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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1923-03-08, Page 8Dominion News m Brief ,1' tevecel River, 13,C.—The, Powell.; 'Ver Pulp and Paper Oo, will embark spring yn a canpaeg'11 of develop.. iib that wilt Teprosent an expend- () elf over flour 1111140119 of, aeon rs on oontpleJted. .A; large ,steam plant f li to be erected:, the liaise unit of which kk Cil costhalf a rnil'lion The Bevel -p tn'ones will extend aver two .years. Medicine Hat, Alta.—Large export eaters of flour are benug received' by the teed milling companies from the Orient and the United . Kingdom, to. which markets large slapments have been made during the past few months, All mills are running to ca- pacity, •and pneetiealily all report that they are unable to supplythe demands for dhow 'grade flours. Regina, Sask.—A feature of the creamery butter production report eaf the Province ofSaskatehewan, is that slighety ever 66 per cent., or over 5,- 000,000 pounds, of the total creamery butter output of 1922, was exported under Government grade certificate. Of this amount 1,700,000 pounds were shl4rped (React to Great Britain, while ;120.000 pounds wont to the "United aces; and the ,balance to other mar- FStets, l:St. 'Catharines; Ont.—An excellent trade was done during the past season by the Niagara District Gra•re Grow- ers. Ltd, The company handled 1,486 tars of grapes, as against 756 in 1921. The graze turnover was $1,043,976, dibble the turnover of the year of of time;tion , Growers wets paid $45. a ten foiesnll ,gnaipoa, excepting Niag- eras, which brought $'42 a ton. Montreal, Que,-eMontre t paid 'tire largeet'en-mutt cf Monne tax dieing tho fiscal year to December 81, the anowet'theing $18,196,749. Toronto' came next with $11,742,770 end Win- nipdg third with $4,019,399. The total collected income tax theotughcut the Dominion in the same peeled was $65,517,222: Bathurst, N.B A.n important ad- dition to the industries od the Mari- time Provinces 'rte being made by the erection of a large newsprint mill here by the Bathurst Co.' The work of con- struction was started on October 2 last, and it is hoped that the first ma chine will be :turning out paper by June next, The initial eapaeity of the mill will be about 55 'tons daily, and provisions have been made foe a fur- ther extension to manufacture 110 tons daily. Sydney, N.G.—Organized by the British Empire Steel Corporation, for the declared .purpose of helping its employees to solve their housing 'emb- lems, the Empire Housing Co., form- ally opened offices here. The corpora- tion owns many building lots through- out the city and len evolved a plan whish, it is said, will 'assist its em- ployees to acquire building sites and to finance the construction of homes on easy terms. CANADA TO GET ONLY FOURTH OF CLAM Asquith Awards Dominion S8,O0O,000 as Settlement of Debts Standing Over from War. A despatch from London s•tys:— E'ormer Premier Asquith, as arbitra- tor of the differences between the British and the Canadian Govern"- Merits, overn-inerts, relating to an adjustment of debts standing over from the war, '.has handed down his decision. award- ing Canada $8,000,000 as a settlement, The Dominion claimed $32,900,000. )3oth sides accepted Asquith as arbi- trator, and for his work he is to re- ceive £1,000, The dispute was the result of finan- cial transactions which meek place be- tween Canada and the Imperial Gov- ernment during the war. While hos- tilities were proceeding the British Govermuent received advances from Canada of something over one thou- sand million dollars. The British Treasury, on their part, supplied Can- edian troops with food, clothing and _munitions, and also British currency for paying Canadian troops. At the request of the Chancel:nr of the Exchequer interim adjustments of the account tock place between the i; two Governments at various dates up l till March, 1920, at which, date the Imperial Government, owed Canada ;over one hundred million dollars. 5'When the final adjustment of accounts came to be dealt with a decision bud to be reached on the question of ex- change. The Canadian Govermuent held diet payments made to them on account of the debt should ire credited to. Canada "at exchange rate ot; the day" on which the payments were C made. On the other hand, the .. British 1that sterling t T9•eaaur heldn r a . hus t be n'34Iq III it, 4a'.i,�;,8 THERE ARE LOTS MORE LIKE THIS in IRELAND In their syetereetic destruction' ell floe' property tot sympathisers and', -sup- porters of the Irish Free State Goyernnjent, 't1ie rebels under de "Valera tirade an attempt to raze the home of Sir Horace Plunkett. The attempts did not meet with sufficient success to satisfy the rebels, so :they returned the next day, again fired' the house and completed 'fie destr•uctiorl. . t'`. The Danger Years o f the Teen -Age. BY H, M. MORRIS; A young Hiatt came to Toronto re- cently front the farm to seek ,employ players to learn the timelier :and dis- tribution, qf employees, ewe enquired about the 'age at whi'eh they would take young- workers, In the one of stilled of semi-slcilled occupations the employers, with scarcely an ext'eption, stated they did not employ adolescents ment, and so far has not been suc- under sixteen years of age. •"They cessfal. He has enquired at the office are not strong enough," "they waste of many commercial, industrial and too 'much material," "they do not manufacturing establishments to face work," "they have no sense of respori- the following guestiens: "What stand. si'bility' are 'the thingsemployers say ing lead you when yo•n left school? about than,What, then, is the re - Have you had any experience along Ault? Snell children find employment the 1•ine of work, required in this in- in unskilled occupations and blind dustry? What -age are you?" The alley jobs, leading nowhere and only young man informs' me that he re- toe frequently With bad environment. plies as follows: "I . passed the en- They shift about from one occupation trance at thirteen years of age and to another' with little opportunity to have worked on the farm ever since acquire skill or to increase their earn- and am now twenty-one. My parents ing power. They soon reach the maxi - wanted Inc to go on to school' but I Mum earning capacity which they find did not realize the need se I do now. insufficient to maintain decent' stand- Now I have conte to the conviction Ards of living:as men and woageeft At that farming is not my job and before twenty-one they usually . find, .their; it is too late -I want to gee into the selves without a trade, .or any. special vocation that I dart mete my life skill, too old to.start over again, and work." on tide way to increasing the' ranks of This young maid is typical of teams, unskilled and caeuel labor. deeds and even thousands of young No child can b'e adequately educated men who leave the farm for the urban for life by, fourteen years of ages The centres. It is not, as is -Commonly sudden transition of such a child fioni supposed, education that 'lures then school: to earning; aisd'espedialiy away from the farm. This young nap. bf the kind; he, must accept, 'is' too and 'many others left the farmand complete and too dangerens. tried some other vocation in spite of This sudden -transition. from. one their lack of education. -Ask 'any-' of ;joint control of the school and the these young men if they are in favor home to the apparent freedom of:wage of the Adolescent Seheol. Attendance earning only too frequently ressilts in Act, ,which requires 'boys and girls to a retrogression of character just: at Will Have Grain Trade Probed. stay at school till they are sixteen .the time character is becoming' fixed. W. C. Smith, a farmer member of wears of age and you will invariably The complete removal , of the school the Alberta Legislature, has rueceeded heel r, "Well, it would have bean a' control and the loosening of the horde in getting through a resolution asking blessing for me if my parents hnd,:cottrol -when a boy begins to earn for a full and complete investigaticn , made me go to school and I suppose, money are responsible for much of into tee grain trade of Canada. I they' would have dere so if it had been • the "rowdyism" so apparent in adol- 1 cempulsoty." Or if you ask any of ascents, credited at par of exchange, namely, the 7,000 people who are attending; "In all civilized lands criminal sta- 54.80 2-3. ; night 'classes in the Technical School, i tistics show two sad and significant The interim agreements were MeldToronto,, where they may take courses facts: First, ;that adolescence is pre - by Canada to be tentative and for', in printing, plumbing, electricity; me-. eminently the criminal age when: most first commitments occur and • when most vicious careers are begun; sec- ond, the proportion of ju'venileidelin; quents seems to be' evevywhere:'in- cre'asing ' - • • 'he'r reit of th ' 'pm:until' . t.' 7. t• e T ran o dl.vonile GI , Court, shops the egiis' of children brought into. court during 1920'. The percentage's of, One:ages are: the convenience of the British Trees-' chattics, steam and gas e,rgutes, ur -, The :Slidell Government, how-; whiles, architecture, millinery, do - ever, mestic. science, sewing,: nursing and ewer, held that there agreements were final and they were ,not disposed to etc:, you will no doubt get a reply in reopen them. fever of an extension of the compel- givi his award,' sort' school age to sixteen,. years. . II. H. Asquith. in giving has allowed the exchange on all trans-' The Adolescent School Attendance actions covered by the interim agree- Act was passed by the Legislature in menta to stand, and the outstanding,1919, under the, Conservative Aclnnin-. ianadiat-G v •n- isiration, when Hon. H. J.. Cody +'$.5 L.,». 1:_i_r balance due tothe C t (ao ur Age ' 7'yea rent is to leo seated at the "rate ofwas Minister `f- Ptiueatton,' I3'y pro- A e• 8' oars . .. .. ,... 28 ( g Y:14 ;d4 .3021$ 13.55. the day ' when payments are me,le:j niommatton nf. thu,.Lleutetiant av,•e>zrou. Age -9. years .. . le on the 13th da • of July 1920 The euir-tance of the decision- means' mac 10 y ' + ,Age 10 years that Great Britain has paid the hulk i Section 3 canseihto"t'dreen Stept'ian Age 11 years • • , of her balance to Canada a1 f de her, 1rl, 21, requiring that all boys anc1 •Age. 12 years gn•1s between -the ages afefourteen.and' predated peunds„but has r:^dived pa. Age :13 yeaeS t h t i;f' - value for theta. The small amount . till sateen ur lusnc d e acaoun ec of Age 14 'ears due to Canada':vill be pail at current rate of exchange, To Fix Date for Easter. Lord Desborough, representing Flr1- tisit business organizations, will at- tempt to have the date tor Raster per- manently fixed as flip second Sunday in April. at the meeting of the inter- naatioual ' C`ongress of Chambers of ton 11 11 0mon r. • as beim.; meter at schaal of engaged Age 15 years 20.1.0 in soanc useful etuploy,ulent. Children Age16 '....:..::..... . ' are nnt'coinpeiled to lees- Moine to: at- ybars „ 2.6 3 tend .3cirooi but: 'school .boards ,are' Age unksiay:n , . , . 1:.1.40 Ice at Niagara g f; The, table simws that: 39 net' "delft; 4 urged Hint r of isionfil' ire thorn g GI g Dislodged by Explosives ; a practical training in theYionte -lice] of the delinquents' are, 14 or 1.5 Tvbarkt j or by several school sections .conbin- -0f age. Judge Mott point, out 'that A despatch from Niagara Falls,!;eg for Continuation Classes, up to the age of 14 the school and the Ont: saysIdo-shooting far 'the' home -have joint, control of the -child. i fire following; argument ft t rite ,Act spring Itis cmntnenced in the Niagara; was advanced by le. P. Gavin of the As soon as the school givesup its;con- River gorge. Employees of the Nia-' Department of Tdu'cation. in an ad- time there is "a sudden rise in the fro gars Gorge Railroad Company started;,laess befare .the Trustees' and ?;ata-' qucncy of Betty crines. One must(son- their annual work of dislodging over- payers' Association hi 1921, "At Pres- chide there . should' be some kind' of hanging ice Iron. the walls ofthe cut children are allowed to leave school influence nuud eontrrtl duringgorge. 'school at. fourteen yeatr4 of age re -i these deb dangerous and difficult The 'ice dein; the early thaaring; udleao of their attainments. wiehant' Veitt's of the adolescent's lite. weather is _dangerous to ttaffie enany preparation for wage-earning and the trolley tracks at the foot of the without an opportunity to find' out cliff, and all masses that appear to. what work they are Hest fitted to do Bugler of Balaclava ' be loosened are shot 'with at heavy in life, They are not nature enoughie charge of explosives. : either in body,in minor in char- S af'I Ioaa?e in Ireland Residents at the north enol of the; acter to gain amime to siesrairle ' y sit- consider the' shooting' one of the' employment. The doors of skilled em- A despatch ;from Belfast pays:— beet signs of spring, ; ployntent where ll ey might continue ThonuasFinlay, 0110 as :bugler soimd- 1 to learn something ueefinl are closed ed "ehargo" for rho gall'ant:Light Bid-. Men 01 ever} nationality secaredtouch youthful workers, The Tech- gale at Balaclava,,' and thus started status of citizens of `Canaria duriu;; s � Meal Branch of the Department of the wild ride uneortalized by. Tenny the fiscal year ending March :11, 19..2., i Education bas made surveys in ten son, died on .Tuesday at Drogheda. Altogether I0,360 foreigners were maI Ontario cities -fbi the purpose of de-Fiiilay's detuth follows closely that timlahzed: Americans with 2,206 and' 1f` of chni- of Thomas S'haw, :a member of the Itertninfng the need, t any, to Russians with 2,060 led in the number cal education, sand the nature o -l' it, in famous 1irigade, who died' at London, of persons who became naturalized' n ala" In calling upon em- Otit. Sunday night. each community. r iy g p i I Cena< farts. IN RABBIIT.BORO THERE.'5 SOME.THING ABOUT YouR pAUGHT;i=R ADOPTED i ' FRENCH'' R' 1ER A.:despatch from.. Paris says:—Pre tis; molralisartion or nee of colored mier"Ponreare has decided upon' three .trope s,,,,, nal-Yna:riil ttion weelet mtpo'tmat,lnees1Tes- to subdue Ole Ii4erll i}c#G$po mdRilq;!MNtiiirtnN,!'In view Ruhr. They involver of )he Pfetnteets stat'oment on the city 1; Infliction .of the dentin penalty alto' Ijuhr Was Beet:pied that no sel- —.by' arrangennent- seith;..th1e Ditgl'tsh diol• or raileeadlrian •,dvpnlltl; bs lnvhll- -up'ofi all 'Germans ' •eepo'nsible for iio's1, s0' colored troops are dtpt to be fatal railioatl aoeidents, 2. Imprisonment of, all defaulters of the 40 per cent. coal tax until they pay. 8. 1tTdvenient of "colored" as dis- tinat from"black" troops into the here. he first se the final step rn-gnv- Ruhr. i l-n'g tseces�sary •powers to the French' These steps have not been decided anti Belgian commanders to' :admin- , upon without pave deliberation,and t or the." enrYiah' railroads and tiff"•, p grcwlY G obaceb the''decision regarding ordered troops soeond .pi;,gvides foe the collection 01 is said to be 'due ito the insistence •of an internal revenue tax ori" ,. Marshal Foch thelt't+he colonials'have and -alcoholic 'beverages, despatch from Dusseldorf says:— Pwo decialene, haying an important, hoa1ring on d'he a'dministrution of t'he til m.elane and the Ruhr by the Altai' aril announced at:Prench,hetid,ai.uaxte,r,. been absorbed' to'-su'eh an 'extent in In the deereo "':promulgating the e the French army that thele is. no reel- dedi<rons the In$er-Allied 'hill): Cant-` son whyMoroccans and Annaniites rnission's'.ri`hl to'„ope_at' '^ e rail � C nth. should not be used for purposes' of roads along. iheleftban] of'the ;Rhine occupation is turned over formally to the army Tisa Natsrial 1'tesoueeee'Inte'- Ilgenco Service of the Den art-; ineiiit of the Interior at Dania stl�s:• '.The‘ urea 01 Ontario is i07,- 262 square ,nines, of whist 365,- 880. equ.tte; miles is l•li?d,;card 41,382 square utiles it t5t; ltea The "province's'-`'poputatidsa ata 1.921 was '2.03 062 0fi whom 1, 220,979 were rural re id its and 1;707,258 were tt there Tho population ovspreeente all aver,- age of_ 8,02 per square mules. There`' are Ci the'jifovineo i25' cities of 10,000 and ever: 'and --46 cities' and towns of 5,000 and : over,:' -In 1921.of a tota:l:'imeti- • gration into Canada of 148,477, c 42 percent,, or: 621572'eettled,in • Ontario. There were,_ill 686,844 pnpile attending public , schools, ancte$30;026,435eNtss ex-, "derided on education in schools under' .public , control, Several of the Ministers have sug- authorities, partly 'as',;a precautionary” --- — gested that keeping the 1922 class measure to guarantee the safety, pf with the colors will he sufficient, but •the troops ef, occupation, The Col•'' this idea' hes been out -voted,' and the 1. ogne bridgehead "area• occupied by the alternative presented was either pars' British is not included in this order, .e Week Markets a� Toronto. Manitoles wheat—Nos 1' 'Northern,, $124%, • $2aftitoba 'oats -.le -Nominal Manitoba baeley�Nomrnal,;;; All the above, track, Bay ports, Amenacan earn—No..,8 yellow, 91c; Nos 2, 89'r%'c, Barley—Malting, -59 tp Ole,,aceord- ing to freights outside. Buokwheat—No., 2,.18. to 80c., Rye-•-No.:2,,. 84. to, 86c. Peas --No, 2, $1,45 to $1.50. 214 - Del > 1MPnti,eal : freights, bags, inclndedr Brany.Tpex ton, 526;. shorts per ton, 528; middlings, $28.53; goad. fe d fionr, Ontario :wheat—�lo».; 2 white 51,14 to 51,10, according -.to freights outside. Ontario No. 2 white oats -48 to 50o. 'Ontario .corn—Nominate , Ontario flour—Ninety per; fent. pat,, in jute bags, Montreal, prompt ship.- ment, hip- nient, $5.10•.te $5.20;'Toronte basis, $5,05 to 55.15; bulk .seaboard, 54.95 to $5,00.1.. ., .r Manitoba flour=l'st'pats., in cotton sacks, $7:10 per,bbl; and pats., 56.60. Hay—Extra No. 2, per ton; track, Toronto, 514; mixed, $11; Clover,. $3. Strata—Car Nets,: per 'ton; track, To - onto, $9,60, -Butter•—Finest peeteurizedlacreanm- ery, eolith, 50 to, Ole; prints, 51 to 52c; ordinary creamery 'solids, 46 to 48c; prints; 48 to '49c; dairy, 29c; cooking, • 1„5 to 18c, Eggs' -Fresh gathered, 37 to 39c; held, 26 to.29c. 4 to 5 lbs., 22 to 25e; turkeys,' young, 13. Jibe, and up,26c; do, old; 20C:, Live Poultry.: -Chickens, 'mills -fed, over 5,1bs., .26c; do, 4 tp 6 lbs., 22c; do,. over 0 lbs.,. 22e; .do, 4 "to.'5 lb's.,; 10c;: dei; 2 'to 4 llbs.,,'15"to 180; hens;' over 5 lbs., 25c; do, ;4 to 6 lbs., 18e; do,•3 to 4'lbs., 15 to '180; roastertf 12 to. 15c; duc$lings, 'lever 5 -"lbs.; 25 to 30c; d'o, 4 too 5 'lbs., 22 t 25e; tirSkeys; young, 10 lbs. encl. 25c; •do, ol'd, Dressed 'p'oiiltr3e Chiekens;. mrllc fed, over Vibe., be., 30M;' do "4 to 5 1'55., 2,0c; : do, over 5 lbs., 260 d'o,�'4 to.5 Ilse., 240, de, 2 'tel 4' lbs:,_ 22c; hens, over 5 lbs.,' 25c;' do, 4 to:6 lbs:, 24c, do,.3 ito 4 l'bs, 29c; roosters, 22e; 15c:'•, r n i• 's:' 28 'to 806•' do <Uacllings,.l'gve b ,r , Potatoes—On ` track; 'I 'orontde'75 to a,0e per,90, , bag. P' .,,Heavy;,s,'te41s, choice $7:60 to w'8, butcher steers choke, $$6 50" to $6.75; (1q, geoci,.56 to 36:50•;" do, meds; :15.50 to,$G do, eves ., •55 to 55.50r; butcher heifers,..Cheiee, $6..25 to, 56.50; do, med.,55,50: to $6 do; coni ; $5 to .$5.50; ' hutch- • caws choice, $4.50 to: $5.25; r. , do, mel 58 to $4 canners and'but tors, $2 to 52.60; butcher. bulls; good, 54 to $5; do, con, -$3' to 54; feeder steers,. good, 55.50 to $6.00; do, "'air, $4 to $5; Stockers, good; 54 to $4,50; do, fair, $2,60 to' 53.50; :calves, choice, 512:50 to $13; 'do, hied:, 59:, to . $11.50; do, corn., 55 to ,p8• Milch. `cows, chprca, ,570 to IO6; pringers, choice, $80 to $100; ambs choice, $13.50 tb 515; sheep, choice 57.59 to $8; do, culls, $3 .to 54; bogs, red and watered, 510,60, do, .6,0)5., 59.75; do, `country points, 59.50; 'Hogs quotations are based'• on the prices of thick, smooth hogs, eels! on a graded basis, or selectee • sold: an the graded basis, bring a premium of 10 per cent. aver the price of thick, smooth ]togs. • Montreal. Cosa; Ain. No. 2 y ellow 93 to 94e. Oats, C'an, west., No. 2, 64 to 66e• do, No. 3, 53' to 60e; extre. No.. 1 feed,". 56 to 57c• No. 2 lecdi white, 541o, 85c;, F'1'aur, Man:. spt'irvg, lgli sat.' pats., 1.sts, $7.10; ends, $0t00i strong bakers, Giant Zeppelin ReadySoon pp for $baited States Navy A despatch from:' London, says: The -eonstrni,etion of the new Zoppelcn ordered by rho'' United States Navy, will be finished ;soap at the Zeppelin .: w'o'rks at Friedrichshafen,-aceording to 'a despatch fr101n Berlin, The nit ship will be the largest ever con-:; stritcted and will start from Berlin for'Cliicagoeailyiii.June.:Itwill :fly .. under the American flag,; but opei at - ;ed ;by •German mec'h'anics and airslrip- - lexperts.' The trial' flightwill begin fn April" and • several :Over : the., Alps are pr.dpesed When everything ds 'perfeeted. tflol, air liip' will start for .'. 'Berlin, where the final preiraraticns for the trans-Atlantic flight Will' bet made. Tw enty:fve Birthdays,,,,:• in One Hundred Years A despatch from Winnipeg says:-- !. Although'+�ecltnica7ly he has had only Heads Educatiogal Association, • !'twenty-three birthdays, J. 8. Steven- `'' Joseph Grey Elliott, of ;1tingst0n,'. son' of Winnipeg has entered his hurt- t president of the Ontario Educational;eeeebh year hale and hearty: Association, which meets in Toronto., Mr. -Stevenson was born February 29, in Raster weep, in:;conjuncteen with 1824, and has been cheated out of.! the National Council of Education, Mr, I about 75 'birthdays. IIo even skipped num,' is on the executive committees a leap' year because the day was' of both orgamr ations rightfully his in 1900, when by a' .' ".quirk ofthecalendar he was missed 56,40; winter pats., Ghoiee, $fi,50. again. 112r. Stevenson caro to Can- Bl,an, este, hag 90 lbs., $8.16 to $3.2b. ada when he was nine years old, and Bran, 526 to $28, Shorts, $28 to $30: forty yearn ago moved from. Ontario'` Middlings, $33 to e35, Hay, No, 2, per. to Manitoba. ton, -car- lots, $14 to $15. . 52to' Butter, choicest creamery, � . , 630. Eggs, fresh, 47c,' Potatoes per General Degoutte bag,-car;lote; $x:.05 tsrs' 0. Light butcher 'steers and` heifers, Issues I'roc��xrlatlOn $6:50; choice baby beef, $7 per cwt,; good. fat dairycows, 54.50;; do, cow., , A despatch Trot-T.Gologiie says.—';' P $3, to 58.25; than heifers and steers; 53 'General Degoutte iseued a'proclama.-- to $3.60; canners and cutters, $1.60 to tion that all Germans in t:he-Ruhi who;: 2.75 good heavy lsulls, $6; do, red., obey the orders of the French military'.'s 4' s{eeali, 5 ;'nlgdusr .$g to $3.60' ., .... ,z .r t xbeing) brood' smalls, $10'; `menti lotg;t$9:60; corn, , authordts anti pay the a es • ones, 58, Hoge, selects .end,g qd; leveled upbrt "thont, will be protected, quality butcher hogs, $11; 'thick" Frit freta ehai'gea of treason try rho Gera q yman Government, , It is also .proclaimed that the A'li Iiias„a4i11':"not teavetthe Rnhi <untrl all'`, s- for oho itr .th .accu r a •tial' lrtiu5ltte, ter Y g e I tlrp... .. forcers have been revolted • " ; F'e i Caecho-Slovakia Sends "CQlee tO Fr nce1 ' 1 1 t. ' A dasrS'alfbh front "V e u 1. b,—Ctrs tlfqusand.tiohs of coke ,xro, eing ship, Civil war in Iralatnd has ceasecl`atul ped frorri-tzeche-$lovalcra;.overe- ue given eine, ,be e1 widespread,. orgy.,, of tria to France daily, and the °Auetriaia crime nvitltout poi, 111 al' sfgniiieanee.:Gevei:ix'tilent hie ordeicd sosk0ade tri; expedite the shipment.'" It rs "eajf Austria fears sabotage by railroad men' would lead to unpleasant ewe - plications. Czech. miners who were being trans - (government has the rebel tomes eon- ported to France, and who ;were held gtely on the run and is` likely toup in Austrian territory, were allowed keep them so until the trouble ceases•' to pass upon the Government's order. He describes then as merely-soatter-Should Austria provoke theca to it, e¢ roving bands under robber cirie£s the Czechs alight cut off her eoa:l Mid : robber gang organizations. No supply. district, adds the correspondent, can• ✓e------ long be termed a rebel stronghold and I l gyaii l las Bumper the Government gro;v's stronger daily. harvest of Sugar Calle ! DON'T KNOW I IU F WHIT IT IS _` corn fed hogs, 59.50. tat G�'aJ® � 1ti�1 ,: • o d7R�i2AA vI� k�I:IIJPi E IN ORGY OF CRINa But. Ge3 Ve n n1;:: •u, a ; SStrongeu>]l2aily," Sacs LYQ; !$ London • Express;',. A dospatedi from London says3— which 't!he :Fenn of law are steadily erushing... This is the substance .of a lengthy survey of tyre situation in Ire, land sent by the Dublin corf•espondent 04 the Daily Express. Het sitys the pat+"'from g;Wn German ;�r,mbaseador Lunches ,saysA:—desIlawaii'sch sugar caneWs.011iarivcit At Buckingham ,Palace opining the y ea't"ended ':test September 30 was th'e liu!gest, iii er ht ye to 'se- , A dee:patch Rom :London s ayee.- cording to .an eethl ate 'by the Depart - Foe the first time since thewar, the meat of Agriculture. Production "cine German Ambassador; Die Gustave the year was placed at 1.,184;000,000 Stahmer', and his' wife, lunched with bounds, or 13 ,per cent, more than that the Ring and Queen at Bueleingliam for the previous year, and, larger, than Palace on Thursday. the 'average for tide ` previous ten OH ,THAT fHRT's1 t•i pur+1L3,0NNv ! THE }'ooR 5:1MP HE'S HAj4ML ,55! Itfiss Muni-el•Corkery, of St, bolos, N.B., wa•s admitted to -Ibe bat' before the Court of Appeals recently. Miss .Corkery enjoys the dr tinction of be- ing the only woman barrister practic- ing law in the provinc° her.peedecee- ser, Miss M,aioel P, ;French, .who was admitted; as a ''barrister ;51 New .. Brunswick on N•tvveinbee 21, 1007,'htav intogBsir tis'1i nce reCoved from, the pttrvince molnxmhiia Plans aro being 1aptdler .completed , in•coneeetion witui the ploposed (Ian- adian train t0 'France to: contain ex- hibits of the products of ' Canaria. After the temple -den oe the tour of Frgmee, Which wild c:nbt'ace all',the principal centres, 'a statianory exhibit will he ;plat ,up in- ono of the la i;go bnl�dlaugmi to France Qne'proposall is to ereet;,;'a 1015g01- d-1010001 giving .0 ;,"bird's-eye'-vlerJ of (lnttada, At the.sta- tienery exhibition,