The Clinton News Record, 1923-6-14, Page 4GOLD FIELDS OF ROM' N TP., QUEBEC,
GIVE PROMI SE OF' RICII HARVEST
Noted Miming Companies Ac quire Large Holdings in New . .
District Geological Structu re of District ResemblesThat
of Kirkland Lake Fields.
A despatch from Rouyn Lake, rue., er here as being correct is that assays
eaye:—Careful exaimiaation of lend- show en average of $7 a ton over a
Ing discoveries in Rouyn township con- width of about eight feet and extend -
firms the intermittent reports from Ing over` a length of 1,600 feet in ono
time to time during the past winter. ore shoot and with e -800'-foot-long
Surface outcroppings do not contain ore shoot ,containing much higher
spectacularshowings ,of native gold. values.
This absence of the glitter of gold ' Ore coming from the test pito of
may account' for the;;' quiet that has eight to,: fifteen feet in depth shows
masked progress in the field..' Never- heavy mineralization, with native gold
'theles, in this very quiet there lies visible and with graphite in quantity
a depth of seriousness that should somewhat' similar to that occurring
augur well for the future. of Rouyn. in the high-grade ore in the producs
It is to large veins and to assay ing mines of the Kirkland Lake dis-
-sheets that 'modern miners look, and triet,
-it is a feature of this day age a ge that : There is a marked similarity in the
mining gold is not ,associated with characteristic of Noranda ore with
the flashing of rich; specimens, but, that in the Kirkland Lelce district,
rather,. with the measurement;of.ton- and the geological structure has char -
nage andthe determination of the aeteristie,f in common with Porcupine
average gold content in the zones of as well as Kirkland Lake.
segregation. Various Ontario i gold and silver
More work has been done; on the mining companies•are interested "lo
Powell claims than at any other point the new. district. The Dome Mines
in s, the new district, The Noranda Co. of Porcupine holds options on a
Mines Co. not onlyholds the Pbwell large number of claims, after having
y
under option, but also holds a number kept two geologists in the field for
of bdioining claims, among them be- some time. Mr. Wright, chief geolo-
ing'; the A. 11. Cocheram, J. H. S. gist on .the Dome Mine, is coning
Waite, W: A, Chadbourne and others, back to Rouyn this week on a second
making tip a total' of nearly 2,000 trip, despite the fact that the coo-
acres, pany's field man, Mr. James, is being
What is known as the Powell vein kept continually in this district,
h;as ;been traced for close to ' 12,000 The M. J. O'Prien, Ltd., a $20,000;
fee, -svith considerable- trenching and 000 corporation owning the. O'Brien
explorationwork, along nearly, ono `Mine at Cobalt and the Miller Lake-
, mine 'of its length. The averagewidth O'Brien in Gowganda, as well as other
of the deposit, as so fai' determined, big interests, has secured ::a large.
is from eight.. to nine feet, sometimes acreage in the Roiiyn gold, area.
attaining a' width • of twelve feet or Tho Coinages Mine of Cobalt has
more. The vein is a true fissure, run- secured property et Pelletier Lake,
ping east of south and cutting the and is sending in a 'force of men to
porphyry "and greenstono formations carry on development. 'These claims.
at•-r"ight angles. wore staked by M. P. Wright and P.
. No one on theproperty has author- -Billings, 'among the first staking in
ity iso announce the "average gold con- Rouyn township. A strong vein: out,
tent of the ore in the Powell vein, crops at surface in which gold 'Is
'but "the information generally accept- 'visible.
ALBERTA EXPECTS
EL71_MMPER WHEAT CROP
Yield of About '100,000,000
Bushels Generally Pre-
„ dieted.
A -despatch, filen Calgary says:—
Grain men and others in_Calgary' are
already forecasting the probable yield'
of .wheat in Alberta thi's year,
-and those who are;' prepared to
hazard'. a guess state that given
ordinary favorable - conditions be-
tween now - and harvest time
the threshing machines will regia-,
ter soinething in the neighborhood of
100,000,000 bushels. This estimate is
based on the 55,000,000 bushels^crop of
last year (Alberta Government esti-
mate) and on approximately the, same
acreage seeded,' As a matter of fact,
there are some' grain men who' say
that the estimate is somewhat: con
servative, and that :: the . acreage in
some localities this year shows a con-
siderable increase compared to last
year, particularly so in the northern
portion of the• province; where wheat
Is rapidly outiivalling oatsand other
coarse grains.
While the recent rains, : which
amounted to about seven inches and
which are believedto be the heaviest
on record in Alberta for an equal
length of time, are regarded as being
'worth anywhere up to $25,000,000 to
the province, the benefit to the forests
may also be fairly regarded as am-
ounting to millions.
By the way, another' saving to Can-
ada following- the rains is • being ac-
complished at the Federal aerodrome
at High. River, Alberta, for with' the
forests -saturated it is not necessary
to send out the daily airplane patrols
which' cover 'a' stretch -ranging from
the, Clearwater River west to Red
Deer, apprexiinately to the g "interna-
tional boundary "below the Crow's
Nest. Pass. .The machines will only
be sent out when conditions warrant.
Harmless Eruption of
Vesuvius Presents Rare Sight;
A despatch from Rome ,gays!. -as
Canadian tourists landing in• Naples
are enjoying the rate spectacle ,of
Vesuvius in theatrical eruption.'
Professor 1Gialladrasays that the
eruption, though hartnless,is intense-
ly interesting scientifically, because it
arises from an, overflow of lava inside
the immense crater owing to breaks
in several cones;
The lava is' overflowing the cones
and fogming Immense fiery bulwarks
which are a. fins spectacle by day 'and
become marvelous at ,night,, when gi-
gentle columns Of smoke'sliow bright- office,
rel; against; the sky. All the lava
coming from the eones le incandescent;
Fermere growing' vines and "vege-
tables at the' foot of 'the volcano bes
came.terelfied at the sudden spectacle
but they were quieted by the :assur-
ance of experts that the.. eruption .was
harmless. Visitors immediately flock,
ed to. see the superb spectacle and
to” watch women and children Utley
gathering T and to
C g beans , Teas matoes
in the shadow of the erupting volcano.
Sir, Campbell. Stuart
The Canadian Editor of the Loudon
Times, who has started the organize•
tion of a society, of whiGle he is secre-
tary, for the collection of data con-
cerning Canadian 'history .in Britain
and France. Lady :Minto, with. of -a
former Governs' -general,' and ,'the
Duke of Connaught, aro eo-operatt%g.
NOR.T N IRISH
�R 1l4EN
LOOKING TO CANADA
British: Plan to Equalize the
'Number of Emigrants in
Both Sexes.
A despatch from London says:—
Canadian regulations for the emigra-
tion of young persons under the over-
seas settlement 'scheme provides that
the Dominion's share .of the grants
for passage money shall be made for
girls only tip- to 16 years of age and
youths to 17 years of ego. '
11 is ,understood that the British
authorities' are ''so impressedwith the
desirability of the sexes being_•er i-
grated In equal proportion_,ehat they,
have resolved to offer to provide a,full
grant for every additional girl who is
between 15 and, 17 years of age, the
idea"being..to equalize the: number of
emigrants inboth eIassee.
Owing to the interest displayed ,in
the question of emigration to Canda
in various parts of Northern Ireland,
the Canadian Emigratlbn Department
is; doubling`;its space in the Belfast'
w17H DUMMY
f•
Themost powerful radio equipment
afloat will.; he aboard the "Leviathan"
when the giant ship re-enters the
transatlantic Services under the colors
of the U. S. Lines somo time in June,
The equipment; sa ch"• will ` ,be six
times as powerful as that carried by
the average steamship, will provide
fait uninterrupted communication with
points 3,000.: miles distant.
ENGLISH'PARMgFIETTE$ TOUR CANADA
Four bright young English girls ranging from foui`teentoeighteen years
of ago, have reached Canada to make a tour which will last until September.
They travel under the Sir henry Thornton Scholarships and are chaperoned
by glee, Wolfe Murray, a newspaper woman, who is s'descendant of General
Murray. The girls' are Miss Joan Moore, Lelcesterehhe; Mise Ivy Townsend, a,
of Surrey; Miss Mildred 'White,.of Devonshire; and Miss Emma Abselgn, of
Middlesex, The: ability to speak and write were factors in their selection,
Mesa Moore, the youngest, defeated her father in a judging contort before
leaving England.
O KILLED, THREE
INJURED, ON DON ROAD
In Making Drop of Seventy
Feet Auto Somersaulted
Three Times.,
A despatch from Toronto says:—
Two women were killed outright, two.
persons sustained injuries that neces—
sitated their removal to the hospital,
and two others miraculously escaped
injury, when an automobile driven
by Frank Kelly, 293 Lauder Avenue;
staIIed on the steep hill ::beyond ,the
second.bridge, which spans the C,N.R.
tracks, Don Mills Road, two Miles
'north' of the city limits, backed down
the slope, crashed through the flimsy
rail on the righthand aide of 'the,
structure, and somersaulted three
time before it reached the steel right -
of -Way, seventy lest below. The dead.
ere: - Mrs, John Wilson, aged 51, 135.
Simpson Avenue, and Mrs. , Norman
Jackson, her, daughter, aged 85, 69
Friezel' Avenue, Those injured are:
Frank Kelly, wiio is •believed to have
sonie•b'roken ribe,,but who is' to under-
go an X-ray 'examination to ascertain.
definitely if ,this is, so, and May Trete-
ley, _aged' 4, of 0,9 .Frizzell Avenue„
Mrs. Charles Trebley, who "is also :a
daughter;, of Mrs. Wilson and mother
of the injured child and of Donald
Trebley, aged 18 months, escaped with
her baby.' The ,remains of the two
victims of the tragedy- were removed
to the Morgue, where County Coroner
W. L. Bond opened an inquest - The
injured persons ware conveyed to St.
Michael's Hospital. Afterher right
limb had been set in a' plaster cast.
May Trebley was, able to go home.' '
Kelly, who isengaged to one of Mrs.
Wilson's 'daughters, had had his •car
in storage until' a week ago.
Mrs:' Wilson was the, mother of ten
children.
Lady Carnarvon to Give
Treasures to England
A despatch .from London says:--
The
ays:—The Iate Earl ofCarnarvon's wonder-
ful collection of antiquities, which -in-
cludes same of the • most, valuable
Egyptian relics, will be presented by
his widow teethe nation for the -British
Museum, says"The Daily Mail." Lady
Carnarvon thereby sacrifices the pros-'
pect of greatly adding to herwealth,
for the earl's will stipulated that if
she decided to sell the collection the'
British Museum should be accorded
the first chance to refuse itfor £20,000.
This' sum is said to,be far below the
real valueof the treasures.
The. newspaper •asserts : that the
prospective gift to the nation will in
elude whatever part of the treasure
found in Pharaoh Tut-ankh-amen's
tomb is allotted to Carnarvon's estate
by the Egyptian authorities.
Third Woman M.P.
Mrs. Hilton Y
hilipson, formerly Mian.
Mabel Russell, an actress who has
.bean elected to the British Commons,
the third'Woman IV.P. She succeeded
her :husband, who was tlns'eated °Win
g
to the acts of his election agent,
Canada Has Sent 15,434
- Head Of .Cattle to Britain
A despatch from Ottawa ways: -=-
Since the British ,embargo was re-
played (and up to May 31), 10,190
store cattle and 5,244 butcher
cattle have been , .exported to
Great Britain, says a :report'of the
Department of Agriculture. ' Of that
number, approximately 11,500 were
billed from Ontario and 1,900 from the
Western Provinces. Prices on good
quality steers have been stimulated
from 50 cents to $2 perhuridred'as a
result of the improved demand for
good stock, Practically all the stock
was either hornless or dehorned, and
meeting • the requirements of a high
class of trade,"sold at strong prices.
Mere Talk.
It Is not 'necessarily a mark of
strength to be, silent. There are those
who are still,'. because, to save ;their
lives, they could not think of anything
to say. 13y' nature empty and dull,
they found it too laborious to "im-
prove" their minds. ' lfethey could sit
back- and have predigested knowledge
haisd'ed them' in ,chunks, as, at motion-
picture shows ,or certain kinds of sec-
tures, they 'would: take it. Whatever
Iearning can, be imbibed or inhaled
without conscious efforton their part
they would accept. But.' to go out of
their r obese and vegetating selves in
quest of experience and feet would not
appeal to them. They Will shuffle
through a torpid life to an insipid
eternity .somehow. Meanwhile, the.
whole of the real business of Iiving
goes by them like a- procession' with
a band, and .they have. no part in it.
What is the:use:of theist? They might
as well not' be.
Though there are'plenty of men' .02
action who are ,Iirofessionally terse—
Men ; whose kt5iries we ';long for and
never get—most', o4 the good talk is-
sues from those who "'are in the thick
of things and are making. them move.
Of course, there are finicky -idlers,
who fancy they are artists, like the
author who boasted that he spent the
morning putting in a comma and the
afternoon taking it out. If that meant
infinite .patience in a genius, the rest
of us' Wright bow our heads in acqui-
escence; , But' in this easel it heads,
si i -
Y fin,
fled the decadent trifling; of an elegant
'Idler,, whose•,faatidious product am-
ounted to nothing When it was done.
The chatter of such. genteel
does not signify. What really matters
is the formulated senao its speeeh of
men in sober earnest, with all. they
have and are In everything they do.
Willingly; and,
we listen when one' talks
"who' saw life ''steadily and saw it
whole." He went somewhere (though
physically he, may not have stirred)
and he came back.and told us what he
learned. „He did not,seem'to be epeak.-
ing from any passionate- infatuation
with' his own art of _words. He evi-
dently felt that what he had to say
might, interpret' life assistingly for
some one else; 'and so he spoke.
In listening to oratory, the first
question we raise is that of the speak-
er's sincerity. If the man Is not in
and behind the utterance, the listener
feels and knows that hereis but a
hollow, fragile and;reverberant shell,
uninhabited by substance..: He listens
to one who, no matter how adept a
juggler, has Come 10 regard language
as the end and not, the means, He
misses the tremendous moral impact
of,.a conviction, so: possessing. the soul
of a man that. it, aidstehnd utterance
and reach the inner,room of another's
Nitliitill iRetif,uPco8
nia
ltStire
The Natural Itolasur<•;s Intel;
ligence Se ';'leo of the Depart
Ment of the Interior et Ottawie,
says:
While Ontario, being an in-
land province, has no:sea fish-
eries, the groat lasses provide as
very large output of many spe-
cies of edible fish, as do also the
many interior lakes. Ontario in
1920 produced 33,001,035 Ms, of
fish, valued et 82,631,098. Her-
ring provided tholargest out-
put, being 13,143,610 lbs„ with'
whitefish next, with 0,803,720
lbs. Trout were taken to the
amount of 5,025,100 lbs,, blue
pickerel 3,379,524 lbe„ and
coarse 'fish 3,379,524 lbs.; white
pike, dory; perch and carp were
over one million pounds each, 01
the provinces having no. sea
fisheries Ontario is far in. the
lead in fish production.
eee
bishop of Algoma
Archbishop Thornloe, who celebrates
.the iubilee of lits diocese on June 17th.
He was created a bishop twenty-six
years ago, and an archbishop eight
yeare ago.
.... \,
Toronto : Institutions Benefit
by Gift of Mr. John D.
•- Rockefeller, ' Jr.
The Toronto General Hospital and
the Hospital for Si* Children are
each to. receive $10,000 and the 'Uni=
versity of Toronto the sum of $5,000
fee research in insulin to be conducted
7,7
PIRE' FORESTRY CONFERENCE
TO BE HELD DI CANADA IN JULY
In the forefront of. prominent inert
to attendance fit the Empire (Forestry
Conference to be held ie Canada this
Summer will he Major-General Lord
Lovat, IC:T., it,C.AM,G,, D.S.O. Lord:
Levet ie chairman of the Imperial
Forestry Commiselon, which is .carry-.
ing' out a gigantic 'program o1 re.
forestation in. the British Isles, The
forests of England and Scotland worn
subjected to serious depletion to eup-
ply war demands, and the work of
the Comnlisiion'is to restore as rapid-
ly as poealble the forested areas in.
the United: Kingdom."
During the war Lord Lovett was in
charge of all British forestry opera-
tions, and associated with him were -
many men, including 'Canadians, prom-
inent In the lumber and pulp manu-
facturing world, He has rnanyfriends
in Canada, and it is anticipated that
his coming ,will waren the hearts of
many a member of the clan ?reser,
of which Lord Lovat, as Simon Fraser,
is Chieftain. Not only is he a man
of great energy, broad vision and out-
standing ability, but he is possessed of
a most charming personality. The
several Canadians who were delegates
to the Empire Forestry Conference
held in London in'1920 speak highly
of Isis ability as: the :leader of that
Conference.
OUTLINE 0I' PROGRAM.r
Preparations for the Conference, are
now so far adyeneed that certain im-
portant particulars can be given in
regard to the program The: Confer-
ence will open during the last week of
July, foresters from all partsof.the
Empire taking part. Almost immedi-
ately after the formal opening a' tour
will be made.' in the eastern provinces
to observe `forest conditions and to in-
spect forest industries. Following the
eastern trip: the meetings at Ottawa
will take place. At the conclusion of
these the Conference will visitlumber-
ing centres and forest areas in, tree
tario and 'Western Canada. Many of
the delegates Will 'see for the first time
forest industries on a scale entirely
new to them. The huge pulp'con-
cerns In eastern, Canada and the gi-
gantic sawmills of the Pacific ,Coast
, will undoubtedly normeion much
tore t,
AIM °F' Tara cogk'i+ngNcg,
It is the: aim of the Conference to
find the ways and /needle o1 making
the Bmplce selfesuel,$ning in Its tine -
bet euppiy. 'fills involves cergfel
stock -taking of forest resources, the
pooling of information In 'regard
thereto,, and the establishment of fnell»
{tier; for increasing Empire trade gen,
erally in forest products, In Teens`
case,; possibilities have been neglected
purely through the lack of Information:
that has prevailed regarding :supplies
and facilities,
A most important feature of tho
Conference le the placing plainly be-
fore the people of the actual condition, ;
of 'Empire'. forestry affairs,, In some;
parts of the Empire forest mina e-
Ij +�
meat is en the basis of sustained yield,
while in others cutting is 'carried on
greatly in excess of annual growth, 30
that the woods' capital is >being aerie'
ously impaired. Many other -related
subjects will also receive attention.
Canuda is honored by being selected
as the meeting place .of this, the see.
and Empire Forestry Conference.„No
effort is being spared to justify -:this
selection, and it may be anticipated
that the nornerous delegates: will re•
turn to their respective countries with
a clearer conception`: than they, havo•
previously. had of Canadian conditions,
the advantages of .Canada as a'source
of saw forest. products, and of the
state of her development in .the ninon -
facture of wood' material'' info many.
different forms,
Women Preachers
in United
States Now Total -178
A despatch from Chicago says i
There are 178 women preachers of
various denominations in the United
States, all of whom are members of
the International Association o2 Wo-
men Preachers, according- to the list,
of members recently `made public here.
Illinois leads in the number of women,
preachers with 83, 17 of 'them being
.in the city:: of Chicago. ltansas, ranks
second.with 30 women.ministers. Ne-
braska is third. in numbers' with 18.
Weekly Ma rket Report `
TORONTO..
ManitoIla wheat -No. 1 Northern,
$1:23.
Manitoba oats—bio. 2eCW, 55Me;
No, 3 CW, 52%/$c; No. 1 'feed, .51%c.
Manitoba barley—Nominal,-
All the above, track, bay ports.
Am. coni=No. "'8- yellow, $100%;
No. 2, $1,
Barley—Malting, 40 to 624, accord-
ing to freights outside,.
Buck}'cheat--Ne. • 2, 70 to 71e.
Rye—No; 2, 79 to 81c,
Peas—No. 2, $1.40 to $1.45.
Miilfeed-Del., Montreal Freights;
bags included. Bran, per' ton,. $20;
shorts, per ton, $81; middlings, $35';
goad feed (lona, $215 to $2.25.
Omario-:vbcat•---No. 2 ,vhite, $1,23
to 125,
'Ontario ;No, 2, white oats -50 to 51c,
Ontario corn—Nominal.
by Dr, Bandag. Ontario %lour—Ninettyy per cent, pat.
Mr. JohnD:Rockefeller Jr: who ?n; jute` iia s,.l4fontreal; prompt ship -
has watched with keeninterest �meat, o $5.:to bulk Toronto. basis
, the ;5.05 to $5.15; bulk seaboard; $4.9
0
development of Insulin Treatment of to ea
Diabetes,recentlyannounced n ed that he Manitoba hour—rst pats., in cotton
would support the -work bygivinga sacks 7.10 cr bbl.; 2d ppats., $3.60,
A $ P oth Yer t o
sum of>money to be used in the fir. 1day=Extra IVo,.2 L•;m y, p o ,
theranee of the treatment' of Diabetes 7:k, Toronto, $19'ta$15.60;,No,3
with'Insitlin among the.indigent. In thy, $14 ;nixed,$12;lowermaking this donation to Toronto Mr. ,8.ra$060 lots;perton,'traek,.To-
Rockefeller is �desirons of recognizing, o $9:60,
loafers, especially the home of. the discoverer Cheese large, 20c; twins
of Insulin, and the place where Insulin '22c;trilete 23c, Stilton, 23c.' .Old,
triplets,
treatment has bears first” dei'elo ed, largge, 32c; .twine, 823ac; triplets, 83e;
While, speaking, broadly,; the perp se Stilton; 83?bc.
Bu r—Finest creamer rims 36
of the. gift is to matte possible `the. � y p '
treatment of a larger number of lids- to 37c; ordinary creamery prints, 84
gent diabetic sufferers a to 85 ;;,dairy, 24 to 25c; cooking 22e..
a an to- assist ;
Dggs—New laids, loose, 31c; new.
the teaching. of,physicdans in general laids in cartons 85e
X -Ray Movies'Attaln Higher
Perfection. ' •
According to competent medical
authority,' new developments in Xray
movies have been'achleeed by the use
of a new method pf sonsitleing the
photographic piafe 50 as to:eeoord new
leagtlags• nevem before photographed,
Knowledge of Car Needed.
An ounce of ins'tr'uction may save a
.,pound oftepair,,,
6L I'LL
RUN- FOR
DOC' WHITE.y
No - GO 'i'0R.
A/ RSUN POPE..YE.i
practice in the proper, method of erne( Live poultry, -Chickens, milk -fed,
pioying insulin in the treatment of ober 5 lbs: 25e; do, 4 to 5 1b§, 22c;
diabetes, the disposltion.of the moneys do, 2' to 4 ibs.a'20c; liens, over 5 lbs,;
r.
raceived is leaf to the �discrotion' of 20c; do, 4 to 5 tbs„ 28c; -do; 3 to 4'lbe,;
the governing board of each recipient bs, ro s4 er 4 toa6 bsck28cs'turke-
ys,
institution,' to be used in the wanner young, 101be.'and up, 25e,
in which it can best further the treat- •Dressed ppoultry—Chickens, milk-
Ment. of the disease. The gift of $5,000 fed, over 5 dbs., 35c; do, 4 to G' ills;,
to the University is to be added, to 80c; do, 2 to 4 lbs., 25c; hens, over 5
the "Baiting -Best Fund" recently lbs,, 29c; -do, 4 to 5 lbs., 26c• 30; 3 ti
established by the Legislature, and is 4 lbs., 22e; roosters 24e; ducklings,
to bo placed at rife disposal vf` Da, over, 6 lbs,, 30c; do 4 to 5 lbs,, 29c;
Baiting for further researches 'in turkeys, young; 101bs, gosi up, 80c,
insulin. In sending the gift bre Siinon ( Beans, --Can, hand-picked, pea; ib.,
7c,'primes, 6%c
Flexnei.' adds, "I am very happvto;be (• Maple products—Syrup, per imp.
the medium oftransmitting this gift gat, 32.50; per 5 gab tin; $2,40 par
to you for the several institutsins-,gal: .Maple sugar, ]b, 25e,
mentioned, and I wish to congratulate) Honey -60-1b. tm.i,'105 to 11c per
you and the uneeersity on the great 1124 3-2%-1b,
ins, 11 to
12%,e. per lb.
advance in scientific . and practical 34.50 to $5; No. 2, $3,75 to 34'.25. '
medicine in which you Have shared sol Potatoes, Ontario No 1 $];30 to
conspicuously: I` hope that this gift 31,40; No; 2, 81.15 to $1,30,
may serve to extend tho•;use of insulin I Smoked merit~ 'scams, med., 26 to
3n the tieatnient of tl ahetos-iitone 28c;',cooked'hams,' 39 to 42c smoked
widely and more accurately, and,le d rolls, to 28e `cottage rolls, 25 to
to still other discoveries''whicls iiiay 28c;' breakfast',bacon, 30 to.33'e;'spe-
increase its usefulness," g' t 42
b k b t
It would take a mint 82 ears t
y oto? Is, $1,70 901b ,
coin silver dollars for every cloliar of and u 10.0 lightweight
v
John D. Rockefeller''s ,wealth. 90 lbs p, $ g
'I $33
Britons in prison toe not paying L d P 163; t 1G
their. income; tax numbered 1,102 two
years ago; the number is much entail.,
er h04v.
dal brand breakfast bacon, 35 to 8$c;
ac a, One ss, 0 e.
Cured meats—Long' altar bacon,, so
0: lbs., 8' to, s. 317.50;
5';' tel ht
rolls in bids. 330' heavy wei ht'rolls
$ l Y -. r
' far — uro tierces, 16 ., c;
tubs; 1614. 10 17e; pent, 17 to 17%c;
prints, 18"yz5. Sliortening tierces, 14%
to ^15c; tObs, 15 to 16%c; pails, 1534
to 16e; prints, 17 to 1715e.,
raga
W1•1/6,k 1=CIi:
You Dulls
DOISki ?
CAN, GETf1ON S Y -OUT
PrPJ`t' BODY !,
Choice heavy steers, $8' to. 33,85;._
butcher steers, choice, $7.25 to $7.75;
do, .good, .$6.75 to 37.25; do, med., $6.251
to 36.75; do, sons., 36 to 30.25; butcher
heifers, choice, $7, to 37,50; db, med.,
36:50 to' 37;' do, come . 36 to 36.50;
butcher cows, choice,: 35 to 36; . doe
;Wed., $4"to 35; canners and cutters,
$1.50 to 32; butcher' bulls, good, 35 to
35.50;• do, come; 33 to $4; feeding
steers, good, '37 to 38.25; do, fair, $6
to $6,75; stockers, good, 35,50 to $6;
do,' fair, 36 to 35.50; ,milkers, spring.
ers, each, -380 to 3110; calves, choice,,•
$10;50 to 312; do, med., '$8.50 to
310:50; do corn., $5„ to $7;' Iambs,
spinng, 318 to $20; sheep, choice, light,
36 to 36.50; do, choice, heavy, '34 to
34.60; do,' culls • and bucks, 32,75 to
33.50;' hogs, 'fed and"watered,' 38,85;
do, f.o.b., 38.25; do, 'country, points,
$7.85. -
MONTREAL.
Oats, Can, West., No. 2, 61 to
61%c; extra No.'1 feed, 67 to 57%c;
No. 2 localwhite, 54'4, to 55c. Flour,
Man. spring wheat pats lets, 36.901
2nds, 36,40; strong bakers', 36.20;
winter pats,' choice, 36.05 to $6.15.
Rolled oats, bag 90 Ibs., $3,05. to, 33.15.
Bran, $26. Shorts, 329. Middlings,
$34. Hay, No, 2, per ton, :ear 'lots,
$15 to 317,
Cheese, finest easterns, 17i'ac, But-
ter, choicest creamery, .331la to 33y/sc.
Eggs, selected, 83c. Potatoes, per bag,
car lots, 31,35 to 31.40:
Dairg type cows, med. quality, 34
to $5; corn. bulls, 33 to $4; calves, med,
quality suckers, $6 to 36.75;' do, core.,
$5; do, better finished, heavier.,7;
sheep, good lots, 36.50 to $6.75; spring
lambs, ,$13.50 per ewt; choice iambs,
averaging 60 lbs. in weight; 18e per
lb. Hogs, mixed lots, good 'quality,
$10; coarse and rougher hogs, 39,50.
Canadian'for U.S. Post
Ahother•Canadian has been.appbint-
ed to an lmportant'post in the 'United
States in the person of Mr.•101. A. Pull,
of:the poultry department of the Mae.
Donald College, Ste, Anne de Bellevue.
He bee nios' Senior Poui'trynia$ In -
ohl,rge of investigation, division of
aminal husbandry, U.S, Dept, of Agri.
culture, Mr, ,Ju11 iso a M.So, of McGill
and PhD, of Witconein University,
and 'author of a ,score or more of int.,
Portant publications.
Scanner.
Summer, . Queen of Seasons,
With her snnlliissg train
Cornea In radiant epiendor
O'er theland to reigir.,
Followtiig le heir L-•••-W'aY
Myriadcharms am teeny
Jtihilating ctreamleta,
PloweOO of vatted siege0
Blue olelos, glorious •sunsoilte,
Ti'agapnce.lad, n breeze,
Oroluirds' Pleaaant, feuitage.
Freida of waving mein,
Feil os Joy Anal 1?loasure
Acid title long bright days
And 14 time (h'silous (Given,
Thankful hearth waw PAISO,
—mit: A, Clalt¢o