953 A despatch from Athens says: The newspaper Heath publishes an inter- view with the Serbian War Minister, who is at Salonica, in which the Min- ister said: "Although we have lost 35,100 killed or wounded and 20,000 taken grlsoncr. the operations are anything at ended. Our form now number- ing 200,000 are still intact. We are only defleient in heavy winery. The morn!» of tho hoop. is unimpaired. The commissnrint is working splen- (liliy. thanks to the French organ- IZv'Y‘S. "NV x-ertheless, the tsituation is dim- mn. though not hopeless, from a The Leading Markets Losses Thus Far 33,000 Killed, and Wounded and 20,000 Prisoners-Ames Have Surprise In star: 200,000 5mm FIGHT on ' TAKING HEAVY mu or ENEMY _r"iryi"'fifi'jd EACKIES ESCAPED In'd tt 0 Ct H R ll ht k horde Min fl hite Ot Business in Montreal. J natiaNew crop, No. 3 to 39c; wmmercial oats, 37 wording to heights outside. , wheat-No. 2 Winter, per in to 9Ce; wheat, slightly and tough, 90 to 93e, accord- mph'; wheat, sprouted, smut- Nth. 7.3 to 880, according to '10, Toronto. flour-New Winter, $4.40 according to sample, sea- Toronto freight: in bags, hipment. . .. . .. Bbl It Coutttry Produce. in'vsh dairy, 28 to 30e; in.. to 2.4c; creamery prints, 32 ., ~-u|'uls, 31 to 320. - " Itside ri iambic Making t, 49 to 1, Nov. M.--Oats--No. 2 ', 4694.0; No. 3 local white, 4 local white, 44%e. Bar- ’nha feed, 65c; making. "wheat-No. 2, 78 to Me. nitnha Spring wheat pat- 'p $6.10; seconds, $5.60; rm". tG.40; Winter patents, ', straight rollers, $6.30 to Lugs, $2.50 to $2.60. Roll- Zbls.. $5.20 to $5.25; do., Pe 1r bag I Ed] from London says: The oth the British and French tdes which recently were in a now assured. The French ind States Wheat. 1' lots, $17.50 to $18 nest westerns, 17% " eastern', 16% to "icest creamery, 31% .4, 20% to 81e. Egg n 45e; selected, 82e; ti No. 2 stock, 27 to y... In." A,“ in. CI on H t-.Nominal, car lots. 75 Ming to heights outside. 2. nominal, 86 to Me; rye, 831v, according to sample. flour-First patents, in 6; second patents, in jute ; strong bakers', in Jute irig-ad: Which Assisted in Defence of Bel- .1,~‘, Nov. "',0.-Wheat--De- ' to 9933; May, 31.02%: inn], 31.05%: No. I Nor- 'Iris to $1.03%; No. 2 Gas to 90%e. Corn-mo. 'r. to "0%e. oats-No. 8 to 36C. Flour unchanged. tt $18.50. ", breUktasi plgin. 34 to mg clear-.1535 to 16e per ts. Hams-Medium, 17% heavy, 14% to tik; rolls, ; breakfast bacon, 21 to 'ov. M.- -Wheat--No. 1 ', No. 1 Northern, $1.01; ern, 97c; Montana, No. 2 December, 98c; May. "nseed--C'assh, $1.99; De- C'.':; May, $'2.0?.rk. 'C lard eastern“, 16% to 17e. cost Creamery, 31% to 20% to Sie. Eggs -. 45c; selected, Me; No. 1 No. 2 stock, 27 to 28c. 'l' bag, car lots, $1.20 to ml hocrs--Abattoir killed, l. Pork-Heavy Canada bhls., M to 46 pieces, " Canada short-cut back, cr, pieces, $27 to $27.50. mml, threes, 375 lbs., pails, 20 lbs. net, 10%e; , 375 livs., 12% to 13c; oils, 20 lbs. net, 13% to Prov isiong, Midtllings, Stock Markets. n'. :T.-The quotations Is' cattle, choice, $7.35 to $32 nominal, per car was. $1.50 to $2, ac, lots, delivered Mont- "an, per ton, $22; 823; middlings. per M flour, per bag, Monastir, new w days ago, a received from commanding barley, H to 16c; (owls, o loc, geese, 14 c; twins. 18e. t Ontario quot- Brunswicks at t, on track. t T2e per dog new-laws, 41 w, 56 to Me; according to :grade Heard From Bran, $22. $29 to $30. Hay-No. 2, 30 to $18.50. us. 17'i to lb lh WITH TIE SERBIAN ARMY ding Boneless 10 lots, ac- the the to $2. 4.'t A despatch from Amsterdam to the {Exchange Telegraph Company says: Food riots are frequent in Poland. The shortage of supplies is so great in the [towns around Warsaw that even the l wealthy are unable to obtain sufficient food. As a consequence. outbreaks are of almost daily occurrence, and involve turhtintr between civilians and (the German troops. I The situation has been made worse I: the refusal of General von Besse- ler. Governor-General of Poland, to allow the Polish Relief Committee to ; work except under German control, to which the committee declines to as- sent. The mortality among children has doubled since the cold weather began. 1 British and French naval brigade; “were sent to Belgrade last {all and took part in the fiidtting against the m-z'imns and Austrians preceding the "vecuction (if the capital brthe Setbl. strategic standpoint, and as regards munitions we shall remain on the de- fensive, holding the passes and wear- ing down the enemy until the Anglo- French forces are tsuMeiently strong to enable us to resume the offensive. "The participation of Italy meet- with difficulties owing to the diver- some of views regarding Albania. Russia's intervention will be effected after the concentration of the allied armies in the Balkans, and it is ex- pected that this will produce a change in Roumania'a attitude. -diGiruridri, jot, that France and England are preparing surprises in the Balkans." I A despatch from Winnipeg says: ' The Union of Manitoba Municipalities, I represented by over two hundred ireeves and councillors, in annual con- . vention at Stonewall, resolved to peti- ' tion the Manitoba Government to levy to $7.60; do., good, $7 to $7.25; do., medium, $6.25 to $6.60; do., common, $5.25 to $6; butehers' ulls, choice, $6.25 to $6.75; do., 2 bulls, $5.75 to $6; do., rough bull ' $4.75 to $5.25; butchers' cows, hoice, $6.30 to $6.50; do., good, $5.35 to $6; do., medium, $5 to $5.50; o., common, $4.25 to $4.75; feeders, good, $6.50 to $6.75; stockers, 700 to 900 lbs., $6.25 to $6.50; canners and cutters, $3 to $4.50; milkers, choice, each, $75 to $120; do., common and medium, $35 to $60; Swingers, $50 to $100; light ewes, $6 to $7; sheep, heavy, $5 to $5.50 do., bucks, $3.50 to $4.50; yearling lambs, $7 to $7.50; Spring lambs, cwt., $8.90 to $9.50; calves, medium to choice, $7.25 to $10; hogs, fed and watered, $9.65 to $9.70; do., weighed off cars, $9.95. Montreal, Nov. 30.--Choiee steers, $7.25 to $7.50; steers, $5.75 to $6.50; common, $4.75 to $5.25; butchers' cows and bulls, $4.50 to $6.25 per t'wt. Canning stock-Cows, $3.15 to $2.35; bulls, $3.75 to $4.25 per cwt. Ontario lambs, $9 to $9.25; sheep, $5.25 to $6 per cwt; milkfed calves, T to Sc, and grassfed, 3 to 6c per 1b. Hogs-Selected lots, $9.75 per cwt., weighed " cars. STA!“ E LN WARSAW; HERMAN FOOD SCARCE Tells U. S. Immigration Authorities He is Weary of War. A despatch from New York says: Heinie Schultz, late a private in the German army, reached New York, a desertor and a stowaway aboard the Dutch steamer Noorderdyk. He wore a uniform which bore the earth stains of the trenches. and said he had grown weary of war. If he is denied admission, he probably will be held here indefinitely, as to deport him would result in his capture by the British. Schultz deserted, he said, after his father and brother had both An Gfeiiii Eomiilunique aitributed the disappearance of these prisoners to an epidemic of cholera. been killed. A despatch from London says: News of further Armenian massacres has reached those in charge of the Lord Mayor's Armenian Refugee Fund. It tells of the mascacre of 500 refugees by Kurds. The refugees succeeded in reaching Russian trans- Caueasia, but nearly 200,000 refugees were already there, and the 500 tried to return to that part of Armenia in Russian occupation. They were mas- sacred on the road to Van. a tax of one mill for five years on all assessable property in the province for the Manitoba Patriotic Fund, in aid of the soldiers' dependents. British brigade, dated from Mitmvit- m. November 20, stating that all was well. Number of Victim: ls Placed at Two Thousand. A despatch from Bucharest says: According to trustworthy sources at Debreczen, 2,000 Russian prisoners confined nearby, who revoked owing to bad food, and killed two sentries, were shot by Hungarinn troops. REFI'GEES MASSACRED ON THE ROAD To VAN URGE PROVINCIAL LEVY FOR PATRIOTIC FUND Hl'NGARIANS KILLED RUSSIAN PRISONERS li “(MAN SOLDIER ARRIVES. , According to the latest news from lSalonica the French line is 'still un- i broken, the report that the Bulgarians have occupied Krivolak being un- ifounded. On the contrary, all their iattacks have been repulsed. I The French official statement re- ports an engagement with the Bul- garian forces near Brusnie, to the least of Erivolak, in which the Bul- agar-s were repulsed. CZAR’S MESSAGE TO THE SERBIANS Reported to Have Promised Their Presence in Bulgaria a Week Hence. A despatch from London says: The Russian Emperor has addressed a personal telegram to theaerbian Pre- mier, M. Pachitch, according to a Salonica despatch to the Daily Tele- graph, in which he promises the ap- pearance in Bulgaria shortly of Rus- sian troops. Tho Italian Government, according to this despatch, has also promised to send an expeditionary force of 40,000 men. swan-w- -- ___-"" F racks are to he erected for the allied troops, and where a great electric power station is to be built to enable the allies to carry on their repair work. France and Great Britain have notified Greece that full indemni- ties will be paid Greece for any dam- age to Greek property that may be caused by the allied armies. The change in Greece's attitude, to- gether with the impressive military preparations by Russia, are under- stood here to have caused a marked reversal of sentiment in Roumania for the allies. It is believed here that Roumanio will grant full permission to Russia to send troops across Rou- manian territory for an attack against the Bulgarians. Many heavy field and siege cannon from Japanese armament factories have arrived in Southern Russia. De- spatches received in Berlin state that large consignments of these cannon are now at Odessa. This news has caused a deep impression in military circles at Berlin. German military authorities state the Russians are about to strike the blow for which they have been preparing in the Near East for the last month. The fact that Russian troops are being con- centrated at Odessa, the principal Russian port in the Black Sea, has given rise to the conviction that Rus- sia will attack Bulgaria from two points, one of the Czar's “armies marching through Roumania for a direct assault on the Bulgars, while another seeks a landing-place on the Bulgarian coast of the Black Sea. "dreat Britéin and France are pre- paring to establish a great military position at Salonica, where large bar. . A u a“. AL,. ..ll:.-,l A despatch from Kingston says: Pte. Vervicke, a Belgian soldier who returned from the front, says he lost his father, mother and three sisters when the Germans destroyed Belgium, and that he and his brother, who is training in Ottawa, wish to get to the front to avenge their deaths. Pte. Vervieke was with the Canadian En- AUSTRALIA WILL HAVE 300,000 MEN IN KHAKI PARENTS AND SISTERS KILLED BY GERMANS tralia, says: q Government has ( additional 50,000 bring “Pine Au for the war to 30 gineers. The Balkan States and the Austro-Italian front have held the chief interest. in war developments 1u,tgiie,',', week. After four months of terrihe fighting with heavy losses in a moutttaiyoys .eounty when-e1 'l,l"1T,,'.1,'t1' were extremely difficult, the Italian armies are reported to have captured their i.nynedirte go? ho e test This news has not yet been officially confirmed, but if it proves true, the Italian victory " one o t e gr I importance. An immediate alliance atrairytT.riest.e may be exgectedLAnwml A" CHM“ Mm“ mnkina a ....,v.......-. .-.. ......._-._-_ -r_MP____""i"" “weâ€, __ - - In the Balkans the Austro-German and Bulgarian advances have continued, masterly retirement. It is now pretty definitely believed that the Serbian arm: although both sides suffered terrific losses. Large forces of French and Briti the defence is becoming very much stronger. At "tiiiibiriaTGiiii"'thi/furii" have made desperate efforts to drive the _ evidently depending upon the reports that the Allied forces there have been inforcements for the Balkan campaign. _ lnIorcemems 101‘ we Danna“ saunas-5n. Russian armies, thoroughly equipped, are now concentrated near the Romanian border, and willl in Bulgaria next week. Greece has complied with the demands of the Entente nations, and after have succeeded in checking the invader, it would not he at all surprising if both Rumania and Gre assist in drivinggnut the enemy forces and in punishing Bulgaria for her part in the war. On the Weste front winter conditions prevail, and fighting has been largely restricted to artil The Eastern battle-front is almost entirely unchanged. Considerable naval activity has been repm Baltic, a squadron of the latest British submarines having passed though the Cattegat, according b reports. A German super-dreadnought is reported to have been sunk by a mine. A despatch from l from Melbourne, Aus- '. The Commonwealth has decided to raise an 30,000 men. This will , Australian contingent to 300,000. The Week's Developments in the War. War Is Expected to Breed a Warless Race. Discussing the question "Has the war any advantages?" the Medical Journal says: "The only apparent redeeming feat- ure of the present war is the work of the physicians and nurses; and yet their labor seems pitiful and absurd, for they are. engaged in picking out from the scrap heap of fine body ma- chines those which are not beyond re- pair and in returning to the front as many as possible of these for future destruction. "To those who believe that there is a wise purpose running through the universe and that everything that happens has a meaning the phenomen- on of war seems to have no place; and yet it is hardly believable that war, with all its horrors does not serve some purpose in the general scheme of things. "The destruction of fine physique by war has seemed by all ordinary hu- man standards of measurement wrong; the preservation of the feeble and sickly as accomplished by modern medicine has also, judged by a similar standard, seemed to be bad policy; but if there is a purpose in it all both must be for the best. Certainly both tend toward the same end, and if one is good in the long run the other must be so. "Following this lead. the purpose of war as established by and continued by nature would seem to be the pro- duction of R race of beings less ro- bust in body, though this does not mean that they are less persistent or short-lived, and one in which the bod- ily energies are directed toward mental development. Whether or not war is for this purpose the develop- ment in peaceful pursuits tends in this direction. The inventions of ma- chinery for work and for getting about are making constantly for se- dentaries and diminished muscular- ity, and mankind takes with apparent readiness to a change in this direc- tion. "If war has any real biological pur-' pose it must, therefore, be intended for the end of bringing about a new type of man in which the combative' quantities that make for war are be- ing gradually done away with, and the elements which make for peace are being steadily brought forward.‘ If there is any theory which will make war a good thing and reconcile thei work of bullet and splint it would} seem to be this. If these two factors! are to Isrttit.Ee: some day, a type of man who will be so peaceable and sol wise as not'to care to go to war, buti content to settle his differences in) milder ways, then we could perhaps become reconciled to the present, struggle." l The Time to Marry. Hepsey, the maid of color, had told the mistress she was to be married. "Well, Hepsey," said the mistress, "I'm sorry to lose you, but l suppose it is all for the best. How long have you known the man?" "About two weeks ago, ma'am." "My.r No longer than that? Don't you think you ought to wait and get to know him better?" "It's a case of love at first sight." "Well, maybe it will work out all right. I took four years to select my husband, and look what I got." "5&0, ma'am," exclaimed Hepsey. "Et I knowed him any better t sho' never would marry him." The first ironclad was the Warrior. Constructed in 1858, she was in 1887 still on the active list. THE MAN or THE FUTURE llcau: """ â€L \Ayw‘rvvu- lgarian advances have continued, the Serbian army making a ly believed that the Serbian army has escaped the trap set for it, my forces of French and British troops are now in Serbia, and esperate efforts to drive the British and French into the sea, Allied forces there have been greatly weakened to provide re- Her Chance Good. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO hing Bulgaria for her part in the war. and fighting has been largely restricted to artillery duels. sited. Considerable naval activity has been reported in the having passed though the Catlegat, according to repeated ‘4 "a?†! Attempts of the Austrians to use ithe ice on the Styr River for fording ipurposes resulted in the annihilation [of an entire battalion. While the Itroops of the battalion were crossing fthe stream the ice gave way and all i were drowned. ', At other points on the front, Rus- 'sian artillery is breaking up the ice [with shells in order to prevent the IGermans and Austro-Hungurians from crossing. On the Dvinsk front, the Germans are now upon the defensive, although 'strong counter-attacks have been launched north of Illoukst in an (effort to capture the ground lost to (the Russians. Field Marshal von 'Hindenburg's army has been driven from important positions in front of ,Dyinssk and the Germans have tsuffcr- 'ed severe losses. l The position of the Russian armies lhas been enormously strengthened, however by an abundance of ammuni- tion, the correspondent says. Gun- ‘ners now show to infantrymen in- scriptions written by workmen on em- munition boxes, which read in sub- stance: "Don't Ibure shells. Plenty more are coming, comrades. We are {Working hard to keep you supplied. i‘Cheer up." RUSSIAN RIVERS ARE MUNI IP Austrian Battalion Attempts to Cross the Styr. But Is Anni- hilated. A despatch from Petrograd says: Intensely cold weather is prevailing all along the front in the eastern theatre of war, and already the rivers have begun to freeze up. _ An official report tells of an attack hy Russians on the enemy near the village of Semikovtze. on the Strips. The Germans were driven to the river and those who escaped Russian bullets were drowned in an attempt to cross the river. Over. 100 killed or wounded were found on the scene of the action. Notwithstanding this, the Germans still are making desperate efforts to advance in the direction of the Dvinu. They have built a new road for the transport of ammunition and heavy guns. Huge quantities of ammunition recently have been forwarded to the regions of lkskul, Friedrichstadt and Jacobstadt. Victory Does Not Always Go To Big Battalions. It is a fatal mistake for a command- er to despise the army in front of him, even though its numbers may be much less than his own, as the Ger- man general before Liege found to his cost, and as Edward II. learned at Bannockburn. From classical times to the present day, victory has by no means always gone to the big battalions. Garibaldi and his two thousand or so red shirts made the kingdom of Italy possible, while the British Army has nothing finer to show than the defence of Rorke's Drift, when eighty men of the 24th, with a few men of other regiments, defeated some 4,000 Zulus, and saved Natal. One of the hardest fought battles of the Franco-Prussian War was Worth, where the French were out- numbered by nearly three to one, but made such a gallant resistance that their losses in killed and Wounded were fewer than the Germans. At Agincourt the English were outnumbered by five to one, while at Crecy they put to flight a force rather more than twice as strong. .Lord Kitchener speaks A r . . a native. r lie like FACING FEARFL'L ODDS. t and will be fighting and after the Allies nia and Greece should ITALIANS TAKE Capture of Months' A despstch from Rome on?“ After] five months of "htintt the Italiano" have taken the Podgors new“. the' key to GorIts. now known to the Ital, lan soldiers " Monte Cslvsrio, be- cause of the heavy losses muttered by them in their clot-ts to conquer it as we“ us by the Austrian defenders. These heights, just west of Goritz Ind on the opposite bank of the home, commsnd the stronghold. Their capture means that virtually the last step in the taking of Goritz has been accomplished. l To the French belongs the rrmlit lfor the first use of motor transport (in the present war. which aceovding ,to the "FremdenbUtt," which says that at the very outbreak of hostilities lthe French General Staff seized 500 Paris motor buses and sent them off, lpacked with soldiers. to the Belgian lfrontier, and 1,000 other motor itransports similarly improvised fo!- 'ilowed next day. ‘ A later despatch says: The Italian ', mu.†advance against Gorizia made sortwU".t, further progress to the south and thy _ " pit north-west of the city. The force/thit .which took the summit of the Pod- ful Il Egon; heights extended their eonquests _ an,“ lnorth-west of the city, taking furvilwm ither trenches in the course of vigor- cut l iii? lighting. and holding them against i Ch an Austrian attempt at a counter-lot “I lattack. i, ivto l South of the city. on the ('ursulsmul 'platcau, the Italians gained some in!“ V Iground to the north of Monte “whim-l ('liGfi?e, between Bosehini and Pete-"and Iano, and to the south of the mountain, 1 of I" (in the direction of San Martino. Kim" Austria's urgent appeals for 1hus l in tlt man aid on the Italian front are still ( ful. iunheeded. Germany has two reasons: Ca Ite: refusing to aid her ally in this Ohm quarter.' the necessary troops ure not l mush lavailable, and Germany is not at war tiatlt't 'with Italy. As a result of Germany's emru Iposition. it is possible that the Aus, the _ trians will be compelled to retire and , tinte: 1give up the desperate resistance which E thrce ,they have been interposing to the-[sepm Italian advance. I â€m†The Italian oMeU1 statement con- taining the announcement of this, the most important victory won by the Italians in many months, follows: "On Monte Cnlvtrio (Podgorn heights), west of Goritz, our attacks continued, and we reached the sum- mit, which we held under the furious and eorteeettratad fire of the enemy. "On the Cnrso plateau, after re- pulaing weak night Ittlckl, the oper- "ions were vigorously resumed in the morning, Ind a strong entrench- ment was taken near the San Martino Church. A total of , otheers and 86 men were taken prisoners." Following their success in the cop- ture of the heights of Podgora, the Italians are now storming the heighté of San Michele, on the edge of the Como plateau to the south of the Aus- trian stronghold on the Lsonao. These heights form the only important forti- iieatioms south of Goritz, and the Ital- inns have been making desperate efforts to oceupy them for snvorul weeks. In the oiheint report, it was an- nounced that General Cudorna's forces succeeded in occupying the fourth line of entrenchments near the summit of the mountain. This victory wan. achieved after a tevrific bombard- ment. of the Austrian positions lasting all night. When the urtilh-ry iitw eeascd, the infantry charged from. the district around the church of San Martino. The Austrians were unable to retreat in time, and most of the 'lc- fenders of the fourth tron-ch wow made prisoners. Sure Proof. Hokusr-r can always tell a wo- man who takes things just because they look cheap. Pokus--Howt Balms-Simply by looking at her “that 7 ' Since the beginning of the Italian offensive, which is now known as the fourth battle of the Isonzo, the Aus- trians have delivered a series of artil.. lery and infantry attacks along thrs whole line of the [some in futile at- tempts to regain some of the fround lost to the Italians. These attacks were in every case broken down by the terriiie bombardment of the Itul- ian big guns. Every day sees an in- crease in the violence of the bombard- ment in the neighborhood of Goritz. It has been learns-d here that a council of war was held recently at Laibach, at which it was decided by the Austrian commanders that Carin. could not hold out any longer without lid from Germany. Germany's refusal to aid Austria on the Italian front is said to have Inn-ll instigated by Prince von Buelow, for, mer Imperial Chancellor, whose vinit to Switzerland is believed to have had for one of its objects an attempt lo learn whether appreciable Italian sun ceases, including the permanent occu- pation of Gorizia. would satisfy Ital- ian public opinion. It is evident that Prince von Buelow hopes that the war between Italy and Austria will not b.- continued longer if considerable ter- ritory is gained by the Italians before Winter. Hence Germany would Ire benefited in the future if she now rv- fuses to aid her ally. As “an approximate cstimate" it is stated that "the belligerent Pos, as in the firtst week of the war marlv usv of some 250,000 motor transport wag- zons, apart from the great numbers of automobiles de luxe and touring cars which were pressed into service." Of this 250,000 motor wagons France had 90,000, Germany 70,000, England 55,000. Austria 25,000 and Russia IO,- 000. Their total value is estimated at $200,000,000. This Italian offensive, heretofor, belittled by the Austrians, now "vi dently is pressing them hard. Used Automobiles in Field Day War Marted. FRANCE FIRST WITH MOTORS Height- Crown. Five Canals-I Agaitust 'tt men or HUNGER . SHARPENS TONGUES‘ The Problem of “MY“! Ge Sun“. ‘I Pueu Upper- A deerntegt from (Home an: The Volku wrung in a shun-p article - the 'uicutai to call the WW to account for its mum to deal ado-l quntetr with the problem of otw’h’W' (WI. "To supply the German nation with provisions is at present the most im- Portant military question, and om, which must be carried through before Winter." the Voila 2eitune “YI- l“This doubtless will Ire recognized by who supreme mm command, Who†Eitiii will find no opposition. We re- ‘commund the appointment of an eco- nomie dictator in military clothing." I The article closes with an attack on The article closes witl Kerr won Stein, racer Under-Secretary of the the ground that hr l enerttetitatlly onoug'h l problem. "This doubtless will the supreme armv orders will find no 0 commend the Ippoi! nomic dictator in I Sonny the Red ( Manual may jelly, cum, ', made wher bought pm good, and P sick room, products cu ing war." The present, m4 many men, uour:! faring from dis brought home. " therefore, to Knox, make the home-m Raw meat juice Here is the meth, half a pound of has home-killed meat. bone, and with m sun-hardened piece mince one wineglu ter. This must Mu hours. Then Hun Marchv25th used to be the first day at the you; . year. At the Louis-lo-Grand Lyceum, l oldest in Paris, there are 900 studer as against goo last your. More th 150 of last year's pupils " this i ceum are in the army. Only 25 p cent. of the usual number of studer are registered at the Fine Al School, and other sections of the ui versity have suffered equally; t medical school even more, most of t professors being in the sanitary m vice. In the an svhoots the tendem-y to modernism has not been shaken. hut it has lwt-n cleared of freaks und ex- trnvagunces. The artist student i, taught to take nature and improve upon what ordinary mortals see of Lt, but in such rational form that any one an rewiilsviistitwuish forms and features. The subjects are moms. The muteriul is largely marine. very little of battlefields or other war Menes, excepting in the wor of stu- dents who have been or still we at the front. in all schools, prim-r . and danced. ere is on increased t',,'l')l est in history, geography and political my. . and sque This tttut should ire Obtain l oughly, saucepan enough 1 emu p: bet we The Attendance an Soho-bk That of Last Year. The student life of France 'toe m uninterruptedly. though Hymn-win: modified by war. Thv molrilixatio; drew more upon professors than pu pila last year. This year's rcopenim of the schools shous heavier draft have been made upon the students " colleges and univeraities. In th primary schools and 1yceums the at tendance. though less than the aver age. exceeds that of last yeur; th immune is made-up largely of re fugeu that did not attend schunl his simmering in the usu: times. Continue the I three hours until the separate from the tttt through course mu: into a buin, or maul be first wetted with t jelly will turn out WI if eep more The full An authoritat C Chi the mould is tiTUOr',N'r LtFF, IN tHttht I an invalid's n small pica all, and put with a pint tand iling on hee 1h jun r.V two tea, ch M Hill " HUMI layers thin. 1 broth own“: e, sub} kept that p: With to ch th, itf the Met Cookery Red " m yocenlly appointod " a. though somewhat . The motrilization professors than pu- tis year's reopening lows heavier drafts ' meat muslir l8 y m ‘H h n cold when entities. In th d lyceums the at sss than the aver of last year; th n runs Irutts the hue rtions of the ed equally; more, most 1; the snniww n Q Inteiior, or has not dealt with thv, food " M n. Nursing lawn-d! me- The ot per mt s " un he he h II