PAGE SIX TE-sm -—~ vu-uam IU-DAY ONLY -Z- SHOWS 130-7 flllll 9 i . “sass omen rain will; be om m. ilnee which: the Melony AIII I t villi . .4 George MURPHY I llln ""5"". 0 Ilfllte PLUS COLOR CARTOON AND SCREEN NEWS m‘ 3-BIG DAYS 0F Fllll e-MON-TIIE-WEDT rue GLAMOUR MUSICAL ABOUT "m: GLAMOUR TOWN .. . e e e . l-OVELI NESS! ‘ d! Love: SONGS! IY osflas‘ Eff-NEVA‘ i DUN AMEBIIE BETTY [iRABlE ltflBEliT CUMMINGS ... Charlotte Greenwood r lack lialoy - fiarolo lanllis fiobina Wright, Ir. -.-.-..-.-.-.-.-.-.-l-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.a-.-.-.l-a-.-.-.-.-.aa-.mn-.-.w ' .~.--.~-.* -:» CAPITOL -:- MOIL-TUE-WED. FINAL TG-DAY SHOWS 2.307 8.15 500 Itliles on Hqufl 900 Thrills o Second! . l V‘ l x MUSICAL COMEDY Collin’. r.- KlNG or THE ROYAL MOUNTED A WARNER IROS. I'll-filth WAYNE MORRIS PAmEAU - EllC-WN 73H eisficaruua“ 11m" worinrr: ‘New Books‘ 0.30 c/luhmcflrl-rr: wast n:- may: Newsletter, 0.4a rn m. s NORTHJMERICAN v.00 mews ANALYSIS. r .§ Y. I é WAVl-Zl. ..\'G'l'lI ($0M pm.) Western Canurh-2B52 (to 10.00 p.m.| 4910 m, lfrcm ldl. and USA-Iii 32 nl., 25.53. W TRANSMISSION I ‘y Illtem Daylight Saving Time iaqggwggmwficfiiys. van i Thm" hm" letv. from the Basement Shel. 7' fer of the layers‘ _Theatre_ (under the direction of Leonard Sachs. 800 ‘II-IE NEWS. 8.10 ‘LISTENING ‘POST’. oi environ. Avovsr 1o .015 1m... Callir-u‘ ' 3'32 5Y5“? "7l"“‘°" tea w . . Q 3'7 '. CI!!! Meerwwwhw- aummmf _. N x;- i‘: This column ls reserved for new: o1 lnelll interest, but advertising ol a uewsy nature may be inserted at 6 cents a word. strictly pay- able ln advance. I couranamrlou LIFE INSUB ANCE. 11-87111 COOKS for Piluwgraphs. I L-l b-f-A-U. JULY 3D i JUST ARRIVED ladies’ dresses ir crepes, sheers and woollens. Kennedy's Ladies’ wear. Great George Street. L352-8-l4-Lll. i THE BAPTIST cl-lurlcll. - he Rev. Ross C. Eaton B. 1).. a former minister of this church. whose m- terestlng and thoughtful sermons have impressed his hearers on prev- ious Sundays. Willi occupy the‘ pulpit at 11 A. M. and ‘I P. M D. S. T. Miss Berna Huesils.colltra1to. W11]. sing at MIC K101111112 SS1 V108. U18)’ 5D0flh§ "Let Not Your Heart Be Troubaa. man. baritone. l dule in connection with the nlornu g service. l GALBBAAIZHI -— (BNRAD. — T.ie ,marriage took place quietly yester- dav afternoon of Miss LVCLVII lvnld- . red. daughter of Mrs. Carolyn 0011-, l rad and the late Daniel E. Conrad. Jialifax. to Licut. Charles MacKln- non Galbraith. son of the lat»: Mr. and Mrs. uilvurti Galbraith u! Argylesnire. Scotland. and formerly located in Cilarlottetown. The cert:- mony was performed bv Rev. Char- les E. Burke. Oxford street Ulllicd Church. at the home of the bride's atlnt. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Conrad. 106 Vernon Street where a reception was later held. 'l‘he bride was KlVfll away by her uncle. Milton Conruu. iand was lovely _ln a slluber s . military style rcdlllgote ot'cr_ a white lsheer floor length gown with lung ysleeves. She wore a chlapcl veil unu carried a cascade bouquet of u | roses. Mrs. Bnsll H. Shmnel" was '1 <- I matron of honor and wore a pc £\I tone sheer with a llulo of the sol. c i material and she _C_3.l‘l‘l(3(l a bsunult -of Picardv glrldlolll. R. W Bonk-sit. _P. E. 1. Highlanders, was the ilest I man. The mother of the bPlUff worc orchid shccr with fl lrdiugotc zllui a deeper mauve toned. little flower flat. II-ler corsage was of roses. At the reception those who bzured v"e"c Ma's. J. Holden and Mrs. Milton Conrad. Assistinz were Miss Elsie ‘Stewart. Misses Margaret Smlm lGrace Oxner and Margaret Cro . ,Later Lieutenant and lvlrs. - ‘braith left on a short motor t-ll). the bride wearing for travelling a Itrlmly tailored suit of the Blur-k I Watch tartan. and her hat was fash- ioned along the lines of the grooms ' balmoral. Her ccrsage was of orczl- ids. The best wishes pf a host of friends follows the bridal couple.- Halifax Herald. Personals Mrs. Michael Aylward has recclvrd a cablelrram from her husband Pile | Michael Aylward announcing his safe arrival in England. | Miss Alma Dollar. R. N.. of Haven. hill, Mass, loft yesterday morning after spending her vacation yirn her parents Mr. and Mrs. F. C. D - lar of Brookficld. She was accom- panied on return by Miss Alice Abbott. R. N.. of Maplewood. New Jersey. Moovooevaoooeeoooeoee‘ TIIE LIKEABLE § MAN SYLVESTER CAIRN i ;OQO4OQOQOOQ§OQQQOOVOQ-OX f “Momma? Gerald was alm-lst casual. _ "mat you. Ashley? Late, aren t. you?" The tone was that of master . to servant. f "Sorry!" _ n "I'm going into things a bit. Ron- ald was curt. "Your uncle seemed to trust '15." “It's purely a matter of business. You must go over things with rue some time IIll-—DUZZi€d." He sboke slowly. “Watt knows more of that than I oughtrrt to-whcn you're factor.” A couple of days later he got back to Rose Cottage to 11nd that the laird had 1.1. w: rd for nlrll lo ll.) 11D to the house flll/Sl‘ dinner. | "I said mcbbe you'd be busy. but he said. "Not too busy to collie when i 1 tcll him.’ ” Gerald wit. this was the last straw. If he had hated Mc-Grcgcl" bsforc, "now he loathed him for this mat- ultaus insult. “Mav as well drift round unless anything more amusing turns Uh," he said. But the words were a mere ges- ture and lvfrs. Thomson knew it. as well as he did. _ He was shown lnfo the library. and the laird kebt him waiting for some time and when he did come he neither apologized nor asked tum | t0 sit down. , Gerald remained standing. facing him telling himself it was not wor h getting angry about. vet w-ritlllrg under the pcitincss of it all. “I'm not satisfied about those books." McGrelzor came to the point. ' "Your uncle nlwavs was." , "He was childish-and vou knew it. What dccs that meant-ind that? And why doesn't that tally? Estimate and cheque differ consid- erably.’ He thrust papers under Gerald's nose with such rlwldltv that no man could have grasped their moantnrz. and volleyed sharp questions and flung baffling struc-mcnls. "I-f don't know" Gerald was forced into the admission. 9.00 HEADLINE NEWS AND VIEWS. Commentator, .1. B. McGEACIl-IY 9.15 ‘DEMOCRACY MARCHES? ‘On Young Shoulders‘. 9.30 ‘Canada Calls from London’ . (in collaboration with CBC): ‘Quiz for the FCYCPS'. Frm the Evy" Club. Presented by Gerry Wilmot. 10.00 Wceklv Visit to American a m l agle C b. 10.15 Propaganda Review. by W A Sinclair 10.30 ‘Lights of E.V H. Errmet . 11.00 The Dally Service. 11.0% ‘lrndcn Calfrllr’. ‘ 11.15 ‘BRITAIN °'='-‘""~" (Repeat) 11.30 RADIO NFTWS-RFZFL. A.M. l 12.00 ‘DFMOCPACV MARCHESF ‘On Young Shoulders‘. I 12.15 ‘The Musk of Britain’: "Pictures in the Fire’ (Haydn We»-t\ 12.30 HEADLINE NEWS AND- VIWWS, (Repeat). . Oloee p At the evening service a selemed solo will be sum! bv Mr. Rov Small-l The Church school , meets on its regular summer SCnc-l d fill Gal i hzndon’. Ccmpere. I THE CHARLOTTETO‘/"N GUARDIAN "'°"'_'3;L"""""““‘Tank Radicals” Dominate High Command Unanimous Tank- ! mindedness I Guarantees OH Battlefield ‘i Even Defence Minister has been tank convert since i Bourbon Wood, 191s. — “Maginot tactitions" ruthlessly banished. By KIM BEATTIE Last slimmer was a period of up- heaval in every army whim knew, ‘or suspected, that ft mrght some lday face Hitler's Wehrmacht. The imperative need after the Fall of France was obvious. That was a new type of army, one which must gain hitting strength from arm- atlul ourccl fighting vehicles, speed from ' wheels and gasoline, sustained power from close-knit cohesion of fast-travelkng combat corps striking as one. There was a major reorganization in the Amerian Army. whim possessed only a single rcxpcrilnental tank brigade in June, ‘i940. ‘There was another, which lreached revolutionary proportions, i in the Britsh Army under the new Chief of the Imperial General Staff. General Sir John Dill, ‘who ' had even combined tanks and air- planes against Arabs. “TANK RADICALS" RISE As a result the British Army was Iswept. clean of tncticians with me "maginot mind", and mechaniza- , tlon experts now fill every key post. Every higher command at home, in the Middle East and Far East, ls held by officers known for their progressive thinking. Many of them were _cven once known as "tank radicals". Dill, Brooke, Wavcll, Wilson. Hanlrlg. Alexander. and a. host of newcomers might all be in- cluded in that category. The Com- mandcrs of the Royal Armoured Corps. Major-Gen Glffard le Q Martel, is the man who built the first one-man tank in his garage. Sir Alan Brooke, Commander the Home Forces. in which We l Canadian Corps ‘s serving, was des- ‘cribcd as “The only mnn who seemed to know how to handle tank units,“ during the French blitz- krieg. It was only through his lil- terest. and that of progressives .ike llfm, that such unorthodox Pon- trapticns as "'II s- Travelling Bath- itub" which brcame the Bren-gun carrcr. were fostered and adopted Of all the swiftly rebuilding arm‘es, the Canadians were b‘es=ed iwi‘h several assets which nave yprovsd invaluable. In proportion i0 ‘, its size, the Canadian Army already ‘had a tentative tank formation ,whlch was probably larger than ‘that 01' any other army. We knew we could make armoured troons easier than most nations. for al- most all our recru'ts could already ,drlve cars. do running motor re- ipnlrs, and were naturally mechan- ‘lcallw inclined. We also knew that. Canadian troops would be at their best in fl e type of wlde-orxn fast- lnovlng warfare which they seem- ed destined to fight. l IN SAFE HANDS But the greatest of Canadian Army enacts was founded on leadership, the most important factor of all. Reorganization to bring scicntlfic soldiers and mechanization enthusiasts to the top was not necessa y in the Canadian Army?‘ Thr-y were already there! The destiny of the Canadian P. Success g 0f- l CAREERS OF McNAUGHTON, CRERAR, i)lLL AND BROOKE REVEAL LONG FRIENDSHIPS THE CANADIAN CORPS AND man panzcrs on the battlefield. flanked by Lleut..Gen. A. G. L. adlan H. Q. in London. Army was already safely in the hands cf three mcn who were nothing if not tank-minded. '1|.ere was tremendous advantage to Canadian Army leadersh'p in the first place, in the man who stands behind the two senior genera‘: Lleut.-General A. G. L. McNaugh- ton. the Corps Commander, and Major-General H.D.G. Crerar, the Chief of Staff. in their effort to build an army which was offensive in both spirit and arms. Hon. J. L. Ralston became Min- ister of National Defence while the German blitzkrieg into France last year was still in progress. It was surely fitting to find the War Min- lstry in Canada. in this critical hour, in ire hands of an ex-bat- t-afon commander who saw tanks breaking the trench-lock in the last war. It fs safe to say that the pres- ent Minister of National Defence- bccame unshakablv tankmfncled on the day he led his Nova Scotian Highlanders to the assault on Bout-ion Wood. The fighvng tn- fantry colonel saw two Mark V tanks crushing machine-gun nests -—and saving infantry lfves—ahead of h’m. He did not miss tlze lesson CANADIAN ARMY TEAM In Canada's offensive spirited and mechanize-minded Army team of McNaughton and Crerar. there is no more scientific sold’er in high place in any army than the Cana- dian Ffeld Commander. And there is no more convinced exponent of the machlnes-for-mcn pr'nciple, with all its attributes, than the Canadian Chief of the General Staff. As proof of the tank-minded- ness of all three-the Minister and the twn Generals-there ls the dcspatch with which a Can- adlan armoured corps was lng to the British-Canadian co-erdlnated f. Commanders‘ 35d l Creators ‘ of the McNaughton, the Chief of Staff. Below are: Major-Generals Pear kes, Odlum and ions, Brigadier W. W. Worthington of the Army Tank Brigade, and MajonGen. Montague of Can- Ralston became Minister of De- fence ln June: in July General Crcrar returned from Englrlld to be Chief of Staff. nn doubt bringing General McNaugIllnns suggestions for armoured troops; the Minister's approval immed- iately followed. which could only mean unanimous belief In the? urgent need. COMRADES-IN-ARBIS McNaughton and Crerar are peo- uliarly well fitted to work to- geiher in creating, training and leading the modern Canadian army. They understand earn other. McNaughton and Crcrnr have been workhg togcirer-urli thinking alike -cver since they were staffiofficers in the last war. The former was Counter-Battery Staff Officer when the latter was Staff Officer, R.A.. at Canadian Corps H. Q; and when McNaughton be- came G.O.C. Heavy Artillery. Cre- rar replaced him in the counter- battery po=t. 'I‘hey and their staffs not. only then worked in close co- operation, but the two future gen- eraLs messed and lived in the same quarters. For years before lite outbreak of this war they labored together to have mobllzation plans ready for any eventuality. Those war plans were actually laid down when Gen- eral McNaughton was Chief of Staff and General Crcrar was Gen- eral Staff Officer (Operations) at Ottawa between 193i to i934. When war came. the two officers were immediately called uporhMcNaugh- ton from the National Research Council. where he was pres‘dent. and Crerar from Royal Military College, where he was Command- ant. General Crerar proceeded al- most at once to the War Office. London, and had everyring ready for the arrival of General Mc- agreed upon I year age. Col. Naughton and the 1st Division. CANADIAN cones I WRTHIN THE ARMY-IN- TRAINING at home ls resolutely building and traln- “Army Plan" which is designed to meet and defeat the Ger- That, and nothing else! Above are Defence Minister J. L. Balaton, the Corps Commander, and Major-Gen. ll. D. G. Crerar. Price of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Divis- artillery_ ‘ . srou i MONIAGUEI FORESAW NEW WARFARE The Field Commander has bee“ talking mechanization and motori- Zgtlcn for years. Inng before The Germans adopted British mechan- izcd-war practices, which were first publicly held on Salisbury Plain m 192a lmc 1921. the present CW” 51191191116. 1941 lllfl ell their minds h T \ fining on the pl-oblizs Q yuan of mechanized-em.- h, EXCHANGE OF ‘PIIEORIEB “The two Canadian “chi by the Brltf the war colleges, orshvfifrfekeitih l1‘l fellow students. Dill instructed ~ Nflushton at Camberley 1.. “'1'” early “twenties", for instance m. Brooke and Crerai- we... ,,,e',“,’" genie: at Staff College. still hi2; anoolx was Crerars army lnsrruq. mPfirial Defence (3011,. Such close contact inevitably l“ to exchange and flbfiOrptlon or- “or! others military theofes and deb lnes. °°‘ '1'}!!! 10!! friendshl be - and Brookge. Mtllqflllgliltfiilltzfiledn ‘B? rar actually started in the war. John Dill was General 3.,“ Officer with the Canadian 0.}. for s. time, end Alan Brooke w? Staff Officer. (Royal Anmew) “f Canadian Headquarters lvilill» Am‘ McNaughton and Harry are“: were there. They worked Almost n each others elbows. Whcrl Brooks Went on to 1st Army HQ. 1g w“ Crflar who succeeded him‘, Without doubt Me contacts mad, in war and peace are now pgyipi valuable dividends. Official 5Q. quafntances were kgpt a1... by correspondence and lnfmitablv lip- ened into strong friendships m. ween military leaders lvilnse Opt“. ions and outlook agree on momel-l. tous things. When sir John Dill re- turned from India in 19251. for 1n- stance. he was the guest of Gen. eral McNaughton in Ottawa, Chief's we,‘ OBVIOUS ADVANTAGEQ This rise of the British prim“. slves to meet the llliTili 01m, Nazi panzer divisions. and the unique advantages which its pm. vides the Canadian Army, has not been noted by the public. 1r why, by hi-EEOTY-Perhflbs as a mljor factor in the success of British. Canadian amls on the battlefields. It is certainly obvious that close w. operations between the British llnl Canadian armies. which is so imp. eratfve to success in action. is likely to be enormously enhanced when the leaders of tlie two armies have Identical strategic and tactical views. when they appreciate each other. When they th‘nk and plan alike. It is a foregone conclusion that they and their forces will fight alike. How the British-Canadian "Army Plan" of creating shock-troops fol- mechanized war succeeds will not be k710i‘!!! Until put. to the 0H0! in action. But there can be no doJbt Commander was visualizing today's “val-fare and rue adaptability of the average Canadian to the new KPIDUIE and tactics. Tile clret of stat! also had o remarkable opportunity to abaflfb modern theories and dootrlnfi! l0 the period of his staff grounding overseas. It was during the time ma; the British "tank radicals were in the ascendancy over the defensive tactlcians. As an instance. Harry Crerar was a Staff 953°" at, the “War House” in 101K100. in charge of Home Defence. when Archie Wavell was his immediate senior. It was the same two V9111‘!- 1926 and i927~wlten Col. Frederitk Pile gave those startling demons- trations of new tactics. with fast- mrlrshalled motorized infantry at- tacking behind tanks and under low-flying airplanes, which revol- utfoned all future armies and bal- tleflelds. There was no feature of German trtzkrleg tactics in 1940, except the “Fifth. Column" which was not preached and practiced ln the British Army between 1926 and 1934. That period. prior to i034. was the most fruitful of Bri- tlsh military progress of ell the 21 years between the two Ger- man wars. Both Canadian gen- erals then worked with the most brilliant minds 1n lac British Army when mechanl - tlon was at lte peak. McNaugh- ton and Crerar are of the some school of military thought as are Dill, Brooke and Wevell. Their doctrinal are the lame, that the efficiency of rm,- Canadian Army is enormously enhanced by the singleness of opinion and pur- pose of its leaders overseas and it home. The matchless influence of a Defence Minister, a Field Com. mander and a Chief of staff hold- ing the same faith In the new weapons and tactics, 1s perhaps the greatest asset Canada has in creating an army to nleet tho highly mechanized Germans. BRIGHT DESTINY It la difficult not to know f tremendous reassurance about "the future of the Canadian Anny 0n the battlefield, on re- membering that the Canndia-l Corps overseas and the Arm!‘- fn-Tralnlng at homo. which will reinforce It. are being built to e plan which such men u Dill and Brooke. McNaughton and Crerar, have worked out. They hold that the process o training ' troops for mechanized war, which Canada is fnllowlnl. will put such powtrful and hard- hittfng shock-division and mow!!!- ed infantry into the field that the! will be dominant factors in mnkinl Hitler and Nazism a more nilfm‘ mare of memory within short years. It, means a long mid 99'1"" " s training grind in the fulfil‘ amentals of soldfering~more tillfl for any previous type of yrarfflft“ but no better mctliod was W" discovered of creating efficient W‘ _self-xellant fighting men- “Whv don't you? Do you expect] mc to believe that? Isnt it your 14b JJlk lnw things." "I'm sorry-out if you'd let lrte have the books to go over quletly-" “Do you think I'd trust you with them‘? Haven't vou seen them often enough?‘ “Walt did most of the accounts", “You can tel. the sheriff that.‘ There's something funny-and nae been for long enough." "What do vou mean?" "One can't afford to be-eystem- up allcally robbed." “You mean." said Gerald slowly, “that Wattll have to face a charge cf embezzlement?" "Oh. no. 1 uolrt - I mean you will. Watt may be brought is 9s your accomplice. That remains w be seen." KNAVE 0R FOOL? "You mean." said Gerald slowly. that there are discrepancies in the , uccounts? “Yes. but your innocent air 1e scarcely convincing!" Ronald gm.- ncd. and 1t took the other all his time to control his temper. Besides. this was sheer nastiness; ICVElIVCIIG would know it was c- Gregor-s smte. But there must be something queer. even the Laird would not invent such a thing. 1t must be Watt: this would account for the fellows anxletv to keep the books in his own hands r People talked That was inevi- table but Gerald found that his friends rallied round him and abused Mcuregor as freely as he . could have wished. "The fellcwb gone a bit too far "Jealous because Mabel prefers vcu. and 1 don't blame her." "Be tried in the County Court? Thatll mean old Greta. He doesnt mince ills words. I bet McGregllrul nurse the dav he looked into r-he books and tried to be clever. Watt‘: a scnmb. but ou can't heln that. After all the 0d man chose tllm ilimseif." It never occurred to anyone that Gerald could be blamed. Of course he had left thlnlrs to Watt. but Watt had been engulfed on aocormt of his expel-fence. Hadn't the aid Colonel said "You can learn your lab from 111ml." But hollow. toned High time someone old‘ ' took it seriously aid to admit that ne had not at- tgmpted to learn his fob. [ Ronald . McGregors telling lies about you? I 1%]: him you'd have him up for 11 l." “What if I lost the case?" laughed Gerald. trying lo make a Joke of ft. "You couldn't because you haven‘ done afllltllinfl- And Ronald's lust belnk sllly—-because—of me." and she looked at hlrn from under lonll lashes. ‘lime dTflRilBd until the case came But n0 one except Anzus Seton _"A Ditv vou left all the responsi- bllftv to Watt." he said, "it. may make it-more difficult." “What do you mean?" Gerald was in the mood to see a slight in any remark. however innocent. "It seems-odd that vou didn't go over the books regularly. since it was vour job." Gerald lulled up at that. "You mean you think 1 stole the old boy's money? And I always thounht vou were my friend!" "Don't be an idiot. but I do think you've been darned. slack. and I've told you so often enough." Gerald flung away at that and avoided Angus for days. On the verv moi-ulna of the trial Ronald McGregor sent for him. "Ive been away since I last.” Ronald was curt. know what the legal point salary fs-if you don't get convict ed.’ Gerald's face set. "I'll ask my lawyer. but I don't fancy I've any lfabflitv under the circumstances." “You mean I'm dismissed, whet- ever the verdict?" "Plain enough 1;n't it? I've never liked vou-and vou can no any time, The sooner the better." l-lis jealousy showed fn the last words. Gerald had never thought of that.- But the Court would open in half an ho-ur and his lawyer WBSJVMUIIR to see him. " ' He hoped the Court would be em- btv. but all his friends seemed to be present It was kind of them com- fng—or was ft? Proceedings opened. Sharp auro- tlons followed sharp questions. The atmosphere was chan fng and he lwu could not wonder. He new that he but it Illl le' that anv mnn could have been easv-Roing. Watt had n ct r in all but name. But even so. was it. possible that all those sums of moll- cy had gone into Watts Docket un- known to him? It was torture to a sensitive mun. He felt physically sick before the ordeal ended and the Sheriff pronounced sentence. Six months for Watt. Gerald felt a chill like icy water rfpnle over tllm S0 olt1rllzc lflxhefldgrtfls LleuL-Generrl A.G.L. McNaughton. Canadian Corp: Commander (left) and Major 06h G.O.C. 2nd Canadian Division. hold an Informal conference on the roedllle 100.000 British and Canadian troop; my p"; l; g bu‘. [chum] h repel an bowed. he was ashamed to meet those eves which had been friendly and now were scorrlful. "Not prov- cn." Considering the evidence he was luck“ to get off with that. l3_ut the Sheriff was s ing heavhy. lnvd he tried to listen. "There is not sufficient evidence to convict the second prisoner- That meant him. Gerald Ashley. “Therefore 1 have no choice and am old “ii-it o have C356 Proven." One could see thc man's regretting the words- almost incredible there could is a of knave or give him the benefit of m? m1‘ One ls tempted to stwnlwtll" w, the other prisoner. who std-W worked hard while his so-calle l m! erfor did nothing-if we M” own story.“ forced brirl m a verdict of Not ___il_'o_be_fi9ntfn"fi‘ikf to s...__.___._. _ erel V. W- 94:3’ during manoeuvres I "IIIVIIIOI"; “and