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The Clinton News Record, 1925-12-10, Page 7A ISPUTE SETTLED 141111 AID OFENGLAND -Lige lietwee e Iw71. tea in. } tee State Will Remain Unchanged d:Beiteisi Will 'Venn -dun Cl airs for Latter% Share of War Debt. 7t•.d.spatch front London s.tjs:- A slight concession 'is also, made to The Irish boundary .dispute has been the ,' Northern Government in the adjusted. The negotiations at Lon- trasier to .theUlster Parliament; of don `for settling the difficulty caused powers,' hord,ofore invested'in tin, by the refusal of Professor Eoin i4I te--� Council o. Ireland. Ulster has the Neil, the Free, State representative, advantage, too, of retaining the exist- to recognize the award of • his col- ing boundary, leagues on the Boundary Commission, In his statement to the Commons, has been cone:uded with a celerity Premier Baldwin' expressed the hope unusual in. Irish disputes, that the necessary legislation author - Tho agreement was . signed in he- .izing the new agreement would be half of 'the British Government by passed before the•Iloise rises for the Stanley Baldwin, Winston Churchill, Christmas recess, Sir William 'Joynson-I-Iielcs, Lord,In British Government circles em - Birkenhead and lieutenant -Colonel L. phasic is laid on the comprehensive C./111;. Amery; in behalf of the Free nature of ;this triple agreement 011 State by William T. Cosgrave, Kevin .the boundary problem, which prevent - 'O'Higgins, Ernest Blythe and Peter ed a settlement at the Buckingham O'Byrne, all members' of the Irish Palace conference before the war and Cabinet, anil in behalf- of. Northern nearly wrecked the Irish• treaty four Ireland by Sir James Craig the Ulster years agog- In this connection the Premier, and Secretary Blackmore of Prime . Minister wished to acknowl- the Ulster; -Cabinet. ' edge $n behalf of the Government its The new :agreement revokes article deep sense of the- services of the 12 of the Anglo-Irish' treaty., which ,Boundary :'Commission has rendered , provided for the Boundary Commis, to the cause of Irish peace and unity. cion, and, releases the Free State - The Government: view is that the: from obligation under article 5 to pay 'new agreement is more satisfactory a portion df''the, ,British war debts, to the general interest than the re - while the ,Free State undertakes to :sults of any arbitration would ,have shoulder, the whole costs of compen- been and that it could not have been sation for. damage to property in Ire- secured but for the workof.the Corn - land. mission.• Hunt forBed Warmers as Relics Increases Price tfrom London:sa A despa eh s: -Soy. ,many American antique hunters,have carried across the Atlantic old-fash- ioned Mid:Mh copper-. bed warmers that the price of these articles in Lon- don has trebled in recent months. The matitis, caused by 'experiments with Americans seize upon the warmers as Xray, Reginald G. Backell is dead in fine things to hang beside an open -IX -ray, ra London hospital. He was a pioneer fireplace or to use as chestnut roast -1 in that branch of service.- A . co- - ers, o--ens, or corn poppers. ,The ordinary worker says: "I doubt if in the whole warmer is about the size of a wash 1 range of martyrs to science there basin,. with' a lid' and a three-footicould be found a more striking case. handle. In its'hey-day it was fluted i He was only 44 and suffered half hie with live charcoal and thrust be- life. Although toward the end he en - tweet. the sheets at night to take off `dared agony, he never complained, and the chill. 1 retained his e1 thne'a int for science, These warmers were part of the, keeping up with develop -netts. With winter egeipmeut of almost every' i�•tli arms g're, he still worked as English home until the arrival, some i, tie -jeer, when able.", forty Years ago, of the stone hotwater' aw.t r, TWO years ago a newspaper raised bottle, said to have been conceived by a smallsumforisim, and it is now Mrs. William E. Gladstone, wife of i 1114.4,14 there will be hep fou the widow the famous Prune Minister, The fcum the Carnegie Fund, Grand Old Man used to wake, up; thirsty during,the night and drink: -'• the water nearest him, usually that ill The Inoomplete Bible, the stone bottle beside him.' To. give "Is. any of the Bible dost to the him something: more palatable his wife world 4" Yes, nine books and one filled the bottle. each evening with psalm ' are mentioned in the Bible, boiling tea; sweetened. Stone bottle and we have no'trace:of them. These warmers, although replaced by rub- are lest to the world -while many of ber articles in the cities, aro still used the other books are fest on the world! i in English country districts, where they are known as "Gladstones." Scientist Gives Life • for Cause of X -Ray A despatch fronlr London says: - After 23 years of suffering from der- INTERVENL ON OF LEAGUE PREVENTS WAR BETWEEN GREECE AND BULGARIA A despatch from Geneva Gays: -A bare margin of two and one-half hours stood between warfare on An extensive scale in the: Balkans when the League of Nations intervened in the Greco - Bulger 'dispute, according to revela- tions made in the Rumbold Investiga- `tion Commission report, • When - 'the Briand ultimatums, reached the capitals Athens had ord- ered a Mass' attack upon Petrich -by 1,000 men and three batteries of artfl-I fiery, while Bulgaria had issued orders to a defensive contingent of ono bat- talion of regular troops with twelve l cannon and hundreds of irregulars to contestthe advance. The message from Athens to the commanding' officer to halt the ad -1 arrived at 6 a.m.; 8.$0 had been Axed as zero hour. Had Petrich been attacked the losses certainly would have reached hundreds, 'lighting, awhich could not easily of, a war havo been extinguished. The Rum - :bold .bo ldP re ort is an �extensive document ent which 'reveals a'x causes of the con- flict the inherent defects in the fron- tier guard system in the Balkans and designates the refugees situation as one of the major contributing factors. It finds 'Greece almost entirely to. blame and has assessed damages total- ling 30,000,000 levas, about $249,000. Of this amount $146,000 is assessed as reparation for material and moral damage, whish includes the, loss of the life of one lieutenant, four soldiers,` two children, five civilians, the wound- ing of nineteen persons, the loss of working days by 8‘,500 peasants forced from their homes, three cases of rape And the extortion of money from the peasants by the Greeks." Both `Greece and Bulgaria are send- ing delegations to the December Coun- cil. Sofia will accept unequivocally, but Greece is expected to ask ameli- oration of the conditions, which the League is not expected to grant. The commission' recommends that .the fron- tier guard :system be reorganized by a commission of file League consisting of frontier officials of the same na- tionality who will work in close co- operation o with p wit each other on opposite sides of the. border. It also urge' an immediate adjustment of the minor- ity and refugee questions. WIFE, OF FOREIGN SECRETARY HONORED BY:THE ^KING , The wife of Sir Aintcn Chemins -lain was signally 'tenoned when the Yung eonferrcd on her the 'title' of Daino of Cleand Ctn.'s of t'ie Order cf the Bri tisit Empire roecgniaing i,he important pat she 'pla . 1 to the Locarno con- ference, h ]tons Duane Chanibcrii.n v. -lilt her daughter ionence, .Dove I 4 P � g end two sons CABLED PF10'9ne OF QUEEN MOTI-1i R'u'; 131E QIJEEN ALEXANDRA AT REST The above photograph Is the first to reach Canada of the.obsequlee of Queen Alexandra earl, awe%' l r' ,casket in. Sandringham Churrih, with the wa..eatlis sent Sy the.Ring and Queenecene Queen:Alexandea's. coachmen on .guard before his, intstrees' bier, -The photograph, taken in the` Roylai Church,_ was sent teem London over the cable by the remarkable. B5s t ane pho - tranemiiss1on•proeess. POPULARITY BR1NGS SPECULATORS CAUSE DOWN• PRICE -:OF EtJLL FLURRY IN WHEAT iel, "King 9 of the Fairies" .. frona Royal Ranch, Lamed and Exhausted by Admirers. A despatch from Chicago says:- It begins to look as if the wheat mar - Tho champion Shorthorn bull, "King ket was. off on another mad ride. ' In of the Fairies," owned by H.R.H. the the last four days, since the opening Prince of Wales, which was also grand on Monday morning, the price has champion at the Royal Winter Show jumped ahead 18 cents. The advance. at Toronto this year, is now the prop- on Thursday alone was 7 • cents. erty of Frank C. Baker, Kansas City, Speculators are pouringinto the mar - Mo. This famous bull was sold for ket, and It 'is apparent that almost the astonishingly low price of $1,050 everftown and village in the country at the auction sale of Shorthorn cattle has its group of citizens taking a flyer at the Exposition. in wheat. Mr. Baker admitted after "King Last year an orgy of buying by thb of the Fairies" had become his prop- public shot the price up until early in arty that he had conte to the sale pre- February it had reached the record pared to pay a much higher price,'if of $2.21. This was followed by a necessary, tosecurethe bull for his break that took. it back to $2, then farm near Kansas City.- down to $1,70, and later to as low es' Prior to the bull being put up for $L45, • sale, Professor W. L. Carlyle, Man The price of December wheat on ager of the Prince'0' ranch at Pekisko, Thursday was higher than on the same Alberta, announced,to the crowd' in date a year ago. December closed at, the sales building that the reason for 41.60 5-8, compared with $1.58 8-4 a the "Ring of the Fairies" going on year ago. The May and July options, the auction block was that. the .Prince however, are not quite as high as a of Wales intends to bring out another pure-bred Shorthorn bull from Britain early in the new year. The price of popularity was the principal cause for the low price, for since the arrival of "Ring of the Fairies" from Toronto last week thou- sands have .: inspected- the . animal, causing it to stand up continuously, and therefore when it."entered the sales ring on Thursday the bull limp- ed and slithered every sigh of exhaus- tion. Childhood Heroes Seen at English Theatres, • Excited Public Trafficking in Futures in Winnipeg Pit. A despateh,froin Winnipeg says: - 1 ii' ATAlciTVATF'lgRE 41L'1.9"SOS000 A. despatch from London says: - Peter Pan, Jack and the Beanstalk, Alice in Wonderland, Cinderella and a score of other fiivorites of youthful England are in rehearsal at Christ - 'A despatch from London clays:- fas bills in the English theatres. One The London wheat market has bean feature of the Christmas pantomimes very active during the last few days and plays this year will be a general and large purchases of Canadian revival of old English fol the and wheat have been made. As many as carols to replace much of the ragtime '1 ca hes hail Canadian 6 r an of.and music which,has crept into'Christmas g ' y pantomimes of recent years. Australian grain were bought at The English public has tired of the prices which represented•advanees of froth one shilling to one pantomimes which were largely a'•r, shillingand , hash of slap -stick musical' comedies. six pence per-queeter over the closing P notations of Wednesde . TheLon- In some cases the humor of these pro - don market is shill' waiting iiefinite iluetions was of a character parents dews of the crop conditions inAsigen- did not care to have their children Lina and in the meantime millers are hens. The press has teen filled with securing supplies chieflyfrom North protests from parents who urged that America. bills be arranged which are suitable for children of any age and there has -- year ago, being .$1.613. and $1.59 8-8, respectively, compared with 31.65 and $1.6331 on Dec 8 of last year. The wheat . pit at Winnipeg .on Thursday was highly exciting. No ono appeared to know what was going to happen next, Buying of options by the local public, higher cables -from Liverpool, and news of bad crop con- ditions in the Argentine all combined to send prices soaring. Although wheat "liar shot a5tead, oats, barley, flax and rye are all considerably lower than a year ago. - Wheat marketed to date in the West totals :205,000,000 bushels. London Buys Heavily Y - of Canadian Wheat every F e -i rnei,ass,. Five tares Destroyed in B1fie Starting i13 G i ocery. A despatch from North Bey says -- Sevosi families are .homeless, ,four, dwellings and five stores are burned to tho`ground, while a number of ether buildings are damaged, - according to reports received here of the, fire which broke out in:Mattawa early Wednes- day morning.` The, total damage is approximately $150,000: The 'blaze started in the grocery store of K., C.- McDonald, .McDonald, who was in North Bay at the time, and when it was noticed tet 3.45 ie the morning it had -gained too much headway to be checked. The flames 'spread to. a' fruit 'store owned by N. Karan, an Assyrian, to o hardware store owned by J, Ai Fink, 1 to the drygoods store of Mr. Monsour and to the customs office: An apart- ment building tenanted by H. E. Gil - beau and Mr. Lignac, the C.P.R. agent, was destroyed, as was -the resi- dence of L. Mosseau, The _Lignac, Monsour, Guilbeau and SSrazin-fam- ilies, who lost everything, were -saved in their night attire' by the fire fight- ers. They had slept through the early portion of the fire. - To the'fact that there was no wind the people attribute thefact that the Romeo did not sweep through, the whole' town, which -is largely composed of frame buildmgs Following the alarm nearly all the male residents of the town turned out •to :fight the fire. So intense was the heat that the -fronts ofeige,mildings across the street were badly scorched. Mattawa is a town of about two thousand' people, situated about fifty, miles east of -North Bay; at the junc- tion of the : Mattawa : and :4)tnawa Rivers. It isin the heart of the lum- bering district and logs floated --down the ._two rivets. are ordinarily held over there, he Hero His Majesty Honors t and Heroineo# Locarno A despatch from London says: - Britain honors its heroes' of peace no less than its victors .in -war. Austen Chamberlain, the man .who won the peace at leocarno, and Mra. Chamber- lain, -his adroit although unofficial diplomatic 'assistant, were received by King George at Buckingham Palace, where the Foreign Secretary wag giventheaccolade of Knighthood, TORONTO. Man. wheat No. 1 North., $1.67; No. 2 North., 11.63%;; No. 2 North., $1.60%. Man. oats, No 2, CW, ltoliinal; No. 3, 51c; 'No, 1 feed, 49o, No, 2 feed, 4635c, Ant. corn, track, 'Toronto -No. 2 yellow, 93c, • Nfillfeed-net„ Montreal freights, bugs included. Bran, per ton, $28; shorts per, ton, $30;; middlings, per ton, $36; good feed flour, per bag, 1230, Ont. oats -40 to 43e, f.o.b. shipping points. ' Ont, good milling wheat -$1.30 to $1.33, f.o.b. shipping ,points, according to freights. Barley -Malting, 67 to 69e. Buckwheat -No, 3, nominal: Bye -No, 2, 60c. Ont. ,flour --Toronto, 90 per cent, nut.; per barre, in carlots, Toronto; 86,20; seaboard, in bulk, 16,20, •re Straw-Carlots, per, ton, $9 to 19.50, Screenings -- Standard, recleaned, f.o.b• bay ports, per ton, 320.. Cheese -New, large, 24 to 2451c; twins; 24r/s to 261/ c;- triplets, 26c; Stiltons, -27c. Old, large, 28c; twins, 290' triplets, 30c, Butter -Finest creamery, •prints, 48c; No. 1 creamery, 47c; No. 2, 45 to 46c. Dairy prints, 41 to 42e. Iiggs-Fresh extras, in cartons, 78 :to 80c; .fresh extras, loose, 75c; fresh firsts, 60 to 65c; storage extras, 45 to 46c; store firsts, 42 to 43e; storage seconds, 86 to 87c.' - Dressed poultry --Chickens, spring, lb., 80c;' hens, over 4 t 5 lbs., ,24' to 28c' do $ to 4 lbs., 22c; roosters, 18c; ducklings,' 5 lbs. and'up, 28 to 26c; turkeys, 35c. - Beans, Can. handpicked, lb., 8c; primes, 5 to. 51/2c. Honey -50 -lb. tins, 11i,¢ to 12c per 1b.; 10-1b. tins, 11% to 12c; 5-1b. tins, 12 to 12trec; 2% -lb, tins, 14 to 14%cr Smoked meats -Hams, need., > 26 to 285; cooked hams, 40 to ,42e; smoked' rolls, 22e; cottage,' 28 to 25c; break- fast bacon 82 to 86c; apeciai'brand breakfast bacon, 88, to 89c; backs, boneless, 80 to 87c. Cured meats -Long clear bacon, 50 to 70 lbg.,,$22; 70 to 90 lbs., 320.60; 20 lbs. and up, .419.50; lightweight rolls, in bgee.e1s, 343;50; heevywoigh rolls, $30. "leper barrel, Lercl-faro tierces, 18 to 18%e tubs 187E to 19c; pails, •19 to 10%e;prints, 20 to 203nc; shortening tiercere 13%F,c; tuba, 14e; pane, 14t4,e; blocks, 15 to 15 ', Heavy ethers, choice, $7, 75 to $8.50; do, good, 37 to 417,60; 'butcher steers, choice, $6.75 to $7.50; do, good, 36 "to 36.50; do, med;, $4.75• to 35.50;, do, corn., $4 to $4.50; butcher heifers, choice, $6.50 to 37,25;. do, good,. $5.75 to $6.25;' do, med., $4.50 to $5;'do, eom•, $3.76 to $4.50; butcher cows, choice, $5 to $5.25; do, fair to good 14 to $4.50; butcher bulls, good, $4.5d o $5,75;"bolegnas, $3.25 to $3.50; canners and cutters,, $2,50 to 13,15; springers, choice, $90 to 1110; good. mulch cows,' $75 to $85; .medium cows, $45 -to $60; feeders, good, 15.75 to $6.50; do, fair, $4.50 to $5; stockers, good, $4.75, to 35.50; do, fair, $4 to 44.50; .calves, choice, ;112 to 313.50; do; good, $9 to $10; do, grassers, 35 to 36; good light sheep, $6.50 to $7;50; heavies and bucks, 34.50 to 35.50; good lambs, $14 to $14.25; do, med., 312.50 to 313; der,' bucks, $10.75;,to ; 111; do, culls, $11 to $12; hogs., thick smooths, fed and watered, 312.85; do, f.o.b., 311.75; do :country points, 311.50; do, off cars, $12.76; select premium, $2.42. MONTREAL. Oats, OW, No. 3, 59%c; extra No. 1 feed, 56%c; No. 2 local white, 53%e. Flour, Man. spring wheat pats., fNrsts,' 38.90 to $9.10; seconds, $8,40 to $8.60; strong bakers', 38.20 to, 38,40;,winter pate, choice $7.50. Rolled oats, bags, 90 lbs., 13.50, Bran 329,25. to 380.25. Shorts, $31.25' to $02.25. .neiddlinggss,, 88.25. -Flay, No. 2, penton, car lots, $ 14, , Cheese -Finest vests21% to 22e. Butter-No..1 pasteurized, 44c; do, No. 1 creamery, 48 to 4838*; do, sec- onds,42.to'42%e. Eggs, -storage ex- tras, 46; do, storage firsts,'41c; do, .storage seconds, 36c; do, /reek spe- cials, 15 to' 80e; do, fresh extras, 70c; do,' fresh firsts, 65c. Potatoes, per bag, car 'lots, Quebec, 32.75. 'Good veale, 311,- medium ones, $10 and.310.50; grassers, $4.75 to 35; hogs, mixed lots, $12.75; do, selects, $13 to •$18.25; sows, •$10. Natural Resources Bulletin. The Natural Resources Intelligence Service of the Dept. of the Interior at Ottawa says: One of Canada's greatest natural resources, andone to which we give very little thought : except whenwe bre individually affected, is our water Supply, particularly for domestic pur- poses, We have become so `epoustom- ed to having the water, available simply by turning a tap or by using the pump -handle,; that only when something' untoward happens- 'and the supply is absent do we give any real consideration as to its source or its adequacy. Canada is fortunately well provided with water. We have no arid areas, and very few sections where even dur- ing periods of minimum precipitation the occasional well becomes dry, In the cities and towns where water is supplied as a public service lenge equipment and well -organized, staffs are necessary, while enormous invest- ments are , required for the distribu- tion of the water. Even for this ser- -nice the price we pay is very reason- able, because we are paying only for service, -Wo pay nothing for the water -it is ono of ;iatnre'e gifts to Canada and is provided to Consainers'for their own use without charge. When, how- ever, the water used is commercial- ized, or'made tq earn a monetary re- turn for the user, the guardians of Canada's natural endowments collect a value in the common interest. A recent illustration of'the cost of a water supply is containedin a re- port s of the - rutin e of the operating expenses steam railways of Canada in 1523. For the use of their locomotives only, the steam' railways paid -32,550,8$1, quite a tidy sum when .measured im Sir Austen Chamberlain while Mrs, Chamberlain was handed the insignia of the Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire: Thus the part played by.a woman in assist ing her husband to bring the diplomats of Europe into accord at Locarno was recognized, while the momentous role that Austen Chamberlain Mild so successfully earned for him at the hands of his Sovereign the highest di tinction that an English subjeot can attain. Sir Austen, as the new Knight of the Garterr must perforce be ]mown, takes •precedence among the great in. the land. The primary resources of Canada aro: t eases many, and of these we have been inmos . generously su liedr but g y ire of none can it be said that it is more valuable of more general eiieral use than our water supply, - been a general response on the part L RNO SIGNED IN LONDON of managers. TREATIES Isle cif Skye Forsakes Simple Life for Radio A despatch .from London says; A despatch from London says:- of Nations, teplasenting Italy; Signor Under the gorgeous ceiling of th Pilotti and Marquis Medici, members The Highlanders of the Isle of Skye and the Outpr Hebrides, off the.West great hall in the Foreign.Officei the $f the Italian delegation; Dr. Luther, coast of Scotland ]nave abandoned the German Chancellor; Dr. Stress- plenipotentiaries of seven European mann; the German Foreign Minister, their traditional oatmeal for a more, nations signed` with golden pens the and Herr von Schubert of the German luxurious diet of tea, white bread and Treaty of Locarn_o and its subsidiary Foreign Offioo. At the end of the table, facing Sir Austen Chamberlain, sat Herr ZComp nes of the German Foreign Office, and M. Roan of the Belgian delegation. On the side of 'the table at Sir Aus- USHERING GOLDEN AGE OF PEACE jam. This• fact has been brought out treaties, -Which optimists believe, 'v-411 by the chief medical officer for the bring to Europe a• golden age of Treace. Inverness-shire, which includes Skye, t, Long, before 11' o'clock,` the time set who declares the change is "dietetic, for the ceremony, those bidden to at - folly and is the result of Indolence.'itend began to enter the beautiful For - The -medical officer says that radio, sign Office hall. They included ten's •left sat Mr. Lampson of the crossword puzzles and other modern' statesmen, diplomats,' the wives and British Foreign Office; the French ideas are threatening to spoil the daughters of the signatories; and Premier, M. Boland; M. Berthelot, island crofters, and to remove all the scores of newspapermen. In fact, Permanent Secretary of the Frencle picturesqueness of the country of thearrangements for giving the press a Foreign Office; Foreign Minister crofters, as the emend -Ile -nand Farm- good view of the proceedings vied Banes of Czechoslovakia; Foreign erg are calved. The authorities of the with those made ' for the movie men. Minister Skrzynski ::of Poland; M. region are making attempts to intro - Almost all the seats on one sidc'of the Przedziecki, his fellow -delegate from dude easier methods 'of' preparing hall were reserved for:. British and Poland, end Premier Vanderveide of rporridge;so that the islanders will not; foreign newspapermen, who totalled Belgium. stick to their new-` tea and breed diet; more than 150., 'Rangecl before thein In a long row beheld the side of simply because it".is easier to .make in two tops of coats were the official rho table tvljere the- Germans ware` ready for the table. stenographers. ` seated a number of diplomats and at - The, signatoeies t- The,signatoxies entered with others tachose grouped themselves. Behind who were to Sit at the green table in Premier Baldwin and Foreign Sure - the centro of the room. First of these tary Chamberlain the distinguished Marshal Joffre Has Written Memoirs of Great War .to appear was Foreign Secretary men who tools seats included Lord A despatch 'from ,Paris: says i-. Chamberlain, now Sir 'Austen Cham- Balfour, Chancellor of the Exchequer Marshal Joffre has ,admittect •that --he berlain, with the Gorman Chancellor, Winston Churchill, and the other has written his memoirs'Cifthe Woe.dLuther;, and French Premier, Biiand, members of the British Cabinet and War, but says that the time has not on either side of hint The distill- numerous ladies. yet come' to publish them. guished group seatedthemselves at Proceedings were 'opened by Sir "I 'atn still in active service," he -rhe table in the following order: Austen Chamberlain, who' read a explains, alluding ;to t11e:,fact that itir.::Chamberlain tool.. the head of message from Meg Gcorpe'we<connn3 there is no retiring age foe marshals the table. On i is right sat Premier the delegates,- expressing s tisf:iction of France:who; therefore,:. are sub- Baldwin, and on his left Sir Cecil because > London was chosen as" the jeot technically during their lifetime Hurst, legal adviser to the British place -for signing the Locarno Tt'ea$ to the regulations which forbid army delegation1 at Locarno. Ranged on and regretting• -that' the death oI' •. officers in "active service to.publish the ands of the table to Chamberlain's Queen Alexandra prevented ce.elira- anything connected with army mat-' right were Signor Scialoja, head: of ting the occasion by special fninetions, tors. the Italian delegation to rho 1.eagua as had been originally intended. dollars and cents, but snialI in com- parison with their cowl bill, which was 359,280,418. And yet the fuel repre- sented by the latter account would have been of comparatively little use but forthe water necessary for steam making. Water as water has many uses, and in very few of .them could a substl- tate be found, while the power pro- duced by flowing or descending water, when harnessed, is ono of Canada's basic elements -one on which our pulp and paper industry, our mining development, our chetiiical plants and many other commercial endeavors are solely or almost entirely dependent. Britons Leave for Canada at Rate of 3,000 Mont A despatch from.. London says: - s British figures show that durine the first nine months of this year, 26,817 emigrants of British nationality pro - ceded to Canada. This compares with 17,706 who went to Australia; 7,748 who went to New Zealand, and 14,668 'who went to the United States. Answer to last week's puzale: CR •iso t ^ INI ' Diy� s as '' ill gag ,.i' ,s w.r{ y. i. Vii. QQ R - t lioritontii,' Vei tical 1. A holy or godly person 1. Wise men 2, Exists 5. Takes ;nlawfully • 1 A hard -shelled fruit 10.:A kind of fat 4. A group of horses yoked to a 12 ^.A plan used in soups, stews, etc. . wagon 19. The first woman 16 A kind of duck 13. To proceed 6, A preposition 15. ''Sharp o;tho taste 7. To piece out laboriously 17. To produce, as pictures; on metal 8` Branches of learning or glass, by means of lines eaten 8• Intertwined in by chemical agents 11, A windy perennial plant 14. having the shako of in 'egg 21: To home .together 18. A person distinguished by an Sot 24, Coarse hominy (U.S.) 30• 26..;Oiganelof hearing, '' 22• 28. One Whoeeractiees medicine (title) ee, 29. One .who . tells • falsehoods 3),s4i. part of the face (plural).' 77, ss, 'remain of a beast' 32• 38 You an n15 83. 40, •Implethuto lents litot' `be inserted in'Iocirs 42•'Wilig. -'35. 44.:A yeungrflower 37. 4f.To gathur,a harvest 8fl 48. To deface 4L 49. `A -child (slang) ;i4;. !i1.`A thiel auto or si,loe of anything 46. 53,-112issoml (abbr.) 47, tail herons 64'A plume of certain ,n ons. p 50. 56. To catch, to enonare 52; 58. To keep ` 55; 59. To try ilia flavor of anything .67, To send forth:',; An excursion A piece. of )end in a city Rept for ornament dr public amusement Want quickly One who rune Todint• noisily, as a door A material used in automobile•; Part•of a needle (plural) An English trolley.car h largo wave or billow. ,A, food seasoning e, German gold coin To start and run with velocity A division in the hair A beverage The ri o made bya aitchD iig his , sheen noter A in the diatonic reale 1 1.n'adeitiou toa letter , 234� e 78 { '�' it .a. Y der. -ii f 3: t�'�'r J 11 ,. 24 !r i� ,'• .Gni". tuft n, - ze� 26 ,,. .0.' a'; 32 a � 29 SYS.; ter 30 , ;lik ' S 1, ` 34 35 ;�::.. 37 n - 43 4® . 41 42 Ire 44` �t ' � 45 71 r 46 �, { ' 47 ° 48; t. 57 �1 f 5 r•:' F Vii. lioritontii,' Vei tical 1. A holy or godly person 1. Wise men 2, Exists 5. Takes ;nlawfully • 1 A hard -shelled fruit 10.:A kind of fat 4. A group of horses yoked to a 12 ^.A plan used in soups, stews, etc. . wagon 19. The first woman 16 A kind of duck 13. To proceed 6, A preposition 15. ''Sharp o;tho taste 7. To piece out laboriously 17. To produce, as pictures; on metal 8` Branches of learning or glass, by means of lines eaten 8• Intertwined in by chemical agents 11, A windy perennial plant 14. having the shako of in 'egg 21: To home .together 18. A person distinguished by an Sot 24, Coarse hominy (U.S.) 30• 26..;Oiganelof hearing, '' 22• 28. One Whoeeractiees medicine (title) ee, 29. One .who . tells • falsehoods 3),s4i. part of the face (plural).' 77, ss, 'remain of a beast' 32• 38 You an n15 83. 40, •Implethuto lents litot' `be inserted in'Iocirs 42•'Wilig. -'35. 44.:A yeungrflower 37. 4f.To gathur,a harvest 8fl 48. To deface 4L 49. `A -child (slang) ;i4;. !i1.`A thiel auto or si,loe of anything 46. 53,-112issoml (abbr.) 47, tail herons 64'A plume of certain ,n ons. p 50. 56. To catch, to enonare 52; 58. To keep ` 55; 59. To try ilia flavor of anything .67, To send forth:',; An excursion A piece. of )end in a city Rept for ornament dr public amusement Want quickly One who rune Todint• noisily, as a door A material used in automobile•; Part•of a needle (plural) An English trolley.car h largo wave or billow. ,A, food seasoning e, German gold coin To start and run with velocity A division in the hair A beverage The ri o made bya aitchD iig his , sheen noter A in the diatonic reale 1 1.n'adeitiou toa letter ,