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Georgetown Herald (Georgetown, ON), May 26, 1954, p. 10

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ala key a 1m tv uhi itjmtl batk lata satttt cmm rtaiw ti oi ql batfau h partial arwhllltalinn program unci sua is loosrjna us purs tbringaulo ur th international market is ui uptneiv quest tor large aup- plia of wool which today is truly in golden fjeace a compelling nuu for the uv tsruiv buying program u indicated by th mml disclosure that th country haa failed to build on ad- quat stockpile of wool to mnl th present amargtncy meanwhile price for thl vital commodity have soared to th highmt level in hl- tory not tha national geographic sociaty although practically vry nation grow soma wool most of it comas from southsm hsmupher coun tri australia argsntin hw zealand t5uth africa and uruguay australia is th worlds ldr ac counting for about onefourth of the inurnatlooal supply lars pro ducers 1n tha northtrn hemisphere are the united sutes gtst bri tain hpatn france end italy but u s demsnd for wool has faf outdistanced he domestic sup ply the nation normally consumes about soo million pounds annually domestic aources yield utue mure than a fourth of that amount at boston long a center of wool trade acuvlty prices in recent weeks have risen to as much as s3 a pound for certain good grades of cleaned wool columbian sources 1hk bfalx tua clarifies views 43nrent ccjtrol 71 king street preston ontario dear mr editor for anyone to imply that i may be th spnttetisn for branch 110 csnarllsn legion befsu did not read tha letter by councillor allen tha letter by branch president las- he clark dearly indicates that tha branch supported th control abol- lanmant as my latter cam as a great surprise to th council had 1 known that tha branch was in agraament with th affair i would not have sent th latter in i tha provincial canadian legion bxsl are against tha abolishment there fore so should the branch 120 tha imperial provincial command are against it too they supported th motion after the provincial vice president canadian legion had made the point clear at the strat ford convention of the imperial provincial command at which he was tha guest speaker 1 my jetters have caused misun- dertandlng between the council end the branch 120 1 humbly spologlx whilst my signature indlcsted that i wss the president of the imperial section branch 120 it did not read that i wrote on bahalf of that sec tlon therefore that does not im plicate the secuon it would not te proper to avoid mrs cordaro s lengthy letter all per cent of canada is composed of new jersey party producer new jersey was the first state outside of ntw lnffland to minu faclure iron the first furnace kji built nbout 1674 in monmouth coun ty by henry leonard a prortilncnt massachusetts ironmaster north ern new jersey blast fumnecs or lginally operated on bog ores but the industry developed rapidly with the use of the rich magnetite ores of the area foremost mines in colonial days were in the sue tasuhns and rinawood deposits in eastern pennsylvania there were many furnaces operating on local timber and pockets of ore one of the old von plantations called hopewell in berks county has been purchased by the government and partially reconstructed by the na tional park service at present teelmaking plantl are located at bethlehem coatsvllle harnsburg ivy hock philsdelphlo phcenlx vllle reading and steelton in east lern pennsylvania at roebling new jersey and clayihont delaware immigrant and tha children cat tt pe cent of industrie in canada including stock 1 american tha uaempleyavant in canada is tha largest ln it historyend tha ooua- ing th mora acuta immigration cornea to halt during 14 hous ing coat since veterans got together have sky rocketed lota for sal in georgetown tsoo each cost of deposit on cheap houa 18000 l taoo no man in georgetown can aav the many psytng jlxty dollar a month rent plus heating th deluxe apartment 1 quoted at s100 per month had no heat or hot water th house at 21 had four wall and indoor toilet 6u11 has th same at sto th investor of this property was paid tenfold the coat before world war two and let it go to rack and fuin the cost of th rate u sll it is worth what jh federal government did coun cillor allen explained in his letter j am satisfied in these letters i drew interest thanking you sll it may be of interest that toronto toegan at the same year as jeorge- town of the is million in canada toronto haa one million immigrants yours william broughton travel treats for pingtrn detroit a st louis 2900 new orleans 4gh bound tktp by btj8 sl corner cupboard restaurant tr 73051 main street if all the federal governments civilian employee 1120363 as u august 1033 were gaithired in one city it would rank as the fourth city in canada add their depend ents and you d have canada s no 1 centre population wise herald advertising brings results i oil ttiu may bo major uarto tf uqa4 fool colorado oil shsle which may tome day be major source of liquid fuel for the nation contain litue or no oil in tu natural stale according to a report by four bureau ot mines investigators to the american chemical society laboratory studies of srlettrd samples allowed that ahute is com posed of organic material and mm erals the organic matter being the part which yields oil when suffi cient heat la applied iron alum in um calcium magnesium iulfur sodium and potassium wire among the minerals found oil shale dpomts of the groin river formation exist i r un rs tunatcd area of 16 soo mjuan mius in adjoining porli ris nf c 1 ra 1 utah and soming tin tic p mih constitute a potc ntiil i urt e f liquid fuel whuh is estimated at 300 billion barrels of oil or several times our knon petroli um re- sources the richi at and most a ccimble oil shalri of this forma tlon are in wtstirn colorado a laboratory in esligation has l rn made of six ailecud simplis trim this area i t bsqfflffllj 6 i j nlitaljmnftri nrnrincrri ftt columbium as now known are the belgian congo v brazil in img it was reported thai rich columbium deposits had been found in the ural mountains of the soviet union the southern part of manchuria from whicr dunes communists have been moving in on the korean ttnfcsle was aaid in 1047 to con tain uranium and other ores mixed with columbium within recent weeks norway has announced plans for working new found columbium holding deposits wmnu k a s uu mv jitan 053 umnu cordac sad twlaa a total of j8s 3 000 pounds of cordage and twin was produced during 1050gaccordlna to a recent study of th cordage and twin mar ket th market in 1050 consumed mora than 197000 bales of cotton as compared with 151000 bale in ims of th ipso total 233132000 ounda wer twin and 153212000 ounds cordage twin used nearly t u co andcordage took ovr 74000 bale i steel ira saak batiasa a solid piece of meal or iron would link to the bottom even where the ocean had die greatest tupth there is a slight compres sion of th water at great deph hut practically the density re- tnwm the um as near the surf ace a body wul float only if its lsvr density i leu than that th liquid in which it it placed rvhum equity ot an object 1 to it tola weight divided tturbulk end that of the b vral umu u alean mbarkod in 1951 on art xpantlon programm to mmt th incrwaiad demand far aluminum thli pre- grammo divldsd into two principal parts it eomputad in qubec and nearing conclusion in brlflut columbia in the fiftyfour years since the first canadian aluminum plant opened at shawinlgan falls canadas aluminum industry has grown to be the second largest in the world and canada now exports more aluminum than any other country still the need grows both at home and abroad for this light strong modem metal ot many uses andaluminum company of canada is putting manpower and money and saaaaaa w ptqfy engineering brains and imagination into the job of keeping up with that demand aluminum is packaged power the elec tricity needed to produce one ton of aluminum would light the average home for nearly a generation by making use of canadas abundant lowcost power this canadian enterprise has created employment and income for tens of thousands for the men who build and operate the dams andpowerhouses the docks and smelters and power lines it needs and for tha more than one thousand independent canadian companies who turn aluminum into countless forms important to industry and our own daily living aluminum 4fm company of canada ltd rvojocars aitel processors el aluminum for canacfcn totwry anel worw morra ponfjor shawlntaan falls arvlda uimellfcne shlptkaw parlbenka portahred oeouhomoh wolteflew klnamon etoueok kmntttt ktmcmtt sssstasl iiy va i j r i ttfl i ttija si

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