I, keep t. alone, what r next bins cal party foe Ga 'er ht, " ter QB he Remember that lam-Bull In “to (other diluent to the ordinary oint. mean. no" of that consist ot ulna] m Zulu-But contain no true. of may mum] ht. or gay mineral mun. Bult I. by In the most widely mod will In Cmda! Why has it becom so popular? Bee-use it heal- Intel. cures skin dbeueu. and does what In chimed for It. Why not let It he“ 'ol" son? - - Boston, April 27.--Werner Horn, who attempted to destroy the Inter- national Bridge at Vencoboro, Maine, on February 2, 1915. mint stand trig] on tt charge of illegal trttnteportation of dynamite, the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals ordered on Thurs- day. Petition for a Writ of “the“ Corpus G ER.“ AN OFFICER A despatch from Paris says: The German-Swiss frontier has been closed since Monday afternoon even to mails, toys 3 despatch to the Matin, from Berne. Foreigners now in Germany have been informed that none will be allowed to leave the country before twenty days have elapsed, the des- patch adds. 1 Itlilm mu I I" SURE? A despatch from London says :4 The destruction of a German sub- marine by a British trawler " the north coast of Scotland is described by Dutch newspapers recieved here. According to the accounts, the sub/ marine had halted two Dutch steam-i era. when a trawler appeared and killed with its ftrst shot four men who were standing on the deck of the submarine. The trawler then sank the submersible with a second shot. The entire action lasted less than ten minutes. The papers say the sub-i marine was of the latest and largest, type and carried a crew of sixty, all of whom were lost. i SW Ist', FRONTIER It no. "mambo: the“ mettt--Banb "In Thursdey's bombardment the British force consisted of three bat.. tleships, 18 destroyers and between 80 and 40 mine-sweepers and miner- layers. Two of the bettleships bom- barded the coast between Feebrutrtre, and Knocke. including Heyst and; Blankenborg. The tire was answered; by the German batteries. The thirdi battleship concentrated its tire Ti three German torpedo boats whichl left the harbor immediately after the} attack began. One of these was hit: several times, and returned to the! harbor seriously damaged, supported by consorts. "Thorough preparations were made by the British before the bombard- [ ment, Dutch territorial waters being] marker by colored buoys." BRITISH TRAWLER tack The Rotterdam correspondent of the London Daily Mail, telegraphing Thursday, says: "A Briti h squadron resumed the bombardment of the Belgian coast at 4 o'elock on Thursday ?tornintr, Mine-sweepers have cleared the 'ill'1"f wafers of mines, and nets have been] laid to guard against submarines.,' The Germans anticipate asevere at-l BRITISH EMPLOY 8 BA'I‘TLErl SHIPS. 18 DESTROYERS AND , " MIN E-SWEEPERS. I BELGIAN COAST TWO isiiiiiiiiii""'""'"' AGAIN swamp HAVE comm†, lPe movement is sectional only, and Premier Asquith, who on Wednes- has no sympathy from the reprMb- (Day had given reassuring news re-'entativL of the Irish leaders." specting the situation in Ireland, Mr, Asquith said that for obvious can ed something of a flutter of anxi- reasons he did not like to name the etr by his statement on Thursday in, other places to which the trouble had the House of Commons when he an- spread, but there had beam in the west nounced a spread of the movement to and south, but pnrticularly in the other parts of Ireland, the retention'west, places where there was a de- by the revolutionalists of 'truftrt;:veloptnent of the movement. Very Parts of Dublin and the fact that fight- stringent precautions were being mg was g'ill going on in the streets.) taken by the military authorities to The government, the Prime Ministerldeal with these places. i g...“ “lions one in to Dublin. A despatch from London seys '.-- Martial law has been declsred through- out Ireland, and Mnjor~Genersl Sir John Maxwell, who until recently commanded the troops in Egypt, Us: (one over to take charge, the Irish; executive otrieuu having placed them-V selves under his instructions. He hes;l been Riven lull disciplinary Peers;" for the extension of the operations] and the suppression of the rebellion.’ The revolt which broke out in Dub- lin has spread to other pert: of Ire-f land, chiefly to the west and south.‘ This Information, together with the; feet that the rebels are still in Pos-) session of parts of the city of Dublin," was given to the nation by the Minist-; era in Parliament on Thursdny. l, There had been . small rising at,’ Arden 9m. 1-..... . - Major-General Sir John mm Inui"iiitiiiiiiii CLOSED BY GERMANY. MUST STAND TRIAL. Troops are Adequate. SINKS FOE SUB. uth und g rather Gore Swords and Lusk, close r John Maxwell Sent from London To Take Charge. Alliance, from secret soiireG 3,6171; v.1“ w lauv‘, w‘u .mcuru "tn: ml “m‘he F,,tfettde Cy. 1tt.Pte.1el.Pew 'Attteytti of prominent Bohemian ftuniliee, in- eluding Miss Alice Mazaryk. well known in America for her social tret- tlement work, have been executed by the Government, according to advices aid to have been received here on Execution of Prominent Citizens in} Prague Ind Other Cities. ' A despatch from New York say-u --5'rttsh revolts have broken out in," Prague, Pilun. Tabor and other; Bohemian cities, and many members] AUSTRIA PUTS DOWN Secured Now. A despatch from Toronto says: The _ Ontario Department of Colonization ‘and Immigration has recalled its spe- ieial officers from Michigan, where they have been drumming up farm hands to relieve the scarcity of help in Ontario. The venture proved a sue- [cess, close to five hundred men having Pten secured. but the floating supply of good men has been exhausted, and ' those available now are not considered of proper quality. There are lots of ', good farm hands in the State, hut the {special officers when they went after I them found that the farmers had most: ’0! them tied up under contract. The} _ scheme to get farm hands has helped 1more than the farmers. Some of the] men secured, after landing in Ontario ! and getting within the sound of the! bugles, have promptly enlisted for (', overseas service. The Department of Agriculture is now satisfied that with! the men secured and the help of retir. l ed farmers and High school boys fel leased for farm ‘work the situation I this summer will be well mot. l _ Three Cases of Soldiers at Moose Jaw . Cited. A despatch from Ottawa says: De- tails as to the alleged inhuman treat- 'ment of soldiers at Moose Jaw by L hanging them up by the arms for Icomparatively trivial offences were -'furnished to the Commons on Wed- - nesday afternoon by W. E. Knowles, l following up his demand of Tuesday I for an investigation by the Acting . Minister of Militia, Sir Robert Bor- ' den. Mr. Knowles cited three cases. C One soldier who fainted under the or. l'deal was "hung up" for being off (duty, another for insubordination, iand a third for neglect to carry out orders. J. H. Sinclair, of Guysbor- ough. declared that charges of sim. ilar brutal punishment of soldiers had fappeared in some of the Nova Scotia (papers. Premier Borden promised! (that a strict enquiry would be madei forthwith, and any officer guilty of cruel or unjust treatment of his men [ would be brought to book. ( Only Poor Class of 1'ffflilllaiM'g IRELAND NO MORE FARM HANDS FROM UNITED STATES DETAILS OF CHARGES OF INHUMAN TREATMENT, "i Germans in Custody in New York to ) Testify Agninse Others. f A despatch from New York says: srComplete confessions given in return g; for immunity have been made by two [of the eight Germans recently arres eyed in the alleged conspiracy to p12). '. fire bombs aboard munitions shi , . and they were on Wednesday after.. " noon telling their story to the Federal I grand jury. This was made known by Assistant United States District District Attorney Wood, in charge of :the investigation of alleged German plots. The two men are Capt. Chas. von Klelst and Ernest Becker, an elec- trician aboard the interned German steamship Friedrich der Grosse, where the bombs alleged to have been placed l (on various ships were partly manu- factured. The others arrested in the case include Capt. Eno Bode, Capt. A Otto Wolpert and Frederick Garbode, employes of the Hamburg-American' Line. A ninth alleged conspirator, t Dr. Walter T. Scheele, is yet to be ap- c prehended. . Mr, Asquith said that for obvious reasons he did not like to name the other places to which the trouble had spread. but there had been in the nest and routh, but particularly in the west, places where there was a de- velopment of the movement. Very‘ I "Behind that there is undoubtedly ‘nn obligation which rests upon the Government of making in searching [investigation into the causes of and "Our allies already have been made “are by Sir Edward Carson and Mr. Redmond," the Premier added, "that the movement is sectional only, and has no sympathy from the repres- entatives of the Irish leaders." " further announced, was convinced that ,'r the forces new in Ireland and those l proceeding there were adequate to deal with the situation. l _ Renate Order First. i Replying to n question whether the (Government had been warned of o ‘dnngerous growth of sedition, Premier 5 Asquith said _ the resironsibilit, (o; Gia'" iartr." That obligation we fully recognize and inttnd to_tliseurtre. I fyrther "The first and paramount duty of the Government is to restore order and to stamp out rebellion with all possible vigor and promptitude. That we are doing. l RIOTS IN HUNGARY. Men Can opined nus ttreetitCiTa7t'C; -iiiN7aralllr" g; l to heading} â€5n {my-am." Under-{gnu} mm Louis Ramarkors. the famous Dutch National Committee for Relief In Bell-lam A. - I ‘1. - .. - 7 w,.. "nun-:5 LUK‘ trouble are never satisfied when they find it. RUSS TROOPS REVIEWED " IN MARSEILLES STREETS.I A despatch from Marseilles says: The Russian troops which arrived here: on Tuesday held a dress parade onl Wednesday morning in the presence; iii a vast crowd which cheered them; _ wildly. The troops were reviewed byl Col. Verstakosky, their commander“ 'General Menassier, Governor of Mar-) 'tseilles, and M. Schramech, Prefect of Marseilles. While the review was in l progress bands on Franch warshipsu played the Russian and French Na-l; tional Anthems. The Russian troopsi1 then ilaraded through the city, preJ1 ceded by little girls who strewed flow- i1 ers in their paths." i An Army Several Hundred Thousand Has Been Organized. A despatch from San Francisco says: A rebel advance on Pekin, the capital of China, has been ordered by the Chinese revolutionists, according to a Shanghai despatch to the Chinese Republic Association here on Wed.. nesday. An army of several hundred thousand under Luy Ung-Ting, for-i merly commander of Yuan Shi-Kai'sf forces in Kwang Si Province, andI Gen. Lung Chi Kwang, formerly with the Government troops in Kwang Tung, will begin the march upon Pe-g kin soon, it was stated. l People who CHINESE REBELS PLAN ADVANCE ON PEKIN. No sooner had the first Russians other force equally big was reported Russia to make any peace before the Luv nrlusn nee: shelled the sea coast in the neighborhood of Zeebrugge on the 24th. It three German destroyers, after being hit, were forced to withdraw into the harbor. Little opportunity is being given the enemy forces to concentrate in Egypt. Aeroplane keeps the authorities advised of any hostile movement. During the week an attack was mm the force used was not sufficiently strong, and a withdrawal was necessary. But this was 0 Stronger forces were brought no and an. nnnmv I,.,A on a“ ,__- _..,,..a.. Local! was again Vlllted by German warships on Tuesday morning. They were sighted off Lowestoft by the British local naval forces and were engaged. They fought for twenty minutes and then fled. Before fleeing one of the vessels fired into Lowestoft, but little damage was done. Two men, a woman and a child were killed. At the same time fire was opened on Yarmouth, and one or two buildings were slight- ly damaged. I About the same time a fleet of Zeppelin, made a raid over the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk. This is the region in which are situated Yarmouth and Lowesboft. Some bombs were dropped, but a fog made it im- possible for the enemy to get any accuracy of aim. _ The British fleet shelled the sea coast in the neighborhood of Zanhruaan M. "., 'aaxt, .. . - 54.--, he . The English coast: was again visited by German warships on Tuesday Lowestoft by the British local naval forces and were engaged. They to fled. Before fleeing one of the vessels fired into Lowestoft, but little dam and a child were killed. At the same time fire was opened on Yarmouth, ly damaged. A RAEMAEKERS WAR POSTER ""ee ,w...‘......., - nun-tn lot In. Comnlillcc for Relief In Belgium one of we most tamarind“. . "war Postera." It Is ropmrluced above} The ttrue tt m In Belgium when the use to ted, n- " ttrtehbs n'“-"m M- anâ€: 'allt also†in this Incon- '" "ln Brigham" taut-mam appears e on. tmitf all-h". NORTR Qt! always» looking for rom otamia gives ground for anxiety. The Tigris is st f of Kul-el-Amara is delayed. There has been some made great claims which have been discounted by they captured Trebizond, have kept up their advance I l A despatch from Paris says: A rc- I (port that two Germans had been te' Irested on the charge of setting flee,' ‘to the naval arsenal at Lisbon is con-" (firrned by newspapers of that cit)“ Isays a Havas despatch from the Ily-i ytuguese capital on Wednesday. The (fire occurred on April 18, resulting in I (the destruction of two buildings with; {considerable treientifie equipment, in-, ‘cluding naval charts, and the Govern- l, Iment immediately instituted an in- vestigation, which indicated that it , was of incendiary origin. i LISBON ARSENAL I Mora, in the Cameroons, Defended For Eighteen Months. l What has been the longest siege of the war? ,5 It is doubtful whether 1,000 Brit-1 ons, outside of official life, could lanswer the question. This is not istrange, because the stor is told, more for the first time. it comes "rom a young British officer who had ithe sanction of the War Office to,' "ell the story of the most stubborn; scrap of the war. 1' l When the history of the war is writ-; ten it may be known as the Siege of) Mora-a siege which lasted for eight-, een months. With Mora in the hands of the British and French, the allies) came into possession of a country of , 29,950 square miles in area, which is 1 as large as the German Empire and Belgium and the part of France un- i der German occupation at the present I time. This is the Cameroons, or, as the Germans spell it, Kamerun. ', moonlit, has drawn for the who landed at Marseilles got half-way to as having landed there, too. There is now Allies do. mgr! vi). " a LONG EST SIEGE OF WEEK'S NEWS OF THE WAR. FIRED BY G ERMANS, WAR. I Our idea of an innocent V' an; is 'one who imagines man Chev-, cloves because he really like. them i "The Bible tells u; we in Jd love iour neighbors," mid the m , Mon. H‘Yea, but the, Bible’ Wis v." 'ten be- fore our msirthho-. lived so c?.se,†re-l hired the mere man. I I The Provincial Government esti- 'mates include $8,600 for the install:- I tion and operation of n ferry between f Barnston Island and the Surrcy shore 'of the Fraser river, connecting near I the Hjorth road Ind the ser 'ee will ll be a boon to the settlers then-. i half-way toward_ the battle front than mrtbrcak of tone w been prvvalrrnt in 1 late, too's plan! rote when several arme tacked the store of mun. V Emil Webster, a South Westmin- ster Indian was, in the city lice court, given the maximum yenal'toy of two years in the penitentiary for un- loosening and taking cables attached to log booms. In an effort to build up small ranch- ing around Victoria, Commissioner Cuthbert of the Victoria and Island Development Association has startcu issuing information on the manage- ment of turkeys. What the nolice believer!!! be an ~..Al,_- _., P . 93h? In Fort Langley, an electric power and telephone line is to be erected from Carter drive down Bartlett ave. and across the Salmon river to Deep Creek farm. Pats been shafted. ,,.--_.-. "I : Five years' imprisonment was the sentence meted out to Charlie Chew, a Chinaman, who was convicted in i' Vancouver of a diamond robbery. TG.--... nu... n, .. ... _ ' There continues to be a great de- mand for cement among the farmers of the prairies. Many are concreting th‘eir barnyards and building concrete an os. The Delta riding, which includes Surrey and Langley districts, is down in the estimated for a total expendi- ture of $40,000, of which $22,500 is for roads. _ 6885. -, -- - “lull-VII“ IUUWry. Vancouver City Council will tition the Dominion Government to Ul,',','.' the soldiers in camp in Vancouver to re- main there until they leave for over clue! of police at a salary of $100 per month. Work on the new shipyard site at Port Moody is expected to commence at once. _ Trail schools are closed for two weeks on account of the prevalence oCrpeaales. [ “one" of the Great West Told In I Few Pointed Paragraphs. WHAT THE WESTERN PEOPLE ARE DOING. FROM SUNSET COAST is still in flood, and the advance of some fitrhtine with the relieving d by the despatches of Sir Percy Vance westward along the shore of M an: n‘uuck' wuc'.’e to De an of tone whr, such as has "alrrnt in the coast cities; of plan! recently in Vancouver, eral armfd ghinamen alt-l " AA“ - __ _.. ind. no doubt of any intiniiGi -it feuoicanti7, cu um um: mule " at high speed to "The his: German ships loosed e the nor'heast. All they nod om ofthe “rum of shells It the 'yrproaehineiunta seemed in trouble. Our de- chips and then swung to the east, but stroyera shot after them and war-- the German Admiral spin changed ried them " they di-red, thr. hi. course when he found that the sound of the tirue (rowing fainter British folio. Cu not nearly and to:' 5nd um: " (ryintr back. The resson was soon sppsrent. From the south cums little clouds of smoke,drswing nearer every moment. A rousing cheer was given, as it was seen that the smoke was coming from British cruisers snd' destroyers. I The Lowestoft correspondent of The his five great cruisers and many de-, "amdon Daily Mail "Yr.-- stroyera. i 'The scream of shells end their de- see Oliver: T,'/l,,e.n,,t we r'1tee",tit,? to :ronation as the burst inland was ' . ur a I†own outo t e water,' H the first intimztion the eople of Bud gm of our watchers. 'Our com- l p pnrntively small vessels were necking gLowestoft had that for ‘the second to get at close quarters to the Ger- time German Dreadnouehta were " men giants "Id I perfect storm of their shores. The people sprang from tthells, "reamed arose the water to; their beds, peering toward the sen, WIN! t.heny but whoever commanded where, looming through the mist, our shit" had trrettt counge. could be seen great I?†shapes here Raider Kit - and there picked out with t1ntthes of, " 'The Gen; ' h!" ll tir. . Mm!!! another shell come inshore.'.“ around J,",."',,",.,,)","),',',', 'll,'.",', Jthtt “The-him mumbled into reply until well within " id not . . . . . Mm. Then their clothes and, catching hold of time and exam they hit the Ge their little ones, hurried out, not in monsters. Once we saw I v I 1'"l') panic. but out of curiosity. to the shore fl o um. o name leap from a funnel of one of the to watch and count the German shells. - w-rghips' Another suddenly Seaplane- Cllued Back. that?“ but in I 'oeond filmed it- "t . . . ","fl'PoMorteouldreeaiiiUi, '32:22. fd ,r',odt:,vtd'iist:'r': "ye: "'m.iryt from ur.".' tsal m. can seaplane. which I In 2iinFiid,',i'/.": amps “t: Rh . could before hed_ left 90 vet-ell, cone hut-Q 1t'.'.heett, ff, m.†did, 9te a." fMessage Brought By Seaplane Sent Germans l Scurrying Homeward. " The twelve countries having the (fewest blindness are as follows: Bei- igium (lefore the war) had 43 blind ‘rersons to every 100,000 of the popu- 1 ntion; Canada," 44; Netherlands, 46; lSaxony. 47; New Zealand, 47; West. lern Australia, M; Kong-Kong, tn; Prussia, 52; Denmark, 52; Germany, !60; New South Wales, 60; and the gunned States, 32. I NAVAL Emu: DESCRIBED - llf Mill Inn WITNESSED n NIâ€! Montreal. May '.---Puir strum at "" to te; butcher-1' cowl from 86.25 to " and bull: from " to 38.50 per 100 lbs. Good calves. B to Be, and the lower grade-- av 4 to 6e per lb. Sprinx lamb- rom " to " each. Yearling lamb! and old sheep scaree and Brm. Eek-Mod hop. Ml to 812.15 per 100 Ibtr., weighed " is do " :31 Iâ€: Toronto, May 2.--A?hoiee many newâ€, ".90 to 89.20; butcheru' cattle. Munro, $8.60 to 88.90; do,, good. te.ts to 38,60. o., medlum. " to $5.25. do.. common, 31.25 to 87.60; butchers' bulls. ettoive, 187.25 to 87.76; do., trood lrullte, 813.85 to â€7: do., rough bulls, “.65 to 85.157 (butchers' cowl. (410109. " to 3750; do.. and. 86.15 to $6.75; do, medium. " to 'tlr, do., munmnn. 85.25 to ".75: awoken. 700 to ttlro lbl. ".75 to $7.tg; choice feeders, dehorned. 950 to 1,000 lb.., $7.60 to 88; runners and cutters. ".50 to 34.40. mllkera. choice. each, 575 to 3100; o., common and medium. elCh. $40 to “in: T,'"mT,',i $60 to .100; “gm ewe], $3.50 to " ; sheen. hem" " tol $t.60; rveariinttrt, $10 to [13485; bunkl‘ and culls, â€.60 to 81.50; lambs, choice, ttt to t18.60; valves. good to choice, "i' to $12; do., medium.es'a'.25 to $5.50; has; fed and warn . $11.60; do., a; steed " can, $11.85; do., t.o.b., mibiih,' MTs'. tr-i'imatW'.ico, 1 I 51.2“; No. 1 Northern. tin" to " No. e Northern, 31.1“ to 811“, new cash and any. ".1Mit; July. ' an Book luau. v..... “v. v unue. 1‘. In "C fancy patents. lic higher. quoted tirtst clans um-hsnlpd; ascend cl lower; quoted at $8; Ihlpnu-m bNtre.iu, Bryn, Us.“ to "a I mumresu. May 2.--corn, American No. it yellow, " to No. (his. Canadian Wetrtern. No. 2, 5450; Canadian Western. No. s, Mc; exlru No. 1 reed, Me; No. l local white, in to true; No. , local white, go to 50:41:; No. 4 land white. 49 to "ie. Barley. an, feed, " to 72v: maltinx. 76 to Ire.. Flour. Mum Spring what pat. entu. tirstts. 36,60; seconds. 36.10. strong it!"y,t',:,ycir1; Winter palm". t'hoico. -....4. ...,. __.... -- -.. -- "Iliad Btates "to!" Minneapolis. May 2.-Whea C,itr, July, $t.tit to 81.19]: N, 1.2“; Nu. 1 Northern. tl 31.2“; No. 2 Northern, tt $1.eu. Corn-No, , yellow, t61 Shim-No. 8 w_hite_. fu to no I Mnntreal. May it yellow, " to “Western. No. 2, E No. s, Mc; exlru [Reg] vylljle. in to _ ,,,_ .,..‘., v" ... um. nun: Ito Tht. Flour, Mam. Spring whe cuts. tirtsttr. 88.60; seconds. 36.10. bakerl’. 35.90; Winter patentn. 86; straight rollers, $6.8it to 85.4 bags. 82.45 to $2.50. "OHM out fold. $5.10 to .510; bags. 90 lhll. to 82.45. Bran. tn. Shurls. 826 dlings. '" to 380. Moulllle. no Hay, Nu. t, per ton. our Iota, .20 "i. Cheese. linen Western. " u ttnent enunermu. 17t to "tc. choicest ere-mew, " to sue; s4 80 to MIC. Eggs. fresh, 250. Pu per bag. cur loll. 81.70 to "J21. ttArt Win “no; May 2.4 Wheat -No. 1 Northern. do., 'ritt; No. , tin. I lliPi No. 5. "F, No, 6tc. Out-‘Nu. g C. w.. “In; extra No. I feed, 4, no; No. 2, do., (to. Bar] No. 4. "c; reJevled, 66c: "r.-biy.u1 N.-W.CV. SL551 - LS tit 1.1%}: "iii'; and pulls. 16t to IHC. ,. _-.. an", At u) " 18c; breakfast bacon. " "At EGCLboneyenu hacks _ a... no. I Nearly ell enimele are better wim- B _ h u... _ more than men, and take to the water utter Fresh dury. choke. " to t'lt.; :gtf'ergor. not crgmery prime. " to netuully, whereas ',','rh'i'g'g,1P'it to ; er or, o C. he Boat end prope imee . 'u. m -"-E - .- . P I . ton-$.21 i'i,"hi,Pd. " to "c: do., " e" per: Weekly tell- of the feet- of ringw- yytrrtturrAiar, In to to 60-11:. mm. cam, elk and deer; but of All Imm- k" l? 'Wi, 'in",ra-to. I, "-75 to " mere of " dimes, the bet, althom o. ' ' . . t , ' Bean-34 'd “.40. the latter rm not the smlteet. u the tour. bear, "ht,ei,tids 1 l t 1 jpeeaee he]! his time m the water, S",yre tWe, 9 "3 tw n.. l C. lewimming end divine. 101:1.“e 'Wrup--tt.tro per "Mm," "III His swimming power is wonderful. "f)Nttrsfit,ti.'","r; 'h l", zzkc: 10:28. ind it is to be 'g,',','nhd macuuge o C; no I, to v; ur eye. ' P, 1w.ur in the regions uen ll PptatoeiL> l t r 0 t i ' 1.65 to £1.70. and ICJ' 1r'lu'J/ctJ,ioti 'd 'ir,irtvariy.ur1v. cold, and! that 'e.,'tl water to 81.85 per bag. on track. is 'i',',if,t/,'..rihr very dutcourmng to . mm (lie.;';;';?,'....: here are bears tgut,',' a r . . . t I'm-onanng clear, 16t to t7c pen-writ} thirty miles or more wit ou Ib., In vane lull. Httntre-iutiuiit', " to espeint effort. .-. A - . _ P/r.' 99..7!Iga\'y_717 to 80c; roll. 171 tn! n.__ -n AL- ,, "utter-Pr-h dairy. choice. " Mc; Inferior. Ne; crumory prints. " 150; Inferior. " to tte. Elts~New-hud, " to "c: do., In Cl tons, to to "c. ytytetturrrT/G, In 10 to 60-th, th "' to He. Comb-No. I, 62.75 to I No. I. 32.85 to 82.40. Bank“ to “.40. the latter f hum-picked. Shft,tcirrertreurric; twins. 19M r ulnllobu ttotiic-rPfGi Patents. In Jute tttst; "t".t second '/1"'ll"y 2 Jute I. ; strong Mel-1'. n u e but. 85.50. Toronto. Oriana yyrr-rtrittter. net-arcing to llmplo. ".20 to ".10. track Toronto. in Mr; tcts to $4.85, bulk Benhoard. [Inked-Car Ion, delivered Mammal ryituryichrG; per ton, $2C, shot“. per ton. 826; middling; per ton, 828 to ter. Iood feed ttour, per beat, 81.6" to 81.70. V H .v .u. Arr“ want. " to we. according to freight: outside. PeicVii, 2, ".65. according to um- PJ': 3-20 to 81.50, according to height. o I e. ?H1t.1r-:yutun.. " to No: feed. 59 to 'te, According to freight. uululde. Pat_tytdiait"e--iii, to 70c. according to heights out-Me. RN-UNT. 1 commend-L 90 to 91v; re- Jected. according to sample. " to tutc, no- cordlnf to freight: ouisida. Man (ob. nuutgFirst patents. in Jute :ul. "t".t -rttttd natural 2 Jute I. ; strong Mel-5'. n u e Mn. 85-50. Toronio. Onmrio tyyrr-rtrutter. according to Emmanugo to ".10. up.“ annhln I.. 'e, lg uumub. oi--'No. , LIV t. do.. no; our. No. t food Ned. Me, on tuck Buy for" American eorn--No, t" trunk Toronto. Canal“: corn-peed, " to " track Toronto. Ontario fM"e-No. I white, commerclu, " to "e, no fttriyrttii, outsm- arelxnt- outatai. W "M Ontario' 'rhettt---.i. l 31.01 to tt.or, No. 2. do., Ye t, @m.__9¢ to "e: {PM Toronto. May " I Northern. t1.M: 8 do., ".13. trunk â€atrium; on.“ t. do.. tue: new. , Markets of the tu/il Least Blindness. an. aelnorncd. 950 to 1.000 to 88; runners and cutters. 40; mlllgerg. t'hotee.. ench, ‘75 . "-"'-.'-_'._ "\nn. - Tern 1erd,_tiercesi, unclu, " to 'lic; turkivCiiiC B-<Ur lots or Omar-ion. ".65 ty, New Brunswick: an tt an: Mu- b'... .... A..,,,., Lon: clear, In to 17c per e lot.. rHottrt-rMdiiiuG', " to navy. " to Mrc; rolll. â€I to tet/lee/i, .lli In 'e, bun-kn, Mon mu Markets, ONTARIO . tr, "te; No. 6, Mic; teed --No. , CAV., “in; No. a. do. No. I feed, Mk: No. I feed, do}. fr, 19rrt.v-p'p, 8, INC; I. lay ',--itot,. whetu---No. Tt. $1.M: No. 2. do.. 81.28; No. tit, track. Bar porn. I. o_ttr---No. , cnc, "c: No 3; oftnhNo. 1 food. “c; No. 1 nu. ..-- .., n _ . VII-Ivor Gnu _"fmv-NO. 1 commercial. "; No. t, do.. 99c to 31.01; F to 980; feed when, " to I to freight: outside. t, 01.65. according to sam- " .50. according to freight- any 1-0:“: pt"tcen:--, Northern. "J“; No, ' 'uhy?oz. ti :09; g A No, 4, ---Ptur "an†at 36.75 mm from [6.25 to " to $8.50 per 100 lbs. be, and the lower permit). __Dpr_|nx_lambl 'orn-No. t follow. “it. At--rooa, " to "c. nonun- unto. e-No. ' white. " to "c; fd to "e, teem-din. to ted isFrtroayiircC.irt"G' '., he“; No. , cw, to to in. ___ -eF_iN 1Shtt-r,No. their! -itif;' -viiiii'iairld l.i.1u;ts'ofiiuiFir, ham. " .20: to horn. 31.17 to allow, 76h to THC. ‘I to 48c. Flour, q', quoted It "tit; ascend clears. Me Ihlpnwrnts 62.400 " jtriiei;HKai; kn. " to 29c, reel. 1ft,tt1uc, medium, each. to 8100; Ilqht bean" " to Q13)!†buck. We» _ May 90 thm, 32.40 rts,8'2t'a, Mid- lie, $80 to .85. "a,A80.lro to n a. the northeast. As they iirotLTit"di' thjni,etunta seemed in trouble. Our do- T but strong-a that alter them and wor- But tur' 5000061. 'ottttoes, 40; dd. Ms. but whisk we saw a aeroplane coming from th. north at a torrifie rate. Whatever new: it brought the Germans turn- ed tail and nude ott It high speed to the northeast. As thos, fUd arm " "., timutitt taming from urn mil plums. “‘Our ships were hit-they could, lurdly "Cape, so thickly did the Ger- man: pluur the Inter with shells. The so: wu so churned by the fast moving ships and the exploding sheila that it looked like foam. Suddenly, we saw a aeroplane coming from the -ML -1 - ., .- _ 18t Yd â€7.. _..w..- chU """" all around our craft but they did not reply until well within rum. Then time and again they hit the German monsters. Once we saw I volume of fume leap from a funnel of one of the great warships. Another suddenly :umred but in a necond risked it- self, though we could see shun Ind ARCHIVES ,,-_- “w“... to get " close quarters to the Ger- man giant: and I perfect storm of shells screwed Iron the water to ward them, but whoever commanded our ship: had Creat courage. Raider- Wt Fre-tir. MThe German the": were falling nil Ara-Ind A..- --.. . _ _. - A " - 77"“: mm“ "“H. but by concentration he nil probably be able to do lame one thing batter dun anybody else can do it; and that in his duty u well u hi. privilege. I A despau-h from Brantford nya: zThe five aona of Mrs. J. Harrington. P116 Walnut street, are now in khaki. ‘Mrs. Harrington received word that her son Fred had been wounded and admitted to hospital. Later word wa- rocelved in a letter that another son, Pte. Earl J., who but been in hospital for a year, had undergone another operation, which improved his condi- tion very much. FIVE SONS IN KHAKI I A cup-ten from London "ys:--mse ’roport that Great Britain intends to [tighten the commercial blockade is (reiterated in I despatch from the jCopenhagen correspondent of the Ex- ‘chnnge Telemph Company. who say- Ether. Ire persistent rumors to that meet in circulation there. It is stat- a, he add", that Great Britain desires ‘3" Danish merchants to pay in ad, vanee through London for goods pur-. chased in America, with the object of gaining thorough control over the commerciel connections of neutrals. BRITAIN WILL TIGHTEN COMMERCIAL BIAK‘KADE A despatch from London say: ..-- Lord Robert Cecil, Minister of War Trade, denied in the House of Com- mons on Thursday afternoon that Great Britain was carrying on semi» odrieiat negotintions with Bulgaria. Re reminded his questioner that Great Britain Wu precluded by the spirit of the agreement with her allies from entertaining any Peace negotiations with any of their common enemies without the knowledge and consent of the other parties to the agreement. N0 NEGOTMTioNog One of the 'twifteat of swimming animals is the squirrel. A sportsman on one occaaion. having a young squir- Ilel that had never seen water, wanted no see if it could swim. and took it orith him in a rowboat to the centre of the lake. When the squirrel was put into the water it turned toward the bank, head and pawn above the omter, back and tail underneath it, and began to ohm so rapidly that the man had hard work to recover it when it reached the shallow water near the land. It is said that even nonquatic birds will swim like ducks if anyone attempts to drown them. A dtttchfrom London my mm any do, may thines “UNA“ emit-5cm“; _--------"--"..-; 671.32% You" Squirrel Proved to Be One at the Britten. plri'irlra'rr"'"" ANIMAL SWIMMERS. craft but they diam; l within rum. Then they hit the German TWO ARE INJURED ,trEVCii" SHOES n Pa, Sam's: WITH BULC, ARIA §PORT