Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Oct 1920, p. 14

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5 years, has done its share in the development of the business of the Do- minion. Our experience and uipment are at the service of every customer. STANDARD BANK OF caNADA KINGSTON BRANCH J. F. ROWLAND ----r TR RN NTENARIAN BOASTS os + SPLENDID APPETITE They are living to old age in Eng- land, nowadays, Miss Betsey Wotton of Park Cottage, Harrow, Middlesex, reached her 104th birthday on Sept. 17th. She has lived in Harrow for 102 Years. Her appetite is remarkable. At a quarter to seven every day she eats a rasher of bacon; for luncheon Manaoen she prefers boiled mutton and onions | and milk puddings, and after bread and butter; she ends the day With some fish for supper. And she sleeps well: She is up by 9.30 in the morning, and her housekeeper says she never sits still, but likes to walk about, She has lived in ner present home for fifty-two years. Until she was 100 years old she attended all her busi- ness and some property which she possesses. Mary Ann Lawson, who has died at the Friends' Retreat, York, at the age of 102, h . the institution since 1881. She was able to read without spectacles, and until a year ago walked about the garden unassisted, Aged 105. Bernard Royle, Omeath, County Louth, hag died. of Increase Stocks and bonds or real estate may depre- ciate in value, but a Savings Deposit, even if not added to by fresh ~ deposits, will always increase, Open a Savings Account to-day in | THE BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA | Pudup Capital 3 9,700,000 Reserve - Resources « 'land white granulated, $ f ® THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. Markets Reports GRAIN QUOTATIONS Winnipeg. Winnipeg, Oct. 15.--~Wheat--No. Northern, $2.37 %: No. 3 Northern, $2.24: 0. 4 Northern, $2.17%; No, §, $2.- 073%; track Manitoba, track Saskatchewan, $2.30%; track Alberta, $2.30 . Oats--No, 2 C.W., 76%c; No. 3 C.W., T0%e¢; extra No. 1 feed, 69% c; No. 1 feed, 69% c; No. 2 feed, 65%c; track, T0%ec, Barley No. 3 CW, $1.11%; No. 4 C.W., $1.06; rejected, 92c; feed, 92¢; track $1.07. Rye--No. 2 C.W., $1.76. Flax --No. 1 N.W.C., $3.02; No. 2 C.W.. $2.98; No.. 3 C.W,, $2.62; condemn- ed, $2.52; track, $3.01. 1 $2.22 No. 4 Montreal. Montreal, Oct. 15.---Oats--Cana- éian Western, No. @, 94c; do., No. 3, 92c. Flour---New .standard grade, $12.50. Rolled oats--Bag of 90 lbs, $4.20. Bran---$45.25. Shorts--$50.- 25. Toronto. Toronto, Oct. 15.---Manitoba oats |=No. 2 C. W,, 76%; No. 3 &. W., F70%¢c; extra No. 1 feed, 693% ¢c; all in store, Fort William. | Northern wheat, new crop--No, 1 | northern, 32.351: No. 2 northern, {$2.32%; No. 3 northern, $2.24%; { No. 4 northern, $2.17%; all in store, | Fort William. | American corn--No. 2 yellow, $1.- 130, track, Toronto, ' prompt ship- | ment. 5 | Manitoba barley, In store, Fort Willfam--No. 3 C. W., $1.113%; No. 14 CW, $1.06; rejects, 94c; feed, | 92¢. | Barley--Ontario malting, $1.10 to | $1.15. Ontario wheat--No. 2, $2.05 to $2.15, f.0:b. shippin olin ord- {ing to freights; No(2 spring, $2 to $210 Ontario oats--No. 3 white, nomin- al 64c to 68c, accorumg to freights outside. Ontario flour--In jute bags. ernment standard, prompt | delivered at Montreal, nominal; To- | ronto, nominal; bulk, seaboard, [ $9.00. Manitoba flour--Track, Toronto, | cash prices, first Datents, $12.90; | second patents, $12.40, Mill feed--Carloads, delivered T¢- [onto treights, bag included: Bran, | per ton, $49; shorts, per ton, $64; | feed flour, $3.50. Hay, loose, No. 1, per ton, $38 to $39; baled, track, Toronto, $30 to $32. | Gov- shipment, New Yorks New York, Oct. 15.--Flour--Mar- ket firm; spring patents and Kansas straights, $11.25 to $11.75; spring clears, $9.50 to $10.25; winter straights, $9.75 to $10.50. Rye flour--Market quiet good, $9 to $9.60 $9.65 to $10.25. White corn flour--Market $3.75 to $3.85 per 100 Ibs. Cornmeal--Market dull; yellow 3.60 to $3.70. Rye--Market firm; No, 2 western, $1.35 f.0.b., New York and $1.89 c.i.t. domestic. Barley--Market steady; feeding, $1.01 to $1.02 and malting, $1.10 to $1.12 c.i.f. New York. Buckwheat--Market dull; milling, $3.40 per 100 1bs. Wheat--Spot market strong; No. 2 red and No. 2 hard, $2.37 spot, c.L.f. track New York and No. 2 'mix- ed durum, $2.24 c.i.f. to arrive. Corn--8pot market steady; No. 2 yellow $1.15% and No. 2 mixed, $1.13% c.f. New York, 10-day ship- ment. Oats--Market easy; city bran, $44 and western, $43 in 100-1b. sacks. ; fair to ; choice to' fancy, dull; Chicago, Oct. 15.--Wheat--No. 3 red, $2.16; No. 1 hard, $2.14 to $2.15%; No. 2 hard, $2.15 to $2.15. Corn--No. 2 mixed, 91 3c to 92¢; No. 2 yellow, 92% to 93%e. ats--No. 2 white, 55% ¢ to 5 Ke; No. 3 white, 64¢ to 55%e. Rye--No. 2, $1.65. Barley, 75¢ to 97¢. Timothy seed--$5 to $6.50, Clover seed--$12'to $20. Pork--Market nominal. Lard--$19.80. Ribs--$16.25 to $18.50. ------ LIVE STOCK MARKETS, ---- Toronto. Oct. 15. -- Cattle Toronto, -- steers, $14 to $15; Heavy beet nid WHEAT PARTICIPATION CERTIFICATES Leave your certificates and we will collect orized b end of | THE. CANADIAN BANK | OF COMMER PAID-UP CAPITAL RESERVE FUND KINGSTON BRANCH-R. T. Brymner, Crown Lite Insurance Co., MH. hich will by the | Wheat Board Penwarden; Kingston District Manager, ™ i ---- eT ------ with this Bank RTE probably be auth- - about the . me > Jaton Manager. Toronto -- ---- . | C b : hoice, $12 to $13; | Creamery utter, Ib, butcher steers, ¢ $ di | Dairy butter good, $10.50 to $11.50; [THE KiNGsTon maRKer | Kingston, Oct, 15, Products. to 67 to [$7.50 to $9; commor, $6 to $6.75; | Whey butter {butcher heifers, choice, $11 to $12; | Butter, rolls ito $6.75; butcher $9.50 to $10.50; cows, medium, $7 [butcher bulls, good, $8.50 to l$9.50; common, $5 to $6; feeding |steers, good, $10.50 to $11.50; |fair, $9 to $10; stockers, good, [$8.50 to $9.50; fair, $6.75 to $8. | Calves--Cholce, $18 to $19.50; medium, $15 to $17; common, $8 to [$12; milch cows, choice, $100 to |$160; springers, choice, $125 to | $1657 Ewes, $7.50 to $8.50; lambs, {$12 to $13.50 Hogs, fed and water- |ed, selects, $20.25; lights, $18.25; [heavies, $19.25; sows, $15.25 to ($17.25. Montreal, Montreal, Oé¢t. 15.-- Cattle -- Butcher steers, good, $9.50 to $11; medium, $8.50 to $9; common, $7 to $8.50; butcher heifers, choice, $9 to $10.60; medium $8 to $9; com- mon, $50.50 to $7; butcher cows, medium, $5 to $7.50; canners, $3 [to $4; cutters $4 to $b; butcher bulls, |common, $5.25 to $6. Good veal, $13 {to $15; grass, $5.50 to $7. Ewes, [$5.50 to $7; lambs, good, $13; com- mon, $10 to $12.50. Hogs, off car | weights, selects, $19.50 to $20, Buffalo, Buffalo, N.Y., Oct. 15 --Cattle-- $9 to $14; yearlings, $15 to $17; heifers, $6 to $11.50; cows, $2.50 to $9.50; bulls, ,$5.50 to $9.50; stock- ers and feeders, $5.50 to $8.50; fresh cows and springers, slow, steady, $65 to $130. Calves, steady; $6 to Hogs, light yorkers and pigs, few, $17.10; roughs, $13.50 to $14; stags, $8 to $11. Lambs, $7 to $13; yearlings, $6 to' $9; wethers, $7 to $7.50; ewes, $6.50 to $7. Minneapolis. Minneapolis, Oct. 15.--Flour un- a barrel in 98 shipments, 77,113 barrels. $30,000. Wheat--Cash, No. Northern, $2.16% to $2.26%; De- cember, $2.11%; March, $2.08. Corn--No. 3 yellow, 88 to" 90c. Oats --No. 3 white, 5014 to 50%ec. No. 1, $2.92 to $2.95. Chicago. at $16 to $17; $9.50 to $14.50. ed slow, mostly $5.50 to $9; bulls, steady to strong; choice vealers, 3 cents lower at $16 to $17; grassy kinds, steady; bulk $8.50 to $12; de- sirable feeders steady, common kinds slow. Hogs--Top and butchers, $1 packing sows $14.25 to $14.50; pigs strong to 25 cents higher; bulk de- sirable kinds around $15, Early top native, $12.25; grassy weak; bulk ewes, $5.75; bulk, $5.25 to $5.75. : ---------- GENERAL TRADE. Montreal, Montreal, Oct. 15.--Butter--Neo. 1 solids, 61c¢ Ib.; prints, 62¢ 1b.; No, 2 solids, 59¢; prints, 60c; dairy, 650e. Eggs--No. 1, 60¢ per doz.; selects, 68¢ doz.; specials, 78c. Lard--In prints, 31c per 1b. ' Shortening--28c per 1b, Hams--Large size, 49c¢c; 6635¢ 1b. Cheese--O0ld, 33c per 29¢ 1b. Bacon--Windsor boneless, 57¢ per Ib.; breakfast, 48c to 60c per .1b- Dressed poultry--Milkfed chickens 42¢ to 45¢ per 1b,; fowls, 35¢ to 38¢.; geese, 30c; turkey, 57c; ducks, 40c per 1b. Beans--Canadian hand-picked, $5 per bushel; peas, $4.75. Dressed Hogs--Fresh killed abat- toir stock, $20.50 to $30, Flour--First patents, $12.50 per bbl.;. second Patents, $12 per bbl; Millfeed--Brand, $45.25 per ton. ex-frack; short, $62.25. Hay--Baled, per ton in car lots, No. 2 Timothy, $32; No. 3 Timothy, clover, mixed, $26 to cooked, 1b.; new, .] ex-track. $30 to $31; $27, ex-track. Potatoes--In bags of 90 ibs., $1.50 to $1.60, ex-track. Toronto. Toronto, Oct. 15.--Butter, choice dairy, 5c to 60c, do., creamery, §5¢ to 70¢; margarine, m., 87¢c to 40c; €Egs! new laid, doz., 75c ,to 80¢; cheese, 1b., 40c to 45¢. Dressed Poultry--Chickens, spring, 1b., 46c to 60¢;. fowl, 1b., 38¢ to 42¢; chickens, roasting, 46¢ to 50c; ducks, spring, 1b., 40c to 45¢; turkeys, 1b., 65 to 60c. Apples--Barrel, $1.76 to $4; apples, basket, 30c to 60c; canta- loupes, basket, 66c to 80c; grapes, 60c to 90¢; oranges, doz., 30c to 76¢; plums, basket, 40¢ to 6c; plums, gages, 65c; peaches, Can., 11- qts., 80¢ to $1.25, do., 6-quarts, 60c to 75¢; lemons, doz., 20¢ to 30¢; watermelons, each, 50c¢ to $1. tables-- ; basket, §0¢ to 76e; beets, 11-qt.. baskets, 40c¢ to 50¢c; carrots, new, 11l-qt baskets, 40c; corn, 1 doz, 20¢ to 25¢, cabbage, each, 6c to 10¢; caulifiower, each, 10c to 265¢; Pumpkins, 16¢c te 26¢; celery, 4 bunches for 26¢; cucum- bers, 2 for 26¢c; gherkins, 6-qt. bas- kets, $2 to $2.50; egg plants, each, 25¢c; leeks, bunch, 25¢; lettuce, leaf, 403, 25¢ 10 30¢; lettuce, head, each, ¢ to 16¢c; potatoes, bag, $1.76 to $2. {391 Jock, 36¢; ; ¢ to 10c¢; peppers, 75¢ to $1; raddish, spinach, peck, 26¢; baskets, 40c to 50c: 16c to 28c; vegetable to 15e, Lt -- London © Supper. Dinner in churclt sounds somewhat St. Mary-at-Hill city of London, dary Carlile opens his church' "each day from 12 tin 2 o'clock (Saturdays ex- cepted), as a rest for the workers in elane vestibule of the church anyone bringing his or her own dinner is provided With table and chair, while lemonade and tea Cin be obtained if desired. Pictures and music are provided inside' the church from 1 till' 2 o'clock. : € | » $7.50 to $9; common, $6 (Eggs, ;- No. 2 Northern, |medium, $ choice, |Oleomargarine to | Cheese $2.31; |$9; canners and cutters, $3 to $6; | | Round steak, |p i | | | | Shipping steers, $15 to $17; butchers, | $20. Oranges, doz, $17; { Peaches, | $3 to $6; mixed sheep, Cod, 1b. Butcher cows open- [Doacons | 1h $16.10; bulk light | Washed wool, 5.50 to $16; bulk |Shearlinga { fresh, doz. 36 to 36 to Poultry. Chickens, dressed, 1b ... Hens, dressed, Ib Meats. 38 to 45 25 to 30 Beet : \ Porterhouse steak, 1b, .. to to 45 35 28 20 22 30 Rib roast. ib, .% 26 to Boiling cuts, 1b. 15 to Western carcase, cwt ....$20 to Western hinds, cwt .... to Pork : to to 40 to 9 to $20 $27 to 28 Loln roasts, Ih, Rib roasts; 1p. Pork 'chops, 1b... ... van Hogs, live welsht ...... 4 Hogs, dressed, cwt, Lamb: Fronts, 1b, Hinds, Ib. Leg, 1b. 30 { Loins, 1b. 40 Chops, Ib, 40 Mutton, Ib, 25 Vegetables. Baets, bunch Cabbage, head Celery, bunch Lettuce, bunch New Potatoes, peck ... Carrots, bunch Frait, Bananas; doz .... ono Grape fruit .... Lemons, doz, 30 to 50 12 to 15 30 to 40 65 to 75 basket +» 75 to 1.00 Tomatoes, bus, Eels, 1b, Filets, 1b. Finnan haddie, Ib, Haddock, fresh, 1p . We see. ae om . Halibut, 1» changed to 45c¢ higher; in carload | v.1h lots, family patents quoted at $11.50 | Herring, fresh, ip, ound cotton sacks; | pola Bran | Peroh, | 1 |Plke, 'mn, ippers, pair RockNish, 1b. Salmon, 1p he | Trout, salmon, Dh. : Whitefish, fresh 20 to 22 ides and Wool. Beef Ilides, No, 1 10c per Ib. Chicago, Oct. 15. --Cattle--Bulk, | Lambs $17.50, top $18; fats, 5 cents lower | Veals . Kipe 1 60c up to 9 rate iuns up to £1.00 up to $5.00 tas nnnenimn 8c per Ib. Wool, coarse, price per 0 0 Sheep skins Horse 1Mides Tallow, No. 1. Unwashed coarse, Sheep-- { Barley bulk na- Bran, ton ,., tive lambs, $11.25 to $12; fat native [Shorts . , "ee 52.00 reves. 52.00 to 54.00 Buckwhent, bush, .. 1.25 Hay, baled, ton $25 to $28 Hay, loose, ton ...,.... "$25 Corn, yellow feed, bush 1.50 to $1.60 ) 6.60 to 7.75 ns Flour cwt, 66 to 75 to 12.00 Straw, baled, ton ,,. .10.00 Straw, loose, ton 'e 10.00 Wheat, local « 2.10 to 2.20 Had a Suspicious Look. Speaking of banks and banking, it takes very little sometimes. to arouse suspicion in the minds of depositors, We recall the story of a banker who, being bald-headed, was in the habit of wearing his hat continuously dur- ing business hours. Among his de- positors was a carpenter who seemed timorous concerning the safety of his money, and as this man was drawing Out some one day, the banker said to him, "Look here, William, why don't you let your money stay in the bank?" "Well," replied the carpenter. "I'm rather afraid. You see, sir (here he glanced at the hat the banker was wearing), "you Jook 28 though you- were always ready to start some- where." ------------------ Asked Permit to Die. Vege- | yim Euphrates Euphrates, a native of Tyre be- longed to the Stoic school of philoso- phy. In=his old age he became tired of life and asked and obtained per- mission from Hadrian to put an end to himself with poison. Sleepless Nights Overcome By = Safe Method a Worry, overwork, overstudy and indigestion cause insomnia. Healthy, natural sleep can't be pro- duced by drugs. First, the blood circulation must be mproved : Congestion of blood in the head must be removed. Irritation in the brain must be re- Heved, It's because Ferrozone equalizes circulation, because it soothes the ir- ritation, because it removes conges- tion that it does cure insomnia. For building blood and nerve, for instilling force and life into over- worked ans, Jor yo Nablishing strength and v! . ere cam you eae as Ferro- find Remember, sleep is just as import- zone? ant as food. You must sleep, or break down, but if you'll use Zone and thereby ve the conditions which now Jou from sleep, you'll get well quickly. Ferrozone is not a narcotic not a dope; it is any child or delicate woman can use, Absolutely safe is Ferrozone. Take it for » month, take it for a year--no harm, but immeasurable good will result To sleep well, look well, feel well, be free from dep: nervous- Or blues--use Ferrozone. It's a tonic, & healer to the weak and » & boon to in 50c, all' dealers, 27 | pe Albania, then & health-giving tonic that! SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1920.' § Mo § Want Scutari : HE problem that worries more than anything else the people of the former king- dom of Montenegro--now a | federal province of Jugo-Slavia--is | that of Scutari, writes the Cettinje correspondent of the London Post. | Seutari is their "Chaba" -- the | Holy City on which all their eyes are set, all their desires are concentrated | to-day as they have been centuries, { the correspondent says. This is not | & movement of the politicians, not |& movement inspired from Belgrade. | Indeed, people of Cettinje speak 33 | somewhat bitterly of the capital, 25 | Belgrade is far offt--five or six faye) 45 | journey at the least--does not reae | lize, is but lukewarm in the matter, And they gaze down at the coveted a5 | ity, thing of D'Annunsio up yonder | 30 | in the north and mutter darkly to | | one another a tag from some national poet: "While the wise were fighting each other with their wisdom, The fools were looking after their own business." they are itching { to lay hands on Scutari, and only the Presence of the Serbian troops has hitherto prevented them from doing so, . In plain words, During the last few weeks demon- strations have taken place all over the country. At two of them the day In each case was market day. The Peasants from the neighborhood are thronging the village square, buying, selling, chafing, joking. Then some one drags a table from an adjacent cafs, mounts it and begins to har angue the srowd. Bpeaker follows speaker; all take up the same tale. "Scutari is ours, for reasoms historical, ethnological, emotional, geographical, economical, It is ours because the memories and traditions of the ages sanctify it to us. The home of our early kings, the appanage of their eldest sons. We lost it, indeed, to the Turk, but the Turk failed to make it his own, To this day its folk are our folk, or largely so; to this day, for miles around, there is not a single place- Dame that is not Serbian. And ir we lost it we have surely brought it back again a hundred fold. One- third of our whole army died for it the other year." : 80 are arguments that leave Europe cold. And yet it the South Slav State is to have any sort of ease and freedom of life in the future, Scutar! must either be Serbian or in the hands of those unreservedly friendly to Serbia, The valley along which the Bojana carries the waters of Lake Scutari down to the Adriatic, a few miles distant, forms the only break in the mountain system that shuts off both Montenegro and Southern Serbia from the sea. This gap is not only the one possible outlet for Monte negrin commerce--{for the two car- riageable roads that lead into the country are interesting peculiarities of engineering rather than practic- able commercial also the natural and obvious outlet for that of the whole western inter- ior of the Balkan Peninsula, espe- cially the fat lands of the Metohija and Kossovo. Through it will pass, Some time, a railway line which will be, of great importance to the com- merce of the future, the line which, down the valley of the Drin, will link Belgrade (and Sofia and Bucharest and Odessa) with the Southern Adri- atic. At the imner end of this break ia tae mountains, commanding it and all transit through it, stands Scutari. It is the point which any ome who wishes to transport his Person or his goods inte or from the interior must necessarily pass. Seutari, or the free- dom of it, is as essential to Mofhite- negro and the south of Serbia as Fiume is to Croatia and the morth. But this is not all, of recent years cut for itself a new channel, entering the Bojana just below Secutari, and latter river choked washes down. The " Bot only that the navigation of the Bojana is rendered impossible for the larger sort of craft, but that the waters of the lake have been raised vastly beyond their earlier level. The change is welcome by fisher- folk about Scutari, but it hag been a ai to' Montenegro. Year by year the lake has crept further northward and eastward, swallowing up the rich sole wealth, until now thousands. of hectares with the silt ft consequences are largely dry up in Summer, leaving great stretches of erbian Ser official policy is that if Powers set up a really indepen- 1 to such an Al. bania--with which it would be pos. (sible to have close relations, imclud- Ing perhaps a military, and certainly tari safely be handed over, Montenegro frankly doubts the sibility of such an Albania and will of the powers to create it. she is --afrald for her ten thousand graves, for her unborn chil- d And if, she the sacred pos- the | nationalities is to be invoked she has 200d a right to invoke it as any- e else. ---------- Praise! ' Little Gerald was ¥isibly perturb. . "Daddy," he asked, "what does a fellow mean when he 'hot sketch'?™ equal to the nal as on axplained. : ---------- | The georgraphy class was !son, and the teacher pointed a |t0 the map on the wall. "Here, on one hand we have the ; DE country of Russia. Willie," she asked, looking over her panils and setting on one small boy at the end of the class, "what do we see on the other hand?" Willie, hopeless with fright, hesi- tated a moment, and then answered: "Warts!" in sea- finger aye routes -- but it fig | The Drin has ; now keeps the | mosquitoes to breed in. | AR economic coavention--might Scu- | But | And | ren. says, | principle of the self-determination of means you're a warm baby, son," he | 100 Years' Pulpwood Supply are offering te our clients a new issue of a pulp and Paper company. The company will immediately erect a thefoughly medern groundwood pulp mill with a daily capacity of 100 tons. It is estimated that the standing timber on the company's limits is sufficient to keep a mill of the capacity of the ome presently planned at full capacity fer mere than 100 years. | The issue carries with It a bis: ! -- TR WIth Tt 2 bonus | of one share of commen for every share of preferred. Advance pariiculars and ospe clus om roguest, { '| Ryan,Grier <&ZHastings ! LIMITED | MONTREAL | [ 98Notre Damest.W. | Main 1493 | | | TORONTO 33 Melinda St. Adel. 2246-1 G. Hunter Ogilvie Offers For Sale a new issue of $4,000,000 89% Cumu- lative Participating Preference Shares of the Three Rivers Pulp and Paper Co'y, Ltd. This is a particularly attractive of- fer for those subscribing before the 20th of October, 1920. $100.00 for each preferred share, with a bonus of one of Common. 20% to accompany. application, remainder in 4 equal instalments, quarterly. 281 KING STREET Phones = 568; & 1087 SCOTT'S GARAGE Repairs, Washing and Storage. aa 1915 McLasghiin Toure ing tar for sale cheap for a quick buyer. BAGOT STREET Phone 1894w, Sen, It pays to save Your Newspapers, Magazines sad scrap material--we ars paying good prices Fg MAY ¥ERED Pi Or Water or fea ng or a tent for next summer. Call en ua L Cohen & Co. - Phone x36.°37, 267-275 ONTARIO STRERY Call and pick out the cloth now for your new Suit. We make both Ladies and Men's Suits. Prices reasonable. You can also bring in the cloth ar? we will make it up for you: M. YAMPOLSKY 353 PRINCESS STREET hone 2119. Sawed in Stove Lengths BOOTH & CO., Foot West Street Phone 133 Davie & Barrett PLUMBING and TINSMITHING Now is the time to have your Fur- mace repaired before the cold wea. ther sets in. See us for prices. 203 WELLINGTON STREET Phone @88. Time is signalled to vessels in the harbor of Lisbon by two lights which are automatically flluminated five minutes before each hour and extin- guished at the hour. 174 Barrie Street 877 Alfred Street .. 413 Johmson Street 81 Alfred Street ... 5i4 Princess Street ,. 25 Wellington Street 468 Albert Street 8434 Collingwood Street . Kina Street a bungalow om Mack Street. Your taste. changed. Apply toi-- J.O.HUTTON * FOR SALE. e houses under cons truetion on Edgehill street, and Buy mew Insurance of all kinds, Viet ory Bonds bought, sold and Xe Brick; Het Water, Brick; Hot Water. Brick; Hot Water. New Brick; Hot Water, New Brick; Hot Water, Stone; Het Air. Frame; large barns. Frame; no furnace. Large store ang dwelling. and have finished to suit 67 CLARENCE STREN? Phone 708. These bonds are now due ment of your funds and believe you wish. 287 BAGOT STREET. Every ingredient "phony" 4 ; tain anise, or any they do whole milk. Am. "2nd. of 4h. 5th "7 periods. It is Ww | Ne I PL Holders of Anglo French Bonds portune time for maturity of A nglo-French than when our good Canadian secur ties are so cheap, Call office and look over the "bargain day" ment issues. * We will collect y our 'maturing Anglo-French if ..Bongard, Ryerson & Co. "The Home of Good Investments." 3rd. It doés not scour; blood ingredients, which insures Easy to feed, no boiling, » just'mix with warm waver. . It is balanced just like whole : the first on Purina Calf __ keeps them making gains without and we invite the re-invest-_ there could be no more op- right now at our prices of our govern- PHONE 1728. ) Is Different Yes, it's unlike any calf meal on the market, It's differont because it's better. is a pure feed of recognized value, no unknown worth, It does not con appetizer, Calves eat it as greedily as flour is one of the important milk. Calves thrive Chow and it + Wholesale and Retail Distributors, - P. PETERS . . Foot of Princess Street '

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