\ ". l-‘lf/i I »->'~'¢r~.~:<-y,;-». . . . iii: . ciiuiiomuovni auiiiiiiiiiii uprnlls‘ DI“! (Ffillllbl II 1"?) Pnnltlcntt Llout. Cul- W. c599“? ‘r l°un Vin Prnnldent- J. ll. lzurutlagJ-l- "'0 lonntaryl Llcul. II. . In: nun. - - - llllhlf and Illlllllll ntmwr. J. I 81m"- '34-‘ Assn-Into Erlllornr Frnnl Wnlluir. and Hill- lll - numsn, ILILNVJI. (flu Artlu Beryl“) Col. NUHFPIIIPTION IATII B; llnli In l" E. l.. "-00 im- non IIJBO for I manila, sud lnr a mmlthnt 1W f» n" "W" m” nah," yup, M, "y"; u.» In O month m-m i" s mnnlhli m m n» fir!" I! Mull tn other Fractures nnsl I1.I.A. 10.00.87.511" lutnrllny Weekly: I'M I!" "F" "-0. °' - ‘ 50o fm- I months nunrdlnn mu be uhtullol l! ‘Tlmru Iqulro. Now "vii Corn" blllk lml Wlnhllltol Bolton: smrtmnnmn Nlvrn An-nry. INI In! It. Mflmnull: -I. Fins- 35f Buy Ill. Toronto: Now! MIMI (‘hula-nu liuurler. (litmus: “'""l'l !U‘" 5'5"‘ I'm‘ burs‘. 0nl,; llul» "ruin-wi- Shup. Mons-ton, 8.8. “The Strongest Memory i8 Wall“? TM" the Wen/res! Ink.” wisusususv. JANUARY 1a. 1m Thu (‘hnrlullutnsrn Ilotnlllnrn" News AKIN‘!- Dlrl Imlth Nrwl AINWI. 4 A Much Needed Survey l-‘i-nni ‘litinui routes llllllUllllClllllClli that Can- ada's lllilllt-ll \t‘l'\lCt'>, saippcd by the demands hi‘ lllt‘ 'll'|llk‘ll flutes ziiid llllllllllg short in rural urn», n1- t» lit uilijt-cictl in zui uiiprccedcittcd :lll'\\'_\' llllll phtiiiiiiig effort ‘lo be ifl-Llllflhfid 3i a roiiirrt-iict- i-i ‘nt-zilili authorities operiiiigpat tilt’: lloiiiiiii-ln cztpiizil on _lllllllill‘_\’ 20. .~\t the invita- iioii oi tlic (lllllliilllll .\i1_‘(llC2ll Procurement and _\sniglllllt‘lli ll-Jilftl, representatives of all health nrgniiiztititins lllltl zigt-iicies have been asked to nit-t-t lin- l,\\'|i tittys to iintp out a concentrated allittjk upon ilit- ltfillllfilll. The survey to be_ at- tciiiptetl is iutt-iitletl to sliuw just what medical, tlt-iiizil, tiuix-ing Zllltl ltuspliili assets Canada. poss- CMCS, ll<J\\' lllt‘_\' are distributed and where ad- justments iiitiy lie ll‘.£l.(i€ to obtain the greatest service from existing sources. tlne of the ziinis iii the conference will be to iiiie>tiqzite ilit- >lltlltlltlll in rural communities tlcpiivcvl oi zttivqiiziie iiicdical attention. This is stiinetliiiig of direct cottcern to many sections of -I'rince .E(l\\'£ll'il island. At the outbreak of war we had sixty-tun doctors in this Province. Today we have only forty-seven. Some who are still practising are tut» tiltl to discharge the added duties which the sliortzigeof younger men has forced upon them 1n a few large sections, such 1s the Belfast District and Tyne Valley, there’ is now no resident doctor at all; in many others, only one, where there were formcrlv two or three. _ This condition, of course, is not confined to this Island. When the war started there was an estimated force of less than 11,000 physicians, 28,ooo trained nurses, 4.000 dentists, 1,000 hos- pitals and tiine medical schools in Canada. The war has taken about 3,000 doctors and many nurses and dentists. Medical schools are being aided and are cooperating in the work of speed- itig up graduation of doctors, but the problem of meeting civilian requirements in anything like adequate measure is likely to increase rather than diminish while the war continues. Some progress has been made by the estab- lishment recently of 1 Medical Procurement and‘ Assignment Board with advisory committees in each Province. The Board is controlled by the Canadian Medical Association (five of its nine members being appointed directly by this organization) 1nd has authority over “health services and health requirements of war indus- tries and the civilian population, as well as the armed services." The local advisory committee members an Hon. Dr. W. J. P. MacMillan, chairman, Dr_ I. W. MacKenzie, and Dr. B. C. Keeping, Deputy Minister of Health. In addi- tion there is a Maritime advisory board whose chairman is Dr. j. R. Corston, Halifax, and to which the provincial chairmen belong. As an example of how the Board functions it may be stated that a the request of the local advisory. committee it has taken doctors out of tho ser- vioe forces and made them resume their civil- ian duties where there was no available doctor b roplace them. it is to be hoped that full opportunity will be token by our provincioi health authorities of the Bond’: invitation to meet at Ottawa on Jan. 2o to discuss this very serious problem of medical manpower, and to cooperate ‘m wary my go. yards its solution. Beecham Tells ‘Em? Our American neighbors were "told off" in style by Sir Thomas Becchmxn, England's in- ternationally famous orchestra lesder, at I reception given in his honour the other d: by the Citizens Committee for the Brooklyn gym- phony Orchestra. The episode is reported amus- ingly in the Brooklyn Eagle. Sir Thomas’ behaviour, says the reporter, was st first "formal. polite, a little stiff perhaps, but all conventionally pleasant.” Then the distin- guished guest “tweaked his little pointed chin beard, called for some whiskey and sods, took off the white kid party gloves and tossed them right into the laps of the astounded committee. He told Brooklyn off with a sharp wit, but he didn't neglrct llctroit, or Salt Lake City or Seattle, m‘ any fllllfl‘ cily of millions that can't stir up rivic pride enough to support a decent orchestra." Sir lliotnns expressed the view that people who ftiil in take advantage of good music "tint-ll tiitricr llit‘ vcil of senii-Imrbarism." In- stczid of four concerts a year, Brooklyn should have one every week. He told his audience about his orchestra at home, the Imdon Phil- harmonic Orchestra, which he took over ten and a half years ago “when it was almost as bad as the New York Philharmonic is today." The London Orchestra plays five nights a week in wartime, with a repertoire of 1,000 numbers, and can go mt toiir without any music and play s whole programme. "If London can do that, why not Brooklyn?" demanded Sir Thomas. "immortality is in front of us," he went on. "Of course I don't expect to lift Brooklyn to cultural heights all at once, but I'm working on discreet infusion of the novelty, in the best man- ner possible." Good music, be said, is as easy to take as bad and he paid a left-handed com- pliment to Philadelphia when he said he never heard of the city until it had a fine orchestra. He lambasted Detroit as "the richest city in the coun- try, that in the iniddlc of a war decides to take the shine out of its life by stopping its sym- phony orchestra." He confessed that he didn't care whether he reached "the money-bags" 0r not; he wanted the people. So in Seattle lie call- ed in the representatives of the unions . . . “fourteen unions, what they represented God only knows, but I decided to have them, so we could get to the people and make them appreci- ate good music." In the midst of Sir Thomas’ harangue, which .extended beyond the scheduled hour for clos- ing. a wedding party which was to use the re- Sir Thomas looked up blandiy and asked. "What's this, a bomb?" and went on undis- ttirbcd. Editorially, the Brooklyn Eagle suggests that Sir Thomas’ criticism may do much good “even though it may ruffle civic consciousness a bit to be spoken to thus." Aren't we all in need of llC- ing deflated occasionally for the good of our souls? Western Grain Orders Ii is expected that iii the curly months of i943 the Canadian railways will handle the largest movement of feed grain in their his- tory, states the Agricultural Supplies Board. The demand for railway cars will be beyond the available supply, consequently it will be difficult for the railways to give the customary prompt service on feed grain deliveries from bVestern Canada. To protect supplies for distribution to feeders, the Board urges planing orders for grain as far in advance as possible and recom- mends local dealers to keep their storage space full. Floor prices offer protection to the buyer. The important point is always to have feed grain available ahead so that demands front farmers for feed may be met and vital livestock produc- tion encouraged arid assisted. - EDI lURlAl NUltS — More open-air skating the better. It is en-i couraging, but none the less a reflection on pub- lic spirit, to see boys flooding their back yards in order that they may engage in skating and hockey on a small scale. n: s w a H.R.H. Prince Arthur of Coiitiauglit, eldest son of the late Duke, Governor-General of Cati- ada, born this date i883, died Sept. i2, i938, succeeded by his only son the Earl of i\'Iacduff,I born August 9, i914, and who is now .~\.D.C. to! H.R.H, the Earl of Atliloiie, the present Gover- nor-General. Iili The Minister of Defence tells the Mayor that his colleague Hon. Mr. Angus Macdoiiald secs no reason why there should not be another ship called “The Charlottetown". Would that the Minister of Transportation adopt the same ai- titude, then there would be some hope of a new ice-breaker at Borden-Tormentinq W I i I It is most unusual to have brothers head of respective public services in two different couii- ~ ties. But in Canada and the United States there is a case in point. Mr_ G. C. Batcman is Con- , troller of Metals in Canada, and Dr. Alan M.i Bateman, Metal Controller iii Washington. The oldest brother is Mr. G. C. Batcmaii, who is a Queen's University science graduate of 1909. Dr. Alan M. Bateman is a Queen's University science graduate of I911. ~u a s m Mr. R_ A. Adamson, Conservative member of Parliament for York South, in an address in Toronto said a high percentage of Canadian men rejected for military services are morons. “The reports of the medical boards examining the young men of Canada prior to their entry into the army are alarming," Mr. Adamson said. "They show that approximately x quarter are category C: and that s very high percentage of these are incurably mentally sick, the medical term for moron. These are the figures for young men in their 20's. If you consider the whole population, it would, I believe, show that we are rapidly becoming a C3 nation." Mr. Adunson said medical care, both preventive and cuntivs must be made available to all citizens, irrespective of their efonpmk: status. U The Russian Oi-thodox Church is backing the Soviets financially and otherwise. Sergeius, the Metropolitan of Moscow, acting Patriarch has advised Joseph Stalin that the Patriarchy is contributing 100,000 rubles and is urging all clergy and church leaders to donate funds for construction of the Dmitry Donskoy tank col- umn. His telegram recorded by the Soviet Monitor said: “Sincere greetings to you. In prayer I wish you New Year health and success in all your undertakings, for the welfare of our country is entrusted to your care. By a special message I advised the clergy and all leaders to contribute to construction of the Dmitry Donskoy tank column. As a beginning the Patriarchy itself contributes l00,000‘rubles." n a a Harsh words about the prevalence of bttrau- cracy at Ottawa were spoken by Mr. john Brac- ken in his first broadcast. He declared that for servants of the Government to execute policv and even to defend policy was the negation of res- ponsible government. This coming session should afford legislators an opportunity to test the truth of Mr. Bracken’s assertion, says the Gazette. While the probes that have been con- ducted these last two years by special commit- tces into war expenditure have produced some beneficial results, it is probable that something more tangible might come from a committee inquiry into the extent and the operations of the so-called bureaucracy. There is abundant warrant for such a move, for a similar inquiry is being instituted by the ilnuse at Wnsliiiigtou where tliev are determined to discover ivhcthcr i,” Sir Tlnmins said the secret of a good orchestra in “to play the best tnusic in the world, with a lception hall next attempted to crash the gate. The lst sores ulna vniv seeing daylight again. Never glass helm revlflcfl number. -Balfut News-Letter. As events have transpired. Giraud. —Sydney Post Record. ther these honors (orders seem to us to be unrealistic. a democracy all men have irights under the luw, but this must lnled the recogrftton which the only tangible courage or faith, or intellectual that the bestows‘. of titles for dls- contrary to the true nature of demo- cracy. --Peterboougl1 Examiner. Nothing ha; been head of late of th~ earlier Ottawa suggestion that compulsory bllleting might be en- forced. In other words, that families with an unoccupied room or two those needing housing accommoda- ton. Willy niliy, So many snags be- is not surprising that the plan pcter- ed out. The average home could not accommodate an extra tenant and many new fittings which are unat- tainable because of official restric- tions. —-Calgary Herald. Fats make glycerlne, and glycer- lne makes high explosives. Bones ‘produce fat, also glue for war ln-ied dustry. That is why the authori- ties at Ottawa are makng a drive for the saving of every spoonful of dripping, every piece of fat and every bone. It. has been estimated that one ounce of fat dripping peri person per week would provide thirty-six m lllon pounds of fat; eiwh year for glycerine. —'I‘oronto Tele- gram. One of the really moot and knotty questions of American history has to do with what started the great Chicago fire. The problem has been thicshed out time and again, but never quite satisfactorily. First there was the story that the woow Olsearyg cow started it. by kicking ova: a antern. Then somebody salt‘, no, that there was no such cow; some reporter of the old imaginative Chicago school had invented the anl- mal Then came what is known to historians as the Theory of the Three Burns, which had it. that three un- washed and underprivileged tempor- ary tenants of Mrs GLetmys barn, who W'Bl‘8 drink ng and smoking, artcd the fire accidentally. One of the author ties for this was one Peg-Leg Sullivan. Now The As- sociated Press had a circumstantial story from Indianapolis quoting a butcher. Mr. Joseph A Kicker, as saying that the cow was no m h; indeed. he says 111.; father bought. Mrs OT-earyts cow and calf and butchered them, saving their hides for some years as mementos. Mr. lekcr says the cow started the fire, but admits the presence tn the barn of three bums. How does he know who started the fire? We must view his testimony as inconclusive, F0; our own part we shalt continue to hold to our cherished original be- lief that the cow started the fire by klllklllg a lighted lantern and that she. and she alone, is the culprit. And we'll go farther and throw one more hypothesis into the contra. versy; we suspect that Peg-Leg ant. "V811. one the three bum-s. was really the Lost Dauphin, -New York Her. nld Tribune. Tho allies have found French Africa _t0 be a land of extreme scar- city. its shores of food and live stock exhausted by Germany and the ma? °1 VWW- The situation offers evlcenoo of what the countries of North and South America wlll have to do in the way of supplying food as the oppressed nations are deliver- from the tyrants. For Canada means more self-denial and the extensfim of rations. It ls all poi-t of the price of victory and the re. storauon of freedom. Hamilton Spvtator. , A striking account of the played in the war by the govern- ment and people of the sudm Riven 1n a pamphlet, “The sudan and the Abyssinian Campaign," written by K. D. D. Henderson, an official of the secretariat in Khar- toum, copies of which have reached London. The Sudan was a sup l base for four armies, the Brltgh. the Indian, the Sudan Defence Ibrco and the Ethiopian. Among tho more unusual activities mentloied 1s an atlmept to find 1 fast dye as camou- flage for white camels. -London Times; Don't be too surprised if, 0m of these clays, we may be growln: cot- tonwood fen 5 here 1n south Ai- mta tn .1 pulpwood for paper mills. We ‘mow 113s a long Sulktcrl of the lmagltmtlon as we look over the bald-headed prairie with nary a tree 1n s‘ght but what has been planted by hand. But an American newsprint plant has been offering to buy pulpwood in the Flathead dis- trict of Montana. The cottonwood, as ls well known, ls one of the fast- est-zrowing trees. and 1t l5 a nuttve of this country. Under anything ap- proaching favorable conditions n c-“onwood forest would grow in s few years so that 1t would provide large qiuntlfies of gulpwood. One has only to hak to t c cottonwoods on our boulevards to sec that. What we would be really more interested ln, however, is to know whether it might not be possible to start n cotton factory on the cotton from our cottonwood!» Q-icli June. We're or not too many persons are employed in Gov- ernment positinus in the .'\lll(‘l'lC£lll ciitiitiil. whe- ther or not the controls are being wisely and efficiently administered. ' quit‘; sure the suggestion wlll meet. immediate approval from teihbrldw house-holders whose lawns turn whltc tn cotton season each Spring. —Lethbr1dge Herald. (Batu-dag Nldlt. ‘mron Many shopkcollflll who for mm The Char tY-IWIIII. P- I. than a yew‘ hat/B be“ "fwd 9° Guardian observed last month ‘conduct their business in seml-dark- , "Saturday Night docmnot ncss, because their windows were,“ Libs"), mt ll mmahect 1n the su- raids. INMIIWWiSGIVIUVQ and nntl- .01." 0N1 have 1 seen so man sheets of plate M It Dre-wll- ieaders tn‘ doubt cl to our In one street rccenty I countedfcharlcter we propose to Mid three separate lots of workmen fe-‘dgrlfymg pairing windows, which had been. covered with boards or felt. Thea-rm;- mq gxpgllenf, reason are few more dept-wins llkht-s than»; not Llberul. We an not boarded-up wndows. and 1t 1s good conservative, 1n tbs some flu to see a steady reduction ln their are not op the brutal murder of Admiral Dorian has created a situation from which | the Nazis must derive cold comfort. lves have felt. for ssvorll curl, Fighting as well as the for- past that. the mam meat mer "Itchy" French tn North Afrlcaflconservatlve party u been are firmly united under General The discussions which arise from son for tine to time in Canada as to ivhe-Jlovernmcnt be replaced by a 0on- ofpservativs Government - oven if ichlvalrv) are “democratlw or notqthere had at any Urns during the Infast few years been any prospect equal of such a change. A; a matter of does , fact tho managers of the Conserva- not; mean that natural superlority|tlve party during the last three years p” go unrewarcled or that the.hnve been advocatlnc not a Con- brave or the brilliant must be de- servatlve Governmen , give him an award; frequently it ls.1on's r8518!!!" benefit which-would have made comes to him in return for a. deed IIIIDOB-ilble- N81!!!" 0! or a piece of work which took great iect-s has mrtlcullrl! In lsineiv. m accomplish We cannot seelwhom they dld not nlrtlvullriv I Parties And Ponds: lb) ' anti his rather unclear our periodical should lea Rte Conservative party we think 0 800d mm)’ 0° that the but such us; we know innny Conservatives tn ,pea1 either. and there seems to tlngufshed service ls in any rlay-good reason to SHPDOsQ that thd! did not particularly appeal to the mass of the electors. The party has now undertaken the task of preparing itself to form a. strong Progressive Conservative Government bv the proper and legitimate method of carrying on a strong Progressive Conservative should be compel ed to rent them to Opposition; and 11: w-‘li hsve-notifi certainly our unqualified support ln everything 1t may do, for ws came immediately apparent that it have n9 lnwlltllm 0i 5990mm! ll party organ of Mr. Brackenis any‘ more than we are s party organ of Mr. King's, —but our freely ex- pressed approval of everything in which 1t. seems to ul that t ls idoingoppostvon work that is use- yfu: to the country. The fact that the‘ doing of such work wlll ,strengthen its claims to be evwust- later on with the task of pro- ivldlnz a Government will not deter us 1n the slghtest. l .In the matter of the 0.0.1" our poslflon 1s somewhat different. we believe that considerable changes ln the economic structure iof modern society are lnevltnbto ‘and desirable; but we do not be. fleve in the abolition of competition and of the profit moflve, we do not believe that the cmpbyment of one lndlvtdual bv another in. dividual or ii group of individuals ‘s wrong and should be prohibited, pnd 1n senetripl we do not believe n many of e feat of uni - sal state soclallan “m! V“ less frankly proclaimed bv its ad. vocates. We bel'eve that ‘the C C. F has h therto performed very “u. fir] fitnctlons as the ‘mOuthplecg apd defencer of the weaker 585e,; ° °l"‘ 506%"- But we should be 50"‘! to see 1t entrusted‘ with the responsibilities o! gag-wing on the government of this country and particularly of carrying it ori with the enormous added msoonslbdltles 0f 3991111111’ mflnfluiniz the country's itidustry and commerce. as it; mic- gllntcs would require i; m d‘, To mélv egctent lIllF chm-lotegown up" a e justified in descflblmz us s anti-CC w "_ though we mink gzvelgfisentt Parliament would be C F or he loss of several of its ‘n d members, 59d 9111-1351151 - BYHOCTHCY compga u; to hold that the electors of several Quest-it, nrovlncial rfdlngs are entttlqg. to renTefifyiflfilon 1n the legislature 9"" t B." are llkel c0 F, candmates‘ v to return Judicial Appointments Wflnizhuv law Jflilrflll) W9 Dflbltsh elsewhere a very s18- i'.%.‘:"‘i*;ii"‘""°" Peed t» - annugl t‘ ich Columbia at their meeting dealing wlth the 1.11mi in tho r that the time hgsoizirisnigntogggflrathc Dmlth-‘Bl Spoils system of the up. Pfllritment of Judges. The ultimate admlnftratlon of Justice lies in the hmdloftnsneuicltmdupgu- "4 1t h only by the united efforts y! both the purity of jugtiog ggn e maintained. In the flnul mal- ysls. therefore, the r nclbflity for the satlsfac mdm “on @1- Justlce must lie with the Bu‘ for ll: l! from the Bar um the Judges must be chosen. The moat rlgvmu; exclusion from the Bur of men u - “W111? w Practise law cannot avail M" to maintain the purltv of lustloe l! measures an not taken to sec nut u 0111? those men vmo display real .1:- e lcal qualities arc aopu t; ‘Bench. for the best Bur can do time with s. weak Bench and the bar. lawyers do not always make the best Jlldtles. As therefore the real Wsmhlitbtltiiy for the nruper admin- istration o Justice lie; with mo Bar-ct least the public lay the ‘blame for faulty sdmL-nptn of Mtlce upon the lawyer and Motto upon the Bench-it behaves the Bur to remember that 1t 1s not enough t0 d0 Qvervihlvg tn their power to exclude unworthy mo; from practise 11 they do not. at. the some time insist. upon having s, lnmgh grog!" suv than they have at the present “m0 lfl the appointment. of Jiidgcs and at. least make it pint-n that a lawyer must. have more than more partisan pclltlcal qualifications In chic-g to obtain such In appotut- men . 0 I O The obvious other defect in the use of political qualifies" u a criterion for Judlul appointment is the fact that the lawyer who has devoted enoiwh of his Mme to ;e_ nulre political ellgl-hllltv, has taken that much time away from the practice of lsw lrid no 1n than days, when practice of 11w ls s full time lob for any man who wishes come a sound lawyer. has demon- strated that lawyer ant-t therefore from n accept Judicial prefcrment. appointed Judges that. mltl them no tlflle to lay politics. e result always ls l. the Inca that proton to un- wisely administered bv those who had control of 1t. ‘:3, mcrelfo: wu no culxr a airing out tho user-sum!" with policies which Inclusion, 211's: company, to be w M. P. numbers but attached as it is more or. fnt-mcnt in any way attractive to_ mom. ‘Ric t taunt despite the fact the most eligible men lrc thus passed over, tnbe-thcbcmhfslapm ultfs. But than 1s always‘ dune:- hc ls only a part-‘l/me‘ and one can sec periods ln crew egs nolnt of view far less nullified to the Bench Andrew immuta- 1187' lnlihllh n noes. We do not profess to buggers-l d to the Bonsai-vol m“ as formed. or- ie-ortentlcc 1f you 9111a‘. at Winni- peg. we ncvcr have been mtlq Conservative, but we have felt. u; nus-vat.- 5 "1 9.5 it: i lone. undo an excellent officer. ln his work mm interested and understood hi; fellow man-n "h" great asset tn the llfs and work of theythey termed a National Govern-Wm mm’ have a right to expect If a man meut. at first. with policies which does great service to his fellows 1n would have made possible the In- ivar or 1n peace we cannot. see anylclusion of some Womb-Canadian u" reason why his Sovereign should not. reimsetitfltion. but 11w‘ Dr. Min- . I .. . r‘ (DQLIIIIIJIHDPI-R-QI-“a N¢w:l¢=i ,c|¢w == a "c" can ioinlhc Active Army Mandhcmswwi lwu“? vmnflv QQQJQJBYQIORYQCUIQOIJIICWIéQéQIDHIVO csClorlqCcoiqSlolonqDrlvsr-Maclunlqicnol- loollfkloltllvlldiffifioclcpclroryolhflndrolscu Coloqory"A"ncnlotcolllbcldilly_._ ' i Spoddtrcdupoyloottpulqmdwuhnpcaslng kudos lost-Floatation on nsrltbcds-wlth opportunity - Iolocmclrcdoorlviapcsoycwskllhyanprmnl AqoLlinlllllo48cHhlcmuvptc5$MNOW cndliolplobcstonvldory. LOCAL RECRUITING STATION llsllu-Copwcllimncallollsupltsl Abdfcnvdhlcwolnikdtllcwfllllivl-Wllfllliiiivl I Mounted Police on P. E. The war brought duties, and of admlgvoét up term? m1“ Arm-y Overseas was sn- hc VOliZIlAQIQd. and, in . 19M. went overseas with Hand, Drummund-Hay transferred b0 the Coldstream Guards-a reg merit with whose traditions his family had been associated for many years. He iwus sent to Bandhurat where hr’ achieved outstundlns success and 5t ptlon was gran 8 lsslon with this furious 01d British Regiment. When the 8W- rds were sent to the Eyyptlan tine- atre of war. he accompanied "Wm- and at the time o1 the 02mm‘ drive lnto Lybla 1n J1me of this year he was with s battalion of his res- fment stationed st Tcbruk. The Coldsltmnllts arid the Scots Guards refused to surrender when the Axis hoard swarmed down on mu t. in the Libyan aesu-uzh- BLUE BIRD glousiyosthese two units fought their ‘way out. Wliat was left of them Ensemble was lcteruformed into s unit- and placed on the El Alamefn llne. 0o July 1a, the very day he was tn be taken to is base hospital for treat. ment to n poisoned arm. Dfllm- mond-Hsy was hit by a shell and received severe head and cheat ln- Hc died twcnt their experiences and comrades ln- these horrible days. The true glory o; tam hardships, the privat- tons, 351d heroism of our 89-11511‘ desert fighters may then be tflld- In the eantlme we have much $0 do. we must. r1d our world of men like Hitler and Mvssolfnl. and BY- enge the loss of men like Ardrew nrummondJ-Iny - me who WW6 destined to pint a 1e: inc inrt In our post-war tarcblems. Ho ls gone! Althuuzh he was l» mufh younger man than I. he 1185 left. with me his mark of frlcndlllf! and devotion to duty- I can th-nk of no better ending for this tribute than to quote an mrtlcle whlch RD- pcnred in the Auk. l3. 1942. 158119 °_Y the Imidon Times: L. L. writes. "Althmsgm I bu‘ only known Ll;- Andrew (Andy) roummond - HI" 5111c; the early days of the war. I was fm-ttmate enough not Onlv 1° ggt w know huh well but inso, I sincerely bercve. w make _n friend- ship which will remain wt h me as a pleasant- and "W"? m¢"‘f>YY l5 long u 1 live. Such was its rer- isovnalltv that I know the same $0 be true of all his friends. of whom were were many in QWW will‘ °l life. m Andy was wmtrehlv natural and sbnlvht in the highest gonna: which combined wltp an 1n- fectloua piety and loveofl fomade g lasting impresskva upon every"! he met. Before the war he Md ~been living in Canada. where fer some um he was a member 0f t- Q famous Canadian Mmmtfes. On ms outbreak of hostilities he lolnvd the Osnsaim y and soon 11m‘ nu sn-ivu in this wintry was vnt to sandbox-st. when he shirt/ed ti"; distinction of helm wrtvled rm A or ‘outstanding’ cvdct before passing om, “Isa? up glgutassnuhlglzn 111 the Co s mm v - gagllgyiptfsnlosstlmtwfllbe . man . (‘that wprznlatlm was wrlttfll b? ltie oommundl 01PM? li- 5,"“"' hung n, l; p flttlnlz lzrlbu e in our yournz friend, but 1t 1s also very true of the fine F011"! man know: n lance Corporal Dvirmmond-fiu o: the from Olmdlan Mounted Police. (my; Not The Voice“ 0f Austria (Ottawa Journal) _ We do not know how widely D1‘- Franz Klein circulates the mill!" sine called The Voice of Annuals, which he publishes ln Ottawa. lit wo mould b0 (rcntl surprised ff 1| doing any good the emu of Austria nhjgmq objective, hardly dis-l IllllBd st lll..l.s the rest/oration of the Hnbsbulfl to the throne of an Austria restored by the United Na.- tlons‘ efforts. Head of the move- ment l; Crown Prince 01m. who rc- csnuy was liven the opportunity to recruit on Austrian legion 1n the ‘Unload Btltcs. 11ml: permission, ac- cordln: to Drew Pearson. l well- lnformcd Washington commentator, rune from Prcsfdent Roosevelt, nvcr the stout ‘opposition of his most 01101510 for judlcnl appoint. mom no never considered for such appointment until sheer merit forces them u the politicians’ athntlon and y that time it is much too lsh to make judlcnl sp- fcct diamond. facets. It of such absolute perfection arc will by Wanner. Fawless ‘125 Authorized Terms! Color and brilliance no only It must be out correct takes -‘ c ttlng and freedom from car- bon spots t0 make the diamond pen-fr‘ w. w. WELLllEil iii; purl of tlia story 11's" thug; Only diamonds pennant» IIILAIGII — “OI DIVE i Jewelers plnce I80! _ secretary of state, Mr. midell Hull. i Otto. writes Pearson, ls “sincere, hard-working and personally like- ablc," but, he adds, “there are not many Austrians or Hungarians 1n the United States who want to go 111.0 battle under the banner of the old I-labsburg empire." The current issue of The Voice of Austria ls s typical one. It has n contributed artcle defending the Hababurg llns with much vigor. Dr. Klein 1n s long editorial tells U8" his heart is filled “with bitterness" because there ls not even one mem- ber of the British House of Com- mons “who wou d espouse Austria's cause with any fervor and persis- tence". Dr. Klein has also an ur- tlcle comparing Darlan and Stalin. in which he says Dar-tan was "a great ‘i-‘rench sailor and patriot who was misjudged and slnndered." an- other 1n which he trrltlclzes the st- tltude of Mr. Gaul-chill towards Italy. This sort of thing. we aug- gcst, 1s not calculated to make friends for Dr. Klefn‘: cause. The plain fact ls that in 1914 Austria-Hungary, under the Haba- burgs, eagerly joined with Germany ‘n a war against Britain-her ob- ject not defence, because ‘ i, was threatening Austria-Hungary. but greed for more territory and power. It would be foolish to ex- pect any more enthusiast: in a British country for restoring Otto to Vienna than for setting up the Huhennollern: 1n Berlin. HAT-JOHN IULIIB TIA? LONDON -tC'Pl- Don't be sur- prised if you hear that British peo- ple ate brewing tea tn th a dehydrated tea-powder which they say makes a refreshing drink with u different toms. l‘ COMPLETE INSURANCE . SERVIC " - AW. If. RUGEIIS Agencies Ltil. 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