HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1946-01-03, Page 10BATTLESHIP WASHINGTON ENDAN GERED BY GALE
An Atlantic gale that forced the American cruiser Augusta and the aircraft carrier Wasp into South
England for repairs has seriously endangered the 35,000 -ton U.S. battleship Washinton, according to
reports from Lisbon, Portugal. Th• Washington, which went through the entire war from Scapa
Flow and Murmansk to the Japanese theater without a scratch, is reported in trouble off the Azores.
VOICE OF THE :
PRESS
USEFUL FARM GADGET
Mrs, Gladys Strum, M.P., in a
recent speech, described the farm-
er s wife as "the most useful, gen-
eral purpose, labor saving device
on the farm." Young farmers who
have not availed themselves of this
gadget are reminded that it usu-
ally can be had for the asking.
—Toronto Saturday Night
WHAT GRANDSON THINKS
Grandfather cut firewood in the
timber. Walked beside the wagon
in zero weather. Carried lines
over his shoulder and whipped his
hands around his body to keep
from freezing. Now his grandson
thinks he is roughing it if he has
to drive a sedan without a heater.
—Guelph Mercury
Maybe He'll Understand
A little patience and understand-
ing should enable returned men to
get along with civilians who have
been reading books on how to un-
derstand returned men.
—Edmonton Journal
THE VERY IDEA
It is predicted that nylons will
eventually sell for 25 cents a pair.
Yes, but try and get a girl to wear
anything as cheap as that.
-Ottawa Citizen
STEERING COLUMN
A scientist says that a dog often
steers himself with his tail—using
it to guide his wandering bark, in
fact.
—Peterborough Examiner
Nazi's Produced
Synthetic Butter
and Egg Powder
Recent developments in the
manufacture of real and synthetic
butter in Germany may have a far-
reaching effect on Canada's export
of butter, it was revealed at a press
conference by Dr. W. H. Cook of
the National Research Council.
In one section of Germany which
he visited recently as a special Can-
adian Government investigator, Dr.
Cook examined a butter -making
machine which was small in size
but turned out high quality butter
at the rate of nearly 1,000 pounds
an hour.
Apart from this high-speed but-
ter -maker which is vastly ahead of
Canadian practice, Dr. Cook said,
the Germans had gone far in the
manufacture of a synthetic butter
or margerine from petroleum. This
product is edible and nutritious and
one .plant in Germany alone made
40,000 tons of the "ersatz" butter
every year.
Germany also had made marked
steps in the manufacture of syn-
thetic powdered eggs, Dr. Cook
said. At the Herman Goering
Foundation, no less than five types
of egg powder had been developed
for varying uses. For cooking and
baking purposes, he said, the Ger-
man powdered product had proven
even better than eggs laid by the
hen.
Field Crops' Value
Lowest Since 1941
Gross valvae of principal field
crops produced on Canadian farms
in 1945 was estimated by the Do-
minion Bureau of Statistics at $1,-
098,859,000, lowest since 1941, but
still almost double the 1935-39
average of $583,260,000-
The 1945 total was a decrease of
$222,449,000 from the 1944 'revised
estimate, with most of the decline
dte to smaller production, particu-
larly in Prairie province grain
crops.
The 1945 wheat crop was valued
at $326,800,000, $138,000,000 _less
than the revised 1944 valee .of
$460,400,000 and a reflection of
drought conditions in Saskatche-
wan and Alberta. •Other principal
grain crops, .oats, barley, rye and
flaxseed, showed appreciable de-
clines.
Slight reductions, Were indicated
for potato and root crops, some-
what lower production in these
cases being offset by increased
prices. Hay and clover and alfalfa
crops, as a result of increased pro-
duction, were- higher.
Comparedona Provincial basis,
the most significant change in
value'occurred in Saskatchewan,
where the decrease amounted to
$158,700,000, a reduction of 24 per-
cent from 1944. •
The onl, Provinces showing in-
creases in estimated values are
.Ontario, British ColuAbia and
Prince Edward Island.
Tuberculosis is recognized as the
most destructive of all infectious
maladies; it causes the death of
more children and young people'
than all other contagions diseases
together
•
Record of Safe
Railway Travel -
Last year only 12- people in all
were fatally injured'. on United
Kingdom Railways; that is, one -
person in 150 million carried. Only
two railway accidents incurring loss
of life occurred during the whole
year.
This unusually high margin - of
safety was attained despite the fact
that the war had ledto a terrific
overburdening of the staff and
stock. It is to be expected that the
corresponding peacetime figures
will be even fnore- favorable.
FASTEST, FARTHEST, FIGHTIN'EST
This is the. Navy's new Neptune patrol bomber P2V, which Navy claims is the fastest, most far-
ranging and heavily armed search plane ever devised. Built by Lockheed of Burbank,Cwfth the it arress'
a crew of seven with sleeping accommodations and an -all -electric galley, is equipped
• radio -radar equipment. The "varicam'tail," a mechanical device for varying the curve of the horizontal
tail surface, allows the pilot to balance a heavy load in one part of the plane and keep it in level flight.
Javanese Rebels
Trained by Japs
Those who criticize sei sharply
the despatch of small British and
Dutch forces to try and bring or-
der out of Japanese -promoted up-
heaval in Java, might reflect for a
Moment - that the Javanese insur-
gents are no angels, says the Ot-
,fawa Citizen,
An official inquiry into the
deaths of five Royal Air. Force
men and 18 Indian troops who
made a crsh-landing from their
aeroplane near Batavia a fortnight
ago, discloses that a mob of Indo-
nesians, including many women,
massacred every one of tile sur-
vivors: - -
The ;details of the massacre are
too horrible to print. It is enough
tc say that airmen's and soldier's
hands, feet amu arms were cut off
with swords and spears and dag-
gers while they ran the gauntlet
Of a savage mob of natives in the
prison yard. Then they were de-
capitated.
These murders were the work of
at. Indonesian secret society
known - as the "Black Buffaloes,"
Japanese -trained and maintaining
their power by sheer terrorism
over a large part of Java.
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Vas a IFI
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Ranches Co
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u one of Somerset
Afaasham's three
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Time Magazine.
and
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3 Q..: "The Razor's Edge
rr
Doubleday One Dollar Book Club,.
Dept. WL.1, 105 Bond Street, Toronto 2.
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a gift. Also send'me as my first selection for $1.00 the
book I have checked below: -
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D China to Me ['Lusty Wind in Carolina
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