Tramendous Loss to Province in One Year.â€"Great Infant Mortality 14,000 DEATHS PREVENTABLE A @espatch from Toronto says : Dr. Charles A. Hodgetts, medical edviser to the Conservation Comâ€" mission, Ottawa, addressed the chief officials and inspectors of the civic department of health in the City Hall on Wednesday on "Conâ€" servation of Life.‘""â€" Dr. Hodgetts cited figures to show that infant mortality in Ontario is at the rate of 195 deaths per 1,000 population. By infant mortality he meant the death of babies w thin a year from their birth. ‘"The infant mortalâ€" ity in eighteen cities of the Provâ€" ince to _ a casual observer clearly indicates that there is~an unwarâ€" rantable waste of child life in many of them,"‘ he said. ‘"It is the cry of the babies. It is a plea for the education of the parents in all that pertains to infant life. It is the great opportunity for health deâ€" partments to carry on exploration work at the public cost, instead of leaving it to philanthropy and social organizations. It is essenâ€" tially a branch of municipal health work and should be instituted and earried on as much so as any work now being done.‘‘ Dr. Hodgetts @EPORTS FROM THE LEAGiNG TRADs GENTRES OF AMERICA. Smoked and Dry Salted Meateâ€"Rollsâ€" Bmoked, 14340 to 150; hams, medium, 170 to 171â€"2c; heavy, 15 1â€"%0 to 166; breakfast bacon, 181â€"%c to 1i96; long clear bacon, tons and cases, 141%a to 14340; backs (plain), 21 1%6; backs (peameal), 22¢. PRIGES OF FARM PROOUGTS Beansâ€"Primes, $2.50, and $2.60 for handâ€" pioked. Potatoeaâ€"O%tario potatoes, 850 per bag; car lots, T5o; New Brunswicks, 9c per bag, out of store; 80c in car lots. Bpanish Onionsâ€"Per case, $2.35 to $2.40. ~~Ontario Flourâ€"Windsor wheat floug. 90 per cent. patents, is quoted at $3.9% to #rices of Cattis, Crain, Cheese and Otnar Producse at Home and Abroa@ Breadstuffs. Toronto, Feb. 11. â€"Manitoba Wheatâ€"Lake %01‘1/5, No. 1 northern, 9%66; No. 2, 931â€"2¢; o. 3, Yl0; feed wheat, 65 1â€"%0. Ontario Wheatâ€"No. 2, 90 to 966, for car lots outside, ranging down to 70e for poor grades. _ Cl Butterâ€"Creamery prints, Jio to 3%0; do., solids, 2%¢ to 30o; dairy prints, 250 to 270; inferior (bakers‘), 22¢ to 20. & Eggsâ€"Cold storage, 18¢ to 200 in caro lots; fresh, 2¢ to 230; strictly newâ€"laid, #c to 30c. e % yas “ah';es'e'â€""Twins, new, 1434c to 150, and large, new, at 141â€"%¢; old cheese, twins, 150 to 15 1â€"2¢; large, 150. J Lel Poultryâ€"Live chickens, wholesale, 120 to 130 per pound; fowl, 10c to lic; ducks, 130 to 14c; live turkeys, 150 to 17o; geese, 90 to 100. Dressed poultry, 2o to 3o above live quotations, excepting dreseed turkeye, at 206 to Zlo. ts . i ereenne . Manitoba Flourâ€"First patents, $5.30 in jute bags; second patents, $4.80 in jute bage; strong bakers‘, $4.60 in jute bags. Honeyâ€"Buckwheat, 90 pound in tins and &6 in barrels; strained clover ‘honey, 121â€"2¢ a pound in 60â€"pound tins, 12340 in 10â€"pound tine; 13c in 5â€"pound tins; comb honey, No. 1, $2.60 per dozen; extra, §3 per dozen;. No. 2, $2.40 per dozen. Milifeedâ€"Manitoba bran, $20 in bags, track, Toronto,; shorts, $22; middlings, §26; Ontario bran, $20 in bags; shorts, §22 Barley';@&)&"vmalting barley, outside 62c to 636. to, 44 You can have a taste of the summer sunshine of the corn fie!lds by serving a dish of These crisp flavoury bits of toasted white corn make an appetizing dish at any time of year. Try them in February and taste the delicate true maize flavour. Shivery Post Toasties A dish of Toasties served either with cream or milk, or fruit, is surâ€" prisingly good. Canadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd. : Windsor, Ountario. [‘he Memory Lingers" ton bags, ten cents more per barâ€" Grocers everywhere sell Toastles. Country Produce. Mornings Provisions. referred to the Dominion Governâ€" ment‘s encouragement of the farâ€" mers by granting money for educaâ€" tion along agricultural lines, and he said : "‘The Government might devote a dollar or two each year to the education of our people in the intricate problems of propaâ€" gating the race, and the conservaâ€" tion of the lives of our babies.‘"‘ Dr. Hodgetts claimed that it was as much a part of the work of the Government to spend money on educating the people on these lines as to spend money on bringing men and women into Canada. a loss from $6,000,000 to $10,000,â€" 000. Education was the great need, the doctor claimed, to prevent such waste in fubture. Baled hay, No. 1, $12 to $13; No. 2, $9 to $10; No. 3, $8 to $9; baled straw, $9 to $9.50 Referring to the fact that in this Province there were 34,341 deaths in 1911, Dr. Hodgetts said about 40 per cent. of them were preventable ; 14,000 lives which should have been saved to the country were lost. He calculated that each life was worth $20,000 to the country, hence the total loss in money was $40,000,000. In Toronto no less than 6,000 deaths had occurred in 1911 that were preventable, and this antailed P‘g;l?(:Short eut, $26 to $28 per batreol; mess pork, $21.50 to $22. _ _ _ & Montreal, Feb. 11. â€"Best steers, $6.50 to $6.75, and the lower grades from that down to $4, while choice butchers‘ cows brought $5.75 to $6.00, good $5 to $5.50, and the common stock from $3.50 to $4.50 per 100 lbs. A few choice bulls sold as high as $5.50, good at $5.00 to $5.25 and the lower grades from $3.00 to $4.50 per 100 lbs. Sheep sold at $7.00 to $7.50, and lambs at $4 to $5 per 100 lbe. Calves ranged from $3.00 to $12.00 each, as to size and quality. Belected lots of hoge sold as high as $9.75, but the ruling prices for the day for carload lots were from $9.40 to $9.50 per 100 lbs., weighed off carts. Toronto, Feb. 11.â€"Ho%s, $8.80, fed and watered, and $8.45 f.0.b. Choice calves, $8.50 to $9.50. Rough calves $4 to $4.50. Export Cattleâ€"Choice sold at $6.75 to $7; choice butcher, $6.25 to $6.75; food mediâ€" um, $550 to $6; common, $5 to $5.25; cows, $4.75 to $5.50; bulls, $3 to $5.25; canâ€" ners, $2 to $2.50; cutters, $3.25 to $3.75. Stockers and Feedersâ€"Steers, 700 to 900 lbs., $3.2%5 to $5.65; feeding bulls, 900 to 1,000 lbs., $2.75 to $4.25; yearlings, $3.10 to $3.50. Milkers and Springersâ€"From $50 to §$72. Montreal Markets. Montreal, Feb. 1i1.â€"Cornâ€"American No. 2 yellow, 620. Oatsâ€"Canadian western, No. %, 411%e to 42%0; do., Canadian western, No. 3, 40 1â€"26 to 4i0; do., extra No. 1 feed, die to 411%; do. No. 2 local white, $8¢; do., No. 3 local white, 37s; do. No. 4 local white, 366. Barleyâ€"Manitoba feed, 53c to 54c; do., malting, 76c to §0c. Buckâ€" wheatâ€"No. 2, 5b5¢ to bTe. Flourâ€"Manitoba spring wheat patents, firsts, $5.40; do., seeâ€" onds, $4.90; do., strong bakers‘, $4.70; do., winter patents, choice, $5.25; do., straight rollers, $4.95 to $4.90; do., straight rollere in bags, $2.25 to $2.30. Rolled Oats â€" Barrels, $4.50: do., in bags of 90 lbs., $2.â€" 121â€"2. Branâ€"$§20. Shortsâ€"822 Middlings â€"$27. Mouillie, $30 to $55. ‘Hayâ€"No. 2, per tom, car lots, $13.50 to $14. Cheeseâ€" Finest westerns, 13¢; do., finest casterns, 121â€"%0 to 12540. Butterâ€"Choicest creamâ€" ery, 20c; do., seconds, 240 to 27c. Eggsâ€" Fresh, 34c to 360; do., selected, 22¢ to 24¢; do. No. 1 stock 206 to 2lc; do. No. 2 stock, 15c to 166. Potatoesâ€"Per bag, car lots, 650 to 750. ii:rdy:;‘l“ilérzgg,“ 13 3 5â€"4:3_,_ _Aubs, 14¢; pails, 14 1â€"4¢. Duluth, Feb. 11.â€"Wheatâ€"No. 1 hard, 875â€"80; No. 1 northern, 871â€"8¢; No. 2 do., 8B45%6; July, 906 to 90186 asked; May, 88 5â€"8¢ asked. Police Graft Exposure Shakes Up New Â¥York Police. h A despatch from New York says : The trail of police graft upon which District Attormney Charles 8. Whitâ€" man set out last summer is declared by him on Thursday to have emerged from the thicket of minor eÂ¥posures to an open road leading to men higher up. Through the reâ€" markable confession which Police Captain Thomas W. Walsh made in the presence of the District Aittorâ€" ney on Wednesday night, which will be repeated to the Grand Jury, inâ€" dictments will be sought against a Fo‘h'oe inspector and others as alâ€" leged graft takers on a large scale. If obtained these indictments will be the most important developâ€" ments in the exposure of the "sysâ€" tem"‘ since the city was aroused to the alliance of the police with gambling and vice by the Rosenthal murder. smoked. United States Markets. Minneapolis, Feb. 11. â€" Wheat â€" May, 88 1â€"4c; July, 901â€"86; September, 887â€"8¢; No. i hard, 881â€"40; No. 1 northern, 86 5â€"40 to 873â€"40; No. 2 northern, 84 3â€"40â€"to 85 3â€"4¢. Cornâ€"No. 3 yel-}e%g 450.â€"_Oatieâ€" No. 3 white, 1140 "am â€"Ryeâ€"No. 2, 55e to 571â€"2%6.‘ Bran, 19.50. Flour pricer unchanged. _ _ dn eeie t ut alo Fatalities Occur in C. P. R. Fort William Yards. A despatch from Fort William says : Within twelve hours two fatal accidents occurred in the Canadian Pacific Railway yards here,. both victims being switchmen. _. Chas. Wm. Brock, twentyâ€"nine years of ago, single, fall beneath a car being switched shortly before midnight on Tuor:day, and died from his injuries; while just before noon on Wednesday James Henry Cunningâ€" ham, married, was thrown off the IMPORTANT DEYVELOPMENTS killed Green Meatsâ€"Out of pickle, ic less than real TWO SWITCHMEN KILLED. footboard of a locomot‘ze and Baled Hay and Straw. Live _Stock Markets. TORINTQ CORRESPONOENEt The Late Dr. Beattie Nesbittâ€"Toronto Has Some Rich Menâ€"Workmen‘s Compenâ€" sationâ€"Passing of James Young. Always delighting in life in dramatic situations, the spirit of the late Beattie Nesbitt must have, found some satisfacâ€" tion in the chain of ciremmsiances which found a climax in his death. In the court room his lawyers pleading for the quashing of the indictments against him; at his bedside his doctors struggling to retain the breath of life. The lawyers gained their point; but one short hour later Beattio Nesbitt was dead. Beattie Nesbitt‘s hero in history was Napoleon. His living rooms were. filled with pictures and books pertaining to the Emperor, and it is said that he deâ€" voured every line . of Napoleon literaâ€" ture he could find.> No doubt this fact explains why Nesbitt‘s life was in some striking respects (not excluding the misâ€" ery of later yeare) an imitation of Naâ€" poleon‘s. srter & He has left his mark on the political life of TorontsA The Conservative Ward Associations/as they exist toâ€"day are a monument" to his&work. They are exâ€" ceedinglyâ€"influential and effective in their organization, aâ€"fact for which Nesbitt must be thanked. His original idea, it is said, was tointroduce an organization that would be as effective as Tammany, but‘in this he was thwarted by what is known as the silkâ€"stocking element in the party. However, he had no trouble in being elected to the Legislature, where he could have held his seat as long as he wanted to. There was some disappointâ€" ment among his friends when he was not taken into the Whitney Cabinet which was organized in 1905, and it was not long afterward that he retired from the Leg: islature to accept the Registrarship. This was the Elba of his career. He made his last plunge into .politics by running for the Mayor‘s Chair,, but he could not, carry the Conservative party with him, and he was defeated. At that time he was President of the Farmers‘ Bank, and it has been said in explanation of his acâ€" tion in running for the Mayoralty that his desire was to bring prestige to the Bank. He calculated that as Mayor of Toronto he could have got in England or elsewhere all the capital necessary for the new institution. His Physical Strength. Many stories are told of his enormous strength. Once singleâ€"handed he cleaned up & crowd of lumber jacks who were making trouble in. a northern camp. Again getting into an altercation with a cab man on account of some trifling dam-‘ age that had been done to the eleigh in. which Nesbitt was riding, he bought the. outfit from the cabby for $25.00 and then: turned it upside down on the street. \ Nesbitt was an organizer. He had. the restless energy and imagination of the promoter. He was resourceful. But it is hardly correct to say that he was either a very strong or a very great man. He had the heart to resolve and the head to contrive but he rarely had the hand to execute. He was an active Orangeman. As a young man he broke from his party in the Dcltan MoCarthy days, but later was instrumental in ncijzirg N. Clarke Walâ€" lace and Sir Charles Tupper together on the same platform in Massey Hall. Ho arranged for them to shake bhands, when turning to the audience he exclaimed, "Is not that a great pair to draw to?" He was an admirer, however, of the Ro:â€" man Catholic Church, and frequently said. that if he had been born a Roman Cathoâ€" lic he would have become a Bishop. Toronto‘s Rich Men. No little interest has been evinced in the list of twentyâ€"three men who, acâ€" cording. fa..Hon.m?f R.. Emmergon, control practically. ail_uam‘theâ€"big business in thy country. Of theitwentyâ€"three named by Mr. Emmerson, nine belong to Toronto. Two of them, of course, are Sir William Mackenzie and Sir Donald Mann, the twins of the Canadian Northern Railway system, who have spent their lives in getâ€" ting public utility franchises of one sort and another all over the world, turning them into going concerns and making tremendous profits in the process. It is at present impossible to compute how much these two men are worth. No doubt they could not do so themselves. It is gonerally admitted, however, that their biggest coup has yet to come when they will put on the market the stock of the C. N. R. corporation. This trans continental line, now running into its thousands of miles of trackage, has been built entirely by the ealo of bonds, the stock remaining in the control of Macâ€" kenzio and Mann personally. One of these days this will have a value when it will be put on the market, and the reâ€" turn to Mackenzie and Mann may be sufâ€" ficient to put them in & list of a dozen of the wealthiest men in the world. The C. N. R. Group. Of the others named in the list, Mr. Z. A. Lash, Mr. D. B. Hanna, Mr. Fredetâ€" ick Nicholls and Sir Henry Pellatt are more or less intimately associated with Mackenzie and Mann corporations.. Mr. Lash is undoubtedly the ablest Corporaâ€" tion Counsel in Canada.. Mr. D. B. Hanna is Viceâ€"President of the C. N. R. and the active force in its direct management. Bir Henry Pellatt and Fréderick Nicholls are interested in many industrial underâ€" takings. A few yeare ago Sir Honry Pellatt realized over a million dollars in cold cash from his sale of the control of the Toronto Electric Light Co. He imâ€" mediately proceeded to put a large porâ€" tion of this amount into a residence on the hill, now nearing completion, which is a marvel to all beholders. Sir Edmund Osler and Mr. W. D. Matâ€" thews are Toronto‘s represontatives among the Canadian Pacific Railway‘s group of financiers, while the ninth man on the list, Senator George A. Cox, is closely associated with the Grand Trunk Pacific enterprises. While not competing in the spectacular achievements of Bir William Mackenzie and Sir Donald Mann, Senator Cox is in many respects one of the shrewdest financiers in Toronto Of in the country. INTERESTING BITS OF COSSIP FROM THE QUEEN CITY. An estimate of the ten wealthiest men in Toronto and their fortunes has been published as follows: Sir William Mackenzie ........$15,000,000 J. C.>Eatou â€"...... . L. is Wvi se 12,000,000 Senator Cox ... ... . .o0s .....00,000,000 Bir Edmund Osler .... ~........ 4,000,000 Cawthra Mulock ...... .... .... 3,500,000 W. G. Gooderham ...... ....... 3,500,000 @. R. Wood .~....."..3..... ... â€"6,000,000 Bir Henry Pellatt .... ......... 3,000,000 Sir Donald Maun ........ ..... 3,000,000 J. We Flavelle ucce uce 2:000,000 ©There promises to be a hitch in the Workmen‘s Compensation legislation, due this session, over the question of whether clerks in stores and farm laborers ATO to be included in the provisions of the Act. The goneral principle in modern Workmen‘s Compensation legislation i8 that a fund is established to which emâ€" ployers of labor contribute, and out of this fund damages are paid to workmen whenever accidents occur. Industries are graded according to the hazard, so that the employers in hazardous occupations have to pay more than those in less haz ardous occupations.. The workmen themâ€" selves contribute nothing and the fund is administered by the Btate. Theoretically, legislation of this kind should apply to everybody, ‘but it is feared that reï¬uesentativee of rural conâ€" stituencies will object if farm Jaborers and store clerks are included. There is, therefore, a possibility that these classes will be dropped in the legislation which is to be recommended by Bir William Meredith, the special commissioner, who has been investigating the subject, and that the labor unions which have been agiâ€" tating for the Act will not object, fearing that if they did so they would jeopardize their chances of getting any legislaâ€" tion. Organized‘ Ward Associations. The Ten Richest Men,. At the Legislature. of this kind dy, ~but it is of rural conâ€" farm Jaboretrs $15,000,000 12,000,000 â€"©5,000,000 . 4,000,000 . 3,500,000 3,500,000 â€"3,000,000 . 3,000,000 3,000,000 . ©2,000,000 This will probably be the most importâ€" ant piece of general legislation to come before tke: House this session. Tax Reâ€" form and Temperance legislation will no doubt furnish the basis for what are known as dress debates. Passing of James Young. The death of Hon. James Young at Galt removes & Liberal of the Old Guard, who for years past has taken a keen, though an onlooker‘s, interest in passing events. His two volumes of "Reminiscenses," just published, have proved to be a very difâ€" ferent work to that of Sir Richard Cartâ€" wright‘s, with whom he was contemporâ€" aneous. Mr. Young‘s work is largely from the view point of a spectator. Sir Richard was a crusading participant in the campaigns he describes. Champion "Mischief F*‘‘ Bought by a Wisconsin Man. _A despatch from Toronto says : ‘‘Mischief E,‘"‘ the pure Scotch Shorthorn heifer that carriecd off the grand championship for the best beef animal in Canada at the Guelph Winter . Fair two months ago, was on Wednesday sold by auction for $700, which averages something like fifty cents per pound live weight. ‘"Mischief E‘" was bred by Messrs. W. R. Elliott & Sons of Guelph, and after being exhibited at the Winter Fair, was sold to Mr. Robert Miller of Stouffâ€" ville, who disposed of her on Wed:â€" nesday to Mr. Frank Harding of Wankesha, Wisconsin. The Guelph heifer brought the highest price of a string of sixtyâ€"five Shorthorns w(’flhich passed under the hammer at the Union Stock Yards. Breeders from all parts of Canada and the United States to the number â€" of three hundred were present, and bidding was fairly keen, though hardly as spirited as in former years. Clygesdale mares brought as much as $1,010, and Percherons as much as $980 each, at an aucâ€" tion held here on Tuesday. _ The horses were bred by T. H. Hassard of Markham, Ont. A despatch from Montreal says : John Shepard, the murderer _ of Frank McKenna, a Hamilton man, and Dr. Devlin, at the Bath Hotel last summer, was taken to Portâ€" land, Maine, for deportation on Thursday. He will be placed in an asylum in Seotland, where arrangeâ€" ments have been made for his deâ€" tention by his wife. Shepard was on his way home to Scotland with his wife and family from Chicago, after being injured in the head while working in the latter city, when he ran amuck in the Bath Hoâ€" tel and shot McKenna, bartender, dead, and mortally wounded Dr. Devlin. A Bad Heart, Its Cause and Cure Percy William Collins is Sent to the Asylum. â€" A despatch from London says : At Old Bailey on Wednesday Percy William Collins was placed on trial charged with sending threatening letters to King George and to Miss Lillah McCarthy, actress and wife of Granville . Barker, playwright. The evidence showed Collins was insane, and the Court committed him to Broadmoor Asylum. Many Firmly Convinced They Aro Dying of Heart Trouble, Have Ofâ€" ten the Strongest Hearts. Sometimes you wake up at night, heart throbbing like a steam engine. Your breathing is short and irregular; paing shoot through the chest and abdomen, and cause horrible anxiety. Your trouble isn‘t with the heart at all. These sensations are the outcome of indigestion, which has caused gas to Just read what happened to Isaac Malloux, of Belle River, Ont.: "Three months ago I was a weak, sickly man. My appetite was poor, food ferâ€" mented in my stomach, I had sour ris ings and indigestion. At nightâ€"I would often waken â€"with gas in the ‘stomach and heart palpitation. "T consulted my doctor and used remeâ€" dies that my friends advised. Nothing helpod. form on â€" the heart Goes farthest for the money "One day I received a sample of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills, and my cure commencâ€" ed. Today I have a vigorous appotite, strong heart action, and no sign of inâ€" digestion. I feel younger and healthier than ever before." Your druggist or storekeeper sells Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills, 25¢. per box or five boxes for $1.00. By mail from The Catarrhorone Co., Buffalo, N. Y., and Kingston, Canada. LIPTONS TEA Tea when you are tired, particularly if it‘s THREATENED THE RKING. HEIFER SELLS FOR $700. BACK TO SCOTLAND. â€"Will Go to Asylum. A GCOD HABIT the stomach and â€"press against Erom Martpan Assertion of Supsrintendent Burgess of the Hospital for the Insane A despatch from Montreal says : A stirring appeal for the better education of the community®in matâ€" ters pertaining to insanity, was the basis of the report of Dr. T. J. Burgess, ‘Medical Superintendent of the Verdun Hospital for the Inâ€" sane, at the 26th annual meeting of the officers of that institution held on Wednesday afternoon. _ That, taken in its incipient stages, inâ€" sanity was, with rare exceptions, curable, was the opinion expressâ€" ed by the doctor, and his stateâ€" ment was borne out by aâ€"presentaâ€" tion of statistics gathered in the institution over,which he presides. The trouble was that, as a general rule, the relatives of an afflicted SAYS INSANITY IS CURABLE THE NEWS IN A PARAGRAPH York County will spend $100,000 for good roads. Canada, the Empire and the World in Goneral Belore Your Eves. Canada. Toronto is to have a court for women, UAPPENINGS FROM ALL OVEB THE GLOBZE IN A NUTSHELL, Radical changes are to be made in Ontario‘s prisons by new legisâ€" lation. A deputation from Toronto and surrounding municipalities asked Premier Borden and the Minister of Railways for a subsidy of $6,500 a mile for the Toronto, Uxbridge & Port Perry Railway. Jersey breeders will try to have the standard of milk sold in cities raised. The Holsteinâ€"Fresian Association will increase the import tax on United States cattle. its father. ception to his Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught at its annual banquet. A fiveâ€"months‘â€"old baby underâ€" went an uperation in Toronto for a broken thigh said to be caused by Toronto will have & plowing bee in the spring, when fifty teams will break up the vacant lots to be used as flower gardens. Mr. B. A. MacNab of Montreal has increased the amount of damâ€" ages for alleged libel he claims from Col. the Hon. Sam Hughes from $10,000 to $50,000. The Dominion Canners, Limited, is to erect a $65,000 factory in Chatham this summer. for a sale. Almon Hampton, a farmer near Gananoque, was crushed to death Ambassador Bryce has beemn apâ€" pointed a member of the permanent Court of The Hague Tribunal. The Welsh disestablishment bill was read a third time in the Comâ€" mons and obtained a first reading in the Lords. A Pittsburg doctor arrived at New York on Thursday with the first Friedmann serum for the cure of tuberculosis, i General. The sixâ€"power Chinese loan was again halted owing to French obâ€" jections to the financial advisers appointed. A structural steel plant is to be erected at St. Thomas, to cost $100,000 and to employ 160 men. . Great Britain. A suffragist created a scene in the British Commeons on Thursday and was ejected. A workmen‘s compensation bill is not likely to be passed at the present session of the Legislature. Otto Khan, the wellâ€"known bankâ€" er, predicted a tremendous boom immediately the war ceases. _ United States. A contract has been awarded in New York for eight wireless staâ€" tions to span the Pacific Ocean. Decisive Change in the German Naval Policy. A despatch from Berlin says: The Budget Committee is now disâ€" cussing the naval estimates for 1913. According to the semiâ€"officiâ€" al Lokalanzeiger, Admiral Von Tirpitz informed the Committee on Thursday that a "sensible agreeâ€" ment‘‘ between Great Britain and Germany with reference to the strength of the respective navies would be "something to be we!â€" comed.""‘ If he has been accutateâ€" ly reported, his declaration is the first official admission from a reâ€" sponsible quarter that Germany considers an agreement of any kind with Britain as within the range of practical politics. The Montreal Bar tendered a reâ€" SENSIBLE AGREEMENT. individual, provided he was noi dangerous, allowed his complaint to become chronic before any acâ€" tion was taken. By such a course the work of hospital staffis was inâ€" creased, and the chance of the reâ€" covery of the patient greatly diminâ€" ished. Prevention and not cure should be the watchwond of alienâ€" ists, and in this matter it devolved upon them to become the instrucâ€" ®s of the public. The moralist and the sociologist, as well as the physician, had here a field for their endeavors. By providing a menâ€" tally deficient individual with ocâ€" cupation and amusement, wonders could be worked, and, combined with_treatment, cures could in the majority of cases be effected. Chest Colds, Wheezing Cured Over Nig®@ You Can Break Up Cold, Feel Fine Next Morning, by Following the ‘‘Nerviline‘‘ Method. Experience of a Trained Nurso. Every mother knows how dificult it is to get a younrg child to take a cough mixture. Seldom will one help unless given in large doses, and the result is to completely upset the stomach and make the child sick. Speaking of the promptest cure for chest troubles and children‘s colds, Nurse Carrington says: ‘"In all my experience in nursing I haven‘t met any prepataâ€" tion so dependable as Nerviline. It is the ideal liniment. Every drop you rub on is absorbed quickly, einks through the pores to the congested muscles, ea relieves and cures quickly. Especially, chest colds, pain in the side, stiff neck, earache, toothache, I have found Nerviâ€" line invaluable. In treating the minor ills of children Nerviline has no equal. I think Nerviline should be in every home." Members of National Diet Assault« ed on Leaving Building. A despatch from Tokio says: Most exciting scenes were Witneggâ€" â€"£*4â€"d@uring the dispersal of the Japâ€" anese Diet on Wednesday after a vote of censure on the Government under Prince Katsura had been carried. The exits from the Chamâ€" ber were thronged with people, who cheered the members of the Constitutional party when they assaulted Saburo Shimada _ and other soâ€"called renegades of the National Liberal party. They were thrown out of their rikishas when they attempted to drive away, and efforts were made to duck them in the canal, but these were frusâ€" trated by the police. P Hundreds of thousands of bottles of Nerviline used every yearâ€"proof that 1t is the ideal liniment for the home. Re:â€" fuse anything your dealer may offer inâ€" stead of Nerviline. Large family sizew, bottles, 600., trial size, 250. All dealers, _ or the Catarrhozrone Co., Buffalo, N. Y., and Kingston, Ont. . +S22 EXCITING SCENES IN TOKIO. Aurora local option stands on recount by a fraction of a vote. 25 Bluings 10 cents. The roiler bearingsâ€"and hand and foot levers â€"make churning an easy task, even for a child. All sizes from 34 to 30 gallons. Write for catalogue If your deaier does not handle this churn and Maxwell‘s *‘Champion" Washer. C David Maxwel! & Sons, *.%, St. Mary‘s, Ont. \ > â€"_â€" Fayorite Churn. It makes the smoothest, richest, most delicious butter you ever tasted. _ § MAXWELL‘S Any little girl can do the churging with Wash Day Manufactured by The Johnsonâ€"Richardson Co Limited, Montreal, Can. Makes the Clothes a White as Snov Try It 1 Verdun /A