Show FLYING ACROSS THE ATLANTIC Reginald Enock a member of the Royal Geographical society suggests that It will not bo be so difficult as has been Imagined to fly from Europe to America America- He doesn't want It understood that the easy route is from the English coast to the American coast By studying the map he has found that the flight could be accomplished with a greatest width of oI landless sea of only about GOO roo miles Describing a a. great half circle from the northern isles of Britain by way of Iceland Ice Ice- land Greenland and Labrador or the theland theland land lanel north of it an aeroplane would could reach America and OO miles must soon be bo within a practical aero radius This ho he says would not be andali an all dali English route exactly but tw two termini at least would bo ho British Tho The advance ane of or aviation hitherto may acquire a sudden value In Inthe Inthe inthe the future both political and ical Tho The small Islands scattered about the tho vast expanses of or ocean which have served as cable stations or which arc are practically unknown parts of the BrItIsh BritIsh British Brit BrIt- ish empire ma may prove invaluable as aero stations in thc future just as the high inaccessible slopes and plateaux of the Andes or the Himalayas may New York Sun |