Flesherton Advance, 16 May 1923, p. 3

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. Canada from Coast to Coast Halifax, N.S. An extension of flf- Winnipeg, Man. More than 22,000 teen days, from June 1 to Jane 16, { persons were inspected and passed has been made in the lobster fishing , through the western provinces during: season on the Nova Scotia coast from March, according to Thomas Gelley, ' Halifax westward. This action was | chief immigration officer here. Of ' taken because, owing to the backward j these, 2,500 are reported at the im- ' spring practically no lobsters have yet migration office as returning mechan- ' been landed, although the season open- ies; about 2,500 were settlers going direct to the land ; and in addition, be- tween 16,000 and 17,000 were ghort- ed on March 1. 1 ,.. St. Stephen, N.B. That the Hol- . llngsworth-Whitney Corpn., large term visitors here, some as land- ( pulp and paper manufacturers of the! seekers or seeking business oppor- ' United States, would erect a pulp and tunitiea. paper mill here, was the statement ' made by David Maxwell, well known Regina, Sask. It is understood that during the present year the Sas- railway engineer of this town. He: katchewan Elevator Co. will construct aid that large tracts of land had been 25 new elevators at rural points in purchased by this corporation and ; Saskatchewan, involving an erpendi- that they had secured water power ture of from $200,000 to $300,000. rights on the St. Croix River. Quebec, Que. A conference was held here recently between represen- tatives of the Quebec and New Bruns- wick forestry departments to arrange Edmonton, Alta, Lumbering op- erations in the districts north and west of Edmonton have been conduct- ed on a more extensive scale than ever .for co-operation between the two befor t- th< : * er ' 3 cut aggregating provinces for protection against for- , ver million feet It is estimated ' est fires. Forest rangers of both pro- ^ at le * ai . 2 '? me ? Were empl y ' ' vinces will co-operate to such an ex-l ed m '"Bering last winter. tent that it is understood they may) Vancouver, B.C. It is believed that . work in either province at border by the summer of this year there will points. Iroquois Falls, Ont A new pro- be two or three new lines operating regularly out of Vancouver. One is Weekly Market Report TORONTO. Manitoba wheat No. 1 I1.SJ7. Manitoba oats Nominal. Manitoba barley Nominal. All the above track, bay ports. | Potatoes, Ontario No. 1, $1.15 td Northern, $1.25; No. 2. $1.10 to $1.15. Smoked meats Hams, med., 25 to 27c; cooked hams, 36 to 40c: smoked rolls, 26 to 28c; cottage rolls, 28 to 80c; breakfast bacon, 30 to 33c; spa- Am. corn No. 3 yellow, $1; No. cial brand breakfast bacon, 35 to 38cs 2, 90 He. Barley Malting. 59 to 61c, accord- ing to freights outside. Buckwheat-No 2, 78 to 78c. Rye-No. 2 79 to 81c Peas No. 2, $1.46 to $1.50. , backs, boneless, 34 to 40c. Cured mea ts-Long clear bacon. 50 to 70 Ibs., $18.50; 70 to 90 Iba., $18; 90 Jba. and .up, $17; lightweight rolls, , b .. rreLh $35.50 ' $33 50 MUlfeed Del. Montreal freights, Lard Pure tierces, 16 to 16^c: bags included: Bran, per > ton, $59; ^^ 16 ^ to 17c; pai , s 17 ^ yfig* shorts per ton, $31; middlings, $<Je; printS) ig^c. Shortening tierces, good fc-ed flour, $2.15 to $2.25. , u ^ to i 5 i Ac . tub8i 15 i 4 to 15 ^ c . Ontario wheat No. 2 white, nom- pailg j 6 ^ to igu c . prints inal. Ontario No. 2 white oats 50 to 52e. Ontario corn Nominal. Ontario flour Ninety per cent pat, $? g() butcher steers, choice, $7 to $7.50; do, good, $6 to $6.50; do, med., $5.50 to Manitoba flour 1st pats., in cotton 'sacks, $7.10 per bbl.; 2nd pats., $6.60. Hay Extra No. 2, per ton, track, I Toronto, $14; mixed, $11; clover, $8. Straw Car lota, per ton, track, To- J6: twins to $5; canners and cutters, I) to $2 ; butcher bulls, good. $4.50 5 ; do, com., $3.50 to $4 ; feeding $6.50 to 7.50 ; do, fair v j $6.50; stockers, good, $5. i>0 to do, fair, $5 to $5.50; milkers- to $110; duction record is reported from the being discussed toward Australia, an- mill of the Abitibi Power and Paper | other between Montreal and Van-; Co. recently, when the machine turned couver, and a third may go on to the out half a ton over five hundred tons.! Orient. These are all British lines. Since the three machines were instal- In addition, W. L. Comyn, of San led, almost two years ago, they have! Francisco, may include Vancouver in; been gradually creeping up in speed the Australasian service he intends to I and production until this winter they! inaugurate in July with German ves- practically reached capacity. I sols recently purchased. Admits Starting Forty Fires. Duchess Called "Lazybones Lion" by Lancashire Girl A despatch from London says: NEW CANADIANS FROM THE HEBRIDES. A family of Scotch immigrants from the Hebrides, waiting to land at St. ro " t j ' ?9 ' John, New Brunswick. Th(y are typical of the families which are being 2 ,~; T^.^^osc ^s'tifwnsVlw toYs'c! choice, $10 to $li:^do, med., $8 to $10;' attracted to this country under the. new immigra'tion plans. They are of O!di large, 30c; 'twins, 32; Stiltons, *> com.. _$5_ to $7.50; lambs, choice, splendid stock, and bring with them the traditions which have made Scotch 32c.' f 13 , M $: ? 5; do - "i? 1 ";',! 7 '?? Vio^n' men and women ideal settlers. Butter Finest creamery prints, 35 '*f' * ^J^ ,'- f^ J^ST^U to 36c; ordinary creamery prints, 33 sheep, choice, litrht, 3750 to $8.pO; do. to 34c: dairy, 24 to 25c; cooking, 22c. Choice, heavy, $(j to $7; do, culls and. Eggs new laids loose, 32c; new bue ks, $4 to So.oO; hogs, fed and laids, in cartons, 36c. Z7?S?7 V.l; 2 -r * *n.50; do, f^o.b., Live poultry Chickens, milk- fed, f}"-"" to j?- : do> countr y Points, over 5 Ibs., 25c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 22c; lO-^o to $10.aO. t do, 2 to 4 lbs., 20c; hens, over 5 Ibs.,! MONTREAL. ,28c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 26c; do, 3 to 4 lbs., Corn, Am. No. 2 yellow, $1.01 to f* ^ r> -^ n ' v*. i n i 22c; roosters, 17c; ducklings, over 6 $1.02. Oats, No. 2 CW., 67 to 67^c; .Uovernment Committee brings in Eighteen Recommenda- lbs., 30c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 28c; turkeys, NO. 3 CW, 62 to 63c; extra No. l feed, tions Effecting the Admin r'stration of the University ; young. i i bs - nd u Pi. 2 . 5c - ... son to 6ic; No. 2 local white, - CHANGES IN ORGANIZATION OF TORONTO GENERAL HOSPITAL TO BE RECONSIDERED of Toronto. A uesimu.fi iruiu i^uuuuu aa>a. , . . . . , . The name of Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, The sp ec,alcomm,ttee appointed by _ rv.-i.-. .* v-._i. _.u_. ' the Provincial Government to mvesti- now Duchess of York, whose marriage Queen Mary was solemnized in West-. minster Abbey on Apnl 26, has prov- the administration of the Uni- as set forth the ed a stumbling block to many persons, gum below Some rf these but to none more than a little Lanca- commendations have . direct bearin shire lass who explaining why she the wdfape of Canadjan dtizens as a whole. Research work should Dressed poultry Chickens, milk- to 60c. Flour, Manitoba spring wheat fed, over 5 lbs., 35c ; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 30c; pats., firsts, $7.30; do, seconds, $6.80; do, 2 to 4 lbs., 25c; hens, over 5 lbs., do, strong bakers', $fi.60; do, winter the students, and another $500000 30c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 2Sc; do, 3 to 4 pats., choice. $6.15. Rolled oats, bag, $3.10 to $3.20. Bran, $28. $30. Middlings, $35. Hay, , saved to the city, without taking into lbs - - 4c = roosters, 24c; ducklings, 90 fts., consideration mone e over 5 lbs - 30c : d 4 to 5 lb *' ' 29c; korts, consideration money expended for new .. .. v ' T A i turkeys, young, 10 lbs. and up, 30c. , No. 2, per ton. , which provide employment Bea y n ^icanadian, hand-picked. Ib.,' Cheese, finest :o workmen. 7c: crimes. 6Uc. ! Butter, choicest for Toronto workmen. CfiT lotS S14 tO easterns, to 17c. 7c; primes, 6Hc. .Butter, choicest creamery. 32 to 32 1 4t. in regard to the re-organization of Maple products Syrup, per imp. Efrgs, selected. 34 to 35c. Potatoes, Toronto General Hospital the report pal., $2.50; per 5-gal. tin, $2.40 per per bag, car lots, S1.20. ., . adds: "In connection with the release gal. Maple sugar, Ib., 22c. Com. and med. dairy cows, 53.50 to ' of certain doctors from the hospital Honey 60-lb. tins, lOVi to lie per $4.75 per cwt; calves,' $4.75 to $5.25; staff, the committee considers that the lb -'- S-2H-Ib- tins. 11 to 12Hc per Ib.; picked veals a shade higher; hogs. was not at school that day. said it was because the Duke of York was "weddin" a Lazybones Lion." Running a house without a savings [ obtained from the efforts of scientists | a regrettable lack of consideration for, fund is like running a ship without in the university. The method of , and appreciation of the valuable and thc approval of the Senate before ac- ballast It is dangerous at any time, liquifying helium, the development inefficient services rendered to the uni- ceptance by the board of governors, generous financial support, i Board of Governors and the trustees Ontario comb honey, per doz., Splendid results hax-e already been J of the hospital, respectively, showed $4 ' 50 to $o; No. 2. $3^o toj4.2 l.lgood lots. $11.50; do, (coarse, $11; sows, $8.25 to $9.' and and disastrous in a storm. England is asking for Canadian canned fruits from the most westerly the realm of anaesthesia, and the dis-| versity and the hospital for many 7. That generous provision be made covery of a cure for diabetes are re- 1 years by those whose sen-ices were for the furtherance of the efforts of cent instances. j abruptly and irregularly terminated those engaged in scientific research. m , . The encouragement of extension ! under the authority and with the ap- ; 8. That the composition of the coun- Johu Ison, of London, Ontario, who part of the Dominion, Vancouver Is- ( work throughout the province is also'proval of the President of the uni- cil of the faculty of medicine be re- ls< held upon a charge of setting ftre to ; land. A local canning factory was, strongly recommended. Many a man versity." This matter is mentioned in vised, so as to enable lecturers and in- numerous London homes and inOtu- 1 recently asked by a London firm if , and woman deprived of early educa- section 16 of the summary of recom- structors in the clinical departments tions. He confeses to setting fire to I they could make shipment of 50,000 tion has been helped by extramural mendations. I to vote after serving as assessors for thirty or forty place*. He is a puzzle J cases of canned loganberries. There courses. Highly trained university; In dealing with the relation of the three years, and restricting the fran- to the police as he apparently tea is a considerable quantity of logan-.nien visit numerous centres through- Eaton and Rockefeller gifts to the chise in the primary (non-clinical) placed no value upon human life. careful. England. berries produced on the Island, and ' out Ontario; summer schools are hold changes in organization, the commit- departments to full professors only. ^ it is hoped that a permanent trade in and correspondence courses bridge tea finds that they did have a bearing 9. That the status of the Ontario If you want to be free of cares, be this commodity may be developed with the gulf to higher education. This on the reorganization and it recom- College of Education be continued as work, in the opinion of the committee, mends that in fucure private endow-, at present deserves the Government's generous ments should not be accepted unless | 10. That the city of Toronto contri- ald - , ' K> ven unconditionally. | bute towards the support of the uni- It has long been the opinion of The following is a summary of the versity educationists that first-year univers- ' recommendations: 11. That the Minister of Education ity work should be undertaken by the 1. That the relationship between be not a member of the board of gov- hi?h schools and collogiate institutes the University of Toronto and the ernors. of the province. The advantages of Federated Colleges, having proved at 12. That "Convocation" consist of this change are apparent to every one. all times eminently satisfactory, be the A.lumni Federation of the Uni- Ta Investiflate Grain Trade. Students would spend an extra year not disturbed. I versity of Toronto as at present con- w - G - R"^erfoi-d, Dean of .V t ricut- under the care of their parents and 2. That the present methods of fin-'stituted i ture ' n tn * t-~n:versity of Saskatche- of the teachers who know them best. ancinr the university be continued. j 13. That the government consider wan - wao wl11 *** a m ember of /~* RUSSIAN CHIEF ASSASSINATED AT LAU- SANNE, TWO ASSOCIATES WOUNDED M. Vorovsky Shot P A Rifled Outright While Dining in Lau- sanne Hotel wiss Murderer Surrendered to Police A despatch froo. ..ausanne says: for the safety of the guests, who . M. Vorovsky, an unbidden guest from were crowding the doorways. They would thus become more matur- 3. That (a) plans for the erection future representation of the workers' A/) K<&f/^tA an fa i-i nn n ns\n f K* ii-ni>lr .i^n/in*.>lti<!l.]^ to investigate the Cana- before entering upon the work of of new buildings and extensions," and educationaTass^iation*on'We"board d:an Grain Trad*. He ias speut much Soviet Russia at the Lausanne con- The assassin, however, kept on fir- the university and therefore more cap- substantial alterations on existing of governors and the senate on condi- time ln work for Ule betterin * ot COQ - ference, lies dead, slain by a Swiss, ing, shooting Ahrens and Didwilkow- able of profiting by its advantages, buildings; and (b) terms of gifts of- tions set forth in the section of the ditions affecting farmers. formerly an officer in the Russian ski. Then he walked up to the pro- A specialist course could be pursued fered to the university, be subject to report relating to the representation' service, and two of his lieutenants prietor of the hotel, surrendered his with less effort on the part of the are seriously wounded, each with two weapon and said he would wait for student and with better results at the, bullets in his body | the police. Panic pervaded the hotel, end of his college term. Besides, the ! Hcrmann ! It was half an hour before the police cost of an extra year in the collegiate !' riin arrived. Meanwhile, the wounded would be less than that at the uni- men had been carried to their rooms vsrsity, an important consideration to in an unconscious condition, but parents in these days of financial his senses long stress, body One of the Ahrens, a Bolshevist from Berlin, the Russian press agent at first and second Lausanne conferences; the other is J. Didwil- **JJ > - - of ?rpat interest to ^ m[n nAt y kowski Vorovsky s young Russian ^.^^ wiu pay dear , y for graduates-many of whom fought for | '^ r> "' -' this." 'alumni representation on the Board: The assassin, whose name is Maur- g y some the murder of Vorovsky ' ' Governors the committee express- Ice Alexander Conradi and whos Js rejrar( j e< j as a tragic sequel to his es itself as quite won over to the home was in the Canton of Grisons.l attaeks on tne Swiss Government for proposition, and recommends that the was seized immediately after he shot , re f us i nR a v i se f or a Russian courier Federated Alumni Association of the the three Russians while they were^ to Berlin. The recently organized University of Toronto be entitled to dining at the Hotel Cecil, headquar- p asc i st i t^^ up the matter and warn- elec t ei ht Governors out of the total ' " ed Vorovsky and his colleagues to f twenty-four by direct election. Vor- Also of interest to all graduates is the fact that the Alumni Federation ters of the Russian delegation. Most of the guests in the dining- j leave Lausanne immediately, room had finished dinner when the ovsky ignored the warning. assassin drew his revolver and ad- vancing quickly, fired upon the Rus- The leaders of the Fascist!, how-' w to take the place of Convocation, ever, disclaimed responsibility for the which h . ad become virtually obsolete sians. The first bullet struck Vorov- j cr i rae . They asserted that the only as constituted under the Act sky behind the ear. He fell across p l an they had in view was to kidn'Y II ls recommended that the City of the table and uttered no word; prob- i Vorovsky and escort him over the Toronto contribute to the support of ably he died immediately. He was Italian frontier. struck by other bullets also. the university in a measure commen- _ The assassin Conradi told the police surate with the benefits accruing to Ahrens, who is always armed, drew that he was born in Petrograd of th * ** as . the seat of the Empire's Prin ,. lpa i of Vpper Carada ^ s weapon after being shot twice, 'Swiss parentage. He said he served ^f^t university It is estimated who was honowd witll the f rt before he could use it a waiter! as a cantain in the Russian army dur- that the sum cf ^.500,000 is expended Doctor of Laws Queen . s Univer , f . ln the city annually by the college and Kingston, at the annual Convocation ' his but eized of labor. 14. That the Federated Alumni As- sociation of the University of Toronto be entitled to elect eipht representa- tives out of a total of twenty-four, by direct election, to the board of gov- ernors. 15. That the question of permitting landed at Southampton this week, his representation in the legislature to vision completely recovered. During the voyage Gilson fell deliriously ill London Poet Recovers Sight on Sea Voyage A despatch from London says: Hibbart Gilson, a London poet, board- ed a liner at Durban totally blind. He the university be given earnest con- sideration by the government. 16. (a) That the reorganizations in medicine, surgery and gynaecology and for some time was unconscious. Then his sight, which he lost in tha war, _*_* y :ame back as he slow- (1919 and 1920) be referred back to j Tiere from hw illness. the proper authorities for reconsidera- I l wnttO S Uth AfriCB> t j on I (b) That the method of removal of, certain doctors from the staff was . of one e >' e came back - unfortunate. (c) That a new agreement regard- ing hospital appointments be entered into by the university and the hos- pital. 17. That hospitals receiving govern- ment aid guarantee against the prac- tice of "fee-splitting" by doctors prac- ticing therein. 18. That an effort be made to de- vise a means whereby doctors not on son, "thinking the change might do and it was there the sight But after a time I was totally blind again. Eventually I made up my mind to come to England to consult a special- ist. I could sec nothing on embark- ing and had to be helped up the gang- way. It was during the voyage tha remarkable thing happened. It ia wonderful!" his arm, apparently fearing Ing the world war. An Irishman, charged with assaul^ was asked whether he was guilty. the university staff may have access "How can I tell, your honor, until I to the public wards of the hospital have heard the evidence," IN RABBilBOKO . 5AVS MRS \ VTWO 6ABIES BELGIAN HAS 7\ \ Jl>5T THE < TWINS;- WHATs) \SAME J ,DICK ?/ I AOE:^. AN' THREt JUST THE SAME CALLED ? " "FOUR' L BABIES ? ) AN' I THINK FIVE JBA&IE.S. ARE CALLE.D CENTIPEDES ! ^QUADRUPEDS \ (

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