MAXIMS 01-‘ ‘A MERE MAN The stars govem governs the stare. men, but God f?‘ pharliittetowu (iuurillun Two Coliti- um-"lng tiunnllnn, Fuuiuied min. CHAkLOTT Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew crown, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, SEBTEMBEB 1, 1938M llilllll llNY REFERENCE Til CZECH; ISSUE ‘ i 1:‘ _%-_ Nuremberg Address Is Devoted Largely 'l‘0 Internal Affairs. (B Louis P. Incline!) ' (M90148 8d Press lflireign Staff) NURERIBERG Germany, Sept 3 -Ch:iuceiinr lli ler ln a, 50-11mm“; address tonight. sniil the cultural rriilin iviis the only one left in which foreign opponents 11f the Nazi regime hoped successfully to mack. lie denied vigorously time X31151“ aimed ill esf-iililuiiiing n new rellg. ion or 1n-rtormcil “cultie rites." 1hr address was preceded by 1111,- Npiirt reiui at the opening or 11m 10th lllllllllll partv rally in \\’lli(‘h he kept silent on ‘zeehoslovaklti and made tow refcrene ~ to foreign “f. M“ PWPM to ilc t- Germany now is 9o Slfiillg she mild prove im. miiiie to any imr-tiiiie lilockziilc, "'l‘hc idea of bloelcirliiiv: (‘ rm- luv can even now be buried is un Pllitiflil)’ ineffective ivenpiiii." ho zis- Ber ct. CONFERS ‘VITH HITLER The Crechoslovak ntpotiitions WPfl: brought to Nlll'f‘llll7i r1: lioiv- ever by Konrad lit‘lll1‘lll_ the Sllil“~ ten German leader. who arrivcd in the fll't“.ll00l‘l. I-le \\':ts'elii<t,-‘etl first Willi the German Minister- C?! ilkiu. Ernst, E‘. then .1 .h Iiitler. ' in his address Hitler asserted: "We ""ii'l builiiiiii; cullic. ironies. i apples’ halls. I 'cn'1 conslructiiit! cuitie iii sports arenas and play- Fimift performing cultic i i Olfiflllillll" oonulnr dem- s." he shouted. ulcd foreign nations for fir. lie r help 1' All Oil-tied German (Continued on page '7. C01 3) llluskrzit Tops At Montreal Fur Auction Jen's into their MONTREAL. Sept. 6—1\IllSl(l‘l\t was flips lti the Montreal fur auc- tion stiles today. M‘ 1>cr cent going It 25 per cent increase over inst ialc: ill-ti fox mcclitwre demand. it) _|>cr cent up; ivolf, 42 per cont sold, price unchanged; sinall iirmuii<l skunk, Mink sells tomorrow. silver fox Thursday. Siilcs today were B per cent of IVIIOIB. COMING ‘EVENT! ll Dance Niiiht- M h-l257-ll-ll-lil “Wednesday The llighlan B. "Borden Talklec Wednesday. L-982-U- 4-1. “Tfllkltb-M l W tine-still?’- a peque L-(ElZI-ii-Ii-Si. "Tulkies-Orapaaid. L "YWs ‘Theatres-Went: In The lesion Now. All Tccniooloi‘. L-92i-9-3-3l. “Reserve Thursday, December lat. for Zion Church animal tea and bazaar. 11-1096. "Dance in Freeland Lodge every Wetlncstiay night begins at nine ° 9101K. Tignisp Orchestra. ‘Olfi to the Dance in St. ‘lbresak Hall, Wednesday- Septem- licr nu. Orchestra. L-liYTQ- -’l-li. H all Frldiiyj. L- l0? "Uaucc! Fortune 7 9 7 A; - - -. i. sflitcmbci‘ 9th. '_'Yi‘fl's ‘lkilkics ~- Ztliintarzuc Sai- llltitis". souris Monday. Lllc Bcizliiii 1" tlvllvsc with um Brothers. L-ltliitt-li-I-lii. “Como to the Dance in Huiiicr River l\lilStilllC Hull. Scpieliibel‘ litii. Old time and modern (latices. Lncul Orchestra. i.-it)B‘.:-ll-’l-2i. "Old Tiinc Dance iii. Moiitrif-‘lle Rink ilriday. September 9th. Niusin by Quinta. L-lfliil-ii-"I-2l. "Kinkora Hall- Ice Crcnm and Dancc Friday night. September “"1111. Siiinincrsidc ovt-liest i. L-ll) 2-0-7-11. F "Dance in PMGiL-il (‘iaraai- liall ‘mm. September ilfli. Jackie Chip- man's Orr icrjtru. L-ltlfiti-li-‘i-lii. "Uilckcn Supper Calccinn ii ‘ch. l*‘i"._dv,\'. Rr\')l(‘llll)“i‘ 0'11. Hui 25c llllfl l - li-liliifi-li-l-ll. "iii- (‘rwain 12ml l‘:i.:~e<~ (‘iiilhilli iii, r1 [ll'.‘|lll‘,t'1' iTh L-ltltifi-il-I-Zi. "fiance .1 “T1 f wcdillwdfllv anhm ill iii {ink ui 1Y1 11-101.- J-s-‘rucs-wcd ti. reserved about taking‘ L-2i77-7-5-Moii-Tues-M. " =12: 00min: here on "a ll rima e the Cradle of Confedgragtlonfiaiig ils a gesture of intcrprovincial good- will. uiiiviirds of 300 re i-esentatives of the Union of Mun clpalitles of Quebec arrived in Charlottetown yesterday morning on the S. s North Star. After visiting His Hon- Olll‘ Llclifellllflt Governor DeBlois at. troverntnent House they were driv- e_ii about the city and to the North Shore. and were guests of the civic and provincial governments at an PIUQYabie luncheon at the Canadian National Hotel. after which they re- iunicd to the boat. leavin here at 4 ‘o'clock for Coineau. aguenay Rllt-‘l’. Quebec and Montreal. where lliev arc due t0 arrive on Friday. The delegates were representa- tives of some 100 municipalities of the province oi’ Quebec. Warm appreciation of the hospi- tality extended to them on their brief v sit. here was expressed by lion. .'losc1:l1 Bilodeuu, Minister of Municipal Affairs in the Quebec Provincial Government, by His Worship Aclheinnr Raynault, Mayor or nlontreal. and Mr. Charles Bour- ussa. sccrctiiry treasurer" of the Un- ion. who were spokesmen of the delegazinn at the hotel luncheon. Nil’. Doiirassu. at the close of the function. presented His Worship 1\l-'i.\'or Foster with a beautiful sli- ver c1111. with ilic following in- scfipllfl“ A Son Honneui E. A. Flostcr Maire cle Charlottetown P. E. I. UUnion . des Mimiclpultic." l do in Province dc Quebec Scptenibre 19 Translated the inscription reads: To iiLs‘ worship E. A. Foster, Mayor of Cliarlottetoiitn. P. E. 1., from the Union of Municipalities of the Pro- Vince oi’ Quebec. September 6, i938. Conn, B. Roy Holman, Deputy Nfayoi- who presided at the lunch- l con. first called upon Premier Campbell. The Premier recalled that this was the third occasion on which the Union of Municipalities of Que- bec had honored Prince Edward Isla d th a visltatio do Island Battle Win Honors At Saint John (O. l’. by Guardian's Special Wire) SAINT JOHN, N. B.. Sept. 6- Livestock prize winners at the Saint John Exhibition today in- cludedn Shot-thorns: Senior Grand Olin-m- pionship (main). Downsvicw Kil- blean. owned by George Chase, Port Williams, N. S. Ayrslih-cs: Championship (mal- csi, Springburiie Royal King. own- ed by A. MacRae and Son. Char- lottetown; reserve (‘rlcngarry F‘liiff‘.s Oliver, owned by J. R. MacDonald and son. Shuben- acadlc. N. S. Ayrslilres: Senior Champion- ship (female). Miillin Court Lady Luck, owned by A. MacRae and Son; junior championship (fe- male), Ingsbrook Penelope, owned by Inizs nod Son, Charlottetown. Muilin Court Lady Luck was nam- cd grand champion and Ingabmok Penelope took the reserve chump- ionsliip. High ivinncr in the speed jiidlflliifi was Geonze L. Boswell. Charlotte- town. who won with his Oxford Downs and Shropshires. Veterans tum. By Guardian's Spfltilnl Wire) QTTAWA, Sept. 0 Dominion Council oi the Canadian 1x810"- wlncn assembled in semi-annual conference here today. will, meet- ilic grveziiirieiit tomorrow for a dia- ciiesir n of wiir veterans‘ problems 'i‘oii.1_ilit it sub-committee of the count-ii. consisting of Col. - W- in zvi- uncuuvcr. lltiilillllOh Pred- (i(‘lll_ . . C. llnsil Priffi‘. Mfllllrmii 1,1,1 v. .- iu-tnntlctit, Alex Walker. ,. - 1 111t- ig-‘ticund Vlc~ President. anal ‘l, A, ‘ l'-.irn~.ird. Nflllilllll0. B. C.. ilrattwl u llltill\)l‘tlii(lIlll1 to lay be- 1.~_-.. 1111- 1)l1lli\l',\‘ sin-stun of council loin; row l‘l\lil'lfl_"lll!'. llic rvlllijstll" iatttn, 1o be made to .114‘ 8°\<‘"\' i Ii" ll|'l(i at St n"? etiql i|1\‘i'. ' 9 l‘. " i ‘vi’ i r a‘ - i) wt . . . t.“ ' bmrmflzyk .,l..i.p. John 1‘ i. _i.t L-aoz-a-z- :.l great : ti lillt"ll‘.ltl."_\'lll('lll anion! i i e:i'a.;;ci in s1 of ill“ s ten irn th s a tcriiarm- A iicai had bccii dcue in the ch ampionship, .. Problems At Legion Council Meeting i1?- Pays n9inWi-5h 1n any Way to commer- cialize our hospitality." he said, “but we do invite you all and sill".- dry to come and spend your r1011- 1183's here." He referred to the newly established National Parkumprovcd highways and other tourist attract- ions. and closed by extending a warm vitelcome to the delegates 0n geeliqatif of the Provincial Govern- llnn. Jos. Bilodeau "A 59W ycais ago." said Hon. Mr. Bilodeau, “the _Union came on a similar convention to your Island, The pleasant memories of your kindly Ptiollle and beautiful 1irov- ince have remained with us. and I10_W we are back to see you. ‘For the Past twenty years more and more o our French Canadians have come to Charlottetown to fillldy at St. Dunstnifs Uuivcrsitv. and always on return they would speak with affection of your stur- dy people. your undulating farming country. and your silver foxes. the fame 0t which l5 known all over the continent. and even in Europe. The? Speak 0f tiic devotion of the inhabitants of \'Oll1'-l)l'O\‘ll‘C(‘ to its university. of the gencrcrity of its most prominent citizens. and es- pecially of Sir Charles Dalton. l evcn wonder if Dalton I-Iitll is not as well known in our Province as the halls of the seminary oi Que- bec. Wlicn our people have finish- cd extolling your virtues Wu ivould look at them and wonder if they were Qucbeccrs or Prince Etiward lslattclers. ‘Of the many advantages a boat trip brings to conventionists the most important onois the close contact we get with the cities of other provinces." Mr. Bilodcau continued. He wished, on behalf of his de- partment in the Quebec Provincial Government. to offer this province the closest colaboratlon in the study of municipal problems. In closing he declared. amid ap- plause. that the Province of Quc- bec. while cherisliingits own riuhts. wishes io_cp;qpcr_atc with all other (Continued on page "i. ColjL U. S. Quintuioling Her Air Defences (AP. Bv Guardian's Special Wire) WASHINGTON. Sept. ti-(AP) —The War Department is qulntupling United States anti- aircraft defences through a $10.- OOODOO-series of contracts with private and government ordnance factories. Officials said today contracts awarded in the last few days for various parts will when the parts are assembled. give the army more than 33f) new anti-aircraft; guns and gun carriages. The present strength is under 70 guns. Prison Physicians " ' ‘Clieirged In Deaths (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) PKLLADELPHIA, Sept. ti-Two county prison physicians found "criminally negligent." by a cor- oner's jury in the "baking" zleaiiis of four convicts were held today for grand jury. After a five-minute hearing. Coroner Charles H. Hersch held Dr. George Enoch. 01-year-old vis- iting physician. and Dr. Hulls ahams, 28-year-old resident physician. Twelve otthers are implicated. Aired it way of ameliorating conditions, still re- was " ‘ted. but much malned to bc done. Some complexities had developed in connection with the convention's resolution requesting that collection of radio licence fees be set aside ns n job for cx-service mcii, t-iie C0l1l1- (‘ll was told. Oii tliL-i point. however. the inst word had not yet been heard. Mr, Bowler said. With regard to employment of a “reasonable quota" of veterans on Dominion and provincial projects. indications ivcre that in some sec- tions of Cniinda this was working out advantageously. while (he con- trary was tlic case in others. It was declared tlicrc were instances where llfllltiflll patronage governed the jobs and preference was gven to mrty \\'0l'k€l‘S rather than to those who had served their country. HEAR LECTURES‘ 0N HIGHWAY fillllflklltillllN i" Good Roads Associ- ation Convention Opens Sessions At Bigwin Inn, Ont. BIG-WIN INN.. Ont, Sept. 6- (CPlWPTODICITIS of keeping beauti- ful the zircas surrounding highways were reviewed by two officials in papers tireparcd for delivery today to the Canadian Good Rozids As- sociation convention.‘ HlZllWhyS Minister McQucstcn of Ontario and W. H. Siiiioiron. senior land- scape architect of the United States Bureau of Public Roads. ‘Nashing- ion. prepared the papers. The convention brought b0 this Muskoka resort more than 300-dele- gates interested in highway pro- blems. Lieutenant-Governor Albert nlzittlirws of Ontario formally op- cued tiic gathering and Mr. Mc- Questcn welcomed delegates to On- tario. Technical features of road construction occupied early sessions with R. M. Smith. Ontario deputy minister of higriivays, orcparing one of the lectures. "Wayside Development" Lccturing on "Wzrvside Develop- ment." M . McQucsten said in his. paper that the term might cover; a ivide range but lie applied itl particularly to his department's: 1rollcy in connection with the mod- lc 11c of inch-grade high- 10f," ‘s’ or . ' —\vhich Oii. ffiifflllily adopted. orty inilcs are completed and another 100 miles arc in hand, Tin-y are designed for sustainedf speed. with the best i1li‘,’lll11-E1li5,i fewest curves and least grades 1. . siblc and hypo-sing centres o‘. 11.11 ". To accomplish their pur- pCse fully. local traffic and local birinc-s aloul! their borders must be discouraged as the ultimate in- tciiiiou was to liinii aces-s to the e nicioi'i\"a_\'.s cxceivt at carefully con- trolled and infrequent points. Tile (it‘|lfll'll1l7ll.. therefore. was "oiiibitin; establishment of bus- irers enterprises-gas stations. camps. markets, icarooins etc.— zilong these routes. thus prevent- ing what iii England had been termed " ‘bbun road development" which s lllnly affected usefulness of these niuliivziys. To compensate established business for diversion of traffic from previously-existing highways. signboards directing motorists to the various centres which have been by asscci arc er- ected at all priiicine intersecting and connecting roads. In an lllllSllTl-lffl acidrcs< "Prac- tical engineering problems involved lll__l_i1_(‘_llllldSCil.p8‘__dBV9lD])lT1Glli- of (Continued on page 7. Col 3) Count 0ft Bovadonga Bleeds To Death lvllAklil, F111,. Sept. 6—'l'lie Count 0t Covridongu, once heir t0 the crown of 51min, lost. his lifelong. battle against hemophilia today, (lying 0t the heredituijy blood dis- caist- \\'l1l(‘h causes pi-itfuse bleeding alter ho was injured in a motoring uctutlvnt. 'l'lic one-time Prince of Asturias was hurt during o nocturnal ride) with a, young night club entertain- er who lost control oi licr car and wrecked it against a telegraph pole. ‘Ilio Count. son of former Qilvfili Victoria Eugenia. was cut about the head and ince. his lei: broken and his skull 1mssibl_y' fractured but he might have recovered except tor the disease. It is handed down by tlic ivomcu oi his mother's Battvnbcrg line. ‘They are free from it them- sc cs. Hemophilia prevents coatllllilllvn 0f the blood and lets thc smallest wounds bleed profusely. Throughout. his 3i yturs. the crippled Count fought his handicap. coining many times to the door 0f death. Recover Body In waterlogged Dinghy (GP. By Guardian‘: Special Wire) TORONTO. Sept. 6 - Lifesavers late today recovered from a water- logged 14-foot dinghy on Lake On- tario the body oi 1'1 year old Alex Whcciuns of Toronto who set out with Gcrrtudc Ferguson. i9. oi suburban Long Branch 0n n weak- end cruise to Hamilton. There vlas no trace of the girls y. The diiiizliv. its mint. wrecked af- ter u wcck-ciid storm. was sighted earlier bv an airplane cliarlcrcil by tlie ‘Foiouio Slur about one mile east of Oukvlllc, New-spapermcn on the plane said the couple appeared to be l lug on tlie bottom of the craft vi lose deck was w nah. their arms clasped about one another. Lifesavers found only one body. Unable to land in the rough irat- er. Pilot Clark Rouse returned to Toronto and notified lifosavers who Bped to the a roximnte area. They had great di fculty in findinit the craft as the izunwalcs were only a River Booms Vlialt Japanese Naval Drive lip Yangtse River SHANGHAI. Sept. 7-—(Wednes- day>—(APJ-The Japanese naval advance u the Yangtse River to- ward Han ow, an important ad- junct to overland drives north and south of the river, today ivas reported. to have been altecl for the present at least by a river boom between Wusueh and Matow All Japanese columns either advancing directly toward rovisional Chinese capital or empting to reach and severriail- ways north and south of Hankow the virere estimated to be roughly 100 miles from their Wijectives. After advancing across the Anhwel province border into southern Hanan, a Japanese mot- orized column reported it was sit- tackliig Kusliih to gain a foothold for a westward push toward Sinyang. on the Pciping-Hankow railway about 100 miles north of Hankoiv. Foreign observers considered this column the greatest threat to Hiinkoiv because the city. situat- ed on the north bank of the Yangtse. would be subject. to dir- ect ‘attack. without any interven- ing water barrier‘. down thc Pcip- ing-Hankow line from Sinyang. ElllllllllEll AT ST. DIINSTAWS Msgr. Edward Savage Dies At Moncton. (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) MONCTO-N, Sept. 6~Most Rev. Arthur Mclanson. Archbishop of Moncton. will celebrate poniifical mass of requiem at Itllc‘ funeral to- morrow of Rt. Rev. Msgr. Ezlivard Savage, pastor of St. Bernard's Church here, whose ‘death at the age oi '79 occurred on Sunday. The body has since been at the church rectory and this afternoon was re- moved to the church there to lie in state until the funeral services tomorrow morning. Monsignor Savage was born at Melrcsc. Westmorizmd County, N. B.. in 1859,5011 ct the late Mr. and Mrs. William Savage. He was the last of a family of l3. After cits- trict school lie went to St. Dun- stanis, Charlottetown. then Si. Laurent. College. Montreal. St. Joseph's University. Mcmramcock. N. B.. and then entered the Grruid Seminary. Quebec. for his theolo- gical course. He was ordained priest by Card- inal Tascliereau at Quebec on July 12, 1891. He had been curate in Saint John and Fredericton. pas- bor at Sussex. N. B.. for l0 years and on August l0. i895 became pas- tor at St. Bernard's. licre on the death of Rev, H. A. Meahan. He had filled that position for 33 of the 4'1 years of his priesthood. He had erected several buildings in connection with the parish work and made improvements to Bernard's Church. Father Savage had travelled wide- ly and was known as a scholar of repute. In 1934 lie was honored by the Pope with the rank of do- mestic melate. His remains will he interred at his native Mclrcse. Port or lliarseille U-nder-Military Rule PARIS, Sept. 6—(AP)-Thc Gov- ernment tonight announced its de-l clsion to put the Port of Vlarscliic under military rulc. The action followed weeks of fruitlcsls efforts by Premier‘ Ed- ouard Daladicv to get dockworkers to load and unlaaxl ships 0n Sun- (iflyS—\Vl‘llCll they refused to do be- cause of their 40-hour week lniv. It was not made known immedia- tely ivhcthei" the dockworkers would be mobilized and required to work under military onicr. bill the decree gives the Premier that wer. Senegalse troops have been used on the weekends to keep perishable merchandise moving. but the gov- ernment decided the army should take over entire control. y The action was seen as closely coingected with the Czechoslovak crs . Notes Improvement In Business Trend MONCION. N. B.. Sept. 6- Biisineas conditions in Canada have shown considerable improve- ment within the past few weeks as indicated by the iipiviird IPCHG in Canadian National earnings stated Alistair Fraser. traffic vice-pres- ldent Canadian National Railways when passing through Moncton today on the Ocean Limited on his return to Montreal following a visit to Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. TELEPHUNE ASSN. nicis NEW tint 14th Annual Conven- tioii Concludes Here Yesterday. Mr. John W. Delaney, Winnipeg was elected president of the Tele- phone Association of Canada as the 14th annual convention oi the orgaiiizaiitin concluded here yes- terday. Mr. P. A. McFarlaiic. Adon- treal ivas named vice-president while Mr. A. M. Mitchell. Edmon- ton. ivas rte-elected secrtitiijv treas- urer for the ilth time. Directors clccicd included Jessrs. J. D. Bak- er, Edmonton. James Hamilton. Vancouver. P. A. NIcFavlanc. Mout- rcal, John E. Lowery. Winnipeg, O. J. Fraser. Saint John, and W. H. Warren. Regina, The i939 convention would be held in the territory of the Bell Telephone Company. it was an- nounced. probably at Montreal. At the annual general session which opened yesterday morning ivitli retiring president. Mr. W. A. Winfield of Halifax presidliiq the technical committees reported. Mr. William Curran. Montreal reported for the Engineering committee. Mr. William Bruce. Edmonton for the plant committee and Mr. Neil Fitclipatrick. Vancouver for iiie traffic committee. During the day a congratulatory telegram was sent from the As- sociation to the lJcan of Telephone men. Mr, L. B. McFztrlaiie, Mont- real, who yesterday ciilebratrzl his 87th birthday. A teicuram of good wishes was also sent to Mr. O. J. Fraser of Saint John. absent from the convention because oi illness. Mr. Frank Browncll 0f Winnipeg extended the thanks of the ccn- vciitlon to the retiring officers and to the Island Telephone Company’ for its hostiitalityt. niciiticiiing es- pecially Mr. W. A. Winfield. retir- ing" turcsiclcnt and Mr. Waller Grant. Nfamigei‘ of the island Company, Most of the 4i (ielegates here for thc convention leave today by special railway car for their homes. Several. especially the Maritime (integration are travelling by motor c Ill‘. The tive-tlav convention opened ‘Tuesday at the Canadian National Hotel where all scdsions were held. Last night the delegates were guests of His Honour Lieutenant. Governor Georue D. DeBlois at an informal fuiicilon at Government House. Included in the program was a concert. by the Prince Ed- ward Island Light Horse Band. Numbers included Overture to Or- pheus and a elarionct solo by banrlsmau Charles MeGregzor, Searcflfor Parents Of Dying (‘hild LYNN, hliiss. Sept. 6—(APl- Local. state and Canadian police and coastguardsmeii today were asked to search for the jiarcnt-s of Ruth Goodwin. nine. who was re- ported tiviiii: at, the iynn liosnital of a fractured skull suffered while ivatchlnp n sancllnt baseball panic. Harold Goodwin. tlic lather. is ii fisherman aboard the Schooner Andrew and Rosalie. reported as being somewhere off the Grand Banks. The mother was reporter! en roiitc to an iiininmcd destin- ation in Nova Seotia to visit friends. Insurgents “Hiinili” British Freighter ALICANTE. Spain. Sept Arab member of the crew of the British freighter Marvin was kill- ed here early today Wll0l1 it was struck by a boinb dropped by an Insurgent plane. The freighter. loaded with wheat. was set afirc by the boni-l) and badly damaged. Other mis- slles struck the residential quar- ters of the city. injuring ll per- ti-An s ‘PAGES I HITIER SA Ys REICH CAN DEFY BL OCKADEl Delegation From Q u e b e c Visit T0 Province “Cradle Of C-oTf-ederation” Of ‘Interest To Union Of Municipal- 1ties-—Lunche_o£ At C. N. Hotel; MERE MAN Full of misery is the mind nnxlois about the fixture. MAXI M6 OFA French Reserv LONDON, Sept. ti--I\'ew While the German Home Fleet w: umn manoeuvres Fueh tier. Statesmen fruitlessly loo Nuremberg, for indication of the quarrel in which he has c Austrian Annexation "I come before you, my old party 1 comrades, not with a. pact butt with seven new German districtsl of my own homeland,“ the mess- l age said. referring to the March 13 tanncxaiion of Austria. l France. disturbed by Gcmianyfl» ‘ military manoeuvres at a crucial stage in the negctiatioris between the Praha Government and the autonomy-demanding Sudeten Ge"- mans. poured more men and ma- terials into the frontier area along the Maulnot line. running from the Belgian frontier to the Swiss border facc-to-face with Ger- manys 110W Siegfried fortifi- cations. It was estimated that 300.000 re- I scrvisls had been called to the French iri-color to help the stand- ing army "watch for trouble ll'Oil1| over there." as Frenchmen dwtcll-t in: along the border expressed it. Await Reply Whether Praliais new proposals for solving the minority dispute would be acceptable to the Sude- ten Germans-or Hitler-cs a basis of further negotiation re- mained uticertain. ilfavas, French News Agency. re- . ported from Praha nine proposals which unofficially were said to be the Czechoslovakian Government's latest and "ultimate" offer to the pro-Nazi Sudeten German minor- itv. (The plan met in hart 0r in whole seven of the Sudcten Leader Konrad Hcnlcinls eight (lemmids for auionomy for his 3.500.000 fol- loyvers, Hams said. Outsiaticling among the Government offers was a proposal ior eventual introduc- ticti of district. system wit-h min- orities cnjovuig autonomy in all iriattcrs cxrcp’ those directly rc- lated to national unity and de- fence.) Despite intiiciiiions that Pralia fell. the new otter rcprescnzeci the limit to Willi ll it could possibly go. the ixissilnlity iiiiit. Viscount Run- citnan. uu fiicial British mediator‘ in tlic fllrlllllt‘. iiiishi proiliuc l'il:. in London. ffifiplfllblllll‘ tpiarters Mild Hcnlein iPra-ha tiuspatchcs left toniizlii for Nazi ctoncrcss.) The 131"." l1 Home Plot began l0 weeks oi .\‘¢ii'ili Sea niaii t-iirics toduv. -.|. l'.'il for active sc . Jflie... ll.~.l. (‘refill-Wu Cd "fOllllilP" lllzlllfivllVfPfi j North Sea Aura. 2a The Adiiiirnlt_v inane a last-inhi- ‘ute change in the fall program tn insure the \\'f‘Si.l‘l'l"l approach the Etiglisli Channel would be closely guarded. This iiiovc sent the battleship Royal Oak and the Fourth De- stroyer Flotilla to fbrtlanci. across the western neck of tlic channel from Chcrbourg. France. Fifty warships hl.{‘fll11(‘(l out 0f Portsmouth and other base:- for the North Sea exercises. led by the "KEV!" ll‘. sons and destroying three build- ings. 335004011 battleship Nelson. Colnada - U. S. OTTAWA. scpi. 6 —tC P)»- Conclusion nf the Canada-United States trade negotiations lending in about l)('.\\ agreement is expected two weeks. according to the information avuJablc here. Sudden (incision of Tracie Min- ister Euler to return home when lie had planned a prolonged tour of Europe. and the recent hurried visit to Ottawa b_\ several mem- bers of the mission which has been working on the revised n- greeméiit is approaching cori- The abundant wheat crop this year has been a factor in this up- turn in business conditions and there should be a decided improve- ment. between now and the end of few inches above the water. the year, he said. ciusion. Mr. Euler will tench next. Saturday. Much interest attaches to the new agreement but even more so to the Anglo-American agreement which has been in process of Canada to a revision oi the existing trade. Trade Treaty Nearing Completion, Report negotiation since early in the year and ivliicli is believed to involve Canada in sacrifice of some of licr preferences in the British market. There is no assurance that the two agreements will be concluded simultaiicousiv. Canada's existing agreement. now bPillll revised. citds Dev. 3i. next. but could be l‘.‘(il‘llll(‘(i Irv iiiuliial iiizreeiiu-iit The Ainrlo-Aiiicrienii uni-cement is a new 1vrojiiwsliiuii. Mr. MucKctizic Kim: may at- tend toinorrou-‘s weekly cabinet council if lie is ivcll enough liiil (he prospects are that lie will iioi feel equal to coining down from ’ Kincsmctie. He has not been cu- , tirclv incapacitated but (or three weeks has been suffering consid- erable discomfort. message. formally opening the Qwn prtilmslll was tioi ruled out ill tiic Nlll'(‘ll’ll)f“.‘-I _ Annual Sulmcrlpllun Utlhereil $1.01: By .\Inll—l'. u-z. i. 54.00; Cniiuvin and u. s. mo. CZECH CONCESSIONS RAISE PEA CE HOPES Powersjl-lert As Reply Is Awaited ToNewProposal-s British Home Fleet Steams Toward North Sea For Manoeuvres- es Man Border. (‘lee h conccssitins tuniaihi raised liurtipczin hopes of settling the (IzccliosluvzikAli-i- man dispute without war as Chancellor llitlei- 1ii~oclziinicil the Reich immune against any war-time blockade. rer spoke. Great liritziinfi steaming toward the North Sen for aut- and French powerful fortifications facing (iei"m:in_i"s western tron reserves 1inurcd into the kcd to the Relchsfuehrer’: Nazi Party Congress at Hitlcfs future attitude in oncerned himself as “protec- tor” of 3,500,000 Sudeten Germans. "The message belittled the efficacy of pacts as iinplc- ments to attain national QTEHHLQSSV.H__ _ P. 1.011 ll an SBHflBlS ilE-tl P E v Prince oi Waits Colic-age rc-open- ecl yesterday after the tllflllllfl‘ holidays. Third and i0‘1l",ll your students enrolled and will air/end first cla.\<e:» this inornins: Second year students rcuistcr taxi ' while those attcizding the inst. ‘ ' inc nr" iin.i- will enroll ti day. s - staff chanti- recent agiptiiiitiiieiii of M Calibcck of Si. Avards to vacancy created by the years . of nl).\(‘ll(‘L‘ granted Prof. Linklciter Mr, Linkletter Wlli con. iinuc his stud bu: it. 'l‘ ll lea icri in“. i‘ t at u .1 crs v hleanivhile City S(llOOl.\‘ "were l\"~ oixuiiiig. .\ll (lav icachr classifying 1iupil= who rooms almost to (‘l1])114‘li‘». Illajm T. E. iticNiut. secretary of the Cit) uarri annouziirtid .. . r/i‘ av ' _ ct‘. there ivouiri be lncrezisl- iii the inunbiu‘ oi -ovcr that oi‘ a ar arm, ' ucrc ap- or: illt‘ reg- irnatcly 2 4m LONDON. Sept. fe-Iielgium. Sweden and The Nctlierlzinrls tonight informed Great Bri- tain they no longer t-tiiisiiier themselves lionutl to apply automatic sanctions’ under Article XVI ui‘ the Lennie of .\':ittoii< Cmenaiit. . thorn AND ow (‘Mittens tow: i0 tl-li Sixpence s l\lE'l‘l<lOl'tt)lttJt-ICAI. .'»l-.li\'l(‘l'“. '1'111¢n111n, Sept t’- -—l( l" .\lllil~ nuini and llltlXlllllllll ttiiillflllllll" cs: Dawson ill T5 Victoria 5° 56 ‘Edmonton i’ 7L’ Regina ti" Qt‘ Winnipeg h" C Toronto ‘iii 53 Ottawa. 1i?! 54 Montreal 4" i Quebec 42 50 Saint John 44 i=4 Halifax 45 ti? Cliarliiiieiovvn it; 6i) Maritime east: Fresh millili- ivcsterlr \\'ll\fl<j mnstlt‘ fiiir llllfl cool. l Hiizli title this nioriiinu at ii.- [30 and tonight at 9.41. . Sim sets this P\'f‘l1lllf’ at 6.27 and rises t-itnorrow ititiriilitsr at. Fulfil Piill moon Sept 0. Mill P Tvl. t I ' Siuunilihiili- title ll’. niuiitics lat- lt-r than (‘li.iilutl|t|>\\ii. i Tllli (Wit I-‘ITIIIKV SKIIJNTZS l Iicave llortion 7 :i. m. ll l?» n. in. '1 p. m. and 4.4:’- p. m. ’l'ornu~n- tim- ttlfi a. m. ll a. m. 12')?» p. rii. ‘ and (1.50 p. m. 1 Sundays, leaves Borden 9.00 a. m. and 7 p. m. j Lcnvec Tormentlne 10.15 a. and 8.10 p. m. Rh