Oshawa Daily Times, 12 Dec 1940, p. 14

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1940 x | | ¥ ord Lothian's Last Speech Sees. Victory If U.S. Helps (Continued from Page 1) ut without revolutionary violence." < "But the more people think about Jhe future the more they are drawn the conclusion that all real hope 'depends upon sime form of co-op= "eration between the United States and the British Commonwealth of | Nations", he added. ' "Even if we 5 win a total Mictory there will be no chance of nediately erecting an is rapidly coming into output, You will be stdggered.at" what will coms' out-of Gdnada shorfly in the shape of trained 'pilots' and men. And Canta produced , perhaps the best airmeriain 'cur forces:in the Great War, Australia andy New Zealand are producing pilots also in Great Py, South Africa is actively ngaged both. in the gif and on land - Abyssinia, Kenya and in the Su- effective. new league of nations. There will be nothing in Europe out | of which to make it. "The plain truth is that peace| and order always depend not upon | disarming the police but upon there | being overwhelming power behind just law. power can be found behind the laws of a liberal and democratic world is in the United States and in Great | Britain, supported by the Domin-.} jons and in some other free nations Must Have Superiority "The only stable and peaceful and democratic world can be built after this war is if the United States and Great Britain possess between them more airplanes and ships of war and the key positions of world power than any possible totalitarian rival | will political | Then and then only and industrial freedom be secure . Discussing at length the chang that have taken place since he last spoke in the United States nearly | SC five months ago, Lord Lothian re- called the "gloomy prophesies circulation about the future of the United States." Had the British fleet been sunk or had surrendered or "sailed away to the outer parts of the British Empire," the prospect for the United States "was not "Moreover, the British fleet passed across North American ports it would not have a quarter as much value to North America. If Gibraltar and the West African ports fell into Axis hands how could the United Stat defend the Monroe Doctrine, especi ally if some thousands of were assembled at Daka columns in the Amer arrogant at the downfall of Brita even if some part of to ove "Those June and July days were indeed gloomy days for us and for you. That was the period of Hit- Jer's triumph--when he went to the Invalies to commune with an earlier conqueror of Europe, to the Eiffel Tower to survey his new empire and to Boulogne, where once before a grand army had been -sembled for the conquest of Br Britain Wins 2nd Round "But that grim picture has been dispelled, at any rate for the pres ent, by the action of the people of a small island in the North Sea, nobly and valiantly aided by ti young nations of the British family across the seas . .. and finally has come the gradual petering out of the much heralded invasion of Bri tain . . thus if Hitler won the first round of the great battle which be- ban in Norway in April, we have won the second For w ithout. he conquest of Britain Hit win the war." But, the ambassador hastened to add, the war "i won." Hi t- ler "certainly g the attack on Britain with all hi this winter and spring. E else is for him a side shc if Hitler can destroy Britain and his friends will have won the basis of world domination." "But this time he is going to con- centrate on the sea .. he is build- ing submarines and Jong 1 planes with all his might a 'with which to bomb the con and to announce their loca to the submarines. He will base them on all the ports and air dromes along that line which runs like a vast semi-circle 'round Bri- tain, from Nervik down to the Northern and Western coasts France to Spain. "He will have two new 35,000-ton battleships, the Tirpitz and the Bis- marck, and other vessels in the North Sea early next year. With these he will try to deliver a knock- out blow at our communications so as to prevent us getting the food, the raw materials and airpl necessary to enable us to cor the war at full strength . . . navy, with the tremendous upen it, not cne of whic ked or evaded, is strung thin, Deep Concern To U.S, "We think that this is 2 sit which conce you almost a as it conce s. It has long been clear that your security no less tha nours depends upon our hold- ing the Atla impregnably and you the Pacific . moreover the Axis-Japane pact of September last makes nakedly clear the ulti- mate chjective of totalitarian str egy . . . thé more secure is our con- vet wot of uation trol of tie Atlantic the less likely | is the two-occan war to hreak out." the ambassador declared, the least dismayed." irst for spirit- | pal reasons--"the li Hitlerism | is moral rottenness nd on the ts Also "we have | Muni- | is | espite bombings. divisions and of ily going up. Lord i Britons, "are not in They are confident, f side of armamoe great and growing, tions and airpla steadily rising The number 0 pilots also is ste Lothian added: "What is young nation] wealth, Cana Africa, New sets." production important, of Australia, in the Graf Australian Syd ranean. The only place where that nucleus 'round which a | in| much | rats tne | the ccmmon- Soutn , are fast get- The number 5s is increasing. You of their prowess on + front, as you have Zealand Achilles e battle and the y io the Mediter- dan. Indiah troops: and munitions | are. now: coming , into the battle | fronts and ever increasing resources | are coming from the colonies and ! territories. | "The whole of this growing ag- gregation of power is now being Its first task is to de- tend that: great ring of defensive positions - which' lie around you, Britain itself, Gibraltar, -Cape | Town, Ezy pt and the Suez Canal, Singapore, Australia and New Zea- land: | "If Hitler and his friends could smash through these mobilized. | was thrown back from very strong GREEKS REPULSE ITALIAN ATTACKS T0 REGAIN PEAKS (Continued from Page 1) which was very stubborn buf our troops were not held up.' (From Ochrid, Yugoslavia, came dispatches saying that Fascist forces had wiped out minor Greek gains northwest of Moskopole and west of Pogradetz, in the northern part of the Albanian front, where: the Greeks are concentrating in a drive on Elbasani.) At one point in the northern sec= tor, the spokesman said, "picked Italian units" counter-attacked in an effort to recapture important heights but the attack was repelled with heavy loss to the Fascists. "In the region of Premet and north of Premet the thrust toward interior Albania continued. The Greek troops succeeded in occupy- ing heights of very great strategic importance," he added. "More to the north, the enemy positions 1,800 metres (about 6,000 feet) high, which the enemy de- sprea It oth of sec: war to a vic- more | can | the are | d over would urity | power could begin to Africa and the Pa { make tlie problem b | and of bringing the {orious- er | dificult. ; | hold these posit 5, we | democrati fie. we and yond them 1 task is to enable us midable yeoples Zz to shoV Hitler's | t secure, uld be "If we can ick on Bri- CARRY ON YULE TRADITIONS IN UA. THIS YEAR i from Page 1) s for ced to most of spend long to be 1 contal no bh plainer. 1} s might ich as : Fr esh fru it » pork the at the plater v also is rationed. > heen curtailed so supplies could be i: HEAVILY BY NAZI e tion! of red before the supplies children will be the to the "bazaars" 2 Santa uated in ment of | sb any pass s to the kid- rger centres the $ been abandon- ren also must lIorego ditional hunt for "thu'penny" i ; have replaced the old silv ror and the govern- ment has warned that placing of copper in puddings may lead to us producers have promis. pantomimes--*"it wouldn't Christmas without them"--will be staged. But those who go to see Peter Pan, Puss in | Boots or Cinderella will have to go in the afternoon. All shows close in early evening. : Brave attempts are being made to carry on other traditions, Decora- tions are common in the district market places, though outside dis- plays are banned by the blackout, and annual market raffles for suck= ling pigs seem.a thing of the past. Evergreen trees are needed for things other than decorations. Even if the kiddies left in London are deprived of toys they can always win miniature fighter airplanes by going ou' and gathering 10 pounds of the shrapnel that falls in the streets every night. THE NATIONAL ANTHEM Melbourne (CP) -- Pointing out that "God Save the King" as sung in Australia contains only the three original verses, a writer ir "The Argus" suggests it should bh 'e an- other verse, bringing in the Domin- ions and the Empire, ed that be an English | choice troops but they were repell- dried | from | il oc- | ne. Thousands of | fended seriously, So great was the importance of this height that the Italians tried a counter-attack with ed with serious losses." He said the offensive was con- tinuing despite snow and rain in Albania. The Greek high command sala only that the advance was continu- ing despite "fierce reactions of ths | enemy" and added that 'prisoners and booty have fallen into our hands." (Police in Bitolj, Yugoslavia, or- dered all non-resident newspaper correspondents covering the Itallan- Greek conflict from the Yugoslav r to leave the district today. explained the order was a ure to protéct Yugoslav neu- trality.) CLOSING MARKS THEATRE FRIDAY FOR RENOVATIONS (Continued from Page 1) | which will be placed dressing ta- bles with mirrors on three sides. Nex w luxurious seating is to be in. and while the auditorium b nlarged the seating capa- will remain about the same 1 to the more comfortable seats The immediate work of altera- tions and renovation will be con- fined to the interior and is expect | ed to he completed by Christmas | when a re-opening is to be held. | The outside work will be advanced | as much as possible without inter- rupting with the daily and evening shows after the re-opening. While it is planned to put in air- conditioning this will not be done | at present although improvements in ventilating system will be | carried out along with the present | alterations, and provision made for installing the air - conditioning plant at a later date, Mr. English, | architect, told The Times today. | The work is to be done by loca! labor and will be by day labor and not on contract work. it was learn- | ea. Carpenters and electriclans are | now being lined up to commence work at once. BIRMINGHAM HIT the : BOMBS IN NIGHT (Continued from Page 1) | don were short-lived. Thames-side batteries blasted at the first form- ation, which flew too high to be seen by ordinary observers, The volume of engine drone indicated it | was large. The second formation was heard | flying up the estuary a few min- | utes later. Then followed the noise | of two separate air batteries. They | lasted a short time and the raiders | were repulsed. A lone raider made a hit-run at- tack on a southeast coast town, ma- chine-gunning and dropping one bomb which fell into sea. A num- ber of others crossed the coast at | | great height. Authoritative sources said one | German night raider was downed, NAUGHTON GAVE DEMONSTRATION POOR ROAD BLOCK (Continued from Page 1) where. He arranged a demonstra- tion to prove his point. The re- sult was startling. A monstrous 25-ton tank crushed two types of road barriers in the demonstration, staged before enough generals, brigadiers and other officers to staff an army. The tank crawled into the first barrier and crumbled it. The other block, whose cemeN; and steel made it seem the last word in impreg- nability, withstood the first batter= ing. But a second charge shatter- ed its vital parts, The lessons learned at this Cana dian-staged show appear to have been embodied in the new blocks which guard Ulstei% roads, | then | that time on, Lothian was convinc- | ed the only way to deal with Hitler Irish, English and Welsh troops are settling down in Ulster for a wine ter of training and intensive school. ing in strategy. While the B.T.L (British Troops in Ireland) is keyed for the possibility that invasion may come with tomorrow's dawn, the general belief is that a thrust will not be tried before the spring. A senior staff officer at Northern Ireland command headquarters told me the educational part of the training program is designed "to broaden the brain span of the men." By fostering individual initiative in battle it should make the army more mobile and the al4ick more fluid. "The need for this is one of Z.e great lessons learned from bitter experience of the recent past," the officer said. He was referring to the plan the Germans carried out with such brilliant success during the break- through at Sedan and elsewhere 1 the low countries and France. "On the theory that the flanks would somehow be looked after," he went on "the Nazis plunged straight ahead. Supply and com- munication lines were left to work themselves out while all power was thrown into the attack. "In such warfare reliance must be placed on individual initiative-- on the ability of a junior office to think quickly for himself and the men under him. That is what we are stressing." LORD LOTHIAN DIES SUDDENLY IN WASHINGTON (Continued from Page 1) Prime Minister Lloyd George, is credited with writing many tions of the Versailles Treaty. He received his title in 1930 on the death of his cousin. Besides being Marquess of Lothian, he is Lord Newbattle, Earl of Lothian, Baron Jedburgh, Earl of Ancrum, Baron Kerr of Nisbet, Baron Long- Newton and Dolphingston, Viscount of Brien, Baron Kerr of Newbattle and Baron Ker, Lord Lothian was a Christian Scientist and wrote much about that faith. Knew American Opinion Arriving here in August, 1939, it was his 15th Journey to the United States. As Secretary of the Rhodes Trust, he had visited 44 States and prided himself on know- ing something about American public opinion. Lord Lothian once believed Hit- ler was "earnestly" desirous of He ce c | peace and he advocated an Anglo- | German pact, even suggesting Ger- many's colonies be restored to her. Then came Munich and Hitlers seizure, first of Sudetenland, ana all Czecho-8lovakia. From and Mussolinl was through superior power. » He returned recently from a vi- sit in London and started public discussion of financial aid to Great | Britain by declaring that the coun- try's finances were running low. THAILAND READY 10 TALK DISPUTE (Continued from Page 1) Thakhek, 265 miles southwest Hanol. The report said the attacks were reprisals for an. Indo-Chinese raid on a Thal border town in which two were killed and eight wounded. One Thal plane was reported missing after the series of raids. French Raids On Thai Hanoi, French Indo-China, Dec. 12 (AP)--French Indo-China planes were reported today to have car- ried border warfare & considerable distance into Thailand (Siam) with two raids on Thal airports. Night raiders dropped three tons of bombs on Undorn airfield and on Sakonlakon airport, about 35 miles west of the Thailand border town of Lakhon, leaving fires burning, it was said. The high command of the Indo-Chinese air force sald the | attacks were successful. of MANITOBA HOUSE APPROVES OUSTER FOR SUBVERSIVES (Continued from Page 1) a Communist candidate, is at pres- ent in an internment camp. Mr. Major said it is "probable" that both Penner and Litterick will forfeit their indemnities as a result of their disqualification. Penner is a native of Russia while Litterick was born in Glasgow, Scotland, coming to Canada in 1925. A miner by trade, Litterick was once provincial secretary of the Communist, party of Canada. The Communist party is now an out- lawed organization in the dominion. REE BUFFALO RETURNS SHIELDS Buffalo, Dec. 11.--The Buffalo team of tne American Hockey Lea- gue returned Defenséman Allan Shields yesterday to New Haven of the same circuit. Shields, an Otta- we player formerly with Montreal Maroons, had .been here on loan, Simultaneously, Forward Jack Keating, left winger from Kitchen- Behind these and other defences 4 "no VE er, Ont, was given his outright. re- FURNITURE MAN T0 STAND TRIAL ON TWO CHARGES (Continued from Page 1) Wilson's store. Witness testified that at first Wilson denied any knowledge of the furniture in ques- tion but later said that it had been sold about two months previously to "some person living near Black- water". No sales slip or record of the sale was obtainable in the store except an entry on the books show- ing a cash sale of $35.00 for a ches- terfield and a quantity of oilcloth. Witness stated that Wilson admit ted to him that this sale had been made only a day or two previous to the visit of Levinson and the detectives. Wilson further told him witness said, that he had obtained the furniture jn a trade deal. Levin- son testified that the list price of the chesterfield suite was $85.00. Levinson again visited Oshawa shortly after and along with De- tective Flintoff visited a number of people in Oshawa who had pur- chased mattresses from Wilson Two of the mattresses =old to these people were exhibited in court and were identified by the purchasers who produced sales slips in court bearing Wilson's name. One mat- tress had been sold for $795 and one for $1495, the sales slips indi- cated. Both mattresses had been made by the Way Sagless Co., wit- ness sald, and bore marks where the manufacturer's label and that of the government apparently had been removed. The purchasers tes- tified jn court that they had not | removed the labels. Murray Claver. traveller for the Way Sagless Company, that he had called at Wilson's Church Street store on November 19 and asked for Mr. Wilson. store. He saw a suite which he rec- ognized as having been made by his company. On {inspecting it, he but he was sure it was 'a design them. A. E. Sumner of Toronto was call- ployed by the Way Sagless Co. az a shipper until about November 1, 1940, He had been charged in To- ronto police court shortly after that ture from his emnbployers and had been acquitted. He tell the Oshawa court that over a and 25 sets of springs which he sold for amounts varving from $1.00 to $2.00 He testified that he had sold this merchandise to a man F. W. Callaghan, K.C., who ap- peared for Wilson. was assisted by H. L. Mendelson. A. P. Annis, crown attorney, handled the case for the Crown. 20,000 ITALIANS ARE PRISONERS IN EGYPT DRIVE (Continued from Page 1) "brilliantly executed desert march." Hide-and-Seek Battle Cairo, Egypt, Dec. 12--(AP)-- British mechanized forces are fight- ing a hide-and-seek battle with isolated Italian forces in the west- ern Egyptian desert following the capture of Sidi Barrani in a sud- den drive westward toward the Lib- said today. advance base for Italian operations in Egypt since last September-- scatered Fascist units artillery and bombing planes. Reports from the front said new batches of Italian prisoners were being brought in continually, swell- ing the total of 6,000 already taken by yesterday. The nature of the operations, it was said, made it difficult to obtain at once an accurate tally on the number of prisoners and equipment s0 far seized, Reduced To Rubble Sidi Barrani itself, which con- sists of one small fort and a hand- ful of hovels, was said to have been reduced to a rubble heap by the pounding of naval guns and air bombs before it was occupled by the British. (Headquarters of the Free French forces of Gen. Charles de Gaulle in London revorted French units participated in the capture of Sidi Barani.) Military spokesmen attached less significance to the fall of Sidi Barrani than to the large number of prisoners and great quantities of equipment which were captured in the area immediately surround- ing the village, centre of a series | of camps and supply depots. These sources sald it- might be some time before a full account of the British operations would be available. Reports of the British successes caused great enthusiasm, however, as they trickled into Cairo, A gen- eral feeling of confidence was evid- ent and prices rose sharply on the local stock exchange. Test of Air Strength A Reuter News Agency air cor- respondent expressed the opinion that the British advance had open- ed up the way for a major trial of strength between the British and Italian air forces in North Africa. He sald it seemed unlikely that the British high command could testified | He was told he was not in so he (Clav- | | er) looked over the stock in the | found the labels had been removed i made by his company as it was the | only one of that style turned out by | ed to the stand by the crown. Sum. | ner testified that he had been em- | date with attempted theft of furni- | proceeded to | period of several months this year | he had stolen about 30 mattresses | named Collis who lives in Toronto, | yan frontier, advices from the front | South of the mud hut village-- | apparently | were still holding out in fortified | encampments, battered by British | question of air superiority had been decided. This question is of particular im- portance in desert warfare, the cor- respondent pointed out, because the lack of cover leaves ground troops the air. Skiliful use of light anti- aircraft guns is the only answer to air attack in the desert, he said. (The air ministry in London an- nounced last night that 460 Italian airplanes have been downed since the start of the war while the Brit- ish have lost only 58 in operations against the Italians). Navy Takes Part London, Dec. 12, (CP)--The ad- miralty announced today that the Royal Navy is "continually harass- ing Italian communications" in an effort to disorganize "the Italian retreat in North Africa." ' 'The announcement said that Bri- tish ships had "heavily bombarded the focal points of the Italian re- treat at Salum near the Libya- Egypt frontier and Bardia on the Libyan coast." Italian Version Short Rome, Dec. 12. (AP)--The Italian high command today reported fierce fighting in the Bugbug zone of Western Egypt, west of Sidi Bar- rani, but its communique did not state whether Sidi Barrani had been evacuated by the Itallans. (The British command yesterday announced Sidi Barrani, 70 miles inside the Egyptian border, had been taken by British forces. Buagbuq is 35 miles west of Sidi Barrani.) On the Albanian front the Ital- | ians claimed they repulsed sporadic Grek attacks with the capture of prisoners, and arms, TURKS HOLD KEY T0 OIL RESERVOIR GERMANY COVETS Land of Strange Con- trasts -- May Be Decisive Battle Scene Tied to Great Britain by treaty, but remaining neutral to date, Turkey is a land to which the war cry may spread although pro- bably not until the spring be- cause of Italian reverses in Greece and Albania and the severe winter weather. The part this country of many contrasts is playing in the war situation is told in a ser- ies of two articles of which this is the first. By C. A. FARNSWORTH Associated Press Staff Writer New York, Dec. 12 (AP)--Turkey is an answer to the quest of Ger- man strategisis for a route to the oil riches of the Middle East and could conceivably become a great battlefield on which the future of the war well may be decided. Turkey is many things. Turkey is a bridge between con- tinents, between Asia and Europe. Turkey is a link between religious worlds, Islam and Christianity. Turkey is a conglomeration of the old and new, the past and present, the streamlined and the archaie. Turkey is a melange of cultures in which the Muezzin from his min- aret may call the faithful to their prayers to Allah while the shifts are changing at the local steel works, in which freight-carrying donkeys jog alongside sleek automobiles and in which the snap-brim felt hat of Westerners still is challenged by the turban, banned a century ago, and the fez, tabooed 17 years ago. Now in a world at war, she holds one of the great keys to the settle- ment that some day will be written into treaties to be signed at some conference table. For turkey, though poor in oil herself, is the gateway to the fields of Iraq (Mesopotamia) and Iran (Persia) which Germany and her | axis partner, Italy, seek to tap to help keep their war machine oiled for a long-term conflict. These fields with those of the ad- joining peninsula of Arabia are un- | surpassed in the world outside the United States, Netherlands, East In- dies and Russia. Turkey, as a non-belligerent ally of Britain, blocks the Nazi pathway to the Middle East and Turkey once declared that *1,000,000 bayonets" would keep it blocked. So long as Turkey stands as a barrier to the Nazis at the back door to the Middle East, so long as Italy's desert troops are kept far from the Suez, and so long as the British fleet ccntrols the Mediter- ranean, the oil is Britain's to use. Britain has access to the Middle East to a total annual production of 17,500,000 tons of petroleum--enough to supply her needs fh the Middle East with a surplus for export to the British Isles and the Dominions. This figure includes the production of fields along the Persian Gulf in Arabia, and Bahrein Island, The most immediate target of any German diplomatic coup or military thrust would be entry to the Mosul | fields of Iraq where the annual pro- duction is 4,400,000 tons. These lie along the southeastern border of Turkey. All of Turkey would have to be crossed to reach them overland from Europe. A German attempt at a "thrust through Turkey would meet bitter resistance from Britain, using new air and naval bases in Greek terri- tory, as well as the British army in the Middle East, concentrated partly in Palestine, and working either in- dependently or in co-operation with Turkey's own well-trained modern army. 'Canada's 1040 potato crop is esti- mated at 42,058,000 cwt., an increase of 16 per cent over last year's pro- highly vulnerable to attack from' REGINA SCHOOL GUTTED BY FIRE: 103515 $170,000 Started in Airplane Wing at Youth Train- ing Institution Regina, Dec, 12 (CP.--Fire which started in an airplane wing in the Dominion-Provincial Youth Train- ing schocl here yesterday swept the building in which the school was located and caused damage estimat- ed variously at between $90,000 and $170,000. A spark from an acetylene torch settled on the fabric of an airplane wing in the school's air engine shop. Students fought the blaze with ex- tinguishers but, after they appar- ently had the fire under control, the flames suddenly burst into new life and quickly spread. The 225 students attending class- es left the building, Smeed's Ware- house at Thirteeniii and Halifax street, in orderly fashion. Several lost hats, coats and overshoes, Oth- er occupants of the building also left safely when the alarm sounced. Lost, in the blaze were the equip- ment and fixtures used by the | training scheol; stock of the pro- vincial government book bureau; | stock and equipment of the Re- | Bina Tent and Awning Company; | stock and equipment of the West- [= Knitting Mills. The 'top floor of the warehouse was gutted and the cther two floors damaged. Smoke and water damage was | caused in an adjoining one-storey building, owned by Smeed's and occupied by the Regina Kik Bev- erages and a garage. The blaze spread rapidly and the top floor filled with thick smoke | within three minutes of the our | break. | For a few hundred citizens who | braved 20 below temperature, it was | a spectacular fire. A great cclumn of smoke could be seen from all | | parts of the city. Firemen faced a difficult task. In the bitter cold, ice-coated hose pipes were difficult to handle and the spreay sheathed the firemen in ice from head to toe. Mittens froze and ladders wore caked with ice to make the job more difficult and dangerous. | DEFERS JUDGMENT IN GAMBLING CASE Eleven Acquitted as More Combine Club Charges Heard Toronto, Dec. 11. -- Five men charged with keeping a common gaming house--the Combine Club-- will appear in county court mext Tuesday for judgment. They are: Fred Pickett, already convicted of keeping a common betting house | and of having liquor in an illegal | place, in connection with operations | of the Combine Club; Harry Mar- shak, Harry Lieberman, Thomas Rashkin, and George Jameson. The charge of keeping a common gam- ing house was dismissed in the case of eleven others, and the charge of obstructing police, placed against all sixteen, was withdrawn by the Crown. Insufficient evidence was present- Too Late to Classify SPECIAL -- OIL PERMANENTS from Two 'Dollars up. Nestle Machineless, Three Dollars. Guar- anteed. Clarke's Hairdressing, 296 Richmond East. Phone 2399J. (21Dzc.c) ed in the cases of Benjamin Lite man, Philip Feder, Max Goodman and Harry Lazier, Magistrate Wil. liam Keith ruled in acquitting them, There was no evidence James Milligan, Owain _ Sellers, Harry Dessenhouse, Morris Bow- mile, John Plumptre, Foster Dry- den or Max Gelberg, Magistrate Keith said in acquitting them also, "We have already paid out ale most $8,000 in fines in this case," ® J. Murphy, K.C., defense counsel, asserted. "That is a good deal of money for a case of this type." Mr. Murphy and Frank Moore, K.C, who shared the defense, con- tended that the accused should not have to stand trial on a charge of keeping a gaming house when they had already been tried on a charge laid under the same secticn of the Criminal Code, namely, keeping a common betting house. NOW PLAYING . "KNUTE ROCKNE ALL AMERICAN" with PAT O'BRIEN -- also -- "Youth Will Be Served" with Jane Withers MARKS KING AT CELINA NOW PLAYING "YOUNG BUFFALO BILL" with ROY ROGERS GEORGE "GABBY" HAYES =~ ALSO = "THE SECRET SEVEN" ALL STAR CAST BILTMORE NOW PLAYING "Brother Orchid" -- STARRING -- EDWARD G. ROBINSON --~-- ADDED -- "NAVY BLUE AND GOLD" -- STARRING -- JAMES STEWART HITT THT Osuawa Arena HOCKEY TONIGHT OSHAWA GENERALS vs. STOCKYARDS 8.30 p.m. "---------------- Save the 25%. Budget Tax incressé on appliances, 'while our stock lasts, .. 4 . Don Christiun Electric - 38-40 Simcoe St. N. Phones 84 - 744 PEGGY MOUNTENAY'S BEAUTY Parlour. Permanents $1.50 and up, 1so special Machineless waves, $2.75. FOR RENT--FRONT BEDROOM or bed-sitting room. Breakfast if | desired. Also garage. Close to: Motors. Phone 2340W. (115a) | J MOTOR CAR FOR SALE--31 PON- tiac sedan, excellent condition, good | tires. Cox Motor Sales, 168 King Ww. (1152) FOR SALE -- 1 IVORY PRAM, gondola type. 174 Arthur St. Phone 2150W, (1162) FOR SALE-1 HIGH POWERED | Elim Grease Gun with all attach- | ments including 25 ft. of hose. Also! 1 Ox. Welding outfit. 339 King St. ! E. (1150) | FOR RENT--3 ROOMS, UNFUR- nished, suitable for couple. Very reasonable. 'Phone 333TW. (115a) : WANTED TO BUY -- ELECTRIC train, must be in good condition | and reasonable. - Box 315 Times. (1152) | MALE HELP WANTED -- CARE- | takers for 2 open-air school rinks. Apply stating experience and salary. | Box 316 Times. (1150) | FOR SALE_TUBE SKATES AND boots, size 7. Skiis and poles, 8-10 years. 'Good condition. 1395R. ; : (115a) | MAROON PRAM FOR SALE, ' good sondition, $5. 340 Pine Ave. (1158) | SINGLE ROOM FOR RENT, FUR- nished, Apply 244 Arthur. (1152) FOR RENT--2 ROOMS, FURNISH- ed or 'unfurnished. Adults only. Division Street. Phone 1002R (1158) ONE CHILD'S 'PUDDLE CART duction, ~~ order o major offensive until the for sale, good condition. $8.50 Apply. 313. aise | A charming and fragrant pair , . . Blue Grass Flower Mist, Blue' Grass Dusting Powder, In o gift box that's ' sweel ghd gay . . $3.95 JURY & LOVELL LTD. SIMCOE S. PHONE 68 E.

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