The Exeter Advocate, 1922-11-9, Page 2Armistice, Day
The Silent Two Minutes of November
T2100 TOW Aand ruen ttraine, t Babel tongues tngu f trade,
The whirr aret griad •end eleauldig. of machiliery, ate etayed;
The tioiee or busy ;3,4)h:idles, the etrideat votoe e ,ceaete
And, o'er the. laboring world there feria a elementary peace.
The peoples of the- Centineete, •the family o nutnitlad, • -
Aelueowledge thea ftn. attieen tre eovereignity of ailed;
Thi are not ehief in War or Peetoe-estrm.s, money, ships, supplies,
'1,1w -00re,aIis. Spirit; Soul et the centre
And this le soul and centre of the history of those -ere
Ot bra'ery atid eaffeteug, gallant dedits and bitter tears-
'rhat those who perished raesemed ne; died is our mom and place.
And a boly -wnieper comes; 'Ni men hath greater lcve than tn."
So at .one moment. 'round the world all labor we suepcud,
And in the quietitee of thoealit our heads,u reverereee 'heed;
Ioto the ,slienee of tine graves, that •p:.- o'er lend ale' eee
IVO e.nter, and it spirit we bow the erateful anee.
Words, have r,,ct power end veluane to utter wliat we feel,
Mid o all we use; leuder than tharder peal
Seems universal eilenee, a Low the stilloese fella •
Axel deep ef Leman neeria to deep in no'nelese throbbiegs
Ot baleen learise-fala wound w eauzit the barder.ei hearts of •foes,
That truce:leen: have witheicoil lead cendezenatiows moue;
Perehettee this soered ellet..2e., as e stineenian vetce Of Ot•d's;
'May reeeli them, tete U they nre hearts aed cet inseeteete clods. •
Wrien le a memeat WO retake theas that bind us down,
Ated toil ea bel) to repair the 1oies overthrown.
Let this Eilemu Vitutit,'Ei lees= gad ore .every enterprise--
Theet-TO of all te Sc.ni at the centre Hes.
W. Deagough.
sty in England
Shows Decreasel
A despa4ii. from Lonlon says -1
Only a while ago alarmists were,
indulging in all sorts of dire predic-I
tone eereerning the future of
land beeause, it is alleged, not enough,
babiesv barn. The great°,
r1:143dle ca alred the backbone eel
the country, was declared by some,
pessimists to 1:e doomed to speedy
extinction.
Now :bele lamentations liave ceas-,
ed. Some farseeing and logleal eta.'
ti.etan pointe out that the future
a a e*untry is not detertair.ed so
rinteli by the number a babe born
as by the ranriner of babies wbieh
grow up. Looked at from that aogle,
Euglaen is rot doing ise batty.
The August death rate of children
under one years old was only 41, per!.
1,000 births. In 1919 London's rate Lord Hardinge
for the same period was 55. The British Ambassador at Paris,
Compared with the beginning of who has, resigned i1s diplomatic post
this cer.tuly, the baby saving figures! Montreal's areas of Saorlflce
give still greater cause for rejoicing This memorial was unveiled this+
among those who reckon the future a week In nlontreal at a unique oere-
England depends, above all things, An mow in which French and English.
;melee. The era four 'weeks of Aug, united, with clergy from both Protes-
ust, 1901, gave an infant mortality tont and Roman Catholic churches.
Tate for Lonflon of 267 --more than The Cross stands In the military plot
between the Protestant and Roman
Catholic cemeteriee, and has inser1P-
tons in the two languages.
Paris Has New Idea
in Operating Rooms ways busier in the fall, largely with
:41-1AsJL
Y ham, a British pilot, broke en eeeerin; in the gliders' contests in Englacanellea le renseleed tbe air
fer cue hour and fifty -tame, minutes ids monoplara. He wee; etea 'the entrants foe the Trara-At-
lantie sem*, yearg ago, but his W3.3 disablea tnat teL
••••
ell•••
Fall Clean Up Campaign. llalt Work on-
iludson Bay Railway
By L. P. Burrows, Secretary, Ca.
tWilrill Hortieuleoral Counail. A despatch from The Pas,
old experiencsed gardewrs advise h4,_ „ T i •
ays**--011111eWAte earn -
that the gardens grminls and web.- 4 "Vi4"" .' . . - -
arils be given a inS! elean up before pletion of the Hudson Bay
w. ter eomes in' order that diseases Railway will not be brought
tad insects nay be prevented in eo en„e a• t b 1. d
far as -passible from finding harbor ''''''''' l'` *a ealeve, ' acc*Iding
during the winter. i to authoritative advices, which
The importance of the proper pro- state that recent orders have
para,tion a the ground cannot he too beneis?,.wd by
ardeners because of this, probably National Railway ofti.cials to
the Ca.nadian
tr.ougly imore-.esed upon amateur -
More than on any ober one faetor, proceed to at once pick up all
does the success of the planting de- unused railway material along
end. It is admitted that the greater ee? .1 c .,.-L .1 c
,,,, raites ox t.,Ae rauway as Aar
art of the losses in planting are due ^'
to putting stock that has come eat of a$ Kettle Rapids, the end of
well cultivated nursery ground into, the steel.
that which hue hatilittle or no pre-' ,--....e.-,----,
paration and then leaving it to shifti a eaa ..;
for itself. Such practice is dircoar-; 4-"‘.."-m-ran 4r1 W.,„"tern„Can,‘,ada Francis Paget Macklem
ging and expensive to the gardener,I unnsuany IN arra wbo is 4), disciple or inile Golfe, and
and unfair to the nurseryman who i i who is reported to bo sailing for Canoe
pplies the etoele I A despatch from 1.Tinnipeg says:-- da to opera a free clinic at Grhusby,
Stich a clean up also affords the op- , The autumn season is unusually mildl where ho will practice auto -suggestion.
rtunity of waking a clunk a the' in Western Corrado. In Manitoba' as he learned it under Coco a Nanei,
and plant requirements: At surb there has not yet been severe frost,, France,
la and when the matter is fresh in and several odd phenomena are re-,
mind a list should be eomplied,whieh ported. On Mcinlay e,f,' this week S.
may be further reviewed when plans' II. SununerstlilQs et Selkirk picked:
are bona nettle dur1ng. the wager ripe s-rawberr.ea In hs gamen. They,
33-1012t11$. ', were from the ever -bearing variety.:
Orders ..shoull be placed at as early, wi'et ,5trav,h'snrY Plants are in bloom' Toronto.
a date as peesible .73 os to esame the •J in the country, and prissy willows lave" Manitoba wheat -No. 1 Northern,
sprouted new shorts and buds. It is $1.20.
first spring delivery and to melte cer-
reported that cherry trees are in' nianitoba oats-Nonuna1.
tan that the 'desired kinds and var-
ieties are obtained before the sup,ply bloom at Port William,. several Maniteba barley-Nteninat
.01.11 the above track, Bay ports.
becomes exhausted. branches in blossom having been
Experienced geeeeeeee invariably brought to A newspaper office there •L
six times that of 1922.
Ship Brings Relief
TO OBSERVE SILENCE
ON ARMISTICE DAY
Memory of Heroic Dead to be
Honored Throughout the
Empire.
A despatch. from Ottawa eaye:,-4
His Excellency the Governer -General,
Baron 13yng of Vimy, has received, a
message from His Majesty the King,
expressing the hotie that the two min -
of eilence in memory of ;those
who gave their lives daring the war,
will be observed throughout Canada
n Ariniftice Day, November 11, cern,
reenelog at 11 e'clock in the morning.
In a tommunination, te the Prime Mine
ister, the Governor-General hopes that
the people of Canada -will join His
nrajesty in malting the obaervanee
r!it The two minutes of silence la
endorsed by the Prime Minister in a
statement issued to the Canadian
Prete.
The ocannunication from His Ex-
eellency to the Prime Minister fol-
lows:
"Aa I think you are aware, have
received a message from kiss ll.fajesty
the ging eayiere that be Napes that
the two minutes of silenee, as a mark
if rezpect to The memory of those who
gave their lives during the Great War,
will be observed throughout the Ern
at 11 e'olook on the morning of
Armistice Day, November 1,1.
sincerely hope that all citizens
of the Dominion will. join with Ilia
Majesty the King making this ob-
servance a reality, and that ell work
will 130 suspended timing the two
Iltee set apart for the egence of
t ibute.
"You will, I am sure, be glad' to
give widest publication to this request
of His Majesty."
The Precious Thing.
A br.ulter had, engaged a tutor for'
his cbildree, and he addressed the
prospective instructor ot the young
idea as follows:
"Always bear In mind, my dear sir,
that in my children. I am intru.vting to
You my 'most precious possessions and
give them your best. And what is Tour
lowest price?"
Weekly luarket Report
American corn -No. 2 yellow,
891ne; No. 3 .ellow, 88%-e, all rail.
Barley -Me trng, 69 to 62c, accord,.
ing to freight outside.
Buckwheat -No, 2, 70 to 72e.
Rye -No. 2, 74 to 77e.
Malfeed-Del., Montreal freight,
bags ineltuleil: Bran, per ton, $21;
shorts, per ton, $23; middlings, $28;
good feed flour, $1.90.
Ontario wheat -No. 2 white, $1.05
to $1.10, according to freight outside;
No, 2, $1. to $1,05,
Ontario No. 2 bite eats -41 -to 43e,
Ontario torn -Nominal.
Ontario flour -Ninety per cent, pat,,
in jute bags, Montreal, prompt ship -
meet, $4.70 to $4.80; Toronto basis,
$4.60 to $4.70; bulk seaboard, 450 to
$4.55.
Manitoba flour-lst pats., in cotton
sacks, $6.80 per Lbl.; 2nd pats., $6.30,
Hay -Extra Nc. 2, per ton, track,
Toronto, $16; -mixed, $13.50 to $14;
'clover, $13.50 to $14.
Cheese -New, large, 2114 to 22c;
twins, 2214 to 23e; triplets, 23 to
2314e; Stiltons, 231fic. Old, large, 28
to 24c; twins, 24 to 24Yec; Stiltons,
25c.
Butter -Finest creamery prints, 39
to 40e; ordinary creamery prints,. 35
to 37c. Dairy, 29 to 31e. Cooking,
21c.
Demi-eel poultry -Chickens, 4-1b.
and up, 28c; 3 to 4 lbs., 25e; fowl, 5 -Ib.
and up, 28c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 25c; do,
under 4 lbs., 17e; geese, 24c; duck-
lings, 33c; turkeys, 45e.
Margarine -20 to 22c.
Eggs -No. 1 candled, 37 to 38c; se-
lects, 39 to 41c; eartons, new. laids,
55 to 60e.
Beans -Canadian hand-picked, bus.,
$4; primes, $8,50 to $3.75.
Maple produces -Syrup, per imp.
gal, $2.50; per 5 imp. gals., $2.40;
Maple sugar, lb., -23 to 25c.
Honey -60 -lb. tins, 1214 to 13c per
lb.; 2-214-115. tins, 14 to 1414e per ib.;
Ontario comb honey, per dozen, $3.25
to $4.
Potatoes -New Ontarios, No. 1, $1;
Ne. 2, 80e.
Smoked meats -Hams, med., 26 to
28e; cooked ham, 40 to 43e; smoked
rolls, 26 to 28e; cottage rolls 35 to
38c; breakfast bacon, 32 to 35c;'spe-
cial brand breakfast bacon, 38 to 40e;
backs, boneless, 39 to 43c.
Cured! meats -Long clear bacon,
$19; lightweight rolls, in barrels, $47;
heavyweight Tolle, $38.
plan their :spring wcrk and list their Iv Col. S. C. Young.
trees and plant requirements at this
season a the year, This is evidenced
to Near East Refugees also by the fact that the Landscape
Departments of the eureeries are an
A despatch from Constantinople
says: --The Marie Leuise, a 3,000 -ten
ship chartered by the Near East Re -I
lief as a "floating warehouse' to sup-
ply its stations in the Greek islands,
completed its first round trip and is
coming to Constantinople to obtain
fresh supplies. The ship was a tre-
metious value in meeting the needs of
the refugee 'camps, as it was able to
carry a sufficient target to provide,
each station for more than a month.
It visited Mitylene, Chios, Santos,
Rodosto and several smaller ports.
The next trip will embrace Kavalla,
Dedeagatch, Salonika and Crete. It
carried food, medical supplies, -cloth-
ing, blankets and a variety of smaller
relief necessities to a total value of
$200,000.
Onesiphore Turgeon
After being a Liberal M.P.,for twenty
yews, he has been elevated to the
Senate, at the age of 74 years. He bas
represented Gloucester, N.E. •
gardeners who desire to have the mat -
A deepatch from Paris says -By,
ter of spring planting gone into and
a new idea in operating rooms just settled while their requirements are
perfected by Dr. 'Victor Paueliet, no in nliud*
longer win operations he conducted This provides an oeportunity of
considerable fall preparation of the
in a stifling atmosphere while a score
ground in order that everything may
of clinical students crowd around the
table listeningth ep1anat1on o
be in readiness to receive 'snick when e
f
the head surgeons.
Dr. Pauchet has decided henceforth
to separate himself from all students
by a glass partition eovering the en-
tire operating space. The observers
will be permitted merely to look down
it arrives in the spring.
Public Health Nursing.
The Department of Public Health
through the glaze from elevated rows Nursing is the latest to be added to
of benches. Opera. Masses will be the continually increasing number of
placed at their diseosal for following faculties and departments in the pro -
delicate incisions while a small wire-
less telephone connected with an am-
plifier behind the observers will 'be
used in describing the various stages
of the operation.
By the use of a constant antiseptic
vuicial university. Three years ago
the Ontario Branch of the Canadian Sir Augustin Edwards
Red Cross Society arranged with the The Chilean Ambassador to Great
University of Toronto to meet the ex- Britain has been appointed the new
penses of this new department for
th ' Th president of the League of Nations.
spray before and during the operation, June 30th, 1923, and, at their meeting
Dr. Pauchet believes a greater degree last week, the Board of Governors, C.N.R. President
of surgical success will be possible,
as it is quite conceivable that -under
the old system dangerous bacteria -fre-
quently were exhaled into wounds by
the unintentionally careless watchers.
Britain to Discharge
War, Debt to United States
A despatch from London says: -
The new Chancellor of the Exchequer
has declared that his first duty will be
to settle the debt to the United, States.
He made this announcement in a
speech at Cardiff, wheu he alluded also
to the necessity of ,a prompt settle-.
ment of the reparations problem.
Regarding the amount owing the
United States'he said: "It is a heavy
debt, hut we have told America that
we are responsible for it to the last
penny, and we are going to pay it.
decided, subject to the approval of Begins Duties This Month
the Government of Ontario, to take
over the Department of Public Health A despatch. from London
Nursing on July 1st, 1923, as a regu-
lar university department. The course says :-Sir Henry Thornton,
in public health nursing comprises the new president of the Cana -
eight months' work. It is open only dian National Railways, will
to graduate nurses and the number is
limited to fifty. These nurses are sail 011 the Olympic on No.
trained in school nursing, child hy-_ vember 22, and will take up
giene, municipal health nursing and his new duties as head of the
in any, form of community work in .1v •
• ational Railways in Canada
which the health of the public is cone "
cerned. The purblie health nurse is upon his arrival in the Domini -
trained to be a health teacher in the on. The former general man -
home, the echool, and the clinic. The azer of the Great Eastern Rail -
Department of Public Health. Nurse -
ling has proved its worth in the three way has been much feted and
years of experiment and will, no, dined since his return from
doubt, now that it is to be Perraanenit Canada to wind up his busi-
ly provided for by the University of .
Toronto, be an important factor in the ness in England, preparatory
wetfeee of the Province of Ontario. 1 to taking over his new duties.
Lard -Pure tierces, 17e; tubs,
1716c; Pails, Me; Prints, 10%c.
Shortening, tierces, 18 to 131enc; tubs,
131,i, to 18110; palls, 14 to 1414e;
prints, 161. to 17e.
Butcher steers, ehoice, $6 to $6.501
do, gad, to $o.75; do, med., $4.4
to $6; do, coni., $3,50 to $4.60; 'butcher
heifers, choice, $5.75 to $0.25; do,
med„ $4,50 to $5.50; do, vote., $3.60 to
$4.25; buticher cows, 'choice, ;4 to $5;
do, reed., $3 to $4;neaaners and cut..
ters, $1.60 to $2.25; butcher bulls,
good, $4 to $5; do, corn., $2.50 to $3.50;
:feeding. steers, good, $5.50 to $6; do,
fair, $4.50 to $5.25; stockers, geed,
$4.50 to $5; do, fair, $3.50 to $4; sheen,
good, light, $6 to ;7; do, good, heavy,
I $4 to $5; do, cults, $1.50 to $3; calves,
'choice, $10 to $10.50; do, good, $8 50
to $9.50; do, med. and heavy. $6 to $9;
do, gra.ssers, $3.50 to $4; milkers, $80
to $90; springers, $90 to $100; lambs,
I ehoice, 811.50 to $11.75; do, culls, $6.50
° to $7; hogs, fed and watered, $10 to
$10.25; do, f.o.b.., $9.25 to $9.50; do,
° country points, $9 to $9.25.
Montreal,
Oats, No. 2 CW, 64 to 65e; No. 3
CV, 60 to 61e. Flour, Manitoba spring
wheat pats., -firsts, $6,80. Rolled oats,
bag, 90 lbs., p.05 to $3.15. Bran, $21.
Shorts, $23. Hay, No. 2, per ton, car
lots, $16 to $17.
I Cheese, finest easterris, 2014 to
20e. Butter, choicest creamery, 38 to
39c. Eggs, selected, 39 to 40e. Pota-
toes, per bag, ear lots, 90 to 95c.
Cattle, cone, $1 to $3; calves, good
veals, $9 to $10; grassers, $3 to $3.50;
hogs, 'best lots, $10:75 to $11.
For Overseas Trade
Sir William .royneon-Hicks has just
been appointed Secretary of Overseas
Tra:de, in the Bonar Law Cabinet.
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