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BLANKET THIEVES

N.S.W. MILITARY CAMPS £2OOO WORTH MISSING ORDNANCE MEN BLAMED (9.30 a.m.) SYDNEY, July 4. A number of men in charge of army property were doing little else than stealing i.t and carting it away, declared a prosecuting police sergeant in the Police Court here. More than 4400 blankets, valued at £2OOO, had been stolen from military camps in New South Wales alone, he said. Gaol sentences up to 15 months were imposed for stealing and receiving. “This thieving is engaging the attention of the police and special military squads,” stated the sergeant. “The civilian population is deprived of these products to enable our fighting forces to be maintained.” There was no better opportunity for a man in the army to steal .than in the ordnance section, .the sergeant added. Eax-1 Kitchener had declared during the last war that he could keep a check on the pay of all soldiers, except those in the ordnance section. He had said that so much property disappeared from there that it would be impossible to calculate .the wealth at the end of a year of the authorities who worked in this section. His words were applicable to-day. A solicitor said that hundreds of thousands of pounds’ worth of blankets and other property were stolen from the military quartermaster’s stores in the Great War.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GISH19420704.2.53

Bibliographic details

Gisborne Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 20827, 4 July 1942, Page 3

Word Count
221

BLANKET THIEVES Gisborne Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 20827, 4 July 1942, Page 3

BLANKET THIEVES Gisborne Herald, Volume LXIX, Issue 20827, 4 July 1942, Page 3