5EPTEMBER 10. 1940 uiiiisus 1.111., LONDON. zuouun. (m. mo) lso Ynn‘ There's only one thingi makes one cigarette better than another-it tastes better Black Cat ViRGiNlA CIGARETTES- 25¢ and 10¢ PLAIN OI COII TIP limitation for Quality TDECLARES 11.55 or on any public plat- EVGH in Charlottetown 1 Witt not dare meiltion that man's “ame for he is still in Berlin, and f}. reveal llis identity would be to sign his death warrant. q liiile later in the same sum- mer l) which I refer, our party had been invited by Dollfuss of M|5tflil to a reception which he had arranged {or us. One hundred eminent Austrians were invited to the Chancellery where we were w no r-ieeived, but while we were still ill ll ssia we received a iirire- ms miisnililC that Dollfuss had been murdered. Ten days later we risited Vicniia and noted the Aus- trian troops standing on guard nound the chaiicellery, with barb- od wire aiid machine guns strun “ma; the street. There they tol ti; the tireadfui story of the ass- assiiiiiiiiiii of 1)Oii[liSS,—i‘i0‘N that traitors from within and Nazi sec- ,“ agents had brought about his death. When the uprising foment- ,5 by zhe German Nazis who had cmqod ill.- border began, Dollfuss iras in the Chancellery. He first ilestrt» 1‘ certain state papers and looked ‘o the safety of some oi his gomplllllflllfi. and then, Just. as he was fleeing through a secret door to a stinraiay that would have led iiim to safety. s Nazi agent e11- tered the room and directing a istoi at him at. point. blank range, lie stint. him through the neck. Dollfuss died in about four hours time, Where Is He Now? "In that very Chancellery in which Dolifiiss perished we met Sehiisiiing, the gentle-manly. quiet. courteous new Chancellor of Aus- tria. He told us of the menace of Nazi plotting against his govern- ment and of the fact that con- stantly he had to be on the alert because these agents were slipping icross the border from Germany. You all know the sequel. The dread ilow fell and Austria was incor- Jorated in the German Reich. Where is schusnlgg now? Pining iway in some concentration camp. tihere, nobody knows. "Again it should have been evi- ient to the governments of the roi-ld thnt. the great German na- lon had fallen into the hands of group of reckless and murderous ien irno would not hesitate a sec- nd iii Lliilllq human life if such n fli"i(ll1 furthered their own asiardl}; plans for world domin- lion. "ll/lien one reads Mien Kampf h llfiillillg short of amazing to m llfiW step by step Adolf Hitler id his minions have put into ef- et the plans there outlined. but ie cairefui reader will notice that iere is one outstanding omission. ie notable deviation from the oiirrim. In Mien Kampf Hitler 1's that Imperial Germany's eti’ mistaki- was in falling out th lijlliiiiliifl. It would be his poi- '. he said. to reach an tinder- intlizi; ii-itll the British Govern- =nt and nlivays to remain at ace with the British people. The i‘ iilfllfll‘ deviation from Hitler's ‘Iiliiiill has been his fatal blun- r "we blunder tilnt will yet m: tiiioiit ills complete ilndoiilg. $l\' liioiltlir ago there was no ‘Pile’ iii the world who could W‘ tiredieted the disastrous in» of events. In 1918. Sir Doug- iiu: toid the British nrmy in mo 'lirit they were fighting ii t} 1r backs to the wall, if “'i‘i'“ iiviiis: today he might ad- ." ‘lie some ivords to the whole i‘ 5i Fllllilff’. We need not be ii-l as tn the issues thnt. are ‘ 1R" if Hitler wins this war. eh ue trust by the grace of l’ iid the stendfastiiess oi the “it l‘"<lll|i‘§- will never come to i. tiieii indeed would there be "ii (‘fuk ‘ties It should he clear. i‘ i "f "H" tire fluhtim not only (""eliosi'ivakin_ Poland. Nor- . Denmark. Holland. Belgium ‘trance. hilt for the continued .(‘lli‘i?. not merely of the Bri- Emnire. but of those ideals Wiitulions which havefbeen Pied ihi-niurh long centuries of find sacrifice. “W171 Any sacrifice ‘his cause is worth any sacri- "i i10“'"°si0ns or property. or rt,» 1f. The British peo- ali n iind the world have i miwiiifirenily to the chai- ‘t iVlien Hitler savs that the ‘iilliif ' have llPOWn and pleasure-loving , sure of truth in his s. There is not the slightest i iii-"lt an element of decad- liad crept into our democracy. we hrid become too much con- id with creature comforts and iire and profit and too little irned with the well being of ‘s. Today the democratic na- are being pilrged in the fire now a quality of character is iestcd which was all the while ui in a latent form. 1e dictators had boasted of iliirit of sacrifice abroad in hnds but the British peoples also learned to know the lull of that word. and we are Pr people for it. Not only ls a resurrection of these finer ies of British character which tconiiiiuedotserueesz. were #- 'lnjuri'es May .Decide '40 Pennant Race (By Judson Bailey, Associated Press Sports Writer) NEW YORK. Sept. 9—(AP)—1n- juries, which wrecked the Na.- tionai League's pennant competi- tion this year, now are liable to decide the frenzied fight in the American League. The world champion learned today that Tom rich would be the season bee merits in his urday Besides being one of defensive rightiielders in H116. Henrich was the kee besides Joe DiMaggio hitting above .300 and the effect of his loss virtually on the eve of New Yorks series with clevelnnd and Detroit hardly can be estimated. Just before the recent Cleveland- Detroit.’ series the Tigers lost that; centrefield star. Barnev McCoskev, who W85 leading the team in hit. Yankees my Hen- lost for the rest of ause of torn liga- left knee, hurt Bat- the best the lea- only Yan- cntch at Chicago last week and his only action since has been one appearance as a pinchhitter. Third baseman Pinky Higgins. suffering from multtple flumems‘ n out for the same period and catcher Billy Sullivan has been subbing for him. In the first clash of the Indians and Tigers Hal Trotsky. land's big first baseman. hit a home run and a single. then trio- Ded over third base and sprained an ankle. He hasn't plaved slnce fanptgethe club has bordered on col- “I116 finest qualities of cnristtnn c aracter. are beginning to recog- nize the preciousness of a heritage which they had accepted all too liilhtly. Make no mistake about it we must have the British Armv’ the British the Britlsil RFC Spiritual forces that are arrayed today against the aggressor as they irllfiixirtliaxllvetkrinstiégainst every tyrant tn "It was said of old that the stars in their courses fought against Sisera, and the forces of the iini- verse are arrayed against every tn- divldual who seeks to rob his fel. Two-year-old Takes 11th Win In Grand Circuit THF (TH A R LOTTETOWN i Don McNeil! New Tennis Champion By Bill Associated White Press Sports Writer belt to a Singer, onsh ' REMEMBER WHEN (By The Canadian Press) Jimm pi 1p at New tonight. The as MeLarnin limit. He entered class and later GUARDIAN.’ Y Irishman. bunched his way roe-round knockout over Al lightweight, boxing cham- York 10 years ago title wasn't at stake was over the weight the welterweight topped ‘the di- the Indians out the American L Time: 2.121’. 2.11%. 2.12%. McCarthy Leads By Bill Bonl Associated Press Shorts Wrilfl’ MAiMiARDNECK, N.Y., Sept. 9- fAPi-Maurice (Hay Fever) Mc- Carthy, fiio has been giving a good account of himself in high calzbm ,golf since 1927. did so again today ‘when he paced the first ill-hole qualifying round for the United States Amateur Golf Championship with a two-under-nar '10. Bracketsd behind him at '71 when the day's work was done were Dick Chapman, who croons occadorlaiiv and hits good golf shot; conslsient- I 1y; Jack Creen. from lip-state New lYork, and Tom whlteivav of Cleve- and, Behind him and the three '11 I shooters the brackets boil-m Refill"! . crowded. (Marvin (Budi Ward of’ Spokane, defending champion and, favorite. found a lct of good com- i lows of their freedom while he makes I mockery of justice. 13in the love of freedom cannot bedriv- en from human hearts by any ma- i terial power. and truth crushed to earth will arise again for the eter- nal years of God are hers. “Arrayed with the British peo- ples in their inflexible opposition to tyranny stand also the pegplg of the United states of America, y it oilght to hearten ils to know that at our backs is the tremendous industrial capacity oi this great nation—i1ve times great- er than that of the whole Europ- ean continent. We have just, rend the transfer of fifty destroyers to the British Navy. and of an agreement whereby the United States Government will take over certain naval and air bases on British possessions. This is by all odds the most momentous event that has happened since the de- claration of war, and there is no one in this room who can estimate the final consequence of this trans- action. It is going to influence the history of the world a hundred rears from today. What many forward-lookln; people in the Uni- ted states and the British Empire have longed for through the years has been accomplished overnight through the stark menace of Hit- lerlsin. and now the English speak- ing people of the world have un- lied in combining their resources in the battle against the menace of ruthless oppression. "It is my firm conviction that there is arrayed against Italy and Germany forces that they can never hope to overthrow, and in- dustrial resources that they can never finally overtake. At this moment the British Navy, like a giant python coiled about its vic- tim, is slowly but steadily strang- ling Germany That is why Hitler is in such desperate haste. It is no accident of history that the free people of the world are the might- pany at par-72. including such con- t tenders a: Trailer Bill Holt of" Syracuse. Skip Alexander of Duke.‘ Freddie Has: of New Orleans. W110 t‘ won the Canadian Amateur in 1936, and the hard-hitting veteran Ellie Knowles. who was a semi- finalist in this tournament in 1906 and won the intercollegiate title 101' Yale in 1907. BASEBALUS BIG SIX By The Associated Press Batting (three leaders in 61011 league). G AB R H Pa. ma ..l31 s01 "r2 11s .345 Sox . . . . . . . . . ..i24 4ao 117 ls4 s42 1€éEillE§°In.nnii2 43o a1 14s .342 333 ,'.‘o.1oi:;:::i§3§§t 32135 :31’? . .132 s24 a: 1m .319 Home rilns:-— American beiiguezFcxx, Red 13m: 35. National League, Mize, Cardinals, 41. Runs batted in:-— American League: Greenberg. Ti- ers, 117; National League: Mize. Car 1min 114. Pennant Races At A Glance (By The Associated Press) lest, and the balance of powir today is increasingly felt on the side of human freedom. it. will not l be an easy road. There are bitter i struggles and conflicts, sacrificesi and tears ahead oi ils all but there can be no doubt as to the final issue. After the dust and smoke oi battle has lifted we miist dedicate ourselves anew to the task of bringing in the day oi human brotherhood when justice and freedom will take once again their appointed places in a world at peace. . "The record of history unden- iably testifies that there is an in- greasing purpose in the ages. and the words of Emmerson are full nf wisdom for our day-"1‘he lesson of life is to‘ believe what the years and the centuries say against the hours.’ Let us then seek to put our individual lives iis well as our na- Vrr so resplendent as in the when the menace is the great- i out. there are springing up‘ iial qualities. Men and wo- iodev. faced with 1i threat to tional life in accord with the will of Him who rules the destinies of l the nations for l-fe who has been our help in ages past is ltili our hope for yem to come.‘ 'tiln‘or circuit were Cleveland Indians slipped quietly out the back way yesterday and left Detroit Tigers in ossession of the American League ead by half a game. While all the other teams in the idle. Chicago_ Vifhite Sex stifled the Indians 2-1 | on four-hit pitching bv hefty Thornton tee. There was only one game in the Naticnal League also yesterday. New Ycrk Giants beating BfOCklyil Dcdgers 1-4 and ushlng them another half ame rorn the idle Cincinnati Re s. The standings:- AMETFCAN LEAGUE Club w a Pet om. on D'tro!t n 5'7 .515 - zo Cleveland '16 57 .511 i4 zi New York 75 s7 m 1 2o. Boston '72 ea .537 s an t NAT"“.\'AI. mesons I i cziioiiimu s4 4i s41 - 2o i Brooklyn 7| so sac 1 a11- r. u um u. n. us. on. \ eon. mo av an auvicl. m8. i;___._____ BRINGINGTUP F-ATHER THE OPEN AND SHUT MIND JRWILLIRM$ q-ld H 5E5 AND SHO E~LiNES-' NEW YORK Southpaw Thornton Sept. Lee uf first elgile at place 1n i Cie vcland t tcday, passing out only four hits a5‘ a_<a1>>- Chielse mmhed f ievelaiid Tribe Out Of Baseball ResultslGiants Down McLamin, Vancouver's First Place YESTERDXTGIESULTS Th e D0518’ e r5 mailman season ‘ Lte and Trcs son and Herrlsley. ooo 100 100-2 11 1 ' 000 000 lim--1 4 0 ii; Eisensiot, lX-u- tector won an 11th victory of the NEW YORK L 9_(AP)_ vision. cliloago White 50x slammed a, z-li res-norms. 1.2.4011: Year today by taking the opening _ 1 ' idn't 1m h victory down upzn the sJump-rid-i day's feature race at the Reading 3:51 &§§fnu'uwh&e new 3mm; m?!’ if?!’ as he wished him and den qytbe5men_ ‘Brooklyn s00 ooo 001-4 13 g pan- Grand gnaw“; meettnbq states Sm Hes Tenn!‘ Champion B Y 1111101186, 4-6, 6-8, 6-8, 6-3. _ .\ew York 103 201 00x—’i l4 1 Qwfied by Miihlim N. i-laincs. pf Th okmahoma C,‘ Sensation 2-2 ‘7-5. 4 g The idle Detroit Tigers’ thus. THYHULS, Head. Carleton agii York Pa" and driven by Deivln e 1d h I tag h Ids ime. _Standing aiongsxle McNeill on the .to0k over first place by a hail game] Phelps; Schumacher and DJ .- Milier, Butch ucnthe two nelts of Yea“ ° i0?’ ° g0"? my 03am I _ gbinnace of American tennis for theiand the iast-ciimbiiis New Yorkt , . tiio event without difficulty. mo Naiimiei "Y t‘: u W {fa ‘thud vesi- in a row and the fourth Yankees. who Open a ‘viw-zemet Second GI-me: n,“ t times On the slow track were 2.14 W!“ wit‘ the 1n r°° "all m- time in her career is Alice Marble. t-ifliés here Wmorroiv. face the Ln-iSyracuse ooo 100 ooo-l a 1 béfl’ a. Ind 2.1214. The race roi- two-year- foeunded 1-1 We i0 I POP" Y , - tea? turned back the eighth bid o! diam only s half-game behind. Jersey ca, ooo ooo 111-2 1 1'1) “ old trotters was worth $2,153. TY 0V" d‘? 9n iimfliP-o“ Heen Jacobs, herself a former 1111-, It was the Indians seventh de- swigar; and Bottnnnl- Hen- ( sununariesz- ggblzitt Flgfiisstbgfirlg itiodsgéierv of ‘L- gitanafll gang. by the simple scores of ifvei in esuii starts. I vhiiw and Blaemire, ' i ; .__ .- revs‘, T15,‘ - 1' Fir-ii Few TWe-veer-eld Futurity Down two sets and with his 0p- tlieiiiepiegfloiisklzq “twain: INTERNATIONAL LINGUE ' Iersev (‘ilv "'00 2m 11-4 iii 4 1101,; m3 pump“, “'15; ponfintg; game appafefiitlyc at l" LONDON, sept. 9.—(CPl ~ The Tribe tilts year. made 1151121.! out ' ‘ ‘ :l<<' '. .i-...t».' 1.1. _|kc(\ and, Bum‘, (D- Mm") I mk-tgorixgllflggoif: Ezuféi wiiimwml" H‘ girigaagigig gngenimcmisrideragly ov- Illilzrry lgéseenstat and his Illlllil-ill-l First Gzimei Ila. ‘; li"i'*.‘,_ ‘l Y.“ , c lion, be regs ded s lost g su soor 5 ruc I01 S00 0-5 11 0 » t nue lbe a t s, t Iiferr (Sgt; ti)”. Mil 141 threw caution to the winds, made the Admiralty announced today. ' ' I |‘y u" ‘L ‘ ‘K ‘H ‘MT av r er . . . . . . . . .. r‘ :-:;:.:—:__~»~—.__ ___ I _._.._ _, ~ a, Rufus Han iDe n1 o 3 , , v v _ Gibson Hugger 4H“ Tshomas 5 OUT OUR WAY By J- R. Wllllfllns ORR ROARIHNG -- .\i:i |i|i' Hoopla Barney Scotland iGOOdharY-L. "I ~ -~~ ~~-—-~-~~s—~—-——~—~——~-~-—-t —-. i, ~ syhgilégilgityleirfit """ 6 I fliwliiiclii‘ ' r0 THINK vouo eon. weiv. watt. THAT'S \ LOOK/PQOFESSORKLOTZ! t-isrEuiMrvu MDOBLEWWEFEH ~ ' ' - ' ' . WITH RAGE TO 611' too-r wi-w l: "rt-aw. 11.1. 1M Tuisikiu‘ OF TAKIN' you HOLT connector cu oer: ea soooudif-Ieteglalz guises 1x3. Three a’; EVEN WITH EU/Ski/KE ma: is: gomzfrhizT up THE CELLO INQTEAD Qouuos vor coMc-s our iss MU?“ "i im- Y" 5 THAT FER C LLIN OU N L“, t -, i I i. 1 (For non-winners of $4.750) é- 7// LILVPAO AN. LORD 0F AN,_',_ I-D TA$E UP OF THE VIOLIN. it / 2/ i a Direct Dale ("I‘ysorl) 2 a a E // , couLo REFUSE THEM STUD/IN 1o BE THE LEFT ARM! 135R l-WiW-‘i TO /i\i~‘-<E'PY TEL - \‘ _ gadv Win (ivigfllhgf) gff 5 // ' . A JOB-ER FIRE EM-ER AJUDGE ER A LISTENMHOWDO FAT-l-Elo v;. c.~-_--_ anama ep - - I g i- Qqrt i__t' -.'._. yam Lgdv (Brown 4 6 a, g /j _ BE Gannon AN seuo EM . yr 1r “u: u: sew- )_ Pure Thoughts (Good 6 '1 1 .- l° Ai- ~_ w TELL F vi»- - " Peter Abbe (l-Iarner) .7 8dr -f~ ' KAJtQQiCA 134,; Drawn-Si nal. Gilt Hanover. p, A r‘! y Tinle: 2.0a‘... 2.06111. zoo-ii. - ‘i-r- _ Third Zlfl) Clgusa TrgéboThree- l ea P n. rse . (For non-winners of $1.009) . Graceful Lady (J. Dill) 1 1 , McCall (Utton) . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1 7 2 v , Emma. Protector iGoodhartl ..3 2 1 ‘é Frances Bacon (Carr) . . . . . . . .- 3 3 l/ alter Brewer (Wiiiiams)....4 4 5 All Bonnie 1W Myer) 5 5 7 Athlone Isola the Great tDagler) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..8 6 8 Delavan Axworthv tFaustl .. '7 8 6 11m usnv on i s;~;i§ Bt/ George filial/units STEEQ CLOSEFZ TO THE SHORE» CAPTAIN- 7 a?“ is“ § £\ ‘._O 2A6 12011614 Ioug Qtifl-Gosi/ e Guy aim-t Tue LF KILL N6 iérjfoue-sveo Tune FIGHT t5 GETTING S kuuc/zt55 PJLOR- S x‘ ' // , #- Wzdd and inn-a c4..- mo, It...‘ For...‘ swim", |N< TIPPLE AND “CAP” STUBBS CAP — MR. BUDGE SAVS 145's GOT SOME WDIIIK FOR YOU TO DO-- HELL PAY VOU ' “ WELL, lT'LL o QN rw worm > VVHENWL NE. EPEND WELL As soon as you've rmisi-iéo - Riam’ AWAY ? Q: CWRSE—__A MY LAND‘. WELL, HE oiom ONCE i< MY LANo! were. WiLL YOU, QR VtDNW y0u- - e 4 I'LL THillk WELL, iF in. MQQT PROWMIN’ om - w’ t IGUESS IT'S r-"usmY, ME READING A BOOK ON how TO DEVELOP A yFOEtEFUL PERSON- IT'S FUNNY, ALL RIGHT OKAYaNOW, ONE THING IT SAYS IS THAT YOU MUST ‘,1’ WEAR CLOTHES THAT GIVE I'M GOING YOU A FEELING OF CONFI- WE'RE GOING SAY, JUST A MlNUTEalF ILET YOU LEAD ME AROUND LIKE THIS, VM NOT BEING FOQCEFUL-JM BEING WEAK m.