EELS :VELL thorns and a short cut f she found yin: but, he said. ' him. "No, “You're any here to king. and he looked. ND reach for the rein ain. high" Yone had pe te stood t in his Ind Rob " , and, n horn. Me' winingâ€. o. aslf way slender an k what 0 l. But when " try the (all. p art h ‘wn xt he my he A v3: spun-l: {mm London says: T.'. _ _ s-not-s, at least survived the Jvk. q of thc cruiser Hampshire, alum l which Lord Kitchener and his sti,_'l't. rdrath. The Admiralty an- Hawaii the names of the survivors on Thursday night, saying they were on a raft which was washed ashore on one of the Orkney Islands. They con. sist of one warrant officer and 11 men. Although neither the name .of Lord Kitchener nor any of his party appears in the list, the news that there were survivors was received with expressions of relief, for now " least the story of the sinking of the cruiser and the loss of the Secretary of State for War will be told. Up to the present even tho Admiralty has - -, nu __.._- " an We I"'"'"" -.-._ - - no information as to the cnuse of the disaster. The am, too, bu Iguin luggested' the possibility that other nan on A :lmpatch from Paris says: Fol- iowitur, the example of Germany, Eng- land. may and the Scandinavian coun- tries, th" Senutr- on Thursday adopted the daylight saving bill, advancing le- gal time by one hour. A :l.unatch from Liverpool says: An official announcement given out here on Thursday says the Govern- ment has decided to apply to the Liverpool docks that section of the munitions of war act which provides that no employer may declare a lock- out and that no vmployee may go on strike. A despatch from London says: An allim'l air squadron has successfully homharded the wharves at Hoboken, near Antwerp, according to a despatch to the Exchange Telegraph Company from Maestricht. The Germans are said to have been building destroyers " llnlmken. The squadron was fired on by German batteries. but returned to its base safely. FR\N('F. HAS ADVANCED CLOCKS ONE HOUR. Mi'N ETIUNS OF WAR ACI' APPLIED TU LIVERPOOL tomber. Ample funds to carry on the operlons until then are on hand from the Inst loan in F'ebruary, when more than $'..',G00,000,000 was obtained. The opposition of the Socialists who" the vote was taken on the Bud- get hull no bearing upon the war. The Socialists have been agitatintg for yt"etrs for a new system of taxation to relieve the workingman. They have, without exception, voted against the Budget on these grounds. The new war credit will not be drawn upon, it is estimated, until Sep- FRI‘LN" ll All! SQl'.\l)RON BOMBARDS HUBOKEN. A duspatch from Berlin tMtwr--. The Budget was passed by the Reich- ntag onWednesday, the only opposi- tion being the Socialist votes. There was almost complete unanimity in providing the new war credit of $3,.. 000,000.000, only two Socialists cast- ing their ballots against it. Dr. Heif- fcrieh, Minister of Finance, told the Reichstag that the we: expenditures from January to May, 1916, were ap- proximately $500,000,000 a month. This, he declared, was extraordinarly small in view of the enormous quan- tity of munitions that has been pro- vided to carry out the Verdun offen- According to other dmspatehes, the Russian success is largely due to the unprecedented use of nrtillery, lur- pusing in intensity nny previous ef- forts on either side on the cut front. The retreat of many Aultrhn trench detachments we: completely cut " by a curtain of shrnpnel through which it was imposaible for any liv.. ine thing to pass, and the Austrians Were thus compelled to surrender en mans". GERMANS CARRY BIG WAR VOTE me â€my Telegraph‘s correspon-l The etoture of Lutsk threatens the dent ventures the usertion on the am I Augean: with a new invasion of tht.. thority of e prominent Russian expert ' Win from the north. Vienna de- that “all tive Austrian armies are on I spatches express the fest that the the eve of a genenl retreat, and that I abandonment of Dubno, the npex of Lemberg is in greet strategic danger.†'; the Volhynlen fortress triangle, will On the me nuthority it ls asserted become automatically necessnry, and that a. statistic breach 100 miles ; the Nil of that stronghold would com- wide has been blown in the Austrian l pel the Austro-Rungarians to retire front, involving the armies of General 3 within the Gelicinn border. Count von Bothrner and General van; The Russians, “cording to Petro- Boehm-Errnolli, and part of that of 'urrad, scored nnother notable success Archduke Joseph Ferdinand. I in the last. " hours. Pushlnr forward The Volhyninn fortress of Lutak, 30 miles from the Galician frontier, fell into Russian hands last Tuesday, the first important capture by the Czav'.s forces since the great Spring drive an the 250-mile front from the Two Socialists Oppose New Credit of $3,000.000,000 A despatch from London says: Special d-tchess from Petrotrrad express the belief that the Russian nucceam axtin-t the Austrians are In more important than nppears from tho ofrieU1 announcements. The Daily Telegraph‘s correspon- dent ventures the ssmtion on the au- thority of s prominent Russian expert that "ni1 tive Austrian armies no on the eve of th general retreat, snd that Lamb": is in crest strategic dsnger." On the same nuthoritv it In nun-d The Times estimates the Austrian losses " 200,000. RUSSIA'S BLOW BREACH . IN TIE AUSTRIAN FRONT iv. All on Board 12 (hi THE ghliPsgllllli CREW DRIFT ASHORE ON l RAFT All Five of the Teuton Armies on the Eve of a General Retreat, It b Reported. ftp,"?. bend (I Vessel Carrying Lord Kitchener to Russia Were Not Drowned, as Supposed. An Aberdeen despatch any: the Hampshire sank in deep water two miles trom Jami between Marwick Head and the Brough of Birsny, on the west eoatt of the Orkney Islands. board tho 'tHmpshivc---am; in 'inis Cole nection thc British public- naturally thinks first of Lord Kitchener-may also have reached land on one of the rocky. uninhabited islands of the Ork- ney group. and, though unable to cam- munieate with civilization, are safe. This hope, it is granted by those who mention it, is of the most meagre sort with little probability that it will be fulfilled. A vigorous search is being prosecut- ed for the bodies of Lord Kitchener and others aboard the Hampshire. Several bodies, including that of Lieut.-Col. o. A. Fitzgerald, Lord Kitchener's military secretary. are be- ing brought to Thurso, Scotland, ac- cording to a despatch from that town. A despatch from Amsterdam says: ~The Telegmaf says that a German destroyer struck a mine aw wont. down off Zeebrugge on May 31. A despatch from London says: An) army order issued on Thursday pro-1 hibits the purchase or sale of British ! or Irish wool of the 1916 season. . i Imports and Exports Show Equal Increase in Mar. A despatch from London GSS:-- The Board of Trade returns for May shows that imports increased 212,- 213,000. The increase was represent- ed principally by food products, ttrain, ttour and chemicalsl Imports of cotton, however, decreased S2,T60,000, Exports increased 218,405,000, the in- crease being ehiefty in iron, steel, cot- ton and wool manufactured products. A despatch from Christiania says: --On account of the general strike, the Government has passed a law pro- hibiting, the sale or importation of strong liquors, wines and beer and the shipment of liquors throughout the country. The police also have been ordrlred to prevent the serving of wine and beer in restaurants. BRITAIN yitN TAKES (H ER THE WOOL FU'PPLY OF 1916, fl ER)! ' N DESTROYER GOVERNMENT OF NORWAY RESTRH‘TS LIQUOR TRAFFIC A despatch from London says: There was much satisfaction express- ed at the Admiralty on Thursday over the publication of the admission by the German Naval Department of the loss of the battle cruiser Lutzow of 26,000 tons and the armored cruiser Rostock of 4,900 tons. British reports of the naval battle " Skagerrack had accounted for these German ships among others, which the Berlin state- ments had steadfastly omitted. The offieial admission that the loss of these vessels was withheld "for mili- tary reasons" impugns the veracity of the German claim as to the results of the battle generally, in the opinion of attaches of the Admiralty. Fur- ther admissions confirming the Brit.. ish reports are looked for. The Russians, according to Petro- grud, scored mother notable success in the last 24 hours. Pushing forward in mused formation, with an unpre- cedented outpour of artillery, they pressed the Austro-Humras.en troops defending the "doors of the Rake- wins" to the River Strypa. taking strong positions on the Tribuehowiee- Jsslowice front. Both places lie a few miles from one another west of the Stripa and south of the important city of Buczaz. This success, if fol- lowed up by further progress, men- aces the Bukowina crown land with invasion and the whole Austro-Hun- garian army defending it-estimated at from 250,000 to 300,000---with be- ing cut off. TEUTONS ADMIT MORE SEA LOSS -hhe {all of Lutak was nnnouneed by the Russian War Office on Thursday night. Pripet to the Roumanian border be- The Russian official report asserts that the total number of prisoners taken in the new offensive has been brought up to 54,000. Battle Cruiser Lutzow and the Rostock Destroyed-New Reports on Fight. BRITISH TRADE GROWS. New lnvuion From North SUNK BY MINE I "Finns, Laws. Russians. duke, have §1abor9d unremittingly to fasten a per- Hnanont way of steel between Petro- ;grad and Semonowa. the latter city far beyond the Arctic circle. on the jnorthern shore ot Finland. near Nor- wegian Nerd Kap. Work upon the new line began a few months after , the outbreak of the war, and it has (been pushed feverishly. as a means of ('over.reaehirttt the blockade by land land set: that isolates Russia in the ( west. "The building of this new port. giv- ing Russia a city on open, western Tater, the construction of the new railway into the heart of the north. and the building of a naval station here, beyond the domination ot any river power forms together by tar the most important effort of the whole war to date." Pat-Did they request your pres- ence at the wedding? Abe---Yes, and also my presents. “Spnwnowa may not be the warm water port that the Muscovite has been steadily demanding through the years of his empire, but, nevertheless, it is a port on lcefree water; naviga- tion finds an open way usually around Nord Kap for several score miles down the northern coast. "The undertaking required the building of more than 650 miles of railroad through an unfavorable coun- try, in many places wtstersoatred, crossed by low-banked rivers, filled with countless lakes, large and small, and, through a great part of the year, frozen numb and buried under feet ot snow. Construction has gone forward from the north and from the south, but there Mill remains a considerable middle section to be laid before the completion of the project. Russia Will Have a New Outlet to the Ocean. "A railroad farthest north, tapping the polar sens beyond Archangel, its whole length running through a region of intense winter cold, is one of the most important constructive results of this destructive world- war," says a statement prepared by the National Geographic Society " Washington. “Stimulated by an im. perative war necessity for a port near- er the west and the long battle lines than Vladivmrtock, this new railway has been driven north with the same fierce energy as that called forth by the dash tor enemy positions. entering St. Paul's Cathedral at the recent celebration of "Anzac" Day, in honor of the Australian Colonial troops. FARTH EST NORTH RAILROAD. The picture ts a deck view ot the British cringe:- Indcntigable, which wan sunk. The German Admiralty repom that there were only two " survivors and that they were tagged magnum altar-am-" ON CRUISER INDEFATIGABLE The Late Lord Kitchener Both Kinds. m7 Tramp (entering taxidermist's)-- "Do you stuff all kinds of things here?" Taxidermist--"Why, yes." Tramp-Hell, I wish you’d stuff me with a good dinner." tius/v'ilni%,ivu/ ".is" 163930 Montrmrl. June ".---Buteher.u' Moors. choice. " to ".10; medium. " to to ".50; common. " 30 to 87.90: bulll, vhnlce. " to 38,10: fair to good. " " to 37: medium. 85.66 to “.40: cows. choir». " to $175: fair to load. 86.65 to 86.40: vane": and cutters 13.75 to ".76 Sheen light. " to $8: nun-In: limbs. " to " mph. Calves. "holee. " to no; m-dtnm, " to " loo. elets $1l)trrto $11.60: Toronto. June 18.--Cmoice heavy steers 89.60 to 89.90; buteheref cattle. choice. 39.16 to $9.86: (In. trood. "" to $9.00; do., medium. $8.40 to 88.60; do., common. 87.75 to 88.00; butchers’ bulls. choice. 88,00 to ".50; do., good bulls. 87.50 to £7.75; do., rough butts, $4.76 to M.M; butchertf cows, choice $8.00 to “.25: do.. trood 87.60 to 87.75; do., common. $5.25 to 85.75; slackers. 700 to 850 lb... $6.75 to $7.75: choice feeders. dehorned. 960 to l, 00 lbs. $3.25 to 11.85; runners and cutters, “.00 to 85.00: milkers. choice. each $76.00 to 3100.00: do., cum. and med.. each “0.00 to $60.00; sprint:- ers, $5000 to $100.00; Hth ewrn. " 60 to $10.00; sheen. heavv. $6.00 to 88.00; lambs. per lb.. 150. to INC: spring lambs $6.00 to 810.50; calves. load to ohnlre. "so to$1LS0;do.. medium. $7.25 to 8.50; hogs, fed and watered, 810.60; do,, weigh- od off can! 810.86 to 310.90; do., f.o.b.. 819.00 to $JO.10. -- _ MInnespoHs. June IAC-Wit-July H.101; Septembor. $1.1M: No. lhard tint ', No. LNorthern, SL103 to 81.18]: No. , do.. 81.07! to "All. Jorn---No. ' yellow. 72 to Tlie. 0atsg--No. ' white " to “to Flour unohtnxod; shipments. 29,451 b la. Bran 818.00 to 819.00. Duluth. June ".---wheut--No. lhnrd. $1.18: No. 1 Northern, 81.12: No. 2Nor- thorn. bill'! to 31.09}. Linseed. 81.82}: Ju.ly. $133 asked; September. 'Lot Liiad Winntpetr, June Ir-ish quolsgons: --whettt-No. 1 Northern. "lot; o. 2. Northern. $1.09I; No. 8 Northern. $1.0U; No. 4. 81.00l; No. I. one; No. B, 8920; feed sue. otttte-No. 2 CW. 4Uc; No. a cw. 40ic', our. No lfeid. me; No. 1 feed, Mic; No , feed. 4 lo. Bar- tey-No. 8. 'W No. 4, 6le; re)octad 60c: tttd... 6.th. “1557370 1 N.W.C. ti.69t; N672 div. 51133! Montreal, June 18,--Corn-Amerie.n No. , yellow. " to 81c. oattr-Canadun Western. No. 8, “c; do.. No. a. who: ox- tra No. 1 feed, Mic: No. 2 local white, Mc; No. t, do., 61c; No. 4, do., 60c. Bar- 1ey--MtuMtoba feed. " to thr. muting. " to 760. Flour--Mtutitotras Spring wheat patents. tirmts. 86.80; do., "condo. $6.80: strong bakera', $6.10; Winter patentl. choice, " to $6.25; straight rollerl. 5.10 to $6.60; do., in ttpg',',', 82.40 to 2.66. Rolled msta--Barr. I. 85.05 to 5.65; but of 90 Ibo, $2.40 to tt.0. Mill- feed-Bran, '" to $24; shorts. 826; mlddllnxa. $28 to $30; momma. 830 to :35. Ha tT.tift 2. per ton, car loo, 20.50 to Ci. 0. Cheese-pine" wttet- ernl. 1710; do, euterns. mic. Butter --Choicet" creamery. " to sue; lec- onds, " to 29hr Etttttr---Fresh, " to Me; selected. " to 30c; No. 1 ltock. " to 27e; No. t, do., Mc. Poutoi-per bag, car lots, 81.95. 'll-r-N-uid, 25 to Me; do., Itt car- tone, " to "c. r',,'tt,t','i-il.' to $4.50. the Utter for handpick . Ctteeae---New, lame. 18c: twine, Ig6tt. Maple 'aetar"rti,et are neady at 8110 to t .50 gar st'.'tritM'1rot,, Honey-Com q-No. l, " to tt; No. 2. " to 82.40. ' Dressed pouttrr--Chicho, " to ths; fowl, " 1m Potstoe uric: quoted u ".8? and New Brunswick: at $2.10 per bag. --Medtum, m to me: 60.. navy. I“ to mic; rolls. " to 19k; breakfast bacon. 2“ to Mic; backs. plain. Mt " "ic; yongleu Racy. 22) to 80ke, at.ihitdtU -ltuFrur,JG.] fiffivifézé T158. 8. do., Elle: can No. 1 feed. Mic; No. t tetd, soge. on "whaling ports -.- Lird-u-YvuFi; lkTiir 'cisréth-ic. and pails. 17le; compound. " to “In Toronto. Juno ta-Manitoba wheat-- No. , Northern Inu; No. 2. do.. "AM; Net, 9.0-: mu: 9." tryttcBaypor3y. - "finish? iii-31%.": iftrfG.' it 137%. out-Ida. ' Ontario wtteat--rNo. , commercial. " to tt.0t; No. 2. do. " to 99c; No. I. do., " to "e; teed wheat. " to 900, nom- int: “Tagging kg trfurtttsl gut-hie. Pee-Nts T, 81.70; ucordlnl to um- ple. ti." to 81.60. uccondlnl to freight: outside. Btu0y-yix1tlntr, " to Me; feed " to 039 gem-ding to frelghu outside. Ainerl'ca'n -iedrii-tVo." 'yeic'iw Tire, on tree, Bu non-1789. teelr, Tyrontq, Manitoba t1ottr--Ptrttt mums. tn jut. Mt “.10; second patents. In jute b s. " IV, strong bskers'. in Jute busfit Toronto, - Ontario ttour-Winter. according to sample. "" to $4.86 tn bulk seaboard. prom? lhlpment. Mil feed-Hur tots, delivered Montreal frtsuhts---Brtut. per ton, "r, shorts. per ton, "5: mtddllnxl. per ton, '" to 326: good feed ttour, per but. tt.70 to tro. Butter-Pre" dairy, choice, 24 to Me; inferior, " to NC: crumory prints. " to Hg: tnNrAor, " to Mc. maortiuir-to tiCriif," LGTafa to frel.ttuAtutstde. 7 7 7 V $591035.- 7 "g" Enumerclal. nominal. " toJye,. 'c.eor41tttr tqueixhu out-IQ; _ Met: iii; won! IttuT?n. Iortctse [Bic United sum “to". In". â€at “on. Holman “no. country Mum. ti"s ' 1b. Hun- The medical staff consists of eight surgeons under the direction of a chief surgeon, a dental surgeon. an ophthalmic surgeon, a pathologist. an X-ray operator, an tuuestrthetist, and a number of physicians. In addition women medical students visit the hos- pital, and the entire administrative supervision of the hospital is in wo- men's hands. A Dream Shattered. "Sue, sweet," said the mvain. "do you think ‘hat if we tot married secretly your father would ever for- give us? "I am sure he would, d;=ar." ropir. d the girl without hesita- tion. "And would he give us . a house of our.own'."' "Yes darling." "An income big enough for us to live on in comfort?" The maid nod- ded decidedly. "And would he take me into the firm t" “Certainly he'd do that." "And let me run ihe busi- ness to please myself?" "Why, of ,course he would, silly boy." She snuggled into his shirt fror but he put her coldly from him. "I an nev- marry you, Miss Brown," he aid, ud- ly; "your father It too wins to get you off his hands." From this small beginning the hos- pital, which will necommodate 600 wounded soldiers, sprang. The wounded soldier is considerubly sur- prised, if he is well enough to take notice, to be brought to the hospital and see only women orderlies in the corridors and women surgeons and physicians to attend him. Constitute Whole Std! From Sur- geons to Orderlies. A hospital in which only the pa- tients are men is one of the wu- time innovations in London. It is in Endell Street near Covent Garden Market, and the entire staff, from cooks to surgeons, are women. The institution is the outgrowth of I movement known as the Women's Hospital Corps. A little body of wo- men left England for France in the early stages of the war to nurse the wounded soldiers, but later they were called back, as they were needed even more urgently to care for the many wounded soldiers brought home to England. High explosive shells Wei. first to- tunlly employed in the Boe. War. A' woman doe. herd“, beeiuae she wants to-a man bees; ce. he In. Interviewed by the New York Herald, he made some important re- velations. He said that in Germany the civilian population is underfed, and the aged, ill and weak are dying by thousands because they cannot ob- tain the necessary sustenance. Foml riots are of daily occurrence every- where in Germany, and in Dusseldorf men and women repeatedly have rioted, to be beaten back by armed soldiers and in many cases severely wounded. Every ounce of food which enters Germany, and but little is go- ing in, is distributed from Berlin. The most rigorous censorship is maintain- ed to keep the true state of tttritrs from the world, but in Holland the general knowledge of exact condi- tions is becoming known, and the peo- pleple understand why Germany is fUrhtine so desperately at Verdun and why the Austrians are smashing at Italy. It is essential for the con- tinuance of the war that a great vic- tory be won by the Central Powers so that the people may again put out the fltqts and the bands may play in the streets. l nuns were not starving, that their eotnplaints were ordered by the Gov.. ernment, whose object was to induce the United States to bring influence to bear to mitigate the rigors of the British blockade. Because the slams of famine a year ago were proved groundless it does not follow that Iimller stories to-day are not to be believe). To-day's stories do not come from official sources only. They come from neutral observers in Ger- many and from neutral countries. One of the moat interesting is from Mr. E. F. R. Delaney, formerly Con. sul for the Netherlands in Chicago, and now general agent for the Hol- land-American Line. He returned from Holland to New York a few days ago, after his merrieze to a Dutch Indy. jams? m it 51m 10 mm To-dey, every story that camel from Gemeny in tt story of food shorten, A year ago there were similar station It was said that Germany we: eta-vine, that the wo- men nnd little children were without food. The prayers of the congrega- tion were asked. the lymplthy of the neutral world was required. Sub- sequently it appeared that the Ger- or how gall-nay they fight. If they thrht well and have food, their women- folk and children " home my he starving, and to save their lives the German armies any discontinue the struggle. There is a possibility, which we ought not to calculate upon humili- tary acme, that the German armiee will be defeated by starvation. It is an end to the war that British sub. jects would rejoice to nee, for it would mean that it was the British navy that f1nnllr brought the Teutonic powers to their knees. It iI conceiv- able that four million German aoldiera in France, in Poland and elsewhere, strong, rugged men, plentifully equip- ped with arms and ammunition. ehould throw up their hands and own their defeat. If they have not food it does not matter how skilfully they are led WILL BRITAIN'S NAVY DEFEAT THE TEUTONIC POWERS? A Gentleman Just From Holland Says the German Popnlltion In Underfel. WOMEN RUN WAR HOSPITAL. Censor- Concul Facts. Stories From Ger-nay. to . “Studying the use, the public dis- covered that there is shorrible kind of jam in use smong diNomatuta. York It should be done swsy with es soon mt Pet- as possible, for it is seventeenth cen- mien lwry, not twentieth; but it belongs to “no: l the repulsive com-Mes of the duello, d in ' I and will probably be found necesssry iotyobg-l so long es netions remain duelliste. Foal? Our public wss shocked to find that every- 5 Governments use euphonies to cover sel do ff! bltxaphemiesi they talk freely of have throat-euttintr, ear-splitting and dis- arm ed ; emboweilintr, but slwsys in words that *verely' suggest the degeneracy of some Inor- (which _ bidly truculent College Professor, . vaunve " cold creem end sinister es JI' At, Maine BulL Now, ditsentantrlintt iid/C A the meanings end releuing them from iiiiiiri/ 'diplomatie unge,’ we found that the td 'a"/e1erfer. bit of dialogues had preced- _ .. led the war: Germany (interrupting): I love peace and I have done more than mor- tal may to preserve it. The sword is forced into my hands, evidently by God, and I defend myself. (Drnws two well-oiled and loaded pummns Iof a nttsgnif1cent new model and be- F gins to shoot, while France and Eng- l land run home to get their Runs.) i Search as we might, we could fiml ‘no true substitute for this, dialogue. We have read and listened etuterly--- yes, anxiously and hopefully-- to everything the Germans had to say; we wanted to see the one of their Government in ehappier light; but nothing altered the substance of the 'Govermnental conversation just giv- "n." England, France and Italy: (To Austria) Please wait a minute. (To Germany) Austria in your brother; he does exactly what you tell him to do. Ask him to wait just aminute longer before he shoots. We can arrange this to satisfy Austria if you'll get him not to shoot. Germany: No. Serbia (on his knees and swallow- ing: There.' I've eaten nine mouth- fuls, and [will eat the tenth if you'll give me just a few seconds for diges- tion. England and France (imploring Ger- many): Please Mop him'. You are the only one who can. Won't you any I word to stop him.' Germany: No. Russia (beginning to load his old- fashioned shotgun): I hope you'll stop him. See here. Austria, can't we talk things over and see if there isn't a better way out? Austria: Perhaps we could if---- Germany (interrupting): Russia, quit loading that gun! Rustin: I can": while things are thin shlpe. but [will quit lowing once if Austria will promise not shoot Serbia. Austria; No, your minute is up Ind I shoot. Russia: (To Austria) I'll shoot if you do. (To Sabin) Ent Bil the dirt you possibly can; do your best to keep him from shooting. I don't want to have to shoot» Austria: (To Serbia) You mound- rel, get down on your knees Ind at ten mouthful. of dirt! Do it in one minute, or I'll shoot! belly Hail loom from Kiel that the itrst tmoeieial arstitnnte of Genoa lee-es in the North See the: the number of killed " 800, of wounded at 1,400 and of mining at 4,600. A Central News despatch from Cop- enlugen eeye that the Swedish evenn- " Vende penned the wreck of e ginn- tie warship on Saturdey, the nation- ulity of which it was unable to uter- um Hundreds of bodies were tlov. ine around the wreck end for three hours the Vunde steamed among deed sailors. Near the spot where the derelict was encountered the wreck of a big sliling veuel, apparently In in- nocent victim of the Jutland battle we: lighted. A Famous Novelist wo otr sch-vet Bit of Dialogue. Mr. Booth Tarkington, the well- known novelist, summarizes the cor- relpondence and "eonveraartioms"tut preceded tho war in the following brilliant and strikingly upt manner: "General North report' that the British column- which em-ed Nyeâ€:- lud into the German East Africa. frontier on May 26 pursued the enemy in the direction of [rim " far es the vicinity of Neu-Etenmle. A tturn- ber of minnow. some ammunition end n qunntity of atom and supplies A (leap-can from London an ..--' The following omen] “about was: 'mauod on Wodneuar.-- I ENEMY LOSSES 6,800 IN THE NAVAL FIGHT A donned: from London says c-- Th! coppnhgcen correspondent of The Total Number of German Sailors Killed is 800. vv-vuv. -u||c’. yum-lulu. "It Rhoda!“ column which in investing 1r1ittlllilu EAST AFRICA l British Cola-Is Pursue! the Ema-y An Fu- An the Vlehlty HOW THE WAR STARTED. KNITTERS, LOOPERS. PAIRERS. EXAMINERS Good Positions in our Hosiery. Sweater, and Underwear Departments. Steady work. Eight hours daily. Operators with experience trutirantesrd 89.00 and up- wards weekly. Write us. ITARIO ARCHIVE; RELIANCE KNITTING CO., LTD., King and Bathurst Streets, Toronto. of Nell-I the in at j Lieut. J. Narciue Cartier, an net- mtor with the British forces. who ibrought down a German aeroplane l after a thrilling fight 4,000 feet in the ,nir, h I Ion of Dr. A. P. Cartier, at I St. Hyacinth. “In Edwnrd-"Why, hunt“ to tind out why the heavy end of snatch in the 'light' and." Ion; Gonna! Chailluy, a sun; Rear Admiral, a son; General de Morlain- court, a son-in-law; General Louis, a Ion; General Corvisart, a son; Gener- al de Learn. a non; General do Lentapis. a son: General Bonfait. a non; General Dieulonne, a non. thing General do Caustoinau, an in well known, has lost three Iona; General Pancho. anon and I son-inJaw; Gen- eral Baillioud, a son and a son-in-law; General do laud’huy. I tron; Gen- eral D'Amade, a son; General Des. airier, three was; General dePouy- draguin, two sons General Reynouard, two soul; General de Lardemelle, two sons; General Nayraud. two Ions; General Ganeval. a son-in-law (Gen- eral Ganeval himself VII killed at the Dtmuneilest; General de la Nanou- vello. two sons; General Ebenar. a son; General de Benoit, I son; Gen- eral Bonnal, I son; General de Mon- deair, I non-in-law; General de Van- san, a tson-tn-hoe; General Falqua.a De (Adela. Kead. List With “In. Children killed in Anton. French General. who have exercise ed commands during the war have had .total of 86 Ion: and sons-in-hw kill- ed in action. FRENCH GENERALS LOSE SUNS. Hmong, "pom that the carbon at' that plies broke out of in to" oat tho night at Jun. 2, tutoring - mu... and luv!" WM mm! at their “like. via m and. pr!- nonoro. Among than was the Ger: mu: Commandant, who Ind been wounded by our am. “he German maven [who and ur- yim le dertomiied,pari u! desert-, From the 00m Shore. Rev. Father Renouf spoke in the uthedul at St. John'l. Ntid., mendy for the first time, though he had been It‘ched to the archdioceu for nearly twenty years. There I. nu eridamie of bum} in Homeâ€, " l "durt-intu mm out. or-tio-h-b-s-ntl." . Two Utah, and two home: were tmptd at Harcourt, tia. 7 _ R. M. Connely, witt km- lumber- lnnn of M. John, b dead. t No. Jum- Rumphrey; Mortetaq,! w“ .truck and killed by no cure.“ train. rim an Moran-ed, an! m desert-, in. win, the Potrtthttt_ott in tht no! The Pruner Atate a Finder-icon will erect I ttne new hoopihl. A C. E. i'de'ii'iUCi',i"7iiiiii'nent m1 popular either: of St. John, lg dead. Fire totallr destroyed John Gwdet'o woodworking plant at College Bridge to the extant of $20,000. Sidney French wu Armed at mu- fax. He wu . member of in (on. operating the dredge boat. - jive [urge hebei'gu were reported u few tulle: oft Cape he. by New- foundlnnd tailors fut Standby Pte. H. R. Wilcox, I wall-known young nun of St. George, died In at/ John, N.B., of pneumonia and mallow new. Henry W. Trove", North} " I private. He ls now "ported dead of wounds. , The bodlu of M. L. Lowndn and wife were found in Rocky Luke, " miles from Hum“. It in supposed their horn- nn “my. Joe. D. White and Joe. Poirier, of Sydney, N.S., rescued two men from drowning; they have to their credit the saving of nix men during the your. Two boy bandit. named Smith and Button of Fredericton hove cleverly entwined the police, and continue their reign of terror, breaking into atom Ind homes. 60,000 pounds of pickled hnddock end cod-a full eartoad--w" shipped to New Jersey by the maritime Fish Corporation in one day. "Bert" Buckley. 10-year-old Ion of Albert H. Buckley. Halifax, who had boon "Uetding the Royal Military Col- lege at Kingston, died luddeniy. Miss Mary Cummins, for many years matron of the Villa Nov. or.. plume. and daughter of the In. 2t Jun. Cummins, died in M. John's, N d. Edwnrd--NU, do you know every- Per---") 9n is' ,. ti". up! upped Br Want at ch. In “coming the British Idle Curimsity l, my non, why do you