HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1926-08-12, Page 2AND WIND FLATTEN WESTERN
GRAIN AND RUIN REGINA GAR DEN
Winnipeg, Man,—Ilan and ,wind
caused considerable damage in seine
districts of Manitoba and Saslcat..
chewan Other, districts report heave,
rani, which- will be of • inestimable
value to all grain crops,particularly
some sections of Saskatchewan,
The Brand= t`clistrict, 60 miles west
of Winnipeg, reported hail and hind
damage, particularly in the northwest
crop areas. Southern and eastern'
areas reported heavy rain, but little
hail damage.
Reports from Regina and Moo•ae'
Jaw, Seek., told of heavy hail and
wind damage, with crups flattened, 5
to 100 per cent. Loss in the latter
territory was confined to inteeruption
to' telephtne lines, and (Manage to
buildings in the rural areas, mainly.
the smashing of many windoevs by the
hail stones. In Rc-gina City the prin-
cipal Loss was ; suffered 1,5 hcuseleit ees
with' beelcef vi ndbers and. ruin'ed.gar-
dens. Moose Jaw .ity reported on:y
slight damage. The storm bought its
greatest loss to :coa:itic.s a.ttli, north
and east of Moose jaw, while on the
faros of G 0. Smith, 100 miles south
of Regina, tl•:e crop is a complete oss.
In addition, every window in the
Smith house wets broken and dat,.age
done to buildings.
The storm acted in a freakish man-
ner. Some, districts which were be-
lieved to be in the direct path of the
sterno escaped when the high wised
sent the hail clouds off the course to
take their toll In anether'rection, Such
close -in pieces as the JaiAFarm, n'oxth
east of Regiia,'and the City Farm at
Boggy Creek, reported no damage and
ne hail, The heaviest loss in the Re-
gina area occurredenet and nor+•heest
of the city:
L FOREST FIRES ON EAST
2` -hese three young were rescued by President. Coolidge's boat when their yawl,capsiz,'ed'opposite
WESTERN COASTS his camp ii_ar Paul Smith's, N.Y, Mr. and Mrs, Coolidge saw the acoident.aed sent help. heft .to right: Alan
1 Walsh, ArthurDonner and Leonard Green
Several New Brunswick
Counties. i ALPINIST INJURED ON BASTION PEs
eltuat ons bcton, ecan a N.Iso thatacutepo eCARRIED TWO MILES BY 1lE D
Fredst fire '
Dept. of Lands and Minos announced 9
that it had been decided to awns no; Longum Valley, Jasper Park.—A. he was metby the rescue party sent
m the new name has been added to the roll outiQrom the main camp.
ore forest travel certificates„for
Counties of Madawaska; Victoria and Thu res s:o els of
Carleton. This virtually moans the of honor of the Alpine Clubs of the PI P the Bastion are increase over the preceding year of
, closing of the forests on the upper ;ver:+fl—a roll alreadybright with formed of sha a and rotten rock; any $307,691. Manitoba and Alberta show
Saint John River, and it is' not un-: manydeeds of heroism g at pie: of which' is liable to give• way increases in :value while slight de
• likely that the Counties of Northern , •On this list at any trine and precipitate the climb- creases are shown for Saskatchewan
New Brunswick will be added to the is placed' the name of Lawrence. Grassi er many feet down the side of the and Yukon Territory. Pickerel, white
prohibited areas, The forest service ofCanmore, Alta.; who carried on hismountain.: Added to this -is the a•ways fish and tuillbes in the order named,
is a:so cancelling all forest travel per- back, over two miles of treacherous present danger of rock -elides from are the principal binds of fish in Mani-
mits alreadyissued for the Counties above, s:>des slohpes
shoot tons o£ d like toba; whitefish and trout in Saskatche-
of Madawaska, -Victoria and Carleton rock and glacier, a companion who had dors down the slopes with a sound like wan; whitefish, pickerel and pike 1n.
been injured during -a descent from the discharge of a battery of field Alberta, and salmon in the Yukon Ter-
which means that fishing and camping the top of Bastion Peak of the Ram- guns. The Drawbridge Glacier lies on ritory. The catch of whitefish in the
parties now in the woods on the upper part Range. a steepslope,
Saint John River will have to come am ds about alone -wide: mounter and territory t., valued
review
The accident, of which Dr. R. C: Its face is seamed with- crevices into; amounted to 116,620 cwt., valued at
out. l Williams of Calgary was the victim, which any one but the most sure- $1,044,852. This .value represents 44
Ferule, B.C.—Fire in the Town of was a sem 'e one, a compound frac- footed could tumble to disaster. Below per cent. of the total value of the come
Who defeated GovernoryMiriaai Fen lama o2 estimated 0 miles st of at $40,000. ,caueed The sure of an ankle, caused by a slip it again is crock -strewn slotal,
pe of an- menial fisheries of the provinces and
gfrom :a loose rock near the- peak of other mile
or more, where boulders are t
guson in the coolest for nomination as direct cause of the conflagration is the mountain, but it d d 1 erritory,
Conunercial Fish. Production
in V7estern Canada.
The valueof production. of the com-
mercial fisheries of the. three Prairie
Provinces and the Yukon Territory in
1925, as reported by the .Dominion
Bureau a Statistics, was $2,380,526, an
occurred under heaped in great masses, often higher 4 ”
Democratic candidate for governor in not known, conditions which might have been than an ordinary house.
Texas. Buildings thatfe:1 a prey to the serious had there not been present It was over this ground that Mr.IIieiiish Incoonaes .1W0e1Id
—__y—,• -Y 'flm
'similes were theGreat Northern Ho el,; some one of such resourcefulness as Grassi; who received his Alpine train Allow $1.25.. Per Family
- in which was located the post -office, a Grassi. The point where Dr. Williams ing along the Dolomites of the Italian
--�. P1man Workmen Get
Chinese restaurant building, the tele-' j tan
°� g, i was injured was one where the. rock ' Tyro: Range, carried his companion London.—Noty-
imminent 'a
• _! W. where o leave any one unable to help most experienced members of the club. incomes exceeding ,n year from
Berlim—The average skilled work- : • Beach. Damage was clone to the C. himself was to court disaster. Real- It was a remarkable example of rock investments, ------i
man in the fifteen leadino- German in- P. R. line and the to 1 • i according to Sir 'J's h
$9.56 Weekly Average phone exchange, a grocerystore and, elP more than 1,000 able
g ides aret at ,i hours,, and with a speed that amazed even the bodied idle Lich in this -country draw
the garage and dwe'ing of A W ' i t '
dustries earns the equivalent of $9,56 was interrupted fors c own a reputation which Mr. Grassi has Plan expert; who addressed the Brit -
the stems slope, th Drawbridge g, as probe is Association; Many rich people,
.egrap t sere ce izing this, Mr. Grassi carried his un- climbing that more than full o m
several hours, fortunate companion on his back
,l th y justified Stamp; eminent economist and Dawes
a week of forty-eight hours, the Min-, f steep across e -earned during the meetin
istry of Industry and Commerce re -
Caches and be •end it to the feet n
ports. From this wage the employers I 3 f ably the finest rock climber the club he said, do important work .for which
deduct for the Federal government an Bishop Believes England the rocas into the timber line} where has over seen: They are rat paid. If all the incomes
income tax averaging nine per cent.1 on the Eve cf Revival'
for: single persons and eight per cent. i --- Sees Universal Language year. were pooled, ands after deducting
for married. ; London, ---England is on the. eve of; Emerging From Radio t"1 rt ' � ,} '; the present tax, distributed among the
The organized building tr:!.des work- a great spiritual revive:, in the opin-j ---.-_ sf r4c Q 3<., dk' 1 whole people, there would not be more
ors, plutocrats of German labor, draw ion of the Bishop of Salisbury, who; Ant:tcrdam—Tho coming of a ani-r��p. <; � ..:t:%c+i; �.•;"•� than $L25 additional for each family.
3.15 a weep. Miners rank second spoke at a recent meeting of the versed language for scientific and coin -
.10 . Great Byitain in excess of $1,250 a
with $11:70. The average weekly ray Church Assembly, menial purposes as a result of inter 1I 5' x The average woman now does es
of unskilled male workers is $7,75, The He said a remarkable movement' national radio broadcasting was r.rax:%? ;, much in one day as she used to do in
cost of living as Simon by officio] re- had hien started among young men ;dieted to -day' by DavidSarnoff; vice- $° e three or four:
ports is almost as high as that outside at Oxford, Cambridge and other uni- president of the Radio Corp. of Ant -
of metropolitan districts in the United versities to present the fourth retort' erica, in an address before the Inter -
States, of the Missionary Council throughout! national Federation of Univers:t
Strikes are few because jobs are the country. A campaign!iy 130 stn- Women,
scarce. Forty-eight adulle out of dents was h-eirg conducted in four The country emerging as a world
every 1,000 men, wnnren and children dioceses and in September, l86 stt centre of ratio comm:tnication is like-
are jobless in Berlin, dents will conduit another caneraegn, ;y to give the woi- d its first universal
—a -.- -- 1 "Tt rs ee •fain," continued the it sh- language.
Coal Strike Enables op, "there are elready signs that the "The battle for language supremacy
Living. , y . Power of ('oc1 is workin' •,oCay hi a air 1!I the " •, S ff •
rr racro
Londoners to See the nin Eng us, 1 see it in the progress of said, "Radio is destined to prove the
1 revision of the Prayer Book. I could agent in the adoption of a world auxi-'
London.—English industry is suf- see it in the wonderful spirit that diary language for'scientific and cone,'
faring from the continuance of the passed all over the country when the mercial purposes." ,
coal strike, but English weather is general strike was called off and in all, Hope for world peace lies in the
benefitting from the stoppage. Not ways the spirit of God is present and ability of nations to think in a come
since the last coal strike has the at-; we have a rovival ^oming," !mon language, the. American radio'
mosphere been so clear and the visibil-1 I expert asserted.
ity so good. On the longest day of 1
the year Londoners could see the Sur-; First Carload of 1926 Wheat
rey Hills, forty miles away—a .treat
rarely vouchsafed to them. is Typical Product
In spite of the fact that the normal
total of sunshine in Juno and early
London had a considerable excess, ed by the (eutntlion Pacific Railway whereat we take fresh countg e to de ---
Gratitude..
Hon
R Y SLA,1N BY BO.''
WH1L SWI
Child of. Eight A, eu ;Birth
Ac . This
cl'ubb n When He ® Conrontion
�is the law' which is ba: :on the
HOPd of Pesosiatg Skiff. i Treaty with Ilse Unitecl'Stat,s. Any
I3ailtoit. Juvenile murder it is engiurieeecencerning this -law may be
addressed to the Commissioner of the
al:egeclm; was connnitted on the bay; oIl Canadian National Parks, Dept. of the
Leinedowne Park, about 6 a'c:,ocIC Interior, Ottawa.
Thursday afternoon, .:when Edward omit soesoNs.
I+origer, 8 years old, 34)7. Sherman Ave. Both Dates Inclusive,—Ontario,:
Nardi; Sonat to his death rater being .Ducks, Geese, Brant and Rails, Sept,
clubbed over the head with an oar'her 1 -Dec, 15. '
William Urkowitch, 14 years old, 4141i Wilson's or Jack Snipe, and Greater
Sherman Ave. North. I and Lesser Yellowlegs, Sept. l.l)ec, 15.
The Fenger boy disowned in, deep i Woodcock, Sept. 15 -Nov. 30,
water. Urkowitch, a sullen boy, and clown seesoNs,
son of Russian Poles,` was placed! There,is a closed season throughout
under arrest and later taken -=to the the year in Ontario on Band -tailed
Children's Shelter. Pigeons, Eider` Duck .('the Tatter may
From what could be learned of the be taken daring the open- season in
case, young - Fonger was swimming that portion of Ontario, �uottth of the -
with other boys in the bay off Lane- quebec, Cochrane, Winnipeg line of
downs Paris at the end of Wentworth the' Canadian National. Railway),
Street. A rowboat occupied by'Ori o Swans, Cranes, Curlew; Wallets," God -
witch -and another boy named Joe Wild wits, Upland.Plover, Black -bellied and
covesky, 9 years.o:d, 5 Gerard Street,- Golden, ],'lover, Avoca Dowitchers,
came along. • Young Vonger'swant to- Knots, Oyster Catchers, 'Phalaropes,
ward the boat and .caught hold of one Stilts, ,Surf-bifds, Tnrsnstones,': and all
side with his hands. the there birds not provided with an -
Whether the little boy was exhaust= open season in above schedele.
el or swam to the boatin a boyish.1 There is a closed season ,throughout
prank is not known. ',Atany rate, it' the ,year on the following .non -game
is. alleged, Urkowitch lifted one oar birds: Auks, Auklete, Bitterns, yul-
from its socket and 'struck young mars, Gannets, Grebes, Guillemots,
Fenger over the head with its blade. Gulls, Herons, Jaegers, heone, Murree,
With ' no outcry, it is said, th'p little 1 Patrols, Puffins,' Shearrvaters, and
fellow released his grasp on the side Terns; and there is a closed'.edason'
of the boat and sank to his death. throughout the year on the. following
Urkowitch, it is alleged, told no one, insectivorous lairds: Bobolinks, .'Cat -
of his act, nor did he make any at- birds, Chickadees; Cuckoos; Flickers,
tenipt to rescue the Fenger boy. Fly -Catchers, Grosbeaks, Humming-,
Others, however, are said to have seen birds, Kinglets; Martins, Meadow` -:ark,
the boy sink beneath the surface. Nighthawks or Bull -..Bats, Nuthatches, -
When Detectives Chamberlain and Orioles, Robins, Shrikes, -Swallows,.
Beckett subsequently questioned' Urko- Swifts, Tanagers,_ Titmice, Thrushes,
witch, the latter denied that he struck 'Vireos, Warblers, Waxwings, Whip -
young, Fonger over the head with the poorwills, Woodpeckers, and Wrens,
oar, but finally admitted, police state, and all other perching birds which.
that he shoved the boy away from the feed entirely or chiefly on insects,
boat with his hdad. ' No person shall kill, hunt, capture,.
Joe Wilcovesky, his companion in injure, take or molest migratory ganre
the boat, however,•is said to have told birds during the closed season. Sale
the two officers that it was an oar of these birds is forbidden.
with which-Urkowitch struck young The• killing, capturing, taking, in-
Fonger over the head. His detention juring or molesting of migratory,in-
then followed. • sectivorous and migratory non -game
•---- birds is prohibited.
Increase in Registration of The possession of legally taken
Silver Foxes in Canada. migratory game birds is allowed until
March 31st, following the open season.
Chose to •70,000 pedigreed star•
er In Ontario it is an offence to, kill or
foxes ' have been registered by the attempt to kill any migratory game
Canadian Live Stook Records since the bird between sunset and sunrise.
inauguration of the work in 1919. With DAC LSMITs,
the annonncenient during 1925 -that be- Dacke 25, but nett inorethan 200 in
ginning on January 1, 1926, only those a season; Geese 15; Brant 15; Rails
foxes which are by registered siren 25; Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs 15;
and out of registered dams are eligible Wilson's Snipe 25; Woodcock 10.
for registration, there was sucli a rush GUNS AND APPLIANCES.
for registration before the books were. The use of automatic (auto 10a-
clesed to foundation -stock, resulting ing), 'swivel, or inachiae guns, or hat -
in a great Increase over previous tory, or any gun larger than 'number
years. In 1919, the first year of record- 10 gauge is prohibited, and the use
Ing foxes, 805 pedigrees and 152 trans- of any apropleno, power -boat, or night
fere were recorded; in 1924 the totals light, .and shooting, from any horse -
were 5,345 pedigrees and 5,002 trans drawn or'maton vehicle is forbidden.
Pers, while last year the figures were PENALTY.
36,297 pedigrees and 10,747 transfers. Ever person who violates
In all 66,900 pedigrees have been re- y any pro-
corded since the beginning. vision of this Act or any regulation
THE WEEK'
TniRON'i'O. -
S MARKETS
Man. wheat—No. 1 North., 51,62;
No. 2 North., $1.58; No, 3 North.,
51.5234.
Man. oats—No. 2 CW, nominal;'No
3, not quoted; Noel feed, 49c; No.
2 feed, 461/2e; western grain quota-
tions in c i.f. ports.
Am. corn, track, Toronto—No. 2
yellow, $1, No. 3 ye:low, 99c.
Millfeed—Del. Montreal freights,
s F bags included: Bran, per ton, $27.25;
shorts, pee ton, 529.25; middlings,
George Bernard Shaw $36.25;; good feed, flour, per bag, $2.30.
Was seventy years old on July 30. Ont. oats -42 to 44c f.o.b. shipping
A brilliant gathering' attended his points.
birthday party. Ont. good milling wheat -$1.28 to
51.30, f.o.b. shipping points according
`� =--- to freights.
Once in a long while some boy or l Batley—Malting, 56 to G1c, -
Winnipeg, blah,—The first carload girl we have tried to help returns to Bad Feeding in Early Life' Buc'.:wt:eat-Nomivah
7uly was far below normal, Central of wheat from the 1926 crop was load- speak the golden word of gratitude,Causes Crooked Knees • Rye --No. 2, 90e.
Man. flour—First pat., $9.10, . To-
feldt, Man., an Thursday, our little share toward the hapFiness London.—Few women have straight. conte--; do, se
is typical Manitoba first- Ont. flour
—Toronto, e of ono-- Recently n girl of twenty k Y S' W' :' n Arbuthnot aant,
—all on account of the delightful ab close product and was moved to Wm- called, and in conversation remarked: Lane, the eminent surgeon, who is •p per barrel, in carlots; Toronto,
590 seaboard in bu.
Westminster had about fourteen hours Co. at Rosen cord pat:; $8.60.
or sunshine than the June average The wheat i.nees sa s ir. hI aai —Toronto; 90 per cent,
since of smoke, nrpeg on Friday. "I have your picture in a locket and making a campaign for the greater $ ' lx 55.fi0.
Cheeses sup large, 191/2 to 20c;
-- "^ I carry it a:ways clove to my heart/ use of situp:e foods in an endeavor to 'twins, 21e, trip ets,'22c.' $ti:tons; 240.
When doubt was jokingly expressed build up the constitutions of males 011, large, 28c; twins, 29c; triplets,
she pulled up the locket from some and females. 20c.
hidden recess and opening it. revealed "We always have ltncwn that very Butter ---Finest cre ,rte:y prints,
DADDRAGONS NEAR L a much crc,mp:ed newspaper cut that few men have perfectly straieht nor- 3(1 to 3.7c; No:..1 creamery, 35 to 36c;
ON Dans' AAA had Lean printed ears b,forc She mal legs and knees" says Sir William, No. - 2, 84 to 3ac, Dairy prints, 271/2
P y
AIRMAN FIND AWE I SNI I C
seemed as proud of it as though it And now that women. wear such to 292c.
, were a two-hundred-do:ler miniature short skirts, any one who takes the
Eggs—Fresh Fresh extras,. in cartons, 37
London.—Alan Cobham, the famous flew from England to Capetown and , to 38c: fresh extras, loose, SGr.; :fresh
-' back over impenetrable mid -African
and when presented with a better ono trouble to make an observation will firsts, 32c; fresh seconds 29c,
airman., has slain the dragon of da i t learn that ver. few women have.
jung:es to prove the Iossibity of still carried. away''ths old cue that y Live poultry—Chickens, p
riving at
second time for Britain. Arp y—Chickens, S ring, :b.,
'establishing, air routes even over the had done good service for several,straight knees, .It is a_. due to eany '30c; hens, over 5 :b;, 24c• do 4 to i
riving at •Port Darwin, Australia, he most inaecesibo ec•untr es; years, --,T, J. K'eso, disease caused by bad .feeding." lbs;; 24c. do., 3 t 4•
It
had virtuaely completed the first half ---
of'his second 26,000 -mile air journey,;
As on his first great flight, from
England to Capetown and back, Cob-'
ham saw on his journey over :and and i
sea to Australia, many strange sights,1
Somewhat off the beaten path, and •o
shunned by tourists, on Bima Island, i
near. Australia, he saw in captivity
two live dragons such Si the one St,
George, England's patron saint, slew.
These monsters, which are found only
on Komodo Island-, near Bima, ap-
parently are direct descendants of the
prehistoric minsters of legends They
are about ten feet long, posseseing,
huge claws, with which they aro able
to kill and devour animals even as
large as horses, When angered they
spow forth fumes not unlike smoke.
-When he arrives at Melbourne, the
end of his outbound journey, Cobham
will. have completed the first half of
his second great trip in his de Havi-
grand plane, Several months ago he
shall, for each offence, be liable upon
summary conviction to a. fine of not
more than' three hundred.' dollars and
not less than ten dollars, or to im-
prisonment for a term not exceeding
20c; ducklings, 6 lbs. and. up,
30c; six months, or to both fine and he-
tur30@, Prisonment.
Dresslteys,e
d io'u'tr • hi
1 Y C c. Spring, f Teens S
P
'Ile, 40c; chickens, storage, Ib,, 35e;Ntl Resources .Bulletin
hens, over 6 lbs:, 27c; do., 4 to 5 lbs., Natural
27c; do., 3 to 4 Ibs,, 26c; roosters, 25c; The:forest fire menace is With us
,ducklings, 5 lbs. and up, 35c; turkeys,
40c. again. Each day the press conteine 'a
Beans --Can. hand-picked, $2.60 per fresh item a.e to the destruction of
bushel; rimes 52.40per bashel. - '
P Canada s great forest heritage by. tiro
Maple produce—Syrup, per Imp• —many of their started through caro
ad, 52.80 to $2,40; per 5 -gar, 52.25 to lessness and ignorance. From ecet•v `
42.30 per gal; maple sugar, lb., 25 to
26c; maple syrup, new, per gal., $2.40. district of the Dominion' during the
1 Honey -50-1b. tins, 111/2 to 12c per summer months ',there comes with ,'
Ib.; 10-1b. tins, 1135 to 12e; 5-1b. tins, ceaseless and alarming repetition he
11 to 121/2c; 21/2-1h. tins, 14 to 1414c, old,old story. Timber that has taken
Smoked meats—Hams, med., 34 to a century to grow is, wiped out in a ifs,
36c; cooked hems, 52 to 64c; smoked few moments"
rolls, 26e; cottage, 31 to. 32c; break- .
fast bacon, 35 to 40c; special brand' It 1s•net generally appreciated just`
breakfast bacon, 39 to. 42c: backs, how critical the timber situation in
boneless, 42 to 47c. " Pastern Canada has become. The &- meats—Long clear bacon, CO partment's forestry engineers areCured
to 70 lbs., 524.25; 70 to 90 lbs.. 522,76; authority for the following facts:
80 lbs, and up, 522.3.4; lightweight In the Munitime Provinces annual
rolls in rolls 53J 50 eel bb�.60; heavyweight l use greatly exceeds growth,. and ail
Lard—Pure tierces, 18 tc 183�e losses from fire, etc.,
add to the over -
tubs, 151/2:to 19c; pails, 19 to 191/ac, draft on capital. •
-
t,I 1,
prints; 20 / to 21c; shortening,'tierees, , do Ontario and Quaint,: minae. use
141/2 to 15c; tubs, 16 to 15 <_•c; pais is at least equal to and probably
10'to 16%c; blocks, 17 to 1711,,c. greater -1-hati tis growth; here, also,
Heavy steers, choice, $7.85 to $8.25,
do,, good, $7.40 to $7.76; butcher a2 losses from ire, insects, rte., add
steers; choice, $7.40 to $7.85;' do , seriously to overdraft in capital, '
good, $7 to $7.25,,,,'dp., common, $6,50' In the Prairie Provinces, industrial
to 56.50; butcher heifers, choice, 57 use probably does not exc..R1 annual
to $7.76; do., good, $6,75 to $7: ,but- growth, but the fire fosse sire appal -
cher cows, choice, 55.50 to $6.76; do, ling, and' if continued, sari oit:y`restr_t
fair to good, 54 to $5; butcher in degeneration' of forest industry,
bulls, good $5 b0 to 56; bolognas
lbs. 20c so $3.5to • 4 canners ad r 1 le the' Coast District, the Province '.
esters, 5 5 cutters, $2.50 to $4; Good ntilch cows, $85 to o )
595; springers, choice, 595 to :$115; growth cenditionc The ,-rani problem
medium cows, $45 to 560: feeders in this proving 'is the ria teilment of
good, 56.25 to 50.76; do„' fair $5:to loses through fire. and the a•loption
$6; calves, choice, 510,50 to $12 of more sorts native methost; of
do, ,good 50 to+ 510: do, fight $5 to uti.Iizatioeo -
50; good lambs, $15.50' to $16; do, Canada is dissipating het forst 1,,,. -
heavy
to $15, sheep,
56 f, $13.50 Retirees more. r t pill than any otlacr
to 514; good light sheep, Y 6 £b $7.50 ; repidly
heavy sheep and bucks; $4 to-$5.50;:.nation in the world, and unless dell -
hogs, thick smooths, fed and v:atered, rite. radical, and constructive steps in
512,85; do, f.o.b., 512.25; do, country 1e •est coneervidien ale taken, the in -
points, $12; do, off cars, $18.25; do, dustries iaepehidcnt on' wood will in the
thick 'fess f.o.b., 511.75;.select pre- near future be faced with the necess-
ity of curtailing production.
f British Columbia .en'ove favorable
- MONTREAL.
Oats -Can. West., No. 2, 61c; do,Seedless 9ananas.
No. 3,.57c: Flour -Man. spring -wheat
pats., firsts, $8.90; do, seconds, 53.40;
strong bakers', 58.20; winter pats., Amerioa, has been oxpreeaed by a Bri-
r. chore $6.50 to $6.60. Rolled -oats
titch botauist.
;; : <` ,:a o.. x ;. • : ^. :, <�, ..:,�. t. s � a ,a xs ;z+, , r. , u. =bay of 90 orris. 3.2G B
s4' .n,- 'H. .v`�,,, �+;�::� ;>,�. ;x>r t„ •s,^ + .,�. �.. +. s .:,�,; i'<;ss' "x^ .� . .+' ' ;. ,
---bag P
Bran—
: ,...i�€k, F _,ci „ .o „;x K.^.,.n 3 r.N :..,,, + ,+,: }>. a ,u... ,xa+ •fix,'. $28.2b Shorts -'30.25. Middlings—
,�„�. , - � o$There are more their 3,000 animas
.., 5 .. ,,.. r ... $,,7,25. Hay—No. 2, per ton, car lots, :.
.1.. protest against the Mellon-7learenger Debt A eeement 20 000 I+.ench war veterans recently i,aradcd pst,t the Gc.c.rge Washington statue in 517.60 to $18. lin the London Zoo to -day; ,vet when
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• Cheese, finest welts„ 16%c. Butter the ca lection' was started, 100 years
Paris. The phologral7ft was .akin after they had -visited the Arc de Trtoniplie and laid a wreath there. Prances debt problem may be expressed by the 1 , ..-. •
fact that the franc at present 18 worth less than three cents Instead of the ncrnmal twenty cents, No. 1 pasteurized, 32%p... Eggs, fresh ago, it. contained only a vulture and
extras, 37c; fresh firsts, 83c. - /an eagle. ,
Tho belief that the seedless banana
came from Asia, rather than from