The Clinton News Record, 1913-01-02, Page 2THE KIWI-1E111n CUi3 FREIGI1T •TIII�O GIIi CANALS
EtNC BST FO.119.12"13Practically Alm' est Evart' Cain�nadity lrxc. pt Soft
WEEIcf,Ins, Coal Shows a. Great Increase
News -Record and Mail and:Emnre $1.50
•News.Reeord•'and Globe .... 1.60
News -Record and Fnmily Herald and
News Record and Witness . 1.75
News•lt,ecord and Sun.... . 1,75
News•Record-:.and kroe.Press . 1.75
News -Record and Advertiser'1.75
pews Record and Toronto Saturday325
..Night
News-Record':and Farm,3t a AdvOPtrte 2.25
Nows•ltecord and F'nrpi and Dairy.. 1,75
News•l1ecord and Cana Ilan Parte. 75
News -Record and Youth's Companion 5.25
News•Recordand t,aaddian Country
news-Reenrd and Mall and Empire..• 4'e
Newa-Rreord and Globe' . 4.25
News -Record and Wows .. 2.11
Neave -Record and Stpr. 2.-0
News -Record and'World .,. 3.75
lews-Record and Morning Free Press 305
ewe•lteoord and Evening Free Preen 2.77
88Aews•Record- and. Advertiser . „ 3:00
MONTHLY.
Pews -Record and Poultry Review „ . 1.25
Swam -Record and Lippincott)! Mage-
-
•11.w*Record'• and CanadaMonthly,
If what mit want le not In this lint let
ss know about It. We can nunnly .You at
lean than 1t would cost Soo to. sand' direct:
In remitting pleaee,jlo'ao by Poat•otn^e'
,Order, Postal Note, Ernrese Order or D.er-
tatered letter agd address.
�.J MIT rHFLL,
�`, r�iptlsh'er News -Record
CLINTON, ONTARIO
A despatch Crom tiault Ate,
Marie, Ont., •says'; More than ten
million tons greater than the ,record'
of 1910, the best previous',.osason,;
was the, volumeof freight carried
through the canals at the Soo this
(season, as shown in the statistical'
report just issued.
While shipments of practically
every commodity except soft coal
chow an increase over the three pre-
vious seasons, the movement of iron
ore, 46.503,493 tons, was greater by
more than 4,699, 789 tons than in
1910, the season showing the greet-
ed previous shipments.
The movement of wheat, 174.086,-
456 bushels. was 60,839,895 bushels
greater than in 1909, while the total
grain shipments show a gain of tee
505,095 bushels over the recordel
that year.
Although' the movement of hard
Synopsis of Canadian Northwest
Land Regulations.
Any person who is the sole head
of a fancily, or any male over 18
fears old, may homestead a quart-
er section of available Dominion
land in Manitoba, Saskatchewan or
Alberta. The applicant must ap-
pear in person r': the Dominion
Lands Agency or Sub -Agency for
the district. Entry by proxy
may be made at any agency, on cer-
tain conditions. by father. mother,
ton, daughter, brother or sister of
intending hr'mesteader.
Duties.—Six months residence
upon and cultivation of the land in
each of three years. A homestead.
er may live within nine miles of
his homestead on a farm of at
(east 80 acres solely owned and oc-
cupied by him or by' his father,
mother, son, daughter, brother or
sister.
in certain districts a hom^stead-
er in good standing may pre-empt
a quarter -section alongside his
homestead. Price, 3.00 per &ere.
Duties.—Must reside upon the
homestead or pre-emption six
months in each of six years from
date of homestead entry (including
tue time required to earn home-
stead patent) and cultivate fifty
acres extra.
A homesteader who has exhausted
Lis homestead right and cannot ob-
tain a pre-emption may enter for
a purchased' homestead in certain
districts. Price, $3.00.
Duties.—Must reside six months
fin each of three years, cultivate
Mt.v acres and erect a house worth
$300.(0.
W. W. CORY, '
Deputy of the Minister of the In-
terior.
N.B.-Unauthorized publication
of this ao-'ertisement will not be
'amid for.
MILK RAISED AT GALT.
District Supply Goes Largely to
Hamilton and Toronto.
A despatch from Galt says: As
the result of scarcity of milk in this
section producers have raised
fricei. Chief among reasons given
or the limited supply is that the big
dairy companies of Hamilton and
Toronto are coming into the dis-
trict to get .milk, Wagons from
Iitamilton are collecting milk within
a few utiles of Galt, and large quan-
tities are shipped by express to To-
Tonto.
.E *Rent
MONTREAL.
THE STANDARD is tha National
i8'feekly Newspaper of two. Dominion
lof Canada. St is national In all Its
alma.
It uses the most expensive enc ay.•
;gnus, procuring the photographs. from
`11 over the world.
311 articles are carefully selected and
Ito editorial policy is thoroughly
independent,
A subscription to The Standard!
poste, 12.00 per year to any address 1;
Canada or Great Britain.
TRY. IT FOR 1912!
('$tcntreal Standard Publishing C,ea
Limited,' Publishers,
�NAsthma. Catarrh'
1100P1NC (OUCNS SPASMODIC CROUP
`4ONCNITIS COUGHS COLDS
aaTAaLlYlaa
A401,011, 'gro and eases..
' eht■1 troubles, without dosing'
iny■• Ox.A w•Ith aueceaetort
The air earryleg the san■
avow every breath, maNeo sow
n;e■oroth t. d top lh Co
'.also/s, Crawler Is Pal tush
young d^n_n' and ��
DOOR Pala
Treatment Mr Moo.
the mounds wins
6x4 rear...
eptle vapor, Ieepired
thing easy, seethes
roes an ■ ■ e it
Cyto ma inerco td
1a tri teem*
who.
Pte los Sc a fiact
n»t�t,,,a:ItoWe+t,,
TTrr.l CREBot.P-N�R
•NTIREPTie THROAT
reaI.aT si,•asnitated
throat. They
r. a,
• dentia,
••your and antiseptic,
Of your d,vddiet w from
e,, O,.;0 ■tamp■.
Vapo Crssolene Co.
12 C■n4■J101... N,T.
leamNwgwesp HdIee':
coal was delaveed 1n starting uy
mine difficulties early in ,the season,
the shipments, 2,142,435 tons, were
82,276 tons greater than the previ-
ous high record of 1911, The move-
ment of soft coal, amounting to 19,-
789,109 tons, was 483,558 tons below
0911. dune chiefly to -delay :n getting
the product from the mines to the
loading docks owing to car short-
age.
Lumber shipments were 667,542, r
000 feet, a gain of 64,441.000 .set
over the high record of 1910.
Passenger trafficshows a consid-
erable
onsiderable falling off. the number car-
ried through the canals, 66,877,
havinrz been 56 fewer than in 1910,
and showing a loss of 13,074, or 16
pe -r cent., compared' with 1911. For
this, the unseasonable cold weather
early in the year is held chiefly re-
sponsible,
t11l l Ashford, Kent, where an outbreak
i of foot and mouth disease has oc-
curred.
--- Ind.cted at the Surrey Assizes for
the murder of his wife at Craydon,
Henry Hall was found' "guilty" and
sentenced to ten years' penal servi-
tude.
um IIIJ.IUI OPO E�lal .
NEWS BY M -'11I. ABOUT JOHN
BULL AND BIS t' OL'LE.
Occurrences in The Land Thal
Reigns Supreme in the Com-
riercial. World.
In London there were 2,125 births
and 1,254 deaths last week.
Sir Rufas Isaacs,- Attorney -Gen-
eral, and Lady Isaacs, have cele-
brated their silver wedding.
An addition to Harrogate's win-
ter attractions is proposed in the
shape of an ice skating rink.
Two children -a boy of six and a
girl of four—were burnt to death in
a fire at Yarmouth.
Visitors to the Zoological Gar-
dens, Regents Park, up to the end
of November, totalled 983,034.
In Acrington there are only two
houses to let at a lower rental than
10s. a week, rates included.
John Hogan, a Blackburn labor-
er, fell asleep on the roof of a build-
ing and fell off and fractured his
skull.
The Buxton fire brigade and Bux-
ton Council are still at loggerheads
and the brigade members continue
to be on strike.
Undertakers of Wellesden have
requested the Council to make them
subject to the provisions of the
Early Closing Act.
Casks of ale, joints of meat and
sacks of coal were among the prizes
given in a charity angling match at
Gori
Mr',C: Isabel Tippett, an advocate
of votes for women was fined 105.
at Stowmarket for keeping a dog
without a license.
A Sunderland policeman, George
Wilkinson, was remanded on a
charge of embezzling 35s. from the
Farts of Oak Friendly Society.
While praying aloud at a meeting
of the local Evangelical Society at
Preston, Henry Proctor, aged sixty-
eight, collapsed and died.
To provide herds for sporting pur-
poses in British Columbia, red deer
are to be exported from.. a farm at
'Farnham, Surrey.
Mr. Frend Karnes plansfor mak-
ing Tagg's Island, near Hampton
Court, at a cost of $35.000, has been
approved by the Feetham magis-
trates.
The Postmaster -General announc-
es that the number of telephones
rented in London in 1910 was 64,200;
1911, 73.305. and in 1912, 81,381.
A young French girl- is to be al-
lowed to attend a Deptford school
because she will assist the other
scholars by conversing with them in
French.
During the first nine months of
1912 35 tons 2 cwts, of unsound
eggs were destroyed by the Ber-
mondsey Borough Council's official.
,In connection with the King's
visit to Liverpool next• year, the
City Council voted $40,000 as an.
aaditionai allowance to the Lord
Mayor.
A demonstration was held in Hove
to protest against the decision of
the Town Council to buy the local
electric light company's undertak-
ing.
he King has sent a 'gift of phea-
sants to the patients at St. Luke's
House, a home for the dying poor
at Pembridge Sduare, Bayswater,
Thomas liindall, a farm servant,
of Horse Shoe Bridge, was fined $40
at Spalding for giving his employ-
er's horses wheat with arsenic in it.
Dover Corporation have approved
an amended •scheme for the building
of a viaduct road and improvements
in the pier district at a cost of
;1103,981.
Some alarms was caused by an
outbreak of fire at the British Mu-
seum, but the flames were extin-
guished by a hand -pump and no
great damage was done.
A general massacre of crows has
been declared at Kensington, near
RECORD GRAIAI SHIPMENTS.
Striking Figures in Return Twist
Compiled by Government.
A despatch frotn Ottawa 'a...jr,l:
The Department of Trade and Com-
merce has:just. compiled the. figure
showing total grain shipments east-
wards, for the grain year of 1911-12,
which ended on August 31. The fig-
ures easily pass all records. The
total amount shipped' by lake and
rail was 139,322,961, es' compared
With 9 980,226 bushels in 1911, and
a ran ons. a .•.
8�,s.i, ,uvr 4i 14ib.. ailh' algui•et3-alto as
follows;—
Vessels. Rail.
Wheat . ..87,837,412' 1'5,103,479
Cats .. . 20.'767.RR3 a "/"7'
I ieley 2,929,850 203fu!1
Flax 4,164,830- 1,44;1 spa
Rye .. 7,06'4 . 4,6 i0
THE UNION BANK.
Holds Its Forty-eighth Annual
Meeting.
Progress in all departments of
the Bank's activities marks the 48th
Annual Report. recently iesued by
the Union Bank of Canada. The
Annual Meeting of this Bank was
held in Winnipeg on December
17th, and was presided over by Mr.
John Galt, the President. This was
the first year in which the Annual
Meeting was held in Winnipeg, the
change from Quebec taking place
during the past year.
The statement shows net profits
for the year of $706.832, which com-
pares with 6682,000 for the pre-
vious year. The net profits for the
year 1912, together with $47,000 de-
rived as premium on- new stock is-
sued and $71,000 carried forward
from the previous year, made $823,-
000 available for distribution, Four
quarterly dividends at the rate of
2 per cent. each absorbed $397,000.
The sum of $242,000 was transferred
to the rest account, $100.000 written
off bank premises account and $10,-
000 contributed to the officers' pen-
sion fund. leaving a balance of
$75.000 to be carried forward, Net
earnings for the year were slightly
in excess of 14 per cent. on the
average naid-up capital. A further
examination of the report shows
that gains were made in every de.
partment of the Bank's activities.
Its paid-up capital was increased,
and now stands at $5,000,000. Its
rest account was also augmented,
and now stands at $3.300,000. Large
gains were also made indepoaits,
current loans and total assets. The
deposits now total over 055.643,000,.
a gain of 810,000,000 during the
year. Of the amount, 041.210,000 is
interest bearing and $14,423,000
non-interest bearing. The current
loans at over $45,000,000 show a
gain of $7,000,000 during the year,
while the total assets, amounting to
069,400 000, show the large gain of
811,000,000 over the figures for the
previous year. Another feature of.
the report worthy of special men-
tion is the largo proportion of
gold, silver, Dominion notes and
other quickly available assets.
These bear a very large proportion
to the liabilities to the public.
The Union Bank of Canada is
rapidly forging to the front, and is
occupying a continually larger
place in the business affairs of the
country, The fact that the current
loans for the year amounted to over
*45.000.000. or a gain of $7,000,000
over the previous year, indicates
that the Bank is doing a continually
larger share of the country's busi-
ness and is catering to the business
needs of the communities where its
branches are located. The fact that
it opened 43 branches during the
year is another indication of its con-
tinual expansion. The Bank has
now 235 branches, making it one, of
the beat equipped banks in the
Demireon in this respect.
The address of President Galt
was a splendid review of the finan-
cial and industrial conditions pre-
vailing in the country at the present
time, and showed that the officials
of the Bank kept in the very closest
touch with the progress being made
by the Dominion. An interesting
feature of his report was the relat-
ing of the history and growth of the
Union Bank and the reason for the
transfer of the head office from
Quebec to Winnipeg. He showed
that eight and 'one-half years ago
when the present General Manager
teak charge, the Bank's.oaeital waA3.
just one-half' what it is today, the
reserve fund less than one-third,
and total assets considerably less
than one-third. Altogether the 're-
port and the addresses of the Presi-
cl et all General Manager,•lorm
e 1, oornbimatloyi's issued
1. ,t,; vear,
a Rats.Live-Long Minim Water.•
Government experiments'show
that rats ,eau live au •indefinite time
without water. Three of. the ani-'
mals were put' on a diet of bread,
meat and cheese, but no water, and
11 a lvwell ,1 da
a-- W,.re al. 1; and sixty
after' �„s okpetaments were begun.
On the 15th day one was given an
opportunity to drink. but made no
attempt to do so. When kepi with..
out find, but with water, 0110 rat
it o d ,l . st .°ft, 110-
1 1V1
10 -„ire s I, 31 t . I d ttnd water all
t: F ii„ a pati ids L :ngiug from
,
Barks Herbs
That have great medicinal power, ars
raised' to their highest efficiency, for
purifying and enriching the blood, as
they are combined in Hood's Salsa.
parilia.
40.300 testimonials received by actual
count to two years. Be: sure to take
Hood'sSarsaparilia
s p
tet it today. Sold by all druggtsta
everywhere. 100 Doses One Dollar.
THE E PR!A?H
HAPPENINGS I'RO11 A1.1. CITED
TUE GLOBS to A
Ili 1;TSU E,L.L.
Canada. the Empire and the World
an General ltolore Torr
Eves.
Canada.
Berlin is to have a new Federal
building to cost 0500,000.
Quebec Board of Trade favors
commission government for the sty.
Premier McBride of British Co-
lumbia has acoepted a life vice-pre-
sidency in the British Navy League.
' The Donaldson expedition which
had been lost track of in the James
Bay country, has been reportsd
safe.
Serious complaint against the
treatment of miners at Porcupine
was laid before the Attorney -Gen-
eral.
Major W. Dunsmore of Bury,
roue., will go to Scotland as special
immigration agent for the Eastern
Townships.
A plan to teach' farming by mail
is about to be tried by the Manitoba
Government, and the C. P. R. is to
establish demonstration farm work.
A fourteen -year-old boy, John
Galbraith, was accidentally
drowned in a well at his home at
Camden East while drawing water.
The new Montreal harbor com-
missioners are W. G. Ross, chair-
man, Farquhar Robertson and Lt. -
Col. A. Labelle. All are prominent
business men..
Wm. Todd, formerly of Hamilton,
has been arrested in Seattle, Wash-
ington, charged with theft of ss2,-
300 from his employers. He is al-
leged to have deserted his family
for another woman.
Three young children of Mr. and
Mrs. Andrew Curran of Edwards
Station, Carleton county, were
burned in a fire that consumed their
home, while the parents were har-
nessing tip to drive ,to the grand-
parents' for Christmas dinner.
Jos. Schneider of Montrone -has
been. awarded by Judge Charbon-
neau, 0799.88 from the Royal Guar-
dians, '^H insurance cotnpany,
which, after h r joined, passed an.
amendment excludi,':e liquor dna;:.
ers from membership. The sum
represents the sum he paid in.
Great Brltain.
London tradesmen say the ,holi-
day trade has eclipsed all records.
The Turks and Balkan allies ex-
hibit no signs of yielding in regard
to peace conditions.
Elliott Smith, professor of ana-
tomy in Manchester University,
says that the Pharaoh of the Exo-
dus was corpulent and almost bald.
United States.
A three million dollar . drydock
will be built at South Boston.
Congress will probably meet
March 15 to begin work on tariff
revision.
Wm. Loeb, jr., collector of cus-
toms of New York, will join the
Guggenheims.
The U. S. Steel Corporation will
increase the wages of unskilled lab-
orers.
Col. Goethals, now in charge of
the Panama canal zone, has been
offered the Governorship. It means
a reduction in salary of $5,000.
An unknown woman of Los Ange-
les, Cal., with a revolver forced a
number of drunken Austrians to
cease trampling an American flag.
Guy de Villepion, a former tea-
cher at a San Francisco academy,
has returned from the west coast of
South America, and told a tale of
having been fattened' for a feast by
cannibals while attempting to cross
from Ciudad to Buenos Ayres, He
escaped after many adventures.
General.
Greece has contracted for a su-
per -Dreadnought.
The Paris police will .arrest ve-
hicle drivers who splash mixt.
The French Premier, M. Poincare,
decided to contest the Presidency.
KChina has declined to negotiate a
new treaty with Britain concerning
Tibet.
Six. Italian anarchists are under
arrest, charged with plotting an at-
tack on the King.
The Chinese Government has is-
sued a. manifesto towards suppress
ing the opium industry- -
Chas. Borseul, who discovered
the principle' of telephoning, which
Graham Bell perfected, died poor
and unknown in Paris, aged 83,
The German penal rode is to be
revised. Every sixth matt and every
25th. woman in Germany haw', been
punished for violating it in some
way,
The. present demands of the Bal-
kan league are ,scouted by the
Young Turks as being, arrogant and
impossible. The newspapers take
!the same View,
"Thee Mar, et Fifty” was the sub-
ject GE a Christmas symposium'in
the Berlin Tageblatt, and medical
experts, business;men and artists,
agree that a,ruan of fifty is scolio,
than a man of forty, and in nunler-
m ous instances decidedly mare use -
1111,
PRICES OF FARM PROO111313
ss®onTs FROM the inefIlna- Iero J■
615NtF158 09 AMERICA.
•,ayes at Rattle, Crain, Choose one "tow
erenuu►-0l wont. ...no Nursed.
nreadstues.
Toronto, pen. 31, -Maur -Ontario wheat
Oour 0omest o tote; $•+ to $l t at uii-.s,
Manitobas. k' ,ret potent: 11 1<..,0 u.5u,
bu.au; second i?a.ems, in' 3010 bags, a,.1.,;
strung imams, tntluto ba„s.`,•,.u1.
dirnutober
a wneut-.,o. 1 . ertaein quoted.
at 901 l...0, Ba' petits;. No. 2, 1...-251 a.itt.
No, .5 4101, flay ports.. Memo'wn0ac, to'to
6fc, bay po os.
Uatario wheat -No. 'L new white and red
wheat, 51 to bio, outside, and sprouted, 70
W s.0.
Oats -Ontario oats, 33 to 331.20, -outside;
and 351.2 to 56c, on traoh, Toronto. s a.
tern Canada oats, 41 1-2e for No 2 and at
Oce for No. 3, Lay ports
Peas—No. 2 at 61.20 to 51.25,
-F r •e. h 1b barley of good
B$iky. o t6 B ba Y b
quality, 60 to fi5i„ outeido. Meed, 40 to 506.
tora—New No. 3 American corn, Iso, wit-
rahi.
itye-No. 2 at 75 to 76e, outsides
Buckwheat -40 to 49o, outside.
Bran -Manitoba bran, $20, in bags, To -
tome freight. Rihorts are quoted at $23' to
67,1.50,
.Country - P- roduce.
Butter -Rolls, ohoice, 26 to 27e; bakers',
inferior, 22 to 2301 choice dairy, tubs, 2.0;
creamery, 31 to 320 for rolls and 29e for A
aotle.
Eggs -Case Iota of fresh, 32 to 32o per The
dozen, and of cold storage,, 27. to 26c: T.
strictly new -laid, 4ae- per dozen.
Cheese --1.41.2o for large, ori at 143.411 mei
for twins. VET
Beans -Sand -picked. 83 per bushel; the.
primes, 62.90, iu a jobbing way,
Honey -Extracted, in tins, 121.2 to 123.4e 05
Per pound for No. 1, wholesale; combs, Eu
$2.50 to 63 per dozen for No. 1, and 02.,0
for No. 2.
Poultry -Well -fatted, clean, dry -picked
stock. Ohiokene, 15 to 16e per Ib; fowl, 11
to 12e; ducks, 15 to 160; geese, 15 to 17e;
turkeys, 20 to 22e. Live poultry, about 20
lower than the above,
Potatoes -Good Ontario stock, 75 to 80o
per bag on track, and New Brunswick, 90
to 921.20 per bag,
Provisions..
Bacon, long clear, 151.4 to 151.2o per Ib,
to case lots. Pork -Short cut, 26 to 27;
do., meta, 921.50 to $22. Ham—Medium to
light, 17 to 171.20: heavy, 151.2 to 16o;
rolls, .141.2 to 143-4o; breakfast baton,.
18x; -backs; 211.2e.
Lard -'Pierces, 141-20; tube. 143.40; palle,
15e.
FL
FI
A
Salad Hay and. Straw.
Baled hay -No. 1, 513.50 to 514, on track,
Toronto; No. 2, $12. Mixed bay, 510.50 to
$11.
Baled straw -89,60 to 510, on track, To-
ronto.
Montreal Markets.
Montreal. Deo. 31. -pate -Canadian 'Wes-
tern, No. 2, 43 to 43 1-2c; extra No. 1 f_ed,
421.2 to 43o; No. 2 local white, 41e; No. 3,
do., 400; No. 4, do., 390. Barley -Manitoba
teed, 60 to 61o; malting, 76 to 780. Buck-
wheat -No. 2. 57 to 60c. Flour -Manitoba
Spring wheat patents, firsts, 55.40; 'do..
eeoonds,84.90; strong bakers', 94.70;. Win.
ter patents; choice, 55.35;. straight rollers,
84.95 to 85; do., in begs, 52.35 to 82 40.
]tolled oats -Barrels, $4.60 bags of 90 lbs,
92.20. Miltfeed-Bran, 521; shorts, 83';
middlings, 928 to 500; mouillie, 530 to $•5.
Hny-No. 2, per ton. oar lots, $'410 to 815.
Cheese -Finest westerns, 13 to 131.40; do.,
eastern•. 121.4 to 123.4o. Butter -Choicest
creamery, 301.4 to 30 1.2c. Potatoes -Per
bag, car lots, 75 to 90.
United States.
Minneapolis, Dec. 31. -Wheat -December,
81 1.5 to 811.4c; May. 653.4 to 057.00; .lu'y.
071.20; No. 1 hard; 83 Me; No. 1 Northern,
02 to 833 -So; No. 2 Northern, 80 •to 813 -So.
No, 3 yellow corn, 411.2 to 42o; No. 3
white 1.4
30 1-7e No. ur =First
paten:e,t-84.05 to 94.55; second patent•, 83.-
.90 to 54.15: first clears, $2.90 to 113.20; sec•
and clears, $2.10 to 52.40.
Duluth, Deo. 31. -Wheat -No, 1 hard,
84 1.4c; No 1 Northern, 831.4e; No. 2
Northern, 811.4a; July, 8734o; nominal.
December. 826.8e asked; May,, 8614c. Lin.
seed on track, 81.24 3.8; to arrive, .51.24 3.81
December, 91,24 1-8 bid; January, 51.241-4
asked; Slay, 51.2714.
42:5 eiock_Markets.
Toronto, Dec. 31. -Good to choice'bnteli•,
•ring. steers from $6. to $6.25, medium at
from 55. to 55 75, and common at' ,frons
94.25 to 85. Cows from 83.50 to, 0425, with
common grade. . and canners at $2.50 to
$3,50. Bulks ranged from 53.60 to $4.23.
Lambs brought from 8765 to $7.76, light
ewes from 64,60 to- 84.75, and heavy from
92.25 to 9350 Vealcalves went at from
57 to 59, while roughs changed bands at
from 83 to $6. Hoge from 90.25 to 98.40
per hundredweight, fed and watered,
INVITATION FROM CIIILDREN.
Rulers of Many Nations Asked to
Hygiene Congress at Buffalo.
A despatch from Buffalo says:
One hundred and twenty- five thou-
sand school children of Buffalo and
vicinity ,are to sign a mammoth in-
vitation to be sent to the heads of
nearly' half a hundred countries all
over the globe, requesting them for
the sake of their little cousins in
those lands to send as many dele-
gates as possible to the fourth In-
ternational Congress of School Hy-
giene, which meets here next Aug-
ust. Among those to which the in-
vitation will be sent aro England,
France, Germany, Russia, Italy,
Spain. Finland, .Roumania, Servia,
Greece, Portugal, Holland, Swe-
den, Denmark. China, Japan, Cor -
ea, India, Canada. Brazil, Argen-
tina, Chile and Ecuador,
NEW BRUNSWICK Elia -1.1NCES.
Statement Shows - Revenue the
Largest in History.
A despatch from Fredericton,
N. B., says : The annual statement
of the finances of the Province of
New Brunswick, published in the
Royal Gazette on Thursday, for the
fiscal year ending October 31,..shows
total ordinary revenue $1,417,729.17,
the largest in its history, and an in-
crease over 1911, of $70,645,12. The
expenditure for the year on ordin•
ary account totalled 81,409,019.38.
an increase of $5,509.53 over 1911.
The surplus on the operations of
the year 1912 is 68,672.71, as aga'nst
a deficit in the previous year of $56,-
489.80
Sav1 n b s Opanae with
a7 chlr Campnny
corn ived inter•.t
.CCOU it �S from date ,e-
eote. lata
wltbdrrwn.
fert,teit le credited - JANUARY,
APRIL,. JULY and 0.TOIBR 85 tyro
cote of
4% issmmium
Accounts may opened by
mail and are subject to cheque
withdrawal, Ono Dollar opens an
,account,
The Union Trust
Company, Limited
.. Temple Bptldtng.. etalid
- Cor, Ray and Richno nd Sts„ Toronto,
•tai iiF' ':1;lrf"A1- 9 T10.,G"00 ,mwlll
AND Iinshlv8 R r
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