West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 4 Dec 1913, p. 2

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rg.} ing to W. Hammond, past presiâ€" dent of the Building Trades Counâ€" cil, at the executive council of the Amalgamated Trade Unions in the Labor Temple. He arrived at his fignures by a consieration of trado unionists now idle. He says 25,000 will be idle by Christmas. There aro in Winnipeg over thirteen thousand â€"trade unionists Over fity per cent. of theso are idle. These are mainly men skilled in the building trades. These men have Volume IX. of 191 eonta showing how where they v Seventeen Thousand Three Hundred Men Are Out of Employment at Winnipeg A despatch from Winnipeg says : Beventeen thousand three hundred men are out of employment in Winâ€" nipeg at the present time, accordâ€" The London elubhonse is to be in Pall Mall and the Paria one in the Champe Elysees and arrangements are to be made whereby a Pullmar car for the exclusive use of club members and their guests in charge of the club‘s own servants and a steam yacht are to make travelling really comforiable and exclusive. Both ciubhouses are to have residential accommodation. The club is to be called the Capitals United Club and it is said that a large number of wea‘thy and inâ€" fAluertial people are enpporting it. The memberehin is to be 2000, and the subâ€" seription $25. s FEEDING THE UNEMPLOYED The subject was discussed at Nottingâ€" ham ‘Trades Council, and a Midland guard and driver declared they eaw six old men dragging a plough as they pas» ed on the train, while a man with a big mastiff stood by. One man, living within twenty yarde of the field, said: "I eaw one day last week six men puiling a plough by means of roYe-. All the men were very old, and only pulled the plough a few yards beâ€" fore they had to stop to rest and get their breath. The work was evidem.l{ too much for theee six men, and the folâ€" lowing day there were nine men yoked to the implement." in Great indignation has been aroum~d in Nottingham by allegations that old and décrepit inmates of Basford Workhouse have been yoked to the plough on land belonging to the Guardians. The stateâ€" ments are being confirmed by several reâ€" gidente in Highbury avenus, Bulwell, which overlooks the Basford Workhouse ground«. It in felt hy those chiefly concerned that a new and charming era is begun by the transformation of Buckingham Palace. It ha» been the King and Queen‘s parâ€" ticular wish that Princess Mary‘s coming out should be surrounded by every pleasâ€" ant cireametance and that her London home @hould be transfigured from. its rather drab, early Victorian to a more modern and joyful setting. â€" Hence the choice of pretty pinks and gold which have been so Iar[e?y used in the interior. It is said that the court is rejoicing at the dieappearance of certain dreary and inconvenient old lardmarks and of the heavy look of the state rooms. It is hopâ€" ed too that the era of change will be marked by an improvement in our eourt ceremonies, which left not a little to be deeired, notably in the appearance of one of the large drawing rooms, where the ladies awaiting _ presentation _ scemed rather like an audience awaiting a conâ€" cert where the music had failed. Princess Mary remains the "youngeet" girl of her age in society. The Queen hse a human enough fancy to keen her children children as long as po«sible, and she has a positive terror of the time when it will be necessary for her daughter to make her debut It is not in the least that the Queen fancies that it makes her elderly to have a grown up family. She dreeses rather with the intention of addâ€" ing alightly to her age by adopting digniâ€" fled garments than otherwise. 2 > The vomune Princess is suill kept hard At her @iudies. Special attention is paid to her music, and she goes frequently to play duets with Queen Alexandra, who takes a deep interest in her progress. On the other hand, Queen Mary unâ€" doubtedly hae made changes in regard to the ladiee at court, favoring the v.ndm dames of the old school. Lady antage in particular enjoying her conâ€" fAdence. Queen Mary has no liking for the nouveau riche and never mixes in their society if she can possibly heli It. Sometimes this ie unavoidable, as at charn ity functions, for instance. here they were botn. The five metropolitan counties, Eeserx, erts, Kent, Middleses and Surrey, toâ€" ether with the county boroughe of West It was prophezied that when King George came to the throme many leading social lighte would eink back into insigâ€" niflicance, and for a time this was true. But it is remarkable how most of the old friends of King Edward have resumed their positions in the court set, the reasâ€" on being plain. King Edward always chose the most interesting, and as King George‘s tastes are much the eame the interesting persons in society were bound to come on top again. "Canada, therefore, must welâ€" come the immigrant for many years to come, and must continue to proâ€" ‘"‘The flow of immigration into Canada cannot cease, for it is due to economic conditions which show no signs of changing. Wages, the price of good land, and the oppor tunity for work, are all in {favor of Canada, as compared with Great Britain and Europe. The United Btates, our former competitor for this immigration, is now inclined rather to restrict than encourage any further influx. The poorest laborer coming into a new country, such as Canada, is the incarnation of capital, for he brings with him the capacity to work and to transâ€" form some undeveloped natural reâ€" souree into a thing that can be used, and thus by his labor he creâ€" ates wealth. King Ceorge Likes His Father‘s Friends Plan New Parisâ€"London Club. A club is being formed to have a home London and Puris and to provide the oet lnxnvions facilities for travelling beâ€" ‘‘The pause in the flow of money into Canada has been beneficial in that it has enforced on Canadians that careful and economical handâ€" ling of money in business and in private affairs which has been the real secret of wanada‘s past prosâ€" perity. A despatch from Montreal says : Bir Thomas Shaughnessy, President of the Canadian Pacific Railway, in an interview on the financial situaâ€" tion, said : Pause In the Flow of Money to Canada Is Only Temporary, Says Sir Thomas Shaughnessy OUTLOOK IS ENCOURAGING 6,805 Bormn at Sea in Year 1911 Our London Letter Buckingham Palace Improved. Men Yoked to the Plough. of the report on the ceneus ne some remarkable figures English people migrate from d it is said ‘thy and inâ€" ing it. The ind the subâ€" Several Western cities aro feeq- ing their unemployed under muniâ€" cipal organization, notable among these being Vancouver and Branâ€" don. ‘The towns in Northern Sasâ€" katchewan and Alberta bave passed the crisis by reason of the fact that many men have gone from them to the lumber camps of the country. helpers amounting to at least a number equal with their own. That makes nearly fourteen thousand. He estimates that, conservatively speaking, there are three thousand five hundred other idle men in the cityâ€"clerks, office men, railroad construction men and laborers. A gentleman was about to be married, and his employees decided to give him a wedding present. A smoking concert was . organized, and it was arranged that the preâ€" sentation should be made at it. The Chairman was one of those sadâ€" faced mortais, altogether unsuited for a festive occasion. He announcâ€" ed, halfâ€"way through the proâ€" gramme, that after the next item the event of the evening would take place. "I will wait till then,""‘ he said, "to speak a few words to our dear young friend on the solemn occasion which" will soon overtake him. Now we will hear with pleasure a recitation by Mr. Brown. It is entitled ‘Doomâ€" ed, Doomed to Death.‘ Let us hope to profit oy it. Then the presentaâ€" tion will be made." Stole Goods From the Hudson‘s | Bay Company. !__A despatch from Winnipeg says : Henry Watson, C. N. Storer, J. W. Bailey and Jas. Baver, emâ€" p]oyes of the Hudson‘s Bay Comâ€" pany, have been arrested, charged | with the theft of $1,525 worth of ‘goods. Three of the men pleaded guilty to stealing $1,025 worth of goods, and were remanded until Monday. The fourth man was reâ€" ,manded without pleading. More arrests are expected shortly on charges of receiving stolen goods. Have you made your will!t If not, why not do it now. If you delay, in the event of your death your property might not be disâ€" tributed as you would desire. The advantages of making a will are clearly and briecfly explained in a pamphlet recently issued by> the Union Trust Company, Limited, Toronto, who will send it free to anyone on request. Our readers are advised to secure a copy at once. Work Wil Beâ€" Pushedâ€"Contract Price Is $5,208,743. A despatch from Ottawa says: Work designed to make Halifax one of the best equipped ports in America and more fully to utilize the magnificent possibilities of its harbor are provided for in a conâ€" tract awarded at Thursday‘s Cabiâ€" net Council for the ocean section of the terminal scheme. The successâ€" ful bidders are Foley Brothers, Welch, Stewart and Fauquier, and the contract figure is $5,208,743. Persons born at sea, the report gtates,| showed a remarkable and inexplicable | rise from 3,946 to 6,805. Of the total popuâ€"| lation of England and Wales 36.0]04%.] nearly 9 1â€"2 per cent., were born in this‘ country and a fuâ€"‘her 2 12 fer cent. in other parts of Greater Britain. London, Nov. %4, 1913. Of London‘s 4,521,685 inhabitante, 1,436.â€" | 686 were born outside the county, and it | is another remarkable fact that the proâ€" portion of native Londoners has risen at | each succegsive censue since 1881. At th.| same time the rate of growth of the popu-| lation of London has eteadily declined. Foreigners of all nationalities in London rumber 153,128, more than half the total in England and Wales, and a larger numâ€"| ber than at any previoue ceneus. I Ham and Croydon, contain more than a million natives of London. Eesex claims 260,943 of them and Middlesex 357,63%2. _ Canada‘s progress, are, therefore, looking forward to next year with bright hopes. Manufacturing conâ€" ditions in eastern Canada are also satisfactory, and a considerable number of American manufacturers are realizing that it pays them to have branch Canadian factories and to employ Canadian labor. This is a movement which we heartily welâ€" come, and which I am sure will prove a good investment for the Americans concerned." ‘‘The splendid crops in the West and the large constructive proâ€" gramme carried on by big enterâ€" prises, has caused money to circuâ€" late which might otherwise have been lacking, and the Western farmers, who contribute so much to vide increased facilities of transâ€" portation, colonization and housâ€" ing. To provide such facilities the European capitalist and the inves tor will, in my opinion, continue tc furnish the money, for, owing tc the propaganda carried on by the Dominion and the Provincial Govâ€" ernments and industrial bodies, for labor and for the profitable investâ€" ment of capital, the opportunities in Canada are thoroughly realized across the water, and it is only the temporary financial stringency, due chiefly to ths Balkan war, which has caused any apparent slackening of such investment. NEW HALIFAX HARBOR. GUILTY OF STEALING. MAKING A WILL. }p!ace on Wednesday, when the aeroplane in which they were flying dashed i to a tree and burst into flames. ‘The men were burned beâ€" yond recognition. _ The aeroplane met with the mishap when the aviaâ€" tors tried to make a landing about nine miles from this town. Before the few persons who saw the acciâ€" dent arrived on the scene the men were dead. Nothing was found to indicate who they were, but butâ€" tons on the charred remnants of their clothes show that they beâ€" longed to the military aviation corps. o Frerch Military Aviators Meet With Terrible Accident. A _ despatch from _ Epernay, France, says: Two military aviaâ€" tors were burned toâ€"death near this Lieut. Tieges, a German artillery officer, was sentenced to ten years for the wanton murder of a junior officer. Three persons are dead, and sevâ€" eral are ill, due to eating squirrels which had fed upon chestnuts from a blighted tree near Glastonbury, Conn. A drunken man was the last to shake (Gien. Bramwell Booth‘s hand prior to his departure for England from New York. Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst is takâ€" ing home $20,000 profits from her United States tour. There are now 15,000 employes of the General Electric Company at Schenectady, N.Y., out on strike. Smoking is not only forbidden among the Harrow boys, but by an edict just promulgated it is also forbidden to visitors to the famous English school. The superâ€"dreadnought Warspite, launched at Davenport, may be the last big warship, as it has been found that submarines can render huge battleships almost impotent. The Chief Whip of the Liberal party says there will be no British general election until 1915. Premier Asquith, speaking at Leeds, denied there was any diviâ€" sion of opinion in the British Cabiâ€" net on the home rule question. The total Federal estimates for the year 1913â€"14 were about $200,â€" 000,000. _ After deducting from the usual percentage of lapsed votes, possibly $175,000,000 will be spent by March 31. 1914. Of this amount ©10,000,000 will be on capital acâ€" count, nearly all of which, under the practice which hitherto has preâ€" vailed, the Government would be justified in borrowing; but the greater portion will be paid off out of the current revenue. Christopher Sawyer, of Dorset, a wellâ€"known trapper and guide in the Muskoka Lakes district, was found dead, of heart failure, on the lake shore, having been missing two days, The Saskatchewan _ Purchasing Co., Limited, the only attempt ever made in that Province to establish coâ€"operative stores, as known in Great Britain, has made an assignâ€" ment. It had opened 14 stores. F. H. Callum testified in the Montreal inquiry into the purchasâ€" ing of lands by the city, that he had paid a politician and an exâ€" alderman $5,000 each for their asâ€" sistance. The bodies of nine sailors drownâ€" ed in the recent lakes storm wore buried at Kincardine, Goderich and Sarnia. Two more bodies from the Hu«drus have been identified. The body of Rev. Frank Butler, of Thessalon, was found in the lake, with the throat cut. A coroner‘s jury rendered a verdict of murder. J. P. Muller, the Government exâ€" pert, suggests reductions in Westâ€" ern freight rates for hauls exceedâ€" ing 50 miles. A â€" board of conciliation has awarded a big increase in pay to G.T.R. telegraphers and station employes. Tea and coffee imported into Canada last year totalled nine milâ€" lion dollars at wholesalers‘ importâ€" ing prices. A foreigner was sentenced at Winnipeg to five years and 30 lashes for assault on a young girl. _ London will vote on the question of having Sunday street cars. _ Gold shipments from New York to Canada in the last fortnight have aggregated $18,000,000. a Canada, the Empire and the World in General Before Your Eyes. Canada. Orillia post office is to be enâ€" larged, at a cost of $31,000. "LAPPENINGS FROM ALL THE GLOBE IN A KUTSHELL. ‘HE REWS [N A PARAGRAP: BURNED TO DEATH. United States, Great Britain. General. OYER No longer a fanatical sect, but earnest colonists, the whole body of Doukhobors in Western Canada will make an effort to throw off ‘theirâ€"~clannish barbarism and beâ€" come good Canadian citizens. Countryman : ‘"Well, look here, I don‘t mind drinking another botâ€" tle, but this must be the last.‘‘ _ Haircutter: "‘It‘s very strangeâ€" I can‘t understand it.‘" : Countryman: ‘"You sold me two bottles of stuff to make the hair grow and it ain‘t done it.‘" ONTARI The people of London have learnâ€" ed of an agreeable way to keep their houses free from flies and mosâ€" quitoes, according to a recent deâ€" spatch from that city. They burn sandalwood, which has a pleasing odor, but one that the summer pests much dislike. ‘The idea comes from the Orient, where it has long been practised. The sandalwood can be bought at almost any Turkish or Japanese importing house. You prepare it for burning by cutting it into pieces about half an inch thick and three inches long, and then bake or dry it in a slow oven for twentyâ€"four hours. You light a piece of the wood and put it in a metal urn, or saucer. After it has ignited well, blow out the flame, and leave the red ember to smoulâ€" der until the wood is wholly conâ€" sumed. Immensa Commerce. The Sault Sttâ€"@Maric Canalâ€"popularly known as the. "Boo"â€"will carry . more freight this season than Suez, Mancheeâ€" ter ard all the famous canals of Gerâ€" many> taken together. The "8oo" has traneported an average of more than 10, 000,000 tome per month since navigation opened, and ite total record for the year will not be lese than 75,000,000 tons. Figâ€" ures like these make traffic on other arâ€" tificial waterworks look petty and tame. The great lakee carry more commerce than any other, body of water less in size than the open ocean, and the most important stream of trade on the lakes has to pass through the "8oo" Canal. Progress in Far East. Japan has shown how fast an Oriental nation can pick up and pull abreast of the leadere. Little more than fifty years ago Japan was the home of an unenlightâ€" ened people. Toâ€"day she is neck and neck with the leaders of civilization, and alâ€" ready she has humbled in open war mighty European Yw”: and Japan has a population of only fortyâ€"seven millions, China is following in Japan‘s footsteps and what will happen when China, with her four hundred millions, pulls to the front? India is under the watchful eye of Britain, but India has a population of two hundred and ninetyâ€"four millions of people, who will speak for themselves. Small boys, step up and shake hands with this veneu'bfis gentleman. T1is name is Bceience, and he just ha~ wresented to vhe acBing orld the eoothing aesurance of m colicless cucumber. Don‘t see how that affecte you? That shows that your mind has not been trained to carry a thought to its logical conclusion, eays the New York Herald. Can‘t you underâ€" stand that the advent of the colicless cuâ€" cumber presages the coming of the crampless green apple. _ The immature peach when consumed will carry with it no moral pointing consequences. Happy days are in etore for childhood. to them keeping other things besides chickens. What we as patriotic citizens demand is a good honest Canadian °EE well and truly laid by a Canadian hen. We appeal to the women of Canada. It ie they who are primarily responsible. We know their exacting duties call for much of their time, but if the women of Canada were determined that the great American egg ehould dominate us no more we are sure that the Canadian hen would almost crow over its rival. + Are You a Talosonher? What‘s thatâ€"you don‘t know anything about talosophy? Listen: Talosophy is a new cult, invented by W. V. Backus. It is defined as the art or exercise of appreciation. For instance, when you meet with courtesy in shop, factory, etore or street car, you expreas your thanks and report the matter to the suâ€" perior officer or employer of the courteâ€" ous personâ€"just as you have been accusâ€" tomed to ‘"holler" about dieoourtenlen.‘ You go about looking for nice things to report and you find themâ€"and the more: nice things you find the fewer the un pleasant things become. You bombard“ buey employers with report carde and in that way contribute to their felicity and the revenues of the postal department.| You may, of course, find places where you simply won‘t be able to report all the courtesies you receive, but that needn‘t discourage you from making personal acknowledgments. _It is said that farmers can not live bY chickens alone. But there is no objection During the last fecal year Canada im ported from the United States 7,569,067 dozen of eggs, for which her people pald the enormous sum of $1,621,367. Over 90,000,000 egge among over 7,000, 000 people meane that Canadians during the year eat on an average twelye Ameri« can eggs each. Furthermore, Canadians have been the cause of giving work to at least 300,000 American hens if they each average 300 egge a year. Where, oh where, is the patriotic Canadian hen? Why does she not perform her duties proâ€" perly? Does ahe not exist? Are there not 300,000 hens in all this vast land of ours which will wipe this stain from our poultry yards? fil Canadians _ allow American eggs to decorate their breakâ€" fast table? Will they not rather refuse to eat those dozen egge which come from American hens? Shall we as a nation inâ€" crease our hens or diminish our egge? Tea is grown l:l;u-pâ€" tbemou;t;m of Ceylonâ€"with its native delicacy and fregrance held captive in the sealed lead packages. "H;llâ€"grown" tea has the small, tender leavesâ€" with full rich, delicious fragrance, redolent ti ie spicy tropics. ' Comment on Events ¢Salada" Toa is "Hillâ€"Orown" A Cure For Mosquitocs. Canadian vs. American E#8s. The Colicless Cucumber. TORONTO GREEN or MIXED : Name given by Canadian Postun Co., Windsor, Ont. Read ‘"The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Postum now comes in two forms : Regular Postumâ€"must be boiled. Instant Postum is a soluble powâ€" der. A teaspoonful dissolves quickâ€" ly in a cup of hot water and, with cream and sugar, makes a delicious beverage instantly. Grocers sell ‘‘There‘s a Reason‘‘ for Postum. both kinds. to drink Postum. Your improveâ€" ment is so apparentâ€"you have such fine colorâ€"that I propose to give credit where credit is due.‘ And now~â€" we are coffeeâ€"slaves no longer." Will Be Excluded From the United States Market. A _ despatch from â€" Washington says: Potatoes from Canada and Europe not already under quaranâ€" tine will be excluded from the United States if plans framed by the Department of Agriculture carry.â€" Already warned of an imâ€" pending potato famine, the Departâ€" ment experts said the present reâ€" strictions against diseased potatoes must bo extended further to preâ€" vent _ ruining future American crops. Bome people are wise enough to try new foods and beverages and then generous enough to give othâ€" ers the benefit of their experience. A wife writes : No slave in chains, it seemed to me, was more helpless than I, a coffee captive. Yet there were inâ€" numerable warningsâ€"waking from a troubled sleep with afeeling of sufâ€" focation, at times dizzy and out of breath, attacks of palpitation of the heart that frightened me. "At last my nervous system was so disarranged that my physician ordered ‘no more coffee.‘ I capiâ€" tulated. ‘"Determined to give Postum a fair trial, I prepared it according to directions on the pkg., obtaining a dark brown liquid with a rich snappy flavour similar to coffee. When cream and sugar were added, it was not only good but delicious. ‘‘Noting its beneficial effects in me the rest of the family adopted itâ€"all except my â€" husband, who would not admit that coffee hurt him. Several weeks elapsed during which I drank Postum two or three times a day, when, to my surprise. my husband said: ‘I have decided (Tea is just as injurious as coffee because it contains caffeine, the same drug found in coffee.) Desperate Fight Between Police and Indians in South Africa,. A despatch from Durban says: Later details of the affray on the Blackburn sugar estate show that a body of fourteen police was atâ€" tacked by three hundred Indians armed with sugar cane knives. In a desperate fight six Indians were killed and thirty wounded, some of them dangerously. _ Three policeâ€" men were wounded and a European civilian was stabbed and left unâ€" conscious by the Indians. Capable of Firing Eight Hundred Rounds a Minute. A despatch from London says: The new automatic machine gun for air craft, the invention of Colonel \Lewis, a retired United States *n,rmy officer, was given exhaustive tests on Thursday at Bisley in the presence of a distinguished gatherâ€" ing of British army officers and forâ€" |eign military attaches. The new gun resembles a large rifle in apâ€" pearance, but it has an outer jacket covering the barrel. It weighs only twentyâ€"seven pounds. ; The action is totally automatic and |the gun is capable of firing eight \hundred rounds a minute. With the gun mounted on a Grahameâ€" White aeroplane, Lieutenant Stelâ€" lingwelf of the Belgian army scored ;eleven hits in fourteen shots, from an altitude of 600 feet, on a target bf white sheets twenty feet square. Those present were greatly imâ€" pressed with the demonstration. Chilean Warship Being Built in England. A despatch from Newcastle, Engâ€" land, says: The Chilean battleship Almirante Toore was launched on Thursday at the Elswick shipyards. Her displacement is 28,000 tons and her engines are expected to develop over 37,000 indicated horsepower. The contract calls for a speed of twentyâ€"three knots. The _ main armament of the new vessel conâ€" sists of ten 4â€"inch guus placed in pairs in tmcrets on the centre line and she carries an auxiliary batâ€" tery of twentyâ€"two 4.7â€"inch guns. SIX KILLED, THIRTY INJURED LAUNXCHED AT NEWCASTLE. POTATOES FROM CANADA. HMusband Finally Convinced. EW AUTOMATIC GUXN. nessi wWIFE WOXN. Police Will Attend Them in Future to Prevent Rows. A despatch from Winnipeg says : Murders and stabbings have beâ€" come so frequent at Galician wedâ€" dings lately that the city has been forced to take action, and will send police to each ceremony hereafter, for which a permit will have to be issued. Toronto, Dec. 2. â€"Cattleâ€"Choice _ but chere, $8 to $8.50; good medium, #6.50 to $7.25; common, §§ to $5.50; fat cows, $4.50 to $6.25; common cowe, $5.50 to $4; butâ€" chers‘ bulls, $5.75 to $6.50; canners, $5.50 to $4. Calvesâ€"Good veal, #875 to $10; common, $4.75 to $5.10. Btockers and feedâ€" ersâ€"Bteers, 910 to 1,050 lbs., $6 to $6.50; Eood quality, 800 lbe., #6 to #6.25; li“ht aetern, 400 to 650 lbe., $4.50 to 85.25; light, $5.50 to $4. Bheep and lambsâ€"Light ewes, $4.50 to $5.50; heavy, $3 to $5.50; bucks, $5 to $5.50; spring lambs, $850 to $880, but with 750 per head deducted for all the buck lambe. Hogeâ€"#88.50 to $8.60 fed and watered, $8.05 off care. Early Opening Will Be Facilitated By New Ieeâ€"Breaker, A despatch from Ottawa says: Tenders are being called and will be received up to January 8th for the new iceâ€"breaker to be used in the St. Lawrence. The steamer will be the lragest of its particular kind in the worid, and in conjunceâ€" tion with those already in operaâ€" tion is designed to do much to facilitate the early opening of naviâ€" gation in the St. Lawrence channel. lambs, 712 to 8c A despatch from New York says : The campaign for a $4,000,000 fund for the Young Men‘s Christian Asâ€" sociation and the Young Women‘s Christian Association, which has been in progress for the last fortâ€" night, closed successfully on Wedâ€" nesday night, when it was anâ€" nounced that a total of $4,061,500 had been reached. Duluth, December 2.â€"Wheatâ€"No. 1 hard 8 1â€"%¢; No. 1 Northern, 85 1%; No. 2 do., 8$ 12 to 84c; Montana No. 2 hard 84 3â€"4; December, 83 346; May, 88 1â€"%0 Linseedâ€"$1.39; December, #1.37; . May $1.42 344. Montreal, Dec. 2. â€"Beet cattie were held at 7 i%e; medium, 5 12 to 7 1â€"2¢; common, 314 to § 14¢; bulle, 3 12 i0 4¢; lean eanâ€" ners, 3 to 3 1â€"%¢; cows, $40 0 $84, ove held for $12%5; calves, 312 10 T¢; wheep, i; Minreapolie, Dec. 2.â€"Wheatâ€"December, 82 5â€"8 to B2 J4¢c; May, 87 58 to 87 34¢; No. 1 hard, 86 1â€"4c; No. 1 Northern, 14 to 85 34c; No. 2, do., 82 14 to 83 340; No. 3 wheat, 80 14 to 81 34. Cornâ€"No, 3 yelâ€" low, 64 to 68e. Oateâ€"No. 3 white, 36 34 to 3te. Flour and branâ€"Unchanged. Montreal, Dec. 2.â€"Cornâ€"American _ No. 2 yeliow, 82 to 8¢c. Outsâ€" Canadian Westâ€" erns, No. :kw 34¢; do., No. 3, 38 1%. Barâ€" leyâ€"Man. feed, 480; mailting, 68 to 6%c. Buckwheatâ€"No. 2, 56 to §7¢. Flourâ€"Man, Bpring wheat patents, firsts, $5.40; secâ€" onds, $4.90; etrong bakers‘, $4.70; Winter patents, choice, J.'IS to #5; straight rollâ€" ers, $4.50 to $4.60; straight rollers, bage, §2 to $210,. Rolled oats, barrele, $440 to $4.50; bags, 90 lbe., $2.10 to $212 14. Bran, $20 to §$21. Shorts, $22 to $253. Middlings, §25 to $26,. Mouillie, $27 to $51. Mayâ€"No. 2, per ton, car lots, 814 to 815. Cheeseâ€" Finest weeterns, 13 12 to 13 58¢; finest easterns, 13 to 13 140. Butterâ€"Choicest creamery, 28 to 28 1.%¢; seconds, 2 12 to 27 34¢c. Eggeâ€"Fresh, 5§ to 60%¢c; seelected, 36¢; No. 1 stock, M¢c; No. 2 stock, 2%6¢. Poâ€" tatoes, per bag, car lots, 75 to 90c. For the New York Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. Wirinipeg, Dec. 2.â€"Cashâ€"Wheat, No. 1 Northern, 85 386; No. 2 Northern, 85 1%; No.:3 Northern, 61 586; No. 8, 6§ 1%¢; No. 6, 61 1â€"%0; feed, 56 1%c; No. 1 rejected seeds, 79 Tâ€"86; No. 2 rejected seeds, 77 7â€"8¢. ats, No. 2 C.W., 34 14c. Barley, No. 3, 43 146. Flax, No. 1 N.W.C., $1.16 14; No, 2 C.W., $114 14; No. 3 C.W., $1.01 14. â€" Baled etrawâ€"Car lots, $8, on track, Toâ€" ronto. _ Lardâ€"Tierces, 14 14¢c; _ tubs, 14 !%ei pails, 14 340. Baled hay No. 1 at $14.50 to $15.50 a ton, on track, here; No. 2 at $13 to $13.50, and mixed at $12 to $12.50. i manaig Honeyâ€"Extracted, in tine, !1 to 12¢ per Ib. for No. i; combs, 85 to $3.2% per dozen for No. 1, and $2.50 for No. 2. Poultryâ€"Fowl, 12 to lio per lb.; chickâ€" ens, 16 to 18c; ducks, 12 to 140; gesse, 12 to 15c; turkeys, fresh, No. 1, 23 to 256. Bmon-â€"[mng clear, 166 per lb., in case lots. Porkâ€"Short cut, $2850; do., mess, $24.50. Hameâ€"Medium to light, 19 12 to 2Mc; heary, 19¢; rolle, 15 14 to 16¢; breakâ€" fast bacon, 19 to 20e; backs, 22 to BMc.. _ Potatbesâ€"Ontarios, 9%¢ per bag _ on track, and Delawares at the same price. Butter â€"Choice dairy, 22 to 2M¢; inferior, 20 to 2lc. Creamery prints, 30 to 3l¢; eolids, 28 to 2%¢; storage, prints, 27 to 2¢; do., solide, 2% to 27c. C Eggsâ€"Case lots of newâ€"laid, 43 to 4e gwr dozen; fresh, 3 to Sic, and storage, 2 to 336 per dozen. Cheeseâ€"14 1%¢ for large, and 14 34 to 15e for twins. Beansâ€"Handâ€"picked, $210 to $220 per bushel; primes, $1.175 to §2. _ C Bockwheatâ€"70c, outside, with none Of fering. Branâ€"Manitoba bran, $21 to $21.50 a ton in bags, Toronto freight. Shorts, $22 t« $22.50, Toronto. Oateâ€"No. 2 Ontario oats, 33 to 350, OU side, and at 3 to 37e, on track, Toronio. Western Canada old oate, 39 1%¢ for No. 2, and i%e fer No. 3, Bay ports. Poasâ€"$1, oute:de. * Barleyâ€"Good malting barley, 58 to 60c, outside. Cornâ€"New American, 75¢, all rail, Toâ€" ronto. Rveâ€"No. 2 at 68 to 7%, outside. o ST. LAWRENCE NAYVIGATIOX. High Class 5â€"Year Bonds that are Profitâ€"Sharing. FRICES OF FARM PROJUST3 frices of Cattls, Crain, Eraduce at Home gEEPORT® FRoOM THE CENTRES OF 7% INVESTMENT NATIONAL SECURITIES CORPORATION, Li GALICIAX WEDDINXGS. $4,000,000 sUBSCRIBED. United States Markets Baled Hay and Straw. Live Stock Markets. Montreal Markets. Winnipeg Crain. Country Produce. Provisions. hogs, 3 18. 2.â€"Cattleâ€"Choice _ butâ€" good medium, #6.50 to to $5.50; fat cows, $4.50 cowe, $3.50 to $4; butâ€" Crain, Cheese ana Ainé Home and Abroad THE LEADIN3 TRAP3 OF AMLRICA kam 2,2. _ LITT PWY PnniirdThT Y! on LiFst suicp:ne _ â€" TORONTO. CinAd years. Eend with none of nay be withdrawn any time after one year o. Business at bagk of these Bonds estab» Bend for special folder and full particn ars 4 "Well, Henry, how do : your neighbors}" _ "Not They‘re so quirt that I move or mamma can‘t he they‘re saying." Monsieur Kling, director . Paris municipal laboratory, } vented a pistol that fires a ca: or small bomb charged with chemicals. When the on strikes an object, the chem‘~>» mediately vaporize into suffo fumes that confuse and o temporarily any person nea The pistol is used by policems detectives in the capture of 3: ate criminals, The phys / chief at one of the largest ho: in Paris believes that the n tol wi" be of great value in > ing lunatics, alcoholics, and dangerous persons ; and indee: pistol has already been tried case of such persons with sults. The fumes that it dis> are entirely harmless, but ext ly painful, for they blind the nearly suffocate him, and mak think that he is about to str: Will you please send a doll more, if you can spare It, to D Davidson, the Secretaryâ€"Treass the Hospital, or In this Department in 38 years nean ly 800 boys and girls have been trout. ed for Club Feet and 650 corrected, Half of these came from places outâ€" gide of Tor,nig Surely * have a fair slaitu Tor belp from the people of this Province. In the Orthopedic Departmen last year, of the 1,648 inâ€"patients, 278 were treated for deformities, 25 hip disoase, 87 Pott‘s disease, 2 knock knees, 1$ bowâ€"Jlegs, 62 club feet, 8 lateral curva. ture of the spine, 44 infantile paralysis, 6 wry neck, and 75 tubercular disease of knee, hip and ankle. In 1913, the Surgical Apparatus Shop manufactured 427 appliances for inâ€"patients and outâ€" patients, including ankle braces, spinal braces, hip splints, bowâ€"leg splints, clubâ€"feet splints, plaster jackets, e Busy dollars are better than icle tears. The sympathy that helps is good, but the Hospital has to have the sympathy that works. Will you, the reader of this lettor, help to give crippled children a fair start in life? While Christmas Bells are ringing to the glory of Him "Who made the lame to walk and the blind to se," give, give, give, and help the Hos pital to help God‘s little ones, upon whom the heayy hand of affliction has been laid. Since 1875, thirtyâ€"eight years ago, the Hospital has admitted within its walls 21,018 children as inâ€"pationts, and 159,231 as outâ€"patients, a total of 180,249, or an average Oof 4,743 per year. Of the 21,018 inâ€"patients, 15,209 were from Toronto, and 5,818 from other parts of the Province; 10,150 of the total inâ€"patients were cured, ang 6,367 were improved. In the Orthopedic Department last year, of the 1,648 inâ€"patients, 278 were treated for deformities, 25 hip disoase, the beginning. The beds have grown to 250, the dollars to thousands, the friends to bundreds. 1875, the frst year, 44 inâ€"patients, $7 outâ€"pationts: 1913; last year, 1,648 inâ€"pationts, 25,507 outâ€"patients; 1875, 1 nurse; 1913%, 79 nurses. Few One nurse, six little white beds, 4 few dollars, a few friendsâ€"this was FOR The Hospital for Sick Childreq CoLLEGE ST., TORONTo Dear Mr. Editor:â€" Thanks for your kindness in allow, ing me the privilege of appealing ay this Christmas time on behalf of the Hogpital for Sick Children, Toronto It would take more spate th«, \'Oi ean spare to tell of the good work dong for the sick and deformed children of this Province. Let me, bhowever, in 4 few words, tell you of the progress of the work of the‘Ho_l'_p_I_ml. CuristMAS Arrrar Thls trade mark assures perivct Style, Fit and Finish. See that the celebrated trademark , as shown in illustration, is on every pair of gloves you buy. Perrin‘s Gloves No Gift Is More Universally J. ROSS ROBERTSOXN, Chairman of the Trustees, T« . Seriesâ€"$100, $500, $1000 Asphyxiating Bullets. goâ€"linld . j nd !r- At M» "g nA n. m or MB of Oceurrences FROM MR M XEws BÂ¥ x BULL ax jer qirect From cream or ml 1nd on aooked then % golden tightly ing aet O lease the Posi T oa But after st answer, Ing Reigns 8u I+ re he Cured ost A Wyq & ©very eing t Bloodg Pills WJ 1G# W ho Post u 11

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