Show fl p- p y 7 SIC 1 5 S 5 S SS S n Q PRESS I juit ju BY 1 a Secretary For For War Bosses Bossos S Troops and Newspapers S ii RULES WITH Jill AN MI IRON IRO HAND 5 What He Ho Wants Printed Is la Printed and When Whon He S Says Says No ys No N the Story Goes oes Into the Wastebasket Wastebasket English English Not ot War Enthusiastic Ent War but They Welcome It NoW t Str cd S 1 l Tit The I censorship of ur news S. S S 1 5 Ii IH III ilu Uw lit most Ii 1111 ii nd iii nil 1111 I i lI t censorship thu th that t was ever t r enforced d censorship censorship- HI ID invent lt S. S rl ed ell Nothing lIt bill Whatever ha h Cr was given out outS S III in I the I early Iy days dap of r t hw Il t except k-I k r that Hiat which fn favored un the British skitS side It ItI I was ws obvious lolls that the tbt tb Germans were 5 III remorselessly I i l Oil oil on EV even U If It they Erp tint not moving ij faster I than a 11 aS r. Hut But tin newspapers were S s Uly silly lowed d to print VS Ut of more mol or or orS ore S tas e H K mt lau victories The They trew rew restive lt f hilt ut rha was wai all 55 V g It II did them 3 v Lord Kitchener b Is In Irr command I likes tIki's a 1 lIw newspaper man maii about S is 18 5 well as lS a i jeweler III like ikA a. a t. t safe ife blow blow- r. r There are nie t times lulls when Kitchener y S wants I some published Most times S be bc wants II printed Jc- Jc On this occasion hc the London S. S S newspaper men to together ither Oe tie said he be heS S to confer with them The rhe newspaper m men u decided before ld d-b d before fore they 1 to offer not to tu publish S. S anything which h h j l ht l any S movement of tiie troops or ur in aby I other other oth oth- er way WIB emba embarrass I 1 establish a n news bureau S Mid Kitchener In that peculiarly grimS' grimS grim S' S S tad and uncompromising way Y he lie has hm and andS S- S through It all tb the government wishes published will be he given Riven outS out S The Con went Vent all to pieces at it that jK t Ill looked itt tiie S newspaper men They i at it of them said t itch By ny and by Iy one hiD I fearlessly sly Very try S And if It Is I published which S la Is contrary to to the desires desires of of the gov r 1 2 r T 1 LORD KITCHENER added Lord Kitchener we weS S 4 S way tb the ho license to publish of that newspaper Perhaps It because of ot this complete com corn failure failure of news new SI sources forthe fOr forthe the public was quick to detect that theother the Ibe other side of ot the situation was not beIng beS being be be- S ing made that known-that explained the attitude of the London public d during that period in which war and n nd slaughter S w were rf O Only lly one thin thing was 3 5 and that but vaguely That was that every day regiments left left lett- for somewhere Th There re were WErl days in S. S which not stand stan upon upon a London Lon on that oue one did not hot bear bearup bearS bearup S U up some street or down some twisted S thoroughfare the strains of martial martini 5 music By and by if it one waited long Dough nough one would woul see the streams of Ittle brown Iud men shuffling along ulong S wl enough in III ill fitting boots boob and nm clumsy somewhere There Thre were never any cheers The Thes The's s 's S London crowds stood d stolidly upon ulOn the curbs and nud watched them out of sight bt Dread and uncertainty seemed palpa paipa t bit ble No one knew what had happened S S All speaking Englishmen king kini generally Hr spend P Dd the best t st part part part- of f their lives ilves lv s o out t of at f doors Six Ix days a It week eek they may I work in a It shop The seventh they will wilt willS willbe S be where the sun and rain can enn get et a chance ch at them Add another penny pennyS S to his lila income tax and the En Englishman lI hman i will only growl interfere with hi his recreation rec ree- 5 Nation and he be will talk of sacred rl rights and revolution The upper 4 S classes Ia e have hace their golf courses l and i their tennis grounds and their cricket S o nl ovals The workaday Englishman goes OI OIto i to the raPs races on bank holidays What has happened M Many of the nth fields have bave S.- S. been taken over by ty the government for tor ramp camp grounds ground and drills h bus hos This includes some of if If the really real real- 5 5 ly Iy historic fields fieldA In the United King King- 2 dom There will be be- little cricket In ElI England land this tall fall in ju some someS parts of ot kingdom football will 1 S the practically bo be abandoned until happier J i times S PO S S V I 1 i |