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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1924-10-09, Page 2is ...'.1g4.311TRATION PACT. T.0 .BE FOLLQ ED lei DIS MAMEN coNF . E cE N JUNE Third Step in 'Restoring Permanent Peace to the World Will be An Agreement to Arb itrate All the Vital Economic Interests of An Indu stralized World — League Launched on New Ambitious Programme. A despatch from Geneva says:— This note ran through the whole. Unanimous approval of the cotnpul-i Assembly. Italian and Japanese ad ivory arbitration protocol, as sentto it hesion to the protocol and Germany's from committee on Thursday wound; entry into the League are only part up the fifth assembly of the League of i of the problem which the League itself Nations. As part of the attempt to must attack, the leaders believe,. bring peace to the world a disarma-I Italy and Japan have a tacit pro- ment . conference is called for next r mise from the League that it will con- Tune and all Governments are urged, sider an outlet for their excess popu- to ratify the arbitration pact. nation. But though the Assembly adjourned In his address, M. Boncour empha- after taking this first step toward sized an invitation to the United universal peace, a wider ideal has, States to join the League. But there crystallized in the closing days of the, is a difference between the invitations session. This is no less than eventual' from M. Boncour and others at this erbitratiou of raw material disputes,' session and previous invitations to tura industrial output, immigration, na-j United States. Hitherto the League timial expansion, racial aspirations— has hesitated to take any action which all the fundamental causes of war, � might arouse criticism in the United The present arbitration pact is the States, first step. Next comers the disarm- This time the League disregarded smear, conference. Finally there will American susceptibilities in amending' be arbitration of all the vital economic the protocol to suit JJipan. It is this Interests of an industrialized world. willingness to risk an understanding This grandiose program has more in order to get results which has' foundation in realism than at first ap- launched the League on its new, am pears. The framers of the arbitration bitious program. protocol believe arbitration will not To dissipate the idea which might; • succeed unless the cause of trouble is form in the Assembly that the United' removed. Paul Boneour, the French Socialist, obstacle, Senator Dandurend of Can - in an address to the Assembly on the ada quoted Secretary of State Hughes' protocol, pointed the way, saying: speech at the Canadian Bar Associa- "War can only be ended by remov- tion last year. Mr. Hughes at that ing the causes. Raw materials, their time advocated a permanent Amer-, distribution, questions of immigration ican-Canadian arbitration council "to and emigration, are grave problems which would be referred automatic - which must be solved if the work we ally questions arising as to the bear - have just finished is not later upset ing of the action of either Govern - by interior convulsions." ment upon the interests of the other." IRISH BOUNDARY BILL GETS THIRD READING States by its absence might prove an' Sir Hugh Clifford has recently been appointed the new governor of Ceylon. He is a knight of the Grand Crass of St.'Michael and St. George, the grand- son of a cardinal and one of Great Bri- tain's noted authors. SIR WILLIAM PRICE VICTIM OF LANDSLIDE Prominent Business Man Meets Death on Inspection ' Tour at Kenogami. A despatch from Quebec says:—Sir William Price, head of the firm of Price Brothers and Company, of Que- bec, is reported to have been instantly killed Thursday morning at Kenogami, 120 miles from here, when he was buried under a landslide. The body ! hasnot yet been recovered. Sir William left Quebec on Wednes- day to inspect what is known as the "Eastern Woodpile," which is located below the falls at Kenogami, and where'a small landslide occurred on Tuesday. Thursday morning the party, con- sisting of Sir Wrs. Price and two en- gineers, Messrs. A. A. MaeDiarmid and N. Munro, left the mills to inspect the site of Tuesday's landslide, The object of their visit was to ascertain how much damage had been caused, and also to see what measures should be taken to prevent further' mishaps. Whether they were stand- ing at the top or the bottom of the woodpile is not yet known, but sud- denly the whole-s'de of the hill came down with a rumble, burying Sir Wil - Barn. The other twc escaped. Sir William Price was one of the most influential business men in Can- ada. He was aesotiateci principally with the pulp and raper industry and owned very large mills in northeast Quebec. Just at, the present time: he was engaged with Unittd States capi- taliste in completing a large scheme for developing, water power for pulp plants and factories mar Kenogami, Newsprint mills in Canada produced 113.,763 tons o fnewspeint in August, compared with 113,479 tens in July., For the first eight months of the year Canadian mills accounted for an out- put of 902,391 tons, as compared with $38,425 in the same period in 1923. From British Commons It Goes to House of Lords, Where Adoption is Certain. A despatch from London says:- The Irish bill providing for a com- mission to adjust the boundary be- tween Ulster an 1 the rree State, has passed through al; its stages earlier even than themost sanguine had ex- uectecl It passel i s third reading en Thursday by a, vara of 251 to ea, The Ulster memonrs made a voluble, protest to the last, bat in his fieel speech for the Government, J. H. Thomas, the Colonial Secretary, was able to congratulate the House on the good temper and tone of the debate. The last three days, he said, had clear- ly demonstrated that the i•Iouse of Commons, regardless of party, was genuinely anxious to do justice to both sides. He hoped that the same spirit and goodfeeling would be shown to the measure in the House of Lords. John 11, Clynes, Lord Privy Seal, replying to a question in the House, said it was the British Government's intention to give effect to the Wash- ington labor convention, calling for a 148 -hour week for workers, irrespective of what other European countries might do. I Explorers Find Worms That Live Only in Ice A despatch from Tacoma, Wash., says:—A species of worm that lives only in ice and cannot withstand even the heat of a human hand, has been found and photographed by a scientific expedition that recently went into the Olympic Mountains. The ice on Dodwell-Rixon Pass in the Olympics was found literally alive with these worms. They are black, thin and about half an inch long. When the sun is out they crawl into the interior of the ice where the tem- perature is lower. Scientists with the party said that so far as they knew these worms never had been found be- fore in the United States. When the ice surrounding them begins to melt, they die immediately. What they live on is still a mystery. Prince's Sale of Pure Bred Stock Well Attended A despatch from High River, Alta., says:—More than 500 people attended the live stock sale at the Prince of Wales' ranch, and the royal rancher himself ming.ed with the crowds all, afternoon, watching the spirited bid- ding for his pure-bred stock. The Prince appeared at the front door of his ranch house shortly after 12.30, dressed in old riding clothes. October, 1st was his Last day. at the ranch. He left late in the afternoon for High River, where he boarded his special trainwhich took him through', Calgary to Jasper Park and Tater to, Vancouver. This large sign has been erected on the summit of Yeliowhead Pass, on the Canadian National line, to announce that the elevation at that point Is 3,720 feet above sea level and the west'boundary of Jasper Paris, Alberta. s:=r, QUEBEC FLOODS TOLL McGAJGHEY TO HANG OF LIFE AND PROPERTY ON DECEMBER FIFTH — Three Deaths and Million Dol- Plea of Insanity Fails and Sen- . lars' Loss Caused by tence Passed: for Murder Inundations. of Beatrice Fee. A despatch from Quebec says:- A despatch from Lindsay says: -- Three deaths, over a million dollars' Frederick William McGaughey was loss to property, damage to railways sentenced to death at ten o'clock through washouts, not yet estimated,, Thursday night for the wilful murder and unprecedented interruption in the of'Lillian Beatrice Fee, on May 25 services—such is the summary of the last, the jury having returned a ver - effects of the floods which have been dict of guilty after deliberating four experienced in the section of the Pro- hours and twenty minutes. Execution vince between Three Rivers and the will take place on December 5. The Saguenay and from this city north to accused maintained the same attitude the Lake St. John and Chicoutimi dis-, of immobility throughout the pro- triets. I nouncement of Mr. Justice Logie that Sir William Price is the outstand-r he has maintained all through the ing victim of the floods. A 15 -year- trial and on which the, plea of insanity old girl named Germaine Simard had in his behalf rested to a large extent. been drowned in the Larose River,' The court room was crowded and Montmorency County, and a young the corridors thronged when the jury man named E. Martel had lost his life returned at 9.45. in the St. Ann River. Preliminary At Thursday morning's session Dr. estimates made by engineers of the Robert Armour of Toronto, called in Departments of Colonization and of rebuttal of defence'insanity testimony, Public Works placed the loss at nearly declared in his opinion the accused $1,000,000 in the last ten days. was sane and had never suffered from A report from Kenogami received. catatonia dementia pruecox, the dis- hy long-distance telephone Thursday ease claimed for him by the defence, morning announced that the waters, and that his attitude in the dock was of the- Des Sables River have become a pose calculated to deceive. so furious that the Price Bros. & Co, I In addressing the jury, His Lord - mills were temporarily closed` down in ship remarked that he could not see the afternoon. To prevent the con -•how a different verdict could have tinued erosion, engineers are planning; been rendered. to blow up during the night part of a dam which is affecting the course of - the river, and thus provide an outlet for the flood waters. -- Butter Model of Prince Will be Sold in Pieces "The Prince of Wales Cut Into One Prince of Wales during his recent Pound Pats," was the somewhat visit to Long Island has been compiled startling headline that appeared in by the Hemstreet Press Clipping Bur - London papers last week. eau and sent to London. It will be It did not refer to any atrocity cons- presented to the Prince on his return twitted on the person of the heir to from his Canadian ranch. the British throne, however, but to Every article printed in any Am - the fadt that the model of the Prince erloan paper about the visit of the on the "E. P." ranch, which was done prince is included in the volume, in frozen butter, and has been a prom- which weighs 325 pounds. To classify inent feature of the Wembley Exhibi- the mass of clippings 22 experts work- tiion this summer, will, when the ex- ed night and day for 14 days on a job hibition closes, be made into one pound which under ordinary circumstances, packages and sold to the general would have taken three months. public. Pair of Sheep for Every Austria Decides to Adopt Shilling as Coin A despatch from Vienna says;- Shilling currency will be introduced Austria January 1, 1925, to replace, the crown. After that date it will be illegal to quote prices or keep ac- counts in other than thci nese money.! The shilling is to be issued` in silver and paper and will be worth 10,000 of. the present. crowns. Prince Received More Pub- licity Than Any President A despatch from New York says: A book containing 61,120 newspaper clippings on the activities of the The Clipping Bureau says that no President of the United States ever received so•much publicity in so short Bulgarian, Census Shows a time. A despatch from Sofia says: -The — o sheep and goat census for the current .King Hussein Abdicates year shows that there is a pair of Throne of Hedjaz sheep, or a sheep and a goat, for every man, woman and child in Bulgaria, -- with a part of a sheep or a goat to A despatch from Jeddah, Arabia, spare. says: -The committee -of leading citi- Sheep, however, are much preferred zens of Jeddah and Mecca which had to goats by the Bulgarian government. demanded the abdication of Ring Hus- The reason is that goats, feeding on rein have received a telegram from the fresh, young tops of shrubs and Hussein, dated Mecca,'informing the m small trees, apparently are eating the comittee that he was abdicating, mrd country bare of forests. that he desired to leave Hedjaz. Dominion 'News; in D&'ief. "Taking the Hint.' A mind that repels' suggestion as if Halifax, N.S,—The situation in the Maritime Provinces is considered to be greatly improved and that the pur-1 chasing' power of .this area will be g`iieater this winter than forthe past three or four years. As a result of increased` output and value agriculture; is exhibiting, much brighter prospects and the revenue from this industry,1 it is expected, will be in the neighbor- hood of $110,000,000 for the three pro- vinces. There has likewise been a steady improvement throughout the year in the Maritime fishing industry. St. John, N.B.—The Stetson Cutler, Lumber Co. is contemplating the erec- tion of a large saw mill in the vicinity of Hillside to cut at least fifteen mil- lion feet of lumber a year for a num- ber of years, The company has pur- chased very extensive timber hold- ings along the headwaters of the Tobique. Rouyn, Que.—Gold . is reported to. have been found in two new localities in the township of Joannes, part of the Western Quebec mining area. One is on acreage staked for the Nipissing, and the other on the property of the Goodwin Exploration Co. Timmins, Ont. Within a compar- atively short time it is assured that the Hollinger Mine will be handling 8,000 tons of ore daily; an average of about 4,500 tons is now being handled. This will mean a production of about $20,000,000 annually. This will be :a world record' for tonnage in gold pro- duction from an individual mine. search laboratory, the largest isi .the it were an insult rather 4s -n, an aid to West,:, for the, ,purpose of studying tire -intelligence; Is a mind that poorly rust, to discover, if possible, a means serves its owner.1 They. brat are wife of eradicating :the ' mehaee, will be will oven , etfl3er- fools • gladly, . on th5 established in Manitoba, according to chalice of gettirig'a new, valuable idea, report. The project will include the People sof Newfoundland made rugs erection of several large green houses of dyed rags hooked through canvas: for experimental purposes and a large! The colors were harsh and the designs research bni)diitg. r au cis 1 were crude. Our department stores Regina, Sask.—A total of 547 a did not want thein, Along came Greu• mobiles, representing 2,007 travellers, all and drew clever and amusing pat - ranging almost from the Arctic Circleterns, to be worked out in tasteful to the .,Gulf of Mexico, have registered color combinations. Hence there arose at the Regina Auto Camp to date. The a lively denranci for wares' that former• total promises to reach 600 before the ly were unattractive. camp closes at the end of the present, A young American girl in Asia month. The number repreeents an in- Minor strove to inetruct native women crease of almost 200 per sent. over in the art of making lace. Al first the cars which were parked in the only they were indignant. "Why," they partially organized camp available said, "we knew how to sew before you last year. I were born. What can you teach us?" Edmonton, Alta.—Evidence of the She answered pleasantly, "I know you excellent standard of this season's are skillful with the Needle. But I am wheat is.given in one day's inspection here to teach you how to make the when of 59 care two graded No. 1 things that can bo sold In America. It high, 40 No. 1 Northern, 9 No. 2 and does not matter. how clever you are if 2 No. 3. The wheat came from fairly you make things that you cannot get well scattered districts. ' rid of in the,ena,s'ket." Vancouver, B.C.—The hop crop of, We have ourselves to sell to the the Fraser Valley is estimated by the world. We need to know what en - British Columbia Hop Co., Sardis, and hances or diminishes oar value, But. 11, Hulbert, Agassiz, who are the prin eeltle of us are so sensitive, or so well cipal growers in the district, at 4,400 plotted with our' own, accomplishment, bales :or about 55 carloads. This is that we resent even the kindest fug from an acreage of 520 acres under gestion. t. cultivation. The company's output , i3ut how shall we learn of acm nits - will in all probability be exported to takes if are flare back in resentment at the United Kingdom as in the past, those who perceive a shortcoming, whilst Mr. Hulbert will most likely and, in a genuine concern for our gond, Winnipeg, Man.—An intensive re- ship his to Eastern Canada. 1 venture to tell us of it? The Week's Markets The word "hint" itself means some. storage extras, 48c;do, storage, lsts, thing that is taken, Too often It Is 37c; do, storage 2nds, 31 to 32c; dot something that is indignantly mods,fresh extras, 48c. i ated, But as we think poorly of a Common bulls sold for $2 and $2.25; young pupil who repels the guidance TORONTO. canners and cutter cows from $1.26 to of the teacher, we censure the attitude Man, wheat—No. 1 North., $1,66; $1.75; cont. cows, $2,26 tog 2.75; fairly of the callow apprentice who will not No. 2 North., $1.61: good veal calves, $8; grassers, $3, Man. oats—No. 2 CW, 70c; No. 5 2.75 and $2.50; hogs, mixed lots, $9.50, let the old hand show him how, be - to 59.75; selects, 110.25; sows, 56 to cause in the conceit of his few years 57. and small horizons he believes he CW, 69c; extra No. 1 feed, 69c; No. 1 feed, 6$c; No. 2 feed, 0511c, All the above c.i.f., bay ports. Am. corn, track, Toronto—No. 2 yellow, $1,27. " Millfeed—Del,, Montreal freights, bags included: Bran, per ton, 528; shorts, per ton, 530; middlings, $36; good feed flour, per bag, $2.20. Ont, oats—No. .3 white, 48 to 50c. Ont. wheat—No. 2 winter, $1.20 to $L24; No, 3 winter, 51.18 to $1.22; No. 1 commercial, 51.16 to 51.19, f.o.b. shipping points, according to freights. Berlet'—Malting, 82 to 85c. Buckwheat --No. 2, 90c. Rye—No. 2, 93 to 96c. Ont. flour—New, ninety per cent. pat.. in jute bags, Montreal, prompt shipments, 56,25; Toronto basis, $6.25; bulk, seaboard, 55.85. Manitoba flour—FIrst pats., in jute sacks, $8,40 per bbl.; 2nd pats., 57.90. Hay—No, 2 timothy, per ton, track, Toronto, 514; No. 3, 512.50. Straw—Carlots, per ton, 59. Sere en ings—S tan dard, recleaned, f.o.b. bay ports, per ton, $22,50. Cheese—New, large, 19c; twins, 191rec; triplets, 20c; Stiltons, 21 to 22e. Old,, large, 28 to 24c; twins, 24 to 25c; triplets,, 25 to 26c. Butter—Finest creamery prints, 38 to 89c; No. 1 creamery, 36 to 37c; No. 2, 8.1 to 158; dairy, 28 to 30c. Eggs—Extras, fresh, in cartons, 45c; extra, loose., 43c; firsts, 38 to 39c; seconds, 32 to 33e. Live poultry ---liens, over 5 lbs., 20c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 175,•• do, 8 to 4 lbs:, 15c; spring chickens, 2 lbs. and over, 26e; roosters, 12c1 ducklings, 4 to 5 lbs„ 18c. Dressed poultry—Hens, over 5 lbs., 26c; do, 4 to 6 lbs., 22c; do, 8 to 4 lbs., 18c; sprmg chickens, 2 lbs. and over, 30c; roosters, 15c; ducklings, 4 to 5 lbs., 25c. Beans— Canadian, hand-picked, Ib., 6l,4c; primes, 6c. • Maple products—Syrup, per imp. gal., $2.50; per 5 -gal. tin, $2,40 per gal.; maple sugar, lb., 25 to 26c. Honey -60 -lb. tins, 1314c per lb.; ;10-1b. tins, 13>,44c; 5 -lb. tins, 14',ac; '21,f4 -lb. tins, 15c. 1 Smoked meats -Hams, mod,, 27 to 29c; cooked hams, 40 to 42e; smoked • rolls, 18 to 20c;. cottage rolls, 21 to sre- knows it all. There is no vanity at any age more odious than the pretense of omniscience. Thriving Town of 2000 Grew From Four Couples A despatch from Paris says:— How ays How four couples in two centuries multiplied into a community of 2,00G persons is demonstrated at Fort Mar- dyck, a fishing village near Dunkirk, This town is one of the spots in the country that is not' losing population. It owes its thrift to no modern re- forms or to any political upheaval. Fort Mardyck dates back to the French Revolution, when Louis XIV. was looking forward to the time when he would need seamen for his navy. • He established four couples there with the donation of a tract of land to be parcelled out to provide a home for every' newly married couple, The tam• ilies of the four original fishermen inhabitants—Caru, Journiskindt, Be. nerd and Everard—aro still there, and Mr. N, C, Havenga now holds the their descendants have absorbed all post of minister of finance in the new but two parcels of the land given be government of South Africa. General royal decree. Hertzog is the new prime ,sinister, --�- A Man -Eating Tree. NEW HIGH RECORDS "If you can imagine a pineapple IN ALL GRAIN VALUES eight feet high and thicken proportion at its base" said Mr. Salmon S. Chase, Wheat Reaches $1.62 Per the explorer, When talking about a Bushel on Winnipeg Ex- man-eating tree encountered on his travels in l4Iadegascar, "you will have change—Coarse Grains a good idea of the trunk -with a series Follow. of long hairy green tendrils (ualpi) stretched out in every direction. A despatch from Winnipeg says:— „}It' observations were interrupted Working under a high pitch of excite- by the natives, who had been ehrl'lc- ment, traders saw the price of wheat Ing around the tree with their ehri11 ripe -and fall in spectacular moves on voices, and chanting what i was Crlrl the Winnipeg Grain Exchange. were propitiatory hymns to the erect Wheat prices burst through the roof tree devil. in the opening rush of trade, and on 'With. cilli wilder shrieks.. and heavy buying orders shot up to 51.62 chants they now surrounded 0155 of the 24c; breakfast bacon 23 to '27c; sere- a bushel for wheat for October de- women, and, urged lier with the points ctal brand breakfast {,aeon, 29 to ic; livery, by far the highest price in this of their javelins, until. shat ly and backs, boneless, 88 to 38c. Cured meats—Long clear bacon, 66 seasons move. The previous record despairingly she climbed up the stalk was set in Thursday's trading, when and stood on the sunsuit of Pile ecce. to .70 lbs., 517.50; 70 to 90 lbs., 516.80; October wheat touched $1.56te and the 90 lbs. and up, 515.50; lightweight closed at $1.56' . pale, swirling about her. rolls, in barrels, $33; heavyweight "Tho slender pale, quivered a ne 1 rolls, $27. All other principal markets of the ment over her head amt then fastened 1 Lard—Pure, tierces, 171,6 to 18c; world joined in the record-breaking upon her in sudden coils r • p 1 , Iia > g, local market reached enormous proper - tubs 17% to 18%cF pails, 18 to 18%c; rush. The volume of trade on the heck and arms." rihts 20 to 20 c• shortening', (Perces, 16 to 16c; tubs, 16 to 1G1F4c, tions, and wheat prices fluctuated Ship Passengers Discover pails, 1611. to 17c; prints, 171/4 to 18c. Phi the f Expo s $ $ b h 1 War Risks to Peace T Hund her Export steers, choice 7 to 7.40 tvi n e excessive range o six cents 'butcher steers, choice, $6.50 to 56.50; , a us e . Time do, good, 55 to 55.25; do, com. to fair,( Coarse grains followed wheat, $3 to $4.75; butcher heifers, choice, reaching new high record prices and A despatch from Paris s t5s;--Six ,55:25 to 56; do, good, 54.75 to $6; do, fluctuating within ranges of 914 cents hundred American anti English pas - A come 53.60 to $4.25; butcher cows,; for oats, 13 cents .for barley, 23 cents sengers on the Dover -Ostend boat (Hs- ; choice, 54 to 54.50; do, fair, 58 to for flax and 5 cents for rye: covered, greatly to their frigid., that $8.75; do, canners and ,cutters, $1,50, Orders from all the world's loading! war risks are not yet over. Many of TO $2.50; butcher bulls, good, $3.60 to grain markets were executed in the; the passengers were thrown of !hair 54.25; do, fair, $3 to• $3.50; do, bon, local tradin it Prid p . ay mornin ii feet by a violent shift of lin, rudder ogna, $2.50 to $3; feeding steers,, good, $5.25 to 5.50; do, fair, $4,60 to $6;' Rye at $1.31 a bushel is mere than) of. the Boat The lookout had sightedstockers, good, $4.50 to 55; do, fair, double the price it was a year ago. eating mine chr_etly in the pa h $3.50 to $4; calves, choice, 510 to $11;1 Seventy-five per cent, of the 853 the steamer.: Tho signal was given ' do, med.,'$8 to $10; do, grassers, $4 cars of wheat inspected ontheG'.P.R.' by the lookout and the man at the to 55; milch cows, ehoice, 575 to $90; lines on Thursday went No. 3 North-, wheel had just time to put:his helm springers, choice, $80 to 5100; plain ern or, better, keeping' up the ,record hard aport to avoid striking the mass cows, $45 to $66; good light 'siteo , of explosives. 57.60 to $8.60; heavies and bucks, 4 established this season for htell to 85; culls,"52 to $4; good ewe lambs; quality grain,'' This reline. s `sat poser! to be one. of $11 to $1150 bucks $9 to $9 60 culls r —• I many which are lying too .ow iii the B"hD do fob $9 25 • do country points Empire Inters t t B t !and tvhrnh are set in such trmpeslu $9 to $9; hogs, fed and watered, $9.85; ritis estroyers to Guard water to be reached by ismer, sweepers $9; do, of7;cars, $10.25; do, selects, fed s& at and watered, 510.85. • A dConstantinople, from Constantino lel mer in the Atlantic and on the North says:—Two British destroyers passed' Sea to break their chains end conic to MONTREAL: 11513' ons weather as has prevailed ailed this slim - through the Bosphorus into the Black the surface at any time. No. 3, 74Can extra No. No. 2, 75c; do,, Sea on Friday. Their destination isl Testimony to the gradually improv- Flour -Man- spring wheat pats., lets, unknown, but it is believed they are ing economic conditions of sthe pro- No. do, 2nds, $7.90; strong bakers',6gomg•,to Batum, where they will guard vince of- Saskatchewan was given- 57.70; winter pats., choice, $6 to $6.10. British interests, in view .02 Soviet' ptactically unanimously by represen (tolled oafs—bag of 90 lbs., $3,65 to' Russia's efforts to suppress the revolu-' tatives 'of, implement manufacturers, $3.65. Bran, 528.26. Shorts, 580,25..tionary' outbreak in the Caucasus; lumber, land, and mortgage, insurance Mild ings,' $26.25,. Hay No. 2, per region, i and banking interests, as well as the ton, cal lots, $16.50 to $i7. - - head of the Saskatchewan • I Agrienitur• Failur ' e ma � cause se pain, but, - if the al Societies Association at an' econ. lesson that it teaches is taken to heart; I oniic conference held iii the Parlia• creamery, 36c; da, 2nds, 8514c. Eggs, it will ba a growing pain. 1 menti Buildings, Rept'.. A eau i a s,, „„ ur Lila ulterior ' or Brine., r, ,,,,Pisa, where stirveyons Cheese -finest \vests.; 17% to -17743c; of the topographical survey stored their proviadcns for a short time during do, finest eases, 171/z to 17%c. Butter, No. 1 the summer aspasteurized, 361/sc;• do, No. 1 a protection against predatory •animals. .