The Seaforth News, 1923-12-27, Page 7IIELLEKIC THRONE VACANT PENDING
DECISION OF THE ATI AL ASSEMBLY
King George of Greece and Queen Eli abeth Withdraw
from the Country, Temporarily at least—Admiral
Coundoriotis Appointed Regent.
A despatch from Athens says:—'tears came to her eyes as one woman
George II,, King of the Ilellenes, who after another darted from a group of
succeeded his father, King Constan- her friends, and in tears, and with r,
tine, onthat monarch's abdication, has trembling lips uttered, "God be with
you:
been requested by the Government to
withdraw from Greece, temporarily at The King's turn, shed uniform
e fo
when a guard in picturesque
least, but whether he will be permit- Clasped the monarch's hand, fairly
ted to return depends upon the na- shouting "A safe voyage and a speedy
tional assembly. Accompanied by the return."
Queen, who was Princess Elizabeth of Premier G Yona.as was among those
Romna
aIle, he departed from Athens who
_for,.Baeharest, Quee said farewell to the King
'Phe Official Gazette publishes al Qtleen at the landing stage,
decree Appointing Adnliral'coundori-1When the party embarked
were no cheers; the crowd w
chis, regent. He took the oat 'for
the Cabinet on Thursday. a Th
Y
e •nm
x ent'li
as informed armed the dipl
1
p
representatives that the depai•tu�%ej
the King and Queen is only tenipor.
pending settlement by the constituo
assembly b oP
Y the question ion of the regime,
It is understood that a decree tvil
c
fa 'e we 3 w is an the e•
King r
g
y oxide
p
waving g his hat as the Daphne steam
away.
The day passed in absolute
thens. It was the name day
Plastiras, one of the leader
revolution, and thousands vi
be :promulgated prescribing as . a -tions, ead quarters to present congrat
formula for the deputies' oath "faith A despatch- from Paris says;
in and devotion to the interest was learned that nothing in the n
country, instead of "devotion to the coming out of Greece has caused
constitutional king," as heretofore. mer Premier Venizelos to modify
The departure of the sovereigns any way the attitude he has held si
from Athens was without incident.
• They traveled by automobile - from
the palace to the point . of embarka-
tion, theroutebeing guarded at in-
tervals by cavalry. The King wore
civilian dress and maintainedpetfeet
composure; the Queen was attired in
mauve- with a large picture hat and
carried a bouquet of flowers. She
seemed upset at the leave taking and
and
there ANZAC PREMIERS COMING TO CANADA
axed Canada is -to have, two distinguished visitors when en Premier Bruce, right,
Gr. -Australia, byAustralia the 1
e ou hPul and successful Y s cc ssful chis
f f
the
e Australian ust n
Government,
nt
ed and Premier Massey, left, the popular and veteran chief of the New Zealand
Government, cross the Dominion en route to their home, Pretties 19ruce will:
c'1m .spend some time at the Capital negotiating upon trade conditions between
of
Canada and Alit nr
Australia, end Premier Massey will speak at several ganadlan
sit of f cities, and also disoues the sending of New Zealand malls across Canada in
ttla-II' order to secure more speed
—it British Labor Protests Hymns
ewe on Rich and Poor
for -
e beginning of the recent agita
there resulting from the election.
fernier Premier is still waiting u
the situation growing out of Sunda
balloting has been made entirely cie
and the belief is still expressed
quarters close to him that he will
accept the invitation to return nal
there is a united call from the Gr
people for him to do so.
Three Peeresses Have Seats
in British Commons ,PAPERS FOR OTTAWA
A despatch from London says:—As Doxninio
a result of the election three peeresses n Government Pre.
will sit in the House o f Commons when
it convenes January 8 and will have
the company of their husbands, who
sit in the Rouse of Lords, when re-
turning .Another valuable collection of loco-
`froin late sessions. meatsconnected with the early his
One of these is the Duchess of tori' of Canada, has been presented to
Atholl, wife of the Lord Chamberlain, the Dominion Government, It has been
who will represent the Kinross and given by the Earl of Dartmouth and
western division of Perth and Kinross,consists of 750 original documents
Scotland. She was Katherine Macollected by his ancestor, that Earl of.
jory Ramsay, daughter of Sir James Dartmouth who was that
of
Ramsey. It the last election her eon- State in Britain M 1772,•Of particular
stituency returned.a national Liberal interest are the papers relating to
unopposed. The Duke of Atholl also Nova Scotia .and Prince Edward Is -
heads aBritish-syndicate which is to land, then called the Island' of St.
invest $3,000,000 in a sugar factory in John, Bary conditions records con,
Jamaica. cerning early in Labrador,
Lady Terrington, the wife of Baron including letters by Lieut. George
Torrington, as a Liberal, was elected Cartwright, who explored the country
in the Wycombe division of Bucking- a century and a half ago. He writes
Izamshire. She was formerly the wife incidentally "All' are alarmed at the
of Guy Ivo Sebright, who died, and be- report that Labrador is to be annexed
came Lady Terrington five years ago. to Quebec."
Lady Astor, Conservative, is the edThere is an original letter Governornresf
third of the group of titled women N by Thomas 8, to t ,. tshof
whose husbands sit in the upper houses New York in' which
e't a British h ve
ernment in w]nieh he claims: "I have
French Trawlers Aided by annexed the Six Nations to the Crow
Radiofind have brought Canada to
in LocatingFish such a
.pass that they will be careful: how
they disturb the King's subjects here."
A despatch from Paris says:—Even There is a' document.
the poor fish of the deep is no longer which 17ate2
s cl that it 1773 Nova Scotia has s7w62
exempt from the horrors of.tlle radio, inhabitants and 1,126 In •
for his presence, if he travels" inIndians, sheep. well
schools as is his wont, is to be broad- stated
cows, t, t in 1774oand yonly one
cast by wireless on detection,even stated t ail n theta was only and;
v n vessel sailing between Halifax and
though: he swim 100 miles from dan• Britain and she
gerous land. made only two voy-
Such are the instructions issuedages annually.
'the French navy and .nt These papers havebeena
Y the merchant to the Dominion through the Canada
marine. Messages bearing tidings off History Society, recently
herring or other sea delicacies will be through Sir. Campbell organized
picked up by Government radio sta-I p Stuart.
tions at St. Nazaire, Brest,Cherbourg ears
g Canada Dears England
Havre and Boulogne, whence they will
j
be relayed to the fishing,,eentres, In
this manner twelve schools have been
in A despatch from London says:—
Ileo The Town Council of Bath, in which
tion Labor members predominate, has pro -
The tested against the day school hymn
nail books which have been in use many
y's years in' County Council schools. There
ar, are hymns saying Providence has de -
in fined the status of'the rich and the
not poor. The Bath Councillors' object to
ess a stanza in one hymn especially, as
oak follows:
The rich man in his castle,
The poor man at his gate;
God made them high and lowly,
And ordered their estate.
The Councillors say the hymn is out
of keeping with present tendencies in
Great Britain, when Labor is on the
threshold of assuming government. It
is expected other town councils having
a heavy labor membership. will follow
suit. .
VALUABLE HISTORIC
seated With Documents on
Early History of Country.
vn
Prof. J. G. Fitzgerald
Profesor of Hygiene at the Univer-
sity of Toronto,' and director of the
Connaught antitoxin laboratories, who
has been appointed a. member of the
International Health Board, an organi-
zation supported by the Rockefeller
Foundation. It Is a coveted distinc-
tion in the sgientine world.
Man is an unfinish
ed article, and
far` rm.= perfect. -silt Oliver Lodge,
by Amateur Radio
ed in a day, whereupon fishing,A despatch from Toronto says:—E.
smacks sot out for the banks and re-' S. Rogers carried on a radio converse -
turned with gunwales almost touching tion with a. London station and estab-
the water.
France Grants Pension
to Radium Discoverer
Fished what is believed to be the first
amateur radio voice communication
between Canada and England.
F. L. Hogg of 37 Bishops road, Lan-
don, was the amateur with whoin Ro-
A despatch from Paris says:—The; gars carried on the conversation.Hogg
Chamber of Deputies has unanimously asked Rogers to relay' a message to
voted a pension of 40,000franes year- the Bowdoin, in which Donald Mo-
ly for Mine. Curie, professor of thel Milian is exploring• the Arctic regions,
University of Paris, as the nation's asking whether the ship's wirelese op -
tribute to her work in' the discovery'erator had been able to receive mes-
of radium and its developments, cov-1 sages from English amateur stations.
ering a period of twenty-five years.' n ---s
The pension reverts to Mme. Curie's'Eritish Town Becomes
two daughters upon her decease.
Memorial to War Dead
A despatch from London says:-rA
unique way of honoring those who
died for their country has been fol-
lowed at Lancashire, where instead of
the usual village war memorial being,
erected an entire village was conse-
crated as a memorial. The disabled
and their families will have houses in
the village, i.vhich is to :contain about
forty model dwelling's, and disabled
men, upward of: 100 at a time, will be
sent there to learn, in ideal surround-
ings, trades which will make it possible
for them to earn their own living.
Thirteen houses already have been
built and are now occupied. The train-
ing scheme is to be put into operation
within a few days.
A late report of record-breaking
crop returns conies from the Maid-
stone, district, Saskatchewan, where
Rowlin Bros. sowed eight acres of oats
A Labor M.P. for green feed. -, They threshed' the
Miss 164 IGuaw aces;'a e
p ,, Inc nl��je p, y✓ht 11pj!te1 e 125';,lZ,us e]s to th
blected ;Laiborl 'r uiibe>d1e h fQ ‘3'.(1114T -i41
•, 111, , t i e
t t•,t o Ei..i�t id are. and ,e ,l
Y 4b lad ,40 ,1 It ,• t
o : � .,.,I � o tit
li u. s
4
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6'' �.. „s'b!i3"Y.+.�� ,risk SAS. Y.�,.I �d �atlh lejj�
4n ,C.:L��., •i
Ifs" i'
rk
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1
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aciri r.� r
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±Ch1}1iM1171tl9JitIQ,, ,y1 11Nl li1.YiRt Wli19b1 tpllM1F,erawatiessiseeni8�6W/emextez
r—•
Natural Resources
Bulletin'
The Natural .Resourees Intel-
ligence Service of the Depart-
ment of the Interior, Ottawa,
says :—
Few people in Ontario realize
the extent to which non-metallie
minerals enter into the produc-
tion of some of our more com-
mon articles of use. In the
manufacture of prepared roof-
ings and mineral wallboard, for
instance, five factories are en-
gaged in Ontario. During the
year ending 'March last these
companies used, among others,
the following quantities of non-
metallic minerals: actinolite,
100,000 pounds; asbestos, 181,-
000 pounds; ,asbestos sand, 118,-
000 pounds; asphalt, 12,912,456
pounds; ground dolomite; 2,509,-
806 pounds; ground feldspar,
42,344 Bounds; ground magne-
site, 637,772 pounds; marble
dust, 2,100 pounds; ground mica,.
230,000 pounds; silica sand, 1,-
792,550 pounds; slate granules,
9,298,000 pounds; and tale, 1,-
816,706 pounds. With the ex-
ception of the silica sand all
these non-metallic minerals are
of Canadian origin,
This line of industry is one
which is rapidly expanding, and
will consequently require in-
creased quantities of these ma;
terials. Many other manufac-
tures make useof non-metallic
minerals, notably the paint in-
dustry, pottery, 'stoneware, por-
celain and enamelware making,.
rubber goods, soaps, and. toilet
preparations, etc. Road -malting
also requires enormous `quanti-
ties, as floes also building con-
struction.
Tho value of the Saskatchewan
crop for 1923' is placed 'at $276,844,650,
according to a report' issued by. the
Dominion Bureau of Statistics. Of
this amount wheat contributed $189,-I
466,500; oats $50,985,600; barley $7,
620,800; rye $:1,693,500; and fax
$9,168,250.
.... . . _.. ...-.f••'�
Canada from Coast to Coast
Canada's Island Pt wince.
Surrounded by the ers in the Gulf
Lawrenee s: dna '
1✓
e e pang all e
Kentvill'e, N.S.—The Nova Scotia? plant has already been purchased and of Si. C dos busy 3rtile
vapor atoi•s are malting large ship, l in a short': time
th com w" . b _ Province of Prince Edward Istaiid,
ments of apple pomace to Rotterdam./ turning out a product for which there busy peou because practically total lace
is originating at the is already established d d d d total land.
This material ori iworks productively, 02
a
anis c cxz]an , an area of but 2,184 square miles, and a
various Annapolis Valley plants of, giving employment to at least 1001
popu anon of 88,615, it boasts tis
this firm. men,
Ilargest number of people per square
St. John, N.B.—Among the paesen-� ,Winnipeg, Man.—One of the larg-j mile of any province in. Canada, 40.57'
ger who arrived here on the. Mont- est farm deals in' iecent years is re As a comparison, Ontario, the most
Clare from n who Liverpool were eightekill-sported now in progress of consomme -+populous province, with a; land area
ed woodsmen: who had been engaged ln' tion, involving the 5,000 -acre farm of j of 300,880 square"miles and a papula
the shelled forest areas of Franee,I Hon. Alma Renard; of Dacota Siding, tion of 2,083,062, has but 8.04 to the
They are Ju 0-51 square mile. No less than 85 per cent.
of the population is engaged in agri.
culture; the average size of the 18,701
acres,andin 102
were only 277 tenant farmers on the
type, seven car average farm it is essential th t th
Q Demand far finish- 1 t hi land • be intensi•vely cultivated-
ed iron cliiekene will be made shortly fr } �'lze:
g ays, but all have a a shalt distance west of Winnipeg.
good knowledge of the English lan-I The sale price is said to have been
guage, due to service with British :fixed at $625,000, or $ids an acre, in-
troops in various war -zones. The eight, eluding equipment. M. G. O'Connel, farms is 88 8 1 There
men have been placed with lumbermen of New Orleans, La., is the prospec-
in New Bivnswiek, where there exists j tive._purchaser. Island• With the small
e scarcity of skilled
labor of this Regina Sask.-At least IIarea in the
Montreal Que.—Demand car-
et
pm of dressed turkeys and a a
and steel is showing steady Pm agricultural interests of the
improvement in the domestic aril ex -1 palati in Saskatchewan, states W. Island
Montreal,
Waldron actingresu t that recognize e field
crops return a.
port ] :tin
nark , markets commission- to -
1 et.cie ss n
It is reported that the result the feel$ crops return a
er for
Steel Saskatchewan. hewer .. T
Com n hese sl i -
Company of Canada and the i p T.igh value per acre. The h
British Empire Steel Corporation
have recently closed extensive orders
for bars for shipment to Japan. The
domestic demand for bars is improv-
ing, although the market Is some Edmonton Alta,—illeInnies Fish! what dull at present. A stronger de- Co, will employ one. hundred men and! little area of country we have, sto
o
mand for sheets is noted. Canadian from fifty to sixty teams this season farm it intensively, and to grow those
mills` have received inquiries for ton- things we specialize in, such as seed
nage for Japan. p uffaIo grains and seeds of various kinds, that
St. Catharines, Ont. --within a will require, and to which we give;
short time the city of St, Catharines Ch eh m. much labor."
is to have a new industry in operation b m has During the past season an usual-
ly large demand developed for the Is-
land seed potatoes, Double the quan-
tity produced could have been disposed
of to American buyers and at a good
price. A recent shipment of 65,000
bushels left Summerside for Virginia
and other eastern States as well as
the West Indies are endeavoring to
secure their pure seed supplies from
the island province.
A survey' of the agricultural re-
sources of the province was recently
conducted by the provincial govern.
ment, and showed the following values
for 1928: field crops, $19,250,000; live
stock, $8,150,000; dairy products and
eggs, $1,763,000; fisheries, $1,600,000;
foxes, $1,000,000. The raising of
foxes has become an important indus.
h forests of tr'y in the province, there being 434
fox farms registered in 1922, with 13,-
470 animals valued at $2,882,015, and
a property value in lands, buildings,
etc., of $768,235.
Fish abound in the waters of the
Gulf. of St. Lawrenee, especially about
the shores of the island. The market
value of the catch was $1,612,599 in
1922. During the fishing season of
1922 Prince Edward Island produced
8,758,300 pounds of lobsters, having a
landed value of $651,440. This was
an increase of more than two million
pounds over the production of 1921.
The Island was formerly a large oye-
ter producer, but over -fishing resulted
meats will be made under the aux ices province as.
of local p 1 Bons largely into the production of
farmers'organizations and
will be supervised by representatives
of the
Saskatchewan dept. of, agri-
culture.
registered seed, especially of potatoes.
To quote t Ron. Waller r
M.
Lea, former
Commissioner of Agriculture, "Our
problems are to make the most. of the
in their fishingoperations in B
Lake, situated ninetymiles east of
to a
Willaw, B.C: A muskrat far
eon established here by Messrs Davis
under the name of the Climax Rubber Brothers well known farmers and.
Co. of Canada, The building and trappers' ve
In Ireland, where the people have a
very exclusive,taete in tea, few shop-
keepers will buy tea which has been
blended by machinery.
Saskatchewan labor bureaux are
not only filling the forests of their
own province with laborers for the
winter, but contributing substantially
to the needs of their Eastern neigh-
bors. Of the 1,796 men sent out to
lumber camps from Saskatchewan
labor bureaux since the beginning of
the season, 327 were for Ontario
camps and 116 for Manitoba. The re-
maining 1,353 went into the
Northern Saskatchewan.
The lumber operations in the Prov-
ince of Quebec are • progressing ex-
ceedingly well with the continuation
of the fine weather, stated Gustave C.
Piche, chief forester, and one of the
Heads' U.F.O. Again biggest cuts ever recorded in the prov-
'or. A. Amos, re-elected president of ince is expected for the season of
the United Farmers of Ontario, for a 1923-24. In all, there will be about
secoud term. Tho program of the 80,000 men working in the various
31.12.0. calls for Dominion -wide prohi lumber camps during the winter, if
bition and rigid, enforcement of the the different companies obtain all the
laws already in force, help they require.
Weekly Market Report
TORONTO.
Manitoba wheat—No, 1 North
51.051/ .
Manitoba oats—No. 3 CW, 43
No. 1 extra feed, 4193c.
Manitoba barley—Nominal.
A11 the above, track, bay ports.
Ontario barley -61 to 63c.
American corn -No, 2 yellow, Olc
Buckwheat'—No, 2, 69 to 72e.
Ontario rye—No. 2, 72 to 740.
Peas --Sample, $1.50 to $1.55.
Millfeed—Del. Montreal freigh
bags included. Bran, per ton,
shorts per ton,' $30; middlings, $
good heed flour;, $2.05.
Ontario' wheat -No. 2' white, 02
94c, outside.
Ontario, No. 2 white oats -38 to 4
Ontario corn -Nominal .
Ontario flour. -Ninety per cent. pa
In jute bags, Montreal, prompt snip
ment, 54.60; Toronto basis, $4.60, b
seaboard, $4.25,
Manitoba flour -1st pats., in ju
sacks, $6.10 per bbl.; 2nd pats., $5.
Hay—Extra No. 2 timothy, per t
track, Toronto, $14.50 to $15; No.
$14,50; No. 3, $12,50; mixed, $12.
Straw—Car lots, per ton, 59.
Cheese—New, large, 23 to 231/1
twins, 231/2 to 24c; triplets, 24 to 25
.Stiltons, 25 to 26c. Old, large, 28
80c; twins, 29 to 31c; triplets, 80
32c.
Butter—Finest creamery prints, 4
to 450; No. 1 creamery, 42 to 48e; N
2, 40 to 41c,
Eggs—Extras, fresh, in cartons, 7
to 74o; extras, storage, in cartons, 4
to 47c; extras, 43 to 44c; firsts, 38
39c; seconds, 30 to 82c.
Live poultry—Spring chickens,
lbs, and over, 28c. chickens, 3. to
1152 to 1Gc; prints, 17;;, to 18c.
ern, Heavy steers, choice, 56.50 to $7.25;
butcher steers, choice -56 to $6.50; do,
Iye; good, $5.50 to $6; do, Hied., $4.25 to
$5.25; do, corn„ $3 to $4; butcher heif-
ers, choice, $6 to $6.50; do, med., $4.25
to $5.25; do, coin., $3 to $4; butcher
COWS, choice, $4 to $4.25; do, mod„ For x
$3 to $4; canners and cutters,- 51.251 all i
to $2.50; butcher bulls, choice, $4 to
m 2
t0 $
Vii
$ $ feeding
in the .depletion of the beds. It is
authoritatively stated, however, that
the oyster beds in Richmond Bay are
giving promise of a return to their old
:fertility.
Ono of the chief attractions of
Prince Edward Island; says the'Na-
tural Resources Intelligence Service
of the Department of the Interior, is
the hospitality of the people. The vial-
s made to feel at hone, and, while
slanders are proud of their little
ice, each does not constitute h.im-
a real estate oigent. In the s,,n•-
towns and cities picture que :,;cats
und, and a drive along the 'excel
highways in the spring' presents
tura not seen elsewhere... The sell
since Edward Island possesses a
at reddish shade. On this the
and tl green lines of early vegetation
i glistening 'shells upon the
surface due to the use of the oyster -
bed mud as fertilizer, produce a pic-
ture
not easily forgotten.
The tourist traffic to Prince Ed-
ward Island is rapidly expanding, and
the many beatities of the island form
an attraction hard to resist. With a
varying width of from two to thirty
miles,, any portion of the island is .
within a short distance of the sea, it
has a climate which does not include
extremes of heat and cold, and, with
the best of ferry connections, the pro-
gressive, while at the same time con-
tented people of'Prince Edward Island
have a portion of Canada of whi
they may be justly proud,
$4.50; do, co ; est
steers, good, $5 to $5.50; do, fair, 54.
ts, to $4.75• stockers, good, $4 to $5; do, sial
$27; fair, $2.'50 to $4; milkers and spring- abou
ers, $80 to $110; calves, choice, $10.50 lent
to $12; do, med., $6 to $9.50; do, corn-, a pie
to $4 to 5; - do, grassers, $2.75 to $4; of P
lambs, choice, $10.50 to $11; do, bucks, distin
Oo, 8.50 toi59. 0; d, coin:; $7,50 to 58.25; 10.1 11
g ewes, good, $5 to $6; do,
t fat,: heavy, $4 to $5; do, culls, $2 to
52.50; hogs, fed' and watered, $8 to
ulk $8.25; do, f.o.b., $7.75; do, country
toe. points, $7.50; do, selects, $0.05.
MONTREAL.
G0. Oats, No. 2 CW, 52x,5e; No. 3 CCi;
o11, 50c; extra No 1 feed, 4806c. . Flour,
2, Man. spring wheat pats,; lets; $6,10;'
2nds, $5.60; strong bakers', 55.40;
winter pats., choice, $5.55 to $5.65.
c; Rolled oats, bag, 90 lbs., $2.05, Bran,
o; $27.25, Shorts, $3025,- Middlings,
to $36.25. Moullie, $40 to $42. Hay, No.
to 2, per ton, car lots, $15 to $16.
Cheese, freest westeins,' 18 to 18ile;
4 finest easterns, 1744 to 17yc. Butter,
o. No. 1 creamery, 401 to 41c; No. 1
pasteurized, 411/a to 42c. Eggs, fresh,
0 special, 85e; fresh extras, 65c; fresh
5 firsts, 50e; extras, 89 to 40e; No. 1
re, stock, 84 to 35c; No. 2 stock, 28 to $Oo.
Calves, $10; lambs, $0 to $1,
to 5 lbs., 15e; do, 3 to 4 lbs„ 1.5c;
roosters, 15e; ducklings, over 5 lbs.,
20c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 18c; turkeys,
young, 10 lbs. and up, 23c.
Dressed poultry -Spring chickens,
4 lbs. and over, 30c; chickens, 3 to 4
lbs., 25e; hens, over 5 lbs., 28c; do, 4
to 5 lbs,, 24c; do, 3 to 4 lbs„ 18c;
roosters, 18c; ducklings, over 5 lbs.,
28c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 25c; turkeys,
young, 10 lbs, and. up, 30c; geese, 26c,
Beaus—Can. hand-picked, lb., 70;
primes, G e' c.
Male products -Syrup, per imp.
gal,, 52.50; per 5 gal. tin, $2.40 per
-
gal.; maple sugar, lb. 25c,
Honey -50 -lb. tins, 12 to 13c per lb.;
101b tins, 12 to 13c; 5-1b. tins, 13 to
14c; 21/ -lb. tins, 14 to I5c; comb
homey, per doz., No. 1, $3.75 to $4;
No. 2, 58.25 to $3.50,
Smoked meats --Hams, med., 20 to
27c; cooked hams, 37 to 30c; smoked
rolls
4 thick smooths and good quality hutch: a3 gest of Telescopes
4. Ars, $8.40; poor quality, $8 to $8.25.1 to be Gift to France
lbs., 22c; liens, over 5 lbs., 22e; do, 4
24c
__ _ cie
THE SKELETON IN 'rHE CUPBOARD, ba
C
Conservative, bibasal and Labor Parties (together)--"Ohlto
mention it." • no, we never 1'011
(Reduced taxation, Um ods thio „Lilkei
roll
g y,to aecuza: nna;riotRIIA3 stIP.A.9t'.t 10
Britain, has: been raised by neat oSlthelgeefliiki, tel
21 to 23c; cottage rolls, 22 ;o
breakfast bacon, 25 to 27c; spo-
t brand breakfast bacon, 30 to 88e;
Cks, boneless,�10 to 35c.
ured meats long clear Bacon. 50
7,0 lbs. and up, $10.50;lightweight
s, in barrels, 536; heavyweight
is $33.
Lar d—Pure tieree i, , ti 1 , -to 18c:
lis, 18to 154x; palls 10*r' 'ea
lets 20' . 2 •
to OA�„c, s'libxts,t utg•rfioret�s,
tglto iii�;ic,i tubs; 7':G td 17/,c; ,trtris,i
"'"'Tp ,rx„»
tfi
e
I .I'r p .
{� 011
,LM •y�, I p , 3 LO
_, wn �w.. � fl 'm' 1'I' . Il 1 I ,riC 011 gpinlOn. :•
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I' 4
,
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'A!Unip.+yKOGinMLfilYinlAMY[P,ti&iBIpIIIDAIIBhiNM1� ��
King.GeorgeofGreece
Who, with Queen Elizabeth, has
taken his departure for Roumania to
await the decision of'the National As-
semblyrespecting the regime best be-
fitting tite country.
• One d 'London's s
0111ayt fornix netts
utl h E^ 1
A despatch from Geneva says: --
What will be the largest observatory
in the world, with a telescope more
powerful than that at Mount Wilson
or Greenwich, is to be built on Mount
Saleve, on French territory, a few
miles front Geneva.
The observatory will be the gift to
Prance of the Hindu millionaire, en.:t
gineer and scientist, Assan Dina, and
his wife, who was Miss Mary Wallace.'
Shiliito, of Cincinnati. The building
instruments and installation will cost
$6,600,000.
The telescope lens will have a di-'.
meter of 105 inches, or five inches
greater than that of the Mount Wilson
instrument,
Progress and bright prospects in.
the development,ef sodium oulphate ins'
Saslcatchewan is• reported by the Bar -
eau of Labor and Industries. Sodium
sulphate recovered from Saskatchew-
an deposits is now being. used in the
lnauufaeture of glass at Redcliff, and
six deposits BO far;have been invesjk,
gated by the Federal Depantment'sf*,
Mites. 'tjther'dsposits net et fii'Vt�t1t+.
y i..
vie al
r, 14 now being razed`to g4d,b"the depign nt number ir> $1i
the gtou}1d t0 nlakp,�gp,v yfot-ltDu
QT"i'
1 to nnnii''Y'l Y a i! :4-,
t `•,n
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