The Singapore Free Press, 26 November 1951
1951-11-26
1
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The Singapore Free Press
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Title Section18 1951-11-26 1 The Singapore Free Press LARGEST AFTERNOON SALE IN MALAYA V)- SINGAPORE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1951. PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS.18 words
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Article342 1951-11-26 1 made after evacuation completed ISMAILIA, Monday. TERRORIST hurled a bomb at a Royal Air Force headquarters building in Ismailia last night and narrowly missed killing the R.A.F. commander in Ismailia as the British quit their last offices in the Suez Canal town. It was not clearReuter; AP - 342 words
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Article79 1951-11-26 1 Attack BUTLER SEEKS U.S. AID ROME, Moa -raPTS Cri ellor Kv,; Ex Mr!X Ba-ler will see Mr. r„:: er.U-S Secre;r rreasury, V s help for r thai l waiv--3.:- f :•> 1949 T British n Burier- ns are B: se ner ~V-' >- she Twise. liably ■J-"- Lc: G iAP; AFP - 79 words
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Article43 1951-11-26 1 ;a::::a Ma> a. Mon. p Maltese Opposition La- Part: urge the ask Bri•*B, ai the We of Malta be consulted, 1 decide Pwr the island should flier. anded jr 1 Varies of th >se of! ivS ",1 and AFPAFP - 43 words
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Article46 1951-11-26 1 mcSn*^ eran was sue Sx md over i^s:j year by a rl.-'--- else's car SVjr. weej£end tHVo ec 5 ate d a:ior of j.;;;V Cossack w Cum- described by f a s one who ?r< a '--d *.v:ir rethe :a=r six years.46 words
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Article83 1951-11-26 1 PARIS, Mon. OOUNDS like a succession u of rifle bolts being thrown home were heard in the United Nations Chamber on Saturray The Soviet Foreigk Minister, Mr. Andrei Vjshinsky, froze in his chair and stopped talking. Bodyguards moved forward to cover him while U.N.AP - 83 words
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Article49 1951-11-26 1 French Union forces re-, pulsed an attack by Vietminh guerillas near Choben in southwest Hanoi killing about 100. during the weekend. French fighter bombers bombed and strafed guerilla supply lines around the 1.500 kilometre bulge which was added to the Frenchheld Tonkin delta two weeks ago- ReuterReuter - 49 words
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Article16 1951-11-26 1 Neon signs and advertisements have been barred around Italy's famed tourist resorts APAP - 16 words
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Article32 1951-11-26 1 The Syria President yesterday asked Abdul Baki Nizamiddin, leader of the Parliamentary Republican group, to form a new cabinet, in a fourth attempt to solve Syria's 17-year-old ministerial cpisis ReuterReuter - 32 words
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Article28 1951-11-26 1 Two people were killed and 26 hurt— one' seriously— in a head-on collision between an express train and another passenger train near Woodstock, Albania, yesterday. ReuterReuter - 28 words
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Article257 1951-11-26 1 AUSTRALIA: 'NO OPEN DOOR' MELBOURNE, Mon. THE Immigration Min- ister, Mr. Harold Holt, said yesterday that Australia would continue to "keep the door shut" to coloured, peoples. He was replying to a Sydney statement o n Saturday by the Earl of Hardwicke a member of the House "of Lords, whoU.P. - 257 words
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Article, Illustration124 1951-11-26 1 KUALA LUMPUR, Mon. AT TOTAL curfew has been imposed in the Batu Gajah area of Perak until midnight today. The curfew covers an area west of the Papan to Siputeh road. The main road and the wired-in portions of Papan. Rusing -and Siputeh towns and GunongA.P. - 124 words
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Article199 1951-11-26 1 NANCY, Monday. THE Congress of the Rally of the French People (Gaullists) has decided to instruct its 121 deputies in Parliament to vote against ratification of the European Army plan. Six nations are seeking to form the army as an Integral riirt of the Atlantic PactReuter - 199 words
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Article251 1951-11-26 1 Mossadeq weeps and wins TEHERAN, Monday. pERSIAN Premier, Dr. Mohammed Mossadeq last night won an overwhelming vote of confidence in the Majlis (Lower House) and promised excited deputies: "I will start really free elections tomorrow." He got the confidence vote after tumultuous scenes When he lost his temper, banged hisReuter - 251 words
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146 1951-11-26 1 LONDON. Mon. SUCCESS in school examinations is no guide to a child's honesty. Dr. E. A. Seeley, head of the Pure Science Department of the Bournemouth Municipal College, said. "When I was at school the boys most inclined to cheat were notReuter - 146 words
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Article47 1951-11-26 1 The search for an American C-47, plane, missing since last Monday on a flight from Germany to Belgrade, was virtually abandoned yesterday. The missing plane, carrying four US. airmen, disappeared after it had reportedly been fired on by Hungarian and Rumanian border guards. U.P.U.P. - 47 words
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Article29 1951-11-26 1 Seventeen people were known to have been killed and 380 others injured in an earthquake which rocked Formosa in the early hours of yesterday morning. AFPAFP - 29 words
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Article80 1951-11-26 1 BOMBAY, Mon. EIGHT people, Including six rjolicemen,' were wounded in Bombay yesterday when a 3,000-strong^ Socialist-led procession was "attacked with acid, bulbs and brickbats i Bombay police fired 16 rounds at a riotous crowd in the city's mill area resulting in one person being woundedReuter - 80 words
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Article, Illustration39 1951-11-26 1 picture. The Singapore Police Force are carrying out a recruiting drive by setting up cen- tres to accept new men. Picture shows an officer taking particulars from a recruit at the Chinese Chamber of Commerce this morning. Free PressFree Press - 39 words
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Article98 1951-11-26 1 TOKYO, Mon. A CANADIAN machinegunner on Saturday night cut down "the woman in black" as she led a savage Communist attack on a United Nations position west of Yonchon. Her body, in black uniform with no insignia of rank, was still lying in theReuter - 98 words
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Article21 1951-11-26 1 Five railwaymen were killed near Boise Idaho, yesterday, .when two goods trains of "Union Pacific" collided. AFPAFP - 21 words
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281 1951-11-26 1 Russian charges nonsense, says U.S. WASHINGTON, Mon. A STATE Department official described as "nonsense'* charges in a Russian note protesting against the suggested Middle East Command delivered on Saturday night to representatives of the United States. Britain, France and Turkey. The noie said Russia "cannot overlook these new aggressive plans'*Reuter; AFP - 281 words
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Article60 1951-11-26 1 Stinks bomb rotten «'j(gs and protest leaflets were scattered in the Filmsbuchne cinema in West Berlin yesterday during the first public showing of the controversial German anti-Communist picture "Crossroads of Freedom." The 30-minu*;e showing ended with the exits wide open to let out the foul odourReuter - 60 words
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Advertisement14 1951-11-26 1 L c de SILVA, I* Tel. ***** f 7 hllllMll I: s& beer .114 words
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Advertisement75 1951-11-26 1 fffjgft^!£ja^^^P|^BaaSJLjjlSSs^^^^^^asjSMs^M ii l "l UaJ^ ?^Tt| SINGAPORE, 1 fer 9 u^saZK %9k%rm R^P Yful TWIN SPEAKER S^ 1 1 \\rP<o Jp once ore combmed *o moke this Overv*a* y^ J V-£ViW# -Sj/l bondspread 'ecctvpr one o* t^e most „S^ r^-S* v s^wJl, Outstanding ovoilable todOy. r Singapore price 5320 Federal*,75 words
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Article, Illustration624 1951-11-26 2 Donald MacCormick - Donald MacCormick 1 Lessens to be learned from Royal Tour I By AFTER only a few "weeks' rest Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh will be off on their travels again, blazing a trail of goodwill from London to East, Africa, to Ceylon,624 words
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Article, Illustration674 1951-11-26 2 DAVID WONG, WHO WORKED IN SINGAPORE, WRITES FOR A U.S. UNIVERSITY NEWSPAPER A FORMER Singapore resident, David Wong, entered Stanford University near San Francisco, California, in the autumn of 1949— one month after he arrived in the United States from Hong Kong. In his674 words
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984 1951-11-26 2 No 'drink, no sickness no poverty Bernarr Macfadden made millions out of his resolutions, says Harvey Day AN unshaven, barefoot, sweating man with a mass of unruly hair stood on a vast, carefully tended lawn, looking up at a mansion on the fringe of the coast. He had seen the984 words
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Advertisement103 1951-11-26 2 ilf you want a good diary, for your pocket or for your desk, for a man or for a woman, go to your stationer or bookseller and look for this name T. J. J. SMITH They have been famous for their diaries for over a hundred years. Donald Moore, Oldham103 words
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Advertisement76 1951-11-26 2 «tfD I ,iftti o>*^ lS ed ra^^^* 0 b^ ,<& JfcsSr*flPrtTsW Available at all /eorfino stores: Humanised TRUFOOD MOST LIKE MOTHER'S MILK Singapore avd Federation $2 (l t* ARents: THE FEDERAL DISPENSARY W tIOCOOOOR'TCD OH OtO« •**><>■ 0» I ESTABLISHED tiNGAPORE. ■'*"<■ tWt" f Iff i ii Manufactured by LJ76 words
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Page 2 Miscellaneous
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Miscellaneous12 1951-11-26 2 SBSSSiftSSSSataTMBMHH.SBaMMByrSSfta.% rer-atasEsaßjA sfltf yfsssw^ mmm^ammmmmmmmmwmwmmmmmmmm^mm Hew many more of yen are cx-M.P.J12 words
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Miscellaneous143 1951-11-26 2 New Crossword No. 519 BsSBHHi! jssasjsj ■nmi SaWSaW »a»»»»»»»»WaSai ssn t»»»»Ta»»»»»»j JiiZiZiJir mmmmm I 1.l I 1 I I I *JUIU]UI ACROSS 1. Scents do I find compounded here (9); 6. The three little maids of The Mikado are (6, 5); 8. Scotsman's brief day (3): 10 Whence toe barge143 words
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Miscellaneous266 1951-11-26 2 YOUR LUCKY STAR BORN today, your exceptionally strong will power and your innate love of justice are two traits that will dominate your life. Your mind appears to have almost complete control over your emotions. Once you decide to do something, it eould almost be said to have been accomplished!266 words
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Article, Illustration208 1951-11-26 3 ffie operation takes four m J to six hours SAN FRANCISCO, Monday. rfstfEONS now can take out a person's Sf rich and instal an artificial one in a /I operation. Three such operations were rbd I)r menck Szilagyi, Dr. Thomas A ConneH Jr., and Dr.A.P. - 208 words
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Article116 1951-11-26 3 Headless, but he speaks NEWCASTLE, Australia, Monday. £JREW members of the Norwegian ship "Templar" claim the ghost of a headless Nazi soldier walks the decks at night. They said the uniformed ghost has been seen in the sick bay and forecastle*. It speaks toU.P. - 116 words
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Article19 1951-11-26 3 n ive P< Florida j s igation ia i thai -hey kUJ i 51-v Np«rra i ReuterReuter - 19 words
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Article15 1951-11-26 3 fa .1 ?6 J I S J fixed Bffl- with In- ReuterReuter - 15 words
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Article27 1951-11-26 3 A French plane left Casablanca for Milan with two tons of food. clothing and medicine for Italian flood victims from Italian residents in Morocco. A.P.A.P. - 27 words
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Article28 1951-11-26 3 lOWA. Mon. RLV. G. M. Ottsen. working on a Sunday sermon entitled "Stop Thief** glanced down and found USS4O missing; from his desk drawer.— U.P.U.P. - 28 words
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Article110 1951-11-26 3 HONG KONG, Mon. THE first thing most people did in Hong Kong when they awoke on Saturday morning was sneeze! The temperature dropped almost 17 degrees overnight. At midnight on Friday, the temperature was 70.9 Fahrenheit. At six on Saturday morning, it was aA.P. - 110 words
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Article19 1951-11-26 3 Australia has to buy some military clothing from Japan because little is available from other sources.19 words
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Article50 1951-11-26 3 New York will next week stage its first surprise atomic air raid test involving all people in its 299 squaremile area The air raid warning signal will send nearly 8,000,000 people into shelters and paralyze motor and ferry boat traffic in the city's area. U.P.U.P. - 50 words
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Article, Illustration295 1951-11-26 3 Neither side vulnerable. East dealer. HERE is mother hand from the final session of the National Masters Pair Championship, it was played at 36 tables— the -biggest field ever to enter the event. When a hand of this kind is played at so many tables, of course there295 words
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Article67 1951-11-26 3 RED CROSS AID FOR PRISONERS Arrangements have been made for relief supplies to be sent to Commonwealth prisoners of war in North Korean hands if cease-fire negotiations mature. Last May the British Red Cross arranged for food parcels to be prepared by the Hong Kong branch of the Society andReuter - 67 words
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Article93 1951-11-26 3 Flowers to brighten up prisons LONDON, Mon TULIPS and daffodils will bring colour to the grey walls of 54 British prisons next spring. Eleven thousand bulbs have so far been distributed by the National Gardens Guild to prisons where convicts are already busy planning out displays. The object is to93 words
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Article, Illustration53 1951-11-26 3 picture. The first dress rehearsal of the Christmas pantomime "Puss In Boots" was held recently in the Empress Hall, Earl's Court, London. Picture shows a perfect stage leap by Vera Masakova of Prague. She is a member of the CornsPopper - 53 words
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Article152 1951-11-26 3 Woman refuses to pay fine GRANTS, New Mexico, Monday. A YOUNG Chicago mother faced the prospect of ar. term in a county gaol and temporary loss of her two children for refusal to pay a $25 traffic line Mrs. Deirdre Jerger, 21, blonde and attractive, andU.P. - 152 words
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Article67 1951-11-26 3 SAN FRANCISCO. Mon. A 60-year -old widow, a picture of health and happiness, walked out of the hospital and back into useful life yesterday just 16 days after being pronounced dead from attempted suicide. Doctors who doubted she would be anything more than a "living vegetable"U.P. - 67 words
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Advertisement146 1951-11-26 3 IMDEfTsf^DV Is^^^^^tw UIKEViIUKT •^SSjfjl^^ s^lysw. *^*&r* s^*^<^ '?A^i§v -5" ail Wultlm W A. a^aa^^^^aai '^^jjfcvk^"Sl^^ B^tm tl '^F^^^^^mmm/ *4 CLASSIFIED OlßtCJOß}r^^t^^^^^^^/ /W/ x X^y M^wZil™ Zcld' STREETS AND ROADS ......sM.e K.niDt Streets and Roads in A UNIQUE FEATURE— 10 SECTIONS ot detailed Singapore. Koala Lom-Quick-reference Com- information covering ap- par146 words
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Page 3 Miscellaneous
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Miscellaneous253 1951-11-26 3 R^dio sue j ore InterEmergency 1.00 Ptn.i Home On rae schoo.s.! 7 i V a- ires In| cents 7.00 7.13 Elec-i 3 Parauft w* ime Signal ami Call; 10.15 r Back bc Damn. |IC SINGAPORE h Oi Tnese i-aa* i hymns their. [leva a slysis; t>.4o parade; 6. J From253 words
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515 1951-11-26 4 The Singapore Free Press MONDAY. Nov. 26. 1951. Future in Korea CEASE FIRE before Christmas. That is the prospect offered by the better news from Korea,, where for nearly six months the delegates have wrangled fruitlessly over no-man's-lands, neutral zones and demarcation lines, and the «air has been as thick515 words
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Article, Illustration1460 1951-11-26 4 It there is a solution he will find it' WHAT did the dele- gates representing Malayan interests tell the Secretary for the Colonies, Mr. Oliver Lyttelton. I wish I could give you even the smallest idea. But so hush-hush were the arrangements that even the names1,460 words
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Article295 1951-11-26 4 Hall Romney - Hall Romney by ll"«MW«iiiiwiiiiii» can be as diverting before dinner in the House of Lords. Provocative speech LORD Ogmore had his turn later, remarking that Lord Milverton certainly never tried to convert him when he wa s a Minister. Throughout a strong counter-attack Lord Milverton sat impassive, with295 words
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Article, Illustration505 1951-11-26 4 NO TWISTING THIS LION'S TAIL A cigar and a "V" sign have sent Britain's prestige up says ANTHONY TERRY A cigar, a "V" sign and the most famous Englishman have combined to send Britain's prestige soaring among millions of Germans who until a few weeks ago were enjoying a quiet505 words
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Article553 1951-11-26 4 Burma's 'Little Man' is Worried Freedom from cclonia! r U .e has made him impoverished and fearful of civil strife, says a Special Correspond t WHILE freedom has not brought Burma all the hoped-for blessings, and has certainly not brought peace, she hates the merest thought of her old colonialA.P. - 553 words
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Article177 1951-11-26 4 KNOWLEDGE acquired during the war and now applied to a peacetime use is putting Germany's Danube tanker fleet into operation again. The war knowledge was built up when the Germans had to move entire U-boats vast distances overland— as for instance, from the North Sea, right across177 words
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Advertisement35 1951-11-26 4 GIFTS I offer a most acceptable range of gifts you can always choose one for any occasion and be sure you get it at the keenest price S.P.H.deSILVA., 45, HIGH ST.. SINGAPORE, IPOH K. LUMPUR.35 words
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Advertisement40 1951-11-26 4 I EXCLUSIVE MODEL WiH«« I COi J TS < ,v afj WIKTER f s CO;5 MERCHANT TAILOR >*" n Clubroo" 1 Wherever men meet in e**^! on business or pleasure one I of finelv tailored clothe* hf PHo#l>B 18-E, BATTERY RD. (hxs^)^^^40 words
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Article, Illustration106 1951-11-26 5 SHE'LL DANCE FOU CHARITY... *THE story of the conquest] and fall of Kublai, Grand Khan of Mongolia, in the year 1260 A. D. y will be the main item of an international variety concert to be held at the Singapore Volunteer Corps Hall on Jan.Free Press - 106 words
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Article41 1951-11-26 5 An allegation that two representatives of the Trade Union Adviser's Department "walkedout" from the meeting of the Selangor Divisional Committee of the Malayan Trade Union Council. In Kuala Lumpur yesterday morning, has been denied by one of the representatives.41 words
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Article39 1951-11-26 5 Federation '7 .v., ce»lon Boy :p fa being rj ?f Edm- next year V committee of the s Council on Sat- *?r ,--.r- the .4--- send a and one e*-..W,:- jamboree r FeD H39 words
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42 1951-11-26 5 j lied up en v BC\ ScOUtS Of I h :-:-::r:.o:. s:ar: f-he:r 1952 j j.T-i -o funds .'or the Half of the Lf/ea::.-'. ">~; tht extx n: :he Malayan Patrol, i: i:„ h :c be he'd next42 words
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155 1951-11-26 5 LOCALSTUDY PLAN FOR HEALTH OFFICERS Cost of course in U.K. will be saved OPrAiT 0r Fr f e^ Press staff Reporter B JiiS f o- e dlfficul of recruiting canmm£iSL m S,ng ?P°_ re wj th health qualificaE^dom fh Ca r*° n^ y be obtained in th United S nfak^hi155 words
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Article189 1951-11-26 5 The Service Committee has pointed out that there is only one officer in the Health Department who holds such a certificate. It found it difficult to agree to laying down a qualification for the post which would mean that it could only be filled by an189 words
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126 1951-11-26 5 THE Finance and General Pur- poses Committee of the Singapore City Council has turned down a proposal that the Council should establish a separate employment bureau to recruit labour for City Hall. The suggestion was offered as a solution to the difficulty of recruiting126 words
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Article, Illustration56 1951-11-26 5 MAJOR-GENERAL A. G. O'CARROLL SCOTT, General Officer Commanding Singapore Base District, talking to some of the new recruits daring yesterday's annual inspection of the Singapore Volunteer Corps. In the centre is Lt. Jan bin Mustaffa, MBE, who acted as Malay interpreter. On the extreme left isFree Press - 56 words
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Article57 1951-11-26 5 Salary negotiations were less difficult with industrial employers than with Government delegates of the Selangor Divisional Committee of the Malayan Trade Union were told at their annual meeting in Kuala Lumpur yesterday, in a speech^ by Mr. M^roIdasamy, the committee man, read by Mr. K.57 words
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46 1951-11-26 5 At -hush-nush' talks W Kuala Lumpur yesterday morning, memteS of the Oovernment Clerical services Union gave their comnuttee full powers to continue Se^ouatJoSs 'with the Government for higher salaries Memoers were warned at the meeting not to talk to the press.46 words
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Article51 1951-11-26 5 The phrase "Pity the Blind should be forgotten. Blind people, saki Mr. J. D. HodgMnson. Member for Industrial and Social Re--2505! did not want pity-the, needed help. He was speaking aj^}™^ •t the formation meetif* or l^iliSL. ASoclatlon forTthe Blind «V 0» Kuala Lumpox fown51 words
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Article84 1951-11-26 5 I Free Press Staff Reporter JpHE second mass wedding, sponsored by the Singapore Chinese Y.M.C.A., will be held at the Happy World Cabaret, on Jan. 12. Mr. Tay Koh Yat is expected to officiate at the ceremony. Couples who intend taking part in the ceremony84 words
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56 1951-11-26 5 rpHE RIDA mobile rice millopera ted in the kampongs near Tumpat Kelantan yesterday. Mr. T. W. T. Bangs, the State Development Officer, supervised the milling. Die padi brought by the kampong folk was milled within two hours and for less than half the56 words
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Article88 1951-11-26 5 CO that a correctly inscribed memorial may be erected over the grave, the General Headquarters of Graves Registration and Enquiries, Par East Land Forces, Singapore, has written to a Penang mother asking for information regarding the cemetery in which her dead son, Chew Li Fong,88 words
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Article23 1951-11-26 5 A "Garden of Remembrance" is to be laid round the grave of Sir Henry Gurney in Cheras Road Cemetery, Kuala Lumpur.23 words
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Article, Illustration264 1951-11-26 5 Free Press Staff Reporter WHEN the Singapore Government Officers' Cooperative Housing Society was hardly six months in being, it embarked on the building of four houses on land owned by its members and constructed the first house in Pasir Panjang Hill The keen Interest264 words
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Article, Illustration31 1951-11-26 5 OVER THE JUMPS CAROLINE WON picture. Eight-year-old Caroline Walrusley takes her pony, Starlig.it. over a hurdle when she won the Children's Race at the Polo Club Gymkhana yesterday morning.- Free PressFree Press - 31 words
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168 1951-11-26 5 SATURDAY'S CITY COUNCIL ELECTIONS Candidates step up campaigns Free Press Staff Reporter WITH only five days to go for the election of six membesrs to the Singapore City Council on Saturday, candidates have intensified their electioneering campaigns through public meetings and house-to-house canvassing. The new Councillors will take their seats168 words
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114 1951-11-26 5 10 BATTLES WITH JOHORE BANDITS IN TWO DAYS Free Press Staff Reporter JOHORE has been the main stage for bandits attacks during the past two days, ten battles toeing reported. At least six bandits wre wounded In the Kiuar.g area when a Security Force Patrol, acting on information. engaged 50114 words
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Article70 1951-11-26 5 Although the Legislative Council approved a special vote of $10,000 to be spent on furnishing and equipping four of Raffles' Library branches in Singapore next year, it is not yet known when these branch libraries will be set up. The Free Press understands thai they will be70 words
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Article, Illustration63 1951-11-26 5 MISS CHIANG JUAT PING of the Saltan Abu Bakar Girls' School (left) and MISS A. PERUMAL of the Convent School (right) both of Muar, who have been selected for training at the Kirkby College, England. Miss Chiang is a former student of S.A.B.G.S. and G.E.S.,63 words
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Article, Illustration31 1951-11-26 5 Believed to be the first of its kind in the country, the Malayan School of Motoring will start operating from Dec. 1. with its headquarters in Ipoh.31 words
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102 1951-11-26 5 Traffic!— Fire Brigade's colossal headache Free Press Staff Reporter WHEN a fire breaks out in Singapore, the City Fire Brigade suh'ers from a colossal headache traffic congestion. "It is getting steadily worse," Fire Chief, Mr. J. G. Shaw, said yesterday. "Whereas previously we could attain very high speeds 4>n the102 words
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Article, Illustration53 1951-11-26 5 HE'LL STUDY COOKING CATERING... picture. Seventeen-year-old ROYSTON CONSIGLIERE, an old boy of St. Andrew's School, Singapore, who left for Australia recently on board the Charon. He will work at the Hotel Adelaide, in Adelaide, Australia, for the next five years, studying cooking, confectionery, and the complete catering side of hotelFree Press - 53 words
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Advertisement80 1951-11-26 5 iflce to* nct fjr t»« a -uff Reporter complaints il'* 1' the Sinsa- Council of a >** caused bv .a Dff mre factory m S < iure council's 5 [Uittee has witfl lL d that all fn nes should he j flCnf that new H* 0. are* <^ &F* iture80 words
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Advertisement97 1951-11-26 5 y UNIQUE Collirt. L,GHT ENGRAVED WITH THE MAP OF MALAYA! ON HIGH GRADE NICKLE PLATE. Sterling Silver Engraved J^ with Ae Map of Asia j^^W^S^^^fc^^ YE) Nickle^Plated Plain $13.25 V#s}^|' i^kf^ Engine Turned $>5.75 tl^ TpJSnll M§C? In Red, Navy, Brown, Green m^^^K^^^^^^^^ Gilt, and Black Enamel $17.95 each IGNITING97 words
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Article, Illustration353 1951-11-26 6 ALLAN LEWIS - MOST SENSATIONAL RACE FINISH ALLAN LEWIS Cape Horn won in last stride By jy|OST sensational finish ever seen at Bukit Timah came in the seventh race on Saturday (Class 2, Div. I—nine1 nine furlongs and 36 yards), when Cape Horn got up in the last stride to .defeat the hotFree Press - 353 words
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692 1951-11-26 6 r*OLONEL Daly proved himself the best of the very moderate lot of stayers, V at present in Malaya when he easily won the Stayers Cup over 1% miles at Bukit Timah on Saturday. Colonel Daly dropped out of the race for692 words
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Article145 1951-11-26 6 CLEVERLY ridden by young Straker, old Abby Kay won the third race .for Class 2, Div. 2, horses over nine furlongs, cm Saturday. This was Abby Kay's first success since last New Year's Day when he won at Penang. Straker gets full marks for Abby Kay's145 words
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Article66 1951-11-26 6 JOHORE BAHRU. Mon. JOHORE Badminton Association will hold the annual State open championship meeting during the Christmas holidays. Entries close on Dec. 5. The events to be competed at the meeting are men's singles and doubles, women's open singles and doubles, junior singles and doubles, Veterans' singles and66 words
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Article38 1951-11-26 6 HOCKEY: SRC v RNAS Sembawang at SBC; University v Sherwood Foresters at Sepoy Lines SCBC YMCA at TMCA; BODCA Ceylon SC «A' at BOD. WOMEN'S SEVEN-A-SIDE at SCC: WBAC *B* v Seletar Ladies; SCC WRAC «A\38 words
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197 1951-11-26 6 Australian youth beats Richardson LEWIS Hoad of Sydney, who turned 17 on Friday won the New South Wales Junior Tennis Championship on Saturday by defeating Hamilton Richardson, the U.S. Junior champion from Baton Rouge. In a match which produced much brilliant tennis. Roy Cowling, one of Australia's leading tennis figures,197 words
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Article, Illustration33 1951-11-26 6 picture. Colonel Daly (Percival) winning the Stayers Cap from Privateer (Spencer) and One Three One (Straker). Little Ned (RleClatid) was fourth and Mr. Meadowiark viuiiey) fifth. Free PressFree Press - 33 words
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Article68 1951-11-26 6 _NDIA won the fourth hockey "Test" match in Amritsar beating Japan four goals to one. Hie ground was waterlogged from overnight rain and the trtirti was delayed for 30 minutes. The Japanese scored the first goal through Tokunaga. The home team was vastly superior inU.P. - 68 words
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Article49 1951-11-26 6 ENRIQUE Morea, the Argentine champion, won the Argentine and South American lawn tennis men's singles title in Buenos Aires yesterday. In the final he beat Fausto Gardini, the Italian Davis Cup player 6-3, 6-1, 6-3. Gardini had eliminated Bob Falkenburg (U.S.) in the semi-finals.— Reuter.49 words
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529 1951-11-26 6 SULLIVAN HAS 2 PROMISING GALOPERS gPOKTING Gesture shoued v, U race when he led all the Ua Nu, event (Class 2, Div .>--*>, > t,,ta^u Saturday. Sporting Gesture,/* Bukit T,J^ trainer Milton S«fliva n w h T^R the meeting. nis s^o nd Sullivan has not had the ha. N the529 words
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Advertisement290 1951-11-26 6 w, WJr.; < oa»MB«B«ii>, aa— afaV V^v.>>v?9ajMSSF.v.'.'. -'-"-.a™ H BbWlß.Bnbnbßlß.BnbnbnbnbnbnbnbmW -x x--; B|a I'-MtM^HaTrlßy''''-'''*'*''*''*'''''' '''aaBB^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^aBB^B^B^B^B^B^BBIB^B^BIB^BTraiaMB^B '^f*'' ■H bß> \ayMcßlli-''' iBWaWaWaWaWaWaWaWaWaWaWaWaBaWaHaBB^MjMB^N^BWaWaWB •^3^' -aifc jffla Hr a?'-"" '■■vX-iv 'o|^| RF^ 'JH ■•■/&<vS,'x<7i^y^ JK, BJWK|^^^HgI^^^B^MB^BW^BBaBa^Hif^X^HBMaBMBBM3^BBaBaBB Vfflßff^CflSfe^fcA- \^»»j>^^\ iVJ l-.^a^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BM^B^B^B^ '''.'V '^^fe^S^aE BW.-a^BW^^^l bßP^' ■A•■' Mm B^BX a^K Jo^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^al^B^B^B^Blß^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^Bßß^a^B^'*'A''^'''' i".'»"»'Xftfti> il'"'"''''.' •^■'*"^^^^^^^^^^^^^^fcS^**«>:- B^BT- XvX**'Xffi§Bß290 words
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Advertisement14 1951-11-26 6 PICTURE Iff Solution to MrLMft Picture Tip for Saturte'i The Bosun i second itnv14 words
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Article, Illustration393 1951-11-26 7 Swedes visit an 'experiment' By CRUSADER £AN Singapore Amateur Football Association afford to pay $8,000 per game WBmB the Colony s soccer enthusiasts will have a chance of seeing first-class amateur football The answer will be given when dnt^^w.. Sweden visit Singapore this S-e^d anrt g**Free Press - 393 words
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218 1951-11-26 7 FALY, one of the strongest of the Continental «soccer teams, were held to a one-all draw by Switzerland at Lugano yesterday Switzerland led one-nil at half-time. A rocklike Swiss defence, was under almost constant pressure during the second half of the game, but it218 words
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Article494 1951-11-26 7 T^HE following are OJC. Pootball League placing alter Saturday's matches. ENGLISH LEAGUE— DW. 1. Reuter P W D L P A pts. Portsmouth 18 13 1 ***** 27 Arsenal 19 11 4 ***** 28 Tottenham 19 10 4 ***** 24 Bolton Wan 18 10 4 430 25Reuter - 494 words
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Article187 1951-11-26 7 X H f Bahawalpur-Karachl Cricket n Association carried their over night score of 194 for 2 to Vfn," 71 Sl whlhV ye im r Mohd Hanif scored with 99 tlaZ Ahme<l t<>P-scored fcrV*"" or olay Mcc were Bahawalpur-KaUiuhi j 9 t tmmmA Mohammed Hanif187 words
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Article58 1951-11-26 7 pERIE Taruffl. the Italian racing ace, hurtled across the finishing line a split second ahead ot his fellow countryman. Alberto Ascari. in the second annual Pan-American road car race in Juarez. Mexico, yesterday. Taruffl and Ascar, bojh driving Ferraris, were less than 20 feet aheadA.P. - 58 words
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Article45 1951-11-26 7 Early goals by Mor. iriv •2/ ana Carter saw REME Base Workshops through to a three-one victory against Cheerful Lads at Telok Kurau yesterday Lads put in some fine work in the second-half but succeeded in scoring only once through Chye Hee.45 words
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Article46 1951-11-26 7 MANSOOR bin Sawl (Tanglin Cycling Team) yesterday won the Singapore Cycle Racing Association's 100 mile massed-start road race at Lim Chu Kang Road in 5 hours 36 min. D. Jones was second and R. Jennings third. Only four competitors completed the course. Nineteen started.46 words
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Article92 1951-11-26 7 Arsenal kept up close to Portsmouth with a 4-2 win over Bolton Wanderers who, before the game began, were level on points with the Gunners. Arsenal's tall in-side-left, Doug Lishman, was the scoring star, with three goals. It was the fourth time he had performed the "hat-trick"92 words
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267 1951-11-26 7 AT least two members of the England team chosen to play Austria on Wednesday will not be able to play. Lionel Smith (Arsenal), who was not fit to play for Arsenal in a League game on Saturday, is declared unfit for Wednesday, while PrestonReuter - 267 words
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Article174 1951-11-26 7 From JIM CHAMBERS PORTSMOUTH maintained their position at the 1 top of the First Division of the English Football League on Saturday by defeating the reigning champions. Tottenham Hotspur, two-nil in a fast, brilliant game, which drew a capacity crowd of 40.000 excited fans. BigA.P. - 174 words
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Article114 1951-11-26 7 FRANCE yesterday trounced England by 42 points to IS in a Rugby League match j played in Marseilles before a crowd Of 26.000 The French outplayed the British right from the start. winning most of the scrums and producing a brilliant offensive game of passing. The English114 words
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Article21 1951-11-26 7 London beat P^ria bv >.* oo'nts to three in a Rugby Union match In Paris yes- i terday A .P.A.P. - 21 words
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277 1951-11-26 7 Vital issues at stake this evening BADMINTON DISPUTE Free Press Badminton Reporter TODAY at 5.15 p.m. the Capitol Blue Room will be x the scene of a meeting on which the future of badminton in Malaya may well depend. The conciliatory meeting between the Singapore Badminton Association Management Committee and277 words
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Article45 1951-11-26 7 A Singapore Swimming Club water polo team beat Special Air Service Regiment (Malayan Scouts) by eight goals to one in a match played at the Club pool yesterday. Quince (4), Cacs (2), Barry Mitchell and Keith Mitchell scored for S.S.C.45 words
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Article384 1951-11-26 7 for Saturday, first day of the Perak Turf Club's December meeting, are: Cl.J.Div l-5AStr. Mafleable Mouldings 9.00 Misty Line 8.13 Princeling 8.12 1 Sealed Orders 8.12 I Currency Boy II 8.12 I Kind Regards 8.09 Wellington 8.07 1 Winter Scene 8.06 j Royal Dream 8.05 j384 words
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Article100 1951-11-26 7 FOLLOWING have been -chosen to play for Singapore Business Houses Football Association against the All-India touring team at Jalan Besar Stadium oil Dec 15 Osman Angullia (Stanvac): Johan (H. K. Bank), Salleh (M.P.H Vass (capt (H. K Bank), Hoon Leong (F. X.). Hee Jong (T Standard);100 words
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Page 7 Advertisements
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Advertisement85 1951-11-26 7 r Press Monday- b3 and 930 wng? r5 BSf<9§ TEfHMCOLOR irw VERAELLEN fcrN,v»n Cesar Romero V STAGE SHOW! Hit IMM MMONOmnNFn MAY DAILY II t.M 1 4.5 4 1 5 6 .4 5 i "30 P.M. gfWi mm •I" 1 1 ■t J^ apDLj^ jl -Hi _Wja _Brs starring jjtt85 words
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Advertisement117 1951-11-26 7 \ti s good for A glass of sparkling ENO'S first thing in the morning is good for the liver. It clears the head in no time. The wonderful effervescence is cleansing and refreshing to a stale nasty mouth. The non habit-forming laxative action keeps the system regular. ENO'S is pleasant117 words
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Article, Illustration449 1951-11-26 8 'Orders are given in Russian 9 WESTERN FRONT, Korea, Monday. ALLIED officers were convinced yesterday that Russian artillerymen have taken over the direction of Communist big gun fire on the Western front, opening a "new war." They believed Soviet experts began masterminding bombardmentsU.P.; A.P. - 449 words
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Article182 1951-11-26 8 i^TQWTTT^rirr. ROVIGO, Italy, Monday. OISRUPTED sewage systems, weakened buildings 7 2? d i s ck °1 d^ing water posed new threats ffifihUft Health army andpfc e usands f rom disease More than 160 people have been made homeless by the floods, which started 17 daysA.P. - 182 words
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Article33 1951-11-26 8 The United States national debt next year is expected to reach— if not pass— the pre- j sent legal line of U*****,000 million (about €98 214' million).— A.P. j I33 words
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Article36 1951-11-26 8 For the first time since the outbreak of the last war, a Japanese products fair made its appearance in Taipei yesterday morning. More than 20,000 articles were on exhibition in these buildings. U.P.U.P. - 36 words
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185 1951-11-26 8 Tito to tell U.N. of Red 'threats' PARIS, Mon. YUGOSLAVIA will indict Russia before the United Nations this week for alleged hostile activities threatening her independence. The Yugoslav Foreign Minister, Mr. Edward Kardelj, and the chief Yugoslav delegate/ Mr. Ales Bebler. spent yesterday polishing a resolution they will present toU.P. - 185 words
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Article63 1951-11-26 8 Dr. Cyril Garbett. Arch- bishop of York, said in Melbourne yesterday that we must be ready to defend our heritage and save the world from "cruel despotism and atheism". Persistent and mighty forces were endangering our way of life. Communism knew where it stood and what63 words
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Article280 1951-11-26 8 Big clash seen in Commons Jap peace treaty problems LONDON, Monday. LABOUR Members of Parliament will meet privately this morning to thrash out Japanese peace treaty problems, on which about 50 expect to clash with the Conservative Government in debate later in the day. The House of Commons will beReuter - 280 words
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Article56 1951-11-26 8 HAVANA, Mon. pOUR gangsters escaped from Havana's main gaol yesterday. They were aided by members of their gang who dressed as policemen and were armed with Tommy-guns. One of those who escaped was a gang leader awaiting trial in connection with several murders. The other threeReuter - 56 words
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Article84 1951-11-26 8 CRYSTALS HELP DETEST RADIATION PHILADELPHIA, Mon. PNNSYLVANIA, University has announced the development of a new radioactivity detector, safer and nearly 20 times more sensitive than the present geiger counter. The new instrument, called the scintillation counter," will permit doctors to use smaller amounts of dangerous radioactive material in diagnostic testsReuter - 84 words
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Article27 1951-11-26 8 Emperor Hirohito returned to Tokyo yesterday from a two-week tour of the Kinki district, his 17th provincial tour of Japan since the war ended. A.P.A.P. - 27 words
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Article17 1951-11-26 8 An earthquake shook the Adriatic coast, near 4ncona, Italy, yesterday Ther«» was nn damage. ReuterReuter - 17 words
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Article25 1951-11-26 8 The leftist Ta Kung Pao reported yesterday that the Communists have ordered all sing-song girls establishments in Shanghai tn close down. U.P.U.P. - 25 words
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Article19 1951-11-26 8 Two Israeli civilians were killed by the Arabs on Saturday night in the suhnrhfi nt Jerusalem.- AFP.AFP - 19 words
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Article213 1951-11-26 8 Europe to debate 'harmony' plan STRASBOURG, Mon. ANEW plan to tie Britain more closely to the Continent will be presented to the two-year-old Council of Europe, the unofficial European Parliament, during its resumed 1951 session opening here today. It is understood from au- thorita»tive sources to consist jof a proposedReuter - 213 words
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Article125 1951-11-26 8 LONDON, Mon. BRITISH working class families drank 50 per cent more milk and ate more fish, fruit and vegetables in 1949 than before the war but each person had an average of one egg a week les s and only about two-thirds as much meat.Reuter - 125 words
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Article42 1951-11-26 8 The National Liberation Front in Cyprus, comprising all the leftwing organisations and the Communist party has launched a "freedom campaign. It has called on Cypriots to attend mass meetings in all the main towns on December 16. ReuterReuter - 42 words
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Article26 1951-11-26 8 Harry Anderson, Britishborn survivor of the sinking of the White Star liner Titanic in 1912, died on Fridav He was 87 years old. U.P.U.P. - 26 words
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Article174 1951-11-26 8 SYDNEY, Monday. THKEE-year-old boy died in Sydney after £L w U TS ff antabuse Ablets which hk father had been taking to cure alcoholism. Doctors said the boy's death was the first they had ki£w?f™m the .drug. Doctors believe the boy, named Kerry, tookA.P. - 174 words
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Advertisement425 1951-11-26 8 BIRTHS LEONARD: To Betty, wileTf F. J. L. LEONARD, at PAGLAR's a daughter and for ALLAN a sweet little sister. DEATH MR. SEET CHOON HOO, aged 71. passed away peacefully at No. 9 Ewe Boon Road off Keng Chin Road. 3rd M:le Bukit Timah. on 25th Nov.. 1951. leaving behind425 words
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Advertisement144 1951-11-26 8 AwZm &u6> fa& #$j 7i SCHICK INJECttttd^U^ —^i eCfAHCR SHAVES V \SAFFK. SHAVES ""*S FASTFK SHAVes" '"'7\ mo*e shaves:'' 7 ~> THE MAUYA^UNION «HI» Wy Jj MINNIE IVERSON-WOOD M BRADBUP^r'cAHTAu' THE BEAUTIFUL QUEEN THE VICTORIA THEATRE On Wednefday, November 28. Iffl g4? Bookings at Marder, C I Malayan Union Seminary.144 words
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Page 8 Miscellaneous
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Miscellaneous6 1951-11-26 8 THE SAINT by Leslie Charteris gfhfghgfh6 words
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