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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 28 Jun 1946, p. 2

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midst of the worst crisis of Ameriâ€" can history Abraham Lincoln was able to console himself and the naâ€" tion by these words: ‘"This too will pase." Millions of women in this counâ€" try have never had more than $15 -weehfortoodtorahmfiz’dm; the families thrive, and the chilâ€" drnmswmm t C nntingrin im # o!ulmltedmm:quumm that women demonstrate their inâ€" genuity. When they must stretch a dollar, they do tricks of which no man ever dreamed." The Tweed (Ont.) News is perâ€" turbed about the taking over the frequency of Toronto, much Adults, for g:u had high aims in life, but so have we. Give us a chance to let them develop. Let us have our fun while we may end we assure you we‘ll turn out al lrightâ€"Youth always has. The Wateford (Ont.) Guideâ€"Adâ€" vocate isn‘t um worried, startâ€" ing off an edi comment thus: "John L. Lewis is not the President of the United States. He represents a small minority of the people. Temporarily the voters may be inâ€" weep about it offer the simple soâ€" lution, which is that it might be a good thing for us to get on with the development of Canadian reâ€" sources; to encourage Canadians to make profits, so that there may be as many good and well paid jobs as possible available to young Canaâ€" dians, There will always be better opportunities in the United States for young Canadians than in Canâ€" ada, unless and until the develop~ ment of Canadian natural resources raises, as it should, theorunl standard and profitability enerâ€" Ey in Canada above the general level prevailing in the U.S. The Vegreville (Alta.) Observer is snappy on the subject of farmers in that area on a “non-delivery%" mm the A.F.U. txeumnc it looks as if it has all signs of a bluff." Some of the A.F.U. leaders talk too much, anyway," concluding with the quedion.}&hthflwm going to do on the grain farm, lackâ€" in;mflicientmnr{ucommod&- tion and with a surplus of grain? ‘Talk of Red Cross workers and yogthinkotl.die& Yet Rev. J. W. Shier of Picton, Ont., retired from active work in the Methodist church in 1932, after 42 years of 'i’mm'mud e dles and has 650 articles for the society, going to Europe to clothe the destitute. Here and there across Canada: With pride the Yorkton (Sask.) Enâ€" terprise announces a quick swelâ€" ling of population with five babies born in one hour at the local hosâ€" ?‘ital.‘.’rimmins,Ont.huaby- w making it an offence to leave car keys in the ignition when goâ€" ing away from an auto. .. Arthur Sheridan, of Newmarket, Ont., vetâ€" eran solved the temporary housing problem by housing wife and two sons in a tent on Eagle street. . . A Itn'-lane superâ€"highway is to be built between Toronto and Barrie, the project when completed to cost five millions. . . A resident of Athelston, Que., bought two goats from a farmer at Aylmer, Ont., had them shipped via C.N.R.; three goats arrived, a kid being born overnight...«),gun ago Herb Vandusen â€" of cNab township bought a gas engine from an Arnâ€" prior man, set it aside after a short use; the other day drained the gas, strained it, returned it, gave the starter a fli{t:nd away it went. .. The Peace River Record tells of 12 veterans of World War II, attendâ€" ing at the department of mines and mwmwhuMun- ters of school land ed for vets, adding: "Oldâ€"timers who reâ€" :mmberthelandmholtheen& days would have been amazed wi the quietness which prevails in present day land rushes, . . At Swift Current, Sask., aided by the local rehabilitation commitâ€" tee which believes in action not talk, fourteen veterans signed up in the first group to undertake a seu-helpbundhn;otamueomiz plan ontgropcty set aside mmunby ecilt’{. Costofmautr‘l- , $648; Possible expansion s the veterans and wives and friends will do the building. Inside finish will be masonite. Here is what one&:uth thinks, as per a letter in Deloraine (Man.) Times: Dcerdulu:'mhiswh'.Hw call proper if youth said a or two. First ef all youth would say to you, remember you too were young, do not be too harsh on our ideclsu:&i.acfi:nalgfwemk- responsible it is on nu\mlfla us time, we‘ll grow out of it. = be you think we‘re silly tearing around in drapes, or Sloppy Joes, but didn‘t you do the same thing when you were young, and didn‘t ooo s e buk 5n e it swings to the North In the nigration of young Canadians to the 08. is the subject of much disâ€" THE BEAN PRINTING & PUBLISHING CO. Owners and Publishers Subscriptions Payable in Advance $1.00 per year in Canndn; $2.00 poer yeer outride Conadn Single copies 5$ cents. Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottaws THME WATERLOO CHRONNCLE FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 1946 € | blow. _ â€" â€" l; esAt yay under ,:!1 t more â€" e ?‘enmmmou at Camp l "Rop from all ground will arms i bem in eech foree, with § |volunteers fiven nreference Some About 3,500 grounds treaps, who Till taat fanin, vop propatind .-:' W radar, clothing and other iteme military geer "under all possible winter combat conditions." The Air Force disclosed earlier that a squadron of converted Bâ€"28 long range bombers has been asâ€" signed to Alaska to make Amn\ weather flights over the Arctic. . of .tufl;“qur' pment already has been this Iflg:ll'l la:arhn '|H\ukfit:!‘ receive study and consideration by the church courts and their memâ€" bers for two or three years. _ Each church would carry on its own form of wmblmmz. The "muâ€" tually acceptable try" was deâ€" ‘signed to meet problems of areas where there is little or no religious service provided for the people. The statement said in part: "For some considerable time conâ€" versations have been proceeding between representatives appointed by the Church of hnglmd in Canâ€" ada and the United Church of Canâ€" ada with a view to closer coâ€"operâ€" ation which the growing needs of our frontier regions and our cities clearly demand. ____ _ _ _ on any parish roll or tionâ€" al list; and it is a fact g:t some areas of the country are scarcely lsxgpued with any kind of religious influence at all. "Out of the sense of need created by these facts, the movement for work in common arose. It cannot be too strongly stressed that the impulse for these conversations is a simple and sincere concern for the vand fface "mite wil cpeete ground force hont‘ fom Ocloger 2 uh :elnun.Aprtlalm”mm low w as as 66 below zero have been recordâ€" ed . "Williwaw" force will base at Adak in the Aleutians where fogs ;r';'freq\nm and freakish storms A third task mmw.:-i'n test eqmt more â€" te c conditions at Camp flcCoy. Wis. this ing‘s xpedition in taking it as another of ‘the total disregard oc% Mumc“hmw mark of government Ne DHC whin e emmpating many the CBC with its many fiocks and herds is casting covetous eyes towards the ewe lambs of the private broadcasting stations." Longevity : The Bank of Montreal branch at Picton, Ont., first bank established in Prince Edward County, celebrates its hundredth year of uninterrupted service to the Two Churches Aim For Mutual Misistry Plan The announcement took the form of an official statement by a small committee appointed :lv the comâ€" mittee of reunion the two h;“lt'hum disclosed uu‘tl- e number of persons, about 1,â€" 500,000, who gave their names in the census as belonging to these two communions, have become "lansed" and are not to be found Christian good of Canada." Alaskan Tests To Be Conducted By U.S. Forces WASHINGTON.â€"It was anâ€" nounced by the United States that special tu{ forces will make new tests in Alaska and the Aleutians this winter of tactics, wespons and equipment for subâ€"zero weather. feed men must produce feed for food production if Canada is to ;:l‘npcte Cli: d:lotld markets. But ore ada can exnrt every â€" body in Canada must fed and this meant that better production through proper feed must be Anglican clergymen may serve churches of the United Church of cmm:rmdgm e tions m to congrega is the main proposal to be put beâ€" fore the General Synod of the Churchulhghndh:Cunda‘M the General Council of the United Church in September, it was anâ€" Science Now Applied To _ Poultry Feeding Efi"é'&npm{""", Chicago, told_the convention of the Canadian Feed Manufacturers â€" Association here trator, told the convention that "plucked out of the backwoods" and placed in the front line of science. _ The change had taken place in ( emen io the pout whene moey w it is difficult to raise economically poultry, turkeys or ducks without formation on how to do it." _ Earlier in the mutll’ eti ': J. G. Davidson, Federal Feeds Adminisâ€" It is expected the proposa} is to Winnipeg. â€"Dr. H. E. Robinson, TORONTO by which relief, $8; Theo. Lautenschlager, reâ€" hef, $6.50; The Municipal World, assessment notices, $4.83; Assesâ€" sor‘s convention, $30; Indigent paâ€" tients, $176.38; Welcome Home banquet, 32.94; J. W. Koenig, part payment as collettor, $100.25; Bond Insurance, $22.50; Floyd Honderich, drainage loan, $405.16; Clara Weiâ€" ler, halfâ€"year salary as caretaker, $25; Chas. Heipel, salary as clerk and treasurer, $385; Pay roll for June, 490.53; A. Stem, repairing grader, 250; W. H. Schneider, gas, 20.65; A. Steinman, gas, 28.70; Bechthold, gas and repair, $108; C. Bechtel‘s Garage, welding, $12; W. Ditner, Sint, 2.80; Concrete Pipe Co., 60.20; J. D. Adams, repairs, 4207; St Agatha Garage, gas, 44.17; A. Egerde, gravel trucking, $163.13; Armeo Co., culverts, $96.â€" Activities picked up rapidly at Mobile, Ala., on the (ug coast, when seamen reccived official noâ€" tice that the lastâ€"minute settleâ€" ment, which did not come in time to avert a walkout, had been ag proved by the sevenâ€"union C.1O. committee for maritime unity. Great Lakes shippinr at Cleveland got back on schedule when union members ratified the pact. at their meeting on June 17 apâ€" proved the following accounts for payment: C. J. Leiskau, relief, $14; Ed. Rieck, relief, $6; Dubrick Bros., reâ€" lief, $5; J. H. Kreitz, relief, $12; Steckley Bros., relief, $12; John Buck, relief, $8; George Coleman, commended in a report on youth and health adopted by the Canaâ€" dian Youth Commission and made Eablic this week. Sidnefi.E. Smith, . of T. president, is chairman of the commission. The recommendation states that the program "would include preâ€" vention as well as cure and take account not only of disease and disturbance in the individual, but of how we may create the kind of social conditions which are essenâ€" tial to physical and mental health." 16; Chas, Haid, gas, $4. Sehl Hardware, $16.84. Urge Health Program For All Record Farm Crop Estimated by Ontario Minister the curtailment re maritime walkout Members of the five maritime unions in the New York harbor began returning to their‘ posts three hours earlier after voting unanimously to accept the settleâ€" ment reached in Washington the ni*r‘n‘! before. e other giant harbors of Bosâ€" ton, Phihdorphia and Baitimore returned to normal, and full operaâ€" tions were resumed at the ports of Charleston, S.C.. and Savannah, commended in a report on 1 mate compares with fwooooooo cro‘r value in 1928, Col. Kennedy added. "Ontario will have a Administration said, that ship&ln‘ mfions in the port of New were back on a "completely normal" basis at 6.156 p.m. o‘clock, Wilmot Council Approve Expenditures Shipping In Atlantic Back To Normal ED.T. last: smmh? _night, after the curtailment resulting from the momh:-.â€"valen somfe misforâ€" ppens, Ontario‘s farm crops will run to a record value of $750,000,000 this year, declared Col. the Hon. Thomas L. Kennedy, Ontario minister of agriculture, in a brief interview here. This estiâ€" larger crop of everything this year," he affirmed. He said the only Yroduc( in which Ontario was "light" this {ear was cheese. Production of yutter was within five to seven per cent. of 1945 and all other factors were higher, with the fruit crop most promising and hog production Members of the Wilmot Council A "comprehensive health proâ€" New York. â€"The War Shipping "Frankly. Judge. could YOU watch out for traffiic lights*" " for all Canadians was reâ€" *â€"-â€"__ "I can only assure them that when we have finished," the officer said, "it will be the most wonderâ€" ful bird sanctuaryâ€"nothing but a pile of rocks." 4 Plans are to set off explosive charges totalling several hundred tons in one great blast. The officer said the island would not disappear because it rises in comparatively shallow North Sea waters. However, its remnants would never again be fit for human habitation. The island is about 130 acres and had 4,000 inhabitants beâ€" fore the war. | The officer said the destruction would be "a wonderful lesson for the Germans." He said "influential bird enthusiasts and ornithologists". lnnrlmnh-iop&oud posed strongly the plan to destroy the island because they feared for the effect on migraâ€" y Bar" be ‘"blown up" within three months and be fit for "a beautiful bird Heligoland To Be Blasted by British Cuxhaven, Gcl-ng. â€" It was stated by a senior tish naval officer that the £len German island fortress of Heligoland will §100 YÂ¥ IRO CA B AdPla W$ Tns, panparions, plantain and many other weeds can be made on disappeer, leaving the grase to take over unmolested . "Herbate" is one ef the newest of new chemical products that make life more enjoyable : : : for grownâ€"ups as well as small boys. ‘“l.! UsaBD To Bav® PUn blowing dandelions, but the payâ€"ofl came later when he had to dig out Mr. Whiskera‘ edapsing from the lawn.: Now, thanksa to Câ€"1â€"L and chemistry, he has his fm without weelks: His ded simply eliminates the noew dandelions with a new hormome epeay called "Herbate" 2, 4â€"D. ‘ties and were extensively fed to gi(.s at low cost.fia a consequence, og numbers aPproximately douâ€" bled during the war. With the reâ€" opening of export channels and the ensuing deman:ll ft}t ee:)m at adâ€" vancing prices, hog ing became less pro&l:ble than direct marketâ€" ing of corn, and it is now reasonâ€" able to expect that hog numbers will decline. The same situation exists in other hog producing counâ€" tries, with a smaller. difference in the wartime and present price of feed grains; thus output of hogs and hog products is not likely to suffer to the same extent as in Arâ€" gentina. herd. In North America, the numâ€" bers of hogs stood at 143 per cent of 8!;-\01&!' about the end of 1945; in ania, at 120 per cent, and in South America at lMJer cent. Signs of an impending adjustment to somewhat lower levels became apparently early in 1946 largely as a result of grain shortage and reâ€" latively high price for feed grains. This trend was especially marked in Arg::tim where large stocks of corn accumulated durin,‘ war years owing to transport difficu}â€" out of 31 million head preâ€"war stock, leaving 38 per cent of preâ€" World Situation In Hog Numbers important than those of cattle and sheep which can be driven on foot. wnh:nndhmudm herds in unoccupied are es mmwhnhm“ ber 49 per cent of preâ€"war by the end of 1945. $ Hog numbers in other parts of Europe suffered even more, espeâ€" clally if losses during the current year are taken into consideration, the full extent of which is not yet known. !otmunwhoh.u~ cluding the t Union, a deâ€" crease of 48â€"53 per cent of preâ€"war numbers is estimated to have o¢â€" curred by the end of 1945. The munm. is in the former countries now under â€" tion.(ollowedhylamal“:ee\mzd nations. In contrast w cattle, dom and neutral countries in order to save grain required for feeding this type of live stock. The presâ€" ent worldâ€"wide grain shortage thus presages continued Jow levels of hog production in Europe. Hog numbers in America and Oceania increased during the war the numbers of hogs were seriously curtailed even im United Kingâ€" "§0 LONG, MBR. WHISKERS : 14e o u4 6@ C# tA ds t a Y _ Europe as a whole, excepting the Soviet Union, is estimated to have The numbers of sheep in the world have been reduced about 12 per cent to approximately 88 per cent of preâ€"war, states Ag"i’culture Aboard, issued by the momics Division, Dominion Department of Agricuiture. Heavy wartime damâ€" age occurred in the Soviet Union where 27 million sheep and goats ‘were lost out of 102% million preâ€" war stock, leaving about 74 per cent intact. Most of the Soviet Union‘s sheep are reared on the steppes of Asia which explains the ‘relafively less serious injury to sheep and goats than to the other classes of live stock. The natural increase of these flocks, together with the acquisitions from occuâ€" pied countries may bring the sheep and goat numbers up to within 15 per cent or so otwprewar by the middle of 1946. artime and reâ€" cent damage to flocks in occupied countries is very serious. Sheep are easily driven on foot and reâ€" quire little feed except grazing while in transit. For example, it is estimated that about 86 per cent of the sheep in Hungary had been reâ€" moved by the end of the war. By August, 1945, another decline was noted, and the process seemed to be continuing. Effect of the War On Sheep Flocks THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE LORNS TO FARMERS PY o invie farmers to discuss with us their financial requirements. Your particular case may call for a loan with special terms and arrangements. Many requirements can be met by Farm Improvement Loans. Ask us for the details. . WATERLOO BRANCH E. H. SIPPEL. Manager NOISE IN INDUSTRY Noise, always a nuisance, has been branded by health authorities as a hazard in industry. An officer of the Industrial Hygiene Division of the Department of National Health and Welfare, Ottawa, reâ€" ecmmends soundâ€"proofing of walls, proper machine maintenance and insulation of machinery with rubâ€" ber pads at the base to reduce noise in the working environment. In certain types of plants, high noise intensity can cause damage to the bearing. Outside of Europe, sheep numâ€" bers increased only in South Ameâ€" rica. There was a decrease to 93 per cent of preâ€"war in Oceania and to 86 per cent in North America Taking advantage of the decrease in those two important areas (which concentrated upon beef and pork) and also through the susâ€" tcined British demand, South Ameâ€" mica increased sheep flocks to 114 per cent of preâ€"war. A large part of the increase occurred in Argenâ€" tina, where ample pastures are available. & preserved 76 per cent of the preâ€" war fAlock. In countries which have not suffered extensive war damage, the maintenance of sheep was easâ€" ier than that of hogs, because sheep can subsist largely on grass. Neverâ€" theless, preference for milk producâ€" tion instead of meat â€"has reduced the sheep flocks more than cattle berds. Fruit that falls v’nmsmnly means waste to the orchardâ€" ist. But chemistry knows a way to keep fruit on the tree until it‘s ready to be picked. With a bormone s{ny called "Parmone", which strengthâ€" ens the stem of the fruit, "windfalls" can be almost eliminated. mE eC REIIng | aemeunt Câ€"1â€"41, P.O. Bex 10, Montreal Friday, June 26, 1946 vation on any of is obtainable by NC L4 00 es

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