Tuesday, 15 November, 2022
Lilydale
Family home destroyed by car crash
Residents push back against level crossing works
Holy Fools launches its Christmas campaign
Cherry season kicks off in the valley
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A Star News Group Publication
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RSL tribute By Mikayla van Loon
Victoria votes Lilydale RSL members and veterans remembered fellow service men and women. 307807 Picture: MIKAYLA VAN LOON orama, one who was captured at the fall of Singapore and held prisoner, the other, the oldest who served in the Middle East and New Guinea.
“Upon coming back, he spent 40 years plus fighting another campaign - the Department of Veterans Affairs. Continued page 4
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Christmas
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Turn to pages 10-12 to find out more about your potential representatives
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This week Star Mail brings you profiles from local candidates in the Evelyn and Croydon electorates. Find out the party policies and what issues your candidates will be fighting for in the lead up to the Saturday 26 November state election.
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Remembrance Day commemorations were held in traditional Lilydale style on Friday 11 November, seeing residents, traders, students and RSL members surround every edge of the cenotaph on Main Street. The service was opened by the Lilydale CFA brigade’s siren sounding 15 seconds before the clock struck 11am. Lilydale RSL president Bill Dobson began the opening remarks by saying “we will always remember to never forget our veterans and their loved ones who suffered.” “We’re on sacred ground here, this cenotaph represents and pays tribute to all those local people who died because of war and are buried elsewhere around the world,” he said. In a deeply personal tribute to his own family, Yarra Ranges Council Mayor Jim Child said we must always remember the sacrifice that hundreds of men and women made decades ago in World War I, even if to him “it was an unnecessary war”. “It was meant to be the war to end all wars,” he said. Mayor Child said on average 38 members of the Armed Forces died per day during the conflict of World War I. “I can’t imagine the pain and misery that must have been experienced on the battlefield but also at home for those receiving the news of a lost husband, a son, a grandson,” he said. Fast forwarding to World War II, Mayor Child told the story of two brothers from Kal-