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The Exeter Times, 1918-3-21, Page 6NTI S.... French Fru "p Buried Morey 1 aaioes the Enemy, Which Had Bee tib- Fleeing i.riza P 2Itea $cor.1naLian, Army' .„ Ott,r,�, He d.gzz .iters ;;gays: Otnts de or :; a n.ane I actrw e t'tctitit . herc is little to neno,,:t fro.['+ out G the adtaneed airettl- , Oa'r nr,tA? esr 344, pounwier-5-, trench mortars, st.00',,4 ntAe nuan haz:ye ueetz act �,. Boron**al hnzasslug, fare ;get -pos't.ons.; a$ '4" at5 wng.,."a lar t gets. tl +Ct ninth wit] 0 Area ecovered t'?ncea fie€ 0 1,1 an bon; y«s i ct [AMEN S110N' aoUS RESULTS. OVER 100 PLANES DOWNEI) uperiority des Air Forces Every Day More Manifest Showing hemselves Masters of the Situation. eh from London says: The 1 of commission on the front, of t.hieh o' UST B3 TO R] A ORNCON'>INU :A.I LY STORE LUSTRE. supen.non•ity of the British airmen overt 57 were completely destroyed. Inn ad-; Tleru Are Seel(' f it;Ie the enemy- is :becoming more manifest? dition, the Naval Sc3,Uaciro» hugged 17' day by clay, Tineia^.'wvork during thea two of these being drought down by About One ef.1, Yel°us Since-Marezn 1, on all fronts,a,ag-h. _.. ttlaz_lz 1,60 past fortnight las been almost mare seal/lanes' over the North Sea, du_in,g . 1,recuous Je so machines have been destroyed p. t:kshed f#ve opponents.- Less than a tdrea down n out of control. The L9 of British machines were lost; ,.c Y Ani nC An Tine,. i'orn'QSp(nncFe3lt r4i7or`rs ,matt, '� ,� same porton,. L 333Sl.Spa\'?ll'LON by, zr flag Offer ns. ort re�Ast�at� R *ACREAGE N 1918 CRO Better Prepared This Sea :�, despateln from 4'innipeg anti in the three ronaarcd lor th "The amount Prairie Provluc coming erop tent. greeter time kt t veer. Cit +lnly is tberc this tacroase inthe i an d that will be un- der cultivation, but it hes ail been pre- pared in a much bettor way than iii Preceding years," said ,3. Bruce Want- LA's Commissioner of Immigration, who returned on Thuraday morning from tnnextensive tour of the West, Mr. Walker's tour w°aa, for the fur- pose of ascertaining the acreagelike- ly to be under cultivation this year and to look into the labor problem. a. r+,a', PR! E1i to �ann'totAaA� Ott in,t'siasFt" g0nifl�fGT{. 10 There zeliLterarly� no time lie the 'present `er there is .neo titin but thevsesY F'Yli. laresent. AL SER MAN RS4 CYC 1Is, :non' 009 0 'rlaanr� ti". salt l4P.A'tan. 3li,.4 9.tY71 [:. a o 110h"+'€air txe ti; 111LocaThe a in Areas E: Like .Schon on. Part o' A despatch frozx I ollcion says: Ger- man prisoners of swear are to be distri- buted over areas tw-hich the enemy's aircraft are subjecting to attack it? their air raids. according to the Evert- ing News on Thursday. • '1' a Sia 1 q`. rayLioiYlli til Rept'iIsul i't3r lacrlt 3ia- '%hbz ” says the Ne s, `"Is being done because.tht, allied Goreruments have 'learned that prisoners' of their° n at,onxlnties: in German'h:ands already :ave been, so placed, inall toot ns which the German Geveraimenii considers likely to be nttaeked." a 6 f At Sid r. 10414 t,C 0 1 andinn aiLfor k ,+a, hong t 3i 1'a.ett sn Qt, v tyi ttA..1� tit a Acer Ata hg •tip fat hu bac'? ,. e ai II, nnntisk, ge`_tiaCT1 dignnitg; Are yea the lucky potisessor o` a string of `angers' tears, as someone onee Poetic -all -7 visioned pearls, whier. happeu to be the real and get-tulip.i1 ue, Wear ,hem .. hem cooked, up ", +^ in.';0onnt casket, fo e,. prt,telteast it their /it ote iter i rir.,ixW #, Tr(' nTa< alway y known t { inert isreVAVU '0n a�'e3°z't�t al v the env 110 e n scv rel fainou of this unwri slid the 1 e£fi.: "wry ^ a a 1sk C;Ca,d naly Until e�Attl grain tva is the i :ate the early part 4 tlai..A. ti ic4a will have: two-thirds o i3t a tial xi t1Y': T 3, grain 911:t;ei:ned.. ,g tike tett"fad half erne. 11Z`f+portii i r'wt ,ecl atanou nt� { Bur-, �uCtt9 S ii[' (?4 rain haananel, b n$i In d. tan !1131 lA9 l.: ta: i"9+e was Asci, she wit! u cwzneia ' Genian plc • ?to• tett,,¢ 4„I '1101 E't.:at68€`,anrtt- 9%A t ky R44 tl.aut• 6 st gage!: ''01 k�ltiannna:4i;' E'; n l 1 tone 'Frown: 'train Trac !ling 60 Miles Per Hour. 5'1! 0 ,ra fila a r tilled 1n Soutix ;" f ieEt hy: t`txe en 'ietoriai as ver (' 8kve e :pre.a iiz t t o !lilt anger lt1 :nn1 Ctlee. wed terininz o tie! tiznniaz tlarl le itebella should naAve re area vitt that it was t)te grant uncle of Cinperinl' who rwai:,eal his stable - a grandfather to be a duke and 1c+9 l-ratzt'shah These iaz Qt's wet'cl e1y worth the few sli llai have been wasted if :'1 is nl.11e110 had postponed his dinner.' Things Bet=ter Left Unsaid. lag. Cnpn Ft+ b. tats.. a c e Fa #ti 4j7 tut rivst sutt Rx Ott 'TFIt+ simil 1 rets ;*k zt 1 a.r °1 tai= C <nna;ndlt Food ting pinna fray than bibor> Tor springacct n ;familiar with t•ili he specialty nen; 4•ennti,:1 that they Iain can tln.t land. For !)hiyero of 01:eh 5,1 proof co 0 Ling 0 tin 1.11 IVit,ed to con - order to free the xperi e horses and GREAT BRITAIN AND UNIT STATES TAKE OVER L ing rat Mlle Seiz Mi o s of Holland's national Law. 1 tae iiments are being conducted on the Canadian Government raii- s: -- 1. apparatus that rmits verbal messages' to be trans- A despatch forbnz Washington says: t4ay... ,gat., .t telephone aPi pe, e } ha -re met withhighly gratifying re- —A.;million tons of Dutch ships' now mated Ln <.isci from zz:o:=iizR cz'iiizs,, a ntl ha eg y �through snits. Connection oettveen the instrument and railway is made through the held in ports tile world over . car wheels. it will be ppossible for connection to be made between the train Holland's fears' of Germany's threat to i that •Train s lt them if "they venture out will instruments and flair of any regular £eIephone.Peed is sin • of no -consequence, as satisfactory re sults have been attained with the train be brought into the service of the travelling at the speed" of 60 miles an hour. United States 'and Great Britain at tafae 1313.171a., once, The United str tain will_take them over under national law, availhig themselves sovereign right which Germany self has hitherto exercised undo: same authority. ter - 0141.3 CoAl" RIcHES DOT I've ALWAYS vaiLL -rExt.. Not) SOME *TIME WIN OP01-06MINIG, Tom 01 citresaft ttelt eta d that robe a ez 91n) tattet .ere like Neel pal c 1 they celled the Lally 110Q14ingly desecrated a fiends, and the jewel had Curiously enough, all woman a pearls, and many otvnera ave to delegate the wearing of them I ids or healthier relatives, len, however. are fernot earl cure-all's, end one or v years ago one of the big museums k ttl; 1 qtle. or their h eh had lost "life." successful applicant usual post was required to wear jewels next her flesh under,' the eye of one or two atiendaatA, wi Were told off to see that she (14i no% play any hanky-panky tricks. This young girl proved such a poet', cure-all that she was commissioned by many European royalties and to pay periodical visits to -,`ditcir Don't Lilie the The e, -1,e -Czarina of Russia. also pos- sesses wonderful ropes of tire mosr. lovely bauble in the Ivorld, but ve,fy few are aware that other people nave to give them their "medicine'," as sitai leSoleIllialo,1,..wahTo is one of the f.Imous &t- ot -tole de Valencia, of Bar ponents of the dancing I-, is pecu- liarly Spanish, is said to lytive restor- ed the pearls of the ex -Czarina to ill,t, several years ago by wearing. them eat her heart while (I...toeing at, Petro- , The pearls had lost .0 lustre, a, the insurance ccunpanies NVOre, begin- ning to be alarmed; but after the fas- cinating ,Tortola had wosn them, they "glistened once mare all the -five of life, youth, and health,' according o the unbiased and uncenoted,4epo Of an admirer of the Carnal:Li' 'Sense - The ruts are deep in ro,ad n It The &•Ids are soggy -with the rain, The skies are low and grim and grie,r, The cattle in the barnyard start ,„Has man the courage aud the pluck he, farm& vhich