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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1915-06-10, Page 4g4t t .C� atY xng4� l�� J01111 JoxNT, Proprietor A, 0,, SduITrl, ltiianeging Biitor TFf,URSUAY, JUNE 10tb, 1015 "Set us hear the word "Dago" no more, The Buaaians can stand a great deal of pushing and pounding and yet. Dome back smiling. Winston Churchill may have made mistakes, but he left the Admiralty with a lot to his credit. "Made -in -Germany" was once a trade -mark to e o n j n r e with. "Made -in -Germany" is to -day and may be for generations to come a trade -mark despised and shunned. The Balkans are virtually certain to enter the war. Surrounded as they are with warring peoples, it would be a miracle if they , long continued to escape the war fever. Ontario having lost a Sir John from Government House is requit- ed with another. Lieut. -Governor Hendrie is honored with knight- hood and through him the recogni- tion extends to the province. J. C. Eaton is also made a knight. The Shadow of War The Washington Times of recent date has the following paragraph relating to the present state of affairs between the United States and Germany owing to Germany sinking the Luisitania:--The pos- s ibility of the president being forc- ed to call an extra session of Con- grecs to consider the situation in which neutral person and property find themselves in the present war to the death, between Germany and the Allies is recognized. "Un- doubtedlythe fear of officials here is that the attack on the Luisitania is by no means the end of compli- cations, but that similar attacks are ahead. The shadow of war with Germany looms on the hori- zon." An Historic Event Monday, June 6th was the twenty-fourth anniversary of that great historic event,_..the demise of Right Hon. Sir. John A. Mac- Donald—which came as a public calamity, overpowering in its sud- denness. There was no celebra- tions this year owing to the great stress caused by the present war, but a beautiful floral tribute in the shape of a "wheel of state" was placed on his monument in Toron- to. The attached card testifies to the honor in which the memory of the statesman is held and reads a., follows: "In Remembrance—Jane 6th, 1891 -1915 --From the Centre and South Toronto Conservative Club and the Women's Conservative Club --A tribute to the Memoryof Sir John A. Macdonald, Empire Builder, whose administrative ability, patriotism and self-sacri- fice bas meant so much to Can- ada's political and commercial freedom as an integral part of the British Empire." Coalition Government. Since the recent formation of a coalition government in Great Britain, Liberals in Canada are asking the question, "Why not here?" Premier Norris, the head of the new Government of Manitoba, has already expressed the opinion that if Sir Robert Borden would extend his hand to Sir Wilfrid Laurier that gentleman would grasp it. Wouldn't he, though? Fortunately for everybody, there is not the slightest danger of any approach to a coalition government in Canada for two reasons: Pint that the Borden Govern. merit is satisfactory to all people, has carried on the war in a man- ner satisfactory to all people, and can be safely trusted to continue the work in an equally efficient and ististactory manner, until the end Of the war. 18econd, the Liberal leaders are not the sort of men who could be trusted with a share in the man- agement of the affairs of Canada. The Canadian adia n people threw the Liberals out of office. Even if Bremier Borden had the wish to take these politicians into his conneils, he would not do it with- out offending the Canadian people. There is nes parallel between the sittlatiott in Great Britain and the situation in Canada Ire Canada ;there is a government pledged to carry on tete war to a sticeessfnl lone, and capable of making the pg good,pledge l0 so far as Canadian f"1a adlalti participation ca t.. ._ ntlo 1. In Great; Beltaiu there is not au Apposition eomp'ised of men whose aim and policy for years has been to weaken. the defences of the ,Empire to the extent that non- participation by.. -.Canada could weaken them, I-ialdan,e And Laurier. (London !free Preps) Had Sir Wilfrid Laurier been a member of the British Govern- ment, he would, as The` To- ronto News points cut, have suffered the fate of Lord Haldane, the ex -British lord chancellor and former minister of war in the As- quith Government. Upon the in- formation of the coalition Govern- ment Lord Haldane went out of office. This he did in response to public demand, The demand was based upon the spoken sympathy and trust which he had manifested in Germany. He once said that Ms "spiritual soul wee in Ger- many." He aduaired and lauded the Germain Emperor, and stood in the way of preparation upon the part of England to meet the day when Germany should launch her desperate attempt to master the world and to place ebery nation in virtual subjugation to Berlin. Sir Wilfrid' Laurier `believed in Germany and the German Emper- or to'the last. The declaration of war last August was peculiarly a thunderbolt to him. In the Cana- dian House of Commons, when the subject of the German emergency was before Parliament, early in 1913, sir Wilfrid said:- ' "The German Emperor is undoubtedly one of the great men of the present age, By intellect, by character, by moral fibre, he has shown him- self wonderfully endowed. In the first years of his reign some of his utterances sent a shiver through those who had the peace of the world at heart. Many believed that be was per- haps hankering for the glamor of military glory. But as he advanced in years, and as crisis after crisis came, his potent influence was always directed toward peace. And the day may come, when, like his illustrious uncle, our late Ming, he may be called the peacemaker." Lord Haldane probably did no have, and certainly never gave expression to a higher eulogy of the German monster who to -day ruthlessly sends his engines of death against women and little children. As The News well says, the group of politicians, the mem- bers of the Commons, the Senators and the newspapers who followed the lead of Sir Wilfrid Laurier in Canada gave their full support to the pacifists of Great Britain, the Lord Holdanes, who, had they succeeded, would have had a navy perhaps totally unequal to the task of holding the motherland safe against Germany. Ice view of these facts, and the punishment that has come to Lord Haldane because of his great error of judgment, it is folly to speak of a coalition Gov- ernment for Canada that would include the leader of the Opposi- tion. Their own grievous error in judgment robs them of public con- fidence, as has been shown in the retirement of Lord Haldane from the British Government. Belgrave Miss Clara Mann will enter a hospi- tal in llauniturr on the first of July where she intends training for a nurse. Mr. C. B. Wilkinson attended his cousins funeral in Toronto recently His mother accompanied him and will remain in the city for time to- visi• with 'relatives. Mrs. Wilkinson, al- though in her 87th year is quite smart and bright. Mr. David Scott has purchased a new piano from D. Bell of Wiugham. Mr. Garret Wray ie home from the West on a visit to his ruother who ha,. been for some time past Suffering from the effects of tt fall. Itev. G. M. Duncan occupied the pulpit in Knox Church on Sunday and presented the needs of ]most College from a patriotic standpoint, The funeral of the late James Neth- ery was held from the residence of his daughter Mrs, Robt. Owens to Bel - grave cemetery on Saturday afternoon and as " largely y ar attended, An Obit- uary will be found on page 1. asiemseriossimeimeirma rehe liimpexnei. r<. The common pimpernel, "11oor man's weather glass," has the die* advantage of being a native plant nd has been almost comCX pletely - Celled from Canadian Sower gardens in favor of exotica which ate rarer, but lack much of being As. pretty. h e pimpernel is a charming little flotaer which opens about 8 in the morning ailtl cloasea to itt the after- noon, but hat t e' remarkable -Peelle liaritjr of itldica ng Coining shower b.... hu s tt a . ti tal �' if its ii i p • c iNi! Dtike liimitri Ins Won Distinction On the Battlefield :.******************* =ENT despatches from the scent of war operations in Poland have made mention of Grand Duke Dimitri of Russia, who was attached to the army which invested Przemysi and compelled the capitulation Of that fortified city. Grand Duke Dimitri Is a cousin of the Czar, be- ing a eon of Grand Duke Paul, brother of the late Czar Alexander GRAND DUKE DIMITRI, (II. He was born near Moscow on Sept. (3, 1891, his mother dying six lays later, Like all of the Muscovite grand .: ekes he was educated for a military %areer, and after graduating from the war college he entered the .avalry. After serving as a subor- dinate for a time he was appointed tide -de -camp to the adjutant of the •,loventli regiment of .Grenadier cards and later was made captain the Second regiment of the Fusi- -srs of the Imperial Guard, Since :tilities began he has been on the 'it:g line and recently was decor- : as knight of 'the order of Sera- • in recognition of meritorious • in the field. ire s1Y Tc'iii,�S'. College Ctrdu ;te '_Describes Canditlons In Northern Feisi;t. A letter has been received by Prof, II. Abbot, of the University of oronto, from Rev. E. G. Eshoo, e alive Persian, who is a graduate of :nos College, Toronto, and who has een acting as missionary to his own people. Mr. Eshoo reached Chris- tiania on March 9. His voyage was apparently without incident, except that the ship was held by a British cruiser for seven hour's and two pas- sengers were taken off. On March 14 Mr, Eshoo reached Petrograd, He speaks in the kindest way of the Russians and their helpfulness to hint, but regrets that all his cor- respondence, even down to news- paper clippings, some of which he had treasured for many years, had been taken from hint. This, o1 course, was largely because they were written in Persian or English, and the Russian officials could not read them, They have, however, Promised to send thein on to him i1 they contain no objectionable mat- ter. Mr. Eshoo writes from Tiflis, Northern Persia, on March 23. The substance of his letter is as follows: On the way from Petrograd to Tiflis he met many refugees in moat destitute circumstances, without clothing or food, many of them without boots. After reaching Tiflis and meeting acquaintances, he got definite reports of his people in Uremia. The Russians hold as fax south as Tabriz and Salamas. Uru• mia, Mr. Eshoo's home, is still in the hands of the Turks and Kurds, and it is' in this city and district that the people have suffered most. There are about 25,000 refugees in Tiflis and vicinity, and many more are scattered through Russia. The American missionary in Urumia, Rev. Dr. Shedd, reports that about 120 Christian villages near that city are burned to the ground, and sever. al thousand people have been massa- ered in their houses. The Christian men of every village were captured And then taken to the cemetery where they were tied in groups o1 five, then some of them were shot, some of them had their throats cut, and others suffered tortures of var- sous kinds. Of the women, the old- er women are frequently killed, the younger women and girls are taken as slaves, while even little children are most shamefully treated. As the people ate so terribly crowded in the mission compound&, hundreds of them have already died from sickness. Mr. Eshoo reports that through siCkness, hanging and other causes, from 46 to 60 die every day. Exactly the sane report has reached him with regard to some 3,000 refugees with the Cath- olic mission. The most noted pas- tors and teachers among these have already been hanged or_ shot. An atttempt was being made when Mr. Eshoo wrote, to get the •State Db• partnient of the American Govern• went to authorize the American consul at Tabriz to go to Urumia, as it was believed he could stop the massacre. I1 this could not be done it was believed that all the men would be killed and all the women taken into slavery. dr. Eshoo be - o Would notrequire a Heves that it w u x q very large It,uselan army from Tab• HI to overcome the Turkish army in Urumia, and the distance between the two places is only sheet fifty miles. It is quite evident from Mr. Eshoo's letter that rho Persians are well pleased with the conduct Of the Itttssians, the Only regret hieing that they are not in stronger force. Mr. Eshoo expects to follow the Russian army as soon as they enter tlrunita, but when that movement Will take place is not known. Mr, Eshoo learned, just 'Wren he was writing his letter, from a man who had fed front the village in which his mother ttnd sister lived,that t hid mother had been killed and his sister taken into slavery. T1U WI G A M ADV A NCE RECRUITING Y "AOS" HEDLEX Tela HAS HAiS HANDLED A MARVELLIUS CAMT'AIiN. Expert Landon Advertisement Writer Was Called In by the War Office at sI, Time 'When Conscription Seemed Inevitable and Result Was a Rush to the Colors --Kept His Hand on the British Pulse, It pays to advertise. Ask Lord Kitchener, Ask Winston Churchill, Ask the the British Gov- ernment. Not many weeks ago Kitchener was said to be a conscriptionist. lIo had the mart's size job on his hands of getting together an array ten times larger than Britain 'tad ever hoped or planned to have. It looked Or him and many another Britisher as if the Kitchener Army, beyond a certain point, would have to made up of drafted xnen, But all this time an influence was at work that Kitchener dice not know much about. Qf war and armies and the task of ruling colonies no man knows more than Kitchener, but what Kitchener knew about adver- tising— newspaper advertising or any other kind—was not very much. There was one man in England who knew as much about advertising as Kitchener did about armies, and while Kitchener and' his army coun- cil were worrying about conscription, this man was patiently, scientifically and hopefully advertising. And this man's advertising has probably sav- ed Great Britain from conscription. No Englishmen are to be forced into the army; no men are to be dragged, unwilling, from their fami- lies. Britain will go through the war with the proud boast that every pee et its army of millions is a will- ing volunteer. That is the outlook to -day. Kitchener is no longer a conscriptionist. The man responsible is Hedley Le Bas. He's a psychologist of the masses. He has made a fortune in tI ptlblishipg concern by thio talent, and when this war started he knew that Englishmen wanted to fight for their country. His duty was to tell them' they did. The War Qface knew Le Bas. Ono day it War Qfilce otIicial said to him en a golf links; "Say, you've got a big business, with many men working for you. What would' you do if you wanted more men? How would you get them?" "Easy," said Le Bas. "I'd adver- tise for them." ;Well, the army needs thousands' of inert, Do you suppose you could get them by. advertising?" "Without a doubt." Whereupon the War Office gave Le Bas a sum of money and told him to go ahead. The danger was that his first mes- sage would be too weak. He work- ed one whole night, writing down short phrases. By morning he had only twenty. Then he spent the rest of the twenty-four hours picking out the phrases that were not good enough and throwing them away. Finally there was only one passage left. It read: Your king and your country need you. The newspapers blazed forth that advertisement that night. They also called attention to the fact that this phrase was to appear ore posters and billboards everywhere. The public read the newspapers and watched for the posters. The seven words be- came a watch cry. And then Le Bas set out on a ter- rific advertising campaign. He fol- lowed English public opinion. He kept his nerves raw to English feel- ing. Lord Roberts died at the front. "Lord Roberts did his duty. Will you do YOURS?" was thundered in the newspapers and then from the billboards. When some British ships had been sunk Le Bas knew there would be a flutter of worry on the British mind, and so be put out this message through the press: Britain's strong arms and YOURS will carry us through. Then came a boastful period in English thought. Le Bas was equal to it. This was Le Bas's reply: We shall win, but YOU roust help. And then there was a display ad. showing a soldier silhouetted on a bill, holding his rifle. It said: Are you content for hint to fight for you? Why don't YOU do YOUR bit? The army council and Kitchener can almost put their fingers on the day and hours when the torrent broke. The battery of advertising had done its work. Recruits began to come in faster than they could 'be equipped. The tide has been flowing In ever since. Le Bas's job is •not done yet. Incl• dentally, he works for nothing. Canada's Bacon Exports. Bacon to the value of $1,500,000 was exported from Canada to Britain during the month of Mare]. This was six times as large as for the cor- responding period in 1914. For the first three months of 1915, exports amounted in value to $4,260,000, compared with $1,000,000 for the first three months of 1914. For the fiscal year, ending March 31, 1915, the total exports were worth $10,- 260,000 compared with 54,500,000 in 1913-14. For the month, for the quarter and for the year these figures show a remarkable increase.. Second to these, it is the most substantial from Canada, In this considerable pros- perity to the packers and farmers of this country is involved. There is ne wonder that prices of hogs have been niaintatned in Canadian Mar- kets, and that underlying conditions aro wear° for the holders and feed- ers of swine, A Huge Vault. A remarkable vault has bean com- pleted in a bank 111 Toronto, It con- sists of a hollow Cubo made of hard- ened 'steel and cement, treasuring 30 feet in each direction, This vault has two sections, the upper tectlon being for the use of the public as a safety deposit vault, and the lower for the storage of the bank's cur- rency and securities. A floor of solid steel separates the two sec- tions. The vault is guarded by a circular steel door 10 feet in dlantoter, 3 1=2 fee; thick, arid welghfng forty -ono tons, which is eponod and clo:el by electric motors. When 'all erecaii. tlonary devices sire sot, three differ- ent alarms are sounded by the reighteet tampering with the doors. MORRIS k � TOWNSHIP IN 'U ti Uc; NIL. Minutes of Council meeting, Morris, 3, 1915 The members of the Council and the Rewire were pi'erent,. The Drainage petitions were recall, ed. Oye fronr.l+'red Brewer and other', one from 0. B. Forest and others and one frons A, McNeil and others, The Connell accepted eaeb petition and copies of each were sent Engineer Roger. The Blyth Creek Extension Drain Report as ammended by the Engineer was provisionally adopted. The McCall Extension Drain report was read and provi.ionally adopted. At the Court of Revision on the As- sesi neat Roll, 2 appeals were consider, ed, one from Elijah Higgins fox a low, er asse3sment and from J. J, Sellers, also for a lower assessment. In the latter gaee the assessment was reduced to $5700.00. Mr. Higgins' appeal will be considered at the adjourned meet. ing at 2 p,m,, June 14th in.t, The By. Laws op the Bosnian and Turvey Drains were finally adopted, On com- plaint from Nelson Thornton the Connell passed a motion instructing the clerk to notify Joseph McKinney to remove the atones put by him on Sideroad 40 41, Con. 1. The contract for the construction of the Turvey Drain went to Joseph Greenway at 81279.50. The following accounts were paid: F. R. Smith, Disinfectant $3 00; Duff & Stewart, plank, spikes and work, $505; Municipal World supplies, 83.92; Pedlar People, culvert centre sideroad black drain $93 00; Ed. Henderson, putting in culvert $8 00; Temporary bridge .$4.00; A. Kelly, lamb killed by dogs $3 50; Wen. Smith, repairing cul- vert and plank $2 50; 3, 3. McCaughey pulling willows $0.00; J. Oasemore. winter road $7,50; W. A. Stevenson, black drain contract $1040.00; W, H. Kerr, extra printing $6,25; By-laws Turvey drain $15.00; By-laws Bosman drain $18 00; Beach Alcock balance and extras, McCaughey drain $87.80; A. MacEwen's Bylaws and Clerks fees, Turvey drain $45 00; Bylaws and Clerk's fees, Bosman drain $54.00; Ex- press on role, 25 cts; Warwick Camp- bell, filling on road $1.00; Malcom Black, frame and glass for map $2.75; Thos, Miller, 2 Township maps $5.00; John Potter, aseistance (and to avoid 'maintenance)Oement tileBowev drain. The Council will meet as a Court of Revision on the assessment roll also to open tenders for construction of Bos- man drain on June:14:h. a 12 c'clock. A. MaeEwan, Clerk, SALT MARSH HAY, Nova Scotia Is Famous For Grasses Grown on Dyke Lands. Nova Scotia is noted for the Large and practically inexhaustible dyked marsh lands around the Bay of Fundy, which have been from time to time reclaimed from the sea. When the French came to Nova Scotia early in the seventeenth cen- tury they found large areas of land along the banks of the streams em- ptying into the Bay of Fundy that were covered with water at every tide. These they began to reclaim by building dykes and this work was continued by their English succes- sors. The soil is composed of inorganic red mud brought in by strong tidal currents, of alluvial sediment con sisting of the drainage of the up. lands, and of putrescent vegetable matter and other particles deposited by the rivers flowing into the Bay. The action of currents and the un- ceasing motion of the tides agitate and disturb this mass and thus dif- fuse it equally on all sides, but at the mouths of the rivers it accumu- lates to a great thickness, The fresh waters there meet with the resist- ance of the ocean and are, in a great measure, arrested in their progress. During the temporary stagnation thus created, the insoluble matter In the waters subsides rapidly and forms a rich and deep bed. The water of the bay near these rivers is not only discolored, but actually turbid with the great quantity of matter held in solution. The marsh soils vary considerably In texture, from the light loams around Truro, Colchester county to the heavy clays in the neighborhood of Grand Pre, Kings county, There are two• classes of marsh lands—red marsh and blue marsh. The red marsh is by far the most ex- tensive and by all odds the best, and, when properly under -drained- (the most important feature of marsh farming), has produced enormous crops without any added fertilizer for periods of over a century. The blue marsh or Iow marsh usually oc- cur in a belt along the inner margin next the upland where the surface is lower than the outer edge, or in smaller areas scattered over the gen- eral marsh. The blue marsh con- tains large quantities of partly de- composed vegetable matter, the soil particles are very fine, giving the soil a smooth cheesy sort of texture. Owing to the presence of decaying vegetation, the blue marsh gives off a fetid sulphurous odor. The so-call- ed broad teat hay, which is used ex- tensively for cattle feeding in cer- tain portions of Nova Scotia, is grown upon this marsh. In some cases, when under -drained and lim- ed, this soil has been used for pro- ducing finer grasses, but only to a limited exteht. The tracts of red matsh are equal, 1f not superior, in fettility to the celebrated Scotch Carstrs of Gowrie, Falkirk and Sterling; and to the water -formed lands in England, which border on the many rivers emptying themselves into the Hum- ber. 'There are fifty thousand steres of this description in Noya Scotia, at Windsor, Newport, ralmputh, Horton, CornwaIils, Annapolls,Cobe- Len- danderry, and at the Head of quid Bay, all of which have beep gained from the sea and are preserve ed from it now by regular lines pr embankment. In its natural elate the red marsh land produces a -strong coarse aqua- tic grass; but when well drained, it grows magnificent crops of hay and grain, The well cultivated portiOne yield the usual upland rngllsls hay grasses, which become very luxuri• ant, but not rank, producing from two to feur tons of the best of hat to the acre. In ken well -drained places coarser grasses grew, but these too are of good value. ItOot rro ps i11 growin this soil but not to the best advantage. -4. I. C. in 1~'c,mily Herald and Week Star. r ♦.a 1r r r ► rr,ir �i ► .,�rA►r�i 14.4 w2 i*';'«!tAi+„i:�►:i:r�iw,TVr1:w::1r w, ';Z4 A�e.i0 ,t* i i. s• 4 rlt ret r v er -Ale er Ale AAS i,! /4r AI' Ari r,► fee . 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