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One Hears

8th January 1943, Page 19
8th January 1943
Page 19
Page 19, 8th January 1943 — One Hears
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Which of the following most accurately describes the problem?

That grouping will save groping. • That Cellon, with its 'ethane oil, has put the head louse under control. 5 That nobody 'wants to take the Guy broken swastika to Barimar.

That the M. of W.T. issued the recent Tyre Order limiting excessive wear, because it is the user who is affected.

That it is important to realize that the ban on exposing the fatnic of a tyre covers the whole casing —not merely the tread.

That in extremely cold weather the maintenance of engine-oil warmth is almost as important as that of preventing the freezing of the water.

That excessively cold engine oil may cause the temporary starvation of bearing surfaces, resulting in ibipid wear, and throw undue stress on oil pumps. • Queries as to the name of the new "baby." • That its motto might be "Now, haul together."

That paper. comes after only rubber as an essential war material.

That its policy is to be "Nothing in camera, but all in cameraderie." -0- Someone saying that, to the uninitiated, it seems strange that a boat should require to be hauled 300 miles by road in this sea-girt country of ours.

That transport re-organization in New Zealand has, in three months, saved 25,500,000 vehicle-miles. 2,500,000 gallons of petrol and 6,000 commercial-size tyres.

Of Sir Alfred Faulkner, Director of Alternative Fuels, describing himself as a hot gospeller—most appropriately when considered in connection with producer gas..

That " Don " is a familiar name to many vehicle operators.

That when one hears many variations of the same story one may assume that none is true.

The. hope expressed that '43 may in more than one way be the reverse of '34 for the industry.

That many people in the restaurant of the R.A.C. eat under swastika signs , without doticing them'. • That tyres progressed via solids to pneumatics, but there'll be no ,return by that route, for obvious reasons.

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People: Alfred Faulkner

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