HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1921-7-28, Page 7iFFE-ft, OF iEVEEitA CWTMNS
• TOREE-..EOENTIAL PRINCIPALS
Special Ties Between Ulster an Home Government, Cow
tribution to War Burdens a ncl Occupation of Irish Ports
Are Points Ursconcedecl by 13ritisb Government
.A despatch from London nee:—
I/Meier Lloyd George'e written offs
to de Velem' on Thuredey was um
then Sinn Fein expecteri in sem ree
peels. It was unacceptable, however,
bemuse it fails to concede what the
Sinn Fein claim are the vital prine
eiples, wording to information ob-
tained Thursday regba.
The British Cabinet authorized the
gaeulting of a broad measure of do-
mestic independence, hut the offer fell
ehort of de Valera's dememis ioecasthe:
1, The financial contribution to the
British Exchequer to facilitate the
liquidation of the war burdens is re-
tained, thoeigh it is less than the $90,-
000,00.0 required under the Home Rule
Act
2, The special ties between Ulster
and Westminster are still retained,
3. Tho British occupation of Irish
ports is insisted upon.
The leading English news associa-
tions Thursday afternoon circulated a
report that the offer of Lloyd' George
is final and 'admits of no revision. This,
the correspondent is informed', how..
✓ ever, is absolutely urata When
e do :Valera told 1,1oye George Thursday
- morning that the proposals not
furnish a basis for further 0onferee:0,
the British Premier pressed him to re-
main in London for further parleys.
De Valera, however, preferred to re-
-turn to Dublin for a now consultation
with all the 'Metiers of the Sinn Fein.
There will 'be no full meeting of the
Dell Eireann, but the President will
confetewith 'Michael Collins, 3, J, O's
Kelly, Richard Mulathey, Professor
MacNeill .and Cahill Beughe, who with
Austin Stack, Commendent Batton
and *Arthur Griffith, represent the
whole thinking and ecting force of
Sinn Fem.
The countess Markiewiez, now in
Mount .•Tey jail, will'also be 'present
pro-v.141w). her release from prison is
granted.
If this secret conference egrees to
a resumptionof the London parleys
the .same delegation will return next
week.
RELIEF NEEDED FOR
STARVING RUSSIANS
Region of the Volga River and
Southwest Threatened.
With Disease.
A despatch from Paris says:—An
appeal addressed to all nations in the
,world asking that they organize to
provide immediate aid for "millions
of Russians now suffering from fa-
mine in the region of the Volga River
and territory to the southwest," has
been issued by the Executive Commit-
tee of. the Russian Constituent As-
sembly.
The appeal says that within this
territory, which is greater than that
of France and Germany combined,
millions of Russians are facing star-
vation while their Government is to-
tally unable to render assistance of
any kind.
Latest reports .from this region
reachfng tiro committee say that epi-
demic diseases are rapidly getting
beyond tontrol, and that if relief is
not immediately provided another
serious European menace is imminent.
An Anglo-American Song.
It is quit a remarkable fact in these
days., says an English newspaper, when
we are al] hoping for a still closer
friendship between the national anthem
'of the States, "My Country, 'Tis of
Thee," is sung to the same tune as
v. -Pt "God Save Our Gracious King."
But, although this Is a fact,. it has
not the significance of the origin of
that song which reaches the heart of
every Englisheeeking man and wo-
man, "Home, Sweet Home."
Tie miraculous thing is that it was
written by an American, John Howard
Payne, and composed by an English-
man, Sir Henry I3ishop; yet words
and music might have growntogether
in the garden of some beautiful soul to
produce so lovely a flower of song.
There is another striking, thing
about this song—the Men who wrote
the words never had a 1105110 to call
his OWn, 111 a sense. He was a wan.
derer on the earth, a rolling stone.
"Home, Swoot Homo" is truly the
national anthem of the English-speak-
ing race. Next to it comes another
'heart -binding song canted into every
Continent by the ubiquitous Scot,
"Auld Lang Syne." When songs of
hate are all buried in the deepest pit
et oblivion them sono of love and
friendship will remain.
Germany will have record crops of
both wheat and rye. Mile even this
great harvest will not produce seif- '
ficient to supply the needs of the
population, the crops, however, are
so extraordinarily good that Ger-
many's imports of cereals will he
greatly lessened thereby,
4,000 GUESTS AT
ROYAL GARDEN PARTY
King George and Queen Mary
Hold Brilliant Function at
Buckingham.
A despatch from London says:—
King George end Queen Mary gave a
garden party on Thursday .at 13uck-
inghem Palace to some 4,000 guests.
The spacious lawns presented a
brilliant scene. All the members of
the Royal family were _present. me
function was attended by the various
foreign Ambassadors and Ministers,
the Dominion Premiers, Indian not-
ables, members of the Government,
and others.
King George and Queen Mary shook
bends with same 2,000 of their guests.
The levee party was to some sctent a
substitute for the Courts which the
King and Queen were unable to hold
this year, and the 'informal presenta-
tions were equivalent to the usual
presentations at Cunt.
The gowns worn by the women were
rather more subdued: than those seen
at Ascot and the Henley regatta. Most
of the skirts were longer than those
lately oaasidered faehionable.
•
New Engine Devised
for Dirigibles
A despatch from London says:—
According to a report in aviation cir-
cles, a steam engine has been devised
for dirigibles. It consists a a heavy
oil internal combustion steam gener-
ator with ordinary double acting steam
engines, all of which can he 'housed
within the main part of. the airehip,
instead of in separate gondolas. Capt.
W. P. Durtnall, inventor of the new
system, claims to be able to effect
reduction of the air resistance and the
consequent elimination of outside
motor gondolas, at the same time his
engines being able to work at an elle-
tude at which heretofore there has
been scythes interference with the
ordinary internal combustion motor.
Britain to Build
Capital Ships
A despatch from London says:—
The British Government will proceed
with the polity of replacing capital
ships. This peaky is necessarily not
affected by the .success or failure of
the forthcoming Washington confer-
ence, Lloyd George told the House of
Commons on Thursday afternoon.
Further questioned, the Premier
said that, assuming the Washington
conference would be a complete suc-
cess, he aid not think that would re-
move the obligation which the Gov-
ernment is ender to build new ships.
.64.4
6REECE ,SCUTNR. fa
casoviNoe,,.;,.
• 'the 0,18AZ
10E2Md
ORUSA
.1
Lek' eisi 04
T R
61114
tt.
aetealie
es'XiSii•the
• gurgy.
• K. Y
PatM MRAWSSO
d'AUE f1544dr'"tt.
ROMA
aS
. jild el ; 41111Ai
DENIZLi
rer0-4.
WHERE GREEK CONFRONTS TURK
This map shows where the fighting has been going on in Asia Minor
between the Turk Nationalists and the Greeks, The latter have started a
new offensive,
.41
RELATIVITY
Mrs, Jones selects a good time to present the bill for her new hat.
MECHANICAL ARMS ACCOMPLISH
FEATS OF NATURAL LIMBS
A despatch from London eays:—
A remarkable piece of apparatus which
supplies arms to anyone who lacks
those members was demonsthateci at
the annual conference of bhe British
Medical Association at Newcastle on
Wedeesday.
The demenetrator was an armless
man who incidentally had lost an eye.
He sat at a tabth, and by levers work-
ed with his feet, he operated' a me-
chanical pair of arms which, it seemed,
were made of lead' piping.
With these armee the armless man
fed himself and enjoyed the meal. He
used knife, fork, soon, cup and nap-
kin with ease and .grace. Then he
picked up a eigmette, raised 115 15.0 his
lips and lit it. He cut out a paper
pattern with scissors and wrote bis
name with a pencil.
This new mechanism is regarded as
the greatest triumph of • ingenwity in
ehe art which is now called Prosthetic,
U.S. House Passes
Fordney Bill
A despatch from Washington
says:—The Fordney Tariff Bill
was passed by the House on
Thursday by almost a straight
party vote, after two weeks of
debate. The vote was 289 to
127. It now goes to the Senate.
Final action in the House
came after four separate votes
on Thursday on five preferential
amendments. On these ballots
oil and asphalt were retained on
the free list. Tte proposed em-
bargo on dyestuffs was stricken
out, and hides and long staple
cotton were restored to the free
list.
A New University Course.
Town -planning, or "city surgery,"
is the latest extensionceuese ar-
ranged by the University of Toronto.
This course is offered: during the two
weeks, January 9th to 21st, 1922, end
will be both intensive end. comprehen-
sive. It has been initiated by Pro-
fessor Adrian Berrington oa the De-
partment- of Architecture who is an
expert as well as an enthusistst in
the subject of municipal improvement.
Professors J. A. Dale, R. M. Mac-
Iver, W. M. Treedgeld, and prebably
others, will co-operate; end such sub-
jects as housing anti homing, sthel
satellite city, road, rail and waterways,
civic self-control, vital statistics, the
biology and the anatomy of towns,
economic aspects of housing and town -
planning, housing and health, educa-
tion and recreation, maps and map
reading, roads and pavements, will be
dealt with.
In the present stage of Canada's
development the expert in town and
city planning is urgently needed.
Town -planning commissions and civic
guilds are at work in many towns and.
cities. Here is the opportunity for th,e
acquirement of the necessary tech-
nical knowledge. Municipal authori-
tees will not be slow to see that some
of their employes take advantage of
the offer of the Provincial Univer-
sity. The course is, it is lipped, the
first of a series of such annual courses
and, perhaps, of a permanent and re-
gular curriculum in this important
subject.
Service to the Public is the great
principle of the University of Tor-
onto. It has something of value to
offer th e -very citizen in city, town, or
rural district. Anyone interested will
be placed on the University's mail-
ing list, on request, and will receive
the various bulletins and annotroce-
ments outlining new developments
from time to time. Write the Director
of University Extension.
Grass is afflicted with a parasite
which is apt to cause internal erosible
among those who have the habit of
chewing blades of grass during games,
etc.
Champion egg -layer of the world, a
hen known as Lady Walnut Hill, re-
cently died in Kentucky, U.S.A., after
laying her 876th egg; she was five
years old.
The Leopard's Adopted Son.
Captured by a leopard, reared in a
jungle and at the age of five years res-
cued and returned to eivilized life --
such Is the story of a native boy that
comes from Bombay, India. Mr. Stew.
art Baker, fellow of the British Zoo.
logical Society, who saw the boy after
he had been rescued from his wild dos.
ter mother, vouches. far the truth of
the tale.
When the boy was caught he could
run on. all fours almost as fast as en
adult man mus run on two legs, and in
dodging in and out of busheshe was a
miracle of swiftnes,s. When. Mr. Baker'
saw him Isis knees had. hard callouses
on them, and his toes were upright
and almost at right angles to his in-
step. The palate of his hands and the
pads of his toes and of his fingers
were covered with a very tough, horny
skin. He bit and"fought with every-
one who came within reach; and any
village fowl that came near him he
eateed, tore to pieces and ate with ex-
traordinary rapidity.
When he was brought before Mr.
Baker he had become more or lees
tamed. Although generally assuming
a crouching attitude, he walked. al-
most upright, but when suddenly
startled he would run off rapidly on all
fours.
Far a long time the boy would not
sleep in his father's hut; they tied him
with a rope, and left him to make his
bed in, the grass. Now, however, he
has been trained to sleep indoors. At
first he did not know how to speak,
but growled and grunted like an ane
nal; now he is. gradually learning his
native tongue. He has an exceptional
development of muscle for a child at
his years; his stretigth was such that
it took two men to handle him.
Oil -Hunger.
The world is oil -hungry. It is look-
ing toward the to-nmerows when the
know and developed fields will be
near exhaustion. Oil figures in
diplomacy and it may figure in wars.
Aitplanees are to be used' in search-
ing for oil -field possibilities in the
Amazon jungles. The 'forehanded
British are back of the move.
Wherever there is hope of oil a
Britisher is there or just coming up
over the eorizon.
From Edmonton, two "scout planes"
have been sent 1400 miles north
searching for ell. They have reached
their deetination, well within the
Arctic Circle. They carried eight pas-
sengers, with equipment for drilling.
The ell is there, MI which dee e not
solidify .F1111 92 degrees below zero, 'as-
cordeng be reliable reports.
The Britiehers are not 'worrying as
yet about getting it 'beck to civiliza-
tion Ian the produetion is started,
Nor are they worrying thus far over
bringing oil, out of the ,pathless, reek-
ing South American jungles.
Thei{concern just now is to loeate,
prove end make ready for develop-
ment against that day when known
fields ere aleandon'ed esad the nation
which controls new sources of sup-
ply wi.11 be in e dominant position.
The Britisher comes of the long-
headed Nordic .stock, and he is prov-
ing it in the world's oil game.
Canada lis 1,000,000 choice farms
awssi1isig c'ettl ers.
It's a Great Life If You Don't Weaken
Famine in Russia. •
1"63111119 3134 p.00wiegoo prose upon
the heels of drought in Itnissia to
zeitke that tortured: country is land of
hideous nighttime, Milts of dietress
Imo been sensing out of Russia tor
months peat, 'but 'so •elceptical is the
rest of the World about ite being pos-
sible to know What Ss really VOing," On
there that theee Moth have been re -
calved with more than a grain of KIS-,
picion. It seems, however, as tlaough
we he've cense to the point where we
must believe. •Prore Gemara sources
comes the news that 20,000,000 per-
sons are on the verge of starvation
in the drought -stricken 'methane, sub-
sisting mainly on roma, grase and
the bark of trees, Refugees aro re-
ported as pouring into Moscow anti
Petrograd by the thousttnes, The
parched earth, it is eeeertecl, 'is open-
ieg up great crevices and streams are
swallowed up. Further details; taro
relayed out of Moscow by way of Riga,
thus affording eonfirmabion for the
German aclvices. From them we
learn that a plague of locusts
has descended on the Kuban
and 131ack Sea province, de-
stroying the crops. In. Turkestan re-
lic/ from the drought( is • reported
through heavy rains, but these have
only added another chapter of hor-
rors because they have flooded and
.destroyed the irrigation 'work% inter-
rupting' rail communication, and the
local authorities have been obliged
to appeal to Moscow for aid.
As we have understood it over here,
the rural regions of Russia have been
able to stand more or less aloof from
the political' defficulties that have
beset the land. Indeed, dissatisfac-
tion 'with the plans of Levine and
Trotzky Igoe the part of bhe agri-
culturists has seemed to be one of
the largest rocks that has threatened
the bark of Bolshevism. If the hand
of necessity hes now been laid upon
this oleos, which was let alone be-
cause that part of it that was ac-
cessible to the centres of political in-
fluence had the food which officialdom
needed for itself end the content of
the people, we are likely to hear of
a new adjustment in internal affairs.
A starving esti= otennot keep its
trembles to ithelf. If it is necessary
for the world to go to the aid of
Russia, as it has gone to the aid of
Chine, it will do so without hesita-
tion in the name of humanity. In
this ease the task will carry with it a
lend of reward, for no longer will the
country that has suffered under the
oppression of the Czars and now slid-
fers under the oppression of re-
volutionary leaders be able to shroud
itself behind a veil as inviolate, es the
olden veil of the temple. There will
be light in, Ruissia.
Homes for Our Orphans.
The proper place for a friendless
baby is in a childless borne and act
in an anstitutaen. It has bees derneste
stated hundreds of times that if a
homeless infant is given half a chance
it w4fl soon make an assured place for
itself in the •affecttons of scene good
woman. The trouble is, our homeless
babies are in concentration camps in
big cities instead af in the little vil-
lages and cosy 'country places where
they would likely be appreciated..
Recently a chibdren's institutdosewas
moving from one building to antler
and they had a five os Six months'
sold infant that they did not care to
have go through all the excitement of
flitting. A woman in the suburbs
was asked to 'board the child for a
fortnight and this she reluctantly
consented to do. When the tittle mane
for the :baby to go back to the inetitu-
tion, the woman Jet it get as far as
the door and then completely 'broke
down and begged to adopt dt as her
own. The result is that the baby is
now permanently and satisfactorily
provided for. This is capable of re-
petition. Social Workers are well ad-
vised in seeking out 'proper foster
homes.
Portable electric maehinery has
been invented to screen coal and load
it in wagons.
Dominion News in Brief
Dwweoai, Yukon Territory,—Thirty
Membere of the Advance guerd of the
Oil /Meth 'ewe reaehed tile Port Nor-
man fields, stalked their eletMe, and
Started back for the recording of-
fiaea, agoottling tv Tkormird. Colley who
has just =rived. from the eeene of the
staking.
Victoria British Colemirle.--The
Welt of Governor Ewes of Idaho to
13s4 province is 'believecl to indicate a
joint undertaking to seeleian lend on
the' ICootemaY Rivers; The nate are at
the boundary and there aro 25,000
scree en the United States side and
80,005 on the Camden side, which are
at present producing only bey tele
which it is believed can be reelatmed
'et a cast of abed $25 per acre.
Victoria, British Columbia—Two
thoureand Then are to be stent from the
cities' of British Columbia to the INIT.
VeSt fields of the 'middle west accord.
ing to plans being descuseedby of-
ficials of the Pr9vincial Bureau of
Labor here. These men will to an ex-
tent be assisted in tisansportation.
Edmonton, Alberte.—According to
reports received from the Edmonton,
Dunvegan and British Columbia Rail-
way preparations. ere now in full
teeing at the various 'shipping points
*Ion the line on Lesser Slew, Lake
end Lae la Biche foe the opening ef
the summer commercial' fishing sea-
son. One elation five hundred thou -
'semi pounds of white ash and any
quantity of jack fish easel pickerel will
be the limit of catch for the season
on Lessee Slave Lake, end live hun-
dred thousand pounds of white fish
and no .liereit on other species On Lac
le Melia, According to present in-
formation ninety per cent of the white
fish caught north of the city will go
direct to the Chicago maiket.
Calgary', Alberta.—A n,ovel reunion
for wives of Centudien soldiers who
have eettled on the lands married' in
the Old) Cousstry and new to. Western
Canadien conditions has bean staged
here and will likely b,ecome an went&
event. Calgary women conceived the
idea of bringing them to the city at
fair time to impart a short course in
household and farm economies and en-
joy a good time socially. The course
was an entiee success,
Regina, Saska.tchewan.--Pifty-five
million pounds of binder twine will
be required' foe the crop a the prairie
provinces this year us compared with
twenty-eight million pounds used in
1020, Though the oomonr.,Itas not yet
opowea ono caletributlery has elready
sold three million pouieie,
W'Illotege Malsitobte—High prices 1,
and intense competition marked the
auction sele 04 fare ceedneted hy the
Winnipeg Pur Anetion Suthe come
pane. More than 150 pommel of the
foremoet fur houses of the United
States end Canada were present, One
benched ensi eighty thousand pelta
were se/d for $300,000.
Ottawa, Onteamo.—The errivals 04
feamers, farm laborers and domestics
for the spring months make a. healthy
aggregate. In Marcie April and May
there were 10,405 'arrivals of these
classes et ocean ports, of whom 6,671
were males. Por the same period from.
the United States there were 6,458
arrival% 4,000 being of the male sex,
Niagara Palls, Ontario.—A con-
einuoue 'stream of United Slates
automobile,s is croesing the bridges
into Canada and officiate say that all
reaorde are being broken, the move-
ment totheling at times three hundred
MIS per .hour. The trains aro also
crowded and altogether there is an
unprecedented rush from across bhe
boder to Canadian summer resorts.
Quebec, Quebece—Aceeeding to the
figures given by the Quebec directory
just disthibuted the population of the
city hes reaehed 110,120, divided as
followst—lexersch Canadians, 102,750;
Irish, 5,300; English, 5,275; other na-
tionalities, 2,675. Including non-re-
sidents employed Imre 3,250, and the
leuburbs the poprealem of Greeter
Quebec is 167,875. The total valua-
tion of property is $113,983,671.
Fredericton, New Brunswick.—
Nearly 35,000 pounds of the pravince's
wool crop has been collected here to
be marketed do -operatively by the
provincial Department of Agriculture
in co-operation with the Federal de-
partment.
Halifax, Ncvo Scotia.—A bumper
apple crop is expected iso rho Annapolis
Volley this year and it is estimated
that • over a million barrels will be
sivs,'lab1u for export, all of which,
will pasty through this port.
Lim enberg, Nova Seatia.—The
Lunenbere fishing fleet ha3 returned.
with it catcher, from its second trips
the sixty-five vessels bearing 58,375
quintals cf fize. In the firrt trip five
vessele returned with 3,300 quintals.
This is somewhat below the avenge
of 1920.
The Leading Markets.
.....-••••••••1
Toronto.
Meinitoba wheat—No. 1 Northern,
$1.85%; No. 2 Northern, $1.8344; No.
8 Norrthern, $1.791/e; No. 4 wheat,
$1.6514.
Manitoba oats—No. 2 CW, 52%c;
No. 8 OW, 50%e; extra No. 1 feed,
49%c; No. 1 feed', 48efisc; No. 2 feed,
47%c.
Manitobe barley—No. 3 CW, 83%e;
No..4 CW, '79%c; rejected, 740%,e; feed,
73%e.
All the above in store at Fort Wil-
liam.
American corn—No. 3 yellows 79c;
nomenal, ail. Bay ports,
Ontario cats—No. 2 white, 40 to 42c.
Ontario wheat --All grades, nom-
inal.
Peas—No. 2, nominee.
Earley—Malting, 65 to 70e, accord.
frig to freights outside.
Buckwheat—No. 8, nominal.
Rye—No. 2, e1.25, according to
freights outside.
Manitoba. flour—First pets., $10.50;
eecend pats., $10, Toronto,
Ontario flour—Nominal,
Millfeed — Delivered, Montreal
freight, bags included: Bran, per ton,
$25; shorts, per ton, $27; good feed
flour, $1.60 to $1.75 pet- bag.
Hay—Ne, 1, per ton, $17 to $19;
mixed, $8 to $10, track, Toronto.
Straw—Oar lots, pea' ton, $18, track,
Toronto.
Cheese—New, large, 25 to 266;
twirls, 25% to 263ie; trielete, 26% to
27c; old, leave, 33 to 34c; do, twins,
34 to 35o; triplets, 8415 to 8514e; new
Stilton, 27 to 28c.
Butter—Fresh dairy, choice, 30 to
82e; creamery, prints, fresh, No. •1,
89 to 41c; cookang, 23 to 25c.
Dressed poultry—Spring chickens,
WORLD'S CHAMPION BUTTER PRODUCER
Bella Pontiac, 46921, holdthe world' s resell for buttes production for one
Year and also for two years. On June 28th she completed a year's+ test with
1,587;60 lbs.. butter end 27,191 lbs. milk to her credit. In two coneeentive
Years she made 2,606.26 lbs. butter. These tests were held under govern-
ment supervision. The cow is owned by Thos. As Barron) Brantford, Ont.
, N
-Cl-tE
l'AOTIAINCe
V,IORIZY
I3QT t'D
IOU 'to
TRP.11140
1
is
;PY!'" .: ' ,,
g E.' S
l'O
Poul-
AstN1SE
6eT A
RURSE
\NIF
..,,
,
.
•
'1.
.,
.
!
i
t F- --?ou REALiN
Vsitelet-T 7 0 lateS-i*Elel
t -1,t;.,. IZECoVE.P.sf
14,A6U. lvtE
I -00K HalG NIORSte
CAAE'TT-R4ieIFEH. .STitCoAet- 4Ntet
FICo-9MERAeLt
l.
1
'
,,z,!., 1, . ,,•ri..:.:;:',..',
lIEST
'key
eeleieov4
rC.ei S
. .
IF
9RV:TI'f
5Ef4p
\
\s, OP1ASjs1.14:Ai2.
. -...,_____
.
,•;:
*I.V.LL
-SHE'S AS )
A S 'THA c
t-alfe -1-0 (As(
V1eY;:•C—
. . ..,.., .,.-
....o.
•
",,.‘.1
°,
. •, ..
Vies
esehe, eee
'''' a '',.'. •-1.-
I I
-I'l
,,
. .
...
L
s''-',.',.-
e..
A; s'emimi:4;
.
, -,.... •
,
By Jack Rabbit
TS is% 6izir
we 1F ".(00
\MNE•N
Hon. Lionel H. Clarke
Lieut. -Governor of Ontario, who is ab-
sent from his duties owing to
illness. His physician has •prescribed
absolute rest indefinitely,
--41
40e; roostees, 20c; fowl, 20e; clietk-:
ings, 35c; turkeys, 60s. I
Live poultry—Spring chickens 32c;
roosters, 16e; fowl, 22c; ducklings,:
30c; turkeys, 50c.
Margarine -20 to 22e.
Eggs—No. 1, 88 to Sae; selects, 41.1
to 45c; certain, 43 to 44c.
Beariee-Can, hand-picked, bushet,1
52.85 to $3; primes, 52.40 to $2.50.
Maple products—Syrup, per 11159.gal., 52.50; per 5 inn) gala., $3.25.
Mtsple sugar, lbs., 19 to 22c.
Honey—Old, 60 -30 -lb. tins, 19 to 201
per lb.; 5 -214 -lb. tins, 20 to 210 per
lb.; Ontario eomb ho.ney, at 57 per,
15 -section came.
Smoked meats --Hams, med., 38 to4
40o; heavy, 80 to 81e; cooked, 58 to
62e; relit:, 27 to 28c; cottage rolls', 30
to 31e; breakfast ba.eon, 38 to fffe;
special brawl breakfast bacon, 45 to
47c; backs, boneless, 42 to 47e.
Cured meatee-Lonse ether bacon, 17
to 19%c; clear 'bellies, 1.915c.
Larcla-Pure, tie -tees, 14% to 15c;
tubs., 15 to .154ec; paile, 1515 to 164r;
pnts,16tee1;ub7ct;sshlortrut,
ing,, ilxe3s.cesai
1234 to:18ih0
pails, 18% to 14%c; prints, 153!. to
Awe.
Choice heavy steere, 57 to $7.75;1
betcher steers, choice, $7 to $7.76; dee
good'56,75 to $7.25; do, mete, 95.25 tot
56,75,. do, cone, $3.75 to 55.25; butcher 1
holUrel'choice, 97.25 to 57.76; do,:
mode /46.75
35.75 te 57.25; buteher cowry;
Choice, $4,50 to $5,50; do, reed., $3 raj
$4.50; canners and mittens, $1 to 92.54
fed and watered, $12 to 512.50; de, off/
cone, 53 to $4; feeders, pod, 900 thee;
milkers, $45 to $65; springers, 555 to:
leash% Yearlings, 37 to 98; ea, spring,
$10 to $11.50; shee4s, choice, $4,50 to
heavy ancl bucks, 52 to 58.50; hoo,
care, 512,25 to $12.75; do, fob,, 511.25.
$11.50; hogs, 'fee .and eveteeect, $12 to,
$12.50; do, off oars, 512.25 to 512.75c
de, f.o.b., $11.25 to 911.75; do, countess
brIeueci:esr61.b5uctilteo, 5g7o.o5c10,.; $(14104.2e,06_41.1o.1_,..5i54.2t0.5;145o;
$5.60; do, good, 98.60 to $4.60; do,
to $11.75; do countrY 'Pellets, $11 to
VG; oaNeo, choke, 59.50 to 910; dee
$5.50 to $6; do, eair, 95 to e$5.500.
ponds, 311 to $12,
Oath, Can. Wtell..1,IN6ltio,'2, 65 eo tirI;esre
Can, West., No. 8, 621* 62%e. Flout,
NB1p.apring rssheat%.pes: igrt:6s' t$/134.,r,1,,.,.6.v0i.
Rateoas, ag, 90 abs $9
825to79liprtoti:at
No, 0, per tae, 066131040 td -
Chew° ftnXRaltS, ret0
utter, etote Orm 3 1
Eggs, 'WeetP ', 4 P.: 4$P. ' ..atait.05i
poi. ha, cat lob% t •• . . ., Z.,'
Go.otf
lans% $ to $9,15"!
, 914 4
5525 ts!4t.l.i.aiIII°.alietttla8..6°.kvaAgd thabveu9,
6 J10.
•
Whent-entting started ini Manitoba
anite:
tmi
.toll 0111ferenee. On Male-