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Oshawa Daily Times, 3 Dec 1940, p. 10

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~ PAGE TEN' THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1940 Expect New Taxes, T: Will Save $100,000,0 'Obituaries RUEBEN DANIEL HOLDAWAY Rueben Daniel Holdaway, a resi- dent of Oshawa, for the past 19 years, passed away at the home of his daughter, Mrs. A. C. Wolfe, 333 Gibbon street, on Saturday, Novem- ber 30, following a short illness ffs | Yearly for War Purchases + (continued from Page 1) United Kingdom. _ Minimizes Profiteering At home, profiteering will be minimized and consumer demand held down--a major stroke against the threat of inflation--by the im- position of heavy excise taxes on domestically-manufactured durable consumer goods, chiefly household appliances. These tariff and tax cnanges, proposed by Finance Minister Ilsley yesterday, were effective yesterday but do not effect Christmas stocks already held by merchants through= out the country. .The excise taxes apply only to manufacturers' sales and manufacturers' prices. Announcement of these fiscal pro- posals was preceded by a statement by Prime Minister Mackenzie King on the present war situation. There could be not doubt the prime minis- ter said, that the situation for Bri- tain and her allies was "much bet- | ter today than it was, not only at the time of the signing of the arm- istice between France and Ger- | many, but as it developed in the | months which immediately followed the fall of France." | government This was a war of years, with | inevitable periods of success or re- | verse which should be viewed with a time perspective. It was increas- ing in its fury but Britain's strength was also increasing steadily and in the end the war would be won by | pational character, Mr. King said. resumed late in the day and is being continued today by Conservative Leader Hanson. Pensions Minister Mackenzie also may speak. The de- | bate is expected to wind up late tonight or tomorrow, after which consideration of the finance resol- utions will begin. The finance minister said the measures he was laying before the House for the conservation of ex- change had more than a monetary significance. "By denying ourselves a wide range of imports and by these re- ductions and removals of duties on British goods, we once more say to Britain and to the world that we are with her and that we have faith in her ultimate success, said Mr. Iisley. After reviewing the steps previ- ously taken to conserve exchange for the buying of war supplies in | | reduced at the same time on the United States, the minister said these had been outweighed by | the continuous pressure of wartime import demands -and immediate steps had to be taken now to cur- tail the use of hard currency ex- | non- | change in the purchase of sential imports. At the same time, h emphasized that the steps being taken of the Since required, ar. prohibition had These were: Prepared cereal stock and cut flowers; and canned fruits and vegetables (but not currants, raisins, dates, apricots, nor grapefruit juice); pre- served fich, oysters and crab; man- ufactured tobacco; spirits and wines; certain classes of fiction magazines and comics; sconsumers' paper items; perfumes, etc; china and glass; silverware; electrical household appliances, stoves, etc] bathroom fittings; 2utomobiles; sporting goods and fishing tackle: cameras: musical instruments; lug- foods; florist processed gage; all finished clothing or wear- ing apparel; silk fabrics; orna- ments; jewellery and precious stones; toys and dolls; and various miscellaneous articles, Another list of commodities from non-sterling countries would be per- mitted entry into Canada under li- | cense "temporarily but on a decreas- 1 was found to be exploiting the sit- This gift of sparkle and gayety holds a dram of Blue Grass Perfume. $2.25 JURY & LOVELL LTD. KING E. SIMCOE 8. PHONE 28 PHONE 68 | stricting agricultural imports from The throne speech debate, sus- | pended briefly for Mr. Ilsley to in-| troduce his finance resolutions, was | were only for the durations from a heart attack. He was in his 7 year. : Born at Portsmouth, Eng, Mr Holdaway came to Canada and di- rectly to Oshawa 19 years ago. He was employed at General Motors of Canada, Limited, but retired from active work ten years ago. He was predeceased by his wife, former Emily Orsmond, in 1920, previous to his coming to Canada. The late Mr. Holdaway is survive ed by four daughters, Mrs. J. Jor- don, in England, Mrs. H. Brown, Mrs. W. Merchant and Mrs. A. C. Wolfe, of Oshawa, and three sons, Robert and Albert Holdaway, of Oshawa, and Charles Holdaway, in England. : The funeral is being held from Armstrongs Funeral Home, 124 King street east, with the service to be conducted by Rev. D. M. Rose, rector of St. Georges Angli- can Church this afternoon, at 2 pm. followed by interment in Mount Lawn Cemetery. ed scale." This list comprised five major groups: unmanufaciured to- bacco; automobiles and motor ve- hicles other than passenger automo- biles; hardwoods and veneers and plywood; raw silk and partially manufactured natural silk; and all petroleum products. The Minister explained that these commodities would be admitted for a time in the hope that Canadian industry would adapt itself to the use of other materials involving less drain on foreign exchange. It was hoped, for instance, that more domestic tobacco would be used in Canadian tobacco products; that the furniture industry. would use domestic woods in place of im- ported hardwoods; that gasoline imports could be eliminated by the refining of all Canadian-consumed gasoline in Canada; that the silk industry could swing over from nat- ural silk to artificial fibre. Think of Health In not including American fresh fruits and vegetables in the prohib. ited list, Mr. Ilsley explained, the was moved by two major considerations -- the import- ance in the national diet of having cheap, abundant supplies of fresh vegetables and, secondly, the pos- sibility of creating difficulties in the marketing of Canadian farm produce in the United States by re- HORACE GODFREY A bright young life came to an end at the Oshawa General Hospi- tal on Monday, December 2, 1040, when Horace ("Joe") Godfrey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roland Godfrey, | 308 Nassau street, passed on. "Joe" | as he was popularly called, had | completed his public school educa- | tion at Centre School and this term | had started studies at the O.C.V.I. | He was ill about eight days. Born at Mimico on May 2, 1923, | Joe came with the family to Osh- awa at an early age and was well liked among the boys of his class at school. His passing has caused much grief among members of the that country. Admission to Canada of more British goods would not only enable Britain to buy essential war supplies | family and regret among many here but would also free Canadian | friends. labor and machines for war Work | Resides the parents, Mr. and Mrs and make additional supplies avall- | poland Godfrey, he is survived by able to Canadian consumers, the | one sister, Hilda, at home, and five Minister continued, as he announced | brothers, Harold, William, Ross, Roy amendments to the tariff on Brit- | and Gerald, all of Oshawa. One ish goods, Because British produc- | sister, Mrs. Frank Caldwell, pre- ers' costs were greatly increased by deceased him in 1935 % war. he felt Canadian producers | The funeral is to be held "from could stand this competition. Most | Armstrong's Funeral Homge 124 Canadian industries affected were | King Street East, on Wednesday, enjoying a "very greatly increased | December 4, with Png service at KE) demand" on account of the war any. | p.m. to be conducted by Rev. J. V way. McNeely, miniter of King Street | United Chuith. Interment in the Union Cemetery. Free From Britain He proposed to remove the duty entirely from British' cotton items, | nt man Ton AUTOS DAMAGED IN COLLISIONS ture; gloves and mitts; and miscellaneous items. Duties would Pe ar- maceutical preparations, soap, | earthenware, table cutlery,Aicycles, | electric motors, rugs, ¥ioth, oleum. od Where impor were restricted, it pt desirable that domestic pro- | cuchon of mechanical types of con- | Sumers' goods should be expanded to meet the demand created by that restriction, he said further, nor that price and profits should be increased | by simply restricting their produc- | tion. The skilled labor and much of | the materials used in such goods would be needed for war industries. Accordingly, the government pro- | posed new or increased excise taxes on such goods but these taxes were not heavy enough to curtail produc- tion beyond the degree made ne- cessary by the labor and material Cars and Trucks Tangle On Simcoe Street South A truck driven by Gerald A. Bull, | 79 N-ssau street and belonging to The Oshawa Public Utilities Com- mission was involved in a collision last evening at 5.00 p.m. at the cor- ner of Simcoe and Athol streets. It is alleged that the Public Utilities truck was struck by a car driven by J. Innis, Brooklin, which was ap- proaching Simcoe street About $2000 dam-ge was done to the Oshawa truck and about $1500 will be required to repair the Brooklin lin- | PURCHASING AGENT city | cleaners, | ircns, curlers, electric razors. requirements of the munitions and supply department. Tax on Home Appliances The excise tax on the first $700 of the price of passenger automobiles | would be increased from 10 to 20 | per cent, with the rate on the value above $700 remaining as imposed | last June. The 10 per cent rate on | cameras, phonographs, radios and | radio tubes would be increased to | 25 per cent on the manufacturers' | price. A 25 per cent excise tax would also be imposed on electric and gas | sto.es, refrigerators, water heaters, light fixtures, slot and vending ma- chines, washing machines, vacuum toasters, electric grills, | The government would seek power to suspend the import restrictions wherever a domestic manufacturer vation by charging unjustifiably en- hanced prices. The finance minister said every effor; would be put forward on the positive side to increase Canada's supply of foreign exchange by boost- ing gold production to the limit, ex- panding the tourist industry by cvery possible means and continuing to seek new export markets. To fa- cilitate exports where they might not otherwise take place, the gov- ernment plans to assist exporters in special cases by special tax allow- ances for depreciation or depletion of capital assets, or by tax credits where the first two were impossible. One Month In Jail ' re ; . t'or Theft of Fish Geo; Dainard, Toronto, who plead. ed guilty in Oshawa Police Court last week to a charge of stealing a hox of fish from a freight car in the C.N.R. yards at Oshawa was to- day sentenced to one month in the County jail at Whitby. Alf H, Gower R. R. No. 1, Oshawa, this morning pleaded guilty to a charge of reckless driving laid after an accident at 7:50 p.m. on the eve- ning of November 23 when a car driven by the accused struck a car natked in front of the Collegiate on Simcoe street north. A blowout in wae right 1ront tire was .he reason for the accident, contended R. D. Humphreys, counsel for the accused. A fine of $10.00 and costs or ten | done to Blakeley's car. AUTO IMPORTS 13 days was given by Magistrate Ebbs, r Ray Blakeley, 39 King St. W., re- ported that about 3:40 p.m. yester- day afternoon he was driving south on Simcoe street near the C.N.R subway when he struck a p-rked truck belonging to Cold Spring Bev- erages which was in the charge of | Delbert MacFarland. The truck. it | is alleged, was parked on the west side of Simcoe street facing north | and was unattended as MacFarland was delivering a parcel at the time. Damage amounting to $75.00 was $8,000,000 IN CUT OFF BY BAN Ottawa, Dec. 3.--Total prohibition of importation of passenger auto- mobiles from the United States, an- nounced in the House of Commons yesterday afternocn by Finance Minister Ilsley, to take effect 'at once, will end a trade which was valued at more than $8,000,000 dur- ing the first nine months of this year. Canadian motorists will have to be content with domestically manu- factured cars, except for those which they can import from the United Kingdom, or from some country in the sterling areas, which would seem improbable at present. During the first nine months of 1940, 11,556 new passenger cars were imported from the United States, valued at approximately $8,700,000. In the same period 513 cars were imported from the United Kingdom, valued at $258,000, that being the only other source of supply. Of these importations, 11,127 cars from the United States were valued at less than $1,200, one at $1,387 and $1200 and $2,100, and thirty-four at more than $2,100. From the United Kingdom, 511 were valued at less han $1,200, one at $1,387 and one at $4,303. On domestically produced passen= ger cars the tax change raise the excise to 20 per cent on the manu- factured value up to $700. The excise tax on these cars, fixed last June, otherwise remains unchanged. The rate set in June was 10 per cent up to a value of $700, 20 per cent on the excess of $700 and up to $900; 40 per cent on the excess of $900 and up to $1200; and 80 per cent on the excess over $1,200. Domestic production of passenger cars during the first nine months of 1940 was 80,603 units. Sales of new cars this year are considerably be- low 1939 and the total for October, 1940, was 15 per cent below that of October, 1939, R. J WEARLANE GEN. MOTORS DIES Deceased Came to Oshawa in 1930; Held in High Esteem Robert John MacFarlane, general purchasing agent of General Motors | of Canada, Limited, passed away | early this morning at the Oshawa General Hospital following. a few days' illness. Mr, MacFarlane had { not been feeling well for some time ! and had been on holiday leave since the first of November. He had been | | on a hunting expedition with mem. | bers of the Wedgwood Hunting and | Fiching club and was apparently | feeling better on his return home | until about nine days ago when he was taken to the Oshawa General Hospital. | Mr. MacFarlane was born at Ma- gog, Que., but inoved to Paris at an | early age with his parents, where ne attended public and high and entered his father's the MazFarlane Engineering Co. Ltd, as an apprentice. In 1926 he joined the Ford Motor Company of Can- ada in the capaci of purchasing agent. After foi ears with that' motor firm he left them for a brief | period to become directed. of chases of the Deminie;, Woollen and Worsted Guild. Toronto, 'and in August, 193¢ came to General Mot- ors, Osawa, as assistant purchasing | agd it. In May, 19317, he ed ger 1 purchasing which position he held at the time of hi schools shop, pur- was promot- to agent t, 1928, he married Miss Skippon, who survives him to son, Timothy John, err George W. Mac- Miss Grace In Elva gether with ones aged 7, his fat Farlane and MacFarlane, Toronto. Mr, MacFarlane was esteem by all who ki m in the and perhaps no employee at 1 Motor found a of the mem. 1 em- )= ster, i in high a higher 2 in the affections mpany and iis issed in where | 1 dispo- | own, His sudden came 1ock to them » member of | ; and Fishing particularly ng his {favor- sition were bett passin unting and fishing b ite hobby, The late Mr. MacFarlane is rest- ing at the parl of the Luke Bur- jal Co., 67 K street where service will be conducted on Thurs day morning at 11 o'clock by Rev A, D. Cornett, mini Simcoe Street Church. Interment will take place at Woodiand Cemetery, Ham- ilton, in the family piot, Thursday afternoon. east, ter of OSHAWA AND VICINITY ! removed the clock will be in good | about 11:30 p.m. last night a 1927 | mobile was painted black with red | Colborne Streets. | without creating any hardship. He LITTLE BROWN CHURCH M.. Whitehouse, of Toronto, was the guest speaker at the Little Brown Church on Sunday evening and also attended the Sunday School in the afternoon, assisting the children to sing new choruses. The Scripture reading at the eve- ning service was from the Book of Revelation, Chapters 21 and 22 and from chapter 10, of the Gospel of St. John. Mr. Whitehouse spoke on the ninth verse "The Perfect Sal- vation." SNOW STOPS CLOCK Oshawa citizens who for the past few days have looked at the clock over the Fire Hall and wondered why the time should be 11:25 so consistently will have one less worry beginning tomorrow. According to the local firemen the whole thing came about when snow got into the workings of the clock during the snow storm last week. The clock will be cleaned today and it is ex- pected that once the snow has been running order again. CAR STOLEN Lloyd Holliday, 109 Montrave ave- nue, reported to the police that Chevrclet sedan belonging to him was stolen from Prospect street near the First Baptist Church. The auto- wheels. 3 TRAFFIC LIGHTS 10 BE INSTALLED INCITY AT ONCE (Continued from Page 1) sary. As one he cited erection of a bridge across the creek at Louisa or His argument on this point was quickly smashed by the assertion that his proposal for | bridge meant an outlay of $50.000 to $50,000 where the cost of 'all three proposed lights would be less than $2,200. | Ald. E. E. Bathe endorsed the pro- | posal, declaring that lights were | badly needed. He also pointed to | traffic difficulties caused by Ritson and King Streets by car transport | trucks parking near the corners or at gas stations. Ald. W. H. Gifford declared that after consulting with the city treas- | urer he could give approval to erec- tion of the lights, the city's financial picture being so favorable that the additional outlay could be handled warned that additional lights might be needed within a year at the corners of Park Road and King and | Ritscn and King when the new four-lane highway is completed. With this in prospect, it' was good business to install the three lights | now and thus prevent a heavier expenditure all at once next year. Ald. Stacey continued to insist, as he did last week, that the lights were unnecessary at this time and | that installation could well wait un- til the four-lane highway was fin- | ished so that the effect on traffic | might be gauged. He continued to | claim that General Motors traffic | did not warrant installation of the | | | lights as G.M. workers caused traf- = fic difficulties for only brief periods TO NEW LOW IN THIS DISTRICT Frozen Radiators, Run- Down Batteries, Nipped Ears Result Local citizens turned up their coat collars and dug deep into the moth- | balls for heavier clothing this morn- ing as the coldest temperature Osh- awa has experienced this year so far took its toll of frozen radiators, run- down batteries and frost-bitten ears. he official low figure for the city of Oshawa as registered at the City Works Department yards on Rich- mond street west was four degrees below zero which was reached some. time early this morning. Various other theifhometers downtown reg- istered lower figures, 'several of them as much as four degrees fur- ther down .the scale. Attendants at the Water Works Department pumphouse at the Lake told The Times at 11:00 am. this morning that the temperature at that time was eight degrees below zero but reported no damage or inconven- ience caused by the cold snap other than the fact that they are maroon- ed by snowbanks. Mr. P. G. Purvis of Columbus thought that Oshawa was lucky, When spea%ing to The Times at 11:00 a.m. this morning the temper- ature was still ten cqegrees below zero. All roads except the main road running north from Oshawa are blocked in the Columbus district, reports Mr. Purvis. It is understood that the snowplows are beginning the job of clearing the side roads today. Tom Wheatley, service manager of Ontario Motor Sales, reports that their service truck has been work- ing continuously since early this morning towing in autos with frozen radiators and run-down batteries. as well as an assortment of other minor ailments attributed to the cold. snap. Mr. Wheatley Jost track of the total number somewhere noon and nignt, GREEKS CAPTURE MORE TERRITORY INSOUTH ALBANIA (Continued from Page 1) { our troops dispersed enemy | tiens." A spokesman added that "in the | River Aoos region (of the central | sector) our troops gre fighting with the same courage as that which enabled them to capture Po- gradetz and have captured a sum- mit, 2,145 metres (about 7,000 feet) high on Politzani Mountain. There the Italians were strongly establish ed and hoped to remain." He said the Italians retreated to villages and heights northeast of Premet. "In the Pogradetz region," the spokesman said, "the enemv tried to cover his retreat by defending himself in the northeastern heights (along Lake Ochrida), but we hope to dislodge the enemy from these heights also." (Dispatches from the Yugoslav frontier near the lake indicated two Greek columns are driving to- ward Elbasani, 45 miles by road from Pogradetz, along the Skumbi and Devol River valleys. (These reports said the Greeks had reached the upper Skumbi valley, which twists northwest from Pogradetz to Elbasani, and were moving north toward Elbasani along the Devol valley northwest of Moskopolis.) The Greek ministry of home se- curity reported tdday that consid- erable damage was caused to build- ings by an Italian air raid on the island of Corfu, and said 18 promi- nent residents of the Greek fron- tier town of Philiates were abduct- ed by retreating Italians a week ago. "Their fate is not known," it said. sec- Melbourne (GP)--Perhaps there'll be music with this war after all--it is announced there is an acute chortage of drums, bugles and trum- pets to meet the neds of the Aus- by | into a state of apathy and | security | wrong." HEPBURN ASSATLS KING PROPAGANDA AS MISLEADING Warns Labor Against Selfish Interests -- Approves Power's Work Toronto, Dec. 3.--(CP)--Premier Mitchell Hepburn of Ontario last night in an address to the Young Men's Canadian Club here renewed previous avowals of disapproval of the federal government with an at- tack on the inaction he said is slowing up Canada's war effort. Foremost in criticism that was general but not all-embracing he named what he termed the "grist- mill of propaganda at Ottawa." His only note of approval sounded for the work of Hon. C. G. Power, Defence Minister for Air, and his deputy minister, James Duncan, He said that since they took over control of the air train- ing plan it has become an effective unit of war effort. "But before that | it was nearly as pitiful as the con- dition in England before Churchill took over." An urge for immediate adoption | of currency control was added to a plea to Canadians to take a more | realistic war attitude. Of those who oppose currency expansion "to care for our needs", the premier said "Whether they like it or not the financial men will have to advo- cate some form of currency expan- sion. You cannot go broke domes- tically as long as you have a cen- tral authority jn.asni ove ance." At the beginning of his speech Mr. Hepburn told his listeners it was impossible to talk about mat- | ters of vital national interest with- ut arousing old animosities, pos- sibly a reference to earlier lack of sympathy with war measures taken the Dominion government. His first target, the "tight little grcup turning out propaganda", was the object of his main fire in | the adaress. As an illustration, hz sald Canadians recently had been told of an all-Canadian squadron flying all-Canadian Spitfires in | fighting over England, None of the pilots had been train ed .as Canadian fliers, he said. 'Many of them went' over there after we turned down the Empire- air-training plan. They paid thei way over or worked their way over and they were trained in the Royal Air Force." The term dian Spitfires" was misleading, too, because he said not one engine or propeller for a Spitfire was being made in Canada. "That kind of stuff leads people false and it's damnabie and He said also that a report saying seven Canadian warships were be- ing buflt did not let the people «now that they were of the gor- vette type and that many of the vital parts had to be bought else- | where. Would Demand Action "They know that they are mis- leading the people. If the people knew the truth they would not tol- erate this inaction, We need planes | and we need tanks, and we haven't | got tanks. We need artillery and we have wagon wheels with fence posts between them. The true measure of our war effort is on its effect on the enemy and not in | terms of millions spent. here and | millions spent there." He said it is three years before the outbreak of war 'since Prime Minister King said he knew war was inevitable. Did we do any- thing? No, we did hot ... after war broke out we let wool be shipped out of the country. We all remember men shuffling shifts and no uniforms at all." his continental set-up had no mon- | buy from the United States, tha premier termed United States citi- zens who hide and demand cash as fight to the last Englishman." He called on labor to sacrifice. "I believe in the rights of labor and I believe in collective bargaining. I believe in protecting the rights labor has won all these years. But I believe labor will have to take a stand in the national interest and not in any selfish interest because if we lose the war, labor will lose all its rights. He said (hat as wages increase so do the farmers burdens, and that farmers were on the lowest rung on the labor ladder. Mother of Famous Doctor Dies, Age 86 Alliston, Ont., Dec. 3--(CP)--Mrs, Margaret Grant Banting, mother of Sir Frederick Banting, co-discov- erer of insulin and noted physi- cian, died yesterday in hospital here. She was 86. Mrs. Banting suffered a broken hip three years ago and had been in hospital since then. She was the first white girl born in Alliston and spent most of her life here. Her husband, William Thompson Banting, died 12 years ago. «oo Dahle Too Late to Classify SPECIAL -- OIL PERMANENTS from Two Dollars up. Nestle Machineless, Three Dollars. Guar- anteed. Clarke's Hairdressing, 296 Richmond East. Phone 2399J. (21Dec.c) PEGGY MOUNTENAY'S BEAUTY Parlour. Permanents $1.50 and up, 1so special Machineless waves, $2.75. around 10:00 a.m, tralian fighting forces. PETAIN SEEKING 10 RULE FRANCE FROM VERSAILLES (Continued from Page 1) in Vichy until Laval had discussed arrangements for such a move in Berlin. Petain was said to have ordered Laval to do the arranging in. Paris and cancel the trip to the German capital. This, like Petain's opposition to was | "all-Cana- | | the ousting of French residents | from Lorraine, caused observers to | wonder whether the old marshal | might not be following a shrewa plan to do the mest for France, | while capitalizing on a belief in | some quarters that he is only a fi- gurehead chief of state. Such observers recalled it was | Petain who let Gen. Maxime Wey- | gand drop out of the government. | | Some said, at that time that Laval | | had "squeezed" Weygand out; that ("old Petain just doesn't know the | score." But, today, Weygand seems far stronger in North Africa than he | could have been at Vichy. He commands the loyalty of a well-trained North African army next door to Italian Libya, and his presence there has been considered | Vichy's best guarantee of ccnsid- | eration from France's conquerors, Those close to Petain say he has |a clear-cut plan; that he believes no such settlement can be reached juntil the axis war with Britain is ' | ended ne | AoldiGigly, ui, 'declare, he has placed France's relations wili .ne conquerors in Laval's care -- after | noting that Laval as a man with=- |out a party and without wide pe- | pular support, appears no threat ac a dictator. BRITISH RAIDERS BOMB NAZI SHIPS (Continued from Page 1) and public and commercial build- ings. Some persons were killed and | others injured, but according to reports so far received the number is not large. the early part of the night in East | Anglia, South Wales and a few points elsewhere. Little damage was done, and the casualties were few, though a small number of people were killed. "One. of our fighters was lost yesterday, but the pilot is safe." TRAVEL DISTANCES T0AID SUFFERER . Doylestown, Pa., Dec. 3. (AP)-- five possible blood donors, found among more than 300 who answered a continent.wide appeal, stood ready today to aid 22-year-old Frank Shutt in his fight against deadly streptococcus viridans. All suffered from the blood stream infection, and all have the same type blood as the critically ill son of a Bucks County farmer. live in widely separated parts of | the east and a Philadelphia airplane "Bombs were also dropped during ! They | pilot offered to fly them here if Shutt falls to respond to the first transfusion, to be made today. James O'Hara, 41, unemployed navy veteran, was the volunteer whose blood was the needed type 4. He came from Philadelphia to un- dergo the transfusion. The youth, stricken 11 days ago, has been under the constant care of his fiancee, Dorothy Bates, and his sister Margaret, both nurses. BILTMORE LAST TIMES TODAY! "Tell Your Children" (Scourge of Marihuana) "BACHELOR MOTHER" Ginger Rogers, David Niven CONTINUOUS SHOW DAILY DOORS OPEN 12:30 20c Till 6:30; 25¢ Evenings NOW PLAYING 'BRIGHAM YONGE' -- WITH -- TYRONE POWER -- ALSO -- "GIRL IN 313" ALL STAR CAST "MARKS KING AT CELINA TWO EXCELLENT FEATURES "THE COWBOY QUARTERBACK Bert Wheeler - Marie Wilson -- ALSO -- | "Murder in the Air" { TTT OsHawa ARENA Tuesday Lan FIGURE SKATING CLUB "WIR For Expert Radio' Electrical Service Phone - DON CHRISTIAN ELECTRIC 38-40 Simcoe St, N, | Phone 84-744. 1.2.8.8 .8.¢ ¢ and even | the pitiful spectacle of | around in make- | Stressing the fact that Hitler and | ey problems but that Britain must | behind neutrality | "willing to | Screen Play by Ivan Got, Robert Buckner RICHARD 72 Church St, phone 371J, BILTMORE STARTS TOMORROW (WEDNESDAY) = 2nd FEATURE -- ZORINA -- IN = "I WAS AN ADVENTURESS' -- WITH ~~ ZRICH VON STROHEIM Kk kk kk dokdokkok YATRA were and Earl Baldwin + From a fiers he Walter Relseh PETER LORNE GREENE

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