pa ---- THE DAILY JUNE 19, 1916. _ France's War Material | Multiplies Amazingly Output of Shells, Machine Guns ARMENIA'S DREAM TO BECOME NATION No Bungling In France Where Sol diers' Are Wonderfully Well Cared ------ Unquenchable Are Aspirations of Volunteers Who March With to Victory--Promise of Freedom--Rewarded With Massacre For Loyalty--Arm Claim New Birthright 4 Camillo Clanfara writes: Hrand Navarriantz, an Armenian poet, brought to Rome some hitherto un- known and appalling details concern- ing the massacres in Armenia. Na varriantz sald the number of victims Sus to organize an insurrection in thas" not been exaggerated and proof | case of war between Turkey and Rus- has been secured showing that the {8la. The Armenians not only refused government not only gave its con- | but warned the Young Turk party sent but aided the Young Turk party | that interventicn. in the conflict would to carry out the massacres. | cause Turkey's utter ruin. Hence the "It was when our brothers in the | Young Turks' wrath. Oatichua Jotrieq the Russian army ad Reward of Honest Warning vaneing toward Van, tLat the Youn "The : 4 price Armenia paid for her Turk party began to suspect th Ar yalty was more than a million men, menlan population in Turkey of trea- | women and children deliberately mur- son and decided on hs Sastraetion in dered. The Armenian populction has order to preven , aot Armenian | Fecalled at: last that the victory of oer: he Bak " serving in the | RUSSian is their victory and two hun. Yio were 8 {dred thousand Armenian volunteers regular Turkish army operating In| ore In the rank and flle of the Rus the Caucasus were immediately dis- sian army of the Caucasus.. This is armed and sent in the interior to Armenia's Holy War, a new crusade build roads and fortifications. Mas- against her unrelenting enemy." sacres began right after that in every king of the Armenian national Armenian town. The male members aa Navorriants sald: "We rely of the community, from the age of for protection on the liberal and Chris- twelve up, were gathered in the pub- tian nations of the world. What we llc square or in front of the church now want is our freedom, our inde- ing at Erzerum of the Dacknacktsout- foun, the Armenian national assocla- tion. The Young Turk party sent emissaries to Erzerum to invite the Armenians to pass resolutions urging their brothers in the Russian Cauca- ! lo For--Correspondent Amazed Viggo Toepfer, a correspondent of a United States press agency, writes: | A visit to the British front is like an | invigorating and refreshing salt water | bath on a sultry day. The moment you emter the British military zone you feél'that you have come to a new and virile country. There are no bungling or slipshod methors there. | Everything makes for efficiency, | everywhere you find the most wonder- | ful organization. Things run on well | otled ball rings. Happy and Popular Tommy The most perfect discipline rules, but there 1s no bullying, no loud shouts ing of orders of command. During my | entire visit I failed to aiscover among | the ten thousands of Tommies a single surly or dissatisfied face. Officers and | men alike are beloved by the popu- | | lation, whom they all treat in the! | most considerate manner. I found the | whole military zone, outside the area | of actual fighting, a perfect Arcadia. One of the reasons of Tommy's hap- piness and good humor is undoubtedly | the ideal manner in which his ma- terial wants are catered to. His food is excellent and undoubtedly he gets considerably more variety than he was used to at home. I am certain | that his boarding house mistress will | have a hard time of it when he returns -~ 3 - \, - 1 pad "4 Hinde "He is wounded in the "That's not surprising. head, and they can't extract the bullet" When they once get anything Into their heads youn | bination of gunfire and Cannon of all,Sorts Keeps Rising--The Old High Records Smashed -- Marvellous New Howitzer--No Strikes. W. I. McAlpin writes from Paris te the London Daily Mail as follows: Hindenburg, addressing his troops on the occasion of his army jubilee, made the ' astounding statement, "The enemy's strength is wesring out and final victory will be ours." The field marshal evidently intended this dec laration for home coasumption. - He is GAS AND SHELL STORM CANNOT DAUNT IRISH I------------------ Frederick Palmer writes from Brit- ish headquarters, France, as follows: "We would like to have Casement along here and give him a taste of the German gas," said the Irish sol- diers who repulsed the first gas at- tack on the British front since Decem- ber, 1915. This, the sixteenth, known as the Irish division, with Irish of- ficers and an Irish general, has been recruited from all parts of the Nationalist Ireland since the war be- , ll informed gan. While holding a trench for the | 100 we first time they got their baptism of (SIL, in view of the humiliating re fire in a deluge. verses the Germans suffer! at Ver One of the main points of attack |4un. If further proof were needed is a chalk pit salient in the Loos re | that France is far from weakening gion, held by the Dublin Fusiliers, all | Put is growing daily more formidable of whom were recruited from Dublin ne has only to' consult a report te and Inniskilling. A heavy artillery {the Budget Commission of M, J. L bomba ent and a big cloud of gas Dumesnil, deputy for Seine-et-Marne. started fiere at five thirty in the morn- He had just returned fro- 2 minute Ing, the wind being right. The com- | Inspection of the munition factories and gas is the His tour utivated koe in tha in their | districts of Lyons, enne, Tulle, hardest test for the troops in the and the Chatellerault and Paris region. The Germans sent an infantry at- Ho is filled with enthusiasm at what tack on either side of the salient. The a Jeasrihed as "the mightiest crea: attackers in the south were unable to | tive ol ort that a people has ever ac get through the barb wires. Here | COmplished. to believe it him and shot dead under the eyes of their £ " pendence under the protecorate of terrified mothers, sisters or wives. England, France, .Italy and Russia. Young Turks Guilty » The latter has promised to support Conclusive proof that the Young | our demands at the next peace con- Turks'. crime was perpetrated with gress, and we have reasons to believe the consent of the government Was | the other nations will not oppose found in the residengy of the Gover- | them. Several years ago Russia pre- nor of Koms, where %.4enty Turkish pared a project to grant to Armenia gendarmes had been sent to carry out | a large measure of autonomy. The the massacre of the local Armenian | six Armenian provinces, Erzerum, population. Turkey will once more Djarbekir, Kerput, Sivas, Bitlis, and | plead an excuse that Armenians were | Van were lo be united under the planning tp take advantage of the sovereignity of a governor appointed European conflagration to rise | by the Sultan and controlled by the against rkish rule and secure auto Christian powers of Europe. To-day nomy. Enver Pasha will once more | this is no longer sufficient. 'Galicia state that the Armenian population | must be added to these provinces and | assisted the Russians advancing to- | Armenia glven an outlet to the sea wards Van. But nothing is more ab. In 1913 the project was rejected ow surd and untrue. Ing to Germany's opposition to it The beginning of the European con- | This time we hope; the project will flict cofncided with the annual meet- | be approved." { WOMEN MAN LIFEBOATS | Party Lines Broken by Crisis, Ob Women have, indeed, an opportunity serves Great Roumanian | now of showing what they can do, and wonderfully are they rising to the occasion. The latest new idea hails from Brighton, England. The lite- boat, of course, lives in a louse well above highwater mark, and to trans port It to the edge of the waves and launch it through the stormy breakers in case of need is a considerable un- dertaking. In ordinary times there are always a body of fishermen and shore- workers available to lend a hand in all this work. But now these stalwart fellows are tno louger on the beach. Some are in the army or the navy; others are engaged in land employ. ment; and though the i'feboat's crew refunin ready for their dangerous and sorelymeeded task, the launching +e Péle-Méle (Paris). AA A A | BUTCHERY ALARMS HUNS ENGLISH STARTED KRUPP || trying to feed him in the manner to which he has grown used to in the trenches can't get it out!""--De Armengol in I AA AA AAA AAA the Irish, who Lad stuck to their Await Hour of Destiny trenches, killed and wounded by rifle "Industrial France," Fe says, "be fire, nearly every Germa#h before they | comes every day a nore immense ar could retire. On the north side, where senal. We can look with confidence the gunfire had destroyed the wire to the future. The hour of destiny and wrecked the trenches, the. Ger will find us ready. The appetite of mans penetrated the British line. The | the Suns at Verdun, gigantic as it is Irish fell back to a support trench, | caanot keep pace with the sheils walt where a machine gun commanding | ing to be consumed. ~ Our. stocks of the position was turned on the in-|heavy and light artillery munitions vaders. A sergeant went about re-| keep piling up despite the frightful assuring the men and led a counter | and voracious battle which is devour attack against the surviving Germans Ing steel by hundreds o. thousands of with the bayonet, over the shell tons. Guns are being turned out and pounded earth, close quick work in batteries renewed with a rapidity which the Irish excel, according to | which responds to all tk. necessities the accounts of the men here. So of the combat, and the motor trans far as is known no German escaped | port service has met all the demands death or capture. made upon it. It is largely due te Such a successful repulse and well- | our countless machine guns that we planned attack by the Irish at this [pave shattered the onslaught of the juncture thrilled the whole of the Germans." army. It was at the time of Case- Rifles Sevenfold ment's landing in Ireland. Altogether According to M. Dumesnil, France three clouds of gas were is turnin t 8 & out rifles at the rate of against the Irish and on the brigade seven to one compared with 1915. ln adjoining, which showed equal gal- . lantry. while change. of wind forced | Sit as. ihe daily oni He Germans to evacuate some of their shells are being manufactured from rout trenches. three to six times more rapidly than in 1915. In some artillery workshops production increased twenty-fold and similar results are being obtained in | 24Bplying explosives, barbed wire, and ther accessories. The latest riumph of French engineers is a new 16inch howitzer which it said to be in all respects equal to the giant German howitzer of similar dimensions. Senator Henry Berenger, discussing the military situation, asserts that it is Impossible for Fi.nce henceforth to lack any of the necessaries of war. "The country is now producing less with a view to repair wastage than to increase her offensive power." Strikes being impossible among mobilized workmen, the industrial strength of France is being utilized :o the wut most, and the patriotism of French workmen does the rest. { : THE LATEST WEAPON ---- Italy Is Using It Against the Aus trian Troops There have been many extraordin- ary weapons used in this war, but perhaps one of the strangest is the use of the avalanche as a weapon of offence. This has already heen done on the Italian front. Italian troope reach the summit of a mountain, and below them in the valley Ife the Aus trian armies. The Italians place a land mine deep in the earth, explode it, and a terrific avalanche is the result, which hurtles down the moun- tain side, completely blotting out a certain number of enemy troops. These artificially | reduced avalarches are particularly useful in destroying railways and roads and preventing the movements of the troops. It is esti mated that besides the tremendous damage to property, the Austrians have lost 1,000 men by this means i ---------- Little Hunnesses ® E After one of the successful attacls of the German alr fleet on England six little girls In Schleswig-Holstein, the oldest one of whom Is eleven years old, sent two dollar Pe ) ing letter * Count: Ze J Count: -- you scespt our of eight marks as an AAAS ee en Rations Excellent The paternal military authorities supply him even with such things as matches and tobacco. As for bread, ert : Todd he gets an ample quantity. My own Everyone knows the part which | ED Ls oe os. me wt SUPE, Baws ryoniep Berman? with anything like it in quality or ata "'s taste. 1 also sampled the emergency | NOW many sre aware shat te money | rations, the so-called iron rations, and | With whic ' e great rm oe are while they are ideal in their compact- | ON a Sure San ation, Ja ae ay ness, I felt that I conld live and fight | foun ed, came from Th Agha Fm a whole month or more on them, and | fred Krupp came to nes be none the worse for it , about 1840 with an introduction rom I think with a shudder of the hard. Dr. Siemens to Messrs. Elkington and which 1 Mason, electro-platers, the predeces- | was fed while a volunteer in the sors of the Bese ha of Bikiagion | Spanish-American War. But I heard & Co. He offered to them a machine, { that the quality of the canned meat Which he had invented for rolling the supplied by our American packers in mets) ighi How hich Spavus | this war is everything that could be and forks are he . eka Tr | desired. The way the British military 501d this to she rm oe ay, ith | authorities have organized and ave the money thus acquire bp pro | providing for these millions of volun. | ¢ééded to Essen and laid the Sunda teer soldiers -is beyond praise. The tion of the great fortune he a ter- | American war department could learn | W8rds acquired. | | Decline" in Birth Rate is Aggravated | by Toll of War ' iA Correspondent writes from Berlin, | Germany, to a neutral paper as fol- | lows: German thrift and energy may [ win back the billions of marks lost in the war, but a danger is gnawing at the very heart of the German people--the birth rate is dwindling and | German professors and social econom- ists have argued for years, referring to France, that a declining birth rate is the infallible sign of the decadence of a people. So far the number of births in Germany is higher than the number of deaths, but for years the | surplus has been steadily decreasing. The 'danger is approaching, slowly, inexorably, step by step. Unless something extraordinary happens the moment will come when the popula- tion of Germany will cease to Brow. During the war, when more than a million of German Young men; pros- pective fathers, have lost their lives on the shambles of the battiefields, the problem of how to stop the declin- ing birth rate looms up larger than | ever. You hear it discussed every- where. Aside from the war, Germany would have had 560,000 more births annually if the birth rate had not. de: clined since 1900. Had it remained as it was then Germany to day would have had nearly three million more inhabitants than she actually has. Unimous as legislators and social economists are in agreeing that the evil must be fought and a remedy be found, they differ as widely in re- gard to the reasons to which they { attribute the evil and, in regard to the remedies which they suggest. The | conservative classes and their repre- | sentatives in the legislatures are de- | nouncing what they call the increas: ing lack of moral. among the middle classes and among high society, whose women refuse .to fultik their most sacred duty" towards their country-- | tack and canned meat on A A AI OLD EUROPE GOES M. Take Jonescu, in the Roumanian Parliament sald: "In other countries this extraordinary gravity has caused the frame in which normal life was conducted to fall asunder. Thus you have seen in Belgium a Socialist lead- er, Vandervelde, enter a Catholic gov: ernment; a Socialist ta whose words King Albert reposed complete con | i {& great many things here. Especially. { in the way of economy, for nothing is , ED SE WATER | | wasted. The immense repair shops WOUND REFU. | {at the British bases, where clothes, : | ---------- | boots, harness and everything up to y | heavy guns are repaired are worth Each Takes No More Than a Sip-- travelling thousands of miles to see. Chaplain's Pride HEROES SEE NO BATTLE ir SS During a sea fight the engine room men tend the great engines of a battleship with all the care that they would bestow upon the same delicate yet mighty mechanism in time of peace, roaming listlessly, yet with a definite purpose, around the engine room with oil cans in hand, bestow- ing drops of lubricant here and there as required. Theirs and the stokers' Is almost--not quite the hardest part of the whole grim drama of a naval battle, for they are absolutely cut off from the fight, and are only cognizant of it by the quivering of their ship as the great turrets over their heads fire or as the enemy's shells thud against the armor or when some stray shot finds its way. through the steel wall and the bunkers to the boilers. Such an event blends a whole stoke- hold in one frenzied orgy of death-- death by exploding shell; death by awful wounds from burning coals, or death by scalding, hissing, blinding steam as the water tubes burst all around them. GERMAN SPY'S ERROR Wore Colonel's Uniform, All Correct But Cap London Opinion says: A young of- ficer in one of our machine gun bat- teries, who is back from the front on a few days' leave, says that they caught a German spy. He was dressed in the uniform of a British colonel, and was moving around inside our lines, as large as life, asking where certain battalions were located, about the situation of various camps, and for other helpful particulars. Early in the course of his activities, a man was told: off to watch him, and after his little game had been revealed he was taken prisoner, and duly disposed of next morning. - For you see there had been one tiny flaw in his beauti- ful' getup as & British colonel, and that was the fact that he was wear. ing a Tommy's cap! ee ---- Lord 'Lovat's Corps "Lord Lovat's well-deserved. pro- motion to the rank of' brigadier general has been expected for some time past," says an English expert. "Lovat's and Tullibardine's corps are in fine fighting trim, and contain the pick of Scotland's man. hood of all classes of society. Besides being colonel of his two regiments of scouts, Lord Lovat is honorary colonel 'of the Fourth (Territorial) Battalion of the Gordon Highlapders, anda mil- tary member of the Inverness Terri. torial Forces Association" An English chaplain writing to a | London paper, says: There is a scene before my mind's eye that will never | be forgotten. A battalion attacking just in front of us had suffered awful casualties, and for hours in a con- | tinuous stream the wounded are | brought in or crawl in, all parched with thirst from the pain they are suffering. In response to a request | to the Sergeant-Major for water to give ! these poor fellows, the appalling an- swer comes: "We have not'a drop of water in the ambulance" en ! ) a Sn EES | CARRYING HAND-GRENADES | tt ini Steir . Grenade fighting lLas-become of the utmost importance in modern trench warfare, and there are a dozen varie ? : 8 ties of these weapons, both for hand terday, and the uncompromising So- | fighting and for firing from rifles clallst Guesde. And in fortunate Eng. | Whenever there is an attack by either luna, Protected from all invasions by | side a number of men are specially | {the sea, in England, the very home r wotld' be a difficulty. Bland i told off as grenade-thirowers. These The Brighton Committee have called | pr poarLy polisics, we find Unionists, wen are trained to throw their gren- upon the wives, sisters and daughters | L{D€rals and Bembers of the Labor ades quickly and accurately, and keep of the boat's crew to come to their | PATtY co-operating in the same Cab {Steady showers bursting among the rescue; and the women have respond- net. How, gentlemen, have these ed in' their full strength. They are | !DiDES been. possible? Why has' the befig trained in their new duties; frame of normal life been so broken and recently an excellent launch was | 8% to make it necessary to find fresh made' of the lifélcat, almost entirely modes of action? Because events are by _Women--mothers still in their | Of Such importance as to make it prime' and their girls in their early | Impossible for them to fit into old testis working eide by side ith formulas, results. Not infrequently in the history of the lifeboat service wo- LAUDS SILENT FLEET mel have given help in emergencies je launching; and we all remem- ---- ne aun bh of Gface Darling, | Greatest Force of war, the Northumbrian maiden of one-and- ral Journa nt one assisted her father, ng 1 who al Commenting on the landing of Rus- sign troops at Marseilles, the well- ouse-keeper, in a wonderfully rescue from a wreck, her alpine to launch the boat. [known Spanish newspaper, El Liberal; "was a more than common ex-|8aid: "We see here the action of the ; but much courage and endur- gragtest Jorce of this a British Brighton | fleet. Its silence and in lity have Ji 36 called for fom Bright Induced many to believe it inactive. | Of the House of Commons since the But it is the great connecting nerve | WAT began. This is further proof of of the allied powers. Thanks to ft | (he Willingness with which members there are English soldiers in France, [Of the aristocracy have sacrificed French and English soldiers at Salon. | 1IVe8 in their country's caiise. The iki, and Russlans In Frince. By it Earl St. Aldwyn followed his son to German fleet is sh . | the grave within one week of the THe Gee potence; Too SLANE re oy Sor the former The mic! jhe German submarines The Savlolts of | C00 toon became extinct play when one thinks of their power. | lessness to prevent these, gigantic | British Steel Helmets Superior movements of troops over the world's | British steel helmets, states Dr. Ad- seas." | dison, are more protective than the | Freneh ones. Answering a suggestion Eight thousand five hundred and six- | thai any shortage might be met by | fidence when he opposed the miserable Invasion of his country. The same in France, where we Bee, side by side, Combes and the Catholic Cochin: | where oh the same ministerial benth | are to be found the moderates of yes nd "We were at our wit's end to deal | with the situation and meet the heart. | and carry their grenades in special breaking cries for water that met us | bags or panniers. Each man has WO | on all sides, while waiting for the re. | panniers strapped round him." The turn of the messengers sent with an panniers are madc of strong canvas, urgent request to the nearest M.L.O. | that of becoming mothers. The 8b- and hold ten or a dozen grenades. | ten it suddenly occurred to me that | ¢ial democrats, on the other side, These grenades, by the way, have | my own water bottle was full, as jt | Maintain that the problem is an each a long piece of webbing attach: | paq been filled the night before and | ®Conomic, not a moral, dne and say ed to them, which unrolls when the not touched. ' I rushed to bricg it, | that nothing.ie more natural than missile is thrown, and causes the | and proceeded to dole it out in a cup, | that married people, dreading to see grenade to fall head downwards and | § the | their offspring become part of the | As I handed the cup to each of the increasing proletariat. cule ie 80 ensure explosion i rw ; . | fevanded men. § sald: ook here. 0d deavor to limit the number of their | here, and you must only take enough | Children. {to wet your lips and rinse out your mouth." | Germans. In a charge the grenade-| throwers usually are well in the rear, | Says a Neut- I ---- Peer's Heirs Die The death of Lord Quenington, the only son and heir of Lord and Lady | St. Aldwyn, who was killed at the front, removed the forty-ninth heir to a peerage and the eighth member Pr ------ K'S "ALLEGED" JOKE, Lord. Kitchener is immensely pleas- ed with the work of the New Zealand: ers and Australians in 'the war, and has expressed his admiration of them in no slightfterms. Apropos of this fact, it is interesting to- recall that it was in New Zealand that his lordship made one ofthe Very few jokes of his life. ' Each man, without exception, put the cup to his lips, took one small mouthful, and then passed it on to the next. It is difficiilt for anyone who has not experienced it, to realize the self-denial and self-control necessary to remove a cup of water from one's lips when consumed by overwhelming thirst. One young fellow came crawl ing in, and bis first words were, "Oh, give me a drink!" 1 handed him the cup, telling him the state of affairs, and immediately he said, "Oh, there When "K. of K." was In New Zoal- are plenty want it worse than me: | and he was taken fo see a remarkable give It to them," and he refused to | cave by a pretty Maori girl who acted touch a drop. {as his guide. She informed him that {if'a Maori wants to insult anyone THE LEOPARDS SPOTS | he calls him by the name some | kind of food. Once a certaid Maori Huns Treated Prisoners After Own Fashion Centuries Ago a da Th plot; ance wi wouiil if they have to launch the life- boat id the teeth of a gale. Brighton Gas Company is also employing wo- men laborers; and the Liverpool dock: ers @ prevent women from unload: ing thé ships. : FOR THE RED CR Fancy Prices at London Auction Room For Royal Gifts the Red Cross London realized Messrs. Christic's rooms were led all pe vane prove: may people esent. e wis Bo for a XV. eterie com- of Miss Pickersgill. was 300 guineas, ; el of richly jorated Chinesé embroidery given the King and sold for 200 guineas. gquer cabinet. in black, gold, and 'the gift of Mrs. Adair, sold for jineas, and an old English chim. The first day of Sale in o ty-nine German school teachers have placing orders in France, he sald he fallén in the war. Of these 5,158 were | was not aware that the requisite steel from Prussia. | could be got there. { ; I eu A AAA A Ar AAA A AAA AAA AAA AAA | chief told amother that he wa t | veal and then fearing vengeance he fled to this particular cave where, however; he was followed and killed by his grossly insulted enemy. Lord Kitchetier iistened to the story with great interest. "Ah!" he ex- The particulars of the brutality with which Gérmans treat prisoners of war i may be compared with the following | claimed, stroking his moastas ot passage from Frofssart (ed. Luce, Vol. { one of his rare eh es. thd rap th V., p. 289): "For I'nglish and Gascons | it would be highly dauge YA poss are of such condition that they Put | 0 Maori lady a little Ticks a knight or a squire courteously to | % ransom; but the custom of the Ger- | mans, and 'their courtesy is of no such ] sort hitherto. I know not how they | Since he recovered ftom his acci. will do henceforth for hitherto they | dent at the front, -King George has have had ngither pity nor mercy on | thrown himself wholeheartedly into Christian gentlemen who fall into | the affairs Of the pation. The aver: their hands as prisoners, but lay On age person has little idea of what them ransoms to the full of 'their | the labors of King George ental. estate and even beyond, and put them ! Only at meals and siceping times has in chaims, in irons, and in close prison | His Majesty respite from the cares like thieves and murderers; and all | and anxieties of State, and frequently to extort the greater ransom." "even these periods have been cant Five centuries have made: little | down to a minimum. His Majesty per: | change in the condiict of the 'English | sonally attends to and other documents rom the' various and there re and Freach--or of the Germans with regard to the treatment of prisoners various Government of war. ; day and - or @ Wi Em -------- is' an investiture. |B of Ministers, "he Moma acorns in the forest and selli King's Busy Life brought 180 guineas. T fal to Belgium : men of several! Buropean na- sions to build in Beigium at the close the' war a garden city as a testi A the world to the valor of | and as some contribution the p'aces destroy. the conflict. Edmund J. Phipps tiornby, Herbert K. Jackson were temporary brigadiergenetals Artillery). ; Mistaking a thunderclap for the bursting of a bomb, Mrs. Eliza Jane Thurley, sixty-five, dropped - into a chair and died, it was stated at the inquest at Hackney. Forty-three Dublin ammunition box makers were fined half & crown each for striking without notice for a penny an hour increase Watercolors by Sapper Moore Jones Engineers, ANOTHER KIND OF CONSMENTIOUS OBJECTOR . 4 New Zealand were gow] 3s The Buried : "Buck up, you chaps! Don't keep me here day I'm The Li due out a bombing party hal an hour "Londen. Opiston, hope to Conirol Hoard of » tous there is « heavy daily ie She. Kins» Byshipsiam Palace.