Allan, rector of All Saints' . K. SlotidiF, 4.P.P., for South and formerly Reevoof Oshawa, present, wild invited to a seat beside thn Warden and addressed 1g Comueil briefly. 'Juvitattons were read for the Council to attend a. concert of music given by fis 83th Regimental Baod, and also to. Yisit the Oxbawa bospital. The lattef invitation was acceptod. Commuuications wero read as fol- Thws: i Referred to the Standing Committee on tion :--From Secretary Board of Education, Orillia, enclosing claim for education of County of Ontario pup- fle; from Treasurer of Markham High School Board, enclosing a like claim ; fron R. H. Walks, P.S.1. SouthOutario, ng report; from R. A. Hutchin- son, P.8.I. for North Ontario, enclos- ing report ; from Dr. Colquhoun, Deputy Minister of Education, re Government Kraut te rural schools ; from K. W. Mc Kay, Secretary Municipal Association, enclosing a program of next meeting ; from the Secretary Uxbridge libiaty , y receipt of "Past in Pickering." To County Property Committeo-- From Canadian Historical Awsociation, as to date of meeting; from J. E. Schil. . Mor, sniclosing report of Governor of the Grol. To Committee on Roads and Bridges --From Robeson Process Co ; from W, M. ShieMa, encloring plan re Trenouth bridge ; from W. A. Mclean, C. E., enclosing eopiocs specifications steel and concrete highway bidges. From John Gibson, Mayor of Oshawa, cnclos!lng duplicates of committal of cted children. &CotfiiMittee on Agriculttre--From J. H. Hare, Agficdittral dis(#et repro. Sentative, re work of co-operative circled fz to potltry ; from A. P. Westervelt, Seeretary Winter Provincal Associa- tion; asking grant. To Finance Committee--From Treas wvrep Natioua! Sanatarium Association asking graut To Commissioners Houso of Refuge =-From Dr Bruce Smith, re rules aud regulations of House ot Retuge. Council adjourned to meet at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6 Commtuicationd wera read from Gilbert Smith, pathmaster, re repairs on & county line bridge; from Dr. Warren, Gaol Surgeon, askifig for an ' every ot Rlary ; from MEDohald & ée, fe" doating'lrou work om County bridges. De.. Moore presented his report as delegate to Dominion Government re good roads; also report of delegates to Oatario Good Roads Association, ArTERNOON SESSION. Communication were read (rom fee rotary Good Rcads Association, enclog- | ing resolution: from Carctaker Scugog Te repairs. ns._of $500 was made for carry- work of the District office of ' Agrictliture. fouro'clock the greater number of the members attend the Oshawa Hos- pital, and also visited the McLaughlia \ ny- { TUESDAY, JUNE 6. Acommunication was read from {be Governor of the Gaol, asking an' Hf crease of salary. Dr. Mocre made enquiries af to (he shegod 4. foctive cdonditith of eettaih bigs, and a discussion followed, in which "Mr. Jackson called the attention -|to | A by-law was put throigh to raise. money by way of temporary loaus until CANADIANS HONORED $i Prominent Men Figure In Roblin, McBride and Dubuc Are the wind bydaw. No. 783in. 4 far as it lates 10 salarics of the Governor of thie aol and Gao! Stirgeon.: such time asthe taxes of 1912 haye been collected. <A pediai's licehidd was granted to Murdock M¢Donald, for Nor Ontario: The report of tha Committee ou Print ing was rebived and adopted. A motion to adjurn until June 25 wag lost, . The Council adjotirned to visit the House of Refuge. RATURDAY, JUNE 10. Mr. Pallowdown reported as to a bridge in Rama wrecked by the spring fioed Mr. Rabam brought in the first report of the Committee on Mileage aud Per Diem, A by-law to amend by-law 754 was passed. 1 'The reportof a Ehititnittee appointed to examine certain bridges was receiy- ed: The Rosds and Bridges Committees was instructed to consider the question of a $1 000 grant to be expended on the ge in Pickering Town- $0 pay lor a cement and Bie hie of Brock Township grt of the Committee gos was received and toplud. ; The sum of $25 was granted for re- pairs to the Scugog aud Cartwright roadway. Council adjourned to moet on Tues day June 18, at 2 p.m. freys oF INTERRST IN THE COMMITTEE | REPORTS The application of Dr. Waren, Gaol | Surgeon, for an increase in salary, was | not grauted. 4 The usual grant of 850 was made to the Whithy Volunteer Fire Company. A grant of of $200 was made to aid in making etihbis froth the County of Outario at the Provineidl Horticultural Show at Toronto this year. A graut for the Provincial Fair As- sociation at Guelph te provide prizes | for amateurs from Ontario County for fat cattle, was refused. An increase of $30 was granted in | salary t» J. F. Schiller, Governor «f the Gaol, | A uew heater, larger in sizo than the present one, is to be iustalled in the County Gaol. UNBURN. =F RN oA CEC SORE FEET. posmaon bf rrime mister. native son of British Colu an Bn Bapt. 29, 1806 he the youngest liviay of New Westminster, and is now the father of five children. He contested New Westminster dis- trict unsuccessfully at the Dominion general elections in 1896, and was elected to the Legislature in 1893. 1900 and 1903 for Dewdney, end at the general election in 1907 for Vie- torid City. He was appointed Minis- ter of Mines in the Dunsmuir admin. istration when he was 30 years old. i In 1903, when the House met, he be- | came leader of the Opposition, and | on June 1 of the same year, he was | called on to form a Ministry. He has swept the province every election | since. i The Hon. Joseph Dubuc. B.C.L. | (McGill), LL.D. (Toronto), late chief justice of the Circuit Ccurt of the King's Bench of Manitoba, was born in St. Martin's, P.Q., on the 26th of | December, 1340. He was admitted to the Quebec Bar in 1860. In 1870 he | went to Manitoba where ne was later elected to the first legislative assem- bly of that province. In 1871 he was superintendent of the Catholic section of the Provincial Bureau of Education for Manitoba. From 1872 to 1909 he has filled many positions in the pro- vincial service, having been Attorney- General for two years and chief jus- tice for six vears. - Ho"was a member ' of Parliament for three years. John McDougald, commissioner of customs, was born in Blue Mountain, | Pictou. N.8., the thirteenth of March, 1843. He was edticated af the gram- mar school, New Glasgow, N.8., and | was later in business for some time in | the town. In 1872 he married Mar- garet J. McLeod of Westville, N.B., by whom he had two sons. He was | justice of the peace and county coun- ! { Birthday Awards, June Crop of Knights and Prof. Macouni, John McDougald and William Henry Walker Get Two C.M.G.'s and an 1.8.0. Respéctives fy--The Awards In Britain London, June 14.--The King's birth- | | | cillor for Pictou County for a number of years and was returned to Parlia- | ment from that county from 1881 to 1898, when he resigned to take the position of commissioner of customs. Prof. James J. Macoun is assistant botanist and naturalist in the geolo- gical survey branch of the Depart ment of Mines, He was born on Jan. | 30, 1863, and entered the federal scr- | vige in 1308. | William Henry Walker, B.A., is! chief clerk in the Department of Ex- | | ternal Affairs at Ottawa. He was born | in 1864 and entered the federal ser- vice in July, 1887. TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS. The British strike showed sign of | cojlapsing. ! The Presbyterian General Ascembly concluded its business at Edmonton vesterday. The rural corps' camp at Niagara | tattoo in the evening. | the Anglican Synod at the i | afternoon session, at the conélusion | of the reading of toe fepott bf the, of Council to the necessity of baving an experienced engineer consulted before, making large expenditures. Mr. Elmer Lick addressed the Council as tothe anvual grant f.r the Provioc- fal Horticultural and Fruit Exhibit: Dr. Moore gave notice of a by-law to | amend by-law No 754, and also a by: News Bsoumite Sho Montgomery bridge as 8 gomnty work: § AFTERNOON SESSION. Dr. Moore brought up the report of the Standing Committee ou education. The report was adopted, : Wilson gave notice of a by-iaw to 5" money by temporary loans to meet the ordinary expeuses of the Counaty wiitil the receipt of taxes. A comwittee consistiog of Messrs. Wilgon, Jackson, Cameron, Moore, ' leeask and Mitchell was ap- 189s assessment roll. Was esended to hold meeting of the Cosueil w town hall in the village of discussion took place on roadway Township of of the b bill in ¢ of grating $500 to 'Reach 'Township for the erection of a ¢ r ghe Nonguon River was oo on Roads and day honors were issued last night. The Earl of Carrick, Earl Marshal Bir Wm. Gustavus Nicholson, Sir Francis Allston Channing, who was born in the. United States, and Sir Thomas Borthwick are created barons of the United Kingdom. Carrick's earldom is Irish, and the English peersge gives him a seat in the House of Lords. Rodmond Phalen Roblin, Premier of Manitoba, and Richard McBride, Pre- trier of British Columbia, are made knight éommmanders of the Order of Bt. Michael and Bf. George, while John McDougald of the Department of Customs, and Prof. James Melville Macoun, of Department of Mines, Canada, aré appointed companions of the Order of Bt. Michael and Bt. George; Joseph Dubuc, late { us tice of : Manitoba, knight bachelor, and William Henry. Waiker, of the Department of Brternal Affairs is give en the im service medal. The bi honors differ from those bes of other times, inas- muck as they are bestowed by the King with - direct. recom me: 101 other soutces: . Sir R: "Phalen Roblin haw been Premier of the Province of Manis toba see 1900: He is the son of | closed with a sham fight and military | The Congress of Chambers of Com- merce agreed to a motion urging co- operation in Imperial defence. | One hundred and forty-five water.' ways engineers froin various countries were entertained in Toronto yester- day. New Brunswick provincial nomina- tions were held yesterday. The Gov- ernment secured one séat by acclama- tion. | High Constable Hopkins of Elgin resigned because the Ceunty Council | would not allow. him traveling ex- nses. { Word was received that Lord.Rob- erts and Earl Grey would give medals for the cadets' competition at the Na- tional Exhibition. . i A scratch on his finger caused the | death of Marchion Marazza from lock- | jaw yesterday at Niagara Falls. He injured his finger several days ago, but thought nothing of it. A strong force, composed of Turks and Arabs, with- artillery, attacked the Italian positions at Tripoli on the night of June 11. The Turks were driven back with heavy losses. The jury at Goderich yesterday brought in a verdict of not' guilty on the perjury charge against George Marron of the Patterson House, aris- ing out of the recent The U. B. House yeste the conference report on the army appropriation bill which would legis- "late out of office Maj.-Gen. Leonard Wood, chiel of staft of the army. | which will be submitted fo FLEES : ETE money; offered fi and conviction of the dj blew up The Tintes® | expected to become in considerable extent im Mexico City, June 1 Foreign Minister deck that the Chihuahua legal, as the Stats without power thus to eigpers. Legislators dation were answerable | courts as revolutienari "URGES FAMILY B iagara Falls righ spite of thi are to foals 44 td bo los incursil Uni Btates, where they h more of the continental Sund we have. Then we have th ends. Ieople go away as soon sible on Saturdays and back till the Monday, thus neg ing the interests of the churchiwhi they seem to forget. Added to 41 lech of he. Christin Toachidia of & 4] | dros and ignorance and imi rampant. Vhat is the syn to bh A these things?" Thus did Hon. 8. H. Blake committee of the state of the ahfifeli; ! | which, he said, showed useridus 'de. ¢énsion in spiritual life. "What is the true state church?' demanded Mr. Blake. it stand four square agains§: these introductions of the or 3 have not time o teach their 1 withoat morning" ! ay. Families do evening priyef. 1 believd thi ni | ef in the house in the morningiean- | not help but have Lhe greatest® for good. The fact tiat ther&'ds got | true recognition of Gud in the natills tendencies in the chil aisTespact for jocental a Why does not the church 1 that the standards of the chusch shotild not ba lowered? eh "We are living the life of Heathen The worship is materialism and domi: ' mercialism. Are we going to let the church sink to these low levels or are we going to devise some means whereby the worship of God shall be, established every day? | "We are losing the Lord's Day. If: is slipping through our fi and | that cannot be done withed greatest injury to our race and 4be ! greatest danger to our country." 'When the church shall ve brought about the spirit that should [iowa the world will say ith fi TY ndeed a religion of Jesus "I wish I had strength endugh 1 aight talk; on this subjec| of afternoon," oo Pais in a broken voice owt: The conclusion of ffs ' : followed by several minu longed applause on the synod. A Jesciution along the cated was presen! 2 It was seconded by Mo E. and unanimously carried vote. rreme--ce---------- Relief For the Work Cleveland; 0: Jéne 14 stanes of & feport oon! miéfidations on industs tional parties for- in their platforms was yesterday's session of the al confSrence of charities tions. The report was Wi Owen R. Lovejoy of New ! Ka- | nin | on | | result of three years of kh by a committee of In part, it recomm hour day; sbolition of n women #&nd children, night work for men, p employers of wages tion of the manufactu dangetous to he! #bstitutes ale der 16 to work, insu ment, a work for | Housewls's Moriey Buffalo, N.Y., June 14.-- el, in the U. B. Distric handed down an opi be holds that money sa Has- "the high : id was ob % mend frifm pean sources for "whadt: flour is quiet and the prices : th oat 'the | 3 868 | the Cit ! cwt,; rams, 10 be very limited and bids to-day were 3¢ to.dc were 18.34 per sack below what millers are asking. The local trade quiet, ut ere a fair enquiry from the. continent for bran at a price which is below miller's views. Shorts are fairly active. Butter is quiet and unseltied, OWing to increas. Cheese steadier under a from English buyers. kKgse n do, No. 3, feed Sl34c to Sc. Harley--Manitoba feed 6i%e to 6c; malt! ing, $1.08 to $1.01, Flour-- Manitoba pring wheat patents seconds, $5.20; stron Ker' [3 tents. choice, W440 Jal straight re $4.50 to $4.90; do. 30 to $1.40. FE ilifeed-- Bran, $22; shorts, $28 to 87; middiings, $23 to $3; moulille, $% to $4. Hay--No. 2, per ton, car lots; $0 te Pe heese--Finest westerns, 1%e to 1%6] finest easterns, i3%c to 18%e. Butter--Cholcest creamery, Ho to Be. Eqia sel ted, Bc Ww We; No. 3 stocks 17¢ to 1T%e. Potatoes--Per bag, car lots, $1.60 to SLE. Dressed Hogs--Abattolr killed, $12.33 td Pork--Heavy Canada short cut ms barrels, 5 10 (3 pieces, $28: short cu backs, barrels, 4 to 55 pleces. $28.50. Lard--Compound tlercea, 37% Ibs. 104401 wood palls, Ibs. net, lic; pure, tlerces, 376 1bs., MW%o; pure, wood pails, 3 Iba net, 16a, Beof--Plate, barrels, 300 lbs. #17: arn hg gon he Se Toe Liverpool Provisions, '~ ~<a JAYERPQOL, June 13--Beef=Exfra If din tibia; 153s 68: Pork; primé# mass west: ern; 9s: Iams; short but, I{ to 16 Ibs. bss 6d; bacon. Cumberland eyt, 28 to A Ibs., 58s; sbort ribs, 16 to 3 Ibs; 58s 6d; clear bellies, 14 to 16 Ibs., 86s; long Cleat middles, light, 28 to 34 Ibs. 63s 6d; long clear middles, heavy, 8 to 40 Ibs. 68s; short clear backs, 16 to 20 lbs. Bis 6d; shoulders, square, 11 to 13 lbs, 47s 6d. lard, prime western, in tierces, 5a 3d; American refined. 56s. Chcese--Canadian, finest white, new, 68s; do. colored, new, . Tallow, prime city, 22s 3d. Tugpen- tine spirits, Rosin, common, 17s. Pe- trolcum, refined, #%d. Linseed oll, (is. CATTLE MARKETS. rats, a 10. winter pa llers, do. 1 Toronto Live Stock. TORONTO, June 13.--The railways reported 50 carloads of live stock af Market, Comprising 423 cs! sheep, and 237 calves. Butchers Stall fed steers and heifers sold from $35 to #5; steers and heifers, finished on grass, §1 to $7.60; common and medium | grassers, $6.25 to $6.75; good cows, $6.50 to $6; medium cows, H.50 t cows, $3 to $3.50; canners, to $8 $6.25; common 1.50 to $3; bulls, 'Milkers and Springers The marset for mitkers and s springers ull and draggy, especially the com- | mon and medium classes. Prices were | Tepartea at $25 to $65, with two or three at N Veal Calves. There were 337 calves on sale. Prices were steady to firm at $4 to 38 per owt., or about an average of ¥.50 per owt, Sheep and Lambs, There were 33 sheep and lambs on sale at following prices : Light ewes, $4.75 10 $5.50 per cwt.; heavy awes, $i to $4.50 per $3 to 4 per cwi.; lambs, 8 to $10.75 per cwt. Hogs, Prices for hogs were firmer at $8.60 fof | selects fed and f.0.b. cars. East Buffalo Cattle Market. EAST BUFFALO, June 18.--Catti¢~TRe: ceipts, 20 head; slow and easy. Veals--Recelpts, 250 i 8 watered, and $8.35 to 8:0 $1.55; heavy, 110° to og Sh, $38 to- Sheep 16.000; merket, steady Ra Be en § Go WEI to}; western, 60 ta . Chesss Markets. ered Bu; woth We 6 at 13 eater A, June 13- ne : i Ir or fo ing and | for oa ulting . penitentiary: officers, was the severe sentence imposed each of the prisoners, > Biows Ha Kelly, Arthur io late, . and Colt ia 'Kelly and Brown. pleaded guilty, d his own or = they put the rds from po hrough a close ination, judge complimenting Bonnar en way he had condu is case. He. | is 8 polished young Englishman, and ! with a great flow of language, and he made an eloquent appeal on his own f, and helped Jones in his ease. o addressed the jury, which, r, found the evidence straight against the prisoners and took very little time in returning a verdict. i Bonnar has also to trial on & charge of assaulting Guard Caughe; in Toronto on March 12 at the time prisoners tried to escape from | train and Brown must answer to the charge of assaulting Deputy Warde: | O'Leary at Toronto station, These | cases were held over until the Decem- ber sessions to allow the prisoners secure witnesses, The ples made Buonhit fof & chance to make , was one of the best every heard in the court house. | Judge Madden was much impressed | { with him, and said he would keep tab | on him, also stati that he would | | aliow him the aoe of applying | | for the Goyernor-General's certificate for suspended sentence, on this last! charge after he had served his pres. ony terms. ? Jones and Kelly are serving y . 8 : 18 ests : for dtlémpted murder in Wiifipeg. | Bonnaf seven years for horse stealing, | and Brown eight years for kidnap- | | ping Miss Gladys Price, a school | teacher of Hinch, Ont., near Snow Lake, Manitoba. France's Wheat BIIl. Paris, June 14.--The Chamber of Deputies yesterday passed a bill ad- mitting wheat free on condition that | | an jrouikaient weight "of flour is ex- ported from France by the importer within three months, or an equivalent weight of biscuits within {four months. The high price of wheat and ité scarcity have heen causing conaider- able sppestidngioi in France, and it is believed that this action will tem. porarily relieve the market. A Birthday Tragedy. Buffalo, N.Y., June 14--When Frank | McDonald, moi keeper, uncovered . » body Wednesday night he saw that iit was his own sister-in-law, Mrs. | James McDonald, who was killed by a switch engine. Bhe wag the mother os eleb} Shilaren, Wedasstay was i her birthdey she one out je purchass supplids for « Pirtadey ye BASEBALL YESTERDAY. International League. 2 BE at Lynn, Mass., are files dreds of thousands of letters from women seek- ing health, in which many openly state over their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com; * of whom state that it has from surgical operations. THFT'S RANGE WANES Ja (Roosevel's Supporters Sdy &al- onal Will Carry tha Day. 7 Another Day In Committee Fighting Out the Contested Seats In the Primaries Results In a Compromise by Which the Roosevelt Fortes Get Eight Out of Fourteen Delegates In Missouri, Chicago, June 15 --Ejght delegates for Col. Roosevelt and eighteen for President Taft marked, yesterday's gains of the two chief Hvals fot the Republican Presidential nomination, from the decision of conftest cases by the Republican national committee. In addition the committee settled disputes between rival Roosevelf fac- tions in two districts of North Céfo- lina, thus settling the colonel's title to votes from those sections. It was a day of Roosevelt victories, but victories achieved with the full a~guiescence of the Taft majority on the national committed. Missouri's fo fests, which threaten- ed . another alte between the Taft and Roosevelt faclions, in which the Epes would be closely diftwn; wen compromised so effectively that the committee were unanimous in giving Rogseve!t eight and Taft six of the aontested delegates from that state. The decisions yesterday were: For Taft, 2 each from the seeond, third, i fourth, sixth, seven and eighth Mis- | sissippi districts; two each from the third, seveuth and fourteenth Mis- souri districts. Total, 18. For Roo: large from the first and fifth Missour? distriets, two each from the third and nin North Carolina districts. Total, 13. At the end of 'a week of constant wotk over the contested delegations, the committee, has given President Taft a total of 159 PLR and Col. i| Roosevelt a total of 13. Clubs. Won, Lost. Pet, » 16 8 x 48 ul ; Newark a Provid ew! dence 1; Balti; 3 le Lien : amore Jersey City 1: Mont. Friday games ; RocHé#fe? at Toromto, ontreal, uffalo at Mi Baltimore erecy ity, Providence at Newark. a J Won. ern, lambs, : | ed by the convention ®t | raised his hand foe silence, Sena > Republican national committee could : While the national compitt fee Was disposing of the Missouri contests, Roosevelt delevates in Chifggo were assembled in tie Congress Hofel .lis- tening to a spoech by William Flinn of Pennsylvania, who urged "that man must do his full duty and not give up the fight." Beveral hundre room cheering when news reac fringe of the crowd that Missouri had been won for Roosevelt in the national committee. : "If Theodore Rédsevelt is not want. fot President of the United Btates next Thufsday," Senator Dixon, Roosevelt's managéf, declared after a few introductory ve- marks, "you can back me up against a wall and do anything you want with spohecthe Senator folded his ef Ail ai statement by againsy Wa After he had been cheerdd drifil Ni every Dion are that not ibly get enough delegates for Tait to 3 nominafe. mittee cannot stand the strain of pub. lic opinion, which is with us, m Ee cmtiael commities 13 shoots ir {ae many saved them | colt: Four delegates-at- | Trent t%o each {rom men wefé in the "The members of the national com- infornted the co vy event of -the defection ul vence's tow, Saturday, they stood that the Cabinet has und: sideration measures to pi deh descrtiofis of ships" crews moment of departure. BEEING WITHOUT EVES, ~~ The Sense That Ena les the Amesbd to Locate Its Prey. { Is it possible to see without vest ! Beeing is supposed to be due to thé ! action of light on the retina of ho | eye, which sets up a distarbafity This is carried to the brain by meand- of the optic nerves. Let ides of: { seeing be changed to becoming oy {An amoeba is st the bottom of the. j scale of living things. M4. ia a v& minute creature--a "bag of water," | an expressive if' homely description, IA very thin membrane ificloses winute quantity of water which holds a dot, called the nuelems. The con tents are liquid or semi-liquid, liké white of an egg, and is protoplasm, =' | The unimal has no eyes. eat | brain, nerves or any sense vrgan tha$' | can be detected in the new high pow: | er ultra violet microscope, yet it bes ! comes aware of the existence of {in the adjacent water at quite a dis" tance. : ? | Suppose a man 'should be ships wrecked on an island and be the on human there. Let the island be miles wide. In a year let ano Iman be cast up by the sea on opposite side. Then let the man beconfe suddenly awars. that fi | ther was on the island. This pheflst | menon would be comparable to Bry of an amoebs: Suppos= tha food is an animal atid 2 'geeks to escape the amoeba. Tt will [ind the job to be extremely dificuls, {Ko sooner dues the am: batome conscious of the presence of the éthes éreature than it at onée. fives Fiery Let the fleeing ani sud | clrange its course precisely as does | rabbit puraned by a dog; then | amoeba "cuts across" exactly as does | the dog, overtakes its prey and swal. | lows it--i.c., wraps itself, ily sub stance, around the creature, which iff soon digested. The question is, Can this be called 'seeing in the liters] meaning of the word? Whatever is the true explans® tion, it is now unknown to sciemee. : Real Gems Made by Sciences . . There recently appeared in Paris some diamonds having all the ear- marks of the genuine article nd they were offered to a number of deat ers at very attractive [ives Ce rigid tests. were appl engaged in the trade, : that they were proved to be alighily: different from. natural stones. ¢ diamonds were believed to be mami' factyred by a synthetic process, ba by the experts who examined the they wers claimed t» be genuine. From! this, it seems, the secret of maki diamonds is rapidly being solved, It will pot be long until this new duct of the electric furnace will hi thefle rubies, phires and other m ich are now sold © anufactured : in the open mays