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Zurich Herald, 1916-08-18, Page 3.41:'Y WITH • THE I ''• • SHOES' Coo0, Co , S1C� 110111ENZOLLERNS KAISER IS MASTER ASSASSIN, SAYS FRENCHMAN. Allies Will Make No. Treaty With the Royal Family of Germany. Joseph Reinach, in the Paris Figaro, launches what some think may well become an allied watchword: "Away With the Hohenzollerns." The allies; be says, will agree that there shall bo no treaty with William of Hohenzo'1- lern, or with any member of his fam- ily, and he continues: "Unless I am greatly mistaken the ,question of the Hohenzollerns will become more important every day. It is too vague to speak of destroy- ing German militarism, we must abol- ish German militarism's soul, which is the house of Hohenzollern, with its feudal castes and all its birds of prey. Kaiser's War. "I have shown twenty times that the war is the personal work of the German Emperor. Exactly when he began to premeditate it perhaps even he does not know. But it is a fact ' that he had taken his stand Novem- ber 6, 1913, when he unbosomed him- self to the Belgian Icing about 'the necessity of war soon and his ser- tainty of success.' It is a fact that this imminent war was the subject of the famous conference of April, 1914, whith Archduke Franz Ferdin- and, at Konopstadt. It is a fact that finally, as accomplice of Austria's ul- timatum to Serbia, he with his own hand abolished all chance of peace, refused the conference proposed by England, and the arbitration of The Hague conference offered by the Czar, and declared war on Russia at the very moment when the Vienna Government had welcomed Petro - grad's proposals. And this though every pretext for war had van- ished. One Lord and Master. "Since the brusque attack through Belgium failed, and his bright dream of victory vanished, since German corpses strew the earth and the Ger- man nation is hungry and bears the hatred of the world while the horizon is lowering with menace, the Ger- man Emperor is afraid and says: `I willed it not.' Then, who did will it? "Ills feudal chiefs, his- junkets, the KrollPrinz and his agrarians willed it, too, but Germany of the Hohen- zollerns is no oligarchy or democ- racy. There is one lord and master, Hohenzollern, the Emperor. It is he who willed, who ordered, who began this war. All other accomplices and there are many, Austrian and Ger- man both, cannot alter the fact that the aiser is principally responsible. His is the first place at the dock of infamy, where others after him will sit. He is the master assassin. Justice Awaits. "The British Premier Asquith has also said this in a solemn declara- tion before the House of Commons in connection with the case of Capt. Fryatt. He said: 'The British Gov- ernment will bring to justice the criminals responsible, whoever they may be and whatever their position.' "Surely, in such a case the man who is the author of the system un- der which the crime is committed is the most guilty of all. Who is that man? Over a year ago, in the ver- dict on the Lusitania, a jury at Kin- sale pronounced guilty of wholesale murder the officers of the submarine, the German Government, and the Emperor of Germany. All those gen- erals, those officers, those soldiers are only his tools and accomplices. They struck the blow, but Nero ordered it. As Mr. Asquith said, it is he who is chiefly responsible. He was the arch -criminal. Death for Kaiser. "The conduct of the war is one thing. We will employ against the Germans every instrument of de- struntion they first employed against us. The conditions of peace are an- other. We will not make our peace a mere truce between two slaughterers. We will insure the futur of free peo- ples. But with him who premeditated, willed, and ordered all these crimes— one does not negotiate with him; one judges him." -----�.^�------- German Parsons. The German Church, like every- thing else German, is admirably or- ganized but the clergy depend on the Government for their daily bread. The oath of allegiance which each clergy- man takes binds him to obedience not only to the Kaiser, but also to the "State." The clergy, therefore, can scarcely be considered as anything but a department of the German Civil Service. WORN B:/Y EVE EM E OF THE FA IILY SOLD BY ALL GOOD SHOE DEALERS A BRITISH TORPEDO. One of the Most Remarkable New Weapons of Warfare. An English officer on leave front the Cameroons, who fully understands the topography of the Gold Coast and the whole district known as The White Man's Grave says that in the Cameroons the fighting is more fierce than in Flanders. "At times it is primitive and sav- age," he says, "added to which are. the deadly climatic conditions, and the fear of attacks from tarantulas, reptiles, ferocious animals and all the diseases of the tropics. Service in Africa requires a varied knowl- edge and a wide experience. An of- ficer has to be an expert in many directions and each has to make a special study of ordnance and coastal defence. "Seven years ago, Bleriot crossed to English Channel in an aeroplane, and the world wondered. To -day, the European sky is dotted with flying men. Without a doubt, war has de- veloped mechanics, aeronautics and every science years ahead of normal progress. Every war department is stirring its brains, down to the pri- vate in the trenches who constructs his own periseope from a stick and a broken mirror, which at times proves as effective as the periscope -rifle which enables the soldier to . shoot without exposing himself above the parapet. There is no end to the in- novations for destruction, but one which the English navy claims will actually search for a target is worthy of mention and that is a new torpedo. "Its mechanical simplicity renders it the more efficient, and it is claimed that when the new equipment is fully installed even Heligoland and Wil- helmshaven will cease to be safe re- fuges for a fleet. "This torpedo can be directed to take any course and to alter its course at any distance automatically. Sup - post a warship or other target to be 2,000 yards from the submarine about to fire a torpedo. The range is set for 2,000 yards plus an additional 500 yards. If the torpedo hits the target within that range its mission is com- pleted, but if it misses it travels on for 500 yards, then swings back, boomerang fashion and zig-zags or circles with a bias in the direction of the moving target until it strikes. The rudder can be so set as to oper- ate the torpedo in a logarithmic spiral. The return of the torpedo 8 ry fb9X}G6 y•r •41 AgaiY '%"r F' )'S9::it Are You For "Pre' pared/less" ? The best preparedness for man or woman is the preparedness. that comes from living in harmony with law. In Sum- mer cut out the heavy foods that tax bodily strength and vigor. Eat Shredded Wheat Biscuit, the food that con- tains all the body-building material in the whole wheat grain in a digestible form. For breakfast Or luncheon with berries or other fruits. Delivering Smashing Blows Against Germans. The veteran Russian General Kash- talinesi, who commanded the Russian divisions which recently captured twenty thousand Germans by smash- ing blows in Galicia. The man vale never forgets a favor or forgives an injury isn't out to make a good friend. Many are not aware of the ill effects of tea or cof- fee drinking until a bilious attack, frequent headaches, nervousness, or some other ailment starts them think- ing. Ten days off both tea and coffee and on STU —the pure food-drink—will show anyone, by the better health that follows, how tea or coffee has been treating them. "There's a Reason" for POSTUNM Sold by Grocers. Canadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Windsor. Ont. covers a range of 500 to 1,000 yards from the maximum gauge therefore, approaching to a distance about a thousand yards from the discharging vessel. Should it then be unsuccess- ful in hitting anything, it automatic- ally opens seacocks and plunges to the bottom ofthe sea. Upon striking the seabed it explodes and is no long- er a menace to anything afloat." SUMMER COMPLAINTS KILL LITTLE ONES. At the first sign of illness during the hot weather give the little ones Baby's Own Tablets, or in a few hours he "may be,;beyend, cure These Tab- lets will prevent `summer•i ompIann s' if given occasionally to the well child and will promptly cure these troubles if they come on suddenly. Baby's Own Tablets should always be kept in every home where there are young children. There is no other medicine as good and the mother has the guar- antee of a government analyst that they are absolutely safe. The Tab- lets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. TORN FROM THEIR HOMES. Inhabitants of Northern France De- ported to Germany. Made in Canada IIXTTIx1G • VIE TRAIL. Rarest of Sport in the Rockies or Selkirks. Canada is a land of trails. Trails over mountains and hills; across prairies and through forests, by the banks of rivers beyond num ber and across country toward a dis- tant sky line. Trails made by red men, and by nature. But the mountain trails are the most alluring of them all, and hitting trails is the rarest of sport in Rock- ies or Selkirks, all the way from the Kananaskasis Pass on the east to the Yale gateway on the west. Hundreds of miles of excellent trails have been made in the Canad- ian mountain ranges by the Canad- ian Pacific Railway and the National Parks department of the Canadian Government. Most of them are made for pony use, and mounted on ono of these sure-footed little beasties of the west, you can be an explorer of the wilds and revel in the experience, Every mile of the devious way is . a way of varying charm, every turn of the trail reveals new wonders. Many trail trips are now made in loops. There is the one from Glacier ation up the Cougar Valley to the ves and back by a loop route and ver a pass that brings to view some of the sublimest scenery in the Sel- irks. The liberal ups and -downs of this unique scenic route, as the rail- ays would say, add to the interest, ow -in the bed;of the valley, closed in y trees and huge plants like bhe De- il's Club, now climbing a thousand feet from which superb views are had f the kingly peaks axe Sir Donald. The trail traveller will find another egion of infinite variety and atbrac- iveness in the series of trails radiat- ng from Field and leading up the oho Valley to the Yoho Glacier field s its upper end. Lake Louise will also provide de- ecbable trail paths, especially that eading to Paradise Valley and its ircle of giant summits, and Sentinel Pass, leading to the valley of the Ten Peaks, while in the Rocky Mountain Park and Banff, the routes are multi- plying year by year. Yes, trail hitting is rare sport, I repeat, and no country in the world affords greater facilities for its en- oymenb than our own Canadian mountains.—F. Y. ALLIES' POWER EVIDENT. Great Luck. "Here you are, sir," cried the haw- ker, extending a bouquet. "Buy some beautiful flowers for your sweet- heart." "Nothing doing," respond- ed the young man. "I haven't got a sweetheart." "I see," was the prompt rejoinder of the hawker. "Buy some flowere_br your wife?" "Wrong again!. I am hot married." "Well, then, ' guv'nor," exclaimed the re- sourceful hawker, "buy the lot to cele- brate your luck!" samara's Liniment Lumberman's Friend Many Shots Needed. A girl who had just become en- gaged to a young "sub." was telling her best friend that he'd threatened to shoot anyone who dared to kiss her. "He'll need a machine gun, won't he dear," was the rather point- ed comment. Poignant deails of the deportation at an hour and a half's notice of 25,- 000 5;000 citizens from the French towns of Lille, Roubaix and Tourcoing by the Germans last Easter, are given in a French Yellow Book. The Germans' orders were for the people in certain districts of these towns to assemble in readiness for depat rre at their was to leave thenhousels and none'before 8 a,m. The orders stated that "all protests will be useless and any one trying to evade deportation will be pitilessly punished." The victims in all cases were chosen arbitrarily by the officer in charge of the deporting party. The Yellow Book continues: "The measure caused the greatest anguish and despair among the popu- lation of, the notified districts, while in some cases it led to madness. "Men especially suffered torture at seeing their wives daughters and children of both sexes over the age of fourteen led away. "The protests of mayors and other officials went unheeded. "At Roubaix the Prussian Guard refused to participate in the raids and the work had to be done by the Sixty -Fourth Regiment from Verdun. "A large proportion of the young women taken belonged to the ser- vant class. When those deported were caxrveyed to the railway station and loaded into the cattle trucks they kept crying: `Niue la France,' and singing the `Marseillaise.' " The Paris Temps affirms in sub- stance that it is now up to the neu- trals to insist upon the observance of the conventions signed by them and by the belligerents. Women always have a lotto say about their rights but never a word about the wrongs of the poor man. So emulated Eyelids. Eyes inflamed by expo- sure to Sun, [lust and �'�tsid Eves quickly reiievedby 1 fyeiEeei►Gtly. NoS Mluslne matting. tar just Eye. Comfort. At Your Druggist's 50c per:Bottle. Marine Eye SalveinTubes25c, ForBook al theEyefreeask Druggists orMurineEye Reeled yto. , Chicago st ca 0 k w n b v 0 r t i Y a 1 1 c j An Object Lesson. Mrs. -Saft came in from a .chat over the fence with her neighbor, and her face was hard and red. "Come here, Tommy!" she com- manded her young son. "I am going to punish you, but open bhe windows first!" "What for?" said Tommy, begin- ning to weep. "Well, I have just heard that that cat across bhe road said I have no authority over you, and I want her to hear you getting a whipping. Come here, sir!" Sire Scheme. Young Wife-a"I am determined to karat& w"h r°ra-a. amaaancl.etaa ae-. home ab night. Yet, do what I will, I cannot keep awake, and he is al- ways careful not to make a particle of noise. Is there any drug which produces wakefulness?" Old Wife—"No .used to buy chugs, Sprinkle the floor with tacks." Minard's Liniment CO., Limited. Gentlemen, -I have used MIN- ARD'S LINIMENT on my vessel and in my family for years and for the every -day ills and accidents of life I consider it has no equal. I would not start on a voyage without it, if it cost a dollar a bottle. CAPT. F. R. DESJARDIN. Schr. Storke, St. Andre, Kamouraska. The title "Canadian National Ex- hibition" was adopted by the Exhibi- tion Association in 1904. Previous to that time it had been known as the "Industrial Exhibition." Those Who Know Most Fear Least, Says Lloyd George. Salving His Dignity. Mr. Peewee --Madam, your children laugh at me every time I pass. Mrs. Kidmore—You mustn't mind those silly children. They giggle at every foolish little thing they see. Seep Ittbiard's Liniment in the house He Won. A Scottish minister once noticed a crowd of urchins clustered around a dog of doubtful pedigree. "What are you doing, my little boys?" he asked with fatherly interest. "Swappin' lies," volunteered one of the. boys. "The fellow that tells the biggest one gets the pup." "Shocking!" exclaim- ed the minister. "Why, when I was your age I never even thought of tell- ing an untruth." "You win," chor- used the urchins. "The dog's yours, mister." Ask for Minard's and take no other When the worst comes to the worst, ib is up to us to make the best of it. Llo d George has sent the Liver- poo . 08 ItiltrViercurr..ti..' sauaaaattz, message: "The ie beginning of the third year of the war opens out a prospect which was not visible except to those of strongest faith a year ago. "In August, 1915, those who knew the difficulties and the means at the command of the allies to surmount them had grave apprehensions as to the course of the war in the coming months. Now those who know the most fear the least. SEE]) POTATOES �1 EDD POTATOES, IRISH COB - 17 biers. Deleware, Carman. Order at once. Supply limited. Write for quo- tations. H. W. Dawson, Brampton. NEWSPAPERS FOB SALE 1)ROFIT-MAIK:ENG NEWS AND JOB Offices for sale in good Ontario towns. The most useful and interesting of all businesses. Full information on application to Wilson Publishing Com- pany, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto: MISCELLANEOUS CANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC.: internal and external. cured with- out pain by our home treatment Write es before too late. Dr. D:11man Medical Co., Limited, Collingwopd. Ont. Become a Rnglatered Nurses and receive pay while learning The Beth Israel Yor% City Founded d1890 NOW Accredited by the New York State a6dueation Dept. Offers a two-aud-out bat f year course 1u training for nnrseswith allowance and maintenance. Applicants must have one year blab school e tueatinual egu'ratent. roe particulars adds ss) B.tb Tarsal Hospital, 66 J,•iferson St., New York. "We have now the equipment for victory in men and material. The great battle of July has demonstrated that our armament is, to say the least, equal to the best our foe can command, and that our men are bet- ter than the best he can put into the battle line. Eoch month sees our armament increasing and our men improving. "Let the nation be of good heart. Its sacrifices for humanity are great, but its services for humanity are greater." The Canadian National Exhibition was opened on one occasion by a woman, Lady Kirkpatrick performing that function in 1897. Minard'a Liniment used by Physicians. Camel -Like. Out on Egypt's sands the Territor- ials were camped. The captain of the company was all that a captain should not be. He was short and stout and round of shoulder. Needless to say, among his niera he was known as "Humphy.' One night, on return- ing bo camp, the sentry let him go unchallenged, and so roused his mili- tary wrath. ."What the Blue Alsa- tian mountains do you mean?" he snapped out. "Why didn't you de- mand the countersign?" The sentry trembled with fear so badly that his wits got shaken. "Badad, sir," he stammered, "I thought you was a c -e -c -amen." Shape Didn't Matter. Batcher—Will you have a round steak, ma'am? Mrs. Youngbride---I don't care what shape it is so it's tender. A man can drink himself tighter than a woman can lace herself, ROOK ON DOG DISEASES And How to Feed 1!ailed free to any address by the duthor , y i+tr�t America's Picl:aer H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. i sg Remedies 118 West 31st Street, New York Ontario VolDrinara College Under the Control of the Depart- ment of Agriculture of Ontario Es TABLaST3ED 1862 Affiliated with the Univer- sity of Toronto. College will re -open on Monday, the 2nd of October, 1916. 110 University Ave., Toronto, Can. CALENDAR. ON g,pPLECATION E. A. A. Grange, Y,S., M -S., P!IGG101 The grouch is a barnacle on health and happiness. If you would advance at your full rate of speed scrape off the barnacles. A Gold Mian: On Your Farm You can double your profits by storing up good green feed in a BISSELL SILO „Summer Toed an Winter Long" Scientifically built to keep silage fresh, sweet and good to the last. Built of select- ed timber treated with wood preservatives that prevent decay. The I4ISu17LL SILO has strong, rigid walls, air -tight doors, hoops of heavy steel. Mold by dealers or address us direct. Get .free folder. Write T. E. Bissell Co., Ltd. Dept. U Elora, Ontario. 1111".I For884' N� Wheckck Engine, 150 HT., 18 x42, \%lith double main driving belt 24 ins. wide, and Dynamo 30 LW. W. 'Deli driven. All infirst class conLtion, Would be sold together or sop •;rate- ly; also a lot of shafting at a very great bargain as room is required immedi- ately. :3. Frank Wilson & Sons 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto. ED. 7. 'ISSUE 34---16..