Papurau Newydd Cymru

Chwiliwch 15 miliwn o erthyglau papurau newydd Cymru

Cuddio Rhestr Erthyglau

24 erthygl ar y dudalen hon

. NOTES ON NE'VSQ I NOT.1…

Newyddion
Dyfynnu
Rhannu

NOTES ON NE'VSQ I NOT.1 EuR- i ey ? 1,  S I On February L!.5 a is to be I fr,qci(, the nicni-]'adom!i.s('hcrr.e for Twi:XTY' OUNCES OF MEAT. London a;il the Home Counties. Presumably. if found to work fairly well, i!. wIM be put in force throughout the country. At nrst to be com- after a week or iwo in working it may prove practicable enough. At auy rate, it W]t)I have to be given a i'air trial.. The quantity of the ration. 2!i(jz. in aU per week. will appear rattier alarming to those who have been to eat meat every day nnd tM'o or timps a day, and ha,Tc always thought it necpssary for them. \vI'iIeitwi!I also mean a consider- able reduction, for those wh) have JGY;11>, observed the- vo!)uitary rationing .s.' Both classes. ht)wever, inust do with it, and they may all enjoy the IV kction of knowing that it is consider.) h[\' better tlian the scale u pon which the Ger- mans have been managing for some tune, which is said t-o be 9oz. a week. The deci- sion to base the coupons upon a monetary instead of a weight basis is understood to be due to the dimculiy of dealing with the problem of bone and bone. it is to be noted is included in the 20oz. It seems 'ertain, at any rate. with the adoption of the currency basis, that the cheaper cuts will be in greatest demand, for people will want to get the most possible for their money. 0!'her possibilities of dimcultv present themselves, but we shall have to see the scheme in operation for a week or two before we can tell whether It will meet the case. be brought borne to housewives hv the reduced ration KiTCITEXS FOR A-LL. is thar of flaking the mos'c of it. There will ho I no margin loft for waste in cooking. A loss of twenty or twcnty-hve per cent. in the cooking will be a serious business when the joint is only a small one to begin with. The housewife who can bring most meat to the table properly cooked in one way or another will find the task of providing for a hungry household much easier than her neighbour who does not know and wil] Dot learn the art of economical cookery. The campaign for the extension of public kitchens should gain additional strength from the introduction of compulsory rationing. That it is more economical to <;ook for hundreds of people than for one 'b.milv is a truism, and if all" classes could obtain their meals ready cooked it would be found that the new ration would not mtail hardship upon anyone. The kit- c hens for all classes, however—when they ;ome-niti.t not be run by amateurs. Thu managers and tho cooks must thoroughly know their business, and the kitchens must be properly organised and run on busi- ness lines Only so can. they be success- ful. The Prime Minister and other Ministers who have made optimistic speeches about LORD JMLLH.OE OX SUB- MARINES. the submarines wdi no doubt have noted Lord, Jellicoe's remarks on the subject. He asks them not to make any more speeches until August. when they can make as many as they like, for by that time. in Lord Jellicoes opinion, the submarino menape will have been killed. This is the first time a date has been set for the establishment of the Navy's definite mastery of Germany's Tnost elective weapon, and coming, fram such a source it must be written down as the most encouraging statement yet made. There is no doubt that the natural wish to encourage the people has led statesmen to indulge in optimistic prophecies which subsequent events have made to took ridiculous. The inevitable result has been to cause people to distrust the speeches and to assume that the speakers have de- liberately minimised the peri!. It is, per- haps. too much to hope even now that no- body in authority wHl yield to the tsmpta- tion to tell a nattering tale. but if that does happen we shall do well to remember that Lord JcIIicoe. who certainly knows the position as well as anybody. gives. the submarine six months, and tells us that meanwhile we are in for a bad time. After some days of doubt, during which the fate of the measure seemed to be THE REFORM ACT. nanl,in," in tne balance, the Reform Bill has be- come a.n Act. The step which many of the Peers forebodinctv described na a leap in the dark has been taken. and the* new register, which will no doubt be com- plied as early as possible, will contain tho names of six million women. Soldiers and sailors are to have votes, and for the ordi- nary man it will be a much simpler and shorter business to secure a vote than it has ever been. In the last few days be- fore the Act was passed there were possi- bilities of trouble between the two Houses wi th regard to Proportional Registration and the Alternative Vote. The Rouse of Lords wanted a certain measure of P.H. which the House of Commons would not have at any price, while the Peers would not look at the Alternative Vote, which the House of Commons had agreed to, though by small majorities which carried very little weight. The good old British method of compromise was adopted in tho end, and the Act includes neither P.R. nor A.V. As there wiU certainly be at the oext election a larger number of three- cornered contests than ever before, there will inevitably be many minority candi- dates returned, and it ? is not at all im- probable that the majority in the House of Commons may represent only a minority of the nation. The sinking of the American transport was a Ie¡:rlt.Jmato act of war, and no useful A.N; ACT OF WAR. purpose m served by labelling it, as some papers have done. as another German atro- I cttv. Troopships are fair game for the enemy, just as his would be for our sub- marines if he would only give them the chance. Considering the immense number of transports that have carried Allied troops and supplies across all the seas of the world during the last three and a half vears, the wonder is that so few have been 'lost hv enemv action. Think of the millions of men safely carried across the Channel from this country, the ho&ts that have sono to Ifc,.wpotaniia, Egypt, and Salonica, the great Armies from Canada, Aus.tralasia, and India, and the—what- ever tho number may he—from America, scatheless imtil now: to sa y nothing of the guns. munitions, and supplies of all Kind" that have been reaching the ports of the AMies in uncetisin(r now think of all tms, and if we are act filled with wonder, ? ad- miration, and thankfulness to the Navy we shall deserve to be kept on short rations tor the rest of our lives.

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TWENTY OUNCES FOR ADULTS:…

I.SMALL DESTROYER SUNK.I

IARMY'S REDUCED RATIONS.I

IBANK INSPECTOR'S HOARB.

r21,109 BUTTER FINES.

IFOUR CWT. OF FOOD HOARDED.

SUGAR DIRECTOR.

MILK FOR CHILDREN.

UNLICENSED SUGAR DEALI

FOOD COMMITTEEMAN FINED. I

AN -OLD -LADY'S HOARD.I

NEW AUSTRALIAN PEER. I

MANAGING DIRECTOR FINED. I

GERMAN PRISONERS IN ENGLAND.I

BONUS COSTS 2140,QW.000. I

BIRTH OF A FAMOUS HYMN. I

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 I OTHER MEN'S MINDS.

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OUR CHILDREN'S CORNER

I MEMORISING FEATS. I