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The Wingham Advance, 1919-01-09, Page 2- i e leer. --"etertentreesseetetesseseasseeseeseseast Lesson. IL January 12, 1919. Wawa the Leader of Israei,----Eeoaee3: 1-4: 17. Comnientary.---1. Mom at the burning Watt (3:1-3). I. leept the flock-etioeett had contiutted in the serviee of his father-in-law. Jethro, or Reuel, taking care of his flocks fortY yea. Priest of atletiane-Jethro vete the heittlaer bte tribe iend by virtue of tbat feet waS its Prie5t, having charge a itti religious affairs. to the back- sid# a the deeert--"To the beck a the wiliderness."-R. V. Among Orientals Metre:nit was east, the back west, the right south and the lett mirth. Inoun- teen': of God-adt was called the moue.. 444 ef God, erolatlay from the fact tbea Ood later revealed leitnself there Wet owe r said glove' to Moses and Ilia people. Iloreb-The natant Wea to a group of moUntains of which Sinai was. me,. 2. the angel of the Lord- lier) Ives a Visible manifestation of God, flame Of fire -Fire was erten Weal to srotholize the divine presence (Gee. 15:17; Ileb, 12: 29): a buah-A braMble, probably the acaeia which is coxinnon in that region. The trunk sontetdraes reachee a diameter of two feet: was not consUrned.---This extra- orclihaty sight served both to attract Idoetashattention and to prepare him for the fevelatien soon to be made. 3. 1-14 Seext sight -A fire in the deeert would "ordiaarily eorteeme all the bushes within reaeh. /I. 3The call of 'Moses (3; 449). 4, when the Lord saw -The event is, de- scribed es if God were a Mail, who smelt wait until Moses actea, before he oould know what he would do. out ot thentidat•of tact busa-aelefivah Wae there clothed In a oarment of name. Vose$. afteeee-The relmtitien of the 'tame indicates the 'importance of the cominunleation that Moses. wee to re- ceive (see Gen. 11:11; 40:2). here ant I-Altb.ough the 'manlier of the cams municatioa te, not known, Mese! un- deretoott that hewaspersonally ad- -dressed. 5. put off thy sloe -It was the custom. ancidntly inetbe East; rout is still, to remove the satulals up. on appeettehing an important r)erson- age. holy ground -The divine pre- sence ,rendered the place sacree, and it shottldalitt'ObServed as such by every -reverence. ra, am the God a tby fa- ther. ete,-Thy tord'hhus 'introduced aims& to Moses as the God whom his forefathers had served, and who had guided and preserved hie people thus far. ,. le the afflictioe. of ma. people- Godliadaieen their afflictions and had heard their groattinge, yet the Orate Purpoeo of their sojourn in. Erept was Only now fulfilled. They were kept a separete People,and they lied not be- : ccianti'corrupted fo the Egyetians. task 'haettirs-eGverseas, slave-drivers. 8. I ani Y 'come clown -Representing his dwelling-pliciaas heaven, God comes down to uedertalte fer his oppreffeed People an earth. bate a, gocid' hland and a lerae-Tho land of Goshen had Inconel crowded with the rapidly hi- ereasiog ,race of the Hebreets, and the land oreal)bAti,'Svhich. was to be their P0eaeosIon, was large. flowing with milk ana boney--Canaan was a fruit- ful land', le was"well,acloptee' to graz- ingettherefOre the supply of Milk and ether Prod.ucts of Alreir bores woula be abundant. The land 'radii abounds in Iteeer both wild and domestieated, and ;Teat stores of honear -are produted. Ga.nitaetRee-teInhabitents of the sea- coast each Jordan valley. Hittites- The'pagible' elefellbtg north -of Phealcia and -Lebanon, Anweiteaetavellera in tbe ineuntains eest and 'west of the aordene 9. the Egyefians oppress them -In "Pettal Sle,very, they had been eraploYed ine reeking "brecks, wed he great public *prks, 10, unto Plea,- jeaoh-Probahly Menentah, the son of atanteseed11. •- • III. Obsta,cleet to be evereome (3. 11- 4'; 17).• 11. 'Who ant 'I --a-, alosea Pleaded his itabliity to perform eci etreat a workk. Forty yew*" tell in the 'wilder - nese, he may have thought, had unfit- ted ailetato tand before tb.e. migitty Pharaoh. This was the first of four objectiome that Moses raised to his appdlietineut. He had a proper- -Nett/ of the' gfeatneee of •the task before blea and': ha had no dispositiort to Overestimate hie own ability.. 12.1 will be tattle, thee -et He who was apeeking to IVIteedgleoni the flame lb,' thaenidst Of the` urfecteetmed bush ' would be with'hieir to gltide and strengthen. Ye hall serve God upon this mountain t --This was a second _. answer to Mote? flan objeition, "Veen 'that very Mou.ntain he. would 'worship God with .the dost' ot Israel, wham he was about' to lead Out Of bolidage. 12-22. Thetheeennd Obstacle thatealoses 'claw In the way of his being Israel's leeiler was that the children of Israel Would ask him the tante of the God who he said -lied' h elit aim to them when thee •ehtniarank after hie 'tame, Title obs baton was based' upon bis incom- - pieta hontairettentaloh of. the nature of 'God, and the charaeter uader Which he Wgb theii;'apPearing. Names among the aeraeliterietvere italleative of ahar- .aetere and 'Moses desired the narne by .whier Gad was to be proclaimed to thertt in this crisis, Gotae revelation of ''Hinelelf under -tlfe name, "I am that I, an* Avail. retteeuring, for OVA term 'denotes ells eternitY, Iris nn- chatagaableriese 'end His all-suffielens ey reled gave Moses particular dire. tionS 'as to the iteps to take in der - frig 'to, lerad 'hie purpose concerning them, assurtng him. that they would belletre hitt message. *Phitre.011, how- ever;:"Would uot grant their request to PO into the Wildarrieee to werehip je- hovalt; but after -signs and wonders Itactbeen givert, lie 'Would let them' ge, ' They 'Would receive much treasure from he Egyptians by isking it of theneaThis Is the meaning of the Word 'belie:ow" in v. 22. 4. 1-17. The third OW drl e that appeared to Moses aS behr ' in his way was that hie peo- ple auld not accept hint ee A leader sent from Ond. The Lord anewered this bjection in a most ekriking man- ner, r giving hitt signs that were Mee eupernatural. The staff in. Mos band Was ehanged into a ser - he theew it upon the around. Wheel Moses took It In his hand attga It baAhrte a staff. A second sign was glace, whielf was his hand becoming lepr and beeoming well again. If thesr , Iwo, eignshsvottla not be suffi- Glen he &mulct convince his people by tainting the water of the Nile into blood: )01011es esaw a fourth obetaele Ind Oat was great, as were the otht arts Which he named. Ile was not a read"- speaker. The Lord Was net pita.* with hls raleang title objec- tion, but met it by saying to hire, "Notto tberefore go, and 1 will be With thy likouth, arid telieti thee wbat thou- ehalt ay," and He gave hini hie bro- therll aron as hie epekman.'The lair . remised to give Moses full di. rect a as 'ender of Ills people, and He . enld, make Mont Itr.own to Actrota who Ytould declar* tem to the people. t4liptiong.--Irow long Wee ftreeeli in eileteri? What wee hie occupation? To *fast mountain dirt he go? Whitt wonderful eight did he behold? What ARINVOIMAIII,,,,40,,,,AIIIIIIII,RAWIA. A t comml. ten dal he rrteive? What Ate' foto . jcetfaue did eieece -melte te ettociat, appointment? Llow were Pio I falitettions ant? By what name did God revcal ilinael, to Mates? What woridera were tame in Maeftz' twee- eneel 111:0 Worare Orli for Lad meddle I. The properatien, II. The cennulenien. The world's eall. Sacred bietory recalls no more eventeul life thaa that of alose3, Born obstemitY, Of a noble, eut euelavett race, Ire came into the world ander sentence a death, freni whielt he was delivered by the iugenuhy of maternal affestion, which instinctively and wisely peesunte(1 on wonsauly cempas- eion. 1. The preparation. Great events do not raalte men, they find them "Goa accomplishes his miracles by means." and trains his instrunients with 1111. On the history before us tit° instruments cozuhined what was best In Israel and Egypt, Two elements aPeear casential to the appointed loader of God'chosea people: a Pro- found piety embracing deep and tea tied eonvietions ot the covenant des- tiny er` the nation; broad culture, and exteadee training in statesmanship. The first was provided in the early and impressible years in the humble home of his Hebrew parents, and pos. oibly by permitted a.szociatioa in later years, The second, both in order and importance, was secured in the court of Itharaole -where the deliverer of thd "tramplea rime" was educated in an the "wisdom of the Egyptian," The turtling p oint of thie marvellous career was precipitated perhaps by his noble but unwise patriotism; and male when he "refused to tto calied the son a Plutraolfe daughter,' wben, eweeping aside the aoners of the then mightiest empire, he chose "to suffer affliction with the people of God." Ir. The commission. 'In the history of aldees, as in the experience of men generally, the call to higher service came white Itt the perforneauce of humble and at -hand duty. Faithful ness In the commonplaces of lite de- velops and demonstrates Meese for larger tasks. God's maniteetation was such as to aeatire the reluctant mes- senger, and convince his oppressed and disheartenea people. The visible represeptation of Deity was the only Symbol allowed the chosen nation, and was perpetuated in the shelcinah of tabernacle and temple. The bash Olathe, but unconsumed, declared that God's psople were net abandoned in their • efflietion. God's self announe& ment eonnected the present issue with the covenant of preeding generations. and the title assumed' cinresses per- manenCe self-contained, and self suffie ing. "I am that I am." It sweeps the eternities, and 'was appropriated. by 'Jesus as an' c,xpression of his Deity. "Before Abraham was, I am." In the present connection it seggeste the ultimate breaking of every yoke, Every call to duty, and every challenge of obligation 12 acomnpanied with the asshrance, "I will be with thee." III. The world's call. In every ago and for every emergency God has his prepared and appoleted instruments. History focuses itself on groat names, the prophete and patriots of the writ- ten page, Moses, Paul, Luther, Weslpy; Washington, Lincoln afe synonyms of religious and civil epochs. Every great roform la' first horn in some man's heartand truth, burning in his soil, thrusts him forth as its fiery advo- cate. "A auan can be nothing without a nation, a, nation can be nothing without. leaders, and leaders Tan do nothing without God.." -W. C. tee ---- B AITAL- WORK' IN NUN PRISON YET British Captives Are Dying Off Rapidly. Dead Stripped Naked by Guards. • Leaden Cable -The terrible condi- tions existing ia the British prisoners' eeme at Paehim Mecklenburg, are de- scribed by Sefton, Delmer, the Daily Mall's special earrespondeut in Bev< lin, who visited the camp. Ile says: "The prisoners,, hourly waiting, to go to Stettin for 'the voyage home; are dying of 'rapidly from influenea, 'The German doctor leaves the camp at 6 o'clock every evening and locks eis, medicine cabinet before he goes. 'The prisoners had a terrible Christ. Mas 'fighting influenza with their bate hands, so to say, Ori the day after Chrietinas the British were asked to furalialt a burying party and found 17 dead- hien lying as they had beeu fitter- Into the mortuary. Ali had been stripped, even of their shirtet and were inrwashed, the sanitation ser- vants haying gone to Berlin for the 1 holiday." HOOVER HEADS WORK OF RELIEF 01,,nor ele.1, Will Direct Feeding of Lib - prated Lands. Each. Ally Nation to Have Two Agents. Perla Cable --,President Wileon has eairea Herbert ta Hoover director- general of an international organiza- tion' for the relief of liberated coun- tries, both neutral and enemy. Nor- man Davis, formerly en the eta', or Osear T Crosby, special commie:stoner of finance for the United States in Europe, Will act as Mr. Hoover's as- sistant. This annatumenient was' made tO- day by the Auterican Peace Commis- sion in a statement which ;nets that the deeignatiou of Mr, Hoover te take charge of the relief work is in con- formity with the request of the allied -Governments that tits Treated States take a. predontinating part in the or- ganization and airection of vellef meatures. Under the: arrangeMeuts betweee the 'United States and the allie(1 countries there are being appointed two -repre- sentatives of each Government to se- -cure the co-operation of food, tinances and shipping resources in the solution ea the problems conneeted with the re-, quest of the allied Governments that the United States take a predora- inatieg part in the orgenizatioh and direction of relief measures, Under the arrangement between the United States and the allied coAntriea there are being appointed two repre- sentatives of each Government to se. euro the co-operation of food, financea and slapping resources itt the solution of the problems connected with the re- lief. Te French Government has ap- pointed M..Clementel, Minister of Commerce, and M. Vilgrain, Minister of Food, and their representatives, British and Italian representatives -have not yet been announced. The President -has asked Mr. Hoover to call the first zneeting of the eoutecti as quick as the delegates are named. GERMANY NOT NEAR FAMINE Member of British Naval Commission On Conditions. Fewer "Rcills of Fait/ but People Look Virell. London Cable ,-- A long - article, wretteu re a member et- the Allied Naval Gommiesiort in German waters 1 North Germente is Publish- ed by the Times to -day. The writer is careful to point ,out that he deals only with what various members of tae commission saw with then- oWn oyes in a very considerasie area, and that he ignores hearsay eat - (twice. regarding other parts of Ger- maine "131.1.t if food con.ditions itt the rest of Germany," he goes on, "are not very mita worse than in Oldenburg, Mecklenburg and eachlestaig-Hol. stein, there is certainly to need for haste on the part of the antes in go - Mg to their relief. 1 am coefident that Irene of the score or more members of 'the vareous sub-cont- missione, who covered many butt- dred miTes of toentry, and saw tens of theuzzands of the people at •close range, reported having netieed atty evidence of palpable under-teeding among any of the inhabitants. In- deed, they are of the unanlmoes opinion that the whale population, both urban and rural, in these in- gions, Imre been, mid aro being, fed near enough to normal requirementa to keep them at full physical vigor. As a member of the ihtelligence stag, who had epent many years in the country before the war, said: " `You don't see so many. PeePle with rolls of fat on them as you did five years ago, but you do see a healthier, hardier and generally more 'fit -looking pit/viatica' " 'The men in the dockyards. and on the first ships searched at Wil- helmshaven, although slovenly and filthy, betrayed notie of the traces of under -feeding so ree.dily recog- nized by ono who has been in tadia or China in famine time or in Serbia,. or Greece since- the war. This partly prepared us for the well - nurtured look on the people tif the totyn itself: 111 Ito piave of the A LAST oe MOAN VICTIM, attIld„ resting pacified In the arms of a Canadian soldier, was wounded at IViens, by German shrapnel, just before the slotting of the tied. Its mother, in whose arm* it was, was killed. tifh FISH WASTE ON EACH C AS Research Council Has For- mulated Plans A HOME F This Y.M.C.A, hut, erected on Main piece of welcome for returned Rol passing through the Manitoba mo- ther west, QS HEROES. etreet, Winnipeg, wilt serve as 4 diets, especially foe those who are tropolis en route te their homes fur - saute eliaracter lit England, say Portsmouth, Plymouth Or Harwierce, would the people have beett in bet- ter flesh or better color. "Ate to clothes, the Germans ateuld coriainly bate) bad the best of the comparison," After deeeribing the evidence of good eultivation of the Jana aeon by various mentben3 of the cerninis. sten on their journeys of from fifty to a hundred miles, the writer seers: "The results of a really bountiful. harveet were to be seen in the bulging barns and sheds, the swot - len haystack and the !odder piles. The surest evidence that there ha(1 been an ever -supply of vegetables was the careless way in which such things as cabbage and Swedish beets 'were being. handled in trans - Port. A starving people dace not leave food of this kind to rot along the roads or in station yards." AD MISERICIRDIAM. - (Saturday Review) Oh, Spare our happy German hoineS1 Along the castled Rhine, The cataract belowthem foams, Above then climbs ,the vine. We reared thein years ago from store Of Frenchmen's hoarded gold, Our hearts have learned to love them Ae years' ova o'er them rolled. n lore, h Here Fritz was born; here Gretchen rew; 7.e.heigr Kultur here they learned; Prom pence our himger'd eagles flew, Nor empty e'er returned. Yon clock that ticks above the fire lit France our Hermann found, When Colley's keep and Albert's spire Where tumbled to the ground. This pretty broderic Withelm brought From Louvain to bis wire; He stripped It from a priest who fought, Till Otto's steaming" knife. That collar from a countess came, Her iips 10 Huns denied; The losolent, the heartless dame, In his embreee she died. This reliqualre, of Crystal elear, On Pere's high alter stood; Our pepper has replaced the -tear - A tasteless drop with food. Dear all those rellcs-spare them; apex°, For Fritz's, WIlltelm's rake 1 Should they return, nor find them there, Their warrior hearts would, break. Expect them note -the sea claimed Fritz- Wilhelin we shot, for looting and r•xens Ah, Hans got hacked to bits For deeds .too foul tor shooting. WILLSON IN -ROME. Busy Da,y To -day -Leaves To -night. Home Cable President Wileon took occasion early .to -day to visit some, of the historical spots in Rome. The President went to the Pantheon, and laid wreaths upon the tombs of King Victor Temraanuel II., and King Hebert. His itinerary took him thence to the Lyceura Acadenay and the Soman Forum. This afternoon's programme induct- ed the President's vita to the Vatican, and, later. Ills reception of the Protest- ant bodies of Rome at the American Episcopal Church, His visit to this -ca:pital closes to -night, with an inform- al dinner at the palace, His departure for the north is set for 9.20 o'clock. • MEW PLAN FOR IMMIGRATION Dominion Divided Into Three District And Chiefs for Each One • Named. Ottawa Deepatch The new system under which Canada- is divided into titre' districis fpr the purpose, of the operationri of the Tmilifgrant De- partment has just been contploted. W. It, Little, of Ottawa, has been appointed commissioner for the Eastern division extending from the Atlantic coast to the Leke of the Woods. Percy Reid, an °Meer of the Immigration Department, has been sent to 'Winnipeg to take charge teemorarlly in the district compris- ing the territory between the Lake of the Woods and the Ttooky Meant - tains. 13ruee'Walker, who has been conunissioner ofe immlgration at Winnipeg for some years, has been placed in control of publicity work for the Immigration Department, In the Pacific coast division A. , Joliffe, who has been immigration mama at Vancouver, will bo cone- Missioner. The commiesionere will look after admiesious and rejeetiens of Immi- grants on their respective districts and geeeraly supervise the work of the .clepartment there, reporting to Ottawa. Hitherto there hes beep a commissioner zit Winnipeg, but there has 'been tone in teeter/1 Canada or on tho Pacific etmet, Certain of the Vaneouver offitials were under the direetion of the Winnipeg corm*? sioner FtAte To JAPAN GUY. Seattle, Despatch -A freight -rate re- duicein of $I0 it ton from the Pacifie coast to Japan; wati announeed to -clay by .L Lowma», aentient director of opera. does in thin tiletrict for the Putted fltates Beard. The new rate will be $20 a ton. SAW BALLOON ON THE SEA. New 'rove, Despattet--iette.engein aboard the 11ritish eteenisitip T.owtlar ettetle, htee to day front t!ertliff, reported that on Jen. lst, when the vessel was 250 nide, off the It1 rintulas. they sighted a large derelict eirar-shaped dirigible balloon with it black anti white ring on top. 7Y1nK fist on the sea. VICI-0 WCI'Cr t.,itrrtS Pee aborted. FIVE STAGES OF PEAr PARLEYS En.emy First Admitted to Hear the Verdict • Then Conference On League of Nations. eerie Cable - ('llavas)-a-Thte Peace Confe$0113e, tteeerding to the Petit Parisian, will proccea as Nitwit: First, a conferenee of the four great powers, Seemed, rePrezentative3 of Belgium. told Serbia to be adatttted for a study of the general situation. Third, admission of the other Allies for conferences on 'the problems in- teresting them. Fourth, presentation of eonditions successively to -Gerniaee, Bulgaria, Turkey, German -Austria „tee TiimaarY, and the Signing of Cat peace Fifth, a general conference Concern- ing the questions of a- leave of nations, freedom of the seas, limita- tion of armaments, and related topics. BOLSHEVIK ENVOY. Paris, Jan, 4,---(Haves.)-The Bol- shevik! Government of Russia interes to send Moine Joffe, the, former P,olshevilci Ambessador at Berlin, as its delegate to Paris to claim adrais- :eon to the Peace Conference, accord' Ing to the Bch° cle Paris to -day. CZF.CIIGSLOVAKS EN notim Paris, Friday, Jan. 3. --The Czech°, Slovak delegation to the Peace Con• ferenee 'will leave Prague for Perla on .Tan. 6. according to a Basle des. patch to -day. 46- & FAST ADAPTING -WAR MACHINERY Practically No Waste in Great Britain. Big Firms Am Alr@adY Pill- ing Orders. London Cable -Mr. Colgate, Iseere- tary, Engineering Trade Committee, interViewed by the Daily •Chroniele to -clay, declares there will be practi. catty no waste in adapting the vast - bulk of war machinery in Britain in the requirements Of commerce, He Says the the Ministry of Munitions Is itow buying, selling and transport- iug machinery from useless dis- tricts to productive areas, and this work will go far to ease certain as- pects ot the housing 'emblem. The new productive scope of the machin- ery is enormous. The big pre-war firms are not only already engaged in fulfilling pre-war orders .for such things as motor lorries, but are also carrying into effect schemes for the production of agricultural machinery, sewing Madill:les, watches, clocks and eheap motors, The shortage of prism glasses case itas led, he says, to the installation of a plant for the menu - facture of huge quantities of finer glasses than the pre-war Zeiss. Other eltortages tiave introduced (British machinery on a large Scale which will be used for the production of scien- tific instruments., maehine tools, X- rays apparatus, coke oven machinery and all kinds of electrical &tinge, in- cluding nearly all material for the construetion of eleatrified trains. The great expansion of electrical plants during the war le now resulting in imwerful com.binee of British -owned electrical firms. It is estimated ate thoNtatively that two of these will alone alzeorb the services of nearly a 'hundred thousaed fresh workers who will be engaged on manufactUres formerly in German hands. BAGDAD MAN - ARE ALL DEAD Interned by Turks •When War Broke Out. London Cable A British otficer, who was a prisoner in Turkey, gave all 40001111t today of the terrible hardships and crueltles inflieted upon Britiolt prisonere by the Turks, De- eceibing the raa, at from Kut -el - Amara to Bagdad, the officer' saya the prisoners were driven like sheep along the desert ways. They wore denied food, were short of water, and the Turk e refused to allow thein to rot. They were bayoneted Or elubbed if they rammed Anil were struck with rawhide whips- when they faltered. /toile -Illy epealeng, wording to the sffieee, front 75 to ft5 percent. of the British rank and filo in Turkey died, One battery surrendered at Katt-el- Ainera 117 strong; 11 are now alive, Other batteries are 511110.11 111 the sante condition. One regiment marched out of taut -el -Amara 100 strong, of whom enir 111 arc now lasing. Tee nritisit conaular gneed at Mtg. taut before the war consiettd of two offtrere and no Men. When the war broke (int they were interned In perfect physical condition. Afl Of them are Clead, Mo•••Meemeeenerre...... ore. . To Savo Nillionz iii Prod,ucts, Ottawa Iteport-The problem of in - curing the -commercial utilization Of the ertormoue quattities of tish wade on both the Atlantic fine Pacific 40ASte Council for Scientific and Indesrlal Research for seine inonhs past eadi as a result or luveetigations canducted under- the auspices tat a committee headed by Dr, it, r. 'Button, of MeGill has been ougagiug the atteatioa of the Ilniveraity, indications now point to the creation this year a important nwertvisteinoanUbtortieasefo°arsts11.° r°°°verY of fish The data securea by the Research email as to the extent of this tisk waste would indicate that at present there are annually about 240,000- tons of fish offal and non -marketed fish al- lowed tit go to waste on the Atlantic coast and about 60,000 tous on the Pa- cific. The fisIt oil thus- wasted is es- thaatee to be wbrth about $6,000,000 at current prices, wbile the value of the other potential by-products a the ttatt- lag •industrp, euch as fertilizer arid stock and poultry foods, amouats to hundreds of thousands of dollars, Mare in the Canso Fishing District of Nova Scotia, for Instance, an Investo- gation -conducted by the Reaearen Council shows that elle would heve a marketable value of about $424,000 per year, similarly at other centres such as Prince Rupert, B. 0,, Grand River, Ont., the Gaspe coma, and Clark's Harbor, N. Se. A great annual economic waste has been going an for years through the absence of any en- terprise to C0411111erelally exploit this waste food material. It is estimated that about fifteen per eent. of tb.e fish- erman's catch on The Atlantic -coast now consists of non -marketed or no - edible fish while in the case of trawl- ers the percentage ruris aa'. high as thirty per aut. Ie. the United States reduction worke haye. been established at several fifth - Mg contrea wawa oils, fish meal, fer- tilizer and various forms of stock fooda are manufactenred from fish waste, The induatry has undoubted- ly great possibilities of successful commercial developments in Canada provided proper methods are adopted. Tho research council has urged upon the Recoestrudloa and reevelopment Committee of the Cebinet the import- ance of encouraging commercial ex- ploitation of this fishlno Industry and piens are now understood to be under way whereby ,private enterprise will establisbaplants thie year for tho con- version of fish waste into its various commercial uses. BRITISH AT LIBAU. Russian Baltic Port Under Navy's Guard. IWarsaw iCable-(By the Associate; Press,) -The Ruseian Baltic- port of tabau, according to reports received here, is proteeted by one British cruis- er, three destroyers, and one gunboat. The British werehips, however, have landed no forces. The admiral eommanding the squad- ron visited the Lithuanian -committee at Vilna, and promised to remain at Mau until the Ghat of Riga had be- gun to freeze. --.0 CZAR'S FAMILY Sik ELY 'Atli Brutal Details of the Mas- sacre Told. Bodies Had Not Yet Been Found. • Paris Cable - Prince Lvoff, the former Russian Premier, from whom Foreign. Minister Mahon Obtained. In- formation of the massame of the imperial Russian fatally as related in the Chambee of Deputies last week, Informthe Jeornal that he Ieerned the details Trout a judge who made an investigation of the deaths. Tee Prince quotes the jadge as saying: "I left nothing to chance, and, al- though some points are, not yet cleared up, 1 consider that the chances are ninsty-five out of onc hundred that the imperial femily was massacred." Prince livoff says' the tudge wept as he told him that they had found n the walls of tho room where the family had teen etrafined marke of 35 revolver bnliete and any cuts whiell had been matte by bayonets. Mood wns dryine everywhere, on the wooden floor. The jeep, was search- ing for tho bodies, which had not yet been found when Prince Imoff left tacaterinburg :severe 1 weeks ago. i'trr RORTS TORONTO XARICETS Oa IWO40 et the 94412 eer Illtwol*** latneiNitte ItLeittrIthe Paha Produce -- neater, Oleic° (Miry ,.$ e 50 54 Do., creamery .... 0 57 0 01 Margarine, lb.,. ....... 35 40 Nttgo, new lahl, deem; .. 0 75 0 85 cat•ese, lb. ........ 0 2) 10 Dressed i'oultry* Turetyo ;l0 Ihrsve 23 1) :11 tiering ellice'a 0 31 8 Roosters, ...... 0 23 0 • Ducklings, lb.. .... 3 9 13 Geese, lb.-. .. 0 28 0 32 Prune-. Apples, basket ....,, 0 25 .. 3 01 Vegetables - Beets, peck.. ..... 0 25 .... 1 90 Carrots, peeic 2,1 Cabbage, es.el;'*uI 0 05 Cauliflower, each.. 0 15 Celery, head .. . ...... A5 Lettuce, 3 Onions, 75-1b. sacks3.5r * 1)o., basket ,. 0 25 Do., pickIinj, basket 0 40 Leeks, bunch..............0 10 VallilaY, bunch ..., i'arsulps, Lag 1 00 DO., peek ..... ,. 25 Pumpkins, es,ch ... 0 15 Potatoes, bag .. 1 00 Do., sweet, 3 lbs sago bunch ...„ ..... 0 01 sa,v017, bunch 0 01 Spinach; peek I i• ..A• • 0 40 Squash, each, ..... ;. 0 10 Turnips .. , bag ... Do., ,peck ,• 1,164 •••• At •••,/ IsIDATS-WirOLBSALI5. Beef, forequarters ...$111 00 De., hindquarters .. „. .... 22 00 Carcasses, choice 20 00 Do., medium .. 17 50 Do., common . . „ 14 51 Veal, common, Mt . 13 00 Do„ medium „ 20 00 Do., prime. • ... .... 21 00 Heavy, hoes, c ..... ..., 10 01 Shop /kegs, cwt..,... . ..... 25 00 Abattoir hogs ..... . .. 25 00 Mutton: ewt..,. .. 18 00 Latrib, lb ..,. ...... 21 00 .1gOaf *it WOO* A 00014 Air/40. W400440, 01.16 DU(11,0 11:011n00 Autetiotog, S�JC1TO� TGi! 0074.1 Morse Aulik Wlioshoomi 0 0 0 47""*""*"*".""*"""""1 a 0011VeSnitOni, 41 30 1 10 0 SO 0 81 0 10 0 35 0 10 0 10 75 50 0 75 0, 25 0 10 1 10 0 30 35 1 75 0 52 o 10 10 o 50 o 0 75 0 20 $18 00 22 00 24 00 19 60 16 50 1060 23 DO 25 00 20 OD 26 OD 27 00 20 00 26. ea SUGAR MARKZT. • ItoWthoonloews:1: prices to the retail trade oil"' Canadian refined, Toronto delfivery, are Acadia granulated 100-1b. bags'. $10 27 ntle granulated neeopcic)...NN,Noo° , ''. 2: yyye eel I ul el oowww 1.1 " 9 67 N . . .. . .. .. Do., No. 3 yellow .. .. .. I I 'In " 0 07 Atla Do., No. 2 yellow - .... '' 10 27 Do., o. 2 yellow .. .... Do„ No. 3 yellow ... - .. Redpath granulated - .. Do., No. 1 yellow,,,,.. Do., No, 3 YolIONV . St. Lawrence grannutiod. Do., No, 2 yellow :. r.: 0., o, -„te OW .. .. .. Do., No. 1, yellow.... .. Barrels -5e over bags. Cases -20 5-1b, cartons, GOe. and 50 2 -Ib. cartons, 70c over bags, Gunnies, 5-20, 4001 1940 -lb,, sac over bags. onTER MARTtETS. I I. I I I I I 4 9 37 1177 9 67 10 27 9 87 977 9 07 10 27 9187 977 9 07 NVINNIPF.C. GRAIN EXCIIA.NGE. Fluctuations- on the Winnipeg Grain Dxchange Yesterday wore as follows: Oats- Open High Low Close May............x79 0 737/B 0 73% 0 7974 MAY.,3 40 3 4214 3 $914 3 4214 Baxley -- May 1 01 1 053 1 01 1 055.1 xTo 78 3-40 sold. MINNEAPOLIS GRAINS, Minneapolls-Darley 87 to 96e; l'YO, No. 2, $1.65 LO 11.50 1-2; bran, 750; flax, $3.58 to DULUTH LINSIDIDD. Dututii-Linscod on track $3,57; arrive, 83.55 January, $3.51 asked; May $3.65 askard. RACE BARTLETT TO THE POLE British Have Their, Plans Well Advanced. Plane Journey as in a Pull- man, London Cable - Captain Bartlett is to have serious ,competition In 'his airplane expedition to the North Pole. Salisbury Jones of the British Northern Exploration Company, gave an outline of the Braila plans for a similar expedition. "There is no good reason why the flight shouldn't be made," he said. "We propose to launch our expedi- tion neet -April, and plan to send about twenty men Any one who lenows anything about giant airplane construction, with the new heating ap- pliances and other arrangements for comfort, will admit the journey should be made as comfortably as in a Pull- man car. "We will have a big advantage In going via Spitzbergen, whereas Capt. Bartlett has announeed his intention of going Mi. way of North Greenland. That means his jumpleg off ground will bs about 2,000 miles away, while ours will be only 900. "Capt. Wild, who was amend in cern- mond of .Shaeltelton's South Pole ex- pedition, is now superintending ar- rangements for cur enterprise." The Londoners are confideut that the trip from Spitzbergen to the place van be acomplished in about nine hours. WILSON A ROMAN. iteme, Cable-Proldent hecome ti eltizen of Rome to -night. The ceremony took pleee in the historie cep. desietiel by Mleheel Ange'ts end redolent with suggestione nnekett and lertiteevitl Rome. Assisting In the cer- vices were Nina Vietor Iltrinviintel and t:,,,tmen Helena, nie:nle»-t ne the patien ce.bniet, members of the diplomatic corp.t, and municipal and military milli. orittee. m +mem e PARIS WAS PLEASED. A photograph of King George and President Pain are driving In state through the erects of the Frersoe capital. Our Xing la as groat a orite of Paris ag was hit father, Edward VII. eMirm, giA$1001114At40 0014011404* 1 Sow to *Soii at. Isirist PO* I YORAM* Arthur J. Irwin D.D.S., 4.0.8, poster of Dental Surgery of the Venn* 'altiVanla College and Licentiate of Den. tal Surge*, M Outerte. Closed evert Weanesday Afternoon. Office in Macdonald Week. VV. R. riambLy met., C.M. vdratst att1102 ention -paid to 40e. Women and Children, /wing ; taken postgraduate work in Env, - arz litunteriolOgi and Soleatino ; Medicine. ; sturice In the ICerr rerlidenno, be. I Woos the 'Queen's 'Hotel 'and the Y3ePtist Church, All business given earetul attentions Mole 24. P4,0. BOI 11$ Dr. Roht. C. Redmond ti./14,S, (g.) 14.11.0P, (Loud.) • PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. cAtoares ` o4 &tau% D. R. 1 SIEWART Graduate of 'University of Toronto, Faculty of Medicine; Licentiate of the Ontaria College of Physicians and Surgeons. OFFICE. ENTRA.NCIO: SECOND DOOR NORTH OF • Z`URBRIOGeS PHOTO StUr)10, , JOSEPHINE ST. PHONE 29 OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN tat. F.. 441.' PARK.Eit; eatoopollti Wide ' eltelltr vrif sVongth. Adj,ustment of the aDiee otter tisanes 12 gently gectired, there, by removing the predisposing cantos of Absence. Mood pressure and other **rota* tams asstd... Tresteet gatentiftially bed, t*Ptc91 OVER cgsMvnars 'MAUL goirs-frisesdars gas Larldito, • aArk. to ft tkttr Wataccatrzi, IP to LI a.m. 00fitr d5741 by aDVAattlizatt. -Genera llosprtal Gevorruntiotinepootion), Pleasantly situated;boantifully tur. sashed. Open to all regularly licensed Altysiciano. Rates !Or patients- (which Include board and nursIng)-44.90 tet 016.00 per week, according to handout Of liDorn, rOr farther 'information - *Advise MISS L. hi A TH EWS, Superintendent, Sex 223, WIneharn, Oat, Tewn and let1r971 prepartlea. Oen 7314 he. my net and get my price*. I harm tome excellent values. G. STEWART WINGHAM. .folvapt 1S1. Office In Talmo J. W. DODO (Successor to J. G. STEWART) FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT and HEALTH INSURANCE. I P. 0. Box 806, Phone 198 'WINCH:AM ONT, John F. Grov; Issuer ot rifAIMIttlE-LipElisza TOWN HALL WINGHAIV Fhones-Offias 24; Residence 103. KAISER BHNED fyitiCii EMENCE All His Correspondence at Potsdam Destroyed, White Book, Poreign Office Papers, Soon, reris cable: All the eerrespondenee of the former (4011114:.1). Eniperor which was kept at rotsdam, has been burned, as well as a number of documents deal- ing with internal queetionS, according to 11 statement made to a correspondent Of the alatin by Carl Nnutsky, ,wite is pre- paring a White Book deadng with tho or- igin of the war. littuirky mid that the beolt would con.. tatn all diplomatic documentri bearing tit the war front Cm aneassination of Fran - Os Feidinand to the invasion of /3elgium. It would be in 1111 11' or four volumes Arld 010 Mat V0101110 Will appear With In fif- teen days. The book will contain manY pepers annotated in pencil in the hand. writhit; of the former Emperor. Iteutsky . t',, 51 that Ma 0110 paper weS relcalnet from the Foreign Office. littutaky would not ray who, in hie °Pinion, e11ptaret1 to Ve most compro- mh,tel, but remarked that in the White Book there tvotild he morty letterer tram vount von 'NebirsicY, German Ambasse- dor in Vienna, and a few front Baron von Schoen, German Ambaevador 111 Paris at the outhrealc of the war. Keutaky informs French bewspaper awn that the report tlot it Ilertrittn tirown` t tamed hall bon held tin July 5' 1914, to decide finally on the question ofretaking War an t' ingot-IT:et. Former tier:Mtn Ent, never. Katitsky said', had A COTIret•00C0 on Mot ilay with a stoI1 t! number of promt. itient Vermane, and it was deckled tO sup+ port Auntritt lit her demand.; on Serbia. The (scarcity of lumber to not whol- ly due to the people who SaY nothing and saw Wood.