The Exeter Times, 1921-12-15, Page 7QUESTI N
OF ACCEPTING LONDON PACf
'Two of ilia Ministers Support De Valera in H. Opposition
to the Settleinent--DOegates Who Were Parties to the
Treaty Will Stand by it.
A despatCh from London says...-.
Eamonn de Valera's action th opposing -
the treaty between Great Britain and
Ireland VMS not entirely uneXPected,
the conclusion having been drawn be-
canse of his silence that the terms of
the settlement did ntt meet with his
wishes or in his opinion the aspira-
, tions cf that section of Ireland which
.' he represents.
Several meetings of the Dail Eir-
eann "cabinet" were held in Dublin
• on Thurscl•ay, and while no official
i
statement was given out, t Was early
hinted that a division of views had
cceurred milling the Sinn Fein Min-
isters. In his pliblic statement Mr.
de Valera, makes it known that in his
opposition to the settlement he has the
• support of at least two menibers. ofl
• the "cabinet," the "Minister of Home
• , Affairs and the Minister of Defence,"
Austin Stack and Charles Burgess.
, On the other hand, Arthur Griffith;
. founder of the Sinn Fein and "Min-
ister of Foreign Affairs"; Michael Col-
` bus, the "Finance Minister"; Robert
C. Baton, 'Minister of Eeonomies,"
and George Gavan Duffy and Eanion
3, Duggan, have already affixed their
signatures to the treaty as plenipoten-
tiaries. The views of other members
vf, the Cabinet• have no been made
'
. Arthur Griffith, head of the Irish
delegation 'which negotiated the settle -
merit at London, has issued -the follow,'
'rig statement:
"I have signed the treaty between
Ireland and Great 13ritain., I believe
this treaty will lay the foundatio,ns
of peace and friendship 'between the
to nations. What I have signed I
shall stlind by, in the belief that the
end of the conflict of centuries is at
hand."
Mr. de ,Valera has summoned the
Dail Eireann to meet next Wednesday
morning. It is on that day that the
Imperial Parliament vi11 be opened
in state for the purpose of having the
treaty submittedto it.
One development in Irish affairs on
.Thuroday was the liberation of many
prisoners, including several women,
from Mountjoy Prison, undergoing
sentence•s for political offences.
Congratulatory telegrams continued
t,o pour into Downing Street, Among
the messages were felicitations from
the French Premier, M. Briancl; ,the
South African Premier, ,Tan C. Smuts,
and A. J. Balfour, on behalf of the
-British delegation at Washington.
') DESTROY WHALE WITH tha new administrative area is re -
BOMBS FROM AIR garded as one city, London will be
incomparably the largest city in the
world has ever knewn and wild greatly
outdistance New York both in terri-
tory and population.
The proposals, which have been
placed 'before the Royal* Commission
• Huge Leviathan Too' Bulky
' to be Moved by 75 -ton
Railroad Crane,
A despatch from Waehington on Lonclori Government, involve the
says: -To run around in shallow constitution ef an entirely 120W author-
• water inside the Atlantic •entrance to ity to carry on certain public services
the Pena.= canal, to be killed by which will extend over -the gteater'
machine-gun fire, slatedfor the part of Middlesex and large aresi ii
abattoir but fireilly towed out to sea Surrey, Essex, Kent 'arid lIertferd-
arid destroyed 14-”bonilis dropped from shire. •, •
aircraft, was the fate of a 125 -ton The large number of decentralized
whale. The story is told in the Pan- authorities has lecl to increasing e'en-
ama Canal Record, a, prosaic little fusion in the control of transportation• ;
weekly ;Delineation which deals in a roads, electricity, ' -,Tater supplies,
routine way with canal matters. The housing and. so forth. An attempt to
whale made futile efforts' to extricate 'solve the difficultiei with various•"•do-
itself hat stuckfast i'yith the tali of ordina.ting 'commitfeei.; has been urie
its head and Mosteof ets back ahoVe successful and a delegateon from the
• water. A grate), of eanal employees County Councal saw the' Prime Min,.
undertook to salvage the animal for ister, which resulted in the appoint:
,food. A. launcli mounting° a machine- ment of a Royal Commission. Now the
gun was requisitioned and after the local government has stibmitted plan
whale, a female of the species, had fpr a siPgle Central authority... • .
sbean killed, it was towed to a pier in Sir John Bann said he did not want
order that it might be lifted from the a eityeeoe the eseh and cedes, for tlee
ater to a at ear and sent to the poor growing up side by side. Many
abattoir. A 75 -ton railroad 'crane could of the cities and towns 'which lieve
• not even budge the huge leviathan. sprung up around London wept a
After many many unsuccessful attempts the tral supervising power. It is suggeste
salvage enterprise was abandoned. It that the name "Great City of I4eneem",
was not a sperm -whale and the carcass be used if the proposal is acCapteth
began to decompose. Finally a tug` The area would extend forty milei
attached a line to the carcass and from 149r:deer to GraVeeend and thite
towed it to a point 12 miles outside miles from Reigate to =Enfield- -The
the breakwater. where a navy airplane
dreleeed two 160 -pound bombs from a
height, of 1 000 fed arid destroyed it.
"Great City- of London."
- If the scheme for- centralization of
public, utilities urged by the London
County Council is put into force and
LETTERS FnorA ALL OVER
TELL HOW
I/ loci(
BLiPOD
LL"'
REUEVES DYSPEPSIA
Anaoug many of those who have writ-
ten us is -Mr. A. Fleming, Scotfield,
Alta. He says in his letter: -"I have
been troubled with 'dyspepsia for some
years, I tried several medicines, but
only got relief for a short time. I suff-
ered with pains in my stomach, also a
smothering feeling after eating, and
could not eat any meat at all. I got
run down and was very weak from rob-
bing the stomach of its necessary wants.
I 'also suffered from pains in my neck
which would rim up on both sides into
ray_ehead -causing terrible headaches.
eieedesteeeelebettles of Burdock Blood
33itters, and now am completely relieved."
B. B. B. has been on the market for
Lha past 42 years; manufactured only by
The ,T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto,
Ont.'
ereeseees...eseees---eeseeeeeeeees-eet....eseesseee
ahn is for greater efficiency and ec6ne
omy, whiel-ewillenean the scrapping of
many little ueben councils in borougha
which yet are to be heaedefrom, and
these may se'object as greatly to need-
ify the s'clieme but in general it meets
with' widesptead- aPproval. ,
"•• Dr, Wang
,
Distinguished Chinese stetesinan: who
is one of the three representatiVe's of
hit country engaged in secret coM-
mittee with an equal number of Japan -
see at the Washingto,n Denference in
4,
HIS MAST JOY -RIDE
„
Canada. From .Coast -,to toast
Suinmerside, P.E.I.-The peltieg;: of' pared with 8,273,000' bushels. The to -
silver foxes on Prince Edward ISland tal s area estimated' Sown.in .fal1
• fax farms' is now general. Repaets wheat this'year Der the season'of 1922
received indicate that last year's' One- is' 842,400 acres;'as compared*. with
put has been ebsorbed tl,e 792„200 ages, sown int ,1„.p2p fer 1921
and 'prospects' are 'bright" for anx- Toronto , Ont-sAuthorized cijtal
cellent season. At the last census -the of $14,268,500 is bY comPan
value of Prince Edward Island fur ies whose incorporations were report -
farms amounted to $3018,870, while ed• ;duringathe•, past weeks. compared
the total value of fur farms in all •with 13)8'75,250 ,:the ..previous week,
other' provinceelof 'Canada ,amounted aceording -to. the rMonetary Times.
td`bi•dy' $11,613,735!"'"- • ' •'' '• • This sum is distributed as follows:
Halifaee'' N.Vs---Tha 'NoVa Sccitia Domindon $10•,355 500, 'British,. Colum -
Power Crnninlssi°if' ife's cbitmerlded' btailatio$6
On -
operations in the vicinity of Still- $020,,,(204000i9.1•910a,
llaintgeb,a(e.11$1elalc5'$°1918;,0O0n0-.
weter, Thee'proPheitide. includes the Regina, Sask.-Hundrede of birdS,
eeeeteeetio'n of 'ebeedaiee ereend /nig:ranee 0"1 deeeriptions, were
Mile Leete., r„Abetet 150 nen will be handed'bi/ thegaine'leardens several
eniployed.; aed, it .is eXPeged work Moriths' ag'o in tird er,t1-tat' their •flights
will be completed hefere the eau' 'Of might be studied. The...first bircl•band-
eve.•ireae."' .1: • e le, ed --a. „mud ,hen-atKinistina,. in the
Fredericton, N,B.--Large quantities central part of Satskatc.hewan, has
F„ced,yotatqps. ae.9 be,ims.),p,lieppeete. been killeeleiteateRochestereNew 'York.
fathnzo,fin vee.y, grate Others of the banded birds have been
43„,inior.in.,.vie•w p1. ft,tbat'4rb. .shot in the far South, 'and many in
the 'Oeeiteel States: gook County, Maine has always been
considered, the :banner' growing.distriCt • Edneentore . Alta.-epheistnias inail
iiiejoev. Eekeleea .'gteeeee for the far berth- left here on Decern-
„•
of huskies set out with five hundred '
ber first. From: Mc.Murray two teams
Montreal, Que.-Passengers carried
pounds of mail for traders and trap-
pers in, the shadow of the Arctic
'circle. The most mertherly point, Port
McPherson, at the itelba • of the Mc-
Kenzie River, willehe'ereaehed about
January twenty-see-enth. ,
e Calgary, Alta. --,Alberta wheat, has
.never, been 'graded se high as thie
yeareaccerding to a report of ,the Fed-
eral Grain Inspector's office here. In
October between 300,000 and 400,000
bushels inspected graded number one
'herd, as coinCered -With 'scene 20 000
bushelelhus geadleden the"eafreelpond-
ing nionth last'year.
Vancouver, B.C.-To date 50,000
tons of wheat have been ,date 50,000
the Pcirt of Vance:leer
.
Kingdom and Japan for December and
'
fiem the port =Of' Montreal during the
se`a,son-4.)0101.021 nunfhered 'abOut'
310:e 'While ehis, mieeber „coteeicler-
ably belo'W" that' of last yet, which
was Hal:bier/nal inemany respeerts, itsis
up to the averaee:'=Of.the•tetel given
65,218 landed in ,Mo*real from Brit-
ish and continental' ports, while 41,692
eailed.fieim!Mierlitieetl; • Paseenger
Iiii-
ers made.,84. round, 'trips to Montreal
during the year.
Ottawa, Ont. -According ,to a Gov-
ernment report, wheat production in
th'e Prairie Provinces in 1921 a.mount-
ed to 308 925,000 bushels, as compared
with 234,138,300 bieshels in 1920. Oats
totalled 363)185,000 bushels, compared
with 314,297,000 in 1920; ,barley, 48,-
619,000 bushels, 7as.,In'kainst 40,760,500
bileheli; rye, 23;113,000 ,buslielS,' coni -
Offspring of Six Flies
Totals Three Quadrillion
— --
Lieutenant-Governor Drops
Presidency Of Plow Co.
d'espatch; from Paris says:-s--arfL=cTeeosePn'aftclelf felnixst11-1Barritk,f.L°Tideustaeii•Yean:4.t-
When six fdrriale fide§ Were imprisoned Gievisenor 'Harry' Cockhtitt liciVing 'to
on May 1 sof ,thirs, year by Prof. E. reside at Government Reuse ToAinto
Roubaix', the fix:st thing they began to during his term' of office,' he ha § re-
signed aa'presiclentea*the •CockShett
do Was to' -lay eggs.' Thee wete 'pro.-
vided with condensed milk for food. dPenl°tw,-Ge'Cee8;gCLIVinelditlaeldc.e,hAaendbeenceel:jePe'rteegdi
Tlieineprisem wasereomy, -airy, and to this position., Colonel Ceckshutt
kept at a nice, comfortable temper- will.still his.connection withelie
ature. • company as eheirman,of the, Board of h
• At the end of the fir,et week.seach of Diregers... Meyer WedIalre -wh
' o was b
'tli'esik had averaged 10,5 eggs, eied viceLpresiait and general manager, t
the end of the month the total Pre", ntiw' thecinal post Of, Pre.si-
dtietion: was 2,562. By that tinie, too, dent and general manages.
several iiu'ricired of their direct des- '
cendants were buSy at the eo-g-laying RObber Gets Five Years
game, and professor was even ' •and the •Lash
busier trying to find out how m.any
flies he would have at the eed of he
season if production 'kept ' at 'A despatch from Winnipeg says. -
,,Its, Magistrate Sirsliugh John MacDonald
narinal rate: made good his promise:to,. suppress
isixprisdners would •have bY Sep-. rash when, he sentenced John Hildey.to,
emhor 3ffp-ixidace.d 3,985,96e,38.7,755,-' five 'Years in the per.qtentiary and
NY'ciescendent's. twenty lashes for robbery'. .
• It% a. Great,Life if YOU Don't Weaken
A despatch, from Washiegto
says :-.The Japanese 'delegation to•th
,Conf,.erenee on, ' the- Limitation o
ArMament stated early Thursda
evening 'that, so far, no reply had bee
reeeived from Tokio regarding j•apan'
aecelitance of the 54-8 'c'apita
ratio •and the Problents which are' ir
FRANCE
US
n : meeting will be required to p1ovidp it Many people 4 over t
e with its dramatic effeet before the toss rdht v,ii.er Light an 4 s
1 worid. \Providing the Tokio reply ie lcm,t,
y what Piey a,s,silme it will be, these 5riliSoTillc(;r4nagr'e stipe't;leo'1t.00%.;it.b 11;tiT)Ii";t4,tia'044
4 44th0rities say three things will re- a il,,,. 1 ,,,,,,.,. .,.t.
s suit. These three things have been, iti-'1;11-1.1,-as-,,,4-,-'bVi'i ,,,,?..1"1:ti',3weir''ati'';,. a thcaeolrsePV°4
. .
•MILBURN'S
I) dealt with in a rather vague way be- i
e snably clear,
-11'or:::ibutToh: Ir'llaTheymv:id:i isNa.ornr:4e:diet. rwelIr AND R PILLSal;
e
- take the form, of a treaty,between• Bri-,,,, offer ,the blessing of sound, refreshing
t fain, United States, J•apate Fliance:an4 'sl.P): by inyigorating the heart and ilex-
- TtalY, ves 24d tciaing nothe 'whole system.
cot
tpies$ 1
terlocked 'with it, The srePly. may rcoin
some time during the night; but, 'unti
it arrives, matters relating to Imola
inept are at a standstill. • As a/ reSul
of this delay more than the uStial am
e '1. (2) An entente will •be arrangedhe-'. lvIrss C. le, Xierkett, Norwich, Ont,,
ount of guessing is being'one thos
attached to the conference. The cus-
tomary wild ruiriers are having
merry' time. No ,sooner is one rumo
'proved false than another rises to talc
its place. All day the'Propagandist
too, has ha,d'his opportunity.'
Persons in elose touch with the
British authorities state that as soon
'as ,the Tokio reply is -received the big
outstanding work of ',the conference,
will be coneluded, -*Only a plenary
tween Britain, United Sta,tes, il'aPaa oenliil(tese:Tir"iii'silVelritsaeuddilNeacirl-Yvets.PYiollsb°axel
a and France by an interchange of dip- 'know they have done me good, burzzwinags
r tomatic rete, and not by•*treaty. troubled' with Ally heart nd
•
,,,tnl'a' eshe(irtnaplitl:Ise,bplliAlsiel'acidiedae;),.(talhtsariee°,12,tantetiin::gn::;;Iojat;:it'llhei l'ianiPa'l 1:1:11a115''r.gir: eo‘'Vellerf-1 'i . xt: >aintly:1;elciiedniallittl:pS;c:1(0):31:1:151eiat.10:1;:dail'Inns'es.aeklcid°yoeno'ctueo0;fflohodl ;as; lel, nvoettldenai: 4,?1 ye ahttget°•ra ra:::: it:
and allow,ing for future meet -
'effect as' soon as China^shows that she mailed di • p. a box' ar all dealers, or
'Can. play her pa.i't, •• -
,ing,s to carry these agreements into -1,r, muburiieletan LroicnIziptetdof,rpomethyoThe
could 1,1ar:Iley:Pojititi'ly'
Co., r a a
s
Lady Greenwood Receives
Pen That Signed Pad
A desPatP11,from London says:
The pen, .v,rith Nvhich the Irish
treaty was signed has been pre-
sented by Lloyd George to Lady
Greenwood in recognition of the
shake her husband, Sir Hamar
• Greenwood, had in • laying •the
foundation of the Irish peace.
This share is in danger of being
orgatten.,„ because Sir Hamar,
•realizink how completely ne has
beenlassociated with the coercion
policy, has; deliberately kept ill
the background during the ne-
gotiation§. • Yet in, well-inform-
ed circles it, is, ,claimed that to
the Chief Secretary for Ireland
belongs .the credit- of having
initiated the movement which
has come to a successful end.
• " ' a-
British Elections
•. Probable Next Year
A despatch from London sa3rs,--
.Speculatiern ast..to possible 'clissolutien
'of Pall:Ian:14d revive d• by the Irish
'Aieace," as' ft is laia-Wai that Preinier
Lloyd George is seeking a favorable
pret'InitY rehe* ' his mandate,
Which he obtained in the height of the
armistice enthusiasm and since hes
-beeiv ch '•
'A.* reliable political authority put
the date of the election'about the mfd-
dle'ofenext eeee, but Sir -A., Griffith-
Boscawen, 'Minister • of Agriceltuee,
speaking at Notthighain, said an elee-
tier)* could not long beelelayed,, and he
erged the coalition.organization to be
ereparedee, *:
THE BASCO Li OF TONI
' MAY DEVELOP INTO
PNEUMONI
TOMORROW
Next to consumption there are snore
deaths from' pneumbnie than from any
other lung trouble.
Pneumonia. is nothing, more or less,
thin "Limg Fever," or as itused to be
called, 'Inflammation or Congestion of
the Lungs."'•
Thecoughaccompanying pneumonia is
at first ,frequent and hacking, and *the
expectoration, tough and colorless which
soon, however, becomes more eppious and
of a fusfie red color; the lungs become
congested and the bronchial tubes filled
'Frith phIegmemaking it hard for the suf-
ferer to breathe. • * . 1
On the first sign of a cold or cough
you., should get a bottle of Dr. Wood's Le
Norway Pine 'Syrup, and thus prevent ,,L4
lie cold developing into sottie serious k•
ueg trouble. , •," h
F, Crouch, Rnmsmore, Ont., 0,
writes, -"Two years ago got,pneiimo- '
ia and a cotigle followed it. I coughed t
ontinuelly, and no matter what used
could not rid myself of it. In lgoveta- g
er I was sure I was gettitig some disease. $
ecause ray throat choked rae up so.. d
My,sister wrote me front Ottawa, and s
old meete try Dr. Wood's Norway Pine c
syrup. $
Afteleusing 0/2e bottle found relief, $
o got another one, and before Xmas
nee cough was completely gone."
arkets of tile Wor
• The Teaching of Medicine in
he .Provincial University.
Toronto.
Manitoba Wheat -Mo. 1 $Northern, hitervi„,,,,,,,,d in regard to the effect
'$1,261/2; No. 2 Northern, L21½; No.
3, $1.141/2. I ,upon the teaching of "Medicine of the
' Manitoba oats --No. 2 OW, 551/2e; g;eruirous gifts of Sir John and Lady
No. 3 OW, 5.21/2e;,' extra. Na, „1 feed, Eaton and. of the Roekefeller Founda-
591/0.^c ,
Manitoba baidey--Norninal.
All the above track, Bair ports. -
American corn -No. 2 yellow, 66e,
Bay ports,
Ontario oats, -No. 2white, nominal.
• Ontario whea.t,--NoMinal. ,,, • e
Berley-Ne: 3 extra, test'47 lbs, or the organization .ot medical education
•better, 57 to 60e, according to freights and thb administration of the medical
metside. • '. • " departrnents in the General Hospital.
• Bucktvileat-N 2, 68 to 7k. This reoro-anizationso long desiXed
Rye -No. 2, 86 to 900.
Mailitaba 'fl"r`Fii.81 -Pats" '$.7.40; raenaddyPTs,ehroi-;:tufriits
s'iYsaosnudipmerpthoioesrsii:ttbyh:
'leonVg.hisitiahas1;
second pats., $6.90, Toronto.
,bulkOn,t.:.reaioll.ofiarocui,r-90- per cent. patent, former sYsteln
per diat-relee480: also made poesdble the segreg-ation,
• Millfeed--Del. ' Montreal freigelet; for better treatment and more care-
sbhaogrsts,inpoleurdecIton:, $B2r6a;ng,ordrfeteodn, isi$0211;', ffruomir
lobssenrilvaatrisiend;eefase.
p:tients sufferirlg
•This unifica-
$1:20 to,,$1,80-.•`' • tion and co -Ordination of all depart -
Baled hay --Track, Toronto, per ton,
$18.
, Straw -Car lots. per toe, $12. ments, ntedieine „surgery, gynaeaology,
No:2, $21.50 to $22; mixed;
etc., has naturally resulted in a more
Cheese -New, large, 21 to 22e;
efficient organization both in the
twins, 211/2 to 221/2e; triplets 2216 to Faculty of ,Medicine and in the Gen-
eral I-lospi.tal.
"Instead of clinical teaching being
supplanted by laboratory experimen-
tation, as was forecast by some who
failed to see the advantages of the
new system, the amount of time actu-
elly. spent by the students in clinical
25 to 33e; roosters, 20 to 250; fowl, stint; has been greatly increased and
20 to 28e; 'ducklings, 30 to 35c; turk- the clinical instruction, which for the
eys, 45 to 50c; geese, 22 to 27c. most, part is in the hands of men
Live poultry -Spring chickens, 20 whose time is, largely devoted to hos-
t° 25c; roosters, 14 to 16c; fowl, 1410 ed
week is adequately supplement
-
22,e; duegs
n, 22 to 2k; -tuek-eys, 45 dy
instrirction given by men whose
to 50ai 'gee's% 15 to 20C-
Margarine --23 to 25 • primary interests are those of the
Eggs -No. 1 storage, 52 to 58e; se-
e.
general practitioner. Indeed, there is
kat, storage, 57 to 58e; new /aid now in the Faulty f Medicine more
straights;' 86 to 88e; new laid, in dal -teaching than there has ever
ons, 88 to 90c. • ' •• ' befirt-e been in the history (if the
Beans -Can hand-pieked, bushel, preeincial, university. The same lab-
$4Mt:ple4.2P5r;luncintse-s's$Y3n1.51)0,to:e1.3.• 7_54.,2: under the alei system are now used to
oea.tories which were, in operation
Maple sugar. lb., 19 to 22e, . .
gale $2.50; per 5 hniP• 'gals supplement clinical teaching and to
Henev-60-30-1b. tins, 14% tc; 15c make it in3 every reeeeet more effec-
per lb.; 5 -2% -lb. tin, 16 to 17e per lb.; 'tive,
Ontairio edimb honey, per eloz, $3.75 -to "Without saying that the individual
$4.50. , teacher -or the practitioner in the hos,
eSraolced meats -Hams, med.., 24 to pitariebetter; as -such, than his pre -
2.6,c; *cooked ham, 36 to 40c; smoked decessor of a generktion ago, it is
roles, 23 to 24c; cottage rolls, 25 to
quite within the truth to say that the
26c; breakfast bacon', 25 to 30e• special
brand ,breakfast bacon, 30 to 35e;
backs; boneless, 33 to 36c.
Cured meats -Long 'clear bacon, 18
to 20c; clear bellies, 18% to 20%e.
Lard -Pure, tierces,. 14 to 141,e0;
tulos, 14% to 15e; pails, 15. to
prints, 16% ba 17e, shortening, tierces,
13e; tubs, 13%e; pails', 14c; sprints,
Choice heavy- steers, $6 to $8.50;
utdher steers, choice $5.75 to $6.50;
o, geed. $5 to $5.75; do, med., $4.50
o $5; do, come $3 to $4; butchers'
eifers, choice, $5/75 to $6.50. butcher
ows, choice, $450 to $5.50; clo, med.,.
3 to $4; •canners and cutters, 2.25
o $2.75; butehei. 'bug -e, good, $3.50 to
da, com., $2.50 to 13; feeders,.
,ocei, 900 lbs„ $5 to .45.50; d,o fair,
4.50 to $5; stockers, good, $4 to 4.50;
o, fair, $3 to $4; rriilkers, PO to $100;
Riggers, choice, $90 to $110; ealvee,
hoice. $9.50 to $12; de, niece, $8 to
10; do, cone, P to $6'; Iambs, good,
10.50 to $11.75; do, 'coin., $5.50 to $6-
eep, choice, $5 to $5.25; do, good, $3
to $3.50; do, heavy end bucks. $1 to
$2; hogs, fed and watered, $9.90 to
$10.25; do. f.o.b., $9.25 to $9.60; do,
country points,. e.9 to 9.35.
Oats -No. 3MoOnt.Wre.a,l' 57 to 571/se.
Elaue, Man. Spring wheat patc. firsts,
tion, Sir Robert"Falconer, President of
the University of Toronto, said,
"These gifts have made possible tho
appointm•ent of physicians and sur-
geons of established reputation who
.p.rellio devote. ahnest all their tirne to
.23%c; old, large, 25 to 26c; twins,
251,e. to 26%e; triplets, 26 to 27e; Stile
tons, new, 25 to 26e.
Butter --Fresh dairy, choice, 33 to
85c; creamery, prints ,fresh,
43 to 45e; No. 2, 40 t'o 41e; cooking;
26 to 300.
, Dressed poultry -Spring chickens
' figured in the end that', eneh of violent crinie in Winnipeg with, the
discus.sing the cmcial Shangtung prob•-
'Ion. 1
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-
. U. WOOD'S
NORWAY PINE
eYRUP
• $7.50. Rolled. oats, 90-1,b. 'bac, $'2•80 t
, $2.85. Bran, $24.25., .25.
The $26
15
Price, 35c. and 0.c. per bottle- (" Shorts.
It up Hey, No. 2, per ton, car lots, $2'7 to
enly by ' 'Is: Milburn Co., Linaitece, ee-
•Toronto, Ont. eetS.
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o. imis
general ce-operation, the team work,
:is such under the new system that bet-
ter resnits are secured both for the
patient in the hospital and for the
student under instruction.
. "In brief, the two magnificent gifts
refeered to have made poszible the
ine.ugeiration of a highly effective
organization in the Fa,culty of Medi -
'eine, -end the result of this is that
those who are ill are receiving, better
treatment, while at the same time
more 'thorough instruction is being
given to the young men and women
whose duty it will be,* as physicians
• and surgeons, bo improve the health.
'and save the lives a the sick and;
injured in this pra-vinee."
Victoria, B.C.-A new high-pewered
wireless station will be erected by the
Dominion Government shortie" an Lu-
lu 'eland. 'This station: will take care
of the commercial needs of Vancouver,
leaving the present Point Grey plant:
free to attend to the transportation
and ••shipping business.
SYSTE RUN DOWN
HEADACHES AND INZZY SPELLS.
ALSO CONSTRPATION
Mrs. E,rnest P. Trimper, Waldeck
Line, N.S., writes " My system was
greatly run down, my head would paiie
so 1 could not see, by spells, and I was
So dizzy, at times, I would have to Ile.
right down. I was also terribly troubled
with constipation: '
I got a vial of Millattrifs Laxa-Liver
Pills, and haven't had ally trouble since.
feel that anyone who suffere like 1 did
ean get relief by using your -pills."
are, witlietil n dotibt, the best liver
regulator on the market to -day, Over
Ss quarter of a s'entury's popularity'
prcees 11,is
l'fico, 25cu viaI ht. ,11l dealers, or
' maiiad d/eel on I eceipt of price by.
he T.l'dilItura do., Limited, 'Throat°,
Csa 1,