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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1919-01-24, Page 3I "Bac' breath is a sign of decayed teeth, foul sternal or unclean n: bowel." If your teeth are gond, 4 look to your digestive organ at once. Got Seigel's Carative Syrup at druggist*. 15 to 30 drops after meals, clean up your food passage and stop the bad breath odor. 50c. and $1.00 Bottles. Do not buy substitutea. Get 6 the genuine. A Cure for Bad Breath mon.. .... A .-1-• ^ ^ n • FOCII AND 2 RAINS Di M1D-FOREST IOW ALLIED GENERALISSIMO MET PEACE SEEKERS One of the Members! of the German Armistice COMIllifiSiOn A rites, Ac- count of Dieloric Event. A very picturesque aeCount of the way in which the German peace seek- ers had to meet Marshal troch in mid - forest is given by one of the members of the German Armietice Commiseion to the Voesische Zeitung. Tie says: "The Commission arrived cn Nov. 8, from• Spa, at the Fienesh where several motor nes 'Wfre wait- ing to take us to the appointed place. The motor drive with the French officers lasted ten hour, and it appeared to me that the drive was intentionally prolonged, in order to carry us across thedevastated provinces and to prepare us for the hardest conditions with feelings of hatred and revenge might demand • from us. One of the Frenchmen silently pointed out to us a heap of ruins, saying, 'Voila St. Quentin.' The Two Trains. "In the evening a trait was ready for us with blinds down, and when we arose the next morning the train had stopped in the middle of a forest. We now know that it was the forest of Compiegne. It was, perhaps, a measure of precaution that we were not taken to Some town. We were in a forest where there were no houses or tents, and were obviously completely surrounded by soldiers, On the lines were two trains, one occu- pied by Marshal Foch and his staff, the other by us. In these trains we lived, worked, and negotiated for three days. Our train had a sleep- ing saloon and a dining car, and was comfortably furnished. We had everything in abundance, the officer in charge of our train ordered every- thing we asked for, and there was nothing to find fault with. "The great enmity and hatred .that apparently prevail against us were, jiowever, shown in the negotiations and by the terms imposed upon us. Those of us who were soldiers wore Military uniform and the Iron Cross. itieeiWiatation to the half., detireti" French officers with whom we had to negotiate was made in a cool man- ner. Fech's Question. "Marshal Foch, whom we only sew, twice, at the beginning and at the, end of the conference, is a stern, plain man. He did not speak a single word to us in that polite tone which in former times distinguished the most chivalrous nation. He received us with the words, 'Qu'est re que vous clesirez, Messieurs?' and asked us to take a seat in the big car filled with mapscovered tables. As it had been decided that everyone was to speak in his own language, and everything had to be interpreted, the reading of the terms lasted two hours. "We then - withdrew to our train. As we had been sent out by the old Government and had no instructions whatever to sign everything uncon- ditionally, we divided, under the di- rection of Herr Erzberger, the vari- ous inatters under the headings of Military, Diplomatic, and Naval af- fairs, and then negotiated separately with the members of the enemy com- missions, which were composed solely of officers. All Cool! "Ail these officers showed the same cool correcteess El3 Marshal Foch, which was no' ..nee tempered with a friendly wort i with the exception per- haps of the Chic•f of Marshal Foch's Staff, who snowed a little more po- liteness. The English Admiral throughout adopted the same manner as the French. "In reality there was nothing to negotiate. We only po:eted out the technical impossibility of some of the conditions. We were allowed to send code telegrams to Germany from the Eiffel Tower, but were otherwise cut off from the outer world in two trains In the middle of a solitary wood." To Keep Eyeglass -es Clean. To keep eyeglasses from steaming, in cold weather rub with vaseline and polish with a silk handkerchief. You can clean the white painted 'woodwork beautifully if you use warm water and spread a little whif- fing over the cloth, then rinse with clear water, **1•••••044.0 There has been no generail dis- charge of anunaion workere in Eng- land as yet. The ;stale of war wages n ali trades ,eontinues high because of the high piece,: of necessaeies of life, 01..•••••••••••••••• A single orange tree eval often pro- duce 20,000 oranges, The lemon tree's prcItel: is about one-third of this Dm:att. • xampaysnimgg ontttal Oat .'="=••• uotopeol 't tqirs ,1,3 efe te tfia.ZuMatoftamtua*M00119PI•rfotloOlt'Ailegigke._ WI -LAY 'SOLDIEi.RS WANT fingeStitin. ti5 ithl:r.,;.914.: see:cling' 'gifts to. :soldiers. overseas comes from Lt,..cm, (Canon) Frederick :C.corgeSeotf; Senior Chaplain of ibe First Division,. in a cal:10 received l)y friends Montreal. He says "The men. want .playing Cards and chewing tobacco." ee.irie4 590 r, ri0...r.44. • ••'5:241Straigt5.1re; mar-..eGo&w. VEIL OF WAR'S SECRECY LIFTED UNCOVERING TA -ILS HORRIBLE DE - OF LONDON AIR RAIDS Zeppelin's First Visit May 31, 1915— Last Air Raid May 19, 1918 -- Many Civilians Killed in Raids. In Canada we used to read vague official statements of the air raids. We used to hear that Zeppelins or airplanes appeared over the outlying districts of London, and that a certain number of people had been killed and injured. Ocasionally the veil was lifted to some extent, as, for instance, when we were supplied with details of the slaughter of the innocents in the.Poplar School infant class. But we were told little of the places which had been damaged, of people trodden to death in the panic scromble for shelter, or the terror inspired by hours of bombing. Now that the veil has been lifted, it can be said that at most in four of the fourteen chief raids was any damage of military importance done. One of these oceasions was when a bomb fell on part of the arsenal at Woolwich, in October, 1915, doing damage to stores and machine gun factory. Another was in June, 1917, when the Liverpool street station was bombed, and the third in July, of the same yente when the Central Tele- graph Office in the G.P.O. suffered considerable loss to plant, though the system was not much interfered with. In none of these cases was the mili- tary advantage' of any considerable imnortance. In one case, at Shorn. cliffe, a bomb fell on a Canadian camp, killing fourteen. First Bombs Fall. The first of the raids took place on, May 31st, 1915, when a Zeppelin ap- peared over London and six persons were killed. On September 8th, 1915, occurred the most destructive of all the air raids from the standpoint of money loss. Fires were started and pro- perty otherwise destroyed to the value of $10,000,000 in the one night. The night before three Zeppelins had appeared, and one of the bombs drop- ped missed the Tower of London by 44 aye gar by eating' rap14 tS (Ds your cereal dish This standard food needs no added sweet- enins4, for it- is rick in itS own sui8ar, developed from whee.1-1: and barley by the special Grape -Nuts process of cooking. "There's a Reason" Wog rood Owe t.;coose Ito Z-014 five hundred yards. Ten persons were killed and forty-three injured in that raid. On the night of the 8th many city warehouses were des- troyed, including one silk warehouse, where alone the damage was 8100,- 000. An effort was apparently made to get the Bank of England and the Stock Exchange, one bomb falling within two hundred yards of the first mentioned building. Great excite- ment was occasioned by this raid, as for the first time the Zepps were clearly seen. the nearest thing to an historic loss, next to the bomb which lit near the ancient St. Margaret's Church, close to the Abbey, was caused by a bomb which fell in Lincoln's Inn on October 13th, 1915. It fell near the Inigo Jones Chapel, and smashed some seventeenth century windows. First of Daylight Raids. The first of the daylight raids took place on June 18th, 1917, fifteen planes coming over in sunny noonday. On this occasion the poor districts of the east end and south side were visited, and 104 people were killed and 423 injured. Of those killed and injured, 120 were children. On July 7th, 1917, when the G.P.Q. was hit, 34 were killed and 139 in- jured. It was on September 4th, 1917, that Cleopatra's Needle on the Ern, bankment was chipped. In this raid eleven persons were killed and sixty- two injured. On September 24th, 1917, the Huns nearly got the House of Parliament, a bomb dropping into the Thames, sticky, it dries M a moment, and sim- alongside and throwing up a column Pie' shrivels up the corn without in - of water sixty feet high. In this raid fifteen were killed and seventy in- jurediiTlrteen airships visited England on October 19th, 1917, and so well had the anti-aircraft defences been perfected that of the five which ap- proached London only one entered the London area. In this raid twenty- seven people were killed and fifty- three injured. On a misty night with clouds half veiling the moon, thirty airplanes visited London on October 31st, 1917. Three penetrated to London, killing eight persons and injuring twenty- one.a January 28th, 1918 saw one of the most heartrending of all the scenes perpetrated by aircraft. Altogether fifty-eight people were kill& and 173 injured. On February 1.6th, and 17th twenty- seven were killed and seventeen in- julkedl. elid on March 7th, 1918, killed twenty and injured forty-five. The last raid took place on May 196, 1918. Of the twenty or thirty enemy airplanes which took part, ten were destroyed. Forty-four people were killed and 179 injured. The scars of the raids are hard to find to -day, even when you know where to look for them, but their memory is ineffaceable from the minds of the people who endured them. They failed in their purpose to intimidate; they have been far from breeding pacifism in England. Wonderful! An Irish housekeeper was showing to some visitors the family portraits in the picture gallery. "That officer there in uniform," she said, "was the great -great-grandfa- ther of the present owner of the pro- perty. He was as brave as a lion, but one of the most unfortunate of men, He never fought a battle in which he did not have a leg or arm carried away." Then she added proudly: "He took part he twenty-four en- gagements." • The Solitary Grave. Upon -the farm be loved so well, Looking across the acres wide, Where wild flowers bloom and sun- • . shine streams, They laid his body, when he died. He lived apart from marts and men, And knew the friendliness of trees, The broad companionship of skies, And the caresses of the breeze. His kin might lie in silent rows, Crowded together, near a town, But he would sleep where he had lived As the seared leaf drops softly down. And so in sunshine and in rain, And when at eve the night wind sings, His dust commingles with the life Of sweet, familiar, growing things. YES! MAGICALLY! CORNS LIFT OUT WITH EDGERS 0--.0 0 0 3 You simply say to the drug store man, "Give me a quarter of an ounce of freezone." This will cost very little but is sufficient to remove every hard or soft corn from one's feet. A. few drops of this new ether com- pound applied. directly upon a tender, atc..o4e,- "cern should relieve the sore - nes instantly, and soon the entire corn, root and all, dries up and can be lifted out with the fingers. This new way to rid one's feet of corns was introduced by a Cincinnati man, who says that, while freezone is "A man's real worth to humanity may be well measured by the coneep- tion he has of the true welationship Ise should bear to his feilows."— George L. Wilson. lietuariva rdnignent Ouroa Zeghttunele. flaming or even irritating the surrouud- ing tissue or skin. Don't let father die of infection or lockjaw from whittling at his corns, but clip this out and make him try it. THE FIRST MAXIM GUN The Inventor's First Weapon Was a Tin Pea -Shooter. When the late Sir Hiram Steven Maxim was a boy, opposite his par - nets' house in Brooklyn lived a phy- sician who had a pretty servant -girl. It was the custom of the policeman on the beat t� pay his respects to this maid in the evening, Young Maxim spent some time at an up- stairs window with a tin pea -shooter in his hand blowing peas at the po- liceman. Finally he ecame so adept at the gentle art that he could Enthusiasts, That your real enthusiast ie never damped is emply borne out even under the vilest conditions of warfare, At the front the inveterate hair -oiler, moustediewaxer and manidurist ex- ist. ' There is even found the Man who must have hie eold bath every morning, though a mug and a little water are his only toilet accessories. He is known to fame who, losing all else, emerges triumphantly from every battle with his old violin. Nor is he unknown who will practice the latest revue song while his comrades can think of nothing else but Mullin- , ent death. Even the chose fiend sur- vives. Two Buell having failed to con - elude a game played at odd moments throughout the day sested themselves on the, parapet where the light was somewhat better than in the teeeich below. A high explosive shell rudely terminated the game by blowing the antrgoniets into the trench and scat- tering the chessmen. Unhurt, this irrepressible pair picked themselves up and immediately fell into a violent altercation as to the respective strength of the position?, reached be- fore the abrupt stoppage of the game. Thus, in the face of real enthusiasm, a high explosive shell could stop the game, but could not decide -the issue, For 5-3 anis - • - XereeT tosoARED FSLAca; rox, pea amp. able reward. herrn Bros., Bothwelt Ont. On T71.1..L EQI'IPPTID ilnwsP.APIDE and lob prititlitg; plant 171 Illatttern Ontario. Insurance carried. $1,500. Will go for 51„200 on fiulek sale. B-oi• 02. Publiehing- r!!)., Lta.. Toronto. NEWSPAPER it'on 75211.19 in New Onlarlo, Ownet• going to France. NN;111 ell 82,000. IV, A rtta double that amount. 1.77771Y II- AVii!'34n7 PUblls h ?Le' I.indird. Toronto. ZdESO:511.M.P,..7.iii101713 ANCER, TLTMO.Eta, 1.i7141 Pa, ETC., 1ntermi hind external. creta with- out pain by our home treatment. Write 1.1f4 before too late. De. Heilman 'Medical Co., Limit, Dad, Ont. It has been estimated that Noah's ark was 547 feet lone, 91 feet broad and 54 feet high. Its capacity, ac- cording to Bishop Wilkins, was 72,- 625 tons. befaara,e ZIningeut Cures filatenessor- The wireless station at Carnarvon, Wales, has ,succeeded in sending mes- sa.ges clearly to Sydney, Aust"alia, a distance of 12,000 miles. BIG FArtray GAMES consisting of Cheelvor',Chess, Dominoes, New Game of Au- thors, Fox and Geese, Nine Men Mar- ris, The Spanish Prison, and the Game of Flirtation, all for 10e. Best value. Supreme Novelty Co., Dept. P., Toronto' influenza The Liniment that Cures All WHEN YOU SUFFER Ailments - 9s FROM RHEUMATISM N .N1/4 Almost any man will tell you h?HE OLD RELIABLE—Try It that Sloan's Liniment MINARD'S LINIMENT CO., Lai Yarmouth, N.S. means relief Chiefly for roofing automobiles an imitation g.lase that resembles celeu- teid has been invented in Europe„. 711inard'a Liniment Cures Garret in Como L.INSTANTLY RELIEVED Willi -7-0--17-' ..7; on How REFUNDED. ASK ANY DillinitliST or write Lyman-linax 0o., Montrsol, P.Q. Price ide. 7.s.:7=grommtg=0-",......2„.9r;;r^nagEr For practically every man has used it who has suffered from rheumatic aches, soreness of muscles, stiffness of joints, the results of weather ex- posure. Women, too, by the hundreds of thousands. use it for relieving neur- itis, lame backs, neuralgia, sick head- ache. Clean, refreshing, soothing, economical, quickly effective. Say "Sloan's Liniment" to your druggist. Made in Canada. Get it' today. 20c., 60c.. $1.30. 2CakesCuticuraSeap end 3 Boxes ilintiEtt Heal Two Weeks Old Baby Of Skin Trouble(' "When about two weeks old rny baby turned blue, and in a couple of days broke out in a rash. Then she turned sore around her ears and on the top of her head, and on her arms and lees. The skin was red and she scratched till she made ft bleed. Shecouldnot sleep. 9 wrote for a free sample of Cud. curs Soap and Ointment. It was a great relief, so I bought more, and I used two cakes of Cuticura Soap and three boxes of Cuticura Ointment when she was healed." (Signed) Mrs, Alfred Ryan, 167A St. Martin St., Montreal, Que., August le, 1917. For every purpose of the toilet Cade caret Seep and Ointment are supreme. For Free Sample Each by Mail ad., dress post -card: 'Cutieure, Dept. A. Boston, 11. 5, A." Sold everywhere. w711 reduce inflamed, swollen Joints, Sprains, Bruises, Soft Bunches; Heals Boils, Poll Evil, Quittor, Fistula and infected sores quickly •as it is a positive antiseptic and germicide. Pleasant to use; docs not blister or remove the bah. and you can wort: theinatacy 52.90 Per bottle. delivered. Book 7 R free. ASSORDINE,JR.,tho antiseptic liniment for riankind. reduces Painful, Swollen Veins. "!Vens. Strains. Bruises; hit the wall of the doctor's house *tops pair; and ,.,..,,,,,fl.n. . above the heads of the lovers and tT,er,fsi !?rryiidiesve.v.forvizeiVrImoups.morc If you write, cause the peas to drop on them. The w, F. you Ne, p, g, pe516Lenans eids.,Montroa1,0ea. policerrian blamed a small boy who oaMilMIC ad Anglaise. Jr.: are nub c Cage., lived next door, and threatened to visit him with the vengeance of the law, and did his best to catch him; but he never found the youth in pos- session of the incriminating shooter or the ammunition on him. MONEY ORDERS. Remit by Dominion Express Money Order. If lost or stolen you get your money back, Hints To Poultry Keepers. 1. Keep better poultry. Standard bred Poultry increases production and ,improves the qualtitY. 2. Select vigorous breeders. Healthy, vigorous breeders produce strong chicks. 3. Hatch chicks &airy. Early hatch- ed pullets produce fall and winter eggs. 4. Preserve eggs when el -leap for use when price ie high. 5. Produce' infertile eggs; they keep:better. Fertile eggs are neces- sary for hatching ,only. 6. Cull' the. flocks. Ellhninate un- profitable producers and reduce the feed bill, 7. Keep backyard flock to supply the family table, 8, Eat more poultry and egge to conserve the meat supply, seinaraeg velment Oures colas. Ste. ISSUE.' No, 4-19 , tee; ttire.-X. .-„ -44,7.20,EFAMTSEETWIFA0.&Teeet$CeilMTA.Ter '• 7-1 9. J. Fit et5ihiii STOPS THE PAIN—AND ACTS QUICKI.,Y itheummi,,,, neuralgia, sprains, laree twee " teehrei,e, ear- ache, or tfiront, joints and aj o,niili,rtrai',•,;;;;; reiieved b:v IflrttS Pain Eaterminator. ilmg and diould lir in ev-..ry hnaschold—hoga limulreau, Ali dealers' or 7.7tritc Mr, num REMEDY CO., lismiltitm, Clattati:?;. eseereaferanneseeennesnaSSEEM"feirea:S.sen Ire—Mana.tietnets,..'w"*.AMEFtelilnigers 21 ..rNF.t....a .. XLMMEMV.J.SLatM.;"‘E=47:iikgaTalf"..,•,,,s........• • II(icl I.cI Coronad Coronado Beach, California Where the balmy yet invigorating climate makes possible the enjoyment of outdoor sports through. out the Winter months. POLO, GOLF, TENNIS, MOTORING, FISHING, BAY AND SURF BATHING Write for Winter Folder and Golf Program. JOHN J. HERNAN, •Manager ...ikr.47:40'.0iiir=1=70111i7= d'""