PAGE EIGHT O.QQD.D£>.QC'Q00 JQQODADDEIQQQQQJC£CSOLDDDDQ3JDXUQQQQCL g 3 -. 8 C l? L: V. x1133".- OOO C? C" ‘I Cé-LJIYDIJ." Sorry to leave was 12-year-old Arm llfargaret florrton, slioivn i-x- aiiiiniiii; the model of a transai ntic clipper with Capt. R. O D. w 1 h 1 . b “d Sullivan. skipper of the Dixie (‘l .| -r, lit-fore leaving icr Lisli n. She em n: L‘ cm ("m") u D8 is going iii me "lict-ziuse. iny piirvnts min me so much.“ Ann's father is .1 retired llltiitlll army officer. She has been living since last suinnifr "we “*"~"o=><>"¢~:~<:o,¢»o.o:on i . J \Bt)\'l1: 'i‘h'i.< is the type of men who are making aviation listory piloting bombers across the nort itlaiitic from Canada to England. Tillllllilfi-llpflln] are, lcft to right: Capt. G. lluxton, Capt. L. V. Mes- Capt J. T. Percy, Dept. A. B. Youcli, arriving i.n New York on S. S. Georgie. All are Im- vs pil Tzinadinn postnissters from coast to coast joined rcts in present thr- Government Savings stamps, vxiueii a‘. 0.1.“... . . irlfldt‘. to Primr- -Postmisster General W. P. Mulmk and a t. in the Prime ' _ " , ' - nftler- were, Lit to iiuhti M-f- Milli-Niki C~ D- GTm-ih. Eluvan- 535K’ ' "Jftiiilfy! J. L. Jzt in, Safnion Arm. lii.i‘., Dinnin- ion President, C; Mil Postmaster!’ Association; Arthur (fhurch. Suntlrldgr, 0nt,, Vicc-prcsiilcnt; Jay Ferris, Ciunpbeilloid, Ontario Secretory; Philip Grenier, Neuville, Quebec Secretary, and the Prime Minister. I When these two Ontario soldiers come home the!“ I" ‘milling a wsr guest with them. She's "Sche- hereude," the blAck-nnd-whlk kitten they rescued from n bombed building and adopted rs their mas- ”; Th, mm ere sergL-Msjor E. G. wells. of London, and Sci-gt. C. Scott of Woodstock. They have been taking s five-months‘ course in tactics and gunnery, and they will be biiek in Canada soon to take posts iis instructors. Churchill pauses lit-side s heavily armored car inscribed “Churchill" during a tank ilonnnstration somewhere in England. A Symbol o! in ‘Toronto. Britain's indomitable courage is this man of iron will and determin- THE CHARLOTT TOWN cuAigpiAN ol lionibcr trotep-carrying Royal Lon i.iii Air Force. When the from one fighter station to another, lUDUDBZiQQUD DJUJCKQURQQ€II$LOIQUD i he WORLD in PIC w» smile, prhne Minmer- “vmsmn ation. With him ardhlgh army official-l, who watched with interest as tanks and mechanized units went to town on :.n imaginary enemy. The man of’ the hour stands ready, match in hand, to light the fuse of the little island's great anti-invasion army ff iuid when the zem hour arrives. ‘rt-raft serves as an aerial vim for No. l Fighter Squadron of the Jllfliilimfi. now vett oi‘ the air battle of Britain, recently moved the ground mom r ii-hile pilots flew their own Hawker Hurricane personnel innilc the transfer in this Royal Air ‘Force fighters, FLEIV 2100i) MILES Bosh from visit to the vie- torloug Aiiitra‘ shock troops in rived in London alter is 21.000-mile trip by air. lie is eonfcring with British officials on the prosecution oi’ the war, nuns (5.D.N.A. W J. Mots, mllll rig-director of the Kitchener Dal y Record, Jll elected president of the Canadian Daily Newspaper rsiocistloiu st the lllllllll meeting held in Toronto. The Royal Air Force bombed a Gcnman cruiser of the l0,000-ton Admiral flipper class at Brest, the all‘ ministry announced recently. The bombers attacked the (locks where the cruiser was the target “in sii directions by many stick; of bombs" despite "very he. 'y anti-aircraft fire". No llultish planes were lost. The aittack was said to have liecn patterned infer the Nazi ‘sillllts on Coventry and Swnnscafl conecn- trated mid on s. single selected point. A Nazi cruiser . of the !0,000-ton Admiral flipper clan. is shown hero Drsuled and bewildered, these kittens emerged from their bombed Lindon homes each with all ol its nine lives lnteot. Rescue workers, MARCH 12,1941 Ill e . A rsonal lette from M o - threlnd Dlvislor: (active zgniyeeitloerrieqggirgdiihltl-gii liltiniylnandcr or Rifles, accepting an honorary life membership in gin-Ln“... l: (“mm tails of some of the generals experiences as s private i. MM m“ "1""- IIIBIIY years ago. "l accept the courteous recognitinilr q; light." ho says. “For my memory takes mo back to tlir- . “i We" the South African war when I went with the battalion 1; l to camp on Csrllng Heights, London. Memory tells mi: 1...‘. iii inlut." in the hot sun. standing stiffly at attention, I fell or“... i‘ 3'3"“ Today I am not at all likely to mm. i have become tunglli l‘ "m" imizli at heart. 11m nrlan beats a. little faster ivhen I rir,,',‘.",,“f" you rmnenibered mo. When I tell of my history, 1 n. - “Hf 1m ll)’ "Iii my first official military activity was as ll nit-mini "i: rm old 22nd Oxford Rifles. Prior u» that, being it... ,-.,....g u, h. ,,,‘,',,,_"," I had been a water carrier in the Coivurg battery.” llcre tln- venue‘ talks things over with s prlygfig, ' " m“ tlii- regg. Thousands oi‘ London fire-fighters, injured in the Joli of eonilmtinis "lireblitz" raids, are to be aided by a fund which f\]l"lll‘ii Al. irli aiii ovcr North America. The drive for millions of (iolliii-s \\ i ' in Toronto by Ralph lleslop, president of the Toronto l" t‘ association, who says the London fireninnis average iverking rlw i~ 15 110"". With 2i hours on dull! in the worst fire raids. tlltlfl ill Canada lllll till UJ. III "0310! l0 lid," Ml‘. Htslnp said. in rt ' “m, work trimmed- busy following Nni sir raids on the metrolwii". ii" "i from piles of wreckage that bad been houses. and the cats were rescuul. fifilfifiiillitQlfilfifiQO. .00