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The Clinton News Record, 1925-08-13, Page 7S tra az•c despat ch Iron u a` f• it says 11a. ifal to the mid 't6 it June, fol - ng of i six months' i �tertno eon to vin, the• Neve s ,,,, z.101, is ot, w;thdsnwal front the minn3 looked for very scan;' and` it is under- stedd to have ben discussed by the as of the m's itary, recammemceaient Govei ,tent. of work on I'donday, and'appointinent The tie-up of'the province's coal in. of •a commission to investigate the:en- dastry tasted insitilve months, having tiro coal industry, are 'dev lopnlents stai.t d on &Itirch 6, 'Previous to that, which are exi coked to•happen in rapid both, prior to, and after the 1924.•con-- successiotr 00 ,the result of the agree- tract exp'red, on Jan. 15, ne.gotiati'o2s ment'of both the British Empire Steel were conducted. Corporation and, their Miner employ- Informed reviewers -of the condition) ees to accept the Gov=ernmenL'sf pro- oG the co,;ieiles following tili2. :ong posais for a return to work:. strike are .of. the ”opinion that work The appointment -of the commission cilli, -be started on Monday in Collier- -will probably La .e loin than the' 3-s Nos. 1A, 1B, 2; 4,''5, 10, 12, 14, 16 ,. other evelopm^nts, but Prr:i e ] 22 and 24. Nos. 6 and 15 are closed Rhodes id it 0,6041 ;i Je done `as' indefinitely from flooding; No. 11can- speedily as poi ibis," not operate'-iintil the burned Bankhead ' a' , ui men is replaced; N. 21, 1� 0 1 on the contract will start . t and eq p t p once; When the District Board of the was announced to have boon abandon- miners trill meet cornoratio i officials ed at the beginning of the strike; and in Glace ,Bay. It is not anticipated No. 24 previously dependent on No. 11 that tills will Present any apnree i.o•e for power, wall he curtailed in opera diffculty,. inasmuch as the,C35ern- .tion until .other arrangements are: meth's settlementterms provided that made, s th auto have 1922. iv�a•*oe These col:tieries are all on the ou the :o frac` .h rates' anil the 1924 wor'uing agree 'side of Sydney Harbor. On the north meet, , side maintenance work was. carried. With the contract out, - of the way 5n throughout the strilse,-' and no C this week, Vice -President J. IS .i1-. apprdelay is -expected -in start'' Lurg anticipates -that Svorlt could bo ing operation. The salve situat on, commenced in the mines on Monday. prevails in Pictou Comity, and main= Withdrawal. of 1,000. troops which, teirance work has been going on in were sent from' Ontario, Quebec and' Cumberland County; for sortie time. i' UNIQUE JOURNEY MADE BY GOVERNOR-GENERAL, Lord Byng Visits Canada's Northern Hinterland, Store ping•at Eskimo Fishing Camp. A. despatch from Winnipeg, ,.MEW ., says:—After journeying thousands -ef miles which carried hint into the far- thsTmest regions of Canada's northern Hinter_and, His Excellency Baran Byng, Governor-General of Canada, is on his way back to civilization. It was the first time that such a trip bad .been undertaken by •a Gover- nor-General of the Dominion. During the long trip, the party encountered much of the hardship.: experienced, by the scattered population of the north country, obtained a keener apprecia- tion'of the vastness and possibilities of the Dominion, and come into per- sonal' contact 'with, native Eskimos. Indians and members' of missionary and trading outposts. .At. Ak:aviks according to, wireless, despatches from the S.S. Distributor, on which the party has•donemost of. its sailing, Baron Byng inspected the principal buildings and chatted with members of the tiny settlement. He visited the outlying regions and stop pod at an .Eskimo• fishing camp nese Kittigaruit. 'The Governer -General's Route of Lord Byng tel e ward from Peace. River Crossing. cul Ratherdisorganize to the it peculiar' and after greeting hien inated"with hfs'arrtyal at AkiaVi e n station service and risk a riot the to thdir peculiar, fashion,' time enter- ani tabled the visitor at a breakfast of' the delta of the Mackenzie river near company decided -to send the train to fish d, tea: Speeches 'of w.a comae' Beaufort -Sea, a subdivision of the Are. Margate, after all. RU8'SELL SCOTT PRONOUNCED INSANE THE WEEK'S MARKETS Jury; Reaches Decision After TORONTO. fast bacon,: 82 to 36ei special brand mare [Deliberation Lasting 1\reagly `No. 2 Noithe 178?i�;_ Neste., lvoi181 lt, beset sst3G to bacon,2c8 Lo 39c; backs, ,Eour'ntours, $1.72; .No. 4 wheat, trot quote l: Cured meat$ =Long clear bacon, 50 Man„oats-No. 9'CW, not quoted; 'to 70 lbs„'•422 ;' 70 to 90 Ibs:, ` >0.50; despatch from Chicago clays.-- No. l feed`” 57�yic• Na: Ecco 557zc.• 20 lbs, and up, $19.50; liglitweiZlit Itusslelt Scott, has won his last fight to All the, above c.t,f.-bay porta. rolls, in barrels, $29.50; heavyweight escape the a:•'o.vs, -A jury in. the 1m. corn, track, Toronto -No. 2 ,alis, $24.60 par barrel, Court' of Superior Judge Joseph B. yellow', $122. Lard -Pero tierces, .18 to 181Fc; David four.] him insane. ?1Tillfeed--Del„ Montreal fret hts tubs 1871s to 19e; palls 19 to tierce' Ti reached 't 'et after bags included ran per. ton $28; Prints, £O. to 207/sc; shottemn ,•tiercoe, j h B ddl'�p36 1 7/s0, tubs, 15e; polis, 1G / c, Blocks, Lee good feed flour„per tag, $2:30. tt nutae, • been 7r to 5 for insanit and Qit ., oats --48 to 50e, f.o.b. shipping do choice sitters $0 to $8.he repeated to have binsanity good, Sr v5 to ,7 G0; hilt -cher points,58,8; thzreafter the voice gritdually swung Ont. wheAt—$1,30 'ta ,$tee, f.o.b, .steers, choir, r 87.25 tod dp, good, to the insanity verdict:` Scott imine- eIlippitlg points, according to freights, 135.60 to 5$74..5o0, too$ 5,25 bclir he f- diately was committed to the Chester Asylum. for the Insane: The jury aoolt seven -ba•: ate. Scott sat tensely in his chair while 'the jury filed into the box lie turned eagerly to the foreman wlhsn he, an- nounoed:to the court that a verdict -was r'ead'y, and as the Bailiff passed the .verdict to the Clerk, Scott's eyes fal�lowed 'the 'slip of'paper that might mean life or death. When. the verdict •was read Scott's mouth twitched nervously and- his shifted his position. in the chair. Ile sat motionless at the' side of his at- th cenotaph to i1 ne for e pthe, -to entered I the corners me s while the court While in Toronto Earl ilei aid to �a e g y front -of the cit hall. in; memory of those who gave their lives judgment on the verdict, and then Be cleated inY in the Great War. �a jury react .e'C its •f 47 deliberating three hours and','forty sorts, per' ton, $30•'ini ings ;- 1d.,/3e Germans Dread a Draft and Prefer to:Endure Heat Probably in no other country in the world are' people .more „afraid of a draft than in Germany. Thisefear led to grotesque absurdities during the present summer, the hottest experienc- ed in Germany in years. For fear that there may be a draft, all»the wit down on one side of street cars must be left closed, while. on the other side only the last two windows are kept open.: Street car travelling thus be- comes. a yeritable ordeal of heat,"as the windows with the sun shining on them act much ,ee'the 'glass panes of hothouses. In the omnibusses tele Same rule applies, yet most Germans prefer sit- ting inside in sweltering heat rather than climb on the breezy deck. In the subway fans are taboo lest they create drafts. • A Unique' Occurrence in British Railway Annals A despatch from. London says:—A bit of British 'railway history was mode at 'Victoria Station here recent - 1Y. e� t the height of the bank holiday rush a ticket taker incautiously left the gate: to a platform unguarded. It happened that there was an empty Hudson's 'Company Nails ll-nud'son s Bay 100 Years Old Near Fort was 'hurried out of the -room as the Bailiff adjourned the session. - Mgrs, Catherine Scott, the young wife of the, prisoner, leaned forward in an attitude of prayer after the verdict was read. Scott's mother, at A despatch from Ridgefield, Wash., 'hie side, wept .and. embraced Scott's says: -Century -old nails," laboriously wife,-vlii;.e Thomas Scott, his aged forged- by, hand, were found here. re- and crippled; father, received the Ver- cantly, near the site of the old Hud- dict without -show' of emotion. son's .Bay Go. blockhouse, erected in Scott while gain .'to"the asylum as. 1825 to care for. the fur. trade of the 'insane; still d ath,on the ga1'.ows• Colum1 ra River and . its tributaries: should he ever be found• to have re- The.nails were in a stout•wooden box gained his sanity, of material two inches. thick. It is believed the nails were lost in trans- ferring the material from 'boats' to the fort. 'Some of the; square, green- ish iron spikes were need ill an air- plane hangar, being. erected here by the. army. . _ C,onselentlous. The plumber worked and, the helper stood looking on. This was his first day. "Say, he inquired, "do you charge for my tine?" "Certainly, you idiot," came -the re- ply. , "But I' haven't done anything.” The plumber, to 1511 In the hour, had been looking long at; the. finished job with a lighted candle.. Handing ,;the two inches of it that were still unburn. ed to the helper, he said, witheringly: "Here. if you've got to he so dared conscientious, blow that out!” Dld He Need a Sea Voyage? train awaiting removal^to another A doctor was examining a man who track. But on the.,other:side of the had come to him for the first time. barrier there was a crowd waiting to Satisfied at last, the doctor. looked at go to Margate. They surged through hint gravely. "'� the gate, took possession of the train "You are in bad` shape," ' he said. appearance pati: Was But Cohe were eq - The governor-general's trip north and refused to leaver it. to- the natives. th y equal than the whoa: S aia were delivered and His Excellency tic Ocean. In all, Lord Byng will have was presented with a number of nee' traveled about 2,000 miles over west, tive souvenirs. Silesian Specks for 12 Hours in Oratorical Contest Delingi en:cy Increasing Arnong Youth of Canada ern Canada's greet inland waterways. The above map shows his route along the Peace, Slave and Mackenzie rivet's. A .despatch fr•onl'' Berlin' says:— Franz Hone, from upp r Si,-esia, ase pires to be European champion in pub- lic speaking. Coaling to the German apital for the initial event, he recent - A 'despatch from Ottawa says Juvenile delinquency is increasing in Canada. R•eporte received from r.13 eroding cities show a total of 5,751 y mounted a soapbox in the Lust boy delinquents and 547 girl delta - erten, began speaking at it ;a,m., and uent4 in 1924 ' as contrasted with 4 ldad at"9 p.m.,pausing only ecce 871 boys and 380 giro in 1923, and tonally for two minutes to sip lemon - 4,602 boys and 389 vis in 1922. tdo or near beer. Above his 'heady nuig a placard reading: "I am care.' Toronto. leadsthelist of the prin casting for the European champion -I cipai cities, in having the largest in juvenile delinquents number of epi a e the J Ilia in speaking. I chap -ng 1924,witli a total of 1,837 boys :and rators of . Germany ` If no one ac 140 girls. Winnipeg leg ranks 'second in epts 'I wig the title: Contests ` will allow in Warsaw, Paris and Rome." ; this respect with 1,335 boys and 166 During _ his ,Boron performances girls; while Montreal is third with his modern Demosthenes has reeita;i 1,242 boys and 190 girls. Ottawa is chiller, Goethe and other German fourth with 378 boys and 19 girls, and oats by the declaringhe is anx- Ilahiax fifth with 196 boys and • 8 005 to revive hour,tlieancient, but lost; art,'gires. Vancouver, Regina, Hamilton, f 'oratory, In Paris he intends to' Vletoria,: BC.;. Calgary, Edmonton, eeite Mo:ierei and: in Rome the entireSaint John, N.B.; and Charlottetown, each in the original: P.L,I„,.rank in the order named. eivine Comedy, g anguage. Prince Plants Clive Tree reat Britain Lost Many . in Memory of Napoleon Prominent Architects in War A despatch from St. I3•o:era says:- 1 ;tdon says: — `r'1 a Prince of Waes paid a touching des A patch from Ail anticipated shortage of architects tri,luts ire the n;enary of Napoison during his visit' here: At Long Wood, n, Great Britainis causing anxiety :he planted an sive tree near the place -Along, the leaders= of- th_ •profs elan, e 'o ,e -time ruler hsh architecture :where the body , of tn., one-time olio fear that 'dloge " of Earope rented before it was taken ill lose such individuality as it note rto ossess55, While , sehoo'sr .of ar`cht-- Paris..• state^re :'nenie r,'of ' Nothing ..maids .to identify the h have`a fair ' indents,them is no rixdic4tion the former tomb itself except a plain achsr's'saY, drat much white sleb: of stone healing no inscrip-, these will Ih callable : material for creative.work, There is now only a comparatively mall band' of about a thousand ar•chi- ects who practice their profession in neat Britain, for the war ,took many, f the prominent ones and there seems o be no youngergeneration: rising to ill the -gaps in the ranks. • • The College of, Architecture in at coapting. to overcome_ the expected ifficulties has instituted twenty -'five cholarships by which promising bung men and women of. the profes- ion may be trained both in Groat Bri-: air and abroad. tion, A -brass plate nailed on a near- by cypress tree, yiaaced these by the' I,a Forte Fle:podition in -1860, says slum : To tee memory of .the Emperor." 1 The Prince panted his tree three front the stone slab opposite a { - feet P, weeping wr.'ow sent from France by' Me rshai' Foch. Aznerican Migration : 1 Used in. RussooJapalaese War Will House Relics, A despatch from Tokio says : -.The ar hip illilkasa, ,which was to have o n scrapped, will be.conveited into rinval museum off Tokosuka. So far' the scrapping •regulations' are con- erned, the old vessel will be made tterly useless as +a warship. Tho hull, 'however, will be recon tructd into a floating museum for - exhibition of : venous relics, pa- s and other artic:es having to do ith th,o I usso-Japanese war. - The nevi.i authorities are honer -ng to Mikasa for her distinguish •d scar - in the Japan Sea Battle. Shows Decrease in Past Year A despatch from Winnipe says:— Dui,•ing the last twe:ue'moiiths a total of 16,689 `settlers came into Canada from the United Steles, the average cost per head to the Dominion for get - twig Cham into this country being 312,41. In the previous twelve months • 20,171 were brought in at a cost of :519.81. The value of cash and erects entered for importation' from the, Un- ited , States to Canada in the fiscal year ended March 31 was 3910,375 as compared with 34;100,490' no the pre - In the Iasi: fiscal year there were. 363 ca,leads of settlers' effects from the limited States, as compared with 188 in the previous year. The total re—.neer of Canadians returniee from. ho United States in the laze, fiscal - y lar was 43,775. - Seott, convicted p2 the murder' of Joseph Maurer, drug clerk, was saved from death three weeks ago, six hours before ,he was to have been hanged, by e week's reprieve from Gov. Small,; Queensland Offers Settlers Training and Money Advances Barley -Malting, 74'10 77c. Buckwheat -No, '3; 78c. Rye—No. 2, nominal: M. flour, first pat., $9.10, Toronto; do, second pat„ 58.60, Toronto. Pas- try'' flour, bags, 56.10. Ont, flour—Toronto, 90 per cent. pats., per barrel, in "carrots; Toronto, $6.10; seaboa3d, in' bulk, 50.10. Straw—Carlots, per ,ton, $5 to 58.50. Screenings—Standard, recleaned, f, o.b. bay ports, per ton, 521. Hay—No. 2, per ton, $13 to $14; No. 3,per .ton, $11 to 512; mixed, per ton, 39 to $11; lower, grades, 56 to $9. '$4.50; good lambs, $14.50 to $14.85; .. Cheese --New, large, 24 to: 24%/sc; do,.med:, $13,50 to $13.75; do, bucks, twins, 247th', to. 25c; triplets, 25 to 512.50 to $13; do, culls, $13' to $13.25; c; Stilton 26 to 27c. Old, large, t fed and: watered, 25 rs , g hogs, thick"�smoo h, 28 to 290; twins, 29 to 30c; triplets, $13.60; do, f.o.b.,.,$13; : do, country ., 29 to 31c. points,' $12:75 ; do, off cars, 314; select Butter -'-Finest' creamery . prints, premium, 32.55. 40c; No.. 1 'creamery, 40c; 'No, '2, 37% to 38c. Dairy •prints, 27 to 29c. Eggs—Fresh extras, in carters, 41 to 42c; loose, 40 to 41c; fresh firsts,' 87 to 38e• seconds 32 to 33c,' pre,choice, 37 to 87.75; do; med„ 35.50 to $6; do, coin $1.50 to $5.25; butcher cows, choice 31.50 to $5; do, fair_: to good, $4 to '84.50; canners and runlet s, 32.to $2.50; butcher bulls,' gd„ $4.50 to $5.50; do, fair, 53.75 to $4;, bologna -,--$3 to $3,50 feeding steers, good,.36 to 36.25; do,fir, 'd $4.50 to $5.25; calves, choice, $9.50 to "511.50;' do, med.,.$7 to 39;. do coin,' $4.50 to $5.50; Milch cows, choice, 370 to $80; do, fair, 340 to 350;'springers,: choice,: $75 to 390; good light sheep, $5.50 to $6,50; heavies and bucks, '33.50 to Dressed poultry=-Chicltens,''spring, , lb;, 30 to 35c;hens, over 4 to .5 lbs, 22 to 24c; do,'8 to 4 lbs., 20c; roosters, 1$e; ducklings, 27' to 30e. Beans—Can., handpicked, lb., 6e2e; priines 6c. • Maple produce -Syrup, per imp. gal., 52.40; per 5 -gal. tin, 52.30 -per.. gal.; maple sugar, 1b., 25 to 26c. Honey -60 -lb. tins, 13x/a'e per Ib.; 10-1b. tins, 18%c; 5-1b. tins, 14c; 23x- lb. tins, 15% to 16c. Smoked meats—Hams, need.; 32• to 33c• cooked hams 47 to 50c; smoked A despatch from London Says:— With the object of getting'as many young English' settlers of -•a certain type as possible in the nest few years, the government -of Queensland is offer- ing attractive inducements- to public school boys and others who have a little capital of their own. An Australian Farms College is be. ing established at Lynford Hall, Nor. folk, bought for the purpose, which will be controlled by H. V. Potts, for- mer , principal of the Hawlesbure Agricultural College, New 'South Wales. Students will•receive the nec- essary training at this college at a cost of $875 for.,six months. They w111 be expected to possess $1,250. capital on 'landing lit Australia, Which, with: pasoage money and pocket meney, totals 52,500. The state, how- ever, will advance to each trained stu- MONTREAL. - Oats—Can, wests, No. 2, 70%c; do, No. 3, 6335c; extra No. 1 feed, 645c. Flour, Man. spring wheat pats., firsts, 59.10; do, seconds, $8.60;,-' strong. bakers,, 58.40; winter pats., ., choice, 36,40 to $6.60. Rolled oats, bag. 90 lbs., $3.85 to 53.95. Bran, 528.25. Shorts, $30.25. Middlings, 536.25. Hay, No, 2, per ton; 'car lots, 514. • Cheese, finest. wests, . 22%c; finest easts, 23c. Butter, No. 1 pasteurized, 38M, to: 38%e; No. 1 creamery, 87% to 37%e; seconds, 36%i to 361in0. Eggs, fresh extras, 41c; fresh firsts, 38c. - Com. bulla, 52.75 to 53; calves, good, 57.50 to 58.50; grassers, $4.50 up. Hogs, mixed+lots, good weight, .514.25 rolls, 22c; -cottage, 23 to 25c; break -to $14.50; sows, 511 to 511.50. EARTI-I' STILL YOUNG SAYS GEOLOGIST American Scientist Gives De- ductions from Various, • Recent Earthquakes. A despatch from' Montreal says:— Quebec Province and'the St Law- rence aw rence Valley seem to be, the epicenter of .the series of earthquakes en the Atlantic seaboard this year, said Pro- fessor Charles W. Brown, Bead of the geology • department of Brown University, Providence, who is in Mon- treal o;i treal;in'the course of a tour. of this section and other parts of Canada,' on which he will confer with, geo)ogists of. Canadian cities and Dominion offi- cials to confirm this impression. "There have been nine slight tre- mors since the first of the year," said Professor Browne "As to the cause of "What you need .is a sea voyage, Can dent with 51,250 capital a sum of the continuous tremors, it seems to be you manage it?" $3,750, - the crust of the north, Atlantic sea- "Oli Yell," relied tl e patient: "1'mthat the trainin and board adjusting itself, just as the y, p t P It is estimated training_ and second mate on -the Anna Marie, just acquirement of afully-equipped rind Pacific seaboard has adjusted. itself, in from Bong=bong• HORIZONTAL 1—Pluck • 5—Stand as you' are (lilted.) 7 -Naked 11—Sudden gush of [Muhl 12-A pleasure ground 14—To make,a hole in 16 -Pulled apart 17—A tropical fruit - 13 -To journey about 20—Part of. verb "to be" 21—A muSical note 23—Point of .compass (abbr.)-, - 24—To roar or cry, as deer" 25—A heron 28—Left Side (abbr.) 25-A : well-known' tree 31 -To soak, ea flax 33—Exclamation of disgust 34 -Interjection 36. -Ship crane for hoisting boats 38—To .mend 39—Egyptian sun god 40—Indefinite article 41—Arranged' In layers 43—Prefix, same, as "ad" — 44Pericd' of time (abbr.), 45-A nurnbcr 40—A girl's name 48—interjection 00—A kind of poem 51—Interjection expressing impatience 52—Possssslve.pronoun. `54—v'es 56—Watery discharge, from- he 553—Shade of color; tone 60—Suffix;same- as "an" 62—An alcoholic{ quer 63 --French coin 64—To,. make sad a 67—Pesseaoed . 68—Evergreen trees:, 69—Locked at closely ' 70—A membrane 72—To wash off In emen water 73—Narrow beams of light ' 74—"4, metric moaotire,.of length 75—A province and its chlef city Belgium. THC IN,ERNAYIONAI, 0Y05IGA1' • VERTICAL 1—A' germ 2—Wholly very 3—Vase 4—A division of the Bible (abbr.) rr--Bend,dswnward 6 -Conjunction 8—Humble - 9 -To roam over 10—Befor't (post.) 11—Strongly placed;, balanced 12-•-Wanderer.or waytoror 13—Knights Templars;(abbr.) 15=•-A Hebrew proph"ot: mime) -17-Enemy. • 19—A musical note 22—A variety' of mineral coal used for ornaments 25-Gulded . 27=An escort; cortege 2^-A familiar tree 2,0—A division, of'Britlsh tales 32--C vine milk, ao a, cow s5—Robust;:'strong 37' -Ar, edvance.guard, es of any army. 33—A dcvire' for., agitating the air 43—Deriure horn or produoed by nature 44—Harsh and rough 1,, sound 47—In addition; 'besides • 49 -Blunt at the extremity, as n leaf 61 -e -Definite article 53 -Going up, 56-Nioknam�e., for anIilchman 57 ---Wet siipp^_rysoil 59-PartainIng to Scaitdinsvlan countries, f GO -A notion . • 61-P,olnt of compass (abbr.) 80—A city in Ayrshire, Scotland. 66-8. E S0ate•of U. S. (abbr.) 67—To sing In low tone 68—Ari expression of lmpat!eneo 71—Past of verb "to 50" 72—New 3ngiand State (abbr.) in fully -stocked farm will amount to following the Santa Barbara earth - 56,250. _ quake. - r ' "The silver lining to the cloud is Thorndale Bank Robber Given that the earthquakes show the earth 6 -Year Term min Penitentiary still to be young, vigorous and grow- ing.. When the earth •gets old, and A despatch from London, grit, the geology clock -runs down, there says e -Leslie .G. Hatiteway, the con- will be no more earthquakes. No ono fessed bandit who robbed the branch would' want an old earth, like the of the Bank' of Montreal at Thorn- moon, without atmosphere or life." dale on July 3 of the sum of 56,000 Natural Resources Bulletin. odd, and held the staff up at the eioint of a gun, later locking them in the The Natural' Resources Intelligence vault, was sentenced by Deputy Pollee Service of the Dept. of the Interior This photograph. o1' William Jan - Magistrate G:'adman• to serve six years at wtwoin the penitentiary.- OnOttaewaondersays:— as he travels along nil gs Bryan was taken less than hours before his death in Dayton, I3atheway scented surprised, and, the railway, what becomes of al 'the Tenn, later stated that he guessed he 'had old railwayties that the section gangs i 8 been given a year for every thousand g g lie stole. His wife, fainted when she are constantly taking out and replac-I Prince to be Elaborately Enter- he the. sentence, and a doctor had ing with now ones. Occasionally a to bo called. Recovering in an hour fire is seen,: when these old 'ties are tained During Visit to Chile ter portion Hein burned but the res g , g P she drove to the jail, where she had A despatch from Santiago,Chile a pathetic meeting with her husband. of them are used by the railway men, P , It is understood 'that there will be for firewood. It is the enormous quare says:—Preparations are under way no appeal, and that Hatheway will`be tity of these ties, however, that are here `for an elaborate program of en- startedron'the serving' of his sentence required' to keep the railway lines in terkaintnent for the Prince of Wares proper condition, because, with the during his brief visit to Chile in at Hoathewa ei• ped documents waive heavy trains and the high speed with September. y g which, they travel, it is essential. that Arriving in Santiago from the ing right to appeals On the strength the roadbed be kept up.,•to maximum Argentine frontier' the royal visitor of this he will be taken to KingstonI will find the city virtually en fete and . at race, efficiency. �1dbe • ply of kiss is ori df the problems with display everywhere. Some of the The, provision of the necessary sup- with British and Chilean emblems on ' Song May int which the railways have to deal, and streets will be specially illuminated frr6rn Protestant Hymnal it is .a,'very serious one. Rigid speer- for the occasion.. He will he called fications are provided, and -a. careful upon .toreview the Chilean fieet at A despatch from Seattle, Wash., inspection is necessary. When the I Valparaiso, the military here and a'.00 says:—The, next edition of the ani- Millions of ties used:annuallyis con -1 the Chilean Bey Scout organizations. versal hymns used by many Protest sidered, and that each tie hasils pro -I There will be a gala day at the races. ant churches will bemiens one old portion of the load to earry, the nee- for the "Prince of Wales" trophy. t societies The British heir will have an op - song ' if certain Northwes essity.:for this inspection is apparent. haveanyinfluence„ This week, at the In 1925,this last ear 'for which.portun by to play a game or two of r of here f Ba - . - y --,e' polo in Valparaiso and later will wit - Gist a conference 1 a P figures are available, there were 14, P , n - List ministers, -a special song service •764830 railway, kiss cut :in Canada, ness a: display, of Chilean horsoma was announced. The song :'coder tock Tlieso convert d• into their<e uiva eat ship at 'a native rodeo. Another fee- These, the. hymnal and q' turn of his visit, according to present the dplatform. bene Y of standing timber, represent 177;177' i 960: cubic feet with a value of $13; plans, will be the presentation of a ter scarfed ca the eat%rm,'which 228,547, collection of Aucanian,jewels of pre- ter ran through :the church. Rai:ivay ties' vary in length from calomel days. "We've r� -Two grand balls will be given in his The'h hymn anno;local was "W 8 to il*WaY, with a thin eof from . g Leached the Land of Corn and Wine." 6 to 7 inches and a width on top ae honor, one by the government and an- F°il e Destroys i© Ah., es of in grade according to the putpose for republic. On the night of•:the Prince's P I from 7 to 10 inches, while they vary) other by the British residents in the re r elit- arrival 17.6 Mtge ,bonfires,P � Choate; � C � which they aro to be 'useti ' Some SP Green 'ria'cb�r ^t C I y CETT _ •. r ., c: , tiesare sswzd` or `heaved on top,"ing as many years of Chilean nailogir bota n, r'life, will 'burn along the foothilie,.ii frosty `7ancpuver sa s:— bottom and sides, while athlete ar Adespatch Y the "Asides within easy visibility of !Re -Torts l-_-<:1 stela ';ilei about 800 sawed or Hewed on top and. bottom, ners of gr, 7 timber. of which 390 only. Santiago. sores very valuable, lte2 ve :10 During recent years the, Canadian 1nilad lay fi a{; Choat^_,;on ills Clan_ thrailways `Hae: undertakenirprersteo ,a- adt.:., P1crflc F, i�};r" `.;,ii ii!•a, 50 ie treatmentvof the.tiQs, creosote rail c5 vest of leen: Fire f g'hl ere tiro being largely used. There are a 111101' n hiivn v'cls dtiiie:i_ty and it is stated, leer of 'planes' situated throughout that in the event of, a strong wind Canada for this 'purpose, many :Mit- further 'damage ;would be dope. . lions bsintg ilius .treated annually. It is cleiniod that the life of; th3 ties is Ancwor' tolast Week's :-ptizzla...'doubled':by this:` preservative treat - meet. This is a: big :factor in the cost of upkeep of the ;• railway lines, as the prices • now being paid foe', tie ,nee ; a hart .charge against operation". The lengthening of the life of the ties, furthermore, reduces the cast of changing them in the roadbed, and Neel 0-00 i nuc the supply of old ties available for f 1ewood. In Nortborn Florida thoro are some Inset.; when t4:,tet, 1revellC3g und•er- ,8000)1: 0.ore higher leve?s, spouts out with suffcient'ceerey to drive turbo- giLi.,_rafers, 'A Heavy =Cold. Smith (err the scales)—"Can't tell why' 1 should .weigh mciro to-dny..tlian yesterday." Jones—"Haven't you just caught'' that heavy cold?"