The Exeter Times, 1922-10-12, Page 2IST OF DEAD IN NORTHERN
ONTARIO; SIX TOWNS BURNED
Property Valued at $4,000,000 is Reported Destroyed and It
is Feared the Death Toll May Reach Sixty -- Present
Disaster is Regarded reater Than the Calami-
ties of 1911 and of 1916. •
At Tilai1eybuiry-1.
Airs. T. A. Cobbold, -wife of the Di-
visional Court Clerk.
IVIrs, 1;),o,on,
Falb; Des Jam -dines.
F. Rocaton,
Unidentified
,..Ailortiien, a boy.
Three months' old baby, unidenti-
fied.
Two bodies so badly burn.eel that
sex cairnot be 'determined.
H. Elphick, aged 45, single, brother -
tin -law of the late Col. Hay, president Englehart partly burned.
of the McIntyre Miae aso reported Towns tand villages whfch escaped:
dead, but unconfirmed. Cobalt, Latchford, Earlton, Elk Lake„
At !leaslip-17. Gottvganda.
Robert Bond, his wife, their eight The fire one does not extend north
children; his wile's brother, John of Englehart.
Marshall.
men; two unidentified women; and two
persons whose Domes were so badly
uthriloa that it was not possible to
determine the sex.
NOTED WORK OF
SIR HENRY THORNTON
Amos Beastlip, his wife, and, the'ir
two sons., and James Fleming and hisons
At Charlton -3,
Mrs. O'Hara.
Elderly uniden-hified man.
Unidentified 'baby.
Towns and. Villages Burned.
Islaileybury, North Cobalt, Heaslip,
Charlton, North Timiskaming, Thorn-
loe.
A1ssevera.1 settlements along the
White River. New Liskeard aad
A despatch from Cobalt says:—
Rain, which began to fall about she
o'elock Thursday evening, has definite -
13r checked_ the spread of the "forres,t
fires in the &strict, and with the tan -
of further loss of life ,at an end,
organized efforte are being directed
toward re,eavering the bodies of vie-
tiins and yprong relief for the liv-
ing.. It is estimate;d that the property
less 'Will be at least faux million
doll -ars.
While it will be days before any-
thing like an accurate estimate of the
death tell can be arrived at, the cen-
sensus of opinien hi the town is that
at least 60 lives were lost. Already
about 85• bodies have been recovered
in the neighberh'ood -of Haileybury,
Heaslip, about 28 miles farther north
en the Tirnisk,aming and Northern
Ontario line, and at, Marl:tern, some
twelve miles beyond Heaslip. A num-
ber of the bodies are so terribly burn-
ed that identification is impossible.
Now that a clearer idea of the ex-
tent of the fire can be gained it is
learned that several small centres
whicii were earlier reported to have,
been burned were n:ot in the patb of
the flames. Notable among tliese are
Earltan, Elk -Lake and Gawgarid,a. On
the other hand, the villa:ge of North
Tiraiskeming, -not previously mention-
ed as having suffered, is now known
to have been burned out, and also
several smaller eettlemente north and.
west -of_ the town. North Timiska-
reing is' on the boundary between On-
tario and Quebec at the head of Lake
Timisloaming. "Whether there was
loss ef li•fe there is rso:t established
at the 'present time.
It is estimated that about 1,000 re-
fugees have left here for North Bay
in two special T. andl\T.O. trains.
People here estimate the property
losses at $4,000,000, which is divided,
1-Taileybery $2,000,000; North Cobalt
$500,000; and other paints $1,500,000.
The xi -umber homele.ss`is estimated at
5,000, of whom 2,500 lived in Hailey -
bury, and the other hall. elsewhere.
The areas burned over extends from
Mileage 104, near here, to near Engle-
hart, a distance of 38 miles.
Two of the heroines of the fire ,at
Raileybury were telephone operators,
Miss Marjorie McGee and Miss A.d.dien
They remained at their posts -until
the back stairs of the building were
cm fire. The last mess,age they got
out was one to North Bay asking that
a relief train be sent as soon as pos-,
sible. The two girls put out on Lake Major-General Sir Henry Worth
Tirniskaming in a sin 11 boat d
a,an
Thornton, K.B.E., the newly appointed
landed on small island where they
head of the Canadian National Rail -
spent the night, They arrived here ways system, who commanded the Bre
suffering considerably from ex-Posure. tieli Army transportation during the
Doubt is expressed whether Halley- war. He arrived. in Ottawa quietly this
bury win be rebuilt, and it is said by
week and accepted the position after
prominent reeidents tha,t the town conferring with the Prime Minister.
will he unable to redeem its $250,000 en year, He 're -
outstanding' bonds and tihat it th,e receives $50:000 a
turns immediately to England. to re -
duty a the Drury Government to
.t sign his post with, the Great Baste -
stand behind these bond With
Railway,
, tn.
guarantee. On every side.the-apinion
is expressed that the disaster is Worse
71,-,thern the calarniti es of 1911 and of
1916.
New Head of Canadian Na-
tional Railways Achieved
Success in Engla3ad.
A despatch from Landon says:—
The appointment of Sir Henry Thorn-
ton as chief of the Canadian National
Railways has created a big sensation
in railroad circles here, where Thorn --
ban has occupied a foremoet position,
esrpecially since the war, when he ren-
dered services that won high recogni-
tion not only from the British but also
the Allied Governmnts
Sir Henry's arigin•al appointment as
general manager of the Great Eastern
railway in 1912 was -a big surprise
to the railroad_ world. President Lord
Clau,c1 Hamilten's justification -of it at
the time on the ground that it was
impossible to find a British railroad
man to fill the position exeited keen
hostile ear/unmet. -
'Sir Henry -made good, however, and
canie to be recognized as one of the
commanding personalities in the Brit-
ish railroad world. He completely re-
volutionized the Great Eastern sys-
tem df managenint and contral,-mak-
ing it a model line in many important
respect's.
AIRMEN LEAVING FOR THE 'EAST „
'Members of the British air forces leaving for service in the Near Eat.
They were originally destined for IVIes•apotainia, but rush orders cleflebSed
them to the new scene of activity.
Canada From Coast to C�ast
RK DEMANDS.. FOR EVACUATION' 0
. Z n e ' . " ' ' t liat always praiseworthy in a
E
TliRit,CE hAur AK misTict,' coNFEREN€ mart that he Kee -S. eVerything destitute
,,, , ., i ' of every enveloPe of glamor tOi r
romance.
A desioatch from Constantino -pie alsb came to -t if le It ,is The rea, lists who pride themselves
says:---4bruptly„ thou•gh not un.. understood that 'the Allied G enerals .on seeing kiffe in its true colors may he
expectedly, the lquilarda conference will go into conteronce with ,.the High seriously at fault. They think that
-came to a halt on T'huissday afternoon, Corrarrissioners on certain 'SCTD.0,US dif" the truth must be utglY or brutal. The. y
4311711.coortneta-ti.tvuillt.el,he resurned ' a nrafter ficulti a wilii-h have ari.cii at Mhdana think tilt t facts `cannot he of exceed
„ . , ,... ' . , . e
. A ee0V ail le; 10 unofficial infOrniation, ,,ing loveliness. They.deery the foolish
ThTrlaiceogy.1-irstit°hIle-ce:21:r „er tah;Tortuplin7,1o:: !Wet Pashas, dho N4lOtl,allilat Repre-' ones wlt,10 persist in beholding a rem-
sentabive, sudden.y taisittd, the que,tion, /ince er a glory elicre, he say, there
Thursday
nwr:dsnyaritiLlionliiiti.cedTh'•eatattaituldqljet-oofh,otrite, of the' evacuation of Thrace, General l is no 'such thing.
Harington replied that that would. Illustion is for the eyes of the spirit,
Turks and Creeks was yen, bellicose, come after the 'conclusion of the peace' and the power of sight is got monapn-
threatening the success of the cen_ treaty, as ;Set frit-t-fhtin the joint Allied, Iized by the eyes of the body. It is
I feliess:eleeti pasha, in a fiery mood upset
upset nc.taoatT.i.erriesillwItuainb•jsoinst:sadnhd'e'aitte\d,;1,1Yis c'floliniancl hileyveilll.usTittbni'sth"astat;C\liv'estulivffe at
ts odllirreahmlgeha'arste
the conference on Thursday. InIP°g,b;ele•attc'enr'etatn2ihjs ainnipoagritaenentlep'llOin't.' sli:lolau(11:e (Yi" that is the hre'ad of the
enter Thrace immediatel
;:.:, iyae de the
Gellezial. lVlombelli, of Italy, support- No great commander of peace or
dared that the Turkish a- must
tonGeenwearsaldeHte::ilm.7bdona,neat(tizflitlintetdia'll'tias el General Harington, but the French was was unimaginative. The Greeks
cdcem,..iliginaitttea, I.General Cliarpy, waS not -i- ',o,fpooeditclit,waela;de ,r,idgohetr,livliinenth-theieryliodnegrittitafigeeci.
reason with him •I'terr the fah'i°h At this - juncture -M. Franklin- The poet cannot 'always tell Ytoll ,v`rhY
w
ynhiinochr phia‘ediinpiiin'oaVie,i'diesi,S'D,buetffiesentli:t° 7vitahs, , Bouillon, :the special French envoy, he does things, but he feels within
adamant. France as with ismet. ,. intervened, declaring, that he had been him the urge and surge of feling,
:instructed by the French Goverrmient irrepressible, •clarnoring Cor expres-
Brigadier-General I-lalringbon Corn- to support the Turkish demand. The -:sian. One man puts his poetry M the
mThatilix.dseld'aoyf etvheen.:Lnlgl.ixecInfotrheees and heagl discussion' grew very warm and the, form of word e that exalt a hest' he
of the Allied delegation, returned Allied Generals anjourn,ed te1' corder never sees. Another man expresses
, , ,E Ba,ettlesliip with p the. Commissioners art Constan- hrimself in a building nobly wrought
Iron Duke' and the Italian del gation t' o le - th adorn a eity and to serve its busi-
ness or its culture. Another "doer" '
•
The Illusion.
Sumoner,side, has j munity will be started on a tract •of
been •ordered for a modern. cold stor-, 500 aures. north of Toronto, Which is
age plarit -to serve this' town tas well as to, heisuibdivided into, approxirnatelY 75
the surrounditlg country. The num- .poultry plants, each owned independ-
erous fox ranches in thi,s locality -who ently, but working on a 'semi -ap-
e -re very large users of meat and operative basis. TJpward ,of 100,000,
abattOjr by-products will now be able layers will be accommodated and it is
to purchase the meat in large quans estimated that 100 eases or more of
titles at a time and place in eald e,ggs a day will be produced when the
stowage for use in the warm weather.
Sydney, N.S.—The largest cargo ef
steel produets ever shipped to the
AptiPodes cleared from here on Sept.
20 for Australia and New Zealand,
with 2,200 tons of the output of the
Dominion Steel plant on board.
St. John, N3.--Fidal approval bas
Heads National Railways.
community is fully developed. This
product will be graded in acoordanca
with the government standard, and
sold under the...community trade mark
direct to the eonsurners.
Arborg, Man.—The first annual
sheep fair and fat lamb sale held here,
combining the interests of sheep
been given by the International Board breeders livestack exehanges and
-:of Health for the grant of $27,000 per
year for two years from the Rocke-
fpller Foundation for the promotion
of a health program in New Bruns -
agricultural colleges, was a great sue-
eess. More than 700 animals were
shown and -sixty prizes dona-tecl bring-
ing meney ter over 300 head,. A,t the
wick. The money will be deoted bol,conclusion ,of the sale, 689 of the am -
extending 'the system of medical in= malls shadvn were piirchased by of a
the prov- of out-
sof the sale was the elistributiori
spection and clinical work throughoutl. side parties. An important feature
the entire school ystem
Mee, a.nd -was available when the., carload of purebred rams of special
echools re -opened. ,en quality, to encourage breeding in the
Montreal, Qii.e.—Fk. -Shipments district. '
." ,
from the port of Mentr ..aleto Europe Edmonton, Alta.----Ceal production
are considerably heavier airedn-lest sea- in the Drumheller fields has mounted
1
son and give indications at 'Present to 6,825 -tons daily and will shortly be
of keeping up to the new level. ' Up to increased to between 8,000 and 9,000
the end of last month and including tons. .All the ,coa.1 camps in Alberta
Sept. 2, the total shipments of Can-- and, Eastern British Columbia a.re, now
11
CANADIAN NEWS
,ITEMS
One hundred and thre:e bushels of
oats te the acre was the 3rield of a 20-
- acre field of irrigated land on the
Raymond Agricultural School demon-
stration Jarmo. Other ,districts in Al-
berta report large yields.
Tragic incidents.
A most tragic incident occurred at
Ileaslip. Here Robert Bond, his wife,
their eight children, and Bond's wife's
brother, John Marshall, had taken re-
fuge in a mot house as the flames
approached. Searchers tosday found
all eleven euffocated. Other residents
Premier Bracken
Wins By -Election
adieu flour reached. 1,732,949 .laags,, as workin,g, and much of the product is
same period last year. Not a liner IVIarntaba., it eX'Peetetrample coal
ha.s left this, port without carrying a
consignment •of flour.
Toronto, Ont. --Ontario is to' have
a great poultry 'community, similar
to that at Petaluma, California. The
City` of Petahnna, with e. papulation
of 'Dyer 6,000 peoplerawas 'organized
and built entirely on the product of
the White Leghorn. There are more
than 6,090,000 'hens in the district, and 500,000. boxes of apples to the ether
ammally over 400 cars, :of eggs are side of -the Atlantic, via the Panama
shipped therefrom. The Ontario ,coni- Canal.
compared 1,582,038 bags for the.; being shipped to Saskatchewan and
will be mined to -nieat at the require-
ments of Western Canada.
Vancouver, B. C. Refrigerator
space for carrying approximately
600,000 boxes of :apples :from British
Columbia orchards to Great Britain
and Europe' will be -provided this sea-
son by steamers sailing from this port
Last year the services carried nearly
Radio--:telepliony was used. by an
aercipl,ane to -direct artillery fire for
the fir.st time in- Canada at Camp
,Sarcee, Alta. An aeroplane from the •
co-operated With the Royal Canadian
station stuAdvane-week medical post -graduate
conrse with clinics at various
. . .
Iligh River Government- air
Horse _Artillery, and assisted the fir- 1°c2-1 11'°'s1(34-tals' wilt e°namenee sh'rt17
eers of -the artillery state that the vel'sii-Y.
under the auspices of Dalhousie Unis
It is thaug•ht that the course
ing by means of radio-telepheny. Offi-
directions of the pilot in the air were will -bec-orne aululad nnd assume wide
heard.. deseiectly en the ground and prope-rtians if favcr'sblY received thisi much of a place, a persen, an event,
enableclethem ta' direet the firing ,. g. of year. The present year marks the and then the place was stupid, the
the battery with -great -accuracy.
United Kingdom. Total grain ship_ serves- the State thoughifully, without
-ments last year were 7,500,000 bush,. desire of loot or power, and with con -
els, a record. secration. Each man in his trade or
profession, under one great Overseer
-
An influx a experienced agTieill- eaffhodrtTbayskmhiassidterre'lamis lasfmittilinreedsuilht, lhtiliss
),
twists from Holland to Canada is
likely, according sto J. c. C. sanclberg, pictureof the product .of his toil.
Who is visiting Ottawa represecnvi..tliteligi himPhseeifm. aw1,11 hiefniho set -teill141-1s-- .11,00iihist hheasn never the Government of Hollend,
Pr'eposes a se eme e assis e emigra-1, Ilyoaisi thnaetinlyaenyhatsmiforaLchLe ,pc°0'nf:Isaswesoit_tc't
,a f ' ' t a •
tion of fanners and 'agricultural lab-
orers and their families. Staondihnevregsiiis_lisshiognieilblarmeonPtehcsafell'ilthaenyintlha:tihaLil:tile:alt°ctr::11
making a tour of Canada -to a dungeon more
gate the possibility of settlirol- the
ty devised. It is to take - color from
surplus of Dutch farmers.
sunsets, flowers froth g•ardens, child-
.
play out of homes, books from the ;
shelves and pictures from the walls.
It is to rob as of the aid of theatres;
it is to Ihnit our pulpits' to bare, dry, -
d °etre nal homilies.
Suppose the actuality does not come
up to expectaticn, Suppaee we hoped
A despatch from The Pas, Man.,
eayse--Premiler John Bracken -17i/RS
,grected for :this 'constituency in the
Ma,nitiolma Legielatur.e on Thursday by
an overwhelming majority. 1),he elec-
tion was tdeferred, when the general
election Was aleldi. on July' 18 last.
0,_ , .• ,
cf Hteaslip 'or vicinity WILD perished Perhaps His Teeth Hurt.
were Antos Heaslip, his wife and two , ' 0
..cdany of as remember the story oi-
sons, 'and two other men, a father and
the bey who. would not eat his crusts.
Poselhlyeae a punishment he, was
changed into the bird hi this anecdote,
which Bird Lore prints,: A Phila.
eon, named I -len -ling The Heashp
rfainilly had also taken reftge in a
root house en, the farm :adjoining
t'hat ef the Bonds .and were stifled delphia Ia.
ciy keeps a pan of fresh,
by the dense :smoke. , clean water iri her g,arden for the
At Haileybury Mi -s. T, A. Cobbol'cl,
birds. One day one of her visitors
happened to be a line, slick blackbird.
I -le moved about, occasionally perching
himself on the edge of the pan and
dipping his. Mil into the water. Sud-
denly he cocked his head on one side
and then flew a few feet away to
where a crust of bread was lying,
Peeking away for a moment, he flew
with the crust, to the edge of the pan
and dropped it into the water. When
he had stood guard l'or a short while
lie quickly took up the softened crust
and, swallowing it, flitted away, Prorn
a hard dry cruse had niade a valet -
wife of the DiViSii1011 C,OUrt; Clerk, met
her death while trying to rescue her
ninety-year-old, uncle who lived: With
them. The uncle -was taken to .safety
by rescuers:, but Mrs. Cobbold. could
not be reached ancl perished hi, the
ruins the horde. Cobb -old was lahn-
self severely berried. Other 'victims
In the town were: Mrs. Doan, eld-
'ally man named Felix Dee Jardiness ct
paralytic, a patient in the lie,spital
who could not be carried to safety;
a ',C,t,OUTIg man named Rochon; a child
net identified, a lad nen-lett AllIoteart,
son. of the late Jack Ailletearle a three able roorsoi,
inonths' old baby, Whose b'etly was 1
Aland in take Timiskarrong, tlie par- Nothing great was ever oer.onirli.sh-
ent4 being unknown; Tote- unidentified cd withaht ontliuStasin.—Emersen,
Jesting in the Face of Death.
During the stormy night of March 2,
1922, the steams...64p Esthonia, -which
then was perhaps -seven hundred miles
off Cape Raced, Newfoundland, picked
up eaneS 0 S cell from the Norwegian
freighter G-rontaft. The storm was
severe and the injured Grontoft was
Gold production in Ontario far the
first half Of 1922 shows a maiked in-
crease over a similar period last year,
and gives eramise of an output ex:
ceeding $20,000,000 for. the full year,
as compared with $14,624,085 in 1921,
according "to returns r,eceived. by the
Ontario Department of Mines..Silver
production also shows a correspond-
ing increase over the corresponding
period in 1921. •
" the past tWe'Yearg Manitoba:
has developed practically a new in-
dustry in bee-kee.ping, which this
yea' will bring to 'the province a
revenue tof $400,000, according to the
provincial apiarist Floyd. Next year,
declares this official, if the present
development 'continu'es, this, figure will
be doubled. Approximately 1,000 bee -
...keepers in Manitoba have produced
2,000,000 pounds of honey this yeate
Indications that grain shipments
throu,g,h the port of Vancouver this A Good Friend Passes
year will exceed all previous records
are contained in -the announcement of
the Merchants' Exchaliged that more
wiches -for the lifebeats. Looks like
we were goin,g on a picnic." Toward j
midnight the wireless operator of the
Esthonia caught the words, "The old
wagon has a list like a run-down reel.
This is no weather to'be out in with
out an umbrella."
At ten minutes past midnight the
captain of the Grontof.t dictated, We
settling rapidly; but as the Esthenia are sinking asern first, The decks are
Toronto.
labored toward her the wireless opera- awash. The boats are smashed. Can't
tor af the stricken vessel—a man hold but ,any longer." But the redoubt- Manitoba wheat—No. 1
e th tone of the message a "The- skip- Manitoba ostsseeNorninal
fiftieth ianfliversaryi of the first grad-
uation in medicine from Halifax,
.4-ee iseWseemr
. Rev.. Byroia Stauffer, jotirnallet,
person was unresponding, the event
was "chill as a dull face frowning an
a song," instead of the happy, radiant
incident we had! 'anticipated. The ex-
pectancy, at any rate, has cheered
us and 'inspired. We were optimists
cleteived enthusiaet,s fueled once more
—but what matter? It did us good
to sUstain the illusion. Another time
it will (gime_ true—the faith will be
'rewarded, end there be the
ecstasy we were denied to -day.
Seeing With -the- Brain..
• .
We have all heard of the wonderful
feats of memorization by blind men,
but just recently some unusually re-,
markable instances have come fa light,'
vouched for by the National Institute
for the blind. '
MT. Fred. Turner, one of the clever-
est of Scottish blind musicians, ,ecent-
ly memorized the whole of Sebastian
_Bach's St. Matthew Passion, and in
four months trained his choir, bimself.
taking the organ through the whole of
the work. This is a particularly diffi-
cult work even for a man .wite sight,
Preacher, lecturer and all-round friend Mr. Sinclair Log,a,n, -the blind conn
of humanity, who died suddenly in poser and organiet, • cormunted to
than Sixteen 1,h,o,usand. tons of grain Toronto. Be was widely hnotc\ n Memory the whole of SomervelPs "The
Passion of Christ," a fairly compli-
have already been hooked for the throughout Canada.
cated work which takes" seventy-five
minetes to perform.' trained the
choir and accompanied. a Mg:11y suc-
cessful render Mg; all th-, in two
months,' time, Awing_ which period.he
was working., on.-- other 'important
pieces to be memorized for a recital
in Eiverpool, in addition to oedinary
professional duties. , ,
• d
Wegivhilarket
whose na,rrie is unknown—passed his able operator apparetly disa,pproved $1',071/2•
last moments in sending out a slice s- e _
sion of messages that recorded a per dictated that," he added; "he
singular mocking indifference to the ought to know." On his own. account
fate that menaced. he continued, "Where did I put my
Following the first S 0 S came the hat? Sorry we couldn't wait for you,
Words, "God -pity the boys at sea such Pressing business elsewhere. Skoal!"
a night as this. The old man thinks Thus ended the mesa,ge withAhe an'
it might breeze up by night." At claim of the old Viking toast. When
eleven o'clock came another S 0 S the Esthonia reached the spot where
call, accompanied by the remark, the G-rontoft had beep she had sunk
'Well, the steward is making sand- without trace. '
IF VVINTER COMES!
-gire-Wie4
lel ear
11;
0
Co;
Lg,
roostere, 17 to 20c; fowl, 20 to 25c;
N,ortshean; duckling's., 22 to 26c; turkeys, 30, to
„ Margarine -20 to 22c. ,
Eggs—Ne. , 'candled, 35 -to 36e;
Selects, 38 tie 39c; cantons, 45 to 46e.
Beano -Canadian, hand -hand
No. 3 yellow, 79c, all rail. $_3_•75 to 33.90.
eamariea,n corn --No. 2 yellow, 8 c, ,Ivairap. ie....preduets_syrup, per imp.
ouBtsaiideee.y-No. 3 extra, tes,ti.47 lbs. or Laaple sugaa.,, lb, 20c.
better, 55 to 58c, accordirig in freights gal., 82.20; per 5 im p. gals., $2.10;
, FT:army-60-lb. tins 13c per lb 5-
1121/2-11e tins, 14elo 15c, 'per 1-laa Ont'ario
`Manitoba barley—Nominal.
All the above track; Bay ports:-
Theckwheate-Nominal.
Rye—No : 2, 63, to 67e.
„
who ean play off the, entire -forty-eight.
-shorts, per ton, .$2.3;. good fe,ed . •
• - - 133/4,C• pails 14 ,to 141/2c prints., 161/2 '
-freight, 'elprce 'flalley, Per doz. 8175 to $4.50.
• ' sittiii
•
I 1VIontreai
hagse iamlueed: Bran, per, foM". I ' c'
tierces: 13 to 131/2c; tirbs 1314 to
Fat,atoce—New Ofitarios, 80 M 90 ' leludes and Fugn,.. 61 Bach at one.
To r member by heart,without
being able to see -the keyboard, Bee-
thoven'S thirty-two Man ofe r Le Sonatas
ie. indeed a wondeilful feat yet that is
what Mr. William ,Wolatenholme, an -
,other blind artist, does. , Also remark-
able at miemorization is' Mr, I-1, "'NT.
Spanner, a blind resident of London,
F
Ontario wheat --No. a white, ss la
The oung'm Hea-t
-, Clhoice hea,-vy s;beers,,•37 to 37.50; do,
:393, '85atc-oc°r9dOicn. fc'• ,rights
cu..tsicl'e; N(''j'' $r., ro. ,, , s3 ro t , 3A. but .,h r lflie little girl was crossing the
, 1 , .0 ( . 0 cone ,,, ., 0 -- e
good, $5.50. to $6; do, -med., $4,50 do
Ontario, No 2, whito untz--35 to 3,c. ; ei- ;., .1 • , ';:ip .. 3050, . 'ao, rnea , I ocean with ller mother. One day she
, •
' Ontario corn-11orninal. , :35 1-.0 $5 '
,50: de, 000L - 31 to 34.25; had been playing inei•ril;y• at, shuffle -
1 Ontario' flour -2 --Ninety per cent. pat, I butclie;:' cows c,hoice-, 34 to $5; "de, board with. a iniddiegged, - gee-Lige:rail
Iin, jute hags, Montreal, prompt •ship -i, med., 33 to 33.50; canners and 'cutters, who had 'made her act; (lain t aii•ce, an ci
xnen,t, 34„50 to 34 (.)();; Toronto best:, $1 to 32; butcher bull, good, 38.50 I:o Lcols gdeal
flle.• if 1') ,..^ ' -•
$4 911 to, 34.50- bulk seaboarcl, 341-.20 to , $4.75; clo, 00111., $2.50 to $3.50; feeders,
$185. ' ' ' . I go'cici, $5 to $5.75; d°, 'fair, 34'25 du, ' ider mother, coinin,z_,, in search et
' l‘i anitaba flour, -1st•Patse ;11 cottoni$4-75; s-teeke`rs, g°c3tti.l'i $4.25.,t° 35; ft•-, bet, founds.her just as. she had stdiaped
sadl-a, $6280 per hbl.•, 2itcl pats., c'jlii,,i,t0 fair, .33 to 34.50; irr.11,-.ers, $70 to..$.90; playi.ag,, „Whiat hav_e yea been doing:
Hay—Extra No. 2, pel• toile track, s'prinkems, 380 to 3100; calves, cnoie,e,
$13.50 t $4; $10 t 02 do,m.,8 o $10;'do, my d.ear?asked tie Inc ee .
Toront),$1ieedo1o.
•
kits. - to 311; sheep, choice, $o to $6, oo, man ever there, • the litt e Lir]. le-
' .eloyer, 313.50 to 814. straw. 39 car coin $4 to 37. sriring lambs 310.50 pii`e'id'v.e been playing with •that's:01-111-
... ,
Smolved ine,ats-----ITarns, med.. ....6 to e•co,e, 33,50 to , 4.50 du com., 31 to .
23e; cool:eel:1Juni., 42 to 4,5c; §n-1,-(21..ed 33; yenrlings, .clurree, $7 to $8; do, The mother look -ed across at- the'
•rolls. 26 to 28^; cottage roils, t-tt• to :corn.,1"4 hogs, fed, and watere , , in. ., gaged genuem..a,a and smil. 738c; 'breal<flasl!; bacion32 to :35c; Spe- 0.1..50: to 312; 310.75 to 1
; "Plow,do you know when people, are
,:•backs, boneless, 30 to 43,c• 311.
pir1:70,1;uibr:ea::: ,tcliw,Tib:ia:eg,tash,i1_:,:f.'raL:oltin,51,:a,ionoc,n,bie,,aaigt18.,,eitslo,,,,a4c4008en; 3, 11:: .)2,arlts; Oats ---No.
72-,1%ai.::0,1-,,,rn:jw:3:0-riar5o;2.1::;ts:N$0.1.0 .8:50(),\,tvo, I fly; ou::::1,y,,,m,,, Marc
are
Heart that
heavyweigTht, rolls,, $ 40, , 60e. Finni., man. sprhyg -wheat Pats-, halia a ga°c1.ti'n°1''
Lard ----•Pure, itrces, 15,1A c; tubs, 16e; firsts,: 36,90, "Rolled oats, 00 -lb. bags,
e ..,, "Oh,", replied the little :girl con-
. .
pailia,, 16IAe; prints, 18c. Shortening; 32.00 ,to $3. Bran, 320, .,Shorts, 322, ,
Cheese—New, large, 193/d to 20c; Hay, No. 2, pertton, car lets, 317 to irtisi\filot,t.iii.leartgit,,,,itjtei'gos, et, ,,ati•inic gioleirgt, ,ttoinideo ytoLit. 1,0
2t3/se;2;3(t)till/2botibsc; 2211ce.; tOril.Pdil.,'e'tlsa'rg2o1,' 2t3e $1:8dhse-'''''''', f.lm's't cast6rns'' 16'114'c' 13' llt- ,eall:e thing to you .1.1.3 -ea slap' it, I'll
to 24c; twins,,,24 to 241.7ca; st,a.,ens,, ter, choicest creamery, 33e. Eggs, se -
....,25, , . • • - lectedt '35c. ,c;pIaupr::duit youlchit,,1,
It YOUpiapallitsie1as
,prin, olit'lrly op uu .1,1,
Butter--Finetst creanicry prints, 89 Cti,..ed cows,- 34; clo, riretit, 33.40',
to 40e; ordinary ereamery prints a5 good quality 'cutters, $2.25; -corn. ligh 1Jeese (after a moment's t,haught)—
to 37c,- •Dair/ 29 to, 310 Cdolcing,-21c bull • s to .2,25, 'cal's-es, suckers, $8 "Mama 111 pull ita tall.'' -
Dressed poultry—Spring chielense tic? $3,75, grass 'calve .„, $3 to $8.50, . . ,..—..............—,
27 I 11 ' .22 t 26 I; R. ,.' '30 Iambs e8 up' ohne 32 50 to 4. 'do ...,, .
80ei:o<l',tiu5<c;mig7.,ose:si.t.e-ios,0 23c1,:;.; fi.oa-7.,ety,24, to I, m t..,),, g,pood 1,0 ,,,, itt-0, .tO.:31.0•5 , ni,, ed., outgovilynea.piiiigon.LnHe gatbiahri geetuhth.moreoartlun 04uaki ,
, , bo i5a. , - ' - e high :grade, $3.g0;t hoge, :eele gt $1.Z , ,,__ ,.3 '
--Nee/ Yorie "Werid.1 Live poultty—S ang ellieltens., 2,5c; 'to'31.2.25; sows, chalet+, $0,69, :ta 419* "4 Wa:R4Q-lP,vliwo , .[ PalelPIT+,
, .
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