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£4,000,000 TASK.

SOLDIERS , CLOTHES. 3000 MILES OF KHAKI. MILESTONE IN HISTORY. (Special—By Air Mall.) LONDON, June 15. July 1, the date when the first of Britain's 200.000 militiamen are to be called up for army service, will mark a milestone in British industrial expansion as well a-s in military history. Within the next twelve months the factories of Oreat Britain will be called on to clothe not only the 200.000 militiamen, but also about 200.000 extra territorials, at a cost of more than £4,000,000. Preparations have been made to deal with this influx of new business without interfering with normal clothing needs for the three fighting services, and without slowing down the production of cloth for export or for Britain's 47,000,000 civilians of all ages and both sexes. The vast woollen mills of Yorkshire. the world-famous cotton mills of Lancashire, the mass-output clothing manufacturer* all over the I'liited Kingdom, and the great boot-making linn* have already mobilised their resources to meet the army's demands.

About 3000 miles of khaki, enough to span the Atlantic Oceon, is being made for the new classes of fighting men, and British boot manufacturers are now at work on 1,000,000 pairs of boots to meet the needs of the forces. "Service Dress" First. The service aress of each soldier will cost about £10 and consist of one cap, two khaki suits, three pairs of woollen Uocks, two shirts, a «et of woollen underclothes, one pair of boots and anti-gas equipment. Priority is being given to the production of this uniform. Battle dress and walking-out dress will be made while the. new armies are undergoing their training.

Huge machines fitted with "guillotine" knives can cut out the soldiers' suits to the required shapes and sizes in a continuous operation, and so mechanised hart the manufacture of military shirts become that a long strip of cloth goes in at one end of a machine and comes out as a complete shirt at the other. The whole process takes only <>0 seconds, after which the shirt requires only a little hand trimming before it is ready for the soldier to wear.

At every factory Government inspectors, representing the War Office, are liable to arrive day or night without notice and examine any articles to make sure they are being made to the exact specifications of quality, size and workmanship which the State demands for her soldier sons.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19390706.2.133

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LXX, Issue 157, 6 July 1939, Page 13

Word Count
399

£4,000,000 TASK. Auckland Star, Volume LXX, Issue 157, 6 July 1939, Page 13

£4,000,000 TASK. Auckland Star, Volume LXX, Issue 157, 6 July 1939, Page 13