The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-10-14, Page 21
ifilikilVATIol FACES
HALF A MILLION CHINESE PEOPLE
Ilankowee-Penned up more than a pouring shells fromPa 4 el 1se-
Month before hy the 1.4(1 0,,Antonos# where hi the iron ring eig;on4thaellsuefeer-
armies boieging the eity, half mil- ing Peelf"ee
'
A. vestigof mercy has been shown,
lion Chiaese people _face death by star- Beginning laet Sunday, avomen and
e of
vation, cold and gunfire in Wucliang. ehildren a the impeverished classes
Largnumbers dead lie in the have.been Permitted to pass through
streets, Those rentaining hateeaten the gates of the river, eeeltine passage
across to Hankbw. Thirty-eight thou -
vend have been rescued by boats bear,
ing the emblem of the Red Cross and
taken, to Hankow to be eared for.
Scenes of horror are witnessed each
trip of the boats. In the fight for
places on the beets, eeveral hundred
have been trampled to death ,as the!
maddened hordes struggled for rescue.
Many, thrown into the river, are ,
drowned. Next ,Surtdey, if they have
-upon themfor the gates wil be close
,. lee
not escaped, the ratn of fire will pour!
,Only a "few miles away are the
troops of Sun Chuan -Fang, ruler of
the See provinces of Eastern Chimi,
trying to thrust aside the Cantonese
who oppose their inaroh to the relief
of beleaguered Wu Chang Seemingly
arsenal across the Yangeee River and fenders within a few days.
dogs, cats and rats and are dropping
in public pieces or dying miaeralely in
Shelter* into which they have crawled.
The northern troops Off Marshal Wa
Peielee, garrieoning .the city, having
been refueed terms of turrencler, are
holding on desperately, hoping for
ferrates of their ally, Sun Chuan Feng,
to break through the Cantonese
cordon.
Meanwhile the relentless and well-
fed Cantonese outside the walls rest
patiently oletheir arms, having block-
aded all exits from the city, and await
the time When they shall enter, What
will happen then is not known.
The Cantonese have notified the de-
fenders that next Sunday they will
loose 4 gererel bombardment upon the
city of misery, firing from Hanyane relief must come to the Wu Chang de -
DROWNING ACCIDENTS
IN VARIOUS LOCALITIES
Two C. P. R. Conductors.
Perish—King of Bootleggers
and Mechanic Believed army, who recently became chief aide.
de -amp to the chairman of the Kuom-
Drowned in Lake Erie. intang ,on the eve of the Cantonese
North Bay, Ont.--W.-W. P. lemming army's sticcesses in the northern cont-
eF
and Emmett Trahan, both conductors P'signe
on the C. P. R. and residing in North Wang was a "house boy" in the
Bay, were drowned in a lake near Kip-
home of the late Dr. Sun Yat -see at
Shanghai and served his old chief
awe while eshing. Their bodies were
when he was a political exile in the
recovered. As there were no witnesses
United Stat* Striking out on a path
to the &awnings it is not known how
they occurred.
different from serving chow and clean -
The men, after completing their
ing rooms, Wang joined the army and
run
from Mattawa. to Eipawa, went to the is now a higil °Ifteetre
lake to fish, as they had done many
- times in the past.
"House Boy". Becomes
Colonel in Chinese Army
Canton. -,—A "house boy" wbo• be-
came a colonel is the career Of Colonel
Wang Wai-lung, of the• Cantonese H18 EXCELLENCY THE NEW GOVERNOR:GENERAL OF CANADA,
VISCOUNT WILLINGOON. *
Conductor Flemming was one of the
older conductors on the C.P.R., having
entered the service in July, 1905. Con-
ductor Trahan became connected with
the railroad in 1908,
Niagara Falls, Ont.—It is !leaved
that Aaron Vandevere, Port Collaorne„
popularly known as the king of boot-
• leggers, with an unnamed mechanic,
have lost their lives in the waters of
0 Lake Erie. They have been missing
since Tuesday morning. Vandevere,
with his son, own a fleet of eight boats.
He left Port Colborne •on Monday
night for Dunkirk and reported out of
that place at two Tuesday morning n
and has not been seen since. It is be -
p. that his craft, a cabin cruiser,
took a. nose dive in the lake. All the
Vandevere boats with the Dunkirk 1
fishermen are searching for the miss-
ing men.
Mr. Vandevere is rated as one of
the best navigators of Lake Erie. He
will be remembered for his part in
the fight in Canadian waters with the
United States toast guard vessels
earlier in the suninier and appeared a
few days ago on a charge of stealing
la a machine gun from the United States
patrol boat.
Port Doyen—Captain, Duncan Mac-
▪ Donald, of the fishing tug Dimmie
• John, picked up the body of 4 man
ten mike east of Long Point and
' brought it to this port.
The man, who was apparently about
60 years of age i had a clearance for
the four -ton gasoline boat Tourist
from Port Colborne to Erie, Penn.,
with 150 cases of whiskey made out
in the name of IL Gibson and dated
lie• • Mandan •
It may be safely conjectured that
the Tourist has foundered, and that
the other occupant of the craft is also
dead.
The man had a life -preserver on,
and, in the opinion of Coroner Dr. A.
IL Cook, had died in the early. hours
0.
V.
Indians Saved Themselves
in Florida Hurricane
Returned from Arctic
_Capt. J. E. Bernier, Arctic explorer,
who visited Toronto recently. He
claims Russia did right in seizing
Wrangel Island, and says Canada had
no right there in the first place.
•
Coal Prices in aritain
Reach $1 Per 100 Pounds
London.—With coal costing a dollar
for one hundred pounds—if you „can
get it—and only one hundred pounds
allowed to each householder fortnight-
ly, Londoners are looking longingly to-
ward the Riviera and wondering how
they will get through the winter.
Even a settlement of the coal strike
will not make the British coal situa-
tion easy for several months after the
miners go back to work, • as there has
been such disorganization in the trade,
and the demands of railways, power
plants and gas pants are so great,
of the morning. In the pockets of his that the small consumer will not have
clothes were $84 in bills, some loose much chance to get more than his
change and a car owner's license for a rational amount.
car made mit for A. F. Vancleveer, 233
Charlotte Street, Port Colborne.
11.
London Ancestor He Traced
300 Years Proves Absconder
Washingtoh—Not one of the 500 London.—Mayfair is having a laugh
Seminole Indians whose homes were at the expense a an ' American who
destroyed by the recent hurricane that came all the way to Europe to treca!
wrought so much damage in Florida his ancestor of some three hundred
was killed, an agent of the Dept. o f , years ago whowasa taxpayer in Ho: -
the Interior reported to -day. The In- born, a section of London.
diens saved themselves by abandoning The books were brought down from
their homes and lying fiat on the their dusty shelves and in due time
ground, and holding on to palmettoa the name of the ancestor, was found.
with their hands until the storm was Opposite his name was the remark:
"Abeconded without paying his rates."
over. e
DEVICE TO PREVENT RAILWAY ACCIDENTS
INVENTED BY VANCOUVER MECHANIC
Vancouver, B.C.—Toseph W, Saun-
ders, 40, Vancouver inventor, an.
nourices that he has perfected a device
through which he believed it would he
posible to eliminate 99 per cent. of all
railway accident,
Saunders explained the device as
tonaieting of a leer voltage electrical
• wire running along railway tracks,
• which, when affected b epee ewitecies,
broken rail, washouts, slides, or burn-
ed bridges, Will autoreatitally bring
• approaching treble to a halt in time
to avert aecidents.
ranyay accidents suck as he
hopes his ineenticn will eliminate have;
played important are
in Saunders'
t::ith his parents were killed in
a wreck near IIa.ineton, Ont., 88 years
ago, while his own career as a Iota-,
motive fireman was cut short by injur-'
ies received when he was.28 years of
age, between • Port Arthur, Ont., and
Duluth, Minn. •
It was an open switch that caused
the Accident," said Sateident, "I saved
ray train by reversing the engine and
applying the air brake, but with the ;
lose of eyesight in one eye and several
broken ribs n trailroad days were
over, I beearnea triechaticer
IMMIGRATION AND BALANCED PRODUCTION
BY C. W. PETERSON. •
Every now and then .objections are the greater may be .its trade with
raised to policies having for their other countries, and the more they all
object an increase in Canada's popula: produce together, the greater the var-
ietyen of comforts and necessities avail-
tion,abe for the werld's population. We
yet corrip.ete.y peeved our industrial have net even. approached within
unemployment problem and, therefore, measurable distance of satisfying
should not add to our present diffi- reasonable human wants leave alone
culties. Such objects are based on a over -supplying them.
complete misapprehension. They would What Canada, and marg. other
undoubtedly be valid in fully develop- countries, has suffered from during
ed, overpopulated 'countries, but that recent years, and what has given rise
line of reasoning cannot consistently to general unemployment, is not over:
be applied to &new country like Can- production, but unbalanced produc-
ada. One family placed on a farm tion. While Canada's population has
will create eMployment for from one been unequally distributed, our agere-
e
to two additional families in our towns gate working force has been and till
through its own consumption of corn- is, vasty below our minimum national
requirements. With millions of acres
of the world's richest agricultural
lands lying idle and undeveloped, and
the world clamouring for food, it is
paradoxical to harbour an unemploy-
ment problem. Widespread unemploy-
ment under such conditions is prima
facie evidence of bankrupt statesman-
' ship in so far as sufficient intelligence
and energy has not been focussed on
the Wilton of a prolalera which ob-
viously lends itself to correction by
known and proven methods,
namely, theaugmentation•of our pro-
ductive, a.gricultural popelation, which
would speedily find full time employ-
ment for ,our industrial plant.
modities, machinery and the like end
through producing the new material
ofurbanindustry. "
The recent European rear and its
aftermath brought home to the world
a multitude of strange economic facts,
many of them old as the hies, but. up
to that time wholly unrecognized. One
of the outstanding lessons taught 'man-
kind was that there is absolutely no
limit to the amount of work to be done
in this word, or to the amount of
business to be developed. The truth is
that over -production is inconceivable.
The purchasing power of every coun-
try lies in its own power of production
and the more each country produces,
London,. Ontario, Honors
Brave English Girl
Landon, Ont.— Honoring Ethel
Langton, 15 -year-old daughter of the
keeper of St, Helen's Fort lighthouse,
Bembridge, Isle of Wight, • for her
courage and endurance in keeping the
light burning for•three days during a
gale last'March, the St. George's So-
ciety of this city has sent her a unique
medal of recognition. The medal is in
the foriii of a Canadian. $5 gold piece,
set in gold map:e leaves. It bears the
following inscription: "To Ethel
Langtoe, for courage and endurance.
13y St. George's Society, London, Can-
eda."
It will be recalled that Miss Lang -
ton's parents made a dash to shore to
replenish provisions jest previous to
the Isle of Wight storm and were not
able to get back. For three day: and
nightn their daughter was alone with
'only her pel dog for companionship.
She sept the big beecon turning,
climbing 20 feet up a steel ladder at
intervals to replenish the oil. Alt the
food she had was a leaf of bread.
•
........•••••••••••••••••••••••••••1:4,...1. •••••••••••
Famous British Airman
to Fly Across Canada
Winnipeg, Man.—Sir Alan Cobham,
noted British aviator, who is declared
to be plannina trans-Atlantic flight,
will fly across Canada, fallowing his
ocean journey, according to informa-
tion received here from London. No
details of the trans -Canada flight were
given, but it is understood that Sir
Asan plans an "air survey" of the
Dominion from the Atlantic to the
Pacific, and will stop off in Winnipeg
en route to Vancouver, B.C.
•
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FALLS
Power ITL
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DIG POWER DEVELOPMENT WORKS AT CARILLON
This map indicates the location of given 100,000 hp, of the Woe On.
the Carillon power site which is on tarlo Is now under contract to tells
the Ottawa river, 260 nines from 250,000 lien developed by private in.
Toronto, at the point where the inter. terests on the Gatineau at the point
provineial boundary leaves the river indicated en the map. Inset appears
and turns touthward towards the St. a small map of the derllion vicinite.
Lawrence., The relative Itieaticee of The border at that paint is shown tri
other power sites in eastern Ontario mans to run along the -shore whereas
are shown, including that at Morris- elsewhere it is in reictkreara. Oretario
burg; where Oetario could obtain 750e claims that the Maps are faunae and
000 h.p., and Chat's Palls, where On. that half of the water at that point be-
tario's share might be 150,000 h.p. The , longs to her. This contention prob.
development at Carillon may reach ably cbtains partial retogeition le the
between 250,000 and 300,000 h.p., and arrangement now agreed to by Pre.
It is believed that Ontario will be viler rergusoe.
VISCOUNTESS WI"LLINGDON
Who is to be chatelaine of Rideahlean for the next five years,
ONTARIO HOLSTEINS
- WIN MANY PRIZES
Dominion
ialNatio
a1 Show-
ing
in Detroit;
• *Detroit, Mich.—Canada scored a -fine
clean-up in the Holstein cows, judged
Thursday afternoon- in the National
•Dairy Show, when it took prizes in
nearly every class, just as it had in the
morning session when bulls were
jtuvidegnetdyvTehehastda.1017, cwahttiech stutst le3cly thet
members of the Ontario Holstein
Breeding Association had- so many
.rbbons in the fore that it looked like
a decorative scheme.
The best showhig was made in the
class for heiferseatotin milk, one year
and under eightes nionths. Here the
Ontario men scored one, •two, for the
Dominion, the blue ribbon going to
J. W. Innes, of Woodstock, ogi his fine
animal, C. V. Alcarta Tortilla Ormsby,
and the second prize to Haley and Lee,
of Springford, •on Tensen Teake
"Abbekerk.
Thirty-two animals conipeted in this
c.ase, the largest number seen during
the day in one• group. Judge Moscrip
took. great care in his seeetion when
he pieked two animas from the Do-
minion to lead the line.
1 Other wins in the cow division
• were: Aged cow, ninth place, to Pon-
tiac Gerken Queen, owned bye,Arbo-
gest Brothers, of Sebringville; sixth
place, same .class, to Gyp* Pasch
Ruby, owned ey-Saley and Lee. Cows,
between four and five years, fourth to
I Belle Abbekerk Dewdrop, owned by
neames Bettie, Burgessville. Cow, be-
tween three and four, fifth place, to
Ourvilla Rhetta Echo, owned by Haley
and . Lee. eieifer, between two and
three years, third, to Beddine Johanna
Spofford, owned by J. W. Innes, Wood-
s oc , , o au me anostine
°rinsing owned by Haley and Lee;
ninth, to Bessie Posch Pontiac, owned
by Arbogast Brom Heifer, between
18 months and two years: .ninth, to
Aggie Sylvia, owned by J. W. Innes.
Heifer calf, sixth place to Daisy Mer -
cane, owned by D. A. McPhee, of Vern"
kleek Hill; while third in the sarno
class went. to Sprucedale Jemima
Burke, owned by D. Smith and Son,
Glanforth: Station.
- The grand champion COW was picked
as Holyhock Plebe Forbes, .oweed by
the Hollyhock Farms, Dousme.ne
'conein.•
King Abbekerk Susie, entered by
Haley and Lee, was awarded third
place in class one on the day's pro-
gram. This class is for bull calves,
four months old and under one year.
In class two for bolls ene year and
under eighteen months, Maplecrest Al-
bert Canary Sylvia, another Canadian
bull 'entered by Leroy Side.e.11 and J.
F. Gibbons, of Denfield, took fourth
Third prize in the fourth class for
bulls between two and three years old
also went te the Dominion when Abbe-
kerk Saevius Led, owned, by J. W.
Innes, of Woodstock, was awarded the
ribbon. The red ribbon for aged bull
went to Sr Franey Mercent Burke,
'owned by le, A.. 114Phee, of Vankeeek
Ivan Burke, owned by T. 0.
Dolson, Brampton; Ont., won second
place in contest for . eighteen menthe
to two years old Holstein Fresian
buns. King Abbekerk, owned. by Haley
and Lee, Springfield, Ont., •won third
place in bulls under one year, and
Abbekerk Si lemmas 'Lad, °greed by .7.
W. Innes,.WoodstleOnt., won tilled
placein elass..two-yeanold and tinder
three.
tt
England Guards Secret
of New Giant Airsh:p
Londem—The etmost secrecy is be-
ing maintained in building Eautlani's
giant airship, the R-101, fer Feigland-
India-Australia aervice. Arireid guards
keep all visitors away „from the han-
gars aryl each one of, the 30D persons
employed in its construction is sworn
to eecrecy, Various groups Of work.'
ere are Striet:y confined to repose
parts of the. erection work ani not
more than half a dozen nersonit know
anything about the omelets plans for'
the airship, which it is hoped will gain
for Great Britain the supronmay of
• the air,
Peasant Suddenly Enriched
As Car of King Kills Dog
- •
Berne.—Caesar was a fine dog, of no
specific race or creed. However, he
was a good watchclag, and when a
friend recently proposed to acquire
him to guard his house, theowner
suggestede60 francs night be conSid-
ered a reasonable price. The matter
was being argued. on a Berne street
what suddenly, like a juggernaut, a
big motor car swung round the corner.
All financial- discussion ended, for
,Caesar had wagged his tail for the
last time. While the irate owner
threatened dire vengeance the chauf-
feur converseden an endertone with a
"tall gentleman:reclining in the motor
car, and then handed him a bank note.
And as the cite disappeared down the
street Caesar's astonished master
found himself richer by 1,0e0 Swiss
francs, while the gossips gathered
areeired the market mange, to discuss
the generosity of King Albert of the
Belgians.
•
Former British Officer Earns
Living Making Telephone
Directories.
London,—One of the queerest jobs
in London is thumb -slotting telephone
directories. The work brings the- man
•who does fn. an ex -army officer, an
income of about $5,000 a year.
He hie on the idea through having
difficulty in finding an eddress in the
teetehone book. Thinking that much
tiine could be saved to eity firths if
each alphabetical section was thumb -
slotted, he bought a concave chisel, a
hammer, and a small etee l stamp for
each letter of the alphabet. He calls
on clubs, business firms and private
houses and charges 2 shillings for
each book thumb -slotted. The task
takes him abaut ten minutes. He can
easily index fifty beak a day and is
never out of work, as new directories
• are frequently issued.
• , For
COPAND CAMP,
PAIN'S IN THE STOMACH
Thera's. Plathlug Equals
•
yeIatrslhaists baecetuionillisuspleafsoarete:reareA!
reliable and effecnial, and reline
comes promptly.
4 4Don't accept a substitute.' '
• The genuine is put up only by The
Milburn Clo., Limited, Toroato
es.
Duke of Devonshire 'Finds
• Way to Lower His Taxes
London.—The Duke of Devonshire,
former Governor-General of Canada,
has turned his estate into a limited lia-
bility company. By this method he
will avoid spacial taxation, deduct -the
-expenses of running the estate from
his income tax and escape the pay-
,
ment of death dues. At present, the
• death duties on real estate are so enor-
mous that it is calculated most pri-
vately owned estates paying thein
must inevitably be broicen _up. within
three generations.
The Duke owns five palatial homes
in different parts of the country, none
of which is ireDevonshire. In addition
to CarltonGarden, Landon, he owns
Chatsworth House and Hardwick Hall
in Derbyshire, Bolton Abbey, inYork-
shire,' Compton Place in Eastbourne,
and Lismore Castle in WaterfordrHe
owns about 186,000 acres of land.
Canada's Mineral Prosperity.
Victoria, B.C.—"Conditions in the
mining industry of Canada are better
throughout the whole country than I
• have ever known them in my thne,"„
said Charles Cainsell, Caeadian De-
puty Minister of Mines, and chief
executive officer of the Canadian Gov-
ernmentwin mining matters, who has
iirrivecl -here -after a coast-to-coast
tour. "The coil industry is free a
labor troubles. Production in the
metalliferous mines premises to be the •
greatest. on record this , year. Since
about 1900 our production has been
steadily increasing at the average rate
or $6,500,000 annually, and it iseprob-
able that the increase this ,year will
be even greater."
Small Area Yields •
94 Bushels Per Acre
Edmonton, Alta.—When it comes to
big wheat crops this one well hold the
rest of the farmers in this sunny pro-
vince for e. few seasons, A. G. Walker,
-a,• prominent farmer, Who lives at
Irma, had 3 1-3 acres of well-manured
Summerfallow :and sown with Prelude
wheat. -Threshing it last week, the
griachintally recorded 312 bushels, or
nearly 94 bushels per acre.
THE WEEK'S MARKETS -
TORONTO. 84c; cooked learns, 47 to 48c; smoked
•Man. wheat'—No. 1 North., $1.45; trooll4s0, e2; 8batcoks3,0bc 0; nbee:sask,f5a7s ttoba4c5ocn,. 35 •
No. 2 North., $L41; No. 3 North-, Cured meats --Long clear bacon, -50
$1M38an. oats—No."2 CW, nominal; No. to 70 lbs., $23; 70 to 90 lbs., $21.50;
• rolls in barrels, $42.50; heavyweight -
201.4 lbs. and up, $22.34; lightweight
feed, nominal; Western grain quota -
3, nos quoted; No. 1 feed, 60c; No. 2
rolls, $39.50 per bbl. • e '
Lard ---Pure tierces, 16 to 17c; '
Am. cern, track, Toronto—No. 2 tubs, 17% to 18e; pail, 18 to 183e;
yellow, 96c; No. 3 yellow, 9.4c. prints 19 to 19-eec• shortening, tierces,
I balVgleillifnecoldu—deldli:elbr :irliy.ttrreatlon,freight, .•
tits
i6; Illot'°12te;•t CkS41116t lt4o17;c.pails,
shorts, per ton, ee1.2o; • middlings, Heavysteers, choice, $7 to $7.50;
28-..25' good g perg, 2%30do, good, $6.0 to $6.75; butcLer steers,
roiOnnits.: oats -42 to 44c, f.o.b. shippingi
$6.25; do, corn., $4.50 to $5.50; butcher
choice, f ) ce, $6.50 to $6.75; do, geed $6 to
Ont. good mill -leg wheat—$1.23 to cows, choice, $4.75 to $5; clo, fair to.
$1.25, f.o.b. ehiep•ing pointsi according egood, $3,75 to $4:50; butcher bulls,
toBfraeri.ey—ts.Maaing, 56
to 61c. • to $4; canners and cutters, 2.25 to $3;
e good, $4.50 to $5.50; bol.egeas, $3.50 .
' Buckwheat—Nominal. , I good milch cows, $70 to $1C-0; spring.
Rye—No. '2,, 85e. • , e I ers, choice, $30 to $115; med: cow,
I Man. tfitour—Firet 'pat., $8:1o, . Ton., $45, to $60; feeders, good, $6 to $6.5e:
ronto; do, second pat., $7.60. .1, do, fair, $5 to $6; do, med., O $7 te
nt. flour--Teroeto, 90 pee cent. $9; calves, choice, $12.50 to $13.'51: -
patent, per barrel, in carlots, Toronto do, ' good, $9 to $11; 4o, inede
$5,70; seaboard, in bulk. $5.7o. •e$7 to ..$9; graseers, $4 to *$4:60.--
fheesc--Ne.w, large, 20 to 20%c; "good ,embs, $12 . to $12.e5; do,
twins, 201,e to 21c; triplets, 22c. SO- bucks', $9 'te. $9.75; good Light ehap,
ices, 23c. Oid, large, 26c; twins, 27c; $6 to $6.50; heavy sheep and bucks,
triplets, 30c. • $4; togs, thick smooths, fed and wee
Benee—eineat -eeeiniesv prints, erecl, $11,75; do, f.o.b., 11125; do,
86 to 27e; No. 1 treamery, 35 to 36e; country points $11; do oil' cern'
No. 2, 34 to 35c. Dairy prints, 2014$12.25; select premium, $12.82.
,
tc'3-:°eg'
Eggs-••Fresii exeias, in cartons, 51.. MONTREAL,
to 52c; fresh,extras, loose, ,50c; -fresh
firsts, 4ec; fresh seconds; 35 to 36c. Oats, No, 2 CW, 69c; Is,,o, e CW,
etorage extras, 430; do, firsts, 40c; do, 654e; extra Me, 1 feed, 56e. neer-
seeerele., 34 to 35o. . ; Man. spring.wheat pats., lets $8 JO'
einem, I do, 2nds, $7.60; do, strong bakers,
" $7 40. '
Poultry, dreesed—nisei,,
< unbs, 1 tO lee lb , 32 t 95 ; • , 0, Will er pa se c (nee, $6.40
:Ptlirelilligsgs, i):Tcrtoil 21bIllis,3,8 345° fitto°c;38dco;:, Stc:1:'?..5?.50t.ra111):°'1$:4'se9d•212511.1188' 'ftboavgi's'9$03-11e415".-
...• A ) ''• • ,
ton, carlots, $14 to $16. •
Middlings, $39.25. Hay, No. 2, per
ao, 21,,e, to 3% lbs,, Sec. do, 2 to 3in
lbs,, 32c; hens, over 5 llasn, 28e; do 4
to 5 lbs., 26c; do, 3 to 4' lbs„ 2ic: Cheese, finest wests, 1114 te 171-;;I e;
ur71.:e8ta";:nrcs:L2C2aen;‘. lidaun6:11-irliiigcsked5 $12b,s6.0 apielar gfigneBe.8uttteears-ls'X" c'1'61% r't:st1e6:171.4:ic'ze. tl 821A1 t0
. ,
,
Leslie -I; primes, $2.40 pet bushel. - Eggs ---Storage extras, 48c; do,
Ina ee ptoduceSyrup, per Imp, firsts, 30c; do, seconds 84c; freeh Ole -
gal., $2.25eto $ne80; per 5 -gal., $2,15 tras, 52c; fresh flints, 470,
to $2.25 per gal.; ma,,:e sugig, lb 25 Good veal calves, $11 to $12;epoorer
to 26c. ••
ones, $10: grass caves, e3.75 to $4;
lioney- .60.I. tins, 1214 to 13c; 10- ewes and wethers, gotel ...eta, $11,25;
lb. tins, 12% to 13c; 5-1b. tin, 13 to ten poorer tote, e.10,50 to $11'; becea,
1314e; 21/2-111. tins, 1314 to 14e. ''
C: nib hmsy—$3.40 to $4 per doten, filercav
ictesst
eot.ns8llie,$;1ns
12.TOtoTilai
ltecittil;diteY,
Smoked nieats-41ams, tned., 33 to se.estar $12.15,