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March 15
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Watch this
space on
March 22.
GOAL
Saturday,
HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
Hitler
Draws Draws
March 16, 1940.
Up
To Impose On
Terms Britain
21 Lost in Sunk Naval BUT HE'S GOT
Two officers and nineteen ratings are missing and feared lost in the alaking by enemy aircraft of 11.M, trawler Fle- shire, announced by the Admir- alty last month.
There was one survivor.
Another Admiralty trawler, the Solon, was attacked by bombs and machine guns, but the Ger- man aircraft were driven off, and (ho vessel returned to part.
The Admiralty statement gaYO the master's name as Acting Sub- Lieutenant J.V. Searles Wood RN. The ship was sunk as a result of enemy aircraft attack. The survivor is Able Seaman Albert Edward Illowers.
The Fifeshiro was a vessel of 540 tons, built by Smith's Dock Co., Lid., Middlesbrough, and was owned by the Fifeshire Fishing Co. Iler port of registry waLY Grimsby,
The Salon (348 tons) was built in 1931 at Beverley, and is owned by the Standard Steamflshing Co., Ltd., and is registered at Grimsby,
The
German News Agency claims that two British patrol boats, Tartan and Starnbank, have been runk by German planes.
LIFE OF A BEST SELLER
MARIE CORELLI: THE LIyy, and Death OF A BEST SELLER. By Groner BULLOCK. Constable. 12s.
Mr. Bullock has kept his balance nicely where it would have been very easy to use it. Marie Corelli was in everything so extreme that a bles grapher must be
be tempted to see her
Trawler
The agency states that the Nor- weglan steamer Ala (933 tons) has been sunk at the English coast.
Paris reports state that R.A.F. planes were over the German war bases of Borkum and Heligo- land and attacked· German tor- palo-boals.
According to reports of the Columbia Broadcasting - System an air batilo took place between German and British planes off the Norwegian coast.
FORCED CAPTOR
TO WED
A 22-YEAR-OLD girl, Alice Miner, told a court at Ashland, Oregon, how she-
Was kidnapped when she was.12, Forced to marry her captor, and Hud bar children by him, The husband, 31-year-old Otis Vin- cent, was charged with kidnapping her.
He was said (according to British United Press) to have kept her virtual prisoner for 10 years and forbade her to have friends, When their second child was born he forced her into a marriage cere- mony "to stop people talking.". When she applied to the authorities for old Minor disappeared, and she returned to her parents.
Sawbones, R.A.F.
TO WIN
FIRST
HITLER AND VON RIBBENTROP HAVE DRAWN UP A SEVEN - POINT PROGRAMME OF WAR AIMS, WHICH
ALSO TO ARE
CONSTITUTE THE PEACE TERMS WHICH THEY WOULD IMPOSE AS A CONDI- TION OF TERMINATING THE WAR.
That is, of course, IF they won!
And if the armistice arrive before they had been able to occupy any largo expanse of British and French territory, If such occupation had been effected, the terms would be extended to include the retention by Germany of such territory.
The terms will shortly be published in Germany. They are as follow:
1 All British and French territories
Ih Africa to be surrendered to Germany.
British territories thus affected
would be the Union of South Africa, South West Africa, Kenya, 'Ithodesia, Tanganyika and Nigeria, as well as other smaller territories.
Turkey Watching
Ready To Fight If War Endangers Security
Istanbul. Mar. 14.
An attitude of watchful, waiting
has been adopted by the Turks to- day. The Press gave no inkling of the apprehension expressed in official circles yesterday that the end of the Russo-Finnish hostilities Increased the chances of the war spreading to the Balkans and the Near East.
2 France to surrender. to Germany the whole of Alsace and Lorraine. 3 Britain and France to pay to Germany a war indemnity, in sold, sufficiently large to "re-habilitate the financial position of the Reich." As Germany now has a war debt af £4.000,000,000, it is, presum- ably, that guro which Itler has in mind, plus any further indebtedness that might be in curred tu paying for the stages of the war that are yet to come. 4 Britain to enter into commercial treaties giving Germany preteren tal treatment for her goods in all parts of the British Empire, includ-Sena were part ing the Dominions and India,
The only indication that the coun- try might be involved in war was found in the newspaper Akcham in the Mediterranean and the which
It was pointed out that both Black of Turkey's "space of "War in either of | security."
Turkey
ons would mean
6 Special financial and economic regions
concessions to be granted by Bri- tain and France so as to establish German political and, economic leadership in Europe. 6 British
world leadership brought to an end, France to be compelled to sign
years.
that
these
must act to protect her interests, but the
paper states that "Turkey employing all her forces to keep wor far from the space of security. Pre- to beparations which we are now making signify that we are going to throw
ourselves into an adventure." Informed Turkish sources Russo-Finnish
state
in
a Treaty allying herself with Ger-that the many for a period of twenty-five no way changes the Government's
peace pact
policies. The country will continue its preparedness measures and watch en events in order to be ready for any aituation.-United Press.
The terms have niready been made known in certain circles in Switzer- land.
us she saw the charaters in her novels -ail black or all white. Mr. Dul- lock's book, judicial but not serve, painted but not derisive, has left one reader with a strange hope the rope The following letter was received that Marie Corellt never knew the by an RAF. medical officer: truth about herself, that she lived "Dear Sir,I would be glad if you7 and died convinced that she was as could tell me whether I can join the she saw herself, and will no worm Royal Air Force. I am a carpenter even of self-suspicion to gnaw at her in civil life and naturally I should heart. In ail but degree, she like to follow my trade in the Alr child's play to the understanding of Force. If, however, there are no the present time.
vacancies for carpenters I shoud like "Minnie
Illegitimate to join the medical branch." daughter of a second-rate writing- man and woman of the people, grows so naturality into the Contessa Marie Corelli, with the proper endow
beauty and genius. What ment of was singular, about Marle Coreill was the foree with which this con- pensation for
for reality seized hold of pensation fo her, and the consistency with which she lived up to it. We have to con- cede also an extreme of
of insensitive:
any
Mackay,
ness, attack-literary, social, pative or nequired, or probably both personal-on this perfection; such attacks do not wound, they
arouse
righteous indignation. Add a luxuri- ant imagination and
No ANO
energy and the idol is. exposure of
of elementary ignorance, of petty vanity (like her protest to the Paper which did
not mention her!
of the Bests
(like
$30,000 among the
84.40
Braemar Gathering), of the letter about Hall
Eternal City," in which Mr. Bullock very ocklly sees traces of generosity),
or or high-handed officiousness (like well-meant interference
much ut
af her
at Stratford-on? Avon) could find
ny
serap of clay in the image of Marle Carelli which Minnie Mackpy had up. But if worn at her heart there was, the gnawing must
Bet
been bitter inded,
the
have
She comes out of it all absurd but unconquerable and very for from being contemptable. The blushing! should be done by and for the well- bred and educated people who were taken in by her books, Her high- water mark as seller was in the nine- ties; and in the nineties "society" loved to hear its vices abused, whe- ther in church or in fiction (such abuse was the crude forerunner of ::: the later and subtler pleasures of moral
stripping by psycho- analysts); ind, at the same time, many worthy people were nervous of the new, clever writers who inade "sin" so attractive, and of the general fin-de-steele feeling of a landslide In religion and in morals. To them "Barabbas," "The Sorrows of Satan," The Mighty Atom" and the like ware most comforting and reassuring. To do them justice, they stuck to Marie Corelli longer than "society," which soon found her a bore and turned her into an incubus.
A.BROKEN DOWN SYSTEM. This is a condiilat (or disease) to which maNY Dames nem giren boc few really undevanod. It is simply weiknesama break down za li verk be the vital forces that sustain the system. No patter what may be its causes (they are almost numberless), le symptoma are much the BRISE; the more prominani being sleeplasaneSE, KEZDE of protesttoa or, wenzinasa," dopessalon aprits and want of energy for all the ordinary airs of life. Now, what alone is essential in li soob anga is increased vitalliy welgeur, vital rength and
energy to throw off these morbid failings, and as night succeeds the day thi may be more certainly secured by a course wi THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY.
THERAPION NO.3
of
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ENJOY ENDLESS
13
KEPT FROM HIS SHIP
BY SCIATICA
Sailor Who Could Hardly Walk, for Pain' Rheumatism had so crippled this old sailor that he could only make
way
about with pain and diMculty. Here he tells how a friend Introduced him to a remedy which made' him perfectly. At for the hard aenfaring life again within a week:-
his
"I have been а seamun and travelled all over the.world”in sall- lng ships. Some time ago I was taken bad with sciatica and rheuma- them. If I went out I had to rest two For three times before I got home. One day an old mate of mine asked me what was the matter, and he said 'get some Kruschen Salts. So I got some and. I am pleased to say I felt a great ease. After continuing for a week, I was a great deal better and on the Saturday I was bacit on my ship."-T.R.W..
and The pains of rheumatism selatien ore caused by too much uric acid accumulating In the body. Two of the ingredients of Kruschen Salts dull the sharp edges of uric acid crystals, then dissolve them. away altogether. Other ingredients of these Salus nasist Nature to wash out these dissolved crystals through the juntural channels.
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