HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1921-1-13, Page 3WV,
TWENTY-FOUR RAIDS
MADE IN DUBLIN
No Peace Parleys in Progress,
Say Sinn Feiners,
A devateh from Dublin rayht---
Twority-four military raids we made
th Dublin, Detaelneente of etildiere
and silos on Thursday Surrounded
a little ielakid in Cork harbor and
searched it thoroughly. One 'arrest
was made, that of Patrick Sheahan,
at one time moot:my to gammon do
Valera. -
At three etclock Thurealay morning ed: "I am very g•led to hear that the
Patrick Duer, egad twentyr son of a successful organization of this great
farmer near Ballintober, was shot project to send a touring exhibition of
dead by a gang of masked men. Dor arposa, manufactures to the dominions
was called aMeide of the bowie by the is likely to be completed At an early
• men, who found him .0.sleep in the dote. During my recent tour through
place with two °there. He was orde Australia X realized that we are in
ered to these, and when he appeared (tango of losing oaf hold on certain
at the door he was 0110 through the markets in the dominiore in which we
right eye, his heart and a leg. N lie g
- were formerly supreme, ipia favin
left in a Pool.of blood, The other two which we are gradually being ousted
men jumped from a rear windovv and by foreign conmetition. I ern quite
escaped. sure, however, the danger is only tem -
The directors of the 'Freeman's poetry and will pass. I feel confident
'Journal, who have been in jail fora the exhibition will get a warm wel-
some weelei, were ordered released come throughout the dominions. Its
Thursday night by the authorities on advent will do much to remove the
the ground of ill -health. I impression that British merchants do
It was stated officially on Thursday net realize the importance of trade
by Bina Fein leaders that no peace •with the Empire, and the great op -
negotiations are under way, and that portunities of developing it within the
President de Valera will not discuss dominions' and colonies.'
any peace proposition with the British The exhibition starts next Summer
Cabinet which does not embrace the on a Seriee of overseas visits, whith
recognition of the Irish Republic. will include South Afriea, Australia,
De Valera is "on the run" here the New Zealand, and finally Canada, The
same as all other Sinn Feim members products of 700 manufacturers are
of Parliament, and is liable to arrest represented in the exhibition.
at any mement,
A large force of British military,
with armored cars, made raide in Fer-
rnoy, County Cork, on Thursday. They,
seized goods valued at about $600
from four tradesinen and saloon-
keepers. The people of Fermoy con-
sid,ered the raids and the seizures as
a fine levied on the city, and Thursday
night, as a measure of satisfaction,
all' the martial law posters in town
were torn down.
BRITISH EXHIBIT TO
TOUR DOMINIONS
Given Godspeed hY Prince of
Wales at Lonclon.
London, Jan. 6,L -Speaking et the
Foreign Samples Exhibition, Whieli
hos. been instituted by the DepertMent
of Overeeae Tiede, and which coni -
pies one hundred thousand aamples
of manufactured goods cc:fleeted from
over the world, which are in coms
petition with United Kingdom imina-
feeterers, the Prince of Wales remark -
EX -KAISER HOPES
TO REGAIN THRONE
In Constant Communication
With Friends in Berlin.
A despatch from Paris says:—
That Ex-K•aiser Wilhehn of Germany
confidently' expecte to regain his
throne within a short time and that
he is in constant communication with
his friends in Berlin, is the statement
made recently .by a man who hae
known the ex -Kaiser for many years
and who was a guest at the Castle of
Doorn at the recent wedding of the
daughter of Count Bentinck to the ex -
Emperor's aid-de-camp.
IA relating the matter, he said: "I
had a ten-minute talk with the former
Kaiser, during whieh he expressed
himself freely, and hopefully. Irem-
ember him saying, 'Things are coming
to a head in Germany because of the
French oppression on one side and
the growing Bolshevik menace on the
other. There will soon be need of the
only power which can bring the coun-
try back to unity—the house of Ho-
henzollern. Then will come the time
fbr which I am waiting in confident
expectation. Those who say that nty
day has passed are .going to have an
unexpected awakening.'"
•
TAKE BIG LINERS
OFF ATLANTIC ROUTE
Business is Slack and Market
Glutted With Ships.
A despatch from London says:—
Within a month all the large pas-
een.ger ships in the British -American
service will be withdrawn. The White
Star liner Olympic and the Gunarders
Aquitania, Mauretania and Imperator
will be laid up, ostensibly for repair-
ing and refitting, but in reality be-
cause of the unprecedented slump in
to Face Court -Martial
Prof. John MacNeil, one of the lead-
ing Sinn Feiners, recently arrested In
Dublin, who will stand his trial this
month.
THE BARRIER
Red Teaching. '
European magazines for thildrea
are making, their appearance in which
the effort is made to sweep away all
"superstitions" about God and the
church and to sew in all directions the
seed of class hatred. The child is
taught to believe that the employer is
the enemy of the employed and that
the rich have no heart for the poor
and no right to any accumulation of
poseessione. There is to be no risings.
by honest toil and the sweat of the
brow to any post of vantage above the
general level of mediocrity. Ambition
is a delusion, and the will to excell
points the way to misery for those
left behind in the race. There will be
no incentive of reward and no com-
petition.
In their effort to invert the natural
laws and upset divine ordainanent the
Bolshevists ignore the teachings of
history, the results of human exper-
ience. The :schools •In Russia to -day
are founded on the shifting sand of
atheism, at the extreme of the reac-
tion from the once impregnahle con-
servatisin of the orthodox church.
The Bolshevists have a song whose
burden is, "We have got rid of God,
now let us go -after the priests:" In
the December 'issue of • "The Red
Dawn" is this passage: '
"We despise. their mythical Christ-
mas; we despise their chursch and
their state, their army and their navy,
their artists and their poets, their tine
ladies and their great men; we des-
pise them root and branch. We laugh
at them and all their flunkeys, wheth-
it be a bishop or a VII; for they are
not ours,"
The Bolshevists are jealous of the
invasion of what they consider their
bailiwick, by the Friends, or by the
Salvation Army, or by any other body
whose influence goes to contravene the
teachings of destruction, hatred, ir-
religion: The ghastly mischief is
that the Bolshevists spread the poison
of their doctrine among the youngest
and the most susceptible. The chil-
dren are allowed to hear nothing else
and they believe what they are told.
Tho future offers a deplorable pros-
pect of a land overgrown by the tares
of vicious doctrine where good wheat
might have been planted. Even the
cruelties inflicted on evicted aristo-
crats are not so dreadful as the sys-
tematic debauchery of the minds of
the young under pretense of liberty
• and enlightenment.
Discover Sinn Fein Plot
to Blow Up Jewel House
A despatch from London says:—
The Sinn Fein plotted to blow -up the
jewel house in the Tower of London,
according to the Daily Sketch, which
says the plot was discovered when the
authorities read a number of docu-
ments seized by the police in a raid
in Ireland.
The documents, it is added, con-
tained written instructions "to take
as little life as possible."
The use of time bombs was sug-
geste•d.
Special precautions, the Daily -
Sketch adds, have been enforced at
the Tower to guard the royal regalia
kept in the jewel house.
Carson Retires
as Ulster Leader
A despatch from London says:—Sir
Edward Careon has decided to relin-
quish the political leadership of the
'Ulster Unionists and also not to take
office in a new Ulster AtIleilliStrati011,
according to The London Times, which
adds: "He considers his work, as
Ulster leader, ended with the passing
of a Home Rule act acceptable to his
ocean travel. , followers and will make way now for
The Olympic already is undergoing a younger man. Ile goes to Ulster
repairs and enlargement of her oil soon to receive the thanks of the
tanks, and the Aquitania will make Unionists at a great farewell demon -
her final voyage from Liverpool in- stration which is being planned."
stead of Southampton on January 22.
A large number of freighters also
are being withdrawn from the Atlan-
tic service, because the world-wide
trade depression hat strangled for-
eign trade and seriously affected both
freights and -express. A despatch from London says:—
. In the British shipping world a aitu- Lord Reading, the Lord Chief Justice
ation has arisen which is without pre- and former Special Ambassador to the
cedent. In explanation, a shipper United States, has decided to accept
said: "The market is now glutted with the post of Viceroy of India. •
ships. The world has 8,500,000 toms
gram more ships afloat than before
the war. Owing to conditions in Cen-
tral Europe there is less stuff to
carry,"
Lord Reading Appointed
Viceroy of India
SWI Armed,
'1,110 poopts,4 of Gezmany--arld retina
pereone.outaide Cerreanyaasire watch -
Inn vsit1a deka inieveet the course of
affairs in Bavaria, That country ties
roam to Ira the Mort conservative and
the least republican of any in the old
German Empire. Me:1kt, lUc ethom
German cities, had ha revolutionary'
upheaval in 1918; but slam the death
Of Kett Eimer, the 'Socialist premier,
ib hos reverted to something like re—
action, The Bavarian countryside is
Roman Catholic, oldsfashioned and by
no means M love with the Inobleili
political theoriee that rule Bertha
13evaria hes not yet disarmed, as
the rest of Germany has. There are
hundreds of thousands of rifles still in
private hands M Bavaria, -Meet of
them ere in the hands of members of
The Leading Markets,
'Toronto.
Manitoba wheat—No. 1 Northern,
$1,013%; No, 2 Northerri,',51.88%., bire,
8 Northern) 51.81%; No. 4 wseat,
$1,72%,
Manitoba out—No. 2 CW, 58o; No,
3 CW, 60e; extra No, 1 feed, 50.0; 140,
1 feed,. 47%c; No, 2 fed, 44%.c,
Manitoba barley—No, 8 CW, 88%c;
No, 4 OW, 76%e; feed, 67fac; rejected,
67%e,
AB kthove in store, Fort William
Ontario wheat—Fob, 0141 ping
points, wording to freights outaide.
No. 2 spring, $1.80 to 51,85; No. 2
Winter, $L85 to $1,90,
American corn—Prompt shipment,
N9, 2 yellow, traCk, 'Parente, $1.16,
Ontario oate—No, 3 white, 50 to
53c, according ie freights outside.
the Einwohn r ehr • Citiz Civil Barley—Malthrg, 86 to 90o, •amorde
--a .. . _ .
in to freights outside,
Guard, which is a mysterious organ- .
Those Boundary Lines. '
The boundary lines for the Republic
of Armenia, arranged •hy Preeident
Wilson at the zolicitation of that little,
stricken country, have at this time
scarcely more 'Dian a darious.historie
interest, says an editorial in the Phil...!
adelphia Public Ledger. The legend
is that of what might have been. As
outlined on the map, we see the liberal
apportionment oe territory giving this
ancient Christian lend the outlets to
the Black Sea on the one hand and
the Mediterranean on the other, which'
were sorely needed if Armenia. 'was
to maintain A contact with the family
of civilized nation, whereunto the
United States had given her official
'welcome. _During the two and a half ,
years of Armenia's existence as a re-'
pnblic the United States has not offi-
cially lifted a finger to end the harry.;
ing pr. to mend the deplorable'social
condition. All that she has done for
Armenia has been clone in the name
• the ear EastRelief,
contributed by Arnerhan private gen-
erosity. The outpouring of money to
this land, more than -5,000 miles away,
is one of the finest recorded instances
of the charity of a nation whose good-
ness to distress at a distance, as
as to the needy at home, is witlibut
historic parallel.
With the incessant turmoil in Asia
Minor, due to the,contention of Turks,
Greeks,Bolshevists, Kurds, Tartars,
Armenans and other races, afflicted
• or afflicting, slight significance at-
taches to the fact that in far-off
Washington a reapportionment in
favor of the weakest of these peoples
has been suggested. Mr. Wilson has
• appointed Mr. Morgenthau as medi-
ator in his name, and Mr, Morgenthau
is the ideal personal agent,- bit he Is
powerless to act alone against roving
hordes of banditti who swoop across
deserts or down from mountain Aust.
nesses and take what they will, when,
they please: At present they have
turned the Armenian Government into
the rubber stamp of a Soviet adminis-
tration. That rule does not represent
the will of the people, but they sub-
mit to it to save their lives. The coal-
man enemy of Armenia and America
has a certain fear of losing our trade
in tobacco and oil, and it is forced to
admit that the missionary effort ef
• America in the Levant is urtselfish.
Otherwise, it will not do anything at
our request except under compulsion.
Camouflage Mahogany.
More than twenty mahogany -like
woods are now offered as true mahog-
any, not to mention a considerable
- number of woods cunningly stained to
imitate mahogany.
0
Three Rivers, Que.—TheeInterna-
tIonal Paper Company, of Canada, the
subsidiary of the Internatiohal Paper
Co. of America, which commenced op-
erations a couple of weeks ago, is now
turning out 60 tons of sulphite pulp
daily. When the mill is completed in
the Fall of 1921, it will have a rapa-
city ca 240 tens of newsprint daily.
imignisheimmoomh
The appointment of Lord Reading
as Viceroy of India was announced
several days ago, and attention was
then called to the fact that for the
first time in history a Chief Justice
had been named as Viceroy.
There's a real reward awaiting the
main. or woman who discovers a use
for Christmas cards after their ster
eotyped messages have passed their
initial reading.
Toronto—Reports reaching the fin
ancial district here are to the effee
that Britain is repaying $150,000,00
credit granted during the war by
group of Canadian banks. It is shated
that the loan is being paid off it th
rate of $5,000,000 a month.
Port Arthur—The Provincial Paper
Mills, Ltd., have secured a pulp wood
limit of some 1,220 square miles, well
timbered, in the Nipigon district, and
will commence operations in this city
immediately. Finances for this under-
taking has been -arranged by the
authorization of 'an issue of $3,000,-
000 in borida
eseeeeesse.,_.....seeeseeeesseettienerrettereserte_
0 NV Q3. 4
nO tom flour—Winter, hi jute bags/
ization not controlled by the govern-
ment, It was organized and is led by seaboard, rs,so,
pnompt shipment, :straight run bulk,
nominal.
one George Escherieh, • university Peas—No. 2, $1.75 to $1.80, outside.
graduate with the title of Doctor, Who Manitoba flour --Track, Torontoi
has been superintendent of the Ba- First patents, $10.90; second patents,
Varian forests and who has a repute- $10.40, accdiding to freights, $1.85 to
tion as an Afitioan explorer and big- 1.90.
game hunter. Locally it is called the 13ucktvheat—No. 2, $1 to 51.05.
Orgehola vitt& is a Convenient word ve—No 2,nominal; No 8,$1.60
mined from the first syllables of the Mill.feed—Oarlots, delivered, To -
words "Organization Escliericlah ronto freights, bags included. Bran,
The Orgesch is officered wholly per ton, 538.25 to 540,25; aborts, per
with veteran. soldiers; it drills openly, ton, 540.25; white middlings, $47.25;
bolds shooting tournaments and owes feed flour, 52.76 to $3.
who says that his militia: force is re- twins, 27 to 28o; triplets, 28 to 29c;
Cheese—New, large, 26 to 27c;
allegiance to none bit Herr Emboli*
crafted solely to resist the spread of to 88¼c.
82 to 88cl do, twins, 221/4
B°1°11evism• But Bolshevism is net a Butter—Fresh dairy, choice, 49 to
danger that anyone in Germany seri- 500. creamery, No. 1, 65 to 68c; fresh,
ously fears to -day, whereas the'58 to 61c.
Orgeseh thrives and grows steadily .1ilargarine-35 to 87c.
Eggs—No. 1, 74 to 76e; selects, 78
to 80e; new laid,. in cartons, 90 to 96c.
Beans—Canadian hand-picked, bug.,
$3.75 to $4,20; primes, $8 to 58.60;
Japans, 91/4e; Limas, Madagascar,
101/40; California Limas, 121/4c.
Maple products --Syrup, per imp.
gal., 53.40 to $3.50; per 5 imp. gale.,
58.25 to 53.40. Maple sugar, lb„ 27
to 80c.
tins, 25 to 26c per
lb.; Ontario comb honey, at 57.50 per
15 -section ease; 51/4-21/4-113. tins, 26
to 27c per lb.
Smoked meats—Rolls, 80 to 86c;
hams, med., 88 to 41e; heavy, Sel to
89e; cooked hams, 56 to 58e; backs,
boneless, 56 to 60c; breakfast bacon,
46 to 48c; special, 50 to 52c; cottage
rolle, 88 to 39c.
Green meats—Out of pickle, lc less
than smoked.
Barrelled meats --Bean pork, $40;
short cut or family bieek,548; for same
baok, boneless, $68 to $54; pickled
rolls, $55 to 558; mess pork, $38.
Dry salted meats—Long clears, in
tons, 26 to 29c; in cases, 271/4 to
281/4c; clear bellies, 801/4 to 311/4c; fat
backs, 22 to 24e.
Lard—Tierces, 26 to 251/4c; tubs,
26 to 261/4c; pails, 261/4 to 26•Vse;
prints, 28 to 29c; shortening tierces,
16 to 17e per pound.
Good heavy stems, 511 to 5121
butcher steers, c.lsoice, $10 to 511; do,
good, $8.50 to $9.50; de, med., $7.50 to
85.60; do, come $4 to $6; butcher hell -
ere, choice, $9 to 510; do, med., $6 to
$8; do, come $4 to $6; butcher cows,
choice, $8 to $9; do, med., 56 to $7;
canners and cutters, 58.50 to 54; but-
cher bulls, good, 57 to 59; do, com.,
$4.60 to $5.60; do, fair, $6.60 to' 57.50;
feeders, beet, 59 to 51-0.60; do, good,
800 lbs., $8.50 to $9.60; do, 800 lbs.,
57.75 to $8.25; do, corn., $6.75 to $7;
milkers and springers, aloha, $100
to 5150; calves, chole, 515 to 517; do,
med., 512 to $1,4; do, com., 55 to 510;
lambs, $11 to 518; sheep, choice, $5
to 56; do, heavy and bucks, 54 to $5;
do, yearlings, $10 bo $10.50; hogs, fed
and watered, $15.25; de, off cos, 515;
d5o14'.f.o.b., $14.25; do, to the farmer,
Montreal.
•
Lieut. McLerie, who piloted an S.E.
_ In the communication service be
t tween Camp Borden and Toronto, cov
o ered the 60 odd miles in thirty min
a utes. The flight will be made ever
day this month, which is considered
e by flying men to be the worst mont
I in the year.
more formidable. Moat people think
that it is kept in condition to be usecl
for the restoration of the monarchy
inGermany. Certain it is that when
an attempt was made to extend its
organization to Primate its eponsors
there were men of audit vrelleknown
monarchical vielia that the present
Prussian government suppressed it
firmly. The same thing occurred in
Saxony not long ago. The real re-
publicans in Germany distrust Herr
Escherich and are kept in constant un-
easiness by rumors of approaching
revolt in Bavaria. The name of Gen.
Ludendorff comes now and then to the
surface when such rumors are afloat;
he is suspected of being Herr Eseher-
ichis military adviser. At the same
time it is whispered that France is
not entirely hostile to the Orgesch and
that its representatives have winked
at the refusal of Bavaria to give up
its rifles and piatols, because. the
Frenr,h believe that they could get
along amicably with a Germany in
which Bavaria was the chief power,
though they are implacably suspicious
of Prussia and hostile to it. •
Much Is going on beneath the sur-
face of German politicthat we can
only guess at, but whenever another
eruption occurs we may expect to find
Herr Escherich and his organization
near the centre of disturbance.
y
seSSAISS)iSSSANS.
• THE WORK OF THE BLIND
The Montreal Association for the Blind are holding numerous local
demonstrations to awaken public Interest M the good work that is going on.
Aniong the most Interesting of their activities are broom -making and chair -
caning Isy blind men from the Industral Home, reading of Plaine, type-
writing from the dictapbone, knitting socks and stockings by machine by
the pupils of the school. Photo shows a party at studente at their work.
It's a Great Life If You Don't Weaken
'THAT KID'S
KEPT ME AWAKE:
Pki-ie WIZ t F
'IOU DONT t-INKE
1-04 sTo?'(ELLIN4
COME• - '''''\--....hr
Gm -a- Satiate
6E.AS SiaLCOME •se.,.,.
AS -ct-te FLOWERS
04 VIM
Slated for the East
• Lord Reading, fernier British Am-
bassador to the United States, who
has accepted the vice -royalty of India..
King George's Family Name.
"What is the Hine of England's
family name?" Is a question that is
often asked of newspaper editors. On
this point The Private Life of King
Edward VII. says: "It is a popular
error to suppose that the surname of
the Prince of Wales is Guelph because
that is the family name of the house
of Bruns -wick, from which our present
sovereign la demo:dad. When the
Queen (Victoria) married, she, by the
law of the land, changed horsier:3.e, as
do the humblest of her subjects. The
Prince Consort, who came from the
house of Saxony, bore the surname of
Wetttn, and the Queen by marriage
with him took that name. The Prince
of Wales, therefore, and his children,
though Guelph by descent, are really
Wettin by name."
This surname, however, was changed
by a royal decree, Issued in 1917,
which reads: "Our house and family
shall be styled and known as the
House and Family of Windsor, and
all descendants in the male line of
our grandmother, QueenItictaria, who
are subjects of these realms, other
than the female descendants who may
marry, or have marriecl, shall bear the
same name of Windsot."
OUR FIRE WASTE. --
WILL IT INCREASE 411
•
$800,000 MORE IN 1920
THAN IN 1919.
Dangers of "Cashing in" On
Insurance Policies During
Business Depression.
Canada's fire lose in 1920 up to the
end of November, as reported by the
"Monetary Times," was. approximately'
524,000,000, or nearly 5800,000 over the
total for the entire twelve months oe
1919. The loss for November was 52,-
770,000, of which 51,865,090 is repre-
sented by 13 fires, with only 7 re-
sponsible f or 51,626,000, out of tin
average monthly number of fire) of
1,360. The large riske, therefore,
make up by far the larger proportion
of the losses. It Is to the large risk, in
the factory, warehouse, sawmill, and
other business property, or to the de.
vastating conflagration, we must look
for any emelioration of this eonetant
draM upon, our created and natural.
resources. •
During the past tour years, Canada,
has enjoyed unprecedented prosperity,
Business conditions have been goodi
aud the purchasing power of the buy-
ing public abnormal; there has, there.
fore been very little incentive for the
surreptitious. destruction of stocks by
fire to secure their insured value. front
insurance companiee. Sir Vincent
Meredith, president of the Bank of
Montreal, speaking at the recent am,
anal meeting of the bank and referring
to the present period of defiatient
atted that the number of commercial
failures would no doubt be someivha
greater. Thie, unfortunately, is like)
to be the case with the number an
cost of fires. •
Cireful Inspection Needed,
Earth in • Process
of Reconstruction
A despatch from Paris says:
—The world is in process of be-
ing made over climatically and
geologically as a result of recent
tremendous seismatic disturb-
ances in the Arctic seas and
Northern Asia, according to a
recent statement by an eminent
scientist, Professor Guillaume
Bigourdan, president of the com-
mittee on longitudes.
"We are traversing a period of
volcanic disturbance similar to
that occurring before the crea-
tion of man, and which caused
the disposition of the present
continents, oceans and chains of
mountains," he said.
Screening the plants from certain
effects of sunlight, an Eliglish botanist
has produced purple nasturtiums, a
color heretofore unknown.
Oats, Cen. West., No, 2,. 73e; do,
No. 3, 70c.'
Flour Man. sprmg wheat
patents, firsts, 510.90. Rolled oats, bag
90 lbs., 58.70. Bran, 540.26. Shorts,
540.26. Hay, No, 2, per ton, oar lots,
530 to $31.
Butcher heifers, conn, 55 to 57.50;
butdher cows, med., 55 to 57.50; can-
ners, 53.25 to 53.50; cuttera, $4 to 56;
butcher bulls, com.,
$6 to 56.50. Veal
calves, 513 to 518.50. Ewes, 55 to $6;
lambs, com., 56 to $11. Hogs, selects,
off ears, 515.
In a survey by the Commission
Conservation, preceding the publication
of "Flee Waste in Canada," some 4
the more prominent causes for fires
assigned by those consulted were:.
Moral hazard, non -inspection of pro.,
party by agents., attitude of courts tee
ward faandulent claims, and over -in.
sureaCe.
Daring the period of high values,
insurance agents were active in advo-
cating increased insurance to cover
enhancing value. Care must there-
fore be exercised that aver -insurance
be not permitted to become a temple,
tion to arson. A careful and rigorone
inspection shottld be instittled by In-
surance companies as a means of pro -
'lading their policy holders, as, in the
final analysis, the insurance companies
are but the collectors or premiums in
order to reimburse fire sufferers Inc
losses. It le only fair and just that
every precaution be taken against the
Daily Increase in
Wheat Shipments
A depatch from Winnipeg
says :—Exports of wheat from
different points West to the
United States seem to be in-
creasing daily. The threatened
passage of the Emergency Tariff
Bill in the United States Con-
gress has given a great impetus
to the buying in Canada.
During the. first three days
this week 180 . cars at wheat
went south from Moose Jaw and
district Most of it was con-
signed to Minneapolis.
Buying from sample has reach-
ed large proportions. The
freight car situation has also
greatly improved of late. Buyers
for United States firms are se-
curing all the cars they revire.
"The heart is the toughest of all
our organs," says 0 doctor, "and stands
any amount of rear and tear,"
The flaming swond at the gate of
the Garden. of Eden nowadays is in
the hands of the British administra-
tion of Mesopotamia.
hammoieratsum
y Jack Rabbit
et 4'
44,67
possibility of converting, by means of
fires, high priced stock into cash :111
the expense of the community,
Italy Making Dolls.
The mere name Nuremberg calls up
so many sparkling Christmas legends
and fireside tales of gnomes and gob-
lins that it seemeetrange to hear the
new toys being made in Italy des-
cribed as "more fanciful" by a Lon-
don review. The dollbabies from the
south are said to embody gaiety and
romance rather than the grotesque-
ness that marked mechanleal marvels
Scan efficient German workshope.
For instance, the marionettes of
Venice are copied from the carnivals
of the days of the Doges or are like.
characters in Childcare plays. There
are harlequins. of Bergamo, Puloinello
of Naples (the original of our lhoneb)s
priests, policemen and kings..
Turin Is becoming the dolls' strong,.
hold, and there they make the coquet-
tish mannequine used as aavertisa,
meats in dressmakers! and milliners'
windows, while Venetian districts are
producing papier macho rocking
horses strong enough to carry two
children at once.
The Italian toymakers are imagines
tivo and adore brilliance of color; to
even tin pals and trumpets are decked
with clawing Mune and nosevays, bas
stead of circles and splashee. They
most menage to capture the hues of
the Bay of Naples, "dipping theft'.
banshee in sunshine and in lemon
groves, pomegrantes, and TYrrheiaa
skies."
"
Mine Dangers.
coal ratniag is. a more dangerous ma
capation in winter than in summer, be.
cease explosions of Wel-dust are mora
liable to occur,
Ventilating ftens at tile mouth of the
thine force froth air tato the under.
ground workings. It is laden with
moisture; but it cornett out dry, Zia
periments made at OM mine in Penile
aylvande, showed that thorn was lose at
fifty tons of moisture from the Mit
each twenty-four hours,
In trammel. the air le relatively hiee
mid; it merles more moisthre, 10014
Weather it laude te be dry. The drp
neee of the itAn it the unto home eo4
dust in wassaueion, %eremite; lithilltj$
of extrlosiota
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