HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1942-7-1, Page 2toy`
WIN; WAR
VOICE
OF THE
P R E S .sJ
TO BE STOPPED
From the standpoint of econ-
omy in the use of gasoline, the
warning of the Oil Controller
against using trucks to carry
groups of passengers on Sunday
outings is well justified. Such
vehicles are not subject to the
strict rationing which applies to
passenger cars, and loading them
up with holiday-makers is a
subtle way of getting around the
spirit of the law. There will be
scant sympathy for any truck
owner who finds his licence can-
celled because of such' practices.
—Windsor Star
MARRIAGE DETERRENT
The rush of war weddings ap-
parently may bring drastic meas-
ures to Washington. There the
office of price administration has
suggested that bakers stop slicing
bread. This proposal purportedly
is offered as a means of saving
time, labor and paper.
If the prospective bride is well
aware that she may have to slice
bread, she will think again about
marrying that lad before he goes
to war. Why, one of these days
they might even ask her to bake
—Guelph Mercury
NO FRIENDS LEFT
Belgium, regarded as more or
less complaisant since the Ger-
man occupation, now is reported
aflame with revolt, the people
having become sickened with the
behavior of their conquerors.
There is not one corner of the
occupied lands of Europe where
the Nazis can count any real
friends.
—Niagara Falls Review
"HOME ICE" FINALS
Those in a position to do so,
provided they measure up to the
physical and age requirements,
should join either the reserve or
active army, or, as one soldier
puts it bluntly, "the playoffs in
this war may be on home ice."
—Kitchener Record
IT ISN'T REASONABLE
Detroit woman has divorced her
husband because he had a habit
of getting home late—six months
late in 1940 and five months late
/est year. After 'all, a woman
can keep the plates in the oven
just so long.
—Windsor Star
TWO GOOD REASONS
Lord Beaverbrook says that
Russia may settle the war for us
this year. Let's hope uo, but in
the meantime let us also work
like blazes to help her settle it
and also in case she doesn't. •
Kingston Whig -Standard
FIRST CONTRACT
The coming of war to New
Qiuinea brings to light interior
tribes which had no previous con-
tact with civilization. We hope
they like it,
—Winnipeg Tribune
I�IilIions Of Bees
Travel By Train
One hundred million bees will
travel by train during this years
bee -shipping season, according to
officials of the Canadian National
IIbtpress. The season extends
iron late April until early July,
and the value of the bee -import-
ing business this year promises to
exceed that of last season.
During the 1941 season, 2,594
orates of bees passed through
border points. Each orate has
three hives, sometimes called pac-
kages, each of which contains
two and ole -half pounds of bees.
With five thousand bees to the
;pound, an estimated total of 97,-
279,000 bees were imported
h 14I
rou the ontr4al gateway.
t1is number, almoat ninety
per cent were to ned over to the
Canadian National .Express for rsi-
JttIpme tq Ruebee Honey Fro-
` MS farnes.
Shipments of certified bees
,inn plostly bigm vocalg mil
Misarsslppi, although oc aslonts
lots come from N'evadit and Ala-
bama.
THE WAR - WEEK -- Colnrnentary on Current Events
Message Of Good Cheer Given
By Prime Minister Churchill
There echoed through Mr,
Chnrrehill'e grimly measured sen-
tences yesterday all of the old
determination, the old force and
fire, backed by a new confidence
and a new authority, says The
New York Herald Tribune, It was
the unanswerable authority of ev-
ents. Not, perhaps, since his blast-
ing address to the Italian people
in the last days of 1940 has the
Prime Minister spoken with quite
this ring, Dealing with the long
Intervening succession of periods,
defeats and anxieties, be has not
been able to.
Through the two long years
since the collapse of Prance the
British and their Prime Minister
have • had to speak • out of dog-
gedness, courage and little be-
sides. But now at last the weapons
are coming into their hands; they
are partners of a mighty alliance,
and the authority with which Mr.
Churchill again actresses the en-
emy peoples is au authority which
we may all begin to share. Less
than ever can one doubt that 1942
is the crucial year, that we are
already witnessing — from the
thunders of the artillery over the
Coral Sea all around to the crash
of super -bombs on western Ger-
many—the first stages of the
greatest and perhaps the most de-
cisive battle in history, and that
the next few weeks and months
will, as the Australian Premier has
put it, shake the world.
* * *
At this solemn moment, Mr,
Churchill paints a picture of the
actual stivation far better than
any one, amid the shattering fall
of the Western World two years
ago, could have dreamed that it
would be; far bettter than one
could have hoped a year ago,
when we in the United States
were still tangled in our confu-
sions and experts were predicting
the end of Russia in a space of
weeks; better than cue feared
amid the defeats at Pearl Harbor
and in the ensiling months; better
even at some points than many
today suppose. His promise of a
bombing offensive by .American as
well as British planes is even
more formidable than one had ex-
pected; his statement that even
yet there is no evidence that the
Nazis have succeeded in massing
for a new Russian offensive is sur-
prising, and his statement that
Hitler has "certainly" expended
more lives in Russia already than
Germany lost in the whole course
of the first war is startling.
* * *
When these hints are seen
against such momentary good
news as the initial success in the
Coral Sea or the astonishing re-
surgence of General Stillwell's
"Iost" Chinese army in Burma,
it is difficult to doubt that events
are at last upon their remorse-
less march toward a tremeudous
climax. One may never for a mo-
ment forget that the issue of that
climax is as yet undecided, and
can be decided only by the utmost
effort and at heavy cost. But the
long, long retreat, at least, is
ending, Slowly crime, murder and
aggression are calling up against
themselves the terrible logic of
history, se they have done so often
in the paet. It was that fact which
Mr • Churchill announced to the
wend, and announced in particu-
lar to the German and the Jap-
anese people. lie showed them
that they are already far on the
road to a frightful catastrophe,
of which they are the only au-
thors and which can be averted
only if they change their mouse,
And lie spoke with the authority
of events.
* * *
Prophecy in the midst of a
world struggle of such titanic di-
mensions as this, according to the
New York Times, is necessarily
perilous, but it may well be that •
historians, looking back, will place
the definite turning point of the
war in the .spring of this year.
We are too close to such events
of recent days as the British seiz-
ure of Madagascar, the dramatic
reversal it the Battle of Burma,
or the stunning blow dealt to the
Japanese naval forces in the
Battle of the Coral Sea, to be able
to estimate clearly their longer
significance. Indeed the lull score
on both sides in Burma or the
Coral Sea has yet to be counted,
and in neither case is the epi-
sode definitely closed. Yet so far
as we can judge now the naval
action northeast of Australia was
a setback to Japan of the first
dimensions. Such a rate of losses,
certainly, could not be long sus-
tained, . .
With each day that passes, Mr.
Churchill seems to be more and
more correct in calling Hitler's
attack upon Russia last Jane a
"fatal blunder." The blood bath
through which the Nazi tyrant
has already taken the German
people is appalling and the end is
;lot in sight. It is not too much
to say that Mr. Churchill's radio
speech was the most confident he
has made since he assumed office.
He has been confident; it is true,
before; bat previously his confi-
dence was that of a man who
knew only that England never
could be conquered; today it is
the positive confidence of a man
convinced that Germany can be
and perhaps even now is being de-
feated. Mr. Churchill, for example,
would never have talked as he did
of aerial bombings; he would nev-
er have taunted Hitler for his
failures, as he did, or warned him
so bluntly against resort to poison
gas, unless he were convinced
that the United Nations now held
at least air equality and would
soon hold :t growing air mastery.
* * *
Not least among the grounds
for hope in Mr. Churchill's speech
was his reference to the tine ele-
ment. Democratic statesmen in
LIFE'S LIKE THAT By Fred Neher
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.MRS PIPS DIARY7
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"I didn't like the sudden way it ended, . . I hardly had time to
put my shoes on."
restricting sales of new, retreaded, and used
tires, new and used tubes, and retreading services
EPF'r
Only a lim'ted few, the owners of essentia elig'ble vehicles, may now
obtain usabletires or tubes, or retreading services. Apart from sales permitted
by the new regulations, no person may buy or sell, borrow or lend, barter, give
away, mortgage, burn, cut, destroy or otherwise dispose of any such tire or
tube. Eligible vehicle owners are divided into three classes, on this basis:
Plass: Who may buy:
"A" Physicians,
Visiting nurses,
Firefighters,
Police,
Certain trucks, etc.
"B"
War
Technicians
War supply
inspectors,
Taxi owners, etc.
"0" Food
inspectors,
Scrap buyers,
Travelling
repairmen,
Rural school
teachers, etc.
What may be bought:
New, retreaded, or used tires;
new or used tubes; retreading
services.
Retreaded or used tires; used
tubes; retreading services.
Used tires, used tubes.
How purchases may be made:
To buy new tire or tube, retreaded tire
or retreading service, purchaser must
apply for Ration Permit to the nearest
office of Wartime Prices and Trade
Board: (For used tire or used tube, see
Class "C").
To buy retreaded tire or retreading ser-
vices, purchaser must apply for Ration
Permit to the nearest office of War-
time Prices and Trade Board: (For
used tire or used tube see below).
A vehicle owner in this class may buy
only used tires or used tubes. He must
prove necessity to any authorizd dealer
and fill out with the dealer a Purchase
Certificate. Classes "A" and "B" may
also buy used tires and tubes under the
same conditions.
FULL DETAILS OF THE NEW ORDER ARE OBTAINABLE
FROM ANY TIRE DEALER
Very severe penalties will be imposed for any infractions of the new regulations,
The tire dealers of Canada are co-operating with the Government in the efficient
operation of the order, and in its enforcement. It is their patriotic duty to repair
and legally resell all usable tires in their possession, and turn over at once to the
nearest salvage agency any scrap rubber they have on hand or receive in the future,
including all tires and tubes no longer serviceable.
Every person, whether a dealer or not, must report by May 31 to the Tire
Rationing Representative at his nearest Wartime Prices and Trade Board office,
all tires and tubes in his possession on May 15, which are not scrap, and which
are not on the running wheels and one spare rim of each vehicle he owns.
Department of Munitions and Supply
HONOURABLE C. D. HOWE, MINISTER, OTTAWA
CONSERVE YOUR TIRES—THEY ARE PROBABLY THE LAST YOU WILL
HAVE UNTIL THE WAR IS OVER
recent years, and perhaps Mr.
Churchill most of all, have had
to warn their countrymen that
it was getting late. But when Mr.
Churchill said, "It is now the tenth
of May, and the days are passing,"
he meant for the first time that
it was getting late for Hitler.
Hitler may strike still, at any
moment, and terrifically; but with
each day that passes there is rea-
son for growing confidence that
what holds him back is not the
desire to choose his moment, but
the fact that he nas at last lost
the power to choose his moment,
* * *
In commenting on Mr. Churn •
-
hill's warning to Germeuy against
the use of poison gas, The Lon-
don Daily Express said:
"The last thing in the world the
British people want to see is the
use of poison gas again. They
would sooner their victory cost
them 20 years of hard fighting
than win in one year by the use
of gas.
"'But if the Germans start the
use of gas thea Britain is equip•
ped to respond. Churchill many
times has been right in hix warn-
ings of events at hand in the
war. No one will ignore his solemn
warnings of gas warfare •
"The gangster's who rule Ger-
many are desperate. Maybe they
will not heed this warning front
Britain. Let the German people
heed it."
To Ration Candies
in Great Britain
Food Minister Lord Woolton
announced that chocolates and
other candies will be rationed,
starting July 27, A new per-
sonal ration book will be issued
to facilitate distribution.
Lord Woolton said the decision
was the result of appeals by the
public and dealers for more equit-
able distribution of available sup-
plies. Candy mations for the
armed services will be dealt with
separately and there will be a
special book for children.
REG'LAR FELLERS—Mighty Casey, Jr.
MoreWomen
In War Work
Make Delicate Instrumento
After Few Weeks of Training
Canada's army of women dir-
ectly engaged in war industry
now numbers tens of thousands.
The proportion of women to men
in the various branches of muni-
tions varies widely according to
the nature of the work; in some
instances it is as low as three
per cent, in others as high as 00
per cent.
In aircraft factories women's
work 1s growingly essential and
significant. Once, in the early
days of the big expansion, they
were used on "woman's work
only", such as sewing of fabric
on airplane wings and fuselagee.
Now, they do much of the elec-
trical wiring, the rivettiug and
welding, and the fitting of sub-.
assembly work.
Women are making intricate
and delicate instruments after
only a few weeks of intensive
training. More are combining
head and hand work in making
parachutes, on which the lives
of airmen often depend, Por cer-
tain Riede of work, requiring del-
icacy of touch, the (lands of wo-
men are defter than men's, They
exhibit greater patience, too, in
operations that demand accurate
and repetitive movements,
As an example of the opportun.
ities for women in war work, one
of the largest automatic gun
plants in the world, situated in
Ontario, employs women to op-
erate lathes, milling machines,
anti barrel turning machines. At
another factory, established with
Government capital and owned by
the people, a high percentage of
women are working in the ma-
chine shop making Lee -Enfield
rifles, lu the Dominion Arsenals
thousands of women anti gills are
tuning out lnillious of rounds of
small arms ammunition,
STEE-Rlkg
THU-REE
Shell filling, explosives, a n d
chemical plants also are drawing
increasingly on female labour. In
one of the most interesting of the
publicly -Owned enterprises, many
women are working on parts for
and the assembly of tank peri-
scopes, range finders, and fire
control devices,
And marriage is no bar ne'w to
temporary Civil Service positions.
let one month alone the Civil
Service Commission took on al-
most equal numbers -322 anti 313
respectively Of typists and steno-
graphers for employment in and
outside of Ottawa.
There is developing a keen de-
mand for university woolen who
have had advanced training is
mathematics, chemistry, or radio,
t0 fill vacancies with the Inspec-
tion Board of the United King-
dom and Canada. Several hundred
women already are employed with
this board to inspect gun barrels,
gun carriage parts, fire control
instruments, explosives, • and radio
. parts, And the demand for women
with technical education and
training is steadily increasing.
Citizens Of U.S.
Get Ration Books
Ration books were issued to
individuals last week for the
first time in the history of the
United States when registration
for sugar allotments began.
Made necessary by a war -
caused shortage, War Ration
Book No, 1 insures every man,
woman and child an equal amount
'of sugar. The book also has
been designed for.possible ration-
ing Of other products.
The basic ration for the im-
mediate period is half -pound a
week for each person, alth;ugh
actually each person will be al-
lowed slightly more than that
amount in the initial period from
May 0 to 10 when stamp No 1
will be good .tor a pound. Sugar
sales : to individuals have been
prohibited .since April 28.
By GENE BYRNES
r449 SLIP
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