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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-11-18, Page 6INF E FORGET JERUSALEM NOW A RE OF WAR A Y SCHOOL 1TIYO LEADING GERMAN. +K Istrtfeatty iiihd Wring Psrp.trett.d by the Gera* i�lisry i. the Pk* Ast Fitadreacs, Why* .t the V.s e i *of the F of the Ikxene. tthre asteout��l * 'Mai of German slicers were frequez ly R 1.9 -page ets, found to have been left an s state imetialsel "Getim 's Die Mored bestial pollution, which can only be Levey." They are eireelaemi by the explainedt by groes drunlcenness or intrtiouseistery &ecniit ing Committee filthy 'inalicie. Whichever be the ex- mod are free to the public. In twee- piauatien, the fact remains that, nieasia1, very oceasiwaal, bookstalls, one while to use the beds and: the upbol- Inds 1.a..lets of th. Union of Demo- stery of private houses ae a latrine, is erotic Control and other such: peel -allot an atrocity, it indicates a state of: IIsi organisations, also free to the turbid. sufficiently depraved to• commit pantie. The Government psmpblet one. Many of these incidents, related ooetains additional records of German; to arae by our .owa officers from their 'trochee* in Prance extracted from own observations, are, so disgusting the report of Professor J.11 Morgan, that they • are unfit for publication. toren/14 ien.d by the Secretary of ,The point to deliberate •defilement." INTERNATIONAL LIEN. NOVEMBER 21. Loma 'VIIL -Jamb is alliwiieinerY Nineveh, Jo*b s.1 to 4, 11; G. Tee -Matt, .20: 19, ea. State for Home Affairs to env stigete the alleged breaches of the laws .uf war by German troops •in'Fence. When the time comes for peace terms, pacifists and, sentimentalists will raise size Worst.ItTot Told. r ' the heading: "Methods; of Savgcs.r the report reads:— • "The public hag been shocked tldiy their voices, pleading for the enemy,.the evidence, accepted by Lord Bryee'a ,There must-be.no leniency, --no sacci. Committee, =as- genuine,u<bich--te11s-of Etc of _: clvilizati; n___ o narlewia:,s.. ouch inuti1ationa -of women and:eldle When peace comes, peace terms must .dren as only the Kurds of Asia Minor be secured which will insure as'far ass J bad been thought _ capable, • of perpe- is humanly possible the freedom' of trating. But the Committee were fully Um world from ,tyranny and, greed 'justified in accepting "lt.-the"y could and lust .and oppression. not do otheewise••--and they,. have.. by no =mile published the whole, Path- ologists athologists can best supply- the explant- tion of these crimes. - I have been, told by such that it is not at all uncommon In ease of rape Or sexual" excess to Snd'That the crirztu,al • when- .satiated. by lust, ettenmpts to murder. or muti- late his victim, This ie presumably the explanation—if one can talk '..of explanation=-ef outrages which eek' otherwise be incred Meta The Commit- tee hint clerkly at perverted - sexual: instinct. Cases of sodomy and of the rape of :little children did uxndoubtedly ,occur on a vera large scale.. Sortie of the worst things;have never been pub- lished: Story of Wainer and Wrong. "There is ' very • strong reason to suspect that young girls were: carried off to. the tranches by^ licentious Ger- man soldiery, .arid there -abused by French 'wounded, the 'slaughter of The hordes of savages and licentious civilians, and• the destruction of town's men.: People in hiding in. the cellars Were all 'the deliberate outcome of . ofhoses havevidi heard the =voices°'of calculated policy;, women in the hands of ,German sol- One damning' brigade order reads: Biers crying' all night long until death, `'Tee date from this:. day no prisonersor stupor ended ,their agonies will be made any toner. : All the .ori goners will be executed.; The wound- id, ,whether armed or `defenceless, will be .executed. Not; a man. winbe left Alive behind. = Revolting Record.. Protection, Not Revenge. The Parliamentary, pamphlet aright -Well have been headed lest We For - et." ' Those who read it and remem- ber—they they can hatdly'`f4rg.et�-wi'll !lea that'd of: Germany a ;settlement .which ft shall 'leave her too brelcen to dare to • • disturb Europe again. They will de- mand an atonement not in the spirit of revenge, but in the spirit that the law demands the punishment of the criminal .for the protection of hu - Manicy. • It is a dreadful report, although not;. more dreadful than those of the Bryce Committee or the Belgian Committee. AS to the -outrages ppm Women by German, soldiers, "they have beee so frequent," Professor Mergan writes, "that it .ift ingiossible to escape the 'donna 'Ana indeed' entbaragea by.Gek- I have made a 'Most minute, study'of the German occUpation of This :place was..cetupied by a regi - meet of German Huseare in October ter a '• period of , eight days, During the Whole of thet period the town was ,delivered over to the excesses of a "There were at least thirty caies menteeetswittiesses mid geneeally by medical certificates of injury, It is extreMely Probable that; owing, -to, the natural reluctance of women to giVe evidence in cases- of , this kind, the aetutil mimber of outrages, largely 'exeeeda ,tncleed, the leading phy- sician of 'the town, Dr. 'Bela puts the naniber ai high ap sixty- At least -oftenees, and.".where the officers set the eiamnle, the men folloOed. :The. mothers, and theaters in the presence or the hearing of their little. thildren, ry 'I, Jonah Goes to Nineveh . (Venues 1-4),. Versa 2. Preach unto it- 1'onah w'as not a novice at preaching, lie was. chaplain to, Jeroboam the second (2 `Wage 14,. 20). S. Three days' journey --,That is twelve hours of the day, IL ':1he, Ninevitea Repent (Verses 540j S. Believed God Not only because they were religious,. but because Jo= nah mightily' stirred . them. • They proclaimed. -.a -•f =`.hia..waS" 4 , edictal, -.tan* - -sipoi taneotrs sponse to the religious fervor" created b y Jonah's preaching.' �' . 6, The -tidings',reached the. king— just as . the prochiug:.of John. .the Baptist' 'and of Jesus cams { to the ears of the Herods. " • ^Laid 'bis robe. fron4 :frim.,,:' . i. king wwfth his;robe on at a'tii,ae•'of. religious. ,upheaval is about as,,incdngruous as ?a' woman 'in ,party dress, at -a: 'revival ere sting ; ;'* The :Spirit bus,* aubduing' ff ec., and-pom>y and display .t' Who Holy Xand has become a military camp, According to Jerusalem despatches, which tell of armed airships flying over the birthplace of the Prince of Peace. of troops manoeuvring daily on the Mount of olives, and English. Preneli and Russian *convents tanaed into barracks for the Sultan's. the public aanare In Bethlehem. before the Church of the Nativity. SOLDIERS OF WAR 1 The present Emnerep seems to be i bitten by the seine craze, for when 1 at Tangier some years' ago h was -so. INIANY LANDS' impressed by .the ' 'stature ofea Moor • of colossal proportions that• he en- , . 1 gaged -him (01 -the spot for • his 1st, •somE CURIOUS ARMY CORPS IN discipline however assorted ilt with i him , on the head with the s eYmbals Servian Cavalry Reginient Qlitt•Twn which lie_ played; and the KaisersIreala in the eught coining front behind the ,„ , If tzing that .PhYsicalivheeictd !ill: slihaiepe. Mee on •Eech ' ' its drawbacks, after all, l' German trenches pear. Itichebourg ,_ ..,,e , " . , . the Icing of -Sian' has .-Et•very' -Am-. PAVoue... when WO advanced in the . It is abroa'd ;4; .,;;';,.e -And the most Posing bodyguatd et 400 hignsborn morning end drOve the Gernians out, ramentic and Picturesque' of •Military teaks,. the pick `of his kingdom. 'Es - girl u ground 'pegged out', in the form of 'a CrUeifix. I need not go ,on with this chapter of horrors. To the end oa time it will be remembered, and from ,'One on our officers, a eulialthrti in the sappers, heard A wonien's shrieks a Was. nd, lying naked on the • cokes; but there are quasi -military organizatione in Greet Britain which are not ieeluded in the Armi List, ana whicb, although the man in the street is to -day far more learned in •r 'ant to military matters than he plans 13 Tlanders, in the valleys.'of ,was a few weeks ago, are probably the Vos es and on the rolling fields of 'quite unknown to many •people, says the Ma e, the coral, traditions of nien London •Answera, wilt. perpetuate this story of infamY ' Our Bodyguard of Gentlemen -at - and wrong. Arms, the "Yemnan ,Warders of the, - ' ' Pride of Insolence. Tower," end the Iting's• Indian Bodye . e guard are 'fairly familiar to Louden ers; but how many have heard of the write as a jurist; I have here made no ruling Sovereign, whenever he visit's counts of an indictment. The Ger- enans have .. breken all laws, Balmoral.? . It. is a COrps entirely human Apart from all military conventions and divine, and not even the ancieet freemasonry ef arMs, whose honor- yet •the inembers aee strictly disciP- able traditioes are 'almost' as one as Many Brttieh ,firma have ferMed war itself, has restrained ehent in . their hrutal afialicentious fury. It is special Territorial companies or semi - military tedies; but one London.man- THOUGHTS :FOICT E DAY:. Life, with all its elds of joy and woe, ts just our Chance of the 'Prize of learning lave—how love Miele' be, hath been, indeed; ana Always remember that if the oppor- tunity for -great deeds never comes to you the opPortunitY for &deg geed deeds is renevied for day -by day. The thieg for Us to live for .is the gooae . A great work of literatere is more lasting than the mountains because it is imbued with mind. 'The mountains will cramble to dust, aut tagreat 'week of literatute will last -wane the world eridures.--LIL McKellar!. sentially a peace organizatio,n, „one If broad daelight. phouid never be would imagine. Yours on this side of the :grave He curious corps of Amazons' is ?eat will holdeycniate feet in the ,,twiligbt ..last, with all the more love, and all and chant their weird. war-song--to-f the-ntere speea •well• He will .fola stimulate the Aghtera you to His bosoin; who 'is .11imself the Teachers Get Pensions. „...14;11. 6twuesene.7erce4iseeaeuel*de°ensam*wu; may reckon the period of suitt service Mornson 'as equivalent to service in a 'Public Life is ini:de up, not of great secri- elementaty schoel ter pension purl: fices or duties, but of little thing% In Poses. • ' ' :obligations, Oen habitually; are what "' Cats are said to wash right over vein the heart and' secure comfort.— their ears when rain is apprpaching.. Bir Humphrey Davx. • 7. Neither man nor beast—Showing the intensity eif the revival. Even the brute creation was to be affected. Compare Rem, ft; 22. 10. God repented of the , etil—A desPise. He cannot visit anger on the rePentant (see 'Psa, 18); .NEW LIQUOR RULES. • Early' Closing and Restrictions Felt The restrictions 'regarding the„eale ofeclistelled liquore in Greater' Berlin, which • werea proposed in Augusta by governing authorities,' bave gone into effect. They are so drastic that land- lords and distillers are in desnair, and the general public feels that its indul- drinks la tO' be very largely curtailed.. The rules now laid down forbid the sale of 'distilled licidot except between anti having wen= waitressee and barmaide, the -sale in "automatic" reStairants and the sale to drunken persons. The liquor may be sold Only for cash aed must be drunk on the new rules does not reveal ho\s, drastic they are.. Relatively few, persons, be- cause of the late working andeatieg hours *in Berlin, have either deeire opportdnity to indelge an spirituous iquors until after the new' dosing hour, Secirei, Teputable 'restaurants and, cafes new hive female- employees hi place of the-Winters-who-haVe- ore these • cafes are barred from making their forinal profitable sales. The provision -that eheliquer irrupt be drunk on the premises deals a blciw to bottle trade that heretofore has as- ially,in the less pretentious cafes and aloonse Virtually :the only provision • see tvveeit the People and their rulers: an ufacturing firm hes a conaplete Corps,' tr- abundanCe of diaries uf sokliete. in the a o which there is Me objection is, diet overning sales to drunken_persons. rient the n restriction of distilled quors included the ptovision that one should be sold after 7 pan., and The distillers and --liquor dealer:4 reathed easier when they heard that e authorities did not favor anything drastic, but all theirshopes yanish- d, when the -authorities finally did ranks shows is an Army, officer or ex -soldier and a nbt the pride of puie and igh'.endea- vole bat the pride of inse enee which The GrapPlitig kin:mg-no pity and. feels no love: Long This , eecalls an evee more durionS • canker • \Which was eating into the Ger:- District Grappling Corpe, and it pee - Mae charaetere Pedants indictrinated eesses a special appliance for recover - 'it; 'generals, inStilled it; the Empefor big the bodies of drowned .persone. peeacaea it. The whole people were The caPtain is ready to. turn his coma th , taught; that it was a normal .state of .out by daY or night , duty,. and Ranted sin Counles. civilization, that lust of tongeest and claims a certain allowapee fbr sue-. so ,,"in One. ease- -the facts' of Whibh nog ince of race were he •mos a young' Sea . fruit the Gernian peoPre have to.iit twe men on One 'horde. The satiStt anY court of law, th ca girt of nineteen waS violated by one been fed for generation until they. idea hardly sfrikes one as militarY• officer while the other hela her ewe Ard rotten to the coee."—The Toronto ake public their new regulationa. It fes that „do not specialize in beer— have to dote at 9 instead of at 11 or. 1 o'clock, and that many of them will haVe to go out of 'business. they caniuit. understand the new or - ;der nor the reasons for it. For mUntlis new . it has been- forbidden , to serve soidiers or sailors with dietilled li- quors, and they say thet therefore Thee- maintain that there is a great sufficiency of liquor for armY, ineda cinal and hospital needs now on hand, eete eo- that there is no necessity -tor ex - Ara -ineasuree tce conserve -the supply 4n thia-dramatie' way., Also, they as- sert with the utmost positiveness that Berlin suffers. not at all from cie un- dlilgenee en' liquor la would rarefies' correction through: restrie-, tiOn.of the supply- • WHAT YOUR WATCH WANTS.- Shoula Wind It In the Morning, Not Yet, some twentrfive years ago, the ther by the throat and Pointed a re- Dade News. - • 1 Sereians when battling with . the velvet, aftee wbich , the ' tWo . officers ! , . Tival of_ a regiment of the letter with Bulgarians, were astonished at the ar- se--aerENERAL AND MEN SPLENDID« ter the outrage thet dragged the girli . . .,.. ... two men on each animal. a ,, , ° outside,. and. asking ner if •ehe -1.1.1etv sia A... ef; n . Sinclair Pays tribute_ to, But they.might have beet. even ' of any other . young -girls fajetipes ' • . more aetonished IrtheY hid met a that they wanted to clo'teetheri. what ' • Lettere from Captain .Sir A. IL M. Island of Madagascar... These siddiers they had done :toter.- ' - - ' Sinclaira Rata; of,Jilliter,2:Statland„ fga About theintnili4ry :operations on . 7-401110 often. Add scolateig Vsto-siti: who ha.s been cm active _service sin'ce 1 oxen. 7 . , • • p e .t e putt/reek ef, the ware and is at 1, The enimals ere very 'lama, creat- bougo &neer prefene6 of, seeking. bite': prettent en_the staff • with_ the Cane,-....Lu_rgs..; Mietee e-.4-teif and -Ile -kW; and. inaariablit deacon- Of -Lonclon, hoe', 'rector--.- 'of we--forine&-daring the operationa in threatened With a loided revelveriaifeeSirmanbury, Sussei, pay o yiT4tin Egypt some, yeets ego. • , they. resisted. The husband oe father tribute to the Canadian troeps and ; Aiming komeetic foreign regiments, . of the WoMen- 'gad ,girls were uallidle to 'General •Alderson, Sip Archibald norie is inorelairiouS thee the Frenth a rn en ' the renthes. tan, corps in existence, containing en/Inane to (termini Ceders, however any day Tiow. The !nen (Canadians, '.inals, degenerate doctors, ' and Pro- !: iniftener,,IS always punished i.,vit';-4 in- ete.), were spleedid, keen, intelligent, fessors, and adventureint ruffians of l stint death. In several. &Ines latle educated; tough end disciplined with every riation inuivithc- sun. The regie . • • children heard the cries and struggles th4,....distiplfue ..-Nybio arises, ,.frQuir_ inents:_iii,e.,_ fimily dil•teipline4 iier are . . - .--of tlieneeriotheriniheAdjoieleg yobiii; -retpe4 and devotion. to their officers empIoyedern eeery deetierate end, haz- . to width she hid been tarried by a and: /AU:. from- niere obedience to the ardous einulition Adventutes ere te, - .1 brutal-exereiee of forces Ne. attelitt4. Ir.fnieif 'regniagon's. i or Afie;driii-"Ser.! be foiied 44.aloee ICy this' Legion. -Mt, , •,- was- snude to keep .discipline, Mut th-li'. gear3, or fear of the coneequeeees perigee; Gne would not. inivip:e fnio's , treelia, %teat'. epire such discipliee be must be got ploy' truculent tribeernen—"ehowki- often drunk aed aa,reye inooleat, But", aid of,.fratii,Which dentoeratic sygern dere"' they are ealled—to preteet the eignificautlY erica:0,1M holds' of, die- „,:carne ivirch deeds. as stemmed the ltritish troops at adalet Against thd dating, and Merciless Pathan ,r;f1:t. ' 4tt Will, and*haidly a $ing,le. tra-ggferi ileii. gneeal is splendid . . . and " thieves who' infest those parts. , WRS' left bollindt. ' - .. ' /* the' Men keenly appreciate. his' fie- ' Giants ' Under Anne. • egjerieerate, Deeleeteeta . e quoit visits to the treeehes. 'One 1 . Turtling to -Germany, we fled ' ilia- '', ' thing We All ftel Obant_Ont general, tinetive regiments there also. Take property, and after.' reteunting the d n &V Seine tinter:4*mA dlsobedietee o„4" lar.. -t week, and expect to go in agein many -rubled aristocrate, alien mini- ss eg inent of Guards, de,stenetron aria pillage wilt& every- zo 00 '91" eta,. oat Wil for instance. Every, member is a --the proteeeer teneladeeee.".1 phould -- b(17 elsr% 15-1 in the Sl.ade by • the feinotte giant lihe to draw tire. ,atteetlen ot the, Yik reader ta eolne tinolcesant fecfnIthfek `." ortivot berry, methods. A.11 tenritrieis "wfre scoured for tne them,/ s hateful light on the teniper„ ' • of °ell-sae:I °there mid 146114 'trill *VC " tete t ves, cey, swede% Poland, and even Ire- thiug is ;twig cleatly iridet1;shed than, from nnP1)116nV and, eud one T' roleve giant la said • • \ and Afternoon Wear. A young girl cannot ,have too many dresaes for the rough terVide:clemand- simpleasturdy tied good400king, the drebe shown herewith, Ladles' Hone journal Patterta No. 9124, filla these regnireinents 'admirably, dt the :same time making a dress suitable ,tor wateltmeher, ,„"a great'. deal depends. --Aptiit-liotif..Yoit treat a -wattle -at to - "'Tor instanetailt ways wind—the of plaits front and back below a deep yoke, full-length sleeVeS, turned beck to torin .cuffe, Medici or Military og- ler, revere and 'belt. 'Can be made with or witheut poekets. Sizes 14 to 20, 10 requiring 0% ' yards ef Vaittelt materiah Patterns, 15 cents eeeh, tali be per- 'ehazed. at yOur local Ladies' Home Jettreal dealer, ot 'from The Milne Pattern Company, las George &red, • Watch -in the Morning) and not at •wo• rks best, and can thuti stand the Constant MoVements of its wearer during the day. Another good tip is to ' Wind watch slowly, &irefully • "Daring the night yoll ehonid keep *watch in much •the same positicin as it hai occupied during, the day, A *at& Worn in the pocket during the day should vet be laid ['Own fiat at tight. the same -way, a Watc'h that should riot test On the slab Of washstaed at night, " Itaile and eleiin mit the, peeket ate' which you carry your Avateh, or dust eertein to iind its way inter the fo 'at right,' hut good luck FALR NHATN A . BTl4I4l IRA►GKFN8RN A TACTICIAN* I!lh1, They Are Very Different as Boldiero' - an d Also as Mea Tw. Gen. ends' Co ntrautcd. Faxlkenhaynn to plan and Mackeneen to do. The sentence gives the Gor4 man, conception of these soldiers > when - the . "drive'" of •the Russian* was Iii full swing.- .-It. affords. an insight tette ...-__ the characters of the men besides- their characters as soldiers, for as next they present eontrusts indeed,' Falkenhayn is a strategist ,and Mao-, kensen a tactician: 'Eric von FalltenJ hayn, . chief of the general stem tri Berlin, is a .conspicuous figure at t te` court of ,Williaiin ll,, a atatesrrian awi' well as a soldier, enjoying the conil denee,_of' both ,the,• Emperor_.atitl Grown Prince, August von,:Maeltone• seri le noted tas a cavalry officer Mut a sppecialist, -.like Hindenburg, in ma noeuvres. Horses .are the hobby o Von ' Mackepsen,'who "always.- coxa• plains: that :the Germane -think ted much,. of big guns...' Mackensen le ;nut of the goda of the Hussars of ` the D.eatletellead,. 'the .'regiment t ,. F Which ;;the Crown Prince was connect+ ed.forr so /Mar- a tinme' , , Falkenliayn has 'travelledmo}d - widelSas M44411401 bee 'the build •.of :. the Saxon • , Falkenhayn is more yard able in hie moods. He traces hie one cestry quite far back to Bohemian magnates and: a branch of his family' still flourishes in Austria.. Macken -1 sen is very much the elder of the two('.: having long passed his sixtieth year.. Falitenhayn-is If -little past .50, anaae the, younge"st- Minister of War -.Qere Many ever had, • Falkenhayn Unbending., That stamp of firmness, and dem- sion Which the military life of Berlin', imparts to -the character of A man discerned by a writer in the Parid Gindois hi every pose arid gesture of , Von Valkenhayn. The intimacy be- tweeil hiMself and the Emperor 4. int . Means- iMplies that the chief of th'e general staff is a piippet. has -not the disposition that accommedatee ita fielf to another's. Nor eould he con- ceaI his' coneempt for unsound' dia.' tegy, though it woe the' Raiser's.' There may be truth in aseeport that he and the Emperor have 'quarreled/ we read*. but it by no means fellow .that they have %permanently parte company: The explosive nature 0 William II. is consistent with the' soldier, end white he' has. had sharp! does not part with then' for any mere"e• a4ertion of their opinions and plans.' the court of .Berlin. Re is absolutelt without.the 'gift of 'dfssumulation. pkees as apt for what. they can afia. nesse." He has the mind of the com- manoeuires him .into imOossible and -- if. it Were a game of chess. He nag .the quiet 'firmness in giiing 'orders-, the unruffled pose at . heedgearters, and tile coeIness that belong to that type of military genius. - eve He hAs given little evidence, at least, to the writers in the French • press,- Of can play' a campaign from a broad strategical . standpoint like ,Falkerthayn. In ere - catkin, hoWever, he is unsurpasse& Nor ie he coMmitted to Any term of -e 'tactics, like Itindehburg of The Itlackensen is a cavalry ' officer; in- deed, but the French do 'not discern in. him tire dash 'of the gait -airman. He is too 'quiet for theta Ile 'leeks .: the Pressianism of Falkenhayn, ing been brought up on the estate of , his father, who was a territorial aria. c tocrat in Saxony and an atithority on and married into -the PrUsaian junker Mass. 'His heme is Usually in , Dan- zig. When the Cnown prince was heir to the throne was treated withal! theedeference dueeto hie 'high Tank but he fouud "house arreae a real ide SHOT WOMAN IN' SWOON'. How 'German Officer ...Petaled. OW:, Tne Lenaon Mail's Amsterdam tor - respondent sends the following de- tails of the. eeecutioir Of 1Vliss Edith , charged with aiding Itelgiari men to tegland by hiding then' in her house and helping to ' emuggle tnem over the froetier after she• had, given -then! Money end , addicists in ' The execution occurrad tt walled -garden in Brussela .The firieg-partY ef six inett atid an officer was drawn ; up aWait Miss Cave), whom other Acatt Ord was -deadly P-a-iild,Jnifiteri- ped bravely forWard until wiping the swoon, 30 yards from the well where she wee to have' been tshet. . The officer comintoding the sol- diers advanced, took a large revolver froM his -belt, Meted steadily . and then shot the Won= through the . h'ead as she lay quietly on the ground: IViOthet•' "YoUr papa, dear is rt tea weepier. sernples the • different hieds of tea." • rgrow up, Mame am geinb to be a cendy sem. nie to hiln to supply her with. plenty . of cense.