».- 1..~ "" OCTOBER 15, 1914 "‘ ;1< X - i LZ., ' » -f 1 'r . / IIISCIHIIS FUH _ YUUH BIWIIS II HIIIIIEHI, SIEK ' 1 _TONIGHTJ CLEAN YOUR BOWELS ` Ano END HEAoAcHss, cows, sous srom/ion Get a 10-cent box. Put aside-just once-the Salts, Pills, Castor Oil or Purgative wage,-5 which merely force a passageway through the bowels, but do not thor. oughly cleanse, freshen and purify these drainage organs, and have no effect whatever upon the liver and stomach. Keep your "insides” pure and fresh with Cesvarets. which timrougiiiy cleanse the stomach, remove the undi- gested, sour food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the con- stlpated waste matter and poisons in the bowels. . A Cascaret tonight will make you feel great by morning. They work while you sleep-never gripe, gicken, and cost only 10 cents a box from your druggist. Millions of men and women take a Cascaret now and then and never have Headache, Biliousness, Severe Colds. Indigestion, Sour Stoin. acli or Constipated Bowels. Cascarets belong in every household. Children just love to take them. -_-___ SOIL FEFITILITY WASTED BY FIRES. Experts state that forest soil have lost and are losing much fertility ow- ing to forest fires which, doing appar- ently little immediate damage, rob the soil of accumulations of liuinus. ln many sections land is being cleared for farming, and, where such forest land has not been burned, there is a large percentage of vegetable matter which provides considerable fertility and a. good texture. Moreover, as this soil has a greater capacity to absorb and retain moisture, it is less likely toibe washed and gulfed under heavy ra ns. THE ESCUTCHEON ON BULLS. The escutcheon is also found on bulls from heavy milking strains. but it is not so wide as that on the cows,- although it has the same indications. Bulls with wide escutclieon,if nialted with cows of heavy milking qualities, (Continued on page one.) this treaty it is purely an excuse on our part. It is our low craft and cun- ning, just to cloak our jealousy of a superior civilization-(laugliter)- we “"3 Hfiemlltirlg to destroy. Our ans- wer ls the action we took in 1870. (Cheers.) What was that- Mr. Glad- :stone-(clieers)-was then Prime Minister. Lord Granville, I think, was then Foreign Secretary. I have never heard it laid to their charge that they were ever jingo. BELGIUM IN 1870. Treaty Bond was this we called upon the belligerent Powers to respect that treaty We called upon France, called upon Germany At that time, bear in mind, the greatest danger to Belgium caine from France and not from Germany. We intervened to pro- tect Belgium against France exactly as we are doing iio\v to protect her gaiiist Germany. We are prorceeding exactly in the same way. We invited both the belligerent Powers to state that they had no intention of violating Belgian territory. What was the ans- wer given by Bismarck? He siiid it was superfluous to ask Prussia such a question in view of the treaties in force. France gave a similar answer. We received the thanks at that time from the Belgian people for our inter- iiitervention in a very remarkable doc- ument. This is the document addres- sed by the municipality of Brussels to o What did they do in 1870? That » _ ' we a Queen Victoria after that intervention The great and noble people over whose destinies vou preside have just given a further proof of its benevolent sentiments towards this countrv The voire of the ianglish nation has been heard above the din oi arms lt has asserted the principles of justice and right. Next to the uiialterable attach- ment of the Belgian people in their independence, the strongest sentiment which fills their hearts is that of an imperishable gratitude to the people t` Great Britain." (Loud cheers.) That was in 1870. Mark what follows: Three or four days after the docu- would throw calves of better qualities 'ment of thanks the French army was than if the cows were stocked by a bull with a very small cscutchcon. HOW T0 PREVENT ACID STOMACIIS AND FOOD FERMENTATION .___- By a Stomach Specialist. wedged up against the Belgian fron- tier. Every means of escape was shut up by a ring of flame from Prussian cannon. There was one way of es- cape. What was that? By violalting the neutrality of Belgium. What did they do? The French on that occas-, ion, preferred ruin, humiliation, to the breaking of their bond. The French Emperor, Marshals, 100,000 gallant Freiiclinien in arms preferred As a specialist who has spent many to be can-led Capuve to (he years in the study and treatment of stomach troubles, I have been forced to the conclusion that most people who complain of stomach trouhle.possess stomachs that are absolutely healthy and normal. The real trouble, tiiat which causes all the pain and diiil- culty, is excessive acid in the stomach, aggravated by food fermentation. Hy- peracidity irritates the delicate liiilng of the stomach and food fermentation causes wind which distends the stomach abnormally, causing that full, bloated feeling. Thus botii acid and fermentation interfere with and retard the process of digestion. The stomach is usually healthy and normal, but irritated almost past endurance by these foreign elements-acid and wind. In all such cases-and they com- prise over 90 per cent. of all stomach difficulties--the first and only step necessary is to neutralise the acid and stop the fermentation by taking in a little warm or cold water immediately after eating, from one to two tea- spoonfuls of bisurated magnesia, which is doubtless the best and only really effective antiicid and food cor- rective known. The acid will be neutrallsed and the fermentation stopped almost instantly, and your stomach will at once proceed to digest the food in u healthy, normal manner. Be sure (0 ask your druggist for the bisurated magnesia, as I have found strange hind of their enemy rather than dislioiior the name of their coun- try. lt was the last French Army de- feat. Had they violated Belgian neu- trality tlie whole history of that war would have been changed. And yet it was the interest of France to break the treaty. She did not do it. v “A SCRAP OF PAPER." It is now the interest of Prussia to break the Treaty, and she has done it. (Shame) Well why? She avow- ed it with cynical contempt for every principle of justice. She says treaties only bind you when it is to your inter- est to keep them. "What is a treaty?" says the German Chancellor. “A scrap of paper." Have you any five pound notes about you? (Laughter) I am not calling for them. (Renewed laugh- ter.) Have you any of these neat little Treasury .£1 notes? (Laughter.) If you have, burn them, they are only "scraps of paper." (Applause) What are they made of? Ilagii- (Li1Ut§ili-91’-) What ara' they worth? The whole credit of the British Empire. (Applause) “Scraps of paper." I have been deal- ing with scraps of paper within the last month. It is suddenly found the commerce of the world is coming to a standstill. The machine has stopped. Why? I will tell you. We discovered. ii of us for the first time-l doii’t BRlTI\IN’S FIGHT FOR HUNIIINITY l_i__»_______i___ Inspiring Speech by Mr. Lloyd George commerce today than I did six weeks ago, and there are a good many men 'like ine-who discovered the inachin- ery of commerce was moved by bills of exchange. I have seen some of them -(laughter) - wretched. crlnkled. scrawled over, blotched. frowsy, and yet these wretched little scraps of pap- er moved great ships, laden with thou- sands of tons of precious cargo, from one end of the world to the other. (Ap- plause.) What was the motive power behind them. The honor of commer- cial men. (Applause.) Treaties are the currency of inter- national statesmanslilp. (Applause) Let us be fair. German merchants. German traders had the reputation of being as upright and straightforward as any traders in the world. (Hear, hear.) But if the currency of Ger- man coninierce is to be debased to the level of that of her statesmansliip, no trader from Shanghai to Valparaiso will ever look at a German signature again. (Cheers.) This doctrine of the scrap of paper. this doctrine which _is superscribed by Bernliardi, as treaties which servo only as long as it is to its in- terest, goes to the root of public law. It is the straight road to barbarism. just as if you removed the magnetic 'pole whenever it was in the way of a . German cruiser - (laUEh¢€!‘)--U10' whole navigation of the seas would be- i come dangerous, difiicult, impossible, and the whole machinery of civiliza tion will break down if this doctrine wins in this war. (A Voice: “It won’t.") FIGHT AGAINST BARBARISM. We are fighting against barbarism. (Applause.) But there is only one one way of putting it right. If there are nations that say they will only re- spect treaties when it is to their inter- est. to do so, we niust make it to their interest to do so for the future. What is their defence? Just look at thc inter- view which took place between our Ambassador and great German offic- ials when their attention was called to this treaty to which they were part- ners. They said: ' “We cannot nelp that." Rapidity of action was the great German asset. There is a great- er asset for a nation than rapidity of action, and that is-honest dealing. (Applau's'e.) What are her excuses? She said Belgium was plotting against her, that Belgium was engaged in a great conspiracy with Britain and with France to attack her. ' Not merely is that not true, but Germany knows it is untrue. What is her other excuse? France meant to invade Germany through Belgium. Absolutely untrue. France offered Belgium flve army corps to defend her if she was attack- ed. Belgium said: "I don't require them. Ihave got the word of the Kaiser. Shall Caesar send a lie? All these tales about conspiracy have been fanned up since. The great nation ought to be ashamed- (hear. hear) ought to be ashamed to behave like a fraudulent bankrupt, perjuring its way with its complications. She has de- liberately broken this treaty and we were in honor bound to stand by it. (Cheers.) Belgium has been treated brutally, how brutally we shall not yet know. We know already too. much. What has she done? Did she send an ulti- matum to Germany? Did she chal- lenge Germany? . Was she preparing to make war on Germany? Had she ever inflicted any wrongs upon Ger- niauy which the Kaiser was bound to redress? She was one of the most un- offending little countries in Europe. (Hear. hear.) She was peacable, in- dustrious, thrifty, hard-working, giving offence to no one; and her cornflelds have been trampled down, her villages have been burned to the ground, her art treasures have been destroyed, her men have been saluglitered, yea, and her women and children, too. (Shame.) What had she done? Hundreds and thousands of her people have had their quiet, comfortable little homes burned to the dust, and are wandering home-- ma y other forms utterly IHCRIUE iii “S 'pretend to say thatl do not know, peculiarly valuable properties.-l\‘.J.G. niucli more about the machinery of less in their own land. What is their crime? Their crime is that they trust- ! . L l prosper ? you yours prosperiti °" rosper 1°" 7° Remember - ' ' ' Remember that unless he prospers elf will suffer. ' E",-y Canadian is y Y Is he prbspering? Are you doing ~ ii ee that you buy It from him` whzitiiiielfrldm i=:il:i?>i?; :tier-:to the end that he maybe able “tg” what you yourself make or sell, to the end that you create t° “Y f him and for yourself. our our next door neighbour---every iii at on ou needt eheip of every Canlgilafffffegqugmgulisgozfjtpatdothm and every ounce of cms 11,8., ,bu to buy only Canadian-made goods---If you will reason to 4° so Ind consistently car? out the resolve enum '°'°I§ workmen will be employed, median merchants vv I C'“‘° ‘° ni-self reap the benefits of “good times.” - - - - -_-J EVERY CANADIAN IS YOUR T DOOR NEIGHBOUR ' f I sci/earn <9 v.| 4 ' French dirigible and died with its ZH-.mf `Q._ , -_ .ii -‘rua cnantorrarows ein spills _ PAGE mum A ~ t Icl`t; and cre w of 25 after the collision in the at /~ » l\ilIc. Stcir. ir. Five of the woiiicii :irc shown in the ff/ Cf’ if ‘R \ FIVE. FRENCH WOMEN SWEAR TO DIE WRECKING GERMAN DIRIGIBL ES. At left in aviation costume,Lily Leeniiiig; above, llolen Dutricii in iiiarliiiic and Viilciiliiif: Duciiig inset; Below Broness De La Roche, at French WOIIICH, 118 Well as Frclicllllllill. M0 3011112. to the front to sam' iilce their lives for their f-ountry. The-v arc not nurses-nurses are plenti- -_ ful. They are fighting wonien. And at _thc front with thc figliiiiig im-ii the y will tukc their pint-t~ prepared to die by violcncc in mortal conflict with the coniinon enemy. Twelve women ot l~`i‘ancc, all oi' tlicni avinli-ices, are tif-terniiiif-d to cniiiizilc ltoiniid Giirros, thc intrepid aviator \vlio wrecked a picture. All ure qualified air pilots. ed to the word of a Prussian King. (Applause) I don't know what the l\aiser hopes to achieve by this war. (Laughter.) I have a shrewd idea of what he will get, but one thing is made certain, that no nation in future will ever commit that crime again. THE SHOOTING OF CIVILIANS. - I am not going to enter into those tales. Many of them are untrue; war is a grim ghastly business at best, and I am not going to say that all that has been said in the way of tales of out- rage is true. I will go beyond that and say that if you turn two iiiillioiis of men forced, conscripted and conipell~ ed and driven into the field, you will certainly get among them a certain number of men who will do things that the nation itself' will be ashamed of. I am not depending on them. It is enough for me to have the story which the Germans themselves uvow. admit, defend, proclaim. The burning and massacre-Ing, the shooting down of harmless people-why? Because, according to the Germans, they fired of German soldiers. What business had German soldiers there at all? (Cheers.) Belgium was acting in pur- suance of a most sacred right, the right to defend your own home. But they were not in uniform when they shot. lf a burglar broke into the Kaiser’s palace at Potsdam, destroy- ed his furniture, shot down his ser- vants, ruined his art treasures, espec- ially those lie made himself (laughter and cheers)--buriiod his precious man~ uscripts, do you think he would wait until he got into his uniform before he shot him down? (Laughter.) They were dealing with those who had bro- ken into their households, but their has gone. ((‘licers.) Thcy have not gained tinic, but they have lost their good name. THE CASE OF SERVIA. But Belgium was not the only littlc nation that has been attacked in this war, mid l make no excuse for refer- ing to the case of thc other litttle nn- tioii-the case of Servia. The history oi” Scrvia is not uiiblotted. \\’hat his- tory in the category of nations is un- hlottcd? The first nation tlint is with- out sin, let her cast it stone ut Svrvin. A nation trained in a horrible si-iioul, but she won her frccdoin with hor ton- acious valour, and she has iiiiiiiituiiicrl it by the some courage. If any Sur- viuns were mixed up In llic zissusiiizi- tion oi’ the Grand Duke tlicy ought to be punished. Servia iidiiiiis ilizii; thc Servian Government had iioihiiii: to do with it. Not even Aiistrht r'l.'iiiii\»d that. The Serviun i’riino lliiiiisli-r is one ot' the most capable :ind lioiiozx-cl men in Europe. Scrvia was willing to punish any one of her siilijcvls who had been proved to have nn_\' <-oiii|ili<~ ity iii that assasiiizitinii. Whzil iiiorc could you expor't‘.’ \Vl\iit wcro iliv Austrian dciiizinds? Sorviii syiiipn- thised with her follow r'o\iiilrynicii in Bosiia. "Flint was one of lici' criiiics. She must. do so no inorc. Ilcr iicwzi- papers were saying iiii:iitly niiiiic. ilu! ihcsv cilircrs had just ciiicrgvd froni n \\'nr winiri- |h|»_v were :iililiiig lustre to tho Scrviziii n|'ni,~;-giillaiiit, brave, cf- |iil»ii~nt. l(’Iicvi‘:=.) I \voii:|cr wlictlici' ,ii \‘.'i1s their guilt or their f-iil<:ic\if:_v iilini proiii;itr~:l Austriu's zlitiicii. llut,` ,iinirlr, tho @i>suiz>~io W DSA f/ 'V"-1_f\lf 4 CRUBEE if; ( \ ®BoRGEE'_HoU"r ~ , ’ w roar into I I ' ` URT DE FORT LA , Cnoorgg N G H B 0 U R ' ’ roar sr Piuttlrra - TORT DE FERXEM U ‘ I/ Pains ` I I (~)EEcRJ'sRi:N roar . @ ’ ' 5T.MAR1c@>>` . . \ ` ' , m your part towards helping him to , , _ci-c.tsoG>`l Q Qprisnicari oiarvcnon Qwo isiiirr \\‘\e-»~>°-, C~»°°@ iiiiieféie » 1-nam ANTWERPJ @FORT- I 4 rom - Q yroier- 3 -#I _ ,, .W NEX , \ _ . 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