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The Exeter Advocate, 1924-3-13, Page 7- -1 =11 ,t I si.... b,,,,... rtht ieet 401 For ally and for gest least and tit ete • el il'otw•tse. rag - r 40 mit's 8:5; aura 3 fa and ility. napte,e , of 4 rave nate izzy. was ting, r.• his 7 to ions, morn nder rare trch- ;avid meas ltght este- ercy, tod.' that fl he the exalt an4 let ouse, t we areer poet, 1 ele. that r the ;tiny. it is 'last e for stful. ; and )avid has 'eine* coups judg- shop- el 9 n t o ay of rd of from Na - f our that a liv- knew Here - been sence le re- uper- en to 3 this right. )avid, his - 'or it. . Hit later ymbol The to a kin of the io far cour- all o swa a can- celled Ph art e of • dith • her .ies. - 1 to es. th2 oft as• I ti 4041K d In'ibe • idaiditteo rat no 6124 too& dart, TORONTO CHOIR APPLAUDED AS FINEST ON -WESTERN HEMISPHERE A despatch from Philadelphia there was no "dead wood" in the eays :-Once more the mighty Ninth Symphony of Bethoven conquered on Thursday night in what was undoubt- edly the finest performance of it in Philadelphia for 25 years. This result is due to the combination of the finest „ acherus in the Western Hemisphere organization which sang- Thursday evening. They sang perfectly, and that is all that need be said as to the general performance. Larger choral organizations have appeared here, but none so perfect in every detail of singing as this one. In ual't of • anthe finest orchestra, under a lead-, voce, balance of parts, shading, above ,,,--ers ip which was little short of in -1 all, volume when required, instant re- spired -and the Ninth demands all, sponse to .the leader, whether it was three if it is not to become moeoton-1 Mr. Stokowaki or Mr. Pricker, unan- ous. The novelty was the work of the 1 imity of dynamics and all of the thou- Mendelssohn Choir of Toronto, which send and one other details which go furnished the choral section. I to make up perfect choral singing, the There can be no question that this' Toronto organization is at the very the finest choir on this continent top. -day. The singers who came to: Here is a chorus which can really hiladelphia numbered 234, but ap-' sing the Ninth Symphony, and no- parently every. one was a picked voice; thing more need be said. et.. NOVA SCOTIA MINERS C REFUSE WAGE SCALE Settlement Recently Made Re- pudiated by Vote of Two es to One. urzon's Picturesque Phrase Gone Under Labor Regime A. despatch from London says. - ay by day the slump in the pietur- Photograph shows the Canadian que, due to the retirement Tutankhaznen's soldiers. big• sinefn the,The whole •patrol of the p an depots and fuel stations, for the Belt an the coming into the office' plane flight along the coast of the Aleutians to Japan. a Government steamer and to the fete and a fireworks display. Across the North Sea Should be Thin After 60, Baronial Country House Re - A despatch from Halifax says of of the Labor Party, becomes morel TWO MORE DEATHS The coal miners of Nova Scotia voted Ferry Route Organized iated last month at Montreal be -I en • No New Cases Reported in A despatch from London says:- A despatch from London says: -"If A despatch from London says: -A almost two to one in Thursday's refer -I For years the ordinary Briton, far- endum against the new wage scale1 ing forth to the Continent or to the FROM SMALLPDX s of the earth, felt, when he look d tween the representatives of .Distriet at his passport, that he was ' going Ofl Says British Doctor constructed into Small Homes,' o. 26, United Mine Workers, and the, the grand tour, for did his passport British Empire Steel Corporation. The not begin with these grand, rolling ?tete was 5,617 against and 8,145 for words: "We, George Nathaniel, Mar- eatifiesttion of the new scale, totalling guess. Curzon of Kedleston, Viscount e 8,762. - , Scarrlale, Knight of the Most Noble The. repudiation of a co tr I.Order of the Garter Knight . der of the Most Exalted Order of the man - being a 14 -months' baby and Adolph English coastwith Zeebrugge in Bel-; I inclined to grow stout. But a certain carrying with it an increase in wages, Star' of India, etc., etc., request and Shaw. No new cases were reported gium. The distance is eighty-four arnount of fat before an individual is e or middle-aged persons negotiated by the responsible officials require, in the name Of his Majesty, in this city for the past 24 hours and rni/es, and the voyage will require• ntne 60, Dr. Ash contends, is a reserve in of the district and the international; a those whom it may concern to al - 11 to ten hours cas representatiye.s, has created a situse how yi B1 health Officials are inclined to take a Mon that is • h Windsor -One Victim in Raleigh Township. A despatch from Windsor says: - Two deaths from smallpox were re- ported at Amherstburg the victims The first North Sea train ferry will commence operating about March 15. you're fat and can't get thin there's new use for English 'country mann This /ong-heralded project which, it is no help for you." That is the verdict sions, which rapidly are becoming a argued, should in expanded form make of Dr. Edwin Lancelot Ash, who holds drug on the. real estate market, duel the proposed Channel tunnel less of a that week -end golf will not provide need, will connect Harwi h an t'd ' to the inability of present-day owners to find means to keep up these homes in style, is forecast by an experiment. being tried out in Rolleston Hall the parallel in. the, ; more optimis c of the situation. or I be three to start with thin afte . y- ank-Blank to pass • ti viewThe ferryboats, of which there will though, in his view, it is better to be Trent. Sudden strain or illness, fine baronial mansion near Burton -one history of the United Mine women; to afford h' freely, without loss or hindrance, and! • A despatch from Chatham says .- Association ni eve The Provincial Executive will place, protec,,tion ofh he may stand ini • whic Raleigh Township according to Dr. It is estimated that the Cost of load - the matter before President Lewis and i need. The passport was signed tT..C. Bell, health officer for the town -ling t peen type of freight cars the International Executive ecurzon ship. The Health Board of th ry assistance and A case of smallpox has developed in modate fifty-four of the short Euro. he Board at f K he boats 11 4 Ancient Shrine of St. Alban Found in Danish Village despatch from London says: -A recent despatch from Copenhagen telis of the discovery of the remains otfakto ancient shrine in the village of TjMhorg, near Eesbjerg, dedicated to Si. Alban. The frontispiece of the shrine is richly ornamented with alle- gorical carvings of the Charlemagne period. The shrine is believed to have been taken to Denmark by the Danish Vik-1 ings, to pass into private possession I early in the seventeenth centur about ne $1 per ton he or she is thorough] try, plans are being made to convert n and ornamented with a cipality held a meeting at Merlin at instead of $3 to $5 per ton, when the' 11. motto "Let Cu beautiful print of his arms, with the: which strict measures were decided contents of each individual f • •I A syndicate which has purchased "There is fallacy in the idea that', the former consists mostly of old fain, health is a matter of feeling well," Dr.I ilies, and as Rolleston is situated in Ash insists. "One very seldom comes' the heart of the Meynell hunting wan. across a man or a woman who s e.w t Curzon' upon. The case is said to be of a • have to be transferred between train g car helde"-altogether an impressive I and boat. tout -ensemble. malignant type. ' The principal goods reaching Eng - (Cornish Language May But Curzon, no longer holding what j I land through Harwich at present are Curzon helde, a new name appears on I vegetables and dairy. produce. The British passports, without arms mott be Revived in England cheaper transport should make some or honors, except that its holder is "a member of His Britannic Majesty's Most High Privy Council." I Thus the old order passeth. 1 .A school for bakers is to be erected lin connection with the Ontario Agri- cultural College, Guelph. The A despatch A seventh languagein fresher condition. ing perishable goods to the markets the collection of distinct languages, aside from dialects, now spoken in the !. ' British Isles, if the effort being made French Heroes of Seine Floods to revive the use of Cornish as a living Honored by Country ng tongue is carried out successfully. atch from Paris says:- Is to be erected by the Bread and CakeIt was generally ation of Canada, andbelieved that the A desps Seine flood provided Paris Bakers' Assocl! language formerly spoken in Corn- Thiyear's with a little known epic, but none the building operations are expected to the most southwesterly count e spring. I of Egland, had died out, but speakers less heroic, comparable with the leg - 3". commence early in thI at a meeting of the London Cornish Association, held here, clairn it is still hole in the dike with hi end of the. Dutch boy who plugged a• used Canada from Coast to Coast 01•••••••••••••••••••.0. Halifax, N.S.-During the year Winnipeg, Man. -For the purpos 1923, 3,380 tourist automobiles enter- ed the Province of Nova Scotia, ac- of serving the Bingo mine a hydro electric plant will be erected on Grass cording to the annual report of the Nova Scotia Tourist Commission. Al- River, 110 miles northeast of The together 63,000 tourists visited the Pas. In addition a 100 -ton mill for evince .and distributed a sum esti- treatment of ore will be built. It is set ated at $6,000,000. A comprehen- stated that British capital is largely sive advertising campaign had been responsible for the proposed new in - conducted by the Government and stallations, as the company has now this had brought gratifying results. largely passed into British hands. Fredericton,. N.B.-The survey, re- cently completed by the provincial de- partment of lands and mines, shows that during the period from Nevem- * 15th to December 15th, 99,389,885 Leet of lumber was cut on the Crown Lands 0 curiously enough, even the physically , , well often are troubled with some nervous or mental ailment," The doc- tor says walking is the best form of exercise. 511 Into six separate houses. The partitioning, which is unprece,` dented in the case of such -a palette/ mansion, will be carried out vertically and not horizontally, resulting In re- construction into houses and not flate,. Weekly Market Report TORONTO. • 11% to 12e; 21/2 -lb. tine 121/2 to 18e, $1.13%. Manitoba wheat -No. 1 Northern, comb honey, per doz., No. 1, $3.75 to $4: No. 2, $3.25 to $3.50. 1, 45c. Manitoba oats -No. 8 CW, 46e; No. Smoked meats -Hams, med., 24 to 250; cooked hams, 35 to 37e; smoked Manitoba barley -Nominal. rolls, 17 to 18c; cottage rolls, 19 to Al! the above, c.i.f., bay ports. Ontario barley -65 to 70c, 21c; breakfast bacon, 23 to 26c; spew tial brand breakfast bacon, 28 to 30ct American corn -No. 2 yellow, 981/2e. backs, boneless, 28 to 33c. BuckwheatNo. 2, 78 to 82e. Cured meats -Long clear bacon, 50 Ontario rye -No. 3, 75 to 79c. to 70 lbs., $18.50; 70 to 90 Ibs., $18; um . The Peas --No. 2, $1.45 to $1.50. 90 lbs. and up, $17; lightweight rolls, in remote parts of the county,; ers, Beraud and Regnier, who, when ' French heroes were two husky labor- ' M' ee -Del. Montreal freights, in barrels, $37; heavyweight rolls, lish I -* h • •• the British Isles are, aside from Eng- , and steps are being taken to develop it The languages already spoken in ' ' ting the water in to the tunn 1 the Seine embankment collapsed, let- goodsoshorts, $30; middlings, $36; t bLard-pure tierces, 14% to 15e.' _ bags included: Bran, per ton, $28;1$32• , is , Welsh and Manx Invalides Railway, worked for twenty- $1.02, outside. or e Ontario wheat --No. 2 white, 98e to -spoken on the Isle of Man -and the old Norman French, spoken on the eight hours running, carrying 100-lb.I Ontario No. 2 white oats -41 to 43e. sacks of sand to build a new rampartd Ontario corn-Non:inal. Channel Islands. preventing damage to adjoining prot1 Ontario flour-Nneti per cent. pat., Still Found on We F Beraud was dragged from his post perty which would have cost millions stern ront half 1 p and Regn wh.ile arguing with his comrades ier collapsed:se let, 5.$610 flpoeurr-blasrrt etit.a tsoi dint>.,7zedgute5bteor $C51.)7w5s; dlr., $4.25 to M jute bags, Montrea , grompt shit A despatch from- London says:- keep the • Bodies of British Soldiers ment, $4.70; Toronto asis, $4.7 ; of dollars. bulk seaboard, $435. u c er heifers, choice , to 1o%c; pails, 15% to 16e; prints, 18 to 18%e; shortening tierces, 1414 to 14%c; tubs, 14 to 15e; pails, 15 to 153c; prints, 17 to 17%c. Heavy steers, choice, $7.50 to $8; butcher steers, choice, $6.75 to $7.75; do, good, $6 to $6.50; do, med., $5 to $5.75; do, com. $4,50 to t• *vine, Sask.-The honey crop will/ track, Toronto, $14.50; to $15; No. 2, cher bulls, choice, $4.25 to $5.25. !$5.05; do, med., $3.50 to $4'; canners cor ing to the report of the Imper- pital. The Municipal Council has worl goin75 to g. He died in hos..! Hay --Extra No. 2 timothy, per ton,land cutters, $t..25 to $2.30; but. soon be of considerable importance in ial Graves Commission for 1922-1923, proposed a gold medal for Beraud and ' 'No. ' $12.50. $14 50. 3 $1.2 50 to $13; mixed, do, corn., $2.00 to $3.00; feeding Saskatchewan judging from the greatj bodies of British soldiers are still be-, a pension for Regnier's widow. Straw-Carlots per ton $9 50 steers, good, $6.50 to $6.50; do, fair, $4 interest taken in bee keeping and the - , where the fiercest fightin t • fair, $3.50 to $4; milkers and spring- ine found along the western front,' to $5; stockers, good, $4 to $4.75; do, success of Saskatchewan bee kee e • • ers, $80 to $120; calves, choice, $10 p ce ng Smiths Must Adopt b. bay ports, per ton, $20. OK Standard recleaned screenings, f.o. in securing good yields of honey of j during the war. Since November,'•, • • 1921 6 107 isolated bodies have b e province, almost a third high quality. The University of Sas- • discovered and reburied in cemeterieeesn,1 New Methods to Earn Living A despatchtwins, 20 to 21c; triplets, 21 to 21%e; Of the total 'estimated season's cut of 1 n4.000 000 feet. The survey timates the cut from C also Muckle, formerly provincial apiarist katchewan has em. 1 dR M in M ttob p oye R. M. 1,054 being identified at the time, but • from London sa sn• g Stiltons, 22 to 23e, Old lax 26 Cheese --New, large, 19 to 20e; an s y counties and shows Restigouche leading with an estimate of 110,000,- i00 ft. Northumberland is second with n estimate of 60,500,000 feet. _ Montreal, Que.-Word has been re- alved at McGill University that the pept. of Architecture in the Faculty Of Applied Science, has now been ree- gnized by the Royal Institute of Ttritish Architects as a "Recognized •,achool." This recognition. has been ranted to only four architectural chools outside of Great Britain, of hich McGill is one. r• o onto, Ont. -For the first time in , n axle, an attempt will be made in b t tlie spring to organize a voluntary egg t *IA Arrangenients for the under- , letig have been completed by the lifted Farmers' Co-operative Co., and 4is hoped to control absolutely the gg market in the province. Collee- Noes will commence April 1. tea e et se eate. see oners were identified subsequently'•e smith, according to no less Butter -Finest creamery prints, 46 • 28c; twins 27 to 29e; triplets, '30e. on bee keeping in any district suffi- , o giving lectures! here through a study of the effects' an authority than the Rural Indus.. M 47e; No. 1 creamery, • 43 to 45e; meeting. ciently interested to arrange for a • found with the remains. The number of these bodies fou cl; down and out unless he adopts tries Intelligence Bureau, will soon be No. 2, 42 to 43c; dairy, 37e. Calgary, Alte.-The expenditure by the Dominion of 425,000 on the Banff - Windermere Highway brought in 240,000 of American tourists' money and 120,000 of Canadian tourists' fnoney the first year the road was used through the mountains, accord- ing to the chief engineer of the Banff National Park. Vancouver, B.C.-Vancouver is to have eoal bunkering facilities for deep-sea vessels almost immediately. It was announced that temporary means for providing coal bunkers would be d in tak er en immediately, and as soon as trade warranted, pert monent coal bunkers would be erected. The Harbor Board is willing to spend up to $500,000 for bunkers, if war- ranted. MET MANY BONNY storvo? You KNOW cliARGE._ OF `N Me. mew" WomAN'Z to $12; do, med., $8 to $10; do, eone, $5 to $7; do, grassers, $3 to $4.50; lambs, choice ewes, $14 to $15; do, buck; $12 to $14; do, fat, heavy, $4 to $4.50; do, culls, $7 to $8; sheep, light ewes, $7.50 to $8.50; do culls $2 methods. t , hogs, fed and watered, $8.25; ggs.- xtras, fresh, in cartons, 40 , do, f.o.b., $7.75; do, country points., covered in the Ypres salient, on Vimy1 is decreasing, but they still are dis-I secretary of this bureau, "those at "t to "e• The smith," says Mr. J. Wedgwood, et ee o ern to 41e; fresh extras, loose, 37 to 38c; $7.50; do, selects, fresh firsts, 34 to 35e; fresh seconds, MONTREAL. Ridge and in the Somme, particularly1 least, who try to make their liven b Oats -Can. West. No. 2, 55e; do, in the regions of Thiepval, Mouquet shoeing horses, are dyingout. gThy ' lbs. and over, 25e; chickens, 8 to 4 ' . Live poultry -Spring. chickens, 4 !bre. 8, 53 ti c; extra No. 1 feed, 51%e; farm, Delville and Hangard wood.' pwlhigeehltwfights are in even a sadder 4 to 5 lbs., 15C; da, 3 to 4,1bs '150 ; spring wheat pats., 1sts, $6.30; do, Mere are expected to turn up when 1'0i:cr.-ars, 15c; duckings, over .6' lbs., f:ds, $t5.80; strong bakers, $5.60; win- e lbs. 20e; hens over 5 lbs. 22c• do • No 2 local white, 50%e. Plour-Man, the French have cleared Bourdon, "We are endeavoring to show the A do, 4 to 5 lbs., 18c; turkeys, oartspa Trones and High Woods, at present blacksmith how he can extend his bdg of 90 lbs., $2.05. Bran - impenetrable on account of the dens® trade. What we feel is that as the' , young, 10 lbs. and up, 22e. Dressed poultry -Spring chickens, oats -Bag of 90 lbs., S3.05. Bran -- s., choice, $5.65 to $5.75. Rolled undergrowth and the presence of con -i age is getting more and more inechan- 1 14 lbs. and over, 30c; chickens, 3 to 4 $28.25. Shorts -$30,5.. Middlings- siderable quantities of unexploded ical, so village mechanics ought to be ; 4138.to'$36.25. Hay -No. 2, per ton, car lot; i getting busier and more numerous, 1 roosters, 18e; ducklings, over 5 lbs.: Butter, No. 1 pasteurized, ammunition. 25c; hen,,, over 5 lbs., 28c; do, .e.,. 5 lbs., 24e; do, 8 to 4 lbs., 18e• The cost of raisieg hard springI. trade is pettin h rather titan dying out, The motor; creamer 40 wheat in the United States 1 t 24c; do, 4 to 5 lbs 26e; turkeys as g o d ranged from 85 cents to $119 a bus., while in Canada it ranged from 58 cents to $1.19, the U. S. Tariff .Com- mission found in its investigation in connection with the application for an increase in the wheat tariff. rte traffic into tai® b k _.. , but the employment , • geese, etsseea, young, 10 lbs. and up 32 to 35c;: 22c. of power and mechanical appliances! ns --Can. handpit ke. , lb., 7c; by the agriculturist is also greatly on Maple products --Syrup, per imp. the increase." primes, 6%e. The only way to have a friend is to gal.; maple sugar, lb., 25e. gal., $2.50; per 5 -gal. tin, $2.40 per be one. RABBITBORCi SHe. SAID :THAT Pite1R...ME-R pewLAp CAM?. IN THE. 011-tER P/Nte FROM HARE. HoL,LOW- AN' NE 5..toPPED A`r The- tXci-k"r1 Honey -60 -lb. tins, 11 to 11%c per lb.; 10 -lb. tins, 11 to 12c; 5-1b. tins, y % 2 c; nds, 89e. Eggs, fresh extras, 37c; fresh firsts, 85c. Potatoes, per bag, ear lots, $1.55 to $1.60. Cont dairy type cows, $3 to $4; canners, $1.50; cone bulls, $3 to $3.25; real good calves.$9 50 t 1 • • mixed lots, fairly good quality, $8.50 o, to $9; hogs, thick, smooths, and. shops, $8.25 to $8 50 H. 5etH5s 15 TH15, 'TF(Et WOMAN •5 itX CHANGE? " 7./ E..5 SHE 5/w5 - "LL,A vou Trie_ WOMAN ?" "y E.5 , SHE_ 5/W5 t- , 1 ..0.••••••••••PA.....4... \ V..... 'THEN b.PsY5 He_ I GUEZZ I'LL KEEP MN' it OLP Nlo L IN' -....._--..... ...,....., ••[,•••••••••••••.••••••••• 11 0 es '41 -1 1 1 4 0 4 1 -4 1 ••4 1 4 -11 4 1 1 4 4 4 4 1 4 1 1 4 4 1 1 41 4 4 4 4 1 1