The Clinton News Record, 1919-1-9, Page 3vie -e``
Airs—
eelle
SIR WERT BORDEN .,WILL
• ATTEND CON. BRE f E OF NATIO**
ffitissh 1)olniniplls Will Reeeive Consideration Comnlenstiate
With Their Participation .in the War .and TMefr •
a •Status in l;i'itirh. Comimanwealth,.
•
A dospatell from. London says:--
T,Ite eonferenee of 'rePreselatativos of
the allied i tions which was to begin
at Paris on trartiMey 0 hos 3)een-post-
ponetl few one week owing to the dee
velopment of the Cabinet crisis iii
• Italy, It is now e:cpiected to meet
on Jauuery 13, and arrangements, to
that endare being compleeed.
Tho character and scope of this
conference is not likely to be defined
until it actually meets. There is the
view that it should bo a formal gath-
ering with a do'finite,agerida to be
considered, and offering a public re-
port of conclusions to be reached,'and
.an alternative proposal is that this
conference should bo, completely in-
formal end given up to the freest
poi'sible consideration of all questions
of peace as they, affect, the attitude
which the allied nations will taste at
the Peace Conference. Tho prob-
abilities are that the latter course
will be .followed' as lending' ' itself
more .readily to the purposes in view:
the adjustment of all differences be-
tween the allies so that they can go
into the Peace Congress with an
agreed programme. There is no
difficultyabout the representation at
this conference as all' the allied coon-
trieet will have ample opportunity of
presenting their views by their .re-
preeentnivos, .
The British delegation Will be
headed by bir. Lloyd George, Mr.
Bonar Law and Mr, Balfour, but
there will be attached an extensive
retinue of officials from the Foreign
Office and :from the various services,
.,The C.anad'ian Mission will proceed
to Paris in time for this conference
and the Plume Minister, Sir Robert
Borden, will represent . Canada in
these preliminary, axil. important dis.•
cuseions.
-The date Tor the official' peace
congress has not yet been fixed. 11
can be called in short order, as the
delegates who are t1', attend it are
now in Paris, or. 0n their way there,
The belief is that the inter -allied eon-
forences will require about a 'fort- , Z .1
night, and that the actual peace can- GERMANS WRECKED PEERAGES FOR
ference will begin its work about the
first of February. •
The questions of the representa-
tion of the varietal countries entitled
to be present at this congress have
not yet been fully settled, and may
not be until they are considered by
the inter -allied conference, but it
may ye said that the British Doe
minions will receive consideratime
commensurate with their participa-
tion in the war, and Their status in
the family of British nations. -
5
•*
After 47 Years—The famous Arc de TriompheParis, which was
closed iia le71 after the 'Prussians defiled it by passing through In pro-
cession; is to be rc••opeued for a great Victory pl'oCession early in the
year. ,
LOYAL INDIA
GREETS THE KING
National Congress Favors the
League of Nations Idea.
A despatch from Delhi, India,
Bays Six thousand delegates and
visitors attended the National • Con-
gress here, from which the Moderates
niostly abstained. Mothali Malaviya
rlietaber of the Viccrega1 Council, de-
livered the presidential address and
offered loyal and dutiful greetings to
his Majesty upon the successful ter-
mination of the war. Indians were
particularly glad to think, while des-
potic monarehs were disappearing,
the King -Emperor sat ever more
firmly on the affections of his people.
lee suggested that the Congress send
• a message to the Pence Congress that
India was prepared to contribute in
every way possible towards its suc-
cess, and to support the League of
Nations, Ile thought India's repre-
sentation at the Congress should be
more numerous. Referring to IndIa's
great contribution to the. war, he
asked how far India would share in
the fruits of victory. Ifo repudiated
es insulting the suggestion that In-
. dians were unfit to govern -them-
. eeel4 S, and hoped that the principles
of autoncuny and self-determination
%irould be extended to India.
TURKS VANISH
BEFORE ALLIES
Allenby's Report on Eastern
Campaign Shows Ambitious
•. Plan.
A despatch :from London says: --
Details of what was, perhaps, one of
the most spectacular operations of
Y the war becante known recently when
General Allenby's report on the Pal-
estine campaign was published. Brit-
. isle Indian, French, Italian .contin-
gents participated in the lighting,
and, in addition, Arab forces from
oast of, the Jordan rendered effective
assistance. The British navy also
had a share in the operations.
General Allenby's pian was ambi-
tious. Ho sought to break the Turk-
ish linos, send his cavalry through
and encompass what ho describes as
" a rectangle five miles in length and
twoive in depth, in which the Turkish
troops were crowded." By thie'stroica
he planned to cut..$he enemy's cor-
munication and complete his discom-
fiture by joining hands with the
Arabs,
A force vastly superior to the
Turkish armies. was gathered against
the right wing of the enemy's army,
near the Mediterranean coast. On
the morning of September 19,. after
an intense bombardment lusting only
fifteen minutes, the allied infantry
attacked. A great gap was I:orn in
the Turkish lines.and through it wore
sent masses of car airy which had
been held in leash until the moment
had arrived,
°Within thirty-six hours," 'says
General Allenby, "all the main ave-
nues of escape for the Seventh and
Eighth Turkish Armies had been
closed."
All organized enemy resistance
ceased and roads were blocked by re-
treating men and transport. Their
the allied air forces hurled them-
sclyes at the huddled masses of
Turks.
"The Turkish armies melted into
nothingness," says the report. "A
junction was made with the Arabs,
and the way to Damascus and Alep-
po was open."
SURRENDERED U-BOATS
ARE BEING DIVIDED UP
'A MODEL ]KITCHEN
"' Draught. Closet 'Keeps Odors Away
From Living -Rooms.
When the housewife boils ham or
cabbage, everybody in the house
knows it. Ie the cooking is done iu
the diminutive kitchenette of a mod-
ar'n apartment, a small edition of a
German gas attack is very apt to be
the result,
The nrchiteet who designed the
model kitchen, recently installed in
.:('aril, solved the cooking -odor prob-
lem by borrowing an filen utilized for
1.nany years in all well-equipped
chemical laboratories. Many client-
YCfii operations are .accompanied -by
'disagreeable and often highly injur-
ious fumes. Such operations are car-
ried on in socalled draught -closets.
The draught -closet of the model
kitchen is• very similar iu construe -
tion to the chehtical draught -closet,.
It has glass doors through which
kite progress of the cooking opera -
lions on the gas stove can be watched.
iL;slit in the lower part of the glass
doors admits air, and the heat, steam,
- smoke and cooking oeiora.. escape
through a flue placed in the upper
part of the cabinet.
if the draught -closet;, in kitchen o•
kitchenette is pl'operiy constructed
and provided with a good flue, it will
prevent even the odor of caned beef
uud cabbage from penetrating 31190
the living -roosts of the apartment.
FRENCHI SOLDIERS OCCUPY
THE I{UN HUNGARIAN CAPITAL
A despatch front PariS says: --Two
' thousand French soldiers have outer
od I3uilapest,•the Htulgarlad capital,
according to a telegram front Zurich
to the Temps, One detachment oc-
eupied the castle ot± Count Karolyi,
where Field Marshal von Mackensen,
of the German army, is interned. Gena
Berthelot, commander of the allied
forces in Roumania, is making -a tour
ihrougb Hungary to insure 1110 proper
tarrying out of the armistice
w a awa'• •-mum + ee.re nx.
A. despatch from London says--
C:erutae submarines which have been
surrendered are being divided among
the allies, according to The Mail, The
newspaper eays-'that fifteen go to
FHedy, ten to ely, seven to Japan
and four to the United Stat,) , The
le -boats turned over to the United
Sinies are said to be now on their
way ?cross the Atlantic,
The. newspaper docs not specify the
manner in which the rest of the 1..^.7
titirrondered submarines ore •to be
shored.
CANADIAN MAIL FON
FORCES IN SIBERIA
•
A despatch from 'Vladivostok
gays:—The steamer Neign Chow has
arrived hero with a cargo of military
supplies and 61 sacks of mail for the
Canadian forces in Siberia. The
Neign Chow also brought equipment
for the Vladivostok branch of the
Royal Bank of. Canada, the first Cantt-
tlian financial institution to be repre-
sented hero, Manager Rae arrived a
week ago by way of Japan.
MANY 'AI PLANES BRITISH GENERALS
British- .Army of Occupation at
Cologne Finds Skelton of
:fluke Gotha.
tl clespacit from London rays:—
Many German airplanes were des-
troyed in part by the Germans when
they evacuated Cologne, according to
r eports from British correspondents
iu the British area of occupation.
Among the dismantled machines is
the skeleton of a huge Gotha. It was
baht to. carry 14 men, and on its
broad wings are walks, while little
iron ladders lead to the upper plane
where the machine gunners were
posted. Another machine kk`' an
armored airplane for use in attacking
trenches with machine gone. The
wings' are of cord.tgated steel and
eteel plates a quah-ter of an inch thick
protect all vital points es well as seats
fur two men. Two m13C111ne guns point
down through the bottom of the fuse-
lage.
SWORD -MAKING IN JAPAN.
Every Process in Manufacture nets a
Religious Ceremonial.
The Field Marshal's sword which
was recently presented to King
George by Prince Vorihito isaa speci-
men o1 one of the most cw�ious arts
in tho world. Japanese swords are
said to equal any made in the Western
world, and the number of processes
which they undergo before they "pass
the censor" is greater than the mor('
prosaic 'Western swordsntitll ever
imagined.
Sword -making kn Japan es a relig-
ious art, and every process has a re-
ligious ceremonial, The hut in which
the work is done contains images of
tite god of the sword -maker awl the
thief goddess of the Skittle's. 'Bits of
paper and Wisps of straw are also
employed to drive away evil spirits,
No woman may enter the place, for
a IV Man would bring a demon in her
train, and imperil the ntiesion of the
weapon.
I Before the work begins prayer 18
offered; and various religious rites
are observed ere the blade is said to
be well and truly made. After the
wean011 is polished and sharpened it
is offered to the sword god to be
blessed, with offerings of saki, ricm
or sweetmeats afterwards praver-
swells are read—and the sword is
111810110d,
Seaweed offemt 11 prolific source of
fuel oil when present supplies arc
exhausted, according to an English
professor, who has obtained seven
gallons from a ton of vegeLable mat-
ter. •• t
Field hiarShal hitt;' and Admiral
Beatty Rewarded With
Earldoms.
A despatch front London soya:--_
I1!arldoms will he cotnferred on Field
Marshal Haig and Vice -Admiral
Beatty, in rocogititien of their serv-
ices (hiring theewar, at:cording to
The 11Iail.
It is stated that Generals. Horne,
Plumer, Byng, Rawiiuson, Birdwood
and Allenby will be elevated 50 the
Peerage. -
The newspapers ,say that these
honors will probably be accompanied
by grants of money:
Immediate ltunouueomen1 of these
lienors is -said by The illail to be
improbable, as Field Marshal Haig
prefers to remain in command of
the British armies until the treaty
of peace is signed and the army 1':
reconstructed on a peace basis, a
work in which he is taking a deep .t
interest.
Ie is recalled that Lord Roberts
received a Parliamentary grant of
±100,000, and that Lord Kitchener
was given ±50,1100 after the South
African War. These grants were in
addition to the title, conferred upon
them.
It is reported that Vice -Admiral
Beatty will be given the rank of full
Admiral, Since he took over the
command of the British fleet from
Sir John R. Jellicoe he has borne
the title 0.e "Actin;' Admiral,"
The Murnuis of Milfordhavon, coen-
mending the second cruiser squadron,
and former I''irst Lord of the Adnlir-
alty, lies been plucwll on the retired
li,t at his own requ30L
,Y
,arkets the7V1.9.414 CANADIANS READY
• TO BOMB BERLIN
Brssadstnlfs
Toronto, dun 7,--'1e 41114obu wheaat
-L-NO 1 Nortllo 11 $2,24tita' Ile 2
Northern '1(;2.,211/a, No, 0 %loetiteat,
.171/x' No. 4 'wheat, $2.111/23 13
ore '',Fort William, not Yncluding
atom
Manitoba oats—No, 2 0,W., 7lieee;
No,e3 (J.W., 711/sc; extra No, 1 feed,
721430; extra No 1 feed, VAS) in
e(tore fort Wllldatrt; '
American corn—No, 8 yellow,
T111oronto,,70; No. 4 yellow, $1,65' eamplo
corn, :feed, $1,45 to e1,5el, track
Ontario Oats, new 0103) No, 2
white, 70 to 73e; No. 3 white, 09 to
12e, according to fxeighte outsido,
Ontario wheat ---No, 1 Winter, per
car lot, $2.14 to :12.22 No. 2, do;
$2.11 to $2.19; No. 3 Sprieg, $2, 02
to $2.10, f.o,b,, shipping points, nee
cording to freights,
, Peas—No, 3, 42,00,
Barley—Malting, )Iew crop, 00 to
95c, according to freights outside.
Buckwheat—No, 2, 41„80.
Rye—No. 2, $1,04, nominal,
Manitoba flour-01cl crop, war
quality � 411,35, Toronto, work three days before the signing
Ontario flour—War quality,olcYlpf the armistice,”
crop, $10.25, in bags, Montreal malt Commander iYIulocic received the
Toronto, prompt shipment.
Millfeed—Car lots, delivered Mont- D.S.O. in 1916, the C4eveller of Th
seal freights, bags included: Bran, Legion' of Honor in 1918, rand was
$37,25 per ton; shorts, 442.25 per. twice mentioned in despatches. Heton,
flay—No, 1, $22.00 per ton; mix- mnintarriedh. a Birmingham- 15(3' Inst
ed, $20,00 to $21.00 por ton, track v..
Toronto;
Straw—Car Pots, $9.50 to $1.0.50,1 THE UNBOASTING ENGLISH. '
track Toronto,
^^- Another U,S, Writer Pays Tribute ,to
Group Under Commander Mt1-
leek o1' Winnipeg Had Piens
Completed When Pence Came.
A dospeteh irons London 844300:•—
General Trenchard, in Itis report on
the work of the Independent Air'
Vero, makes an interesting roveala-
�tion how Berlin narrowly escaped be.
Mg. bombed by a squadron under the
famous airman, Commander R. I•X.
Muloelc ot: Winnipeg,
"The 27th group was , established
in England," says General Trench.
'era, "under the command of Com.
mender Mulocic for the purpose of
bombing Berlin and other centres
This group only received machines
capable of carrying out this wort
at the end of October,, Although al
ranks lead worked' night and day to
get the machines ready for attack
ing Berlin, they only completed the
POLAND VICTIM l
OF CERA .t.,
CITY 010 IirkLIC7 BURNED 1N
SPITE, SAYS CAPITALIST
)
All lndustrics Were Ruthlessly Strip-
ped of 1Sluehinery and Material
—$2,000,000,000 Damage,
Poland was stripped of all nlntorial
and machinery during the German oc-
cupancy, which ended November 11.
On that day a few thousand soldiers
of the Polish legion, aided by the
population of Warsaw, disarmed marc
than'20,000 German soldiers who had
planned a revolt against their own
c officer's, All food and all telephone
wires were remo) od by the Germans.
All industrial plants were robbed.
and dismantled with the result that
Poland will have ,a hard ,bob to start
in again even if Cillenelcil and political
conditions were 0. the best, observers
say. Discussing the economic situa-
(, 11011. in Poland, Stanislau Larlowski,
director of the Commercial Bank of
Warsaw, said to 11115 correspondent:
"14 will taste nearly $2,000,000,000
to repair' the damage done during the
German occupation and to put us on
our feet properly and to develop out
great natural resources. Our oil pro-
ducts return 500,000,000 marks annu-
ally, and the are rich in coal and salt
mines, potash, forests and agricul-
tural products.
Stable Regime Essential.
"I''irst, WO roust establish a sound
government which will have the con-
fidence of the outside world. Any gov-
e1•unent must have money to rum
itself, but it cannot get money with-
out confidence. When such a govern-
ment is established we will put out
foreign loans for the purpose of buy-
ing materials and starting up factor-
ies. It is even necessary for us to
obtain loans in order to hey clothes,
alio )machinery and locomotives.
'everything. in the country must bo
rebuilt along new lines.
'The Germans transported glome all .
the machinery from tiro industrial
city of - Kalicz,and then set fire to
city
•'t• Ti' ft'•
Country Produce—Wholesale the British People.
Eggs—No, 1 storage, 54 to 55c;
selected, storage, 68 to 60e; cartons, FI. ft, Windeur, in au article Itt the
new laid, 7S to 78c, Popular Alocllauics Magazine of
-Batter-1_'reanler3•, solids, 51 to 01110ago, pays the following tribute to
52c; do prints, 53 to 4351'; choice dairy Great 1lrltaill's war record: --
prints, 45 to 4,e; ordiner;y dairy of all people tee .Englis11 are least
prints, 38 to 40e; bakers', •:30 to 33o; coneoenee with )'also for graving done
oleomargarine (best grade), 82 to vrhal; the conscience nt''tlne 4latiort itn-
34c.
Oheesc—New, large, 27 Jet 1..281'; del'0t004 to be 1119; right -tiling to do,
twins, CF to 313 ee; spring' niado, "3'110}' n03er seek applause, 2101' are
large, 281j, to 29, Lt� ills, tin to 29 elm. they swerved from a course deemed
Comb honey --Choice. 10 oz, $4.50 right for lack of it. IL is 0 sterling
to $5.00 per dozen; 17 o..., $,1,50 to quality which has often been nttst.tligeht
;f;1 per dozen. for mere sl.ubbormlees. Among some
3lapie Syrup --•!n eegar tine, 5;,93, other tillage 33,0 have discovered due.
1'ra,itriolrs— rd"Itolesctic fug the war, one is that tee 'iluas_have
insidiously and persistently, for years,
nrr1 heas((wocl seeds of suspicion and lune a51h;lBmeasello,porki, $' i'. ts—Pickled pork, the English -throughout the'worl(1.
Green M.t(t, -put of pzckle,'10 lass Because 0e4101auy was jealnns of
}tan smoked. England she hated her; and hating her
USING .AltM V (::.ARBAG]b
Twofold Saving in.Feeding*Waste to
Snipe.
Perhaps never before in the history
1,t' America. not to say the world, has
the conservation of material, nncl the
salvage of unavoidable Weast0, born I
practiced so eonsietenly and generally I
es clueing the war period. Confider,
for distance, the action of the com-
mandant of ono of our training camps
who realized that the true spirit QC
eonstrvetion is utilization. Ile estab-
lished a well-pla11i1ed hog Tarin near
the camp so that the haste from the
army kitchens might be profitably
utilised. It is hardly necessary to
uu:ntiun that a plan of this nein re-
meeents a twofold saving, for in addi-
11011 to changing loss to profit, it
eliminates must of the trouble and
expense otherwise involved in gare
,age disposal.
Our mistakes outribettu much to
he wisdom) or others,
A "MYSTERY SHII'.”
This is one of the "Mystery ships" which looks like an ordinary tramp
steamer. In reality she is a vesselof an entirely novel type, heavily
armed with guns which are concealed and can bo ultntaslced in a few
second's. i'tt addition site has a very heavy armament of torpedoes and
depth charge throegers, but she is Wilt 4wIth a draught of only alis feet,
Aich made her practically intnutae front submarine attack. It is an-
nounced that one of these Wits will he seat on n tour of the. Empire
and that it is hoped her light draught will eatable her to pass through
the St LIAWZOnee. 041111430 and be 4u'ough1 to lake Bolt
. .... .: An„d,Be. egetelewgIrtR • enclie,gernseeere/tee!ge •r eeeeeeeem _.. pyly --- -0 elegg
7 7€143iGi ' "1'73:7' e'er' '�J' " 7I;"..tf.a. .'' .1 Nt,
•
Smoked falcate—Rolle 33 to ;330;
Mame, medium, 88 to :36e; heavy, 20 waat::d • all other cunutries to 1,u3
to 311'; cooked kerns, 51 to (tee: ',twee, England. n1s0. And au aro1nd 3110
411 -to 47e; backs, 'boucles; "50 to 52e., w,n•id went an army of German spies
Breakfast bacon, 42 to 47e. Cottage whose ulisston was to spread a. prup;t-
' rolls, e5 Lo 301'_
Dry Salted Meate--Long eburs, in 1! 1, hi of hatred. Germany, migrate-
, tons, 30e; in cases, 8(3;20; clear bet -
NI, had no rause for this.
j lice, 38 to :?8by0; fat backs, 25c. lenglish ports the worse over were
I nerd Pure, tierces' 3t) to 301 c; Open freely t0 German ships to come
tubs, 3f)ri, to Ole; Ial1:;, 30;4. /s to and go and trade at will, Engem hel-
1 sett 1.,811eht from (3erruany annually
millions of dollars tvtirth or German -
made gootbt in mecees et rahat Ger-'
many bought front Haglund. Gerultu111
In England were as rree to work, tra-
vel'' sell gefirs as 2.113' l.ltg.Lisbnlan,
$11.35 to 411.86; ._roiled outs. bag while the )Englishman in Germany was
00 lbs, $1.25 to 1'.1,50• brio $17.2;; subject to constant s try„iilallce anis in
sbwrt's, $42:25; Mo14111 , , $68.0 to arriving at :t German (My must first u£
4470:00; hay, No. 2, por ton, car lots ell filo a lengthy report containing a
::20.0(1 to 331 .00, Citoese, finest Personal history, the nature of his er-
rand tilers: and haw many days 1t,, !n-
t011d1d to remain in. Ihitt ,lace.
As ire all ksnstr, it woo 1, que;tinu or
honor add not necessity wilieh brotlght
lltiglnuid Into war immediately. She,
too, with the exception of a strong
marry, was cnttirely unprepul'el, tend the
world will tweet. cease to owe a debt
of gratitude to those brute Wren who,
with only seemly 58 )plies and scantier
alnniimiti011, hold, aetua11y by a t1u'ead,
'and (lt awful cost or lire, 1310 thin. lino.
while an army 94110 gathered and
nmuttion works were being built, But
for tho llib'g11811 navy the war would
Lava ended very differently, 13u1: for
English ships, also, only thirty per
cent. of the Ametecan troops could
have reached France.
Of ani the great. things of tha x•114'
110n0 114 greater them tito ltteetin :out
loyalty of the British h0nlhlions and
001.011 105 to tho mother country. ')V111le
they might:have remained aloof, with-
out a moment's hesitation they united-
ly and heartily rallied to her aid. Or
their hest of life and treasure they
sunt front far-distault lands and climes,
freely, voluntarily, ttnonnlplaiuhlgly. It
was a 81,end 134)eotacle, a. mighty tri-
bute,
}3rcause no press bureau was mule.
talu(ad to keep tis caalstautiy reminded,
there are few of us who as yet begin
to realize our debt to Greai•. Britain 10
this war: hitt time, which adjusts all
these things, will write the story of
our debt, and with tint. undorstaniting
will come a truer emnan of our obliga-
tion,
(�EIli4YAN5 EVACUA.Ti; RIGA _
TO ESCAPE 1101,8IIJIYIICI
A despatch from Copenhagen
say5:--Owing to the advance of sttp•-
;osier forces of Bolsheviki, says a
despatch from Berlin, the German
troops have been compelled to evacu-
ate Riga, the Livonian port at, the
head et the Gulf of Riga.
Once more fruit growers are res
minded tlial small apple trees can
be protected against mice and rab-
hits by tying' 'building paper around
the trunk and covering the first 18
311) 1; print:;, !1110 to 82e; shorten-
ing, tierees, 25ee to 2tie c; tubs, 2531
to 26c; pails, 26 to 261.11 ; 1-11).
pmts, 27 t0 27e.
Montreal Markets- -
Mortreal, jou, 7.—Oats, e:tra No.
1 feed Sic.; dour, new standard grade
onetel'net, 24 Es 2.1e. Butter, "'choicest
ereamere, 62 to 02e. Eggs, select -
ad, 59c; No. 1 stack, 51e. Potatoes,
per bag, car lots, $1.70. 7)re.t;1d
!logs, abattoir killed, 425.00 to
$25.00, Lard, pure, w0011 p111is, 20
lbs. net, 31 to 321x(.
Live Stock Market
Toronto, Jan. 7,--Cbeict) henry
steers, $13,00 to $13 2u'; but oilers'
cattle, choice, tel L 50 to $12.$5; do,
good, 410.75 to $1.1.25; do, medium,
$0.60 to $0,75; do. common, $3,00
to $8.25; bulls, choice, 410.25 to
4310.75; do• medium bulls, :38.75 to
89.25; do. rough butts, $7.50 to 3.00;
butchers' cows, choice, $10.25 to
$10.75; do. good, $9.50 to $9.75;
(lo, medium, $8.25 to 48.50; do, eau=
neon, 47.00 to $7,,75; 510ckees, $7.75
to $10.50; feeders, 410.25 to $11.25;
canners, $6,00 to $5.85; nl,lkors,
good to choice, $30.00 to 4150,00;
do. coni. and med., 466.00 to $75.00;
springers, $e0.00 to $150.00; light
ewes, 40.00 to 210.00; yearlings,
8.1.3.00 to $13.50; spring lambs,
$15.00 to $!1'1.00; calves, good to
choice, $14.00 to $17.00; hogs, fed
tad •watered, $.18,00; do. weighed ot1
cars, 418.25; do, f.o.b, 41.7.00.
PRINCE 01' 'WALES
WILL VISIT U.S.
A. despatch from London says: ----Tb
is understood that Ring. George .mrd
Queen Mary assured President ',Wil-
son that the Prince,af Wales will visit
the United States during his coming
trip through the British Dominions,
according to 'a Paris despatch to Tho
Maki.
--`G--------
;� The Spirit of the Nurses.
tti purse who hall been on board
o torpedoed vessel, and who had
drifted about in an open boat for
801110 time, watts asked, in awstru0k
tones:
• "Weren't you frightened?" -
"No," sho laugll(d. "Wo sang every
comic song we could possibly think
of, and got the wounded soldiers ly-
ing 111 the boat to join in tho chor-
uses."
"To he trusted is a greater enm-
pllmont 1111311 'to be loved,"—Mae-
dalial(I
ifHERE'S
LEi
'
ER
ROh(CUP.`s
ee
e
t1 .cznl -
l0`t riEX'1 t
1.seetelq WILL
ee mom Lhaliibi lt-
FlE"5 Meier lhv `G�`t'O U -
1
' 0Lp Iil1" in VJEA6 1.11' •
liEfVY SOCteeg AND
'd001-Vemee til Tr111
i sZ[NCH1 S At 1fA teles 0
t.,UN171.t1l) up
I')11TC: ((3M 3‘ftA11.1-
1115 MUS`E DO
11Ei-L l -11r1 -
Wks`( GO `(0113
KkGP l'ifl441iy'
ANT Thlte Peer( -
Il.,.;f
WH'f DON'T si'�.','(,,1
LE.T 1"1111 C ,:.
9 Ct
Y
• 4,
lou3, uruast)noo neirgtea
crimes fu 101.1. They dill this al.
though there was ne battle fought
there.' They drove out the people by
bombing the city anis then robbed it
methodically.
"The Germans also requisitioned all
the factories' and machinery in Lodz,
which is the Polish Manchester, with
its vast cotton and woolen mills. Dur-
ing their entire occupation they cone
tinned to loot Lodz. Even last Sep.
teinbor they carried :away all the iron
plates and floorings from the factor-
ies."
Count Adam Tarlto',vsl;i von Tar-
now, Austro Hungarian representa-
tive in the 'Milted States at the time
diplornatie'relations were broken, said
that he felt keenly that the Allied
Governments had not recognized
Palantl.
Tho program of buts present Gov-
ernment for the division of lands and
the ownership of alines said all in-
dustrics, Count Taruowski thought,
would 1Ca41 to an economic stress iii
Poland, because it was too early to
put such plans into execution,
e---
F'AIT1H IN DREAMS
-levee ;raved by Following Dream
\% arnings.
The faith of (10111e people In dreams
is strikingly illustrated by the story
of Mrs, Fry, of Lewes, who. although
repeatedly informed by the War Of-
fice, the commending officer, and the
chaplain of lila company that her son
WAS killed fifteen months ago, stead-
fa>itly refused to believe he was dead,
simply because she drelunt he was
alive.
Ctttlstaltt drehms of her son buoyed
up her ]lopes, and elle expressed her-
self in no tray astonished when at
last she heard that he was a prisoner
in Germany.
Ten clays before the Titaulie dis-
aster the Icon. J. C. Middleton, vice-
president of the Akron -Canton Rail-
way in Ohio, (x110 had booked a pas-
sage on the ill-tated lister, dreamt, 110
saw the ship capsized in teid-oceaU
and n 1ot"o'f passengers struggling 411
the water. The following night he
dreamt extictly the same thing, and
fleis so irpressee him that he decided
to cancel his passage.
Mr. Melton senor, the famous 'war
correspondent, once told the writer
Mae-, on -two occasions While in Africa,
at the time of the'ulu War; he
dreamt he saw himself shot and wit-
nessed ''Rs 0031) funeral. Later, on
arrival et,Durban, he received a let+
ter from his -mother stating that she
had .had a preeiaely similar dream,
and bogging him not to go with a-
eertarill expedition. The colneidetwe
se ilnprassed hilts that he obtained a1
substitute, wile was killed with the
rest of the members of the expedition.
The C`z£Chc at41(1 Slovalt9.
The Czeelts and Slovaks are be
effect the same race, with only
Slight
cart
difference in laugu. rc , n
division between: them vats erected
only in 1807, when to die id0 the mer-
ies of the people. the Slovaks were:
put under Ilunga Han rule. The Caths
and Slovaks have . for 1u.tny
chafed under and resisted Auslliaht
and Hungarian rule. The Czechs 111-
habit Bohemia, Mortheavia 'lad Au trkant
Silesia, exown lands of the Austrianian
invite lyiug between Austris rLvt t1
ants the P'"-"._" - -
,...rr..r ax Carinae 0114)1102
' 1'l10 Slovaks 114)4 411 the 1(ppnr regio)
of Hungary, 4uljoieing t}:e (';x,111,
4110 911755 and sentliOtI,t, 'Clte (:,1.04)8
1410 0110 of the 2110141 hiFllly riviiizcrl
people h1 the •uurbi and ,•cer,oroirally
I the moot prre.perrel. of Ihr .5.1:.(,17143
0 ,
tlf the 100,0110,1 4)) (2('1'((1;• of
pc. ou';v 11)rvC otos 4ou.h llu,t 111,
Iltin3 tt (1)1,1 f1 n11 1, 11 r: `,eifi-
e:i?nt Poen anpl)1 , 1111 ;n l'l next
harvest without u)3 oft>