The Brussels Post, 1942-10-28, Page 7TWILIGHT OF ANOTHER RISING. SUN
Yap plane ase rr it floats g -sun nom on the Pacific e ing is after bei g shut otlldownsin at f dog-
fight over the Solornons.
Germany Drams
Italy's Manpower
As the Nazis drive toward Rus-
ela'e oil, the toll of machines and
materials is reflected in reports
that Germany Is moving Italy's
industrial plants into the Reich
and draining Italian manpower to
staff factories in the Reich.
An obvious weakness of the Ger.
man -Italian alliance is Italy's lack
of raw materials, says the Nation-
al Geographic Society,
Before the war Italy depended
upon Germany for coal. Normally
she looked to Germany for about
one-half of her requirements (about
7,000,000 tons a year) ; to Britain
for a fourth. Much of the imported
tonnage was water -borne. Bri-
tain's blockade put a severe bur-
den on Italian facilities for move-
ment of German coal by rail. Coal
deposits in the Apennines and at
the base of the Alps yielded about
2,000,000 tons a year. With the out-
break of war Germany became vir-
tually Italy's sole source of supply.
By subsidies Italy tried to be-
come independent of foreign iron
sources. This effort failed. Only
one-fourth of the country's needs
Dame from domestic mines, with
the ielemds of Sardinia and Elba
the chief sources. Imports of iron
and steel from Germanyhave kept
Italian industry going. German
shipments of bars, rods, sheets and
manufacturers of iron and eteel in
a representative year amounted to
116,000,000. From Germany also
came machine tools, agricultural
end textile machinery, electric gen-
rratore, motors and other appar-
atus to the amount of $25,000,000
in a year.
Before the war Italy was second
only to Japan in the buying of
scrap iron and steel.
SCOUTING . e
Lady Baden-Powell, widow of
the founder and late Chief Scout
of British Empire Boy Scouts, has
returned to London from Kenya,
Africa, where she has been living
for some time, and where Lord
Baden-Powell died, Lady Baden-
Powell, who is world Chief Gtrl
Guide, said she had come home 'to
urge the Girl Guides in this coun-
try to do evenmoro wonderful work
than they are doing now." Lord
Baden-Powell died in Kenya on
January 8th, 1941.
• • t
Boy Scouts all over Canada are
going in for "Commando" Scout
ing, to toughen themselves for the
time when their services may be
required in the armed forces. Typ-
ical of such training is the task
set /Or themselves by two New
Toronto Boy Scouts, who made a
week -end hike of 42 miles to the
Blue Spring Camp reserve near
Guelph. They carried fall kit and
cooked their meals en rerrte,
* *
In the recant "Baedeker" raid
on Bath, England, a 13yea•-old
Tenderfoot Boy Scout was named
as personal guide to the 0.0. of
the military establiu'hment. In
writing to the lad's fldoutmseter'
afterwards the 0.0. staked that the
boy had an expert knowledge of
every section of the otter, and was
able to direct him to Rale' place be
desired to go. Despite the fact
that Bath appeared to be among
those places unlikely to be bomb-
ed, Boy Scouts had taa0ned them-
selves to be prepared for any emer-
gency, and were ready when the
raid did come.
M w *
Boy Scouts of Cambridge, Eng-
land, have beenorganized into a
water -carrying group, In the event
of the water supply "being inter-
rupted dueto ars air raid, these
boys will know whore to secure-
an auxiliary supply and will be
prepared to take it to any part of,
the city where it may be required.
When a Scottish town was blitz-
ed a neigltbmdng village was asked
to take Dare of 1,200 evadeees. The
village Bey Scoute • lnnniediatel'
turned their Scout hu.t lwto a rest
centre and provided sleeping space
tor 70 people. For ten iaye they
rose at 4.30.4,M. to light: canteen
boilers, maintained a day and
night; messenger 0orvice,•provided
entertainment for their ,ggaeste t.n
the even age, {laid' genor011y acted
as off-jobmen ,in the •:c0Mneebity,.
Title worst Wet1 all atcolspllolied
under the leadership of patrol
leaders, the 'tree!) `beIl1 t Witheet
a Seoutmaetor,
Gold Miners Move
To War Industries
Labor Minister Mitchell said re-
cently that Canada is working 'In
an evolutionary way toward the
same goal" as the United States
in transferring workers from gold
mines to more essential war pro-
duction.
He forecast that "upwards of
10,000" gold minors will be trans -
barred to base metal mines and
Other war industries in a "planned,
gradual movement" designed to
dovetail with the decisionof the
United States War Production
Board to halt a]1 gold mining in
the United States.
Latest complete figures—tor 1941
—show 32,661 employees in the
gold mining industry. It is believed
that the present figure is slightly
below the 1941 total,
Almost the entire 3200,000,000
annual production of Canadian gold
mines goes to the United States but
reports have already been made of
reduced tonnage because of man-
power shortage.
Clear the Decks! .
Two men worked side by side in
a War Production Board office in
Washington. They never spoke,
but each watched the other. One
man quit work daily at 4 o'clock,
The other tolled on till 6 or later.
Some months passed. Then the
harder working of the two ap-
proached the other,
"I beg your pardon," he said.
"Do you mind telling me how you
Olean up your work every day at
4 o'clock?"
"Not at all," said the other man,
"When I come to a tough piece of
detail, I mark St, 'Refer to Com-
mander Smith,' I figure that in an
outllt as large as this, there is sure
to be a Commander Smith, And I
mast be right; none of those papers
comes back to me."
The harder worker started to re-
move his coat,
Brother,' he said, "prepare for
notion, I'm Commander Smith,"
Check, On Address
Of Soldier's Mail
• ~
News From Home Siggest
Thrill For Fighting Men
There are 1,100 Canadian Postal
Corps men handling nothing but
Canadian mail in Britain,
The need for more handlers Is
growing more serious daily.
Tons of mail for the armed ser-
vices arrive at distribution points
for the big job of sorting that is
neer/airy before the mail reaches
Hold post offices.
Mali from home is still the big-
gest thrill Canadian fighting men
get. Great ships carry thousands
of mail bags on every trip, In ad-
dition, there are the mails for
points on other fronts. The sort-
ing of the mails le a Job that is
never finished,
Despite repeated warnings, some
are still sending in the mails pal••
cess welch are incorrectly or in-
completely addressed. The proced-
ure with such mail is that it is
-simply set aside by sorters until
such time as more attention can
be given it. Often it takes days
or even weeks to run it down,
All this causes extra work, extra
delay. Anxiety and disappointment
follow, Letters are sent back
home inquiring why mail was not
received, thus adding more volume
to the already overloaded mails.
Hunreds of soldiers, sailors and
airmen every day fail to receive
mail because someone at home has
been careless in preparing it for
overseas,
Make sure the address is com-
plete and easy to read.
French authorities at Vichy have
given notice that smuggling of let-
ters in parcels sent by next-of-kin
will result in the prisoner to whom
the parcel is addressed being dis-
ciplined accordingly.
No registration or insurance can
be placed upon parcels sent to
prisoners of war, the postal cen-
sore advise.
Red Cross Ald
Quarterly next-of-kin parcels sent
to Canadian prisoners of war may
include both khaki and blue shirts,
also boiler -suite and overalls, ac-
cording to advice received from the
International Red Cross at Geneva,
Switzerland,
These supplies a 0, in addition
to types of underwear, knitted
comforts and othea• articles next-
of-kin have always been able to
send prisoners of war. Each parcel
may also include chocolate bars
not to exceed two pounds ]n•weight.
As part aQ its services to pris-
oners of weer in Europe the Can-
adian Red Cross now ie mending
over 60,000 food parcels every
week to British and Canadian pris-
Onele
Balmoral Castle, private resi-
dence of British sovereigns in
Scotland, means in Gaelic "the
majestle building."
VOICE
O F T H E
PRESS
HOOVER IS RIGHT
That was more than a wisecrack
John Edgar Hoover handed Ameri-
can police chiefs when he pointed
out that if an Austrian paperhanger
named Hitler had not been paroled
nearly 20 years ago, millions of
lives would have been saved.
Ritter, then a relatively obscure
agitator, was convicted of "violent
and treasonable demonstrations
against his government," and im-
prisoned in Munich. Against the
advice of the Bavarian police di-
rector, ho was paroled.
What followed is history, 80111 In
the painful making.
—Kitchener Record,
GET IMPLEMENT PARTS NOW
Mr. John A. Carroll, superintend-
ent of Agricultural and Horticul-
tural Societies for Ontario, urges
farmers to check Over their farm
machinery and order any necessary
parts now, instead of waiting until
spring. This is sound advice. In
the spring parts will be harder to
get. And machinery will be needed
more than ever, in view of the
manpower shortage.
—Brantford Expositor,
HEADS WE WIN
G. W. Spinney, director of the
Victory Loan drive for all Canada,
has this little poem to tell how
Canada can win or lose the war:
The Lord gave us two ends to use,
One to think with, one to sit with;
The war depends on which we
choose—
Heads we win and tails we lose.
—Windsor Star.
THE LAST STRAW
"1 don't mind washing dishes for
you," wailed the henpecked hus-
band. "And I will even sweep the
floors, but I ain't gonna run no
ribbons ' through my nightshirt
just to fool the baby,"
—Dunnville Chronicle,
12 -YEAR RECORD
The City of Brantford, happily,
is nearing the end of its 12th year
without a solitary case of diph-
theria. This is a definite and
established world record for cities
of more than 25,000 population,
—Brantford Expositor,
TAKING NO CHANCES
Owner of 1939 :Ford would like
to correspond with widow who
owns two tires. Object matrimony,
Send pictures of tires. Marlboro
Enterprise, Box C. B.
—Hudson, Mass„ Sun.
AWAY BACK WHEN
Speaking of treason, we can re-
member when dipping a wet spoon
In a sugar bowl was only a social
error.
—Stratford Beacon -Herald.,
THE WAR - WEEK — Commentary on Current Events
New British Battleships Bring
Royal Navy To Pre -War Strength
Two important acuouncemen
is theless, the announced damage to
r- the Axis submarine fleet is cer-
tainly graver than most of us had
e- guessed.. Submarines are more
w easily replaced than their crews,
e as the last war proved. The tre-
e mendous hazard revealed seems
t- bound, to affect the morale of Axis
d sub -surface sailors at an Increas-
r ing rate. This announcement is
✓ the most encouraging report yet
made from the Battle of the At-
a
e
a
e
were made by the British Admi
alty last week:
(1) The new 36,000 ton batt]
ships Anson and Howe are no
at sea with the Royal Navy, Th
ships were the last two of th
King George class to be couple
ed and their 14 -inch guns are sal
to have an effective range greate
than the 16 -inch guns of earlie
ships.
Fifth ship of the class was th
Prince of Wales, sunk in the Chin
Sea Dec, 10 by Japanese planes
Four older capital ships hav
also been sunk, the battleship
Royal Oak and Barham and th
battle cruisers Hood and Repulse
With four of the Lag George V.
class now in service, Britain's
battle fleet again numbers 16 cap-
ital ships, as it did at the start of
the war,
The Admiralty disclosed that the
Anson is the battleship for which
the people of London paid with
voluntary contributions, According
to the authoritative Jane's Fight-
ing Ships the King George V. type
of battleehips cost about 911,600;
000 each.
(2). 530 Axis submarines have
been sunk or damaged since the
start of the war. Even this figure
does not represent a grand total;
for it does not include losses in -
Meted by Russia, by France before
her armistice, or the complete
damage done by our own Navy,
says the New York Times.
It would be foolish to jump to
conclusions and assume that the
submarine menace has been over-
come. Admiral Land, who undoubt-
edly knew these figures, warned
us only the other day that it will
never be wholly overcome. More-
over, we do not know the Axis
rate of replacement and so we
cannot establish the comparative
enemy loss. We do know that Ger-
many especially has concentrated
almost her entire shipbuilding cap-
acity on submarines. Nevertheless,
some comparisons are possible. In
the First World War 199 German
and twelve Austrian submarines
were sunk, The Axis had more
submarines than that when the
present war began. Germany in
1939 acknowledged seventy-one
completed and thirty building, but
probably possessed others. Jane's
Fighting Ships in 1940 credited
Italy with 122 submarines, the
largest undersea fleet inn the
world.
It win be noted that the Ad-
miralty„ figure is more than double
the submarine fleet possessed by
Italy and Germany at the begin-
ning of the war. But it does not
separate submarines definitely
sunk and those merely damaged.
Nor is it clear whether the figure
includes Japanese losses, Never-
lantic.
In the last week of September
only five merchant ships were
sunk in the Weston, Atlantic, For
the moment, even if only for the
moment, the submarine mena^.e
has been checked. The present
comparative lull may mean only
that the U-boats are seeking new
victims in other waters. It may
mean that many are now operat-
ing directly against our supply
lines to England and Russia. It
may be that they have withdrawn
only to refuel and rearm.
But there is no doubt that our
defense against the submarine has
improved. Our merchant shipping
is now shielded by escort in con-
voy, by watchers in the air and
by swarms of swif 0, small oraft
which we simply did not have
when the war started. The list of
ainkings stands at 479 since Pearl
Harbor, a loss no group of nations
could long sustain 10 such a rate
were maintained. It has dropped
off noticeably in recent weeks,
with the lowest loss registered In
the lateet week. Two other factors ,
in the situation are also hopeful.
Our shipyards have managed for
some time 'to replace all 'losses
almost ship for ship and with
greater tonnage. And virtually all
cargo fleets of the United Nations
now sail within the convoy sys-
tem.
There have been recent signs
that Hitler has ordered his sub-
marines to concentrate on naval
convoys. Berlin has repeatedly re-
ported such attacks. But the haz-
ard for the submarine is largest in
that particular field, The enemy
may strike heavy blows against
us there, but he is bound to take
hard blows in return,
Nazis Evacuate
Million Children
The Basler Ark eiter Zeitung
said not long ago that more than
1,000,000 German children have
been evacuated from areas sub-
jected to intense bombing in an-
ticipation of heavy attacks this
Winter. About 1,000 special
trains were needed to move the
children out of the menaced reg-
ions, particularly the Rhineland
and coastal areas, the paper an-
nounced.
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