HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1921-8-11, Page 7DAL EIREANN SUMMONED
TO DECADE ON EPLY TO PEACE OFFER
Members of Sinn Fein Parliament Now Hell Prisoners Will
be Released—Progress Made in ,Informal Talks Be.
tween Water and the South,
A despatch from Dublin sayer -It
has been officially aunounced• that the
Dail Eireauu has been summoned to
meet in Dublin, August 16, for the
lrurpose of reviewing Lloyd George's
offer and deciding peon at •roply,
, The attitude of Ulster also will be
eoneideeed.
Tho summons will be sent to all
Dail momhe3s, ineltedinrg those in jail,
end it is taken fos granted in Dublin
that they will be immediately releas-
ed, although no formal request for
'their freedom will be made.
A despateli from London says: -
'The British Cabinet has already given
power to Sir Hamer Greenwood:,
Chief Soorotaly for Ireland, to release
Dail Eireann meurbers should it seem
advisable, and it is understood lie will
teaks the receipt in jail of seminal
to attend the Dai Eireann as a re-
quest fox the release of the prisoners,
Marty are in Eneglith jails and can-
not reach Ireland' before Sunday or
Monday at the earliest.
Sensational stories were published
in loans English papera on Thursday,
stating that Ulster had definitely and
finally refused to have anything to do
with the peace propasai», and insisted
wpm retaining her present status,
These stories have boon afficia'lty de-
nied. Meter has made Ili deneme
yet, far the reason that no forin:,i c011-
versationS have taken place between
representatives of the North and the
South, but the infonaut' theca are still
going on, and it is 'believed are pro-
gressing favorably,
Sir Janice Ceche returned to Belfast
Brom London Thursday morning and
attended the meeting of the Ulster
Cabinet, at which all merriibees were
present. No statement was given,
but it is understood it was occupied
with routine matters, such as ap-
pointments and plans for the session
of Patlllaanont, etc.
It is expected in Beifaist that for-
mal peopossls soon will be 'received
frim Dublin, and it is likely the
framing of these will form part of
the work of the earning meeting of
the Dail Eireann,
Great pressure is being brought on
the Belfast leaders both by tho Gov-
ernment in London and Belfast •bili-
nese iron for a •sottlernent-by the
Government, because it is anxious foe
an Irish peace in view of the general
international situation, and by the
business mien because they have been
hard 'hit by the Southern boycott of
Belfast traders and. industry.
RUSSIAN RELIEF IN
HANDS OF HOOVER
Motor Trucks Are Needed to
Reach Rural Districts Far
from 'Railways.
A despatch from Paras says: -The
entire organization for Russian re-
lief is in the hands of Herbert Iioover.
When Walter L. Brown, European
dereetor ce the American relief ,ad-
mimistrationo arrives at Riga from
London for the purpose of distribut-
ing relief in the famine districts of
Russia he wild find scores of all
e'esses of Russians and people of
other nationalities, anxious on one
pretext or another to accompany the
reifef adeninestmation's forces into
Russia, atcccrdeng to a despatch from
Riga. United States relief head-
quarters there are being besieged by
applicants vclueteering to make the
trip, sone out 'of mere curiosity,
some •anxious really to be of assist-
ance and ethers frankly saying that
they are trying to get into Russia to
see what has happened• to relatives,
felend•s or their property.
Baltic newspw:ors are printing a
nun:',er cf runcre regarding events
in Russia. One is to the effect that
Leen Trotoky, the Bolshevik minietcr
of War, has been named food dictator,
and that heavy reinforcements of
ttvcnga have 'Ween rushed into the fa-
mine e strict to quell the ttat•ving
'nes ees, who. sae pictured as beating
down the guards, invading cities end
eating everything they find. All such
rumors are without any sort of Con-
firmation.
In Moscow, aenording to recent ar-
rivals in Riga, there wars n0 indica-
tion of famine. Small members of
refugees had managed to reach that
oity, but it was said the Government
was attempting to direct the masses
Into the fruitful regions of 'Siberia
and the Ukraine, instead of permit-
ting then to go to the cities.
Owing to the fact that many vil-
lages where starvation prevails are
far from the railroads, one of the
principal needs in the relief work will
be a large number of motor trucks.
•
A Dead Comrade.
There is a name we have not said, so
long
That in our very hearts that name is
shy.
Yet who once loved him more than
you or I?
Olt, be more loyal to our love, and
strong!
Could we not name him, laughing, as
of old,
Here on the open hills this summer
day,
And tell again 'the things he used to
say -
Lost love too lonely laid grow sad and
cold?
Ah, it were grief indeed if a day came
When this familiar road and friendly
trees
And the gay mammies all entwined
with these '
Should make us only sigh! And veriest
shame
If we who knew such days, and such
a friend,
Should not go proud and smiling to
the end!
Natural Query.
Customer' (to proprietor of restau-
rant) -"Your family has been estab-
lished here a long time, hasn't it?"
Proprietor -"Yes, sir, The bust -
sees used • to belong to my grand-
father."
Oustomer-"And did this fowl be-
long to bin?"
"Rainmaker" Hatfield
Chas. M. Hatfield, known as "The
Rainmaker" has made good on his
contract with the United Agricultural
Association of Medicine Hat, to secure
an increased precipitation of rain over
a certain area,
Japan Gets Into Line. •
In JO:can the talc has turned and is
reaming .:t.'iogly temard disarmament.
The militarise paten. Mill all powerful
ths_e, 11os failed 3n some of its pot
vcoteres and cheriehc l ambitions.
Teo Siberian adventure has cert
1,00i1.000,000 .cn, and there have been
no c':;'• Mends on that national invest-
ment. There nem never be. Tokio bas
lest some of its zest for Siberia, and
Japanese timers may be celled home
by the presence of domestic affairs.
japan is beginning to know incites -
treat, unrest. Labor trouble at I{obs
and other points has taken an iugiy
turn. There are bloody rioting: and
Cabinet •decisions to deal drastically
with the rioters. These and other
matters are affecting the Japanese
attitude. They would' affect the atti-
tude of any nation', burdened with
taxatien and troubled with other of
wanes aftermathe.
The power of the militarist party,
in Japan, as elsewhere, opposed to
limitations on 00105, is seeping away
little by little an that country. It is
stili powerful and dominant, but not
alt -powerful as it has been. The cpin-
ion is growing in Japan that land as
well ac sea forces should he limited
in the Washington agreements that
are hoped for.
Better than anything else for eis-
arnlnment'•s chances, the. Japanese
are losing thee: suspicious attitude to-
ward the parleys. They are being
convinced that the Western nations
have not called the meeting to
str'a:ngle Japan.
Tokrio:a o£fioial attitude, in accept-
ing "with reservations," is under fire.
Even the militarists fear that the
"conditional acceptances" have placed
Japan in a bad light.
The national will to disarm in Japan
outruns the w'illdsgnscs of the Gov-
ernment. In ilea the Japanese situa-
tion is similar to that in the other
interested nations. In all countries
disarmament advocate's ere forced to
lead their rulers, instead of waiting
upon the rulers.
Japan is .getting into step, The
powerful interest novo being taken in
the island empire le still another
guaranty that something :Oar -reaching
and valuable will come out of the
Washington parleys.
e.
It is probable that the Conference
on Limitation of. Armaments end Pa-
cific problems will be held at Wash-
ington on Armistice Day.
LOADING AN AERIAL LINER
The British airship R-33 being loaded at Croydon Aerodrome. The ves-
sel le moored to the landing tower by the nose, and goods and passengers
are taken up through the tower and eater the airship by means of a gangway.
Bits of Canadian News:
All Indication of the enormous tour -
list traffic which annually visits Brit
deli Columbia from the Pacific west'states, is the announcement made by
! U.S. Consul General Frederick M.
Rider that over two hundred and fifty
thousand visited the provmee in 1920.
The use of travelling vans equipped
at render dental service in rural com-
munities has been suggested by the
Manitoba Dental Assoelatiann to the
provincial board of health, The use
of such vans, which have proved very
successful in Ontario, is urged by
1101.808 engaged in public health work.
Claim is made by Norman Ross,
supelintendeut of the Dominion POI,
ostry Farm at Indian Head, Sask„ that
all fruits can be successfully grown in
the province of Saskatchewan. Mr,
Rose has grown on the eperimental
farm apples, plums and hybrid cher-
ries, to say 'nothing of strawberries,
raspberries, currants, gooseberries and
other bush fruit. During the present
season 8,000,000 or more trees have
been distributed to farmers from In -
than Head.
According to a directory census re-
cently complied the population of
Greater Vancouver 1s estimated at
222,013, exclusive of Orientals, who
! are said to number at Moat 15,000. The
estimated increase during the year
past is slightly over 20,000. This
ranks the Pacific city as the fourth of
. the Dominion.
A new flour mill. costing thirty
thousand dollars, with a capacity of
fifty barrels ,ler day, is being erected
at Mossbonk, Sask. It it expected
' that the mill will be completed and be
operation by the first of October.
The total area some to wheat In
Canada for the harvest of 1921 is
placed at • 18,664,000 acres, according
to preliminary estimates issued re-
cently by the Dominion Bureau of
Statistics, Last year's final estimate
was 18,232,000 ac,'es, and the average
of the five years 1115-1919 was 10,343,-
000 acres, The estimate for fall went
is 709,000 acres and the area sawn un-
der spring wheat totals 17,046,000
acres.
Announcement -has been mail- that
the Italian government has wit..,trctwn
restrictions against the importation of
Canadian rotor cars to that country.
As a result of tbo removal of the em-
bargo Canada will be placed upon the
sante fooling as Great Britain, and it
will no longer be necessary to obtain
licenses for the shipment of Canadian
automobiles to that country.
The Prince of Wales is exhibiting
his Shropshire sheep from lads ranch
at High River at the Calgary, Edmon-
ton and outer western Canada fairs
this summer. Already they have won
many Alberta ribbons,
Waisted Energy.
"7 aim ter 'keep it got. ',"
Ter ale says Uncle Alf.
And every night he wound the clock
Upon the mantclsholf.
No mater if his rheunlotlz
Was twitch:In' in his knee.
At half -past eight he'd 1110nnt a chair
And fumble for the key,
For nine long years he wound it
Every night, but what a shock
He got when finally he found out
It was an eight-day clock,
,2
Tho mother fly lays 160 eggs at one
timeand deposits six batches in her
lifetime of five weeks. In the track
of u single fly have been found 116
colonies of germ, and on and in the
body of a single fly, (3,600,000 germs.
Everybody ,believes ren the 111,311 who
peals ts.
It's a Great Life
GERMANY PAID OVER
ANOTHER $5,000,000
Payment in Favor of Britain
Made Through New York
Banks.
A despatch from New York says:
Germany hats paid another teem out of
her :balance in New York, on her deb
to the allies for reparations. Th
sum, paid amounted to approximate)
$5,000,000 and it was paid over b
the four institutions vvihiele hold bail
anoes here for the account of th
Reicitsbank, to the Federal Resew
B•anlc of New York to the credit
the Bank of England.
It was established, however, that
each of the four banies received orders
to make payments of various sizes for
the account of Germany and that the
total amounted to $5,000,000,
One of the factors in the payment
made on Thursday WAS that it did
not disrupt foreign exchange,
University Extension. •
At the Conference of British Uni
varsities held in July at Oxford a
good deal of time and thought was
given to the various probe:arm in
Volved in the extension of Univeret.ty
education to those people who, iron
um of 'circumstances, are unable to
attend a university in the regular
way. Dr. H. Darnley Naylor of the
University of Adelaide, Australia,
spoke of the Workers' Educattiona
Associabion; Dr. M. E. Sachet' of Leecls
University outlined the work being
done there -3n the promotion of tutor
al classes; Dr, R. St. J, Parry, in th
curse of an address on university
extension, mid; "The old 'conception
that a university is concerned only
with the promotion of education ani
eseareh within its own walls has
yielded to the reiterated appeal from
umbers of would-be students vvteso
circumstances make it impossible; that
hey could enter the walls of the ttni-
ers'ity,"
The University of Toronto has gone
arther than ntnst universities in
nswering this demand for adult edu-
cation. Without lowering dts sten-
awls in the least, et has so far re-
moved the extraneous obstacles tha
any citizen in any part of the province
an obtain an education of university
grade without giving up his daily em-
loyment. This new plan is at present
'ether hampered for lack of funds
but, should the Report of the Royal
Commission on University Finances
e adopted et the next 50533021 of the
Ontario Legislature, the Provincial
inaversity will be, in a position to de-
elop its extension work so as to
-each all parts of the province with
is classes, its extension
ures, and its university evening tutorial lec-
lasses, The desirability of this derno-
ratir, development ,3s univeroally ad-
w'itte'd, _ • _�_
To Facilitate Adoption.
Under the provisions of the Adop-
4011 Act passed by the Legislature
est session, the Ontario Government
es issued an Orden -in -Council ap-
pointing iter, J. S. Kelso Provincial
fflcer. This mean that parties whili-
ng to adopt at child must apply to Mr.
Keleo for a eertiflcate of Approval. If
e is satisfied, the application is then
ubmi:ttod to the County Judge for
etiiieation, The machinery is not
at fully provided, but when In week.
ng order it is expoded that over one
housand families, who have 11100011y
aken a child will seek the benefits of
his legislation,
HYDRO -ELECTRIC
WAGES CUT 10 CENTS
Scale for Work on Chippawa
Development Set at 40
Cents Per Hour. /
A despatch teem Toronto says: ---
Labor en the Chippewa Hydro -electric
development is to receeve 40e on'llaux,
a 1 cs redalceion, from August 0, ae•
cording to announcement made, en
Thursday by the Peevin'cial Hyde()
Commieslon to Organizer John A,,
Flett and representatives of the men.
Thirty-five cents an hoar was tllo
figure originally contemplated by the
commdss'ion, but upon Sir Adage
Beck's suggestion, it is wrier, it was
finally decided to grant another Sc an
hour. Labor on the same class o1
work on the Une'ted States side is re-
ceiving 86e an hour,
The general aehedtile of wages that
was deckled upon was that agreed to
subsequent to the strike of last year,
less 10e ,per (hour,
This schedule, it is said, still leaves
the Chippawa Hydro men et more gene
eroue scale than that in force on Am -
tier classes of week elsewhere, With
decreased living costs, the commission
feels that the new pude will make
ample provision for the workers, Tho
commission was unanimous oil the
scale adapted.
While the new schedule decided
upon by the 'commission has net been
formally accepted by the representa-
tives of the men, 4,000 of whom ere
affected, they are to report bard[ to
the men at Chippewa and once more
rotten to the commission, this time
wit11 •a decision of the men as to its
acceptance. Hydro officials anticipate
no difficulties, although the mien's rep-
resentatives have presented numerous
arguments in opposition to a rethsc-
tion.
The mass of the workers on the
Chipjawa aro said to appreciate the
fact that the ebnlmdssion's 50c -an -
:hour wage was considerably higher
than wages do other projects, and ac-
ceptance an their part is expected'.
t With the night shift all genre, the
e latest ,prognostication of the date
y upon which power will be turned' on
7 at Chippawa is the end of November.
The race is now with the ice forma-
t) tions, which appear :sometimes in mid -
e December,
of
u ..
t�ahrm n n
fn Sen? • In 111•:1
1'115 aTRIlLINO AND Tai:
Canada's Amazing Progress.
Au illustration of Canada's growth
since Confederation, the larger figure
being based on the statistics available
up to the end of 1920.
—0,—
A
----aA British ex -officer claims' to he the
only blind 'chartered accountant ars the
world',.
The funeral of Enrico Caruso, the
famous tenor singer, was held in the
Royal Church at Naples and attended
dry a special representative of Ring
Victor Emmanuel.
SUN'S RAYS SET FIRE TO GASES
IN SWISS DRJED4JP SWAMPS
A despatch from 'Beaune trays; -P110
i081g en4 continuos dnowght and heat
in Switzerland is 'ewueing tho auth:or-
tides great anxiety, Already in soma
Plates tbo waster srgcpply is r:ut orf et
'mutate. hours, and although the gla-
ciate aro melting at a tondflo rate,
owing to the smorahlag eun, and fre-
gnenntly was'}' rsway seretehee of tToadds
and mountain railway limos, ngverthe-
lose, the spring; of non-gtlIseler
etreasits and ladles are drying tap coo
much that the 'Melee Govel;nment has
Jost appointed a &paella eoramieelon
of experts to consider what measurea
frust now be taken to sateguarcd th
country's water supply dor domestic
use and for eleotrkaal power, They
are studying the best methodic of ac-
cumulating electric power, which irs'
plentiful now, ee that 1t can bo seed
in the winter.
Hitherto there hes been no rain-
fall 'beyond showers, sod thunder-
stoams hays trade potters rasher
worse because lightning iiia struck
teens and set the formats on fire, One
forest in Engadine, at a height of
about 7,000 feet, wee thus set a'biaze,
and despite all efforts of the peas••
entry, meat of the trees have been
destroyed or injured,
Swamps which have dried up pro-
duce peculiar indomitable gases,
These gasos have been set •alight by'
e rho sun's rays, Swiss /armor's state
that, unless the Beitioh Dominative and
the Untied States can send enough
cereals and A -ell , Central Europe will
be short of food next wlnnter,
Memories.
That man is 'blest who hos in his
own mind a book of happy memories,
whose pages he may turn whenever
he wile,
He can never, he utterly lonely while
he has this mental oomredeship, and
may revisit at his pleasure the games
on which the light of other days is
shining,
We travel a far greater mileage in
memory than in the body. Such Joon
neyring costs nothing in the coinage
of the realm, and yet rewemde us
richly. The real impoverishment of
our lives 'is not to be deprived of
the things that are of the earth earthy
•aid; of the ,body bodily, We are poor
only when we excise to recall what is
brighter and beautiful• when we suc-
cumb to visions of what ds sordid arud
mean and debasing'. St, Francis of
Assad taught than poverty in ma-
terial poesessdans might go hand-in-
hand with a spiadtual affluence. "Ho
disliked Tong faces and weave**
]dues, says a recent ,biographer.
Long faces and melomeholy lives
are the result of treasuring in our
minds the things we ought to put out
of them.
We shall look unhappy aral convey
unhappiness as long as we hear in
mind the disagseeablces, which abound
like weeds when we give them room
and entertainment.
Instead of the nowioue vegetation
of remembavince, let us make a fair
plantation of a different sort,
One moan ohoeste to fill his mind
with lines of poetry, that recur for
his solace in time of stress. Another
has a fund of cheerful stories on
The Leading Markets,
Toronto,
Manitoba wbeet-No. 1 Northeros,
$1.81; No. 2 Northern $1.78• No, 8
Northern $1.74; No, 4 whew, $1.,68.
Manitoi,a oats -No. 2 CW, 511,be;
No. 3 CW, 49%c; extra. ale. 1, 40'ysc;
Na 1 feed, Wee; No, 2 feed, 47r%a.
Mr'iem-No. 2 CW, 68%c;No. 4 CW, 731%c; rejected,, 6914c;anitoba ba
/08(19 681,1c.
Aa above in store, Fort William,
Ontario wheat-F.o.b. whipping
pointe, according to freights outride.
No, 2 winter, $1.20 to $1.25; No. 8
winter, $1.17 to $1.22; No. 1 cotn-
mt0r0ia1, $1.12 to $1.17; No, 2 spring*,
$1.15 to $1.20; No. 8 spring, $1,12 to
$1.17; No, 2 goose wheat, nominal.
American corn -Prompt shipment,
No. 2 yellow, c.1,f. bay ports, 79e,
nominal
Ontario cats -No. 2 white, 48 to
60e, according to freights outside.
Barley -Malting, 09 to 72a, accent-
ing to /relents onutedde,
Ontario flour -$6.90 to $7, in bags,
Mona -eat/ end Toronto,
Peas -No, 2. nominal,
Manitoba flour -Track, Toronto:
Anse pato., $10.50; second pats., $10.
Buckwheat. -Nominal,
Rye -No. 2, $1.26.
Mil1l2e:eed.-•Oarlots, dei,ivered Toren..'
to, $27; shorts, per ton, $28; feed
flour, $1.70 to $1,85,
Cheese -New, large, 24% to 261,1c;
twins, 25 to 26c; triplets, 26 to 26efic;
old, large, 33 to 34c; do, twins, 34 to
85e; triplets, 341,1 to 351,%c; new Stil-
ton, 27 to 28c.
Butt -
e1• Fresh'm
fall y, Choke, 33 to
35c; creamery, prints, froeh, No. 1,
40 to 420; cooking, 23 to 25c,
Dressed poultry -Spring checkers,
40o; roasters, 20c; fowl, 300; dock -
tangs, 40c; turkeys. con:.
which he draws for the common gay- Live poultry -Spring chicdceee, 30c;
etye--without becoming bomesome. An- roosters, 16c; fowl, 22c; duckir.,ngs,
otJhee has roamed the world and 30a; turkeys, 50e.
brought aback tales of strong men met R2n.rgarine-',0 to £2•c,
incl -grange things neon that are Eggs -Ne. 1, 41 to 42c; selects, 44
h
to
agreeable to those who did' not oa ncartons, 4ha,1 to 47c.
g Belurm. ::1::1, ,•mee
away. In every instance, such as $2 } 5 tois--Can, 43 prime*, $2.40 te. $2.70.
these, by the neere produce of their Made r.rrdu•.io-Syru; , ee
minds, are much more entertaining gee., $2.50; per 5 im ;r l•..
and ain me brae who merely 1120010 a'ugar. lice, 1:> to 2
51175 to ns, "See how 01108311 money I' Holley-ti0 30 -•lb. tin:+, 11 to 1l;c r.00
leave made," and shows us gardens, onl 6-E?, m tir:s, 16 i0 15c ;terr!b,,
lawns and fountains, a bank -book and
Ontario comb bolts,, per doz, ,;3.70
to $4.60.
an income tax. 1 Smoked meats- Rolls, 27 to 28e;
Ile veto each days inscribes upon, hams, need., 40 to 420; heavy, 29 to
his reooth that which iet worth his 300; cooked hams, 60 to 1.50• h31101 ss
remem:bralme, and is worth being re -.backs, 42 to 48c; beenkfast harm, 33
memlberee, of egg when he is gone, ds to 38e; special, 45 to 48o; cottage rolls,
sure of a happy fife no platter what 30 to 31e.
adversity
he encootntea's, It wild not Green meats -Out of plater lc Ices
than smokcal,
be the irmeflective ]happiness of an Barreled nests-13:e•:m pork, $29;
infant ea a simpleton. It will be the short out or family back, bonele e,
tenvpemed•, iiatdon,al eatlsrbactdon of one $40; pickled rens, 941 to 940; mew
who finals life good to live because perk, $33.
of the chance it continually brings to Dry salted meats --Long clears, in
serve. The recollection of a ]fife thus tolls' 171a to 19%c; in cases, 18c;
spent is all that will bring comfart clear bellies, 191,1c; backs, 14:c.
at the end. Lard- Tierces, 18 to 18%e; tense
18ee to 19c; pile, 18ee to 191Iec;
R0 prints, 20ee to 22c; shortening, tierces,
14 to 143'e; tubs, 14% to 15e; pails,
15 to 15,ic; prints, 17% to ISc.
Ohoice heavy steers, 97 to 98; but-
cher steers, choice, 97 to $7.75; do,'
good, 90 to 97; do. med., 95 to $0; do,
come, $3.75 t $5; butcher heifers,
choice, $6,50 to $7; de, med., $5,50 to
96,50; bube.her cows, choice, 94.50 to
$5,50; do, med., $3 to $4,50; canners
end' cutters, 91 to $2.50; butcher bus,'
good, $4,25 to 95.25; do. come $3 to
$4; feeders, good, 000 lbs.. 96.50 to
96; do, fair, $5 to 95 50; milkers, $45
to $65; springers, $655 t0 975; cr'•vo-,
choice, $9 to $10.60; do, med., 97.00
to $8,50; d0, cem., 94 to 05; !omhs,
yearlings, $7 to 98; no, em•dng, 90 to
99,50; sheep. choice, $5 to 90; do. good,
$3.60 to 94.50; do, heavy 1101 larks,
92 to 93.50; hogs, fed are welereee
913.60 to $13.75; do, off ears, $13.75
to $14; do, nob., 912,76 to 013; do,
100 Per Cent.
Jimmy - "Father, yesterday at
scbool I made 100 on my studies."
Father -"That was fine; what study
did you make it in?"
Jimmy -"Fifty on spelling. and 50
on arithmetic,
LORD BANG OF M Y TO BE
FORMALLY RECEIVED AT QUEBEC CITY
A despatch front Ottawa says: the Dominion Cabinet wild be held and
Arrangements for the reception of at that meeting Lord Byng's Com -
Lord Byng of Vimy, Canada's new mission will be read, he will take the
C G' ' oaths of office and Sir Henry Drayton,
a'av50,ol - enG-1'a•,, upon his arrival at a•s acting Secretary of
State will country points, 912.65 to $12.75.
Quebec and at Ottawa, have been formally receive the great zeal of I
Mont real.
practically completed. Lord Byng Canada, Lord Byng will 'be the guest Oats -Can. West„ No. 2, 63te to
wild arrive at Quebec on the Empress et honor at a beneficent In the Quebec 64%e; do, No. 3, 62 to (etc. Fleur -
04 France on the night of August 10. Parliament buildings and in the even- Man, spring wheat oafs., first.+, 910.50.
He will not land on Canadian soil,
however, until between 10,30 and 11
o'clock of the morning of August 11.
A salarto of nineteen guns will greet
him as he leaves the Empress of
Franca and proceeds on the Canadian
Government steamer, Lady Gamy, to
the Ring's wharf, On the wharf 110
will be received• .by the Lieutenent-
Governer• of Quebec, the majority of
the members of the Dominion Cabinet,
nemeses of the Quebec Government,
Senators and members of Parliament
resident In and around Quebec, and a he wh receive •adehmesses _from the
military guard of honor. After this eorporee.tion 0f Ottawa and from the
reception the new Governor-General Great War Veterans' Aseoctetion,
will be escorted to the Quebee Par- After this ceremony he wil'1 proceed
lianvent buildings, waters a meeting of to Rideau hail,
ineetmeteteetei__
0 to
beg at a dinner to be
given •by Sir I Rolled oats -Beg, 90 JIbo , ;!.3.3_5,;. Bran
Charles Fitzpatrick, Lieutenant -Gov- 28 215. H50 ay- No 2, r ton,t. car61 is
ernes of Quebec. Lord Byng will e80 to 932.
leave for Ottawa by epeciel train at Gheese 22 to 23c. 13uttei, cboioest
11 o'clock and' will amnive in the Capi- creamery, 20 to 30e Eggs, se:a tee,
tel •at 2,15 o'cloclk in the atternoon of 43 to 44e. Potatoes, per bag, car
August 12th, IIe wild •lie a'eoeived at lots, 45c.
the Central Staten by members of Decd' lambs, $7 per cwt.; nom., 95
rile Cabinet, Senators and members to $6; niilk-fecl calves, $7 per cwt.;'
of the House •
of Cotenants and. repre- hogs, selects, 914 per 015t,
sentatdvoe of the city. He will then
.proceed to a platform erected in front ITALIAN SHIPPINGo£ the Parliament buildings, There SERVICE TO CANADA
- •- --.3.
Change Route from United
States as Business Ther6
is Not Good.
A despatch from New York says; -
Shipping circles 'here have been in-
formed that the Navigazione Generale
Italiana Uwe has directed part of 1tza;
ships Into a • new Italian -Canadian
sattviee:
This is mid) to be the fret Italian'
lino that has boon established between!
Italy and Canada, The reason attri-1
buried for the move as that Ita4in.&
navigation idn05 •isetween the United'
States and Italy aro having .groat dna
Acuity in finding business for their'
liners at the present time, due to the
enactment of the present United'
States immigration law.
According to *formation h dt
other steamship companies are ,
occupied on the problem of fltialmv
other fickle for the surplus It•34.1993,
population 4nd it ie expected t13gi<,
or two more Italian comp,w1io
commence sanding to Canada,
lag their present New York, 9
to that effect.
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Change Route from United
States as Business Ther6
is Not Good.
A despatch from New York says; -
Shipping circles 'here have been in-
formed that the Navigazione Generale
Italiana Uwe has directed part of 1tza;
ships Into a • new Italian -Canadian
sattviee:
This is mid) to be the fret Italian'
lino that has boon established between!
Italy and Canada, The reason attri-1
buried for the move as that Ita4in.&
navigation idn05 •isetween the United'
States and Italy aro having .groat dna
Acuity in finding business for their'
liners at the present time, due to the
enactment of the present United'
States immigration law.
According to *formation h dt
other steamship companies are ,
occupied on the problem of fltialmv
other fickle for the surplus It•34.1993,
population 4nd it ie expected t13gi<,
or two more Italian comp,w1io
commence sanding to Canada,
lag their present New York, 9
to that effect.