May 1915.

Fermanagh Herald May 1st. 1915.  THE DRINK TRAFFIC AND LISNASKEA GUARDIANS.   CLOSING OF THE PUBLIC HOUSES.  A copy of a resolution passed by the Ballymena Board of Guardians “viewing with great apprehension the grave position in which the nation was placed,” “and that the drink traffic was in every direction working havoc and asking the legislature to carry through a measure for the complete suppression of the traffic during the war,” was read. The chairman objected to the adoption of the report as it was only a move to kill one of the few industries in Ireland.  Mr. Kirkpatrick said it was awful the amount of money people who were receiving the bounty, were spending on drink.  Mr. Kirkpatrick said it would do no harm to adopt the resolution and the Chairman disagreed.  The Chairman said it would do a lot of harm to other people.  The government would do nothing to the “weak beer” in England but they were trying to kill the little whisky industry in Ireland.  Mr. Kirkpatrick said that they would all have to drink coffee after a while.  The Chairman said there would be no need to consume such a beverage as they could make that whiskey in the mountains. (laughter.)

 

Fermanagh Times May 6th, 1915.  SOME PERTINENT QUESTIONS.  How is the two million pound scheme for lighting Ireland with electricity generated at Belleek progressing?

How much extra land has been put under tillage in Fermanagh this year as result of the war?

How did Judge Johnston, then deciding a motor accident case at the Quarter Sessions after saying he could not see how the defendant was guilty of any negligence, then fine him £5 and costs for negligence?

What foundation is there for the remark made by Mr. James McGovern, J.P. at the Enniskillen Urban Council on Monday that that body had always taken precautions to employ old men on their working staff so as to leave the younger men free to join the army?

Will the action of the magistrates in Clones and Enniskillen in greatly increasing the fines inflicted for offenses of drunkenness, during the period of the war, have any effect in decreasing the number of cases in our local courts?

Is Clones not well off for public lighting having both a gas company and an electric light company?  The cost of lighting Clones for the season ended the 8th of April by electricity was £89 as compared with £126 paid for gas during the corresponding period of the previous year?  How can the gas company tender now at £75.00 with the price of coal and everything else enormously increased. They must have made a tidy profit when getting £126  for the same amount of gas manufactured under more favourable conditions?

 

Fermanagh Times May 6th, 1915.  LEAVING ENNISKILLEN.  The Dragoons departed at about 8.30 in the morning and proceeded at a leisurely pace to Lisnaskea, where a halt was called for a time.  The second stage of the journey was then commenced, and at 1.30 o’clock Clones was reached.  The Cyclists did not leave Enniskillen until after one or clock and they took a short breather at Lisnaskea and arrived at Clones at 4.00

The weather was ideal for the journey, being dry and bright, yet not too warm, but the cyclist suffered somewhat from the dust, with which they were liberally covered before they had gone far, the men in the rear ranks naturally receiving the lion’s share of this commodity which settled on their machines, their uniforms and accoutrements and paid particular attention to their eyes, ears and hair, so that when he reached by their journey’s end they looked like men who had come through a hard and arduous campaign, and there was a universal demand for water, and still more water, with which most of the evidence of their ride was soon eradicated.

The horsemen had not suffered nearly so much from the dust as they were, of course, higher from the ground and where possible used the grass margins along the side of the road on which to ride and which is to be found practically the whole way from Enniskillen to Clones. An advance guard had preceded them on the previous night to the latter place so that upon their arrival everything was found in complete readiness.  Clones contains perhaps the best stabling accommodation to be found in a town of that size anywhere in Ulster, and not the least difficulty was experienced in procuring ample room for the hundred Dragoon horses, the great majority of which were comfortably housed in the stables belonging to Mr. Joseph Clarke, Mr. John Nixon, Mr. John Robinson, and of Messrs. Levinson & Company.  The men of the cavalry regiment were comfortably billeted in the Townhall and the Orange Hall while the cyclists were equally well catered for in St. Joseph’s Temperance Hall and at the Pringle Memorial Hall.  The officers had rooms in Robinson’s Hotel and the Aberdeen Arms Hotel.

 

The people of Clones cannot be accused of making any exaggerated display of enthusiasm for military ardour on the occasion, in fact they cannot be accused of showing any interest in what was, after all, an historic event, the visit of two regiments on their way to finally complete their training before going out to fight against a ruthless and merciless foe.

 

Fermanagh Times May 6th, 1915.  THE MARCH TO BERLIN AND THE FORMER PRO-GERMANS WHO ARE STOPPING IT.  Our readers (says the Daily Mail) will remember that during the many long years in which the Daily Mail aided by other newspapers was endeavouring to prove to the British public that the German Empire was preparing for war with Great Britain this newspaper was steadily abused by certain pro-German newspapers.  These organs were chiefly Mr. Cadbury’s Daily News, which vociferously played the German game by urging the British Government not to make war preparations; the Daily Chronicle, in which Mr. Frank Lloyd even within a few months of the beginning of the war, dwelt upon the peaceful outlook for Europe and the Westminster Gazette wherein Sir Alfred Mond and Sir John Brunner, up to the very declaration of war bleated pro-Germanism.

The same politicians and the same newspapers that did not know the war was coming are still endeavouring to make the public believe that the Germans are on the eve of collapse for want of corn, copper, or cash.

Our readers know that against a continuous tirade of ridicule and ignorance from one of these newspapers, we predicted that the aeroplane would be an essential factor in the coming war.  We believe that this government which did not see the war coming does not now understand the terrific nature of the struggle before it.

Just as for years we advocated a large Navy, the provision of a large Army, the development of aeroplanes and waterplanes, so today we urge that preparations for the war on a far greater scale than are now under contemplation be immediately put in hand that the crowd of young “shirkers” all over the country who are standing back from enlistment when married men are in khaki be “fetched” and, above all that more troops, guns and shells be immediately sent to Sir John French.

 

Fermanagh Times May 6th, 1915.  THE ENEMIES BARBAROUS TACTICS and continued use of poisonous gases.  A new German gone bombards Dunkirk and there is severe fighting on the British front while a deadly struggle is going on in Poland.

 

Fermanagh Times May 6th, 1915.  THE GOVERNMENT’S DRINK PROPOSALS.  A DRASTIC SCHEME AND HEAVY TAXATION.  Mr. Lloyd George introduced on Thursday his proposals for dealing with the liquor question. In his speech he said that the Government had been blamed for having attached too much importance to the drink question in relation to the output of munitions.  It was said that they had treated it as if it were the total cause of any delay which had taken place.  That was exactly the reverse of the fact.  In the present war, munitions and materials were of more importance than men.  The small minority of workmen who shirked their duty could throw the whole lot out of gear.  The loss of time was mostly attributable to excessive drinking.  The slackness of activity in many of the shipyards was causing anxiety to those in command of the High Seas Fleet.

With regard to private yards, reports from the Clyde, Tyne, and Barrow, showed that about the end of March the amount of work put in by the men was much less than could be reasonably expected.  While the country was at war the men were doing less than in peace times.  The problem was to get these men to do a normal week’s work.

During a week in one yard turning out submarines, only 60 fitters out of 103 worked a full day on Monday; on Tuesday only 90, on Wednesday only 86, on Thursday 77, on Friday 91 and on Saturday 103.  This represents a loss of 30 per cent on the peace basis.  In every case the principal cause was excessive drinking.

In addition to extra taxation the government was to have are complete and thorough control of the liquor traffic in areas producing war materials.  They would have power to close any public house, and power to suppress the sale of spirits were heavy beer is in such areas.  He did not claim that the measures were heroic, but he hoped that they would be sufficient.

Mr. Redmond promptly entered a caveat against the increased taxation upon whiskey and heavy beers, which, he said, would destroy a great Irish Industry and was in no way justified by the facts of the case, since in Ireland there had been no such increase in drinkingas was alleged to have occurred in Great Britain.

 

Fermanagh Times May 6th, 1915.  OPPOSITION IN IRELAND.  DUBLIN.  A mass meeting of the citizens of Dublin together with some representatives from the country, was held on Sunday in the Phoenix Park to protest against the proposals of the Chancellor of the Exchequer to impose increased taxation on whisky, beer, and wines, so far as Ireland is concerned.  There were three platforms.  The resolution was passed protesting against the imposition of any further taxation on this country, and calling upon the Irish members of Parliament to prevent the extension to Ireland of proposals, which, it was contended, would have the effect of extinguishing at least two important industries, in regard to which Ireland stands preeminent.

 

Fermanagh Times May 6th, 1915.  BELLEEK.  BOY DROWNED.  On Friday afternoon, at Clyhore, convenient to Belleek a distressing occurrence took place, as a result of which a little boy belonging to Mr. Robert J.  Donaldson, general merchant, fell into the River Erne and was carried away and drowned.  It appears that the little victim who would be about six years old, was at school on the date of the fatality.  Shortly after returning home he was on the bank of the river, which just passes his father’s premises on the Donegal side, when he was seen to drop in by some people.  At this place the current on approaching the falls becomes particularly strong, and to the horror of the onlookers he was swept away before anything could be done to save him.  Widespread sympathy is felt for the parents.

 

Fermanagh Times May 6th, 1915.  GUINNESS’S POSITION.  A good idea of the way in which the taxes affect the liquor industry is afforded in the case of Messrs. Guinness and Co., the whole of whose output comes under the surtax of 36 shillings per barrel.  In 1914 Messrs. McGuinness paid in duty £1,400,000.  In 1915 if the output of the brewery remains the same and the existing taxation remains in force the duty payable would be three times greater or £4,200,000.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 6 1915.  THE DUTY ON WHISKY IS DOUBLED IN THE CHANCELLOR’S PROPOSALS, AND QUADRUPLED ON ORDINARY WINES.  PUBLIC HOUSES ARE TO BE CONTROLLED IN WAR AREAS.  POINTS OF THE SPEECH.  We must strain every possible nerve to increase our present output of ammunition.  Lost time becomes more frequent with increases of pay.  There is excessive drinking among a section of workmen who receiving very high wages.  The loss of time is not so great in the armament works as in the shipyards.  There has been no perceptible improvement during the last few weeks.  Men drink heavily stupefying beer and raw spirits.  The congestion of transport at the docks is due to the fact that men can earn enough in three days to keep them in drink for a week.  One of the reports referred to slacking on the Clyde on Mondays, and the investigator attributed this to the pernicious habit in Scotland of taking home bottles of whisky on Saturday night to drink on Sunday.  Another cause suggested was the absence of provision around the yards for food for the workers.  If the men got food with alcohol less harm would be done.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 6 1915.  FLEET IMPERILLED BY THE DRINK.  ADMIRAL JELLICOE SPEAKS OUT.  I am very uneasy about the labour situation on the Clyde and Tyne. You may think and I am exceeding my sphere of action in doing so, but the efficiency of this Fleet is so affected by it that I felt it my duty to wire.  Today an officer in a responsible position arrived.  His account of things on the Clyde was most disquieting.  He said that the men refused altogether to work on Saturday afternoon; that they took Wednesday afternoon off every week if not the whole of Wednesday – and worked on Sunday because they got double pay for it.  He also said that they only worked in a half-hearted manner.  My destroyer dockings and refits are delayed in every case by these labour difficulties, and they take twice as long as they need to do.  I feel that you ought to know the facts and so put them before you now.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 8th. 1915.  JOTTINGS.  A son of Mr. Henry K. Leslie, Rockcarrow, Co., Monaghan, agent for Lord Enniskillen has been killed in action at the Dardanelles.  Mr. Stanis Irwin, brother of Major Irwin, Killadeas, has also fallen.

Amongst the officer is killed at the Dardanelles will be found the name of Major Edward Featherstonehaugh, of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers.  He was a brother of Mr. Godfrey Featherstonehaugh, MP for North Fermanagh, and a distinguished graduate of Dublin University.  Major Featherstonehaugh had been all through the South African war, and had been mentioned in dispatches on many occasions for his distinguished bravery in the field.

A farmer named James Callan, Carrickmacross, was found drowned in the river at Derryalone, on Sunday evening.  Deceased, who was 67 years of age, was well known in Monaghan and adjoining counties in the cattle trade, and very regrettably to relate the deceased son was accidentally killed by falling out of a cart in Carrickmacross street a short time ago.

At the monthly meeting of the directors of the Monaghan Gas Company –Mr. Harry Roger’s, JP presiding – it was decided in view of the contract prices for coal being about double those of former years, to increase the price of gas by 5d per 1000 cubic feet.

The Tempo sports and horse races will be held on Thursday, the 13th of May.  An excellent programme has been arranged and good sport should be witnessed.  The proceeds will be devoted to the Tempo Temperance Brass Band.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 8th. 1915.  LLOYD GEORGE’S SURTAX, INTRODUCED FOR THE OSTENSIBLE PURPOSE OF COMBATING THE DRINK EVIL, which, it is alleged, is adversely affecting the output of the essentials of war, but which in reality will sound of the death knell of important Irish Industries, was heard of with bewilderment in Enniskillen.  Several of the most prominent citizens of the town, interviewed, give it as their opinion that the Chancellor’s  proposition would never be enforced, owing to the hostility of the Irish Party who would never consent to the imposition of such taxes.  A large shareholder in Guinness has stated that the new taxes (if insisted upon,) would mean ruin to the thousands of middle-class people, who by their thrift, had saved a few hundred pounds for the evening of their lives, and had invested their earnings in some brewery or distillery.  The Chancellor’s remedy proposes a double duty on spirits which means 14 shillings and nine pence a gallon extra, quadruple duty on wines, sextuple duty on sparkling wines, and a graduated tax on beer according to specific gravity rising to 36 shillings per barrel on heavy beer.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 8th. 1915.  A REGIMENT OF DONKEYS PREPARE THE WAY FOR THE ALLIED TROOPS.  The special correspondent of the Daily News, Mr. Hugh Martin writes that he learned from an official source that the landing of troops at the Dardanelles had been successfully accomplished.  Landings had been effected in at least four places – one on the Asiatic side and three on the European side.

According to a story which I have every reason to believe one of these landings was made as the result of a clever and the comic ruse.  Covered by vigorous fire from our ships, nearly 1,000 donkeys with dummy baggage and mountain guns were put ashore at a certain spot.  The Germans and Turks at once diverted a strong force in this direction.  Meanwhile, the real landing force easily accomplished its purpose some distance up the coast.  The regiment of donkeys, which were decrepit animals purchased in the islands for a mere song, were annihilated. Among the prisoners are not a few Turks with revolver bullet wounds inflicted by German officers in driving them on to the attack or in desperate endeavour to prevent a retreat.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 8th. 1915.  A BOY DROWNED NEAR BELLEEK.  On Friday afternoon at Clyhore, convenient to Belleek, a distressing occurrence took place, as result of which a little boy belonging to Mr. Robert J. Donaldson, general merchant, fell into the River Erne and was carried away and drowned.  From particulars to hand it appears that the little victim, who would be about five or six years old, was at school on the date of the fatality.  Shortly after returning home he was on the bank of the river, which just passes his father’s premises on the Donegal side, when he was seen to drop in by some people.  At this place the current on approaching the falls becomes particularly strong, and to the horror of the onlookers he was swept away before anything could be done to save him.  At the time of writing the body has not been found.  Widespread sympathy is felt for the boy’s parents.

 

Fermanagh Times May 13th, 1915.  BELLEEK.  THE SAD DROWNING CASE.  In connection with the melancholy drowning of the young son, Bertram, aged four years, of Mr and Mrs J.  Donaldson, of Belleek reported in our last issue a correspondent writes: – The child had returned from school, and had his dinner, went out to play, and in a very short time met his death by accidentally falling into the river Erne at his own home. He was carried down the stream through the salmon ladder into the main river.  Mrs. McBride saw him falling in.  She was some distance from the shore on the opposite side; she raise the alarm, called her husband who ran to the river, and was within an arm’s length of him as he passed over the first fall of the ladder but to his sorrow was not near enough to lay hold of him.  Very soon, in answer to the alarm, many people were at the river.  Sergeant Ballentine waded out to the centre of the river where the ford is below the bridge to save him, but he sank before he came that far.  He and some of the Constables with many others deserve much praise for their endeavours to find the body.  Although two boats in a very short time were carried to points where it was considered likely the body might be found and grapples and poles with books were used from Friday evening until Sunday evening; the body was not found until 2.39 p.m. on Sunday, when Mr. John Slevin and Mr. Edward Keenaghan succeeded in bringing the body to the surface at a place near 25 feet deep and which had been searched and re-searched from the time of the accident.  It was a great satisfaction to the parents that no marks of violence were found on the body.  He appeared as if asleep.

The boy was a favourite with all who knew him being of a winsome and gaining disposition.  On Monday the 3rd inst. he was laid to rest in God’s acre.  The Rev. F.  J.  Johnston who officiated, give a touching address to an audience young and old and committed his body to its last resting place.  The very representative and respectable funeral testified to the sincerity of the sympathy extended to the sorrowing family in their great grief.  The remains were carried from the home to the grave by Messrs. A. L. Roddy (his Sunday School) teacher, Thomas J. Johnston, Robert L. Montgomery and George Cassidy, members of the Belleek Methodist Sunday School of which deceased was a member assisted by others.  The Sunday School children walked in procession after the remains, the girls dressed in white and black.  At the grave the children sang the hymn – “When He cometh, when He cometh to make up his jewels, all His jewels, precious jewels.”  The chief mourners were – Mr. R.W. Donaldson, (father) the Misses Violet and Edie Donaldson (sisters), Jack Donaldson (brother), Mr. W Hood, (grandfather), Mr. A. W. Donaldson and Mr. R. H. Hood (uncles).  Wreathes were from Father and Mother, Miss Knox, Mrs. Johnston, Mrs. Beacom, Mrs. Elliott, Mrs. McBride, Miss McCabe, Miss Quinn and Mrs. Slater; also a basket of flowers from Mrs. Naylor, the Glebe.

 

Fermanagh Times May 13th, 1915.

PEACE ABROAD.

 

Bob Hunt was not a martial man,

For peace at home he’d plot and plan,

And yet his better half, they say,

Would trounce him with her tongue all day.

She nagged him ninety to the minute,

And Mrs Caudle wasn’t in it.

 

No pleasure pleased the lady long,

Each single thing he did was wrong;

And, as a schoolboy dreads the cane

So Roberta feared a jaw from Jane;

And never went recruit more willing

To shoulder arms and take the Shilling.

 

Today, serene and cheerful, Hunt

Enjoys a rest cure at the front.

Where Maxims bark and shrapnel screams

His round, unruffled visage beams,

Through crash and clatter, thud and din,

He observes “This ain’t a patch on Jinny!

Jessie Pope

 

 

(Ed. Douglas William Jerrold (London 3 January 1803 – 8 June 1857 London) was an English dramatist and writer. Jerrold wrote for numerous periodicals, and gradually became a contributor to the Monthly Magazine, Blackwood’s, the New Monthly, and the Athenaeum. To Punch, the publication which of all others is associated with his name, he contributed from its second number in 1841 until within a few days of his death. Punch was a humorous and liberal publication. Punch was also the forum in which he published in the 1840s his comic series Mrs Caudle’s Curtain Lectures, which was later published in book form.

He contributed many articles for Punch under different pseudonyms. On 13 July 1850 he wrote as ‘Mrs Amelia Mouser’ about the forthcoming Great Exhibition of 1851, coining the phrase the palace of very crystal. From that day forward, the Crystal Palace, at that time still a proposal from his friend Joseph Paxton, gained the name from which it would henceforth be known.)

 

Fermanagh Times May 13th, 1915.  ROMANTIC FERMANAGH MARRIAGE.  ENNISKILLEN PROMINENT IN LOVE AND THE NOVEL.  HYMNS AMID ARCTIC ICE.  From the Toronto World a story of the most romantic lies behind the wedding of Miss Gail Porter, of Enniskillen, which interesting event is fixed for the 21st of June next at Fort Yukon, just north of the Arctic Circle.  How she came to make acquainted with Mr. Jack Carruthers, her husband to be, reads more like fiction than fact, and surely the crowning feature of the romance is that she is travelling approximately 9,000 miles over seas, land and snow-capped mountain passes, accepting with a smile the dangers of the Yukon rapids, to say nothing of mine and submarine infested waters, in order that she may be married in the  country where her lover had struggled against adversity and bitter disappointment before he struck the vein of gold which had long eluded him but in the end rewarded his perseverance with wealth sufficient to make him independent.

 

Carrothers, who is also a native of Enniskillen, left the thriving island town when little more than a boy to seek adventures in the land of the Maple Leaf, and incidentally to grasp what fruits Dame Fortune had to offer.  He was caught up in the famous gold rush of ‘98 and, with thousands of others, made the tedious journey over the snow blocked Chilcoot Pass, he and his companions all intent on getting a soon as possible to the scene of the harvest.

 

Success did not crown Carruthers’ early efforts to strike gold in paying quantities.  However, he did not become disheartened because the goddess of luck failed to select him for elevation to sudden riches, but persevering in his never ending search for gold his search took him all over the Yukon country, and when he finally struck ore in quantity Carrothers was content even though many others had made far richer discoveries.  His search of years rewarded, the spell which the rugged Yukon country had woven around him, claiming him for her own, was broken.  He longed for the outside, and came out when able to dispose of his holdings to advantage.

 

Last year he went to Europe and visited his old home in Enniskillen.  Later on he drifted over the Continent, and just for the sake of comparison was one of the excursion party to North Cape in Norway, to witness the midnight sun rise there.  On board the ship he became acquainted with Miss Porter, who became deeply interested in the narratives of his experiences in the Yukon country.  The acquaintance begun so casually quickly ripened into a strong friendship and great was Carruthers’ astonishment to learn when it came time to say goodbye that she was from Enniskillen, his old home.  Without mentioning that he had already been back on a visit, he announced his intention of going there direct, as it chanced to be his birthplace.  Carrothers’ visit was prolonged until he had won the heart and hand of Miss Porter and her promise to wed him in the following year.

While planning their forthcoming wedding Miss Porter, half jestingly, expressed the wish that they might be married at Cape North in Norway, in the field of daisies, buttercups and yellow violets, which annually grow in the lee of the monument of King Oscar standing on the summit, while the Midnight Sun shone, clearly disapproving that romance has long since gone to seed.

 

This met with the instant approval of Carruthers, and it was agreed that they should be married there this year.  Then along came the European upheaval and the failure of a speedy termination of the war to loom in sight caused Carruthers’, who had returned to his home and business interests on this side of the Atlantic, many a sleepless night until he hit upon the plan of having his fiancée come to Canada and journey north inside the Arctic Circle to Fort Yukon that they might still be married in the land of the Midnight Sun.

 

When he broached the subject by letter he feared that she would be a little diffident at the 9,000 mile trip which would be necessary for her to make, and he was overjoyed one morning to receive a one word cable “Yes” from her.  All arrangements for the wedding at Fort Yukon were completed and Miss Porter who is accompanied by her mother, will arrive in Victoria, B. C., about June the first and the party will set sail for Skaguay on either the 12th or the 14th of the month.  From that point they will travel by rail over the White Pass and Yukon route to Whitehorse. On our honeymoon trip we intend to visit all the famous old gold camps –Nome, Fairbanks, Dawson City, and others.  My wife is bound to be agreeably surprised to learn that, despite her fears to the contrary, Yukon and Alaska are not lands of ice and snow the year round, that they have a delightful summer climate, and so far from being barren they are lands of flowers. It is interesting to note that Mr. Carruthers’ has made arrangements for a cinematograph operator being present during the journey into the wilds, and also at the unique ceremony.  In this way a lasting record will be made of what should certainly prove an adequate climax to a love story so full of romance.

 

 

Fermanagh Times May 13th, 1915.  ITALY’S 2,000,000 MEN PERFECTLY EQUIPPED AND READY.  In view of the indications that Italy may decide shortly to enter the war special interest attaches to the strength of her armaments.  During the past six months a sum of £44,000,000 has been spent by her on special preparations.  The weakness in stores, munitions, uniforms, and equipment, of which are staff complained last year has now been removed.  Her land forces are admirably supplied with all requirements, and have at last obtained a full equipment of artillery.

 

Fermanagh Times May 13th, 1915.  THE EFFECT OF DRINK ON MUNITIONS.  At Birmingham two men were summoned for neglecting work through drink. Thomas Walker was ordered to pay £7 and costs and William Brown £3 and costs.  They were engaged on urgent Government work, but one absented himself for three days and the other for 2.  Walker was found in a public house by the police but he refused to leave.  It was explained that in consequence of the defendants absenting themselves there had been a loss of five tonnes in the production of munitions.

 

Fermanagh Times May 13th, 1915.  RUSSIA AND AT THE DARDANELLES.  A writer in the World says that although Mr. Churchill initiated the idea of forcing the Dardanelles as far as this country was concerned, the scheme was primarily of Russian inception, and our Eastern ally lays the utmost stress on its importance both from the view of subduing the Turkish Army, which has been giving the Russians a certain amount of trouble, of influencing Mohammedan opinion all over the world, and of affording the most convenient passage for supplies to Russia.  It is said that Russia practically insisted on our cooperation, and that the French authorities also heartily concurred in the scheme.

 

Fermanagh Times May 13th, 1915.  THE SINKING OF THE LUSITANIA.  The news of this dastardly outrage has been received with loathing and execration by civilised men.  In Holland, in Italy, in Norway there is outspoken condemnation of its cowardly authors.  In the United States intense indignation has been caused by this barbarous murder of American citizens.  The whole German nation, men and women, have shown that they approve of the deed.  In the United States the German–Americans have not been ashamed to hold a “joy day”.  There had been discussion on board as to whether the Germans would attempt to make good their threats and advertisements in the American newspapers, in which they declared their determination to destroy the fastest liner on the Atlantic.  The belief was that if they tried they would fail owing to the magnificent pace of the big ship. Perfect confidence prevailed on board.  The portholes were open.  The speed was not high and it is variously estimated at between 16 and 19 knots, whereas the Lusitania at a pinch could be driven at 26 or 26 ½ knots.  Everything went well until the second lunch was being served about 2.00.  The band was playing “Tipperary” and had played it so well that the tune had been encored.  These were the last strains of music that more than one thousand heard.

Women, with their children, clung to the rails of the ship as it began manifestly to sink.  The end came not later than 2.26.  This point is fixed by the fact that the watches of those in the water stopped at that time.  The vessel was now inclined steeply to starboard.  Gradually the bows sank and the stern rose and stood right out of the water.  Many people leapt from the stern rail to which they were clinging and dropped 70 feet down towards the screws.  One of the most appalling sights was the fall of the gigantic funnels which broke off with tremendous crash as the ship went down and killed several people on whom they fell.  A strange story is told by at least two distinct survivors.  When the end came they were borne by a swirl of water into one of these huge funnels and carried some way down it, where their mouth’s filled with cinders and shoot.  Then came a violent rush in the opposite direction.  One woman was shot out of the funnel into a boat; one man was shot out of it into the water and managed to reach some wreckage.  From all the waters rose at once a loud, long wail of the drowning children, and then slowly died away.  Those in the water whose vitality was strong enough found their life belts admirable.  These saved hundreds of lives.  People wearing them floated for two or three hours and not a few were picked up unconscious but yet floating and were revived by the men in the fleet of steam tugs and trawlers which hurried to the spot.  Every available boat had put out from Queenstown, Kinsale, other harbours along the coast but was an hour before the first of them could reach the scene.  The scenes when the survivors landed at Queenstown in the dusk were heartrending.  The great majority of the survivors travelled on to London.

 

Fermanagh Times May 13th, 1915.  THE OPINION OF NEWSPAPERS.  “Modern history affords no such example of a great nation running amok and calling it a military necessity.” –New York World.

“In defiance not alone of every principle of international law but also of every dictate of humanity, men, women and children have been exposed to death.  For this murder are there is no justification”.  – New York Tribune.

“The civilised world stands aghast.  If ever wholesale murder was premeditated, this slaughter on the high seas was.”  – New York Herald.

“The sinking of the Lusitania, with its heavy freightage of peaceful passengers was not an act of war.  It was a deed of wholesale murder.”  – The American.

France “No one could have believed that Germany would push or infamy so far.”  – Figaro.

Italy “There is a limit dividing the soldier and a scoundrel.  Germany crossed it yesterday.  –Idea Nazionale.

Holland.  “It is devilish.  This places Germany for always outside the zone of civilisation.  –Amsterdam Telegraph.

 

(Ed. From the BBC. “The Lusitania controversy. Some 124 American citizens were killed when the ship sank after being hit by a single torpedo as it neared the end of its journey from New York to Liverpool. The death toll helped convince many in the United States that their country should intervene in the war on the side of Britain and France. The debate over cargo has remained controversial. Germany insisted the ship was carrying war materials and could therefore be seen as a legitimate target. That claim was denied by Britain, which said there was no record of explosives in the cargo. But the rumours have persisted.”)

 

Fermanagh Times May 13th, 1915.  RECENT NEWS. Mr. Thomas Evans, Imperial Hotel, Ballyshannon, has been granted a commission in the York and Lancaster Regiment.  Mr. Evans has spent 30 years with the colours, to which he now returns.  For 20 of these he was sergeant-major of the old Donegal Militia, with headquarters at Lifford.

The number of the emigrants who left Ireland last month was 824, compared with 5144 in the month of April 1914.  During the first four months of the present year emigrants numbered 1000 913 and in the same period last year the total number was 8801, were 5888 more than the present year.  We regret to learn that Mr. Winters, lately the popular manager of the Great Northern Hotel, Bundoran is amongst those who have lost their lives by the sinking of the Lusitania.

 

Fermanagh Times May 13th, 1915.  CAPTAIN F. K. LESLIE KILLED.  The news that Captain Frank K. Leslie has been killed in action was received with profound sorrow all over his native county of Monaghan and also in Fermanagh.  The late captain was only 28 years of age, and after being educated at Harrow and Sandhurst he joined the he Royal Fusiliers some nine or 10 years ago.  He spent the greater part of his military life in India.  It was from there he came to his regiment about two months ago, and being stationed for a few weeks in England he paid a short visit home before proceeding to the front.  Up to the time of writing the exact engagement in which the deceased officer lost his life has not been made known, but the probabilities are that it was in the course of operations at the Dardanelles.  He made many friends in Enniskillen by reason of the fact that on several occasions he visited Mr. J.J. Lunham for shooting outings during the season here as well as in Monaghan.  The greatest sympathy is felt with the bereaved parents at the loss they have sustained by the untimely death of their only son.

 

Fermanagh Times May 13th, 1915.  TOUCHING SCENES HAVE OCCURRED MORE than once in the process of identification of the dead brought to Queenstown.  A lady, looking among the corpses at the morgue had almost given up the questing of her daughter.  The very last person she glanced at happened to be the daughter that she was seeking.  With hysterical screams she flung herself upon the lifeless body, and it was with difficulty that she was lifted up and removed outside in a state of collapse.

 

Fermanagh Times May 13th, 1915.  THE WAR ON THE WESTERN FRONT IS A WAR OF SHELLS and numbers, and shells and numbers will win.  The Germans do not believe it, but everyone knows that our islands are full of splendid men, some ready to go, others nearly prepared.  The eventual result says the Daily Mail if our government looks far enough ahead and puts into operation compulsory service, it is a certainty.  But for the moment Germany’s star is in the ascendant and every man and woman among us should realise the fact and in the realization resolve to bend every effort to vanquish the monster which has been preparing to destroyers us for well-nigh half a century.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 13 1915.  EFFECTS OF THE GAS.  A BRITISH OFFICERS DESCRIPTION.  “Of all the devilish crimes of which the Germans have been guilty since the war started this one is far away the most devilish and to try to excuse it on the grounds that it inflicts a quick and painful death, far different from the tornado of shells we let loose at Neuve Chapelle, is blatant lying. We have a lot of men who have been gassed in our hospitals.  Their moans are awful and they sit up swaying about fighting and gasping for breath.  Their faces and bodies are a muddy purple black, their eyes glazed and foam comes from their mouths.  Their lungs are turned to liquid, and the doctors say they have the appearance of men for the point of death from drowning.  Nurses and doctors fight night and day to give relief.  The way the damnable stuff is worked apparently is by burying in their trenches cylinders of something containing the gas.  From the cylinder a tube runs up to and through the face of the trench with a nozzle at the end, and when the wind is favourable for the purpose the gases is pumped out and driven over to our lines.  Will this convince people at home of what Germans are capable?  If one could only exterminator the whole breed the world would be all the better for it.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 13 1915.  A DESPATCH FROM THE DARDANELLES.  LANDING OF TROOPS.  By the evening of 26 April, after two days desperate fighting against the enemy forces occupying positions which, in addition to great natural strength, had been carefully prepared beforehand to resist attack, our troops succeeded in establishing themselves firmly on the south eastern end of the Gallipoli Peninsula.  The landing began at dawn on Sunday morning.  The landing force consisted of the Australian and New Zealand contingents.  The operations were divided into two phases –the landing of a covering force, timed to begin at 5.30, and the main landing to begin immediately the coverers were ashore.  The whole operations comprised six landings on the Gallipoli Peninsula, and a seventh by the French on the Asiatic side.  In most cases moreover, foreseeing the possibility that the beaches would be used as landing places, the Turks had protected them with barbed wire, of which they were absolutely prodigal, hidden machine guns, and a strong force of infantry in entrenchments, supported by a formidable number of batteries of 6 inch howitzers and smaller guns

A bombardment by the warships, beginning a few minutes after 5.00 preceded the landing.  Several battleships were pounding a terrific fire into the shore and especially on the fort and town of Sedd-el-Bahr.  The air was shaken with the roar of guns.  On the right three French battleships, with a great transport behind, were similarly hammering at the Asiatic shore. The landing at De Tots Battery was affected with commendable smartness, and comparatively few casualties.  Most of the boats reach the shore soon after 7.00.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 13 1915.  Rhymes from the front by two Maguiresbridge lads.  Privates A. McFarland and G. Traynor, with the help of Lance Corporal Dempsey, of Belfast claim to have composed the following lines.

 

This is from our Irish lads, fighting out in France.

Sitting in the trenches, waiting for their chance;

So here he is athinking his thoughts are far away,

With the beloved sweetheart he hopes to see somebody.

 

By my side poor Jack lies moaning,

He was hit right through the head,

When I looked into his pale face

I knew not he was dead.

 

‘Cheer up old Jack’, I murmured:

We’ll soon have you all right:

But he heeded not our speaking,

We buried him that night.

 

When will the war be over?

To you I cannot say,

But to gain a crowning victory

More men must come this way.

 

So leave the hunker-sliders

And show our Irish blood,

And fight for King and country

For now your help we need.

 

Come over now and help us,

And when you are old and grey,

You’ll speak of Tommy’s message,

And how you joined the fray.

 

Remember all our Irish lads,

That Britain rules the waves,

And if you don’t cross to us

Ye may be German slaves.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 13 1915.  THE SALUTE.  CAPTAIN JOHN O’DONEL, D.L.  was quite angry with several of the young men at the recruiting meeting at Manorhamilton on Saturday for not saluting the Sovereign and our country of which His Majesty is the head, by uncovering at the playing of the National Anthem.  Our impression is that they were not as culpable as might be supposed –that they were never taught to remove their hats, and by their salute pay tribute to our national greatness and our King.  They have been taught to uncover at religious exercises, but not at this duty, next in order; and the sooner they are taught the better.  Our schools are greatly at fault in this regard.  Our National Schools should all inculcate loyalty and the outward courtesies and duties due to the symbols of our National Life; and there is room for education in County Leitrim.  Every child should be taught to salute the flag.  The first lesson was administered pretty forcibly by Captain O’Donel on Saturday, and we hope it will be remembered.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 13 1915.  THE LATE COLONEL A.  F. F.  BLOOMFIELD, CASTLE CALDWELL.  A soldier whose lot did not throw him into the famous events of his time, but who did good service in those less known but all important events by which the peace of the Empire is maintained, has recently passed away in the late Colonel Alleyne Fitzherbert Fenton Bloomfield.  He entered the army in the early fifties of the last century and first saw service in the second Burmese War, when he accompanied the Karteban Column to Tonghoo, and was present at the attack and capture of Congab.  For these services he received the medal.  And during the Mutiny he served with the Colcondah Sebundies, in command of a detachment, and assistant to suppress the disturbances in the Codavery District.  While many others were winning their spurs at Delhi and Lucknow this unrecorded service fell to his share, but had it not been for men of his stamp who handled a difficult situation with tact and judgment the British Empire of India might have been much more desperately imperilled than it was.  For his services he received the thanks of the Madras Government, as he did later when still in command of a detachment of the Colcondah Sebundies he suppressed the disturbances in that Zemindary in 1858.

Colonel Bloomfield commanded the Civil Force sent to quell disturbances in the Rumpah country in 1862 and, being slightly wounded, for the third time receive the thanks of the Madras Government.  Later he held civil appointments.  He became Lieutenant-Colonel in 1876, and Colonel two years later.  He was one of those servants of the Indian empire of whom the word hears but little, but upon whom the whole of that magnificent Empire really rests.  Colonel Bloomfield was the youngest son of the late Major John, Colpoys Bloomfield of Castle Caldwell, County Fermanagh, and was born on the 18th of June 1832 and died on the 21st of April, 1915 at 31, Walpole Street, London.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 15th. 1915.  THE LUSITANIA IS TORPEDOED BY A GERMAN SUBMARINE AND THE GREAT A VESSEL SINKS IN LESS THAN 20 MINUTES.  THERE WERE 1,908 ON BOARD AND NEARLY 1,150 VICTIMS.  The magnificent Cunard liner the Lusitania was torpedoed about 2.30 on Friday afternoon off the Old Head of Kinsale by a German submarine and sank in about 20 minutes.  The weather was fine, but she took a heavy list soon after being struck, and those who went to the port side were at a disadvantage.  Their Saloon Passengers were at lunch and lost more in proportion.  They included Mr. Vanderbilt, the millionaire; Mr. Hugh Lane, the famous Dublin Art expert; Mr. Charles Froham, the Theatrical Manager; and many other prominent people. As soon as the news came to Queenstown vessel set out for the scene of the disaster and they landed survivors at that port last night. Reports show that 764 persons were saved.  The German Press partly exults in the crime and partly excuses it on the grounds that the Lusitania was armed, but this is denied by the Admiralty and the Cunard Company.  Interest will now centre on the attitude of the United States.

A reward of $5000 has been offered for the recovery of Mr. A. Vanderbilt’s body.  Enquiries have been made from London at Queenstown tonight relative to the Rev. Father Basil Maturin, S J, the celebrated preacher.  Until then nothing seemed to be known of Father Maturin being a passenger on the Lusitania.  The enquiries, however, were definite and it is feared that Fr. Maturin has been amongst the victims.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 15th. 1915.  SHELLS AS THICK AS HAIL.  A DULLAGHAN MAN’S EXPERIENCE.  In a letter to a friend, Patrick O’Brian who is a native of Dullaghan, Dromore, Co., Tyrone and who is at present serving with the 2nd Middlesex Regiment at the front says that he enjoyed the quantity of cigarettes and tobacco which he had received.  They were a treat as it was very hard to get either cigarettes or tobacco out there.  Describing his experiences, he says that the worst he ever had was at the battle of Neuve Chapelle, and he would never forget the morning of the battle as long as he lived.  It could be imagined that it must have been pretty bad when a chum healing from the slums of London asked him if he thought it was the end of the world.  The shells were flying around as thick as a shower of hail.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 15th. 1915.  MAJOR G.  C.  BROOKE KILLED.  News has been received that Major George Cecil Brooke, 1st Battalion Border Regiment has been killed in action, having been shot in the Dardanelles on the 30th ult.  Deceased was the only son of the late Brigadier –General H.  E.  Brooke, of Ashbrook, Brookeborough, Fermanagh, and of Mrs. Brooke, now of Hampton Court Palace, and grandson of the late Major-General W R Christopher.  His father, who was also killed in action, using his life during a sortie from Kandahar in 1880, was grandson of Sir Henry Brooke, first baronet, of Colebrooke, Fermanagh and 11th Earl of Huntingdon.  Major Brooke, who was 43 years of age was educated at Wellington, received was commissioned in 1890, was promoted major in 1911 and he had twice seen service in India.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 15th. 1915.  INNISKILLING OFFICERS’ LOSSES.  CASUALTIES IN THE DARDANELLES.  Thursday nights a list of casualties sustained by the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force in the Dardanelles contained the names of seven officers of the 1st Battalion Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, who have been wounded, in addition to that of Lieutenant W. M. M. Gilliland, who, as already reported, has been killed. The officers in this morning’s casualty list are: – Captain M. F. Hammond –Smith, Captain W. Pike, Captain C. Ridings, Lieutenant R. B. Shulrich, Lieutenant M. J. F. O’Reilly, Lieutenant E. W. H. Raymoud, and Second –Lieutenant C. H. Godsland.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 15th. 1915.  A VERDICT FOR THE DEFENDANT WAS RETURNED AT CLONES HORSE CASE.  It was the result of the suit of Mr. B. Levinson, horse dealer, Clones, against Colonel Ferrer, Inspector of Remounts, for damages laid at £5,000 for alleged slander, the words complained of having reference to the purchase of horses during mobilisation week.

The action said Mr. Powell K.C. for the defendant, was an indictment of the War Office by a disappointed man who posed as a horse dealer who had failed to force himself forward as a Government dealer in army remounts.  It was a crafty impudent action.  Counsel said that in everything said or done by Coronal Ferrer he acted as a gentleman, and the jury could not find that the words he used were spoken with malice against one whom he regarded with contempt.  Levinson was but a horse dealer in name, for the truth was that he could not tell the difference between an artillery horse and a zebra. (laughter).  But he was active in the plot to make a “corner” in army remounts.  It was well for him that he was dealing with chivalrous people who controlled the War Office, and not with his former clients, the Germans, who, in like circumstances, would probably hang him from the nearest lamppost.

Bunting, “a disgruntled horse dealer,” said council tried to bolster up this nefarious business, and they found Levinson buying up Caldwell, his partner, as part of the stock-in-trade, with a view to becoming an agent for the purchase of army horses, and to make exorbitant profits.  Colonel Ferrer, in what he did, was but doing his duty.  The jury would not assist the Russian Pole in accomplishing the purposes of his unholy creed.

Mr. Horner, KC, M.P. for the plaintiff said that it was unworthy to scoff at his German-born client, who had served in the Russian army and who had presented a hospital with 20 beds for British wounded soldiers, with two doctors, medicines, and nurses, and 40 acres of land.  The purpose of those opposing his client was to confine of the purchase of remounts to “three pet dealers” at war rates and give no others a look in.  Defendant’s purpose, apparently, was to enrich his three pals – the horse triumvirate – at the expense of others.

 

Fermanagh Times May 20th, 1915.  WAR NOTES AND INCIDENTS.  *At present, by not organising or taking forethought and by trusting to bad news to stimulate recruiting, the authorities are draining some of the best men from the ammunition factories, are filling the ranks with an undue proportion of married men, and are passing over hundreds of thousands of young “possibles” who declare they will not go on till they are “fetched”.  Such a model would be impossible in a nation really aroused and resolutely bent on welding utmost power into a single thunderbolt.

*Think of it – think of bombarding a city at a range of 23 miles and every shot a hit.  That’s what the Germans did at Dunkirk.

*A system of fines has been inaugurated by the Clyde trade unions whose members are engaged upon munition work.  Fines varying from £1 to £3 will be levied upon men who do not work full hours, and repetitions of the offence will be followed by still sterner action.  The unions are determined to weed out slackers, shirkers, and drinkers.

*Mr. G. N. Barnes, the well-known Labour M.P. and. Mr. W.H. Beveridge, the director and C. F. Rey, general manager of the Labour Exchanges Department in London, have left for Canada to engage suitable men for employment in this country in the production of munitions of war.

*During the six months I have been here I have seen many thousands of wounded, but never have I seen a more hideous sight than the sufferings of the Canadians who were “gassed” at Ypres.  To see all those brave fellows lying gasping in the sunshine outside the hospital, struggling with heaving chest to get their breath, was a heartrending spectacle and which aroused feelings of the deepest resentment against those responsible for such an outrage.  In these words did a medical officer of a casualty clearing station express his opinion of the latest method of warfare adapted adopted by the Germans.

*It is believed we are doing better in the way of munitions, and perhaps in enlistments, but with so much striking here and there, so much carping and cavilling; the Government even yet seems not quite the masters of the situation.  We can offer no opinion as to the truth or otherwise of Coronal Reppington’s complaint of the lack of ammunition at Ypres, but from what has happened its truth is too probable.

*Intense public indignation and discussed prevail over the strike of tramway men in the employment of the London County Council.  It is felt that, however serious the grievances, this interference in present circumstances with the carrying on of work in the metropolis is grossly unpatriotic and an encouragement to the enemy, who has openly proclaimed his belief that British labour would prove treacherous to British interests.

*If the rush of events did not cause people to forget so quickly they would remember Admiral Sir Percy Scot’s remarkable warnings about submarines, which were treated by the usual “experts” with the same contempt that our politicians expressed for Lord Robert’s urgent appeals.

*Why not mobilize the single young men of the country and thus stop the expense of the enlistment of married men when the young shirkers can be seen swaggering about our great cities any Sunday in their hundreds of thousands.

 

Fermanagh Times May 20th, 1915.  THE RESUMED INQUEST.  The inquest was resumed at Queenstown on Saturday on the victims of the Lusitania tragedy, the jury being sworn in respect of the death of Mrs. F.  King, Illinois.  District Inspector Armstrong deposed that 220 bodies had been brought into Queenstown, that 1,145 fire lives had been lost, and 773 saved.  The majority of the passengers were British subjects.  Coroner Rice said there was not in the whole history of warfare so appalling an instance of the effects of launching an attack without warning upon an unarmed ship which carried no contraband of war.  It was an atrocious, nefarious, and diabolical outrage, an insult alike to religion and humanity.  The jury found that Mrs. King was wilfully and unlawfully drowned by the crew of a German submarine, conveyed the deepest sympathy with the relatives and fellow countryman of the victims of this most atrocious murder, and professed abhorrence of the cowardly, unnatural, and unchristian conduct of the perpetrators of the abominable attack on non-combatants, men, women and children.

 

Fermanagh Times May 20th, 1915.  THE COMMANDER OF THE 1ST INNISKILLINGS KILLED.  In the casualty list is the name of Lieutenant-Colonel F.G. Jones, commanding the 1st Battalion Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers who has died of wounds received in the Dardanelles, where the 1st Battalion of the Inniskillings form part of the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force.  Lieutenant-Colonel Francis George Jones had a long and distinguished military career.  The deceased officer served in the South African war, and acted as adjutant of the 1st Battalion of the Inniskillings from the 16th of December, 1899 to the 24th of February, 1900.  He took part in the relief of Ladysmith, including the action of Colenso, and was also present at the actions of Spion Kop, Vaal Kranz, and Tugela Heights.

 

Fermanagh Times May 20th, 1915.  DEATH OF A FERMANAGH MAN IN CANADA.  The mail to hand from Canada brings the sad news of the death of Mr. William Hunter, son of the late Mr. Robert Hunter, of Tempo, at the comparatively early age of 55.  A Winnipeg correspondent writes: – An old Fermanagh man has just passed away here in the person of Mr. William Hunter, born in Tempo, Co., Fermanagh, the son of the founder of the well-known firm of Provision Merchants, F. Hunter & Co., of Enniskillen and Manchester, England.  Mr. Hunter arrived in Winnipeg seven years ago, being subsequently joined by his wife and son.  During their residence in Winnipeg Mr. and Mrs. Hunter made many new friendships of long standing with those of their own country, who are also pioneers in this important outpost of the British Empire.  Before coming to Canada Mr. Hunter had been for some years in Australia and also in South Africa where he was engaged in various activities and in the latter country was a member of the South African Field Force, and was in charge of the Search Light Apparatus at the De Beers Consolidated Mines during the memorable siege of Kimberley.

 

Fermanagh Times May 20th, 1915.  ANOTHER WINTER CAMPAIGN.  MORE HIGH EXPLOSIVE WANTED.  THE FRENCH SUCCESSES COMPARED WITH THE BRITISH.  Judging by a statement made by the London correspondent of the Manchester Guardian the British War Office are under the impression that the war is not likely to be over before the autumn, and that another winter campaign must be forced.  The military authorities have, he says, made up their minds to another winter campaign and the public must make up their minds to it too.  To shorten the duration of the war the troops require more high explosives, more howitzers and more men.  So writes the Times military correspondent in France.  He shows that the want of high explosives especially is a fatal bar to their success.  After such statements any men in England who, in the main munition areas, refuse to respond to the demands made upon them are acting criminally.  Because the French have sufficient high explosives they are able to level the parapets of the enemy to the ground and to penetrate with great effect into their lines.  It is computed that the Germans opposing the French have lost at least 20,000 men, when the British on the immediate left and before Ypres have caused the enemy a loss of 10,000.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 20 1915.  HOSPITAL ACCOMMODATION.  The demand, by reason of the greater number of our wounded soldiers, on all our hospitals are so great that a soldier invalided from the front and four convalescents were transferred from Belfast on Thursday to Enniskillen military hospital at the Redoubt, where there are some beds to spare.  We venture the thought that all the accommodation which the county can provide for wounded soldiers may become necessary, and it would be well to prepare for the possible – nay probable – eventualities.  Enniskillen Town hall would offer unusual facilities for a hospital, the major and minor halls being suitably placed, and provided with water supply and lavatory accommodation, while other rooms available would afford accommodation to nurses and for a surgery.  The kitchen also is provided with a range for cooking and there is a lift to the top floor.  Ballinamallard provided a small hospital of five beds.  We hope that it may be availed off for convalescents and being on the line of railway it would be easily accessible though very slightly outside the limits of distance from a ‘large’ town.  It would suit convalescents well so as to free beds for serious cases.  It seems almost certain that there will be another winter campaign, and that the casualties in both the Navy and the Army will be heavy.  We must grit our teeth and face the realities of the situation.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 20 1915.  THE GREAT SENSATION OF THE HOUR – A COALITION GOVERNMENT.  We have had in high places the very men who ought to have known everything, and who had prepared for the crisis; but instead of augmenting, they were reducing the Navy and Army and helping the enemies of the kingdom and weakening our own defences.  Only a fortnight ago a ship was done to death within sight of our own shores, and Mr. Churchill disavows all responsibility for it.  Of course he does.  All incompetents do the same.  No destroyer waited near the Fastnet in British waters for the Lusitania, and she was done to death with 1,500 souls on board and not a gunboat to aid her.  Lord Charles Beresford had again and again demanded fast cruisers and more fast cruisers for such purposes, and the Churchill’s and McKenna’s and other incompetently men of the Treasury Bench merely smiled at the patriot sailor who knew the needs of the sea and the muddling of those in high office.  And the man they regarded as a crank was right, and they were wrong.  The assumption by Mr. Churchill of the right to force his own idea of strategy on the  Admiralty without or against the approval of the First Sea Lord, such as was his first rash attack on the Dardanelles without the support of the army and led to the resignation of Lord Fisher.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 20 1915.  Private W.  A.  Lipsett.  From information received by relatives and friends from his comrades in the 10th Battalion Canadian Expeditionary Force, it is feared that private W. A. Lipsett, a son of the late Mr. Robert Lipsett, of Ballyshannon County Donegal, lost his life in leading a hand grenade charge against the German trenches during the fighting at Saint Julien.  Private Lipsett was a member of the Irish Bar, and left this country for Canada two or three years ago.  He came over with the first Canadian Expeditionary Force and went to the front with them.  His brother Lieutenant L. R. Lipsett, Army Service Corps, is also a member of the Irish Bar.  Both are cousins of Lieutenant Colonel Lipsett who was mentioned in the Canadian “Eye witness’s” account of the gallant stand made by the Colonial troops at Saint Julien.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 20 1915.  Death of  Brigadier General Cole.  Brigadier General Arthur Willoughby George Lowry Cole, C.B., D.S.O, whose death from wounds is reported from Headquarters in France, was a distinguished member of the Fermanagh family of which the Earl of Enniskillen is the head.  He was the eldest son of the late Colonel Arthur Lowry Cole, C.B., and Elizabeth Francis, daughter of the late Rear-Admiral Villiers Francis Hatton and grandson of the late General the Hon.  Sir Galbraith Lowry Cole G.C.B., M.P.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 20 1915.  WAR NEWS.  A winter campaign.  It is daily becoming more evident that we shall have to face a winter campaign.  The progress of the war, while very slow, is exceedingly heavy in casualties: decisive battles have not taken place, while on the other hand men are fighting day and night, and dying for us at home.  We must make up our minds for it – a winter campaign, and the absolute necessity for conscription to draw out the loafers and fill the ranks of an augmented army.

3000 butchers have ceased doing business in and around Liverpool owing to the greatly increased price of meat.  There is no demand

3000 Aliens have already been interned in England in the new camps, many of the Germans being voluntary surrenders.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 20 1915.  SCARING THE TURKS WHO HAVE A DREAD OF THE BAYONET.  SUCCESS IN THE DARDANELLES ASSURED.  Cairo, Monday.  An observer who has just returned from the Dardanelles describe the position of the Allies as all that could be desired from the point of view of strength and health.  The Turkish forces he said could not move the British from their present positions especially at Saribar, which was of great strategic importance. The British were biding their time.  A formidable task lay ahead, but success was assured.  The trenches are sometimes only 30 yards apart, and Turkish attacks were constantly repulsed.  The enemy would never face the British bayonet while the British were only held up by machine gun fire.  The observer added that the British had behaved splendidly, showing valour worthy of their highest traditions.  They had done all that was expected of them.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 20 1915.  THE INNISKILLINGS.  COLONEL JONES OF THE 27TH HAS DIED OF HIS WOUNDS.  We deeply regret to learn from the War Office returns that Lieutenant-Colonel Francis G.  Jones, commanding the first battalion Royal Inniskilling fusiliers has died of wounds received in action at the Dardanelles.  He was 51 years of age, and the eldest son of the late Rev. Edward George Jones of Cecilstown Lodge, Mallow County Cork.  Colonel Jones commanded the details of the Inniskillings at Enniskillen during the Boer War and subsequently served in the war and had 30 year’s service in the old battalion.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 20 1915.  EARL KITCHENER WANTS 300,000 MORE RECRUITS to form new armies.  So he said in a general statement in the House of Lords on Tuesday on the military situation.  ‘I have said that I would let the country know when more men should be wanted for the war.  The time has come and I now call for 300,000 recruits to form new armies.  Those who are engaged in the production of war material of any kind should not leave their work.  It is to men who are not performing this duty I appeal, and I am convinced that the manhood of England still available will loyally respond by coming forward to take their share in this great struggle for a great cause.  (Cheers.)

 

Fermanagh Herald May 22nd. 1915.  3000 BUTCHERS CLOSE DOWN.  CRISIS IN THE MEAT TRADE.  The war has hastened what appears to be a crisis in the meat trade.  The higher the price of meat goes the more difficult it becomes for a trader to keep his head above water.  And so we find on one hand the people clamouring against the extortionate prices charged by prosperous butchers, and on the other hand these butchers, by the thousand closing their shops, because it is better to be idle that to trade at a loss. Meat which was formerly 10½ to 11 pence per pound is now selling at one 1s 1d and 1s 2d and before the butcher can sell at a profit he would have to charge 1s 3d. Among the causes are: – Ireland is being drained of cattle and immature stocks are being killed, which will have a serious effect on the breeding for years to come. The same applies to sheep.  So many lambs are being slaughtered that stocks will be limited for a long time.  Enormous quantities of meat are being sent to the soldiers at the front, many of whom are eating twice as much meat as formerly.  The chilled meat trade is crippled by high sea freight rates for more ships are engaged in other duty, and it is asserted that what chilled meat is being sold in Liverpool is brought from London.  Finally owing to foot-and-mouth disease there is an embargo forbidding the importation of cattle from Canada and the Argentine.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 22nd. 1915.  FLIES ARE GERMANY’S ALLIES.  Flies are disease carriers.  There will be more disease in the Europe than ever this year owing to the war.  Flies, once more, are disease carriers.  Therefore kill them at any time, but more than ever this year; and kill them at any stage.  The only good fly is a dead one said Dr. R King Brown at the Institute of Hygiene, London.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 22nd. 1915.  THE HARDEST THREE DAYS THE SINCE OF THE MARNE.  How we took “the hypnotic hill.”  The hardest three days since the Marne is an officer’s comment on the fighting which began on Sunday and ended on Tuesday with the storming of hill 165 at Notre Dame de Lorette.

“Early on Sunday, he said, the brigade was shown the hill and told it must be taken at all costs.  The men of my regiment shouted for joy.  The hill had hypnotised them for weeks and weeks with its tiers of trenches up the slopes.  Our artillery, concealed in mounds to the west, thundered forth, preparing the way for us.  We could see the shrapnel bursting over the Germans and shells ploughing up their trenches, blowing into the air bodies which danced like figures on wires.  At 7.00 we started along the sunken roads and under cover of copses.  The first German trench was on the fringe of a little wood.  In spite of mitrailleuses we dashed forward with fixed bayonets and rushed the trench before the Germans could recover from their stupor.  We were now at the beginning of the slope.  The second trench was carried after a fierce struggle.  We rushed on over heaps of the bodies of the enemy.  A perfect hail from the crest made us waver, but we kept on, taking every scrap of cover and protected by our light artillery, which rained shells on the crest and swept away the barbed wire.

We were now galled by fire from a little wood on the left, and the advance was rendered difficult by bayonets planted point upwards in the ground, which impaled those who fell.  At 11 o’clock the German reserves appeared on the top in compact masses, and although our artillery made great gaps in them we had to retire with only 100 yards gained.  The next day the battle had to be fought all over again.  At last, on the third morning, thanks to a double turning movement, we carried the height.  German corpses were strewed on the ground in many places a yard high.  The enemy lost far more heavily than we, and my men as their share of the bag captured 300.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 22nd. 1915.  JOTTINGS.  The remainder of the Inniskilling Dragoons and Cycling Corps left Enniskillen on Saturday for Magilligan Camp.

Private James Lynch, a native of Enniskillen, has been killed in action.  He was shot in the breast and died eight hours afterwards.

On last Thursday evening five wounded soldiers arrived in Enniskillen and were brought in motor car as to the military hospital.  They received their wounds at the fight for Hill 60.

Dr. Knox, at the last meeting of the Lisnaskea Guardians, reported that three cases of typhoid fever had been admitted to the fever hospital, and that he had to requisition the services of a night nurse.

We desire to draw the attention of parents to the very attractive scheme of scholarships which are being offered by the Sisters of Mercy, Enniskillen.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 22nd. 1915.  THE COMMANDER OF THE FIRST INNISKILLINGS, LIEUTENANT-COLONEL F.  G.  JONES IS KILLED.  He has died of wounds received in the Dardanelles where the 1st Battalion of the Inniskillings form part of the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force.  Lieutenant-Colonel Francis George Jones had a long and distinguished military career.  He served in Burma in 1892/3 and in the North West Frontier of India 1897/8 and also served in their South African WAR.  He took part in the relief of Ladysmith, including the action at Colenso, and was also present at the actions at Spion Kop, Vaal Kranz and Tugela Heights.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 22nd. 1915.  AGAINST LADY CONDUCTORS.  Tramway employees of the British Electric Traction Co., in South Staffordshire area, comprising a network of services, decided at a meeting on Saturday to demand an increase of half a penny an hour in wages, and the abolition of lady conductors now being trained.  Failing satisfaction, the men have decided to cease work on Saturday next.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 22nd. 1915.  ITALY DECLARES WAR.  Rome, Sunday. It is officially announced that Italy has declared war against Austria.  Its army and navy are mobilised and 1,200,000 troops are ready to fight.  The Italian Ambassador at Vienna has been recalled. A state of war between Italy and Austria will begin tomorrow, May 24th.  Continued animation prevails in the city.  The soldiers are everywhere acclaimed with enthusiasm.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  THREE TRAINS CRASH INTO EACH OTHER.  THE MOST APPALLING DEATH-ROLL EVER RECORDED IN BRITISH RAILWAY DISASTERS.  MANY SOLDIERS AMONG THE VICTIMS.  The most disastrous accident ever recorded in this country occurred on the Caledonian Railway close to Carlisle early on Saturday morning.  The three trains involved in the disaster where: – a fast train travelling from Carlisle south with a battalion of the Royal Scots carrying about 500 men; a local train which left Carlisle for the north at 6.10 a.m. and the London to Glasgow Express which left Euston at midnight.  The local train was standing on the slip line to allow the fast Carlisle train to pass when it was dashed into by the troop train.  Then, into the wreckage and scenes of death already wrought by the collision of the two first trains – the express from Carlisle.  Words fail to describe what followed.  The following can be taken as the figures up to the present: – bodies recovered or died in hospital 170, number of injured about 300.  All these did not come by their deaths or injuries through the collision.  Fire broke out in the troop train through gas ignition and this horror also claimed its victims.  The scene of the tragedy is Quinton Hill two miles distant from Gretna Green, with its romantic memories of fugitive marriages.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  HEROISM REWARDED.  BOA ISLAND TRAGEDY RECALLED.  In the courthouse, Enniskillen, yesterday (Wednesday) Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Cullen, Ardshankill, Boa Island, Kesh, were presented with two handsomely framed certificates and a cheque for £5 from the Carnegie Hero Fund for their heroism in saving the lives of William Snow and Thomas McCabe on the 24th of December last.  It will be remembered by our readers that the boat in which Snow, McCabe and a man named Gibson were crossing to Boa Island capsized.  Cullen and his wife hearing their cries for help rowed 400 yards to the rescue and succeeded, with great difficulty and risk to themselves, in saving the first two named but Gibson was drowned.  The presentation was publicly made by Mr. J.  E.  Collum, His Majesty’s Lieutenant, Fermanagh, who congratulated them on their heroic act.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  LOCAL NEWS.  *Leading short manufacturers in Derry have been receiving contracts from the War Office for 300,000 army shirts.

*A woman named Annie White, about 40 years of age, who was sentenced to one months imprisonment at Omagh Petty Sessions for insubordination at the Workhouse, was being conveyed in the train to Derry Jail and when about ½ mile from the city she suddenly thrust her hand out of the window, opened the door, jumped out and was killed.

*By order of Colonel Fagan in command of the Lough Swilly defences, the hours during which men in uniform may be served in licenced houses in Enniskillen are from 6.00 p.m. to 8.00 p.m. This order supersedes the old order which permitted the men to be served between 5.00 p.m. and 10 pm.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  FERMANAGH, ACCORDING TO THE MILITARY AUTHORITIES themselves, has already done fairly well in supplying recruits for the new armies, and there can be no doubt that has done splendidly in proportion to its population, compared with very many other counties in Ireland.  Its resources, however, in this direction have been by no means exhausted, or even very seriously affected, and consequently there is ample scope for the operations of the district committee is formed yesterday Wednesday to stimulate recruiting in different parts of the county.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  MOTORING SEASON IN FERMANAGH.  NEW LIGHTWEIGHT MOTOR CYCLE.  With the advent of good weather and drier roads motor cyclists are making their appearance on our Fermanagh roads in increasingly large numbers and all sorts and conditions of machines are daily to be seen passing through Enniskillen and other towns in the county.  The motor cycle as a means of rapid, economical and healthy travelling has beyond doubt come to stay and the largest motor firms in Great Britain are catering more and more for the swiftly growing demand which has of late years arisen for these machines.  This season there is an exceptionally keen demand for reliable light weight motor bicycles which can be purchased at a moderate figure, and in order to satisfy this demand in the County Fermanagh and the adjacent districts Mr. Josiah Maguire, Darling Street, Enniskillen, has just placed on the market two machines of this description which merit more than passing notice on the part of those thinking of embarking upon a new purchase. One of these is a two-stroke” which has been appropriately named the “Erne” and which is certain to become very popular as soon as its merits and reliability have become properly known.  A representative of the Fermanagh Times has inspected the machine during the week and the following description of its principal parts would give our motoring readers some idea of it. Price – single speed model 25 guineas; two speed counter shaft model £33; two speed countershaft gear and free engine clutch £35.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  THE GOVERNMENT AND RACE MEETINGS.  A REQUEST FOR GENERAL SUSPENSION IN GREAT BRITAIN.  NEWMARKET EXCEPTED.  The following letter has been sent by Mr. Runciman to the Jockey Club on the subject of race meetings.

Dear Captain Greer, – the Government have ascertained and appreciate the motives actuating the Stewards of the Jockey Club in continuing to give their sanction to those of the race meetings which have taken place since the outbreak of the war and we have been fully conscious of your desire to protect the interests of those persons who are dependent upon horse racing and horse breeding for their livelihood.

The general feeling on both sides of the House of Commons is, however, so strongly against the meetings being continued that the government have felt the present moment opportune for further consideration of the subject.  I have to inform you that owing to the circumstances of the war, and in particular the necessity for keeping the whole of our British railway system free from congestion at any time for the rapid and unimpeded transit of troops and of munitions, and the special conditions of the munition areas, think it necessary to ask the Stewards of the Jockey Club to suspend all race meetings in Great Britain after this week for the duration of the war.  The only exception to this general suspension should be at Newmarket, the particular circumstances and industries of which, dependent as they are entirely on racing, combine to make this exception expedient.  Yours very truly, Walter Runciman.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  STEWARDS COMPLY WITH THE REQUEST.  Speaking at a dinner given by the British Industries Fair in London on Thursday night Mr. Runciman said the seriousness of the national task before the country could not be exaggerated.  Referring to his letter to the Senior Stewards of the Jockey Club, he said that the Stewards at once complied with the request, and from the end of this week, with the exception of Newmarket, they would not sanction any race meeting until peace was declared.  This was a striking instance of the sacrifices the people at home were prepared to make, while the younger generation were doing their work at the front.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  IRISH RACING.  As Mr. Runciman’s letter particularly mentions Great Britain racing in Ireland is apparently excepted from the request of the Government and the decision of the Stewards.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  PLAIN SPEAKING ABOUT THE WAR.  EXTRAORDINARY ALLEGATIONS.  THE SCANDAL OF THE SHELLS.  LORD KITCHENER’S GRAVE ERROR.  (From the Daily Mail.)  The new government may have to bear the brunt of much darker days than any we have yet faced.  It is possible that the men whose names will be put before the nation in the next few days may be responsible to the country at the time of an actual attempted invasion – the first invasion on any scale of importance since 1066.  For we do not believe for one moment that the Germans are keeping their vast fleet of warships and transports rotting in idleness.  We believe that when the hour suits them – perhaps in some last moment of desperation – their fleet will strike with the intention of terrifying the people of these are islands into a peace on their own terms.  That is why it is so vitally urgent that the two most important factors in our national life at the present time – the organisation of the Navy and the organisation of the Army – should be placed in the best available hands and at once.

 

It is now an open secret that the Navy has suffered seriously during the past nine months by the quarrel between Lord Fisher and Mr. Churchill – the quarrel between the professional expert of lifelong experience and the politician.  At the time of writing we are not yet assured that the control of the Navy is where it should be – in the untrammelled hands of Lord Fisher.

 

Then comes the great question of the Army.  In the dark days when Lord Haldane – who, we can definitely say, is going – showed signs of renewed tinkering with the Army, The Daily Mail suggested that Lord Kitchener should take charge of the raising of the new troops.  Lord Kitchener at once saw the size of that part of his job, and that part of the work was done as well as anyone could do it.  We have never liked, and the public have never liked, the use of Lord Kitchener’s name – instead of the King’s – in connection with these armies and the public has greatly disliked some of the publishing methods employed by Lord Kitchener, but it has pardoned them in the urgent need of the moment, and the soldiers are there – how many nobody knows; German estimates place them at two million, though they say that these men are largely unprovided with arms.  Whether the Germans are right or wrong we do not know.  But what we do know is that Lord Kitchener has starved the Army in France of high-Explosive shells.

 

The German aeroplanes which hover over our positions all day long know how we stand at the front in regard to numbers of men, and the work of the German spies at the ports of departure in England and those of arrival in France adds to their information. A Liberal newspaper which is in very close touch with the Government yesterday (Thursday) spoke of the quarrel between Lord Kitchener and Sir John French.  There should be no such quarrel.  It has never been pretended that Lord Kitchener is a soldier in the sense that Sir John French is a soldier.  Lord Kitchener is a gatherer of men – and a very fine gatherer too.  But his record in the South African War as a fighting general – apart from his excellent organising work as Chief of the Staff – was not brilliant.  The opinion which Lord Roberts expressed as to his handling of troops at Paardeberg is well known, and we have never met a soldier who held any other opinion.  Nothing in Lord Kitchener’s experience suggest that he has the qualifications required for conducting a European campaign in the field, and we can only hope that no such misfortune will befall this nation as that he should be permitted to interfere with the actual strategy of this gigantic war.

 

The admitted fact that Lord Kitchener ordered the wrong kind of shell –the same kind of shell which he used largely against the Boers in 1900 – has alarmed the whole army in France and also the armies of our Allies.  He persisted in sending shrapnel, a useless weapon in trench warfare.  It is now admitted that he was warned repeatedly that the kind of shell required was a violently explosive bomb which would dynamite its way through the German trenches, and entanglements and enable our brave men to advance safely.  The kind of shell our poor soldiers have had has caused the deaths of thousands of them.  Incidentally it has brought about a national crisis and the formation of what we hope he’s going to be a National Government.

We are not a military nation, and therefore do not understand the difference between soldiers and soldiers.  Sir John Collins is a great soldier, one of the greatest soldiers in the world.  It is to him we owe the superb arrangements for the feeding of our troops.  Sir William Robertson, Sir John French’s Chief of Staff, is a great soldier.  To him is due the fine Staff work of the British Army in France.  Lord Kitchener is a great soldier.  We owe to Sir John French the leadership which has enabled a handful of men from the British Islands, their Dominions, and India to hold back the mightiest army in the world, the remorseless horde which has been preparing for this particular struggle for 44 years.  Not being a military nation we do not know how to discriminate between various types of soldiers.  It by any mischance Lord Kitchener went to France to conduct the campaign we should probably have a costly object lesson in the difference between African and European warfare.  It is to be hoped that Lord Kitchener – with proper and necessary assistance – will remain at the War Office, though when compulsory service comes his sphere of usefulness will, of course, be greatly diminished.

That compulsion is coming and coming soon, is proved by the extremities to which Lord Kitchener is reduced.  The advertisement he published yesterday urging the enlistment of men of 40, married men – which we greatly regret having printed and which The Daily Mail will decline to print again – is proof of it.  Men of 40 should not be used until the recruiting powers of the country are exhausted.  The expenditure that is coming upon this nation in the near future in the matter of the dependants of married men who have been advertised into the Army is one nobody thinks off in this moment of extravagance.  The expense, however, is a small part of it.  There are the breakup of homes, the breakup of businesses which follow the enlistment of married men, the sorrow and grief of wives and children that should be considered.  It is no testimony to Lord Kitchener’s organising ability that this gross unfairness should continue.  Rather it is an indication that his life in India and Egypt has made him unacquainted with British conditions.  We invite him on Sunday to take a stroll down Oxford Street to the City and return by the Strand.  He would meet some thousands of capable young “slackers” who are staying at home and, as one of our correspondents said yesterday, stealing the businesses of married men who have gone to the front.  In the midst of all the confusion of cabinet making the vital question of the Navy, the shortage of high explosive shells, and the sending of men to France are being forgotten.  True, it may only be a matter of a few days, but, as someone has remarked recently, things happen at such a pace in 1915 that the events which would fill six months of an ordinary year are crowded into a single week.  Our little Army cannot wait.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  THE POLITICAL CRISIS.  FOUR MAIN REASONS.  One – the quarrel between Mr. Churchill and Lord Fisher at the Admiralty; a conflict which began with the undertaking of the Dardanelles expedition.  Mr. Churchill carried the War Council on this, and it was undertaken before the Cabinet were informed.  The Cabinet were committed to it by the movement of ships before they had any formal notification.  Lord Fisher, for his part, considered that the enterprise should not have been begun unless it was supported by land forces, but he also was committed to it.  Mr. Churchill was counting on the support of Greek forces on land, a calculation which was not justified by the event.  It is now hoped that Lord Fisher will withdraw his resignation, and the possibility of Mr. Churchill being placed at the India Office is being discussed.

 

Two – the Cabinet have not been kept informed by Lord Kitchener as to supplies of high-explosive shells sent out to our troops at the front.  It is the fact that huge supplies of shells  have been, and are being sent out but the proportion of shrapnel is greater than the proportion of high-explosives shell, and the Army Command require that the proportion of high-explosives shells should be greater.  The fact that the Cabinet have been to some extent kept in the dark of late on this matter accounts for some apparent discrepancies in recent ministerial statements.

 

Three – the opposition leaders were in possession of facts as to the high-explosive shells and threatened a debate in the House of Commons, in which their statements should be proved.  Such a debate would have gravely undermined the authority of the Government and coupled with the resignation of Lord Fisher with a consequent disappearing either of the First Sea Lord or Mr. Churchill, would, in all human probability, have led to the disastrous downfall of the King’s Government in the midst of the national peril of this war, with consequences most lamentable.

 

Four – there have been on both sides, some leading statesmen in favour of a Coalition Ministry for the prosecution of the war.  They are few, but influential.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  FIVE BROTHERS KILLED IN ACTION.  Five brothers named Furey, all belonging to the Connaught Rangers, have been killed in action.  There are three other brothers in the army, one of them, Private W.  Furey of the3rd Battalion Inniskilling Fusiliers, stationed at Derry has received notification of the death of the fifth brother, a native of Loughrea.  Their mother, a widow, has received a letter of sympathy from Lord Kitchener and expresses appreciation of the patriotism of her family.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  RECRUITING IN FERMANAGH.  DISTRICT COMMITTEES FORMED.  Mr. E.M. Archdale said he thought the fairest means of getting men was conscription.  If it was enforced it would not take the good men and leave the “shirkers” at home all fit men would have to go. He hoped sincerely from the bottom of his heart that the Coalition Government would have the pluck to bring in conscription. The chairman of Fermanagh County Council, Mr. J. McHugh was unanimously elected Chairman of the Fermanagh Committee.  Mr. McHugh, who thereupon took the chair, returned thanks for the honour and said that although he had no family of his own he had two nephews, one engaged repelling the Turks and one on a British cruiser.  (Hear, hear).  He would only be too happy to see everyone rallying around the flag to ward off the Kaiser. (Hear, hear). Among the list of committee members in different areas are – Belleek and Garrison – Messrs. F.  Leonard, P.  Ferguson, E. Elliott, J. J. Acheson, G.  Maye, J.  Tierney, P. Scott, J. P.; J. Timoney, J. P.; Thomas Daly, James Cleary and H. Wilson.

 

Kesh and Pettigo.  Messrs. W. J. May, J. R. Crozier, J. P.; A. Gibson, R. Phillips, J. P.; Adam Ogle, J. McElroy, John McHugh, James Aiken, Irvine Ingram, W. P. D. Irvine, James Murphy and Dr. Patton.

These committees were given power to add to their number and it was decided that the clergymen of the different denominations should be ex-officio members of the local committees.  Major Johnston mentioned that he got very little assistance in most of the districts he had visited on recruiting missions with the exception of Belleek, Pettigo and Newtownbutler.  He remarked that Fr. O’Doherty had sent him in a number of men and Mr. Michael McCusker (Derrygonnelly) had brought him five recruits that morning.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  AIR CRAFT AND BIG BOMBS.  The French aviators have shown great activity all along the front and have succeeded in several bomb throwing adventurers.  They have thrown 203 projectiles of which 83 were large bombs of 10 kilos each and 14 shells of 155 calibre weighing 43 kilos each.  The efficiency of the explosives was verified at several points notably at the German Aviation Depot S. E. Roisel, where a shed and a machine took fire, and the German Reserve Park for Aircraft at Grand Priel, N.  W. of St. Quentin where a part of a roof was broken down and a petrol depot hit.  During the preceding night four shells were thrown on the Railway Station at Douai and a fire was seen to break out in the neighbourhood of the goods shed.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  THINGS PEOPLE WANT TO KNOW.  *What do shopkeepers in Enniskillen think of the system of street sweeping by our Corporation workmen, which fills their premises and covers their goods with a thick cloud of dust of the most objectionable kind?  At least one shop in East Bridge Street had to close its doors altogether one morning unto the street sweeping in its vicinity had concluded.  Who is responsible for this unsatisfactory and insanitary method of working?

*If the discussion on recruiting, which took place at Lisnaskea District Council does not throw some light upon the influences which are quietly at work in some parts of Fermanagh – as elsewhere – to prevent young men of joining the army at the present time?

Is it not a matter of concern to know that the number of people admitted into Omagh Lunatic Asylum from County Fermanagh is increasing although our population is seriously that decreasing and is that institution not unhealthily overcrowded at the present time?

*How many yards up or down the streets of Enniskillen can a soldier now walk without having to salute to an officer?  And in a small place like this where the same officers and men meet perhaps 20 times in the course of a day there should not be some temporary modification of this ceremony.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  LOCAL MILITARY NEWS.  Lieutenant Knight and his party who continue to have very satisfactory results in the recruiting campaign throughout the county, travelled to Ederney on Friday.  The people of the village give them a most hospitable reception.  Refreshments were supplied and an open air meeting was held, over which Mr. J. R. Crozier, J. P., presided and delivered a rousing speech.  Brief addresses were also made by Mr. Adam Ogle, Sergeant O’Reilly, R.I.C, Kesh; ex-Sergeant William Herrerin (late the 3rd Battalion Inniskillings), and Lieutenant Knight.

Afterwards the party marched to Lack where they were again well received.  Later in the day they were enthusiastically welcomed by the people of Irvinestown.  Tea was supplied to them in Mr. Edward Johnson’s Commercial Hotel where, as usual “the thing was well done”.  The principal movers in regard to the reception were we are informed Dr. Aiken and Messrs.  Oliver Emery, John Armstrong, W. McNeill and Edward Johnson.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  THE BATTLE OF YPRES.  TWENTY DAYS FIGHTING.  Our losses may have been heavy says a correspondent and the sacrifices great but the main thing is that the Germans failed in their attempt to break our line, though their troops were superior in numbers and their guns more numerous than ours.  The battle really began on April 20th, when the Germans began heavy shelling of Ypres, which continued for two days, with occasional infantry attacks.  The Rifle Brigade opened a withering fire upon the advancing columns of the Germans with machine guns they had brought with them.  On May 3rd of the occupation of the new line was ordered, and the troops were gradually withdrawn from the trenches, picked shots successfully holding back the enemy.  The

R.A.M. C.  Territorials cheerfully faced the danger of the shell-swept area, and as soon as dark had fallen went boldly out of cover, and succeeded in collecting nearly all the casualties.  Dispatch riders constantly carried important orders through a road over which a curtain of shell was maintained.  If one man was killed than another took his place and the dispatch reached its destination.  Special praise is given to the 8th Territorial Battalion Durham Light Infantry in its splendid feat in relieving the Canadians.

Private Lynn (Lancashire Fusiliers) without stopping to put on his respirator turned his machine gun on the advancing gas, and also on the German trenches beyond it.  Even when the gas reached him he would not stop, but kept up a fierce fire compelling the enemy to retire and he had to be literally dragged away from his gun.  He was removed by ambulance, and died the same day.

The Captain of the 2nd Monmouths, who was wounded in two places in the head, refused to leave his men, and carried on till he became unconscious.  When he was picked up he was found to be suffering from two other wounds in the body.  In the attack on St. Julien on April 25th one portion of the trenches where Captain Railston (1st Rifle Brigade) was in command was almost blotted out by the enemy’s fire, and men were falling on all sides.  A retirement was suggested, but Captain Railston retorted, “Retire, be damned”, and carried on so successfully in a ruined trench, that though he was buried twice and wounded by a shell he bluffed the Germans during the whole day.  Only three men besides himself were left, and yet by running up and down the trench and firing several rounds rapidly when any German advance was attempted these four heroes kept the enemy back till two companies of the regiment arrived in support.

Sergeant Cooke, Dublin Fusiliers, had perched himself on the top of a farm, from which he could look down upon the German trenches.  In one of them he saw an officer and 10 men crawling along the back of the trench, and with the extraordinary coolness he picked off the men one by one.  Then hurrying down from his point of vantage he ran into the other end of the trench and levelling his rifle at the astonished lieutenant shouted “Hands up”.  A few minutes later Cook walked back to his own lines triumphantly escorting his prisoner.

Major Crichton was shot down and his leg shattered, but he refused to be removed, staying with his men, the 10th Hussars.  He sat there on the ground waving his arms and cheering them on, ever exhorting them to renewed efforts.

 

Fermanagh Times May 27th, 1915.  INNISKILLINGS HEAVY LOSSES.  The 2nd Battalion of the Royal Inniskillings Fusiliers have apparently been engaged in heavy fighting in France or Belgium.  For some days passed the relatives of a large number of men of the Inniskillings have been receiving notification of casualties from the War Office and Tuesday mornings casualty list contains the names of no fewer than nine officers of, or attached to, the 2nd Battalion, whilst a tenth has been privately notified.  Three of the officers mentioned have been killed and seven wounded.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 27 1915.  AS SEEN IN A HOSPITAL HOW OUR MEN SUFFER.  Mr. Alex Powell, an American, writing of what he saw in the hospital at Bailleul, so close to the firing line that the window panes rattled with the concussion of the musket fire, says in the course of a long and interesting article – The surgeon in charge took me to the ward which contained the more serious cases.  In a cot beside the door was stretched a young Canadian.  His face might have been stepped upon by a giant in spiked shoes.  ‘Look,’ said the surgeon, and lifted the woollen blanket.  That man’s body looked like a field which had been gone over with a disc harrow.  His feet, his legs, his abdomen, his chest, his face were furrowed with gaping angry wounds.  ‘He was shot through the hand,’ explained the surgeon.  ‘He made his way back to the dressing station in the reserve trenches, but just as he had reached it a shell exploded at his feet.’

I patted him on the shoulder, and told him that I too knew the land of the great forests and the rolling prairies, and that before long he was going back to it.  And though he couldn’t speak he turned that poor, torn face of his and smiled at me.  He must have been suffering the tortures of the damned, but he smiled at me, – I tell you – he smiled at me.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 27 1915.  FEELING AGAINST  MR. CHURCHILL. A strong feeling of hostility has developed in the Liberal Party against the inclusion of Mr. Churchill in the new Ministry.  It is felt by the greater number of Liberals that Mr. Churchill, by his rashness and impatience, has been one of the chief factors in jeopardising the Liberal Government’s fortunes, and that although the party are indebted to him in the past for great services, he is in no different position in this respect from other able Ministers who are now, from patriotic motives, relinquishing their offices to make room for Unionists.

 

Impartial Reporter. May 27 1915.  THE TURKS ARE ADEPT AT SNIPING.  THEY KILL OFF OUR OFFICERS.  A deplorable feature of our casualty lists continues to be the high percent of officers killed and wounded.  Colonial officers suffered in the charge of May 8 as heavily as British officers on other occasions in the Dardanelles. There can be no doubt that the German officers have carefully coached their men to recognise and pick off our officers.  The Turks, indeed show special aptitude for the art of sniping.  After every advance days are passed before solitary snipers could be cleared out of the occupied area.  They hide themselves in burrows with a week’s provisions and 1,000 rounds of ammunition.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 29nd. 1915.  THE NORTHCLIFFE PRESS AND LORD KITCHENER.  A SCENE ON THE STOCK EXCHANGE.  A remarkable scene occurred on Friday in the Stock Exchange of a demonstration in favour of Lord Kitchener on account of an article attacking him which appeared in in the “Daily Mail.” A meeting of members was held at 2.30, when Mr. Charles Clarke, one of the most popular men on the Exchange, made a short speech eulogising the Secretary for War and a resolution was passed expressing the entire confidence of the members in Lord Kitchener and strong indignation at the venomous attacks which had been made upon him.  A telegram embodying the terms of the resolution was sent to the Prime Minister.  Loud cheers for Lord Kitchener were then given by the large crowd assembled, and the incident ended with the burning of their “Daily Mail.”

 

Fermanagh Herald May 29nd. 1915.  A SCURRILOUS AND MENDACIOUS ATTACK.  The Daily Chronicle says: – If this country were Russia, Germany or Austria the attack on Lord Kitchener which was made yesterday in the Times and Daily Mail would have had a swift sequel.  Lord Northcliffe would have been taken out into a courtyard and shot within 48 hours.  That is not a conjecture but a statement of fact.  If it were France or Italy he would probably have been lynched within a shorter interval, and his premises at Carmelite Street and Printing House Square would certainly have been gutted.  What is to be done in face of such a danger as these anti-patriotic journals present?  If the new Coalition Government ignores it, as it has been officially ignored hitherto it will go the way of its predecessor.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 29nd. 1915.  Gunfire and rainfall.  Dr. H. R. Hill, Director of the British Rainfall Organisation, at a meeting of the Royal Meteorological Society discredited the theory that the heavy rainfall of last winter was due to the firing at the seat of war.  In the same way he said, the heavy winter of 1903 had been explained by the general adoption of wireless telegraphy.  The fact that 1873 was equally if not wetter without the aid of Hertzian waves and that no year since 1903 had been nearly so wet in spite of the enormous increase of radio telegraphy, showed the fallacy of the inference.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 29nd. 1915.  THE CENSORSHIP.  FIVE TONS OF MAILS ARE EXAMINED EACH WEEK.  From 30,000 to 50,000 telegrams pass through the hands of the censors in the United Kingdom every 24 hours.  The censors are mainly retired naval and military officers.  All mails which have to be censored are necessarily subjected to some delay, but harmless letters whether private or commercial are not stopped, even when coming from an enemy country or addressed to an enemy person.  No letter however, addressed to an enemy country can be transmitted unless its envelope is left open and is enclosed in a cover addressed to a neutral country.  Letters in which any kind of code or secret writing is used are liable to be stopped even if the message appears to be harmless and totally unconnected with the war.  In the private branch more than a ton of mail matter is censored every week exclusive of parcels.

 

Fermanagh Herald May 29nd. 1915.  JOTTINGS.  There Enniskillen Guardians have decided to procure the new ferry boat and to have one of the existing two repaired and the other one sold.  Mr. Gilligan and Mr. Liddy were unanimously appointed to look after the matter.

At a meeting of the County Fermanagh Grand Orange Lodge, held on Thursday evening, it was resolved that owing to the war and the death of a large number of officers and men the longing to the Order, not to hold the usual demonstration in the county on the 12th of July.

Among those wounded in the war who have written home to their relatives are: – Private Patrick Reilly, 14 Dame Street, Enniskillen Private F. Fitzpatrick writing to his sister at number 11 Strand Street Enniskillen. Major C.  C.  Mason, of the Australian infantry wounded at the Dardanelles is a nephew of Mr. JC Mason, J.P. of the Moy, Enniskillen.  Private Patrick Durnian of Monmurry, Brookeborough, who volunteered from Glasgow has been wounded in action and the relatives of Private John Baxter another Brookeborough man in the Inniskillings, have had similar news concerning him.

His mother at Maguiresbridge has been notified that Private George Stewart, of the Canadian contingent has been wounded in action.  Before emigrating eight years ago, he was in the employment of the Sligo, Leitrim and Northern Counties Railway at Enniskillen and as war was declared became one of the first to volunteer from Montreal when the war broke out, sailing with the first contingent.

DEATHS. Killed in action at Ypres, on the 22nd of April, William A. Lipsett, barrister-at-law aged 29, of the Grenade company 10th Battalion, 1st Canadian Division.  Youngest son of the late Robert Lipsett and Mrs. Lipsett, Ballyshannon.  He fell gallantly leading a hand grenade charge on the night of April 22.

April 1915.

Impartial Reporter. April 1 1915.  THE BISHOP’S PROTEST AGAINST HORSERACING.  The Bishop of London entered an emphatic protest against the light and overweening spirit of optimism which prevails in many quarters and against frivolities.  In his lordships view the people have not yet awakened to the seriousness of this terrible war.  It is time they did. Against horse racing and on the drink question the Bishop spoke with all the fervour at his command.  “This question of the drink traffic should and must be taken up more strongly.  It is our first through importance to the nation and should have been dealt with before.  And there is racing.  I am dead against that so called sport and amusements like it at this terrible time.  I say nothing against healthy recreation.  That, of course, should continue as usual.  The business man can, of course, have his round of golf to keep him fit.  There is no harm in that, but there should be no unseemly levity in this great crisis.”

 

Impartial Reporter. April 1 1915.

 

THAT LITTLE CHAP OF MINE.

 

I know I’m just an ordinary, easy going cuss,

‘Bout the common run of men, no better an’ no wuss.

I can’t lay claim to anything as far as looks may ago,

An’ when it comes to learning, why, I don’t stand any show.

But there must be something more in me than other folks can see,

‘Cause I’ve got a little chap at home that thinks a heap of me.

 

I’ve had my ups and downs in life as most folks have, I guess,

An,’ taken all in all, I couldn’t brag of much success,

But it braces up a feller and it tickles him to know

There’s someone that takes stock in him, no matter how things go,

An’ when I get the worst of it, I’m proud as I kin be

To know that little chap of mine still thinks a heap of me.

 

To feel his little hand in mine, so trusting and so warm,

To know he thinks I’m strong enough to keep him from all harm,

To see his loving faith and all that I can say or do

That sort of shames a feller, but it makes them better too,

An’ so I try to be the man he fancies me to be,

Just ‘cause that little chap of mine, he thinks a heap of me.

 

I wouldn’t disappoint his trust for anything on earth,

Or let him know how little I just naturally, am worth,

And after all, it’s easy up the better road to climb,

With a little hand to help you on an’ guide you all the time.

And I reckon I’m a better man than what I used to be,

Since I’ve got a little chap at home that thinks a heap of me.

 

Ida Goldsmith Morris.

 

Impartial Reporter. April 1 1915.  FERMANAGH NATIONALIST  VOLUNTEERS.  HOW THEY “AWOKE” AND DID NOT PARAD IN DUBLIN.  From the local standpoint the most significant feature of the Nationalist Volunteers parade in Dublin on Sunday was the absence of the Fermanagh and Monaghan Volunteers, also the Volunteers of South Tyrone, South Donegal, and of the Manorhamilton District in North Leitrim.  About one month ago a meeting of commanders was summoned to meet in Enniskillen for the object of arranging to send at least 500 men from Fermanagh.  Only two persons put in an appearance!

 

Fermanagh Times April 1st, 1915.  HE KICKED CUPID OUT OF CAMP.  AN OFFICER’S CURE FOR LOVE SICKNESS.  Lieutenant Crosby Smallpiece, Army Service Corps, son of Dr. Donald Smallpiece, Felstead, Essex, and the nephew of Lord St. Davids, tells the following amusing story in a letter written at the front.

“For some time the section of which I am in command was sent to rest at the base and it is part of my duty to censor all the letters the men wrote home.  They had nothing else to do but write letters, and the censuring became a very serious business for me as I frequently had at night carefully to wade through 150 love letters.  So I decided to introduce a change if possible, and one day I motored to the nearest town, Boulogne, and there bought a football, which I took back for my men to play with.  The result was quite magical.  The money I gave for the football proved to the best investment I have ever made.  Then took to it so keenly that they played football all day, and had very little time left in which to write love letters.  After the introduction of the football I never had more than five love letters to censor at night.”

 

Fermanagh Times April 1st, 1915.  WATCH THE CRADLE.  HOW A DECREASED BIRTH RATE MAY BE REPAIRED.  AN URGENT DOMESTIC PROBLEM.  Men are being slain by the thousands each week, and a great problem is to refill the cradles.  That there will be a decrease of babies owing to the deaths of so many men is obvious, but the fact makes it all the more important that those who are born should be well born and well cared for and not just lost by callousness.  We owe it to Mr. John Burns that the Notification of Births Act was passed, and it is important that the Act should be put in force everywhere.  It requires that births should be notified within 36 hours instead of within six weeks as before.  The earlier notification is in the interests of the child’s health, and many lives have been saved by the Act since it was passed in 1907.  Where the Act is adopted a health visitor is appointed, whose duty it is to visit nursing mothers, and to attend those homes where she can render the most service.  The Kent County Council proposes that the Act shall be adopted throughout the country.

 

Fermanagh Times April 1st, 1915.  THE BLOCKADE.  A LIVERPOOL STEAMER SUNK IN THE CHANNEL.  The Liverpool steamer Delmano bound for Boulogne was stopped in the English Channel on Thursday.  The crew were allowed 10 minutes to leave the vessel, and the ship was then torpedoed and sunk.  The crew, who stated that they were shown every consideration by the Germans, were taken to the Isle of Wight coast, and arrived later at Portsmouth.  The Delmano was a vessel of 3,459 tons gross and belonged to the British and Chile Steamship Company, Liverpool.

 

Fermanagh Times April 1st, 1915.  WAR NEWS.  The regimental band of the Irish Guards, and the drums of the Reserve Battalion of the regiment, are about to make a tour in Ireland.  They will arrive in Dublin on Saturday next.  The tour is undertaken mainly in the interests of recruiting for the regiment.

Just before the beginning of the present war it was stated that there were 2,000 generals in the Russian army, of whom the great majority received their rank not for military merit, but through patronage or personal service.  It is safe to say that very few of the 2,000 generals now hold commands under the Grand Duke Nicholas.

More qualities are required in a modern general than those which formerly sufficed.  It is still true that any Army marches upon its belly, but it does not march in the same way.  “Napoleon,” said General Joffre to an interviewer, “profess to gain his battles with his soldiers’ legs.  We gain ours with our locomotives.  That is the difference.”  Consequently it is necessary that the Army Commander in these times should fully appreciate the working of railways.

Throughout the war the French railway organisation has worked wonderfully.  During the first 10 days some 2,500 trains were dispatched, of which all but 20 ran with absolute punctuality.  In the second week about 2,000 trains were dispatched, and there were no delays.  Ever since then, in spite of all sorts of unexpected demands upon the service, and the vicissitudes caused by the alternate retreat and advance of the French Northern Army, the railways have continued to work wonderfully.

Some 500 of the graduates and undergraduates of the Queen’s University, Belfast, have responded to the call of King and Country.

A court martial has sentenced M.  Dexlaux, Chief Army Paymaster of France, to seven years’ of solitary imprisonment and military degradation for misappropriation of military stores.  Madame Bechoff, his mistress, was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment, and a private soldier Verges to one year’s imprisonment.

 

Fermanagh Times April 1st, 1915.  THE FUTILITY OF THE GERMAN BLOCKADE.  Since the beginning of the submarine blockade on February 18th until Saturday – 7,401 ships have sailed from or to the British Isles.  Three have been sunk or captured by the enemy cruisers, one has been sunk by a mine, and 22 have been sunk by submarines.

Since the beginning of the war – 43,734 ships have sailed or arrived.  54 have been sunk or captured by cruisers.  12 sunk by mines.  33 sunk or captured by submarines.  42 fishing vessels have been sunk or captured.

 

Fermanagh Times April 1st, 1915.  DRINK AND THE WAR.  Greenock Sheriff’s Court afforded us a few days ago some revelations as to the class and earnings of the men who are tempted to idleness by the lure of drink, and who are impatiently demanding at this national crisis more wages.  John Graham, wearing a war badge as a riveter engaged on Admiralty work, just now almost as important as fighting in Flanders, though infinitely safer and better paid, was charged with breaking a probation bond to which he had entered to abstain from drink, not to neglect his children and to keep at work.  It appeared that this oppressed son of toil earned £6 a week when he chose to labour.  This rate of payment, however, could not allow him to get and stay drunk far more than three or four days out of the 5 and a half of employment and so no doubt, he was one of the most vehement of the party on the Clyde demanding higher terms.  £6 a week for the roughest of mechanical work!  This fellow, it was proved, had not given his family sufficient food and clothing and his rent was unpaid.  He has again escaped punishment on the ground that his services were required at Government work.  The case provides its own moral.  Pet of Radical politicians, pampered by a Radical Government, pandered to by Radical newspapers – there are too many John Grahams in the labour world, who have lost all sense of personal responsibility and whose passions and caprices form their sole rule of conduct.  It is the competent, thoughtful, industrious men with whom there is no trouble.

 

Fermanagh Times April 1st, 1915. KILLED IN ACTION.  News has been received by his sister, Mrs. P.  Galligan, Diamond, Enniskillen, of the death in action on the 16th inst. at the battle of Neuve Chapelle of Second Lieutenant P. B. Rohan, of the King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry.  Deceased officer was a Quartermaster Sergeant in the Irish Guards, but was promoted on the field of battle to a commission in the York’s in the month of January last.  He was in the thick of the fighting since the outbreak of hostilities until he fell at Neuve Chapelle.  He was 33 years of age.

 

Fermanagh Times April 1st, 1915.  THE MAN BEHIND THE PLOUGH.

 

They sing about the glories of the man behind the gun,

And the books are full of stories of the wonders he has done;

There is something of sort of thrilling in the flag that’s waving high,

And it makes you want to holler when the boys go marching by;

But when the shouting over and the fighting’s done somehow,

We find we’re still depending on the man behind the plough.

 

In all the pomp and splendour of an army on parade,

And through the awful darkness that the smoke of battle’s made;

In the halls where jewels glitter and where shouting men debate;

In the palaces where rulers deal out honours to the great,

There is not a single person who’d be doin’ business now

Or have medals if it wasn’t for the man behind the plough.

 

We are a-building mighty cities and we’re gaining lofty heights,

We’re a-winning lots of glory and we’re setting things to rights;

We’re a-showing all creation how the world’s affairs should run;

Future men will gaze in wonder at the things that we have done,

And they’ll overlook the fella, just the same as they do now,

He’s the whole concerns foundation – that’s the man behind the plough.

Chicago Herald

 

Fermanagh Times April 8th, 1915.  DRINK AND THE WAR.  THE KING’S DECISION.  We are authorised to state: – “By the King’s Command, no wines, spirits, or beer will be consumed in any of His Majesty’s Houses after today.  The notice dated 6th of April (the date of its publication), so that the prohibition came into force yesterday (Wednesday.)

 

Fermanagh Times April 8th, 1915.  THE FUNERAL OF MR. THOMAS MCKENNA, merchant, Irvinestown, took place on Friday and the dimensions of the cortege that followed the remains to the cemetery attested the respect in which the deceased gentleman was held.

 

Fermanagh Times April 8th, 1915.  THE FERMANAGH HOSPITAL.  Why has not a single penny been contributed to the Fermanagh Hospital from collections taken in any of the Roman Catholic Churches while during the past year alone a sum of over £40 was given to the Institution as the result of collections in 17 Protestant Church?  Which denomination derives the more benefit from the excellent treatment given in the hospital?

 

Fermanagh Times April 8th, 1915.  BALLINAMALLARD CATCH MY PAL. (Ed A temperance organisation much followed in the Fermanagh Times and Impartial Reporter.) The monthly meeting was held on Tuesday with the Rev. W. T. Brownlee in the chair. An enjoyable programme was contributed.  Rev. A Duff, Pettigo delivered an interesting address.  A strongly worded resolution was passed appealing to the Government to enforce prohibition of the sale and manufacture of intoxicating liquor not only during the war but for six months after it ends.

 

Fermanagh Times April 8th, 1915.  LOCAL MILITARY INTELLIGENCE.  THE 11TH BATTALION ON HOLIDAYS.  Our streets have been rendered quite lively during the past week by the presence of some hundreds of the men of the 11th and other battalions of the Enniskillen Fusiliers home on a few days’ holidays.

The boys from Randallstown looked remarkably well, presenting a healthy, smart appearance, which one would hardly have anticipated after the many stories which have been circulated regarding the alleged dirty and unhealthy condition of the camp at Shane’s Castle.  These stories, it would now appear, have been grotesquely exaggerated and if any proof of this were to be found it is in the sound physical fitness of those who have been residing there during the past few months.

Their holidays were graced with good, bright, although somewhat cold, weather and throughout Fermanagh the khaki lads were to be seen everywhere, visiting friends and relatives and incidentally doing a little quiet recruiting.

 

Fermanagh Times April 8th, 1915.  A LETTER FROM THE FRONT.  Canon G. G. Parkinson Cumine, Newtownbutler, has received the following vivid letter from his son who went to the front with the first Canadian contingent.

“I was very glad to get the Impartial Reporter and Fermanagh Times.  I wish we could have some of those fellows who hustled that recruiting sergeant in Enniskillen a week here would cure them of that kind of thing.  If some of the Irish boys –and they are in the majority here –could express their feelings about such cowards who are afraid to fight their country’s battles – well, they would put lots of true Irish feeling into it and the doctors would do a fine trade – not to mention the undertakers!

If those at home could understand the feelings of aversion the average soldier has for those unfortunate men who do not have the “spunk” to do their bit, they would never look an honest man in the face again.  They seem to think they have done their duty cheering the soldier as he goes out or returns as the case may be.

I was passing a house just after the Germans had been shelling a village in which we were for a rest, and I went in to see the effect of the shells.  There was an old man and his wife there, and for them it was the end of the old home.  They were both French.  The old chap took me upstairs to see the damage muttering “Les Allemandes!  Les Allemandes” and then he would draw his hand across his throat, and shake his fist towards the German lines, just to show us how he felt.  In the attic everything was confusion – broken tiles and splintered wood.  In one corner stood a little rocking horse and a few children’s toys, which the old fellow picked up only to put them down again.

He told me how they had been sleeping in a lower room a night or so before the shells came and had only moved in time, for I saw where the big pieces of shells and the shrapnel bullets had pierced the roof, two floors and the bed – it was a sorry sight, and I could picture the once happy home, with its pleasant memories now wrecked and ruined by a cruel war.  The old lady stood in the kitchen and as I went out I simply shook her by the hand – I just couldn’t tell her how sorry I felt –it would make anyone sorry to see her as the tears rolled down her cheeks.  If some of the boys at home could see a sight like this, and picture their homes in ruins and their parents broken hearted they would no doubt take a tumble-to-themselves as they say in the West!

I was in the village some time ago for a few days’ rest, and we had coffee in one of the houses – the poor old lady who served as had stuck to her home through all, and when we came in this time we found a shell had blown her head clean off –another for “German Kultur”.  Before we left the village I was in a field at the back of a house when I heard a “silent Willie” whistles somewhere in the sky and then it stopped.  When it stopped, I knew it was going to burst and that for at least 50 yards in front of it there would be nothing but death, to you bet I did not feel quite at home!  I felt like breaking the latest 100 yards record!  Then there was a roar and a flash only about 40 yards from me, but I only got covered with black dust and clay, as a shell had gone dump into the soft ground.  I think, too, than I was behind the shell and so did not get the full blast.

Yesterday the Germans fired 36 shells at some houses and not one hit the mark although they smashed trees, etc. all around.  The shells they use now are not half as good as the ones they used at first – instead of copper nosecaps they are using all sorts of alloy, and makeshift stuff.  They managed, however, to set fire to some houses behind our lines yesterday and they kept firing at the smoke just like children.  Our guns did not let them have their own way long, for they soon had several fires going behind the German lines just to show them two can play the same game.

I got the shamrock all right and you may be sure I was glad to get it!  We all had some as the Armagh Guardian sent out quite a lot for the Irish troops.  I was on guard on St. Patrick’s night, and I was trying to see down a path at the end of our trenches to an old farmhouse when star shells lit up the country just like day.  Just as the shell went out a fearful cry went up – it simply made my blood run cold!  Then up went another star shell, and some big guns flashed and I saw – a cat!!  I pelted it with bricks and anything I could lay my hands on.  I think it’s going yet!  And I hope it is, for it made my hair stand on end as everything was quiet till it made itself heard.  I saw in the Impartial that some people are still talking about Home Rule.  If the people of the British Isles don’t wake up they will have no homes to rule soon – they will only have what the Belgians and people of Northern France have – the ruins of war in a once happy land.

 

Fermanagh Times April 8th, 1915.  MADAME LEVANTE’S ORCHESTRA.  On Friday night the people of Enniskillen will have the pleasure of hearing Madame Marie Levante’s clever and accomplished Orchestra of Ladies in the Townhall.  The gratifying impression left by their last visit is still remembered and should be the means of attracting a full house on this occasion.  Interspersed with the orchestral selections, will be solos, vocal and instrumental, and these will no doubt prove once more the wonderfully individual talent possessed by the company.  The pity is that they will not be with us for a longer period, but certainly one delightful evening’s entertainment is promised.

 

Fermanagh Times April 8th, 1915.  NOTES. Mr. Frank Brooke, D.L. of Shillelagh, a gentleman intimately connected with Fermanagh and Mrs. Brooke has recently landed in South Africa where they have gone to visit their ostrich farm.

The Earl of Enniskillen has arrived in Kildare and will remain for the Curragh Races this week.

 

Fermanagh Times April 8th, 1915.  SIX MONTHS FOR NEGLECT.  Inspector Mallon, N.S.P.C.C., summonsed Edward Lavery, who did not appear, for having neglected his wife and child. Ann Jane Lavery, Mary Street, said she made a statement in August last complaining to Inspector Mallon of the way in which her husband was treating her.  In the course of this statement she mentioned that her husband had left her and that she and the child (of six years) walked to Belfast and found him the day after arriving there.  Her husband refused to give her help and beat her.  She and the child had to sleep out several nights and she afterwards traced her husband to Boyle, Co., Roscommon.  In March she made another statement and mentioned that her husband deserted her in July.  She afterwards met him in Lisnaskea and they stopped in the Workhouse that night.  They again walked to Belfast and her husband enlisted, but under a false name and as a single man.  Subsequently she met him again in Belfast and he said he had been discharged from the army.  He enlisted once more and was once more discharged for misconduct.  For the past three years she had only received three shillings and three pence from him for the support of herself and child.  The defendant was a coach painter and, said the wife, could earn 30 shillings a week.  Six months imprisonment with hard labour (the full penalty) was ordered.

 

Fermanagh Times April 8th, 1915. THE RISE IN COAL PRICES.  130,000 MINERS ARE WITH THE COLOURS.  The committee appointed to inquire into the cause of the rise in the retail price of coal ascribes the chief cause to the general reduction of output due mainly to some 130,000 miners joining the colours.  Contributory causes have been increased freight for seaborne coal and congestion of the railways.  Coal prices in London and the Southern Counties have been seven shillings to 11 shillings per ton above the normal.  It is believed that London consumers are paying a large surplus above the ordinary profits.

 

Fermanagh Times April 8th, 1915.  LIFE IN A SUBMARINE.  THE NERVOUS STRAIN.  The Washington Sun and the World have published a picturesque interview with Lieutenant – Commander Claus Hansen, commander of the German submarine U16, describing his life at sea. “It is fearfully trying on the nerves.  Every man does not stand at.  When running undersea there is a death-like silence in the boats, as the electric machinery is noiseless.  It is not unusual to hear the propeller of a warship passing over or near us.  We steer, entirely by chart and compass.  As the air heats it gets poorer and mixed with the odour of oil from the machinery.  The atmosphere becomes fearful.  An overpowering sleepiness often attacks new men and one requires the utmost willpower to remain awake.  I have had men who did not eat during the first three days out because they did not want to lose that much amount of time from sleep.  Day after day spent in such cramped quarters, where there is hardly room to stretch your legs, and constantly on the alert, is a tremendous strain on the nerves.

I have sat or stood 8 hours on end with my eyes glued to the periscope and peered into the brilliant glass until eyes and head ached.  When the crew is worn out, we seek a good sleep and rest under the water.  The boat often is rocking gently with the movement somewhat like a cradle.  Before ascending, I always order silence for several minutes in order to determine by hearing, through the shell-like sides of the submarine, whether there are any propellers in the vicinity.

Commander Hanson prophesied a more effective blockade when the crews of the vessels had “found” themselves.  He refused to say how long the newest German submarine could remain below, and the censor did not allow him to talk about the length of his voyages.

 

Fermanagh Herald 10th April, 1915.  TALKS WITH A PIRATE.  Commander Claus Hansen, of the U16, submarine graphically describes in an interview at Kiel with the New York World correspondent Mr. Karl von Wiegand, how the German submarines carry out to the blockade of England.

Commander Hanson explained that the each submarine has a definite area to cover.  His last cruise was assigned to the Channel, and he related the sinking of several vessels.  “The weather was so thick that I couldn’t see far.  I was compelled to submerge for hours.  I came up in the vicinity of a small English ship, and ordered his crew to take to the boats.  I then torpedoed her.  As a number of French destroyers gave chase, I escaped by going down.  The same evening opposite Havre I stopped the Dulwich, and to give 10 minutes to the crew to get off in the boats.  They were often in less than 5 minutes and our torpedo tore a hole under the smokestack.

Next day we came up in front of Cherbourg, to have a look around, just as the French steamer Ville de Lille, was coming out of harbour.  Evidently believing that was a French submarine which had suddenly come out of the water the steamer ran up the French flag, but then started to flee regardless of our signals.  I saw two women and two children on the deck, and of course, could not torpedo a ship with women and children aboard, so we gave chase.  The Ville de Lille finally stopped, and 24 men, women and children clambered with alacrity into the boats.  I send four men aboard, placed bombs in the bottom and sank the steamer.  They found a little terrier which had been abandoned.  It fought the men with its teeth but was captured and brought along, and ever since it has been the mascot of the U16. I give the women and children some blankets and some food for themselves.  The crew then took the two boats in tow of the U16 and towed it to opposite Barfleur, close to land, from where there was no difficulty in rowing in.  Two days later he torpedoed the French Dinorah off Dieppe which, he said, was loaded with horses and artillery. There can be no fire because fire burns oxygen, and the electric power from the accumulator is too precious to be wasted in cooking and so we have to dine on uncooked food, when cruising – as you have seen, a kitchen and dining room are non-existent on our boat.

 

Fermanagh Herald 10th April, 1915.  IN THE DARDANELLES THE TURKS AND THE GERMANS STRENGTHEN THEIR POSITIONS. The British public may have taken too light hearted a view of the campaign against the gates of the Turkish Empire and will have to exercise patience and be prepared to accept heavy losses with equanimity, for the Turks and German advisers have had time greatly to strengthen their positions on each side of the Straits.  Much hard fighting in which the Allies must suffer heavily may therefore be counted on.

 

Fermanagh Herald 10th April, 1915.  THROUGH THE WAR IS NEARING AN END according to a statement by General Joffre.  At the Belgian Army Headquarters yesterday General Joffre personally decorated a number of officers of the Belgian General Staff.  General Joffre had a long conversation with King Albert and with the premier M.  de Broqueville.  In the course of these conversations the General declared that it would not be long before the war ended in favour of the Allies. He added that he was happy to decorate officers of the Belgian General Staff and to make public recognition of the services rendered by the Belgian army to France.

 

Fermanagh Herald 10th April, 1915.  THE KING’S EXAMPLE.  TOTAL PROHIBITION IN HIS HOUSEHOLD.  The Press Association is authorised to state: by the King’s command no wines, spirits or beer will be consumed in any of his Majesty’s houses after today Tuesday.  A meeting of the Cabinet Council will be held on Wednesday at which the subject of drink and the war will be considered.

 

Fermanagh Herald 10th April, 1915.  JOTTINGS. No application has been received for the vacant position of Medical Officer of the Tempo dispensary district.  At the meeting the Earl of Belmore suggested that as all the young men had gone to the war they should get a lady doctor.  It was decided to re-advertise.

Mr. Patrick Crumley, MP, suggested at the Enniskillen Guardians that the inmates be provided with knives and tin plates.  The condition of affairs which existed in the house during the meal hours would be improved if these two articles were provided.  No action was taken in the matter.

Private J.  Hynes, Enniskillen, who was reported dead, has written home stating that he is still alive.  He explained that another soldier bearing the same name and belonging to his company was killed that morning and it was thought that it was the Enniskillen Hynes, because he was in the same trench and not far from him at the time he was killed.

 

Fermanagh Herald 10th April, 1915.  A MAGNIFICENT DISPLAY IN PHOENIX PARK WAS WITNESSED BY 100,000 PEOPLE AS OVER 25,000 VOLUNTEERS WERE ON PARADE.  The great parade and review of National Volunteers in Dublin on Sunday constituted a historic demonstration of National unity.  From all parts of Ireland, from their remote villages of the West and South, as well as from the bigger centres of population, representative of Ireland’s National army assembled in the city to take part in a demonstration as historic and perhaps no less significant than that of 1782.

There is no doubt that critics, who serve a political purpose unworthy of the time, will not hesitate to argue that Sunday’s demonstration is in the nature of evidence that Nationalist Ireland has great material which it has refused to give to the service of the British Empire in crushing Prussian militarism in Europe.  But if the truth of the situation is sought it will be easily realised that only a very small proportion of those who paraded yesterday feel themselves at liberty to join the colours for service abroad.  The majority of them are breadwinners, artisans, town labourers and the sons of farmers whose services at home are absolutely necessary.  While willing to sacrifice a good deal for the common cause, they do not feel themselves – and really are not – at liberty to give over their whole service to active soldiering in the regular army.  Long years of continuous emigration has left Ireland a country of old folks and a limited number of young people on whom the welfare of the trade and industrial welfare of the country must rely.  These latter formed the large majority who took part on Sundays great demonstration.

 

Fermanagh Herald 10th April, 1915.  A FERMANAGH LADY’S WILL.  Mrs. Margaret Jane Stack, of Ardess, Kesh, County Fermanagh who died on the 2nd of January last was the widow of the Right Rev.  Dr. Charles Maurice Stack, D.D, Bishop of Clogher, left unsettled personal estate in the United Kingdom of the gross value of £9, 860 18s 11d.  She left £50 to her servant, Annie Eliz. Virtue, and at the residue of her estate to sons, the Rev. Charles Maurice Stack, Walter Auchinleck Stack, William Bagot Stack, and Edward Churchill Stack in equal shares.

 

Fermanagh Times April 15th, 1915. THE RESOLUTION OF IRISH BISHOPS.  SELF-DENIAL IN DRINK.  The following resolution was adopted on Monday at a meeting of the House of Bishops of the Church of Ireland: – “The Archbishops and Bishops of the Church of Ireland desire earnestly to press upon all whom their words can influence the need for personal example and self-sacrifice in the matter of alcoholic liquor is during the present national crisis, in accordance with the splendid lead of our Most Noble King.  The Archbishops and Bishop’s appeal to the clergy and laity of the Church of Ireland to imitate in some small degree the self-denial of our gallant sailors and soldiers by sea and land.

 

Fermanagh Times April 15th, 1915.  LATEST WAR WIRES.  GERMAN AVIATORS CAPTURED.  Yesterday evening’s communique states that Tuesday was calm along all the front.  A Zeppelin threw bombs at Bailleue.  Its object was the aviation grounds, which were not hit.  Three civilians were killed.  Two German aviators were forced to descend in the French lines, one near Raine and the other at Luneville.  They were taken prisoners.  Another aeroplane was winged by the fire of a French outpost at Ornes, north of Verdun, and one aviator was hit.

 

Fermanagh Times April 15th, 1915.  BRITISH DESTROYER’S DASH.  SCOUTING THE DARDANELLES.  H. M. destroyer Reynard yesterday entered the Dardanelles on a scouting mission.  She ran up the Straits at high speed for over 10 miles, penetrating probably farther than any of our warships have yet done.  A heavy fire was directed at her, but she was not hit.  H. M. London entered the Straits after her and drew most of the enemy’s fire.  It is possible that the Turks have withdrawn part of their artillery from here in order to mass it quickly at any spot the Allied armies might use for landing.  The weather is rainy and murky, hindering aerial reconnaissance.

 

Fermanagh Times April 15th, 1915.  LOCAL MILITARY NOTES.  Among those whose names have received prominent notice for valiant conduct at the front we are pleased to note is the name of an old Portora boy, Mr. Gerry Houston, who has been awarded the much coveted Distinguished Conduct Medal for valour under fire.  Mr. Houston was carrying dispatches within the firing zone when the front springs of his bicycle were struck and broken by a portions of a shell and immediately afterwards the front tyre of his machine was blown away.  Notwithstanding all this he continued his journey under circumstances of the greatest peril to himself and succeeded in delivering the important documents with which he was entrusted into proper hands.

 

Fermanagh Times April 15th, 1915.  LINER GREATLY DAMAGED AND TOWED TO QUEENSTOWN.  The disabled Harrison liner Wayfarer, from an American port, with 750 horses on board, was towed into Queenstown on Tuesday afternoon by four tugs and safely berthed at the Deep Water Quay at 4.00.  The naval and military authorities issued strict orders that no persons were to be allowed on board the vessel, and as the refusal included representatives of the Press it was not possible to obtain an interview with the brave captain of the disabled steamer, who gallantly stood by her. Practically all his crew left in the ship’s boats after she was torpedoed.  Whether the steamer was torpedoed or an explosion took place among the cargo is not known.  It appears, however that as a result of the explosion from whatever cause, seven lives have been lost, one trooper received severe bruises, and two horses were killed.  As result of the explosion the engine’s where disabled, but notwithstanding that his vessel seemed doomed the captain refused to abandon her, and pluckily remained on the bridge giving orders to the few officers and men who are elected to stand by him and the ship.  Among those on board and safely landed at Falmouth was Mr. William Thorp, formerly of Enniskillen, and now and for some time past one of “the brave soldiers of the King.”

 

Fermanagh Times April 15th, 1915.  ADVERTISEMENT.

THE CYCLE AND MOTOR HOUSE. Agency for Rover, Swift, Humber and Overland cars,

Rover motor cycles. SEE THE NEW ERNE, 2 ½ HORSEPOWER, LIGHTWEIGHT, TWO STROKE, WITH COUNTERSHAFT TWO SPEED GEAR.  SIMPLE, SILENT, SATISFACTORY. All sorts of motor accessories, motor cycling suits, etc., in stock.  Repairs.  Garage.  Josiah Maguire. Enniskillen.

 

Fermanagh Times April 15th, 1915.  FERMANAGH MAN KILLED IN ACTION.  DEATH OF A CANADIAN VOLUNTEER.  Deep regret has been expressed all over the district of Kesh with Mrs. Gilmore at the loss of her son Robert, who was killed in action on the 22nd of March, when serving with the British Expeditionary Force in France.  About three years ago he left this country for Canada, where he gave up a lucrative position and joined the Canadian Volunteers at the outbreak of the war.  He returned to England with the first contingent, and during the period of training, was stationed at Salisbury Plain.  In the middle of February he was sent to the firing line and after about a month, during which he went through many exciting and strenuous incidents and engagements, he was shot through the head, death being almost instantaneous.  He was a fine type of Britisher, kindly, open hearted, and was immensely popular with everyone who knew him.  One cannot but admire the grand spirit which prompts a man to volunteer in such a way.

 

Fermanagh Times April 22nd, 1915.  FERMANAGH DOING “VERY WELL” IN RECRUITING.  Judge Johnston has paid Fermanagh the complement of stating that in the matter of volunteering and coming forward in defence of King and Country it has done very well.  No one can complain of the county.  The crisis has brought out some of its best qualities and when the men now in training go to the front they will uphold, we are sure, the best traditions of Irishmen in the field of battle.  At the same time the rural population could do much more than they have done.  If we deducted the young men of the towns and villages out of the khaki wearing battalions there would be little, indeed, of which to boast.  We recognise the scarcity of labour that prevails in the farming industry and the anxiety to keep all the young men possible at home.  Crops must be put in and in due season garnered.  Food must be provided for the fighting forces as for the rest of us who are non-combatants.  That is all true. Nevertheless the work could be done, the supplies harvested and still many thousands of young farmers and labourers could be spared to help the brave men who are just now there  doing such valiant service in Flanders and elsewhere.  If the Germans by any fatality got the upper hand there would be little harvest to look after in Ireland.  Ruthless devastation would lay waste meadow and greenfield alike, homesteads as in Belgium would be given to the flames and red ruin would stride like a gaunt phantom over the land.  In the Southern districts of the country, we are glad to notice, the farming classes are becoming more and more alive to the acute danger of the situation.  They are becoming uneasy.  They no longer sit complacently watching their cattle and their crops, taking it for granted the war is no immediate concern of theirs except in so far that it enables them to increase prices and enlarge profits.  Too long has that been their attitude.  We want a loosening of that selfish feeling here likewise in the North.

 

Fermanagh Times April 22nd, 1915.  THE DIETING OF OFFICIALDOM.  Mr. Crumley is proving himself an economist, a reformer and a most admirable Guardian of the poor all at the same time.  Evidently the Hon. Gentleman’s experiences in the House of Commons and his observations in his travels away from home are now bearing fruit to the advantage of the Fermanagh ratepayer.  We have nothing but praise for the good sense with which he is initiating changes and making improvements in the ménage of the Institution at Cornagrade.  There has long been a field there for a more intelligent administration.  His latest suggestion deals with the dietary of the officials and has rectified it quietly and without entailing additional expense on an undoubtedly unnatural arrangement.  Variety is as needful to the digestive apparatus of a nurse or a workhouse master as to that of the ordinary ratepayer.  Hitherto the feeding methods have been cast in a steel mould, in which, and from which no suspicion of deviation in any direction was for a moment permissible.  Now, thanks to Mr. Crumley, there enters a welcome latitude.  Beef for every day in the week would weary the most carnivorously inclined among us and so provision has been made that the officials can obtain other food to a defined extent whenever they so choose.  In that proportion will greater cheerfulness and happiness move the staff to nobler thoughts of duty in the future.

 

Fermanagh Times April 22nd, 1915.  LOCAL MILITARY NOTES.  The present strength of the new Reserve Battalion, Inniskillings, now stationed in Enniskillen, is 11 officers and 300 men, made up of double companies as follows: – A company 121; C company 99; E company 91.  These men have all joined since Friday the 14th Inst.  The three companies are now located in the Main and Castle Barracks, Queen Street Barrack and also in the County Hall.  We regret to hear rumours of the probability that we may soon lose the Divisional troops (Inniskilling Dragoons and Cyclists.)  These men are exceedingly popular with the townspeople, and we trust the rumours prove unfounded.  If they are taken from Enniskillen their probable destination will be Magilligan Camp.  On Monday Sergeant Patrick Lynch, Dame Street, was buried in Enniskillen with military honours.  Deceased who was in the 4th Battalion Inniskillings came to town to bury his brother.  He himself took ill on Wednesday and died at the Military Hospital on Saturday.  At the funeral the firing party was composed of men of the Inniskilling Dragoons at present stationed in Enniskillen.

 

Fermanagh Times April 22nd, 1915.  SOME PERTINENT QUESTIONS.  Is there a certain section of the community in Derrygonnelly doing their utmost to harm the interests of the local creamery? What is the real object in the attitude they have taken up?  Are the inmates of Lisnaskea Workhouse really underfed owing to the new directory system?

Is the public controversy at present being waged in Monaghan over the question of the Belgian refugees in at county not both invidious and in bad taste at this present time?

How many people in Enniskillen told the police last week that they had no room in which to billet soldiers?

 

Fermanagh Times April 22nd, 1915.  DUBLIN AND DRINKING.  TOO MANY INTOXICATED SOLDIERS AND WOMEN.  The greatest anxiety prevails in Ireland as to the nature of the Government proposals for the restriction of drink, and suspense has reached a sort of crisis (today Wednesday, says the Daily Sketch,) when the Chancellor has consented to receive a deputation from the Irish licenced trade.  On Tuesday Mr. Redmond, Mr. Devlin, and Mr. Dillon had a second interview with Mr. Lloyd George, and pressed upon him the necessity for exempting Ireland from any proposals under consideration on the grounds that, outside Belfast and one other small area, no munitions of war in any form are produced in Ireland.

As a result of the interviews however there is apparently less prospect of exemption entertained by the Irish trade than before.  In support of the proposal that Ireland should be included in the Government scheme, Sir William F.  Barrett’s and two well-known Dublin ladies have issued a statement showing the result of independent investigations carried out in Dublin licenced houses between November and this month.  From one house under observation 65 soldiers came out, of whom several were drunk, and at the closing of the house the place was still so full that it was impossible to count the number inside.  Women were loitering in the vicinity.  In another case 94 women were counted coming out of the house in 25 minutes, all more or less drunk.  Numbers of soldiers were inside with women.  Another house was full of girls and soldiers all more or less drunk and behaving disgracefully.  The place had side doors out of which soldiers and girls were put very drunk.  The investigators add: – We visited many public houses during the afternoon hours.  In all of them there were very many women.  Many of the women were expectant mothers.  Outside babies were handed to some passing child to hold when the mother’s went inside.

 

Fermanagh Times April 22nd, 1915.  PRISONERS OF WAR.  LETTERS AND PARCELS SENT FREE.  We have just received a communication stating that letters, postcards, parcels and money orders may be sent, free of all postal charges, to prisoners of war interned abroad and to British civilians interned in Austria–Hungry and in Germany.  As well as the rank and, name, regiment, place of internment and country it must be clearly stated on the address that the person is “a prisoner of war” and the letter and parcels must be sent C/O G. P. O., Mount Pleasant, London, E. C.  The letters must be short and clearly written and must, of course, contain no reference to naval, military, or political matters.  No newspapers or newspaper cuttings are allowed to reach prisoners and the transmission of coin is expressly forbidden.  Person seeking information and advice with regard to British prisoners of war are invited to apply to – The Prisoners of War Help Committee, Embankment Entrance, Victoria Embankment, London, W. C.

 

Fermanagh Times April 22nd, 1915.  DRINK LOSSES ON THE CLYDE ARE EQUAL TO 25 PER CENT OF TIME.  A deputation from the Shipbuilding Federation that recently waited on the Chancellor of the Exchequer has furnished him with additional information regarding the time kept by workmen engaged in steel construction.  The figures, the Federation say, shows a serious amount of time which, owing to drink is directly and indirectly being lost to the grave injury of the country’s needs at this time of crisis.  During the four weeks of March the aggregate amount of ordinary hours avoidable lost by ironworkers on the Clyde and in the northeast districts is 668,000 equally to a loss of 25 per cent on the normal working hours.

 

Fermanagh Times April 22nd, 1915.  THE ASCENDANCY WHICH THE BRITISH AIRMEN HAVE GAINED may be attributed to his innate sporting instinct.  “Cool, adroit and with that daring which is seen to advantage in an emergency,” in air duels he is more than a match for the Germans.  The latter learns to fly with meticulous care, and handles his machine with a highly average skill, but does not possess at a crisis just the spirit of initiative which and in aerial fighting, more than in any other, spells the difference between victory and defeat.

 

Impartial Reporter. April 22 1915.  DOUBLE FINES.  The Enniskillen Bench of magistrates carried out at Petty Sessions on Monday the resolution announced at the previous Court, of doubling fines for drunkenness.  Accordingly the customary fine of two shillings and sixpence for a first became five shillings; the five shillings for a second offence became 10 shillings, and so on to the 20 shillings became 40 shillings.  The magistrates of other towns have followed the good example of Enniskillen, and the Guardian is urging Armagh Justices to do likewise.  There need be no mercy extended to drunkards, especially in war time.

 

Impartial Reporter. April 22 1915.  HIGHLY PRICED CALVES.  We referred in the last issue of the Impartial Reporter to the high price of heifers.  We learn now that Mr. Gamble of Rossawella, Belnaleck, sold a bull calf, 11 months old and three weeks( not one year) in the March fair of Enniskillen for £14; and two calves not one year old for £16; so that good prices were not confined to the April fair.

 

Fermanagh Herald 24th April, 1915.  JOTTINGS.  The news of the death of Lord Crichton in action has occasioned much regret in Enniskillen, where he was well known.

The record price of 76 shillings per hundredweight was paid for pork in the Irvinestown Pork Market on Wednesday.  There were about 140 carcasses on sale.

At Lisbellaw Sessions Mr. George Law, for driving a cart without a light was fined one shilling and costs.  Mr. Law considered that the fine was excessive, and the chairman said he was sorry he couldn’t change it.

For allowing a cow to wander on the public road Michael McMulkin was fined one shilling and costs.  Mary Francis Knight was also fined two shillings for having three head of cattle and an ass on that thoroughfare.

 

Fermanagh Herald 24th April, 1915.  A LISNASKEA FATHER’S HONOUR.  Mr. John Neeson, Lisnaskea has the unique honour of having five sons in the colours.  His eldest son John, who is attached to the 2nd Battalion Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, has been wounded in action and is at the present time attached to the Army Medical Corps.  Peter belongs to the 2st Battalion of the Inniskillings, James is in the Irish Brigade at Tipperary and Francis is at the front serving with the 2nd Battalion of the Inniskillings.  The youngest son Patrick, who is only 17 years of age, is attached to the 4th Battalion of the Inniskillings.

 

Fermanagh Times April 29th, 1915.  OBITUARY.  COLONEL BLOOMFIELD.  There has passed away in London a member of an old and influential Fermanagh family, in the person of Coronal Alleyne Bloomfield formerly of the Madras Staff Corps, aged 82 years.  In 1864 the deceased gentleman married the daughter of Mr. Nicholas Loftus Tottenham, of Glenfarne Hall.  The family seat of the Bloomfields was Castle Caldwell.

March 1915.

Fermanagh Times March 4th, 1915.  ANOTHER ZEPPELIN WRECKED.  From the Hague comes a report that a Zeppelin, which engaged in guarding the bridges over the Rhine at Cologne, has been blown down and destroyed, though the crew escaped.  This is the third of these unwieldy gasbags that has been wrecked in the past fortnight, if the report is correct.

 

Fermanagh Times March 4th, 1915.  THE TAX OF TEA.  FEARS OF HIGHER DUTY.  There seems to be a strong probability of still it dearer tea in the near future, says the London Daily Express.  In November the duty was raised from five pence to eight pence per pound.  Some of the largest multiple shop tea firms are preparing for the possibility that the Budget will add a further 4d, making the duty one shilling a pound.  This would mean that the cheapest tea would be about two shillings and one penny per pound retail.

 

Fermanagh Times March 4th, 1915.  THE MARQUIS OF LONDONDERRY’S WILL.  The Marquis of Londonderry, K.G., P.C., who died on the 8th of February last, aged 62 years, left unsettled property provisionally valued at £500,000, “so far as at present can be ascertained.” Probate of his will has been granted to his son, the Most Hon. Charles Stewart Henry, now seventh Marquis of Londonderry, the sole executor.  He bequeathed £100,000, a carriage and pair of horses, and a motor car, as she may select, to his wife, together with the selection of any two of his thoroughbred brood mares, with either foals or yearlings; £150,000 to his daughter, the Countess of Ilchester; £100,000 to his sister Lady Allendale; and all other property to his son.

He stated: – “It is my wish that my said son should, out of the said gifts of residue, make such presents to my faithful agents, and also to such of my servants I shall have been in my service for 10 years and upwards at the date of my death, as in his absolute discretion he may think fit.”

He further stated – I wish that my death shall not be allowed to cast more gloom than is absolutely unavoidable upon those with whom I have been so long and so happily associated but that my relations and kind friends will not allow my death to make any difference in their arrangements, but that they will resume their engagements and diversions exactly as if that event had not happened.

 

Fermanagh Times March 4th, 1915.  SANATORIUM FOR FERMANAGH.  THE COUNTY COUNCIL ADOPTS DR. TIMONEY’S SCHEME BY A LARGE MAJORITY.  The vexed question of their provision of a Sanatorium for Fermanagh came up again for discussion at the meeting of the County Council on Thursday, when Dr. Timoney’s report came up for consideration.  Mr. Arnold said he was opposed to the scheme, and he was opposed to it for a very good reason.  If he could prove to him that the scheme was going to be the benefit that it was claimed to be he would agree with that.  If they could prove to him that sanatorium treatment was a cure or a preventative he would be with them.  He deplored the ravages which consumption was making in the country, but he had yet to learn of the advantages which would accrue from a sanatorium scheme in County Fermanagh.  It was said that the scheme would put £5,000 on the rates.

 

Fermanagh Herald 6th March, 1915.  THE CHANNEL TUNNEL SCHEME.  At present, owing to difficulties arising out of the war, there does not seem to be any possibility of the projected scheme for the construction of the channel tunnel between England and Ireland, materialising, but there are grounds for believing that the project will again come before parliament and after the sensation of hostilities.

 

Fermanagh Herald 6th March, 1915.  GOLD IN OUR BOGS.  Now that the price of coal is so high, people are asking why it is that up to date methods are not availed off for the production of more fuel from our Irish Bogs.  The bogs are the true gold mines of Ireland and infinitely more valuable than any inexhaustible supply of the precious metal.  Turf dried by machinery has a much higher heating power and will not burn away so quickly as ordinary air-dried turf.

 

Fermanagh Herald 6th March, 1915.  JOTTINGS.  Lady Erne has written expressing her thanks to the Fermanagh County Council for the resolution recently passed on the death of her husband, Lord Erne.

The various Volunteer Companies in Arney have been reorganised during the past few weeks.  As soon as the good weather sets in drilling will be resumed.

The report of the annual meeting of the Sligo, Leitrim, and Northern Counties Railway will be read with pleasure by the shareholders.  The company has passed through a time of stress and difficulty, and they have surmounted the difficulties successfully, and the directors have pleasure in recommending that the same dividend be payable this year as last year.  This is a matter of congratulation both by the directors and the shareholders, having regard to the fact that practically all of the railway companies in Ireland and Great Britain had to recommend a reduction in their dividends.

News has been received in Enniskillen of the death in Arbroath of Mr. William Alexander Harvey, a son of Mr. James Harvey, Belmore Street, Enniskillen.  The late Mr. Harvey was in Scotland visiting some friends, and death was caused by motor cycling.  At the time of the outbreak of the Boer War he joined the South African Constabulary Force, and in 1912 he returned home and afterwards left for Patagonia to share a ranch with a friend.  At the outbreak of war he disposed of his share, and set out for home with the intention of joining the colours.  His demise under such tragic circumstances will be learnt with regret, and sympathy will be extended to his father, mother and relatives in their great sorrow.

 

Fermanagh Herald 6th March, 1915.  ENNISKILLEN.  HOUSING SCHEME B.  Chanterhill Road West – 10 houses.  Here the committee propose to erect a row of better class dwellings on the left hand side of the roadway going from the town and beyond Alexandra Terrace.  The houses are to be of 18 feet frontage and to contain kitchen, three rooms, good attic, and bath accommodation with bay window.  The estimated cost of each house is £36 – 7 shillings and 11 pence.

 

Fermanagh Herald 6th March, 1915.  DEATH OF AN ENNISKILLEN SOLDIER.  A GOOD MAN AND A BRAVE SOLDIER LOSES HIS LIFE IN THE TRENCHES. We briefly announced in our last issue the death in action of Private Francis McKiernan of the 2nd battalion of the Inniskilling Fusiliers.  Private McKiernan was an employee of the Enniskillen Urban Council, and on the outbreak of war answered the mobilization call, as he was on the Special Reserve, and on the 31st of October he left for the firing line, and on the 10th of February he was shot by a sniper.  His mother has received the following letter from the Catholic Chaplain, Fr. McCabe and from the C.Q.M.S.: – Dear Mrs. McKiernan, – I have the sorrowful duty of informing you that your son, number 1724, Private Francis McKiernan, was killed in action on the evening of the 10th of this month.  I trust you will not take this heavy blow too much to heart, and I am sure it will console you to know that your son was well prepared for his death.  Only a few days ago I said Mass for the men of his company, and your son was amongst those who went to Confession and received Holy Communion.  The circumstances of us death were as follows: He was in the advanced trenches and was doing up his pack, when he raised his head above the tranches.  A sniper who was on the lookout immediately fired and hit your son in the head causing almost instantaneous death.  This German was soon after shot himself by his comrades.  Yesterday accompanied by as many men who could be spared I buried him with full Catholic rites in a little country cemetery not far from the firing line and this morning said Mass for the repose of his soul.  R.I.P.

Try then my dear madam to see even in this great sorrow the finger of God.  Your holy faith will comfort you and sustain you.  Your son was a good man, and brave soldier and a devout catholic.  He has died bravely, strengthened with the Sacrament he had received so shortly before.  No better ending can any man have.  God bless you and comfort you.  Yours very sincerely in J.C.  A. E. McCabe, R.C. Chaplain.

 

Dear Mr. McKiernan, – I am very sorry to have to convey to you the sad news of the death of your son.  He was killed on the 10th inst, and buried the next day, a clergyman being present.  I am sending you all the things that were found on him by post, and I hope you will see them safely.  There are other things which you will receive through the Record Office, Dublin.  We are making his grave as nice as possible.  If there is anything you want to know I will be only too pleased to give you any information.  I have just scribbled these few lines in a hurry.  W.  Thompson, C.Q.M.S., “C” company 2nd Bn. Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers.  1st Army.

 

Fermanagh Herald 13th March, 1915.  WITH THE NEXT ISSUE OF THE FERMANAGH HERALD there will be presented a beautiful half-tone portrait suitable for framing of Mr. Joseph Devlin, MP.  It has been reproduced from a special photograph and will be printed on Art Paper.  Orders from newsagents for extra papers should reach us at the latest on Monday next.

 

Fermanagh Herald 13th March, 1915.  JOTTINGS.  The Enniskillen Guardians have given a grant of £3 3s to the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.

Mr. Justice Gibson was presented with white gloves at of the Fermanagh Assizes on Saturday.  His remarks in his address the schoolboys will be ready with interest.  He spoke about the six fruitful years spent in the classrooms of Portora and the “throb and thrill of memories which come over him when he visits Enniskillen.”

The depot Brass Band from Omagh arrived in Enniskillen on Wednesday morning for the purposes of giving a fillip to recruiting.  Wednesday was fair day in the town.

It has been decided that on completion of their tour through Antrim, Derry, and Fermanagh, the 36th Battalion of the Cycling Company will be stationed at Enniskillen until further orders.

Becoming frightened at the burr of a motor bicycle, a horse which was harnessed to a cart took fright on Tuesday night and galloped up Townhall Street.  The animal approaching the Imperial Hotel went in on the footpath and try to dash through the portals of the hotel and in the effort smashed the cart.  The horse continued to drag it up as far as Mr. Taylor’s window, where it fell in a heap.  Mr. Taylor’s windows had certainly a miraculous escape from had being broken.

 

Fermanagh Herald 13th March, 1915.  LIGHTING CLONES WORKHOUSE.  Clones in Guardians on Tuesday received an account for £7 – 5s – 9d, lighting for two months and 13 days.  Oil lighting for the corresponding period last year it was stated cost £4 – 13s – 4d.

 

Fermanagh Herald 13th March, 1915. NURSES’ CHEERY TASK.  Writing to the Clones Guardians regarding the alleged neglect of the dead, the Local Government Board state that is the duty of the nurse to wash and prepare a body for coffining, but not actually to coffin it.

 

Fermanagh Herald 13th March, 1915.  THE GAA FERMANAGH COUNTY CONVENTION.  On Sunday, the 7th of March the Fermanagh County Convention of the GAA was held at Derrylin –Mr. P. L. McElgunn, chairman of the County Board presiding.  The following clubs were represented – Shamrocks, O’Connell’s, Brian Borus, Rapparees, Brehons, and Maguires.  The report showed that during the year Fermanagh had made a very creditable display in the Ulster Championship, beating Tyrone and Cavan and thus qualifying for the final in which it was defeated by Monaghan.  In the semi-final of the Croke Cup Competition, Fermanagh was drawn against Louth, and was only beaten by this famous combination by the score of 1 point.  The credit for this is principally due to the Shamrocks, who selected the team.

In the competitions in the county good progress was made during the year.  The 1913 League competition, won by Maguires, had to be finished and all of the championship, which was won by Shamrocks.  In the 1914 championship all the matches were played except the final.  In the league, however, things are not so far advanced owing to unfavourable climatic conditions.

The convention next proceeded to make bylaws.  It was decided to play championships on a league system vis., home and away matches, the home team to take charge of the gate and field arrangements.  Only 10 minutes’ grace is to be allowed after the time appointed for starting matches and the entrance to the Junior League was fixed at had two shillings and sixpence.

 

Fermanagh Herald 13th March, 1915.  FOOTBALL.  Trillick Football Club and travelled to Brookeborough on Saturday last to play a friendly with the homesters.  A very enjoyable game was the outcome.  Trillick had rather the better of a hard game, which ended with the score: Trillick, six goals; Brookeborough, four goals.  The marksmen for Trillick were McElholm two, McGee two, Slevin and Brennan one each.

 

Fermanagh Herald 13th March, 1915.  BALLYSHANNON GUARDIANS.  The Master reported that owing to Dr. McMullen, medical officer of the workhouse, been called away on urgent private business, he was obliged to requisition the services of Dr. Gordon to temporarily discharge the duties of medical officer.  He also stated that he lodged a sum of £112 8s 7d to the credit of the Guardians, being repayment for the treatment of military patients.

An application was received from Andrew McShea for the grazing of the hospital field for 11 months at the sum of  £10 16s.  The application was granted.

 

Fermanagh Herald 13th March, 1915.  THE DEATH AND FUNERAL OF MRS. ANTHONY CASSIDY.  Her death occurred on Friday last the 5th, inst., at the age of 78 at her residence, 16 Upper Pembroke Street, Dublin.  Coming from Enniskillen some years ago with her late husband Mr. Anthony Cassidy, who predeceased her by a little over four years, she has since resided in Pembroke Street.  On Wednesday last she received with edifying piety and resignation the last rites of the church and on Friday morning she passed peacefully away in the presence of her daughter, Mrs. Gordon.

Of the most charitable disposition, the deceased lady will be very much missed by the poor of the parish of Westland Row.  From whatever quarter the appeals came – and they came in numbers – Mrs. Cassidy, once assured of their genuine worthiness, give them with open hand and willing heart and the prayers of the poor will be offered to the God of Mercy for her who was so merciful.  The remains arrived in Enniskillen by the 12.40 train, and the interment took place subsequently in the Catholic Cemetery.  The chief mourners were Dr. John Cassidy, London, and Dr. Louis Cassidy, RAMC, Dublin sons.  Mrs. Gordon, daughter and Mrs. Louis Cassidy daughter-in-law, Michael and Maurice Cassidy brothers in law. (Anthony Cassidy was the owner of a tobacco factory in Enniskillen and also the Graan Monastery farm, Enniskillen.)

 

Fermanagh Herald 20th March, 1915.  JOTTINGS.  Official intimation has just reached his mother in Enniskillen, that Private Sandy Hynes, of the Inniskillings has been killed in action.

The number of dozen eggs required in the Enniskillen Union for the current week is 25.  Some short time ago 60 dozen were required.

Mr. Donnelly was declared the contractor for meat, and Mr. Whaley the contractor for bread, at a meeting of the Enniskillen Guardians on Tuesday.

A case of spotted by fever was reported at a meeting of the Board of Guardians in the county during the past week.  Stringent measures have been adopted for the segregation of the affected person.

 

Fermanagh Herald 20th March, 1915.  THE RESIDENCE OF THE BELLEEK DOCTOR IS TO BE LIGHTED BY ELECTRICITY.  At a meeting of the Ballyshannon Board of Guardians on Saturday Mr. Felix Leonard vice chairman said he believed that it was the intention of the Guardians to have lighted by electricity Dr. Kelly’s house in Belleek, but he saw by the minutes that they were only going to put in the wire is etc., and Dr. Kelly was to supply the globes and shades.  He was of the opinion that as well as putting in the wires they should supply the globes etc., because Dr. Kelly’s residence was the property of the Guardians and they were receiving a big rent from him annually for it.  Mr. D. Gilfedder said in his opinion Dr. Kelly was a man who gave them very little trouble.  He never got a holiday for the past five or six years, which was the means of saving the Guardians a sum of almost £25.00.  If any man was worthy of consideration Dr. Kelly certainly was.

Mr. Gallacher said there was a scheme on foot for the public lighting of Belleek, and it was possible if the scheme matured it would be easier and cheaper to light the Doctor’s residence.  It was also stated that the current for the lighting of the streets of Belleek would be generated at Belleek Pottery.

 

Fermanagh Herald 20th March, 1915.  WAR PICTURES IN MANORHAMILTON FOR SIX NIGHTS IN SAINT CLARE’S HALL.  The people of Manorhamilton and surrounding district will be pleased to learn that Daniells Irish–American Animated Picture and Variety Company are here at present paying their sixth annual visit to Manorhamilton and will remain the whole week.  As everybody knows here, Mr. Daniells always gives a refined and up to date program and shows a complete change each night.  The subjects filmed by this popular company includes exceptionally fine pieces in drama and comedy, as well as the very latest war pictures, which win the unanimous approval of large and representative for audiences.  Mr. Daniels will show during the week, “War scenes in Belgium,” The Russian army in action,” “The Germans entering Brussels,” “The English army in France, etc. etc., which are all highly interesting and attractive.  The popular manager of this company – Mr. Happy Harry Harden – informed our representative that all films are quite new and have been chosen from the best kinematographic works procurable. In addition to the pictures and illustrated songs a variety concert will be given each evening by the following distinguished artistes: -Mr. Jack Seeby, Mr. Happy Harry Harden, Mr. Bert L. Dempster, Mr. Jimmy Greene, Miss S. Ryan, and the Brothers O’Brien, all of whom are great favourites.  A full orchestra will render high class music at each performance.  Doors open at 7.30 to commence at eight o’clock and admission is 6d or 1s with children half price.  Seats may be booked in advance. (Photograph of Mr. Braecy Daniells.)

 

Fermanagh Times March 25th, 1915.  THE U.S. THEATRES HUGE SALARIES AND A REFUSAL.  Madame Melba will go to the United States in the autumn and will receive there £1,000 a week.  The New York Tribune which makes this announcement gives details of an interesting “star hunt” of Mr. Edward F.  Albee, who is offering huge salaries to attract the great ones of the concert hall over the Atlantic.  He received, it is said, a rebuff from the Irish tenor Mr. John McCormack, who when offered £300 for every appearance, with a percentage of the profits, or, failing this, £1,000 a week, intimated that the lowest terms in which business could be done where £5,000 a week. Mr. McCormick is the only singer whose price has been so high, and Mr. Albee is now said to be negotiating with Tetrazzini.

 

Fermanagh Times March 25th, 1915.  FERMANAGH A SOLDIER KILLED.  Mr. Frank McGovern is the first of the Newtownbutler boys to fall on the battlefield.  A letter has been received from the War Office stating that he was killed in action on the 28th of February.  The following letter has also been received by his father: – “The King commands me to assure you of the true sympathy of the King and Queen. – Kitchener.

 

Fermanagh Times March 25th, 1915.  ENNISKILLEN STREET TRAFFIC.  We think the time has come when the Urban Council should pass a by-law compelling all moving carts and vehicles to keep as close to the footpaths on their own side of the street as possible.  At present they seem to have an irresistible tendency to keep the centre of the thoroughfare.  Under any circumstances this leads to inconvenience but now when fast travelling has become one of the permanent facts of our traffic that leads to danger as well as to unnecessary annoyance.

The rule we suggest is being adopted and applied stringently everywhere else.  It gives drivers no extra trouble, but greatly relieves the strain and stress of street locomotion.  There is no reason why Enniskillen should lag behind other places in enforcing so sensible a regulation.  Indeed, our traffic is so concentrated and so continuous that there are few towns which more demand the most accommodating and safest method of travelling.

 

Fermanagh Times March 25th, 1915.  OUR LOSS OF OFFICERS.  CASUALTIES NOW EXCEED 5,600.  Up to Saturday morning an analysis of the casualty list showed our loss in officers as follows: – Killed 1,808; Wounded 3,022; Missing or Prisoners 844.  Total 5,674.  Of the Irish regiments the Inniskilling Fusiliers; nine killed, 24 wounded, two missing or prisoners, total 35.

 

Fermanagh Times March 25th, 1915.  THREE WARSHIPS SUNK IN THE DARDANELLES.  BRITISH SAILORS SAVED.  FRANCE LOOSE 650 OFFICERS AND MEN.  In the Dardanelles operations on Friday H.M.S. Irresistible, H.M.S.  Ocean, and one of the French battleships Bouvet were sunk after striking drifting mines.  Practically all the crews of the British ships were saved, but the crew of the Bouvet, which foundered in three minutes after the explosion, were drowned.  She had a complement of 650 officers and men.  The ships lost were not of modern construction, nor of first class fighting value.  (From the Times.) The first sustained attempt to overcome the defences in the Narrows of the Dardanelles resulted in serious though not unexpected losses, and we must be prepared to lose still more ships before our object is completely achieved.

 

Fermanagh Times March 25th, 1915.  MAINSPRING OF THE TRENCHES.  THE WONDERS OF THE BRITISH HEADQUARTERS.  The Special Correspondent (G.  Valentine Williams), of the Daily Mail, writes from the General Headquarters, British Army in the Field (France).  It is related that at one of the blackest stages of the retreat from Mons Sir John French astonished his entourage by announcing, after a long morning’s work at his headquarters, that he thought he would go for a stroll.  And, picking up a walking stick, the Field-Marshall calmly walked fourth to take the air as unconcerned as though he were going to stroll down to the War Office through the park.

That the British Commander–in–Chief should have been able to free himself momentarily from the enormous responsibilities of those days of stress is not only a remarkable instance of his mental detachment, of which I have already written, but it is also a most striking tribute to his absolute confidence in the perfect organisation of the British Army, without which even the undying heroism of the British troops would have availed nothing against the systematised frightfulness of the bosche.

Sir John French knows better than anybody else how admirably organised the British Army machine is.  He devoted his whole life to it when, emerging in a blaze of glory from the South African War, he was not content to rest upon his laurels but embarked on a long spell of silent, unostentatious hard work, the fruits of which are seen in the marvellously efficient army under his command today.

The amount of foresight required to feed an immense army serving on foreign soil may be imagined, yet so perfect are the arrangements of the Quartermaster Generals department that even during the great and glorious retreat from Mons when our troops were constantly on the move, the men never liked anything.  The Director of Supplies is kept daily posted on the number of men to be fed.  Each day the amount of rations required is sent up from the supply base to the nearest railhead, where it is met by the mechanical transport and conveyed to the distribution centre, where the regimental horse transports carry it up to the firing line.  The same procedure is followed with regard to ammunition.

An important part of the department’s duties concerns requisitioning and billeting.  There is a Claims Office at General Headquarters, whither the farmers and peasants of the region occupied by the British troops send in their requisition receipts.  Officers are provided with special requisition forms clearly printed in French and English contained in a book, which has a preface with some concise hints as to what an officer may and may not do when requisitioning from the civil population.

The Royal Army Medical Corps has now many motor ambulance convoys, each with 50 ambulance cars and repairing outfits, cars for officers, and motor cyclists, attached to the army in the field.  When a man is wounded he is taken to the regimental aid post which is just behind the firing line, where the regimental doctor, assisted by a corporal and five Red Cross orderlies, there tends to him.  He is then sent down by horse ambulance to the field hospital, whence he is removed by a motor ambulance to the casualty clearing station.

 

Fermanagh Times March 25th, 1915.  THE FLIES AS A DISEASE CARRIERS.  Medical authorities are urging the importance of a more energetic campaign than ever against flies in the coming spring.  It is pointed out that the existence of military encampments in all parts of the country must inevitably tend to provide breeding places for these pests, and where troops are billeted in cottages, where sanitary arrangements are primitive, the conditions must also be very favourable to them.  Another factor favourable to flies if the weather is dry will be the clouds of dust which we must expect in the months ahead were grass has been trampled down and roads cut up.

 

Fermanagh Times March 25th, 1915.  MUNITIONS OF WAR.  NO STRIKE AGREEMENT.  THE GOVERNMENT AND DRINK.  The draft of an agreement between the workers’ representatives and the employers regarding the output of ammunition and equipment was published last night.  The important terms are: – Free employment of women’s labour.  No restrictions on output for the duration of the war.  In the meantime the government has decided that the profits of armament works shall not exceed 10 per cent during the war and that any surplus shall go to the state.  Mr. Lloyd George addressed the delegates on the excessive drinking among several certain sections of workmen in particular districts throughout the country.  He announced that the Government had under consideration the question of limiting the hours in these areas, and that they would be glad of the views of the conference on their suggestion to allow public houses to open only between 12.00 p.m. and 2.00 p.m. and 7 o’clock to 9 in the evening.

 

Fermanagh Times March 25th, 1915.  THE WON’T WORKS.  AN ENGLISH TOWN’S PRIDE AND SHAME.  The pride of Sunderland is its claim to be the biggest shipbuilding town in the world; the shame of Sunderland is its large body of shirkers, and that shame is paraded openly and almost ostentatiously in the main streets of the town, says a Times special correspondent.

“At 10.00 a.m. there are hundreds of men, hands in pockets, slouching idly along in little groups, standing talking at street corners, most of them smoking – many of them able bodied men of military age, and a fair proportion of older men, still capable of good work.  “Who are they?”  I asked a young constable.  “Wont works” was the laconic reply.  I put the same question later to an employer.  “My men, many of them,” he answered bitterly, “The Government work is being delayed because they’re taking a holiday.”

 

Fermanagh Times March 25th, 1915.  PATRIOTIC TYRONE POSTMEN.  Enthusiastic scenes were witnessed at Omagh Railway Station on Monday morning, when 11 postmen and post office officials left to join the Post Office Rifles.  The contingent, which consisted of six men from Omagh, four from Dromore and one from Castlederg, left by the 12.39 train for Dublin, and received a great send off from a large crowd of townspeople and their fellow employees of the Post Office.

 

Fermanagh Herald 27th March, 1915.  LICENCED PREMISES IN THE TOWN OF TEMPO FOR SALE.  I have received instructions from the executor of the late owner Mr. Bernard Maguire to sell by public auction on the premises at 1.00 sharp on Monday, the 29th of March, 1915 those valuable premises at present occupied by Mr. Bernard Breen and situated on the Main Street, Tempo subject to a head rent of £3.00 per annum.  The  property consists of a spacious two Storey dwelling house having four rooms on the first floor and five rooms on the second floor, a cellar 40 feet by 20 feet divided into three apartments and fitted throughout with an Electric Lighting System.  The out offices which are extensive and in good repair, consist of ample stabling accommodation, a byre, coach house, etc..  There is also a neat little garden attached.  The entire premises, which are now in occupation of Mr. Bernard Breen as yearly tenant, paying £12 15s yearly rent are well adapted to a Posting Establishment.  Tempo is a very progressive little town and has a good weekly market and a monthly fair.

 

Fermanagh Herald 27th March, 1915.  A REMARKABLE ENNISKILLEN MAN, JOHN MULLANPHY served in the Irish Brigade in France and later created a Cotton Corner in America.  John and Mullanphy was a pioneer in American commerce in cotton and came from Ireland in 1792 as an emigrant with his wife and a year old child.  He was born near Enniskillen, Co., Fermanagh in 1758 and at 20 he went to France and enlisted in the famous Irish Brigade in which he served until the Revolution drove him back to Ireland.  The emigrants remained a year in Philadelphia, and then went to Baltimore, where Mullanphy prospered in business until in 1799 he pushed further west to Frankfurt, Kentucky.  Here his store became the trading centre of the section, and his house the hospitable refuge of the missionaries who visited this district from time to time to minister to the scattered Catholics settled in the neighbourhood.

Mullanphy’s service in France had enabled him to learn the language of that country and St. Louis was then a French settlement. In 1804 Mullanphy fell in with one of its founders, Charles Gratiot, who persuaded him to locate in St. Louis.  As he spoke French he was soon at home there and the store he opened on Second Street was an object of wonder.  He had 15 children, eight of whom lived and continued his benefactions.  His only son, Bryan, who died a bachelor, in 1851, was Mayor of St. Louis in 1847.  Bryan Mullanphy’s will left one third of his estate, about $200,000, to a trust fund, “to furnish relief to all poor emigrants passing through St. Louis to settle in the West.”

John Mullanphy’s name is recalled to the St. Louis of today by the Mullanphy Hospital and the Mullanphy Orphanage Asylum as that of his daughter, Mrs. Anne Biddle is preserved in the Biddle Home and St., Anne’s Foundling Asylum. His life in St. Louis was one long deed of charity.

Snippets from 1898 Impartial Reporter.

May 1898.  From year to year it is remarked that Bundoran is improving.  This long straggling village of one continuous street, extending over a mile in length along a country road by the seaside is without any government of its own – no Council to look after its byways, thoroughfares, other sanitary arrangements and it remains for private efforts and private association of residents to do any little that can be done without the aid of legislative powers.  The Ballyshannon Board of Guardians are supposed to exercise supervision in sanitary matters, but, practically, they do nothing.  The Sanitary Act with them is almost a dead letter; but somehow after years of patience and labour they have managed to get portion of the water works constructed and next year may hope to see a water supply in Bundoran.

One of the surprises of Bundoran has been the great success of the Highlands Hotel. When its walls were only a few feet high people shook their heads over a scheme which could not pay, and would not attract any money and the house which would remain empty.  We cannot say that the shareholders have yet received their five per cent but the hotel was not long in existence when it became so crowded that an additional wing and an extension of the dining accommodation became necessary.  Mr. Sixt the courteous and enterprising manager had the knack of sending his guests away with the desire to return and thus it is that even now with the additional accommodation he is obliged the times to refuse guess.  His resources no doubt are many for when the bedrooms are all full the billiard room, lounge, his own office and other resorts are made available and for instance it was by such a expedients that he was able on last Saturday and Sunday to house 71 people while its sleeping accommodation was only for 58.

July 28th 1898.  JUDGES OF WHISKEY.  According to Saturday’s Surrey Mirror certain members of the Reigate Board of Guardians were not satisfied with the whiskey provided with their lunch.  At the last meeting Rev. E.M. Gibson, of Charlwood called the Lunch Committee’s attention to the fact that the whiskey was very bad indeed.  He hoped the Master would provide them with decent whiskey; no man with any self-respect would drink what was at present supplied. (Laughter.)

The Chairman Rev. H. J. Greenhill remarked that whiskey was supplied to them by a highly respected merchant and cost of 49 shillings per dozen.  Rev. E. M. Gibson – It is raw, crude oil, and is not worth 15 shillings a gallon.  The Vice Chairman – I quite agree with Mr. Gibson – it is not fit to drink.  Major Kingsley O Foster said he only tasted the whisky once and he thought it was the most filthy whiskey he had ever tasted of his life.  Rev. C. Gordon Young – Hear, hear.  No action was taken.

July 28th 1898.  THE TEDIUM OF THE PRINCE OF WALES SICK ROOM is cheered by the electrophone, which sends a concert, an opera, or a church service along a wire to edify or amuse him.  It is not necessary to shout in an instrument of this kind or worry over it as over a telephone.  It simply gathers up every sound in the largest hall, church, or theater and sends it along.  The Prince had the special pleasure of hearing a sermon preached on himself and his accident by Canon Fleming at Saint Michael’s Church, Chester Square.

July 28th 1898.  MR. GOSCHEN THE FIRST LORD OF THE ADMIRALTY, has risen to the exigencies of the situation.  He is given the proper answer to Russia and has fully redeemed his promises.  As a patriotic and statesmanlike member of the cabinet he has adopted the true line of conduct and he has asked the nation to endorse his action in regard to strengthening the British Navy.  The House of Commons has cordially responded to his request, and the whole country rejoices that there is a solid man in charge of the “Empire’s First Line of Defense.”  His speech on Friday last dealt with three main topics, the original construction programme of 41 ships; the ordinary programme for the current year and a supplemental programme.  The latter consists of four battle ships, four cruisers and 12 torpedo destroyers, the estimated cost of which will be £8,000,000.

November 17th 1898. Impartial Reporter.  BALLYSHANNON.  THE WORKHOUSE MASTERS DEATH.  HAWKER CHARGED WITH MANSLAUGHTER.  On Thursday at the coroner’s inquiry into the sudden death of Mr. Patrick Gavigan master of the Ballyshannon Workhouse, the circumstances of which have already been reported, two witnesses named Holland and J.  Cleary deposed to seeing the deceased receiving two blows on Saturday from a man named Charles Flanagan, a hawker.  Medical testament was to the effect that deceased suffered from diseased brain and that death resulted from extravasation of blood on the surface of the brain which might have been caused by a fall on the back or a blow on the side of the head.  The jury found that deceased died from extravasation of blood on the surface of the brain and that death was accelerated by a blow or by blows received on Saturday night from one Charles Flanagan.  Flanagan is in custody.  The prisoner has been returned for trial to the Ulster Winter Assizes at Belfast.

November 10th 1898.  ELECTION REJOICING IN KESH.  A GENERAL ILLUMINATION.  At 12.30 Wednesday the 2nd inst. a special wire conveyed the news that E.  M.  Archdale, Esq.  D.L, was declared our member for North Fermanagh.  Messengers were dispatched with the expected news to the supporters of Mr. Archdale who reside in remote corners of the district.  Ere the shades of night fell hundreds were seen, old and young, to make their way to the village to join in the rejoicing over the victory of Mr. Archdale.  As soon as darkness arrived in large bonfire was lighted on Dromard Hill and other hills to the north of Kesh.  Gunshots and ringing cheers everywhere echoed the news through the air that a Fermanagh man was the representative of Fermanagh men in the British House of Parliament.  Looking from an eminence above the old barracks, Kesh had the appearance of a portion of some great city animated with electric lights.  Every house, Unionist and Nationalist, was lighted to such an extent that the aspect of the village was most striking and for the first time the street lamps were all aglow.  At 7.30 tar barrels were brought into requisition by Mr. J.  Aiken, junior and located in the Fairgreen, then a torchlight procession marched from the vicinity of the Orange Hall through and around the village and finally took its stand where the tar barrels were placed.  After prolonged cheering for Mr. Archdale had ceased, Mr. W. J. May presided as chairman and gave a splendid address.  Dr. A. Aiken addressed those present of all creeds and classes on the occasion of their coming together to pay all honour they could to one worthy of their highest congratulations, Mr. E. M. Archdale.  (Cheers) Mr. Campbell, Mister J. Martin and others gave addresses.  Loud cheers were given for Mr. Archdale before quitting the Fairgreen.  Afterwards speaking and singing where continued in the Markethouse to a late hour.

February 1915.

Fermanagh Times February 4th, 1915.  FERMANAGH MAN KILLED IN ACTION.  DEATH OF IRVINESTOWN VOLUNTEER.  Very sincere sympathy is expressed all over the Irvinestown district with Mr. George Chittick on the loss of his eldest son, William Henry, who was killed in action on the 22nd of January at the early age of 25 years.  Deceased was educated at Methodist College, Belfast, and afterwards served with of Messrs.  Lindsay & Company, The Arcade, of that city.  From there he went to Messrs. Deuts, London and at the outbreak of the war his patriotism, loyalty and love of King and country asserted itself and after writing to his father that he felt it his duty to volunteer he joined the Honourable  Artillery Company in September.  He was a splendid type of Britisher, vigorous, open hearted, kindly, and was immensely popular with everyone who knew him, both in business and social circles.  In the beginning of October he was sent to the front, and after almost four months, during which he survived many exciting and strenuous incidents and engagements he was shot through the head just above the ear, death being mercifully instantaneous.  There was no general engagement in progress at the time, writes a companion, who was at his side, but only general firing that is practically continuous, but not heavy.

A more detailed account is given in a letter written to Mr. Chittick by Second Lieutenant Martin M.  Schiff, who says: – I deeply regret to have to announce to you the sad news of your son’s death, when in the trenches on January 22nd.  Your son’s death deprives me of a fine soldier, and one who endeared himself to all of my platoon.  He was known as the “Brazier King” owing to the wonderful way he was able to get a fire or brazier going under the most adverse circumstances.  He was shot through the back of the head and death was almost instantaneous.  He was buried at dusk in the garden of a ruined cottage just behind the firing line by all his friends.  A short service was read by the commanding officer and we placed a wooden cross over him.

Fermanagh Times February 4th, 1915.  BOA ISLAND FERRY OR BRIDGE.  (To the editor of the Fermanagh Times.)  Dear Sir, permit me through the columns of your widely read paper to say a few words on the much needed bridge into the Boa Island.  I would ask on behalf of the Boa Islanders why the deputation adopted the east end of the island as a suitable place?  Perhaps owing to their ignorance of such a place as the Boa Island!

Sir, as one of the largest rate payers on the mainland facing the Boa Island I protest against such an invidious selection of site, in so much as this would only suit a few at the top end or east end of the island.  Now, let me ask, what is the whole of the Boa Island to do for a market if the so-called ferry were placed at the top or Kesh end?  Are you aware that the island people are divided all over the island?  There is a County road to the lake shore facing on Rossgole to Pettigo, which is the market town, not Kesh.

Now, I ask those gentlemen who so strongly differed with Mr. Burkett, how much interest they have in the Boa Island people?  What has the Rev. Father Fitzpatrick to say, does he contribute a farthing to the rates or the maintenance of a road to the lake, has he one iota of interest in the island?  Where does a schoolmaster like Mr. Nugent come in?  Is it not his duty to mind his school and while away the time to when he is eligible for his pension when, perhaps, he may find solace in a little home on the Boa Island where to end his day, enjoy his pension and agitate for a ferry to carry him to the great Beyond?  What has the Rev. Mr. Stack to gain by having a ferry at the east end?  I am not aware that he is in any way interested in either Kesh or the Boa Island.  Now, sir, I think I must conclude, but my earnest hope is that if ever there is a ferry or bridge into their Boa Island it will be at Rossgole.  Years, F. W. Barton.

Fermanagh Herald 6th February, 1915.  THREE BRITISH STEAMERS ARE SUNK BY A GERMAN SUBMARINE IN THE IRISH SEA.  This happened on the route used by vessels trading between Belfast and Liverpool.  They were all sunk in the vicinity of Fleetwood, and not far from the Liverpool lightship.  The ships were the steamer Ben Cruachan, 1,978 tons from the Orkneys to Liverpool sunk at 10.30 on Saturday.  The crew of 23 were saved by the fishing smack Margaret and landed at Fleetwood.  The steamer Londa Blanch from Manchester to Belfast was sunk at 12.30 and her crew of 10 were saved by the Fleetwood trawler Niblick and landed at Fleetwood. The steamer Kilcoan, from Liverpool to Belfast, with coal was sunk about the same time as the Londa Blanche whose captain and crew of 10 were saved by the steamer Moon and landed at the Isle of Man.

Fermanagh Herald 13th February, 1915.  CATHOLIC NEWS.  EXPIATION SUNDAY IN ST. MACARTAN’S, MONAGHAN.  In accordance with the decree of Pope Benedict XV., Sunday was observed as a day of prayer and special devotion for the restoration of peace in all the churches in the Diocese of Clogher.  In the cathedral his Lordship Most Rev Dr. McKenna presided at the 12.00 Mass, after which there was Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament, the “O Salutaris” and vespers being sung.  Large numbers of the faithful visited St., Macartan’s during the evening, and the children of the various schools were there, and sang hymns and recited prayers before the Altar of Repose.  At devotions in the evening, the congregation was a very large one.  The Litany of the Saints was sung, and the Pope’s Prayer for Peace recited.  Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament was subsequently given by the Lord Bishop, the assistant priest being Rev James McPhillips, Adm., and Rev. Denis McGrath, E. I.

Fermanagh Herald 13th February, 1915.  WHISKEY IS FOUND IN A PATIENT’S A BED IN ENNISKILLEN WORKHOUSE HOSPITAL.  A lively discussion followed the reporter from Dr. Betty who wished to draw the attention of the Guardians as to the irregularity and want of observation of the nursing staff in the case of a patient in the infirmary.  In my rounds on Friday last, he said, while examining the beds, I found a quantity of whiskey in the patient’s bed – namely, one naggin – partially consumed.  The use of whiskey in her case is injurious, and I would ask the Guardians to make a rule prohibiting stimulants to be carried into the institution.  Mr. Crumley proposed that there should be a sworn an inquiry into the whole establishment.

Impartial Reporter. February 18 1915.  COUNTY FERMANAGH RATES.  Large increases are estimated with Lisnaskea up 8d and Clones up 9d.  The Belleek rates are still the highest in the county at 3s 1d for land and 4s 5d for buildings which is an increase of 2d in the pound.  The principal cause of this increase is new roads and the repairing of ‘lanes and private avenues’ against which the County Surveyor has consistently protested at both the meetings of the District and County Councils.

Impartial Reporter. February 18 1915. WAR NEWS.  The meat supply of all Australia is being reserved by the Commonwealth Government for export to the British army.

Women are now acting last tram and train conductors and bank clerks in France owing to the scarcity of men.

The ox have taken the place of horses on farms in France, owing to the horses having been called up, and the ox takes quietly to his new duty between the shafts of the cart or elsewhere.

Germany must be in a desperate plight when she is calling men of 60 years of age to the colours.

The Lusitania left Liverpool on Saturday, flying the familiar British Red Ensign.  “A stout British skipper and the British flag are good enough for me,” said an American on board.  Consumptives who thought that their ailments would have secured them from conscription, were forced into the German army, and certificates to the fact that they had consumption was found on the bodies of some dead Germans.

Impartial Reporter. February 18 1915.  BELLEEK COUNCIL GET URBAN POWERS.  At Belleek Council on Saturday, Mr. J. Timoney, JP presiding, the Local Government Board wrote relative to the application of the Belleek Rural District Council to be invested with powers of an Urban sanitary authority to enable them to carry out to the public lighting by electricity of Belleek, and in view of no objections having been lodged with the Council against the proposed scheme, the Board have given directions for the preparation of an order, under seal, investing the council with the necessary urban powers in the matter.  The Board also wrote stating that they had recommended the Irish Land Commission to issue to the Belleek Rural District Council for the instalment of £500 out of the loan of £4,250 to them granted under their Labourers Act.

Impartial Reporter. February 18 1915.   BALLYSHANNON.  Within a few hours of setting foot on Irish soil, Patrick Slavin, Lisbally, Ballyshannon, who returned from America last Tuesday, died.  He had been advised to come home by his New York doctors, and arrived in his native place in an exhausted state and died a few hours after.

Fermanagh Herald 20th February, 1915.  JOTTINGS.  Mr. A.  C. McDonnell, M. A., Headmaster of the Enniskillen Royal School, has accepted a class-mastership at Eton.

Fermanagh Herald 20th February, 1915.  BUTTERING INMATES BREAD.  At a meeting of the Lisnaskea Guardians on Saturday Mr. Kirkpatrick said that they should revise the existing dietary scale.  He said the 2lb loaf was cut in four portions, and the butter was placed on in any way and handed to the inmates.  The result was that in most cases the soft part of the bread was only eaten, and the crust was considered offal.  He was of the opinion that the officials should cut a certain quantity of bread and butter it and let it be served to the inmates on trays.  Let each inmate take what they want and any portion leftover be put in a press until the next meal and used up.  That was the way it was done in his own house and they should do the same in the workhouse.

Fermanagh Herald 20th February, 1915.  SIR ROGER CASEMENT IN BERLIN.  Sir Roger Casement, the Irish leader and former British Consul-General in Rio de Janeiro, and the exposer of the Putumayo atrocities, published and communicated today to several newspaper is an open letter to Sir Edward Gray, alleging documentary evidence to substantiate the sensational charges he makes against the British government of the criminal conspiracy to have him captured and murdered.  He charges the British Minister in Norway, Findlay of criminally conspiring with Casement’s manservant Adler Christiansen, a Norwegian, to kill Casement for which act Christiansen would receive 25 or perhaps $50,000.

Fermanagh Herald 20th February, 1915.  BELGIANS IN CLONES ARE ANXIOUS FOR EMPLOYMENT.  The Belgian refugees at Scarva House, Clones, are apparently quite happy and well looked after, but they are anxious to find employment if possible, especially the men, who had been occupied at various trades in their own country.  M.  Lebon can repair motor or ordinary bicycles; M. Tacquet is a worker in bronze, and can also install electric light or gas, having worked in this latter occupation in Brussels; M Vandorik is a ladies’ hairdresser, possessing three diplomas for proficiency in that art; and M Mollyman is a ladies’ and gentlemen’s tailor.  Madame Tacquet is a milliner; and Mme Vandorick and her sisters are glove makers; and Mme Mollyman before the war earned her livelihood at the incandescent mantle business.  Anyone desiring the services of any of the above should communicate with the secretary, Belgian Relief Committee, Clones.

Fermanagh Herald 20th February, 1915.  BELLEEK DISTRICT COUNCIL.  A meeting of the above Council was held on Saturday in the Boardroom of the Ballyshannon Union.  Mr. J Timoney, J.P. presided.  Belleek Rural District Council is to be invested with powers of an urban sanitary authority to enable them to carry out to the public lighting of Belleek by electricity.

The tender of Mr. John Campbell for the erection of cottages number 11 and 12 was sanctioned under the Labourers Act.  A certificate was received from Dr. Kelly stating that houses in the townlands of Drumnasrene and Scribbagh were in a very unsanitary condition.  Mr. R.  O.  Gregson stated that these houses were ready to fall at any moment.

Fermanagh Herald 20th February, 1915.  JOTTINGS. Snow fell heavily in Enniskillen on Sunday and Monday.  There has been a lot of sickness prevalent in the town for some time past, and it is hoped that the snowfall will clarify the air and kill the germs prevalent.

Official intimation has been received by his parents in Enniskillen that Private Frank McKiernan, has been killed in action.  Private McKiernan and was a well-conducted young man of high character and his death on the “Field of Honour” will be regretted generally in the town.  Much sympathy is felt for his parents and relatives.

Mr. Hugh Smyth, stationmaster, Enniskillen on his transfer to Cootehill, has been presented by the people of the district who do business with the Great Northern Railway with a well filled purse of sovereigns, and by the local railway staff with a handsome marble clock and ornaments.

Fermanagh Times February 20th, 1915.  THE BOA ISLAND FERRY.  DEPUTATION TO THE COUNTY COUNCIL.  BUT TWHAT DO THE PEOPLE WANT. The question of providing Boa Island with a bridge or ferry which has been under discussion for 10 or 12 years once more came up for consideration at the meeting of Fermanagh County Council on Thursday.  The county surveyor said that building a pier at either side would cost about £300 each and the ferry boat £200 making a total cost of £800.

Mister A. Nugent, Kesh spoke in favour of the undertaking and stated that the memorial which had been presented to the two members of parliament for the County was representative not only of the people who resided on the island, but of those who lived on the mainland in that district.  The memorialists consider that the ferry should be at the East end of the island for these reasons; – 1. The object of the ferry was to enable them to bring over their horses, carts and produce to market on the mainland, and by placing it at the east end of the island they could go to either Kesh, Pettigo or Irvinestown with their goods; whereas to have it placed in the centre to serve Pettigo only that would cut off the other two places altogether, which they submit it was not right.

  1. The clergy of both denominations have to travel into the island and all hours of the night and this would suit them best.
  2. There was much better land shelter on both sides of the east than elsewhere; in fact in the roughest storm one would be able to pass from side to side in the ferry, which certainly could not be done at any other point.
  3. The County Council was custodian of the county’s money and they should not diverted into Pettigo, which was in County Donegal, when they had Fermanagh markets equally available for the islanders.
  4. The people whose names appeared on the document to which he referred and who would be most affected by the ferry were desirous of having it placed at the east end.

Mr. Burkett the County Surveyor said if any person wants to put a lot of needless cost on our County let them keep up this controversy as to where the ferry is to go, a controversy to which, in my opinion there is only one side.  I believe if you allow this controversy to develop you will have no ferry at all.  I will go so far as to bet £5 to £1 that if an independent vote of the people who live on the island was taken it would be found that there was a majority of at least 5 to 1 in favour of pulling the ferry in the centre. Fr. Fitzpatrick P.P. declared you were biased in this matter.

Impartial Reporter. February 25 1915.  THE IRISH TOBACCO INDUSTRY.  The yield of green tobacco in Ireland varies from 1,600lb.  To 2,000lb. and in some cases 2,300lb. per acre, whereas the yield in America is from 1,200lb. to 1,500lb. per acre and as the subsidy is substantial, the Irish farmer can make this crop pay from £12 to £15 per acre.  Some 70 hands are at Adair employed and grading the leaves into five different lots according to quality, each be used for a special brand of tobacco.  Cleanliness and comfort are features of the buildings in which this operation is carried on.  The various buildings can be seen connected with the rehandling of tobacco at Adair, nearly four acres, and the bonded store, in charge of the Customs officer, contain a considerable stock some of it four or five years old.  Extensions are in progress, and there is about the place a general air of bustle and business that suggests a thriving enterprise.

Impartial Reporter. February 25 1915.  MICHAEL O’LEARY, V.  C.  AN IRISH HERO.  On the first of this month at Cuinchy O’Leary, then lance-corporal was one of the storming party which advanced against the foe’s barricades.  He rushed to the front and killed five Germans, who were holding a barricade.  After this he attacked the second barricade, some 60 yards further on, which he captured after killing three more Germans and making two others prisoner.  Thus he captured a German position with one pair of Irish hands. O’Leary was promoted on the field to the rank of sergeant for distinguished service. He has been well rewarded.  He has won the V. C.  and the heartfelt thanks of the Empire.  Michael O’Leary is not yet 25 years old, having been born in Macroom, Co., Cork, in September 1890.

Fermanagh Herald 27th February, 1915.  MR. CYRIL FALLS SAYS: – “Night after night in the past few weeks, in tiny Orange Halls, in school houses, even by the roadside at night, when the speaker could not see the faces of his auditors and had to read notes by the light of a bicycle lamp, I ever heard made and made myself, this plea: – we are not asking you to support the Government that would have shot you down a few months ago.  We detested it as much as you.  We all have our account to settle with it later on.  Now we ask you to fight for the bigger things than the Union or the Orange Association, for your farms and homes – for your King and your country.  We are fighting for our own particular form of civilisation, and if that is overthrown none of these things will matter a straw.  The U.V.F must come forward in big numbers now or shut up shop.”

Fermanagh Herald 27th February, 1915.  A Victoria Cross for Fermanagh.  Among the 11 Victoria Crosses awarded is the following: – Lieutenant James Anson Otho Brooke, 2nd Battalion the Gordon Highlanders, for conspicuous bravery and great ability near Ghelurvelt on the 29th of October, in leading two attacks on the German trenches under heavy rifle fire and machine gun fire, regaining a lost trench at a very critical moment.  He was killed on that day.  By his marked coolness and promptitude Lieutenant Brooke prevented the enemy from breaking through our line at a time when a general counter-attack could not have been organized.  Lieutenant Brooke was a son of Captain H. V. Brooke, D.L., now of Aberdeen, whose father was the second holder of the Brooke baronetcy, Colebrooke Park, Brookeborough; who was MP for Fermanagh from 1840 -1854.  His brother has been wounded in the fighting in East Africa.

Fermanagh Times January 28th, 1915.  WHAT THEY HAVE ENDURED.  THE WOUNDED IN WAR.  In the early days of this war, when the ambulance and hospital trains had broken down under the strain of the war, and the wounded were suffering all the horrors of interminable journeys in cattle trucks, you could never discover from any of them that anything was wrong.  The took it all in the day’s work and assumed that the best possible was being done. Thank God, that is over, and we now have the best of everything for the wounded; but all the more, because they do not complain, the rest of us should realise what they have suffered and did suffer, and the great call upon character and courage this war is making upon those who take part in it.

Fermanagh Times January 28th, 1915.  PENSIONS FOR WIDOWS AND WOUNDED SOLDIERS.  Much dissatisfaction has been expressed lately at the delay in issuing a report on the subject of separation allowances and pensions for widows and disabled soldiers.  It will be remembered that a good many weeks have elapsed since a committee was formed to deal with the matter, and it was confidently expected at the time the recommendations would be forthcoming within a fortnight at the latest.  It now seems that the committee have had to tackle a problem far more difficult and complicated than was generally supposed, and it may be some little time before the body is in a position to draft a statement.  The delay is certainly regrettable, for there is no doubt that the uncertainty which at present exists regarding payments to dependants is having its effect upon recruiting.  Married men are reluctant to offer themselves for enlistment until they know precisely how their families will stand in the event of their death, and there are numbers of single men who’d like to be assured of adequate means of subsistence in the event of disablement.  Meanwhile, the Government have done a wise thing in providing for the payments of full separation allowances to widows pending a definite decision on the subject of pensions.

Fermanagh Times January 28th, 1915.  JOHNSTON –December 26, 1914, at Reitfontein, Johannesburg, South Africa, Frederick William, second son of the late David Johnston, of Belleek, County Fermanagh.

Fermanagh Times January 28th, 1915.  CAPTAIN J.C. JOHNSTON, R.M. of Magheramena, Belleek, and private Secretary to His Excellency the Marquis of Aberdeen, has been appointed R.M. for the County Meath.  Captain Johnston was High Sheriff of Fermanagh a few years ago.

Fermanagh Times January 28th, 1915.  CAPTAIN BRIAN BROOKE of the East African Mounted Rifles, whose name appears in the official list of killed in the East African fighting was closely connected with the Brooke family, Colebrooke Park, County Fermanagh.  He was a son of Captain Harry B.  Brooke, D.L., Aberdeenshire, and grandson of the second holder of the Brooke baronetcy, who was Conservative member for County Fermanagh between 1840 and 1854.  Deceased was born in 1889, educated at Clifton College, and settled in British East Africa.  Like most of the settlers he joined the local forces on the outbreak of war, and has now been killed fighting the Germans.  His brother, Lieutenant J. A. O.  Brooke, of the Gordon Highlanders, was killed in action in France.  Another brother, Arthur is a squadron officer in the 18th King George’s Lancers, (Indian Army), and a third brother, Patrick, is a midshipman in the navy.

Fermanagh Times January 28th, 1915.  THE MOVEMENT TO CAPTURE GERMANY’S TRADE, about which so much has been heard since the outbreak of war, is slowly but surely assuming definite form.  The information supplied from the Board of Trade and from consular and other resources has proved extremely valuable, and manufacturers’ are now showing a more pronounced disposition to act upon the advice submitted to them.  An exhibition, which it is proposed to hold in London at a date soon after Easter, will include a display of goods specialised in Germany and Austria, and of British wares by which they can be superseded.  An influential advisory committee has been formed in connection with the project, and it is hoped to add further names to the list of members so as to make the scheme thoroughly representative of British and Irish trade and commerce.

Fermanagh Times January 28th, 1915.  A CERTAIN RELIEF FOR PAIN IS DR. BARRETT’S ELECTRIC RUB which can be used either by itself or in conjunction with the above for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Pains in the Back, Lumbago and Pains in the Joints.  It far surpasses ordinary embarkation, and gives immediate relief.  Bottles one Shilling and one Shilling and nine pence each.  Postage three pence.  Obtainable only from W.S. Taylor, L.P.S.I., Chemist and Optician, The Medical Hall and The Pharmacy, Enniskillen; and The Medical Hall, Lisnaskea.

Fermanagh Times January 28th, 1915.  FERMANAGH MAN MURDERED.  HEAD BLOWN OFF.  TRAGIC SEQUEL TO CLAIM ON LAND.  The story of how Mr. Mervyn Johnston, husband of Mrs. Johnston, The Stores, Kesh, of which deceased was a native, was foully murdered has just reached us.  Mr. Johnston had but recently emigrated to America in company with his brother-in-law, William Moore.  They went to a place known as Sulphur Spring Valley and filed on two pieces of land.  It would seem that a man named Cy West filed on part of the same land a year or more ago.  The recent filing was made on the ground that the prior rights had been forfeited.

On December 31st West returned to the property, erected a shack for himself, and started ploughing on another part.  It then appears that Mr. Johnston and Mr. Moore were about to walk past West’s cabin on January 1st when a shot was fired.  It was buckshot and entered Johnson’s head blowing it completely off.  The body was found directly in front of the cabin door and the hands of the murdered man were in his trouser pockets as he had fallen directly when hit.  West was afterwards arrested on the capital charge.

At the inquest it was stated that no words were spoken before the murder occurred, but immediately after the fatal shot West is alleged to have remarked – “All of you had better get off the place.”

An American local paper says – Johnston was prosperous farmer in his native country and also operated a merchandise store.  He was also a friend of James Aiken, formerly a resident of Bishee who returned of Ireland some years ago.  He has been known as a law abiding man who never carried any firearms.  He was universally respected by all who knew him.  Johnson leaves a widow and six children in Ireland to mourn his death.  Deceased was well known and highly esteemed in Fermanagh and the news of his tragic death will be received with the greatest possible regret.  It may be mentioned that deceased had no knowledge that West had any claim to the land in dispute.  He was a prominent Orangemen and the funeral arrangements were conducted by the members of the Order in the district in which he met his death.  Much sympathy is felt for Mrs. Johnston who is most popular in the Kesh district, on the sad and tragic loss she has sustained.

Fermanagh Times January 28th, 1915.  A LITTLE WET HOME IN A TRENCH.

I’ve a little wet home in a trench,

Where the rainstorms continually drench

There is a dead cow close by,

With her hooves towards the sky,

And she gives of a beautiful stench.

Underneath, in the place of a floor

There’s a mass of wet mud and some straw,

And the Jack Johnston tear

Through the rain sodden air

O’er my little wet home in the trench.

There are snipers who keep on the go

So you must keep your napper down low,

And their star shells at night

Make a deuce of a light,

Which causes the language to flow.

Then bully and biscuits we chew,

For its days since we tasted a stew,

But with shells dropping there,

There is no place to compare

With my little wet home in the trench.

1915 – The war and other events as reported by three local newspapers with additions from the national press.

My most recent book is called Sleepwalking Into War. Fermanagh and Surroundings in 1914. The news items were chosen from three local newspapers who cover Fermanagh and surrounding counties and reflect the war news and local events to give an insight into what people were thinking and feeling at the time. The book costs £12 plus £5 P&P.
Similarly I have read and taken notes from the same newspapers for 1915 and intend publishing them throughout 2015 as a blog reflecting life and death as it was a hundred years ago this year. The items include the Christmas Day truce, the high price of potatoes, feeding Belgian refugees with horse meat, recruiting (or the scarcity of recruits), the purchase of remounts, firsthand accounts of the fighting, optimism that the was would be over by the summer etc etc.
Enjoy!

1915 Fermanagh Times, Fermanagh Herald and Impartial Reporter.

Fermanagh Times January 7th, 1915. ONE DAY OF PEACE AT THE FRONT. The following is a remarkable description taken from the Daily Mail by an officer at the front of how the British and Germans ceased hostilities on his part of the line on Christmas Day.

Christmas will remain engraved in the memory of many British soldiers who were in our trenches here as one of the most extraordinary days of their life. For on that day British and Germans ceased fighting with each other for an interval, came out into the open between their respective firing lines, buried their dead and held a short service in their memory.
Our chaplain had come with the colonel to officiate at the funeral in a trench of one of our Scottish soldiers. During the programme of the solemn writes it was noticed that one or two fellows were standing outside. No attention was paid to this to the service ended, when the colonel shouted, “Come inside men!” The reply was that some Germans were standing outside. Gradually more and more of the enemy – some of them officers, by their uniform – appeared, none of them armed.
FOOTBALL MATCH WITH A HARE. At last our commanding officer resolved to get out and see for himself. The chaplain jumped up into the open at his heels, and crossing a ditch which runs down the middle of the field between the lines cried “Does anyone speak English?” As reply a private stepped forward and then to our amazement we saw our chaplain cross the ditch, salute the German commander and his staff, and begin to talk with them. Almost at the same time a hare burst into view and ran along between the trenches. All at once Germans came scurrying from their trenches and British from theirs, and a marvellous thing happened. It was all like a football match, the hare being the football, the grey-tunicked Germans the one side, and the kilted “Jocks” the other.

The game was won by the Germans who captured the prize. But more was secured than a hare – a sudden friendship had been struck up, the truce of God had been called, and for the rest of Christmas Day not a shot was fired along our section. Dotted over the 60 yards separating the trenches were scores and scores of dead soldiers and soon spades were flung up by comrades on guard in both trenches, and by instinct each side set to dig graves for their dead. Our padre had seized his chance and found the German commander and his officers very ready to agreeing that, after the dead had been buried, a short religious service should take place. He told us that the German commander and his officers were as anxious as the British could be to keep Christmas Day as a day of peace. That was quite in keeping with the behaviour of the Germans, who had kept up only an occasional firing on Christmas Eve and were very busy singing carols and glees.

SOUVENIERS EXCHANGED. We did not know all that was being said, but afterwards we asked the padre two questions. The one was, “Why did you and the German commander take off your hats to one another?” What happened, as we learned, was: The German took his cigar case out and offered the padre a cigar, which was accepted. The padre said, “May I be allowed not to smoke, but to keep this as a souvenir of Christmas here and of meeting you on Christmas Day?” The answer, with a laugh was, “Oh yes, but can’t you give me a souvenir?” Then the hats came off. For the souvenir the padre gave was a copy of the “Soldiers Prayer” which he had carried in the lining of his cap since the war commenced, and the German officer in accepting it took off his cap and put the slip in the lining saying as he did it, “I value this because I believe what it says and when the war is over I shall take it out and give it as a keepsake to my youngest child.”
The second question was what was in the notebook the German commander showed you? The answer was that he had been shown the name and address in England of a certain brave British officer. He had been killed, and as he was dying the commander happened to pass and saw him struggle to get something out of his pocket. He went up and helped the dying officer, and the thing in the pocket was a photograph of his wife. The commander said “I held it before him, and he lay looking at it till he died a few minutes after.” Our padre took down the name and address and has been able to pass on the information to the bereaved home.
A FINE SPIRIT OF RESPECT. The whole German staff showed a fine spirit of respect during the service for the dead. On one side of the ditch halfway between the two lines stood German officers with their soldiers about them, on the other the officers of the British regiments in the section with their soldiers about them, and between were our Chaplin, an interpreter, and a German divinity student serving with their army. Our chaplain read the 23rd Psalm in English, the German student reading it after him in German. Then a short prayer which the Chaplin had written on a postcard and the interpreter had turned into German was read sentence by sentence by the student after the English form had been recited.
It was a memorable sight to see officers and men who had been fighting, and as I write are fighting against one another as fiercely as ever, bare headed, reverend and keeping sacred truce as they did homage to the memory of the dead on Christmas Day 1914.

Fermanagh Times January 7th, 1915. HIGH PRICED POTATOES. A NOVEL AUCTION IN BELFAST. 600 bags of specially selected potatoes had been kindly given by members of the Killylea, Killinchy, Kilmood and Tullynakill farming societies, the proceeds of the sale being in aid of the Belgian Relief Fund, and also for the provision of gifts for local battalions serving at the front. Altogether the sale realised the handsome sum of £106 11s 7d of which £78 12s would go to the Relief Fund, while £27 19s 7d will be utilised in providing comforts for men who have left our midst in answer to the call.

Fermanagh Times January 7th, 1915. HORSE FOOD FOR REFUGEES AND OTHERS. To the Editor of the Fermanagh Times, December 29, 1914. Dear Sir – there are many thousands of Belgian Refugees in our midst and it has been announced that others will be arriving in the near future. Many of these are destitute, and as the present widespread distress will tend to increase progressively so long as the war continues, the provision of cheap and suitable food is sure to become an important and an urgent problem.
It is well known that in Holland, Belgium and France horse flesh is used as a staple article of food and in times of peace not less than 1,000 lives horses are exported each week from this country to the Continent. Owing to the war this trade with its attendant hardships is temporarily at least at an end, and strenuous efforts are being made to create a market for the products of the bodies of the horses in this country to save them now, and in the future, from the miseries of the Continental traffic. There is hardly any part of the body of a horse that is not commercially valuable but at the present time in this country the flesh which is the most important item is not used as human food, whereas in Paris and Brussels it is sold for this purpose at an average of one franc per pound. Here we can buy horses at 12 shillings and sixpence per hundredweight and the meat could be sold at a few pence per pound or less than half the present price of beef.
We are extremely anxious to develop a scheme by means of which our Belgian guests could be provided with the form of food which the appreciate; and we think that this provision would be accompanied by an enormous diminution in animal suffering, in that it would enable us to rescue and put to a painless end a far larger number of older horses than is possible to us at present. Those who are willing to combine humanitarianism to horses with benevolence to their fellow men are invited to apply to us for particulars of our work and especially of the scheme adverted to above.
We think that it would not be long before the example of our Belgian guests would be followed by our own people, and bearing in mind the fact that horses are clean feeders whose flesh is wholesome, nourishing and palatable – the meat derived even from older horses is tender owing to the shortness of the muscle fibres and it is regarded as a preventative of consumption and cancer by Continental physicians – the introduction of horse flesh as food into our own country would be a gratifying achievement. HORSE AND DRIVERS AID COMMITTEE, LONDON.

Fermanagh Times January 7th, 1915. EDITORIAL. ULSTER BETRAYED AND SOLD was under no obligation to the Government. Nationalist Ireland having received its wages stood bound in honour to return its services as pledged by Mr. Redmond. What has been the result? From the beginning of the war to the end of the year Ireland sent 40,000 recruits to Lord Kitchener’s army. Of these over 28,000 came from Ulster and about 12,000 from the rest of Ireland. We make no accusation against Mr. Redmond’s sincerity as regards recruiting. But when he is vainly striving to obtain one small Irish Brigade of three or four battalions from the National Volunteers, the Ulster Volunteers within a week or two will have completed the whole of an army Division containing four full brigades, each with four battalions, as well as the proper complement of medical, transport, veterinary, engineering and other necessary services.

Fermanagh Times January 7th, 1915. THE PUPILS OF SEVERAL SCHOOLS IN BELFAST have voluntarily relinquished their prize money this year, as did the boys at Portora School, in aid of kindly public objects. The Methodist College lads devoted theirs to the Belgian Relief Fund. Other Schools have contributed to the U.V.F. hospital. Most excellent self-denial!

Fermanagh Times January 7th, 1915. THE PROGRESS OF THE GREAT STRUGGLE. CONTINUED GOOD NEWS FROM THE FRONT. ENEMY REPULSED AT EVERY TURN. SPLENDID WORK BY THE FRENCH AND RUSSIANS. WHAT THE BRITISH TROOPS ARE DOING. NOTES, INCIDENTS, AND STORIES FROM THE FIRING LINE.

Fermanagh Times January 7th, 1915. IN THE TRENCHES AND ON THE RETREAT many of the soldiers lost their hats, and the various headgear called into use was most curious, nearly all contributed by local inhabitants. Some were woolen sleeping caps, then there were straw hats, slouch hats, green “trilbies”, and one soldier went as far as a glossy top hat. The latter was too much for his officer, who ordered him to discard it. So it was thrown into the ditch, only to be seen later on, badly concertinaed, on the curly head of a kilted Scotsman. The climax came when the same Scotsman went to the aid of one of the thousands of refugees that were marching with us. A poor greybeard was wheeling his old wife along the road in a wheelbarrow, and the next thing I saw was the Scottie in his top hat wheeling her along, pathetic and yet ludicrous.

Fermanagh Times January 7th, 1915. THE ENNISKILLEN COUNCIL AND THE VICEROY. LORD ABERDEEN’S RESIGNATION AND AN EXPRESSION OF REGRET PAST BY A SMALL MAJORITY. The chairman Mr. J.F. Wray, LL.B proposed that “We, the Enniskillen Urban Council have heard with extreme regret the announcement of Lord Aberdeen’s decision to resign and we desire to place on record our keen appreciation of the invaluable services rendered to our people by His Excellency and the Countess of Aberdeen in their untiring and self-sacrificing labours for the improvement of the health of the people and for promoting the welfare of the industrial working classes and alleviating the lot of the poor and the destitute. They had been the first in Ireland to take up a position like that and they had come into close contact with the people of Fermanagh. To carry on the work of fighting the scourge of consumption had been met by Lady Aberdeen by the establishment of Rossclare Sanatorium. Since the establishment of that institution many a victim of that scourge had received treatment and attention there which would have been unavailable to them otherwise.
The proposal was opposed by Mr. Trimble who said that there was a weakness and inefficient Irish Administration. They had Dublin itself, seething in crime, labour was held up, ship stopped, strikes in the city and in some of the railways and during this they had a feeble, weak, old-womanly administration in Dublin Castle. In regard to the local associations referred to by the Chairman, Mr. Trimble continued, the town of Enniskillen received the Lord Lieutenant in silence. He had not been invited and he came without been asked. With reference to the Lady Aberdeen he recognised the great energy she threw into the movement for the prevention of consumption and it was through her efforts that the country people had learned the value of fresh air. It was letters written by Lady Aberdeen however, that contributed largely to the removal of the Lord Lieutenant. For the very little Lord Aberdeen had done, and for the great deal that he had left undone, he was adequately compensated by the salary he received which was equal to that of the President of the United States. In conclusion Mr. Trimble said – “I am delighted to hear of his departure from Ireland.”

Fermanagh Times January 7th, 1915. THE DURATION OF THE WAR. OVER BEFORE SUMMER CHANGES INTO AUTUMN. Quite the most comforting New Year’s message that I have seen (says a London Correspondent) is in the speech of Sir George Buchanan to the British and American colonies in Petrograd. He spoke of the war being over “ere summer has changed to autumn.” As the British ambassador is doubtless fully acquainted with what is going on in the eastern theatre, and is also pretty well posted as to the progress of the Allies on this side, his hopes may be assumed to have a substantial basis, or he would not have given utterance to them.

Impartial Reporter. January 7 1915. THINGS MILITARY. One of the many mistakes made by the War Office was in not adopting the offer of the town of Enniskillen to accept the old prison premises. The offer was not favoured, and now when the County Council have demolish the old prison, and converted the new prison into a fine hall and the old prison hospital into a Technical School – all heated with hot water pipes, lit with gas, and newly floored, the War Office are only too glad to make use of the premises which might have been their own. These premises now house 270 men of Captain Sproule Myles’s Donegal Company of the 11th battalion of the Royal Inniskillings comfortably. There is need for more room to accommodate more men and it has been proposed to put 150 more men within the walls of the old prison, or 420 men in all. If the County Council had allowed the second gallery to remain in the building (and it could be replaced) it would accommodate two full companies, or over 500 men. The probability is that the She Barracks in Queen Street, which have been undergoing repair, may be utilised to house the 150 men, and the surplus room of the County Building kept available for the incoming recruits till the battalion reach the 1,150 standard.

Impartial Reporter. January 7 1915. PICTURE HOUSE ENTERTAINMENT. On Tuesday night the proprietors of the Picture Theatre placed their entertainment at the service of the local reception committee, with the result that the hall was crowded with soldiers. Canon Webb, in a short address wished the men God speed and a safe return and told them that when they got to Berlin to let the Germans know where they came from, a sentiment that evoked loud cheers. He also on behalf of the committee and the men of the 11th battalion thanked Mr. Casey of the Picture Company for his kindness and generosity in placing the pictures at their disposal.

Impartial Reporter. January 7 1915. PURCHASE OF REMOUNTS. On last year I sold a horse for £36 10 shillings to one of for local dealers from whom the army purchases, and delivered him next morning as arranged at this gentleman’s stables, just as one of the Government gentlemen who was there purchasing mounts was viewing his other horses. He requested me to give him a ‘show’ which I did and had the ‘pleasure’ and satisfaction of seeing him put up with the other horses purchased at £50.00 each. Not a bad profit of £1310 shillings – more than he made me for 12 months care and feeding. I am quite satisfied that this is not an isolated case. Some may say I was a duffer to sell him at the price. Well, I sell a few horses, and generally know what I’m about but when it is impossible for me to meet the Government purchaser we are obliged to sell to the middleman, and worse still, at his price. No wonder we have given up horse breeding, nor will any scheme induce us to rejoin it so long as we cannot get the value of our horses by selling direct to the Government. Let the Government appoint places and dates in each county, same as they did at the beginning of the war last August where their purchases will attend, and I assure you they will be able to buy cheaper and still give a much better price. CABALLUS.

Impartial Reporter. January 7 1915. WHAT A PLUCKY SOLDIER SAYS. Writing to Mrs. A. Taylor, Druminchin, Newtowngore, Co., Leitrim, Trooper Thomas Bryson, North Irish Horse, says – the first of the sad sights I saw when I landed in Belgium was of the Germans shelling a town. I went about not thinking or fearing, picking up bits of shell for curiosity. Then our officers shouted to get into the house. We had no sooner obeyed orders when a shell burst in the yard and smashed the windows of the house where we were standing. The bullets and shells were falling as quick as hailstones on the three roads leading from the town. I saw one shell bursting which killed two of the Lancers, eight horses and three others. We could not leave until it got dark, and then we were riding over men and horses lying dead as thick as they could be.

I often heard and read of war never expecting to take part in it! But, now, when I have taken part in this great struggle I am not sorry for doing so, although it is a bit hot sometimes. Neither am I tired of it. I never was as happy in all my life as I am at present helping to hold up the old flag, and I believe I could not die happier than to die for it. And I must say that any man or boy fit to hold or help to hold up that flag which we all should love and does not his duty, is a coward and should be deemed a coward. The friends at home and around are so kind in sending me such good things that I want for nothing and trusting in God, I expect D. V., to see you all. (Ed. D.V. Deo Volente i.e. God Willing.)

Fermanagh Herald 9th January, 1915. HAVOC IN HOLLAND. Amsterdam, December 29. A violent storm raged last Monday and Tuesday morning over Holland and for hours all communications with the Provinces, with England and with Germany were cut off. Even now – on Tuesday afternoon – only one single wire is working with London. At Amsterdam the rough weather was especially felt.

Fermanagh Herald 9th January, 1915. THE SECRETARY OF THE ADMIRALTY makes the following announcement: the battleship “Formidable” was sunk this morning in the Channel, whether by mine or submarine is not yet certain. Seventy-one survivors have been picked up by a British light cruiser, and it is possible that others may have been rescued by other vessels. The “Formidable” was a third class battleship of 15,000 tons, and was launched in 1898 at Portsmouth and completed in 1902 at a cost of over one million pounds sterling. She was 400 feet long and her complement was 718 men, and she was a sister ship of the Irresistible and Implacable. She was a heavily armoured and designed to give a speed of 18 knots. An additional 70 men have been rescued by a Brixham trawler.

Fermanagh Herald 9th January, 1915. THE INNISKILLINGS AND HOW OFFICERS AND MEN FOUGHT AND DIED. Private Francis Conway, now a convalescent and on furlough in Sixmilecross, tells the following tale of his two months active service from Mons to Armentieres. Mons – at 6.00 (dawn) we were having some tea in a farmhouse garden when a shell burst among us killing and wounding several. We seized our rifles and advance towards the enemy’s lines. There was terrific firing. Artillery, machine-guns, rifles and cavalry all in action. After half an hour we had to retire 700 yards. We then reformed and advanced again, but somehow both sides had ceased firing, and we brought our wounded to a farmhouse, the ambulance being far in the rear. My cousin, Sergeant McCrystal, Glenhordial, fell in that action having both legs broken. The horrible artillery fire from the enemy drove us back 3 miles. In this fight we lost 500 out of 1,300. The general retreat then began. We were covering that the retreat; we had a bad day at a certain village. The Germans were about 300 yards behind, and as we retreated up the main street they were really get a field gun into position, and began to Moore’s down when halfway up the street. We wheeled and returned the fire, but were being badly cut up. There was confusion owing to orders advance and Retreat, sure that for a time we were mesmerised so to speak and the gun did horrid execution. We then retreated outside of the village, and concealed ourselves as best we could in a turnip field expecting the enemy to come in pursuit but they did not come. After this we were relieved, and did not come into action again till the enemies retreat began. Before the battle of the Aisne we were ambushed by a battery concealed in a wood; Lieutenant and Boyd and several men were killed; when we reach the wood the battery was gone, leaving dead and wounded horses and men behind. The battle of the Aisne lasted several weeks.

Fermanagh Herald 9th January, 1915. LIFE IN THE TRENCHES AND FIGHTING IN A SEA OF MUD. 31st of December –Monday, the 28th of December was a day of pelting rain. Towards the evening this give way to a hurricane of wind, followed during the night by a violent thunderstorm. On Wednesday the 30th gradual progress was maintained. The Germans again bombarded Armentières and shelled our frontline. On the left to our north, their aviators displayed more activity than they have latterly been, dropping bombs on Dunkirk and Furness. The day was bright and frosty, favourable to reconnoitring. The last day of 1914 passed equally uneventfully all along our front. The fighting is now taking place over the ground where both sides have for a week past been excavating in all directions, until it has become a perfect labyrinth.
A trench runs straight for a considerable distance and then it suddenly forks in three or four directions. Sometimes when new ground is broken, and the spade turns up the long-buried dead ghastly relics of former fights, and on all sides the surface of the earth is ploughed and furrowed by fragments of shells and bombs. From a distance this apparently confused mass of passages crossing and recrossing one another, resembles a large irregular gridiron. The life led by the infantry on both sides at close quarters is a strange cramped existence, with death always near either by means of some missile from above or some exploded from beneath –a life which has one dull monotonous background of mud and water.

Fermanagh Herald 9th January, 1915. THE PASSING OF THE HORSE IN MODERN WARFARE. One of the innovations of this war has been the substitution of the motor for the horse. A horse it is a rare sight now except at the stabling stations near the front. Armoured motor cars and motor cycles for scouting, motor wagons and lorries for ambulance and transport work and almost the only branch of activity in which the horse is still indispensable is for rushing field artillery into action, for motors cannot smashed through hedges and over broken ground as our splendid horses can.

Fermanagh Herald 9th January, 1915. NEW LABORATORIES AT MANCHESTER. The new radium laboratories of Manchester Infirmary, which contain radium to the value of £20,000, raised by public subscription a few months ago were formally opened by the Lord Mayor of the city. A staff of experts will specialize in efforts to apply the radium for the arrest and elimination of cancer. The equipment of the laboratories is second to none in the kingdom and in the 16 rooms allotted to the special work there is ample provision for administering the treatment to patients. There is accommodation at the infirmary for the treatment of the 15 patients a day, and although no one has been accepted until this week some 8 or 10 names have already been entered.
The method by which the treatment is administered at Manchester is both bewildering and fascinating to the lay mind. First one enters a strong room guarded by a massive safe door and there on two shells are four glass bulbs containing some £14,000 worth of radium. Already Dr. Borrows, who has charge of the scheme, has discovered a method of measuring the quantity he requires that admits of no error.

Launch of the 2015 Fermanagh Miscellany

Launch of the 2015 Fermanagh Miscellany in Fermanagh County Library 
10-11-2014.

Ladies and Gentlemen welcome to the launch of the ninth volume in the 
annual Fermanagh Miscellany series which showcases writing by members 
of the Fermanagh Authors’ Association. The Association was founded in 
2005 to promote and showcase local writers and their work; authors 
native to Fermanagh or writing about Fermanagh and exploring the 
diverse facets of local life, history and heritage.

The book includes short stories, reminiscences, historical articles and 
poems all showing the diversity and vitality of the literary talent and 
traditions in Fermanagh. The cover features Michael Donnelly’s subtle 
watercolour of Callowhill Mill which is one of the paintings that 
illustrate his article on mill houses in the county. This year’s volume 
reflects on the onset and early years of the Great War and our 
dedication this year is to the men and women who gave their lives 
during that war – supposedly to end all wars as it was said and a 
poignant poem by Irish war poet, Tom Kettle, is included in tribute to 
them.

Among the articles this year Miscellany 2015 contains  stories of two 
Fermanagh Unionist newspaper editors warring in print by John 
Cunningham; a light-hearted look  at William Carleton, the man and his 
writings by Bryan Gallagher; Dianne Trimble’s short story about 
Fermanagh’s most famous ghost - the Coonian ghost; a project about 
making prayer flags  that don’t create division by Florence Creighton; 
reminiscences of a donkey derby champion and family pet known as Life 
Indeed on the track but back in his own field was simply known as Paddy 
by Linda Swindle;  John Reade, a Fermanagh native from near Pettigo who 
achieved fame as a Irish Canadian poet; Fermanagh from the newspapers 
of a century ago and an aristocratic Fermanagh lady Monica de 
Witchfield nee Massy-Beresford who fought in the Danish Resistance in 
WW2 – both by Dermot Maguire; in and out of Prison Cells but only as a 
Prison Visitor by Tony Brady; Frank McHugh’s account of a project 
entitled Connection and Division involving Fermanagh Grammar School 
pupils; Sean McElgunn’s Hidden Histories of the Carmelite Order in New 
York  and Vicky Herbert’s recording of 85 year old Robert Ryan growing 
up on the Crom estate in East Fermanagh just after WW1. There are also 
poems by Seamas Mac Annaidh on the theme of Fermanagh castles and also 
his annual and invaluable collating of Fermanagh related books in 2012 
and 2013 while Winston Graydon pens his poetic remembrance of the Brown 
Haired girl and the thrills of going to Bundoran.

The book goes on sale in the Fermanagh County Museum, Fermanagh Tourist 
Office and shops up and down Fermanagh. It will be on sale for the very 
modest price £4.99 and will make a very attractive Christmas gift for 
both Fermanagh people living locally, for those living away from home 
and visitors to the county. When the turkey is gone and the pudding a 
distant memory your gift of a Christmas book will be a cherished memory 
for little more than the price of a fancy Christmas card today.

Fermanagh Miscellany 2015 features work by Sēamas Mac Annaidh, John B. 
Cunningham, Bryan Gallagher, Dermot Maguire, Vicky Herbert, Frank 
McHugh, Dianne Trimble, Michael Donnelly, Sean McElgunn, Anthony Brady, 
Florence Creighton, Winston Graydon and Linda Swindle.

Dianne Trimble and myself are joint editor’s this year and on behalf of 
all the membership of the Fermanagh Author’s Association I would like 
to pay tribute to Dianne our wonderful secretary and the person who 
bore the brunt of editing and bringing this book together.

Thank you all for coming here today.
John Cunningham 10-11-2014.


John Cunningham, Erne Heritage Tours.
adam4eves@aol.com

Tom Kettle, Irish WW1 Poet.

Tom Kettle married Mary Sheehy in 1909 and their only daughter, Betty, was born four years later. Thomas Michael Kettle was born in 1880 in County Dublin. At University College Dublin in 1897, he was a politically active student with aspirations for Irish Home Rule clearly inspired by his father Andrew J Kettle, founder of the Irish Land League. Kettle qualified as a barrister in 1905 though he worked mostly as a political journalist. He won the East Tyrone seat for the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1906. As a supporter of the 1913 strike in Dublin, he published articles revealing the appalling working and living conditions of the Irish poor, a subject close to his heart.

Joining the newly-formed Irish Volunteers, Kettle was sent to Europe to raise arms, where he witnessed the outbreak of war and acted as a war correspondent. This first-hand experience confirmed his belief in the importance of fighting for democracy. On returning home, he volunteered to serve with an Irish regiment and, although poor health limited his role to recruitment, he continued to advocate Home Rule and for Irishmen to make a united stand against Germany. His health improved by 1916 and led to a commission into the Royal Dublin Fusiliers, with which he served in the trenches of the Western Front before being killed in action on September 9, 1916.

To My Daughter Betty, The Gift of God

In wiser days, my darling rosebud, blown

To beauty proud as was your mother’s prime,

In that desired, delayed, incredible time,

You’ll ask why I abandoned you, my own,

And the dear heart that was your baby throne,

To dice with death. And oh! they’ll give you rhyme

And reason: some will call the thing sublime,

And some decry it in a knowing tone.

So here, while the mad guns curse overhead,

And tired men sigh with mud for couch and floor,

Know that we fools, now with the foolish dead,

Died not for flag, nor King, nor Emperor,

But for a dream, born in a herdsman’s shed,

And for the secret Scripture of the poor.

Recruitment Kesh and Pettigo in 1914.

Dear Sir,

According to an item in a paper last week “There was a particularly strong response to recruitment in the Kesh and Pettigo areas in World War 1.” The reality is as far removed from this quote as could possibly be. Farm prices rose enormously at this time and the farming community reacted by keeping their sons and labourers at home to make the best of this financial bonanza. William Copeland Trimble of the Impartial Reporter was particularly scathing about this as regards the Kesh/Pettigo area as can be seen from the following. There were brave men and women who did volunteer and died in the 1914-18 War including relations of mine but the reality was that a great number were content to view it from a safe distance.

Impartial Reporter 12th November 1914.  VOLUNTEERING.  Kesh 9th November 1914.  Sir, – Allow me through the medium of your much circulated paper to make a few comments on the above subject.  The first, I would like someone to inform me whether a man who has a place to look after and no one but himself to work at, would be doing his duty to his King and country by going away and leaving it waste.  If so, where is the rent and taxes to come from?  Would the Government keep his farm for him, and not ask any rent or taxes for three years, or until the war is over?  I know plenty of young men in this district who would be willing to go to fight for the King and country, but they would be leaving their places much the same as Belgium is at the present time – waste. A company of Fermanagh Infantry were in Kesh on Saturday, and they are a fine body of men.  I don’t think there were many recruits from it, but Kesh has a good many men at the front, and some at Finner.  There are not many more could very well go, and because men don’t rise up and leave all and follow them they are branded as disloyal, and cowards, but this is not so.  I heard some of the ladies proposing to do postman’s duty, if they would go, but you know they are always good with the tongue.  I would like to see them going over the country on a snowy morning.  Thanking you for your little space, – I am, yours very truly Tom from Kesh.

***There are numbers of men in the district from Kesh and Ederney to Pettigo; dozens of them who are physically fit who ought to be in the army, and who are at home.  In fact this district, and that of Coole are said to be the two worst districts in the country for loyal men of deeds.  This statement may be incorrect; but we do know as a matter of fact that Magheraboy and Glenawley of County Fermanagh are in the front rank; and the two we have mentioned are a long way behind.  – Ed. Impartial Reporter.

 Impartial Reporter 19th November 1914. THE RESULTS OF THE MARCH.  ALMOST 100 RECRUITS.  Sergeant J.  B.  Stewart, who by official orders accompanied the men on the march as recruiting sergeant, was energetic at all times.  And he had the assistance of many men in the Company, who took delight in coaxing men to enlist.  Sergeant Stewart did his work well.  Recruits were taken as follows – Kesh, 2 recruits; Irvinestown, 17; Ballinamallard, 3; Enniskillen, 26; Lisbellaw, 5; Tempo, 10; Maguiresbridge, 4; Lisnaskea, 11; Newtownbutler, 8; Crom, 1; Pettigo, 5; making a total of 92. This now brings Captain Falls’ Company to over full strength and the overflow will form the nucleus of a new company.

Impartial Reporter 19th November 1914.  PETTICOATS WANTED.  Dear Sir, – will you allow me to answer your question: what are the Kesh men doing?   One man named Corporal Brown of the Royal Artillery (a number of years of the service), from Tubrid, volunteered and went to Finner, leaving a wife and six small children, the eldest seven.  He saved his crop, hay and corn before he went, but left a valuable field of potatoes to be dug.  I may mention here, Brown for the last two years spent two nights in the week drilling 50 men.  Well a gentleman named ex-Sergeant Brimstone says we can’t let Brown’s crop be lost.  I will set an example.  They started with eight men; two of them volunteers dug one day.  They waited a fortnight; not a man of the 50 men at Tubrid turned up.  Sergeant Brimstone started again with seven men, some of them Roman Catholics and dug another day.  The Sergeant says some of the men Brown drilled will dig them out; there they lie now, and £10 of potatoes are about to be lost on the poor woman, so that is what the men between Kesh and Pettigo are doing.  I think if someone could start of fund and supplied each of these 50 men at Tubrid with a hobble skirt, I will supplied each of them with a white feather for their Volunteer hat.

B. Cunningham (Excerpts above from forthcoming book “Sleepwalking into War – Fermanagh and surrounding counties in 1914.”)

 

 

John Cunningham, Erne Heritage Tours.

adam4eves@aol.com