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The Exeter Times, 1922-9-28, Page 7'..-CRANAK,;.,.:Qlt:AS:KtCSOE:0FSTRArfS:.: d'oerelatch from Coustan:tinople says:---fSumming up the Military sit - nation here, 'officers at British head- gee:eters said on Iiihersday "We now alold a strip en the Asiatic side, coveting the n arrows a joint eenference. While Geneial Pelle refused, to ;discuss the visit, he said he was in/pressed with Keonal's I frankness when he stre-ssed his in- ability' to hold 'back his troops much longer if th:e•formal control of Con- Chanalt Our advance posts are stantinciple is net promptly conceded. pttehecl: out on -all pessible lines: of the Hernia Bey visited General I-tarring- ICientalest approadh. The positions, are ton. Commander of the Mlle& fardee , welil enttenolved and wired. Fur der - Mare, ia the available IVIeclitentranea(n fleet now is at the Dardanelles." It. is :also officially stated here that titie f °axes have no intention of evaau,atang Cons,tanbutople, "It is true that the British ,army is a declaration of war, ,agamst Great embanking the -wives ;and farail•ies of Ban ritain d, would be resisted with its memberst" said an offrei(al "but all vigor. this need not icause tanxiety. Officers Humid B•ey ried epl, that the Nernale and men islioultd, not be Iramper:etl by, lists dlid not wish to light th13 e ritish. Thpr:ettence of their families. A means (if lavoidin,g a breach was "The British hourly are expecting a then discussed. otcnorlai Ipanringeon re large focof (cavalry, ta'nlos and ped roposthat a conference be eal•led. armored oars. Furthermore, the At- early in Cachet. OT sooner, aind asked lantle fleet is sending here additional I-Iamid Bey to guarantee that the aircraft and light ,cruieenst, • "Berl," the Turkish paper at Ana- -belie, says: "Now u.-eigns the victorious Turk. At this moment 'Ilturkey is not making war to re,o,coupy Thiace and Adrianople, but everyone is. perfectly certain that Turkey eould' recoVer them by force is she Ificed." Another, Turkish p•aper says: "It is just the ;tactile for us whether we go to an.-: conference as ,00nquerfors con- quered', provided our tre.tional aspira- • tions are accepted.. Our terms Ivre known." Vnt General Pelleh, FrencHigh Com- missioner here, has returned' fr(oni 'Smyrna, where he extended to Kemal the invitation of the Allies to attend and explained that what the .Kemal- itrs were is•eeking writes the -right to moss the Dardenellere, a :privilege already (a:a:Corded to the Greeks,- . General Harringten replied that a •advanee (on the Straits meant Turks Would observe ;the neutt(alatgr of the straits -until then. The Turkish enyoy rsphac1i that he could not fur- nish such a guarantee. Latter General I-Iarrington reoeived the Turkish War Minister and the IVIinister ef the Interior and they clis- cussed how peracefuil tonditians could be maintained in the ,capital in the event ef disoncliers. The French and Italian generals expreists regret that -their Governments find themsel,ges unable to participate in the preparations for ;defence. The French commander, however, -assured General Harrington that the Freinch trloops would assist in every wai y n preserving Mover. Washington Garden Grows Potatoes on Vines d;espatoili from Hohuogn, Wash., says:--Poba,toes are. growing on vines in the garden of Harry Van Warbler here. He says he -planted, his crop in the usual viray. He was 'startled by the size of the plants and stiil1 more startled -when tubers began to form on therm. He is, now picking large potatoes three feet above the -ground': The United Kingdom was a better customer of Canada than the United 'States for the twelve month ending -with July, according to a stait,enient issued by the Federal Bureau of Sta- tistics. The total exports of Canadian praclucts to the United States for that period were valued •at 3304,000,000, and to Great Brritain. arid Ireland were netaTly $307,000,000. • New Type Permits Sightless and Seeing to Correspond. A new type 'system, developed in Prance, which serves as a medium of correspondence between -the blind and Those who See, efollows very closely the form and characters- of the Roman alphabet, except that the fetters con- sist of a series of dot's instead of full lines.. The idea is to s-hpplernent rath- er than replace the Braille system of printing for the blind., and it has the :approvalaf the Interallied Congress of Mutilated. The •estimated, yield ;of 903,919,800 :bUsihelts of 'grain loi• tihe • Western Provinces this year by the Winnipeg Free Press, as compared: with 631,- 984,500 ilyeshells in 1921, hag, been con- firmed by Dr. J. H. Grisdale, Deputy,. Minister of Agriculture. Canada Fro Coast to Coast CLharlottertawn, P.E.I.—Fifty thou- sand domays have been borrowed by the Pro•vinoe of Prince Edward Island under the Federal housing scheme. Prince Edward' Island is the last province to take advantage of the Federal Government loan, probably whioh are damaging grain crops. Many reports have been received from because the need for liouses in this province has not been as urgent as in districts vibere tale birds ore causing_ the other Provinces. T,he -money bole pinch havoc in th,e grain fields. Grande Prairie, Alta.--A.aciording to in rowed is to he used for the main part Charlottetown, it is understood. captured 50• per cent.. of the first prizes offered. Regina, Sask.—An Order -in -Coun- cil has been p,a,sseci by the Provincial Gaverninent making it legal' for farm- ers to shoot, .orult of season, wild. 'ducks Hartville, N.S.—The Premier Paper and Power Company is preparrin,g to install a standard newsPriirt. machine The quality is :excellent and harvest - in its plant at Harttrillie. The machine ing, conditions favorable. The very will have a capacity of 15,000 t -ons. a heavy rains during the latter Part of year. In order to provide the neces- the sea,son seem to have given the sexy power, the oompany is making strop ,stufflaient moisture to promote an additional de-velopment of 5,000 growth, A conservative estimate horse -power on the river, • places the yield at 17 to 2() ,bu,nnets St. John, NB.—The rapid: *move-, of -wheat per acre this season. ' ment of lumber froan the north shore' Vernon, B.,C.---A rancher on Olean - of the province, including stocksagan Lake is now stalling gTeren filbert wil-dich have aocumulated since war nuts which are of excellent quality time, has created something like al and flavor. He has conducted eXperi- • boom In this district. 'Steaniers and merits for some time and 'elaims that sailing vessels are -being loaded in nuts can 1o,e grown in the Okanagan numb ars which sureas,s anything wit- nessed for many years, and the werk taus effordeti ,and the money put into circulation, has made a Subs a it t inl impaovenaient in conditions. The cleat - Ing up of old stocks also Opens '1.e 'we y for mere extensive hirribering . (tions in the coming seaeon, `1Theee Rivers, Que.—The plant of the St. Maurice Lime Company at St. Louis de France'is being enlarged from two to six kiln capacity, which will give the plant a production of 600 tons of lime per week. The company has also under construction, at an estimated cosi of $175,000, a rail -way ccemecting:the plant with Piles Juncition. the latest ,crop report from the Peace River district, indications are that netwithsrbanding the exceptionally dry sea.son, a fair crop is being harvested. 50 04,) tetRS wit -SON'S rr e 11 64.)e S5 N{o Pit .A1'4 FAN' LA TT Lk?: orrietz , e••• ten. '•"), RPM. GoVernment Crop Estimate for 1922 Canagla!s Ihimper Harvest Wheat .. Oats ... Barley ... Hay and Clover . 1921, „ 1922 300,858,100 hu. . 20,968,0002 426,232,900 )bria.. 509,752,000 59,709,100 gni. • 64,881,000 ,21,455,260 lou. 37,848,000 4,111,800 ho. 4,530,000 9,930,000 tons 15,545,000 Inane:are 20,109,900 83,519,100 4,171,900 16,392,740 418,200 5,615,000 CONSTITUTION PASSED BY IRISH HOUSE Second Reading by Provision- al Parliaraent Given 47 • to 16 Vote. A despa h from Dublin .says: -- The constitution passed tits second reading by the Provisional Parlia- ment by a vote of 47 to 16, without any -amendment or -change being of- feredi. On Monday the House will can - side -r, clause by clause, the draft all-, ready approved by the British, and' some amendments will be offered, principally' by Labor representatignee, The Government, up'on request, an- nounced that twelve articles in the draft renst remain intact. In ten of them the ruler of Great Britain is referred to ei•ther, as the King, Crown OT his Majesty. •.. . Efforts to latter :other ,artioles wili not likely be attended by much suc- cess. The first 25 :articl,es will'be con - &tiered IOU Monday and the Ministry's hope ;of getting thes,e approved, before adjournment that day indicates the „attitude toward tthe would -he 6.111'P1dL- • ers. • Expressing a wish for more in- telligent criticilsari during the third reading, Minister of Hontie Affairs O'l-Iiggins warned that there wo'uld be no time for sentimental pr•otests Sudbury,' O'nt.—The large plant of the International Nickel company .at •Oopper Cliff has resumed op-erations after havin,g been- closed down for eighteen months. The ccanpany is *- mating at one-1-0111nd of its war -time capacity. Regular "shipments of the matte will be mode to the refinery at Po'rt Colborne, The refined nickel will be shipped to the new rolling mills at unti Hngdon, Va., where it will be rolled into' malleable metal netcl. mar- keted mostly in the United States, Winnipeg, Man.—YIanitoba better, in keen competition with butterr from other Canadian prorvinces; carried off two first prizes at the Canadian Nee tionall Exhibition at Toronto, a000rd- ing totan (announcement by L, A. Gibc son, provincial dairy conamissionert As there Me but lour teo,tionn for creamery limb -bole Manitoba exhibitors Vnliey as well as :fruit and presages a time when they will be exported frortiliere in bangle quantities. RtgIt PLE ANADA CENT OF 1921 COAL CONSUMPTh kei'10`1„1-tv;(11SL ieSttbite beioCtlit at peheevil;eV0'.1"11,0 think ,so, awl 'will arise indigitatitly• collf/Tte the etatotnent. They ,sect f)orairlien Placed on EqualitY With States in the IVIatter a Ile PTOk..ipo,ct neeee in it clerlt woeld • Distribution of Fuel Duririg Present Season Basis•is t.t/14eiY,3' Same as That Prevailirifi During the War of Loals; they make a luxury of grief OT, 1.04.1Sity a grievance. sions of the United State,s, the Perin- Phere can ne eing 'Tit e A des:patch froui PhiladelPhia; Pant A11,3rs,:—Di$4.Tirbution of all entheeoite .produced in the next year witil '4e .regulated. by the Pereirsylva.rfia Fuel Commission under an agreement af- fected in this ;city on. Thursday. All states, ineluding Pennsylvania and the Dominion ;of Canada, win receive -allocations :of :anthracite under a tribution s'yetem devised by the Penn - Sylvania Commission. Bach state and' Canada will be alio- muted' 6 per cent. of the total -amount • of pre,pared ,sizes of /anthracite actu- ally consumed during 1921. Instead of a,pplying to the Federal Fuel A6- mirAstratEon in Washington, the marl- ous states and Canada wall conduct all business of anthracite distribution througli the Pennsyl-vania Commis. Sion, of which W. D. B, tkiney, ehair- man of the Public Serrvice Co-mmis- sion, is the head. The- entire matter ed: distribution was gone over here on Thursday, when the Fuel. Commissioners r,epresmiting the various states, as well as Canada, Met with. the Federal Fuel Committee and the Pennsylvania Feel Commis- sion at ,the. Bellevue, 'Stratford. •Following the conferent,e between representatives of the Fuel Commis. against his Majesty. He said: "That was ell thretsheci out last Deoember and: the ,situation is too grave and too urgent to rover the g,round again. We know that the ,signatorieslcilid not like (blue treaty any ,more than we did." According to the latest estimate of the fruit branch of the Department of Agrieulturre, the apple yield of Can- ada this year will amount to 2,537,850 barrels arucl 2,215,000 boxes. Of this quantity British Columbia accounts for 2,215,000 boxes; Ontario, 285,000 112:erre:is; Queibec, 61,600 barrels; New Brunswick, 41,250 barrels; and. Nova Scotia 1,500,000 barrels. According to preliminary estimates the production of gold during August from the mimes of Northern Ontario was the 'highest on record, with a to- tal yield of approximately $1,840,000. For the first time the production of gold in Ontario exceeded the rate of 322,000,000a year. Eight mines con- tributed ta, the output, three being in Porcupine and five ijn Kirkland Lake. At least five more producers will like- ly be inothlded; Within a few mon'thts; while the peresent producers, by en- larging their mill1s,• are expected to ,ackl cllose to 50percent. to their out- put within the next twelve months SUCCESSFUL OBSERVATIONS MADE BY VARIOUS NATIONS OF SOLAR ECLIPSE Sylvania Commitsi,on, represent,ed ,by and a reverent eyatitatbY for th0s,0 001Pm6s,stoner James S. Berm, w1To who lost dear ones in •Tile WOX. Ncr served as chairman in plaee lef MT. can there be any palliation for the AineY, went into 'conference with, hideous iniquity of starting that war members of the Canadian Fuel Com- I ,at all, Not in mar time earl We reckon mirsion. • I to the full all that -bite evorld lost In The Canadian Oonarnissionent were lives of beautiful promise Many wo- informed that 'their conntry wciudid be men were cle,franded of their birth - put on the same distribution basis as right to be married to the Mee they prevaO1 : during 'the war-, but that cored Tor most. The surplus of the 1 the)/ woi4c1 be permitted 60 per emit., marriageable womanhood of Europe as the United States. One rigid rage,- ' gedies. One natent social lea after lotion laid down to 'the Canadian another may be (hurled :against the tion were (the Canadian :aeal dealers' is the hest age that the world has to enter the United States market known, with an ,offer to buy anthracite coa , But it is. at :a ,priee higher than 38.50 art the Never was there a time so gdod for . , mines, us fixed by the Pennsylvania man or wanian live in, for a a et Commission :and, announced, on Tues:- to grow up day by Governor Sproul, "What nonsense!" will be 'the exele- The regulation, the Commission de- mation of many to VvItoan the very clared, forestalls any attempt en the streets •exhibit a panorama of all that part of the Canadian coal dealers, to' is vulgar, unholy and: in need of re- enter the market dangle a fanay, forming. They can reeite a long price :before some of the more ime catalogue ;of besetting sins and reg - reliable operators, and ship out eoal nant evils. They decry the failure of and ,disrupt. the entire system of dis- The Church; they assert that the tociel tribution as well as create is sleareag-e) cortscionce dead; they see thie world in this country that might become rushing headlong to perdition, and serious, they look back with repining to the 1 ti dt he -which in the of.their no'rreal ,consuraption, the same is one off 'the great outstanding. tire', authonities was that under Ile condi. target a our first -sentence, that this tlays tier o , Mustapha Kemal Pasha Leader of the Turkish Nationalists, who have so decisively defeated the Greeks in Asia Minor. He is com- manding the best equipped Turkish. army that ever conducted a campaign. He demands that the Allies band, ,Ctan- stantinople over to the Turk's. Quebec Buys Another 250 Milligrams of Radium A despatch from Montreal says:— The . Quebec Government has bmight enother 250 millig-rams of radium in addition to the one gram already pur- chased by it some time a;o. Beth • purchases were from the 'United States Radium Corp oration, the price being at the rate of $77 a milligram The new supply will be placed. at the disposal of the Univensite de Mon - A -despatch from London says:— to be highly pleased at the success of the photographic plate, ta.ken with the The astronomers had a splendid view of ,Dhavoday,,s sole_ „tedpse n_ from purpose of proving Einstein's theory M' relativity, namely, the bending path Woodall, near Broome, Aostralia, ac- of ,a ray ,cd light in, its passage cording to a despatch to The Times through the sun's gravitational field. from Perth. The sky was Cloudless The Canadian land Australian astron- and the observations were most sac- omen occupied positions nearby the cessful. •- Americans. All had made careful ef- ' The United •States expedition at forts to verify the Einstein theory. Woolal, head'ed hy Professor W. W. Cheistinas Island, where the British, Campbell, director of Lick Observe- Dutch and German expeditions were tory, saw c'orona 40,000 miles wide, lacated', and Wooled, were •considere-d from which four long streamers of light shot forth, one extending 2,500,- 000 miles•fr•om the sun's ;centre, says a despatch to the Exchange Telegraph from Melbourne. The (lunation of the totality of ;the eclipse was four sec- onds shorter and began 15 seconds th e rnost favorable points far ;otter- - (ation:, becarkse of the sen's high alti- tude there, but an exped•ition, under New Gold Discoveries retrosp'eat seern to them 'infiniterlY in British Columbia 1922. Let clear the ro,aci dust -out of eur more good to live in than. September, us A despa.tah from Quesnel Dam, B.C., eyes lancl see truly. Let us have the says:--Man'y' claims, have been record- Tight perspective on the familiar and ea within a radius of 01112 mile of the near -at -hand. The war did not Quesnel Dam, and gold* is being re- ruin the world. It couldn't. It brought cove•recl from all. Pro,spectors who out the best as well as the worst in have spent the ::'.11D.MET successfully people, and the residual goodness in - prospecting the clistriot hills -are rush- measurably overbalances the evil. We ing back here to get in ou the new, take 'bo -day :a thouvandfold more eare strikes which have taken place within of the mentally or physically enfeebl- the past two; weeks. The Cedar Creek eel and depend.ent titan we -used to Chann•ol has been staked for five take. Crimes against the so D'Al order of old were hidden by a false prudery. The fierce light of ;publicity :blaze:s to-cley on many evils that once were Ensigns of AnzacS Again Ply at Gallipoli and the ruthless dragging to daylight I under cover as, the works of darkness; is the us,eful beginningof :abolition 1 A despatch from London says:— or prevention. The London Times' Chanak coares-1 The riessintist has too much to say, pendent, telogra,ehing Wednesday,Iand he •gets too nmoh of an audience says that the Australian and New for his me,grians and, his saturnine, Zealand ensigns are flying at Yetis:, glum predictions and maledictions. opposite Chanak, With all its badness, it is is good Anzac office -re, under Col. Hughes, world on the whale; a better onelthan who have bee -n engaged for three it ever hat 'been; and anyway, •since years past en memoicials to the fallen it is the. only one we have, we must in the peninsula, are enthusiastically do the best we ca.n with it. assisting in tha defence of the Nar- rows with their resoorces of depot woilishops and labor. Ch,anak and. The Narrows are the scenes of roost intense activity from dawn to dark. The Turkish toopula- tion momentarily is quiet and under the control of the military. Ridge. Since vegetables were a neees- sary part of ter daily bill of fare, she . Over 12,000,000 bushels of grain, was a good Patron of Jake Hilton, who Full Pods. Mrs. Greedy was a little dried-up old lady w -ho ran the only boarding hoarse in the small mining town of Gravel constituting an inareas'e ,of more than, had a garden patch u -ext door: " tVh-eal. preceding month, Peas vvere in season ;sirs. Groody pur- purchase she insisted 1,500.000 over the were shipped to Montreal via the La- chased them frequently. but every time sbe made a chine Canal during the month of Aug - lett, according to records supplied by that she should have "full pods." the canal office. In addition a con- I "One day," said Jake, "1 decid.scl to sedum:Me 'amount cif flour, 31,500 sacks_ have a little fun with her. The next , and, 50() ,bani..cle were shipped, in Aug_ time she came for peas she repeated ust as ag,ainst none for the same treat. month last year, Weekly 14,14,.riret epo.ri her usual requett for 'full Pods. 'Your peas ase all right, Mr. Hilton,' she said, but the pods- ain't 'full enough. You ought to let 'em grow longer! 'Though I tried at all times to 'fur- nish my customers 'with the best that the garden produced, for once anyway I was determined that Mts. Groo y '21/2.1b. tins, 14 to 15::: per lb.; Onta.rio Toronto. Manitoba wheat—No. 1 No-rel./ern, 31.09; No. 3 Northern, $1.06. Manitoiba ;oats—Nominal Manitoba barley—Nominal, All the above track, Bay ports. American °erne -No. 2 yellow; 80c; 4 50 should have Just what elle asked for oonah honey, per doz., $3.75 to $ . ; Potato,ese-New Ontarios, $1 to, $1.15 I searched the vines all over and.when, Smoked meats—Haras, med., 26 to I was through I had the -nioest lot -Of `I8c; cooked ham 42 to 45c. smoked seed peas you ever saw. The peas rolls, 26 to 28c- mitt:age rolls, 35 to were hard and dry, and the rich dark 1.38-a; breakfast ;baleen, 32 ta, 35e; ape- green peas had faded and in places Ge,orge F. Doclovell,. Government No. 3 yellow, 7gc, rail, cial bran- Te,a c as actually had tuned yelloN . I was lf t bacon 38 to 4,0e; • v ge ites Loa! backs, boneless, 39 to 43e. B 3 extra. test • in South Australia went as, a. enamel. a almost afraid to CaTTY theXe over to to Cardillo Downs, in the Australian better, 55 to 58c, according to -freights Cured meats—Long 1 e -ear ba:e."", her; hut she said nothing when I firt- interior. The observations m-ade by outside. boavyweig later than previously predicted. this expedition also are said to ha,ve Buckwheat ----Nominal. urated States ats eon; mere are ; -1317; lightweight roils, in labia., $48; , . ally took them into her kitchen. o •taxi been most•successful Rye—No. 2, 62 to 670. Lard ---Pure.. frees. 151/2.e; tubs, 16c; I Gi'°•°13-Y. nanalb' came every How, • evraniik nziMi 8, Kerasach 0f '1 eutti!tot.91,9 abg Es Rana._ enng- eglgrod llaun opruo Moneps . Varjen _ft• , "Ehtr-4-----M5 eFle:- Oc et;k.4 s. On if h trtea , 714 rag ara 97; c • Ainedjilr 4./SdA4'Zi °({4Ve - nr41\\, Tr mem tettriti' oidan,7anno 62Ve 13 fa 4E117 -as- urn 511 to --‘7 -,..---.-cill •'P°' " :I 04,01.4 „,. • La eat.ii nnegr-In• Le , I t T eeretett pa kr17.4 U .1(so $ , e o 0 ao Tenni( WHERE ALLIES AND TURKS CONELiCT Britain is takipg firm stand ag alert 111 e Turks under 'Rental Pa S b kir, WI' 'FA" n 11, is V Ctorl over the Gre elm. have been note bl e to thei co m p r ens iv en e8T4 The surrender Three e by the Gre elm, the. ab a lin- on ment of anY d es igns to hold 'Palatal d j a, a nu the w r wat Of `:Ajlied fore es from th e neutral 'sou e to imd 'the Datdanedies, Constantinople ,eatd the BosPhortis are all parte .01 his requests, , • •I; ct bin' 1T1 along the Maritza Mid alto to b e dematudieg the surrender of 'Aglrianople, The 'British Goverment is hope- ful that France and Italy will assist in 'foiling' these Pronositions. If they' fa il, Britain will 'oppose the Tutits alo 0. The plaees mentioned itt the foregoing will he found on the map underlined. Other points which may figure in c is- , , , Patel:es later will alto be found on the map, f3PuSS." Millifeecl—Del. Montreal freight, pails, 1.61/ge; prints, 18c. Shortening, tWO Or three days for something, but autosh,idtaleripeoiNnate!.2 white • oats, -83 to seet good, $6 to • $1.07n°ttentio$1W8-11.ait--No. 2, 90 to 95c, at 9 Clui-6,crei.ec heavy steers, 37 to $8; but- gone by tee came in cne morning, end bags incliTcled: Bran, per .ton, $2.1; tierces, 12 to 121.e.a; tubs, 1214 to. as the days passed and I saw nothing :cher stems, choice. 36.50 to 37; do, she was all smiles. I could not under- : tl, good C118 teiller. ...'%-iter a week had stand it, for I was thinking of those Ontario corn—Nominal. 35.50; do, corn., $4 to $4.25; butcher 30.50; do, niecl., 34.50 te hard dry peas Ontario flour -1st pats., in jute 1.1.4.,,,ifers, cbgice, $6,50 to 37,25; dot - - • , "'`11,Ir• Silton, she said, 'I want stens sacks, 93's, 36.80 to $7.10 p,er bbl.; 2nd Died $5,50 to $6.25; do, com. $4 to pails. (bolter's), $6 to 36.30. 34.25'; butoher cows, choice, 34.50 to 111°:Te l'ea' "''''' l wish Y051'd 1-'10k 'cm Ninety per cent, pate in into hags, 35.50; do, med,., $3.50 to $4; camines just like You did the lest time. 1110A,.: butcher hells,: peas was the he• t I've 'leo ot1 Montreal, p•rannot shipment, 34.50 to and cutters, $1 to 32; $4.60; Toronto basis, 34,35 to 34.45; good, 34.50 to 35; clo, atm., 32.50 to. You know, I heft 'em on the table Manitoba flour---ls.t pats., in jute:34.50 to 35; stoakers, good,. 34.25 to all up!' " 33.50; feeders, good', 35 to 36; do, fair,' three times before 11 I - • -• i bulk, sea:hoer% 34.20 to 34.25. . sacks, 37.20 per bbl; 2nd pats., $6.50, : 35; do, fair, $3 bo $4.50; milkers, 360, • clover, 313.50 to $14; straw, $0, car-, $9; Co, cam., 33 to $7; spring lambs,,' , .. , ,lit, , , ., to $80; sPrillgers, $70 to 390: caive,s,,1 In Japan tnere ts 1 tee ev.urniiie re Hay --Extra No, 2, tor ton, Crack, Toronto, 316; mixed, $13.50 to $14; choice, 310 be 31,1.50; do, med., $8 to! A Japanese Custom. lets. 311 to $11.7.-5; sheep, Choice, $5 to $6; ' twine, 20 to 21c. triplets, 21 io 211/2o; to $3. ye,aelings choice $6 to $7; dot nest dopTes,81on. Most of the Males- shorts, per ton, $23; good food 'I2ia; pails, 13 to 18.-14.c; prints, 151/2 ; of her I began to think that I had lost. $1 I un me plum e nt CVCIS i n times of bail Chees-e—New, large, 19 to 191/2c; do, goio,di, $3,50 to. $4„50; do, corn , ' Stiltons, 21e old-, 1.-,,,,,e, 23 to 24c; ' cern, 34 to, $5; '41'0gs, fell and watered., trial woricers eome from the little . , twins, 24 to 241/2c; Stiltons, 20r. I 311.50 to 311.75; do, faeb., $10.75 to farms hit° which the country is (livid - 13 utter -lamest creamery :prints, 39 gin ; dte, co entry points, $10,50 to ; ecl, and, sinee tliey lia-v a a str on g ti 40c; ordinary creamery 'prints, 35 $10,75, ' family feeling, they go hack to their to 37,c. Dairy, 29 to 312c. Cooking-, 21.e.;ri. ,Tonti eat ( country relatives' as soon as they. are Dre-st!ell poultry --Spring chickene, 80 to 35a; ro:osters, 23c; fowl, 24 to Oais —Can. tirest. No, 2, 55c, do, out of work in tits cities. A "strong 27oi . ducklings, 30r; turkeys .35 to 40a. ' Ne• 3' `ipre• 11°w, Ma'n• e'Prul'g wilc•at familY feeling° (i'f that kind' It seein' Live p o ult.ryn--- Sp ri n g el 25a ; Pat5e ri r.5i'''.1'; $0 • 30. Roiled • oat's, bog to us, might easily hectomm e ore roostees, 17 to 20c; fowl20 -to 25s' " Ls -912.00 to $3. Buell' $20- Sheri's', prized by those who have it than by d,.. tuokeee'o to 3 „ 5e , $22, Hay, I‘lo 2, per ton, ear lots, e, 021>upon whom they permit i to etogbings, ;30 MSTgarilie....1:-20 to 2's Eggs—No. 1 atindied, 00 to , , ozeteri,,, 151/2 to selects, 37 to 38c; cartons, 43 to 46c. 11-1:51-e• Butiter• elIokest 'ereablerYt 35e. 85 to 8iskt potith,e,,, It it net by regretting vvhat is itt 1 1 1 1 $4.9•5; printes,-$3.75 .$3.00,, car fits 80c , parable tea LI•tle. wor t is te come, • Iteans---Citienelan, haaad-rocokecl; bas„ g• • - . jyroa,p1,a ,p,r0;1-,mt,,q, .....,$ y mil, , . per 1111) , , Steers, $5,50; light butcher steent; but - by inaking the b'''''at of \'".'''''it vv.' ' $2,20; pee .5' Imp; gals., 3'2.10; ' and heifers, $4,50; greasers, 33 to are; it is net by -complaining that we Maple sugar, lb., 20,r, , . . ; 53.50; lambs, best, 311; nied. lots, :39 have riot the right tools, li.s.,, .t,s et ing , 'Tion,o5,--60-k, tins,. 12e Per re.; 5, UP; hogs, selects, $12. well the tools ' we have. ' . '