HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1919-08-07, Page 7L -
THE VALOR OF
THE TOMM1ES
Glowing Tribute by French
Leader When lionored
by City of London.
DOMINIONS, TOO
Share in Eulogy, for Fight-
ing Aid. and War
Supplies.
11/014•1,10.••••=•••••••••••••
London Cable—(Reuter Despatch.)
a•-talarsilial Foch wag given a most en-
'thwilastic welcome by the city of Lon -
den to -clay, when., accompanied by
Gen. WeYgend and other distinguished
French generals, he drove in the state
earriage from the Carton Hotel to the
Oulisthall to receive the honorary free -
410M of the eity.
• The streets were gaily eeeorated
and packee with eneerine croWds,
,and, the playing of the alarseillaise
Nita heard when he entered the Guild-
. hall, where a large and distinguished
etimpany, including Prince Arthur of
thinnatight, the French Ambassader,
Fleld Marshal Haig, Sir Henry Wil -
.son, Sir Ian Hamilton, A.clrairal Ham-
' ilton, Admiral Womyes, Right Hon,
• Winston Churchill, Right Hon. Meeere.
-Long and Barnes., and other membere
of the Government were assembled.
The address conferring the free-
dtim Of -.the city described Geztetal
.1 bah as an heroic figure, a model loa,
' futtire generations of soldiers, and
• vele 'teibute to Ms 'brilliant itart in the
war, lfis stern sense of duty, patriot -
Om and supreme knowledge of the
seieno of war, It declared that afi
had earaed the gratitude of millions
• and the honor and glory ot un-
-Paralleled success, and asked him t0
accept a copy of the resolution. The
'.(onanaott Council voted bim a wordof
• lion& as a token of profound admiad-
tiaan•ear his brilliant services to France
aid the world. •
. • Acknowledging the freedom of the
pity and the sword of honor, Marsha'
roclaaspeakipg in -French, paid a great_
tritifite, to the valor of the British sol -
;Aida, the skill of the British generale.'
esteeeitilly General Haig, and aliao the
evacaderful work of the industrial
scialsses eof Britain in providing tell
allies with abundant guns and mania
* tions: Dealing with the great Ger-
'raen Offensive of 1918. he remarked
abet tae British armies, theugh very
exhausted, fought, as brilliant a rear-
guard 'action as bad ever been fought.,
.(Clieers.) He paid eloquent tribute
,tta ' the _magnificent qualities of the.
rifitiah and Dominions' armies in the
gfeat counter-attacks alter August,
'1.918, and said that their dash and
-bravery were ansurpassable. They:
• nevera stopped smashing the Germen
war Machine, and would have goee
through to the Meuse or the Rhiiie
but for the armietice. thoud cheers.)
. Marsaal Foch's tributes to the Brit -
'isle and Dominions' war efforts were
" coedited •in the most glowing terms,
1For example, referring to the early
'days of the- war, he said:
"At 'Ypres in 191.4 did •I not see the
•Caret Baitish corps resist vietorlously
ithe enemy's violent, attacks, detapite
• ithe cruellest of losses? On tae
Somme in 1916 your armies gave
pivot of • their incomparable ardor, ahd
eh's gallatttry was shared in by the
(Dominions' contingents. As for ma-
terial, guns, ammunition, gas, aia-
Plaaree, tanks, of what magnificent
voluate prodection.did your country
not show itself capable?"
•After describing how France, bleed -
4n g sorely and tired, struggled with
• simtlar energy, he said, "After that
wile could dm* the outcome of the
war? Once again the ,justice his-
-tory was to give its ever unquestion-
eble Judgment, namely, that natl.:Me
;ire (dearly invincible when, having
sufficiently advanced on the road to
!civilization, they consecrate without
eegerve and all their energies in the
struggle for liberty against peoples
eighting for domination."
,
111 wor „cgs_
•
OF GERMANY
.Gompers Censures Them for
Not Protesting Against
• Outrages,
• LAME EXCUSES
Offered by Them at Great
Amsterdam Labor Con-
ference.
• An. Amsterdam Special Cable —
The preliminaay gathering to -day of
the ehternational Trades 'Union Con-
gress doyelopett eeries of accusatieens
Belglan, American, English and
French delegates against the Gentian
. workers tor 'theft- conduct durhig the
war. This led tq eharp incriminettiOns
by bone ;delete
• To-dmes -Meeting had the Ptielsoee
• a Clearing (up the affairs of lite old
• trades tution Internationale and mak-
• ing preparatioes for a new orgauita-
time Before- the diecussieti opened
. the Belgians declared that they had
a mandate to state eshe grievances of
leetglitn workera. M. Mertens then
delivered his indictment, declaring
that the German trades tutionists had
• hot protersted againat their military
authorities deporting Ilelgiane.
, Curl Budolph Legiert, president of
.•the German Federation of Trades
Unions, itt reple defended the entire
1 of the German tradee tinionitte,
he ettid "aad been absolutely
leered, declared their position pre -
meted, their protteting to the Govelet-
et,. Moreover, Logien added that
all the time trete under the nu -
on that thiry ware fighting Is
give wee.
did iteutt vta thought wee right
to kelp the Belgian wet -kers," Legion
,
eeattettied. "blamed cf proteetiella lealb
licly, we tried to retain the influence
et the Goeernment and effect anar
ethane,"
The ',Impreselon eeemed to prevai
among the aelegatee that Lealen's
statement constitetea halting apt-
aga.
SINKING OF LUSITANIA..
Samuel Gompers, president ot the
A, • F. Of La followea Logien. lie
remlled that Logien, in the course Of
a, tapeecla had defended the sinaleg Of
the Lusitania. Mr. Gampers told the
Germs -as that theY OWed an apology
only to Belgium, but tae whole inter.
nationel orgenization of workera,
The American labor leader brought
tO light a lommunication he sent tO
Legieu, before Antefica entered . the
war, in which he endeavorea to per-
suade the Germans to protest agatuat
the Isusitanta incident. This was con-
tained in a letter ,aarried by Count
Von Bernstorfa German Ambassador
to the United latates, when Bernstorff
was recalled, Legion deniee havieg
reeeived the letter.
At tbe end of the long eitting,
Herr Sasanbach, German Soeialist,
handed in a resonation containing 0,
statement la explanation of the Ger-
Man Workers' attitude during and
since the war, This was handed over
to a comruittee for a report, evIdelt
Will be heard Monday, whera a vote on
it will be taken. Tlae gist ot the
Sassanbach resolution follows:
of the independent Socialists.
The German 'workers always hael
been opponents of war and arma-
ments, and never gave aasent to the
Government's Imperialism. . tbe
who as far as possible, during the war
fought against it; the attitude of tae
German workers at the nuthreak and
during the war was dictated by the po-
sition et Germany. It was their con-
viction that Germany was fighting a
defensive war, which was the opinion
of all Germans, including the leaders
The Germaa trades unions always
recognized that Germany acted wrong-
ly in Belgium and always condemned
atrocities committed; the German od-
cupation of Belgium and the deporta-
•tIon of Belgians was not done with
,the consent of the German 'workers,,
resolution continued, at the beginniag'
aof the war, all had been known that
mow was known, if the workers' hail
not been misled and betrayed by the
Governraent, the attitude of the work-
ers and their leaders would have been '
• different.
If the German labor movement bad.
ospected that Germany was the at-.
aaessor it would, witheat doubt, have
taied by every tueans to prevent the
war, The German. workers recognize
ehat the workers et other countries
cannot appreciate or understand the-
,Aeveral actions of the German Workers,.
staring the war, but these actions were"'
forced on them by the severe struegle
Waged by the German nation,
aMany things were done, the reselue
tion said, under the fulI convictioa
4that right was en Germany's side, taat
'would never have been done in the'
light 'of the truth now being brought
home. The German workers at tha
beginning of the war tried to do their
duty without wronging the laboring'
classes of other countries and without'
tfiaeinpling itt their OVA national oblige;
CANOCK [HERS'
RECORO FLIGHT
Rade an Urgent London -to -
Cairo Trip.
•
Perilous Voyage With Dis-
tinguished Passengers.
. .
.,.' Ottawa, Report—How two Canadian
airmen broke the flying record from Lon-.
don to Cairo is related In an interesting
record of the trip which Lieut. Harry
rates of the Royal .Mr Force has for-
warded front Egypt to his parents in Ot-
tawa.
Lieut. Yates and Lieut. James *Vance,',
of Toronto, undertook the trip for the
I3ritish GOvernment, on a few hoUrs n0-
• tice.
Their mission was one of great urgenaY
' by reason of disturbed conditions..in the
near east, and tittle was of utmost im-
portance—honce the 'use of the airplane.
They left London on the evening of June
21st, and reached Cairo shortly after dark
on .the.etening ,of the 25th, having -brokett
the, is,Xisting -London-Cairo record by '14114
hours, - They spent two of the film days
• ojt ,,forced landing, due to petrol. trouble
so the -thelt cletual flying 011ie far the
th .ge , thousand .trilIcs WAS Just • three
att s.•rl'hey averaged. from I'm? anti -ono
ha f th three hours sleep per night, Ana,
on hat•meal a day„ and Were very
greatly fatigued at the'oniurney's encl.
After their arrival and safe delivery of
their Iwo distinguished passengers, they
were tendered a dinnee by Brigadier -
General Salmon°, and complimated by
Gen. Allenby.
Liout, Yates writes: "We both thought
it Was over stiveral tittles, Two-thirds of
• the rollte is over country which is MOMS.
1
BEM CASE
BEFORE COUNCIL
'Commission of Fourteen to
Rear It lViondAY.
Asks Guarantees Against
Future Invasion,
Paris Cable --Next 1.111ondaY BO-
OM will present Iter ease bolero the
Ccannassion of Fourteen, which is dis-
cussing the question of the reviiiion
of the treaty of 1839, under whieh her
neutrality was guaranteed by Great
Britain, Austria, France, Prussia and
Russia,
The commission is composed. of two
delegates from each of the five great
powers, and, two each front Belgium
and Holland. P. Segers, Minister of
State, and M. Orts, Minister Plenipo•
tentiary, will put forth the claims of
atelgaim.
• Belgium, in the statement that is to
be submitted, does not seek any ter-
ritorial expansion, but asks to be
plaaed in a position that, should there
be a repetition of the wanton aggres-
sion of 1014, she will be able to defend
herself on the Meuse and Scheldt
Rivers, instead -of on tho Yser.
The proposal of Belgium does not
insist upon the relinquishment of the
Limbourg key to Liege and the left
bank of the Scheidt Itey to Antwerp,
but ask a that guarantees be given in
the event of another Invasion from the
north, that Limbourg will be properly
defended, thus protecting Liege end
permitting the Belgianactrinies to con-
ceetrate behind the Meuse.
Concerning the Scheldt, Belgium de-
sires free passage on the rIver in
till4e3 of peace or war (the last fotir
words are underlined in the Belgiaa
atatementa Belgium, the docitatent
continues, must receive gttarantees•
that her defence of Antwerp and. the
.Scheldt will not be made Impossible
by.the fact that she doee not own the
left bank of the lower river.
•
IN CONSPIRACY
Crown's Contention in 'Peg:
Strike Leaders' Case
... •
When Defence Counsel Ob-
jects to Evidence.
Winnipeg 'Despatch —At the pre
liminary trial of the eight -strike
leaders to -day, the Crown alleged
that the One Big Uniou, to which a
large faction of Winnipeg *labor. is
now committed, le part of the eedi-
tious conspiracy charged against the
accused, and parts of epeeehee made
by W. A. Pritchard. ehaitman of the
so-called "Big Five" of the 0. B. U.,
and one of the defendants, were read.
The constitution of the One Big
Union, seized in a raid, was put on
exhibit.
When A. J. Andreete, KO., Crown
prosecutor, examined Sergeant R.
Waugh, of the R.N.W.M.V., secret
eervice, Calgary, who raided the 'Cal-
gary office of. Edward Brown, 0.11 U.
• delegate, defence ouneel objected,
asking if the One Big Tinton ere
on trial. Crown •Counsel contended
,that such was the ea,se, and Magis-
trate R. M. Noble • said:. "a thought
,we had threshed this out a few days
ago; some of the accused were .at
the Calgary convention and were
members of the 0.B.11."
Owing to some demist as to his
authority during the vacation sea-
son in hearing the application for
a writ of habeas corpus aud a writ
of certiorari on Inhale of Cecair
Schoppelrei, weese deportation waa
ordered July la by the Immigration
Board, Chief ,Juattice Matters re-
aerved judgment to -day. He pointa
ed out that the Court of Appeal
sits on August 5, atia advised •coun-
sel to have the hearing transferred
to that date and court. ' After some
discussion this the outlets' agreed
to do.
On behalf of Solomon. Almazoff.
also held by the Immigration au-
thorifies. Marcus Hyiman, counsel,
made application for a writ ,of ha-
beas corpus, 1 -Tearing e this wa,s
a --,et over till next Tuestiay. Mr. Hy-
man also •agked that his client be
allowed bail meantime, but this was
refueed.
• •
talnou right ta the water's edge, and n
foreed, banding .means a certain crash. To Make • •
We had three forced landing* with petrol '
trouble. As luck would have, it, it ,was
my trick at the :w teal on each occasion
The first, which aged. me at least two
years,thappened just after 'Id e entered. the
Gulf Of Corinth. There were motintains
on throe sideS and the Gulf on the fourth.
I managed to get down into the bed of
a lrentntain torrent, and actually got,
away With nOthing worse titan a broken
tail skid. I thanked my lucky stars that
I knew Hanaley Pages as / do."
TYPHUS IN BALTIC.
Allies Will Send Mission to
Fight Epidemic.
,Parle Cable — One hundred and
seventy thousand cases of typhus ex-
ist lu Poland and Ike 13altic ltussian
Stites, according to reports received
to -day by otficials contected With the
Anterican sanitary expedition now
hurrying by train and bY entomb -
bite through Germany to the glid-
ed distriete.
The Polish Departnient of 'Health,
facing what is offielals tornt a crisis,
baite uppealed to the alliee Govern-
ments for ttid in checking the spread
of typittis. Allied staffs will be de-
tailed to the Polish efinistre ot
• -Good Tea
49,W many hotiefiwives known how
to make tea properly/ You know,
the lapanese expert tee -maker Ini-
tecceee °tee not only wfili the extreme
setaitiveness of his hands, but also
with the evideht delicacy of his senses
of sight and smell. AnStahe WIto wants
to may learn to make tea with the
Same delicate taste and aroma. The
whole pecret lie's in the ihfusion.
Now, about ,tea itself, The variety
Es a matter of individual taste, Select
the tea you like beet aud learn wile.
ther it Is from an early or late
picking, its name at home, how it is
cured, and then ineist upon getting the
same tea every time. By experiment-,
ing a few times With the Variety yeti
like hest you will soon learn to make
a perfect tea, and then do not medify
in any detail the way of making It
Properly, for in nothieg is greater
exactitude required,
Next, the making. There are VW°
broad rules to folloW and several
Health. mieor one te First, black tea require
AFRICAN MANDATORY DIVIDED.
London -Ca,ble—(Reuter Deepaboli),
—A telegram front Brussels 4 states
that Belgium will be given a Man-
date for II -nand& and Vrundi, while
the balance of ex -German Eat Afries,
will be under British control, with
clear territorial rights to Loke Ed-
ward and Lake Albert for the "All
rted route from Cape to ,Cseeo."
Tudor for Fountain
Fountain penal are tested by an in-
trument called a. palentemeeirte 1f one
1-iece of the mechanism le out even
Mx -hundredth peat of an inch it is
ejected as faulty.
boiling water and greea teas ao not.
Black tea requires. fresh water pour-
ed on its leaves when, it heti just eoree
to a decided boll. Hot water that has
boiled a long time mid lost its life will
not make good tea, /t should stand
from three to seven minutes (aeeord-
•ing to the quality), and in a percelain
Pot only. Then all the liquid should
be poured off. /lot water standing on
test leaves draws out the tannin, vrhich
Is the mein thing to avoid in teaatrialt.
ing. For secoad CUPS pour' boiling
water on theme onee-teled leave,
The principal ingredients of tea are
tannic add and thew. Prom the
former we get all tbit bitter taste, front
the latter the groat catd the pleaeing
and lemelletal etesots Of tee, To &ale,
out the theine Wad at the Ifealka tirde
net disturb the Uusehe to the object at
good tee -making. It you have made
e, tee, with no free tannic aeld,. Milk
ineproYee the taste for lime, end it
yell 1140 eUgar eta that it Is thorougbly
dissolved, for tbis mage e e, tieetcled
difference eltetricalles
'When you make green tea remeMber
that the thlng to be desired is an oily
beverage; not an astringent, but one
that is very smooth. Water beyonel
150 degrees Fahrenheit tuft to de-
stroy the flavor and arena by eriving
the very volatile on. Let hot water
stand in the cups to be server. in order
that they MAY be thoroughly heated,
so AS to not cool the tea that Is after-
ward poured into them.
Pour fresh hot water. slightly cool-
ed, over ibe leaves, and let stand for
two minutes. Then pottr lute• the heat.
ede cup.
You will learn that soft water makes
better tea than hard water does.
If tea IS properly made no injurious
qttalities are drawn out; if boiled or
"steeped," the resultant tannin is sure-
ly not a wholesome food for Juan, A
vera safe rule to follow ts that if tea
is bitter it is unybolesome, Some -
tine's this is the fault In the curing
pr t "e.s.
_ •• •
WRECKED FLATS,
N. Y. Tenants' Revenge for
Ejection by Landlord.
New York Despatch --Twenty-four
tenants, who had been ejected from
tee apartment house at 615 East
193th street took vengeance on the
landlord 1»' wrecking the rooms, ac-
cording to a complaint made to -day
in Harlem court by 'sector Levitoff,
1,668 Park a—enue, owner cif the pro-
perty,
Levitoff also charged, that the en.
raged tenants, not satisfied with doing
about $5,000 damege, are picketing the
building, intheidattng prospective ten-
ants and, keeping them fawn entering
the premises.
Photograpls of the wrecked dwell-
• ings were shown to Magistrate Bern-
ard J, Dolmas, who said they looked as
:if they had been teken in a Kansas
town after a cyclone,
HE "MADE GOOD."
Man Under Cloud Gave Life
for Another.
Detroit Despatch--. Harry V. Janman
• 25 years old, who was waiting trial on
-a eharge of theft, and who had prey-
,iously served two penitentiary sen-
• tences, gave up his life this afternoon
.to save a boy from drowning.
•
Janman was walking in the vicinity
of the River Rottge, when he heard
eries froin a smalleboy who had be-
come exhausted while swimming. Run-
ning to the river ban% Ja.nman threw
;off his shoes and meant to the boy's
,assistance. He managed to reach the
lad's side, seized him, and was swim -
'ening towards the shore', when his
atrength failed, Tbe boy was picked
• up by other reactiers,' but Janman went
down before aid reached him,
Janman's body was recovered. It
Will be sent to Cleveland, where he
foranerly lived. He had recently ex-
pressed a desire to "make good."
ALLEGED A
• GIANT FRAUD
Shipbuilding Expert Charg-
ed With Conspiracy.
U. S. Gov't. Let in For a
Million.
• London Cattle — General Denikine,
rest to -day of Charles H. Strang, a
-tehipbuilding expert, it became known
fcar the first time that the Govern-
ment had teen defrauded of nearly a
million dollars as a. result of a con-
• spiracy among ten or more men- em-
PloYed by the United States Em-
• ergency Fleet 'Corporation, These
men supervised the- construction of
• Wooden cargo -carrying vessels at the
'Duval shipbealding plant in Florida.
• Strang was seized by United States
• Marshal James Power of the East -
„ern District, at his home, No. 76
Mountain View avenue, Staten Is-
land. after a widespread search had
been on for him since laet April,
• when he was indicted by the Fed-
eral Grand Jury of Florida on a
charge of conspiracy.
Strang,. who gained • considerable
unpleaeant notoriety some time ago
.When he and hie wife were arrested
and convicted ,on Staten Island on a
• charge of burning their cbildren be-
cause they misbehaved, disappeared
immediately after he completed” his
prison term. He was Superintend-
ent of the Standard Shipping plant
On Staten 'eland at that time.
• Nothing was heard of him uhtil he
turnea up in Florida, where he had
been employed as a shipbuilding • ex-
pert by the United States Fleet Cor-
poration, and entrusted with one fq
the most responeible positione in the
southern plant.
According to the Government offi-
• Males Strang and the °there with
whom he Was asieociated were to sup-
ervise the construction of eight
wooden ehipe. Only four were befit,
however, the complaint charges, and
the money appropriated for the other
four went into the pockets of the
ring,
How they managed to deceive the
higher officiate of the Fleet Corpora
atiezt Was not made knoWn here to•
but it was eald that immediate-
ly after Departmeht of Juetite agents
• iv'ent to work and It became known
at the ring that they were under sus-
picion they ell fled.
intlietatents were returned by the
Federal Grand. Jury of the Florida
district against all concerned fa the
gigatitic traude, and Secret Service
Men and Departreent of Justice
agents were sent on their trail.
Strang was traced to various parte
ef the country, but it was net until
early to -day that he wrte apprehelid-
ed, when lie and hie wife drove up to
their Staten Ieland home in an au-
• tomobile after a motor trip to Lake
Hopatcong, It was the fleet time
• they had vis:ted Staten Island °ince
completing thett prison Orme.
Mr*. Strang was not arremted. Tier
hueband, who is 46 yeare old, was
hat:doffed and taken to Brooklen
by Marshal Power and lotted up in
the Adams Street Pollee Station,
Me will be arraigned the Bente
States Dietriet Cettrt, eireoklye, on
the Murree ef eenetgracy for which
he stande indicted.
e1vato•M
-
4, To control by lionise or other-
wise the export and sale of tater OUt Dandified
Barbarians
..d to or from any car or .44444'.44'444446""'"""
,.mAssAcRE OF
UKRAINE JEWS 5. For the purpOse of performing
, of Canada,
it duties under this order to allocate
Canadian lake tonnage, and to WWI -
bate cars for rail shipment,
,Authority is given to make advance
paymente according to e echodule to
be prepared by the board and ap•
Preyed by the •Government -in -Council.
• Provision is made, too, for the tissue
of participation certifieates: and in
regard to payment in full, the °retie,
in -Council reads: "As soon as the
board has -received payment in fun
for all wheat dellvered to the board
there ehall be deductee from same
all moneys disbursed by, or on behalf
of, the board far exrenees or other-
wise connected with or incident to
the operations of the board, and tho
• balance shall be distributed pro rata
among all producers and others hold-
ing participation certificates,"
4 •
1201000 Alleged Slain in
New Pogroms.
1,500 School Children
Among Victims,
tuNe w
e ukYo
r atrulte oils? autchhi—cli areein
120,000 Jew
are alleged to have been slaughtered,
are reported In It eablegrain sent frOtit
Paris by Le0 Motkin, Secretary of the
Cemnalttee of the Jewieb, delegates
at the Peace Conference, to Louis
Marshall, the President of that coin.
ralttee, who is now in this eitY. This
cablegram Trona Part% which was
given out ta-day, is as follows:
"Zuckerman Payed and confirms
former ceatraunitatIous, He reports
• new and terrible pogroius, Which 00.
mimed tiering June at Karninetz, Po-
cloisk, laitalgorod, Curinine, ete. The
latest now is certified by three. tab
-
bis and by other Jewish representa-
tives of Khotine. I know these men,
who gape ;roue thet Ukraine. TneY
state that altogether 120,000 have
been killed, lil Prositurof albite
3,964 inhabitenta and nurnereus ease -
log people have been killed and 2,-
000 wounded. Among the killed ware
1.500 school children. Uarainian
Judaism fears total extermination. It
is impossible to check the exact fi-
gures. In all of the pogroms, un-
doubtedly dozens of thousands have
been ntassacree.
"(Signed), Motkin,"
The Ukrainians reported guilty of
these massacres have been warring
wath the Poles, who have been large
Iy exonerated by •the reports of
Henry IVforgenthau and othershoef
groats attributed to them. T
ieged maseacre of Jews by Poles at
'Pinsk occurred when the Poles were
Passing throttgh the city to fight the
Okralhiantala Mr. ,Marshall made the
follovnng statement:
"Similar reports reached me
whileI was in Paris, 'which came in-
directly from the Ukraine, and
from men Pf high standing a Id re-
spensibilitas - Every effort was made
to procure detailed information, but
owing to the state of anarchy which
prevails in the Ukraine and the dif-
ficulty of communication, It has been
impossible to secure such detaile as
are linportant or desirable. It is,
howeyer, unaerstood that the mas-
sacres that have •taken place hive
been • principally perpetrated by
large, organized bands of robbers,
one dr them undar the leadership of
Gen, ,Gregorieff, eaberte death was re-
portea a few weeks ago. Time fain-
illar with "Amine conditions regard
the situatioe of the Jews whet- live
thera.'as precerious so long as the
chaotic conaitthns which now pre:
rail Shall Continue.
"The only. hope for relief is to be
found in the speedy establishment
of a, strong and liberal Government
and the requirement that such Gov-
ernment shall, as a condition of be-
ing recognized by the allied and as-
sociated powers, give adequate guar-
antees for the protection of • the
lives, liberty and property of all the
inhabitants. All received coincide in
their estimates of the number of the
victims. I believe from all, the in-
formation that has come to me, that
the numbers will be found to run into
the tens of thousands."
NEZD CITY PLANNING.
Iapanese Municipal Authorities
Are Aroused.
• The remarkable expansion of Japan-
ese cities during the last few years has
accentuated the urgent necessity of
city planning, With this end in view
• a conferenece of the mayors of the
leading Japanese cities has occurred
at Tokyo. Among those present were
the mayors of Osaka, Yokohama, Nag-
oya, Kyoto and Kobe, while Tokyo
municipality was represented by
Messrs. Kabashima and ()gine.
"In Tokyo, city planning was set on
foot twenty years ago, about the sante
time the queetion'of city planning was
receiving attention in America and
Europe," said Dr. S&L major of
Osaka, in an interview with a Tokyo
Yon -duel representative. "In Osaka,
eitowever, it is only a few Years since
the Problem began to claim serious
attention, although the necessity of
•city planning in Osalta is perhaps more
urgent than in other cities. The dens-
ity of population in. Osaka is certainty -
greater than in other places and im-
provement ina sanitary and other mat-
ters is urgently needed. , It is esti-
mated that the population of Osaka
twenty years hence will be 2,650,000,
and that of the two neighboring dis-
tricts 2,360,000, making a total of
5,000,000. This estimate 18 based on
the present rate of increase, but it is
•POSSible the rate of increase may be
larger. Herein lies the urgent nature
fif the city planning for Osaka."
THE PEACE TREATY.
Commission to Co-ordinate
and Interpret It,
Paris Cable — The anter-allled
Supreme Council decided to -day to
appoint a commission to co-ordinate
and interpret the German Peace
Treaty. he commission will be
composed. of five members represent -
Mg the Five great powers.
The aommitision will have its head-
• quaktera in Paris, but is empowered
to convene eleewhere if accessary, It
will sit after ratification of the treaty.
The members will have diplomat,
• standing, and will be aided by staffs
to technical advisors.
The Earl of Deity, Brltisli Ambass-
ador to France was announced to -day
as Great Britain's representative.
DENIKINE ROUTS
THE BOLSHEVIKI
Important Victory Over
• Reds On the Volga.
5,000 Men and Much Ma-
terial Captured.
New York Despatch — In the ar-
the Russian commanderams gained an
important victory over the Bolsheviki
and captured the town of ICameshin,
on the Volga. Five thousand Bolshe-
viki, nine guns and large quantities of
material were also taken.
In making, this announcement, the
War Office says that in possession of
'Kareasnin gives Gen. Denlitine a firm-
er hald on the river and his main ob-
jective -in the advance on Saratov
threatening the Bolshevik -communica-
tions with Astralthate Kanaiehan
was entered by tbe. anti -Bolshevik
troops on July 30th, and the fleeing
enem ywas pursued twelve miles be-
Yend the town,
Speaking at a meeting of the mem-
bers of the House of Commons, at
which General Briggs, Chief of the
British. Military Mission with General
Denikine, gave details of that gener-
al's achievements, with British helle
Col. Winston Churchill, Secretary for
War, said General Denikine had the
nucleus of a good army. They might
advance or they might be driven back,
but they would continue to fight while
they lived. Col. Churchill reminded
the meeting that Denikine and leol-
eliak had from the first declared war
on the Germans, and had never
swerved from the path of freedom and
honor which Britain itself had been
treading since the war began. It was
most pathetic that in peace celebra-
tions the Russians could not take any
part. Britain's policy, Col. Churchill
deelared, was, after all, most moder-
ate. It was to endeavor to give a
measure of support to Denikine which
did not involve the sending of troops.
GERMAN COURT
ON WAR GUT
-Beerlin 'Cala —A State tribunal la
to enquire into and fix the responsibil-
ity for the war. It will be composed
of the Supreme Court of the Empire,
Whose president will be chairman. He
will be assisted by the president of
the 'Military Court and the, judges of
the Prussian, Bavarian and Hansa
High Courts,. In addition, ten assist-
ant Judges will be elected, five by the
National Assembly ancl five by a 'com-
mittee of the German States. The sit-
tings will be public. The- tribunal
will be only empowered to .pronounce
upon the question of guilt; it will not
impose punishment.
4.1
WHEAT BOARD'SIT'S GERMAN NOW
f f
LARGE POWERS
Can Take Possession of
Stores of Wheat
And Control Export and.
Sale of Flour.
Ottawa Deepatch --The Wheat Pur-
chasing 13oard will be known as the
Canadian Wheat Board. Under the
order -in -Council ereating it, the board,
itt udditiort to purchasing and telling
powers, has atithority:
1. To fix Maxintuni prices or mar.
gin of profit at whielt flour aad other
products made from wheat delivered
to Militia, May be sold, and to fix
standards of finality of such flour.
2. To purchase flour front millere
at prices to be fixed by the board
end to sell same in Canada or in other
countries.
3. To take poseosion of and to
sell and deliver to millers, or to pur-
ehase in other eountriee, wheat stored
in any elevator, warehouse, or on rail-
way tare or Canadian boats, atut to
deal with the ettMe aS to payment
of advance and otherwise In the
steno Way as if it had been otherwiee
delivered to the board, and to move
grain ittto and out of or through any
"Hun" and "Boche"oto Be
Bad Form.
London Cable says — Diecuseing
flange as they are soon to be, if the
terms of the Peace Treaty are to be
carried out, it popular weekly re
view bus aetonished some of its
. more radical _readers with the fol-
lowing:
"Germany is how, • technically, a
fripadltr power, or soon will be. That
• being so we suggest that our preen
Anight with advantage discontinue
its sprightly habit ef using the
• WOrds 'Hun' [Old 'Doselte) on all pos.
sible oectualons. We slain eoon have
the Germaa lembasey again occu-
'pied, and it would really be dolor
-
.able if its chief were commonly re-
ferred to in print as the 'Hun Am.
hasea,dor' Or the 'Beetle diplomat.'
• "It is not becattee of our love for
the Germans, but regited of our own
teptitatient for good manners, that
this suggestion is made. We ellen bo.
sorry to part with Beebe.' The
startle was an inspiration. 'Hun' has
no merit -except brevity, and all per.
eons of good sense will be glad to see
41 go."
Illitke—Do you and your wife ever
thittit the teem? ants—When /en
Out late at the club we do. She keepe
thinking *bet she'll ente when 1 get
home, and se do 1. — New Orleans
Picayune.
Picture a man whose long 'lair is
done up in a Psyche knot, with a
bandeau of lamb around his head;
then add fe this: the heavy feattireS,
full beard, and moustache of a owarthy
barbarian, and one hae some idea of
the appearance of a warrior type of
the northern part of the Island of
Luzon.
These men pertain, to the tierce
tribes; of hoad-liuntere, and their elab-
orate dressing of the hair, which in
civilized countries • is conaiderect a
Purely feminine vanity, ROMS gro-
• tesquely incongruous with their Ravage
PUrsulta. Not being oblIged to waste
any time on their wardrobes, since
clothing is practically unknown, all
their efforts toward adornMent are
devoted to the head, and are unieb
more elaborate than those of the
women.
The dandy of the Kalinga tribe
bangs his hair heavily over the fore.
read, training it so that it bas almost
the effect of a low pompadour. Above
this is built a structure of feathers
and flowers, the latter branching out
and drooping quite artietically over
each side.
• At the back his hair is arranged to
Italie long and flowing or is Put 111) in
a chignon. Hie ears have enormous
holes in which are plugs of wood fan-
cifully carved. Sometimes many
strings of beads are about the neck,
and the face and chest are tattooed,
but the main efforts at adornment are
directed to the hair.
A little cap woven of bamboo, abeut
the size of the "Pfil, isox" of ToratnY
Atkins, is often worn on the back of
• the bead to cover the coil of the imer.
Boudoir caps trimmed With, pin% rib-
bons have not yet penetrated to the
interior of Luzon; but if they ever do
It is eat) to say oat they immedt-
ately will be approprtated by these
warriors to the entire exclusion ot the
feminine contingents
The wearing of false hair is allowed
the women. These additional locks are
in every case the ,hair of their an -
coasters. A wife of e lealinga chief is
described as wearing quite a towering
superstructure of false hair sur-
mounted by flowers and feathers.
Around her neck are natnY strings of
large, rough agate beads,
Agate is highly prized among these
people, and the larger and rougher in
surface the better. A string of such
beads holds, in comparison, something
of the same value as the rope of pearls
of the society dame. Tho lealinga
woman of the beads held the rank of
queen among her people; hence her
right to the necklace and the abund-
ance of false hair.
A COSTLY POST.
$50,000 Too Little for Am-
bassador in Washington.
London Cable — In_ consequence
of continued inability to find a suit-
able appointee to the British Embassy
at Washington, the Government, says
the Daily Mail, proposes to raise the
salary attaching to the post, which
tip to the present has been 510,000 a
year.
"Nobody without considerable pri-
vate means " adds the paper, "can
afford to fill the post, and 'at least
one eminently suitable person has re-
fused to accept it for this reason."
• 0' '
0 1-44-0-0-444-4-1-0.0 0-0-.4-•444- V-0- *4-01
1
B R 0 tLEIiS
4-4-0-44-444-+4-4-4-44+4.4-4-4-0-0-1-4-44-a
(Experimental Farm .Notes.)
Under ordinary conditionaathe most
Profitable time to market cockerels
of the light weight evariefies is un-
questionably at the broiler age.
All surplus Leghorn e and cockerels
of shutter breeds should be disposed
of at this stage, as the quality of the
flesh rapidly lowers with age and
they are consequently not in demand
as roasters.
The most desirable weight for broil-
ers is from a ,pound and a half to two
pounds eaeh, and the quicker the
chick can be forced to these weights
the better the quality oe the broiler.
In growing broilers the chicks may
be fed and handled in the usual way
until they reach the ago of about six
to eight weeks. The cockerels should
• then be separated froxn the general
flock, kept in confined quarters and
forced with ground grains, mash and
milk, just an oceastonal feed of wheat
or °racked corn being „supplied to
stimulate the appetite.
Milk is essential if the highest
quality is to be secured, and when
• fed sour it acts as a stimulant and
keeps the appetite.
A mixture of sifted ground oats and
corn; corn, oats and. barley, or buck-
wheat, oats and barley, makes a
good retion. This should. be mixed to
a rather thin batter with sour milk,
and fed at least three times a day
all the chicks will "Oetin up.
They should have at least two
Weeks' feedin& Of this kind before
being marketobd. ,
When ready they should be starved
for at least twelve hours, bled and
neatly dressed, care beteg taken to
avoid tearing the skin when pluck-
ing, as they are very tender and con-
sequently easily torn at this age.
Those who are not experts 8A dress-
ing, or who live at a di:dance from
market, can make _arrangements to
ship to a dealer who will dress and
deliver at so much per Pair. This is
Usually a better plan titan shipping
dressed in hot weather, as tho danger
from spelling under this Method is
grFfaott: the week of july 8th broilers.
were (motet in a velidlesale way at
45 to 50 cents per pound In Montreal;
40 to 45 at Toronto and Vancouver,
Where ehipping to olubs and retailers
eonsideeably higher prices can be
realized.—Gecrge ItObertson, Asteistaut
Poultry Husbandman, Central Export -
mental Fenn, Ottawa, Ont.
LUXEMBURG PROVESeGRATITUDE
Luxemburg, Cable—The Minister of
State proposed to -day in the Chamber of
ieeputioe teat one Mallen francs be tip.
prepriated for Verdun and two hundred
thousand finites for the reeenstruetion ef
it devasted town hi Bolgium. lia Said
leranee and lielghitn deserve the eternal
gratitude of the Grand Dotty for aid and
protection during the war.
PREE MEDICAL TREATME,NT.
wenieet, bespatch—Vree medical /attn.
Om for a year is due every man who
asorved in the CattadIfot army. This was
announced to -day bY 0urgeon-001mnd 11.
11. Casgrain, itt ths.rge of the Wilt* Da.
partrnentai tree triedmal lirti itt 20 Vaasa '
Pitt Meek, here. Any Millets, exoopt that e
eur4 by rn neendatt, will be treated u
Without tharge.
T ITEMS
OF THE
:OF THE DM
British Lords Rola Up
Right of Peeresses to
Sit in 1:40140.
PEACE TREATY IS LAW
U.S. Government Calls Con-
ference On 'Ugh Cost of
Tll
‘fyirheenrca ilwi hae -syhedi earr-odsoveltilt. d"bnY °Ira 1 n OCI uoeir fie
Dorothy Wren, four years old,
daughter of W. Moran, Ottawa, Was
fatally burned while playing W1tb
matches.
was srnoll.tizT.ateCtl°11fglritittl. 0!
S
the 14egistiatMuraery1;11;
the South Perth Conservativera In con-
vention at Mitchell. •
Border Cittes Great War Veterans
are again inceesed over an article in
ait Doteittrootitopanaupoerai and passed. a reso-
lution to useforce it necessary to keep
By a fire eriginating in the thresh,
ing outfit working at the barn of Xr.
G. Bailey, neer Harold, in Rawdon
township, his bare and contents were
destroyed, and. also those Of James
Cranston, besides the separator outfit,
exceeds lz5C,oloires Sharpe, The loss
de
There were 34 deaths of asylolent
nature in Toronto during July, or five
more than the Month previous,
Jean Baptiste Abel, Vice -President
of the Freneb Chamber of Deputlee,
has been appotntea Governor-General
at Algeria.
Gen. Boehua,Huagarlan Soviet Min-
ister of War uadee Bela Kun, has left
Vienna for Budapeit to urge Bela Kan
to retire voltintarily,
13ritish royal .assent was given to
the German peace treaty and to the
Anglo-French treaty, which thus be -
c o masi e law. of
s
the Goon Cola Company of
Atlanta to New York interests for
$25,000,000 became known at Atlanta.
The House of -Lords decided to delay
giving the right to 'peeresses to, sit in
the House 0± Lords until the recon-
stitution of the Ilotwe is settled.
• • Heavy rains fell all through South
ern Alberta Wednesday night. In some
places the downpour tested four or
five hours. It was the best rain In
weeks.
• Earry.A. Leo, manager of Buffalo
Bill's Wild West Sbow when It made
Its first tour of Europe, died at At-
lantic City. Na
Hon. A, J. McLean has arrived in
London and will leave 4n a few deo
Tor France. The trip is only for pleas-
ure, but he is incidentally looking atter
matters affecting the Canadian ship-
PliTigsittuhatidron.
The
ireading
of the coustitu-
tional bill was debated in the German
Assembly. ti. proposal by the Demo-
crats that members of Parliament
shall be elected for four years was
adopted by a vote of 166 to 3.39.
Lieut. Locatelli, a member of the
Italian aviation mission now in Argen-
tina, completed an airplane flight frau
Buenos Aires to Valparaiso, his trip
markiag the first crossing by air of
the South American continent from
the Atlantie to the Pacific.
Within a radius of fifty miles of
Melville, Seek., tho crop yield is ex-
pected to be the heaviest ever har-
vested -in this district. There has been
plenty of moisture, with ideal growing
weather throughout'the season.
it. S. Attorney -General Palmer sum-
moned the heads of ithportant Goverin.
naent departments to confer with him
imraediately on the high cost of living
and to consider measurea to reduce
prices to the average citizen.
Rev. P. Ryott, pastor of All Saints'
Anglican Church, Woodstbck, left with
his family for Biuefields, Nicaragtia,
Central America, where •he will take
up missionary work in connection with
the AnAthcaunr ct
Chnirrreiho:
Sir
commander ' of
the Canadian expeditionary • force,
cabled the Montreal -tontraittee , ap-
pointed to prepare 0. civil and military
reception for him that he was sailing
for Canada on the Caronia, which
leaves Liverpool for Hafifax on Aug. 7.
Gordon Mogg, of Woodstock, was the
victim of a painful •accident in Detroit,
He was painting on a bridge and was
holding on to the rail above him
when a tight engine came along and
ran over hie hand, cutting off four
fingers. lifogg is n welaknoWn Junior
hockey player, •
A GERMAN INSULT
Offered to the Danish Flag
by Hun TroOps.
• Copenhagen Deepatch — Immediate
occupation by the allies of the Settles
-
wig territory where plebeseites are
to be held, or tonte other Means of
protecting the inhaleitente, was asked
to -day in it resolution presented to the
allied commission here by a delegate
tiou of the Sorderbeeg (Schleswig)
Municipal COuncil.
The resolution was adopted by the
inhabitants it was said, as the re-
sult of disOrdets by Germansailors
during the visit, of 1,400 Danish boy
scouts recently, The Germane were
said to have insulted the Daniell flag.
•
TELL RUSSIA JAP, POLICY.
Oinask, Cable—A. party of seven mem-
bers of the Japanese Parliament, repre-
senting the Main partleoi in japan, has
arrived lit Dlagbvie,shtehensk, Capital of
the PrOVinte of Amur. The antIOUSeed
purpose of the delegation is to aequaiht
the Russian people with Japan's pOiley
with regard to Russia.- General Muni&
Is 'chairman
resentative of
et tthhee Mdlitsgrttrip.ftritIye I ni Praepr:
Ilament.
*o. •
CUT IN WIRE RATES.
New York, Despateha-When eontrot ef
the telegraph Ayatrirt$ Of the eountry is
formally relinquiSbed by the Government
itt ealaintaritt, it reduction of 20 per Cant
in rates Will be Made ittiliedlitt07 en the
lines of the Postal Tele -graph and Cable
CO., but the Western Union Will retain
the fiehedule put into effect atter Poet.
master rturleson took control, tat April
1.
There are times when every men
as to tot the matt end hz beivilet
tek about it. either,
fr-