$ t POLES PUT BOLSHEVIKI TO ROUT, _ f TAKING 10,000 PRISONERS The Polish offensive is now in P9M swing. More than 10,000 prisoners, 30 cannon, 300 machine guns and thousands of supply carts have been eaptured from the Bohhlflltl.m o L9 & P 0 .C! aâ€"® amal Warsaw Sector Being Rapidly Cleared of the Invaders by Victorious Poles Following Up With Artilleeyâ€"Sucâ€" ceed in‘ Retaking Several Polish Towns. _ «â€" W Aictntnnpealiiet uin ulste. > qed 2097 "i The Poles have occupied Plonsk, Pultusk and Wyskow, through which the Reds drove in their sweep toâ€" ward the Capital Owing to the Polish pressure from| the northeast it is reported that the| Bolshevists are withdrawing mt forces which reached the Vistula south of ‘the Prussian border and to the northwest of Warsaw. © _ ~ The Warsaw sector is rapidly beâ€" ing cleared of the Bolshevists. North and northeast Of the Capital the Reds Are being shoved back by the Poles who are following them up all llonfl the front, using artillery in such quanâ€" tities as to cause great confusion among the invaders, who are now on the run. _ To the east the Bolshevists are reâ€" ported to be making their way across the Bug at various points. 8 & l â€" e a 0. VoF uk * EmmE w S Siedlor was taken by the Poles early Wednesday. The Fifth, Seventh, Fiftyâ€"Eighth and Eighth Bolshevik Divisions, on the Warsaw front, have been anniâ€" hilated, and thousands of Soviet solâ€" diers â€" made _ prisoner, Wednesday night‘s official statement says. Halting Boishevist Advance. General Woygand, who was assisâ€" tant to Marshal Foch in the World War has taken over the command of all Polish troops and already his work is boeing felt in the setback given to the Rod Armies. The General took up the offer on *ondition that he be al«l lowed to run theo campaign in his own way. â€" He has transferred Polish troops from Galicia to the Warsaw front. Gemeral Woeygand went to Poland at the head of $00 Freanch ofâ€" ficers. the Rod Armic the oftfer on * lowed to run t A â€" despatch from . Washington says:â€"Ratification of the Suffrage amendment by the Tennessee Legisâ€"| lature was bailed with great joy in| the capital. Secretary of State Colby, upon whom rests the final &ct of proclamn-' tion, all that is needed to confer the : voting privilege upon 26,800,000 woâ€"| men citizens, announced that he would act at the earliest possible moment. Under State laws 19,000,000 women already hold the Presidential franâ€" chise, but only 7,000,000 were entitled to vote for members of Congress. The ratification of the amendment thereâ€" fore gives Presidential suffrage to an additional 8,000,000, and the right to vote for Congress to 20,000,000. Repatriate Serbians A dospatch from Paris says:â€" More than 1,000,000 immigcants in the United States want to return to Eur-l ope, according to a Serbian official in Paris, who is arranging a commission to go to America to arrange for the repatriation of 800,000 Jugoâ€"Slavs, who are said to have signified their wish to return to their native land. despatch from Warsaw says:â€"â€" & . Prabprf ie 3 >( by All U.S. Women in United States The Russians lost their bearings in trying to meet attacks on all sides from the Polish columns on their flanks, the statemer.© adds. _ The Poles, continuing their advance, have cccupled Kalussyn, 35 miles east of Warsaw; Siedloe, 57 miles east of the Cnpih‘ Milzyrzec, 20 miles southâ€" east of Siedlce; Wlodawa, on the Bug River, 125 tniles southeast of Warsaw. The Poles are renorted to. be reâ€" The Poles are reported to. be reâ€" group.ng before Lemberg for a counâ€" terstroke against the Bolshevists, who are lesw than 30 kilometres from the city. |MENNONITES APPEAL i _ TO QUEBEC PREMIER In the region of Thorn, about 105 miles northwest of Warsaw, the comâ€" munique says, the Poles have launchâ€" ed a counterâ€"action in the direction of Brodnica, which still is occupied by the Bolshevik forces. In the region of Lipno, about 25 miles southeast of Thorn, and at Siedloe the Bolaheâ€" vists have started an eastward moveâ€" ment, aviators report. North of the fortress Novogeorgeâ€" evsk the Red forces were dislodged after stubsorn resistance, a Polish cavairy charge smashing a Bolshevik brigade. The Bolshevists leaving Pul-i tusk, thirty miles north of Warsaw, took with them the town Mayor, and all of the clergy as hostages, the comâ€" munique states, adding that 1,500 prisoners were gathered in this enâ€" gagement alone. Fear They Will Lose Language and Religion in Western A despattjh from . Quebec, Que., says:â€"Seven representatives of the Mennonite Church in Mgnltoba__n:d -S.-a's-}-c-;t-&\;wair{ waited on Honorable L. A. Taschereau, Prime Minister of the Province of Quebec, here on Wed_nu- day â€" afternoon and submitted a lengthy document setting forth their beliefs and customs, as well as the privileges they desire, should they deâ€" cide to come and séttle in the Province of Quebec. _ The document states that the Menâ€" nonites, fearing that their language and religion may be tlkfl_l from them | A despatch from Ottawa says:â€" That it will be possible by next sum-‘ \ mer to travel over improved highways |from Windsor, Ont., to St. John, N.B.,| | is the hope of officials of the Federal | Highways Aid Department. | If present indications are borne out | : by subsequent construction there will | be good roads all the way between \ these points, and also between Niaâ€" | gara Falls and St. John, N.B. There \ will remain, however, the necessity | of ferrying across the Ottawa River ! on the highway between Ottawa and | Montreal. ,l American motorists who took part .\ in the recent Michigan pike tour exâ€" x| pressed surprise at finding the Can-‘ ,| adian roads as good as they were. Some of them who had done extensive travelling over the famed Lincoln Highway declared that the roads they had encountered in‘ Northern Ontario |l during their recent journey were betâ€" ter in their présent state than were _l some parts of the Lincoln Highway. in the provinces where they row reâ€" side, see themselves compelled by their consgience to look for another home, where they may live up to their conâ€" fession without being molested or reâ€" stricted. The delegation, including two bish-‘ cps of the Mennonite Church, was reâ€" ceived by the Prime Minister, accomâ€" panied by Hon. J. E. Perreauit, Minâ€" ister of Colonization, Mines and Fishâ€" eries, and Mr. J. N. Miller, secretary of the Catholie Committee of the Council of Public Instruction. Improved Highways \Lord Jellicoe New Zealand‘s | New Governorâ€"General A despatch from London says:â€"â€" Viscount Jellicoe left on Thursday for New Zealand to assume nis duties as Governorâ€"General. in Eastern Canada In the centre cof Queen _Mary'-' diadem at the recent Court shone the celebrated Kohâ€"iâ€"noor diamond, which according to tradition, "may be worn by no man without misfortune, but which brings no harm to .a woman." Its history is known for some 500 years, and it is believed by the superâ€" stitious to have brought death or disâ€" aster to many an Eastern monarch till it came byâ€"conquest into the possession of Queen Victoria. It has now been worn by three Queens of England, and has sparkled with kindly beneficence on each. . The Dukedom of York has been inâ€" variably conferred on the second son of the Sovereign since the. days of Edward IV. The last holder of the title was the present King, who sat for the first time in the House of Lords as Duke of York in 1892. He was introduced by his father, the Prince of Wales, afterwards King Edâ€" ward VII., and his uncle, the Duke of Connaught. % o e e o eR Et s t > wWITH THE IMPERIAL PRES$ DELEGATEs /A The University of Toronto has fallen in line with McGill (Montreal) in paying recognition to the work of the Press of the British Emptre in the late war.. The four men seen above, who have received the degree of LL.D., are, from left to right: Mr.Geoffrey Fairflax; Sir Robert Bruce, Mr. Robert Donald and Sir Gilbert Parker Twentyâ€"eight years later it falls to the Duke of Connaught again to introâ€" duce a Duke of York, and his experiâ€" ence in this respect is unique. If the Prince of Wales had been,in this counâ€" tr.y...'l\"ev;rt;ili(-!_'aiihOlt certainly have been the senior sporisor for his youngâ€" er brother. g Mr. Lloyd George‘s career renmblesl in some respects that of Lord Beaconsâ€"| field. Both were selfâ€"made men, both| were trained in solicitors‘ offices, and wills which were witnessed by the present Prime Minister when he was! an articled clerk, or made by him when he had an office of his own, must still be coming into effect. With the possible exception of Mr. Asquith, Mr. Lloyd George and the great Tory chief are the only two selfâ€"made men who have ever occupled No. 10 Downing Street. The appointment of Lady Elizabethâ€" Dawson to succeed Lady Isobel Gaâ€" thorneâ€"Hardy as one of Queen Mary‘s Women of the Bedchamber is an illusâ€" tration of the tenacity with which old titlesâ€"especially in the Royal Houseâ€" holdâ€"cling to new duties. Needless Visit of HMH.R.H. to A despatch from Londo.. says:â€" The Royal Proclamation to India states that the Prince of Wales will not visit India next winter to inaugurâ€" ate reform legislation. The Duke of Connaught will undertake these duties,| MAKE CANADA THEIR . This picture gives a good idea of the class Britain to settle in Western Canada.. They ha Land. A Letter From London ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO India Cancelled "REG‘LAR FELLER S‘"â€"By Gene Byrnes to say Her Majesty‘s new attendant will have nothing to do with any of the sleeping apartments at Buckingâ€" ham Palace. M At one time, Ladies and Women of the Bedchamber were present at the toilet of the Queen, but toâ€"day they are merely ladiesâ€"inâ€"waiting, â€" and should really be so described. â€"The "Ladies" are invariably peeresses, the "Women" are usually the daughters of earls, and one or other attends the Queen not only at Court ceremonies but when she visits any public place. Wearers of the Victoria Cross, who were King George‘s guests the other week, would not have been known as V.C/s had Queen Victoria‘s personal v.iew prevailed, for while agreeing that those to whom the emblem of valor was awarded should "bear some distinctive mark after their name," she urged to Lord Panmure that V.C. would not ‘do. "K.G. means a Knight of the Garâ€" ter, M.P. a member of Parliament, M.D. a Doctor of Medicine," she wrote, "in all cases designating a perâ€" son, but no one could be called a Viectoria Cross." _ D.V.C. (decorated with the V.C.) or B.V.C. (bearer of Ithe V.C.) were her suggestions, but happily she yielded to persuasion and lconsented to the plain V.C. One of the surgical miracles of the war was the grafting of new nerves into the shattered systems of men who had been wounded. The old nerves were rejoined by means of lengths of nerves taken from animals. How this was done was told by Sir Charles Ballance in a recent lecture to the Incorporated Society of Trainâ€" ed Masseuses, at the Royal Society of Arts. "You get an animal," he said, "whose nerve is the same size as the one you want to heal. An officer was wounded in the arm, and two inches of his ulnar nerve was blown away. I went to my butcher and told him I wanted two inches of a sheep‘s sciâ€" atic nerve. He killed a sheep, and while the nerve was still alive I cut it out and grafted it in immediately. \That officer made a complete reâ€" covery." BIG BEN. Threshing Commenced in Saskatchewan A despatch from Regina, Sask., says:â€"The first thrashing in Saskatâ€" chewan is reported from Radville, work having commenced on an oat crop. In this district the yield will be only fair he class 'o-tweimigrants coming from They have just arrived from the Old HOomEe Harvesters are asking $8 and 59‘ a day, but most of them have signed up at the prevailing rate of $6 per day. Many of them are exercised as to the amount of work they are exâ€" pected to do. "Will.we work eight hours a day?" is the most frequent question with which offic:als of the Bureau of Labor ihave been plied. S "You certainly will,", is the invarâ€" iable reply., Britain to Recognize A despatch from London says:â€"It is understood that the terms of the peace treaty between Zaghloul Pasha, the Egyptian Nationalist leader, and Lord Milner, include formal recogniâ€" tion of Egyptian independence and then surrender by Egypt to Britain of the control of foreign affairs, and cerâ€" tain financial measures. â€" This will mean a substantial degree of selfâ€" government for Egypt in her domestic affairs. A despatch from Ottawa says:â€" During July the @ost of the weekly budget of staple foods dropped slightâ€" ly, according to the figures given in the current issue of the Labor Gazette. The average was $16.84 at the middle of July, as against $16.92 in June; $13.77 in July, 1919, and $7.42 in July, 1914. The index number of wholesale prices again declines, being 846.8 for July, as compared with 349.3 for June, 294.9 for July, 1919, and 134.6 for July, 1914. The Dog Show at the Canadian Naâ€" tional Exhibition has been run for 25 years and is second largest on the continent. Tororto, Aug. 24.â€"Manitoba wheat â€"No. 1 Northern, $3.15; No. 2 Northâ€" ern, $3.08, in store Fort William. _ is ApRei ty CC DTR AET C en dE e og Manitoba oatsâ€"No. 2 CW., 96%¢; No. 3 CW, 94%e; extra No. 1 feed, 94%c; No. 1 feed, 90%c; No. 2 feed, 87%¢, in store Fort William. Man. barleyâ€"No. 3 CW, $144%; No. 4 CW, $1.35%; rejected, $1.17%4; feed, $1.17%%, in store Fort W-ll_lian_'l. American cornâ€"No. 3 yellow, $1.95;l nominal, track, Toronto, prompt shipâ€" | ment, Ontario oatsâ€"No. 3 white, 80 to 85c. Ontario wheatâ€"No. 2 Winter, per car lot, $2.30 to $2.40, shipping points, according to freights outside. _ Peasâ€"No. 2, nominal. _ Barleyâ€"$1.35 to $1.40, according to freights outside. Buckwheatâ€"No. 2, nom‘nal. Ryeâ€"No. 3, $1.75, nominal, accordâ€" ing to'_frt_zigh;tl outa:ide. Lower Living Costs in July. _ Manitoba flourâ€"Government standâ€" ard, $14.85, Toronto. J t Ontario flourâ€"Government standâ€" ard, $12, nominal. New Flourâ€"$1040 to $10.50, bulk seaboard. & Spes se Milifeedâ€"Car lots, delivered, Mont-‘ :lt:e;'oi’c‘eo'?{sut’o’;.l’fi‘gé'D(‘i‘t:c?;; real freights, bags included: Bran.'w’slz 505 do; med ‘$1'0 u’, 3 per ton, $52; shorts, per ton, $61; good ) (0. 7 ‘¢7 5y to $9; bulls, choice feed flour, $3.75 to $4.00. $11; do, good, $9 to $9.50; do, Country Produceâ€"Wholesale. $6 31‘2 (5 b;tc{_xen' c‘ogvl, ;hgice‘ to .50; do, to $10; d Eggs, selects, 63 to 64c; Np.‘l, 59 $6.50 to'$7.58; s{ockers, ‘{, 4 to 60c. Butter, creamery prints, 59 feeders, $11 to $12.50; canne to 61c; choice da.'.g'y prints, 49 to 51°3.cutters, $4.50 to $5.50;‘ milker ordinary dairy prints, 45 to 47¢; bAkâ€"|{o choice, $100 to $165; do, ec ers‘, 35 to 40c; oleomargarne, best meq. $65 to $75; lambs 'ye grade, 34 to 38¢. Cheese, new, large,. $10.50 to $12; t'!o, spr;'ng 20% to 80c; twins, 80 to 30%e¢; old,| $18 50; ealves, good to choice large, 33 to 34¢; twins, 34 to 85¢; Stilâ€" $18) sheep, $6.50 to $0.50; hc ton, old, 35%4 to 36%c. Maple syTrup;| and‘ watered, $19.75; do, weig 1 gal. tin, $2.40; 5 gal, tin, per Fal)| cars, $20; do, f.o.b., $18.75; $3.25; maple sugar, lb., 27 to 39°'=country points, $18.50. ® Churning creamâ€"Toronto creameries| " Montreal, Aug. 24.â€"â€"Butcher I are paying for churning cream, 58‘ to good, $9.50 to $10.50; med., $8 t 60e per pound fat f.0.b. shipPing\ com, $6 to $8; butcher heifers fpomts, nominal. !$9 to $10.5b0: med.. $7.50 t« Provisionsâ€"Wholesale. Smoked meatsâ€"Rolls, 33 to 36¢; hams, med., 48 to 51c; heavy, 41 to 43¢c; cooked hams, 65 to 68¢; backs, plain, 54 to 57¢; backs, boneless, 60 to G5¢c; breakfast bacon, 49 to 59¢; cotâ€" tage rolls, 89 to 48c. _ o $Pe. Barrelled Meatsâ€"Bean pork, $43; Wholesale Grain. Weekly Market Report MAYOR OF CORK _ GUILTY OF SEDITION He is Hungerâ€"Striking and Wife Has Been Warned of His Condition. A despatch from London sAYS:â€"* Terrence McSween®y, Lord Mayor of Cork, Ireland, who was arrested, tried and found guilty of making a sediâ€" tious utterance, Was sentenced to two years in prison, the Government anâ€" nounced on Thursday. He is hunger striking. His wife, in Cork, has been lwsmed.of his condition; she is holdâ€" iC harself in readiness to &0 to him striking. His W warned of his C ing herself in r should he grow Germln;b"" Two and a Qumef Mnlioa in § A despatch frc The total losscs in suffered by the navy in the great A despatch from Berlin says:â€" The total losscs in k:lled and missing suffered by the Gérman army and navy in the great war were set for the first time at 2243,364, in an anâ€" nouncement of a semiâ€"official nature. Of this number 500,000 meh were tarmed "missing and most like‘y of t termed dead." Eminent Jurist Comes to Canada. Right Hon. Viscount Cave, Lord of Appeal of the British Courts since january, 1919, and former British Home Secretary, who will be the chief speaker at the annual moeting of the Canadian Bar Association which opens Sept. 1st at the Chateau Laurier, Otâ€" tawa short cut.or family back.at $56; for same back, boneless, $56 to $57; pickled rolils, $60 to $66; mess pork, $47 _ Green meatsâ€"Out of pickle, 1¢ less than smoked. a _ # Dry Salted Meatsâ€"Long clears, in tons, 26 to 28¢; in cases, 26% to 28‘4¢; clear bellies, 20% to 80%c¢; fat backs, 24 to 26¢. o Lardâ€"Tierces, 26% to 27¢; tubs, 27% to 28%c¢; pails, 28 to 29%¢; prints, 29 to 30c. Shortening, tierces, 22% to 28¢ per Ib. Montreal, Aug. 24.â€"Oats, No. 2 C.| W., $1.16 to $1.17; No. 83 CW, $1.14 to| $1.15. Flour, Man. Spring wheat pa-“ tents, firsts, new stand. grade, $14.85 to $15.05. Rolled oats, 90â€"Ib. bag, $5.60 to!§5.75. Bran, $54.25,. Shorts,| $61.25. Hay, No. 2, per ton, car lots, $31. Cheese, finest easterns, 24%c.) Butter, choicest creamery, 59 to 60c. Eggs, fresh, 58c. Potatoes, per bag, car lots, $2.10 to $2.15, | Live Stock Markets. \ _ Toronto, Aug. 24.â€"Choice heavy, steers, $14 to $14.50; good heavy; }steers, $13.50 to $13.75; butchers‘ catâ€" tle, choice, $13 to $13.50; do, good, 812‘ to $12.50; do, med., $10 to $11; do, com., $7.50 to $9; bulls, choice, $10 to| $11; do, good, $9 to $9.50; do, rough,! $6 to $8; butc{_len' cows, choice, $10.50 to $11.56; do, sood, $9 to $10; do, com.,| $6.50 to $7.50; stockers, $9 to $11; feeders, $11 to $12.50; canners and _ cutters, $4.50 to $5.50; milkers, good | to choice, $100 to $165; do, com. and med., $65 to $75; lambs, yearlings, ; $10.50 to $12; do, spring, $12 to | $18.50; calves, é;md to choice, $16 to | $18; s&leep, $6.50 to $9.50; hogs, fed | and watered, $19.75; do, weighed off |cars, $20; do, f.0.b., $18.75; do, do, j country points, $18.50. $9 to $10.50; med., $7.50 to $8.50; com., $4Z§ to $7; butcher cows, choice, COlï¬m‘ltV Pï¬inf\l. 313;50.8 toher at '; A despatch from Paris says:>â€" ontrea ug. 24.â€"â€"Butcher steors, p ili i i lost «m rren s AC d abemrt tetts | Toroive pillion ohdren i Europe lort ;%mi},s '18.5?;’ B‘:gi-."$!1‘}:l§"t.<; c:g'xsc(t)z: it is shown by compilations cathered com., $4.75 to $7; butcher cows, choice, bYy representatives of the American $8.50 to $9; med., $5.50 to $6; canners,| Re€@ Cross in 18 countries. Russia $3 to $4; cutters, $4 to 5; butcher; leads with four million, and France l‘"&llt»o O:ï¬. #.3'5 “% $t°57‘51.1 good Vea‘ls,: has one million. Albania is last on > ; grass, ; ; ; i k to $6; hmfn, $12; sh’eg;r, P to| the list with seventeen thousam4 $7. ée’ect hogs, $20, off cars; sows, +m# semon $16 to $16. { a me [Â¥ hy T4 â€"~maamd Montreal Markets. weaker. dril PWeat‘) s.T._Te of M'l C rptcop Will be Lessened. convuidusen CC CCC C Comotlts es the League as Great Britain, France, or any other firstâ€"class power will be effected by the Execut‘ve Assembly of that body at a meeting which has been called for November 15 next at Geneva. B The rating of nations under the universal Postal Union, which classiâ€" fies the Dominions as firstâ€"class powâ€" | ers, has hitherto been followed, but in iview of the growing expenses of the League more equitable arrangements A despatch from â€" London .SAZS.â€"* A revision of the financial scheme of the League of Nations under which Canada is required to pay the same contribution towards the upkeep of 2 o mlnults ‘Reante. are to be made. i British newspapers have recently been muking a strong point of the |\ fact that the Br.tish contribution is | oneâ€"third of the total of the original : signatory states, but as a matter of \ fact the Mother Country pays only | the same share of this oneâ€"third as | Canzda and the sister Dominions. [ As far as Canada is concerned one . of the most important subjects which Iwill come before the Geneva meeting : for consideration will be the question : of Oriental immigration. This quesâ€" ‘\ tion will be introduced in a report to : be submitted by the International \ Labor Commission which has been creâ€" ‘ ated under the League‘s aegis. It also | will be a factor in the matter of the | renewal of the Angloâ€"Japanese Treaty | which is to be submitted to the attenâ€" \ tion of the League. The idea of numbering things for the purpose of identifying them is inconâ€" ceivably old. Men who have learned to count have always noted the pasâ€" sage of time by numbering the hours, the days and the years. Whenever a snew invention appeared that made it convenient to ientify the units, those units were numbered. In the early days of railroading the engines bore names, but in a few years the names so muitiplied that the engines had to \be designated by numbers, and the | timeâ€"tables indicated the several trains | in the same way. Cities number the.r | police officers and the houses in their streets; the streoet railway companies number their conductors and motorâ€" men. Every telephone station has its number. The motor car and the motor boat must be registered and bear a distinctive number. | It is an age of numbers. \ The improvement of longâ€"distance :â€" roads for automobile traffic is likely to l! lead soon to an interesting extension io! a practice that is already in genâ€" ,eral use in France and that is about ; | to be adopted on a large scale in Engâ€" , land. All the great highways are to | bear each its distinetive number, To *.4 show how it would work here, supâ€" t | pose that there were three great trunk " routes from Montreal to Ottawa, numâ€" | bered 3; 6 and 8. At every crossroad y ‘ on each of them there would be a gignâ€" 4 board that would show the number ‘_‘ conspicuously. No ome could strey â€"| from a road so marked. "The signboards would also indicate distances and destinations, Thus, at the crossing of two great Wgaways the signboards at right anglesâ€"the terminals of the two roads being, let us say, Avon and Hampton on the one and Frankville and Weston on the o‘tllinetsâ€"would read something like this: 14 To Avon 67 miles. To Hampton 183 miles 9 To Frankville 120 miles. To Weston 11 miles. Such a system would be much more helpful in the increasing complexity of shorter state roamds than for longâ€" distance motoning. No better scheme has yet been devised for guiding the traveler and preventing even blunderâ€" ers from straying. | Poles Refuse to Disarm I Uinless Russians Do y RNEALLNZRARA CANADA‘S EXPENSES _ War Made Orphans of 12,000,000 Children A despatch from London says:â€" The Polish delegates at the Minsk Conference have refused to accept 4 peace condition advanced by the %o‘\_ng for the disarmament of the Pâ€"isk army unless the Russia®* inemselves disarm, SAY* &A wireless despatch from Be"in, quoting a report received from Previous to 1885 ales and beere were gold on the Canadian National Exhiâ€" bition grounds. ‘The custom was abo!â€" ished at an annual loss in booth rontâ€" als of $2,000, quite a big sum in the early days for the Big Fair to pay for & principle. As early as 1882 a State deputation from Qhio visited the Cunadian Naâ€" tionai 2=~*ibition Joo {or pointers: They have beon («* rom various States ever since, mars of the big * SHK MAKING IS A IAONC PRJ __ "The world is indebtod !< tor the digcovery of the \ UAtkworm. Its produ®! ® . he Bi Shanghai Has the 1>) * the World‘s Silk M Held About Jun in depth that h a distance the 1 matied (?c.bweb eocoon, but weas and «keins aroun From Tegucigalp the United State â€. of this #! into wken-l: C ‘ï¬â€˜ eommon and texture. “" in Centra de m which 1 mlong with a !0: A4mack from whi “. filaments. ~ _There is epider in C _ _A peculiar 4e that it is incact. Neitl fowis in the are from the _u-dnt as digiously ind never been demand for matter of To they bhave lost © As already #=! ... 4n China = ago. The Chin« Iintroducing «!!k the wife of the fix the date ot ‘ later u\e‘(‘hi:.‘ 6 white mulber‘» worms with (» “ M start of P than 3,000 year obtained thei Cos probnbl.\‘ l (hina throur Phoenicians. As with the Auction of si}k occupation way ‘o the loc Ti gists of mulbérr #mall pleces. .\ attained groote! sary, of :« frames for | altered in U leaves not s are given v A cur tion wit in their instanc« hatched for a sp lowed b another habits. petites they wi four da: comp tion ©oco( Jitt en the that go« texture : worm 1 the qua worker Seeding regular the qua being m tected : by the) are pe! ence of their 8 Exp« fect in lies in whici ployin; Upor The Bhaug throug Now it ! and its i A Doe worn Centr baglik« th , the which there to 1 during w! at Feeding the ©EF Wh u the