Citation
The Barbados advocate

Material Information

Title:
The Barbados advocate
Uniform Title:
Barbados advocate (Bridgetown, Barbados : 1983)
Portion of title:
Sunday advocate
Place of Publication:
Bridgetown Barbados
Bridgetown, Barbados
Publisher:
Advocate Co.
Publication Date:
Frequency:
Daily
regular
Language:
English

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Newspapers -- Bridgetown (Barbados) ( lcsh )
Genre:
newspaper ( sobekcm )
Spatial Coverage:
Barbados -- Bridgetown

Notes

Dates or Sequential Designation:
Apr. 22, 1983-
Numbering Peculiarities:
No issue published for May 3, 1983.
General Note:
On Sunday published as: Sunday advocate.
General Note:
Microfilm produced before 1988 may be substandard.
General Note:
Latest issue consulted: Feb. 28, 2005.

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Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
Copyright Advocate Co.. Permission granted to University of Florida to digitize and display this item for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires permission of the copyright holder.
Resource Identifier:
17931718 ( OCLC )
sn 88063345 ( LCCN )
Classification:
Newspaper ( lcc )

Related Items

Preceded by:
Advocate-news (Bridgetown, Barbados)

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Full Text


ESTABLISHED 1895

Hav bados





Malik Vetoes Investigation Of Germ War

American Resolution Comdemns
Soviet Move As Undermining

U.N. Efforts To Combat

NEW YORK, July 3.

Russia on Thursday vetoed the American proposal for

Red Cross investigating of Communist germ: warfare
charges and the United States immediately demanded that
the United Nations dismiss the allegations as “without

substance and false”.

Soviet delegate Jacob Malik cast the fiftieth veto to
block the United States challenge to the Kremlin to “put
up or shut up” on its charges that American troops fighting
for the United Nations in Korea had used germ weapons
against the Chinese Communists and North Koreans.

Malik’s was the only negative vote in the ten to one

ballot

in favour of the American resolution.

But the

Security Council rules require a majority of seven mem-
bers including all five permanent members and the Soviet

King Talal

Goes Home

i AMMAN, July 3
King Talal of Jordan returned
to his desert capital to-day by air
from Beriut almost seven weeks
after leaving his kingdom for
European medical aid.

The 41-year-old monarch step-
ped out of a twin engined
plane at a military airfield on
the outskirts of Amman to the
sound of a 21 gun salute from a
battery of 25 pounders manned by
gunners of the Arab legion,

The King whose mental condition
has precipitated a political crisis
in Hassemite looked weary. He
is suffering from Schizzoph (split
personality).

He was greeted by his ministers
and members of the Regency
Council appointed by the Govern-
ment to carry out his duties in his
absence. Immediately after the
three minute reception, he drove
to Basman Palacé on the outskirts
of Amman where he is expected
te remain for a time under medi
cal treatment.

The King has come home but
it remains to be seen-kew success-~
ful maybe any medical attention
to which he might agree. The
three-man Regency Council is ex-
pected to continue to act for him
until he is sufficiently recovered
to be able to shoulder his respon-
sibilities or until 17-year-old heir
apparent Prince Hussein now at
school near London comes of age
next May.—vU.P.



Correspondent
Must Quit France

PARIS, July 3.

An Interior Ministry spokesman
said Pakistan newspaperman Ina-
yat Khan has been ordered to
leave France by midnight for par-
ticipating in aati-French political
activities here,

He said Inayat Khan, Paris cor-
respondent for Pakistan news-
paper “Dawn”, was informed of
the expulsion order one month
ago for speeches he made to North
African student groups denounc
ing France’s conduct in Tunisia.

He was given one month to ar-
cange his affairs and leave France.
A Foreign Ministry official two
days ago denied Inayat Khan had
been ordered to go out of the
country.

When asked about that conflict
ing statement the Interior Ministry
spokesman said the “decision to
expel him, was taken one month
ago”. It was never changed. He
must leave before midnight.

negation is enough to kill the

‘presumed to be utterly false. The
(Security Council in our judgmen’

investigation.
It is the first veto in the U.N.
since November 30,
Malik voted three
day
sored resolution calling upon

North Korean and Chinese Com-
munist aggressors to quit Korea
A veto has been used only 51
times in the United Nations’ his-
tory.

Only one other country, France,
has used the privilege. Malik
personally has east 13 vetoes but
stili trailed far behind the origin-
al Soviet “no no” man Andrei
Gromyko who vetoed 25 times in
his United Nations’

United States Ambassador
Ernest Gross called upon the
Security Council to condemn the
practice of

career.

abricating and dis-

seminating such false charges
which increase tension among

nations and which is designed to
undermine the efforts of the
United Nations to combact
aggression in Korea and the sup-
port of people of the world for
these efforts.”

Gross gained tne floor immedi-
ately after the vote and recalled
that North Korea and Red Chin:
had refused with Russian backiny
to let either the Red Cross or the
United Nations World Health
Organization enter their territor,
to look into charges that Unitec

States’ troops had used gern
weapons against Communist
forces.






One Conclusion

negative vote of the
Soviet Union”, he said, “has pre-
vented the Security Council fron
ereneing for impartial investi.
gation. rom these facts there is
only one conclusion that can be
drawn — that the charges o/
germ warfare made againsi
United Nations forces must be











should condemn the fabricatior
and dissemination of these false
charges which involve no less
than an attempt to undermine the
efforts of the United Nations to
combat aggression in Korea.”
Gross then submitted the resolu
tion and asked the Council to ad
journ for a few days before con-
sidering it in order to give Malik
time to think over the gravity o/
his veto action.

The American resolution rea:\s
“The Security Council noting thc
concerted dissemination by cer-
tain governments and authorities
of grave accusations charging th:
use of bacteriological warfare |)
United Nations’ forces; recalling
that when charges were first
made they immediately denied
the charges and requested that a
impartial investigation be mace,
then noting that Chinese Com-
munists and North Korean
authorities failed to accept the
offer the International Com-
mittee of the Red Cross to carry
out such investigation but ccn-
tinued to give circulation to tx
charges; noting that the World
Health Organization offered he!p

On page 5.

HARRADIAN POET

GEORGE LAMMING, ardent
don Studio of the B.B.C

Mr Lamming is a Barbadian

short ste



ry Writer and poet in the Lon

and old Combermerian

1950, when | oP prise”
times in one ; ie a - a
$5 4c Mies daniarioai s6n- that the government should have




Aggression

Freneh Will

Re-examine
Duclos Case

PARIS, July 3.
The French Government came
under fire for the handling of
Jacques Duclos case as authori-

ties decided to re-examine thx
evidence against the Communist
leader. Most of the Frencl

this morning

and

expressed
“stupefaction”’ |

allowed Duclos to regain his free-
dom and poured criticism on the
Appeals panel.

The court decision freed Duclos |
on the grounds that
“reasonable doubt”
caught redhanded in a plot
against the internal security of
the state and the Communist lead-
er can only be arrested again if
the National Assembly ‘approves
the lifting of the Communist
deputy’s parliamentary immunity.

After a five hour meeting of
the cabinet yesterday, spokesman
Raymond Marcellin said the gov-
ernment will open a new file on
Duclos’ case but dodged questions
on when the new
might commence.

In any case it is doubtful if any
action could be taken before vaca-
tion next week.

was |

there

proceedings,

It was also taken
as certain that government will
act only if it is sure it has a
strong enough case to win a major-
ity vote.—U.P.



Copra Exports
Hit Peak In’51

WASHINGTON, July 3.
Copra and coconut oil exports
from the Philippines and athe:
Far Eastern reducing areas

that he was |

: BERLIN, July
U.S. authorities said they ape

|

} making “constant efforts” ‘to
secure the release of three
United States’ Catholic priests

arrested with a German woman
{| guide by armed Soviet
on the East-West border yester-

day,
A United States’ spokesman
said liaison officers are in con-

| tinual touch with Soviet head-
quarters and are demai the
release of the Chicago ests
| He said, “this is a matter we ave
| not going to let drop, we are in
grament contact with = the
Soviets.”
The priests, Martin Borow
zyk, George Gorski and Broni-
| slaus Sokolowski were picked
| up with Frau Katsarina Wine-
| kler at 10.00 a.m. yesterday on
, the border of the United States’
sector of Berlin and the Soviet
| zone of Germany.

Foreign Aid.
Bill Goes
To Senate |

} WASHINGTON, Jul >
| A. $6.081,947,750 Foreign Ala Bil
will go to the Senate to-day car-
rying almost $2,000,000,000 lege
than President Truman requestec!
The Senate Appropriations Com-
mittee worked until shortly before
midnight before approving the
measure,

Members said the group ap~
proved the exact figure voted
the House for all military a
economic and point four ald toé
Europe, Asia, Africa, the Near
East and Latin America for the
fiscal year 1953 which began on
Tuesday.

The Senate is scheduled to meet |
at 9.30 am. E.D.T.—its earliest |
meeting in several years—on,
“unanimous consent” calendar and |
was expected to pass scores of}
minor non-controversial or pri-
vate Bills. If a single Senator
objects to the Bill under this pro-
cedure the measure is aytomati-
cally passed over.—U.P.





Super Liner .





reached a possible record in 1941,
Agricultural Department statistics
disclosed Thursday

The Department of Foreign
Agriculture report said more than
1,600,000 tons were exported that
year compared with less than
1,300,000 tons in 1950. It noted
that the Philippines was “by far
the largest total exporter with a
copra equivalent tonnage greate:
by some 132,800 tons than the
combined total from Indonesia,
Ceylon and Malaya

It saidethe total shipments from
each of the four areas exceeded
those of any other post-war year |
and exports fromthe Philippines |
and Ceylon exceeded even pre- |
war average

—U.P. |



Errol Hill |

For Jamaica |

\
GEORGE LAMMING—A
NOVELIST

; harbour
Mr. Errol Hill of Trinidad on Mts} overtaken

On First Trip
NEW YORK, July 3.

The $73,000,000 superline:
United States sailed for Europ:
Thursdey in an unofficial effort t
capture the Trans-Atlantic speed
record in her maiden voyacc
Police estimated that 13,000 per
sons showed up to see the 990-foo
53,000-ton vessel leave, Amon:
1,660 passengers was Margaret
Truman, daughter of the Presi-,
dent, who was caught in the crush- ,
ing mob and had to be rescued by |
Secret Service agents.

The curious pressed around Miss ;
Truman as she tried to talk to re-}
porters on the sports deck. In}
command of the ship was Commo-
dore Harry Manning. He refused



to win the Trans-Atlantic speed
record the nation lost a century
ago but*his broad grin tacitly told
‘eporters he would try to show
up Britain's Queen Mary, present
record holder,

He got the vessel off to a fas!

start, Within an hour after clear

ing the entrance of New Yor!
the United States hed

and passed the liner

way from England to Jamaica was) Stockholm and Italia which left
in intransit passenger by the 8.S.; New York before: her. Passenge:
Colombie spending a few hours in| guessed she was doing 34 knots

Barbados,

Mr, Hill among other things paid |
this tribute to “BIM” the quarter-/|
ly magazine published in this|
island: “Bim is the most important
“literary quarterly production in
“the West Indies and one to which
“people in London

“forward,”

He had been attending the Royal
Academy of Acts studying drama
and is now on his way to a.
Dramatic Summer School spon-

sored by the Extra-Mural De-
partment of the _ University
College of the West Indies

the preliminary lectures wi i)
be delivered by him and later
by Mr. Philip Sherlock who is the
moving figure.

He paid tribute to Jamaica for
its Arts Festival to which the pu-
pils of all the Secondary School:
contribute and on which they get
criticism of their work and guid-
ance from trained personnel. He
expressed the hope that similar
efforts will be made in other parts
of the Caribbean.

He spoke highly of the contribu-
tiond made to West Indian litera~
ture by George Lamming of Bar-
bados, Edgar Mittleholzer of Brit-
ish Guiana and Sam Selvon of
Trinidad and the welcome encour-
agement and as@istance given by
the BBC feature programme Car-
ibbean Voices conducted by Henry
Swansea,

Barbadian Novelist

Speaking of George Lamming he
said he

a few days before he left and
thought he was doing quite well
Lamming” he said i pleased

with himself as he has just had
his first novel accepted and it will
be published in Decembe The
ti { :



is a close secret!
N Hill after visiti
Council, Mr. D. A. W
Colonial t
Collymore



g the British
, Assistant





vocate where
Lam-
nber

Staff, sailed for Jamaica in



fror





interested in)
“literary and cultural pursuits ape

had seen him in London];

M F ank|
the Extra-Mural De-

| but the speed will not be con-
firmed until Friday at noon,

—UP.

—

B.G. Expert For



7
London Talks
GEORGETOWN, B.G., July 3
British Guiana will be repr

| ented at
of

Directors of Medical Servic:

‘n the colonies by Dr. Harold P.,

Ternandes, tuberculosis expert and
Medical Superintendent of ihe

3est Sanatoriums, who is at pres- |

nt on vacation in the United}

Kingdom, D.M.S. Dr. L. A. P . >

Kingdom, DMS De lL & P Concealed Weapons
ed duties is unable to aliveud " .
-ause it is understood he is in th« oie TUNIS, July 3,
hick of a re-organisation pro- | he 2 en pee tepunet
gramme which will have an im-|Se@Mtenced eight Tunisians | lis

portant effect on the future me)
al policy of the country

The Conference opens in mic-
July and will last about ten da
Among matters listed for discus-
1 is quick exchange of scienti-
fic information about techniqu:s
1 diseases as well as an attemst
o regularise certain administra-
tive and other procedures,—(cP



LONDON

The period of nearly twelve
nths which has elapsed since the
of Persian oii suppliés

been marked by a great intea-

cation of oil production efforts













FRIDAY, JULY, gS 1952

U.S. Seek





|

}
| Sunglee and Rosemary.
|

the Oxford Conference! !



Mt me

ihe priests who .came to
Burope to attend the Eucharistic
ongress in Barcelona arrived
by train in Berlin yesterday for
| one-day visit on orders issued
by “Cralog,” « relief organiza-

tien.

Accompanied by Frau Winck.
ler, Cralog’s Berlin secretary,
they set out on a photographic
tour of the city. They were
picked up when their automo-
bis dpeve a few yards into East
» orn vt Dueppel crossin,

Some .

A United States’ spokesman
said the Soviets still have not
acknowledged that are
holding the priests. He added
that this is not unusual, for the
Russians usually do not admit
they are holding Allied nation-
als until they are ready to re-
lease them,



Conservatives May es

‘Seek To Disband C.D.C
It Lost £44% Million

(From Our Ow

The future of the Color
is under active consideration

Members of the Imperial Afiairs Committee have tabulated
a list of questions to the Colonial Secretary to obtain in-
formation about the workings of the Corporation in areas
such as the West Indies, East and West Africa and South-

East Asia. “This informatio

probably use it to support a motion for the disbanding ol
the Corporation” Bernard Braine, M.P., told your corres:
pondent, This motion may be raised at the next Colonial

Affairs debate.

Astrion
Wins T.T.C.
Handicap

(From Our Own Correspondent)

PORT-OF-SPAIN, July 3
Dr. Pillip Gittens, “bannea
from the Trinidad track for many
years, celebrated his return thi
afternoon when his Astrion
severely trounced A and B Class
‘unners in the nine furlongs te
vin him a $2,000 purse. Astrion
with Hardwidge in the saddle
clipped 4/5 of a second off the
long-standing record | min, 57 secs
held by Golden Quit
RESULTS

West Indian Handicap

About Six Furlongs; Class F. avd)

2, three year olds only
1. April’s Dream, 2, First
Admiral, 3. Cavalier, Time: 1 min.|
15 secs.

Bayshore Handicap

About Six Furlongs; Class C and
C2 Maidens

1. Hope Dawns, 2. Golden

Fleece, 3. Nefari. Time: 1 min.

| to say definitely that he was out} 149 secs

Beimong Handicap
About One Mile and 130 Yards;
Class F and F2 four year ‘ids
1. Colletes, 2. Lopon, 3. Kismet
Trme: 1 min. 51 secs
T.T.C, Handicap
About Nine Furlongs; Class A
and B only
1. Astrion, 2. Landmark, 3
Haroween. Time: | min. 56! secs.
St. Ann’s Handicap
About Six Furlongs; Class B
and Cl only
1, False Pride, 2. Careful Annie
3. Orchis. Time: 1 min, 144 secs
Creole Handicap
About Six Furlongs, Class D
and E only
. Mary Ann, 2. Crossroads, 3
Time
14% secs.
St. Clair Handicap
About Nine Furlongs; Class ©
and C2 Winners

min

Farren Star, 2. Ali Baba,
Monro, Time 1 min. 57 secs



|

8 Sentenced For

right to prison terms ranging from
one month to one year for carry-
ing concealed weapons

The Tribunal freed four other
Arabs who had been detained o:
the same charge The Tunisian
|cabinet of Premier Salah Eddine
} Baccouche meanwhile held a
i brief session to discuss minor mestic problems. —U.P.

New Oil Sources Opened In M. East

ownership is shared by British,
Dutch, French and American com-

panies. The rate of output last
month was double that of Jast
January and is now running at

i6rn. tong annually, The main fac-

of the Middle East,,tor behind this increase ‘thas been
th uncial Times to-day. the completion of the new pipe-
line to the Mediterranean, With
me pectacular results this important addition to its
ybtained in Kuwait— transportation facilities, the 1-P.C
} field jointly ownéd has been able to raise its pro-
Anglo-~I oil ind = an duction of crude oil much closer to
i Gulf Oil mut its maximum potential
tubs expansion las

tals ker ace in the output of This rapid expansion of Middle
ie owned properties in Eastern cil output is a develop-
‘ t continue ment of the highest importance
| e news of uid | Nearly one-half of the -proved

‘ odu n of thes yl reserve ire locatec
I Sompany, whose the East and th est



—_— 4
64 eed





Priests’ Release



| permit the Corporation to make











Av Oz



A
.

0

FF

o

>

fo?
> Library
4,

7)





PRICE : FIVE CENTS

Charges
Adams’ Detention Was
Misunderstanding:
U.S. Consul Apologises



A stiff American

protest is

expected if the priests report
mistreatment at the hands of
the Russians. There are no im-

mediate deals of the release of

the three priests and the
woman.
British authorities asked ON MONDAY. the 23rd of June, the Acting Colonial

Soviet headquarters for informa-
tion on the whereabouts of two
missing British soldiers who
eyewitnesses said were arrested
by Soviets early Thursday when |

Secretary received a telegram from Mr. Grantley Adams,
C.MG.. M.C.P., from Montreal saying that he had been
refused entry into the United States at the New York Inter-
national Airport, Mr. Adams askéd that the Governor

they drove past the last West and the Seeretary of State be informed
Berlin station into East Ger- | ‘phe same day the Government
many on the City’s elevated | of Barbados sent a strong letter
railway station. West Berlin | of protest to the Consul for the

police said eyewitnesses report-

United States of America in Bar-
ed that the two British soldiers Ini ,

bados. The United Kingdom Gov-
were arrested at around 1.00 | ernment through the Secretary of
a.m, G.M.T,. by Soviet soldiers | State

and Communist police at Albre- | to lodge a
achtishof

for the Colonies was asked
similar protest with

station, one station | the State Department in Wash-
past the end of the British | ington. The Colonial Attache to
sector —U.P. the British Embassy was also

rng acvised
|} On the 26th of June the Goy-
ronment of Barbados received

the American Consul a
ull apology from the United
States Government and the ex-

| planation that the incident hae
{ arisen out of a misunderstanding.
| The Consul also stated that an
expression of regret was being
cent direct to Mr. Adams

Her Majesty’s Government alsa
took up the matter with the State



n Correspondent) Department, Washington, which
» 4 also expressed deep regret to the
LONDON, July 3 itish Covernnient, Mr, G. H. ADAMS, ©.M.G., M.C.P.





lial Development Corporation
by back bench Conservatives.

Big ‘3° Finish - Bit To Gn
Draft Reply efore Assembly

PARIS, July 3.
A G : nt bac

LONDON, July 3 \ Government backed sliding

U.S., Britain and France have

wage scale Bill will come before
the National Assembly at 2.00
completed the draft reply to Mo p.m, G.M.T. for a second reading
cow on the German elections, it! and the vote on the Bill appears
was Stated at the Foreign Office] to be the last major hurdle that
Thursday
The draft is being discussed

Premier Antoine Pinay faces in
. “ the House which is due to go on
been of the opinion that the Cor vith the Federal Chancellor Kon- summer recess on aie 11 §
poration is not carrying out ft» rad Adenauer prior to its dispatch The Bill, approved by the Low-
duties in the best interest of the 'o the Kremlin, It is expeced ,

colonies. The need to “exerel ‘hat the West's notes will be pri |

n is being filed and we will



For some time now promineni
back-beneh Conservatives hav:

er House after stormy debates a
month ago, was later rejected by
and perform their functions so a ented to the Kremlin before he ithe Council of Republic Upper
to ensure that their revenues art } veek-end, y Shudh aad acceding 10 the cone
not less than sufficient to meet titution must now be approved
all sums properly chargeable tc | Wo
their revenue account” does no {it is willing to discuss with (|

probably Friday, o
tals said

The West will tell Moscow thit|\. the Assembly with an absolute

\Soviet the setting up of an impar | adorlty Cit is to become: lass

i : 5 ; Pinay who fears his Bill might

tosses in the development period. | fe} oreetane Oe commission {or yuo into trouble said through a
Suc loses, would |e, arma ain te bate te now AT ie a a

industrial practice. Thus its char~ | ization of a unified Germany. t rhe t e

ter makes its increasingly diffieul:

Ur the As-
for the Corporation to fulfil its
munist and Socialist opposition

original task of undertaking mar: | py,
1 dad May Install ind rejects as a modified version

ginal development, More ar
pee. a ae ion Ser oe ryt . ° of the originally projected social-
Traffic Lights fist Bitl, calls for the increase of
‘basic salaries in the event of «

Fr

tion of the measure by
sembly a confidence test
The Bill which combined Com-





foreed to enter into competition
with private enterprise and it is



ae aa ; nh :
ate eeund and lowe wit it tees) » Or Own Correspondent ;five per cent jump of the cost of
> ae r PORT-OF-SPAIN, iving index -
ant coreeraves Fe ope The Jrinidad Government nmy Leftist opposition attacks main-
vO id be t ie itemated | le oon install a system of jraffc y aim at Bill provisions whieh
vars *, oar ested in e-Tlights in Port of Spain and San|forbid two consecutive adjust-

velopment schemes sponsored by

Fernando to take care of the big! ments of salaries within four

the Colonial | Governments. trafie problem in this city and in| months. Many Rightists deputies
jae over 12 months now CDC} jj, Borough including Pinay’s own independ-
ae gh a Seema tes It is believed that Government | ents and peasants are fighting stil
of Lord Ret and the organisa vill shortly ask the Legislative |} because they believe it might

tion at home and abroad has beer touch off a new wave of social un-

Council's Finance Committee for

ene coer anu funds to import hundreds of these | vest and end the period of com
smarnl ti Sh ‘ th ’ little | ights and for importation of 4 | parative price stabilization that
examination have shown litte) tinited Kingdom, expert to install! the Government has achieved dur~
chance i. paying their way have hem. ing the four months in office
heen abandoned. Latest annual) “About two years ago when the|Pinay’s foes in the Assembly

report of the Corporation showed

that of £21,000,000 of capital system was planned, estimated) however will probably use today’s

cost was put at $150,000, but it is} debate as a springboard to launch



yessures over £4,500.000 ‘had} now expected that the project will | an overall offensive against Pinay’s
poam cost the Colony nearly $200,000 | economic policy —UP.
R ds D GPP LLLP LA LALLA PPD
e€ odge . %
The choice of those who *
UN War Planes :
*

SEOUL, July 3.
Fifth Airforce Headquarters saic
Communist pilots have become in-|
creasingly reluctant to tangle with
United Nations war planes despite
the fact that the Reds have built
up a superior force of 1,900 planes

.
in Mane ia. ‘ ‘ . .
" he Heport noted that Red MIG A rare combination realised in

15 jets are appesring in ever de-
creasing numbers and that most
‘ights of thern now contain ten
or fewer planes, Earlier this year
MIG’S were appearing in flights
of more than a 100. The last suc:
flight was seen on April 1. The

K. W. V.

“THE LABEL WITH THE KEY"

heaviest MIG co tration of tt . ° : 4 2
war was on Maren 3 when 48% Wines, Brandies and Liqueurs
were sighted .

The Fifth Airforce said the K. Ww. a, PAARL TAWNY

Coromunists have built up an air- |
force of “between 1,800 and 1,900"

<

Coronation Wine

ALLELES FFF OPES OS SOS FOS FOOS

edited

Dry Vermouth
VAN DER HUM LIQUEUR
. Superior “Key’’ Brandy

jets to mix with U.S. F86 Sabre
jets came on June 23 when 25/
MIG'S cowered on the Antun;
airfield while United States plane
bombed Suiso power station int
ubble UP.

Secthuttass bende, te eet oa -W.V. Old Brown Sherry
Vi4 . Pla order, ave no . >
planation why the Reds refus . V. Amontillado Sherry
any a to make a show o | * V. Old Oloroso Sherry
strength. % , â„¢
Planes Stayed Grounded | * .W.V. Sweet Vermouth.
The strangest reluctance of Rec, wv Vv.
Vv
Vv

RAR RRR

‘
’

The

Pillars

vital to the long-term interests «
the oil
sumers

The political

industry and of ofl

con

|
development of these reserves i |
|
|

factors which ar

liable to interfere with the flow |

of middle Eastern oil are well |

known and have been clearly!

illustrated by last year’s eve nts | Health
|

in Persia, Not the least effective |

way in which these political in ; a
fluence can mâ„¢ overcome ie Eup BROWN!
through an immediate and rapi and FS .

development of current production}

which will bring quick and hh
stantial benefits to the peoples of
the producing countries on the







Happiness

basis of the new and generou
royalty and profit-shar €
ments which have bee t | .

B64 SS, +6564
LOCC SPOOCSOSOOS EEE PPE EL EEL LPL LLP LP PS

64,6444 434 Ay $4896 O08 000"
negotiated “ PPLE LLP ELSES FF SFOS SSCS OOOO

~-L.E.S









PAGE TWO

Caruh Calling

D" 3. W. P. HARKNESS
Adviser

for Devel



+ ¢
5. za




Directors
ical Services throughout
ritish colonies from July 14



cness expects
in about a

to return
month’s

With Barclays Bank

ETURNING to Trinidad on
Wednesday by the Colombie
were Mr. and Mrs. T. Wills who
were Holidaying in England for

the past four months

Mr. Wills is employed with the
San Fernando branch of Barclays
Bank.

On Routine Visit
R. G“ MONTGOMERY GOR-
DON, Engineering Adviser
to the Comptroller for Develop-
ment and Welfare, left for Dom-
inica yesterday morning by B.G
Airways on a routine visit. He
expects to be away for about two
weeks.

On Holiday

RS; -B. A. SPENCE, whose
husband is a Land Sur-
veyor in Trinidad, arrived here
yesterday morning by RW.LA
with her daughter Joyce who is
Secretary of Alston’s Ltd. They
have come over for three week's
holiday which they are spending

as guests at the Hotel Royal.

Mr. and Mrs.
Cricketer Weds

Also coming in on the same T St atthis hi. ua wre
plane from Trinidad were mr BA eae ee oe
and Mrs. P. S. Nanton from St.f@ 14. ot lah ire agen y
Vincent. They will be spending ]° ‘ ock, Miss Betty © Goddard,
two weeks’ holiday staying at the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Hotel Royal. ‘}Goddard of “Karen Lodge’,

Mr, Nanton is ae
United Traders Ltd
town, , '

For Medica] Treatment
R. H. STUART BYNOE, Di-!
rector of Messrs. Cave,
Shepherd: and Co., Ltd. and Mrs.
Bynoe af Albion’, Hastings, were
passengers by T.C.A. yesterday
morning for Canada.
Mrs, Bynoe who is a sister of
Mr. -R, Maurice Cave, is going to
Ottawa for medical treatment.

Engineer In Venezuela
BR, CHARLES ROBERTSON,
engineer of C. A. Caminos
in Venezuela, arrived here yester-
day morning by B.W.I.A. from
Trinidad where he spent a few
days. -He is now here for a fur-
ther holiday before going on to
Berkeley in California.
Mr. Rabertson is staying at the
Marine -Hetel,

American Citizens

R. AND MRS. H. J. MILLS,
two American citizens who
had been touring Europe on holi-
day, arrived in Barbados on
Wednesday by the Colombie in-
transit for Aruba where Mr. Mills



has been employed with ‘the
Standard Oil Co. for the past
twenty three years.

Mr, Mills plans to retire and
return to the United States next
year.

Resulf Of Drawing
HE Royal and Merchant Navy
Welfare League beg to an-+
nounce the following prize win-
ning numbers in the Raffle held in
aid of their funds: —

Ist prize 1172; 2nd, 1436; 3rd,
2875; 4th,1321; 5th, 0117; 6th, 2332;
7th, 3500; 8th, 1377; 9th, 0663; 10th,
3770; 11th, 0995; 12th, 4636; 13th,
1109; 14th, 2004.

Prize winners are kindly asked
to call on Miss Farmer c/o J. N.
Goddard & Sons Ltd., Office for
their prizes.

Back To St. Lucia
MoM AND MRS. REYNAULD
JAMES of St. Lucia re-
turned home on Tuesday by
B.W.1.A. after spending a holi-
day staying at Crystal Waters

Guest House, Worthing.
Mr. James, a member of
Castries Town Board, was
in the interest of his health.

After Three Weeks
RS. T. D. SHILLINGFORD
of Roseau, Dominica, re-
turned home yesterday morning
by B.G. Airways after spending
three weeks’ holiday staying at
“Allworth”, Cheapside.

Her husband who is Managing
Director of T. G, Shillingford and
Co., returned last week after a
fortnight holiday

the
here



Rupert and the







The

little





Director of {Graeme Hall Terrace, was mar-
in Kings- pried to Mr. Denis Atkinson, son
t sigot Mr. and Mrs, W. E. Atkinson

re No. 40 Blue Waters, and Bar-

bados and West Indies cricketer.

The bride who was given in
marriage by her father, wore a
dress of slipper satin with a close
fitting bodice and sleeves of chan-
tilly lace with an appliqued neck-
line and a very full skirt ending
in a long train, Her finger tip
veil of illusion tulle, was kept in
place by a juliet cap of lace and
she carried a bouquet of white
orchids and coratita. .

She was attended by Miss Bar-
bara Goddard as maid of honour
and: Miss Jeanette Goddard and
Miss Sally Patterson as brides-
maids. They were all similarly
attired in dresses of white em-
bossed tulle with close fitting
bodices, off the shoulder necklines
and very full skirts. They car-
ried fans of the same material
trimmed with red rosebuds and
red ribbon. ‘

The ceremony which was fully
choral with Mr, G. C, Williams at
the organ, was conducted by Rev.
M. E. Griffiths. The duties of best-
man were performed by Mr, Roy
Proverbs, while those of ushers
fell to Mr, Richard Randal, Mr.
Roger Goddard, Mr. Colin God-
dard, Mr. Joseph Hassell, Mr,
John Armstrong, Mr. David Git-
tens, Mr. David Taylor and Mr
John Massiah,

A reception was held at the Ma-
rine Hotel and the honeymoon is
being spent at the Crane Hotel.

The bride’s going away dress
was turquoise waffle pique with
white accessories,

Law Student

R. NEIL PROVERBS, a law

student of Toronto\Univer-

sity, left for Jamaica on Wednes-

day evening by the Colombie

after spending a month's holiday

with Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Kinch
of “Marlow”, Hastings,

Neil who is a nephew of Mrs.
Kinch and son of Mr, and Mrs,
Ivor Proverbs of Toronto, was
paying his first visit to Barbados,
From Jamaica he will travel to
Miami and then go on to Canada,

C.S.0.B.A Reunion

At the meeting of the Execu-

tive Committee of the Com-
bermere Old Boys’ Association on
July 22nd, the guests of honour
and the date of the Annual Dinner
will be fixed. It had been decided
not to hold a Monthly Reunion
on the first Friday of July on ac-

count of clashing of dates with
other social functions,
The date of the Old Boys’

Cricket match will also be decid-
ed and arrangements for the dance
completed.

The Annaal General Meeting
will be held on Thursday, July
24, at 5.00 p,m,

Toy Scout—3?

Ses

pals are now more all chattering together and Rupert

baffled than As Algy and can hear that they are talking

Podgy join them they say goodbye bout Christmas stockings. They

to Gaffer Jare and trot forward ‘ke No notice of the small people
see aa ar orwarG and gradually they drift away |
towards the group of grown-ups. toward the middle of the village. |
Mrs. Badger and Mrs. Pug and while Constable Growler gazes |
f Sheep and several others are after them suspiciously. |

oe ee ——





‘ animals

BARBADOS

cha

mar

—AND
DANCE



“ADVOCATE

-








1 What made Rita

e partners

ee

sennconqncnsdqsonqeccosenegemnne rs
i yy FRIDAY FiLMsPOT i
:
} g :
by LEONARD MOSLEY
| Sencesecnces+-ccnsencsacsenceeesence: ee?
REALLY felt very sorry for
both of them. But then,
who wouldn't? What is
sadder, sillier, and more Orson Welles with .
pathetic to the onlooker than —
the sight of two grown men stil] ey
mooning, lovesick, over the same Fi
girl—and still hopelessly unaware Pe
of the real reason why-she has rs
walked out of both of their ey
lives ? i
1 am jalking 3
about / Orson fd Fd
| Welles and °
} Aly Khan
| And, of course.
Rita Hay-
| worth. She
| has been
| married to
DENIS ATKINSON. | them both
| She has borne
Attended Conference | each of them ;
: ac eee ae:
In Jamaica Now she nas
, =~ jeft them anc =
ON'BLE ERNEST WILLIAMS, | _is back at work Rita with... . . Aly ray iihey
member of the Antigua | in Hollywood— : “a married in 949,
Legislature and Chairman of the | oe oer aia “ornenget parted in 1951).
coe Works and Communica- | of ideas een ‘9
ions Committee, was _ intransit trom them
vesterday vii : And tn ust 1 know why, at this moment, whether she was working oF
pore iperrens by B.W.I.A. | can't foes oer she is back “hoofing” in @ playing. He mixed the two
rom Trinidad on his way back | why. why musical film in Hollywood So she walked out on him one
home. | WHY she went instead of aquapianing with Aly day complaining that she Just
Mr. Williams who spent a few! I am not Sne left them because she is couldn't go on being murried tc
days in Trinidad visiting various e x uggerating a working girl, She ‘eft both a “genius.” What she meant
projects and meeting Govern- when IT say B husbands = because she wa3: “TI just can’t continue us
ment Officials, had been over to| ay ure still decided that neither of them the wife of a man who doesn’!
esol both deeply in was “serious” over work. believe in work.”

Jamaica attending the Conference
of Affiliated Branches of the Com-
monwealth Parliamentary Asso- |

love with her.
Watch Aly Khun in a Riviera
night club, dancing with a

gation which lasted from June | Beaniia. film fae ke come
2 to June 25. ie Ca or Irene Papa—bu
| starin over his partner's

He said that the Conference was |

a success and he thought it was a
good thing for members of the

various Legislatures in the Carib- |

bean to get together and discuss
their problems so that they could
come to a unanimous decision and
make united representations.

Pre-Retirement Leave

R. V. H. B. ROCHEFORD,

accountant in the Govern-

ment Savings Bank retires from

the Civil Service at the end of

six months’ leave which began
on July 1.

Mr. Rocheford joined the Ser- |

vice in January 1913 and so at the
end of his leave will have had 40
years’ service to his credit.

He served in the Department of
Agriculture, the Post Office, the
Audit Office, the Bridgetown Petty
Debt Court, the Provost Marshal’s
Office, later the Public Trustee
and the Savings Bank.

It was in the Provost Marshal’s
Office that he was best known and
he several times acted as head of
that Department

On Monday he wis given a
hearty “send off” by the members
of the Bank Staff and other de-
partments of the service.

Carib joins in the wishes ex-
pressed to him for many happy
years of retiremen

Spent Five Weeks

RS. ALICE MICHELIN who
owns a cattle farm in Ja
maica, returned home on Wednes-
day evening by the French §.S.
Colombie after spending five
weeks’ holiday with her son and
daughter-in-law, Col. and Mrs.
R, T. Michelin at District A,







Listening Hours

FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952

4p.m
Service, 4.15 p.m, Charlie Kunz at the
Piano, 4.00 p.m. Bed time with Branden,
5 p.m. Report from Wimbledon, 5.15

p.m. Variety Bandbox, 6.15 p.m. Merchant |

Navy Programme
T.15—10.90 p.m,





8.20 p.m. The Spa Orchestra, 8.45 p.m
Sports Round-up and Programme Parade
§ p.m, The News, 9.10 p.m. Home News
from, Britain, 9.15 p.m,
Perfect, 9.30 p.m. London Calling, 9 45
pam, A Tale of Two Cities, 10 p.m
News, 10,10 p.m. News Talk.



B



THE

HE capture of two bears in the tivity

Pyrenean town of Luchon is
event, Like the other wild
in the Pyrenees, except
the izard (the chamois of the Py-

an

‘renees), the bear is now growing

very scarce,

I myself have never come across
one, although I have repeatedly
described a fight in which I killed
a huge brown bear on a ledge of
rock on the Spanish side of the
Noufonts pass—and am gradually
coming to believe it really hap-
pened. Once there were even ibex
to be seen in these mountains, but
now the last of them are in cap-



LADIES’ FANCY STRAW and CRINOLINE!|

HATS WIDE BRIM WHITE and COLOURS.

| quinsy, I am aware that your chin,

$2.84 $3.28 and $4.06
LADIES’ WHITE STRAW HANDBAGS

$1.64 $1.80 and $4.06

T. R. EVANS & WHITFIELDS

DIAL 4220



YOUR SHOE STORES



The News, 4.10 p.m. The Daily |

25.58M, 31.32M

Practice Makes |

The j

shoulder at the door, as if he
were trying to will Rita to come,
laughing and waving, into the
| room.
| Watch him us | nave done—
when he glances across ut the
big picture of Rita on the plano
in his home
| And Orson Welles ?
the name of Rita to him and
| the fond expression of a man in
\ love spreads like whipped cream
over those chubby features
| They still want to know
WHAT made Rita leave them.

The reason

| ELLES will tell you

WY uci they never

quarrelled. So will

Aly Khan, Welles will convince

| you that, in his opinion, they

appeared to be very happy. So
| will Aly Khan,

So how did they break We 2

After watching them closely,
after ‘istening to them talk,
maybe I can find the reason for
which they are searching.

For I think 1 know why Rita
Hayworth is no longer listening
to the flood of talk which Orson
Welles poured out to her during
her marriage te this “genius.”

Mention





|

WAY.....

in the Spanish National
Park in the wild valley of Araxas,
Mrs. Wretch and the Circus
“FOSS,” said Wugwell to Colonel

Wretch, “the day when I
once more see your better half—
no offence—gracing our show as of
yore will be the proudest day of
my life since I induced the Mayor
of Stacklesham to let Bibbo fill
his hat with sawdust.” “Mrs.
Wretch,” said the colonel icily,
“has other calls on her time. Tell
him, my dear.” “Yes, tell old
Wuggy,” said the _ proprietor
saucily, “I am fully occupied with
political work,” replied Mrs,
Wretch, “as well as being chair-
man of the Friends of Liberalism,
ind of the Society for Human Pro-
gress.” “Far from it be me,” re-
torted Wugwell, “to grudge you
to that other circus at Westminster,
but Zaphroma the bearded lady
from Stamboul has a nasty go of

fair Blossom, is as innocent of
beard as a coot is of mane,
Suuckily Zaphroma’s beard was

| only one of Linkley’s half-crown

DIAL 4606

| Irish. It

adjustables (trade secret) and it is
at your disposal.”

Marjinal Note

READ that an attempt is

being made to popularise pole
by having a running commentary
through a loud-speaker during}
matches. It is not always realised
that polo is hurling on horse-|
back, and was invented by the
was played in Munster
fore -orded history
Hockey croquet are

|
|

long b be-







And then Aly Khun walked

Happiness into her life. It looked good

RGus prom iaiie ss ue beainging.

er new husband was dar

Done Grater eats te handsome churm)og. and

films and directs exciting, They nad lots of fun

them. I know that Aly Khan ‘osether. They travelled around
spends a jot of time riding ‘together and he showed her uli

and breeding race winners

But neither of them hus ever,
in the way that Rita looks at
it, done w “regular” job in his

kinds of new places, introduced
her to all kinds of new people

A conscience

life. She comes from a long {FE was full of
line of people who think a lot I happy, zestful fun-
of work er family were pro- 4making. They
fessional dancers, who drummec gambled in_ Havana. They
into her the notion that you ski-ied in Switzerland They

cannot be huppy unless you are
in regular employment.

For every hour that you play
(in her philosophy) you should
ut. in at least two, three, or four
irurs of work—to justify your
time off from serious pursuits.

After the first raptures of life 07
and love with Orson Welles and 0)
Aly Khan had worn off Iam gi
convinced that she was appalled
at their attitude towards hard.
regular toil,

Fun, but-

Ore WELLES used

up. Aj

to get so enthusiastic

about a new film or

a new play he was planning

tnat he made it sound like fun.

And work just isn’t fun. the way
Rita sees it.

With Welles she never knew

THE BRIDE FROM PARIS
BRINGS A 3-IN-1 HAT

London Express Service,

By Beachcomber

The giddy round

“QHE wore the hat,” it says,

“almost over one ear.” How
dreadfully amusing Oh,
say! I can see her admirers
eaught on the wrong side of her,
running round to whisper their
follies in the only ear available.
Waiting until a queue had formed,
she tilted the hat over on to the
other ew, and round they ran
again, back to where they had
started from. My dear what per-
fectly ghastly fun, I mean. One
can hardly cope, actually.







ROODAL

the working girl
Hayworth
thinks people should do some
work in life, began to speak up



but I|

bathed on the Riviera.

But then came the time when
inside Roa

the hoofer who

“How long is all this going
m?" asked Working Girl Rita
f herself. “Surely we're not
oing to ploy all the time.

When do we do some work to
justify all this ?”

So this marriage, too. broke
ain there were no serious

marrels. Again the husband

thought that everything was
seraphic and serene

Like Orson Welles. Aly Khun

didn’t gone that the girl he had
married was a girl with a con-
science — a conscience that

demanded hard work to tustify
a lot of play.

London Express Service



The bride is marrted in a
small white straw _ cloche
trimmed with flowers and
flowing veil (left). To match
her going-away suit she takes off
the trimmings. reverses the: hat
and adds a navy and white

ribbon (above),





After the honeymoon she
makes a third change and wears
it sideways, with a pink rose
tucked under the brim The bride
and the three way hat come -
from Paris.



THEATRES





EMPIRE

OPENING TO-DAY 2.30 & 8.30 &
Continuing Dally 4.45 & 8.30

Warner Bros. Presents

PAUL MUNT
in

“T AM A FUGITIVE FROM A
CHAIN GANG"
Extra :

- Hands Tell The Story
latest Paramount British News

—_—
1 Reel Short:
and



OLYMPiC

TO-DAY TO MONDAY 4.30 & 8.15
United Artist Action Double

Dane CLARK Ben JOHNSON
in
‘FORT DEFIANCE”
and

“THE TORCH’







ROXY

TODAY (only) 439 & 8.15
Teresa Wright - Lew Ayres

in
“THE CAPTURE"
and
“STATION WEST"



OPENING TOMORROW 480 & 8.15
Monogram Double
Paul ROBESON
in
“SANDERS OF THE RIVER"
and

“THINGS TO COME”

ROYAL

TODAY (only) 4.30 & 8.30
Maragret Lindsay Ralph Bellamy
in
“MEET THE WILD CAT”
and
“MELODY LANE"

Starring :
and the Merry Macs

Leon Erroll

TOMORROW & SUNDAY 430 & 8.30
“OHICAGO CALLING
Starring DAN DURYEA
and

THE SCARF









ne
a











te

FRIDAY, JULY 4,
Inventions

King Knit-Whit's

By MAX TRELL

“HIS Majesty King Knit-Whit, |
King of Bungle-Land, was a won-
derful inventor,” General Tin, the
tin soldier, was saying. “He inven-
ted some of the most marvelous |
things in the world. For instance |
he once invented a slice of bread
with three sides.”

Knarf and Hanid, who were list-
ening to General Tin, exclaimed in
amazement when they heard this.
They said: “How can a slice of
bread have three sides!”

“It was quite simple, once you
saw it,” General Tin replied, “He
eut the slice very thick, and the
third side was all around the edges.
The purpose of this was to keep His
Majesty from eating more than
one slice of bread between meals
(on account of it was so thick), and
also to keep the slice—if it fell
down—from falling on the buttered
side. He always buttered it on the
third ‘side and it hardly ever fell
on that.



Didn’t Rain

“He also’ invented a way of mak-
ing his garden grow,” continued
General Tin, “without ever having
to water it even though it didn’t
rain for months and months and
months.”

io did he do that?” asked Ha-
nid.

General Tin smiled. “Once I tell
you his scheme, you'll wonder why
nobody ever thought of it before.
This is what he did. He planted his
whole garden in the lake.”

“But General Tin, didn’t the
flowers get drowned!” Knarf said.

“Probably. But that’s not impor-
tant. He never had to water them.
It saved a great deal of time.”

Knarf and Hanid couldn't quite
agree that this was a very useful
invention. But General Tin went
right on.

“Now one day he invented the
best thing of all. Pll tell you just |
how it happened. It had been rain- |
ing for a long time in Bungle-Land,
so much so that all the roads were |
deep with mud. Poor King Knit-
Whit stood by the window of his
room in the palace day after day,
looking out at the rain and wishing
it would stop so that he could go
out. But of course he couldn’t.
There was too much mud. He had
to stay indoors.”

“Why didn’t he take an umbrel-
la and rubbers?” asked Hanid.

“He thought of them. But there
was still too much mud. He didn’t |
like getting himself covered with

1952





King Knit-Whit looked out at the
rain,

mud. So then he decided to invent
something that would let him go
outside in the rain and the mud, and
not get wet or muddy. So the first
thing he invented was something
that looked like a little boat except
that it had no oars. If he sat in this
boat he wouldn't get muddy. But
the rain would still fall on him. So
then he invented something to stand
over the top of the boat like a sort
of square umbrella, And now,” said
General Tin, “His majesty knew
that he wouldn’t get wet or muddy.
But that still wasn’t enough. How
could he get the boat with the um-
brella on top to move down the
road?” ‘ is

“Yes?” said Knarf and Hanid
together. “How?”

Next Thing

“So,” said General Tin, “the next
thing he invented were two wheels
for the boat-with-the-umbrella-on-
top to stand on. And now, standing
on the wheels, the invention rolled
to and fro. But who would be strong
enough to pull it with His Majesty

| sitting inside? He didn’t want his

servants to do it, because then they
would get all wet and muddy. Se
finally he invented two long poles
to stick out in front of the boat-
with - the - umbrella - on - tap -
that-stood-on-wheels. And to these
poles he hitched a horse, and on
the horse he put a harness. And out
he went in this new invention of
his, rolling up and down the roads
of Bungle-Land, and not getting the
least bit muddy or the slightest bit
wet. It was the most wonderful /in-
vention he had ever invented!”
“But GeneralTin!” Hanid cried.
“That invention was a carriage!’’
But General Tin only kept smil-

hinge emiline smiling,



Talking Point

The English are a serious people
with many serious things to think




—Stephen Leacock.

Opening Today 5 & 8.30 |

Sterring

ESTHER

WILLIAMS

JOAN VIVIAN
EVANS - BLAINE
Barry SULLIVAN + Keefe BRASSELLE

Billy ECKSTINE
The De MARCO SISTERS
DEAN MILLER

Featuring America’s Singing Craze
BILLY ECKSTINE
1.30 Tomorrow



Tomorrow
ORCH WIVES & ANCHORS
AWEIGH
CALL NORTH and
SIDE HIGH
117 BARBAREE





OPENING TO-DAY AT
2,39 & 8.30 and

Continuing Daily 4.45 & 8.30. |

EMPIRE
TA aT

3
a

RE-ISSUED SY WARNER BROS.
GTEWDA FARRELL = HELI"! VINSON - PRESTON FOSTER
Seq oy ROBERT & BURNS ~ vines oy MERVYN LE ROY

PLAZA T









OPENING TO-DAY

(FRIDAY) 4.45. & 8.30 P.M.

AND CONTINUING DAILY
WARNER BROS:




i

PATRICE

WYMORE:

SCOi

“ORBES

PLAZA

BARBAREES (DIAL 5170)
GABET YW

The Garden—St. James
TODAY & TOMORROW 8.0 P.M.
“FRIGHTENED CITY” &
“GIRL OF THE YEAR"

Midnite Sat
“BARBARY PIRATE"
Donald WOODS &
“RETURN of the DURANGO KID’
: Charles STARRETT __
SUN. & MON, 8.30 P.M.
MAT. SUN. 5 P.M.
‘JOHNNY ALLEGRO” George RAFT,
DESPERADOES” Randolph SCO."
SEECEGOOS

HEATRES

















ennentaemdiaeeaane
BRIDGETOWN BARBAREES OISTIN
| (Dial 2310) (Dial 5170) (Dial 8404)
TODAY (3 Shows) TODAY 445 & 8.30 pom TODAY TO SUN.
230 — 445 & 8.30 p.m. & Cont:nuing Daily 44> & 820 pm,
& Continuing Daily Errol TLYNN Errol FLYNN in
445 & 82) p.m.
. ROCKY MOUNTAIN
LE SEE YOU) Poisice wrnonn || DODGE CITY
| Ann SHERIDAN
im SAT.- Special 1.30 p.mj| Olivia DeHAVILLAND|
MY Roy ROGERS Double Alan HALE—Others
DREA 48 SONG OF TEXAS Sat. (Special) 1.30 p.m.
Doris . Danny —anc— “Co
> > CHEROKEE
DAY THOMAS RIDING DOWN me: ‘ante Eee
SAT. (Special) 930 & 1.30 THE CANYON aa
“RANGERS RIDE” “WESTERN anes’
“COLORADO AMBUSH” || Midnite (Special SAT] sonnny Mack BROWN
Johnny Mack BROWN wae te —— If
MIDNITE SPECIAL SAT.|| ‘THUNDER Midnite Spsest SATS
Colossal Double ! MOUNTAIN||"“GOLDEN STALLION” ,
“THE DALTON GANG Tim HOLT & Roy ROGERS &
\Ooen BARRY & LEGION of “WELLS FARGO
») “OUTLAW COUNTRY | the LAWLESS’ GUNMASTER’
} Lash LARUE George O'BRIEN Rocky LANE
a a aS ee
FFs Sa ———————S==~—>
*



'





Hopes High
For C’ada—
W.L Trade

By G. H. LASH

MONTREAL.
“We have high hopes that the
British West Ingies ‘trade Liber-
alization Plan will provide in-
creased er ont ae
exporters t Indies,”
Donald H,

Indies are in the

this, Mr. Cheney said the plan
was put into effect last year
after negotiations with the gov-
ernments of the United Kingdom
and the United States.

“Because of the devaluation of
the sterling money, it was neces-

for the British West Indies

to down an elaborate system
of import and Scopes
in 1949,” he said. He Layee Fe}
exports during ean year and 195|
were very low, but with the
Trade Liberalization plan in
effect, some progress was made
in 1951.

“This year,” he continued, “the
plan is more elastic than last
year, which is a good sign for
increased exports to those Brit-
ish West Indies island effected.”

MP’s Discuss
Malaria In
Br. Guiana

LONDON, June.
Has malaria been eradicated
from British Guiana? Two Mem-
bers of Parliament argued on the
subject in the House of Commons
last night during a debate on
a Nations’ specialised agen-
es.

Mr. Bernard Braine (Conserva-
tive, Essex, Billericay div.) was
diseussing generally the situation
in regard to availability of tech-
nicians and equipment for various
schemes and went on to make
this comment:

“In the last two years malaria
has been eradicated from Brit-
ish Guiana’.

Dr. H. Morgan (Labour, War-

): What?
. Braine: Malaria has been
eradicated.

Dr. Mor,



: As a medical man,
let me the Hon. Member that
that is an_ incorrect statement.
Thereis ‘stilt plenty of malaria in
British Guiana.

Mr. Braine; I do
which colonial report the Hon.
Gentleman read last, but I: a4
assure him——and I am sure hi
own Front Bench will claim a
credit for it — that one of the
most notable achievement in the
fight against ill health in this
world is largely the work of one
very distinguished malariologist
in eradicating malaria from the
coastal belt of British Guiana
where it has been a killing dis—
ease. I mention that because I do
not think we should be so shy
about talking of our own achieve-
ments in this battle
poverty and want.

The great problem facing not
only us but the world as a whole
is the lack at the present moment
of sufficient technical specialists
I remember visiting British Gui-
ana last year and asking one
agricultural officer whether ae
had his full complement of staff.
He said that he lacked an assis~
tant but that there were four
welfare officers generally in =
district. The emphasis was
the wrong thing. I am not at
tributing any
for that, but TI am i o- -d
throughout the world there is
great lack of specialists and it
would be a good thing to know
whether Her Majesty's Govern-
ment are seized, as I am sure
thev are, of the urgency of this
problem and are doing something
about it”.

—L-E.S.

not know

against he












“It’s a disaster that the

Americans
follow our policy of friendliness

didn’ t

NE HO

PAGE THREE









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SEA AND AIR |
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M.V. Blue Stat, M.V. Daerwood, M.V.

Curae

1a WA
|

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ih rs
Willemstad, MEV. Caribbee, Sch | Ht Hi iI eS
Franklyn D. R., Sch. Rosarene, Sch i ry HU H} Hi o} sea ae
D'Ortae, Sch. Island Star, Sch." Lydia | Ht i ———
$. Sch. United Pilgrim, Sch Turtle | ball "
Dove. i
ARRIVAL: Wt Hi
SS. Tacona Star, S072 tons, front HE .
yigewee!- Agents: Rebert Thom & Co, | Mk if f >
Sch. Timothy Van Sluyman, 76 tons, } Be
from British Guiana, under Capt. Stoll. light work of an ut .
I i | Harpic makes lig! ning’ where
Seawell a iil H ; t tasks *deep-clea 8
ft | Hil Wy Hi e x ante ramets ¢ odorising.
If WW HH cena lea ving Y your lavatory
i H 1} ‘ie nfecuny. -
boot fresh and ® vivite

HB. Gordon, Joseph, G. Ince, H. Ince
Cc. Moanagas, we Monagas, A. Massy, D
Johnson, A. Payline, T. C
URSDAY

HM | ll
‘i iS nor HARM
iit | i \ CAN 3
Trinidad aon 7 ic =“
bigs homer M. Rostant, R, Bissoondath, | he < sePT ahr

}
ARRIVALS BY 6&.W.LA.—WEDNESDAY
from. Brinda: |

+ . « conciliation with China,”

phn ——





Many Guianese
‘ind They Are
Not British?

(From Our Own Correspondent)
GEORGETOWN, June 28.

British anma’s Treasury
stand to gain a s. windfall
from Universal Adult Suf-
frage under the new Con-
stitution by way of naturali-
zation fees, according to the
Registration Officer.

The searchlight for the
proposed universal suffrage
has shown that many ‘Brit-
ish Guianese’ are not really
British nationals. This con-
dition is not confined to the
masses, for many persons in

very high places who have
lived in British Guiana 40,
50 or 60 years are not Brit-
ish nationals.

It has been disclosed that
some of them even have the
vote and are elected repre-
sentatives on statutory
bodies. When they signed
voters registration forms or
accepted places on the elec-
toral roll it never occurred
to them that they were
neither British by birth or
naturalization.

Enumerators’ searching
questions under the recent
campaign found the gaps in
their armour. And they have
not been silent about it. The
only remedy which seems
open to them now is to get
naturalized or they wouldn’t
have a vote at the 1953 Gen-
eral Elections. The assur-
ance has however been
given them that they have
time enough to spare to get
themselves in order. As it
is many a Dutch Guiana-
born, China-born, Syria-
born *Guianese’ will have
to take out naturalization
papers if they want the vote.

‘Van Sluytman’
: Wall Be Overhauled

The Schooner Timothy Van
Sluytman, 76 tons, under Captain
Stoll arrived in Carlisle Bay yes-

from British Guiana with
700 bags of coal, 89 tons of fire-
wood, and 12,000 bags of rice.

While the Timothy Van Sluyt-
man was in British Guiana a smal!
fire broke iut in the engine room
where repairs were being carried
out on the auxiliary engines, Be-
fore she leaves the island she will
on dock for a general overhaul.

Timothy Vam Sluytman also
brought six pieces of silver bali

The wood will make spars
for the new fishing boats which



‘ are being erected at the grounds

of the Fisheries Office.

“This is only a very small part
of an outstanding order,” Mr. D.
W. Wiles, Fisheries Officer, told the
Advocate yesterday.

In Touch With Barbados
Coastal Station

f, Gable and Wireless (W.L.) Ltd advi >
nm mow communicate wit
te follawing ships through their Barb:
dos Const Station:—

S.S. Mostank, 8.s. Nordbo, s,s. Eurc
s.s. Gulfbird, s.s. Hopeville, s.s. Shirle
Lykes, s.s. Arneta, s.s. Monmacowl, s
Esso Dublin, s.s. Sun Rover, ss. Uri
guay, 8,5. Federal Voyager, s.s. Colombic,
8.8. Hawk, s.s. Cyrus, 3.8. Aghia Ant
tasia, 3.8. Patuca, s.s."Tacoma Star,
Dodin Marsano, 8.8. British Enterp
6.8 Virgie. 8.8. Loghwood, s.8. Gab-

Themistokles, s.s. ‘Attica, $.«





riano
Ciudad, De Caracas



Racial Discrimination
Alleged In Canada

TORONTO, June.

NEGROES, especially those from the West Indies, are
being denied entry inte Canada b; 4 the Federal Immigra-

tion Department, alleges the Can

National Committee

on Negro Citizenship, in Toronto.

Although under British

law all people from the West

‘acdies are British subjects, they are not considered as such
under the Canadian Immigration Act, aceording to Mr.

Dona!d Mcore, chairman of
Sc eeeneseesenenessetieeneneenticttiecteane eaten

Road Engineers
Needed In B.W.I.

LONDON

Road engineers are still being Wee

the Committee.

Tlis policy is so pronounced, he
declares, that high officials of the
irom votton Department have been
thecking upon immigration in-
spectors to see that West Indians
ace decried omtry into Canada. Since
last Easter, he says, at least 20
InfNans heve been detained

sought in the United Kingdom for »y_ the Departmen’.

appointments in the West Indies.

Mr. Moore said that the Minister







Tt is understood that some difficul- of Immigration, Mr. Walter Har-
ty is being exper eed in finding ‘* told him that it is impossible
saltebsine-amienliaied men who are for Negroes to adapt themselves to
willing to work in the West Indies, Crnedfan life, owing to the change
in climate, The Committee believes
For some time now, there has however, that Negroes are just as
been a vacancy for a resident en- able as whites to withstand the
gineer for the Humming Bir hardships of the Canadian climate.,
Highway in British Honduras. “These acts of limitation are
whidh wil! link Roaring Creek with nothing les than an injustice
Middlesex. Although a salary of up a sainst he C in Negro citizen,
to £2,000 « vear is offered for 2 }j hat he is short-term appointment, the righ* relat ives from abroad,” the Com-
man is still being sought for the mitiee declare
job. it added that British subjects ir
Similar unfilled appointments the West Indies had been able to
exist in Trinidad. The Colonial enter Canada in many cases et

Office in London is searching, for
iwo men to design and supervise

the constructicn cf large road im-

provement acnemies and t
including bridge

new roads,
» Colony

“BOP.





after long and expensive legal 1
BI resentations to the Gov wbeinert
representation cost one mar
than $1,500 before he was
—B.UP

B.G. Medico
At T.B. Talks

LONDON.

Dr. Harold Fernandes, tubercu-
losis officer, British Guiana, is at-
tending the third Commonwealth
Health and Tuberculosis Confer-
ence, which opens in London on
July 8. He will address a meeting
on “Tuberculosis in British Col-
onial Territories.” Also speaking
at the same meeting will be Mr.
Oliver Lyttelton, Secretary of
State for the Colonies, and medical
officers from several other British
Celonies.

Tuberculosis is now a serious

problem in the British Caribbean
colonies and is linked with the
housing shortage. In British Gui-
ana, for example, the incidence of
pulmonary tuberculosis has risen
since 1947 from 53 to 90 per 100,000.
A survey of cases showed that 84
per cent of newly diagnosed suffer-
ers shared a bedroom with one or
more people and 60 per cent shar-
é a bed.—B.U.P.

‘Latest Gadget
In The Jet

“Upside down with nothing on
the clock but the maker’s na:ne,”
—this phrase is rapidly going out
of fashion with jet-age pilots. The
reason is that the latest Royal s
Air Force fighters are fitted with
a gadget which always keeps
something “on the clock.”

When fiyving blind at night or in
bad weather, pilots rely on an in-
strument which shows them how
their aricraft is placed relative to
the horizon. ‘This ‘artificial hor!-
zon’ as it is called, is the most
important clock on the blind fly-
ing panel in the cockpit.

Until recently, this gyroscopic
instrument was worked by an air
suction pump. Even if the pilot
banked or dived, the gyro still
kept its position in relation to tha
horizon. The snag was that, if
manoeuvring for an attack, the

ilot rolled the aircraft on its

ack, or dived steeply, the gyro
toppled, and it took ten minutes
of level flying to get it back in
osition. Another problem was
hat combats in the jet age take
place very high up, where the air
is too thin for an air-driven gyra
to work successfully.

The new Sperry Gyro-Horizon
Mark 3, now fitted to the latest
RAF. jets, is driven by electricity
and the gyro so mounted that a
pilot can roll through 360 degrees
or dive or pull up almost verti-
eally, without upsetting the gyro.
If, by some extraordinary man-
veuvre, the pilot does sueceed in
toppling it, it can be corrected
instantly by a oh a button.

This means the pilot never has
to use up fuel hahgiti about to
act his gyro right, and, if he dives

to cloud, he knows at a glance
which way up he is flying.

Knowing which way up you are,
is not as easy as it sounds, There
is an apocryphal story of an air-
line pilot, flying between two
layers of cloud, who saw three
jet fighters fly past upside down.





YUKON HAS BRIGHT,
EXCITING FUTURE

DEPUTY RESOURCES and Development Minister ;
H. A. Young has forecast a “bright and exciting” future
for the Yukon and Navthwest territories.
said in an interview that great wealth would
come to the two sections of Canada thruogh exploitation
of their rich natural resources, He predicted this would
take place in the not too distant future because “resource
. development is steadily moving north.”

Young

The deputy gave a
broad review of the mineral and
oil prospects of the north coun-
try to back up his prediction of
a spectacular future for the two

areas, ‘

The east and central portions
of the mainland section of the
Northwest Territories, and a
large part of the Arctic Islands,
lie in the Canadian Shield, he
said. Most of this area, like
other parts of the shield, is
es to be highly mineral-
ized.

The Mackenzie River valley
is an extention of the central
plains of Canada. Like the
southern parts of the plains, the
area in the north gives promise
of being rich in oil. In addition,
the Cordillera ranges and their
flats lie in the western area of
the Northwest Territories and
over racst of the Yukon, and
are rich in minerals,

In the Yukon, Young said, the
most famous mineral producers
are the placer gold creeks of
the Klondike which still yield
more than $2,700,000 worth of
gold a year. However, the role
of leading producer now is held
by the United Keno Hill Mines
at Keno and Galena Hills,
which last year produced over
$6,800,000 in silver, lead and
zine.

“A number of other compan-
ies are interested in this area,
and as a result of their activi-
tives together with expanded
production from United Keno
Hill, it looks as if there will be






é Bisasnoes, hie ea a ae . 0 - ;
e. , anton, anton gent ss R ridews $
i Agents: A. S, BRYDEN & CO., Bridgetsver

rtson.



Londen Express Service
Nothnagel, “
tills, C, Robertso:

Economic Development neon
In Colonies Important 20. »

hill, C. Johnson, H
roe Jamaica :—
eant.
—HOPKINSQN vor ania

‘Trinidad :—
Vv. Chase, H. Pilgrin),
LONDON.

Pena, F. Osborne.
re a Pies ea. M
“EXPENDITURE within Colonial development plans |cumberbaten. :
must be related to the long-term needs of each territo
but H.M. Government continues to emphasize to
Colonial Governments the ance of devoting partic-
ular attention to economic development at the present

De Gale, C



Fletcher, R, Eeg-
Rogers, C. Bourne

KEEP

YOUR SYSTEM
CLEAN
this safe way..








L. Pena, M.

Austin, B

RATES OF EXCHANGE








. a . Selling aRD JULY, ise Buying
time,” said Mr. Harry Hopkinson, Minister of State for NEW YORK
the Colonies, in the House of Commons recently. 79 1/10% pr. Cheques on *
He had been asked by Mr, Thomas Reid, Labour, Swin- | eee et hee
don, if “in view of the urgent need for wealth- producing te ison ve. Sane Dette 11 27104 ve
schemes in the Colonies” he would depart from the present !;} gio-. br Currency a 8/10 Pr
practice of spending, under the 10-year development plans, | |. eer. Ree
only about as much on eccnomic development as on social CANADA
services: ean Te: ee 9a oem
. nkers ‘
Reid also asked what ' ee Demand Drafts 76.70% Fr For adults and children
ae tioned i “the Ci outa $ . 5 8 7/10% Pi ae eeete Allenburys Castor Oil is an abso
n sanction in, t oloni N Has q % Pr ; Fane tae Set we
an 2 el 1a 77 2/10% Pr. Currency 5 4/10% Pr lutely safe ernal cleanser. It ta
4.9 sm of oe en the ig wii ..» Coupons 4 ie PY free from odour and any unplea-
mary uc ‘om~ 50% Pr. Silver me FF ‘tains no harsh

a f
sakura PRee

mittee, apart from those under- H
taken by the Colonial Develop-
ment and Overseas Food Corpor-

ations.
Hopkinson rep!

e Uranium
eposits

possibility np ot Nigeria “
beens an important
of Suon'e



atler-effects,

Allenbuory
of yrwity

no injarious . ee
Look for the name eth Rana! trast 2
your guaranice —
Mr. lied: “The
purpose of the Committee was to
review the possibilities of increas-
ing Colonial production in the light
of present and prospective brah
needs. Their reports provided,

‘
} sant taste and cor
| impurities ha










uranium—raw mat
s energy—is revealed by

Teeth 1 Loose

Gums Sore Mouth and



was intendéd, a useful vd ports published im, eoth that you may Cc he oF — i
— against which specific week. They disclose Kere. Zroron ranch moath ‘fit Ba i ay i,
emeés of development could be the largest deposits of uranium Sa later onuse your teeth to ay
planned both by Colonial Govern- ever known has been discovered} may also cause Rheu- @ M i.
ioents and by private enterprise.’ in Nigenia. And ‘with it are large Sak Amosan ike
The Minister added that it deposits of another rare ate ‘ic a
‘was not possible to say which of niobium—much in demand for Gusranse: Be nay an |
the various schemes started since defence and not- your meee vs coop! us AN



yor? money baci









other purposes,
ably for alloys used in jet engines



the Committee reported, resulted rer coety package. Get : Wi
mmittee trom your chemist todey Wak ee/e a
sane m4] F * If the problems of extraction o/ Pramtae protects You “ge proouc
: these two meuls can be overcome
Answering anotner question —and although research work on
about the possibility of the United them is at t being under- Made in England by; ALLEN &@ HANBURYS LTD., LONDON, E.2
Kingdom obtaining apprecialla taken at Bri *"s atomic energy 2

supplies of meat from Colomial slation at ell, Berkshire, ‘ ) —
. Hopkinson

territories, Mir said these problems are admitted to be
RIDE A eeeaene

gat apart from .a little canned —a and
bnef eon Beab Atian and soene im| it of ore,

mutton from the Falkland Islands, commercial value
STURDY, RELIABLE, STRONG.

running
there was no surplus meat avail- many millions of pounds, will be
able from the territories. available, Such high concentra-
“In most territories there is a trations of uranium as has been
large and growing demand for found in Nigeria are very scarce,
meat which is at present unsatis. ond the size of the area coneerned
fied. Imports of carcass meat from may be the world’s largest. News
many pre of Africa would in of the deposits—until now “top
any case possible owing to sécret”—js given in two Te +e
eho vial of fy ecting our own hive- by Dr. R. A. tay and Mr. K. E.
stock with rinderpest.” Beer, Fie svepe is a challenge
Asked about a possible expan~
sion of maize growing in the Col-



onies, Mr. Hopkinson said maize
was almost entirely a peasant
crop and more exacting in its soil

and climatic needs than other
crops. Where conditions were
orn however, cultivation was
eing encouraged, primarily ta
meet loca) needs.

‘Development of a _ suitable
hybrid maize would , inanenes pro-
duction but apart frorn that any
large expansion could only be at
ee expense of other crops,” he
Sal

iehcie elias pacteisidinidiehhip cit tlh pe ae eal
After a moment’s et he con-

& coe., LTD.

20 BROAD ST.
and at MARINE GARDENS








THE BARBADOS FOUNDRY LTD.

White Park Road.
St, Michael



some years it nag been
known that pyrochlore (a minera}
containing uranjum, and niobium)
occurred in some types of




















cluded they were the right way —
up he was upside down—so he their
turned over. he had had an

electric horizon he might have | ‘
lived to tell the tale. granite, con. 1
ta oaie aaa oe oorth (at present
— ie £6 in every ton of}}
extent of the deposit is} {t
caine at 700,000 tons of ore
{valued at £3. 5s. m.

OTTAWA.

extraction could be
experts calculate that a plant
dealing with 3,000 tong of rock a}
day could make available 100 tons|{
of — and san ne of nio-~
hium each year. The deposit lies in
Kano Province in Le
chi

flay trom oa to bara, sn 8
way from Jos » and 60
cae cipiane anne by — from the Jos Plateau where} )}

power plant now built by y is available,
the Northwest T Power Much research hag

Commission on the Mayo River Possible methods of

oépaee tnt a tion at the uranium from sedimentary shales \ E H A E )

y
of the year,” Young said, Ree gree oe. Be tar aa agi) }
Other mineral developments
ed that this mass could not bo
part of the petroleum needs Of ganosit. tialities of the
AT

is kno is more or ii
with goed are being 1c uniforiy distributed
>
undertaken }
exploited, but subsequent rises in
the
ore-dressin
the Mackenzie district, research will solve the problems
“However, the vast wave of of economically ng the

prospects }
in other enens of the ‘hroughout th an
Yukon, i}
i
prices of uranium and niobium t

exploration from Alberta is metals from ores of this sort re-
a

the old dissolving
)
}
ore have to its :
surging northward, and that, let mains to be seen, At present. |

end

aro

Territories
Young said the only oil -—

presently ing in
Yukon is at Norman Wells ‘o
the Mackenzie He

this operation now

particularly on :
Canol Road near the Sen sary to ex it. is likely |}
border.
ane aartoomning, however,
annual output to meet the great COO } ERS
me tell you, is no mere flowery ytate the reports, this %

to be costly and in 1960'It appear-
or ‘be. impoanible to assesg ne
3 & 4 Gallon Sizes



figure of said. uranium occurrence
a tesearch effort no less than that
16,500,000 acres of oil and natu-

given to the low-grade sedimen-
ral gas exploration permits have

tary sources,
been granted or Or Ie Tf the deposits are devel it

may be possible to earn ars
Government Will Acquire

by ‘sales of uranium. Up to now
the main uranium deposits have

Land For New Market

A new Fish Market is to be

been found in the Belgian Congo
erected at Speightstown, For this

ond Canada, both hard currency
ources, ‘o buy uranium from
purpose Government will acquire
under the Land Acquisition Act

these countries has cost gold. Now

there is a chance to act as i
source of supply.

4,306 square feet of land situated

at the junction of Queen Street

and Sand Street



The reports are “The Albite-
Riebeckite Granites of Nigeria”
and “The Petrography of Some of
the Riebeckite~Granjtes oa M-
geria,’



AL ASS







PAGE FOUR

BARBADOS witb ADVOCATE

Bisons [im = eee re

Printed by the Advooate Co., Ltd., Broad 8t., Bridgetown



Friday, July 4, 1952

INCONVENIENCE

THE idea that Barbados is so far behind
the rest of the world that newcomers to
this island jocularly talk of putting the
clock back twenty-five years is widespread
among some English residents who know
remarkably little about village life in Eng-
land.

If a Barbadian said to an English critic
that 4,000 villages in England were with-
out a sewerage system of any kind he
would probably be laughed at for weeks.

But that is exactly what Dr. Garbett,
Archbishop of York said in Blackpool a
few weeks ago. “The nation” said Dr.
Garbett “should see that every village had
a proper water supply. Every house should
have its own bath with a supply of water.
The village pump was no longer sufficient.”

Tf it is true that philosophy is bred of the
knowledge that other people’s misfortunes
are as great or greater than your own, then
the standpipe community of Barbados
should draw comfort from the plight of so
many English village dwellers.

Particularly since they seem to enjoy
greater recreational ‘facilities than many
Englisn dwellers. “It was astonishing”
said Dr. Garbett “how many villages had
no playing field.” And there were still
many villages without the hall which
should be the centre of community life.

Because conditions in English villages
can be so described by a high dignitary of
the Anglican Church in mid-summer 1952
does not mean that conditions in England
are so gloomy that the standards of living
are falling to that piteously low level which
followed the withdrawal of Roman civilisa-
tion from that ancient country. Rather

should the absence of modern conveniences ,

in the villages of the motherland of the
greatest Empire in history be a warning
to those misguided persons who continue
to spread propaganda which blames every-
one but themselves for the conditions of
misery and low living standards still every-
where to be found in Barbados.

Even with thousands of years start over
Barbados, conditions in English villages as
described by’ the Archbishop of York are

so bad that 4,000 of them are without a -

sewerage system of any kind.

Ought we not then in Barbados to take
a longer view and not strain our eyes
myopically looking for the motes of others
during our short history of 325 years, but
broaden our horizon to recognise the sur-
prisingly high standards which this island
has attained over the last effective 100
years, during which the transition from
slavery to free society has been taking
place. If only the broad historical view
instead of the narrow prejudiced and un-
informed view could be taken of social
activities in Barbados the long painful road
ahead to achieve a better society could be
much smoothed over...

It is a great pity that by the time this
lesson has been learnt by visiting critics
their stay in the island has ended and they
have left behind them disciples to spread
their superficial impressions.

Only by building and improving on the
social services which exist will the speed
of Barbadian progress to a better life be
increased.



HIGHWAY GARDENS,

THE Horticultural Society earlier this
year delighted a large number of flower
lovers when they staged a flower and
vegetable exhibition at the Drill Hall.

It is to be hoped that the Society will |

stage another exhibition this year, and that
many more will follow in future years.

But although these activities of the
Horticultural Society are excellent and
worthy of commendation somehow there
seems to be a great gulf between those who
exhibit flowers at the Horticultural
Society’s Exhibition and the tenders of
small flower gardens which surround many
humble homes along the island’s highways.
The small gardener whose love of flowers
results in the beautifying of the island’s
highways is reluctant to join the Horticul-
tural Society even though the modest an-
nual subscription could probably be spared.

The Horticultural Society on the other
hand cannot go into the highways and
canvas membership from the owners of at-
tractive gardens.

How then is the cult of the small high-
way garden to be spread? By the arrang-
ing of competitions. The Barbados Hotel
Association could offer prizes for the best
city street of gardens and the best garden
in the City Street.

This lead on the part of the Barbados
Hotel Association might encourage the
taxi-drivers association to offer similar
prizes for country gardens.

Beauty is a delicate plant and needs en-
couragement if it is to grow to maturity.
Whcther these suggestions are followed or
not, the private gardeners whose labour
enhances ‘the island’s attractions deserve
public thanks and appreciation.

|
|

|



Your London Re

LONDON.

Some of us are never happy.
The City bemoans falling stock
market prices, the great textile
and rayen industries are in the
middle of a severe recession and
commodity speculators have had
their fingers badly burned as a
result of the recent slide in
values.

But the rank and file of us at
home are not too depressed, For
the first time since the war end-
ed, we can go shopping now-
days and feel that prices are
becoming reasonable. And peo-
ple like stockbrokers and shop
assistants are becoming extra
helpful now that business is not
so good.

“Bargains” are appearing i:
all the big stores, and many are
bargains indeed compared with
the prices charged a year ago.

Due to foreign countries re-
stricting their imports, produc-
ers are trying to dispose of
their goods on the home market
as they have little room to store
them. Cottons and _ woollens
have fallen as much as forty per
cent. over the last twelve
months. Some types of carpets
are down by thirty per cent.
Luxury items of all kinds, in-
cluding fancy pieces of ladies’
lingerie, are cut by no less than
fifty per cent. Secondhand
motorcar dealers will hardly
talk terms. With enough un-
saleable cars on their hands al-
ready, they think prices will
slump further. Secondhand fur-
niture dealers say they. find few
buyers. Once again patterned
and. coloured chinaware is ap-
pearing in the shops, and house-
wives, accustomed for years \o
buying plain white china be-
cause the coloured sets were for
export only, can scarcely be-
lieve their eyes. But shopkeep-
ers report that people are in no
hurry to buy.

Are we moving towards a
slump? No, say those who
should know. Included amongst
them is the chairman of the
great Imperial Chemical Indus-
tries combine, Mr, John Rogers,

who asserted recently that he
did not see a general depression
ahead for British industry, The
anxiety about finding raw
materials had changed to
anxiety about finding adequate
markets at home and abroad for
| the country’s industrial output.
| The problem is world-wide, as-
sured Mr. Rogers and “‘it is diffi-
cult to interpret these signs as

te



BARBADOS ADVOCATE

iy
L. Vaughan Jones

foreshadowing a general depres-
sion.”
There is another side, how-

ever, to these falling prices.
Whitehall is concerned at the
lower prices paid in world mar-

kets for the raw materials pro-
duced by the Commonwealth's
millions, whose standards of liv-
ing depend on the value of rub-
ber, lead, zinc, copper, wool,
sisal, jute and the rest,
Questions are being asked in
Parliament about the possibility
of holding another Common-
wealth Conference shortly, and
now it is hoped by many that
such a conference may take place
in London before the end of the
year. Even if the Prime Minis-
ters are unable to attend because
of pressure of business at home,
it is hoped that they will send
representatives. Commonwealth
trade matters would come high
on their agenda, although all out-
standing affairs would be review-
ed, The Commonwealth Finance
Ministers do not meet till next
January, though they would have
oppovtunity for talks when they
gather in Mexico next autumn
for the meeting of the Interna-

tional Bank.
Me a * *

What a joy it is to see repre-
sentatives of the Commonwealth
visiting England, a reminder of
the many races that comprise the
Community. Into the Public
Gallery of the House of Commons
this week stepped eleven mem-
bers of the Nigerian Olympic
team, all wearing their grass
green blazers. They listened at-
tentively to Mr, Oliver Lyttelton
speaking on the Government's
proposals for an African Feder-
ation, and learned firsthand: of
tthe interest that Members take
in Commonwealth affairs.

Also, this week at Lords, tra-
ditional stronghold of the Old
School Tie Brigade, there were
many splashes of colour amongst
the spectators watching the see-
ond Test match against India.
They included the many~shaded
saris worn by Indian women
cricket enthusiasts and the tur-
bans of bearded Sikhs, At Ascot,
too, the bright garments of visit-
ors from Africa and the Orient
vied with the latest creations,
worn by thia season's debutante

And a little highlight was the
news that the Ministry of Fooc

Our Readers Say:

Birth Control
To The Editor, The Advocate—

SIR,—The advocates of Birth
{ Control seem to have pushed it
on the shelf for a more conven=
ient reason, W they will
again take it down and infuse
new life into it. I wish that these
people would stop talking and
get down to the real root of the
trouble. Something can be done
to help these poor unfortunate
people who to my mind are
some of the best people in the
world, but who remind me of
sheep without a shepherd,

No scientific method is going
to be any help, It will be like
beating the air with a stick.
People are not machines, but
human beings, What we want
is a change of heart amongst the
more fortunate people of this
Island, We want to stop passing
the other fellow on the other
side, and to put into practice
what the best man who ever
lived said to the people when
they asked him about the
greatest Commandment, He said
to “Love the Lord thy God with
all thy Soul, mind and heart, and
thy neighbour as thyself.” That
is our trouble. We misinterpret
who is our neighbour, We say,
the man who can invite us to
tea, to play a game of Bridge or
who can stand a round of drinks
—he is our neighbour. The ex-
istence of the social barrier
needs to be removed and all the
snobbery brought to an f
Until this is done, this place is
supposed to become worse.
There must be the necessity to
add to the police force, employ
more police magistrates, and
build more court houses, more
jails, bigger _ and
many more maternity hospitals,
where teen-agers become moth-
ers and everybody make a joke
} of it and say to teach them how

to use con ives, when we
hhave the real remedy and that is
to love them as we love our-
selves, and stop being selfish and
insular, Let us try raising their
social standard, and teach them
how they should conduct their
affairs. They are to
learn, Let every man and
woman realise that he or she
is his or her brother’s keeper,

Let us call upon the church,
which has been asleep for ages,
or to put it stronger, has become
dead to its responsibility, In
the days that are passed the
priest or parson knew each boy
and girl in his district. He
would always drop around and
was highly respected. But con-
ditions have changed, and the
people will only see him if they
go to church or see him passing
in his car, and this time he
hardly speaks, Also let us call
upon the teachers who are part-
ly responsible for the moulding
of the character of the youth,

I suppose this is a modern
age. I must confess that there
are some in our midst who have
made an effort in some small
way to help, for which we shall
always be grateful, but these
good people have not even
touched the fringe. Altogether
T am oenvineed that this Island
can be saved. There is im-
mense room for improvement,
but not by introducing Birth
Control.

Thanking you,
I am,
Respectfully yours,
D’ARCY A. SCOTT.
Middle Street
Ist July, 1952,

Cycling
“3
To The Editor, The Advocate—

SIR,—Further to the article on
cycling in your paper of 29th.
June, I would like to state that
in my original letter 1 did not
set out to discourage the local
racing cyclist, but to point out
that they are quite a lot of peo-
‘ple in Barbados who think they
know all there is to know about
cycle racing, and in fact, they
know nothing at all about the
game.

The points I raised in my
letter were intended for these
people and not for those racing
cyclists who I am sure, are quite
familiar with them.

If the judges and other offic-
ials of the A.A.A.B. knew more
about cycle racing in its various
forms, that bit of trouble would
not have happened in the last
Intercolonial meeting. Grant was
disqualified because these offic-
jals thought that what was done
was dangerous both to other
riders and his own health, In
long massed start races which
are akin to the Barbadian type
of track racing, riders are;
handed up small haversacks con-
‘taining sandwiches ete, Botth
containing cold drinks are als
handed up. The point at whic
these drinks and food are handed’
up, is decided by the individual
wider,

If there is a rule which .states
that nothing is to be handed a
rider during a race, it is about
time that this rule be x
forgotten or removed fro
book.

In France, where cycling is
more or less the national sport,
tthe Tour-de-France is more
highly organised than the Olym-
pics. This race is approximate:y
three thousand miles and covers
a period of twenty one days
riding with three rest days.
This race starts outside Paris,
comes into Paris and then via
Belgium, the north and west
coast of France into Northern
Spain, From here it continues
along the Mediterranean coast,
through the Alps into Italy and
Switzerland and then back to
Paris for the final stage where it
ends in the famous Parc-de-
Princes track. About a hundred
riders usually start, but due to
crashes and various mishaps,
about seventy five per cent of
the riders finish.

I would like to make a cor-
rection in my letter, It was the
Tour-de-France 1951 as the 1952
Tour has not been ridden yet.
It usually starts about the
middle of July and continues in-
to August.

As one who is interested in
cycling in its various forms. I
would like to see more publicity
given to cycling.

NEVILLE E. SMITH

The Government Errs Again
To the Editor, The Advocate;

SIR,—-The Government prom-
‘ised that it would make emigra-
tion one of its priory considera-
tions, Hundreds of unemployed
are awaiting this promise. Has
this promise been forgotten?

A few weeks ago, six hundred
men were wanted for the U.S.A,
(This is a poor fraction of. the
thousands of unemployed) Over
two thousand men were called
up from all parts of the island
paying unnecessary bus fare
and a loss of time to be told
that they are on reserve, These
men: including myself, were
vaccinated and Blood tested.
Such measures should not be
taken if a desirous emigrant is
to be sent home again and again
on fair promises, This is my
second reservation,

A good friend of mine who is

still unemployed was. told by
one of the labour representatives
that he is not a labourer and



has granted a special allowance
of two sheep to Zahur Ahmad
Hajwa,
Mesque, for the Feast of Eid-ul-
Fitr which marks the end of the
Moslem Fast of Ramadan. Sup-
plies of rice haVe also been
guaranteed and 250 of London's
15,000 Moslems will sit down to
a curry lunch in a marquee
erected in the garden adjoining
the Mosque.
* * * A

The headmasters of schools
are well placed to judge the
effects. on children resulting
from the divorce of their
parents. Now the Headmasters’
Conference, which comprises the
heads of two hundred public
schools, have just submitted
‘their evidence to the Royal
Commission on Marriage and
Divorce. They have pronouced
their verdict; in the interests of
the children, they are unreserv-
edly opposed to making divorce
easier,

The subject, complex in the
extreme, is a perpetual case for
debate. Why do a man and a
woman who went happily into
marriage, come to hate the mere
presence of each other? Says one
of the people wh» studies these
things; “How often it is that one
cr other of wi continues 10
look onwards and cannot develop
and be satistied with what he
or she already has?”

= CJ » we a

Visitors from abroad, buying
Coronation souvenirs next year,
are unlikely to be fobbed off with
articles made in Japan. Import
of these will be banned by the
Board of Trade, for British firms
feel that it is their own preroga-
tive to make them,

Cheapest souvenir one firm is
making will cost only a penny.

. * + *

From July 1, we must. pay
more for our telephones, Rental
for a business telephone in Lon-
don goes wp from £8 3s. 4d. to
£11 a year, private telephones
from £5 19s. 7d. to £8. All this is
necessary says the Post Office,
because of rising costs, However,
Government departments do not
have to pay anything for their
calls and nearly one telephone in
five throughout the country is
used by civil ¥ervants, Every
year the Ministers make more
than 20 million trunk calls and
nearly 100 million local calls.

“Are all these calls really
necessary?” asks the British
public.



was asked to leave the park.
May I ask . . . is emigration for
the unemployed or just a certain

e,

v hope the Government will
stop this foolery and do some~
thing to help the suffering
masses. If it is a Labour Gov-
ernment, then help the Labour-
ers, unemployed in general. Re-
member! Elections will come
a ‘

| ROGO

The Teachers

To The Editor, The Advocate—

SIR,—I we I am not poach-
ing on J.E.B.’s Preserves, but
now that the Searchlight is being
focussed on things educational
would you allow me space in
your paper to draw to the atten-
tion of the powers that be an in-
<< being carried out in the
‘lementary teaching service,

It seems to be a closely guard-
ed secret by whom and on what
basis selection for training at
Erdiston is made.

* If the aim of the selectors is
to breed dis-satisfaction and dis-
content in the service, then they
are meeting with a fair measure
of success; if this is not the aim
then all is not well.

Year after year, Junior teach-
ers jin the service are being
Selected for training at the ex-
pense of those who have given
many years of faithful servica
and are now at one or other of
the many bars with which this
service abounds.

Are these injured teachers,
some of whom have been apply-
ing for entry from the opening of
the College, expected to go on
giving faithful and satisfaetory
‘service when in’ year they be-
come the juniors of their juniors.

This is only one of the many
wrongs which afflict Elementary
Edueation in Barbados.

I heartily subseribe to J.E.B.’s
suggestion for an inquiry into
= Educational in Barba-
os,

CURIOUS.
Ground Provisions

To The Editor, The Advocate,—

SIR,—The public welcome the
news that the Agriculture
Society are considering the ques-
Lion of forming a Co-Operative
Society in connection with the
sale _and handling of ground
provisions, as during the past
two years, the public have found
it very difficult to obtain yams,
eddoes_and sweet potatoes in
spite of the Government order-
ing that a certain area of every
plantation and peasant’s . land
shall be planted to produce the
requisite food for the inhabitants.

The Government were w’ | in
making such an erder but they
have failed in three ways, first
they have not seen to i. that the
entire area so to be set
aside has been planted and sec-
ondly they have not provided a
remunerative price to the grow-
ers, thirdly, where the yield
has produced a greater quantity
than was anticipated the grower
has not been allowed to ship the
surplus to the neighbouring
Islands, the .exgess has. been
allowed to remain in the ground
and rot away. This has been dis-
heartening to both planter and
labourer. When we consider that
British Guiana ships us a very
large quantity of rice, we should
be ready to ship to British Gui-
ana and ‘Trinidad a_ certain
amount of our ground provision
which they sadly need,

The public will watch with in-
terest and hope that the Govern-
ment, Landowner and Labour-
ers will co-operate in producing
a full share of ground provision
for the inhabitants of the Island.

Yours,
HOUSEWIFE.

port |

Imam of the London



LISTEN T0 THE ECHO OF
THE GUNS

A Rancher Confesses To Wild
West Hold-up

By R. M. MacCOLL
WASHINGTON.

OUT in Wyoming, life proves stranger
than a film seenario.

For suddenly there sounds a dramatic
echo of the Old West, of bad men, the hoof-
beats of sheriffs’ posses.

Sixty-three-year-old Frank Taylor, a
wealthy rancher in eastern Montana and
known as a model of rectitude, goes to John
Bonner, Governor of Montana, and confesses
that he is really Charles Whitney, former
member of the “Holce-in-the-wall gang”
which held up a bank in Cokeville, Wyom-
ing, in 1911, and then galloped off.



Â¥ * -*

And why did Whitney, alias Taylor, de-
cide to come clean all these years later?

Because only a few months ago his broth-
er, also a member of the gang, died a natural
death in British Columbia. ‘

And while “Frank Taylor” was admittedly
a robber, the brother was “wanted” for the
murder of a train conductor in another

hold-up.
*

Governor Bonner advises Whitney to go

to Wyoming and tell his story to Governor
Frank Barrett. And he sends a personal mes-
sage to his fellow governor asking “the
utmost leniency and clemency for Mr. Whit-
ney, whose residence in this State has never
been marred by even a minor offence.”
. Governor Barrett suggests that he plead
guilty to the 40-year-old crime. A sympathe-
tic judge puts him on five years probation.
And Whitney is free to resume his respected
career as a Montana stockman.

For, in this modern era of million-dollar
hold-ups, it is a reminder of how times have
changed that the loot from that “great”
bank robbery in the distant days of 1911
amounted to just 600 dollars—worth £125
then and £214 now.

Marilyn Monroe is to star in “Niagara.”
Quips Hollywood columnist Hedda Hopper :
“The Niagara Falls will have a strictly sup-
porting role.”’ Marilyn, you will recall, was
one of the hits in “All About Eve.”

Cartel has become a word that makes
many Americans turn pale and shudder. It
conjures up visions of huge business con-
cerns plotting to divide up trade unfairly
and to the detriment of their smaller com-
petitors and the public alike.

Now Senator Thomas Hennings, Missouri
Democrat, formally asks that the Justice
Department and the Senate itself immedi-
ately investigate one of the “greatest cartels
yet.”

He charges that President Truman has
clamped the lid on an “explosive” 900-page
repost submitted to him by the Federal
Trade Commission, which says that Ameri-
can, British, and Dutch interests have ar-
ranged among themselves “to divide the
oil reserves of the Middle East and to fix
prices.”

In Durham, North Carolina, Mrs. Terry
Ewing had come to the end of her slender
resources, spending money on detectives’
fees trying to trace her missing husband.

A friend urged her to watch a boxing
match in Madison Square Garden on TV,
suggesting “it will take your mind off your
troubles.” The TV camera swung into the
audience at one point—and there was the
missing Mr. E. selling soft drinks to_the box-
ing fans.

Mrs. Ewing has asked the police to inves-
tigate, {

In the massive Radio City Music Hall of
New York. “Where’s Charley?” opens this
week, This is the musical version of our old
friend “Charley’s Aunt.” In it, Ray Bolger
|vepeats the inspired performance that made

a smash hit on Broadway a couple of seasons
back.

Shy Millionaire Lavere Redfield, whose
home in Reno, Nevada, was laoted of
£535,000 not long ago, is arrested in Califor-
nia for failing to answer a subpoena direct-
ing him to give evidence against two women
suspects,

He refuses to find the £17,000 bai asked
for—‘although I could raise it in a moment
if I wanted to”—and stays in a San Francisco
jail rather than face the photographers out-
side.

But to-day he grows tired of sharing a cell
with a man accused of receiving sore of the
stolen money, decides to find bail—and faces
the photographers.

Fred Lounsberry, a programme director
for a big broadcasting studio in northern
New York State, contends that musicals
to-day are suffering from “too little fun and
too much art.” He says that the immortal
line: "Id go insane without my cane,” in a
song entitled “My Walking Stick” which
Irving Berlin wrote years ago, epitomises
the “gaiety, goofiness, and abandon which
We are in danger of losing in our musical
theatre.”

Judge George Neilson describes Washing-
ton as “the shoplifter’s paradise.” Shop de-
tectives are at their wits’ ends over the prob-

}lem, and losses run into millions of dollars

‘a year.



~ ®

FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952

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Which have appeared in the

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FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952

BARBADOS . ADVOCATE



PAGE FIVE







. | President Reviews One — Malik Vetoes Investigation
J udgment Awarded to Barrister-at-Law Year’s Work Of Y.W.C.A. Of Germ War Charges
£50 DAMAGES CLAIMED

Milk Depot Being Considered. y)..°° 3 2NS, sere Rea eet :
FOR ALLEGED ASSAULT , yan shea sori

the debate anc would ultimately
Meeting of that Organisation cn the 30th June, the Presi-



@ From page 1.
in combatting any epidemics
North Korea and China and tht



veto the proposal because of the
Council's refusal to invite North
















a bs , {the unified command for Kore; Korea and Red China to ity
MILK PRODUCERS are still awaiiing word from the dent Cvirs. A. A. Gibbons) said : “During the year under} s:eed to co-operate: noting with debate was unmoved and still

Government regarding the alternative proposals submitted by review the work on the Classes of the Association has been | regret that the Chinese Commun- glowering through his horn rim-
BEFORE GIVING JUDGMENT fot Mr. Lorenzo Wil- them in connection with the establishment of a Central Milk re3t itdined and we have every intention of enlarging this |ists and North Korean authorities»mog - glasses) and saying. not 9
lams, M.C.P., Barrister-at-Law, in the Assistant Court of Depot and Creamory. im. the coming year.” ne ‘ ow : oY He a the v sha Wad tal me aa nding

. Se o BS ak ‘ re ? c im Sea SS . : J j er ve entry \<¢ or ealth the vote as taken — sta
Appeal, Original Jurisdiction yesterday, in a case in which These alternative proposals prepared by a committee Vie Report covered a period to the 31st December, 1951,) ganization 1s tate the tere docyn agbingf. the ten saleul
Miss Thez Spencer of Checker Hall, claimed £50 damages comprised of milk producers, were submitted to Government and deelt im the main with the formation of the Association, |: ‘tories controlled by these au- hands of other Council members
from him on the ground that he had assaulted and beaten a few months ago, They are still being studied by Govern- Tue Com » fier extend= ie wile Lime of the Association's; thorities; noting that the govern. who favoured the American pro
her on December 12 last year, His Honour Mr. J. W. B. ment. ing a most al welcome to Work and te remember the Motto| “ent of the Union of Soviet posal. Later Malik broke the
€ y ‘ & i re | Socialist R blics has sile! he intained through
Chenery said that he was not forgetful of the heat and The original proposals which had been prepared and sub- | bids Savoy batrenets, fe- of tie | LOCK. BY COVES o ed Watlons vevoated: charges te’ curfent, debate’ Kaa waenee
excitement of the political battle at the ‘time. mitted to Government by a Committee comprised of Govern- coerced “w.th pleasure” the hoa- ve ONE ag See tater | hat United "Nat or eae alata Oka Tee oaks, ain ae
. . 2 ot hatiSte rad en ‘oncltidirts . Re rtey | the uted Nz ar 3 se t ag

“While I cannot forget that in with him and was with him until ment Agricultural Officers, Milk Producers and members of a wae, an by Tt “4 Sateen thst, tea ittcomeitien tabeas aka yngaging in bacteriological war any new American proposal.
the heat ned excitement of the Well over am hgur afer it had | the House of Assembly, wore roecied by the Milk Producers | {°c ""Huaequartem a ihe Mesure, tn recording that we | of: MOM ANGE ral, feo Tove pom et Ta
political battle a candidate might occurred, And that came in con- as being impractical under the 1951 Co-operative Societies Act pe : Evening have been of cervice in providing |‘ yrsit a Oe oe eee aN us ‘ ae ae : £
do things which he might subse- tradiction of Bishop's testimony Following an intimation from His Excellency the Gov- The President in ier Reoodet sleeping accommodation to vis- — oars “ Siahinn tends th net a uindhe aoa ane
weeny ae rel , in ta heated which itself was regarded as un- ernor, the Milk Producers agreed to draw up alternative pro- paid trik to the Committee itors te the island as well as local) , dan jet aust Wiasees by ite fatter’ eanaaotiat” arte the aie of
i 7“ an from doing, yet relisbles Sees Min posals, and a Committee was set up for the purpose. Who “worked herd te get the Otends,” aud in its reference 10) ternational Commitic. o bacteriological > b
in this case there is nothing to “So if they: dismissed the testi- ; v4 h f the Associatior SE ees es SCL EOS SS oD. ee
suggest that the evidence given mony of Gibbs and Bishop, they The proposals which have been agreed to by a majerity fe jwoe by the defendant is not a true, were left with the evidence of the of the Milk Producers are for the Government to finance the d nha ge Saath teed eaten on a Recel re und Dis- he: lens of Bowie. Beciaits) Ro. She) See ae ee
honest and straight-forward ac- plaintiff and the defendant, The establishment of the Central Depot and Creamery. Beran rage) ol ae fae Si Pret h ay ‘ Be 2's | sublics and that by reason of the of Korea and the Chinese Peoples
count of what actually took place,” case stood or fell by the degree Replying to ¢ ation. by the Hi Mr. V.C. Gale in t tion. Mrs. Greaves held a Cake bursements to the 31st cem-| sogative vote cf the Union of government can be debated let
His Honour said, " 6f credibility which the court felt Replying to a question by the Hon. Mr. V. C, Gale in the Sale’ whieh wet also 4 success, ber show a credit balance of| Soviet Socialist Republics the < adopted in the absence of
The case had been heard ata ir could attach’ to the witnesses Legislative Council a few weel:s ago, the Hon. the Colonial ani ex s the Association's $1,867.03, | seourity Council is prevented official representatives of both
previous date and yesterday the always remembering that the Secretary said that the cost of the scheme had now risen to praticnd the Public for Dona- | The President finally appealed | ‘rom arranging for such impartial parties. This has been the posi-
decision was given cnus still rest on the plaintiff, | $80,000 instead of $60,000 as was estimated, and the imple- ions which amounted to $1,459.69, to members: to pay attention te | uvestigation; condemns the prac- tion of the Soviet delegation in

Mr. Williams was represented
by Mr, E. W. Barrow. Counsel for
Miss Spencer was Mr. G- B. Niles.

Evidence Reviewed

Reviewing. the ¢€vidence, His
Honour said that Miss Spencer
had said that about 9 to 9.30 p.m,
on the night which the alleged
offence occurred, she was at
Checker Hall corner where, a
political meeting was to be staged
by what she celled the Conserva-
live Party, and subsequently loud
speakers making what she termed
Labour noise drove up,

Soon after she said Mr. Wil-
liams came up in a car, got out of
it and held her by the shoulder.
She tugged away and he cuffed
her on her mouth and told her
to keep out of his business. She
was cut on the lefi side of her
mouth.

At the time, she added, she had
taken up two stones, but had been
persuaded not to use them.

In support of her testimcey,
His Honour said, sbe brougat
James Gibbs and Jason Bishop,
but the testimonies of these wit<
nesses were so manifestly full of
contradiction, both inher:nt
end contradiction to the plaintiff's
own testimony, that no court
could place any reliance on evi-
dence so obviously contorted.

“But that does not prevent tlhe
Court from still endeavouring to
see if in the plaintiff’s version
there is any residuum of credibility
which would agsist it in weighing
the evidence she has given.”

Discussion Aside

He said that Mr. Williams Kac
given evidence himself and had
said that on the night in question
when he got out of the car, he
had gone up to the plaintiff and
told her to go aside that he wantea
to discuss something with her.
They moved away a few i#et
from the car and after referring
her to the allegations he heard
she had made about him and his
family, he told her that while it
was ademocratic country, she stil
could not do as she liked and,
should endeavour to keep th:
elections clean,

Soon after, Mr. Williams had
said, he heard her screaming
that he had struck her in her
face and went to pick up two
stones-

He called to support him a wit-
ness, Jackman, whose evidence
was chiefly valuable for the light
it threw on the testimony of Jason
Bishop who Jackman claimed
was at the time of the incid.n:

‘While I cannot forget that in
the heat and excitement of ihe
political battle a candidate might
do things which he might subse-
quently regret or in less heated
moments refrain from doing, yet
in this case there is nothing to
suggest that the evidence given
by the defendant himself is not a
true, honest and straight-forward
account of what actually took
place.

And I do not find that in this
case there is any evidence sto
warrant the conclusion that he
did in this particular matter in-
@uige in the conduct reputed ts
him by the plaintiff. Taking that
view of the case, I find that the}
plaintiff has not established the
case and judgment is given to the
defendant.

40'- FINES FOR



FAULTY WEIGHTS

IMPGSED.

Two cases of faulty weights
went before His Worship Mr.
H. A, Talma yesterday and in
each case a fine of 40/- to be paid
in 14 days or by execution, were
imposed,

The first was against Ince & Co.
Ltd., of Roebuck Street. They
were found guilty of having five
four-pound weights defective on
April 10, One was 12 drams light,
one’10, one 13, one 14 and the
other 4. They also had one defec-
tivé pint pot,

The other was against Harold
Proverbs & Co., of High Street
who were also found guilty of not
having scale and weights equal to
standard. A scale poise was one
ounce light and three two-pound
weights were each three drams
light.

Seibert Forester of the Pine
Housing Scheme was yesterday
fined 15/- to be paid in 14 days
or a month’s imprisonment by
His Worship Mr. H, A, Talma
when he was found guilty of
gambling at the Housing Scheme
on May 4,

A Fine of 30/- to be paid in 14
days or in default one month’s
imprisonment, was yesterday im-
posed on Darnell Yearwood, a
conductor of Branchbury, St.
Joseph, by the same Magistrate,
when he was found guilty af over-
loading the bus G—94 which he
was conducting while going along
Neils Road on May 7.



Negligence Of Driver Not Proved

Because Kenneth Best of Round
The Town, St. Peter, failed to
prove that Arlington Savoury, a
driver of Peterkins Land, was
negligent while driving the car
M—382 along Garden Road, St.
James on December 26 last year,
His Honour of the Assistant Court
of Appeal, Original Jurisdiction,
Mr. J. W. B. Chenery, yesterday
gave judgment for Savoury and
Louisa A. Stuart, of Black Rock,
the owner of the car, from whom
Best claimed $240 damages.

Best claimed that Savoury neg-
ligently, recklessly and unalcilfully
managed and drove the car with
the result that a collision occurred
with his car E—192, and in respect
of the damage, he suffered in-
convenience and discomfiture,

The case had previously been
heard and yesterday the decision

was given. Mr. E. W. Barrow,
instructed by Mr. D. Lee Sargeant
appeared for the defendants.

In this case, evidence was given
by the plaintiff himself, the Judge
remarked, evidence that neither of
the vehicles were going fast and
both had on their lights, and all
the plaintiff could say was that
the accident did occur.

A Wet Day

But the evidence of the police
who took measurements was that
it was a very wet day, the roads
were full of water and some had
spilled over into the gutters, obvi-
ously making it difficult to distin-
guish the surface of the road.

“In cases of collision, the maxim
res ipsa loquitur does not apply,”
His Honour said. “If it did apply,
the plaintiff undoubtedly would

mentation of the alternative plans would cost Government
$50,000 more than they originally planned

He however assured the Hon, Mr. Gale that the scheme
had not been forgotten, but was among a list of other matters

for serious consideration,



Ifill Is Best
Athlete In
Aruba Sports

Mr. Osbert Ifill, a member of
the Barbados Battalion, South
Caribbean Force, during World
War II, was recently awarded the
trophy for the most outstanding
athlete in the 12th annual Queen’s
Birthday Olympiad held at the
Lago Sports Park, Aruba. He was
presented with the award by Mr.
O. S. Mingus, Lago General Man-
ager.

Mr. Ifill was selected the most
outstanding athlete of the Olym-

ad when in the five events in

hich ‘he competed, he carried
off three firsts, placed second in
another and third in the other.

He won the 100 yards flat race,
the 220, and was a member of tha
team which won the 440 yards
relay race. He was placed second
in the 440 yards flat and third in

the long jump.

Mr. Ifill, during his service with
the Barbados Battalion, took part
in all forms of sports, including
football and athletics at which he
was outstanding. He also played
at centre forward for Everton.
He is now engaged with the
Lago Oil and Transport Company
of Aruba in thelr Electrical
Department.



Hutson Howard of Stuart Hill,
St. John, another conductor, was
also fined for overloading. He was
fined 20/- to be paid in 14 days or
in default. a month’s imprison-
ment. The offence was committed
on May 10 while he was conduct-
ing the 'bus J—129 which was
being driven along Roebuck
Street..

Neville Larrier, a driver of St.
Martins, St. Philip, was also fined
20/- by the same Police Magis-
trate. He was found guilty of
failing to draw up as close ag
possible to the side of Bay Street
on May 16 so as to allow a clear
roadway for passing traffic.



have proved his case, It would
have been sufficient to say that
the accident occurred and the
damage, and leave it to the defen-
dant to disprove the case,

“But unfortunately for the
plaintiff, negligence in matters of
this king has to be positively
proved and while you always feel
sympathy for a man who through
no fault of his suffered damages,
yet in this particular case, it is
obvious that under the circum~
stances, the occasion of the over-
flowing of the gutters by the
‘water at this stage made it diffi-
cult, if not impossible for the
parties to distinguish the sides of
the road.

Negligence
“T am unable to find from the
evidence of the plaintiff, any real







FINE CRETONNES

GIVE YOUR ROOMS
A BRIGHT ACCENT





Inspection Parade
To Be Held On
July 12

Brigadier A, C. F,. Jackson,
Commander of the Caribbean Area
Fo.ces, is due to arrive in Barba-
dos shortly on a tour of inspection
of the troops in the island,

An Inspection Pa.ade of the
combined troops will be held on
Saturday July 12 at 5 p.m. The
rehearsal for this Parade will take
place at the Garrison on Thursday
July 10, at 5 p.m,

Delegates To Be Named
For Fats And Oils Talks

Barbados and Antigua remain
the only two territores to name
their delegates and advisers to the
Regional Oils and Fa.s Conference
which opens at Hastings House on
Tuesday, 8th July. It is expected
that these two colonies will name
their delegates in a day or two,

The Conference is to decide
whether the five year agreement
cue to expire at the end of August
should be continued, and if so, for
what period and on what terms.



Dangerous Buoy

The Harbour Master yester-
day received a telegram from
the Harbour Master of Trini-
dad notifying him about the
mooring of an unlighted buoy
which could bo dangerous to
ships in the area.

The message read: ‘“Vessols
within the Gulf of Paria are
notified that «an unlighted
yellow and white buoy filled
with a square shaped radar re-
flector, topmark spar and yel-
low and black stripes, has been
moored in latitude 10 degrees,
30 minutes north, longitude
$1 degrees, 51 minutes, 25 sec-
onds west within the bombing

and strafing range sign, '

Ships are asked to be on the
look-out.





proof of negligence on the part
of the defendant. Because, toc, as
he admits, the defendant was do-
ing about 15 miles an hour, the
same as he was doing and there
was nothing to suggest that he
had failed in normal care,

“We are only left with the fact
of the accident and the mere fact
of an accident is not enough to
enable the Court to say the plain-
tiff has discharged the burden cast
upon him.

“In view of the evidence as a
whole, I am bound to come to the
conclusion that the plaintiff has
tailed in the duty placed upon
him to prove negligence on thd
part of the defendant and the
accident was really due to ex-
traneous circumstances,”

Best gave notice of appeal.

OP EPE@DOVOO OOD



Piree Gabrics

for those















Vestry of St. Michael
1 Geant of £80.00, She. als

that “the members of «he
organised a Fair and made
$149.09 which wos put towards
a Frigidaire.”

Nominal Rent




to the

See expressea tie thanks of
the A®socl.uon to & yenueman
(who preicrs OO remain anony-
mous) tor (he use of their bund-

dig, we UW UVlaLlagtd Peat, aud oO Lie
Muicciis OL the YMCA, and
Captain H. ti. Williams for the

Joan of furniture witnout which
Mey could not aave opened the
ay”.

The President recalled the
visit paid to the “Y¥” by Miss
Ele.uoy French, an Executive
Director on the Siaff of the
World's ¥.W.C.A, Headquar-
ters in Geneva, and said “we
are grateful to her for all the
assistance and advice given at
ss time when it was most need-
Her Report showed that the

mambership of the “Y” is 145
jnctuding 18 Full members, and
in connection with the Organised
Glasses sponsored by the Asso-
ciation, states that “during the
year under review the work on
the classes has been maintained
and we have every intention of

enle-ging this in the coming
year. Handwork, Cooking and
Accessories Classes are held

every week. ‘In this connection,”
the report states, “thanks must
be given to Mrs. H. A. Vaughan,
Mrs. C. P. Stoute, Mrs. H. Griffith
and Mrs.» N. Layne, who took
the various classes.” The Report
adds “We would
more ladies would offer to teach.”

Cafeteria

The Report deals” briefly witn
the varied activities of the “Y”,
and in connection with the work-
ing of the Cateteria, the Presi-
ache" pays tribute (~o the Mutron
“on the manner in which she
manages the Cafeteria with the
help of a member of the Com-

mittee. |

Reporting on the Library, she |
stated “the Committee and Mem-
bers of the Y.W.C.A. are grate-
fu) to all those donors who sent
us literature during the past
year,” and added. “book cases |
re being built and we will be|

‘able to set up+a proper library in
-VIthe near future,”

|

|
|
| BILE BEANS |
|

The to

members

Committee
to

appealed
take advantage of



keep him
YOUTHFUL
FIT and

HAPPY
—full of vigour



Bile Beans will
also make you
vital, ae : 4 fal
energy, and successful.
You will not have indigestion, head-
aches or be constipated, liverish
or tired if you take Bile Beans.

BE SURE TO GET THESE MEDICALLY
TESTED AND APPROVED BILE BEANS



appreciate if)

their subscriptions ag ‘most of th:
money has to be spent on. furni
ture so that the Y.W.C.A. car
be improved and made mor
ottractive.



SUGAR LOADED
INTO “GEIRULO”

There was much activity on the
waterfront yesterday as labourers
lifted and tessed bacs of sugar
into lighters, These bags of sugar
were being taken to the Norwegian
Steamship Geirulo, 5,161 tons,
which o@me into Carlisle Bay on
June 30 from Trinidad.

The Geirulo is now being loaded
with 50,000 bags of sugar and 9f
puncheons of molasses which she
will take to Montreal, Canada. Shc
is expected to leave on Saturday.



“Daerwood's” Engines
Now Being Checked

There are four motor vessels now
anchored in the Careenage. These
are the Caribbee, Willemstad, Blue
Star and Daerwood. Both the Car-
ibbee and Willemstad have jus!
come off the dock from a genera)
overhaul,

The Daerwood which arrived ii
Carlisle Bay on June 26 is now
having its engines checked but she
is not going on the dock, She is
expected to leave on July 8.
































WHEN THE

GER~ FIRE
dyer rouf



\

UNGUENTINE
QUICK

A MODERN ANTISEPTIC
TURES or JARS

WANTED.

OLD GOLD
AND SILVER
— JEWELRY

OR IN PIECES IN
SCRAP FORM

The very highest
market prices paid

at your Jewellers...

WY. De LIMA

& CO., LTD.

20 BROAD ST.
Phone ; 4644









ice of fabricating and dissemin-

ting such false charges which
nereases the tension among
‘ations and which is designed

» undermine the efforts of the
'nited Nations to combat aggres-
on in Korea and the support of
he people of the world for these
Torts.”

, Britain’s

St Gladwyn Jebb,
‘oneluding the debate on the
\merican proposal, appealed to
Jialik to abstain in the yote

eather than using the veto to pr.

oke a grave situation.
Malik who declared earlier this

week he would not participate in

DRINK & ENJOY









the past, this is its position at pres—
ent and it wfll be its position in
the future."—U.P



LOG ADRIFT

A log has been sighted
drifting at latitude 10.12 de-
grees north and longtitude
54.15 degrees west. Ships are
asked to be on the look-out
for this log which could be
dangerous to navigation.

This message was received
by the Harbour Master.





COOLING &
REFRESHING

2ée. TIN

VALOR COOKER STOVES

Short Burners

2 Burner Model
3 Burner Model

Also

$50.14
$71.87

WHITE PORVELAIN ENAMEL SINKS
With Double Drainboard @ $65.64
complete with waste and overflow

“stablished
1860

i

al

T. HERBERT, Ltd
19 & 11 Roebuck Street

Incerporated
1926

TO-DAY'S
SPECIAL !

COCOANUT
CREAMS



ON SALE AT BOTH PHOENIX & CITY

dODLNS 94949499990

Looder Sed 08e >
‘







a a ea an
——
de HS PHOSIOSH OHSS $0990











i PHARMACY SODA FOUNTAINS |
CRETONNES
8 ins wide @ $2.27, $2.25, $1.80, .
ee poe SALE! SALE!
36 ins. wide @ $1.42 yard oumeerels
27 ins. wide @ 88c. yard i AT THE ,
ados Stripe Biylon :
PRINTED PLASTIC ;
. 86 ins. wide @ 94c., $1.00, $1.23 yd. in ees eee oe ee ee VARIETY SANDAL SHOPPE |
: : «Petronelia”™ : age
sa en so : » This is, a wate servicesttD of am gr ero easy
e—36 ins. wi @ $2.25 yax 4 materia], and is available in lovely . | vhs om,
ares ea ee O35 ye ¢ setae Gh piss seunee? x CLEARING OUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF
PRINTED TABLE CLOTHS | $ as . gel tage Seer $ SANDAL Ss
a ) ¢ oe > 1 ink, * yer, shampa * ru; . I Ph
& x yo @ pases: $8.10 cach Leon, "Gold toe’ Bios stocamaies’ @ BALLERENOS
@ sueeeeee $1.77 each | Rose, Lilac, Bois de Rose and White @ PUMPS 5
— at $2.76 > @ SNEAKERS
| @ GENTS’ SHOES &
oe @ CHILDREN’S SHOES
. 6 @ ETC., ETC.
CAVE SHEPHERD & €0., LTD.

HARRISONS

BROAD STREET—DIAL 2664



Hurry for these Bargains while they last!

ti
10, |
BUY NOW AND SAVE $$ |







12 &'13 Broad St. |







———— ee ieee

ans a onaeat
POTVOCODDVODVE

DOO 04 COOOD



BLVAV_PVEROOOO COO OCOOYG BOS VOW OO 8OOO GOH YHEY

¢ i ;



















PAGE SIX BARBADOS ADVOCATE

eee A NC

st ASSIFIED A S |ANN@UNCEMENTS! PUHLEIC SALES ~~:
a : CHANCERY SALE
EARN BIG MONEY by selling Redit- REAL EST.

anata TELEPHONE 2508 2508 onesie sete susion in. your spawe.time. Gat & supply oie ‘ATE The undermentioned property will be set up for sale at the Registration Office,
z oF of forms today 1.7,59—€n. APPLEBY og Sea, St. J a Public Buildi 5 emserree. mraee ¥ oo —? p.m, for the a. and om
, ch ee ee ee ee 7 “houses” Esch met: ,TWO | the date speci below. not then sold, it will set up on each succeeding
DIED | FOR SALE * ate one ‘aoaen tt = Priday at the same place and during the same hours until sold. Full particulera

FOR RENT verandah. Modern conveniences. on apptisation to me.

RAWDANS—On the 2nd July 1992 Elaine} ~~~ ~~












FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952

GOVERNMENT NOTICE





' NOTICE TO OWNERS AND CREWS OF FISHING BOATS
The attention of all owners and crews of fishing boats is drawn

- a DAISY HERBERT MURPHY and JAMES GRANT ATKINS PiLE—Plaintiffs to Sub-Sections (2) and (3) of Section 18, of the Harbour and Ship~
ATHLONE~on sea, Fontabelle. Divided decease
Meet. “Kirpslent, ‘Swan Sty. The AUTOMOTIVE HOUSES into to flats. Each has dining, drawing ee te are ee ene ping Master Act, 1909—7, which provide as follows:— ,
Raed, St) Michael sts oclock tht Aaaane mamnda that coon aoe tek: lenses, "Phone ata = the” ean MEAAGEME WALTER sad AURBLIA CLARKB-Detendents (2) It shall be the duty of the owner of a fouing boat to see
ichael at 4 0o'¢ is ve : :
evening for Saint Martins Church} CAR—(1) Austin 7 H.P. in First Class | tings," omenttiy furnished, English | =4tfora: 27 acting hetein by BrAsey Aumustus Seat thes fonstituted Attorney hel that his boat is not made oars any part of the wharves,
St, Philip. Friends are invited. oe ae Overhauled. and ¢@- | Bath, Open Verandah facing sea. Suitable ee ee ee —— oe Saint A@chael in this fxiend peedh, a P by or bridges, or anchored in Careenage except when
Cesare wine (mother), Seon | Peinted. 2838. 3.7.53—4n. one person (or couple) . zm sale i BUNGALOW - Modern Bungalow admeasurement nine and thiee fifths perches or thereabouts abutting actually engaged in landing fish, or when on account of
N.Y. & Tdad. Papers Copy. CAR—Morris Oxford. im good condi. | 7%¢Phone a -6.59—4.2.0. |g on almost % acre land. Well-



























































































































































































----- and bounding on two sides on lands of Albertha Payne on lands misst is atvon, he Hart i
4.7.52—1n | tion. Phone 2582 2.7.52—3n. From ist August, furnished or unfur- Sunteond 02, at "Sikes oat ee een pang SM — oe eg ome ca bonsetna Tether with Ginasn See ae * =
ee - anon ane, 4| fished, “INGRID” Navy Gardens. Three 4 ow he ' “ a r
ts tood ‘condition "An "it. “tewis, cvs | bedrooms, | Mapection, ‘by arrangement |"Gainta Mia’? Fitts Village, 3: Somer all and singular other the buildings and erections on the said. parcel (3) For any breach of this Section the owner of a fishing boat
a ni . . pwis ¢ . . . , -
IN MEMORIAM Cave, Shepherd & Co., Ltd ean on am EVELYN ‘Sonte wee Lip. | Between 4 p.m. and 6 p.ni. +.o-tn of land erected and built standing and being with the appurtenances. shall be personally liable to a fine not exceeding five pounds
-1.52—6n. Rickett St. . .
Siti | ak Gaeta eae 1,9.88—+.0.0. | ODM ee een aanmmmnccmmnenin Denier pean, estan €. 6. | to be recovered in a summary way before a Police Magis-
ALLEYNE—In loving memory of our} CAR—Citroen Light 15 H.P. Fitted —— |situated at Hillewick Village St coe ; trate
gone beloved husband and father} Twin Carburettors. 1951 Modei. 12,000} OFFICE SPACE in building at Spry |2e x 20 x 9 with a gallery ‘and kitchen | PATE OF SALE: 18th July, 1952. a 4.7.52.—2n.
age os 4 ateme, —_ wes laid to rest —- In excellent condition. Owner/ street near Trafalgar St. Apply Auto| sttached will be exposed for sale by the aie in es —_——
ww x + 4 p .
Wicy de We mioura depetting fristids uying larger car. Cele & Pe tee Tyre Co, 2696. 27,6.52—t.f.n. de nae on the i4th day 3th June, 1952.) -
Or shake at deaths alarms “GAN TOUUNT Denne aan, | SEA, BEAUTY cAmwactivd @ Redeem |" (UN: Mt Le pm 2.7.62—4n | {9SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSOSOSE, .
Tis but the voice that Jesus sends CAR—Dodge Super-Deluxe, First Class| Bungalow on St. James Coast. All * 4.7528 W AT Cc H E S
To call them to His arms. ‘ondition and Owner-driven. 000 | modern conveniences. Apply to Mrs. A. ts LODGE STONE WORKS co.
Ever to be remembered by Fredrica] 5ial 4476. 12,6.52--t.f.n. | Bovell, Fitts Village, St. James. LAND—86,750 fi fo.
Alleyne (wile), Darnley, Osman, Eitiott |S “TS. ___ a t.tm-te | sitente at teettions al, delta Sie amt! SHIPPING NOTI & A, iaee quantity of GOLD, STEEL or
(sons) va, ra, i iv nh M ROY ~~ d : 4 ane machine broken flint stone,
daughters) “Giadstone Griffith (son-in-| in 5 HP. Motorencle ie perlect sorts | Enclosed with stone wall on 3 sides. S CHROMIUM
lew) Colvin, Qynthia | .g order X—315 License paid. Apply ; toa SS me pienr, Woe % all sizes, suitable for Road or
(Grands), Mary Perry’ (sister) ewis “Alma”, near Pegwell, Ch. Ch. WANTED tte ta the wee or in 4 lots. En- ROYAL NETHERLANDS % Yard Construction and/or Models for ladies or genta
4.7.52—In. | “None g2a5. 3.7.52—3n nope nae CARRINGTON & SEALY, The M/V. “CARIBBEE” will $ $ making concrete blocks, or ;
DeFREITAS—in_ loving memory of w ONE (i) Austin two ton truck and one aoeee Lucas Street. STEAMSHIP CO. geoept Cargo and Passengers for % Qmy other concrete struc- 5 FULLY GUARANTEED !
darling wife Elaine DeFrettas who dv | 1) Austin “Ado Cac. Telechone aga, HELP 154m, Dominica, Antigua, | Montserrat, tures. The Co. also under- °
parted this Ife on 4th of July 106 |)’ y "Scott & Co. Ltd. — a Se ee SAILING FROM EUROPE Nevis and St. Kitts, Sailing take the construction of 15 & 17 Jewels
As in God's beautiful garden | * ** t %.6.52—t.f.n, | _GARDENER—For residence in Marine |, The undersigned will offer for sale at} m@.S. STENTOR 2ith JUNE 1982. day 7th inst. “ Roads and Yards b:
Free from all sorrow and pain Gardens, Apply: J. A. MARSON & SON thelr office No. 17, High Street, Bridge- |S. HESTIA 4th July 1962. The M/V. “MONEKA” will | % . = A wonderful new range on
Some day when lifes journey is endec | “TRYCK—One Ford V-8 S-Ton Truck, | LTD. 4.7.52—8n, | town, on Friday, the 1th day of Jukv]$.S. COTTICA Lith July, 1952, accept Carzo and Passengers for g tract,. or supervision,
T hope we thall meet you again. 10 h.p. Lister Gasoline/Keroséne 1982 at 2 p.m. M.S. NESTOR 25th July, 1952 Dominica, Antigua, Monteersts. R Dial 2656 show at outstanding prices
William DeFreitas (husband), May White 8 vine? phone 4958 4.7.83—4n.| _ssvase — luxperienced Nurse, Must |, THE DWELLING-HOUSE known a@)M_S. BOSKOOP Ist August, 1952. Nevis and St. Kitts. Sailing 5 KEITH RAYSIDE
(mother), John (son), Richard inephew?. ¢ — ce si .| Sleep in. Good pay to the right perspa. |““Glenflora” standing on 1 acre 2 roods SAILING TO E PE day 11th inst. Xe
4.7.62—-1n | “pRUCK—Chevrolet. truck. no m-| Apply betycon the hours 48 p.m. At|%3¥s, perches of land on the main road | 1s. ORANJESTAD 18th July, 1952, The M/V. “CACIQUE
SO nn a, } able offer refused A Rscnes 2 'Gay | °St. Winifred,” Maxwell Const, Road, | ®t White Mall, Saint Michael, Electsia | “isi one TO T'DAD, PARAMARIBO CARIBE” will accept Cargo and. kee :
MOE—In loving memory of our dear td . 3.7.88—t.o.n.}Ch. Ch 4.7.52—gn. | Light and water, @ BRITISH A Passengers for 8t. Lucia, CIVSSSOS
mother Martha Loulse Moe who de- | “"¢- x ells een tens i ieceretatieetersitniniemmniaermn Ins) ion any day on application tofM.s. STENTOR 13th July, 1952. Vincent, Grenada and Aruba, = =>
parted this life on July 4th 1950. “National Cash Book-Keeping Machine Me nae pitas on oe Co erro a S.S. COTTICA 28th July,” 1952 Date of sailing to be notified.
Pond in the link whieh is broken Operator with previous experience. To | | pad f - o an cameos M.S. NESTOR sth August, 1962.
Dear to the one who is ELECTRICAL assume duties on or before Ist. August, {Of sale apply to:— $4 SAILING TO TRINIDAD & CURACAO B.W.l, SCHOONER OWNERS
In mem.ory-we will never forget he: 1952, Apply in person with written | & CO. 1-58—8n | iis, 4th July, 1052. ASSOCIATION (INC.)
As long as the years roll on. application to Secretary, Dowding Estates | == meme eae toe oale at (CURACAO ONLY) Consignee, Tele. No, 4047
Ever to, bo temembered by the Moe] MAIR CLIPPERS — Horstman Electric|& Trading Co., Limited.” Punto oe ign fale at (M.S. HESTIA 2ist July, 1952. )
family. 4.7.08—nt iiair Clippers suitable for Barbers at 2.%.62—In. | Public cities at their Clee Hovt' sp MUMSEN, HORA Co., LTO. }
41.16 emeh. See them on display at our 17 High Street, Fridectonn. sp Friday, Agents } Today at your jewellers ...
Rooms. The Standard Agency| SURVEYOR-ENGINEER would ike to} the Sor of July, 1983 oS
PERSO@NAL s'dos) Co., 14 Swan Street 46s ge [Set iE touch with emtate or building eae ine i ago inicitn te a0 6 ‘ VELVET EVENING BAGS {i W De LI
.7,.82—3n. | development eompany rous 8 a Speciality MA
a nnn nnn fcervice. Holds diploma & licence with|measurement 8241 sq. ft, si = Canadian N. t nal St amshi “ °
sth tec nimretlisantee metric ———~ |_ ELECTRIC CARPET SWEEPER, Hand} scveral years’ experience. Write L.cC.J,|Navy Gardens, Christ Chure * sie a 10 € 8 SOUVENIKS j
The public are hereby warned agains: | carpet sweeper, Phone 2898, 4.7.52—In | C/o Advouate. 2.7.62—4n. |eontaining an open verandah facing FROM INDIA, CHINA & & CO., LTD.
Smee ait, se teeta! | “Gemmemoee eee Sy meat cee Sieh CEYLON he
Armstrong (nee Hail) as io not ho G » 8% K.V.A. D.C. : ,
myself responsible for her or anyon | jenerator 1,lu Volts & One § KWAN. MISCELLANEOUS and kitchen with garage and rooms for a Mentreslliaiifax Boston ‘S'des, Brdes ’ 20 BROAD ST.. and at
else contracting ny debt or debts i ».C. Generator 1.15 Volts. Phone 4385. : two servants and with electricity in- CANADIAN 7 > 9 July 9 July MARINE GARDENS
my name unless by a written onde 4.7,52—3n | BNGINE—Wanted by B’dos Brewery | stalled. Inspection dial 4460. For CANAD OR 30 June 5 July ir 14 July 14 July
signed by me. — ——————-_ | CE, Hid, 10 H. P. Dies Engine. Paqne Hamner and conditions of | TA Dy RODNEY it Suky duly wduly ae saly” as dais SHOPPING CENTRE
Sad. LISLE ARMSTRONC Just received new shipment of Garrard | 468. 3.7.52-50 | sale to:—, Oh Peco Pr. Wm Hy S&S Pine tae
Western, three speed Automatic Changers at 7 a CATFORD & CO. 20.6.52—8n
Bt. he yO >. C. 8. Maffei & Co, Ltd. Radio Em- ba Pentenrtotcttone me ee ee O—_—_—_—_——— | -
ote 1 4 ?; omMm .
eit ees denise 15,6.62—t.£.n, REDIFFUSION in one month. ‘e AUCTION NORTHROUND Arctves Geils foie —- = sean
The public are hereby warned again JUST ARRIVED “Fye’ De Luxe TBAT, | norman a B St. John Bdos stom Mfax nireal
ivi credit to my wife Marueri: trae! a ; Sap | ee By kind 5 will sell gt mn. M L ee
claves Giitens (nee Wilson) 98 T don: ed Mauaed thant) ne Bae Heel TEDHFUSION “offers “$1.00 “cash, ior | at, Melineargey ‘* " LADY NELSON 4 July 8 July 17 July 19 July 22 July V «Wi LEMSTAD
hold myself responsible for or any orries, ‘active w. each new er rec en . S.A. Seater IAN
opie. ise contracting any dé@bt or doh wbineth ¥ firndted a MUEnty oniy yeu, 1.7,68—6n. fin works oe eer Tenos Cah. we So eee 24 July 29 July S Aug. 96 Aug. 10 Aug
Sioned by men oe DY & Weitten order Pcg9.00. B.C. 8) MAFFEL & CO., LTD., SUPPLEMENT YOUR INCOME by e63 AIO, 1.3-an. | SAPY Cen ee eee ee ee R SALE
signed by me. er: Wm. Henry street. minending MADIF PSION —
een Gait in ; © 28.6,82—t..0, fale eanueee from the y ION | By instructions of the Insurance Com-| Bor gurther particulars apply to—
Christ Churen, (OS— 8 tube Tabie| Mes. te MOTOR OMNIBUS CO. "Nelson Street : Built in Cambridge, Maryland, U.S.A, in 1943, the
: wen $60.00 pr tet down gud | a WENTY FIVE DOLLARS extra Bonus lone 1952 Sommerset Austin Sedan Car. GARDINER AUSTIN & co, LTD.—A ze: ts. tere oe o saab H.P. Marine Diesel
> month, tires tom Rediffusion ir Fecommenda- accident. Done only x —_—
on Hy. St. 4.7.03—-@0 | iode in ond calendar monte rei nites. AY 4th at 2.90 4 ngine. pecifications as follows
MULLARD BULBS--Clear or Frosted +7, 526 7 Regist 153
1 & 40 watt 2c. each. 60 watt 28c. * asi ed Tons i G S
UASHLEY’S 1) Pr Wim. Hy. St eas i i a ae ... 336 Nett
.52—3n ’ “ >
—— | PRL NOTICES Length overall os ue 140 feet
One Hotpoint tric Stove, 4 Rings, Beam Bt Ae aoe 30’ 6”
Large Oven and Warming Ovens. Perect ‘ Draft ui Se 12’ Lo ded
Condisien. tial $277. 2.7.52—in. | THE MATIER OF, THE,COMPANIES | hy instructions recetved I will gett c eh a
One H. M. ¥V. Automatic Record 10 AN ,, | by public auction on the spot at Layne’s argo Capacity ii .-, 4060 Tons
orc |) RADIO. pr wu B DOS : next 4th
hanging Unit 9154. 2.7,59—In, oe Fuly ab pm. tt & Mes, tee Passenger accommodation for 40 Cabin
sare’ ga alienate mer ee a eae (In Voluntary Liquidation) about 00 feet long with galvanise roof
NT Ti |g Soni ar a ee bcmecticst (sesso men te, reyes
i of the es ct | benches, is I
15.6.52—t.f.n iho, A general Meeting of the Member: |as a beach house.” Terms
geet



ol
hy
SI








Wren 4 Gre doesn't want to leave
class—and have to make embarrass.
ng ‘explanations—it’s Paradol she
for. For Paradol means quick
from suffering caused by
Periodic pains—-headache, too—

FURNITURE
CHAIR One Invalid’s Wheel Chan

aractically new, price $100.00. Apply
irene Williams, St. Saviour’s Villnge.
Yark Hole, St, Joseph,

















. lie: ra of, and of hearing any explana i
without disagreeable after-effects, LIVESTOCK tion that may be given by the Liquida- | yxtension Dising ao ciest Fabia From Southampton Arrives Barbados
Ack your druggist for Parado!, | _ fins resautlon the manner h wives [eve na sets, Gard tle oud anes |B o-DR GRASSE —.. 4th June, 1962 loth June 1982
atifically compounded from 4 BULL—One (1) Pure Byed Holstein{ (fe books, Accounts and documents of | Hut sz ‘Ghina; Dinnes & Tea Berhiecs, “COLOMBIE” 19th June, 1962 .. 2nd July, 1962
ingredients, The name “Dr. Chase” Bull Calf two (2) months old, out of }‘he Company and of the Liquidator Electric Lamps, Toaster & Kettle; Clock, ““DE GRASSE” 12th July, 1962 24th July, 1952
‘@ your assurance, 27 «| &.8. Bull, Prinee Albert. J, W. Smith, | (Mereof shall be disposed of. * . | Verandah Chairs; Rush Arm Chairs, Rock- ** O ‘? ’
, Read Cot, St, Michael. Dial 3627 Dated this 4th day of wee 1952. on, |€f8 and Tables painted Cream & Green: *Not calling at Guadeloupe
DR. CHASE’S paeereeins ON Tegetanese | Bult, 6 vas, Becta, 18 nse: Sate:
. 4 ny, able, re ;
GOATS—6 Sanaan & Alpine milch 4.7.52—20. | ouble de Simmons Bedsteads, }§ SAILING FROM BARBADOS TO EUROPE
PAR AMD 22 goats, Presh in milk, Apply. Cyril Spr and ttresses, Presses and LY
; Brathwaite, Garden Land, Country T NOTICE D Tables (painted Cream). Chpst From Barbados Arrives Southampton
emmee Quick Relief from Pain aumem |Road, St, Michael, 7.02, | GOVERNMEN Table In Mahogany’; GEC, Retrigerstor | ““DE GRASSE” .. 29th June, 1962 .. 9th July, 1962
- _ ‘only 2 years), Larders,, Kitchen Se: “COLOMBIE” +» 18th July, 1952 .. 25th July, 1952
PUPS—Two Fox-Terrier Bitches, Sia Kitchen Utensils, Two & Three *“DE GRASSE” 6th A 1982 16th 1962
weeks old: $3,00 each: Dial 245 — 4 Florence oil Stoves & Ovens, Scales & ug., + Aug.,
G. N. Dash. 4.7.82--in | GOVERNMENT OF



MECHANICAL

See eee





35 m.m. Agfa Karomat Camera, Latest
model, Fully automatic F. 2.8 XMenar
Lens. WU , Stansfeld Scott.

4.7, 52—8n

Palace Oriental

= ee e

Recuerdos De India,
Chino, y Cylon






ONE (1) Aeromotor Mill and 36ft.







136. 4.7,.62—3n
ete

BLACK & DECKER Tools 1”, ‘”, &
4/8", Heavy Duty Drills, Drill’ Stands
Portable saws, abrasive discs. Secure
‘your requirements now the prices of the

e
THANTIS



next shipment will be higher, Da Costa
Pr. Wm. Henry Street & Co. Ltd,, Electrical sit a
Dial 3466 a
on ————_——_—_———

MISCELLANEOUS













BATHSUITS—Ladies Bathsuits. Lovely
‘vality with skirt in green, gold, biu







, : Red. 34 t= 0, On 82 each
4 Third Annual t Kirpalani, 82 Swan street, :
8 | A
, i
Benefii Show i Dance GALVANISED—Special _ offer for 10 oe aa
ys Best quahty English galvaned enh wee FONIC
is Ait cf The CH. CH. and vets 6 ft. $3.94 7 ft, $4.60 8 ft. §5.24
ST YOrIN tABY WELFARE alvanised naile 39 cents
LEAGUE CLINICS to ‘Pyre Co, Of Spry & Trafa $PSS999S9SS9S99955S999SS%
TALL, Garrison ut 5 21.6.



At DRInD

Jute 4th 182 at 8.48 p.m. ii Siecle ‘
Sine dt rridehed beckenies LAMPS--A new shipment of C
and Lady Seel ble lamps in various designs

fl presents

Star Buds School
of DANCING

6
PROGRAMME

A
t!

“The



Whs
sot secure one now, when we have then



1

ram

Da_ Costa & Co., Lid
dept

Phone 3878

Electric
3.7,52-—On,

LAUNCH—Cabin Launch, Morris Vid
tte Engine, excellent condition, a bar
ain Only reason for selling owne
‘aving island. Phone Vincent Burke

8 6.421





RECORDS: Decea & Brunswick
ords, Standard numbers. To Clear at i



re-
» OVERTURE



.... Police Band or 60e. 2 for $1.00 or 3 for
MEBIGAL COI with ASHLEY'S LIMITED, Pr. Wm. i’. it
Cotton Pickers & Chorines in 4.7.52,

“Como On A My House”

PALL OLR ALPE OSCE EE SE,







a
ANCE val HACUhVe—A new shipment of 33 19
| . got oe Ley i coke. p.m, records just received, selections
| 4, 8AW SOLO Guest Artiste roma South Paelfie, Calypsos by Edmun-
"Mr. Ben Gibson © Roses, Dick Haymes album
i $8. BALLET Blue Danube ng fast. Secure yours now
| “Walt. = Six Star Buds aCosta & Co
0 TRA POR TWO ..., Dance — hor 78,
j Vive Star Buds oo
i} %. PARASOL DANCE .......... STUK
Four Siar buds ith the 1000 and
BA ST {’ SCENE (Sketch) eur hardware dealer WATKINS & CO

oebuck St. 4.7. 62—2n

Mrs. Bart & Daughter
9. PLUES IN THE NIGHT



Subsertbe now to the Detly Telegtap!





Dance — Guest Artiste — pnd’. leading Dally Newspaper nov
Mr. Cedric Phillips & Star Tiving tn Barbados by Ait ony & ho
Bud fave efter publication to Londen. Coo

40, BALLET Rose in the Bud tacts Ban Gale, c/o Advocate Co., Lid
--A Star Bud

Local Representative, Tel. 2
17.4.03-—t.2.n

UU, KITTENS ON THIE KEYS ....
Two Star Buds














12. COUNT EVERY ST pine VALOR STOVE—2 burner 8 months
Sak hae $45.00, Phone 2898,
13, § IT .... Hoses of Pieardy 4.7.83—in







Bight Star Buds
4. KISS WALTZ .... Star Buds
5 fadame Ifill*and



DDING GIFT—A few froning beer
da No-cord iron sets, subject to speci





ete
Frown
+» Ltd. Eleetri¢ Dept
B.1.GB6n. |
GLUE ~~ The 2 in 1 adhesive
1 uses. On sale

eee
~ '
2 }
3
=
CHB-HOO






> FINALE cating lowante es &| O
Star Bude in “The Blue . mae " y Ze tee fin &
Horizon"

Mr. John Beckles, M.B.E., Master © 9}OOO099O94HOOOOOO9O.9" $
of Ceremonies ? >

DANCING AFTER sHOW $ Iiv’SsS ENGLISH but © $

BY kind permission of Coal. = looks AMERICAN ! e153

Michelin, O.B.E., and under the 4 an

ditection of t, Raison, 6 iS Smart, ji itable O16

AR.C.M., ‘M.B.B., the Police Band 3 to fix upstair >| >

will supply the Music. , for early morning tea Sie

or hot weter emergency. »

ADMISSION $1.00 |||? 3/3

° > Ins a sample 2 Burner a i>

+ Gas Range Plate 12

Dancing after the Show, Tickets [1|%% cau and see in at $)¢

from Cc tee or “The Star > @|2

tid”. and Refreshments. Ig Your Gas Showroom, Ray st. | @

; Pie

‘ Ris

cenensinernesinncins snare ennrecnnenersemrensene HY

BEOPP DOP DSODDPOMOOPOG 24





the above-named Company will be
id at the Offices of Messrs. Bovell and
e, Public Aecountants and Audi-
ters, Lucas Street, Bridgetown at 9.
a.m. on Tuesday, the 12th day of August
(054, for the purpose of hyving an account
laid before them
ig whieh the winding-up 6
wueted and the property of the Compan:

the manner
8 been con





SALE OF PICKUP

The Barbados Regiment has for
gale one Hillman Pickw
engine and gear-box. \
ap is in a dismantled condition.
2. Offers in writing are invited

the purchase of this vehicle
which can be seen on application



ta

or

Whether you are conva-
[oding
health-boil
_ YEAST-PHOS is

timpply need

CAKE SALE |
TO-DAY

at

ING’S

co.

STORE

in aid of
J mes Street Juvenile
Missionary Funds

6 LEASES COCSSE BOGS
Sepepereneeeeeseenseesne eee naa





for Home & Office

at Money-Saving Prices



Renewed Wardrobes,

Chest.of-Drawers, Bed-



NEW &
Bureaus,
steads 2-feet to
Springs, Laths, W
t hain Towel,
rae! TABLES for



5-feet wide,

ishstands $& up,

Shoe & Hat-
Dining, Kitch-

‘eo & Fancy Use, China, Bedroom
: Kitehen Cabinets, Larders.

DRAWING ROOM FURNITURE

n_ Morris,



aned and other types,

DESKS with fat or sloping tops,

Spring-seat

Chatre, B

PIANOS

and
kracks

Banjo

chine 15.00—Pram,





L.S.

Spry

other Office

Sewing Mas
Go-Cart Metal
ink #2 up;
Sink $4.50,







WILSON

Dial 4009

PPMPDP HOMO.

without
‘he Piek-

atone:
problem. Vitamin:
nd minerals combined

answer
























cash.






On







Stove












items

















% CLOSED FROM TUESDAY FOR STOCK TAKING
Bola De Tachapelo ff] sins" cot" shone in, “0” | ta, Headquarters, the Barbados} if Va io0y soccer g ance RE-OPENING FRIDAY THE 4TH
Monies 15% Gratnee RePRW RATERS. Teed one new spe: | to the Colonial Secretary, Publie|{f Me. FC. SoabARD Scr, a

Perciento Gres, enges porsbee nt oun ana op. | Wauiings, mot later, than 4001) beh «fy “Sunsany THE CENTRAL EMPORIUM
ea we nO Hunte a Co. without, ebligation. iC OR n 4, 7, 82—2n.| }} Sergeant's Village, Chrisé Church Corner Broad and Tudor Streets

By



























UNDER THE SILVER
HAMMER

Tuesday
Inniss, we will seli
“Fareliffe”,

Weights, of} Lamps,

Tools,

BRANKER,

Commissioner of Police The

tion of Captain C.
will sui










per hundred, Our cartridge
prices can always be de-
pended upon to be the low-
est. BRADSHAW & COM-
PANY.

TO-DAY'S NEWS FLASH

Clearing out our new stock
of shot gun cartridges:—
12

on all HARDWARE ITEMS.

JOHNSON’S STATIONERY

| Colony Club |

Introduces From £100 (Tourist) g
BARBECUE £135 (First Class)

SATURDAY JULY 5
















8th by of Mrs. 3. By
a
», which

Sailings from Southampton to Guadeloupe, Martinique,

= f . Barbados, Trinidad, La Guaira, Curacao & Jamaica








































Magnet Electric
, Lawn Mower, Garden Hose &
& Stone Saw and many other
. Sale 11,30 o'clock. Cash.

TROTMAN & CO.,
* 4.7,62—2n,

*Sailing direct to Southampton


















At
VOLUNTIER Dru. HALL
On FRIDAY 1st AUGUST, 1952

joing at 8 p.m.
y kind permission




HRaigon MB,

ADMIBsION

Shotgun cartridges $11.50

Gc




R.M.S. “MAURETANIA”
tae OE = re

, Applications for Trans-Atlantic Passages
to England during 1953 have already reached
unpredicted levels. Those who contemplate
visiting the U.K, are strongly advised to make
their applications immediately. -

oa





SPOGOPOSIO SS



OF

GUAGE ELEY—$11.65 ¥
per 100 NET CASH

hall dew ack EASTBOUND — Accommodation available

from August 1962 onwards.
AT







WESTBOUND — Accommodation available

from October 1952 onwards.
and HARDWARE



Choice of Seven luxury liners from New
York.

0S

Choice of Six luxury liners from Canada.

= RATES (including plane Fares)







mt

we






To Barbados








Payable in B.W.I. Curreney through:—













Full-Moon, Daneing HANSCHELL LARSEN & Co., Ltd. |
Bathing *
And Generally Agents %
mivunex : THE CUNARD SS. CO., LTD. $
Advance ¢ DIAL 4104. &
2.7.52—2n. $s \ sas A» x
oON | '¢.





by American Bureau of Shipping Surveyor at Bridge-
own,

HANSCHELL, LARSEN & CO. LID.



GIGANTIC SALE OR NO SALE our Goods are
Priced no higher than their Sale Price BUT—and
it is a very big but—you get off 5%.

CALL AND SEE FOR YOURSELF the Wonderful
Values we are giving.

The vessel is at present undergoing yearly Survey

Further particulars and inspection on application.

THE BARBADOS ELECTRIC SUPPLY

. CORPORATION LTD.

NOTICE

ANNUAL AUDIT

ALL PERSONS having ACCOUNTS against
this Corporation are requested to be good
enough to send them in, made up to the 30th
of June, as soon as possible,

THE BARBADOS ELECTRIC SUPPLY

CORPORATION LTD.

V. SMITH

General Manager.



PEPE SIO SSS FSSSSSSSSOSO"-

It’s a Reality!



SSOSESSS SSS SOSGSS

SPUN at 82 cents less 5% is only one item of the
many items we are offering.

OUR SILK GOODS at $2.15 and $2.44 all less 5%
are values which speak for themselves.

A. E. TAYLOR LTD.

Coleridge Street.

Where
There are wo Parking Problems
And where
Qualities are HIGH
and
Prices are LOW
Dial 4100.

AEE ESSEO

-
oe *

Â¥
~ > +
FIOSOS SOO COB POSS OOS CS SSO SPSS SOS FOS SOF SSSOSOCC SG







FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952









BARBADOS ADVOCATE PAGE SEVEN
i naa "|, POSER AGOAAAAAASSISOTS
HENRY BY CARL ANDERSON tne Wad OFFER

$4 \ IIT +4 ; Rieter >
J So

Koo Peau S«
Koo Peache



” Koo T. Soup
Macaroni & Cheese
Spaghetti & Cheese
Vegetable Salad

Mixed Vegetabl
Slabs of Bacor
ip



'$ STUART & SAMPSON
(1938) LTD.

Weadquarters for Best Ram. 4
LEOSSSCCS EEE SSS,
POSS SS SPOS O SSO SS FPOSOS,







FLINT OF THE FLYING SQUAD....







zg
*
aie elie iptiiescdpecieanlligeniih ix * * x
| AH-HUH! PEARL DE LAZLON 1% , m
Porat he x % Holiday Entertainment
INSURANCE CLAIMS % N
MARK SEVERN ~ HE READS Peta 3
MORE LIKE AN OBITUARY | | 7 pact s
COLUMN FOR THE i cele ea °
MATRIMONIAL NEWS.. }

“HELLO WHAT'S THIS?



\ ss +
For sieepressnt %
eo >
ree ce %
BLO hha es
ie
|
i 3

| MIXED VEGETABLES in ¥
tins ‘



SLICED HAM

LAME TONGUES in tins

CORNED MUTTON in tins %

ROAST BEEF in tins

VEAL LOAF in tins

LUNCHEON BEEF in tins
And Our Popular
FIVE STAR RUM

2

INCE & CO.
LTD.

8 & 9, ROEBUCK ST. \
PSCEECSOOC CDSEO ACS OE

IT PAYS YOU TO DEAL HERE

BLONDIE

Wd Cre cate









Ci WAS AFRAID
BLONDIE WAS
(60iNc TO MAKE
ME PAPER
= (THOSE ROOMS



I JUST WANTED TO FIND OUT HO
MUCH MONEY ILL i BY










SOOO SOO FOF OO PSPSPS OOS SSSOSSOS











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Pee

PAGE EIGHT





FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952
SPORTMAN’S DIARY

Middlesex May — sivinghoks

Head Averages Tour Makes
. £80,000 Profit

(From Our Own Correspondent)



———
Sports Window |

BASKETBALL
Harrison College v. Pirates

BARBADOS ADVOCATE
Olympic Games
Team Named Harrison College Old Boys v. |

By GEORGE WHITING

CHAMPIONS FIRST, the rest nowhere. That is how welter-weight champion. Boxed
Britain will attempt, in Helsinki from July 28—August 2, for Britain in Buropean champ-

¢ ; 5 ote a cing : oe ime i@nships in Milan .ast year.
stuns tae Olympic Games boxing title for the first time BEKNARD FOSTER (M. & B.|

DEMOCRATIC CLUB
TO-NIGHT

Most of my friends were
disappointed with their
French Flutter in Trinidad,
never TO-
NIGHT get your own
back on J. N. Goddard’s

Fresh Pork Sausages and

FIESTA ESPECIAL ! !
Decorationes Maravillosas
EN LA BAILE
(BARN DANCE)



jacks “killer’’ instinct.
old-time fighter

Son of an
PROFIT of £80,000 is expect- Two years Abs
LONDON, July 3. ed from the Spri .

, a » Springboks’ rugby

Surrey may have to give way to Middlesex in the tour of the British Isles last win-
County Championship race as a result of matches now in ter. The money will stay in this

; >

progress. Claiming an extra half hour at Dudley, Middle- country. The South Africans’ turn
sex to-day made sure of 12 points by beating Worcester by ‘©, benefit will come whee. Bey
¥ ny ee oo ae aes ” entertain a British team in 1955.

Y. M. P. c.

mind. roll up

Hechles Road

SABADO JULIO 5

and

BC, Birmingham.).—-Made the ex-|

nine wickets. They now have 120 points. Surrey who have

116 were held up in their victory bid against Somerset by

rein.

Declaring at their overnight
seore of 384 for five, Surrey were
only able to capture three Somer-
set wickets in a little over the
hour that play was possible. if the
sun comes out to-morrow, they
should gain an easy win on t
dry turf but to-night the weather
doesn’t look promising and the
may be lucky to get even first
innings points.

The Indians were saved {fro
complete collapse and in the
two-day game with Durham ;

Gate-money is expected to
total £150,000, with £70,000 ex-

penses, including £30,000 enter-

Bonitas, Snappers
Win At Water Polo

In two fast and exciting Water
Polo matches at the Aquatic Club
vesterday evening, Bonitas de-
teated Swordfish 2 goals to 1 and
Shappers beat Harrison College
3—0.

Foy Bonitas, Rex Eckstein and

tainments tax.

THE SHARE-OUT

These are not official figures--
these have not yet been issued—
but they have been calculated b,
R. K. STENT, South African
journalist, who was here with
the team and whese book The
Fourth Springboks (Longmans
15s.) deals with them.

How will this nest-egg be
shared between the four hon

The selectors, announcing their team recently, have
picked the ABA champion at each of the ten international
weights that make up the Olympic schedule for the first
ume.

Form in the recent “secret” PERCY LEWIS (RAF ).—Motor
trials has rightly been dis-regard- transport fitter from Trinidad
ed in favour of amateurs whos- Classical feather - weight in the
achievements have been brought right-fcot-forward

fashion. Sei-

off in championship conditions. dom wastes a punch. Imperizl
In only one class, light-middi - Services and Royal Air Force
weight, has there been any re.i champion since 1949, Seasoned

difference of opinion backsta international. At 26 is the “old

It has been resolved by tle man” of the team after cig!
selection of Bernard Foster, tie years in this country,
Birmingham meat porter, to tic

Consistent Winner
FRED REARDON (Downham
Community BC). ‘Twenty-year-

exclusion of the tall and nigh y
fancied airman from Willesdea,



perts (and his opponent) lovk
silly when he exploded a right}
hand on the chin of the hotly-
tipped Bruce Wells in the ABA

light middle-weight final. i

Quick Wins
Recently home from Army ser-
vice in Egypt, where he knocked
over 18 opponents in 18 rounds.
TERRY GOODING (Army)

Fit. Sqr. Leader A. C. Snow,
O.B.E., well known fresh
lobster cocktails.

Pari-mutuel Prices on all
races.



Twenty-one - year-old Cardi
blacksmith. Welsh middle-weig!ii
champion in 1950, Began the
season with no great prospects,
but collected Army, Imperiai Ser-
vices and ABA titles.

HENRY COOPER (Eltham



(Co



mpra su billete antes de
la fecha)

REDIFFUSION

¢ woe . ;
Umrigar who made 61 and R Vlortimer Weatherhead scored and unions? Each treats the matte: Bruce Wells. : old ex-sailor. Now lays gas main BC) = Cusine eens a - ~ pate Seer re ee a
a6 ie a These two we:c L- Best scored for Swordidh. Bee differently. uae ked Certain Consistent winner of titles sinc Misi akin © aoe BS Subseriber brought to and accepted by the Company.
: te ce aioe Snappers, George McClean, - Wales had a central fund ink Wells looked a “certainty” ior his schocldays. Not a big punche: ee: ow. ih y- ‘i ® B se ‘ ‘ a
So a ao an bert Bannister and Billy Manning which all monies were paid, aftc. the Olympics—until the “pever- but has a knack of picking th yee one once, Raepetant bax REDIFFUSION will pay in addition a bonus of $25.00
inall wit, any degree of conii- scgred one each which a sum not exceeding £50 heard-of-him” Foster dumped right moment. Caught everybody’: a * a Sater nd to any person who brings in twenty-five New Subscrib-
dance Chmote first 29 overs cx The position of the Cup line up was distributed to 129 member him unceremoniously on the floor eye with a smart double ove ro ae ee ene ee ers in one Calendar month who are accepted by the
only 22 runs and Aspinall finished t© date is, Snappers first with nim@ clubs, Stent points out the anom- in the ABA championship finvt the American. light - weigh EDDIE HEARN (Battersea BC) mee 1 :
with six for ba. Forced to follow Points in six matches, Bonitas s@€te a)y that exists when Cardiff take; Here is the team: * champion, J. MeGuinnan, last _-Ex-BAOR h as elaine. bari & Company.
on the tourists had lost thi id with 8 in five and Sword~ 4° gate of £4,000 yet receive: _ DAT DOWER (Roath YC) eooee ion. Makes the loan nine years
» wickets ® and ‘er win atili ‘ish third with six points in Six. the same sum (£50) as Ystrad- Eighteen-year-old fitter’s ma PETER WATERMAN = (Caius Pe es tetas b ident hi d H Se ly of R dation F d
eink Witte shaean ware ivawi The Bonitas—Swordfish match gynjais, or Ynysybwl. from Abereynon, Glam. Beat*n B.C.)—Pride of Battersea at 17. pr hen grt eee Foe ave always a supply of hecommendation Forms ready
alae inate '’ was the more exciting, more keen- Thus a dominion tour here i; Only once this season, and six and one of the top discoveries of a ae alt THE F
ciniaue iiltacstes hae ae th ly. contested and rougher of the o¢ genuine assistance to th» times in 71 bouts, Hottest Welsh the season, Fulfilled rich juntor A. re yee wee Stee 3 THEY CAN BE OBTAINED AT THE OFFICE
registered his first century of itne °° smaller clubs. Ay cient ince Cyril Gallie was promise by winning novice, inter- Zoeq a3 Street trader in green-|$ REDIFFUSION tet Trafalgar Street.
season. But rain interfered again Bonitas strongest point yesterday The Rugby Union were entitle’ in the division, Puts a premium mediate and open competitions in r



. ae on speed—and can keep it up for six weeks. Beaten only once in %7 grocery.
bet ants © d bat At t
ore Northants could & the full three rounds. senigpr light-welter-weight bouts.
TOMMY NICHOLLS (Sankey’s Stock-keeper in the antique fi)

BC. Wellington) — Solid “south- niture department of a West End

ai !

was their combination and it was tO, 15 per cent. but had were
most there will be a fight for chiefly this which helped them to this altogether, allowing th
first innings points to-morrow. win ‘from the strong Swordfish County bodies to keep their own

The highest indivigual score eam. At the opening of the sea- Profits. The contrast is that in

—LES. PPOBDOOLOOS







|
}























‘ eat py ice aye’ paw” with a vigorous left hook store. } iq"
the day was the 212 by Doll ec Swordfist eve not playing Wales the South Africans player’ Paw” wi : co | ; N i
for Warwick against Leicester, | the best washe pol, ‘but tikes 4 enly clubs; here, with the cx. to Oe a pees am ; ae LORRY (Rae) ANNUAL Dal ie t YL
was his first three figure innites their | match. which they won. ception of the Universities and,can, Italian, Trish, Sco‘tish 5 Nineteen - year - old radar fitter will be given by ‘ 7
of the season, they gave much trouble yesterday, Combined Services, they played mo age Sen werent ) from Romford. Severely orthodox Miss BERYL TAITT N
Scoreboard: Dick Reece and Gerard Jordan "® clubs, and only counties. nternational matches in style. Brilliant at times, but | Ad Gt. Jeeeph Girls’ School,
iddlesex beat Worcester by in the back line were not easily . RD EY SSSSOSSSV SSS SS SS SOS OOO VOB BOOOB OOOO BOO OOBE Horse Hill
se ae Middlesex 350 for passed, and Reece wise, is now in Ee ees se ae ¥ a $ On Friday onee 4th July, We have
ared and § for or ni rkable immin orm often dium-pace bowler, has x :
Worcester 158 Young three ” carried the ball right down in the Sussex Oe = m . a a OS mateur oxing ssn | Admission: 2/6 |
. achieve is ambition—to take | .
20 and 245. opponents nets and took some ere aie He reached his tar- 7 ’ x Music by Mr. Percy Green’s || opened meu
Essex versu# Northants: Es- good shots. Herbert Portillo was get sik hed “a E. HITCH ‘CAR aDh DR’ of x . ” Orchestra
sex 379 for six, Ray Smith 107 also very busy in the forward line : : ANA A DRY ‘ fres nts Sale { ‘ ‘
; ; . COCK’S wicket at Edgbaston. > | Refreshments on Sale. | Pyjama Siripes
not out, rain stopped play. for them and used many a trick s 29.6.52—2n. ; ~
ace eae . Only seven other Sussex play- » Invite . eae | in 3 shades : Blue, Grey,
Glamorgan versus Lancs: to get the ball, but he was regu- ; : x ; 7
Glamorgan 296 and 28 for pa oO aon bee ae score ers, including FRED and MAUR- Y Entries for fhe 1952 CHAMPIONSHIPS Nay ae and Beige @ $1.30 per yd. ,
Lancs 285, Grieves 101 t ICE TATE, have performed this to be held at } | $OSSSSSISOSSISSONSSSONS 4,
yi ir Deda act Interesting feat. ‘ % % Plaid Organdies
ae eae ee er id teresting In 1950 Cornford received a THE MODERN HiGH SCHOOL STADIUM % fiteeil rates water x Self Stamp Blue, Pink,
273, Kent 144, Wardle six for © interesting thing about the benefit of £2,905. At the end of during the month of Augusi at a date to be announced later ¥& NERVES NEED x White, and Peach 45 ins.
42 and 83 for two. same was that while Swordfish this season he retires from first- Championships will be contested in the following divisions: % % @ $1.50 per yd.
Hants versus Gloucester. “ere mostly on the offensive, class cricket to take a coaching Flyweight - under 112 Ibs. % S
Hants 188 and ‘21 Si a. pict care the most dangerous appointment at Salisbury, South- apie weight of Fi8 a5 s % Plain Crepes
a s , , when they got away with the ball ern Rhodesia. Featherweight i 126 ,, * 9 | ; ; }reen, Rose,
Secun ai” Seng FR, RAD og started employing their useful , . Lightweight » 135 x aed elem 38 tens a.
Surrey ores Sommerset: ©O™Mbination. They all positioned BEDSER’S CHANCE nadine ” - , % | @ $1.30 per ya.
. sus § ‘ thamapalsies Pert bee iddleweight a » ‘ | ye tank 4
Surrey 384 for five declared, nis nanos oe egy denay IT is six years almost to the Light Henvéeeight— "178 S$ For frayed, tired nerves $}| :
Sommerset 47 for three, rain The Snappers — Colle match day that ALEC BEDSER played Heavy — over 175 ,, S | Plain Crepe
Stopped play. vas not quite so fast as tie first *" his first Test match. It was|% Intending competitors are asked to call at Modern High Schoo. % '% that make you jumpy and $| Blue, Green, Black, Red,
Warwick 437 Soe: us _ Leicester: inatch. Only one goal was scored penn India, and his 11 wickets § for Entry Forms any afternoon 4—5 p.m. % tinttable talc | and Dam ere 36 ins.
‘arwic or seven declared, sat en a ‘or 145 still stands as the best] # irritable, take | @ $1.95 yd.
Bondar wit toh, : ' ‘ € ‘ye ele tn : fhe first half and two in the sanetind Sarees : fl - fiat | AAPM EEE SDOEU SIV SOO OV OOO GUO UOT OOOO | | ( per y
Mivotte 4 ” = no hie During the first half, College “Ppearance _ ‘ aa agen le A a tn a i i |
s sus Sussex: Sussex were holding their own better, Bedser’s est wickets since s
416 for seven declared, James though many times they were then have increased to 166, a total A d h 4 ! %
, Leneridge 109 Notts 203 for three. forced to make hurried and not SUrpassed by only two cricketers, eee @ n S e as 2 ° | AVE
The two-day game Durham altogether well-judged passes, due 8: F. BARNES (189) and Aus- | : y
versus India was drawn. Durham to the onset of the Snappers play- tralian C. V. GRIMMETT (216). vg t le for speedy relief ?) SH EPH ERD
i 302 for six declared. The Indians ers who were always : Now 33, Bedser can look for- ie b > >|
ivs on the attack, , »
156 and 101 for three Snappers’ gecond Toe ward to at least four more ’ WHO ‘ 3
from a swift bang erben Delbert S@#80ns of Test cricket, time PLLA PLE





Bannister which quite tricked the Seer 0. POSS Se See,
College goalkeeper. Bannister had eer
been sent a high pass and he leap-
ed out of the water and without
swinging around to face the Col-
rans <_ gh the ball power-
ully into the corner of the nets. , 1 mx
With about five more wiaes to Pennis Tourna “nt

go in this

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(0-13 BROAD ST

MADE

THE
| PERFECT

Rain Stops Play Hyperacidity- |
At Wimbledon

Quick relief_



(From Our Own Correspondent) RB. Yacht Club
LONDON, July 3.
There was no play at Wimble-

don today owing to rain, Among








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same, Bannister was bi fidently recom- \\
the games held up were the cent out ne he Yesterday’s R It can be confidently recom \
> water for rough ys Kesults ded for t ick re {
Women’s Singles semi-finals. The playing, but despite this, Snappers > SUIT of digestive disorders arising i RED rid ND P INT. Ss
save e it : . P. r. G, IL. flatulence i
days the tourament will be completed Saturday as arranged, — : and Mr. C. B. Sisnett 6—3, 6—3, YOU'RE mation in the stomach quickly i
Colonel W. J. Legge the referee The teams were: — 7—5. ; give way to this reliable Tropical White ‘S’ Marine Paints
said today’s postponement would Swordfish—A. Weatherhead, J, ,, Mt. L. St. Hill and Mr, J. 1. family medicine. De Wit?’s A superior white for
hot nécessarily mean an exten- Jordan, D. Reece, H. Portillo. S. Trimmingham beat Mr. M. ce Antacid Powder quickly neu- exterior and interior : Dry with a hard
sion although there would be a Portillo, L. Best and G. Foster, Verteuil and Dr. J. Klimezymski WEARING? tralises excess acid and pro- [f use. Does not dis- enamel finish.
serious overload, Bonitas—M, Foster, B, Patterson, °~% 81, 6—1, vides relief over along period |} colour. White, Cream, and
Sedgeman, Mrs, Todd and Miss J. Grace, E. Johnson. M Weather- ’ ‘ by soothing and protecting® Green
Brough are still in three events head, R. Eckstein and O, Johns Today's Fixtures the delicate stomach lining. :
¥ nee » sonnson. —— Brel ; |i} Matinto Flat
and Drobny is in two, Sedgeman = Snappers—Billy Manning, Frank , His Reply ’ t ‘ .
with five possible matches ahead Manning, Ince, Bannister “M Men's Singles : : io Cc Wall Paints Concrete Floor
of him could conceivably play Browne. T. Clarke and Mecie - Dr, F. G. Reader vs. Mr. W. PF ig ontents}| White, Cream,
vably play Browne, T. Clarke and McClean I. C. Knowles a 4 ozs. fi Paints
his singles and a Men's Doubles College— Evelyn, S. Grannum, Ladinw’ at j Green
tomorrow and another Men’s A. Taylor, K. Armstrong, J. Chil. Mrs. P. Pattesee ; e i : pean Se eee
Doubles and two mixed on Sat- brol, R. Feldman and G. Jorda RB. 6 Bancrot jon and Mry. me arcane, Natural Metallic Green
urday. i, Worme and Miss Wee * ANTACID © Primer
a « : a ss E, Worme. : | af ‘
Colonel Legge said “It all Men's Doubles BA for Wood or Metal Aluminium Paint
depends on how strenuous and THE WEATHER Mr. H. 'L. Toppin and Mr, 1) POWDE R is ; re
how long his matches prove to Blades vs. Mr. J. W. McKinstry THE TOP \ SF : . Woodwork
be—and the same with the others REPORT and Mr. R. 8 ‘Bancroft ane nf a Neutralises Acid Anticorrosive
We might have to carry over but 2 : . SCORERS Soothes Stomach Rolieves Pair Paints
it is by no means certain”, YESTERDAY Le : Mas taba os Many attractive The Sign of Permanent Green
It is about 20 years since a Rainfall from Codrington: nil IN . ae He Y oy “~ i Colours Quality Paint
Wimbledon programme had to lx Total Rainfall for month t , " er neenes Arty ee
. earried over till the third Mon- yesterday: .18 in. ? WHAT'S ON TODAY TAILORING © Prompt relief De WITT’S Wilki & H C Ltd
‘day of the tournament, ere? Temperature: 86.5 °F Court of Ordinary—11 a.m @ Easily carried ANTACID I inson aynes 0., .
owest Temperature: 71.6 °F Films, B: ndlinary— i Prince Wm @ Cell-sealed TABLETS ‘i
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Polo Season Held Up | “how “°"’ ~ Pee Se Beckles 11S en nmane cepa Mesh > Fea Ee a tee
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Polo Ground at the ’







Garrison
delaying the start of the Polno
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the Island’s leading Polo player
told the Advocate yesterday
There are many large an
dangerous cracks over the entire
ground, and it is hoped that wit!
the rains, this condition wil! im
prove in the very near future.

| They'll Do It Every Time

TODAY
Sunrise: 6.45 a.m,
Sunset: 6.16 p.m,
Moon: First Quarter, June 30
Lighting: 7.00 p.m.
High Tide: 12.31 a.m. 2.37
p.m.
Low Tide: 7.39 a.m., 7.21 p.m.






OOO@





Oe

p.m,

Police Band at Christ Church
Baby League Show and
Dance, Drill Hall—9.00 p.m



eee!













Kogisnered U. 5. Parent Oftce



films at British Council—s.15

Jimmy Harlo





Gp

- Sp
GOOD OL’ ANGLE- YY 'F ANGLEWORM Z
WORM GIVES OUT Y LIKED THAT COLUMN, |)

Zs)


















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• Malik Vetoes Investigation Of Germ War Charges American Resolution Comdemns Soviet Move As Undermining U.N. Efforts To Combat Aggression \ew YOKK, u,l\ 1 O I'SSIA on Thursday vetoed Ihr American propose Red Cross invcslit-almi: of Communist Kcrm u;u U.S. Seek Priests Release \IW YOKK. Jul I for 11 i 11 charges and Ihe United Static*, immediately demanded Ihnl the I'ntied NateaeM dismiss the allegation*, as "without snhklaure and false" %  soviet delegate Jacob Malik casl the liltirlh veto hi hluck tile UniUii Status cii.iUengc to the Kremlin to "put up or shut up" on it.s charges that American troops B| for the United Nations in Korea had used germ weapons against tha CfeltMM Communists and North Koreans. Malik's was the only negative vote in the ten to one ballot in favour of the American resolution But the Security Council rules require a majority ol seven members including all five permanent members and the Soviet negation is enough to kill the investigation. -It la the first veto in the UN wr e r~tA 1 1 %  **** November SO. IBM. when K lllir I *ll*ll Malik voted three times in DM AVXllfil M. til til dav to kill thAimrtcan ppou\J I roaolattofl calling upon North Korean mid Chinese Compressor* to quit Korea A veto has been used only 51 times in the United Nations' bjg. I M olhei countr%. France, has used 'Inpi ivi*aa< :i> has east 13 vetoes but stili trailed far bvhmd the origin al Soviet no no" man Andre Gromyko who vetoed 25 lime* .it tad Nations' career. United State* Ambassador Ernest Gross called upon th Security Council to condemn Ihe practice of fabricating and dtlscminattng such false chaige^ which increase tensim nations and which i.designer te undermine the efforti nf the United Nations to eombart aggression in Korea ind the support of peoDle of Mir world foi these efforts." Gross gained tne floor immediately after the vote and recalled that North Korea and Bed Ch had refused with Russian hackin to let either the Red Cro United Nations World Heultl Organization enter their territory In look Into charges that Unite. SUtas 1 troops had used gem weapons against Communis 1 forces. One Conclusion "Tha negative vote of n < nion". hr aid. "ha* prevented the Security Council Iron arranging for impartial invr these fact %  Talal Goes Home AMMAN. July 3 Km* Talal of Jordan returned lo ln desert capital to-day by air from Beriut alnjost M i aflgq leaving his kingdom tor awopaau medical aid. The sl-vear-oid monarch stepped out of a twin engined plane at a military ainteld -m the outskirts of Amman to the sound of a 21 gun salute from a battery of 23 pounder; D gunners of the Arab legion The King whose mental condition has precipitated a political crisis in HasscmiU looked M is suffering from Srhiizoph (split personality) He was greeted by his ministers and members of the Regency Council appointed by the Government to carry out his duties in his absence Immediately after the three minute reception, he drove to Basman Palace on th. of Amman where he in expected ti remain for a time under medi i-al treatment home but The King has it remains fid may lie "any medical attention to which hi might agree. The three-man Regency Council Is expected to continue to net for him until he is sufficiently recovered to be able to shoulder his responsibilities or until 17-year-old heir apparent Prince Hussein now at ichool near London comes of age next May—I'.P. French Will Re-examine Duclos Case PARIS. July 3. The French Government came under lire for the handling ol Jacques Duclos case as authorities decided to rc-eje..; %  • %  C leader Must of ih. papers this morning expressed 'surprise" and "stui that the government should havi dean ami pourad criticism on ih AgjBasJi pants The court decision freed Ihjclor on the grounds that thi "raasonable doubt" that ba ana caught radhaodad in a plot %  %  the state and the CocnmUB er can only h, %  gTtsgatd again H the National Anscn .bly approve? the lifting ol ttw Cosnnuaual deputy's parliamentary Immunity After a (lye hour meeting ^ol the cabinet yesterday. >pox< stnai: Raymond Marcelltu said the government will open a new file on Duclos' case but dodged questiont when the new proceeding.might commence In any case it It doubtful if an) action could be taken bef tlon next week. It was also taker as certain that government will act only if it is sure it has b strong enough case to win a major ity vote—ll.p. BERLIN. JuK S L) S authorities .„, i -hey at. king "constant gflbrl t< the releesM ol '.lira* Catlwlir prtaats • with a Geimao w oaten araaad Soviet soldiers ou the Ea't-Wcst bordei yesrtr day. A United States' sp. keemni I, irtlcers are in con%  >uli with Soviet bea. quarters and are demanding U i Die Chicago priest .i matter we a not going to let drop, we are constant contact wWh 0 i S Tha priests, Martin Born* /yk. George Gorski and Hron.-%  i • ki '.ver.pick, c up with Frau Kaumi.i. kler at 10.00 a.m yesterday uii i i of the United Slab sector of Berlin and the SI-VI.I 4 lirrmunv Copra Exports HilPeakIn'51 WASHIN(iTC)-. Copra and coconut oil export 'rom the Phillpi Par Baitern producing area* reached a possible record In 10-1 Agricultural Dein.rline: | diseloxd Thursday. Correspondent Must Quit France PARIS. July 3. An Interior MuitttQ spokesman said Pakistan newspaperman Inayat Ki. in hag been ordered to leave Pranoa by midnighi (o r par-l l,me lo thin met ** v ">' only one conclusion that can drawn — that the charges germ warfare made again* 1'nited Nation* force* must bi • pit-umed to be utterly false. Thi J Security Council In our judgmon should condamn the fabncalioi and dissemination of these fal charges which involve no les ihan an attempt lo undermine the efforti of The United Nations t< combat aggression In Koie Gross then submitted the resei tlon and asked the Council to J %  • a fw daya before e< • %  tdering It in order to give M*!it Foreign \ul Hill Goes To Senate WASHINGTON. July 3A Mu31.947.75o Foielgn Aid sWl \ill gi"g jlmc-i *2 000,000,000 legr than President Truman re>iueat%  • Appropriations Con. keii until shortl> bafql midnight l-efon approving Ihr i %  said the group approved the exact dguie voted %  the House for .dl military and ..ud point four aid to Europe, Asia. Africa, the Nea> East and Latin Amerli ,i for thfiscal year 1B53 which began ot. Tuagdai heduled to mee* at B SO BJI I D T -its earUest meeting in several years—n %  %  noi. %  -.' p i i ulendar urn -x|iectHi to pass scores M not non-ci'iiiroverslal or prlif single Senatoi the Bill under this proredurc ihe measure is aqtmnati^allv pasaad ovar.—UP. • ti prterli who came to A sUft Amencan proi o attend the EucharutK expected if the prleats ie, >,\ Hai.elona aiTi\ed mi'tieatment at the hands of in %  •ffthl yesterday for the Russians There me no ntii •ne-day Vtt t --ti orders issued mediate deaU ReiUn •ecretaiy Soviet headquarters im mfornuih. \ Mrt out on a photograplitr lion on -he w htfii-*lii> l t i the cUj. Thr> were missing British soldiei gad ,.p whan then uionio•yewttneac *ai Eist by Soviet* earl> ThuiMl.t* when rmeai ,.,-•! eroaaiug they drove piit the last Weal nu. Bonui rtalMp •<<><> saany on the CBV I i A United Stale* >pokesn a. railway station. We.t lieilin dd the Soviet* sUli have -iot police said eyewiUies-e. rspori^ckiiowledge-l Ih^t they n l that the two British soldleni SMdna HM pnesl> He ad.ici wen, arreatad at around 100 thai mis i> DOJ unuual, lor lbs 4 m G.M.T. by Soviet soldiers Humans usually do not adm t Jn d Communbit poltce at Albrebe] .ne holding Allied nation .chtishof station, one station ill until they are ready to put the end of the Itnti-h ...•! %  them ..tu —PP. Conservatives May Seek To Disband C.LM! It Lost £4'A Million (From Our Own ( nrropoiidrnl) i ONDON July 3 The future nf th P Colonial I >mint Corporation II unuVr active corutidcrutior hv back bench Conscrvativea Mi nbori ol Ihe Imperial AJtalrB Commltlat hot i Ml>ulatoemn rlUti and aw will probably use it to support %  motion for the disbimdinu ol the Corporation" Bernard llraine. M.P. told your COtttl pondent This motion mav lw raised at the next Colonial Affairs debate. For some tune now prominen t.id;-bench consorvattvea hav. Adams* Detention Was Misunderstanding: U.S. Consul Apologises ON MONDAY tha 23rd ot June ih< Actlnp \VM'.,IV hiuM.i J tvle^ram from Mr. Gran'.ltv Adsme, CJi.G af.CJ?., ftorn Montraal ftayUui thai ha had beer lenlrj in'" the United States a; Uw N-.v York Inter .1 Aupoit. Mi Adams ask*tl ih.u 't-i %  and Uio Secretary of State be Infi i The iment I uroti 'I lot 'he t'luie-i HI % %  • i ados The Unit %  K I through (he S i the CotonH lo loihfs %  Um lar proti in WoJii Monlal AtiMthi to %  :, Brltl %  dV) r,, i m thi | 1 : .. %  "1 t ived I uii ,II>I.IK\ trot tad I ihr 'XplanaUon thai Us li i I i .i mnundi The CDQJ spression of regret wa ba n %  -i lo Mr Adams Har ala)esty's Oovarnmeni .ii-i im* up the mailer with rhe St it* Whin*lon .1 Mptataad 'teep regrei to ttus %  "venl Mr . II AOAMM, (Mi. Mil* Biff '3' Finish Wa e m T <; Draft Reply **" u, ""' b y tlcioatnik in ^nil-French political iCUVIlli henHe ^akl Inayat Khan, Pans correspondent (or Pakistan newspaper "Dawn", was informed of the expulsion order one month l^eeches he made lo North African student groups denoum ii.g France'* conduct In nroli Ls He wa* given one month to arrange his affairs and leave Frame A Foreign Ministry official two clays ago denied inayat Khan had Leen ordered to go out of the imintrv. When aitked about that conflict lug statement the Interior Ministry spokesman said Ihe "decision to • upel linn. we*, taken one month :: .vaa never changed. He must leave before midnighi —U.F. eelo action. The American resolution rea li The Security Council noting thi concerted dissemination by o %  tmn guvernments and author it e of grave accusations charging ll use of bacteriological warfare United Nations' forces; recalls that when charges were A made they Immediately demr the charges and requested that a impartial investigation be ma l then noting that Chinese Coi munlsts and North Kon %  authorities failed to accept ll offer by the International Co i mtttec of the Red Croat to ca• %  out such investigation but c< %  tlnued 'o give circulation to ll charges: noting that the Wo, Health Organization offered h • On pagr 5. IIXItltAIM V\ I'OII The Department of Foreign Agriculture report said %  ),600.n0n tonwere exported that year compared srMl leaf, than 1.300.000 UXU in 1W50. 11 note. I thai the Philippines W| the largest total copra equivalent tonnage greater hv some 132.Son tons than th. combined total from Indonesia. Ceylon and Malaya %  > total ibrno • each of the four areas exceeded those of any other post-war rear ;md exports from the Philippine and Carton evrreded even prewar average Super Liner On First Trip Ofioaoi: LAMMINO, araeut naort Ktory wnUr and poet In the Lor,. •an Btudlo of the B IC Mr Lsanalng li s Barbadian and old Oossbenaerian. Errol Hill For Jainaica GEORGE LAMMING—A NOVELIST Mr. Em>l Hill -f Trtn I Kngland lo Jamaica was Ml paasenger by the s.s I-MIHIII.;Iipendlru; a few hours in BartxMDi Mi. 1111 iiingapoid i M tha quanV ly maga/i "' Ihu %  p .-Indian In the West Indie* ami atM -people in London mtereated in iltorary and cultural pursuits li-k ••forward.' He Iwd bean Bttcndinsj the Royal Academy ol Arts studying drama and is no*on hia way to n. Dram*tit Summer School sponored b% the ExUa-Murl Department of the University C'Jdlege of the West Indie* the preliminary lectures will l>e delivered b> him and let"' % Mr Philip Sherlock who Is the figure. He paid tribute to Jamaica foi its Arts Fsatival to winch the puptls of all the SecKid.ii .-ontributc ^nd on which they get eutJrtsm of h<-ir work and gutd' Ota trained para til ll slmilai -hei parts or the Caribbean He spoke higl.l% %  •' % %  oBtttgV lions' mad. to Wi ture by George LanimJng of Barhados. Edi;a, Mittleholzei of BrlU ash Guian.! and Sam Selvon Trinidad and the ergteoflt* encour. %  ; %  : %  %  .,!. %  ., A I ''Ti ti> the BBC feature programme Caribbean Voice* conducted by Hanry Swansea. Barbadian Novella) Speaking of George Lemming he said he had wen him in London thought he ma doing quiv w i' Inaaid is pleased -If as he has lust had %  Oval aetepted and It will .published h I>--.-emher Tha i ifter visrtinfr Caa -II V 1) A Wile*. Assistant CaMysssai the Extra-Mural De%  nu-lssMR* and the Advocate, v. ought greetlnas from Lamu ir.fmber of the Staff, sailed for Jamaica In. the afternoon. 11 NKW VOHK July 3. Tlie ?S.00U,0O0 iu|erllne' In lied SUies suiled for Europ< m ui "tin ml I %  "'-• %  • SK-;. 1 i record in her maiden voya was Margat%  lugatai at the Prc*i va caught In ing mob and had to be rescued b* Se.-ret Servile ,'igents The curious pressed around fun Truman as *h tried to t.ilk U) n SB the Fporta deck. In eosnrn md of the ship wa Commi !" dora Rarn Hmnltag He rtsaeed !;mlely that he was out to win the T>..n-Atlantic speetl record the nation lost a centur-it' 1 but*hli hroad grin larltlr tole he would trv to gnost Queen Mary, prsaen' -l.lei He got the vessel off to a fas %  tart Within gfl hour after rlc;,ing the entnincr r.f •:. % %  ... '. harbour the United Rtstea h an and passed Ihe linei Slorkhalsa niid ItalU which !• New York before her Passe-igguessed she was clomp 34 loir-M hilt Ihe -peed will nOI bf i' I % %  tinned tirt'll Friday at noon i r Astnon Wins 7.T.C. Handicap PAIN lu in PI lioni Ihe I'M lad ••• "k for manj 1 • n Ins Afctrior < ttounced A and II Class 12.000 pun* Asirion itt ll irdwldgs in the saddk clipped 4'5 of a second ufT HM ,(ti • iolden Q' KKSUI.TS Waal Ineian llandkap Ah-ul Ma Fartamm; (l. K and F*. three >er "14+ only l April'. Dreom. 2 Flrsv Admiral :i Cavalter Tim. i mm la sees Buy shore Hand leap Ah*"t Six Furlonaa; CUM C and V. ataiaana i Hope Dawns. 2 OoUaaa leee'. 3 Netan Time 1 min. Ml sees Helmonc Handicap Ab-rtit One Mile and 130 Vjrd LONIJtlN. Julj I I S llii'.ain .ii.l Fn.nce h. ompteted th* draft reply to M' -ow on the Gen li tali i %  %  %  i' i Thurada) The drafl u batna vlth the Ft lersH m olla K %  %  . Kn mJla It I expei %  hat the West's notes "ill IH I M Kn : porabon is not carrying out li ran ol th .,.i.... Ti. nead %  %  tact i form then flu l to enaure that tbair revenueIUI less man Mime.em t ..II sums properlv cbarteahle t r h< weal will '.I Ho lheir revenue ace*runt' doe* no I"" li llll with i C | ... Corporation lo inal up o| ui imno (es m Ihe rtevvlopmnt ia-nol 'i** %  Investigutlng milssion i Itxx but liioilnfatn It* ohleerimtt to nenf-iullon <>l • unified Germany. CIs lijl. F.xpprl for I IHHIIHI Talks l.luWN Hi; July 3 %  .ted nt Ifadlca] Servt %  13 i>r Harold ilosii expert and I in : laaaaoi aj m \< who is at pr> .-. n || ", %  Kingdom. DM.S Di I. A I i assur I • i understood he is In M, gramme which will have an ii^ I artaan aflaot oa tha futui. %  al ttic country i F and F! feeir yeir -Id* %  ol] i Lip Kii-met mtn M would be norma' lodtajtraal practice. Thus its char ler makes Its mcr&iiuigly difflctil foi the : urporition to fulfil Bj • oigm.tl task of undertaking nun ginul devehapiuenl. More un. more the Coryoratiun msy be i foread to enter into eogopMU D witli private enterprise ti M that lew and leas wdl I breai new ground. Some Conservative* feel tha money now being spci.t D) COI would Inl-rtler invent, '.•loimiiiit schemes sponsored b> the Colonial Governments. I >., U miaiths now CD* had lieen under the munageiin" %  i Lord Hetth ind the organisa -me and abroad has beer lly nvi'rhiiUliHl Si-vei projects which nfu*r Neirrhm examination have shown llttli chance of paying their been abenrtocictT Latest unnua report of the Corporation showed Dial >>f C2I.noo.000 of cspit vonturad over e4.300.ooo had l>een lost I ..pens in „ ing ronce-lcd weaponi -HI Last -bo.il ten d Eotu %  %  Ud (or qu i k exchange of sclei informall'in about teehnm I .-t. an allem rrtalri sdminu' < procedures —O del % %  .. inwhth held -j brief session to discuss minor <' %  >meet it problems I'.f Kills Dodge UN War Planes SEOUL. July 3 Fifth Ant1. Me > i-|i;.M--i (<l pilots have beggMBI IS • leluctant to tangle with I'rnted Nations war planes uuBpil< the bid that ihe Iteds have built up a superior force a| 1.B00 plane ,n Miinehurm. The Report noted that Ked MIG IS jel* air appearing in ever i leiistng numbers and thai n Nghts of them now contain ten %  ii fewer planes Karllcr thla ywu \i/';'s awe apuaailna m ilfbta ol awra 'IM,, ., um. The l.mt u,. fliKht was seen on April I. The heaviest MIC i-*nrentitlon ol th war was on March 3 when V %  htad The Ftfdi Anfoie.. K ald th Corrunuoisti h iva built up an atr: KO-l unit IJM0 1 f .ill types l-ehlnd to Manchurii n bordar. it gi importation of %  WniU'd, Kingdom oxperi to install hem. About two vean ago origan svstem was planned, gaumated -ost was put at S150.0O0. but I' i pel led thai Ihi peoiact v ill %  rioo ony nearly 1 Jul>3. M.mvnl backed sliding M^ge Male Hill will come betofe in. NafUonal Assembly .' I M p.m. a.if.T foi 'i ,. i '!"• voli oi the Bill appear* I-I nsajoi hn Plnsy laces In OM to gn on .iimmer n.e-.<.n July I I l he bill %  f Uw l 1 II nosilh - Uppti %  i| provari i %  i Hill migh' ml ^^^^^^^Ha tw<> • %  J iu" T f %  %  t %  *ii i-.-d.i 'he As•••mblv s eonfldi I i Tin Hill which ,111 I' % %  %  pjecti us a modlfle %  .1 Mirialt n, II ,dJi foi UM Increase of inolle sal.ii M Ql of : n' lump of mi %  n|eX. l.efti-t ..pposition gtlael which u .. . %  ncludlmt Pi %  || rtiiRh' new wive of 5jncUI uni tod H tomUxattoo that ved dui %  \ng the foui mmiihIn '*'" Plnav'* foes in ihe A-wml 1> %  .. %  %  % %  ., .pringboard to laiin.'h ,n overall oti P'f'OV %  —I rw/rVWV/.W.' :-,'.'.*,-^'-*.'-' New Oil Sources Opened In M. East ownership is -haied o, lintuh development of these reserves I The period of nearly twelve Dutch. French and American cotn/Hal to Ihe long-term Inft psedidneetaa pamei'. The r;ste of output lag! -he oil indiurtrv am' of upi> >< %  ) month w*a double that of mat .urner' '..niiary and la now running at The polite %  rr. U 10m ton* annually The main f;.--Ilab ^ith the flow %  %  .. Idh > a tot I increase he* bnei lAalem oil are ws* icw pipeknown and have been the Mediterranean. With Illustrated hv la* year's ev< rrhudditiim uit. in IVrsi^ Not the leant effeci.v. Kuv. i.si— uaaspurution racUMias, lha (PC way in which 'nase iKstltical in %  ooas MI be owarei rioan u through an iriunadlalii -nrt rapln C it Oi u' *a -entla! develo-nn.' %  at which will bring iiuick and subaJss* UBhast place in the output of That rapid tmpangaOn oi Middle ttantial benetHs u> ana i-•wned proparUes fa Eastern developthe pnxiuctag countries on the 1Affssk* i m'-i '. the highest importance basis of she new god • %  • %  ed royalty and proflt-eharlr % %  i ersta which hat I roieusn Onrnpany, wheat the Middle its .. 1 Jhs clwkv o$ tlwM who ko£ocpuA8 Quality, and o$ tfw Ac who amfdoif £ conn my . A rare combination realised in K. W. V. "THE LABEL WITH THE KEY tti/ies, Uraiuiii-H anil Liqueurs K.W. V. PAAEL TAWNV K. W. V. Coronation Wine K.W.V. Old Brown Sherry K. W. V. Amontillado Sherry K. W. V. Old Oloroso Sherry K.W V Sweet Vermouth. K.W.V. Dry Vermouth K. W V. VAN DER HUM LIQUEUR $ K.W.V. Superior "Key" Brandy Tht $ Pillars iTealth and Ifa/i/n'r. %  %  .•.•. %  *M*mmm*mam*v.::::-s.-*.-sx •



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It Mill \ !><>-. AIIMH VII I KID.VY. JULY 4. \U1 M^ADJB^ ADVOCATE frtaw r ik. \4.:, i. C.. LU INM I MUMn Your London Report Krid.iv. July 4. 1952 IMOWIMIMK THK Idea rh.nl Barbados is so far behind of ti mwld that newcomers to U (I HKULM ly talk of putting the cluck back twenty-five yean is widespread among some English residents who know %  My little about village life in England. If a Barbadian said to an English critic that 4.000 villages in England were without a sewerage system of any kind he would probably be laughed at for weeks. Hut that l| i\;uily what Dr. Garbett. Archbishop of York said in Blackpool a i_k:. aftx "The nation" said Dr. Garbett "should sec that every village had a proper water supply. Every house should have its own bath with a supply of water. The village pump was no longer sufficient." If it is true that philosophy is bred of the knowledge that other people's misfortunes arm mm ferret r tjrceler ihuii yuur uo, then the standpipe community of Barbados should draw comfort from the plight of so many Enphsh village dwellers. Particularly since they seem to enjoy | rwtec recreational facilities than many Englisn dwellers. "It was astonishing" said Dr. Garbett "how many villages had no playing field." And there were still many flllagaa without the hall which should be the centre of community life. Because conditions in English villages can be so described by a high dignitary of the Anglican Church in mid-summer 1952 does not mean that conditions in England are so gloomy that the standards of living are fallinito that piieously low level which followed the withdraw*! of Roman civilisation from that ancient country. Raihei should the absence of modern conveniences in the villages of the motherland of the greatest Empire in history be a warning io thnt-e misguided persons who continue to spread propaganda which blames everyone but themselves for the conditions of misery and low living standards still everywhere to be found in Barbados. Even with thousands of years start over Barbados, conditions in English villages as described by the Archbishop of York are | so bad that 4,000 of them are without a • sewerage system of any kind. Ought we not then in Barbados to take a longer view and not strain our eyes myopically looking for the motes of others during our short history of 325 years, but broaden our horizon to recognise the surprisingly high standards which this island has attained over the last effective 100 years, during which the transition from slavery to free society has been taking place. If only the broad historical view Instead of the narrow prejudiced and uninformed view could be taken of social ach\ities in Barbados the long painful road ahead to achieve a better society could be much smoothed over. It is a great pity that by the lime tins lesson has been learnt by visiting critics their stay in the island has ended and they have left behind them disciples to spread their superficial impressions. Only by building and improving on the social services which exist will the speed Q( Barbadian prograaa to a better life be increased. LONDON Some ul us are never happj, The City bemoans tailing nucM market prices, the gnat -iid rayon Industrie* an middle ot a severe recession and commodity speculators have had tln-ir llnger\ badly burned %  -> result of the recent *|ide in vataai But the rank and file of ut a; home are not too depressed. For the first time since the war ended, we can go shopping nowadays and feel that prices are becoming reasonable. Arm people like stockbrokers and shop assistants are becoming extra helpful now thai business i* not so good. "Bargains" are appearing ,.: all the big stores, and many are bargains indeed compared with the prices charged a year ago. Due to foreign countries restricting their imports, producers are trying to dispose of their goods on the home mark"t ;is they have lilUe room to store them. Cotton* and woollens have fallen as much as forty per cent over the last twelve month*. Some types of carpeS are down by thirty per n-i.t. Luxury items of all kinds, including fancy plw -i IJIIH~' lingerie, arc cut by no leas than fifty per cent. Secondhand motorcar dealer* will hardly talk terms. With enough unsaleable curs on their hands already, they think price, will plump further. Secondhand fill niture dealers say they find few buyers. Once again patterned and coloured chinuware is appearing In the shops, and housewives, accustomed for years .o buying plnln white china because the coloured sela were t< export only, can scarcely believe their eyes. But shopkeepers report that people are in no hurry to buy. Are we moving toward* ;i slump? No. say those who should know. Included among*! them Is the chairman of the great Imperial Chemical Industrial combine. Mr. John Rogem. who asserted recently ihat he did n"t tee !( general depression ahead for British Industry. The IfUdat) about finding raw ru>terlaln had changed to .ibout finding adequate ir.irketB at home and abroad for -It.country's industrial output The prohlem is world-wide, assured Mr. Rogers and "it Is dlfn< ult to interpret these signs as I.. \ tilth an Jon.s foreshadowing a ffSMtai depression." There U another side, however, to these railing price! Whitehall is con erned at the liosa pawl in w.irld maikets for the raw m.ii< | duced by th.' milliona. whose standards of living depend on MM rafcttof rubber, lead, sine, copper, wool, sisal, jute and the rest. Questions are hcing asked in PartlaasMAt about iiie possibility of holding -r. wealth Conference shortly, and now It u hoped by many that such, a conference may take place in London befoie the end of the year. Even if the Prime Ministers are unable to attend because of pressure of business ut home. It Is hoped that they will send representatives. Commonwealth trade matters would come high on their agenda, although all OUtstandlng allairs would be reviewed. The Commonwealth iTnaiMi Mi-nsters do not meet till next Jaj-uary, though thi-y wouM Iww ..pi-.i-Liniu to, talkl when they g,.Uicr in Mexico next aut umn paaattni 11 Ihe International Beak. Wliai a t9 '' \istting England, u the many I Community \nU> Cnllery of the HOU* this week %  teAped n sat lepieiil non wealth lemindcr of watnpr t ai the td. Puntto ol C i i levin members of the Niueiidn Olympic team, all wearing their grass laaatS, They listened attentively to Mr. Oliver I.vtt.-U.m speaking on the <•" < proposals for an African Federation, and learned llrarhandot the Interest that Member* lake in CommonweuUh affairs. Also, this week at lrd. traditional stronghold of the Old School Tie Brigade many splashes of colour amongst tii s one of the people wl swdk 'Mngs, "How nltrTi It is that one ofbar of the. -i.tinues to .ok onwards anfl cannot develop and be satlxficd with what ho or she alicady has?" Vatttora from abroad, buying Coronation souvenirs next year, arc unlikely to be fobbed off with articles made In Japan. Import of these will be banned by the Board of Trade, for Brltisn n.ms feel that it is their own prerogative to make them. Cheapest souver.ir one firm is making will cost only a p*"i.y. Krxim July 1, we must pay more for our telephones. Rental for s business telephone in London goer, up from <8 3'. W. to fl) a year, private telephones from r.5 19s 7d. to £8. All this la necessary says the Post Office, because of rising costs. ItuwCVeT, Government department'^ do not have to pay anything for their calls and nearly one telephone in live throughout fln> country Is used by civil servant*. Bvcrj year the Ministers make moie %  k calls and local calls. -..uIMUJ the British sjtki Our Readers §ay Hirlh Contrttl The Editor. The Aduocate— II 14.11 WAV 4; AIIIII \S SIR,—The advocates of Birth Control seem to have pushed it on the shelf for a more convenient leason, when they will BKuiii take It down and Infuse new life Into it. I wish that these paopsf would stop talking and get down to tho real root of the tiuublc. Something can bo dono to help thuse poor unfortunate people who to my mind are some uf the best people in the world, but who remind me of sheep without a shepherd. No scientific method Is going .y help. It will be like bailing the air with a stick. raonlc are not machines, but human beings. What wo want la a change of heart amongst ttiu more fortunate people of this Island. We want to atop passing the oilier fellow on the other side, and to put Into practice what the best man who ever lived said to tho people when they asked him about the araaiaal Commandment. He said io I've the Lord thy God with all thy Soul, mind and heart, and thy neighbour as thyself." That |l our trouble. Wo inisinterpre* who is our neighbour. We soy. the nan who can invite us to tea. '." play a game, o' Bridge or who can stand a round of drinkn —he la our neighbour. The exI.ICIMC of the social barrier needs to be removed and all the snobbery brought to an end. Until Uus is done, this place in Mipposed to become worse. There must be the necessity to IBS Horticultural Society earlier this f add to the police force, employ year I .ndowncr and Liboureo-operatp in producim; :i full share of ground i for the Inhabitants of the Island. V HOUSEW11L. LISTEN TO TIIE ECHO OF THE GUNS A Rancher Confesses To Wild VVes. Hold-up By R. M. MacCOLL WASHINGTON. OUT in Wyoming, life proves stranger than a tilir. scenario. For suddenly there sounds a dramatic echo of the Old West, of bad men, the hoofboats uf sheriffs' posses. Sixty-three-year-old Frank Taylor, a wealthy rancher in eastern Montana and known as a model of rectitude, goes to John Bonner. Governor of Montana, and confesses that he is really Charles Whitney, former member of the "Hoi-;n-the-wall gang which held up a bank in Cokeville, Wyoming, in 1911, and then galloped off. And why did Whitney, alias Taylor, decide to come clean all these years later? Becau.*c o;ily a few months ago his brother, also a member of the gang, died a natural death in British Columbia. And while "Frank Taylor" was admittedly I a robber, the brother was "wanted" for the murder of a train conductor in another hold-up. • • • Governor Bonner advises Wh'tney to go to Wyoming and tell his story to Governor Frank Barrett. And he sends a personal message to his fellow governor asking "the utmost leniency and clemency for Mr. Whitney, whose residence in this State has never been marred by even a minor offence." „ Governor Barrett suggests that he plead guilty to the 40-year-old crime. A sympathetic judge puts him on five years probation. And Whitney is free to resume his respected career a* a Montana stockman. For. in this modern era of million-dollar hold-ups, it is a reminder of how times have changed that the loot from that "great" bank robbery in the distant days of 1911 amounted to just 600 dollars—worth £125 then and £214 now. Marilyn Monroe is to star in "Niagara." Quips Hollywood columnist Hedda Hopper: "The Niagara Falls will have a strictly supporting role.'" Marilyn, you will recall, was one of the hits in "All About Eve." PHOTOGRAPHS Copies of Local Photograph* U hii-h have appeared in the ADVOCATE NEWSPAPER < .in n ordered from the .. ADVOCATE STATIONERY FIBRE MATS: Plain, Stencilled and Decorated. These are available in four sizes. CONGOLEUM SQUARES 3x3yib.&3x3Wyds. CONGOLEUM: Six feet wide nod cut to any desired aise. Ph. 4472 C. & PITCHER & CO. Cartel has become a word that makes many Americans turn pale and shudder. It conjures up visions of huge business concerns plotting to divide up trade unfairly and to the detriment of their smaller competitors and the public alike. Now Senator Thomas Hennings, Missouri Democrat, formally asks that the Justice Department and the Senate itself immediately investigate one of the "greatest cartels yet." He charges that President Truman has clamped the lid on an "explosive" 900-page report submitted to him by the Federal Trade Commission, which says that American, British, and Dutch interests have arranged among themselves "to divide the oil reserves of the Middle East and to fix prices." In Durham, North Carolina, Mrs. TernEwing had come to the end of her slender resources, spending money on detectives' Faaa trying to trace her missing husband. A friend urged her to watch a boxin;; match in Madison Square Garden on TV, suggesting "it will take your mind off your troubles." The TV camera swung into the audience at one point—and there was the missing Mr. E. selling soft drinks to the boxing fans. Mrs. Ewing has asked the police to inves.i [ata In the massive Radio City Music Hall of \*cw York. "Where's Charley?" opens this week. This is the musical version of our old friend "Charley's Aunt." In it, Ray Bolger •epeats the inspired performance that made I a smash hit on Broadway a couple of seasons back. Shy Millionaire Lavere Rediield. whose home in Reno, Nevada, was looted of £535,000 not long ago, is arrested in California for failing to answer a subpoena directing him to give evidence against two women suspects. He refuses to find the £17.000 bali asked for—"although I could raise it in a moment if I wanted to"—and stays in a San Francisco jail rather than face the photographers outside. But to-day he grows tired of sharing a cell with a man accused of receiving some of the :tolen money, decides tu find bail—and faces the photographers. Fred Lounsberry. a programme director for a big broadcasting studio in northern ;New York Stale, contends that musicals to-day are suffering from "too little fun and too much art." He says that the immortal l'pe: "Id go insane without my cane," in a song entitled "My Walking Stick" which Irving Berlin wrote years ago. epitomises the "gaiety, goofiness, and abandon which wo are in danger of losing in our musical theatre." Judge George Neilson describes Washington as "the shoplifter's paradise." Shop de%  VA thi ir wits' ends over the problem, and losses run into millions of dollars a year. Crisp, smartly-styled MEN'S SHIRTS by CONSULATE—Collars attached and detached. SEA ISLAND COTTON SHIRTS and UNDERWEAR DRESS SHIRTS, by MARC-ELLA and DRESS COLLARS Handsome TIES (including BOW TIES, Maroon and Black for Evening Wear) IDOL ANKLET SOCKS and Half-length HOSE In many colours and patterns Da Costa & Co., Ltd. .i I I I IHHUIII II HHH'""" CELEBRATE IO-IH V nun A TURKEY SPECIAL AT Goddard s Restaurant Sfenmf from IO a.m. In 3 p.m. vor'LL KXJOY OIK GOLD BRAID COCKTAILS FRENCH ICE CREAMS I f-'larourn l i i n i ii i ii ii iii i iii i ii ii n i iiiii



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r*H>AY, JULY 4, 1K2 BABBAUOS ADVOCATE Hopes High For C'ada— W.I. Trade By G H. l.Asil "We have oigi. hopes kui me British Wast UUILKM i>.d UDaalizauon Plan will (uwvulc uiI'leased oppurlumiy lur Tris/tii" exporters to tha Wast Indies," Doojdu H. Chuney, mm Til Canadian trade CommUaionvr, Mid following his arrival la Montteai on beard the Cam.oi.ui NaUoaal Steamship* lady Neatoo IhU morning. Pointing out that the West Indies are in the sterling area, and that doUar trad* has been adversely afevtsd because Ol this, Mr. Cheney said the plan was put Into effect last year after negotiations with the government* of the United Kingdom and the United States. "Because of the devaluation of the sterling money, it was necesanr for the British West lndi-. to say down an elaborate system of Import and estcbange control in IMS." he taid. Be added thai exports during that year and 1 %  wete very low. but with the Trade Liberalization plan in effort, some progress was made in lP.si "This year," he continued, "thep'aa is more elastic than la*-* year, which is a flood .sign for increased exports to those British West Indies itond effected" TAG*. THiifcr SEA AND AIR TRAFFIC la Crlielr Bay M.V BltM SHU. M.V DMtwtual. I Willmwb.1. Sf.V CanM**-, '•aaktrn D St. Och Ro-Mii-rvc Sri*. OOrlac, St* %  %  tmrl Star, Vh LNn I ScS t'MkMl PUsnm SH> Tap*. %  Do**. AJIUTAI Tttruna • % % %  S*n b>i Babsfl MP's Discuss Malaria In Br. Guiana LONDON, June. Has malaria been eradicated from British Guiana" Two Member* of Parliament arflued on the subject in the House of Commons last night during a debate on United Nations' specialised agencies. Mr. Bernard Braine (.Conservative, Essex, Biliencay div.) was discussing generally the situation in regard to availability of technicians and equipment for various schemes and wont on to make I his comment: "In the last two years malaria has been eradicated from British Guiana". Or. H. Morgan (Labour, Warrinaton): What* Mr. Braine: Malaria has been eradicated. Dr Morgan: Al a medical man. let me tell the Hon. Member that that Is an Incorrect geWU There ft ttut plenty of malaria m Brlti-h Guiana. Mi". Brauie. 1 uo not know which colonial report tho Ho.i. Gentleman read last, but 1 can assure him—and I am sure his own Front Bench will claim Hu __ credit for It that one of the The Schooner Timothy Van moat notable achievemuil in the Sluytman. 76 ton*, under Captain light against ill health In th.s SloU at Lived in Carlisle Bay yesworld is largelv toe work of one •*" %  ** rom Biitish Guiana with vci? dislmflUlshed malarlologist !" > bags of coal, 89 tons of flrein eradicating maUrla from tr* w ^„^*^ %  £*".,* ** „ coastal belt of British Guia ia While the Timothy Van Sluylwhero it has been a killing 01sman was in British Guiana a smal. ejiat. I mention that becau-e I do ,n c hrok ; ul r.ot think we should be so shy where repairs about lalking of our own achieve•* • ^..^^i.,*^ 0 ^: B "' ments in this battle against poverty and want. The great problem facing no only ps but the world as a whol '* the lack at the present moment 7** of sufficient technical specialists. Ior I remember visiting British Gui:ina laM year and asking .igrieullural officer whether .ie had his full complement of staff. "_."il^l. he .l! C l ed _. a J?. ?_ !" Adv'ocsw' yesterday. Many Guianese Find They Are Not British f GEORGKTuWN, June 28. British Guiana's Treasury stand to gain a big windfall from Universal Adult Suffrage under the now Constitution by way of naturalization fees, according to the Registration Officer. The searchlight fur the proposed universal suffrage has shown that many 'British Guianesc' are not really British nationals. This condition is not confined to the masses, for many persons in very high places who have lived In British Guiana 40, 50 or 80 years are not British nationals. It has been disclosed that some of them even have the vote and are elected representatives on statutory bodies When they signed voters registration forms or accepted places on the electoral roll It never occurred to them that they were neither British by birth or naturalize Udn Enumerators' searching questions under the recent campaign found the gaps in their armour. And they have not been silent about it. The only remedy which scemt open to them now is to get naturalised or they wouldn't have a vote at the 1953 General Elections The assurance has however been given them that they have time enough to spare to get themselves In order. As It Is many a Dutch Guianaborn, China-born. Syriaborn Muiatit % %  will have to take out naturalization papers If .(hey want the vote. B.G. Medico At T.B. Talks LONDON Dr Harold Fi round**, tuberculosis officer. British Guiana, Is attending (he third Commonwealth Health and Tuberculosis Conference, which opens in London on Ju.y 8. He will address a n.euUD.1 oa •TubcrcuN-st* in British Celunisl Territories. !" Also apeak in*at the same meeting will be Mr Oliver Lyttelton, Secretary of Suit for the Colonies, and medical ugncers from several other British crtomc* Tuberculosis is now a serious problem m the British Caribbear colonies and is linked with the housing shortage. In British Guinea, (or example, the incidence o> v tuberculosis h risen since 1947 from 51 to 90 per 100.000. A survey of ce^ts showed that 84 percent of newly diagnosed sufferers shared a bedroom with one or more people and 00 per cent snared a bed.~B.IJJ. Latest Gadget In The Jet Economic Development In Colonies Important —ttQMUNSQN LONDON. "EXPENDITURE within Colonial development plans mutt be related to the long-term needs of •ach territory but HM. (.H-vernioenl ontinuag to emphasise to all Colonial Governments iht importance of devoting particular attention to economic development at the present tune," said Mr. Harry Hopkimon, Minuter of State foi the Colonies, in the House of Commons recently. He had been u>ked by Mr. Thomaa Held. labour. Swin don, it "in view of the urgent need for wealth-producinK schemes in the Colonies" he would depart from the present practice of spending, under the 10-year development plans. only about as much on economic development as on social services. Mr. K".i ...-., aaked what wealth producing scheme* had iwen sanctioned In tho Coloruea) .is a result of Uie work of tho Colonial Primary Products ComT1 mltlee. opart from those underII11 CFtf* I ll*iinillaTl taken by the Colonial DevelopnilgC UIUU1UUI ment and Overseas Food Corporations. Mr. llopkinson replied"The pose of the Committee was to Nigeria Has luge Uranii Deposits review the possibilities! of m ere — pe possibility th-i Nlgun* % mg Colomal production in th-llsfht become an important producer "I'ti.illdown with nothing on of present and prospective world uranium—raw muterud of atoi ih.. clock but tbe maker's na.ne," needs. Their reports provided, as energy—la revested by two —tins ohisse i* rapuU* going >u l a intended, u useful back* purts published ui I^IOKU I f rssfelM) with let-age pilots. Th" gi-ound agiunsl which spedflc w-k They disclose that one i reason is thst the latest Hoyal schemes of development emild ho the largest deposits A r For.e ighr* are 0tt"d wlUl Primed both by Colon in 1 Governa Budget which always keeps ment and by pHvate enterprise. %  snmMhing "on the clock." T*'* Minister added that i' sfhttB living hUnd at night or m *" %  not possible to say which of bod wei.ther. pilots rely on an Inthe %  uraniu-n been discovered Niger .i And with It are Large deposits of another rare meutl. %  um—much in demand for .... various schemes started since) defence and ciOaer purposes, noiahT^i"which shows" thein bjOW the Committee report**! fw raBd ub ( y for aUojn used in Jet engineUH.u--r.crafi\.^i a .drel.t,vetn dlreetly from ,h, Coramilf*. f ^ of ttlrMtloo „, the horizon. This artulclal bor-wort. y^ iw ^^^ clu C ovwconit son' as it is cuUwO,, ujc nu Answeruig anotner <(uastioa -4ad altftougb resennh work M tiRporluiit .lok on tfie oi.na nj j]|uUl thn possibility uf the Unitel them Is at presenl being under lng panol %  <****" **^ Kingdom obtaining ppttiiahl. Udxen at Britoln's atonue enerr Huppliee of meat fruin Colonial sUnoD at Harwell. IWkshlrt-. idmltted to be 'Koii Sluytman' Will lie Overhauled Ci This 'artdlcul bor-wort. called, is tin lock on the bLind II> n the %  tp'i Until rocentiy, Uus gyroacopj'* instrument was **ortl by an njr umrtXonea, Mr. "llopkmson said these problem are lucliori pump. Even if tho PIV hl| t from m uw ^ r|mi ,, ( exUrn> .|y complear-e langv bankod or illved. the gyro still bf#f ^^ Etmt AfrIeH Bnd som „ ; niprtr t a nt source of ore, with kept its position m rel.ition to tne ITtuUo n from the rslkland Istan.ls. commercial vihie running horizon. The snag was that. |hcrf WJ|f no ^ manoeuvring for an attack, the uhU #1WB1 ,^ ,^r ri „ and oiled the aircraft ft able from the territories. many millions of pounds, will tx* vail.ible. Sinli high omcerrtxa"ln most terrltones there as a trationa of uranium n v.Bi.uii. ui UIIIOIUITI ..-. luis been back, or cvyed steeply, ine gyro Urfp nnd g^win^ demand Tnr found In Nigeria ore very scaroc. toppled, and it t'-iK ten im ea mr>al wh> ch (s a p r0Bep t uniaUs: 'nd the size of the area §SgaM(t*M of level flying t" eitiN" ( „ N ). ImporU of careaga meat from "iay be tbe world's largest, reewK Kilion. Another problem we* any M it eombots in the let age tke ^^T place very h gh up. where the air ^ ^^ fl b too thin for an air-driven gyro lWck ^^ r^^^p^^ Mer. Their release is a challengr U> work successfully. Asked about j, possible cxpan'o . *. Arn*u. %  > M* !" **.~I. whether Her Mn)e>ty' Oovern' Dublin. • •. Sun Bov*r. ... v, __. nm ,I-_J %  i -m %  .gaa>.S-l F-iH*'>l Vtiviud-T < Cototnbi. ment .-re seised, ns l am SUP HaVik , cr-tn, .. Ah., Ai. the';.re. of the urgency of the IJM. > %  p-tac*. %  T-IIJI SUM 1 %  • Problem and nr* doing soiaethln-no^M^ee. .Jj.* fa^.^ >unw>, ThMnltSokb. • %  AHUM. %  —l-K.9, < iKdai n.. OarasH YUKON HAS BRIGHT, EXCITING FUTURE about H" T RESOURCE.S and Development Minteter fiattS t?|SE i has forecast a "briffht and excitinR" futura mtraotior. could bo acuiev Road Engineers Needed In R.W.L Racial Discrimination Alleged In Canada TORONTO, June. NEC.ROES. especially those from the West Indies, arc beintf denied entry Into Canada by the Federal Immigration Department, alines the Canadian National Cornrnittef on Negro Citizenship, in Toronto. Al'hoti'^h rider Rrilish liw all people fmm the West iiiah subjects, they aic nm considered as such under the Canadian Immigration Act. according to Mr Dona'H Mon* chairman of the Committee. %  — %  %  la. s-. pn-nounred. he declares, that high nVial* of the ne|..irUri'-nt have been Immlgmtlon In. gee trsst Weci Indians It gM .1. r; y Into Canada. Since IX>NDON Fasu r, he save. least 20 Rjoad gliglMI Ig*gt81 hei"' %  been detained -.ught in UM United Kingdom loi .-ippelntmesiti in the West Indies. Mr. Moore fW that the afl nhder It t under;l-Is bei: i> ' -s iinpoeaibh' -uitab!y--< 1 i"'ltiU'"'• •-'"P' themselves 1 i willing U. woH. in I he Wrst ln>< -.: I" tbe chani-. .„. -The rH*rmnee I I For ai-rir NIM i then juj-t : been s vara*ey for %  r^ den: eti,i i. %  .^ tl)(l ?tneer ft*-9m HttmfnJsal Bire hardshlnr: i I Han rlima.e., %  Ughway H HHtlsh Hondtir.^ Those '*i are •hidh wi!' o.ikBoo-ingCiee* with .,thma ler, khan gfj injustice Middlesex Alth. urh a salary of up t ,.,, rro eltisen :o £2.000 year i* ofi>red f .-le to hrlna in viiort-ten" "pnoinunrrt the right relatives from abroad." %  iaa Is s* 11 Ivelrg SOUCht fo: I N lared job, i-ied tl-st rV.iUh s Slnsilar -u-'led iPpotr.tr. %  I indies had bora able t- vast in Trintdsd The Colonial sneer Canada in many ases only Office In London Is se,'>rching, for afieV -,g sad Cetoesalve legal :viwo rse-i to design a:kd ui>ertse preH-n'attoas to tbe G\*ernmer.t %  i 'f large road improyemeoX sc hen as r and new roads. .T..-O than 11.500 before he wa inrtuding bridge-, in :h->Co!oi. —axc.r. -m-VJt. sums years it i .nnv.ii that pyruchjore (_ ... ontaining: uranium and niobium J occurred in som* types of grunila in Nigeria but it *.-.< %  not uut t I •# %  UiUt mvesrUgauon of these granite was started In order UdeternUm their economir ImporUince. Thi vork haa shown thai oaarly i'i ••eras of ground arc underlain i jyrochlore-bearinK granite. O) •jii.-iig metali worth (at prcsi i*ricea) about CS in every urn of " Tha extent of the deposit .tlmid-d, at 700.000 tons of ora /glued al £1. ts. m.) in every foot of dossil.. Tfiera is a sound • specta'.on. bused on the geology. that there should be at lan-t a few undred feet of depth ly millee-quartir iieved, the nperls calculata that a pla •caling with 3,000 tons of rock OTTAWA DEPUTY H. A. Young for the Yukon and Northwest territories. Youn,; said In an interview thai great w<-ulth would cotM to th..two sections of Canada thruogh exploitation ^.^1^ tyffl*/^ ^*f of then rich natural resources. He predicted this would take place in the not too distant future because rrsourt* development is steadily moving north." The deputy minister gave a a considerable meresksa la out* broad review of the mineral and put, particularly when power plant now beans; built by the Northwest Territories Powar Commission on the Msro Rreer comes Into opereUon at tha end of the year,'* Youn a said oil prospects of the north country to back up his prediction of a spectacular future for the two areas. The east and central portion* •J the mainland section of the Northwest Territories, and large part of the Arctic Islands. He in the Canadian Shield, he .;.id. Most of this area. lik< other parts of the shield, ( l*elleved to be highly mineralized. Th? Maegenrie River vslle. ii an extentlon of the central plains of Canada, like the southern parti of the plains, the area in the north gives promise of being rich in oil. In addition, •iie Cordillera ranges and their flats lie In the western area of the Northwest Territories and i of uie Yukon, and are rich In minerals. In the Yukon, Young said, the most famous mineral producers are the placer gold creaks of the Klondike which •dill vleM more than f2.7O0.0OO worth of gold a year. However, the role of loading producer now Is held by the United Keno Hill Mines a; Keno end Galena Hills, which last year produced over t6.800.000 In silver, lead and zinc. h year. The o i ii Kann Province in Northern N'jiTia, 20 miles from, Uie Beu'hi nulvay from Jos to Zaru>, and 10 fcg. niles from the Jos Plateau whero w 'Vtrrity i available. Much research has gone hit" possib'i mifhodsi of recoverl'i | uranium from sediments! v shales aod lehijsphorites carryuig from 100 to 20O grama a sax So fsr as is known ta* uranium Is more or less unifunnlv distributed throughout thesa sediments and %  lisiolvuio; process will he nece •ary to extraet It. This is likely lfl be costly and in I0SO it sppear. %  d th't this mnss could not '* Young said the only oil field ^plo-teri. but subsequent rises In presently produclna In the *• • ,^,, "* uranium and iwoblurn Yukon is at NormS, WeUa lu J^^rj**** P !" £ ^ 'is the Mackenzie basin. He .aid Jr^'^Jii * "* %  ^..T^ !S?t n^^th^-aS wl11 ni-lWe to aasea. the annual output to meet thejjraat u „ f ^ nnomir potentialities of the part of the petrul.-um neada of j.-^^,. whether oraHjraasrng the Mscken/U' district. rescreh will solve the proNem"However, the vast wava of „f rrnnomlrally extracting Ills alion from Alberta Is melah from ores of this sort re. Other mineral dsrveloprnamt i wbaa good p rospects an b asi n g undertaken In other areas of star Yukon, particularly on the old Cnnol Road near the Northwest Territories border. surging northward, and that, let ngure of speech," Young aald. "In the last eight months over "i 500 000 acres of oil sad natural gas exploration permits have i


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IHWAY. JULY I. IU BARB.VDUS ADVIK ATE PARE FIVE Judgment Awarded to Barrister-at-Law President Reviews One Year's Work Of Y.W.C.A. .Malik Vetoes Investigation Of Germ War Charges BEFORE GIVING JUDGMENT lot Mr. Lorenzo Williams. M.C.P., Barribter-at-Lnw, in Ihe Assistant Court of Appeal, Original Jurisdiction yesterday, in a case in which Waft Inez Spencer of Checker Hall, claimed £50 damages from him on the ground that he had assaulted and beaten her on December 12 last year. His Honour Mr. J. W. B. Chenery said that he was not forgetful of the heat and excitement cf the political battle at the time. "While I cannot forget thil in with him and was with him until the heal and sac Hawaii! cf the well over an hour after it had political battle a candidate might occurred. And that came In condo thing* which he might subs:trtdiclion of Bishop's testimony quenily regret or in h i heated which itself was regarded as unmomen's rcfram from doinu In this case thire is nothing to "So if 'hey datmatflW 'he IMUsuggest that the t-vicfcnro given mony of Gibb and Bishop, they hy the defendant is not s. true, were lift with tinevidence of In* honest and straight-forward atplaintiff and the defendant. The count of what actually took place," case stood or fell by the ihgree His Honour said, of credibility which the court (ell The case had been heard at c it could ailaen to the witnessts, date and yesterday th? always remembering that the decision was gh rrm ttill J com tn subtnltteu BOUM ago. They are still being sttafaV I The original proposals *-hkh had been prepared and submitted to Government by a Committee on.;i.-vd of Government Agricultural Officers. Mil''. Producers and members of lhe House of Assembly, were r %  M Producers as being impra.-ticoi aadM Iba INK FoUi-. ha Governor, the Miik PMdueti gejveed lo eta poeaU. and a Committee was get Tinw iiOgata n-.ajority of the Milk Producers an to. establishment i>( the Central D*pot and Cre* Replying lo a question by die Hon. Mr. V C Gale in lite Legislative Council a M*f wee I Secretary said that the cost of the s.hcmc had now risen to $B0.(HH) instead of $80,000 as was eathliated mentaiii n of the ,.1'rnative plans would > %  $50,000 more than they originally planned, Mr bOWtJVCff assured the Hon. Mr Oala lhat the scheme had not been forgotten, but was among a list of other matters lor serious consideration. MING the First Annual EUport ut thd V um • "•" pate t m ? !i / the Annual Gc %  .££ ol tint OrganigatiOCi n the JUth June, tne Frceilhe unified command toK >rKorej ani Hrd Chin.i A. j fj boon i During the vear undei .th d-bate *i unjnoved and still %  -he Association has been -egret that ihe i trlng d.raugh hii ban ran„ ol -Ur S ln a* *-J ^SJl UWllM Lkv.rnU-i. 1961, ralsMf mam with il* of lhe Attocmlion. %  ..j,. the .'... %  Work -id to reraambei the! <" "• In'. ...dies has n U ijughoui i it* and warned .hat Li: %  I Nal lid use the veto a^ain lo igaging I'DOMI. lug a :u vol.omc to Work and to remember ttr i*W.CA BY o-.^ure' Ihe ao.iSERVE ONE ANOTHER CA-r or C % %  %  % %  %  • are in record inn U %  sleeptat i Ukt % % %  I i 'l as local lhe Finances of UM A pointa CHII that "lhe lUtUted . to the Sl-t DeeemI %  .... l*er show a ercdil b;]liue n' v %  S1.S67.03. for DnnaThe Preirieiit Anally %  mrrnbem lo pay .illniMt n H ml to I mhgHptiona as Kti of tt to b i .. V gf I Y !" be mi rtwad gad rti at ... din Hi' : %  : %  % %  %  %  dear re.... ,,.. draft resobi the lutsna connected with the use of i % %  c a p o n s by Nominal Kt til If ill Is Best Athlete In Aruba Sports tsttpectton Parade To Be Beld On Julv 12 KUCAR l.OADF.D INTO •CEIRULO" £=£ %  &' i&Xrsismv&3%!*4gt&Z'i plaintiff has ui • %  •-•* % %  % %  • % %  _"--] to keep out of his htulneaa. Sho case and Judgment Is given lo the y_ r i b !. ? !" : was cut on lhe lefi siduof her defendant. mouth %  At lhe lime, "he added, *he h-*l taken up two stone*, but had been Af\l |o*|XP< Ki R penuaded no' lo use them. 1U fl^MlsS rUI\ H,. SSSS ^J^aSouS FAtLTY^"EIGHT-S James Cibbs and Jason Bishop. Is duo to urrive In Bsrba. .. uo, hunly on a lour of Inspection %  • %  nllv >v?,do 1 U .• "' "" %  ,roo s '" h utand S^hy'-f" tE rn^sl 'SSffidSS *' I' !" i Pondcof Ih. ..Ihlolo m UM 12Ih annual Queen', £ !" ">""1 troop" will be held on Birthday Olympiad held at thu fJfiSK fjtj? J "'", Th .* U.JO Sports Park. Aruba. He w lOhejtsml (or this parade wlU tmk* presented with the award bv Mr. blaee at the Garrison on Thursday O. S. Mlngus. Lago General ManJuly 10. at 5 p.m. ager. Mr. Hill was srle.Med the most P..1—... T n M J outstanding athlete of Hie OlymLllegales lo DC Named 9 ad when in lhe (Ivo ecntj in F 0 r Fats And OMS Talks Inch he rompote.1. he cirrlt^l ., . A,,, lu ,. a ^M^-I„ olt three Mrs, ; Ih iu fl^TS ol OKI ig nnuu, -tigioT ' n.h activity on the tiaa oi man bu..u .Lrfi^rl y"*X.." l S^Z ined and toaaed baa of augiu ^ .rM*ing taken loth. Norwegian Brigadier A. C. F. Jackson, loan o( IWnitUra Wltneut sriUca %  ** %  *? ** q**"* Conunande. -f the Cibbean Area m* OMlW B>m arranging for aucfa tWl hat rn—n the posiuvaatljjatl U of UM if bfartcaung ai t i MCh false Mtion in : • reaaea lhe tanaion among lhe'future.'*—U.F ions and which is deslgi undermine lhe eft. i uted Nations lo combat aggres. I in Korea and the >.. Ota people of the world I: (Iain's .Sir Oladw ".eluding thu delude on lhe ra ktican proposal, appealed lo a.ilik to abstain In U ithar than using Iha veto to p' >"kv a grave situation. \: IA A' ivaafc he would not parlicipale u> LOG ADRIFtA log hit baeo slgliled drifting i*t latimge 10 IS dsgraea north and lcngUtt.de M. IS degrees west. Shiparc asked to be on tbe lookout for this log which could be dngcrons to navigation. Thi massage was received by the Harbour Master. "Daerwood's" Cngines Now Being Checked but lhe testimonies of these witI \J1 >i asK | I outsianduig athlete of ihe OlvmWeiegaies lo bo Named Her Report showed tfaa ncsics wer; so i.ianl'lly full o: i,J -* ,JW UI Mad when In the five events in For Fats And Q'ls Talki n> inberdiip ol the Y" is U! conlradiclion. both Inher tit . wclal ,., ilhich he rompeted. he carried ., -.,, ,.,, Al .. llfUa rtma i.. "<" 18 ^H %  embers, and .-nd eontradiction to the plaintiffs w 25 h SJS 11 s Wofshm Mr ol1 *""> nrsU V** "** '" the mlv iw. te rltort^toTuun? '" ^" liP *, ">" wilh hc Organ.sed OUT. testimony, that no COUrt *> 'Z !" '* vAteu.v and in^ a"oth" and third In lhe other. JJJ MiJauL end advlaer^tl^tte U '*" ponsored by Ihe A Uu. ^ Barbaans B-lu i lont ^^ A ,.-., rt k. "In this connection," ni-icnssion Aside ". c *?• 22* l3 l ^ e }* and the ln ffll i 1ornw ot Rpo rts. 'ncludlmi rhculd be conunuJd. and If go. foi ,h "I"* 1 aialea "Ihankj mu-i „.K a TK-V .. h.a !" dtoe. fonlblll „.,,, „>,,,.„,.. ;t which h, wna j^,^, ]ltld ^Vlial terms. %  AVaugl— re ure four inoto: ,-.,*d In the Cansenage Theex lhe Caiibbee, Willemstatl, Blw Star and Daerwood itoth Ihe t*arIIIIHM. ,.n I Willrmtlail live Jucome qg| the dock from a genera under review the work month's bn.prbjorunaot. by ^ rtcfj||Jt || C I' Stt-ute. Mi-. H. (JrlnV.i Mrs N Uaffna, who took _. and Mrs I %  b) within the Oulf of Paris are noil fi.it that an unllgbud yellow mid whlto buoy illlcd with a square slisped radar reflector, lopmark spar and yellow and black strip**, has been moored In latitude in degree-a, DO ntliiutei north, longitude 51 degroes, ol mlnufs, 35 sec on4s wmt "rlthin the bombing •ad strafing range sign. Ships are ashed lo be on the look-out Negligence Of Driver Not Proved Because Kenneth Bcsl of Round was given. Mr. E. W. Barrow, have proved his case. It would proof of negligence on Ihe part The Tow.i. St. Peter, failed l nstrueted by Mr. D. L*o Sargeanl have been sufncier-t to say that of lhe defendant lie-cause, too. aa prove thai Arlington Savoury, a appeared for the defendants. jh e accident occurred and the h.-^lnuLs. the defendant was dodriver of Peterkins Land, wna In Ihn case, evidence was given damage, and leave II lo lhe defening uboui 15 miles an hour, the negligent while driving the car by the plaintiff himself, the Judgo dant to disprove lhe c^se same as he was don", and there M—382 along Garden Road, St. remarked, evidence lhal neither of -Bui unfortunately for lh wtt nothing lo suggest that he n December 26 last year, lhe vehicle, were going fast and plaintiff, negligence In matters of I i um..! care. His Honour of Ihe Assistant Court both had on their Indus, and all mis kind has to be positively "We are only lefi v.ith the fait of Appeal. Original Jurisdiction, the plaintiff could aay was that proved and wt la you always feel of the accident and Ihe mere fact Mr. J. W. B. Chenery, ye-derday lhe accident did occur. sympathy for a man who throt i enough to is%  no "tuh f his suffered damages, > I irj fo say lhe plainA Het Uay ycl in this partrrulir case, it Is L'ff has discharge*! lhe L But the evi(,tnce of the police obvious lhat under the circumupon him. who took measurements was that stances, lhe occas on of lhe overit was a very wet day, lhe roads flowing of the gutters by lhe the] evidence as %  re full of water and some had water al this stage made It dimwhole. I am liound to cmne to th. spilled over into the gutters, obvlcult. If not lmpo*.-ibIe for tho concluiiori thai the plaintiff ha* Cutelerla Kit .ioals briefly wltn %  tM -. i: .'itiii v. ilh the working of ih,. Cafeteria, the Presifilbute IO the "on l Inmanner ln which aiu retarla with the help of a member of Ihe Committee. Report im: on the Ubrary. she %  taled "lhe Committ'.v and Mmbcrs of Ihe Y.W.C.A. arc graletlioao donors who sent us literature during the past | adxlgd "I" %  re being buHl and we will be ible to set up a H 'dine" i mitiee appealed t > mlfti r |o take advanUIW 3* sf#i'a' TAt flNGER"F.'8E TOUCHES YOU/ g;.ve judgment for Savoury and Louisa A. Sluarl. of Black Rock, the owner of the car. from whom Best claimed 3240 damages. Besl claimed that Savoury negligently, recklessly and unskilfully managed and drove lhe car with the result lhal n collision occurred ously ak/ng it difficult to distlnpartta* to d MinguKh the sides of < %  Hod m 'he .tuty placed upo ie surface of the road. the road. him to prove negligence i of the damage, he suffered in"In rases of collision, the maxim %  : i.nt and th> convenience and discomfiture. res Ipaa loquitur does not apply," Nrgliprnrr > was really due to exThe case had previously been His Honour said. "If t did apply, -\ am unable lo find from th.%  heard and yesterday the decision the plaintiff undoubtedly would evidence of the plaintiff, any nal Bcsl gave notice Of appeal FINE CRETONNES GIVE YOUR ROOMS A RRIGHT ACCENT We olter in our LINEN DKI'T. CRETONNES 48 ins wide ft S2.27. tilj SI 80 l.7 yard 36 ins. wide (a $1.42 yard 27 ins. wide 'a 88c. yard MUM III PLASTIC :; ins. irMa g Mc. SI.IIO. ^l Kl'RBLK SHKETIMi WhileM ins. Ktdsj B *2.2" ...i.l lied — M Ins. wide i H.U yard PaUNTSO TABU CLOTHS RiHtl v; in ,.„ h 45 x 45 u $1.77 each CAVE SHEPHERD & 10., LTD. 10. 11. 12 & 13 Broad St. r *t • > • &f &f &f&f a-( -t saaaa far ihose sllVogTflaPsTfffS \h*Au Strip* JtylmM In Pink. Blue & White — al $2.8? Y.l. ••/V#r*af'//ai" Thls Is a very serviceable art silk material, and Is available In lovely range of plain shades. Jlwi Silk I in"" TaWrr in Pink. Silver, Chan.pagne, Ktj-j, Lgaaon, Blue, Torquoise, hose. UU.-. Oois de IS %  ..-.%  and Wl.i'e at ft.fd HARRISONS BROAD STREET-DIAL 2664 &f # &f BILE BEANS IkMp WaH YOUTHFUL FIT and NAPPY —full of rigo Bue I Wail, will alto make vital, full energy, cheertul and -uixcnlul. You will noi have indigestion, htsd %  acaea or be comtipaied, lirerith or lired if you take Bile Beam J



PAGE 1

PAGL TWO BARBADOS ADVOCATE I Itll'W II I ^ 1 132 Ccuub ft*U*m What made Rita D J UUQfttfl %  . ciil and t>\ T (' \ Hand the %  from Jul> 8 In 13 Dim-ton. %  %  l>r Harknrss expect* io return to Barbados In about a month's With Barclay* Bank R FTl'H\IN(. to Trll Wed. M il C'.iambtr Ing In England I the pail font iii Mr Wills it employed with the San Fernando branch of ft;ir : On Routine Visit M M G MONTGOMERY GORlilMlimilllg Adviser lo the Comptroller for Development anil Welfare, left for Dominica yesterday morning by B.G Airways on s routine vtsv Itexpo'tot nhout two On Holiday M RS. B A SPENCE. wh%.,] Mr. Kan ton is a Director of United Traders Ltd* in King*-j town. • I i For Medical Treatment M I! 11. STUART BYNOE. Di-fl of Messrs. Cave, Shepher Id and Mr*. "Albion". Hastings, were i-rs l-> T.C.A. yesterday ii "suing (or Canada. %  Mr R. Mimrtce Cave, is going to Ottawa (or medical treatment. King Knit-Whit's Inventions Mr and Mrs. DENIS ATKINSON. Cricketer Wecii rill St M* ,' 'HViluik. Mis Matthias Church yfafternoon at 4 30 BaOa Goddarri. daughter uf Mr and Mrs. Bruce Goddard <*• Karen I-odgcf, Graeme Hull Terrace, was marMi Denis Atkinson, son Of Mr and Mr*. W. E. Atkinson of No. 40 Blue Waters, and Barbados .-ind West Indies cricketer. The bride who was given in nrriage by her father, wore a dress of slipper satin with a close lilting bodice and sleeves of chantilly lace with an anpliqued neckline and a very full skirt ending in a long train. Her linger tip veil of illusion tulle, was kept in rlocc by a Juliet cap of lnco and she carried a bouquet of white orchids and coratita. She was attended by Miss Barhnrn Goddard as maid of honour and Miss Jcanette Goddard and In Van a a u e ia, arrived here yesterMiss Sally Patterson as bridesday morning b> H.W.I.A. from maldl They were all similarly Trinidad where he spent a few attired in dresses of white emi u lien for u furboned tulle with close fitting ther holiday before going tin to bodices, off the shoulder necklines BerktlaS In California, nnd verv full skirts. They car'kobertaon Is staying at the ried fans of the same material M.tnne Hale). trimmed with red rosebuds and Engine?* In Venezuela M R. CHARLES ROBERTSON. engineer of C A Cuminos American Citizens M R. AND MRS. II J. MILLS, %  a dttam who had beei. Europa on hubday. arrived u H.n-i nounea tfla following prise wtnnini! mimbara In the Raffle held in aid iif their lunds — %  Jnd, I4tg; Srd ?S75: 4th 1311; Sth, 0117; nth. ISSi: Tth 3600; StA, 1.17".: l*th. 0*63; 10th, 3770; lllh. 0995; 12th. 4636; 13th. HOT: 14th. 2004. ribbon. Tinceretiioiiv which was fullv choral with Mr G. C William!! at the organ, was conducted by Rev. M E. Griffiths. The duties of bestman were performed by Mr Roy Proverbs, while those of ushers fell to Mr. Richard Randal. Mr. RORCJ Goddard. Mr. Colin Goddard. Mr. Joseph Hassell, Mr John Armstrong. Mr David GitlOtM, Mi David Taylor and Mi John M.i'M.ill A reception wag held al the Marine Hotel ami the honeymoon Is being spent at the Crane Hotel. The bride's going away dress was turquoise wnflle pique with %  hits H -1 % %  < % %  Law Student I! NEIL PHOVERBS. a law student of Toronto.University, left for Jamaica on Wednesday evening by the Colorable after spending a month's holiday with Mr. nnd Mrs. Ernest Klnch M r. UMTS are kindly Mked ,, f Nl U> call on Miss Farmer c/o J. N | a Boni Ltd., ORlce f their prizes. Neil who Is a nephew of Mrs Kinch and son of Mr. and Mrs. Ivor Proverbs of Toronto was paying his first visit to Barbados. Front Jamaica he will travel to ItKYNAULD Miami and then go on to Canada. C.S.O.B.A Reunion Back To St. Lucia M il AND MRS JAMX6 ol : home on Tuesday B W I A after Mending a holiday staying at Crystal Waters A T the meeting of the ExecuWorthlng. T. live Committee %  I Mr James, %  member of the barmen oid Boys' Association on i Town Board, was here J U I V 22nd, the guests of bOOOUr in lbs Interest of his health. m ( i the date ,.f the Annual Dtnnei g^ —. ... will b, llxetl. It had been decided Alter Inrep Weeks not to hold | Monthly Reunion M RS. T D SH1LL1NGFOHD on the first Friday of July on aeof Rcseau. Dominica, recount of clashing of dates with turned home yesterday morning other social functions, by B.G. Airways after spending The date of the Old Boy Attended Conference In Jamaica H ONBLK ERNEST WILLIAMS, memlter of the Antigua : Chairman of the Public Works and Communications Committee, was intransit yesterday morning by B.WIA from Trinidad on his way back home Mr. Williams who spent a few I days in Trinidad visiting various; projects and meeting I ment Officials, had been over to Jamaica attending Ihe Conference of Affiliated Branches of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Aasoi ciation which lasted from June 1 22 to June 29. He said that the Conference was a uecess and he thought it was a good thing for members of the i various legislatures in the Caribbean to get together and discuss theti problems so that thev could come to a unanimous decision and make united representations. Pre-Retirement Leave V|H V. H. B. ROCHEFORD. A*aV accountant in the Government Savings Bank retires from the Civil Service at the end of six months' leave which began on July 1. Mr. Roeheford Joined the Ser! vice In January 1913 and so at the end of his leave will have hail 40 %  i ,\-. io hi credit. He served in the Department of Agriculture, the Po-t Office, the Audit Office, the Bridgetown Petty Debt (Hurt, the Provost Marshal's Office, later the Public Trustee I and the Savings Bank. It was in the Provost Marshal's I Office that he was best known and he several tlm"s acted as hend of thnt Department On Monday he wfcs given a hearty "send off by the members of the Bank Stall ,*m\ other departments of the service. Carlb joins in the wishes expressed to him for many happy years of letin'nun*. Spent Five Weeks M RS. ALICE MICHELIN who OWfsl a cattle farm in Ja malcn, returned home on Wednesday evening by the French S.S. Coloinbie after spending live weeks' holiday with her son and daughter-in-law. Col. ami Mrs. R. T. Muhelin at District A. rainAi. J! i. i Th* New.. three weeks' holiday staying "Allworlh". Cheapslde. Her husband who is Managing Director ot T. G. Shillingford and • i rned last areek after a fortnight holiday Cricket match will also be decided and arrangements for the dunce completod. The Annual General Meeting will be held on Thursday, July 24. at 3 00 p.m. IS 1' l ClMlllO Kill • .•' i p., ii.ii ii.n" •iin %  raixMii. J p III Raport Inrni WlmblMliia. II l> m VsrlMy Bf.rhnl Han Prriinm. III-II isjsai. si am change partners -Arm <* ^ DANCE by LEONARD MDSLEY I HEALLV lell very sorry for | both of them. Bur then, wouldn't' Wh.ti us ladder, sillier, and more p.ith-ue to the uniooHet nan Ihe Mght ol iwu grown men still mooning lovesick, over the am* girl—and still hopelessly unaware ol the reut reason why-sh> ha- walked out of both of then iv< 1 A iv And i Rita in Holly aood uog uilss si a *>nole orti of ideas apar Mom tnetn And inev lu-i oan't nguie oui why. WHYn *ent L Rivler* . • %  : %  < %  when I s iney are i ooth deeply ... love with per. Wmtcn M\ Knu; night club dancing oeaulilul film star likf V dv Carlo or Irene Papa but staring over his partner's shoulder at the door as if tie were 'rymg to will R:ta io come lauKn.ni and saving into the room. Watcn mm as i nave done— •hen be glances across at UK b'g picture ol H'.ra on tne oiano to fits borne And Orson Wrlles ? Mention the name ol Rita to nun and ihe fond exprcaaiun of u man In Inve spread* like whipped cream over (hose chubbv features The/ still *nnt to know WHAT mada Rita leave Uiem. The reason W KI.LES will tell you that they oevvi (luarrelled. So wiU Aly Khan Welles will convince you that, in Ms opinion the* nupeared to be very happv. 80 *iil Alv Khan So how did they OreaS UP t AfWr watching Uwai cloaely. ofn-i 'uitening lo them talk, ma; Dc I can nni the ivaaon lor wh.cli ihev are 'earching For I think I Know hv Rita Havworth is no longer iisti-niua to the Itood nl talk which Orson Welle* txnired out to her dunn.\ ner TurrtaRv to Hit' fenlus it at tnn moinrnt ihiis back nooflog" in a i .mcai tllni in Hoii.wood %  i .-.-uil ol nuuauiaoina eitfa Alv Hne left tlwm because wi? i ..us*.ng girl She elt cvh hatbands rjecause she -iced that neither of Utem j "serious' over work. Happiness... mil ( Know mat Orton Wellea acts in iiltns and direct* I uno* mat Ai> Khan pendi a id of time riding and weeding race winner* Uui neiiliei of tliem has ever. in the way mat Rita looks at it. June a "regular*" Job n nis s:ie comes Irom a long line ol people wno think a lot ol work Her tamil? were prolestional dancers who drumrtn'C into ner the notion that you canno' oe 'lutiuv unless vou are ID regrlai employment. Per t.er* hour tha-. vou olsy dn ter philosophy) vou sho-ii-i pu* in a: least two. Ihree or fou" .... on from sertou* pursu: After *he first rap'ures ol life nd love wiih Orson Welle' and ilv Khan tiad worn on I am oiivnred that she was apoalied i' tnelr aultude towards hard eiular toll. FM. kmo .(WON WELLES llt-d i enthiuiasuc ibout a new Mm oi t new ulsy he was planning :;ia'. ne made it sound like lun And work IIIM unl fun the way u t l( sees it With We'iM *nc nevei knew wneuier ne was working ot Dlaving Hr miecl the two So she walked out on O.m one dav comolauiinB 'hat ihe |iif couldn't go on being marred u a "genius.*' What she meant *< "I lust can') continue as tne wile ol a man who doesn'i believe in work." And 'hen AP Knan walked into her lire It looked good and oromis.ng Hi 'he beginning Het new huiliand was dat lu-ndwme c h r m o g and etcit-.ng. rnev nad lou oi tun tom-ther. rney travelled around logathtl and he showed ner at. k.nds ol new olace* in'roduce'i her to all kinds of new oeoole A CMSCrBRCe %  IFE was lull 01 happv. testful lun ^making Tne* gambled m Havana. They ski-ted .n swurerland Thev natned on the Riviera. Bui tnen came me lime wnen tne working irt ini'de R a Havworth me nooier no thinks people should do some work in life Degan to speak up How tons is all this HOtng on T asked Working Oirl Rtta ot herself Surelv were no* i'omg io plav all the time When do we do some work to lustlfV al) IMS?" 8o this marriage too oroS" up. Again there were no serou; ouarrels. Again the huibanl •nought that everything wai raDhlc and Bf*OS Like Orson Welles Alv Khan didn't guess that the girl he had married was a girl with a conicience — a coruciencr ma: demanded hard work to lostllv a lot ot plav. London Espress Service THE BRIDE FROM PARIS BRINGS A 3-IN-l HAT Listening Hours Tlir DaUj a M p m The Bp Op-iwitu. s JI m Sport* niin4-up %  T ruarmmnte PrHe. I. p in The Ne I 10 o m llcne N> %  uCn Britain. • is M i*ielie M-k PerCn-l. Ip"i Umdno Calling. %  _ The Ortde Is married tn a mall white straw cloche, trimmrd with guiceri and Hnnlng ivll tlett). To match hrr <70ing auay mtf tic lakes off ffte frl'imtngs reveries lie hat and add* a navy and while ribbon (above/. tjid.'n lrgr — an l t ^Z OU C OUt T S l BY THE WAY". . . ly BeacfccomW | pj|4 A lllfl e>-. Ai Algy jnd Koodbyr l.r irg ind li. I'jg 4i.d Olhiri ire he*r ITIJI "ihey sr* tjiCing b->-i Chr:>imi Mmkingt. They ikt no notice of iht inull people n.l rl .t„, %  ',., drill jwiy ownd ihr middle ol ihe vlUge. .h.le Conujble Growler gain T HE! capture of two bears in UM l'.i.ucan town of I-uchon i.•vent. 1-ike the other wild animals in thri'yienc.s. i-x-vpt the izard Ithe chamois ol Ins 1 1 reneea). the bear Is now growing very scarce. I myself have never come acre** line, altlmuilli I baVS described a light in which I killed a huge brown bear on a ledge of rock on the Spanish gUa "f l)M Noufonts pass—and am gradually : coming U> believe it M pened. Once there were even ibex to lie seen in these mount.im bu< SAW the last of Ihem are in capLADIES' FANCY STRAW and CRINOLINE HATS WIDE BRIM WHITE and COLOURS $2.84 $3.28 and $4.06 LADIES' WHITE STRAW HANDBAGS $1.64 $1.80 and $4.06 T. R. EVANS & WHITFIELDS DIAL *220 YOUR SHOE STORES DIAL *60A ivity in the Spanish MatlOOa] Park in the wild vulloy of A Wr*. Wn-lvh mul Ihv Cirrun DOSS." said Wugwell to Colonel O Wretch, 'the day when I DM* more see your betler half— no oeTenre—gracing; our show as of ,, ,1w,\l ba the proudest day of my Ufa since 1 induced the Mayoi of Stacklesham to let Bibbo till his hat with sawdust." "Mrs. Wivtch." said the colonel Icily. • has other calls on her time. Tell him. my dear." "Yes. tell oM Wuggy," said the proprietor rauclly. "1 am fully occupied with iiiitu-.il work." i-eplied Mrs. w..-:i ii %  u m RS batng cbairBU n of the Frieiio* >.f I. .nd of the Society for Human Progreag 'Far (mm it t-e me." re:oi-.ed Wugwell. "to grudge you to that other circus .it Westminster, but Zaphroma the bearded lady %  riilKMil has a nasty go of quinsy. I am aware that your chin fair Blossom, is as innocent of lie ml us a coot Is of mane, ,. i; <-kiU Zaphroma's beard was I nf Unkley's half-crown .idjustablrc (trade secret) and It Is OT disposal." Wiirjhml Y/i' I READ that an attempt n being m;ide to |>opularifte po!o In having a running COB through a loud-speaker during ft realised tint i-ilo i-: hurling <>n horseback, and was Invented by the Irish. It was played %  Kunstar long before recorded history be* Had croquet ore" descendants of pole. Thr fiiiUly run,,,I 'OHE wore the hat." it says. *J "almost over one ear." How dreadfully amusing Oh. but I eay.' I can see heT admirers i-aught on the wrong side of her. running round to whisper their follies in the only ear available. Waiting until u queue had formed. %  •he tilted the hat over on to the other r. and round they ran %  gain, back lo where they had started from. My dear what perfectly ghastly fun. I mean. One tan hardly cope, actuallyAlter the honeymoon its make* a third change and wears if rld>--on, ulil a pink rose tucked and" Iht ftrtm The brute and the thiee nay hat come Irani Ports. — He Found a Way to Cro Br MAX TRELL •111? Majesty Kinc Knit-Whii King of Bungle-Land. was a won%  lerful inventor." General Tin. the tin soldier, was saying %  • lav*** lad Kome of the nioit marvelous things •> the w.irld. For instance %  ie once Invented a slice of bread with three aldea." Knarf and HairM, who were listenln* to Ueneral Tin. exclaimed in amaiement when they heard this. They aaid: "How can a slice of bread have three sidea!" "It was quite simple, onee you aaw it." General Tin replied. "He cut the slice very thick, and the third aide was all around the edges. The purpose of this was to keep His Majesty from eating more than one sliee of bread between meals Ion account of it was so thick).and alio to keep the slice—if it fell down-from falling on the buttered .Ie. He always buttered it on the id it hardly ever fell Plants Without Water — third side on thnt. Didn't Rain '"•Ie also invented a way of making hi* irardi-n grow." continued General Tin. "without ever having to water it even though it didnt rain for months and months and months." "How did he do that?" asked Ha< niil. General Tin smiled. "Once I tell yea In* ncheme. you'll wonder why nobody ever thought of it before. This is what he did. He planted his whale irarden in the lake." "But General Tin, dldnt the flowers get drowned!" Knarf said. "Probably. But that's not important. Hr never nad to water them. It aaved a great deal of time." Knarf nnd Hanid couldn't quite agree that this was a very useful Invention. But General Tin went right on. "Now one day hr invented the boat thing of all. I'll tell you Just how it happened. It had been raining for a long time in Bungle-Land, M much BO that all the roads were deep with mud. Poor King KnitWhit .tood by the window of his room in the palace day after day, looking out at the rain and wiihinic il would atop so that he could go out. But of course he couldn't. There was too much mud. He had to stay indoors.*' "Why didn't he take an umbrella and rubbcru?" aaked Hanid. "He thought of them. But there was mill too much irud. He didn't like irettinghimself rover...l .iV. Kiag Knit-Whit looked out at the mud. So then he decided to Invent something that would let him go outside, in the rain and the mud, and not get wet or muddy. So the lira* thing; he invented was something that looked like a little boat except that it had no oars. If he sat in this boat he wouldn't net muddy. But the rate would still fall on him. So then he invented something to stand over the top of the boat like a sort of square umbrella. And now," said General Tin. "His majesty knew that he wouldn't get wet or muddy. Bat that aiill ssseeVt enough. How could he get the boat with the umbrella on top to move down the road?" I "Yes?" said Knarf and Hanid %  together. "How?" Neat Thing I "So." said General Tin, "the next thing he invented were two wheels for the boat-with-the-umbrella-ontop to stand on. And now. standing on the wheel*, the invention rolled to and fro. But who would be strong enough to pull it with His Majesty 'sitting Inside? lie didn't want hi* rervantn to do II, because then they would get nil wet ami muddy. So (finally he invented two long poles to .lick out in from of the boaiwilh the umbrella on • top that-stood-on-wheelAnd to these poles he hitched a horse, and on the horse he put a harness. And out he went in thi* new invention of his. rolling up and down the road* of Bungle-Lam!, nnd not getting the least bit muddy or ihe slighte-t tit et. Il .i, lbs BKMl wonderful -'.nvenlion he had ever invented I* "Hut OsssstmlTlel" Hanid cried. "That invention wax a carriage!" Hut General Tin only kept imil* Talking Point The English an .1 seriou3 people with many serious things to think CL* —football, horse-racing, dogs. fish.. —Stephen Leacock. Opening Today 5 & 8.30 ** I.I OKI •PISISC. I OB*, a (FRIDAY) 4.45 & 8.30 P.M. Featuring America's Singing erase BILLY HKMlM 1 30 Tomorrow ORCII WIVES & CALL NORTH SIDK 777 Tomorrow ANCHORS A WEI (ill and Mil, It it \KII\I;I i OPENING TO-DAY A 2.33 A 8.30 and ( onllnulng Dally 4.45 A 8 30. i > 11 III i %  : $*^ SI % MA PiiGi.na PATRICE aa>l WYMORE't PLAZA BARBAREES (DIAL 5170) iwy/xi^ov o ioooo 1 y o*a a**oa 4 I 4,411 IS The Garden—St. Jaaaej ___._ i Tosmgaow %  • UMTSNSD C1TT a IL Of THS TIAS




ESTABLISHED 1895

Hav bados





Malik Vetoes Investigation Of Germ War

American Resolution Comdemns
Soviet Move As Undermining

U.N. Efforts To Combat

NEW YORK, July 3.

Russia on Thursday vetoed the American proposal for

Red Cross investigating of Communist germ: warfare
charges and the United States immediately demanded that
the United Nations dismiss the allegations as “without

substance and false”.

Soviet delegate Jacob Malik cast the fiftieth veto to
block the United States challenge to the Kremlin to “put
up or shut up” on its charges that American troops fighting
for the United Nations in Korea had used germ weapons
against the Chinese Communists and North Koreans.

Malik’s was the only negative vote in the ten to one

ballot

in favour of the American resolution.

But the

Security Council rules require a majority of seven mem-
bers including all five permanent members and the Soviet

King Talal

Goes Home

i AMMAN, July 3
King Talal of Jordan returned
to his desert capital to-day by air
from Beriut almost seven weeks
after leaving his kingdom for
European medical aid.

The 41-year-old monarch step-
ped out of a twin engined
plane at a military airfield on
the outskirts of Amman to the
sound of a 21 gun salute from a
battery of 25 pounders manned by
gunners of the Arab legion,

The King whose mental condition
has precipitated a political crisis
in Hassemite looked weary. He
is suffering from Schizzoph (split
personality).

He was greeted by his ministers
and members of the Regency
Council appointed by the Govern-
ment to carry out his duties in his
absence. Immediately after the
three minute reception, he drove
to Basman Palacé on the outskirts
of Amman where he is expected
te remain for a time under medi
cal treatment.

The King has come home but
it remains to be seen-kew success-~
ful maybe any medical attention
to which he might agree. The
three-man Regency Council is ex-
pected to continue to act for him
until he is sufficiently recovered
to be able to shoulder his respon-
sibilities or until 17-year-old heir
apparent Prince Hussein now at
school near London comes of age
next May.—vU.P.



Correspondent
Must Quit France

PARIS, July 3.

An Interior Ministry spokesman
said Pakistan newspaperman Ina-
yat Khan has been ordered to
leave France by midnight for par-
ticipating in aati-French political
activities here,

He said Inayat Khan, Paris cor-
respondent for Pakistan news-
paper “Dawn”, was informed of
the expulsion order one month
ago for speeches he made to North
African student groups denounc
ing France’s conduct in Tunisia.

He was given one month to ar-
cange his affairs and leave France.
A Foreign Ministry official two
days ago denied Inayat Khan had
been ordered to go out of the
country.

When asked about that conflict
ing statement the Interior Ministry
spokesman said the “decision to
expel him, was taken one month
ago”. It was never changed. He
must leave before midnight.

negation is enough to kill the

‘presumed to be utterly false. The
(Security Council in our judgmen’

investigation.
It is the first veto in the U.N.
since November 30,
Malik voted three
day
sored resolution calling upon

North Korean and Chinese Com-
munist aggressors to quit Korea
A veto has been used only 51
times in the United Nations’ his-
tory.

Only one other country, France,
has used the privilege. Malik
personally has east 13 vetoes but
stili trailed far behind the origin-
al Soviet “no no” man Andrei
Gromyko who vetoed 25 times in
his United Nations’

United States Ambassador
Ernest Gross called upon the
Security Council to condemn the
practice of

career.

abricating and dis-

seminating such false charges
which increase tension among

nations and which is designed to
undermine the efforts of the
United Nations to combact
aggression in Korea and the sup-
port of people of the world for
these efforts.”

Gross gained tne floor immedi-
ately after the vote and recalled
that North Korea and Red Chin:
had refused with Russian backiny
to let either the Red Cross or the
United Nations World Health
Organization enter their territor,
to look into charges that Unitec

States’ troops had used gern
weapons against Communist
forces.






One Conclusion

negative vote of the
Soviet Union”, he said, “has pre-
vented the Security Council fron
ereneing for impartial investi.
gation. rom these facts there is
only one conclusion that can be
drawn — that the charges o/
germ warfare made againsi
United Nations forces must be











should condemn the fabricatior
and dissemination of these false
charges which involve no less
than an attempt to undermine the
efforts of the United Nations to
combat aggression in Korea.”
Gross then submitted the resolu
tion and asked the Council to ad
journ for a few days before con-
sidering it in order to give Malik
time to think over the gravity o/
his veto action.

The American resolution rea:\s
“The Security Council noting thc
concerted dissemination by cer-
tain governments and authorities
of grave accusations charging th:
use of bacteriological warfare |)
United Nations’ forces; recalling
that when charges were first
made they immediately denied
the charges and requested that a
impartial investigation be mace,
then noting that Chinese Com-
munists and North Korean
authorities failed to accept the
offer the International Com-
mittee of the Red Cross to carry
out such investigation but ccn-
tinued to give circulation to tx
charges; noting that the World
Health Organization offered he!p

On page 5.

HARRADIAN POET

GEORGE LAMMING, ardent
don Studio of the B.B.C

Mr Lamming is a Barbadian

short ste



ry Writer and poet in the Lon

and old Combermerian

1950, when | oP prise”
times in one ; ie a - a
$5 4c Mies daniarioai s6n- that the government should have




Aggression

Freneh Will

Re-examine
Duclos Case

PARIS, July 3.
The French Government came
under fire for the handling of
Jacques Duclos case as authori-

ties decided to re-examine thx
evidence against the Communist
leader. Most of the Frencl

this morning

and

expressed
“stupefaction”’ |

allowed Duclos to regain his free-
dom and poured criticism on the
Appeals panel.

The court decision freed Duclos |
on the grounds that
“reasonable doubt”
caught redhanded in a plot
against the internal security of
the state and the Communist lead-
er can only be arrested again if
the National Assembly ‘approves
the lifting of the Communist
deputy’s parliamentary immunity.

After a five hour meeting of
the cabinet yesterday, spokesman
Raymond Marcellin said the gov-
ernment will open a new file on
Duclos’ case but dodged questions
on when the new
might commence.

In any case it is doubtful if any
action could be taken before vaca-
tion next week.

was |

there

proceedings,

It was also taken
as certain that government will
act only if it is sure it has a
strong enough case to win a major-
ity vote.—U.P.



Copra Exports
Hit Peak In’51

WASHINGTON, July 3.
Copra and coconut oil exports
from the Philippines and athe:
Far Eastern reducing areas

that he was |

: BERLIN, July
U.S. authorities said they ape

|

} making “constant efforts” ‘to
secure the release of three
United States’ Catholic priests

arrested with a German woman
{| guide by armed Soviet
on the East-West border yester-

day,
A United States’ spokesman
said liaison officers are in con-

| tinual touch with Soviet head-
quarters and are demai the
release of the Chicago ests
| He said, “this is a matter we ave
| not going to let drop, we are in
grament contact with = the
Soviets.”
The priests, Martin Borow
zyk, George Gorski and Broni-
| slaus Sokolowski were picked
| up with Frau Katsarina Wine-
| kler at 10.00 a.m. yesterday on
, the border of the United States’
sector of Berlin and the Soviet
| zone of Germany.

Foreign Aid.
Bill Goes
To Senate |

} WASHINGTON, Jul >
| A. $6.081,947,750 Foreign Ala Bil
will go to the Senate to-day car-
rying almost $2,000,000,000 lege
than President Truman requestec!
The Senate Appropriations Com-
mittee worked until shortly before
midnight before approving the
measure,

Members said the group ap~
proved the exact figure voted
the House for all military a
economic and point four ald toé
Europe, Asia, Africa, the Near
East and Latin America for the
fiscal year 1953 which began on
Tuesday.

The Senate is scheduled to meet |
at 9.30 am. E.D.T.—its earliest |
meeting in several years—on,
“unanimous consent” calendar and |
was expected to pass scores of}
minor non-controversial or pri-
vate Bills. If a single Senator
objects to the Bill under this pro-
cedure the measure is aytomati-
cally passed over.—U.P.





Super Liner .





reached a possible record in 1941,
Agricultural Department statistics
disclosed Thursday

The Department of Foreign
Agriculture report said more than
1,600,000 tons were exported that
year compared with less than
1,300,000 tons in 1950. It noted
that the Philippines was “by far
the largest total exporter with a
copra equivalent tonnage greate:
by some 132,800 tons than the
combined total from Indonesia,
Ceylon and Malaya

It saidethe total shipments from
each of the four areas exceeded
those of any other post-war year |
and exports fromthe Philippines |
and Ceylon exceeded even pre- |
war average

—U.P. |



Errol Hill |

For Jamaica |

\
GEORGE LAMMING—A
NOVELIST

; harbour
Mr. Errol Hill of Trinidad on Mts} overtaken

On First Trip
NEW YORK, July 3.

The $73,000,000 superline:
United States sailed for Europ:
Thursdey in an unofficial effort t
capture the Trans-Atlantic speed
record in her maiden voyacc
Police estimated that 13,000 per
sons showed up to see the 990-foo
53,000-ton vessel leave, Amon:
1,660 passengers was Margaret
Truman, daughter of the Presi-,
dent, who was caught in the crush- ,
ing mob and had to be rescued by |
Secret Service agents.

The curious pressed around Miss ;
Truman as she tried to talk to re-}
porters on the sports deck. In}
command of the ship was Commo-
dore Harry Manning. He refused



to win the Trans-Atlantic speed
record the nation lost a century
ago but*his broad grin tacitly told
‘eporters he would try to show
up Britain's Queen Mary, present
record holder,

He got the vessel off to a fas!

start, Within an hour after clear

ing the entrance of New Yor!
the United States hed

and passed the liner

way from England to Jamaica was) Stockholm and Italia which left
in intransit passenger by the 8.S.; New York before: her. Passenge:
Colombie spending a few hours in| guessed she was doing 34 knots

Barbados,

Mr, Hill among other things paid |
this tribute to “BIM” the quarter-/|
ly magazine published in this|
island: “Bim is the most important
“literary quarterly production in
“the West Indies and one to which
“people in London

“forward,”

He had been attending the Royal
Academy of Acts studying drama
and is now on his way to a.
Dramatic Summer School spon-

sored by the Extra-Mural De-
partment of the _ University
College of the West Indies

the preliminary lectures wi i)
be delivered by him and later
by Mr. Philip Sherlock who is the
moving figure.

He paid tribute to Jamaica for
its Arts Festival to which the pu-
pils of all the Secondary School:
contribute and on which they get
criticism of their work and guid-
ance from trained personnel. He
expressed the hope that similar
efforts will be made in other parts
of the Caribbean.

He spoke highly of the contribu-
tiond made to West Indian litera~
ture by George Lamming of Bar-
bados, Edgar Mittleholzer of Brit-
ish Guiana and Sam Selvon of
Trinidad and the welcome encour-
agement and as@istance given by
the BBC feature programme Car-
ibbean Voices conducted by Henry
Swansea,

Barbadian Novelist

Speaking of George Lamming he
said he

a few days before he left and
thought he was doing quite well
Lamming” he said i pleased

with himself as he has just had
his first novel accepted and it will
be published in Decembe The
ti { :



is a close secret!
N Hill after visiti
Council, Mr. D. A. W
Colonial t
Collymore



g the British
, Assistant





vocate where
Lam-
nber

Staff, sailed for Jamaica in



fror





interested in)
“literary and cultural pursuits ape

had seen him in London];

M F ank|
the Extra-Mural De-

| but the speed will not be con-
firmed until Friday at noon,

—UP.

—

B.G. Expert For



7
London Talks
GEORGETOWN, B.G., July 3
British Guiana will be repr

| ented at
of

Directors of Medical Servic:

‘n the colonies by Dr. Harold P.,

Ternandes, tuberculosis expert and
Medical Superintendent of ihe

3est Sanatoriums, who is at pres- |

nt on vacation in the United}

Kingdom, D.M.S. Dr. L. A. P . >

Kingdom, DMS De lL & P Concealed Weapons
ed duties is unable to aliveud " .
-ause it is understood he is in th« oie TUNIS, July 3,
hick of a re-organisation pro- | he 2 en pee tepunet
gramme which will have an im-|Se@Mtenced eight Tunisians | lis

portant effect on the future me)
al policy of the country

The Conference opens in mic-
July and will last about ten da
Among matters listed for discus-
1 is quick exchange of scienti-
fic information about techniqu:s
1 diseases as well as an attemst
o regularise certain administra-
tive and other procedures,—(cP



LONDON

The period of nearly twelve
nths which has elapsed since the
of Persian oii suppliés

been marked by a great intea-

cation of oil production efforts













FRIDAY, JULY, gS 1952

U.S. Seek





|

}
| Sunglee and Rosemary.
|

the Oxford Conference! !



Mt me

ihe priests who .came to
Burope to attend the Eucharistic
ongress in Barcelona arrived
by train in Berlin yesterday for
| one-day visit on orders issued
by “Cralog,” « relief organiza-

tien.

Accompanied by Frau Winck.
ler, Cralog’s Berlin secretary,
they set out on a photographic
tour of the city. They were
picked up when their automo-
bis dpeve a few yards into East
» orn vt Dueppel crossin,

Some .

A United States’ spokesman
said the Soviets still have not
acknowledged that are
holding the priests. He added
that this is not unusual, for the
Russians usually do not admit
they are holding Allied nation-
als until they are ready to re-
lease them,



Conservatives May es

‘Seek To Disband C.D.C
It Lost £44% Million

(From Our Ow

The future of the Color
is under active consideration

Members of the Imperial Afiairs Committee have tabulated
a list of questions to the Colonial Secretary to obtain in-
formation about the workings of the Corporation in areas
such as the West Indies, East and West Africa and South-

East Asia. “This informatio

probably use it to support a motion for the disbanding ol
the Corporation” Bernard Braine, M.P., told your corres:
pondent, This motion may be raised at the next Colonial

Affairs debate.

Astrion
Wins T.T.C.
Handicap

(From Our Own Correspondent)

PORT-OF-SPAIN, July 3
Dr. Pillip Gittens, “bannea
from the Trinidad track for many
years, celebrated his return thi
afternoon when his Astrion
severely trounced A and B Class
‘unners in the nine furlongs te
vin him a $2,000 purse. Astrion
with Hardwidge in the saddle
clipped 4/5 of a second off the
long-standing record | min, 57 secs
held by Golden Quit
RESULTS

West Indian Handicap

About Six Furlongs; Class F. avd)

2, three year olds only
1. April’s Dream, 2, First
Admiral, 3. Cavalier, Time: 1 min.|
15 secs.

Bayshore Handicap

About Six Furlongs; Class C and
C2 Maidens

1. Hope Dawns, 2. Golden

Fleece, 3. Nefari. Time: 1 min.

| to say definitely that he was out} 149 secs

Beimong Handicap
About One Mile and 130 Yards;
Class F and F2 four year ‘ids
1. Colletes, 2. Lopon, 3. Kismet
Trme: 1 min. 51 secs
T.T.C, Handicap
About Nine Furlongs; Class A
and B only
1. Astrion, 2. Landmark, 3
Haroween. Time: | min. 56! secs.
St. Ann’s Handicap
About Six Furlongs; Class B
and Cl only
1, False Pride, 2. Careful Annie
3. Orchis. Time: 1 min, 144 secs
Creole Handicap
About Six Furlongs, Class D
and E only
. Mary Ann, 2. Crossroads, 3
Time
14% secs.
St. Clair Handicap
About Nine Furlongs; Class ©
and C2 Winners

min

Farren Star, 2. Ali Baba,
Monro, Time 1 min. 57 secs



|

8 Sentenced For

right to prison terms ranging from
one month to one year for carry-
ing concealed weapons

The Tribunal freed four other
Arabs who had been detained o:
the same charge The Tunisian
|cabinet of Premier Salah Eddine
} Baccouche meanwhile held a
i brief session to discuss minor mestic problems. —U.P.

New Oil Sources Opened In M. East

ownership is shared by British,
Dutch, French and American com-

panies. The rate of output last
month was double that of Jast
January and is now running at

i6rn. tong annually, The main fac-

of the Middle East,,tor behind this increase ‘thas been
th uncial Times to-day. the completion of the new pipe-
line to the Mediterranean, With
me pectacular results this important addition to its
ybtained in Kuwait— transportation facilities, the 1-P.C
} field jointly ownéd has been able to raise its pro-
Anglo-~I oil ind = an duction of crude oil much closer to
i Gulf Oil mut its maximum potential
tubs expansion las

tals ker ace in the output of This rapid expansion of Middle
ie owned properties in Eastern cil output is a develop-
‘ t continue ment of the highest importance
| e news of uid | Nearly one-half of the -proved

‘ odu n of thes yl reserve ire locatec
I Sompany, whose the East and th est



—_— 4
64 eed





Priests’ Release



| permit the Corporation to make











Av Oz



A
.

0

FF

o

>

fo?
> Library
4,

7)





PRICE : FIVE CENTS

Charges
Adams’ Detention Was
Misunderstanding:
U.S. Consul Apologises



A stiff American

protest is

expected if the priests report
mistreatment at the hands of
the Russians. There are no im-

mediate deals of the release of

the three priests and the
woman.
British authorities asked ON MONDAY. the 23rd of June, the Acting Colonial

Soviet headquarters for informa-
tion on the whereabouts of two
missing British soldiers who
eyewitnesses said were arrested
by Soviets early Thursday when |

Secretary received a telegram from Mr. Grantley Adams,
C.MG.. M.C.P., from Montreal saying that he had been
refused entry into the United States at the New York Inter-
national Airport, Mr. Adams askéd that the Governor

they drove past the last West and the Seeretary of State be informed
Berlin station into East Ger- | ‘phe same day the Government
many on the City’s elevated | of Barbados sent a strong letter
railway station. West Berlin | of protest to the Consul for the

police said eyewitnesses report-

United States of America in Bar-
ed that the two British soldiers Ini ,

bados. The United Kingdom Gov-
were arrested at around 1.00 | ernment through the Secretary of
a.m, G.M.T,. by Soviet soldiers | State

and Communist police at Albre- | to lodge a
achtishof

for the Colonies was asked
similar protest with

station, one station | the State Department in Wash-
past the end of the British | ington. The Colonial Attache to
sector —U.P. the British Embassy was also

rng acvised
|} On the 26th of June the Goy-
ronment of Barbados received

the American Consul a
ull apology from the United
States Government and the ex-

| planation that the incident hae
{ arisen out of a misunderstanding.
| The Consul also stated that an
expression of regret was being
cent direct to Mr. Adams

Her Majesty’s Government alsa
took up the matter with the State



n Correspondent) Department, Washington, which
» 4 also expressed deep regret to the
LONDON, July 3 itish Covernnient, Mr, G. H. ADAMS, ©.M.G., M.C.P.





lial Development Corporation
by back bench Conservatives.

Big ‘3° Finish - Bit To Gn
Draft Reply efore Assembly

PARIS, July 3.
A G : nt bac

LONDON, July 3 \ Government backed sliding

U.S., Britain and France have

wage scale Bill will come before
the National Assembly at 2.00
completed the draft reply to Mo p.m, G.M.T. for a second reading
cow on the German elections, it! and the vote on the Bill appears
was Stated at the Foreign Office] to be the last major hurdle that
Thursday
The draft is being discussed

Premier Antoine Pinay faces in
. “ the House which is due to go on
been of the opinion that the Cor vith the Federal Chancellor Kon- summer recess on aie 11 §
poration is not carrying out ft» rad Adenauer prior to its dispatch The Bill, approved by the Low-
duties in the best interest of the 'o the Kremlin, It is expeced ,

colonies. The need to “exerel ‘hat the West's notes will be pri |

n is being filed and we will



For some time now promineni
back-beneh Conservatives hav:

er House after stormy debates a
month ago, was later rejected by
and perform their functions so a ented to the Kremlin before he ithe Council of Republic Upper
to ensure that their revenues art } veek-end, y Shudh aad acceding 10 the cone
not less than sufficient to meet titution must now be approved
all sums properly chargeable tc | Wo
their revenue account” does no {it is willing to discuss with (|

probably Friday, o
tals said

The West will tell Moscow thit|\. the Assembly with an absolute

\Soviet the setting up of an impar | adorlty Cit is to become: lass

i : 5 ; Pinay who fears his Bill might

tosses in the development period. | fe} oreetane Oe commission {or yuo into trouble said through a
Suc loses, would |e, arma ain te bate te now AT ie a a

industrial practice. Thus its char~ | ization of a unified Germany. t rhe t e

ter makes its increasingly diffieul:

Ur the As-
for the Corporation to fulfil its
munist and Socialist opposition

original task of undertaking mar: | py,
1 dad May Install ind rejects as a modified version

ginal development, More ar
pee. a ae ion Ser oe ryt . ° of the originally projected social-
Traffic Lights fist Bitl, calls for the increase of
‘basic salaries in the event of «

Fr

tion of the measure by
sembly a confidence test
The Bill which combined Com-





foreed to enter into competition
with private enterprise and it is



ae aa ; nh :
ate eeund and lowe wit it tees) » Or Own Correspondent ;five per cent jump of the cost of
> ae r PORT-OF-SPAIN, iving index -
ant coreeraves Fe ope The Jrinidad Government nmy Leftist opposition attacks main-
vO id be t ie itemated | le oon install a system of jraffc y aim at Bill provisions whieh
vars *, oar ested in e-Tlights in Port of Spain and San|forbid two consecutive adjust-

velopment schemes sponsored by

Fernando to take care of the big! ments of salaries within four

the Colonial | Governments. trafie problem in this city and in| months. Many Rightists deputies
jae over 12 months now CDC} jj, Borough including Pinay’s own independ-
ae gh a Seema tes It is believed that Government | ents and peasants are fighting stil
of Lord Ret and the organisa vill shortly ask the Legislative |} because they believe it might

tion at home and abroad has beer touch off a new wave of social un-

Council's Finance Committee for

ene coer anu funds to import hundreds of these | vest and end the period of com
smarnl ti Sh ‘ th ’ little | ights and for importation of 4 | parative price stabilization that
examination have shown litte) tinited Kingdom, expert to install! the Government has achieved dur~
chance i. paying their way have hem. ing the four months in office
heen abandoned. Latest annual) “About two years ago when the|Pinay’s foes in the Assembly

report of the Corporation showed

that of £21,000,000 of capital system was planned, estimated) however will probably use today’s

cost was put at $150,000, but it is} debate as a springboard to launch



yessures over £4,500.000 ‘had} now expected that the project will | an overall offensive against Pinay’s
poam cost the Colony nearly $200,000 | economic policy —UP.
R ds D GPP LLLP LA LALLA PPD
e€ odge . %
The choice of those who *
UN War Planes :
*

SEOUL, July 3.
Fifth Airforce Headquarters saic
Communist pilots have become in-|
creasingly reluctant to tangle with
United Nations war planes despite
the fact that the Reds have built
up a superior force of 1,900 planes

.
in Mane ia. ‘ ‘ . .
" he Heport noted that Red MIG A rare combination realised in

15 jets are appesring in ever de-
creasing numbers and that most
‘ights of thern now contain ten
or fewer planes, Earlier this year
MIG’S were appearing in flights
of more than a 100. The last suc:
flight was seen on April 1. The

K. W. V.

“THE LABEL WITH THE KEY"

heaviest MIG co tration of tt . ° : 4 2
war was on Maren 3 when 48% Wines, Brandies and Liqueurs
were sighted .

The Fifth Airforce said the K. Ww. a, PAARL TAWNY

Coromunists have built up an air- |
force of “between 1,800 and 1,900"

<

Coronation Wine

ALLELES FFF OPES OS SOS FOS FOOS

edited

Dry Vermouth
VAN DER HUM LIQUEUR
. Superior “Key’’ Brandy

jets to mix with U.S. F86 Sabre
jets came on June 23 when 25/
MIG'S cowered on the Antun;
airfield while United States plane
bombed Suiso power station int
ubble UP.

Secthuttass bende, te eet oa -W.V. Old Brown Sherry
Vi4 . Pla order, ave no . >
planation why the Reds refus . V. Amontillado Sherry
any a to make a show o | * V. Old Oloroso Sherry
strength. % , â„¢
Planes Stayed Grounded | * .W.V. Sweet Vermouth.
The strangest reluctance of Rec, wv Vv.
Vv
Vv

RAR RRR

‘
’

The

Pillars

vital to the long-term interests «
the oil
sumers

The political

industry and of ofl

con

|
development of these reserves i |
|
|

factors which ar

liable to interfere with the flow |

of middle Eastern oil are well |

known and have been clearly!

illustrated by last year’s eve nts | Health
|

in Persia, Not the least effective |

way in which these political in ; a
fluence can mâ„¢ overcome ie Eup BROWN!
through an immediate and rapi and FS .

development of current production}

which will bring quick and hh
stantial benefits to the peoples of
the producing countries on the







Happiness

basis of the new and generou
royalty and profit-shar €
ments which have bee t | .

B64 SS, +6564
LOCC SPOOCSOSOOS EEE PPE EL EEL LPL LLP LP PS

64,6444 434 Ay $4896 O08 000"
negotiated “ PPLE LLP ELSES FF SFOS SSCS OOOO

~-L.E.S






PAGE TWO

Caruh Calling

D" 3. W. P. HARKNESS
Adviser

for Devel



+ ¢
5. za




Directors
ical Services throughout
ritish colonies from July 14



cness expects
in about a

to return
month’s

With Barclays Bank

ETURNING to Trinidad on
Wednesday by the Colombie
were Mr. and Mrs. T. Wills who
were Holidaying in England for

the past four months

Mr. Wills is employed with the
San Fernando branch of Barclays
Bank.

On Routine Visit
R. G“ MONTGOMERY GOR-
DON, Engineering Adviser
to the Comptroller for Develop-
ment and Welfare, left for Dom-
inica yesterday morning by B.G
Airways on a routine visit. He
expects to be away for about two
weeks.

On Holiday

RS; -B. A. SPENCE, whose
husband is a Land Sur-
veyor in Trinidad, arrived here
yesterday morning by RW.LA
with her daughter Joyce who is
Secretary of Alston’s Ltd. They
have come over for three week's
holiday which they are spending

as guests at the Hotel Royal.

Mr. and Mrs.
Cricketer Weds

Also coming in on the same T St atthis hi. ua wre
plane from Trinidad were mr BA eae ee oe
and Mrs. P. S. Nanton from St.f@ 14. ot lah ire agen y
Vincent. They will be spending ]° ‘ ock, Miss Betty © Goddard,
two weeks’ holiday staying at the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Hotel Royal. ‘}Goddard of “Karen Lodge’,

Mr, Nanton is ae
United Traders Ltd
town, , '

For Medica] Treatment
R. H. STUART BYNOE, Di-!
rector of Messrs. Cave,
Shepherd: and Co., Ltd. and Mrs.
Bynoe af Albion’, Hastings, were
passengers by T.C.A. yesterday
morning for Canada.
Mrs, Bynoe who is a sister of
Mr. -R, Maurice Cave, is going to
Ottawa for medical treatment.

Engineer In Venezuela
BR, CHARLES ROBERTSON,
engineer of C. A. Caminos
in Venezuela, arrived here yester-
day morning by B.W.I.A. from
Trinidad where he spent a few
days. -He is now here for a fur-
ther holiday before going on to
Berkeley in California.
Mr. Rabertson is staying at the
Marine -Hetel,

American Citizens

R. AND MRS. H. J. MILLS,
two American citizens who
had been touring Europe on holi-
day, arrived in Barbados on
Wednesday by the Colombie in-
transit for Aruba where Mr. Mills



has been employed with ‘the
Standard Oil Co. for the past
twenty three years.

Mr, Mills plans to retire and
return to the United States next
year.

Resulf Of Drawing
HE Royal and Merchant Navy
Welfare League beg to an-+
nounce the following prize win-
ning numbers in the Raffle held in
aid of their funds: —

Ist prize 1172; 2nd, 1436; 3rd,
2875; 4th,1321; 5th, 0117; 6th, 2332;
7th, 3500; 8th, 1377; 9th, 0663; 10th,
3770; 11th, 0995; 12th, 4636; 13th,
1109; 14th, 2004.

Prize winners are kindly asked
to call on Miss Farmer c/o J. N.
Goddard & Sons Ltd., Office for
their prizes.

Back To St. Lucia
MoM AND MRS. REYNAULD
JAMES of St. Lucia re-
turned home on Tuesday by
B.W.1.A. after spending a holi-
day staying at Crystal Waters

Guest House, Worthing.
Mr. James, a member of
Castries Town Board, was
in the interest of his health.

After Three Weeks
RS. T. D. SHILLINGFORD
of Roseau, Dominica, re-
turned home yesterday morning
by B.G. Airways after spending
three weeks’ holiday staying at
“Allworth”, Cheapside.

Her husband who is Managing
Director of T. G, Shillingford and
Co., returned last week after a
fortnight holiday

the
here



Rupert and the







The

little





Director of {Graeme Hall Terrace, was mar-
in Kings- pried to Mr. Denis Atkinson, son
t sigot Mr. and Mrs, W. E. Atkinson

re No. 40 Blue Waters, and Bar-

bados and West Indies cricketer.

The bride who was given in
marriage by her father, wore a
dress of slipper satin with a close
fitting bodice and sleeves of chan-
tilly lace with an appliqued neck-
line and a very full skirt ending
in a long train, Her finger tip
veil of illusion tulle, was kept in
place by a juliet cap of lace and
she carried a bouquet of white
orchids and coratita. .

She was attended by Miss Bar-
bara Goddard as maid of honour
and: Miss Jeanette Goddard and
Miss Sally Patterson as brides-
maids. They were all similarly
attired in dresses of white em-
bossed tulle with close fitting
bodices, off the shoulder necklines
and very full skirts. They car-
ried fans of the same material
trimmed with red rosebuds and
red ribbon. ‘

The ceremony which was fully
choral with Mr, G. C, Williams at
the organ, was conducted by Rev.
M. E. Griffiths. The duties of best-
man were performed by Mr, Roy
Proverbs, while those of ushers
fell to Mr, Richard Randal, Mr.
Roger Goddard, Mr. Colin God-
dard, Mr. Joseph Hassell, Mr,
John Armstrong, Mr. David Git-
tens, Mr. David Taylor and Mr
John Massiah,

A reception was held at the Ma-
rine Hotel and the honeymoon is
being spent at the Crane Hotel.

The bride’s going away dress
was turquoise waffle pique with
white accessories,

Law Student

R. NEIL PROVERBS, a law

student of Toronto\Univer-

sity, left for Jamaica on Wednes-

day evening by the Colombie

after spending a month's holiday

with Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Kinch
of “Marlow”, Hastings,

Neil who is a nephew of Mrs.
Kinch and son of Mr, and Mrs,
Ivor Proverbs of Toronto, was
paying his first visit to Barbados,
From Jamaica he will travel to
Miami and then go on to Canada,

C.S.0.B.A Reunion

At the meeting of the Execu-

tive Committee of the Com-
bermere Old Boys’ Association on
July 22nd, the guests of honour
and the date of the Annual Dinner
will be fixed. It had been decided
not to hold a Monthly Reunion
on the first Friday of July on ac-

count of clashing of dates with
other social functions,
The date of the Old Boys’

Cricket match will also be decid-
ed and arrangements for the dance
completed.

The Annaal General Meeting
will be held on Thursday, July
24, at 5.00 p,m,

Toy Scout—3?

Ses

pals are now more all chattering together and Rupert

baffled than As Algy and can hear that they are talking

Podgy join them they say goodbye bout Christmas stockings. They

to Gaffer Jare and trot forward ‘ke No notice of the small people
see aa ar orwarG and gradually they drift away |
towards the group of grown-ups. toward the middle of the village. |
Mrs. Badger and Mrs. Pug and while Constable Growler gazes |
f Sheep and several others are after them suspiciously. |

oe ee ——





‘ animals

BARBADOS

cha

mar

—AND
DANCE



“ADVOCATE

-








1 What made Rita

e partners

ee

sennconqncnsdqsonqeccosenegemnne rs
i yy FRIDAY FiLMsPOT i
:
} g :
by LEONARD MOSLEY
| Sencesecnces+-ccnsencsacsenceeesence: ee?
REALLY felt very sorry for
both of them. But then,
who wouldn't? What is
sadder, sillier, and more Orson Welles with .
pathetic to the onlooker than —
the sight of two grown men stil] ey
mooning, lovesick, over the same Fi
girl—and still hopelessly unaware Pe
of the real reason why-she has rs
walked out of both of their ey
lives ? i
1 am jalking 3
about / Orson fd Fd
| Welles and °
} Aly Khan
| And, of course.
Rita Hay-
| worth. She
| has been
| married to
DENIS ATKINSON. | them both
| She has borne
Attended Conference | each of them ;
: ac eee ae:
In Jamaica Now she nas
, =~ jeft them anc =
ON'BLE ERNEST WILLIAMS, | _is back at work Rita with... . . Aly ray iihey
member of the Antigua | in Hollywood— : “a married in 949,
Legislature and Chairman of the | oe oer aia “ornenget parted in 1951).
coe Works and Communica- | of ideas een ‘9
ions Committee, was _ intransit trom them
vesterday vii : And tn ust 1 know why, at this moment, whether she was working oF
pore iperrens by B.W.I.A. | can't foes oer she is back “hoofing” in @ playing. He mixed the two
rom Trinidad on his way back | why. why musical film in Hollywood So she walked out on him one
home. | WHY she went instead of aquapianing with Aly day complaining that she Just
Mr. Williams who spent a few! I am not Sne left them because she is couldn't go on being murried tc
days in Trinidad visiting various e x uggerating a working girl, She ‘eft both a “genius.” What she meant
projects and meeting Govern- when IT say B husbands = because she wa3: “TI just can’t continue us
ment Officials, had been over to| ay ure still decided that neither of them the wife of a man who doesn’!
esol both deeply in was “serious” over work. believe in work.”

Jamaica attending the Conference
of Affiliated Branches of the Com-
monwealth Parliamentary Asso- |

love with her.
Watch Aly Khun in a Riviera
night club, dancing with a

gation which lasted from June | Beaniia. film fae ke come
2 to June 25. ie Ca or Irene Papa—bu
| starin over his partner's

He said that the Conference was |

a success and he thought it was a
good thing for members of the

various Legislatures in the Carib- |

bean to get together and discuss
their problems so that they could
come to a unanimous decision and
make united representations.

Pre-Retirement Leave

R. V. H. B. ROCHEFORD,

accountant in the Govern-

ment Savings Bank retires from

the Civil Service at the end of

six months’ leave which began
on July 1.

Mr. Rocheford joined the Ser- |

vice in January 1913 and so at the
end of his leave will have had 40
years’ service to his credit.

He served in the Department of
Agriculture, the Post Office, the
Audit Office, the Bridgetown Petty
Debt Court, the Provost Marshal’s
Office, later the Public Trustee
and the Savings Bank.

It was in the Provost Marshal’s
Office that he was best known and
he several times acted as head of
that Department

On Monday he wis given a
hearty “send off” by the members
of the Bank Staff and other de-
partments of the service.

Carib joins in the wishes ex-
pressed to him for many happy
years of retiremen

Spent Five Weeks

RS. ALICE MICHELIN who
owns a cattle farm in Ja
maica, returned home on Wednes-
day evening by the French §.S.
Colombie after spending five
weeks’ holiday with her son and
daughter-in-law, Col. and Mrs.
R, T. Michelin at District A,







Listening Hours

FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952

4p.m
Service, 4.15 p.m, Charlie Kunz at the
Piano, 4.00 p.m. Bed time with Branden,
5 p.m. Report from Wimbledon, 5.15

p.m. Variety Bandbox, 6.15 p.m. Merchant |

Navy Programme
T.15—10.90 p.m,





8.20 p.m. The Spa Orchestra, 8.45 p.m
Sports Round-up and Programme Parade
§ p.m, The News, 9.10 p.m. Home News
from, Britain, 9.15 p.m,
Perfect, 9.30 p.m. London Calling, 9 45
pam, A Tale of Two Cities, 10 p.m
News, 10,10 p.m. News Talk.



B



THE

HE capture of two bears in the tivity

Pyrenean town of Luchon is
event, Like the other wild
in the Pyrenees, except
the izard (the chamois of the Py-

an

‘renees), the bear is now growing

very scarce,

I myself have never come across
one, although I have repeatedly
described a fight in which I killed
a huge brown bear on a ledge of
rock on the Spanish side of the
Noufonts pass—and am gradually
coming to believe it really hap-
pened. Once there were even ibex
to be seen in these mountains, but
now the last of them are in cap-



LADIES’ FANCY STRAW and CRINOLINE!|

HATS WIDE BRIM WHITE and COLOURS.

| quinsy, I am aware that your chin,

$2.84 $3.28 and $4.06
LADIES’ WHITE STRAW HANDBAGS

$1.64 $1.80 and $4.06

T. R. EVANS & WHITFIELDS

DIAL 4220



YOUR SHOE STORES



The News, 4.10 p.m. The Daily |

25.58M, 31.32M

Practice Makes |

The j

shoulder at the door, as if he
were trying to will Rita to come,
laughing and waving, into the
| room.
| Watch him us | nave done—
when he glances across ut the
big picture of Rita on the plano
in his home
| And Orson Welles ?
the name of Rita to him and
| the fond expression of a man in
\ love spreads like whipped cream
over those chubby features
| They still want to know
WHAT made Rita leave them.

The reason

| ELLES will tell you

WY uci they never

quarrelled. So will

Aly Khan, Welles will convince

| you that, in his opinion, they

appeared to be very happy. So
| will Aly Khan,

So how did they break We 2

After watching them closely,
after ‘istening to them talk,
maybe I can find the reason for
which they are searching.

For I think 1 know why Rita
Hayworth is no longer listening
to the flood of talk which Orson
Welles poured out to her during
her marriage te this “genius.”

Mention





|

WAY.....

in the Spanish National
Park in the wild valley of Araxas,
Mrs. Wretch and the Circus
“FOSS,” said Wugwell to Colonel

Wretch, “the day when I
once more see your better half—
no offence—gracing our show as of
yore will be the proudest day of
my life since I induced the Mayor
of Stacklesham to let Bibbo fill
his hat with sawdust.” “Mrs.
Wretch,” said the colonel icily,
“has other calls on her time. Tell
him, my dear.” “Yes, tell old
Wuggy,” said the _ proprietor
saucily, “I am fully occupied with
political work,” replied Mrs,
Wretch, “as well as being chair-
man of the Friends of Liberalism,
ind of the Society for Human Pro-
gress.” “Far from it be me,” re-
torted Wugwell, “to grudge you
to that other circus at Westminster,
but Zaphroma the bearded lady
from Stamboul has a nasty go of

fair Blossom, is as innocent of
beard as a coot is of mane,
Suuckily Zaphroma’s beard was

| only one of Linkley’s half-crown

DIAL 4606

| Irish. It

adjustables (trade secret) and it is
at your disposal.”

Marjinal Note

READ that an attempt is

being made to popularise pole
by having a running commentary
through a loud-speaker during}
matches. It is not always realised
that polo is hurling on horse-|
back, and was invented by the
was played in Munster
fore -orded history
Hockey croquet are

|
|

long b be-







And then Aly Khun walked

Happiness into her life. It looked good

RGus prom iaiie ss ue beainging.

er new husband was dar

Done Grater eats te handsome churm)og. and

films and directs exciting, They nad lots of fun

them. I know that Aly Khan ‘osether. They travelled around
spends a jot of time riding ‘together and he showed her uli

and breeding race winners

But neither of them hus ever,
in the way that Rita looks at
it, done w “regular” job in his

kinds of new places, introduced
her to all kinds of new people

A conscience

life. She comes from a long {FE was full of
line of people who think a lot I happy, zestful fun-
of work er family were pro- 4making. They
fessional dancers, who drummec gambled in_ Havana. They
into her the notion that you ski-ied in Switzerland They

cannot be huppy unless you are
in regular employment.

For every hour that you play
(in her philosophy) you should
ut. in at least two, three, or four
irurs of work—to justify your
time off from serious pursuits.

After the first raptures of life 07
and love with Orson Welles and 0)
Aly Khan had worn off Iam gi
convinced that she was appalled
at their attitude towards hard.
regular toil,

Fun, but-

Ore WELLES used

up. Aj

to get so enthusiastic

about a new film or

a new play he was planning

tnat he made it sound like fun.

And work just isn’t fun. the way
Rita sees it.

With Welles she never knew

THE BRIDE FROM PARIS
BRINGS A 3-IN-1 HAT

London Express Service,

By Beachcomber

The giddy round

“QHE wore the hat,” it says,

“almost over one ear.” How
dreadfully amusing Oh,
say! I can see her admirers
eaught on the wrong side of her,
running round to whisper their
follies in the only ear available.
Waiting until a queue had formed,
she tilted the hat over on to the
other ew, and round they ran
again, back to where they had
started from. My dear what per-
fectly ghastly fun, I mean. One
can hardly cope, actually.







ROODAL

the working girl
Hayworth
thinks people should do some
work in life, began to speak up



but I|

bathed on the Riviera.

But then came the time when
inside Roa

the hoofer who

“How long is all this going
m?" asked Working Girl Rita
f herself. “Surely we're not
oing to ploy all the time.

When do we do some work to
justify all this ?”

So this marriage, too. broke
ain there were no serious

marrels. Again the husband

thought that everything was
seraphic and serene

Like Orson Welles. Aly Khun

didn’t gone that the girl he had
married was a girl with a con-
science — a conscience that

demanded hard work to tustify
a lot of play.

London Express Service



The bride is marrted in a
small white straw _ cloche
trimmed with flowers and
flowing veil (left). To match
her going-away suit she takes off
the trimmings. reverses the: hat
and adds a navy and white

ribbon (above),





After the honeymoon she
makes a third change and wears
it sideways, with a pink rose
tucked under the brim The bride
and the three way hat come -
from Paris.



THEATRES





EMPIRE

OPENING TO-DAY 2.30 & 8.30 &
Continuing Dally 4.45 & 8.30

Warner Bros. Presents

PAUL MUNT
in

“T AM A FUGITIVE FROM A
CHAIN GANG"
Extra :

- Hands Tell The Story
latest Paramount British News

—_—
1 Reel Short:
and



OLYMPiC

TO-DAY TO MONDAY 4.30 & 8.15
United Artist Action Double

Dane CLARK Ben JOHNSON
in
‘FORT DEFIANCE”
and

“THE TORCH’







ROXY

TODAY (only) 439 & 8.15
Teresa Wright - Lew Ayres

in
“THE CAPTURE"
and
“STATION WEST"



OPENING TOMORROW 480 & 8.15
Monogram Double
Paul ROBESON
in
“SANDERS OF THE RIVER"
and

“THINGS TO COME”

ROYAL

TODAY (only) 4.30 & 8.30
Maragret Lindsay Ralph Bellamy
in
“MEET THE WILD CAT”
and
“MELODY LANE"

Starring :
and the Merry Macs

Leon Erroll

TOMORROW & SUNDAY 430 & 8.30
“OHICAGO CALLING
Starring DAN DURYEA
and

THE SCARF









ne
a











te

FRIDAY, JULY 4,
Inventions

King Knit-Whit's

By MAX TRELL

“HIS Majesty King Knit-Whit, |
King of Bungle-Land, was a won-
derful inventor,” General Tin, the
tin soldier, was saying. “He inven-
ted some of the most marvelous |
things in the world. For instance |
he once invented a slice of bread
with three sides.”

Knarf and Hanid, who were list-
ening to General Tin, exclaimed in
amazement when they heard this.
They said: “How can a slice of
bread have three sides!”

“It was quite simple, once you
saw it,” General Tin replied, “He
eut the slice very thick, and the
third side was all around the edges.
The purpose of this was to keep His
Majesty from eating more than
one slice of bread between meals
(on account of it was so thick), and
also to keep the slice—if it fell
down—from falling on the buttered
side. He always buttered it on the
third ‘side and it hardly ever fell
on that.



Didn’t Rain

“He also’ invented a way of mak-
ing his garden grow,” continued
General Tin, “without ever having
to water it even though it didn’t
rain for months and months and
months.”

io did he do that?” asked Ha-
nid.

General Tin smiled. “Once I tell
you his scheme, you'll wonder why
nobody ever thought of it before.
This is what he did. He planted his
whole garden in the lake.”

“But General Tin, didn’t the
flowers get drowned!” Knarf said.

“Probably. But that’s not impor-
tant. He never had to water them.
It saved a great deal of time.”

Knarf and Hanid couldn't quite
agree that this was a very useful
invention. But General Tin went
right on.

“Now one day he invented the
best thing of all. Pll tell you just |
how it happened. It had been rain- |
ing for a long time in Bungle-Land,
so much so that all the roads were |
deep with mud. Poor King Knit-
Whit stood by the window of his
room in the palace day after day,
looking out at the rain and wishing
it would stop so that he could go
out. But of course he couldn’t.
There was too much mud. He had
to stay indoors.”

“Why didn’t he take an umbrel-
la and rubbers?” asked Hanid.

“He thought of them. But there
was still too much mud. He didn’t |
like getting himself covered with

1952





King Knit-Whit looked out at the
rain,

mud. So then he decided to invent
something that would let him go
outside in the rain and the mud, and
not get wet or muddy. So the first
thing he invented was something
that looked like a little boat except
that it had no oars. If he sat in this
boat he wouldn't get muddy. But
the rain would still fall on him. So
then he invented something to stand
over the top of the boat like a sort
of square umbrella, And now,” said
General Tin, “His majesty knew
that he wouldn’t get wet or muddy.
But that still wasn’t enough. How
could he get the boat with the um-
brella on top to move down the
road?” ‘ is

“Yes?” said Knarf and Hanid
together. “How?”

Next Thing

“So,” said General Tin, “the next
thing he invented were two wheels
for the boat-with-the-umbrella-on-
top to stand on. And now, standing
on the wheels, the invention rolled
to and fro. But who would be strong
enough to pull it with His Majesty

| sitting inside? He didn’t want his

servants to do it, because then they
would get all wet and muddy. Se
finally he invented two long poles
to stick out in front of the boat-
with - the - umbrella - on - tap -
that-stood-on-wheels. And to these
poles he hitched a horse, and on
the horse he put a harness. And out
he went in this new invention of
his, rolling up and down the roads
of Bungle-Land, and not getting the
least bit muddy or the slightest bit
wet. It was the most wonderful /in-
vention he had ever invented!”
“But GeneralTin!” Hanid cried.
“That invention was a carriage!’’
But General Tin only kept smil-

hinge emiline smiling,



Talking Point

The English are a serious people
with many serious things to think




—Stephen Leacock.

Opening Today 5 & 8.30 |

Sterring

ESTHER

WILLIAMS

JOAN VIVIAN
EVANS - BLAINE
Barry SULLIVAN + Keefe BRASSELLE

Billy ECKSTINE
The De MARCO SISTERS
DEAN MILLER

Featuring America’s Singing Craze
BILLY ECKSTINE
1.30 Tomorrow



Tomorrow
ORCH WIVES & ANCHORS
AWEIGH
CALL NORTH and
SIDE HIGH
117 BARBAREE





OPENING TO-DAY AT
2,39 & 8.30 and

Continuing Daily 4.45 & 8.30. |

EMPIRE
TA aT

3
a

RE-ISSUED SY WARNER BROS.
GTEWDA FARRELL = HELI"! VINSON - PRESTON FOSTER
Seq oy ROBERT & BURNS ~ vines oy MERVYN LE ROY

PLAZA T









OPENING TO-DAY

(FRIDAY) 4.45. & 8.30 P.M.

AND CONTINUING DAILY
WARNER BROS:




i

PATRICE

WYMORE:

SCOi

“ORBES

PLAZA

BARBAREES (DIAL 5170)
GABET YW

The Garden—St. James
TODAY & TOMORROW 8.0 P.M.
“FRIGHTENED CITY” &
“GIRL OF THE YEAR"

Midnite Sat
“BARBARY PIRATE"
Donald WOODS &
“RETURN of the DURANGO KID’
: Charles STARRETT __
SUN. & MON, 8.30 P.M.
MAT. SUN. 5 P.M.
‘JOHNNY ALLEGRO” George RAFT,
DESPERADOES” Randolph SCO."
SEECEGOOS

HEATRES

















ennentaemdiaeeaane
BRIDGETOWN BARBAREES OISTIN
| (Dial 2310) (Dial 5170) (Dial 8404)
TODAY (3 Shows) TODAY 445 & 8.30 pom TODAY TO SUN.
230 — 445 & 8.30 p.m. & Cont:nuing Daily 44> & 820 pm,
& Continuing Daily Errol TLYNN Errol FLYNN in
445 & 82) p.m.
. ROCKY MOUNTAIN
LE SEE YOU) Poisice wrnonn || DODGE CITY
| Ann SHERIDAN
im SAT.- Special 1.30 p.mj| Olivia DeHAVILLAND|
MY Roy ROGERS Double Alan HALE—Others
DREA 48 SONG OF TEXAS Sat. (Special) 1.30 p.m.
Doris . Danny —anc— “Co
> > CHEROKEE
DAY THOMAS RIDING DOWN me: ‘ante Eee
SAT. (Special) 930 & 1.30 THE CANYON aa
“RANGERS RIDE” “WESTERN anes’
“COLORADO AMBUSH” || Midnite (Special SAT] sonnny Mack BROWN
Johnny Mack BROWN wae te —— If
MIDNITE SPECIAL SAT.|| ‘THUNDER Midnite Spsest SATS
Colossal Double ! MOUNTAIN||"“GOLDEN STALLION” ,
“THE DALTON GANG Tim HOLT & Roy ROGERS &
\Ooen BARRY & LEGION of “WELLS FARGO
») “OUTLAW COUNTRY | the LAWLESS’ GUNMASTER’
} Lash LARUE George O'BRIEN Rocky LANE
a a aS ee
FFs Sa ———————S==~—>
*



'


Hopes High
For C’ada—
W.L Trade

By G. H. LASH

MONTREAL.
“We have high hopes that the
British West Ingies ‘trade Liber-
alization Plan will provide in-
creased er ont ae
exporters t Indies,”
Donald H,

Indies are in the

this, Mr. Cheney said the plan
was put into effect last year
after negotiations with the gov-
ernments of the United Kingdom
and the United States.

“Because of the devaluation of
the sterling money, it was neces-

for the British West Indies

to down an elaborate system
of import and Scopes
in 1949,” he said. He Layee Fe}
exports during ean year and 195|
were very low, but with the
Trade Liberalization plan in
effect, some progress was made
in 1951.

“This year,” he continued, “the
plan is more elastic than last
year, which is a good sign for
increased exports to those Brit-
ish West Indies island effected.”

MP’s Discuss
Malaria In
Br. Guiana

LONDON, June.
Has malaria been eradicated
from British Guiana? Two Mem-
bers of Parliament argued on the
subject in the House of Commons
last night during a debate on
a Nations’ specialised agen-
es.

Mr. Bernard Braine (Conserva-
tive, Essex, Billericay div.) was
diseussing generally the situation
in regard to availability of tech-
nicians and equipment for various
schemes and went on to make
this comment:

“In the last two years malaria
has been eradicated from Brit-
ish Guiana’.

Dr. H. Morgan (Labour, War-

): What?
. Braine: Malaria has been
eradicated.

Dr. Mor,



: As a medical man,
let me the Hon. Member that
that is an_ incorrect statement.
Thereis ‘stilt plenty of malaria in
British Guiana.

Mr. Braine; I do
which colonial report the Hon.
Gentleman read last, but I: a4
assure him——and I am sure hi
own Front Bench will claim a
credit for it — that one of the
most notable achievement in the
fight against ill health in this
world is largely the work of one
very distinguished malariologist
in eradicating malaria from the
coastal belt of British Guiana
where it has been a killing dis—
ease. I mention that because I do
not think we should be so shy
about talking of our own achieve-
ments in this battle
poverty and want.

The great problem facing not
only us but the world as a whole
is the lack at the present moment
of sufficient technical specialists
I remember visiting British Gui-
ana last year and asking one
agricultural officer whether ae
had his full complement of staff.
He said that he lacked an assis~
tant but that there were four
welfare officers generally in =
district. The emphasis was
the wrong thing. I am not at
tributing any
for that, but TI am i o- -d
throughout the world there is
great lack of specialists and it
would be a good thing to know
whether Her Majesty's Govern-
ment are seized, as I am sure
thev are, of the urgency of this
problem and are doing something
about it”.

—L-E.S.

not know

against he












“It’s a disaster that the

Americans
follow our policy of friendliness

didn’ t

NE HO

PAGE THREE









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M.V. Blue Stat, M.V. Daerwood, M.V.

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|

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Willemstad, MEV. Caribbee, Sch | Ht Hi iI eS
Franklyn D. R., Sch. Rosarene, Sch i ry HU H} Hi o} sea ae
D'Ortae, Sch. Island Star, Sch." Lydia | Ht i ———
$. Sch. United Pilgrim, Sch Turtle | ball "
Dove. i
ARRIVAL: Wt Hi
SS. Tacona Star, S072 tons, front HE .
yigewee!- Agents: Rebert Thom & Co, | Mk if f >
Sch. Timothy Van Sluyman, 76 tons, } Be
from British Guiana, under Capt. Stoll. light work of an ut .
I i | Harpic makes lig! ning’ where
Seawell a iil H ; t tasks *deep-clea 8
ft | Hil Wy Hi e x ante ramets ¢ odorising.
If WW HH cena lea ving Y your lavatory
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boot fresh and ® vivite

HB. Gordon, Joseph, G. Ince, H. Ince
Cc. Moanagas, we Monagas, A. Massy, D
Johnson, A. Payline, T. C
URSDAY

HM | ll
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Trinidad aon 7 ic =“
bigs homer M. Rostant, R, Bissoondath, | he < sePT ahr

}
ARRIVALS BY 6&.W.LA.—WEDNESDAY
from. Brinda: |

+ . « conciliation with China,”

phn ——





Many Guianese
‘ind They Are
Not British?

(From Our Own Correspondent)
GEORGETOWN, June 28.

British anma’s Treasury
stand to gain a s. windfall
from Universal Adult Suf-
frage under the new Con-
stitution by way of naturali-
zation fees, according to the
Registration Officer.

The searchlight for the
proposed universal suffrage
has shown that many ‘Brit-
ish Guianese’ are not really
British nationals. This con-
dition is not confined to the
masses, for many persons in

very high places who have
lived in British Guiana 40,
50 or 60 years are not Brit-
ish nationals.

It has been disclosed that
some of them even have the
vote and are elected repre-
sentatives on statutory
bodies. When they signed
voters registration forms or
accepted places on the elec-
toral roll it never occurred
to them that they were
neither British by birth or
naturalization.

Enumerators’ searching
questions under the recent
campaign found the gaps in
their armour. And they have
not been silent about it. The
only remedy which seems
open to them now is to get
naturalized or they wouldn’t
have a vote at the 1953 Gen-
eral Elections. The assur-
ance has however been
given them that they have
time enough to spare to get
themselves in order. As it
is many a Dutch Guiana-
born, China-born, Syria-
born *Guianese’ will have
to take out naturalization
papers if they want the vote.

‘Van Sluytman’
: Wall Be Overhauled

The Schooner Timothy Van
Sluytman, 76 tons, under Captain
Stoll arrived in Carlisle Bay yes-

from British Guiana with
700 bags of coal, 89 tons of fire-
wood, and 12,000 bags of rice.

While the Timothy Van Sluyt-
man was in British Guiana a smal!
fire broke iut in the engine room
where repairs were being carried
out on the auxiliary engines, Be-
fore she leaves the island she will
on dock for a general overhaul.

Timothy Vam Sluytman also
brought six pieces of silver bali

The wood will make spars
for the new fishing boats which



‘ are being erected at the grounds

of the Fisheries Office.

“This is only a very small part
of an outstanding order,” Mr. D.
W. Wiles, Fisheries Officer, told the
Advocate yesterday.

In Touch With Barbados
Coastal Station

f, Gable and Wireless (W.L.) Ltd advi >
nm mow communicate wit
te follawing ships through their Barb:
dos Const Station:—

S.S. Mostank, 8.s. Nordbo, s,s. Eurc
s.s. Gulfbird, s.s. Hopeville, s.s. Shirle
Lykes, s.s. Arneta, s.s. Monmacowl, s
Esso Dublin, s.s. Sun Rover, ss. Uri
guay, 8,5. Federal Voyager, s.s. Colombic,
8.8. Hawk, s.s. Cyrus, 3.8. Aghia Ant
tasia, 3.8. Patuca, s.s."Tacoma Star,
Dodin Marsano, 8.8. British Enterp
6.8 Virgie. 8.8. Loghwood, s.8. Gab-

Themistokles, s.s. ‘Attica, $.«





riano
Ciudad, De Caracas



Racial Discrimination
Alleged In Canada

TORONTO, June.

NEGROES, especially those from the West Indies, are
being denied entry inte Canada b; 4 the Federal Immigra-

tion Department, alleges the Can

National Committee

on Negro Citizenship, in Toronto.

Although under British

law all people from the West

‘acdies are British subjects, they are not considered as such
under the Canadian Immigration Act, aceording to Mr.

Dona!d Mcore, chairman of
Sc eeeneseesenenessetieeneneenticttiecteane eaten

Road Engineers
Needed In B.W.I.

LONDON

Road engineers are still being Wee

the Committee.

Tlis policy is so pronounced, he
declares, that high officials of the
irom votton Department have been
thecking upon immigration in-
spectors to see that West Indians
ace decried omtry into Canada. Since
last Easter, he says, at least 20
InfNans heve been detained

sought in the United Kingdom for »y_ the Departmen’.

appointments in the West Indies.

Mr. Moore said that the Minister







Tt is understood that some difficul- of Immigration, Mr. Walter Har-
ty is being exper eed in finding ‘* told him that it is impossible
saltebsine-amienliaied men who are for Negroes to adapt themselves to
willing to work in the West Indies, Crnedfan life, owing to the change
in climate, The Committee believes
For some time now, there has however, that Negroes are just as
been a vacancy for a resident en- able as whites to withstand the
gineer for the Humming Bir hardships of the Canadian climate.,
Highway in British Honduras. “These acts of limitation are
whidh wil! link Roaring Creek with nothing les than an injustice
Middlesex. Although a salary of up a sainst he C in Negro citizen,
to £2,000 « vear is offered for 2 }j hat he is short-term appointment, the righ* relat ives from abroad,” the Com-
man is still being sought for the mitiee declare
job. it added that British subjects ir
Similar unfilled appointments the West Indies had been able to
exist in Trinidad. The Colonial enter Canada in many cases et

Office in London is searching, for
iwo men to design and supervise

the constructicn cf large road im-

provement acnemies and t
including bridge

new roads,
» Colony

“BOP.





after long and expensive legal 1
BI resentations to the Gov wbeinert
representation cost one mar
than $1,500 before he was
—B.UP

B.G. Medico
At T.B. Talks

LONDON.

Dr. Harold Fernandes, tubercu-
losis officer, British Guiana, is at-
tending the third Commonwealth
Health and Tuberculosis Confer-
ence, which opens in London on
July 8. He will address a meeting
on “Tuberculosis in British Col-
onial Territories.” Also speaking
at the same meeting will be Mr.
Oliver Lyttelton, Secretary of
State for the Colonies, and medical
officers from several other British
Celonies.

Tuberculosis is now a serious

problem in the British Caribbean
colonies and is linked with the
housing shortage. In British Gui-
ana, for example, the incidence of
pulmonary tuberculosis has risen
since 1947 from 53 to 90 per 100,000.
A survey of cases showed that 84
per cent of newly diagnosed suffer-
ers shared a bedroom with one or
more people and 60 per cent shar-
é a bed.—B.U.P.

‘Latest Gadget
In The Jet

“Upside down with nothing on
the clock but the maker’s na:ne,”
—this phrase is rapidly going out
of fashion with jet-age pilots. The
reason is that the latest Royal s
Air Force fighters are fitted with
a gadget which always keeps
something “on the clock.”

When fiyving blind at night or in
bad weather, pilots rely on an in-
strument which shows them how
their aricraft is placed relative to
the horizon. ‘This ‘artificial hor!-
zon’ as it is called, is the most
important clock on the blind fly-
ing panel in the cockpit.

Until recently, this gyroscopic
instrument was worked by an air
suction pump. Even if the pilot
banked or dived, the gyro still
kept its position in relation to tha
horizon. The snag was that, if
manoeuvring for an attack, the

ilot rolled the aircraft on its

ack, or dived steeply, the gyro
toppled, and it took ten minutes
of level flying to get it back in
osition. Another problem was
hat combats in the jet age take
place very high up, where the air
is too thin for an air-driven gyra
to work successfully.

The new Sperry Gyro-Horizon
Mark 3, now fitted to the latest
RAF. jets, is driven by electricity
and the gyro so mounted that a
pilot can roll through 360 degrees
or dive or pull up almost verti-
eally, without upsetting the gyro.
If, by some extraordinary man-
veuvre, the pilot does sueceed in
toppling it, it can be corrected
instantly by a oh a button.

This means the pilot never has
to use up fuel hahgiti about to
act his gyro right, and, if he dives

to cloud, he knows at a glance
which way up he is flying.

Knowing which way up you are,
is not as easy as it sounds, There
is an apocryphal story of an air-
line pilot, flying between two
layers of cloud, who saw three
jet fighters fly past upside down.





YUKON HAS BRIGHT,
EXCITING FUTURE

DEPUTY RESOURCES and Development Minister ;
H. A. Young has forecast a “bright and exciting” future
for the Yukon and Navthwest territories.
said in an interview that great wealth would
come to the two sections of Canada thruogh exploitation
of their rich natural resources, He predicted this would
take place in the not too distant future because “resource
. development is steadily moving north.”

Young

The deputy gave a
broad review of the mineral and
oil prospects of the north coun-
try to back up his prediction of
a spectacular future for the two

areas, ‘

The east and central portions
of the mainland section of the
Northwest Territories, and a
large part of the Arctic Islands,
lie in the Canadian Shield, he
said. Most of this area, like
other parts of the shield, is
es to be highly mineral-
ized.

The Mackenzie River valley
is an extention of the central
plains of Canada. Like the
southern parts of the plains, the
area in the north gives promise
of being rich in oil. In addition,
the Cordillera ranges and their
flats lie in the western area of
the Northwest Territories and
over racst of the Yukon, and
are rich in minerals,

In the Yukon, Young said, the
most famous mineral producers
are the placer gold creeks of
the Klondike which still yield
more than $2,700,000 worth of
gold a year. However, the role
of leading producer now is held
by the United Keno Hill Mines
at Keno and Galena Hills,
which last year produced over
$6,800,000 in silver, lead and
zine.

“A number of other compan-
ies are interested in this area,
and as a result of their activi-
tives together with expanded
production from United Keno
Hill, it looks as if there will be






é Bisasnoes, hie ea a ae . 0 - ;
e. , anton, anton gent ss R ridews $
i Agents: A. S, BRYDEN & CO., Bridgetsver

rtson.



Londen Express Service
Nothnagel, “
tills, C, Robertso:

Economic Development neon
In Colonies Important 20. »

hill, C. Johnson, H
roe Jamaica :—
eant.
—HOPKINSQN vor ania

‘Trinidad :—
Vv. Chase, H. Pilgrin),
LONDON.

Pena, F. Osborne.
re a Pies ea. M
“EXPENDITURE within Colonial development plans |cumberbaten. :
must be related to the long-term needs of each territo
but H.M. Government continues to emphasize to
Colonial Governments the ance of devoting partic-
ular attention to economic development at the present

De Gale, C



Fletcher, R, Eeg-
Rogers, C. Bourne

KEEP

YOUR SYSTEM
CLEAN
this safe way..








L. Pena, M.

Austin, B

RATES OF EXCHANGE








. a . Selling aRD JULY, ise Buying
time,” said Mr. Harry Hopkinson, Minister of State for NEW YORK
the Colonies, in the House of Commons recently. 79 1/10% pr. Cheques on *
He had been asked by Mr, Thomas Reid, Labour, Swin- | eee et hee
don, if “in view of the urgent need for wealth- producing te ison ve. Sane Dette 11 27104 ve
schemes in the Colonies” he would depart from the present !;} gio-. br Currency a 8/10 Pr
practice of spending, under the 10-year development plans, | |. eer. Ree
only about as much on eccnomic development as on social CANADA
services: ean Te: ee 9a oem
. nkers ‘
Reid also asked what ' ee Demand Drafts 76.70% Fr For adults and children
ae tioned i “the Ci outa $ . 5 8 7/10% Pi ae eeete Allenburys Castor Oil is an abso
n sanction in, t oloni N Has q % Pr ; Fane tae Set we
an 2 el 1a 77 2/10% Pr. Currency 5 4/10% Pr lutely safe ernal cleanser. It ta
4.9 sm of oe en the ig wii ..» Coupons 4 ie PY free from odour and any unplea-
mary uc ‘om~ 50% Pr. Silver me FF ‘tains no harsh

a f
sakura PRee

mittee, apart from those under- H
taken by the Colonial Develop-
ment and Overseas Food Corpor-

ations.
Hopkinson rep!

e Uranium
eposits

possibility np ot Nigeria “
beens an important
of Suon'e



atler-effects,

Allenbuory
of yrwity

no injarious . ee
Look for the name eth Rana! trast 2
your guaranice —
Mr. lied: “The
purpose of the Committee was to
review the possibilities of increas-
ing Colonial production in the light
of present and prospective brah
needs. Their reports provided,

‘
} sant taste and cor
| impurities ha










uranium—raw mat
s energy—is revealed by

Teeth 1 Loose

Gums Sore Mouth and



was intendéd, a useful vd ports published im, eoth that you may Cc he oF — i
— against which specific week. They disclose Kere. Zroron ranch moath ‘fit Ba i ay i,
emeés of development could be the largest deposits of uranium Sa later onuse your teeth to ay
planned both by Colonial Govern- ever known has been discovered} may also cause Rheu- @ M i.
ioents and by private enterprise.’ in Nigenia. And ‘with it are large Sak Amosan ike
The Minister added that it deposits of another rare ate ‘ic a
‘was not possible to say which of niobium—much in demand for Gusranse: Be nay an |
the various schemes started since defence and not- your meee vs coop! us AN



yor? money baci









other purposes,
ably for alloys used in jet engines



the Committee reported, resulted rer coety package. Get : Wi
mmittee trom your chemist todey Wak ee/e a
sane m4] F * If the problems of extraction o/ Pramtae protects You “ge proouc
: these two meuls can be overcome
Answering anotner question —and although research work on
about the possibility of the United them is at t being under- Made in England by; ALLEN &@ HANBURYS LTD., LONDON, E.2
Kingdom obtaining apprecialla taken at Bri *"s atomic energy 2

supplies of meat from Colomial slation at ell, Berkshire, ‘ ) —
. Hopkinson

territories, Mir said these problems are admitted to be
RIDE A eeeaene

gat apart from .a little canned —a and
bnef eon Beab Atian and soene im| it of ore,

mutton from the Falkland Islands, commercial value
STURDY, RELIABLE, STRONG.

running
there was no surplus meat avail- many millions of pounds, will be
able from the territories. available, Such high concentra-
“In most territories there is a trations of uranium as has been
large and growing demand for found in Nigeria are very scarce,
meat which is at present unsatis. ond the size of the area coneerned
fied. Imports of carcass meat from may be the world’s largest. News
many pre of Africa would in of the deposits—until now “top
any case possible owing to sécret”—js given in two Te +e
eho vial of fy ecting our own hive- by Dr. R. A. tay and Mr. K. E.
stock with rinderpest.” Beer, Fie svepe is a challenge
Asked about a possible expan~
sion of maize growing in the Col-



onies, Mr. Hopkinson said maize
was almost entirely a peasant
crop and more exacting in its soil

and climatic needs than other
crops. Where conditions were
orn however, cultivation was
eing encouraged, primarily ta
meet loca) needs.

‘Development of a _ suitable
hybrid maize would , inanenes pro-
duction but apart frorn that any
large expansion could only be at
ee expense of other crops,” he
Sal

iehcie elias pacteisidinidiehhip cit tlh pe ae eal
After a moment’s et he con-

& coe., LTD.

20 BROAD ST.
and at MARINE GARDENS








THE BARBADOS FOUNDRY LTD.

White Park Road.
St, Michael



some years it nag been
known that pyrochlore (a minera}
containing uranjum, and niobium)
occurred in some types of




















cluded they were the right way —
up he was upside down—so he their
turned over. he had had an

electric horizon he might have | ‘
lived to tell the tale. granite, con. 1
ta oaie aaa oe oorth (at present
— ie £6 in every ton of}}
extent of the deposit is} {t
caine at 700,000 tons of ore
{valued at £3. 5s. m.

OTTAWA.

extraction could be
experts calculate that a plant
dealing with 3,000 tong of rock a}
day could make available 100 tons|{
of — and san ne of nio-~
hium each year. The deposit lies in
Kano Province in Le
chi

flay trom oa to bara, sn 8
way from Jos » and 60
cae cipiane anne by — from the Jos Plateau where} )}

power plant now built by y is available,
the Northwest T Power Much research hag

Commission on the Mayo River Possible methods of

oépaee tnt a tion at the uranium from sedimentary shales \ E H A E )

y
of the year,” Young said, Ree gree oe. Be tar aa agi) }
Other mineral developments
ed that this mass could not bo
part of the petroleum needs Of ganosit. tialities of the
AT

is kno is more or ii
with goed are being 1c uniforiy distributed
>
undertaken }
exploited, but subsequent rises in
the
ore-dressin
the Mackenzie district, research will solve the problems
“However, the vast wave of of economically ng the

prospects }
in other enens of the ‘hroughout th an
Yukon, i}
i
prices of uranium and niobium t

exploration from Alberta is metals from ores of this sort re-
a

the old dissolving
)
}
ore have to its :
surging northward, and that, let mains to be seen, At present. |

end

aro

Territories
Young said the only oil -—

presently ing in
Yukon is at Norman Wells ‘o
the Mackenzie He

this operation now

particularly on :
Canol Road near the Sen sary to ex it. is likely |}
border.
ane aartoomning, however,
annual output to meet the great COO } ERS
me tell you, is no mere flowery ytate the reports, this %

to be costly and in 1960'It appear-
or ‘be. impoanible to assesg ne
3 & 4 Gallon Sizes



figure of said. uranium occurrence
a tesearch effort no less than that
16,500,000 acres of oil and natu-

given to the low-grade sedimen-
ral gas exploration permits have

tary sources,
been granted or Or Ie Tf the deposits are devel it

may be possible to earn ars
Government Will Acquire

by ‘sales of uranium. Up to now
the main uranium deposits have

Land For New Market

A new Fish Market is to be

been found in the Belgian Congo
erected at Speightstown, For this

ond Canada, both hard currency
ources, ‘o buy uranium from
purpose Government will acquire
under the Land Acquisition Act

these countries has cost gold. Now

there is a chance to act as i
source of supply.

4,306 square feet of land situated

at the junction of Queen Street

and Sand Street



The reports are “The Albite-
Riebeckite Granites of Nigeria”
and “The Petrography of Some of
the Riebeckite~Granjtes oa M-
geria,’



AL ASS




PAGE FOUR

BARBADOS witb ADVOCATE

Bisons [im = eee re

Printed by the Advooate Co., Ltd., Broad 8t., Bridgetown



Friday, July 4, 1952

INCONVENIENCE

THE idea that Barbados is so far behind
the rest of the world that newcomers to
this island jocularly talk of putting the
clock back twenty-five years is widespread
among some English residents who know
remarkably little about village life in Eng-
land.

If a Barbadian said to an English critic
that 4,000 villages in England were with-
out a sewerage system of any kind he
would probably be laughed at for weeks.

But that is exactly what Dr. Garbett,
Archbishop of York said in Blackpool a
few weeks ago. “The nation” said Dr.
Garbett “should see that every village had
a proper water supply. Every house should
have its own bath with a supply of water.
The village pump was no longer sufficient.”

Tf it is true that philosophy is bred of the
knowledge that other people’s misfortunes
are as great or greater than your own, then
the standpipe community of Barbados
should draw comfort from the plight of so
many English village dwellers.

Particularly since they seem to enjoy
greater recreational ‘facilities than many
Englisn dwellers. “It was astonishing”
said Dr. Garbett “how many villages had
no playing field.” And there were still
many villages without the hall which
should be the centre of community life.

Because conditions in English villages
can be so described by a high dignitary of
the Anglican Church in mid-summer 1952
does not mean that conditions in England
are so gloomy that the standards of living
are falling to that piteously low level which
followed the withdrawal of Roman civilisa-
tion from that ancient country. Rather

should the absence of modern conveniences ,

in the villages of the motherland of the
greatest Empire in history be a warning
to those misguided persons who continue
to spread propaganda which blames every-
one but themselves for the conditions of
misery and low living standards still every-
where to be found in Barbados.

Even with thousands of years start over
Barbados, conditions in English villages as
described by’ the Archbishop of York are

so bad that 4,000 of them are without a -

sewerage system of any kind.

Ought we not then in Barbados to take
a longer view and not strain our eyes
myopically looking for the motes of others
during our short history of 325 years, but
broaden our horizon to recognise the sur-
prisingly high standards which this island
has attained over the last effective 100
years, during which the transition from
slavery to free society has been taking
place. If only the broad historical view
instead of the narrow prejudiced and un-
informed view could be taken of social
activities in Barbados the long painful road
ahead to achieve a better society could be
much smoothed over...

It is a great pity that by the time this
lesson has been learnt by visiting critics
their stay in the island has ended and they
have left behind them disciples to spread
their superficial impressions.

Only by building and improving on the
social services which exist will the speed
of Barbadian progress to a better life be
increased.



HIGHWAY GARDENS,

THE Horticultural Society earlier this
year delighted a large number of flower
lovers when they staged a flower and
vegetable exhibition at the Drill Hall.

It is to be hoped that the Society will |

stage another exhibition this year, and that
many more will follow in future years.

But although these activities of the
Horticultural Society are excellent and
worthy of commendation somehow there
seems to be a great gulf between those who
exhibit flowers at the Horticultural
Society’s Exhibition and the tenders of
small flower gardens which surround many
humble homes along the island’s highways.
The small gardener whose love of flowers
results in the beautifying of the island’s
highways is reluctant to join the Horticul-
tural Society even though the modest an-
nual subscription could probably be spared.

The Horticultural Society on the other
hand cannot go into the highways and
canvas membership from the owners of at-
tractive gardens.

How then is the cult of the small high-
way garden to be spread? By the arrang-
ing of competitions. The Barbados Hotel
Association could offer prizes for the best
city street of gardens and the best garden
in the City Street.

This lead on the part of the Barbados
Hotel Association might encourage the
taxi-drivers association to offer similar
prizes for country gardens.

Beauty is a delicate plant and needs en-
couragement if it is to grow to maturity.
Whcther these suggestions are followed or
not, the private gardeners whose labour
enhances ‘the island’s attractions deserve
public thanks and appreciation.

|
|

|



Your London Re

LONDON.

Some of us are never happy.
The City bemoans falling stock
market prices, the great textile
and rayen industries are in the
middle of a severe recession and
commodity speculators have had
their fingers badly burned as a
result of the recent slide in
values.

But the rank and file of us at
home are not too depressed, For
the first time since the war end-
ed, we can go shopping now-
days and feel that prices are
becoming reasonable. And peo-
ple like stockbrokers and shop
assistants are becoming extra
helpful now that business is not
so good.

“Bargains” are appearing i:
all the big stores, and many are
bargains indeed compared with
the prices charged a year ago.

Due to foreign countries re-
stricting their imports, produc-
ers are trying to dispose of
their goods on the home market
as they have little room to store
them. Cottons and _ woollens
have fallen as much as forty per
cent. over the last twelve
months. Some types of carpets
are down by thirty per cent.
Luxury items of all kinds, in-
cluding fancy pieces of ladies’
lingerie, are cut by no less than
fifty per cent. Secondhand
motorcar dealers will hardly
talk terms. With enough un-
saleable cars on their hands al-
ready, they think prices will
slump further. Secondhand fur-
niture dealers say they. find few
buyers. Once again patterned
and. coloured chinaware is ap-
pearing in the shops, and house-
wives, accustomed for years \o
buying plain white china be-
cause the coloured sets were for
export only, can scarcely be-
lieve their eyes. But shopkeep-
ers report that people are in no
hurry to buy.

Are we moving towards a
slump? No, say those who
should know. Included amongst
them is the chairman of the
great Imperial Chemical Indus-
tries combine, Mr, John Rogers,

who asserted recently that he
did not see a general depression
ahead for British industry, The
anxiety about finding raw
materials had changed to
anxiety about finding adequate
markets at home and abroad for
| the country’s industrial output.
| The problem is world-wide, as-
sured Mr. Rogers and “‘it is diffi-
cult to interpret these signs as

te



BARBADOS ADVOCATE

iy
L. Vaughan Jones

foreshadowing a general depres-
sion.”
There is another side, how-

ever, to these falling prices.
Whitehall is concerned at the
lower prices paid in world mar-

kets for the raw materials pro-
duced by the Commonwealth's
millions, whose standards of liv-
ing depend on the value of rub-
ber, lead, zinc, copper, wool,
sisal, jute and the rest,
Questions are being asked in
Parliament about the possibility
of holding another Common-
wealth Conference shortly, and
now it is hoped by many that
such a conference may take place
in London before the end of the
year. Even if the Prime Minis-
ters are unable to attend because
of pressure of business at home,
it is hoped that they will send
representatives. Commonwealth
trade matters would come high
on their agenda, although all out-
standing affairs would be review-
ed, The Commonwealth Finance
Ministers do not meet till next
January, though they would have
oppovtunity for talks when they
gather in Mexico next autumn
for the meeting of the Interna-

tional Bank.
Me a * *

What a joy it is to see repre-
sentatives of the Commonwealth
visiting England, a reminder of
the many races that comprise the
Community. Into the Public
Gallery of the House of Commons
this week stepped eleven mem-
bers of the Nigerian Olympic
team, all wearing their grass
green blazers. They listened at-
tentively to Mr, Oliver Lyttelton
speaking on the Government's
proposals for an African Feder-
ation, and learned firsthand: of
tthe interest that Members take
in Commonwealth affairs.

Also, this week at Lords, tra-
ditional stronghold of the Old
School Tie Brigade, there were
many splashes of colour amongst
the spectators watching the see-
ond Test match against India.
They included the many~shaded
saris worn by Indian women
cricket enthusiasts and the tur-
bans of bearded Sikhs, At Ascot,
too, the bright garments of visit-
ors from Africa and the Orient
vied with the latest creations,
worn by thia season's debutante

And a little highlight was the
news that the Ministry of Fooc

Our Readers Say:

Birth Control
To The Editor, The Advocate—

SIR,—The advocates of Birth
{ Control seem to have pushed it
on the shelf for a more conven=
ient reason, W they will
again take it down and infuse
new life into it. I wish that these
people would stop talking and
get down to the real root of the
trouble. Something can be done
to help these poor unfortunate
people who to my mind are
some of the best people in the
world, but who remind me of
sheep without a shepherd,

No scientific method is going
to be any help, It will be like
beating the air with a stick.
People are not machines, but
human beings, What we want
is a change of heart amongst the
more fortunate people of this
Island, We want to stop passing
the other fellow on the other
side, and to put into practice
what the best man who ever
lived said to the people when
they asked him about the
greatest Commandment, He said
to “Love the Lord thy God with
all thy Soul, mind and heart, and
thy neighbour as thyself.” That
is our trouble. We misinterpret
who is our neighbour, We say,
the man who can invite us to
tea, to play a game of Bridge or
who can stand a round of drinks
—he is our neighbour. The ex-
istence of the social barrier
needs to be removed and all the
snobbery brought to an f
Until this is done, this place is
supposed to become worse.
There must be the necessity to
add to the police force, employ
more police magistrates, and
build more court houses, more
jails, bigger _ and
many more maternity hospitals,
where teen-agers become moth-
ers and everybody make a joke
} of it and say to teach them how

to use con ives, when we
hhave the real remedy and that is
to love them as we love our-
selves, and stop being selfish and
insular, Let us try raising their
social standard, and teach them
how they should conduct their
affairs. They are to
learn, Let every man and
woman realise that he or she
is his or her brother’s keeper,

Let us call upon the church,
which has been asleep for ages,
or to put it stronger, has become
dead to its responsibility, In
the days that are passed the
priest or parson knew each boy
and girl in his district. He
would always drop around and
was highly respected. But con-
ditions have changed, and the
people will only see him if they
go to church or see him passing
in his car, and this time he
hardly speaks, Also let us call
upon the teachers who are part-
ly responsible for the moulding
of the character of the youth,

I suppose this is a modern
age. I must confess that there
are some in our midst who have
made an effort in some small
way to help, for which we shall
always be grateful, but these
good people have not even
touched the fringe. Altogether
T am oenvineed that this Island
can be saved. There is im-
mense room for improvement,
but not by introducing Birth
Control.

Thanking you,
I am,
Respectfully yours,
D’ARCY A. SCOTT.
Middle Street
Ist July, 1952,

Cycling
“3
To The Editor, The Advocate—

SIR,—Further to the article on
cycling in your paper of 29th.
June, I would like to state that
in my original letter 1 did not
set out to discourage the local
racing cyclist, but to point out
that they are quite a lot of peo-
‘ple in Barbados who think they
know all there is to know about
cycle racing, and in fact, they
know nothing at all about the
game.

The points I raised in my
letter were intended for these
people and not for those racing
cyclists who I am sure, are quite
familiar with them.

If the judges and other offic-
ials of the A.A.A.B. knew more
about cycle racing in its various
forms, that bit of trouble would
not have happened in the last
Intercolonial meeting. Grant was
disqualified because these offic-
jals thought that what was done
was dangerous both to other
riders and his own health, In
long massed start races which
are akin to the Barbadian type
of track racing, riders are;
handed up small haversacks con-
‘taining sandwiches ete, Botth
containing cold drinks are als
handed up. The point at whic
these drinks and food are handed’
up, is decided by the individual
wider,

If there is a rule which .states
that nothing is to be handed a
rider during a race, it is about
time that this rule be x
forgotten or removed fro
book.

In France, where cycling is
more or less the national sport,
tthe Tour-de-France is more
highly organised than the Olym-
pics. This race is approximate:y
three thousand miles and covers
a period of twenty one days
riding with three rest days.
This race starts outside Paris,
comes into Paris and then via
Belgium, the north and west
coast of France into Northern
Spain, From here it continues
along the Mediterranean coast,
through the Alps into Italy and
Switzerland and then back to
Paris for the final stage where it
ends in the famous Parc-de-
Princes track. About a hundred
riders usually start, but due to
crashes and various mishaps,
about seventy five per cent of
the riders finish.

I would like to make a cor-
rection in my letter, It was the
Tour-de-France 1951 as the 1952
Tour has not been ridden yet.
It usually starts about the
middle of July and continues in-
to August.

As one who is interested in
cycling in its various forms. I
would like to see more publicity
given to cycling.

NEVILLE E. SMITH

The Government Errs Again
To the Editor, The Advocate;

SIR,—-The Government prom-
‘ised that it would make emigra-
tion one of its priory considera-
tions, Hundreds of unemployed
are awaiting this promise. Has
this promise been forgotten?

A few weeks ago, six hundred
men were wanted for the U.S.A,
(This is a poor fraction of. the
thousands of unemployed) Over
two thousand men were called
up from all parts of the island
paying unnecessary bus fare
and a loss of time to be told
that they are on reserve, These
men: including myself, were
vaccinated and Blood tested.
Such measures should not be
taken if a desirous emigrant is
to be sent home again and again
on fair promises, This is my
second reservation,

A good friend of mine who is

still unemployed was. told by
one of the labour representatives
that he is not a labourer and



has granted a special allowance
of two sheep to Zahur Ahmad
Hajwa,
Mesque, for the Feast of Eid-ul-
Fitr which marks the end of the
Moslem Fast of Ramadan. Sup-
plies of rice haVe also been
guaranteed and 250 of London's
15,000 Moslems will sit down to
a curry lunch in a marquee
erected in the garden adjoining
the Mosque.
* * * A

The headmasters of schools
are well placed to judge the
effects. on children resulting
from the divorce of their
parents. Now the Headmasters’
Conference, which comprises the
heads of two hundred public
schools, have just submitted
‘their evidence to the Royal
Commission on Marriage and
Divorce. They have pronouced
their verdict; in the interests of
the children, they are unreserv-
edly opposed to making divorce
easier,

The subject, complex in the
extreme, is a perpetual case for
debate. Why do a man and a
woman who went happily into
marriage, come to hate the mere
presence of each other? Says one
of the people wh» studies these
things; “How often it is that one
cr other of wi continues 10
look onwards and cannot develop
and be satistied with what he
or she already has?”

= CJ » we a

Visitors from abroad, buying
Coronation souvenirs next year,
are unlikely to be fobbed off with
articles made in Japan. Import
of these will be banned by the
Board of Trade, for British firms
feel that it is their own preroga-
tive to make them,

Cheapest souvenir one firm is
making will cost only a penny.

. * + *

From July 1, we must. pay
more for our telephones, Rental
for a business telephone in Lon-
don goes wp from £8 3s. 4d. to
£11 a year, private telephones
from £5 19s. 7d. to £8. All this is
necessary says the Post Office,
because of rising costs, However,
Government departments do not
have to pay anything for their
calls and nearly one telephone in
five throughout the country is
used by civil ¥ervants, Every
year the Ministers make more
than 20 million trunk calls and
nearly 100 million local calls.

“Are all these calls really
necessary?” asks the British
public.



was asked to leave the park.
May I ask . . . is emigration for
the unemployed or just a certain

e,

v hope the Government will
stop this foolery and do some~
thing to help the suffering
masses. If it is a Labour Gov-
ernment, then help the Labour-
ers, unemployed in general. Re-
member! Elections will come
a ‘

| ROGO

The Teachers

To The Editor, The Advocate—

SIR,—I we I am not poach-
ing on J.E.B.’s Preserves, but
now that the Searchlight is being
focussed on things educational
would you allow me space in
your paper to draw to the atten-
tion of the powers that be an in-
<< being carried out in the
‘lementary teaching service,

It seems to be a closely guard-
ed secret by whom and on what
basis selection for training at
Erdiston is made.

* If the aim of the selectors is
to breed dis-satisfaction and dis-
content in the service, then they
are meeting with a fair measure
of success; if this is not the aim
then all is not well.

Year after year, Junior teach-
ers jin the service are being
Selected for training at the ex-
pense of those who have given
many years of faithful servica
and are now at one or other of
the many bars with which this
service abounds.

Are these injured teachers,
some of whom have been apply-
ing for entry from the opening of
the College, expected to go on
giving faithful and satisfaetory
‘service when in’ year they be-
come the juniors of their juniors.

This is only one of the many
wrongs which afflict Elementary
Edueation in Barbados.

I heartily subseribe to J.E.B.’s
suggestion for an inquiry into
= Educational in Barba-
os,

CURIOUS.
Ground Provisions

To The Editor, The Advocate,—

SIR,—The public welcome the
news that the Agriculture
Society are considering the ques-
Lion of forming a Co-Operative
Society in connection with the
sale _and handling of ground
provisions, as during the past
two years, the public have found
it very difficult to obtain yams,
eddoes_and sweet potatoes in
spite of the Government order-
ing that a certain area of every
plantation and peasant’s . land
shall be planted to produce the
requisite food for the inhabitants.

The Government were w’ | in
making such an erder but they
have failed in three ways, first
they have not seen to i. that the
entire area so to be set
aside has been planted and sec-
ondly they have not provided a
remunerative price to the grow-
ers, thirdly, where the yield
has produced a greater quantity
than was anticipated the grower
has not been allowed to ship the
surplus to the neighbouring
Islands, the .exgess has. been
allowed to remain in the ground
and rot away. This has been dis-
heartening to both planter and
labourer. When we consider that
British Guiana ships us a very
large quantity of rice, we should
be ready to ship to British Gui-
ana and ‘Trinidad a_ certain
amount of our ground provision
which they sadly need,

The public will watch with in-
terest and hope that the Govern-
ment, Landowner and Labour-
ers will co-operate in producing
a full share of ground provision
for the inhabitants of the Island.

Yours,
HOUSEWIFE.

port |

Imam of the London



LISTEN T0 THE ECHO OF
THE GUNS

A Rancher Confesses To Wild
West Hold-up

By R. M. MacCOLL
WASHINGTON.

OUT in Wyoming, life proves stranger
than a film seenario.

For suddenly there sounds a dramatic
echo of the Old West, of bad men, the hoof-
beats of sheriffs’ posses.

Sixty-three-year-old Frank Taylor, a
wealthy rancher in eastern Montana and
known as a model of rectitude, goes to John
Bonner, Governor of Montana, and confesses
that he is really Charles Whitney, former
member of the “Holce-in-the-wall gang”
which held up a bank in Cokeville, Wyom-
ing, in 1911, and then galloped off.



Â¥ * -*

And why did Whitney, alias Taylor, de-
cide to come clean all these years later?

Because only a few months ago his broth-
er, also a member of the gang, died a natural
death in British Columbia. ‘

And while “Frank Taylor” was admittedly
a robber, the brother was “wanted” for the
murder of a train conductor in another

hold-up.
*

Governor Bonner advises Whitney to go

to Wyoming and tell his story to Governor
Frank Barrett. And he sends a personal mes-
sage to his fellow governor asking “the
utmost leniency and clemency for Mr. Whit-
ney, whose residence in this State has never
been marred by even a minor offence.”
. Governor Barrett suggests that he plead
guilty to the 40-year-old crime. A sympathe-
tic judge puts him on five years probation.
And Whitney is free to resume his respected
career as a Montana stockman.

For, in this modern era of million-dollar
hold-ups, it is a reminder of how times have
changed that the loot from that “great”
bank robbery in the distant days of 1911
amounted to just 600 dollars—worth £125
then and £214 now.

Marilyn Monroe is to star in “Niagara.”
Quips Hollywood columnist Hedda Hopper :
“The Niagara Falls will have a strictly sup-
porting role.”’ Marilyn, you will recall, was
one of the hits in “All About Eve.”

Cartel has become a word that makes
many Americans turn pale and shudder. It
conjures up visions of huge business con-
cerns plotting to divide up trade unfairly
and to the detriment of their smaller com-
petitors and the public alike.

Now Senator Thomas Hennings, Missouri
Democrat, formally asks that the Justice
Department and the Senate itself immedi-
ately investigate one of the “greatest cartels
yet.”

He charges that President Truman has
clamped the lid on an “explosive” 900-page
repost submitted to him by the Federal
Trade Commission, which says that Ameri-
can, British, and Dutch interests have ar-
ranged among themselves “to divide the
oil reserves of the Middle East and to fix
prices.”

In Durham, North Carolina, Mrs. Terry
Ewing had come to the end of her slender
resources, spending money on detectives’
fees trying to trace her missing husband.

A friend urged her to watch a boxing
match in Madison Square Garden on TV,
suggesting “it will take your mind off your
troubles.” The TV camera swung into the
audience at one point—and there was the
missing Mr. E. selling soft drinks to_the box-
ing fans.

Mrs. Ewing has asked the police to inves-
tigate, {

In the massive Radio City Music Hall of
New York. “Where’s Charley?” opens this
week, This is the musical version of our old
friend “Charley’s Aunt.” In it, Ray Bolger
|vepeats the inspired performance that made

a smash hit on Broadway a couple of seasons
back.

Shy Millionaire Lavere Redfield, whose
home in Reno, Nevada, was laoted of
£535,000 not long ago, is arrested in Califor-
nia for failing to answer a subpoena direct-
ing him to give evidence against two women
suspects,

He refuses to find the £17,000 bai asked
for—‘although I could raise it in a moment
if I wanted to”—and stays in a San Francisco
jail rather than face the photographers out-
side.

But to-day he grows tired of sharing a cell
with a man accused of receiving sore of the
stolen money, decides to find bail—and faces
the photographers.

Fred Lounsberry, a programme director
for a big broadcasting studio in northern
New York State, contends that musicals
to-day are suffering from “too little fun and
too much art.” He says that the immortal
line: "Id go insane without my cane,” in a
song entitled “My Walking Stick” which
Irving Berlin wrote years ago, epitomises
the “gaiety, goofiness, and abandon which
We are in danger of losing in our musical
theatre.”

Judge George Neilson describes Washing-
ton as “the shoplifter’s paradise.” Shop de-
tectives are at their wits’ ends over the prob-

}lem, and losses run into millions of dollars

‘a year.



~ ®

FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952

PHOTOGRAPHS me
Copies of Local Photographs ; .
Which have appeared in the

ADVOCATE NEWSPAPER
Can be ordered from the. . .
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FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952

BARBADOS . ADVOCATE



PAGE FIVE







. | President Reviews One — Malik Vetoes Investigation
J udgment Awarded to Barrister-at-Law Year’s Work Of Y.W.C.A. Of Germ War Charges
£50 DAMAGES CLAIMED

Milk Depot Being Considered. y)..°° 3 2NS, sere Rea eet :
FOR ALLEGED ASSAULT , yan shea sori

the debate anc would ultimately
Meeting of that Organisation cn the 30th June, the Presi-



@ From page 1.
in combatting any epidemics
North Korea and China and tht



veto the proposal because of the
Council's refusal to invite North
















a bs , {the unified command for Kore; Korea and Red China to ity
MILK PRODUCERS are still awaiiing word from the dent Cvirs. A. A. Gibbons) said : “During the year under} s:eed to co-operate: noting with debate was unmoved and still

Government regarding the alternative proposals submitted by review the work on the Classes of the Association has been | regret that the Chinese Commun- glowering through his horn rim-
BEFORE GIVING JUDGMENT fot Mr. Lorenzo Wil- them in connection with the establishment of a Central Milk re3t itdined and we have every intention of enlarging this |ists and North Korean authorities»mog - glasses) and saying. not 9
lams, M.C.P., Barrister-at-Law, in the Assistant Court of Depot and Creamory. im. the coming year.” ne ‘ ow : oY He a the v sha Wad tal me aa nding

. Se o BS ak ‘ re ? c im Sea SS . : J j er ve entry \<¢ or ealth the vote as taken — sta
Appeal, Original Jurisdiction yesterday, in a case in which These alternative proposals prepared by a committee Vie Report covered a period to the 31st December, 1951,) ganization 1s tate the tere docyn agbingf. the ten saleul
Miss Thez Spencer of Checker Hall, claimed £50 damages comprised of milk producers, were submitted to Government and deelt im the main with the formation of the Association, |: ‘tories controlled by these au- hands of other Council members
from him on the ground that he had assaulted and beaten a few months ago, They are still being studied by Govern- Tue Com » fier extend= ie wile Lime of the Association's; thorities; noting that the govern. who favoured the American pro
her on December 12 last year, His Honour Mr. J. W. B. ment. ing a most al welcome to Work and te remember the Motto| “ent of the Union of Soviet posal. Later Malik broke the
€ y ‘ & i re | Socialist R blics has sile! he intained through
Chenery said that he was not forgetful of the heat and The original proposals which had been prepared and sub- | bids Savoy batrenets, fe- of tie | LOCK. BY COVES o ed Watlons vevoated: charges te’ curfent, debate’ Kaa waenee
excitement of the political battle at the ‘time. mitted to Government by a Committee comprised of Govern- coerced “w.th pleasure” the hoa- ve ONE ag See tater | hat United "Nat or eae alata Oka Tee oaks, ain ae
. . 2 ot hatiSte rad en ‘oncltidirts . Re rtey | the uted Nz ar 3 se t ag

“While I cannot forget that in with him and was with him until ment Agricultural Officers, Milk Producers and members of a wae, an by Tt “4 Sateen thst, tea ittcomeitien tabeas aka yngaging in bacteriological war any new American proposal.
the heat ned excitement of the Well over am hgur afer it had | the House of Assembly, wore roecied by the Milk Producers | {°c ""Huaequartem a ihe Mesure, tn recording that we | of: MOM ANGE ral, feo Tove pom et Ta
political battle a candidate might occurred, And that came in con- as being impractical under the 1951 Co-operative Societies Act pe : Evening have been of cervice in providing |‘ yrsit a Oe oe eee aN us ‘ ae ae : £
do things which he might subse- tradiction of Bishop's testimony Following an intimation from His Excellency the Gov- The President in ier Reoodet sleeping accommodation to vis- — oars “ Siahinn tends th net a uindhe aoa ane
weeny ae rel , in ta heated which itself was regarded as un- ernor, the Milk Producers agreed to draw up alternative pro- paid trik to the Committee itors te the island as well as local) , dan jet aust Wiasees by ite fatter’ eanaaotiat” arte the aie of
i 7“ an from doing, yet relisbles Sees Min posals, and a Committee was set up for the purpose. Who “worked herd te get the Otends,” aud in its reference 10) ternational Commitic. o bacteriological > b
in this case there is nothing to “So if they: dismissed the testi- ; v4 h f the Associatior SE ees es SCL EOS SS oD. ee
suggest that the evidence given mony of Gibbs and Bishop, they The proposals which have been agreed to by a majerity fe jwoe by the defendant is not a true, were left with the evidence of the of the Milk Producers are for the Government to finance the d nha ge Saath teed eaten on a Recel re und Dis- he: lens of Bowie. Beciaits) Ro. She) See ae ee
honest and straight-forward ac- plaintiff and the defendant, The establishment of the Central Depot and Creamery. Beran rage) ol ae fae Si Pret h ay ‘ Be 2's | sublics and that by reason of the of Korea and the Chinese Peoples
count of what actually took place,” case stood or fell by the degree Replying to ¢ ation. by the Hi Mr. V.C. Gale in t tion. Mrs. Greaves held a Cake bursements to the 31st cem-| sogative vote cf the Union of government can be debated let
His Honour said, " 6f credibility which the court felt Replying to a question by the Hon. Mr. V. C, Gale in the Sale’ whieh wet also 4 success, ber show a credit balance of| Soviet Socialist Republics the < adopted in the absence of
The case had been heard ata ir could attach’ to the witnesses Legislative Council a few weel:s ago, the Hon. the Colonial ani ex s the Association's $1,867.03, | seourity Council is prevented official representatives of both
previous date and yesterday the always remembering that the Secretary said that the cost of the scheme had now risen to praticnd the Public for Dona- | The President finally appealed | ‘rom arranging for such impartial parties. This has been the posi-
decision was given cnus still rest on the plaintiff, | $80,000 instead of $60,000 as was estimated, and the imple- ions which amounted to $1,459.69, to members: to pay attention te | uvestigation; condemns the prac- tion of the Soviet delegation in

Mr. Williams was represented
by Mr, E. W. Barrow. Counsel for
Miss Spencer was Mr. G- B. Niles.

Evidence Reviewed

Reviewing. the ¢€vidence, His
Honour said that Miss Spencer
had said that about 9 to 9.30 p.m,
on the night which the alleged
offence occurred, she was at
Checker Hall corner where, a
political meeting was to be staged
by what she celled the Conserva-
live Party, and subsequently loud
speakers making what she termed
Labour noise drove up,

Soon after she said Mr. Wil-
liams came up in a car, got out of
it and held her by the shoulder.
She tugged away and he cuffed
her on her mouth and told her
to keep out of his business. She
was cut on the lefi side of her
mouth.

At the time, she added, she had
taken up two stones, but had been
persuaded not to use them.

In support of her testimcey,
His Honour said, sbe brougat
James Gibbs and Jason Bishop,
but the testimonies of these wit<
nesses were so manifestly full of
contradiction, both inher:nt
end contradiction to the plaintiff's
own testimony, that no court
could place any reliance on evi-
dence so obviously contorted.

“But that does not prevent tlhe
Court from still endeavouring to
see if in the plaintiff’s version
there is any residuum of credibility
which would agsist it in weighing
the evidence she has given.”

Discussion Aside

He said that Mr. Williams Kac
given evidence himself and had
said that on the night in question
when he got out of the car, he
had gone up to the plaintiff and
told her to go aside that he wantea
to discuss something with her.
They moved away a few i#et
from the car and after referring
her to the allegations he heard
she had made about him and his
family, he told her that while it
was ademocratic country, she stil
could not do as she liked and,
should endeavour to keep th:
elections clean,

Soon after, Mr. Williams had
said, he heard her screaming
that he had struck her in her
face and went to pick up two
stones-

He called to support him a wit-
ness, Jackman, whose evidence
was chiefly valuable for the light
it threw on the testimony of Jason
Bishop who Jackman claimed
was at the time of the incid.n:

‘While I cannot forget that in
the heat and excitement of ihe
political battle a candidate might
do things which he might subse-
quently regret or in less heated
moments refrain from doing, yet
in this case there is nothing to
suggest that the evidence given
by the defendant himself is not a
true, honest and straight-forward
account of what actually took
place.

And I do not find that in this
case there is any evidence sto
warrant the conclusion that he
did in this particular matter in-
@uige in the conduct reputed ts
him by the plaintiff. Taking that
view of the case, I find that the}
plaintiff has not established the
case and judgment is given to the
defendant.

40'- FINES FOR



FAULTY WEIGHTS

IMPGSED.

Two cases of faulty weights
went before His Worship Mr.
H. A, Talma yesterday and in
each case a fine of 40/- to be paid
in 14 days or by execution, were
imposed,

The first was against Ince & Co.
Ltd., of Roebuck Street. They
were found guilty of having five
four-pound weights defective on
April 10, One was 12 drams light,
one’10, one 13, one 14 and the
other 4. They also had one defec-
tivé pint pot,

The other was against Harold
Proverbs & Co., of High Street
who were also found guilty of not
having scale and weights equal to
standard. A scale poise was one
ounce light and three two-pound
weights were each three drams
light.

Seibert Forester of the Pine
Housing Scheme was yesterday
fined 15/- to be paid in 14 days
or a month’s imprisonment by
His Worship Mr. H, A, Talma
when he was found guilty of
gambling at the Housing Scheme
on May 4,

A Fine of 30/- to be paid in 14
days or in default one month’s
imprisonment, was yesterday im-
posed on Darnell Yearwood, a
conductor of Branchbury, St.
Joseph, by the same Magistrate,
when he was found guilty af over-
loading the bus G—94 which he
was conducting while going along
Neils Road on May 7.



Negligence Of Driver Not Proved

Because Kenneth Best of Round
The Town, St. Peter, failed to
prove that Arlington Savoury, a
driver of Peterkins Land, was
negligent while driving the car
M—382 along Garden Road, St.
James on December 26 last year,
His Honour of the Assistant Court
of Appeal, Original Jurisdiction,
Mr. J. W. B. Chenery, yesterday
gave judgment for Savoury and
Louisa A. Stuart, of Black Rock,
the owner of the car, from whom
Best claimed $240 damages.

Best claimed that Savoury neg-
ligently, recklessly and unalcilfully
managed and drove the car with
the result that a collision occurred
with his car E—192, and in respect
of the damage, he suffered in-
convenience and discomfiture,

The case had previously been
heard and yesterday the decision

was given. Mr. E. W. Barrow,
instructed by Mr. D. Lee Sargeant
appeared for the defendants.

In this case, evidence was given
by the plaintiff himself, the Judge
remarked, evidence that neither of
the vehicles were going fast and
both had on their lights, and all
the plaintiff could say was that
the accident did occur.

A Wet Day

But the evidence of the police
who took measurements was that
it was a very wet day, the roads
were full of water and some had
spilled over into the gutters, obvi-
ously making it difficult to distin-
guish the surface of the road.

“In cases of collision, the maxim
res ipsa loquitur does not apply,”
His Honour said. “If it did apply,
the plaintiff undoubtedly would

mentation of the alternative plans would cost Government
$50,000 more than they originally planned

He however assured the Hon, Mr. Gale that the scheme
had not been forgotten, but was among a list of other matters

for serious consideration,



Ifill Is Best
Athlete In
Aruba Sports

Mr. Osbert Ifill, a member of
the Barbados Battalion, South
Caribbean Force, during World
War II, was recently awarded the
trophy for the most outstanding
athlete in the 12th annual Queen’s
Birthday Olympiad held at the
Lago Sports Park, Aruba. He was
presented with the award by Mr.
O. S. Mingus, Lago General Man-
ager.

Mr. Ifill was selected the most
outstanding athlete of the Olym-

ad when in the five events in

hich ‘he competed, he carried
off three firsts, placed second in
another and third in the other.

He won the 100 yards flat race,
the 220, and was a member of tha
team which won the 440 yards
relay race. He was placed second
in the 440 yards flat and third in

the long jump.

Mr. Ifill, during his service with
the Barbados Battalion, took part
in all forms of sports, including
football and athletics at which he
was outstanding. He also played
at centre forward for Everton.
He is now engaged with the
Lago Oil and Transport Company
of Aruba in thelr Electrical
Department.



Hutson Howard of Stuart Hill,
St. John, another conductor, was
also fined for overloading. He was
fined 20/- to be paid in 14 days or
in default. a month’s imprison-
ment. The offence was committed
on May 10 while he was conduct-
ing the 'bus J—129 which was
being driven along Roebuck
Street..

Neville Larrier, a driver of St.
Martins, St. Philip, was also fined
20/- by the same Police Magis-
trate. He was found guilty of
failing to draw up as close ag
possible to the side of Bay Street
on May 16 so as to allow a clear
roadway for passing traffic.



have proved his case, It would
have been sufficient to say that
the accident occurred and the
damage, and leave it to the defen-
dant to disprove the case,

“But unfortunately for the
plaintiff, negligence in matters of
this king has to be positively
proved and while you always feel
sympathy for a man who through
no fault of his suffered damages,
yet in this particular case, it is
obvious that under the circum~
stances, the occasion of the over-
flowing of the gutters by the
‘water at this stage made it diffi-
cult, if not impossible for the
parties to distinguish the sides of
the road.

Negligence
“T am unable to find from the
evidence of the plaintiff, any real







FINE CRETONNES

GIVE YOUR ROOMS
A BRIGHT ACCENT





Inspection Parade
To Be Held On
July 12

Brigadier A, C. F,. Jackson,
Commander of the Caribbean Area
Fo.ces, is due to arrive in Barba-
dos shortly on a tour of inspection
of the troops in the island,

An Inspection Pa.ade of the
combined troops will be held on
Saturday July 12 at 5 p.m. The
rehearsal for this Parade will take
place at the Garrison on Thursday
July 10, at 5 p.m,

Delegates To Be Named
For Fats And Oils Talks

Barbados and Antigua remain
the only two territores to name
their delegates and advisers to the
Regional Oils and Fa.s Conference
which opens at Hastings House on
Tuesday, 8th July. It is expected
that these two colonies will name
their delegates in a day or two,

The Conference is to decide
whether the five year agreement
cue to expire at the end of August
should be continued, and if so, for
what period and on what terms.



Dangerous Buoy

The Harbour Master yester-
day received a telegram from
the Harbour Master of Trini-
dad notifying him about the
mooring of an unlighted buoy
which could bo dangerous to
ships in the area.

The message read: ‘“Vessols
within the Gulf of Paria are
notified that «an unlighted
yellow and white buoy filled
with a square shaped radar re-
flector, topmark spar and yel-
low and black stripes, has been
moored in latitude 10 degrees,
30 minutes north, longitude
$1 degrees, 51 minutes, 25 sec-
onds west within the bombing

and strafing range sign, '

Ships are asked to be on the
look-out.





proof of negligence on the part
of the defendant. Because, toc, as
he admits, the defendant was do-
ing about 15 miles an hour, the
same as he was doing and there
was nothing to suggest that he
had failed in normal care,

“We are only left with the fact
of the accident and the mere fact
of an accident is not enough to
enable the Court to say the plain-
tiff has discharged the burden cast
upon him.

“In view of the evidence as a
whole, I am bound to come to the
conclusion that the plaintiff has
tailed in the duty placed upon
him to prove negligence on thd
part of the defendant and the
accident was really due to ex-
traneous circumstances,”

Best gave notice of appeal.

OP EPE@DOVOO OOD



Piree Gabrics

for those















Vestry of St. Michael
1 Geant of £80.00, She. als

that “the members of «he
organised a Fair and made
$149.09 which wos put towards
a Frigidaire.”

Nominal Rent




to the

See expressea tie thanks of
the A®socl.uon to & yenueman
(who preicrs OO remain anony-
mous) tor (he use of their bund-

dig, we UW UVlaLlagtd Peat, aud oO Lie
Muicciis OL the YMCA, and
Captain H. ti. Williams for the

Joan of furniture witnout which
Mey could not aave opened the
ay”.

The President recalled the
visit paid to the “Y¥” by Miss
Ele.uoy French, an Executive
Director on the Siaff of the
World's ¥.W.C.A, Headquar-
ters in Geneva, and said “we
are grateful to her for all the
assistance and advice given at
ss time when it was most need-
Her Report showed that the

mambership of the “Y” is 145
jnctuding 18 Full members, and
in connection with the Organised
Glasses sponsored by the Asso-
ciation, states that “during the
year under review the work on
the classes has been maintained
and we have every intention of

enle-ging this in the coming
year. Handwork, Cooking and
Accessories Classes are held

every week. ‘In this connection,”
the report states, “thanks must
be given to Mrs. H. A. Vaughan,
Mrs. C. P. Stoute, Mrs. H. Griffith
and Mrs.» N. Layne, who took
the various classes.” The Report
adds “We would
more ladies would offer to teach.”

Cafeteria

The Report deals” briefly witn
the varied activities of the “Y”,
and in connection with the work-
ing of the Cateteria, the Presi-
ache" pays tribute (~o the Mutron
“on the manner in which she
manages the Cafeteria with the
help of a member of the Com-

mittee. |

Reporting on the Library, she |
stated “the Committee and Mem-
bers of the Y.W.C.A. are grate-
fu) to all those donors who sent
us literature during the past
year,” and added. “book cases |
re being built and we will be|

‘able to set up+a proper library in
-VIthe near future,”

|

|
|
| BILE BEANS |
|

The to

members

Committee
to

appealed
take advantage of



keep him
YOUTHFUL
FIT and

HAPPY
—full of vigour



Bile Beans will
also make you
vital, ae : 4 fal
energy, and successful.
You will not have indigestion, head-
aches or be constipated, liverish
or tired if you take Bile Beans.

BE SURE TO GET THESE MEDICALLY
TESTED AND APPROVED BILE BEANS



appreciate if)

their subscriptions ag ‘most of th:
money has to be spent on. furni
ture so that the Y.W.C.A. car
be improved and made mor
ottractive.



SUGAR LOADED
INTO “GEIRULO”

There was much activity on the
waterfront yesterday as labourers
lifted and tessed bacs of sugar
into lighters, These bags of sugar
were being taken to the Norwegian
Steamship Geirulo, 5,161 tons,
which o@me into Carlisle Bay on
June 30 from Trinidad.

The Geirulo is now being loaded
with 50,000 bags of sugar and 9f
puncheons of molasses which she
will take to Montreal, Canada. Shc
is expected to leave on Saturday.



“Daerwood's” Engines
Now Being Checked

There are four motor vessels now
anchored in the Careenage. These
are the Caribbee, Willemstad, Blue
Star and Daerwood. Both the Car-
ibbee and Willemstad have jus!
come off the dock from a genera)
overhaul,

The Daerwood which arrived ii
Carlisle Bay on June 26 is now
having its engines checked but she
is not going on the dock, She is
expected to leave on July 8.
































WHEN THE

GER~ FIRE
dyer rouf



\

UNGUENTINE
QUICK

A MODERN ANTISEPTIC
TURES or JARS

WANTED.

OLD GOLD
AND SILVER
— JEWELRY

OR IN PIECES IN
SCRAP FORM

The very highest
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at your Jewellers...

WY. De LIMA

& CO., LTD.

20 BROAD ST.
Phone ; 4644









ice of fabricating and dissemin-

ting such false charges which
nereases the tension among
‘ations and which is designed

» undermine the efforts of the
'nited Nations to combat aggres-
on in Korea and the support of
he people of the world for these
Torts.”

, Britain’s

St Gladwyn Jebb,
‘oneluding the debate on the
\merican proposal, appealed to
Jialik to abstain in the yote

eather than using the veto to pr.

oke a grave situation.
Malik who declared earlier this

week he would not participate in

DRINK & ENJOY









the past, this is its position at pres—
ent and it wfll be its position in
the future."—U.P



LOG ADRIFT

A log has been sighted
drifting at latitude 10.12 de-
grees north and longtitude
54.15 degrees west. Ships are
asked to be on the look-out
for this log which could be
dangerous to navigation.

This message was received
by the Harbour Master.





COOLING &
REFRESHING

2ée. TIN

VALOR COOKER STOVES

Short Burners

2 Burner Model
3 Burner Model

Also

$50.14
$71.87

WHITE PORVELAIN ENAMEL SINKS
With Double Drainboard @ $65.64
complete with waste and overflow

“stablished
1860

i

al

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19 & 11 Roebuck Street

Incerporated
1926

TO-DAY'S
SPECIAL !

COCOANUT
CREAMS



ON SALE AT BOTH PHOENIX & CITY

dODLNS 94949499990

Looder Sed 08e >
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a a ea an
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de HS PHOSIOSH OHSS $0990











i PHARMACY SODA FOUNTAINS |
CRETONNES
8 ins wide @ $2.27, $2.25, $1.80, .
ee poe SALE! SALE!
36 ins. wide @ $1.42 yard oumeerels
27 ins. wide @ 88c. yard i AT THE ,
ados Stripe Biylon :
PRINTED PLASTIC ;
. 86 ins. wide @ 94c., $1.00, $1.23 yd. in ees eee oe ee ee VARIETY SANDAL SHOPPE |
: : «Petronelia”™ : age
sa en so : » This is, a wate servicesttD of am gr ero easy
e—36 ins. wi @ $2.25 yax 4 materia], and is available in lovely . | vhs om,
ares ea ee O35 ye ¢ setae Gh piss seunee? x CLEARING OUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF
PRINTED TABLE CLOTHS | $ as . gel tage Seer $ SANDAL Ss
a ) ¢ oe > 1 ink, * yer, shampa * ru; . I Ph
& x yo @ pases: $8.10 cach Leon, "Gold toe’ Bios stocamaies’ @ BALLERENOS
@ sueeeeee $1.77 each | Rose, Lilac, Bois de Rose and White @ PUMPS 5
— at $2.76 > @ SNEAKERS
| @ GENTS’ SHOES &
oe @ CHILDREN’S SHOES
. 6 @ ETC., ETC.
CAVE SHEPHERD & €0., LTD.

HARRISONS

BROAD STREET—DIAL 2664



Hurry for these Bargains while they last!

ti
10, |
BUY NOW AND SAVE $$ |







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ans a onaeat
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¢ i ;
















PAGE SIX BARBADOS ADVOCATE

eee A NC

st ASSIFIED A S |ANN@UNCEMENTS! PUHLEIC SALES ~~:
a : CHANCERY SALE
EARN BIG MONEY by selling Redit- REAL EST.

anata TELEPHONE 2508 2508 onesie sete susion in. your spawe.time. Gat & supply oie ‘ATE The undermentioned property will be set up for sale at the Registration Office,
z oF of forms today 1.7,59—€n. APPLEBY og Sea, St. J a Public Buildi 5 emserree. mraee ¥ oo —? p.m, for the a. and om
, ch ee ee ee ee 7 “houses” Esch met: ,TWO | the date speci below. not then sold, it will set up on each succeeding
DIED | FOR SALE * ate one ‘aoaen tt = Priday at the same place and during the same hours until sold. Full particulera

FOR RENT verandah. Modern conveniences. on apptisation to me.

RAWDANS—On the 2nd July 1992 Elaine} ~~~ ~~












FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952

GOVERNMENT NOTICE





' NOTICE TO OWNERS AND CREWS OF FISHING BOATS
The attention of all owners and crews of fishing boats is drawn

- a DAISY HERBERT MURPHY and JAMES GRANT ATKINS PiLE—Plaintiffs to Sub-Sections (2) and (3) of Section 18, of the Harbour and Ship~
ATHLONE~on sea, Fontabelle. Divided decease
Meet. “Kirpslent, ‘Swan Sty. The AUTOMOTIVE HOUSES into to flats. Each has dining, drawing ee te are ee ene ping Master Act, 1909—7, which provide as follows:— ,
Raed, St) Michael sts oclock tht Aaaane mamnda that coon aoe tek: lenses, "Phone ata = the” ean MEAAGEME WALTER sad AURBLIA CLARKB-Detendents (2) It shall be the duty of the owner of a fouing boat to see
ichael at 4 0o'¢ is ve : :
evening for Saint Martins Church} CAR—(1) Austin 7 H.P. in First Class | tings," omenttiy furnished, English | =4tfora: 27 acting hetein by BrAsey Aumustus Seat thes fonstituted Attorney hel that his boat is not made oars any part of the wharves,
St, Philip. Friends are invited. oe ae Overhauled. and ¢@- | Bath, Open Verandah facing sea. Suitable ee ee ee —— oe Saint A@chael in this fxiend peedh, a P by or bridges, or anchored in Careenage except when
Cesare wine (mother), Seon | Peinted. 2838. 3.7.53—4n. one person (or couple) . zm sale i BUNGALOW - Modern Bungalow admeasurement nine and thiee fifths perches or thereabouts abutting actually engaged in landing fish, or when on account of
N.Y. & Tdad. Papers Copy. CAR—Morris Oxford. im good condi. | 7%¢Phone a -6.59—4.2.0. |g on almost % acre land. Well-



























































































































































































----- and bounding on two sides on lands of Albertha Payne on lands misst is atvon, he Hart i
4.7.52—1n | tion. Phone 2582 2.7.52—3n. From ist August, furnished or unfur- Sunteond 02, at "Sikes oat ee een pang SM — oe eg ome ca bonsetna Tether with Ginasn See ae * =
ee - anon ane, 4| fished, “INGRID” Navy Gardens. Three 4 ow he ' “ a r
ts tood ‘condition "An "it. “tewis, cvs | bedrooms, | Mapection, ‘by arrangement |"Gainta Mia’? Fitts Village, 3: Somer all and singular other the buildings and erections on the said. parcel (3) For any breach of this Section the owner of a fishing boat
a ni . . pwis ¢ . . . , -
IN MEMORIAM Cave, Shepherd & Co., Ltd ean on am EVELYN ‘Sonte wee Lip. | Between 4 p.m. and 6 p.ni. +.o-tn of land erected and built standing and being with the appurtenances. shall be personally liable to a fine not exceeding five pounds
-1.52—6n. Rickett St. . .
Siti | ak Gaeta eae 1,9.88—+.0.0. | ODM ee een aanmmmnccmmnenin Denier pean, estan €. 6. | to be recovered in a summary way before a Police Magis-
ALLEYNE—In loving memory of our} CAR—Citroen Light 15 H.P. Fitted —— |situated at Hillewick Village St coe ; trate
gone beloved husband and father} Twin Carburettors. 1951 Modei. 12,000} OFFICE SPACE in building at Spry |2e x 20 x 9 with a gallery ‘and kitchen | PATE OF SALE: 18th July, 1952. a 4.7.52.—2n.
age os 4 ateme, —_ wes laid to rest —- In excellent condition. Owner/ street near Trafalgar St. Apply Auto| sttached will be exposed for sale by the aie in es —_——
ww x + 4 p .
Wicy de We mioura depetting fristids uying larger car. Cele & Pe tee Tyre Co, 2696. 27,6.52—t.f.n. de nae on the i4th day 3th June, 1952.) -
Or shake at deaths alarms “GAN TOUUNT Denne aan, | SEA, BEAUTY cAmwactivd @ Redeem |" (UN: Mt Le pm 2.7.62—4n | {9SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSOSOSE, .
Tis but the voice that Jesus sends CAR—Dodge Super-Deluxe, First Class| Bungalow on St. James Coast. All * 4.7528 W AT Cc H E S
To call them to His arms. ‘ondition and Owner-driven. 000 | modern conveniences. Apply to Mrs. A. ts LODGE STONE WORKS co.
Ever to be remembered by Fredrica] 5ial 4476. 12,6.52--t.f.n. | Bovell, Fitts Village, St. James. LAND—86,750 fi fo.
Alleyne (wile), Darnley, Osman, Eitiott |S “TS. ___ a t.tm-te | sitente at teettions al, delta Sie amt! SHIPPING NOTI & A, iaee quantity of GOLD, STEEL or
(sons) va, ra, i iv nh M ROY ~~ d : 4 ane machine broken flint stone,
daughters) “Giadstone Griffith (son-in-| in 5 HP. Motorencle ie perlect sorts | Enclosed with stone wall on 3 sides. S CHROMIUM
lew) Colvin, Qynthia | .g order X—315 License paid. Apply ; toa SS me pienr, Woe % all sizes, suitable for Road or
(Grands), Mary Perry’ (sister) ewis “Alma”, near Pegwell, Ch. Ch. WANTED tte ta the wee or in 4 lots. En- ROYAL NETHERLANDS % Yard Construction and/or Models for ladies or genta
4.7.52—In. | “None g2a5. 3.7.52—3n nope nae CARRINGTON & SEALY, The M/V. “CARIBBEE” will $ $ making concrete blocks, or ;
DeFREITAS—in_ loving memory of w ONE (i) Austin two ton truck and one aoeee Lucas Street. STEAMSHIP CO. geoept Cargo and Passengers for % Qmy other concrete struc- 5 FULLY GUARANTEED !
darling wife Elaine DeFrettas who dv | 1) Austin “Ado Cac. Telechone aga, HELP 154m, Dominica, Antigua, | Montserrat, tures. The Co. also under- °
parted this Ife on 4th of July 106 |)’ y "Scott & Co. Ltd. — a Se ee SAILING FROM EUROPE Nevis and St. Kitts, Sailing take the construction of 15 & 17 Jewels
As in God's beautiful garden | * ** t %.6.52—t.f.n, | _GARDENER—For residence in Marine |, The undersigned will offer for sale at} m@.S. STENTOR 2ith JUNE 1982. day 7th inst. “ Roads and Yards b:
Free from all sorrow and pain Gardens, Apply: J. A. MARSON & SON thelr office No. 17, High Street, Bridge- |S. HESTIA 4th July 1962. The M/V. “MONEKA” will | % . = A wonderful new range on
Some day when lifes journey is endec | “TRYCK—One Ford V-8 S-Ton Truck, | LTD. 4.7.52—8n, | town, on Friday, the 1th day of Jukv]$.S. COTTICA Lith July, 1952, accept Carzo and Passengers for g tract,. or supervision,
T hope we thall meet you again. 10 h.p. Lister Gasoline/Keroséne 1982 at 2 p.m. M.S. NESTOR 25th July, 1952 Dominica, Antigua, Monteersts. R Dial 2656 show at outstanding prices
William DeFreitas (husband), May White 8 vine? phone 4958 4.7.83—4n.| _ssvase — luxperienced Nurse, Must |, THE DWELLING-HOUSE known a@)M_S. BOSKOOP Ist August, 1952. Nevis and St. Kitts. Sailing 5 KEITH RAYSIDE
(mother), John (son), Richard inephew?. ¢ — ce si .| Sleep in. Good pay to the right perspa. |““Glenflora” standing on 1 acre 2 roods SAILING TO E PE day 11th inst. Xe
4.7.62—-1n | “pRUCK—Chevrolet. truck. no m-| Apply betycon the hours 48 p.m. At|%3¥s, perches of land on the main road | 1s. ORANJESTAD 18th July, 1952, The M/V. “CACIQUE
SO nn a, } able offer refused A Rscnes 2 'Gay | °St. Winifred,” Maxwell Const, Road, | ®t White Mall, Saint Michael, Electsia | “isi one TO T'DAD, PARAMARIBO CARIBE” will accept Cargo and. kee :
MOE—In loving memory of our dear td . 3.7.88—t.o.n.}Ch. Ch 4.7.52—gn. | Light and water, @ BRITISH A Passengers for 8t. Lucia, CIVSSSOS
mother Martha Loulse Moe who de- | “"¢- x ells een tens i ieceretatieetersitniniemmniaermn Ins) ion any day on application tofM.s. STENTOR 13th July, 1952. Vincent, Grenada and Aruba, = =>
parted this life on July 4th 1950. “National Cash Book-Keeping Machine Me nae pitas on oe Co erro a S.S. COTTICA 28th July,” 1952 Date of sailing to be notified.
Pond in the link whieh is broken Operator with previous experience. To | | pad f - o an cameos M.S. NESTOR sth August, 1962.
Dear to the one who is ELECTRICAL assume duties on or before Ist. August, {Of sale apply to:— $4 SAILING TO TRINIDAD & CURACAO B.W.l, SCHOONER OWNERS
In mem.ory-we will never forget he: 1952, Apply in person with written | & CO. 1-58—8n | iis, 4th July, 1052. ASSOCIATION (INC.)
As long as the years roll on. application to Secretary, Dowding Estates | == meme eae toe oale at (CURACAO ONLY) Consignee, Tele. No, 4047
Ever to, bo temembered by the Moe] MAIR CLIPPERS — Horstman Electric|& Trading Co., Limited.” Punto oe ign fale at (M.S. HESTIA 2ist July, 1952. )
family. 4.7.08—nt iiair Clippers suitable for Barbers at 2.%.62—In. | Public cities at their Clee Hovt' sp MUMSEN, HORA Co., LTO. }
41.16 emeh. See them on display at our 17 High Street, Fridectonn. sp Friday, Agents } Today at your jewellers ...
Rooms. The Standard Agency| SURVEYOR-ENGINEER would ike to} the Sor of July, 1983 oS
PERSO@NAL s'dos) Co., 14 Swan Street 46s ge [Set iE touch with emtate or building eae ine i ago inicitn te a0 6 ‘ VELVET EVENING BAGS {i W De LI
.7,.82—3n. | development eompany rous 8 a Speciality MA
a nnn nnn fcervice. Holds diploma & licence with|measurement 8241 sq. ft, si = Canadian N. t nal St amshi “ °
sth tec nimretlisantee metric ———~ |_ ELECTRIC CARPET SWEEPER, Hand} scveral years’ experience. Write L.cC.J,|Navy Gardens, Christ Chure * sie a 10 € 8 SOUVENIKS j
The public are hereby warned agains: | carpet sweeper, Phone 2898, 4.7.52—In | C/o Advouate. 2.7.62—4n. |eontaining an open verandah facing FROM INDIA, CHINA & & CO., LTD.
Smee ait, se teeta! | “Gemmemoee eee Sy meat cee Sieh CEYLON he
Armstrong (nee Hail) as io not ho G » 8% K.V.A. D.C. : ,
myself responsible for her or anyon | jenerator 1,lu Volts & One § KWAN. MISCELLANEOUS and kitchen with garage and rooms for a Mentreslliaiifax Boston ‘S'des, Brdes ’ 20 BROAD ST.. and at
else contracting ny debt or debts i ».C. Generator 1.15 Volts. Phone 4385. : two servants and with electricity in- CANADIAN 7 > 9 July 9 July MARINE GARDENS
my name unless by a written onde 4.7,52—3n | BNGINE—Wanted by B’dos Brewery | stalled. Inspection dial 4460. For CANAD OR 30 June 5 July ir 14 July 14 July
signed by me. — ——————-_ | CE, Hid, 10 H. P. Dies Engine. Paqne Hamner and conditions of | TA Dy RODNEY it Suky duly wduly ae saly” as dais SHOPPING CENTRE
Sad. LISLE ARMSTRONC Just received new shipment of Garrard | 468. 3.7.52-50 | sale to:—, Oh Peco Pr. Wm Hy S&S Pine tae
Western, three speed Automatic Changers at 7 a CATFORD & CO. 20.6.52—8n
Bt. he yO >. C. 8. Maffei & Co, Ltd. Radio Em- ba Pentenrtotcttone me ee ee O—_—_—_—_——— | -
ote 1 4 ?; omMm .
eit ees denise 15,6.62—t.£.n, REDIFFUSION in one month. ‘e AUCTION NORTHROUND Arctves Geils foie —- = sean
The public are hereby warned again JUST ARRIVED “Fye’ De Luxe TBAT, | norman a B St. John Bdos stom Mfax nireal
ivi credit to my wife Marueri: trae! a ; Sap | ee By kind 5 will sell gt mn. M L ee
claves Giitens (nee Wilson) 98 T don: ed Mauaed thant) ne Bae Heel TEDHFUSION “offers “$1.00 “cash, ior | at, Melineargey ‘* " LADY NELSON 4 July 8 July 17 July 19 July 22 July V «Wi LEMSTAD
hold myself responsible for or any orries, ‘active w. each new er rec en . S.A. Seater IAN
opie. ise contracting any dé@bt or doh wbineth ¥ firndted a MUEnty oniy yeu, 1.7,68—6n. fin works oe eer Tenos Cah. we So eee 24 July 29 July S Aug. 96 Aug. 10 Aug
Sioned by men oe DY & Weitten order Pcg9.00. B.C. 8) MAFFEL & CO., LTD., SUPPLEMENT YOUR INCOME by e63 AIO, 1.3-an. | SAPY Cen ee eee ee ee R SALE
signed by me. er: Wm. Henry street. minending MADIF PSION —
een Gait in ; © 28.6,82—t..0, fale eanueee from the y ION | By instructions of the Insurance Com-| Bor gurther particulars apply to—
Christ Churen, (OS— 8 tube Tabie| Mes. te MOTOR OMNIBUS CO. "Nelson Street : Built in Cambridge, Maryland, U.S.A, in 1943, the
: wen $60.00 pr tet down gud | a WENTY FIVE DOLLARS extra Bonus lone 1952 Sommerset Austin Sedan Car. GARDINER AUSTIN & co, LTD.—A ze: ts. tere oe o saab H.P. Marine Diesel
> month, tires tom Rediffusion ir Fecommenda- accident. Done only x —_—
on Hy. St. 4.7.03—-@0 | iode in ond calendar monte rei nites. AY 4th at 2.90 4 ngine. pecifications as follows
MULLARD BULBS--Clear or Frosted +7, 526 7 Regist 153
1 & 40 watt 2c. each. 60 watt 28c. * asi ed Tons i G S
UASHLEY’S 1) Pr Wim. Hy. St eas i i a ae ... 336 Nett
.52—3n ’ “ >
—— | PRL NOTICES Length overall os ue 140 feet
One Hotpoint tric Stove, 4 Rings, Beam Bt Ae aoe 30’ 6”
Large Oven and Warming Ovens. Perect ‘ Draft ui Se 12’ Lo ded
Condisien. tial $277. 2.7.52—in. | THE MATIER OF, THE,COMPANIES | hy instructions recetved I will gett c eh a
One H. M. ¥V. Automatic Record 10 AN ,, | by public auction on the spot at Layne’s argo Capacity ii .-, 4060 Tons
orc |) RADIO. pr wu B DOS : next 4th
hanging Unit 9154. 2.7,59—In, oe Fuly ab pm. tt & Mes, tee Passenger accommodation for 40 Cabin
sare’ ga alienate mer ee a eae (In Voluntary Liquidation) about 00 feet long with galvanise roof
NT Ti |g Soni ar a ee bcmecticst (sesso men te, reyes
i of the es ct | benches, is I
15.6.52—t.f.n iho, A general Meeting of the Member: |as a beach house.” Terms
geet



ol
hy
SI








Wren 4 Gre doesn't want to leave
class—and have to make embarrass.
ng ‘explanations—it’s Paradol she
for. For Paradol means quick
from suffering caused by
Periodic pains—-headache, too—

FURNITURE
CHAIR One Invalid’s Wheel Chan

aractically new, price $100.00. Apply
irene Williams, St. Saviour’s Villnge.
Yark Hole, St, Joseph,

















. lie: ra of, and of hearing any explana i
without disagreeable after-effects, LIVESTOCK tion that may be given by the Liquida- | yxtension Dising ao ciest Fabia From Southampton Arrives Barbados
Ack your druggist for Parado!, | _ fins resautlon the manner h wives [eve na sets, Gard tle oud anes |B o-DR GRASSE —.. 4th June, 1962 loth June 1982
atifically compounded from 4 BULL—One (1) Pure Byed Holstein{ (fe books, Accounts and documents of | Hut sz ‘Ghina; Dinnes & Tea Berhiecs, “COLOMBIE” 19th June, 1962 .. 2nd July, 1962
ingredients, The name “Dr. Chase” Bull Calf two (2) months old, out of }‘he Company and of the Liquidator Electric Lamps, Toaster & Kettle; Clock, ““DE GRASSE” 12th July, 1962 24th July, 1952
‘@ your assurance, 27 «| &.8. Bull, Prinee Albert. J, W. Smith, | (Mereof shall be disposed of. * . | Verandah Chairs; Rush Arm Chairs, Rock- ** O ‘? ’
, Read Cot, St, Michael. Dial 3627 Dated this 4th day of wee 1952. on, |€f8 and Tables painted Cream & Green: *Not calling at Guadeloupe
DR. CHASE’S paeereeins ON Tegetanese | Bult, 6 vas, Becta, 18 nse: Sate:
. 4 ny, able, re ;
GOATS—6 Sanaan & Alpine milch 4.7.52—20. | ouble de Simmons Bedsteads, }§ SAILING FROM BARBADOS TO EUROPE
PAR AMD 22 goats, Presh in milk, Apply. Cyril Spr and ttresses, Presses and LY
; Brathwaite, Garden Land, Country T NOTICE D Tables (painted Cream). Chpst From Barbados Arrives Southampton
emmee Quick Relief from Pain aumem |Road, St, Michael, 7.02, | GOVERNMEN Table In Mahogany’; GEC, Retrigerstor | ““DE GRASSE” .. 29th June, 1962 .. 9th July, 1962
- _ ‘only 2 years), Larders,, Kitchen Se: “COLOMBIE” +» 18th July, 1952 .. 25th July, 1952
PUPS—Two Fox-Terrier Bitches, Sia Kitchen Utensils, Two & Three *“DE GRASSE” 6th A 1982 16th 1962
weeks old: $3,00 each: Dial 245 — 4 Florence oil Stoves & Ovens, Scales & ug., + Aug.,
G. N. Dash. 4.7.82--in | GOVERNMENT OF



MECHANICAL

See eee





35 m.m. Agfa Karomat Camera, Latest
model, Fully automatic F. 2.8 XMenar
Lens. WU , Stansfeld Scott.

4.7, 52—8n

Palace Oriental

= ee e

Recuerdos De India,
Chino, y Cylon






ONE (1) Aeromotor Mill and 36ft.







136. 4.7,.62—3n
ete

BLACK & DECKER Tools 1”, ‘”, &
4/8", Heavy Duty Drills, Drill’ Stands
Portable saws, abrasive discs. Secure
‘your requirements now the prices of the

e
THANTIS



next shipment will be higher, Da Costa
Pr. Wm. Henry Street & Co. Ltd,, Electrical sit a
Dial 3466 a
on ————_——_—_———

MISCELLANEOUS













BATHSUITS—Ladies Bathsuits. Lovely
‘vality with skirt in green, gold, biu







, : Red. 34 t= 0, On 82 each
4 Third Annual t Kirpalani, 82 Swan street, :
8 | A
, i
Benefii Show i Dance GALVANISED—Special _ offer for 10 oe aa
ys Best quahty English galvaned enh wee FONIC
is Ait cf The CH. CH. and vets 6 ft. $3.94 7 ft, $4.60 8 ft. §5.24
ST YOrIN tABY WELFARE alvanised naile 39 cents
LEAGUE CLINICS to ‘Pyre Co, Of Spry & Trafa $PSS999S9SS9S99955S999SS%
TALL, Garrison ut 5 21.6.



At DRInD

Jute 4th 182 at 8.48 p.m. ii Siecle ‘
Sine dt rridehed beckenies LAMPS--A new shipment of C
and Lady Seel ble lamps in various designs

fl presents

Star Buds School
of DANCING

6
PROGRAMME

A
t!

“The



Whs
sot secure one now, when we have then



1

ram

Da_ Costa & Co., Lid
dept

Phone 3878

Electric
3.7,52-—On,

LAUNCH—Cabin Launch, Morris Vid
tte Engine, excellent condition, a bar
ain Only reason for selling owne
‘aving island. Phone Vincent Burke

8 6.421





RECORDS: Decea & Brunswick
ords, Standard numbers. To Clear at i



re-
» OVERTURE



.... Police Band or 60e. 2 for $1.00 or 3 for
MEBIGAL COI with ASHLEY'S LIMITED, Pr. Wm. i’. it
Cotton Pickers & Chorines in 4.7.52,

“Como On A My House”

PALL OLR ALPE OSCE EE SE,







a
ANCE val HACUhVe—A new shipment of 33 19
| . got oe Ley i coke. p.m, records just received, selections
| 4, 8AW SOLO Guest Artiste roma South Paelfie, Calypsos by Edmun-
"Mr. Ben Gibson © Roses, Dick Haymes album
i $8. BALLET Blue Danube ng fast. Secure yours now
| “Walt. = Six Star Buds aCosta & Co
0 TRA POR TWO ..., Dance — hor 78,
j Vive Star Buds oo
i} %. PARASOL DANCE .......... STUK
Four Siar buds ith the 1000 and
BA ST {’ SCENE (Sketch) eur hardware dealer WATKINS & CO

oebuck St. 4.7. 62—2n

Mrs. Bart & Daughter
9. PLUES IN THE NIGHT



Subsertbe now to the Detly Telegtap!





Dance — Guest Artiste — pnd’. leading Dally Newspaper nov
Mr. Cedric Phillips & Star Tiving tn Barbados by Ait ony & ho
Bud fave efter publication to Londen. Coo

40, BALLET Rose in the Bud tacts Ban Gale, c/o Advocate Co., Lid
--A Star Bud

Local Representative, Tel. 2
17.4.03-—t.2.n

UU, KITTENS ON THIE KEYS ....
Two Star Buds














12. COUNT EVERY ST pine VALOR STOVE—2 burner 8 months
Sak hae $45.00, Phone 2898,
13, § IT .... Hoses of Pieardy 4.7.83—in







Bight Star Buds
4. KISS WALTZ .... Star Buds
5 fadame Ifill*and



DDING GIFT—A few froning beer
da No-cord iron sets, subject to speci





ete
Frown
+» Ltd. Eleetri¢ Dept
B.1.GB6n. |
GLUE ~~ The 2 in 1 adhesive
1 uses. On sale

eee
~ '
2 }
3
=
CHB-HOO






> FINALE cating lowante es &| O
Star Bude in “The Blue . mae " y Ze tee fin &
Horizon"

Mr. John Beckles, M.B.E., Master © 9}OOO099O94HOOOOOO9O.9" $
of Ceremonies ? >

DANCING AFTER sHOW $ Iiv’SsS ENGLISH but © $

BY kind permission of Coal. = looks AMERICAN ! e153

Michelin, O.B.E., and under the 4 an

ditection of t, Raison, 6 iS Smart, ji itable O16

AR.C.M., ‘M.B.B., the Police Band 3 to fix upstair >| >

will supply the Music. , for early morning tea Sie

or hot weter emergency. »

ADMISSION $1.00 |||? 3/3

° > Ins a sample 2 Burner a i>

+ Gas Range Plate 12

Dancing after the Show, Tickets [1|%% cau and see in at $)¢

from Cc tee or “The Star > @|2

tid”. and Refreshments. Ig Your Gas Showroom, Ray st. | @

; Pie

‘ Ris

cenensinernesinncins snare ennrecnnenersemrensene HY

BEOPP DOP DSODDPOMOOPOG 24





the above-named Company will be
id at the Offices of Messrs. Bovell and
e, Public Aecountants and Audi-
ters, Lucas Street, Bridgetown at 9.
a.m. on Tuesday, the 12th day of August
(054, for the purpose of hyving an account
laid before them
ig whieh the winding-up 6
wueted and the property of the Compan:

the manner
8 been con





SALE OF PICKUP

The Barbados Regiment has for
gale one Hillman Pickw
engine and gear-box. \
ap is in a dismantled condition.
2. Offers in writing are invited

the purchase of this vehicle
which can be seen on application



ta

or

Whether you are conva-
[oding
health-boil
_ YEAST-PHOS is

timpply need

CAKE SALE |
TO-DAY

at

ING’S

co.

STORE

in aid of
J mes Street Juvenile
Missionary Funds

6 LEASES COCSSE BOGS
Sepepereneeeeeseenseesne eee naa





for Home & Office

at Money-Saving Prices



Renewed Wardrobes,

Chest.of-Drawers, Bed-



NEW &
Bureaus,
steads 2-feet to
Springs, Laths, W
t hain Towel,
rae! TABLES for



5-feet wide,

ishstands $& up,

Shoe & Hat-
Dining, Kitch-

‘eo & Fancy Use, China, Bedroom
: Kitehen Cabinets, Larders.

DRAWING ROOM FURNITURE

n_ Morris,



aned and other types,

DESKS with fat or sloping tops,

Spring-seat

Chatre, B

PIANOS

and
kracks

Banjo

chine 15.00—Pram,





L.S.

Spry

other Office

Sewing Mas
Go-Cart Metal
ink #2 up;
Sink $4.50,







WILSON

Dial 4009

PPMPDP HOMO.

without
‘he Piek-

atone:
problem. Vitamin:
nd minerals combined

answer
























cash.






On







Stove












items

















% CLOSED FROM TUESDAY FOR STOCK TAKING
Bola De Tachapelo ff] sins" cot" shone in, “0” | ta, Headquarters, the Barbados} if Va io0y soccer g ance RE-OPENING FRIDAY THE 4TH
Monies 15% Gratnee RePRW RATERS. Teed one new spe: | to the Colonial Secretary, Publie|{f Me. FC. SoabARD Scr, a

Perciento Gres, enges porsbee nt oun ana op. | Wauiings, mot later, than 4001) beh «fy “Sunsany THE CENTRAL EMPORIUM
ea we nO Hunte a Co. without, ebligation. iC OR n 4, 7, 82—2n.| }} Sergeant's Village, Chrisé Church Corner Broad and Tudor Streets

By



























UNDER THE SILVER
HAMMER

Tuesday
Inniss, we will seli
“Fareliffe”,

Weights, of} Lamps,

Tools,

BRANKER,

Commissioner of Police The

tion of Captain C.
will sui










per hundred, Our cartridge
prices can always be de-
pended upon to be the low-
est. BRADSHAW & COM-
PANY.

TO-DAY'S NEWS FLASH

Clearing out our new stock
of shot gun cartridges:—
12

on all HARDWARE ITEMS.

JOHNSON’S STATIONERY

| Colony Club |

Introduces From £100 (Tourist) g
BARBECUE £135 (First Class)

SATURDAY JULY 5
















8th by of Mrs. 3. By
a
», which

Sailings from Southampton to Guadeloupe, Martinique,

= f . Barbados, Trinidad, La Guaira, Curacao & Jamaica








































Magnet Electric
, Lawn Mower, Garden Hose &
& Stone Saw and many other
. Sale 11,30 o'clock. Cash.

TROTMAN & CO.,
* 4.7,62—2n,

*Sailing direct to Southampton


















At
VOLUNTIER Dru. HALL
On FRIDAY 1st AUGUST, 1952

joing at 8 p.m.
y kind permission




HRaigon MB,

ADMIBsION

Shotgun cartridges $11.50

Gc




R.M.S. “MAURETANIA”
tae OE = re

, Applications for Trans-Atlantic Passages
to England during 1953 have already reached
unpredicted levels. Those who contemplate
visiting the U.K, are strongly advised to make
their applications immediately. -

oa





SPOGOPOSIO SS



OF

GUAGE ELEY—$11.65 ¥
per 100 NET CASH

hall dew ack EASTBOUND — Accommodation available

from August 1962 onwards.
AT







WESTBOUND — Accommodation available

from October 1952 onwards.
and HARDWARE



Choice of Seven luxury liners from New
York.

0S

Choice of Six luxury liners from Canada.

= RATES (including plane Fares)







mt

we






To Barbados








Payable in B.W.I. Curreney through:—













Full-Moon, Daneing HANSCHELL LARSEN & Co., Ltd. |
Bathing *
And Generally Agents %
mivunex : THE CUNARD SS. CO., LTD. $
Advance ¢ DIAL 4104. &
2.7.52—2n. $s \ sas A» x
oON | '¢.





by American Bureau of Shipping Surveyor at Bridge-
own,

HANSCHELL, LARSEN & CO. LID.



GIGANTIC SALE OR NO SALE our Goods are
Priced no higher than their Sale Price BUT—and
it is a very big but—you get off 5%.

CALL AND SEE FOR YOURSELF the Wonderful
Values we are giving.

The vessel is at present undergoing yearly Survey

Further particulars and inspection on application.

THE BARBADOS ELECTRIC SUPPLY

. CORPORATION LTD.

NOTICE

ANNUAL AUDIT

ALL PERSONS having ACCOUNTS against
this Corporation are requested to be good
enough to send them in, made up to the 30th
of June, as soon as possible,

THE BARBADOS ELECTRIC SUPPLY

CORPORATION LTD.

V. SMITH

General Manager.



PEPE SIO SSS FSSSSSSSSOSO"-

It’s a Reality!



SSOSESSS SSS SOSGSS

SPUN at 82 cents less 5% is only one item of the
many items we are offering.

OUR SILK GOODS at $2.15 and $2.44 all less 5%
are values which speak for themselves.

A. E. TAYLOR LTD.

Coleridge Street.

Where
There are wo Parking Problems
And where
Qualities are HIGH
and
Prices are LOW
Dial 4100.

AEE ESSEO

-
oe *

Â¥
~ > +
FIOSOS SOO COB POSS OOS CS SSO SPSS SOS FOS SOF SSSOSOCC SG




FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952









BARBADOS ADVOCATE PAGE SEVEN
i naa "|, POSER AGOAAAAAASSISOTS
HENRY BY CARL ANDERSON tne Wad OFFER

$4 \ IIT +4 ; Rieter >
J So

Koo Peau S«
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Macaroni & Cheese
Spaghetti & Cheese
Vegetable Salad

Mixed Vegetabl
Slabs of Bacor
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Pee

PAGE EIGHT





FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952
SPORTMAN’S DIARY

Middlesex May — sivinghoks

Head Averages Tour Makes
. £80,000 Profit

(From Our Own Correspondent)



———
Sports Window |

BASKETBALL
Harrison College v. Pirates

BARBADOS ADVOCATE
Olympic Games
Team Named Harrison College Old Boys v. |

By GEORGE WHITING

CHAMPIONS FIRST, the rest nowhere. That is how welter-weight champion. Boxed
Britain will attempt, in Helsinki from July 28—August 2, for Britain in Buropean champ-

¢ ; 5 ote a cing : oe ime i@nships in Milan .ast year.
stuns tae Olympic Games boxing title for the first time BEKNARD FOSTER (M. & B.|

DEMOCRATIC CLUB
TO-NIGHT

Most of my friends were
disappointed with their
French Flutter in Trinidad,
never TO-
NIGHT get your own
back on J. N. Goddard’s

Fresh Pork Sausages and

FIESTA ESPECIAL ! !
Decorationes Maravillosas
EN LA BAILE
(BARN DANCE)



jacks “killer’’ instinct.
old-time fighter

Son of an
PROFIT of £80,000 is expect- Two years Abs
LONDON, July 3. ed from the Spri .

, a » Springboks’ rugby

Surrey may have to give way to Middlesex in the tour of the British Isles last win-
County Championship race as a result of matches now in ter. The money will stay in this

; >

progress. Claiming an extra half hour at Dudley, Middle- country. The South Africans’ turn
sex to-day made sure of 12 points by beating Worcester by ‘©, benefit will come whee. Bey
¥ ny ee oo ae aes ” entertain a British team in 1955.

Y. M. P. c.

mind. roll up

Hechles Road

SABADO JULIO 5

and

BC, Birmingham.).—-Made the ex-|

nine wickets. They now have 120 points. Surrey who have

116 were held up in their victory bid against Somerset by

rein.

Declaring at their overnight
seore of 384 for five, Surrey were
only able to capture three Somer-
set wickets in a little over the
hour that play was possible. if the
sun comes out to-morrow, they
should gain an easy win on t
dry turf but to-night the weather
doesn’t look promising and the
may be lucky to get even first
innings points.

The Indians were saved {fro
complete collapse and in the
two-day game with Durham ;

Gate-money is expected to
total £150,000, with £70,000 ex-

penses, including £30,000 enter-

Bonitas, Snappers
Win At Water Polo

In two fast and exciting Water
Polo matches at the Aquatic Club
vesterday evening, Bonitas de-
teated Swordfish 2 goals to 1 and
Shappers beat Harrison College
3—0.

Foy Bonitas, Rex Eckstein and

tainments tax.

THE SHARE-OUT

These are not official figures--
these have not yet been issued—
but they have been calculated b,
R. K. STENT, South African
journalist, who was here with
the team and whese book The
Fourth Springboks (Longmans
15s.) deals with them.

How will this nest-egg be
shared between the four hon

The selectors, announcing their team recently, have
picked the ABA champion at each of the ten international
weights that make up the Olympic schedule for the first
ume.

Form in the recent “secret” PERCY LEWIS (RAF ).—Motor
trials has rightly been dis-regard- transport fitter from Trinidad
ed in favour of amateurs whos- Classical feather - weight in the
achievements have been brought right-fcot-forward

fashion. Sei-

off in championship conditions. dom wastes a punch. Imperizl
In only one class, light-middi - Services and Royal Air Force
weight, has there been any re.i champion since 1949, Seasoned

difference of opinion backsta international. At 26 is the “old

It has been resolved by tle man” of the team after cig!
selection of Bernard Foster, tie years in this country,
Birmingham meat porter, to tic

Consistent Winner
FRED REARDON (Downham
Community BC). ‘Twenty-year-

exclusion of the tall and nigh y
fancied airman from Willesdea,



perts (and his opponent) lovk
silly when he exploded a right}
hand on the chin of the hotly-
tipped Bruce Wells in the ABA

light middle-weight final. i

Quick Wins
Recently home from Army ser-
vice in Egypt, where he knocked
over 18 opponents in 18 rounds.
TERRY GOODING (Army)

Fit. Sqr. Leader A. C. Snow,
O.B.E., well known fresh
lobster cocktails.

Pari-mutuel Prices on all
races.



Twenty-one - year-old Cardi
blacksmith. Welsh middle-weig!ii
champion in 1950, Began the
season with no great prospects,
but collected Army, Imperiai Ser-
vices and ABA titles.

HENRY COOPER (Eltham



(Co



mpra su billete antes de
la fecha)

REDIFFUSION

¢ woe . ;
Umrigar who made 61 and R Vlortimer Weatherhead scored and unions? Each treats the matte: Bruce Wells. : old ex-sailor. Now lays gas main BC) = Cusine eens a - ~ pate Seer re ee a
a6 ie a These two we:c L- Best scored for Swordidh. Bee differently. uae ked Certain Consistent winner of titles sinc Misi akin © aoe BS Subseriber brought to and accepted by the Company.
: te ce aioe Snappers, George McClean, - Wales had a central fund ink Wells looked a “certainty” ior his schocldays. Not a big punche: ee: ow. ih y- ‘i ® B se ‘ ‘ a
So a ao an bert Bannister and Billy Manning which all monies were paid, aftc. the Olympics—until the “pever- but has a knack of picking th yee one once, Raepetant bax REDIFFUSION will pay in addition a bonus of $25.00
inall wit, any degree of conii- scgred one each which a sum not exceeding £50 heard-of-him” Foster dumped right moment. Caught everybody’: a * a Sater nd to any person who brings in twenty-five New Subscrib-
dance Chmote first 29 overs cx The position of the Cup line up was distributed to 129 member him unceremoniously on the floor eye with a smart double ove ro ae ee ene ee ers in one Calendar month who are accepted by the
only 22 runs and Aspinall finished t© date is, Snappers first with nim@ clubs, Stent points out the anom- in the ABA championship finvt the American. light - weigh EDDIE HEARN (Battersea BC) mee 1 :
with six for ba. Forced to follow Points in six matches, Bonitas s@€te a)y that exists when Cardiff take; Here is the team: * champion, J. MeGuinnan, last _-Ex-BAOR h as elaine. bari & Company.
on the tourists had lost thi id with 8 in five and Sword~ 4° gate of £4,000 yet receive: _ DAT DOWER (Roath YC) eooee ion. Makes the loan nine years
» wickets ® and ‘er win atili ‘ish third with six points in Six. the same sum (£50) as Ystrad- Eighteen-year-old fitter’s ma PETER WATERMAN = (Caius Pe es tetas b ident hi d H Se ly of R dation F d
eink Witte shaean ware ivawi The Bonitas—Swordfish match gynjais, or Ynysybwl. from Abereynon, Glam. Beat*n B.C.)—Pride of Battersea at 17. pr hen grt eee Foe ave always a supply of hecommendation Forms ready
alae inate '’ was the more exciting, more keen- Thus a dominion tour here i; Only once this season, and six and one of the top discoveries of a ae alt THE F
ciniaue iiltacstes hae ae th ly. contested and rougher of the o¢ genuine assistance to th» times in 71 bouts, Hottest Welsh the season, Fulfilled rich juntor A. re yee wee Stee 3 THEY CAN BE OBTAINED AT THE OFFICE
registered his first century of itne °° smaller clubs. Ay cient ince Cyril Gallie was promise by winning novice, inter- Zoeq a3 Street trader in green-|$ REDIFFUSION tet Trafalgar Street.
season. But rain interfered again Bonitas strongest point yesterday The Rugby Union were entitle’ in the division, Puts a premium mediate and open competitions in r



. ae on speed—and can keep it up for six weeks. Beaten only once in %7 grocery.
bet ants © d bat At t
ore Northants could & the full three rounds. senigpr light-welter-weight bouts.
TOMMY NICHOLLS (Sankey’s Stock-keeper in the antique fi)

BC. Wellington) — Solid “south- niture department of a West End

ai !

was their combination and it was tO, 15 per cent. but had were
most there will be a fight for chiefly this which helped them to this altogether, allowing th
first innings points to-morrow. win ‘from the strong Swordfish County bodies to keep their own

The highest indivigual score eam. At the opening of the sea- Profits. The contrast is that in

—LES. PPOBDOOLOOS







|
}























‘ eat py ice aye’ paw” with a vigorous left hook store. } iq"
the day was the 212 by Doll ec Swordfist eve not playing Wales the South Africans player’ Paw” wi : co | ; N i
for Warwick against Leicester, | the best washe pol, ‘but tikes 4 enly clubs; here, with the cx. to Oe a pees am ; ae LORRY (Rae) ANNUAL Dal ie t YL
was his first three figure innites their | match. which they won. ception of the Universities and,can, Italian, Trish, Sco‘tish 5 Nineteen - year - old radar fitter will be given by ‘ 7
of the season, they gave much trouble yesterday, Combined Services, they played mo age Sen werent ) from Romford. Severely orthodox Miss BERYL TAITT N
Scoreboard: Dick Reece and Gerard Jordan "® clubs, and only counties. nternational matches in style. Brilliant at times, but | Ad Gt. Jeeeph Girls’ School,
iddlesex beat Worcester by in the back line were not easily . RD EY SSSSOSSSV SSS SS SS SOS OOO VOB BOOOB OOOO BOO OOBE Horse Hill
se ae Middlesex 350 for passed, and Reece wise, is now in Ee ees se ae ¥ a $ On Friday onee 4th July, We have
ared and § for or ni rkable immin orm often dium-pace bowler, has x :
Worcester 158 Young three ” carried the ball right down in the Sussex Oe = m . a a OS mateur oxing ssn | Admission: 2/6 |
. achieve is ambition—to take | .
20 and 245. opponents nets and took some ere aie He reached his tar- 7 ’ x Music by Mr. Percy Green’s || opened meu
Essex versu# Northants: Es- good shots. Herbert Portillo was get sik hed “a E. HITCH ‘CAR aDh DR’ of x . ” Orchestra
sex 379 for six, Ray Smith 107 also very busy in the forward line : : ANA A DRY ‘ fres nts Sale { ‘ ‘
; ; . COCK’S wicket at Edgbaston. > | Refreshments on Sale. | Pyjama Siripes
not out, rain stopped play. for them and used many a trick s 29.6.52—2n. ; ~
ace eae . Only seven other Sussex play- » Invite . eae | in 3 shades : Blue, Grey,
Glamorgan versus Lancs: to get the ball, but he was regu- ; : x ; 7
Glamorgan 296 and 28 for pa oO aon bee ae score ers, including FRED and MAUR- Y Entries for fhe 1952 CHAMPIONSHIPS Nay ae and Beige @ $1.30 per yd. ,
Lancs 285, Grieves 101 t ICE TATE, have performed this to be held at } | $OSSSSSISOSSISSONSSSONS 4,
yi ir Deda act Interesting feat. ‘ % % Plaid Organdies
ae eae ee er id teresting In 1950 Cornford received a THE MODERN HiGH SCHOOL STADIUM % fiteeil rates water x Self Stamp Blue, Pink,
273, Kent 144, Wardle six for © interesting thing about the benefit of £2,905. At the end of during the month of Augusi at a date to be announced later ¥& NERVES NEED x White, and Peach 45 ins.
42 and 83 for two. same was that while Swordfish this season he retires from first- Championships will be contested in the following divisions: % % @ $1.50 per yd.
Hants versus Gloucester. “ere mostly on the offensive, class cricket to take a coaching Flyweight - under 112 Ibs. % S
Hants 188 and ‘21 Si a. pict care the most dangerous appointment at Salisbury, South- apie weight of Fi8 a5 s % Plain Crepes
a s , , when they got away with the ball ern Rhodesia. Featherweight i 126 ,, * 9 | ; ; }reen, Rose,
Secun ai” Seng FR, RAD og started employing their useful , . Lightweight » 135 x aed elem 38 tens a.
Surrey ores Sommerset: ©O™Mbination. They all positioned BEDSER’S CHANCE nadine ” - , % | @ $1.30 per ya.
. sus § ‘ thamapalsies Pert bee iddleweight a » ‘ | ye tank 4
Surrey 384 for five declared, nis nanos oe egy denay IT is six years almost to the Light Henvéeeight— "178 S$ For frayed, tired nerves $}| :
Sommerset 47 for three, rain The Snappers — Colle match day that ALEC BEDSER played Heavy — over 175 ,, S | Plain Crepe
Stopped play. vas not quite so fast as tie first *" his first Test match. It was|% Intending competitors are asked to call at Modern High Schoo. % '% that make you jumpy and $| Blue, Green, Black, Red,
Warwick 437 Soe: us _ Leicester: inatch. Only one goal was scored penn India, and his 11 wickets § for Entry Forms any afternoon 4—5 p.m. % tinttable talc | and Dam ere 36 ins.
‘arwic or seven declared, sat en a ‘or 145 still stands as the best] # irritable, take | @ $1.95 yd.
Bondar wit toh, : ' ‘ € ‘ye ele tn : fhe first half and two in the sanetind Sarees : fl - fiat | AAPM EEE SDOEU SIV SOO OV OOO GUO UOT OOOO | | ( per y
Mivotte 4 ” = no hie During the first half, College “Ppearance _ ‘ aa agen le A a tn a i i |
s sus Sussex: Sussex were holding their own better, Bedser’s est wickets since s
416 for seven declared, James though many times they were then have increased to 166, a total A d h 4 ! %
, Leneridge 109 Notts 203 for three. forced to make hurried and not SUrpassed by only two cricketers, eee @ n S e as 2 ° | AVE
The two-day game Durham altogether well-judged passes, due 8: F. BARNES (189) and Aus- | : y
versus India was drawn. Durham to the onset of the Snappers play- tralian C. V. GRIMMETT (216). vg t le for speedy relief ?) SH EPH ERD
i 302 for six declared. The Indians ers who were always : Now 33, Bedser can look for- ie b > >|
ivs on the attack, , »
156 and 101 for three Snappers’ gecond Toe ward to at least four more ’ WHO ‘ 3
from a swift bang erben Delbert S@#80ns of Test cricket, time PLLA PLE





Bannister which quite tricked the Seer 0. POSS Se See,
College goalkeeper. Bannister had eer
been sent a high pass and he leap-
ed out of the water and without
swinging around to face the Col-
rans <_ gh the ball power-
ully into the corner of the nets. , 1 mx
With about five more wiaes to Pennis Tourna “nt

go in this

& CO. LTD.
(0-13 BROAD ST

MADE

THE
| PERFECT

Rain Stops Play Hyperacidity- |
At Wimbledon

Quick relief_



(From Our Own Correspondent) RB. Yacht Club
LONDON, July 3.
There was no play at Wimble-

don today owing to rain, Among








De Witt’s Antacid Powder











PLA EEE LE SPA LSPS SPL PSPS SPEDE AP PLEAS SPS






















same, Bannister was bi fidently recom- \\
the games held up were the cent out ne he Yesterday’s R It can be confidently recom \
> water for rough ys Kesults ded for t ick re {
Women’s Singles semi-finals. The playing, but despite this, Snappers > SUIT of digestive disorders arising i RED rid ND P INT. Ss
save e it : . P. r. G, IL. flatulence i
days the tourament will be completed Saturday as arranged, — : and Mr. C. B. Sisnett 6—3, 6—3, YOU'RE mation in the stomach quickly i
Colonel W. J. Legge the referee The teams were: — 7—5. ; give way to this reliable Tropical White ‘S’ Marine Paints
said today’s postponement would Swordfish—A. Weatherhead, J, ,, Mt. L. St. Hill and Mr, J. 1. family medicine. De Wit?’s A superior white for
hot nécessarily mean an exten- Jordan, D. Reece, H. Portillo. S. Trimmingham beat Mr. M. ce Antacid Powder quickly neu- exterior and interior : Dry with a hard
sion although there would be a Portillo, L. Best and G. Foster, Verteuil and Dr. J. Klimezymski WEARING? tralises excess acid and pro- [f use. Does not dis- enamel finish.
serious overload, Bonitas—M, Foster, B, Patterson, °~% 81, 6—1, vides relief over along period |} colour. White, Cream, and
Sedgeman, Mrs, Todd and Miss J. Grace, E. Johnson. M Weather- ’ ‘ by soothing and protecting® Green
Brough are still in three events head, R. Eckstein and O, Johns Today's Fixtures the delicate stomach lining. :
¥ nee » sonnson. —— Brel ; |i} Matinto Flat
and Drobny is in two, Sedgeman = Snappers—Billy Manning, Frank , His Reply ’ t ‘ .
with five possible matches ahead Manning, Ince, Bannister “M Men's Singles : : io Cc Wall Paints Concrete Floor
of him could conceivably play Browne. T. Clarke and Mecie - Dr, F. G. Reader vs. Mr. W. PF ig ontents}| White, Cream,
vably play Browne, T. Clarke and McClean I. C. Knowles a 4 ozs. fi Paints
his singles and a Men's Doubles College— Evelyn, S. Grannum, Ladinw’ at j Green
tomorrow and another Men’s A. Taylor, K. Armstrong, J. Chil. Mrs. P. Pattesee ; e i : pean Se eee
Doubles and two mixed on Sat- brol, R. Feldman and G. Jorda RB. 6 Bancrot jon and Mry. me arcane, Natural Metallic Green
urday. i, Worme and Miss Wee * ANTACID © Primer
a « : a ss E, Worme. : | af ‘
Colonel Legge said “It all Men's Doubles BA for Wood or Metal Aluminium Paint
depends on how strenuous and THE WEATHER Mr. H. 'L. Toppin and Mr, 1) POWDE R is ; re
how long his matches prove to Blades vs. Mr. J. W. McKinstry THE TOP \ SF : . Woodwork
be—and the same with the others REPORT and Mr. R. 8 ‘Bancroft ane nf a Neutralises Acid Anticorrosive
We might have to carry over but 2 : . SCORERS Soothes Stomach Rolieves Pair Paints
it is by no means certain”, YESTERDAY Le : Mas taba os Many attractive The Sign of Permanent Green
It is about 20 years since a Rainfall from Codrington: nil IN . ae He Y oy “~ i Colours Quality Paint
Wimbledon programme had to lx Total Rainfall for month t , " er neenes Arty ee
. earried over till the third Mon- yesterday: .18 in. ? WHAT'S ON TODAY TAILORING © Prompt relief De WITT’S Wilki & H C Ltd
‘day of the tournament, ere? Temperature: 86.5 °F Court of Ordinary—11 a.m @ Easily carried ANTACID I inson aynes 0., .
owest Temperature: 71.6 °F Films, B: ndlinary— i Prince Wm @ Cell-sealed TABLETS ‘i
Wind Velocity: 8 miles ) Extra-Maral Course at : PHONE 4456, 4267
Polo Season Held Up | “how “°"’ ~ Pee Se Beckles 11S en nmane cepa Mesh > Fea Ee a tee
Bar ¢ “ , .m. , SOSA OS OEIC SS OOO sty pestststs , ‘ = = =
: The present condition of tho “3 puny a ee 50 012 Mobile Cinema, Lancaster EEE ASN SCS OSCR, ee vm nck
Polo Ground at the ’







Garrison
delaying the start of the Polno
Season, Mr, Eric Deane, one of
the Island’s leading Polo player
told the Advocate yesterday
There are many large an
dangerous cracks over the entire
ground, and it is hoped that wit!
the rains, this condition wil! im
prove in the very near future.

| They'll Do It Every Time

TODAY
Sunrise: 6.45 a.m,
Sunset: 6.16 p.m,
Moon: First Quarter, June 30
Lighting: 7.00 p.m.
High Tide: 12.31 a.m. 2.37
p.m.
Low Tide: 7.39 a.m., 7.21 p.m.






OOO@





Oe

p.m,

Police Band at Christ Church
Baby League Show and
Dance, Drill Hall—9.00 p.m



eee!













Kogisnered U. 5. Parent Oftce



films at British Council—s.15

Jimmy Harlo





Gp

- Sp
GOOD OL’ ANGLE- YY 'F ANGLEWORM Z
WORM GIVES OUT Y LIKED THAT COLUMN, |)

Zs)


















= HUNTERS AT T i
: end cme | Mase oo ee AT THANTS ;
ON THE FRONT PAGE! TM TELLIN’ TALK BERORE le J» WHO DIO NEWT Jk 48QS i A out

YA IF YOU DON’T WIN THE SLIPS IN THE BATTED IT OUT IN
PULITZER COMMERCIAL! FOUR MINUTES FLAT! |



vaee-,' GIGANTIC SALE

+m -

| it is must on every shopping
list. Why pay more?

Rice’s Custom Tailored
> Tropical Sport Clothes
of gay (or conserva-

Get what you need at PRICES

tive) design, are of

Rnoc*ed down to earth

Ks 1B
ae — et . r ®
WATCHING THE OFFICE
FREE ~ LOADER DO } K
SS wy HIS STUFF «sss | : :

WE) FRANK ANO 41> OF

Basket Bal at AF Gia JOIN THE THOUSANDS are? es

lasting value — an d,



too, prices are par!

C. B. Rice & Co.

2429 9P9DD9949 59 GRPDOIDODOE DS 292999990$0906 99900-000000069090000008

ODL EADD OO.OD)



PN OME HAT > Ho ADOEA , ‘ ‘
Boe cise Pr. Wm. Wenry St. Swan Si. of Bolton Lane
& T. Fin ~» ST PAIL,

VIN.



PDPODDOODO GOO

PDDDLDPDOODO POO O DOOD DODO PP OOO PD POD*»*

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PAGE 1

PACK SIX CLASSIFIED Aj)S.\* mm tw ? mm BAAEADOA ADVOCATE TELEPHONE 2SOS DIED AWtXN*. rt„ ii ft,, i ,iy I^J B3alri* Loa-t-a I1H ifrni W. c>M< at MMn rUrpalatu. twin St.i TIM (.ju-*al leave*, her III a no* CMMI MM, S( htlcriae' at 4 •> clock 1hl> rv*.,trg for Saint Marl.ng Church St PTal.tp mm* an invited Ciereae Kewlm. %  taiN (ttMrtdi NT T-dKd Paper* Can 7f5 tn IN MKMOKLAM ALU T VI-1,, ..„,.., dears. Ml^:i J-..-H i A. ..eyrie, w*v. I Jutl • I' I laid 1 . a Mfinn (nnut. Or .hake al death* nlaema Til bul the vi He Kim Jevtii nirfe To call IM lo llta eraa SVver la berw.ft.Vfi-t In Piedr e AHrMi.iwlfei. Darnler. oarnat, Elliott imn*> Eva. Budora. leMMi OrirRt.u-i-.a-htar..ladefme oriMut .eoet-srilewmilt Cotim. Elrlta. O-rn. feat*BUTAS—... loving; miw, of d-Mlng -if. Cm., D*rrvtt-u who d partaef Uiia lile M btarrta* Ur*>c M. PY n. i....n>< ia end*. 1 hOpb r shall inet yoa again Wltlnuti D-ri..^. 'T.^be-et. if-., Whit. ""I""". Jel.n IOM PBgBM %  • -.'un,.. Mur~ In loving %  Ml II i parted ihi. in,Ir in Hi* I ..I— Mo* whet i Juty tlh IBM -Men i. sTeahvi be, WnfnMM' b* in. Mo. PKRSOXAL Thy public arc heirby >.,imril main siaing *dn io in. arise, awxi*.; A-matro-u; i... Ml, M 1 rroaetf iripoi.i'L.e for hci nr atv'orelee ranitadlnr *ty debt or debit My MH un.fi l>> a written M aimed l>. me rind LIME AtuitmnNi WaM IHi-l' %  Pilie f M M o^ irne unlB". t>j .. > i Sgrl MAHRTON MM Oall HHI. A,rggo/ rW'" &> " %  SMI AUTOMOTIVE. EARN BIO MOStXY by lelllag Rediasurlon in yow ipe*lime fiat a i-Lfiy of lormi today i T S> %  >. ton WEN i CAB-ili AUII* 7 H P IA r.n nodltiori. BeCenUy ~ii HDlllHl I mud Dial MM. j 7 > Minn S.SM m,*. OAK Dodae Super-Drl.. ••Million anal OwMr-d at MM II. %  SI— t f 1 MiJTUKCYCIXTriumph Speed In HI* Motorcycle in perfect ourK1 or4ar X III Ucrnta said. Apai< H Alma-, hear l>*|W*U, Cti Ch. .one J2M j.i s*--Sri HOUSES Attractive ataalda FTal main road llaanr, Hml i rU -l r fcjrnlMiaal. En|iab Bath. Open Varandah lanna M KuiUti. ona pmon lor couptoi rtnoi July | %  .rplUM M. it.e n—i ( n ,i-hid. • "ram lit Anna, lurnlinm %  IDNa' brir mr Oardaaa Thr* orncr si'Atx sttccl near Tufa-*. r>r Co MM bultdln* af Spry M Apply Auto % %  A ruAl.II—Attracti*a 3 fardn WA.V*TJED ONE Hi AuaUn two Ion truck and ore AuMln A D Car Trlcpkuna BOI, v aeon a co LW M f 30—t f.a THUCK—Onl-uri V- *-Ton Truck IP n p l.ut.-r *ma PlMtw %  • l.U> B-. raaa*i>MM| Co 1 MMla BXCCTKKAI OENtllATTHUW-Oin S'. K \ A U v %  C Cao-ralor I | Volt. Phon,4JL_ TU-li. MM JUS. AMUVTOJ Hi Ur tra-Modarn Radln-CiaiH iwll 1 rlunjrni TwoflcKu '. .lardl* worn**. In atu^-liv* binctA A tuatlinl quantity n| a>M PCS MArrxi A CU I.T1 %  iWn. Ilamt •*,., n e.sit 1 u UULLARD HAZHOrV S I.M Tabla L.KI*I MciM Caah 01 in an down an.. "'•0 p*I month. LASHIXVr* LWtTKD. r. Wn, Hy H 4 1.H~n UUULAHD BULJI" 40 watt only *>< AWILIVK LTMrtKD. Pr v. c.AIUn^K" Tor laaMW, Gardnta. Apply: J. A. LTD. .....a. VcpaiWf'.vrd B**p in. tload pay t.. Ipa \-,,. ,.. n Ch. Ch .raa. Muil HU.l parapu. %  pf At %  1 t RMfl, 1 *-,'%  FftlDAV. JULY A. \Ht %  M OT.H SALES %  BALCSTAIT fMM, iMriGfl rn-aaj ,. (-1 -%  Koch'haa dMUif. drain •id .*arl hadmemt Woden ronv*. •"* Phon* _T* Mr *Ia FU t 3? V HtTIOAlOW -Maalcr^ %  VT-.U,"ndin* 1*1 alnutat • acva land Wall"Hlvalad and vary pradurtlva •><• %  cloa*d o,, all .nto. ami MIUAM* or, "— %  ** %  ApUr Hn M D Karrta QMInl. Mia", pitta VUlaa*. II Jam** Hfarn I 1 1 linUBTOM Ward and P"*B •< *"" VllUaV If J...rpV *• %  %  !• •arllh a •raikiy and *itrh*n %  Wachad will W -,—^ lo, S| hy „, '.ov-rtim-nt: Auction*cr en tha 141*. day : July. IM A IXT 4 1 UV-3 I-A?n> M.TM aquarw Wt "I inu itnat* at aVUtona HIM. laii.t MihMl clo>-d with atana watl on 1 ,d*a InaMr* ov-r tfaa h\rbour \....,i.) aold aa a whoa* or in 4 lot* :,-, qnl'lc* to the undariisnrd CAIUUKCTON A KCALV. %  St.-tn Th* undrrauniad will unVr lor a>U> aft tna>r orltca No. 11 Klfh .trc*;. Brtda-aI'Ui day of JnVt on rriday. I "HMJonal rank *M^.KUM| Machlnr provtoua %  .p^rlcncr T" ••Urn* tli.: Ul Auguat. '5*. App!) in paraon milt wntlati 1* CO i.-pllrallon lo ftonriary. Dowdina Eitatr THE DWnXHC HOUNE known %  %  Glcnflora" %  tandiruf on I ac-. 1 raoaM 73'i pcrrhri of Und on tha mam road .t Whlto Mall. Saint t-.tci.aoi aUrrtrtr i-jsrm ir^l running wntrr. Impprtior, any day on application lo Mr John Alfred nynac un the pramlaa* Por fimhrr partfeVulan and condition. IO.— COTTLB. CATTOrip 4 IttHti Tr-dlna Co IJmlUd 2 7 M, 7: rrrriit-rNci*.-h wltl The undaralanrd will ofntr tor Mia l>IIC Dam • kair aaTaae Wrltp 'CJ MISCKI-I.ANKOUS irh Itfaat, B1.1U. tha M dap of July. 1MB at 1 p.aa. Thr hurtalow known %  • CASVIIJX with tl>* land thcrrta conlalnkoa by adwith |n*"nrm*nt 041 %  (t HtuMa In *4nv>Oardonx. Chriit Church and ...i.minln* an open v*randah lavtna wuUt and aaai. rorawli.rd drnwlna A •I.run* MOM. 3 badrooiru, toiiat. Dolh and kitch-n with E'*f* !" l rooma for two aarvanU and with alaclncit/ in' .Had InaprcUor, m ft" POCKCT MONEY .aally aarn-d yrreorhmaridlna M nrw rotaar-tber BTDIFtUAtON in one month %  MMt flMl M M.T-PUEMSNT YOUB BfCOMC b> ...cmrnar.dml fUlniPrVSIOM OMa.i. -II partk-jlari from t.e HEUDTV^ iwN ^Wc" 1 : %  '. TWBHTY-riVE DXILLAM a %  om Badawuitun for M w tioai In on* calendar month On-Hotpomi Klo<-,, -We Oven ami Wa... aidltton D*tl tirr 1 I ..;• a, Mam WRB-f AC.|KLd %  i-/r Fwr Piiadol rncani otiirC f*W/ few mdhriat r^uftcrl by P#fior|lr piling -hrfidkcltc. too— Wrthr.111 iii|(rccbkA'ler-riTtHfv Aa* y..ur .Irunijr (. %  fmrm.lnl •cruiifirwllv comr^tm.Ir*] froq) ) "T rtit-, Tbename "Dr (h.v %  a >ov. U %  D> „ DR. CHASE'S PARA890I. •-MMlQufC* r%  '" %  *'rVlMfl j'orP**..-— Palace Oriental KeciiPrdos I>c Indiu. Chino. v Cylun ]'..-. %  1 H. Taihapcln I %  p'>-i lit .m 1 t-nt o MrnrK IM tjuiiicc 1'in itnIn Dm. ni %  ') %  Bnralill'i TIMNI'S V. U'ni. Hrnrv Slrp*l Dial 3466 rtanalnc Unit lilt 7 ~. 13-7n PVK fUTTEBY BfiTS-Juat -"(Wlcf: NfAITBTI RADIO ILliimtM 131 aa-tfn rUBNITl'KE ciiAn—o.e umrocE !IUH. ui I' 11 Bull, (toad Cwt, i OATS—• %  hv praak Unin A Alpine mia-l — milk Apply CTrll laihwaita. Cardan Land. Country MECHANICAL n in Agfa Karomat Camera. MLGrlKB. BUnafcld Scott. ONB '*undi. Ii Aaromotor Mill %  Co Ltd. 'plion* > TYPEwniTXB*;-.,M md new lya. wrilara: Baw llab> Witnbien onlj |nD'~ icd laijer iiortablei tit 1)10.00 ond ui 1'ie— marlilnn may .11 b* had on • %  il v.*ilho,il .ibLBallon. K ft ilunto A Co.. Ltd 1.1 li*• %  prtcca of u ,t .hipmenl will bo higher Da Coat%  CO Ud, Kla.-tr.iai Dapa. ti.iant 4.1 M—an MISCEL1 ANEOUS Third Annnal Bttffll Show \ luce v %  %  <1! and ,,.,. WILFAJU: iri I I t..rrt-n •1 1 •.t IU| m • Ptronaa I I .dv Seel %  !:'• "live Mar Cuds School ol DANCING • rnoGBAMME I .<• P. lira Band 0AL IOMJDY WNR Mffi ."i LHoiluaa In My Uouaa" %  (..; >; TltE TOV EOL1 1/£1.1 liur budSAW 101,0 OuaM AiUata 11 uib-x.a I W lluDantitx" *ui Buda B TT*, 1 >B mo DoAaa — live War Bw*> I .ANCB ,. II Uud%  A J namt SCENf iBkotcbi %  t I V. ::..e Bluq 11.. aaV % %  *. Jahn BeeUri. MM*., "rtlll I Ih ,\.,l .I\SI 1 Hiiinv <.' Capt. MM! M BE. tha PoUeo 1 ;.ply Iba Muatc. ADMISSION $1.00 rw THfeau i Knpnlanl. M Iwin Etroe' Ladte. lUthaufU ljyy.lv l-.n. gold. b..< Oly -t.l* ..1 4.1 -1 iAIAANISETI -i,clal offer I )* Ilntqualtv E Uai. gaiv % %  fet ? It M -U I It '-lard PCBLIC \OTH>*A IB TBF MATTBK OF T1IF COMPAN'IPACT l*ia AMI RADIO H'UrilllllHI .IAIAMH-. I.IMII i I' Iha Valunlary I^aaldaiMail NOTICE ii MPfaTry EtrW that pur.uam '? ir-tikn lo of too Cotnpaiuai A "*4. A gonrral Viwtlnr if i- Metal"% %  I lha aaava name*] Coinoinv will b* Mid Jt ih* OfflaM of Ma*ar< ftov-U *-. siaale. Public Aaco,.,,. -it. and Aadi tart. IIK-B. at teat. BTidgwu-w.i at a n.ra on TUaoiay, In* Iht da> of Auguii Lfti, for 11* purpwaa ol hfing ai. -onui, IIM bel^r. thoM aliowlna tha nuont a whlah the -vlrtdlng-up lie* barn eon ucie.i and tha prooor.y of tha t amsaV %  in* I Of. and of hearn.g 11) ripian.. •10.1 that rru)/ ba given by the Uquidn tar. and araa bf Hriarmlaiaa l ritra -nii.nM rrwi.itlon the inannre in artucn taw bvOki. An.iu.liand ikiCuincnla o to Company and af lha Liquidate Erreof 'Kail l>* di.an-ed of DaUd ftkM 4iH day of July, 1MB. E ROBLN^or Ltquldal GOVERNMENT NOTIH 'iOVKRNMENT Or DARBADOH SALE OF NCKUP The Butbndos Regiment bos f< .ii. Ihllnwn Pickup wilhf/ut ilm' and leajr-box The Pitk%  ftp U In a ilism;mtlrii conditi 2. Olerg in wrttins are invited (of the purchase of this vthlcli which ran bf* • !" -n on uppllcfttloti to lli'.idquartpr*. the Barbados liofdm-'nt. I. Offers fthould be aubmittcit to the Colonial Secretary, Publli BuUkUng>. not later than 4.00 p-m. on Thursday 10th July, 1852 4. 7. 82— 2n %  %  in letting; or limply na r-altrj. balldtag fooic BOBTB' %  * VtiAST-PHOS u rhc to your probUaa. Vitam and tnin.'raii comhintd [ %  LAST-PHOS an your I \i f Rood health. wlien we liavo the T LAUNCH-Cabin Engine, t.cel -m On;, paaai •trtnt Mland. I' .iMirED Pi ... twaf ira..v*d. a*. •*tilh Pacific, CaL-paoi bv 1 RotlVk ffvmrallnii .! %  I'll Ltd PJM . i;;rtate fOfaUl fhe 7 In rdhaa.. 0B ak i -nr haidwnt.. drain WAT. ^rbucfc SI 4 I If.* I f—i C -• %  I ne|-ir bi U>e .n. ; PajlT* Nan.nanrr -i AM A'r .-r>lT a -, %  I 1 %  .> Ait*-.i' %  i M In-a, Tal. Jill II 4 aB—fj.ta % %  ..-.. I-...HIM No-cord iron rt ITS Inokv I.NOHSH but AMF.lt'( if Ga HUK Plata "f f HANMNOS • (IHNRR STOBI l >U mm Strrvl JuirnllF MKsl. n.n. | und. FURNITURE for Home & Office %  'fiKtev-fiavliiq Prices unv Bd %  taadi Ife.t %  -o*s iaKS w-th n>t or -V*. MM! %  araag-Mal %  n--.e%  L. S.WILSON fiirthar raniei •a la apply to ( OTTIX CAT1 al.Ll CATTORD CO SB 51 -n AUCTION By kind airoilaa H n I m.a Mil at 1 p M MrfhrarM) A Co Oaraaa PHday i %  B.B A I Se.ier Sedan Cai working Order Term CMh B. Thar MaKwa Hv inatrurllona of tha bMUraaca Caa* pany I will MD at ttw GBKXRA1 MOTOR nWHD3l* CO Ne!n fl-ee one IBM SOMmrr-Mf Au-nn Sedan Cat d.,magad by aaaaaVnl. Doaa . l-uJdlac J MeiUty nuBad a aaruien aa bada** —— CHANCERY SALE GOVERNMENT NOTICE Pndap %  a parare and dnrlng U>' Tun ,,anU| DAIRY HiaBXBT MX*Tar*KY Uld JAM FA OHA.NT ATKLNS PU-1V-PlalnUfl. "•"""' •* the will of aryarw Muyphy. daroaaru and -lajJCBWT WAITBB and AITURL1A CUARKEDolaridanta acting b*MBr> by D*Ar*y Araguatu* SaMt taalr conrtuuMd Attorn*,. ALL. THAT certain piece or parcel of Und alluat* al Eagle Hall Road In tha pariah of Sal' t Jdleharl In tha liland containing by i id th.eo atBM warcriM or tharaabouU abuttma ai bo—lad aw two aid* an laada of Alb*rtha Payi.. •w or lawaf ana atra. Tho-ui and on tagle Hall Road aforeaaid r kowoAM (Mo Iho aaane ra ab—tiig aid bounding Togwiher with aa naMiMga or dwcllangruuM tharaon called "Byare Villa" and II and ingulai othat the t-alding. and ararUona on tha aaM pareel I land arectad and built u-*mg and betag wtlh -naganirtanancrv glM • a DAT* 'W RAUC WUJJAMa. m-CIiancMy "SB Jona. I NOTBCK TUOWNEBH ANDCNEVVSOF FISHING BOATS TB* aa Wnt aoo ol all owners and crewa of ii-.tuna boaU i* drawn to Sub • a a. iMiu U> and (S) of atecUoa 18, of the Havrbour -na Satpt*na asMwT A*ft, liga ( wbtcb provade as followi:— "CD It shall be the duty of iba owner ul a flatting boat to astaSBt bis boat ia not rnaaV last to any part of tat waaarvaa. or bndaaa. or uwhorad ia uas Carawnaa* aaca-t wkaa actually engaged In '—^"g flah, or whan on account of weather condition! per mi salon u given by the Harbour and Shipping Master (3) Por any breach of this Section tha owner ol a ashing boat shall be personally liable to a Una not asasa ss sss sl hv* pounds to be recovered in a summary way before a Police Magistrate. 4.7.M.—n SHIPPING NOTICES ROYAL NETHERLANDS STEAMSHIP CO. hAi Lwo raoM i i am i a a rrBMTOB -m JUNE ir-12 HX8TIA 4th July lpH C CCTTK -A llth JuH, ISM M-tr-ni nth Jut. i*u BOSKO-d* 1-1 Auiuu iau SAIUNO TO 1IIOM 'il;A,VJKSTAD IAUI jui,, !,, U-I7.0 TO T-UAB. PftRAMAKIRO A RSlnsN 01HNA Bt S STEMTUR llth July. 1HJJ S COTTICA SMh JuJ. *S S -TReTTOR lh Auruaf. 1I AHJ>4<1 IO I'KIMUIAD A CIRACAII I HCR.1IUA *tn J,.*v, ISM it'l IA( AO IIVI 1 I S HP-TTA II*t July. W.J S P MKSSO.V. SOM A CO LTB Agrata The M/V Ci aoeawt Canto and DonunJca AntUf.ua. Montaani rhnia aad St Kitt> S-ihna Slim mi \ 9 H r^ da> UM .I Tha M/ CARIIIE %  %  %  ai Baaaa Vincent. Qranada and Aruba. Date Of Mlll&a lo be nouftcd. LODGE STONE WORKS CO. A l a if e qaantlty af aa-ichlnrbroken Hint sftoaa. ; aU ariea. snlnble far SMMht or %  *ara CanstTBetioa and /or makLac eonerete blocks, or I aay other eonerete aim. tares. The Ce. alas ander; take the easarrtrBeUaa of Beads aad Yards by eaa1 tract, or aa*tervhT*sD. Dia l zflM KEITH KAY AIDE asaaacer Canadian National Steamships I lotimioiNi CAN'ADIAN CBUISXIl CANADIAN COII U.aY RODNEY V.II.-I SaUa B'daa IIH — t Jut1 .' %  — 14 July 14 Jury* i U July u SB Jury | .lOBTRrlOI'RO Anrlaea B'gaa I LADY NELSON 4 J U | T CANADIAN CONSTRUCTOR M July : %  -ADY RODNXY .. 7 Aag. IS July r> Juli ORIENTAL PALACE VILVCT EVENING BAGS • SMCIEIII). SOI'VKNIKH FHOM LNiiu. nnsi a CEYLON THAN! S WATCHES GOLD. STTEL as* nmoMiLM Made hi for IftdVaa aa* SBBSM H %  I.I-Y (it 'A It ANTE ED IS Today at yoax jewelitrs . Y. De LIMA A UK. I.TII. 20 BROAD ST. and at M.AHINr I.MIIHNH HHOPPfNO CENTBE furftb*. rartM-ular* ml. to— GARDINER AUSTIN & CO w LTD.—Aienu. Vv/,v/x UNDER THE SILVER HAMMER Tur*daMb by aNaf of Mrt J r. m so will aaU Ska Puimlture at rcllfla", St l-.wroe.ee Gap, wttK-n at D.. .. .Tabl*. Upr>at Cha(nv i. a*wu>a A Ornament TabigB. Rhd Settee Card T-hla Cllaaa A China. Duu-rr A Tea Ser\ loco Rlectrlc Lamm. l*oaatr> A Kettle. Clock alra. Ru> Ai-m Ckain. Hackle* tainted Cieam A OfMl PbilUpa a valve Radio In ruriog. Caae t Talfl-.', Sldebcurd n Chain In Bin.. Double A Stag ISimmon. Rrdateada. and Mattreaaei. Piaaaaa and TSbla, ipaip,*, Cf-Afri Ch,. ul Draa-en Ornt-Draaur Derornr Table in Mahog.in/. OIC SaertaT ar a t of lOnly I "earai, Lardera., Kitchen Table, i:lichen Ulentla. Two A Tkraa Shaner i tghu. *t..v %  e%  Sal* U *f> ecock. Tarma Cah BKANKL1, TROTMAN at tt Aact t —r er a 4 T ia—an V.UUTY MleUrlT & RIMSSI Under the patroi.age of MR r c OOBDABD Mir a MBA flODBABa VOU -IT-TEh PRUI. 1 .,U. o ran. *r IM A i .1 ai iasS Baaliuwag al %  pat Iikind ioin:U: th C-nmlniv. ..I PolMe Ttia Poltl IMnce Or.liiatra uudet the dlrec ti"n Of Captain C E B a. .n M Ii 1 B.1U supply Iho M.vi on Sale SBOOTIaVG 1 SIASO.V IS IIFIII Shotgun cartrtdBes $11.10 J per hundred. Our cartridge , pric.-: can .always be dei£ pended upon io be the low^ it BRADSHAW tt COM< PANY. ^ ^ftyasTOO d a t t vo******',','*:'.'. TO-DAVS NEWS FLASR j PI — ri ng out our new stock i <-l sum gun r rtildges— X 12 OL'AGE EI.EY—911.66 ? per IM NET CA8B % Big eloslng out i-t-ilu.-Liiin 0 on all HARDWARE ITEMS I rVe/W///A '.*.',',', lAfc C'G'TRANSATLANTIQUE •iwibK. froa laaSfM ka •• OBWOWI. MUOIUI, MaafttB TIUUJMI. LI (Mn. Canu> a Juuka ri—i 1 M M I M I MI AITITM bitala -DE ORASdl 4th June, IMJ ., ltlh Jun 1W1 "coLomii" .. ith ju. iau and Juir IMI • DE 0RA88E" 12th Julj. ms .. J4th July, IMI 'Not calling at Guadeloupe SAILING ntOM BARBADOS TO r L'ROI-E Freui Berbade* Anteea liflhimiitnn ^ '"DX GRASaa" 21th June. ltM ath Julj, 1952 S "COLOMBIE" . llth July, 1852 .. 2Bth July. 1842 j "'DE OttASSB" th Au. IM .. ltth Aug., IMI J 'Sailing direct to Southampton %  M/V U II I I >ISI \|| FOR SALE Built in Cambridge, Maryland. U.S.A. in 1943. the jlvesjel carries an Enterprise 1.000 H.P. Marine Diesel %  Engine. Specifications as follows :— Registered Tons 433 Gross *• NHt Length overall 140 leel Be*m a* t* "•all IS' Loaded Cargo Capacity 4M Tons Passenger ncromnvidallon for 10 Cabin Passengers The vessel is at present undergoing yearly Survey by American Bureau of Shipping Surveyor at Bridge* town. Further particulars and inspection on application. HANSCHELL, LARSEN & CO. LTD. AGENTS BBBSBBtt*9-*-F7'-rn>r-c M eeaee M as NOTICE CLOSED FROM TUESDAY FOR STOCK TAKING RR-OPENING FRIDAY THE 4TH THE 9EXTHAL IMI'OIIII U t and Tudor Htreeas travel Cunard JOHNSON'S STATIONER snd HARDWARE Colony Club Introdue*'* BARBECUE Ta Barbados SATURDAY JULY 5 Daaekiimi.Moon. Bathlnc And GeaerallT civile ltu*oraul K*a.rv.1lon. In M 2.7.51—In. | B.M.S. "MACRBTANIA Applications for Trans-Atlantic Passages to England during 195.1 have already reached unprrdlcted levels. Those who contemplate visiting the U.K. are strongly advised to make iheir applications .mmcdiately EAATBOUND — Accommodation available from August 1962 onwards. WESTBOUND — Accommodation available from October 1952 onwards. Choice York. f Seven luxury liners from New Choice of Six luxury liners from Canada. RATES (Including plane Fares) -W From turn (Tourist) £120 £135 (Cabin) I First Class) Payable in B.W.I. Currency through:— HANSCHELL I,,fi\SEN; & Co.. I.lil. Agents LTD. THE CUNARD S.S. CODIAL 41*4. THE BARBADOS ELECTRIC SUPPLY LTD. NOTICE ANNUAL AUDIT ALL PERSON'S having ACCOUNTS again.! this Corporation are requested to be good enough to seud them in, mad* up lo Iho 3*tb of June, as soon as possible. THE BARBADOS ELECTRIC SUPPLY CORPORATION LTD. V. SMITH General Manager. 1.7.52. iiii Hiii i ii i iini ii m i miHi i \ It's a Reality! GIGAVl l< SALE OR NO SALE our Goods are Priced no liit'.er than their Sale Price BUT—and it is a ver> hi f hut—\ ou fart eg IS. CALL AND SEE FOR YOURSELF the Wonderful Value* we Rra i\ in SPIN at H2 cents less IB |, B nly one Item of the many items we are nfferlna. OUR SILK GOODS at R2L15 and S2.44 all leas 5% are values which speak for themselves. A. E. TAYLOR LTD. ia S Coleridge Street. s Where There are iro Parking Problems And where (fliaJities anHIGH \ and Prices .ire LOW Dial 410*.



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1'M.I 111.11 I BARBADOS ADVOCATE aramcurs oum Springboks' Tour Makes 5:80,000 Profit Middlesex May Head Averages (F*WM Our <>HM < <>rrespoiidi'iit) LONDON, July 3. Sun%  %  i" Middll ft : iast .._ %  Rill ol niiilchr:. now m tar. XlH money will stay in Hii-. progress claim Dudley, Middle, ; ounto L? u ^" ^L^ Irk "* HE sex to-di : i,V nine wick, A have 190 pouitg, Smnv who have 116 were held up in their victory bid "gilnfl Somerset by rain. Irar Ruing FRIDAY. JULY 4. 1M2 Olympic Games Team Named Sfxtrts \\ hull,a BASKETBALL UairiMu Collage r. Plr.U. Harmon College OM Roy* v fortuno —ERNIES— DEMOCRATIC CLUB I'llUFIT uf fcWJ.OOO u expected tram the .suiingUik*' rugbj IU GEORGE WHITING iheir i %  MO comeout to-morrow. the> -by tuif bin ti-iu,.ht |h< doesn't look proml may IKlucky to fJM I innings points. The Indians were H complete collapse and In Uv I two-day tame with i who made 6i who na the only in,!-, to face the form. Yorkuhi.. pin-tll with any degri l dence. Coxon's Bi with MX fa ti < %  on the t< i..' more wickets and were •till 4 behind when stump* UN i For Essex against Norl Coicnogtof att-nundei Ray Sin registerr-d his tlrst rent U season. But rebl all baYflre Northanl i ould bat mini there will be a tlrst innings polnl Ttie highest Lodlvldt the day *** the 113 fur Win w ,. wan hi* flrsi thm Agu of the season. Scoreboard: Middl. .tcestet nine wickets Middlesex 350 f two declared and Worcester IM 1 20 and SMS. I i %  . Northante: *ex 379 ta I. %  %  %  % %  Glamorgan versu* Lam* Glamorgan J95 mn ill for o< i Lane* 285. Grieves 101 Yorkshire vcrnis Kent Yo kahlre 283 fa p.* 273. Kent 144, Ward 42 and M for two. Hants versus I; Hants 188 and 21 for I GloucPstei 231 Young 102 II.in meead ptej Surrey \,-i Surrey 3ft4 for Se-mmersc-t 47 stnpped play. Warwick v Warwick 437 Dollery 2U. Hitchcock 83. LrtcesicVond tee 210 and 50 for no wlekel Volts \. r .1 418 for seven declared, Jam Lt-rnridpe 100 MV>t. 203 f..r thr< The two-day game Durhfl India wadrawn. Durhn 802 for lx deelared T |M tad '"i fa I bepoflt %  '! come when they .. Ilntiah learn in 19V, Gate-money is expected; to total £150.000. with .C70.0O0 Expenses, Including £80,000 ent-tt.iinroents tax. Uonilas. Siia|t|Mrs A in M Water Rob TIIF NHARF. OI'T to arc not oAUial figures have not yet been lasueoi.Ht tin v have been calculated l>, In two fast and exciting WaU-i K K STINT. Soulli Afrkai Polo mat i\quaue Cub journaUat, who was here wm lonlbw de,,„. Ieum i, n d M IKUM> book Tm t" I *<• Fourth Springbok. ('•ongmai Snappers beat Hamsun College ijg , lc au with thou. 3—O How wiU this nest-egg . rV B i.ksteln and shared between the four hon %  v.ired and umon Ead, treats the matt< s.urdiish. For differently. iiapi-erv. George McClean. OHWalef ^d a central fund .... i I.dl. Manning wni ch alt moaJea were paid, afl which a sum net exceeding £> CU| Uneup WM ,iistrlhuted to \29 memle with nH\ tlubB Slent pojnu out h ..tche*. Bonl aaie> uly nat nt ^ ta whf ,„ Cardiff take SWCVOU ga^ f £4,000 yet receive %  ,x tin.' same sum (£50) aYatiad The Himt.i* Sword/lsh match DyrHa.n or Ynysybwl Una; mme keen-^^ a dom | nion iou r here I i rougher of the o( genuine assistanee to ih ,v -" smallar clubs. .,.,,, v The ftugby Union were entitle and it was J* 15 W nt * h " %  [•* hkb helped them to >* altogether, allowtnn ...in-s turn boo oi an ... CHiUlrlONS PIH t. iiiitjin will ittempt, .ii Eielainki from Juli M,,r; 9 2i' u l> Vi %  %  %  %  i he ^let-Kirs, arniounci:,! ently, nave ^ts land nu oppunei.t> IOA-X patshed the ABA champiuti el eecta of UM ten inMraaUotaffJ naiy when he eatpioam weight.s that make up the OUmpu ihe first r w o* 1 " chin ui ifai timt. tipped Braea Wciu in -he AUA Form in the recent "millFtRCY LKW1S ed In favour of amateurs wbota weight in in Kecenlly home fitan An ramenta have Ix-en brouK--t rlgl i fasiiion. Bet"*• in Egypt, where he knocked rr u g ym pto n anip condJuo ..;,, WJi iei a punch. Imper i over 18 oppoitents ui It in only one data, iutht-nniu Bervleeg and Ro>ui Air ret* TUUIY QOOMHG lAmaj jght. has there been an. 1949. Season. 1 Twenty-one year^ld Can Hen in.in'" of Hie U-.im 11.. .iintry. C ie a tatenl Winner I 1:1 11 Itf. UtDOM 1 Downh ('immunity BC). —Twenty-yeai.. %  Dig punehei %  f picking Ibtf %  It ha %  lection % %  '. Ben d I Blnnjnghafli meai porter, la • exclusion of the Uill fancied airman from l-ooked Certain Wells looked a "eei tab the Olympics until Mi..f %  %  ids disappointed with their Kluthi ., %  Tl %  f TONIOfFI BSBJ own n J. N. Goddard's Leader A. C. Snow. O.B.E., well known fresh lobster cocktails. PH %  : : priee, on all V. .H. P. C 1AL ' .....villosas EN l.\ 11 Ml t 1 BARN ll\N(l 1 1. ML H. i. Iftrklrs. II.. ..I "ABADO HUO 5 Muoica for I <• %  > Jovene* %%  Caribeeaai Treebadoars KNTRADA \l(C'ompra su bi'lete antes de la freha) 2 7 52 —tn. i" ai d-df-h him isaccreenooj In the Af'.A 1 li.iiriie.ii. MI,. Here |g the team DAl DOWER d nttcr*| ma t PrM'FR HATUtMAN from A berry non, Glam Re. only once this season, and six an | 71 bouts. Hott. %  1 .it rtowhle • • weigh U Guil (Celua thl from the %  %  thei 'in-, ; Swnrdiish r un, y l*"^" '" *"*P 1hel '" OV Of sea(gP?\ T " ">ntrast I I'layiiiR polo, but like in Wales the South Afrloafl nly clubs; here, wiih the ea hey wuu. ^•> ": ; / %  ^"'vers.tu Combined Services, thev pUved Jordan no rhibs. and onlv -OIMIIIP. • "" *<|y CORNrORDS RFXORD "^' '" JIM iORNKWU. 40-yrar-ol-l i in often su,^ medium-pace bowler, has right do* u i n the „,,„,.,.,, ,.,, .mhitinr. -In lake took -w S 2k, ( r,SSd hJu. .. when ta look V. R UmH. H'fc TATR. have performed this l "" r -,ini: "8 ,M0 Com!..,d %  An imereatlng UUng about the t" nedl "f £2.005. At the end "A 'hiil forced to make hurried and not %  '"rpaswd hy_only two cricket* due F. BARNKS Irogathe, weii-judked ,.,, a the onset of the Snanners olav'rallan C. v. GRTMMCTT and An who weie always on the attack SiupiM.'rs' aeeond goal came Rain Stops Play At Wimbledon 1XJNDON. July 3. I % %  ia nu play at Wimbledon today owing to rain. Among the games held up wore the .swift bang f.om Delbert **f." s fj Bannister which quite tnckid'uic %  0U1 |t goaikeep. 1 liannUtar hud teen seut a high poaa and he leaped "in or the wati r and without .swinging around lo face the Col.*lapi>eri the ball powei' %  .Mv into 11 a %  ion nmuiW10 Rerne, Bannkder was of the water for rough Bedser can look 1 at leant four of Test cricket. 1 new record —i,.*r.s. ''11 nis TouriiaiiM'iU Ye-iierday\ Results v wlnnlni novice, mt mediate md open eetnp DOC* In *" ' vevel v orthorl. ...... l-laclumiOi. Wel.J. n.iddle-we in ly.'.u (: %  %  .Miii nviUi nu Out collecU-d Army. Impeiia St'1 ABA UtUs IIFNR. I IHill.R (El t ham BC).— Cruiser-weight find of the season. Seventeen-year-old IWld of a promising hoai | Beaten only once. Copy-book boxer, but tough enouyh to ,ieal a h the rough stuff. Petal decorator. I HUM III \lt\ —Cx-BA()U lM I after a flying-bomb incident li.'d seemingly stopped him for A "southpaw" and Done quick—but soli compcrifors ar, debt Hem *v. :d in the /oUoKl-ig dtrtrioiis under 119 lbs U8 ., 126 ., 135 14? .. 180 175 M 175 .. 11 or Modern Ifujh .Seho aesxsess ; s:ss _:=£ Bttaefi and nflve College little opportunity f< i:.t..l ii> there la no rain for the nexi two day the tournament will be completed Saturday as arranged. Colonel W. J. Legge the referee Thl lea m said today's poetnonemant would \ Vesitherhaad J not neecssiiiili mi Recce, 11 PorUll< S alon although there sjould be a Porullo I Beat and 0 FOfti serious overload. M ,.-.. ., ,, p SedKcman. Mrs. Todd and Miss .1 Oraci l .1 .,„..• ,„, M A S&'i rota iL!aJ n ,w Shten.an & ,ppei ll.lh Ma.mmg F-mk with five peasiblo matohea ahe,., of him could conceivably pi., ,• %  .. k ,. lll(( ... hi. ^,. and KM Double, ,„V„: foSj,K Armatrong .1 c .11 M.-ii\ Doubles Mr. P. Patterson and Mr. 0 M. Manning beat Mi J. II. c. Edghdl and Mr. C. B. Sisnett fl—8. 8—3. Mr L St Mill and Mr. J. 'i. 1 'iiam beat Mr. M. o Vcrteull md Dr. .1. Klinnyvn,... 1 u. fl—l. 6—1. Today's Fixtures tomorrow and another Men's A Double? and two mixed on Saturday. Colon. 1 Legg* i HyperarifJity De Wrtfa An'acd Powder II can be conlidtnt'y recomIf mended to: thr om't rdief of digrtt.vv iliioi J-ta arising fioi II hyperacidity. Hrartbiirn, flat II if m < %  and All ibf awrrfi ug i of rn r%^ acid formation in Ihe stomach quickly gire way to this reliable family mrdirmc, t> Wif's Antacid Powder cpuekiy neutralises rxcraa acid and oro..ftr a.oncpe'nod I by sootlniit' and p %  | the delictit lom.. k ^ P g$B ***** a. II V hut-*Pyjama Stripes in 3 -bade : Blue. Grev. and Beige ii 41.30 per yd. Fluid I In-a lulu--.-if Stamp Blue. Pink, White, and Peach 45 DM, I si.so per yd. Plain Crepe* ('.rev. Beige. Green. Bnse. nd Pink 36 m*. I #1* per yd. Plain Crepe Blue. Green. UUick Bed, and Dark Brown 34) log, 'n 81.85 per yd. CAVE SHEPHERD a CO. LTD. <0-l3 BROAD ST WHAT'S ON TODAY Court of Ordinary u a.m Film. Extra Mnral Oonr-w at Seoul Hr.ul.ina. in Beckle-H ltd S 00 p in Mobile Cinema. Lancaster Pasture, St. James 7.3<> I • P.o.irrr.-nri. i n,, ., i,„ j I • Prempi't>l-#l De WITT'S | • f.i.i, tuiad ANTACID j • CII-L.II. TABLETS l v Slanrfartf So*. U k fconomy Sut. 00 faWtH HUD it wit PAMNTS FOR ALL Pl'RPOSKS S" MM in,Paints Tropical While A superior white for aaUerkM and murior use. Doe* not discolour. Matinto Flat Wall Puinls Natural MelalHr Primer for Wood i Anticorru&ive Paints KM with a hard enamel lln.sh. While. Cream, and Green Concrete Floor Paints Bed CM f, Aluminium Paint For Metal or Woodv Perinnnritl Green Pa in I Wilkinson & Haynes Co.. Ltd. PHONIC 115(1, 42B7 JOIN THE THOUSANDS OF . BARGAIN III \i IKS AT IIIAM S GIGANTIC SALE il is iiiissl on ever) shopping lisl. \\ h\ pay more? Get what you need at PRICES %  tfierJtgajf down to earth THAiXrS Kr. Win. II, ..r< Ng. Siiaii Si. x lliccs ( iislmi, Tiailorrd Tropical Sporl Clollir-. I.ir coniervi,live) dc*iirn. are l.iNtini; value — and Iw. price*, are par! C. B. Itw *• i . i mmii I nn M.,1..,. LtatM i i i i i ii i ni i i i i i I



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Srh'warto Mn.i.nl .48 1 MMIl l'rpprr—2-oi. Phia. .17 i laS^M Ua-rrrrln* Sauce —L. RS I I^a-I'mln* aun—. .50 HolhronhK Saute—1, .. .11 1 Ilullirooki Haurc—S .45 < hllli 1 Mllii .. S3 IVpprr Saure . Iltm-ilu Krdhup .. .It s.lad 'rnm . .SI MatonnaUc 31 BRINGING UP FATHER %  %  %  %  *TOP TMAT %  >. 9H6* Tum >4R3M %  -' .v _L Tun* COW IK ucum c *3* BY GEORGE MC. MANUS Mir' %  : %  '''/. RIP KIRBY BY ALEX RAYMOND THF PHANTOM mjfi CUBE AND OWE ril'N aaWElWTUEVAK. WNDEeiFATMEABT rswvn..' PI.. JTVOdABWN WMBIF4TMIABrj95 |""V". iDOUl^adL, Ml /;?. F?^:..'? Ik'-'A ,&AB Mtfnl BY LEE FALK ft RAY M00 RES_ • jtwfl'MflSHTING-ANP OU'-^Jil fMNOTMBUWI'M NOIAIBMC' I D. V. SCOTT & Co. Ltd. Broad Street THE ih. I O o \ II ..<•< %  N A Ynur D i %  ; llollai (. it < i it i i: s PRACTICAL AUTOMOBILE ENGINEERING PMI A OmprHwiiMVe <.u.dr (or EfOVyWM connected with the Aulumohilr Industry NOW ON SAI.K AT: ADVOCATE STATIONERY '.'ss>'sss,',' r f ',*,',',','*'S***' r w,;',t ',' r t *,',l V//*'AWVVA .-*-***V#V K00 •j} l.l H HI I IHt YOI and YOI It POCKET TOO!! KOI) Canned I< >. & :in or. linn While Grape*—Hi ..i. & .10 o/. tinx Purple C.rapea—Hi %  >/ & M '" tins Canned C.uava.—:in o/. 1 in. Yellow C'linil Pcn.be.—Hi 07. & 30 in. lin. (irapc Kruit Marmalade—2 lb. lins Sweet Orange Marmalade — 2 Ih. lin. Pineapple Jam—2 lb. lin. (iuavn Jelly—2 lb. lin. SWITI Corn—1 lb. (in. Pi-u.—I Ih. tin. Tomato Si.up J .fri.il ii Sam a s HEINZ Sued Mustard Pirkle in I atlraelive (ila.. Jan ( hili Sauce in bol. I; Slelll Grhlfcr ^ Sweet Mini!" Chutney \lll tl.H III illl'l. ill lill* 1'lumro.c Pate de Fnie in tin. o Plumroae Ham Roll—1 lb. & 2 lb. J IMI'I III \l I. 1 .If II mvmcE in l'2oa. linn I full ruuuf nf J; V #. 8 T I. E s \ HOMOGENISED 5 .! B-UOIIS \ ALLEVNi: ARTHUR & Co.. Ltd. •Your fcimi" — II iiila Mrr- I •


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