Estranged Spouse Doss Not is Spare Lash of : Scorn fri London, July 8--At a time whenit appeags possible ;that ex-Kaiser Wil helin Way return to' Germany, a strik- ing book blasting the glories of the one-time war idol, Ludendorff, and written by his former wife, Frau Mar- garethe Ludendorff. has become the literary sénsation of Europe. With Germany mourning the stig- ma of. war guilt fastened upon it by the Treaty of Versailles, her book, "When | Was Ludendorff's Wife, a striking etching of the ex-Kaiser s old ide, is being read widely. oh 3 ook Be a Ludendor ff pale with anguish and disappointment over the Kaiser's dismissal: of him from the vast power he had over the Ger- man armies in' the battle zones; a Ludendorff_ trembling with fear, fice- ing in disguise into' Sweden to escape the wrath of the revolutionists; a Ludendotff foaming with wrath be- cayse his old associate, President Hin- deAburg, refused to visit him in Mu- nich; a Ludendorff making a fool of himself in the Kapp and Hitler: "put- ches," both of which miserably flop- ped--these are some of the pictures of the one-time German war idol. The book is being eagerly read by alt" Europe. Her { / former husband has sitice married, has issued a letter of protest about the book, but the reign- ing opinion is that deftly, and with: out any malice or ill-will, but merely showing him:as he: really was, Frau Ludendorff has - skinned him alive. She "married him in 1909 and they lived 'together until 1926. The book-is full of plums. To be- gin with, she kills the legend about Hindenburg and Ludendorff. Accord- ing to the German yarn, when the Kaiser in a panic called upon old Hindénburg to come out of his en- fofced retirement and take charge of the eastern front, the old warrior is supposed to have said: ~ #That 1 will only do with Luden- dorff as my assistant. Pair Grew in Power Frau Ludendorff drily remarks that at that time, with the Kaiser as "Su- preme War Lord," no officer would have. dared make terms, As a matter of fact, she says Hindenburg and Lu- dendorff were both. assigned to the job by the Kaiser's choice, Their dazzling successes in' the battle of Tannenburg and other conflicts on the 'eastern front soon made them na- tignal heroes, -Ludendorff and Hin- denburg went on from triumph to triumph until they, seemed. . bigger than the :Kaiser. He was the figure- head, but they for a time had the real power. But Ludendorff seemed to have a presentiment of what would happen to him some day. Once, when he' came to Berlin and was given a \! HTH A) \ A TE TE Beautiful Finish ~ Without hard rusping Don't envy the brand new car its smart lustre. Whiz Polish will make and keep your car's finish as beautiful as a fresh paint coat. ... Takes just a few (TL IVE CET YI BAYT don't have to rub Insist on Whiz 50c and $1 sizes J reached Newfoundland-Labrador '| of Newfoundland, the Eskimo were '| Here the Roman Catholics and the Vo g bi" y > & a mighty ovation: from frantic crowds, he said to his wife: : "Ah, "believe me," the: favor of crowds, 'like the faver of rulers, is very changeable You wiil see--so0n there will be stones flung. In i918 Frau Ludendorff says the situation on the western front" grew steadily worse, due to the fact that every sieames landed forces American troops, who, fresh in body and spirit, marched forth in over- whelming n 3 There were stormy debates in the Gérman Reichstag. In the closing days of the war, the Kaiser urgently summoned Hindenburg and Luden- dorff to Berlin. The Kaiser was an- gry. He vented his wrath on his two generals, His bitter criticisms were especially directed at what he terme Ludendorff's fatal mistakes. The lat- ter replied: # "With deepest pain I mast recog- nize from the reproofs of Your Ma- jesty that I no longer possess your confidence and that my labor on the front does not find favor in your eyes. 1 must respectfully ask for my dismissal." § The Kaiser hesitated a moment, then replied: : "I will thank you if you go. "You ease the situation for me thus im- mensely. I will seek with the aid of the Social Democrate to build up a new Reich." Predicted Revolution Ludendorff hurried home. He was deathly pale and he fell into a seat in a lump. Almost tonelessly from his lips came the words to his wondering wife: The Kaiser has sent me away. 1 am dismissed." He was thunderstruck. He had imagined he was indispensable. His wife tried to console him. It was use- less. Then he sprang up, muttering: "You will see; in fourteen days we will no longer have an empire nor a Kaiser." Revolution broke out all over Ger- many. Ludendorff"s name was uni- versally reviled. His friends urged him to flee. His wife says she did not advise this, because she did not think such conduct worthy of him. Adorned with a false beard and blue goggles, the once famous general ran away to Sweden, . From Copenhagen he wrote to the "wife of his heart": "It's all like a bad dream to me. go away." . Once he said to her: "The biggest piece of foolishness the revolutionists did was to let all of us live. Well, if ever I come into Ebert (Germany's first President), Scheidemann and company strung up and hanging." ' Frat Ludendorff gives the inside story of his quarrels with the German €rown Prince, the Bavarian Crown Prince, and President Hindenburg. The one-time great. man is shown to be very small potatoes, It is a de- vastating book. MISSION WORK I do not know whether I did right to Rover again there will be no pardon. ith quiet conscience I would' see _ THE OSHAWA DAILY, TIMES, MONDAY, JULY 8, 1929 HINTS FOR HOLIDAY WAKERS GIVEN OUT 4! "Don'ts" and "Do's" Con- tainedfin Bulletin of Health Toronto, - July 8---Brunettes tan better than blondes. In fact, some blondes can't acquire a coat of tan at all--a sad blow for many, since a tanned complexion has become so fashionable that drug-stores now sell it in bottles, According to a special "holiday bul- letin" issued by the Canadian Social Hygiene Council, in co-operation with the Department of Public Health of Toronto, there are a number of "don'ts" and "do's" which the holi- daying 'city or town-dweller should observe, if his constitution is to stand the strain of the summer rest-period. Don't scratch mosquito bites, don't pick poison ivy, watch your milk and water supplies and get plenty of sun but not too much at once, are some of the admonitions. And here is an emergency medical kit that everyone is advised to pack in the suit-case: Three or four bandages, 2 or 3 inches wide; % pound of sterilized gauze; 1 ounce of absorbent cotton; 1 or 2 ounces of tincture of iodine; 1 small roll of adhesive plaster about 1 inch wide; 1 ounce of boracic acid; 1 or 2 ounces of bicarbonate of soda; a hot water bottle; 2 ounces of aro- matic 'spirits of ammonia. "The last item is important in the event of a collapse," the bulletin ad- vises, "From one-half to a teaspoon- ful of aromatic spirits of ammonia in a wine-glass of water acts more promptly than whiskey or brandy. It is one of the best stimulants we have." Cuts or bruises should be washed with soap and water and carefully painted with tincture of io- dine. Splinters should be removed with a needle sterilized by being held for a few minutes in boiling water, and: the injured -place treated with iodine. Poison ivy irritation should be treated with the juice of the jewel weed, a plant growing two to four feet high, in marshy places, and pos- sessing a juicy, semi-translucent stem, and. with orange-colored flowers with brown spots. Either strong laundry soap, or fresh lime-water is a good substitute, Avoid being overly zealous in your efforts to get sunburned. Half an hour at a time is quite as long as any part of the body, not accustomed to exposure, should be subjected to the strong rays of the sun, for the first few days; then it will be quite safe to increase the time to an hour, and after a fairly good coat of tan has been developed you are well protected against the dangers of sunburn. If you do not take these precautions your holiday may be spoiled--pain- fully. Furthermore, recent revelations as regards the therapeutic value of the chemical rays of the sun have been such as to make one feel that it would be difficult to over-estimate their importance. Therefore, we re- commend for small children the sun suits which can be obtained in any of our stores. These suits only pro- tect the hips and upper parts of the thighs and leave the balance of the body exposed to the sun's rays. It is well to bear in mind that in order to get the therapeutic benefits it is not absolutely necessary that you be exposed to the direct rays of the sun--there is the sky shine or reflected rays from the sky and clouds. On a clear day you may lie or sit on the shady side of the house, with the blue dome above you, and get from one-third to one-half of the henefits of the rays of the sun that you would get by exposing yourself directly to them. For mosquitoes, three things should be remembered--netting, liquid am- monia, and coal oil. The netting shuts them out, the liquid ammonia, applied promptly to a bite, frequent- ly neutralizes the poison and pre- vents subsequent itching, and the coal oil, put in very small quantities on top of water in rain-barrels, lit- tle ponds, etc, prevent the mosquito larvae from developing into mosqui- toes. Furthermore, certain aromatic preparations such as spirits of cam- phor, menthol and oil of citronella, may be applied to exposed parts of the body to keep these pests away. RANCHER PEER IN WESTERN CANADA Times of India Applauds Baron Renfrew For Development Bombay, India, July 8. --In an article in the Times of India on peers who have ranches in West- ern Canada, headed 'Rancher Peers," The Times says: "The recent succession of Fred- erick Perceval, Alberta rancher, to the British peerage as the Earl of Egmont adds another name to thd imposing list of members. of the nobility that have been associ- ated with agriculture in Western Canada. The most distinguished member is Baron Renfrew (the Prince of Wales) who has owned and operated a ranch at High Riv- er, Alberta, for ten years. The Earl of Minto, Lord Aberdeen and the Duke of Sutherland have been permanently identified with rural development in the West. There is still of Wales. and through it the own- er remains, though absent, a bene- factor to the livestock industry of Western Canada. Years ago, Lord Aberdeen and the Duke of Suther- land developed ranch properties, the former ag the entrance to the rick Okanagan Valley in British Columbia, the latter in the Brooks district of Southern Alberta, "Valuable colonization was done through both areas; one made a mark in fruit production, while the other became promin- ent for alfalfa, bringing to Canada for the first time the Champion- ship for alfalfa seed. Lord Rod- ney, after a distinguished career with the Scots yg Greys and Tank Corps, settled with his wife in Northern Alberta, and through his own efforts developed a very fine farm, which he is expanding. established a training school for young men of good family from the Motherland and among his pu- pils were Lord Edward Montagu, John Stanley, nephew of the Earl of Derby, and Duc de Nemours. Another British peer, at the con- clusion of the War, settled near Alix in Alberta, and established himself as a wheat farmer, while the Marquis of Anglesey operates a large cattle ranch in the inte- rior of British Columbia and is also a successful fruit farmer." LARGEST CAWP SINCE THE WAR Kingston, July 8--Approximately 2,500 troops, all ranks, will go under canvas at Barriefield today fora pe- riod of ten days in the biggest mili- tary camp held here since the war. The camp area. to be occupied by over three-quarters of a mile from a Minto ranch in close: proximity to that of the Prince Hel. troops will extend for a distance of the rifle ranges, at the 600-yard mark, down along the north side of the camp road, to a point some distance east of the caretaker's residence, while troops will also occupy locations on the south side of the camp road be- tween it and No. 2 provincial high- way. The westernmost unit on the main camp line will be the Princess Louise Dragoon Guards, and from that point cast the units will be in the following order 3rd Dragoon Guards, 4th Hus- sars, 3rd Field Company, Canadian Engineers; 3d Signal battalion; La- nark and Renfrew regiment; Gren- ville regiment; 8th Infantry Brigade headquarters; Stormount, Dundas and Glangary Highlanders; Hastirigs and Prince Edward regiment; 9th In- fantry Brigade headquarters; North- umberland regiment; Durham ,regi- ment; Frontenac regiment; Machine Gun corps. Seven Presbyteries in Saskatche- wan exceeded, and one reached, the average annual givings throughout the whole United Church of Canada. And some of these Presbyteries are in frontier areas. -- el AMONG ESKIMOS "People" Respond to Christiar. Teaching review of missions to 'the Canadian Eskimo was presented by Venerable A. L, Fleming, archdeacon of the Arc- tic, in an address to the summer school for the dioceses of Toronto and Niagara in Bishop Strachan school last week. "At the outset he stated it will sur- prise many to know that the first mis sionaries of the Christian faith to preach to the Eskimo of the North American continent were those sent by the "Society 'of the Unitas Frat- rium," better known as "The Mora- vian Brethren," a Protestant Episco- pal church whose missionaries first in 1752. At that time, according to Brit- ish admiralty records quoted in Hunts "Life of Sir Hugh: Palliser," governor "the most savage people in the world." It was not, however, until nearly 60 years later, 1811, that missionaries the Ungava district, where the Mora vians established a mission at Killi- first reached the Canadian Eskimo in neck, now known as Port Burwell. The first Church of England mis- sionary to the Eskimo was Rev, John West, who was sent out in 1820; from then on the work developed on both sides of Hudson's Bay. It was on the west sidé of the bay that most of his work was done, and through an inter- preter he told the simple story of God's love as revealed in ig Christ. He paid a special tribute to the work done by Archdeacon Kirby, Archdeacon Winter, Bishop Horden and Bishop Newnham, Until 1922 the Eskimo was minis- tered to largely at the trading posts but in the following year a 'race for territory began between the Anglica and the Roman Catholics: As the formation between Bishop Dewdney direct result of exchanges of © in- and Bishop Charlesbois the Roman Catholic bishop, missionaries of the Oblate Fathers entered the field, the speaker asserted. A gentlemen's agree ment with respect to territory pre- vailed for a time but he charged this was later entirely disregarded by the Roman Catholics. In 1927 their effort to establish a mission in Baffin Land year, The work on the . east side of Hudson's Bay was organized by Bishop David Anderson. An outstand ing, pioneer in this district was the Rev. E. J. Peck. It was Peck who first gathered a vocabulary of the Es- kimo language, and in 1 compiled the grammar which has since been in use, and which has been adopted of- ficially by the Canadian government. It was not, however, until 40 years after the pioneer effort of Rev. John reached the Mackenzie River delta. West _ that missionary enterprise Anglicans have both done very effec- tive work and particular tribute was paid by the speaker to the efforts of the Rev. I. O. Stringer. * Rev. Hiram Hull, Perth Avenue United Church, has Toronto, July 8--A very interesting | was frustrated because of the wreck | || of the S.S. Bayrupert in July of that been elected | 'chairman of Toroiito" West Presby- 11.200 tery, Rod --- wf McCOLL-FRONTENAC OIL COMPANY LIMITED Offices and plants at Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary, Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal- Distribution warehouses at other convenient points. ~ - MCCOLL-FRONTENAC Cyclo Gas. 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