Milverton Sun, 24 Sep 1914, p. 7

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

WILL FINISH FATEFUL JOB British Troops Have Struck ‘Terror Into the Ger- mans, Steady Flow of Reinforcements Needed situation in a manner that proved A despatch from London says: his worth as @ soldier. Speaking in the House of Lords, : f Jeader= Field Marshal Earl Kitehener 0-5) 7h a te tte ee vealed the strongthot:the British: (0) she British aemy. bas been expeditionary force in France, and described what he believed must be done to assure a successful issue of the conflict, While the tide had apparently turned in favor of the allies, a steady flow of reinforee- ments was required, he said. There wero already in France, the Secretary of War said, rather more than ae divisions of British troops and two ome cf cavalry, go) enemy. ranting. His every move has ae that Eo reseon what wal the stro an bi) the disa: ster their authors had Barl Kitchener also paid a tribute spent, ier i meleht without ae A. RIGID. WAR CENSORSHIP CORRESPONDENTS AT THE FRONT ARE SUPPRESSED. Archibald Forbes, Veteran Corres- pondent, Prophesicd 20 Years Ago It Would Come, “In ol ei European w: an inte: ar’ Jasin hand of Biig censor will lie heavy Ye th war correspondent, a mere transmitter, by strictly pik rs, by tion of the official set in authority ie atioh i .phecy was written in by “Arona Forbes, the man who made war correspondence one of the fine arts. The situation is even yon than which were tained at s Inoculating Troops for Typhold Fever at Valcartier. Mr. Forbes pictu It is not : | tnd men of the expeditionary force. 9 tht call song Forth TOF |e itty, vine. oon Ceara ees Se eth io lar divisions Stganied from units | Erench did not materially change T DE AD be given out except “official” news, drawn from. ovorsens garrisons, SR toon published’ statements Naturally this is devoid of interest; which were now ine ocoupied by territorials and vs rs, A divi- sion of peat valteaay had left a for Egypt, @ brigade had gone to|"V° Malta, and a gebeech force to Gi- Long and Mighty Conflict. braltar. Referring £0 the two new armies,| ,O7 ite, ‘The troops were reported to mot hen forw « subject of recruiting, the Secretary said that new divi-| Vhiah prides itself on outdoor sport mene, ore naa being collected at! as does Britain should have no dif army was being formed on the new| ing “officers: the moment A Earl Kitchener said: ‘‘A country in ‘ culty in finding men capable of mak- The territorials are A despatch from Paris says: The Matin and the Gaulois print the fol- lowing story, the Matin giving Sena- ee al 4 pan Mane making great strides in often, tor Puuliat as authority, and the vrdhees f Ro = “| and before long will be able to tak t ; fime, Indian divisions were on their Eivasuiiaanrdsy thie eaniraian 1 Agha ae suthor, Deca meee Nae while, reserve units are being sent | th. articles in the CGaulois: Praises General Frenoh. to nage j elo oc inane ri tthe Prussians ooonpied the min ar ear Aces ATe mn le n his despatches from the front, | Gecritoriala, ¥ | ing village of Lourches, near Do Sir yao French, Re gered of the British expeditionary foroe, had f det confid + should be the Beoretary continued, | hor ae Soe te of the commander himself.” carry on and ring th mig nt, badly wounded and lying) s Earl Kitchener spoke in the high-| conflict to suocess a Re halt hidden a ditah clove by dus It wil be n rder to |" ecessary keep the army at its full strength, to maintain a steady flow. of rein- forcements.’” met every difficulty eeennes by the THE PARMERS’ OPPORTUNITY. ERAL DELAREY KILLED. Minister of Agriculture Issues an Appeal to Grain Growers, A despatch from Ottawa says: Hon. Martin Burrell, pres of Agriculture, has issued a well-known Boer General, has be to the farmers of the knee West accidentally shot dead near Johan- to incre ir wheat acreage to Lest General Delarey, accom- unprecedented demands | panied which the year 1915 is expected to} just resigned his position as Com- Boer Leaders. A despatch from Capetown says: ili promptly and most carefully handle the stibble land. Tt is, therefore, ee urged upon every farmer in Mani-jeral. It is evident taken by ius Sazonoff, the ations ie ‘oppo: s mi tthe following statement in his be-|the larger towns on Wednesday. half: ‘I quite realize that accounts | The po of wictisies and routs, acts of hero-|4r¢ being employ ism and magnificent assaults may | ' ti sell newspapers, but above and be- lish neat a0 Eroreoe foreign em- yond all this there now exists @ situ- ies and consulates. ation and an STE ie trade mmerce with Russia which, GERMAN MPLOYED. {t is easy to realize opportunities for an industrial ow’ we have been paying Germany year- pitt somewhat Hhiees owing mans Near Soissons A despatch from Havre says: b: Something had to be done, got the maxims up, Bane fire, busy. It wounded in the hospital ship, of the fighting near reece ‘on the re- treat from Mons: ae don’t just Topaanhee the date. have not time to think Si diet nase But it was. “ne over a boys went, about their wor reek a fe were somewhere in| “Our rses, and late that Rat thought | from *nidlation. Within eee the last of the Germans| minutes they for a ti shots. in as many “Tn ‘the morning, however, the the Germans. Ms lonel gave orders to saddle. We lumped on our horses, nd at the enemy’s Aacpaeatere ae al- i ition, and while we prea recapturing horses, shrapnel, nnister shots and bullets were were before they expected sounded, and Aa Aa were off at enemy's net result o! eleven Krupp guns and aD to| soner creased in intensity. We began “While Britain has cee, ground b. ree e- op armed forces Tragic End of One of the Famous Gen. Jacobus Hendrik Delaney, & the en by General Beyers, who has using a car similar to that of Gen- Delarey, challenged the Gen- { neither Government, domon- no Ttaly’s eatin of neutrality continued in lice being Se troops | at ais = Russia Liat The eee eatin in Berlin let such as can hardly be overeat e a atc | 8 etm oe ee 000,000 souls, and the $300, many: Wokeritc the situation as becoming eee GALLANTRY OF THE BRITISH With Four Guns to Eleven They Routed the Ger- wait anxiously for our own Royal | Hore is a story told by Private Bry-| Field. Artillery to get into position aul, a Belldsh- oldies: aa. he lay [Ib wae-delayed by the fact that the) a attery horses Baty being wa’ atered. | so we} despite the} Our boys soon got | would have done you good to see how calmly and quietly the n realized the meaning the neighborhood of St. Quentin. | of their job, It was to hold on un- We had been Li Se all day. We] til the aries came up. In other picketed and watered our] words, save the regiment were, sending 8,000 $6001 that little scrap cts the capture et many pri- chy, A yee ttt with a half com- pany, had _arre was gi soe an ord when he himself fell dead, the shot coming from a French ser- A z geant summo) his energy aC succeeded in shooting the lieu t with his revolver. Gis Ger rushed on geant, ruck at him with their Files, an hee him and dragged him to the teen prisoners, Then there was a - hed the inexdent, and-ra Monument to Be Erected in France to Boy Who . Avenged the Murder of His Compatriots diers sought While awaiting the captail looking on to bring him water. A boy ran- am young geo! pa AES ef The captain fell aleo, for the boy quickly swinging round, shot hie point blan the boy to deat! subscription has been opened to build a whose name was Emil Despres. short delay while the German sol- orders from their cap- @ cup, out drank, The m captain arrived ites time to od at oe Ferret he would sh shoot the boy ee the rect of them too. Then, chang- ing his mind, ial thrust a rifle in the boy’s CEN and told him to shoot while a firing vert “The German soldiers bayoneted ith? monument “to the boy, it lacks a great deal that the people anes to know It was Forbes, in the Turko-Rus- sian War, news to the having out-distanes to war correspondents | pleased to frequently, ask them for rae news from their own front, and al sought them out to give intelligence. Tt was thes late William Howard Russell who, writing from the Cri- mea to the London Times, of the terrible condition of the British amy in the trenches at Seb: 1 in the hard winter of 1854-55. Tt was very unpleasant reading, and the people in mae bad +! eyes opene nade $0 sibs trouble First Correspondent. fearless and never considered friend or foe when there was hard beh to tell. Russell became so unpopu jee in the United States after hi letter to the London Times, describ. ing the defeat of the Union Army at the first Battle of Bull WARNING AT RHEIMS. German Methods Adopted to Ter- rorize People. “Rheims was occupi eres and it was occupied by the French after considerable fighting. “A procl tion, bring. ‘‘As farmers on the prairie|mander-in-chief of the defence | ; rayon i iti Kno," said the cieular, ‘itis now |forces of the Union of South Africa, aoe the oe eh aR ee too late in the seasor -mpt, returnin gna nstaths ouilate in the ee cca retireing ‘en, evening] 4 \iteral translation of this poster increase the wheat area by breaking ies ‘automobile to his Sec when Hs tollows:— ew land for the crop of 1915. ‘The! police, who were watching for - only way to get more wheat is ng of desperadoes knéwn to Proclamation. * dn the event of an action being eighborhood of totally or partly burned and the in- fraction te the abov ‘ “By t of Mb German au- thorities. “Here followed the names of ue Mayor and 81 of the principal in © Mabitants will be hanged for any in-|; 8 erenc gift of horses, but Col. Hughes had Tafortned him that remounts were ‘tion to pre with the words, ‘And others.’’’ Mee TROOPS. Thero rd Bf of the British ermy ate on their w to the seat of y ber. abowib 70,000. remier did not ns ee Rheuns; with their ad- dresses, including four priests, and | hi some ae | Run’’ Russe! a Wednesday that the Indian troops t is Béliaved say £0, sell was asked to go. a ‘country. ears afterward was a alluded to e this country as ell is peciay regarded. as thoshaihnae correspondent. Ori- ginally he was a parliamentary re- orter for the London Times. Le Bolievea Are 70,000 in] knew. nothing of military affairs at - ee the time he was taken from the 1 renony Nowe onters’ gallery of the House o! A despatch from London eae: Commons and sent to the Crimean Premier Asquith announced i had not been selec’ for the place, but it appears from one reason or another the man whom the Times -| clined at the last minute, and Rus- He obtained the duty of Man stantially to Aber Racin and of its emier Roblin sated red PS not needed, It was the inten send 50,000 bags of flour. on Wednesday afternoon T, C. Norris, leader of the Mela og spoke of to give sub- that he toba, Saskatchewan and Alberta in| General Delarey nor those in the| that they must remain absolutely ‘pening se troops have | his credentials fromthe British War the wheat-growing districts, that he| cor with bim heard the challenge, | ‘ele ond. must in no Way. &y 40 ted the front and are | Offic seb off for othe -seatot give the matter. o: epa ration, for they led without -| take part in the fighting. They must taking part jn the baitle now raging | war. of stubble land for wheat, his imme-| ping. ‘The police fired at the car, nob abtempt to attack wither icolated (in France. Tt has been the oustom| After Russell's achievement in uaa cisetatemtonvisars Tati cud a, bullet entssed General De: foldiers or detachments of the Ger-|! the War Office and the Govemn-|the Orimean War war corres- be the determination of every far- laters 6 heat. woting of the|man army. The See ot arri-|ment Press Bureau to not forecast | pondent became « ate profession, mer to make his Seaewe acres in 1915) Gener: aused a great sensa-|cades, the taking of paving |*Y y event, but to wait until it had| but it was ie elevated to a fine yield as never bet tion crea South Oita @tones in the streets in no way to happened before making any an- o until the Franco-Prussian War a sent ml hinder the movements of troops, or, | Mouncement. 1870. In Phat seo pitt oe aqme 7 a9 s a ¥ y action that may em- ‘i BIG RUSSIAN TRADE. WAR FEELING IN ITALY. Bole Soe eee ‘army, vr for- 50,000 BAGS OF FLOUR. @ censor, pe he had ‘both talegrani | a 7 Siraicnaeh tually forbidden, —— and cable at his service. It Has Beon Paying Germany $300,-}790ps Employed to Repress the|""Aviih an idea to securing ade-| Manitoba Offered Horses, But These| The pa Balkan War maa the early. Demonstrations: _fauately tie seal Ob te Rice Were Not Wanted, (pi ME slandh gent os te eee : orresponden ozens of them A dospatoh from London says:| A despatch from Rome says an stil calm into the A despatch from Winni : p The Petrograd correspondent. of | Spite the geet energetic measures | tion at erey the pe reated at Manitoba. Légialaen Pen: were permitted to reach the aie capital and believe that they wer y accompany the babes but. ke waited and watched and finally re- turned home without hearing a shot MAY SEIZE FOODSTUFFS, Moye to Cheek ae Effort to Boost Pr A despatch from ene says: A as been issued auth- A despatch from Berlin says: In- Hise ok the hewisninot s reat number of unemployed, the | stead of the exultation that marked hed Moothgeet arab and eesti high cost “n iti ercaateisaxaty the capital during the first days : ve var, ere have een urn markets in the world.”’ of the necessaries of life, especially the wars, {h dences of depressio stantly epovine gloomier. ‘This is true to-day not only among oficiales and the abaya general, but it also has sprea among the people everywhere. Separatists Busy in Germany ep sicte: { Berlin also is beginning to reosive of a seemingly authentic reports disturbing nature irom the outlying districts, where itis said that mark- anatist movements are gain- Word of these movements is coming in not from a particular section of the empire, orizing the Board of Trade to take any articles of com- mreasonably held from the meat paying the owners asda ¢ them. Tear. GS sick DOCTOR Proper Food “Put Him Right. The food experience of a physician ia his own case when worn rom sickness and when a the worst way, is valu- , but from the states in general, aye le: ‘cially from Bavaria, Wurtember | and Saxony. jes CAVALRY RIDING INTO GEMBLOUX; BELGIUM N FerP *. Severe it of me. reco oT eae to take four bio an fuls of Grape-Nuts and cream thre times a day, and for 2 weeks thie a8 al my only food, It baited so delicious that I enjoyed it im mensely an stomach handled it perfectly from the finet mouthful. ength, “Grape-N uts is of food to sustain life during serious attacks in whith the seeatt is 80 deranged it cannot digest and assi- milate other foods. “T am conyineed that were Gnape- Nuts more widely used by. ph; reat value as 3 =e i 2 =} 3 ES z * given b; ian Postum et e Windsor, ‘perfect. food in the sme: "Trial of Grape-Nuts and sera | 10 days proves. ‘‘There’s a Tok: ‘in pkgs, for the Tittle book, “The Road to Wellville. Evor read tho above lotter- ppears from time thme. rhe, eanuloe, true, and full of human tor ithe Geversieab that there was i a change of Ministry A m|_, ‘The old war correspondents were | "iis 3 absiiee in the position. Petri the « needing | Daily News at “Ghent, Soe ib z {and ac ap of iets ietiln es bh or I could never Ho ie a a beac and will be tried i. court: ross infractions of the Will Declare War on A despatch from Pafis says: Bf war against Austria and the date Italy w Entente he Ital is Cabinet are imminent, within two weeks the mili naval forces of Italy will be to the strength of Italy oves a cast the weight against of her sighed j| is the time to recover ancient terri- tory now held by Austria; and, taly is on the verge of declaring 8 Germany. PY lithe’ ie the ‘oplton-ot tio bee! in| yee sar esl ee thesshe formed publicymen in Prange All of bo wil deoide detustely to eon.§ in her lot with the Triple} Russian Gov: A correspondent who arrived here on ens has private hobo : That] and Triest with its own arms, for it uty bo civilization to Ttaly that the issue is in the balance ; that Italy will certainly be the victim of} cal ITALY TO JOIN THE ALLIES September 28 is Mentioned as the Date When She Austria and Germany : anallyy Ly aod the public eg} of the ntry can no er gicalaell ast few days at point, to the aban Pou taly ‘to the active par- eeu cs) There iis a ae belief that the antervonticn would most -|eomed by the Triple *Entonte and most Eee in the campaigns against Austria and Germany. The Giornale d'Italia, of Rome, quotes a St. Petersburg Ne’ per as de- ee that the Russian Govern- ment expects Italy to take Trent cannot be expected thai will Tr) be Panagassericay merely for main- taining neutrality, Ital ments have been suppressed, A despatch from London says: Hayre: “I learned on Thursday o! a combat waged during the which this war of eee lines with the ‘object. of reconnoit- machine a British airman sot up to attack, German saw the The attempted to attack him from above. © | Shots were fired but missed the Bri- tish plane, which swept in a wide semi-circle around his to swoop in order close range from above, os len, gidd, achines showed anothe: The Ger “DUEL AMONG Dramatic Struggle for Supremacy of the Air Be- tween British and German The Times has the following from up among the battle of the popes plane flying high fisited the British » As the ered overhead well out of reach of fire adversary and ly manoeuvring of both swift] to, and give - eye-witness. THE CLOUDS :,almost at the same prin but out of range of one anot Bach rf) Was fighting for a eer wo machines, -|/advamce and retire. Suddenly the British machine ane above ee eye re \d then, travelling cae oni the Ge man descends, The German . {is pnd There have occurred to my ks aie ledge many such encounters, .| which the amazing pluck of the ie men has been revealed ie sper pba number. evel rd as aga ne bos thrilling which I have ever listened it in the words of an BELGIUM'S REPLY. Exchange for an Armistice. A despatch from Telegraphing from Antwenp the Ex respondent says : Baron von vernor- occupied by the Germans, had visi- net ‘arose from the fact olic Anti-militarist party, who re- gians left, was se the Germans to agcertain whether it was pr ossible to arrange an armis- tice iy promising Belgium an exten. sion of her country. Belgium’s re- ply was a four days’ Louvain and Aerschot.’ Seeley be sct ek ogaehl A DAY, reat Britain, considered to £33,300,000 (8166,500,000), The reve: nue is only two million pounds. be- hind last year, WRECKER OF LOUVALN, Court-Martialed. Di It is satisfactory to,observe th in the criminal eile of se Offered Extension of Territory in London pare change Telegraph Company's cor- “The stb that Field Marshal i 0) General of ah territory in Belgium that M. Woeste, leader of the Cath- mained in Brussels after the Bel- mt to Antwerp, by battle near What the Present War Is Costing |) G A despatch from London says: A rough calculation made on Tuesday | CAs. Belgians haye refused to treat as a the city of mile ain, ATTEMPTED INVASION, German Troops Drew Back Into Their Own Territory. ach from Nairobi, i ay io the Belgian ted and alahac back into their pit ‘territo: he Enat tras Mounted Rifles der and defeated the invaders at 4 Kishi, ——— TO CLBAR THE BATTLEFIELDS. Hundreds of Firemen Leave Paris x On a Sanitary Mission. A despatch from Tobie iter Reuter’s Paris soe capital wee the region round about dager of infectious, dis from “all (in OE MISTOOK In FO POR FRENCH. 4 | Phe Segre “Annihilated ‘Their Own Reghment, ae Brae from Troyes, France, Saxon officer, a priso vb A Prisoner in Belgium and Will Be tise Germans Asked for Much, But Have risoner “re war eee erst Received Little, leune, who commen 10 ere ’ * patch from L nm Baye! man Landsturm: at king lqhe war indemnities claimed by the tage of tara sel Apel into has their tran at the people of the city are hard- ware of their presence, the Pi asntwal eo! hem were seat rage nn. Ail their tattered greenish-grey forms. “Red tro be) also. more visible,’’ German nates lost two army corps yen) in the battle Sou Prisoners from the Bat- Right |day,’? said one of the m handed ae them arrived in one day, aes g: belopeing ‘to pexiise freely, pointing eating ab uni- users are more elegant, said one. ars but all carry im their pockets | ¢l a set of Copper buttons surmounted German Losses Over 80, 000 was so nourishing I was quickly built back to normal health and despatch from Bordeaux ‘says; by an imperial crown, Min up stre: It is unofficially announced that the a a Bena tl ex~ ea On their tunics bat Hey: aonee a town for any lengt of tae ate majority of the a soners had been wounded in their finst Saige: but if ey, fought little they marched m| “We never did less than 43 or an kilometros a men, ‘“The field kitchens had difficulty in keep- ing Wes but neve’ less we usually .d one meal, But the marching All erated a day we march- One ed for 22 hours fuervupted bP one Ait 5 sle “This war is a terrible fing said a ae aise tears in his e left. thers," roiptiag to “my wi Do you oe T am heré willingly? What do we want here 2’*’

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy