oo THE DAILY BRITISH W HIG r | / GRAIN QUOTATIONS. : Toronto. Tonto, May 11.--Manitobs wheat Ay ES. Fort Willfam. 1 Northern; $3.80; No. 2 ~3-"Northerm; $2.73; Nor- [anitoba oats--No. 2C. W., $1.19; Lk 3 C. W., $1.16; extra No. 1 feed, (16; No. 1 feed, $1.14; No. 2 feed 12, in store Fort Willlam nitoba barley----No. 3 'C w., § 8%: No. 4 C. W., $1,66; rejected, 162; i feed, $1.62, in store American corn--No. 2 By-law to Exempt From Taxation .. Certain Dwellings Houses 4 iY NOTIOR. ¥ NOTICE that foros - ATs robosas ly " to be su \ 1929, © tn . Fort ellow, $2.27; nominal track, Toronto, prompt shipment. Ontario oats--No. 3 white, $1.05; to $1.07, acording to freights out. side, . Ontario wheat--No, 1 winter, per tar Tot; $2.00 to $2.01; "No--~2, do $1.98 to $2.01; No. 3 do, $1.92 to $1.93, f.o.b. shipping points, ac- cording to freights. Ontario wheat--No. 1 spring per car lot, $2.02 to $2.03; No. 2 do, $1.98 to $2.01; No. 3, do., $1.95 to $2.01, f. o. b., shiping points, ac- cording to freights. Peas--No, 2, $3.00, Barley Malting, $1.87 to $1.89, |85 to $15.05. Rolled oats, bag 90 secording to freights outside, {1bs.,, $5.50 to $5.60. Bram, $54.25. Buckwheat--No. 2, $1.75 to $1.80 | Shorts, $61.25. Hay, No. 3, per ton, according 'to freights outside. jour lots, $33 to $34 Rye--No. 3, $2.15 to $2.20, ac-| : : cordingto freights outside. i > Chicago. : Ontario flour--Government stand- | Chicago, May 11.--Wheat, No. 2 ard, $10.90 to $11.00, Montreal, $11 | hard, $3.01 to $3.08; corn, No. 2 mix- to $11.10 Toronto, in just bags. ed, $2.06 to $2.07; No. 2 yellow, $3.- Prompt shipment, {08 to $2.10; oats, No. 2 white, $1. Milifeed -- Car lots -- Delivared 14% to $1.16%; No. 3 white, $1.13 Montreal, freight, bags included-- to $1.15; rye, No. 2, $2.25 to $2.28; Bran, per ton, $51; shorts, per ton, barley, $1.65 to $1.86; timothy seed, '$58; good feed flour, $3.75 to $4.00, [$10 to $11.50; clover seed, §25 to --Hayw=No; 1. per-ton, $3000 to} $35. . a = $31.00; mixed, per ton, $25.00, track. | New York. Straw--Car lots, per ton, $16.00 | New York, May 11.--Flour firm; to $17.00 track, Toronto. | spring patents, $14.75. to $15.75; . spring clears, $11 to $12; winter Montreal, |straights, $12 to $13; Kansas Montreal, May 11.--Oats, Canadian straights, $13.75 to $14.50. Hay western, No. 2, $1.30 to $1.32; Can- |firm; No. 1, $3.20 to $3.25; No. 3, adian western, No. 3, $1.29. Flour, | $3.15'to $3.20; No. 3, $3.05 to $3.10; Manitoba, new standard grade, $14.- |shipping, $2.90 to $3. Hops steady. unchanged; shipments, 38,348 bar rels. Bran, $53; flax, No. 1, $4.74 to $4.79: wheat, cash, No. 1 northern, $3.15 to $3.30; corn, No. 3 yellow, $1.94 to $1.96; oats, No. 3 white, $1.07% to $1.08%. LIVE STOCK MARKETS, S-- Toronto. Toronto, May 11.--Heavy steers, choice, $14 to $15; choleé butcher, $12.50 to $14.50; medium butcher, $10.50 to $12.50; common, $10. to $10.50; light, common, $7 te $8.50; heifers, good to choice, $11 to $11.- | 50; butcher cows, choice, $10 to $12; bulls, ehoice, heavy, $10 to $11.50; do. good, $9 to $9.75; do. light, $7 to | ! $8; canners and cutters; $5.25 to §7; | For a Term of Years -! stockers, 800 to 900 lbs, $9.50 to the purpe - Ward--6u a 20d 13 at 103 Ordnance Ot. § assented to fon of the Cty of the 1 wen the forenoon, at 5 » to the votes day of May, A. re of mine ©'- snd Five o'clock the following in force and EL law shall come A foot on ts subject te | by the electors. wot King- Jeg-Bub-Div. Nos. 1 end 2 et 63 Ward--Sub-Div. Nos. 3 and, 4 at Bagot Street. ot. 4, Sub-Div. Nes. § Ward --8ub-Div. Nos. 7 ot 339 Wellington street. Frontendc 'Werd--Sub-Div. No. 11 at 149 Sydenham St. b-Div. Nos. 12 Ward--8ub-Div. Nou. 14 and 15. §8 John street. Rideau Ward, Sub-Div. No. 16, at 270 Division Bt. ! Ridean WarS=Subd-Div. Noa 17 and 21, at #78 Princess St. 'Ward--8Sub-D'v. Nos 18, 19 at 348 Brock St Victoria Ward--Sub-Div. Nos. 23 and 28, at corner Union and Division streets. Victories Ward--8ub-Div. No. 34, ot 57 Xmg street. b-Div, No. Victoria jo. 25, at corner King and Beverley streeta. that the 30th of May, AD. 1920, at eleven o'clock the ot my office in the City Buildings, in the said Mund , has been fixes) the appointshent of pe at the Polling places and at the) pel up of the votes by the; And that if the assent of the aleot- ors i obtained #0 the said p By-law ¢t will be taken into counsidera- don by the Municipal Countil of the nm at a thereof Tele atu the ADiTation of ome' from the date of the firat publi- cation of this Notice, and that such first! publication was made on the 35th | of April, A.D, 1920. % ony to TARE NONCE FURTHER that - whe res 10 Ww upon sa ZRoppeed y-law must deliver to the lerk not later than the tenth day be- fore the day a ted for taking the vote a decla on under the Canada Evidence Act that he is & tenant whose lease extends for the time for which the debt or liability is to be created, or in which the money to be raised by the proposed By-law is payable, or for at least twenty-one years, end that he has by the lease covenanted to pay all muni ] taxes in respect of the prop= erty of which he is tenant other than local improvement retes. 'W. W. SANDS, Clerk. 4 of securing amd the sum of az for the same. od Bt Te oreated by this BY- t dus $37,000.00 of he aw Is ) By-law to Purchase Property for the Purpose of | BETWEEN: THE CORPORATION OF THE ITY 0 Of the First Part, i g i ; : i § il i i f i i iH Te g : 1 i i he fi j 1 te 4 g! i i i 2 §35s21 2H ? i A i hei | i] Hp i i i 8 : Hyak HH Fa Ti , Sing Warsow Div. Nes. 11 and : . ¢. NICKLE, % CHARLES ALBERT EATON. Signed. sealed and delivered in pres- a. CAMPBELL, as to signature of H. C. Nickle. B: N. STEACY, se to signature of C. A. Baton, i -------- i ! NOTICB. { NOTICE thet the foregoing 16 law of St. Lawerence Wi hands at Corner 5 at 2 Wer Ry: at 229 Cataraqui 'W: b-Div, Nos. 9 and 10, at 237 Se a : Frontenac Ward--8ub-Div, No. 11, at 149 Sydenham St. 1S Ordmtnce Sureet. 90s. 12 and b-Div. Nos. 14 and 15 at §3 John street Rideau Ward--Sub-Div. No. 16, at 170 Now. 18, 19 and Bo a 8 Bk / urg-Sub- Div. No. 25, at of May, A.D. : | bkt., 50¢c to $1.25; +1812; oranges, doz., 50¢ to 76¢; lem- 4 Ons, doz, $10.50; feeders, 960 to 1,000 Ibs, $10.50 to $11.50; sheep, $15 to $17; heavy sheep, $13 to $14; calves, $15 to $30; do. medium, $12 to $14; hogs, fed and watered, $19.75 to $20; do. off cars, $30 to $20,235; do. to farmers, $18.50 to $18.75; do. f.0.b., $18.75 to $19; yearling lambs, $19 to $20; spring lambs, each, $10 to $18. : - «Buffalo. Buffalo, N.Y. May 11.--Cattle--- Shipping steers, $13 .50 to $14; but- || chers, $9 to $13.60; yearlings, $12.50 to $14; heifers, $6 to $11; cows, $4 to $10.50; bulls, $7 to $10.50; stock- ers and feeders, $7.50 to $10; fresh cows and springers, $65 to $150. Calves 50 cents lower; $6 to $15.75. PHogs--Good, 15 cents to 25 cents lower. Heavy, $15 to $15.26; mix- | éd, $15 to $16.10; yorkers and light | do., $16 to $16.25; pigs, $16; roughs, $12 to $12.50; stags, $7, to $8.50. Lambs, $8 to $19.25; yearlings, $12 to $16.50; wethers, $14 to $14.50; ewes, $6 to $13.50; mixed sheep, $13.50 to $14. & Montreal. Montreal, May 11.--Cattle, butch- er steers, choice, $15 to $15.25; good, $13.50 to $15; medium, $12 to $13; common, $10 to $12; butch- er heifers, choice, $12 to $14; med- ium, $11 to $13; common, $8 to $10.50; butcher cows, choice, $11 to $13; medium, $7,50 to $10,560; can- ners, $5 to $6.50; cutters, $6 to $7; butcher bulls, good, $11 t6' $13; com- | mon, $8.50.to $10.50; spring lambs $10 to $14; ewes, $11 to $14. , -Hogs, selected lots 'for local trade sold for $21 off cars. Sales of mixed lots took 'place 'at $20.50 to $21. Sows were-$4- less and stags $7- less per hundred: Off car weights, selects, $20.50 to $21; heavies, '$19.50 to 1 $20; sows, §16.50 to $21. Chicago. Chicago, May 11.--Cattle--Med- ium and heavy beef steers slow, most- ly 26c lower; light and yearlings steady to lower; top yearlings, $13.- 75; top heavy cattle, $13.65; bulk, $11.50 to $13.40; butcher stock gene- rally steady, supply light; veal calves steady; bulk, $11.50 to $12.50; stockers and feeders steady. Hogs mostly 10 to 25¢ higher; medium ad- vancing most, $15.60; bulk light, $15.25 to $15.40; bulk 250-pounders and over, $14.10 to $14.90; pigs | steady to 25c¢ lower; bulk 100 to 125 ; pounders, || unevenly strong to 25¢ higher; spots $13.50 to $14.50. Sheep more; choice shorn lambs, $19.25; bulk shorn lambs, $17.50 to $19; good 102-pounder shorn lambs, $15; few prime shorn ewes, $13.50. GENERAL TRADE. Toronto. Toronto, May 11.--Butter, choice dairy, 62¢ to 63¢; do., creamery, 70c ?to 80c¢; margarine, Ib, 37c to 40c; eggs, new laid, doz., 65c to 60¢c; { | cheese, 1b., 36¢ to 40c; fowl, Ib. 40¢c to 45¢; chickens, roasting, 45c to 50c; turkeys, Ib., 65¢ to 60¢; apples, do. bbl, $5 to 20¢ to 26c; grapefruit, each; Tc to 13¢; pineapples, 30c to 40c; rhubarb, bunch, 10c to 15¢; strawberries, box, 32¢; potatoes, bag, $6 to $6.25; do., pack, $1.10; pars- ley, bunch, 10¢c; parsnips, bag, $2.25 | to $2.50; turnips, bag, $1.25.to $1.40. rnin, .. Montreal. Montreal, May 11.--Cheese, finest easterns, 383% to 29¢; butter, choic- est creamery, 58 to b9c; eggs, fresh, 55c; potatoes, per bag, car lots, $5.- 75. ' READ AND WATOH YOUR ~ GAZING STOCK GROW an answer. Mr, Lewly' question is 8: - "Who gets the difference between 98 cents, the price paid the miner for digging out a 'ton of coal, and $9 paid by the public? Only one of the big newspapers of this country published this extract from Mr. Lewis' evidence against the coal operators and commented on It' editorially. It adds: "Every reader shares Mr. Lewis' curiosity. Many would like to know where coal can be had for $9. It costs more -than that. -- For-instance; $15 a ton is paid/in Augysta, Ga. What do you think of the American system that makes the consumer pay fifteen times what the stuff costs at {the mouth of the mine? By the way, i when you discuss coal miners and their so-called 'outrageous demand for a five-day week at six hours a day,' rememer this. The miners would rather work six days a week. K The ask a chance to work at least five days a week. Mine owners, to keep Minneapolis. Minneapolis, Minn., May 308. bar or the supply of coal and keep up the price, have laid off their men about h&if of the time, and the men about three days a week. They did not ask for a shorter week; they ask-: ed for a longer week, a chance to do more and earn mors. The ingenious press agents of the coal mine owners made the whole country think the miners wanted to do less work, when they really wanted to do more." At the hearings recently closéd in Washington before President Wil- son's commisison to. settle the coal strike, so called, Van H. Bittner, sta- tisticlan of the miners' union cited a mass of statistics showing wages, earnings, cost of production, profits, ete., and¢then submitted statistics ob- tained from the treasury department and financial reports, which show that in 1917 there were 3556 mining companies in the central competitive field that made 15 per cent on their capital stock, 311 made 20 per cent, 295 made 25 per cent, 270 made 30 per cent, 232 made 40 per cent or more, 197 made 50 per cent or more, 105 made 100 per cent or more, and 8 companies made over 1,000 per cent, 'With Brother Lewis' query before you, together with your winter's coal bills and the above facts at hand your gasing stock will easily focus on the answer. The man who holds the ladder at the bottom is frequently of more ser- vice than the man at _the top. Old Folks' Coughs, Catarrh, Bronchitis Quickly Cured This Tells of a Method That Cures Without Using Drugs. Elderly people take cold easily. Unlike young folks, they recover slowly. That is why so-many peo- ple past. nriddle life die of pneumonia. Cough Syrups seldom do much good because they upset digestion. Any doctor knows that a much more effective treatment is "CATARRH- OZONE," which heals and soothes the irritated surfaces of the throat. In using Catarrhozone you do not take medicine into the stomach-- you simply breathe into 'the throat, nose and lungs rich piney balsamic vapor, so full of healing power that colds, catarrh and bronchitis disap- pear almost instantly. The germ-killing balsamic vapor mixes with the breath, descends through" the throat, down the broa- chial' tubes, and finally reaches the deepest air cells in the lumgs. All parts are soothed . with rich, pure, medicinal essences, whereas with a syrup the affected parts could not be reached and harm would result through benumbing the stomach with drugs. A Catarrhozone Inhaler in your pocket or purse enables you to stop a cold withthe first sneeze. size costs $1.00 and supplies treat- ment for two months, small size 50c; trial size, 25c¢; all storekeepers and druggists. have been. able to earn wages only |. Use FIVE ROSES FLOUR ior better bread, Banner Oats, Island Frontenac Seed Oats . i Internatiozal Dairy Me ~The Wholesale and Retail. Specially selected f r high 0! passer Aru ="All varie- : LAWN GRASS Special mixture . .50c¢. Ib. Prince Edward avin $1.90 per bus. rotein, 26% Oil Cake; "es . $75.00 per Wholesale office and ware- house, foot of Princess Street. Phane 61. Retail store, old stand, 117 Brock Street. Phone 217. Holidays, night or Sunday phone 808. \ 'Holidays, night or Sunday, yl « Mr, Green, phone 1352. Special attention to mail or- ders. Shipments made same day received and at market prices. y oh Er $1.60 per bus. ton bagged Safe Place to Trade WE HAVE A MOST COMPLETE LINE OF TIRES, AND ACCESSORIES ery May 1st must get these on or. before May 10th, 1920, otherwise the above orders will be cancelled. VanLuven no i +N 3 Bros. Real Good Used Car at a Moderate Price 4 'TUBES, We can give you REAL service on your car--the kind of service ap- preciated by the busy man, who must have his car wheh he wants it. * Simply telephone us day or night and y you the very best of attention. 'Phone 567. LS H.M. FAR, ou will find us ready "to give 3 Limited |