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Oshawa Daily Times, 24 Dec 1940, p. 5

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1940 "Sock Hitter Vi} Chios BRAWNNOT BRAIN GHOIGE FOR BLOOD BANK DONATIONS trunks, jewel boxes and family vaults is coming 'to light in ces- ponse to demands of brokers, For the value of these stones has increased as much as 300 per cent, in some cases since the war, 'Old-fashioned "sunbursts"--those ray-like brooches of a couple of FORGOTTEN GEMS HAVE NEW VALUE Greetings and good wishes. May your Yuletide season be Hitler Sweep Gives Small Diamonds Enhanced Value By ED WALLACE (Associated Press Staff Writer) New York, Dec. 24 (AP).--The| old phrase, "gold is where you find it," could be changed to something | 'way into cheaper types of jewellery. like this: '"aiamonds are where | modern generations ago--rings set in the <tyles and with the stones of the 19th century and fancy bracelets of the hectic '20's are popping up in | jewel merchants' offices. Taken from their old settings, some of these stones can be re-cut and sold to the trade for use in jewellery. The smaller stones, repolished, may find their Canadians who take seriously the problem of how to become good | Doctors Prefer Truck Drivers To Bank Presidents 88 BOND ST. WEST Toronto, Dec. 24. (CP) -- Those a merry one. DOMINION GARAGE TELEPHONE $108. blood donors wiil eat fewer cream | One broker said he had handled | "probably $500,000" in stones of this size in the last three weeks, others have gone. directly to them -- if you look hard often | tiny To One and All for a Very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. A. F. COX and SON # KING ST. W. PHONE 666 IRR ERR UR ERR BR Pa a To all our customers and friends we extend best wishes for a produced away i guild manner, ines and saves Very Merry Christ- now mas. GENOSHA HOTEL PHONE 2825 MAY JOY AND HAPPINESS BE YOURS ALL THROUGH 1941. SAYWELL LEATHER GOODS SIMCOE ST. SCUTH PHONE 463 RIX RRB RRRZI Re SVD VCTO0E The Management EEE: and Staff of 22 RR you find puffs and shovel more coal. i At Connaught Laboratories at The cheerful chap whois |2 bod ook in 8 : : trunks in the attic might help. [and blood is treated and stored for $0 anxious fo assist you that the public with advertisements for | F{ a [ : bik WBI®P © | future service here or overseas, it is your Local Agent--be {in recent weeks and profiting by i A :. 2 gE. : . { 4 di lit. \ ay i di "| blood donors. sure to ask him to help When Hitler's legions swarmed ; 5 4 % é 3 The cream puff--coal shovelling they unwittingly made the market FRANCE 0 RISE "Blood is almost like milk after that many are discovering in in- « 1 | a person has eaten a fatty meal" It's the market in small diamonds al reasons asked that his name be --"melee" the trade calls' them. withheld. "The prime requisites of ellery industry, melee is the x thing one can get only as a result given to cut stones below a quurte i of manual labor. y |cdrat, down even to the one-point | size A . sons from 21 to 60 years of age are | gg : . | acceptable to the Canadian Red | these tiny gems are needed annual- . ly in the manufacture of wedding Institute Reaches Thin or medium weight persons 14) . usually are preferred to fleshier and } engagement! U.S. From Paris Li the got roves locate in the latter. A donor is Smai' brooches | called upon to give his blood only a Mena os . | Bonnet, director of the Institute of The flow of : es halte Mmtellectual Co-Operation of the | a little less than a pint each time aor, ne ; : | Prime Minister King, in an- GOING BY [lov : countriss, wae: ome 20,0001 Prance will rise again once Britain { nouncing Sunday the expansion of utters hem I itari - el - ing" ¢ 5 cutte the totalitarian doc there was described officially as blood-banking operations in They cannot be cut profitably N Jonnet in the United gome / weekly will be needed 'tnt i ; fatalities. The capital got an early | ; this continent 3 ifamond 3 1ce the Nazis have seiz Pp 8 Doctors said other matters im- | f Tit 1s : | portant in the | A few fatali ley a 50 were report. | top-ndtch blood donor are: 1. eat hint a clearing house of | ed in a southcoast town, but else- lacking. thought and effort, | Io . She | eneral health rules; 3, do manual : | | ties and damage were limited. labor to increase your blood flow lain. halt made was in not assuring ) ha i lipe riority on the seas. They were agreed that because . FA TORY ot the manual labor clause, this is Qn < - '{ oN eo 1 d. re onant vole 'and cheered the troops immensely. | Lig 16] cq ue cpline dy te Seat Some truck drivers move around rank first, bank presidents last. 2 ( ep - Bonnet does not share the |, "iia cab windows. | ks to show that France fell At.rioon today some units hel a | CUTS RODUCTION | arian, 5 ohn taining 1 internal disintegration. He Catt | F. Harrigan, 50, physical training | sergeants waiting on the table | teacher and sports coach at man- yecause of Germany's care- { They ate well but not out of pro. | ual Training High School, Brook- ilitary preparation. : é i | soning, wip the RYerage vis Holds Orders for treatment two months ago when |B s fantastic, of France's | Cone sung of tur ey, POF, Polatoes, 1 h he was bitten by his dog. He died » country was healthy and $ 0,000,000 Wort : coffee. In many cases officers pro hydrophobia. vided candy and cigarettes before > fi a enough." those forg the University of Toronto, where Thousands have been doing 1 gems old gems. wasn't hard to get suggestions for : over Holland and into Belgium, angle is important. you plan your next trip creasing numbers. I N F R PF S said one doctor, who for profession- W E il 0 ¥ I The bread and butter of the jew- a good donor are good veins--some- . Generalized rules are few. Per- Thousands and thousands of Head of Intellectual Crom which will register dimirs | | bands, as side st in engagement cnes because veins are harder to ss ew York, Dec. 24. --(CP)--Henr} | watches. | once every two months and gives abruptly. with the invasion of the |y.;qye of Nations, said today that | mu ? " MOTOR COACH" | craft- ta i OR COACH" |cra Enrope. Nght. although. ther were Canada, said about 2,000 donors . 1 | merchants. Also t are y | the institute in Paris from wig N all-clear signal development of a | some 400-cdd cut the ma + directed the League's work of | t io it mechanizall nt ng raw or rare meat, iver; 2, Ww | tor y where, the government said, casual- at, or liver; 2, follow Asar test mistake Ger- J and enlarge your veins. control of the seas, the (Continued from Page 1) one field in which truck drivers the routes with holly and mistletoe | TACKS ALUMINUM, ns of those who have writ- a HYDROPHOBIA FATAL Christmas dinner for the men with country was crushed quite portion to the wartime civilian ra- lyn, refused to undergo the Pasteur spite many explanations, turnips, mince ples, cookies and today in a Brooklyn hospital--of aid. "Ther ; - said. "There was no peo of Aeroplanes the men resumed their duties LUCKY LUCKY g body = . li > more intimately united and as- Conger - Lehigh | sembled than the French Boal Coal Company 3 24% EXTEND BEST WISHES 4 TO ALLFOR A -Merry Christmas AND A PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR! * CONGER-LEWIGH COAL CU. ncerning the League of Na- he described as "the ssion for a construc- v PAC! he said: "I know from the political point ew the League was weakest, as have only too sadly estab- ] If the League of Nations ad had the time to evolve, to solve e questions of the minorities who | maintained the hatreds in all of Central Europe, and certain fron- | tier difficulties, to prepare econo- mic agreements, notably in the Danube Valley, it would, gradually, | have established the elements for 18 nal federalism, * which could { been transformed, one day, into veritable federal unions, super- [me national sovereignties and ountering the clash of { Isms | "The fault lay | N m |and similar roy the already too-timid and too-s'ow beginnings of European { organization." have national- in permitting doctrines to JAP OFFICIAL DIES Tokyo, Dec. 24 (AP) -- | Yuasa, 65 who resigned as Lord | Keeper of the Imperial Kurahel | Seal last But the big day will be tomorrow when thousands of Englith homes will be wide open for the Canadians to spend a few hours enjoying their warm hospitality. Every Canadian in the fighting forces will have Christmas dinner in a private home or in the mess. * The most original stunt in the 1st Digision of the Canadian army was a Christmas party staged by the Divisional Signals for 300 chil. dren In their district. Every eff: is being made to give the men a rry Yuletide and the officers are spending it quietly, mostly with their troops. EASTERN CANADA 15 AGAIN SHAKEN BY EARTHQUAKES (Continued from Page 1) {it had received reports of the 'quake and had made arrangements for Los Angeles, Dec. 24 Northrop Alrcraft Corp, holds national defence totalling $10,000,000, is curtailing working hours of 2,000 employees by 20 per cent. because of an alumin- um shortage. Lamotte Cohu, general manager, announced last night that the work- ers' time would be reduced from ten to eight hours a day, effective im- mediately, The company's plant, at nearby Hawthorne, has been on a 20-hour schedule daily. It now will operate 16. "There simply isn't enough alum- inum available to meet the great demand occasioned by the national defence program," Cohu declared. "This same situation is bound to affect other aircraft concerns. Some of the larger manufacturers were able to lay in large reserve supplies of this material and as yet they are not handicapped." He added that orders now require from 30 to 35 weeks to fill, and that indications are it will be September before increased facilities at alum- inum production plants will be able to care for the industry's demands. (AP) =| which | contracts | driver was Mrs. Sarah Lupacchinno Meriden, Conn., Dec. 24--(AP)-- | An automobile was tossed 100 feet after striking a New Haven railroad passenger train locomotive here to- day, but its two occupants escaped uninjured from the wreckage. The of Hartford. A Merry Christmas To All Our Friends and Customers. MODEL SHOE STORE SIMCOE ST. SOUTH WTC OC I I Py re In appreciation of your goodwill-- A MERRY CHRISTMASI wpene ROYAL HOUSE FURNISHING COMPANY MRS. CROZIER, Manager. 35 King St. E. - Opp. Post Office - Phone 260 immediate development of the Northop's defence contracts are WALTER G. CORBEN 52 King St. E. Phone 871 June 1, died today after a protract- ed iliness. seismograph record to determine the extent of the tremors. Mild disturbances were reported from Quebec City. The seismograph at the Univers- ity of Toronto was out of order and failed to record, but Toronto residents reported the shock was more distinct than last week's tre- mor. Newspapers reported a number of telephone calls. One man, Frank Davis, sald he heard a loud ex- plosion and thought his house was coming down. Apparently the earth tremor was most severe in York Township northwest of the city, where windows rattled and furniture swayed. INVASION PORTS WHERE ACTIVITY GREATER BOMBED (Continued from Page 1) kerque, Flushing and airports in the same area. Bomb Industrial Town London, Dec. 24. (CP)--German alr raiders concentrated on Eng- land's industrial northwest -last night for the second successive night. Wave after wave of German bombers, which began coming over after d@isk, participated in the assault, and the government report- ed that a number of fires were started and that "considerable damage" was done in the area. A number of persons were killed and injured in one northwest towi when a bomb scored a direct hit on an alr raid shelter. Several were buried in cellars when their houses collapsed. The - government sald, however, that preliminary reports indicated casualties were not heavy. . The Nazi night raiders also at- tacked London, but the damage '|around an open fireplace, for various types of military craft and tail assemblies for certain bombers. In addition, the company has just tested the first of 24 bomb- ers ordered by the Norwegian gov- ernment under a $1,500,000 contract. Yule Concert At Gibbon St. Mission A happy occasion last night was the annual Christmas concert of Gibbon Street Mission. Under the capable chairmanship of the Sun- day school superintendent, R. H. Lockwood, an excellent program of songs: and recitations were pre- sented before the large crowd in attendance. Assistant superintend- ent J. Walls spoke briefly, as did R. B. Wilkins. Mrs, Kemp was in charge of the program and Archie Campbell presided at the piano. Special lighting effects made "Away In a Manger," by the Pri- mary Class, and "Hymns We Love" by a group of the older girls very colorful. A group of boys presented the piece "Light the Way to Beth- lehem" with the aid of flashlights. The following gave recitations: Danny Kemp, Louise Winicott, Ivan Martin, Charles Kemp, Allan Baker, Opal Winicott, Ileen McCullough, Betty Merchant, Nancy Parks, Mer- vin McDonald, Harry Wittaker. Ruth Winicott, Keith Northcott, June Winton, Allan Smith, Eddy Smith, Myrtle Peters, Harry Whit- taker, As a group of boys and girls portrayed "Waiting for Santa" sleigh bells were heard and soon the jolly old man himself appeared. With the help of nis assistants, Santa Clays distributed candy, oranges and other gifts from the Christmas tree. "God Saye the King" brought the concert to a close. Last Sunday night a special carol service was held at the mission, featuring singing by candle-light, and an illustrated Christmas mes- sage. another year we say, 262 KING WwW. The gift we treasure most was not given at this Christmastime . . . but it was given all through the year. This gift i is your friendship and patronfige. We treasure it most because we know it is your way of showing us that okr services has been welcomed by you, and that you value this service. So fi "Merry Christmas to Alll" her MILLS MOTOR SALES | - G.M. PRODUCTS, SALES & SERVICE OSHAWA rion}

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