HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1917-10-4, Page 611
'D
KS FtEPULSED
inFlanders
and Take
News�t1 1t Captured �
ici €?
1,614 Prisoners.
despatch f •o:r- IiritiAi Front in , he. report from Feld ' Ia? sl?al
s} a. 1t >, , � �
-, Haig
r t only
�says:—The „• l l-_Taa r_ Thursday night re_8rs ,
., wanes and BeEabl,»ata, a�ys, T'he Brit-, ,
If r` `1 to the r orations ff `l'hursda p,
_:b.iexy t o. 4 3
- strength, -: ,
u s a� continuedto t
is Tll r o
on; a Flanders, Qn the`�p,°evaot?� aalr
en the line to, which tier battled their , seven poae.szl, lo_ t:
7le coittei i
t
l+ ,
�a n Wednesday.,esda-, The' Australian
,tacks,*�
cars were
exe
;ezllsel
w.
i
t
h
,
eo 1e ed their conquest, cd o theheGe_�,iiw .S es and £i�_ Germans ver.=
ratan positions at the eastern ez,.em.ty uI.en prisoner,
of Polyon Wood. Two Places secured � ta. ,Dori.,-, edsec a ss fl hti,c�r har
acr,
y
hero renreseaeed the only 1;enlain ng l rs or British aeroplanes aide
±�Fi±ii,vauve points cr'v;-y r,.xFI .t. .Yti earn
K-"faax-y:th e Get- F, l
vont, which .Teaches lorfka-ar1 tt7k:
rn low aliit�actes with great
east of Polygon Wood.
There hasabeen much hard 1
in this section, but on Thursday
Germans apparently with,dr ' � i}}� � laaaelt `'I ,"ere ac
x�.
A
e favorable� ta:iiiwzT€�zthe?^ :i:•
n t_,e Austral,% 0
the south n
Markets el
73reat s turfs
Toronto. Oet. 4 ;alsnitoba wheat—No.
1 Northern 2 µ3: No 2, do $2,24;
No. 3,y,iIt 52.17 No, 4 -,A,heat„ $2.03,#n
store Fort 4111.34anx. tneludli g ac ,a..=:,
'1lanttobh oa,t No, £', k%., 684e, xn
store Fort 4'a'fal0
x1 a_i4. sne'cat
gt't.N
o, ,
;•ealo
s-,tro . or,tooOnFclto 6.20
, 3nwozaxai
.
nal: No, 3, 010.
h,Qcerding
to rots outstle,
()aro e atai4—:et„ No,'S.,2,./.5
J' a.:<n ?i; to freights r_et>
pcts,da,
'aa,ariea---_oust i-'tl�, nrtx` .rt,is to 51.23,
aecorling to 2rQ/0,hts o �"
e.
stye— =e`' 1,1 o -al' , -
as � ,
etgI'tc a at? . e +f+�."rikaf�frJ"ild'
4 '^r� n
tents, n atate>
".§1.1§0. d, tw', $U.ot}; aaroog;:
A
atiaolaa, Ziour
PST CANADIAN TO GET 0 B,E,
Ox der of the British Empire Con-
ferred on Moaatre3l ilea inecttirer.
rom The Mi el es
The Oadez° •o' the 13 =zs_ r �Ia`pWEEN ONTARIO AND BRt-
r b. Empire
i:as instituted in June last for theTISH e°1.u3'1k11A.
t,ai
pp ase of recognizing 1n��rifold,,
services, voii;nfaryand otherwise, that
have been rendered both b y British. r Itep1& From Prazittc sk Where
Ma II � 1
subjects and their allies in connect'on " Onterio' Boys o^t 7Th* A; e
1 a, 1t.
I.z I`r 'R '�� inryi n'r'a hul nd
1"r T 1 r
b.ttian
fA'tri1.4% �#l�retx�•--'t1"i9lij7S�a', need
1_14,2en::.1; lxn tr
Ed--Cal"anis. bags ncludet3-
Mae German airmen put up ;. t'Q�n ys ria r borzs, do,., $42; r0.1 tM1R I1
abatiUt' and as a°eSttlt tee
; . 331{ good reed rricivi , ,
p
_�j the :e hi li axr l t, 1 heti, per zo11, 's 1_tltl
'1�'r F�yt'lbr a snIN,.,.x n
�' � al "fin., ss }o
tt ick T
ko
4a
The first C
aria( Iasi to receive, Ldiia r
honor is ..MMajor. _ Caldwell and a t,"L, � 1.
..Mia --Charles Slab GordonGardals of J
0 M w _ 'Winnipeg officers have
Montreal. , 3s reward for the ace, t Moffat, two,
P
abie services rendered b ., Mr. or- W00 honors at the front..
y G i
as vice_1 Fifteen .80
men 32
The messagye said that the present
teams are emPleved by theWitmiljeg .,
situation theItalian offensive e sur-
f ..
i It att.ort ox It l
l 1 ,
IDepartment,
�
i � �>n��. � .' � Street Commtssaone; s .
•prises, and that tie halloos have
'i�ee in the stl°sass in goad condntlon, .. ,
a p g practically- reel
the 1 talnisiz a Pia-
-.. 3e r ani �� fQ„'ei2?et2.. '����,� htGr7i.siiad
a teau, asci are holds ail floe territory
?fi teams were at wa°ork.
theyhave thusfar gained'
Boal:bipr°ers in Winnipeg get an in-
crease of $3.50 a week, "The present; state of affairs on the.
.uSit d,ian front," the ipesSage
.leu Norman J. p3 Aaev is a Win- : -a� .
or nearly two _
Qi3
s
Complete Mastery of the; Bain
sizza Plateau; Gained by
Gen. Cadorna.
G 6 e
A
despatch tet from -Washington says::
ra1� €?
A tstrian counter -at cka on the Ital-
ian
ta_
fan. front have all failed, accordingto
a semi-official despatch reaching
Washington from Rome on Thursday,
r z.etril e, l ti to he Rill of pion,ises
nae Haan to tie-in the 341ilitarti Oros,,., - rl
T'i t V'inni e ' oaasurr_es ,half as and *t96I?X es,, The :lenl.r.‘-',1he;lie,„vi77, carload lots selling for 167 cents er.
s p g the ariprne}ne solation f the wr care, p`
ntlie� fpP..:?salts, l=leougla, olal;, pound,. . ..
pQ Q' tet `'1 ,pize, is the estimate of be expect a orgy ygl'tin , is
! , stn enK p11ng i llefe,zses and ae= The first Good Steads Co t'. of
food economist, British Columbia,held at I?entictori
lia+in oris arsdy :30-'
1Ri11YAlaX,C Ego 11 n roes of; 1T'a<te- vas 3�„cry successful the loaner plain:
m1oA o s irnete.: additional � t (lest i�, 41 +x and . doing etre n
land aiii-0
found for eonscr ptedl 11g possible to for stall a facture _
Italian offensive rented,
, artileln is expected.
?oast i 3n? i in The
rash th'a t'eFtr Sinn est @ he
r
jolt i yr
;stat „
FROM� SET CORS'
WHAT ' TILE WESTERN
ARE DOING.
PEOPLH
Progress of the Great West To14
Few
La
e
Paragraphs.
The thirty-fourth 'session of the
.Frovircial Normal School, Vancouver,
hasg
begun,
Capt. W. B, Macdonald, R,N., a na-
tive of Victoria,has'L e invested
been � by
the Khedive of Egypt and made a
Commander of the Order of the Nile,
Licit. Hart' Wooton, Limit. Harry N. 1i� oto a, -svho A' -ion
the Military Cross oversea is home-
in
ome
in, VictarY on 1
,��^. leave.
a SX O
m 1tlIS ci>
_ .. lir'
Halibut has reached the igest
a., i highest
price ever on record at Prince Rupert.?
P }
Italians !lave practie ,U oleared 'repaaganda day the Food
I1ainsizza Pla+oan,,fro hold t to bring about the eousuznlat
all file territory eongcleied 'ac ti tette zbi°ead is resulting
a to the statenw isr8Q`k* arala inereasee. 13 the pub1lw Q d
fel-brown bread,
at: seems rltlit the „�,tlstam�us ;tae
o-^disc€tttn°aged Vit' ,Io aed the The oftiees of the Citi:iei}aat ,hall at
atost netivity is being, i ayod la l Kerrisdalo fere overrun with flowers
Ilan airplane; , , hicb are ,scouting t affd vegotables 'when the, annum boa-
r tho oiaelpv's rear Thies, tia here tictalttiraad faiar a °as sueces fully opened
ustrian troops are r sting,;by Reese Fleteber,
fe
ge it
o grain
al
`esters
in his-
ietil-
here
gar -
ate Tests Carried Out ` ea#r' 'rogral int
O eials,
18,
aaarl of
tmanor, namely,
''h.e Order of the
feared. upon him
y
5 Q
Tollna.ge:
0,
Ada
0
g
r,
err is,
lhert
o experimental
tltfs1-1a4TP
htht e iwerQe r2ee0ib;00- 3
operial hehe�lieredetao at1
t't 300011(1 clasp ,
Commander of age
5'lt Fnraire, coat• Shelter at Edmonton
ant
age of eighteen'
as living, and 4
fortt3iae, He f
Text
nnu
1' O1
871 `9.
r r;ng ;txigta:at,
dmonton '
pita, Ito
s majesty the , The city, police serviceit
nt
costs the eitizens .$'1,61 Per c;
psi Calgary the rate is $1,81.
The I3dinonton :+F.N1'tll ltion As
iQ4 gave 284 of el caw coapt»:
ad, need, find a thimble 1
dren exhihtt5i?ala iia the school.
i trtnient, w' n ,
ugh to w ;
%3
0t10 far
ti
is
ve -ped 1ilai;
tr, sated fiat° yvzt
in C ops,
te
nada i
..11els fro
yield
,16 and 29 arsh- The cost of living in
i,. 1- e iimated yield of is from 20 to 30 per cell r,- blown 1 et have been i doted by Judge
in 191d F 229,313,000 littOtele it was a year 'tieally i McInnis for the . ncouver judicial
0 ,448,250, acres, so that'the 'Winnipeg t i r hlur eet district, and they include a woman,
i a t tal-for 1917 represents an for blind readers. 76 /
51,700 bushels, or 8 tunes at the n'ese
exit. The total yield of oats in Winnipeg pt ":„ 1 e ;, hers, attitehed to the Vancouver Gen -
;timer
8-
pal
3,1
plarie> 1 30 }at
WAS callsttl�
5{%t6°71"61 tI'1.
Th
katrn<iOII, declartn
epee cxf any jo'Cing 'full
ed trir'pntaens for any ri41
de3Blatteh fro
res
wlaomlirlofi proved to be a surprise
to t]le general public, who foresaw
the acquittal of Madame Soukhornlin-
off and expected that the former War
A4iinister would be found' not guilty.
The Procurer -General declares that
the verdict cannot be quashed on a
technicality, as no higher court ex-
ists,
f
O .N H
•ograd. soya:
the trial of leneral3
I7
gr and if tl
truetiblt wore
actaane the leading
world. 711 3.
V,.
ill ;tae inor4a03 aratAaa Albert
1 11 F7 day, Thos a3du0
ang; lq toartat a lreiaar;P
Qty. The
ft 1b x is retdtte;.. .,I
a Y -1..,U anti $5 per dtty
hirty-two 2Oblliers 3•;
the front, to Snsl;'atchewtan
heal a luncheon ;tt the
hib, Regina, and a
'rough the city
0
Gell
Controller,
ioi W less
EOP
heir During laat month, t ,s
the tire loss foi'
d by insurance.
11r. 3, K, L. Ross, naval lieutenan
conditions in Briti-di Colombia '
a T4 :,01 luaa:creormi I lzfirnol iri os tsf hi ;11 liei,r1:110: nieeisliolain,frrQ,1,14.((i,r;ov en‘P,,d1,,eilliing”
Badly battered and
or
d
The;
t?bir ty PQ.
l ...oaday
fell i
da
In Nli°18Ntsiale)r:r' ribunals under the 1\1 -Hitt -try Service
dbabhoyth
ay elleit
lit by
de hotel
st
waters off Privet
nown
ived
veyor in Vancouver, has w
411;iii and iiivotion to duty
;wed The it appointinents to the local
ea
rth
shipping` natior; lit
•
tVAL. FORCES
BOMBARD OS"LINO
spntch from
London says; The
'German naval base of Ostend, on tale
„Belgian coast, was bombarded by Bri-
tish naval forces. British aerial pat-
rols over the fleet encountered six
hostile aeroplanes and downed- two.
"Naval aeroplanes," says an Ad-
rniralty statement, "copiously bomb-
ed the Sparappelhoelt aerodrome.
s
They made several direct hits,, smoke
being observed from the sheds on the
t southwest side. Several of our light-.
'ing patrols over the fleet encountered
six hostile aeroplanes, two of which
;they brought down.
"There was a bombardment of the
t naval establishments at Ostend by
our naval forces. Several hits were
1 observed on A.natelier de la Marine."
Soukhomlinof's sentence, life im-
prisonment, carries with it the se-
verest form of incarceration, called
"Katorgaa," The first ten years the
convict passes through different
stages of punishment, including
chains on the feet, sometimes on the
hands, also, and he may be chained
to a wheel -barrow. The next' several
years "on reformation " are sent in
prison without "• chains. Next, "on
probation," until finally the stage is
reached where the convict is set at
liberty in a village, ,from which. he
must not' depart. The several stages
are shortened by good conduct, and.
the convict finally has the chance to
become a free Siberian settler.
MANY PRAIRIE FIRES
IN SASKATCHEWAN.
A despatch from Prince Albert,
Sask., says: Large quantities of hay
have been destroyed by prairie fires
in Northern Saskatchewan. The prin-
cipal losses are in the Star City' and
the Tisdale districts. Fires are also
raging in the timber areas, north of
Big River, and that town has been
enveloped in smoke for several* days.
DEFENCE AGAINST
IIEAVIEST TORPEDO
A despatch from Montreal says: ---
:Major Douglas Hamilton, is perfect-
ing a device designed to make it im-
possible for Germany to sink ships at
sea. The details of the invention are
in the hands of the British Govern-
ment, also of the allied Governments.
A ship equipped with the device will
be tested by torpedo fire in the near
future, and Major Hamilton says he is
so confident of the success of his in-
vention that he 'is willing to take a
chance on the ship experimented upon.
The resisting- power of the device with
which the ships are to be protected is
said to be one thousand times heavier
than the heaviest torpedo or other pro-
jectiles made by the enemy.
\THERE. Yon GO,
IslosE AGAIN,
t1 Is pt..I. en, 1 ,N rttit,
No..3
ct a t1 a No, 1
No.
+:i
--No. '1 \ '14.x",
No,' 3,
0.
:ttd
unites
2
ylitanetstlails, Itt. 2—Coro—No 1 yel-
anw, 31.0 tea 31'tS. Oats --No. `s white,
58 to CO . .i1.our 1 and patents $11,,10;
13r•„t elear4., 310.30 ^+01'0170 patetns, 35.550.
131 alt—••537 it! to �,3"ti0.
Duluth, Oct.. 2 w-a.insoed-31 50 to
3,1 n4; arrive, $3;,411; September, 33:50
hld Y etaaller, 3 t.4 to ll;ed, Nil ember,
$3, 3 licei rrtacr 33,•30.
Savo Stock ?, arkets
Toronto. Oct 2 --.Extra choice heavy.
stews. $21.50 to $12;: 00., good heavy,
;310.50 to 311; butchers cattle, choice,
83 ii ti) 510.,0; do.. good,39.25 to 39.45;
do., xnedium, 58.50 to 35.75; "do„ cam -
mon, 56 r5 to 57.40: butchers` bulls,.
r,Itoice, 33.30 to 58.65; ala., good butts,
q $"7,40 to S7,S:a; dp., xtaedium bulls, 36,8.5
Lo 57,18• do. roil. bulls, 35 to 36;
butchers cors, choice. 58,25 to 38.50;
,,do.. good 50 to 3 7.73 do.,me Urn,
,16.0 to' 32.75; stockers, $7,50 to 58.73;
feeders. 33 25 to 3'3.13; canners and cut-
ters, 35to 35.50; mincers, good to choice
590 to 3135; :do., coot and med., $75 to
535; 'springers, 590 to $1355; light ewes,
39 50 'to $17.-50; sheen, heart', 55.7'-
37.50;, to
yearlings, 311 to 312; calves, good
to choice 315 to $25.50; Spring lambs,
315 to 315.50; ;' hogs, fed and watered..
318,75; do., weighed off cars, 319; do.,.
f.o.b.. 517.60.
Montreal, Oct 2—Choice steers, 310.25
to 310.330; good, 39.75 to 310;lower
grades, 38 to $9; butchers' .cows, 'x3.50
to 38.50; bulls, $8 to '$3; Ontario lambs,
$15 to $15.25; Quebec,' 314 ' to 314.50;
sheep, $S.50 to 310; milk -fed calves,
$14 to 315; lower grades, 39 .to' 313;
selected hogs, 317.75 ,to 318.25.
ANOTHER U. S. LOAN
MADE TO FRANCE.
A -aespatch from Washington says:
A further credit of $40,000;000 was
extended by .the Government to
France. This brings -the total ad-
vanced the allies up to $2,466,400,000.
Educate the mo.ther and save- the
his hoMe. was
The formal opening of the new rani -
y annex for sick mid wounded ;',411-
.7 is estimated at 399,843,000 bush- ordered to furnish bond against do.
„, els from 12,052,000 acres harvested, age to persons or property. -Gov. F. S. Barnard opening the
, as compared with 365 553 000 bushe s T le Edmonton Auto Club reliev A despatch from Zeneta, door
1 Hospital, has' been celebrated,
ny'10,178,000 acres harvested the street car tie-up considerably y says: Charles Myer, who lost ,SPriaffl A report has reached Vancouver
6 For the prairie provinces it givIng irce ndes to the working pen- purchased an irnprovetl section of land that the edet,il Government proposes
has en necessary to deduct from the Pie. at :,35 an acre on credit and seeded to take over the evaporators handling
sown as percentages of 10 in Williant Dianiond, mdster of arts 550 acres to wheat, lias just threshed vegetables and that the control will be
-, us e s o No. - Northein, This exercised before ninny weeks b. ,
Alberta for crops not ripened into tot:a, has been awarded a fellowship grain win bring .$25,000 at the fixed missed. ' . 1
grain. The yield per acre on the hex. in the Thilversity of Chicago, ,` m re lhan sufficient t ' 'e AnFurgent call for women helpers
veeted area is therefore for all Gan. Flight -Lieut. A. W. Carter, of Cal- him a clear title to the propert, has come from the fruit canners of
ada 33.18 bushels, as ccanpared with garY, has been awarded the Distirt- .',:
Manitoba and in Saskatchewan and graduate 'of the UniVersity of Mani- 1.o. 000 b • h - ' •
Kelowna, I3.C, • Fruit picking in this
in 1916 and 4,13,1 bush- g s Service ross for skill in air- TNNO 10E SEAI LANES district has now passed over the peak
els in 1915. For rY0 tile estimate is craft near the 'ipres salient, ARE BROUGHT DOWN. of the crap and the packers are now
4,194,950 bushels from 211,870 acres, D. S. MacKenzie, Alberta's Deputy -- enAteri:igantthec‘aNtbeVniayagt-eoouvereaiips;:hnui.:gs,lsvoansle;
as cOmpared with 2,967,,I00 bushels 'Minister a Education, has resigned A despatch from I.:ondon saYs. Two
come ursar of the University of Al- brought into Flushing Holland by f 't f
Dutch torpedo boats, and it is renert- produce to be found at the second an -
bushels (rem 2,392,200 aeres1 as A, western farmer donated a volun- 'ed that they participated in the air nual flower show held by the Garden
against 42,647,000 bushels from 1,- teer s Pay to the local patriotic fund. raid on England, says a despatch to City Women's Institute, Victoria.
703,700 acres in -1916, the yields per 1i Ittdisi eatilicutlatedt thfatmtbhertea abret en- Tohe Evening News from Rotterda.m.
acre being 24.80 and 25 bushels re- s e n a Par o er e ween ne of the four German
spectively. The total yield of flax- rows Nest and Bow Island and south seriously wounded, The three others
from 148,620 acres in 1916, the yields from that important position to be- large German seanlanes have been thing over t' ti d
per acre being nearly 20 bushels in h , cri moon o tne kmd of d
both years. Barley yields 159,318,400 herta.
gar en
airmen -was
seed is placed at 10 067 500 bushels of the Crow line between 3,500 and have been interned.
ONE AGAINST HUN
The object of Germany's submarine
from 1,242,000 acres,
with 7,316,300 bushels from 622,000 conva escen ome an a
•, • tionaI training school is being planned
SUBMARINE WARFARE
•
Some Necessary Provisions -o the
Terms of Peace.
harvested acres in 1916 the average
yields per acre being'8.11 bushels and \ warfare is not so simple' or purely
11% biashels in 1916. Of the 22,000 harvesters ' passing A despatch from La Paz, Bolivia,
military as ane would think It is on.
In the summer. of 1916, the' Com- o line e or arnto a arms. men ing on e mea
economic --se'
Let There Be Light.
inissiun of Conservation conducted a The Canadian - Council of Apical- by Ai-gentina and Peru to obtain satis- , Ys a retired Rear Admiral
detailed survey Of 400 representative
farms in Dundas county. Of these,
less than one per cent. practised sys-
tematic selection of their seed grain,
similar to that followed by the Can-
adian Seed Growers' .Association.
Three per cent. treated their seed
grain for smut. Only nine per cent
tbreugh. Winnipeg, 3,000 hands wera says:—ELDiarici and El Tiempo, coin -
'f M "h f t' *th "Stires being taken the 'cOntyary 'twofold.---militarY • 'and
ing club, and will help with the liar- Parliament. ,
partmental store have formed, a stook_ sion of new treaties is in Progress in
ht eienledear ei igialsrWel sjjli nf rn'lloi ler °gae,,,s1;We epieennnritsiiip3roenagsd. yds: fins oaelcintdaTitorniityfarPooPmfr °SaGoeuehtribm.11 gaAnmfyor the complete
: r iscaay. thDei s :nu os i itosifo nrt hu nte ho IwUe s. sc l So ym. idNnegasvt rfy or. ya mi nSghaei: aril; a nds ho tit. ro po oin. nul gyr,
allies, hut, with an eye 'to the future
off al,L supplies of food and 'ammuni-
te ua rtsidx endeavoring by her submarines to cut
vest.
she can find, whether neutral or belli-'
Place pulverized pumice stoner.1:6-: inger n , w ii e she herself ,is building
erchant steamships with frantic
speed in order, when the war, is over, ..
edge -to keeP the powder from spilling. „to kayo a vast amount of tonnage,„ ir,
Wipe larnp chimneys or window -panes
with this dry cloth and they will tie f ar as possible, the world's carrying '
readiness with which to monopolize, so
clean ''and sparkling alinost, instantly. trade, The German means fo make in- ..,
humanity profitable. It is "for civiiiza-:.
Enough powder Will rem
cloth to be used many times'.---
Theaefore if the Adlies win in- this
struggle against, barhariQin it is in-
conceivable that the, terms of peace,
shall fail to ,include the proVision- that
no German ship shall,be permitted to
navigate outside of Gerrnan.territorial '
waters until every vessel her subma-'
rines have illegally sent 'to the bot-
tom of the sea shall lave beeii' 30-'
every _German official, nooliatter how
plaeed by Germany. In addition, ,
high his rank, who has authorized or'
directed this assassin's employrnent o
If the submarine and every German cap,;
,,, eteami,ninwhr.o 1,1uhrie,ddseerrs.„,,purn4;rimmeio„lit:o:cilidng, nails
anri an can order another
combatants must bp banged for. '
grew wheat, but -practically all grew
oats. 'Of the latter, slightly more
than -half mew t e name of the vari-
ety grown. -FortY-three per cent. did
not Itriiow the varieties of any of the
grain sown On their'farrns.
•
Brooms' should always hang when
not in use. Have, atliole borer -through
the handle four inches from. the end
and large enough to slip Over an Or-
dinary nail. When left on the floor
a broom soon loses its shape and will
noi do good work.
‘2021 iticasa
ANI ONE.
MASSAGE '101),,INI
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