Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 28 Oct 1926, p. 7

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\ we mingled with fr. ? Ten or more towns an 'sald 'been "in North ar 3 ohn, ng to New rinswic : Pulp and Paper Milis, Lt - % an announcement F. W Clark, president of per pany. By the terms of the agreement |- few company 1s being formed called] Quebec Logging Corporation, for| = charter is now be- |. Sup .. of Quebec, - 1s to erect a + Power from ~Toronto, pulp mill that will utilize the Ottarde Falls Plant. Ont.--The Ontario Govern: ofidary liné work as well Winnipeg, Ausialisn amy Minister crease the numbers of ducks dnd ; oungést o on- A . : 22 ¢ matkras, i: the nerdheen AND MAINTAIN OUR EXCHANGES wealtli's Premiers. tenance, the Provincial Dept. ---- London.--Political England has al- culture' has sent nort ride to be sown by aeroplane over the vast duek marsh known as Moose Lake r' Lake. This vast marsh, 20 by 90 miles long, is the London. -- "Buy British goods" might'have been adopted as the sl i Great Britahii; 4, Stanley Melbourne Bruce, Commonw Se | BUY AND SELL WITHIN THE EMPIRE Sir Philip Cunliffe-Lister Strikes Hopeful Note at Imperial Conference. forced to restrict NN oo a. rr OF SELF-GOVERNING DOMINIONS AND OF Minister, the " their credit and their Poxierence; < Jy duck: marsh on the contingnt, and also constitutes: the lar, musk- rat harborage. a 'Regina, Sask.--The Saskatchewan Hog Pool and Fhe. Saskatchewan Live X- Pool: 3 'Nesently agreed to ... unite Hope to shave the new pool in operation by the beginning of the new year, . perial Economic: Committee and the Edmonton, Alta--Alberta has the] Empire Marketing Board; most wonderful-wild game: hinterland). Sit Philip Cuhliffe-Lister struck a America, according to Adolf | iopeful note on Empire trade. In'the Muller of Norristown, Pa., Game Com. | first Half of this year, he said, one- missioner for that state, He express. third of the British imports came from ed that opinion after spending a monith in the interior of the province, ; exploring and taking motion pictures, British exports went to points within including some of caribou on the trek. the Empire. : Vancouver, BiC-- The foreign trade "We'shall need each other's riarkets exports. out_of V. ver have risen |? the next few years," Sir Philip ex- 200 Ai EP re claimed; "particularly because of the : hig the. Vancouver Merch, economic after-effects of the Great ants' Exchange, while imports have| War and their correction. Foreign inereased 51 per cent. Sountaloes which are Seeking to stabil- 1 exchanges will inevitably be of Thursday's sittings of the Imperial Conference, review and trade conditions by Sir Philip Cunliffe- Lister, president. of 'the- Trade, was echoed throughout-a sub- 'Sequent statement by' Lt.-Col. C. Amory, Secretary of State for Domin. fon Affairs, on the work of the Im- same period nearly one-half of the | prch more we buy and sell within the Em- A review "of. Empire| pire the easier it is for our exchanges." rd of | portant factors in the development of inter-imperial trade as being the fol- lowing: Empire shopping weeks, now a regular feature points within the Empire and in the ' should become supplies was bound to defeat itself, They will buy Tess, The T us to maintain tralian, Sir Philip summed up the most im- the old "grads" against Oxford i school, he took a brief fling at the Migration. English bar, but left that when the Sanitation, war came to accept a qaptaincy and He declated that as a result of the| pec Port In the Gallipoli offensive, in which are! throughout ' a national habit." tered politics. Any policy which sought to hold up ai ; Amnesty in Belgium to Mark \ Mark | Poultry Congress of 19237. : eof Cro "The World's Poultry Congress ex- Brussels, Belgium.--The marriage 'of Crown Prine 'of Belgium and Princess rid of Sweden in Stockholm, the date for, which has been: advanced to November: , will be the oeeasion-of 4 speelal sine in "Belgium, 'it is learned in court Belgikn royal family will em- October 80 on the steamer Marie Jose: for Gothenburg, from which a spe¢ial train will them to! Ve ection. Commereial exhibits will Stoekholm' for the civil cerentony. be one of the main attractions, and one en -* hibits will cover more than two hun- dred thousand square feet of 'floor space. This exhibition will make 'a record for any single branch of agri- cuture. The national educational ex- y will occupy 'a floor space of } y- five thousand square feet. There will be approximately ten thousand ive 'birds on exhibition,-and these willlin- clude specimens of every breed and variety in the American standard of HURRICANE SWEEPS CUBA LEAVING DEAD, INJURED AND HOMELESS IN ITS WAKE ALL CANADIANS SAFE. The first train since the storm broke arrived from Santiago on Thursday.| | y 10" | Porfirio A. Bonet, Cuban consul-gen-|- Canadian lives were lost in the eral to the Dominican' Republié, a hurricane. 3 'passénget : trair ! n hour from Manaca, in Santa I. Clara Province, Ail trees and tele- Ss were plo y and telegraph poles were lying for aid. | it. Nearlyevery house in every town \ alon| ute "destroyed. Not Long: FAL wa station war» id to have 1 _was standing. |. } unable to give any and injured but | reported la indicate t ° assés | terrific. ex eigh ts. It is! It is fea the Sent work: re been | ers compiete: heir investigations the story of destruction and loss of life in Havana City will be repeated on a he. entire 2 TY Tm incubator: manufacturing firm has al- ready taken seven thousand square feet of space. Those desiring to ex- hibit should communicate with their National Commi the World's Poultry Congress Secre- tary, Ottawa. should receive immediate attention, in order hat every detail may be complete forithe opening of the Congress, July 27, 1927. Yet better, if, where'ér we roam, Anotlter country, truer home, Is in our hearts . . . If in the joy of heaven we live, Nor only on what earth can give. she agreed to take this irect wi ttees or direct with youngster. Matters such ad this b cooing. ---------- Home. Toit © Trench door a baby .0. J. Ketso ireland; 7, J. B. M, Hertzog, ready dubbed Stanley, Melbourne Bruce, Australia's youthful Prime "baby of the Imperial which opened Oct. 19. Mr. Bruce is-42 years old and is the youngest Premier of the British Com- monwea ths. He is a native-born Aus- He was educated in England, however, at Cambridge University and still recall" how he theiped row his varsity to victory in. 1904. which he was twice wounded. That he Was a thoraugh soldier is attested by A pi p the: Military Cross and "Croix de Great Britain; "buying British goads Guerre which he possesses, After the Sir Phillp said he did: not think | Yar he returned to Australia and en. there was any serious risk of produe- ers' pools unduly raising prices. The producers 'were bound to meet keen competition and it must be the object of the producers to increase the vol- ume of their sales and strengthen their good will. -- ein Woman and Child. Deserted by its mother, a wretched, ! tio emaciated infant was left without a friend in the worid and only through its weakness and misery could it make! : an appeal to the heart. The problem D388 included: Bran of 'what to do_with it was generously | s solved by a sympathetic woman who | just at the opportune moment made applieation for a bright, healthy child, and after a few minutes conversation | $1.30, f.o.b. shi to freights, aban Her assiduous care and devotion soon made it fat, healthy and "You would 'make a fine ma- tron for an Infants' Home," I remark- ed when she called some months Jutery to show how her charge was getting | potent, per barrel, in carlots, Toronto | to 70 Ibs., $23; 70 to 90 lbs. along. "No, indeed," was her reply,| 8s "a woman can love one baby, but when it comes to a dozen crying youn she is most likely to hate them." so God wisely sends the babies one at) a time and in His wise providence Pro-, oo vides that they may receive the un-' divided attention of one woman. does not mnywhere endorse or encour- | age the "institutional" plan of caring to b | firsts, 46 to 47¢; fresh seconds, Leaving THE MOTHERLAND i 5, Walter 8. Munroe, Newfoundland; 6, Sir James Cralg, Northern Union of South Africa; 8, J. G. Coates, Dominion is to be noted that these empire representatives meet on Premier Baldwin being merely "primus inter pates." present the end of the week. ished by the same time, thé yield per acre at bushels of wheat for Alberta, and Prairie Provinces, prosperous year in the West. man in Memory of War Days. i veillier, fare Carlo Casino. "I was the commandant," from Nice to try his luck at gutter, A triple marriage service now is projected for Princess Astrid and Crown Prince Leopold of Belgium, The firat will be a civil ceremony at Stockholm on Nov. 4; for which the bridegroom and the King and Queen of the Belgians will come to Sweden. After that the Royal wedding party will set off for Belgium on the Swelish warship Fylgta, and on Nov. 10 there will be a religious service in Brussels, probably a' double one, both Roman Catholic and Protestant, in order to many's entrance into the League. gotten. -- pee is Nought nobler 1s, than to be free: The stars of heaven are free: be cause Pe, No. 2 North., $1.52; No. .3 North., $1.46. Y meet the religious preferences of the 1b two high contracting parties. In ampiitad of ifberty Their joy is to obey the laws, THE WEEK'S MARKETS _ TORONTO. Man. wheat--N -, 1 North., $1.56; 36c. Storage extras, 43c; do, 40c; do, seconds, 35 to 86c. Pouitsy, dressed-- Chicker., spring, squabs, 1 to 1% Ibs, 32 to 86¢; do, spring, over 4 lbs, 30 to 32¢; do, firsts, Mar. oats--No. 2 CW, nominal; No, $ doned gsters| twins, 20% to 21c; riplets, 22c. Stil- | rolls, $39.50 per And tons, 23¢. 3, [Yollow, 90c; No. 8 yellow, 88c, horts, ; good feed flour, per bag, $2.30. zal, $2.25 Hix Syrup, per Imp. Lo = | gal. A 0 $2.30; per G5-gal., $2.15 po ToAs-~10, Lob. x ipping |g) $2.25 per gal.; male suger, lb, 25 ronto; do, second pat., $7.8 spring, 8 to 4 lbs., 32 to 86c; do, 2% to 8% Ibs, 30 to 33¢; do, 2 to 214, Ibs., 30c;=hens, over 5 1bs., to 5 Ibs, 28¢; do, 8 to 4 Ibs, 24¢; | roosters, 22¢; turkeys, 40c; ducklings, | 6 lbs. and up, 86c. Beans--Can, hand-picked, $2.80 per ushel; primes, $2.50 to $2.60 bushel. Maple p not quoted; No. 1 feed, 62¢c; No. 2 eed, nomina!; Western grain quota- ms in cif. ports. Am. corn, track, Toronto--No. 2 lifeed--Del. Montreal freights, per ton, $27.25; per ton, $29.25; middlings, = 41.25 to' 26c. Honey-- 60-Ib. tins, 12% to 18¢; 10. 1b tins, 123¢ to 13c; 6-lb. tins, 13 to 1845¢} 214-h. ins, 15% E 14ec. ! somb honey. .40 to $4 per dozen. Buckwheat--856¢, nominal. |. Smoked meats--Hams, hr 838 to Rye--No. 2, 88e. 84c; cooked hams, 47 to 48¢c; smoked Man. flour--First pat. $8.30, To-| 0. Ont. good milling wheat--$1.28 to pping points, according Barley---Malting, 69 to 62c. rolls, 28 to 80c; breakfast bacon, 35 {to 40c; backs, boneless, 85 to 43c. 90 per cent., Cured meats--Long clear bacon, 50 $21.60; $22.34; lightweight iid heavyweight Ont. flour--Toronto, .80; 'seaboard, in bulk, $6.80. 20% Ibs. and up, Cheese--New, large, 20 to 20%c¢; rolls in barrels Old, large, : ideal woather continues, threshing will be nearly completed south of this city by The bulk of threshing north of here should be fin- complete clean-up there is not expect- ed for three weeks, Threshing returns, loth south and north of Calgary, show least equal to the most sanguine expectations that were entertained even before August rains Edo hb The grade will be low, but it looks once more like a total of 120,000,000 aggregate of 375,000,000 for all three Barring belated and' unforeseen calamity, the Western farmers will receive as much money for their wheat as they did in 1925, and 1925 was a ------e ni French "Cabby" Punches Ger- Paris.--"You were the chief of the German prison camp back of St. Quen- tin during the war?" asked Jean Se- a French chauffeur, when his ded in front ofthe Monte replied the portly German who had journeyed roulette, "Well, then, take that!" shouted the Frenchman, landing a punch on the other's nose, knocking him into the At the police station Seveillier told the officials that he was willing to go to jail for a year if necessary, since he had kept his vow to repay some of the cruelties he said he had endured . y o during his days as a prisoner of war, Triple Marriage Ceremony The German officer refused to make Will Unite Royal Houses{a complaint, and Seveilller was re- leased after the desk officer advised him to read the speech of friendship delivered by Foreign Minister Briand at Geneva upon the occasion of Ger- "I prefer Poincare's speech at Bar- le-Duc," said Seveillier, referring to the Premier's statement that Ger- many's war guilt' could not be for- 28c; do, 4 [and experimental . maintenance, education and training of the native-born child until it reach- es the productive age, or, in order to compensate for a falling birth rate, or to speed up settlement, upon propa- ganda and other effort to transplant in. Canada an acceptable person of productive age from another country. Records show that sifice 1870 we have brought somewhat over 41% million people to Canada at a direct cost to the government of 37 million dollars, Estimating the expenditure of thé railways, provinces and other active gencies at an additional 45 million dollars, the aggregate cost would be 82 million dollars, as an average cost per head of less than $20. Has Can- ada ever spent money more advan- tageously? Is it conceivable that any national investment could possibly yield greater returns? THE EUROPEAN POINT OF VIEW It is instructive to contemplate the unfriendly attitude of European na- tions towards the emigration of t citizens, except to their own overseas possessions. No matter how fierce the economic pressure, how widespread unemployment and distress, no pro- gressive nation deliberately promotes emigration to evacuate obvious surplus population, There is, on the contrary, a keen appreciation of the potential value to the state of the vital asset, and natibns will go to almost any lengths and incur the most fantastic expenditure on relief, to preserve this precious asset intact during periods of economic stress, in the hope of the un- employed population being ultimately absorbed in gainful production, THE SENSE OF HUMAN VALUES Wo in Canada lack almost complete- ly this sense of human values. We sit idly by whilg three hundred million dollars worth of our productive citi- zens, the flower of the nation, move across the boundary each year. Even the problem of their replacement gives comparatively small concern. For a country with our fabulous, undevelop- ed resources, it seems an amazingly unintelligent attitude of 'mind. The colonization problem in Canada is not In any sense a class problem. Every citizen, irrespective of occupation, has a direct financial interest in its effec- | tive solution. If every class of the community would intelligently study the effect of an increased producing popuiation upon its own fortunes, we would rpeedily.create a favorab'e mass opinion on this subject. an pe Natural Resources Bulletin. The value of agricultural research as carried out at agricultural colleges farms is seldom fully appreciated says the Natural Re- sources Intelligence Service of the De- partment of the Interior at Ottawa. The commercial value of Marquis wheat has been widely 'heralded and undoubtedly it has added miilions of dollars annually to Canada's wealth and status as a wheat-producing coun try, but it is one of the few instances that have been sufficiently spectacular to catch the public eye. Agricuitural research by both fed- eral and provincial governments along lines of plant culture and anima, breeding, diseases and biights, fegding and so on have undoubtediy added stupendous sums to the farming"in come of this country, much of this work being done without recognition 6c; twins, 27c; rd--Pure tierces, 16 to 17c;|and without appreciation of its econ- "tri lets, 28¢. Old Stiltons, 30c. tubs, 17% to 8c; pails, 18 to 18%e¢; [ omic benefits. utter-- Finest cre:n.e*y prints, prints, 19 to 19%e¢; shortening, tierces, An excellent example is furnished in Ht te Bes Ho. 3 crgamety, 35 $0 Soci 1124 Jo Jes Subs, 13 0 hs; Pails, | a statement recently made by J. B. 0. 0 3be. Dairy prints 0 14c; blocks, 0 c. 1 ; Guel He to 30. ' Heavy steers, choice, $7 to $7.25; Reynolds, president of the (jue ph good, $6.50 to $6.75; butcher steers Agricultural Society in particular ref- productive citizen, the | We may logically conclude. that it would apparently be sound business to expend up to this amount upon the gga Fresh extras, in cartons, 56 do, 35 to $6.25; do, == | COWS, choice, $4.75 to $5; } 'good, $4.50 to $5.50; bolo | to $4; canners and cutters, $2.25 to $3; =O : (ONTARIO CABINET ~~ ; a to. ers In ABNEY provinelal cabinet: Hea. Willem 8 Ll Jamieson, | : New Ministers i» Ferguson Cabinet D. Monteith, provincial treasurer, and Hon. Dr. David | good milch cows, $70 to $100; spring- i ers, choice, $80 to $115; med. COWS, | 846 to $60; feeders, good. $6 to $6.55; do, fair, $5 to $6; do, med., $7 to $9; calves, choice, $18 to $14; do, good, $9 to $12; do, med., $7 to $9; assers, $4.50 to $6; good lambs, 11.75 to $12 do, bucks, $9 to $9.75; good light sheep, §6 to $7; heavy sheep and bucks, $4; hog® thick smooths, fed 'and watered, $12.10; do," f.0.b., $11.50; do, country points, $11.25; do, off cars, $12.50; select premium, $2.87, MONTREAL, Oate, CW, No, 2, 72¢; do, CW, No. 3, 68¢. Fiour, Man. spring wheat pats., feats; $8.30; «Man spring "wheat 'pels. seconds, $7.80; do, Man. spring wheat pats; strong bakers', $7.60; do, winter pats. choice," $6.50. Rolled | oats, bag 90 lbs., $3.76. Bran, $27.25. ! Shorts, . $29.26. Midi nga, $40.25, Lr No. 2, per ton, car lots, $14 to 15. 3 Cheese, finest wests., 17% to 17%e¢; do, Aneltt t ensts, 19%; butter, No. 1 u , to A gs, stor- ath 42 to 43¢; do, s firsts, 88 to 39c; do, storage secon y 88 to 84c; do, fresh extras, 62c; do. fresh firsts, 47c. Com. cows, 31.76 to $3; com. bulls, $8.25 to $3.50; veal calves, good qual- do, fair, $11.50; grass ca $4; lambs, good, hogs, thick smooths an c; fresh extras, loose, 55c; fresh | choice, $6.50 to $6.75; do, good, $6 to com., $4.60 to $5.60; butcher do, fair to | good, $8.75 to $4.50; butcher bulls, nas, $3.60 erence to the work of the Field Hus- bandry department of that institution. The one department, according to Mr. Reynolds, has been successful in pro- ducing, by selection and breading, im- proved strains of oats, wheat and bar- ley. These improved strains have been broadcast over the province, and have enabled the farmers to increase the yield per acre in these grains during the last eighteen years by over $134,- 000,000. This extra wealth would have maintained over this period of eigh- teen years thirty colleges in the scale of the Ontario Agricultural College. --e pd" "Commonwealth of British Nations," His Majesty's Term London: -- A significant' Séhtance marks King George's reply to the mes- sage of loyalty sent by the Imperial Conference at its opening session, in 50 far, there has been a reversion to "Commonwealth." In his Majesty's reply, which was atts Sotlugls firing of ti Conference, t i o s shall follow with interest and sym- pathy your discussions of those im- portant questions which will come be- fore you, and the settlement of which, I trust, will promote the unity 'and od, $11.25; ho shops, $13; do selects, $12.75. oe Sn " 4 + of the Commonivealth of Nations i ea view of the fact that practically . I throughout the Conference discussion, the old term "Empire" rather than { "1 : i px 5 A 3 ove ot, 4 Se

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