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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1928-11-29, Page 7Canada ''aid years on a 'vi luutaiy 'basis, but the, voluntary spirit gradually worked, it, • '_ _ salt` oqt-und comrpulgor)r servlco was, '"rib►ute to 60?000Introduced in August, 1937, on the • War Dead passing pf the Military Service. Act, • By 'this time the relafprcetnedt situa- tion tied become Very serious,,• - .Tenth Armistice, Anniversary inUnder n er the alio li f an y thirteen regi. Stirs Memories of'Her Of- far , to Send an Expedition numerous oJIMA of ther formationtogether e•t ad with to Defend' the Empire, and raised;; an ;the introduction of corp cif,, the: Large. Arrny'• That pulsory service the policy • was adopt- ed of .passing recruits to denote , the Went Overseas.. - � .proceae of torming new. unite.. to send A Seth* hushed for.. too, minutes!.Ito: England' and be broken up there This• Is the tribute Canada paid to being abandoned', Altogether, under her 60.,000 war dead •on the tenth elk.• both systems, 6'19',636 men were re-. nyersary of Armistice: Day, crusted in, the'' Canadian• Expedition - The occasion has lost nothing with .,ary Force, the. passing "-of the:, years, and the r The official figures• on casualties Is •silence will : •be observed 'b1! not only one of which Canada, • is proud. The. hos 'who knew thegreat war •in all list Yollows.: „_, t e Killed, (including missing, now its grim reality but •by that younger on • which has grown, pp since i •, Presumed dead) .,. , , 39,488, eederati, Died..,ot wounds 12,260, and 'to w!ltom, war .is only a faint echo • • 1-2 •rapidly be.owliig;-refuter,: 'Died, 1 Wot}nded ,and injured +. }.76,841' The heroes''are not forgotten,: Tt ho `Prisoners• of war. : • -. � •3,870 * ,will forget that dramatic day in 1914 •• 4'3,430 • when Sir Robert Borden °offered, to Enemy prisoners captured :provide an expeditionary force. for the. Gulls captured' : f ' 664 defense of • the" empire? This offer Trench' mortars captured • 471 Machine guns captured ... '. 3,154 was accepted by ,the British Govern - . tent. • In response to calls for volun- Enlisted in • Canadian Expedi. ' • - •leers, some 40,000 men assembled in•a I d itionary Force a.6 19,436 few weeks at `Valcart er,where land NumbeoveseasfomCanad,.424,589 and other bad• been Purchased, cleared, drained Sin.,' France • and otherwise' re tired Por theassem- theatres=of the'war 344;596 the The.. incl al b attics in which r P _ . f --troops:: niza i n o the n . r a to 0 In d bl a g• g lC Part were a af ol- i n rocs 'too nada t a - A P ;The mobilization scheme :Prepared In .1911' and •revised later was ignoredp lows:' In 1015, Ypres, .'Festubert, 1. !` Mount Sorrel: in. 1916, Somme, in- but gradually the •troops were formed Into unitsPi . ror. to sailing ler Eng eluding `Thiepval, _ Anere,: •Heights and land. 'I'hIs : contingent c OII Andre; to .I9.1Z„- Arras, including •• , •original ” listed of one''division.of infantry and .Vimy, Ridge, ;Arleux and the Scarper •in, 1 .Passchendaele • Cambrai (pay- pne "brigade of mounted troops, • ,, airy only)./ Saint -Quentin (caval of c mmt#nication. 'gather :With lines o . • . ' • ' the Sea -•- incess Petri only), Amiens, tn.�i91$. r*� units,, The lmmgrtal Pr,. . 'was• 'ane Drocourt-Queant• line, the battles ,of: cia s .Canadian Lig. .Infantry n l n a a "1 di C r :a lin in u ' nbu e Inde g the e.. ou h ut g - thr o i ed recru t Independent. ant mitt, g i 1 �.a1en- . mbrai ,1918. or and Ca Idu ,Nord • Ganad'a. , uiied into: • ciennes', 'Sambre 'and the:' pursuit' to • Surplustroops Were orga. • ns. , an. ''add#tional—Fourth-brigade mad iKo:. tember, 19.23 a. brigade,: of alsoacccimnan ed the torce..•The con= ,� .lo •Sep , . , g HEAVY WQRK OF :H;UN:TINiR AT,THE �. ., _ •.- �, ... �„ .�.nT•-+.r.. .,w • 1 PORTAGE, , .,On: tho, way over :Cranberry Carry,.with the guide carrying the m e•4i N.S.,wherethe heart of the cos untin •count is located. t. b g. country Canoe : and leading -'.the way, near New League Shop Talk"England Rears Loss.. Committees e Newf oundl'd to U.S. five at Lea " . gue- Headquarters -=Many .-' Problems' .Being XnvestiL•' gated by Experts- at. neva Although: ' hes Assembly of the g t , League of Nations, which brings" so was the Newfoundland Parliamentary many statosmen, journalists and oh -Election off Last week. Swept out, of* servers 'from the four ,corners of the. power was Ccnservative Prime •Mm: earth to Geneva, concluded its sittings, icier Frederick, Alderdice; and .sw'ept`` some time ago, the Swiss city still in was IiberaI 'Sir Richard A,nderson hums wit haetivity, writes a corres-' Squires ' ,The "Liberality" ' Of ' Sir pondent of "Interdependence,' month-`i;ichard is such that lus•: principal iy review ,ot the League of Nations. henchman; . Sir :William Ford Caaker, Society - o • Canada, publlehed• •at •has said; • Ottawa • Commissions ' committees,) "The true' de iny.of ewfo'undland, sub -committee r, fisheries, her' forests, and her ' e and various bodies are , •wrth. he constantly in session delving into vara mineral wealth lies in the, djrection of . ours abstruse international 'problems, the United States... , Thehrniinion` whoe4e very character are -generally -80 of Newfoundland ,is',comrng around'to • ' . complex and`• techn cal 'that .,they 1 the;,idea of. choosing to' become one of, baffle:. the common lay observer. But` -,f the States .• At present'if a refer not a little: that Is ro tic and inter euduni ••were taken on thin subject it' °. . esting is, buried beneath. the ,mass ;of• would carry by a 70 per cent...vote of ::"shop -talk" thtt, . goes on. • the whole electorate, not' because New• The difficulty ,of collecting tares folirdiand has forgotten the old flag;• from the' natives In Western Samoa but because the tendency of: the ,times' and the work, of the 'secret "Citizen Is to consider dollars and cents first. Comm1ttee" busy broadcasting faire ; , ..Ten per cent.' of .our population and . fantastic news,' were described; are .continually 'going to: and., coming' for instance, to thee• Mandates Com- from, the United States. " . • Grafto , 'mission, `to, whom report the' various The avowed ',policy of: Sir Richard, a ions under. whose control •Irarious'' n Squires is to .bring to'•Newfonndland England's fear that the recent'Newt foundland election may mean its an- nexation by tl:e United States is sum marized' as 'follows in the , current issue. •of "Time";— , '' A sufficient eause�• (or 'Royal qualr$ a' Disaste h hi sink Laidto Dela the Y two minutes after, he jumped from r: ve to • • the laws of the .life. they _ wilhha deck, and there. was a general feeling t For that. lying won't A�d • ^enter .F example„ n • number; 'of passengers and crew had to Ring theinselves ' into ' the• . water. One man told of seeing the ship s n d cation „, .. v •ar aa' "e rod villzed ,are aa an ci h4Y d , un S • oihna`an . both Canadian �nd •U d ardship was also given to this.'bodY. the , illimitable , . Labrador :forests, What is the true purpose,of educe- •ways Were .' functioning, the port . of ma upas becks' O'stenaibly Sir: Rich 8a , tion?' To '.make • plain to the young :been. piece : A report upoir •his ,stew 'cents," by • fostering • exploitation of by Mr. Werth, Administrator of the• whence comes nicest: of the pulpwoai. territory . of Southwest •Africa. Rail- for Canadian and II.S, 'we organo,' •fy that others may not have jumped i ry time and were carr a ow • • - will get punished, that if they are :-.: a Iain•... malned With Ship ;captain. • . ; world will.. be p p cowards,: th w hole in C d e -., f he against t t l k#n o f • de; thieving still:.less; that idleness i d d n 'with the How To Keep' Many Pouts Boiling • _ O.t those. who, rut get tnto',the .v titer hive � will a � t he �'h t f Y t L wa • c Wlth ahe Ac or an a g• and ruin the ac u� s n Of, Sea •ship. the Majority of those eventually .''their own "way they must, fght;tor it: the crew' .—Arthur .Hugh Clough. ; , n '�- . -•`.. steamer t esti is'•':rezrsueil were members of •. ., .. i\e . om?, . tie to sank When. only 'about::80 'of its 32S the ,,greatest • to s ; being ahiong the ' passengers an.'dcrea had •been launch- f .h,:ve some explanation in the:theory, ed, .after two boa.,Ioads•of aomen''and children, had been hurled• into the sea, that the crew Were :men. accustomed • • t e• ea i f • ` • to 'hard labor more .able'to`witlistand •..,_ __ ttie eliip's' aidez-_axi t_ina fist the'hardslii .of the long hours in the • fest ,they he dragged clown n:itlt the wet e , and not ,to any., genera, a -Tiff foundering hulk. •- :•. ,on 4.he,part 'of the cr'ea.,•to take. posi., Survivors ',brought 'here ' declared :(•tions: :Of com;iaratire, safety' in the that the traditions of the sea had been • boats; •rightfull; , belonging by the law. scrupuinnil . ob;er bd •as to e.ii.ng, of th.e sea•'to the passepgers.' first • thought to v, omen. and .children; en;; • -:-I L.44 • ani they told an app'ea'ling story of , Knowled•ge is Power • inadequate preparation for disaster. ,: '"ye shall know' the truth,, and ;the ' ' The first tw:o boats were lilted With +'riith: she'll make you frog Does ,„. women; and children—there :Were :N i women' and ,13,,"children • on board thin not • suggests_ the. reason why„ and the :' crew started oto ' lower away.. •• some are unhappy and 'why all are ••: not equally happy' Many have ,been Tlien .'the, sinking ship lurched, 'tyle detfnquent in developing. 'their, minds: :beats, crashed • against. its side and ' aiid •'hearts ''.to • • entertain 'happiness: women and children were, tumbled; They, have had.no time, and aenthu. into the' waves. Reports indicate that' ria y ng nis a and noor disc u alt the' children ' perished and but 10 of the `'r d y ; ering truth. Vessels inac be equally,: • .1. but the large h d 1 h p•. enger' This was:.thought to TYPICAL AMP KITCHEN OF THE DEER .HUNTER: C 'Stove consists 'ot' a few rocks piled onthe ground to form a' fireplac and cooking utensils consist of •tin pails :and a' frying pan. What you ea in the 'woods Must be cooked In' one of the . pails. 0 t �, of 33.000, tidal, strength, oto n ea ithat g 33,000, tig t,w began to embark at• Quebec on Sept. 22.• The thirty -ode transports gather- ` ed at, Gaspe Bay; whence'they • sailed” , on Oct. 3„ -,with a naval escort' 'pro- *Mded by the Admiralty • ••' ; The "ontin ent remained 'encampped, Th c g , • at,Salisbury' Plain during the winter • 'of -191415 which proved to' be' an ea= *ere ro, ii e details s e and some P artillery vided from England for :,the North ' between Arch- angel divided n -el •:,and 'Murmansk: ,In January,. ag 1918," a force ".organized' ,.in Canada was. sent to`Siberia, consisting,ottwo_ battalions of infantry, a battery of in' all 4,186 men:. artillery and details,. , Font hospital units served in, the _ •Fou p .. ""Mediterranean :Expeditionary' Force.at • ' ceptionally wet one. 'The First„Cana- _ the• : Dardanelles • (Lemnos) and Sa- lonika; Division :proceeded to France m and a bridging company served, February,,' 1915,. followed in May 'and June, by the. Cavalry Brigade (dig, mounted) and the 'Motor Macliline. Gun Brigade. ',4'1% , Meantime other • units were being ecruited in Canada and passed on to ngland : The Second • • Caandian' Di to Fraiiee in September ' 1915, and Defence Agalnt ' : ticked Cana- iii i�alestine: Forty-one p , dian volunteers. took part in the Bag- dad Mission,, known as• the Dunster- force, and practically each„, man was detailed for an isolated, mission' in the .vicinity- of the' Caspi'an Sea.': vision was' organized and' liroceeded Failure together With the First j Division .There is 'no end :to ;the sufficiency formed the `Canadian, , Corps. The bt 'character, it''can afford ,to wait; Third Canadian ,Division was orgd•n• it can do. Without what- is called suer lzed iii France>,in December.: • In Aug- cess; it cannot but succeed. To a ust, ,1916, .the .Fourth Division,.'which well -principled man, existence is' vie- • bad been organized; in England, join- tory. He ' defends • hintselfl against, ed 'the 'Canadian Corps, and for the , failure in his main design byimaking rest of the War the corps:was main.' every • inch ” of the road to it• right. twined on a four -division (iasis. There • is no, trifle and no' obscurity in' The Fifth Canadian Division which Other Canadian Forces to him; he feels the 'immensity of the chain whose.lost Ituk he holds ' his'' hand,. and,..is led by 'it, • Raving • was,formed in' England in the early nothing, 'this splrtt .;liatli all, It, part of 191?, did not 'proceed .to Fiancip° makes no stipulations for .earthly and eventually, in February, 1'118;wvas felicity =does not :ask. ,in the abso- .. broken up 'and, its persbnnei sed as hu lateness of -its, trust« even for the as-. e 'women .were. areae : of s more than tb:e Began to List'Saturday small: Tea, knowledge is';power; . but , On tlib • whole, the - 125:survivor •' knowledge' alone • is not ' happiness: arriving "here, cin the Ame icon Ship• .The man ,*bo spends all bis time, 'in. Per "and, the 23• on the' Berlin' -agreed •,acquiring knowledge finds';•himself .'et Chat' :in intention the.•, officers, and, last,exhausted and' standing'still,'With crew of. the *estris had been beyond the' beigpta' of happiness;' yet; far criticism; but;. many of them blamed:'away. There, Is pleasure, .often .acute' the' captain, w`ho went down with his, pleasure, 'in acquiring wisdom.: There "ship; for indecision: Which they:saw as, 'is no. happiness in "knowledge; with • one principal:.. reason for': the large out action: hnowledge . without ac,- • number ,of fatalities'believed' to :total tion is like stein' 'generated, 'but :car- 108., ried • off ••on:' the 'bosom .of the ' wincL The .ship began to list on•:Saturday unharnessed and uncpntroiled. It.. is night, :they said.' and. its condltion -:like the 'blossom ,in the springtime, grew ' snore. serious steadily through: for 'the moment beautiful,' but disap out Sunday, and "vett no distress call pointing wheii• , .'no • fruit appears:- was sent:'untii the• middle of Monday 'Daniel. 'Poling niornin 'and as a•.'result no^rescue ; ;limiting, ships s were. on: ;the seen.• until many. • P hours atter the -ship sank at 1.30• that ' U ton Park: .. . Ali `r desperate ' hazards'• : courage . ado .. P . . 'afternoon.: ',create When . 'r`dth atwe !_ rso ns' `dee are Ma ,p e » --Walvis-By—ha@grown-and prospered,; and conditions• have greatly .improved, he said.. ' horities FIo in that the customs `rut P g . r i 't rid. .may'. be ot • the -.:countries ,o Le.-.'rr�o Y encouraged to' call a :spade. a spade metaphorically: -4n all languages, a l`special; sub comml,ttee , of exeperts ids • "i u by 2r, w: •:'fax: g, cm, xaH ... •,..•.w.w.An•'isri�A�..a '•.SOCCER' IN ENGLAND, A HEAD -`GOAL /•: Htifton, west Ham's goalie,. cpuldn't stop Dean scoring :Hazards Hoz the captain did'decide to•, abandon f• As. he plays frankly who , has .least 1 S call,. e state' . h first SO ;ship, shortly atter the . . r • :; in dis- • nee of mind, -and: cou age , the•tackl'e of the �iiteboats was found; Prase .. s .;� tre s r armies . t 0 rocu re h" P • r a ire 'more' then, success. —Dryden. ;to be, faulty.. :It took hours, to 'lower ones' with the'women and them, the child en , ,were` •crashed,. and ,'another F. was stove in and'put: away, `with a gaping: hole in. its side. a'• reinforcements, with the exception, of Btir'anco _of cont npeC lite —R. • W°: . the `"dirltire al"artilletr3� 'Which W izt, merlon:• �:Ita•-f E to France.. intact. u;w_ 14iany units..whwlt �ereryfirers in_'• '.:;toss,taf l icv ti�€dtflll i5hni ts s. -•not ti.04r ;;11a kills•A.40 Yr. depleted and their personnel trap§-, ;worry. "117ork. is, health': yetican terra .to .:reserve fornmations for use hilraiv hftt tittit"e upon,a mna.t that. h;e as reinforcements.' Other new organ:all •heli �tbrrir re is t ,upthe'{ izations came into. beiiii during: th^ tilade. -'lt is pat time ret on st''uj it ttm2ti+'' course of the war, 'such as time Cana" desroys the •machinery,' but the trial, than MachineGun ;Corps, the Cana -,iron.-- henry 'Ward -1;600 e r. • Lddian..Forestry ..:corps,.xttho.. ,Corps .ot. 'Canadian Railway Troops, etc., and •'.much' expansion and reorganization, took place in the Canadian artillery anti engineers: Y • ` 4.itecritttltig'`tn Canada was for three. Wessel , Sank e n l� . ' Suddenly Only two boats: aucceasfull Y launched, although .others. broke • loose as the 'ship sank and were caught, by i i survivors The greater g ce e f blessings—the Priideas- i . t • or Everton, a aid ' i -Perfectly -wllling' that the Ba-°' l binder foreMa 'Should be.. transferred' • to the Dominion of` Canada—for a' std. ficlentiy'atiff price., But the exceeding. ly harmonious reletlons :.existing hi, and'the Internatinal'Paper; tvaieen ,Co; , with 'headquarters" in Manhattans a '''Sir i card thinks tR'ht B b suggest. .t stiffer price can. be get;'irom Wall. St, The • blatant'`nansense about merging 'Newfoundland. •.with the 3J,;S, is• prob. '' ablyra.•mnere advance guard,ef pu?ilfe. eitrfoundlandera'. e* ltg.-�'- prepare N`. - f U.S.' 'dollar `penetration. • The : recent Pets it cal > pent-rs--tta- questionably attributable to, the de.. .pressed Condition of Nevif'oundland fisheries • and other industries, The electorate,' disgruntled, ''(has •clearly. been swept' to. the euppgt'L• of • Sin Richard :Squires by his eiev« `tilollara and,; cents" , campaign, • have been sitting .In Geneva for some Books - task is to study thequos= time: Their ' Books are ,friends, and r;what friends ttiey�ar. e . Their' love is deep, ' and un - 'their .p changing; ', . , if h it alienc e exhaust— ible; their ge'ntleness' , perenhial, their forbearance' unbounded;'.. and their i . s ym h r ath : without selfishness.=- . P, y . Langford, A er lugs Of immuniiy; safeguard, liberty rig. no,, and integritF, ahicb. we a jY, To be in anger, is ipii,ietf. deserve the thankfulness' of a,whole But Who is: the .*man who, lif -J Collier. • angry? -Sh'akes s mm n e. Thankful Hew .A. " .i not o nl the rt s l $e Y :A thankful heart, , ° eatest .v#rtne, but the parent of all 6r the other 'yirtnes,--•Cicero, is not pears; ecallin Happy Das` in the Wilds' g PPY ; Days .-:. s. „ PLAYING HbLJSEWIPE" IN THE Nd:RTH 'WOCIi)3 .': .. • ..t_, f it hi the hunting dig• rtobse ,itttliters• ntnst bait ,nintting• water for washing: the dishes, and tlieie in p anti' d t g ' o ul , u os1`ttotu that htiriters don't Bother wtt]i washing dishes; trtcta, Tltts• liicti.re dlspro}es,,the p r at• s pp tion of Mie unification of .customs` no- '•menctature, and brin about 'a simpli g fled •sy stem Of tariffterms that will facilitate commercial 'intercqur9e be= tween nations.. • • ' 'The' •Committee of the Health Sec - tion forms a clearing -house .for infor- "oration regarding every disease, plague Devout Report Recent :Miracles in Many CoYntree Superantuial• Manifestation*. Proclaimed in ::France;, ... Germany and Mexico •. or sickness that Is' affiliating 'any por- tion of the earth...' .An epidemic of d. eng ue—also• known as aedes 'aegypti austnmany 'deaths in =that ig' c g. 'Greece is ' at , present under invsetiga- Two other "coramit.tees dealing With' tnvol ed and highly technical matters are those investigatinginternational economic'. ,relationships and double and' nd • fl§cal evasion. Daily Life Some people think the, age of.,mira cle 'is, past, but :there • are plenty of . My others,;: says'. "The . Pathfinder," .in alt, • `' pa'rta•of the' world ,who are proclaim . ing' "miracles" every little while,. Mexico;, with • her religions troubles, seem to be a leader in the.matter,, On a report. ,that.' .the• country's-, patron' saint,: the Virgin .of Guadalupe,: had: appeared to sorne••Indian' Workers in field. near the town .'of )4texicalcinge touch crowds surged over the'; place, de,', stveytng cibps and:Property, that fedi eral•troops had'to be called to restrain, : - ti'em,, Another report that the -patron:• saint had appeared on the ten' of hill in the town of Guadalupe Hidalgo• .. and 'hadleft her • image en a . great reek -caused hundreds"of Raman cert.*, , : e' . ' • ,flowers and,c candles visit th io ng place. e ,'.Blasting was going o np u-. t that didnot, deter. 'them. They had R • lie forcibly reriotedh2i9re the' e0h4 u blown" wet!P. recently hue bad' ' nc too, ;more y= ` France, , her supe rnatural visitations, Neat the f ,Renirnmont• a ` easatig little. town, a ,i • P ..: • .declared that the Virgin Mary .:: girl on the ed of a c appeared: to'her , bye. lace and .told her to retnri► to the p every eimisin a min everyacie. ,his . and pray;3• "reelle returned g .tothe• spot day after day and prayed•and state$ that. the vision was regularly repeat: ed, The spot was raped' off and the • girl 'was followed by, crowds hoping to see. the' miracle; It was in a' very,situ,, ilar mariner that Lourdes, world, famous as a healing 'place, gat its start in the last century, • Germany, ten, last ,year' had 'hes superpattirai manifestation in the Per, soli of •:a girl,with sti iitata-bleeding spots on the body corresponding to•the wounds o*] the body of Christ. Crowds flocked `from „far 'sand near to leo .her:, Supernatural revelation,. of courser ari by' no means limited to Christians, Over in .8. tropical Hawaiian island a certain large stone becanie.accredite4 With the power to produce miraculous -cures.' Many. natives,, Japanese and Chna;''visifed it, knelt and''. prayed 'beflire it andmads ot`ferings to it. ' It" bade • fair- to. rival the _black . shine a :'rhe daffy life into,whtch'people are bona;• and into • Which they are ab- sorbed before they dare aware, forms chains which only:one in a' hundred has Moral strength; 'enough' 10 despise. and to break wheel the right time comes—when an Inward . •'necessity for independent action arises; which ie' superior to all outward conven- tfonaettes,—Mrs. Gaskell. (Ruth.) Thankf ulneaa " There it this -difference", between- a thankful and aa,_unthankful mdn tae Cmre -1s always -pleased• in -the --good he has• done, and • the other only in what' ti 'ilds dLcived 'b'tit--ttiere -are some incn who are never thankful lir • lvbbility . Aiythltig hi any' wise 'beauti'' noble, •owes the beauty to itself; with Itself alta ,bean' •,endo; prt. forms no part of it... .. true beau.. needs ' no . addition, 'any more than law, . or truth, or ktndnese, or self- respect.—Marcus elfresect.—Marcus Aurelius, 01;1,11, fhl �DIItent :ancLUisContent •"' Ciitltetttnt tit :furnishes 'eansticnt joy:: •Much-, coc'etatttlbws Gonstant.:grietfi_'pP _._r the contented, et verty is jaY,.. • • he_.rifsrnntente f.,.ev..ti •wealt'h. it. :•i, Sflttg Sunt Paott Neetit.• + article' Ilya, thatwo- growing .bigger: Do. Wife -Well,. at any • •nroving more and 911 Meed geh^ oee. ' good tiitl4'' for ' , fi't's,