Girls Fin it Buicks in Slug-F est ih nearly happen- Woy the Tad les' st night 'when Charlie 3 Sova! Buicks wallo the «apple for the t two nings of a hectic \game and at Softball League. We -- dd A.Y.M.C. DEFE THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1928 tae ------ At DEFEAT ROYALS Baltimore, Aug. 8.--One unearn- ed run, coming in the home half of the fourth , gave the Orioles Yieton over Royals here today, it The game today was a mound battle between Bolen and Falk, both in rare forme The Baltimore hurler was nicked for six hits, three of which were of the scratch variety, while Falk held the Bird bats to five safeties, The lone run of the afternoon came in the fourth had when Onslow was safe on Schrei- of the second e a Grants Town contingent at the 4 end of an 8 to 6 score. Later velopments, which ingluded 2 £ run batting - bee on Whitby's , gave George Forrester's clan inal 25 to 14 however, r the strengthéned Buicks. "Anyone who says last night's ument didn't live up to ex ons, and didn't get eir ney's worth, can stay home for t Malleable-Chevrolet brawl at the same battle ground tomorrow ht and make room for those from a distance. Buicks looked like a million dollar gold piece in first four innings of last night's , and if the vemaining five stanzas hadn't turned out to be so ch scrap from, it would have been one of the best games of the on, "e Robinsons Back £ it was, however, Whithy showed why they won the first halt of the schedule and why they ave still a menace to Mallegbles and Chevs in the second half when they came through after a bad start--both moral and actual, to win by the comfortable margin of 26 to 14. They had to start the ~game with only eight players, but by the time they finished they cotild have got along nicely with ahout seven. Jean and Ruth Rob- ingon were back .in the game yes- terday and they showed that fit didn't take long to get acquainted w the ball once again. They ae- counted for four hits between them lag night and brought in four rune, besides playing brilliantly in the infield. After such a good start, it seem- ed to the Buick supporters only the toughest of tough luck that prevented the blue and orange , Bi from dragging out a win, They earned their runs in the first two stanzas--ask Mary Forrester if you want the statement veri- fied, The ball was almost clubbed to pieces, with Whitby also taking no small hand in the punishment, and the fans cheered themselves hoarse while it lasted, Both teams chalked up four in the opening frame and then while Whithy were gathering two in their half of the second, Buicks repeated their achievement and lead by an 8 to 6 count at the end of their half of the session. While idle in the third, however, Whithy crept up a notch when Ruth Robin- son circled the bases on a non-stop flight after dumping an apparent- ly easy fly in between second base and centre field. Productive Bth Buicks and Whitby split a brace in the fourth to leave the former still one ahead, but the avalanche started in the fifth, when the County Town shoved six across on a barrage of hits which included a triple apd two doubles. Six more followed for them in the sixth, and the game was all over but the cheering, although the fans still held hopes of seeing a last minute rally from the locals. ° "They were almost satisfied at that when in the seventh and ¥th, Buicks accumulated five runs, but they had waited too long and with a teg run lead to fight against, their .cause was well nigh hope- less. They went down battling to the last, however, and if nothing else impressed the fans, it was Buicks' gamepess. As we have said before, they deserve to win a game some of these days, but the question is, which team will it be that suffers--Whitby, Malleable or Cheys? d ! ne ups were: --L. Watson, 2b; Park- er, I t, 8b; J. Robinson, 1b; M. ster, p; R. Robinson, ss; B. Bi ; Bande], rf; Jones, c, B Reece, 1b; Farrell, 3b; bi , p; Ferguson, ¢; Crow], ss; Tyrrell, M; Cassidy, 2b; Ruck- stubl, cf; coin, i Score by innings: Whitby 42116631125 Buicks, 44010023014 ber's misplay and advanced to sec- ond following Farber's great catch of Brower's fly when Mooer's sin- gled to left. Urbanski fumbled La- motte's drive and when on recover- ing it he threw badly to first. On low streaked for home and slid in safely, Leafs Victors Extra Innings Cote's Double Followed By Two Sacrifices Gives Toronto De- cision in Eleventh--Leverenz Bears Down Newark, N.J., Aug. 8.--Newark today conceded the championship of the International League to the Taronto Maple Leafs, who downed them through the great left-hand pitching of Walter Leverenz, in one of the greatest extra inning battles ever staged here, by a score of 2 to 1, The Leafs, fighting mad all the way, and holding a 1 to 0 lead, only to see it flittered away through an umpire's judgment in the ninth, when the Bears tied the score and forced it into extra ges- sion, won out in the eleventh ses- sion, on a two-base slam hy Cote, a sacrifice by Billy Webb, and an- other sacrifice fly by Bedore. The other run scored by the Leafs came in the first inning, when Clayton Sheedy tripled off the right field wall and scored on a double by Dale Alexander. President Toole Present Of all the games played at Bears' stadium this season, the one today was the greatest. In the: ninth inning the Bruins tied the score. on a questionable play that caused a rumpus with John Con- way Toole, president of the Inter- national League, looking on, It so happened that in the ninth in- ning, Fournier slammed to rignt for a sipgle, and was sacrificed to second by Lutzke, Leverenz forced Malone to pop, and then Jacobson put up a long foul fly. Sexton, who had taken the place of Joe Rabbitt in right field, raced behind the bleacher stadium section and caught the foul. Unfortunately for the Leafs, neither Umpire Solodar, on the bases, nor Otto Meyers, be- hind the plate, could see the play. They. ruled the play "no cateh." Jacobson then singled sharply to centre to score Carl Fischer, who was gent in to run for Fournier. A good throw would haye caught Fischer, but Easterling's peg was wide of the plate, That exened the score and sent the game into extra innings. It was just a bad break for Leverenz and the Leafs, who 'had played wonderful ball from the very outset, Only Six Hits off Leverenz Wally, in eleven innings, allow- ed only six hits. The Leafs should have won out long before the eley- enth.. They had seventeen men stranded on the bases for lack of a base blow. In the fifth they had the sacks filled, but Herb Pruett, recently acquired from the Phila- delphia Nationals, by the Bears, proved too much for them. He had his screw ball working to per- fection, and while inclined to be a trifle wild, he was great in the pinch. He gave way to a pinch nit- ter in the seventh, said pinch hit- ter being no other than the great Waiter Johnston, who grounded out to Billy Webb, CRICKET NOTES St. George's played Parkdale at Lakeview Park on Saturday, and lost by the narrow margin of one run. Parkdale, batting first, put 51 on the score board, all out. Dr. Ben- nett was credited with carrying his bat through the innings, and being undefeated at the close. When the church boys went in, they found the visiting bowlers in 890d form, and the issue was al- weys in doubt, right to the end of the game. Iver Bennett was batting well, and may have settled all doubts, but unfortunately he stopped a straight ope with his pads, and the inevitable L.B.W. out followed. Parkdale were certainly lueky tii ft - wig but the church boys' field- fog could be much improved, and only have themselves to blame for the game, However, better luck next time, WOULD SILENCE NS Niagara Falls, Ont., Aug. 8.-- There has been such an agitation in favor of the prohibition of whistling - and bell ringing by trains passing through the city that the City Council has asked the Solicitor to give a report on the possibility of passing a bylaw against it. BASEBALL RECORDS INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost PC. Toronto «ewe 66 674 531 523 1505 504 Sue 482 379 Cemmy Rochester ...... Battimore .... Newark ..,... 87 Buffalo «..... 64 Jersey City .. 44 WEDNESDAY'S SCORES xToronto ..... 2 Newark ceve-- 1 x--11 innings, Jersey City 8-7 Buffalo ..... 7-3 Reading -. 156-4 Rochester ... 2-1 Baltimore ,,.. 1 Montreal ..., 0 GAMES TODAY Buffalo at Jersey City, k Rochester at Reading. | Montreal at Baltimore. Other clubs not scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost St. 100i wt 1m 87 New York ..... 60 Chicago -..... 61 Cincinnati .... 59 Pittsburg .,... 58 Brooklyn ..... 52 Boston ....,... 31 Philadelphia ... 29 PC .633 594 656 551 539 491 .323 .293 WEDNESDAY'S SCORES Boston .. ..6-12 Cincinnati , 3-1 Pittsburg .... 4 Brooklyn ...., 3 New York ... 10 St, Louis ..., § Philadelphia .. 4 Chicago -wvu., 3 GAMES TODAY St. Louis at Pittsburg. Other clubs not scheduled, AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lost New York .... 78 35 Philadelphia .. 68 39 Bt. LOWS weve: §7 54 Cleveland -... 50 59 Chicago ...... ve BO 59 Washington ... 50 60 Detroit oo. 46 60 Boston .oweew 40 66 676 .636 513 459 459 465 434 377 WEDNESDAY'S SCORES No games scheduled. GAMES TODAY Washington at Philadelphia. New York at Boston. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Won Lost P.C, 87 52 Bhs 67 54 bbe bb 638 57 529 67 621 63 479 68 419 71 404 Indianapolis ,. Minneapolis .. Kansas City ,., St. Paul ... " Milwaukee Toledo » Louisville -... Columbus _.__ WEDNESDAY'S SCORES Columbus ... 6 Kansas City __ 3 Indianapolis 5 Minneapolis __ 4 Milwaukee , 8-4 Toledo ..._ 2-2 Other clubs not scheduled. Learnto Swim By Aileen Riggin (Olympic Diving Champion in 1920) Lesson Sixteen COMPETITIVE SWIMMING Bear this -very important fact in mind it you are contemplating competitive swimming: Form counts for g great deal more than 'wild rushing. The impulse of the novice is to disregard all rules and just plunge madly forward. I never heard of a single race that was won without mastering the stroke to be used and swim- ming powerfully but with an ah- sence of all wildness. I think that the best pre- paration for the contest will he found in dally swims of from 440 to 1,000 yards-- done at a slow gait. If this is too far at first, work np to it gradually, After doing this, undertake one or two short sprints and then practice racing starts and turns, , the training will be largely contingent on the kind of 2 race you are entering, A long contest will call for endurance ra- ther than speed; conversely, a short race will call for sprinting plus middle distance. But whatever the length of the race, be sure that you never ex- baust yourself in training, 'This is abviogely [biuriogs and will nev- er aid you in winning. Keep the fact in your mind that a slow, powerful stroke is the ome that wins, Tomorrow: More about competi- tive swimming. I -------------- Home Run Hitters Home runs yesterday--Klein, Phillies, 1; Hartnett, Cubs, 1; Al- len, Reds, 1; Bell, Braves, 1; Jack- son, Giants, 1; Terry, Giants, 1; ' Whitman, Keys, 1; Moore, Keys, National League leaders--Wil- eon, Cubs, 26; Bottomley, Cardin- als, 24; Bissonette, Robins, 18; Hafey, Cardinals, _ 18; Hornsby, Braves, 16; Harper, Car 15. American League leader; ; Yankees, 43; Gehrig, Yankees, 19; Hauser, Athletics, 15; Blue, Browns, 12; Simmons, Athletics, 11; Foxx, Athletics, 10. International League Home runs--Alexander, 2%; Rabbitt, 7; Sheedy, 4; Cote, 2; 'Phillips, 5; Webb, 2; Styles, 1; Prudhomme, 3; Easterling, 4; Be- dore, 1; Fisher, 1; Burke, 2. | sPoRr1 sNAPsHO1s Kingston is definitely out of the Central league race according to dis- patches and now fsfinitely is sure to clash with Belleville for the league crown. The Ponies have not received the desired patronage all season and with three of their four remaini games on the road, the fig loomed too large and Joe Daly and his men after an uph stepped out of the race with a pulled tendon or what ha ncial question fight all year ve you. Peterboro have a mathematical chance of catching Oshawa but it looks hopeless and very soon Belleville and the local hopes will be fighting it out for the right to meet the Toronto winners, Even the Belleville scribes are worried about the final result. Teams that glide along so smoothly in the league race have a tendency to reach for the clouds when the final games breeze along and the coming strugg should be no exception. Peterboro is two and a half games behind Oshawa and the locals oly have five more games to play, two at Deloro tomorrow and two wit Peterboro, one at home and one away, plus a postponed game with Deloro. The "Petes" are made a Ji of the Kingston at Peterboro game scheduled for August the 11th an Oshawa also takes a win without effort on a postponed game--Kingston at Oshawa, AY MC, which translated means Anglican Young Mens' Club, are sitting in a rigid position on top of the Intermediate softball loop, leaving no doubt as to their superiority over Fittings by trimming the latter 16-9, Textiles and Moffat Motor Sales will fight for the right to meet the An- glicans, playing at Cowan Park tomorrow night. The Industrial league is another misguided organization that believes in the first three teams play- ing-off, idea, Whitby Girls softball team will play Toronto Swastikas of the Sunny- side league in Whitby tomorrow night. Swastikas were announced as the winners in an extended session in the Queen city on the holiday which was a dirty dig for the Whitby team after they had come home and told the folks how they had trounced the Toronto girls, Tomorrow night should | pom Maas to the Vistula and from give them a chance for revenge. Fred Waghorne, Sr, was in Bowmanville yesterday and has the youngsters from the neighbouring town organized and ready to battle for the championship of the league, the winner to meet either +Tecumsehs or Shamrocks, Oshawa's two juvenile teams, " The first scheduled game of the season will take place tomorrow night at Alexandra Park when Tecumsehs and Shamrocks mingle. The teams played a game over a week ago when Tecumsehs won 2-1, but that game has been thrown out the regular schedule not having been drawn up. Len Smith who, like all other referees, has heard some disparaging re- marks about himself at one time or another, has been signally honored by being chosen president of the World Lacrosse Association. After this the tans will get even a bigger kick from razzing such a celebrity, Oshawa's senior lacrosse téam plays in Weston on Saturday and at the rate the Humber River team were travelling two weeks ago here, the locals will have to be right on edge. Kelley Degray will be an absentee unless the O.A.L.A, officials relent, which is hardly likely, before next Tues- day when a special meeting has been called, Olympic news is rather flat at the present moment, since the Argo eight and Joe Wright were eliminated there has been deep sorrow in sporting circles in general and rewing circles in particular, Jack Guest and Joe Wright are still in the doubles and meet the United States pair Costello and Mcllvaine tomorrow, the Austrians having succumbed to the 'Americans today. The Argo cight have everything they had in the race with the Cali- fornia crew finishing a bare half-length short. Unless Wright and Guest come through Argos' colors will be hanging a foot from the ground. EAGLES JUVENILES DEFEAT V. A. C. 65 Eagles deefated V.A.C. at Cowan Park last night in a closely contest- ed game, 6-5. Guiltiman and Kitchen were the winners' battery, with Sewchuk and Patterson for U.A.C, The Eagles spoiled many chances to score by poor base-runs. Eagles -- Kitchen, Guiltiman, Norris, Corrin, Toppings, Bradd, Bates, Little, Campbell. U.A.C.--Patterson, Sewchuk, P. Hercia, Petrowsky, Starr, Merch, A. Hercia, Ritzie, Talkochoffe. CATS DOWN BISONS IN DOUBLEHEADER Jersey City, N.J., Aug. 8.--Jer- sey City evened its series with Buf- falo by subduing Bisons twice to- day, winning the first game of a double-header 8 to 7 and the sec- ond 7 to 3. Selkirk, pinch-hitting, lifted a sacrifice fly on which Calleran scored the winning run in the ninth of the first game, after Buffalo had tied the score by batting Higgins, teh second Skeeter hurler, from the box in the eighth. Shoffner, Hig- gins, and finally Break, hurled for the Skeeters while Mangum went the route for Bugalo, but was hand- icapped by terrible support all the way. Bill Henderson held the Herd in hand while his mates were pound- ing hard in the second game, VESUVIUS SUBSIDES Naples, Italy, Aug. 8. -- The eruption of the volcano Vesuvius, .| which began yesterday, continued with less intensity today. The new smell cone on the southwest side of the crater gave forth a stream of highly liquified lava, which sometimes was sent into the air as high as ofrty feet or more. Fire and smoke are much in evi- dence. Agitation of selsmo- 'aphs, quite marked yesterday, deh ely ceased since this morning, New Martin Ted Wells Thunder Riders LLOYD HAMILTON in "LISTEN, CHILDREN!" 2nd Episode Scarlet Arrow. Fittings Out in Indus. League Lose 16-9 to A.Y.M.C, and Suf- fer Elimination in Intermed- iate Softball Battle-- Textiles and Moffatts Meet Winners to Play A.Y.M.C, A YM.C, clinched first place in the Intermediate Industrial Soft- ball League last night, defeating Fittings 16-9 in an interesting game at Alexandra Park' The victory was sweet revenge for the Anglicans, who defeated Fittings 6-56 in a previous en- counter, and then lost the decision. through a protest concerning the umpires. Fittings started out right, count- ing three runs in the initial stanza, while St. Georges could only regis- ter a brace. That was the one tinre the winners were headed in the struggle, and from then on the league-leaders took a decided lik- ing to Salmon's shoots, The fourth inning proved the downfall of Fittings when their op- ponents scored six runs, Smith step- ping into the limelight with a cir. cuit clout with the bases densely populated. All Fittings' good things came in threes, the team counting trios in the first, seventh and eighth sessions. They tried hard to draw up on even terms in the final inning, but Keith pitched fair ball and was backed up by elever flela- ing. Snowden was left stranded on third, while Jacobi, Salmon, and Love went out in order. The loss eliminates Fittings from the race, Textiles meeting the 2nd place Motor Sales Friday at Cowan Park, the winner of the tilt to play A.Y.M.C. next Monday and Wednes- day for the right to clash with Chevys, the wearers of the Big Four crown. The line-ups: AY.M.C.--Smtih, 1b; Crothers, 3b; Cornwall, rf; Timmins, ef; Trotter, If; Drinkle, 2b; Atkinson, 88; Keith, p; Gibbie, e. Fittings--MacInally, 3b; Snow- den, ss; Jacobi, ef; Salmon, p; Love, ¢; Rowden, 2b; Hester, 1b; Wilson, It; Arnold, If; Rorabeck, Score by innings-- A. Y.M. C. ..... 232 603 000--16 Fittings .. 300 000 330-- 9 Batteries--Keith and Gibbie, Salmon and Love. ) of league con- ventions were deposited with the sec- the permanent court of international justice and also certain amendments to the covenant of the sad 0 cluding that to article 16 covering cconomic blockades. Canada de- posited a ratification of the anti- slavery convention , - - les | Difference May Evaporate - §1*Balkanization of Europe." SOCIATS FAVOR SCHEME 0 UNITE AUSTRIA GERMANY President of the Reichstag is Outstanding Figure at Vienna Festival NEED "UNITED STATES" Before New Status of Parties in Reichstag Berlin, Aug. 8,--An impressive demonstration for "Anschluss," as the -movement for the union of Germany and Austria is generally known, which took place during the German singers' festival in Vi- enna recently, has been. attacked in the French press as a pan-Ger- manist manifestation. Such de- scription is misleading. The popu- lar agitation in Germany and Aus- tria for union should not be con- fused with the campaign of tne noisy pan-Germanists, who before the war put all of Central Europe the Baltic to the Brenner, as well as most of the Baltic countries, un- der the hegemony of Berlin. But today these people render only lip service to the cause of "Anschluss," whereas its most outspoken cham- pions can be found in the ranks of their detested enemies, the Social- ists, The outstanding figure during the Vienna festival was Paul Loebe, President of the Reichstag. It was he who made fiery speeches declar- ing 'the people have spoken," in reference to the enthusiasm of the mixed crowd of Germans and Aus- trians for "Anschluss," and saying '""we are a united people, a united nation, and we wish once more to be a United States," Loehe, who is president of the German-Aus- trian National League Propagand- ist Society, founded three years ago to promote the union of the two countries is probably the most active exponent of the moment in either country. Yet Loebe is not a socialist but a member of the party's left wing and is so unre- concilably Marxian that he looks with . undisguised aversion upon the co-operation of his colleagues with the bourgeois politicians in the German cabinet, A Foremost Task While Loebe was making his in- toxieating addresses in Vienna, Hermann Mueller, the Socialist chancellor, was giving an interview to 'a correspondent of the Vienna "Neue Freie Presse" in Berlin, wherein the German Premier de- clared that one of the foremost tasks of his Government would he "not only to maintain our rela. tions toward Austria on the exist- ing footing, but if possible to drive them still closer, so that a con- sciousness of homogeneousness will become increasingly the com- mew, property of the German peo- ple. In fact, nearly, the first act of the Socialist Chancellor on assum ng office. was to send a telegram to the Austrian Chancellor, Dr. Ignaz Seipel, expressing the wish for con- tinued closer co-operation between the two countries. As a result the socialist advent to office in Ger- many a great step may shortly be taken towards the ultimate unifi- cation of the two German states by the adoption of a common penal code. For a long time co-opera- ed by the Austrian Chancellor, Li, Seipel, who said that Austria would Join no economic combination from which Germany is excluded. The central European question, declar- ed the Austrian statesman point- edly, couldn't be solved so long as the largest state in central Europe, namely Germany had no say in their solution. Urging the French liberal press to aim their shafts at protectionism and the exaggerated nationalism afflicting Europe, Bern hard wrote: "It would be more to the point if the French press, in- stead of devoting so much passion and spite towards the little ques- tion of German-Austrian Anschluss would co-operate in accelerating the unification of Europe. Then German Austrian Anschluss would become a mere bagatelle." §57 NEW AIRPORTS DEVELOPED IN U. S. Chicago, Aug. 6--Five hundred and fifty-seven new airports have been developed by towns and cities in the United States in six months of 1928, the American Air Transport Associa- tion reports. At the end of 1927 there were 1,600 regular classified fields, in addition to more than 4,000 airports owned by States, cities, commissions and similar organizations, on which emergency landings could be made. Most fields are municipally owned and operated, and improvements have heen notable at ports situated along air mail routes. Hand in hand has come the marking of city names on prominent buildings as guides to iers, One national organization al- ready has marked 1,000 buildings. FOURFOLD APPOINTMENT GIV. EN L. W, GOETZ OF GUELPH Guelph, Aug. 8.--Appointment of Leo W. Goetz, of the firm of Dunbar, Goetz and Dunbar, to the fourfold position of local master of Supreme Court, local registrar, Surrogate court registrar and clerk of the county court, was announe- ed today. Mr. Goetz succeeds the late William Kingston, whose death cenurred 'several months ago. He is a native of Walkerton, and lived there practically all his life, until he commenced his studies in To- ronto. Saskatchewan, Sask., Aug. 8.-- J. Geisel, who farms two miles from Turtleford, Sask. began cut- ting a field of Garnet wheat Aug- ust 4, it was reported today. The heads were filled out nicely and a good yield was indicated. DANDURAND OFF TO LEAGUE Quebec, Aug. 8--Senator Raoul Dandurand, delegate to the League of Nations from Canada, sailed today for Europe on board the SS. Empress of France, Senator N. A. Belcourt was also a passenger. FOUR PARTIES ARE READY TO FIGHT Death of Frank Rose Makes By-Election Certain-- No Writ Yet FF 8.--An London, Aug, interest. ing four-cornered contest is prom- ised in North Aberdeen, the parlia- mentary constituency left umrepre- sented in the House of Commons by the death of Frank Rose, Labor. Dr. Laura Sandeman is the Con- servative nominee, Wedgwood Benn, the well known Liberal re- cently transferred to the Labor movement, is the Labor candidate, and Liberal and Communist candi- dates also have been chosen. Dr. Sandeman was the Conserva- tive candidate opposing Mr. Ross in the last general election, the Labor man getting a majority of about 5,000 votes. , WILDOCAT CAPTURED Sault Ste, Marie, Ont., Aug. 8.-- A fine specimen of the wildcat species has been captured at Hearst, on the A.C.R., and the game warden now has the big cat, uninjured, in a cage at that place. The animal' was secured by a couple of men whose names have not yet heen reported. They came across the wildcat in the bush, and it took to a small tree. The men, attacking a piece of wire to a pole, made a noose, and at length succeeded In passing it over the animal's head. Then it was dragged ignominiously from its perch and secured, Regent. NOW PLAYING Colleen Moore 'Happiness Ahead" Also Other Attractions EE tion between Berlin and Vienna in this important sphere has been impending, but hitherto it has been upheld because the Reich insisted on capital punishment being re- tained in the code while the Aus- Mas Remove Difference Now that the majority opposed to the death penalty has been re- turned to the Reichstag by the May elections, it is likely that this difference between the Austrian and German viewpoints will be re- moved, The German Socialists are eager for "Anschluss" because their ranks would be swelled by the ac- cession of a large and extremely well organized socialist party from Austria. For this very reason the Nationalists dislike the idea of unjon because they fear that "Red Vienna" would increase the power of the Socialists in the Government and Reichstag. It should also be borne in mind that while the pan- Germanists have relied on bayonets and guns to realize their ideal, the Socialists appeal to the right of seif-determinatiwn influded among Wilson's fourteen points as the jus- titication for the inclusion of Aus- tria in the Reich, George Bernuard, editor of the "Vossische Zeitung," declared that the Vienna demonstration was not an ebullition of pan-Germanism but of pan-Europeanism. Certainly as Bernhard pointed out, the real driying force behind the "Ansch- luss" is neither beer nor somg but economic necessity. Even the sue- cession of the states is beginning to see dangers inherent in the Edu- ard Benes, foreign minister om zecho-Slovakia, has recently been 'meking the rounds of the European capitals peddling his idea of an economic customs union composed of the states formerly in the dual monarchy. His project, however, wae veto- trians abolished that after the for-| mation of the Xepublic. and long, $110, Canada Steamship Lines' 1 vessels ply the waters of the St. Lawr- ence River, from the Great Lakes to where it is joined by the distant Sag- uenay; nearly a thousand miles of sur- passing beauty. There are short trips to fit every vacation purse, For example, the eight-day trip from Toronto to the Saguenay and retu including wumerous landings, pov prious For further information, rates and reservations, apply-- CANADA STEAMSHIP LINES 3 . T FITTINGS IN INDUSTRIAL LOOP