12A • COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL • DECEMBER 12, 2018 © 2018 by Vicki Whiting, Editor ne stormy December night in 1903, a mail carrier named Elinar Holboell was working late in a small post office just outside of Copenhagen, Denmark. Glancing out the window, he noticed two children dressed in rags. As he went back to his work sorting the happy holiday cards, he was troubled by the hungry and cold children. Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 35, No. 1 n 1904, Elinar and his fellow postal workers created a special stamp to help children. It had a picture of the queen of Denmark, Queen Louise. The Danes bought four million seals that first year. The funds were used to build hospitals for children with tuberculosis (TB). At that time, TB was the leading cause of death. Suddenly he had an idea. Suppose that every letter carried an extra stamp, and the money from these stamps helped unfortunate children. Denmark’s neighbors, Norway and Sweden, saw what a great power the people could be, and in 1905 they started selling Christmas Seals. But when an American woman wanted to use Christmas Seals to save a small hospital in Pennsylvania, she ran into problems. The post office would not let its workers sell the seals. When a young newspaper writer saw the seals, he told his boss, “Just look—a penny apiece—within everyone’s reach—think how they’ll carry the news of what people can do for themselves—what a slogan, STAMP OUT TUBERCULOSIS!” The newspaper told the story and sold the seals at their front counter. The first day the stamps went on sale, a little newsboy who was too small to see over the counter came in and, reaching up with a penny, said, “Gimme one. Me sister’s got it.” Draw a line from each envelope to the box it should go in. Unscramble the names of the cities on the map. Then draw a line from each box of mail to that city’s location on the map. Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Follow multiple-step directions. Soon, countries around the world started selling Christmas Seals to help people with TB. Today, TB is not the threat that it was 60 years ago. But there is still a need for help. Today the money from the sale of Christmas Seals helps people with asthma, bronchitis and other diseases of the lungs. The American Lung Association had a coloring contest for kids in the past and used the drawings (one winner from each state) on Christmas Seal designs in 1975, and 1977 through 1980. They did this again in 1995 and 1996 thanks to a sponsorship from Triaminic. The contest was discontinued when sponsorship ended in 1997. But just for fun, you can still design a Christmas Seal. Use the space below to draw what you think would make a good Christmas Seal. Standards Link: History: Students understand how events in the present are connected to the past and the importance of civic virtue. Find a picture and/or words from today’s newspaper that seem to say “goodwill.” Use these images and/or words to create a Goodwill Seal. If you could sell your seal, what cause would you support with the money? Find the stamp that is different. Standards Link: Visual discrimination. Standards Link: Visual discrimination. Look for a pattern in each row of stamps. Draw the stamp that comes next. Standards Link: Math: Students recognize patterns. STAMP PENNY SEALS SWEDEN NEWSPAPER NORWAY STORMY RAGS HOLIDAY WORKERS LUNGS QUEEN MAIL MAP Standards Link: Social Science: Students understand the importance of civic virtue. Find the words by looking up, down, backwards, forwards, sideways and diagonally. P A M D Y M R O T S M G F W O R K E R S P M A T S G N U L Y SLOGAN E O R A N E E U Q D The noun slogan means a word or phrase used by a group to attract attention. D P R A G S N L U I E N T W S L N I E L W N K H A D Y A T O S E A L S Y V M P H Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recongized identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns. Power of the People The candidate’s slogan was, “Time for a change.” Try to use the word slogan in a sentence today when talking with your friends and family. Receive or give? Christmas Seals showed people that anyone can help solve serious health problems, not just doctors and nurses. Look through today’s newspaper for examples of people working together to make the world a cleaner, safer, healthier place to live. ANSWER:+HKHDUGWKDW\RXKDYHWRVWDPSOHWWHUVRUWKHSRVWRIILFHZRQ·WVHQGWKHP Standards Link: Health: Students make decisions about health and safety issues. This week’s word: N E W S P A P E R A Some say it is better to give than to receive. Do you agree? Why or why not? Thank you to our Newspaper in Education sponsors Want to be a Newspaper in Education sponsor? Contact us today! 541-942-3325