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Oshawa Daily Times, 14 Nov 1940, p. 1

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- Every Week Day Except Saturday. > Ba a A AS Sadia @shawa Baily Times PROBS Partly Cloudy and Cold Today and Friday. : VOL. 27--NO. 95 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1940 Single copies 3c TAR Shoo NTO RAI Down 15 Nazi Planes i in B D GIVES BRITAIN o& -* 2,000 Greeks Routed 20,000 Picked Italian Soldiers in Mountains p=. Cipbalat, of, Battle in Pindus -- Capture Kill 1,100 Sredk Soldiers So Enthu- iastic Captain Could Not train Them in Pursuit ; x Driers Wes, Nov. 14 (CP).--The 'veported withdrawing; large ive but that British and Greek air attacks on Italian naval bases at Taranto and other Italian and Albanian bases had help up the transport of reinforcements from the Italian mainland. By MAX HARRFLSON Associated Press Staff Writer Athens, Nov. 14--(AP) -- Some 20,000 of Italy's fines mountaineer troops. ho inte on were cut to by-'a compara: A the 30th; a wounded iinet captain "Sodhy. ; Ei rng & bs 2 bed yo tell be higimén toljed, 54 miles § mountains 4a. a" continual i 5 were. caught flats 'and from that mo- ry was one of de@dly the early mofeing of] mari, a peal 5900 feet , west: of Mognt Smolika and BR fometres (abdiit g §3% miles) po Wg the town Sean, the Third Alpini bib talons cH Britain to Draft Million to Speed Munitions Output London, Nov. 14 (CP) -- An industrial speed-up has been ordered by the govern- ment which will involve draft- ing of 1,000,000 men and women into the production of munitions by August, 1941, The object of the scheme is to place Britain's output of war essentials by the end of the second year of the war at a pitch reached in 1918, four years after the outbreak of the first Great War. MOLOTOFF LEAVES HITLER AMID DIN OF RAT. BOMBS Statement Says Two Na- tions im Accord on All + Important Questions Berlin, Nov. 14 (AP).--A m- munique issued at the close, of Soviet Premier-Foreign Comm! Vyacheslaff Molotoff's visit to - En today sald Germany and So Russia were of a single mind "on all important questions of interest" to them. Molotoff and his retinue left Ber- lin at 11 am. (5 am. ED.T.)f after two-days of conferences with Hitler and other Nazi leaders, The communique issu ter his departure sald:g "During his visit to Berlin on Nov. 12-13, 1940, Chairman of the People's Council apd Foreign Mini- ster Molotoff had talks with the Fuehrer and Reichs Foreign Mini- ster Von Ribpentrop. "An excfiange of views was car- an atmosphere of mu- and led to mutual accord mportant questions of in- Germany and the U.SS.R. Molotoff was accompanied to the station by Foreign Minister Ribben- trop with whom he had a final con- ference of several hours last night after a formal reception at the Russian embassy. Soviet Ambassador Alexander soon af- ions of. Gren adiers, 81 pendent companies "The Ttalian for (Continued-o EK 12, Cor: 1, "i Li BRIVEN FROM LORRAIE oats ~Given Going - to and . AE - v. 14 (CP).--The Vichy ted to. the mmission con- had aiven French-speaking Lor- ralne residents the chofee of being' expelled to Poland or France, "Since all chose France, thé com' munique declared, the residents were being transferred into the un- occupied zone of France at the rate of sevén trains daily. Germans were accused of telling Lorraine the.action was being taken as the result' of an alleged accord between Vichy .and Berlin, |. "The government issues a most formal denial of this allegation," the communique said. | bling ™ Schwarzew boarded the special {rain with his chief, who departed with the mystery which was sur- (Continued on Page 12, 3, Col. 2) Doriihion to Supply Britain With Food London, Noy.. 14 (CP)~-The Min- istry of Food .announced that ar. rangements hale been concluded with Canada for the purchase of various import#nt foodstuffs for the second period ofithe war. These in- cudeag bacon, 'theese, condensed milk, Honey, canned salmon, canned tomatdél, canned and dried fruits, Canned fish and frozen fish. Can- ada hopes to increase her cheese ex- ports 25 per' cent. OSHAWA UAWA, DIRECTOR CHARGED IN WINDSOR GOURT George Burt, One of 46 Men Arrested at Chrys- ler Plant Late Yesterday Windsor, Nov. 14 (CP)--Bail of $200 each for 13 men and of $100 for 33 men was set by Magistrate D. M. Brodie in court today when 46 men, including former employees of the Chrysler Corporation appear- ed on charges of illegal picketing. Higher bail was asked of men who were re-arrested when out on bail on similar charges. Geo. Burt of Oshawa, regional director of the U.AW.A.-C.I1.0. for Canada, was one of the 46 men. Magistrate Brodie cautioned the mn against picketing while on bail and sald that if convictions were made, each offence would be treated separately and consecutive terms imposed. Cash bail was demanded, instead of personal recognizances as in former cases. Picketing began when the employees walked out over a matter of seniority. Charges against the men were laid under the Defence of Canada Regu- lations through a section which forbids loitering in the vicinity of a protected place 'after being request- ed by an appropriate person to leave such premises." Picketing at the plant began last Friday following a dispute regarding seniority between company officials and members of the Windsor local of the United Automobile Workers of America. The plant had been de- clared an "essentiii] service" by an order-in-council of the Federal Gov. ernment last July. The 46 men: were dtrested yester- day after they. refused to disperse from a picket line at the order of police, Thirteen of those arrested had previously been arrested on the same charge last Monday and were free on bail, pending a court appear- ance Nov. 20, TRANSPORT STRIKE TROUBLE LANDS 10 MEN IN COURT Five Remanded i in Toron- to on. Vagrancy Charges --Stopped Big Truck Toronto, Nov. 14 (CP)--Five To- ronto men charged with vagrancy as a result of their alleged part in ac- tivities arising out of the current strike of employees of two transport companies, appeared in court today and were remanded until Nov. 21. Bail was set at $500 each. The five are Jesse Gibbons, Stan- ley Waylett, John Carney, John Deadey and Wilfred O'Keefe. They were arrested last night after they allegedly stopped two truck drivers, Harry Brown and Leo Sittler on the stréet here and attempted to per- suade them to abandon their large transport truck and go fo union headquarters to sign up with the teamster's union, an American Fed- eration of Labor affiliate. The firms affected are Martin and (Continued on Page 12, Col. 4) AGRICULTURE OFFICIAL DIES Vineland, Ont,, Nov. 14. (CP)-- Suffering a heart attack, James B. Fairbairn, deputy minister of agri- culture for Ontario, 1030 to 1937, died at his home here today. ackles After Eight Days i "Bombed House Wreckage .. By HAROLD FAIR inadian Press Staff Writer Sonim Nov 14 -- (CP) -- Bog) splinters from the Battle of Britain: Newsst wartime gadget: A "bomb snuffeg" to smother incendiaries. You Mit, pick up the thing resem- e top of a roasting pan, with & broom handle that has a hook on one end and drop.it over the bomb. 'The contents of dry sand are released immediately to fall on the bomb. It car be re- charged. : SEE PAGE 12 A layman suggested at the Ches- ter Diocesan Conference 'hat peo- ple who flee crowded cities for the quiet and raid-free safety of the country should increase the sub- scriptions to their city parish "for the pleasure of enjoying a peaceful night." Heard in London: "We've got a new baby--he's Just five sirens old." Eight days after a London house wds wrecked by a high explosive bomb ga demolition squad found a chicken ' alive beneath .the debris and only slightly injured, It still (Continued on Page 3, Col. 6) ¢ Sacrifices Ship to Save 30 Vessels from Nazis A fresh page was 3 itten in the glorious history of the Royal Navy when" the armed merchantman, Jervis Bay, above, sacrificed herself so that thirty-eight vessels of a conwy might have a chance to escape from a heavily-armed German raider which attacked the convoy. The raider attacked the convoy off the coast of Ireland and the Jervis Bay immediately rushed to the at to enable the convoy to break up and escape. Battling against desperate blazing, kept the Nazi raider occupied until, a blazing hulk, she plunged beneath the sea. at least 30 of the 38 ships of the convoy were able to escape. Capt. Fogarty Fegen of the Jervis Bay went down with his ship after directing the fight. Bi k, laying down a smoke screen s, the Jervis Bay, with guns | In the meantime 5 rv Of Horse and Fuggests Provi Province Revises Municipal Powers -- Fa- vors Pay for Aldermen-- Paved Road to Airport Setting up a provincial commit- tee to prepare a plan of municipal reorganization throughout Ontario is urged by J. C Anderson, K.G, Civic Taxation System Mayor Tells Camelot Club elic Buggy Days, Tell and Retell Heroic Details Jervis'Bay Fight An East Ccast Canadian Port, | Nov. 14 (CP).--How the armed | | | mayor of Oshawa. His worship voiced his suggestion at last night's annual banquet of the Club of Simcoe Street Church where he was the guest of honor and principal speaker. Declaring that municipal coun- cils have become the "Creatures of | the Provincial Government," and | denouncing the civic taxation sys- tem, which charges 80 cents of estate owners as an anachronism held over from horse and buggy days. Mayor Anderson urged that the: proposed Province of Ontario committee of municipal jurisdic- tion and taxation be called to meet at the same time as the provinces of the Dominion gather to confer with the Federal] Government at Ottawa. Mayor Anderson revealed two things of local importance. One is that the consolidation of Oshawa's (Continued op Page 2, Col. 6) Camelot | United every municipal tax decllar to real | | merchant cruiser Jervis Bay made a suicide stand against a powerful armed enemy raider was told and | retold in this port today as 65 sur- | | vivers of the battle rested here af-| | ter the ordeal. I In order 'to save her convoy of | | 38 ships, the Jervis Bay matched | her puny weapons against the big |guns of the raider, at the same time laying down a smoke screen | to enable the ships loaded with | cargoes for Britain to fan out and | escape. "It was a magnificent fight all | the way thrcugh," recounted Lead- | ing Stoker George Beaman of Hali- | fax, a survivor who drifted on a life raft for nine hours before he was rescued by the Swedish merch- antman, the Stureholm, a member of the convoy. The last wireless Captain Forgarty Fegan of - (Continued on Page 2, Col. message by the 2) To Britain in Parliament Expects to Hear Plans for Supplying Food House Today iner Will Give Details of A:rangement -- Meighen Critical of 30-Day Militia Training By CARL REINKE (Canadian Press Staff Writer) "Ottawa, Nov. 14 (CP) --Results of recent negotiations in Britain for a continuotis wartime food supply from Canada are likely to be dis- closed in the House of Commons to- day by Hon. James C. Gardiner, Minister of National War Services and Agriculture. Some comprehensive arrange- ority has been expected for many months and it is assumed here that Mr. Gardiner and his delegation reached some such arrangement on their trip to the United Kingdom from which they returned only last week-end. Agreement under which Britain would absorb a substantial part of Canada's large 'surplus of agricul- tural products would in part help to meet the wartime agricultural crisis * pictured to the House of Commons yesterday by house lead- ers of the Co-operative Common- wealth Federation and New Demo- cracy groups. Two members from government ranks also agreed with the suggeston that something had to be done to relieve the situation. The midweek half-day in Parlia- Believe Hon. J. G. Gard:|; ment with the British food auth-' Premier of Egypt Dies in Parliament Cairo, Nov. Egyptian Premier Hassan Sabry Pasha collapsed and died today while reading the Speech from the Throne at the opening ses- sion of Parliament. 14 (CP) --| | Tuesday, might hold | in Kingston Penitentiary. FATE OF SAILORS ON MISSING BOATS MAY BE UNSOLVED Eighteen Bodies Washed | Ashore -- No Hope for 67 Missing Seamen Ludington, Mich., Nov. 14 (AP)-- Searchers patrolled the shoreline in this area today for additional bode ies of victims believed to have per- ished in Monday night's Lake Mich- igan gale which veteran navigators declared the worst in many years. Hope was virtually abandoned of finding alive any of the 67 seamen aboard two large lake freighters and two fishing tugs presumed to have foundered in the stormy waters. Thus far bodies of 18 cailors--16 from the crews of the 7,200-ton Wil- liam B. Davock of Cleveland, the 4,200-ton. grain carrier Anna C. Minch of Sarnia, Ont, and two cooks from the Canadian pulpwood carrier Novadoc -- have washed ashore along with bits of wreckage. Coast guardsmen expressed belief that the lake, whipped into a fury by high winds Monday night and forever the secret of the fate of the four ves- sels and the men known to have | been aboard. If the vessels foundered unexpect- edly, cfew members on duty inside the cabins would have been trapped and only the bodies of deckhands (Contigued on Page 2, Col. 8) Soldier's Killer Is Given. Reprieve Guelph, Nov. 14--(CP)--William Moulton, Stratford, convicted here Sept. 13 of the murder of Pte, Ar- thur Phillips, Perth Regiment, C.A. SF. and who was sentenced to be hanged Nov, 19, has been granted a reprieve, Sheriff H. C. Waind an- nounced today. The announcement sald an offi- cial communication had been re- ceived from the under-secretary of state, advising Sheriff Wa'nd that Moulton's sentence has been com- muted to one of life imprisonment Moulton, a member of the Perth Regiment, C.AS.F. is alleged to have shot Phillips at Niagara-on- the-Lake, July 14, during an argu- siderably itain Today Completely Chamberlain's Ashes Interred In Westminster London, Nov. 14. (CP)--The ashes of former Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain were buried today beneath the grey stone floor of the nave of Westminster Abbey, resting. place of many of Britain's historic figures. At the close of 40-minute Angli- can service, Mrs. Chamberlain, heavily veiled, knelt on the floor, took chrysanthemum petals from handbag and dropped them into a two-foot square, purple lined crypt. Prime Minister Churchill stood intent among cabinet ministers at the graveside. The Duke of Glou- cester represented the Royal family, The Archbishop of Canterbury of- fered -final prayer. 40 BIG BOMBING PLANES MAY BE RELEASED BY 1.3. Report Bombsight Also Will Be Released for British Use Washington, Nov. 14.--(AP)--Big bombers for Britain--and perhaps bombsights of a long jealously guarded pattern were reported to- day to be major items on a new ad- ministration program for increas- ing aid to England. Official sources were uncommuni- cative about the bombsight, except to stress that the army and navy had no intentions of releasing the prized, new sighting mechanism which is rated as one of the coun- try's most important military sec- rets. There were authoritative hints, however, that an earlier and highly effective type of bombsight may be made available to the British. It was understood, however, to be con- less accurate than the model which superseded it for use (Continued on Page 12, Col. 3) VICHY MOVES TO COUNTERACT FREE FRENCH ACTIVITY Berne, Nov. 14 (CP)--The Petain- Laval government at Vichy is taking urgent steps to defend its African 'empire against inroads from Gen. ®harles De Gaulle's Free French forces. Unconfirmed reports said units of the French fleet had left Toulon and other continental bases for North African ports. It could not be learned whether the fleet would merely pull in at Oran in North Africa to keep an eye on Gen. Maxime Weygand's North African activities or whether it might risk running the gauntlet at Gibraltar to get to an Atlantic ment. port in Africa. ment produced a detailed program for the rehabilitation of agriculture from M. J, Coldwell (C.CF. Rose- town-Bigggy). John Blackmore (N.D., Lethbridge) urged the ne- cessity of utilizing the national credit not only to meet such dom- estic emergencies as that confront- ing agricukbure but to help finance the war, without adding to the pub- lic debt or to taxation. In the Senate, Conservative Leader Arthur Meighen asserted Canada' was not doing its part in the defence of Britain. Instead, the dominion was "mesmerized by home defence" although defence of Britain was vita] to Canada. Senator Raoul Dandurand, gov- ernment leader, replied that Can- ada was doing everything Britain asked. Britain had not asked for more Canadian soldiers but had asked for help toward domination of sea and air, Towards that end, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Suggests Six-Day Week When Unemployment Slack ABsorbed Alfred P. Sloan, nt G.M.C. Chairmar, Urges Step Before Academy of Political Science New York, Nov, 14 (AP)--Alfred P. Sloan, Jr, chairman of General Motors Corporation, suggests that United States Industry supplant the the five-day week with the six-day week as a means of increasing pro- duction "when the slack unem- ployment has been taken up." Addressing the Academy of Po- litical Science last night, Sloan as- serted the key to national defence "ig the strongest, most virile, the most ASpTessive economy that the creative genius of America can de- vise." "Output can increased 20 per cent. by ring days a week in place of five days. It seems clear that this should be the first step, if the point is reached when the slack of unemployment has been taken up and the increasing speed of industry has been utilized to the fullest practical extent." He said the "penalty for over- time" should be cancelled during the emergency to "encourage a longer work week." Sloan said he saw inflation as the most striking economic danger (Continued on Page 13, Col, 6) Has Changed Picture on Land And Sea in Near East o& - R.A.F. Bombs Taranto Again London Spends Quiel. Night as Weather Keeps Nazis Away -- Few. Raids Today : 4 Taranto Success Makes. Aid for Egyptian Camy paign Easier London, Nov. 14 (CP)--" Fifteen German planes were ~ shot down today, the Air. Ministry announced. London, Nov. 14 (CP) -- The triumph over the lation fleet by torpedo-carrying aire craft of the British fleet has ale tered the balance of power. ig' the Mediterranean area on land' as well as sea, naval sources' said. With. one stroke, they ie fleet air arm has:-- . Eased the task of cons tors reinforcing British armies: in Egypt and Palestine. : 2. Released powerful naval units for service in the Far East, where strengthening of the Empire's Oriental forces is under way. 3. Allowed Britain's battle cruisers and lighter ships arm= ed with eight-inch guns to join" in the search for the German commerce raider in the Atlane tic. 4. Boosted the British Eme. pire's prestige with the Turks, Greeks and Moslems of the Eastern Mediterranean area. 5. Reversed the ratio of capital ships in the Mediters ranean from six-to-four in favor | of Italy to 4-to-3 in favor of Britain. By LARRY ALLEN : (Associated Press Staff Writer) Aboard a Battleship of the Britis Mediterranean Fleet off Taranto,' (Continued on Page 12, Col. 3) BIGYCLIST BADLY HURT INACGIDENT. Harold T. Gibbs Struck by Car at Nassau and King Streets Harold T. Gibbs, an Tod's Bakery, was seriously injured . this morning at the corner of King and Nassau streets when the bicycle he was riding collided with a car driven by Thomas Moore, 126 Wile * liam street. The young man suffer- ed a broken arm, a broken leg, lac~ erations to the face and scalp and ° possible internal injuries. He was taken to the Oshawa General Hose pital in an ambulance where he was | given attention by Dr. R, W. Grae ham. According to information given * the police, Wm. T. Trotter, 381 Pacific avenue, was also involved in the mishap which occurred shortly after 6 o'clock. Trotter, who was ride ing a bicycle, was struck, either by the car or Gibbs' bicycle. Although slightly injured Trotter continued on his way to work. The car, said to have been driven by Mrs. Moore, slewed to the left with brakes applied. But before the car was halted, it is alleged that Gibbs and his bicycle had been pushed 33 feet. When informed of the accident to Gibbs, who has been in the employ of the bakery for about ten years, D. M. Tod drove to the home of the injured man's parents and took them to the hospital to see their son, P.C. Donald McLelland, of the Oshawa Police Department, investi. gated. A

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