The Seaforth News, 1924-03-13, Page 7E! EL$SOHN CHOIR OE TORONTO AC-
C EttISP ERE
•
A despatch from Philadelphia there was no "dead wood" in the.
rays:—Once more the mighty _Ninth organization 'which. sang Thursday
Symphony of Bethoven conquered, on evening. They sang perfectly" and
Thursday night in What was undoubt- that is all that need be said as to the
edly the finest performance of it in general performance. Larger choral`
Philadelphia for 25 yeara. This result organizations have appeared herebut
is due to the combination of the finest none so perfect in every detail of
chorus in the Western Hemisphere singing as this one. In quality of
and the finest orchestra, under a lead- voice,, balance of parts; shading, above
•rahip which was little short of in- all, volume when required, instant re-
spired -and the Ninth _demands all sponse to the leader, whether it was
three.' if it is not to become mori'oton Mr, Stoleowaki or Mr. •Pricker, unan-
ous. The novelty was the work of the imity of dynamics and all of the thou-
Mendeissohn Choir of Toronto, which sand and one other details which go
to make up perfect choral singing,, the
Toronto organiz'ttien is at the very
top.
Here is a chorus which can really
Philadelphia numbered 234, but ap- sing the Ninth Syntplsony, and no-
parently every one was a picked voice; thing more needbe said.
fur -melted the choral section.
There can be no 'question that this
is the finest choir on this continent
'.to -day. The singers who came to
MINERS. VOTE DOWN
WAGE SETTLEMENT
Nova Scotia Coal Districts
• Threatened With Trouble
Following Repudiation.
A despatch from I•Ialifax says; --t
`The coal miners of Nova Scotiavoted
almost two to one in Thursday's refer-
endum
efer-endum against the new wage scale
negotiated last month at Montreal be-
tween the representatives of District
o. 26, United Mine Workers, and the
8•ettisli Empire Steel Corporation. Tho
vote was 6,617 against and 3,145 for
ratification of the new scale, totalling
8,762.
The repudiation of a 'contract
carrying with it an increase in wages,
negotiated by the responsible officials
of the district and the international
representatives, has created a situa-
tion that is without parallel in the
history of the United,. Mine Workers'
Association.
The Provincial Executive will place
the matter before President Lewis and
the International Executive Board at
once. `
Mustapha!' Kemal Pasha
Who is first President of the Turkish
Republic, and has abolished the e.
legions system of the Ottoman Etupi'e.
Paris. Plazas to Honor I
Heroes of Seine Floods
A despatch from Paris says:—
This year's Seine flood provided Paris
with a little known epic, but none the
e less heroic, comparable with the lege
e end irf the Dutch boy who plugged a
hole Jin the dike with his ethumb. The
French heroes were twoEitusky labor-
ers, Beraud and Regnier, who, when
the Seine embankment collapsed, let-
ting the water in to the tunnel of the
Invalides Railway, worked for twenty-
eight lours running, carrying 100 -Ib.
slacks of sand to build a new rampart,
preventing damage to adjoining pro-
perty which would have cost millions
of dollars.
Beraud was dragged from .his post
half 'asleep and' Regnier collapsed
while arguing with his comrades to
sties]) the work going. He died in hos-
pital.
os-
ib i.
p a The Municipal Council has
proposed a gold medal for Beraud and.
e pension for Itegnier's widow,
British Village Smith •
Must Change His Ways
A despatch from bond a` says:---•
The village g smith, according to no less
tin •authority than the:eltural Indus -
fries Intelligence Bureau, will soon be
down and out etaless'.he adopts modernI
methods. ,r' • • -
"Thearitith," says Mr. J. Wedgwood,
Wocfetary of this ,bureau, "those at e
tenet, who try to make their living by
tihoeing horties, are dying out. The
feheelwrights are in even a sadder
alight..
"We are endeavoring to show the
blacksmith how he can -extend his
eleade.: What we feel is that as -the the
Lige; is getting more and more mechan- a
al, so village mechanics ought to be B
tting busier and more numerous, t
o Lather than dying out. The'motor t
t ade is .putting horsed . traffic into '
eite background, but the employment 1
ie power and '.niechanical_appliances
1,y -the agriculturist is also greatly on
the increase,"
Reports to the Dept. of Lands do a ,u
ore
SHS for aches state that the a a
nt snovrfalls have changed activity
n lumber camps from cutting to the rho
Vii. uling of timber, which is available li
t large ' quantities. It is estimated'I —
.a, t�:
c 1.
umbel• eat this yearwill be, , of
flt record onf. 0
No More Crests on
Britons' Passports
A despatch from London says:—
Day by day the . slump in the*pictur-
esque, due to the retirement of the
SMALLPDX CLAIMS
TWO MORE VICTIMS';
The Prince ot'Wanes, makes his first appearance since be was thrown
from hie mount, on the ooeaeton of a benefit football game between Oxford
'University and the Tottenham Hotopursi
Tories and the coming into the office
of the Labor Party, becomes more
apparent.
For years the ordinary Briton, far-
ing forth to the Continent or to. the
ends of the earth, felt, when he looked
at his passport, that he was going on
the grand tour, for did his passport
mot begin with these' grand, rolling
words: ""We, George, Nathaniel, Mar-
quess Curzon ;of Kedleston, Viscount
Scarsdale, Knight of the'Most 'Noble
Order of the Garter, Knight Comman-
der of the Most Exalted Order of the
Star of India, etc., etc., request and
require, in the name of his Majesty,
all those whom it may concern to ale
low Ir. Blankety-Blank-Blank to pass
freely, without loss or hindrance, and
to afford him every assistance and
protection of which he may stand in
need."
The passport was signed "Curzon
of Kedleston" and ornamented with a
beautiful print of his. arms, with the
motto, "Let Curzon holde what Curzon
helde"—altogether an impressive
tout -ensemble.
But Curzon, no longer holding what
Curzon helde, a new name appears on
British passports, without arms, motto
or honors, except that its holder is
"a member of His Britannic Majoety's
Most High Privy Council."
Thus the old order passoth,
4
Trains to be Ferried
Across the North Sea
A despatch from London says:—
The first 'North Sea train ferry wilt
commence operating about March 15.
This long -heralded project which, it is
argued, should in.expanded form make
the proposed Channel tunnel less of a 'i
need, will connect Harwich on the
English coast with Zeebrugge in'Bel-
gime. The distance is eighty-four i
miles, and the voyage will require nine f
to ten hours.
The ferryboats, of which there will t
be'three to start with, can each accom-
modate fifty-four of the short Euro- 1
peen type of freight cars. u
It is estimated that the cost of load-
ing the boats will be about $1 per ton,
instead of $3 -to $5 per ton, when the
contents of each individual freight car
have to be transferred between train
and boat. s•
The principal goods `reaching Eng-
land through Harwich at present are
vege$$abies and dairy produce.., The
chegper'transport should make' some
difference in prices because of bring-
ing perishable -goods to the markets
in fresher condition.
Rural Mansions Become
Hives of Small Homes
Anaherstburg Man and a Baby
Die—No' New Cases- in
Windsor.
A despatch from Windsor says:—
Two
ays —Two deaths from. smallpox were re-
ported at Amherstburg, the victims
being a 14 -months' baby and' Adolph
Shaw. No new cases were reported
in this city'for the past 24 hours and i
health officials are inclined to take a;'
more optimistic view of the situation.
A despatch from Chatham says:—
A case of smallpox has developed in E
Raleigh Township according to Dr, I
3. C. Bell; health' officer for the town-,
ship. The Health Board of the muni-
cipality held a meeting at Merlin at
which strict measures were 'decided'.
upon. The case is said to be of a
malignant' type.
British Soldiers' Bodies
Still Found in France
A despatch from London says:—
According to the report et the Imper-
sal Graves Commission for 1922-1928,
bodies of British soldiers aro still be-
ing found along the western front,
where the fiercest fighting took place
during the war. Since November,
1921, 6,107 isolated bodies have been
discovered and reburied in cemeteries,
1,054 being identified at the time, but
others were identified subsequently
here through a study of the effects
found With'the remains.
The n tuber of these bodies found
s decreahing, but they still 'aro dis-
covered hi tha Ypres salient, on Vimy
Ridge and in the Somtne, particularlyry
n the regions of Thiepval, l3Iouquee
arm, Delville and I•Iangard wood
Mere are expected to tarn up when
he French have eletired Bourdon
Tronos and High :Weigle, 'ds, at present
mpenetrable on account of the dense
ndergrowth and the presence of con-
siderable quantities of unexploded
ammunition.
ANCIENT EGYPTIAN SACRIFICE OFFERED I `�
AT TOMB OF . TI 'ANKHAMEN
A despatch from Luxor, Egypt,
says: -The re -opening of the tomb of,
Tutankhamen on Thursday, for •inspect
tion by some 200 visitors, guests of •
the Egyptian Government, was pre -1
ceded by the picturesque ceremony,
following' the custom in the days of
the Pharaohs, of sacrificing two: bulls
in the'centre of the tomb. The first
party, made up of Ministers and high)
officials, were present.
Thousands of natives' and sheiks,'
in gorgeous costumes, crowded the
gaily beflagged streets, singing to the'
accompaniment of Egyptian instru-
ments. After the sacrifice the Gov-
ernment party was entertained by
feats of horsemanship performed by
the sheiks.
The whole party, including the for-
eign diplomats member; of Parlia•
nient and .Commissioner Allenby,
were then taken across the. Nile on
a Government steamer and to the
Valley of the Kings in automobiles
through a road. lined with soldiers:
After refreshments served in a big
tent, groops of eight entered the
tomb, where the lid of the sarco-
phagus had been removed sin .e the
Egyptian Government took charge of
the tomb, A large platform was
erected, from which the visitors had
an excellent view of the gold -covered
figure of the, Pharaoh.
Neither Howard Carter, the chief
excavator, nor' any 'of- his staff'wzs
present at the ceremony, which was
superintended by Prof. Lacau, the
French Egyptologist, and the Egyp-
tian Minister of Works.
The tomb will now be closed 'until
March 10, when. it will be'repopened
for ten days to permit the public to
inspect it. The guests were given a
banquet here on Thursday night,
which was'followed by: an Egyptian'
fete and a fireworks display.
RACE FOR POSITION
OF MOSLEM LEADER
King Hussein of the Hedjaz,
Descendant' of Prophet,
Choice of Arabians.
A despatch from London says:—
Because
ays:
Because of the direct descent of King.
Hussein of the Hedjas from the Pro-
phet Mohammed and other favoring
factors, his designation as'Caliph by
the Arabs of his Kingdom and the
Moslems of Mesopotamia and Trans-
Jordania, ruled by his two sons, is re-
garded by British observers as likely
to find acceptance in a large part' of
the Islamic world.
Not all, of Islam is considered well
disposed toward the Arabian Monarch,
however, and a bitter contest between
the Arabian Moslems and some other
sections of the faithful over the
mantle of the Prophet is looked for
in many quarters.
The first sign of a split in the Ori-
ental world was seen here in the order
of the Angoran Government warning
the •Turks against pilgrimages to
King Victor Emmanuel Mecca and Medina, in Hussien's do-
of Italy, who with his wife, Quee
Helena, wee make a flue -day visit t
King Georgic and Queen Mary stem
tI ie thee spring, according to the Car
Aero IteIletno.
minions, because it was declared they
omight be hi great danger there.-
e As far back as 1915 the British
Government. informed Hussein that it
would not view his elevation to the
Caliphate' with displeasure; that it
believedrihe would be accapetable to'
70,000,000 Moslems under British
tutelage
Sections of Derbyshire and
Nottinghamshire Feel Quake
A despatch from London says: --
An earthquake shook large section
of Derbyshire and Nottinghamshir
Thursday night and early Pride
without, however, any appreciabl
damage being done.
The' tremors shook the whole Alfre-
ton district of Derbyshire, shortly be-
fore eleven o'clock Friday night. House
furnishings were rocked by the shocks
and the alarmed inhabitants rushed
' into the streets. Shocks also were
felt early on Friday in northern Not-
tinghamshire.
At Sutton in Ashfield chimneys
were toppled over by the tremors. •
A policenfan at l\lansfleld declared
his house shook so much he was near-
ly thrown from his chair.
ute age .in India.
A despatch from Geneva says:—1
Abdul Medjid, the deposed Caliph of
Turkey, accompanied by lis family,
s arrived on Friday night at Territet,
e on the north shore 01 Lake Geneva.
y1"
A', despatch front London says: -+A
new+ use for English country—Irian
stone, which' rapidly arce-becoming a
drug on the 'real.adtate market, due
to the inability of present-day owners
to find neezeis to keep up,these homes
in style;' is forecast by an experiment
baiter tried out in Rolleston Hall, the
fine baronial mansion near Burton -on-
Trent.
A syndicate which has purchased
the former consists mostly of old fam-
ilies, and as Rolleston is situated in
the heart of the Meynell•hunting coun-
try, -plans. are being made to convert
the hall into six separate Houses.
The partitioning,. which is unprece-
dented in the case of such a palatial
mansion, will be carried out vertically
and not horizontally, ,'resulting in re-
onstruction into houses and net flats.
Ancient Cornish:Tongue
May Sound Once Again
A despatch from London says:--.
A seventh language will be added to
collection of distinct languages,
side from dialects, now spoken in the
ritish Isles, if the effort being made
o revive the. use of Cornish as a living
ongue is carried out successfully.
It was generally believed.that the
anguage formerly ` spoken in Corn-
well, the most southwesterly county
o 1
f D and t
g ,lad died out, buts takers
P
at a meeting of the London Cornish
Association, held here, claim it is` still
sed in remote parts of the county,
nd ste are re being taken to develop it,
The languages already spoken in
British Isles are, aside from Eng -
eh, Irish, ,Scottish, Welsh and Manx
spoken on the, Isle of Man—and the
d• $>lorman French, spoken on the
flannel Islands,
Ancient Shrine of .St. Alban
Found, in Danish Village
A despatch from London says
:—A
recent . despatch from Copenhagen
tells oft the. diseovery of the: remains
of an ancient shrine in the village of
Tjaerborg, near Eesbjerg, dedicated
to St. Alban. The frontispiece of the
shrine is richly ornamented with alle-
gorical carvings of the Cherlemagne
period.
The shrine is believed to have been
token to Denmark by the Danish Vik-
Inge, to pass into private possession
early in the seventeenth.centvey,
New records have been set up in the
production of raw materiah from the
forests of British Columbia during the
past year. It is probable that the
enills will be found td have produced
the largest amount, of lumber yet re-
corded in the history of the province.
The total amount of timber ecaled in
the province last' year was 2,542,-
280,000 feet,' as compared with 1,899,-
158,000 feet in the previous year.
Uncle'S Seeks to
Bar Canadian Wheat..,
A despatch from . Washington
y ncrease o 12 cents a
'bushel in the tariff rate on wheat was
ordered on Friday by President Cool-
idge.
Acting under the •flexible provision
of the tariff act and on the basis of
the tariff commission's recent inquiry,
the President at the same time order-
ed an increase of 26 cents a: hundred
pounds in the duty on wheat flour
and a decrease of 50 per cent. on the
ad valorem rate on mill feeds.
A school -for balters'le to be erected
in connection with the Ontario Agri-
cultural College, Guelph. The building
is to be erected by the Bread and Cake
Bakers' Association of Canada, and
building operations' are expected to
commence early in the spring.
e Week's Markets
TORONTO.
Manitoba wheat—No. i Northern,
$1.13%.
Manitoba oats—No, 8 CW, 460; No.
1, 45c.
Manitoba barley—Nominal.
All the above, c.i.f., bay ports.
Ontario barley -65 to 70c.'
American corn—No. 2 yellow, 98%a
Buckwheat -No. 2, 78 to 82c.
Ontario rye -No. 3, 75 to 79e.
Peas—No. 2, $1.45 to $1.60.
Millfeed—Del., Montreal freights,
bags included; Bran, per ton, 528;
shorts,. per ton, 580; middlings, 536;
good feed flour, $2.10.
Ontario wheat—No.. 2 white, 98c to
$1.02, outside.'
Ontario No. 2 white oats -41 to 43e.
Ontario corn—Nominal.
Ontario flour—Ninety per at.,
in jute bags, Montreal, prompt ship.
Ment, 54.70; Toronto basis, 54.70;
bulk seaboard, $4.85.
Manitoba flour—lat pats., in jute
sacks, $6.30 per` barrel; 2nd pats.,
55.80.
Hay—Extra No. 2 timothy, per ton,
track, Toronto, 514.50; to 515; No. 2,
$14.50; No. 3, 512.50 to 513; mixed,
$12.50.
Straw—Carlota, per ton, $9.50.
Standard recleaned screenings,'"f.o.
b. bay ports,.per,ton, $20.
Cheese—New, large, 19 to 20
twins, 20 to 21c; triplets, 21 to 21%
Stiltons 22 to: 3c. Old, large, 26
28c; twins, 27 to 29c; triplets, 30c.
Butter -Finest creamery prints, 4
to. 47c; No. 1 cresm,ry, 42 to 45
No. 2, 42 to 43e; dairy, 87c.
Eggs -Extras, fresh, in cartons, 4
to 410; fresh extras loose, 87 to 38
fresh firsts, 84 to 35e; fresh seconds
31 to 82c.
Live poultry --Spring chickens,
lbs. and over, 26c; chickens, 8 to
lbs., 20e; hens, over 5 lbs., 22c; 'do,
4 to 5' lbs., 15c• de, 8 to 4 lbs., 15c;
roosters, 15c; ducklings, over 5 1ba
19c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 18c; turkey
young, 10 lbs. and up, 22c.
Dressed poultry: Spring chickens
4 lbs. and over 80c• chickens, 3 to
lbs., 25c; her.., over 5 lbs., 28c; d
4 to 5 -lbs., 24c• do 8 to 4 lbs., 18c
roosters, 18z; ducklings, over 5 lbs.,
24c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 25c; turkeys,
young, 10 lbs, and up, 32 to 85c;
geese, 22e.
Beans—Cana handpic ke.., lb., 7c;
primes, 63 c.
Maple products -Syrup, pee imp•
gal., 52.50; per 5-gaL tin, 52.40 per
gal:; staple sugar lb., 25e.
Honey -601b. tins, 11 to 113 a per
Ib.; 10 -Ib. tins, 11 to 12c; 5-1b. `ins,
11% to 12c; 2% -lb. tins, 12 • to 13e;
comb h'bney, per doz., No. 1, $3.75 to
54 • No. 2, 58,25 to $8.50.
Smoked meats—Hams, med., 24 to
25c; cooked hams, 85 to $7c; smoke
rolls, 17 to 18e; cottage rolls, 19 to
}
Natural Resources
• Bulletin.
The Natural Resources Intel-
ligence Service of the Depart-
ment of the Interior at Ottawa
Ontario gives :serious thought
to her coal supply froin the
standpoint of its need as fuel
for heating purposes. Her' coal
supply must all be brought into
the province: -
Not so in Nova Scotia. There.
130,000 men find employment in
and about the coal mines of
which 10,000 work underground
and many of thetas under the sea.
This number would make a' con-
siderablocity of itself: in fact,
the mines themselves are. not
unlike the layout 'cif our cities.
They are laid out to a plan, 'with
streets' and lanes, with railway
tracks, with horses and mules
for transportation purposes.
Thomas '3. Brown, Dep. Min-
ister of Mines of Nova Scotia,
in' a recent address, said: "We
hear now and then of great' feats
of railway construction on. the
surface in God's own daylight,
but their performance all sink
into significance when we con-
sider the work of the citizens of
the great black cities of Nova
Scotia. Tunnelling underground
in the darkness and 'surrounded
by all the danger and drawback
which accompany coal mining,
they are excavating one mile of
tunnel out of the solid coal every
day, transporting it for miles
underground, and constructing a
railway track in every foot of it
at the same time."
It is thus that' Canada's na-
tural resources are being de-
veloped, and a supply of coal
produced for Canadian industry,
Down Hill.
What Is the first cause of that sub-
sidence, in physical force and in men-
tal acumen, which makes some people
old before their tine?
Others are bale and hearty far be-
'yond the Scriptural allotment of life's
term, They carry on' with unimpaired
vitality. They seem as young in spirit
as' those who stand in the first suurays
e; of life's morning. They welcome new
c; ideas, sympathize with youthful as -
to piration. Years do not mean that
their minds dry up, their spiritual
6 arteries harden or their enthusiasms
c; ossify into'rigid forms that never
0 change and never yield.
e; Whether life, after the first era of
, youth, goes down hill or continues to
ascend to a far -seen ,culmination de -
4 pends chiefly on the disposition to
4 continue climbing. Some love the
risks and the rewards' of mountain-
eering; others, for all their lives,
e, abide contentedly on low levels and
abhor the heights.
The most pathetic sight in the
4 world is the man who acquiesces and
0, relapses because it is trouble to
change. He craves to be let alone. He
does not want to be fussed with. Af-
fectionate, constructive criticism he
calls "nagging"—an easy word to be-
stow on any deliberate, thoughtful
effort to improve him.
In the complacent retrospect of the
past he is satisfied with what he did
and was, as determining the sort of
human being he is to -day. Now he
wants most of all to be comfortable
in mind •and body. If he is in busi-
ness, it is easier for hem to criticize
d his superior officerls thah it is to pro-
duce and originaV'e-and thereby make
himself more valuable.
Before all things, he wishes to evade
responsibility. Let others have the
praise, if they will also shoulder the
blame. He means to be safe and
shielded. Not far him are the hard
knocks of personal contact, with vig-
orous contestants, in the open.
So the easy-going, apathetic one, ii
, whose sluggish blood there is no 'tits,
, of great awakenings, Lets himself
on from day to day in the fixed ro
he knows. ws. He never asks
him
what he is doing with his life. He se.
Bests any reforming hand, as an nae
warrantable interference with his per
sonal liberty, to elo as he chooses, to
look as he plead to go and come
willfully; and this he ealis "to live
and to let five."
He who does not care is he who
goes down hilL He needs the incen-
tive of'a strong desire to please some
one otlter than himself. Unless this
spur shall rouse him from his' laasi-
tude, he will merely be one more am-
ong "the forgotten millions. Re will
have spent his years on earth and
counted for nothing in a toiling,,:
heavy -laden generation that needs the
whole value oe every man and all that
he can do.
01, -
21c; breakfast bacon, 23 to 26c; spe
ial brand breakfast bacon, 28 to 30c
asks, boneless, 28 to 88c.
Cured meats—Long clear bacon 60
to 70 lbs., 518.60; 70 to 90 lbs, $18;
90 lbs. and np� 517• lightweight rolls,
in barrets, $37; heavyweight rolls,
$32.
Lard—Pure tierces, 14% to 16c;
tubs 16 to 1611:• pails 15% to lee;
p
1
Sir Esme Howard, newly appointed c
British. Ambassador to the United b
States. lie succeeds Sir. Auckland
Geddes, who has retuauved to Englandi
British Doctor Sees No
Hope for Fat Persons
A despatch from London says "If 1
you're fat andcan't
gee ;thin theme;
no help for you," That ie the verdict b
of Dr. Edwin Lancelot Ash, who holds d
that week -end golf will not .provide
an antidote for middle-aged `persons
inclined to grow stout. But a certain d
amount of fat before an individual is
60, Dr. Ash contends, is a reserve in a
case of sudden strain 'or illness,
though, in his view, it is better to be d
thin after 60. Is
rints, i8 to 18%c; shortening tierces
43 to 14%c; tubs, 14 to ilc^,•'pails
6 to 154e; 1
3�prints,17. to 17
a
, ',t
Heavy steers, choice,' $7.50 to $8;
utcher steers, choice, 56.75 tor$7.76;
o, good,.56 to 58.60• do, med.,
5 to $6.75; do, com., $4.50 to 55;
butcher heifers choice $6.76 to 57.50;
o, med., $6 to $6.76; do, com., $4.25 to
4.75; butcher cows, choice, 54.76. to
5.05; do, med., 53.50 to 54; canners
nd cutters, $1.26 to $2.90; but-
cher bulls, choice, $4.25, • to $5.25.
o, cont., $2.00 to 53.00i feeding
teers, good, $5.50 to 56.50; do, fair,, $4
$5; stockers, good 54 to $4.75;'
do,
kers and spring
air, $8.60 to $4; mil-
rs, 580 to $120; calves, choice, 510
512; do, med., $8 to $10;'' do; teen.,
5 to 57; do, grassers, 53 to .44.50;
mbs, choice ewes, $14 to ;15; do,
ueks, 512 to 514' do fat, heavy,
4 to $4.60; do, cubs, $'.. to 58; sheep,
ht ewes, 57.50 to 58.50; do, culls, 52
$8; hogs, fed and watered, 58.25;
o, f.o.b., 57.75; do, country points,
7.60; do, selects, $9.05.
MONTREAL.
Oats—Can. West. No. 2, 66c; do,
No. 3, 53eec; extra No. 1 feed, 51%e;
No. 2 local white, 60%c. Flour -Man.
spring wheat pats., 1st,, 58.39; do,
2nds, 56.80• strong bakers 55.60; win-
ter pats., choice, 56.65 to $5.75. polled
oats— bag of 90 lbs., $2.05, Bran--
oats—Bag
of 90 lbs., 58.05. Bran
28.25, Shorts—$30.25. Middlings--
36.25.
iddlin s—
36.25. Hay—No, 2, per ton, car lots,
le
Batt
T
Butter, 1. o, 1. pasteurized, 41?,irc;
No, 1 creamery, 40', c; 2nds, 8041,o..
E fresh sh extras. 27c; fresh firsts,
350. Potatoes, per bag, car lots, 51.55
to' $1.60. •
Com, dairy typo' cows,, $8 to $4;
canners, $1.60; coin: bulls, $8 to $8.25;
real good calves, 59.50 to $10; do,
mixed lots, fairly good quality, $8,50
to 59; liog s,•thick, snieoths, and shops,
58;25 to 58,50.
"There is fallacy in the idea that to
health is a matter of feeling well," Dr.' f
Ash insists. "One very seldom comes, to
across a . man or a' woman who' says $
he or she is thoroughly well; and,'la
curiously enough, even the physically b
well often are troubled with some 5
nervous or mental ailment," The doc-
tor says walking is the best form of to
exercise.
• The cost of raising hard spring
wheat in the United States last year
ranged from 85 cents to. 51.19.a bus.,
while in Canada it ranged from 53
cents to 51.19, the U, S. Tariff Com-
mission found in its investigation in
connection .with the application for
en increase in the wheat tariff.
�i3" y t t" fkU;;�y£iw`ga tit 3y "' `.•4 Greater 'Toronto has a ,population
c+ .;s"i, �` ',:,�@, kyr :�F i •+� � .�. 1�.`.. .;,• f 709,000. Toronto proper has
P a
u •'s'� ,fey,, .,� ;
population of 684,225. These figures
Y+. y
V • 't
� a'- .•� �.• v��' ;ts'C
rYr,
2`�, .,a • x.ht�,..'wer
prepared b9
the publishers
0f
rr�
th
--..�5��.., 1. ,. 2:,,,.+ ti��....> a,, •,l', directory ester, and according
'to the same authorities, this city, in
Her re two of1922, hacl.a population of 627,520 and
• c are the inoclsis which will be need ren the-'ministttnee naval euburbs i
battle to be fought in tanks at use British ,tui lite Ex tet ee the iuburhs 6L,61. The jincreases-ut
1. 1 b ti The modern � the •snL^^orbs for 1323 is just .shout.
model is l•fetee. Vindictive of Zeebrugge faun double what it is in the city proper,
ra er,
There'
s a Reason
So you're smoking theclgats your,
with gave ave youfor CJhristntas?"
"Olt, yes, indeed. She's improved
wonderfully it judging to a
eco of
late.,,
The only Sta f
n ay ,!o havee ,.t tstzd is to
be one.
Language
is but a poor buil'',-:jr
lantern wherewith to show off the .'.aac
eathedrsl of the world, --Ste? Essen.