Newspaper Page Text
4E
Kipling Tells of Plan
To Makethe Graves of
Soldiers With Stones
B of Bensitinince and Crowes. as
Sacrifice in War Cemeteries.
By RUDYARD KIPLING.
* LONDON (by mail)~WHth the
growth of the war our work naturally
covered every part of the world where
the men of the British Empire had
served and died—from the vast and
known cities of our dead in Flanders
and France to hidden and outlying
bruial grounds of a few score at the
ends of the earth.
These resting places are situated on
every conceivabie site--on bare hills
flayed by years of battle, in orcharls
wand meadows, heside populous towns
or little villages, lin jungle glades, at
coast ports, in far-away islarfds,
among desert sands and desolate ra
viges. It would be as impossible as
undesirable to reduce them all to any
uniformity of aspect by planting or by
architecture.
In a wer where the full strength of
fhations was used without respect of
mrsonu, no difference could be made
tween the graves of officers and men.
~Yet some sort of central iden was
needed that should symbolize our
eommon gacrifice wherever our dead
might be laid; and, above all, each
cemetery and ndividual grave
should be made ag permanent as
man's art could devise, s {
Crosses of Sacrifice.
Our commission lustructed Hir‘
‘Frederic Kenyon to report how these
aims could best be realized, and he,
after consgulting .very fully with the
relatives, representatives of the serv.
jces, religion and art, and knowing
the practica! limitatioms, particularly
in obtaining labor, for carrving out
such a vast undertaking, recommend
ed that: -
In e2ch cemetery there should utandl
a Cross of
Sacrifice and an alterlike Stone of
~~ Remembrance,
and that the headstones of the graves
should be of uniform shape and size,
~ Stone crosses to sueceed the tem
porary wooden crosses were at first
suggested, but crosses of the small
#ize necessitated by the nearness of
the graves to ezch other do not allow
sufficient space for the men's names
&and the inscriptions, and are by their
#hape too fragile and too subject to
the action of frost and weather for
enduring use,
- Plain headstones, measuring 2 feet
6 Inches by 1 foot 3 inches, were,
therefore, chosen, upon which the
@ross or other religious symbol of
the dead man's faith could be carved
‘and his regimental badge fully dis
played.
Badaes on Headstones.
- The regiments have heen consulted
a 8 to the designs of these badges,
“some of which hzze‘ w been ap
_:\,fraved Mma are ad#é,for engrav
_Ang as soon as experiments which are
being earried on have, as there is
_ reason to hope, shown how to over
~come the difficulties of dealing with
#uch numbers.
~ In due time, then, wg:rnvor a man
?’ be buried, from st Africa to
- North Russia. his headstone will car
,«g'!lh regimental hadge, identifiable
world over.
Besides the fighting forces provi-
WHEN YOU SUFFER
.
Almost Any Man Will Tell You
y y 8
That Sloan’s Liniment
Means Relief.
. /
For practically every man has used
it who has suffered fromn rheumatic
aches, sgreness of muscles, stiffness
of joints, the results of weather ex
posure.
Women, too, by the hundreds of
thousands, use it for relleving neu
ritis, lame backs neuralgla, sick
headache. Clean, refreshing, sooth
ing, economical, quickly effective, Say
“Sloan's Liniment” to vour druggist
{iet it today. 380 c, 60c and $1.20
: : an il
SO4 K
Liniment.
Kills Pain
P | l
Open sluices of the system each l |
morning and wash away the |
% polsonous, stagnant matter, |
\ . |
Those of us who are accustomed to
feel dull and heavy when we arise;
gplitting headache, stuffy from cold,
foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stom
ach, lame back, can, instead, both
look and feel as fresh as a daisy al
ways by -washing the poisons and
toxins from the body with phosphated
hot water each morning
We should drink, before breakfast,
a glass of real hot water with a tea
spoonful of limestone phosphate in it
to flush from the stomach, liver, kid.
neys and ten yards of howels the pre
vious day's indigestible waste, sour
bile and poisonous toxins; thus
cleansing, sweetening and purifying
the entir®™Sqlimentary tract before
putting more food into the stomach.
The action of limestone phosphate
and hot water on an empty stomach
is wonderfully invigorating. It
cleans out all the sour fermentations,
gases, wuste and acidity and gives one
a splendid appetite for breakfast. Al
guarter pound of limestone phosphate
will eost very little at the drug store,
but is sufficient to make anyone who
I 8 bothered with biliousness, constipa.-
tion, stomach trouble or rheumatism
@ real enthusiast on the subject of in
m sanitation. —Advertisement.
sion must be made for the graves of
the merchant seamen and dischargod
men whose deaths were due to enemy
action; for sisters and nurses, killed
or died of wounds or disease; for
labor units of all races, and, indeed,
for all who have served in any ca
pacity in the war. The distinctive
badges of these headstones are not
yet decided upon.
In addition to the name and rank
upon the headstone, we feel that rei
iuth'vu should, if they wish, add a
short ingeription of their own choice
'm: an expression of personal feeling
land affection. Those inscriptions
will be at the relatives’ expense, and,
to avold unduly crowding the stones
with very small lettering, which, be
sldes being difficuit to read, does not
weather tvell, it has been found nec
essary to restrict the length of the
inseription to 656 letters, *
Every cemeiery will keep regis
ters of the dead buried there, and in
these registers it is hoped that it
will be possible, with the assistance
of his kin, to enter the age, parent
age and birthplace of each known
man.
The planning and planting of the
cemeteries must depend largely on
their site and the climate of the coun
try, but it is proposed that, as a gen
era) rulethe cemeteries should have
buildings designed for services, cere
monies and shelter, where the regis
ter of that cemetery will be kept un
der safeguard,
To recapitulate:
1. For each cemetery its cross of
sacrifice and stone of remembrance,
2. For each grave ils enduring
headstone carved with the symbol of
the dead man's faith, his name and
rank, his regimental badge and what
ever text or lnsvrlpflon‘hu relatives
may add, |
4. In the cemetery building the reg
ister in which the man's blrthplaco,i
age and parentage can be recorded
and referred to. J
Graves of Indian Troops.
The symbols of their faith will also '
be carved on the headstones of Lha|
soldiers of the Indlan armies who
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HEAKST S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper lor People Who Think — SUNDAY, MAKCH 23, 1919,
}ruught beside their comrades from
England and throughout the empire
of France and Belghm in 1914-16,
and of the Indian labor corps, who
have dince worked and taken the
risks of life behind the lines,
A committee of the comimssion has
decided upon the form that these
symbols should take, and has further
recommended that:
A Mohammedan mosque and Hindu
temple should be erected in France
for the remembrance of the gacrifice
made by Hindus and Mohammedans
ke in the war,
The designs for these buildings
have been aubmitted for approval in
India. In all such matters the treat
ment of the bodies of these soldiers
will be in strict conformity to the
practice of their religions, and will
be carried out under tha supervision
of native officers,
Isolated Graves,
After s 0 many vears of fighting
ov®r densely populated and eiviiized
countries like France and Belgium.
it is inevitable that there must b
single graves and groups in poxitions
where, when the life of the land goes
forward again, they can not be
reached or tended, ;
Some lie in what weee once town
or village thoroughfares, and will he
#0 again, others by the side of raile
way stations and goods yards, houses
or factories, In arable or pasture
fields, parks, gardens, and the like. |
The objections to leaving !hl»:w‘
Eraves where they are need not be
dwelt upon. No precantions will save
them from being encroached upon or
obliterated in the course of time. ‘
There s, moréover, a strong s nll-!
ment among ail ranks lhmughnuf the
British Empire that such fl(‘flflwrml‘
graves look lonely: and the lnsllnrt|
of the services demands that those
J e
‘ IO RGCEE DE™
SRR BTI L i
Your winter things should be thoroughly clean
ed before being put away.
Have them STODDARDIZED: then you can
know their fresh, dainty cleanliness will not at
tract moths and they will be in excéllent condition
when next fall comes.
When out.of-town orders amount to $2 or more, we
prepay the return charges
DIXIE'S D g ) 126 PEA
S 5 g A
2 - g o : TLAN
AND DYER.. /U S Gzoaca.
wito fell by the waysile should be
gathered in to rest with the neureflt'
main body o.helr companions.
Memorials "to commemorate the|
parts borne by particular armies, di
visions or regiments In campaigns
and battles, such as to name only a
very few, the Canadians at Ypres,
the South Afrieans at Delville Wood,
the Australians at Amiens, the Brit
ish at the breaking of the Hinden
burg line, will be advised upon by a
fully representative military commit
tee, and it is to be hoped that the
best artfof the empire will give its
services and advice in the dulxning‘
of them.
It has heen suggested that the en
trance to individual cemeteries
should carry a text or inscription,
and it has been decidea that monu
ments should be erected to the deadl
whose graves are unknown, of a lpa.|
cial form which has yetto be settled.
Progress of the Work. !
Meantime the long and\ mmcuu;
business of identification and regis-!
tration goes forward still on all|
fronts. The various architects, to!
whose charge the cemeteries have!
been allotted, are preparing their de- |
signg for the planting and the build
ings required in France, and steps are
heirg taken to prepare dignified and
characteristic designs for our ceme
teries in the Fast and elsewhere.
All this ean be effected in re:mon—.
able time, but there is no possibility|
of expediting the delivery of the |
headstones, {
More than half a milllon of these;
will be required, and at present there
i= not labor enough in all the world
to cut, carve and letter them, While
they are being made the wooden
crosses will stand, o
(By International News Bureau, Inc.)
Per sonal 0
Appearance
4 .
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