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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1926-03-11, Page 7P RT .ARTHUR TO MAVITOBA BOUNDARY IIIVE OF CTIV A. despatch from ' Port Anthu says: -Northwestern •Ontar;ie, Tyco Pert Arthur to the Manitoba boun clary, is a hive of o-tetivity, , O1cl-thn residents cannot recount a winter .full of business. Tho soil is covers with snow knee-deep, but still the op- erations go on, the workersse.rnirg to enjoy the zestful tang of a typical winter in the hinterland. Along the railway lines, on both bi es, are immense piles' of pupand cordwood; the Minks et stream.: aro the temporary resting -place of thou-, sands of ties. Men are busy trapping in the bush or hunting for minerals. Enginers aro mapping out a route fogs an linmenso power . line froiu Big falls,' seven miles .north 'of-Atikolcan, to Fprt Frances, where the ultimate electric energy will be used in' huge pulp and paper mills • During the ..past . three winter: months building after building` has been added` to the structures in the hinterland hamlets. Mine Centre, the track headquarters of. the British- Canadian Mines Co., developing the Foley goldproperty, is building up rapidly. ; New stores are clotting the main street. The mining company r has put up several now structures, All n along the Canadian National,: Pont Arthur -to -Winnipeg litre,,bridge and o bth.ding•men_ vze clouting where con - o' dittone permit: Little station houses, d built in Port Arthur and mead on fiats cars, are being deposited on a site to marls a new stopping place. Atikoltatt to µ•the scene of activity. Ilcro the Backus interests tz y.o erect- ing track buildings in connection with th it power development. At Rig Falls they have 100 men working, Every train brings an more. i'ort-Frances, a frontier town, is leaping' ahead of her American neigh- bor, International' Falls. The Cans adian town now hos a population of :5!500.' W. II, Elliott; the Mayor, is prophesying that within the next five years Fort Frances evil. bo applying for a city charter. Fort Frances is setting apart addi- tional property for a tourist camp- ground. The Mayor and city officials have soon to it that tho ueceseary•at- tractive folders are already off the ,press and ready for distribution. They ,look"for greatest tourist trade the northwestern end of the province has ever enjoyed. CANADA EXPORTS SEED GRAIN TO ARGENTINE ReccIA Consignment of Fifty Tons :Lowered at New York. A -despatch from New York says: - The largest shipment of Canadian seed grain ever shipped to the Argen- tine was loaded here on the Vestvard, of-fhe Houston -I, F. C. lines. Totalling in-allapproximately 50 tons, the ship- ment was made up of 18,000 bushels of pedigreed Marquis wheat and 15,- 000 5;000 bushels of pedigreed Banner oats. It was .consigned to the Burige end Borst Corporation of Buenos Aires, from the Moose Jaen branch of the Canadian Seed. Growers' Association. The loading of such •a large consign- ment of grain'e roused no :tittle inter- est and the -'event was marked by a luncheon given: b?- the captain of the 'carrying vessel: Frederick C: `iiudd, Canadtan.Trade Commissioner of New York, attended, while Hgtrry Lesser, president, and Alfred Meale, iRce- presieent of the lines, were also present. Moving pictures 4of the loading activities were taken for public dis- tribution. • Sir Austen Wins French With Smiles and Smokes A' deepateh from Paris says:a-Sir Austen Chamberlain is one of the most popular British foreign secretaries that France has ever known, His close friendship with Premier Briand seems to delight ehe,people of this country • and the press never records the meet- ings, of the two statesmen without fre- quent allusions to, the welcoming smiles in which they are wreathed'; Two factors tend to contribute to this happy state' of affairs. In the first peace' Sir: Austen speaks Pooh, and it is noted with enthusiasm that his French is so improving- that he now picks the "mot juste, with all the facilities of an old Parisian. And secondly, Sir Austen, wind this sem-7w important, is able to smoke, cig- arette for' cigarette, with the French ?rentier, who is • almost never seen Ivibhout a "gauloise Maryland" droop- ing front the earner of his mouth. On such things the geed relations of - two countries may often depend. John J. Dixon new president of the. Canadian Nation - fa Exhibition, MQ' 1`iER SAVED BABIES BUT FATALLY BURNED Port Arthur Woman Perished and One Child is Severely •. Injured. A despp,atch from Port Arthur, Ont., says: --Mrs. M, Hotchlcoski received fatal burns' and her three-year-old daughter is in a critical condition in hospital here following a fire which destroyed' their home on Thursday. Mrs. Hotchkoslci died in hospital short- ly before noon, retaining consciousness until cm hour or more before she ex- pired. • . Awakened from sleep :by heat and smoke, the mother seized' her two chil- dren and threw them out of a window on to a snow-covered verltz%dih, where they were picked up by neighbors. The eldest" child was seventy burned, but a baby was unharmed. Forced from the open window by a rush of flames, Mrs, Iiotchlcoski fought her way to the rear of her little home, escaping through a doorway, The soles of her feet were berned raw, and her whole Body was. charred. Westminster Abbey g ng Clean-up .. finder of to Continue 20 : Years A despatch from London says: - Westminster Abbey's interior is under- going a general scouring with vacuum cleaners and electrical scrubbers, and marvellous decorations in gold and beautiful briglit colors are 'being un- covered an walls and pillars which had greyed under lite smoke and- dust of n centuries. Every foot' of the wall and ceiling in the great cathedriil. 15 to 1>e restored 05 nearly es passible to ite drigivail state. Wal paintings dating back t'o. 1800 have ci ready been uncovered; and pi ;ars which were suppozed to, be ordinary stone blackened by grime prove to be fine red and white ntarltle, Even the dti`E decorations on. many of the tombs are lovely mosaic when they, emerge from the halide' of -the cleanerS,' Mach of 'the' art work has been Robert Hobson o8o0tively concealed 'because of a ear. President of the Steel Coin nish, Believed to have been applied treaty e- under thee instructions CREW OF SIX SAVED; FROM SINKING VESSEL l in r Taker 'Off 'Skipper and Men Afloat Since Dec. 17 ton Derelict Ship. A despatch from New York's, s:- W y Two ivr e ess messages from the Hol- land-American' iolIand-Am rican'diner Volendam were put together to make the probable story that the skipper -and five men' of -the schooner General Smuts had been, 'rescued in mid-Atlantic after spending several weeks on their dere- lict vessel. In one .respect, that of dates, their informations received at Halifax and New York did not jibe, While the Ilalifax, radio said that the General Smuts had been abandon- ed _and _set, on fire in latitude 44.05 north, longitude 38.27 west, the ,New York message' read: "Notify ..Associated -Press captain rescued ,midnight Skipper and five men afloat since December 17 on sa,id- less, sinking schoner op way Spain, Newfoundland." Shipping records sliowed that the British schooner left Spain an December 18 bound for, St. John's, Nfld.' - The IIa,i£ax message was received by the Department of Marine -and Fisheries. The New York; radio :was sent.by Ossian Lang, e pgssenger on the Volendam; to Robert J. Ken. - worthy, grand secretary of the Ma'am - is Order. Officials ref the Ilolland-Ainerlcan Line said they had received no report of trha•rescue from Captain -de Kenig,. of the Vane -dam. Attempts will be made by wireless to reach. the boat, which -is -due .,to'•errive',at ' Plymouth; Engcand, on Monday` THREE CANADIANS iN HONG KONG ' Toni Pylturn, of Toronto (standing), William Daley, of Montreal, and �• :.Lorne Saunderoock, of Brookline (sitting left to right), whe are with the Sum of £30,000 is Donated Hong Mona dofenee corpa•.,attaolted to :the Eaet Surrey Regiment to Aid -Migration to Canada — A despatch from' London says:,-- Mining Men Are Toid Natural Resources Bulletin. Leybourne Da"ideon of Hunt:y, Aber- of- Big Developments deensltire, a pioneer in the 'rubber in- ' ----- Maple sugar bane will soon be here dustry, and prominent in other indus- A despatch from Montreal says:ea. -that time that is looked forward to tries also hasoffered- to contribute Tlie impetus to the development of by all who. own a sugar bush as' the g8O,Ot?0 to assist in . the migration Canada which lead beets given by the first sign of .spring. The coed nights movement front Great Britain to the discovery o£ aninerais, the pieponder- give place to the sunny days, the .sap Aominions. The details of the propos. a ice of• Canada as a nickel producer, 'in the maple commences' to run, and ed contribution are'unsettled as yet, petro-eum and gas developments in the sugar -making equipment is again It appear that Leybourne Davidson's 111bet ta, and the benefits of research Put into service. gift, which has aroused. _widespread as an aid to the paining industry were The making of maple sugar and interest, was the sequel to a' speech presented to the. convention of the syrup is almost exclusively -a Gan - made by Sir Robert Bottle, M.P., for -Canadian Institute of Mining and adian industry, although the, New Can- nier Chancellor:'of the Exchequer, at Metallurgy here on Thursday. England States make some. But Can - Elgin, Scotland, last November, when The. transformation into, a populet- ada, being known as the "Land of the he' emphasized the advantage'of send- ed country which• had taken pace in Maple can `claim the maple industry ing young men from Great Britain to hitherto unsett•ed potions of British as its, own. Are we making the moat the Dominion. Columbia, through the discovery of r0 this industry, bawever? "Are we Pre- minerals re- tni aer is to the last century, was now g maple sugar that carries an being repeated in nar:there Manitoba, appeal from the standpoint of • quail - Ontario and Quebec, Charles Camsel],' ity? 'unfortunately we cannot give a Deputy Minister of; Mines, Ottawa, favorable •answer,. There appears. to said. be no uniformity in quality or color, ..:-...--.3-- the ]atter varying from a clear yellow to almost a black, while some of the sugar is so hard as to be almost un-, breakable, In marketing the sugar little attention: is given to appearance and often the conditiota in which it is placed en sale is lar front appetizing. Canadian maple sugar makers are missing a splendid opportunity in not catering more carefully to the taste of the consumer in regard to the con- dition in which it is SoM. 'Canadians as a general. rule have a sweet tooth Tor maple sugar, and will consume large quantities of it, 1f put up in ata inviting ,form. An additional anarket is offered in the hundreds of thousands of American tourists that will be coating to Canada this year. They wi±i want something typically Can- adian, and, if maple sugar can be offered to them in an appealing wrap- per or even in a waxed paper wrapper. that is a protection against contam- ination by flies or careless handling they will consume -considerable quanti ties while in Canada as well as carry it back home with them, with the re- sult that a larger market will be cre- ated far Canada's delightful- confec- tion, Eskimos Face Starvation in the Barren Lands A despatch from Fort' Smith, •N.W. •says: -A detachment of the -Royal Canadian Mounted Police left 'Fort Smith Thursday morning on a long trek into the Barren Lands in an effort to prevent a band of 'Eskimos from meeting death.through starvation. Word was received hero of the plight of the natives and Corporal Bloke, a constable from the regular staff, And a special constable left with two Indian degteian,drivers: A largo quantity of food was carried an the sleds, The location of the band of starving caribou eaters is believed to bo 2$0 miles northeast of here in the Barren Lands. Payment of Twenty Cents Made by Wheat Pool A despatch from Winnipeg says:` -- The• Central Selling Agency of' Prairie wheat pools will make its 'sec- ond payment to contradt.holders this week, it officially earned here. The payment will amount to 20 conte a bushel, based on No. 1 Northern. Tho first payment \vas' $1 a bushel, made last.November.. It is understood lettlerMAI R. F. Gagen Secretary of tate Ontario Society of Artists, wits dropper dead ou_,March tad white Soaking over the work oe Canadian artists at the Toronto Art Gallery. that a third payment may be made - ^- 3 aster soding, ant a final settlement Princess to Operate Alberta early next summer. On the basis of .20 cents e bushel, the. total amount. to be paid out this weal: will reach $25,000,-000. Chickegn-Paan. Aeuording to information given b s r znul Cotonization Company, Princess Mate Australians Invite Canadians to Parley. . N Al O t y 1 1 of the Dominion The four Australian' wheat pools have extended an •invitetlan to the Svenigorotislcaya, a member of the old Canadian wheat peels to send a dela First Mummified- Horses • Russian ,,,,I. i., is ml,eiriming to o er petioli 10 Australia lit August t0 cots• waiting i Discovered e n Egypt t - 1 iCl en fa: m on , large Scale in ler with pool rept•esentativee there. A despatch from Cabo, leg , :vet awaiting L11e1 outcon10 oil ^; a en (r, says: -Coffins containing two. mum neggti rtleus being carried +ni Icy . ternationnl fo-operativ.n Wheat Pool! trifled hooses -the first ever discover-ICharle,s Stewart, minister sr the 1e- that fens at, Vaal. Mina:, says od in 11gypt- have besn•,fouud in the! termor, with the American immigration)' fallowing the erinCerence' at St. Pyramids of Sakliara, south of Cairo, ko0teial„ iu nn endeavor to arrange:Pani he teacher the Ninonsign that The excavators also found a papy-1 0t tho ani the Ca.Oulil n and Aali•1ier,art wheat 1 1 Y i united States pass -i , rub which rebated how a female singee port lsernait.-which would nitow be pgo,s coal }vat: together, provided t .to i the for agstra:iaa pole risme tip to from the .court ole Thoth,. the Gieek resins iu Cetiacia and nidi: friends in name for the Egyptian -god' of letters, the Tlnitod Statewhe» she 4lesfrr,3 to the standard of the Canadian pools invention and wisdom, carte to enema'. 110 40, and,. Iilae Thein. formed a cen!'.ral :.ell- tlte men its their work. But the re- ing •orgv-iz:Ltion, compete sent the Ans- i her effortta, if the- a rue has other pools., enmpete . Air, e P PY g reit I correctly read and cart be trusted If I. have enough for myself .and olhea' -urr rogartt,z 5a11Uig, hlr, -htcDo -, family, I ate steward only for myself; laid added that Itthat n l that the anen_ceas,:d their' work ie I have o was convinced that, repaired to the bank o ve snot'=,Tani but steward of the Canadian wheat rcoleh h f the river t a been in-� that a bundenee for others. --George strnmentai .to stabilizing Wheat - est.: Tlerbert: t pricer during the 1gtt�tslx mbIlthA• FIVE CAUGHT I STORM TRIP FROM •'I N a A dospetch from Windsor says:- , A1, hope vas ioractically abandoned on Thursday ter J ernes Phipps; his wife, Nellie; aria their three child --ren, aged 0, 13 and 4, who stetted out at 4 oclock last Monday afternoon from Peed Island in their sedan to drive 'across the frozen. wastes of Lake Erie to the main•!end at Leamington, emit- -teen miles away, ,and of whom nothing has sines base seen. It is feared the party, overtaken probably by a snow- storm that ,swept across the lake about that time, lost the trail,' and that Phipps, who was at the Wheel of, the carr, drove into -an is hilo concealed beneath -a thin veneer of ice and snow. All day,,long the mournful hoots of shore 'whistles at Leamington echoed across the expanse of frozen cake, sounding their warnings at regalia/2/ intervals, in the vain hope that th AIR °RO 15 ORENEED TO NEW GOLD FIELD First Plane Makes Five -Day Journey in Hour and a Half. A. despatch from Hudson, Ont,, says :-The aeroplane superseded the dog-e'.ed to -day; an,l- a party, including a prospector and,,, ga geologist; took the air' route to R•eI- Lako, acme of •0n- taxio's latest gold -strike, The arduous five-day, jouriney was cut to an hour mid a half. The distance to Red Lake by the air route is 14a miles from this point. -The theinaorneter registered 30 below zero. The air `eervice has been inaugur- ated by Jack V. Elliot, Haanilton 'a'ir- man, and three -planes have been sta- tioned et Hudson to carry out a regu- ler,schedule of flights. It was . -indicated Thursday that the development of the new field would be hastened by the advent of 'air. trans-" potation. ,Experts who have gone into the field to investigate will be enabled to return with their reports in a fraetiein of the time required by the dog teams. Supplies and baggage will also be carried by the planes. March 5th witnessed tho inaugura- tion of a mail service to the mining camp. Mare than 'a thousand letters awaited delivery. a. --- - Eighteenth Child Born in Family Iii' With SSnlallpox NIS travelers might possibly still be alive and that who •whistle signals mighe guide them to shore," But as dst knew fell and no word . came from the numerous seeirching parties si:atteted along the shore and far put over the lake, the hoile'thtvt the little family still :night be alive slowly 'yielded 'to' conviction that they ' had gono to death at the± lake's bottom,` The first Hetes that the party :was lnissing was bt.•oadcast-Thursday fore- noon, when a mail carrier returning from Fabs Island 1eported to anxious. inquirers that the Phippses had left the island a, few minutes before 4 o'clock "Monday afternoon,` expecting' to rea�eh the mainland: near Leaming- ton before darkness set in. Up to that time friends of the family ab Learn - Mg -ton believed they had decided to o prmong their visit on the island'. • Sir Henry Lunn Head of the London tourist agency beating his name, who is turning over most of hie fortune to the 14u0n Foun- dation for •the epuraose' of bt'oincti-ng Unity of the churches and peace among nations, Bishop of North Pole" Resigns His Arctic Post The Eight Rev. J. R. Lucas, Bishop of Mackenzie Elver, has, -since - 1913, relinquished his dioeese owing to rho ill -health of his wife; and his resignation becomes efleetive on A despatch from Kitehenor says:- March 31. Mrs. Lucas's breakdown is The stork defied smallpox placards due to the trying life of the earlier when it brought the eighteenth child days in the ;frozen North, to Mrs. John I{, Weber at her homer Dr; Lucas, known to his brother 'here, 25 Peter' St., Wednesday night. clerics as the "Bishop of tee North The mother is a victim of smallpox, but , Pole, has a dioeeso covering 800,000 the child, a boy, was born in a healthy : square miles, with only' about 0,000 condition. Seventeen of Mrs. Weber's people, tisnost entirely Indians and children ere lieing. Nine of the chi:. f Esquimaux. On one of his visits to dren who are quarantined in the house London he gave some interesting par - have smallpox. ticulats of his great "parish." "The diocese ineludee the North Pale, he said, "but I don't think an endeavor will be made to establish a mission thorn until we know our way about bless regions better. The Ca- thedral 'Church is at Tort Simpson, and to catch a traits we have to start six and a half weeks in advance. The nearest railway station is a thousand miles away. - "'Tate transformation worked in our 'Esquiamux has been profound. 1'or- merdy they used to be dirty, cltshoneet and untrustworthy. Now, before at- tending church every week, they insist on having a bath, no matter !tow tow the temperature may be. They will melt show its their huts to do it." Mrs. Emnialine' Pankhurst who, after at abr,eecaof eight years, has returned. to England et the age of 71 to take part to the eariipalgp to ex- tend the franchise so that English wo• t 01'en may vote at twenty-one iustead of until they are thirty. : I a aet ,c l+ Alberta. The Princes:; is• at present 'I• M, McDonald, of Ade title, South ypt in Vaucoi lusfrahrl ribs attended the recent J of Sir Chris- ago Canada, who flied recently his hOtlae ape in Hamilton, replier Wren, which was supposed to )yoet paeaerve the colors. This varnish prob. was is ,- ;, ably did preserve the colors,' but it • Prince*s Latest "Cropper and 1 � held the dust and, smoke. and "coated: May Aid Shoulder Droopthe art objects so 'heavi'I �. With :grime. to t YY that modern visitors have, had little A despatch from London says' conception .of the brilliant achieve - The Prince of Wales' Iatost accident meats of medieval • workmen. in the hunting field, in which he stif- It will probably take twenty year's foxed a broken collar -bone, has proved to ,complete the a-estotation, which is to be one of those blessings which come going on tirade -1' the dizectio)i.of E, W. in clisgut.e, in the opinion of his ishysi_ Tristram of the Royal Co'lage of Are cians, • They ;feet Hirt it will tend to correct the slight droop in ono, of his British -Naval Estimates shoultiets, which 'resulted from the, for 1926Are- 000 breaking of the other collarbone in , 1924:. The prince has been cayseai veI A despatch from London says:-, lit Th me ises mhase bye this acci055' The. net total of the I3ititish navy esti and rias beets ab'e to keep all his ape mates for 1926 is 5258,100,000: ($281,- aointm pts, It will, be some : time 785'000) , which 15 a reduction of $2;- 400,100 from that of 1925, notwith- ltowevel, before' he will be aleci to steeding that the provision for new dance' or take " part in athletic pas- construction is increased from -,',7,235, ilnlne, • ' r87'to 89,088,893. This announcement Prince t0 @'np was made to -day by W, C. Bs•idgernai , dlkilt. I°irst Lord of the Admiralty. The estimates provide for carr in A despatch loinLondontit London says:-- n ry ts ' neer n..t;ruct:on programThe Prince of Wes will app ar;in the which we praresented to t'sris imelit 1 r bJab the festival of the highland -last Jury„ It was originaCy intended Society of Lor -len this, mouth. -- Ills that the iloetie k c r rattan 15 the `Stuart:. Some r r• ' lock for Singapore,l c awns tvhclt was included in that program, consider that Scot( ish entre is not as should be provided' by; the rsecons,trtc beeonsi r;, to tits diose'sr 3Vals:.as it, Hon of a former German dock, Er- is to ti Duke of York, who Often l.erienee, however, has show Ibis wears t e Iu1C evhvn 1 e is at Balmoral." impracticable,1• toe- Caste. The Prins'grdere .rind anew :dn k is be - Castle. V a < will: ba iri{; .ordered. the` chief of the TT,glEa d Society for this, year, and tho Duke oC York is The annual trnea ,i i 1 l <- crop p F the chief of the Sys fish. Cana .1 s., ia- liawanan rt:ctnds is worth about $20, - don. • 000,000. Red Lake the: Scene of the g Gold Rfash mg, I MNR.e NowgY VICTORIA SYNC) CON I ACTAS to NORANDe, AMMeL•, woltoo -cos—eec- RaATE ❑111, 1'l1,I lir' rni 11. NEW' REOTOPiNG °Friar: : -y unor q MAMOTV -5050050 Cute t? To MINekl 75" AEC{ 7F ,•,PEGS rn y,. *w"1-1.4ik1•�'r • "f= 'ii+•rL�' -N.r?.l � 1 185 1r,11;s5 A 1 rn,nr , r u ock 9000+� a ¢nnfntl 5 11 E'n0,//5/1 PurposedC,in,f cro,ieO fro,i, fii'U9oN >a flgmlYu6�1 sdcE./tv,n' G n7RN/fta/N✓ /AC •.1 :// 4 Flt % gfl. Q,,vc't pLLP VJOCJD L to Gooqse• La YrC • bOI°t IT Cr�NE Roui0S.... heDOir Mae` R Fl i1 t`^rt'i't1' 1 '7cT:,apt , H . ASO 1tx�rtou7 1, HAZARO.O•US W INTER, TRAIL LEAD& TO RED LAE e GOLD ,=lEeteei -Kills Wild Cat in Hen Coop With Pitchfork and Dog A. despatch from I{ingcton, Ont., says: -Awakened during the night by the loud barking of his dog, William McDonald, Wolford Township, went to the poultry Iowa and encountered a wild cat which had just killed five geese. The farrier, armedwith a pitchfork and 'aided by his dog, killed the cat, which is a splendid. specimen. THE WEEK'S REIS rox.oN'rrt, Man. wheat -No, 1 North., 31.013'.. No, 2 North., $1,68;0.; No, 3 North, $1.58 it. Alan, oats --No. 2 CW, neminel No. 3, not quoted; NO. 1 foci, 47e, No. 2 ;Coed, 45c; 'Western grain quota tion. •oit ai.f. bay ports, . Ant. corn era k Tnr C Ot1t0-- U N. yellow, 85110; No. 2 yellow, 83a MilIfeed--Dei, Montreal freigh,.s, bags included: Bran, per ton. $30.25 to 331.25; shorts, per. ton, 332.25 to $33.25: middlings, 339,25 to $40.25; good feed flour, ; Tr hag 32 30 ` Ont. oats -40 to 42c, f.o.b, shipping points:. Ont. good,: 'mining whoa.±. -•$L27 to 31.29,f.o.b. -shipping points, according to freights, Barley, malting -62 to 64c, Buckwheat --No, 2, 690, Rye -No, 2, 85e. Man. hour --First pat„ 38.40, To- ronto • do, second pat., $7,90. On fleur-Toronto, �0 per cent, pat,:, per barrel, in cat ors, Toronto, $5.60; seebeaad, in balk, 35.60. Straw-•Carlete, per ton, $9 to $9.50. Scree ' nritgs.-S-andard, recleaned, P. o.b. bay ports, per tOO 322.50. Chet w --Nett, large 22e; twine, fly/se triplets, 23e; Stiftotts, 24e. Old, large, 28 to 30e; twins, go to 81c; roils, 22c; cottage, 25 to 27c; break- ; fast bacon, 32 to 36c; special brand breakfast bacon, 33 to. 59e; backs, liotteless„ 35 to 43c. Cured meats --Long clear •bacon, CO to 70lbs.,$24.25. 70 to 90 lbs., 20. lbs. and up, $22.34; lightweight roils, in 'barrels, 342.50; 'he yyvtiglit .. to --s 30.60 , r l e bb, Larct-Pule tierces 18 ' t :tubs 19 to 19 8 n i1e; o4e; pails, 20 to 20c; prints, 21 to 211,1c;; shortening tierces, 14 to 14%e; tubs, 1430.. to 15c; pails, •15%to15114e blodks,16,t'to170;.. Heavy steers, choice, $7.5410 38.30; do, good, 37.25 to" '37.50; butcher steeee choice $'T 3. 37,50, .do, geed, $4.'50> 6 • to 30.75; bu teher Heifers; choles, $6.50 to 37,25; de, good, 36.00 to 36.50; do, med,, 33.50 to 36; do, come; $5 to $5.50; butcher : cows, choice, $5,50 to 86; do, fair to good, $4 to 35; -.'butcher bttlIs, good,' $5 to -35,75; bologns5, 33.26 to $3.75; canners and nutters, 32,25 to $8 springers; choice, $85 to $100; good i ntilch Cows, $70 to $80; medium cows, 345 to .$60', feeders, good, 35.23 to i $6,75; do, :;5an•, $u to $6; stockers, good, $5 to $5.60, do, fair1 $4,50 to o, go 5 i 05od, �a1.050${1 .01to13105$12.50700, 313g,g10 z'Asse$1r4s; I . , to �l h to ig"50 6 , soda t sheet 7 $ , g $ g P, 8 heavies and lnick $a`a $5.00 6,50; uo! mecr7 - $1.2 to $12.50; do •bucks, $9 to $11; do, salts, $10 to $11 liege, thick smooths fed and watered, 31;3,85; do, f.o.b., 318.25; do, country points, 313; do, of} cars, 314,25; select premium, 32:70, MONTIIEAr, Gals, Can, West., No. 2, 59c; No. 3, 56c; extra No. 1 feed !tic, .:IP:our, Ian spring wheat pats,,firsts, 38,50; seconds, 38; strong balkeos, ,37.60 to $7.80 Bran 33‘0.25, Shorts, $32.255, ltfiddungs $h4 2. 'jay, No, 2, ler ton, car ,eta, 315 to $1.3,50. Cheese, finest wests;, nuc; do, finest eases IOM(. to Ieeec, 13nttsr,'No, 1, pastetr zed, 46 to 46140. Eggs, storage extras 52e; storage -Pasta 27c; stor- age eeconde, 11e; fresh e;ttres, 42c; fresh firsts, in Pota cos, iiuoboe, Dei• l,ag, ear lots, $2,131 to 3'3,05. plots, 30 to 82e, - 13utter-l'inezt creamery prints, 48c; No. 1 creamery, 413 to 47c; No. 2, 45 to 46c Dairy prime, 41 to 42c, P,.ggs I cs•h extraF, in 'cartons, 43 to ile fresh 0 tr._s, lease, 39 to ide; it h firsts, 3u- to 30e. 3)re<sssil poultry --Chickens, spring, 111., $2 to 35c; hens, over 4 to b lbs., 305; do, ' to 4 lbs., 250;,rot/sters, 22c; iiueklnots, S Itis, and up' 80: to 32e; turkeys, 35c, Deans Can'. h.1nd-picked, ib,, 6c; prints, ,5 to,5,,Qc, Mep:e produce ---Syrup, per bap, gal.,' 32,40; per 1 -gat tin, 3.2,30 per get; maple sugar, 11,,:2,1 to 26c,' linnety 2: tins,. 11,_.{0 L.E per 16, 10-111. tins, 1114 to lie, 5-1b; tins, 52 to 12,sc; 2'4-tb, ties, 14 to 1.41ise: Smoked o)ionts-harry, teed., 29 to 11e; cooked hams, 411 to 45c; smoked