s w‘: .1 .4 : ( r ,3“ /l‘./,v ...a...>\._-._ h. can; ‘Ht-u. Inv!‘ alum r.-<»- HQ- "w, w" ",1 ‘pr g» g5: 194p- Ifipb sing‘ f Blngham. Ii nnln n {iltles from butllcliclll. T-rtmsnav, Saw” Swirl MAN ’S DIAMOND ,1»- u- ... l Every man's i BECK‘?! l. l erirei iila i» v i l l i l A wide svlcr- 7 lion of these dependable watches in a host. 0i‘ slliuri, styles. W. W. Weliner Ltd. wrlewelcrs _Since V1368 | ‘m? s STRETFlIl-llt i f All wrapped up in i is a new ivm- lnLl-rl medical corps hy Wanna-milk“ " n~l m» lllf‘ -(‘ni. .\. if. It. or may be us. or two-man earl-x in rrinoiing “Th! Srroiul .\.\\nrd Ell. Genrgc :\HI'.‘(I l5; 1w» up Kitehen-"r, (int, i-‘lli ‘fhqhrl-IF- lliig-r tlngulnhed Urn-not ," H“, Dllflpe rniil, Oflllfllls in tin‘. n": hGf 0f Hi!‘ '\‘ti'.':'l i l" ' -.~_ _ : iers. ifanadinn “Th Wu». ‘ ‘:7’ ' For Foot ltlanelils l tux-xi 1 l‘ H. .l. .\. lilCi)'.'i“‘.. l)?‘ i i I43 Great (i"wi‘"." "fro?! CIIAICLU'l"i‘|.'l"ilHN. I‘.'I.l. (lcslre I ‘ Handsome, llli|§> sivc inunniiiig with flawless. f it; 'l the. lll-llh.i=?ll'"iiliiil '~~ Finds Fanned by Official G Special to the New York Herald Tribune and Charlottetown Guard- lian. CODYTIQUL i943, By John Steinbeck 1DNDON.— International amlty, good fellowship and mutual un- derstaiiding between the British and Americans plum reaches 9, hitch where war between the two sl‘0lll5 very close. 'I'his is usually directed understanding and sires rise to some very silly situ- atlons. Directed understanding and tol- erance _ordi.narily begin Wm; ggn. iJYHIIZilIlOXiS. Our troops approach- ill}! England are told in pamphlets what the British nre li e, where time)‘ are tender and where hard. iwhut words, innocent at home, are lnujsh and usiv on the British ear. This has much the same eflect as telling a friend. “You must meet Jones-wonderful fellow. You two W111 Bet along. I lust know that." With a start like that, Jones has igot twu strikes _on him before ou iever meet him. He has to ive ‘down being a charmln fellow be- ifore you can tolerate im. In this jcase, it is even worse because the =Brltlsh are told that they will like jus when they just get to know us. The result is that the two oome together like strange dogs, each one looking ior trouble. 1t takes long time to live down this kind of understanding. Generalizations n Hlndranee .. The second phase of getting along is carried on in innumerable attempts to describe each other. The British are so and so. The Americans are so and so. The Brit- lish are iust like other people only ‘more so. The Americans are boast- lers who love money. This love of. money is. of course. iulique wiihl Allicl'lc.ills. Every other 990F319 dc-l lusts money’. The Americana are line. sturdy people. The British ,ure linc, sturdy people. This is ob- tlOiLSlv n he. There are Iood cues innd stinkers on both sd {ting thcm up doesn't; do any good. ~ ,Just about the time you get 11 lik- ,in;l and u respect for a number oi ‘Englishmen. some one comes along land tells you about the English [and you hurc to start from scratch in. This some thing. undoubted- hiippens to the English, too. l The third little pitfall 6011081115 .t.hc qualities of the fighting men. ‘A big. rnngy, old mountain boy ‘tomes rolling down the street with 111s knuckles just barely clearing the puvelnellt, and right behind I15 o. GilillTlSlllflli, shoulders back, ichln up. nine buttons glowing like lnndo. Immediately the mlfipllrlson its mad. One is a fine soldier and thr- ctbcr is a lout The fact 0i tho matter 1S that they’ are both '- .\'(7li sec a little 'lil€lCl'i‘fl Tommy like a crab and ' us good a _ world ins lino im-(i, bu‘ l‘\ his rccurd. llc‘. on his soltiit-rlv bearing, (iuntl Ont-s and Bad Ones Thc whole trouble seems to lie . “n.4, ffianadian Hospital lSiiip In Sicily A l. L I E D HEADQUARTERS. ‘NORTH AFRICA, Jilly l8 -~ (CP Lhllll?» --» Cunrttirrs iirst hospital slim is in illt‘ Nleditcrrancail, it was learnt-d lit-re Saturday. n r 'l‘hc Ludy Eclson, first Can- . l nziiun husp al ship outfitted in the picu-nt w; . was commissioned at Halifax recently. She is a fully" equipped ship. with accommodat- ions lor patients of all types. an inn-rating room, luboixiulrles, and it medical and iliihlllf; stall corps. Pursuant it) intertiutloriol law which uccolxis protection to hus- piiril ships. the vessel is brightly tnnntud in the wsv laid down for hospital ships, and she travels fully liuhtctl. . A descrlptioir of the ship has bcvn communicated to enemy . coiuitries and its movements are made known to the enemy. In Memoriam MR. PAT [Ll UK SANPHY The death of Patrick Sanphy of the train near Brunswick, Maine, on Saturday, Junc l9, 11943. while en-' rtutc to Lynn, Mas-s, to visit his brothers and sisters nil of whom reside tllcrc. I .\lr. sanphy was in normal health , when he loll. home but within three l hours oi his (lestination he was overcome with an attack of Coron- ary Emlxllism from which he fail- cd to ITPDVCI‘ and he was prunin- cod dead when the train reached tile who; at Brimswiok. Maine. His r» mains were escorted to his home by his sister, Mrs. J. Chadderton, his nlccc Miss Frances LeBlanc. and hLs brother Mr. Cyrus Sanphy all ni‘ Lynn. Mass! l Mr. Snnphy was a prosperous | farmer cn Bnlrlwirfs Road where he rl-skkwi all his lifc. He will be great- , if." inl=sc<i iu that vicinity. Tho following relatives are left in cherish his mcmory and mourn their loss: His wife. Mrs. Laura San- , two dnilzhtcrs, l-lnzcl, a stud- ’ Ill .c.(7lll'l.\ Crnvt-nt and Anne at. homo: his aged fntlhcr, James San-l n. Mans. Mrs. David Shanahan, Mr... Anthony u-Blnnc, Mrs. John (Jhnrlrlcrion. Mrs Charles MncDonr aid. Three brothers who also reside in Lynn. Mass: Joseph Sanphy. Fun-lard Snnphy and Cyrus Sam. i n: Numerous spiritual bouquets were t r rrivw‘. from manv friend; and l-e- ~ ir-‘lren "Dv- pflll hearers were Messrs.) Franz-H Crrrornn. Josoph llald- l win, Thomas Snnprfiy. Jcssph Cili- lrn. Elmer McQunld and Edward, f‘ "n: '1'» funeral was inrrzciv nticndeti built! llililil’! rlw-c at Flt Turrnw . il l" i" 'l'in- ll '\'. Ffiilhor Crokcn l iI l 1 v LONDON. # IFP» - British) nrrs are will: lees than 20 . rcn! 1"’ Ill .* _ ‘tar rrnstlmp-i l'fl of v~r\t"<"ri!‘i. (‘ . J J. Astor. ~~ ll in." ‘limos sol-i .11. Llilils ' by the press iisnll l Steinbeck Reports Generalities ‘Mislead Both Yanks, Tommies Each Nation's False Ideas About the Other, to Promote Friction, 1i havin es sch lsometlnng or Baldwin's Road, P.E.l., occurred on l and lour sisters all living inl pu‘ oodwill Booklets, Tend Nat Friendship in eneralities. Once you have generality you are stuck You have to defend it- Lets sady; the British and or Ameri- can soi er is a superb soldier. The British and or American officer is B Bentlemnn. You start in with a lie. There are good ones and bad ones. You find out for yourself which is which if you can be let alone. And when you see an American second lieutenant misbe- in a London club, it is ex- pecte that you will deny it. 0r. if you mcet an ill-mannered, surly gopingay of a British officer, the rtlsi are expected to deny that he exists. But he does exist and they hate him as much as we do. The trouble with generalities, par- ticularly patriotic ones, is that hey force people to defend things they don't normally like at all. , It must be a great shock to an Englishman who is convinced that Americans are boosters when he meets a modest one. His sense of rightnes is outraged. Pre-con- ceived generalities are bad enough without trying consciously to start new ones. Recently a Georgia boy with a face like a catfish and the line soldiexrly bearing o1 p. coyote complained bitterly that he had. been here four days and hadn't seen a duke. He had got to be- lieving that there weren't any dukg: and he was shocked beyond wo . Somewhere There is Truth Somewhere there is truth or ml approximation of it. If there is‘ an en agement and the British say " e got knocked about u bit" and the Americans sav "They shot the hell out of us," neither state- ment is true. Understntement ls ilniversnll_v' admired herc and ovcr- statement is dctcsted, “herons Iieithoi“ one is near the truth nntl lioiihcr one had zinyihing to do with the fighting quality of the soldier involvecL. We know that you can't sav the Americans are ' other when those Americans are crackers and inn‘:- legged men from the Panhandle ‘and neat business men in blfW-nlfil, .imd shoddy j(‘\VCll'_\' salesmen and‘ high rigscrs from the ivucds in, Oregon. And it is Just as sillv inl try to describe the British Wllcfli they are Lnnc-isliire men and, Wehhmeli and (‘t>(‘lill.f‘\'= and LircY-i pool lcnuwhtwrr-mun. “'1' not “long very well us individuals, but lust il‘c moment we ltccntnc the All19i‘!-“'l“"> and they hecomc ‘re British trcub» lc is not inr behind. ‘ l Fifty miles from Pembroke, 0nt., at 0d Woodcraft ls covered in s. course \ ‘J l...» l Putting their theory into practice, scrgt. P. llusrd of the Regiment dc Quebec ilefi) and Lieut. .I.J. Deniger of the Regiment do Devil, let a spring-pole snare for small gnrne. They are both Instructors It the Con. ‘ iidian Army's whnnl of Woodcraft at Venne Depot In the Quebec woods where men of the Canadian army learn to be skilled vvoodsmell. Woodcraft Schopl Turns C had the Quebec woods, the Canadian Army operates a school of Woodcraft where soldiers, N.C.O.‘s and offl- cers learn the art of living in the bush. Every phage TUE QQAKQIAN Heavy Allie Action Over d Air Sicily By Balms-u Morin Associated Press Staff Writer HEADQUARTERS IN ALLIED NORTH AFR-IOA, July 1.6 —(AP)— Hundreds of Allied bombers, strik- ing from bests in North Africa and the Middle East, heaped "very great damage" upon Messina. yesterday in one o the heaviest assaults ever dei- ivered against the enemy's most im- portant Sicilian port, following a rlaid the night before by Canadian f yers. Other Allied planes, many of them operating from captured air- flelds in Sicily, continued their lur- ic-us attacks against Axis positions throughout the island and enemy shipping in surrounding waters. More than 200 heavy and medium bombers, escorted by fighters. blus- ied harbour installations and rail- way communications at M-essina barely two mil’, from the Italian mainland and almost the only port through which the enemy can rein- Franco’s Views 0n Monarchy MADRID, July 18 — (AP) —Gefl. Francisco Franco, in o long-await- ed statement on domestic policy, said Saturday he docs not oppose the possibility of a restoration of the Spanish monarchy but added that the monarchy should never serve as a tool for foreign Dro~ pagnnda. The Phalnnge Party and its pro- gram, he said, is "the only iuat and true solution" of Spain's prob» lems. Franco also indicated that the question oi’ restoration is being used by foreign propaganda iii Spain, although he did not sav hour. Hc mntic it clear that he con- ceives of the monart-liys return at the moment he decides it is pro< piticuls. and then it will be "ndopr cd" by the Phalonue Party move- ment which he heads. He spoke to the National Coun- cil oi the Phalnngc I‘; ty. MIXER?» GO BACK TO WORK "Pl ORFYCF, N. 9 fCP> —~.'\l){‘l1l- “'1 s" will l‘i3ll'l'll in wnl‘ Eur in ll" Fl ch h": irccn itllc since Thor r‘ d to lrttwli to work i0- morrou, .3" nn unanimous vcic Venne Depot in operated under Sash In the wood: you don't have ambulanees or trucks to carry casualties or heavy loads. The lump line by which the pioneers packed heavy loads force his shrinking Sicilian defen- ces from the continent. Seventy - live American four- ‘ rs from the Nfiddle East duinpgmmoroioslmm film pounds o exp ves on ess- lna for their partin the devastating daylight assault. Attacking in three waves the big bombers con- centrated on tin lerrytermllnal and the railway yards. then continued on across the Messina strait to bomb the opposite terminal at San Giov- anni on the Italian mainland. Meanwhile, torpedo - carrying Eeaulighters operating over the Tyrrhenian Bea knocked another hole in the enemy's naval supply lines by blowing up one large tun- ker. setting fire to another and leaving a ‘LOGO-ton merchant ship ina for their part in the devastating coastal commnnd planes also shot up an enemy destroyer and a cargo vessel and blasted a Junkers-w transport plane out of the a-ir. l taken at a special meeting today. Their grievance will be submitted to the War Labor Board at Ottawa, it was decided after recommendat- ions to this effect were made by officers of the local and mine pom- mittee. A Matter 0f Size OTTAWA, July l8 —(CP)— It's all a matter of size. Justice Minister St. Laurent told the House of Commons last night that criminal code regulations cov- cririg deceptive advertising should be changed to meet cases like that 0i a store which advertised: "Nu lire sale hero." The wording was all right. but the "no" was very small, and tut- word "here" was very small. Mr. St. Laurent said lL appeared the slim was deliberately intended to deceive. ‘The House approved an amend- ment to the code to mukc liable tn fine of up to $200 or six lYlOllLllS| imprisonment. nr both, nn advert- iser udlnse “ndvc-rtiscnietlt is tentlollally so worded or nrrdngrrl as to be deccn u» m" misleading"- CLQFFFZ" f‘ l llLl. SCHOOL A . JULY 20, 194,3 u‘ __§ Why eat s cereal with only one or two advantages, when delicious Post's Bran flakes gives you threefi They help prevent constipation due to luck of bulk in the diet-help to keep you fit and smiling. They contain wheat noun-filament- carbohydrates and roteins, useful quan- tities of iron and pgosphorus, other food essentials. And with all this, they have n grand, malty-rich flavor that is a favorite with millions. Your grocer has Post's Bran Flakes in two sizes of package-regular size and giant economy package. Equally good for you as a cereal or in bran muifins. Delicious, sugarless bran mulfin recipe on each pack- age. Mann» mm ~14- 05s my FlA/(ES WIT/r‘ OTHER PARTS 0F Wl/f/IT BIO! A Product of General Food: ....\ l friends gathered at the school for The afternoon was pleasantly LIFEBvOAT MXRAGES ' ‘spent. in games and sports, The pup- Prines were presented to the nup-‘ils were tthen given a treat of ico- LONDON. - fCPl-The Miriisti iis by the teacher Miss Catherine cream and lunch throuuh tlhe kind- of War Transports pamphlet to i: Johnston. The teacher was prescnt- ness of the Arlington Women's ln-‘cnrrricd in every lifeboat says ms cal with a beautiful gift and a sumlstitute. lshnuki not necessarily oonzaidi o! money from her pupils. Dilriniz the year the pupils of this‘ ViPlllFPlVtPS ilaht-headed if whi.‘ ‘Twelve pupils received Grade VlILrrhcol purchased $64.00 worth of fr“: art- adrifi they see ships l the annual school closing. On “Pdncsriw alicrvnmi Jwlt- ‘he; h a 11 rum of r ems and- Certlfiofltt‘? find alRrBQnumbl-‘UE- War Saving Btnmns for whlzh lhcynlwizd but should make certain bl vein! Jaguar and Senior writing deserve much credit. [lore pillling tovvztrds it. POI‘ I 1C3 S. C.0.'s is being taught how to place a sprlngpole snare for small galmukhandy to a soldier forced to live off the land in wooded country. The in- structor is Lieutenant Robert Brunnellc of Duck Lake, who might he a’s Sgldiers into Skilledliwoodmen . Jm-ucf’ hi’. ‘e . pared. At right a class of Canadian soldiers at Venn Depot use thc knife to make axe handles starting wit! I block of wood. Closeup shows how the knife is uset by an expert. ’l'hcse men will be highly trainel vvoodsmen as well as soldiers when they finish thi Army's Woodcraft course in the Quebec woods. The crooked knlfe-“the knife tat opened the con- tinent" according to skilledjvoodsmen-ll the tool of all trades in the bush. it is the tool with which im- plements are" made, axe handles, paddles, tent pep, or with which game can be skinned and meals pyg- fvr Ion; dlltlncee cameo Into its ovvn again at the school of vvoodcralt. Sergt. P. lluard. Rest, dc Quebec demonstrate. how casualties can be carried In wooded country. Ilc has upwards of 800 pounds Of CIIMHII fighting men on his back in this picture, vvlth Army webbing moth‘ the tlnp line. Protection from storms, or llvlne quarters for ins-n, can be built when "I lnny flghtl In wooded terrain. Thin Wigwam as at top is built by limb’ In| birch saplings Into the earth, then tvlni: the hmt tops together a!" covering the whole with canvas or tnrpaulln. In the lower picture men If tending the Canadian Army's wonder-aft school at Venne Depot. W" get I spray before plunging Into the bush, where black files are the P?" out enemy. jcmadlnu Arm! 7h Canadian Army's