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Summer Diarrhoea from child to child, and- thus kills 5,000 to 15,000 children under one year old annually." •In New Zealand alone. 655 babies died 'from Summer Diarrhoea during the last three years. Every mother, knows how difficult, sometimes impossible, it is to keep babe's milk sweet and fresh from .one feed to another m hot, sultry days ; yet sour milk f or milk "on the turn" will cause many a baby io '; become sick prill. ' ;. . "' Give Baby Qlaxo-the germ- ';,_} free - powdered milk, which ; j comes to you m a sealed ,tih. /,- Each feed of Glaxo is freshly ;. preparedT«s-reQuirediby mixing ,'j it with .bpiliii|f w ; ater. i»C(iyen ; ; to ybur baby ip ,a sweet, .clean ".;'-' GJaxQlFeeder,; baby gets uncjon- \ taminated milk) a . free » < from fly, ipfeetipp,' "because j.flies . " , qanhot -reach it if- you replace the l.id : on ,the tin. • y .'•'. '.' ■ You 'can have no "* proof that : Glaxo • does build *!' borinie, healthy, happy babies •;• 'than the fact that it.dias been persistently used by orgarlis- ■ atiops for the .preservation of infant life,, and- by *> Children's Hospitals, for -more than seven yeass, one alone having purchased lOO.OOOIbs. V i Give your baby Glaxo, and watch liim: thrive on the nourishment and nutriment' m pure, germ-free J! Glaxo milk. w, ill' rejoice to .see your baby -i* growing stronger ami (healthier. '

By lloytii Appointment, to the. Court of Spain. (By Itoyal Apiviintinentfo the Court of Jtaly. Awarded Gold Medal International Medical . - ' Congress Exhibition, 1913.. '■Builds Bonnie Babies" 1/3, 2/6 andßl- Tins of all Chemist* aridStdres. I - • Ask your Doctor! Proprietors: Joseph Nathan A, Co., Ltd., London,- --' • and Wellington, N.Z.

the "oldXfontemptibles" — to hold up the German legions.. three years ago. - It is true that the v ,rifle "jvjent^.out" when trench war fare 'was established. The infantry , grew ,atiteustomed to depend oiv bombs and 1 to -think- more of the barrage; than the bayonet- iSfew 7 -training sclioote m the. field --have brought back the rifle and taught jrien the tactioal value of» bullet and bayonet m .kjllhig the enemy —the only thing that really matters. They have been taught how a "pill-box": spitting machine gun bullets, can . be captured by a' group of careful marksmen who kno>v;.;how to advance and where to fire. One of the jnost satisfactory phases of the infantry work recently was .the response of .jjhe. men with rifles "to the counter-attacks, and a high officer told me that whenever German battalions came close enough to fo"rm for an advance they Wje.ro heaten by the rifle fire by the -time "our bar.rage was laid on them; Mcii : did nQt wait for the artillery, but showed a jnew-found confidence, m their weapons. . ' • HOW WE LOST THE TIJRKS. ! AMERICAN aJISiOMAT'S DISLife m .Constantinople during the sum-* mer of 1915, when the Allies were hammering at the gates of Gallipoli and German. iritrigtte^overned. misrule and' outwitted Br/ti§ji .diplomacy, is described by an American (diplomat, Mr. Lewis Einstein, a former United States Minister Plenipotentiary and late special agent at the American Embassy, m. his diary. ■. . . The blunders of Great Britain m relation to Turkey, are pointed out with. con,-! vincing' logip .by this American,, whose sympathies were profoundly pro-Ally. He believes that with only a little skilful handling ' Turkey would-, have been glad to become our ally: As a Turkish, diplomat,. Djevad, said to the writer:—: ''He thought {the British made a great mistake riot-to work witK the committee —with, all: ite faults -it-Jiad energy and power, and a country ,.Jike. Turnkey was not vipe for . party -"government.'- . * . . After all/ the ; Tjurks prefer .the, English, to other foreigners. " I told him that the Young Tui^ti|e.a(,me\ifc of Greeks and Armenians iiad 'given' great offence. He asked, why this wqiild not. haye/ k bee.n over-looked} m the same, way as London over-looked Russian atrocities m Persia. ,-B^TISH ERRORS. , "Ho had" been much impressed when, after every kind of hoi Tor, Grey declared he;, was, hwithpu.t^ yifovonaition on the subjectv Djeyjul gay;e t ; i<he usual Turkish al-gUmeiit ' for ' the ' war^— th c necessity of seizing the oi)portuno moment to <fight .Russia, and also to Avipe out> the of th,e Balkan . wai 1 . 1 asked what Turkey ' would gain from it. 'Nothing, 1 he said. All we ask of Germany is tjiiit she 'sbpi^d no,t --be 'beaten.' ■'.'After the revolution they' (the E'ng- V .Ush) held Turkey iii their hands. They erred over i Adrianoplc during the" second Balkan war-; when AsquitL declared the Tui'ks would 3iot be .allowed" to" stay there, and last August, when they, seized the two Turkish Dreadnoughts and the money with them, instead .of sending the^m her© under British officers to contuol the straits j when they let .. m. the :(Soeben arid the fleet .failed to: follow and sink h<jr m; the. Pardanellcs^' when they did not deliver an ultimatum to Turkey to , dismiss < the.', GeiTnan ' officers an<J crew.' . Then * they . blundered - v when they did npt , • attack"; the Dardanelles ,w>hile the ; for,ts ,'^ wer^ still •wwrepared." ' '; : . f: VE^E^:;DREA\^^ : The . writer frequented the' club where the Germans were always to be. fecund when the situation looked f avorable for .their side, , and 'he says: — ; ': At the' <cbib i ( the • 111,6,1? who gOA'ern gamble daily":, Talaat plays poker and the; Grand billiards. Wangenheim, the .German. Amb'a,ssadoi*, played bridge with "the .Turks, but not with the Austrians. It is odd," : says the writer, ','how iitUeltho Aiistrians and Germans mix. Each , sit at separate tables, and .not ■ once ' have :-I . seen, them ; talking together. ' . . . .. . „■'.,. ' , ".Weitz (Wj&ngenhewh'ssliadow) informs eveayone that at "''the German Embassy a golden " btbok is 'kept of the records a.na deeds^, of everyone. Arid if Ger.jriany is victorious there will be many scores, to' pay.'" ■ Ho\Vs.subtle and .delicate is German, diplomacy ! this is what the author Icalis "Deutschland : über Allah." *'• Pasha is described as strangely and the writef •adds :-^ "Tbi»6e who kno^hwn hest believe he .aspii'es to a crown and aims to establish his own dynasty after- the present Sultaa has passed away, r; The. Bulgarian Minjis-.' ter) calls ]^jrn;the^'3?/pp)j,et of-. -the Prc?phgt/ Hatid^fiji '^te I ;^^^' 1 *} 8 ..' desk *t tlie ; WarlOfflce^h^nf'pU'traits of y apoleoii and Frederick; the Great. " :

'■^v Rttiatarai Nam far * _KELa%.NT'fi» BBBHNOI Ou bottU uakM a plat of flaeei family eeatl •ad «otd remedy. Cert* 1/- fetea It/-

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PBH19180105.2.68.5

Bibliographic details

Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XLV, Issue 14495, 5 January 1918, Page 9

Word Count
1,034

Page 9 Advertisements Column 5 Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XLV, Issue 14495, 5 January 1918, Page 9

Page 9 Advertisements Column 5 Poverty Bay Herald, Volume XLV, Issue 14495, 5 January 1918, Page 9