12 PAGES ------. YEAR 82 NO, 117 ALLIES P Forced the, Turks to Disclose Only Be Gained By the Arrival of More Men And a Continuous Supply of Am- By Ashmead Bartlett. Ot the Dardanelles, May 10, via| Moudros, May 16.--The first stage of the great battle for the possess- fon of the heights of Atchi Baba has . come to a close, and, although the British Army is not yet in possess ion of this commanding position, the Turks have. been forced to disclose their strength and the character of | | their defences, and the Allies are now in a position to estimate the full measure of the task which lies | ahead. Atehi Baba is the first of the com- | manding positions on which the Turco-Germanic force can take~ its stand before we are able to move up the Gallipoli Peninsula and thus command the northern shore of the Arrows. . There are others just as rmidable, even if not more so, be- hind it, and unless the enemy sud- Bab denly loses heart and decides to give in all these positions must be tak- en hill by hill, valley by valley, and trench by tremch, before the army can open the gate to the fleet and enable it to pass through to Con- stantinople. Once our fleet has pass- ed the Narrows the end has cdme. An Enormous Sacrifice Victory can be gained here, as in France, only by more men and a continuous supply of ammunition. The Freneh-British troops have made an enormous sacrifice to pre- re the way for reinforcements to ollow up the successes which this band of heroes; so many of whom lie beneath the soil, have achieved. Their positions are impregnable, and 38 Jorce the Turks can pring against ti -will move. H they Nave won by sheer hard fight- ing. Apparently the Turks have this fact and now hope that they will hurl themselves against their entrenchments and redoubts. That both the Turks and the Ger- mans have recéived a staggering blow, we know, for they were con- vinced that Gallipoli Peninsula was impregnable; that no enemy could y land on any of the beaches. ar that it, by chance, an isolated ' force did get ashore it would be easy to take a division and drive it nto the sea at the point of .the bayonet, Indeed, they had every right to sup- pose their defences would prove im- The more one examines tion the more apparent is the extra- rdinary feat of arms performed by the British landing parties on that never-to-be- ten morning of April 25th. Each beach was a fort. Tess in itself, not only protected the posi- REPARED WAY FOR VICTORY AT STRAITS They Have Made An Enormous Sar For Re: inforcements to Follow Up the Suc- cosses They Have Achieved. | same men who went through Keeney wiio after their landing at them from the lines | Kum Kale, were taken from the Ad-|Someiem y Their Strength---Victory Can against attack from sea, but also joffering an equal measure of pro- [tection against an attack from lanl ~--a proposition which, it was con- | fidently anticipated, would remove [the last chances of a hostile force | retaining a footing on the shore, ev- | en supposing it did succeed in effect- | ing a landing at one point. Obstacles Overcome, All these obstacles 'were overcome; but the Superlative merit of the achievement lies In the fact that the this dreadful ordeal of April 25th main- tained thejr positions without receiv- ing any reinforcements for several days, in the face of the most deter- mined counter-attacks and actually advanced their lines until they were firmly established astride of the pen.) Tasula, facing the heights of Atchi a The Turks fought with extreme bravery and made the most deter- mined efforts to drive the invaders Into the sea. ' Not only on the night of the landing, but also in a sustain- ed effort on the night of April 28th, they pressed forward om the thinly held lines in close-order formation after the manner of the Germans; hoping by sheer weight of numbers to smash a way through the infeebled khaki line, but they were everywhere repulsed and a long line of their dead lying in perfect military forma- tion in front of the trenches, show the high-®Water mark of those futile efforts. Since that night their attempts spasmodic, and their main 'attacks have been directed against the riatic shore and placed on the rignt of the British lines. On the night of April 28th they attacked them in dense masses, which melted away under the rapid fire of the French rifles, and were finally routed in figrce and well-directed counter-at- tacks at the point of the bayonet. On the following Saturday the Turks again pressed forward againae |. this part of thé Hue, which was the scene of desperate fighting. At one time a part of the French trenches actually paceed into their ngs: but the situation was saved and the ground held. We know from prisoners that the enemy was largely reinforced from Adrianpole and Asia Minor and they are unanimous in. . saying that the Turkish losses were enormous In these futile efforts to carry out Gen- eral Liman's orders to drive the Al- lies into the sea at the point of the bayonet. » GIFT OF HORSES TO EMPIRE. Members of Saskatchewan .Legisla- ture Given Details of Purchase, . Regina, Sask, May 18.--A number of interesting details were made known in the Provincial Legislature yesterday in answer to questions put to the Government by the Opposi- tion in connection with Saskatche- wan's gift of horses to the Empire. In all, 1,292 horses were purcha at a price varying from $100 to $22 each, with the exception of one ani- mal. Delivered in England the cost to the Saskatchewan people, includ. ing insurance and transportation, etc, was $347,710.25; delivered at Regina the cost amounted to $217,- 484.98 which Included the cost of assembling 438 of the hordes at Sas. Paid For The Pictures. A man entered the bar of a fash- ionable hotel in New York, and plac- ing a quarter before the wine clerk, asked for a glass of beer. After serve ing the beverage, the clerk rang up the 25 cents. "Is that drink worth 25 cents?" queried the customer. "No", was the reply. ' "But you see that pic- ture on the wall---that's a 'Rem- brandt.' The other is a 'Whistler." Next day the customer returned, and after obtaining a glass of beer, he put 6 cents 5 the bar, remark- ing, "I saw your pictures yesterday. ' Usually a girl whose front same is Mae ok niore like July or Aug- ust, katoon and transporting them to Re- gina, i It requires lots of merve to tell a nian the things he ought to know. .wWas weak and all run down. Pills against the British have only been] 5,000,000 POUNDS OF MEAT. Canada Géts Half of Muge War Office Order, | London, May 19.-W, L. Griffith, Secretary to the High Commission- | er's office, states that out of a War | Office tender for ten million pounds of beef, one-half was awarded to | Canada, large orders being given to | the William Clark Company, Mont- | real, and the W. H. Davies Company, Toronto, PALE ANAEMIC GIRLS. Find New Health Through. Or. Wit | | | i liams' Pink Pills For Pale "People. There must be no guesswork in the | treatment of pale, anaemic 'girls. 1. | your daughter is languid, has a pale, sallow complexion, is short of | breath, especially on going upstairs; | if she "has palpitation of the heart, | & poor appetite, or a tendency to | faint, she has anaemia-- which means ! poverty of the blood. Any delay mn | treatment may leave her 'weak and | sickly for 'the rest of her lite--de- | lay may even résult in consumption, | that most. hopeless of diseases. When the blood is poor and watery, there is oplyone certain cure--that is Dr.' Williams" Pink. Pills, coupled WIth nourishing food and gentle out- of- door exercise. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills actually make new blood, | whieh flowing through the veins stimulate the nerves, increases the appetite, gives brightness to the eye, a glow of health to the cheek, and makes weak, despondent girls full of healthy activity. The case of Miss J. H. Lassalle, Sorel, Que., is typical of the cures made by Dr, Wil- liams' Pink Pills. She says: "1 und rovered With pim- ples. My lips were pale. fered from pains in all my limbs, which would at times be swollen. | was ha™lly ever free from headaches, and I found work about the house a burden, as the least effort left me fatigued and breathless. I had no appetite, and notwithstanding that I was constantly doctoring I seemed to be growing worse all the time, One day mother said that she thought I ought to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and I decided to do so I soon dis- covered that I had found the right medicine, and after using nine boxes I was once mere enjoying the best of health, and. 1 have not been-un- well a day since." - You can get Dr. Willlams' Pink rom any medicine d~~lap 0) y mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. rattles The Daily British PAGES 8-12 KINGSTON ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY I9, 1915 REMARKABLE PICTURE OF The British Admiralty report of Mare theavily, and-at-5.50-she-sank having p NE: -| the Turks shelled the ship with 6 in. howitzers, HOW RATTLESNAKE TAUGHT SONG TO GOOD INDIANS So They Would Not Kill Him-- Why Indian Boys Walk With Eyes 1 Looking At Ground. By, John M. Oskissoh. Long time noon, when the 1it were taught to walk through the grass, eyes looking straight ahead, the: old men w that. they must do that so Would net hurt their friends, the nakes, by, stepping on them, stén, little ope." Wold say when lie was the boy how to walk. sthalght and swift- CL an pat Ap) td WHERE BRITISH GAINED 'ONE. Ago, in the late after- tle Indian boys the trails and always with their at the ground quid tell them that they the old man show Gs gm of one mile north of Festuber pointing. The shaded porti Neuve Chapelle advance, cut indicate other recent at the right of the map. This map shows the Brit = po Ee ih on above shows the famous' and the arrows h : attacks. The objective is Lille, {ed with it; the mixture is thoroughly ish line before the advance t, where the --- le liv BR ks | lowest arrow is igher up dn' the the | much in the same way as Portl .{ eqment. { ment. hin that he would have to £0 home and set a task for his wife because she had. killed their brother! And that task was one long life-time of working day after day in the fields. "When the rattlesnakes saw that the woman was carrying out the bard tasks her husband had set for her, they called a council of el! the people. It was the great black rat- tlesnake who #.t in the chief seat at the council, and after everybody had taken their places he got' up and told how théir brother had been killea and how. the 'woman was working even then in' tlie fields to pay for. it. "And the great black rattfesnake told the people that never, so long as the women worked in the fields would 'the rattlesnakes bite them. 4 they 'were to sing a certain-song: And if a rattlesnake ever bit any of the people by accident they were to 80 to that person and sing that rong over him and would be well." And when the old man had fin, ished telling the little hoy this story the little boy would ask: : "What was the song which the rattlesnake taught the people?" But the old» man would shake his head and say: } "That song is a sacred song, and it cannqt be learned hy little; boys, Until you grow up te be a man you must walk. always with your, eyes wide and looking at the ground hére 'you step, so you 'will not risk Raking our Triends angry by 'stép- ping on: them." f CEMENT: FROM BEETS . Carbonate Of Lime Contained In 2 Scum of Boiling Beets. + It is.now. reported that a French firm is faking ap Sssliont. Sement from a by-product in the p 8 0 making beet sugar. The Towne Stat torms when the beéts are boiled, and which 'has "heretofore been thrown away, consists largely of ' carbonate iy aie of Seely's Br'gade. of lime and- water, and from 70,000 tons of beel treated, 4,000 tons of caronate of lime are obtained; to this 1,100 tons of clay are added, the re- sulting product being 3, excellent cement. " : 'The scum is pumped into large tanks, 'where 'it is allowed to dry par- tially; finely-divided clay 1s then mix- smplgamated by ; beaters for an hour and burned in a rotary, kiln, * The clinker is then moved ~ and pulverized idto a ~THt Bits. § A female tis a woman pilio, cam keep. a hired girl for six consecutive weeks. Buta i (We always like to quote threatan- ing Scripture when it applies 3 3 4 3 u 162 tons of 1 ¥A 3 the th THE BRUTAL GERMANS ft SEVERAL CANADIANS ORUCIFIRD AT LANGEMARCKE Figure of Christ Removed From a Village Crucifix and the Body of a Canadian Sergeant Fastened London, May 19.--Several letters from Canadian officers and mon have been received by R. P. Houston, M.P., corroborating the charges that the, Germans crucified Canadicns. As a result of these, Mr. Houston in- tends putting further questions in the House of Commons. He will ask the Un: " of Warf he has information that during a re- cent 'fight, in which the Canadians Were temporarily driven back, and were compelled to leave forty wounds | ed in a bam, that on recapturing the position they found that the Germans had bayoneted all the wounded except a sergeant, and that the Germans had removed the figure of Christ from the village crucifix and fastened the sergeant there while ,|alive, and also if crucifixion is be- coming a favorite practice of the enemy. Mr. Houston produced a letter from. a lieutenant of the 15th Battalion, which he showed to The Mail and Empire correspondent con- firming these charges, and also an- other letter which asserted that a Canadian H ér 'Was = crucified oi 8 'barn: 'door, with bayonets though his hands, feet and t The writer avers that a chaplain took the statement on oath of the man who took down the body of the sergeant. Mr. n is an active member, of the Administration Com- mittee of the 2nd King Bdward's Horse, in which c&pacity he 'has come in contact with many Can- adians. He is a prominent steam- owner 'and' has: done mach for ae Globe reports. to-day 'that. a Cate Alcester from an officer in the Lejces- ment charges that mot only Sian, but a mas S m the 5th rritorials fas been cruci- LIBERAY, OLUB FEDERATION. Original Club Membership, 22; Pres. © émt Olub Membership, 03. § {RApecial to the Whig) | Toronto, May 18.--A record steady i importance in.the scope of Its work, marks the development of the Liberal Club Federation of On. tario which is celebrating birthday here on Friday, with its annual sins esting A afternoon, an even 'with Sir Wilfrid Bs fied of hin numbers, and ever- » Dr, Howard Soha. May 21st,' iret; Deputy Chief, Aliph hon SECOND SECTION SINKING OF IRRESISTIBLE IN DARDANELLES. h 18th operations stated at 4.9 * Irresistible" Kaymine, If was when the ship drift causing thirteen to be kille ed toward the beach that d and sixteen wounded. mem rier, Vr, N. W. Rowell, Sir Lomer Gouin and Hon, George P. Graham. among its guests. The Federation's ofcers and most of its members are young men, and the movement, quite separate from any of the official organizations of the Liberal party, represenst the young man's place and influence in the Liberal party and in Ontario poli. tics. Just two years ago the Federation was formed by a nnfon of the twenty. two Liberal Clubs then existing in the province. To-day the elub mem- bership has risen to sixty-three, with an individual membership running into the thousands. The annual business meeting on the 21st, under the presidency of ne, ussed, among them the follow- "The | and the War," Individual Club Problem," "The Federation and the Clubs." and "The Federation's Ideals." Thess discussions will be led by young men from various parts of the province, Particular intérest is sure to attach will see 4 nu disc ing 'to the subject of "The Federation and the War," Ever since the be. sinning of hostilities the Federation and. its clubs have been holding pa- triotic meetings, af buting litera. tue on the war, and doing their share in the propaganda for recruits and for a realization of the seriousness and the high honor of the task be- fore Canada and the Allies. Fur. ther schemes of service along these lines are to be discussed. The following Hst of clubs in the Federation will give an idea of the widespread extent of the movement: Ameliasburg, Auroras, Barrie, Belle. ville, Berlin, Blackwater, Bond Head, Brantford, Brampton, Brinston, Bur- lington, Caledonia, Cardinal, Cayuga, Clifford, Clinton, Cobourg, Forest, Georgetown, Hagersville, Hamilton (two), Harriston, Iroquois, Jarvis, Kettleby, King City, Kingston, Kings- mill, Kinmount, Lansdowne, London, Mallorytown, Matheson, Maynard, Midland, Milton, Mitchell, Morris- burg, Mt Forest, Newmarket, New Barum, North Bay, Oskville, Orillia, Oshawa, Owen Sound, Paris, Parry Sound, Pelham Centre, Penetangui. shene, Sault Ste. Marie, Stouftville, 8t. Catharines, Spencerville, Tillson. burg, Toronto, (3) Tweed, Usbridge, Woodstock, Yarmoath Centre, and Winchester, . Marmora Has Fire Brigade Marnioa, May Sa a en thusias! ng own Hall the' village i organ- ized a fire brigade, the two shemien o engines y corporation having arrived. o Oray ed. The rolgw ng were officers: '¥. N. Mar- 3 Shan- ; Captain, John * Never Questioned fined, pure, cream of tartar, an i grapes. Not an atom of unw/ it; not an unwholesome influence more delicious m it. It perfectly leavens the food, ina HA ¢ the qualities that make derisnever questioned. quitted the lire listing =