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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1918-9-5, Page 6t S TbviSDAY, Skrr. 5 ,1815 Frequent headaches. Pimple with titin blood are much nate whiect to headaches thin% full blooded persons, and the lent ot anaemia that afflicts growing girls is almost always ac - con mnied with headaches. together with dutus-tomes of the digestive organs. Whenever you have constant a teoe- cuteuig headaches and pallor of the face, they show that the Wood is thin and your eftsts should be directed toward belling up yatu blood. A fav treatment witb Dr. Wpbawu' iMk Pills will do this effective- ly,uo the rich, red blood made bl' these giLi will remove the headache. More duturbancea to the health are Caused by the blood than people have ' any iiea o(. When your Wad is im- poverished. m- poven ted. the nerves suffer Com lack of rwwnskinaN and you May be trowbkd with neo nnta. neuritis. neuralgia slatita. Muscles *Object to gram are undo and you may have mue- s:Mat the iso or Iwtioago. If your Wood is t d you begin to show symp- toms of any these disorders, try build - big up the blood with De. Williams' Pink finis. aid as the blood is restored to its ,socai condition every symptom of the trouble will disappear. There are more le who owe their present state of health to Ur. Williams' Pink Pills than to any other me<ficule, and most o►( then (SU awl hesitate to say so. You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any *Met in medicine or by mail at fill reels a box or sin boxes for 6250 front the Dr. Williams Medicine Co. Iltockerlle, Ont. OP,vvesters Urgently Needed in West- ern Canada. When travelling to Western harvest fields go by the Canadian Northern Rail- way and thereby give loyal support to Use Peopt;'s Line. Itdoinatioti of value to harvest hands is given in a Iealtet entitled "Harvest- ers' Work and Wages," lobe bad from any t:. N. R. agent. 30-2t STOW E'S THE RED BARN, SOUTH STREET ,ltl.wi , FOR 'BUS, LIVERY AND HACK SERVICE 1J!ra. cy:) IFttl all (tains. Passer ger; called for in any part of the town for outgoing trains on G T. k. or C. P. R. Prompt attention to all orders or telephone calls. Slott Lutes • First-class rip h. R. STOWE Telephone 51 Successor toT. M. Davis NO ICE Owing to the scarcity of Coal, and the fact that sales have. of necessity. to be made in very small quantities, we have found it absolutely necessary to make a rule that ALL COAL BE PAID FOR ON DELIVERY MacEwan Estate L. B. TAPE The Matt' Sewing Machine Ag.or. bee Mitts neer the rigs aa. yp/Ills Idenuiaial boater imp nilaalet0 &MS rod miff leerat' (.nth lines Palma $.JLssr, trod Spear Seeing Mts A kw :hare of the pi hiic pat- ronage not be appreciated. RED GUARDS ROUTED. I. epwnon, acid Osectio-Speirs& Troops Were Vkct.sa. LONDON, Sept. 3. — Entente Ai lied foredo and Gaeelo-fHlovak trjlops have attacked the Bolshevik Red Guards oa the Useuri river Croat and have driven the enemy back for a distance of 16 miles. Prbonere were taken and booty was captured by the Allied forces. An official statement Weed by the Japanewe War Office says: "At dawn on Aug. 24 tis, Allied armies assumed the ogeaslve aad otter a contest giouted the esemi, whom they pursued, reaching the Kraefsk diMSc< is the atteraooa. The enemy havjag dealroyed the bridge over the Uyerass cher, h halted on the left bank. Preparations for further pursuit are going ea ^During this engagement some of our infantry, with oat battalion of Nippers, succeeded in reaching the eaeu.y's rear and destroyed the rail- way. They captured two armored cars. "The headquarters stall of the Fuji detachment arrived at Mar- che!' as Aug 23. and the mate de- tachmeat arrived Aug. 24. "Gen. Semenoff is oocupyl.g Siding No. 14, about 36 miles west of Manchull." Ntnely-Orr Americans. including all Consular omeers, except Consul - General Poole. ail the personne4 of the Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A-, repre- sentatives of the American Bank and a number of private citizens lett Mos- cow for Petrograd on a special trails the evening of Aug. 36. Areerieaa interests previously bad been turned over to the Swedish Consulate. With the Americans were the Italia° military mission, a party of 71 persons. This news, transmitted through the Swedish Government, did not confirm recent reports from German sources that the last of the Entente' representative* had left Mos- cow. and ft la thought here that the British and French Coaauler °dicera probably still are detained. In belated . despateheis received from Mr. Poole himself, a Inst dat- ed Aug. 21, tbe Consul ral re- iterated his intention of remriining in Moscow to give moral support . o his British and French colleagues''beld by the Rolsheviki Government. The Swedish Governident also ad- vised that' passports of the Ameri- cans and others who had left Moscow had been vaned to leave Russia and that permission from the Finnish Government to pass through Finland would be awaited at Petrograd. This permission already has been auth- orised. CANADIANS CARRY ON. Gains 1s Big Offensive Have Totalled Seventeen Mlles. With the Canadian Forces 1■ the Field, Aug. 28. via London, Sept. 3. --- It is exactly a month since the great trek began. 11 is jut* over three we.ke since• the Initial blow was P t ruck. East of Amiens It is five days since the Canadian force so vic- toriously returned to Its old wapiti - 1°g ground and tools; part is the eves harder task of the relief of Arras. Within that period It bas penetrated no less than 17 miles into the beset of the enemy's defence, has shatter- ed a anmber of bra best divisions. and has taken off him Immense spoils In the way of prisoners and material of war. And the Canadian force is still going strong. It gore forward sing- ing and suffering its losses unftaei- ingly What Caaadlan heart L so la- seneible that it does not thrill! The frost occupied by the Cana- dians was practically unchanged. the tired troops resting after the aaa- g uinary battle of the previous day. There was movement, however, north and south, our capture of Artillery Hill on Wednesday enabling the Heottiab division fighting on the left leak of the Canadians north of the Searp+ to storm and consolidate 1 Greenarand 14111. The enemy still pours in a beat? shell Ore from the heights around Oppy. To the south of us other British troops did aplendid work yesterday. generally advancing their line and thus relieving our hard pressed right lank. It rained again last night, adding to the dtfllcultiea of the troops. but early this morning they went over the top and captured the enemy trench system east of Cheney, where we were held rip Wednesday. The August Bag. LONDON, Sept 3. — Sir Douglas Hates report from Headquarters on Sunday night said: "In the moth of August. 67,315 Oermaa prisoners, including 1,183 officers, were captured by the British troops in France. in the mime period we have taken 6G7 guts. Includlag over 160 heavies. "Over 5.750 machine guns and over 1,000 trench martens have been cooled Among the other eaptoren were three trains, nine locomotives, nnmeroes complete ammualtlon aad engineer dumps. many hundreds Ot tbouirnds of pounds of gun said trench mortar ammunition, as well as small arms arsaualtlon sad Im gsantltiea M war material of Per dsrription " as4sses Take Primmer.. iAR1i. Neer 1 -- The Betgiaa essa•uaMstion reads' "rear detachm.ats attacked es Thursday night on a frost of three k/Mssetran north sad south of the laagoasarek railway and penetrated the ea.my positions Alt our ohf.n- Uvee were reached and maiatabed. We ineieted very heavy losses on the enemy and brought back 90 un• woond.1 prtsnner. belonging 0o alt ✓ egiments. maehlne guns, home• throwers and war material " gimlet ghlpbotMlwg. LONDON. Rept. 3. — Anther world's record has been made at a Belfast shipbuilding yard by the domplettloe of ■ standard ship In eve worklaa days after the lannehrpg K filo weasel. THP: btGNAL GODERICH, ONTARIO BARON HERTLING IS REACTIONARY German Chancellor Wants to be King -Maker. WS BAVARIAN CAREER He Proved Long Ago That ■o hi a Mas Without Any Mona 5oe..pias That Might l.trrfere With MU Poilt4eai Ahnaeement — ■e Kwcoeeded la 'Maki Lott - 'old Khag heistead of itogest." BOISE verses' who thought %kat Baron George vasa Northam would prove more liberal In kis view -plat phos tbe Glossas Cbasoellors who preceded Wm were doomed to dis- appoistment. It they had knows the facts about this Bavarian, they would have bees aware that be is as strewt- h, Prussian is character as the worst of them. Indeed he has. long aspir- ed to be a king -maker, a sort of Bavarian Warwick. Baron von Hert- ling, seventh Chancellor of the Ger- utas empire, was bora i■ DarmataAt is 1843. After finishing kir studies he spent two years to Italy, and 3. 1667 settled down at Bonn as al PrWaldosent. Thirteen years ,lased before he obtained a professorship. The reason, as he himself has said la use of his books, was that be was written down as an ultra -montane, mad the academic progress of ultra- moatanes 1a those days was "sleep and dltacult." Bat haling obtained his professor- ship in 1850, he was tranafernd two VON HEMMING. years later to Munich as professor of phllosopby. He already hod for melee years been a member of tbe Reich- stag, and his fortunes advanced rapidly with theme of the Centre par- ty, of which he ultimately became the leolee, on the death of Dr. Lie- ber. While be was nominally a profeasor In Munich, Hertling, was In reality the ebief, although unoffi- cial, representative of Germany at the Vatican, and for a generation bei has conducted every Important Ger- man negotiation with tbf! Pope While Hertliog'e career in German politica could be described only in a history of the Centre party during his time, tbere are two events winch defiers+ to be remembered. When Prince Bellew at the en 1 of 1006 lois- ed iaeue with the Centre party— nominally about colonial policy— Beetling, as be explained acme years afterwards, took the dbaolutlon of the Reichstag as an attempt to estab- lish ctadlish "a Liberal regime" in the empire and In Prussia. The result of the etoetiona was thm defeat, not of the Centre party, but of the Socialists, and the Reichstag majority, wlicb came into existence+ was not a "Lib- eral" majority, but the famous blue - Mack bloc ---the combination of Con- servative* and Centre party. Two years later Prise Below received his punishment when the Coaservae Oyes and the Centre party detested with reattlonary arguments the pro- posed death duties, and Prince Bulow fell. It is characteristic of Hertling that, whereas la 1002 he had atronlly sup- ported Below and severely criticised the Kaiser in the matter of the Daily Telegram Interview he supported in the summer of 1309 the criticisms against Below for his behavior to- wards the Emperor In the previous year- --the bane which caused tete Kaiser to take bis - ern revenge tie Below as soon as the political Siva - Lisa gave biro his opportualty, is February, 1912, Hertling waa suddenly summoned by the tate Primer Regent Lnttpold to suceeed Count Podewlle as Minister-PrMldeat of Bavaria. Herillsag's appolntmest was found pecullarly convenient, ow- ls' oat the one hand to bla power and prestige se head of the wbole Ceatrt party is Germany. Harping had eonalderabie troubles over the regency question after the loath of Prince I,altpold, sad ex - Whited MU* tact. But be kept his position, and the Ktag of Bavaria baa e st been ungrateful for the tact tial It is to Hertling that he owed the termination of the regents and kis eetaliNshme$t on the asverins three, while the mad King Otto was WU alto.. Sinew the nutlreuk of war Bartow vin Beetling has bees gives this hereditary Utio of count. To Bathe the Roby t#bN bathing the baby fold a thlek towel and lay It at the bottom of the with This will provost the child from attpiklng, wilds Is the Muss of the aerwoaaoe.a ..*lbUsd M t bsM.i wiles brio ieM a& AN RXPLODRD 1711l®OPtI'. Nwedlsh Naturalist Talks of latent. Einem of Ast. The ant has bees greatly overrated 1a the opialea of Richard Ege, • Swedish naturalist. *Women set the fashion will his famous adworitlon to the sluggard, and the ant has been heist under false proteases ever •lade. For as a matter of tact, she L a hopeless cbuckiebead, and to cesWder her ways is no way to be - creme wise. Mark Twain arrived al this eon - *tee ea many years ago, and science new jo/as heads with aim io the per - sea of Mr. Kee, who publishes the results of a aeries of experiments with asps. He dlapoaee erre of the is sect's supposed uncanny power to re- cotialse other lemons of its own ant- hiY. Mr. Ege waabpd ants in ether. lipped them in liquid gained by pressing a number of warmness sm- other hill, and put them back ameat their own friend., who promptly Gell upon them and ejected them. $e took asps fifty num. larger than the inhabitants of a certain ant -bill, washed them arta treated them In a liquid premed treys ants of that hill, and then placed them in It. The Lil- liputian insects did not recognise the Meats a. Invaders. Mr. Eire oest- dudes; that the supposed remarkab!/ sharp recognitions' powers of the ta- ssels are simply a matter of Groat and labertted redoxes. Ante removed from familiar paths blunder blest)), along, wick no sense of distance or direction, until they strike a trail made by themselves et other tats. la many tests made by Mr. Zoe the loeecta diadosed '!ns sort lntelllgeaoe than is to be fogad la the digestive processes ot bursas beings." In otber words, he found nearly all their tots are but mowe- meats by relaxes, unconnected with Mut gene. "Have you a vomitlet.ethe story Masks" Proof that Some Women, do Avoid Operations Mrs. Etta Darks. of Ogdeosburli, M►is., mist 1 maimed from female troubles which cawed ydereing palms Elks a ball, through my back sad side I halfy lost all my strength ea I had to re to bed. The doctor advised an vpsratlea but 1 'mild not listen to 1t I thought of what I hsd read about Lydia L Ptnkham'e Vegetable Campeand and tried it. The drat bottle bwegbt great relief and ran bottles have entirely cured as.. LydiaR women who have female trouble of any kind should try LBi. Plnkhara's Vegetable Oumpesa4.rr How Mrs. Boyd Avoided as Operation; Damon, Otho.—"1 suffered from a female trouble which caused tine meek enderlpg. and twe deuton decided tblt I get woaidwell live to go through an *pennon before I could My mother, who had been helped by Lydia E. Pink- bam's Vegetable Compound, advised sae to try it be- fore submitting to an operation. It relieved the from mytrembles so I can do my homes wort without any diulty. 1 advise any woman wbo is *Meted with female troubles to give Lydia E. Pinkbaln's Vege- table Oemponnd a trial sad 1t will do as much for them ' — Mrs. MA3¢* Bonn, 1431 1th St., ]g. L, Craton, olio. Evert; Sick Woman Shd�t • ` 1,1 1' ,•II ice. LYDIA E. PINKHANI'S i VEGETABLE COMPOUND Before Submitting 'Ib An Operation &101A t.pMIKNAM Mt.DICIM( CO LYt1M. MASS. "Ob, yes, sir; here is one that will raise your hair. BENMIi Intended for Wt, sweet "Well, for goodness sake let Inc have It, miss. I am as bald as an egg and would like to raise some." After Measles Whooping Cough or Scarlet Fever the extreme weakness often results in impaired hearing, weakened eyesight. bronchitis and other troubles. but it Scoet'a Emotweel is gtvten promptly, it carries strength to the organs and creates rich blood to build op the depleted forces Children thrive o. Scott•. Eao io.. Pres Irmo liana/al Drug. WEDNESDAY, Aug.2't Mr. Joshua Moore Left for the West on Thursday. Mr. ;Harty G. McKie. of Toronto. is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. traughan. Mr. and Mr.. Samuel Schuan.e and son Blake. of Rocarville. Sash:., are visiting y in the neighborhood. Mr. Wright is around again after his recent operation. He is at present staying with his daughter. Mrs. James Jewell. .4 meting of the Farmers' Club was scheduled for Monday evening, but owing to the small attendance no business was transacted. A coaled cellar makes a warm house. II The about the pen being mightier than sword is temporarily canned- • s a A Candid Soldier, In the possession of a naval San Francisco is a questeonaue sent to a young San Franciscan who had enlisted before it was trailed. The portal authori• tie4 thoughtfully forwarded it to the young man and it found him fighting in France, already a solder, But he dutifully sat down and answered all the draft questions and mailed the document back to the proper authorities. These are tux questions and the San Franciscan's answer,: Q—A re you an expert in any occupa tion? Fighting Hums with a bayonet. Q—What language do you speak A—Pidgin French. 1 Q -s -What enterprise are you engaged in? A—Fighting Huns Q—State the name under which the en- terprise is conducted. A—Europ can war. Q— What is produced by said enter - officer prix' in I A— Hell, Q— How many persons are employed in the plant where you work? —Ten million. Q—Are you engaged in agricultural en- - %.e? Plowing ••No Man's Land." Are you an employe or managing head of the enterprise? A—Rear of enterprise. Q—State what kind of farm. .A—Poor (arm. Q—What branch of the work are you engaged in? A—Digging trenches. Q.—What is produced by that branch ? A—Shell craters. Q—State number and kinds of livestock on the land. A—Crumbs and other vermin. else Huns. Q.—How many persons live on the land ? A—Nene, very long. The Silent Heroes of the War THE men of the Merchant Maine—do you ever give them a thought P The whole submarine campaign is aimed to frighten this non-combatant force of the seas. For then— Britain, France, Italy would face starvation. Oar armies coald not fight. Canada would be wreched commercially. The fight for liberty would be lost. Yet governments make no official recognition of this heroic body of 300 000 men who tod day and bight in danger of death. No provision is made for pensions, or relief for their dependents. We must admit our debt to tbe widows and orphans of tbe 15,000 men of the Merrkawt Marilee, who have gum down, victims of the U -Bost. Our cry must be— "They Shall Not Want" In his famous a ie+eed of Aarwt °eh. less, Premier Lloyd Gaspe said 'Dariag the put two years Germany ties made two distinct attempts in force a decision --one on tie lead and one on the sea. The land ofte°.br'might have been disastrous. but the sea offensive, if a had succeeded, wooed brae been (mat IT tine sebas•rmes bad wace*ded, our armies in France wish have withered away. No Americans monad Wee moose over to assist us and II* Poen* troops. Asmwsition could not bum bees shipped sad we could not have soma the sectasary coal and material to etsrrltiOe Primer and Italy to mauafadnre atiirooa "If France. Itaty gas/ Great litritaim were threatened with stareatios Ile war would have been ever babre drys ,same bad been reached.' THE soldier is rightly remembered with gifts, separation allowance and pension. He is honored, as is his due. The men of the Navy are provided for and their dependents are not allowed to suffer want. But the seamen of the Merchant Marisle—faciflg death in a hideous form at their daily work, risk all at the call of duty. It would be a lasting disgrace to allow the widows and orphans of the noble 15,000 to suffer hardship, other than the loss of their dear ones. Those who died on the sea are calling to you mow. REMEMBER BY GIVING Ontario's Objective $1,000,000. Ontario Has Never Failed! THIS IS SAILORS' WEEK Catnat» I�r diiaisar♦ i-aalr. '[SIB NAVY LEAGUE OF CANADA Camstedss. Assam Jarvis Prari asst fossm4. tN Lifts St. *ark Tomas