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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1922-8-17, Page 3•. r • ; HEAT-eROP Of CANADA, 1922, ESTIMATED AT 320,968,000 BUSHEIS Bore.. of StatisticsEstimates Show Big Yield of Oats, While Barley, Rye and Hay Also Reach Figures -Pota- to Crop Reported Good. • • .. • • • ' .••• • • • -•. •...• • . . t A dresepatch ftione Ottawa sewer:- report, le the Ptairis Provinces good •• Clanirde'e wheat crop this year le esti- rains haveltellen throughout tYlanitebe mated at 320,968,000 bushels, or and PreiVects in this Province are ,Slightly more than twenty million fav-orable. Baskatelsolvan the erons bussinsle larger then the final estimate in the eouthern distxia ore .generally of lest yerres crop, by theeDonarolon excellent, but in the central and north - "Bureau of etistiog, This'estintate is ern Le iota they hove euffered leen- , based 0011,rilitl'o,na prevailing eiderably freak drought and the yields thrthigliont Canada at the end 'afloat indicated on' Auguet 1 are conernier- ',.... month, and. is arrived at by .compiling ably below average, In Alberta, the data received front erop correspend- eouthern dietrictg have received. ample •mete of the Department. The eetirelet- moisture, but prospects M the eentral °ea yield a eats is 509,752,000 bushels [(and northern distriets are poor cwin,g ' c'nlilliared with 425,232,900 to drought. British Columbia hae Mao last, year, anti of barley, 64,881,000' suffered Sg4T1 dr -ought. ' bushele, ws against 59,709,100 bushels For the three Prairie ProVices the ' 1921. It is estimated that 'the foeedast buelrels is as fellows the • , yield -of rye will be37,848,006 beshels, figures in brackets indicatiag the fin- • asesempered seith 21,465,260 'fast Year, ally 'estimated yields of 1921: and flaxieed 4,530,000 hesitate' in coin- Wheat ' 297,781,000 (230,098,000) parisen with 4,111,800 buehels in 1921, oat's, 304,869,000 (281,147,500); bar - The eetimated yiela a potatoes, ley, 45,4'73,000 (44,681,600); q -ye, 35,- 102,914,000 lbtrtaller$, is smaller than 073,000 (19,100,700); flaxseed, 4,360,- - last year's final estimate, Which -wee 000. (8,945,700).. For Manitoba the 107,346,000, busbettS.' The arerraga yielder.% bushels are: Wheat, 63,444, - yield p.or acre ef Fall reheat is esti- 000 (39,054;000); ante, 73,028,000 (29, - mated '154 2214 11;S againit 442,600); barley, 24,534,000 ()9,681,- .21:* haAefira lest Tease,. The total .600); rye, 4,240,000 (3,5,04,700); flax - yield of hay and relever'is estimatetd seed, 611,006 (544,700). In Sesiltat- at 15;545,000 tons; whieli is the larg- chrewan they men' Wheat, 176,160,000 est- reoord With the exeeption of (188,000,000); carte, 154,669,000 (170, - that for•1916; when the yieldi was 16,-' 513,009); barley, 10,209,000. (13,843,- 348,600 tons. Last year-the:total yield, 000); rye, 27,893,000 (13,546,000); was only 11,366,106.'tens. Of 'alfalfa flaxseeds 3,561,006 .(3,230,000). In Al - (first carting) 'the Metal, yield is 483; bees; they, ase Wheat, 69,237;000 (53,- 000 tons as 'agtani..qt 662,200 tons in 042,000); oats, 77,172,000 (54,192,000); - 1921/ .batriey,, 10 730 600 (11 657 000) ; rYOP COliditiOnS thiVilghOUt Eastern Qin,. 2,940,000 (1,999,000); 6o:reseed, 188,000 .acia _eentinue to he favorable, Says the (171;000).e • oVti: -40 gAr '"- . ' A despatch from London says: --- "Why dans' any one want to travel • . first ,cl.ass7" That wag the reineek , made bye Queen Mary after She had inspected the great kitchens, balm- -• houses ,and, Sculleries. on, the White • Star liner Majestic at Cowde: With eare the Kierg, the Duke 'orf Connaught and Prince Gebege ehe pease& two' houre on the:weed% la'rgest'aitinn • . The Queen, was ,Mest interested in the dornegfic 'arra-notate:nits air& sines.- tiered- the cooks, stewards and ste*- =dresses, - While Sae . was amazed at the seam') of the act claSs' public Sloonts she toOkentrief interest in' the '4:errand and steerage qtrarbers, ,avlicreaaacealrepeeeinsaired her remapii. t. The Ring displayed/ en intimate f inveterate ca ',the ".teelaileal side of spbuilding when he aseeasee,si the liner's eel-atria/barn ira detail wiali iirrederre ifayea and officers of the -ernipahy..n.A lifeboot. waseloweredi. in - three minutes„ and it wras explained • hew. th-e shipis entire passenger ca- ' pacity rif 4,000 people could be eleared + waarY-fiv,e minutes. , Elltatt,, svernserng .etruetor, won the ecingratulations of ''' • etihe -firmest With her ,diying inee the , "ehipaepoca. The king had along talic 'with a beribboned ,galley inan'Mamed British Reply to • • Poincare's Proposals A despatch from Paris says: -In a note handed to the al- lied delegations at London on Thursday night, according to a Playas despatch from Lon- don, the British definitely out- lined their attitude with regard to Premier Poincare's propos- als. The' plan for a 26 per cent. tax on German exports, says. the despatch, is' accepted by the British, as are also the proposal for seizure' of the customs and the control of Mines and forests, but the lat- ter control is agreed to only - conditionally upon the Ger- -- mans continuing recalcitrant and maintaining their apposi- tion to the new customs lines. ICING AND QUEEN -VIEW 'THE MAjESTIC Wonders of World's Largest Ship Amaze Royal Visitors. ' ' Prince George insisted on riding the elrectrieally driven jumping horses M th,e gyemasium and every one was so interested. that the partrY overetayed its schedule by half an hour. Later in the day PaineesseBeratrice and other notables from Cowes, •Mspecteci the uhp. The King andr-Queen returned to Buckingham Paktee ifi the evening. wers They e h.eastily cheered by a big . • . crotrd e.t Waterloo 'station . . LIEUT,,-COL. W..0. V.C., D.S.O., " - The famous aviator" ether has just re- turned to Canada eftee visit -to Ertg-- land,e says' Mat the British plane 'tor buildleg a fleet ot 500 aeroplanes' are inadeeuata and that 5,000 would be a mese suitable number. says that , theetvare ratalea'airtina Wili'llaa"gala be deckled in the' alr, and that the great Speed of the latest types of aeroplanes ie such that no rangefinder could fol- low them and they would be immune from gunfire. - • - • Alexander Graham BeIrc Superlabives rtee' genera/1y out of order, hutt it is a. jumtifrable supeelsel bive to call Dr, Alexi:rider Graham Bell One •of the gneatestrmen al the 'nineteenth century, Thette.st. is sim- ple. Whenever- any, one is illustrat- ing srosne ,point :by A bold slimmest • of the greatest parries of that century, or for that matter of this one the list may vary, but it never fails to irsolude Bela When one recollects' that some of these lists leave !out the. names NarprSietra, Darwin and Bismarck, tthe conclusiiron is ineseistible. It is Worth noting too that Belar's greratmse,wa aehieved en the service of humanity. Everything he. did -and he did much move- threarinvent the telephone -was in the' direction of making' life easier and pleaeanter. sometimes fee the whole world as in the case ,of the telephone, 'But whethe et as teacher, as inventor or what not, his peofessiert, his vocatren and even -his avocation; all 'eansisted of service to the weria. This is why every list of the great mast %elude ha name. It io geneething to be great through ser- vice; rt le more than Napoleon Carl claim . The World Moos a groat man but did not lane him until his weirk' 'WA'S done. IL So vely a few months since hie health began to fail, but it was plate few that time that ha would not be able to perform any more great weeks H 'began his weak as a bey of sixteen and ... Sometimes, he ,lahered for special class, such as the deaf and, sitirnh; Tt.81, rsr t .4f '41,\CE1; Pers'uoaal Liability !for ,,., Fire Bill Draftd "sl IN MEMORY , • tv'AteMliDntit;RAIlare (lat.) I NY,441.011 lee teReet5..',D 'A' IVIONUMENT THAT' WILL LIVE rmievEz Braise, ana Celeniat Prese NATIONAL -TROOPS OCCUPY CORK° - FIRST PHASE OF REBELLION NEARS END A despatch frc,m Dublin Says : - The National foroes (sobered the city of Cork oil. Thursday, according to an offinial antnetincement. Pratiallekrebreet, the Vieterla -Hotel, the military bar, wake and die -newspaper offieereaao aflame, :fallerwing dynamite explosions which blieW"up many buildings. -- A despatch from London says:-. Landon mopert opinion in regard to the progress of the tetra 'MIX in Ire- landsiattrat•the drat phase in the suP- presslon of rabels-the Phase a formally anganiattel werfare-le now rrearing abe close. ' 311.0 attivalc from the sea M Cork County and the evacuation of Cark city may well provedetheive, for -that succees is one which, if properly pur- eared should soon end the existence of the Reprablacan array as an organized fere() &velar+ ot laoldierg the ' The military peek:ion willabe-appre- ciated if it ie tereernberect that the irregulaire had alreellute emetrol of the whale County of Cork; with Kerry on the west ands part of the ()aunty of Waterford, on the east. North of thie Day the fighting, zone, which tuna be called the front line, and along that the Government troope avith elow but eleady present» have been pushiag eouthwaed. The capture positions Alava feale and Druenoolloglarr brings 'theati into 0ork Oeurebyaa its north-western end, while /they are evidently attacic, ing near 011anmelaabout 20 mflee from its northeastern end. , The: Prevarional Governmenta sue - cess Cark neat make the whole resistance en the principal front hove - lose. It takee the enemy' in the tear at las geographical, pelt/teal and arallie chary centre, The cauip has been °ferried out ivy 0. aneelerbe y,ateng !officer, Mader- Genenal Dalbcni, who distinguiehed himself the.'great war, and is now turning his military. experierree to ea - 5,000 Lives Lnst- in Chinese Typhoon A aespatca Hanglcong sayer: - Five thousand persons are believed to have last theritalivee in a typhoon that swept 'aver Swatow, 250 miles north of here, on Wednesday night. Dead borliee are floating in the harbor amid the wreelcage and 'nearly every house in the eity :was, damaged, The floo_d (following the *wind drove ell the ine habitants from their homes. - ,Warehousea wens dearealishediar the stunt) and their OCintalta "10,3t or ex- tensively damage& Two British steamers were swept ashore and their cargoes, it le believed, wilibe loot for pirates beffiorie they ran be salvagera Swabew,le a port of 50,00,(1 te,60,000 inhabitants at the Mouth ea the River rear the eastern border of the province oE Kwangetung. It is the port torr the city of Chao-an-Hsien, twenty-five miles • The news from England of the open- ing of a great refinery in Swansea, Wales, by the Anglo -Persian 011, Com- pany putting that company in a p6si- tion according to rispert, to supply 01 lieast ceveethird of the total ;can- samption of the Beratish Isles, with a daily prodaction of„ 160,000 gallons le of interest the MaXitinle" Pray- incee -wham !this coinpany is under- taking clevel.oprnents in the Oil shales of -New Brunswicle and Nova Scotia. Red hate are banned by many medi- cal men aa dangerous to the nerves, if wore. hot eunnyaweather., • r Canada from Coast to Coast Charlottetown, P.E.I.-Fermers in\ Windsor, Ont. ---Dodge Brothers, tale province Are organizing receiving automobile,: maniefacturera, Detroit, 'etettiens for fowl and other products have parchasea a factrrry -site In Wind - and are- advertising- receiving dates ear and will erect to plant to earn for preparatory to forwarding aarlealds of their Canadian trade and possibly products•frorn the different centres' to their expert trade. There is seven and Montreal, Boston arid. New ;York. a half atres in the site, which is pax- Dididax, record run of sal- ticularly well adapted for manufacturr- MOM has entered the Margaree river ing and shippingm this seaeroal The angling far exceede Regina, feareee......The famous iota., that of recent years, and it is eeported dor tench of 100,009 acres of grazing !that 100 salmon were taken on the lands, in the wesrbern,paat of the papa- lly early thie ,rrienth r from a convex- ince, is being acquired by the Provin-. ativ-ely ernallilatrebeh of the river. A cial Government for eommunity graz- good run of salmon almost invarialrly Mg. Representartione are new baing aseendrs the 1VIargaree with the macle to the provincial autheritieg to autumn rains towards the beginning place Id superintendent in charge of of the spawning season. This year the ranch with,e, Maribor of 'cowboys the water remains high and the run and that a charge a 50 cents a head of saline/1. has been large and steady per month be impoeed ten all cattle throughout the whole spring...sews/on. pastured up to about '6,000 head, St. John, NB.--Progpeots are eacel- Edmonton, Atta,--The Eederal Gov - lent for a goad apple crop in th'e prov- eminent hair enderaed a trant.of 966,- ince- of New Brunswick this year, ac- 965 to the Province of Alberta "for the eardiag te the provincial heeticreltur- purpose of aiding an& advanehrg the ist, Who 'has just completed an inapec- farming industry by instruation in Hon trip through the orchard digbriets, agriculture." The payment will be Early apples will be 'a bountiful erop. made from the revenue -fund of Cam - Quebec, Que.---Terenty-five " the 'rade tor the Year ending March 31, sixty nrem'bere of the British Ilouse of 1923; and under the authority of the Lords and Commenahave already, ac- Agricultural Instruction Act, , eepted the invitation of the Montreal Victoria, B.C.-A new nee for the Borarci of Trade be be its guests on yellow eyptese of Britoil Columbia a trip aereee Canada • to eaebrate the hs been cleseovereti es a vesult of ex- beetaradth anniversary of the orsean- perlineets cartlect out_by the- Foreets izetrion. Aceoremodation has been sre- Products Laboratory. It has been die - cured for else hundred rnernbers ef ceviseed thrroug,h bang ececatale that the the Board of Trade. The idea of the yellow types -se, is very -valuable m the Board is to reoetribute to the interee'.3 reernefectuee el aronage batteries, drif- of the Denamen and Empire be af- fereaCeeetana ; a'1\1 separated fording members n,f the Imperial Par- by a thin leyer of weed. The 80. Bement a means of seeing Canada and yellow eypreas TIOW being used. elm-, ti C n ne ineecielly :iOr this pereossa. Ines:Sing rent esen r v,e .a , • be flied, at seventy-five. Such a reseed must look fax for rag feleew. Carry yourself with a self-roeficient air, and you will" rot only ins'Mrs others with a belief in" yoer atrength, but you will come to beieve in it quark enough under the circumstances, yourself. an aeroplane brought the parte Irma the $tate of Ohio under a rush order. The little toe is (le t' ' It is said that this is the first time bo tile's's...me of modern mootwear, and eneecroplatia hambeen used for :stall e oentury 03 s.o it will disappear a reimpose in Canada - altogether, ateetding to' ma doctoo. In order that a 1.'oreeto autoniobile company -might have certain Retorter- s bile parts in time to fulfil a coetract to ' for shipment to Eng - send, railway tvansportation not being ro 4 geneia ing, owing eati,a'r9i3's,114?(11.18-(1 $rquis.`, do, 'fair. bo Ontrer:,io coen---Nonanat. setahe 93; de' •A despatch from Vancouver sayst---A (haft of the pro, posed personal liability for bre bill was read and endorsed at the aroma' meeting of the As,, sociation of Canadian Fire Marshals here on Thursday. This Act, which will come into force 60 days after receiv- ing royal assent,,will be adopt.= ed every province in the Dominion. ' The purpose of the Act is, to enable fire de- partments to recover the cost of extinguishing fires from persons, who, through crimin- al negligence, are responsible. EVEREST CLIMBERS - SET FlNIE EXAMPLE 1\1:11o5t Valuable Result of Ex- iedition is Standard of Human Achievement. A despatch feeni Lundell sayee-- lialeuataineering proper as not news- serily tastiness, but a emeetion Of pru- dence .and of ceurage, etaangth and steadies:m.3,, and of a feoling•-for na- ture mid her most hidden beauties, which are often awe) inspleing, dent far that reason the more eubliine, and, to a ecereeinplatarie spirit, the xne-re sug, gestive." Sir Francis Younghaband, epreith- tug adore thee Royal' Getraraphical .So- ciety • on the rilleirirt Everest expedi- tion, used the feregoing eto express the smith -neat whielelias animated all these etinnected with the expecliften, and then. Saki, it was written thirty- three years ago u Fearer Raba, now Pope Pius XL Alter describing" whiet" the expedi, tion. had accompliebed Sir ,Francts said: "The experience gained this year sheers that skilled mountaineers .are able to take those unskilled in high ineuntrein craft to the ' highest alti- tudes. , G-eoffrery Bruce had,. never climbed a snow .aad ice mouniaria be- fore. Yet under Pinch's eukillect lead- ership he wag Obi)? bo attain a -height, of 27,300 feet Anerthe. Sherpa. pont- ecu, though they were priletieally un- treined to snow and ice wark," Were able, under Ceti. Bruee'e atimulating influence, to eaary lo!ads up tO 25,500 /eet, some ,of them rnalcing the jour- ney fpur thnes and So earning. the unstinted praise cf the loest moan's taineers. ..„ "By careful orgapizetion and tom - Natation of eilloma tieing experience to guide !inexperience arta dry this displiesi of indemitable'pluCk on the part of the highest climberer, the eXpedition at a bound brought the record up from 24,600 feet to 27,300 feet and thas left -only 1,700 feet to be climbed be- fore the crowning sullen -lilt i.s reached. "The 'Standard of( hinnen achieve- meitthas titereby been zensibry.raised. Andmank another traveler aad many another struggler upwitaxt in every walk ef life and in every country'will be braced and heartened.in remember- ing what ninch and /Viallory, Somer- veil., Norton' land Dril,00 .1roaye this year aecomplished on Mount Everest: And !talks, to my inIndy is' incomparably the most valuable result of the expeditidn, and a regifirawaleh makes their efforts iirthe highest degree worth MOS.C9W Citizens Dependent on Government Rations A ,diespatehrfroni Berlin eays:-Twrie, thirds of the iehrabltreats Moseew- abata 700,000 out of trtheaeopulation of 1,100,000 -are Mai (dependent r, upon Government rablens. The Soviet Government, through an orgardeatiork known as the Central Co-oponaitive, mailcing an effort to nreet Me toed shortage and claims to have made great strides beamed, keep- ing down the Oast of toed. The co- operative maintains twenty-five par. avasung agencies in the Provinces and also controls a number of fectories engaged in the,:nianufactu-re a fend- stuffe. In the dietribution of bread the co-operative elaims to issue 125 pounds, a month tor... workers, 100 pounds terrehete and doctors, 90 pounds to gevernment employees and 86 pounde.to children and invalids, The Ce,nadi'an .Government rshettly appoint a teethe commissiener "to report upon ahd inveerligate open- ings for Canadian beide in Mexico, The Ord.er-inComicil ce.ntrainine authority Inc the a,ppoinitments says , that "Wetted- offer:6 field fCe'l` erean- iging extending healtha irag'. re- lations between Olt o entry ani Canada!' • e r:,47. e•s• • extra No. 2, $22 t.o $23; mixe•d, $18 to , ,„ tle8r. Lon, Mask, TO- la!°'141;Pu $a66;1715-; arli1P; ra. helfere. chaire $6 to $7a5,; 11:01001.:11.2t:re5iitoo: el,b•ttclace;tilit,-,1,a0',abNioesu_etibsiNDI d,onent ainoerairril,twsite, oltto.c.„'ibte:leinuaciarl s.ga$:::ff0.4151id,(Uot , AGREEMENT -REACHED BETWEEN COAL OPERATORS AND MINERS DI FOUR STATES Jt tiesrplateh from Cleve/end, O., raya-Coal operate/le represented her and mieese a Ohio, Indiana, Il- linois “nd Western Permsylvenia fharcelay agre,G1(1 15 make aaeoratraet permitting immediate reetenpttort of ooft coal mining in the eentrel 00511- petitivo field, named a general corn- nritteo 1» worIc'eut the details of the centract end adjourned, subject to cell on the completion ef tho reommittoeis Work. ' A.sootelingto ,John L. bowie,' the making af' an' agreement with the 0P- eraters repaerented here means that within the week -75 per emit. of the 600,000 iron whp !ruvie been on strike will be back at work, leaving the only tato properties jb15oae intindrett in fields non-11Mo% prior to April' 154, end that the United Mino Workers have er,on." their strike. The decision te,...„neske a °entreat without tho eo-operation of the op- eraters' orgartizations of Illinois and Indbaria was, reacbed ttftdr the 'policy conniattee of Ere Miriam he met, The eonanittree deekied to wait" no l'angaa for tate bulk cif the Indiana end II- tinole leperatoes and make ftil agretr- rannt with the operators hero willing to reeume on the basks of the old _• Neale until April 1, and Set up ma- chinery to ley 'plane ;far 'the making el a eealle te be (afeetlye eater Mat d a te. The eonferearre formally argalazal Thareaey efteraeon, weal Michael Callegleete manager of the Hanna Coal it4eseobn,eeo reharirman, eminttel nOS'iYFI and found, operatorrepresenting, 40,- 030,000 tons present ond willing to man, Of this amount, 27,960,000 tone was from this rebate, viral; hale a nor- mal production of 41,000000 tone at year; 7,800,000 of Western Pentnala'- vastilals 60,000,000 tone, 2,470,000 of Indiana'80,000,000 and 1,8(10,000 of the 90,000,000 capaeity of Illtnoiss pereentages Ghia figarree 62 per emit, •of Ohlre 15 per !rent. Of Western Pennsylvania, 8 -per dent, of Indiana ans/ 2 per cent. of Illinois. In addition to lade," veneaderabla tenegge a Erg tour States represented -here, but not rectually talking part in the conference, 45 understood to be ' Waling to alga eonitraet when 'com- pleted, while et large pert and Indiana, officially against any eettlerrient that does not 'involve an agreement to arbitrate everything nn. the eapiratioe of am contract, is de- clared to be wavering. Futurity. When we were little the futiire seemed as far ahead as the fairy tales eeerned loag eV, We hadl blight dreams of what we meant to do. As life has- creme upon se day try day ever 'ranee, we have felt at times in- aignarit with Fate for hustling 'us into events, acetates, eituations' foe which so often we 'have felt unprepared. We haye not been given time to adjust ourselves to a new order of thiags, to /11410 a deliberate and eareful pre- paration ere they happened to us, The pesponsibility has been precipibated <00 us lace a landslide down a mountain, like a bolt from the empyrean, with - ma fair warning. The pest we know, the so -event we have andl the future keeps aertiing be- fore we want tit to ,come. We beg for a delay and the petition is not granted. We' are snot mestere of our ,autobM- geaphi, which, stlx,ve 1l wigs, es -I euredly:should belong 'to use' Ourown lives take part in the consPiracy of crowding accident and fascadent to hustle us. We lay large plans and frame good resolutions 'bo- down, ,to be etts,y-going, to make inane te. live 'and to Incense good. companyefor selves. But things keep happening s6 'tag, because of unciontaellable cir- -cun8baoOoes, that SOOn our ylrttioes re- solve is smashed to kintiling weed, If the future would only remain In futu-rity, rancl.gnod. Bet it won't. lb....keeps hurry -trig toaneet us. It is like -the case of two_ children traihed' by la. maiden!aura in that liveable ahiag, the multiplication table. ' She would take them Ioti a joyride down the road. They Must have the 'table accurately xecited as fax as twelve -times twebas ay the theie they reached tbe little white 'house at the cross - toads, under penelty of turning baolc. How that libtie white- house would make baste to meet thern halt -way! 1)1 never waited in its place as at shoulo. It became animate; it bad wings, It seerned to take a malicious rplessure, in spoiling their f,un. The hest way, instead a trying to cling to 'the present, tis to go to meet the future as one who is unafraid. If evalt till we Sallie we axe ready to go forward We are likely tot to move at all. Het Whoprooreetinertes ie go- ing be be shocked one day by a 'per- emptoey summons, It will be to usa. at that thus to, say, like the indolent schoolboy, "Not prepared!' He wishes will not be constalted. He will not Ise asked if he la ready or besought to declare what is his pleasure. The fu- ture he strove to evade oe at least to postpone has come inexorably to seek 'him -where he is. • _ The best cure for herd luck is hard work. • [1 CANAIZIIEWS I . Vancouver, 31.0, -The whemh =eve ment .through the pert of Vancouver for the 1921-194 searson wi1i net ecases until leste in July err early lit ' Augus , tahti°Vueglyli 'behmearl.lal.ri'larnra.uft tbeeti4bea :1•TpPelaa'rel. When it is gone the government edee valor sell], have exported 6,579,105 busifele to the United 'Kingdom and the ,Orient. This' is (the &steal wheat shipped and does not include that led in screening, Calgaree Altaa-Farrneag in the <Ma- telot east of Retlaw have daciael to foriratm lereain thi the e,WeetI:ridia:ticir Dis- tiaart be about 4;700 irriga•ble acres, and every effort is to he put forth to have the construction week done this sum- mer -da order that the water may be available Inc the land next maven. Sagtailaaa, Seska-The Univers* rSeskartelterwan is to aave a new do- r _pertnorent, and a 'amus0 of bee hes- leateary win be includedi in the eunri- vain-roof agrartan"stOdeats Mia fall. The university aaithorities have enlist- ect the aid of gra. j. IL Bayford, Wasre0a, ,Sagle., who, in 1921 gathered 9213ficupletu. rof h aeney, worth 70 'eents Winni,pegelVIems-Forty-rone thousesid harvesters will be required to bandits the prairie Crops this year, le was So- nounced aollenving a zneeting of repre- sentativee of the railways, wesieru ,comrnission'ers,, and the egaain trade° interests. The 'arateri waggi cliscuesea were $3.50 a !day for har- vesters. and $4 a dna fer theeshare. The ,harvesber excursians eommenced • to makes .in Winnipeg from Eastern Canada August 7, anf will entstinue until-Auguist - ' Mentreati, Que.-Captain Tremblay and three men, of Captain Berniee's Far North Expedition have left here for The Pare, itrunilbolea; 'where they will proceed overlandm mat join Can- tata Bernier, Who lett Quebec,recently en his steamer "Amebic." The "Arctic" makes an annual trip north vis6ling the outlying settlements, eellecting Mail, administering medical aid, ald HdiuStrdsmanT6Bilgy a$UntraGio.evEloneittnetuhbevive4at9fk,Doui: well as collecting 'Ana, ere. Sydney, the., w,eek ended Jtrly 21, 85,000 tons of veal Were repeated shipped by rale Deana/roe Coal Company, la record quantity. The highest previous week was 80,000 tons. Ot the 85,000 tons, over 31,000 were • ter American parte, the Itergeet ton- nage from gape Boston to the. United States in many years. Weekly Market Report Toronto. . Ilb.; 6-245-115. ting, 1415 to 1545e per Martitelsa wheat -No. 1 Northern, 111).; Ontaale emit honey, per dozen, $1.39; No, 2 Northern, 91.27; No, 3 94 Northern, $1.21. ') Potat9oes-New Ontarios 91,10 to Man i bob a oa ts--/slotn i nal. Smoked ineets-Tfams, Made 36 te, Mani leba aarley-Nominal, :10A:•8111311:t'll',121'1' ee41a- or'nbw:ev°71.e9nert-rraaNclii°(''''a.132ial-Y7 e111.1°:rwL • 8ije ; ,c'irn3i8a.8elocell;s;u'b.rbcr:2aati°8:91(1(leti!dhaer:all!ba'se ;11bt_flaa' c'tcr:9'Litno.36.11b:a-6340c2Otil5tbi :o:41:34:5"c&Dnb;.31:5a1:11)::::4". Bare.`CY-NO. 3 extra, ts.srt 47 1(15. et Letter, 55 to 58a, according bo freiehts bac.k, hvaolesa. 42 la 44C. Iluckve, zat-Ne m : 1503, 917; lightweight rolls. in bbire, $48; IIMY.,11-1 eeNdGrLD2'e(1:.5 tcMrnert.i. ea: f r eight, bera3:Paw-ellPgillutr`e'vec:ti'lit"ce4$4,0.16'ei tuba 17v ; ' ' ' _bap indludeds. Bran, per tem $22 ee ipa5:41sc,; 1p7lain, b8pliiin7,,a.s. 18c, Shortening, t',erces, 14% to 14Vec; tubs, 15c; nails, fr5e2e3d; efilatouti•t,s,91p7:10. tboon,$3,9,284to 0. !25;: gwid Choice . heavy steam, $7 '15r8; Baled hay -Track, manta, per nem eeteeer efeeen, enefse„ 57 bp 97,50: es, ram, 93 1,,e 54 t, reale-ea- CABLE ENDS S OU D LAN'0NEN GL1SH SOIL SAY 'LONDON MERCHANTS A de:petal!. from Landon says:- The great cable oongestion caused by destrnetion of abler stations ref the Western 'Chien and of the COMM-Ct- Oka Cable Ceinpany in Ireland and the emashing of the Clilden *Melees station, have terionsly inconveraleaed t big finanetal Iraueee here treeing large daily transactions with the Unibea at have. There le a tvideepreted demand that these dthle ends shoteld be landed in England es soon as 901041110, This demand la voiced the Deily Medi robish (says that When these tableit Swore landed in Ireland that eountry yea an Mbegral pamt, et. the United Kiegdore and no risk eitistaci ef Mires, .fereecs rby Mali:times atter-41%e or bY ceneorship 'net eerier Beiblea eontrei, The obviotire comma., it asserts, is te, traestar these arbmieg to British aOil 0s 00011 ,1)0 poesiboe. There tees thinlyh.eur (kitty oft Thersday Mahal rate cemmeretal ineSseges and the eittiation bestirly li.esearte worse, 100 eame mmeters here it i3 believed Chet the e004(314ig tys, the sables aria smesh- ing of the Wire:lase Were planeea by the rthela in the wild hem:.«6 forcing Se0/0)110,gort interventioa 111 meter to gain poeserseip0111111851011of these stationre -ea 14040915110411taa14040915110411 • tile 5tAiena ba IteNGLANa TO 011,, ' 'ithr3 urracithi 116.6(51photagrapit ,ot rat' ossuchd eenteo Dt iho -rXro rid dhow; Old 7t ruin or (981310)115 or9'913• . . . land, eccupying 1106'1.110.0r le tee centre of the plertme• r hich it 's eselorsfend is to be rebeilt, The ;sell et the l'iallk of Fillgialtd le 459)8j15) 30 41 latIO t(tidetgtOnnil veult eteVereti'vs'An eeverat (cat of water (051113'(051113' eirattgal Mat . . . tarrestearreaseateassameam :,.o.lAtftik•••kait,L,Slath atraigais in bulk,. 0000 'b»losr' .111 96t 4851.(9ert,s°, V6$56�0' dbo')' 6$1181(hnkcemo) 56.80.0(r $5.60; ,! Manitoba flout-Isl. St-rt.a., ,in joie „,"'"1„1.'11'sv.,rs, 9,70 141 990: 'calves. choice, scCkIrsteeS8°NePewr blbalr;ge2,ndlea,b8.1:0971-.082; 'C)(/ Urs*I;t:Ilnleg!"'iaSn7lbtig'o• 9:1:06'11"0' 09011011, twins, 19 to 1.9%c; trMirts, 20 te "e,e4r, cn'r,,,*"; Sn le, $5.50; do, green, 201/so. Old, hinge, 26c; twins, 24 to sl""'"" 1.0 0"; 61( 'e'0111,... 91 ba 9M8; 9.4iarc, Stiltome 25c. Extra, old' Mtge, Y, ?",.11"V• ,611411ce, 96 to 97; siade, CO, 26 te 27e. Old Stiliens, 24c, 90e; noga, fed and wateredr, 913 t Buteer---Fiereet creamery peints, 371 el'erlbe 9541» 91216; 600 la 88c; oedinary ereamety printe, 321"u1ibrY Points', 812 tor 912,25. 1)tGetii:yil,e;29Ntoo. 321 c°,1"cuOneleelitTtl,e,"21.1Co. 34e. Oats.--Nre. 2MO°11Vtt.i,e5a. 8145. te 59e; No, Dreseed noultry--Spring ehickens, 3 OW, 551/ee. Flour, Men. Spring 85 fe eese. tossers, 23e; fowl, I,o, wheat pats,, areal, 97.80, Ballad eats, 27e; dueldings, 30c; turkeys, 35 15 44». 00-1h. Was, 98,20 bei' 93.00. 1117e0, 1,,15'e 7001lt0:v.-S00%4 chickens, 30c; $26,95. Shoots, 987.25. flay, No. 2, vet:dors, 17 te 20e; fowl, 20 to 24»;, per ten, tee 1,0"bs, 529. ritaltdingec 80e; lealtrye, 80 bo 86c, theme, finest enamels, 1.445e. tint. VI-tegarintir-20 to 22c. I ter, choicest auarnery, 84 to larege-,Ne, 1, canr15c.(1, 28 to 29(e, Eggs, selected', 33 to 33e, polatooy, (relents,. 82 le 38c; CatOus, 34 IP 36e.' net l'osty, ter lete, $1 te 91,25, ts.,11 otiliot1;1,00,a1$00512.008, tes193evv; te4oweeta,tv9et5abeeziet 'Maple pro de -rayrue, pee Mei lots, 97,50; made_ 90.50 fair, o1( -fed, gal., $2,20; per 5 IMO. !PANt",...rr.in,dc.rl 11,, vtsrs,S,.corais„ s$84toorlilir7ts ;goritioD,1,bszto.0 ,91t05: Miele (Auger! the 30c. ,lo Hotteys-00-1b, tIOti, 13 to 13%c per 912,50, "