l‘ um" m“ "m" that through these agencies yon Ribbentrpp ‘has “gag M$5bm° mtg‘: d“ SUBSCRIPTION marina k c“, deposits of over $3,000,000 in banks in Lunch, cpmpa lcgurgntiyj glegardgastthts _ - Ill‘ NI l"! ll" ""1"" i" ""3 Swit erla d, I-Iaarleri a d Th Ha ue, Holland‘ P9" “l m "R °n gqmwJq-pqgrpp, “ u” F" 7”" m‘ “"“°" “m” w I" t‘ u". has life [insurance irolidies aggrevagiting $7,320,: {The popuhm’, Elf,- “ "6 §°',,§ ‘v l‘ Jul w rm u» advance) muse u cumulus t, song. essor M 1" rrm sroir cnrw snout: n: trunnion a up i . norm Glillliiiiill ' ‘ Al "It l o! . $°ti‘.l"..’i§‘1i.‘§“.‘3f.§§;.¥%'2 ‘illbfrifiil’; - '-""'- "'v~ w?» lensing Illlly (Pounded In III!) _ _ - Y _ _ _ - _ lessor H hes Mearns, chairman .' "m," “gnaw m chm“ a mum father-in-law is Henkell of the Imitiation Wine of the t oi Or$tive Vice Prutdent. J. I. Burnett. I, I. l_ Company, who is represented by people named gdtyflfflw "l f“! ggl‘ “ling; l' nl-lsIl-Collllllsellnnomllll). HItI and Imaging Director l. l Burnett. I‘. J. l Members Judit Bureau of Clrcllltltilll Chicago Dailly News,‘ who ma m. expelled from Berlin some months before, cabled from Paris more details about these foreign invest- in the wine business in Italy, France, United States and other countries. Mr. Mowrer says 000, about half in Germany and the balance in France, Holland and Belgium, and that his wife NOTES BY TIIE HAY less little quatrsin which now forms the major part of the lvric conceived the words tn 1910 eight yous after his graduation from Harvard, and never dreamed they ~ 'rowr~i GUARDIAN TREATED NAT ALL ocronsn 1s. 1039 One of the excuses made for a. boy or girl of ‘teen age who is self- ish, rude, ill behaved, lacks cour- age. or demands his own way. is thathewasaweatchildorhsd had many illnesses. It is only nature! that when a youngster is sick. his family, par- ticularly the mother, is likely to be over careful o! him. she is con- tinually about him, arrang his pillows, shading the sun or asking him his wants, and in vsr- ious ways making him feel how important he is in her. It is not any wonder then that should he be delicate or he attacked by a num- ber oi chlldrens’ gilments. he takes aflvantage of the mistaken kind- ‘Tho Strongest Memory is Walker "N"! the Weakest Juli." might. someda. make the radio program calle the l-lit Parade. The lines have undergone a. few minor changes since he wrote them --most recently at the hands of Harold Adamson, who, with Bern- ard I-lanighen, brought the Little Man into musical prominence — but in the thousands of times they have been repeated tn the last 20 years they have never strayed far from Mourns‘ original: As I was walking up the stair I met a man who wasn't there. He wasn't there again today. I wish, I wish he'd sta away . ‘The qustrain, which as achiev- ed s kind of folklore status, was has policies amounting to $850,000, chiefly in the United States. In addition the son is insur- ed for a large sum. Provision for the future has thus been made abroad by at least seven Nazi leaders notwithstanding the fact that Nazi laws make punishable by death the storing of funds and insurance in foreign countries. ramsx. ocropan. 13.10am _ Chamberlain's Answer It took Premier Chamberlain. just SlXliififl minutes yesterday to reply to Hitlers so-Called "peace" pruposuls, and the gist of his reply can be summed up in still smaller compass- Hlilel‘ S proposals are “vague and uncertain and contain no suggestion for righting the wrongs done to "w! new p». M. immune i In making plans for meeting new i-. EDITORIAL NOTES -. Greenwich standard time universally adopted this date. 1334- all times to give helpful counsel in ttltll p... .....u.-._. l-J-p-s s...‘ -.:e,$.v_-.- yr»- -.o..h Ire-z: #1» ¢.s1._<-‘-- ~ Czrscho-Slovakizuand Poland." Infiltiill the)’ 31:3 based on recognition of his coHqiiBSIS and l115 right to do what lie 1116-1585 Willi (he conquered- “lt would be impossible for Great Britain 1° accept auy such basis without forfeiting her honour and zibziuilouiug her claim that mic!‘- national disputes should be settled by discussion and not by force." _ I Earlier in the week. Premier Daladier gave France's answer in practically the same words. After each act of violence Iliilfil‘ hail Promised _ _ . u ' “This is the last: there will be no more. _H1§ word Ciillli0t llDW be accepted. France is fight- ing’ and “.111 ggntiliiic to fight, until there 1s a trustworthy guarantee of 1161196 Elven to the world. _ Both countries are preparing for s. long war- Tliis is something the l\_':i_zi leaders had not bar- last ‘var. in the be11_b0,t0n,cd grouse“ of an gcrimtaayéigreianycralflprfg hiifnotcrpelilleaggejx.‘ calm, or the undue attention he Rained l-"Y- Alldllt’ 541mm" "Wk l°1' the PM‘ able-bodied seaman, their lorilslups have learnt spmfessmd W111, nQbQdy e159 YNPMBQ- pose of appraising Germany have been accepted by them as evidence of iveakness and cowardice; they are mentally incapable 0f understanding the moral reason for the stand now taken by Britain and Frauce- But it is important that the common people of Germany and the world i1? large should be given every opportunity ‘of understanding, and to this end no opportunity should he missed of emphasizing, over and over Merchants report that business is away ahead of this time last year. >1- »: a m Should the industrial developments promised in the Maritimcs regarding both ship-building and airplane bases materialize new markets will be created for farm produce and occupations for farmers’ sons. s s a s Lord Somers, Deputy Chief Scout of Bri- tain's Boy Scouts, issued a war order to all Scouts to wear their uniforms, himself appeared in the House of Lords in Scout shorts. Com- mented the Loud-on Evening Standard: “His costume aroused little comment. Ever since Lord De la \Varr entered the House during the to take many strange uniforms in their stride." s =1- 1r a With the nation at war, it may be considered either unnecessary or undesirable to proceed with the Central Mortgage Bank_ The Govern- ment may not feel like spending millions in wartime 0n discounting farm and urban mort- gages, sharing the (liscount with the mortgage companies. The tlirec-aiitl-zi-lialf per cent_ in- first sung publicly in ‘The Ps co- ed," a play Dr. Mearns had wri ton for a group of theatrical amateurs. In the drama, a psychology student addressed the ditty to a ponderous professor, who proceeded to an- alyze it at great length. After a couple of conferences with the newly published music and t0 split royalties on it three ways - a penny a copy for hlrn, for Ad- amson, and for Hanighen. They will similarly divide receipts from phonograph records. Dr. Mearns doesn't anticipate getting rich from the song and will continue his professorial career. He's been at N. Y. U. for 14 years. He's a garrulous and reasonably little man of 64. who doesn't believe in the scholarly formality adopt- aroundi" - From the Nep Yorker. It the hour were not so serious, one might say 0f Winston Churc- so carefully that now he is the ot’ Soviet Russia's purpose, the British First Lord of the Admiralty has just said, “It is a riddle wrap- m Fmom the physical when the child is getting better is important not to let him damage his heart by ‘being up on his feet too much and ton soon. This makes hill that he polished up his phrases it hard for the parent or nurse be. _ criise the child has been ruler of the King's navee. Speaking so long he is naturally an get rm and may. "Manv children are iniured per- an-entlv because thev are allowed bed 111 mystery inside an enigma.’ to return t~ school too soon after Conceivably the epigram was sug- 1m mus-q, w" mild ness of the household. Even be- tween attacks of illness he expects the same "kind" treatment. very sensible advice is given to parents and others by Elizabeth Cotton. Huntsville, Texas, in I-Iygeta, the Health Magazine. "Even though special cars is nec- essesy. a child should be treated as naturally as possible during an illness and particularly when he is out. of bed and recovering from the illness." The surroundings of the child during illness should be such that he does not become unduly nerv- ous and unset. The sick well as the sick adult needs to be let alone. He should not be con- stantlv questioned concerning what he wants or how he feels. Neither shoitd he be allowed to get the ides that being ill is a privilege be- Some child as standpoint, it "Quiet" xious to should be out needs or changing circumstances in business, there comes a point where consideration has to be given to the banking angle of the enterprise. f" n , , ,, When that time arrives, come to the Bank of Montreal. We are ready st_ BANK oruournrsll Charlottetown Branch: A. I. B. BELCHER, Manager MODERN, EXPERIENCED BANKING SERVICE. . . tbs outcome of 1:: years’ rucmrful opmefletl banking problems and to consider with an open mind banking assistance “to worthy ventures in business. I r CONSULT THE MANAGER’ OE OUR NEAREST BRANCH zsranLrsl-lnn sen l i ' ‘ ' ' ' ' PUBLIC FORUM ' 811K111. why ll"? All“ 11"‘- al Waf and what the terest rate proposed msght also provide difficul- MW! t0 MT- Churchill by 11 PPP- of red iollcwing such illness as "nu r , obstacles are to a Just and enduring peace. ties mm on [he other hand‘ land values may pllpnrd tfgxllillllgtlaOéamétlliglglyfilfllibkf rétejitliyrllfltmnirggflavfartgillllghasggpg]? damn’??- JrJN-ahl u. P 9 Nazis Fear Red Menace rise so substantially under war pressure that discounting of mortgages will become less neces- ing for a black cat that isn't there. Actually there are several reasons besides the gravity of the hour Con"?! u" til. his temperature is normal for» twenty-four to forty- ehht- hours." questions el Interest. Charlottetown Guardlon does lot necessarily endorse the opinions Three Pressing Needs , ___ s... _ , , . i‘3'.“§i..§2.°°“l£ii.ti.“§r.%“.2€°§13l ..T’§"‘"?.‘i ""2 was“. _, or a s- s- "mm _ ’ , a - 1 ~ .907“! S m1" "EV 8S G B I'D- flmn W. I r Hitler-i Prefer“ for swim"! Czechosbvakm In addition to airplanes. the British Govern- have w ponshfhls Fententceiialni mvfrlnll- 11ml not ‘ettirw him set _ (continued y‘ u“) ‘liastfbiretligpadoiidlrantmririitugehtiriueclive- ‘ ti“ "°‘..““;‘i..‘;;'i..;‘ ri“‘.‘ii..‘;iif“z.i;..iii.i'""f.; "or has dad-d t» in so» as oar; a: 3;.“.."..*".:..'".2:r..:":.: 1 Poms»- MM m""~"°~ l.‘i"‘d§’.l’l§“‘a€‘ii°." s. at: at l a ‘ l I , . . v _ u rl iii y '01“ a" . T _ m Gemnn a rec to evacuk Slble 111 il115 country. l0 Ollfifi l°§~j@5 911115134 l?!’ stages %';°'"n',',is alwglih boagferag, leam ‘mm the "m" “ml”- Sir: You note the Ottawa vision So seriously did the members of for prompt and rfltpld action, but . on y one ‘lilb imce (vi I _ r y g _ the [yboat c;unp,11gn_ A stiuulzlrtlllCd type will churchlurs radio speech 0n‘ suq; of a. federal 81801210!!! presumably as the Provincial Government and that is one of the penalties of war. no“ of (‘crmml mmon."cs’ aim? tllmt ‘:35 be built, blue Prints for which are now available. day was obviously not. in the alc- E M D Iiirtlféediccttgtgiliebeci may repuqm. fifilififi°,m'°gj§“w,fi",jh“g,fgvtfnl§e ‘lllllglllg; {as . 1150009 won I South 'l‘yrol as tlic price 0 U113" 11¢“ 5 lP- The cost of each $1,, - 1 . - cepted parliamentary manner. It e - - Du ,5 h, ‘ . Ne" “"11 1 — , . p is p aced at aboutfiai 250,000 D1685 l5 e BR1181111161118?!" ers of the Island have for years evi snced in London and Paris 5' Bu‘ "Ow ‘he 5'1"“ ‘.5 o“ the om." mot‘ . AS a and the initial ordcr, it is learned, is for 5,0 ships. Claim. rtiignilsolgiiilii biiiil (London Correspondent fi3§°'r§in‘§§'l'i§°§ irlilie giiclbgigvlgalg been working that’ ‘l’ me m?’ m‘ during the pa“ ye“ and m "cent y result of the Russian pacts with Estonia and N 1 _d___ i. _, - h _ m, i“, “.5 st ‘a Bu, this mp Ottawa Journal) ' - . 3 sion, a farm rehabilitation Act weeks tn Ottawa. i L t.‘ i "i Mo-"coiv 'iir and naval bases in 0 aqua m uh or Sm‘ conslrucm-nl’ 0.“, pens to will. l-iteryarv man who was ‘There are not ma women Eli }§,‘§,°1g§§,SP",’,‘,','§‘°“§,,d aljmijfifgyj W811 P150911 11901’! 319 sl-P-WW lYWlK-‘i A point in this connection Worth i1 1151- g ‘"- g ~- ‘ ever, have yet been awarded. Canadian shlp- at the head of the ‘B11451, navy 1n known w1dtfl1gbylzhe1rjn11a1ggxhe1 premuon of arftbmxberiausrxf, wmch by unanimous vote and during the noting is that in this retiabiliin. I “fir: :~.- -. - """.'-‘P7E'Q,fii(_m§v‘\_g:_3 - both countries and imaging thousands of Red [oldicrs into the territories, German residents are being evacuated on a wholesale scale. There are some 62,000 Germans in Latvia, most of them in Riga, and 15,000 in Latvia. In Lith- yards are t0 be extended as rapidly as possible, having in mind the British Government's opin- ion that the war will lust for three years at least. Only such extensions as can be made productive within this time limit will be approved. a =01 i I ago. If Mr, Churchill is back in l" old Job it is not because he York Times. the World War twenty-five years xgdshire nuts!“ , _ oil polishes phrases carefully. New o: an Eagle“ which twice before it was accepted. She followed this first success with a Dell, w as as a she died in a Hert- g home, was one. It is 2'7 years since she struck literary pest-seller with "The Way rewrote she Liberals are a plying in a hope to keep that prov ce in support. of the diminishing Government of MacKenzic King. This ts the excuse. The real fact is tn development of the long known truism that. Premier King is a poli- iecent elections many promises were made that assistance, as nut- llned in the Act, would be forth- coming at an early date. As a mat- ter of caution a survey of farm conditions has b_een in brogras during the past three or four tion scheme the money required will come, as with the Canadian Farm Loan Board, either directly or indirectly, from the Federal authorities. During the first days of the war it. was feared that the rate of interest that the Dominion - - - . ' tion often finds realiza- uania too it is expected that the 40,000 Crcf- l?‘ f J . v ion series of sentimental novels. u“; opporwnwg 1.115 eyes are eve;- months under Professor Reid's di- Government would have to yum mans, livirig 111cm will be exchanged for Lith- fillfclglBlfillfllglllslCllilil-izn sifis niwlii‘: a“ creatgdertlalle popular Strong Sil- open a; m the prospects oi’ retain- rection, which survey I understand its loans would interfere wi the uanians from East Prussia. The evacuation, which is accompanied by the flight of wealthier native families from the same regions, was anticipated in Hitler's Reichstag speech as invisaging “a new order of ethno- graphic relations in the resettlement of nation- alities." What it really means is that the Nazis are fearful of the consequences of the Red menace in Europe. The exodus in Estonia has been compared by a German pastor to “the flight of the Israelites through the desert" only i115 time, by rough justice, it is a march of fiermans and not Jews. _Von Ribbenlrop In Canada " Credited with being the most anti-British lmong the Nazi warmongers is Von Ribbentrop, who made the sinister deal with Moscow as Ger- As he was covering a series of newspaper calls the other day, an enterprising London journalist- Gcorge Graves, “spotted" a clean-sliaven Gcr- man athlete at the Admiralty in \Vhiteliall. He turned out to be Captain Franz von Rintelcin, who directed German sabotage in the United States in 1915 and who blew up “Black Tom”, the Canadian Car and Foundry plant, which has been the subject of so much litigation in recent years. Since December, i938, mystery man von Rintelein has been a British subject with a town house in the West End-and a villa near Ostend. He maintained that the reason lie was visiting Whitehall was that he was ambitious “to form a division of Czechs, Austrians, Poles and other emigres in England to fight that Hitler.” 3 11 $1 t There is still hope for Canada even were the British navy to fail us. If Canada were in- vaded by any European power, the great major- ing when compared with subse- quent events recorded in cold print. 'I‘lie Flying Dutchman was a le- genclary and phantom ship said to have been seen in stormy weather and to forebode ill luck. It was doomed never to enter a port. be- cause of a murder committed aboard: another rumor had it that the captain was a valiant soul who said he would spend all eternity to weather the unweatherable. the way around Cape Hope where he may be seen any bad day trying in vain to round the point. The fabled Flying Dutchman has in- spired novels arid a. Wagner opera. The Flying Dutchman in 1939 is the good ship Bremen, one of the fastest and most luxurious ships ever built, a thin so big lhfll one can scarcely bel eve it could be lost even on the biggest 066811 Since the Bremen slipped out of New York haribor it has been seen in the South Seas. in the West In- dies, in Gremland, in Iceland, in ent Man Just after the war was her lit- erary zenlth, when she must have been making about £25,000 a with her tyi ewriter. But nobody 9V8!‘ avoided pu licity more. In this oect she resembled Marie Corelli and Greta Garbo. country, almost a5 a recluse, she combined novels with housework, and nobody ever seems to have seen so much as a photo- graph cf her. In 1922 she married Colonel Ger- ald Savage, of the R. A. S. C.. and in later years her literary v declined considerably, thong are still a large number of "Eli/ID. readers up and down the country. She was extremely her benefactions were considerable- Her vogue was the admit. hittin in home rec ing. of EP-Qlflfld that she compelled to submit? The fight re- ported by Winston ChurchtL‘ off Living generous, reward year res- in the ordinary ue has there I and of an of the feminine taste would be lng power. An election was in prcs- pect early this summer. The Europ- ean situation was the phantom ex- cuse for delay. The real . fact was that lie was feeling the warmth of the political waters before taking the plunge. The situation in Ontario and Quebec was chilling. Anti-Imperial- ism was then a popular bait, so he l-l10118ht. in Quebec. His eyes are open to the fact that Manion Ls the Quebec ideal, that thk great pro- vince, the former backbone of his career, is estranged from his c- tatorship, and that political salva- tion is only in the gesture of turn- ing volt face in his ife long policy, and adopting the traditional Con- servative lo alty to the Crown. Having a andoned in measure disloyalty of the ast, and adopted a war policy wh ch commended him the greater multi- tude of Canadians. he sees a feel- ing of less repugnance on the of the electorate, and adventurous! is pl. pecting an election-wt Du lessis and Quebec as me excuse. has proved beyond radven-ture the existence of a wi espread need for aid. As a result of the above manyhfaarners have during the past inon or two come to Charlotte- town to enquire how soon they could expect to receive the expect- ed financial assistance. Following the usual course in such matters a definite plan under which the Act would be enforced would no doubt be presented for approval to the legislature at its next on. Now. however, that the war has added so greatly to the responsibilities of the farmers of the Province, and particularly because of the need for action be- fore the mow flies this Autumn, it whole plan. Such, however, has happily not been the case. O one thing at least there is no mor~ for doubt, viz.. that, ti’ the famiers’ needs warranted the s- sing of the rehabilitation Act last spring. those needs are many times greater and more insistant today. when every dollar advanced will mean many dollars’ worth of iri- creased supplies for war purposes in 1040 and" insubsequent years. The above is the Island's pres- sing need No. 1 and all and sundry are challenged to prove that there has been any attempt in the above to overstate the case. (To be Continued) this be remedied by his resignat- ion?" Answen- “No one tn re to." Qpestion, -“'I‘o the Lieut- ver- nor " must be to the borowing buying without a visiblA lfigislstive body in existence. An this while the nation is in one of the most stupendous issues oi’ world conflict known w history. All "Noerqovernor. subservient to a. dictatorship of un- man Foreign Minister, and previously served as ity of United States voters now say they would many other places on the Seven the coast or Norway between Br,“ is early atmude w“ m“ m cue “welrdounyt m‘ act perm", “to icnltzwrzopptprpzartiatrrl/etglaglvbroved :11. Nazi ambassador to London. His earlier career be in favor of using American forces to aid us, feggmjytgedgllleigiolaliswélhffi‘: lsli cruisers and a squpdtaon o! Ofexvymflr tthgle slliould be a twoNmembeggt l gm t "h e on. Mackenzie Klliig i! ' ' 1‘ ' ." ' Ge lesshowstha enavy m ac oraccuracy. a ‘omem shoe aurew - tchtngth litialbarrneteru in Canada is recalled _m an Ottawa excljlangltl. according to a_ survey by the American Institute flying Dutchman of the war of cazwagulg “Rn, be“ It has Mb m?‘ 1s been“ “m, mm ohm,” out a snake". lama,‘ ‘m, 51:? “f, deem‘; the eh where he turned up first about 1913. ostensiby of Plibllt Opm10n~ Seventy-three per cent of 10:0. The first lord of the amt-n sum, Brmm _ mm“ Fm "y, m, ,_, New,“ _ 5,, Rob“, ..w,m l 0mm. mum m m,“ o, ‘m, by w, to promote the sale of a brand of chunpagne those questioned__a representative crossfiection admiralty believes that the ghpstly PIWL Borden held a war time election. ‘Then I reflected-no legislature. demands, and reduction u! unem- d b x- f I - l b t l-tt] kno t_ f . . liner is in a north Russia port. re- Why not make a. like adventure? no House" no speaker since last plplyment created by the war, will ma e y ‘us atier-in- cw i1 1 e Wn 011 o the votcrs in each of the 48 states-were in ports from Holland say that. the 1 It has been said that brains are May. Then a ovemment, in n uence his action. I believe, much side of Germany. Selling champagne, however, favor of using the Ijnimj 513165 army and navy Bremen has become an Italian not essential to life. or even of ad- of defeated an withdrawnmem rs more than the alleged Duplessis ship; the crew of an Estonian ‘ ministration. In a friendly, not. pro- of the executive. A remnant "autonomy" issue. "filled l° till": "P llllle 0f hi5 llme- He hid to aid Canada in the event of attack. Twentv- w, tau 1 ~ tn 520- tessional talk with a lawyer gossip in full mm! no fluggl e r 1r letters 0f lnlfflilllCllvfl t0 Ofllclflli at Rldflail Hall. seven per cent answered in the negative. The ampliliirltrrigi-poin ivifiliisir. Ilussia, ARE You TROUBLE“ m“! ou may call it, some ideas ' along w ' a spen g mo“ y’ ' aidfissariaifan and the result was that he obtained entree to some of the political and military circles which form an important part of social life at the Cap- 1en-i10ry (Qmynamling thg qpprgachgs 10 {hg had seen the Bremen safe and Ben w Le . . . _ ‘ » 1 . Page, and declare the ital. Von Ribbentrop had many attractive qual- Panama Cana1 1f any of 111cm ghould be invaded. gm: 011mm,. fiiligtiigiylnlpton barb“ Governor to be still a member of 1 I ities. He was young and handsome, fond of sports, a good linguist, an accomplished musician, a suave man of the world. His social visits were appreciated at the time, but in later years were recalled with suspicion. Isle also made himself at home in Montreal, same large majority said they would fight to defend Cuba, the Bahamas, Mexico or any other I I U According to Mr. F. C. Mears, who for many years has enjoyed the confidence of Prime Min- ister King, a Federal general election on the issue of a united national war effort directed by a national government will be an early result of and a woman in Montana got a letter the other day from an aunt who wrote from England that she Aunt Emma told Niece Pauline And Pauline told to me— The secret of the riddle Of the vast blue sea. -Buffelo Courier-Express. "Any time 131300.000 people LUMBAGO OR If so we have one of the best remedies to otter. nlrncly BACK ' RITE TABLETS his line were in reflection. I the issue, the legislature, what would be the status at Govemment House? As a member he could not retain both nests, would it entail a. vacancy in the Govanorship?" e answer was. " es" or italit us BRAHMIN i. Th Y . "But," I interposed, "would not ORANGE PEKO TEA _ _ H A tell one mortal man they can no E peck" n u I L _ 1 Quebec City, and in British Columbia, where he a Duplessis victory iii the Quebec. contest. It is lmfi llllilmaglélgg “a”? m” ‘l’; biigo, Sc atiecafcivziiritlfs", 1:1: seems to have acquired a good deal of knowledge no secret that the King Cabinet regard the pro- {at fume,“ ‘ systmjsai? m, gh“::::{h:'d::ng film“ e ElJOlit Camila in n0 way ESSOClHICd with the vincia] fight with deep QQnQcffl bgcgmgg of the American tradition, It is their gmagmun “u.” fink n business of wine selling. When War was de- clared on Aug. 4, i9i4, he was on his way to a tennis match in Oll‘l\\'<'i, but made some excuse and disappeared. The pullCe were on his trail, and he was intcrncrl at Montreal. Through the influence of a 1rromincni lady he was pennitted to do some shopping under the care of a guard. He eluded the guard nud, as the American bor-r der was only about sixty miles away, he was soon safe in the LTuitcd States, which had not then entered the wzir. Von Ribbcutrop has been given credit for Hitler's rcccnt foreign ventures, but apparently he has no confidence in the ultimate result of his own 1inlicics. On Sept. 2i the London Daily Mail reported that cash and securities amount- mg to more tlirm $05,000,000 had been deposited in other countries in the names of Hitler's seven leading henchmen. von Ribbentrop, Goering, Goebbels, llcss, Himmler, Ley and Streicher. lt was stated that in addition they had taken lifc insurance policies for another $i5,oo0.000. mak- alleged injury it will do to national unity and it is also well knmvn that the three Quebec members of the Federal Ministry-Rt. Hon. Ernest Lapointe, Ilon. P. I. A. Cardin and Hon. C_ G. Power-mean business in their purpose to accept the logical consequences of an adverse verdict in Quebec and quit the Government. Three important vacancies in a Dominion Cab- inet, including one caused by the resignation of the deputy head of the Govcrnmcnt—-Mr. La- pointe——and involving removal of all represen- tation in the Ministry from one province, Que- bec, is a condition, ivrites Mr. Mears in the Montreal Gazette.‘ that could not long be toler- ated in federal circles or by the people in the eight other provinces who are determined to have a united and aggressive war effort- This spectacle of a Federal ministry (lccimated by a Duplessis victory, which in other parts of the country would be regarded as a challenge by a province of nearly 3,000,000 people, is already foreseen on Parliament Hill, and by those close- inga total foreign itivcstment of $30,000,000 for the seven wliusr natucs were given, On Sept. 21 Edgar Ansel Mowrcr, correspondent of the ly associated with ilic aduiiuistmtitul‘: ivork it i5 contended such a situation would have f0 be remedied at the earliest opportunity. fault and not his if his delusions of grandeur iZTBDEIYJOIf. him to _Qlympus." -- Liberty Magazine. The trial blackout which takes place tomorrow night in Port of Spain, Ban Fernando, Points-a- Pierre and Point For-tin. is a. necessary precautionary measure which the exigencies of modem warfare unfortunately demand. Air raids over centres of strategic value —e.nd even those of no value-have become almost commonplace. and while there ls little likelihood that the inhabitants of Trinidad will ever be actually called upon to re- sist sn enemy attack. vet so ion-z as a state of war exints there is obvious wisdom in the govern- ment's determination to accustom the pie to these precautions. - Trin dad Guardian. Today the command of the sea is Just as vital to Britain as in the pest. As long as she retains her control of the high sees no invad- in force can reach or maintain it- sef cm British soil. The worrv in recent years has been the develop- ment of airplanes as a fighting force. 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