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AIR-RAID WARNINGS

BRITISH SCHEME SYSTEM OF SIGNALS (British Official Wireless.) 1 1 RUGBY, June 18. Arrangements made for warnings in the event of air raids are detailed in an air-raid precaution memorandum issued by the Home Office. Advice on the choice of public warning signals is contained in the book.

For the purpose of the scheme the country is divided into more than 100 separate warning districts, and it is proposed that a warning message should be distributed to each of these districts as it became threatened in the progress of a raid. The messages would be distributed over the General Post Office telephone to people named in the prearranged lists.

When it appears possible that a certain district or districts may be raided, a preliminary "caution message" i$ to be sent to the principal officers of the local services and to those responsible for blast furnaces, explosives factories, and other industries where fairly lengthy preparations must be made.

The preliminary "caution message" would be entirely confidential in character in order to a\'oid unnecessary public alarm and dislocation of industrial activity if the raid should, not materialise.

If the threat of attack were removed, the preliminary "caution message" would be washed out by a "cancel caution message," and the public would know nothing about it.

If the movement of the raiders supported the belief that a particular district or districts would be attacked, an "action warning" message"would be distributed to all on the warning list. This would include local Government offices, operators of warning signals, the headquarters of the divisional police stations, fire brigade headquarters, and certain public utility and' industrial undertakings.

Delivery of the "action warning" will be timed to give not less than five minutes' notice of the raiders' approach. After the raiders have left, the district "action warning" would be cancelled by a "raiders passed" message. The four messages involved would be communicated on the telephone by a code of colours.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19380620.2.75

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXV, Issue 143, 20 June 1938, Page 9

Word Count
324

AIR-RAID WARNINGS Evening Post, Volume CXXV, Issue 143, 20 June 1938, Page 9

AIR-RAID WARNINGS Evening Post, Volume CXXV, Issue 143, 20 June 1938, Page 9