«4 Saved From Wrecked Steamer, They Tell Conflicting ‘Storâ€" n ies About the Death of Captainâ€"All Survivors A despatch from London says:â€" Kronstadt is reported to have surâ€" rendered to the British fleet. A despatch from Faris says:â€" Among those whose extradition is deâ€" manded by the Lille courtâ€"martial is a certain Major Evers, who at Le Crtclat condemned ffl: British solâ€" diers to be shot without any justificaâ€" tion, making them carry their own coffins to the place of execution. Brutal German Murderer On List for Surrender KRONSTADT SURRENDERS TO BRITISH ; FALL OF PETROGSRAD AT HAND Coneral Yudenitch Continues Victorious March, Nearing Russian Capitalâ€"Reds Refuse to Defend City. Wales‘ Specia® ‘I‘rxn.)â€"â€"“'l'he town is yours. Psint it ahy color you I‘ke." This was the text of a sign which groet=d the Prince of Wales at Copalt on Thursday, and expressed the epirit which informed the welcome extended the Prince Thursday by the Poreupine people. A despatch from Englehbart, Ont., says:â€"(Fn route with Prince of Wales‘ Specia‘® Trgin.)â€"*"The town is Prince Sees Ontario Mining Centre and Receives Souvenirs. SILVER AND GOLD [FORTY MILLION DOLLAR |liam. _ _ NUGCETS FOR H.R.H.| _ TRADE WITH GREECE . Manitops On the night of October 8, during a heavy storm, the officers of the Zirâ€" ke!l saw distress fAsres from some vessel ahead. _ As they pulled nearer «igna of great commotion were noticeable on the craft, which apâ€" peared to be a twoâ€"masted schooner. In an effort to cireumvent the schoonâ€" er and approach closer, the steering gear of the Zirkel snapped, and for four hours she wallowed helplessly in the trough of a heavy sea. t An air of mystery surrounds the causes which led to the death of the Captan and the Mate of the schoonâ€" er Onito, ending with the distress signal which summoned the steamsh‘p Zirkel to their aid. The Zirkel docked Thursday afternoon at the Washingâ€" ton avenue wharf, and the Captain, Daniel A. Sullivan, of New York city, told a story that rivaled the fiction of_ many writers. | A â€" despatch from Philadelphia says:â€"Four sailors, saved amid all the peri!s of a storm at night in midâ€" ccean, are now held at the immiigrant station at Goucester, N.J., to await a hearing before the British Consul on a charge of mutiny. % Finally a lifeboat was daunched, BRITISH SAILORS FACE MUTNY CHARGE AFTER RESCUE AT SEA A Are From | on the road to Petrograd and trenches and entanglements outside of the | Capital are not formidable. It is also announced that the Bolâ€" sheviki are evacuating Petrograd owâ€" ing to a mutiny among the Red troops. Reports from Russia generally chronicle successes for the antiâ€"Bolâ€" shevik forces in all sections of the country, but, with the excption of éntly wish to do all their own work! _ Strawâ€"Car lots, per ton, $10 to $%*1, of reconstruction. track, Toronto. | â€"â€",â€"f_â€".â€"_._._._. Country Produceâ€"Wholesale. « Butterâ€"Dairy, tubs and rolls, 38 to Soldiers Uncover 40c; prints, 40 t{) 42¢. Creamery, fresh | Tombs 2,500 Years Old g‘t‘alde solids, 53% to 54¢; prints, 54 to | lec. _A despatch from Salonica says:-â€"‘ Eggsâ€"55 to 56c. A & Military excavations, trench making, 25Dtr:s§(e)g. ml:tre“';.:s.%??gémsrwzkoent% etc., can"ied on in the Greek parts of!, 25¢; duckl'invgs, 25 to -30c’; turk'eys, 35 Macedonia during the war by the Alâ€" | to 40c; squabs, doz., $4.50. § lied armies, have brought to light a| Live poultryâ€"Spring chickens, 22 large nmumber of antiquities, such as to 25¢; roosters, 20¢; fowl, 18 to 25c;l ancient instruments, © vases of geoâ€" ducklings, 20¢; turkeys, 35¢c. | metrical design and jewellery of iron,l Cheeseâ€"New, large, ?8% to 29c; silver and gold of great archaeological tWins, 29 to 290%4e¢; triplets, 20%4 to: value. Tombs of the fifth and sixth 30¢; Stilton, 32 to 83¢. _ _ | i ormms k 4 |_ Butterâ€"Fresh dairy, choice, 48 to‘ centuries before Christ h:ue also _beeni 50¢c; creamery prints, 57 to 59c. discovered. _ These antique articles, Margarineâ€"33%} to 38c. ’ which have been taken possession of Eggsâ€"No. 1, 58 to 59¢; selects, 61 by M. Pelekides, director of antiqutâ€" to 62c. l ties, prove that the civilization which! Dressed poultryâ€"Spring chickens, existed at that ancient time in Maceâ€"| 30 to 35¢; roosters, 23 to 25¢; fowl, 30| donia was identical with that in to 82¢; turkeys, 50 to 5§§;‘Jucklmgs,l Greece Newf | _A despatch from London says:â€"Up to date Canada has done some $40,â€" 000,000 worth of business with Greoce. Of this sum only $10,000,000 have been financed under the Canadian Governâ€" ment credit to that country, the reâ€" maining business having been done on a cash basis. Our exports have rangâ€" ed from wheat to soldiers‘ housewives. The Roumanian credit is now practi-' cally used up. Only about half a milâ€" lion dollars‘ worth of business has been done under the Belgian credit.’ Under the French credit we have done nothing at all, principally because of, the prohibitive French surtaxes. 'l'here; are time clauses in these contracts which terminate them at the end of: the present year. It is considered doubtful whether the French ctedit! will be renewed or the Belgian credit exhausted, as these countries apparâ€" éntly wish to do all their own work! of reconstruction. | Only Ten Miilion Doliars of This Sum Financed Under Government Credit. C amistane thakralishad wat namy Lar) | _ Toronto, Oct: Z1.â€"â€"NManitobs wieat suspicions that all had not been told,‘ _x, j Northern, $2.30; No. 2 Northâ€" as a result of which they were turned ern, $2.27; No. 3 Northern, $2.23, in over to the immigration authorities to store Fort William. await the action of the British Consul.! Manitoba catsâ€"No. 3 CW, 79¢: exâ€" Capt. Sullivan gave the men the freedom of the ship and took good care of them, but the stories they soon cireulated concerning the loss of the Brussia brothers became variâ€" ous and conflictinz, easily exciting The four men, all from Newfoundâ€" land, were Thomas Houlton, age 29; Ernest Fizzard, age 19, of Burin, Newfound‘and; aud Douglas Nichol, age 24, and Lorenzo Ash, age 24, of Carbonear, Newfoundland. They said that the boat wes sinking and that the Captain, James Brussia, of Burin, and his brother Errect, the Mate, were killed during a shifting of the cargo of salt some days previous, and buried at sea. ! under the direction of Chief Officer E. Sims and six men, and approached the distressed craft, so that four men could jump into the boat. So heavy were the seas that when the return to the ship was made the boat was smashed while efforts were made to haul it back on the steamer, but the crew and the rescued men were saved. ‘ *R XN@RILN @ UP PPA TEER EL Official figures given out recently in London show that the darkest day of the war for England was on July 1, 1916, when casualties in killed and wounded numbered 170,000. It was the opening day of the first battle of the Somme. A despatch from London says:â€" Out of consideration for the special transportâ€" needs, King George and Queen Mary did not use, as is their wont, a special train from London to Sandringham, whither their Court has Live nori:l%;yâ€"»s'pring' chickens, 22 to 26¢; fowl, 23 to 25¢; ducks, 22 to 25c. King Shows Consideration For Needs of Transport Dressed poultryâ€"Spring chickens, 30 to 35¢; roosters, 23 to 25¢; fowl, 30 to 32¢; turkeys, 50 to 55¢; ducklings, 84 to 35¢; squabs, doz., $6.00. Butterâ€"Fresh dairy, choice, 48 to 50¢c; creamery prints, 57 to 59c. Margarim.h&'} to 38c. Eggsâ€"No. 1, 58 to 59¢; selects, 61 to 62c. Eggsâ€"55 to 56c. Dressed poultryâ€"Spring chickens, 25 to 30c; roosters, 25¢c; fowl, 20 to 25¢; ducklings, 25 to 30¢c; turkeys, 35 to 40c; squabs, doz., $4.50. Hayâ€"No. 1 per ton, $24 to $25; mixed per ton, $18 to $21, track, Toâ€" ronto. 1| ET ECWOUEI ORUSâ€"NO, o CW, id¢c; exâ€" ltrn No. 1 feed, 80¢; No. 1 feed, T8Â¥ke; ;_No. 2 feed, To%c, in store Fort Wilâ€" shipment. Millfeedâ€"Car lots, delivered Montâ€" real freights, bags included. Bran, per ton, $45; shorts, per ton, $55; good feed flour, per bag, $3.50. Ontario flourâ€"Government standâ€" ard, Montreal, $9.25 to $9.50; Toronto, 89._05 to $9.30, in jute bags, prompt Barleyâ€"Malting, $1.28 to $1.33, acâ€" cording to freights outside. Buckwheatâ€"Nominal. Ryeâ€"Nominal. Manitoba flourâ€"Government standâ€" ard, $11, Toronto. Ontario wheatâ€"No. 1 Spring, $2.02 to $2.08; No. 2 Spring, $1.99 to $2.05; No. 3 Spring, $1.95 to $2.01, f.0.b. shi'Ppi‘ng' points, according to freights. Ontario wheatâ€"No. 1 Winter, .per car lot, $2 to $2.06; No. 2 do., $1.97 to $2:03; No. 3 do., $1.93 to $1.99, f.o.b. sh;er.'ing_ poi_rlts,_'a(:‘crgv)rrai}â€"lé E(;};élght; feed, $1.1544. American cornâ€"No. 3 yellow, nom inak; No. 4 yellow, nominal. Ontario oatsâ€"No. 3 white, 84 t« 86¢, according to freights outside. Darkest Day of the War. Part of a great demonstation in Profiteers or get out." Manitoba barleyâ€"No. 3 CW, $1.35; . 4. CV_V, $1.27; rejected, $1.15%; TORONTO Broajstufls. Weekly Market Report to A despatch from Regina says:â€" The Great War Veterans‘ Association of Swift Current has passed a resoluâ€" tion endorsing the action of the Sasâ€" katchewan Department of Education in enforcing compulsory school atâ€" tendance upon the Mennonites in that district. "We pledge ourselves to supâ€" port to the fullest degree the Departâ€" ment of Education in its efforts to educate all children in the Provime,‘ as they should be, in the English hn-l guage," says the resolution, after reâ€" citing the fact that "there are groups of people who resist education as proâ€" vided by the legislation of this Province." I Live Stock Markets. " Toronto, Oct. 21.â€"Choice heavy |steers, $12.75 to $18; good heavy | steers, $12 to $12.50; butchers‘ cattle, . choice, $11.25 to $11.75; do, good, . $10.50 to $11; do, med., $9.50 to $10; do, com., $6.75 to $7.25; bulls, chcice, | $10 to $10.50; do, med., $9.59 to $9.175; :do, rough, $7.50 to $8; butcher cows, ‘ choice, $10 to $10.50; do, good, $9 to $9.25; do, med., $8.50 to $9; do, com., $7 to $7.50; stockers, $7.50 to $10; |feeders, $10 to $11.25; canners and :cuttcrs, $5 to $6.25; milkers, good to choi‘ce, $110 to $150; do., com. and !med., $65 to~$75; springers, $90 to | $150; light ewes, $8 to $9.50; yearlâ€" ings, $9 to $10; spring lambs, per cwt., | $12.75 to $13.(‘)6; calves, good to enoice, f$16 to $20; hogs, fed and watered, $18.25 to $18.50; do, weighed off cars, |$18.50; do, f.0.b., $17.25; do, do, to farmers, $17. I ‘ Mongtreal, Oct. 211â€"Choice steers, . per ewt. $6.50 to $11; choice bulls and | cows, $8 to $10; canners‘ cattle, from $5 to $7 per ewt.; sheep, $7.50 to $9 ; per cwt.; lambs, $11 to $13 per ewt.;| milkâ€"fed calves, $12 to $15 per ewt.; select hogs, off cars, $17.50 to $18. | Compel Mennonites to Obey School Law R it "~ inss Surtbaturoi ds trt Mercasramact theik tss d 10?. | _ Honeyâ€"Extracted clover, 5â€"lb. tins, .‘ 24 to 25¢; 10â€"1b. tins, 23% to 24¢; 60â€"1b ; bins, 23 to 24¢; buckwheat, 60. tins, ‘: 18 to 200; Comb, 16â€"0z., $4.50 to $5.00 doz.; 10â€"0z., $3.50 to $4.00 doz. ; _ _Maple productsâ€"Syrup, per imperâ€" ial gallon, $3.15; per 5 imperial galâ€" jlons, $38.00; sugar, lb., 27 to 28c. 1 Provisionsâ€"W holesale. i Smoked meatsâ€"Hams, med., 43 to ,| 44¢c; do, heavy, 36 to 38¢; cooked, 56 | to 59c¢c; rolls, 38 to 35¢c; breakfast : bacon, 46 to 50c; backs, plain, 46 to | 48¢; boneless, 51 to 538c. | | _ Cured meatsâ€"Long clear bacon, 82 |to 38¢; clear bellies, 31 to 32c. | _ Lardâ€"Pure tierces, 30 to 30%4e¢; | tubs, 30% to 31c; pails, 30% to 31%4¢; | prints, 81% to 32¢; Compound tierces, ‘27% to 28c; tubs, 28 to 28%4¢; pails, 28% to 28%c; prints, 29% to 30c. ' Montreal Markeet., ' Montreal, Oct. 21.â€"Oats, extra No.’ 1 feed, 91%c¢c; flour, new â€" standard ! grade, $11 to $11.10; rolled oats, bag | 90 1Ibs., $4.45 to $5; bran, $45; shorts, |$55; hay, No. 2, per ton, car fots, $22 to $23. Cheese, finest easterns, 25¢; butter, choicest creamery, C0 to 61c; | eggs, fresh, 69c¢c; eggs, selected, 62 to| ‘64¢; eggs, No. 1 stock, 58 to 57¢; eggs,§ No. 2 stock, 52 to b4c; potatoes, per | bag, car lots, $1.30 to $1.35; dressed hogs, abattoir killed, $25 to $26; lard, pure, wood pails, 20 lbs. net, 30 to, 30 %4e. ' | Beansâ€"Canadian handâ€"picked, bus., $5.25 to $5.75; primes, $4.25 to $4.75; Japans, $4.75 to $5; imported handâ€" pic’l':ed, Burina, $4; Limas, 17 to 18¢. London at which the slogan to the government was "Get after the under the water." "If France gives up large families you may put into your treaties the finest articles you like, you will do in vain whatever you try. France will be lost because there won‘t be any more Frenchmen." The gecond was: ‘ "The future of the German Empire is not on water, as it used to be, but | _A despatch from London says:â€"It | costs a newlyâ€"married couple toâ€"day | about four times as much to furnish a { house as their parents had to pay. | Despite the Profiteering Act and pubâ€" lic outery against the scandal of high | prices, the cost of living in this counâ€" ‘try continues to increase, and everyâ€" where serious unrest is manijfest. Many of the necessaries of life have risen by 200 per cent. since 1914, the working classes being the greatest sufferers. l Premier Clemenceau‘s recent speech on the Peace Treaty contained two Telling Epign:llx_:‘o y 1ig Costs Four Times as Much To Furnish a House Now A despatch from London says:â€"A world record in prices for cattle was ectablished at a sale of Shorthorns at the Abordeenshire Show. _ The first bull calf to enter the ring was knocked down for $32,261,. The calf was bred by the famous Shorthorn king, Wilâ€" liam Duthie, of Collynie. This figure is the highest price ever paid for a bull calf. Another world‘s record was established by James Durno, of Upperâ€" mill, who obtained £2,100 ($8,788) for a sevenâ€"monthâ€"old heifer calf. l $23,261 for a Bull Calf ; $8,788 for 7â€"monthâ€"old Heifer _A despatch from London says:â€"In a recent speech Mr. Lloyd George urgâ€" ed the imperative need of greater proâ€" ductivity on the part of the nation. He pointed out that the national debt was nearly e‘ght billion pounds. He said wages had doubled, the hours of< work curtailed, and the standard livâ€" ing was higher than ever, but that that standard could not be preserved. by a concourse of tribunals or the deâ€" cisions of labor conferences. | Nationz! Debt of Bxitain Nearly Eight Billion Pounds A despatch from London says:â€"In a recent speech at Shefficld Lloyd George called upon the British people to see that the peace was a real peace, "It is not the British habit," he said, "to nag, harry, insult and trample a; bleeding foe. _ So long as Germany vromforms to the conditions we havof laid down, we must give her a clear} chance to lead a decent, peaseable and honorable existence. This in the inâ€"‘ terests not merely of Germany, but ofl Great Britain and the whole world." Net the British Habit to Insult Bleeding Eoe from Tiger of France lo;':il ' As it requires a professional cyclist ople to fly a few yards, one yard from the ace, ground, it is likely to be some time aid, before the air is full of aircyclists goâ€" e a Ing for a spin. It is rash to prophesy, lany' but the general opinion is that while uwo’ Poulain‘s experiments may give rise lear | to a new sport, something Hke jumping andi on skis, they are unlikoly to be the in<l preliminaries to long flights on man i _,) driven machines. Water from the meliing snow Iying on the rye in the early rin&"u very jnjnflmnwthoorw.uxit water lies on the land for any length of time considerable killing out results. Low spots in the field liable to hold water should be drained in the faUl before freezeâ€"up by running furrows to form channels for the water from the low places to some outlet that will drain it away. * | A despatch from London says:â€" There are 77,000 German prisonerg of war still in England. Repatriation has been delayed owing to lack of Still 77,000 German Prisoners in Britain Thence to Ottawa, where the Princg will address the Canadian Club, Saturâ€" day, Nov, 8. One hour‘s stop will be made at Brockville, Oct. 27, and some side trips out of Montreal are being arranged for. The Prince will visit the eastern townships, Oct. 29, includâ€" ing Sherbrooke and St. Anne‘s, Nov. 2. Cobait and Timmins, 16th; Hamilâ€" ton, 17th and 18th; Niagara Falls, 18th and 20th; Brantford, afternoon of 20th; Guelph and Stratford, 21st; Woodstock and Chatham, 22nd; London, afternoon of 22nd to afterâ€" noon of 23rd; Windsor, 23rd and 24th; Galt, 24th; Kingston, 25th to 27th; Montreal, 27th to November 2nd; Toâ€" ronto, Nov. 2nd to 5th. i The itinerary of the Prince of Wales‘ tour through Ontario was as follows: Towns Visited in Balance of H.R.H.‘s Tour Needless to say, he £ad not waited, and the dejected procdssion straggled off to look for him! } Marshal Foch, in common with nearâ€" ly all great organizers, likes punctualiâ€" ty, and delivered an unpleasant shock the other day to the inhabitants of Morlaix, in Brittany. It was the train that carried him there, as a matter of fact, that provided the shock. . The townsfolk had arranged a brass band, flags, and a procession to meet him at the station and give him a, rousing welcome, and they arranged to reach the station, not atâ€"the time the train was due, but at the time it actually had arrived every day for months past. They trooped to the station to find thatâ€"probably in recognition of its distinguished passengerâ€"the train had actually come in on time, and. Marshal Foch had alighted a quarter of an hour ago! ' Some Early Attempts ® *% at Aviation. All the earliest ideas of human fiight were naturally based upon the obserâ€" vation of birds and demanded that the man should work hbis own artificial wings, for there were no engines, and possibly if there had been their use would have been considered "not cricket." In the notebooks of Leonarâ€" do da Vinci, the painter and universal genius, are many sketches of wings to be fitted to arms and legs and more than one disastrous attempt was made to fiy with sugh devices. Thus at the beginning of the sixâ€" teenth. century an Italian alchemist promised to fly from the walls of Shirâ€" ling Castle to France, and actually tried to do so. Naturally, he failed ; by lack he only broke a leg. He “'1 tMbuted his failure to the fact that he had used for his wings the feathers | of fowls, which had an "affinity" for . the dunghill. He does not appear.'l however, to have made a second trial with eagles‘ feathers, which should | bave solved the difficulty. ‘ A more successful, if more modest | attempt was made recently at Long-i champs by a French professional cyclist. Poulain, who with a manâ€"} driven aeroplane actually flew, not to | Stirling Castle, but a distance of thirâ€" | teen yards. It is understood that a prize of 10,000 francs awaits him it | he shall repeat the feat under speciâ€"| fied conditions. | The Unpunctual Procession. only broke “lu. He atâ€" failure to the fact that he r his wings the feathers ich had an "affinity" for * "Eauories apd coold storage phn?- are Anding it dificu}t to tuke m of the 2:. Prices paid the shermen are highost ever kuown apd with the in the gost of cans it is lvm" camned sap mon will necesgarily sey At a high evenly divided be and the humpback. _ _ 7. PXecnha Jtiver, which enters the Pacife just below the city of Prince Rupert, the salmon run is the greatest in the history of the salmon fAsbheries. For some days the average take of fish on the Bkenna was ap. m‘ .1“0.30‘0 to 150,000, about | A small coin (five drachmae) had to be dropped into a siot to set the ’moohanlsm in motion and secure a emall quantity of water. Heron, of Alexandria, who lived two hundred years before the Christian era, had «: machine of this kind constructed fo: his own personal use. The "pennyâ€"inâ€"theslot" machine, as we know it toâ€"day, was invented by a Mr. Percy Everitt, of New York. Since he placed his invention on the market many thousands of patent: in connecâ€" tion with slot machines have been taken out in Great Britain ap4 foreiga countries, Ploughing matches in years gone by were common and very interesting events. They became less popular as twoâ€"furrow and power ploughs came into use, until ploughing threatoned to become a decadent art. The aim seemâ€" ed to be to plough the greatest posâ€" sible area regardless oi how the work was performed. Rfforts are now being made to revive interest in better ploughing. Junior Farmers‘ competiâ€" tions and local matches were held in many places this autumn and an Inâ€" rprovincial Ploughing Match and Tractor and Machinery Demonstration was held at Ottawa on October 14th, 15th and 16th. Classes were open to boys, young men and mature ploughâ€" men. This was an educational event, intended to stimulate interest in betâ€" ter ploughing and better farming. Good ploughing nearly always means better farming throughout. Attention should and can be paid to the quality ;a well as to the quantity of the work one. water, Automatic machines were first used in Egypt, and in the old temples of the Ent devices were employed for nutoâ€" matically dispensing the purifying On the Skeena Rive» The monitor oxn startles hunters by crashing throwgh tme jungle, makâ€" ing as much noige as large game. It climbs trees for squirrels, birds, and their eggs. ~At other times it may be found digging along stream banks for the eggs of the crocodile, of which it is most fond. Either in running or swimming, it can leave its enemles far behind. If surprised when up a tree, it drops into the water, swimming with powerful strokes of its flattened tail, which acts as oars and rudder. When captured it fights with teeth, claws and tail. The monitor is equipped with a long, forked tongue, extending from a sheath like a snake‘s. It is one of the largest of existing lizards, reaching a length of seven feet, although its nearâ€" est relative, the gigantic Australian monitor, grows from twelve to thirty feet "long. The monitor lays twenty or‘ more white, softâ€"shelled eggs in hollow trces, and in Burma these bring a much higher price than hens‘ eggs. The water monitor affords one of the food standbys of the natives of India, Ceylon, and the Malay Peninsula, The eggs of this lizard are more highly prized than hens‘ eggs, according to a writer in The Scientific American. ’â€" CAtF 7E _ ‘ would not be over five cent. of the ‘dnhabitants of the mz States and ‘ probably an equally lerge percentagd . of Canadians who are ".2“‘" v | public charity. During “:Q x: | years practically all comm prices have risen steadily, pet vast sume is the aggregate are now being spent fot goods that the purchasers could nz well do without. The production | juxuries requires the labor of thousâ€" | ands of men and the use of capital and ! materials that could be turned t betâ€" | ter account in producing and distribuâ€" f ting necessaries. It is surely obvious | that such meedless expenditures inâ€" inuence in a marked degree the trend ) of prices in general. Record Catch on ’ No rightthinking nation or individ« ual desires to become a pauper, but to }uold such a fate thrift is a prime esâ€" sential,. At no other time in the hisâ€" tory of Canada has thriftiness been more imperative,. At no other time has prodigality been so much the rule. It may be only a reaction following the enforced frugality of the‘ later war years. It may be due to the surplus currency which war industries brought into being. But in any case, the general result is baneful and tends toâ€" ward pauperism. If the discount on Canadian currency abroad is to be wiped out and the prices of necessaries reduced, national and personal thrift is a precept which must be put into practice. Slot Machines 200 B.C. Gaving is not always looked upon as savinge grace.© If it wore, thore Lizards‘ Eggs As Food. P & uc ®e eapeyd d_!v}dogl betwoen the s Good Ploughing. Need For Thrift is sockeye $# Marriage in W has an both bride an not permifled 1 after the cere! wedding that ] wflb@q in A than fifteon yei sembled with Hebrew salut A girl woi pittle rev« Jight‘y th tend the ; softest another deferen men 21 room 0 girls in A gold Intervals nargile, « of which gince nu as many the s t« wiv i of t\ men woOn 8J de be H lc AS 1O BA tut hi it the Ba W the stoo ered BA W w in 1. ever s W w on t in ing cor £Q V wood Jt is it vk 7P 9y 11 b Ol Or U )d at t em M