PAGE FOUR 111-111" KJHAK‘ UT’ l'k‘.i'l'U\VN (ll IA "ZIYAN SEPTEMBER 21_ 19 ; THE Bllllll LOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Alurning Dally‘ tl-‘outtded 1881) ‘Ill, Llt-ulmfol. W. (‘ltesler . Mt-Luro het- l‘rt-~.ltlt-1tt, J. It. Burnett. I'\.J.l. Serra-tat). Ltt-uL-(‘nh l). A. Illarliltttiott. 0.8.0. Editor utttl handgun; Uweetor. J. ll. Burnett, F-JJ. Associate litlittlr. Flank Walker .~'l'li.\t‘|(l~."l"l()N lL-Tfl-JS $5M) per year 1111 atltnlttel delivered lo (fly. $1.110 pct‘ _ ' 1111 advance: tnailed to l‘. E. Island $5.00 pt-r 11- - llll admin-ct nnuled to tan-aria and U-S alt-tubers Audit. Bureau u! Circulation: "The “blrong/esl Jlcmury is Plfeirtrker Utah the llectlresf Ink." \T|".|).\l"..\i}.\l, EhPILSZiiER ‘Ll, 1938 :___.__. .._:__. — 'l'h(.- Dire Alternative t-"al-YX- 111-11111-11 may b1- tlivi-lt-il .15 (t; -1-. --1 flu" cour-t- talu-it by the llritislt ' 1- itt fact- of thc iietanan 1111-11- ut-ll to rcntentbcr \llitl ---11: infortttzttion not public nlticlt ltas dictated the l :11-1-"r:11{1" lczttlcrs itt this enter- c .\l--ntrt-al Star points out in i l, \\ 1- c1111 at least cnntfort ...:tt th-- \\l,)l'l(l has esntpeil a . war. .."11 l:..-l 111-". eon-r to llt-rclttesgad- l. ~ day l--- tva-ltttg lutlletins-—11o: lal-inct at-proials of the agree- . ._1--l1ttt 11f 1111- first etigagettteitts -- Young 1111-11 nn both sides are "i-l l1.'1\1- l11-1-n dead if Nev- ltzt-l not put his pride in his to the iastncsscs of Bavaria. of zl-ntt-ztnils- 11f other young men Yti- vw-ttld ltztvv been ntarsltalletl thin-till pri-tw-“iott whose end no an-l final sacrifice l1t-1-1t quitt- as fruitless as that ‘tlit-t l 11ttl_\‘ two decades ago in “a \\'.'l!' t-- 1-:-l ."t'l wars.” . .\l1 Iftfltl c-1t11t-t11p11t':1r_v lays stress on the fut"; Ilia? the liriti-lt and the Freuclt dem- '~~ have 11-"1t cztpitulzttcd. Their interest in of tYrt-clnnlovaltia was never really They made the dentocrttov of that " -pl1- :1 goo-i “t.'tll<ing point", but \ .tl\"i:1_ 1t i- p. 111' . 1y H 1 \\ lll>\(' -1"1_ no o..- . '10 . s that th1- (‘xi-ch trt-atntettt of tlt-‘r :1 lll'll‘ll"lll.’\ was any shitting example 0t -3-‘t"'-<1'-<'_\1 liven the Slovalcs were com- vt-Jtrs ago. \\'ltat the French and ~""--1-" had 1n tinn-l when thev pledged to go to the rrscue of the Czechs, ‘It-t‘ l11- ltililVbCtl hv liertnattt", was l-valua was a \"it:tl bastion in tlte ' the l-1";1111"-1-l\‘11s~1.'1t1 front. and that ' would 11-11 afford 111 pt-rtuit the (ier- nrt- 11. 'l'h1*_v were r1-."ttly to defend l- 11- reason that we defended tlte "'11 f1 w plant"- tllt" b: .\'---1-i.1>\'. -l-3i~i11t1 tin-ans 111th’ that they ltavc c'- .1. l their 1t1ind~~ :11 lea-t. lirancc l1:\<."l‘lu‘ li-"t l: were mvwt‘ coinntitu-il 1-1 p11 111 tho we- C111‘ P’ flu‘ lit-ah» 'l‘l11-\" were onlY lllr-lficd to $11;-".~~-1“ 1hr l-‘rcnrh. if 1h1- lain-r were :1~.<ailc-l. nn-l 1H1 t: ztri- still ~11 pledge-l. lint the Fret1cl1 Ft-et-t 1-1 be '11t1."t11in1-111-‘-." Jig-reed todrtv that i1 uonl-l l-1- far wi-t-t" ‘to ri-lc \\"l1:1t1-v1-ril11<< may r-niv- fr-nt the <t1t'1‘1't1-l1"t‘ 11f tht- (Vt-ch sztliettt to llith-r than to plunge l-ittropt- int-- a first- class uar at this tin-v. 'l'he_v still ltave lllt‘ll' hlagituw", line. :1n-l with tht- lloh-stttiatt l1:t1"ri1-r nut of ‘l1-" \‘.'.'|_\'. tl".1- anibiti-uts lit-rntans rtrt‘ fat" n- -r11 "111: 1-1 go cit-f 1311111 \\"1>~t i111" iptitt- sonn- ll"1"'3. . Bcrnttula Apple Market _v--:n" sales of t':t11:t1li.111 ap- -l-.-."1"-:t-cd, due Ltrgcly 1-1 the t-lr- in the lintc-l Statc- and w Yotlv", \\l'llt‘~ l), 5. bolt‘, 1.: 1-111111ti--i1n11-1" :11 .\'c\\ Yorlt. 1--.1- 11f tlr- ll-tttniurcial lntclli- . - t"1-1---1‘~-i i-y the ll-ttllittiott exp-nus oi tltnzulian ap- 1 "it :'1 tlm- cai-"zt-lat‘ yt-Jtt" 1111',‘ as c-nttpzttw-d \\"itlt :,-1 l1:1r1"1-l~ in 1-135. 11f 1-1 1.1-1; l.11- I'll-I '11 l "W'- <‘--11~i~t chit-fly 1111-‘ -\..111~‘\1-l_\" from .\'-1v.1 . tt-r-l 1:1 \'l_\ for cooking p111‘- p. un-l h-dvl 11": l1-, and also 1- :1‘ ..- fri-lt fruit. ":1 lierntnila i- for :1 goo-l : _i11i1"_\. of nteditun -iz1-, 1111i- .. and with t1lt-nty of colour. "lli\~ in 1l1-n1a11-l are liravettsteitt. \\."1q1~n1-r, lh-ldwitt. .\lclnt11.~"l1, 11.‘, . l '1 ~. >, l-fr. Rogers’ Valor .\~"l-l1- -~1 1 the v-tnvetttintt of the 'l'radc~ and .1' or (' 1.- :11 Xiirtfgara littlls. llnn, .\'ot"n1.'u1 l\‘-._-1t"-. ‘.l€-1-.'~11-1"-~i lxtbor. lai-l at thi- door; of tl-r-c of tli- l'r--\it11"--- tht- hlann- of blnrltittt; the l1--11-.'-~.i..11 1;--v-1-1-1111-111'< efforts to write a na- ti -n"1-.'-l<- n11 i-iplwnn-nt itnurance law into the -r;11:-'-- l1-- l\\ of (Etna-la. 'l'l11- .\lini~ter ft-l- ln-ie-l tl1i= -t"11--1111-111 11p \\"itlt a tdellgv that the t1--.~-.111-. --_-11-‘-l l11- t1lzi1" ~1l l11-f-1r1- l':1rli'1n1ent ttnrl 1-11 ~-'-" l. -l- ~- i" 1h:- ---:l1.'u"l< it l1."1~" received. “\\'1- wfil 11-11 r-lax" .1111‘ i-ff-nls." he derlari-tl. “The w‘ l-Ittfl. 1-1- r1-"1i\"t-l last year was a ltittet" 1l'-1:,-.-151:'11.-1:11 1-1 1.5111. ll was :1 ltitter disap- tw- t‘.‘111.--11t tn 1111- :1- llitti-tr-t" 1-f labor in :1 Hov- ertrn- n1 ul-ivlt \\.'1~ trztlting every effort tn ciq-ttrp lll;\ 1"111"111""|ti-111.“ H111- r-in 11-111 ."--ln1i1~1- front :1 distance. sari flu F lt-v l‘-1-t—|\'1-1-o1"-l, \lr. Rogt-rs' cottratttr 11 - 1-" »-1 lt-rri-n :1 1111-<."1ur' tt- tltt" Tlr-‘ltlvfi :1'--l l--l---r l‘11---r1--s tt-gr-r-littu :1 rr-fornt which k'v11"l|l l-i- l--.i1 v-rri-Il out several years ago. (ilplv -t ~11 ll tr-rt 11f !l11 ri-stultlsillilil)‘ fill‘ llll‘ 15-- ---‘- -- 1"~--111--’--1'1111~11t itisurzntri- can be ,1 .-. ,1 ;. ‘lllxl \'.-\1 lrultnviclv, Out-bee :tn1'l ‘ --l1i~l1 1u-f'"~'"-l t1- l'1ll'l'~(' th1- 1<i11111;111-- ~'- 1-1-1|»1--l to 11-"1-"1 tln- wintkitt- lt-tfislzt- ,., -.- 11-1-1- 1111-11-1-1-1-1 wlv with :-n enabling t, ..- ,,f Ho» HyTILh \'->t'l1 \n1*'l‘it"1 \t"t. lowed three years to elapse since tlteir advent. l to office, without presenting a single substantive l proposal before Parliament along the lines of l1ll(‘lll[Il4)_\'lll(‘I1l insurance. .\|r. hogers told tlte Labor Congress that lacl; 11f the ll£‘\'L'~.\ill‘_\' cwoperzttion frottt three of the llrt-vinct-s ivas a "bitter disappointntent" to the lxing (iovernntettt, bttt that the tnt-asure would be [iressetl to a finality notwitltstanding this check. lhtt the fact is that the Doutiniott (lov- crntnt-nt knew of the obstructive zittitttdes 11f New Brunswick. Quebec and Alberta last fall, —at least 2 tnontlts before Parliament assembled. ——and still allowed one of the lottgest and least active sessions of the Houses to run its tedious course to prorogation. without taking or pro- posing a single step toward ntectitig the situa- non. The Kittg Govt-rnntettfs whole record 011 the question of social security reform is entirely discretlitable. .\lr. Rogers‘ valor itt going be- fore the Labor Parliament of the llotttitiioti attd "essaying to explain that course stands out i11 re- tnarltable relief on the picture of Cattatliatt fxilitics. J Editorial Notes I‘ Sir Robert Borden hccattte Prime Minister this date, 19ft. 1k 1r 1k l‘ Is Bones to join Sclasse and Schnsittigg as hostage to misfortune? llavc .\lr. .-\. F. Xlaclx-an, .\l.l".. andlthe Hon. B. W. LePagc gone t0 join Gerry .\Ic(ieer's Cave of .\dttllant itt Vancouver? ‘l ll‘ 1‘ ll‘ \\'he11 lntreattcrats ztttcttttnt to run a govern- mcttt it is their own and their friends interests that are pritttarily considered. the pttblic can go to ltatlcs. 11- \\'hcn brothers fall out politically or legally as the ("attipbelbs e\"icle11tl_\~ha\-e, the public are likely ttrhear some plain homc truths on public affairs.- ti! 1k \\'ltat is going to ltappcn the Berlin-Rome axis- when the people of Austrian nationality in 'l‘rie.ste demand self-determination just as are the "given away" territories of I919 in Czecho- slovakia? \\'hen Dictator meets Dictator then will come a real tug-0f-\var. a =1- 1- =1- iii I: the Catnpbell governtnent going to subsidize two new up-to-tlatt- sutntner ltotels in addition to the Canadian National and the prospective Railway one at Dalvay‘? It is understood Stan- ltopt- llotel proprietors are alrcady- cotttemplat- ing enlznjgetnctits and extensions at their pop- ttlar resort. 'l'hen there is beach (irsvc \\"l1icl could very well claim a subsidy. " K 1K llf >lf 3h" llngh Robertson, Scottish tnusiciatt who recently travelled across Canada. as judge at ntusical festival on return ltomc told this little story of the Winnipeg school children: “.\<l- ilressittg them. l ltad occasion to use the word ‘bawbt-c’ tlrtlf-pe-tttty‘). Did they know what a bztyvbt-t- was? l'p shot scores of little ltattds. 51111111. l thought. Their answer was one of the ltigl1l1gltt~ of the festival. \\'ith one accord they shouted; ‘.~\n littglislt policematf." 1K 1 i if .\ curious argtnncnt was advanced by Mrs. Fred (i, Mcl-lriett itt seeking the Conservative tiotnittzttioit for 'l‘orot1to Parkdalc div i011 itt the Ontario legislature. §he declared: "Lhavc been approached by many delegations and urged to contest the election. lt is the feeling of the people i11 Parkdalc cottstitttettcy that my husband was elected for the duration of Parliament and that. as his tmtimely death prevented tltis, I should try to carry on for him." In other words shc contends the tut-elapsed period with its i11- dcnutity is part 11f her late ltusbaiuls estate. an ztsst-t to which sht- is entitled. The party did not thinlv" so. l111\vc\"c1". and chose t-x-.\la_vot" \\'. _I. Ftewart instead. The Liberal cattdidatt- is .\lr. .\ttdrey llonrl. a Tiorrntto la\\"_ver. >l< ll‘ 1i! l! Normally" t't11pl11_\"t11etlt expands itt _lt1l_\"_ parti- cularly itt the 1na11ttf."1"t111"i11;g iudttstri s. This year. however. says the lfanlv" of .\'ova 51-min l‘re~-= lit-lease. the total workittg force was al- most unchanged while cmplr-y-tttcttt in tnattu- factnring was retiurrtl. ("otisetpteutly the cor- rected Index of Gcttcral Industrial lintpl1vvttu-ttt (leclitted by nearly" 171%. The re-luctiott itt thc working force of the printztry branches of the ir11t1 and steel industry was particnlztrly" sharp. but losses also occurred in other lteavy indus- tries such as machinerv and implemcttt plants. Slacltenittg was also evident i11 textile nulls. rub- ber plants and other light industries, though em- ployment in mining and construction was well tnaintaincd. F l I I The Cattatliatt Produce Association has sued a letter to its ntentbcrsltip itt the follotvtttg is- ‘ ztssttrc the (‘attadiatt Dairy Itidustry of a reason- able return over the cost of production during the cmning winter tnonfhs, that approximately tz.ooo.ooo pntmtls of butter should he exported between .\ttgust 31st and December first. That every province in the Dominion should c11ntri- bntt- their quota of this 12,000,000 based on last _v1-:tt"‘s 111-11dttction per province. 'l‘hat it \\'()\ll(l bi- preferable the total shipments per wcck front “It wttrces (lo not exceed Lmoorx) tioumls. That the responsibility for the carrying ottt of the ptvigrattttnc be placed in the ltands of a Na- tional (ftnntnittee, a representative to said rotu- utittcc to he appointed by the butter trade in each provittce, That neither Provincial nor Dominion liovernntents be requested to sub- sidise this proqranifnc in any manner. That arty expenses bt- defrayed by wholesale distributors in proportion to the tonnage ltantlletl. 'l"h.lt a policy 11f Laisscz l-‘ztirt- lms no place in National mer- l" chantlistttt: tinder present worltl- conditions. 'l'h:tt the (Etna-Han Prodttct- hsociafion would not be fulfilling its purposi- as a National Produce ."\s- T1,.- .11=--f tnh-iii . ,-1;-.- l-‘r1-1ni1-1- King. .\lr, ltngt-rs sociation if it tieglccted to accept its responsibil- and the whole Federal Cabinet. who have al- ity to the Canadian Dairy Industry It this time." l ternts: "It is our personal view that itt order to; -Canndlnt\ tzootls. |control are etu-ttring l NOTES BY TllE WAY Science has accomplished won- ders, and will no dottbt. astound the world with further tliscovetzes and revclatlotts. but 1n some in- stances scientists ure bewnuereu by the twobletns that their achieve- ments glve rive i0. For lmtance: The Poultry Uepartntent of (Jor- nell University succeeded in breeding a type of chicken witn- oul. feathers. But. ltctvittg bred them. it was discovered that. the cost of heating ltcnhottscs to pre- vent nudity running into pneu- monia far exceeded the cost. of re- moving the pin-feathers from nur- mal fowl. It is all very baffling. and rctninds one tita. v.0 llhfl.‘ bred a. race of women who. injured to semi-nudity in some circum- stances, nevertheless wattt; fur coats in mnter. ‘the pain of hu- man progress 1s inadequately marked with detour stgtts. -Norfh Bay Nugget. Al. Inst l have come upon a word that. looks as lf ft might supplant the now weary and threadbare "swell." It tnay not fetch the men. but ft. has already attained 11 gen- eral popularity and broad appli- cation among tltc wontcn. It. is cute. I ltave heard it. used to des- cribe one of the last acts of 11 person on 11 deathbed: of the first: gurgle of a newborn babe. I have heard it used us a substitute for kind, loyal. thoughful. attractive, clever, amusing. self-sacrificing, pretty. ingratiating, concicntious, painstaking, artlcss. In frtzt. there seems to be lwllllllg short of bat.- tle. nturdet" or suttrlr-tt death that. cattuot be ftftttiuly described U185? days by merely remarklng, think lt.'s real cute. Dont ytou?" There is no action of a favor- able nature that cattnot. be sum- med up, by some sweet young thing, in the terse phrase, "That's very cute of you. -Bnltimore Sun. In the Park Department exactl- tudtyis achieved in :1 degree that must be ltigltly satisfactory to all efftcieney-cousclotts tritlzetts. Sun- day fright half u score of the put.- ting greens of the lVttr-holu public golf course were torn up by “that the authorities term vandals; the custodians of the playgrounds inspected, consulted their tnathe- matlclans, read the stars and were able to announce that "11 gang of 23 melt. working daily, will not lmve them fit for play within a week.” This computa- tfon inevitably recalls that pass- a e tn “Throttglt the Looking Gass“ in which the Walrus and the Carpenter. Wes-ping like any- thing to see such quantities of sand. indulged in the enlighten- lng exchange: _ “If seven maids with seven mops Swept ll: for n year, Do you suppose,“ the said. ‘That they could get, it clear?" “I doubt it," said the Carpenter, And shed a bitter tear. ‘ It must be the cause of humilia- tlon to the police to observe the precision work of the park em- ployes. The man-hunters can think of nobody on whom to blame the catastrophe except. thieves who have been prosccttted for stealing balls from the rough. Obviously none of the police ls a golfer. If there were one among them he would begin a cattvass of the worst putters who use the course, cottfulctil that in that dol- orous and often Iraufie company’ the culprit or culprits will be found-mud perhaps they found boasting of their revenge 011 greens that did not pcrtnlt; them to display the full mearure of the skill they feel that the)’ possess. —New York Sun Walrus Such is lht- tet-ltnical superl- orlty of the Jatpttnt-ac military" ma- chttte that the fall of Hankow 1s probably only a tnatter c1 time. But time is becoming almost as precious to J 1 as the other raw materials \ tit-h she uses 1n the war". and even if she foot; Hau- kow tomorrow ltcr success would still be omlnottsh" tardy. More- over, the recent statements of her leaders reflect their gloomy -and fully justiffed~susplctons that the capture of Hnnkmv will uobof necessity imply the disintegration of the Chinese Government and the end of the wttr. The horizon bevcttnd Hankow is dark; and so far no rays of tronstruc we politi- cal or military thought lntve enm- nated from Japan to pierce its ob- scurity". ln the "occupied" areas tlte stenrlet" tenaetes of Japattese fainy well the tmwelccnxe but tntitcirave at- tentions 0t the C11 ntte gucrttl us; but tn the vltqt nhero of political ' .11: eft n a nun- fmum o1 prcc, ~. haz. been mane. ’1here is inttr."n.1l trouble in ill-tug churra and l(‘l“».t-ll on its Ru s,.an frontier. At " fir: tvnttnlrfic bururncttrt" per»; ‘"1 a slaw 111- cvitttblt- (let-hw- untz-lt no pvtdtet- i‘ ' nblc (levelotitttt-tt‘ v-tn arrest wullln ‘we are to bet-evi- whet the next few _\‘.?."ll'.\. Jain-it"s- p ticn. in short, 1s f,llC 1.1 v.lu:;h cannot safely 1-11 1.111111: tntlefinitxly to flout the 1.1": of " ties, Mfht: T1111 From Nova Srofin trt-ently there ha". come n book entitled "the lord Helps T1 ostu. telltnt; of the ef- forts of ftshertnt-tt and -t'-- - cers there to 110111 tl1 " through co - opt-retire c-fort If lvs. git-t. been said by Minister cf Commerce Euler back frctn 1t visit to Eng- land, the hook and its implica- tions should be eon-J-rlcrtvl by t-t-r- tan Canadian btrlnesshten. Mr. Euler says they tire not. taking advantage of the tmtttnlatt Gov- ermenfs atlvertlsitt-r t-tttnpricn fn Bt1tlsh ntarkeis Thus: "News- papers. billboards flllll other ml- vcrtlsittg broadcast the tnt-rlts of But wrolcsulors are tutttblc to tibfnltt the rtlvcrtts- ‘ed supplies. Cnnadlnn salmon was 1 one product prominently advertis- ed and llnobtaiftablt- b1" 11-11011:- salers during the visit.“ Mr. Euler adds this: "There ls n tendency on the part of tll‘(‘.(lll"(‘l‘S t: ex- pect. the Government to do some of the things they ottght. to be doing themselves." That tendency, indeed, ls altegether too common. Governments can and do help all of us by providing us with op- portunities; they can't. be expected to help us as well ln taking ad- vantage of opportunltles. That ts for ourselves. and unless we are prepared to do somethlntz about ft, to stop this prevalent. notion that the State must. take care of us en- tlrcly. the otttlnok for the future must be other than bright. —Mon- treat Gazette That country mn- ln Surrey, Eng" has been waltlnu quite a few enrtt for Mr. Bennett to buy ft. e was supposed to have spotted ft before he became Canadian Con- servative Lender. Meanwhile the National Review 1111s plckorl n job for hlm ns Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster tn a prnpr-sr-tl Cabinet reorganization. It's only at home he can say he lit m longer news.- Toronto Globe and Mull. Qtlljtif 3501M lu Jams: II). Barton. MD. - BIRTHMARKS ‘Wht-tt lf. was learned that. one of the Dionne quintuplets had a growth on her leg cmslsttng of a mass of twisted blood vssscls. a great, many were naturally ln- terested as to whether or not. the growth could be safely removed. Its removal byt the Drs. Kelly of Baltimore, by the use of radium, was qulte successful. These red or blulsh lumps of bloodvessels, so often on the face. are always a source of distress and worry to mothers as the fear of 1m unsightly scar makes them tiesitate about; tts removal, aside from the expense. Yet. as they think further of when the child grows up with this blemish (if it were not removed) they are even more worried. The decision has to be made. D1". Henry W. Kaesslsr, Bronx- vllle-Mouttt. Vernon, N.Y , tn dls- cussing these vascular or blood hlrthtnarks tn the Journal of The American Medical Association says: The common methods of treat- ment of these blood tumors are not practical for ordinary use. Electrical tlessication tarytng up), freezing with carbon dioxide snow. cattterlzlng with heat or with phenol or nttrtc acid, or cut- ting out. by surgery, are all serious or drastic methods, producing sloughlng, and often lumpy scar forntntiott. Radium treatment. ls costly." t A simple method of treatment, available to the average physician ls described by Dr_ Kaessler. ‘Twenty percent quinine dlhydroch- lortde and urethane diluted with an equal partofz percent procaine hyrochlorlde (with eplne hrrfne- adrenalin) was found pain ess and most. effective. Forty-four hemtm- gtotnas (blood tumors) ‘were in- Jected with excellent; results tn children from 2 weeks to 3 years of age. There was no return of the tumors after from two to four and one-half years. Wtth sttch relatively safe. simp- ment. these growths should not be allowed to grow to an size. Where deep tissues are tnvo ved in the growth. the Xray ls consider- ed most effective. Unfortunately the ordinary flat red or port wine blrthmraks are not. helped by this injection meth- od, as these are really made up of extra pigment or coloring mat- ter. While some of these cases are helped by "quartz water cooled ultra violet irradiation." prepara- ttons of coloring substances to cover or conceal the mark 1s the only recognized method of handl- ing these cases. The Power 0f Hitler (Ottawa Journal) Could We but view Lh.s struggle for peace tn a detached and dism- teremeu tnanaet- who a cnnnng, fearful game of chess it all is! A drama so much more profound, more thrilling than anything ever produced on Btoadway; a ntystery that twales Oppenhelm; a thteuven- 111g txagccly perhaps unparaneleu. "I suppcse," salu Lord Baldwin some yes-rs ugO, "the guts o1 rhe- toric have uecn responsible for ntorc bloodshed on this earth than alt the guns and explosives that ever ltave b=en invented . . . That ap- palling tuppsnce-halfpettny gift of fluency. trim the aodtkoti of a cer- ta n amount of lmaglnatfon in word-spinning. is the kinu of rhe- toric hnhlcl) stirs the emnhons of the mo-b and sets ft. moving.’ One trunks of Nuremberg last week, the pc-wer t-lltler held over his tas. audience-on attdlcnce not llm- .te:1 even by international bound- arias-the frcnzted cheering. the nalve “We like our Fatehrer." 1t. w-as Stanley Baldwin too who declarul" "'11 is, whm we stop to thtt.. about, it, a very terrible and tnsnacing 111.11g, that. one single man, 1n these ntotlern times, can do 1n and 1v tn a country what Adolph hitter has been able to do ln and with Gcrtnatty." I-fhlet" bacatne the supreme power 1n uctttu-ny. The worlq awaited h s ward; the world tn United State. taunt“... ...- wsrltl tn Czechoslo- nflklln cottages. the world tn Can- adian vnagcs, One man. One man was going to send mlllions into IlTIIC-ICS, going to smash great cit- ins rain gna. treatures. One man. One man was going to upset. to a xrcatcr or lcssrt" degree every house- hclzl tn the world, every semblance of c.v.ll::at.cn whuevar he could lay his hands. - v/na. happened seems now 1k: cazy 103.1; but must have been the brilliant, idea of a man inspired. The way to meet one man l; wt h anctner m.n. Hitler's arrcgance is o. tlte type that. can HELD. Cab- inrts. ridicul: cotrezpmdence. How to tzc-L through hls tot-tress of sec- retaries and mlnsuzrs, all playing his tune? To send one man. The man. And so Chamberlahv-GD-year-old Neville Chamberlain who not long ago said he'd just as soon never fly --fook a ‘plane to the mountain. another dove of peace l-f you will, a dove hoping to bring back Breen BYHW. Hitler held the world at check. But. before ft. became chcckmnte the wcrld nut up Chamberlain to make another move. Now the game 1s thrown open agtrn. Game ls a strange word to use tn such a place, but game ft ts. A dreadful game. a game that has to be pinged as 11 game. For 1 lc and goo counsel count for no tn1z_ atnst. such n man. Chamberlain's epnrture from Brftl-sh democratic recedent may well have startled ose proud of Englandb system. No doubt ft start- led Chamberlain e hope. the ltlltipperate hope, h that 1t startled .e rtoo. EYESIG llT EXAMINATION l Fmln; and llnnptytnl Gum: 8M. ll. J. IMBON OPIOMETRIJT MONTAGUI. P l. l. Ollln (‘Jinan-ted "lib v . Drunken 1‘ " " "" ~ le. bffectlve and inexpensive treat- - ‘ Dlvlslom, os u to the itivasioit of Czzchostovakla. Q1 Europe", appeal" beluwl. An attack on Czechoslovakia can- not be spoken of as a catn-palgn m the ordina settse. The outstand- tng fraht t- c-f lt 1s that the whole action tnttst b: cottcluded wfthln fourteen days. at the mcst. Af- ter fourteen days there should no Czech army left. The wot-id must be confronted with a 6WD achieved at lightning speed (blit- zartlg"); the troops which carry out the operations must be ready ln the shortest, time for eventual use tn the West, in case France clacldss to help its ally. This line of thcught takes on finality from the fact that. Germany cannot: wage a long war; the dearth of raw materials demands the quick- est possible conclusion of a cam- patgn. France, Russia Held at. Bay No help could come (to Czecho- slovakia) from the Soviet Union, at least. during the perlcd of the great campaign against Prague. The Red Army could not. even lf lt wanted. be on Czechoslovakian soil in time to alter t-he fate of Prague. Troops from Vienna and Ratibur could easily and with small forces block the line of advance of the Reel Army, because of topographical difficulties and of the mountainous character of the country. Poland and Hungary would also be bound to meet. such a. Russian advance, which would be a threat to their most vital fn- terests There ls left the Soviet atr arm, In tnaterlal and quantity it is censiderablc, bttt Poland would tn no case permit flight over lter territory and so there remains only the way over Cat"- patho-Russta and over the Baltic Sea. We must and could meet these attacks. all the more as the Russians would have to fight so far from their base of opemtlzns. To these facts must be added un- pleasant eventualtttes for Moscow from the Far East. France ls a very important factor. If she takes automatic action. with all the means at, her diF-DHSHI. a dangerous long war could ensue. But there are strong cbjectlons. France's nc-btllzatlon requires so much time that tn the Interim the fate of Prague might be decided. It ls doubtful whether the French people. faced with a completely mobilized and already victorious Germany, could be easily persuaded to embark upon a devastating war to help a Czechoslovakia whcse fate ts al- ready sealed. It is more likely that France, unless threatened would accept a "fall. acccmplt." Believes Czechs Might. Crack The troops which are to operate against Czcchoslovaktq do not, new to be_ mobilized. tot a large part of these troops nlv-nys remain mobtlc._ The mobtllzaticn of the Ysmflie-ns 1mm" could follow quietly, while the invading army ts already nmrchtttg on w Prague. Array Dtttislott I. would have the task of guarding the West. and of defending against a possible French attack. In this 1t ivgutd be sttuported by Afr Squadron West and the powerful Wes-tern fortifications. They would have the task of defending themselves and hf-‘lfllflt! up the enemy until Czechoslovakia has been finished. Only then could an offensive on our side be thought of, Punitive expedktons in the air could. how. 81/111". be undertaken, a5 a reply to French atr attacks. But here. too. a strictly defensive attitude l5 imperative. to prevent a Psycho- logical change on the part or France. which ls today 111115 was wrltten in March) averse to fight. ink: the some ls true for Eingland, R l5 quilt’. possible that when the Czechs are threatened by be- trfllpll titmon-g their cwn ranks and con ron ed by superior power and flllflfik frcm all sides, their morale and military efficiency wculd go l0 Pieces. On the other hand, the)’ have a really excellent arms. mm! 1'01‘ a small country; the Skoda Works must certainly be flies" eerie-Lily. "Itieti- leadership mo. has much improved in 19mm, times .. The enormous superior. 1W of Dower and the closing tn 111 our troops from all sides, so that among officers and men the 1d“; of the hopelessness must strike home. We must operate with this enormous concentration of force for otherwise the Czechs might, "Y_R5 l" sDnln-to form uruts of resistance. Plan of Campal," ls Set Forth t It is to be expected that the ac- lon will take place in cont-tango“ wttrt recurrences in the Sudeten German territory. The entry 111w 11m territory must follow on a wide front. Itbr this task the III. and IV. Army Dfvtslons are envisaged whjch must ruthelesly attack vtrlth rank formations. after the strong. illegal SA and 8.8. troops lmve lnfll- trated tnto the area. Tointhcr with the Sud-etch bcdles the; have the task of blowing up nn-a destroying the enemy movement .. Inces- snn-t ttlr attacks must. break the enemy and destroy his base-s; through the Sudeten Germans. supported by infantry-parachute formations, devastating nlr attacks on Prague and Brttnn wlll com- nh-te the task. The so-calted Czech Mrttzlnct tlne must. be forced. While these attacks are taklng nlace on the Bohemian mt-thern borders. Army Division V tvlennal has the task of attacking from the south, moving northwards from Llnz to cut off the retreat of the Czech armies tn Bohemia. Army Dlvlston I. and VIII. will the unfsn of this army with that advancing from 1the south might lead to the capltulatlon of the main Czech forces and the cloctn of the Carmtho-Ruasfcn an Slovak corridor to Russlan entry. If the great forces of the enemy are put out cf actlon, tn the flrlt attack the troops of Army Dlvtaton IV. must. turn to help the Western strengthen con- trol fn the West. 1111.1; ttllttatlon would be reached with the fall of Pmzue By the end of a French moblllmtlcn not. only must the operation walnut. Czechoslovakia ll llimntlllr our. but m advance from Upper Silesia, and. The “Lightning Stroke” (German. military leaders have long had it‘ mhhl the "-595 U preparing plan's against the day when the Fuehrer would order 1111c German Mllltary Academy offered a prize for the best scheme of attack. This was won by cot. Cfflfhd, Chief of Staff of the 18th Army 00m. Extracts from the prize-twinning essay. published recently by the "Friends march to the West should be 1n principle complete. so that the risk Mitch France f: undertaking shall be felt ln its full weight. in case France has not. auto- matically attacked. Prague la Main Objective One of the maln objectives the whcle operation must be reach Prague and go even farther. This obectlve must be reached. The capture of Prague would put- the re and administration of the w ole country tnto confusion. The push, therefore, must, carried tc Prague and beyond When and whether operations shall take place ls not. .1 cmcom of the Army leadership but of {he political leadership of the Reich, above all of the Fuehrqr, upon in tD . whom the final decision as well as full YOSPOXIBIWRY rests. A criticism of politics under such clrcum- stances seems meaningless. The 0110 dill-Y of the military attthor- tiles is to concentrate on the an Mun-ten: of the objective. QUIET WORK One lesson, Nature, let me team One leossonlflitlhlch in every wind i5 .0ne leigtewn ‘of two duties kept at ThWBn the loud their enmity Of toll un evered f t/ ill - Of lwbouxgsthat 1n liigltlfngrlii-ltilllf oiii: grows FM noisier schemes, a fkhed in repose, Too great for haste, too high for rlvatry. world proclaim Yeti. while on earth n. thousand y discards ring, Mans fl-tful uproar mingling with sl-lll d0 t-hl! sleeples ‘ Lstcrs move on,_ ‘Fhelr plot-tons tasks in silence per- N : Still working], blaming stlll our vntn funno Laborer; that 5111111 not 11111 when man fa gone. -Matthew Arnold. ell NOQVA 11115111111" v llavc you trciubl- " stommrh. If cl "f. “*- lhe" “T Elk You to EVAtvs srotitartt MIXTURE Evans‘: Stomach I- preuerlplfon or D1310“ vans ol London, l-ln 1-11 ' "Id l! 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