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Evening Gazette August
1942
L.M.S.
SALVAGE COACH.
Exhibition at St. Annes opened by Mayor.
THE L.M.S. Railway Company's salvage exhibition
was
on view at St. Annes on Wednesday and was visited by a large number of
people. It comprised a coach showing materials that can be made from
salvage, and another coach containing a film unit.
The object of the exhibition is to stimulate the salvage
effort among railway men and the public.
The 34-years-old coach
was damaged in an air raid and was scheduled for breaking up, but was salvaged
to house the exhibition
and all the materials in the exhibition are also salvaged.
The walls are lined with balloon fabric salvaged from
balloons damaged whilst guarding our towns and cities. The cast-iron
letters used as slogans were made from the names of railway stations
removed in 1940. The exhibits show how salvage is turned into
serviceable materials used in the war effort.

“WASTE IS
UNPATRIOTIC."
Mr. Ashton Davies, C.V.O., 0.B.E.,
vice-president of the L.M.S., who introduced the Mayor, said that the
coach was symbolic of the great part being played by the L.M.S. in
salvage. The L.M.S., actually, were pioneers in salvage.
In the last six months alone they had salvaged 2,375 tons
of metal, 2,752 tons of paper, and 178,816 bottles. Frequently the necks
of bottles were broken, but they were turning them into tumblers. They
had put more than a hundred million sheets of paper back into service
during the same period.
“We
want to utilise this coach," he continued.
“to
encourage our own effort and introduce the public to a great scheme.
Waste is unpatriotic."
The Mayor, in opening the exhibition, said he wanted, as
Mayor, to express his great appreciation of what the L.M.S. had done for
this Borough both before and since its incorporation. That indebtedness
to the Railway Company had been brought about by the very good offices
of their real friend, Mr. Ashton Davies.
COLOSSAL EFFORT.
The public knew far too little of the part being played
by the L.M.S. in the national effort. He could assure them that that
effort had been colossal. Indeed, if ever the story of the part played
by the L.M.S. came to be published in full it would be found to be not
merely a fascinating story but an amazing one.
That effort had been made in spite of many obstacles and
difficulties which at times must have seemed to be almost insuperable.
Those who knew Mr. Ashton Davies, however, knew that he, like other
great leaders, did not recognise the word impossible.
Everybody should see that exhibition, and those who did
see it would realise the effort being made by one of the greatest
concerns in the country. They should also, at the same time, realise
that even the smallest and meanest article might be used to further the
country's war effort.
The Mayor expressed his thanks to Mr. Ashton Davies and
the L.M.S. for the opportunity of seeing the exhibition and also for
their contribution to the war effort.
The
Mayor was supported by the Mayoress,
Coun. and Mrs. J. Kay (Deputy Mayor and Deputy Mayoress), the Town Clerk
(Mr. Walter Heap), Mrs. Heap and many members of the Council.
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