Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Jun 1918, p. 15

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

PAGE FIFTEEN me ------ mn sae ---- ns S-------- a ---- THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1918. tell him yon ur having had three or five 3 oO ------ [if you consent to work you 3 Story Told by Times----Many Captives | anything in reason you ues Laboring in Munition Plants In- | takes you to the dining ¥ + G0 justice to the food clined to Become Naturalized, Then you are given a { Amzterdam, May 31.~--The roilow-| lager beer and a Cig ing story of life in a mubition angel unfolds to yo tory at Cassel was furnished y . 1 give the conve a prisguer-gf-war. 1 give his: sowm as it took place between the in words: terpreter and myself, The Henschels steel factory since He said: "If you will work for us the catbreak of the war has turned | at your trade (crucibje steel smeli- its whole resources into the produc-| ing) we will pay you twenty-five | tion of iaunitions, Approximately,| marks a day, out of which vou will 20,0040 paople are employed, In the pay ten marks for food and lodging latter part of 0915, amongst these | You shall live in a house in the town | were 2.000 prisoners-of-war, whol with eivilfans and be allowed to] were sent there, nat knowing until] wear civilian clothes. When your! they arrived the nature of the work | work is finished You may go they were to perform, and, accord- anywhere you wish, providing you ing to their story, the majority of the | are accompanied by the German in prisoners-of-wir, immediately they} whose house you are lodging. realize that they are at a, munitions factory, refuse to work; but,by either force, persuasion or guile, they sub- sequently remain. The method of | providihg she is willing, and there is compeling a prisoner-of-war to work | no reason why you should not be is peculiar, On their arrival at the | comfortable: , » Looking around works the prisoners are given a good | the shops the only peculiarity | fo- meal, with g few bottles of beer, and | ticed was the truth of the intefpr things to smoke. They are interview-| er's remarks concerning the women ed bv the firm's interpreter, whose | In every branch of the works where daty it is to impress the prisoners-|a prisoner is employed he had wo- of-war that it Is not w muuitions fac- | men and girls as neighbors. I gques- tory; that they made only bicycles, | tioned different Frenchmen concerns; pocket knives, razors, ete. The field | ing what I'd been told about the wo. and siege guns, machine guns, and | men to learn if it was true, As many the thousands of shells you see | ag 500 prisoners of war living with stacked in every spare foot of the| women were allowed as much free- yard---well, they paint those, dom of movement after working bours as the Germans themselves, I want it clearly understood that this practice was encouraged by the authorities, as it assisted the b rate, und ensured t put of n work, as the p oners-of-war in these circumstances realized that they had lost all claim on their own national ideas, and the majority ser iously contemplated taking out na turalization papers and remaining naturslized citizens. You don't edn of rifles or bayonets. When you fe- | Pure these men. They didn't volun- a y 48 y+ | tarily go to this work They were gain consciousness yon find yourcell es 0 : . under the ground, in a eell, close to pooed, and are not to be blamed, the exhaust pipes of various ma- | PUt pitied, : J chings. You stick In this usually for a om : three or four or five days, and then Willie His Flannel Shirt. suddenly the interpreter asia: illie," said an interesting "Will you work mow?" mother to her youngest hopeful, fo | Soy you know what the difference is be- tween body and soul? child, is what you love with; the body carries y This is your ence, but living is mo hady," tc ng the little fellow's | hit or miss proposi shoulder, "but there is something ERE deepér in, You can feel it now; what is it?" § OFFERED AS TEMPTATION TO INDUCE PRISONERS TO WORK, 4 Lm RERE + BERR os FUER 5 TRIE RRL 0 The Temptation, *Yoy can have any girl you wish, Penalty For Refusal, You fhally refuse to start work, and a German officer of high rank Kppears woo, the interpreter informs you, is In charge at the works of the prisoners-of-war, ind who is invested with the supreme power, and can sentence you to death, You again re- fuse to work, and immediitely you are surrounded by twenty seniries, who tickle your ear with the butys CIGARETTES BEAUTIFULLY COOL AND SWEET SMOKING Le RARE SAREE o BERR RRR PREF CS Mil cio NB The soul, my i 3 Industry is a sci MACLEAN OFF FOR IRELAND. I months ago when he was sent on al or less of a Special mission to Ireland to investi- I [ gate the possibilities of voluntary e Believe Foxes Marvellous. is The Japanese have many curious fos ied tudents to | superstitions about animals .the chief fort. He is ved tc ve ren a % "i 1 2 "» 3 J + : 4 e is believed to have reported | i. resident lady boarders." among which is their belief in the su- a student was caught in the | pernatural power of foxes. brought before the headmas- satd: "Well, Mr. Blank, the for the first offence is four , dor the second ten shillings, third £1, and so on up to about. Appointed Director of Voluntary Re. cruiting Campaign, London, June 1,--Col. Roynotds| very favorably, ------ | | a rolling stone iE] Shrines Dedicated to Foxes. I't * numberless shrines in| MaclLeé in, formerly Director of Na- Gh. I with! The bad- | tional Service, has been appointed a flash of eyes, | 18 ano é Al teared by the | Director of Recruiting in Ireland for "that's my fi 8 ! Su Is 1s: J tn It isthe purpose of the new voluntary | ture at least ;that of acquiring an en- campaign. MacLean, at the outbreak viabla polish. of the war was a Non-Confo mist | When a man boasts that he minister at Cardiff. He began his ac- | never gave his wife a cross word, the tivity on the recruiting platform two {chances are that he doesn't dare to. I mp, a Willie, ed to foxes, ; : When you esck your head up and carry it at an angle of 45 degroess ho- cause you have a little more of this world's goods than your neighbor, re- member, that "death comes equally to us all and makes us all equal when it comes." ki ow," said Although ' no moss, it has one extenuating fea- Where Conservation Fails. Tanto a pries: Christian Herald. tw rying of weasels and The great manufacturing plants of the f 3 are considered to-day waste nothing. In the lum-'evil o and h insignificant New Invention Rotaine Rupture Without Knife, Danger or Pain. Old-fashioned gal lt trusses and mail re Bed 0 ro 6 away with viiat would a season ticket enquired the culprit. a -------------- wonderful invention of a t ha his d Just . "Made fn Canada." Kingston, Handolph Hoteles : Saturday, Supdty-(ull doy snd night) 2 days only, June | and 2. i . Pay $1.10 to $1.50 per day and $25.00 educated; pay $1.10 10 $1.50 pet day : ® . Some vacancies alse for seamen and | other ratings. Apph 48 Cooks and Stewards wanted for the Cana- dian Naval Service. Cooks, age 18-50, experienced. conditions. Boy Stewards, age 16-18, well educated, 50¢. daily, 00 separation, Free Kit, Free Messing and useful _ service to the Country. > Naval Recruiting Officer, 103 Bay Street, Toronto, Ont. - Oe a Recruiting Secretary, 270 Wellington St. Ottawa. Sued, tion making are fabrics and fertiliz- | ber mills even the sawdust is burned and the scraps become fibre for fur nitvre and rugs and process silk for neckwear and hosiery. The scraps from our clothing enter into shoddy or paper, the packing plants. lose only the dhe by Products of muni- ers. Leather scraps make fibre board, Only the loose ends of our Beamsville, June 1.---His E lency the QGovernor<General visite the aerodrome at Beamsville this afternoon. A fight of ten gift aero- planes was made irom the 'Leaside Aerodrome (North [Toronio) to Beamsville, where they were in- spected. The distance, sixty miles, was covered in less than an hour. His Excellency met some donors of ithe aeroplanes, namely, Jawes Carruthers, Montreal, who had pre sented four battlaplanes and three training machines; Sir William Hearst and the Hon. T. W. MoGarry, representing the Government of On- tario, who presented one battleplane and two training machines; Mayor Church, R. H. [Cameron and 'W. H. Shaw, representing Toronto's gift of ithree training machines; and Col. William Hamilton Merritt, P. Burns, Calgary, who presented a fattle- plane, and Mrs. William Hamilton Merritt, who, jcintly with her hus- band, gave two training machines, were unable to be present. The names of the training ma- chines were: "Queenston, 13th Oect., 1813"; "Lundy's Lane, 25th July, 1814"; "Montreal; "Winnipeg"; "Bdmonton"; "City of [Teronte"; "Macdonell, 13th Oclober, 1812"; 'Mercer, 3rd June, 1916"; "On- tario Neo. 1." and "Ontatic No. 2." These machines form part of a fleet of seventeen presented to the Bri- tish Government which have been ppomoted by the Canadian Awfation Fund and the value of donations has refiched $167,616, i It is natural that mishaps wil} wear fo machines of every character so that the Imperial Government at helr own expense replace all dam- aged machines and therefore give to the dohor a permanent association with the air service. That the move. ment Is desirable and desired Is It is a standard joke that! CANADA'S GOVERNOR-GENERAL AT AERODROME AT BEAMSVILLE happening shudder the believers through ------------ ch Girl Works. } Misg Frances Nash, da late E. W. Nash, president of the American Smelting Company, and who has $5.000.000 in her own right lis working for a living in one sense jof the word. for she is now appearing as a professional rausician. er of the Nem shown by a mecent letter from the Air Ministry In wi} it is stated. under command of the | iCouneil, that they are interested in 2 move- ment which ds fin train under the auspices of the Canadian Aviation Fund, and trust that the work may £0 on and prosper, and that what is now happening on the wesiefn front well shows the value of such aid. The work of the Aerial School of Gunnery was inspected by 1 Ex celiency, wing that fin the f stages the cadet goes up with a pilot, has a Lewis gun revolving on a turret at the rear and fires at the picture. of an aeroplane on the ground, usually 200 yards distance. Fights between aeroplanes are prac- tised, but instead of bullets the Lewis guns are loaded with photo- grapale lms, the - films showing whether the jgans have been correct~ ly aimed or not. For another target two (Hun maghines are painted on a huge canvas ®n the ground. Then there is a flying target, ma sheet of canvas six feet square 'towed bé- hind ancthér aeroplane, the cadet flying after it "kills" it wily his Lewis gun. To practice fighting with scout machines, on which a Vickers' machine gun is fixed, minia- ture balloons are let loose and chas- ed and destroyed. lectures on aerial fighting are given by returned fiying cfficers. This aerial gunnery course is the last one piven a cadet, and 'When he succeeds in passing it he ig granted his commission ms a fiying officer. Generally speaking, before going to the front to fight he is given a Beat. graduate corse in England, but it is understood that in cases this is now dispensed with, as the course given by the reserve training squadrons of the Royal Mr Force in Canada is se very thorough. evr e Fair to Your Dealer S a business man, your shoe dealer has only one That 1s to fill your requirements object in life. make his store a more satisfactory exactly--to thus place to shop. ® Every minute of the da merchandise, so that wh of everything at the low y he is on the 'alert to obtain new and reliable en you come into his store, you will have the best est possible prices to choose from. In addition to supplying your needs, he tries in every way possible to avoid misunderstanding, mistakes and annoyances. merchandise, but service. For example : In Canada from coast to coast, there are approxi- mately 10,000 dealers who sell shoes. They sell thousands and thousands o pairs of shoes each day. It would be surprising if among these thousands of busi- ness transactions some mistakes or misunderstandings did not occur. Now then, when something goes wrong with your purchase, what is your attitude towards your dealer ?. In most cases, of course, the basis of adjustment is evident, and most dealers in Canada are quite ready to give prompt atten- tion to reasonable claims. That is the understanding on which When you see the A. H. M. trade mark on a shoe, mark an endorsement by the product of a highly organized industry, the shoe utmost in value, style ~ AMES H all business should be aone. If you buy a suit and a seam rips or any other little thing goes wrong, you do not ask or desire a new suit, but merely have the trouble repaired, Are you equally about Shoes ? Do you make demands on your shoe dealers which in comparison with other business would be unreasonable or excessive ? Do you fully realize that foot- wear has to stand the roughest treatment of any wearing apparel and is oftentimes subject to actual abuse and rough usage ? All reliable manufacturers stand fully behind their dealers in cases reasonable largest He sells you not only of reasonable claims arising from chance defects of workmanship and material. But if you force your dealer to make allowance for a claim that is unjust, he has to stand the loss, Appreciate the fact that your retail shoe dealer wants your trade, and that he wants to have you consider his store a pleasant and satisfactory place' to, shop. e wants to be just, even at financial Joss to himself. So the next time you have a complaint or a re-adjustment to bring to his attention, why not be sure that your claims are well founded and that what you ask him te do is reasonable, Be fair to your dealer. know that not only is that shoe concern a an but that ing hae ng represents the , you are i ' wearing ties which can be obtained at the price. OLDEN McCREAD "Shoemakers to the Nation" MONTREAL TORONTO

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy