PAGF. FOUR frtii: QHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN NOVEMBER 11, 1941 tiiit 011.111 tciiriuwri GUARDIAN Morning Daily iifounded in i881] Preston-tit; Llcul. Col. W. Cheater S. MoLiu-e nt-e Prcsillrlll: .1 R. Burnett. FJJ. \'_‘i'l"i‘l.li‘); iii ut Col. l) A. Miiclkillnilll. D.S.O. [Llltni .1i11l .\l;in.;;iiig llirci-lur J ll. Burnett. IJJ. AauW-ixl" Luitnrs: Frank Walker and inn A. Burnett “subsonic-nun RATES Ly 111.11 in 11.11.!" $1.00 pct your", 52-50 for 6 111111101! $1.35 fur 3 iiiuntiis; 50o for one month ti.» Delivery 55.00 pcr rear; $3.00 for Ii month: $1.75 iui 3 months By iiuii in Cunuuii and U.S.A. $5.00 per year 51111111111; ticckiy: "$.00 pcr your; $1.00 for ti month; 50c for 3 month: r1111 tlinrliittt-tiiiiii tiunriinin muy be obtained o: “illtllill , 51-1“ tgtin-y, 'l‘-llil'l equure, New unit; Old giilllli i‘), (Mriiri Milli 111111 iiinilitngtuit, lllrallrli; 1 , A1111. Aygrtlvy, IZ-llt reel et.. 111111111-111, .1. 111111- 0.11 tin,» .\1. m; New! stand. Llitrlciiu AMIUIIPI", 011.111.“ “tilt stnntl. Euubnry. lulntrru hllup, .\l\.|||\.'li l 0111.; - The Shvniyc-sf Jlemory is Weaker than the ll cit/rest lit/r." m-Isinv, NOVEMBER ll. 1941. tinn '1 Remembrance Day Xciy i..\v of tliosc 111m‘ serving in 's iiilvTw ;n honic and abrozid c1111 rc- lkiy, ll)lb'——lll€ fateful 1'11.- t-lcvciiih day of tlic l1" 11111-11 1111- _Lflll]5 ceased firing ' " .11.» 11f the blotnlicst coii- 11.111. tiur own Canad- rciioivii. They , oiic iii three of Canada's 1.111, and 86.7 per cent _\ .1_'t1.ooo of thcm hzirl Hi lllitw who crossed, 011-- 1-111" 11011 411111 1111c iii seven (lied. 111, 18,000 are commemorat- -11.c in a ct-iiit-tcry" but by a 1111111111111-111 which stands for . Ql'.'t\t‘. Th1- .\lcn1i1i (izite bears 11111.1 who fcll in Belgium, tlic "11 tho-e of 11,285 \\'llU fell in 11:1: 1111- price Cannth had paid for June i, 194i totalled 18,032,000 units compare-l with an average of 16,084,000 units from 193i t0 i935. The i941 total of grain constiniing ani- mals was the highest yet recorded. TlICTC was an increase of 3 9 per cent in thc total numbers of hens and chickens on farms a! June i_ I941, compared with a. year previously, the iotiils being 662,532,500 and 60,201,300, rc- spcctivcly. Most of the increase occurred lli birds luiitlcr six months of age. lt is l)('llL‘\‘L‘(l this the con1ing winter. There was also a moderate increase in the numbers of Lurkeys on farms. 1- IIDITURIAL NUIES — Remembrance or Armistice Day; on this (late 1918, at the eleventh l10t1r 0f tlic eleventh (lziy of the elcvcnlh month hostilities iii tlic (irczit \\'nr of 1914-18 ceased .'l‘lie anniversary has been ob- served through the Empire until last year, when, in Great Britain, it was decided, for obvious rea- sons to stispend celebrations until such time as jircsciit hostilities conic to 111i end. i l I l After the lapse of three years the Free Churches in Britain have decided against the out- line of a scheme for reunion with the Church of England ptit forward by tlic Lnmlicth joint Conference. From thc rcply to Lzinihctli, it wits evident that episcopacy was still n. serious st1i1iili- ling block, and that even should an episcopate be agreed to as one organ of a tiiiitctl Church, tlic apostolic succession. 1k I it 101 Wheat raising in Kansas mziy be romantic and satisfying, but the records of at least one coit- scientious farmer show there are more lucrative tirstiits The farmer, whose twine was withheld liy Mr.‘ \\1'. j. Conovcr, extension zigriculturni economist of Manhattan, l\';1ii., kept records of comparative income from three crops ——\vlieat, atlas sargo and alfalfa hay. He nettei! only $1.45 an acre on wheat \\‘llCl'(‘£l.<flillllS tiscd for silage returned him $12 and zilfiil :1 iicttt-rl s10 1111 ncrc. His record showed these figures: Wlicat-—$i 1.20 an acre gross income, expenses $9.75, nct in- come $1.45. Atlas sargo —$2.t an acre gross in- t‘11- Qllll- Clll<Cil fire 011 the first i1 since 1111211 1111s witnessed tic-cs- throughout Canada .~\ simple but beautiful rituil 111ml this observance, which . _\"-11'.th iiitist have mad? 11-11111 our ‘toting iiicn now under s 111- zigziiu 0l)sL‘l'\‘€ the two ii1iii- 2111111111 of our dead in the last 5111111111 he inspiration for us ZllYlllCl] and civilians ——in 11111 to tlic SiEilK‘ ideals. lf inviting -~if iii the example ihcrc were no spur to rise 51111-11111 1 21111.1 the l' 1111s ,-,. come, expenses $12, net $12. Alfalfa hay —$2o an acre gross, expenses $9, iict income $20 2111 QCTC. Q i Two innovations in harvest festivals were noted in England this year. At Kingston, Surrey. the service ivas held in the saloon lounge of the British Oillt’ public house instead of a church. 1t was arranged by the landlord, and conducted by the Vicar of Kingston. The congregation gathered and sang hymns round a. billard table covered with vegetables, fruit, and flowers. most of them grown in customers‘ allotments and gar- dciis, and a gift of oranges 11nd lciiions. Th8?‘ were sent to the local hospital. Lumps of coal 1' 101 Free Churches definitely reject the doctrine of] - - - - i should result in heavier egg production during A fair young miss from North Ontario in the vlcinty of Beaver- ton shed her student clothes the other day and clothed tn tier Windbreaker and slacks, appeared at the wheel of it tractor ln e. con- test with nine boys. won first, prize plowln in stubble at the Inteznationa Plowing Mach. This young lady. whose name ls Frances McM’llan, is years o‘.d. and at present is 11c wnding the Pet/erborcugh Normal school. Unknown to her masters and to many cf her fellow- studcnts, Miss McMilhn entered the DlOWlTlg match and won first prize, and the ncxt day was back at school as t-liough it had only been part of her everyday work. In fact, 1t only mid- been part o this girl's daily work for month-s. for at home ivitli farm l~btir scarce she ll-Jd bet-n talking he": place driving the tractor and hence her ‘ability to plow and pl:~w w - l Peter crough Examner. Women with an avenging zeal to "get back on Hitler" for the loss or a husband or SWEtLllPiITlZ or 011131‘ li-ved one are among the enthusiastic recruits who liovt? joined the National Fire Seivce in res-ponse to the recent. a-ppeal for wcmen volunteers They have deliberately chosen this means of- .nattonal servzce as the best way of personal repayment One of those voluntcczs is Mrs. Ellen Harrison, 11 ill-yezir-zlcl brunetue, of Bt-rivick szrcct, off West Derby rend, Liverpool, whose husband was killed in e, raid wlille street fire-watching last May. She has jtfned up. she stirs. as “the best thing slic condo‘ she ivas among 60 recruits at, the new training sclicol for firewomen in Liver- pool-tile first training school of the kind in the provinces. Anoth- er young woman lost, her fiance- a police officer-tn a. rald on e, Mcrseys do town, and she has lsrccmg ll lii-civrtiitin in ordfr to do wl '1 she can to avcnfe 1101‘ loss. As " c ivas fornterly engaged ln a dratvizig office. her skill with in- struments and familiarity with plans will no doubt be turned to gtod tit-count- A t,‘ woman traint-p eniollcd on_ learning that lit-r liti-zbantl was missing at sea. - Lverpccl Post. Our star system, or galaxy, l: marked in tlic sky by the galaxy of stars which we call the Milky ‘ ' really a gre..t. thick, loosely-j zed disc of stars. ‘Ihe sun and cart-n are situated in this disc. When we look out edge- wise, into the thick part of the dlsc, we see a whole cloud of stars —and call it. the Milky way. This stretches all around t-lie sky. When we lzck out. the tun iviy of the d150, we see fewer stars, and hence Our knowledgg cf this gtnax greatly improved in recent The flattened shape long ago suggested that the whole dsc ofl stars must be rotating. Just. as the‘ planet; all revolve around our sunn so it was rcssonabls to suppose that tlic myralds of stars- one of which we call our sun-were re-t VDlVlfig around the distant cenrtel y has years. iNOTEf By THE WAY Churches And Peace ' ' 'w" (mus m,- a region which is not Milky Way. lly (Winnipeg Free Press) In these titres of the breaking of the nations, lizere is eomethln encouragement 1n the signs are everywhere 1n evidence in the democratic countries of a. deter- mination on the part. of all sorts and conditions of mm to insist upon a workable system of peace for the post-war world. It Ls not bounding interest, lri providing a durable peace without thought-s breaklnw in. If the social 111-4 religious organizations which sue now so deeply concerned to save the world from war rad shown one- tienth of the interest. which they now display, in protecting and de- veloping the agencies for peace which were set up after the last war, this war might have been ore- ventied. Fitrther. none of the pro- jects upon whfch so much titougnt and industry are now being ex- pended are worth more than biimk _paper if the Nazis and their allies rue not. overthrown. The individuals the organizations and tfne nations that look forward longfngly to a world of continuing peace are deep in the wilderness trying to reziun the highway to world peace upon which they would not travel when it. lay lnvltlngly before them. - Among the bodies thus deeply interested are the organized churches of the United States which have set up 11 commission to discover the bases for a just. and durable peace. The scope of their inquiry and the objectwes which they seek are set out in on article appearing elsewhere on this page. The objectives cover everything that ivas sought in the Covenant of the League and the Pact of Paris; they definitely provide for a new world order involving the abridgment of national sovereignty Ind the nnnclatlon of force as on nutrit- ment of international policy. The objectives do not expresly include a declaration in favor of collective action where necessary for the defence of the principles avowed: but surely this is implicit 1n the declaration of tire aims to be sought. The record of the churches of the United States ln support of the principles of a peace established by mutual agreement and defended if necessary by force is pretty much of a. blank: even where the objec- isfll » seventeen possible, however, to view this n-' sombre l 1 CHALLENGE A THOUGHT A DAY _FOB A PEOPLE AT WA] "We are returning to Can- ada more convinced than evei that if we expect to halt an overcome the Nazi hordes everybody has got. to sacrlflcr a great deal moi"e than a1 present. This race ls going tc go to the swift. ‘There Ls '11 time to be lost. The only’ way to win is through sheer totality of undertaking. Statement by the party u Canadian newsman on the!‘ return from Great Britain, 1-1‘. The Road To Russian ‘ Oil (Exchange) The Crimea hangs from the rest of Russia. like a sun-ripened nlum. It; was along this fabled shoreline that the Argonauts of old fared to the Caucasus in their quest of tzie Golden Fleece. The Germans woul- are also pounding down the coals‘. of the Crimea on the same quesz, the golden riches of the Russian oi! f ids. When they overrun zhe whole peninsula, as it seems they must, they will be roughly halfway around the Black Sea. It has cost. them somcilsLrig more than four months of hard lighting and hen losses to get there. How long it w ll take them to cover the remaining distance depends, of course, primarily on the resistance the Russians can still offer. Envis- aglng the situation from this (lis- tanoe, e contemporary points to the Soviets in the Crimea. ltacif :11 apparently badly demoralized. Se- vastopol cannot resist modern wea- pons as it did the cannon of the Allies in 1855. It has lost lts im- portance as a stronghold, and the Russian fleet has probably fled al- ready to Novoi-ossilsk. Ketch, penn- ed up on the eastern end of the peninsula, cannot hold out. The Strait of Kercli, separating it. from the mainland. Ls only four miles wide and constitutes no formidable tlve of continuing world peace was favored there was no readiness to face the problem of how to make such a peace effective. There was a wholly unrealistic dependence upon the moral force of unexoebtlonablc sentiments. In destroyln-i- the 1,95- gue and ti-e Pact of PBTlS, the idea.- llstlc paclflsm of the churches was a factor upon which the worship- pers of Mars counted with a con - dence that: was only too complete- stifled. There thus appears to have been H. profound change tn the thinking and the attitude of the (Iiurclies of America. If they co-operate to the extent indicated l.n the article, which we quobe in support of the objectives which are listed, they will be powerful agencies both in seeing that the peace-when and if made-ls just, and that due provis- from Bostov to Novorossllsk that the real Russian defence snust he organized. The Germans are fling- fng furious attacks on Rostnv. The drive on Novorossllsk probably will banter to parachute troops. It is ‘ come soon. There ls some oil at Maikop, 100 miles beyond. but. not enough. Thence southward to Botum the march is along e narrow strip of coast flanked by ranges from 6,001 to 12,000 feet high. Anv route through them or around them is difficult and dangerous. But. w mach the oil fields of Baku on the Caspian the Germans must cross an even rouwher tangle of moun- talus. ‘Ireic, it would seem, they must also meet the British under General 5h- Archlbaid Wiivell. De- stroying the oil wells before the Gennans get there would not be easy. Each one of thousands must 1 ND; SS’ sA-V 5 SPE MORE LE \ f‘ n iii ' ...0N TH "Your duly a: a good Canadian 1': to Ieu and save more." spend Hon- ]. L. Haley min-tom 11/ nnnnq THRIFT is today on the march all through Cumuliitn life. In industry, in the oflice, on the f1“- even in the lchoole, THRIFT l: caving for y; war requirements. m: lul THRIFT avoids unnecessary spending and reduce, the demand for ordinary civilian goods. This helps to curb the rising cost of living and at the sum; time makes men and equipment available for in. creased production of urgently needed war Bllppligg, An account cl this Bank will be most useful In YOUR THRIFT PROGRAM. All banking services are available and your use of them will be welcomed.‘ l! THRIFTY ‘Itie BANK of NOVA SCOTIA J. A Mel-IOU H; D. IUINS Pmlh Oeeuei For Cenude end yourself- Buy War Saving: Certificate: I ISFD; lIIT-OVIR A CINTIIRY OI IANKINO IXPIRIINCI possession may prove one cislve actions of the BRANCHES IN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND C‘ lottetown Mlllny Kenslnlton Montana (rhea-y More] Summers! Victoria v a az or ago..- e r n- q, - A Gtimiriis: glittering one. The bottl; for its of the dc- Some gliders m made entire war of_inetal. A stormy night, slippery highway, blinding head- lights, an unavoidable accident, some one injured-an ~.'111 1'00 rind (l{‘\'i){iOi'i—-ill€i"l they and lllils 0f will" “Tie Tilllgfll b31546 ll°\\'¢l'-‘- of the galaxy Plaskews work ‘on is made to make it enduring. be “mum-yum, wrecked and evm emergency ride to (he hospital, . 1111-11 in vain. . ‘l’. 'l‘l11~ ilt-iul speak more eloqu- ' Z§'i’ll\'(‘~‘ than tiny living orator v ZlfC closer to us today than ' I 11kt: up our quarrel with the Foe” c- of <l('l'll(‘l‘ meaning tli:in when we 11111-11 t1111 _qlibl_v-—in the years of :"1- 1'1 l nriiiiiq tlic lesson that pence I111» 111th injustice and ty-rztnny, and 1 is of less worth than the moral 111"li srtiictify" it. Trix-ices For The Troops 1111 1111s just been concluded in lfiiiit-d Service Organizations -. \"lllL‘ll corresponds to 11-1." \1'1\li,li_\' \ . , 11111 llll‘_\' went ovci" if» '1.\c 1,1 8111513311110 111 olitiiiii $13,- .11»11.1111r1. 1-11 111k 111111111111, it is said, is ii1suffici- c111, f i" '1"11-~ $.- "l i ,1" 11.1, 1‘: - not included in the United i1/.11i1i11s 11f tlic Yiiitcd Btates, v. .\1.1"..\..v. w. c. .-\..1' " (Riniiiiiinity- Scrvicc, Jew-i r11. Siilititioii .\i"i11y and Na- \i1l .\~.~"iCi.'lll1)ll. 1'_\‘ \\"11" .\\-i"\-iccs czinipziign last 1 l-‘1-1l Fro-s) we \\'/.i1l over tlic 11.1>111> 11111] 1'>l'l.'llll(‘(l more than ' .11 gri-"it 111-111 more than the -1 1h: Viiitcd States in propor- 1111 111' 1111- two countries. But ~ 11.1 1- :11". if it ivcrt‘, it \\'0lil(l -1 111111-‘1 i'11"_-;1-1‘ 1111111 for its sc-rvicc " ni-t-ly adopting the joint 11 v.1- lmvc, also :1 close super- ‘ of 1h.- vtti-ious oruiiiiizzi- 15111.: i~ nwiitlt-rl. l‘i"c.'-"nmzilily ..,.¢, l 1" "i 1 1' 1 1- 11:1 lopW-tl in lllf‘ iiiittt plziil 11- l‘ .1 < ' \\'1i1-11 tlic pcflplc are goit- 1“ 1* "1 ' '1:1;, 1111-1- should have assur- tzmci- 111 11 will b1- pruilvntlv spent, (T.iirii1l.i's Livie Stock ' ' '1 1 l l1_\' lli(‘ lhiiiiiiliiiil lltifctlu Of 111 11!. 11111- incrcuscs lli all the ~ -- 111' il\'.\l4r('l\‘ 111i Ctiiiaditin farms --, \" 11111111 Ill _lu111- I, 1111i. in tlic case i-,ii111i1. 1‘ nits 5.904.000. being‘ tho 1111i "1 111-1111"); while sliccp iiiin1bcr- vegetables and sheaves of corn at Morton Church. London. “Coal and ivzitcr niav seem to he unconnected with the harvest. but r1 lizirvcst festival is a service of thanksgiving for all thc- bounties of the earth," it ivas explained. l T i i Arc local authorities in liritziin within tliei" rights in releasing gases on tlic higlnvziy to test gas masks, and is any one who suffers injury from the gases entitled to compensation? 'l‘l1ese are the problems which have arisen out of a mans claim for damages for injuries catisctl to his eye, ivliich he alleges resulted from the rc- lcase of tczirgas iii the strt-cts by the local council of a Midlands lOWil. lle has started proceed- ings in which the high court is expected to an- swer these questions. The iiian was not ivcnring n gas-mask at the time of llK‘ rclczisc of the tear- gzis ziltlitiugli it lizid hat-ti 1i1ililicl_v' iiitiititiiicctl llllll the test ivas to take place. I U l I The British commander at Beirut, Syria, re- ceived the other (lay the invoice of :1 cargo that was on the way from Britain. Among tlic itenis was a cryptic oiic: "Stccl carriers, llll sur- fztccs, one-ivliecled —60.” \\/'hcii the itcm had been passed among the staff, it was concluded that the Supply hlinistry- was sending over sixty ivliippet tanks, aliotit which tlicy 111d liczird s1) much but not yet set-ii, and according to tlic correspondent of The Daily Telegraph of Loii- don, their enthusiasm was boundless. The ship arrived The cargo was discharged. \\'licn tlic cnigninticzil item had liecii checked. up, it was found to coiiiiote sixty lliClill \\"hct-lb:1i'i"1.1\vs. v Brigadier Georges P. Viiiiier of No. 5 Mili- tary District and fornicr Canadian hliiiistcr to France ivarned tlic members of the Cznizulint". Chili of Quebec that "tlic ilziy ivhcn lhc Atlantic will cease to be an obstacle 11nd llCCttlllt :1 large i!!! British. American and Canzidizin flccts will no longer he maeter: of the Atlantic, if such a thing is conceivable, our hour will have struck. Do not sziy that such is llll[l(l5<l)ll(‘. say rather tliiit it will not happen if each of its (lot-s his ditty. his ivholc, ditty" and concluded, “our liriui- of stif- fcring will come, stiffcring of tlic soul ziiid suf- fering of tlic flcsli. Let us b1- prcprircrl. Lot 1H be serious with ourselves. Up until now wl1:it sucificcs have we niridc F" v l i . 1111- llljllr-‘I r1-c111"1l<-1l since June I, "s 11f 12-11111- 1111 farms, estimated at 3.8‘ pt-r 11-111 higher than zit June '|'11.1- ii11:1"1~:1~1- ltl cattle numbers was p.'1i"1ic11‘:1i"l_\ ; 111i iii $.1sl\:1tcli1-\v,'ii1, Albcr-‘zi and liflll-ii (Viitiiiibiu, wlicrc young stock is lie-- inf; lu-lrl 11111-11 for lin- iwl-wiildiiig of herds. Unless gjflirluiti \~,1 l lzi-t _\'- :11‘. serious f1.-1-1l .~l11»1't.--.,41-< tlt-vclop it may be ex- ]K'ClL‘il tlizil llllllllli'l‘\ of cuttli- will continue n in.~,-_1;1\1- (1\'('r 1111- il('.\'l fcw vczirs. 111(- npiiwu-il 11-1-1111 i11 numbers of horses 0:1 frirni- uliitii r1 1111111 l\('l‘ll iii 1113i) \\','lS coiitiiiticrl. fly; [I)|;;I 1,19,]! _'_.\'.~'|.1i'i1i 1" iiiipiircil with 2.358. 91,0 in 11141) 11nd z,1\‘.-4.1>o11 in i030. Tlic most important liiCfPiL-it‘ in iiuiiibi-rs 11f liorscs OCCUTfCil iii 1h;- llffiYlflfC 11f S.-i~l<.'11cl1-\\".'1ii. The" lil(‘l'(‘f!¥(' in ll\\‘ -t111"l< iiiiziilicrs is account- ed for liifgvl)’ hy 1111- i111-1-1-.-1~--1l demand for meats and the relatively high prices which have pro-j vailerl for these products". Converted to a basis of grain consuming ;11iii1i:1l units, numbers of all spccics of live-stock 111111 poultry 011 farms at l tlic times and 7O per ccnt of the iiiiiizitt-s would ‘be bctter off somewhere else, believes l)r. Ralph S. lliinay, psychiatrist at Sing Sing Prison. llc v told the American Prison (‘oiigrcss at San I Fraiiscisco that U. A. rx-niil iiislittilions arc ins frir behind the titiics as the days ivlicn State lniciittil ltospitals ivt-re refcrrcd to as lunatic asyluiiis. lle said his studies of Sing Sing pris- oiicrs had revealed that oiilv 30 per ccnt could l)‘.‘. classed as normal persons for WlIOIII puiiishiiiciit was justified. ivhile tlic oth-‘r 70 pcr ccnt wcrc ‘abnormal nicntzil cases who should lic trczilcrl iii ‘ , hospitals. Tltkiiig Sing Sing felons as a fiiir cross-section of prison initiates generally. Dr. j Banay offered this picture of their mr-ntal health. IOne per ccnt is insane. 20 pcr ccnt are al- COhOliCS. ii per ccnt are mental defectives and 20 per cent are immature mentally and of the split personality type. Hence what is wanted Is ‘ doctoring and nursing, not punishment and isclii- ti0n-. Q supplied some of the mcsl; posltlvet prcof of tbs rotation. The diffl-‘ culty is that the galaxy is so large that we can study only the mo- tizns of those stars which are in the neighborhood of our own sun. And they would all be ex-tected to revolve at about the same rate as our sun. and hence to us aptear to be standing still. We tlius seek to work with stars as fai- away, and so. unfoi-t-uncitely, as faint as pos- sible. - Toronto Star. It would be absurd to continue intantzy field training in Australia. —tl_ie prepiir 11g cf an almy for active service-on tlie ideas held by the British A".my at the ciitseti of ttie war. but now iccogniaed asl obsolete. The British Army entei-edi the war convinced that. the prin- cipal help on air force could give to 1m army was a.d in reconnais- sance; and to serve this purpcse B. few squadrons of snort-range reconndtssatice tnacliines were pm. vdcd, ivithin the air fotice, for ser- vice wit-ii t-lie army when needed. The trutn, now appreciated, ls that the lnfdnti-y requlze tits-tr cwn attack-panes also for shock action ped, and for support of tank and artillery operations. It ls the Gov- ernnientls duty mt to approach this matter as a question yet to be answered-to.- 1111 uncertainty was clspellcd when tha Gezmans matched through Pslriiid - but to accept the advce cf its army lead- ers on s. subject; about WillCh there no longer ls any doubt. Mr. Churchill declared emphatically after the campaigns in Greece and Crete: “It of the utmost con- sequence that cverv div‘s'on should and training in dose and pnclse re cttlonsh p With ii articular num- route leading to these shores, the day ivhcii the , American prison methods arc too yciirs hchiiirl , t» Si! ber cf altcra-ft tha it knc-ws and that it can call up at will and " need. and tinder its own command. for the purposes cf eveyttiinq that. 11s a tactical oreriticii.. It is the iinirntlcn to 11o fcriw-rd u-ron that ‘pith nrcnctliatcly“. The Ausn-aiian Gcverifmmt. can har-'1,v do less.— Sydney Australian Herald. Britain's fighting services are tiyng to improve tlic methods by which tlic-y present. tlic story of their work ta the wood, and as a result soc-racy bars may somewhat lifted. The Navy taking on pliotogrtphszs its never before-skied Fket. street, men wlio can get tlic pictuics - and the Army. which has had a flim unit. aimost. since tlic war btgan, tin-e gently developing it. This iiilm unit} hrs s" tied on almost. [every front, but the pubic has yet e many of lts plc.lii€8. The R A.l=‘ are mak ng inipi . t- too. They have the great advent- age limit wlirn :1 ftgiiter 'planes guns come lntq actlcn a camera. works too. right along the lne of fire. On the w lt.ng and descript- ive side of c1111 service changes ' are also ln contempiiition. It seems c:rtaln ncw that vzry s:on Britain will have writers and picture men might in the foi-efinzit of every umttle. whethzr in the sky, on the sea, or on land. Thzy w ll run the ,samc risks as the German "pi-cip- agaiida troops", of whom some 80 hiid been killed in iicticn befo".e the WAT‘ with Russia Cctfltig the news and pictures for the British pub- lic may become one o.‘ the most ecntinuously dander us Jobs in wai- - —-but it. will yield etorire end pic- tures of on: fight rig effort fer better than anything evallable in the past. - London Btu. Mr. J. Merrlqen, the I original mods-l for Bairnfather‘: "Ole Bill," 9s deed. Here's hoping that lie iios ' found that, "Better ‘Ole.’ -Wlndsor Stal- _ _ _ iignlnsi. an enemy similarly equlp-, 'h."1vc a chance to live lts dnlly llfej ‘Iljere ls in this. as we hove already said, sound grounds for Cllflflllrflgvg. merit. 1 lion THE FALLEN With proud thanksgiving, e mother r her children, Britain mourns for her dead across the sea. Flesh of hei" flesh they were, spirit of her spirit, Fallen 1n the cause of the free, a. few left flowing would relieve a HM III HI NEWPORT FLIIFFS lliilfl COAL We now have a sup- ply of Old Sydney Screen Coal arriving Solemn the drums thrllll Death august and royal I Sings sorrow up into immortal spheres. | There is music in the midst of deco-l atlon And a glory that shines upon our tears. ‘They went with songs to the battle, they were young, Straight of limo, true of eye, steady and aglow. 1 They were staunch to the end - against odds uncounted, 1 They feil with their faces to the foe. They shall grow not ol are left grow d. Age shall not. weary them, nor the years condemn. At the going down of the sun and in the momln We will remember t em. They mingle not. with their laughing comrades again; ' | IThey sit no more at familiar tubes‘ . of 110m ' They have no lot in our labour of l the daytime; 1 ‘ They sleep beyond Britain's foam. j But where our desires are and our hopes rofound, Felt as a we l-sprlng that is hidden from s , - To the innermost heart of their own they are known 1 As the stars are known to the night: d, as we that As tiie stars that shatll be bright‘ when we are dus , Moving in malrches upon the heav- | time of our darkness, To the end, to the end. they remain -Laurence Binyon. or MANY rAitTs A Hawker “l-iurrlcone" posed of about 25.000 per l la com- tie l How Are Your Eyes? if you ere luvin: nmptnn-i of strain - headaches. um eye: or illnlneu - conliili specialist. At vonr o'er-vice with rem of experience end e thoreolh reireetlnr net-vice. Cell In end tllloiue "I! dlfllonltiee. G. F. Ilutchason I. G. IUTOIIISON G. I. 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