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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1922-11-30, Page 3AWED POWERS AT LUSAINE . • DemaitarAzod Strip of Fifteen Miles on Ottoman Border Would Include AdrinoPle end All Strategi'e,. Points 'Leaving Constantinople as Only Important Mili- te17, ost of Kernali,sts. A clee•patch from Lausarine says:— Supported solidly by' the Balkan a secret sub -committee or" the Laus-' arine Confe•rence, 'whleh has beell ex•-; a,mining tbe question, of demilitarizing the Otto/nen, frontier and Thrace, has practically reached a decision to dis-I arm Turkey in Europe. o.D.-recommenclabinn from General Weygand, Marshal Feeb!s Chief a stgff, it was announced that a zone •approximately fifteen miles wide on b-oth sides of the border from the Bleck Sea, to the Aegean should' be 'cuMpletely ettripped of all fortifi- ea,tions ;and war materials of every „kind and no treep movements, allowed therein. • Tilde zone would 'include Adrianople and- s'everall• -other „towns along tae Maritza River, wheee usee as military basee, in the opinion o Gen. Weytgancts would he eseential toe Turks if they should ever aittempt an offeneive war on their neighhors in Europe • Gen. Weyeg,,and painted Out that, de-- • spite the development'ef trenches and tenip•orarysearthwork' nthe Tate war,' which -would be of -value to belliger-! ents, strategic strongholds and; forts would ie diminished, • ' This demilitarized strip would also include the strategic railway line from the Bulgarian frontier through, Kara- gatch to the port of Dedeagatch, on the Aegean, thus provid-ing Bulgarim. with an outlet and preventing either 1.7.;d1 the Turks would have Constan- tinople, atS filOil" only military base in Europe, and they °would be separated f rent their' li•elican neighbors by miles oiatine2gereteetea and eenri-desett ten- l- Although •the decision was net, re- ceived fay Drably rin Turkish quarters, the belief is helci that Iernet will bow to, it in the hope of •being able to se - are compensation somewhere else, especially eine° the big powers are unanimous 011 this decision. In any event the matterewill be re- ferred to Angora for final decision. The plane which lifts the menace of M-6slem aggression against the Turks' Christian neighbors, is result- ing ili a new Balkan bloc due to the ,untiring efforts of Premier NI:chick' oif Jugo-Slavia inspired by former Premier Verfizelos of Greece. The action taken by Jugeo,-Slavia, Rumania, Greec,e and Bulgaria -on this question is regarded as the initial' step toward the formation of 'a Balkan' alliance which is de•sigmatedi to suer - •cede theLitt1e Etrtent.I The latter is con,sidered the logical development of secret British negol tiations with the Belgrade and Buc1i-1 a.reet Governments for pledges of military aid in 'support of the British naval strength against the Turks in case it should ever beeome neceesary to us -e force to impose -the Western ;Powers' will in the Near East, When neither the Freneh nor Itali- side, in case of future war, from us- ans would promise the contingents of ing for warlike -purposes the sole troops the British deemed neCessary means of railway transport in the at Gallipoli and the Dardanelles pour - territory. parlers wi.th the Serbs and Rumania With -their frontier thus demilitax- began two Months ago. , 'CANADA TO EXI-IIBIT AT BRITISH FAIR 6 -Minion's .ProductS.and'Re- SOUICeS VieWed by Ten Million People. Canada will Participate in the Brit- ish Empire Ex,hibition, to be held' at Wenabiley Park, near London, in 1924, and will have a phvilion covering ape Proximately 150,000 square feet of space, it was atineunced by Hon. Charles Stewart, Minister of the In- terior, in an interview recently with Major,, E. A. Belcher, assistant general manager of. the Exhibition andhead of t4iinission which has toured the provinces and placed the matter of participatfon before the various gov- ernments, , The amount oil money -which itis proposed to spend an the Canadian exhibit for the occasion was not s,tact- ed.. The spece being taken, however, is the same as that being ;taken by Australia, which is spending $1,250,- 000 on ,i;bs display of Australian pro - climbs for the exhibition, Major Beleiher expres•sed satisfac- tion with the mega of hies -tour of Can- ad,a. The iiroviricial gov,ennnents, he said, lead all been enthusiaetic inetheir 'support pf- the, prepesals placed before {.61•1•131••1•0 IViarqiiis of Crewe Newly appointed Britiall Ambassa- CIOT to France to -succeed Baron .1-Iard- inge. He was formerly a Liberal lead- er in the House oflaords•. Prince of Wales Awaits Tierri' in' Peers' theme and the Goyeeneeen.t. of New-' interesting spectacle recently, when founeRand, which Domereee the •had the Prince of Wales, who outranks all visited since his lost erinference with of the Loiele, einelinely disregarded the government at Ottawa, lend an- paecedence by waiving the rights' to n,ounced its intention of takinga which, he is entitled as heir to the pavilion of ;approxirnately 8,000 square Throne. feet at an expenditure of $50,000. One When the Prince arrived to take of the best sites on the Exhibition hhs the oath as member of the new Par - been res.erved tor the,Canadian heap'ent 11; found a queue. of Some 50 ion, M•ajOir Belleire,r stated $ and he was n,or,b);e LorN, lined tieretvaitilig to per- confi,dent that the exhibit of Canada's' form the ceremony. The Clerk of the preaueta and, natural resonrces would House immediately „hurried to the he one of the beat on the grounds, --- pnce rito conduct Idie to the head e.f. The Exhibition will continue for the Hae taut • f ueue A clespateli from London says:— The H.o f L,^ ; _ • CANADA‘IN THE' LORD KgYQR,a SHOW 'hie Lend lifiry•er'S S, be* in Louden thee year included floats representing the" Dominteas, The, Picture sitoare the Canadian float, which was an ap1Ma1 for Dritatit, satelors for Canadian farms. - Canada- row Coast to Coast N.S.—The export of Neva Scotia apples through the port of Halifax to date is nearly el•glety 'than - sand berre'fs in excess of the total Rhipmentss.tor the same period of the 1921-22 season. Figures., available show that 309,709 tharrels have passed through the port •eince the season be- , gun, while ;the-tortal for the eame per- iod last season was Only 230,787 bar- rels, During the month, of October there were eighteen steamers left sHalifax with cargoes totalling- 173,0.69 barrels, Campbelltewn, N.13. --Fifty eargo-es o.f lumber have been shipped from this port this season, whieh is a record. It is reneeted, that lumber eompanies are being flooded with orders for lum- ber a,ncl lath, Montreal Que —The largest roller - bearing in the world is reported to be on exhibit at the Motor Show in Lon- don, England, before its shipment to 'Canada. It is over faqir feet high, weighs more than a t -on, and is of the chain type, like those recently tested by the 'British Railway -S. This giant hearing., and, two others like be installed in a Canadian pulp Toroeto, • Ont.—Eighteen hundred, exhibitors, forty-five front the United States sh,owed theirsProducts at the Royal Winter Fair here. The exhi- bition was hold in the Royal Coliseum, one e the -greatest arenas on the con- tinent, 'covering ;approximately nine acres. Winnipeg, Man.—Fifty-six free homesteads and six settlement grants were entered at the Dominign Land _Gffice here during the nionth of Oc- tober. Twelve quartz mining loca- tions, mainly the Rice Lake clistriet, were registere,d. The farms were lo- cated'hetween the lakes Winnipeg. and Regina Sa,sk.--The winter of 1922- 23 will be one of the biggest dumber- s•eisOMS in the history of Northern Saskatchewan, if plans now being formed by lumber companies are car- ried through, according to a statement of officials of the Saskatchewan Bur- eau .of Industries. 'The wages to be paid this year will; he from $30 to $45 a month ands hoard, as compared with $26 to $30 paid by the camps' last year. Edmonton, Alta.--Fecleral plans for a chain of wireless stations extending right into the Arctic Ciedle are being completed. The stations will be op- erated lby- the Dominion Government, with the primary purpose of keeping officials in touch with one another. The lo•cations of the proposed, stations are Forte Smith, Resolution, Simpson, Norman and McPherson on the Mac- kenzie, and the sixth at Dawson City. Lardo,13.0.--Rich ore has been lo- cated at the heads of Canon Creek. Returns of two thousand ounces of silver to the ton -have been secured. Five tons have beett taken out and sihipped te the 'smelter at Trail. uebec to Check Hoarders of Food and Fuel A despatch from Quebec says: diastic measure creating a Fuel arid Food Con- trol 'Board in this Province, with powers to render oblige - tory and final decisions fixing and' limiting the quantities of coal and food which may be . . sold in time of'crisis to cus- toiners, and compelling manu- facturers and merchants to supply the board with ,an in- ventory of the fuel and food they have in store in ware- houses, was presented in the 1-,egislative Assenibly- on Thursd_ay. Severe Penalties are provided, and fines vary- ing from $25 to $100 may be imposed under the , Quebec Summary Conviction Act. That the 'increa,sing deniand ,in Eastern Canada for the product of AIC acIon six menths from 1924, and en shook hie head and retained his piece rmoyasty Manitoba's granite pr•oducing inclus- e, conservative basis- it is estimated t the'I ' bout rapid develop - over ben millions of INGTAte wip attend There was near-const,ernation on befere its el'ose- • , I the faces of aeorne :of the Lords; • • iseveral offered the.Prince their places , .Re,cgaansi ; geni,zeolg Goad, Work a'n the Tale, bat he em'e.litg.:iy..2,deelind of Children's Aid Society them ell and, ;waited his turn, which was long in emeing, • -' At a recent session of the County Council of Northumberland and Dur- ham the grant to the Claildren's Aid g 'pee Society was imortasei from $200 to ':)tIcalAT e'rY ' Tient Sell $300 ger month in recognition of the at Fifty Thousand effective work the Society is doing for neglected and homeless, children. A despatch from, •Three Rivers, ------ sayrsi—Fif.t,r 'thousand dollars' for a 'single stra-v°15'arrY plant Paid ing for a general plan, effective by Frank 13. Beatty, president of the throughout the Doininion, which will ----------- s be known es 4eRn,kkila,,,, in honorof its breeder, b_attin of this disease Harlow Rock -hill, of Conrad, Iowa. The :• price is believe,d here -te te the highest ever paid for a single strawbera-Y plant. Tile plant bears in early suni- mer, bearing continuously until Nest conies. The purchaser said he be- lieved the plant' he had purchased esiaasee;- :gay. • ,e'XI.I,"•!0•1[;" ment Of these industries is assured. Both red and grey granite has been, taken out during operation of the i quarriet within the past two Years- 1 and it is "4-epected the industry will! develop rapidly since a market has' been found in the Ea$t. Alberta's death rate from tuber--; culosis is the second lowest in Cau-i ada, so Dr. R. E. Woodhouse, of Ot-, tawa, secretary of the -National So-! eiety for the Relief of Tutereulosis, declared at ,a big_ public meet - at Reginig is oftpdagn- Hon, Maiming. bolierty. pecescrilree,' a national ce-ope tare' set 0100 01 marketing farm pae- duce to, orerrect "slovenly!' .inetheas, Da Osifteilo Is -clay, and an .ageresesive, cei iii ing immigration policy„ R. M. KelloggeCompanyta-frutit grow- •pro,gege egkittate, maane ien-F-th,a,ieeees would revolutionize the etrawberry incluetry. Twenty Hen i's Eggs Sell for $500 A despatch from Tacoma, Wash., sayse--A record price for eggs in this „section was established tvhen H. H. Leyrthern of ' Woodland sold tiwenty eggs from Lady Jewell, his ehampion White Leghorn hen, for $500. Lady Jawa laid. 865 egg,s for the year oral - e6 November 1 at the official egg - laying contest conducted by the Wash-- illaton Experimental Station, eggigent.„,.. 0 BritiSti. 'Wine Owners Hope to Retain Canadian Trade A despatecheflreart London saysie- Britieh,..cotil mitiesoWners are beginee ding t)621iiiiie that lie'poeSiblce te• build up a Permanent eXport,',tracle, in rt141/1 RITISH .11(3USE'..,COriFRONTE, VTTAI, • ISSUES' IRISH ,AN eecieSe ' ho- It e eta. the, sights , Mid ,iiiiar 41,1 • n" Intak id Otieg A (les-ltat'ela from Loudon says:— , , The new P'tiriltantent opened on There/ - day, if not in a tranqiiik. IS at leaet. in a quiet rnoods There were no fire- works, nerd Ramsay Maedonalti, as leader of the Opp:if:rifle:It, made plain that as long, as he leede the Labor party it will follow no violent or 'un- constitutional inettrods ef obtaining relirosne for its grievances Troz is taken es a timely warning tO the extremists of his- party whose demeanor while the House was being SWQrn in indicated 'impatience ,with the orderly cenclu,ct of business under the established usages ef Parliament. Mec,d•Oneld made a favora'bie impres- sion riot only by his iattitude on this point, but by Iris whole manner and the tenor of his s,peech. Lloyd George, sitting below the gangway in the seat not long since occupied by Hora,tio Bottomley, fol- lowed, -the words of triumphant Labor's leader with the deepes inter - es , n let aro sign of approval or disapproval escape him. Ile scanned with 4oniething am-usement hi his xgreesion, the fgeee of the Ministers as Macdonald, with all the,air being master of the eithation,, reraindel them of the tlifficulties that confront. them. Ile predicted the itiecial inter - eat of Labor in any propoSed settle - merit of the dispute between the oil interests in Mesup;otarnsa. Bonae. Law -was rather eut.dued ansi. e,pparetitly lit, -since he was, elosely muffled in heavy gaTments'. He is quite firm in his deteminetion to See the Irish teearty through. The session. opened with all the eeremenial iattendant upon this an- cient formality. Driving with the ;Queen,. in the State coach, drawn by eight h,erses, and .attenclecl by an eseort of Life Geards the ting passed from Buekingham Palace threet,gh `streets lined with troops, to Westmin- ster Palace, Where he donned the gor- gems Royal relies. Accompanied by Queen Marry, King George walked. in a prece,saien, to the House ef Lords,where he read his -epee•ch from the Threpe. to the robed peers, and as many commoners as, could be accommodated, I Judging from present indications, -furs should' be plentiful in the north this season, stated J. A. Campbell, conimissiener for Northern IVIanitoba. It is stated that several amendments to game laws would be proposed at the next sessior, of the legislature, particularly in a change oinseason for muskrat to the month of October, rather than November, as at present.' Hon. Dr. Belanct. He has reduced. the estimates, of the ...1Department et Soldiers'. Civil Re-es- tablishment -by sir ion -dollars. for next year, hy conce,r.tratfon. of liospit- Icoal- 'with Canada. Notwithetanding fis WOrk SITODS, CANADA BUYS LESS FROM UNITED STATES Remarkable Decline in Do- minion Importations from the South. A despatch from Ottawa saY'sz— The extent of the decline in Canadia,n importation of ,products frGm the Un- ited States is shovrn by a statement just issued. through the Dominion Bureau. of Statistics, giving aompir- a'tive figures for the twelve rnorehs' ending October 31 last and the twelve- month. periods ending October 31, 1921 and 192. This statement reveals t'he fact that ini,eartatiotare from the United; States de:: hied in value $115,272,742 during the twelve months ending October 31 last, in comparison with the previous twelve in cat ths. ° 17illessa the figures for the period. just eeded one compared with thoee ,Dti the twelve-month period. ending, October 31, 192;0, a drop cf no leas than $330,- 012,874 is shown. - During the twelve months ending I Catcher 31, 1922, exports to the Un- ited Stetee tvn‘le to the value of $327,- 1037,218. During the previous twelve- month periodethey t,oballed $390,738,- 018. Exports fe the United Kingdom, on the other hand, increased from 3296,772,084 in the twelve months end- ' '• • Coleher 31, 1921, to $326,370,742 tag - • ' in the eeriod just ercleth . Over nineteen, million feet of ish Columbia lumber was shipped to • [fereign ruarlea.bs during October. t; •eounde that constitute "iii-gli life" alidi the social whirl, one easily dlsoyena an empty iinreferestinithiisS/ lihnwa fleet, in the vacant, aimless feee and then in the etnpid futile cony -ere -aim of snobbish nonentitiee, Orie has nothing to give out if epe I never takes in anything. Failure to feed the inner life is, ,failifre 10 let Ile mouiltain, springs replenish the low/en:1 stroaru. As civ,er,y factoey must re cot gr,e een,s ten Lly ITS 'sue ply of, the raw material, ae newspaper must have roll's of paper for its press- es, even so the bodily mechanism is ' quires its fuel of vitamines Tho spie- it, too importunately eries for Its daily t'read. Wt carry a small book to -read 'Or a letier from a frienl. if , carmot •see ?kat friend, and when " the soul liungefs we feast on what wenreask A marl in the World War cargted a girl's picture, or a lock of herr, or a baby's Shoe. It was not a bullet for the enemy, it was not even o talisnla% againet a wound-, but it lifted him through hell; it was a mem- ory to keep ham straight and gentile' L0. , The things' men live by may be the things they hide or the things they rnerition, (IA even the things 'diet they deny; but through the working' hairs or the playtime, ;subconsciously they go with us, to 'cheer, inspire and fort- ify. They are the necessities, as the compass and 'the rudder 11.TO ta a ship, They keep one true to the comae; they are restorative after a sad maze •of error. Again and again we must return to some source of power to be replenish - ,ed, quickened, corrected, 'with a leis) discernment. That source of power is personal, and we ;cannot get strength from those -who have no strength to give. We do not appeal to the vain, empty, frivolous, flippant ones to help us, for the effort is quite 'beyond' -them,. even if they would. The trag,ecly of life is to find oneself affiliated in parteership, be it marital or industrial, with one who merely exhauete and makes no return. "Free- ly ye 'have received, -freely give." No- thing' in this world was hest:owe-a on us that we zni,ght cluteh it to ourselees or make a 'tantalizing display of what we have to thoSe who have mot. Did any one ever tiese.rve to be loved /and admired for merely showing •off ? It doeen't need the approval of Christ- mas to tell us that a gift great, er joy than an acceptance. Nor is there any gift like that of .ourselyee, if we have anything sit all in etir tures that can heal and; 'bless. It is hard, indeed, to imagine a nature se poor and mean that it eannot offer a precious contribution to the peace and happiness of earth, the a.ffeetionate everyday communion of a household and a family. The Bells of Limerick., the settlement of the strike in the Un- Limerick, where the Irish rebels had 1.* -4 State-si large quantities of „Welsli „ 1.71 keuork. eeal continue to be sent to both Can- ade and the United States: Two Veit>, Steamers left from Swansea Theis - da With 12,000 tone angle -further large cargoe,s are toeked. It is recognized. that 'there is slim chanceTs ef retaining the custom of 'the United. States, but it is hoped that a permanent. trade in the better class; of Welsh coal may be built up with Eastern Canada. The, Canadian Government merchant mar - Inc °facials here are encouraging• the idea, ,as tending to provide profitable cargoes for west bound vessels of the fleet. Toronto. Manitoba wheat—No, 1 Northern, $1.24:1/2. iVlanitoba oats—Nominal. Manitoba barley—Nominal, All the above, trackaBay ports. 1 American coen,a-Ne.,2 yellbw, 891/2c; G. ow, 17,2' c, a , rail. , Barley—Malting, 60 to 62c, averd- ing to -1-.eights outside. Buckwheat—Nc. 2, 78 to 80e, u e • , , e 1341.e.c; pails, 14 to 14,1/2c; prints, 161/2 to 17o. Chaice., heavy steers, $7 to $7.50; butcher steer -e, choice, $5.50 to $6.25; cite, $5 to $5.50; do, med;, $4 to $5; cie, cern , $3 to. $4; butcher heifers, choice, $5.50 to $6; do med., $4 to $5; do, , t $4; huteber cows, choice, $4 fir $5; do, merle $2,50 to $3; canners, and -cutters, $1.50 to $2.25; t r hulls good $3.50 t 34.25; ' $ 2 t $ 3. Rye—No. 2, 81 to 83c. ao, ;cone, o feeding steers, good Millfe.ed—D el, Montreal french t, 5 to$ $ , do, tair, $5 to $5.50, stetkere, bags included: Bran, per ton, $24; gond' $d to $4.75; d"' fair' $3 $4; shorts, per ton, $2.6; middlings, $28.50; " ' ' , o ' , t me- ", ' , to $9.50; do, cont., $3 to $7; mficil, good. feed flour, $2, • choice, $60 to $80; ispringers, Ontario wheat—No. 2 white, $1.11 e°ws' olscice, $80 to $100; lambs, $12 to to $1.14, according to freights out- 312,80; eheep,",choice, $0 to $7.25; do, side; No. 2, $1.06 to $1.09. cuEs, $2 to $6; hogs, fettle:ad watered, Ontario No. 2 white oats -42 to 440. $11; de. f.o b., $10.50; do, country -Ontario corn—Nominal. p‘ oirite" $10 95 Ontario flour—Ninety per cent. pat,, ' .- ' in jute bags, Mientre.a1, prompt ship.., oeee,__cem. West No. 2, 65 to 66c; Montreal. ment, $5.10 to $5.20. Toronto • basis, do, No. 3, 60 to 6ic. Flour, Man, $6.05 to $5.15; 'bulk se -aboard, $4.90 to eering,wheo,t pats., firsts, $7.10. Rolled ' oeteeheg, 90 lbs., $8.15 to $3.25. Bran, .1 Manitoba flour--lst pats., rn cotton $24. Shorts, $26. R:ay, No,. 2, per ton, tiny—Extra No. per ton, tra,els,' Cheese, finest easterns, 221/2 to '23e. sack,s, $7.10 per bble, 2n1 plate., $6.50. eat late $16 .to $17, I Toronto, $15; mixed, $13.50 to 3.14i Butter, choicest creamery-, 36c. Eggs_, :Hover, $13:50 to $14. ,loresh, 45 to 46c; selected, 40c; No. 11 Straw—Car lots, per ton, treck., c,tock, 36 to 36c. Potatoes, per bag,1 ;Tonto, $9.50. 'ear lone 90c. 1 Cheese—New, large, 25,e; twins, oyes": • c.e/.3; $5; corn. rough 251/2c; triplets, 201/2c; Stiltene, 27c. seeers, 3e25 t,s $1.50; med. western Old, large-. 27e; twins, 28u; Stiltons, -cows, $3.50; goal, cetve, $4; canner 29e. • 00`X8, $1.50^, cutters. $2; corn. bologna Butter --Finest creainerY prints, 40 builti, $2,50 to $2.75; good veal calves, ,to 42c; ordinary- creamery prints, 37 to 30; e,oni, onos, $6,75 and up; grassers, 39c. Dairy, 29 ,to 31.c. Cooking, 21c. $2.50 to $3; -hog,s, sole -rite, $11,75; sows, Dreses-ed pon.ltry—Chielcens, 4 lbs. t13 $10, The Tiger of France and -up, 28,,, • re, 3 o 4 lbs., 25c; :Cowl, Ex -Premier Geerges Clemencem, et 5 lbs. and u.p, 28e• do, 4 to 5 lbs.. 25,e; France, who arrived in New York to do, und'sr 4 lib's" 1?'e; geese,94^. •.<1.'"'. 001,aanlen'Oe, a lecturing .tour of Ain gac; t'urkeYs! 45* - Margarine -20 to 22ci Eggs—No. 1 tandled, 38 to. 39e;'- 71' ;AND SOUTH ATIERICA 7;5 to 80.e. selects, 42 to '43e; Carbons', new laide,' . ,Beanse-Genediere hand-picke-d',. • F 'cm; -..Pplil:7,-.`'.1,,,Ittes._,„s„.„uper 1ALLY BY SEAPLANE gale $2.50; per 5 imp. gals., $2.40; maple sugar lb 23 A de.spatch from Georgetown, ith Guiana, says:—The SC II complet- ed, its task of aerially ;linking North and South. America when Pilot Hinton brought the big seaplane down in the Essequibo River, just off Saddle. Suddie. is a.croaS the mouth oti the river and about twenty-five miles from Georgetown. The 310 -mile flight from Port of Spain, Trinidad, was made Without incident. We ;are ,spend- ing the night at Suchlie, where the oil supply will ihave -Pc he replenished. The arrival of the SC II Ion the boast of South America leaves but two; im- portant intercontinental flights to be made. Europe and North America, Eurep3 and South America, Europe i'and Asia, Europe and Australia, Eur- ope rued Africa and now North and 'South America hatre •been joined, by flying men. North America to Asia and North America to Africa ;are still to be accomplished. Walter Hinton pilot of the SC,11 has tho distmett.en ;of having made twe of these pioneer flights. Besides Inc ;pre'sent trip, he fievI-the NC -4 on the first successful trans-Atlantic air journey. Althengh the SC II has linked ,the 'two continents, it has not finished its Its goal is :Rio „de janeirei Honey-66-lb:'tins, 12% to 13c rser lb.; 2-214-1b, tine, 14 to 141/2-e pet- •, Ontario cemb honey, per dose $3.25 to$4 1 Potatoes --New, Ont•airiets: No. 1, 80 to 90c; No. 2, 70 to 80e. Smoked in:eats—Home, nted., 26 'to 28c; ,eoolted ham, 38 to 40c; snicked rolls, 26 to 28c• ciottage roils, 86 to 3ge; livea,kfast It anon, 32 to 85e; ape - Sial brand breakfast Tereen, 38 to 40e; bcks, hons3crsr, 30 to 48,c,, Cored moats--.1,eng elver loon, 50 to 70 lbe„, $21; 70 to 90 ide, 520; 90 I1)5, and up, 518; lig'htweig'ht rel3imr p,e•i?ce, tiree,$; , ,.1,1";01C4ia/2'''-a• P.elitior ha ere e 3e1 heave it eight o le, 0-17, ' ' 1 '1 1;',t, pails; 177irie; prints 193, 4hortenteg, 1411`.•', \Ito "118 1 tiereee .18 be 131/2,e; tubs, 'to 13":4-.isb their headquarters, has one of the most beautiful peals of bells in the world. They were ma•de in Italy by a young workman, who after the toil of, many years. produced a peal of bells. which were so p-erfect in time that even hie critical jud,g-ment was eatis- fied. bells were hung in a n,eigh- boring convent, but in the course. of years war swept across. that part o.f the land, and the b.ells. were lost. Mis- fortun•es• ,crvertook the bell founder -and he left his native land, wandering about the world for years.. Then, teething that his bells; had be.en. taken to Limerick, he set out to hear their, sweet tones once again. As hes vessel: sailed up the Shannon, borne upon the, evening air from the towers of the cathedral came the music of his hells. He went forward and sat, listening, his gaze fired upon the ,distant ca.thed- nal, but when the vetisel came to an- chor and they went to 13,DCalse him -he was dead. Forbid Foreigners Holding French Real Estate A despatch from Paris says:—The • 1.1niteci Statm States Embassy has received instructi,on from the State Department in Washington to make iminediate re- paescritations to the- French Govern- ment con,ce-rning the eecent adoption by the Chamber -cek Deputies of a bill forbidding _foreigners to holcl real estate in France, or to lease property. for more than nine years without for- mal gmvern•inenbaa ,a,pproval. A hall ehould me.asure a,t the mouth 15 -times the thickness of the beim or Several thousand bushmen will be required by the lumber manufactur- ers of Ontario west of the Great Lakes this -winter, according to the Ernpley- meet Service of Canada. "Several hundred men, are being sent to these caraps each week ,anct the dernand is beeomiitg• more and mciee in.eistent. Depletion of stocks during, the past ern -rimer, raving to heavy building do- , nrand in Eastern Canada and the Ur,- it ed Status, ie reetionelble for the canis ;being; put back ea full; strength • Assurance of French official sea - Pont for the exhibition train -of Can - "eaten product* whieh is to tour Feta -ice next; eserire, has ;been elatesteeti. the- ," Senator ("-13;13:e•eiibien, of Mont- real, :Cron accord.- , 1.1g fee a dee:es-ire:1i l'eeelved from Lon- ' don. Tt • Frcsneh railways- are to give a stet- leced tree Pc tour, 15