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The Seaforth News, 1925-06-18, Page 2ONTARIO TROOPS DISPATCHED STRIKE AREA OF CAPE BRETON Sydney, N.S., Juno 14.-A detach - silent of troops, including ,artillery, reoyed out to' Aberdeen in .the Glade Bay area at daybreak. this morning and.proceeded to patrol the British Empire Steoi'Corporatioe pow- er station, believed to have been men - Aced by striking miners. No attempt was• made' to molest the force. A telegram from Zion. James Mur- dock, Minister of Labor in the Do- minion Government, to the United Mine Workers of America executive, announced that he would leave Ottawa to -day for Cape Betn in an endeavor to mediate the differences between the company andits employes. Upwards of "50 members of the United Mine Workers were sworn in as special constables at Glace Bay to- day. They will assist the kcal author- ities in the prevention of fires and pre- servation of order. thousand miners attended the Five house tl funeral at New We.terford yesterday afternoon of William Davies, shot down by a policeman of the British Empire Steel Corporation during Thursday's fight for possession of the New Waterford power station, subse- quently captured and wrecked by the strikers. Three stogies operated by the British Empire Steel Corporation in the lin- mediate vicinity of Glace Bay, and a store at Sydney Mines, were looted by the striking miners Iate last night. Two of the stores in the Glace Bay area` were destroyed by fire. The miners assisted the firemen in saving the: houses in' close proximity tp the 'Glace' Bay stores. Police at Glace, Bay and Sydney Mines stated they were powerless to interfere with the strikers. A detachment of soldiers is now at Sydney. ' Sunday passed quietly, throughout the southern area. - Toronto, June 15. -The appearance of Toronto Union Station Saturday, afternoon •was reminiscent of war days, about 260 of the "regulars," including 100 officers and'men of the Royal Canadian Dragoons, 60 officers and men. of the Royal Canadian Regi- ment, of Stanley Barritcles, and 6 offi- cers and 100 men of the Royal Can- adian Regiment, of London, Ont., em- barking on special train for the mine - strike district in Nova Scotia. The R.C.R. men from Landon, carrying Lee -Enfield' rifles and service kits, and wearing trench hats and khaki uni- forms, ni- forms,'ntany of the contingent show- ing war decorations, arrived at the station around noon, and awaited the atria-va1 of the Toronto contingent from Niagara Camp. CANADA TO HAVE _, NEW NATIONAL ENSIGN Three Suggestions Put For- ward for Distinctive Flag for the Dominion. A. despatch from Ottawa says: - WEEKLY AIR SERVICE SUEZ CANAL TO INDIA British Government Decides to Inaugurate Commercial Line by Next Winter. A despatch from London says; - Falling in line with Australia and The British Government has decided New Zealand, Canada is to have a to inaugurate weekly commercial air new flag which will be recognized as service between the Suez Canal and the flag of the Dominion. An Order- Iiarachi, India, _ Sir Samuel 3, G. in -Council has been pissed appointing', Hoar, Air Minister, announced in the a conmuttee to consider and report: House of Commons, or. the most suitable design for a ('an- It will replace the present fortnight - adieu national flag for use ashore.. lymilitary service now operated by the A distinctive Canadian flag hae so Royal Air Force for strategic pur- far been authorized for use only by poees. Bids for operation are being Canadian Government-owned veswels; asked' froni private concerns and it isi and by other vessels of ('enadian reg -' hoped to start operation next winter.' istry. In the former case the flag is The time for the journey from Lon - the blue ensign with the Canadian don to India is expected to be lessened Arras in the fly, while merchant yes by from five days to :t week. Passen- eels of Canadian registry use the red; gers for India will board the plane at ensign with the Canadian Arms in the; port Said and fly over the '2,500 -mile• fly. I route in from two and one-half to At present, under an Order -in -'three days; the present voyage takes; Council passed some years ago, the eight or nine days. It is hoped night; red ensign with the Canadian Arms' flying later will shorter the flight to bathe fly is flown over the office of- n day and a half. I the Canadian High Commissioner in; From Port Said the planes will go} London, as well as over other Can -,to Kantara and from there along the' adian offices abroad, but the flag hos, Persian coast to Karachi. Part of this; never been authorized, route was followed by 'United States' The committee has three rugger- ;world flyers. The long route across:. tions before it at present. The first; the desert was opened by the Royal is to.continue to use the red ensign air Force in 1921 and mapped for, with the Canadian Arms as Canada's' pilots by the simple means of having, national flag. The $L-eond is to use vehicles traverse the whole of it.I the Union Jack with the Canadian drawing a chain harrow which made Arms in the centre, The third is to, a furrow plainly visible from the air, adopt an entirely new design. ' Fuel depots were established along ,- s the line. 1 5,000 Zulus Dance in , In view of the big passenger traf-I Honor of Prince of Wales fie between England and India the, - ie ;time -saving air route t expected to a %" P be veryn u ar Eventuall • the , Ades etch from Eshowe, Zululand.P P } route, P witho I villline up proposed Imperial; �.. •P P 1"' Union of South Africa, says: -Never er• r, c etytce and bythat time' airship It in ht, vatted experience nes the Prince '11z eeted aerial lighthouse. ise� will witnessed P is of Wales nes,ed such an extra- ordinary spectacle as that presented have made night flying possible. Sue -I of the new *melee is expected . far his delectation to-r:ty. For days, .assto past. Zulu warriors have been stream hasten eat thliehment of an all -air,, ing hither from distant carts in seem route to India. j endless lines f ---a--. i e o n �r the great. ingiy g a inch a and war dance in h honor of the' Brink Saved on 12215 Man i son of their King. The warriors were t accompanied by many of their women, of Niagara Falls 1 folk to spur the dancers to excel Niagara Falls, A despatch from \ z ar. themselves, n g When the Prince and his party took Ont., says: Saved in spite of him - their from 1 r 11 'read. Thursdaynight fir i ref .t o seats on the parade ground the, great gathering of warrior brays the brinks of the Falls , -Alfred E. nowMary's Hosd-: u s11n is in ,t. Cthe I I L stretched •t, far as eye could see gP • while 5,000 picked warjrors of the tal, after being taken out of the mer; finest physical proportinns, lithe and just at the crest by a human chain' naked except for sporane. of leopard. formed by four men. skit, were drawn up ire the fore i.ug=din was seen to plunge Into ground fer half a mile. eix men deep the cataract, and four men, Iiajarian,' hlinla'n Johnson and King,imm di -- to perform p the lane_. They formed a triking pt ure wirer of v formed a chain, went into the enormous spreadingheeddreeees of swiftly towing river and puled Lugs- blaek feathers m 1 •wring yard din to h bank The latter tried to across. With strange _yrations and free lameete saying: '°Pease :et me' contortions the dancers worlmd them g". I don't want to live.' He refused. selves into a romp et= frenzy, nerom- to give the police any reason for his ponied by terrif; ing yetis and dirge- i action. He is a resident of. Buffalo, ; like singing of the women. The dance; culminated in the adverse of the. Trapper and His Dog whole line, with shields aloft covering the faces of the warriors, who, in an • apparently impenetrable mass, rushed A despatch from Wort William to within a yard of where the royal,saya:-Heading back to civilization. party sat. latter a long, winter in the backwoods, '� two trappers stumbled into a deserted Anatole Frances Brain I,calin when skirting thc shore of Cat' Weighed Below Average t Lake, north of here. 'Inside the shack -� ray the body of an elderly trapper, and That the size of the brain -its the carcass of his dog beside him. weight is of very little:importanee, Near the door was found a-tabog- while its .circumvolution's tell the real .gan loaded with a rich catch of fur- story, seems to be once snore proved and laced ready for the long trek with' the announcenle;tt that the brain south, No signs of fou: pray wire of Anatole France weighs but 1,017. die-covt,_d, grams, with en accepted weight for the average man of 1,390 grams, says GirlMisteken for Rabbit: a Paris despatch. The announcement f 1 15 made in the Revue Moderne del is Shot trey Father i Medecine et de Chirurgie as the first s - ! - Saskatoon, June 1 .. Sawaly result of Felix Ragas being conducted wounded by the discharge of a shot- , by Dr. . Regault. The - Circuit-. ,q volutions, on thc other'. hand, are vitt gun in fir. hands of her father, who nonnced "numerous and deep."nustook life pai•t'y liidd'u daughter for It' is recalled that anthropologists a; jack rabbit, at 11idd:a "Lake, north were asttiunded when an examination of Humboldt, Saturday afterr on, of the brain of Gambetta revealed Maly-. Horiri,'four• years of age, is in that it was considerably under the St. Elizabeth Hospital, Humboldt. The average weight:aithough heavier than n Lets struck the girl in tlee meek and oto brain 62 France has proved .`..0 •be, "left side; Found Dead in Shack' University of Toronto Foresters. During the session 1924-25 there were registered in the Faculty of Forestry of the University of`Toronto 43 students, All the members o$ the grachulting class were placed in for- estry work immediately after the con- clusion of examinations, but not telt secured pltsitious which may �^ •� 'girded as -permanent. Some of them are doing temporary work for the summer with the anticipation in sone cases that in the autumn the work will be placed upon a Immanent basis. Two men of the Fourth Year class are working for the Ontario Forestry Branch, one for the Dominion For- estry Branch,, one for ,the Forest Branch of the Province of British Columbia and eight men have gone into the employ of private pulp and paper or lumber companies. All the undergraduates have found work for' the sutrimer vacation, 02 these, the Ontario. Forestry Branch is_employ- ing 26 students on forest survey work between Hearst and Coeht'ane. The remainder of the undergraduates are employed by the Dominion Forestry Branch, the British Cnlumbia Forest Branch, and private firms, Three -Year -Old Carried Away on Step of Auto A despatch' from Sault Ste. Marie, Ont, says :-Harry Lyons, son of Hon. Janie Lyons, James y ns, is the hero of a pecu- liar affair. hero • which undoubtedly would have resulted fatally but for his presence of Mind The 3 year old i son of Frank hose, Bloor Street, placed himself on the steps of an auto while the owner was absent, and, not being seen from the other side of the car when the driver returned, was carried away at a merry clip. Lyons' was apprised of the incident by the, excitement of the parents and others,' and, guessing at the rotite the autoist, would take, stepped on the gas, and by good luck headed off the auto atI a street intersection. Lyons parked, his car across the road to mane sure' the other one would stop and when it did so rescued the child from its peril' ous perch. 1 NEW STATUS GIVEN . COLONIAL OFFICE "Milestone an the Road •of Empire Development," Says • London Press, A despatch from London says: -In P'a Y 'the Houses of Commons Premier Baldwin announced _that the Brit- ish Government proposes to create the office o2 Secretary for State for Dominion Affairs and the office of Parliamentary •Under=Seetetary of State for the Doniniens. These offices, he said woul'c4 be part, i of the Government',s proposed re -1 organization of the Colonial Office. Premier Baldwin slated drat the' new Parliamentary Under-Secretary' would also be Chairman of the Over- seas Settlement Department and that there would also be'a permanent Under -Secretary - For convenience sakethe new ser- e reta ryship would continee to be.vested in Rt..Hon. L. C. I13. S. Amery, See- retary forthe Coloniea,and would: be housed in the Colonial Office, he said: The Prince Minister stated that the existing organization was no longer in correspondence with the actual con- stitutional position of the Empire, was inadequate to .cope with the ex- tent and variety of. work tlr•oem upon it. It fell short mora particularly, he said, in di's'iiuguishing between work of consultation and co•nperation with the Dominions and the administrative, work in connection with the protector ates. Mush is - being made in the British press°.of' the setting up of the new secretaryship of Dominion affairs. It is hailed as "a historic Empire, I change, a milestone on the road of Empire development." Its most. nee - fill function' may be to find a way of keeping the Mother Country and par- ticularly the Foreign Office, in touch. with Dominions' opinion ' The Morning Post's editorial com- ment on the neer departure is evident- ly aimed largely at Canada. We do not think," says the Post, "this offi- cial recognition of the new status will mean a weakening of the bonds of Em- pire. On the contrary, they will now be strengthened. After all, the Brit- ish Empire has been scolded by com- mon sense and because. the Dominions now enjoy complete liberty, they is very little danger of their snaking ex- trafagant use of it. Must Show License Cards When Motoring Into the U.S. A despatch. from Niagara Falls, Out, says: -All Canadian motorists. must now show license cards entering the Ueited'States by the local bridges, according to new regulations which went into effect here. The new ruling follows the method adopted on the Cauedian side, Ii1 case a motorist in- tends returnitig by some 'other route lie must' secure the usual permit card. Prince of Wales Resumes Tour of South Africa A despatch, from Vryheld,° South Africa, says: -Thee Prince of Waits, after several days of rest, resumed his tour of South Africa, Ile made short halts at several pieces, the long- est being at Dundee, the centre of the Natal mal 'fields, where the first bat- tle in the Boer War was fought. H.R.H. spent some time at the scene of the fightiri, at Tallinn Hill and. listened to rennniecences by a Boer and an Englishman who fought against each other dui•i,a: zeta tvat, CROSS -WORD PUZZLE HORIZONTAL 1 -Early form of an insect 6-A kind of lily 9 -Girl's name 10 -Lacking moisture 11 -Note of the dove 12 -Ever (poet.) 1S-Russiah national drink 15 -Changes In position' ,, -' 16 -An acclamation of praise to God 21 -Sad or evil destiny 24 -interjection 25 -To have existence 26-A tribe 23 -in the year of our Lard !sb,br,) 30 -Prefix meaning"with" 81 --Tho bird of peace 33 Bereft, without fricnda 34-Galntd S5-Csneration 37 -Suffix expressing quality -Or state 59 -An inland body of wn.:r 42 -Trim, orderly A3 --Conception, mental tmage 44 -Girl's. name 46 -Personal pronoun 47 -Latin for "for the sake of ex- ample" (abbr.) 48 -Solitary 51-A noted living French philosopher 64 -To- move smoothi.• 56 -Unmounted, 55 5S• -Personal pronoun 55 --Maio child 60 -Boy's name 61 -Te go wrong 62 -Abounds &1 -To make fast as a rope I.THt INTt5(ATIONAL SYNDICATE. VERTICAL 1-Lead•co,ored 2 -Unnecessary activity 3 -Wireless 4 -Hebrew ornrment (Gen. IV 19) 5 -Stupor 6-A horizontal surface 7 -Famous Southern general in Civil War 8 -Malicious burning of property 14-F.ourth musical note » 17-I nterjection 18--Interjection-"Stand as you arel" 19 -Province of Canada(abbr.) 20 -Point of compass (abbr.) 22 -Possessive pronoun 23-The;Virgln Mary 26 -To convert from fluid to solid" 27 -An insect 29 --Receiver of a'gift's . 30-A small rail -bird, 32-A church festival 33 -Symbols •of Easter, 36-Ceflnite article ' 38 -Identical 40-A musical direction meaning 4 "slowly" (.abbr,) 41-A meted 44 -Lacking In weight 45 -Racket, row . -Onaof,various .European . ,,thrushee 53---A small hallway 51 -Girl's hame '(familiar) 52 -Proceed 13 -Without feeling, as if :dead 55 -To give a deceitful Impression' ' 57 -Historical period ONS DINER KILLED, MANY INJURED, I.BY REL LANES IN NOVA SCOTIA STRIKE AREA, Party in Search of Amundsen Try Out Machines "naer A despatch from Glace Bay, N.S., other, some 20 or 30 broken heads and says': -New Waterford, C.B., thethe repulee of the police. scene Thursday morni,cg of a. battle It"is understood that a large squad between; striking miners and British of provincial .police departed for Syd- Einpire Steel Corporation police': for ,nay on a regular train.. Possession of a company power sea- A later despatch front Sydney, N. ., tion, was quiet=at,night. The power says; -Quiet was reported through-. station remained in't1e hands of the ort the colliery dietrict of Cape Bre- miners and was not weltting so that ton on Friday evening and the 500 Theparty arrivedeSaturday on the pumping P P y the Midnight Stan. Oslo, June 14. -Both airplanes of the Norwegian Government's party for the relief of the Amund'sen.Eils worth,_North,;Pole eepedition made successful trial flights under the -mid- night sun he-mid-night'sun last night at Advent Bay, epitzbergen, according to a wireless New' Waterford remained without soldiers and police who arrived, et message from,Roald Amundeen's ship, light and water and the ranee of the noon from Halifax took a quarters tete Farm. P of . . dtstrrc� were being flooded toe lacer foie the present in the plant rho t of ower, steel ' ' t at : ere•. steamer Ingertre, and the planes were Lan 1 1 Casualties in Thursday' morning's At New Waterford, where the 13 -' unloaded .immediately, The expedi tion probably y will leave to -morrow for baths in which 2,000 miners ru had iveclrs-old. sti•ika o,f that United Mine . P Y ,_ , s Dane's :Island•, north est of S � itz- the power plant occupied . -by $0 or Itemisers „ of America against tlie'witge'T y � ` P mere company police, stood at one rates of the British Empire- Steel Cor- bitrgen. dead three seriously:: wounded and• potation culminated in a bloody olash New York, Jane 14.: -The Aniund sen -E .sworth air lane ex edition to 26 or 80 suffering from` injuries of in which one miner was killed and two P P varying, gravity. , score ,wounded, N11. was quiet. • The• tele North Pure hopped offfrom King's ri • •' tower iaait whi •h the corporation Bay, Spitebergen, at 5.15 p.nt. Thurs-. Balham Davis; a.minei, was dead, I. II L P Thurs-'day May 21 just 24 days- ago. ' No and Gilbert Watson, also a miner, 'was in a precarious condition' with a gunshot wound inhisstomach. Two seriously injured police remained in New Waterford while 25 police had been removed' to, the hospital at Syd- ney. • Accompanying the police to Sydney were General Manager H. 3. McCann, of the corporation, and D. A. Noble, chief of the corporation force. McCann was previously reported missing. British Empire Steel Corporation police uncle?: command of Captain D. A. Noble, early in the horning raided the New Waterford power station, taken over by United Mine Workers pickets one week ago. After install- ing themselves within the plant and preparing to re -operate the station, which generates power for the main- tenance of a group ofmines in- the southern area, the patine proteed'ed to protect the plant from attacks by stringing barbed wire entanglements. In the meantime the United Mine Workers pickets had retired to the baseball park, where they were joined by hundreds of miners from the var- ious collieries in the t;cinity; and a counter-attack organized. A despatch from Halifax, N.S., police -rv2, `b'y a surprise attack Titurs , dtly morning.and loet.in 'a counter -et- word was received from the flyers at tack Thursda afternoon when'theirlthe base in the intervening' forty-eight y forces wore completely routed by the hours. minerspresented a deserted aspect' After a week of silence, Amundsen's lieutenants o anal sealed instructions on Friday night. There were eco pick - eta p and no company officials. They' for' use in such. an emergency, and y -1 be organized until two weeks had plant. was a- complete wreck and b0 g yond all Usefulness for weeks to come. elapsed, Looting of the company stores and' I'hts perioi passing,- the Norwegian property has (ceased l and the affairsE Government organized an airplane were not necessary because the wet road his request that no relief party of the colliery towns were pursuing' relief party June 4, putting- Lieut. their usual orderly course. It was' Lutzow Holm in command, Qn the n estimated by the company that loot -1 steamship Ig. entre• Lieut. Holm and ' ing of the company's property during, his party have arrived at Advent"Bay, the night had resulted in a loss of, Spitzbergen,.to meet Amundsen's•ship, • the Farm preparatory to flying along The power plant had been wrs kesi' the edge of, the polar ice*to see if the inside and out, Valuable electrical explorers can be located appliances and instruments had been •torn from fromn their•-: enmlacements and FIRE WIPES (U'V battered as though by &'.edge hammers,) BUSINESS SECTION the windows smashed and two boilers were believed to have been burned be- yond all usefulness through fires hav- ing bees placed under thin white thee were empty of water,'Two very es. Town of Hagersville Thtaten- ed by Blaze Originating aential and valuable pieces of eectri- in Laundry` cal machinery will have to be orderedHagersvil.o, June 15 --At an early from an English firm which made the hour this (Monday) morning, a ser - originals. Weeks must elapse, the ious fire practically wiped out the authorities stated, ,before the plant 'main business portion ofthis town.' says: -Five hundred troops of all can be again operated. Tho conflagration destroyed four ranks entrained at Hakfa;: on Thurs- When the troop train arrived Fri -,business blocks, iriSSudieg E. L. Alma's day night, fully equippted and steel -1 day morning it bore signs of having feed stables and Ilarris's feed stables, helmeted for duty in the Cape Breton, passed through difficulties. Windows which adjoin each other; Burns' fur - coal fields where clashes between -were smashed and the cars scarred by niter° establishment, and the civic striking coal miners and corporation, the stoning they received when pass- barn adjoinieg the market haus°. police resulted in the death of one ing' through the northern colliery The Opera House block, including m• iner, the serious wounding of an-. towns_` •the Smitli hardware establishment and moving picture theatre, is also in good, 54,50 to $5.50; canners and cut- flames, with little Iikeelhood of saving ters, 52.25 to $8; butcherbellegood, anything. 54.50 to $5,50; do, fair, $3.75 to $4; - The fire is also raging in the Nlas- bologgna, 58 to 53.50; feeding steers, erre Hall and the Smith residence, good, $0.50 to $7; do, fair, $6 to $6.25; overhead. At 2 o'clock this (Monday) morning a section of the Hamilton FA Dept. arrived to supplement the efforts of the departments from -Jervis and Cay - $5.50 to $0; -heavies and bucks, $3,50 workuga; , whiandch ithad is nowbeen hopdedoing thatherothice to 54.50; good Iambs, if16 to $16.50; united efforts of these fire-fighters do, med., 51.5 to $15.50; do, curls, 512 will prevent a further spread of the to 518; hogs, thick smooths, fed and flames watered, $12.85; do Lola, $11.75; do, country points,' $11.50; do, off cars, I It is believed that the fire origin- 512,75; select premium, 52.40, •1 ated in a laundry beside the furniture MONTREAL. establishment. THE MARK TORONTO. Man. wheat -No. 1 North,, 51.85%; No. 2 North., 51.82si.: No. 3 North., 51.78%; No: 4 wheat, nut quoted. Man. oats -No. p CW, not quoted; No. 3 CW, notguoted• extra No. 1 feed, 65c; No. 1 59e4p; No. 2 rfeed,_57tec. 1 All the above c.i.f. bay ports. American corn, track, Toronto -No, 2 yellow, 51.29. Millfced-Del., Montreal freights, bags included. Bran, per ton 538; shorts, per ton, 530 middlings, 536; good feed flour, per hag 52.30. Ont. oats -49 to 51c, f.o.b. shipping 01.21ta, ' i1 Ont. wheat -S1.38 to 5 lAlf. f.o.b. . shipping poits according to freights. Barley -Malting, 78c. Buckwheat -No, 2to 80c. • r$ Rye -No 2, nominal. 5 Man. flour, fie pat,Toronto; u rt •. 10, 0to ' do,second ord pat,, 59.50, Toronto. Pas- trflour, bags, $6.50. Straw-Camlots, per 'ton, 58.00 to 53.50. Screenings - Standard,recleaned, ' f.o.b. bay ports, per .on,524.00. Hay -No. 2, pea - ton, 513.00 to L4 Noper511.00 • o 9U 3,ton,t $ 7 1 00'-:rn2xed per n 59.00.to $ t , e pp lower mixed, 6.UC to59.00. 511.00; Chese-New, large 2036 o 21c; twins,..222' - 1 to 22c; triplets, to 3c Stiltos,- 3 to 24; Old, large, 27 to "G twins, 28 to 29c^ trrr ors, 28 to 80c. tButter -Finest creamery prints 37 to 88c; loose, 36c; f eeh firsts, 34c; seconds, to 84c. Dairy prints, 26 to 28c. •- Eggs -Fresh extra., in cartons, 37 to 38c; loose,88c;fresh firsts,34c; seconds, 30c. Live poultry -Chickens, spring. Ib., 45c; hens, over 4 to 5 lbs,, 20c; do, 3 to 4 lbs., 18c; -'spring chickens, 4 lbs. and over, MY., 24e; Jo, corn fed,, 22c; roosters, 15c; ducklings, 5 lbs. and up, 22c. Dressed poultry -chickens, spring, ib., 50c; hens, over 4 to -5 lbs., 28e; do, 3 to 4 lbs., 22c; spring chickens, 4 lbs. and over, M.F., 85e; do, corn fed; 32c; roosters, 205; ducklings, 5 lbs, and up, 27e. Beans -Canadian, handpicked, Ib., 61�.c; primes, 6c. Maple products -Syrup, - per im- perial gal., 52.40; per 5 gal. tie, _$2.30 per gal.; maple sugar, lb , 25 to 26e. Honey -60.1h. tins 13', c; per lb.; 10 -ib. tins, 13tee 5-1b. tins, 14c; 2% - lb. tins: 151 • to 1.6e. - Smoked meats -Hauls„ fined., 30 to 32c; cooked hams, 45 toa4,7c; smoked rolls, 22c; cottage; 2i to 25e; break- fast bacon, 31 to 38c; special brand li eakfast bacon, 35c; i,acks, boneless, 36 to 42c, ' Cured heats -Long coat• bacon, 60 to 70 lbs., 522; '70 to 9u lbs 520.50; 20 lbs. and up, 519.50; lightweight rolls, in barrele, 5i'ii50; heavy- weight rolls, $34.50per hbl. - Lard -Pure. tierces .18 to 18tec; tubs, 181% to 19c; pails, 10 to 19?ee; prints, 20 to 2Ol4e; shortening' tierces, lac;' tubs, 14tec; pal's,. 15c; blocks, Heavy steers, cheice' $7.60eto $8.215; do, good, • $7.25 to53 50; 'botcher steers, choice,57.25 to `50'; do, good, $6.73 to $7; do, rued 56.25 to 56.75;. do, con., 55.50 to 56; hatcher heifers, choice, 87 to $7.25; do ::