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Daily Post - 01.10.1943, Síða 3

Daily Post - 01.10.1943, Síða 3
DAILY POST Facts... Oddities.. „Quotatioos” FACTORY FASHIONS Thousands of women in U.S. war indusíries still ask the et- ernal question: “What shall 1 wear?” There has been no ge- neral agreement on the most suitable types of clothing for women factory workers. The U.S. Office of Price Adminis- tration has therefore asked the American Standards Associati- on to make recommendations on the subject. Safety, dura- bility, and attractiveness all must be considered. One of the most satisfactory women’s out fits so far in use consists of a simple two-piece suit of slacks and jacket, with an apron to cover the whole. The jacket is well fitted hut allows free- dom of movement. The women may choose either of two col- ors and two fabrics. The safety cap, necessary to keep wqmen’s hair out of the way, presents problems of its own. Many types have been tri- ed — skull caps, snoods, plio- film caps, nets, berets, kerchi- efs, and turbans. Adjustable — berets, pliofilm caps with a vis- or, and button—on turbans all have essential safety features. The transparent pliofilm cap, ( which is attractive, light, and i practical, is the most popular. The O.P.A. is taking all these things into consideration and its standardization program will include body garments, leggings, gloves, and other ap- parel, with the exception of sho es and such specified safety ' equipment as face shields for I welders. ❖ ❖ More than 55,000 employees of the U. S. Steel Corporation and its subsidiary companies, the equivalent of four full Ar- my divisions, are serving in the military forces of the United Nations. * * * The Association of Americ- an Railroads reports that more than 8,000 miles of railroad track were built in the U. S. in 1942. ❖ * íH A million miles a day are be ing flówn in Cessna bomber— pilot training planes at U. S. Army and Royal Canadian Air Force flying fields in North America. » Army engineers inspect a new bridge they built as part of the road. Approximately 85 per cent of the special battalion’s members worked on regular United States railroads before joining the Army. To War Note: Edward Hungerford is a well-known authority on American railroads. He has produced and directed sever- al great transportation exhi- bitions, including, “Wings of a Century,” an international display of modern transporta tion, at the Century of Pro- gress Exposition, Chicago, 1933, and “Railroads on Par- ade” at the New York World’s Fair, 1939—1940. Many months before America went to war the railroads of the United States had girded them selves for the conflicts. In .the summer of 1940 the largest rail road system in the world — with its 236,000 route-miles of line, its great fleet of nearly 50,000 locomotives and two mil lion freight cars, and over a million well-trained workers — already was hard at its new tasks. Munitions for shipment ov- erseas were coming out of U. S. workshops everywhere in steadily increasing quantities, and it was the railroads’ job to bring them to the ports for ship ment overseas. The movement of troops already had begun. The Army and the Navy were expanding, and everywhere a- cross the land men and muni- tions were being gathered to- gether. When Japan attacked the U. S. this situation was intensifi- ed vastly. American railroads, working as never before, came to the fullest test of their effi- ciency both in men and mach- ines. Through the Washington HQ of the Association of Ame- rican Railroads, an already es- tablished, close liaison with the War and Navy Departments was enlarged. Civilian use of the ro- ads began to be cut radically. Passenger trains were removed and dining, parlor, and sleeping car services were greatly cur- tailed. The American public was quick to cooperate by avoiding unnecessary travel. Those who still patronized the trains for one reason or another frequent- ly had to wait some time for sleeping-car accpmmodations or for meals in the dining cars. — Sometimes they went without either and stood for long dist- ances in the aisles of the coach- es. But there was little or no complaint about such minor dis comforts. Most Americans real- ized that troop movements ..ec- essitated an increasing use of passenger equipment. Ofttimes some of the finest and fastest trains in the land were held up for hours to let the troops trains go sweeping past, to some far off military camp or embarka- tion point. Troop Traffic This condition continued to grow. In April of the present year (1943), about 1,750,000 troops a month — something ov er 50,000 men a day, together with their accouterments — were riding on the trains. — This was exclusive of furlough travel. To accommodate troop traf- fic, about half of the nation’s supply of sleeping cars (3,000 cars) are being used, plus 17 per cent of all the day coaches (an- other 3,000 cars). During over- night runs the soldiers ride in Pullmans, 39 men to a car, one man in each upper berth and two in each lower. To handle an Army division of 15,000 men, with all its equipment, re- quires nearly 1,300 cars, of which 338 are used for passeng ers and about 900 for freight. As many as 300,000 men and their arms may be transported in a single troop movement, perhaps clear across the contin- ent, (3,000 miles) with little or no delay. To the railroaders, long since trained to a military discipline, it is all part of the day’s work. War Freight War freight presents a fresh set of roblems. Built for a movement that for nearly three-quarters of a cen- tury has been primarily egst- bound, America’s transcontin- ental ^roads now face a traffic that chiefly is westbound. The Pacific Coast is engaged in war production on a huge scale. It (Continued on page 4.)

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