HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1924-09-18, Page 3UL R,RISE
i
GR AIN, PRICES
BITRATIO
¢t t of. Action for British Navy. When Engaged in Tae,
f Maintaining or Restor'ng Peace is Demanded by,
t3Ule,gate to Geneva Conference.
Dispatch from Geneva says:--,
that if the
British reser
va
t
ion
is a
e-
Lreat Britain dramatically dropped c tedhythe other.powers,Conti
-
nayal bomb into the Geneva C i£sr- nental countries will bed only get
once en: Thursday and the now Anglo- economic help from Britain as part
French 'entente was appraised by of the proposed pact. of security or
ny as approaching, , the character of sanctions, but also the full and inn,
an oat -and -out alliance,.when Sir Ce- mense support of the British Navy in
etl Hurst, eminent, jurist; and British case imye country, in defiance of an
delegate declared Great Britain's arbitral decision, opens hostilities and
t cadiiess to "accept. compulsory arbi- attacks another State,
tratirnt provided she would not be
brought .into court because of some
act of -her navy performed in attempt-
ing to maintain or restore peace.'
This declaration has ''set Geneva
agog more than anything since Pre -
Sir Cecil Thirst declared the :J3rit-'
ish reservation was ,not a Macchia-
vellian subterfuge: In times past
there has existed an idea that Great
Britain was the tyrant of the seas,
Yet, he said, the British delegation
miers MacDonald and Iierriot':com- wasonly seeking to discover some
enitted-themselves inP rinciple to the method whereby the great cause of
setttlement of any and all disputes by organized peace and security could
obligatory 'arbitration by some world
tribunal er -tribunals.
The British reservation was inter-
preted as meaning that once the Brit-
ish Navy begins .to operate,her right,
of search and capture, which formed
the subject of controversy between the
.United States and Britain before the
'United States 'ordered. the Great War,
cannot be questioned, juridically'
The effect of the announcement is be unnecessary,
be: advanced on terms assuring pro-
gress.
All ideaof holding a special Con-
ference to extend the principles of
the Washington Naval Treaty to non -
signatory •States has been "dropped.
n
The, `T3isarmament .Sub C o.irn• ission
decided that, in view of the likelihood
of a general Disarmament - Confer-
enee,.such a-NavalConferenceConference WOuld
404,01,1.1914.
1 arr'val of the American "'round tine-"
All Boston turned out to see 'the
wo 10 flyers and they were given a tremendous reception. 'Pho'tograpli ,5001
the airmen signing. the register Immediately they stopped ashore.
The 7Zeo�
r ,
Bran, ?
r
.2r
. Shorts, its $29.26.
.26.tt6,,Rolledoats, bag, .90 lbs., $3.45
middlings, $35.25.Ray,.- No: r, per
ton-•.cat•'-lots; $16.50 to $17,
''-•TORONTO. -
Cheese, finest rwests., 161/ac; finest
o
caste., 1.6tte. Butter,.No. 1 pasteur-
- Man. wheat -1.40; No. 3' o the "' to.3't• c •No.:1, ereameri
NO. 2 North., 1.40; : No. 3 North: Cree.•- , b
$1.SG. $ -: - ' $41/Ec seconds,, 33*c. Eggs' fresh
M}an. oats—Nor 2 CW 63c; No: ' r, a
3 -:CW 61e; extra No. 1 feed 61c Goocalves, $9' to $9.25. lambs,
N. 1, feed, 60e; No. 2 feed, 58c.
All theighove c.i•f.,,bay ports.
Ain. .co n track,,' Toronto—No. 2
yellow, -$1.373. .
Millfeed Del.,. `Montreal freights,
bags 'included: Bran, per ton, $27;,
shorts,: per' ton, $29; .middlings, $35;
good feed flour, per bag, $2.05.
Ont. oats—No.. 3 white,' 48 to 50c,
Ont, wheat—No. 2 winter, $1.14. to
$1.18; No. 3 winter, $1.12 to $1.16;
No. 1 commercial, $1.09 to $1.18, f.o.b,
shipping points, according to freights.
Barley -=Malting, 75 to 785.
Rye -89 to 92c.
Ont. flour—Nep' ninety per cent.
pat;,, in.jute bags, lylontreal, prompt
shipment, $6;75; Toronto basis, $6.76;
bulk seaboard,. $5.50.
Manitoba flour—First pats., in jute
sacks, $7.90 per barrel; 2nd pats.,
$7.40. ,
Hay—No. 2 timothy, per ton,
track,' Toronto, $14;' No. 3, $12.50.
Straw—Carlots, per ton, $9.50. -
Screenings—Standard, recleaned,
f.o,b, bay ports,. per ton, $22.50.
.Cheese= -New; large, 20c; twins,
20%c; triplets, 21c; stiltons, 22 to 23c.
•01d, larga 28 to 24c; twins, 24 to
25c; triplets, 25 to 26e. •
Butter--j'inest creamery prints, 38
to 89e; .No. 1 creamery, 36. to 37c; No.
'2, 84 to 86c; dairy, 28 to 30c.
,xa aM;rycc •sr�< z �.�-,- s Eggs—Extras, fresh,in cartons,
i ar rr: 450; -extra, loose, 43c; firsts; 37c; sec-
i�.:., ands 80 to 31c,
extras'42r. • #resh firsts 36e:
good lots, $10 to $10,50; hogs, $160
lbs, or better, $9,50; light, 4E3,60; se-
lects,'$10,25. ,
Poor of All Countries Pro-
vided With Free Legal Aid
A despatch' from Geneva says;—
The firstLeague ,Commission -devoted
to the examination of legal questions
adopted the report of a 'sub-cominis-
sion providing free legal aid to the
poor of ,all countries, regardless of
nationality. This was pit' motion of
the chairman, Sir Littleton Groom,
Attorney -General of Australia.
Live poultry—Hens, over"5 lbs,, 20e;
The beautiful international polo, trophy which the British four will try, do, 4 to'5.Ib3:, 17c; do, 8 to 4lbs.,,1.5e;
to regain from the American poloists, , The Americans brought the cup from spring chickens, 2 lbs. and over, 25e;
England when thay- won the 1921 series and haveretained it since. roosters, 12e; ducklings, 4 to 5•lbs.,
180.
Dressed poultry -Hens, over 5 lbs.,
FLOQDS CAUSED BY Prince Will Not Bring 26e; do, 4 to 5 lbs, 22c; "do, 3 to 4
lbs, .18c; spring chickens, 2 lbs. endl
•FOUR DAYS'' RAIN . Polo Ponies to Canada 'civet., 80o; roosters, 15c; ducklings, 4
to 5 lbs., 25c
A despatch fromLowe Q Owri of c pprimes e..
• land, says:—The prince will not taker Maple products ---Syrup, per imp.; Husband of Princess Patricia, has
Raymond, Neal' Quebec, his polo ponies to Canada. Thomas al, 2:60 • per 5 -gal. t a ' 2.40 per been aimn1nfea commander of H,M,S.
gal., $ , P 8 , $
Lon is- Beans- Canadian, hand picked, lb., . Gept. the Hon. Alexander Ramsay "
H Syosset g
Part
fT St6 6
is Under Water. Russell, the head groom, will return gal,; maple sugar, Ib•, 25 to 26c. (Calcutta; now at Quebec,
with -them: -to England at the end Honey -60 -lb. tins 18tic per lb.;: - -- �----
A despatch from Quebec says:- of the American visit when his par -'10-1b. tins, 13thc; 5'-h. tis, 14tAc; ,
' Flet More Effective Than
Fed' by four days of almost continuous titular jolt on his •return to the Old 2% -lb. tins, 14 to 16c.'
rain; rivers in this district and the Countrywill .lie to conditiont Smoked meats -Hants, mad•, 27 to Toothbrush in Preservation"
the
xp
(()wee of Ct"41Ctu. naliil Charlottetown P:10;' t }y4,=•:" live 'fox
eiHF45111g 1and fur °ww;;upen 'the world is
ayttne.'s S itlal rid I h3dt`easecl to`be" held in Chariot town in 1925,
at Op*,,e3Y,..lne' 1"iY^Pe: acegrdmh•;'to' d,deciaior, ,reached',hex•e
A. despatch Sze rr Chic• go. gays:— by the Silver Black Fox Breeders' As -
The remarkable ii -e in Lhe price', of soeiation at their annual meeting.' The
grain within- the past 90 days, of '30 meeting expressed 'Lheopinion that
cents a' bushel in the price, of Wheat, inasmuch as the island was the cradle
35 cents in corn, 20 cents in rye and of the fox industry its capital 'city
15 cents in oats, is estimated in some WaS 'qie proper place for the holding
quarters to have added 'as much as a of such an exhibition at which it is
hillier' ,- dollars to the purchasing expected there will be several thou -
power of the rrrain fanners of Canada sand animals 'on show.
and the United States: T-Iali£ax, • N.S•—The 'Nova r Scotia
Never before in history has a spec. 'Evaporators , will - haveevaporating
tacular -upward swing;'in prides of Plants in operation this season at
farM products carne at a more opper. , Kingston, Aylesford, Annapolis, Ber-
tune time, nor has a rise 'of this char- wick,' Waterville, Lakeville, :Cam-
acier beenascribed-to se many dili'er. bridge, Port Williams and Wolfville.
ent and: misleading causes:- The truth Tite. first two named will have: two
is that ecohbrnie laws and nature have Plants each in operation. • There is a
carried the farmer from utter delires- possibility that the plants at Windsor,
sion to prosperity. Grain men market Middleton and Lawrencetown will also
experts: and economists area nuit-in
declaring that it is - CIsc world ro;,di-
tions::of supply and demand' which
have boosted the priceof wheat. They
scoff- at rumors -that United States
politicians are influencing the market.
Grain marketing specialists believe
figures
that a glance., at the,pro-
duction
of
duction and priesin different conn -
tries will prove the -:fallacy of such
rumors. b ,
Eastern Townships are raging floods, prince's twenty hunters for :the o e`n-129e;. cooked hams, 42 to 44e; smoked' ..,,,,_--
and are doing' huge damage. . ': in of the season in October, P rolls, 18 to 20e; cottage rolls, 21 to LAittle
despatch from London says:—
I 8 . 1240; breakfast bacon, 23 to 27c; spc-, Little'Johnn 's ob'eeti ii to thetooth
The Town of $t Raymond •was re -1 The prince •brought' eight of his tial brand breakfast Bacon 29 to 31c• y o
• ported to be very badly affected, the ten poi th Atlantic,,b l boneless, 86 t 40c. I i
pe 8 leaving only two at home. They are Curedm g a bacon, ..
Wireless Apparatus for All
Lighthouses on . British Coast
Within the next few months all the
lighthouses an the coast of Great Bri-
tain—and there are many—will be
equipped with wireless transmitting
sets, with skilled operators in charge,
in ,addition to the usual men operat-
ing the beacons, says a London se-
spatch, These will.be 'used to warn
ships at sea of weather conditions,
heavy seas and impending danger, soa 12 months eliding Aug. 31, 1924, ex-
` lights as well to warn marl- seeded in .volume. by almost 60;000,0ee
06 year; `flaxseed, 10,846,000 a bushels
d1 ff brush �a� after all sezenttfa It's"-
lower
with the
, being
t o pontes across a backs; o o, j, e' • of dangerous %oasts and shoals; bushels that exported for the tortes compared with 7,189,600 last year.
lower Theon of the town at, under le in eats—Lon deer 50 e�tron. The
motto Behei Sought for
the•City of Lo3ldon
.English or Latin? Lat or English?
And, if either, what? These are the
questions that are being asked of
members of the L. C. C. these days,
due to the• fact' that London is with-
out -a motto,' says a London despatch•'
The wprd 'London itself;is Celtic,,
but, as the city wet -Originally founded
by -the Romans,' it is `thought that a
Latin inscription for its' coat of arms
would be more`"appropriate. 'Besides,
Latin is -the heraldic language and the
majority of mottoes are in that lan-
guage. A number of people, how-
ever; are agitating for an, English
motto, and numerous suggestions have
been sent to the Council. "Heart of
'Empire;" "Mother of Empire," "Moth-
er of Nations," are sbtne of the more
high flown of these, while others have
ranged from "Forward" to- "Flower
of Cities AU," the last,being,a sobri-
quet bestowed on London :fey one of
its poet citizens away. back in the
fifteen hundreds.
Among the Latin suggestions
brought forward, quite the best so far
is "tlrbs Urbiunt,". the, City of Cities.
Another la "Britairnorum Focus," the
Briton's Heart, which • Iattcr is "riot
like,y'to be ad6'pted. It is probable
that by the end of the year London
will have her. motto, but" whether she
will live up to it is • another- matter.
Cynics have 'been Beard to observe
that the,city has got along quite well
for. hundreds of years without a
motto, and that therefore one Is hard-
ly necessary
/now.
be in operation, depending on. the
available supply of lower grade
apples.
Fredericton N,B•-Nearly •twice as
:. y.
many tourists' have registered at the
camping' grounds here this' year; as
last, a total of 660 having made use
of the grounds before the end of Aug-
ust. The camp has been conaiderably
extended and .additions` made •to fa-
cilities this year. Campers have come
from .many- states of the Union as
well •as' all over the Maritiiiies..
Montreal,. Que.—Canada ' as a suit-
able field for Scandinavian emigrants
is strongly advocated by Otto Elander,
publisher, of ; Gothenburg, Sweden,
who recently visited' the Swedish set-
tlements in the Dominion for the pur-
pose of , studying, conditions. Mr.
Blander states that climatic and other
conditions to wh eh them{ n of 3
ern Europe are accustomed aid in
which 'Scandinavian. settlers " have
Made a success, are, ;: to be found in
Canada,
Fort William, Ont.—Governor' J. A.
0. Preus, of'Aiinnesota in Fort Wil-
liem recently, predicted an' immense
tourist traffic into Northern Ontario'',
as soon • as the highway from Port
Arthur to Nipigon is completed, The.
road is a 'four miles from the world
famous trout stream, connecting here
with the highways into the United
States.
Winnipeg,'. Man.—An order for 5,-
000 boxes, containing' 56 pounds each,
of creamery butter has been received
by Manitoba from England. The
value of the shipment is approximate-
ly $100,000 and will be the second con-;
slgnment of unsalted butter to be ex-
ported overseas from this province.
Saskatoon, ` Sash, -World famous
chemistss.and botanists; leaders in the
attack upon the scientific problem
vital to western agriculture, witness-
od the formal opening of the chemical
building of the University of"Saskat-
chewan by the premier of the pro-
vince.
Edmonton, Alta. --More than one,
_hundred land fifty trailers from, the
far north arrived here recently bring-
ing., with thein fur bales to the value
of approximately $500,000.
Victoria B.C.—The Prince of
Wales,was,a heavy; winner at the
Coria Fal1 Fair through entries from
the E.'P. Ranch, Twelve first prizes
were secured in the shorthorn elassees,
of cattle in addition to twelve firsts
for Hampshire 'sheep; and three firsts
in Shropshires;
The Prince of Wales''niar he too late to take part in the harvest ng
operations on his ranch in Alberta, but here he 13 on -his former visit to
Canada lending eland in unloediag•sheaves,
CANADIAN WHEAT' •
EXPORTS .ON INCREASE
Dominion Bureau of Statistics
Reports 60,000,000 Bushels
More Than Previous 12..
Months. ;
A despatch,: from `Ottawa says:--
Wheat exported from Canada for the
1924 Crop Estimated by
DoininionBureau of Statistics
Ac despatch from Ottawa says:—
The oat crop for all Canada this year
is expected, to total 463,860,000 bush-
els, compared with 563,997,000 bush.
els last year..;. barley, 90,769,000 bush.
els„:compared with '76,997,800 last
year; rye, 12,799,000 bushels, corm.
pared with 23,281,800 bushels last
Brittsh Dental Associa n is ng - orree `These are the estimates 4f the year.
the capabilities of the lxghthouees will ponding 12 '.months.previous, a -
water. The power plant at. POrtneuf ;a valuable'stnn being :wo t 2 to 70 Thee $17, 70 to 90 lbs•, $16,60., tion,refuses.to discard ;it
altogether u bythe i3omtn- 'minion Bureau of Statrsttas.
g, g r h $ ponies'
be increased greatly, htl; tp reports- las ed _ —
is badly daiitagecl, There fees aeries tall 3000:a apiece* ie. 90 lbs. and. u , $15.50; eavyweight.bru at:3ts anneal d.faug ss respecte i s: ---"--F.--
-
is s .' « S .of the Pontes �' 2:_
of washouts reported on. the in li•ne rolls, in barrels, $3 , heavyweight .brush was accorltsd• far less respect A few-Itghtshtps have, been eicpen- ion Bureau ,of $,strati c Bulletin.
P ate •Enghsh bred, one is Australian.; mentin wath:evireless for some weeks The fi res: for the current year Natural Resources
of the Canadian National Railways to bred from IOhghsh stock and the
rolls, l than it receives in the average mod- the results have. been so astra- period were 289,190,061 bushels, and `
Murray Bay,• and trains going to Chi- eighth,Jacinto is American- re Lard --Pure, tierces, .17% to 18c1 :ern household. and
b d. t 2 to 18%e; pacls,.18 to 18ing, factory that the decision to. fit out in the previous 32 months, 220,681,814 The Natural Resources Intelligence
couttmi had to go round by St. Pierre. t Russell, who is a typical Old Coun-� prints, 20i/s to 20• zc; shortening, ' Sir Leslie Mackenx[e, medical mem- all lighthouses and lightships with ad- bushels. ;The estimated value respec- Service of the Department of the In -
Many cattle and sheep are said to try horseman, confessed to the- en-'ierce, 16 to 18t,te; tubs,, 18trs to :bei of the Scottish Board of Iiealth,. , i a atixs was made. tivelywere 288995,127 and $263,- terror at Ottawa says:
have been swept away by the ooe I, •inuring reporter that he had never117e• •Pails, 17 to 17?lac;. prints, 18 to read a paper on._dental hygiene, in dtoapparatus
with -wire- 819430..0E the total exported in the The rapidity with which the high-
i Someof the cap>
and a number of 'Valuable' log booms touched liquor in his life, ins rte of 18%c. which he declared.tto were way to navan carried ut on, Good' last 12 months over '200,000,000 event ways are being improved throughout
beaus broken from their moorings and American P Export steers, choice, $72b to $7.75; sound teeth was to water the diet, less have been o
American ideas about English dunit 7 t 7 50 baby b win Sands the treacherous stretch to the United Kingdom, an increase the country i8 ereating•a traffic prole-
,
have gone adrift ing; and that he neither smoked' norl d d $ $
o, good, o a y ch beeves, flier of the mother during pregnancy,
choice 600-800 lbs., $8 to .x`10; butchers ,which has been responsible for many of 26,000,OtlO bushels. !Pbe amount lem that is becoming exceedingly dif-
.. their of the mother white musing her
d to i th ifiult t deal with It is an unfortun-
At St. Albano the house of.a farm-'; chewed, except possibly a straw when choice, $6.25 to $6.76.; do,.fair to good, casualties, and tt has been found that, exported ;to the Unite Sta s n e ,,c o ea
er named George Neaud was carried in a ruminative mood. : Ile, declared .5 to • 6; do cons• 3,50 toa 94; cows babies, and ,lien of the children them. tests extended over a very1924 period was '11,320,24$ bushels, ate fact also that the provision of
away. by the flood, end only for the that .be liked nothing',better than gto choice $4 to $4.50; do, fair selves. According to Prof. Ielelianby; though the a •i 1 already Srre ascompared with 12 930 048 bushels good roads is looked upon by many
goodshort period, wireless est e dY as.p P , , r ,
fact that the majority of the residents ,to take a couple of apples alongand to good, $3 to. $4; do, tom. to med„ as quoted by Sir Leslie, teeth defects
li P . caused' vented many vessels from foundering :for the corresponding 12. months of drivers of motor cars and trucks' as
of .the district had, spent; s sleepless have a ho,iday. A gay d d d $2 50 to $3 canners and cutters $1 are not by baiter, t and the em incentive to excessive speed, in
og, rn ee I:1'
theta: •the 1923 period,
• night watching develo menta, loss of I --� — to $2; butcher bulls, good :to choice, toothbrush is a broken reed. Sir Les- •i,�_
g p„Yet another •improvement, though
do me 3� to , 3.50 •
many cases combined with a careless
3.50 to 94.25;, 9 $ ; ue would,not be so sweeping
1
ife might have been recorded. Work $ P g 'importance- One nets little short of criminal.
s( g r Stirrnng I-Ifstoly of Empire 2 t z 7G f d` r not of such vital has been Japanese Recovers Money d b'• $ $ t`
completed' f • lt' `i - a o, ologna,' o' , ; ee era, With all its shortcomings,” Ire said,
'"T cu hent our smaller municipal -
has on ore o the rb ways a rou h I-Ioxiest Fisherman I g n
5hoWn at Wemb(e Std h t] sap $G 7o to $G 2G do, h ht made m Brt tins hghiliouses For 'j (a g
has y y $4 t $5 • stociters and $4 to $4 76 ears rife fights have been supplied • •i g
been rendered useless b the a ruin sort r
• "the ..toothbrush, given our present ides bordering on these good roads
wee of water and the dams e'in n ' g feechnt methods; has sonic elect in 1 :, there. is n constant danger, .of acct -
p ' g Wemble et feediegheifers, goodea4 to $5, cal res, ; with--naia£fiit oil, but recentl they
this foes ect. is urticularl severe. • y elven over preserving th. teeth. and w keeping Y. Y Through�tho honesty of a fisherman
P P 1 last week choice, ,$10.50 to $12, do, med., 7 to 3 p toriri B.C. Yokiahi fukuda, a
dents 'to pedestrians and especially to
$ have all had ower of their bea- of Vic
Earl Thursday morning the cit e_k fax the pageant .of em 9 GO do coin:, $3;G0•to 6.60 lambs the mouth clean,; The systematic us children. It ,is difficult at all times
Early g ILs purpose ac of d h to Colonial 1 $ $ 'eons inereasea bl the introduction of Japanese deported ,from Seattle has
mare of the'flood seemed to have been g di f'tl t tl' b' 1
c i o oma. <choice, `cwt., $13;, o, med,, 911 to ng o the
oo r ,rug r anvays mvo:ves '
Secretary J. H.. Th patio:eutn vapor' barriers, which give •ie slued his •savings: of flue years to keep children orf the street, esp
y Thomas was to $11.ed'eelo, cull, $8 to $9., sheep, choice rinsing the, mouth at least with clean g all in. country places where they
reached, and at noon •were dis- +show in pageant double the light supplied by paraffin.
which h° lost in an attempt to swim ct y
reached,
signs of im rgve there P•g the whom moving light, to $7 ' de. coli, $2'to $4; water, if not wit ni;d disinfectant, �Y �._:,,._ h are no sdewalks, cued drivers should
p tale of `our, achievements, to light the hos thick smooth, f.o.b., 99; do, fed i he one reflects that scale '� ashore from the steamer carrying
A despatch from Sherbrooke S hogs, i t z t fel z, Alberta Wheat Pool' of claim be compelled, if they will not do 1
P torches of the future at the glowing and: watered, $9:60; do, weighed, off • phtheria tuberculosis an. • • him back to his .ago
sa s:—The St, Francis River Va11e „ g g dip d other to 11at Pnzniurs•who nomad the •co=o exa- was ord- otherwise, to exercise every caution
y, y heart of the past, :sa s a London cars, .$10• • . - fedi ons was, be re ••esen ted s . . _." , , e ed te menthe •ago Fukuda ,
through 'many, m1les of tts length m y i f t y p' t .. ruong ,tive marketing : organization received' ; Japan • hon immi- Trio' legal'. speed limit does not .giv
gt despatch. MONTREAL. the infection germs incubating ,in the : fired to return to w the ie it to create an
this notion is under water in some . g $2,000,0.00 mote fol then 7,923, crop n eattloslesrned: any motoristg
•Water, Mora `than .15,000 amateurs, of all .Oats„CW, No; 2, Go to 6he, do, CW,, o th th toothbrush i, a grati8a authotrnte;e Si
districts to a' depth of six .or.. seven .• •, t ,, m a e g onventenb than the would have fretted through < ve,;gerous aondittons.., When such coed
p classes of Btztrsh life wonted. hard No. 3, 04 to 66;x'1 .extra.:No. 1 deed, er f the dirt f Y that `,lie had tentm. a that, port •fie,
e s s' • - --: 4 e ptemmd , ,o y o keep -the de endentmarketin methods. -i- tions aretheresult :of carelessness
feet, a , a result ult of the deluge of rate in ,their s are time to63c„ do, j.Vo, 2 legal white, G1 /ao, hide p $ b ears ago < boar $ ,a .passport. He
•P.. reproduce. the • mouth.and throat clean.. At the same y., g .
Which poured, down .wrthou .a in la + Flour •Man. spring. wheat pats. „firsts,L pool actuall .handled 34192,805; bush n aiegligence or, deliberation, 'the, lav
p a t g great evrsodes,whrch marked •B tat ' Y. was laced •aboard t :Nippon Muse
g ri n s 7 0 eco ds - 7<20 strong ttt?so,,:darty, Loothbr-ashes .may: spread placed -• 1- a ould be 'sufficiently drastic to pre
break from Tuesda until- $7. 0, d , n $ g els. o. wheat duxm the first':. obi h
y midnight progress down the :gest- Dukes and disease.” . f g P •Kaisha steamer Iyo, TVIaru. When the ...
bakers 7 .winter. star choice . $5,90 ;dzseas
Thltrs a ;n ht...'Bnd es: have been . ;.:,.: ,' h,. , . p , t , Q
tits recurrence by ' either the driv
• d y, g peens, 71ob e Itnrghts an big city fi steamer was far from or Tukud
carried away, }umber yards are float- anciers to
mg, fields of unharvested crops flood- - s.. „... �: wa• :u ,:e ,o ,:,, ;,., . ,:. s, auk boon recording
The British Treasury advanced Mg '$50 and a b g
S' ., . „ + - ,?%+:y^`C ..:.f4..< ...aw„,3:,,N. •:.�,"•`• r ycr';,t,,..g' ,'•xyr.ud§..r.:z.�:l"•,�, _
da the most valuable natural re
tinned”
er"or'the car,
at`rehearsaI• —. . •
ed, and' intiumerable buildings, fac- £100,000 to,make the pageant a sac-
toxies and dwellinghouses and store, cess. 3fore-than twenty-five miles of
sheds flooded with water up to the cloth were ,pur•chasecl to clothe the
first floor. Older residents- of the city,' participators and 10,000 square yards
state that the level of the water now, of canvas were painted for scenery: A
is higherthan it hasbeen for,thirtyi thousand' doves, 50 cloniteys, 72 mon-
years. During the rainstorm a total: keys, 8 camels, 3 bears, and 7 ole -
of 3.25 cubic inches fell, phants were utilized.
B°itish Craftsmen Return
I Io ne` frein United States
Canada May Look Forward to.
Yearly Visit frorrm the Prince
A despatch : fx•ofrr London - says
Canada is to have the privilege of
welcoming the Prince of Wales every
year, according to the London Star.
Tho Star says: "Despite circumstan-
tial 'reports to the contrary,. it may, be
taken for settled that when the, Prince
of. Wales has visited South Africa
next year he will bring his wandering
in distant parts of the world to a
close for some years. While there is
A despatch from.' London, says:—
Skilled Mechanics, whose emigration
'to America was deplored last year as
the beginning of a dangerous decline.
in 'British craftsmanship,, are com-
mencing to come home. The shipyards
in Clyde, Barrow and Middlesborough
are gettilig, orders again, and with
them many of their best workmen
are showing up.
Most of the home -comers are from
the United
no States, and theyreportortdoubt ac would like to visit cel"that: their"toIlow
emigrants, with few
tato parts of South America, ,the de- exceptions, are eager for the "chance
mends upon his time at home a1•e, of, getting back to .the Old Country.
likely to become increasingly >heavy ar
in':future,.so that he will be kept al- ,Winter wheat on dty'land at the
most constantly engaged in Enoland. experimentai farm threshed this week
The bright ,exception will be a visit yielded 35 bushels per acre, One
of a few weeks every year to his Can- favored field at Lethbridge, Alta,,,
adian ranch." went 45 ;bushels,
r a io al Exhibition may be :ob-
'•; ,list ere in attendance daily at the Canadian N t n, Y
Auidea of the vast c,e,. s �V .:
allied from the above photograph; which shatvs the entrance leading to the Midway.
dived overboard with a box contain -
The safety of the young life of Can
smuggle him- Is of far more importance than th
2,380 yen, deposited in: the Yokohama ' ource which this country .possesses
Specie Bank Branch an Seattle tied to s
his back. His attempt to
self` into Victoria .failed and he was liberty of dangerous• drivers, and th
returned to the ship, but it his sting_ children should• be protected at al
last hour of th
strug-
gle with the waves he lost his pre- hazards: '' The appeal of Alfred
cions box. Vanderbilt, in the
Five months after his arrival in
ill-fated Lueitania, "Come and le
Tokio the box wasforwardedto him us save tls kiddies," might with ad
by a fisherman, who found it off the vantage be. permanently affixed to th
coast of British Columbia. wind -shield of every motor car, as :
testimony" to .the value of child Jif
Horse Proves Worth and the need for its preservation.
in Endurance Test
During the four months of April
A despatch from Bella Cools, .B.C., May, June and July a tetal of 18,87
says :—One hundred and ten miles, C,anadians 'returned to, Canada fro
most of the way over "mountain crags, the United'' States. Of this total 16,
in 14 hours' riding en horseback, was 106 were Oanadian-born citizens, 1,
the amazing achievement of Chief 646 were British subjects who had ac
Squinash, an 'Indian, who travelled
a Canadian domicile and 1,05
from the Ar ham Lake settlement to were classed generally as Canadia
this' city to catch a boat for Prince 151517'ens, In July Mone the total num
Rupert to give evidence in a court ler of admissions of returning Can
case. thief Squinash declared that adiens i;ecorded at the International
his' horse„ and he'were somewhat boundery.line was 5,127,
fatigued,
Tho aitportance of green stub fo
Chemie:; were introduced into `);ng- cats cannot'be over estimated. Grass
lanai from` Flanders in l.ij,40.' • ,runs hi summer, and lots of'sproute+
Faith may prove mountains, • but it oats in winter are the thing, The
Ii: timeso lti ro m -to sweep the stomach
has a mighty tough m v g act a; a b .,,o P
some human beings. -G, M. '1 aed keep it clean.