o PAGEFOUR THE GUARDlANi i 1 Authorized In Second Class lllall Post Offiro Department, Ottawl. The island Gunrdlun Publishing (to. CIRCULATION 1 ram my Zone smell l:ctIiI Trading Zone 8.-I311 All Others .. . 827. Total Net Paid 1:.ol9j Hrcsidenf. and Associate Bllitor. Ian A. Burnett, l Associate Editor. I-trunk Walker. l "The Strongest Memory as Weaker lhan the Weakest lnk". l Fl-THARLOTTETOWN. W'l'lDNESDAY.-B-'E,l:'F. 26. lilfyll Seeking A Scapegoat Official figures of the United States De- partment of Agriculture show that Amer-i ican farmers are borrowing more money: nowadays than at any time during the; past ten years. The explanation for this trend is the increasingly high cost of farnl-l ing. Fertilizer which last year cost 3544 ai, ton now costs SS6-1. Farming machiueryi Ind equipment has risen sharply in pricol over the past year or so. Farm labour is scarce and expensive. Any farmer in Prince Edward Islalld will verify the fact that farming costs have, been mounting rapidly in Canada, too.; Farm cash income, instead of increasim:,l has actually been on the decline. More Canadian farmers are finding it necessary to resort to credit, at a time when controls make credit a matter of ever increasing difficulty. Advocates of price control are prone to blame the high cost of living on the farmer, and to overlook the fact that mod- ern farming relies heavily upon industry for essential machinery and equipment. Chances are that if the price control en- thusiasts had their way the farmer would be the first target of their attack. For food costs, which represent the major item in most family budgets, have risen more sharply than other items in the c0st-0f-liv- ing index. Members of Parliament who happen to represent Prince Edward Island and other agricultural areas of Canada, before pledg- ing their support of price control, should consider carefully the consequences of such a policy so far as the farmers are concern- ed. Farm equipment and fertilizer are not included in the official cost-of-living index. Industrial workers interested in higher wages would probably not be much con- cerned to see the price Of Such items "frozen". Their attention would be focus- sed on food costs, and their attitude to- wards the farmer would be that of "the Devil take the hindermost". Making the farmer the scapegoat of inflation underlies much of the clamor for price controls. i als have shown a similar jump and airline revenue is rulming between four and five times above the 1945 rate. Air Transport !Board records show that the figures for )Canada are higher than the world wide i I average. , Actually, the current rash of air fatal- ities is chiefly among military planes and non-scheduled lines. Statistics for the soiled- uled lines strongly indicate that we may still be safer scudding into the wild blue yonder in a Skymaster -than meandering down :1 district highway in the family car. LDI IURIAL NUILS To be or not to be, that is the ques- tion regarding the proposed Royal Visit. 6 V U Hospitals are kept busy these days looking after the victims of higllway ac- cidents. 0 0 I Competition will be keen at the Pro- vincial Plowing Match at Dundas. Results are ever uncertain but one sure winner is Island agriculture. o In It is odd that the two main parties in the United kingdom both follow a policy of strong centralized government. It is only the almost extinct Liberals who want to see government activity restricted. O O I Recruiting is the order of the day. There is no longer the inducement of na- tional glory and expansion but, at least as imperative, is the call to bar aggression and bring closer the rule of law. O O 0 Attention is directed to all advertise- ment in another part of this issue warn- ing trespassers to keep off the Exper- imental Farm in consequence of thievery and mischief, that have been committed. Ontario and a town of the same name welcomes an Old Country Mayor. The Mayor of Leamington, England, Alderman O. R. Davidson, was asked to open the flower show at Loamington, Ont., when he visited there Monday. 0 O 0 Tile Island has long been familiar to people abroad because of the missionary activities of displaced Islanders, but it is only since the air age that significant num- bers of visitors from Europe have been able to see for themselves. 0 o 0 Leading Canadian newspapers are al- most unanimous in expressing the unfair- ness it would be to leave to Princess Eliz- abcth to decide for herself whether she should abandon the long-looked forward Visit to her future subjects in Canada. Coo. I'eachers' Training. considering the many years during, which the P. E. 1. Teachers' Federation has: Sympathy will he felt for Mr. Graybiel, president of the Windsor Star, and his associates Mrs. llcrman, Mrs. Lawson and Mr. W. L. Clark, in the death of Mrs. struggled to raise the standards and fi-icrayblel who, like them, spent enjoyable nanclal returns of the profession it must Vac-cmons he,-C, advocates of a policy of lowering educa-E tional requirements. ' It is arguable, of course, that when suf- ficient qualified tcachers are lacking it ls necessary to grant permits to some whoscm academic attainments fall short of the re-. quirements for a license, and that they may even possess lower qualifications than required under the earlier law. Even though this may be so in in- dividual cases, the present system at least assures the greater number of classes hav- ing a teacher with a minimum of two years at Prince of Wales College, rather than one Tltlll Safer Aloft be discouraging to find that there are stilli 0 O 0 Old Age Pensioners in this Province are likely to total over 6,350, without means test, at M0 per month. ccipt of the pension. . Cuthbert,'Lord Collingwood, British ad- miral, was born this date 1750. He fought on shore in the battle of Bunker Hill and later began a lifelong friendship with Nel- son. He gained great distinction at the battle off Cape St. Vincent in 1797, was second in command at 'l'rafalqar, taking over on Nelson's death. at u 4- ln days not far distant it was British The recent string of airplane crasllesm and consequent fatalities may revive theand India too with their manufactured re- New India herself has under- with 20,000,000 tistics tell a different story. points out ihci yards of cloth which previously would have .come from British mills, keeping thousands impression that travelling by air is more: dangerous than by any other means. Sta-; Ottawa Citizen. Air crashes are always spectacular. They-' draw headlines while auto smash-ups are only underlined on long, holiday week-ends when a total of deaths on the highways is compiled and publicized. Yet, based on the number of fatalities per 100,000,000 pass- enger miles, scheduled airlines come second to railroads on the safety scoreboard. Autos and taxis have the worst record. Within the last year, there have been no fatalities on Canada's scheduled domestic lines and only one on an international route-and that off the hazard-bound coast of Alaska. In -relation to miles travelled, the number of .I'lr fatalities on domestic and interna- tional runs in the United States, has been dropping steadily since 1945. on the same bull, both were below the figure for autos Ind toxic last year. Airline safety charts are all the more striking when the tremendous increase in tho number of planes and passenger: is him into conslderutlon. Throughout the the llumorothnntrlpledolncetheend manufacturers who chiefly supplied China quirelncnts. taken to supply China of British workmen and women busy. 0 0 it The Prime Minister and the Minister of Finance are of one mind in telling tax- payers that the special session of Parlia- ment next month, at an additional cost of 354,000 plus per member, is for the pur- pose of increasing taxes not reducing them. Their attitude is that you can't expect to baby-bonus-and-old-age-pension cakes and at the same time be entitled to eat your reduced taxation. Airdales are being enlisted in the R. A. F. Postwar recruits to the R. A. F. who receive no pay, get no leave and wear no uniforms are the R. A. F.'s Alsatian Po- lice dogs, sewing at home stations as well as in Germany, the Middle East and the Far East. The dogs lure proving success- ful for ground duties and are given ranks of their own. A recruit is Air Dog 2 and may be promoted toAlr Dog 1, leading Air Dog and, finally, Instructor Air Dog. In- structor Air Dogs are used by their hand- world, numberofpuoengerairmlles flown I tho Socond World War; passenger tot- Ion to train new recqultsv - The figures given tho other day were those of seventy and :0VCl' who have registered to date, taking no account of some 3,220 presently in re- THE GUARDIAN. Cl-IARLOTTETOWN Successfully Launched ' on to roater heights! size in will. .?....,I PUBLIC FORUM This column is open to tho discussion by u0l'l'ESp0lIdClJl.I of questions of Interest. Tho Guordlau doe: not necesIar- Ily enooru tho opinion of correspondents. GOOD PLOWING ESSENTIAL Sir,-Your editorial on ”Plow- in-g Match Revivals". also that excellent cartoon on "Good Plowing" (Guardian. Sept. 19). reminded this city reader of the fact that ”piowing" is one of the most basic activities of mankind -ranging from the most prim- itive types. not far removed from the original "crooked stick" (lost in the misty past, but of which there are still fair samples in the ancient. lands of the peasant East) to North Americas 1951 "Man on the Tractor". It is true that 90 per cent of the people in the world's cities have forgotten it, but the iron fact remains that their lives depend upon "good plowing", and the people at work ”in the furrow". and what. your artist terms ”the good earth". I was reminded. also. of the following couplct: "He planted where the deluge ploughed. cloud." Then. too. I remembered this tender reference to ”Burns'': "The horses pass by, with their looped chains swinging. But one team tramps through the night and day. With a lonely ploughman be- hind them singing A song so sweet it will still hold away- When songs of the purple have passed away!" Finally, there is this very prac- tical reference, by one of today's farm journals, to the fact that the tractor is steadily gaining a grim notoriety as the most lethal implement on the farm: "What the farmers nccd today is a fool- pmof tractor. . Strange. is it. not. how erosion has become such a problem since the tractor dis- placed the horse? Horses could work around those slopes with- out. too much difficulty. . . As the condition gets worse. the advice to farmers to contour plow their land and re-grass the knolls be- comes more ungenf. So it comes down to a necessity on the part. of the tractor makers to do some- thing with their iron horse- power. li. should not be too dif- ficult. an engineering job to de- vise ll lllp-proof tractor. Or at least one that would have I much lower centre of gravity, so that it would not tip so easily?" (Farm and Rarkh Review). I am, Sir. etc., "GREEN LIGHT". Toronto, Ont. GOOD CIIEEII. WITHOUT CORDIALS Sir.--On the 19th, the Prince Edward Lodge of Masons met for its annual banquet in Mary Stewart's spacious restaurant in Cavendish. Albout. co couples sat. down to I turkey d-inner. After dinner an interesting program was put on. Mr. Elton Woodslde showed us I film, just released. on Newfoundland. a wonderful act of pictures of that most in- teresting country. it: brave peo- ple. and its vast industries. The whole fishing set was Ital-tllng in its realism. If you'cannot visit Newfoundlnnd this picture will put you there. Among other stunts that made us laugh was the latest. ' ” show in which five men, each well known to the guests. were painted Ind do-cued up in the lat.- eu Mia. and Iocloly gowns. As ench came in "her" attire was ducribed in technical lnnguue by the chairman. Mr. Wendall Moc- Koy. Their feet did give them IwIy. The long gown! helped to Ihroud thorn; but from there up, tho "India" were really mu- nificnt. Our lauglu greIt.ly help- ed to digest our heovy night. sup- par. 3 In booouno foohlonoble, of lItoyIIu.ItI1mz-.-tlonllko thin to pour claim: but ovary onI Ieemod to hove bad I perfectly good time without the stimula- His hired hands were wind and. Happy Families (The Times) Now that the last echo of the Sklrllns pipe: has died away and the clansmen from Chicago and Dolnts east and west, having fold- ed up their family tartan kilts, are back in muftl, it is safe to re- flect. from the sunny side of the Border, on a remarkable gather. ins. No mother country, except Scot- land, could thus have brought her exiled children together cheered by the belief that they knew all about their ancestors. Most men would like to be able to trace fam- ily roots deep down into the cen- turies but, lacking the clan clue to guide them, they get quickly lost. They order this matter better in Scotland. There, surnames are comparatively few and some 40 or 50 big clans absorb I large propor- tion of the Scottish names. 0 0 O This pleasant tradition allows an individual. whose forebears emigrated generations ago and who has no knowledge of his great-grandfather. agreeably to identify himself with events in history. "He" was out in the '15 and again in the '45 and, going back further, be can revel with a personal sense of participation in the romantic excitements of the Middle Ages. The wild beauty of Culioden Moor makes his blood tingle because his name comes into the story. For English tourists there is no such stimulus. Even if they have served in I regiment that took part. in the battle, on the winning side. their pulses remain unbur- rled. Regimental association, strong though it is, has not the same glamour as I clan name. Nor has A southern surname. who called I-lood fancies himself in a previous incarnation clad inbLincoln green and shooting arrows into sheriffs? What Smith claims kinship with Wayland? 0 0 When southerners do take Ii hand ill this game they play it oadly. Highest points go to any- one who came 'ovcr with the Con- queror, so that his expeditionary force must have been the largest to land on either side of the Channel before D Day. Hardly anyone seems to have had an an- cestor who fought for Harold. al- though the English preference for lost causes is notorious. A further oddity to be noted by anthropol- ogists studying the island way of llfe is that the Welsh and Irish, fo: all their pride of nationalism. have allowed themselves hopeless- ly to be beaten by the Scots in this contest. The Kings of Munster" and so forth have, nowadays, fewer con- fident descendants, even on St Patrick's Day. than they had in the recent past. Welsh pedigrees are lengthy Ind involved, butthey lack the free Ind easy universal- ity of the Scottish clan connex- lens. 0 Scotland may not. have reached the perfect solution. but she does satisfy. or If. least lull. a generally felt Impulse of human curiosity. How fascinating it would be to possess a genuine family tree that went back for hundreds of yearn. The speed It: which the record fndes is lamentable. Even the memory of those indtapemable old ladies who Ire the verbIl histor- ians of mIny fImlllea gives out Is I rule by the eighteenth century -if not before. Most people know Ibout. their gmndfcthorc; only I lucky few can trace thou gr-IndfIl.hon' nor Iny lung-over from tho festive evening. One of the defecta in the new Temperance Act ll the loop-hole that gl-Inu to club! Ind special pgrtlos I licence to distribute liquor, (Ice. 16 b I: d of the Act). which often leIdl to unfortlimto ruulu. Intelligent Ind decent people can have I that cluo. load time without liquor. There in really no need for tlluc special permits. which Ire opening Io many more outlet: for liquor. eopcolatly in Charlottetown Ind Bummeruldo. I Im. Sir, c&. ' 1'. Guam. tion of liquor with no regrets sunnynna... Old Charlottetown (And I. I. L) (I PLOWLNG MATCH IN rnmcu "The Innull Ploughing Motch of the Prince County Agricultural Society took place on the 3rd inst. at the Pavilion Farm, st. Elean- cr's. Nine ploughs started in com- petition for the prizes, which His Excellency Lieutenant Governor Ready: second donation of Three Pounds, as well as several private gifts (one of which was I new plough. presented by Mr. Robert Mllllgan. the Secretary) enabled the Society to award on this oc- union. The work was Idmlx-Ibiy performed, and the judges had some difficulty in deciding on the merits of the different competit- ors. Mr. James Hall obtained the plough. "In the ploughing there was I very decided improvement compar- ed with last. year's. I8 well in the appearance of the mouths. WWII and harness. The members dined together It the house of Mr. John MacMlcken, when the thanks of the Society were unanimously vot- ed to the Lieutenant. Oovernoinfor his very liberal donation. which the President, Mr. Samuel Green, was directed to take the first op- portunity of commu lcuting to His , Excellency." -Royal Gazette. Nov. 33, 1830. grandfathers. It. is no consolation to learn from relentless judges of evidence like Round that legend descends quickly on the most. ex- alted genealogies. To be intro- duced to an ancestor who was con- temporary with Queen Anne would be delightful. If only the Browns and Robinsons were divided into clans the trick could be done. As things Ire, the Incestor ill, IIII. more dead than the Queen. 7 E ,7oe&'6mwz FROM TIIANATOPSIS so shalt. thou rest: Ind what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, Ind no friend Take note of thy departure? All that breathe will share thy destiny. The say will laugh when thou art gone. the solemn brood ad on: Plot! on. and each one I! before will chase His favorite phantom; yet Ill these shall leave , mirth and their employ- ments, and shall come And moke their bed.w'it.h thee. As the long trIin of Iles glide Iway. the son: of Their men, The youth in life's green spring. Ind he who goes In the full strength of yarn. mIto- ron Ind mIid. Ind the Ipeochleu babe, grey-hnded mIn-- sholl one by one be gathered to thy side By those who in their turn shall follow them. -WililIm Oullon Bl-ynnt. V&555H5 'I'llo Ago-old Story &5 . Children, may your potent: in the Lord: for this II right. llonor The I strolled from Part One was different, the money was dif- ferent, everything was different. There was no center aisle on the train; we went into our compart- ment and closed the door, the tickets having been collected at the station. Soon we were in London. but it was more than an hour's drive into the heart of the city. - The outskirts were not impres- sive. - ancient b r i c k buildings, smoky back yards, narrow streets with little color , or just large open spaces. We met two or three freight trains hauling dozens of small "goods wagons" which ap- peared rather primitive when com- pared with our freight. cars at home. But. we knew nothing about everyday life in England yet. At St. Pancras station in the heart of London we did not have to ask for a porter. They were there by the dozens, and the one at whom we had unwittingly nod- ded Ioon gathered in all our bag- bage and ordered us to follow him. Our Scottish friends were still with us, and helped us to figure out the milling: and pence for the porter. In the ot.Ition restaurant, we got our first impression of English rationing Ind meals. But. here was an air of refinement. The wait- ers were in tics and swallow tails, (even the bank messengers in Lon- don wear top hat: and tails) and the but men insisted that we have a drink after such a long trip. For dinner we had I. choice between sausages and curried chicken. My wife never ate curried chicken before, and I'll never for- get the homesick look on her face when she tasted it. "It's nothing but pepper and bread crumbs. Where is the chicken?" The waiter overheard her and anxiously as- sured us that it was a very special dish for today. I dish which they did not have for quite some time. 0 O 0 As it was early in the day we decided to go to our hotel by bus. We asked I "station Bobby" for directions and set out for the bus stop. But. all the buses and cars were travelling on the wrong side of the street: and we were nearly run over several times before we became accustomed to the left- hand traffic. There were the double-decker buses, a steady stream of them. There were scores of newsies, with a. variety of dif- ferent paperushoutlng their heads off on the street corners. Then No. 23 arrived. We climbed to the upper deck to get. a better view. The conductor, a young girl, came up, shouting something in an ac- cent. which we took to be a de- mand for tickets. From my hand- ful of change she took the price of two singles to Marble Arch, and promised to ”call it out". Now we could see London, in the heart of the world. Thl-re wasl so much to be seen that we could not lose any time. The traffic kept moving. There were shops every- where, some large and elaborate. some simple and small. The streets were narrow. People were rushln-z about, but yet there wns an air of order, of confidence. and purpose. Our hotel was small but home- llke. As soon as we got settled, we sent. telegrams to some friends who had made the arrangements for us. but; whom we had never met. Next. morning I had to see the authorities about my scholar- ship, and Mary went to the Mill- istry of Education. She had to earn enough money to pay her way and preferred her old profession of teaching to any other job. We had along weekend, however. to son London. 0 We began our sight-secillg tour I o a'r;r119MBER 25, 1951 T. ..-' Lessons From Europe In Community Progress By Lee P. Mcisaao (continued) (All Rights Reserved) IN POST-VVAB LONDON - We were in England. The Iccentithcugh, it in different It 15 Even but it is re up the lolder than the outside. ilgtrflba lglfsggry book. The 5 D38. 0 la nlen and warrlors.p?Ie'he' 0:1,: m'”' 530118. the coronation chalrne M many other things which rlmztlg i th . ' gee hoere. 8 We ReIorm'””" days 0 C I In this vlcinty there. If; other historic spots: St. Ma; W5 Chfipel. where all the .32, marriages take ploce; Central 1-1.): which is the big meeting pm, i LOMOH: Westminster Bridge- 1;,” Thames it-self: Whitehall 'u.' narrow and busy, pm; wow at mods street: Scotland Yard Hm: many quarters. and "N . 10'' V - st. It is difflcultoto get Roillmlm It once. " At the end of whit; to Trafalgar square, V332 bronze and granite monument in N9150H'. and the offices of em hassles from Ill over the world. We went; into Canada House to. sign the vistors' book and to Ask g few questions. The first mill n lander. They're everyn-hurl and always asking about friends 1,; home. If you really want. to be in mi heart. of London you must go Piccadilly. Perhaps no other mm in the world has won so mu.-,;, fame and affection as Piccadilly, Someone once said that London without. Piccadilly would be u... thinkable. Piccadilly without in London. one feels tempted to 33,. could still carry on, for Piccadilly 1'5 811 things to Ill men. It is the street. of big nffices, hotels, restaurants, Irt. galleries, clubs, second-hand shops. pm.-,1. houses, travel agencies. largest of large shops, motor show room. banks,-there is, in fact. only on; thing left. out. of Piccadilly, and that is the origin of its own namp, It is said to commemorate the wild flowers that bordered the western exits of London in the old days. 0 I I For one good look at this whole tcrrltory we went up into the low- er of Westminster Cathedral. This new building built about the first of the century. is the Roman Catholic Cathedral. and cavern about one and a quarter acres of ground. From the tower, you can lock down on Buckingham Palace. the parks, see Westminster and get a good view of some of the best shopping centers. A walk down Fleet street. if you can get through the traffic, will bring you to St. Paul's. You hal- en'i. seen the Church of England until you see St. Paul's. "Tile noblest thing that England has.” It. cannot be better described with- out seeing it. but when you do, it is easy to appreciate the lllnollullv. the architectural skill and the on- dllrnuce ofgour building forefath- ers. It was the target of some of the greatest Nazi attacks dllrill: the war. but still stands majcstlc in the midst of the prettiest. war damages of London. One must see, too. the stock ox- chnnge, Lloyd's. the Bank of Enu- lsnd. and the headquarters of the Milk Marketing Board, if the com- mercial life of present day Eng- land is to be appreciated. It is said that one really cannot know Loll- don. and the people who know it least are the Londoners (hem- selves. If you get. lost. in L0lld0l'. whether in the East. the West End or the Center, it is practlcnlly use- less to ask a postman or Londoner your way back. or how to gel to A particular place. The incvlmbin answer is, "I'm sorry. sir. but If it useless to ask a Londoner Fol" way around London. See if you C3" In the usual place. Hyde Park. there down Park Lane Ind across to Buckingham Palace where we waited to see the ceremonial changing of the guard. What: I thrill to see them march down in their scarlet tunlcs. high fur cap: and rifles! Tile pageant- ry. the style and the tradition of the ceremony make it easy to un- derstand why every Loudonor. ev- ery Englishman, and every British citizen abroad is proud of his heritage. , Without seeing the parks of London. it is hard to apprccintc their significance. Thousands of children are playing. old people Ire sunning, droves of tourists are roaming Iround in admiration. Acres and acres of green parkland with Ihudy trees and walks are crisscrossing the heart of the world's greIi.eat metropolis. It is easy to wander in " and Iwc here in the heart of London, in the very hurt of our Anglo-Saxon world. But you have not time to linger. We went down past Clarence House, the home of Princess Eliz- Ibeth and her children. Prince ChIrIoI and Princess Anne. It is not. for from ,there down to West- minster, the pulse of London. more. the old palace. begun by Idwnrd the Confcsaor and com- pleted by Willlnm the comma Ul- Itnndl on tho banks of the Thoma. It ll better known In the Hamel of PIrliIment. It has three tmverl. but. the one in front. Big Book. in the most famous. It Is three hundred Ind sixteen feet from the high water mark of the river, I loh to only I few feet I whole building in so urn t.hIi. It donu description. We were fonunote in joining on tour through the old d the butldlnx which in- cludes the noun of Lords. the cum pulntluu. Ind the crypt. 'i'llI louoo of Common: wII de- ououod during the var. but um nhult Ind opnod lust inegml. M Ito moot in wutmlnster ..lookIn from the outside like In old Ind It.Itely Itructure. I relic of earlier centul-leI. Inalde. find a stranger. He will likrl)' if” you." . But. you must see London. though it takes at least ,half a da,v.lt covers about clxlllwl acres, and lies within lllv old Roman city walls. The first ml” was built by Wllllum lllv Con- queror to protect and COil'.l'(-i.-11'" city. You can see the archllm-.llrc of the Roman and NcI'lIlfll1 D9" lads, and of almost all r-tile. rlmlll to the prl.-scnt day. It has lwcll R the inner (ii fortress. a palace. a prison. in” has housed the royal mllll. (ll). public records and the row i” servatory. This is where the: kill" the small arms and the ammuni- ion in the early days. It in still I garrison and ti. enter you have to cross a draw-brlllgc. was here in the tower that m0-V of the execution: wdrc carrled out. The first scaffold was erected in the early tltirtconth centllrl? eral of our great. statesmen. 1-3 vm Jane Grey. Ind at least two of fit wives of Henry VIII were rm-U ed there. The record - roonl m Foil; talns many interesting. among them the cloak Ill u 11 General Wolfe died at Qufim l)': 1759. Also In the tower nrr kill" most. of the magnificent rrtlfl . Ind the crown jcwels of the Inns, lish monnrchs since the dd)-5 mf- Cromwell. 1-nu maznmm" da, play case in. of course wcll wall” ed. In 1940 three German bola” hit the tower building. bl"- dImIge WIS not great. W k Its walls. eighteen feel. "of were built to stand the P0W"me ancient enemies Ind still doll", 1! might of modern warriors. law now cl muneum, dial)”-"W uiP' uniforms, guns and military NIB ment of the different 1205- M”, the guide: Ind zunrdl 5”" , the Iclrlet. oontu, side-swords; uniforms of the only dd-l' British ChiVIll'Y- d (To ho continue l , (Footnote: ' This world-lama"- monument VII orecttd ( Nelson I load view 0 "en In. Ind from time to time. t thorn II I movemen vision. met. (you guessed In was M. 1,, - toduy. . .BupIInd to clan Iwlll ll” '" ; y largo buildings that oblcll” M