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THE SALVATION ARMY

WAR ACTIVITIES Salvation Army mobile canteens were the first to arrive at Coventry following the bombing of that town. The acute need made very heavy demands on the staff of the five canteens, who continued, despite great fatigue, to supply rescue workers and homeless people with refreshments. A number of Salvationists have been killed or injured in the latest raids in the Midlands. Resourceful Salvationists, deprived of their Sunday night congregations, conduct meetings in shelters with numbers of shelterers. The comforts department, organised in the early days of the war by Mrs Carpenter, has dispatched many thousands of parcels to servicemen, large quantities of clothing, bedding, and other necessaries to refugees and evacuees in Finland and Great Britain, and a considerable number of parcels of shoes and essential food to necessitous chilrren of servicemen. Salvationists and friends of all parts of the British Isles and in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and the United States have maintained the flow of garments and gifts, and they are continuing this splendid work. As the winter approaches more and more garments will be needed for the millions of troops now on active service and for the refugees. Thousands of Londoners who spend each night in public shelters and the tubes are being served by the Army mobile canteens in response to an appeal from Lord Woolton on behalf of the Government. Admiral Sir Edward Evans, “O.C. Shelters, London,” and Lord Horder, physician to his Majesty the King, and chairman of the Government’s Committee of Inquiry into the health and conditions of people in shelters, have seen the Army at work and expressed appreciation of what it is doing. At one huge shelter, where four thousand people find refuge, the Trans, port Board has agreed to allow Army workers to go down into the tunnel, and has provided trolleys for the carrying of tea urns down the quarter-mile underground passage.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM19401205.2.26

Bibliographic details

Nelson Evening Mail, Volume LXXIII, 5 December 1940, Page 4

Word Count
319

THE SALVATION ARMY Nelson Evening Mail, Volume LXXIII, 5 December 1940, Page 4

THE SALVATION ARMY Nelson Evening Mail, Volume LXXIII, 5 December 1940, Page 4