m CC ED HIM britwal Desires. ed out Folk s tGarden s Disputed reatest" « td M h rd n n ed n He KAISER TO DIVIDE AUSTRIA Punishment for Emperor Joseph Not Having Kept His End Up In the Conflict A despatch from London says: The Press Bureau‘s official eyeâ€"witâ€" n~ss at the British front sends a new â€" version of German aims, vleaned from captured German offâ€" ers, who say that the Austrian Empire is to be dismembered, part t it going to Italy and part of it + Germany. This is the price, acâ€" eording to these officers Austria must pay for the failure of her ~ude all Germanic peoples and the Scansinavians. _ Antwerp, accordâ€" ing to these views, which are proâ€" nounced with great assurance, is to be made an international port, and the whole of this scheme iyto be brouzht about through the offices f the Pope. Conversation with captured offiâ€" cors and the better educated priâ€" soners â€" has thrown considerable light on the views of the general situation now held by the German SEEK 10 CAEOK â€" RUSSIAN MARCH 1t is freely acknowledged that (iermany started the war, but opinâ€" in seems to be divided rega:ring her intention to occupy Belgium % N The Austrians Are Sending Many Troops Northward in Hungary. k \ leâ€"paich from Petrograd says : (n the new Russian base along the ine of Uszok, Lupkow and Bartfeld «nbtantial â€" beginnings of the spring â€" campaign are visible. ~A ussian column moving into Hunâ€" zarvy along the Ondava River capâ€" turcd two full regiments and a field battery. The Austrians are now bringing large reinforcements from the south. The first stages of the battle, which is engaging great numbers, are now developing. The (Giermans in the north are covering the period until a fresh corps arrives from the west by restless and futile raids. . The enemy‘s exasperation at the steady crushing of his Niemen campaign is »measured. General von Buelow‘s irtillery has been evacuating its nositions to the northâ€"west of Ossoâ€" wetz {or several days. Once twenty batteries were shelling the* outer sector of the fortress, but now only {our remain, . and even they are quiescent. All the heavy mortars have been withdrawn slowly along the Lvck Road. The field troops re main in a corner of East Prussia. The Austrian cavalry, in moderate numbers, crossed from Czernowitz into Bessarabia, a Russian province which formerly belonged to Rouâ€" mania. In the direction of Khotin they moved from a point where Auctria, â€" Russia and Roumania moet, a region where the Russians did not consider it expedient to place any force, but the raid is now being countered. Apart from the obvious political purposes of imâ€" pressing Rouwmania, it is possible that the Austrians thought it micht in fluence the movement of Russian troops. Strategists Never Dreamed of Carâ€" pathians as Battlefield. \_ despatch â€" from London says : The battle of the Carpathians conâ€" tinues to be regarded as the most important development of the war by the allied countries and the Teuâ€" tons. Both sides are daily augâ€" menting their forces and the battle line has been prolonged until it now stretches over 200 miles of some of the roughest country in Europe, and along this line actions are being fought daily, where neiâ€" ther general staff nor military straâ€" tegists ever dreamed a battle would be fought. es Arex." UPR C OB The Carpathian battle line now extends from the valley of the Onâ€" dava above Dukla Pass to Wyszâ€" kow. and this line is the base of the triangle, the apex of which is to be driven into the plains of Hunâ€" gary. 3 Some people worry a‘most â€" 4" much over their money &8 other people worry over not having any. 4_# TWO MORE VESSELS SUNK Crews of Each A despatch from London says : Iwo German submarines, the Uâ€"28 and another, the number of which has not been ascertained, which have been o;;enting off the west coast of England during the past m'dhys, have added two more tish steamers, the Flaminian o o h ue 2 0 6 S mirve Hhudk British _ SVERUET TY . 0C 0 C lus and Crown of Castile, to their list of victims, There was no loss of life on the Flaminian and Orown of ('a.-rtl:'lo, the crews of each beln% o d ce uns 40 en barely time in AM s:‘ gayen into ~their â€" boat3. In UIC C*"" °.""| ""Seal the latter vessel, however, the subâ€"| matel marine fired before the crew left | chane the steamer and shells passed along| _ As the bridge, on which the captain | Crow! and an apprentice were standing. | the o1 k Crown.of Castile was sunk by | mans liâ€"fire, but this did not prove steam sufficient to send the Flaminian to‘ "Brit the bottom, and & torpedo had to she t‘ wOoRst GROUNXD INX EUROPE. s. â€"It is said in addition, by e men that Germany will insist n the annexation of Belgium to â€"w German confederation, to inâ€" worry almost . as Were Given Barely Into Boats permanently. The belief is that she would not have crossed the Meuse if England had remained neutral, but would have advanced through South Belgium and Luxemâ€" burg, thinking Great Britain would take it in the right way, as long as Germany maintained that she deâ€" sired no territory in Europe not already â€" occupied _ by Germanâ€" speaking people. It is admitted that Germany‘s strategic frontier in the Vosges must be improYed‘.‘ ‘‘The most important point in the views now held is a frank admission that since the Austrians have failed so badly in the present war and have had to be bolstered up by the armed strength of Germany she will have to pay for it and must bleed. . ‘‘The German prisoners hold that the Austrian Empire will cease to exist. The Germans will give away some of its territory to Italy, and will include the Germanâ€"speaking portion of Austria in the German Empire, and also Luxeml{urg. y hcont stt Mbcccestrditiveirteteditientviveizientt? tithâ€"16 "‘The (Germans will welcome the Duchy of Poland as a buffer beâ€" tween themselves and Russia, and will insist on Belgium joining the German zollverein, Antwerp beâ€" coming an international port.‘"‘ Will Go Into Effect On and After C April 15. . A war tax of one cent has been imposed on each letter and postâ€" card mailed in Canada for delivery in Canada, the United States or Mexico, and on each letter mailed in Canada for delivery in the United Kingdom and British Posâ€" This war tax is to be prepaid by the senders by means of a war stamp, for sale by postmasters and other postage stamp vendors. sessions generally, and wherever the two cent rate applies, to beâ€" come effective on and from the 15th April, 1915. Wherever possible, stamps on which the words ‘"War Tax‘" have been printed should be used for prepayment of the war tax, but should ordinary postage stamps be used for this purpose they will be accepted. * o *This war stamp or_ additional stamp for war purposes should be affixed to the upper right hand porâ€" tion of the address side of the enâ€" velope or post card, close to the regwlar postage so that it may be readily cancelled at the same time as the postage. + In the event of failure on the part of the sender through overâ€" sight or negligence to prepay the war tax on each letter or postcard above specified, such a letter or postcard will be sent ir‘nme‘di‘ately to the nearest branch dead letter office. s It is essential that postage on all classes of mail matter should be prepaid by means of ordinary postâ€" age stamps. The war tax stamp willâ€"not be accepted in any case for the prepayment of postage. sUXNX POWER. Doubtful If It Can Be Generated As Cheaply As Water Power., The inventor of a sunâ€"power enâ€" gine now working in Egypt claims that 20,000 square miles of the Saâ€" hara Desert can be made to deliver as much power as is obtained from all the coal now mined in_ the.world. The claim is a little startling at first. â€" Population has followed meâ€" chanical power for many years, and doubtless will continue to do so. If the sun engine is to be made truly practical, visions arise of the densely peopled areas of the North being deserted for the sunâ€"baked plains of Africa, â€"Arizona, and Mexico. What then? Nothing then. That emigration never will take place.. Nature has so ordered it that lands of perpetâ€" ual sunshine produce _ very little that mankind needs. Man, of reâ€" cent years, has arranged things so that power can be shipped long distances over a wire, with comparâ€" atively little loss. If the sunâ€"power engine does as much as this inventâ€" or hopes, the world‘s deserts may become great generating stations, and that is about all. Even this is problematical. It is dowbtful if sun power ever can be generated as cheaply as water powâ€" er, in certain favored regions, and it will be many a long year before the new develqpment cut down the Li Atant PitPy T consumption of coal French destroyer rammed and, it is believed, sank a German submarine off Dieppe. The members of the submarine‘s crew, it was asserted by the men from the Crown of Casâ€" tile, boasted that during the four days previous to tbekselzï¬inc of Itl:o s un s en 2u L TEROAR Adbrcrse Kh e tile, boasted that during the TONT days previous to the sending of the Crown of Castile to the bottom they had sunk seven British vessels, inâ€" cluding the steamer Falaba. ‘‘We thought at first,""‘ one of the Gerâ€" man officers is quoted as having said, "that we would sink you with allâ€"hands ; but it â€"was decided ultiâ€" mately that we would give you a echance." As the boats were leaving the Crown of Castile the members ot the crew :{ that some of the Gerâ€" mans jeered at the men from the steamer . and sneeringly shouted, Britannia rules the waves, does wWAR TAX ON LETTERS. used. As an Time to Get offset to this, a PRIGES OF FARM PRODUGTS REPORTS FROM THE LEADING TRADE CEM®TRES OF AMERICA. Breadstuffs. Toronto, April 6.â€"Flourâ€"Manitoba first patents quoted at $7.70, in jute bags; second patents, $7.20; strong bakere‘, $7. Ontario wheat flour, 90 per cent. patents, quoted at $5.90 to $6, seaboard, and at $5.95 to $6, Toronto freight. _ * Wheatâ€"Manitoba No. 1 Northern quot« ed at $1.60; No. 2 at $1.58 1â€"2, and No, 3 at $1.55. Ontario wheat, No. 2 nominal, at $1.40 to $1.42, at outside points, s Oate~Ontario quoted at 60c, outa‘de, and at 62 to 63e on track, Toronto, West: ern Canada, No. 2, quoted at 69 1%, and No. 3 at 67 1â€"%¢. s f is 4 Barleyâ€"Good nraiting grades, 80 to 85¢ outside. Rye‘$1.15 to $1.17, outside, ~§e“'N°' 1 quoted at $1.85 to $1.90, out aide. f Rye‘$1.15 to $1.17, outside, .‘I;eaevNo. 1 quoted at $1.85 to $1.90, outâ€" gide. f Cornâ€"No. 3 new â€"American quoted at 90 1â€"%, all rail, Toronto freight. Buckwheatâ€"No. 2 quoted at 82 to 83¢, outaide. Bran and shortsâ€"Bran is quoted at $26 a ton, and shonts at $28. _ £aat" â€" Rolled oateâ€"Car lots, per ‘bag of 90+lbs $3.40. Butterâ€"Choice dairy, 27 to 2%¢; inferior, 21 to 2%¢; creamery prints, 35 to 35 1%¢; do., solids, 32 to 3¢; farmers‘ «eparator, 27 to 28c. Eggeâ€"20¢ per dozon, in case lote. Beaneâ€"83.15 to $3.20 for prime, and $3.2 to $3.30 for handâ€"picked. _ o Poultryâ€"Chickens, dressed, 14 to 18¢; ducks, dressed, 13 to 15¢; fowl, 11 to 13¢; turkeys, dressed, 19 to Zic. Cheeseâ€"18 12%¢ for large, and at 19 to Mlle. Perichon, who is only 23, is a Belgian Red Cross nurse. Bhe has the distinction of being the only Belgian woman whom King Alâ€" bert has decorated with the military Order of Leopold, and the medal on her bosom was pinned there for conspicuous bravery, which _ has seldom been equalled even by members of the stronger sex. Mile. Jeanne is the only Red Cross nurse who has actually done work in the trenches at the front. She felt she could accomplish more good there by administering firstâ€"aid to the wounded than by simply doing her regular duties in some field hospital, and by special permission she was pennitted to go with the surgeons to the battle lines. She is in America as the secretary of the Countess L. de Hemptinne, to aid her in her appeal to Americans for help in rebuilding Belgium. 19 14e for twins â€" Potatoesâ€"Ontario, 55 to 60c per bag, out of etore, and 45 to 50c in car lots. New Brunewicks, car lots, 55 to 60c per bag Montreal,. April 6.â€"Cornâ€"American No. 2 yellow, 82 to 82 1%¢. Oatsâ€"Canadian Weetern, No. 3, 67 1%¢; extra No. 1 feed, 67 1%¢; No. 2 local white, 66 1%¢; No. 3 local white, 65 1%¢; No. 4 local white, 64 1.%c. Barleyâ€"Manitoba feed, 80c; maltâ€" ing, 90 to 9%c. Buckwheatâ€"No. 2, 9%¢. Flourâ€"Manitoba Exring wheat patents, firste, $7.80; seconds, $7.30; strong bakâ€" ere‘, $7.10; Winter Patems. choice, $7.90; straight rollere, $7.40 to $7.50; do., bags, $3.50 to $3.60. Rolled oate, bbls., $6.75 to $7; bage, 90 lbe., $3.25 to $3.35. Bran, $2%. Shorts, $28. Middlings, $33 to $34. Mouilâ€" lie, $35 to $38. Hayâ€"No. 2 per ton, CaT lots, $18 to $19. Cheeseâ€"Finest westerns, 17 1â€"4 to 17 1â€"%; finest easterne, 16 54 to {7c. Butterâ€"Choicest creamery, 31 12 to 3%e. Eggeâ€"Fresh, 21 12 to 20. Potatoesâ€" Per bag, car lote. 42 1â€"2¢. Dressed hogsâ€" Abattoir killed, $12.2% to $12.50; country, 89 to $11.25. Porkâ€"Heavy Canada short me«s, bble., 35 to 45 pieces, $28; Canada @hortâ€"cut back, bbis., 45 to 55 pieces, $27.50. Lardâ€"Compound, tierces, 375 lbe., 9 1â€"%¢; woodlg‘lils. 20 tbe. net, 10c; pure, tierces, 375 .. 11 1%; pure, wood pails, 20 Ybe. net, 1%¢. Mnneapole, A{n‘il 6â€"Wheatâ€"No. 1 hard, $1.51 38; No. Northern, $1.46 74 _ to $1.50 7â€"8; No. 2 Northern, #$1.41 78â€" to $1.47 7â€"8; May, $1.44 58; July, $1.38 14 to $1.38 38. _ Cornâ€"No. 3 yellow, 68 12 to 68 3â€"4¢; No. 3 white, 54 14 to 54 34. Flour, fancy ‘patents, $7.50; first â€" cleare, $6.20 ; seconds cleare, $4.70. Bran unchanged. Duluth, April 6. â€"Lingeed, cagh, $1.92 34; May, $1.93 34; July, $1.96. Wheat, No. 1 hard, $1.52 346. No. 1 Northorn,, $1.51 34; No. 2 Northern, $1.44 34 to $1.47 3;41;MM?_2~ Wo. s El oieene En t s ces AG c tana No. 2 hard, $1.51 34; May, $1.48 34; July, $1.43 38. Toronto, April__6, â€" Butchers‘ . cattle, choice, $7.40 to $7.60; do., g)od, $6.50 to $7.%; do., medium, $5.60 to .50; do., comâ€" mon, $4.75 to $5.15; Butchem'.PtLl\ls. cl:gigp. ; RWICR®? hk t * CHORRY TIZW CC C CRZ en o Wl f $7.2%; do., medium, $5.60 to $6.50; do., comâ€" mon, $4.75 to $5.15; Butcbers‘ bulls, choice, 86 to $6.75; do., good bulls, $5.30 to $5.75; do., rough bulls, $4.50 to $4.75; butchera‘ eowe, choice, $5.175 to $6.75; do., medium, $5.2%5 to $5.50; do., common, $4.50 to 85; feeders sGood. $ to $6.80; do., rough bulle,. $5.25 to $6; stockers, 700 to 1,000 lbe , .86 to $6.75; canners and cutters, $3.75 to $4.40; milkere, choice, each, $60 to $90; do., com:â€" mon and medium, each, $35 to $45; springâ€" ers, $50 to $90; light ewes, $6.50 to $8.25: do., heavy, $5 to $6.50; do., buoks, $3.75 to $4.2%; lambe, $6.25 to $11.50; calves, $4.50 to $11.2%5; hoge, fed and watered, $8.50; do., off care, $9 to $9.10; do., {.0%., $8.25. Montreal, April 6â€"Sales of choice steers were made at $8 to $8.25; good cteere at 87.50â€"to $7.175, and the lower grades at from $5 to $6.50; butchers‘ cows, $4.75 to $6.75, and bulle from $5.50 to $7 per owt. One bull weighing 2460 pounds, sold for $180. The supply of Spring lambe offered was protmbl* the emallest for _ many years past, for which the demand was good and sales of a few choice head were mad> at $8 to $10 each, and the smaller ones at from $2.50 to $5. The ‘trade in calves wase active owing to the steady inâ€" crease in supplies and ealee were made freely at from $2.50 to $10 each, as to aite and quality. One calf weighing 425 pounds eold at 8¢ per pound. The tone of the market l‘sr yearling lambs was firm at $8.50 to and sheep at $5.2% to. $6 . per owt. ‘The market for hogs was unchangâ€" ed. Sales of selected lots were made at $9 per owt.. weighed off cars. The [pro: enects are that priccé will be higher next , Tramp Lore. "Get away from here, or I‘ll call my husband !"‘ threatened the hardâ€" faced woman who had just refused the tramp some food. "Oh, no, you won‘t," replied the tranfl), "because he ain‘t home.‘"‘ "How do you know!?"‘ asked the woman. e week "Because,"‘ answered the man as he sidled toward the gate, ‘"a man who marries a woman like you i2 only home‘at meal times.‘‘ e e ‘ï¬â€™;â€â€œi&':"“ d un t Je Feat @?ï¬ â€˜4 {?*m e Jt United States Markets. Business in Montreal. Country Produce. Live Stock Markets Mademoiselle Jean PC aF crichon, Belgian Heroine. Doing a *"*Small Thing" Belittles the Dooer. ‘ In one of Mrs. Wilkinsâ€"Freeâ€" man‘s best short stories, we read of a husband who is a hardâ€"working man, so intent on his schemes for moneyâ€"getting that he has grown thoughtless of the higher obligaâ€" tions of life. For forty years he has been promising to replace the tumâ€" bleâ€"down â€" farmhouse with a new one ; but he has built barns instead, and now he is breaking ground for another. The patient wife turns to her endless round of â€" housework, smarting under the sense of neglect and ill treatment t She is baking pies, and she hurâ€" ries with her task, for the morning is slipping away, ard a piece of pie for dinner is the husband‘s darling indulgence. It never enters her mind that she might rettaliate by the petty revenge of a pieless meal, and if she had, she would have disâ€" missed the thought as altogether unworthy. â€"Mrs. Freeman adds the sage reâ€" flection :>â€" ‘‘Nobility of . character manifests itself at loopholes, when it 18 doors "Large doors‘‘ are not the ordiâ€" nary belongings of. small lives. What our friends and the world know of us comes mainly by loopâ€" hole glimpses of the interior, but these, after all, are more significant than we are willing to believe. â€" Doâ€" ing a ‘"small thing‘‘ belittles the doer. It is a loophole disclosure of a narrow mind and a mean spiâ€" rit. We often think that "holding a grudge‘‘ is only the firmness that selfrespect demands when we know that we are on the right side of a quarrel. Really it proves only a mind too n&rrow and selfish to forâ€" get and forgive. The careless husband of the story would have been keenâ€"eyed enough to see the slender loophole of a pieâ€" less dinner, and the confidence and respect of forty years of wedded life would have suffered a loss by what he saw. _ A series of such loophole disclosures might account for a thousand loveless homes and a thousand broken friendships. But a noble spirit, a loving heart, a character moulded on broad lines, cannot be hidden, either. It comes abroad to eweeten and uplift the world through loopholes as well as through doors. A life that shines never fails to be seen, a‘though it may be fancy itself concealed under the ‘"bushel‘‘ of obscure circumâ€" stances.â€"Youth‘s Companion. A strange little incident of the war is shown in our photograph. While in action, one of our troopers h d L225 .106 c 2: cb dact Abuca stt ie nncedats t t _An dind had a clip of cartridges which he was carrying in his bandolier transâ€" fixed by a German bullet. How narrowly the soldier escaped death can be judged by the course taken by the enemy bullet. Fortune Tellerâ€"‘"The lines on your hand, madam, indicate your future clearly. You will marry & second time." Woman â€" ‘"That proves you & fraud., If I ever marry again it will be for the fourth time." THE NOBLE SPIRIT. The Past Not the Future. not provided with large A Freak of the War. SLEEP LONGER, LIVE LONGER WIHIAT AN EMINENT SCIENTIST sAYXs ABOUT IT. People Need Ten or Twelve Hours‘ Slumber Out of Every Twentyâ€" Four * That sleep is the key to the timeâ€" piece of dlife, indeed the most vital factor in long life, is the gist of a record of experiments just completâ€" ed by Professor Carl Ludwig Schleâ€" ich. Professor Schleich is one of the most eminent surgeons and medical authorities in the world. The local anaesthetic which he disâ€" covered is used by surgeons and physicians for operations in every civilized land. © circulatory systemâ€"artemes, veins and capillariesâ€"of the deposits that barden them and which are one of the foremost causes of senmility. _‘The main purpose of sleep, says Professor Schleich, is to clean the Eight hours work, eight hours play, eight hours sleep is all wrong, he believes. It should be at least ten and preferably twelve hours sleep and four to six hours work. _ Emt e Pem on Cmy o t i C + He also advises "gymnastics of the blood vessels.‘"‘ ‘ During the daylight hours of ac: tivity, muscular movements and work of all the nonâ€"sleeping tissues, two processes take place which ta.v&eap intimate asgociation with ardening and toughening of inâ€" elastic arteries and Other Blood Tubes. One of these is the precipitation and deposit from the streaming blood of all the heavy minerals, ashes and waste particles present in the scarlet flow. _ ¢ F The upshot of this is that the living walls and living tissues which line the blood pipes try, like a cat, to cleanse themselves. They literâ€" aly lift the stuff from the walls and carry it further inside, deep into the middle and outer layers of the arterial walls.: To the touch they feel hardâ€"sclerotic: : When your muscles are excessiveâ€" Iy in motion the adrenal glandsâ€"â€" little bunches of tissue over the kidneys which look like horse chestâ€" nutsâ€"pour out an extra quantity of juice made by them. ‘This raises the pressure of the blood, adds to the heat and rush of that fluid, and causes the little muscular rings in the blood pipes to work . beyond their normal. > The heart beat in sleep is softer,‘ the blood pressure falls to its lowâ€" est point compatible with health, the adrenal glands cease their manâ€" ufacture of muscleâ€"activating subâ€" stances, minerals are no longer deâ€" posited on and in the walls of the arteries and veins, the muscle rings in the blood tubes are allowed to rest instead of being overworked, and all the functions of the blood channels are free to begin cleaning away the debris and refuse which have collected during the working hours. But they must have time enough to do it. Ten hours is the least they can do it in. YVYaricose Veins. Gymnastics of the arteries and veins not only aid sleep to ward off arterioâ€"sclerosis, but they protect you from the most annoying torâ€" sions and bends of the veins known as "varicose veins.‘"‘ The way to carry out these vascular exâ€" ercises is simple enough,. Great paâ€" tience and persistency is, however, necessary. If you will run the forefinger and thumb of your right hand along the lines of your thumb, straight up from the front of your wrist and forearm you will feel the pulsations in the radical arteries of the arms. In like manner, half way between your chin and the angles of the jaw on each side, you will feel the pulse of arteries. On the forehead on each side, in the neck, in the ankles, in the elbows, armpits, thighs and crotch of the knee the same beats of the heart are to be felt as a pulse. 3 ; The veins, unlike the arteries, have no beat or pulse in them. They are, nevertheless, easily to be found on the surface of the skin by virtue ‘ of their bluish hue. The blueâ€"green color of the veins shows them up to the most unobservant persons. Physical Culture of the arteries and veins is carriegd out in this fashion,. The arteries are more circular and less flat than the veins, so they are seized as far as possible with the thumb and forefinger and rolled back and forth twenty times. _ Then the arteries are stroked and soothed as you would a lead pencilâ€"always away from the heart toward the distal, surface or the extremities. The purpose of this, it must be plain, is to squeeze out the limy deposits and minerals of the arterâ€" ies into the inrushing blood is the very direction in which the heart is sending it. The wash of the blood thus cleanses and takes up the crumpling particles of gravel and sand and nature has that much less work to perform. i L civcsd t te ds Sn t > cn cA td Plainly the best time to twirl, twist, stroke and smooth out all of the arteries within reach is just before you are to take your tenâ€" hour sleep. The arteries, which are not within direct reach of your fingers must be exercised by deep pressure if in the abdomen. Bweâ€" dish movements, massage and Faraâ€" dic electricity. "It‘s pretty hard to sleep on an empty stomach,‘"‘ said the tramp wearily to the hustling farmer‘s wife "Why, you poor fellow !‘‘ she reâ€" plied sympathetically. ‘‘Why don‘t you turn over and sleep on your back for a little while? Ye hain‘t Unfortunately the average man seems t> think the time to say no is the next time. wore it out lym; on it, hev ye t" Sympathetic. TORONTO 9 ob oCE wÂ¥ ‘lndd city, forms it | Eetoral 7 per, o 00| gian, and Very | F. Mohr, city, all « SYS | associated ACCUSED OF FIRING THE TOURAINE Police Think He Caused an Explosion in Baggage on Steamer o in Parn doanged wah mclong ts in. is, charged with setting fire to the steamer La Touraine, is an American citizen, and represented in this country a French syndicate engaged in purchasing supplies for the French Government and the civilian population. This was atâ€" tested to by R. K. Maclean, of this city, formerly textile expert of the Federal Tariff Board ; by Thomas Hooper, of Victoria, B.C., a Canaâ€" dian, and by Eugene Davis and W. F. Mohr, both Americans, of this city, all of whom said they were associated with Swoboda in the purchase of supplies All four men were unanimous in asserting that a grave error had been made in arresting him, and have made representations to the State Department, accompanied by affidavits to prove that Swoboda‘s mission at Paris was solely for the purpose of submitting samples of American goods to the French syndicate. British Indian Force Rout 10,000 Tribesmen A despatch from Simla, India, says: Ten thousand tribesmen, composed mainly of Zadraus, colâ€" lected with a view to attacking Tochi, near the Miranshah Post. Government troops, under Brigaâ€" dierâ€"General Vane, engaged the natives, repulsing them completely, killing 200 and wounding 300. A subsequent reconnaissance showed no trace of the band. One of the Most Miserable Ways of Making a Living. An extraordinary occupation that many of the very poor follow in Japan, is that of the esatori, or bait catcher, who spends his days gathering â€"angleworms. _ We say "his,"‘ continues the account in the Japan Magazine, but the bait digâ€" gers are as often women as men. The Japanese angleworm is not taken from the sceil, as is the case in Occidental countries, but from the black mud of the rivers and canals. Tokyo is a great place for this calling. The city has numerous streams and camals connected with tidewater, and as soon as the tide begins to cbb you can see women with their baskets and their mud forks climbing down the stone facâ€" ings of the canals, plunging their legs into the deep mud, and picking up the wrigging ‘red angleworms that they dig out of the mud. & These worms are a somewhat difâ€" ferent species from the carthworm. They are slightly stouter, with jointed bodies and peculiar mousâ€" tached mouths, The receptacles for the captured worms are baskets or tubs with covers that contain small square openings through which the women «dlrop the worms as they pick them up. As soon as the bait baskets or tubs are full the women take them to the shop and sell them. The bait shop deals in bait only, and from _ these establishâ€" ments the fishermen buy worms for their hooks. A despatch from New York says : The amount that the angleworm catchers can make daily is very smallâ€"not more than forty sen for each worker; but it helps out in the household expenses. In the summer weather the work is not hard, although it is certainly hot, with the sun beating down on the stooping form and reflected from the wet mud and water. In the colder weather,> however, it is more trying, for the bait catcher has to stand for hours in the freez ing mud. _ o PeC ES Diseases that are the result of their calling are frequent among the bait women, especially beriberi and dropsy. The Japanese regard bait digging as the most miserable way of getting a living known to mortal man. L JAPANESE BAIT DIGGERS. A despatch from Venice says : Reports received from Trieste say that the Austrian troops in Trenâ€" tino are in a miserable condition, being penniless, hungry and illâ€" clad. Their pay has been cut from fourpence per day to twopence, and their rations from five. loaves of bread a week to two loaves, it is said. Men considerably over forty years of age, the reports say, are being sent into the trenches, illâ€" equipped and their uniforms old and torn, after only a month of practice drilling. | The condition of the civil population is said to be equally wretched. Private letters from Trieste say that numbers of WilL EASE T00R THROBBING HEADâ€"â€"â€"â€" AND s70P DRoPPMNG IN THE THBOAT To Cure Sniffies and Clear Stuffed Nostrils Nothing Equals "Catarrhozone" You can end a cold mighty quickâ€" cure it completelyâ€"by Catarrhozone. Any sort of Catarrh, whether in nose, ing, if you have dull frontal pains over throat or bronchial tubes, can be drivâ€" | the t;gg-é::'l}::‘;trgo speediest cure _ | poss! ozone. ;f,'g::::‘;l::t,: ftï¬oh:mt:;nv:’;o:’:t' Years of vqndertul success in Euâ€" Catarrhozone |rope and < America have proved Caâ€" y tarrhozone a ;mcmc for all catarrhal, It‘s in the nostrils and air passages throat, bronc! and breathingâ€"organ that Catarrh germs breed. The germâ€"| troubles." SImple‘Jleumt. safe and killing vapor of Catarrhozone means| gure. Use the tr and proven remeâ€" ifstant death to these germsâ€"means) dy, Any dealer anywhere can supply that a healing process i¢ started| Catarrhozone, large complete _ outAt that ~a Nemine (A"~""" . ombt@nes.! £1 00: small size 50¢c; trial size Â¥oc. k n o c ol â€" fls i ccus uies PM 3. uts itc en ce * P throughout all the sore membranes,| $1.00; small size TWOPENCE PER DAY IN CASH Aocording to the Paris despatchâ€" es Swoboda has been arrested there as a result of evidence brought out at the official enquiry into the fire on the Touraine, which broke out March 6 while the steamer was en route from New York to Havre. The fire is said to have been traced to an explosion among the firstâ€" class baggage in the hold, and Swoâ€" boda was declared by fellowâ€"pasâ€" sengers to have made peculiar statements before the time of the accident. Bwoboda was traced to Paris and arrested by a French secret service official, and it is said that letters in German found in his room at a hotel will furnish important eviâ€" dence. The despatches state that he was well known in Paris finanâ€" cial circles, where he had served as forecign representative for a broker named Morrison. He was supposed to be a Russian, and ofâ€" ten spoke in Paris of family conâ€" nections in Petrograd and Moscow. VIEWED GRAVELY BY WASHINGTON A â€" despatch from _ Washington says: The reported death of leon C. Thrasher, an American citizen, as the result of the destruction of the British ship Falaba by a Gerâ€" man torpedo, are viewed gravely in official quarters here because of the serious possibilities involved. _ _ Murder of an American Citizen by German Pirates Stirs Uncle Sam. * Ambassador Page is giving his attention to the case and will forâ€" ward all the facts. Boecause of the gravity of the issue raised by this first American death resulting from the German submarine programme, officials refusel to make any comâ€" ment on the case for publication. It has been realized ever since the despatch of the communication to the German Government notify ing it that the United States would hold it to a strict accountability for the acts of its naval authorities that this Government was practiâ€" cally committed to serious action in the event of such a case arising as was indicated in the American note. It is now believed that a case has occurred falling within the purâ€" view of the American note. It was made plain, however, that the State Department will move with extreme deliberation and care in the Thrasher case. No effort will be spared to obtain every fact having a bearing on the case, par ticularly with reference to the cirâ€" cumstances under which the Falaba was sent to the bottom and more than one hundred persons, includâ€" ing Thrasher, lost their lives. Palatable wheat bread is unobtainâ€" able at any price, and the supply of war bread is quite inadequate, The bakers‘ shops are besieged early in the morning, but only the strong and aggressive, the letters say, succeed in getting a few lou.vet. throwing him over The fellow who puts up a bluif with a girl can‘t blame her for the people are _litpull; starving mice 4: Prade uhoi itA tat o BP t The shops then close for the day. Disorders are said to be frequent, and the police are compelied to make many arrests. According to the letter the prices of most of the necessary foodstuffs have doubled or trebled. The misery of the poorer classes is said to be indesâ€" cribable. Persons daring to proâ€" test are arrested. thereby effectually ridding the system of the real cause of the trouble. Catarrhozone promptly opens up clogged nostrils, takes that irritating pain out of the nose, prevents the forâ€" mation of hard painful crusts. If there is a nasty discharge it disappears with a few hours‘ use of Catarrhozone inâ€" haler. If a bad cold keeps you sneezâ€" ing, if you have dull frontal pains over the eyes, you‘ll get the speediest cure possible with Catarrhozone. I #% lt C