West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 20 Jan 1916, p. 7

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A dumb}! from London says: The recent Inauguration of a censorship Upon Lo'h outgoing and incoming AmerVan mails has already produced reunite, according to oiheUhs, in the. form of the revelation of a wide- spread espionage plot, which the on» till: dads-c has amply iuatified the1 a d., nci.rtvat of troop. Homing in order to pr: arrival of Serbian troop: k r VI neig tho new mths tir th, by on An Preparing: for the Arrival There of Serbian Troops. A Jssrriuch from London hare'.' A New)! dead-mum has been lauded p0 Ur (um. C. Creelman, in a few words, showvd the necessity of capital for the graduates in agriculture. "Thea, men," he said, "hnve to start in wlu-n- their fathers did fifty years ago-7 on an unimproved farm. with Poor' stock and machinery. If they wen allowed capital to put a farm in shape the first your they would be ahh. to make use of their education,‘ instead of wasting it on scrub cattle and rtm-down soil." Dr. Creelman also favored the idea of B.S.A. men Vir.se out to manage one-thongnnrl. l Fawn-rs by producing a record crop last yrs: saved this country from a genre iinaneiat depression. said the President of the union. Mr. Herbert Groin. amid applause. In his opinion the farmers of Ontario were a little slack this year in thcir interest in the welfare of the Empire, and should bear in mind the fact that Providence favored tho German and Briton agri-l culturixt alike. l P ttctT rr - -_ w.-- .""""."h_ vuIt - other side of this business-naman failures due to to poor crop, diseases, and winter injuries, in moat cases the result of careless handling. Tons of Food Wasted. I "A valuable natural resource," con-l tinurd Mr. Pettit, "is the honey which is pmduced every summer by the mil- lions of Rowers blooming on the farms of Ontario. This honey not only anti». lies the human craving for sweets, but it ha., real food value, so it cannot in any Way be considered a luxury. At present. many tons are wasted for want of bees, and many bees are kept tttttlot. stnprofitahle ”mamm- r.... Imu- th Two cases illustrating the unusual profits that may be made from the keeping of bees were cited by Mr. Morley Pettit, Provincial Apiarist, in an address delivered at the Experi- munlal Union meeting at the Ontario Atrricutturnt College, Guelph. One was that of a young undergraduate of the O.A.C. whose bees during the sum- mer vacation produced $1,000 worth‘ of honey, and the other of a woman whose bees produced more than $2,000 worth of honey during the season of; 1915. l H farmers f " "(WHY m A VALUABLE NA. TURAL RESOURCE. A doapatch from London says: De- spite the assertions node in the Blglthmg that food is ample and ,mrvution in Germany is impossible, the, Gunman press continues to print Judah. of the authorities' claims Ind to give indications of the "ever- Increasing pinch" caused by the Bri. tish lumde. The Berliner Zeitung szx. "It. in difficult to imagine that thing: Mud grow worse just now without Fume "aowrting disaster. The masses or tho people are hungry all day lang, many articles of food having reached 1 price wholly beyond the reach of thel families od the working class. Bun. ger renders the people sullen and at»: privtxl them of all joy in victories, Triumph of fh.t.C. No, Berlin Papers Admit That i'vvored the idea of BSAmen , out to manage one-thousand- I'nrms as a business proposition. Farmers Saved the Country. Nest of Spies Unearthed in Britain AN EVER-INCREASE! iiririiiiii'ii='""===="-""- / muss» BY BRITISH momma r stttprofitable conditions toi. lack illful management. 1iiiTll)Iil OF TIE EX- PfiillliEln'jtl, UNION It M'H occupy CORVl "ti 'atwc experimcn ual cxpetimenu, mus and their men. but their -ru Saved the Comttrr--'rrit"toh of the "O. A. C. No. 72" Oat. sycaker .9159 pointed out the has amply Justified the as well, l of the pl ms of see at It Need of Capital g .. u\ aynuu Hutu JJUIIU rivulture carried on at _ Belgian spy, Cels, w 1 on, mote than 4,000 Edith Cave“. the Flnglis ut Ontario. {was executed at Bums: , value of this workfago, to the Germans ha 'rofessor, referring toisinatcd. His body war, cxporimunts. "is from J street of Schaerlreck, n cpetiments carried out T with two bullet wounds and their sons. Not: A despatch from Bru of fortili plots or Crechn . familir all wat Whit Data numnt That the People There Are Hungry All Day Long According to evidence revealed by} the opening of American mail, it is} stated, an organization of spies here? has been sending information to ani American branch, which forwards it to! Germany by various routes, -titiiiiJl by one through Holland. i organization of the large departmm neg-saw! to carry on the work. (hvater Beriin adapted a resolution oxprwsinz with” that only twenty f3oeialists in thy Reichstag suppstrterl Dr. Kari Linbkrccht in the opposition against the war median Similar reso. lutions were adopted at Socialist meet- ings in Liepzig. Weimar and in the Rhine Province. SU('|.\LIST Ol'i‘USHN‘N INCREASING DAN.) Belgian spy, Cels, Edith Cave". the Bug- was oxscuted at Brus ago, to the Germans l' MW WHO D'd.Ntu'.NCEit EDITH CAVELL BHUT l A despatch from Paris says: The Illavre correspondent of the Petit Journal teleeruphs that the Belgian Government is about to lodge a pro- l test with neutral Governments against "he new German war levy of 40,000,- i 000 francs monthly, in addition to last jyear’s tax of 480,000,000 francs. The Belgian protest, the correspondent 'says, will point out that under the provisions of The Hague Convention war taxes levied in occupied territory; are limited to amounts necessary to meet needs of the army of occnpu-l tion or to pay for the administration of the territory in question. The new Belgian tax is said to be far in excess of the amount needed for these Dur- Prof. Harcourt advised using it on poorer lands, or practically any place where other clovers had been found Cl to fail. Some men from actual expert, Lence favored it for posturing and - weed smothering. On a farm in West.. , l orn Ontario, according to one of these _ l men, two hullocks to the acre could be t, run on a field of it all season after it I once got a start of eighteen inches. i I Talk on Farm Management. I Paul Angle, a successful manager} of a fifteen-hundred-acre farm at Sim-,' lme, gave a brief talk on farm man-, 9agement. "Business methods are noth-'I jing more than methods which assist you to obtain greater praflts," he said. ,“The business end ofv'furming has [changed from simple teaching in our Imutndrather's time ticomplex prob- llems of buying and selling and the Ehirim: of labor. Concentrate your [business and study‘hew you can turn I [waste time into'valuablv labor,” was ', (the pith of his address. I' Pllt " FF'TS AGAINST ‘lthough all the bells are ringing and ,itutrs wave. The children are under- liled, pale and wan, looking like faded Mowers. The extent to which the fall 'iin the birth rate occupies the atten- i‘tion 'of the Government" was shown at lithe meeting of the People's Welfare 'iAPtrociation' at Berlin. On that Occa- "sion a representative of the Prussian 'i3finistry of the Interior stated that the Government was fully aware of ‘r the importance of the question in its " bearing on the future of the German lnation, especially in view of the fact (that hundreds of thousands of young leer) are being cut off in the flower If, "heir youth. In the meantime We are iinformed that the military authorities ‘have forbidden meetings convened to; Idiseuss the dearnesu: " "win-I" I I Professor. J. E. H, startling statistics enormous losses to pt rot. "Despite the las in the acreage of the stated, "there was a 1 than five million bu: average of forty bu despiti 1am Potato Loses Through Rot G from Team: ER.“ A N BRIGAN DAG' h', " . J. E. Hewitt Rave a few statistics regarding the me future of the German ecially in view of the fact ads of thousands of young mg cut " in the flower of In the meantime we areI at the military authorities den meetings convened to; dearness of living." f tity Socialist ot' th in a oh; pus Th: Da ily nation in pur Manager-What do you mean by talking like that? Are you the man- ager here, or am I? Clerk-r know I'm not the manager. Manager-Very well, then. If you're not the manager, don't talk like an idiot.' l Qumran”, til to $1.50; hugs. fed and Winn-2d. Sp.y.5 to. $9.50. M, aitul, Jan. IS----'".. steers sold i'. $7.77) to S“: good at $7.25 to $7.Mt, and the lower. grades at 53.25 m $7. whife imm-hem' cows brought from 9511.5" to $6.25, and hulls from $5 to Ci' per out: cows. $3.50 tu $3.60, and bulis at $4 to $4.50 per ewt. On- tario lambs sold at $10, and Quebec stock at $9.50 to $9.75, while ewe sheep brought $6.75, and bucks and culls at $6.25 per cwt. Milk-fed calves sold at 'Ni.. to 10e, and grass-fed at tr to 61,90 per lb.. Selected lots of hogs sold at $10.25 to $10.35 per ewt.,1 weighed off cars. I dium, $5.25 to $5.75, do., CO' $1 to $4.50; feeders, gruod, $6. $6.14); stockers, 700 to 900 lbs., $6.50; CaHnc't'.", and cutters, 1 $1.50; milkers, thoice, each, t $100; do., common and medium, $35 to $60; Swingers, $50 to light ewes, $6.50 to $8.25; [ heavy, £5.25 to $6: do., hucks. tn $1.50; yearling lambs, $7 to l lamlma "wt., $10 to $11.75; calve: tyum to rhoicc, $6.75 to $10.50 comma". M tn SM..50: hugs. fod l Minneapolis, Jan. ri,t'r-tr,rett-ya.s:/ 31.2614; July, $1.25; No. 1 hard,! $1.30u; No. 1 Northern, $1.26yi to) 31.28%; No. 2 Northern, 31.22% to! $1,25ri. Corn-No. 3 yellow 75 toi 751/50 Oats-No. 3 white, 44% to, 44%e. Flour and bran unchanged. I Duluth, Jan. 18,--Wheat-tVo. 1 hard, $l;'26">3;“ N9. 1 5 Northern.! 3 Winnipeg Grain. f Winnigeg, Jan. 18.--Cash quota- tions:-- o. 1 Northern, $1.101i'/; No. 2 Northern, 51.16%; No. 3 Northern, $1.13%; No. 4, $1.00%; No. 5, tt.0ii'r'c, No. i;, 91%e; feed, 81%e. Oats-No. 2 C.W., 43%e; No. 3 (HM, 40%e; rxtra No. I feed, 40%c; No. 1 feed, 38%e; No, 2 feed, 38530. L'ar.. 1ey--No. 3, 62c; No. 4, 67e; feed, 50c. Flax-No. l N.W.C.. $212745; No. P. C.W., 82.09%. i .u. 5‘772; an”! no. 1 Iced, Atf%e; No. (t local white, 46% to 47e; No. 3 local lwhite, 45% to Me; No. 4 local white, 114% to Me. Barley, Man. feed, 60e; ‘malting, " to “Sc. Buckwheat, No. _ 2, 82e. Flour, Man. Spring wheat pat- 'cnts, firsts, $6.90; seconds, $6.40; Matron-g: hokrsrss', $6.20; Winter patents, choice, $6.50; straight rollers, $5.80 to $5.90; do., bags, $2.75 to $2.8.5. Rolled oats, barrels, $5.20 to $5.25; bags, 90 lhs., $2.45 to $2.50. Bran, $24. Shorts, $26. Middlings. $28 to) $30. Mouillie, $31 to $33. Hay, No., 2, Wu' ton, car lots, $20 to $30.50.j Cheese, finest westorns, 18% to 18%c; i finest easterns, 18 to 18940. Butter,) choicvr't creamery, 81% to 85bie; seconds, ll2% to Me. Eggs, fresh, 45 to 48c; selected, Me: No. 1 stock, 20c; No. 2 stock, 28c. Potatoes, per bag,‘ car lots, $1.75 to $1.80. i I Provisioné. l Bacon, long clear, 16% to 16%e [per lb, in case lots. Hamrr-Mtrdiuris, (17% to 18%e: do., heavy, 14% to L'iet malls, 16 to 16%e; breakfast bacon, 21 'to Me; backs, plain, 24 to Me; bone- Prsy bteie, 27e. Montreal, Jan. lik-Corn, . can No. 2 yellow, 83% to 84c. Canadian Western, No. 2, 50% ' 49%;; gum No. 1 feed, 48% Lard-PIG" lard, compound, 12 to 12yke Millfeed-Car lots. delivered Mont- real freirhts. Bran, $24 per ton; shorts, $25 per ton; middlings, $26 gar ton; good feed flour, $1.60 per att. Ontario fltmr---Winter, $4.60 to $4.80, according to sample, seaboard or Toronto freights in bags, prompt shipment. , B.ar)tttMattine barley, tn to 62e; feed harley, 53 to iie, according to freights outside. Bpckwhoat-dar lots, 76 to Tik, ac- cording to heights outside. Ryed-No. 1 eommoreial, 88 to Me; rye, rejected, 70 to Me, according to sample. Manitoba ffour--Pirst patents. in jute bags, $6.80: second patents, In Jute bags, $6.30; strong bakers', in Jute bags, $§.10, Toronto. Peai-Ufdf. 23w: iii:%it's,' peas. according to sample, $1 $1,76. Breadth... Toronto, Jan. 18.--Mtutitoba wheat ---New erop-No. 1 Northern. 81.19%; No. 2 Northern, 31.17%; No. 3 Northern, 31.13%, in store, Fort ”Villiam. C Manitoba oats-No. 2 C.W., 48fie; Ao. 3 C.W., 41%; extra No. 1 feed, '119ie; No. 1 feed, 40%e, in Itore. Fort William. American eorn--No. 8 yellow, new, 81%c, on track, Toronto. Canadian etrrn--No. 2 yellow, old, nominal, on track, Toronto. ‘ Ontario oats-No. 3 white, 40 to 41e; commercial oats, 39 to 40e, inc-l cogling to freights outside. Ontario wheat-No. 2 Winter, per car lot, $1.06 to $1.08; wheat slight- ly Fproutwl. $1.03 to $1.06, and tough according to sample; wheat sprouted, smutty, 94c to $1; and tough nocnrding to sample; feed wheat, 80 to /illtr, ac‘gording to heights outside. His Own Privilege. Markets of the World United States Markets Montreal Markets, Country Produce. 1,h-,--9yty. A Teri- _ 3,400 medium, each, $50 to $100; $8.25; sheep, " hucks. $3.50 $33. Hay, No. 20 to $30.50. .1334 to 18%c; {$930. Bqtter. 14 to 14%e; me- do., and Lil}; May, ; No.‘ 'r. No: I to A despatch from London says: ALTurkilh submarine which had ground, despatch to Reuter'a Telegram Com- led in Documen- the mouth of the puny from Petrognd say: that Rus-jMilen. Two kill: soiling .--hip| sian torpedo boats have destroyed twirl: coal also were destroyed. M $1 Professor (to student)--WUt you laughing at? Not at me? sStudent--Oh, no, sir. Professor-Then what else is t in the room to laugh at? u.» um... u“. umua nus J the King's congratulation. 27 Itclatives in the War. 3 Mr. Henry Collis, of Cambridge, England, a retired warrant officer. of thivty-theee years' service, thirty of which Were spent in India, has twenty- sevcn velatives serving with the col- ors. They include tive some. one son- in-law. two grandsons‘ two brothers. fourteen nephews, and aivc brothers- in-law. All hut three have served at the front. Mr. Collis has just received i The successful transplanting of the nerves of young pigs into the human body has been reported to the Moscow Society of Surgeons by Dr. D. A. Gruztlefr. Three operatinns, all of which gave ttood results, were de- scribed by Dr. Gruzdeff. In two cases he had to deal with a leg that had been paralyzed by a Wound, in the third case with an arm that had been similarly paralyzed. , A despatch from Petrogrud says: iGermun and Austrian prisoners cap- [tured on the south-western front state 'that their losses at Czartorysk were enormous. Along the battlefield the Russians collected 10,000 unwounded 'prisoners. At Czernowitz. Tarnopol land on the Bukouina front the Teu- tun wounded numlunvl 100.000. There were only eight armed 'tuards,.but the camp is scourer sur- rounded with barbed wire fences. The discipline of the camp is left to Ger- man non-commissioned omeers. 80; (‘"“ 1......” daily, with potatoes, white bread, snup, seasonal. green vegetables, and plenty of coffee. Some of the pri- soners work in tailor and boot. shops, where they repair the uniforms and footwear of their comrades. For this work $1.50 a week is paid. HNEMY'S LOSSES ENORMOl‘S IN ('ZARTORYSK FIGHTING Men Fitted With Nerves of Pigs to city of Dwinsk. 'rhe"diGniiriirii." ummn, nuuul-east 01 muxt, which is devastating and caused losses aggro in German hands. Illuxt is only eight gating 70,000 to the armies of Gener, miles west from the great railroad als von Pflanzer and Count von Both, eitv " “which TIM. fr.,......, 1n," .. "-""'e ‘ycllb UGLLIC3 For the first time in several weeks the Stripa. the Russians displayed activity on the of killed w, north-western part of the battle line, tleheld. launching an attack on Field Mar.I "Austriat: shal von Hindenburg's forces 1royrt,dpisonmo s: Dvinsk, south-east of llluxt, which is devastating in German hands. Illuxt is only eight gating 70.0( i A despatch from London says: On the Russian front, the Austrian offi- cial communication records renewed desperate attacks by the Russians on the Bessarabian frontier, but claims that the attacks everywhere were re- pulsed. The Petrograd communica- tion is silent on the subject, but the Russians usually withhold mention of their movements until they are well on the road to completion. T Desperate Attacks Agair t the Teuton Defences Renewed at Various Points The Professor’s Break, RUSSIAN ROLLER IN mono" -- - _-L- ALONG BESSARABIAN mom "UN CAPTrVEs [IVE WELL, Russians Destroy Turk Submarine By way of variety. when they are trenches In France, British ottieera luv carts" and dotra. The picture thaws the owner. is there are zians on; The Pctrograd correspondent of the claims‘London Daily Mail telegraph: It is were rerreported that the Rulsinns are ener- munica- g'etically pushing toward: Czerno- but the witz. They have occupied Sadagon. ttion of It is reported that 10,000 Austrian well on prisoners have been taken in the re- .cent battles in the Bukowina and on 1 weeks the Strips Besides a great number on the of killed were abandoned on the bat.; Je line, tlefleld. l l Mar-.I "Austrian and German wounded and; _aroytyrptisoneto say the Russian artillery is, LLJ. t.. J.»--A~A~"r T . _ Every time a man makes a fool himself by acting contrary to his ' Judgment he gets mad. A 'lcspateh from London saw: Bri- tish infantry lossvs on all fronts now average- Ir, pm- cunt. monthly. Unwr- Sveretar.v for War Termant informed the House of Cr,mmons on Wednesday aftrrnoon. explaining why the Gov- ernment found it m-cossary to adopt rorrccription to fill the ranks. These tigurcs take into account soldiers re- lieved from duty because of wounds, but who afterwards recover and re- turn to the front. lsure singlvness of direction in mili- tary operations, which has become more necessary than over now, and at the same time to establish close co- ordination between tho command of our armies and the technical councils of the Allies, which will be held " grand headquarters." BRITISH WASTAHH IS 15 PER CENT. M0NTmA' if France Not to Replace Joifre as Coll- l mander. l Premier Briand is authority for the tstatement that the Government has ino intention of appointing a successor ito General Jotrre, in command of the garmies on the French front, according ito the Journal. In reply to an in- Iquil'y from the Army Committee of lthe Chamber us to what would be the .efl‘eet of the creation of the new post for Commander-in-chief of all the French armies except those in Africa, to which Gem-ml Jotrro has been ap- pointed, li. Briund is quoted 35' having said! l "The sole object of the extended :powu's of the generalissimo is to in.' 3'Spirit of Optimism on Both British , and French Fronts. l London, Jan. P2.--There is a great flspirit of optimism in both British and "French despatehes from the west from, the correspondents expressing , the firm conviction of the allied Gen-, "ovals that there. is no possibility ofj ‘ any successful German offensive anyo. |when: in the west lines. The corre- Jspondent of Reuter's Telegram Cont. pany sends from British Headquarters. "an interview with an unnamed pron minent staff officer, who was quoted: as saying: "We now have full in-; formation about the German forces; facing us. We know their exact dir. positions and strength. We every-1‘ other-e outnumber the Germans, andl also outnumber them in both field ted heavy artillery. and our weapons are l better than theirs. We can tire tivei‘ shells to their one without depleting“ our munitions. We can take theiri‘ first line of trenches whencvcr WQI: wish. To say that we have got theml beaten is dangerous rubbish. but the" truth is we have got them ready for: a beating." ! ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO FIVE ALLIED SHELLS T0 GERMAN ONE SINGLENHSS or' DIRECTION" Otriee reported on Wednesday after- noon that the Russian attacks failed, wig! httyor losses to the Attackers. nave "hart-aeo- race." with maxi-tat}: the champion at on. regimen: and N. - _ "~~"-l General JoITro has been ap- M. Briand is quoted as: having oft Iyr, ”mourning behind tho n in both field and our weapons are We can tire tive without depleting is. to in- in mili, become of Wyn". furtiur '-li.Vr, "that amp the nun-rink of mar thcre ha, been an in. crease in 1iru.nlcoucs,s, among women. ‘In thi, matter it is not safe to My (too much on statistics. 'When there is I more money to spend on drink there is more money to pay fines, and the Inumber of convictions may be reduced [by the police being absorbed in other (duties and by the instructions issued to them in certain cases to warn of. fenders instead of chasing “will But no Ur " prison statistics go they do not support the view that drunken- he" among women has i-ed. The number of women remind on convic- thm for the dance of W hu fallen from 15,10 in an.“ 'iii! 1/tg'et,,tt'.e'a"isc'ciii;l , per cent." There has been a marked improve. ment, in the manufacture of clothing. Parisian drosmtakintr has shown an unexpected revival. In some industries operations are now m: wide " before the war. This is true of the metals, chemicals, leath- er and transportation industries. Others continue to show depression. Operations in the textile industry at present are only It per cent. of the normal, compared with " per cent. last year. Big Improvement Within I Year - nrcstmuaitttt Improves. A report made recently by the French minister of labor " published in the Paris Matin, shows In improve- ment in industrial conditions in France. Of 43,794 factories, the num- ber in operation last year decreased to " per cent. of the total, but has now risen to 81 per cent. The numlwr of, employed “viking men fell to 31 per cent. or normal last year, but now stands at " per cent. , '1 The importance of lime to the soil :fwas set forth by Prof. Harcourt of ‘gGuelph, and the deep interest of the (convention was revealed by an am usually large number of questions at ju close. He explained the tseientiiie ‘reasons why it was necessary to ap- ‘ply lime to the soil, especially to soil "hat was sour. In the latter use he advised the use of fiaked lime. one ton of which was equal to two tons of ‘ground limestonc. which was more' [suitable for “my son. Lime way one of the cheapest materials that {could be applied to the soil, and in) 'most cases was all that was neciled tn rch-usw the plant food in the earth..' l Because there is a prejudice on the part of the "ctories against the use of milking machines, and because the [trouble is in the handling of the machines, the subject of "How to get [clean milk with I milking maehine" ‘wn introduced. The paper was pre- ipared by Prof. T. H. Lund, And was :read by the Secretary. Frank Horns. (The solutions in which "tumy dairy-) "tten kept their machine parts were' insanitary. In one case the solution was found to be teeming with ham; teria. Prof. Lund's recommt'ndntion’ was to use a solution of one pound of chloride of lime to ten gallons of: water. i It has been frequently stated," the HUGH H INDUSTRY REVIVES. f Following the announcement of lthese results, Mr. C. F. Whitley, who Ante charge of dairy records at Otta-‘ iwa, gave an illuminating address out-i ttir, some dairy herd records. In. one month the Dairy Division had '22,000 records of individual cows [come into the office, and from a fowl !of these he illustrated the advantages‘ lot individual records. He compared‘ lrecords of 69 good cows with those of l " poor cows. The latter produced'; milk valued at $4,310. the better cows’ ‘ product being worth 86,694. Oriel herd of sixteen cows showed a profit, of $44.70, as against $3.84 shown by1 a poorer herd within ten miles of the! first herd, showing that one cow in a ) good herd would make " much profit _ as eleven cows in a poorer herd. The l lesson he pressed home was that of, individual cow responsibility. I _ The titat prize winners, Jame-5‘ Burton & Son of Sal-nil. furnished from their herd of eighteen, between Mny und November, 7,175 pounds of' milk per cow; J. C. Harkes' (Liam- el) herd of ten gave 7,071 pounds per , cow, and the herd of sixteen owned; by & H. Coneybeare, Listowel, gavel 6,806 pounds. l Dairy lied Cit-petition. The dairy herd competition repre- sents one of the important activities of the auociation. the prizes being awarded to cheese factory patrons who furnish the largest quantity of milk per cow from herds of not Ieu than eight. Will Be Nu lie-and After the War HI- Far Dairy I'M-eta The farmer- ln Ulster are1| atillul: eeiving very high prices for eir "tdHeet. Atthecoumiketf-uttesat- When hostilities ceaae a great do. Wo tom clued for aale brought $50.- mud for dairy producta, live M1000. and neat producta will follow; ttl The death baa occurred at the are pleted European herds muat be re- of " years. of Mr. Janna O'Dwyer. pleniahed, and Canada la one of the County Tipperary. He wan the uncle national ”urea from which to draw SOY Sir Itichael O'Dwyer. Governor- for this purpoae, according to the General of the Punjab. directors of the Dairymen'a Aaaocia-1 Opening the inner Winter Ass. tion of Western Ontario in their re- laizea at Cork: Mr. Justice Dodd Mated port to the forty-ninth annual conven- that there was a falling " in the tion held " St. Marys laat week. number of reported caaea, IM, an against 168 laat year. - " . smut At a meeting of the Dublin Port President Robert Myrick of Spring- and Docks Board . report on the dani- ford, in ttis opening addren referred use done by the recent atom waa nub. to the increased production of the mitted by the engineer. which was ee- year and the high pricea. though re- “mated " about '20,000. netting the cause of the abnormal i Notice has been given to every prices. Re expressed the opinion that ‘young civilian in the Army Pay Dept. the time was ripe for creameriea and " lslandbridge “a Linenhall Bar.. cheese factories to set some standard. 'racks, who in of military age, that his so that they might receive nil 1tlirh-,userviG will shortly be dispensed grade cream and milk that had been with. produced under Inch "nitary ”Mi-i An important conference was re. tions as are already maintained by a-cently held in the city of Waterford large number of patrons lon recruiting in tho on“ “a ............ Importance of Line to the Soil CANADA 1‘0 REPLENISII EU. RO?“ DAIRY HERBS. Jnismtlt0lmiltlit) DAIRYMEN MEET "A fortune teller told Inc yuterduy that I “and "you with a ftnaneiat ro- which in more unheated. Potato. than. "bk-hers." and other thine. but not known, all form part of "our dlily bread." many. there "all; other u food which lendu itself better allegation than bread, and I Whokmell bread. or “brown bread,' is supponcd to contain the whole gait of wheat, kernel, germ, and bran. ll requin: menu-r mastication. and in the “may of retaining much that it lost to White bread. ‘Iiy prolonged soaking, then boiling it ,milk. and adding sugar, thus making A "frumentr" But for breadmnkinx the wheat , milled or ground to tiour, Ind to ob. tain white flour much of tho valuable ', part of the what in 'uutri6erd, the ‘gem and the lvrnn being both dis- rt-abt), and much protein and mineral "lu-indie-tste for body build- ine-Most. This first loss in grinding is followed by a further big loss in baking; three-mm" of the (out; go, and much of the protein and carbohyo draws, the "energy" bull in food. An ordinary loaf in nearly half wo- ter, too, though you may and it lard to bellow. "And did you t" "Yea; the chum _ Etch part co quantities, pron-i1 food, but the r.e the form of glut sum which aim iaeture of broad There is munch] slices three parts can be mtott--Utt inner tterm from which the future plant would Crow; the kernel, whid Nature intended as food for the um. and the bran. or probative covering composed of hard, woody fibre im prognatcd with minnrul salts. Tlu (term t'ep"t'.uents. l't, per cont. of th: main, the kernel 85, and the covering IQI/ main, the ' 18%. The arm-ago person's knowledge ot brad is very limited. He knows dun it ‘I made of tiour -HM' supposed tn be “and that it is dear. like the othot things. But there Is lunch else of interest. The Composition of a Single cm: of What The average wit-son’s knowledge o! f The new military order mam, under the Defence of the Realm Act by Brigadier-General Howard, Qumnu- town Barracks, respecting “(Timed premises in Tipperary, is now in force. " forbids publicans admitting to their premises all men in military uniform at any hour. forum-and intinl'utgl at "ir;Uii'oi of military agn- will be appointed to any position. The Senate of Queen’s University, Belfut, In: ilsued a notice urging teacher: and students, except foul-J: and fifth yl'al' medical 'ttuilcrir:, of military agn- to join "is Maic,ty't, A mldier named Pte. Charles Pres.. ton, of the 10th Battalion, Royal Irish 'tities, stationed " Clandc'uoyo, was burned to death in a fire that totally destroyed the barn of a farmer named June: Thompson, near Soaki- nore, County Tyrone. The Lord Mayor of Dublin In: re- ceived I cheque for 8250 from Mr. [Phonic Mon. manger of the Wick- "ow Hotel, Dublin, in aid of the fund l'which in being ruined for the benefit iof Irish regimen“. A crew m. fetched from semi take their plnce, and the nailing ' not delayed. Ha I Antimony, a mineral used in the manufacture of high explosive sheila, he been discovered in the County Ion-chm. The new mine is a rit-II one, and is aim-ted in the townhnd of Crouluve. four miles from Kandy. The lumen Ind tlremen of the steamship Inniuhowen Head refused recently to join the ship at Dublin unku they had an increase of wages. lat fyoung civilian in the Anny Pay Dept. at Islandbridce and Uncut." Bor- ’nch. who I: of military an, that Ila jerviees will shortly be (ii-penned with. l An important conference was re. Voently held in the city of Waterford Ion recruiting in the city and country. The Lord Lieutenant was present on! ltir. John Redmond and others attend. vice with the East Lnncuhire Regi- ment, the same regiment in which his qrnndfnther, Captain Lockwood, was wounded at Waterloo. Mr. Wm. E. Crude Hume“, J.P., A.bhereie,, has volunteered for ur- Between 1,700 and 1,800 men luv: Joined the Colors from Kilkenny, ir- respective e! the large number that have gone any within the last couple of months to - in munition- work. o" like -eurrd use two dollars,“ [Prim-'3 "iii-ii-iii' 'uoreqsrttmetsert-uuuae Mann-em... N". " Matt, MI MIT. grain of wheat be cut into um three parts can be menu "he OUR " A ILY "REA " in no other article of Pl to do in: H

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