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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1913-01-16, Page 6• OYAL PURPLE • stock & poultry -specifics vie will fiend alatiolatelY Ire% for FREE the asking, postpaid, One' of our • ....nee...Stereo 64.page hooka (with in- sert), O'n the common diseases of stock and poultry. Tells hew to feed all kinds of heavy and light horsm, colts and rearm, milch coWS. calVes and fattening steers, also how to keen mai feed poultry so that they will laY 000 wen in winter as in summer, lt contains 360 recommends from all over Canada, from pee& who have used our goods. No farmer should be ;without it. You cart 1 atten cattle and hogs in a month's less time by using our Royal 'Purple • Stock Speeille than YOU could pessibly do without it•, -thereby saving a month's feed and labor and the cost to Yon will not be more than $1.50 for Biz pigs or 51.00 for one ateer. It will keep your horses in show condition with ordinarY feed. If you have a poor, miserable -look- ing animal on your place try it on this one first and see the marvelione result which will be obtained. Our Stock Specific will increase the milk flow three to live lbs. per cow per day., while being fed in the stable. A 60c 3aacitage will last a COW or horse 70 &Ye. ROYAL PURPLE POULTRY SPECIFIC will make your hens lay Suet as well in the winter as M the summer, and will keep them free from disease. These goods are pure and -unadulterated. We do not use any cheat, filler to make a large package, entirely different from on on the mar'et at the present time. Royal Purple Stock Specific, 50c peltgs.•, four 500 nekgs., in an air -tight tin, for 51.50. 'Royal Purple Poultry Specific, 26c and 500 pckgs., and • 51.50 air -tight tins that hold four 500 pekes, Royal Purple Lice Killer, 25c and 500 tins: 00e by mail. 'Royal Purple Gall Cure, 250 and 500 tins: 30c by mail. Royal Parole Sweat Liniment, 50c bottle; 60c by mail. -Royal Purple Cough Cure, 500 tin; 60C by mail. Royal Purple Disinfectant, 25e and 50e tins. Royal Purple Roue Cure, 25c tins; 30c by mail. •Royal Purple Worm Powder, 25e tins; 300 by mail. Manufactured only by TheW.A.JenkinsMfg.Co. London, Canada Royal Purple Supplies and .13ookleis may be had from .Ford & McLeod, Flour and Feed: W.S.R. Holmes, Drugs CLINTON '- According to recent French 'figures but one-quarter of the ac- seidents sustained by aviaters are due to defects in aeroplanes. Curved laws that may be strapp- ed to the hand have been patented .by a Michi gan inventor to enable a man to husk cern quickly. A. plant has been established in Hielland to manufacture illuminat- ing gas from petroleum residue by . a dry distillation process. THE MARKETS If DDIDAD0,300. •11, --Today's prices, for grain declined Moderately, as did Previsions, Fluctuations were 'aerie:: narrow aed the volume of busitmos moderate. t. iseavy ETIOWfall in Kansae pre: ceding the predicted cold, and the Prospect... of large alelpmenes frem • Argeetine WOrI4 bear fa.ctorS in 'wheat. The faot that shorts had pretty well eliminated themselves daring the pre- vious two days also worked aga,inet prices. At the close, May was 1-80 over the nottorn, but 1-8 to 1-4c under yesterday: The Liverpool market a:Med )ficl to %d higher on wheat and ees higher on corn. Buda Pest closed %a lower on wheat. Antwerp unchanged- and Paris 140 to %a big"r. WiNNIPEG OPTIONS: Prev.• Open. High Low. Close Clo.te May • 87% 3714 87% 8714 8714 July 89 89 8814 89743 89 Oats— May 3504 5514 Hie 351/4 35b July 36 3604 36 36% .... TORONTO GRAIN MARKET. . Nerbeat, nets, bushel......50 94 to 50 96 Wheat, goose, bushel-- 0 90 0 92 Rye, bushel 0 66 Oats. bushel 0 41 ..•• Barley, bushel 0 68 070 Peas, bushel Buckwh ea t, bushel 0 20 TORONTO DAIRY MARKET. Butter, cuearnery, lb, rolls..0 32 0 84 Butter. treamery, solids0 30 .... I3utter, separator, dairy0 28 0 30 Eggs, new -laid 0 35 .... 0 24 0 26 Butter, store lots Eggs, cold storage, doz0 20 0 57 Honey, etxracted, lb 0 14 0 16 0 12% .... Cheese, new. lb Honeycombs, dozen 2 75 3 00 MONTREAL MARKET. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • 1 SIIfpAW'S • a • • • •-• • S C . II 00 L S. •• • •• .• Toronto Cs Leda, iuclude the • •• Central Business College, the 111.. .• ,• Centrel Tele:graph aid Rail- i 0 road School. and Four City • 49Branch Business Schuala. AU 2 • • provide ex.sellent cru.sea i • leading 'to good salaried psi- • • dons. Free catalogue on 2 o request. Write for it, W 11 rs * e Shaw Presiclent. Heed office • •n Yonge and Gerrard etreetti • n Toronto, Out. O S e••••••••••••••••••••••••• Business Change TROUBLED EVER Since Taking Olt PILLS Lyone Brook, eee., Feb. 26th. ',You are ,perfectly free to use my name in any Way to benefit GIN PILLS, for they' deserve the highest praise. My back has never troubled me since taking GIN PILT,S, and my wife feels much better after taking GIN PILLS for her back. She thinks GIN PILLS will make a complete cure." JAISILS L. NAUSe. GIN PILLS will always relieve name Back, Sciatica in Back and Rheumatism, Burning and Scalding Urine, Painful Urination, Weak or Strained Kidneys, and always prevent taking coldle the kidneys and bladder. Every box is seed with a positive guarantee to give prompt relief or money refunded. 5oc. a box, 6 for p.p. Sample free if you write National Drug and Ceemical Co. cf Canada, nimited, Toronto, 141 MONTREAL, Jan. 11.—Cables on Manitoba %arts.; wheat came stronger, at an advance of 11411 to 3d, and a fair amount of business was worked for spring shipment, but the prices bid for nearby shipment were not considered satisfactory. The local trade in all lines of coarse grains continues dull, and tho undertone to the market is easy. Flour Is steady under a fair .demand. Demand for millfeed is increasing. Butter is quiet and about steady. Receipts tor week, 1069 packages, against 1743 a year ago. Demand for cheese shows no im- provement. Receipts for week, 182 boxes, against 361 a year ago. Eggs quiet and easy. , Receipts for week, 2804 cases, against 707 a year ago. Stocks: Wheat, 510,768; corn, 18,560; oats, 1,463,033; barley, 52,098; buckwheat. 13,327; flax- seed, 44,134; flour, 163,658. Corn—American No. 2 yellow, 650. Oats—Canadian western, No. 2, 420 to 421/20; Canadian western, No. 3, 40c to 401/40; extrk No. 1 feed, 410 to 41%c; No. 2 local white, 39c; No. 3 local white, 38c; No. 4 local white, 370. I3ar1ey—idanit0ba feed, 60c to 610; malting. 78c to 80c. Buckwheat—No. 2, 57c to 60c. Flour—Manitoba spring wheat patent% firsts, 55.40; se0010ds,$4.90; strong hater% 54.70; winter patents, choice; $5.35: straight roller% 54.95 to 55, do.. baga, 52.35 to $2.40. Rolled oats—Barrels, 54.60; bag 90 lbs.. $2.20. Millfeed—Bmn, 520; shorts, $22; mid- dlings, 527; mouillie, 510 tO 535. Hay—No. 2, per ton, car lots, 513.25 to $14.60. Cheese—Finest westerns, 13c; finest easterns 12%c to 12%c. Butter"—Choicest creamery, 29%c to 30e; seconds, 25c to 27c. Eggs—Fresh, 500 to 55c; selected, ne to 30c; No. 2 stock, 20c. Potatoes—Per bag, car' lots, 750 to 85c. Dressed hogs --Abattoir killed, 513 tO $13.25; country, 511.75 to $12.25. Pork—Heavy Canada short cut reess, barrels, 36 to 45 pieces, $29; Canada short cut backs, barrels. 45 to 55 pieces. 528. Lard—Compound tierces, 375 lbs., 59.50; wood pails, 20 lbs. net, 510; pure, tierces, 375 lbs., $14.75; pure, wood pails, 20 lbs. net, 315.25. DULUTH GRAIN MARKET. • Having pu:ehaead '1.nta genereal :al ore 'and- stock of Mr. Boat, Clark at oinstance, we once in a p• sit:on 0 supply tile people of the iur- aouinclipg eounary with g•.ads at ,close cut prief•s in all lines. We have bought largely in pre- eratian of the Christmas trade. If you will cal; and ea, air :stock, we think it w. 11 taterest' yon; , -•tie aie in a position to ioy i.ur ustomers the highest ilarket price tor all kin 'a os produce. Live and o'ressed fowl b' ught to be deliver- ed at one sore every Thursaav morning. Our Motto--i'A Square Desl for Everyone. Wi el, in', von all A Merry Christmas an% a 'T.i.appy 1 nd Prosperous New Year, • HALL SI co. I:CONSTANCE r"Slrirtb neadgarters FOR Walking and Rieling (Meer plows I. H. C. Gasoline 'Engiesee McCormick 1#.eltiiinIrly Pumps ALL kriaDSlinGIVIIAPAIRS AND EXPERTING. CALL; ON Hiner Corner of Princes and Albert streets. DULUTH, Jan. 11.—Close—Wheat-50. 1 hard, 86%c; No. 1 northern, 86140; No. 2 do., 83%c; July, 894,,to asked; May, 58140. CATTLE MARKETS APPLICA'tION IS DENIED. Chicago Refused Water at Expense of Great Lake Harbors. WASHINGTON, Jan. 13.—Henry Stims le U. S. Secretary of War, has deteed the application of the-sapitary district of Chicago to increase the amount, of Water drawe from Lake Michigan from 5,167 cubic feet .per second, the amount now authorized, to 10,000 cubic feet. He thus states his conclusioes: "First. That the diversion Of 10,000 cubic feet per second from Lake Michigan, as applied for in this pen: tion, -would substantially interfere with the navigable capacity of the navigable waters in the Great Lakes and their connecting rivers. Second. That that being so, it would not be appropriate for me, without express Congressional sane-. tion, to permit such a diversion, how- ever clearly demanded by the local, interests of the sanitation of Chicago. ' "Third. That on the facts here pre- sented no such ease of local perman- ent necessity is made evident. "Fourth. That, the provisions of the Canadian treaty for a settlement by joint commission of "questions or matters of difference" between the Uune.d States and Canada offer a fur- ther reason why no administrative officer should authorize a further di- version of water, manifestly so injur- ious to Canada, against Canadian pro- test." Dealing at 'length with the reasons that have influenced his decision the Secretary says: "The United States has improved about 106 harbors and rivers on the Great Lakes affected by this diversion and ,has spent on such improvements over nieety millions of dollars. The Canadian Government has improved over 50 harbors on Georgian Bay and Lakes Huron, 8t. Clair, Erie and On- tario. By treaty, American vessels are accorded equal rights of naviga- tion with Canadian vessels in all these waters, including the St. Lawrence River. The reduction of the water in these harbors and channels would diminish to just that extent the amount of these improvements, and wsuld nulify to just that extent the effects a the moneys which have been appropriated for that purpose by the respective Governments. Connecting various portions of these waterways are the two canals at the Sault Ste. Marie, the Welland Canal, and a num- her of eanals on the St. Lawrence River. The availabje depth of water over one oi• all sills of each of these canals would be affected, and in some cases reconstruction might even be made necessary. "The International Waterways Commission reported that it would be a conservative estimate which would make the loss to the navigation in- terests resulting f rom a reduction of six inches in the depth of water as $1,500,000.per annum, or 0 sum which, capitalized at d per cent., would amount to 0 lose el $37,500,000, The lowest careful estieaate of injury to American vessels alone is reported by the chief of engineers, as $1,000,000 per year." The decision againsya Chicago's cen- tention will come as re relief to Cana.: dian navigation interests. Some months ago strong representations were made on behalf of the Dominion Government and various. The general argument they ad- vanced was that the proposed with- drawal of water would seriously lower the level of the great lakes and thus menace navigation in Canadian waters. efetve Chilline Toronto, Jan. 4. e- The Monetary Times' estimate of Canada's f re loss during month of December amount- ed to $1 769 905, ess compared nith November lose of $1,184,0o0 and $2, 866,950 for Deem bele 1911. Of this total. fires in which the loss exceeded $10,CUO accounted for $1,300, 210. The only fire in which the los0 amounted to 5100 000 will be tat in the Montreal Paint Works. Defeetive chimneys, stove pipes and flues were the cause of 2'5 tires, 10 were due to electrical defects. Nine were ince_ndiary. The number of deaths from Tore for the month wets 2e4. This makes a total of 203 for 1912. The municipal bond sales in Canada for December, as compiled by the same- paper, amounted to $4:91,590. This is the smallest amount placed on the ma,rket since January, 1911. The largest issue woe made by Melville, Seskatchewan, which sold 5104,300. Ontario made a larger issue than any • other province, viz , $205,190, while Quebec did not appear in the market at all. EAST BUFFALO LIVE STOCK. EAST BUFFALO, 11.—Cattle— Receipts, 100 head; steady. Veals—Receipts, 100 head; active; 000 lower, at $4 to $12. Hogs—Receipts, 5600 head; fairly ac- tive and 10c to 150 lower; heavy, mixed, yorkers and pigs, $7.70 to 57,75; roughs, 56.50 to 56.90; stags, 55.50 to 50.25; dairies, 57.60 to 57.75. Sheep and Lambs—Reeelpts, 5000 head; active; sheep steady; iambs 20c lower; lambs, $6 to $9.65; yearlings, $5 to 55.50, v, -ethers, $6 to $6.50; ewes, $3.50 to 56; sheep, mixed, 54.50 to 56.25. LIVERPOOL LIVE STOCK. LIVERPOOL, Jan. 11.—John Rogers & Co. reported today that there had been a. steady trade for cattle in the Birken- head market since the last report, and that prices remained unaltered at last week's level, viz., 12c to 13%c per pound for Irish steers. NIL quickly stops coughs, curecolds, And heals the throat and lungs. :: 25 cents, MANAGER:S ACQUITTED. But Jury Says They Should Be Cen- sured All the Same. TORONTO, San. 13.—Much to the surprise of Mr. Justice Middleton the nary in the Star Theatre ease return. ed a Verdict of "not guilty" against the defendants, Messrs. E. W. Stair and Daniel Pierce Saturday night. The judge severely scored the jury for what he called a miscarriage of the administration of justice. He acne - ed that another jury of their type would not be found for a long time. Justice, in his opinion, had been brought into ill -repute by their find- ing, which follows: ' "It is with exceeding great diffi- culty that -we bring in a verdict of not guilty, but the jurors wish the citizens to know that they feel that the proprietors and those in charge of show houses cannot be too strongly censured for allowing such plays as th:s, suggesting anything that is im- moral, indecent or obsence." tessereteeeererMeTteennereeeTtlr''''''7 e'llen:enheele.:7::PV1Alleede e ,i5.r00Q. Ate .I.lettni.A216ieefl'I'Ssaeeeeleyieldeed 3611,733000- • letteltelen oe the. valtie•: Of $1.1.6 026,000 • ,.baelen, einon.1;416,200 When you begin to awn and feel a .:,.. acres, yielded 44,014,000 bushels, Of the value of $20,405,000', arid flay , buraing sensation in thesuisal pessages, If upon 1,671,800 acres yielded' 21d or when a tickling irritation in your , 681000 bushels, of the value cif throat starts you coughing, the first 626,000. . important thieg is tb act at once. It's By comparison with 1911 the re - the neglected cote that becomies trouble- sults of last year's harvest, both, some and dangerous, , ' aeregards yield arid value, are up - The second important thing to do is I irorice and Chlorodyee, awl keep it up take Na -Co Syrup of Linseed, on the -whole inferior, The aver - take s were somewhat less, whilst to age prices realized for most of the JURY IS GENEROUS. Alberta Woman Gets $20,000 In Breach of Promise Suit. CALGARY, Alta., Tan. 13.—The largest verdict ever given in a breach of promise case in Alberta, and one of the largest in the Dominion of Canada, $20,000, was awarded. by a jury Saturday afternoon to Miss Louise Collard, 27 years old, a school teacher at Nanton, who was suing Martin J. nemsteong, owner of the Nanton -Valley ranch, for failure to keep his promise to inarry her, The trial, which onsumecl five days, was fiercely fought, told the verdict cause ed great surprise here because of its magnitude. It is understood that Armstrong will appeal on the ground that the court, in stumping rip the evidence, misdirected the jury. 1....fimenleoular.Menwnewnvowsvormair*sull...1110,..., WINTER TERM PROM JN* Gth Central BusinessCollege Stratford. Ont. Does more ,f rr its PI :dente and graduates ihan daes oth- er similar schools. Cm! ses are up -to -da' e and inlet redoes are expe ri en c Gro.dtietaa are pleased In good positions Phe three epplicateors re- ceived to -day ofthr average salaey of 51173 per enamel. Ihree Denartineniet, Commer- cial., Shorthand, Tele eraphy. Write for free catalogue at once. , 0s 141 D. A. McLachlan, Principal. Heavy STIOW on .Frontier. NIAGARA FALLS, Ont., j an. 13.— After a series of -rain and cleat storms that tied -up treffic and did thousands of dollars' worth. of damage, a severe snowstoem struck the Niagara frontier yesterday, on the American. side, the Bell Telephone Co.'s service was put, out of commission, but the Home Telephone Co. gave service all night. Trains and trolleys were delayed. An ice mountain is forming- below the Who's Seen This . Bell Boy? BERLIN, Jan. 13.—Isaac Laufer, a German, aged 18, short, with dark hair, a former bell boy at the Ameri- can Hotel, is wanted here by the po- lice son the charge of theft of a trunk- ful of clothes. It is known he -left here on the nine o'clock train yester- ,day morning and bought a ticket for •Ea, town 000 .Michigan. ASTORIA Pot Infants and Children.. the Mod You Hue Always Bought " Bears the e'igneture (VOLD NOT LET ANYONE ME TO NEN till the cold disaepeare entirely. Na-Dru-Co Syrup of Linseed, Licorice and Chlorodyne is absolutely free from harmful druge, and can safely be given even to moderately young. children, It is pleasant tasting and (duck acting, promptly relieving the irritation of the throat and nostrils, loosening the omens, promoting expectoration, end checking the cold. your druggist has Na-Dru-Co Syrup of Linseed, Licorice and Chlorodyne. in 25C. and 50c bottles, or can qpickly get it for you. Compounded by the National Drug and. Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited. 315 and read it, for it gives an admir- able account of the trend of peblie affairs during the Whitney regime. The speech is not amere review of the financial condition of the Prov ince, though it contains one; it deals besides with many (topics, such 55 the unsatisfactory condit- ion of education, the bilingeal 9011001 problem, the decadence of agriculture, the inertia of the Crown the yielcle from wheat, rye, peas, beans and corn for husking were also lower. On the other hand, oats yielded about thirteen and a half million bushels more than in 1911, and the following crops also show more or less an excess yield: —Barley, buckwheat, mixed grains, flax, potatoes, turnips, ete., fodder corn, angar-beet and alfalfa, The average yields per acre for the year 1912, compared wit,h 1911, are as follows ;—Wheat, 20.42 bushels, againet 20,81 e oats, 3925, against 37.76; barley, 3110, against 28,94; rye,17.44, against 18 89; peas, 14.98, against 15.80; buckwheat, 2654, against 22.69; mixed grains, 33 67, against 29.78; flaxseed, 12 92, against 11.41; beans, 17 40, against 19.061 corn for husking, 56 58, against 59,59; potatoes, 172 against 114 ; turnips, etc., 902. against 314; hay and clover, 1.49 tons, against 1.61; fodder (torn, 10.26 tons, against 9 92; sugar -beets 10.74 tons, against 866, anci alfalfa, 2.79 tons, against 2 24. The uality of the grains of 0e1'- 1AI;10 '134rns' Packing Plant in Calgary Destroyed by lands administration in the colon- 1 eals• as shosvn by average weight izeition • of new territory and the per measured bushel is somewhat construction of colonization roads, inferior to that of last year in the the taxation of railway property, case of wheat,_ rye, peas, .mixed and soon, In Am fact is a copie- • • • hensive review. of the state of the Province, lucid in style, moderate in tone, and .statesmanlike in grasp, grains and flax, but is super the case of oats, barley, buckwheat beans and corn for husking. In the three Northwest Provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Al- berta the production of wheat is placed at 183,322,000 bushels, com- pared with 194,083,000 bushels in 1911, of oats at 221,758.000 bushels, compared with 212,816,000. and of •barley at 26,671,000 bushels, com- pared with 24,043,000 bushels. The wheat production of 1912 in Mani-- toba was 58,899,000 bushels from 2 663 100 acres ; sin Saskatchewan. BUSINESS AND SHORTHAND 0 Subjects taught by expert instructors at the ''"U'Ll LOSS IS OVER Y, MC. A. BLDG.. 1 93,849,000 bushels • from 4,891,500 LONDON. ONT. - acres, and in Alberta 30,571;000 'Students assisted to positions. College bushels from- 1,417,200 acres. 'Conditions as affecting live stock are reported to have been much the same as those of 1911. Mild weather through the fall and up to $2.,000,000 Worst Fire In History of Western Canada Occurs When Celebrated in session from Sept. 3rd. Catalogue free. Enter any time. J.W. Westervelt J. neWesterve , Principal 0.aliecreelrAiseeseipulant a I Christmas enabled ecomomize their feeding supplies, and live stock have entered winter field Crops Worth Establishment Falls Prey To the Flames -- Water Pressure Was Too Low FOr Firemen To Do Anything—Supply Reduced. CALGARY, Alta., • San. 13.e-Tbe most disastrous fire in the history of Weatern Caeada occurred yesthrdayd TO ESTABLISH RATES. Government To State Demands When Rates Case Resumes. OTTAWA, Jan. 13.—Saturday'e ses- sion of the western rate enquiry. was adjourned sine die th allow of the preparation of further material. It will resume again probably within six weeks, when the Government will further present its side of the case. The evidence so far, as Chairman Drayton remarked, has been mainly of a destructive nature, but at the next seasion testimony of a more con- structive kind, which will help to es- tablish what would be fair rates for the western provinces, will probably be begun. Saturday'a sessions- were taken up with the examination of W. R. McInnes and W. B. Lanigan of the C.P.R. Isaac Pitblitdo, reprasenting the Winnipeg Board of Trade, questioned Mr. Lanigan closely in reerione to the C.P.R.'s statement that -the larger population and greater diversity of traffic in the east was an exeacie for lower freight rates there. Mr. Pitblado at the fir -at of the ses- sion, examinecli Mr. elcinues in regard to the rates on agricultural imple- ments. The caeload rate in 1522 but of Brandon Iva+ lower than the pres- ent one -34 • as- compared with $36, said Mr. Pitblacle. Mr. McInnes eeplied that care were smaller then. Speaking of some of the ears sitow-n in the te".2.R. "series et."' of rate reductions- Mr. Pitblatle Sind that 01 lot of tito rates shown were paper ones. The public was. not con- c.erned with paver: rates, but slather those it really had to pay. Successor To Chief Rabbi. LONDON, Jae. 13,—The rabijmate .0°1/mitten rnet, yeaterday at Leopold de Rothschild's maidenee in London to ch000ae a maces:roe to the laie Dr:. le:et:mann Adler as chief ritilbi of the British Empire. 11 is undeestood Alia the carulidney of Dr, fternard Dutchman of New York, has. been di:- liana:1y, ciroppeda. SHE WAS SO INER.VOUSe Diseases of the nervous system_ axe very common. All the organs of the " body may be sound while the nervous system is all upset, on accouat of the troubles and worry svhich fall to the lot of one who has to look after the troublee. incident to housekeeping, and when the nerves becoine unstrung the heart is ales effected. -.In Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pilledis combined a treatment that will cere all forms of nervous disorder as well as act on the heart itself, and for this reason we would highly recommend them to all run dosvn women. . • Mrs. Wm. Smith, Terra Novae Ont., writes:—"I wish to tell you that have used IVIilburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, I was so nervous I could hardly let any- one talk to me until a neighbour told me to try your Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. 'I got tlwee boxes, and did not have to get any more ae they completele cured my nervous aystem." Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are for sale at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price, 50 center per box, 8 bostee for $1.25. Tho T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Dynamiter on Bail. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Jan. 13.— Sufficient bones to release on bail Charles N. Beum, now in the federal prison at Leavenworth in connection with the dynamite _conspiracy, were furnished by Minneapolis freeholders here Saturday in the federal court be- fore Assistant IL 8, Distriet Attorney Dickey and judge Willard who will certify the bond to the U. 8- Court ol Appeals. A number of busineaa mtrs joined the bond, quarters in excellent condition. when the large packing plant of Burns & Co. was totally destroyed. The loss, including carca,ssee in cold storage, will probably lee in exeese of $2,000,000. On account of the low water pressure the fire department was unable to do effective work and to -day the fire was still burning. The loss is serious in that the local plant was the largest institution of its kind in the west, front which all of the western cities, including Van- couver and Victoria and the ooast ci- ties, draw largely for their meat sup- ply and butcheriag in the open may 'have to be resorted to in order to prevent a meet famine. The storage plant contained from 15,000 to 20,000 CaTCaSSCS. The fire was discovered about 12.30 o'clock Sunday morning. The whole of. the basement was in flames, and, the packing plant department, aug- mented by all of the city fire depart- Inents, were unable to make any head- way against the flames. This was due in a measure to the low water pres- sure and also to the ammonia fumes. in the basement, which were so strong that the men could not endure them. Repeatedly the firemen entered the basement, only to be driven back by the overpowering ammonia fumes. In a short time the fore had gotten into She grease soaked floors of the upper storeys and when this occurred the water had no effect whatever. Several firemen bad narrow escapes from exploding ammonia tanks, but no one was seriously injured. The fire raged furiously all day and to -day 108. tle remafris a the magnificent plant but charred ruins. The Burns' plant was a local insti- tution with a history. It had its start when Pe Burns, then a very young man, came to Calgary, about, twenty years ago. It is related that his sole capitol was one lone beef steer. The' growth of his plant has kept pace with the development of this section, and' has made its owner one of the richest men in the west, his wealth being reputed' to be in the neighborhood of $15,000,000.. The property destroyed was fully insured, the insurance of the stock in storage being in the neighborhood ot $1,000,000. Half arm 1 JANUARY PRESS NOTICE. lino Roe. and Gun, published by W. J. Taylor, Limited, Woodstock, Ont. for January has a somewhat striking cover eut, being a repro - Inferior on the Whole to auction. of a lady fox farmer. The same issue contains an article on 1911 Ibrvest. the Culture of Black and Silver Foxes, under the heading"Value." In addition, there arestories of out door life and sport representative of both the Eastern and the West- ern provinces. "Along the Mighty Mackenziie to the Artie .Ocean," description of El trip from Edmon- ton to the loot post on ale Macken- zie River e A Wild Goat Hunt in the Rockies; The Bear that:Kept an Ap- pointment.; Fining a Big Game License in New Brunswick ; Mink- Tranping ; Good Luck at the Kil- marnock Hunting Camps ; and other stories. in. prose: an.rl rhyme, combine to make an inteeesting issue of this Canadiansports- 'can's magazine. An illustrated write-up of the St. Thomas T ou r n a - me nt, held December 2nd to ale is to be found in the Trap. Depart- ment, along 'Withothem notes of trap -shooting But Oats Yielded More Conditions Affecting LiicGes Stock Were Muth Same Last. Year as Year Previous—Live. Stock Enteral' Wintered Quarters In Fine Condition. Ottawa,. Tan. 10 —Final estierettes of the yield and value of the prin- cipal field) crops of Canada' for the season of1,912' are issued teneley by the Censtis and Statistics Office of the Department of Trade andlCom- Merce. Upon a total area% snider field crops Of 32,474,000 _acres a harvest has.been reaped the•value of which., calculated at anerage local market prices, makes a total of 5509,437,000. The area under wheat last year was 9,758,400 010108 of which 781,000 acres represents the harveeted area of fall Wheat grown wihcipally in Ontario and Alberta, but also to a limited ex- tent in 'Manitoba. Saskatchewari and Britieh Columbia. The total productiodi of wheat was 1914e36,000 !Ender Mr. Rowell's 7 LeadenhiP There ia abundant evidence to shoiv that the Ontario • Liberals made no mistake in selecting Mr, N. W. Ro well: as then' leader. Be- sides proving himself a competent. Parliamentatman he has eatablished a reputation as a skillful a,nd po- pnlar platform speaker. Butmore than these- equipments ie necessary to early' end •permant suecese in the •t - • a leadership of a 1 e . i , , syseematic and educative propa- ,_, ganda,, Lon not tiler ely spas.- ewith dust. ThiS menobant bougb ..,,. . 1 m 0 clicalW clurine an -election cam- piques and bad. goiaa a colleCtion of ! 1 flgt-• paign,, but contintionieler during thuol tbern. It, set iteppenee one day taitt t . lluas-ented Linotyv whole i"arliernentery, term betaveerl I; the rebber ateirop mannfacturer stapp. 1 tfiephame, NV.bite, Divine, Murphy., ii ed in .and while- 'flake discovered e slid • Brown, the 'latter fei01. hei n I?: CO n. a• 11 dene iace.. After e ational reporters, undertook the The litiaraoster Worid, eaCas ago publicatiois, pikes • fon. at :sat in lia- na a:seesaw. who hel troelele get. ting people to -list them:legs for laxes, "(lot aulaweed" ne askriei "No," was tbe aiia eaa "Well,t 'sess essous erne ani. y - y —net my faud if.y.ceaust got oi datVgA..” How Itcridents Bale Made fortunes Fir Many People ht Years That Have Pas 114i: Fire' att Skskatcrorn. SASKATOON', Tan. 13:—Fire yester- day morning completely gutted' the, building of the Western Foundry & Machine Co. here. Many , valuable patterns were. destroyed; and' the th- tal loss on plant and buildings will total aboat $25,000, whieh. is- partially covered by insurance. Edmontbns Mem \Mite& EDMONTON, Mta., J'an, the thermometer• far below zero fire broke out Saturday afternoon, in Reed's Bazaar,. a two-storey' wooden structure, Owing to a breakdown in the power plant: the city was without water for nearly an houreand it look- ed for a tittle as if alt. -the buildinge. in the vicinity Avere doomed: NOW' NIA l‘t GON E; Police Find' New Eeidence- Agaieste, Men -treed; Benk: MONTREAL,. Sen.. 13, ---Henry Le- vee, de -feinting- tame of. the. Hoche- laga 'Bank, wile secured. his tempor- ary' freedom. some. days ago through: an appeal against hie conviction, will be • re -arrested. if the authorities ezun find him. The Superior Court has. orderea his re-arrdett on a writ. of: cap -is. following,. the, discovery of a, bo on-taiaing $e5 00a of the, stolen, x c , moneys. Lieut. &waren. who. macle tin dis- covery; was at work: on the ease.. lesg. than twenty-four hours. The beye containing notes.- and, securities wa5. found under a bed in a hisuats in Cher- rier street. Ile hart been. taken. there. try a friend i of Legace. Per aberie to le-a7A a. country boy 0; l's started at Na,41.shingiton, D 0.a. Ira, the 5,1,11 a two months the box; had been in the, on a cattle train for New, "los k City,' 1S7 L. it was in tho colq...brated safe ' sat Ay vault. of. the. Bank of Mott:roal ! He had two thing,s—arnbition to lie a )311114141`y CP0P. Whiaillil,Sted six weeka. branch at Ste., Anne de Bellevue 01 000 Mom fact over and:liallimostly in 1 Seven instruments elndi ;3rSynany opera :Savard explataa that the box had: • d • _ atova were "via:ed anal an, email numher been placed with, 2 jeweler of Notra ' - Dame streets and, later takeu ts, nth. Anne de Bellemes, through a. :ietel: clerk, it. was }placed. in thc., lesme branch. of the Montr.eal Bank. Wednesday, on, Darter uf LegE:eia te , box was.. withdrawn from Vii, l,ink and seat to Montreal to tho. .,.,.,T.t1 of a friend; in, 0herrier street. small piece.% Whiel isa 111/1.tea • by doing odd jobs. about his house Michigan. Daring spare mo- menta: be inyented. little n ovelties . . which, he intended to. Mantilacture when be arrived in teeseing city. A smateeonin on leulton stveet was rent- ed Hese there he hegss,n:1 ariufactitre . . i f at enogro ph ers, . Jo. ...eat . p 01 svals a n e's short hen di males, By use use.. of - monifold. papee• three coniae wiwe revised, boontli„inelexed, and 11'.4 ceal• i is tile hands ofecoaineel.by 8 onleek eh evening, derevious to thee these all courts. re- porting was wail -teat Oalt 1E1 10tIg ,.out.. exparienced the lISTIa.1 starvation per- , ':It wee cihe nlant. id62, 00 have en me - 1 iotino common to enshiticed poor boys, ;chine that snosald print—one that imb mane ged Ins little biipSiPPSS So Weil iW01111(1 print a, page suitable fey the 0110;47. by 1887 it had geowri to several efeongresseonel. liteeord, Assceitited thoosand clollat'3,a,yeala ---..iwith hirn in NS: idGla were three, ether ma neagb amis. aaas. a, demo! in. lien marl the tauartet spent $70•400 try- tiala i jog to pertisat avian a -machine. • The oltriolc)cillgs 'who, was not overly aabout his :sloes,: with the result thaa obstacle whiells. they could not. over - ;his stock we% ooverod in ore or le2s I come was in getthig 18 10 lost'./y—ha,ve the line. ..wen on .both sides -of the en Saber stamps and to. s. yp . elections. There has just appeared frotn the, press, under the imprint of the.0:nt arise Ref orm Assoceettiou, a pamph- let containing a fdll and well-eclit- ed report of Mr. Rowell's defiling speech in the Budget debate ()Item eession of 1012. This brochure' ehoulcl be in the hands of a.s, many electors, irrespective of party coin plexion. as can be induced.to accept LEARN THE AUTOMOBILE BUSINESS during the wintea tnenths and be prepared for the op.portunities of the early spnag. TAKE A COURSE IN THE BIG TOItONTO T. M. C. di. A.VTONE01113.1E, SCHOOL. Dept 10 275 BRoADVIEW AVENUE Write Ice Free Booldee bales (pees. , a he . had Einiehed examining it lise, had ermstraation Of a typewnter ma clime They had not been sucalasafill and Old an idea. 1tte boiaight it wad taaek it I home. 3F4d waa impressed with the their stvoubles to J. IL, Seville Weser simplicite a the works, wench he 1 0 g iota V.-110 thought he oonld &olive thought. Could, he mealufactured in I tile 'problem, lie watat to a little side large officautities for a small sans, "11- 1 stre.Tt in BalLimore,aerhere he took his the brass case could be cut down to a 1 idea to a meebaniowith a mai/ shop. much smaller size. His business oc- The meelianicis. aaarne was Mailmen- cupieill his 1181)0 80 much that be dia not i' thaler. With a, typewriters neville have' en opportmuity to glee much explaiued what be wanted. ?seta how thonght to his new toyibe thought it eould be acemplished, Ruled nDoileWetch, lbnt it Nees Mergenthaler who solved ti ' the probl ern. From the typewriter he But eventually-1SM, to be exact— the dollar watch was put on the mar- ket Not only the watch but the ina- chinery for its manufacture had also been planned. et was notreceive. with rowel entbusiasm at first, tor 15 to the meohenical problem. 800 c was thought impossible D to • r Cluee pony gave him a liberal amount of the anything More than a mere toy for stock arra he died a few years ago that 'price, but time developed Its use - invented the typesetting num t to -day. That was in .18.93. end the first, working model coat $15,000. He did not take any actisre part in the sale of the machines, but gave his attention a comfortable fortune, fulness as a timepiece and the facterY grew to a oapacity of several thousand "TIT; Hest time ha the bistore; of the 1 Children Cry typewriter that thoereachine was p HER'S into practical use In tbe way of malt leg transcripts eit shorthand Agtea l0as HE. DID THE Jen, Ainn Klegseon Convict Wowed Free I Men: Wrongfully 1 rrariaonecl. InIN.GSTON, Jan. 13.-aA man, name Xaiabairoa who is in tisto peaitentiary earring .term for satealahswing just et:Aside, London, Onto deelares that lie ia hauecent. Another man named. M-Misaq was arrestne cm the 0101112,, (Flange and who i$ ease in the penia tienetary. At the tone the ease no heaad in Lonclon Fairbairn stronele• denied the ebarge and steps :were talc,- ezt by his couneet to get him a we' teal. Tins has been granted lea Vairbaitin haS 'AM every hope 75 sea curing his freadons. It was *3.Wit here Saturday that Murray, 101130 04-. mits blowing up the safe,. isleialaroa that Faithai:Va had nothing whatever to chi with the matter; Audi 'that, if given a ehance, he will aa> into ,the witness ten and .swear that Fairbairn is innocent, but that ne himself di the eat: . . Cook's Cotton Root Compoon Tito great TJterine Tonle, an 'tartiy• safe. effectual Regulator on which wome,0 • depend. Sold in three degr of strength—No. 1, $1.30 N 15. 10 degrees stronger, ; No. 'for special ages, 5.0 per bo Sold by all Gregg:sta. or 00 repald, on 143001111 1D... PKWIla,iet.1 • A S .0 R 1 A 114SIHOIN100., a ft, a,- s J2,0,