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1353
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The Sylvan Lake News 1942-01-07 - 1944-12-20
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Date
1944-11-08
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Transcript
|Precious Jewels United Nations Relief And Rehabilitation Administration — To Give Aid To Liberated Areas The [mpor Are Playing A Leading Role In Many Of tant War Jobs ut rd UNRRA hes e/a familia 1 ds, sopphires, rubles and garne derstood, Tt bly the roles a3 tools for war. pphir { rubles are used in known If t Relief watches and chronometers, For this Job Jev s say that they must best evidence we be hard and free from flaws. Natural sapphire 1 rubies meet these re nd the Four Freedoms quirements very well because they are almost as hard as dinmond: merely. re | -, ‘They are also needed In meters and Tees M Ia Sh Tribute To Lord Halifax) iene ee Re are ee ote oney In Sheep | planes, tanks and other ware ei - |Us. Newspaper Man Has High) 8! mt a a ter or bi ae ar stats) upeninthie- \senst Aer a ens Little Labor In | Praise r British Ambassador ly cet eae Se Mae ot otter ea Proportion ‘To Other Livestock | Luthor Huston, Washington cor eas eee and Pe eaten es nena | required to keep one cow yondent of the New York Times) iii. on the a s ae an Neate a ye Cie et { for a half dozen sheep. pays high tribute to Lord Halif eran tak Re ee ae See ee oeduetia trainers siderable part of year] |the British Ambassador to the) ot available for wide usag nee from their sufferings. food, clothing Pp require no gr The returns) United States, in a recent article.) so oe ats at see ane : and shelter, aid in the prevention of wool came at midsummer when Be Grites Chis tall; rather aombte| ety Oe Ne Oe hie nen odtiecce gud in the recovery. of often few sources of |man who has been the British Am-| Pea ais Peiuoea at Ee pestth of the pecple, and that prepat ihe wool ret usually |passador since January, 1941, aS) 3 ist in 1902. The original eAthea ae ar crunpements shall Yemade cost of feed for the year, | demonstrated to thousands of Amerf-|) 0°) inproved to such ae ie leaving the lamb crop to cover the Jeans that there is a common meet-| (0,40 © Fee ee ccan s now distinguis Ing ground, and, in doing so, has ac- quired a wider knowledge, perhaps, | nd exiles a Winnipeg, of prisoner: assistance in for the return cost of labo Under encing and other in- to their hoi 1 for a raaake z the resumption of urgently needed ear ney oa eae displays some of the trophies he has : loca S agricultural and industrial production | Van Nice ae Seca gathered as a scout in Belgium, He ee ean pried a BRS and the restoration of essential Se-| station, Scott, Sask perimental |{, one of a group of Canadians hold-|°ther Britisher si s we est vice Raa Aiea ‘Ses ing a captured German strong point works hard at his job an BS | 2 , a great profit can be) 4, the Dutch frontier with the enemy travelled very widely In the United States, but no matter where he 1s, Lord Halifax cannot be very far away from the lines that communi- Administra-| ns of \ In the sess the tion held a few weeks ago in Mont- expected. summer when Lambs develop during the jess than 1,000 yards away. feed costs are lowest E W.V.S. Centre real, even this broad polley was ©’ and can often be sold to advantage larged to include ide’ eated ene eins the fall without grain feeding. cate with Whitehall and Downing countries, and one of the most heart-|Tests at the Scott Station Indicate | street. He does not know the hour ening evidences of the broad eharity tar lambs weaned on rape pasture, TW° New Projects Have Been | hen a dispatch may come that re- that underlies UNRRA’s activities’ qo funy as well as when grain fed.| Undertaken In Regina quires: immediate and earnest atten-| waa to sce the representatives of/ Only the breeding ficck need to be| “Zn recent weeks the Resins WS.| ion, There flows across his desk and thiopia and Greece. that in such! carried through the winter and an Centre has reported two projects they| rom it to the comprehensive ana| have undertaken which are particu) complex Embassy organization which ent time had suffered under Italian reesion, standing in their place to ag yolce the belief of their governments relief should go to Italy agic need of the mil- that some to meet the lions dying from malnutrition and disease. So among the first acts of this great humanitarian project was one to provide $50,000,000 to care for a defeated enemy. ‘All over Europe there is desperate need, UNRRA‘s part is not the long look. It is to step into the breach at the moment to care for the 180,- 000,000 Europeans who are near starvation, and to he ready to come to the relief of 250,000,000 Chinese who are still under the yoke of Japan as soon and as promptly as may be. When the preliminary work has been done, other agencies will take up the long-term task. It is a big and generous program and the total pool of resources that it will have to meet its great task will be in the neighborhood of two and a half billion dollars. The forty- is inexpensive shelter is adequate, such s an open shed with plenty of yentl- lation. Closed buildings are not sat- isfactory for sheep. Aside from shearing and lambing time, sheep require very little labor in proportion to other kinds of live- stock. They are particularly valuable in weed control as dily eat most kinds of weeds and no weed seeds will grow after passing through the digestive system of a sheep. An important factor to success with sheep is the attitude or likes of the attendant. Breeders who like sheep find them able to pay their way and return a profit but the sincere) interest of the attendant seems to in- fluence profits more than with other kinds of stock. they rea | FORGOT HIS WARNING When Samuel M. Freedman opened a restaurant at Lawrence, Mass., he was careful to post a sign reading, “We are not responsible for property Recently Freedman only to lost or stolen.” hung his coat near the sign four contributing countries will ap- SEN eae P-\return a few hours later to find it portion to this task one per cent. of ; had been stolen. their national incom: based on the year ending June 30, 1943 In this = mae WANT NEWSPAPERS way the United States will be calied upon to pay the major share, appro halt of the total The United seas want their “home town” news- Kingdom’s contribution will be in the papers more than anything else, Capt. helghborhood of $850,000,000, and Violet Matthews of the First Ald Canada’s, $77,000,000, Nursing Yeomanry, who recently re-| Not all of this amount will, of turned to her home in Torento, said. course, be called for in cash. Ten = = = = per cent, of cach nation’s contribu- pe tion must be in a form negotiable out- Big Three side the country. The other 90 per % = will be in the form of credits | for the purchase of goods and ser- ntributions are not al- those countries that ay for these services| will do § nee and the Nether- | lands hav ady expressed their intentior paying for this relief This, in bri UNTO It not only a broad plan of reconstruction but the evidence that even the bitter-F ness of ars of war has not dried up t vellspri of pity— From Liberty Magazine INTROSPECT Unloss many pe in the intimate relatic Canadian soldiers in hospital over- larly interesting,” the directors of| Geais with all phases of British in- Women’s Voluntary Services, National terests in the United States a saat, War Services mentioned in an inte™-| amount of documentary work. By nature and long training, he works quickly and easily, makes his decl- sions, and gives his instructions with- out hesitation. Had he not that faculty his work never would be done. His name 1s Edward Frederick Lind- ley Wood and he was the third Vis- count Halifax until recently, when the King’s honors list made him the Earl of Halifax. “He 1s as British as Yorkshire pudding or Devonshire cream, yet but for the place and circumstances of birth he might.have been Professor Wood of some New England college or Ed. Wood from the Kentucky hills. He is a man who would do all right in either of those environments, and does right well view. “Plans have been made for partici- pation in the Wartime Garden survey. The object of this survey is to learn how many wartime gardens were in operation in Regina last summer, the type of vegetables grown, the amount of the harvest. A meeting was held by the Regina Centre with a repre- sentative of the Agricultural Sup- plies Board at which final plans were formulated.” ‘The other project being under taken by the women of Regina and sponsored by the W.V.S. Is the “re- making of garments for the needy of Europe,” as the directors put it. “The Board of Education in Regina was approached for the use of sew- ing rooms in the public schools one evening a week.” The directors con-| tinued “Apparently the library in one district is becoming the community centre for activities other than the giving out of books. One of the dis- trict leadera reported to the Centre that she had secured the library one | afternoon a week for this purpose.” DEEP SEA DIVING A new, harmless method of mixing hydrogen gas with oxygen for deep- sea divers, has been discovered by & Swedish engineer, Arne Zetterstrom. ‘After experimenting with animals, | self, reaching a depth of 140 feet. A translation of the New Testa- ment, published in Britain, uses only 850 different words. forth a shoot more tl ee long, with the root clearly perceptible. One out of every 10 early Ameri- \ean colonists died of smallpox. munity life, there never can emerge a uly 1 nation, or a community f 4 Hf T do not love ms yom T know, how can T| Jove the human ra hich is but n abstraction? If T have not learned to work with s few people, how can! T be effec with many?—Arthur FE. Morgan The silent git] has a much better hance of marrying than her talk = t er.” asserts a psychotogis Photograpt who seems to think that the best way invasion of the central Philippines, for a girl to catch a man {is to keep|cormander of the American Sixth her trap shut. 2593 can flect which landed more than a quarte ned about a year ago somewhere in the Invasion “Of Philippines’ [he has made the first descent him- Placing a lotus ly seed, 250 years old, in an oven recently, a British) scientist found in three days it put ches between a real and a synthetle jewel Before the war the supply of these gems came from continental Europe. ‘Now they are made in the United States. Diamonds are doing one of the most important jewel jobs in this war In 1864 the diamond was first used for drilling purposes. In that year, the diamond drill-bit was invented by a Swiss engineer. This tool was first used in the construction of, the famous Simplon tunnel in Switzerland which was opened 38 years ago. The diamonds used by industry are not the same as those gracing the third finger, left hand. While those used by industry are real enough, | they are only fragments of diamonds and are called borts. ‘The borts are chipped off in the mining of gem stones, Although probably the most important wartime job they have is in the diamond drill, they are also used in such precision instruments as cutting, grinding and machining tools In the navy, jewels are also play- Ing an important role. To keep the men of naval gun crews from slip- ping off greasy decks into the ocean, jewels are now being spread under their feet. Synthetic garnets, made from aluminum oxide, are crushed and glued to the decks of battle ships to insure safe footing under all sea- going conditions. This Week's Needlework Ea 7105 by Alice Broo! Little handfuls of roses add chantment to your darling's princ dress. Scatter bouquets on front panel make her eyes shinc Pattern 7105 contains a transter pattern of embroidery for panel und collar, and a single dress pattern in Left to right are: ‘South Pacific are the leaders of the current hugo-scale Gen. Douglas MacArthur; Lieut.-Gen. Walter Kruoger, id, commander of the 7th Ameri- size 2, 4 or 6. State size desired. | ‘To obtain this pattern send twenty | cents in coins (stamps cannot be ac- cepted) to Household Arts Dep: ment, Winnipeg Newspaper Ur 175 McDermot Ax ‘Winnipeg Man. Be to write plainly y Name, Address and Pattern Number Because of the slowness of mails delivery of our patterns may take a few days longer than usual.” NOT INCLUDED Ttalians “will be free to work out their own destiny,” President Roo: velt announced, But says the Ottawa Journal, that destiny doesn’t include’ the Duce’s grandiose scherne to make Army; and Vice-Admiral Thomas C. Kinkat 1 of a million men on the Philippine shores. \the Mediterranean an Ttallan Inke.
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Image 1353 (1944-11-08), from microfilm reel 1353, (CU11125604). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.