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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1914-04-17, Page 6Grain, Cattle and Cheese Pries of These Products in _,the Leading Markets are Here Recorded aBreadstttl£s. Toronto, April 14.-• _lour—Ontario wheat flours, 90 per cent., $3.85, sea- board, and, at 53.95 to 54, Toronto 1\laultobas—k'irst patents; in jute bags, 55.60; do., seconds. 55,10; strong bak- ers'; in Jute bags, 54.90. Manitoba wheat—Bay ports—No. 1 Northern, 97c, and No. 2,951e; Gocterich is more. Ontario wheat --No. 2 at 98c to 51, outside. according to freight, and $1 on tract,. Toronto. Oats—No, 2 Ontario oats, 39 to 398c. Outside, anti at 41 to 42c, on track. To- ronto. Western Canada. oats, 416e for No. 2, and, at 401e for No. 3, Say Ports, Peas About 95e, outside. Barley --Good malting; barley, 57 to BSc. outside, according to quality. Rye—No.. 2 at 63 to 64c, outside, Buckwheat -75 to 76c, outside. Corn—New No. 9 !�merican, 733e, all rail, 'Toronto. Canadian at 69 to 70c, Bran—Manitoba bran, 524 to $25 a ton, in bags. Toronto freight. Shorts 526 to 527. Country Produce. Butter—Choice dairy, 22 to 23c: in- ferior.. 18 to 19c; farmers' separator Tints, 23 to 26c: creamery prints, fresh., 30 to 32c; do., storage prints, 27 to 28c; solids, storage, 25 to 26c. Eggs -20e per dozen, in case lots. Cheese—New cheese. 151 to 151c for, large, and 16 to 161c for twins. !leans—Hand-picked. 52.20 to 52.25 Per bushel; primes. $2.15 to 53.20. per 1•lonet E.r'tracted, in tins, 11 to 12e er dozens for No. 1 'aid' 52'.40 to 52.50 for No. 2. }'oultry—FonI. 15 to 18c per ib; chick- ens, 19 to 20e; ducks, 17 to 1St; geese, 16 to 16c; turkeys. 20 to 23c. Potatoes--Ontarios, 80 to 850' a bag. on track, and Delawares at 90 to 95c, an track. car lots. • Provisions. Raton—Long. clear, 15 to 16c per lb., in case lots. Hams—Medium, 18 to T880; do., hear', 1.7 to 18c; rolls. 15 to 1$30; breakfast bacon, 18 to 190; backs, 22 to 24e. Lard—Tierces, 138c; tubs, 1350; pails, 14c, Seeds. Wholesale seed merchants are sell- ing re -cleaned seeds to the trade. on the 100-1b. basis:—Red clover, No. 1. $19 to 521; do., No. 2. 517.50 to $18.50; atsike No. 1. 520 to 521; do.. No. 2, ;517 to $18; Timothy. No. 1. 58,50 to 59.501 1, 514o 515;1do,. .25 No.$2, 513 alfalfa, 1, o' LORDHALD A.NE. Lord High Cha ncelloi'-'Oral Sitcaelr�s1, ful War Office Animillietraalol'. Lord IIaldan•c; hays come into the limelight again' as a result o°f, T're- q ' h' No. 4, 52c No. 5, 70c; No, 6, 74o; feed 69c; No. 1 rejected seeds, 5450 No. 2 re- jected. seeds, 830; leo. 1 smutty, 8499; No.• 2 smutty, 838c; No. 1 red. Winter, 881o; No. 2 red Winter. 87c; No. $ red Winter, 851c, Oats --N0. 2 C.W., 341e;' No 3 CLW. . 3333c; No.2 feed. 33c. Bar- ley—No. 3, 448c; No 4, 4880; rejected, 418e; feed, 411c. flax—No, 1 N.W.C.. $1.363; No, 2 C.W., 51.331; No. 3 C.iY., 51.251. Winaipetw Grain. Winnipeg, April 14.—Cash - prices- 1'i'hea.t No- 1 Northern. 881c: No. 2 Northern, 'Sic; No. 3 Northern. 858e; Montreal Markets. Montreal, April 14.—American No. 2 bellow, 773 to 75c, Oats—Canadian Western, No. 2, 436 to 44c; do., No. 3, 43 to 4380. Barley—Manitoba feed, 50 to 51e; malting. 6S to 70c,' I+'lour— Manitoba Spring wheat patents, firsts, 55.60 do„ seconds, 55.10: strong bak- ers', $4,90; Winter patents, choice, 55.25 to 55.50; straight rollers, 54,70 to $4.90; do., in bags, 52.20 to $2.35. Rolled oats—Barrels, 54.55; bag of 90 lbs., 52.15. riillfecd—Bran, 523; shorts. 525; middlings, 538; •mouille, 528 to 532. Hay—No. 9, per ton, car lots, $13 to 514. Cheese—Finest westerns, 146 to i5c; do., easterns, 14 to 1430. Butter —Choicest creamery, 28 to 236o; sec- onds, 27 to 273c. Eggs—Fresh, 21 to 22c; selected, 35c. Potatoes—Per bag. car lots, 728 to 500. United States Markets. Minneapolis. April 14.—Wheat—May. 878 to 8740; July. 895e; No. 1 hard. 914 to 918e; No. 1 Northern. 883 to 908c; 2,do., 554 to 8780. Corn—No, 3 yel- lw, 65 to 658c. Oats—No. 3 white, 363 to 37c Flour and bran --Unchanged, Duluth, April 14.—Wheat—No. 1 hard, 8980; No. 1 Northern Mc; No, 2 North- ern, 861c; Montana No. 2 hard, 871c; May. 583 to 89c; July. 903 to 9040. Lin- seed --Cash, $1.568; May. $1.57$; July, $1.59.,'; September, 51.598; October, the bur- den mer A.s: ui�t�. '.s, taking up , e of Seere�tary,for War, folio -Wing Col. J. E. B. Seems s i+e ignatio:x. The' Lord Chancellor was for + omn,e years :the suieessful political head elf-the'array oc the Asquith Cabinet, ganef the cables say he l,s, '14i1s3^ co;.vchiag Mr. Asquith .for hips •neW office. .bitty -see` en Years hi age, the First Viscount of ` Clean and Lord High Chancellor of Great :.Brittain is the mod famous representative ; of a very ancient Scottish family,- His mother was the daughter c5f Mrr Richard Burdon Sanderson, of West Sive Stock 8Vtarkets. Toronto. April 14.—Cattle—Choice butchers', $3 to $8.40; good. 57.35 to 57.69; medium. 56:40 to $7.35; com- mon, 55.10 to 55,70; choice cows, $6.75 to 57.40; good, 55-75 to 50.35; corn - mon, $4.50 to 55.60; cutters and can- ners, 53.20 to $3.50; choice bulls, 56.75 to 58.25; good, $5.65 to 56.50; common, 54 to 55.40. Stockers and feeders— Steers—Choice, 57.15 to 58,50; good 55.60 to 56.40; light, 53.60 to -$4.75; springers. to 510; milkers. to 595. Calves—Good weals, 53.65 to 510.75, medium, 57 to $9. Sheep and lambs— Light ewes, 55.50 to 57; heavy, 53 to 53.50; Spring lambs, 59 to $9.50. Hogs —59.25 to 59.35, fed and watered; 59.50 to 59.60, off cars; $S.90 to 59. f.o.b. Montreal, April 14.—Prime beeves. S to 88; with a few choice at 85; medium, 58 to 71; common, 48 to 58: milch cows, 540 ot 553; lambs. ' 85 toy 9;hogs about sheen, cents. Mintage H sary Ceases Evora ,Aolfin larch Carel JUST RUE ON 'OLD-Tie/le "NERVI- . • Not necessary to drug inside! .:.That- awful stiffness that makes you y.e1p worse thana kicked dog will be cured -cured for a certainty, • and quickly,too, if you just rub on Nervi - line. Rub Nerviline right into the sore spot, rub lots of it over those tortured muscles, do this and the pain will go. Iron see Nerviline is thin, not oily. Therefore it sinks, in, it penetrates through the tissues, it gets right to those stit,. sore muscles and irritated nerves that make you dance with pain. You'll get almost instant relief from muscle soreness, stiffness, aching joints, lameness or rheumatism by rubbing with Nerviltne. It's a sooth- ing liniment, and doesn't blister, doesn't burn or even stain the skin. It's the most harmless cure in the world for Lumbago, Back Strain or Sciatica. It takes away the ache at once and ends your misery quickly, Now quit complaining—don't suffer another day—Nerviline, that good, soothing' old-time liniment will limber you up mighty quick. Get busy to- day, the large 50c. family size bottle is the most economical, of course, the trial size costs but 250. Any dealer anywhere can supply Nerviline, -!h BRITISH A'CI ATOIt MILLED. WRECKAGE FROM SEALER. Believed to Be From the Deck of the Southern Cross. A despatch ' from St. John's, Nfld., says : Floating wreckage, be- lieved to have oome froln the miss- ing sealer Southern Cross, w_as re- ported by the sealing steamed' Bloodhound. The Bloodhound Pass- ed a large quantity of wreckage Saturday afternoon about 100 miles south-east of this port. It has ap- parently been washed from aseal- er's deck, but, as the crew of the Bloodhound had not heard of the loss of the Southern Cross, no effort was made bo identify it. The steamer Kyle, which has been searching in the vicinity' -of Cape Race, was notified by wireless of the position of the wreckage, and start- ed immediately for the scene, OTTAWA MAN SHOT. Attacked With Knives, Italian Ice- tatliates With Gun. A ttel 1pteii Spiral Descent Against A411 ice of Instructor', A despetah from London says : Sergeant Deane, of the British, A env Flying Corps, wet instantly 'killed at the Brooklands Aerodrome while making his final flight as a pupil before receiving his pilot's certificate, Deane, acting against the advice of his instructor, as- cended to a height of 1,200 feet. He then attempted ' a sharp spiral des- cent, during which he lost control of the aeroplane, which turned over and fell with hint to the ground. C'A.SAo1 N POT''NA.GE GROWS. Marine Service Anguienteil by .344 Vessels -Last. Year. A detpafch from Ottawa says: Capital ostial ated at $26,908,950, in- vested in; 8,545''= Canadian ve eels; while 43,908. •men .wria boys are em-' ;alloyed in the marine service, a,c- fio ding to the al) nital ; report just iestie4 by the .registrar of shipping.. The number of ,vessels registered is 8,545, -and the tonnage is 896,965, an, inerease last year. of 344 vessels. Steamers number 3,847, and the tonnage 711,512`, Of the 344 new -veeeels added to the register lash year the value is $1,07,380. Lord Haldane. Why take chances b1' asking for "A 'Dollar's Worth of ausar ?" 'Buy REDPATH r► Original Packages and yau'.11 be sure of full weight --- highest quality — absolute purity. 81 5Olbs %w lit rel Olbs �,r,, CANADA SUGAR REFINING CO., LINMITEDW e MONTREAL. 700 SPANIARDS ARE EXILED. FARM CONDITIONS ARE GOOD. Villa Strips Northern Mexico of Its The April Cron Bulletin Shows Pa - Entire Population. 1'oi'atble Outlook in Ontario. A despatch from El Paso says: Information furnished by the On Seven hundred Spanish .exiles from tario Department of Agriculture Torreon have entered Texas. With published in their April crop bulle- their removal, Northern .Mexico is tin regarding agricultural condi- practically stripped of its entire tions in the Province is to the effect population, which a few years ago that fall wheat is starting April in numbered thousands, The exile of nearly the satna condition in which the Spaniards is the, result of one it entered the winter, having re- ef the first acts of Poncho Villa af- ceived little injury from the low ter he had captured Torreon. The temperatures of the first quarter of work of clearing the streets of corpses and searching for the last Federal stragglers had not ,yet been completed before the order expel- ling Spaniards from Torreon was given. So. important did he con- sider the work of ridding the La- guna district' of Spaniards, that but 24 hours was given to the unfortu- nates to secure meagre personal be- longings and go to the station, where, under heavy guard, they entrained and were hurried to the border. It was early morning when the refugee train arrived. In the coaches the women and children had been riding, while the men were given quarters in box cars and ca- booses. In the chill morning the train arrived at the Juarez railway '.'Station 'and- remained -there •until dawn, the refugees huddled•In the sass and in the yards, afraid to leave the train in the rebel border town . In spite of the fact that their pro- perty has been confiscated, those who were the wealthiest have as- sisted the poorer ones in suoh ways as they could, and none of the re- fugees are destitute. _ ---- Jesmond, Noehhumberla.nd. Lord Haldane was educated at `'Edin- burgh Academy and afterwards at Edinburgh and Gottingen universi- ties. At the latter place he grained his mastery over the' difficult Ger- man language and his love for Ger- man philosophy 'and literature. At the age of twenty-three lie was called to the Bar, and after. eleven years' head work on the Chancery side, -during which time he:gathered. together a very large practice .and, the consequent profits, he was made. a Q.C. in 1890 ',alt the early; age of thirty-four. Five years previously he had sought and gained Parlia- mentary honors es M.P. for .Had: dingtonshire, which division he re- presented for twenty-seven years, until his promotion to the Woolsack in 1911. Lord Ealdane's immense intellec- tual powers are not lightened by too• mach humor. He takes llim:self and the word in general very seri- ously. He has wade several incur- sions into the world of literature, and besides translating Schope:i- hauer's famous work, "Will and Idea," is author of "Life of Adam Smith,'' "Eduaaticn and Empire," and "The Pathway to Reality," He has a wonderful facility in elucidate ing facts and a more than wonder- ful facility in expressing the re- sult. He can speak for hours on any topic he is interested in and at a paee which is the subject of ad- miration to his friends and the des- pair of the poor shorthand writers transcribing in hie wake. He. is still abachelor and ever likely' to remain se. It is a pity, as giver an ordinary self-res.pectting woman. there would have' been a masterly struggle for 'the last word.' The Lord Cluancellor, . in •addition to being somewhat Germanic in ap- pearance, is a great admirer of. Ger- man literature and philceophy. ,Ile speaks and reads, German with equal facility as his own language. He is a great protagonist of the movement for the general reduoti,on of armaments. MEDALS FOR BRAVE CREW. A .despatch from Ottawa says : John Sisinni, an Italian, 25 years of age, died Sunday night from wounds reecived shortly atter two o'clock in a, Foreign boarding house at 24 West George Street. _ His alleged assail- ant,. Antonio Pedro, escaped from th.e.hons wktllout a. hat dr coat .and succeeded in "eluding the police. The shooting was the culmination of a fight, im which four or five men participarted . with knives. Pedro, who seemed to be the vitcim of the attack, was driven back to a. stair- way in the diming -room, when he opened fire with a, double-barreled Winohe sten. C.P.R. CAPITALIZATION. It is not 'without interest to note that the gross caipitaliz,ation of the C.P.R. per mile is greatly below the average which other big systems show in the United States. The fixed shares of the C.P.R. are un- der $18,000 per mile, as ,against an average of . $38,000 per mile. The lines compared are ;the Atchison, Topeka, Great Northern., Northern Pacific and Union Pacific. As to the bal;anee-sheet valine of, 'the way ,tend equipment per Mile the average for 'the. lines indicated• for 1918 'was, $72,000 per mile, • while for the C:P.11,. "it was only $25,000'per mile: • If the ' ,equipment of • elle G.P.R..be taken as of equal' value with the average of the, lines named, there would be assets representing the ordinary of $300, per ordinary $100 share without allowing any- thing a..t all floe land. • )iroonlanil's Officers and ?len Re- warded for Their Gallantry. A despa'tah from New York says: Captain Paul Kreibohm, comman- der of the Kr'oonland, of the Red Star Line, four of his officers and 85 of the orew, recea:ved medials from the Benevolent Life Saving' Association of New Y•oatk for 'their. gallantry -in' rescuing 88 persons from the burning V"p1turlxo in mid- ocean last Oetober, While Eastern rates ars not spe- cifically treated .in .title reductions made in Western' freight, rates.•by the Dominion Railway Board, they' must neee'ssegily be ,affected as por- tions ,of through rates and he other ways. DIVORCE BY WIRELESS. In Response to Frantic Appeal By Hawaiian Heiress. the year. The present appearance is most encouraging. With regard to fruit trees, despite the cold wea- ther, the present outlook ` is con- sidered satisfactory. The San Jose scale and the tent, caterpillar are more to be feared than sudden dips in temperature. The' clover out- look is bright. The wintering of live stock c.a.used anxiety to many farmers owing to the severe cold, but many claim that the rather steady cold weather mystery. The reward for infor THE NEWS IN A PARAGR (IA pit ,:1ING'S FROM :tia), 0 TBE' tl:' (0.014 i:. I ti f1R. • NUTSHELL. Canada. the Empire snit the W tan General Before Your Eyes. Canada. • J. U. Vincent has been appoii Minister ,of Inland Revenue, Hamilton Army Medical 'Cc presented Int. -Col.- Rennie wit goal wrist watch, as he is lea to j•ain the new. battery. •Thcimas-Carscadden, Prialohpa Galt Collegialte -Institute. 14t• t years, • has resigned, but atill main •cn the staff as English ma Examination of the books of. 3 sell township reveals a star tli unbusineoslike conduct of the 1 ship's affairs. An inquiry is o cat. Capt. 3. B. Cochrane, for th years insLruebor at the Royal tary College, Kings,ton,,professo physics and ,chemistry, has been ti.rcd. Thomas Collins, of the first cession of Eiddulpli township, is ninety-nine and a half years has just commenced taking m Lessons. Next month a large patty of es: will eniigr'ate to Canada from E land under the auspices of the 0 ()lie immigration .- Association Canada. An action for $5,000 damages been entered by E. A. 1). Nor against Henry Bon -mesa for an cle in Devoir regarding the Mo real ele•otions. Col. the Hon, Sam Hughes is be empowered to I•ease 60,000 ac of land to the National Live St Exchange, Ltd., fur the purpose breeding cava:lay remounts. bliss' May Fe•tterly's dis'appc ante from Morrisburg on the 1 of February is ,child an unsol was much better carrying farm ani- mals through than in the case of a so-called mild winter. Horses, with the exception of some cases of dis- temper, did well. Cattle have also done well and are remarkably free from disease. Fodder supplies have been ample to supply all needs. ' Ii1LLED BY STREET CAR. • • Woman Jolted From Motorcycle and hell .Under Trolley. A despatch from Toronto says : Jolted from an extension seat of a motorcycle driven by William Thompson, 901/2 Markham • Street, Mrs. Enema Belz, 90 Markham St., fell in front of an eastbound Dun- das Street car .at the corner of Markham and Arthur streets, and was instantly killed. Thompson and the motorman, William Good- enough, 107 Laughton Avenue, were placed under arrest by Acting De- tective Holmes, on acharge of criminal negligence. The woman's body slipped under the fender and caught in the front trucks, dragged about 50 feet, slip- ped back and was caught by the rear trucks, and again dragged some distance before the car was stopped. So tightly was it wedged between the. rear trucks and the ground that the street railway re- pair gang had to he called to jack up the rear end of the ear before it could be reanoved. A despatch from San Francisco says: Probably the first woman who ever got a decree of divorce by wireless is Mrs. Marie K. King, a beautiful Hawaiian heiress, now in Honolulu. Mrs. King, rich in her own right and it. member of the well- known Piiloi family of Hawaii, separated from her husband, a loccl, oilman, in 1909. In April, 1913, she was granted an inteeloeutory decree of divorce by Judge Waste in Oak- land. and returned to her island es- tate. • In Honolulu she •neet -a wealthy map, whose name is With- held by beg attorneys. They 'de- tided t.o• wed,.,but at, the -last minute Mrs. King remembered''that the, .final decree of divorce. from King had never been granted. She sent wireless mes•ssages to her attorneys'. here, and as a result Judge Dona- hue, of Oakland, signed tho final de- cree, which was at once wirelessetl tai Honolulu, BOX LOSES HIS SIGHT. Youngster Tricked Apparently Emp- ty Can While Playing. • A despatch from Toronto says : Peter John Bola,hood, aged. 12, liv- ing at 123 York Street, kicked what he thought was am empty oan lying on the ground in his back yard, The east immediately blew up with a loud report, and the boy was so in- jured by -the explosion that he will lose the sight of one eye. He is in :the: General Hospital in a critical condition, . Tho pollee have bean unable t,o find any tace' of the •exploded. earl,, 'which oeemis toleave been blown to a;toen•s, stud° so ,are sbinewhat'at a, loss for a, theory of the accident, They tliiale iti likely, 'however, that it had contained dynamite, and bad been loft there. unthinkingly by 607115 of the foeei.gn workmen living in the neighborhood who are em - L STUDENT N'1' BL 1tNED. GIRL 'Knocked Over a Lamp and Set fire to Bel' Clothing. A despatch from Kiagsto•n says; Miss Lulu Smith, of Glencoe,- a second year .arts .student at Queen's 'University, died in the Ge:ceral Ho•epital, the result of burns re- oeived at the V. 'W. C. A. residence. She had been studying, and nheo about to retire knocked over her lamp. The oil spilled out and tock fire. The blaze caught her night cloth e and she wan soon enveloped in flames. Her room -mate beat out the blaze, but the girl was fright- fully burned. _ Deceased . was the daughter of Rev. Dr, Smith, Glencoe, a,;foxaner enissianary, of the Presbyterian Charoh in Obinn, Misie'Smith had devoting ` .her life to mission work irf.th'e Oe' 'ileettial Empire,. Where She was leorn. 21 years ,a, o. , Mies Sineth was, conscious hila the. Fast, 'a,nd, thinking she 'would re- cover,- .asked 'thence• about,. 'ler 'to .arrange with the Queen's registrar about her universityexaminations so that she could write them later tion leading to• her discovery, d or alive, has been doubled. Jacob Kaufman of Berlin made an offer to the directors of Y.W.C.A. to erect; a five -story proof building, if other subsm tions will defray the interior nicking. Great Britain. The London Standard oafs {h will be a. general electio i is Ju The King and Queen of Gr 13r twin headed the subscription for the Newfoundland scaling dis• ter. Lieut, -Genera] Sir . Henry Sclater succeeded General Sir ,Jt Ewart as Adjutant -General of British Army. British syndicalists are agitat for a general strike in the ant) to procure an advance of 5 chilli a week in the weekly wage of workers. Lord Lucas, Parliamentary Set tary fur Agriculture, speaking Hitchin, announced that it was intention in the coming Budget make considerable grants o•ut of Imperial taxation to alleviate position of the unfairly asse farmers. United States. It is estimated now that the in revenue to the United States der the Underwood tariff will far -less: than 'Wes anticipated. Tlie United States Goverli will. pay .$25,000,000 in gold to Colombian Government in a jra settling the Panama canal con versy. ployed on construotioli in the city.' on. General. The Dowager Empress of. Jap dead. The Mexican Federal forces driven out of San Pedro by th bels, with heavy losses on sides. Seal pelts found by the stea Kyle off th•ecoast of iewfound. prove the fate of the Sout Cross. Scandals in connection with graft have resulted in the diem of. the police president of Col the arrest of the. polies commis. er ,of Frankfort, and the ohie speotor of Forob. The ; Carnegie' Hero Fund, awarded a gold medal to King to Exnni,sanuel fourhis work • , eouraging heroiss .deeds in Itsl the exaample he set in giving til the sufierel''e of the Meestinie a quake is 1908, , Bed it is impossibia to patch reputation so that the patches s show.