_n --__ I I i i t 1 .I 3'. I 1 U tr""~'—sflflln‘.fn_ - '---- --= pa.“ ~meabnn~xlpawqfl Q-s. ."‘Pfi'f"-‘L."':M(\ lALfEVSlX PRINCE ED WARD lolllu - SAT. BIG WLLK END SPEDl ‘L PI. Us -— THE C O .\l M U N I T Y ONION PACIFIC » , i rtehlertv Column -A Do s .. Plwafffilfw» mlli aglfyilifsnusrn) 2ND cllslrrrl: or -- Mlvenfures 0f Red Rvder also - srooli srazuis - CONFEDERATE uoivmi iilalmilpily Grant-EDDY and Jack Beliny's Don Wilson. all of the air- waves, and host of other lop notch movie comedians. “Comin' Round the Mountain" tells the story of the feudin' Bio-v- ers and the Beagles. and o.’ an ITTlllbillies llillll ltiot In New iioil lluriis Comedy Film 1f you ym-lo-earth -,» _ , gimedi" a a 1.125.222: .f“i‘§.‘.§“.i2.l<l.‘1°.i“i‘i??°£i2l” °m.°5p‘“ * A “adlds crs’ "one family" orchenr; con: $15l~1118 of bazookas. corn liquor jugs and fiddles. He contrlves to find them a sponsor for a radio i.io- lzram to save the little five-v.'atter from going ofi the air. Everytniizg looks 300d until the winter truce is called off and the spring feudin’ gets under way. Then follows n series oi hilarious events leading iip to the election oi’ Jed tBob Burns) Blower as Mayor, and his marriage to Miss Merkel, an un- usual event. by the way, perfol-meg without benefit of shotgun. “Comln‘ Round the Mountain" is the first Bob Bums picture in whlgn the sage of the Ozarks gels the I d at a hllioiny hoe- OKVI], £1113 if your ear is turned to good old- l.‘l(“.l fashioned mountain mus», all means go ovcr Theatre and hnl-i- _ time seeing "Count Mountain " Oi course there a'"e o"'ie:'s in the picture, and a r =~. n lg too; ‘There's J r by iol ‘l.’ a D nd Round the ,_ T" girl. Heretofore he has had to be . “offal; Salmled Plflying second fiddle in ~ F! the matter of romance, but, ml; “nil the 01.1w n. llrof-‘ram. And m. m" h" I full-fledged mountain _C@-<*11<>vc~“'tnn1ng handily over ElIERY USED DAR -—- GOES _. A FILLING or ANTI-FREEZE —- DYRING _. llllhflES FALL SALE -'I‘-l\' iilmlit our written guarantee — -— AN!) SEE _ 1939 FOR!) l'lf‘lf-l'l' DELIVERY — complete. ly luhlflllllllflll. looking and $ uilrklzli: like lil-yv-filr onlv .._ $550 Your olrl ("r liill miilie the down payment at A. EIIIIIFJE f? CO. 1G8 KL-lil F‘. 19.’)? Ililll-‘Ll-l SUDAN - n good u" ill 1i ltll- ‘Llllll price ._ ._ .._ _ _. Charlottetown l NONE 678 "l? ' l-"'"i' I111! Car Dealer” The most spedocu‘ outdoor thriller since “Northwest, Pussoge“l Beery‘: hock with 1 a bong! Cos! of hundreds!" with LED CARRILLD ANN LEE PAUL RUTHERFORD - BOWMAN - KELLY f IOSEPII GALLEIA - "mum: MAIN -' I..\.Tl-\'l' r-—SIIOWS—3.I5 —- 7.00 — 9.00——— ‘\'li‘.\“\' t. soxu iibt I110 old adage that ihcre‘; :1 IProl. (‘oioiiiia and proving beyond . Jack. l 311i 1 Qt . Vfeutcrnfllllriller v With ‘VZIIIEICQ Berry i At Prince Edward the pioneer West. iiprozirious comedy B. to the screen llli! ama of lhe iS in "Wyoming." now 11g a; ihc Prince Edward Th0- proviclcs him comical romance fir. and Bi.l." serenndes his ore with a harmonica and en- gngiii» in crluicdy ep atlas with Leo Carrillo. The y in oniance is 12e- P.‘ or , of thc sziiily series, and Lee nrcciicccssor. "Red Man ' the picture is ‘nid nlitdcors, the coun- Lrike, Wyoming, of brcalil-faking _ -man characteri- , 1l lluigly" dramatic at times, ivhiinslcnlly" humorous n1 O'llf‘l‘S, in a story‘ ideal for his par- ticular talents Miss Rutherford QIYTXR a \ . val and Jiltle Bobs \\‘ . .. "B "s Town“ anc ‘Oii Boimwcfi Time." is a pcrfcct foil for Bccrv iii ilicji‘ scenes to- g-ctlicr ivlien the lltrle boy mrlkes a of the formci‘ train robber l‘; k- ‘ llie child anl his sistci. l clues the chnmiiiuii of law and Stiff‘ ill lllf‘ primitive ivllrls IFI\|IEII-(I Thorpe dli ed with clpft ski.l. Cavalry battles with Indians. raids. and other thrills enliven Beery's romance with the “ladv blacksmith." Paul Kelly, made up to lllllLlCfllC the character. gives en int-eicstiityr pcrtrayal cf the hlsroric General Custer, and Joscph Cnlleia provides the menace as the villain- ous Bu: cy. Henry Travers gyms the crooked sheriff. Lee Bowman 15 intriguing as Custerls voung lien- tenant. and William Tenn-en span. Icy Fields, Donald McBrldge Clecn BfWTillS‘. Sira llwcn. Russell 'Simn- son rllirl Chirf Thundercloud halic Iflltllffillilg r01g3_ iiiiuiincd on the pregame L; {he latest News. a Community Sing- sonrz. and a comedy entitled Onion Pacific. WHAT A IYSEFDL BTBY, ______ LINCOLN, N ‘3_ t _ —Th~ l7-monttfiola zgfujiié,‘ and Mrs Richard Stockfeld solved this case without a hitch. Th9 b11173. craivlcd llllfllTT the porrlh and crawl- l rd out. wer cliitnhinz a PHCICGQ‘? or . Ofiareties. Investigation revealed @6251: o; cigarettes parvdy barn and 5 0 F- R D wthoh tfhi had placed thermop eves The Netherlands Indics sent near- lb‘ iA-‘YIHKILIOIIIICGSTII quinine to the v United Suites this year. NAZIS JETTTSON BOMB! To rctilrll to Germany with some bombs lclt in the racks of their nnachincs might prove fatal to Nazi bombing crew's. They often dump their loads in the sea after being jchasctl back from England. writes Lleut. F. C Teri Aggett, Toronto, to ltis wife. Llcut Agg-ett. is aboard a Royal navy vessel, rug: qulygnorrurowiv GUARDIAN W++++ee++e++++++re++e+++ Girl or Boy Story Books Do not wrap BOY SCOUTS TOY MATINEE SATURDAY MORNING, OCT. 26th l Doors Open 10 a.m. SHOW STARTS 10.30 a.m. PRINCE EDWARD THEATRE NO MONEY Sponsored by Bring a Toy not accepted toys in parcel ASSOCIATION irab-llr-fewtedealeabefr-frde-k Nazis Hesitate To Risk Troops For Italy’s Aid .Written For Tlgzflnfldlan Prtvss. By Maj. -Gtn, 5n- Charles Gwynn LONDON. O"t. 21 -(CP) —-Thl3 Battle o; Byit in goes on. It b:- comcs iiicrc lily an air battle, cciiductcd b_\' il..L11-- against mat/or- ial and liiorale. The Navy cpnilnucs “to coiltloi an communication. But we Clllliof. expo i, to hear much of ‘ its molly activities. ‘ Any pi'05].);‘<‘l of tin. main armies of Brituiil and G rlriviy 00111311: t0 ‘ 1i. IlllllPL‘ his. ill my t (ixsuppc-iiy d. The air vvar may continue fc-r a long pcr- iod wi h only mincr BlMTGLIOIIS in method. We m. afforded airopportunity -' ' ‘ier wxng the stuaticn ‘s cf lyu . Libya I1llZl A‘) in an‘, of (‘ours . the only 0Ili.r n:- tive tilicaiics. but. poicnttial tiliea- tircs are nuiiicrous. In Librl a. Grazlcizi is still attemp- ling to d vciop his romziiluilcatious and his advance bnsc. Subjected w IXTIllbllITllliPlll llJVfll gults 0n can side. to h" .'~Sll‘.'! attacks by mobi‘. lLlIKl units on the o hr. and to air illlllC-k, h s pr ma. ions are neccssarll ' proceeding sl‘ ly. He is sufriiu: lrssrs lli mat rial (incl the communicaiicirl: of l1ls advnnced troops inpkc c:.iis‘.'i rabie cicmands upon h.s rcscuvccs. BIG OPPOSING ARMY .. While 1t would b1 a prsfcund error to tihdcicstliilate I a‘ian_ stcilfirh. bxlliiiiiiiniibi--aii'l<l11\l Y tei-lni the Al'ir army 15 1 I (rlldllp n’ o. Till cpwsirg iIPmIMS. llo'.1.'c\ r, ar-L‘, and may Yelflillu for $Olll(‘l.-‘.III(F. Oil side sir -_ of ei-cli only r for an_ hin’: in the nature cf oficnsye or counts? -a‘.1t- ack. Be”or~ the rfferswe shag‘ is nvciicd. Grcrtini m._ TIC-HQ rein- fcnciizciils ii a’i'ci'.iil and ntechan- ' ' Bu‘. sea bra ara by dsturbano: and unless tli v ctn ‘an mild‘ safe ' btfill if Gcrrranyi would rrk sIiidinr many V.‘lll >19 trsops flClTlzS tin. 1i:d.t.rrilii:ali. Cl.‘ other regions bhll. (lemand al- I/LtTHilOII Sp in is prrliaps the most important. Prcssur? i5 obviously be- ing put to Crn. Fualic) to Illlke a move on Gibrallcr. p cslimn-bly with Axis fi!".~lSLllll"f.‘. Bil! nn zact, is 1110!‘:- cei-i-ain tlniii lliiit. Span is w \\‘(’~§ll'_\'. She is (‘X-l\“lii.l_\’ iirp islhcd as n result of licr cwli Ci ‘Wrlr and interruption of trade. She stand; t-o loss much more lillilll k e can (‘V911 be D omiscd by ilie Axi; by pcinu to \\'."ll‘. Perhaps her attiludr. ilk." that. 0f oihris. is waiting upon the ozitccnle of 1th: Air Battle o; Britain. JAPANS MOVE The Pact of Japan wlth tthe Ax’s Powers dcsigird to place a break on Aluglo-Aliierican cdinbcrition. has had. if anything. the opposite result. What its effect will be on the attldude of Russia is still ob- scure, but s0 far fr, d0€s not seem materially to halve changed title gcrllsml military situation. In that situation. the Outstanding point. 1o mly mind. is that, Gcr- many, who up to now has won her victories mainly with her army. l8 unable to discover a tlhliatre in which she can use he; army to the detriment of Britain. It may brcomn purely an army or European occupation. Sh» must le- l_v almost solrly on her air force for ofensive power. And in title eir she hag meg he;- match. News Briefs WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. VA, Oct. 24 —(AP) — Paul B. West, president of the Association of National Advertisers. said today United States businessmen are planning larger advertising budgets to keep step with aiiticipaicd trade gains. A survey of A. N. A. mem- bers, including many of the largest advertisers in the country, West said, snowed at least 56 per cent proposed to spend more money on advertising, in 1941 than th.s year. NEW YORK, Oct. 24 --(AP) - The 7,9l5-ton German passcnmr liner Est, seized by Netherlands au- thorities at Curacao when Germany invaded Holland, has been charter- ed to Great Britain and will sail shortly for England. the Maritime Register said tonight. QUEBEC, Oct. 24 —(CP) -— A suggestion that Premier John Bracken of Manitoba be given a post in the Dominion Agricultural Ministry was made here today by E. Prefontaine, Liberal member u.’ the Mnnfioba Legislature for Carli- lon. during an address at the 16th annual convention of the union of Canadian Catholic farmers. BARRIE, Ont, Oct. 24 ——(CPl-- Hon. Dr. Duncan McArthur. who was sworn in as Ontario Minister of Education on Aug 22. yesterday was elected by ncclamatlun as Lib- eral mcmbcr of the Ontario Legis- la.ure lor Slmcoe Centre. “'“'\'">'~‘n, on. 24 —(CPl Total pay for recruits taking com- I n“ rags plLaOl”) IIIllI-Bfj’ training will n. - ‘MP. headquarters today. elvhb++alrwh+++++d mount to approximately $8,640,000 during the next year. Major J. Q Gillan of the Royal Canadian Army Pay Corps. said here last rlfg\'. Total pay of all Canadian troops amounted to nearly $500,000 a day. 24 -(CP) _ WINNIPEG. Oct. The Dominion Government already is making plans to meet the pro- blems of demobilization when the war is over, Hon. Ian MacKenzie, Minister of Pensions and National Health. said in an interview here last night. Land settlement and a DQ151118 Program were two of the projects planned. he said. ROCHESTDR. N. Y,, Oct. 24 __ (AP) —-Rabbi Stephen s, Wlsg or U19 FY06 synagogue. New York City predicted today in an lnberyjg“; that‘ a Jewish army would be es- Ei“.ZiiifiilimmaP?l§“l§“i.£““°' ““' r - mam. Govern OTTAWA, Oct. 24 —( _ Netherlands Military ltffjlgglonnlfi Canada will begin training Holl- landers 1n Stratiord Ont early in January Col. G. J’. Sas,‘ head o; the 1111551011. told the Canadian Press today. "We Plan to start with a small force of 300 men." Col Sas said. “Weuivill give them three (lionths training after wilich they 3e transferred to the United E 0111 l0 10in the Netherlands 1~f81011 there and a new lot will 23111111 twain: at Stratford in gfflfit-hgiih-L-(CP) —Supt. Mounted police, now slzgliglerldadlilixl ' H MP. command, succeedingugg v commissioner F, J, Mean ‘;‘nl;°d"‘9"e§_ l0 U19 Winnipeg com- n . it was made known at RC. ,C:ldiz. officer om di lwifmibfiz CIIVISIOII, T122 Qfin p‘??? lnqlfliwdenuly commissioner of the G916‘: I23 Ottavva. lsI-Ie succeeds col, . . in , w . eraniiuatlgn. o retiring on sup LONDON. Oct. ZCL-(CP) - The M11115“ V 0f THY-Import todav ordered .5000 auto buses from provincial tomes brought to London to help ‘solve the traffic problems n; the gvabitnl. The Ministry aso an- 11011111311 an approximate six per lCCIllZ. increase in railway fares. ex- cepting on season and workers’ l tickets. A 10 oer cent. increase was iiiaae Jan. 5. LONDON. Oct. 23.—(CP Cable)- ;R3lDl1 Inzersolfedltor o: the New ‘York YIBWSDHDQr PM, said at a press conference todav that he h lfound on a tour of London's bomb- ‘lcd areas less damage to obvious unilitaiw‘ targets than he had ex- lpected from the impression he had lgathered in the United States. He found. however. more damage to non-mllitarv objectives than he had thought would be the case. The New York editor compared the com- plete freedom with which he was able to tour London and the coun- trv with the restrictions placed on newspapermen in Germany. He said PMs Berlin representative report- ed he was permitted to visit bomb- ed piaces onlv when conducted. LONDON. Oct. 23-(CP)—A Lon- don disposal squad gave thanks today that one of its trucks arrived E action bomb and prepared for its removal. but the truck didn't come. S0 the men went off to lunch. While they were eating the bomb esploded. No one was injured. LONDON. Oct. 23.—-(OP) — Gen. Sir Charles Harington, 6B s senior general staff officer of the Cana- dlan corps during part of the first Great War. and later Governor of Gibraltar. died today. After leaving the Canadians. Sir Charles became chief of staff to Iord Plumers 2nd army in France and Italy. and his staff planning laid the foundation of manv of that army's successes. i-Ie commanded the army of the Black Sea in 1920 and the next year became chief of the forces of occu- pation in Turkey. His term at Gib- vraltar, from 1933 to 1038, covered the period of the Spanish CivllWsr and the crisis of September. 1938. LONDON, Oct. 23.—-(CP)—Ab0ut 25 persons were feared todsv to have been killed last night when l. German bomb buried them under the fire-swept wreckage of one of London's largest department stores. Convicted of Fraud Feeding Stuffs Act At the sessions of the Peace, Que- bec City, recently, Messrs LaChance and Morel, Ltd., produce merchants, were found guilty and fined on four charges under the Dominion Feed- lng Stuffs Act, namely ti) Unlaw- fully using the registration number of another company; t2) Fraudu- lently lessening the value of afeed- lng stuff; (I) Itegallv having possession for sale in Canada feed- ing stuff containing injurious weed seeds in excess of the legal toler- antic. and (4) Selling and having in possession for sale feeding stuffs misleading labelled or represen- ed. Fines of 850 and costs were imposed on each of the first two counts. and $5 and costs each on the third and fourth count. dealer, nlfflllfi; a broker or Messrs. Chance and Morel pur- chased oil cake meal manufactureld and properly labeled by a we] -[ known Company of Montreal. un- stitched the bags thus releasing the tags. admixed about 15 to 2 per cent. of ground screenings. resewed Ch the bags including the original tags anld thus offered the product fcr » sa e. late. Thev had dug out a delayedl The Central Guardian This column is reserved lor neIn n! lam] Interest hut advertising oi a uewsy natural may be inserted n 5 cents s word strictly pay- lblo In ulnnos CBASWELL for Photographs. C8NFEDEBAI1ON LIFE INSUR- ‘E. L-ovse-i-zi-ail. DON'T MISS this one] 1937 Dodge DeLuxe Sedan $450 at Bar- bour s; MacDonald's. L-682-10-Zi-3l. HERE'S ANOTHER. good one! 1939 Dodge Sedan that must be lealized on at 8650. See Barbour 8r MacDonald. L-882-10-23-3i. 0f Charlottetown, P. E. Islanmspenr. Tuesday in town. the guest at the home of his brother, Mr. Dan Mac- News. AND LAST but. not least the bar- gain of the year. 1940 Dodge Coupe at $700. On display at Bar- bour 8a MacDonald. L-682-10-23-3l MacMILLAN-ROBERTS-A quiet wedding took place in Winsloe on October 16. when Helen C. Roberls was united in marriage to '1‘ J. R. Skinner 0 IUNERAL SERv1CES—The fun- eral of Mr. William Seller. oi 139 Kent Street. was held Wednesday ' zernoon from the Cutliffe Funeral ‘mic. The service at the I-ionze was conducted by the Rev. Hugh Miller, assisted by the Rev. Donald ‘Boothroyd. Service at York United Church was conducted by the Rev. Donald Boothroycl and assisted by s ' - w e 5352.?" fi°°‘%i.£l§lii;w.$i‘° “i? Messrs. A. C. Duchemin, W. E. lBllTkei H. H. Johnson, Dr. J H. Ayers. The pail-bearers at Yoik were Mes-rs. Herbert Vessey, Mlltcn Vessey, Archie Vessey, Dr, J. H. Ayers, Frank Hughes and Wesie Matthews. Interment was in Yor cemetery. Story of News With Accuracy “Go-operation” By _CI<IARLES BRUCE Canadian Press Staff Writer NEW YORK, O: . 24 -—tCPl - neyvspaperwork centre around the achievements. the experiences. the foibles of some one man. a giant of the nevvsdcsk or.- .,, cavalier of the diplomatic beat. In '11“. Jvritlng "AP-The Story of Nc\vs“-' . Oliver Gramling faced a far harder ‘ ‘job than this recording of a per- lsflnfillty. His task was to make a book about the development of an ldea—the idea of co-operation and truth in news. l l In that development not. one per- ‘sonahtv bilt. hundreds are concern- yed. and in Gramlins hands ‘their ;history tells the storv of The Asso- ciated Pcess: Dr. Alexander Jones, first "general agent" for the six} New York papers which banded in lthe selfish old forerunner of the‘ present AP; Daniel Craig. the geni- us of old-time news transmission: Melville Stone. who embodied the idea of accuracy and whose name; wil be forever connected with that. idea: Kent Cooper. infusing thel human touchc into the factual news i re rt. fighting for the great dc-y ve opmeiit rif a wired photo service., But behind these movesathrong. of purposeful, shadowy figures; ihel morse inan at his key, the telctype l puncher. the "pony'"editor talking; into his telephone, a string COfl'95-. pondent riding to death on a gray‘ mule beside Custer; dispatch boat crews under the guns n1‘ both ficezs at Santiago: a San Francisco editor cabling around the world to get. news of an earthquake to New Ycvk. These figures are as essential totlic story as any "name" in news his- tory, and this the book recognizes, News of I811 The storv of newsgathering isl traced in action. In 1811 young Sam Topliff was in charge of the ‘Exchange Coffee House Reading VROOITI in Boston. When a bngwns; sighted chanciiig tlie_ harbor en- trance at night. TOIJIIII Cllmbfldlll-v to a rowboat and went out to gxnl ‘that Britain was concentral g naval vessels in American waters! “Tdpllff 1n his rowboat had started systematic news gathering,’ “INKS! Gramlfng. ' Sunilarly, when David Hale, in 1828. had trouble in New {ork with the nine original New York papezs‘ who were ‘ "v , collection of rowboaters zvho m’ intelligence, Hzllr started using a1 sloop. “Hale and his Journal _ Commerce had introduced the v1 l‘ stimulant of competition into the sluggish world of news Ratherlng. 1t was Hale who first went to James Gonloa Bennett to talk news co-operatioli. They booed their re- sources to cove:- t e Mexican War later came the old New York AssO-E elated Press. Halifax was the iocr point for the gathering of foreign news. and there Daniel Craill W15 established as the first Associate Press Foreign correspondent. Craig had introduced the use of carrier pigeons in American news-gather- ng' he was full of ideas. He is‘ credited with being the. first man to "end the Bible" in order to hold a telegraph wire. That was at Hali- fax. about 1849. Before the exten- slon of the wire from saint John to Halifax. he had organized the Halifax ltxpiess. a hOISQ-Bnd-Tldfl‘ news relav service between Halfax and Dlibv. where fast boats waited to curry the copv to the wire ter- minal across the Bay of Fundy. It was cralg also who issued the order, after he became “general agent" that if a storv was imP°1"-'l ant enough to warrant details the details were worth the wire costs] This put an end to sendlflll barf. facts for an editor at the other cndi of the wire to pad out from imnfl-I’ fnation. It was n. sensation at thel me. By this time the New York Assn-I elated Press had begun m expand and sell its news to a number of outside papers. but these still had illttle or nothing to sav about the» news thcv mt. no shadow of control -in the organization. Reorganization. [came in 1858. but Gramlin writes:- "It was a union of seven morning papers . . and the news collected was designed solelv to meet thc'r needs, without any consideration for wants of subscriber papers." War Correspondents l Joseph Medill. publisher of the icalm Tribune. was agitating for n better news service and western ‘KESQHIBI-IOII as earlv as i862. but ii) was not until the early 90s that V'ctor Lawson le the successfrl fihgt which resulte in formation cf The Associated Press as it is known SPENT DAY.—MI'. John MacLeod Izod. Queen Street-New Glasgow . G. MacMillan, of West Coveliead. Rev.’ mutated. llurii was not grunt. H“ | Sell cnielit pulled an oarficonceriierl more with WIHQQSL. enwu-e lcrluhfng JDDQFIIUOH than gatliern-fycnusufln 1.8.13.0“ a“ow¢d_ Mnnny in 1847, and out of that idea ayvcr W) l l mmvuyflhillh mgJlIII/II/Illllllll l l l l CT-Sl JCT °£15_R_2§. 1940 Chewing is fun, especially when you have some- thing as tasty and easy to get as Doublemint. The chewing aids digestion and helps keep teeth clean and bright, your smile attractive. The delicious flavor ensuresa pleasant breath! Get several packages . . . one to carry with you . . . one for at work . . . and one to share at home with the children. Enjoy this inexpensive treat! lt’s good and good for you. M _ ‘Qq a‘ \\\\\\\\\\\\ll\ i \\\\\\\\y\\\\\\\\\\\\\“‘ [Ml/Mil \\\\\It\\\\IA\\\\\\\\\\\\\III"my!II/Il/IIII/l/l/l/I/M today. co-operation fully established an the lust. vestlge of private in- lcicst rcilloxcd from ownership c1 tlic licws report, In the meainllne, the Civil War than conic. iii the light of BR513111- dav war reporting, uranilings de- SCPIDLIUII o1 the incn who covered that coililiui is interesting: correshuiitleiits. some. sliiootli- vcn vouihs. some with long t, Lifcr-likft beards, some illustaih- Cu in the zipbroved s;yle of the day. Kossuth hols and iaiicv vests were universal favorites. wore s|.iil collars. Culiipalgn kits were not clabcrale-rcvolvcr_ fled glas- ses. lloieboak. blanket. haversack - iiLhcuu-li a good mount was indis- lzciisable. For the risks and arduous liviin: demanded. the monetary rc- Salaries rang- cd from $10 to $25 a week for the , incii of the field, out oi which they ; had to pay theii own expenses to_a maximum of for key men iii such ‘centres as Washington and Louisville. General Agent Craig rccoivcd $3,000 annually." Throughout this bvok 0116 89$ 11 picture of ilie changing times well ms the new departures ill lwislory of The Associated Press rc- suliiiiu from those changes. Fcr instance. when Hustend and Whil... ‘ two western publishers. came east‘ in i866 to demand concessions:- "Tliev found New York an ilidus- trious citv with a population close to the mi lion mark. The wires‘ from iclograpirpoles laced throulzh l the DT-HILIICS of shade trees along i Bl‘U.'\(l'\\'il_\'. Office forces worked l0 hours a day, six days a wcek. and lncrc were lio female Btlllllflyefs» ‘ilie balscnieiit. of the modest. J- P- Itiornaii ljllliillllfl in Wall Sweet was l stacked with the wares of a retail‘ wooil and coal uealcr. and inllntco- bcsitlill mils were tlie_ latest. boon to I the fcliilnliie iuiure.’ i kku-ly Cables On August m. lam. President Bu- chanan, slttliuz in Washington. was handed this message: "The Queen desires to congratulate the Presl- ucnt llp0i\ the successful completion o1 the gloat international work in lliiil-n the Queen has taken‘ the u-cpest interest." UYPU-i Pie-QB cable was talking. from Valentin io 'l'l‘i1llt_\' buy. Ta the AP came the first European news by cable; ‘Em- peror of France returned to Pars saiurdayi. build)! Prussia too ill lo visit Queen Victoria. tier Majes- tv returns to England 31st August. of Chinese 0118511011: to trade; opens beliik quclled, all India becoming “H tranquil." Wlllllll a few days the cable fall- cd, and it was not. lllllil eight. years lilicr unit. I-lcd was iinully success- iui. tsoilie idea oi how important news nod to be to rate cooling ap- pears in the note that ‘althoufrh cable fates had been reduced from ' to $5 per word. trans-Atlantic \\C1't.‘ a picturesque lot,. dispatches YOIIIBIIICCI the most costly convenience in newsdcm." So the storv goes; the AP sent, men to Europe l.O gather its own news there; began to lease exclusive wires; the telephone came, the air- plane. and the First Greet War; politics lllid depression. life and death and birth. This a book that will never be finished. 1t is o. story of continuity as the closing words indicate. “Britain fights 0n . . . "So the Second world War oon- tinued. past the time when these words were written, past the time thev were sent to press. As a cli- max to almost a century of report- ing daily history. Munichla ‘Peace for our time’ had seemed a beauti- ful note on which to end any story of news. _“But over the world AB rngnyqgrg How Are Your Eyes‘? 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