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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-9-29, Page 3.EXPLO:PKINcpipp.:copyqc4::. 6 Fpur Thousand Injured at QPI3012. Folly Miles firOmMann- heim--Several French Killed,When Explosion Wrecked EisenheimBarrack,s A 'despatch from -Mannheim, Ger- many SaYS:—DegOlitiiin 'and riiinS alone "reinain 'of what wes once the flouriehing tdWn M Oppau., The toiVii hadn'6',500ereeidents, of which a Ma- jor* of'",'eth'it'' Men e'rengsiged in the ehoMical -Were 'killed or 'Wolin/l- ed lby a ee:44 Of in the Badische•Andlinfs.brikenherainaleplant at Oppau, In the RhliVel'Sialatinate, 40 miles ifrom 'here 'Seddiers in 'French uniforms are clearing a -way the Wreck- ag.e, picking, up the dead and injured as afteta lafg 'battle. ,EleVenliundred dead and four thou- sand' ihjifted IS the latest eStimate.of the disaster, which caused a greater nuniber :of 0S11461.0S inhe Mannheim- Ludwigehalen district that the four years ,Of war. The 'desolation around OnpatrequalsranYthing seen at Verdun or in Flanders 'over a similar area. Hundreds Of persOns are , digging in the ruins for the bodies _of relatives or friends, nearly a thousand of which have been recovered thus far. . Thirty-six hours sifter the eXplosion, ft the gaping, funnel:like hole where the Ba'diSehe works formerly stood, there' are still to be heard moan- ing and cries -of the wounded, While the soldiers search for passible ,Survivoes. Twenty-five hundred of the injured are reported to have passed through the hoSpitals of the surrounding cities. The 'Vast Crater is slowly filling With water, and it may never be known bow many Victims found a grave there: All "-mutilated but still living animals crawling aniidst the twisted girders and blocks of 'concrete are being put out of their misery. The firemen and relief workers have not yet been able to discard their gas masks. theTheFrrefiluelli.tY-rm°ylut iAs 1:11ilnY Ce07:14°tef 'charge of the area and every available French medical officer had arrived early Thursday morning to co-operate th the Geran'anphysielalis and ‘Siirr- I id6IIS. The French and German 'Red 'Giese are' eo oterating and a' big Ger- man- sanitary rain has brotight,Ifirge quantities of Medical supplies., he G,erman, offitials thariked.General De- goutte for the prompt manner in which the 'French Army carne to the assietance of the victims. The French High Commissioner on the Rhine, M. 'llyrard, and his entire staff took charge of the relief work . • The mei-Abet-A of his staff were sent to all the surrounding towns to enlist the the Mayors and People in the relief 'plan, in °which the labor unions are uniting. Several. of the funds have •already assumed large proportions. Several French soldiers wete kilIed and many wounded when the force Of the Oppau explosion wrecked the French barracks at Eiserheim. A train which had just left that station was blown off the tracks, plowing throb the wooden sheds where French sol- diers of occupation were quartered. General Degoutte personally decor- ated a Moroccan soldier who repelled eleven Wounded froth the vereeltage, the African being severly berried, about the hands and neck. Primarily, it is repoThed, the dis- aster was caused by the exPlosion of fifteen tons of ammonium sulph'ate in the preparation of a new gas, in which the pressure of 300 atmospheres and a temperature of between 500 and 700 degrees Ceritrigrade were needed. SEND FINAL LETTER TO DE VALERA Every Irish "Cabinet" Minis- ter to Receive Copy of British Reply. A deSpatch from Gairlo,ch, Scotland, says :—A copy of the draft of the British Cabinet's reply to de Valera will be sent to every member of the Irish Cabinet, This means that all will be held responsible for the final draft of de Valera's answer. It is ex- rected that this will delay the Irish ....esisTaraply for a week or more. It is learned that the present draft islikeTy to be the Government's final letter. The ministers are debating the capacity in which the Irish represen- tatives will attend the conference, as well as the "basis" for the conference. It is felt by the members of the, British Cabinet that de Valera's let- ter admits of more than one interpre- I tation on these points, and de Valera; will be asked to make a plain and! definite statement as to the basis oni which he is willing to confer. The attitude of the Government is that the only possible basis is the continuance of Ireland as a part of the British Empire. Those hoping for 'peace gather little consolation from the Gairloch meeting, as a strong sec- tion of the Cabinet wishes to sternly insiet upon the abandonment of' de VI-dera's sovereignty claims as an es- sential preliminary to any conference. They are pressing the view that the Government cannot bandy words in- definitely. They complain that de Valera is making no concessions what- ever, and profess itiarin that" he will bring up the question of sovereignty as soon as the conference meets, and nullify everything. On the other hand ppeals to the Cabinet not to break off the negotia- tions do not fall on deaf ears. The present time is, therefore, a period of suspense, and thin.gs are not nearly so , hopeful after the Gairloch meeting as they were before. Suppresses Noise When Rifle is Fired A despatch from Geneva says: , --Lieutenant Weber, of Lucerne, claims to have discovered an ap- paratus which suppresses all noise when a rifle is fired. Swiss experts have tested the invention, according to Weber, and have found it to work suc- cessfully. He declares that he expects to develop it so that it can be applied to cannons. New Zealand has 4,391 registered apiaries, representing mere th,an 50,- 000 colonies of bees. Reaching the record height of 33,000 feet in an aeroplane; a Frenchman said he seemed to be flying through a rose- colored 1-fine:sphere when at that alti- tude. --PERSONNEL OF NEW FEDERAL CAME Prime Minister and Minister of Ex- ternal Affairs:—Right Hon. Arthur Meighen, Railways and Canals—Hon. 3. A. Stewart, Lanark (new). Trade and Commerce—H. H. 'Ste- vens, Vancouver (new). Justice—R. B. Bennett, Calgary (new). Postmaster -General --L. deG. K. C.. Quebec (new). Socretary of State-- Rodolphe Monts, Montreal (new). a Health, Immigration and Coloniza- tion—Dr. 3. W. Edwards, Frontenac ,(new). eSoicliers' Civil Re-eatablishmeett—R. trManion, Fort William. (neve). Customs and Excise—J. B. M. Bax- ter, St, John, N.B. (new). Public Works ---Hon, F. B. McCurdy (no change). Filennee—Sir Henry Drayten (no change). BDr. L. P. Normand, Three Rivers (nev7)s.ident of the Privy Council— Agriculture—Hon. S. F. Tolmie, Victoria, 13.C. (no change). ' Labor—Hen. G. D. Robertson (no change).' Marite Reit' Naval—Hon. C. C. Bal- lantyne (ao change), Interior --Sir James Lougheed (no change). Militia • and Defence—Hon. Htigh Guthrie (no change). Without portfolio—E. K. Spinney (no change) e Sir Edward Kep (no change); .Tames Wilson, Saskatoon (new), and Edmund Bristol, K.C., To- ronto (new). The peetfolio, of Solicitor -General r,erriains to he filled. 0k4,1-1S.2.E. CO PAES BILL JAZZ — WW1 `?()U teIC-V-T 1-1‘tv% %PC Nis",,TO r4t. iirRa OFF HERt 1 ee, °cave fecasv tasE • • rozap < WIL.t. SHE EVER. MAKE II'? ae. POPULATION MAY NOT REACH 8,500,000 Preliminary Estimitte of the Census Will Not Appear Before Nov. I. A despatch from Ottawa says:—If Canada gets a population of 8,500,900 it Will be considered to have made a wonderful advance in population in the past ten years. In the 10 years from 1901 to 1911, the increase was about 30 per cent., but in the previous ten years the per- centage of increase was only about 10 per cent. In 1911 the population waS about 7,200,000, and if it were 8,5b0,000 now, that would be a gain of 18 per cent., which is considered too high in view of the stonpage of immigration on account of the war and the exodus of many people of foreign birth after it. It is not expected that the prelimi- nary estimate of the census of the Dominion will be given before No- vember 1. Radium is fonnd in nature in quan- tities so exceedingly small that it is never visible, even when the material is examined with a microscope. Rad- ium are ordinarily carries enly a small fraction of a grain of radium to the ton, and radium will never ba found in large masses, because it is formed by the elove decay of uraniern, and itself decays and enanges to other ele- ments so rapidly that it doe e not ac- cumulated naturally in visible masses. The average cost in Canada of im- prisoning a prisoner in the peniten- tiary is $2,80D. To this must be added the loss or damage resulting from the commission of the crime, together avith the support•given to dependents of the man imprisoned, as well as the economic less to the state of the man's labor. Though a limited amount of pay work was done at the penitentiaries during the past year a revenue of $143,384 was returned to the govern- ment. . A I State Education. A political sneaker remarked the other day, "Is it not just as reason- able that the province should main- tain a school for blacksmiths as that it should pay fer the education of doc- tors who charge, high fees for their services ?" He had no.t reasoned felt enough. One learns a trade in leis time and at hs expense than one learns a profession. Resides, the ap- prentice is paid while 4e is learning, whereas the student k under great expense during his yehole university course. No one is deterred from be- coming a blacksmith solder because of the cost of learning ',tile trade, but many a by wouldhave to give up his ambition to be a chictor if the province bore no part of the cost of his medi- cal' education. And what a price in human lives would be paid if some youth with a natui.al talent for sur- gery were prevented by poverty from becoming a surgeon! The education of its.leaders in medi- in engineering, and in other walks of ihe Leadw° Markets cine, in law, in theology, in teachin,g life costs the country a great deal of money, but it is money well spent. perish." Where there are no leaders, Manitoba wheat—No. 1 Northern, Toronto. "Where there is no vision, the people $1.55, nominal; No. 2 Northern, $1.51, the state retrogrades. Civilization nominal; N. 3, $1.47, nominal. itself cannot exist without education. Manitoba oats—No. 2 CW, 55c; No. 3 CW, 53c; extea No. 1 feed, 53c; No, Canadians will require to lbecome ac - university education. For railways, nominal. • 2 Manitobafd49-b.arley—No. 3 CW, 77%e, customed to greater expenditures on for water power, for roads, there is All the above track, Bay ports. abundance of money but, to pro-videi American corn—No. 2 yellow, 69e, for these, the universities must strug-1 nominal,. Bay ports. gle 'along on pitifunir inastaggage Ontsmo 0.atse—No. 2 white, 43 to 45c. revenues. On the part, Of the general Ontario wheat ---No. 2 Winter, per public there is needed some clear lots, $1.25 to. $L30; No. 3 Winter, thinking on the relative value of edu- $1.22 to $1.27; No. 1 commercial, $1.17 cation. , orainioh News nef Victoria, BC,—A shipment of 2,- a trade gonned .0,00)000 feet of spruce' and hemlock ie jainai , cleirifa prepared for San Pedro by the '1,Vhalen. Pulp and Paper plant on the west eoast of Vanceuver Island. Spruce is selling well in the //out"), as its lightnese is appealing to the build- s. Kamloops, B,C.--The Crocklehurst Orchard of the /3ritish Columbia Fruitland, has Shilmeet over seventeen, thousand , boies of erablappl,os .to the east tisk suminer, eora•SiginiretS, frOing to Winnip'eg, BrandonPort Arthnr, Minneapolis and Chicago. It is esti- inated that the harvest' of Wealthy and Mackintosh Reds will reach fourg teen thousand boxes, Making a total production of thirty thousand boxes from the orchard ef fgarteen tliodsthid tree., Edmonton; Alta.—In less than one week twenty carloads of Alberta White fish from Lesser Slave and Lac La 13iche passed through Edmonton en route to the Chicago market. It is estim-ated that there are still eightg earloads 'before this seasbn's cattle in Les.s•er Slave Lake will all be mark- eted. Regina, ,Sask,--An indication of the value and extent of Saskatchewan's t crop this year is the number of Steam boil'er end 'engineers' licenaes taken out in the province which is alrndst double that of last year. AlreadY more than 3,500 of the foriner and 1,500 of the latter have been granted by the provincial authorities. Tifinnipeg, Mm. -Recent statist issued on the railway mileage of C :sada give the total' for all -railways 38,288, of which total Ontatio's sha amoun,ted to 11,000, pepulaticin p mile 260; Quebec, 4,792, 420; Manito 4,168, 133; Saskatchewan 6,162, li Alberta 4,273, 116; British Columb 4,227, 106; New Brunieirick 1,959, 18 Nova Scotia, 1,428, 367; and Prin EalWard Island 279, 336. Ottawa, Ont.--Arniounceinent- h been made that the Canadian Geyer ment will open a trade commisSione office in New York city. Fredei Hudd, at pre.sent acting director, D minion Bureau of Information, Ne York, has been appointed to the pi) The 'government also intends to on Ca. Sl. Cathariaea, Ont.—Large qnane titles of pears are being ahipped to the Urilted Kingdom from tile Niagara district, The pear crop is a good one, being' about the hest in fgaits this year, with the exception of grape whieh are also heavy, Montreal, Quer—Amongst thoee i the cabin of the S.S. Corsican wide signer's office r• SWYMER COM " " OF INFANTS. - The trouble oceuee moetly,dernig bet fiftEOZIS, and is coefined to infante tin lb:Z:1:a, .tahnedneeF3aacli'lifirloY4.1hfdonupl's:t:11).811.4:v1())'01 tillt ''', the time of the cuttiiticof the Malt teeth. e Mothers should, look welt alter their s" children a.t this etaso and hot experiment with any new ,and untried rergediesi, but u procure one having Stood the -feet of many . e years usage in thouciande of •familles.• , 1 Dr. Fewier'n Extract of "Wild Straw - e berry has peen on -the market for, -713 _ years end Is , aelcnowledged by it _ , . . have need it to be the very beet remedy for Cholera Iitfaiituria Diarrhoea, Co, e DySeatery and all Bowel Complainte 1 whether in children or adulte. 1 "Mrs. "s:R.Al'e%ini12BIStelt,t.nilillifax, N.8,, writtee--"My little tiri Wite very bitd With stinntasr ... i - _ bvsoiostrne do eP lvtiol,4i on ft: ya ic- Ili,. ,uosahered. ,„. f4eilSittrtiwcahsaan4e0,teofe°thirniinleg, RS Fowier'ed I did so, at the sannzatimes I Stilts 'untilwas d - tried ee'reiiiil reined- ies but with )10 Xe- ifJ'anA hy tho tittle ems %Ise as well as ever. 1 eannot too highly aredcuolintsm,end it fox both children and Price, .50c. a bettle; put up nnly by The T. Milburn Co., Lunite(1, 'Toronto, Ont., ,urrived here regently -was a party o o• 180 Canadian school teachers wh have been touring Great 13ritain an the 'continent for the past two month Some 35 more, who were with th party when it left Canada are sti in England but will sail ehertly. Th School teachers, who earne from al parn of the Dominiort, and repreSen all grades, were sent on an edueation al tour bY the -varions provincial gov ernments, who made grants for th purpose. The trip was organize( under the supervision of the Federa Department of Education. Halifax, NS.—More than' 2,000,600 barrels of apples, probably the great est yield in its history, will come fren the Annapolis Valley thie year, ac cording to F. J. G. Comeau, freight raffle manager of the Dominion At lantic Railway. The great 'yield, stated Mr. Comeau, has resulted in inquiries reaching the Valley frbm every prov- ince in the Doheinion cued nearly every state of the United States. Indica- tions are that 1,000 ears of apples win be shipped to the United States. St. J.ohn, N.B.—A contract has been let to Kant) ancl, Parker, of this city, ics at for the erection on Partridge Island of a brick and concrete building to be used as a power -house, bath and dis- infecting centre in the handling of im- migrants. The cost of the structure will be $100,000. Work will be started immediately and the ,building, it is expected,. will be coinpleted in seven months. ' St. Johns, Nfld.—What is believed to be one of the most promising cop- per deposits ever discovered in this country has recently been unearthed on the west coast of Newfoundland re er ha '5; ia 0; ee as n- r's 'ic o- w The full extent of the lode is said to et. be of a verY high percentage. Develop - 'en /Tient work has already' commenced. ' Mr. , F. W. :Geag, Edmonton; gAita., writes:—"Lest winter I Was in bedee a inocith with fever. My kidneys con-, stint* gave iDe tronble, 'and I. waa. averned.to be very easeful. '" On an en-, 'suing attack' of kidney trotible,'followed by' constant peina in my 'back; X took two ' boxes of Doan' s Kidney- Pills. sets Relief wasquiekly apparent, and notv "'"9" Cord Finray.Of,NA Eminent Britisher elected to serve as one of the jualges an the Liternational Court at' Justice of the :League of Nation. , vernment Crops . Estirr.late 1921 I have no trouble. 'Moan's" hae-e saved me much pain and 1 tun deeply thankful to them." Price, 50e. a box et all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Isiniteda 'Toronto, Ont, \'4\V MR. V\s"( P0:2- 7._ 5 It's a Great Life aL to $1.22; No. 2 Spring, $1.20 to $1.25 No. 3 Spring, nominal. Barley --Malting, 65 to 70c, accord ing to freights outside. Buckwheat—No. 2, nominal. Rye—No. 2, $1.00'. Manitoba flour --First pats., $9.85 second pats., $9.35, Toronto:, Ontario flour --$6, old crop. Millfeed—Del. Montreal freight bags included: Bran, per ton, $27 shorts,•per ton, $28; good feed flour $1.70 to $1.80. Baled Hay—Track, Toronto, per ton No. 1, $24; No. 2, $22; mixed, $18. Cheese—New, large, 21 to 211/2"c; twins, 21% to 22e; triplets, 23 to 23%e. Old, large, 28 to 29c; twins, 29 to 29%e; triplets, 293 to 30e; Stil- tons, new, 24 to 25e. Butter—Fresh dairy, choke, 33 to 35c; creamery, prints, fresh, No. 1, 42 to 43c; No, 2, 39 to 40c; cooking, 22 to 24c. Dressed poultry—Spring chickens, 35 to 40c; roosters, 20e; fowl, 30c; ducklings. 350; turkeys, 60c. Live poultry---Sprin,g chickens 20 to 25e roosters, 16e; fowl, 16 to 20e; ducklings, 35c; turkeys, 50c. „ Margarine -22 to 24. Eggs---lce, 1, 44 to 4/5e; selects, 50 to 51e; cartons, 52 to 54e. Beans --Can, hand-picked, bushel, I $4 to $4.26; primes :$3.50 to $3.75. Maple products—Syrup, per imp.. gal, $2.50; per 5 imp. gals., $2.35.' Maple sugar, lb., 19 to 22c. I Honey -60 -30 -lb. tins, 14%, to 15e1 per lb.; 5 -2% -lb. tins, 16 to 17e per Ib,; Ontario comb honey, per doz., $3.75 to $4.50. 088 4 Choice heavy steers, $7 to $8. but - coin., $2 to $3.50; feeders, good, 900 lbs., $5.60 to $6; do, fair, $4 to niilkers, $75 to $95; springers, $80 to $1.00; calves, choice, $12 to $13; do, rned., $9 to $10; do, corn., $3 to $6; lambs, good, $8.50 to $9; do, come $6 o $7; sheep, choicie, $8.50 to $4; d,o, good, $2 to $3.50; do, heavy and bucks, $1 to $2; hogs, fed and watered, $9.50 to $9.75; clo, off ears, $9.75 to dot f.o.b., $8.75 to $9; do, "country' points, 8.50 to $8.75. Montreal. Oats, Can. western., No. 2, 60% to 61e; do, No. 3, 59% to 60c. Flour, Man. Spring wheat pats, firsts, $9.50. Rolled oats, bag, 90 lbs.,$8.10 .to. $3.20. Bran, $27. Shorts, $29. 'Hay, No. 2, per ton, car lots, 28 to $29. Cheese, finest easterns, 16%c. But- ter, choicest creamery, 36c. Eggs, selected, 45e. - Good butcher steers, $6.50 to P; good fat cows of dairy type, $5 to $5.50; light thin heifers, $3; green calves, $8 up; good veal calves $10 to ; $12; lambs, $8; sheep, $2 to $4; hogs, $10. Although blind, a Canadian ex -sol - Personality. Variety, we say, is the spice of life. Nature provides many sorts of flowers. We'd 'bee even of the rose if we had no other flower. The seasons alternate. Perpetual summer or perpetual winter is mono- tony. The weather changes. Sun all the time is as undesirable as continuous rain. • National customs differ. Modes of dress and of architecture are not the same. languages are minutely s-ub- divided into dialect's. Life at sea is utterly different t:rorn life on land. To board a ship is the next thing to "going from the world we know to one of wonder still." A voyage through the air is not like a Journey by water or on land. All through our lives the rule of perpetual variance prevails. And so it is with persons. The inc haustible resourcefulness of Nature i 11 creating so many tynes of character, so rnany races, infinitely various in feature, is amazing. Nature did not intend us to look and walk and aet and feel too much alike. Slienneant us* to Myr' our Souls, te de- velop individuality, to speak out of our minds with our own vcilees; in short, to assert a personality. Life is too •tame and tepid if we remain neutral in the background al- ways. Seekers of the limelight ancl the headlines we have with us always, and hey are odious. But it is possible to have a strongly eveloped personality Without making bid for noisy notoriety, It is impertant that we should dare e be ourselves, that we should be willing to be different. If through moral cowardice we invariably assent to the prevailing fashion on our onin- ions, we make one more in a crowd; but a place of leadership is denied us. A controlling force wherever he goes, whatever he does, is the man who has .convietions, and takes sides, and does not hide on the defensive in a twilight zone trying to assume the tint of the background. It is a glorious event in a lifetime to meet one who has a strong and vivid personality-. To such a person we cleave where and when we find him, grateful that the contact gives light d aeeent and electric stimulation to ep us going through "thee head - ng days." The use of the word "blizzard" has • trated back only to the year 1867, d the origin of the word is unknown. Keresene lamps are generally of om ten to tvv-enty-five candlepower, e brightest rtm up to about 100 ncllepower. diet recently passed the Canaddan a Civil Service examination for employ- ' merit as a eihorbliand clerk. ----Stimulate the sluggish liver, clean the foul -coated tongue, do away, with the 1 accumulation of the stomach gases, banish the bilious headaches, cause the "i cher steers, choice, $6 to $7; do, good, o ; o, me a $4.25 to $5. • , an ke floating specks before the eyes to disap- lo pear, and prevent constipation, jaundice, 'heartburn, water brash and all sickness e arising from a disordered condition of the 'De liver and bowels. an Mr. John S. Caron, Donavon, Sask., writes:—"I was troubled with my liver • fr and had severe bilious attacks, a friend Th . • • • ....... • $5 t $5 50 d d a lased me to try Milburn s Lora Liver Barley . • . rRyo . ... ' Flak Seed .. .1 Potatoes 11,707 100 do, med. ... ,- 6 930 000 .... 58,027,000 butcher heifevs choice $6 to 99„937,000 butcher , i $4; canners and cutters, o o ce, $•1.50 $ , do, ni $A iu $5, 'butcher cows I no more bilious attacks." Pills, so I took two vials and I have had mailed direct on receipt of price by The .Price, 25e. a vial at all dealers, or d • ' c'Lege5ci', ''$'8.50edtt'; 44$2t4.5;05d2t0 T Milburn Co., Limited Toronto, Ont, ge'gseeg'-g-rensg--.neng_aagegme/eegeg'e, eagerefezee„, Yourav.tiF? wraY 11-tou‘vor ‘31-01,10 1, SAW •-(OL) WM-1)14 1.4EIR.Z.5,11\01Z.11-11-1Z.. 011-4`2.12.SDW VIA'S YOUR. V•I‘FE r4:01,11, k 94‘: . '0\ 6tite 0111111111K MINIMS U Si A e-c,r4 11 immonsil Muhl mum mon Lgi 1111 By Jack Rabbit WS 62'ENT LIVE ';y& 001,41/4'NNEWEvi zsnee-g:41L,":- • C.70::44•1•,c‘O, PALPITATION OF TE HEART SINKING SENSATIONS. Palpitation of the heart is very often accompanied bv sinking sensations and weak, faint an dizzy spells, and before you cart rid yourself of the trouble it is of considerable importance that the heart should be strengthened and brought back to its regular beat. !WILBURN'S HEART afid NERVE PILLS are just the remedy you require to do this. Mrs. Chadwicle, Delhi, ()lit., writes:— „ "I had palmtatean of the heart, and tne, least exercise, such as going up stairs, or up a hill, my heart, would beat like a trip hanimer and at times X was dizzy headed and had a sinking sensation as if my time was near. A frtend suggested I try Milburn's .Heart and Nerve Pills, so I procured three boxes, and by the time the first was used 1 began to improve. In all I took six bOxes, and now, although in my 66th year I feel like a young eirl; no dizziness or heart thumpieg, aarl en walk miles without faligne. At time of sick/loss r weighed 120 lbS,y 110W 1 weigh 0, Priori, 50e. a box at all dealers or iactiled directant reoc,ipt of price by The li,lilburn Co., Liatited, 'Toronto, Ont.