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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1919-2-27, Page 6ket of tie a'" 'VII orld..1 tl�tl $0,09 to SO M. teSOM.teal- osa3xma, toia•on .heePP, 19Xto $12 1 l.qo .01 trail,., $18.00 to $15,001 Droadstuffa, 'ionto, li'wb 26t• -w Manitoba Wheat—NO, 1 N•olthern, 22,224% • Na. 2 Northern, $2,21'1/4' No. it Nett'here, $2.171/4; No,. 4 evheet, $34,0k, ilk ..torp Verb Vf'ill10 n, Maluto'baioats—•Not 2 C,W„ 70%01 Nod C.W., 62%e; extra No. 1. feed, 1P'RANCE LO$T 46 SHIPS Pour Dreadnoughts and Five Online ars Anton. 3.10,000-TOta Naval Loss. A full list o:C French naval' losses in the ami, 'tt'93ie11 lite been ltttb>,ielsocl, analudle four battleships, the Bouvet, Oil%e; No, '1 feed, 00 ifro; Neo. 2 feed, Sntl'ren, Geolois and Dantorl; four GOt}1rc, do store Fort Williattl. armed eralsaiw•, the Leon Gambotta, M 1itolra barly---No. 3 C;Vt'. &3nb; Admiral Citurttao' 'C,leber 'and Depe2it No, 9,O.li'„ 78%c; rejected, 70%s!+; '1'itounea, and one xastr'eruiseu•, the ;Ned, r0 +' o i i stoi•o I' uz+t ii vlliaan .Annotion born ---No, 8 yellow, Clhatetrurermit, T7ret'e were, besides, shipment, boats and fourteen submarines lost. Chttiui° oa'i:s---No. 2 white, 68 to One of the submarines, the Durie, 07:c; No. 3 white 67 to 60e, according was refloated by the enemy, bub was to fmoights outelde. ,'' eubsoquen'tly recovered, T`he mitaor Ontario wheat—No, 3,Winter, rpev eliiPs tt=pith were, sink were five to lot, $2.14 to $2,22; No, do,.$6 auxi'liaty . crultaers, four- gunboats, Ito $2,19; No, 3 do„ .$2,07 to $2:15; $1,50; No, 4 yellow, tL.4'i, prompt fourteen • destroyers, eight torpedo 'I.m,b„ shipping points, according to freights; • Ontario wheat--No.'1 Spring, $2.09 to 22,17; No. 2 do,, $2.06 to $2:14; No. 3 do„, $2.02 to $2,10, f.o.b,, shipping points, according to freights. Peas—o, 2,;:$1.75 to $1.80, accord- ing to freights outside. • Barley—Malting, 75e to 800, nom- Buckwheat—No. 2, 95e nominal. •:ay0—T1o. 2 $1.20, nominal. Manitoba Jiour—Government stan- dard, $10.85 to $11,10, Toronto. Ontario flour—War quality, $9.75 in hags,. Toronto... and l4Iontreal, prempt shipanen't. ,} • 1N}lifeed—Co'r.lots, delivered Mon- treal freights, hogs included. Bran, $40.23'per ton; shorts, $42.25 per ton; good feed flour, $3.255 to $5.50. per Hay—No. 1, $20 to $21 per ton; mixed, ,$18 to $10 per ton, track To- ronto. ' Straw --Car lots, $10 to $11 per ton, ear lots, Country Produce—Wholesale. Butter—Dairy, tubs and rolls, 36 to 38c; print=, 40 to 41e. Creamery, fresh made solids, 51c; prints, 52c, , Eggs—New laid, 43 to 44c. Dressed poultry—Sluing chickens, tralizod plants, and _soon India—the 36 ; uck32e• nos, 32 ; to keys, 27 to aboriginal home of the cane—will 30e; ducklings, ^u2c; turkeys, 40e, squabs, doz.,, $4.50; gease, 25c, doubtless take a place as a sugar ex - Live poultry Roosters, 20e; fowl', 24 to 30c; ducklings, lb„ 355c; turkeys, 35c: spline' chicicens, 26c; geese, 18c, seventy-two aubmaxine chasers, one sloop and aevon small craft. The logs in tonnage was 110,000, against 550,000 tens for England, 70,- 000 tons for Italy, and 17,500 tons for the United States.' INDIA'S SUGAR AND LOT'I'ON New methods a Refining Sugar Will Insure Large tlxport Trade Sugar making is one of. India's most ancient industries, but the loss of three-fourths of the sugar value of the cane by use of pritni.tivo mach- inery and the muddy character of the product, because religious pre- judices prohibit the use of animal charcoal For relining; have. confined India's sugar to local consumption, says the World Outlook. With nearly three million naps under cane, pro- ducing considerably more than a third of the world's total, India never- theless exports no sugar. On the contrary, in addition to her own stu- pendous production, she spends $25,- 000,000 for sugar annually. With new methods of refining, there is now a atoady development of cen- po'rling land commensurate with the size of her cane crop.. During the last Official year the • Ciheeee-New; l:tige, 28 to 281,ae; cloth woven from India's home grown twins, 283/4 to 29e: triplets, 29 to ;ootton sud; hame-spun yarn cold 293rac; Suiten in, to 30c;, old, large, have belted the world forty times �0P o toes, Oata os, o. ,Or around. Yet this amazing amount Potatoes•—Ontarrns, f.o.b. trach To- ronto, car lots, 96e. gave only a scant five yards per per - Beans — C'auadian, handl-picked, son, and this in a country where the i,usltel, $3.Z0 to $4.00; princes, $3.00. climate makes .cotton cloth the one Imported, hand-picked, Burma or In- usable material for most of the peo- dien, $4,00; Iimas, 15c. p1e. IToney-•-Exi•racted• elovex: 5 -Ib. tins J media already bas 114,200 looms, (8to 29c lb.; 10-1b. 'tins, 'L7 to 28c; the tins; 24 to 261, e• engewlreat, more then half of which' are r 'n r0_ b: tin, 19 to •20a. tomb: 16 -oz,, Bombay Presidency alone.. Hundreds $,4.50 to $5,00 doz.; 12 -oz., 2)1.60 to $4.00 doz. - 1laple products --.Syrup, per gallon, 32,a5 to $2.05; sugar, lb., 27 to 28c. Provisions—Wholesale, Smoked meal's—Hams, medium, 36 Ib 58a' do., heavy, 30 to 32c; cooked, industry into a new development. 49 to 51c; rolls, 31 to 82c; breakfast bacon, 41 to 45e; backs, plain, 44 to • 450;'C boneless, cl ured meats--- Loo ng clear ridden, 28 BOOK ON THE BRITISH NAVY to 29c• clear bellies, 27 to 28e. tills, tierces, 27 to 271E e; Lord Janine Throws Light on the print27%• to, 28c; palls, 27% to 281 ; Battle. of Jutland s, 28% to 29. Compound tierces; 253 to 25%c; tubs, 25'34 to 26%e; Lord Jellicoe's book on the Grand pails, 26 to 261/4c; prints, 271/ to Fleet, which was published recently, 27%. dwells. on the dangers to which it was exposed when it was of thousands of hand looms of home workers are as yet uncounted. The cotton mills employ nearly+• 300,000, and the cotton ginning, cleaning and pressing mills more than a third as many additional workers. The present stress is pushing native Montreal Markets. short of cruisers. and destroyers and Montreal, Feb. 25—Oats, extra No. with bases defenceless owing to sub - 1 feed, 77%C. Flour, new standard marines, mines and tropedoes. Ile b"rade,, $11.10 to $11.20. Rolled oats, points out that the German sea fleet ag's 10 lbs., $4.15. Bran 340.25. yPossessed 88 destroyers compared Ha, Shorts, $4No. 2to, $45. Moutllie, $64. with the Grand Fleet's 45. +It is re- Hay, per ton, car lots, $23. Choose, finest Easterns, 24 to 25c; vealed that owing to the submarine butter, choicest creamery. 52?C•.to 53; menace the Grand Fleet moved to eggs, selected, 50c; eggs, No. 1. stock, Lough Swirly and returned to the '47c; potatoes per hag, carr lots, $1.75; North Sea only when the Scapa Flow dressed hogs, abattoir killed, $24; anchorage was rendered reasonably lard, wood pails, 20 lbs, net, 25 to safe. Lord Jellicoe says that neither in 181.1 nor 1916 did the British mar - Live Stock Markets, gin of superiority justify hint in Toronto, Fub• 25.— disregarding the enemy's torpedo Qhoiea heavy export fire: The position gradually improv - ethers $16 00 $17 50 ed sifter 1916, espociatly as light Do, good 14 50 15 50 ;cruisers and destroyers forces with Choice butcher steers 12 50 13 00 the Grand Fleet 'increased steadily Bntelters' cattle- afttair the battle of Jutland, consider - choice 1200 12 50 ably reducing the clanger of successful �Ilo, good •... 10 10 50 11 25 Do,• common n 8 50 9 00 Bulls, . choice 10 50 11 00 'Dn, medium bulls. 8 75 9 00 Doeon 'h bulls -'7 50• 8 00 Butcher _l cows,choice el WICe lO 25 i' L 00 ...Do.0050 9- 25 9 JO Do, u medt'm 8 25 8 50 Do,comtr n ort . 7 25 7 75 Stocers 8 00 10 50 Feedees • • • 10 50 12 00 Canners and cutters 5 50 7 00 Milkers, good. to choice 90 00 140 00 Do, Cons med. . 60 00• 7500 Springers � 1 9' neo0 14 00 Light o'cve t g s Son 10 00 Yearling's 12.00 12 '50 Spring g las L s 14 00 15 50 Calves, Rodd to choice 15.50 176 7 Ho,R sf ed and' watered ocl 17 50 Do, off eats 17 70 Ito, fob. 16 50 Montreal, -Feb. 25—Choice hogs, $17,50 to $1.8.00 per 100 18 00 18 25 17 00 select pounds wolghed off.' cars, Choice steers, $11 to $12.75; good, steers, $5.00 to $11.00; butchers' lsu'llls, $8.50 to $1,0.50; others $5.50; butehers'•cows, 29,00 to $11.00; poorer, prides, $0,00 to $9.00; canners tortta torpedo c}ts,. w}tilo the inclusion of the K plats of submarine made it pro- bable that the enemy suffered more severely front suUmarine attacks than the British. sh Regarding- 1918 Lord JellicoeY a s s "The position o o i ' s t was assured and p r t we could have afforded to take risks which in 1916 would have been most unwise. If the German., Fleet had come out to battle a terrible punish- ment awaited e it. • One-third of theo b oh is devoted to the battle of Jutland. Summing up the lessons of this fight, Lord 4 .Ielhcoe dwells on' the danger in- volved volved in leaving ochance too much t '1 ' tc o becauto our` fleet was the one o e surd only factor vital to the existence of the Empire, and, indeed, to the allied ed cause.” A Good Law. Poe every tree chopped down in Nor- way the law requires three saplings to be planted. 1 In• the Far North—Canadian and American railway 'Seen replacing a p ere of track and a bridge south of Archangel, I1assia, 'which had been destroyed by the Bolsheviks. CANADA'S SHARE NAVY MANN1NC NAVY Admiral Story' Commends Bear- ing and Conduct of Over-- `. 4,000 Canadians. A despatch from Halifax' says:— Canada's proud batt little known hart in manning the navy for protection of her own shores was uncovered a little bit hero by Admiral W. Oswald Story, wito is in command of the North Atlantio squadron of the Brit- ish navy, and is stationed at Halifax. The occasion was a dinner by the City Council and the Board of Trade to the party ofvisiting newspapermen from the Western provinces. Accord- ing to the enthusiastic testimony of 1,348,120 tees, were launched in the this grim 021 seadog, marc than 4,000 Unitd Kingdom. This. is 584,033 Canadians took part in this work. tons below the record of 1918, 'hut it r I regret yon'did not come here is 185,223 tons mare than in 1917, and sooner,, said the Admiral, and see 739,885 tons more than in 1010, ; What Canada's naval -Work was. On United I{:ingd•pm there coast we have had over 100 vele-Outside the were of the navyoperating, maimed by were launch 3 1,Lon • merchant ves- sels 4,000 and 6,000 Canadians. eels of increase of These cent, as The service these men have. rendered show rae inereusc cf 18.1 per cent, rt. ecinpared with 1917, and are 2,698,.595 life, Toxins of -husky dogs have also to Canada has been great. 7.'hey have Loi higher than in 1913. Thu United been spectrally sent from Canada for had to man small ships, And live A States, Japan and Canada 0 -ere res- transport work, tlsough the ideal rein- life,to which they were not accustom- poitsible for 02 per cent:. of the total deer, which roam in herd, over the ed in any way. They have borne Lapp country, are chiefly used for these hardships cheerfully; and their output abroad. CANADA ADDS TO SHi BUILDING 1918 Out/nit 0f Yesaels Greater Than Any Previous Year. A despatch from London says:— Lloyd's annual summary 01! mercantile shipbuilding 'throughout the world in 1018 shows that the mercantile output of the allied and neutral countries for that year wits 5,447,444 tons. This figtu•e has never previously been ap- proached. It is,, more than 02 per cent, higher than the ogcput for :1013, the record year prior to the war, which included 'Germany anil Austria- Hanga.ry, these countries 'being ex- cluded from the present compilation. Throe hundred and ane vessels, of. WEATHER COLD IN NORTH' RUSSIA But Health of Canadi;ins is Good. and Wtnae1ivpw,Serv A. despatch from London says:— From Cho latest arrivals fsom the Murmatn coast it is leawted that 011e Arllietl troops of the North ztussian expeditionary force 'aro 113 good health conditions and the military authori- ties aro doing everything to alleviate the discomforts of -lie„ extreme cold, combined w'itlt the Are�tic 24-hour )light, The tentpe?rattui'u was neatly Federation. 40 degrees below zero to Sammy, and, Tho order of the British Em ire only throe. to 'oar hours of .daylight during the month at Port Murmansk be conferred on Capt. W. 1•i, which is 200 miles within the Arctic circle, The troops a"i o Mostly accommo- dated with wood -lived 'log barricades or call'iipsihlo rums, fitted with sleep- ing bunks and Russian stoves. Wel.: OUB entertainments age frequently organized. Winter 'sports, especially eleki g, also iouglt shooting, are ire- du7.gesl in. There are comparatively few oases of fr'ostbi'te owing to the heavy (Supply of clothing. The North Russian allied troops are garrisoning 350 miles of the Mur - man .railway. Supplies for outposte aro despatched from tho railhead, so'snetim•es 200 miles distant, by rein= deer sledges, Which are often driven by the women folk. Two of tine latter have received' the Military Medal for 'gallant eanchict in repelling enemy raids on food convoys. Murmansk is an ice -bee port, but FRO : l S i' " COAST 1{'r1:N 't'i:Ili . W.11ST1*ltN l'I:101'I Ai /3 DOING, I'Regrcas of the Great West 't'e$ Lw a Petr I'oInteri Paragraphs, The appointment of A pada secre- tary-tvcastucr has boon decided upoon by the eamrades of the Great War at Victoria, Mr. II, Charlsworth, of Vietoria, has been appointed the new president of the British Columbia- Toachers' Lattice, of Victoria. Ile went over- seas with the 47th 'Elattaliqt'k from Vancouver three:yeara age, '. ' A company known as the. Canadian Siberian Exploration and Dovgloll•• ment Co., Limited,• has reeeived its charter in Vancouver. Miss Grace Hopkins, of Hopkins' Landing; I'Iowe Sound, died of influ- enza anti meningitis at Vancouver General Hospital. Lieutenant' Harold Owen, son of Mnjor the Rev, C. C. Owen, of Vic- teria, is' credited with having fleet originated trench raids. . The medical health officer in the Point Ginty district has requested that schools be kept, closed owing tb theepidemic of influenza. A shipment or three carloads of beef cattle forwarded from Vernon to Vancouver, realized to the shipper' the forces at Archangel are . cam- $0,500• pletely' out off from the outside world Lieutenant A. G. Imlay, Vancouver, for six month's of the year. Inter- of the R.AA.F., has returned dome. communication between the two Splendid results are being secured fomes. commanded shy Gen. Ironside by the Great War Veteran's Aseo- is only possible in' winter time by elation in the obtaining of positions aeroplane. Major Sir Ernest Shackle- for returned men at Vancouver. Lon is attached to Gon. 1MMaynard's Corporal C. 11. Powers, of Van - headquarters as en adviser on. Arctic couver, was accidentally killed in equipment, while at special force of Franco after four year's' service. , t.anaddart officers and non-lcommis- The deportation of alien enemies sioned officers, a''11 experienced in has been unanimously proposed by Klondy'ko conditions, is attached to the Bullard UrSionis'ts' A stlocialioit, the forces as instructors In Arctic V turouvor. Funds ar" being solicited from bus- iness men t Vancouver to build up conduct throughout has been irre- proachable. I regret we have to part, as we will 'demobilize on Monday. I regret you did not come earlier, so that you could have let the people of Canada know the splendid service they have rendered."' CANADA'S EXHIBIT ARP.: ES IN TIME A despatch from Paris says:— There has been some apprehension lest -the Canadian exhibits for the Lyons trade fair would not arrive in time, but the ship contait'ting them docked at Ilavre on Sunday, and they will be' carried to the fair ground by a fast train. With the opening"of the fair, on March 1, the exhibits will be in position, and there will be in at- tendance representatives of Canadian industries and enterprises who, are beginning to arrive. A Model. The newly elected M.P. was opening a bazaar at Mudton. He was in thb middle of what he considered a most telling speech when ho noticed one he took to be the local ,pressman sketch- ing hint, After the ceremony he went up to the man, and said: "I—er—believe—er—aw—you were sketching me—what? Isn't that so?" "Er --yes:" said the pressman. "What—er—newspaper do you re• present?" asked the conceited 141.P. "No newspaper," said the man with the sketch -book. "I design comic post- cards." Allies Must..Revictuai Germany, Says British 1iieslon title purpose. No Tinto to Count Three. The Automobile Nett Solos for Tires, 1''ew anetanlsts veal'kzc dirt ro'troalt-• Ing, w411 ad.cl many miles to the lite Of a tire, This applies, of course, only to tiros that 1ta'y'e received hoed care. 1.1 the tire has :been run uncberin0ated, the inside 'doll will he w'eakroned and perhaps rim -cut, while ov'erloAding has nnuolk the same 'result. It the old tread has creep outs, cans- . ed by glass or sham stones, the fabric or carcass of the tire rs.probably in. jur'ed,The vulcanizer or trepndr man can tell if a tire is too badly injured to pay to retread. Retreading has proved to be a good investment, and often mane several thousand miiee more l'i'fe to the tire. Racing drivers, 'who in the 'past would never thunk of'usin'g any but a new tire, have in many cards been i a:xt'g' letreadod tiros, ami find them entirely satisfactory, When Your Stericr Slips. Starter 'motors end generators, when the comantitatcrs and brushes are scratched, pitted' or lelaekened with dirt and grease, can be taken apart to be cloted. In- diel rsti; rg. it pays to be careful, for .eerie care less move m'ry moan great tanager and a Mgt repair 2111, But anyone Who is handy with tools can do thi wot'k himself, provided he sure tlu' cleaning of the commutator and batistes anal the re,,eatin• of 'tire Tat- ter are the only things to be done to make the system .operative uneg mare, If the brushes are tp '1Je reseate,1 and the commutator trued dawn until eehooth and. clean, i may be nooee- 3ary to remove the entire unit fr:nt the car and dismantle it. I'dCCto'h de- pends upcn the spate open at the top through winch to work. First of all, the battery mist he disconnected Rent the unit. Then the brushes nmet b:; taken out and cleaned. Next comes the commutator, that bright copper eylin1er divided_ into evetiens on which .the brushes ride. If it be.dirty and oil;;', it is likely that it is elan pitted and s'eratc',hed from the two,. of the current in burn-tg on ,to 1- 'When free from all oil mei i otl r ntlw industries. clot after r'c'aning with V. rag satur• The 'Royal 'Northwest Mounted lid v 'tri ,Other lie o+ 01 g11•3°11", Police are to be stationed at Vin -ill ill beavidunt atbo-lt t i:t, sut,.t:e eonver in the near future.i• scratched or pittc, These rat - The Vancouver ;jitney by-law bac elms and pits must 1, rem tel. IP been upheld and jitneys are legally ,het are deep un tit rwie !rr prohibited at Vancouver.muL,tor;,, tl e anti tote hal best be 1 emvvecl and placed in a !lithe to be -- salving group of negro soldiers wero re-. Owing to the overcrowding of Van- trued down gist croup,".t to remove A despatch from Paris says:—The !lcivin instruction In the ilu'owihtg of couver schools, a't•,vo-sass}en syslcin need for revictualing German, is •r,h' rg At ono they were.to ulI each clay has been proposed, Pram 8 the faults. It -ery t' %" dame:: l really urgent, according to the report t' firm . n y ! •this peope.ly comes tinier a s +.c'1 the ; .nt t• zee hr two, e gre hack the to 1t and front 1 to G, v.ut.,rtan :; job, and it Shot..d be taken just made by a group of fourteen Bri- aria; au, trued, throw the grenade. The It was A great shock to n razor. ' captain explained to the nervous ue- circle of friends at Vnnconeee to hear to 'dile for attl:ention. groes that five seconds would elapse of the death of Lieut. -Col. IT. Dud- A sr::t uei c see trill "qui" ibetw•een the pulling of Inc pin and the well, D.2.0., C.BI•G., Croix de Guerre, only a emailL amount to .be taken off, of pneumonia, at : t• John, N.D.anti in that case the handy' car -owner t Lic aid air is to bo ,one of the can it himself. If the use of a lathe chief t commodities turned out in a is nut'ut needed, get the finest s- end new iudusi.iy to be established in paper made. but a ribbon o. the vvey shortly. pater the width of the commutator There. is reported to have beat :t trot maul the• sanded side over incl around the surfuee with e ba.,l, and stench increase in the mining indus furt}7 movement, making surd all the nee of Vancouver Island :dut•ing 1018. surface is treated aka. `Vico ,l:m" Representatives of Lite R.C. Fruit and ;the commutator is free of the Growers are opposing any increase in scratches and pits, rer,'at the brush,;; express rates. by replacing them in their holler+ 141r. Joint Redman hoe 1,t:•ts elected •, 1,1 pull in between them and the president. of the Ifiuniuo;s Farmers' mors' commutator a ribbon of the sand - Institute for the ensuing year. paper with the sande:} ride n...;. to cif fedi the brushes. Owing to a fresh outbreak enza, throe schools at Ladner, Me., per ho stone back -and -forth t:19•:0 - have been closed for several wicks, lticitt will again be ucces dry, only GERM AN SURRENDER The Somas•Cou oil have ptu...husetl t Victory bond far $t 000. „il,bott of ,wdpaprr true to 11,o c I1.'.e A despatch from London says:—On Carl A. Nascat, of �l lct;,roce, has behalf of the Government 11 has been returned home after serving' at the of the 'voulntut1Ita seance tat the brushes will have a curvature d t announced in the House of Gilmutcas, front for over two yyctu'' their seating surfaces to c,ntt•orm to. its answer to a question, that the..fol- The net cost of maintaining the that of the commutator, ''hen done and you beeht t t •'t•• tieh officers who visited various parts of Germany recently for the purpose of conducting a special official in- vestigation of the situation. The explision. "Yon must: not throw too officers deelarur that the eeulltry is soon," he said, "or some German is living on its capital as regards Food likely. to pick it tip and tots it back. Don't haler it too long. or it may blow your arnt off."' Then he counted. "Ono." A little negro on the end jerked the pin, poised the grenade an instant, and threw it as far as be could, "What's the trouble there?" asked the captain. ".Didn't: I tell yon to hold that until the count of three?" • "Why, man." said the t e�tt eolemu- g swain' supplies, and that ei'therr famine of Bolshevism—probably both—will en- sue before the next harvest if outside help is not forthoomin'g. The nee,;l for fats is especially urgent, INDIA'S CONTRIBUTION TO THE WAR A despatch from Deihl says:—Ili ly' "Ah' could feel that ilii opening the Legislative Council, in my hand." Lord • Chelmsford, the Viceroy, sa,td that India's contribution to the Alites —' ^--- included 21,000,000 sterling worth of BRITISH G'E'T 5,000 GUNS hides, 200,000 tons of railway sleep- BY GEl ors, 1,800 miles of railway track, 299 Tocomotives, 5,800' vehicles, 42,000,000 articles of military clothing, 1,250,- 000 combatants and non-combatants. GERMAN PROPOSES NATIONAL MOURNING A despatch from Weimar says:— Telegrams of protest against the sign- ing of the new armistice are pouring into the National As'enbly, and one from Berlin demands that a period of national mourning be ordered, notch car' mast be taken to keep the armies had been surrendered: to the British up to February 9: Heavy guns, 2,500; field guns, 2,500; machine grata, 25,000; trench mortars, 3,000; airplanes, .1,700; loco- motives, 4,005; motortruchs, 1,220. Up to Fobru'ary 14 the Germans had surrendered to the British 126,- 826 freight cars, Fil dd,,,,,� `r'y�'Y 111 "� v'tx�>~� •It�,T•'F'.,lpt�l..•.i e - • d ' S .+t 1 .i' __ • ._ , � � 1, tom - .o4Y7 ' 8 .� ■ �1 1 rr 1�t �■ 7 11111! {' •�� f� �C � sn � F g "I ' .POLAND q' II LZ s- ;III 1 . 1 ' a ctro _> a" 'la i'r0 tt a stA GRH¢CE e l , r� l" 111114111 . u ,� .l! i �1 .a cill!A1ANR•Nt ■ C . I' �/.�{ ' • yII •V IIFj �' j� v r 'fat` i � ■� r ■ re ■ C� , y c C � rr■ z�lrm■ e=3: ■ ■�■C r _ IIM u■ III pc r �I illi L;I:�u ntli ail) ,.<., t+.�8,v." � , � ■r CCry`L�i ��'" I•.• if III"r � if if , . ,,, 61. +./ /. ._.. r' c.a dl r, i-„ �1. i r lam ti oa5 ^,ty '+,� `, {« ,. ., ?r r�L ' �., es ..... , ,:i, •, ,i, ki f:Y , 6'ii r.� °., _ _ ' °°y I I:; 44 ( , f' .Ii�M . ;;� t�r c' , iTtt r t:Rr� C P ■ i Iiii i ■ r ■ -Mall ■pC t` C�� � In �i �■ C C iiiii T 4• p �■ aaII "C r � , 2 - Car .CCC r r■r � ■■■r _ ■ ' p ■■■■ ■■ o■ 1. ep' r +i.1"a rl r �r on • r �ii y �CC III.PIM ��� CC 9 Ili Ili l� �' pp C C C r ■ .1r ur i C 0 `, le ■ r r�r■ CC . i� ■r■ii � e, ■� io■IM �6la a .9 ei, � . � � o ■e.1.R- p a ■ 99 r 8�jr �ri��i� 1i ■■t t � rrA ■ �1111rrIF s r■ r�G to .Areas of t to World B •ought Ur der t le Leap a of Nations.—'The tert:'tories of t to eatioms whose rep- resentatives have signed tie covenant for the League of Nations are shown on this m.ap in bare c and those of the nations which have not yet signed in white. This is a map on Mercator's projection and, while areas between identical parali'el�% of latittule are shown Sit correct proportion with each other, there as progressive exaggeration in area. south. and north of the equator: -..14:9, ?" 3lEro .' .eiVe (fa T72IE1 'Et.°52'MEZ2,E'. during• 1018, so far as the citizens «+• parts, are concerned, was $80,121. The total assemble the make s,tr- •,t cost Wali 2115,548. clunks or drops of old grease do net The delegates of the Women's In- attach theutscltc,, to the neWiy il,i stitnteconvention atNew Westminster t lied cemmut.ltor; and lirushes, eise visited Lhe Colony Farm andtiteRoyal iho sante trouble will return tc _h Columbian Military Hospital. perhaps with les, n1 ens iii L :,o Lieut. D. G. McLeod, of Vat -icon- make sore that et et y plc, e c c 1 t It Iver, died of donlite pnetunOnip at to its pt'oiter 1,'.-''c in the _o..t.+... Montreal while est route from .Ans- trite, where lie had been a prisoner fol' six stout1.i.5. Where Cottrtecy is Wasted The Beebe ii rtiwt.ye it Bothe, incl •doze not undo: stand being tit deet lite Health of the Hair. a gentlemttn, Fay:: 1. Lu"do cr" in The poisons left ilx illc :stn by the. ,the 1 venlig Stnncl n'tt. ll hen et+r influcnze. seem to hero cs, i red los; of ,tel ctivah'y detachment,. putt :t1 ci e �' 311 t I found 1 h� patients, •'r fE many of l 'alt with m. tet t h' Fo hair i Germany they V i+tV , illi l the 1 e build t t • r •r r 1 til' lust 1 t , r • : heti is,h 1 i<r )themselves at night, idly. lit t t ''111 n171.• 111 the is1 s andfar c,. nisi last fand 1 and100511, c (1010, t wOL and v twice t day, t , 11 I . r,ca] i 1. t :forage. sage end sn 1 +s of lead t l" tl Ili. 1'C F t the i The Ita11 t,llouhl 1'p -washed f1' tt a nt'}'. Illy would then talk the local anth- too, even though a greet de:11 or. hair c ome s 0111 t at each ch Washing. 7 t Le i tc it usat u s will' e ei y e e utt c g f e ! rfwd Possible trestore the hit -ilblit;incl foraNget, azl 'act'lile] p' fm ' keeping the scrap tietn.ThO tubbing tiatr:Noe thingwag 1i -roamed, othfefrhit,tsoculdl Ccold w•Ie1taa,lra -n'aYcieannl• 1L'u+uelvtchod1-dll Lnnlointlu g.�h if1s? atslamcaiL' Actatoo. .At least five wend , 1hsh 1rtlr'mF neutrals „toti,m sagenight and. -morning i 1 t 1tl.\lsC, othis c Ptice -am Itemise thinly against the lite t.rueaLs to the ,echos,„ .hey en you come into wh y 'dl • b+tt ,.utll 1 111 , getelan bold, and, e head, tot e th.l 1 sit* at :Burgo- s() • nC the >; ,,� ..r td f, lac town or ill va1d. 1 Lava the scalp bon act forward . silex h i i twn him that n • and tell so ihcii it is loo r, and nu P educe master, n that n•c;low < elime A good tete to use• lit night t, made of forty-five grans of I:mese in, oue ti O101 of gly•, cerise and onongh cr diluted 01001101 to fill a six•onnce bottle. A druggist will put this up for yyotl. Faithfulness to this treatment is very necessary. ISOM P44Ltg144t•WIL.t, d a -rimy tea-rimy ThtCltd TGti4RPitr;- P�"'1l-ij'j1 OD YOU `roMORROW (DOWN 4 N r�Gl.tS 11 "?fir .,4+, R"J'UTY Ir twRTOWhi E. 4Ra ATTEND n mi RE RD•0 4 AL:L l'HE tN .1- 0,,,,o4? UN brit. rite. OF ' �— or) �, 1' SAY • 3M1Ttt DON'T L'ieiseta ME, • i HAVE. ' OU E'tn`a dFt . 113tJ t 9 AT HON"- l(i __ • ._ , � � 1, tom - 4Y 4OLl.Y' � SHE LOGttIN' � AT bit. S vtt Me ha ,r6\ - ( n � t {�.,t,; ° ' ,• ter s'., � o' S, :�.. i u ' i iC, ., Z =, _ ,^ -..�, - - �' ?4' .. �ar'N • 3NIrH •ij.i, 0t f�T TWIT M r. TIN' 84Ety`S POtSi tN The O T TOWN SHOULD 1'4E• :1,1,,,,,,,l'il,:',.,1.,,,,,,H1 ''_ta .,. -y '�w�'tl� fLir= ° f } :li+?t''!„y . il:, i.7� I , rJ•+ ,.t•+ .. 111. �. _ !n,=".� Y°31 . u 1al r. .. ,•,: IJ t I ,- 1 I' �/.�{ ' • yII •V IIFj �' d.: ,:- t ISI ! i • • 1 -Q liph 1. 1(l .Ir- ; d'-`l� WSsr 5. 1” a,,.,.t,..,.-"O 111 / iii' .ur>h;E;'nl ° - 1 t' «'„a I iP; lae 1' JiI •.' ll{� 1a Jirf i.tA�I':I I. U�n,°' ,• ' I{'. Ao,"�'� ,.c+.. „ ' ,+• i1..I, •'l', ,f� ,� i.�cn.. ,t ,7yi.. "•,. ,p.^s�.J �, , .Y. "'4{�'t^•'. ••k. �Ml ' )�i ^!"'' ( e'F �,' es I ..- 1 r . , •- ^_-.+•1” ^( t� w•n,r+:,,,,e;r-�,II 0 }. a ��� jl '•rzttenOrtixm,YMaM.'•mmriw«tlaiw, III I; .1 fII 'II {i{I�:,:�I .._:..•• II II' I (flt i,: 4, III iIt P II aJo r �I illi L;I:�u ntli ail) o I ' '� 1, ,;,, �°i/ niw Ili1 .{t . tl� �r'a,,. S. '1L ii rw«,,.�•n'w�+.._««..... 1,:, ..;Jx..I III , �JnI'. il, �i{l:l u {:" i ��'" I•.• if III"r � if if , . ,,, 61. +./ /. ._.. j'" , .. , `- �•"''•� .. ) kn F. �qI' �It.:: 1 a l • 'I�t ;�. 11j1 !, I I X o . p.YnwwttA✓.VMw,.w,:.w,wen,.:+'_..._:-.... I i ,,5a I':'t I,�t,, .;YFIIq,JIC�; I,., r II II I. ;-s ,, l ill ','1'' '•t,s1 ; ?h, ¢. ,,�, h�•'M1, is. r gI ,�• ,. ;pa. l',k •.. - 1 '' ���q ..',"^'"'p y dc�Ib I w^s'"... V ��'x{{'�'' `w to oo ...: ,,, _„y..,:. •.-..,r+.w♦,,'s,d"1d'♦W:" _ot, 1r;. •f', ,: *.,• r ti oa5 ^,ty '+,� `, {« ,. ., ?r r�L ' �., es ..... , ,:i, •, ,i, ki f:Y , 6'ii r.� °., _ _ ' °°y I I:; 44 ( , f' .Ii�M . ;;� tl�Il,, II III I,/. N :, • I' I t 1 55p. : '� .. w, _ ISl.4PMM�i,wVM.w:a,wuti+,.r+.../•.,:..uwur...+N✓..w„•:...,,•w.+..,e+ri7m1.w:.:4..t.u.,iiRr:iter . r hours so much food and forego must be delivered at yotir headquarters," The Boche understood that teeatt,tent at once, and the stuff was promptly produced and a roeedpi; given for the. genie, to be redeemed at current rates. • HOSTILITIES WIT'II' POLAND SUSPENDED BY GERM•S.NY A despatch from Basle says: _ •Ail official statement from Berlin says: "Conforming with the convention pro; longing the armistice, hostilities with Poland. wet n suspended on lite morn- ing of February 171" 1114 Miles by Ail With 12 Tons A Handley -Page aeroplane, with four 860 11,-p. Rolls-Royce engines flew from Belfast to Sheffield, 104 miles, in 214 hours, with a total weight of twelve tons on hoard, in- eluding the crew of seven, and a half a ton of baggage. "This is the big:. gest load ever carried, by au frost' Ireland to England," said an otileie of the company. "Luncheon was tnkely on board by the passengers, one a$ whom, a pilaf, relieved the regular' pilot; while he was eating." 1t'9ten r nir<tty at n set away, put fc,v bits of butter on top, 1,,t0a13 ripe i4orntilnd` sof .ay 0.00tc