HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1926-07-01, Page 2CLINTON
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one inch, each as "Wanted," -"Lost,"
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structions as to the number of in-
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ed out and will be charged accord-
ingly, Rates for display advertising
made known on application.
; Communications intended tor publi-
cation must as S guarantee of good
faith, be accompanied.by the name of
the writer.
G. E. HALL, K R. CLARK,
Proprietor, Editor,
G. 13, liacTAGGART
za. D. MeTAGGA.RT
MeTAGART ROS.
BANKERS
4 general Banking Business transact-
ed. Notes Discounted, Drafts Issued,
Interest Allowed on Deposits. So%
Notes purchased.
H. T. RANCE
Notary Public, Donveyancdr.
lleal Estate and Fire In-
surance Agent, Representing 14 Fire
iusuranee
Division Court ,Office, Clinton.
BRYDONE
aarrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, etc.
Offte,e:
SLOAN .I3LOGR CLINTON
•
• DR,: J. C. GANDLER
Office H4orel--1.30 to 3.30 p.m., 6.30
to 8.00 p.m., Buncle.ye, 1.30 to 1,30 peel.
Other hour's by appointment onlea •
Office and 'Residences Vietorla eat.
DR. H. S. BROWN, L.M.C.C.
°Mee Hears' . •
e 1,30 to 3,30 p.m. 7,30 te 9.00 p.m.
-Sendays 1,00 to 2.00 P.m.,
Other hours by appointment.
Manes
Office and Residence, teetarto Street.
Phone 218.,
DR. FRED G. THOMPSON.
• Oalce ariet Residence:
Ontario Street
One door west of Anglicali Church,.
•-"'Phonse172. •
Eyes examined and glasses fitted.
DR. PERCIVAL HEARN
Office and Residences
Plume Street .. • - Cliatore Out,
• Phon69
(Forinerly 'occupied5 by the late Dit:
Eeesee°,iWnt•drhenmsona
'D. H. McINNES
and Classes Pitted.
Chiropr•actor--,Massitue,
Of Whigbani, will he at the Cominea
elel Inn, Clinton, on Monday and
Titureday forenoons each week.
Dieeases of all kinds snecessEullY
handled.
GEORGEEwon.
Licensed' Auctioneer for -the C)etnty
, of Huron.
Correspondence 'promptly inswered.,
blued fate arrangements can be made
for Sales Date at The News -Record.
Clinton, or by calling Phone 203..
Charges Moderate mut eetiefeetioit
Guaranteed. •
B. .R. HIGGINS
• Clinton Ont.
Gena'al Fire and.Llie lesuranceeA.gent
for Hartford Windstorm, Live Stock,
Automobile and Sicknessrand Accident
Insurance. -Huron end Mee timed Cana-
' da Mist "Bonds. • Aneelethielles made
-to mime parties ,at Brucefield, Varna
ana Byfield, 'Phone 87.
OSCAR' KLOPP
Honor Graduate darey eozteie ilational
School of Auctioneering, Chicago Spe-
cial course taken In Pure Bred Live
Stook, Real Estate, Mereliandise eind
perni Sales. Rates -in keeping with
pre -trailing market, Satisatetion as-
sured., Wriefe ,or tviro, Zuoich, Ont.
Phono 1•8:03,
-The McKillop :Mutual
Fire insurance Company
Head Office, Seaforth, Ont,
OIRECTORY:
President, James Connolly, Groderleta
Vice, James Beane, Beachwood; Sec..
Treasurer, Thos, Eallays, Seatorth.
Directors: George 'McCartney, Sea -
forth; D. F. McGregor, Seaforth; J. G.,
Grieve, Wa ;' Wins Ring, Seeforth;
M. McElwee-, Clinton; Robert Ferries,
Harlock; John 13e.nnewetr, Brodhagea;
eas. Connally, Goderiele
age,nfs: Alex. Leitch, Clinton; J. W.
Goderich; Ed. Partehray, Sea -
forth; W. Chesney, legmeadville;
G. Jarmuth, Brotteageaidn. ,
t Ate" Money to be epin ' may be
maid to Illoerish Clothing Co.; Celinton,
or at Outt's Grocery, Goderich,
:Pa,rties desiring to affect. Insurance
or :transact other buelneess will lie
promptly net,einled els on apalleatiort fo
Amy of the above. oineere ear/re-seed to
their respeotive pct. eine°, Leases
inepeeted by the Directors who lives
nearesetthe Scene;
• ,
TIME TABI., -
Trains will arrive at'and deAfit, from
. Clinton as ',fellows;
Buffalo and Godeilch
Goin'g Dant, depart 6.25 a.ut,
2.52 p.m.
Goals West, Cr, 11.10 term
as, 43.08 ap. 6.53 p.ni.
are 10.04 p.m.
London, lauteM a. Deuce Div,
GoIr.tg S, oath, or, 7.56 sip. 7.56 are,
•• o
t,Going North, deet,:ast 6.50 p.m.
ste 11.05' 11,15 a.m.
11{v1ENIOUS 1)11IVICE DISCOVERED
FOR SPIUGGIIII‘IG LI
New York most ingenious which a tow rope can f .fxds,tleilded.
vice e
_
sprung fiorn. rum -running IFtrins, was its own waterline the small launch'
discovered by Federal officers When'could proheed 'let,81,1relY to 'shore tind...6r
they inspected .,the culinary .schooner. the very oyes of the coast guard with-
Rosie- '13„ chptured off Montauk out aroasing so -much as' a stlisPiCit>th
point on Wednesday evening by ,the- Ti -could draw one -of the entail -Sub:,
, -
destroyer AddllougalI, , ' marines or.a dozen of them in a chain.
Aboard the-''selooner were 40' Steel' It stepped "by; it 'COaSt guard vessel,
torpedoes specially coPstrlucted to it could ,cut' look the torPedo anil pick
'carry liquor,ortrither:,valuable -contra-lit up again at a , more opportunetno
band." Each is about' 18 feet long end 'ment.
two led rir, diameter. Partially en- How long runt -runners' have,. been
veloping each torpedo and running its Slipping' their treasured cargoes bet:.
full length, is, a thin air chaPiTier math the boast guard cordon' with
which can be adjusted so that -the these submarine devices, assistant His -
craft, when-,-Alled, lath floorjust below. trict,Atterney James A. Farmer, who
the sUrf ace of the Water, examined -the crew ur the Rosie M. B.,
Painted a grey -green, the torpedoes was nimble to learn. •
when in the water ate,invisibie, .' Five of her torpedeeS' were fria of
bars of the crew of the schooner ex- 'Scotch molt,' apprmitimately 50 gallons
plaintkel.' They contain im mechanism or -about -IIi10500 worth in each.. On
self -propulsion,, each Of the board,.besides, ware 83 kegs of Scotch
titre tapered ends is en, iron ling to nis.14.valued at more than .$12,000. ,
BODIES RECOVERED
FROM ST. MARY'S RIVER
Remains of Four of. the Six
-Victim of Drowning
cA cident Found.
Sault Ste. Marie, Ont—Between
three o'clock in the afternoon- and
eight -thirty o'elock in the'evening,
four of the bodies 'of the six victims
of Sunday's drowning eceident were
recoveted !min St. Mary's River. At
three e'cloc1e7- the body. of Clement
'Conner, aged 13, was found by Mike
Boissineau and Charles- Stone, two In -
dips; Who had dragged the river eon -
stately eine° 8 o'clock in the morning,
At 4.30, the body of Arthur Tessier,
'aged 10, was recovered and before 8
o'clock, after some 50 beets had bean
pressed into service, -the bodies of
Metres.* e McIet•fiee aged 17., and
Emily Terry, 16, were found. The
dragging_ operetions continued until
well after dark. The body of Cormier
was found. practically where the acei-
dent occurred in the swift current be-
low- the ship'eanalmier and the otheas
over eg distance of 200 yards further
east at the spats, apparently where
they became exhausted and let go of
the overturned motor beat, which cap-
sizeciein the-nil:ma water. The success
attending the work of the seamen's
is no doubt due to the tact that the
bodies have started to rise and are
more easily grasped by the grappling
Insects Seen as Man's_
Conquerors on Earth
• •
Oakland, Calle.--leumans and in-
sects face a death grapple for the
mastery of the earth, with the condi-
tions' of warfare fa-voeleg the insects.
Dr. 0. Hovrard, Chief of the
bureau of eiltomology, United States
Dept: of Agricalture, said this in an
address at the tenth annual conven-
tion of the Pacific divisiee, Americria
Association for the Advancement of
1
Selehee. 1
human beings are to continee,
to eisists" he 'Said, "they must first'
gain masteey over insects. Life mayl
develop into a struggle between man,
and insects foe the mastery of the
earth. Insects in this countey eon:
tinually nullify` the labor of 1,000,000
men. -
"'meets are better equipped to oc-
cupy file earth tban are humans, hay-
ing been On the earth for 50,000,000
years, which the human race is but
000,000 year's old!'
t311:118;1010111iir
11110111111.
Donald D. Gunn
Under officer, winner cg his excellency
the governor-general's gold medal at
Royal Military College, Kingston. This
der011icer Gunn is a son of Brigadier'
General S. A, Gunn, Termite.
„ .
Tunnel Unearthed on Site
of Pala& of Henry VIII.
London.—A subterranean passage
has been discovered ea Weybridge, in
Surrey, where theald Palaee of Hemel -
VIII stood in the sixteenth century.
The passage pourts in the direction of
the Thames and Hampton Court, King
Henry'e other palace, whieh still is the
mosrfamous show -place in the vicinity
'of London.
Itis thought the message connected
the two royal palaces and was used for
• purposes not revealed by history. The
,t distance from Weyliridge to Hampton
!Collet is about six miles. There is also
Ian ancietit cellar, audI both this and
the paseage are surmounted by neatly
chiseled arches.
These discoveries have revived re-
mora cencerning a buried treasurh bee
longieg to One of Henry VIII's
Ane "of Cleves. Jewels were 'stolen be
a servant during her stay at riattands
Palace, es it was called, and, when
the thief was discovered; wen buried
on the estate and never found,
Holland Hit by
- British Embargo King George I, has passed on. ,
Olga was widowed when King
'The Hague,—The recent British ena George I was assassinated at Seteniki
beet° on heported meat eeore the in Martin 1913. She was born a grand
Continent is causing increlesing trade duehess of Russia and was married to
George, at St. Petersburg, now Lenin -
depression &long. Dutch meat export-
ers as well as grave concern among -laird, Oct. 15,1867. Subsequent to the
eettle breeders, . • passing on of king Alexander, her
Aecording to eurrentt'opinion here; grandson, in, 1e20, she assumed» tire
Holland does eot deserve this teeats regenese which she held MAR thexe-
turn to Greece ofetfin late King Coe-
ment, as the objeetienable meat, it is
alleged, es:Melee/it teeigium, vehence it taiitirie• Consliintine abdicated it
was .transported in closed vans vi 39I2, and the Republic of Greece was'
Rotterdam. The Hague Government
has thus fiaued al, decree prohibitine •
. • _
transit of fresh meat,, , hoping that Bri• Some saakes in eaxtivity httva been
M
tawill soon acknowledge .the lair- known to go over a year without sat-
ness of the Dutell'etandialint, lag stnyteing,
Ex -Queen of Greece
•
Passed on in Rome
---
Rohie.—The former Dowager Queen
Olga of Greece; graedmothel• of the
late 'King Alexander and widow .a
foemed in Marsh, 1024,
Caliada froii Coast to Coast
Halifax, N.S.- ,Stormont, the beet
mine in Nova ecotie When gold mining
in the province was an industry, is to
be re -opened. Up until it closed dewn
tweeve 'years -ago, Stormont mine, had1
produced over 5'75,000 tens of 'area
giving an aveeage oe free gold of $4.13
per ton or $2,225,000 during its actiir-1
itY,
Fredericton, N.B.—The-historic site
of Post Beausejour, in. the Count -fee
Westmoreland; New Brunswick, is
s,hortly to be proclaimed a ,national
park: Such action has been teecen•en
recommendation of the 'historic sites
arid monuments 'board of Caputo.,
athich has deilared this 'site,'to be -of
sufficient historical inipoetance to Vier -
'rent, its being proclaimed a national
jscett Beaueejour ‚wag construct-
ed in' 3750-51 is. the vicinity of-Beate-
bassin end Was closely associated with
the. struggle between the. French ane
Ertgeieh fee possession of the contia-
. ,
Montreal, Que,- -Adele° ;has" been
ceiveri here from Port Alfred, .Que.,
that' the first newsprint unit of the
Port Pulp an:d paper Corpora-
tion has conirnenced, production. The
corporation's construction progeam
dells fer four "units,, with combined
do:ily capacity of 440 ions, ,
Port Arthur, Out.—It is reported
here that another big pulp- and paper.
mill is shenqy to he located :in Port
Arthur, Tire bIigors Ceileoratioe,
Linated, useler u.n agreem.ent with the
Ontario Covernmeet Ter woods limits,
in toeMild a 400 -ton puli arid paper
plant. It is stated that an agssenant
with the city for e lecation •on the
waterfront complete and theta pubs
!lie announcement teal be made by the
cotemeation ill this regard in the very
near future.
Winnipeg, Man. --The largest group
of. industries in Manitoba, in number
of establishinents, „is wood and paper
products, of whieh there are 213,, ac-
cording to figures compiled by the
IndustrialDevelopment Board of Man-
itoba. Next in order come'vegebable
preeruele, with '190 plants; chemical
producte, with 129; and textile pro•
duets, With 89: •
Sutherland, Sailee-The Dominion
forestry farm here has been perticte
larIti busy during the past month in
shipping youngetrees destined to be-
come 4:le:tenet groves 'of shelter in
nearly 3,000 places iri the Prairie Pro-
vinces. Up ast the fall -of 1928 the
Sutherland station bee shipped, since
its ireception, over 17,000,000 trees.
For 1924 thee total te"as well over 2s-
0110,050, whico-in 1925 it was about the
San10, MIRlbel.. • This 'yeas' 8;3,55,000
were shipped. "
'Lethbridge, Alta.—Southern Al-
leerta's alfalfa harvest was. ataeted
during the first week of June. Cutting,
i's now•., general1:1 the irrigation dis-
trictat the earliest on record. The
early spring Nveather has brought the
crop along two weeks ahead of the
usual season.
Vancouver,' B.C.'--Four ships will
sail from this pore within the eeet,
tteo weeks for the western"Arctic1
Ocean,. - (Parrying trade goods and I
stores, worth an estimated value of
$300,000. Time Hecisoe's Bay Co. is
seeding two vessels end a Vancouver
trading company the other, '
- -
Natural Resources Eulletin. Pollee ,easeria
'' ' """
The fled s of Prison Bay and of Rheumatic 1-)16tiris
the lakesme,- 1 .1,,,Yell3 running tot -4) It Rheumatism is, a ' consdtutiong
'should With 'reasonable protection' disease. It 'causes local aches end
prove a source of perpetual revenue pains; inflamed joints 3.131(1 Stiff '
n TlCi Totte supply, The natural etlek is muscles; but cannot be permanently
c'verYWh,`34.°1)1.efitif-iii., ''''''uilx"'-,ri.°''''-lual-- etealtiilvnet by
yt moot bo'srv:xoto'Nn'eTitintaiPoPnia'd
itv and ponsideralne variety, Most of . • ' • .
the Hudson Bay fish are belioved to be ,
Take, tile great blood -purifying and
fresh Watt't fish which have adapted tonic medicine, Hood's Sarsaparilla,
althoughtir,w,,,ev11v: ei lc 6 to tui nms ta.,,i,cia nt g'lifewat. ot se: 2.71:::11::::Ptille: - 1t,aaWilhe:bhel,oect:derar on net::tfie:h:stribidie. sus:f:14attlm0:, e,..:.
,i,„,,,..s pariodi,„Ny, The local industry iteenndnetteitinuttit tgnieeenae neaternerearvat argearliel-inf•
r ,
ponds takes advantage of thee,circurn-
snietrt'ic:g tin° Pihnerdiai'vieerdsl°, i..ng. m'''s.t: of' trhe'r . finite regulatory and adiriMistrative
Large quantities -01 fish are toften improvements could ba effected not
.,
frommthe lakes accessible from the only to preserve existing ppe,2,,iQs bust
IBlouhdesrolens iBnaythe'raviilweioayit.Y oCfmTnnhowPelaa'si iineW"Q'Insteocolas.aesur Fistu'oPef(14vnalerrottitehseraanl'tlYltthh
Mono have exceeded $100,009 in'1,,-gue encourage the takiog of' destructive
for the Season, not 'including Large' fish anil animals who prey upon the
quantities used locally of which doe feed ashes, It is understood that an
food foams an important stein. The Inspector of the Fisheries Branch of
fishing for scale fish is done largely in eeeasederal Dept-. of Marine and Ebel -
winter by netting through holes cut, 'cries well be sent to Hudson Bay dew-
, in the lee, the lir:eared being shipped ing-the present eummer to obeetin, ha- ,
lien ga steekif,rh 'nhaueisiltat/ttt railway, pit some- ling)ritrb9e4As:nWaretet8ePleting 1144'g ."°,silect
1
the whele been quite"profitable. Derv, earl -way or the Temiskaining and
times 'necessary, the industry has on , The completion oe the fludecin Bay
Iquantities.'are aise 'sent via Selkirk Northern, Ontario railway to the coast
ham Lake Winnipeg eellere, regular 'would' be of great benefit in the de-
flects are employed, end feomtthe•ad- velopment of these fisheries AS a direct •
outlet would then be available to Am-
erican and Canadian western or to On-
tario markets. . '
The King and the Queen as they appeared at the christening of. tlseij-
grilnddcug'lmtert the Princess Elizabeth•of. York. s
MORE PERSONS .SUFFER FROM P
DICITLS EVERY YEAR SAYS DR A
9
Vietorre.---kore people than ever
before were suffering from appendi-
citis every year, bothAmerica and
Enfope. Although mortality among
patients 'was 00 per cent, a quarter
of et centney age, to -day the percent-
age of deaths was very small, Dr.
Edgar a Edmonton told the
Ceraidian Medical Convent*. -
,Medical science has been making
great, progress, he said, since the first
appendix was removed 30 years ago.
In a three-etear period in a Montreal
hospital, be instanced, there had beet
only 10 deaths in 1,201 eases: Yet the
disease itself had spread so emermoiese
ly within recent years, keeping pate
with science, that its greater incidence
made up for the lessened operative
mortalitr.
Eat more fish—that's the secret of
prevention of goitre as summed up
by Dr. W. B. Keith. of Vancouver.
Study of the (lipase had shown that
certam races,, notably the Indiane of
the Paeifie Coast and the natives of
Jepan, suffered very -little from goitre,
said Dr. Keith. Both peoples were de-
pendent for food mainly on sea pro-
ducts. • e e
Thousande of dollars are being ea-
Peeded annually on useless drugs,, to
the detriment of tlie public health, Dr.
V. E. leencleeson, Rroeessor of Phar-
maccettegy at the University of ,Toronto,
warted the delegates. `
^ + -,.•- • • • -
MISSING EVANGPIIST
FOUND IN ARIZONA
____
Tells Story of Having Been
Abducted.by Bandits and
Making Her Escape,
-Douglas; Ariz.—Aimee' Semple -Mc-
Pherson, missing Los Angeles evangee.
fat, was brought to a hospital here in
an exhausted condition; and related a
tale of having been kidnapped by two
men and a woman at ocean ' Park,
Calif., May 18, and held captive in
Mexico for half a million dollars sae -
James Anderson said he tound Mrs.
McPherson in a state of collapse at
Ague Prieta, acmes the border, "
Mrs. Aimee Semple McPhersort
Was held to.ransoni in Mexleo, is re•
pert.
The evangelist, , pastor of, Angeles
Temple, bee been given. up for deeds
by most of her followers, who be-
lieved that she had been drowned in
the sure at Ocean Park the day she
disappeered.
Mrs. McPherson said elm escaped
erom a- Mexican shack in which she
was held, while hey captors were
away.
The story of the abduction, as told
by the evangelist in the ,hospital to
McCafferty and pollee, was that she
had been lured to an automobile•While
-swimming at Ocean Park Beach, on
'the plea of a woman Who' asked her to
minister to a sick baby. Going with
the woman, she said, she wag thrown
into the car end drugged and ltnew
nothing further until she awoke in -the
shack ,.the fol.:owing •day, violently ill,
and attended by the woman who was
called Rete. Here the trio ,informed
her, she said, that she was being held
Sr ransom of $500,000.
. • •
• '
Floods Along Rhine
- Ruin Many Vineyards
rerlin.—Southern and Eastern Ger-
many are suffering heavily from floods
caused by' recent tains of long dura-
tioffea Grope, particularly en Eastern
Pritesie, have. been badly damaged.
Reports from along the Rhine, Mo-
selle, gad Lake CoestrirMe, say that
the- vineyarde have been badly dam-
aged and Some of them wholly ruined:
-Parts of the city of Dresden are under
water through rese of the Elbe River.
More than, 8,000,000 marks damage is
estinuseed by the government to. have
been caused in the State of Wurtten-
berg.
Clondbinsts and heavy reins in the
Carpathian Mountalee haveeaused the
tOder-River -to overflow itg hanice. 'A
httudeedtfoet hole Inie,been teen in the
Neisee River Dam at Stringen in
ana several m:ages
have been Mandated:
Japanese Diver, to
Hunt Sunken -Gold
.-
TokioaaThe Japanese diver, Timis
haeln Kataoka; who surprised. selvage
experts by 'Ids euccese last year lb
bringing'up 'gold bullion valued at
5500;000 front the :wreck of the steam-
ship Yaeaka Marti in 000 feet of water
slew: :Egypt, has deceived an offer frees
Lloyds, of Leedom, He is asked to sel-
vage the liner -Egypt, Which sank iii
the Bay of Biscay. hear Brest With
gold bullion worth $2,50.0,000 end 4: -
ver worth $2,000,000 after collision
with a German steamship,
The sense of .sreell le said; to grow
moms keen as we grow older.
LONDON A CITY 2100 Y M.
IMPORTANT CENTRE IN 100 B.
London.—By degrees ancient Len -
den --the Londinium of the Romani-,
is being rediscovered by the archier-
°gists, and the idea is 'that it was n'o-
'thing much, more, than, a hamlet. is
being eeeleded.. The, latest diseeeery
is a animal -a of -an embaleirment beet
,
by .the Romans along the Thames -es
probably the very first ancestor of the
-present-day Thames Embankment
The Misty feet so far uncovered,
' consieted of a great timbered wall,
1inadet of the trunks 'of trees, squared
and piled -up, with cross timbers keyed
end dovetailed in for strength. It lies
between King- William street and
Miles lane, about eighty feet farther
from the proseneethore of the liver
than the wall which the Romane built
eater on, ;that they gracluelly
itecleimed more land fee their town,
•• •
• A branch -railway through the min-
eralized belt ;of rierthern elanitebat
such as has been authorized, would
also make accessible several largo Sel-
land lakes lavishly stocked. Thee are Knewn bY Their Odors,
so many' fish it some of tire lakes
that supervised exploitation would There are ranee aensee :red there are •
probably be more beneficial than place smells. For instance, all the
otherwise. , ' Lanceeltshire towns enroll of the size
It is date:eta if• the Hudson Bay used, in the maitufaelesee of cotton
fisheriee proper' would be profitable to goodat te • '.others -than reeident fishermen. The Provincial vieltoes say that the emelle
open seasonis, from the middle of June of garroltire almost epoils Landon. It
to August ehen fish arc orr the coast pervades the, atinoepheee. la Dock -
after migt:iationeand again in Septet:a- land, however, it, gives way to the
bar and October till the ice sets in., It smell of tarred rope, aumtOhe the Eat
is possible that winter fishing theough 1 India Dock neighborhood tit; times smell
the ice could be developed; etberwitee' pleasant one for CC11430—ar spices, -
supplementary oecupations such as I It him been said that a globe-trotter e
trapping or a change of operations to of experience could toll whore he was
theelnland lakes would be necessary by his nose if lie were blindfolded. The --
for the remainder of the year.
-Whalers from the United States ,and
Europe have visited Hudson Bay regu-
Ihey'for the past eentikry, but due to
the gradual extinction of the Right
smell et -Madrid and of' most Spanish
towns Is garlic. The emelt of` Paris is
coke, and the email of Ire441341 IS peat.
The poet was right we° said that
"spiel( bfeezes blow soft an' Ceylentit
whale the 'fleets are hecoping smaller. isle,' end the same samark applies to ,
The pfudsort's Bay Co, in addition to time East Indies. Sheffeld emells of
large catches for the' use of its em- smoke, and so do soles other towns.
ployees and retainers and their doge, Leeds has Me smell of it reeolexems
has been known to ship
oratory and as salted cargoes in reg.- Midland towns in loperland smell of
fish as refrige Sclheoatrath.erta, nor's shop, and •beveral of the
ular export trade with the Old Coun-
try. '
There is used for the study ofeehe Great Britain consainee more tbaa
habit's of the northern fisleept thatake 5,000 tens -of pepper a year.
- THE WEEK'S MARKETS
36c; 'cooked hams, 52 to 65c; smoke'l
Kan, 'wheat -4o. 1 North., $1.59%; fast bacon, 85 to 40e; special brand
TORONTO. rolls, 26c;_cottage, 29 to Vet break -
No. 2 North., $1.65%; No. 3 North., breakfast bsieon, 39 to 42e; backs,
_ harmless, 42 to 47e.
Man. outs—No. 2 CW, nominal,;' No Cured meats—Long clear baeon, CO
8, not quoted; No. 1 feed, 4.8%c; No. to 70 lbs., $24.26; 70 to 90 lbs..$23.75:
2 feed 45%c, Western grain queen- 30 lbs. and ute $22.34; lihtweight
nobs in c.i.f, ports.,4
Ant, corn, track. Toronto ---No. 2
yellow, 84%c; No. 8 y ' ellow Bac.
Millfeed--Del., Montrealfreights,
bags included: Bran, per ton, $29.26;
shorts, per ton, $31.25; middlings,
$38.25; good feed flour, per bag, $2.80.
Ont. oats -44 to 46c, f.n:b. ShiPPing
rolls III barrels, $42,50; heavyweight
rolise$39.60 petal:hi.
Lard—Pure tirees, 18 to 4838e;'tubs, 18% to 1.9e; pails, 19 to 19 lee a
prints, 20% to 21c. Shortening, tiercee,
14% to 15e; tube, 15 to 151/ee; palls,
1.6 to 10%c; blocks, 17 to 17%c,
Heavy steers, choice, $8.50 to $9;
points.
t do, good, $8 to $8.25; butcher
Cie.
$1.38, f.o.b. shipping' points, accoreing
Ont. good milling whet,' -$1.30 to steers, loh.5.otioce,7*.e.$08;; btOutch$e8;5h00;itedros:
to ' $8,35,- do, good,
'Barley, m' althig-62 to 84e. ' $7s to $7,25; buichercaws, choice,
Buckwheat—No. 2,
eee, $5,75 to $6:25; do, fair to good, $4
'
Rye --No. 2, 85c, p . to $5,25; butcher bails, goode$5.60 to
Man. flour—First pat., $8.70, To- $6; bolognas, $8.50 to $4; cannel's
vette; do, second pat., $8.20. • and Outters,•$2.00 to $4; good mulch
' Ont. flour—Toronto, 90 per eeet, cows, $85.00 to $95.00; springers, ,
c$h4o5icteo' $$9656°;°tet9ede4rhs1,6*
g0000;dme46,coowtso,
4p0a;t8.0, ;pseerubboaarrrae,l,ini% telakr,losts.8, $5.85., S45
Stravs-aCarlots, per ton, $9 to $9a0. ait ,ae
'Cheese—New large, 22c; ' twits, to eau; do, agate, $5 to $7,50: gOad
• ea, do - fair, $5 to $6; cruxes,
ea . '$10.60 to $11; do, good, 98
23e; triplets, 2; Stiltons, 25e. Old, lambs, $17 to $17.e0t do, mod, $1.7i to
large, 26c; twins, 27e; triplets, 28e. '$16; de, culls, $18 to $14; good light
Butter—Finest creamery princs,1it, 80„, to 87; heavy ,sheep and,
89% to 40c; No. 1 creamery, 38 to e""
bucke, $4 to $6,69. hogs, ekmte%
89e; No, 2, 86 -to 37e. • Dairy prints, 29 ea, and . watered, 814,80; dq f.o.b.,
• t se"
to 31e 1;14, do, country points, $1805; do,
Eggs—Fresh extras, in cartons, S9, a
to 40e; freth extras, loose; 38a; fresh i ecean ...ea,16, ,$14 do,, thick fats, f.o.b.,
firsts, 36e; fresh seconds, 30 to 31e. - e".wi Wed Peerreurre $e•86.
Live poultry—Chieeene, spring, lb„ —
35c; hens, neer. 6 lbs., 22e; the 4 to : MONTREAL.
5 lbs., 22c; do, I to 4 lbs.,•20c; racist-. Oats, Can.. West., No. 2, 62lee; do,
ers, 200; decklings, 5 lbs. and up, 30c;' No. 34 5734e; do, extra No, 1 feed,
turkeys, .30c. - t 55eec. 'Flour, Man, spring wheat liate.,
Dressed poultry --Chickens, spring,ilsts, $8.70; do, 2nd.s, $8.20; do, strong
lb., 45e; chickeTs, storage, 35e; hens,' bakers, .$8; do, whiter pats, eh° ee,
over 5 lber-, 276; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 213e; $6.50 to $0.60. 'Rolled oats, bag 439
do, -3,.to 4 lbs, 26e; roosters, 25e; lbs., .133,10, Bran, $29.26, Sheets,
duckliegs, e lba. and up, 85c; turkeys, $31.25. Midcrings $38-25 Hay, No.
• Beans—0 Can, band -picked, $2.0 pet Good hogs, $1525; teem,to $11 1 , pm. ton, car lots, $17 to $18.
boskel; primes, $2.40 per• bushel. , $11.25; good veal Calves, $9; do, good
- Maple produce --Syrup, per imp. i quality, pal fed $'7; fair (nullity suck -
gal ;2.30 to $2.20; per 5.gae, $2.25 to ere, $8.
$2,30 per gal.; maple sugar, lb:, 25 to 1, Chteee—Finest wostgrns. 18% to
He; maple syrup, new, per gal., $2.40.118%et do, easterna 18 to 18elie. But-
Hosiey-50-1b. ties, 11'e9. ai 12o per iter—No.si. pasteurized, 8430 to 04/ie.
lb.;10-lbe tins, 1134 to 12e; belb. tins,1Egge—Fresh extras,, a/ to 88c; do,
11 ,to 12%e; 234 -lb. tins, 14 to 144ce firsts, 34 to 355. Potatoth—Per hag,
Smoke(' meats—Harns, med., 84 to ' car lots, $1.70 fo $1.80.-
-- ea
"tiLe na ore' headache for you,.--tak-othese:
Don't And "another" the headache without roznovinx the cause.
Take Chamborlair.'a gteinach and Tablet.. They net only tato
the headache bat:Tiro YOt1 a buiwitah healthful fecling.hocanne they
tone the Um., owaetert the atemacIt and eleanoc the bowels. Trythetti.
All 1)Wifelett, 21e., Cr by mail '
cnAmilsimms MRDICItiE co.
Toronto, Oaf. '
1 The age of the old erebeleltment has t
I been aihmot precisely fixed by the ex-
. -
perte of the Guildhall Museuiri, be -
cease of certain pottery frrignients
found on...the site:', These, have been
definitely identified as 'Senairie„ oe' a
veorkmanshas atia style iteft7ehion dur-
ing the first century. 'The -latest of'
these fragments dates truism about 100
B. C.
is TIONV believed that London was
an important trading dental even„ in
those days, and,that the Beitons then
Wel Sufficiently cultivate to provide
a yeitly market fel' Roman luxuries,
Indeed, S0111d of the shoes and sandals
of pierced leather found In 'UAL. City in
recent excavations are of a eeliceey
of workmanship arid On eiegance of
stye rare' p equalled to d
now si
YitIM AY be using nOw—wbothor or hot you think you can sail—'
rackStitTess 47.4-BeIr irrabo
It.tia Moe AMAring ettome you ean easilymaster thesecrots of telling that =aka
Storjoe.of Sunoco Star Salesmen. SVhatoyer, your experience has been—whatever
what thou mon inn% done, you can dol. In your spars tnno
Year? then get in touch with me at once) I will prove to you
just ane,wor this question: Are you ambitious to eara $10,1)00 a
Salomon. 11.111 shone You bow the Salesmanship Train ns owl
Without coat or obligation dint you can easily .become,i a Star
rru.ceeaTninplosYllietiigSersilco,!fthe N. S. T. If will Ittip you to !ILUelt
$10 000-A Year Seihng Secrets
4Y.
:At!:
ere note eolne, :1Chi at acnieg. eer, pie ,,UE, 0.
National Salesrioetee Trainieg Association
Ceundien Met. isos% 552 -