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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1922-9-14, Page 6SURROUNDED BY TURKISH FORCES SOUTHERN ARMY OF GREECE SURRENDERS Turks Within Forty Kilometres of Smyrna and on Cbast of Algean Sea --Hellenic Government Offers to Evacnate Asia Minor—Greek Loss During 'Offensive Esti. mated at About 50,000. A despateh from Constantinople saysi—A, telegram announces that at 11 o'clock Illaursda,y morning the Greek Govetninent made, -through the Allied High Commissioners, a req-eesr6 to the Angora representative in that city for an armistice, the Greeks to evacuate all Atha Minor. If the re- , quest Is granted it is .expected that !representatives of the two ,govern - merits will meet in a neutral zone to draw up the terms of the armistiee, It is not, however, considered likely that the Turks will grant an armistice, at least nail the present offensive has either reached its goal or has been checked, as 'there is still poasibility it might be on the outskirts of Smyrna, The l•atest telegrams state that the Turks are now within 40 kilometres of Smyrna and that the whole South- ern Greek army had been surrounded and, has surrendered. The Greek loss- es since the offensive •began ere esti- mated at 50,000, among whom 15,000 A wholesale concentration of Greek end Armenian refugees at Smyrna has oreated an acute crisis at that port. The number of refugees has already reached 200,000. Not only are many in danger of starvation, but their presence in the city threatens an epidemic of diseases. Relief organizations have been be- sieged with appeals to have all avail- able relief supplies, medicines and workers in the Near East shipped. to Smyrna. Latest advices received here from Angora confirm previous reports that the "Puricish Natiqualist army num- bers 350,000 men, Of this number 200,000 men are engaged in the (Arens- ive operations against the Greeks. The remaining 150,000 are being held in reserve, A telegram from Angora reiterate's the assertion that General TriconPis, the new Commander -4n -Chief of the Greek army in Asia Minor, and sev- eral other Greek generals were made prisoners by the Tanks on the even- ing of September 2. The despatch adds: "They were taken to the head- quarters of the Kenialist forces, where they were treated as guests of Mustapha Kemal Pasha." A despateh from Paris says;—A column of 4,900 Kernalist cavalrymen oecupied Bender, 30 .nailes from Smyrna/ and are radvancing on Smyr- na, says a lilavae despatch from sktlana, dated Thursday. The despatch adds that another 5,000 men, after taking Akhissar, 60 miles northeast of Smyrna, are speed- ing toward Maniss.a. Continuing, the despatch says that Noury Bey, a Captain of cavalry, has won a prize of 500 Turkish pounds and a flag offered by Mustapha Keine/ Pasha to the commander of the first column to reach the Aegean Sea, HARDSHIPS AMONG WORKERS IN OLD LAND Government Plans Aid for Unemployed During the Corning Winter. A tlespatch from London says :— England expects to be faced by the problem of dealing with 1,000,000 to 1,500,000 unemployed this winter. The cabinet committee which is handling the question has just completed the first stage of its investigation and has reported to the government and local authorities that it svill saf6nd £20,- 000,000 in public works to keep the men busy from October to May. The governments liability will be limited to about £850,000 and the local author- ities will supply the rest. Railroads alsro are planning to carry out improvements including the electrification of many London sub- urban lines while dock improvements, roads, Sewers, parks and playgrounds also will provide work. Originally the government paid 65 per cent. of the wages of the men employed in relief work but the fund for this purpose has been exhausted and its liability is limited to carrying loan charges for such work. Anxiety over the situation has in- creas.ed with the first weekly report made in some months showing that the number of unemployed has in- creased. There are now 1,333,700 actually registered as unemployed with perhaps another 100,000 working part time. The government is confin- ing its work to the really necessitous districts like Glasgow and Barrow-in- Furness ship building districts, tie Bradford weaving and the Greenwieh and Leyton engineering districts. It also further attempted to limit its assistance to districts where ex - service men in distress predominated, but found. that ex -service men pre- dominated in almost all necessitous districts. The scheme proiNHdes that ex -service men must be given prefer- ence up to 75 per cent. /of the men employed. Soldiers Wounded m the Great War The International Labor Bureau has completed its work on the number of soldiers wounded in the, war. The total figure amounte to 6,911,000, and the casualties of the various countries are as follows: France, 1,500,000; Germany, 1,400,000; Great Britain, 1,- t 170,000; Austria, 1,164,000; Italy,' 570,000; Poland, 320,000; United States, 246,000; Czeeho-Slovakia, 154,- 000; Canada, 88,000; Roumania, 84,- 000; Belgium, 40,000; the number of, Russian, Turkish and Bulgarian' wounded has not yet been ascertained.' The Central Information Office, in Spain, has given from the official list; of losses -down to December 31, 1921,1, for Germany, the n.urnber of wouncled in the army and navy as 4,246,874.1 Brit this nurriber was not yet final Anal in reality the real number is much less, as the separate woundings of each man had been aounted singly. British Goods to be Exhibited in Canada A despatch from London says:—•In- teresting evidence of British menu - lecturers' desire to improve their po- sition in the Canadian market is the formation of British Train Traders, Limited, which is about to send an exhibition train carrying samples of a great variety of British goods across the Dona -don, leaving Montreal at the end of Ocitober on a thin' lasting ten incaitlei, Two hundred and ten firms wilI participate in this exhibition. No Antidote for Wood Alcohol, Says Scientist A despatch from New York says :--Alexander 0. Gettler, pathological chemist and toxi- cologist of the medical exam- iner's staff, and professor of chemistry of New. York Uni- versity, gives this warning to the public: -Don't drink wood alcohol. There is no antidote. There ii is sufficient poison n one drink of wood alcohol to kill many,persons. 'Absorption in the human system is quick and. fatal. By the time the doctor has been summoned the dead- ly poison has been absorbed in the system._ , „ `The only remedy is, don't chink it. - Bays :anode is Best. Lord Shaw of Durnferiine, who, af- ter extensive travels in the United States and Canada, says:—"In the United States the middle west seems to have been given over to the genius of desolation; in Can,ada.it seems to have been given overrato the genius of fraitfulnes,s." "VM -71, ari(eine.a,se. 477, ria+irlriaaa„ii ..eitaisaSze, eia•risw -,a010.'etarft. eit ris:a SS& *aka. 15A-e-eteaisellP !RON DUKE With the battleship Ring George, the Iron Duke ha been ordered to Smy-rna, the seaport in of the salie. name, to proteet 13ritigh, interest;against the threatened attaak of the Turks. French United, States war ships are also proceeding to the„sieene. he province Italian and The Basic Facts of tile Reparation Situation Statistics on tile Re parations Question 1919 -'20 -,---Germany's total de'bt to the Allies is .$33,000,000,000. By Allied agreement France's share is 52 per cent, Great Britain's 22, Italy's 10, Belgium's 8, and the remainder divid- ed ,among Jugo-Slavia, Czecho-Slo- valtia, Roumania, Japan and Portugal. The Reparation Commission decided that the total debt should be divided into three categories: "A" bonds, $3,000,000,000; "B" bonds, $9,500,- 000,000/ and "C" bonds, $20 500 000 - 000. "B" rbonds bear 5 per cent. in- terest, plus 1 per cent. for a sinking fund. "C" bonds will be issued and bear interest when decided by the commission. Germany has not yet paid off the "A"` bonds, which she was ordered to dispose of at the rate ,of about $750,- 000,000 annually, either in gold or its equivalent, or goods. 1921—Up to December 31, 1921, Germany had delivered in gold, or equivalent, $260,354,750. This was used to pay arniy casts on the Rhine (except those of the United. States), to rehnburse certain advances by Great Britain to Germany and to sat- isfy a portion of the Belgian, priority. Indirect paynqents were also, made amounting ,to $35,688,250, bringing the total eash from Germany during 1921 to $296,043,000, Germany also furnished geod,s valued at $699,835,500 and the value of state properties in ceded territories was credited against reparations at the rough value of $626,085,500. Thus the Allies col- lected from Germany during 1921 $1,621,964,000. 1922e --During 1922 and up to March 22 Germany paid $,70,487,230,12. Here she -professed diffliallty, and was al- lowed to scale down cash payments for theiYear to $180,000,000. This left her Obliged to pay $109,512,769.88 in monthly= installments. On ruly 15 she had 'effected $42,162,769,88 of pay- ments, leaving a cash balance for the year of $67,350,000, which "She con- fessed she could not pay, due to the slump in the mark. 'Phis brought about the London con- ference, among Britain, France, Italy, Belgium and Japan—the Allied Su- premo Council—to decide whether a moratorium should be granted and what measures should be taken. Canada From Coast to Coast Charlottetown, P.E.I.—The influx of tourists froxn the United States to the island is unpreoeilented this year. As many as twenty-four cars a day have crossed the car ferry to Charlotte- town. Digby, N.S.—A greater future for Digby as a winter port- is forecasted in the addition of a spur railway line -nearing. completion. An additional line will, in the corning winter months Woodstock, N.B.—The quality of, New Brunswick potatoes has been at- tracting a great deal of attention from American buyers. A number of potato dealers from New York, Long Island, and other American points, have been in this vicinity lately, mak- ing investigations on both the Maine sideand in this prayince. The ex- perts find that the' New Brunswick potatoes excel all others in being free other link in the Atlantic -Pacific from disAase. use the port for -loading purposes. ' through, the, Canadian "Save the Chil- dren , Fund" .organization, and 'ten through the British organization. Regina,.rSask.---The Mennonites who left Saskatchewan ; for the Southern States would. like to get back to their Weatern,Canadienlarms, according to several- letters received by the Depart- ment of -Immigration h-ndi Colonization at Ottawa. Some-rof itaii+ese communi- cations are of the 'nature of appeals to be assisted back to their old farms. Calgary, Alta.—Western Canada will ship .considerably more wheat to Japan the coming season than former- ly, according to a sta,ternent made by a director of a large Japanese grain -firm at present visiting Alberta. , Malakwa, B.C.—The new Sicamons- Revelstolte highway was officially opened cluri.ng the week by the pre- mier of th,e province, completing an - highway., The new road is 58 miles cern to secure a. site in Sherbrooke tains and valleys .of transcendent +Sherbrookg e, Que.—The latest con-. long ,and fro:verses a region 'of moun- e with a view to establishing- a plant beauty, is the Canadian Brakesshoe Company, and itis 'predicted extensive develop- E norrno merits will reon loe under way. In- us ues of dustrirally, Sherbrooke , has experienc-1 Paper Marks at Berlin e& improved conditions this summer — and immediate prospects are bright. A despatch from Berlin say -s:-- Thronto, Ont.—Eighty theesandiBank notes totallin- g . twenty-three children are being fed by Canandaseiina,lbintil.rIniencir,uPcaltaetii'onniwithin hi av.th6ea lblerisnt tenput the famine area of Saratov, R and fifty-five Canadian Ititchens a.re daYs/ alechoisrdiinsglotop percent.Ge in o er tion in this distriet forty-five here: of which have been established many's entire note circulation. , spapers 13. a / , • Ger- Always be especially careful when opening a, tall box of ,matches. . Do not create 'unnecessary friction which might oaese an accidental fire in the box. Representatives of the Dominion Depa,rtrnent of Agriculture are en route to South America, to investigate, opportunities Inc establishing a mar- ket fol. pure-bred .Canadian cattle in the Argentine Republic, Rrazil and Uruguay., As the latter two countries are recognized by live stock author - as likely to be aniong the irra I portant sources el, the world's future1 meat supplies, a special study of the methods employed in breeding, feed- ing and •registering purebred cattle will be undertaken, Canada eontinues to cut down her expenditures abroad, and aocording to the eummarY of Canadian trade for the month (of July, 1922, at the same time is increasing her exports of do- mestic merchandise, Imports during July, 1922, were valued at $60,757,019, decrease of early $2,000,000 as corn - pared with the corresponding meal" a year ago., Exports of domestic mer- ahadise during the month under re- atiehis were valued at $70,430,235, as against $54,518,036 in the correspond- ing period of 1921. ‘"SCATt.' ter' Fine Arts and tne..uovern- ment. ANNUAL CASUALTIES OF„D EP 674,000, TONS Nations of the World Lost 559 Vessels During 1921 -- Greeks Suffer Most. A despatch from. London says The fleets of the world lost 559 ships occ 674;257 tons during 1921, according to a report just niade public by Lloyds Register of Shipping, the organization 'which reduces to statistias- the annual toll of Father Neptune standing guard ever Davy Jones's Locker. Mast of 'th'ese VSSelS were wrecitedor aban- doned at Sea. SOTtle were broken up ashore at too old for further use. Others vanished after departing from their ports. The destruction amount- ied to approximately 1 per cent, of tthenst.otal merehant marine of all na- tions. 01 the 559 ships, eydluding all of less than 100 tans, 344 ot535,537 tens were steamers and motor vessels and 215 of 157,720 tons were sailing boats. The record for the year, while heavy, was a return to normal com- pared with the wholesale siontings registereri during hostilities. At the height of submarine activities in 1917 2,605 steamers of 6,607,000 tont and 748 sailing ships of 520,000 tons were Tost at s -ea. Since 1918 the losses have re,i2nfifingedurfeasirly constant at 'about the l The atatistical tables give interest- ing data on the frequency of the vari- ous kinds of .disasters.. 'Straridings and kindred -casualties were the most pro- lific, accounting for 45.1-6 per cent: -of the losses to steamers and rnotorships and 388, -per cent: of the sailers. Cases of abandoned, foundered and missing vessels formed 30 per cent. of the a,team and motor ships and 351, per cent. of the sailers. The vesse,ls broken up and. disman- tled during 1921 aggregated 93,431 A ,study of the tables made public by Lloyds Register shows an, average for the world of less than 1 per cent., witli a proportion for Greece far be- yond the normal.. Loses of the Greek fleet .arnotinted to twenty-six sthin,1 of 52,363 tons, or 8.92 per cent. of the entire mercrhant marine. Many of these..ships were 10St 'Under 'Cirellin- StalICeS which le4 to drastic iirvestiga- tions by insurance companies. The average for the British Empire was slightly over 1 per cen.t. With the exception of Holland, with a loss of only 0.03 per cent, the American flag was the lowest in -the world, with casualtie-s of 0.45 per cent. • Outliving Oneself, - As men surveY the 1.3p.time1Ye paq$- ing of sueh as Rapert Brooke ',74)Y00 Kilmer, Alan iSeeger, there is inevitab- ly 'the poignant sehse ref frustration by death's hand, of dreams yet un- fulfilled of great , premise not come to ,the full flower of realization. has sometimes assuaged a, human %ea-. grief, when the youngawhom the gods love go from us "with the white rays 'of niorn upon their shields:of expec- tation," to reflect that these, at any rate, knew not the pain and bitterness that came to those who have outlived the flush of golden ,proiniee and beheld the dawn fade "into the light of coni - mon clay,",They never ,lost their ideals, I they never surrendered their illusions. The incommunicable raptures were not ended. They , went on from , strength to etrength, Still nursing the unconquerable hapo, Still clutching the inviolable shade , The hour when they said like the old guide, on the Matterhorn, "I can- not!" never came/ to them. They felt ,equal to anything; to the 1,ast they were daring, defiant, ready to address theiniselves to fresh adventures. We are not old until we reach the age when we aro content with our- selves" as we are. If we are never satiefierl—if we are still eager to learn—we never become aged. A MOTO splendid thhig to see than the radiant optimism, of youth is the undaunted ongoing or -those who laugh at the calendar because their wills are young, and --like Termyson's "Ulys- eses"---their purpose holds. It will not do to apendeswhat" are so dismally named "declining" years by review- ing, with a great regret, the bygone days. Why should they be years of -declining? Why may they not be years of accepting? Not a mere acquiescence, not a placid resignation, with hands folded -and feet altogether ioll.e. But an acceptance of the re- .sponsibilities 'referred to our costly experience and- OUT valuable discre- tion. The elders.may be spared those quick, physical errands that are bet- ter committed to juniors sound ef wind and fleet of lurib• But they have their own place, their, own iiS'e and their peculiar fitness. The lifht of a' luminous example , shines in sundown as at sunrise. The real readiness to die does not consist in waiting for the end, but in a joyful willingness to live, each day, Inc all that there is in it. The 'beloved,. ad- -mired "old" /people that we know are not timorous of the•open door.- They are not tired of life and they are not afraid of death --since., it admits to - "life that shall endless be." , Sending Oil by Cable. A- national conservatory of, music is bound to appear in Canada seine of these days, ' The Dominion is unique in not hav- ing some sort of an institution of fine arts allied with, OT supported. by, the Go-vernment, but -there is growing evi- dences that our statesmen and politi- cians will turn an attentive era to the 'call .some bright day not in the far distant fut-ure., Indeed, the actual conservatory may come sooner than we -expect, though not probably in the way that musicians might anticipate. Private initiative ha,s achieved most things in Canada, and it has done a great dread in supplying us with /insti- tutions of learning in the musical field that are of high quality. But it is perfectly possible for a national in- stitution to be established without in the slightest degree conflicting- -with private institutions.already establish- ed. It Should, in fact, add to their patronage by centreing ,public atten- tion more defirritely upon music and giving music as a whole a 'higher standing in the nairid-s of the people of the country. The Gov -ethyl -lent - supported institutions of other coun- tries are not criticized as interfering with private instruction—rather they appear as giving a stimulus to study which must redound to the benefit of all concernedin the art. , Every music lover in Canada should •see to it that our legislative assem- blies take more than a passing inter- est in 11111Sie. NG Government to -day 'is acting in the best interests of its people by ignoring the cause .of music. W;hy not a Department of Fine Arts at Ottawa? Irrigs.ted Land Yields, ' Phenol-nen-alCrops A despatch from Lethbridge; Alta., says:—One hundred and three bushels of oats to the acre was the yield of a twenty -acre field of irrigated land on the Raymond Agricultural School De- monstration Farm. I Chinese Children Refuse to Attend Victoria School A despatch from Victoria, B. C., says:—Chinese school children are on strike, refusing - to attend classes unless placed on an equal plane with white pupils. In the past 'Chinese boys and girls mingled with whites in " schools here, but the white parents protested against such an arrangement, and the schol board decided to I separate the Orientals A spe- cial school was built for the Chinese, but they refuse to en- ter it. The biggest, shipment ever made out of the Grand Lake coal area of NeW Brunswick in one day was made recently, a train of 38 cars of coal arriving. at' Fredericton' over the Fredericton a nd Grand' Lake Goal and' Railway Company, fromMinto. , Toronto. , 111anitolaa wheat, old cr,op—No. 1 Northern, $1.15; No. 3 Northe-rn, $1.07%. New 'crop, No. 1, $1.13. Manitoiba- oats—Nominal. Manitoba barley—Nominal. - All the above traek, bay parts. American corn—No. 2 ythlow, 80e; No. 3 yellow, 79o, all rail. Barley—No. 3 extra, test 47 lbs.' or better,,55 to 58c, according to freights outside. ' Buckwheat—Nominal. Rye ---No: 2, 65 to 70c.• . Millfeed—Del. Montreal . freight, bags included: Bran, per ton, '$22 to $23; shorts, per ton, $24 to $25; good feed flour, $1.70 to $1.80. Ontario wheat --New Ontario wheat, No. 2, 95c to $1, at outside points. Ontario No. 2 white oats, New, 33 to 35c. Ontario corn—Nominal. Ontario flour -1St pats., in jute sacks, 93's, $6,80 to $7.10 per barrel; 2nd pats. (bakers), $6 to $6.30, Straights bulk, ,seaboard, $4.30; Toronto basis. $4,25 to $4.50. Manitoba flour--ast pats., in jute sacks, $7.20 per barrel; ancl pats., Hay—No. 2, per ton track, Toronto, $16; straw, $11, carlias. Cheese—New, large, 18 to 1.81/2e; twins, 10 to 191,c; 'triplets., 20 to 20%c. Old, large`, 25c; twins, 24 to 243/20. tc.'stiltons, 25c. Extra old, large, 26 to 27c. Old Stiltons, 24e. Butter -L -Finest creairiery prints, 39 to 40e; ordinary creamery prints, 36 to 38e; No. 2 creaniery, 33 to 34c. Dairy, 29 to 31c. Cooking., 2.1e. Dressed poilltry—Spring chickens, 32 to 38c; roosters23c; fowl, 24 to 27e; ducklings, 300; turkeys, 35 to 40c. Live poultry—Spring thickens, 25e; roosters, 17 to '20c; fowl, 20 to 25c; ducklings, 30c; turkeys, 30' to 35c, . Maigarine-20 to 22,c. Eg.ge—No. 1 candled, 33 to 31c; se- lects, 37 to 38c; cartons, 41 to 43c, Ben n sei-Can ad i an, h and -picked , bus., 24.25; primes, 23.75 to $3.90. Maple pro duets —Syr up, per tin o. $2'20: per 5 imp. gals., $2.10; maple sugar, lb., 20e, '' —Phila,delpistra Ledger lioney---60-16. tins, 13 to 13%o per a '• Mt.ti`MIXV I 77*".• / Many of the great oilfields are situ- ated' n.ear -Coasts where the, waterea., shallow for several miles out to se,I1*.,n This means that large tankers cannot come close to the shore to take their precious cargo .on board. The aid method, which, was very oostilly, was to dredge a channel and build a special harbor; but nowadays, as the tanker' c,annot come to the oil, the oil is taken to the tanker. Enormous pipe lines, some of them six miles in lengthand from 8 in. to 10 in. in diameter, are laid cut from the shore. A buoy is attached to the far end, and when an oil eltip arrives she hauls, up the pips and-fixets it, to her tanks. Then she signals to the . ahore that she is ready. Pumping he, gins at once, and scan she h full. She then seals, up the end of the pipe, throw s It overboard and steams away. An ingenious naret,hc,d has .beeu,de- viared for alloWing ,a tanker to teansfer, fuel to an oil -burning steam -3e whilst at sea. If an ordinary pipe were run out between the two it -svcula soon break, owing to the, pitching and roll- ing of the vessels. Even. if eeveral. tow lines weie Used the proceee•woruld be difficult. Now pipe and cable are made into one. The tube is ences-eci in litany stra.nde of steel wire. The big steam- er takes the tanker in to, and ell is pum.perd th.rongh the pipe which rare, through the liiicititke of tine cable. X-ray in France. 1:3._;505-t20,1A:31b_7.5t_ -1.4i/2 to 15Y2c Per lb.; Ontario comb honey, per dozen, Potatoes—New Ont,ariese$1 to $1.15 'Smoked rneats—Hans,' med.., 32 to 35c; cooked: ham, 46 to 50e; smoked rolls, 28 to 31c; cottage rolls, 36 to 38c; breakfast bacon, 32 to 35c. spe- cial brand breakfast bacon, 41 to 43e; hacks, 'boneless, 39 to 43e. Cured meats—Long clear bacon, $17'; lightweight' rollrs, in barrels, $48. heavyweight roll.s. $40., Lard ---Pure, tierces, 16c; tubs, 17c; 173/2c; prints, 180e. Shortening tierces, 14 to 14%e; tubs, 14%c; pails, 15e; prints, 17c. Choice heavy steers, $7 to $8; but- cher steers, choice, $6,50 to $7.15; do, good, $6 to $6.50; do, ine.d., $5.50 to $6; do, corn, $4 to $5; 'butcher heifers, choice, $6.50 to -$7; do, riled., $5 to $6; do, corn., $4.50 to $5; butcher Cows, choice, $4.50 to $5.50; do, med., $3.50 to $4; canners and cutters, $1 to $2; butcher bulls, good, $4.50 to $5.25; do, earn., $2.50 to $3.50; feet:lois., good, 5 to . o, fair, $5to $5.50; stockers, good, $.1•50 tO' $5.50; do, fair, $3 to $4.50; milkers, $70 to $90; springers, $80 to $100; calves, choice, 10 to $11.5,0; do, riled., $8 to $9; do, ' $3 to, $7; spring lambs, $11 to $11.25; sheep, choice, $5 to $6; do, good, $3.50 to $4.60; do, corn., $1 to $3; yearlings, choice, $6 to $7; do, cone, 34 to $5; hogs, fed and watered, $12.50; do, f.o.b., $11.75; do, country • pointc, 1.5O. Montreal. , Oats,' Can..1,11estn No. 3, 54c..lino.ur, Maii.,spring Wheat pats., firsts, .$6.80: 'Roiled oats., bag 90 lbs., $2,9,9 to, $3, Bran,$2t25, ; Ilay,,,No„ 2, per ton, car late, $18, to $19. Cheese, finest ea:sterile, i614c, But: - ter, chorcest e,reaniery, 35%.C. Eggs, selected, 'Potatoes', per bag, ear lots, 75 to '80c, Cattle( ,canners, $1; ,Conimron $2.50 to $2.; „conintotr+bullis,-$2 to $2.50; good dillt-fed yeals, ,$10:. good, OnlVes, $8 to. $9;. do, corn., $6.50 ,up; 0 g.$09,50' ,to $10; el • 1 t $9' d0 ' ; m„ $7. do, senit211.,s7/5.,$(,3: hogs, :selects,: $12,50 toi For m-edical uses :Frell,;11 have develo.ped. an xray outfit that eeti be used .at a patient's home-, being ,..tup- plied 'With euree1n.t hy the motes track , transporting -it, in which peotogr,apirs can be develope,c1,very quickly, Some people grow with responsibil- ity; others swell. : urmeseee:snat e 1132evyearby thtwingwatIone11ethea also en As aegaraa' materiale. of .constitie- tieri, 135 ve,sseislof 360,440 tOTIS "Were of steel, 45 of 46,206 of'five of 2,5-08 tene.of ferro-concrete and 75 err 49,829 of wood and coinposite. Ottawa, Ont.—Every man in Can- ada who wants work can get. it, ac- cordieg to managers of labor 'bureaux cello are 'adrvertieingt, far men. Thei o is p.lenty of stork, it is claimedand more jobs than there are applicant, for them, The majority of vacant pc-. zitions is for laborers thou-gh the sit- uation regarding skilled labor is stated to be brighter. Haileybury, Ont—Operations have commenced at the new, mill of the Ternisikaming Pulp and Paper Co., re- eentlY .erectord, at a cost of approxi- mat-ely $1,000,000." The pliant 'will have a daily production ref Tarty „tons ol•g;dtoa. uri sship Points in the.otate of New York,