Oshawa Daily Times, 26 Sep 1940, p. 5

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1940 cies | POPULATION OF BR | CANADA 11,390,000 Million Increase in Ten Years About Normal; Tab- _ PAGE FIVE ! ten years has been about normal TIME TABLE CHANGES Effective Sunday, September 29, 1240 Full information from Agents of the locality he is to cover. The schedules containing the details of information sought number 12. There will be 250 commissioners supervising the enumeration in 245 constituencies. It will take about two weeks. The tabulation will be in progress for a couple of years Usually the population is announc- ed in October. All Canadians on active service abroad will be enu- merated as if they were at home on See Tokio-Berlin Threat Of Joint Military Action If U.S. Aids Britain In East London's Water Supply Maintained Under Difficulties om yn Defensive Alliance Thought Attempt to Split De- mocracy Operations shanghai, Sept. 238 -- Authorita- tive advices from Tokio said yes- terday that Japan and Germany had agreed in principle on a de- fensive alliance which would be- come effective if the United States and Great Britain collaborated in such matters as the Far Eastern naval base at Singapore. Germany wouid use its good of- fices as between Japan and Russia, it was said, to free Japan for execu- tion of its new program of expan=- sion southward. The alliance was proposed by Germany, according to Tokio ad- vices, and seemed aimed at divert- ing the attention of the United States in the international field, to prevent full co-operation with Britain. There was no provision for Japan to change its '"non-invplvement" war policy at the present moment, it was said. This would come only when Japan and Germany felt that too close United States-British co- operation menaced their interests. A charge that the United States, Great Britain and Australia were preparing 'aggressive formations" against the Netherlands East Indies, to interfere with Japan's policy of expansion was made by the leading Tokio popular newspaper, Nichi Nichi. Nichi Nichi sald that present trade negotiations which a Japa- nese mission is conducting in the Netherlands East Indies were aimed at "adding another country to the East Asia mutual prosperity block." The negotiations were specially timely, Nichi Nichi said, because the establishment of a "military outpost" in French Indo-China was expected to bring Indo-China and Japan closer together. SERIES OF AUTO ACCIDENTS HERE Two Persons Injured Near Lake; Boy Runs in Front of Car (Held Over from Tuesday) A severe accident on Sunday was followed by three minor accidents yesterday. Two persons suffered injuries and both cars were badly damaged early Sunday morning when a car driven by George Willoughby, 16%: Simcoe Street North, came into collision with a car driven by Harry Greene, 1472 Simcoe Street South. Both cars: were going in the same direc- tion and had reached Greens's driveway, where he turned in. Arnold Greene, passenger in the Greene car, was treated by Dr. B. A. Brown for facial lacerations and sprains, while Willoughby suffered abrasions and bruises. P.C. F. Faw- bert investigated. Ran Out From Curb Seven-year-old Donald Cooper, 127 Montrave Avenue, East Whitby, was knocked down but not injured when struck by a car driven by Harold Connolly, '3 George Apartments, Simcoe Street South. According to the report, the little fellow ran out from the west curb of Centre Street into the path of the automobile, which was proceeding south. After being struck he immediately got up and ran for home. A bicycle ridden by Albert Dod- well, 230 Ritson Road South, and a car driven by William R, Welsh, 213 Hillside Avenue,.Oshawa, collided on Ritson Road South yesterday. The cyclist was about to make a lefi- hand turn into his driveway. Little damage and no injuries were sus- tained. Fenders Damaged Mrs. D. McLaren, Apartment 7, Buckingham Manor, was side-swiped yesterday evening while driving south on Simcoe street north by a car driven by F. Bery, 184 Celina Street, according to the police re- port. The fenders of both cars were damaged. Swiss Air Again Used As Highway By Alien Planes Berne, Sept. 26.--Foreign airplanes of unidentified nationality Tuesday night violated Swiss territory, often crossed in the past by British air- craft en route to raid northern Italy, the Swiss army staff said in a com- munique yesterday. POLICE ARREST INSANE KILLER Kluk Fails to Draw Gun as 2 Officers Grab Him Toronto, Sept. 25.--The search for the mad killer of Arte Borievich ended in a rain-swept lane off Nia- gara Street late yesterday after- noon when a patrol sergeant and a police cadet pounced on a man who readily admitted he was John Kluk. Tied around the man's waist and held in place by a stout cord was a .32-calibre pistol at half-cock, one live shell in the chamber and six more live rounds in the maga- zine. It was ready for instantan- eous action, but Kluk was given no chance to use the weapon Patrol Sergeant Irving Smith, veteran member of the force, and a 20-year-old cadet, Barry Lorimer, put an end to one of the most in- tensive manhunts in Toronto po- lice history of recent years. Kluk submitted tamely to arrest. He was grabbed before he realized | ter, go almost immediately to Great | that he was being followed. Had he known that the police were closing in on him, it is believed, he would not have hesitated to shoot it out with the officers in an insane fren- zy to escape. Hungry and tired from a night and day spent in eluding the police cordons, the urge for liquor caused Kluk to discard caution and to en- ter the yard of a home occupied by Charles Priolo, 53, at 57 Mitchel Avenue, and demand a drink, It was the same demand he had made the night before of Arte Borievich, whose refusal to comply led to his death. Home And School Clubs Help Along New Courses Port Hope, Sept. 26.--Home and School clubs have assisted the De- partment of Education to a consid- erable extent in launching the new public school courses, Mrs. G. C Hewson, Toronto educationist, stat- | ed in addressing the opening of the winter meetings of Port Hope Home and School Club. Parents, through the Home and School Club, became educated to the needs which were being met by the new courses. "Britain Will Win" PR ¥ Awarded the Iron Cross and wounded eight times while fighting | with the German army in the last war, Ernest Richard Saran is now | with 100,000 cases a lance-corporal in the 2nd Bat- | apples and 425,000 cases of canned | symmer residents, Miss Anne Hess talion, Calgary Highlanders, Na- turalized since 1933, Saran is cer- tain that "Britain will win the war." J A facing I One of the difficult probl London suburb which was particularly hard hit. don auth orities these trying days is that of maintaining a steady water supply. Bombs landing in streets and crashing through buildings have wrecked many mains, cutting off the supply in the hit areas until repairs can be made, The ABOVE photo was taken in a south The main, near a hospital, had been tapped and an em- ergency water station set up where buckets, pans and other utensils may be filled. Residents of the ad- joining area line up for their supply. ulation in October Ottawa, Sept. 25.--Canada, right now, has a population of 11,390,000, according to estimates by the Do- June 2, CANADIAN | CANADIAN NATIONAL | PACIFIC The increase in population in the minion Bureau of Statistics. This is an increase of 1,000,000 over ten years ago. The figures will be offi- cially confirmed, and much other information obtained in the decen- nial census, for which arrangements were reported today as well ad- vanced. The census always needs to be as of a certain date--the first of Junz --but this year it will be the 2nd of June, the previous day being | Sunday. | It takes some time to enroll the people and get the information, ! more time to tabulate what is learn- ed. The equivalent of an army di- vision, and more, of enumerators will be engaged. The number will | be 17,000, apart from guides in the | north and interpreters in the cities duction Required For British Needs ability to supply foodstuffs on a much larger scale than heretofore ment officials, headed by a Minis- j Britain to ascertain just what the | needs are and how best they can | be met, it was learned yesterday | ~The question has been before the Cabinet at each recent meeting and ['indications are that a decision will | be reached this week. As the in- | quiries have been chiefly for farm products, = officials familiar with | Canada's ability to grow the foods | required would be selected if the | Government decides to send a party to London. | "If an official party goes over," said a Government spokesman, "it | | will not be with the object of seek- | ing a market for Canadian prod- | ucts, but rather to see what the needs are and make provision to | supply them without haggling over | prices. | Help Britala to Buy | "Last July we were worried about | how we were going to handle our 30,000,000-pound surplus of bacon and in August the British -Food Ministry stepped in and had the entire surplus moved to the United | Kingdom," he continued. "It hap- pened then that we had the surplus | and it did not affect our domestic | market. "I think {if Britain needs our stocks we should®send them to her even if it means rationing Cana- dian people on certain farm prod- | ucts on which we have no great | surpluses. Where our products { usually bring higher prices than | the United Kingdom can afford to | pay, she should get them at prices | she can afibord rather than be | forced to use poorer products ob- | tainable elsewhere. The Canadian | Government should make up the | difference." | It is understood that the British ! Food Ministry is anxious that the Canadian officials go over and dis- cuss the situation with them. The commodities on which discussions would centre would be bacon, but- | ter, cheese, eggs, tobacco, fibre flax, | apples and wheat. "This war may last five or six years and we want to get down to! the most efficient way of handling food supplies and be able to advise our farmers on what crops to in- crease production and on what crops to cut down," the spokesman | said. "If we can find out in ad-| vance what Britain's requirements | | will be, we can better meet them." | | From last year's apple crop Can- | | ada presented the United Kingdom | of dehydrated apples. Inquiries will be made | whether similar gifts would be de- | sired this year. Dominion To Supply Food On Vastly Larger Scale At Prices to Fit Pocket A Mission May Estimate Pro-| 400 Pounds Of Jam Donated To Red Cross Lindsay, Sept. 26. ~~ over 400 | Ottawa, Sept. 26.--Inquiries from | pounds of jam were preserved by the United Kingdom as to Canada's | Lindsay ladies at two bees, one held {in the has brought before the Cabinet the | | the | 678.47; Dumble, T. H. McClelland, Dudley | large. Spragg, A. Burd, Alex Stephens. where the foreign population is | YOU'LL ENJOY GOING ANYWHERE By Motor Coach ATTRACTIVE ROUND TRIP FARES between OSHAWA and Niagara Falls ............ $ 5.60 London ..iveseviviesred 8 6.50 North Bay .............. $11.00 x--5-DAY Excursion EQUALLY LOW RATES TO OTHER POINTS Tickets and Information at GENOSHA HOTEL -- PHONE 2825 CRAY COACH LINES Each enumerator will have & map Women's Institute kitchen and another in Cambridge Street United Church on Tuesday. headquarters in Toronto for use overseas and also military hospitals and in Canada. Mrs. M. B. Kennedy, supervisor of Nutrition Department of the local Red Cross. was in charge of the bee at the W. I. kitchen, while Mrs. E. D. Fee and Mrs. J. A. Mc- Laughlin supervised operations at the church. Over 500 pounds will be sent to Toronto this week and further shipments will follow later. a ---------- | MAKE PLANS RAISE FUNDS | AT COBOURG: $5,500 Being Sought to ssist Red Cross--Select Chairman to Aid Drive Cobourg, Sent 26 -- Cobourg or- | zed for its Red Cross drive for at a meeting Tuesday night 1 committee chairmen were | | The campaign will start on Oct. | 8th with $5500 as the objective, | Major L. T. Burwash, president of | the Cobourg branch of the Cana- | dian Red Cross, explained the need of the drive, The financial report given by W. Maize for the year ending August 31st, showed receipts of $5507.64 made up of donations and fees, $1,. national campaign donations, $1,351.76 in cash and $1601 in pledgés and raised by other means, $876.46. The expenditures totalled | | $5,172.64, made up of national heads | | quarters | 280.63; Pyjamas, bedding bandages, | transfer, $912; wool, $1. | etc, $2437.60; equipment, $165.96; | administration, $336.58; phone, $39. Col. W. E, Dumble, O.B.E, and Mr. Edwards addressed the meeting briefly, declaring that the Red Cross had a long period of war need ahead of it. The following committee | chairmen were appointed. Campaign manager, W. S. Edwards; special names' committee, Dr. A. R. Rich- ards; businessmen committee, J. D. Burnet; corporation committee, W, S. Edwards; publicity committee, Lester Caughey and Larry Crottie; general campaign committee, F, Raymond, Mrs. Constance Jamieson; and Mrs. B. Oliver; professional men, Major L. T: Burwash; finance, W. Maize; general committee, Col. ARLE SUS RRR RTA A Jo The | proposal that a party of Govern- |J2M will be forwarded to Red Cross | other 'branches of the service | VAP: AVATAR] RTE PALSY! 8 i alk LAIR TRE RTEIR LE A VA: 0:0 A VIVA Special -- Fresh Meaty SPRING LAMB LEGS » 25¢ LOINS » 25¢ FRONTS » 15¢ LOBLAW'S QUALITY BOLOGNA - 2 Ibs. 25¢ SKINLESS SMOKED WIENERS - - Ib. 20¢ Tender Prime BEEF CUTS Special -- BONELESS Round Steak Roast » 29° BLADE Roast » 20° Special -- Thick . SHORT RIB Roast 22¢ 16 Special -- CHOICE Milk-Fed Boneless Fronts VEAL Special -- 3-LITTLE PlQ Pork Sausage Meat .18¢ In Visking, Fine for patties, and frying. ete TENT TT TTT TTT Te TU TTT TT TUTTI TTT TTT TT TD TTT To LTT MOT TH I PRICES EFFECTIVE UNTIL SATURDAY NIGHT, Sept. 28 We reserve the right to limit quantities of all merchandise to family weekly requirements. {Je [IIL IL eb Te LL THe TE Le LITT TTTe [TT TT HTT @ [TNTTTITTTTT Te THT Te HITT {TTT To] DELICATELY PERFUMED LUX TOILET SOAP . R Cokes 1 6: 6LO-COAT = 59: PUDDINGS 3-19: NAPTHA SOAP Pearl White 36s] 1: JERGEN'S FLOATING Carholic Soap 14: 3-Bar Package FOR SHINING POTS AND PANS BRILLO = 2: 23: Pkgs. Libby's Deep Brown CONCENTRATED JAVEL BEANS In Tomate JAVEX wee ree 14 | 73 6 1. "T'90 COMFORT SOAP DEAL 4 Bars Comfort & 2 Tumblers 2. For ( THE 3-FLAVOURED DOG Red Heart 5 13 Pint 0ST"-NOW i CANADIAN RED CROSS ae ent dt edis chil eel eal, Be Wise -- Drink Fry's FRY'S cocoa 21c 14-1b Tin Ogilvie Heather 04 rs 32-02. Pkg. 15¢c For Health Eat 1 to 3 Cakes a Day Fleischmann's Yeast Cahes | 99 44/100 ©, Pure Tin Diet 'B," Meat; fr et Le eli Te TTT Te THEA LULL AL WW Featuring Harry Horne's Quality Food Products * Special © Harry Horne's DOUBLE CREAM POWDER + & 3° Assorted Flavours a Wu 1 Ai Harry Horne's JELL-A-MILK DESSERTS Six Assorted Flavours, 4-.0z. Pkg, 2 15¢ 23° 25¢ 10¢ 11¢ 19¢ 2 ~ 7T¢ un 1 5¢ Raspberry or Strawberry--Added Pectin BETTY'S JAM Jar Special--Hcinz, Malt, Cider or White VINEGAR - - 2: Bottles The Sauce With a Kick Glenwood SAUCE Special--Clark's IRISH STEW Burn's Corned Beef Hash Special--Shell or Ready-Cut-Bulk MACARONI Plain or Pimento CHATEAU CHEES NNN ili Nil 6-01. Bottle 15%-ox, Tin 15-02. Tin Se TTT TERE Te TIT LL Te [RD LT e Ls CALIFORNIA RED TOKAY GRAPES 2 Bus, 15 Large Crisp Red Berries SELECTED QUALITY BANANAS 21:17: Scientifically Ripened in our own Modern Ripening Rooms. ELBERTA PEACHES « BARTLETT PEARS BLUE PLUMS =~ BLUE GRAPES Available at Attractive Prices ONTARIO GROWN DOMESTIC GRADE APPLES 4 Ie: 15: ONTARIO GROWN SELECTED Stalk 5 each c CELERY Stalks 4 lbs. 10- ONTARIO GROWN SELECTED 3 1bs. Be A Larre Vivian Vi WASHED CARROTS ONTARIO No. 1 LARGE CCOKING ONIONS HY 74 ilvidy i Diet 'A,' Fish; Di Y IVORY SOAP 2 Tre 10 oz. b § 7c (1) The "Cash for Charities Offer" Procter and Gamble will redeem for cash © CRISCO © CAMAY SOAP LABELS and CHIPSO BOX ENDS et 'C,' Cheese. HAWES FLOOR WAX "5223 43: Y. ALARA IARI AVERT APRT EE Y VY. Catelli's--In Tomato Sauce SPAGHETT Speclal--Assorted Shades 2iN]1 SHOE POLISH -- PURE LARD - - Special--Chase & Sanborn 1-1b. COFFEE i- 24° i 23¢ - Hid Vacuum Loblaw"s Red Label Individual With Cheese ro 126 10¢ a Of 45¢ TEA BAGS 5: 47¢ Special--WESTON"S BISCUITS O'Canada CREAMS Its design is absolutely new, and in keeping with the patriotic atmosphere. This delicious biscuit is composed of a semi shortbread with fruit flavoured fillings. With an averrge of 30 pieces to the 2 17 pound it wil BAG prove a very eco- nomical purchase dvr vivivdviviniv LOBLAW HEAD OFFICE, GROCETERIAS CO. LIMITED jiaviaviaviaviaviaviaviaviaviavianiani VAN i received from any local charity. Full details of this offer are given on leaflet available at our stores. J i htt NAA AAA HEINZ 6 Varieties Si 2 Lr ay JUNIOR FOODS PRP TENTS TE EACH LOBLAW COFFEE i -- Has its own individual B#ET characteristic e FLAVOUR ® AROMA e BODY ® SMOOTHNESS Pride of Arabia COFFEE gv 39¢ Very fine or medium groand Lib. 35¢! ! COFFEE ns ! J Very fine or medium ground. i 'TRUMPET 1 31¢; Medium ground. H { COFFEE { nid CLT COTTAGE BRAND SLICED or UNSLICED : ¢ BREAD "=u 219 PEERLESS Wheat Puffs 7¢ Cello. Pkg. Crosse & Fckwelt SALMON and SHRIMP PASTE 3-oz. 25¢ Tins Del Maiz Cream Style Golden Bantam CORN 2 ">= 1Q¢ RE STEN Viviividviavisiny (ih i 17-02. Tins 1-1b. Bag ~~ ~~ LOBLAW STORE White 24-0z. Loaves a HOY TORONTO.

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