The Singapore Free Press, 3 January 1957

Total Pages: 16
1 16 The Singapore Free Press
  • 19 1 The Singapore Free Press Largest Afternoon Sale in Malaya No. *****. Singapore. Thursday. January 3. 195":. Pii<'«" 1"> ts.
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  • 212 1 PYTHON BEINGS TERROR Pay before you enter clam on men who want to kill i NEIGHBOURS who want to kill a 20f python haunting a shophouse in Beac Road have been told by the Chinese sho f owner that he refuses entry unless so meon guarantees to pay for any
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  • 32 1 Rubber price drops ct. January first grade rubbrr buyers f.o.b. opened in Singapore this morning at 112 1 cents a lb.. down half a cent on yesterday's close. The tone was uncertain.
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  • 160 1 U.K. accused of Yemen bombing BRITAIN was accused by the Yemen yesterday ot being responsible for an 'attack on a large stall' on Yemen's southern border. The accusation was made by the Yemenite delegation to the United Nations in New York in a telegram to the Secretary-General, Mr. Dag Hammarskjoeld.
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  • 453 1 VITAL HOURS FOR R.I. CABINET Crisis talk in Jakarta i PRESIDENT SUKARNO, in a New Year message addressed to the Indonesian people, said: "The present difficulties with which we are now being confronted can only be surmounted I by a strong national unity." He called on the people to contemplate
    A.P.; Reuter  -  453 words
  • 53 1 The population <if Papua and New Guinea could be doubled in 17 years it malaria were eradicated the Minister for Territories, Mr. Paul Hasluck, said yesterday. It had been estimated, he said, that malaria doubled the infant mortality rate and halved the life ezpectI ancy
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  • Page 1 Advertisements
    • 32 1 Are you I mokes :ronmg a pleasure 1 instead of a drudge. There is a I MORPHY RICHARDS .ron for every purpose, including JM -B i Sole Agents SANDILAKDS BUTTERY CO. ITD.|
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  • MEN of the YEAR—No. 3
    • 188 2 SAVING BIRDS FOR THE TABLE GHT MILLION birds are to be inoculated Singapore thi.s year in biggest ever campaign to rid the colony of raniklet. The Chief Veterinary Dfficer. Mr. R. A. Wright, lold the Free Press that veterinary assistants would /isit large poultry farms ind selected centres where )irds
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    • 209 2 AwuMKtiK of Singapore Government expatriate officers who had been asked to state their option t< stay in service or retire hav e signified their Intention to leave. They include some whe are in vital technical posts The majority of then have still to make up
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    • 87 2 JJERE are the results of last week's Free Press Quiz: I QUIZ NO I, MLs.s Teresa j Teo, 492-0 Upper Serangoon Road. Singapore 19. QUIZ NO 2. Jamshid I Medora. 21 Tanglin Road. j Singapore 10. QUIZ NO 3. Mrs L Lynas. 6 Lloyd Leas. Changi, Singapore
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    • 535 2 rpHE greatest decree of co-operation ever known ■I between fighting services is that achieved in the operation against the terrorists, in which the Navy, Army and Ai r Force have combined to destroy the menace of Communism. g In the Federation, air communication is the
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  • Page 2 Advertisements

  • 167 3 IjOP O'Hafen, the urand old man of the rock-'n-roll troupe, irhlch left for Manila after a ißCCCttfill KtfM in Singapore, celebrated his ~l*t birthday at the airport and said: "I want to be a centenarian.' How dors Pop plan j to do it? "Oh, it's
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  • 175 3 OFNJWHN FAIRLESS, chairman of President Eisenhower's CitiSSSKra SSwa ass nceted to roach Port Said In four days tain and the West." He told Reuter he would hold unofficial talks with Egyptian Government leai ders as well as attempting !to make sure that
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  • 135 3 A GREAT SHOW OF PICTURES AtremenaoiLs leapuiuM. from photographer* in many parts of the world ha* been received lor the Eighth Singapore International Salon sponsored by the Photographic Society of Singapore. Nearly a thousand entries have so far been received from 33 countries. The .salon i.s open to all photographers,
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  • 5 3 Hungary is threatened by famine
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  • Page 3 Advertisements
    • 35 3 RARE EXQUISITE RAFFLES NIGHTLY IN THE BALLROOM DINE AND ENJOY YOURSELVES WITH GIANCARLO AND HiS BOYS BEST FOOD BEST SERVICE BEST ENTERTAINMENT IN TOWN DINNER (1 COURSES) 88 A LA CARTE SERVICE TABLE RESERVATION 2804
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    • 92 3 \y\ Y(/^ The choice of the y I. world's smartest women I Y/ 1 Peggy Sage's new luxury nail polish and indelible lipstick gives you a dramatic dOSh of colour to highlight lips and fingertips. Choose f r <> m a ll exciting v. 1 range of new couturier shades
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  • Article, Illustration
    931 4  - THE PEOPLE SKY Town Pacock It is the world's most expensive school. The fees are M $160,000 a year. That's what it costs to teach a man to fly planes like this... by What does a man need to tackle the riskiest ANE of the most exclusive schools in the
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  • 218 4 The Singapore Free Press THURSDAY. JAN. 3, 1957. Opinion Sharing of profits HAS the Singapore Chief Minister, in seeking to settle a. strike, set a precedent the long-term illi fleets of which might greatly outweigh the benefits? We refer to the Chief Minister's suggestion that a group of strikers should
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  • Page 4 Advertisements
    • 31 4 mm kiiiiiii > nil. I i of S#*#f.vow from Z 1 h<> ilousf z Of UUAi fUAUTY Ml K and rorioN Exclusive Designs 6 Ml 14.41 V A 28. Colcm«in Street. i
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    • 84 4 TRUFOOD 4Ps'^r\ BUILDS *~Kr \»JSX happy kvli^P HEALTHY Jbc r *yfy/J part re? HUMANISED CfijfflP TRUFOOD j 1) Most like Mothers Milk. J| you can't feed baby yoursrlf give him Humanised Trufood. FOLLOW -ON Rrn^y TPUFOGD jWdo*, InVrVwl^ A fortified milk for growing children of all ages. AvmiM P&P!^ TRUFOOD
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  • 164 5 ery Italian film star Sophia Lore recently exploded a Je court that: It wasn't clothe, that ma de peop le not.ee ,c in pictures. I wore hardly any Aida I skinned U in very little in my ne*t Kin, and I d.vcd for sponge, \nothec Did
    -Popper  -  164 words
  • 44 5 American motorists may have to pay higher '««>■•«» insuTnc? rates due to the trend to bigger w*dsM*& and upswept rear lenders. Mr H. S. Omsberg. manager of the »«'*»»a'•Momofear the new cars are more vulnerable, leading to Digger repair bills and higherJamagejlanns.^Ar
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  • 147 5 A MERICAN servicemen and their families are A n ow moving into the first "tobacco houses in Britain. They have been built by the British Government on American bases in return for tobacco valued at more than M540.000.000. The exchange scheme was agreed at the beginning
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  • 186 5 From l*a!»< k 1 hair, keen eyes, and the infectious enthusiasm of tne bom teacher. I asked him: "What makes a test pilot? He replied: "He must bo a dedicated man. These dedicated men, are there many now at Famborough? No outsider can tell Perhaps it is
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  • 290 5 gfs/iop sfarfs fund for research A CWIBRIDGE-cdin-alal Harlev Street specialist in London who A claims he can cure sick people with healing rays from his hands said recently: "I do not claim to be specially gifted. sctiu itimu^ reaUy llfce paying a piano or a
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  • 83 5 Bats in the belfry... the church, too THE Vicar of Alfritk, Worcestershire, the Rev P Moore, is appealing for stuffed owls to plate inside the village church to frighten away bats. The bats are not only in the belfry, but in the church itself, and before the vicar could use
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  • 133 5 tjmmtt RUILT car known as a bpitnrc A sS which will do between five and ten n^les on a monthly ration of petrol to for sale_m Britain. It is a racer built around the supercharged Rons l£yce UOO h.P. Merlin engine which powered
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  • 64 5 "It is geared to a theoretical top speed of 450 m.p.h. in top gear, but we have never travelled far enough to get near that." says Mr Wilcock. Mr Wilcock expects the car will be bought by an American. The reason for selling it is not petrol rationing but
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  • 52 5 Britain's cheapest cheerlesi and newest foxhunt meets on Saturday afternoons at Hartland. North Devon. The bricklayers, carpenters, and labourers who formed it call it "The Working Man's Hunt." The subscription: 2s. 6d. 'about $1) a year. The pack: mixed beagles and harriers 1 followed on horseback, on foot, or
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  • Page 5 Advertisements
    • 35 5 -.V- i u i i irn- '^1 STERILIZED Oy^^Vii FRESH I®l SWISS k --^P f r^- mail NIVEA J^Ljfcj medicated talcum povsder of Jfitmr the tinest texture combined with J jKIJI ucerite. Smooth, cooling v4
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  • 94 6 Today's Radio Programme for Singapore 1.00 Lunchtime Conc< it 1.30 Tim.* Signal and News; 1.45 Ladies Only: 5.00 Calling All Hospitals, presented by Maisie Conceicao; o.no Time Announcement and Programme Summary; 6.02 Children's Programm< 6.30 Radio Dance Club; 655 Announcements and Singapore Share Market Report: 7.00 Time Signal and News:
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  • Page 6 Miscellaneous
    • 354 6 IMIMI 1111l rillllllll lltlllMl lIKIIMI lIIIIIM mm I MllMiiiii 111. IKlllllKllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'll'llllll" >lA\lliCAlii: b> Lee lalk and Phil Davis I SUPPENLY THE I UH- WHERE -J I HOWO-MAMA-ri— v f >, GLOWING ROPE' ARE WE? CAME l/iroKT KHSW. HAWMAW--/V^^ WHAIKINPA /NOT AROPE- IT\ VANISHES— A THROUGH POG"/ SOMEONE IS 4/ fIT2l>
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    • 535 6 S .~_^MMMM^-. E E BORN today, you arc one of the happy-tio-luckv individuals who seems lo drift successfully from one thing to another with the minimum of eHort. Your infectious good nature makes friends wherever you go and E you accomplish more by the mere force of personality than many
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  • 64 7 In like a tiger, out like a lamb TIGER the Seal has just gone back to the sea. fit and strong after a month in the home of the Misses Yfflesias, of Mousehole, a village near Penzance. When he was first taken to the spinster sisters' cottage, after being found
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  • 66 7 KLs vicious, snappy toeth made him almost impos- sible to handle and earned for him the name Tiger. But the Misses Yglesias changed all that, and yesterday, as tw 0 RS.P.C.A. inspectors carried him in a tank over the sands at I Portreath, Tiyer was fat, sleek, and contented.
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  • 66 7 Many famous p<*r- sonalities attended the 5 official opening of this year's Bertram Mills z circus at Olympia. Loodon. Among them were "Monty", who is seen in the above picture talking to his godoon. He is Jeremy Soames. Sir Winston Churchill's grandson. Also in the picture
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  • 297 7 Provost was trapped in lift for 7 hours up. Church officials, police and firemen combed the Cathedral, rang all the Provost's friends, and then marched across the churchyard to hi.s home. They rushed up four flights of stains and spotted the lift jammed two feet from the front door of
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  • 129 7 Murder house is landmark tired colonel's house to sightseers. -'That's the murder hou.se." they say. They tell visitors that four years ago the house. Blue Waters, at Porthpean. Cornwall, in Britain, was the scene of a double murder. It was at Blue Waters, then named Carrickowl. that ex-Dublic school boy
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  • Page 7 Advertisements
    • 496 7 U.K. dosing prices I* ON* I N' Ji 1 1 2 Previous Today RI'BBER No. 1 RSS c.l.f. 31 7 s buyers 32 buyers European ports January 32 4 sellers 32 4 sellers February 11% buyers H buyers 31 7 S sellers :<-"» .sellers RUBBER No. RSS Spot 32 buyers
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    • 55 7 SINGAPORE [HIGH TIDES- i I TODAY: 11 43 p.m I TOMORROW: 1.07 a.m. I and 12 19 pm. I SATURDAY: 1.33 am. and 12.55 p.m. g SI'NDAY: 2.00 a.m. and 1.31 p.m. I MONDAY: 2.29 a.m. and 207 p.m. -Tl i:SDAY; 300 am and 2.51 p.m I WEDNESDAY: 335 a.m.
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    • 32 7 > y*jap\ Fo r High-Class JP* i% WATCHES WUr LANKA 'W > rfewiu*** ™f pay us a visit. LADIES CENTS. It^IJJII^M 20, BATTERY ROAD rff > > S'PORE-1. TEL: ***** I GRUriPio '^Tmir Sinjcuporr KuiU Lumpur
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  • 130 8 Among the most popular circus turns are the show horses with their star-stud-ed blinkers and bridles who seem to prove that they can vie with our four-footed friend the dog for the title of being the most intelligent animals. they bow, courtsy and even dance a waltz in
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  • 418 8 Big top time round the pIRCUSES are going to town. In all parts of the world those daring young men on flying trapezes are thrilling audiences under the big tops: those clown^ with paint and powdered faces are bringing smiled to thousands of youngsters: and those performing
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  • 37 8 Russia's Moscow State Circus rowtlltl favo and has toured widely abroad playing to record udiem It is of a very high standard though the Ku performers rather than animal ones Acrobats,
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  • 4 9
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  • 149 9 Circus girls defy death One of the most spectacular circus shows of the day comes from Japan, it is the Kinoshita Circus which in December 1955 paid a visit to Singapore, and left with the applause still ringing in their ears. ThLs show incorporates all thats best in the circus
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  • 123 9 THE LONG AND SHORT OF IT HAVE you ever tried walking on stilts? It's not a.s ea.sy as it may look. But stilt walking champion Harry Sloan will show you how its done any day He enjoys it. too. "It gives me an air of independence." he says. The truth
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  • 175 9 v with any in Hie worlci nces. ft in more for human ortionists, jugglers and clowns are the hall marks of their circus. But as the picture shows below the animals get their share of the limelight too. Here Irina liuuriniova. the lion tamer is seen putting
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  • Page 9 Advertisements
    • 35 9 p^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^jL W* ;^B W^^^^S|^"S2 il?b I =l lllllc 3llllf lllf lllC3llllllllllllC3llllltllllllC3llllllf llllfCSlillllllllllCaillfllllllf lC3llllf^ m m %J Am m U 1 1 1 1 1 4tt- i L ifsPl* „n Ms^iP* $Z& BHHHBwinBW^ B BH9 JHBHHSSBHOHbwBHHB^
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  • 861 10 THE DESK THAT HELD A SECRET "Mark you, Latiff, it all depends on Poh Lai s evidence, but I can't see that the defence will be able to break him down. His statements will damn Fan Feng once and for all. It was a smart piece of work on your
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  • 321 10 HE WALKED ABOUI THE ROOM HOPING TO FIND SOME SLIGHT CLUE TO THE MYSTERIOUS ILLNESS.... come through the windows for they are sealed. It must have been in his food or drink, but his wife says that she and she alone handled that. She may have made a mistake. It
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  • 685 10  -  Pelham Groom when he bacame so ill that the doctor insisted that he went to bed. His food? He had the same as I did. I prepared it and took it on a tray t 0 his study. Could anyone have access to the food "At no
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  • Page 10 Advertisements
    • 62 10 x^^-n ORLUX 100 J5 mm suof "oifcrot JL <^) Th^ rrnurkable 100 *att proj"r'or t^**^*^^^^ i t-nVi^niv i i surprisingSL*^^>iv>i^i7 r V Iv sun :i in size It nt»*r>sur''s .>niv l^v* B.' x 5 k 3; and i* conoleie with ■pfiW^T^V^^. 4s4ft^l carrlrr and focussinn 50mm WO* Ml <.(,„!> 9m
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    • 3 10 See Page 15
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  • Page 10 Miscellaneous
    • 246 10 I^l CLUES ACROSS 5 These Continentals are 1 After mother gets some partly SeotUlh <9). tadpoles there is an al- 6 How to cook a chop? (5) ternative ending (7). 7 Proceeds of a ticket maybe 5 Not a very sharp knife (6). (5) 11 Not a very bright person
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  • SPOTLIGHT ON THE SERVICES
    • 1088 11  - Mysterious disease had army baffled m Hvnritn*rm Imrmmm in th** h #o o ds i r <> tt nt m at it tt ilf i m ii O O i I tit €> S Tho vttlprii Further experiments proved the Mansonia to be the culprit but the battle was not
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  • 753 12 Asian-African bloc is split: India loses its leadership Contacting ambitions Till; 26 MEMBER ASIAN-AFRICAN BLOC AT THE UNITED NA--1 TIONS— THE LARGEST SINGLE VOTING GROUP AT THE WOULD ORGANISATION— IS TODAY SPLIT WIDE APART. mst, year, tne group s iounaers, meeting lr Bandung, announced to the world that thej would
    N.A.N.A.  -  753 words
  • 276 12 Suez closure boosts Jap exports H|| AP ...featuring news 1 1 \k and views I VbVb about Asia today Glimpses T»HE Japanese Govern- ment's Economic Planning Board said a certain amount of misgiving, which had been felt over the prospects of Japan's export trade in 1957, has been removed a^
    REUTER  -  276 words
  • 89 12 Tokyo's aims in U.N. WITH her new membership in the United Nations, Japan now looks forward ultimately to a Security Council seat. This is one of several points made in comments in Tokyo since Japan's entry into the world organisation. Officials, politicians and commentators have listed these points which Japan
    Reuter  -  89 words
  • 149 12 Konoye murder denied i nnWO prisonec-of-war 1 repatriates who* have just returned to Japan have denied news reports that Fu- mitaka Konoye, the eldest son of wartime Prime Minister Prince 1 I Fumimaro Konoye, had been poisoned to death in a Russian camp. Mr. T*kehiko YoshiI da, a prison mate
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  • 85 12 •T'HE Edinburgh paper JL Scotsman said that, now that the American presidential elections are over, there seemed to be no valid reason why progress could not be made towards relaxing restrictions on trade with Communist China. "The question intimately concerns members of the British Commonwealth
    Reuter  -  85 words
  • 33 12 Rod China's Civil Aviation Bureau has announced the Inauguration of a CantonShanghai air service. It will bo a five-flight-a-weok service says the Hong Kong Communist paper Ta Kung Pao. A.P.
    A.P.  -  33 words
  • Page 12 Advertisements

  • 420 13 ANNE EDWARDS tells... Why girls trust men in their forties! And its no good trying to get to the bottom of his I past. If you are going to get jealou s of every woman he has known in 40 yeans you wouldn't have much time for anything else. Some
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  • 41 13 fJASTERN BROCADES bring oriental gla- mour to London 'cinter fashions. For an i)i- formal evening these 1 h lounging pyjamas are in black silk, patterned j > With chrysanthemums, J and worn with red < > satin blouse. J
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  • 383 13  - Who would be mother to a genius? terrified to smack i genius. The more I saw ol Minou, tho more I realised how much these child prodigies demand from their parents. \M ILLIONS of mother, T1 who have heard o seen the fantastic littl< Minou Drouet, the am azing French
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  • 182 13 WHAT DOES a woman take with her irhcn she leaves home suddenly and for Rood and dare not be seen carrying a large bundle or a suitcase? I asked a woman who is 35. lived in a three-room flat in Budapest, worked in a factory, has
    DILVS KXPRAY.  -  182 words
  • Page 13 Advertisements

  • 107 14 BELOW: Singapore's Qoal is under pressure in an txnauy ».u« Cup final at Kuala Lumpur. Singapore led 1-0, but two great goals by Abdul Gham C P enabled Selangor to win the trophy 2-1 after a lapse of seven years. This clash between champion
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  • 290 14 WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST SPORTS THRILL OF 1956? Broke record The sports stars o£ Singapore Free Press sports reporter Francis Rozario put this question to leading Singapore sportsmen yesterday. Being Olympic year, many had talcs to relate of the trip to Melbourne. Others found their big moments cioser
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  • 78 14 This was the richest race of 1956— the $35,000 Singapore Gold Cup, run over I 1 4 miles la 4 month. Mr. E. J. Tan's Three Rings, ridden by Don Pat6TSOH and trained by J. R. Doc Rodgers, became the leading stakes winner of the year
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  • 30 14 Bursting through the tape, Mary Klass found her biggest thrill of the year. It came not at the Olympics, but on a Malayan track.
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  • Article, Illustration
    238 15 ,1 ;vr, and I was too ,!> «1 to be nervous." (,<-h Chye Hin, president 1,,, the Singapore Chinese l/\ni:itfur Athletic FederaItion: "To have a basketball J. I <<,mpete in Mel- b i;rne What more could «1 r? Like a dream K. Pans. Malaya's I lawn tennis
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  • 229 15 V. FUH and T H»yashi, Uie two table tennis r Prese n t a t i fc I from Jl Pan, who were due to arrive in the Colony last nionth for a series of exhibition matches. have balled off their visit. T\ le
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  • 357 15 Robinson dons gloves to battle the Tax Man OIGAR Ray Robinson, i an old master whi admits loss of speed at 35 but claims prealei explosiveness. risks his middleweight crown ir New York today (Singapore time 10.30 a.m.). His challenger i.s reckless young Gene Fullmer, 2 mauler from tlit Utah
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  • 118 15 1 •k Front Page 10 Those black n^iiious lines are Getah Rengiis— a virulent poison. The smooth poil.sh of the surface might not he injurious but the rouch portions Of the drawer would produce cumulative effects and all those symptom! you saw in Poh Lai and would make it
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  • 49 15 \|R c. (< Howard'i taan oi lV flinty cricketers Uxt by 142 r he West Bengal i m xi in the day t, which ended ii: utta >• ii. .i! s. arcs: Chief Mini XI 149 and it declared: Mr ii SI 224 t< i nine Cfc
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  • 29 15 < ount> rhamplo i^lmji pl-'-y ofT: i 3 Oxlord< e 6. Oth«r matches: lush I t 12 ed South i OW Crai l< B Oid M» diii, 10.— Rtuu
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  • Page 15 Advertisements

  • 223 16 REDS' DISARMAMENT PLAN -IKE SAYS 'NO' U.K., France say it too I Door still open but only through U.n. PRESIDENT EISENHOWER last night called on the Soviet Union to work toward disarmament "w ithin the framework of the United Nations" rather than through a five-power conference such a> Russia^ recently
    Free Press  -  223 words
  • 239 16 CYPRUS PRESS ARTICLE MIGHT HAVE CAUSED BAD FEELING pHARLES FOLEY, editor of the Times of Cyprus, v> was tined £50 in Nicosia, yesterday for publishing an article likely to prejudice the maintenance of law and order. The owning company. The Times Publications Ltd.. was fined
    Reuter  -  239 words
  • 115 16 He stressed that the offence lay in the appearance of the article in Cyprus not in its publication in Britain and in a time of emergency. The situation was not unlike a war and ,t ut merits made in wartime that were likely to affect j morale were
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  • 99 16 The U.S. President, in nu> reply, diaapatched to Moscow last night, left the door open for some such conference as Bulganin proposed, in the future. He said: "I would agree to a meeting whenever circumstances would make it seem likely to accomplish a significant result." But Mr. Eisenhower
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  • 86 16 President Eisenhower also expressed guarded favour on Mr. Bulganins willingness to consider some form I\ of aerial inspection del signed to lead to eventua. I disarmament. The Soviet Premier prof posed the establishment o: t an aerial inspection buffei i zone covering 500 miles or either side of
    Reuter  -  86 words
  • 110 16 United Stairs lorn- preSKn t ;tt Monyama air mander-in-Chief of the bas( j apa n. will be moved United Nations and Far to Fuclm air base near Fast Commands, said in Tokyo. Tokyo yesterday that mili- General £2 tary plans for the reorgani- the move of the
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  • 111 16 Back to normal in Penang PENANG returned to normal this morning as j shops and offices were opened after yesterday's street fighting during the centenary celebrations which resulted in one Chinese being killed and four other people injured. It was stated this morning that three of those in- jured were
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  • Article, Illustration
    27 16 The Raffles Junior Library will remain open on Saturdays till 5.30 p.m. The main library will stick tc the usual opening hours on week days.
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  • Page 16 Advertisements
    • 555 16 imiiiiiiin***""" 1 Strait* Times Free Prest for tht convenience of odvcr tiscr* our reprcscntotivt ot Ist floor, SINGAPORE COLD STOK- AGE, ORCHARD ROAD, «M r«- ccivt tnioll advertisements end I cruweM to box numbers. I CLASSIFIED ADS. SITUATION VACANT 20 Word,, H < Wi/i.j— H«* J" r0 REQUIRED Experienced Competent
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    • 48 16 CAMERAS FOR BETTER PICTURES I EVERY TIME L J o on i CONTAX I 1 Aristocrat of 35mm cameras for profes 1 sionals and those ambitious amateurs I who look for photographic perfection. 1 Sole Agentt:— I THE SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENT CO., LTD. I I SINCAPORH KUALA LUMPUR IPOH-PENANCJ
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