Ma: 25./~No. 4d A Nene. 210%: DS 3 No. ern, $2.17%; 0. heat, $2.11%, in store Fort Wil- Manitoba oats--No. 2 C.W., 70%c; No. 8 C.W,, : p 67%c; No. 1 feed, 66%¢; No. 2 feed, Ye, in store Fort William. Manitoba barley--No.. 3 CW, 96%c; No, 4° C.W. 90%c; rejected, 83%; feed, 84%, in store Fort Wil. American 'eorn--No. J] $1.78%; No. 4 yellow, $1.70; track © Toronto, prompt shipment. aa NaS dilte, 00 16 , accord- per 14 to $2.22; No. 2, do, 1 fo $2.9; No. 8 'do, $2.07 to .0.b., shippi nts, - RIE apr ntario wheal 0. 1 spring, $2.09 to $2.17; No. 2 do, $2.06 to $2.14; 8 do, $2.02 to $2.10 f.o.b., ship- "points, according ta, freights. A according to freights outside. Barley--Malting, 90 to 96c, nomin- 'Buckwheat--No. 2, 85c, nominal. Rye--No. 2, $1.39 to $1.42, nomin- Manito our--Governnjent stan- dard, $10. BA $11.00, Toronto. Ontario flour--Goyernment stan- dard, $0.56 to $9.75 in bags, Toronto aud Montreal, prompt shipment in 0 DEE, an iy Se Millfeed--Car lots, delivered M 1 freights, included. 'Bran, al go E 0.25 per ton; shorts, $42.25 r hs n;, good feed. flour, $3.26 to $350 er bag. - oO eal Hay--No. 1, $20 tp $21 per ton; mixed, $18 to $19 og track, 'oronto. . Straw--Car lots, $10 per ton. Country * Produce--Wholésale. Butter--Dairy, tubs and rolls, 36 to 88c; prints, 40 to 4lc.. Creamery, fresh made solids, 50 to 5le; prints, b¥'to b63c. y x Bgps--New laid, 86 to 36¢. Dressed poultry--Chickens, 26 to 84c¢; roosters, 26c; fowl, 27 to 32c; uckl 8, 82c; turkeys, 46c; squabs, ; geese, 2b¢. . | : --Roosters, 22c; fowl, ucklings; "1b., 86c; tur- fins, 28% to 29c: triplets, 20 to i ¢; Stilton, 29% to 30¢; old, large, . Toronto, car $1.15 to © pou Sn 875; primes, $2.60 ~ $8.20" to $3.70; primes, 4 to $3; imported find pleked. Burma .GHOE, Gan, $8.25; Limas, 4c. = ne Tacted clover, 6 1b, tins : 26 to b.; 10 1b, tins, 24% to 26c; Eo i, 4 to 250; buckwheat, 60 To Sin 19 to .20c. . Comb: 16 oz, wiih to $6; doz.;12 oz, $8.50 to $4, Aon le products--Syrup, per gal. . $2%5% PL rs ; sugar, Ib, 27 to 28¢. $1.20, + hand-picked .| the transport workers, 67%e; cxtra No. 1 feed, i _|lowances for meal§ en route. twins, 30 to 30%c. : Et oy Be ack €00k- Unless Labor Miniter prop! to and he had to believe that these would table to the men, | he himself and the considered reasonable ; Montreal Markets. ( Montreal, March 25.--Oats, extra No. 1 feed, 8lc; flour, new ¢ grade, $1110 to $1190; volled d oats ; bran, $64; ha Ne sharts, $42.25; 3 1 0. All London went wild u front. Of the original unit memorable home-coming. None of left England in 1914, only The Guards Come Home. n the return of the 2nd Battalion of the Grenadier Guards from the war 12 fortun ate men survive to take part in this their burial places being chiefly Mons, The the gallant officers are alive, 7 a tom, eh Marne, Aisne, and Ypres. See Ensferns, 24 to 26¢; butter, choicest creamery, , 58 to 59c; eggs selected, Se; No. 1 stocks 36c; po- 'iin ri Fee BRITISH AVIATORS fi alti) 0 CROSS ATLANTIC 5 50 pails, 20 Ibs. net, 28% to 8 Live Stock Markets. Toronto, March 25.--Choice heavy $16 to $17.50; do, good, : 16,50; choice butcher 50 to $13.76; butcher's cattle, choice, $18.26 to $13.75; do, , $12.25. to $12.76; do, common, 10.25 to $10.75; buils, choice, $10.78 | to $11.75; do, mediom bulls, $9 to $9.25; do, rough bulls, $7.76 to $8.25; butchers' cows, choice, $11 to $12.25; do, good, $10 to $10.75; do, medium, $9 to $9.25; do, common, $7.50 to $8; | stockers, $8 to $10.50; feeders, $10.50 . $12; oa ners 21d sutters, wi jo . ; milkers, goo oice, 0 $1607 do. com: and med., $65 to $75; | seater biplane, | springers, $90 to $150; light ewes, power engine. $11.60 to $13; yearlings, $12 to $14; shaped, and wi I'spring lambs, $16.75 to $18.75; calves, | in the water. ood to thotee, | 10 to 317.5 /] hogs,| Pilot Hawker said he believed Jat i and watered, ; do, off cars,|the flight would occupy about $20.25; pont gg 19.25; do, f.ob, dy The machine, he wiih, hed J ¢ ; . flown 900 milés in nine hours ai ve HR Cation minutes on one-third of its "petrol {$10.50 to $11.50; common, down to capacity, and is capable of maintain: 1 $7.50; oice butcher cattle, $10.50 ing a speed of 100 miles an hour for to $1160; ood, $9 to $10; medium, | 25 hours. : , $8.50 to- $5; canners, $5 to $6.50;| Harry G. Hawker won the British {milk calves, $10 to" $15; sheep, $9 to Michelin prize for 1912 by a flight' of $10.50; lambs, $12 to $15. eight hours and 23 minutes. He has made many - long-distance flights along the British coast. He estab- lished a world's altitude record of 28,600 feet in 1916. : a Ra" | 18 German Ships Clear From Hamburg Port Alone A despatch from London says:-- British avaitors are to try for 8 flight across the Atlantic. A secret- ly built airplane, accompanied by Harry Hawker as pilot, and Com- mander Mackenzie Grieve, Royal Navy, as navigator, has been shipped from England for. St. John's, New- foundland, where it will start at the earliest possible moment in" an at- tempt to win the Daily Mail prize of £10,000 for. the first machine to fly across the Atlantic. The machine is a Sopwith two- with a 876. horse- The fusilage is boat- Il support the machine FAMOUS PRINCESS PATS ' HAVE BEEN DISBANDED A despatch from Ottawa says:-- The famous Princess Patricia's Can- adian Light Infantry, Canadian Ex- peditionary Force, is no more. De- mobilization has been completed, the last man being discharged and the unit disbanded. There was a touch- ing scene as Lieut.-Col. A. H; Galt, the "organizer of the unit, bade the men farewell. Many of the men have left for their homes, those living at a 'distance being provided with first class sleeper accommodation and tickets, in addition to generous al- Berlin, March 23--=Up to seven o'clock last evening eighteen ships had cleared from Hamburg, includ- ing the Patricia, Santa Cruse, Cor- dova, Kigoma, EK eveland and Cap Finisterre. Many other vessels are manned and coaled and ready to sail to-day. The example of the Hamburg seamen in proceeding to sea, it is believed onli here, will have a good effect on the Swiss' Will Grant Asylum A other Hanseatic and Baltic seamen. Aw To Late Austsia " Emperor Over 5,000 Jews Massacred : By Reds in the Ukraine 'A despatch from Gengva says:i-- The Swiss Government hag received a formal demand from former Em- peror Charles of Austria requesting permission for him to live in Switz. erland. As 'the allies, * through Arthur' J: Balfour, the British For- eign Secretary, when sounded on the subject recently, made no objection to such residence, the request of Charles probably will be granted. The matter is now in the hands of the Political Department. ~ ° Rhine is Boundary, Have Lost War, Says Foch New York, March 23.--The Bol- gheviki invasion of the'Ukraine has resulted in pogroms in which thou- sands of Jews were massacred, 5,000 being killed or wounded in Proskurov; according to cable messages fromd the Copenhagen Zionist bureau, made public here to-night by the Zionist of America. Hundreds of Jews were killed in Berdichev, Zhitomir and other places, said the message, which declared the pogroms were instigated by Polish anti-Semites. s pepe a War Cost Claims Will Exceed $1,500,000,000 i Canada's NEW REVOLUTIONARY GOVERNMENT MAKES ALLIANCE WITH BOLSHEVIKI Allied Troops Being Rushed Into A Troops Reported at Tarnopol, F' From Budapest. Budapest, March 22.--The Hungar- jan Cabinet, headed by Count Michael Karoly], resigned on Saturday, leav- ing the Government to the proletar- iat. This action was taken after Count Karolyi had communicated to the Cabinet the Entente note outlin- ing the new boundary between Hun- gary and Roumania. After advising Colonel Viss, commander of the French troops of occupation, of the decision of the Cabinet, Count Kar- olyi then resigned in his turn. A revolutionary government of the Workers', Peasants' and Soldiers' Council was then formed. Alexander Gorbai assumed the Presidency. Bela Kun became Foreign Commissary; and Joseph Pogany, 'War Commissary. ' The new Hungarian Government has proclaimed solidarity with the Russian Soviet Government and an armed alliance with the proletariat of Russia, and Kun has applied to Len- ine for assistance. As soon as the Hungarian Cabinet lyi resigned, headed. by €ount Kar: flected Area--Red Russian ourteen Days' March . { the governing party proclaimed mar- tial law throughout the entire coun- Yo Under the title of "Hungarian So- cialist party," the Socialists and Communists have combined and will administer the country. The Government is reported to be signing a proclamation acknowl- edging a state of war between Hun- gary and the Entente. A mob stormed: the post office and military buildings and destroyed the | Honved monuments. Red Russian | troops are reported to have arrived at Tarnopol. All the Budapest news- papers have ceased publication. London, March 28.--Allied troops in the past few days have occupied the greater part of Hungary, with the exception of Budapest and the surrounding distnicts, for the pur- pose of suppressing plundering by Bolsheviki gangs and restoring order, according to a despatch from Vienna to the Exchange Telegraph by way of Copenhagen. The /Czecho-Slovak Gev- ernmnt is preparing to issue a mob- ilization order. -- SITUATION IN EGYPT IS GRAVE British Forces, Already Large, Are Being Reinforced-- Bedouins Pillaging. A despatch from London says:i-- The situation in Egypt is becoming | worse, and at the present time is dis- tinetly grave, a Reuter despatch from Gen. Allenby, the com-| 'Cairo says. mander in Palestine, will reach Cairo Tuesday. The large forces of troops already in Egypt are being reinforc- ed. A large number of armed Bedouins have entered Beheira Province, low- er 'Egypt, from the west, and are robbing towns and villages. ing any military danger. The Turkish flag is reported to be flying in some villages of Beheira There are no reports of any casualties having been suffered by the military, but some prominent native officials and several Egyptian Province. police have been killed. Riots at Cairo and Tanta on March 12 were suppressed by troops and The 'situation is not regarded as present- a in A despatch from Paris saysi-- "The Rhine is. our only good line' of defence." I do' not demand annexa- on, 'but if awe do: not secure that frontier we will have fought tn by | according to the Reuter correspon- . vy that the on Friday. 1$1,600,000,0 A despatch from Paris says:--Can- ada has ccmplefed her war cost esti- mates for submission to the Repara- tions Commission. It is understood, the police, of whom have been deported. mens feces: "Going to the blacksmith shop to amount wil exceed get my tin hat reblocked." p Id UF FATHER The disorders in Egypt have been ascribed to the activities of the Nationalist leaders, several | | TRAIN SERVICE PARIS T0 BAGDAD Suspension Bridge to be Built | Over the Bosphorus at Constantinople. A despatch from Paris saysi--A | fast train service from Paris to] Southeastern Europe to replace the | famous Orient express, it became known, was discussed at a meeting this week of diplomatic representa- tives of Great Britain, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, Serbia, Rou- mania, Greece and France, under the! chairmanship of Albert Claveille, French Minister of Public Works. ! The new route would run through the Simplon Tunnel and Milan, Venice,/ Triest, Agram and Belgrade. Later it would be continued to Bucharest and to Constantinople. There. is under consideration the question of a suspension bridge across the Bos-| phoru§ at Constantinople, over which | connection would be made with the! German-built line to Bagdad. Ba --tA COMMANDER FROM PALESLINE HAS ARRIVED IN PARLIN "A despatch from Paris cays:i-- Gen, E. H. H. Allenby, cornmander of the British forces in Talestine, has srrived here from Egypt to advise the Supreme Council on Near East- ern questions. Preparations For Big 5 eke - ¢ A despatch from Archangel says:i-- t vity has. increased cons siderably along the Vologda railway and on the na front. On sectors the Bolsheviki have / been defeated by the allied and American A small Bolshevik raiding party, making its way over the snow, sur- prised an allied artillery position in the forests near the Vologda railway. After considerable fighting in the darkness the raiders were repulsed, leaving a number of dead behind. Following up last Friday's suc- cess on the Dvina, when the Amer- jcans and Russians "repulsed a raid against the allied lines of commun- jcation, an American patrol party on Friday encountered a Ishevik pa- trol 'in a" wood, A number of the Bolsheviki were killed and the others in the party were made prisoner. As the winter has been unusually mild in north Russia, it is expected that within a month the thaws will come to make extensive land fight. ing impracticable. = The Bolsheviki will have a big advantage when the rivers open. The Dvina and Vaga Rivers will be navigable near the fighting front before the Dvina is opened further north around Arch- angel. This condition would permit the Bolshevik gunboats which have spent the winter at Krasno-borsk and Kotlas to reach the vicinity of Beresniki before the allied river flo- tilla can steam southward to meet them. Efforts are being made, however, to speed up the arrival of the allied fleet in the fighting zone in onder to confine the Bolshevik advantage to the shortest time possible. In the meantime, as long as the present cold weather continues, it is a race against time to move over the snow before the thaw'comes sufficient big guns and ammunition to hold the enemy boats in check until the allied vessels can move southward. In this svork the allied transport service is performing a stupendous task in spite of the shortage of hay and oats, which has weakened the horses for the long hauls over the snow and added greatly to the difficulties of the situation. BRITISH TURN "CARGO CARRIERS ed Until Costs Drop. London, March 23.--Because of the huge increase in the cost of ship pro- duction, the great British companies have decided not to lay down the keels of any giant liners, like the Aquitania, for some months to come. So shipping officials informed the correspondent to-day. Instead, it seems to be the intention to concen- J trate on the production of cargo and passenger-carrying vessels without duxurious fittings, which, however, will evntually be returned to in fu- ture competitive shipbuilding. It was asserted to-day that the re- sumption of anything - like normal passenger traffic will probably be im. possible in less than six months, if then. The world shortage ol tonnage and the use of the greater part of it up to next autumn for transporting troops is causing an acute world sit. S| uation even for the most legitimate travel. There is little, if any, relief in transatlantic passenger conditions. 'Bhe American Consulaté Gengral is turning away hundreds who,want to go to the Orient, through America, so that there may be tonnage, to enable American civilians to return home. This is arousing considerable feeling among business men, for one British line to the Far East has; every berth booked for a year. Scores of vessels it is asserted, must be overhauled after they are released by the Gov- ernment before resuming ordinary passenger traffic. Start the pendulum. No use to wind the clock and leave the pendu- lum hanging straight down. Give every morning a right start by hav- ing things planned out right before you begin. LP DAE moive wer] |] | opi adpel- Sian | Ji 17S AFTER OVX | HERE | AM tN THE flouse ALL DAY STARVIN' WHILE YOU'RE OUT CACKLING = FER TWO HOURS FER ME | SUPPER = | HAVEN'T BEEN ETEND sin K > ~ Cornnen) 4 ABOUT TIME SOME ONE SHOWED OP HERE - I'VE BEEN HERE 4 DIETEEN The