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Oshawa Daily Times, 4 Nov 1940, p. 2

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PAGE TWO, THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1940 | Two Shots in Back of Head Cast Doubts Upon 'Suicide' Of Graf Spee's Commander Halifax, N.S., Nov, 4 -- How did Captain Langsdorff, commander of the scuttled German pocket-battle~ ship Graf Spee, die? Did he meet death by his own hand--or was there another ex- planation for the two bullet wounds in the back of his head? That was the question left in the minds of Progressive Club mem- bers here after hearing an address by Captain P. G. Dove, British mer- chant master mariner, who was a prisoner aboard the Graf Spee when the pocket-battleship was routed by British guns near the mouth of the River Plate. . Captain Dove--who paid tribute to the courtesy and bravery of the Nazi naval commander -- told of | | such as Captain Langsdorff suffer- hearing a Montevideo police offi- cial comment on the position of the | head wounds of the German offi- cer, Captain Langsdorff was said to have committed suicide following the scuttling of his ship in the outer harbor. One head wound was considered explainable, but the second? Captain Dove said that this caus- ed speculation in his mind. "Aboard the Graf Spee," he said, "were members of the Gestapo. They had taken part in the search of Captain Dove's ship, the African Shell before the freighter was sunk | by the Graf Spee. There was no direct evidence, | however, to link any of the Gestapo | men with the shooting. But Captain Dove reasoned that no man with either one or the other wounds, ed, could have fired a second shot. GIRL QUADRUPLETS ROUGH §0 GANNOT PLAY WITH TOYS Galveston Quartet Growing Rapidly -- Get No Special Care Galveston, Tex., Nov. 4--(AP).-- The Badgett quadruplets--as coy a batch of girls as ever smashed a toy--are nearing their second birth- day in perfect trim, despite the ab- | sence of any unusual precautions to safeguard their health. The Badgetts--Jcan, Joyce, Jeral- dine and Jeanette--are being reared ed in simple fashion. That's the way Mrs. W. Ellis Badgett, 38- year-old mother of the youngest guads in the United States, wants it. 'The girls, born Feb. 1, 1939, are housed in one light, airy room of the Badgett's bungalow. Their four trundle beds take up most of the room's space. There is no nurse, for the children--Mrs takes care of them herself, "And that is a full-time job: try- ing to look after four wild little girls keeps me on the jump," she says. "They are rough; sometimes they get into fights. I can't let them have toys very much; they'll hir each other with them." Joan is the heavyweight of the quartet and occasionally takes ad- | vantage of her bulk, bullying the others about. She tins the scales at 29 pounds; the others weigh in the neighborhood of 23 . The quads' physical and mental develonment has been so swift that Mrs. Badgett decided she would enter them in danéing school this winter. The city of Galveston. in an ef- fort to repay the Badgetts for the publicity thev have brought the Island resort, is endeavoring to raise $10,000 for the purchase of a home for the quadruplets The process is slow, but in less than a year tho Badgetts are ex- pected to be in their new domicile. LUNG KEPT ALIVE OUTSIDE OF BODY no governess Badgett Biologist Envisions placing Diseased Organ Newest organ to be kept alive and breathing outside an animal's body is a lung, an accomplishment of Professor Leon Binet, of the Uni- versity of Paris, described recently | to the French Academy of Medicine and expected soon to be Auplicated with a human lung from an acci- dent victim or some other recent . corpse. Tube connections are made within a few seconds after the lung is tak- en from the chest. These supply blood or other fluid able to ncurish the lung through its arteriss and veins. At the same time an air pump blows up and deflates the lung periodically, just as though the lung's original owner were still breathing. Extra blood alco can be sent through the lung, so that this blood gets new oxygen just as in a living animal. Glandd and certain other organs already have been kept alive for days inside the Carrel-Lindbergh pump, invented by Dr. Alexis Car- rel and the famous aviator, Charles A. Lindbergh but even if used on lung tissue this pump would not al- low the isolated lung to breathe, Professor Binet expects to use his apparatus chierfly in studying the effects on living lung tissues of drugs or other substances; ether. for example, or city smoke; but more fantastic = possibilities . exist Healthy lungs some day may be kept and grafted in place of diseas- ed ones, or someone else's real lung may be used outside the body to aerate a patient's biood (uring seri- ous surgical operations. A separate living lung might even be connected with a voice box and made to talk. FOOT-AND-MOUTH TIE-UP Llanwrthwl, Wales -- (CP). Movement of all cattle, sheep, pigs. goats and dcer has been prohibited here, following discovery of foot- and-mouth disease among farm afiimals, i and Dominion army chiefs. Re- European Missionaries Stranded In India, Africa and Other Fields (The United Church Observer) A disaster of the war, the effects cf which is at present impossible to estimate, is the stranding of four thousand European missionaries in Indian, Africa, China and other for- eign fields, and the threatened ex- tinction of one hundred and sixty- six missions. The missionaries them- cel es are doing their vimest to carry on their work, in spite of the fact that they have been cut off from all normal sources of supply and of funds. The International Missionary Council in London has been sending help and the British people, even in their own extremities, have respond- ed to a call for help. The churches of United States has responded to the call and now the churches of Canada have been asked to help. It is pointed out that unless help is forthcoming the work will cease and this will be an irreparable loss to the world. CANADIANS MAY FIGHT IN LAST Possible Troops Will Aid Greeks Against Fascists Ottawa, Nov. 4.--8hould Britain send land troops to aid Greece it is possible Canadian forces now in England might be amcng them, it was said in defence circles here to- | | "day. It is emphasized, however, that Ottawa is not aware of any plan, It is authoritatively stated here that Canadian troops will be per- mitted by federal authorities to go wherever they are mcst needed, after consultation between British There is no understanding that Canad- ians are to remain in Britain if they could serve more. effectively else- where. Advices here indicate that ain regards the Canadian divisions | overseas as among the best trained | and equipped of empire land forces, | and fully ready for action. "It is just as likely that one of the Can- adian air squadrons overseas might be sent to the Near East," it is pcinted out, "or one or more naval units." GERMAN POWDER HITS AT NERVEY Nazi Trick Proves Useless as British Take Pre- cautions London, Eng., Nov. 4. -- A little sideline in the Nazis' "war of ner- ves" is the dropping of white pow- der might be poisonous or give off poisonous fumes, but, upon ana- lysis by government experts, it has been found to be perfectly harm- less. ' Small packets of this powder have been found and collected af various parts of the country for submission to official analysts. It is thought that this is only another trick, like the dropping ot parachutes withcut parachutists. The powder is stated to be noth ing but some variety of pigment. Other white powder, found on the roads in the country, has been found to be, among other things, flour, lime and vegetable sub- stances. One "powder" sample, which turned out to be baking flour, was traced to a baker's van. It had trickled out while the van was being driven during a raid. CAR SALES INCREASE Ottawa, Nov, 4-- Sales of new motor vzhicles in Canada in Sep- tember, excluding deliveries to gov- ernment and other agencies for war purposes, totalled 5,675 units valued at $6.869,639 gompared with 5.032 at $5,867,283 in August and 6,756 at $7,624,955 in September, 1030. Sales during the nine mouths ended Sep- tember aggregated 104,356 valued at $116.903.629 cranared with 88.788 at $96,878,109 in the same period of 1939. Brit- | " tabi now ern Canada, field hails from Winnipeg. Western Soldiers, Stationed In Tonto, Visited By Thelr Eapuilion et -- Rayfield is shown, ABOVE, with Mrs. Rayfield, and their two children, Doreen and Georgina, Joyous reunions were the order of the day as wives and children Froeted members of the Saskatchewan d at Exhibition Park, Toronto. Members of the regiment hail from all parts of West~ The padre of the regiment arranged for the visit of wives, families and fiancees. Driver E. J. Driver Ray- SHE FOUND TIME TO TEACH 'TWIXT BOMBS, TORPEDOES Toronto, Nov. 4--An East York school teacher who took a pleasure jaunt to Paris a month before the | | blitzkrieg, who taught English chil- dren in the Thames estuary section and who climaxed a year overseas by herding young war guests into the lifeboats of a torpedoed liner, is back cn the job today. Dorothy Elgie went to Fngland in the fall of 1939, just as war start- ed, as an exchange teacher. She dam when it was torpedoed hun- dreds of miles at sea on August 30. When her charges were safely re- turned to Glasgow she helped care for them until the sinking of the City of Benares put and end to | evacuation planes, and then left London to catch a boat for home | just two weeks ago. The aerial battle of Britain had- n't begun to start bombs hailing upon the vital Thamse estuary area when her schoc! there closea at the end of July. But she went back to see friends before coming home, and with them crouched in a private air raid shelter eight feet below a garage, while A Nazi bomb | blasted off a few vards away. | "Youngsters Were Wonderful" Miss Elgie, whose parents live on | Oakdene Cres, and who teaches in ! Plains Read School, is as noncha- lant about all these adventures as she says were the English children in her care aboard the torpedoed ship. "There were 320 of them--among 900 people aboard," she related, "I was on deck for a walk after the kiddies went to bed. On my way to my cabin I stopped at the cabin of a five-year-old girl. the youngest in my group. That's when the tor- pedo struck. GAME HUNTING CONDITIONS SAID (00D IN NORTH C.N.R. Agents Send Re- ports to C.N.R. General Passenger Agent Nov. 4. Indications Teronto, that hunting conditions throughou | Northern Ontario will be excellent ceived from Canadian National Railways agents from various points | in" the big game province. Excerpts from additional reports, received over the week-end by H. C. Bourlier, general passenger agent of the National Systém, read as follows: Oba, Ont,:--Weather here excellent for hunting ducks. Plentiful waterways still open, but weather cold enough to preserve meat for big game hunters. Pine Portage Camp open and ready ac- cept hunters on short notice. Pellicoe, Ont.:--Hunting in the Jellicoe District has been reported exceptionally good this season with abundance of deer, moose and bear. Parry Sound, Ont.;--Indications are that deer will be plentiful this season account very little yarding last winter and deer came through in good shape. North Bay, Ont..--Have been in touch with a number of guides as well as hunting camps this district, who report deer more plentiful than ever, also plenty of black bear with occasional sign of moose, Hornepayne, Ont.: -- Hunting prospects are certainly good this year in this vicinity. Big cow moose seen only eleven miles west of this station. Two big moose and one deer were seen © on the limit quite near to the tie camp, about twelve 'miles west. Looks likek a marvellous hunting season. Burnt River, Ont.:--~Prospects for deer this season are beyond a doubt the best in several years, Section- men report two fine deer crossed the track just in front of their car. Same repert comes in each day from other sources, Two exception- ally large moose have been seen just west of here pasturing with a drove of young cattle on a ranch. The partridge are reported plenti- | get seasick. was aboard the Dutch liner Volen- | | though luckily | guarantee a moose for every this season is given by reports re- | districts of the | conditions | "The youngsters were wonderful. They didn't get the least bit excit- ed. My five-year-old didn't even | | "We got them all into lifeboats. | We had been leading the convoy and the other ships stood by, #0), that we weren't in the lifeboats | more than 40 minutes and every- one was saved. "About 100 of us were taken aboard a tanker that put back to the coast. It was terribly rough--- it was calm when we were changing ships. The kia- dies' got seasick and had been loaded abecard in nothing but their pyjamas, yet they didn't complain at all," the techer reported. Visited Paris, Despite Peril While waiting for word as to how she was to return home, Miss Elgie made several trips between Glas- gow, London and the lower Thames' district. She saw lots of bomb wreckage, saw fires blazing along the river, but had no colse calis herself, Or so she says, thouxh she probably wouldn't think much of it if she had Every school teacher chance to spend a year change in England, likes to take advantage of it to travel on the continent. The fact that a war was on and thousands of German troops, tanks and planes were mus- tered on the French border didn't | deter Dorothy Elgie. "There was an excursion plann- ed during the Easter holidays, so some of us decided to go," she said. | "We had several days in Paris and then went to the Diviera," A few weeks later Naz{ armed columns were sweeping through the Low who gets a | on €es- Countries, ful in and around Four Mile Lake. Gegzama, Ont.:-- Guides here party they accompany. They are quite plentiful this season and can usual- | | ly be taken out whole, Bancroft, Ont..--Partridges re- ported very plentiful in thi sdistrict, also deer in the vicinity of Mum- ford and Wilberforce on the Iron- dale Sub Necrth Bay, Ont.:--Advice as re- ceived would indicate red deer and bear plentiful in territory Widdi- field and North, with moose in the Temagami region and territory | north of Cochrane. | Gilmour, Ont.:--Residents tourists report secing deer alonv | roads this past summer. Idea! grounds for deer and black bear Hunters may secure requirements | as to groceries, ammunition, etc, and cars and trucks always avail- | able to transport hunters from | train to grounds. TRINITY'S NEW MASTER Cambridge, England--(CP)--The King has approved the appoint- ment of Professor George Macaulay Trevelyan to the Mastership of and Trinity College in succession to the | of cheese. With cheese fetching 14 | late Bir Joseph John Thomson. a) | Shipped Overseas Between | Dairy Products Board under Chair- | adian cheese as the best of any | turns ry ad 42,000,000 LBS. GHEESE GOES TO |, FEED BRITISHERS May and No- vember By R. K. CARNEGIE Canadian Press Staff Writer Ottawa, Nov. 4 -- (CP). -- The United Kingdom's request for more | Canadian cheese is being met and | by Nov. 30 Canada will have ex- ported more than $2,000,000 pounds to Britain since the cheese agree- ment between the two countries went into effect last May 23, Agri- culture Department officials said. The agreement called for 78,400, 000 pounds up to Nov. 30 at 14 cénts a pound at Montreal. Later a re- auest came to decrease the weekly shipments and in response exports will be stepped up about 14,000,000 | pounds during the lifetime of thé | agreement, Exports for all of last year were | only 80.000,000 pounds. Clothed with wartime powers, the manship of J, F. Singleton has been | eble to take drastic steps te im- | | prove facilities for handling Cane | ada's cheese exports. Cheese 18 now moved under strict governmental | regulations from the time it is be- | | | ing mad- In the factory until it | reaches the United Kingdom con- | sumer. To meet the new situation whére | the d>mand for Canadian cheese is sc great there is not sufficient time | to mature it to the extent possible | befors the war, the board has fix- | ed at about 50 degrees the tempera- ture at which cheese must be kept | in fnctorles and gradine stations. | A new order also has been | passed to see that cheese while on ship shall be kent at a temperature f 50 degrees or higher, | These are temperatures at which | cheese matures most rapldlv with- ut. deteriorating and authorities | here are determined that every- | thing be done to provide United Kingdom - customers with as good | { The market was open cheese in war time as they got | from C-nade during peace The | imnroved methods of handling will | make up to a considerable extent for tha shortage of timé for pro- nerlv curing the product. "The British people regard Can- | thev import," Mr. Singleton said today, and "we want them to con- tinue to think that." : The Canadian government gives 2 bonus of two cents a pound when cheese grades 94 per cent perfect or better and this year grading re- so far show four times as mitch cheese was' entitled to the! bonus as last year. Cheese grading 93 per cent gets a one-cént bonus. Throughout the summer cheese production was somewhat more profitable than butter. It takes ap- nroximately twice as much milk to make a pound of butter as & pound SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK +t nea Ya £5 RIN io oe NOR IN NATURE ARE PoSSESSED By i INSECTS -- MARKED MALE. MOTHS HAVE FLOWN 10 FEMALE MOTHS FROM DISTANCES oF SEVERAL. MILES AWAY = THe FEELERS® CONTAIN THE OLFACTORY ORGANS Owe. 1900, King Prarurm Syndican, Inc, Word rights ruperond. By R.J.SCOTT Alert 15 A p CoAL MINE OFF CHILE ( TNO MILES AT SEA AO 1,000 FEET BELOW The SURFACE at EWA Jolaun GENSFLEL GUTENBERG SIGN fat WAS SAID 10 CONTAIN EVERY ry oF #18 MAME. N= (9% bint, EVERYONE IN JAVA RIDES A BlcycLE! was at a pulpmill fire in Campbell- ford. The bulky engine was loaded on a flat car where 't was rushed by rail and used to advantage all day. was offered five cents g pound for the pumper but the offer was ten- tatively held over for further bids. W. Wood has been Master Cutler of Sheffield for his second before in 1924-25. Pte. A. Owren, of Regina, seems to be rather burdened down with parcels as he met Mrs. Owren on her arrival to visit her husband at Exhibition Camp, Toronto, British Suspect Double Cross In Vichy's Silence on 'Terms' London, Nov. 4 -- British official circles are beginning to be suspi- clous of the long period of silence and reticence observed 10th by Ger- many and the Vichy Government on Marshal Petein': goreement to "co-operate" with Hitler on the new arder of Europe, It is understood strong steps are being taken to obtain from Vichy full information on the agreement, particularly the part bearing on ure of the French Navy and naval bases on the Mediterranean and the west coast of Africa. "We do not want any surprises to be sprung on us," sald a diplomatic source, adding that he saw indica- tions of stiffening eof Britain's ate titude toward Vichy. Some diplomatic observers believe the aged Marshal has come under the complete domination of Pierre | Laval, his Vice-Premier, who open. [ly advocates Pranco-German colla- boration, For some time there has been a here to regard Petain Weygand. as foils to Laval's policies. But during the last few days, and despite Weygend's disposition and General reported assurances to the French North African colonies that there would be no cessions "incompatible with France's interest and honor," official cirzles here are beginning | to be suspicious of Vichy's silence. At present there is no disposition here to disturb the diplomatic re- lations with Vichy as long as Bri- tain's interests are not endangered any further. . It is understood here that at the time Laval first interviewed Hitler | the German terms included use of | the French Navy and air force and | cession of many parts of the French | mainland and African colonies. There *is«little doubt here these terms were watered down by Hitler | when he interviewed Petain. But | there is still doubt concerning the | future use of the French Navy, and | naval bases. cents, plus the possibility of two | cents bonus, however, butter has moved up to 29 cents and for the first time in a year the twe pro- ducts bring about equal returns to | the farmer. Whether this will rest in a fall- | | ing off in cheese production only * | time will tell. The cheese price is | fixed while butter is bought on the open market although the war prices board is watching the butter | situation carefully . Agriculture Minister Gardiner is in the United Kingdom where he is believed to be discussing with the British food ministry a new cheese agreement as well as a new bacon agreement. No doubt it will be | ready before the present one ex- pires. Last winter the United Kingdom market took all the cheese Canada could spare although generally it | prefers summer to winter cheese then and prices went as high as 19 cents. Many factories in Eastern On- tario and Quebec, where most of Canada's cheese is produced, ex- pect to operate all this winter. Canadian consumers eat about 40,000,000 pounds of cheese annual- | ly and their requirements must be | met in addition to the export trade | However, Canadians can get along with something else, if necessary, since in wartime cheese makes a desirable food to ship overseas be- | cause of its qonesntrated nourish- ing qualities. OL FIRF TRUCK TO BE SCRAPPED Horse -Drawn Engine Served Peterboro for 35 Years Peterboro, Nov, 4--An old horse drawn fire fighting pumper which served its requirements in the city for 35 vears is destined for the scrap heap. This decision wes reached by the fire committee. Sale of the out- dated machine was left in the hands of the fire chief and commit- tees chairman. It was purchased in 1905 at a cost of $5500, and weighs almost six tons. It was drawn by three power- ful horses to the scene of the fire where a hose was dropped in a well or nearby source of water. A steam boiler supplied the power. Last time the machine was used It was stated the fire committee SHEFFIELD CUTLER Sheffield, England -- (CP). -- W. installed as term. He held the office 'To TORONTO, Hamilton, INCOME TAX UP OVER 341,000,000 Total in Seven Months Amounts to $153,209,950 --Toronto Leads Ottawa, Nov. 4--Income Tax re- ceipts for October were more than cepts for October were more than year, Revenue Minister Gibson an- nounced. Net collections for October reach- ed a total of $9.557,703, an increase of $5077364 over the figures for April 1 to Oct. 31, income tax rev- enue amounted to $153.209,950 as against $111,507,162 collected in the corresponding months last year, a net increase of $41,702,788, A statement of collections by dis- tricts shows Toronto heading the list with a revenue of $,50,080,478, an increase of $11,271,830, followed by Montreal with collections totalling $41,056,421, an increase of 3le, 868,888. INDIANS SPREAD NEWS BY RUNNER The Pas, Man, Mov. 4--(CP) -- The *"mocassin telegraph" which for many years has done yeoman service among Indian tribes in this cutlying community, 400 miles northwest of Winnipeg, has been operating daily since September, 1939. S. Lovell, Indian agent here, who recently returned from a trip through the backwoods to register 300' Indians, said the natives are extremely interested in news of the war. Each day, families living near traders who own radios gather round to listen to accounts of world events. AFGHAN NEUTRALS Kabul, Afghanistan -- (CP) -- Opening the fourth session of the Afghan Parliament, King Zahir Shan reaffirmed the neutrality of his country. TORPEDO BLAST SPLIT LIFEBOAT BUT BABY SAFE Mother Comes To, Finds Child; Among 118 Saved by Canadian Destroyer Ottawa, Nov. 4--A Canadian de- stroyer saved 118 persons aboard two torpedoed merchantment in' British waters. Navy Minister Mac donald announced at his press cons ference. The Minister did not name the vessel, but in a prepared statement he quoted from the journal of Al- fred Tate, former Toronto news- paperman, now serving as g lieuten= ant in the unidentified destroyer. Tate described the torpedoing of the merchantmen Furymedon and Sulairia and subsequent rescue Of sallors and passengers, including & Dutch father and mother and their five-months-old baby. Blast Split Lifeboat Tate described the scape of the child as "miraculous" In the arms of his mother, the baby was in a, lifeboat swinging at the davits. when the second torpedo hit the Eurymedon and exploded below the lifeboat. The mother was knocked unconscious as the lifeboat was broken in half. When she recovered consciousness she found the child floating in the water in the bottom of her half of the boat. The family had become separated and both father and mother believe ed the other lost until they were reunited aboard the Canadian de- stroyer, where the baby was put te sleep in the commander's bunk, ate tended by a naval rating. Mr. Macdonald also released fige ures to show that since the out- break of hostilities the navy hades spent $15,227,000 on a building and. conversion program. Projects not. vet completed will cost $73,506,000 and an expenditure of $3%.000,000 on new construction is contemplate ed. From g total of 333 employees in the shipbuilding industry prior to the war, personnel in Canadian | shipyards has increased to 14,000, it was announced. Says Releases Simultaneous The Minister tooig cognizance of an editorial appearing in a Toronta newspaper with reference to relae tives receiving information of the loss of presumed loss of navy men from newspapers rather than of- ficial sources. Mr. Macdonald said a press res lease in connection with the pre- sumed loss of the Bras d'Or be- tween Clark City, Que., and Sydney, S., had been headed "not for puyb- lication or broadcasting" before a fixed time on a certain day. "This injunction, he said, "was laid down in order that the next-of- kin of those men on the ship might receive official notification from the department before any newse paper stories were carried or broad casts made. : ; "All releases from the department are given to The Canadian Press and the Press Gallery at the same time, and no ene newspaper is fav- ored more than another. All are equally subject to regulations made by the department." Pressmen. leNgned at the confer. ence that consideration is being given to the expansion of the Can- adlan shipbuilding industry to a point where large naval vessels may be constructed. BOIL TEA? HORRORS! Manchester--(CP)--A newspaper suggests an "effective" method of conserving rationed tea to English- men, the process involving boiling. the brew in a saucepan, and using one-eighth the normal quantity of leaf, GET A $100 LOAN Repay $7.78 a month $20 to $500 Loans = No Endorsers Loans made on furniture or auto. No | credit inquiries of friends or relatives. Money usually the same day. GUARANTEED PAYMENT TABLE Amount You Each Month octating AF Charen 8 mos. 15 mes, loan loan 3410 6.83 10.92 56 13.65 $7.78 9.73 11.67 15.57 23.35 Ingtalments wased om and include charges of 2% TT authorised by the Small Loans Act, 1939. We guarantee there is else to pay. Phone or call to apply. HOUSEHOLD FINANCE CORPORATION OF CANADA TORONTO, ONT. 736 Danforth Ave., at Eaten Phone Gladstone 1148 R. P. Saunders, Monager ROUND TRIP BARGAIN FARES From OSHAWA NOV. 8 & 9 and AM. Catharines, Niagara Falls, Ont. Hamilton. Brantford, and all intermediate points beyond trains only NOV. 10. London, Windsor, Sarnia, St NOV. 8 to Brampton, Guelph, Goderich, Owen Sound, Southampton, and all intermediate points beyond Brampton. to Meaford, 'Midland, "Penetang, North Bay, and all intermediate pointe beyond Barrie, Jellicoe, Beardmore, Parry Sound, Burwash, Sudbury, Longlac, Geraldton, t-- TICKETS ALSO SOLD TO LOCAL STATIONS BETWEEN BELLEVILE-WHITBY INCLUSIVE. See handbllls for full particulars or secure information from agents. CANADIAN NATIONAL T. 31¢ CANADIAN PACIFIC

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