HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1941-12-31, Page 21a
'r.
Vit•i "Cute"
�► Child to Steal
Welfare 1 .Association Says.
Habits and Attitude; Learn-
ed Uy;• Instruction `
A' Purr -gear -old• child avian takes
penniesfrom ,her' father".s• #rocket$
or cookies tromllthe kitchen cup- •
k:. L
-404,•4.7,10.4Y. • seem Acute". but
the cuteness wears off When the.
same child ; takes cookies from .the.
grocery ,Stere without-- PaYing - for .
theist 1(3ass'- E, P. Kennedy, mental
hygiene expelt;•of• talo 'Cliiid Wel-'
fare Association,- says..' •
•Child welfare workers were 'con '..•
ceraed about wily, a ch ld steals,.:
ratherthan.•the.'fact-that his steals.
H+or'inatance, ,taking ':the cookies
from the :cupboard, .was•tno differ;
rent: m tiae: ehiid;s''iniind; than �tal
ing them from',the gracery�store..:
but: a great difference .was ' seen
by. 'bath the grocer and the= per,.
cuts.
"Habits and attitude are learn-
ed very 'largely'through inatihe-' •
i' ton.:and::imita<tlon, • -and, Peery '. at
foie years is old enough to learn
to: respect other -.people's property.
if your child ,sees jou-respecting
other peopie,'s possssions,,and
in;particular, he sees' that his •
.
things' ,are not. 'disturbed -Without
• his.' knowledge or• consent, he will,
soon learn to• imitate yon and be
able t•o, distinguish between. what
o. erty .. • -what. .nota_
is:,._'his•_ Pl' P �'and
•-. ?is .._....
Until your child`does :learn this lie
cannot be: said'to'. steal.".,
A
thing 'to, be borne in • mind by
parents, Miss ' `Kennedy believed,,
:*as, that .eli=iidren' • are naturally
self-ce tre , and easily embarrass-
ezt it-'vvtirere%re ad'visa-bi-,
teach then' t64' b. unselfishand a0s0
to+seek to facilitate the'little boy's
iris - ion- withother-
.
children;` as. it' was a'natural and
.
neeeS&ry''ttking>:fdr them .to - try, . to
Crake friends. of their, own age.
•
.tt1Wa<
uss�an� � Newfoundland
Bended • •'Gull Flies From
,:Within, Arctic Circle in Rus-
sia,,to,•-NIrrth America, - '
•'The' flight of e g
a ,'kittiwakull •
from within the ^ Arctic' Circle, in
Russia' to' Newfoundland is reveal
ed by a :bird banding recovery : roc -
.ors furnished..recently to theCan-
adiag . Department vi , Mines • and
ll,esourceii through the co-operation
y�
e2aae- �'tmea�oit�T.h#autnB
repe t % Contiitiieilen,. +o'ie ryCovrerne
udlnd.
..,1ri,Qnt, •,Newfo n a . ' •
,•The 1, ng • o -distance b ird
txa
veller
was captured.. 'at Bonavista'
bour, Newfoundland, ,. during, the
autumn of 1939_ , and- subsequent
vestigatien of the band.•it wore re-
vesico- that the gull had been
banded during the summer of 1938
'on the island: .of Kharlov by a:
worker.of'.t1ie Central Bureau for
,. Sirs ,Ringing,. Moscow. The island'
ioi •Kharlev lies. in the 'Barents Sea,
.,of. the coast .of Murmansk, ,about
two hundred ensiles • within the Are-;
tic; -Circle:.
'this species of kittiwake, known
as the, . Atlantic kittiwake, ' is • a
colony 'nesting bird' of -'the gull
family.' It 'is, the smallest of the
herring gull typeof coloration,
which .species it resembles rather
closely---except..for its smaller size.
The Atlantic kittiwake is rare in
14orth America except on the east
- coast. i
.The tracing of this bird's, flight
,i'rom the northern coast of ' Russia
' to the eastern seaboard . of North
ineyten la ,en. effective demonstra-.
. tion -of. the. vale of bird shending
tri determining migration routes,
-breeding and wintering • grounds,
concentration points, and economic
• status od wild birds. In North
Ainierica • this ;important work is
carried on In full cooperation be.
tween the governments of Canada,
the United -States, Newfoundland,
Wetted, and to a certain extent
with South : American countries
•
of
British Draftees
A
re' Amazingly Fit
•
' A surprisingly high standard of
physical fitness has been discov-
• ered in 'the military age group 37
to .40,. now being 'called pp. in
Britain, according' to The London
y Express, tin War Office
authority. Six out of rep men in
this . group have been found fit. •
During the last six months one-'
fifth of the men originally placed
in Grade -III; the. loWest category
accepted by the -set•vices, • have
been •re-examined, found physi-
cally • • improved and posted ; to
ighting, units. • These -.men were
formerly serving -.as clerks, order-
lies, batmen and tore keepers.
instructions have been issued by
the War Office...that all Grade 111
men, are to he re-examined after
a few months of army life. Whey
ever possible their places are ,to
be taketikby' the. Auxiliary; Terri-
torial' Service...
In Grade II comparatively few
men have been regraded. This
grade ii,composed of men who are
not7_iuite up,to the standard need-
ed lit fighting units and whose
condition does- not improve with
Army treining. They are, hew-
eve''', ee,pable of .tr04r,oue duties.
1
LFA 'TOLL IN FORCE WITHDRAWALS
ll�iu�''• r :�15 Ila1; .Cnxi'.: r.r� ..,.,... ,%.+)Y'a .:�:.si:r7G34:'N e.�:�'•$ . %ry '..(2�...?D .Ain,...!•...... --.-
Hardened' troops like these, of the crack Manchester -Regiment, are taking a heavy toll of Jap
' invaders on the beaches and: in the jungles of'Malaya. At. one .time. many ' Canadians were with the
Manchesters. A two-way Japanese offensive is pushing south towards' Singapore and north : into Burma.
C.
In . Washington, .Abassador' Gas-
• •
�'. , -of Nanism ton . m
Henry-Rays Complained re-
-s.:C Christianity--
. •
. received
.t.no...t�Qextra
rations
.b.from
• i •
home via the international Red
Nazis Reject. Centuries -Of
-human Aeprrationn, Relates
eew tmines
• Thi ways of German propaganda
ile'- r- to :fathom --
tilt-as-War
:these of .the 'last': war. There
•must be •a. purpose in the Ndzi :et=
tacke .on Christianity and in Ber-
lin's 'willingness to have those at-
tacks broadcast in this country.,
- .One oan't' readily grasp' wihat -the
purpose is. Not long ago Berlin.
permftted.a despatch to 'quote 'from
' a new German bedt •seller in which
..the assertion is made :that "We,
Germans have-beeneealfejl-b f -at'
to be 'the first to break, with Chris-
tianity.' • Is', this the: way to ,cult'-
*ate a friendship for Nazism In
the United States, in;;Latin Ameri-
ca, or in'Axis Italy?" it even stirs
up protests is. German* itself, as
a 'letter from 'the • Catholic bishops,
read. in German ' pulpits, testifies:
The• Nazis, do'not Merely ''reject'
Christianity or the -Hebrew Testa.'
zee
the
9 iiratfons. If' y' are
Or :filial* a p
right there is no truth in any one:
of •the- following quo
tations:' '
• ' Ideal' of Civilized Men
Right aspiration -Is the aspir
'ariastowardrenunciation, -the as--
pIration__teveard benevolenee;• the
aspiration toward kindness,=From
the Aryan Eightfold Patb• a: the
Gautama Buddha. •
notto do to
' tee
Perfect
.is
.i1•
e
cv
others as you would not' -wish done
' to yourself. -Confucius. -
' Tlie more he helps others, the;
more he henefits himself, the more
he gives, to others the more heste ,.
himabli:•-Froin. Tao -Te -
attributed to'Lao Tie. .
• ,Thou• shalt love thy neighbor as
thyself, -Leviticus.
Therefore, all things • whatsoever
ye would that men should do to
you, do ye even so to them. -From
the 'Sermon on the, Mount.
° • This. ethical •ideas for it is; a
single thing, not 'in the least 'con-
fue d -runs through all great' re -
and all philosophies that
.have had an enduring 'hold: •on
men's rinaginations. Itis, the ideal
of all civilized men today, however
tar it may be from ilsalizatiou. in
the individual or communal life, In
the non -Nazi part of the world it
does .not need defence. One would •
think ' that the consciously clever •
Nazis, however' foul their actual
purposes; would pay lip service to
it. But they do not. In that arro-
gant and, • stupid, Indifference to
other people's dearest• sentiments
lies, perhaps, the seed of their:-
'Cross -as' the' 60,000 British, pile -
onera• do, and haus scaresly enough
'to•--eat.-.ir, -Vtchye--spo-kesmaf
blamed the 'detention of the pris-
oners -.for ' a ' 40 per cent decrease
it1 the _birth'-rate__and_predicted-;-;
that "at this rate the French' will
disappear in twenty years."
• At the same' time Vichy issued
a series of alarming statistics/. that'..
reinforced the envoy's , plea.. Some
'52 per cent of its kindergarten .chil=•,
dren were ill from privation,, while
infant mortality hadtrippled dur
ing the first halt of 1941. French
babies : new. 'average only five•;
poun et birth -tad ten -year -400s --
weigh fourteen. • pounds, less than
Britishchildren of the same , age:.
Similar . eonaitions-=•malnutrition
and the lack of medicine, fuel and
warm clot•g.: prevailed among
adults and sent the death rate for
the first five months of 1941 up 43
per cent among people ever 61) and
22 per cent among those under '60.:..
e
Jim Ei.1.,•
__m�ntia,;: '.1bQls"bi�e' _t;•t1
R
g•
French Fear - That
Race Is D'i'ng Out
Decline. in :Population • Rel-
ative to That of Other Coun-
tries -
ev
There is a,.great.fear that has
haanted the minds of Frenchmen,, '
in peace and in war, for genera ,
none: that their race is in, danger
of dykes,"out, says Newsweek. Ever •
since Napoleonic times, • the .popu-
lation of France has 'declined rela-
ti oe. to that of 'other European
Countries.. From 1870 to 1913 .Ger-
mane 'rnuitipiled
Ger-mane'muitipiled at the rate of 'six '
times' that of Frenchmen., The
losses of' -tile" World War were a
staggering :blow to France...
.Actual French .casualties iii the
present conflict. were ion-ly a tragi
•tion of those suffered. in 1914-18.
But the peculiar deveiopment.,of
this war 'has brought the• threat
of racial •extermination closer • te-
• France than ever before. There are
tiree reasons .for this: (1) the
piiKitt.of • the 1,350,000 French
prisoners still' held by. the Ger-
mans, (2) the effect of' the food '
' shortage on children; and- (3) the
vffa.•! of rationing on 'adults..
1,
irony, '-Recently six' Pamous Paris
res fauran" 11-exim's, Fouquet"s,
Tour -d -_Argent T;aperouse, Ih'ou-
'ant, acid Carton, were treed of,:lood,
restrictions.:. A meal there, without
Wine, costs the equivalent of about,
a11.50' ;r, higher -re „rice that Only
--Nesier can• r acrd,
Bi ars" FOY'' 'Brltal(1i -,
O
Csreat War prder
A writer in the Toronto Finan-
cial 'Post gives a vividly 'encour
agingpicture of • Canada's "Boats
for Britain" . program. Briefly,
this is ;it: '
Cargo ships: 153 ordered,;' 7
launched,' , estimated.. cost, $275
millions: Corvettes: 185 ordered,
77' launched, 40 delivered, esti-
mated cost $81 millions. . Mine=
sweepers: 85 ordered, 59 launch-
ed, 40 delivered, total 'cost ;$51.
Millions. Destroyers:, 2 ordered.
Wood boats: $9 million program
over 50 percent. complete.
Thus 'Canada's greatest 'war
order and, in-, some',' :respects, the
st:;.s ayteiafre e n se
-fig hcrtr,~'!�
P.
.
i >'
THIS CURIOUS OUs
WORLD B
W
uisioanr
t
.........................................
.-/-' 's1.,r.4,,t!.,./ 'r t.',ffrz,wi., +%G/cY0C 2 �,,
. COPR
1930.8Y NEA SERVICE. INC.
SCIENTISTS SAY:
THAT THIS
IS N'Cs. S1JCH
THING AS A
SPECIAL
43,4v4/A/
DSOC2
ATTACK AND .,I<l L.L.•
RPITTLE57Vi4K4"5./
11-1EV- dIDPAP'--fN 1 'i`H:E '
AIR AND gtsESCEND'LiPON'
THE SNAKE V Vh14 THEIR
SHARP HAND
'THEW 5F'RING AWRY
3=3! a
A SPECIMEN of the giant turtle that once swam the Kansas seas
may be seen at the Peabody. Museum, at 'Vale University.' It far ,
exceeds in size any turtle living today. The creature probably
became extinct when larger and more vqracious animals devefoped'
in the ancient seas. •
• NEXT: How many'; square feet of skin do you have on your
, body?
Arctic,'Frontiers
Ideal Battlefields
Advantages in Arctic Cam- .
paigning Would Be.With De-
fenders.
•
The United States did' exactly
righf, in moving into- Greetiiand
ant Iceland before the Nazia:had a
chance to attempt it, and in inak-
Mg secure our hold on Alaska iiy
means of new army.and navy bases
in Alaska,' If •the vinwaa expressed
',reeentl'y. in • leriladelphia by Vilh-'
j'almur Stefansson, noted Arctic'-
•explerer. are correct, Science Ser
Vice' .maintains. Dr: Stefansson• de•
Glared that the. Arctic -regions, far
fi`oin• being an area Impossible for
:winter• fighting, . are almost' ideal
battlegrounds • for• properly `trained' '
. ands etiuipled 'troops , •
The •,time when, nianoeugring fn .
the Arctic wet'Illd .be really 'difficult
is in'summer. Then;; thO vast level
stretches of,niarshy,•ground, three-',
ded , by wide, shallow rivers and
dotted with innumerable lakes,
would be veritable ,troop -traps, es-
pecially,for mechanized -forces. But
in winter, when the land' 3s frozen
and the lakes covered with deep
• ice, righting vehicles on wheels and
tractors and ski -equipped. airplanes
aril
.can get about with greatest f
The Far 'North, despite wide-
spread impressions to the contrary,.
does not have a worse winter cli-
mate' _the,
f
than - man ._ _.
its __.. _
mate`y E►a _
Northwestern United States and
ac'ent - Q'uinc'es' -of -Ganada:. -In-
tact',
In-fact;; many Arctic lands have rela-
tively' mild winter climates. ice -
land; 'Which
ce•land;'w'hich' lies below the _.Arctic
' Circle, . and Spitzbergen, ' w'h'teh is
well above , are • ep °"air oO
ditioned" by branches of •the C,Dult
Stream •. ' •
:&dvan'.tages.:id--AretiC. ea', palgn
ing would lie with .the' defenders.
By adopting the "Indian tighter"
tactics used by the Finns when they
were 'resisting Reissian invasion' in
the winter of 1939-40 defendersof
almost any Arctic terrain could de-
feat •greatly .• superior •nuimbers of
invading 'troops: But if the Arctic
frontiers were .not defended, the
-great rivers like the Mackenzie' and•
th Yukon would form grd bhigh-
ways for easy inland mardhes.
Work'' of *Red. Cross '
Covers Wide ;Field
Mr. Jrtistice P. . • H. Gordon,'
Chairman of the National Exheu-
tive of the Canadian Red . Cross,
sen e ase m Tee
11z�atlrell.srre e>�k
sr -a �
4
RADIO
DIALING Wi'i'H DAVE:, '
He's , the guy wb o .knows ALL
.: the anewersl Who, has been sok:
° ing%•-questions successfully for
many years on the networks in
h'ls original quiz show 4'True at'
False." True or ,.,ltialse comes . to
CKOC Monday night January. the
5th,. at 9.30 E.D.S.T. If you haven't
heard Harry lately, you're going
to enjoy this new network aeries.
The women in the borne. - in
the' factory - in the world of bus- ,
Mese, have become vital figures
• during'thea•'past. few Weeks. Their'
efforts range from .knitting socks
at home for • the forces, toper-
• formifng -difficult •tasks'. originally
'done by men. To unite the women
• of the country . in their: war. effort,
CK -OC presents "the Monday night
8,30 .D.S T. feature "A Woman
Speaks • on War," with Mrs.'Edith:
Hyder.
* • •
The new season brings newpro-.
grams ' to Your local station -
'watch •for. them. And, if you're in
the habit, of tuning .in So CKOC,
• you will hear an, unusual dramatic
treat on Tuesday night,' Jan: 6th,
when the Liberty. Theatre of the
' Air, will be heand..for the first .time.
Broadcast from:8.00 to 8.30..D.S.T:,
'the:
;Air -Th
tre .� dramatizes
the ea
life 'and .experiences of the rained
•_,br.-.Henry,. tda'xweli _the great
preacher, healer and Christian. Ad-
apted from the best-seller "lit His
Steps," the, Liberty Theatre, pi's-
sentati'ons are' complete excerpts in
You'll'
each Tuesday. night product e,o
them: gripping, heal*
warming, and tender. Tuesday see
8.00 p,m. D.S.T. - "In Hie Stead.~ -
• • •'
With the w.o'r actually brought
to
this„continent, news and news..
commentaries' become inoreasingi7.
,significant.: The National News,
carried' by practically all •stations
, in Canada, . 11 pin. • D.S.T. daily.
is the day's finest ;Most autfientis
resume. It does. not attempt `to
analyze or speculate,. but bales!'
• all the day's news ' w,ith any a*
nificance attached to It: -In: the Cow
atY'en'tary field; there are 'qualified
spokesmen w'al'let, number.' Mo• •
Master •:university's 13ii'. 16. T.. 1Sa&. '
iron reviews .the• news .daily- at
7:35 D,S.T;, from, CKOC .Saturday
excepted _ Sunday at' 6;00,p1*.
44 as 111"
1160 Listening Tips: ,
Catch -'the two most recent ad-
ditions to Sunday en CKOCI,
1:00 ' p.m.. - 'N. B..C.'e., famed sin-
ing trio, The Ranch 'Boys! 1.16 .p.m.
-,a WaltZ and A• -Song -•=- melodies
by Harry .Hmol'lick's gi+eeit 'welts
orchestra, and songs by gue?st:4it'
fists.
•
4.16 Sunday' on • CKOC, -Offers
the unusual' music of Primo. Scala
and his :accordeon band, in Hieb.
AAA. resent.
Record of the. week--Cenoertat
for :Two, by Freddie Martin;. the
vcoal adaptation of his •., famed
1 Piano Concerto recording:.
,F•
UR RADIO: LOG
TORONTO STATIONS`
omit Seek, 'GBL 740k.
C.KCL, 580k, :CITY 10104
U.S.. 'NETWORKSWEAF LN.b.C. Red( 1030k. WJZ N.B,C. " Blue 770k
WABC (G.fl.S.) 880k
WOR (M.Bs) '710k
CANADIAN STATIONS'
CFOS. Owen 5d. 1400k
CKOC ' Hamilton 1150t
CHML ' Hamilton ' 80011
CKT•B St. Cath. 1230k
„MITE Montreal 600k
CFCH North Bay 1230k
---0F00- -Chatham. ' 030k-
CFPL• London. 1570111
CJCS S rptford 1240111
011110 Kingston 1411011
CJir 'Sault' Ste. M. 1400k
•
MICE Kirkqud L: -560k
CKCR 'W'atez loo. '1400k,
CKAO. Montreal 430k
MECO Ottawa '1310k
CKGB • Timmins 1470k
CKSO, Sudbury '' '70.0k.
'C1CPO' Brantford 1380k
CKLW' Windsor '800k •
CKNX Winghum 123011
11.S, STATIONS •
WEBR Buffalo ' 1340k
WHAM 'Rochester 1180k
WLW'-Cincinnati' 700k
WGV Schenectady 810k
KDKA Pittsburgh 1020k•
-WRBM--Ghicugo--- 780k
WHEN Buffalo 030k
WGR Buffalo 550k
WKBW Buffalo 1520k
WJR Detroit t'00,
-1-811413,1'."9s. -V9
GSH England ; 0:51a1
-080 England 9.58m
GSD Englund 11.75m
GSE England 11.86in
GSF England 15.14m •
•G8G England 17.70m
GSP ' England 1u:31m'
GSv Englund-' 17.81m
EAR Spain' 0.48101'
CAW Spain Oddly
RAN • Russia 060m
ItNE Hallett/ 12.0010 , 114/110 Russia Russia 15.180
WGEA Schenectady
15:33-1
• WCAB. Phila. '15.27M
WRUL Boston 15.1511.
WCBX N. Yorke 1'1.83x1:
■
:' AMERICAN STATESMAN
people- ae -newer coneeptio ser 'tines a rW: aI 5rg.: ---
work
c
statesman,
is • organization is doing.
o k' gAlexander
comments the �VInilsOr Star. .It
is a subject on which there is -,,
great lack of information, and ,on 7 (1757-1804).
which tile public, should : bei8H wrote ---
n-
>, or tracts' on d
foriried. the -
To many people, the. Red Cross, Constitution,
is simply an, organization that 1:2.G' dy
sends bandages 'and similar medi- 13 To decorate.
cal supplies to the war zone.'It- 15 Past. A
Answer to Previous Puzzle
T a etl'V �G
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R - .A
P
1 '-
s
A
T
E
TPAYMEN'
N
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w
S
E-
1
RD
C C NOG S
1. F: EWE.
REACa
TOM'..
C ' S®
A D M
NOOE1
� T 14 E -a
-Ig RE
.I"If.X
Vis- DM
EMI -UN.
1I' P S•UL [AMR
TAI
is,' of course, much more than 16 Before. • rj N
0
that.Itdoes
work that is under-
17 Small.
C
taken -an& can -he accomplished -le-.: _ • .18 -Jaunty.
no other organization. Its service
in , keeping prisoners of war' . in
touch with their, relatives, and in
furnishing them with food and
other comforts, for instance,
Would be sufficient for any assn-
elation, but it is only one of many
activities of the ' Red Cross.. That•
it is engaged in tracing eight -mil-
lion people in occupied :countr'es
for their relative's• will come a a
surprise to'inany. '
These are just examples of the
unique services performed,, and'
'they demonstrate how greatly this
organization deserves; the support ..I
of 'all the people: ,
Nazis Hold BY,
-Their Own Petard
Can you imagine this? Fact,
nevertheless. Seems Hitler pre-
sented Mussolini with a . squadron
bf Stuka dive bombers and the
squadron •promptly ran out of •'gas
just as itwas flying over British=
held territory fn the Middle East;
and, quite naturally, it being im-
possible to 'scut* an airplane
without impleasarit eonseguenc.es••
to the skipper and his crew, the
Stukas fell right into the hands
of the British and they have been
flying some' of them ever since,
Italian insignia and all. Wonder
what' the Luftwaffe' thinks when
it sees a German• .plane with' the
Italian . insignia flown by the;
R.A.F.? '
0
C
T
OP®WE
BOY
00
S
20 To cook in fat. 43 Company
21 Affirmative:- ' (abbr.). ,
22 Child's napkin 44 Legal rule. •
24 Coi ' 4? Indian:
25 Protrat. d- 49 Cabin.
27 Afternoon
meal. 50 Cake
29 Overall fabric. decorator.
aa Collegiate: 52 Smoldering
36' Ireland. • ' coal. '
371Kind of soup. 54 rem seeds.
38 •Land measure. 55 Eternities. , 7 Negative 48 She f
-39 Repulsive.. 5d 1e was the
41• Avarice. ffirst U. S. A.
42 Ocean. secretary' of
T
E:
R
�P'A.L.
ESC U
S
E
apparatus.
- rx
Ham: tI
s
4 Chest bone`.
19 He Was
"by.Aaron Bur,
in �a
20Meir er of the :
- ::; Federal • party.
21 Sweet potato- `
'23 Holley, •_..
gatherer;
25 :Mulcts.
26 Abo'u'nding alt:
-grain.
28 Seaweelf.
30 Sooner than.
the --. 31 Frost bite.' •
37'Exclamation. 32 Billiard rod.
VEItT1CAL 33 To permit.
34 Frozen water:
1.'Laughter • ' 35 Form of •"be."
sound. 37 Table -land. '
2 To asseverate..40 Lion.
3 Boggy. 41 Obtained.
.4 Fish.4. 8,Maledictiedi
5 Candle: -)..6 45 Ac'��11ity.
• 6 Poem . 46 Existed.'
8 To qualify. 49 Female turkey
9 Tree , fluid. 51 Inlet.
10 Dyeing 53 Lad.
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f POP -Army Life Certainly Toughen 'Em Up
By J. MILLAR WATT
wouLD :YOU COME r0
ME Wiry SCOMACHE ACi-
-IN CIVIL LIFE ?
NO, SIR •
i
.SHOULD SEND FOR
• YOU
til
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