_ graonte Account of° Allies’ — A despatch from Alexandria says: jallipoli Peninsula from the Aegean by ound ‘ue away to eres, which the Turks ieee ta fine make impregnable to jose superb troops that are now ighting to pass over them. There 0 room upon the Gallipoli Peninsula d peak points, and we are now it a eninsula. The British and French line on the | the except | d: Victory on acts ‘Gallipoli began to look as if the victory upon left would be fruitless. That position would become an untenable fallen and os Haricot redoubt re- light for this battle of the loueset ‘ish iS sked for and sate a once, and the arenes was re- sumed throughout the afternoon. At 5.80 it seemed as $1 $1. Northern, $1.29, track, i rts. | ae ba oa Cw, 8c; A Fiers 56e; Théo word, stil nee hovirg of day- | to Markets Of The World REPORTS FROM M THE LEADING TRADE CENTRES OF AMERICA. is. a No 1 ee 3. Ne 2 x 32; No. 8 No. 8 C.W., 62c; extra one S 1 feed, 62e, track, lake’ ports. No. 2 yellow, 790, ‘0 the enemy. At this moment) | ier ete jing ground that culminates in the|a ene was sent to say that the sine Podieh eon Nob Salis. Te, itre with a flat summit, Achi Baba, |trenches must be captured and when ee rite paras be Ma B00 feet ih. On eithér side the|recaptured, Ontario ‘oata—No; 2: white, 5 vines and water é No. 3 site, © 54 to be, ee ¢ CoN 2 Winter, per car lot, $1. “u te: $1. %is, according to freights outsi Peas—No. 2, Paalcal bbe gac oie) po ats rley—Good malting barley, 70 tor Tbe; feed barley, 65, according to freights outside. Buckwheat—Nominal, ane lots, T4cg| tsi vanced works of which assault was delivered. In on according to freights out ig feat of arms we already hold and|there was a temporary inereee of | . Ry nomini glacis of which has to be crossed! ammunition, but the enemy fought et ee erie al before we move forward to the as- with sticks adfets, A, ¢camitobs Roun “First patent: sault upon the bastion of Achi Baba| battalion came hurrying up from the| ite bags, $650; strong bakers, in and beyond to the final assault upon| Turkish right to reinforce it, and was| Jute bags, $6.80. Toronto; in cotton ves very walls of that fortre: caught on open ground by the drum-| bags, 10¢ more. mn June 21 it was deteratined to|ming 75’s and melted away. S bx tario. flour—Winter, 90 per cent. ES deaighien the ike ‘pen the extreme| 600 yards of Turkish trenches were] patents, $4.70, seaboard, or Toronto be right and at 1.3 , the prelimi-|taken, and still the bombardment|freights in bags. 2 : Kary _ bor ei eiagiard Alldeocriies foroedac' to, wat Se ar ee ee pplvetee through the morning the cannonade| counter-attack that was anticipated. $26) chor es per ee milings 20; oad q Went on. By noon the second division |In the morning we heard gladly that od los = Tag, $1.85.” F Gf Brandl had on tho lett stormed and this 6 enemy’s counter-attacks had fail~ « j captured all the Turkish trenches st ed and that our allies were. indeed ieacpecdas the first two pesky Even the Haricot | firmly established. The Tyrkish cas-|} By De ee dairy, 2 “to 28¢; in- q Yedoubt with its damnable entangle-|ualties were at least 000, One| ferior, 18 to 20c; cre: amhery prints, 27 t ents ma: f communicating oa ae yards long and 10 ast to 29c; do., solids, 26 to } enches was in Bench hands. On| dee s brimming over with dea 'ggs—New-laid, 21 to 28e per doz- / the right, however, the first division, They vad been valiant, thase teal en, in case lots, and selects, 23 to 24c. '% after reaching its objective, had been| men. ch officers who fought in| Beans—$3.10 to $3.15 im cked so effectively that ij > they had fallen back Ags y ad- the west say that a e Turk is worth t as a fighting unit 0 Germans; in encod, ageis they took the ten id gaits iris were driven out. «i 10,000 WORKERS | ENROL EACH DAY A despatch from London says: “seven days munitions workers ee recourse Cae xpired With respect to pert W E. Mor- gon, who is Mr. Lloyd’ George's chief assistant in thie inecnaes of his oe rolments. are so highly sat- enrolment has averaged 10,000 a day.” A PRISONER IN AUSTRIA. A despatch from Berlin says: A Bavarian courier reports that among the prisoners of war at Lerchenfeld member branch of tl Rothschild family, who was captured an automobil The urier declared that efforts made rough the Spanish Embassy to have Mr. Rot child resulted in his being compelled go to work i hay fields with | © other prisoners at 4 o'clock the next morning. — YUKON QUICK-FIRING SECTION. Force of Bity-sis Sm Training at A aa from aes lon. says: “<“witty-six men, comprising the quick- -firing section organized in the Yukon, eo arrived here from Dawson City, ey are now aint? fat Shorncliffe, Further re inforcements are expected shortly. | Sent to Prison For Treachery IMPRISONED-FOR TREACHERY. General De Wet, former Minister of Agriculture in put: one Lo ex-Boer leader, years fe nfl Bhd wane oe $10 ,000 for pRB Eats AE ESS Two Ways of Measuring. Mr. Lloyd-George’s wit on the plat- form is well known, but Deateod'a seals says that the following was e neatest. retorts he ever is was addressing a meeting in South Wales when chairman, thinking to be witty: at a chancel- lor’s expense; temarked ti andi- ence that he was a little aaapponid _ SUSPENDED’ BY CENSOR. A despatch from Amsterdam says: Several Socialist papers in Germany ett for reproducing eal for peage, which was triginaliy hee wublished by the Ber- _ Un Vorwaerts, resulting i fper’s suspension, Sa for reprinting the. article in- clude the in Mr. Lloyd-Geor; Gat a Pas ha id heard 80, hr aboae Mr. d he said * “that. I. na- ene expected to mect a big man in every sense; but; as you can see. for yourselves, he is very small. in sta- scones ‘Mai ‘orator would~“have~been arievosty apart by such an ‘unfortu- nate hegi ceedings, ” he-said, with Nat your. chair- “but ‘Ik ‘Selousness, man abd the:Goerlitzer Volksz itang. AcQuIT GEN. | WESSELS. arend Wessels, i 30. lune ex-member of hy second trial on a cl (He was convicted at is ‘net ial is but secured a Hew 15,009 MOTOR. TOR SLRNGES: st F ri ot the ime of another ten cam- paign. ee } - PROTEST LIVING Costs. A despatch from Paris, says: ‘The leva correspondent of th ency Says Munich Neueste _ Nachrichten announces: that advocates a. neon the increasing cost hace Otherwise- He fae Without. _“T wonder who itis that puts up _ the price of meat B Gotineil of Defence of the Union of |™°™ South. Africa, was seal at ls ‘Bot the ize, : poe in owing to the way you have | here of measuring a man. In North mete we measure a man from his etre Put Soldiers \ on. “Lands The siete eat ‘of Canadian soldiérs estern Ta war, is fore dowed by letter: ceive cri dt as As yet, of of 208 ini te: that: the B parhd Goveradent may =e ‘am agree- ment with the anadian Pacific pall way whereby great numb: ler: practical way of . assisting whom the Hestonatiey would not Bye the seuital requi -. ‘He Explained It . Wife—John, I saw in the” that a nautical mile is nea eventh more shan a Jan id ee Why is that, 1 wonder ee uu know, my dat tha cniney swell in nthe wats Sizes Nt “That’s easy.” ‘The man wit wants get it.” ‘Many’ a ae ey ae nites an aching corn. at 194,000. The de crease in 1915 cee a “art eee pe per cent. en from th ae with his back i the wall, the | 9 {t| Turk is magnificent. turned soldiers may-We eidedtey taal” Bupire is inlebiell but-vis sien a} Se et is firmer with jemand; quotations, 17% to ¢ for twins. 5 60c per bag, out of store, and 45 to B0c in runswicks, car lots, 55 to G0c per bag. Business in Montreal “Montreal, July 6.—Corn, eerie ay, No. 2, Tots, $20 to $21.00. i ad oer per ton, car $1.50%; 2 C.W,, $1. United States Markets. Minneapolis, July 6.—Wheat—] No. 1 Northern fo. forthe: July, $1.25 Corn—No. 4 O lo. Flour unchanged; faney patents, $6.70; first clears, $5.50; ee "clears,$4. Bran, $21.50. Duluth, July _6,—Wheat—No. hard, $1.40%; No. 1 Northern, $1.35% to $1.89%; No. orthern, 1.33% to 1.85765 July, $1.3246; eptember, + 1.2% Bh; July,” $1.72%; September, Live Stock M Markets. Toronto, July were:—Butchers’ 25 8 do., eee ie 85. to gis do., rough bulls, $5.50 to $6;. butchers’ cows, choice, ee $7 50; do. e a 4 B; feeders, nad,-$6.50 to $7. 25 ‘ated ers, 700 to 1,000 ive ‘So. 25 to $7.75; canners and eutter: nish each, $60 t medium, cack $45; springer, $50 to $85; Tel ewes, $6.50 t do., heavy, -$ 5; do., bucks, sa to $4.50; yearling Jambs, $6.0 $7. 50 Spring ‘lambs, calves, $8. 0 to 10. 50; hogs, ‘ted ee do., off cars, $9.50. er ewt,, weighed off 5 “4 Novel Preseription. The celebrated Doctor Aberneth; loath -cire woldea-it meelh ‘The r on last century, and on these two. Soe charterization hangs an pakings ne en don. for. “hts Health, are Sisal bernethy, and, oblivious of a- fee Stone a little Siac ish; go-home and build a barn!” f ae a je ed the Bea te som adapted the , He es Se et ‘eatoor eengioe and a mechanical employment that it perfect is ‘was restored. x ocean his ey ao ihe peril ak = : heliovars ia ha: bite | exhauste | ‘The. cae 6. ~The quotations ’\is not y, | own. who lived bar than a lee ite The announcement of the Bonen of er 1e Qu eboney: bord HONOR FOR COMMANDER OF ‘THIRD I BRIG.-GEN. M. ge of the 3rd Infantry Bri-gade. FANTRY BRIGADE S, MERCER. the Conipailouahty: or the Order of received with Pellatt as commander. ‘irst Contingent in the Overses was Brigadier\ A despatch from Paris says: ‘The French forces in the Argonne have: survived another first line trenches, which were com- teal destroyed by German high ex plosive shells of ae calibre which ‘was the a force estimated by the Office at two divisions, or 40,000 men. The French front trenches had been previously obliterated by back by the employment of asphyxi- ating gas sills. REDS the German infantry ru however, and crossed “the first ition line with the intention of piercing the main Second Li ne. Position ions, On the rest of uaaey ae ae sinh oe Canned 0 artillery duels, larly t¢ ee "ot Arras jab the new French front in the Vosges were at once repuls: The Germans are believed ; to be - transferring large forces of. troops 0 the front, as the closing of the Belgian- Dutch border several days ago now hae been followed ilar sures on the Gern The Swiss-Baden line has been closed, - also the Wurttemburg border. GERMAN PRESS GERMAN PEOPLE ARE HYPNO- TIZED BY RULERS. News Manipulated in Such a Way by the ‘Authorities as to Make People Confident. A journalist belonging to a neutral nation gives: thie deseription | of the f information by the TORPEDOS MADE IN OLD ENGLAND THE WHITEHEAD IS THE MOST | POWERFUL. 4 German Type Midway Between Eng- lish and American in Size and Strength. ‘he torpedo 12 is a living, self-con- trolled ana ent of destruction and death, 5a ERG is the home of the Ser Whitehead torpedoes, the most perfect,“are made at New. copile-on- Tyne m naval experts are acy of the pedo, and were quick to adopt great tor- it. The >. German type is larger than that used on American ships. also plan to make more pedoes than either _ the Seen battleships have from four to alx tor- pedo ti ans use of tor- _British or es. new United States ea noughts. be four.. Some Buxitish ships tubes. 8| have five Every torpedo released during the axa ue costs from $5,000 to pe: - a Pet ‘a victim, g bo iat after their ‘motive power is United States Government owns @ big ae Bane at Newport, = oe n to reduce the Bony is itare ot $3,200 The maximum range of British tor- Eas is 11,000 yards. The German $8-40°to $95 day good, 88:10 to $845) torpedoes have a range at best of ction ob to Be hoe yle-| 75000 yards, and the American torpe choice,. § 3 food | does are limited to 4,000, according the latest figures compiled by na- yal authorities. most modern torpedo, without doubt the type which sank the Lusi- tania, is fitted with a gyroscope con- trol. It is doubtful if any other type could have hi by the her speed and the consi oe mendous displacement of w: sete controlled ‘orp is e most improved type. ti es foals of this es has a range more than six miles. What range the Ge ore have developed in this. ws known: The average se ‘of the torpedo’ is 40 knots an Steer Themselves. Its motiv ive power is exhausted Fab eu its veopallgrt stopp therwisé it float until it collided with ee substarice to explode it. The victim. sane be a neutral or mer- chant This. east ‘torpedo has a vertical its recognized speed and fice vale and the rest’ left to chance. @ engine-room of the modern mall ‘gyroscope which is ~ torpedo. the torpédo on its course. The slight- est, inclination to. swerve from that course!is checked by the rudder mov- ed by the eyroscone: i l case of the pedo-is EES into. three conipart- oe the modern eaplont about 800 pounds Here-also is the ide: wn ABR er. Stored i in in it is the hydro-| static piston’ which regulates the Ya pth, under water at which the tor- pelle runs. Self-propell . it ig launched fhe, torpedo | at German | ber. press facts upon her young bares 2S launched this gyroscope kceps| hydrostatic piston. Inside the piston which presses the piston iay in the bulldhead of the: ¢ Piston’ is connected with the horizontal rudders When fires launch ee oe eee hosts. no reclttatg rom ther and dhe hocteuntel codes te alee eanlegd the torpedo dives downward at an acute angle, As it cee its passes through a valve and pressure 19° ex- erted on the diaphra drostatie: piston 4a thae 260 cae until the horizontal rudder with whic d assumes a normal po- torpedo then goes for- the level which it has foun The last of the three compartmen ao conte the engine which drives the torpedo forward is operated by compressed ai av tie Worteslo ix toed from the tube, usually by e hy: back are caught and these set the inter- | Pim: nal machinery of the torpedo going. When the torpedo strikes, another the supcetton in the forward cham- ere is ee powder to sink om big battl battleship. A WONDERFUL HEALTH RECORD : A despatch iain London says: Sir William Osler, speaking at a meeting 02 the Research Defence Society, said the fact that there had 1,000 cases-of typhoid fever during the period of war among the ces of the Empire was something which only those who understood the history ciate, It was a matter faction that at least 60 per cent. o! “We are in which the bullet will be accountable for the larger pans of deaths, and not disease,” he & THRIFT TT COMMITTEE NOW ORGANIZED) A despatch rom London says: ‘The Parliam rmgin impai rift will 6 carried out w | ndrew Bonar Law a of the House of Lords and the House of Com: Publie meetings ir be held, a personal canvas: ade, and ‘pamphlets bearing on the sabjext Sd Be. distributed, SRO tee A Problem. ; Latte ‘Elisabeth and her “mother were i luncheon together, and ae ther, wis im- ee little sardines, are sometimes eaten by the “larger fish.” Elizabeth gazed at the “sardines in| wonder, and then asked: But, mother, how do the large fish | Yi get the cans opel Better Than Nothing. he begai E ages ited rrupted his wife. “Here are 40 or 50 love letters you ¥ ‘me when we engaged. Take: them: along and tall me “one every day.” Uneasy lies the head that wears.a erown—of false hair. serene The really smart man who money to invest in nf sure thing is too smart to eee it. The Trish sh Rifles have the re- ests he bine the most athletic regiment i in the British Army. oe ery week paw and_ “distillers in the. United King q ee Tb. of grain, oe million Ib. = riee or maize, and 9% million Ib. ~| all the large newspapers published in belligerent and neu *h ™: trigger is released which explodes | 6, of typhoid in other wars could appre-| s' of much satis-| 1 for national in Elizabeth, |, “py 8 pretty 2 busy on this trip,” Se authorities in’ Germ: n I entered Germany I believ- ed myself able to take a detached i study cial communiques had I imagined, enabled me to get at the truth in its essential features, Nothing, I was convinced, could influ- ence my deliberately-formed estimate of the relative value of the informa- tion officially and semi-officially dis- seminated from the various belliger- sat sbotitzieas treading of ral States had distinguish the realities behind news opinions, an ainst “atmosphere.” A. in Germany I foun remarkable experience. Before many d d passed I made the disagreeable discovery that Iwas being influenced by the German war atmosphere, The Rec Raenee ot hthe people in ths invincibility of their ies, the Flava deachine. tat eromieteiey lakes nothing to chance, the determination daily outpourings of the press, Titeratu® : +i in short, combined to entice-me into a different mood. This strange in- nee grew stronger as Kk it by. revious conceptions tions along’ the-fronts, and” behint m,“and’of the general ‘outlook for the any inderarent ‘a perceptible chan; isnee ba to understand | the ‘-sacrifiee, and their faith in their y ee “the chief agency in the sodas of eu this. state of. mind, apart f the direct influence of the Shang mili- tary organization of the State, is the shrewd management of the press. It will be remembered that, on the out- break of war, hole German press was turned against England oyer- night, Press Influenced. conspiracy ey unfavorable’ infor ited as “lies,” and a thoroughly- serieiies press campai, inspired were reproduced in as evidence that impartial opinion suppo! @ Means the wi the German people was rented: -and 5 a The process. still goes ny though, as I have before remark- ae the French; Russian, and British, rmans are so con- inca of the accuracy of their own official versions ‘that no other reports te count ars Tt is the same with enemy news- ralide when 1 Bie for them; but I) noticed a pitying smile an. faces whenever they saw others read national repute that exe _| counts. tn that press ann bat’ Gare to be found, HAS BEEN MUZZLED =" to| they lived and ‘the | th eeks | was sh My if sarie newa) St positionis and ctual frozen but | self, comfortably; bi ; | for frst al peste ee door is s O° | dw No attacl iy is too gross for this pres: “reproduce, nd nothing in Germany’s favor is too absurd fo to swallow. Not only is the victorious progress the German, Austrian, and Turki: armies constantly celebrated, but the financial, industrial, and soc! fal cond tion: far superior to those .existin where, Dissensions between the pow-_ ers of the Entente are reported, and disturbances among their people are invented and dwelt 2s eet tad THE MENNONITE STOVE. A Most Bemonical and Efficient Heating Apparatus. About ae years ago the Men- nonites immigrated and settled in the them a great locke of Prairie forty miles long by. twenty they laid out their cyioua “ages, which had only one street, and that often a mile long, with log "heaves set back from the roadway at the town ends of the long, narrow farms. waxed fat, following” nd becams their old-country See an solid and progres: ruled, and th -strietly followed in the household, remem- ber, write: *“Compénion : reader, how curiously their method of heating the houses struck me when I observed it for the first time, was shrieking Cains 0 prairie when’ FE. drew my -cutt into the black shed. Hee stumbled into ie great: liv) ym. of the lon; w, log airs ing ot of the “kaiser” Jy »The instant the door dumpy, were ay, soli- citous in helping me out o! -coat, and isola mitts, Ot edium « daughter, words from a hos' me for a stove where I rome ie ras echt ec pany nothii ng ot vie ‘nd in in’ the td Fea this, with ge i Ser heat, was alert sickening” hen the nite rtd? with the + acne bowl o! ay I asiced her where the cuties narrow, box- Tike structure ent ia the entire length of the room. I touched it, and. hastily snatched away my blist tered. hand. ‘That was only ancient Mennonite custom. ie ites hava one “stove for copkint, at the © end 0} m, and another The latter is wally : Jon; ng clay flue, whitewashed ue the i ‘Tt extends the — another at the ie in a clay fur nace bar en the house is to aap: 04 of. sticks is kindled in this Tae stoked until the flames roar the and y satisa length ‘of the flue. Then He id stable refuse is heaped on th dried stable re scale once rm, or rai i hot, re the res! it ofthe day. me a coumtry that has such cold winters as have Manttoba and the Da- “a ‘most satel al eep through, and consequently, en the tenets’ at its greatest, the hh is fairly saturated with their ‘pune gent, sickly sweet odor. Aek for Mother. nthe carpet to-day, my who “What’ t dear?” ke ‘Mr. Wombat, floy that Johnny has isa responded literal shee gH nat ete js not the big papers oy in a rewyhat sma veesanes °P greatest influence in Germany. th aller districts itis the local towns and nesta sugar or sugar equivalents.