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Oshawa Daily Times, 21 Nov 1940, p. 9

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phen THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1940 PAGE NINE & ro - 2 New Aatomaible Models Forbidden by Government . . (Continued from Page 1) work of the war," he said. In a comprehensive review of the state of Canada's wartime produc- tive effort, the munitions minister warned that added restrictions doubtless would be imposed on the ordinary citizen as time went on. The minister brought the House up-to-date on the activities of his department. Said contracts had been let in Canada for war orders to a total value of $849,000,000 re- ported on the progress in Canada's various war production fields and climaxed his review with the as- sertion the dominion should be producing its maximum of war mas terials in another eight months. The next eight months not only would witness a rapid expansion of employment and industrial activity but would be "a testing time for the morale of the Canadian peo- ple," Mr. Howe said. «I have no doubt that our in- dustry and our men and women will justify our confidence in the productive capacity of this great Dominion," he added. 30,000 Trucks Delivered The biggest single expansion has been in the motor industry. To date 30,000 military trucks has been de- livered, and the industry is now geared to a production of 600 units a day, which will soon be reached. The Minister quoted British state- ments that "Canadian transport equipment is superior to production from any other source of supply." These were among the major items mentioned by the muniticns minister: ; Appointment of a Wartime Re- quirements Board, headed by H. R. MacMillan of Vancouver, also tim- ber controller, to see that war needs are given priority over all other needs and minimized disturb- ance to the Canadian economy. Completion of arrangements with the United Kingdom for the bulld- ing in St. Lawrence River and Pa- _ecific Coast yards of 18 large mer- 'chant ships for Britain. Maintenance of war industry profits at levels "much lower than in peacetime." Reorganization of Canadian air- craft production on production-line basis. The government also is studying the possibility of making airplane engines in Canada. Automotive orders now on hand to keep Canada's automotive ine dustry. at maximum production up to September, 1941, the rate soon to reach 600 units a day. " Expansion of explosives and shell plants so production will be at least 2,000,000 shells a month. : Arrangements made to produce the new Anglo-American tank "in & very substantial way." Practically every type of gun in this war to be produced in Can- sada within short time, The minister reported that the Jetting of war contracts had in- creased from 1910 per month in|' the first quarter this year to 7,500 & month in the third quarter, with the result that at November 11 Canadian orders had been placed totalling $540,000,000 and British orders totalling $309,000,000. Exports to the United Kingdom GREEKS CLOSING INONITALIANS (Continued from Page 1) curred at Mertzanl, Albania, west of the Aoos river 'and northwest of Konitza, Greece. Leaving munitions, arms, tanks, automobiles and laggard troopers behind, the Italians are retreating so rapidly that the bayonet-brandish- ing Greeks are hard put to keep up with them, he said. The Greek high command listed 200 automobile; among the booty captured. The Athens radio predict« ed a decisive phase of the war was imminent. In the north, the Greek command also announced, its hardy mountain- eer soldiers had won the summits of the Morava Range southeast of Kor- itza and were pressing down the western slcpes on that besieged Italian base. on the southernmost front, near the sea, the only place where the Italian invaders remain on Greek soil, successful progress was report- ed without details. The forceful Greek counter-offen- sive in the centre, along the only road in that region, was declared to have followed the virt cessation of Italien air bombar t which previously had slowed e Greek advance. : The Greck command said the Ital- ians bombed two cities in Epirus and Thessaly yesterday, killing a few persons, but that was all. The Greeks' own aviaticn was asserted to have bombed and strafed the re- treating Italians and to have at- tacked the airdrome at Argyrocastro, deep in southern Albania. British Royal Air Forces which are aiding the Greeks, reported that they alone had shot down 11 Italian planes in 24 hours. (It was reported in the Yugoslav border town of Bitolj that British planes also bombarded Koritza while Greek field guns maintained a ter- rific fire into the town and that the Italians apoeared ready to aban- don the place.) The Greek spokesman also said the Italians were having difficulties with the conquered Albanians. A battalion of Albanians in the Italian central forces revolted and had to isd disarmed, he said. for the first nine months of this year totalled $380817,000, compared to $242,725,000 a year ago, an in- crease of 58 per cent. The government's system of fin- ancing plants where this could not be done by private industry had resulted in $265,000,000 being in- vested in production premises and machinery, he sald. Of this sum about 30 per cent. was on behalf of the Canadian government, the rest for the British government. While some members of parlia~ ment had raised the question of the distribution of war orders by province, Mr. Howe emphasized that the question of distribution was secondary to efficient' produe- tion. Large blocks of surplus pow- er were available only in Quebec and Ontario. Mr. Howe gave three major rea- sons for the setting up of wholly- owned government companies to co-ordinate and administer indus- try and obtain supplies: "(1) The opportunity it gave of getting men of known organizing, construction and production abil- ity to assist us in our war effort. "(2) The opportunity it gave of decentralizing, with all the attend- ing advantages that accrue from decentralization in an operation such as this, "(3) It has been proven that the corporate method of administra- tion has been successful in the management of industries and busi- ness men understand such admini- stration." Other speakers at the short Wed- nesday sitting were T. L. Church (Con., Toronto - Broadview) who complained the government had given the House no information on the war effort, despite the lengthy reports of some cabinet ministers; and W. F. Rickard (Lib. Durham) who said he was glad to see labor getting a better deal in industry's wartime activity but ad- ded the farmer also was entitled to a fair return from his work, GERMAN INLAND PORT IS BOMBED (Continued from Page 1) ported from the canonading which continued about an nour, apparent- ly at random, since the visibility was the worst in several days. Two Daylight Raids London, Nov. 21 -- (CP) -- The capital's sirens sounded two day- light air raid alarms in quick suc- cession today shortly after raiders were reported over scattered towns in England. The raiders defied a gale over the Channel to make their daylight stabs at Britain. The first two alarms in London were brief. One southeast village turned out en masse to help fiiemen control fires caused last night by hundreds of incendiary bombs dropped by German raiders. In the London area a high explosive bomb killed a fam- ily of four, parents and two daugh- ters. Raids Under Control London, Nov, 21--(OP)--Terrific anti-aircraft fire was reported to- day to have taken the sting out of the Nazis' second successive night of "all out" raiding on Britain's Midlands and the government de- scribed the attacks as "intermittent and on a minor scale." Apparently trying to strike an- other blow. similar to that at Co- ventry a week ago. swarms of raid- ers poured over an East Midlands town during the night but were dis- persed by ground guns after less than two hours of incenriary bomb- dropping--!irst step in the techni- que of total air war. A communique said: "A number of people were killed and injured" in the Midlands, where "fires were started and high explosive bombs demolished some houses und dam- aged others" In several towns At- tacks on other parts of England, including London, were labelled "generally ineffeciive" and the toll of the dead and injured was re- ported to have been small. Royal Air Force bombers, auth- oritative sources in London report- ed carried out overnight attacks on air bases in German-occupied territory, on a Nazi freight yard and on the submarine base at Lor- ient, in occupied France, The all-clear sounded in London a short time after dawn, ending a night of light raids marked by long intervals without any Nazi air ac- tivity. Although the night's attacks were not so widespread as the assaults Tuesday night, when a nine-hour raid left a dozen Midland towns strewn with wreckage and dead and wounded, observers in. the East Midlands sector said during the early night hours that the raid was the fiercest ever made on that area. The government sald bombs also fell in the London area, at one point in Southern England, in the Northwest and in Sotth Wales. Police of an important industrial town in the Midlands sald last night that a day of digging through ruins left by the nine-hour raid the previous night so far had disclosed less than 20 known dead V.C. DIES IN ENGLAND Windsor, Eng, Nov. 21 (OP)-- Familiar as a commissicnaire at London's luxurious Dorchester Ho- tel, Jergt. Oliver Brooks, v.C., 51, died at his home here. Member of the Coldstream Guards, Brooks led a party which regained possession of a section of British trenches that the Germans took at Loos in 1915. REPORTS OF SWISS GOURT HEARINGS ALPHABET SOUP Papers Use Only Initials of Persons Involved -- Sample Report By CHARLES 8. FOITZ JR. By Associated Press Staff Writer Geneva, Nov, 21--(AP)--Ffor reas sons best known to Swiss judges who interpret Swiss ilbel laws the Swiss press frequently refers to persons arrested in criminal cases only by their initials. 'All of which makes some of Switzerland's prize crime stories sound in print like a cross between a dime novel thriller and a nursery rhyme of the winken, blinken and nod school. Witness the case of the head- quarters of an "underground rails way" designed to help French sole diers interned in Switzerland to escape back to their homeland across heavily-guarded frontiers. Here's the story, in Swiss press styles: Three personages, E, U, and the woman SCH. have been arrested by the military. E, U, and the woman SCH, this last an Italian, helped French ine ternees escape. They were questioned by Capi Guillermet, officer of police of the territorial area aided by his sec- retary. M. Demierre E, U, and the woman SCH. ad- mitted heading an escape agency engaged in smuggling interned French soldiers across the frontier. E. and U. were jailed in Sainte Antoine while the woman SCH, was lodged in the women's prison. A fourth individual, named G,, who also aided an interned soldier in. crossing the frontier, was alzo jailed. E, U, G, and the woman SCH. will be tried by the military courts. NOT DOING BADLY, SAYS CHURCHILL (Continued from Page 1) has crowned our exertions and our perseverence." "Up to the present," Mr. Churchill declared, 'this war has been waged between a fully armed Germany and a half armed or quarter armed Brit- ish Empire. We have not done so badly." Praise Greek Stand "I look forward with confidence and hope to the time when we our- selves shall be as well armed as our antagonists, and beyond that to the time when the arsenals, training grounds and science of the British Empire shall give us that material superiority which added to. loyalty and constant 'hearts will bring vic- tory and deliverance to all man- kind." Mr. Churchill said: 'The valiant and sudden uprising" of the Greeks had already "almost purged" their soul of an attack which he describ- ed as "pure and unmitigated bri- gandage." The prime minister expressed the hope that Britain would be able to give from her sources, "always heavily strained," a "helpful mea- sure of assistance to the Greeks" and that "we shall be able to dis- charge our responsibility to Egypt in defending its soll and guarding the vital artery of the Suez Can- AL" "Even if the whole of the homes all over the country are levelled," Mr. Churchill said, "we shall still be found all standing together and we shall build them up again after the fighting is over." Says Britain Will Never Be Defeated By Nazis or Others Ottawa, Nov. 21 -- Amazement that some people in Canada were worried 'about the victorious out- come of the war, because "in Great Britain no such feeling exists even in the most remote form," was ex- pressed here by J. C. MacPhee, of Russell, Ont., a private with the 1st Canadian Division, C.A.S.F who has returned to recuperate from a physical disability, MacPhee, who visited headquar- ters of the Canadian Legion War Services, said that the people of Britain are magnificient and can never be subjugated into submis- sion by the Nazis or any other for- eign power. The young private, whose deep- est regret is that he is unable "to be in on the kill," expressed great admiration for the work of the Canadian Legion among the troops overseas. He said that Captain Mert Plunkett, C.L.W.S. director of entertainment in the Old Country and founder of the "Dumbells" in the last war, has scored a tremen- dous hit and the entertainment he has arranged has done much to help maintain the morale and fight- ing spirit of the men. MacPhee was enthusiastic about the Legion's education scheme and believed that it would go a long way toward helping to win the war and at the same time assist the troops in get- ting re-established on their dis- charge from the army, Canadians overseas have the re- spect of everyone, he said, and their presence there has been a great stimulant to the British peo- ple. He recalled a German prison- er-of-war told him that the last war proved that "the only way to convince a Canadian he is dead is to bury him." ONE OF HERO'S FINAL ACTS WAS THANKING RED CROSS "May I ask you to convey to your president and committee our deep appreciation of the magnificent gift of winter comforts that arrived safely on board yesterday after noon." The writing of these words, ad- dressed to the Canadian Red Cross Society, was one of the last agts of Capt. Fogerty Fegen, heroic com- mander of the gallant Jervis Bay, who went down with his ship to save the bulk of a British convoy in mid-Atlantic two, weeks ago and was awarded a Victoria Cross. The in- cident was revealed at a meeting of the céntral council of the Canadian Red Cross Society here. Capt, Fegen had written to the eastern division office of the Red Cross expressing his gratitude for Red Cross supplies which had ar- rived a few days previous. "Your generosity is on a par with the wonderful hospitality that has been shown to us at your port dur- ing our stay here and it is difficult to find words to express our grati- tude," wrote the hero-captain. "From my own experience of the North Atlantic last winter I know that your kind of gift is going to be of the greatest value in the months to'come. Yours very sincerely, E. F. Fegen, Captain, RN." It also was reported by Eastern Canada representatives that the sure vivors of the Jervis Bay had been met by the Canadian Red Cross and given necessary supplies when they landed at port. A wire was received from a Red Cross representatives on the Atlantic coast which read: "Late last even- ing I was called on to look after 12 survivors of a certain ship who had been in an open boat four days, two of them wounded. 1 gave them supplies and clothing." A report presented to the council showed that 102,667 articles had been issued to the army, navy and air force and merchant marine at an Eastern Oanadian port from Sep- tember, 1939, to October 31, 1940. They include 8,306 leather and woo! caps, 2,641 caps and Balaclava hel- mets; 15,507 leather and wool mitts; 10,463 scarves; 31,367 pairs of socks; 15,591 suits of underwear; 6394 sweaters; 8,104 windbreakers, as well as wristlets, blankets hospital sheets and pyjamas. ! HITLER SUICIDE WILL BRING WAR T0 END IS-GLAIN (Continued from Page 1) breaks and sorrows, We are going to hare to be very patient, "But when we feel impatient and despondent I want you to think of those other peoples who have al- ready lost the war--of those Poles and Danes and Dutch people and Belgians and Norwegians and French who are living, starving and still resisting under the heel of the Nasi oppressor . . . "Let us thank God daily that we are still free and can go oh work- ing and fighting to stay free Irom that dreadful Nazi domination which has filled Europe with sorrow and suffering." Mr. Philp, a Briton, said Hitler has announced that he is: "the toughest leader the world has ever known," and it was probably true, "His is the toughness of the de- formed--the vitally deformed," he continued. "And he is surrounded by tough men--Goering, Himmler Hess, Goebbels and al! the rest of the Nazi bandits. "He is followed by tough men .. . terribly tough. They are worth fighting and beating." All Have Weak Streak Then Mr. Philip sald he would let his audience in on a secret-- Hitler's followers were not all tough; there was a weak streak in the rank and file. the weak streak of a subject people. "But we Britichers, Canadians, Australians, Afrikander: and New Zealanders are tough ail through," he said, "from Prime Minister Churchill down to the iittle cock- ney children who brag to each other that the bomb that fell in their street was the biggest ever." Mr. Philip said he had found a tendency to ascribe the fall of France to * fifth column work and treachery," but he believed the French were "licked, absolutely and completely licked" in May and June. In the confusion of it all a few men seized the government and made an armistice with the Ger- mans because they helleved that Britain, too, would fall within a few weeks. "That was their vital mistake" he said. "We haven't been licked. We aren't going to be licked. We are still fighting and we are going on fighting until we win." The French knew that now and they knew, too, that their only hope was for Britain to go on fight- ing. Plerre Laval was the man who persuaded Marshal Petajn, the hero of Verdun, to vote at Bordeaux against continuing the war. Laval would "sacrifice the last shred of his own and his country's honor and independence to satisfy his hatred of the British and his cock-eyed belief in himself as a great states- man." But Marshal Petain was "an up- right man." The other day the mar- shal said he had a rope around his neck. He must submit to the condi- tions under which he signed the ar- mistice. Won't Let France Fight "But I am certain," Mr. Philip said. "that he will never agree to associate his country with the Ger- mans in fighting for us. And he has his counfrymen--with only a few exceptions--behind him. "The French may have been over- whelmed but they aren't beaten. They may have been compelled to lay down their arms but they aren' conquered. "And we shall need them ... we shall never win the war without the sympathy of the invaded peoples, without the possibility of their ulti- mate revolt." Mr. Philip told of a dream that had come to him twice during the past year or so. He was at Hitler's Berchtesgaden retreat. He watched Hitler open the drawer of a desk, pull out a revolver and raise it to his temple, and "then of course I woke 'up--one always does in dreams just before the bang comes. "Now, I don't believe much in dreams or omens, but I do believe in subconscious foresight and I am telling you of that dream quite ser- fously because I believe that it will be in that way this war will end." Save 189,000 H.P. By Daylight Saving Otwwa, Nov. 21.--An estimated saving of 189,000 h.p. on peak load power will result from the reten- + | tion of daylight-saving time in cit- ies and towns of Ontario and Que- bec, according to information tabl- ed in the House of Commons in re- ply to a question from George Mac- Kinnon, (Con. Kootenay East). Munitions Minister tHowe said no representations had been received to the effect the order would in- crease rather than reduce the amount of electrical energy used in some municipalities. ! Pickering (J. Clark, Correspondent) PICKERING, Nov. 18.---Mr Arth- ur Hughes, of Caladar, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. David War- | ren and family last week. Mr. Arthur Smith, of St. Cathar- ines, spent the week-end with M. 8. and Mrs. Chapman. - Mrs. John Law, of Toronto, and | Mr. George Law, of Toronto, visit- ed the latter's sisters, the Misses Law, during the week end, Mrs Law also visited with her son, G Law, who is confined to his home through illness, Mrs. F. Jones, of Ottawa, visited with her sister, Mrs. W. ¢ Murkar, and family during the past week. Nir. Jim Clement, of Oshawa, and Private R. Fowler, of Camp Bor- den, spent the week-end at the Fowler home here. Mrs. Harbron visited 'er mother, Mrs. C. H, Pilkey, during the week- end. F. F. and Mrs, Balsdon and fam- ily, of Burford were In the village during the week-end to attend the Balsdon - Moorhouse wedding Saturday. Asthough the highway was In such a bad condition on Saturday night that traffic was held up con- siderably, and a numcer of cars slid Into the ditch, Traffic-Officer Runciman reports that there were | no serious accidents on his beat and no person injured. . Service in the Presbyterian church on Sunday was taken by Rev. Mr. Lawrence of Whitby, in the absence of the minister, Rev. D. Marsaall. The latter is ot Kirk- land Lake for two weeks or. a com- mission for the home mission board of the church. The funeral of the 'ate William Cullis, aged eighty-four years, took place from his residence on Church Street, on Monday afternoon, with interment in Erskine Cemetery. Rev. M. R. Jenkinson conducted the services, and the pa'l-bearers were J. 8. Balsdon, R. Powell, L. J. Proute, G. Found A. Boyes and J G. Baxter. Coming from England with his parents, in his youth, he settled near Newcastle, later coming to Pickering, where he had resided for over half a century. He farmed in the vicinity until his retirement to the village a number of years ago. A well-known figure ir the life of the village, he served a term on the board of police tristees and until {llness forced him to relin- quish the work, was ir. charge of the repair work on the street light- ing system. He was a 'srmer. active member of the Presbyterian church. His wife, the former Sarah Mor- ris, predeceased him several years ago. Noted Scientist Assists Canadian Legion Services Ottawa, Nov. 21 -- Dr. H. M. Tory, M.A., B.Sc., LL.B., former president of the National Research Council and director of the Can- adian Khaki College overseas in 1917-18, has accepted the invita- tion to become Chief Educational Counsellor of the Canadian Legion ar Services, Dr. Tory, who will serve in an honorary capacity, is a one-time resident of the University of Al- erta. Widley known as a scien- tist and educationist, he played a large Part in the planning an equipping of the National Re- search Laboratories at Ottawa. He was largelp responsible for the work of the Council being extend- ed over the whole Dominion. on | British House Opened by King In Ancient Style (Continued from Page 1) the Duke of Gloucester in the khaki of the army. The Queen sat on one of the twin thrones dressed in a plum colored ensemble trimmed with grey fur at the neck. She wore a triple row of pearls and a wide halo hat matching with her dress. (10. EXPECTED T0 VOTE ON RED RESOLUTION TODAY (Continued from Page 1) munism, Fascism and Nazism, and also a proposal to put into CIO constitution an amendment which would make members of any of the three isms ineligible to hold paid jobs in C.I.O. offices. The Communist issue has been described by well-informed labor men as one of the problems involv- ed in the consideration of Philip Murray as Lewis' successor in the C. 1.0. presidency. Convention approval of a policy against foreign isms, it was report- ed, would go far to clear the way for Murray to accept a convention call to the presidency. As the session neared the busi- ness of electing officers, probably on Friday, it was sald that Murray had not wavered from his decision that he did not want the CI.O. presidency. Some of the large unions have been pressing him to agree to accept |the post, and expressing the opin- fon that if he does not, there wili be a scramble for the office. Hillman, a CIO. vice-president end a leading figure in the drive to put Murray in the presidency, | tossed the issue of foreign "isms" into the convention yesterday. He | described as "a menace to the labor | movement in this country elements | which received their orders from | "Rome, Berlin or Moscow." | Hillman declared that the "young | membership" of labor must be warned not to be misled by the | "fine speeches" of the elements he | was attacking. Lewis, who has declared in the | past that he had no sympathy for | Communists, labelled as a "lie" in jone of his convention speeches this | | week any charges that C.I.O. policy |was inspired or directed by adher- ents of Communism, Nazism or Fascism. ANTI-RACKETEER MOTION PROPOSED FOR AFL ADOPTION (Continued from Page 1) an official who is a member of the AF. of L. executive council and the resolutions committee. The executive council in its an- nual report condemned gangster- ism within unions but acknowledged: that the general body of the AF. of L. lacked constitutional author- |1ty to deal with the problem as it |arose In individual unions. The resolution, introduced by | Dubinsky and other members of his International Ladies' Garment Workers, called upon the conven- tion to vote the A F.L. constitu- tional authority to smash racketeer- ing within a union, "In view of the exectitive council report," the resolutions committee member said, "and in view of the resolution I believe the convention will take favorable action. "I do not know at this time, though, what form the resolution will have when it is presented on the convention flcor." The resolutions committee is ex- pected to begin making its report Monday. Dubinsky, philosophical about the future of his measure, said the A. F. of L. would adopt it "if not this year, then next year, or two years from now. But it will be adopted. The AFL. is always a couple of years slow, Tt will do it, though." Live Stock NEWS : . Market Reports | d | at $8; sows dressed, $4.50 to $525. Toronto, Nov. 20--Cattle--8,800, including 1,600 westerns Holdover from last week 700, medium to choice killers firm, others, very draggy with 2600 unsold from Tuesday; weighty steers, $6.50 - to $8.75; butchers, $550 tn $7.75: few tops, $8; cows, $3 to $5.50; bull, $4 to $5.60; fed calves, 8 to $8.50; stockers, slow, 25c lower, $4.50 to $7; few stock calves, to $7.50; goed' forward springers, strong around $95; other milkers and springers. slow. Calves -- 3,000; market steady, veal, $6 to $11; grassers, $5 to $5.50. Hogs--4,000; dressed sales, 60c to 65c lower, at $10.75; live, 50c lower, Lambs--6,000; martet strong at $9.50 to $9.75 for good ewes and wethers with one load at $9.90; heaviest bucks, $1 discount: culls, | mains tremendously popular. F ormer Bombay Premier Is Arrested In India Bombay, India, Nov. 21. (CP)-- Former prime minister Bal Gangad- har Kher of Bombay province was arrested today under Defence of India rules. (In Oct. 1939, while still head of the provincial government, Kher took a stand similar to that of Mohandas K. Ghandi, leader of In- dian Nationalists, by offering a resolution in the Bomkay state as- sembly calling on Britain to regard India as an "independent nation",) MOSQUITO TRAP? Decatur, Ill, Nov. 21--(AP)--Re- member the painting of 3 hunch of grapes which looked so natural the birds pecked at it? Wel', on exhibit at James Milliken University were several paintings, inzluding one called the "nude back." Art depart ment heads insist that they found two mosquitoes perched on the "back" feverishly borings away. FIRST THANKSGIVING Canton, O., Nov. 21--(AP)--Eigh- ty-five child refugees from Britain enjoyed their first Thanksgiving dinner last night. H. W. Hoover president of the Hoover Company, was host at the feast of turkey and trimmings. The refugees are chil dren of Hoover Company employees working in a subsidiaiy factory near London. TWO THANKSGIVINGS Omaha, .Neb., Nov. 21--(CP)-- Mrs. William Adams will go to work as usual in Council Bluifs, Ia. to- day. Her husband has a vacation for Nebraska's Thanksgiving, On Nov. 28, Adams will go to work while his wife celebrate; Iowa's holiday. CHRISTMAS NUMBER READY The Christmas edition of The War Cry, official publicaticn 'of the Sal- vation Army, is now ready for dis- tribution and members of the local corps will be calling on you soon. | a colored | The front cover carries picture of The Babe in the manger with the wise men looking on. In- side pages are printed in four colors | the | with a full-page picture of Army's fresh air camp at Jackson's Point done in full color. The back page, showing a lighted candle in a window, is most attractive. HOCKEY POPULAR In Montreal, the city ot profes sional hockey's birth, the bame re- Al- though Canadiens fini:hed last in 1939-40 complete reconstruction of the ancient cluh on a new-player basis with youth as its fundamen- tal, intrigued Montreal's hockey fandom to a point that at Cana- diens' opening game with Boston Bruins 3,000 or away. 4,000 were turned | PARK 30 SHOOTING IRONS Beattyville, Ky., Nov. 21 (AP).-- Judge Charles L. Seale, presiding over a murder trial, told members of the courtroom audience to check their shooting irons at the dgor. Sheriff's deputies collected 30 pis- tols. CHOPPED BUDGET TOO , Oakland, Calif, Nov. 21 (AP).~ Consulting her budget, Mrs. Jose- phine McCarty, 32, decided he could have a bigger Thankssivi Turkey is she bought a live one. Today she was shy a forefinger, She chopped it off along with the turkey's head. Fo ONES Me, a BOER VETS ENLISTED | London, Nov. 21 (CP).--Nobody knew two soldiers had heen veter- ans of 'the Boer War until Arthur Cranney, 68, gave evidence at the inquest of his 71-year-old friend, Hugh Cochran, kille¢ in a traffic accident. Cranp-- said they want- ed to do their bit and nobody sus- pected their ages because they could do their duty as wel las any- body else. On enlisting, they had given their ages as 53 and 54. NO NUDE! IN NAVY Louisville, Ky., Nov. 2!--(AP)-- When Radford Truitt, 19, tried to join the United States navy, offi- cials took one look at the tattooed figure of a nude woman on his arm and said "No". So Trvitt locked up an artist and had a hathing suit tattooed over the figure. He was accepted TOMB FOR SALF Mt. Airy, N.C., Nov 21--(CP)-- For sale: One deluxe steel vault and tomb. James Watson.80, is of~ fering his cemetery lot, 'omb and trimmings, all rrepared 10 years ago, to the highest bidder He's decided he wanted to be butied with relatives elsewhere. (Don't Be Mistaken | About Constipation! A great many ple, when the; are constipated, open the medi- cine closet, take a urgative, and try to forget--umtil the ailment returns. And generally it comes back -- more and more often-- until you find the cause. If, like most people, you eat bread, meat, potatoes--the cause of your ailment is probably lack of "bulk." And "bulk" does not mean quantity of food, but the kind of food that is incompletel: assimilated and leaves a soft mass in the bowels that helps the bowel movement, If that is the reason for your ailment, eat a good bowl of Kel- logg's crispy All-Bran for break- fast. It forms the necessary 'bulk', and contains Vitamin Bi, the natural intestinal tonic. Eat some All-Bran every day, drifk lots of water, and become + 1 in London, regular.' ade Canada, by Kellogg. At all gro- cers. , cl clole lod dF .V:T30 Jo] TRACTION IN THE "BAD ROAD' SFASON Stop spin and slip in snow or mud...ride safe and secure on GOOD YEARS THE GREATEST TRACTION TIRES EVER BUILT! @ Stop losing money because of delay in Beary ears s tthe' bad road" season of fall, winter and early spring. With these you can mud or snow! The three Good. own here were developed to years. drive on any road...in any weather. . . with confidence. STUDDED TIRES FOR CARS Goodyear Studded tires pull cars through going where ordinary tires would spin and bog down. They are a necessity to doctors, mail carriers, sales. Ser aud farmers for "'off-the-pavement" service. LUG TIRES for TRUCKS and Even heavy loads find safe sure When they ride on Goodyear Lug res. BUSES 2d The heavy, self-cleaning lug on! bite Jeep w= « give Maximum traction.' e tough, long-wearing tread rolls easil on hard roads. y \ 0 oy oy Wo a usiorirendn on ck . . « the shar; ed se studded : Sure-Grip pull trucks through soft mud' or snow with ease. STUDDED SURE-GRIP FOR LIGHT TRUCKS > ur light f-cleaning. cleats on the Goodyear Studded' Be a wise winter driver! Prepare for the' bad road" season now... car with the Goodyear that p your, suits your needs. . . it will sa: time, fuel and nerve strain, Drive in toils oy . ROSS & GREEN, LTD. RIDE, MORE TIRES THAN $7 to $8; sheep steady, $2 to $5.50. 135-137 King Street West -- Oshawa -- Phone 575-116 TONS ARE LAY VIN 2) ON ANY OT

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