Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 3 Sep 1925, p. 3

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far-off Straits Settlements, A. B. M is work- ing In the interests of and no | dotibt as the result of his efforts the 1 | Bingapore Free Press has the follow Ing to say of this country: Aeon "At t Capada's industrial wheat--$1.27 to , "| future has hardly begun. Great' shipping: points, accord- y © t towns do exist and some big indus- ts. PRR ood, $7.50 "to $7. tries, but for the present and for . 200d, | many years to come her energies. will !1 be. absorbed bythe conquest of, the ,|1and and the bringing of it into. culti- .50; | vation.. Looking at the spirit of her cows, choice Peope and the past history of ihe 4 to| Uni tates, there can. be no 50; canners and cutters, $1.50 to| tation in recognizing in Canada one. butcher bulls good, $4.50 to(of the greatest world powers of the Wes i , Tair, $3. 0 ; B a, i on SRE pr ERLE: (1 uf el pn, mod Hn Hr .b. t 4 . 0 $6.26; do, r, $4. 0 $6.25; » Hay--No. 2, per ton, $16; No. 3, calves, choice, $11 to $11.50; do; med. | D® immeasurably. proud." : er ton, $11 to $12; mixed, per ton, | $8.50 to $9.50; do, com. SLO. to iG G. Van der Kop, editor of the ) to $11; lower grades, $6 to $9. |$5:50+ milch cows, choice, $70 to $80; | "Interocean," the only magazine pub- heese--New, large, 24 to 24%c; do, fair, $40 to $60; springers, choice, | lished in the "Middle East," and who ns, 24% to 25c; triplets, 25 to|$80 to '$95; good light sheep, $7 "to| once visited this country, has had tho; Stiltons, 26 to 27c. Old, large, $8; heavies and bucks, $5 to $6; good | many times a good word to say for 0.20; twins, 29 to 80c; triplets, lambs, $18 to $13.25; do, med., $1275 Canada. Dili Pint rvmuer print 2,85, 0% SEL 6,18: do) Curtin tn and of vse gran 41%e; No. 1 creamery, '40%c; No. 2, fed and watered $18.85: do. fob. growing aréas and a wide diversity 38 to 88%c. Dairy prints, 28% to $13.25; do, country points, $18; do, of other vegetable resources. Canada 6 25: sel ,71.| 18 rich in minerals, her animal indus- Frah a , in cartons; 41 off cars; $14.25; select premium, $2 tries are a leading source of national to 42¢; loose, -39 '0 -40c; fresh firsts, MONTREAL. wealth, her forests products provide 86 to-87c; seconds, 82-to 88c. Oats--No. 2 CW, 66%c; No, 3 CW, |a large surplus for export, while the Posted 3 BOE ys Chickens, spring. 60c; extra No. 1 feed, 60c. Flour-- | greater portion of the product of her to 28¢; do, 8 to 4 Ibs, 22c; roosters, | Man. Spring wheat pats., firsts, $0.80; | factories find a market outside Can- 18¢; ducklings, 5 Ibs. and up, 27 to 0c, | Seconds, $8.80; strong hekers' 550; | ada. The quality of her products is ns--Can., handpicked, 1b, 6%c; Winter pais, thoice NE Ly interesting world consumers, and it is 0 en Ma Ll 8 LD (id. | but natural that the thoughts of these y EPEREEE flour, bags, . flour--Toronto, 90 per cent. ts. per barrel, in carlots," Toronto, .10; seaboard, in bulk, $6.10. traw---Carlots, per ton, $& to. $8.50. ners a 0' oo ea dition . LE ROUX COUPLE STARTED TRIP IN SOUTH AFRICA |. +" Mr. and Mys, Dan J. Le Roux, of Kimberley, South Africa, who were in Toile eo ak make the record of being. the first people who have ever hiked' ground the globe on foot. They started from Johannesburg, South Africa, on January 31,1922, and have since walked through Portuguese North Africa and the Naive Territories to Egypt. They have also hiked across { Italy, Switzerland, ®F'rance, 'Belgium, Holland, England and part of Canada. To date they have walked 8,414 miles and sailed 1,100 miles: Bad weather, Y | 'which they encountered, has resulted in their now being elghit months behind Fa, Hh off int rhiradey, Seger 4 |" es id Pe RIE Derious, primes, 6c. i v "com } ! Maple roduce--Syrup, » imp. | Brah, $28.25. Shorts, $80.25. Mid- fore consume flor the dry. weather|, "oi schedule, which contemplated. girdling the globe in five years. | gut; $0 40+ por B.gal. tin, $2.80 por |dlin 9 92025. Hay, No. 2, per ton, | Doig eonsum a - Ba 'weeks, is a good Despite the fact that he pushes a wheelbarrow containing 200 pounds of gal.; maple sugar, 1b., 25 to 26¢c. can lots, $14. duction . : Ey Ah ita all along ute, Mr, Le' Roux covers about 16 miles a day. Honey--60-1b, 183c per 1b.} Hogs, straight lots of good weight, : : o| impedimenta all along the route, x 10-1, tis, 18%c; B-1b. tine dc; 2%- ($14; selects, $14.50; sows, $11 to| Do we as Canadians fully appreci y| This veteran athlete, who is 40 years of age and fought on the Boer side [jp tins, 16% to 16e. ? $11.50. ate'what we have, and are we doing 'during the South African war, is gathering material for a book and lectures = our part in making them known? during the course of his Deregrinations. ot Forty-Eight Marooned ENGINEER GIVES LIFE, rt SOLDIERS! MEMORIAL tome. and wishing ther: Tuck. on Drifting Ice Floe TO SAVE PASSENGERS Something Going On. all d H al mess left hall a . cr . . 3 - y " DECORATED BY PRINCE Boe yal High 9, Jott the hail A despatch from Montreal says: --| Driver Sticks to His Cab in| - There isa febrile temperarent, not red Soles to British Rail. | 1015. Good. RalloW" and there. was| Forty-six men and two women, mar-| Fuco of Inevitable Death. | infamiliar In domestic ite. and the ! rr H R.H. to British Rail-| tremendous cheering from the crowd | 20nd on a drifting ice floe 50 yards 8 . social circle, which demands that The. fire. near au 'thieateded 2 hal, Ya d ] 1 who packed the street outside. square, 60 miles from land, in a driv-| A despatch from Pittsburg, Pa.,| there shall always be something going Jie new; of Barbens bind way Yi ers at Buenos The Prince wad sot greatly in the ing rainstorm which lasted ten hours. says: --Giving his life that 200 pas-|on. There is no rest or peace with _ hon oy oo okin, B Aires. public: eye; but interest in hie. activi. This is the story of the wreck of the sengers riding with him on the Pitts-| such a spirit. If the talk slackens rmers neighborhood joined Adres] ties continue unabated, and every-| Hudson Bay supply ship Bayeskimo|burg-Buffalo Flier might escape, | or seems to approach a lull, the res- > ; (3. 4eehch around A despatch from Buss ares where he. goes 3. erowd "gathers At/in Ungava Bay, on July 23, as told | Enginee: A. G. Miller, aged 55, of | tive one feels that it must be replen-~ A teh from Salt te. Male says: --The prince of , Sh Sor Bis requens the Red of Houck out-| PY one of the survivors who has|Oil City, stuck to his cab, applying] ished as fuel is thrown to a wood fire Ni sepa ie Pot . Marie, | visiting British institut ons t the'side the Basualdo. Mansion, the|feached Montreal, every possible brake, as -he saw his|on a winter night. If a RUest is 'en- °N., says:--Forest fires have reach: city. attended, a hospital ball at | EPrincas nome here, Bos heer Potmoved After the little ship had been|train ride at a 50-mile-an-hour clip | tertained, it is thought that his every Proportions in scattered Tsaure lon Friday night, h His Royal H gs | "| 6queezed in pack ice on her journey l into an open switch below Braeburn.| moment must have an occupation - His chie a, gat a Fh i > Royal Hight Jouched Thurs through the bays and inlets of the] The fireman, J. H. Fidler, aged 45,| found for it. - 'Emmett County, a Jul where Seitioh rain n gr ay uals in a sub-Arctic, She sprung a leak and { also of Oil Jity, was severely injured,| Whatever the place, whenever the ' than .1 ¥, 41 many o: bled. The Prince laid} Hurlingham, wien ot sank, carrying with her supplies for |but his condition is reported a3 "fav-| time, the tongue, the mind, the fect 2 han 1,000 per- | men, were assemble 8 to | chukkers- of- polo. ay ft oo all the outposts of civilization, as Well {orable to recovery." and hands must never be still. The Th Hana rir fa. wreath a nema A Se attended the wedding ? or as for Eskimo settlements in a vast| As the engine hit the switch, jump- | heauty and the blessedness of quiet-- Hag wad ett oupoyes of the ral way spake briefly, | Lewis: Lacey, the inte-national polo| "O"thern territory. Capt. J. L. Lloyd |ed high into the air and overturned, | aye, and the vital necessity, too--are Conte bo ho ge Pn 00icraft killed at the " phaiad . ' POO transferred. his crew. and passengers | Miller was pinioned beneath the lev-| fever recognized and conceded. Life y upper Peninsula, ig-|thanking his a ce for their wel yor. a a to the floating ice and ten hours later | ers of his cab. Half an hour later he must be firever a rush and a siir, a i few hours rad beeh [sm were picked up by the steamer Nas-| was extricated; horribly scalded, his| fret and a fever. In contact with copie and landed at one of the trad-|peivic bone broken, and suffering from such a disturbing incendiary spirit, esident of Pellston, inelud- | = . :WORD PUZZLE . ing. settlements. internal-injuries. He died shoftly | one longs for 'a presence whose com- ing w fens ot ons dem, was Ai a Epp ° afterwards inthe Allegheny Valley | inp is tranquility, whose tacit sym- uk Wanted Liner Turned Back MALS 3 h Hospital, at Tarentum, thy is a.benison, who can afford to 'ay. cut : ¢ started on the oi The passengers escaped with litt'e Ba silences more Fw is in the h on oh ta NE ad a to Port of Sailing more than a severe shaking-up, power of words to convey. x +88 ttagers o- i ----------ie Nature did not intend that we Building--Floricul- | serted their camps, although 4 sud- A despatch from New York says:-- | Traffic in Narcotics should forever be on the go. Sleep, d stab N : | shifl in, the Hind equed | ho resort| The White Star liner Olympic reach- Greatest Past Y. solitude and pelaxation are of her ES, SR idings, temporarily at least: par ed Quarantine last week several hours we wa oT iainment iu certainlyaas vigilance, v ling--Nationa When it WsE_ seen~that ths flames late due to encouritering heavy seas associative toll and strenuous effort. W of passenger Cars. |i... pou, iq 1; ; 8 rst: "Bil Mieel wer Aond to a de lest the first day out from Cherbourg, It | Lo desert their posts. Jus was an eventful voyage, an: when it was thought the gi would The high seas pls. o] much sea- ies, furs, c. sure sickness aboard the ship. Captain A despatch from Geneva Says i-- Traffic in' opium and other narcotics throughout the world during the past year was the greatest since the to be still are the ones whose accom- plishment excels the frantic gyration They who know how to rest and when of those who hustle without a plan, be. aesio the wind "shift, a =turdcd their} vourse away from the lake. W. Marshall was offered $100,000 by a Syrian heiress if he would turn his ship around and go back to the French port on the second day out. Mile, Izzit Pasha, a pretty Syrian girl, about twenty, was the passenger who offered a fortune to Captain Marshall to swing around. - She was cial adyiser to the Sultan of Turkey, who. . recently died and left her $5,000,000. eet eis Nasty, Nasty Man. With tears on her baby cheeks little 'Winnie ran up to the policeman. very seasick: Her father was.finan-/ League of Nations Opium Advisory Commission was organized, Sir John Campbell, of India, declared at the Commission's session here, Seizures have increased enormously, he said. Manufacturers of narcotics 'and an illicit distribution syndicate are well organized, « with vast resources, he charged. Sir John said production cdlild not be controlled because it was impossible to depend upon the honesty 'of some: Governments. = ~ League statistics show that ap- proximately 4,000 chests of opium were shipped to the Orient during the past year, although conditions in Europe and North America are im- save to keep on hustling. Those who make a great show of business with- out getting much done are impatient with. those who take time to think and who believe in circumspection before they leap. , The hasty pluck at the sleeves of the deliberate and want to know when they may expect to see results. They pretend to put a premium on quick decision; -but, as .2 matter of. fact, they never learned ihe virtues of pa~ tience and precaution, and others sometimes must pay for their head- long raghness. -It is right that those who get things done should be extolled when the achievements are worth proving somewhat. It is impossible for the condition of China to be worse, it is said. Hailstones So Large Man Knocked Unconscious A despatch from Fredericton, N.B,, says:--So big were the hailstones "Oh, youll easily catch him!" ex. | during a recent storm in Glougester A despatch from London saysi-- plained Winnfe triumphantly. They've | County that a man was rendered un- Before. the British . Association. at Just carried him into that drug store." [conscious at 'Caraquet, accordin to: Southampton, Alexander Howard, of TT ° Te re, Tomer Winn, POR | the botany section, read a paper Ktat- 4. 8t Pays Cathedral will hid 25; med on a visit i te ae ae oe tors 000, peop: > "Many window-panes were broken, would face a serious timber deficiency. "Pledse, sir," she sobbed, "will you come and lock a nasty man up?" "What's he been doing?" asked the man in blue kindly. "Oh," wailed the child, "he's bruken up my hoop with his nasty bicycle." 'Has he?' sald the constable, pre- paring to go te the scene of the crime. "Well, where is he?" while, but it does not mean much to set 1a motion any process of produe- tion without prefiguring the cost and trying te ascertain the outcome. pis 5 Timber Deficiency Threatens World _ VERTICAL 1--=Modern maids iT 2--Decoyed w= 3=Yes o mL _ 4--Scene of action or combat 5--Stingy person 2 : L7--Kind of wine Sar ooling agent " {= bliring iA one another maak RIZONTAL 365i. pest ; Rl (abbr,) : shes X 8 Ih. TWA AR He especially advocated emeourage- TOKIO AND YOKOHAMA FLOODED |i iid = : : Tag : PRAM a ber, stating that British railway com- 5 or penies now demanded Russian and German oak and American mahogany =. .: > and walnut, at i Recently one railway issued a de- mand for American walnut "sawn by cm : A despatch from Tokio says:--| A 'hluff near Hongo gave away * | Nearly two-thirds of Tokio was inun- | burying several persons, and six oc-| American workmen in America." The |d as a result of thirty-six hours | cupants were dug out when a land-! cast of carrying lumber 80 miles to dated 2s "Thirty thousand' are | slide 'entombed 'an automobile near London, he said, was equal to import and 80,000 residents of Tokio | Odawara, which city is flooded. A from the United States: ¥ and Yokohama, s ipléss. Casual- | street car plunged twenty feet into a ties € = the moat of the imperial palace when| ' = . an embankment gave way; five pas- sengers were rescued .from drowning. erturned on the Chuwo line _

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