Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Apr 1920, p. 4

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG WHAT Foch REALLY SAD/SHORT OF BREATH) ===" Could Hardly Walk Without Resting When you go to a physician to be examined for any heart trouble one of the first questions he asks is: \ Prodigality Adds to the High Cost of Living. In a comprehensive address on the forestry situation in Canada, Prof. C.D.Howe, of the Faculty of Forestry, University of Toronto, told the mem- bers of the Royal Canadian Institute that the continued neglect to con- serve the forest resources of this couRtry- wonld-memretii-turtier Aner creases in the high cost of living. He said that from one-half to two- thirds of the forest wealth of Canada had been destroyed by fire in the past seventy-five years, There are 1,900,000 square miles of forested country in the Dominion, he stated. He advocated the re-investing of for- estry profits in the replenishment of the merchantable timber supply. "I trust that you will not consider me tinged with red when I assert my belief that the community should share in the increased price of lum- ber," he said. In British Columbia, for example, when the market price value of lumber goes above a certain price agreed upon as furnishing the producer a reasonable profit upon his investment, the royalties exacted by the province increase in definite ratio. Thus, the people as a whole profit by the upward trend of prices. I would TO BRZBERGER AND OTHER GER MAN PLENIPOTENTIARIES { Capt. Recouly Pencribes the Historic | Scene of the Morning of November 11th, 1918. New York, April 28 --Germany"s a '| appeal tor an " tice on Novem-| 'Are you short-of breath? I'bér Tih, §met with the 1nsonis Nowy . heart becomes afs I reply, *T have no terms," from Mar- | fected there ensues » feeling of a i shal Foch to Erzberger and the other | choking sensation, a shortness of | plenipotentiaries, according to Ray-| breath, palpitation, throbbing, Ir mond Recouly (Captain X), French | regular beating, smothering sensa- biographer df Foch and Joffre, in an | tion; dizziness and a weak, sinking, | article entitled "What Foch Really | all-gone feeling of. oppression and | Said," which is published in the May | anxiety. | issue of Scribner's Magazine, On the first sign of the heart be- Captain Recouly, describing the | coming weakened or the nerves un- historic scene of the morning of No-|strung Milburn's Heart and Nerve | yeraber 11th, when the generalissimo | Pills are just the remedy you re- | of the Allied forces, attended by a|quire. They regulate and stimulate few members of his staff, signed the | the heart, and strengthen and restore document in a railway dining car in | the whole nerve system. a forest near Rethonde, a town be- Mr. Stephen Crouse, East Clifford, tween Compiegne and Soissons, de-| N.B., writes:--"I suffered for five clared "the sight of butter seemed to | years with heart trouble. I could fill the German envoys with joy." hardly walk from the house to the The radio from the Germans ask-| barn without resting as I used to ing for "a cessation of hostilities in | get so short of breath. Doctors could the name of Humanity," was receiv-| not help me. My wife told me to ed by Foch shortly after midnight on {get a box of Milburn's Heart and the 7th and at 1-25 a.m. on the 8th! Nerve Pills and I felt better alter Mutual Benefits Day by'Day What the Mutual Life of Canada | Is Actually Doing O- Mutual Life is paying in cash to its policyholders 0 y/ ead r their representatives $12,700 every working day. * * The Mutual Life is increasing the policyholders' funds at the rate of over $10,000--per working day. : * % oa every wong atthe rate of - $135, Br Ji dz didi AHI OH I % TAR 418 every working day. * Become a member of the Mutual Life of Canada-- enjoy ils prosperily--enjoy ils protection. 112 Princess Phone 1372] BE A MUTUALIST!, The Mutual Life of Canada Waterloo, Ontario S. Roughton, District Agent Kingston, Ontario. - BL di addi dds Foch peat back his answer: "The | taking them; three boxes made Ine | suggest that a certain portion of such German plenipotentiaries - will have | quite well. I am now helping my | graduated tax be re-invested in the to go to the outpost on the main road son to work the farm, and can truth. forests by the community to accel- N * * from Maubeuge la Capelle Guise". | fully say I feel like a different man." | grate 'the regemeration and growth NY 2 . From this point they were brought| Price 60¢c. a box at all dealers or| of the commercial species, and thus NN." The Mutual Life receives, for all purposes, $28,611 by delayed stages to Rethonde, which | mailed direct on receipt of price by | keep our woodlands at our market every working day. . they reached about 7 o'clock in the |The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toron-| doors continually productive. morning. Two hours later 3hey ere fo, Ont. 'Most private business is sustained | in the presence of the commander oO by a reinvestment of a certain portion » the conquering Allied armies. 'of its profits. The Serta n Jo for- The net profits of the Mutual of Canada, credited "There was a cold salute," says THOMAS COP LEY est business can only be sustained in eutindy io policyholders, amount to $4,841 for every Captain Recquly, "a bow in return; the same manner. The Dominion RN worki ay. no iol The Germans took Telephone 987 Government spends about $8,000,000 NY g vay * * their places at the table in the gin Nantiux anything done inf {he cerpen. % year for the encouragement of RN J - ing car, where their names were wr '. ' . agriculture, which is another way of : Sa ten, and remained standing. The a a kd fan orien saying that amount is re-invested in . The Mutual Life of Henk i bia $170,705.00 of life officers seemed embarrassed and up-| will receive prompt attention. Shop| the busin of increasing the pro- insurance in force on the lives of 70, members, an | set. Not so the civilians who did not | 28 Queen Street. ----- ductivity of the farm sofl. The forest 3 average of $2,400 each. seem to care at all, They talked fam- ~= | soil products have a value equal to q * * | fliarly together; it was impossible to RUN DOWN, PALE AND WEAK, | that of bur wheat crop. yet we are 3 X | believe that their country's fate was NERVOUS AND TIRED * re-investing almost nothing to con- hanging in the balance, and that tinue its productivity. The lumber they were there to sign the most é " § industry created for Canada in 1817 'Kolossal' capitulation the world had VITAL TABLETS forest produets valued at $116,000, eves Seen. i 2 vob 000. The pulp mills of the country { och's plercing eyes, gruff voice FRE WILL | produced in the same year materials {and curt manner were impressive. THE GREAT INCH TONIC to the value of $96,000,000, a total { "To whom have LF the, hoser of BUILD YOU UP. of over $200,000,000. The lumber speaking?" he asked. e Germans . _ | and pulpwood industries stand third replied. "What 1s the object of your ry Siany peuple to-day Aeron: | as producers of wealth in this coun- |} | visit?" he asked. Then followed this from nature intended Disease of | try: being surpassed only by agricul- ' | dialogue: one sort or another is lurking in the | ture and manufacturing. We re- "Erzberger: We have come to in- syste. dapping the very life itself invest a portion of the earnings of quire into the terms of an armistice, ye ie Ty French | Mrictiture and manufacturing to to be concluded on land, on sea and have cone to ine rescue of all such keep those industries going, but with in the air." 'persons. In VITAL Tablets are all the exception of spasmodic planting "Foch: I have no terms to submit the essentials io make you healthy we have re-invested very little of the to you." ; forest revenues to encourage the re- Count Oberndorf, the diplomatist aud strong You have 30 appetite, generation of the present commercial in the German party, interceded: "It |Y' Aor oes wi Ae Tou, species." the Marshal prefers, we may say that Fou e ey are a. on an ge, Why? Prof. Howe said that south of the we are here to learn the conditions decays 5 8. very par of your body | yuut barren lands stretch there is a on which the Allies would be willing rat needs to be kept in a strong, |yery sparsely wooded transcontinen- to grant us an armistice." ealthy condition, is gradually get- tal belt containing about 700,000 "Foch: I have no terms." ting weaker, rather than stronger. | square miles. This is the "little stick Brzberger, drawing forth a greasy | You must build yourself up. You | region," and will never comtridute paper: "President Wilson has in-|must fortify your body. Once your | materially to the Canadian supply formed our government that Marshal | body is strong, it will throw off the| of gawk or pulpwood. Foch has been invested with the po-| disease. The question is, what Prot. Howe stated that 1,600,000 wer of submitting the Allies' condi- {should one'take to do this? The|gquare miles of the Dominion are in- tions to the German plenipotentiar-| makers of VITAL Tablets will sell| capable of producing forests of com- ies." tea them under a guarantee. If they do| mereial value. "Foch: I will let you know 'he Al-| not build you up, you can have your| "Over 40 per cent. of the land lies' conditions when you have asked | money back. Build yourself up, and | area of Canada is either too cold, too for an armistice. Do you ask for an|away goes every disease. VITAL Tab- | high or too dry to produce saw logs armistice?" lets are a wonderful reconstructive | or_even paulpweod,"" he said. "This "Wa!" exclaimed Oberndorf and |remedy, known to science. Go to|is x fact that is overlooked by those Erzberger together, your druggist and procure a box of | who talk boastingly of our inexhaust- Foch: In that case I will read | VITAL Tablets. See for yourself. |ible forest supplies. Subtracting the you the terms drawn up by the Allied | Price fifty cents per box, at all drug | treeless areas from the total land governments." He sat down and the |stores. § area.we get 1,800,000 square miles : i reading began. It lasted an hour, for of forested country." A | the document had lo be translated. Prof. Howe sald that from one- The Germans pleaded for an imme- Lake Ontario Trout and Whitefish, Fresh Sea Salmon, Had- dock, Halibut and Cod. Domision Fish Co. Canada Food Board License No. 9-3340 It Mixed With Sulphur It Darkens So Naturally Nobody Can Tell old-time mixture of Sage Tea J 1 x | 7m ¢olor, which is quite sensible, as are living in an age when a youth- appearance. ls of the greatest ad- 0. Nowadays, though, we don't have I tm A tii " the troublesome task of gathering the and the mussy mixing at home. drug stores sell the ready-to-use pre im: ed by the addition of fents, called "Weyth's to and 'Sulphur Compound." It is popular because nobody can dis- caver it has been applied. Simply ] pn your comb or a soft brush th it and draw this through your dr, taking one small strand at a + by morning the grey hair dis- , but what delights the ladies Wyeth"s Sage and Sulphur Com- , is that, besides beautifully g the hair after a few ap- , it also produces that soft and appearance of abundance is so attractive. +| mitted to leave their train and, guard diate suspension of hostilities and for time to permit the Berlin gov- ernment to examine the terms. Again Foch spoke: "I am but the mouthpiece of the Allied governments. It is those gov- ernments that have drawn up the conditions of the armistice limiting the delay to 72 hours' duration. I have, therefore, no power to suspend hostilities without their authoriza- tion." The Germans at once dispatched a messenger to Spa, with credentials and the request that his journey to Berlin 'be "facilitated," When the messenger reached the German out- posts, it is related, the troops were so demoralized that they fired upon his white flag. Promiscuous volley fir- ing continued and the emissary was unable to reach his destination until the next.day. Meanwhile the German envoys had notified Foch of their §if- ficulty and Foch agreed to permit them to send a German officer to Berlin by air. A plane was equipped and ready for the flight when word was received that the messenger had reached Berlin. Captain Recouly declares the arm- istice was signed because Foch and his staff were convinced Germany was already in the throes of a revo- lution. The armistice envoys painted a "black picture" of conditions. While the German government was analyzing the terms the plenipoten- tiaries remained near Foch in the forest at Rethondeé. They were per-: ed by armed soldiers, exercise in the open air. On the afternoon of the 10th, Foch informed Erzberger, the 'head of the delegation, that hostili- ties would be resumed at 11 en. the! next day. At 7 o'clock on the night of | November 10th the following radio French: "German Government to German Plenipotentiaries: The plenipotentia- ries are authorized to sign the armis- tice. The Chancellor of the Empire." Three ciphered figures at thenticity. More than twelve hours of deliberation and debate over the "harsh" terms followed. Foch grant- ed some concessions and th others. intercepted by the the end of the message proved its au-| "Undergrad " Satin-piped collar and pockets \J are shown in man likes dash and smartness. Compared with American there is in the Canadian Siore vefiietiant vad yea) i : five-point jesdrante Right values 218 PRINCESS STREET TY LES for young men new Semi-ready models. The * " is an effective fashion for slender man who exported from Canadd is the re- Semi ready Tulloring give the GEORGE VANHORNE SUCCESSOR TO DAVID J. WILL been destroyed by; fire in the past seventy-five years,/ and pointed out that it would take twice that length of time to make a tree 12 inches In diameter. "In other words forest fires have destroyed the saw logs in over 1,000,- 000 square miles of good Canadian territory. Ninety per cent. of these fires were caused by sheer careless- ness. We are already beginning to feel the pinch of the diminishing supply of accessible timber. You will more readily comprehend what the destruction by past fires means when I say that the loss is equivalent to about 450 years' supply at our pres- ent rate of consumption of our bil- lion board feet a year." Prof. Howe gave an extended re- sume of the forest resources of the varions provinces, the greatest of which are those of British Columbia, where zt the present rate of use the supply will last for 300 years. He said that definite statistics on the forestry outlook in Ontario would be obtainable when the Dominion Com- mission of Conservation had complet- ed the survey it was undertaking at presént. The wanton destruction or indiscreet use of Canada's forest re- sources should be discouraged by the newspapers, because it would mean a still further increase in the present y high cost of living. Lumber Shortage In Alberta, Curtailment of the amount of lum- quest which the Alberta Association of Architects has put before the Fed- half to two-thirds of our forest had i in the Morning take a dose of ENO'S FRUIT SALT for your health's sake. It's good for you, ENO'S FRUIT SALT is orders of the health. ENO"S FRUIT SALT makes a coding sparkling drink--effervescent and You can drink it at any time with Denetit y ver and promotes good Prepared only by 4.C.ENO, Ltd. , "Fruit Salt" Works LONDON, Eng. IL When you Rise I BRYA Simppiape (Ro-established effective May 2, 1920) TORONTO T0 VANCOUVER CANADIAN PACIFIC THE TRANS-CANADA | It Pays to Buy Tour Groceries And Meat R. J. Shales & Son 71 PINE ST. Phone 1688 and Get Prompt Delivery RAILWAY SRSA AL GRAND TRUN A CHANGE OF TIME Will be made on Sunday, May 2nd Standard time, not so-called Day« light Saving Time, will continue to be used for.Schedules of all trains on the Grand Trunk Railway System For fculars, apply to J. P. Hane ley, C. . & T.A, G.T. Ry. Ont. a For information and rates apply to sr Hanley, C. P, & T. A, GT. 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