| & «* 4 ¢~ DEATHS As RESULT OF BELFAST _ _ 2e 4 8 RIOTS TOTAL TWEm Tob A despatch from Beifast, Ireland, says:â€"Four persons killed in the h:t o e e twentyâ€"four hours have brought the death roll f6¢ the Belfast rioting since Wednesday last to 25. Two hundred and sixteen are in the hospitals with ;";ï¬;l;' homes with lesser injurâ€" lea The week has been marked by 817 serious fires. * Toward dusk a b‘:gl of men adâ€" on Shankili Road. _ They carâ€" mlnn The military barred Two Hundred and Sixteen Are in Hospitals Wil injuriesâ€"217 Serious Fires Within Weekâ€"‘ Palicemen on Patrol Shot. Catholic pop Two of Wednesday‘s dead were killâ€" ed by the rifie fire of the soldiers. The men were participating in a bMg fAight between the shipyard workers and Sinn. FeiA. A Nationalist was killed by a Unionist mob, and one of the Cameron Highlanders was accidentalâ€" ly killed. The garrisons of soldiers at the strateg‘c points in the city are being reinforced steadily. The signal stetion, the post office, the power house and other public Goes to Geneva Conference. R H. Coats, Dominion Statistician, who will represent Canada at conâ€" terence called under the auspices of the League of Nations. He will also represent Canada at the meeting of the governing bod; of the Internationâ€" al Labor Office, Million Bushels Wheat Leaves the West A despatch from Winnipeg says:â€" QOne million bushels of new wheat have already passed through Winnipeg, acâ€" cording to the estimate of a prominâ€" ent grain exchange official. _ _A large part of this wheat grades No. 1 Northern, and the percentage is said to be higher than in previous years. Flour Drops Dollar in Vancouver A despatch from Vancouver, B.C., says:â€"Local millers have announced a reduction of one dollar a barrel in all grades of flour, from $14.50 to $13.50. Hundreds of others buildings at Brown Head were deâ€" stroyed Tuesday night by bombs and fire. A record for extinguishing fires was made when the Belfast br.gade extinguighed four scattered ones in an hour. Sniping added terrors to the riot. On trolleys conveying Orange shipyard workmen, two were mlpor and several wounded. * Sniping on Peters Hill betaween the Falls and Shanks Hill Roads, has brought wilitary oceunpation with freâ€" quent volleys at real or fancied snipâ€" l A despatch from Paris says:â€" ‘St ries of vandalism by tourists on th& French battlefield are still coming "into Paris. â€" Unscrupulous souvenir hun.sers have undermined at Verdun | the famous "Trench of the Bayonets," a spot where the tips of bayonets disâ€" | close the tragedy of a mne explosion, | where a company of@French infantry | were buried alive when standing upâ€" | right in a trench. A_ despatch from Dublin says:â€" Two policemen were shot dead Tuesâ€" day evening while patrolling nsar Ballaghadereen. An official report on Ballaghaderâ€" een killing says that five policemen proceeding from Ballaghadereen to the French Park petty sessions were attacked by sixty armed men. Conâ€" stable Murphy and one c‘lvfl!an were shot dead. _ Another constable, Meâ€" Carthy, was dangerously wounded. The other policemen made their escape. Former County Inspector Foley of the Royal Irish Constabulary, was shot Tuesday evening at Menagh, by armed men and seriously wounded. His assailants were raiding his resiâ€" dence near here for arms. s Famous "Trench of the Bayâ€" onets" Desecrated by sOUVENIR HUNTERS UNDERMINE TRENCH ud ad dï¬ c . lc ced h) â€"Ad During a raid on a private reaidence near Dungarvan, Monday night, by twenty armed men, one of the o¢â€" eupants resisted and was shot dead. Tts coast guard at Crookhaven reâ€" ports that all the buildings at Browâ€" head, including the war signal station and the post office and power station, were destroyed by fire and bombs on Tuesday night. ® Ee s Et Another trench had been dug at | night alongside the place where tln\ bayonets protrude, and the desecrators of "France‘s most glorious tomb," which is to be perpetuated as a naâ€" tional monument, have taken pieces of clothing and accoutrements from the skeletons of the herves, who, upâ€" right in death, form the most grueâ€" some relic to the glory of French arms. «ce -m'l;}-:'e souv;nirs thus obta‘.ned have been sold, it is charged, at high prices to tourists at Verdun., Three Prairie Provinces Expect Large Wheat A despatch from Regina says:â€" Saskatchewan‘s wheat crop this year will total 122,296,400 bushels on the basis of 13 bushels to the acre from 9,422,800 acres. Manitoba will have 41,026,000 bushels from 2563500 acres, or 16 bushels per acre. Alberta will have the highest average crop of wheat of the three prairie provinces, 66,295,000 _ bushels from â€"3,516,400 acres, an average of 18 bushels to the acre. 5 Additional Lines Opened by Pacific Great Eastern A despatch from Victoria says:â€" Eightyâ€"four additional miles of the Pacific Great Eastern will be turned over ready for operation on September 15th, A. F. Proctor, chief engineer of the department of railways, announcâ€" ed on his return from an inspection of the railway. The additional mileâ€" age will carry the Pacific Great Eastâ€" T En hn o o on We d es ie ern from Squamish through to Deep Creek, which is 294 miles north of Squamish and 52 miles south of Quesnel. Tourists. With Severe 201 UUB 9 t where the| Thi# fese mml cite us tomb," ‘°°‘3 d as a na-\ w ken pieces | of 4 nents frvm\the | s, who, upâ€" | ~â€"â€" most me-‘Am Yield Vancouver, B.C.â€"Judging the matw ter from all anglos, the general imâ€" pression is that there will be fairly decent â€" lumbering business between now and November; that the orders will then fall away, particularly on the American side; and that with the coming of spring there will be a reâ€" juvenation of business that will make up for the big handicaps under wh::\h Mas ies o s s S P HITL ELC n Fe ooo S PE rata to the American increase, the additional freight charges from Fort William to Regina will be $1.60 a ton. This will mean that American anthraâ€" cite coal will have to be retailed locally at not less than $26.50 a ton. Winnipeg, Man.â€"There is a total of 4900 acres planted to potatoes in the province, and a fair crop is exâ€" *® Canada‘s V.C.‘s were the SD« thrown open to the men 'h'q won royalâ€" time and the performancé at [ 0400 Claur it cant l n‘ hy K9 This picture is unique in‘ that it taken previous to their parade to the | formed figures on the left. Appalling Loss in Europe as Result of Great Conflict A â€" despatch from â€" Copenhagen says:â€"The result of special researches carried on here into the social conâ€" sequences of the war show an apâ€" palling loss of life due directly to the war. In December, 1913, the ten chief European nations had a populaâ€" DIFFICULTIES REGARDING CANADIAN _ BACON AND APPLES ADJUSTED A despatch from London says:â€" Two Canadian grievances against the British Food Control are being reâ€" moved. As a result of several conâ€" ferences between the Canadian bacon trades, W. L. Griffiths, Deputy High Commissioner; Food Ministry officials and Lord M.lner, Canadian bacon will shortly be controlled. Canadian proâ€" ducers may also be required to give some guarantee as to equitable distriâ€" bution. f _The decision is important, as Canâ€" ada and the United States are now engaged in keen competition to mainâ€" British Food Board to Control Canadian Baconâ€"Grievance With Regard to Controlled Price of Nova Scotia Apples Also Removed. { Canada From Coast to Coast handicaps under which has been working for ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO "REG‘LAR FELLER $‘"â€"By Gene Byrues were the special guests of the big ann n who won fame and glory on the field formancé at night on the Grand Stand inique in‘ that it is the first group ph r parade to the Exhibition Grounds. C pected, averaging 126 bushels to the acre, or a total crop of © 5,287,500 be4shels. + ‘The Better Farming Train has been characterized as one of the most sucâ€" cessful enterprises ever undertaken PAPSRILUI RDCCRCCR OO OO in the West in the interests of the farmér. Lectures were given at 83 points to an audience of some 30,000 people. L . ud ut o up Lt Show Plans have been approv~l for tho? construction by the Dominion Cxygen Co. of & $75,000 plant in this city. Welland /Ont.â€"Positive assurance has been given by Hon. Dr. Reid, Minâ€" ister of Railways and Canals, that a start will be made at the earliest posâ€" sible moment on the construction of a pipe line from Lake Erie to supply the water works system of St. Catharâ€" ines, Welland, Merriton and Thorold. ‘"The reservoirs are now fed from the Lake Erie level of the Welland Canal, which water will be polluted when the work isâ€"started on the upper sections of the new Welland ship canal. The new"* pipe lne will also supply Port Colborne, â€" Humberstone and â€" Port l‘Dnlhousie. Berthier, P.Qâ€"The St. Maurice Lumber Company, as the result of the season‘s work, have 1,000 carloads of lumber for shipment to outside points. Fredericton, N.B.â€"The New Brunsâ€" wick wool output this year has amâ€" ounted to about 70,000 pounds, of which halft has been sold to the United States. The Canadian Coâ€"opâ€" erative Wool Growers‘ Association of Canada has been conducting the sales. Gace Bay, N.S.â€"The Cape Breton miners in the employ of the Dominâ€" ion Coal Company produced an averâ€" age of 618 tons of coal each in 1919. The output of all employees of the company in all different branches was 454 tons per day. tion exceeding 400,000,000 souls. The this up to over 424,000,000 persons by the middle of 1919. Instead of this the population was then only 389,000,-‘ 000 or a loss of thirtyâ€"five millions. Of this total nearly ten millions were killed in war and over five and a quarter millions in epidemics and economic blockades. Some 20,000,000 are accounted for by the fall in the birth rate. tain the bacon trade to Britain built up during the war. The other grievance removed is with regard to discrimination in the controlled price fixed for Nova Scotial apples, as compared with others, a difference of six shillings being made. Protests were made by the High Com~{ missioner‘s Office on behalf of the Maritime Province growtrs, and as a result prices have been levelled. The only objection which now remains on the part of Canada to the Food Conâ€" trol here is with regard to the purâ€" chase of wheat, which is still under Government supervision. mss cmmmmamamemeeaeee m es BITION HONORS MEN QF DEEDS AND VALOR he big annual Fair, Satur.day, Aug. 28th, When the grounds were on the fields of battle. W ith their relatives they were given a rand Stand was exclusively for their ‘entertainment. group photograph of Canada‘s Great War V. C. Heroes. It was rounds. Col. "Billy" Bisi.op and Col. Barker are the first v2iâ€" anrov=A for the NARROW ESCAPE AT NIAGARA WHIRLPOOL Girl Saved by Quick Action of Montreal Man. A despatch from Buffalo says:â€" Miss Matilda Schoonért, Philadelphia, was plucked ~from certain death in the whirlpool rapids at Niagara Falls on Wednesday evening by Gordon W. aysisy >‘ omal . Dunn, Montreal, who was severely cut | $9 3% :-i‘;%;-};~‘. 12. in the rescue~ y l t s ,, ¢ / < D They woere among the passengers :4 <â€" o c26).. oz a Gorge Route trolley that was f «o ling * blocked at the edge of the Whirlpool # Rapids by a fallen rock. The passenâ€" 9 gers got out of the car and were walkâ€" ; l ing on the brink of <he river. . The s Hary girl fell over the slight embankment 4 '? some 15 feet into the river, but caught| o4 and clung to a projecting rock. Dunn| ; Rao uz j saw her instant danger and vaulted | s xA# the embankment. _ He landed on a| nc e _ slight beach of rocks and cut himself | PWAÂ¥ w e Feicane_in _ * severely on hands and head. Getting py y â€f s af d €o his feet, he seized the girl before Meu ycA oo sen cce dï¬ she was swept away. | Canada‘s Oldest V.C. Help was quickly at hand, and the‘ pHe George Richardson, V.C., of Lind pair were taken back to Niagar@) say, Ont., 91 yeers of age, who was 8 Falls Dunn, after his cuts were euest of the EXhibiti o cce on | S+ » * guest of the Exhibition Board on th« ldressed, left the hospital. The girly| ofening day of the Fair. He was also is still suffering from shock. | a guest of the Kpights of Columbus in wommanmantfg x cce » Toronto, although a high degree ‘ In English law there is no defini. Orangeman. He won his V.C. at D 5+ 0s h nc ce akttawt | Cawnpore during the Indlan Mutiny In Englsh law there is no definiâ€", tion of an accident. l Toronto, Sept. 7.â€"Manitoba wheat â€"â€"No. 1 Northern, $2.81%; No. 2 Northern, $2.78%; No. 3 Northern, $2.74%; No. 4 wheat, $2.59%; in store Fort William. ~ _ _ > .__ Mah. oatsâ€"No. 2 CW, 93%c¢; No. 3 CW, 90%4c¢; extra No. 1 feed, 90%4¢; No. 1 feed, 88%4c¢; No. 2 feed, 85%4¢, in store Fort William. Man. barleyâ€"No. 3 CW, $1.27%; No. 4 CW, $1.22%; rejected, $1.12%; feed, $1.12%, in store Fort William. American cornâ€"No. 3 yellow, $2; nominal, track, Toronto, prompt ship-f ment, 1 Ontario oatsâ€"No. 3 white, 80 to 85¢c. Ontario wheatâ€"No. 2 Winter, per car lot, $2.20 to $2.40, shipping points, according to freights. Peasâ€"No. 2, nominal. Barleyâ€"$1.35 to $1.40, according to freights outside. Buckwheatâ€"No. 2, nominal. Ryeâ€"No. 3, $1.75, nominal, accordâ€" ing to freights outside. Manitoba flourâ€"Government standâ€" ard, $14.85, Toronto. Js £ _ Ontario flourâ€"$10.40 to $10.50, buk seaâ€"board. p Te the Th Millfeedâ€"Car lots, delivered, Montâ€" real freights, bags included: Bran, per ton, $52; shorts, per ton, $61; good feed flour, $3.75. Country Produceâ€"Wholesale. Cheeseâ€"New, large, 28% to 29¢; twins, 29 to 20%c; triplets, 290% to 30c; old, large, 32 to 834¢; do, twins, 33% to 34%4¢; Stiltons, old, 35 to 36¢; new, 83 to 84c. _ _ onl e _ Butterâ€"Fresh dairy, choice, 49 to 50¢; creame:y;_grintu, 60 to 62c. Margarineâ€"35 to 39c. â€" | â€" _ Eggsâ€"No. 1, 59 to 60¢; seiects, bo to 66c. Beansâ€"Canadian, handâ€"picked, bus., $4.75; primes, $3.25 to $3.50; Japans, 10 to l1¢c; Limas, Madagascar, 15¢c. Maple productsâ€"Syrup, per imp. gal., $3.40 to $38.50; per 5 imp. gals., $3.25 to $3.40. Maple sugar, Ib., 27 to 30c. Honeyâ€"Wholesalers are now offerâ€" ing the following prices to farmers: 23 to 25¢ ger Ib. for 30 to 60 lb. pails; 23% to 25%c¢ for 10 lb. pails and 24 â€"No. 1, 59 to 60¢; selects, 65 Wholesale Grain. Weekly Market Report â€"=1 |POLES CAPTURE OVER ack 1,000 BOLSHEVISTS &J Northern Advance Continues ï¬ Without Resistanceâ€"Galiâ€" W# | .| cian Situation Unchanged. e mm mm bDuind ‘ap) e , â€" e |2090 K =.. ;fl n â€" 0. HRl] |as 1 t *" _A BB |~ on o .~\\L % J l men ;:, ‘? C Tintaiins w n ~ Th â€"| [R * v ; MR |ns=® aiâ€".| (t. â€" oE 4 ing e $ z)o h * a sh/ â€" in hk\ CR K: 5 * ‘alls § ts . I it k. { 5e /: stret W [ +. on P > .. l grea * §A s #*>~ ,ï¬g‘:{ % .9 d ter i cut e e e o L2 n p se k: 2 is~ l i s :04 <Ce e M | this F:a 3 $ i k. h. ' cach : e k | Che ':lk- PAE * | brin ; â€"+*.. N The e insl | |out nent| f Kel is + s ie ve ight | S a ‘:f" w )unnl ds dle® * {†|is a ilted | aBiy: oi £ | Mid n a oi Ppres Thnk . | by c ols | es 0. é , . ting ho e s ,;;g;\g“: FFREo 2s sc af. s for. Mess Ey / Phatanyt oo es on ) | | Canada‘s Oldest V.C. n the: Pte. George Richardson, V.C., of Lind ‘ws+ gara| say, Ont., 91 years of age, wuo Y f s pl & â€" " | are were guest of the Exhibition Board on th y girl! adenine day Of the Fair. He was 4180 i ner Der ZLamos The northern wing Of thO ~0°~/ army is reported to be advencing without resistance, â€" It has captured Grodek, says the statement, taking more than 1,000 prisoners. A group of Red detachments opâ€", erating east of Cholm, for the purpose of supporting Gen. Budenny‘s cavairy, was repulsed with heavy loss when it attempted to take the agyressive byi attacking the Poles in the district beâ€" tween Dubienka and /Moni&tyez. \ In Gelicia the ritustion remeins unâ€" |changed. Polish cavairy which has ocâ€" cupied Chodorow is in pursuit of the ‘Bohheviltu, who are Fetreating toâ€" ward Rohatyn. E: . {to 26¢ per Ib. for 5 and 2%4 lb., pails; |$7.50 case, 15 sections case. | Provisionsâ€"Wholesale. ! Smoked moatsâ€"Hams, med., 47 to 50c; heavy, 40 to 42¢c; cooked, 64 to ‘68{:; rolls, 34 to 36¢; cottage rolls, 39 | to 41¢c; breakfast bacon, 50 to 62¢; |blckl, plain, 52 to b4c; boneless, 58 | to 64c. C | Montreal Markets, 1, Montreal, Sept. 7.â€"Oats, Canadian ‘Westem. No. 2, $1.16 to $1.17; CW, | No. 3, $1.18 to $1.14. Buckwheat, No,. (2, new standard grade, $14.25. Rolled | oats, bag, 90 lbs., $5.45 to $5.60. Bran, |$52.925. Shorts, $57.25. Hay, No. 2, ‘per ton, car lots, $25. Cheese, finest | easterns, 26c. Butter, choicest creamâ€" _ Cured meatsâ€"Long clear bacon, 27 to 28¢; clear bellies, 26 to 27c. _ _ * Lardâ€"Pure tierces, 27 to 28¢; tubs, 28% to 29c pails, 29 to 29%c¢; prinis, 29% to 30c. Compound tierces, 22% to 23¢; tubs, 23 to 24¢c; pails to 25¢; prints, 27 to 27%e. ery, 60 to 6‘éc. Egz?, fre;h,sgï¬c. Poâ€" tatoes, per bag, car lots, $1.85. Live Stock Markets. TO Sl Toronto, Sept. 7â€"Choice heavy steers, $14.25 to $14.50; good heavy steers, $13.50 to $13.75; butchers‘ catâ€" Fi tle, choice, $13.25 to $13.50; do, good, | *WM $12.25 to $12.75; do, med., $10 to $11; do, com., $7.50 to $9; bulls, cho‘ce, $10 to $11; do, good, $9 to $9.50; do, rough,) _A d $6 to $8; butchers‘ cows, choice, $10.50| The cit to $11.50; do, good, $9 to $10; do, com.,i 116 : $6.50 to $7.50; stockers, $9 to $11;) ine cit feeders, $11 to $12.50; canners Im(i';d T cutters, $4.50 to $5.50; milkers, gocd| 99â€" * to chcice, $100 to $165; do, com. and| 48t°" | med., $65 to $75; lambs, yearlings,| Fiume $8.15 to $9.50; Jo, spring, $13 to mainie $13.50; calves, good to choice, $18 to| only s« $20; sheep, $3 to $8; hogs, fed and the sa watered, $20.75 to $21; do, weighed| plenty off cars, $21 to $21.25; do, £.0.b., $19.75| Sion, ‘to $20; do, do, country points, $19.50| A to $19.75. C t * |_L__§‘f Montreal, Sept. 7â€"Good veal, $13 to $14; med., $10 to $12; grass, $6.50 to $8; ewes, $5 to $7; Jlambs, good, $13 to $13.50; com., $10.50 to $12. Hogs, off car weights, selects, $20.50 to $20.75; sows, $15.50 to $16.50. of the Policsh CUBA IS WORLD‘S RUSSIAN EXLES ELDORADOY OF 1920 _ ON FRENCH F AND SUGAR IS ITS KING, SAYS A WRITER. Cuba Produces a $400 Crop for Every Human Béing With a sugar proguctUon . : doubled and prices more than rupled since 1912, one can read! why Cuba is the world‘s El Dor 1920, and why sugar is its king a recent writer, The imagination is almost powered in attempting to comp: the wast proportions of the su; dustry of the island as it exist year mendous volume that a procession of bull teams, four abreast, reaching around the earth, would be roguiseq to move it. ‘The crop would sulllcs to build a solid wall sround the ontirg 2,000 miles of the island‘s coast line as high as an ordinary dwo‘lling house and thick enough for a file of four men to walk abreast on it. The sugar extracted from this cane would load a fleet of steamars reach }m from Havana to New York, with a ship for every mile of the 1,200 that gtretch between the two ports, Th great pyramid of Cheops remaing, af ter 5,000 years, unrivaled as a monu mental ple; but Cuba‘s sugar outpu this year would make two pyram{!d; each outbasing and â€" overtopp‘in Cheops. The wealth the outgcing sugar brings in is not less remarkable proportions. Four hundred d out of a single crop for every h being who lives on the island. What wonder, then, that C is a land of gold and geims, r Midas ever was, converting by contrast, into a beggar‘! Produces Ten Harve: Sugar cane is grown by U es of planters in Cuba. P« major part of the crop is share farmers, or "Colonas are called. The owners of mills furnish them with a & ber of acres of land to plan them an egreed share of they produce. Another item in the low ducing sugar is the choap motive power. The cane | ox carts. The oxen live | ten months a year on | stripped from the harveste: ;tho remainder of the yea lent guinea grass. Think |pcrous would be the Cana if he could have animal p: | ing not a pound of grain t How much net prof er reaps at 1920 pric timate, but that it is | when the methods of . stated. To begin wit crop, the planter d bother with seed tin years. The soil is so tile that one plantin harvests. . Neither bother him after the the blades strippe form & mulch that | from competing with 'vl;io cane produced is of Think of the prefits th dian farmer would make if he could get ten croj sowing and did not have of them at all to keep dow l A despatch from Rome s«; The citizens of Fiume have dote ed to risk all on the prociamati the city‘s indepemdence of the | dom. This move will be made beo | after paying revenues to the > ‘Flum has not enough resourc« \ maintain its existence. The « lonly source of iIncome is derived : the sale of tobacco. Of this the TO SEPARATE FROYM NATIVE STATE Fiume Citizens Prociaim Their Independence. plenty, but the revenue from its so 0 alone will not support the city. Anxicty exists here and in Fiume about the constitution of that city, which has already been Grawn up To most people it appears too radi l and the Republican party in Fiw~ has told D‘Annunzio and the Nation: Council that a constituent asse! must approve it. It seems D‘ A nunzio has ‘M to call a constituent assembly if all parties do not aZ"° to the constitution before Septem»©* 12 next, the date fixed for the proâ€" clamation of independence. in 3=) case the internal sicuation of Fiuzi 4s far from satisfactory. The King‘s Grapes Attract Numerous Buy®â€"®® A despatch from London says*: huge grapevine at Hampton Cour : mce hothouse has six | bunches this year, Before t incy were always reservcs "* raval table During the war | went to the soldiers‘ hospitals. / they are sold to the public at § a mannd in haskets made by } soldiers at St. Dunstans . :o‘ Orders by post, telegraph and . ¢©‘* phone have exhausted the crop |‘" two days, bringing nearly $1,090 tn his Maleaty‘s office of works. to his Majesty‘s office of on the Island. sugar production . nearly ch net profit t. t 1920 prices i ; that it is larg methods of can: o begin with, : planter does h seed time 1 e soil is so des ne planting Neither doo n after the firs is stripped f; ulch that keo; peting with the f the prefits t n Cuba. â€" Per} he erop is g or *Colonas," e owners of t! em with a gis land to plant : cSte EuU hree y see nd Hosi ol Je PRINCES AND NOBLES CZAR‘S RECGIME. From comparativ dition somewhat ap 4s the saddest chay Russian refugoos n recording to Frenc nearly $0,000 and anxious to return govietism and its tinues for the d princes, generals ficials of the Rus included in the tims, who. just a once sought ref rely on France‘s keep them from They no and «pend ranke, Uie compelied the mean« former nc finding it rate at C farms are Count own« fertile plai the product introducing miniature 1 was once benutiful w Burro Trouckc Guards, that the gin of ; been in increase ment to of finan tic Bc b at Mailn h but i1 Amba #i ages, | awjedf throug Bom# of sought the golonies, t! Ing one of fescendan and Count Ing compe tamily. One Princ ng But t tortunat: ands. A landed i rubles a jewels. been sol is not ut #ian wor "sold th The m have noth of those | fessions 1 the old st to mouth where po «ian docuw Refuge From > ils â€"Pawn Jewels Ward Of Hunger. same re the Russian army . ToT miserable class. Despite they walk the streets wi ders erect and their cropped. Théy are not t other life and are hoping for the return of the old the French police recor many ave finding the en and have abandoned ti suicide in the Seine. Nevortheless, even af er class there is a new 11 h tion appearing. 1nDe | publishing a daily pa there is found a few < work in the Red ridde well as inspiration not battle because the d« Boviets is becoming 1 every day. Naturally | work in such a colony karies, but little advan toward Sovietism am have seen its operatior provided for such pro wther objectives than the homesick Russian These exiles profes politics, but as a fo «cribes 1t, ‘"every nigh fore ikons pleading 1 restore Russia to Its H# penulless her exil go back and share the faithful moujike, enough cash on Boviet yoke and SBoviets, still do not £ The d 1 t} old un Hope Aft n Cul One for Re It 61