Indian Daily Mail, 9 October 1946

Total Pages: 4
1 4 Indian Daily Mail
  • 16 1 Indian Daily Mail Vol. 11. No. 206. I) SINGAPORE, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1946 PRICE 10 CENTS
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  • 268 1 Fit I Consideration Of Draft Peace reaties Resumed Be iin Delegate's PJea On half Of Small States Is soviet Por^igi Minister yacheslav Moiotot the Inst time today when the plenary session of h rente resumed final consideration of the draft It was the earliest meeting
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  • 68 1 New Convention Regarding Defence Matters Own Correspondent) Oct B.— lt is learnt e( j uion hi being eslablishighly secret matters defence policy will be seel between the I the Interim Govtfencc Minister and "<»er-in-Chief before bcf«r« the full Cabi•»f fhis conventioh of the three was Vhru's residence i luutenuii that
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  • 237 1 PROTEST AGAINST MADRAS GOVTS. POLICY (From Our Own Correspondent) Madras, Oct. B.— The Congress Ministry's decision to prevent the expansion of the Mill Industry m the Province m order to give a fillip to their Khadi scheme has raised a storm of protest from all section
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  • 124 1 Gandhiji Hopeful Of League's Entry Into Cabinet (From Our Own Correspondent) New Delhi, Oct. B— Pandit Nehru and Mr. Jinnah met again yes- erday evening and continued di«•ussion on the terms for Leagur entry into the Cabinet. A reference to the progress or talks was made by Mahatma Gandhi m
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  • 97 1 SATYAGRAHA RAGES IN GOA (from Our Own Correspondent) New Delhi, Oct. B.— Despite the ruthless measures by the Portuguese Government, the people's struggle for civil liberties continues unabated m Goa. Satyagraha is m full swing. The application of economic pressure against Portuguese India n s a retaliatory measure against the
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  • 56 1 (From Our Own Correspondent) Madras, Oct. B— The Government of Madras have decided to introduce a Bill to prevent the dedication of women to Hindu dieties and temples. It will be recalled that a similar Bill was introduced m 1939 but before action could
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  • 146 1 (From Our Own Correspondent) Delhi, Oct. B.— Refuting the suggestion made by Mr. R. A. Butler at Blackpool Tory Conference that the Anglo-Indian community were keeping themselves aloof from other sections of the Indian people, Mr. Frank Anthony, Anglo-Indian Association President, releases the
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  • 32 1 Calcutta. Oct. 8. —Twenty-one Calcutta newspapers resumed publication today after a seven-day suspension In protest against the Bengal Government's restrictions news of communal distur- on the bances.— Reuter
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  • 56 1 Lahore, Oct. 7.— Angry women In some villages of the Punjab threw brickbats and cowdung at government officials who were tourng the area m connection wit a an exten"No rationing" placards were hung across doorways and huosewives refused to givs the names and number of
    Reuter  -  56 words
  • 89 1 Bombay, Oct. 7. —Six knife attacks m Bombay from sunrise to midnight —the smallest number of incidents for the week —were reported m tonight's communique The communique added: "The slight improvement m the general situation which was first noticed this morning had been more or leas
    Reuter  -  89 words
  • 139 1 PEACE BID AGAIN FAILS Nanking, Oct. 8. The latest bid to bring peace to war-torn China has failed. In a second public statement issued since they assumed joint responsiility to mediate between the Government and the Communists General Marshall and U.S. Ambassador Mr. Leighton stua.'i, disclosed this afternoon that Yenan
    Reuter  -  139 words
  • 116 1 Liverpool, Oct. 8.-Sir HeniV Thyhaan, retiring Governor of the Central Provinces who arrived at Liverpool today m the Franconia, told Reuter that he was not optimistic about an early settlement of the Indian problem "The aim of the Muslims and the Hindus are so divergent
    Reuter  -  116 words
  • 111 1 New Delhi, Oct. B_Dr. M. L. Atal was discussed today as the most likely Government Minister and possible ambassador to China. In his strong support of Pandit Nehru, Dr. Atal achieved a reputation with the Chiang regime when tie led the Indian Medical Mission into war
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  • 109 1 Nuremberg, Oct. 7.—Unimpeachable sources disclosed today that Hermann Ooering and the ten condemned Nazis will be executed" not before Oct. 16," inside the Palace of Justice compound. The 11 men will be hanged consecutively and, not simultaneously, the informant said. The Allied ControJ Council is
    U.P.  -  109 words
  • 18 1 London, Oct. 7.— C. R. W. Nevlnson, celebrated artist, died here today at the age of 57.- Reuter
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  • 139 1 All 20 Aboard Believed Dead Penang. Oct. B.— A Singapore bound R.A.F. York transport from Colombo, Ceylon, crashed m the Malacca Straits, 70 miles due south of Penang, on Sunday, and all aboard are believed to be dead. United Press learned reliably but unofficially today.
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  • 65 1 Lahore, Oct. 7— A newspaper has published a despatch from its Calcutta correspondent saying that he was m a position definitely to state that Subhas Chandra Bose was alive and was m India. Bose, according to this correspondent, had communicated with his family m Calcutta. Subhas Chandra Bose
    Reuter  -  65 words
  • 150 1 The Headquarters of the Air Command, South-East Asia, has issued the following Press Note:Wreckage from the R.A.F. York Passenger aircraft operating on a scheduled service from the U.K which crashed into the sea on Sunday afternoon, has been discovered north west of Penang by a Sunderland
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  • 75 1 London. Oct. B.— George Bernard Shaw famous playwright and philosopher and Socialist Councillor of the London borough of Saint Paneras from 1897 to 1903 becomes the first freeman of the bocough which saw so rnuoh of his earlier political crusading. Among other privileges accorded to those
    Reuter  -  75 words
  • 44 1 Batavia, Oct. 7.— Lord Killearn, the British Special Commissioner m South-east Asia, and Lady Killearn gave a dinner party tonight at Hotel des Indes here for the Dutch and Indonesian representatives taking part m the Batavia conference on Indonesia's future. Reuter.
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  • 46 1 London, Oct. 7. The latest recruit to the ranks of the British diplomatic service is blondr 28 years' old Miss Monica Milne who is the first woman to qualify for the foreign service under the new rec- ruitment scheme.- Reuter
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  • 37 1 Hongkong, Oct. 8. Members of British Trade Mission arrived this evening and were welcomed at the airport by a large group of Chinese and British officials including representatives of the Chinese Foreign Office and Economic Ministry. Reuter
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  • 127 1 Stuttgart, Oct. B.— German police arrested Dr. Hjalmar Bchachi Dn Monday night within one hoin after he had arrived here from Nuremberg. The arrest wa.s ordered by the Ministry of the state of Wucrttcmberg Baden. Schacht was confined m the Stuttgart police jail. The circumstances of the
    Reuter; AP  -  127 words
  • 82 1 INDIAN ARMY CLERKS CORPS TO BE DISBANDED New Delhi, Oct. 7.— The Indian Army Corps of Clerks (I.A C.Cj is to be disbanded on Mar. 31, 1947, it is officially announced. For the past 23 years the I.A.C.C has trained men for clerical work m the Indian Army. From April
    Reuter  -  82 words
  • 73 1 Batavia, Oct. B.— Dr. Sutan Sjahrir, the Indonesian Premier, told United Press tonight that the Republican Govern mem was prepared to jjraiit the Dutch major concessions and guarantees m exchange for the recognition of independence of Java and Sumatra. The Indonesians, l)r S.jahnr said, were definitely opposed to
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  • 80 1 London, Oct. B.— The Prime Minister, Mr. Attlee, m response to a question m the Commons today said that there was no decision to appoint a Royal Commission to investigate Britain's Press. "I am not yet m a pom tion to announce the government's intention on this subject," Mr. Attlee
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  • 46 1 Paris, Oct. B.— "Unity was the foundation of our victory and must be the foundation of our peace/ Ernest Bevin, British Foreign Minister, told a plenary session of the Paris Peace conference on Tuesday afternoon. V. M. Molotov, Russian Foreign Minister, was m the chair. AP
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  • 700 2 Indian Daily Mail Singapore, Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1946 Estate Staffs And Labour-III ANE of the main reasons for our opposition to a joint Union of Estate Staffs and Labour is, as we have mentioned yesterday, the utter divergence and non-identity of interests between the two. This argument requires further analysis
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  • 315 2 Frontier Gandhi On Wavell's Reaction To Declinina Power is "LEAGUE MISLEADING INNOCENT MUSLIMS IN THE NAME OF ISLAM" (From Our Own Correspondent) Peshawar, Oct. M. Reference to the Delhi parleys was made by Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan addressing a gathering of Mohmand tribesmen who had invited
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  • 195 2 Congress-League Settlement Taken For Granted (From Our Own Correspondent) New Delhi, Oct. 8. Political circles m Delhi take a settlement so much for granted that they arc already speculating about the personnel of the reshuffled Cabinet. The Muslim Leaguers desire that Mr. Jinnah should enter
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  • 137 2 Was.hington, Oct. 7. Officials on Monday expressed the belief that the U.S. main strategic interests will be served by the limited airbase agreement won from Iceland despite a Communist-led insistence that U.S. military personnel must goDiplomatic authorities are not too pleased with what they consider at least
    A.P.  -  137 words
  • 300 2 l.l\ MINISTER Lucknow. i Air Mail*— "lt is the duty of government, every civilised government, to take the most stringent steps to check and eradicate, root and branch, this evil of conniption and the I .l*. Government have taken all the steps which a government can
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  • 67 2 Bombay, Oct. 6.— The toll at Bombay by midnight rose to three dead and thirteen injured, although the situation was described officially as "slightly better.' Home Minister Morarji Desu; met 150 representatives of the Peace Committees to discuss mear^ of restoring order. Mr. Desai promised to
    UP  -  67 words
  • 116 2 Tokyo. Oct. 7. The Japanese House of Representatives this afternoon passed Constitution Revision Bill giving the country a new constitution. The Bill calls for sovereignly resting with the people, with the Emperor stripped most of his power prerogatives and estates,
    Reuter  -  116 words
  • 1518 2 SUB-COMMITTEE RECOMMENDS PARTICIPATION Participation by India m the proposed International Trade Conference so that she can take her full share m working out plans for the expansion of world trade and employment is recommended to the Government of India m a report submitted by the
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  • 657 3 l ATIUIN FOLLOWS CHURCHILL'S SPEECH ,n, Oct. 7. -On the we of Parliament's reopening on some Kritisn political f.bseivers are asking whether ,r Native opposition envisages the likelihood of a coalithe Labour Tarty at some future date. point to opposition loader Mr. Winston
    Reuter  -  657 words
  • 113 3 Philadelphia, Oct. 7. A lonely &rave m an unknown spot, unmarked by headstones, will be the final resting place for each of the eleven Nazi war criminals sentenced to death at Nuremberg, said Dr. Robert Kempner, who aided m their prosecution. He said the court
    A.P.  -  113 words
  • 156 3 Hamburg. Oct. 7. General Lucius D. Clay, deputy United States Military Governor m Berlin, stated today that trials of several hundred more war criminals would soon take place m Nuremberg, the British News Service m Germany reported today. The exact number of forthcoming trials would
    Reuter  -  156 words
  • 107 3 Washington, Oct. 7.— The U.S. Office of Technical Service on Monday reported that business m war secrets is booming. More than 200 queries are received daily by its reference service for technical Information contained m wartime secret industrial reports of Germany, the U.S. and other
    A.P.  -  107 words
  • 27 3 Rome, Oct. 3.—General Wladyslaw Anders, Polish commander, issued a statement challenging the right of the Polish Government to him and fellow officers of deprive Polish citizenship. Reuter
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  • 129 3 Washington. Oct. 7. In an effort to broaden U.S. intelligence activities to permit spying abroad were shaped today m the House Military Committee. Keeping a ciose check on foreign atomic energy developments would be one of the specific assignments of the contemplated espionage Full details of the
    A.P.  -  129 words
  • 133 3 Nuremberg, Oct. 7.— With only 10 more days to live, the 11 Nazis condemned to be hanged, spent a quiet Sunday reading and writing last letters to friends and families: Some of the 11 had special consultations with the prison cnaplain. Former diplomat, von Papen,
    A.P.  -  133 words
  • 74 3 A NTI ROYALIST DISTURBANCES IM BRUSSELS Brussels, Oct. 7.— Several .smai. disturbances look place m Brussels yesterday at the tomb of th« Unknown Soldier where the Burgomaster of Brussels was present ing a flag to the National Resistance Movement. Demonstrators, behoved to d<* anti-Royalists, who created the disturbances, were arrested
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  • 173 3 London. Oct. 7. Britain, acting as agent of the Allies, has sold to Siam 175 miles of the Hurma-Siam railway the portion which lies within the Siamese territory for £1,250,000, the Foreign Office spokesman said m London today. The Burma
    Reuter  -  173 words
  • 37 3 London, Oct. 7. The British Liner Committee, representative of British shipping lines, today recommended that visas be abolished and that simple identity cards be substituted for passnorts as a means of facilitating foreign travel.- —A.P.
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  • 56 3 Oxford, Massachusetts, Oct. 7. The entire population of this small industrial town are guinea pigs m a four-month experiment to check the spread of diabetes. There are 5,100 men, women and children. Officials of the U.S. Public Health Service said the whole community would be tested for
    A.P.  -  56 words
  • 304 3 Plea For "New Approach" To Russia Washington, Oct. 4. The recent unofficial demands for a "new approach*' to Russia have caused widespread speculation among Washington diplomats on these questions: (1) Is a revision of British foreign policy as it concerns relations with the United States and Russia m the offing?
    A.P.  -  304 words
  • 58 3 London, Oct. 7.— A street fight jroke out In the East end, London, )n Sunday night between members )f the Jewish Ex-Servicemen's \ssociation and the British League )f Ex-Servicemen and Women, but vas quickly quelled by police. Two irrests were made. The disturbance started during i
    A.P.  -  58 words
  • 333 3 SENATOR CONNALLY Paris, Oct. 7. With nine days left to complete the consideration of the draft treaties with five European ex-enemy satellites, the Paris Conference entered its last phase this atternoon when Mr. Ernest Bevin, British Foreign Secretary, presided over the plenary session considering
    Reuter  -  333 words
  • 97 3 Nuremberg, Oct. 7. Frau Emmy Goering rushed grim set to Nuremberg jail today for her first visit to ncr husband Hermann Goering since he was sentenced to die and her last before he hangs. Clutching tightly to a big handbag, she hurried through the doors
    UP  -  97 words
  • 72 3 GREECE WANTS CYPRUS BACK Athens. Oct. 7. -The Greek leftwing EAM. m statement today, declared that they would continue the fight for the return to Greece of Cyprus and eastern Thrace. They alleged that King George of the Hellene's action m keeping m power the government headed by Constantin Tsaldaris
    Reuter  -  72 words
  • 57 3 New York. Oct. 7. -Aviation experts representing eleven-member nations of the Provisional Internationa] civil Aeronautics organisation (PiCAOt, including i delegate from India and an observer from the Soviet Union, which is not a member, arrived on Monday aboard a Navy transport from England for three weeks' study of American aircraft
    A.P.  -  57 words
  • 25 3 London. Oct. 3. Two thousand six hundred troops of the "Seventh of December Division" left Amsterdam today by ship for Indonesia, Hilversum radio reported. Reuter
    Reuter  -  25 words
  • 51 3 Moscow, Oct. 7. Pravda today published a three-column letter from Austria charging that AngloSaxon "tourists'* were performing the same fifth-column role as the pre-war German "tourists' m Vienna. The letter identified the tourists as "representatives of the political, industrial and finance circles of Anglo-Saxon po\*ers.
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  • 45 3 Nuremberg, Oct. 7.— The Austrian Nazi, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, who was sentenced to death for his repression of the patriots' resistance In Holland as the Reichs Commissioner for the Lowlands, was unofficially reported to have appealed to Queen Wilhelmina asking for her support for clemency.— UP
    UP  -  45 words
  • 263 3 London, Oct. 7. Commenting today on Marshal Stalin's recent statement that he did not believe m a real danger of a "new war" Dr. Yuri Zhukov, foreign editor of the Pravda, quoted by Moscow Radio, wrote "Stalin's annwers have cut blackmailers at
    Reuter  -  263 words
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    • 6 3 Coming Soon! "ROTI" I *i g
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    • 58 3 ASTROLOGY. Your Future questions correctly answered by Sri Gayathri Upasam Pooja. Write any 5 questions, about your future with a name of a flower, and your age. Correct answers will be sent by next post. Send Rs. 5 by M.O. or by British Postal Order. Prof. R. Swaminalha Iyer, Astrologer,
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  • 559 4 DEMAND FOR WITHDRAWAL OF U.S. FORCES FROM CHINA REITERATED Representatives of 99 Chinese Associations, representing every class and section ot Chinese society m Selangor labourers, rickahaw pullers, tricycle pedlars hawkers, trade unions, clerks, shopkeepers, traders, merchants, youth unions, women's unions, mu&ical
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  • 651 4 GANDHI JAYANTHI CELEBRATIONS IN MALAYA MALACCA. An outstanding feature of this year's celebrations oi Gandhi Javanthi was a mile-long procession, m which more than a thousand persons, including former members oi i.N.A. and ttalak Sena, participated. The procession was very impressive and inspiring. Most of the
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  • 145 4 In exchange, India has to supply textiles, agricultural implements, eyelc tyros and tubes, cooking utensils and medicines needed by i >io Indonesian Republic. The Indian (■overnment will supply 20 million j ards of textiles, of which already fi\e Million yards are on the way to Indonesia
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  • 214 4 Senders of parcels posted m Malaya and addressed to Australia, Barbados, British Guiana, Eire, Falkland Islands, Gambia, Gold Coast, Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Grenada, Jamaica, Leeward Islands, New Zealand, St. ucia St. Vincent, Sierra Leone and Trinidad and Tobago may now undertake, at the time
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  • 145 4 JAVA RICE "EXCLUSIVE" TO INDIA SINGAPORE, Oct. 7— The 500,000 tons of rice offer to India by the Indonesian Republic wa* exclusive' and the question of a partial "temporary allocation from it to Malaya "does not arise at all. asserted Mr. K. L. Punjabi, Food Secretary of the Indian Government,
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  • 70 4 MUTINY COURT MARTIAL Five men, including Pte. Walker, all members ol the 13th Parachute Bn. f will be tried by Court Martial at Najeedee Barracks, (The Royai Scots), Johore Bahru, on Friday Oct. 11. The charge against them will be identical to the one brought forward at the
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  • 77 4 The Michaelmas Bar Examinations ot the Council ol Legal Education have been held this week m Kuala Lumpur. Delhi and Kuala Lumpur are the only centres m Asia for this examination. Thi* is the first occasion that the Bar Examinations have been
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  • 33 4 There will be a Public Lecture at the Singapore Theosophical Society to-morrow at 6.30 p.m. The subject is -Synthetic Religion of the Gita' by Mr. D. E. P. Lingwood.
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  • 216 4 G.0.C.-in-C's Farewell Message On Monday October 7, Lt.-Cien. Sir Frank Messervy, K.8.E., C.8., D.5.0.. G.ac.-itiC. Malaya Command, visited the Ist Battalion of the Malay Regiment, stationed m Kuala Lumpur, to say good-bye m person. The following is the English translation of the Special Order
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  • 35 4 The Director of Education, Singapore, has spent four days m Kuala Lumpur holding consultations with the Director of Education and Senior officials of tht Department of Education of thtMalayan Union.
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  • 178 4 The Health Office, Kuala Lumpur, m September alone accounted for .5. 10G rats m their drive to eradicate vermin menace. Traps are set up monthly m infested areas of the (own. These traps are usually set up m response to requests from owners of foodshops,
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  • 52 4 Malaya's allocation oi linseed oil from India for the year ending March 31, 1947, may be procured commercially. Applications lor Import licences iA.P. Forms) should be submitted to the Registrar of Imports and Exports, Singapore, by applicants who have firm offers from established shippers and crushers
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  • 35 4 A War Crimes Court has been sitting m Kuala Lumpur since yesterday. Two courts will be In session at Kota Bahru on Oct. 16, and In Kuala Lipis m the near future.
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  • 24 4 ADVISORY COUNCIL MEETING TO- DAY A meeting of the Singapore Advisory Council will be held tomorrow at the Municipal Council chamber, at 10 a.m.
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    • 269 4 "For Whom The Bell Tolls" SEASON OPENS AT THE CAPITOL One of the BIG THREE of screen masterpieces, Faramount's "For Whom The Bell Tolls," a technicolour adaptation of Ernest Hemingway's best-seller, featuring the famous stars, Gary Uooper and Ingrid Bergman, opens to-day ai the Capitol. There will be four shows
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    • 107 4 wanted an offio the Regional c Committee or Singapore An tions stating qi salary expected mv Hony. Secretary, iSingapore, on or before 1946. (gnfoD) PARAM'M Vj -s. "for mm niK I BELL TO U" h (m Techni< t EKNKST HKMIY AVv celebrated ek >i, I of War UH Rom n
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