STARTLING CHANGES COMING British Government to Accept Peers' Amendments, Says a London Paper A despatch from London, Eng- land, says: The Daily Telegraph's Parliamentary correspondent writes that a startling change my soon be expected in the political situa- tion. "I have reason to believe that the Government will, after some de- mur, accept the two crucial amend- ments pru|M>si.-d by the House of Lords in the amending bill. The dJMppe&ranoe <>f the time limit has been rerogni/ed to be inevitable. Tin-. i> the first point upon which the (iovcrnment will, ultimately ac- cept the logic uf the situation. The Becnd piut is. the question of the exclusion of Ulster, practically as a whole, from the scope of the bill. This is a much more contentious matter, and is indeed the crux of the difficulty. It is, of course, im- I' .!> f>r Redmond and tlie Xa- tioii.-ili ts tu agree to this proposal, although prominent members of the party now hold the view that, as .\\Noym; KIM; AND O.IEEN. SufTragctli's ll.nl nt Them. Who Are Toiirinx in .Scotland. A despatch from Dumbarton, Scotland. -a\s: Militant Suffrag- ette-, m;idf disparate efforts on \Vfiiii.--.lay. to attract the atten- tion of King U"orgo and Queen HHI\, wlui are making a tour through Scotland. At Balloch Bridge, ut tin- foot of Loch Lomond, the women cut down alJ the decora- tiniis, an-.! at D&lmuir, 10 miles from Glasgow, they managed to break out a huge banner bearing tin- wrds. "Your Majesty stop the forcible feeding and torturing of WoiiHii." acro.-a the route as the proco.-i.iti arrived. At the same tune "ii' 1 ui man armed with a ineg- aphone howled denunciations of forcible feeding. Neither the King nor the Queen paid the slightest attention, but the crowd that had gatli'n-<i to see their Majesties dis- pla\<-d siicl, a hostile attitude that the militant Suffragettes beat a hu-ty retreat. nv: DAI ; in I:HS AS HUT. A N'-lnv.-ka rainier Will .i\ c Them Fur Harvester.*. A d.-sp..trh from Gillner, Neb., Bays: Ambrose Huntingdon, a farm- i residing we^t of this town, post- ed tb fii'l.iwinj: -ifzn along a high- way in front of bis home : "I need fi\e harvest bands fur more than a month. Wages 81! a day; chicken mi'-' 1 a day; w.i^liinit, mending and a bed in the hay mow. Every V"itli> MIIIIIH man hired will have a chance !< marry one of my pretty daughter* If h<- wins one of them. he gi-K .|r,n acres of land thrown in. Hut In - t'"t to make good in in-. : \MI\.< than one." Hunting- tin bad more than fifty applicants. Tii 1 five lucky ones are bard at w..ik <n the wheat fields. However, tin . are far tnun happy, for it has I... ;! known that the five dntigh- ters, i aiming from eighteen to twen' \ MX years, are planning to '! i ft for an extended summer va- \ .. liiu'and. IN IUK it i SH. PI. -f.es of I'roi ineial Police Ex- i-li.'iiiKe Mu.t.- With Him. A ! paleh from Quebec, says: J.^.-pli .Mi.raud. llr- demented ban dit. who sinee In- ran umiiek with a gun shot tlnee men on Tiii'r-day, 1 .'. has terrorized tb- \iliage ai>i' district of Villen.y, in the COIIM!.\ of lyotbinierc, was found de.i'i :n a lint in the woods, accord- ing t-i information received here by Provincial I'oliet: Chief Mc- Carthy. exclusion is unavoidable, it may just as well be on a large as a small scale, but the Irish party will in- sist upon a plan of county plebis- cite as laid down in the amending bill. The Prime Minister has been in personal communication with a prominent member of the Opposi- tion during the last few days, and I am assured that the leaders of the Unionist party, in order to save the country from civil war, will recom- mend their followers to support the amending bill as passed by the Lords. In that case, the Nation alists will be out-voted, although they will probably be supported by a certain section of the radical par- ty. What will follow remains to be seen, but I have good grounds for stating that, in spite of the line taken by the Lord Chancellor in the House of Lords to-day, the Gov- ernment will as a -last resort, con- cede the vexed question of area." HOMESTEAD IHTIES. Special Treatment Asked For Some District*. A despatch from Ottawa, says: Representations have been made to the Interior Department from homesteaders in Saskatchewan, asking for a relaxation of the home- stead laws in view of hard crops this year. The appeals received so far Come ' from the Maple Creek district, which is usually dry land, and it is claimed that as a result of lack of rain the crops there will be very light. The request is there- fore made that the holders of home- steads bo allowed to take two months off in the Fall to engage in outside threshing and other labor, and that these two months be ac- cepted as, part of the homestead duties. Reports on the whole in- dicate, however, that the Western wheat crop will be a good one. , KK Ivl U I!Y A IIOKSi:. I ij-ini.-.i Farmer Killed Within Sight i.i Mi- Wife. A despatch from Guelph. says : James Patton, a fanner on the bixth line of Erasmosa, not far from Guelph, lost his life in an accident cm Wednesday afternoon while at work with a hay rake. Just bow the accident occurred probably will never be known. The deceased had taken the. horse rake out and vas working it in a field not far from the house. The horse became unman- ageable and was causing consider- able trouble. Mr. Patton. it is thought, had got off the i-uke and was about to unhitch the animal when he was kicked in tlo groin. His wife saw him pitch forward cr.d ran to him, but death must have been instantaneous, as be was dead when she reached him. HON. II. It. EMMKKSON DEAD. Expired til His Home in Dorchester. After I. oil); Illness. A despatch from Dorchester, N.H., says: The Hon. H. R. Em- nierson, former Minister of Rail- ways in the Laiirier Liberal Govern- ment and at one time Premier of Now Brunswick, died at his home here Thursday morning. Mr. Em- merson had been ill for some time and his death was not unexpected. The cause of Mr. Kmmerson's death was heart failure. All the members of Mr. Kmmerson's fam- ily were present at his bedside when lie died. Hon. Henry Robert Km inerftoii was of U. K. Loyalist des- cent and was horn at Maugerville, N.I!., September 23, 1853. He was educated at Amhurst Academv. MISSING FROM THE KARLUK Men Left the Ship in Three Companies and Only One Reported A di--|i;il<-li from (lltawn says: Tluil at least ci^lil ollin'r* ;ui<l men of KicfaiiBHon's ship, UIB Karluk, who w err milling the crew when they gut s.ifely on to tin- ice before she. W<-M! down on January 11 last, had Hot ri-.i'-li' <l \\ranprl Island with the rost <>l th<' .ship's company is re\i';il''d in a further M-port l the I)i-|>:i '(incut of NilViil S'-rvii-e re- cei\i-<! from ( ';ipl Hubert Itarllelt OH Wednesday. The. fale of these men, divided into two partii-s, was nut kii'C.vii wlii-ti f'npl Itartlett left NVinn^i'l Island for tip- Siberian r,,;i t in search f help for his ma- rix'iird <><. but as they were well ef|n.|'|.- 'I, it \vu-. li"|i''il tln'.V Imil mi H.-i;iUI Inland, and would be jiiek- rd up ''>' " I<1 r'li''f ex|.i ditiiiii this Kurirtiii'r. lie ordered a search party sent out for them. Tliiw report from ('apt. lUrtlett C'lii'iiin* Hie fir:<t intimation to the dt-iiiu -tun ut tl.'-it wlion lie left \Vran- gel Island all of the Karluk's com- pany hod not been accounted for. After getting <m ^ (| lp j,, f . , vn ,.|, the ship went down they were divided into Uireo parties which left the ship at different times in an effort to reach land. Attempts to land on Herald Island were, so far as known futile, owing to ice conditions, but the main party, in charge of hart- lilt, reached Wrangel Island in safety. When lie left Wrangel Is- land the other two smaller parties, <ii.' nf which, under l-'irst Officer AndiM-.i.n. left Shipwreck Camp on January iil, and the other, under lli.' direct inn of Dr. Mackav, |,-fi IVlininry 5, had not been heard from. There were four men in each. The missing men are: First Offi- cer Anderson, Second Officer Baker, Mnckay, Murray and Henchot of the scientific stuff and Sailors Brady King and MorrU. 1 NEWS INJ PARAGRAPH HAIT ,MM,S FROM ALL OVKB TUB <;i niti: IH A KUT8UELU Canada, the Empire and th Worl* lo General Ucforo Your Eye*. Canada. Guelph is experiencing a water famine. Changes to Hamilton Hospital will cost $250,000. Alfred Boyer Sandwich, comrnit- ed suicide by taking poison. Krafchenko, the Manitoba mur- derer,' was hanged on Thursday. The Empress of Ireland relief fund, opened by Montreal Board of Trade, now totals $52,115. The Canadian Medical Association meeting in St. John, selected Van- couver for next year. A Chinese smuggling syndicate, with headquarters al 'Saginaw, Mich., is said to operate, with To- ronto as a clearing-house, through Sarnia, Windsor and Niagara Kails. Lord Seymour, son of the Mar- quis of Hereford, is in Ottawa with Lady Seymouj- on his way to the Government .ranch near Medie+n* Hat, whiire- "he will be in charge of the Militia Remount Department. The Dominion Government will not defray the expense of- deport- ing the Konmgata Maru's shipload of Hindus, now outside Vancouver Harbor, but soon to return to In- dia. It is up to the vessel owners. Mortgaging his farm in Ko-uiflan- ia and bidding good-bye to his wife and six children, Fontu Toder CUTIIC to Canada in April, landing at Thor- old. Since then he found just six days' work. He built a primitive shack, but had no food for a week until friends gave him mush and milk, and acute indegestion caused his death. The Government mado an offer to tlu- British Admiralty to send the Rainbow up to Hehring Sea to cany <ui the liritish share of the interna- tional patrol, following the sealing convention, and this will be done. The two Admiralty ships which' would otherwise have taken part in the patrol, the Algerine and the Shearwater, have been sent to Mexico. (<reat Kritain. A new arbitration treaty between Great Britain and the United States is about completed. A coroner's jury inquiring into the death of Sir Deny<s Alison, who plunged into the Thames while on a midnight pleasure launch trip, and a bandsman who tried to save him, found that the party hod been "sober but full of fun." "Rome has the right name for Roosevelt," says A. Henry Savage - Landor the explorer. "The Ro- mans call him 'Polloiiara,' which means literally 'one who inflates toy balloons with gas." In reply, Roosevelt refers to his crit.ic as "a perfectly preposterous absurdity, the buffoon of exploration." I uili ii Sillies. l-'ifleen |wrsons were injured, several probably fatally, when a trolley passenger car collided with a freight train near Fairibault, Minn. Sixteen other passengers were liadly shaken up. United States Judge Tuttle or- dered the receivers of the Pore Mar- quetfr- Jlailway to purchase no Fed- tral license and to abolish immedi- ately the sale of liquor on nil trains of (be system. The Board of U. S. General Ap- praisers has reversed tl"e decision of tin- ensigns officials of the port of Oldenburg, N.Y., the effect be- ing to put all lumber that i plan- ed, tongtied, grooved and beaded on the free list. The teaching of sex hygiene will never be delegated to the American teacher if it can be prevented by the National Education Association. This was evidenced at St. Paul when speaker after speaker de- nounced such a course amid ap- plause. (icncral. Grand opera in Paris is said to be doomed by the competition of the movies. The Freneh Senate passed a bill granting a Saturday half-holiday in the Government workshops. The Paris police believe that two bombs found at Beaumont -Sur-Oise were intended for President Poin- care. FAMOUS QUEBEC I'UOJIENADK. 1'urtially Destroyed by Fin-, By Lighted Cigarette. A despatch from Quebec, says : Fire of a spectacular nature des- troyed almost the whole of the Duff- erin Terrace .west of the band stand and communicated itself to the houses on the cliff above, on Thurs- day, -doing considerable damage to the house at each end of the row, but leaving those in between prac- tically untouched. This ic account- ed for by the fact that the dwellings on the extreme ends are old, wood- en ones, while those in between are of more solid structure. There was a strong east wind blowing and this kept the flames away from the Chateau Frontenac Hotel, which is situated at the east end of this magnificent promenad-o. _ j, PEACE IN MEXICO? Ruiz Itciids Report of Meditation Conference to Deputies. A despatch from Mexico City, says: Es,tcv ; a Jluiz. .went before the Senate and the Chamber of Depu- ties on Wednesday afternoon and read th) report of the Niagara Falls negotiations. The reporit was largely taken up with a rehearsal of the events leading up to the con- flict with the "United States. Re- ferring to the prtitocal adjusted at Niagara Falls, the report states there is no need to express ratifi- cation by '{he Senate. Ruiz mani- fests the willingness of the Mexican Government to treat with the re- volutionist's for the restoration of the first time "in Mexico expresses explicitly General Hucrta's readi- ness to resign the Presidency if thereby the Republic's political pac- ifications can be attainea INTERNATIONAL PEACE TATTOO. Big Muslc.il Number at Canadian National Exhibition. The big inoFic.nl number at the Canadian National Exhibition at Toronto, this year will hi' the Inter national Peace Taltoo. Ten bands, a total *f '100 musicians, will tnke part in it, and it will ho in itself n celebration of the hundred years of peace between Hrituin and the United States. The bunds will wear the uniforms of a hundred years ago. and in their counter marching will play the patriotic airs handed down to us by our forefathers. Dr. Williams, of the Grenadier Guards, will be the conductor. URL MOVED BY ( RANi'. Huge Mechanism Deposits Child at Queen's Feet. A despatch from London, says : When the King and Queen were making a tour of the Beardmore works, at Parkheod, Glasgow, re- cently, a 120-ton crane began to move from the opposite end of the workshop. Great was the aston- ishment of their Majesties to find that instead of the usual huge gun a pretty little girl carrying a bouquet was the burden of the crane. She stepped off the plate at the feet of the Queen, and with a fcurtsey ask- ed her Majesty to acce.pt the flowers from the workmen with love and their thanks for coming to Park- head. The Queen was delighted be- yond measure. <;il.\FTIN JUDGES MAY DIE. Chinese Consnratc Urges Extreme Penalty for Two Magistrates. A despatch from Pekin, says : President Yuan Shi Kai issued a mandate recently fixing the death penalty for those officials who em- bezzle funds and take bribes. Now the censorate has impeached two Pekin magistrates for misappropri- ating funds and has recommended the death penalty." Wang Che Hsing, Prefect of Police in Pekin, is in prison charged with selling offices. It is evident that President Yuan intends to use the most string- ent methods in the suppression of grafting. WHOM; HKKAKFAST. Change (invc Rugged Health. Many persons think that for strength, thev must begin the day with a breakfast of nieiit and other heavy foods. This is a mistake as anyone can i-asilv discover for him- self. A carpenter's experience may benefit others. He writes : "I used to be a very heavy breakfast, pater but finally indiges- tion caused me such distress, I be- came afraid to eat anything. "My wife suggested a trial of Grape-Nuts and as I had to eat something or starve, I concluded to take her advice. She fixed me up a dish and I remarked at the time thai the quality was all right, but the quantity was too ismall I wanted a snucerful. "But she said a small amount of G i ape-Nuts went a long way and tJiat I must eat it according to tlir potions. So I started in with Grape Xuts and cream, 2 soft- boiled eggs and some crisp 1-nast for breakfast . "I cut out meats and a lot of other stuff T had been used to eat- ing all my life and was gratified to see that I was getting better right along. I concluded I had ftruck the right thing and stuck to it. T hnd not only been eating im- proper food, but too much. "I was working at the carpent- er's trade at. that time and thought that unless I had a hearty break fast with plenty of meat, I would pl.iy out be.fore dinner. But after a few dnvs of my "new breakfast" I could do more work, felt bettor in every wav, and now I am not bothered with indigestion." Name given by Canadian Pcntum Co., Windsor, Out. Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever roail tlio above latter? A now on* apyoars from time to time. They ro reiinliie. true, au.l (all of human intereit. A despatch from London, says: Nearly all human beings harbor tu- bercular germs, Sir William Osier, formerly of Johns Hopkins Univer- sity, now regius professor of medi- cine at Oxford, told his audience, at the conference of the Association for the Prevehtion of Consumption on Wednesday. Let me give you a shock," the speaker said, by way of a warning. "Tuberculosis may be put into three groups. All of us who are here come in the first. If I hod 'an instrument herewith which I could look into the chests or the abdomen of each of you, the pro- bability is that in ninety per cent, of you would be found somewhere a small area of tuberculosis. So wide- spread is the bacillus that practi- cally all humans by the time they become adults harbor the germ of the disease. "Why don't you die? Becarsc we are not guinea pigs or rabbits, we Beware of Fake Baking Powder Tests ("THE SPICE MILL" (N.Y.), SEPTEMBER, 1913.) Unscrupulous manufacturers of baking powder, in order to sell their product, sometimes resort to the old game of what is known as "the glass test." In reality it la no test at all, but, in cases where the prospective buyer does not understand that the so-called "test" is a fake, pure and simple, the salesman i sometimes able to make him believe it shows conclusively that the io-callcd baking powder he is selling, and which of course contains egg albumen, is superior to other brands which do not contain this ingredient. Bulletin No. 21. issued by Dairy and Food Bureau of the State of Utah, reads as follows: "The sale in the State of Utah of baking powders containing minute quantities of dried egg (albumen) is declared illegal. The albumen in these baking powders does not actually increase the leavening power of the powder, but by a series of unfair and deceptive tests such powders are made to appear to the Innocent consumer to possess three or four times their actual leavening power." WE ARE ALL TUBERCULOUS! Sir William Osier Startles a Big Audience at the 1 * Leeds Conference have obtained a certain immunity. But the germ is in us, though nega- * tire, and with all of us there is the possibility of slipping into the twc . other groups. "The second group comprises those in whjpm the disease is ac- live enough to produce symptoms, . but in whom there is the possibility of arrest or cure, with restoration to working health. Those in the third group are doomed, the disease pro- , gresses week by week, month by month, year by year, and from one year to five sees the end. "When .workers have living wa- . ges, when the house becomes the home, when the nation spends on * food what is spends on drink, then, , instead of hundreds of thousands, there will be millions in the first group, with practically immunity. The enemy has been traced to its very strong-hold, which is defend- ed by the three allies, poverty, bad housing and drink." PRICES OF FARM PRODUCTS &EFORT8 PROM THE X.EADXHO XSADB CENTRES OF AKEKICA. BreaditutTs. Toronto. July M. Flour Ontario wheat flours, 90 nor cent.. $3.70 to $3.75. eesv- board, and at $3.70, Toronto. Sew flour for Auicuet delivery. 13.40 to $3.50. Maui- toban. $5.50: do., eeconda. $5; do., seconds, {5; - I..M_- bakers', in jute bag, $4.80. Manitoba whfat Bay port No. 1 Nor- thern. 94 l-2c, ind No. 2. 93c. Ontario wheat-No. 2 at 95 to 7c. out- gide, and new at 83 to 85o, outeide. Au- KUKt and September delivery. Oate-No. 2 Ontario oats at 40 to 41c, out- side, and at 42 to 43c. on track, Toronto. Western Canada oate. 42 3-4o (or No. 2 and 42 l-4c for No. 3, Bay port*. BarleyGood malting barley. 56 to 5flc. accordmic to quality. l(yi> No. 2 at 63 to 64c. outside. II ut-k wheat Purely nominal. I'orn No. 2 American at 77 l-2c on track, Toronto. Bran -Manitoba bran. ?23, in bae. To- ronto freight, with good demand. ihort, J25 to $26. Country Product. Butter Choice dairy. 17 to 19c; inferior, IS to 16c; farmers' separator prints, 19 to 20c: creamery print*, fresh, 23 1-2 to 25c: do., aolide, 21 to 22c. Egw-Ciuo lt of strictly new-laid, 2 to 26 per dozen, and good stock. 20 to 23c IHT dozen. Honey Extracted, in tirni, 10 1-2 to lie tn>r tin. t'ombn, $2.25 to $2.50 per doica for No. 1. and $2 for No. 2. Cheese- New oheew, 14 1-4 to 14 l-2c for larite. und 14 1-2 to 14 3-4 for twins. Beans- Hand-uirkiil. #2.20 to *2.25 per liuxlicl; primes. $2.10 to $2.15. Poultry- Fowl. 15 to l*c per lb.; chick- en*. 20 to 22c; turkeys. 20 to 21c. Potatoes -Dclawans. $1.75 to $2 per bag, out of store, ajid new i>otatocs at $o.25 iier barrel. Calves Good veal. $10 to $10.25: common, $4.75 to $7. Stockws and feeders Steers. 700 to 900 pounds. $7 to $7.25; light stockeru. $6 to $6.25. Uoire-$8.40 fed and watered. $8.25 off care, and $7.90 f.o.b. Hh'pii und lambs Light ewe*. S5 to $6.25: heavy. $3.50 to $4.50: bucks. $3.59 to $4.50; (spring lamb'. $9.25 to $9.50 ty the pound; yearling lambs, $7.50 to $8. Milch cows Market easier, at $50 to *30. Montreal. July 14. Prime beeves. 7 ' 1 t o 8 l-2c : medium, 5 1-2 to 7 l-2c ; common. 4 1-2 to 5 l-2c. Milch cows, $30 to $80 each; calves, 3 1-2 to 7c; sheep, 5 to 6c: lambs. $5 to $7 each; hogs, 83-4 to 9c. TWO GIRLS DROWNED. I" nal>le to Swim and Wailed Be- yond Their Depth. A despatch from Sarnia, says : Word was received of the accidental drowning of two Sarnia young wo- men at Tushnioo Park, on Lake St. C'lair, where the annual picnic of the Sarnia Baptist Churches was in progress. The girls w-ere bathing and got beyond the channel bank at the moment when a passing steamer caused a surge of water. Both were unable to swim, and wh?n Miss Lawson lost her footing, she grasp- ed her chum about tin 1 waist and bo tli went down to death in the swift current. The double tragedy cast a gloom over the festivities of the afternoon. The bodies were recovered. Provisions. Long clear. 14 to 14 l-2c per lb. i in cane lots. Hauls Medium. 18 to 18 l-2c; do., heavy. 17 to 17 l-2c : rolls, 14 1-2 to 15c; breakfast bacon. 18 to 19c; backs. 22 U> 23c. Lard- Tiorces, 11 3-4 to- 12c; tubs. 12 l-4c; I pail*. 12 l-2o. Compound. 10 to 10 l-4c. Balsd Hay and Straw. Baled hay No. 1 at $14.75 to $15 a ton. on track hea-i>; No. 2 quoted at $13 to *14, and clover at $11. Haled straw Car loU. $3.^ to $5.60. on ii-.u k. Toronto. Montreal Markets. Montreal. .Tut" 14. --Corn, American No. 2 ynllow. 77 to 78i'. Oat. Canadian West- | ern, No. 2. 433-4 to 4-k-; Canadian West- ern No. 3. 43 1-4 to 43 l-2c. Barley, Man. food. 55 U) 56c. Flour, Man. Spring wheat, t>;iu>nt. firsts. $5.60; seconds. $5.10; strong bakers'. $4.90: Winter patents, ohoice. $5 to $5.25; straight roller*. $4.70 to 84.75; | do. bags. $2.15 tu $2.20. Rolled oate. bar- rels, $4.55: do., bags. 90 Ibs., $2.15. Br in $23. Short* $25. Middlings, $28. Mouillie. $28 to $32. liny. No. 2. per ton car lots, 814.50 to $16. t'hoeso. flntwt westerns, 13 , to Ii l-8<-; finest eaisterim. 12 1-2 to 12 5-8c. Hnttor, choii I'M creamery, 23 3-4 to 24c. KBKS. fresh. 22 to 23c; selected. 26 tu 27c: No. 1 Block. 23e; No. 2 Block, i'O to 21c. Potatoes, per bus, car lots, $1.30 to $1.45. PRKDHTS BKJ CROPS. President of Regina Hoard of Trade Is Sanguine. A despatch from Toronto says: Mr. C. S. Burton. President of the Kegina Hoard of Trade, who is visit- ing Toronto, is most sanguine about this year's crops in Saskat- cljewan. "All records will be bor- ken," lie says. The crops will pro- bably be light in the southwest part of Saskatchewan and in south- ern Alberta, he believes, due to drought, but in the Itogina district grain is already heading out, and an early as well as a record crop seoms assured. The hog industry, he continued, has received an enor- mous impetus during the last six months. This has resulted from the mixed funning propaganda preached so widely in the wost dur- ing the past two or three years. Winnipeg Grain. Winnipeg. July 14. Cah:-Wheat No. 1 Northern. 90r: No. 2, do., 88 l-4c. Oat* i -No. 2 C.W.. 38 3-4c: No. 3 do., 37 l-2c; ex- : tra No. 1 feed, J6 1-2. Barley- No. 3. 53c; No 4, 51c: re.i'tixl. 47 l-Ze. Flax No. 1 N -W.C.. 1.39 1-8; No. 2 C.W.. $1J6 1-8: ! No. 3 do.. SI. 28 1-2 Unitid States. Miunoanolw, July 14.- Wheat July,! 863-401 September. 80 l-4>: No. 1 haril, 01 3-4e| No. 1 Northern. 88 3-4 to 90 3-4c; No. 2. do.. 86 3-4 to 88 3-4c. Corn No. 3 rnllxw, 63 1-2 to 64c. OaU-No. J white.' 343-4 lo 35 l-4c. Hour and bran Un-' changed. IhiiluUi, .Inly 14.-\V,hoat Nb. 1 hard.! 93c; No. 1 Northern, 92c : No. 8 do.. 90 to 1 90 l-2<:; July. 91 l-2c. Linwn-d 1'aah. I $1.607-8; July. $1.601-4; September and October. $1.621-2; November. $1.63 *-8. Live Stock Market!. Toronto. July 14.- Cattle --Choice but- i chew. $8.2i to $3.65; gixxl medium. $8 to 1 J8.15; common CIMVM. $5 to $5.50; cannom and cutters. $2.50 to $4; choice fat cows, (6.M) U) (7; oliowu bull... $7 U> 17. 45. FRENCH GOVERNMENT LOAN. Seven Hundred Million Dollars Paid Over Counters in One Day. A despatch from Paris, says: Mon- than three and one-half bil- lion francs (1700,006,000) was paid on Wediu'^dity by the subscribers to the new Government loan, accord- ing to the completed figures issued by the Minister of Finance. The nominal capital of the Routes issued was 8*4,111,000 francs. This was subscribed for more than forty times over, and the money paid in represented the first instalment of ten per cent. Of this great sum, seven-eighths was hard cash, and the other eight in Treasury notes and bonds. The issue surpasses all records, the previous issue being that of 263.000,1)00 francs, in 1901, \vhirh was covered twenty four tLuics.