BIG SUPPLIES
Comforts For Forces Notable Individual Items Stocks Sent Overseas WELLINGTON, May 9. Substantial quanities of comforts are now required to provide for the continually growing number of men in the New Zealand fighting forces overseas. By the last transports that left the Dominion great supplies of goods of all kinds were sent by the National Patriotic Fund Board. One item alone was 2,999,100 cigarettes and or more than four tops of assorted tobacco. The New Zealanders prefer the cigarettes and tobacco they have been accustomed to smoking at home. Some of the cigarettes and tobacco was placed aboard for use on the voyage by the men proceeding in the ships to join their comrades. By far the greater proportion—l,soo,ooo cigarettes and 7,5001 b. of tobacco—-was for free distribution to the troops in the Middle East in accordance with the new policy adopted by the Board of sending cigarettes and tobacco separately in bulk, instead of asking contributors of gift parcels to include them in their parcels. This policy was introduced after the discontinuance by manufacturers of packing in tins. There were also in the consignment cigarettes and tobacco for sale at cost in the New Zealand Forces Club, Cairo. In addition, more than 2,000 packets of cigarette papers were placed on board for use during the voyage. Another consignment of unaodressed gift parcels was sent. There were approximately 31,250 of these parcels, and an additional supply for a ship of the New Zealand Naval Station. The opportunity was also taken of sending more woollen goods to augment stocks previously forwarded, 6,504 pajrs of mittens, 3,834 scarves, 158 balaclavas, and 226 pullovers being shipped. Hospital Stores.
Hospital stores were another big Item, the nature apd quantity of the comforts sent under this heading providing a further illustration of the necessity of adequate funds being available to enable everything possible to be done for the welfare of New Zealand's forces, the sick and wounded as well as the fit. These stores covered a wide range. They included tins of oysters, glucose, tomato and vegetable soups, baked beans, peaches, pears, apricots, bottles of maned milk, vegetable and meat extracts, tins of tongues, biscuits, cocoa and milk powder, cocoa, tomatoes, coffee and milk, condensed milk, honey, packets of jellies, tins of toheroa soup, butter, cheese, sweets, dried milk and so on. The quantities of these supplies were large, and the tinned goods were in tins much larger than the average household size. The tinned fruit, for example, was in gallon tins, the soups in 220 z. tins, the cocoa and milk in 91b. tins, the tomatoes in 28oz. tins, the jellies in 11b. packets sent in tin-lined cases, The amount of butter shipped for hospital use was three tons, and of cheese one tori. Sweets weighing 8001 b. also went. Special comforts were packed for the Maori Battalion and for the members of the New Zealand Nursing Service. Outstanding- items among goods sent for the New Zealand Forces Club, Cairo, apart from the cigarettes and tobacco already mentioned, included a half-ton of tinned bacon, 11 tons of potatoes, more than a ton of chocolate, one and a half tons of tomato sauce, 3,000 cases of apples, 1,056 tins of toheroa soup, 148 dozen packets of luncheon sausage, 180 boxes of cigarette papers, 324 dozen cans of whitebait, 16,7401 b. of honey, 188 dozen 11b, tins of butter and 160 561 b. boxes of butter, 420 sides of bacon weighing 16,7931 b, 333 hams weighing 6,7891 b., and 47 cases of milk Besides these great quantities of goods, comforts, In addition to cigarettes and tobacco, were put aboard the transports for ifse by the troops during the voyage. There were large supplies of writing materials, also sets of deck games, equipment for various indoor games (such as draughts, darts, table tennis, etc.) soda water, cordials, lemons, biscuits, books and magazines, and each ship was supplied with a number of full length motion-picture films, featuring well-known stars, as well as a number of shorts. Soldiers and airmen from this country stationed in the United Kingdom and in other parts, as well as New Zealanders serving with the Navy and the Fleet Air Arm, are also being well cared for by the National Patriotic Fund Board. Substantial dispatches of parcels and other comforts are being made to them. A Big Task The purchasing of the vast volume of comforts now required has in itself become a major activity of the Board's operations. The knitted comforts and parcels are provided through the Provincial Patriotic Councils and are sent to the Board’s goods store in Wellington from all parts of the Dominion, but the other goods have to be bought, and that work is carried out by officers of the Board in Wellington. They also attend to its delivery to the Army transport shipping officer. It is a tribute to them that not once have they failed to deliver the comforts to time, properly packed and complete with the necessqry shipping documents.
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Bibliographic details
Timaru Herald, Volume CXLIX, Issue 21959, 10 May 1941, Page 9
Word Count
835BIG SUPPLIES Timaru Herald, Volume CXLIX, Issue 21959, 10 May 1941, Page 9
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