Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 12 Oct 1910, p. 7

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dl The anies combing in 'one 10- | The Bt. Lawrence Bridge Come] 08 pany, which is J egnthiaiion of the | So lag { rried 'at Ottawa on day. The groom had just sentenced to five years in pe- tiary for theft and wore his Iyen has 'reappointed Lieut.-Governor. of Alberta for an- other term, and Mr. T. D. Brown of Regina ' has been appointed Lieut,-Governor of Saskatchewan, in succession to Lieut.-Gowernor Forget: HET {UNITED TES, "Two ordnance men were killed in an a plosion in the navy yard at ngton. : ri A have been ordered in 'connection with the Los Angeles 'dynamiting outrage. ! A young German coal trimmer from the steamer Moltke is ill with cholera at New York. ~~ i. : The Standard Oil Company has aged in a war with the Shell hii of England and: ts en Oil allies, I" Dr, Doty, Health Officer of the "J Port of New: York, says 2 re is no danger of a cholera epidemic in America. po y Prison terms as well as fines will be imposed on persons 'caught smuggling goods into the United' States. ; . The collision near Saunton, Til; $ in "which, over thirty persons lost 1 Ti ds state Greece may' "Itheir ves; was 'due. to the absent: mindedness of a motorman. .. 'President T erly; Mass., on tariff. experts tions for a trac y 'of vor of the Crown I ring conferred at Bev- | © outr ok + [have been ravaging the country the | d fl COUNTRY PRODUCE. - Apples--$2.98 for good to fine tock, 'Beéans--82:10 to $2.90 per bushel. Honey--No. 1 light extracted, helesale, 10 to 101-2¢c per 1b.; 0. 1 comb, wholesale, $1.80 to $2.- 25 per dozen; No. 2 comb, whele- sale, $1.50 to $1.75 per dozen, Baled Hay-No. 1, $12 to $13.50 on track, and No.2, $11 to $11.50. Baled Straw---$6.756 ta $7.50 on track, Toronto. : : ~ Potatoes--Car lots 60 to bdo per . Poultry--Chickens, = alive, 11 to 19¢ per 1b, ; fowl, 10c per 1b. ; ducks, 11 to 12¢ per 1b. ; turkeys, 15 ta 16¢ ser 1b, and geese, 9 to 10¢ per lb ressed, 1 to 2c 'm : 3 THE DAIRY MARKETS, Butter--Dairy prints, 22 to 23¢; do. tubs, 20 to 21c¢; inferior, 18 to 180." Creamery, 25 to, 27¢ per 1b, for rolls, 24 to 250 for solids, and 23 1-2¢ to 24c for separator prints. Egps--Case lots of pickled 24 to 250, and selected 26¢ to 27¢c per doz. Chepse--New, 111-2¢. for large, and 11 3-4c for twins. HO& PRODUCTS. Bacon--Long clear,' 16 to 151-2 per lb. in case lots ; mess pork, $27.- 50 to 828; short cut, $30. 'Hams--Light to medium. 19 to 191-2¢; do., heavy, 18 to 181-20; rolls, 15 to 151-8¢; shoulders, 14 to 14 1-2¢ ; breakfast bacon, 19 te 20c; backs, 21 to 280. Lard~Tierces, 143-4c; tubs, '15¢; pails; 18 1-40. ' UNITED STATES MARKETS: ii 'Minneapolis, Oct, T1.-- Wheat -- No. 1 hard, 'cash, $1.13; No. 1 Northern, . $1.12;. December, $1.- 103-8; May, $1.141-4. Bran al $18.50 to. #19. . Flour--First pat- lents, $5.20 to $5.50 ;.secongd pat- dents, $5.10 to $6.30; first clears, 4183.70 to #3 $3. md clears, "4 Buffalo, Oct. i Wheat ring wheat, No. .1: (Northern, 'carloads store; $1.17; Winter, steady. Corn «No. 3 yellow, B73-dc; No. 4 yel- low, 563-4c; No. 8 corn, 561-4c; No. 4 corn, B51-dc, all on track, rough billed. Oats--No. 2 white, 37.340; No. 3 white, 37c; , white, 36e, Barley--Feed to: malt- ing, 72 Xoi78e." | mE SLIVE: MARKETS. 1: Oct 115 {American side are heaps of ashes, to $3.50 per barrel Ww "also been destroyed. "The body of a man who was iden. | totalled $12,625,950. Wi 7 Calamity That Reaches the "Proportions of an International Disaster: Ovt., sa rous for. | which touched a coroer of the town, Man. i the history of Northers| CLCPEicinal lows is confined fo the: Minnesota 'and Western Ontario sustained along the American bore er. ast three days," The towns of Railroad and wire connection with Rpooner and = Beaudette, on'the the soene of 'the great disaster in the West is cut off by a burned dis Spooner and Beaudette | trict: from Warroad, Minn;, on' the caught fire the Canadian Northern | Canadian Northern Railroad, a dis. Railway rushed a train of "fitty box | tance 'of forty miles, through which care to help the residents get away. | the last trains passed on: Saturday doey were brought to this place on | night at imminent peril of the lives Saturday: night. The flames' were of the crew, The road is open to raging fiercely through th' 'timber | the south and east, however, and re" and already millions of dollars of lief is being afforded from For damage has been done. The Sheva William. * Those. fires have been lin-Matthieu Lumber Col ostiall smouldering in that 'district' for their buildings and 150,000,000 feet months, and were started anew by of Tumber. - The: Rat Portage Lum: | the tertific 'Wind which began to ber. Co. also 'lost all tneir plant | blow two days ago. The wind in- with 60,000,000 feet. creased in velocity with the head The Rainy River Uo. siiffored the until a wave of flame over 4 hun- same fate and lost 85,000,000 feet | dred foet high, and as long, lea; of lumber, There are 1,000 people | ed: barriers half a mile wide in homeless here. The villages of Slee: mahy directions. It was this situ~ mans, Pitt, Williams and Swift have ation that caused' so many to - ) troye y ish on the " railway . track. They While a wind is sweeping a sea | sought this opening in the bush, bus of fire eastward on the south side were burned to cinders by 'the heat of the Rainy River at a velocity of | wave leaping 'this barrier of some: 50 miles an hour, the great body of | three hundred yards. along. the flames passed this section, revealing clearing of the railway tracks. a calamity that already reaches the| A sepecial despatch from Ware proportion of an international dis- road, Minn., says: The fire zone aster. Bixty blackened corpses |cover- an area 85 miles long and have been found in the path of the | 30 miles wide. It stretches alom flames and a vast area is yet to be | the international boundary a searched for dead, while the towns | the Canadian Northern Railway of Bpooner, Beaudette and Pitt | from Gravel Pit Spur, west ond have been totally destroyed, with a Warroad, to Stratton, the fourth property loss that cannot be intel | station east of Rainy River. * A ligently calculated af present. With'| other 'despatch tells that aver fev the exception of the destruction of enty. bodies have been found, whild > the mills and stock of the Rat Por- | the number of dead will probably tage Lumber Co. near Rainy River, | reach three hundred. er -------------------- A e------ do. | 80nd in a pocketbook was written, Butter--Ohosost, 41.4 fy 341-3 | Women Fulo tho. world, and mes and seconds at 211-2 to 24c. Eggs | *M® their willing slaves. ~felected stock at 96 to 2c; straight receipts, 23c, 5 WINNIPEG BOOMING. ------ Buildin Pormits for the Fear will "Break all Records, A despateh from: Winnipeg says: A a EA "WOMEN RULE THE WORLD." i" "iy "" t Men are Willing Slaves,'"" Wrote Building permite' nd: (nanS. cs Suicide in Montreal. ings of this city will break all re- A despatch from Montreal says: |cords. In 1909 the buildin permita almost tified as John Malone was found [three months yet to be covered they in 'Mount Royal Park on 8 total $13,183,800. And the real rush witn an empty bottle that had con- {is to come. The bank clearings fig- tained carbolic acid. A pote 'was [ures are $621,218,873 for the nine found in his pocket in which he | months, as against $460 739,696 for ¥ a corresponding period last year. When clothes can't be hung outside, and must be dried in a room or cellar, the New Perfection Oil Heater quickly does the work 'of sun and air. You can bang up the wet clothes, light your Perl, tion Oil He en -the 4 mildew. : was L day with De a DEEP BM AE te ; Ea no i Ee i Pr a» =. Fa

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