The Singapore Free Press, 8 June 1946

Total Pages: 8
1 8 The Singapore Free Press
  • 20 1 The Singapore Free Press THE OLDEST NEWSPAPER IN SINGAPORE PRICE 10 CENTS. >S3. EIGHT PAGES SINGAPORE, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1946.
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  • 368 1 12 MILLION IN LONDON FOR V-DAY r. ti: ing: British idur to Washington. i home in the lju en M_r. t Southampton >_id M. EngtUi human na- nil thiill uhen I .vhitf tliffs of the 1 k t.f \\:,ht Ntandin? up t ning sea and 11 a\ uill farm in
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  • 41 1 Assistant Attorney-General Dan Duke yesterday charged that members of the recently revived Ku Klux Klan had flogged a 21--vear-old Negro Navy employee at the Atlanta Hotel. The youth had been given 52 lashes at gun point on Feb. 13.
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  • 1455 1 LONDON. Friday. A> npi in wm received in London today of a mass demonr»i -)0.000 Burmese marching: through Rangoon sfcoutin; We want complete independence, we do not want the Geternoi the possibilitv of early April instead June ■g the date of the Burma elections was
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  • 42 1 FREE PRESS 12 PAGES ON MONDAY WHIT Monday's i sue of the Singapore Free Press will consist of 12 pages, including spekal nages of pictures of the 2nd British Divisions Victory Parade in Johore Bahru and other pictures of Singapore's Victory celebrations.
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  • 75 1 BEYIN HAS PLAN FOR GERMANY RD IN Fri. Foreign j BevinJ Germany •d to ba*c Diplomatic plan would we k to the I for approval. provides fori of Germany's j d ny the j not to be a j proposal. It :or dis_uss on fundamental to the issue. the -.veiling
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  • 166 1 Free Press Reporter JOHORE BAHRU turned out in its Sunday test— the women wearing traditional colourful Malay ccstume this morning for the great parade by 2nd British Division honour of Victory and of he King's birthday next week. rv ei-ht o'clock this morning, a la?- crowd
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  • 71 1 JERUSALEM. Fri. A small schooner carrying 462 Jews, illegal immigrants, was intercepted GO to 70 miles south of Palestine today. The schooner was flying the Zionist colours when challenged by a British destroyer. The vessel ls expected to arrive at Haifa tomorrow under escort. The ship Is
    Reuter  -  71 words
  • 123 1 PARIF Fri. THE appointment of a four power commission which should fly to Benghazi and Tripoli, North Africa, within the next few days was unexpectedly pronosed by the British at this morning s meeting of the Deputes of the Big Four Foreign Ministers. The uiouoeil was
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  • 42 1 A drastic emergency decree, establishing summary courts empowered with the death penalty, was invoked yesterday as the; Royalist Government move to I crush disorder in Greece. Police and military personnel throughout Macedonia had been alerted to meet subversive activities.— A.P.
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  • 17 1 King Umberto II today left the Royal Palace incognito for the Vatican, says Reuter from Rome.
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  • 36 1 pictures. General Salute: Lieut -Gen. Sir Montagu Stopford. C-in-C \llied Land Forces, Commodore Friedberger of ILM.S. Terror, and Lady Killearn at 2nd Division's Victory Parade in Johore Bahru today- Army Film Unit
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  • 133 1 BOMBAY, Friday. TWENTY-FOUR hours after the Moslem League had given its support for the British Cabinet Mission's plan for independence for India the Indian princes, rulers of some 90,000,000 peoples, came out in favour of the plan today. The standing committee of the Chamber of
    Reuter  -  133 words
  • 58 1 COLOMBO, Fri. CEYLON S rice is to be reduced again from Monday following the failure of expected foodstuffs to arrive. An appeal has been made to the Secretaiy of State to divert food ships here and appeals have also been made to Ga»dhi to get India
    U.P.  -  58 words
  • 292 1 Col, wife steal £300,000 gems WASHINGTON, Friday. A U.S. Army colonel and his wife, a WAC captain, have confessed to the theft of Crown jewels of the House of Hesse, near Frankfurt, worth mone than £300,000, the War Department revealed today. The couple were arrested in the Hotel La Salle
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  • 150 1 WASHINGTON, Friday. CHESTER BOWLES, th e Office of Stabilization Administrator, disclosed today that he is discussing with the U.S. Agricultural Department the possibility of rationing wheat and flour. This followed on news of food shortages in this comparative land of plenty. First blackmarket dealings in bread
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  • 151 1 BATAVIA. Fri. POUR HUNDRED Chinese re- fugees f: the Indonesian "purge" who arrived at Batavia today from the V Baroe area, west of Batavia. said that 2.000 Chinese ••v i'ants had been completely surrounded by the Indonesians and alth* KB there had been no attack yet
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  • 24 1 It was reported in New Delhi (yesterday says U.P. that deaths '/from cholera reached the weekly [total of 5,400 In three provinces.
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  • Page 1 Advertisements

  • 26 2 ifcantitn d p-boies, most*> j 1 B-17s. of the I.S.A VF. res: I on thi *ri7ona desert at Old f Kirgman Held. j
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  • 927 2 Demobilization Has Paralysed The American Army WITH 6,584,000 of its men demobilized, the greatest military machine in American history has suffered shocking disintegration less than a year after its entrance into Berlin. Here is the story as told in the Amerrcan magazine Life. Fwas July of last year when the
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  • 73 2 DJG,H.J Lett: What the L'.S. Army has to man its 105 mm. guns is less than 51 per c eat. of the ni n requi—d. TiMESa men could I re the gun b»zt without i flic Iff j_ Ili-^lil: WJial the
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  • 88 2 Recently a man drove his automobile from London io the South African Cape fusing the sea onlv ■cross the Em-fish Channel and the Straits ol Gib] Cays and 22 HOWS. He travelled along the new African highway from Aleiers to Capetown, much of which was cons nut
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  • 164 2 HORSES, HUNTING AND DIPLOMATS Hitler's six hates 'TITLEP hated three things— i horses, Inuring and pro.es- j sional diplomats. These lesi publicized hatreds of the iu:': who also disliked both Jews and! i Communists, were revealed I the six-foot-three SS Standar- tenfuehrer and "No I di Gustev Adolf van Hal^m.
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  • 180 2 He Intends To Live 125 Years A WEBCBMAM thinks he the secret ct lo_v_ev* The man: 80-year-old phvsiJ-fogist Georges Knap, who h announced that he Int Ing to 125 and possibly 1:0 yean rhe secret: vegetarianism, no smokinf, an undisclosed system of massage. Knaps optimism is cased on his theory
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  • Page 2 Advertisements
    • 165 2 SYMPHON!ES..(in complete sets j By great matters CN H.M.V. RECORDINGS Bi-.V X iIOVLN'S No. 1 in C Mijor, Op 21 No. 2 in D Major. Cp 3G No. 3 in Eb M.jor. Cp. _5 No. 5 in C Mir or. O.x C7 No. 6 in P Majo-. Op. 63. No.
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  • Page 2 Miscellaneous
    • 848 2 SINGAPORE re, V._. 8 2 Pm.-12.20 >■»«, 5.30 pm. BAO LU parade, playUm?. 12. Noon Briglv and shin--.l^O-ll'-Wllla a.m GS!- 15)82 metres. 1050 p.m. All join in. G.30 p.m. News. Inf. 12.30 p.m Fil-n and th »a"e RED \EIUORR from noon to Dm.— 12.22 a.m GSN 25 38 16 45
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  • 204 3 DKI MMF-iS of the Scots Guards took part in the pageant \vh_< h was* pro lueeri by Lt Col. Douglas-Withers of Aldershot tattoo fame. iXv-*.'- *£wj§! THE "Drums" pageant was held at the Albert Hall, London, before a crowded au- 1 tlicnce v.hih included Princess
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  • 510 4 TODAY the Emp're and all the Allud nations except Stalin's Russ a and his puppets Poland and Vug .siavia honour the fighting forces of the Empire at t.ie g eat Victory Parad. in a L:n:Ion stiil show.ng some ot" th. 3 scars
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  • 679 4  - What's news to us isn't to the Russians EDDY GILMORE By Chief of the Associated Press Moscow Bureau BASIC c.i.cep'Jons cf a fre e Press are so different in Russia and the United States, it is difficult to see how any agreement can be reach< d on the question. The
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  • 246 4 STEEL KINGS FIGHT NEW PLAN CCHEMES for the reconstruction of the British iron and ste^l industry are "being frustrated and the £1G8,000.G00 seven-and-a- half year's overall plan *is imperilled by the shadow of nationalisation." This statement was made "by 1 Mr. Ellis Hunter, president of the Eritish Iron and Steel
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  • 176 4 Things To Come— In Aluminium MEW uses for aluminium wen shown in a recent display o goods in London. In contrast t< much of London's inevitable aftor-wnr dingmess. all wa.' silvery brightness at the exhibi ticn. The glass showcases were buil; in a framework of polished aluminium; the wide sweeping
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  • 95 4 A PRIVATE citizen will scon be, able to sue the Crown wifchout first having to address a "Petition of Ri«_ht" to the King Involving a^nitional expenditure and loss of time. This means that public departments and their servants, while (en duty, may be sued for
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  • 386 4 From Po W camp to V-Parade WHEN Major Stubbs of the F.M.S. Volunteer Force was trying to Ind his way to Sumatra in a sampan after escaping frcm Singa .ore he thought of many things. But the Victory Procession in London was not one of them. All branches of Malaya
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  • 206 4 ANOTHER stage in Great Bri- tarn's bid to win and hold a leading place on world air service has been marked bv the test flight of the prototype of the Avro Tudor n. the biggest landnlan^ airliner "vet built in the United Kingdom. Tudor lis
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  • 375 4 CONSERVATIVES recently celeb- rated the 64th anniversary. j ot the Primrose League at Gros- venor House. Wearing posies I picked from their own gardens 988 odd delegates— three quarters of them middle-aged women —packed the ballroom With exclamation of "Typical of the Government they showel they weren't
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  • 138 4 Empire Prefer ence 'Nibbled Down' DRITAIX, in accepting the U.S. loan, 1 •'nibble aown" Empire preference--, r Bureess' vice-chairman of New York's Bank, giving evidence .before the .H9ll* sentatives Banking Committee. Britain ha i said, not to disci iminaton nca i expense. Repulican c ford aslfed 1. cans would find
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  • 56 4 JIHYSICALLY 1 be trained ij tain to be ski ri A Ministry of I open to any mt ployed In the Manually present Inf is. nd an vards the cwfteh i pis There win he grants and :<x trainees and :<•• cation al Tra •emnlovprs wtl I
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  • 45 4 QUIT 1. What worked for 13 lompanv"' 2. What oeopu ft. lona whi miles away 3. Name Some:* latest book 0 4. Did J anpear with bis his crave was foui cently? 5. What Is thr London Zoo's new t>. What n tain's latest t
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  • Page 4 Advertisements
    • 56 4 CHILDREN'S NIGHT COUGHS STOP QUICK SWEET SLEEPS RETURNS. THREE-WAY BENEFIT ter Coughs. Colds. Sore Threats INFANT RELIEF! "MOUN-TAIIm" B-agi. PE PI RMINT M I ll TU R E si ppl:es ■■■mm i PER S.S. RHEXENOR a P. t*. YEE CO., 9 SEAH STREET P.O Bo\ tli'S. Phone 4962 Sub- Agents
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    • 13 4 fait:* The simpl? I vord: but te r look th well > PfOV«l I
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  • 466 5 SEARCHCH IN MALAYA FOR MOSSING B-29 CREW War Crimes Evidence r>P'.M Iree1 ree Press Re POTi«* fKUfll village headmen, pudi planters, police constables and youths who were forced by the Japanese o form armed search parties after American bombing raids during the occupation, information is being sought >n Malaya concerning
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  • 75 5 DEATH FORHAVING ARMS II I :t iF-li. I i-i. r- ncea went day in tin n Lt. Col md Jan A and Pow A: a charge i tied on j ./.eluding ned a Krian d:s- e robbed Soo, $2,5 .1 2 na the trial three q were found bl rv
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  • 246 5 War Trial Allegation ACCUSED of being concerned in the death of an American flier who \v:;s said to have been "disposed of" by novocain, injected into his jugular veni, three Jap army doc'.ors and a Kempeitai capt;.in appeared in the Singapore War Crimes C\;urt yesterday.
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  • 56 5 100.000 TONS OF RICE THIS MONTH lb a LUS| of Lt. I f >\. R.NVK. of D-SfSCt, and Miss i «>i Ui:n_lcQon, last plate at it. Gem sir i rey, GC.C, iii.uul. i-uited the I r ntion at i in I'nit pic ores Wai j i t> outside 1 alter
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  • 105 5 Adm. Fraser Ill With Food Poison HONG KONG. Fri. PRINCIPAL Government official and staff officers of the British Pacific Fleet. Including the Coinmander-in-Chlef Adm. Sir Bruce Fraser were stricken with :ood poisoning at the farewell luncheon at Government House yesterday in honour of the retiring C-in-C. necessitatm-, a postponement oi
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  • 314 5 CHETTUR TO TOUR N.E.I. MR S K. Chettur. Indian Government representative I for Malaya, has been deputed by Mi Government to go on a 'special mission to Sumatra, Java, I British North Borneo, Sarawak !and Hong Kong to report on the conditions of Indian nationals in those countries. He expects
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  • 189 5 IHE Chinese community in Singapore is making a determined effort to help to bring to book the Japanese responsible for February 1942 massacres in Singapore; Following meetings at the Chinese Chamber cf Commerce, it has been decided to open up offices in various parts of
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  • 77 5 The governor of the Malayan Union, Sir Edward Gent, sent a menage cf greetings to the Malayan contingent taking part in the victory parade in London today. Some of the parti, ipants in the parade are seen above Sir Edwards message reads: "Ou behalf of the people
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  • 352 5 SALUTE TO THE PEOPLE OF MALAYA Free Press Carre ponient PEXAXG, Friday. The Go\ernor-G*nera-. Mr. Male tim 31acl>_nald, in a Victory Day mess-age says: 'The Virion' Diy is an o :a--sian for public reoicin^ al the overthrew cf tyranny :::.d liberation of frceJom-tovhg proyls al! ran d t > c
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  • 152 5 OpeningSpeech —In Smoke THE American prosecuting cfli- cer in the Si.xih Singapore j War Crimes Court yesterday. Lt. William P. Tompkins, made onc of the shortest opening addresser heard in this court. He told the court why. 4 *l nut npolo°:sc for this extempore opening," he said, 'all mv notes
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  • Page 5 Advertisements
    • 94 5 MOST GLAMOROUS and MOST PICTURESQUE THE WORLD CLASSIC GAINS GREATER GLORY The BAGDAD!. .Desert Port of Allurement'. The grace mure*me*%& CH,^' LRY MARIA £ksj*jf d*2o*£§'& JCN MONTEZ i^^f/lffl&iC**' %A HALL t Kh _Bf_^_VfTi\ The W^^mo^^hl The ine we ;.mISW& '^m w*^w *V^ ioymty Jm f«i33r /vT O s LOYALTY W
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  • 431 6 'FIT FOR SERVICE, FIT FOR PENSION' QUESTIONS WESTMINSTER. THOMAS MacPHERSON (Romford) raised the question of ex-Servicemen's pensions on the basis of "Fit for -service, fit for pension" in the Commons recently. Until that commonsense principle is accepted," he said, "ex-Servicemen will not be satisfied that they are getting a square
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  • 23 6 S nione Simon, famcus French I Im star, has gone to London to make a new film "Temptation Harbour."
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  • 178 6 THE findings and sentences are j announced of the summarv general court martial on 15 Onr- kha other ranks, who were arrested in connection with thc incidents which occurred at th? Pth Gurkha Rifles Regimenta! Centre, Dehra Dun. in March IK6. Twelve of the accused were found
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  • 233 6 EVERY DAY fcr three weeks, a two-ton Army lorry set down about 100 five-gallon drums of paint, varnish and distemper in a gravel pit outside Chichester. Then a bulldozer squashed this lot into the pit. The total loss has been valued i bv an expert
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  • 99 6 THOUSANDS of pounds changed hands recently at a sale nt SVhchj's. London of armour and weapons mostly from the collection of the lat? Harun C. V de Crsson. Highest pricrs were realised by t.vo fif.cnth century helmets. One of Ihrm, a French headpic.c, described as
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  • 25 6 Naval rr.tings are to be lent to the Eircann Maritime Service to assist Irish sailors take over three corvettes bought by Eire.
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  • 124 6 YORK. THURS. lAX ex-soldier's claim that a voluntary allotment made to his wife to be saved until they could furnish a home was still his monev was upheld In the York County Court yesterday. Judge Omerod gave judgment for £94 with costs in favour of tiie
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  • 148 6 THEATRICAL SCHOOL FOR S'PORE WITHIN the next few weeks South East Asia 1 will finally say goodbye to ENSA. A new organisation is being formed, known as "Combined Services Entertainment." which offers scope for Servicemen and women who have leanings toward* the stage or music. A Production Centre is now
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  • 117 6 IndianForces— 600,000 '0ut' NEARLY 91,000 men and women were released from the Indian Armed Services during April 1946. The total number released from the Services is now 590,071. Of the figures for April releases 2.147 were accounted for by the Royal Indian Navy 88.026 by the Indian Army and 79G
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  • 147 6 THE taking over of -duties by a depleted week-end Staff at Northallerton military detention camp on a Saturday afternoon was followed by an outbreak in "A" block— where a staff of eight was looking after 113 mealed by "defiant and ruthless men." This was the story told
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  • 404 6 War Service and Indian Forces LONDON, f r TWO new medals were announced in th c Hoiw if ..mi^ today by Prime Minister Attlee. He also announced revision of the qualifying period for the Can s Mr. Attlee said the first new medal is i. time
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  • 26 6 With thi 1,000 riates who w a Poland aboard 'Sobieski," the veterans returned 1 ed Kingdom is 22 r A P. from Gg
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  • Page 6 Advertisements
    • 114 6 VICTORY THE BIGGEST VICTORY OF ALL GOES TO DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS, Jr. The Murder of His Parents and the Killing of hi> T«m Brother have been avenged by the Killing of His Torrnentor, (OLOXNA. 2- EE. CAPITOL ACCLAIMED BY LAST MGHT* OPENING CROWDS AS THE HOST THRILLING STOR Y FA ER
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  • Page 6 Miscellaneous

  • 419 7 EPSOM, Fri. J liutt's Steady Aim by Feist ead out of ow, starting af 7-1 and ridden by Harry i lhc Oaks tbis afternoon by three lengths cherry's lona by Hyperion out of Jiffy i 2-1 favourite with Major Holliday's \earco cut of Springtime, starting
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  • 98 7 PIG BOXING MAY SHIFT TO LONDON .1 become the boxing conthe MaurielloOrabaa se of this I abmt Madison Ig night. I turned v- i Yorkers M Jacobs d d the all seats Sl b.ins pts- t: 25.000 t: ir.es of ht in abort all browLonal L Ngpr rary I bv
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  • 583 7 OLD BRIDGE SHOW THEIR PACES AT OVAL THE young gentlemen of Old England, age 606 (735 if you add umpires Hobbs and Strudwick>, turned back the history pages and gave the biggest cricket crowd oi thc season (15,000) a rich feast af the Oval on May 23, writes L. V.
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  • Article, Illustration
    48 7 ihe "tild Bngland M erieket Jean takes the fiel against Surrey at the Oval on May 23 In the picture, left to light, are: A San- ham. V Ilenhen, A. P. Free ?an. M. W. Tate, ML J. C. Allom and P. G. ll. lender (Captain).
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  • 86 7 TOMORROWS Charity soccer match between the 2nd Division (Crosskeys) and Chinese Athletic Association wi.'l he held under the patronage Mr. P. A. B. McKerron Colonial Secretary, Singapore. The camp will be played at Jalan Besar Stadium: kick-off at 5.15 p.m. TE IMS 2nd Division (Cross'ieys) Henderson: Reach.
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  • 86 7 KANSAS CITY. rhurs.— Frank Parker, who captains thc U.S. Davis Cup team agi inst the Philippines at St. Louis on June 14. sr d his wife Audrey Ls with him helping him to develop more power in his serves and returns. Parker savs his wife guided him
    A.P.  -  86 words
  • 41 7 SFATTLE. Tues:— A. L. Hostak. H6B lbs>. twice holder of the National Boxing Association Middleweight champion .hip. launched Wa postwar comeback with a four round knock-out of Roman Starr, (161 lbs), of Oklahoma in a scheduled ten-round bout.- A.P.
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  • 357 7 LANCS TAKE BIG LEAD IN TABLE County Cricket LONDON. Fri l ANCASKIRE takes a clear 12- point lead with 53 points as j a result of three Coun.y championship matches concluded to- j day, neither Middlesex nor Yorkshire who previously shared th? lead, having a champienship game. I Once ae:ain
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  • 43 7 Last night's boxing results at the Happy World were: Dennis Collins outnointed Eab" Eaule: jack Campbell outnointed Bob McKinlay: Smiling Castello outpointed Kid Carpentier. who was substituting for Pa^dy Tyrelli: .Tabbar bin .Taffar oat- pointed Oliveiro: Little Loone outpointed Bernal.
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  • 383 7 The Singapore Rifle Association has been revived with the Governor, Mr. F. C. Gimson, as i Patron, and the first sheet under its direction will be held at I Bukit Timah range on June 30. I Major-Gen. L. H. Cox, J.0.C., 'Singapore District, has been elected
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  • 93 7 PATTERSON AND MEDINA BEATEN MfllT, Northern trclan t'tL JAt KIE Patte son, Glasgow, world fl>*wet-;ht eha__.r>ion, uas b at-n b> Rirty Mima ;han of Northern Ireland in Belfast today. Patterson retired at th*s ♦•nd «f the seventh round •with a ut over the <>v' Theo Medina, trench Hy and bantam
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  • Page 7 Advertisements
    • 89 7 ODEON CABAEET NKW UORLD PARK VICTORY BALL Special Attraction (NANKING NIGHTS !..>w B* \-«\> arrived N_ inu Gitls. 9GNOUJLU NIGHTS Mt la Dances By Native Huwainn iMMN BIRTHDAY EXTENSION TILL 1 a.m. I« lun 3 ..n-6 pm every Sund-% from M« On ■*«-3W i— l <z~ i hsoari wrestling Greet
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    • 248 7 BOUSTEf\3&Co. v L .d. TEL 5161-2 LLOYDS Mam GLE:J LINE Gl-ncgl_ LojU for IK in Jay \e!e_s from I K Mid June P»issen?;ers ind cars© aer.-p.ed la L'.K Hon^Lnr.. and Sh-ru^a* as opportunities oflfer BURIIS PHILP LIME Saiinrs 'or Sydney Carry n< pasiMTt^prs ar»d oarer First Class are £1.0 sir
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  • Article, Illustration
    19 8 __n atrial view of London, showing the Mall (lower left) along w hieh today's V-Parade will take place.
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  • 374 8 'UNRRA GOODS IN CHINA'S POLITICS' NANKING, Friday. EVIDENCE of the use of UNRRA relief supplies as a political weapon in China's civil war was uncovered in Yzng chow, 25 miles north of Nanking, writes William Newton, a Scripps Howard writer. He says that despite repeated assurances that there would be
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  • 36 8 The Russians liave wit' drawn between 30,000 and 43,000 troops from Austria and will have their occupation forces down to ap_ proximately 60,000 by July, a reliable Austrian source said yes- terday, says A.P.
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  • 74 8 A s^c-l^l isiue of peace stamps will be on sale throughout Britain on Tuesday June 11, rays Reuter from London. Two hundred and forty million two pence and half penny and 24 million three pence stamps have been issued and no further supnlies will be printed. The flnal designs
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  • 45 8 Nos Sul resaf. meh., 9 fe gynhelir Cymanfa Ganu yn Eglwys Sant Andreas. Cafwyd benthyg yr Eglwys at yr achlysiu drwy garedigrwydd Y ueon Erfynir am eieh prese^oltw *i mwyn gwneud y Gvnania r llwyddiant Dechreuir yn Dryxuun am 7.30 ol glock.
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  • 137 8 BUENOS AIRES, Fri. THE President of Argentina, General Juan Domirgc Peron, cordially embraced thc Soviet Union's chief delegate her e after the Argentine Foreign Minister, Doctor Juan Briamuglia, had announced that the Soviet Union and Argentina had decided to establish diplomatic relations. The announcement, came two
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  • Page 8 Advertisements
    • 119 8 YOU C*N RELY ON THE I r^f^m VW^ TODAY AND TOMORROW A I J\l I 1 I* J I iLfrtlil MONDAY fti|| l_tflT'il Er^-Vs^ shows 10 m.—l i— 30— j m LJ l^ m^ L 9.30 p.m. FOP VOUR WEEKEND ENTERTAINMENT w *!\:d collect your tickets early EfM i 2/ZZ/71
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    • 217 8 ENTERTAINMENTS r@SSow^ '^j^jp^ P.osiiively a«.t 2 Day, YOL Vfc MP* VIIXH TIME TO HlKi: YOL'VE WAGGON'S TO Till STXR-___a__________MM^H**_____H_-____fl ____________^____________ofl^V ________________P^r _1 TONIG HT A* f~ M IDNIGH:^ So Amazing So Ui JT err nt i_. Lr>ut iM|KJUii_i_3l jl hwer arl S3 r =^-^_-_E-^^ Genco: tihib»»iofi. TOMORROW AT MIDNIGHT It's
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