Milverton Sun, 25 Sep 1919, p. 7

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Breadstufts. Toronto, Sept. -“Manit T Northern, $230; No Nee Neth. r ern, $2.27; No. 8 Northern, $2.23, in a Oe, 86%c; breakfast bee, ek Tolls, 88°to cats Pickled peak sbi mess eg No. 1 feed, foie No. 2045 Mo, $1.22; rejected,| co1 rican corn—No. 3 yellow, nom- yell ry No.2 me a to $2.08; No. 2 prime, § No. 3 Spri shipping oie ea BarieyMatting, § $1.27 to $1, td ac- ting to 0 freights outside. ioitobe flous—Government stand- ard ~Covernment stand r pes to ¥e0, reac, tet -—Car bn per ton, $10 to sii "tac Torot nintry Produce—Wholesale irae ‘ton, perv et c, Mapk side! Ale pad $0. 40 per Mgallon; do eal. , one-gal, tins, Provisions—W holesale. Lard—Tierc« ; tubs, 86 to 86%4e; ley Cale: 4 cw, ; mpound lard, ; feed, a 16, in ou Fort Wil-| tubs, 30 to B0%e. Montreal Markets fs er Sept. fsa tation see No. Sos fale, "$11 to bunt ., $4.90 to 3\ exes, fre 0: 3 meee 55c;, sata Live Stock Markets. 10 ae "10.5 9.75; do, ene $7.50 to a ‘butcher 00d: ye Ohi 9 ers, 3 do, coi hts. ie 08: sat hogs ‘pure, wood pails, 20 tbs. 83%c. $1 inners a) mt oe ‘nilkers, good to. hoiee, $110 m. vide? ringers, o " oc $9; ea a at ig fs10 00, to $10; calves, “choice select Riga $18 to $19 per cwt. prints, oe ny aie! lerces, to 80¢; 10; ealed: cat, bag 3b; bam, $4 er bag, lots, anes "killed, So7.60 ee . S78 LOTS OF SUGAR THERE. ‘| Sufficien! is no scarcity of sugar jae the pores of Montreal, the Cana- vernm re i dian Warsior, one of the vessels of marine, having arrived raw ies eri spats merchant C: ae West Indies with oe Rees of Bees, “the sugar being transported to Same yee a 22,000 bags will soon arrive on -the oe refin- 2 BULGARIA MUST PAY $450,060,000 Under Peace Treaty Terms Army is Reduced to 20,000. ‘A despatch from Paris says;—The ‘emps outlines what {t says are the ewes, | lati to $13; fed at weighed off cai ss, Fon tM 26 t ‘a 30, ATLANTIC TRAVEL _ BACK TO NORMAL pales That t End of October ill See Close of’ Military Monopol A despatch from Montreal says:— Canadian and American routes, and at the White adv’ " 3 that third-class y re been not ing from Southam: beginning with the sailing of the Lap- land from Southam Thi the way to ocean ae The feyerts: were sald t and counties well distributed through- out the country, and the in! is believed by officials here to be a ir indication of what is that plenty of space on | 20 are oon be available for civilian travel, on both the New York lings to British ports. | fe 0 much dislocation during the past five years ——9— — CANADIAN "AMBULANCES OVERSEAS BEING SOLD A despatch ties: London says:-— Canadian Red Cross Society will cease to exist as an overseas organiza- tion in a few more weeks. The Cana~ dian ambulances, which jit was ne turn long: hae it was a of and this is being done Like bina mill, y stores, they have realized good Colonel Braylock, head of the boxe ed dian Ri private life eres say; Drummond ‘will return to Montreal at nd of the month, A GERMAN AN CRUISER TO PUT TO SEA A despatch from Berlin says:—A Kiel telegram says th: cruiser Regensburg Is now being fitted out in the Kiel Imperial docks for a voyage to South The vessel is to be ready Monday. Her task is to take care that all Ger- man merchant ships interned in Chile, Argentine, Uruguay and ports of other South American basco sf to Ger- many as quickly as pos: message says ag S iattoe are pending with the Entente on this matter, and that the food be promoted by this mea —_—-—-——— COMPLETES CASE FOR FROSECUTION, OF EX-KAISER A despatch front” London say: a Attorney-General, Sir Gordon rat, has completed the caso = ihe ie of the former Germ: Bmperor, according to the Mirror. The place of the trial has not yet been set- MUST SAIL THIS YEAR A. despatch toc: Lato wap ‘The Canadian emigration officials are jormal me erenty has been held up long Soe d vite fl Tetely consider- rm traondi at the German) popular Mechanics in an article companied by interesting illustrations. The first comes from who believes that an airplane he should be eed when a person dies far from his stream, FOOD PRICES DROP IN UNITED STATES Decline of 10 to 15 Per Cent. Fol- lows Government Investigation. declines in wholesale prices being re- etail prices and additional ‘| reductions coming fr against hoarding and profiteering. —_e——— Aerial ee she ae Dead and meee is hed Mea pardicuisris aera that they salvation and future bliss. oti ports on wholesale prices indicating by decline of two to fiv: ually no ee ae in clothing prices e per cent. Vir- Ea retail food prices we auaptity which Bulgai wy which is to be: pre: sted to Bulgaria. These include abo. jon of obligatory aise service the maintenance a_police force at shall not ex cent anise men. The Customs cers, gendarmes and police agents will pees 10,000. rms and munitions exceeding the ria may. retain mder the treaty shall be placed at and aeronautic provisions of the com. pact. Bulgaria must return all valuable objects and documents stolen*from the | t! Allies and deliver up to military courts of the Allies persons guilty of acts in in- e turned over within a-specified number of years. ———. CORRECT» NAME IS HLR.H. MADE AN INDIAN CHIEF Stony Tribe Supplies “Big Medi- cine” For the Occasion. ‘A despatch from, Banff says:— picturesque escort greeted the Prince ched Banfi. wmed up to conduct His Royal Highness to the park, where the park commissioner presented ee offi- | tain wit formal dignity of their initial greet- ings gaye place to special dances and songs and quaint ceremonies of their race. The Prince of Wales was made a chief of the Stony Indians with pomp Prince has The Indians are his willing nibledis from this hour. fe tiscuss Wes SS Prince of Wales a Cow Pune! In Both B Arsaity. cal “spirit lespatch from Calgary says:—A gt Saale ee U ave been from cities id mation om the campaign —— aver’s error, Curry, eae of the General, set their fears at rest. He stated that the family me as been cokaY spel: led, cated that t! eral pe citoply let the other go by default ing the war as not worth bother- ti. gis ee Itallan ve Bley of Fium e eed bay by the Big Three ¢ A despatch from aan says:—The Messaggero says David Lloyd George, the British Prime Minister; M. Cle- menceau, the French Premier, Signor Tittoni, | Minister, are in perfe havi ths longer, za ie detriment emigration business lertaker earse le that an aerial tated. to mush, the ick may die pene of efinite solution of the Flume aues- tion ensuring the Italian nationality of the town, and are only awaiting the President's decision on the sub- ct. usly w1 bridge the might ators. wee ten minutes he was o yanch- Sea i onan and oor: ‘and the the key- all ‘be eients be eb big cattle] ran ce: 3 ae a BRITISH TO WITHDRAW pe SYRIAN AREA A despatch Foncl Paris says: Gee reat reached by Premier Clem- Field Marshal “hilenby of cupation of Syria pro evacuation of all the area north. 0! relieved by the French forces, au the exception of the districts of Damas- cus, Homs, Hama and gee which will be left out of the a: tion, but will pass rider eeneh in-| fluence, it is said. AS Py a ‘ “BEING DEAD YET SPEAKETH.” eo Shade of His Sopra edan for your rights, dad, by ail means— but dot spoil my work © |the Guggenheim interests, ‘RICH-GOLD DISCOVERIES IN MANITOBA to eS Two rich gold eas! both made within a fortnight, but in rated fields, have ee a rush of fortune-hunters to the province of Manitoba, that recalis the beginning of the stampede for the Klondike. y an prospector, Jacob Cook, a few widely sepa-| sranted Tae prakee SRR Pay National Debt of Canada Several Times Over, is Opinion of Experts, Or Scotland || Z lode Snir beon uncovered. Taking for 6 lode is the same ae gate it ous have a length of two miles. The high-grade gold ai in a vein paralleling the main ore body at a distance of about 1,200 fect ago at Copper Lake, about sixty oe wis ‘The second is the -| consists of quartz stringers pector. It is ie o Contact bay region western Ontario, about 200 miles east of Winnipeg. made his find by literally upon whi is cabin along the shores re with his pick ‘ahd uncovered evi- dence of gold. Within a few minutes he had opened up @ pay streak four inches wide and several feet deep— @ pay streak that alrady is colloqui ly known as “The Golden Sidewalk. Copper Lake is east of Lake Atha- papuskow, in the Cranberry lakes the great Schist Lake ane ide mines, Flinflon, Mandy, operated by It is about the center of the great mineral belt that extends from beyond the eastern tion, among which the best known are at Cobalt, Ont.; Rice Lake, Man.; and The Pas. juent prospecting revealed thatthe width of the large ore body varies from ten to thirty feet and is continuous on ‘the surface for about 1,400 feet. To the southwest and northeast of the main exposure the region, and ent fifty miles east from | rat phi a and sheets of schist. At the bottom of a five-foot inches wide, while on was from a ne to four inches wide. Assays of uartz to either side of the high Ante oe give $10 in gold to tho tot Wachman’s was a stroke of good fortune that surpassed his fondest i pectations, He had come to tho wild of woutern: Ontario to spend a resutic cising only two days then he struck | 9, a vein of gold that assayed at a high its extent has not been astness of the country may illustrated by the Seetment Rs one : the old-time prospectors, thi 10,000 prospectors started in see ioat direc- tions from The Pas they could be out for months in the mineral belt without anyone ne Supthakacn and oer of notthern ‘Manttoba 1 ile riches sufficient to pay the national debt of Sas B many times over, is the opinion o Frank Moore, mining expert and ions eer prospector, of Winnipeg, who staked the Rex and several other mines in the Rice Lake re ‘The building of the smelter and the are matters only of time, ee A George y Events In England BRITISH WOMEN EAGER 10 EMIGRATE Clamoring For Essex County Council is arranging for moving picturds for the county m. asylum. Disability pensions ars are to be increased to the pre- sent standard. Sir Richard Glyn’s Dorset consisting of 5,500 acres, has sold for £192,666. Flowers said to have cost £7,500 were sent by ete to a gipsy funer- al at Orpington, K m-R. May: rabbit wre was killed by the ac cidental discharge of his gun. eet and electric light departments of the Southend corporation have gone on str! een tablished for more than ny holiday homes for crippled boys London at Dnglefield Green, Sur- yy James, a thirteen-months- ees Sat of Tooting, died as a result swallowing thirteen strychnine ees, Workmen have pee that the Weymouth is plaster and i fast crumbling ie ‘Be ‘thomas Myercough, of moves ain, Garstang, Lanes, died from juries received when he was neh i feo his: bicycle Edwin Greaves, of Maida Vale, London was aceldentally\drowned in a boating accident near Four Mills Bridge, Anglesey. William Roberts, aged Atteon, eu two hundred feet from Dov and escayed with a broken ee it some bruises j Paley Sea Good Reasons For Good Roads. into any locality is to build roads that will fast and not have to be done over every few year! ‘With good roads farmers can deliver all their products direct to town: within a radius of fifty miles or more, and by making more profit themselves they reduce the high cost of living for other people; for merchants are able take advantage of new sources of supply to buy their stocks under favor- able conditions, and sell them to their customers at a lower price, Millions of dollars are: lost every ‘Single large firms have actually saved more than $100,000 yearly by using motor tricks; and the trucks will un- loubtedly contribute clit to organ- tag improyement of roac Good roads bring lie ‘and increase property values ina community. They attract Domeaeoksty, and industries. busy: and-attend to Suxiness—| mie ha sure it is your own business, from. tormer | 7 seatite, 2 t. ne, of Aldershot, while | 1 prosperity flow | pr Chancé to Settle Abroad. despatch from London says:— 9 taste at home are clamoring for tacit ties to go abroad—especially to the gn igh dominions, ork has unsettled enormous that the taste for adventure is attract- ing them to new and unkno of effort. The Overseas Settlement | of the local -men w) The death ts reported trom London of George 8. Hutton, pera of. ell Yohn Denholm, Mrs. of recently ‘cole Berwick, Bt, ‘i brated their diamond wedding. epienral: G. Haig, D.8.0., a, Sse ed bo zoey tescy his: fost from King The D.8.0. has Hel ne fajor H, W. Sutherland, son of the orchiet bes of Galashiels, ed a Lieutenant for Selldirks! memorial is to be pean in a suitable place by the inhabitants of the Rulewater district, Roxburgh- ire. A Celtic Cross, bearing the names 0 have fallen in the war, has been dedieated at Lelt- olm, Q.M.S. P. Robertson, Black Watch, Prestonpans, possessor of the M.M. the asaee con , Daykins, V.C. Howden varm, shane home, he was given a ee releons and the free- dom of Jed! The lage ia tibet Dik chatob, Bet, been purchased by a loci baker, and oe a converted into“an up-to- Liout.-Cof. Witilam ‘Thornburn, Harel led ir, A tablet has been erected in ekg Parise Church Hw. art, Gartferry, in memory of his Faalbon Lieut. H. R, Taggart. R een son of the late Pro- vost Mathison, Peebles, nas been ap- pointed vice-chairman of the Johan- nesburg Stock Exchan| Sheriff Maconochie, of Avontoun, has presented a handsome silver cup tor competition among the members of the Linlithgow Golf Club, Sir F, R. Wingate, G.C.B., has sent £60 to the Dunbar War Memor . Fund, in memory of his son, Major twickshire, has raised for war purposes a total of £340 per head of population, beating any other town in Great Britain, ‘he Army and Navy Gift League of Tarbert, has presented a gold watch to Rev. Duncan Blair in recognition of his. having won the Military Cross. pe CE Taae GOLF OF LOWLY ORIGIN, And Popular Game Did Not Have Its Start In Scotland. It tennis has a royal Itneagé, golf, which was later regarded rich man’s game, had most plebefan begin- ywn spheres | Nini Department is helping ex-service wo-| not men as well as men -with free pass- ages, but only such as have the quall- fications demanded by lominions will be assisted in this wa: ‘Munition workers have been particu- vail themselves of this is one of the classes to which it does not apply. QUEEN'S HOME “A FACTORY | House in Which Victoria Lived Now Motor Building Plant. A despatch from London says;— Townley House, in Ramsgate, situated in one of the prettiest parts of land, where Queen Victoria lived as a girl with her, mother, the Duchess of Kent, is to become headquarters of a motor carriage building company, by whom it has been acquired. The beautiful old elms that digni- fied the grounds are being felled to ‘ovide carriage bodies, while house itself is being converted into a home for employees. CEREMONY bisa OYSTER BEDS Quaint Ritual, 1, 000. Years ae Opens 1919 Season at Colchest The Colchester oyster ties has been formally o ida with the usual quaint ceremon; @ London des- patch. The rey ae the corporation severged the poration ee consumed g' sto) it has paeied since the that aire een? oyster: swords, the East Saxons so appreciat- se iad Gelcheater fishery that thi ne and this device still forms he arms of the county of Essex. LERINGING UP FATHER ALarres Ler Sone BY GOLLY- MARGIE SAID a NEVER WANTED TO SEE MI KAA “eH IME wif rte NER AWT AN ANSWER, AY LAST =_GY GOLLY J OON'T EVEI OPEN nN HAVE, v2) end int wiepene "| by. tn speed ik e jungle but in northern Europe. Apparently 4 was first played on ice, being one of players, each with a ball and one club, playing on turf, By the 15th century golf had gern “unprofitable at monarch, however, seems to have disregarded his own edict, as did enough eg Scotchmen to game i Like toaatd golf was played by both sexes. Critics of Mary Stuart cited in evidence that her husband's fat weighe§ so lightly upon her heart that she was seen papas the game in the oe near Set i acntaie also is ascribed a pe me hat suggests modern golf. It was played with @ feather stuffed ball and called “paganica,” th common people play evidence of the game’: o it—another lowly origin. Very i “follow the hounds” b; from a high coe foes ti the cap- ture 0: Aerial Ste assure us in time 4 cont by means of lying minimum of. risk to the hunt- ere. Diss it is anticipated that mee Ee will be éarnied 1 “ore ant tones ot land st aero plane should p as sod sighing, “thou and forest matter, ocr it is i ropgeta ied reindeer c| eo lure from such @ large—probably anything from. toot 000 to $2,000,000, if the hunt took 18, rather’ a cruel form of mee et ‘and ‘it #3 to” be hoped, that here at least, ambitious aviators will call a halt, ploseceegs form of: “sport” by pas 2 is afforded the naturalist. An geronaut In the French forces telly al agenle at tinies. a Cuban Farmers Using Tractors. The tractors ysed on the sugar es wheel and the tracklayer Aes are used reat xolu ing, In

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