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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1922-9-21, Page 2Greer and Armenian Quarter s in iluiTA Well as Most of , the European Section, Iuv °lying Mil tons of Dollars Logs—Turkish Distric t Remains Untouched.' ' A olespateli from Constantinople Foreign dest-royera in the harbor says: --Fire started. the inieu Ua quarter of Snoyitna o. Iiirednesclay and 'spread roipid.ly through the rest of the :town, bun -ring most of the European 'section, and destroying, the American Consulate and. the theatre where Ani. - ••i ericaii refugees , were congregated. kept searchlights playing on the crowds Ilion°, the quays all night to give the 3'eetigee•s every possible pro -I 1 tection. A cordon of Turkish regular troops was' also thrown around them. The Turkish quarter was touched. It was the first day since the 1 The Armen , e,,,cd ian bazaar was pi occupation that there was a south - before the flames reached it and eom- east wiptl, which would blow- the Pleted the destrection. The G -reek flames westward instead of into the quarter was also destroYed. All the Moslem area of the city, - evacuated to Athens. ably heavy. Allied soldiers foiened a fire brigadel The British inhabitants of Smyrna, but the conflagration is 'beyond their with a few exceptions, were safely1 control. The property damage, it is evacuated aboard ,warships on Wed -I estimated, will Tea& into the Millions. nesday evening. The steamships Winona and Edsall I have left for S'al-olikca With betveeent A desPatch from Snayrua says:— [foreign Wonvell. and children are being American financial lessee are prele- ' *(04..1 0064T TO ASriAr\ED 10 ASK VOZ NNN' •,Dt6 tof • 1.11(E. `COO t fiebt G- t Britain I 6. -re eta-) •••••0.1.0e...S STAGGERS THE IRISH PEOPLE '0 7.1t; Kernalists 1Vlassacre 2,000 Greet( Soldiers A despatch from London says: --- A Reuter despatch COSts $1100C0Ca—Long List of Outrages Perpetuated 'day, says the French steamer - casiies and manors Burned All Over the South—One Fire from Athens, dated Wednes- ly Irregulars. ' , Lamartine arrived there with A despatch from Field- ' Gene:ral •Major Ersitilie diner's,' De Iralara's i1n5,c01.4fdrieitiit:gaeeGs rfere°kInJOSUmrnyarini:t. Bead,quarters, sontbera Arrai, Linier. chief lieutenant, came to be dubbed The journalist asserted that iek, says:—The mad craze for destrue- the director el higieriells retreat • Met - tion by burning old castle, and nianur The youngest soldier of the line op- Most Rev. Chrysostr, Met- eratirig with General O'DuffY's Na- ropolitan of the Gteeg. Chtic1-1 flounced campaign of terroriem to Private Patrick Burke,,Tourteen years „ „. in Smyrna, and the Armenian houses by the irregulars in their an- tioaalist forces out of Limerick was `a`bhriinagftehredialjiiingalgisselsi bwai, jeike'h' is iPuiliallhgn almost oBiud;koef ilco.isdliatay ,,.eirea„aerr,e, seeeloweiiclee Mtoesitirs• divieeretrdo,paonlidtatnhahtotthhewi(eerernamhustr: stagger the treasury of the infant lla- eredit as a-bagler in the British army massacred about 2,000 Greek tion when settlement finallY is made. before he joined up in Dublin at the , All over the South of Ireland are th6, -time of the Four Courts fighting. At soldiers, whose bodies were stark and charred walls of ,flue °id „the taking of Buttevant, in County thrown into the sea. k egsivtteitne stoatnhclentioatzohr whiOleUlsietsh, eNVlnchNvIrregularsei•ecoleoetie, ameaasltferinBuarkfea,rmfirlfiugo„Idat, :11.1.1ti p feclITS i was no noir° MiGnitgchele'lsteton:bnleC. astlea, i-cillesethuies- wtoPmjaunstcaasugthlte onbuzz alolr bgbulbl°etsinhgegalinl-. -- Red Blood. SaW that their position within them tunately missed an isolated country , toric seat of the Dowager Countess of There is one town just outside of Red blood runs thicker than blue. Kingston, is atypical act o -f incencliar- Limerick which • almost justifies tile The' first phrase connotes virile vigor, ism 'which marked the ciePartiu'e 01 'claims of thee who defend the alc1' stalwart niarduiness and' masterful - 1 ness the aggressive stride Or the de - the mutnieers from that town. •Its feudal system of landlordism, This is, . , , ,•,, rn b"Writesdh"cellXu7satngi'tvoe 171.P °3ilesa` '' - ri • 1 f c,,,et titccilne several. sborie$ were tole cense - to Turkey. It is Turk,ey's capital, and, 8 ,,,Inue.1,4„. ,,, 8.,4_,11 destruction represents a loss, Maud .. i 11 g /priceless furniture, ,paintings and P ,mincl with whom to think is act: Mare which is maintained albgether' ell-ve hand of •one who knows his 6 400 and 800 refugees eaoh. • ,, -. . i ------ ------------- -- -;-"--e-=-7='---tt -------- u tentraople ,, we wish it peacefully, if pos•siele, If VO,FIRVIA. 'CI :v..*?ini Woli406, 11/ vtuto through the munificence and patron- , heirlooms ?lines mdeta orioitu.noaf$tilee00t.;?e0a.0s,lawrYhieohf 'ciliesg etl nestles ctlhoes etaorl the gl)k..tttlen,w1. Laiyv enof at'illicle languidTllsee ol'Ig.den'1):1:111;taY's e'; steheern sp atloe is. tn,aelirci'vol,1°1:. With these words' Mustapha Kemal Halifax, N,S.—"Halifax Films" hes twenty million annually following the . the Irish Free State, once it is organ-. ancient maxim'. house weech has been d'ee°r°usiles$ of one who thinks that not, We Will fight." . .._-..—-- . a ileirkish regulaT army 'sergeant, or Pasha announced the next alni of the been organized to 'produce Canadian inerease to the lain, izci'It the home of the Wyndham lanai y, oi, the most Perfect flower in life's gar.; ing ,sniael tins, evidently eontainingl crushing defeat of Greece are en route rector's includes the Minister of Public the stiffening of prices, which ranged -romantic steries of conflict and battle, towered parish 'church testify, The ing the origin of the fiee, . The most reliaible is that of Minnie B. Mills, head of the Anierican C01- • lecte. Institute, who declared ebe saw of • ficer, enter a building where the 'Turkish Nationalist army. Already motion. pictures from the -siece s Winnipeg, Man. --A f‘ntitee of the It is dOulbtful if there is anywhere centuries, ' Thirteenth Century shortay after ihrolie into flames. to the Ismid front, while Kemal Pre- Works and Mines, President of the from 10 to 50 Per cent. higher. Cross —a region more full of historical as -I, town is one lone street of pretty, firet nainee were seen. He was carry- manY units which had Part in the Canadian writers. The Board of DI- recent fur auieti'en.sale held here was in. all Ireland—a country so rich in, sLerinee glass windows in the square_ &wine to thie et will be impossible Pares his demands Board of Trade, Director of the Hall- fox recorded the largest advallee,1 soeiations than that round about thatch -roof eottawes ea' ch with its to estimate the numbe.r of Armenian MustaPha Kemal is a nlan of inde- fax Herald, President 'of the Commer- while mink sold 30 per cent. higher. he might be 40 Years old He has The first production will be kreclerick blonde hair, blue eYes, is of medium William W.allace's "Viking Blood." height, and tangle wiry frame. So- Fredericton, N.B.—The picking and cially, he is courteous; personally, he maeketing of the succifient blueberry is kindly—not the tall type one as- is an important industry in certain 'saciates' with great military lea.ders. parts of New Brunswick. Recently He is no swashbuckling General, 'but forty families comprising some three hunclre and 'fifty persons, migrated from their settlement to Restigouche County to pick berries for shipment. This temporasy employment is found decidedly profitable. Sherbrooke, Que.—Operations have cammenced at the plant of the Man- ganese and Steel Foundry, Limited, and the mill is now turning out cast- ings. The furnace is eapable of handli 0- one ton at a heat and three and' Greek dead bodies, many being terminate age. He might be 30 or cial Club; Ernest Shipman and others. More than 8400,000 was realized On made a thorough investigation before Prince Albert, 'Sask.—The Indian - the flanies'dreve themfte 'safety, esti- Paying Treaty Party under W. N. nr.atect the dead at nearly 1,000. How Taylor, of the Department of Indian in the 'burned houees, Dr. Post and other American workers who had • the sale. The principal buyers were local men. many were killed during the night, Affairs art Regina, which has been ab - and how many were trapped in the 'burning area, is unknawn. a man of simple tastes and habits'. Many Railway Shopmen Return to Work A despatch from Chicago says:—While more than fifty • railways—counting -subsidiar- French Statistics Show Fall in Birth Rate A despatch from Paris says:—The anxiety of the French public over the constantly decreasing birth rate was intensified lay the publication of the :mamma am .rf•• latest statistics of t1'4e ten largest ies—had to all intents and ri' • 9 heats can be run in a day. This ca- been about a. 30 per cent. increase also purposes, macte their peace pacitY is expected to be reached within in the entries for these fairs, shown' g French cities, showing the birth rate had dropped off 10 per sent. in a single . . . sent over two menthe on a 1,050 mile tour into the northern area, reached here safely. A successful trip is re- ported. The Indian nopulation in the areas visited had suffered losses by. influenza 'during the year but the to- tal population showed an increase over last year's figures. Edmonton, Alta.—A total of 129 school fairs is being held in various sections of the province, M compar- ison with 89 held last year. There has with the striking, railroad shop- the course of the next few weeks, as the great interest that the school ehil- year. the company has a number of excel- dren in the rural -districts are taking In Paris alone for the first six men 0/1 Thursday, a much months of this year there were 24,000 1- • • till holding • hirths, compared with 27,500 for the rger gr°uP was s aloof, and reports were that same period last year. A similar de- crease was noted in Lyons, Bordeaux, many would reject the Bald - Lille, Strasslaurg, Nantes; Toulouse more separate agreement plan. Announcement, was made by and fSt. Etienne. Only Marseilles and Nice approached last year's figures. \ At this • rate the -decrease in the J• E. Gorman, President of population for the year in the entire the Rock Island, that his road • country will reach the appalling total will not agree to the proposals. of 80,0.00. This has inspired- The Matin to renew its insistence that the 0 "public authorities and Parliament .. — occupy themselves immediately with Value et Quebec crop this national question, for there cer- Set at $225,000,000 A despatch from Quebec says:—In an official statement issued this Prehnunary reports indicate a- -crop morning, G. E. Marquis, chief statis- of 70,000,000 bushels of wheat for tician of the Province of Quebec, esti- • Manitoba, with an average of from mates that the Quebec 1922 crop will 18 to 20 bushels per acre, according attain a 'value of $225,000,00u, as C0311- tO J. H. Evans, Dep. -Minister of Agri- pared with $2194000,000 last year. culture. In 1921 the average was This slight difference with an increas- , 11.53 bushels, with a total crop of • ed -crop is due to the falling off in 39,053,980 bushels- • prices of agricultural products. lent orders booked up, and prospects are stated to be bright. Timmins, Ont—It is reported that during the 28 -clay period ended Rug- ust 12, the Bolinger Consolidated mill- ed the highest tonnage of any four weekly period. in its history, the total for the neriocIlb.eing 119,572 tans, or an average of 4,270,.tons a rday. Pre- liminary arrangements are being made to increase the capacity to ap- proximately - 8,000•tons every twenty- four hours. Production is now well over ane rnil•lion dollars a month, and the mine appears to be looming up as likely to hit an ultimate stride of den is the pink of propriety. Reol blood would rather do than say; it would perform instead of preach; it fights shy of -the namby-pamby, the ultra - fastidious, the hothouse -bred and the luxUrious. It cannot breathe the at- -erick. The entire area has been a rose g;ard en and atmosphere of guret1 ineeplere of the boudoir; it loathes battleground for centuries. Its hills comfort and lenty. To furniZh em- . and valleys and pleasant downs an ployment for the villagers 'Lord Dun- fe'offreenyleilil,affio tBhleueaubciecISotdorsi.°°kIst cbaarc'e-t and P ' fells which so recently echoed and rel. raven built a model eivarette factory, ' _, approached through rose arbors over too much for heraldic emblems': it can find these in a pick and shovel, at flagstone walks bordered by miemon- ette and pretty peeennial plants with in a throttle or a tiller, behind a counter, 7 a riot of blossoms. in a warehouse or a mill or a freight Everything about the place denotes depot. It would not soil its delicate the paternal care of the lord of the fingers carrying packages -or muss its manor and fortunately the manor good clothes shouldering a burden. But the man can be gentleman too. It does not prove muscular fibre. or • moral tisssue to be defiant of the amenities. A Western miner was in- vited to an evening. wedding in an Eastern city. His host, as the hour of the ceremony drew near, sought out the guest, in great trepidation lest the post chapels were fired along with the . hardy laborer should not don the barracks. While most of these bar- proper garb for the affair. He went racks were prosaic in appearance and . . to the door of his room and knocked, • in their associations sonie of then. had . prepared to offer him a dress S.uit and. a touch of romance about them. The all that gpee therewith. To his sur- prise, he found the "roug,hrieck" im- echoed to the 'sound of arms, have re- sounded not seldom to the cry of bat- tle in the centuries that have gone before. The field walls • and hedgerows, gi,een to the very doors of the tiny whitewashed eottagie.s ei.,hich • every- where dot the landsc.ape, afford just the kind of cover for ambushes such as those which the Irregulars pursued here as their agressive military tac- tics. From safe and sheltered retreats behind these solid bulwarks of Inas- ofirY which divide the fertile fields of the countryside, from copses of trees and the heavier growth on neighbor- ing hills, -the Irregulars with a mini- mum of risk could open fire upon the column of General Michael Collins' forces, not often with deadly effect, house was spared when the Irregulars were driven out of it and out of the The ruined military barracks which one sees wherever, the Irregulars have bean in this part of Ireland. are gaunt and grim shells of what they were a few weeks ago. In some.instances the fairs. In the Clabsholm district' but with n persistence thatbecame all barracks in Clonthel was one of the inaculately array, ed, reading 'Scott's alone it is reported that there will be 'the more annoying since the a.ggres- latter., for it was here that Laurence "Lady of the Lake." - about 35,000 entries a exhibits, and in another district about 20,000 entries are reported. Vancouver, B.C.—A report from Yokohama states that the first ship- ment of Canadian"-fla.x seed to Japan reached therein goodeecondition, and was transhippedf by coast \steamer to eel's were rarely exposed_ to danger. If the Regulars pursued their march into an adjoining town reported to be an Irregular "stronghold" it usually was to find that the Irregulars had de- camped, leaving the charred walls of burning -barracks oroa.ncient castles as the certain evidence of recent occu- Sterne, author of the immortal "Tris- tram Shandy" and "The Sentimental jotirney," was born. His father -'vas an officer in. the army andf was Ma- .tioned at Clonmel in 1713 when ihe sari Who- was to become' world -known Bis..mather was an Irish idling tailor's -dummy that wmeet. It will not -do to assume that the woodlander, the boatman, the field engineer, the man whose "calling" is • into the ,open, cannot easily assume "these troublesome disguises that wee . e. woman"named Nuttal, •.Ae. wo, ear" and look as enteel as ii.W.. e f - and it was t° He knows the value' on occasion, of - o , the Kodaido, where it is being sownpancy as well as the Irregular idea of the maternal side that Sterne owed good clothes, but hedoes not make , by way af experiment by one of thWhen a scoref tawns had the playful humor which been el warfare. the mistake of thinking that th. fa- largest growers of flax in 'Japan. If been taken from the Irregulars with- enjoyed by se many generations of cade is of greater consequence than the results prove satisfactory, there out a show of defense on .their part, readers. e.,.... ' the Man behind it, He fdoes not think will no doubt be further business in , - much of the sort of aristocracy that 0.. quaint experience until one becomes prates of ancestry, and keeps refer - this DrOdllet • NETHERLANDS NOW CHANGING POLICY OF WARTIME ISOLATION • Alarm Clock Uses the Human Voice A _despatch from Paris says:—One of the most remarkable novelties shown this year at the Concours Le - used to 'it - . . ring people to the naine and Same of • - ':—' one who did: his work, and passed on On an eao•verage the Mood flows 168 to his reward a great many years ago., miles through the body in a day. .,1 'A red-blooded man who produces can Su ' , ' H. Fairfield, -'0'f,, and does "put it all ov...-ri' the bine,- th eppeorni,ininteiondenEntVxDec.imentai Farm at blooded ' sybarite who merely frivois pine es an. alaeni 'clock fitt.ect with- Lethbridge, Predicts that without and orates,• A deseatch from The Hague says.— ma be antici ated The runic)). 'hat i• ei • • • Y P • , • ceap eagni. On 'going to bed, the ,Pubt the op to be harvested this The object of Queen Wilhelmina's the Queen is also looking for a eandi- owner shouts into the clock- the hour year in the Lethbridge railway di - visit to the three Scan-dinavian .coun- tries has paus-ed much speculation in . and Foreign Minister Van karnebeek Holland, especially since Prince Hero y date for little Pri-ncess Juliana's hand at which he desires to be roused next vision will approach the 30,000,00 is denied. morning and the diaphragm repeats bushel mark in wheat. it will be the Benefits of Sehoel Music. Speaking of the Queen's visit, The he words in due course. To be third largest crop in the history of --- Greene Amsterdamer points -----------------------------ws oist be Southern Alberta. In school,• music should play an - singing the -appreciation of niusfic ",....„11 h ) 1.72 y Lea g Keg ilenput t study of niusical -instruments, origin IIAJOR BLAKE FACtS DIFFEnuLTAIES - - - Netherlands has endeavored to pursue -th row conside-red betthr to have • accompanied her MaJestY. The. the Netherlands GovernMent has up • it 114 AIRPLANE TRIP AROUND WORLD a policy of•isolation for the last three its hands free in view of the conetant- years,• and since the war to detach ly changing political -constellation. herself from the former neutral bloe The paper continues that the Scan- • Adespatch from London says:— civil aviation advisory board makes it with which I-Iolland had become iden- dinavian countries and' the Nether - The, long quiescent aia-ship-versus-air- clear that there is no early prospect tified• It ,is, howwer, possible that lands 'have many common interests plane controversy has been revived. by of an airplane mail to India. becoming Van Karnebeek, who ardently sup- and desire to safeguard them. ported this policy of isolation, has . the first report, just published here, of the civil aviation advisory board on Irnperial Air Mail Services. The main -subject of this firet report is the prac- tical steps to be taken towardthe establishment of a. London to India ' air mail. Publication of the report •ebincides very nearly with the arrival at Calcutta of Major Blake and his flying companions on the 30,000 -mile least difficult stage of a main airway by airplanes only. f a profitable proposition. The report recognizes at the outset that an "All Red" -route cannot. yet be mapped out from England to rndia, though it an- • ticipates that this soon will be • achieved by the construction of a ma- chine which can make the trip from London to Malta, via Paris and Mar- seilles -1,330 miles—in one flight. E then however, it does not sug- airplane trip around the world, who gest a commercial basis for operation now ace net the of their journey—that from Calcutta to Vancouver. The London to Calcutta flight has in the meantime not been without its lessons. A considerable delay at Mar- seilles followed the airmen's success- ful hop there from the Cre3rdon aero- drome outside London. From Mar - :sallies they fiqW to Brindisi, crossing ; the Apenines at a height of 101000 feet, -and, from Brindisi, across the Adriatic to Athens. The next stage removed one of the chief obstacles in -the whole journey to Cal coutta. This was the 500 -mile flight in a land ma- chine across the Eastern Mediterran- ean from Athens to Sollum in North- west Egypt. Major Blake des-cribed it as the Most dangerods stage of the expedition to Calcutta. "All subsequent sea crossings," he verote home, "will be made on a sea- plane, when a forced descent will not involve the practical certainty of drowning," as was the case during thie dash across the sea, More diffi- culties had to be overcome during the flight through the Fenian 01.11f, when, the intense ',heat caused frequent an gine trouble. The broad moral seerns , to be that a flight from London to Cal- cutta, while it is practicable, is not exactly a joyride. In line with this, the I:Overt of the evetoolteieleelleitaii.e.„ found it too precarious -now that Europe is in a state of political and economic upheaval, and considers a renewal of neighborly relations ad- vantageou-s. In any event, the Queen and Prince received; a most enthusiastic welcome in Denmark and Sw-edan and a similar welcome is expected in Nor- way. If nothing else results, a strengtheningof commercial relations ..• iinp.ortant part. It should incilnde • • • ,. . ...• .. - .ToroMo. - - 'Smoked meats—lianas, mod, '28.th Eve school in cenaea'."should'''' . Ont. barley., ---Na. -3 ex-tra• test, 47 30c; cooked ham, 44 to 47.c.,' 'smoked .organize an 'orchestra for the benefit . lbs. or 'better, 55 to 58c, outside. rolls, 26 to 28c; cottage rolls, 35 •to Ont. buckwheat --No. 2,1. - , - 38-c; breakfast bacon, 33 to 35c; ape- "sohfouthe kwn'llOw61.ee' little about the e children ; . , Ont. oats—No. 2 . white, 33 to 35c. cial brand breakfast bacon, 38 to 40c should - Ont r-ve—No. 0 12 to 67c, ouLeicee. backs, ibeneless 39 to 43.c composers so that they will be more , . Ont. Wheate--N_. a evinterinew crop, ' Cured me.ats—Long 'clear bacon, interested. in their music. • UDO J.+ in settling their country nien in West- ff A party of Hebrideaninterested quoted at 99 to 97o f ob $17." 'liglifiVelight rolls in bbIS. S48. IVIairy of the grand operas; for in, s shipping p-oints.• hea.vyw-ei.ght. rolls,..$40. stance, were written very long ago. ' ern Canada are looking over.ProsPects. Western barley--C.I.F., .bay ports, Lard—Pure, tierees, 16c; tubs, yet the'Y still continue to Moye their in Alberta. They represeot a nurnber•No. 3 CW., noininal. 161,hc; Pa-lls, 17c; 'prints' 18c' SilicT,te-flistenei•s, Why is this so? Because No 1 Northern $1.06%. No. 3 North- 121/2 to 13c; pails, 13 to 13%-c; . -6 . . . ern, $1.0., prints Corn—Anerican, track, Toronto,1 Chaice heavy steers, $7 to $8; but- oPeras,' . No. 2 yellow, 80c; No. 3 yellow, 79c.• cher steers, choice, $7 to $7.50; do, The ancient instruments are also Millfeed—Car -lots, del. Montreal, good, $6•25 to $6.75; do. med., $5.50 to interesting to studer, as they were freight, bags included; bran, Per ton, $0.50: do, com••, $4.50 to $5.50; butcher originals from which our modern in - ,221.25; shorts, $28.25, heifers, choice, 36.50 to $7.25; do, struments were developed. extra No. 1, $16 per ton. Loose hay, to $5; UtC. er co. s, choice, 34.50 t HaY----Baled hay, track, Termit°,' flied- $5.50 to $6'25; d°' e°111" $4.50 Every child in Canada shotild lisien to rnusic often d 1 I 't an earn to ove ; , .of easter farmer's .andYfislierrnen. It is. • Westeim wheat--.-C.I.F., bay 'ports, ening, tierces, 12 tolO,123/4c; the doinposers had wonderfui, talent believed that already options on some Alberta property have been secured. The party is also to inspect land's in British Columbia. , . , , A view or ConsPantinople, •wherd iorios •iven the; Turk Nationalists o preserving order in LITE; city and of 0 oik•A ^0, • ,Sfal 153/ t v and inspiration when writing these No. 1, per ton, $16 to $18. '3550; mec., , canners Flour ---Ontario pats., bulk, sea-, and cutters,- $1 to $2; butcher bulls, board, 24.20 to $4.25; in jute bags,good, $4.50 to $5; do, corn., $2.50 to Torontoprompt shipment, $4.35 to 33.50; feetier§, geed, 85.50 to 36.25; • 3445; in jute bags Montreal prompt do fair, $5 to $5.50* stockers good shipment 34.50 to 3400; Manitoba $4.50 to 35.25; clo, fair, $.3 to $4.50; fir 't pats $680 per bole lluontreal- niiliyeis, -$60 to $, i . , sPrngers, o Blinded Soldiers _ • . T:tonto --r"rIeights. 890', craves, ch. oice, $10 to $11.50; 'Cheese---NTek-t, large, 19 to 19'./ec; rued., 38 to 30', do, corn., 33 to • A despatch ETOM 1.,encle: , n twins, 20 to 21c; triplets, 21 to ?Ii/ c; spring 310 to 311;sh000p, Stiltons. 21e. '01d, large, 23 to 24, choice, $5 to 1,5.50, do, good, 335 twins, 24 te 24,1/2c; ,Slilions, 25c, $4.50; do, corn., $1 to $3; yearlingiso, hel) ,st Denstan'e Butterr---Vieest creamery prints, 39 ch'I oice $6 to $7. do, corn.'$4 to $5. I • , the -ctu t • i ' to '40e; orclinai•y creamer -y priuts, 35 hogs, fed! and' watered, $12; do, fob., for blinclecl soldiers and sailors found - to 2le o. Dairy, 29 to 31c. Co • elcing, $11.25; do, countryivintroPeoal-I.lasin points, $11.• Sireidbytshuereli'ditehisli Aribur Pearson,, fe Inc 1'10,000 lif" • •,-sed poultrY--Snring chickens, I Oats ---Can. West., No. 2, SOc Flour favor of St, Dunstan's. -133 to 88c; roosters, 23c;, fowl, 24 to Man. spring wheat • pats., firsts, " 27e; ducklines, 20c: turkeys, 35' to 40c. I 36.80. Rolled oats --Bags, 90 lbs., Live poultry—Spring chiclion.s, 25c;1' $2.90 to 23. Bran, 321: Shorts, $23. roosters, 17 to 20c; fowl, 20 to 25c; Middlings, 328. I-Tay—No, 2, per ton, ducklings 80c• turkeys 30 to 35e, car lots, 318 to $19. Margarinc-20 to 22c. (iheese, finest eastern, 16% to 161/2c, Egg'—No. 1, candle/1, 33 to 33e; se- Butter, choicest creamery, 35c. Eggs, ,t 37 oo r'Sc• cartons, 41 to 43e. selected, 36c. PotatoeS, per bag, car represented at variws perioas $3.7061to• $3-00. 1C.0ii:hoolibtiulllSka.nidarncoli3:s,nyi2ekteod,,,;33,10co.2m5.. .Pb1,1.uleprysw, laIA:rs:Ntfal70:10.1a1 and nofl I vw-IrertyniredoyeilnIGiblreeeare:e'vtii,1,,:i01015on, s of the vice 2vs„;.eI, ime, 14 to oc " to.'","3 50; hogs,best $.12 or), lights and ;1:111015)1''d''o9. oe';,9 :5 rt,3,067:r'ri;sip: .:Scg50';:g.7°:°,1.1::'vs":3:iletpa.c,a:-.13v21e75s5c; o97.1,3nIcilocs,w1:3thele,:bolerdoofi opooTurnoinea(6,,f dotIble task comb bonev; per dozen, $3.75 34.50, fair quality Imteliers, 312 to $12.25. especially music of the better typ..e. Insures Life to 'Aid Lord' Desborough lids occupied many i artan,t public po tion,s 111 this country. In his, younger days lie was a well-ltnown athlete, a note, cricketer and oarsman. He swain twice across the Niagara River. hunted game in the Canadian .1Zocikies Beants• —Clanacliari, hand-pielced, lots', (10 t°' • . an' d in India' and) dirilbC'd in the,' GHRISTIAPilS ARE IN PER IL • Christian have been atta,ele ed g Turk ciciebra,tion • I 1 foreci.c3 arc engaged, the AlIlt upation ' b the 1\lationalist forces. PotatocsLyOnitrio0 $1 to $1,15 protecting it froin the thr0ltaked cc erit, , 1efre--