Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 10 Jan 1924, p. 3

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med Na wh ron at _ : & to 40¢. | {51% to 16c; prints, 17% to 18¢. te b 1 nt to Dublin in custody. 4--Divers retrieve four million}. nds in bullion from the torpedoed or Laurentic off the coast of 0 eorn-- Heavy steers, choice, $7.50 to $7.75; rio Rous X Ber Suk Jats butcher. steers, choice, $6.75 to $7.25; b $4.60; Toranta it \ do, $6 to $6.50; do, med., $4.5 : $4.60, bu! ! Hon. L. P. Brodeur is heifers, choice, $6.25 to $7 ed. * to opens with a record atfen.|.. Lieutenant-Govefnor of Quebec, who Moan oT in, in Jute $5 to $56.50; do, com., 4 to § but- dance of! 76,000, dled Wednesday at Spencerwood, his | Hay Fxtra No. 2 timothy, per ton, cher cows, choice, $4 to $5; do, med., $3 28--Germany offers to give up pas-'offictal home at Quebec. He was a |rack, Toronto, $14.50 to $16. No. 2, to $4; canners and cutters, 0% sive resistance in the Ruhr district on member of parliament for twenty $14.50; No. 3, $12.50; mixed, $12. [butcher hele, Shoice, 34 0 35: 0 0 tain conditions. Italian General years, a minister under Laurier for| Straw--Car lots, per ton, $9. $5.50 2 $6.50: a: fate $i 86; d eX-!iTellini and four members of his suite seven years and Judge of the Supreme = Cheese--New, large, 22 to 22%c; >: od. $4 to $4.75: do. fair, g twins, 22% to 28¢: triplets, 28 to 24c stockers, good, $4 to $4.75; do, Tr, & Per! ggsassinated on the Albanian. road, Court for twelve years before becom. twins, 26¢. Ol, Iarge, 28 to $3.80 to 34; milkers and springers, $70 'and. Italy 'demands reparation i os Lieuténant-Governor. He came of Sultans, 2 o to Bic: iy 80 Greece. 3 a very old French-Canadian pioneer 3 : 29-=Ttaly" demands' apologies; the! family, : 82 on of the murderers and a cash re $1 to $2; med., $8 to $10; do, com. $6 to $7; ; do Butter--Finest creamery prints, 45 ov, ot ep," 40 bucks, $9 to $9.50; "The don, Duke BF Ky ¥. of $2,500,000 for the killing} 9--Hon. I. P..Brodeur appointed 2, 41 to 42¢. \ i ? to CE h | of- Ger ellini,' Lt.-Governor of Quebec. Lloyd George ' Eggs--Extras, fresh, in cartons, 70 $0.50 to $830; do, fan Boars, 88 fo 865 at. Westminster Abbey amidigen-| cial, oes the Islands of in Toronto has a tumultuous reception to 71¢; extras, storage, In cartons, 45 C14 j¥eg! (0 40 957 do, fob, $8.60 to 'rejoicing. - orfi and Samos: The Canadian party by vast audience.' Tsao-Kun installed lo fei SEARLS 10 S50) FSS) $8.78; do, country points, $8.25 to g MAY. . 5 |lédby Allan Crawford, who went to} as President of the Chinese Republic.|" [ive pouliry..Spring. chickens). 4 $8.60; do, selects, $9.90 to $10.15. Washington announces that law Wrangel Island in 1021 reported dead.| 25---Drs. F. G. Banting and J. J. R.' [bs anc over. 28c. chickens, 8 to 4 | MONTREAL. liquors on ocean liners within}, . SEPTEMBER. MacLeod of Toronto are awarded the Ibs., 22¢; hens, over 5 Ibs., 2 i do, 4 Jitu will be rigorously. en-| = j__ Terrific eartliquake in Japan! Noyel vrize for the discovery of: in- to b Ibs, Se; o A to 4. lbs, 1be; n: 80 days: canses terrible destruction of rty sulin by Council of Teachers of roosters; lbc; du : i ritish syndicate obtaina con | nthe of life; Tokio, Yokohama and the Karolinski Institute of Stockholm;|19¢; doy 4 to 5 Lbs, a turkeys, Flour, Man. spring wheat pats., 1sts, ul uf he Bagdad Rafivay. ' ' other i citfes: 'on the: eastern: seaboard, total value $40,000. young; 10. 1bs. and up, 22c. 8.10; nds, $5.60; strong bakers', - Law resigns the British aid waste and the loss of life is esti-| 26--Earl of Athlone appointed Gov- Dressed poultey.-Spring Shiskens, 5.40} Yonter a be Oice, 5 "$2 ol Premiership owing to illness, "| mated 8t-80,000., Final returns of the ernor-General of 'South Africa. 41jbs, and over, 80¢; Chickens, | a tor $36.95, Mid. # ) a : A !1bs,, 26¢; hens, over 5 lbs., 28c; do, 4 Bran, $27.25. Shorts, $35.25. | '22<Staniley Baldwin succeeds: Bon Trish felections. give following resultss| ~30--Death of Bonar Law, who was (,'k "he 94c} do, 8 to 4 Ibs. 18¢c; dlings, $36.25. 0) ar Law as. British Premier, Soviet Government, 63; Republicans, 44; In-| the first British, Prime Minister of | roosters, 18¢; ducklings, over 6 Ibs., car 8 $16 to $16. | ora Hy "accedes: to' British de dependent, 16; Labor, 16; Farmers,| Canadian birth « Britain's loans to al-!24¢; do, 4 to b lbs, 26¢; turkeys, Cheese, finest westerns, 18 to 18%ec; -, man Sa 115; total 158. ! riopol fice ta] 28--DeVillera issues ordef fo rebels 4 Seven US. warships wrecked onl ounts. to £1,913,000,000, and. vo the, Joe Nov 1 pasteurized, 42 lo 42%e; do, No. ¢ {to abandon warfare against the Free rocks near Santa Barbara, Cal, and Colonies, £148,000,000. | Beans--Can. hand-picked, lb, 7c; 1 creamery, 41%ec. Eggs, extras, 88 0 18} ha adn ¢ Chern hy ; 8 | primes, 6%ec. to 89¢; do, No. 1 stock, 31 to 86¢c; do, 2 | State: Gove | 28 seamen drowned. Can. Nat. Exhfs| 81--Britain agrees to U.S. search of Primes; 0c. oo r imp. No. 2 stock, 28 to 30u .dtea go. on| 29--Largequantities of arms dump- bition at Toronto closes with all re-' vessels beyond the three-mile, limit, ol "Resor 5 bri 2 40 > Com. lambs, $9; hogs. thick th < 81e] - BL Foal a 3 gal, $2.50; per . tin, $2. per | om. lambs, $9; hogs, thick smoo als executed, | ¢d by Irish rebels. cords of attendance beaten, the total but British ships may carry liquor) £31" maple sugar, Ib. 25c. and butcher type, $9.25. : being 1,498,000, an increase on 1922; into U.S.'waters under seal. Death at! Sonne in Eleven | 2% P . return JUNE: i Cs i ee) 8--Swiss reject prohibition by a'of 129,600, | Toronto of Clars Brett Martin, first IRIGIBLE the U.S. ; large majority. 10---Greek Government accept allies'; woman admitted to the Bar of Canada GIANT Di small vote favors making SHATTERED'BY STORM ' 12--New Bulgarian "Government terms regarding dispute with Italy. NOVEMBER. 'Edward Island "bone" dry. | firmly established at Sofia. | Passive. resistance in occupied area of| 5--On a refemendum vote Alberta der G. H. Murray of Nova! 16--Damage by bush fires in New Cermany ordered stopped: Irish Free gives a majority of 25,000 in favor of| Aj] 'the Crew of 50 Aviators Believed to Have Perished resigns after 27 years of office. Brunswick placed at-$5,000,000, Larg- State admitted to League of Nations. government sale of liquor. ! in Explosion at Sea. wed est submersible in existence launched; 12--Lord = Renfrew (Prince of 10--Armistice- Day observed fully orts at Chatham, Eng. Wales) arrives at Quebec en route to in British Empire. Crown Prince Wil- ; A despatch from Toulon, France, says:--The monster French dirigible 18-- Eruption of Mount Etna wipes his ranch in Alberta to spend a month helm returns to. Germany after five Dixmude crashed, burning and ex- | out several villages on its slopes. Dam- there. Ottawa's estimate of wheat years' exile. DECEMBER. wins control in the age causes in Quebec Provinceby for< crop. of Prairie Provinces is 470,000, : + whip ot fires during month runs into mil-, 000 bushels. 6--Liberals and Laborites wipe out} ploding, into the Mediterranean off 19--New Irish Parliament opens at' Conservative majority in British elec-| cape San Marco, near Sciacca, Sicily, bt, Britain to' 22-Manitoba gives"n majority of Dublin; W. T. 000,000,000 by end of 62 yrs. 34,000 in favor of government sale of President. Republicans in Irish jails! Cosgrave is elected tions. of Decem~ 10--Premier Baldwin decides to! Suring 3 Str, Un Ah might, of the Dominion Parliament. liquor. - +» |refusedi release. Greece: apologizes: stay in office till Parliament meets m=) Every one of the 50 men on board from the Throne promises re-| 25--Ontario Legislature elections for the Janina assassinations. Franco- January 8, undoubtedly perished--torn to bits by i the Bank Act and redistribu- result in sweeping defeat of Drury Canadian trade treaty goes into effect. | , 26--The Dixmude, giant: French tno explosion, burned by the flames or 'oronto citizens dissatisfied with Government and a Conservative ma-| 26--Dictatorship declared in Ba-' war dirigible, with fifty men on board,' growned like trapped-rats under the the award giving the Street Railway] jority of members. elected. ; varia and Germany proclaims martial reported lost in storm off North Afri- sinking alrship's bulk. 88,000 for their intervests,| 80--Troops called out to stop! riot-{ law. Greece pays Italy 50,000,000 lire. can coast. This official theory was told to the Beck dissenting. ing by Sydney, N.S. steel strikers.|as compensation for Janina murders. 27--France and Czecho-Slovakia correspondent . here on. Jan. 3 by FEBRUARY. Dominion Parliament: pirorogued. 830--The French super-zeppelin Dix-| form an alliance, increasing French! Admiral "Clement, Director of the "_1--The general offices of the Can- B JULY, Caps Broto Wide bredla all SE er Lo | Infiuence In Lr ry causing aly, French naval search for Dixmude sur- Sir Esme Howard adian ¢ ways 4--Every coa e pe Breton nce and enduranc i . assassination | yiyors, upon the receipt of a grim mes- National Rai} are located an uninterrupted voyage of 4,500| by Communist of the Prince Regent of gage from the torpedo boat Spahi, a mn ppointed Wokiay 0 Ambassador 3 | - Government at Montreal, central! closed down. : Dadenrtors : 5--Dockers' strike in Britain in-| miles lasting 118 hours and 41 mins,| Japan. age fom the rialy yaa: man 2 orm, a volves 40,000 workers; trade union : OCTOBER. 28--Spain imposes prohibitory du-| Man coast for clues to the great alr Sir Auckland Geddes. 1 thuania 1--Prémier Baldwin opens Imperial| ties on Canadian goods. The fire re-! mygtery. i leaders order men to return to work. rr-- e ittmatunt nt 1 3» cord of the U.S. for 1922 was 15,000 11--British strike called off; Freneh | Conference in London. Jen bk roposted the di at 2-- Canadian Government Refund-|deaths' and- $620,000,000 of property|an empty aluminum gasoline tank, NEW DEVICE AIDS ing Loan of $200,000,000 is rapidly] des Death of Dr. Otto Klotz,| several pieces of partly burned wreck- CANCER TREATMENT H _ |subscribed. Director of Dominion Observatory. |age and bits of burned tissue off Cape . ! 21-- Strike of 'steel colliery 'miners || 6--Turkish troops re-enter Constan-| 29--Death of Gustave Eiffel, de-| San Marcos, near the place where fish- Enables Physicians to Give i tinople after four years of banish-| signer of the Eiffel Tower at Paris;| ermen found the body of Commandant " Lady ment. ; the highest structure in the world. | qu Plessis de Granaden. Attention to Greater Number EE . =| "We now for the first time are| Of Patients at Reduced Cost. | forced to believe that the Dixmude and 4 despatch from New York Bays :-- its entire crew were lost on the night While stressing a warning at the out- of December 21-22," the correspond- ot that only in certain cases can ent was told. 'We will continue a cancer be cured by X-rays anyway, Dr. most careful search along the Sicilian Francis C. Wood, Director of - the coast, but we have no hopes of finding Crocker Institute of Cancer Research any more bodies. The Dixmude un- of Columbia University, announced a doubtedly was caught In the storm and considerable advance in the treatment driven toward Sicily. It probably Was | os this disease which, he said, had struck by lightning and crashed into been made possible by a new type of the sea." -- ° X-ray tube. | ail . This improved tube, Dr. Wood said, Blind Girl Heads Honor List had no pes curative powers than of University of London | the old one, its chief importance lying : , in its radiation of five to six times as A despatch from London says:--| many curative rays as the former The name of a blind girl stood at the| type, thus lessening the necessary ex- head of the first class English honor Jomure of a patient to the rays from list of the University of London issued | hours to minutes. As a result, Dr. recently, It is that of Miss Sadie| Wood said, physicians may not be able Isaacs, who, though only 22 years old,| to effect a large number of cures, but wins thereby not only a Bachelor of| they will be able to treat a far greater. Arts degree but the George Smith|number of patients in a day. Also, the; scholarship, valued at $450. cost of each treatment is correspond- Miss Isaacs became blind when she| ingly reduced. was eight years old, but despite this] The tube is the invention of Dr. Ee A Wh ens Ed a ari ale ee brilliant record in education. . When| Westinghouse Lamp Co., who has been the B.A. English honors degree. And|tube, now in the experimental stage, Engl ' which will be able to stand a suffi ciently high voltage to give off rays| | of much shorter wave-length, thus ap« proaching the rays of radium. If this a shorter period of treatment it 3 g 8 monster collective damage 1,4 possible to reach an internal ios 'the German Government without the great danger of harming oA Article 804 of the Treaty| the healthy outer body which exists | at present. Sse fe ein. wv How can you keep a determined man from success? Place stumbling | blocks in his way, and he uses the: for stepping-stones rison {and he produces 50; do, com., $4 to $4.50; butcher | 3 m handicap she has all along made a|C. T. Ulrey, Research Engineer of the. | " {8 | she entered the university in 1920 she| working with Dr. Wood for some time. | i [8 | declared it was her ambition to win; They have hopes for an even greater| | tube is perfected, Dr. Wood believes| the medical profession will have more} success in treating internal cancer. § For with more penetrating rays and| Sir Lomer Gouin Whose {ll-health has necessitated to to $100: calves, choice, $11 to $12; do, the resignation of his post as Minister , of Justice..in the Dominion Govern- sers, $3 to $4.50 ambs, choice, ment. . . am ema ---- to 46c; No. 1 creamery, 48 to 44c; No. do, culls. §7 to 5; sheep, light ewes, South African Tour Planned by Prince of Wales A despatch from London says:-- The Prince of Wales, who will on May 2 on a trip to South Afri Oats, CW, No. 2, 61 to b1%ec; do, is expected to visit all the princi a CW, No. 8, 48% ; do, extra No. 1 feed, centres south of the Zambesi River. g3, over © Ibs, 48%c; do, No. 2 local white, 44%c. He will engage in a shooting expedi- tion in Northern Rhodesia before he leaves Africa for home. His Royal Highness will be absent Mid- from England for about four months Hay, No. 2, per top, on his tour. He will travel this time on one of the regular liners instead of the battle-cruiser Renown, on which lies during the war, with interest, am-| young, 10 Ibs. and up, 28 to 32; geese, finest easterns, 17% to 17%c. Butter, he made his voyage to India. The Renown is being reconditioned for further service with the fleet. BE asi] Natural Resources Bulletin. The Natural Resources Intel- ligence Service of the Depart- ment of the Interior at Ottawa, says: There has been a tendency on the part of many persons inter- ested in natural resources to emphasize that this or that par- ticular resource is the most im- portant. Some have contended that the forests are the most important asset, others 'coal, others maintain that the soil, with its fertility, is the most important, and, of late years, great stress has been laid upon the statement that water is the chief asset--the prediction be- ing made that the nation which has the most and cheapest water-power available is "des- tined to take precedence in the world of commerce. As a mat- ter of fact, however, all these various interests are interde- pendent. If any one feature of our natural resources is to be placed before others, probably it could be most reasonably urged that a fertile condition of the soil is the most important natural asset to be safeguard- ed; because, for his sustenance on the earth, man requires food, raiment and shelter, and these essentials are supplied him, in one form or another, either di- rectly or indirectly, from the soil. It must be manifest, therefore, that the factors which make for the permanence of the soil's productivity are of paramount ' importance; and hence the subject of the con- servatiop and use of waters as a natural agset must, among other things, be considered in its prime relationships to. the sub- ec of the productivity of the 80 It should be. borne in mind that the greatest danger which besets the natural resources of not only this country, but of the world, is the undue disturbance of the balance which Nature seeks to maintain,

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