The Clinton News Record, 1923-10-25, Page 3Canada from Coast to Coast
Helifax, N,S,—The diecovery of a Winnineg, x-Vve Britih
new fisideg bank, 200 by 94) Miles, oir herveeter evho ie Willing to work on 0
western Canadian ferns this Winter,
will have 4 job at the going wage, M
the opieion of the ceiranittee appointed
at a recent conference called by the
Canada Colonization Assoeiatioe to
argil with the problem of keeping the
harveetors in Canada.
'were
eeprevalentk The locationhaaver a large part noa Begin', sa4k-4-DesPite udverse
weather conditions, the dental eel's op-
' flea:perect e t (mated . y
b th4 Provincial Junior Red
yet been made known. ,, Cross, visited 112 rural schools in the
Neweastle, N.B.--Neweastle has
provinee dering the past eummer, the
been selected as the site of a new in -
dentists in cheage lectaring on otal
dustry which had decided to 10CAte ill
, hygiene to 8,007 pupils, aceording to a
the Province of New' Brunswick, ie 1',40
st
reP ort preparea by tlie Chairnum of enoultememet of Mayo Creagon, The
the ,Tunior Red Cross Committee, The
plaeth to COMO to Newcastle are those number of eiiirmi
of the Canadian Creosote Mills an a receiving dental WHERE CANADA'BUILDING WILL, STAND AT THBRITISH EMPIR
E E
i treatment S ent was 1436, involving 069
the Creeeete Products, Ltd., both of, ° . a
' which companies are now theathd in fillings, 1,410 extractions and 108 ewe
of peophylaxis. 'CanadaEXHIBITION
's beuatiful building is now la pieseess at ereetion at WeinbleY,
Ontaiio. The two compamies will em- Ezigland, in ereparatioe for the I -empire Exhibition next year. Tile Picture
round.
ploy upward ot 200 Men the year Edmonton, Alta.—A system of ed- ellov.s the elte :malted by a Imee sign "Caneden '
. ucation by mail for there) w , live in . _
IVIontreal, Que.—Thirteen crates of remote rural districts' Oat 0 lfbeeech of
ot these valuable animals, pessed
silver Mack foxesr each centaining two uruernal peectleteeonislash,ebre;hmiginli'slt'eellralo'efaEbdy- CAONAUDEPALTUTSOESF
LARGE
LES
through the city an route to Nalcusp ueation, to go into effect this month. .:
arom Charlottetown, P.E.I. A new fox The working Plan has alre4dY 'hi'lForty-Six MAs irt. Daininion
ranch has recently been established at drawn up to run through the winter.
Maltase, which is near Revelstoke in to the end of the school year. It is —80 Per Cent. Produced
British Columbia., and the thirtee expected that from 'twenty to forty
'b
pair form the foundation stock ; lessons will be given in the case of in Queec.
• Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.—It is reports' each applicant for the service. Cataddeesupeapt:hehfereot/100270w0,40'00sawYsoli7th
ed that asseessnent work his been Victoria, B.C.—Some large pieces of
the eoat of Labrador, is repeated at
the Dept. of 1\11.Viiit) and Fisheries.
This fishing ground, which, it is stated,
abounds in cod and halibut, Is expect -
to prove a velmible addition to the
alreedy known firatieg banks. The
depth of -the water. is 76 fathoms, and
the same sounclinge, varying but little,
POLICY OF CURRENCY
INFLATI N REJECTED
British Government VVill Not
Manufacture Artificial
Money, Says Post-
master-GeneraL
.A despatch. from London a:tyre:—
completed on the Gibson iroti proper- Ilimber designed -to show the extra- of manufactured cotton textiles during Great ;interest has been aroused re-
ties southeast of Wawa Lake, and the ordinary 'size_ of fir timber in British a YOO-V, and of this nearlY $64,000,000 8ently by reports that the Government
'essay taken by outside assayersbear Columbia, will be shipped to London are manufactured within the Province was considering a policy of currency
out the opinion expressed 'some timel to form part of the 7Doraieion GOVara-: '1f 'Quebec, which is credited
with 80 inflation as a 'remedy for the present
ago. Returns give iron ore 59.06, merit exhibit at the British Empire Fer cent, of the entire Canadian pro- aerie= unemployment 'which some
i
which is the highest percentage ever. Exhibition, te be held at Wembley next ductionin19f2e1e.te Thi15econemiets had attributed to too rapid
obtained in that dietrict This makes year. One of he most interesting tea- outstanding14.1011140tinofjtuhset deflation, but if the Government ever
the third -deposit of high-grade herna-i tures of the exhibit will be two twelve- issued by tile Dominion Bureau of Sta. contemplated 'ouch a change of policy
tite iron in this part lying undevelop-1 foot lengths of cut fir, fifty anches atisticS on the 1nanufactare of cotton it would seem that it haa thought hot.
ed, the other two being the Josephine square. These are said to be almost teitiles in 1921, ter of' the idea. •
mine and the Mildred Lake range, i a record for fir squares. The total Canadian production of - Sir Laming Worthington -Evans,
these industries in that year was $71,- Postmaster -General, in a speech 'at
manta Colchester, ize
Natural Reeoureo
Nisteral Xesioarces Intel••
ligence Serviee cif the Depart;
Meat ef the reteriot at Ottawe
says;
The apple is the meet invert.
ant frait Ontario, Di 1600the velue of this troll attiottetest
to 98 per cent 94 ILO y4149 d
all orchaed freite tted to 80,0
per cent, of tho value of all
fruits and maple eyrup,
production of apples in 1920
was 9,662,420 bur:bele, tra coms
pared with 0,409,161 bushels In
1910. Tber were 088,194 bush-
el e of peachee,preaucod in 19211,
as againet 600,18'7. bushels In
1910; 538,26Iebnehele of plume
and prunes as •Orripared with
346,944 beshels; 377,775 Minh-,
els of pears, as compared with
423,568 bushels; and 345,520
bueheis a cherrieri as againet
146,440 bucchels in 1910. .
Grimes yielded 33,114,404
pounds in 1920, being a slight
advance on tho 1910 figure ot
82,694,451 pounds. The straw-
berry is the most important of
the small fruits, the yield being
11,362,041 querts in 1920, as
against 18,094,462 quarts in
' 1910. The production of rasp.-
berries in 1920 wall 0,212,242
quarts. Cureents end goose-
' berries totalled 1,082,628 quarts
in 1920, as: conmared with 2,-
420,811 quarts in 190.-, There'
were 501,299 gallons -of maple
syrup and 63,919 bunds of
maphz sugar produced in 1921,
as against 766,88'7 gallona of
syrup and 251,08$ pounds of
eUgar in 1911.
______-
200,000 while the Value of these emphasd the need of a
- 'R S '7 '
liroducth breught in from other counthe rumors that the Government in -
Moat Valuable of Manuscripts
BRITISH HARVESTER' S factuxed and -partly manufectured eound currency systemand said of Found in laxitish Museum -,
FIND WINTEJOB
tries was 582,288,000.. • In addition tended to manufacture artificial Money A despateh from London says —A
Tivo-thirds of 12,600 ,Helpers theirs was also imported $13,,95a,000 of that there was not the slightest ground great Shakespeare find of the first
- Pierian ' Old Lend ,Remain Taw. eOtt0a, all but 5103,275 of which, for sucha fear, it had no such inten- magnitude is announced by The Deily
' in Canada. ' eame Irons the United States. , 'Hon. - • Express Thiersday Morning. Per more
, . A despetch froza Ottawa says:,-- In the industry there are 46 plants Prederick Goodenough, Chairman of than one hundred years a hundred and
,
. Tho announcemen't by Hon.'3: A. Robb in all Canada,. of which 21 are in Barclay's 13ank, in a speech at the forty-seven lines -of mannscrispt have
Quebecane o
, 20 in Ontario d thther same meeting, made it clear that he is lain in the British Museum. They
- that about 8,000 openings for winter . . , .
. employment have already been fund five in the Maraime provincee, Your. opposed to any policy of inflation. He were additions to A play -written by
of them being credited to New Brune- pointed to Germany ree an instance of Anthony Monday 'on the 'life of, Sir
for Eritieh harvesters, is eyidence that .
. the great majority pf these men can , wick. In 1921 they employed 15,823 the 'danger of an unchecked inflatiom Thomas Moore; which was ' pabliehed
persons, paid .012,142,000 M wages, and declared hie behef that a policy -about 1593. The play was correeted
get well( in Canada throughous the used 1,38A54,816 In materials and of deliberate milation would not cure 11:1 various hands - and it,wais euggeet-
,
winter, if they are preparedto talce .. thrned out 071,200 176 of products. the evils of uneMployment, ear secure 'ed. that one scene was written by
, .
.ordina.ry. chances: As it is. believed •
: that 12 000 harvesters came- from -the , The ascendancy .of . Quebec in this commercial proepeeity for the Empire. Shakespeare. !The Express says it is
, British Isles, it will..thus be seen that industry is , found not In the nambeee On the other hand, deflation was a now established, according to. eminent
but in the size of its mills, For ex- matter •requiring hansiling with the scholars that tbe handwriting is that
`Jobe have been. secured. for two-thirds , . , . .,
ample, those, producing cotton yarns greatest care and with. dee regard to of the poet :Ibis identical to that of
: adeth*, to sfiy-.noilhinfl-of ethers' who
.liavesecured ereploynientthrough 39 and. cloth are by-faa the moat import- the conditions existing elsewhere. sl.T proved .signatures of his will and
theirmwn efforts. ' tz ant in ,the indpstry, their production - It was te Mr. Goodenough that Min- other legal doetenents which hiteerio
. eAll the men I brought out have got for all Canada being valued at $65,- later of Labor Barlove in, a speech laet have _been the only known mare:mkt ,.4
978,596 hi 1921, of which $5e,095,892 week erroneously attributed the plan the handwriting of Shekeepeare. "Thc
,jobs ' and will stay in Canada," said .
9isW ,i is credited to Quebec , mid only $10,- for currency inflation
Captain Northeette-North, of Birm-
610,662 to Ontario, although that . . manuscript is the most valuable in the
Province has as man3r mills as has . , world. It can never, and will never,
ingham, a. writer and lecturer, who
'Quebec. The capital invaeted in these World's Total Wheat Yield be bought by Americans, unless 'theY
'brought out 86 harvesters, men of hie
old company, and who passed through
the city on his way home to England.. Quebec cotton yarns and cloth mills is This Year 3,422,072,000 Bus.' buy the British Museum," gays The
:put at $43,827,000 out of a total of a ' . • Express. •
' -This prtj got work near Carroll,
Manitoba. Speaking of their exper- e little. less than e66,000,Q00 for all the ' A despatch from Ottawa eays:—
.
imices there-, he said: •:: provinces. - , ' According to 4 cablegram receivel Not Willing. to Commit Himself.
"I do MA think that any man of Cept. Robert Foote• That the cotton textiles indaiStrybas from; the International Institute of ?eTe;leseaernat ,0:o we:tl'an! asnomsweethrIlththonatt.
.ordirtary :physical stamina has any A pioneer lake .captain, whose death to meet keen competition is evident Agriculture, Rothe; the first official
#4/TI the fact that over 528,000,000 of estimate cif the' paoductian of tvheat in 11:aatuall7 being one f.- Is not unknown
-complaint to make. 1 shocked 12 •occureed last week. He has esailed
sides of grain a day, and some of ray the Great Lakes. for sixty-five years, manufactured goods' were imPorted -in Argentina is 248,755,000 bushels, imong the, schoolagoing youth of this
was a ready prac-
kad to look 'after- our own intereets,
Speaking about reports to the effect
' the whole, was fine. Of course, we •
.' but that was to be expected.' 'men did as mpch as 16 tencl are hone
. the worse for it. The treatment, on
• '
BRITISIERS TO STAY
CANADA INVITES. . the United States, $12,560,000 from and 32,272,000 in 1921. , '
and was in command of the steamer
Neronic until 1918.
X classes of geode $16,890,850 came from bushels, agatnat 44,280,000 last year
Britain and. 02,887,567. teem other '"These figuree for wheat," itates
interesting tel note that of these two flax -seed: in Argentina is '75,981,000
minting to nearly $4,000,000. It is 642,000 in 1921.. The production of
greater general, Caesar oi Hannibal?"
tlaijodnerOnefetbhaeyawrthowas faced wale the
difficult eitestIon, "Which wae the
The boy, after some thought, pro-
lithelies
1921, the partly manufaetpred am- against 189,047,000 last year and 180,-
500,000 Ot raw cotton imported frorn Comniissionera "coupled with ',be' re, tdiumcieeed ithhlws thi'e•Wh
these greatDn8 led: e rtahl se
'that several men sometimes have had couttries, Add to. this the nearly $13,- T. IC. Doherty, Canadian Institute lived, the conditions under which they
-toa-eat off one plate, the captain said: Offers Welcome ' to Immi-
"Sue:b. things are greatly exagger- the United States and the importance cent Canadian report and the latest srutrluedggleendd, the paeimop,lueitoiev:runwdheoemwthhicehY
an-
ted. .04 eourse, men in a threshing grants Turned Back by IIS,, of that country in this industry is real- revisions of the European crop raise they fought, we are compelled to an -
gang can t expect to find things 'quite
. . . .. Rmad Regarding Quotas" end. gxporw of cotton textile pro- the world's total preduction to 8,422,- sere in the affirmative," , '
as -nice as they wOula in 'their own . duets in 1921 totalled 51,051,905, of a72,000 bushels, corrinared with a,108a '
;homes; but When. conditions out there A despatch from Ottawa says:—An which. 8889,851 'went to the United 000,000 last year and -8,087,000,000 in
• are comPared With what men had to ' • States, $164,444 to Britaie and $507,- 1021. Excepting for a few unimport- —.....-0._—_,
•
intereiting situation has been createa
endute in the trenches there is little 709 to other countries. ant countries, the offIcialitotal produc- A Long Route.
for the Department, of Immigkation
and Colonization here by a provision "aand yeti give the giraffe only One
doe of Europe is now known and ine -lump -of sugar?" asked the'little boY at
to kick about,' ' just made effective by the.correspond- ,..
The captain added that coming ing department in Washington. BY - phippawa's sixth power unit will -be dicates an increase of 219;e60,000 the Zoological Gardena.
down on the trakethere vrere 12-har- lanshels over last year's. crop and 82,- "Oh, yet," replied the keeper. "One
this provision : any immigrant who opened a month ahead, of schedule, in
the United States, and who is outside meat made by the:Hydro Power Com- roma goee a long WaY.With him." '
vest/ars, each with $100 in his pocket, lands in Canada, whose 'destination; is December, according to an announce- 000,000 over that of lo. -1," -
who Inid complained about the diffi-
oulty of securing work, end had got the quota Allowed by the United States laiSeiga„ . With the sixth unit th
their Passage home. Moreover they from the immigrantie country, cannot, Chialpawa will be egaimied to turn out
were boasting about it. , - enter -tho United States, and sonnet, continuouely. a maximum of about
Nine Stories is Highest . . cation for entry into the United States the present maximumm
of fro
if he remains in C-anade, make appli- 360,000 horse -power, as cornpat2ed5070i0tho
.. Building in Paris for one yeztaa If, howeVer, he returns to 300,000.- The additional power will
. ta his native country he may then be needed for Ontarioe, industries and
A stets:math from Paris says i—Con- metke a new ' application . within a homes. . -
struction of one of France's tallest month. . -
akyserepers—nine stories high—has The Canadian authoiaties, however,
. Started in the Rue Marrenniers. have made ft known that if these im-
. Hitherto the highest buildings 'were migrants, who were - destined for the
• eightatories and a special peamit was United States, and -Who cannot enter
-needed to construct he :additional there because 'they landed in Canada,
stoacer, for fear of' making a jagged and because they exceed the quota, aee ..,
of British origin, they will be allowed
to reinain in this ciountry, ' •
a .
The 'Ontario Honey Producers' Co-
operativiseCo., which is said to control
at present -6() ,per cent, ofthe- honey.
Ont,put in the province, is coneolidats
Mg ite otganization aed contaola and
areseiging to establish divisional 'cen-
tral at Toronto, Hamiltoe,. London'
Belleville, OttaWa, • Peterboro and
either Guelph or Mount Foreet, where
from Germany. Se-venteen stamps
were tared, alnicist obliterating the acl-
,.
dress and the message.
and ugly slcylme,.ansi. salting .0' the
light and ale of the adjacent imildings,
Plain Post Card Costs
3,500,000 Marks
-
A. • deepate.h. from Ottawa, says
:—
Nearly three and.a half Million mathe
in postage wee& necessary in ',seeding
re plain pest card teadived bk. the "De-
partment of Trade and Commerce
bonded warehouses will be established,
and honey stored. The honear will be
handled under the brand ,"Bethist,"
Really Swift. - ,
Customer—Do you guarantee then lellilloos of Eggs. -
colors to bo feet?" : A salmon hag beee i.rnown te Pre-
. Shop Assistant --"No, madam, l3lack dime 10,000,000 eggs, Some female
le never comeiderea a test color, you apiders produce 2,000 eggs, while it
know, but I, C44 show you something queen bee prodeeee 100,000 eggs in a
roily swift in etrIpere" seamot.
mastarrementrucc4rawset-mrerne., horstototisdeemastarskiventeneronavt.
Mean.
PhylliseeaThat new teacher's avr-
billy mean." i
Mother—"Hush, my dear; you must
not say that." ,
"Welle she .181 What do you thrnk?
She .borrowed my knife to sharpen a
pandit to give me a bad mark."
A party of thirty Coriish miners
are leaving England, oftthe Canadian
Pacific Steamship "Montelare," fEle.•
cording to cable advice, boand for the
gold mines of Ontario. About three
hundred minerfrom • the English
south-western 'county have eettled in
the Dominion within the past three
yeard.
leRITAIN'S STRIKING POWER IN THE MEDI TERRANEAN
Britain is placing more and neer 0 of her neves power In the Medlterr anomie arid the ttenouncement os the
transfer of the gamous Tree Duke fro m the North sea to the Mediterranean is in, line with the iiew naval policy.
Admiral 3d'Osmond Brock will have the Iran Duke as his flagship. Some- of the greatest and best of British
fighting stripe will be under hie tommaad.
— RABBITBORO
WELL, MIJST SAY,
.M 15S a LOPPY , YOUalea. •
KLIPT. A1,-)A'q FROM
PKETTY WELL SINcE.
1 CAMe TO. YriE si-tORE,
Wiler Cotela eioi)
EXpRO- Avi-Ess
WA'- ,e00
BROKE CON.
EN GA Oti'lENT ?
IBROHae IT i? Skeet 1)40
diT A CHANCE To SLIDE A -WORD IN'? 1
:SHOULD 51,"/Ncfr STARVEDi ON A\
NON 'STOP TALKING IvIARATRON., A441'you,n 56. tALK1N6 Neer H DN'T
fOE STANDS BEIM
WIENCE WATERWAYS PrOi
A deepatch froni
Catiadiart 4elega5th Inc taking- a prom,
inent .1t1"t in, Woili ei 'the C.,treat
Lifthee Arifeit Cleiihrenee; epen-
ed here TlAilradeei. afternecnit boob
Gibbonfi and 1), I. Goudy d Toronto
and William, It 'Duncan a NtiatEpad,
Ont., were appointed on the Nenunta
Plu:Poscs of the conference
P, reeerVation of lake levels and
teetmn harbors arid channels) pre'
motion harbee dOvelopmeM and
port effieiency,
Co-operatlen between harbor 4tles
for the stimulation of Great Lakett
eommerce to the highest stage
thins Cmnmittee, and Mayor Alfred odrvl.ce,
Maguire and Wm, A, Summerville o$ 0o -ordination of water end rail
Toronto ,in the Resolutions Committed, lines effect quick and efficient 4ransi4
Mayer Maguire addressed the banquet port of freight to and from lake ports,
Thursday night, and 1 , IL Duthie e$ giving econernie awl efficient eervice
Toronto, Secretary of the Netional to the entire nation,
It is also prolapsed to unite Arnere
loan end Canadian cities on the Great
Lakee in a movement to back the Sti
Lawrence River Deep Waterways pro -
jot. Resolutions eridorsing this water-
way and condemning the diversion of
eonain and Qreat Lakes cities aro rep- water from Lake' Michigan through
resented among the 100 dolegatee the Chieago Drainage Cane' will be
present. adopted. Canada's ee-operetion in the
The conference is called by the encouragement of water transporta-
Great Lake Harbor Association, tion on the Great Lakes was assured
which was permanently organized at by Mayor Maguire of Toronto in hi's
the meeting. address on Thursday,
Waterways Aseogiation, epoke 'Friday
af ternoon, ,
Other Canadian delegates present
are: Thoinee McQueen, Controller W.
W, Hjlts, Toronto, and D. 1, White,
jra Midlend Ont, Twenty- two WM-
The Same VVorld.
We inherit lied inhabit the same
world; and Vre choose for ourselves
whet we ellen do with all that it of-
fers, whether meat Or poison, foulness
or fairness, vice "or' virtue. One man
,sees.the thing-to.do, and does it; the
other is blind to dutyaineensible even
to his own advantage. There are
various sorts a genius, xoaming the
world. a ICipling writes a Titian
paints, a Brahms makes music, a Saint
Gaudens models- and each man pres-
ents what he ha.; felt or heard 00 seen.
Yet it is the same world for all of
them; the same world in whicli there
are commonplace, dull minds as well
as the live, brilliant intellects who con-
fer glamor and lustre on existence
where they come;
What is the great advantage rich
men have over the poor? A.s soon as
the rich man is out of his house, away
from his growl& and not an occupant
of a vehicle, what has he to enjoy
more than the poorest? We all have
sun and ram, sea and land trees and
grass and flowers. We are subject to
the same laws of health. We have the
same allotment; we all must ge
through the one narrow gate at last.
It is so strange that the "wealthy"
should set such store by the number
f things they collect What is the
use of piling up great possessions if
they crowd out the -soul?
We lister: in delight to a speaker's
golden eloquence; we read a book that
depicts an earthly paradise; we meet
those who are "blest" with a large por-
tion of this world's goods. And we
bhagine that life deals far more ten-
derly with thane than witla ns. Often
we imagine they are leaving a good
time, while we are relatively 'miser-
able. But the truth is that we have
as valuable a chance as they had, for
between the extremes of comfort:and
discomfort the range is surprisingly
narrow. If a man has some gnawing
illness or some preying sorrow, what
does he care for anything else? Others
may envy him, but he has no immun-
ity from pain and grief. He may buy
anything the shops sell; he cannot
buy joy, for it is not in the market
atInasthPrakde.of envy for those whom the
fates seem to have used better, let us
be mindful of the rich blessings that
abound for us, it we will but take
them and znalee them our own. There
is rie much for each of us as there
for any one anywhere. (Bea or land
or thy, the elements VG ours, for equal
profitesharing. The life of humanity
is round about us, and we may mingle
with it'as we choose, for better or for
worse, The inequalities of the eecial
scheme, of which to much is said, are
not nearly so impressive as the preva-
lent equality, the diffusion of privilege,
the power of the weak and the wealth
of the poor.
To Honor Canadian Regiment ,
Lady Patricia Ramsay, known best
to Canadians as Princess "Pat," the
colonel -in -chief of Princess Patricia's.
Canadian Light lufantry, who Is to
place a raemorial to her -regiment In
the Memorial Chapel of the Royal
Military Chapel at Sandlinret. The
Qaeen and Princess Mary have already
erected memorials there to their regi-
ments.
Forty-five persons began work re
-
catty in the graduate schools of the
various Canadian universities under
Fellowships, studentships and bursar-
ies awarded by the Research Council
of Canada. Twelve Fellowships, hav-
ing a value of $1,200 each, eight sta.
deutshipa with n value of $1,000 each,
and 25 bursaries, having a value of
$700 each have been granted by the
Research 'Council for the present year,
and these awards are being )held 40
nine departments of science at nine
universities!.
Weekly Market Re )1
TORONTO.
Man. wheat—No. 1 Northern 51.07.
Mari. oats—?lo. 2 CW, 51,4:c; No,
8 CW, 47140; No. 1 feed, 451/2c.
Manitoba barley—Nominal.
All the above, track, bay ports.
Am. corn—Track, Toronto, No, 2
yellow, $1.26,
°Atari° barley -60 to 62e.
Buckwheat—No. 2, nominal.
Ozet. rye—No. 2, 70 to 72e.
Peas—No. 2, nominaL
Millfeed-e-Del.Montreal freights,
bags included: Bran, per ton, $28.25;
ehorte, per ton, $81.25; middlings,
$38.25; good feed flour, $2.10.
• Ontario wheat—Noe 2 white, 95c th
$1, outside,
Ontario No. 2 white octs-40 to 44e.
Ontario corn—Nommal,
Ontario flour.! --•Ninety per cent. pat.,
in jute bags, Montreal, prompt ships
Meet, $4.70; Toronto. basis, $4.60;
belk, seaboard, $4,50.
Manitoba flour --1st pats„ in Atte
sacks, $6.50 per Male; and pats., 56. '
-Hay—Extra Ne, 2 timothy, per ton,
track, Toronto, $15; No. 2;414,60; No.
3, $13.50; mixed, $12.
Straw—Car lots, per tom $9.
Cheese—New, large, 25 to 26e;
twins, 26 to 201/2e; triplets, 27 to
271/2c; Stiltons, 21 to'28. Old, large,
820; twine, 88 to 381/2c.
• Butter—Finest creamery prints, 40
to 42c; ordinary creamery, 37 to 88e;
No, 2, 36 to 37c.
Egge—Extras in cartons, 44 to 45e; I
extras, 42 to 43e; firste, 38 to 89c;
seconds, 31 to 32e,
Live poultry --Spring chickens, 4
lbs.sand OVC7`, 25c; ehickens, 3 to 4.
lbs, 22e; hens, over 5 lbs., 24e; do, 4
to 5 lbs., 22c;. do, 8 to 4 lbs, 17e;
roosters, 15e; ducklings, over 5 lbs.,
22c; do„ 4 to 5 lbs., 20e; turkeys,
young, 10 lbs., and up, 260.
Dressed poultry—Spring ebiekens
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4 lbs. And over, 83c; chickens, 3 to 4
lbs., 80e; hens, over, 5 lbs., 30e; do, 4
to 5 lbs., 28c; do, 8 to 4 lbs., 200;
roosters, 18c; ducklings, over, 6 lbs.,
28c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., Mk; turkeys,
young, 10 lbs. arid up, 80e.
Beans—Canadian, hand-picked, lb.,
7e; Primes, 640c.
Maple products—Syrup, per Imp.
gal., $2.50; per 5 -gal. tin, $2.40 per
gal.; maple sugar, lb., 25c.
'Toney -60 -lb. tins, 11 to 12c per lb.;
10-1b. tine, 1140 12e; 5-1b. tins, 12 to
18e; 21/2 -lb. tins, 18 to 14e; comb
honey, per doe., $3.75 te $4; No. 2,
Smoked meats --Hams, need, 27 to
29c; cooker] hams, 40 to 42c; smoked
rolls, 22 to 24c; cottage rolls, 23 to
27c; breakfast bacon 30 to 34e; spe-
cial brand breakfast bao, 34 to 38c;
backs, botteless, 31 to 38c.
Cured meats ---Long clear bacon 50
to 70 lbs., $18; 70 to 90 lbs., $17•'50;
90 lbs. and up, $16.50; lightweight
rolls, in bbls., $86; heavyweight rolls,
$83.
Lard—Pure tierces, .e71/2 to 18e;
tubs, 18 to 181/20; pails, 1814 to,19c;
prints, 20 to 210; shortentag tierces,
1614 to 15erscrtulas, 161/2 to 1.6c; pane,
16 to 161/2e; prints,. 1814 to 1840c,
Heavy steers, theme, 57.26 to 57,50;
butther steel's, choke, $6.25 to $6.75;
do, good, $5,50 to $6.25; do, med., $4,50
to 55.50; do, come $3 to $4; butcher
h$4eileorts,0 c5115o.i2c5, 536.2c5etmo.,5-65.37540; d5o4, ;mbetidt,..
cher m
cows, choice,., 54,25 to 55; do, riled,
53 to $4; canners and cutters, 51,50
to $2,50; butcher bulls, good, $4 to
$5; do, tom., 52.50 018.60; feeding
steers, good, 55 to 56; do, fair, 54.50
40 55; stockers, good, 54.50 to $5;do,
Lair, $8.50 to $4; milkers and springs
ers, 580 to $120; calvee, choice, $10 to
511; do, med., 58 to 59; do common,-
54 to $5; do, grassers, $8.56 to $4.50;
larebe, chic, $11e25 to 511.50; do,bucits,
$9,75 to $10; do, etan., 58 to 58.50;
sheep, light ewes, good, $6.50 to $7,26;
do, fat, heavy, 54 to 55; cM, iib1, $2 to
2.50; hogs, thick, smooth, FW.,
8,85; do, f.o.b., 57.75; do, ountry
points, $7,.50; do, selects, $0.25, •
• MONTREAL.
-Oats—Can. West No, 2, 5814e to
59e; CW No, 8, 57 to 57%e; extra, No.
1 feed, 86 to°6614,e; No. 2 local white,
55 to 651/2e. Flour—IVIaii spring wheat
pats, lets, 56,501 2nds, 56; strong
bakers, 58,80; winter pats., choice,
$5,75 to 5E86. tolled oats, bag 00
5Ibtsi:254.8."MidliBrig1191,11'58582.82.52. .5IlaSy1,1°Nrioa:
2, per ten, car lots, 515 to 516. •
Cheese—laineet easterne, 21 to
9140c, BUtter—Choicest erearnery,
5515 to 860. Eggs—Selected, 42e, Pa.
tatoes—Per ba, -ear lots, 05e to $1.
Cows, 51.50 to 52.25; bulls, 59.20 to
2,60; canners, 51.; fairly good voids,
9 to 510; grA4401`8, 52,60 up; hogs,
thick =nails anti straight lots of ittio
graded, $4 sow, 10.154