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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1913-04-11, Page 8itsintemxtegsgs A GOOD HABIT Tea when you are tired, particularly if it's ` TEA }Goes farthest for the money PRICES OF EPI PRO GOTS REPORTS FROM THE LEADING TRADE CENTRES OF AMERICA. Prices of Cattle, Grain, Cheese and Other Produce at Home and Abroad. Breadstufis. Toronto April 8. -Flour -90 per cent. patents, $3.90 to $3.95, Montreal or Toron- to freights. Manitobas-First patents, in ute bags, bags,$8; strong bakery ,y patents, bags, $4.60, Manitoba Wheat -No. 1 Northern, 971.20. on track, Bay ports; No. 2 at 95c; No. 3 at 921-2c, Bay ports. Ontario Wheat -No. 2 white and red 'wheat, 94 to 96c, outside, and sprouted, 76 to 88e. Oats -Ontario oats, 33 to 34c, outeide, and at 37c, on track Toronto. Western Canada oats, 411.2c for No. 2, and 391.20 for No. 3, Bay ports. Peas -90c to $1, outside. Barley -Forty -eight -lb. barley of good duality, 61 to 52e, outside. Seed, 40 to Corn -No. 3 American corn, 581-20, all - rail. Rye -Prices nominal. ' Buckwheat -No. 2 at 52 to 53e, outside. Bran -Manitoba bran, $,1.9.50, in bags, To. fronto freight. Shorts, $22, Toronto. Gauntry Produce. Butter -Dairy prints, choice, 26 to 27c; 'do., tubs, 25 to 26e; inferior, 20 to 21e; creamery, 32 to 33o for rolls, and 29 to 80o for solids. Eggs -22 to 23c, in a jobbing way here, and at 18 to 20e, outside. • Cheese -14 1-2e for large, and 14 3-4o for twins. Beans -Rand -picked, $2.25 per bushel; primes, $2.25, in a jobbing way. Honey -Extracted, in tins, 121-2e to 13o to0 w $3 per dozen ffor No. or Nwholesale: a $2.40 combs, No. 2. Poultry -Well -fatted, Olean, dry -picked stock. -Chickens, 17 to 190 per lb.; fowl, 1.3 to 14c; ducks, 16 to 18o per lb.; geese, 17 to 18o; turkeys 20 to 21e. Live poultry, about 2e lower than the above. Potatoes -Good Ontario etock, 60o per bag, on track, and Delawares at 70 to 72o per bag, on track. Provisions. Bacon -Long clear, 141-2 to 14 3-443 per lb. in case lots. Pork -Short out, $26 to. $27; do., mess, $21.50 to $22. Hams -Medium to light, 18 to 181-4c; heavy, 161.2 to 170; roils, 161Se breakfast bacon, 19 to 191.20; backs. 22e, Lard -Tierces, 141-4o; tubs, 14120; pails, 14 3-4e. Haled Hay and Straw.'. Baled Ray -No. 1 at $12 to $12.25, on track. Toronto; No. 2. $10.50 to $11. Mixed hay is quoted at $9.50 to $10. etL 'The family remedy for Coughs and Colas. Shiloh costs so little and does so much l" MRS. PANKHURST'S SENTENCE Noted Suffrage Turned Pale When *She Received Three Years Hard Labor A despatch from London. says: Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, the leader of the militant suffragette's, was on Thursday found guilty and sentenced to three years' penal servitude at the Old Bailey sessions on the charge of inciting persons to commit damage in respect to the bomb explosion at Lloyd George's country house at Walton Heath. The trial had lasted two days and when the judge, Sir Charles Mon- tague Lush, pronounced sentence his speech was received with loud cries of "shame" from the militant suffragettes, who crowded the court, The jury had added a strong recommendation for mercy, and when the judge pronounced sen- tence the women rose in angry pro- test. As Mrs. Pankhurst stood in the prisoner's enclosure, her sympa- thizers cheered wildly and then filed out of court singing "March on, March on" to the tune of the "Marseillaise." Mrs. Pankhurst, who acted as her own counsel, said she did not wish to testify or to call any wit- nesses. She spoke for 50 minutes, at times wandering so far from the matter before the court, that the judge severely censured her. Speak- ing with much feeling, Mrs. Pank- hurst fiercely criticized the man- made laws, and said that the di- vorce law alone was sufficient to justify a revolution by the women. In impassioned tones she declared that whatever might be her sen- tence she would not submit. From the very moment when she left the court she would refuse to eat and would start a "hunger strike," She would, she said, come out of prison dead or alive at the earliest possi- ble moment. Justice Lush, in 'summing up, told the jury that Mrs. Paiilchurst',s speeches were an ;admission theft she had incited to the perpetratiOu of illegal acts. Mrs. Pankhurst almost broke down when the jury pronounced its verdict. Leaning over the front of the prisoner's enclosure and ad- dressing the judge before he passed sentence, she said : "If it is impossible to finda, dif- ferent verdict I want to say to you and to the jury that it is your duty as private citizens to do what you can to put an end to this state of affairs." She then repeated her determination to end her, sentence as soon as possible, saying: "I de not want to commit suicide. Life Li very dear to all .of us. I want to see the women of this country enfran- chised. I went to live until that has been done. I will take the des- perate remedy other women have taken and I will keep, it up as long as I have an ounce of strength left in me. I deliberately broke the law, not hysterically and not emo- tionally, but for a set andserious purpose, because I honestly believe it is the only way. This movement will go on whether I. live or die. These women will go on until wo- men have obtained the common rights of citizenship as they shall have.over the civilized world before this movement is over." Baled Straw -$0.50 to $9, on track, To- ronto. Montreal Markets. Montreal, April 8. -Corn, American No. 2 yellow, 611.2 to 621.2c. Oats, Canadian Western, No. 2, 41 1-2c; Canadian Western, No. 3, 39c; extra No. 3. feed, 40 to 401.2c. Barley, Manitoba feed, 51 to 52c; malting, 70 to 76o. Buckwheat, No. 2, 56 to 580. Flour, Man. Spring wheat patents, firsts, 86.40; seconds, $4.90; strong bakers', $4.70; Winter patents, choice, $5.25; straight rol- lers, $4.85 to $4.90; straight rollers, bags,. 5220 to $2.35. Rolled oats. barrels. $4.35; bags, 90 lbs., $2.05. Bran, $20. Shorts. $22. Middlings, $25. Mouillie, $30 to $35. Hay, No. 2 per ton, oar lots, $11.50 to $12.50. Cheese, finest westerns,'13o; finest east - erns. 121-3 to 12 3-4e. Butter, choicest creamery, 30 to 31o; seconds,27 to. 290. Eggs, fresh, 23 to 24c. Potatoes, per bag, car lots, 60 to 70e. Winnipeg Wheat. Winnipeg, April 8. -Cash prices :-Wheat -No. 1 Northern, 875.8o; No. 2 Northern, 847 -Bo; No. 3 Northern, 815-Bc; No. 4, 783-4c; No. 6, 73 1-2c; No. 6, 671.2c; feed. 69e; No. 1 rejected seeds 793.4e; No. 2 do., 77 3.4e; No. 3 do., 74 3.4o; No. 1 tough, 80 3-401 No. 2 do., 78 5.8o; No. 3 do., 751-2o; No. 4, 711-8c; No. 6 do., 66 1-2e; No. 6 do., 601-20; MOWED WN To A IVIA\ Montenegrin Bomb Throwers Sacrificed Their Lives To Make Way For Infantry A despatch from Cettinje says : Great Tarabosch fort, which for months has held the allies off Scut- ari, is now practically in the hands of the Montenegrins, thanks to the sacrifice of 200 bomb -throwers, every one of whom lost his life in a last desperate effort to clear the way to the town, for the possession of which Montenegro is ready to give up everything. These bomb - throwers were all picked men, chosen from several battalions. Clambering up the mountain -side under a murderous fire from the Turkish guns, they cut the -wire en- tanglements, and getting to close quarters, threw bombs among the Turks, thus opening the way for.the storming party. Not one of the bomb -throwers returned, but they following close upon them, charged the trenches. The Turks held their ground and a desperate hand-to- hand fight ensued, lasting an hour, and ending in victory for the Monte- negrins, who lost 300 killed. Tier after tier of entrenchments had to be taken, but the troops of the Southern Division, under General Martinobitch, to whom the task had been assigned, overcame all ob- stacles. The tactics followed, par- ticularly in regard to the use of bomb -throwers, were similar to those adopted in the capture of Ad- rianople. But in the advance of Adrianople the soldiers who cut and divided the wire entanglements sur- rounding the forts were clad in cuirasses and provided with shields. At Tarabosch the rough mountain- side made it necessary for the Mon - had accomplished their object, tenegrins to dispense with all im- and the Montenegrin infantry, pediments. GE MA o AI SHIP CAFE Machinery Of Latest Zeppelin Goes Wrong And She Lands In French Parade Ground A despatch from Luneville, France, says : One of the great German Zeppelin air cruisers land- ed on French territory on. Thurs- day, .coming down on the military parade ground here at mid-day, while a brigade of. French riflemen was drilling, It was . seized by the French authorities. Six German officers alighted from the gondola, and explained to Brigadier -General Anti de, Leon Lescol, who galloped feed, tough, 51c; No. 1 red. Winter, 89 5.80; No. 2 do., 867.8e; No. 3 do., 83 5.8c; No. 4 do., 80 3.4c. Oats -No. 2 C. W. 33 5-8c; No. 3 C. W., 31c; extra No. 1 feed 32o; No. 1 feed, 31c; No. 2 feed, 27c. Barley -No. 3, 473-4c; No. 4, 46c; rejected, 41c; feed, 40e. Flax -No. 1 N. -W., 81.07.1-2; No. 2 A. W., $1.04 3-4; No. 3 C. W., 970. United States Markets. Minneapolis, April 8 -Wheat, May, 861-20; July, 88 3-4c; September, 891-4 to 89 3.80; Cash -No. 1 hard, 88e; No. 1 Northern, 86 to 871-2e; No. 2 do., 833-4 to 851-2e No. 3 yellow corn, 491-4 to 50e; No. 3 white oats, 301.2 to Mc; No. 2 rye, 54 to 66x+; br;;u. Do not be misled-- ` ASK FOR and LOOK for the Trade -Mark. Perrin's Gloves are famed for their Style, Fit and Finish. Gloves that are .rVO7' stamped with either the trade -mark or the name "Perrin's Make" are not the genuine. 3 -4I -f2 y SUFFRAGETTES ON WAR PATH Railway Stations Wrecked and Trains Blown Up By Explosives In London Suburbs A despatch from London says: The Suffragettes continued their "reign of terror" on Friday. They burned a large unoccupied house at Chorleywood, in Hertfordshire. Only the walls of the building were left standing. The usual cards bearing the legend, "Votes for Wo- men," were found. The loss is $12,500. The police believe that some of the recent acts attributed to the Suffragettes, principally the at- tempts to destroy railway property, was the work of men engaged by the women. All the railway stations and tiunnel_ are beingg patrolled in $16.50 to $17.00. Flour prices un ed Duluth,Anrtl s Wheat, No nn d, order top prevent t miscreants from 867-8 to 86 7.80; No.1i Northam. B5 tod• . 86 7-8c; No.2 do., 8238•to'83780 Montana, .anagng them. yearnings were No. 2 hard, 87 6-Bc; May, 873.8e1 -JL y,B9a,; .sent out on Friday by the director - bid. Linseed on track, $1.23; to arrive $1. ales of the railroad systems 25; May. $1.24 1-4; July, $1.26 1-2 asked; Sep- y tember, $1.28 1-2 nominal; October, $1.28 throughout the United Kingdom to bid. the effect that militant Suffragettes had threatened to burn stations in various parts of the country, Pa- trols were ordered to be organized at all•stations and in the tunnels. Some empty trains were greatly damaged by explosives near Stock- port, Cheshire, in the course of the night, and Suffragettes are sus- pected of having committed the outrage. A canister of explosives had been placed under a seat in Live Steck Markets. Montreal, April 8. -Sales of choice steers were made at $7 50 to $7.75; good at $7 to $7.25, fair at $6.50 to $6.76, and the lower grades at from $5.25 to $6.25 per owt. , Choice butcher cows, $6.25 to $6.60, and common as low as $4, and Malls ranged from $4 to $6.50 per cwt. Spring lambs from $6 to $8 each. Inferior calves, $1 to $3 each, but the better stook sold from 5 to $12 each. Selected lots of hogs sold at • $10.75, with a few lots bringing as high as $11 per cwt., weighed off cars. Toronto, April 8 -Cattle-Choice butcher $6.50 to $7.00; good medium, $6 to $6.50; common. $5 to $5.25; cows, $4.75'to $5.65;. bulls, $3 to $5.25; canners, $2 to $2.50, $3.- 25 3:25 to $3.76. Calves -Good veal, $5 to $9.50; common, $3 to $3.25. Stockers and Feed - ere -Steers, 700 to 1,000 pounds, $4.50 to $5.- 75; yearlings, $3 10 to $3.50. Milkers and springers --At from $50 to $72. . Sheep and lambs -Light ewes, $6 to $7,25; heavy. $5 to $6; lambs, $8.25 to $10; bucks, $4.60 to $6. Hoge $9.85, fed and watered, $9,50 2.- o.b., and $10.15 off oars. up, that the motor of the airship had developed a defect. The rank- ing German officer said they had departed from Friederichishafen, on Lake Constance, .et 6.40 o'clock Thursday morning, and had lost their way in the.el,o•ud.s. The news of the descent of the German mili- tary dirigible was telegraphed to the Minister of War at Paris, and Eugene Etienne, the Minister of IWar ordered it to be seized, New Treatment Now Advocated For Bronchitis Is Having Wonderful Success, and is Making Most Remarkable Cures. For bronchitis a different form of treat- ment reatment is now advocated. It consists e>' a scientifically devised vapor that pene- trates to the uttermost recesses of the lungs and bronchial tubes: livery spot that is sore, every surface that is irri- tated is at oncebathed with soothing balsams and healing essences that make chronic bronchitis an impossibility. This treatment now so universally em- ployed in bronchitis, throat troubles, colds, etc:, is called CATARRHOZONE. It acts just as air of the pine woods acts, as a healing antiseptic remedy for all diseases of the breathing organs. Just think of it -a remedy that can be carried with the very air you breathe to the coat of bronchial or catarrhal in- flammation. A remedy powerful enough to kill germ life and yet so healing that disease flees before it. Catarrhozone- is truly a wonderful remedy. In many. lands it has woe its 'way, and is afford- ing grand results to sufferers from Bolds, catarrh, throat weakness, asthma add bronchitis. There is no sufferer from a grippy cold or any winter ill, that won't find a cure in Catarrhozone, which is em- ployed by physicians, ministers, lawyers and public men throughout many foreign lands, Large size lasts two menthe and costs $1.00 and is guaranteed; small size 50e., sample size 250., all storekeepers and druggists, or The Catarrhozoua Co., Buf- falo, N. 'X., and Kingston, Canada, 9• Thomas Riley was found guilty 'of manslaughter in trial at Hamilton. Ler killing of his wife a coups of months size), and %vat $bnt:eneed to seven years in the penitentiary. one of the cars with a quantity of fire lighters saturated with resin and oil. The force of the explosion splintered the sides of several cars, a number of doors being hurled long distances. There was also an attempt to blow up Oxted Station, in. Surrey, on the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway, but the damage caused by the explosion was inconsiderable, only the win- dows and doors of a lavatory being shattered. A travelling basket was found in the lavatory containing a clock timed to go off at 3 a.m., and some cans of petrol. A fuse had been set into ae small package of gunpowder, vahi�eh evidently ex- ploded without igniting the petrol. A revolver was found -outside, which apparently had been dropped during a hurried flight. Mrs. Pankhurst has carried out her threat toga on a hunger strike. The last meal she took was lunch- eon' before sentence was imposed upon her on Thursday. Since she entered Holloway Jail she has con- formed to all its rules except that she refuses food. Mrs.' Pankhurst will be removed to the women's penal establishment at Aylesbury, where any steps than are considered necessary to feed her will be taken. GRUESOME DETAILS. How the Scott Antarctic Party Met O eath. A despatch from London says : The Imperial Merchant Guild of Liverpool has received some details of the death of the Scott Antarctic party from Captain B. J. Watson, the guild's agent at Wellington, New Zealand. Captain Watson says ;- "I heard from a shipmaster who had a conversation with Com- mander Evans at Lyttelton that at the time when Captain Oates left the others in the tent and went out- side he had no feeling, having lost his feet through frostbite. Some. time previously I also heard that when the party set out to look for the Southern party and later dis- covered the bodies, they were so at- tenuated as to be unrecognizable." *14 SEEDING WILL BE LATER. Will Not .be General in the 'West Until Between April 15 and 20. A despatch from Winnipeg says Seeding will not be general in the western provinces until between April 15 and 20, an average of ten or twelve days later than 1912, ac- cording to reports from two hun- dred points on Wednesday. While a few places report snow still lying to depths varying from thirteen inches to three feet,'the country is generally clear, and the spring. re- cord may still be much better than last°year, when severe frosts in two 'weeks following the seeding did great damage.. quickly otope. coughs, cures colds, and heals the threat and lungs. 25 cents. *14 John' Pitcher, who lost both legs in, a car accident at Brantford, is dead. Another Case of Blood. Poisoning Persisted in paring his corns with a razor. Foolish when cure is so painless and sure with Putnam's Corn Extractor. Use Putnam's only -it's the best -guar- anteed and painless. prick 25c. at all deal- ers. YIELDS 75 CENTS TO PAN. Miners in British Columbia Good Gold "Values. A despatch from Vancouver says: The prospectors in the new gold field at Silver Creek, Northern British Columbia., found gold in bedrock yielding 75e. to- the pan. It will take -several months, how- ever, to prove the gold fields, for on most of the claims water and ice new prevent the miners from reaoh- ing bedrock. 'B PROFIT SHARING BONDS. Attractive Form of Investment. An attractive folder which will be of great interest to capitalists who are looking for a safe investment yielding 7 per cent., and which of- fers at the same time possibilities of bringing in still further profits, may be obtained by writing to The National Securities Corporation, Limited, Confederation Life Build- ing, Toronto. t This latter Company has been particularly successful in developing and financing various industrial en- terprises. The investment describ- ed in this folder is in the form of profit sharing bonds with interest at 7 per cent., payable semi annu- all.y. Farmers in Sydney township, around- Kingston, report 'that rail- way surveyors are busy and think the LC.R. is behind it, Montreal Chamber of Commerce will ask the Government to compel banksantee detop•eo•sstaitsblish, a fund to guar - Find THE NESS IN A PARAGRAPH iiAPPBNINGS FROM ALL OVEli TUE GLOBE IN A NUTSIIFJ L., Canada, the Empire and the iTorIa in General Before Font Eyes, Canada. Hamilton's new Waldorf Hotel will be twelve storeys high. H. R. Parsons has been appoint- ed city engineer of Peterboro. A crude copper hook, possibly of pre -historic origin, was unearthed at Fort William. Hon. Colin Campbell will likely retire from the Manitoba Cabinet because of ill -health. Rev. Dr. W. P. Dyer has resigned the Principalship of Albert College and may be succeeded by Rev. Dr. E. N. Baker. Ottawa hears that F. W. Gutelius may be made general maneger of the I.C.R., replacing the present Board of Management. The body of James Moore, a, mine foreman, was found in his shack on Elk Lake -with a bullet wound in the heart. Wasil Boyko was found guilty of manslaughter in connection with the killing of Casimir Linkiewitz at Hamilton and sentenced to ten years. A Brockville cleric in his father's store left on Monday for New York to wed a young widow reported to be worth fifteen to twenty million dollars. Miss Lena Roy, a French-Cana- dian girl, aged seventeen, was mar- ried to Hori. Huno Von Holstein Rathbone, a Danish nobleman, at Prince Albert, Sask. Great Britain. Lady Pitman, second wife of the inventor of shorthand, is dead at Bath. Heavy rains have aggravated the flood situation in the middle- west- ern States. Suffragettes are blamed for a small fire in the Free Church at Hampstead. Incendiarism had been threatened. The Rothschilds have subscribed more than Q o the $100,000 15.0 of • al League u e h as which the Nation g raised to oppose woman's suffrage in Britain, United States, Thousands of school teachers are needed in China. Connecticut woman suffragists have lost their fight, in the legisla.- ture. Glenn Curtiss, the American avi- ator, considers an Atlantic flight possible. President Wilson is confronted m ith a serious tariff problem. Removal of all tariff from raw wool has been agreed upon between President Wilson and members of the house ways .and means commit- tee. General. Montenegro has thrown down the gauntlet to the six great powers. Hereafter Germany will veil with secrecy her experiments with aerial craft. . Sergt. Phansoux, a French mili- tary aviator, was killed at Amiens when concluding a flight from Rheims. ofBuenos Ayres, :apitel of the Ar- gentine Repuiblic,has a population 1,434,830,' havig doubled in ten years. ' CANADA'S INCOME. . Dominion Finances for the .Year 1912-12. A despatch from Ottawa says; The statement of revenue and ex- penditure of the Dominion for the fiscal year just closed, as by returns furnished to the Department of Fi- nance to the night of March 31st, has been issued. It shows that; for date the fiscal year ended on that t i� the revenue totalled $165,528,137, as compared with $132,745,386 for the fiscal year ended March 31st, 1912, an increase of $32,782,751. The in- crease was general,in all sources of revenue. In Customs there was an increase of $26,726,391 ; . in excise an increase of $2,238,300.; in post - office receipts an increase of $1,566,- 747; in receipts from public works and railtgays and canals an increase of $2,037,882; from miscellaneous sources an increase of $213,431. The expenditure on consolidated funds account for• the fiscalg' ' year was $95,025,013, as against $83;500,593 for the precedin7rear, an increase ' of $12,064,420. On capital account' there was a decrease of -$151,629, namely, . from $28,909,985 to $28,- 758,456.