HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1918-12-5, Page 3Cus
The e Tro[T Ileart uble
ale.
Faulty .eigesiio.i causes the
generation of gases in the
stomach which inflate and ;press
clown on the Ireait and interfere
with its regular action, causing
faintness and pain. 15 to.SO-
drops of II'Io,hel Seigel's, Curative. e
Syrup after meals sets digestion
right,which allows the heart to ll
beat full and: regular. g hh�I
nPi iss a
•
rat.
Coat
,tooee,lehex
effe,efe; with. roti-
• vertfblo 'c, o'1,1 a'r
Extra well made.
Length 45". A
iropalar seller.
,$120.
.rirelritah
Splendid coats
that look well and.
wear•better than
any other seal.
Specie' price $112..
6�erstat
Lamb'
•and Mink
Two ,or our
specialtiea'in
• Which we' ohe•r1
exceptional''•-ce a 1-'
iter.
$entl ior,Free Oataldg.
t Tia l@!t�leiGS & CUli nNGS
109a St. Paul Street
MONTREA.
RAW FURS': Highest, Prices Paid..
r
f. r l i° !t'I lU �,1*-;
.'i
lMa"
+es1 •� � _ _,�,-'lsdiraa-
Autopower makes your Ford the best
14 JI, P. Portable Gasoline Engine in the
World.: Two minutes' toattach or detach.
tittacll'es to crank shalt, which ensures
delivery of the, engine power. Only the
engine 'runs, eonseeeehten no wear on
tires, differential; etc. A specie:). patent
ed auxiliary fan keens, the engine cool
under all conditions rlar can be moved or
driven with • .A,+itotw ,"!r attached, Auto
matin goyernor controls .the power.'
I-eaps `b2 'p9weG to' a °' a UUUJtiI"
run Grain grindlet s >-
'wood. saws,;,ensilage ti, i , p lig / r
-.utters, hay presses,
fnniiin^•mills, se>
1a-
•r4£ois. chui.ns.' ap
ii i r t 1
z t ii t.i
e i , ret
dr illingmachfnes,ete.
\write ler catalogue
,..and ,trial offer and WITH ATTACHMENT OFF
Bee what users '. y.AND GCENQE NUMDEFCC
A, M rrxcC?sz
Dept A., 114 .adelaide St. NV% Toronto
he Weekly
Moils '
For the -lively little, youngster who.
on cls
a11-
cC P
In 3''ize
Price, 20 cents.
th there is`: an
is� tette heed es .
n z
1 a
,
t Y
i 0 8G 4
ideal:$ult. M attcie _Z\ 0 ,
Boy's Suit. 'sizes, 2to 6ears.
Y,y
•
GERMAY MUST PAY BILLIONS
Debt, Without' Iteparation to Allies,
Two-fifths of Nation's 'Wealth.
Study of Germany's financial situa-
ticn hasbeen undertaken by .Govern-
melt agencies-here,„with a view to
athrowig dight"4on the ability of the
German- nation to • p y blg, sums as
reparation for devas"cation ofinvaded
countries, says a Washington` (les-
patch. ' Unofficial reports indicate that
Germany's national debt represented
mainly, by war bonds held within the
Empire, is now nearly 835,000,000,000
or more than two-fifths of the esti-
mated national wealth. -
Although there has been eenofficial
announcement or intimation . of the
*aggregate amomat which the" Allies
will expect Germany to pay, it is Ger-
. tain to run into_billions of dollars, and
necessarily the terns of payment.
must accord with Germany's ability to\
�
pay: - '.Phi's ability will bC mea uxed
by the- nation's power to,°revive' her
peace -time, industries- and _trade' and.
to tai: this ,for state prh.'poses. 'Fin-
ancial observer hero say soni,e claims
for restoration, and restitution 'set
' `;: forth 1y interests in °,rew Allied na-
tions are extravagant, because they
are beyond Germany's ability, even
though- this is' estimated at the high-
est.
Leather covered' furniture ma"
Y
washed. with • eastile soap 'and luke-
..,w n water. The oil, in the soap
preserves the leather and "helps to
keep . it soft. Grey- leather Shoes
may also be- cleaned in ilhis way.
1.
Thousands
of under-
.
people have
-found;th�t
oo d
blerpd of hour.
15hir► , cereals
�---- helps
wondke r -k lly
xrti lot-,ildir
uheaal+h and
ha ine s.
xde, Fund 8orrd ttense U,2.0
I,SSIjkli iVo. i.S---'i
:9.acharniing"afternoon dress for the
Miss,` with the new rippled tunics. The
one-piece straight skirt is attached to
the waist with. : soft shallow pleats:
McCall. Pattern No. 8610, :,Misses'
Dress. In 4 sires, 14 to 20 years:
Price;.25 cents. • • r
These patterns may bee obtained
from youl:,,local McCall dealer or
front' the McCall Co,",: 70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Dept. W.
THE" 'DISE OF WAR /
The Crash,, of Conflict is Beyond
Power of Words to Describe.'
"-It-is e curious thing," the battery
major said -he was ,An bed, with
broken femur hoisted in a sling—"but.
won -ds are wholly lacking to describe
a drumfire bombardment. One mlist
be present to appreciate the stunning.
vehemence of that sound—the gamut;
of crashes. and ,screams that make the
earth quiver and recede in fogs ; of
white'andyelloev furies; or green and'
black and"bro�ti. '
"The noisetis nembing; air and sky,
heaven and earth appeal.• to he rent ,one, when• our victory.shall be sealed
with the ring"and clang, the hammer by• •peace`. 'T had :dodged, a 'hundred
and growl, roaring clin: in- every key mine, craters"blown:'up by trick enemy
1 might string out letters, 1 could coin "along the road to. Mons and had lie-
uiicouth,onosnatopoeie ,words, hoping, conte entangled in tides of traffic and
$ dred industries, of those in agricul-
to get a bombardment over the foot- 'travelled fat -through liberated. conn Lural pursuits with triose engaged in
lights to you at hone, but I'd have try, but T had determined to get to
no success. , Some of the shells weigh Mons,and on'tlie day of "cease fire" Manufacturing, of capital and labor.
a'"ton, and"where they explode pin to go to that -town which, by happy It i;. -of first importance, therefore,
disappear •like the traditional icicles coincidence, our. inen: had taken. so to remove the causes for suspicious
in he'll- , that the war 'elided where it began; andd mistrust between all classes, in
"The accompanying flames have a order that the social revolution that
terrible beauty; the. after -gas is dead-
ly. Bit the sound' is, worst of all; it
is ag•onising. -Rifle-balls crack and
•
whine Ind' whistle. There. are feld-
guns; and ,howitzers, mine -throwers,
glrenades, aril bombs. There are hal
listic engines of every grade, from the.
Lewis 'automatic to`'enormous railway
guns of a hundred tons. The soldier,
knows jiem all.. IIe can' name each
voice in the, ghastly creseendo of
Swishes and drones, whirring "and
clattering, teering- and` barking, avail-
ing and popping and thudding
"One's Senses are shattered;' one's
soul 'cowers in darkness with asso-
ciated sounds of ,.hideous meanies:
'For every note in .the diabolic, g"dinut
blur the
carries visions of ;Lear that:b r
brain, and at the saltie tine excite the
srildicr'•s animal fury. It is an ear-
splitting tempest, upheaving'"" and
bursting, with falling walls air round,
�p4
THE FIRE' ,OF-' I1IaI. AT L:1 E
ARE E Pii'l' OUT
'V ANi 'C •
.Ott caii'p,Ia ,o fb agi nye•. to.—,ten,--"dollars
°0-y ,t,ell1,/nr acini x€rte rrt + 'ortit4ir, ,p1.wx,+
lfztf laude 4RRrii �aavr, thgee' in eaoli
Poo 1f iR e sg11 for "tx snt,y : flit o cerltR yon
rrrakehie ent0; the ply Gittli*Iy to Hecure
terr^ltory, anq, enclose fifteen 4eutes for
aelzinx etx(1 �i•oetn�ir" „
i ;Ricz t,1',t,"li9 1111.11.41-0EA0VU14X11iG 00.
F02
•
;WORK: OF 1 'RC I'
�i
RINE
-4drtdralty tires Credit dor Overeorala
ring U -haat IR
The
.
The a<lliriraity' board, thanking the
mercantile maria e and, fishing, Indus
`try f oa'� their services dining the war,
a e layrbomraie Vit, oronta gays that without the co-operation of
the former with the navy the enemy's
of 'Bels iunl and France like flames ; sublrlarzne campaign must irievitahly
above them, another 'tide moyeti the l have attained its object, says'' a Lon-
Soldiers , and Civilians ;,Mingle as
Bands„ 'Play and Men ', Sing"-
"Beebe
ins;—
"Beebe Napa," Tommie°. Shoat.
Last night. for the .first time .since 4
August in the first year of the war,,!
there was no -light et gunfire in the
sky, no sudden stabs of- flame through•
the darkness; -no long, spreading glow,
above the black trees, where for four
years of rzights human; beings were
being,smaehed to death, writes Philip
-Gibbs on Nov. 12. , The fires of hell had been put out.
It was silent all along -the front. With
the: beautiful silence of nights of
ppace we did not stand listening to
the dull rumblings • of artillery'at
work, which had 'been" the ,undertone
of all closer‘soundg fere1,500 nights,
nor for suc`iden head; beats at explo-
sions shaking the .earth and air,, nor.
say in whisper to oneself:0
"Curse ethos° guns!"
•f�'•h
c gone t
At 11 o clock the order, had 9
alk batteries' to cease fire. No more thered among ,English lancets and
men swill be killed, no more be xtiaiigl Caiiadiai troops. Little 'groups stood
ed; •no more be blinded.e The last; boy ,around telling 'of those days and
hood of the world, was rept,Ieved on.•pointing' out plaees where ours men
the way bae1G from'1VIons, fought ie •• the streets before they'
oI)posite way and that; had its` flags'' dolt`despatch.. The success achieved
the Admiralty says, was also largely
due to the interest talceri by the own-
ers in defensive equipment, The con-
voy system, which played so import-
ant a part in obtaining a safe. passaget
for the army of the United States,
necessitated practicing the new sci-
ence of station keeping.
The board also says that,°from the•
largest dreadnought to the 'smallest'
patrol boat, officers and men of the
and its benners
- Throngs heroic and Ptitif til.
,11 was': the pitiful, heroic tide of life'
made up`; of thousands .,of civilians,
people who that morning had cane
back through' the Gexinali lines, They
were men from .fifteen :to sixty who.
had been, taken' away from Cambrai
and Courtrai, Lille and, Roubaix, Tour-
coing, Tournai'and'Valenciennes and
hundreds of towns and villages in the
wake of the enemy's retreat,'because �!-nereantile marine combined with
to the very end the German conlmand those of d,he e.oyal'navy ``in defeating
•conscripted this manhood to forced the enemy's nefarious' methods of
labor and to prevent them fr,orn :seri warfare. 'In•theeipterest oz the em- w
ing their:: own 'armies. Then,'at last, pire, •the board says, the close con
yesterday, seeing their own doom had :nection between the merchantmen and
come, they said to these people. in the royal navy must prove a lasting
Brussels and other towns behind their ,one.
iinas :
"You can go. Wewantbe more' MONEY' ORDERS.
of you." ,+ -•e- It is always safe to send a Domin-
i met marry: people 'there who re- ion Express • Money Order. Five.
membered the first battle of Mons aS Dollar s;.costs three cents.
though it` were .yesterday and in the
were rd 'a
r 1 �
ua1G, Ilio sands of; 'cope &
µc1. u people ., The U. S:'Department of. Agri-
culture i t hogs i the
e est mates ha h
s n
g
United States, have increased by 2.3
per cent., cattle=by 3.8 per cent, and'"
sheep by 15 per cent,' in the last year,
I listened to the silence which fel,: made their line outside and:, fell back
lowed the going down of the sun, and , in retreat be .ole
heard the rustling^Fof the russet leaves forces.'
l ends of n ht inpeace I saw only two' figures in this war,' to cull out the thriftless ullets 'the.
and ,it seemed as though God game h h trl't' e have ;'ceased, one slacker` hens and scrub roosters. Five
edit}on to -the wounded -soul g 'the_ regimental offs- cent grain 'should feed'no inferior'
bel rC ,
,o i � cer, from nein toba lion cons- feathered
1 f•ovexwhelmirig
rilinarcl's Liniment Cures :11nhtherii.
Never before was it so important
and the little sot g Y P ,
a now that os i to
f'_tiias the figure of
the world. Other sounds rose fro rfrom subs glade feathered stock.
'towns and fields in the yellowing tevi-
light, .and ins the deepening shadowe
world of the day of armistice." They
were sounds ofhuman 'joy.
Men ,everee singing' somewhere one
mender, the 'boys and their ' elder
brothers who went over the top at
;,dawn and led ,their men gallantly,
;biding any fear of deaththey' had,
and who in dirty ditches an dugouts
the roads; and "their voices-- rang out in -mud wand swamps, in 'fields under
d a
•
gladly. Bands were playing, g, and all
day on the -Way to Mons,I heard their
music ahead of the marching columns.
Bu D•les"were bioviing.
fire,in runts ,that were death traps,
in•all the 'wort hours did;not weaken,
and for their country's sake and the
Bugles -were
game they play, offered up their life
In villages 'from which the `enemy and all that life means to youth as a
had, gone- out that • morning' round cheap gift. °
about Mons crowds of figures surged And the other figure is Tormely.
in the narrow strets, and English Poor old Tommy! You have had a
laughter rose,:atove the silvery chat- rough time -and you hated it, but by'
ter of women and children. ,,British' .the living God you have been natient
soldiers were still on the march with and long-suffering and full of grim
theirs guns and
t d' and '1 t t' swanking.
. their, transport; an sl en . courage; -not g� �s {*� �,p
their old' ' field .cookers and all along, about the things ,you •have done, not Li tD g S by A L C� GLAND'S
their lines S. heard °these 'men talking caring a' jot for glory, not.'getting that make a horse Wheeze.
to each outer gayly 1 ave done
as though some- much: dash; but now
y oti i • Roar, :havenTh'ick'lydind
thing had loosened their tongues and your job, and it rs well done: • or Choke -down, can be
made them garrulous.
Cheers. for Victory.
Late into the night "` there were
sounds of singing and "laughter froin
all open windows in towns which had A sol.dler 'of. France lay on a s'no hair gone, and horse kept at work. Eco 1
beee all shutterec'i, with people hiding ` iital `bed. His shattered arm had just 4iomical-,o`nlya few drops required at an appli- j
in their cellars a•; week ago or'.less, been taken. away. The doctor looked eat -son. S2' S0 per bottle delivered. hack 3 R srea, 1
and British officer's sat down to French down;witlr pity at the white young ABSORi$INE, JR„ the antiseptic -liniment for man- 1
pianos and romped about the keys' and face "I'm sorry, my boy, you had to kind; reduces Cysts, Wens, Painful; Swollen
led a chorus lose your arm," he said. The eyes of �e?ns and Ulcers. $1.25 a bottleat dealers os
7iliinard's Liniment Cures Colds, as.
reduced with "
"Pro- Patria.
>
If you wi,sli to keep cheese :ti orn
'tri
man v e va
1d n cover it se u l
g c r c x y,
cloth wrung -from vinegar.
A good dash. is a parsnip stew,
ninde •of layers of slices ratio palun ps,
pots toesy anti salt pork it earthen
-Season with -salt and d .pepper,
dish. S ..on hn
cover with broth and cook•for an hon
in e oven,
Minard'o liniment Cures Gare'et ix'Cows
'A2 TED
,NZED: --AT ONCinE, ' .1he3X P
R
O-
,gressive Concern. t
PNiagara
eninsula, • the Garden Spot of Canada.
Boilermakers and Drill Operators.
Steady employment.. Engineering- and
Rfachine Works of Canada. 'Limited, St:
Catharines. Ort.
$ L
•POSALE
E
, ELL EQUIPPED NEWPER V Y and job printing plant in Eastern
Ontario Insurance .carried '$:.5'00, "Will{e. for $1,2430 on +unfelt sale.. Dom .69..
1V118on. PublishingLia.,Co.. L., Toronto.
NI,.. r EKLY NEWSPAPER, POE SALE
V In New Ontario: Owner going 10
•Fretce, Will sell $2.000, Worth double
that amount. 'Apply 3. 14 e10 Wilisorr
ublishrna Co.. Limited.Limited.Toronto.
raascEx.r.a.rezoue
(1,.NCER.' TUMORS, LUMPS, 'ETC.,
J
internal and external, cured with.
cut' pain by our home treatment Wilt®
vs before too Bats. Dr. Bella -ken Medical,
Co,. limited, ColiinRwood Ont,
also other Bunches or,Swellings. No blister;
crashed out chords and
of men who wanted to sing any old
song'• '
In officers' clubs glasses were:,rais-
ed and some one called a toast,and no his pillow, and he wlu'spered, "‘ My
one heard any more than the names '1y'rance tl '
of,„ "England," "Scotland," "France"
with "Victory"' as• the loudest word, "
for the men had risen from all the
tables and most •were standing onl4Iinard's Liniment Co.; Limited.
their chairs and there was a beginning.: winter I received
of cheers which Tasted five minutes, Gentlemen, -,Last
minutes longer than that, and great benefit, from the use of MIN -
ten
' g illYS LINIMENT in a severe attack
dTook, E
•
,the lad ,;flashed. "No, no, doctor. I we. F:livered. YOUNG. f. D, F., ff1,5,11,6id's rm
Lence"aas free.
$Idg., Mooirii .Cam •.
didn't lose it,", he said; "I gave it— aeu.urmuc sue eiQsorbidc fir.. ars.,mada an. C3aed8..
to France." .His head saik back on
some of those that cheered had moist
eyes and were not ashamed 'of that be-
cause . of memories hi. their'. hearts
;for old pals
who had gone, who were
mi-s"sing on the •night of the armistice:
Yesterday, coming back from Mons,'
I -had no time to write inore than ,a
few .words describing the best day but
of LaGrippe, and I have frequently
proved it to be very effective in cases
of. Inflammation.
Yours,
W. A. HUTCHINSON.
Reconstruction after the war will
rely largely on "`co-operation. Co-
operation' of men and women in kin -
II
when the "Old" Coritemetibles" with-
stood the first shock of German arms.
Worth Being in Morsl.
It wasworth going to Mons yester-
day with this memory in one's mind,
anyhow, =12ecalise <;of the wonderful
scenes along the roads. I stopped at
\brigade -headquarters on the way, and,
an officer` ,,here said: .
"Hostilities -will cease at 1.1 o'clock
this morning and: thank' God for that."
Everywhere : the news • had gone
will come at the end of the war, may
be, a peaceful- and beneficial one,
liiixfart['s .Linithent Cures Distemuer.
After a block" of tenements hathbeen
partlyfinished, the builder and his
foreman went on a.tour'of inspection.
The former left his assistant in. one
house . and went into the adjoining
one, when the following .conversation.
ensued: "Ca:n you 'ear me, James?"
ahead of inc. Soldiers,, assembled in : "yes, ? • "Can you see me?" `!No."
the field. for -Morning parade, were The jerry-'builder rejoined the fore -
flinging their steel' Itelrnets up and roan, and remarked, with le well -sat-
cheering. \As they rnarched through isfied air : ' "Now; there's what you
villages,^they shouted stet to civilians, can call walls!" -
"Guerre fent, guerre fini, boehe raapoo,,,
and ,the women and children came
running to tberianwith autumn flowers,
,
mostly reel and white chrysanthemums
and they put them in their tunics and
in the straps of their steel helmets.
Thousands of flags appeared 'sud--
crashing trees, and a hall of stones denly in villages Where iia Frenchnor
in hissing elouds-and murderous rain. Belgian 'iiag could be shown without
Attti,tlien co lepssive with fines arid imprisonment until „that
sighing. sereeclzes and, terrine pitrr, very horning, when liberty had come,
like a Million tigers on the pounee, again, ail(' every ',Pommy id the rani"^;,
• "Some' day, perhaps, a wiiard in had a bit of color at the end of hi;i,,
words will catch ;did r eeerdM the tor- rifle or, stticl. througl his belt, antl.
rent and torture of a dr•urnfir'o bona-, every gun 4eiim had'a Venney floating�
bin-si nent, hut the artist will tined a it,boye its ,limtiers or its :guns aied its
new dictionary!' horses had flowers iii Ole harness,
--- .> -- For Miles there was a pageant on
A little;bird sat on a telegraph wire, fine roads and as there .moved ' one
And said t,o his mates, "I declare, way endless tides of British infantry
If • wireless L' telegraphy cones into and cavalry and t.r tillery and ti'rtns
vogue M� port, with all that fluta?er o2 flags
We'll all Have to sit ori alae` ate." .' abotre thein, with the great banners Ila).
KEEP YOUR SHOES NEAT
E YOU- SEEER
FROM RHEUMATISM
Almost any man will tell you
' .that Moan's Liniment
,means relief
For practically every man has used
it who has suffered from rheumatic
aches, soreness of muscles', stiffness
of joints, the results of weather ex -
Women, too, by the hundreds of.
.:thousands, tise it Tfor relieving neur-
itis; lance backs, neuralgia, sick, head-
ache. Clean, refreshing, soothing,
economical,' quickly effective. Say
"Sloan's Liniment" to your druggist.
Made in Canada. Get it today.
30c., 60c., $1.20.
Heats Pimples With One'
Cake Soap and One ,
Box Ointment. .�
Face never free from them for M •
or three years. Were sore and often
became large and hard. Left dark, red .-
blotches that disfigured face. Nothing
did much good till tried Cuticura.
Helped from first application and now
,[aceis healed. •
From signed statement of horse
Lorena Kennedy, R. R. lr 4tdillieinsa
town, Ont.,, March 17, 1917..
Use Cuticura Soap for toilet pur. •-
poses, assisted by touches of Cuticura
Ointment to soothe and heal any ten-
dency to irritation of the 'skin and
scalp. 13y using these fragrant, super
creamy emollients for all toilet pur-
poses you may prevent many skin
and scalp troubles' becoming serious.
For Free Sample Bach by Mail ad-
dress post -card: "Cuticura, Dept.A.,
Boston m jJ. S. A." Sold everywhere.
,,
f°tHIAC�i,4t/Ni7E., fAid, DARK �lIO VN
Oil O H4{.OQI) SHOE r•
n G sheet tet' consocanoWcealescressarcson.
•
ISSUE; 48---'1:8.
Always Effective ----and acts quickly
Relieves lame back, lumbago, neuralgia. sprains, lane joints and muscles
toothache, earache, sore throatandother painful complaints—His st'$
Stops the .Pain. Get a bottle today. Have ft handy—has a hundred F:
k, T uses. At dealers °ortortte ses. 131RST REMEDY CO.:Bawillon, Can.
HotcI. c or
i�. poronado Beach, California-
Where
alifornia'Where the balniy yet invigorating climate makes
possible the en;joyirlenit of otltdoor sports'bhroitgll-
out;'he Winter months,
I1'OLOt GOLF, TENNIS, MOTOR INC,
ISH1•NG, :RAY AND SURF J3AT1flNG
l if Cor ,Winter folder and Golf Program.
.101 -rte J. H5RNAN, Manager^
•a
1