Milverton Sun, 7 Mar 1912, p. 6

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- Sane Government's Order 18 Whitney announced in the Legislature the results of an or- No ernment, giving the’ Province run- ning ae through her sister Prov- ince, and certain parcels of tax- free land on the Nelson River and its pen ‘Saal for the remaining eee ee River ion is hereby made for railway terminals docks, and elevators; but the tent of these strips along the five and Nas must not be greater than ten Ree ‘is thus given to Hudson 1.|the Nelson River will be transfer- Bay the een saat and Churchill, an additional way 200 feet in width fro River to-the soa prailatles point on the Hudsoi etn The T. granted Panning rights | to distance over the The strip from the boundary to cation from the PS, of Hudson Bay at any point ‘or the selection of these lands Ontario is allowed a period of five years. e MAP SHOWING BOUNDARY SETTLEMENT AS SALE WIDE / HUD ION’ BAY {HEALTH | BACKWARD CHILDREN. ‘The conclusions of men of science who have lately been giving muc attention to dull and backward chil- ade a great change in of physicians schools may We can al minewbee how little ef- fort was made a few years ago deal selentifically need this class. child, who air. me on sumption that all dull and ore ae children were lazy and obsti- ne English expert suggests that these children should be divided, to ito two elasses—thoe| | ni see that a form of treatment, suit- able for the first cannot be suitable * for the seco! Me a we are “innately dull” must be, ac as just that. They are often, anally in European countries and BHUENEE grants the descendants o! Y line of peasant tillers of the soil -from whom mental effort has never been deman t hoceeetly feeble-minded, but reese slo — mind fill their destined Boas tions in life very oa hae are ue fitted for Wate mena hem subject. needless Halts when we urge then into competition | | ith the alert and quick-witted. It is characteristic of the innately dull at after reaching a certain grade =the y stop short, and odie been blished in the saolisal ue nals. This acknowledges eople de catch i a draught or go storm, ae get etilled and the cold did it—with come encouragement and assistance one cannot hi| do it, and those. who subject them- selves the most to cold are least lia- - Zamarae voices —Ocr cause any tendency to sctching cold ons whose | People Indignant 0 Over Long List of oe aS - — ” ho is pei ie reond aaa ‘ance i ieee t is ay and N. O. one for concern. it pice alT |THE NEWS IN A PARAGRAPH! 2 HAPPENINGS FROM ALL OVER THE GLOBE IN A NUTSHELL. Canada, tho Empire and the World in General peters Your Eye: “CANADA. Nearly 2,000 workmen are oD strike in Toronto. The O.P.R. has purchased 1,800 acres of land in a Winnipeg euburb for yards. Winnipeg has decided to issue bonds to the iisuGe of £960,000 fer city mapraveinen isi J Palangio of Cochrane was fined $150 and oe for violating the i pemuaten en ie nn Montr a doctors have lke drawing anes from the city health depart A new ala line to operate to and the Niagara report 0 Education showed that the Province suffers from lac! Berlin, Ont., has desided to ab don ie $80, 000 producer savas md on pera ee firemen in Canada have been an equality with O.P. R firemen regarding pay and conditions. The Ontario Good Roads Associa-| 4 the Dominion Government for road improvement. Fifty per cent. ‘of the school chil- dren of Montreal are pronounced iseaced in a report of the Medical Health Office law to give fixed assessment to the big paper eeba pulp mill which is to the cha: rge of murdering his young daughter by throwing her om. bodily GREAT BRITAIN. anti-suffragette campaign was launched ay» mass meeting in Al- Hall, ‘ “The Britich suffragettes started on a window-breaking campaign in London, over one hundred, in- cluding i Pankhur st, being Ss eae UNITED STATES. For the first time in the history of aviation, Captain Albert Berry succeeded in descending fifteen t| hundred feet by parachute from a biplane at St. Louis, Mo. GENERAL. and took possession of Juarez with- out loss of life. situation in ce Canton district is causing grave B ANDITS sane IN PARIS. solyed Murders. Rea from Paris, France. Tuesday night, and who died tis remains unsolved. The people are indignant over the long list of un- solved murders and the srpareny insecurity of Paris. In order to allay ae feeling the police an- nounce the arrest of two men and re suspected of bery messenger They also announe- had ‘discovered an it. station Dee hight is uncertain. DUKE OF FIER’S FUNERAL. Remains Momporarily Buried in Royal Vaults at Windsor. A desp: nae oe Windsor, Eng- land, says: body of the late Duke of Tite, a died at Assouan, Egypt, on January 29 from pleur- isy and congestion resulting from aes noe the wreck of the Wednesday in the Royal here. It wij] remain. there until at Mar Lodge, Braemar, Scotland. The funeral service was of the simp- cave. Reporte a to ue -despateh fro: gas Hydro-electric F3 tion decided to ask $50,000,000 from} move i$ Thorold Pah nee eae The Mexican insurrectos captured | s the completion of the family vault | Ontario seer eee Na- tive-Born Son, $en despatch from Toronto are About two weeks ag: condition took a aukune for the ‘amily to the bedside of ‘the dis- tinguished Canadian. Mr. Blake ey consciousness about half an hour before death. As he breathed his last he was surrounded by: his wife, Mr. Hume Blake, K.C., a son, Mrs. ee )G. M. Nanay a daugh- ter, and Dr. Goldie. Samuel Blake, another son, is ey serie in England, was advised of his father’s decease by cable. Bese GRAIN BLOCKADE. American Railroads Cannot Handle Grain From Duluth East. A despatch from Winnipeg eo bond for export, is the. Meio which reached here on Wednesd yator men at Duluth and Sierise are complaining that they are un- able bain sufficient cars to ing grain with the vent sae elevator space is becom- ing very short. It is stated that there is-only about 1,000,000 bush- els space remaining at Duluth, and The Canadian Pacific Railway ship- ments to the South are see oe the other two roads, an pany says it has plenty of lone room at Fort uel PLAN fone TOUR. wee to Journey in Canada From Coast to Coast. A despatch from Ottawa says: An extensive tour of Canada next summer is being arranged by the time Provinces aon be visited, with John, Halifax, an stop Charlottetown. Mes of the trip will be made cers Victoria and Prince Rupert. HORSES Wank DROWNED. Into Deep Water. A despatch from Guelph Bain, and valued at $450, were ywned While ae in; to get them oe au as vater was very dee} at- empts proved Hie aati they were soon ees SHOT ais SISTER. A Winnipeg Boy Resents Being Re- primanded for Laziness. A despatch from Mjonpes. eles Oscar Sigurdson, a seventeen-yea: jot his sister BS woma’ grew, is in a serious condition, one of the two shots which hit os ing bored sitgtals the spin PORT MeNTCOL a HH! ARBOR. C.P.R. Boats to jo oMabe Only One Calla Week at Owen Sound. ‘A despatch from Montreal says: An official statement issued. C.P.R. headquarters announces that at the chante. 3 ieiestion Port MeN Sound, te. e. es heaenarters ot at ol be it ‘on between Nicoll : ond Fort William eek will be made a vos INFLUENZA EN ENGLAND. HuconeMotmer piste Royal and Princess Louise Victims, —__ A despateh from London says: us thi ae es persons in Lon- ii a among Monir al a say! ee eae pee third . time this vee black | aseeee? é nding the funeral services of the ce of Fife, whose sed y a Prices of Cattle. 121-20, Ww | Mont Western, No. 2, 53 to 831-20; do. No. 3, 4, | 51 to 611-20; extra No. 1 feed, 52 to 621-20; Weight of Sleigh Dragged Animals 25, q e says: A team of horses owned by Alex. eel ‘ ided. | yellow, -|—Malting, $1.20 to $1.32. : threo: iNion dollar: PRES OF RW PROMI REPORTS FROM THE LEADI TRADE CENTRES OF AMERICA. Grain, Cheese and Other Produce at Home and Abroad. _BREADSTUFFS, Toronto, Mar. 5.—Flour—Winter eine 90 $3. $5.50; secondpatents, $5, and strong bak- ers’, $4.90, on track, Toronto. Manitoba wheat—No. 1 Northern, $1 ep aes 2 white, red and 95 to %c, outside. eas—Good spine peas, $1.20 to $1- 25, outside. One we of No. 2 Ontario, 45 to 46c, and o 3 at 43 to 4c, outside, No. 2 48 a oe on track, Toronto. No. 1 extra W. ©. feed, 49120, and No. 1, 48 1-2c, Bay ports Barley—48 Ibs. at 95 to 9%c, outside. Corn—No. 3 American yellow, 711-20, To- ronto freight. Rye—No. 2 at $1.05 to $1. 7 ne Buckwheat—70 to Tic, outs: Bran—Manitoba bran, $25, sty asi To- Tonto freight. Shorts, pene nee se 827, COUNTRY PR nie Apples—$3 to $4 pi to $2.40 per bushel. Honey—Extracted, in tins, 11 to ie per 1b. Combs, $2.50 to $2.75. Baled Hay—No. 1 at $15.50 to $1680, on oultry—Wholesale prices of choice to 2c. Live poultry, about 2¢ lower than the above. BUTTER, EGGS, CHEESE. Butter—Dairy, choice, in wrap} to 320; large rolls, 29 to 31c; and inferior, tubs, 20 to 2c. Creamery quoted at 37 to 38 for rolls, 34 to 35¢ for solids, per Ib. pers, 20 Eggs—Case lots dozen. Cheese—Large quoted at 163-4 to and twins at 17 to 171-4c per Ib. of new-laid, 36¢ per Ie, HOG PRODUCTS. Bacon—Long clear, 1112 to 113-4¢ per Ib., in case lots. Pork—Short cut, $22.50; mess, 19.50 to $20. Hams—Medium to 16 to 161-20; heavy, 14 to 141-20; rolls, 103-4 to 110; breakfast bacon, 16 to 1c; backs, 19 to 200. Lard—Tierces, 12c; tubs, 140; pails, BUSINESS AT MONTREAL, real, Mar. 5.—Oats—Canadian No. 2 local white, 501-2 to 510; No. 3 do., 4912 to 50c; No. 3 do., 4812 to 49. Bar- ley—Malting, $1.05 to $1.10. Buckwheat, No. 2 to 7%3e. Flour—Manitoba spring Cheese—Finest Westerns, 151-4 ; finest Easterns, 141-2 to 150. Bui Be; snide "38 to 400, Po tatooe—Per bag, car lots, $1.10 to $1.00. UNITED STATES MARKETS. Minneapolis, Mar. . ue 10. 3 white, 49 to 49120, Rye-No. 2% 861-2. Bran—$25 to $25.50. Plour—First patents, $5 to $5.30; do., sec- onds, $4.65 to $4.90; first clears, $3.40 to $3.75; do., seconds, $230 to $3.70. Buffalo, Mar. 5.—Spring wheat—No. 1 Northern, carloads, store, $1.16; Winter, No. 2 red, $1.01; 3 red, 9c; No. 2 white, $1. Corn—No. 3 yellow, 69; No. 4 671-2, all on track, through billed. Oats—No. 2 white, 563-4c; No. 3 white, $61-4c; No. 4 white, 551-4c. Barley No. LIVE STOCK MARKETS. Montreal, choice, $7 to $7.25; $6.50; do., common, $4.50 to $5; seed , $5.50 to $5, 10 $5; do., bulls, fe to # milkers, choice, each, $75 to $80; do., om, and each, $50 to $65; aurlages $30 to 845. Sheep—Ewes, $4.75 to $5; bucks and culls, $4 to $4.50; lambs, 6.75 to $7. Hogs—F.o.b, $8 to $8.25, Calves—$3 to $10. _ Toronto, Mar. 5.—Fairly edium. good butcher. at Choice butchering cows sold at from $5 to $5.50 per hundred- weight; good cows at from $4 to $4.5, and common at from $3 to $4. Canners were 82 to §2.75, American yearling sheep sold at indres On- tario yearlings were steady at $7 to 87.50 = inn red at the markets, and $6.60 to $6. sumption. Manitoba flours—First TAacw: ‘ Beans—Small lots of sae Ploked, $2.35 4 Delawares at $1.85. Out-of-store, $18 to| Robbie $1.90. {2] philea tall, white:headed p A peepeieh from ee says an Shi egation quarter is crowded, but the missionaries a1 curred it was estimated that 2,000 soldiers took part, but since then| ii ‘ e mutineers have been augmente: by Jarge numbers of the police, coolies and loafers. The Legations ‘he se are eel ae tot fon hous shased even the foreign resi- aces within one block of the Le- gation q tions, and territory of more mile in area has been burned, This Fires were started in various sec- than | deserted Thrilling Experiences in ribvioos "ie Fakta icine aries ae Out in : in Compounds eS a from tha Forbidden City — aS ‘the building of the Chinese For-— me mee where Yuan Shi Kai re- _ arrived satires ea but did ni efugees at the Ai miele Legation had thrilling experiences as they traversed the streets in which the Chinese troops were in looting. The soldiers did not prema pes interfere with them, as great danger from ee: bullets and fire brands, which were flourished in all Mr. W. D. and Mrs, Strai their records a richly~ furnished Use, which was given over to the looters. Young Folks §) THE HOUR THAT FLEW. “You are going out, and I have-| n’t one sale thing to do!” sighed “Arthur will be at home in hour,” said mother. ‘“‘Let’s of something to do. I’ll tell youj take this pincushion, and stick im ae these new and white Snebhie” Gok oe cushion, which looked like a ttress, and his face ightonal |: “T know what T'll play!” he “Soldiers! The pineushiog can be the p’rade-ground, p papa took us It took some Stine ‘to arrange the white pins all at one end of the pin®) e black ones at the when his eee kissed him slipped a’ “vim Poin Uline the. blue alt red ones for officers,”” he said, for: oats shat tie, was alone CoD hi fat, will make splendid eG ” een quite exciting when Rob: bie made the cannons boom! Inib tend cambiar tell over by dozens. The fat, red general held uigiiny the End, sa wekayad fine fellow MDhert Robbie bull forse Aue bpr- Hades of black and white pins, from behind which the blue and fed soldiers blazed away at each other black aattg pins were [aid fag. ja: the auelion ane alerts By the oars, four of which stuck out side, Blue-headed soldiers epncbedas iis Looe te the boat, ee te sare spirit the mids 80 lifelike 7% did it seem to Robbie that he could almost imagine that the tall pin had its arms folded and was tying eager eyes to pierce the, dar’ “Hello, what's all this?” gS voice in his ear so suddenly that it made him jumy “Why aru, mother saiy you ipa t be here for an said Robie, ‘‘and now more than ‘an beurte= Companion. that IT WOULD D DEPEND “Would you advise me to encour- age my daughter in her i take yooal bee es a wealthy “Well "that would en re- plied the conscientious tea “On what?” “On whether you expect) her to learn to sing or whether yon object is merely to keep her toes ig mis- chief.” | d ask patEAT ESE Isadore--But how ean you hon- to|estly advertise a fire sale ven you haf had no fire. AD ne ‘| carrying of tl anf think | upp ean have a ener pele like tire one ¥ IP Ds be Fashion Hints § PARIS NOTES. New mesh bags are equipped with tiny watches, this form rivaling the the wrist watch. ome of Sheesen tunies have an er tunic, ending in @ narrow length, which is knotted in some queer way Linen “Bas 8 with oddly shaped tunics bordered by a heavy fringe of Jinen, rere to be much worn this summ A ray collarless bist Kote are being shown, - off with folds of as “rating, or he iene sleeve appears to ave run ee fashionable coukse in e American woman is For lingerie dresses, the use of marquitette, while not past, has a j rival in shadéw allover laces and | the shadow voiles. ry e Hats of the Rembrandt or Francis Style, Sietin nisi by the Tam O'Shanter crown, Re nue to enjoy widespread confiden, ilk coats consist, rete of taf- fetas, bengalines, and satins. The high ‘novelty at the present time is a pa chiffon taffeta. Lace, coarse and heavy enough for a curtain, shadow styles, baby Trish lace, and Venise. will ‘trim the so much put together might almost affirm that it had be- come the uniform for dress occa- While the. oy side fastening i still a notice: the spring mots Se: made that they do not disclose =4 much of the dress or waists wai formerly the case. Well, Well! ~~ THIS isa my DYE I fired two salesmen last — A despateh from Sha says: evised figures of the population of Canada are contained in a special) ‘ouse on TI! By Provinces the igus are: ‘fo.b. ears at ee NH “has told a block “af behind the mountain at Mont- real tO a eae syndicate for Bes om “William piston Liberal ‘member M gislatur 2 Borne: 1 | Sheriff Yu sh t The increase was 555,085, .48 per cel in urban districts the. peer ee an report on the census, , tabled in in the, crease was 1,278,147, or ag ‘hursday cent. euinieeniaee mes Teco! umerator in 1691, with atus, was 1,110; in + questions, oe and in 1911, eee a ee ‘of oy

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