-46- #669, Eighteenth from London I cannot pass from this subject without mentioning the loss which we have sustained and which I personally have sustained in the death in action of my representative with General MacArthur Lieutenant General Lumsden one of our most distinguished and accomplished officers the man who at the very beginning of the war in the first contact with the enemy brought the armored car back into popularity. He was killed on the port side of the bridge of an American ship approaching Luzon by a bomb, which Admiral Fraser himself the Commander-in-Chief of our gathering Navy who happened to be there as a spectator only escaped, by the accident of a few seconds. There have been large losses among the high commanders in these campaigns. In Air Chief Marshal Sir Trafford Leigh-Mallory and Admiral Bertram Ramsay we have lost two out of the three British commanders of the expedition across the channel General Montgomery being the sole survivor of the t There is one other campaign on which we and India have extended immense effort and where good fortune has attended us--the advance of the 14th Army--not forgotten but watched carefully their movements ever attended by our thoughts. The advance of the 14th Army in harmony with the Chinese on |