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Durham Review (1897), 3 Apr 1919, p. 6

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. h wl > ~ Ale on 1 whe d + 0000 Pss ds tBMk i c cc c ci d rade, $11.10 to $11.20; rolled oats, {ag, 90 lbs., $3.90 to $4; bran, $40.25; shorts, $42.25; Mouillie, $64; hay No. 2, per ton, car lots, $24, Cheese, finest Easterns, 24 to 25¢c; butter, choicest creamery, 59 to blc; eggs, selected, 36¢; No. 1 stock, 35¢c; poâ€" »wtatoes, per bag, car lots, $1.50: ‘dres. sed hogs, abattoir killed, $27.00; lard, pure, wood pails, 20 lbs. net, 29 to 31%c. Toronto, April 1.â€"Choice, heay | l ow f export steers, m to $15.50; do, gooJ:’ How Germany Will Defray $13 to $13.50; _ choice butcher} The Cost of Food Supplies steers, $13.25 to $13.50; â€" butcher‘s e cao::;e' ;‘l';?'ige. 313122{’;0 tod $13.75; dO'i A _ despatch from _ Copenhagen $1095 to $iy.tbc"bails‘ chotes, pinry mays‘â€"In onder to detray : Hingtye to $11.75; do, medium bulls, $9 to| £0°d. SUPPlies, the German Minister $9.25; do, rough bulls, $7.75 to $8.25;| of F}r{ance is about to issue a decree butchers‘ cows, choice, $11 to $12;| requiring delivery to the State of all do, good, $10 to $10.75; do, medium, foreign securities with a fixed rate $0 to $9.25; do, common, $7.50 to $8;| of interest, except Russian and loans stockers, $8.75 to $11.50; feeders, $11 | to Germany‘s former allies, accordâ€" to $12.50; canners and cutters, 85-25; ing to advices from Berl.jn. They t°,373d milkers, #ood to choice, $90 _to will be purchased at their market :;:?,,’“:;_ “?9"0' ntr;d 3?505‘:"1’16511:0(-:7;5* value at the end of 1918. e a; h bevommomes â€"Atpvarmnend ::,,21: .22{,,_”;1?5""5:' :1192' t‘:‘)’,,l;: Many a man‘s failure in â€" small good to choice, $14 to $17; hogs,| things is due to his being troubled[ fed and watered, $19 to $19.25: do‘| with great ambitiong Montreal _ Markets. Montreal, April 1.â€"Oats No. 1 feed, 81¢c; flout, new . _ Maple productsâ€"Syrup, gal., $1.85 to $2.50; sugar, 1b., 2Â¥c;o 28c. Provisions â€" Wholesale. Smoked _ meatsâ€"Hams, medium, 36 to 38¢; do, heavy, 30 to 32¢; cookâ€" ed, 49 to 51¢c; rolls, 31 to 32¢c; breakâ€" fast bacon, 41 to 45¢; backs, plain, 44 to 45¢; boneless, 50 to 52c. ‘ Cured meatsâ€"Long clear bacon, 28 to 20¢; clear bellies, 27 to 28c. 1 Lardâ€"Pure, tierces, 28 to 28l4e¢;| tubs, 28% to 20¢; pails, 28% to 294 ; prints, 29 to 30c. Comgound,' tierces, 25% to 25%¢; tubs, 25% to| 26!4¢; pails, 26 to 26%e¢; prints 27%t to 27%¢. _ Maple productsâ€" $1.85 to $2.50; suga beansâ€"Canadian, handâ€"picked, bushel, $3.25 to $3.75; primes, $2.50 to $3; imported handâ€"picked, Burma or Indian, $3.25; Limas, 14¢c. Honeyâ€"Extracted clover, 5 lb. tins 25 to 26e lb.; 10 lb. tins, 24% to 25¢; 60 !b. tins, 24 to 25¢; buckwheat, 60 Ib. tins, 19 to 20¢c. Comb: 16 0Z., 34.;5‘0 to $5, doz.; 12 oz., $8.50 to $4. bushel, $3.25 to $3. Live pou‘!tryâ€"Roosters, 22¢; fowl, 28 to 33¢; ducklings, 1b., 35¢; tur. keys, 30¢c; chickens, 27¢c; geese, 18c. Cheeseâ€"New, large, 28 to 28%4¢; twins, °8% to 29c; triplets, 29 to 20%c¢; Stilton, 20% to 30¢; old, large, 20% to 30¢c; twins, 30 to 30%c. Potatoesâ€"Ontarios, f.o.b. â€" track Toronto, car lots, $1.10 to $1.15. Butterâ€"Dairy, tubs and rolls, 36 to 38¢; prints, 40 to 41c. Creamery, fresh made solids, 50 to Slc; prints, 55 to 57e. Eggsâ€"New laid, 37 to 38c. Dressed poultryâ€"Chickens, 26 to B4c; roosters, 25¢; fowl, 28 to 33¢; ducklings, 82¢; turkeys, 45¢; squabs, dog., $5.00; geese, 25c. \ Hayâ€"No. 1, $20 to $21 per ton; mixed, $18 to $19 per ton, track, Toronto. Strawâ€"Car lots, $10 per ton. Millfeedâ€"Car lots, delivered Monâ€" treal freights, bags included. Bran, $40.25 per ton; shorts, $42.25 per ton; good feed flour, $8.25 to $3.50 per bag. | Ontario _ flourâ€"Government â€"stanâ€" dard, $9.55 to $9.75 in bags, Toronto and Montreal, prompt shipment in jute bags. al Manitoba flourâ€"Government stanâ€" dard, $10.75 to $11.00, Toronto. Ontario wheatâ€"No. 1 spring. $2.00 to $2.17; No. 2, do, $2.06 to $2.14. No. 3, do, $2.02 to $2.10 £.0.b. shipâ€" ping points according to froights. Peasâ€"No. 2, $1.80, according to freights outside. .lBurley-â€"Malting, 93 to 98c¢, nominâ€" Buckwheatâ€"No. 2, 90c, nominal. ‘Rye-.\'o. 2, $1.59 to $1.62, nominâ€" Markets of the World Country _ Produceâ€"Wholesale. Live Stock Markets. 1.â€"Choice, hea 0 $15.50; do, good, choice _ butcher $13.50; butcher‘s â€"Oats, â€" extra standard ; do, _ _____| _ _Montreal, April 1. | $14.50 per 100 pound | $9. Bum' ;?tt_,t.le‘ mh- » d .ythern g::;" $12 to $13. 4; No' milkâ€"fed, $12 to $15; +‘w;;"° as low as $6. Hogs, with great ambitions of interest, except Russian and loans to Germany‘s former allies, accordâ€" ing to advices from Berlin. They will be purchased at their market value at the end of 1918. The Cost of Food Supplies A _ despatch from Copenhagen says:â€"In order to defray the cost of food supplies, the German Minister of Finance_ is about to issue a decree sn Th oo loyalty cards and 300 refused them, J. Mansfield, secretary, reports. The 800 have been classed as "undesirâ€" able citizens." Government employ. ment agencies have been instructed to prevent them from securing jobs, Mr. Mansfield said. * A despate from Winnipeg Since the Alien Enemv Inva Board IPEOPLE OF CANADA GIVE : $6,842.80 TO PRINCESS ;f A despatch from Montreal says:â€" |Lady Fitzpatrick has been advised r“that the amount collected in Canada for a wedding present to Her Royal ]Highness Princess Patricia was $6,â€" !842.80. Of this the contributions in the Province of Quebec amounted to }32.549.88. Lady Borden cabled the‘ | Princess that this wedding gift from: the people of Canada would be in-’ | vested in Victory Loan Bonds, which | will be forwarded to her in the near| future enclosed in a silver box. ' J. H. Thomas, general secretary of the union, said that the settlement was made subject to satisfaction beâ€" ing obtained on some points yet outâ€" standing. The strike resolution was rescinded by the conference. A despatch from London says:â€" The delegates to the conference of the National TUnion of Railwaymen decided to accept the offer of the Government for the settlement of their demands. BRITISH UNREST SATISFACTORILY ENDED A despatch from Ottawa says:â€" A return tabled in the Commons gives the total expense on the canals of the Dominion since Confederation at $104,073,439. The revenue during the period amounted to $l7,080,l39.‘ The Welland canal has been the greatest revenue producer. The earnings credited to it being $5,212,â€" 308, while the Lachine canal holds second place with a total revenue since Confederation of $2,345,405. In recent years no revenue has been colâ€" lected from canals because of the abolition of the tolls. f CANALS COST $104,073,439 SINCE CONFEDERATION The feature of this craft, which was one of the several surprises beâ€" ing prepared for the Germans, is the use of a nonâ€"inflammable gas. The late Professor Ramsay was the disâ€" coverer of the gas, which permits of the construction of engines so that they can be placed on an ainship which can float in the water if disâ€" abled. Shots through the envelope,‘ it is said, will only damage the gas compartment struck. The airship is not expected to be ready for trial| before June. | The Admiralty was engaged in buildâ€" ing two such vessels before tke war ended, and it was expected that they would be superior to Zeppelins for scouting for fleets. Montreal, April 1.â€"Choice «stsers, $14.50 per 100 pounds; other grades, $9. Butchers‘ cattle, $6 to $11.50. Spring lambs, $15 and $16 a&ineee. Sheep, $12 to $13. Calves, c ice, mil!:-fed, 312 to $15; poorer quality, off cars, $19.25 to $19.50; do, L.0.b.,| country points, $18. j ALIENS DECLINED OFFER OF LOYALTY CARDS he Alien Enemy I;w;st'i;aix:on started proceedings in Januâ€" 00 a]iens_hgye been granted poorer quality, $19.50 per 100 says:â€" | What the lighthouse is to the‘ | stean._hip, the land wireless station: has now become to the ‘plane, withl | this exceptionâ€"that the wireless staâ€"‘ tion is distinctly more reliable. The| lighthouse flash was surely consid-‘ erably dimmed during fogs, the sound of the foghorn also appreciably deadened by fog; whereas, on wireâ€" less, fog has no effect whatever. Few Obstacles. In the days that lie ahead, wireless will play a greater part than ever in getting in touch with remote and littleâ€"explored territories World reâ€" construction in the general means of communication is inevitable. One difficulty which wireless will dispose| of is the immense sums of money until recently laid out in the conâ€" struction of telegraph systems, esâ€" pecially when these lay through vast|1 swamps or mighty forests. In tropâ€"| 1 ical climates excessive plant growths| i often cause tremendous havoc to a‘f _ During the war, wireless never had ’much of a chance from the purely _commercial standpoint, it is the perâ€" iod of reconstrurction which is to witâ€" ness this particular phase of its deâ€" velopment. The wireless stations unâ€" til recently in the hands of the Govâ€" ernment will presntly be in the hands of private companies. War inventions will have the effect of appreciably reducing the cost of the iservice, while owing to another recent inâ€" vention, the great aerial routes it is proposed presently to inaugurate will not be handicapped as would hnve] been the case in earlier days by the dense fogs. | â€"sRINGING UP PATEHEE | _ That the peace of the world will be furthered by wireless I have no ldoubt whatever; improved methods of communication always make for | the advance of civilization. There 'can be little doubt, for instance, that it has been the transatlantic cables lwhich for years have played the leadâ€" 'ing part in cementing the friendship | between the people in Brit.in and 1 the people in the United States. Simpler Apparatus. , Among the mprovements in wireâ€" less, which, during reconstruction, we hope to see playing a mighty part, is that of receiving messages without the high masts at one time indispensable; but the statement reâ€" cently published in the Press that the method of receiving messages in! the ground, or even of sending them! through the ground is entirely new,l is utterly fallacious. The method is! twenty years old if it is a day, andl in the Tripoli campaign of 1911 was | actually putâ€" into practice. | Senator Marconi, the Famous In: ventor, Describes Its Possibilitics _ in These Days of Reconstruction ' So far as wireless is concerned, the period of reconstruction is goâ€" ing to reap an immense benefit from the devastating war now mercifully at an end. Not only can we send messages more clearly, more accurâ€" ately; not only have we gained splenâ€" did experience in the art of wireless communication by airship and ‘plane, as a result of the war, but by autoâ€" matic apparatus we can now desâ€"| patch some three hundred words a,‘ minute, where prior to hostilities the most that could be sent was half that’ number. | soME HINTS AT THE WONDERS OF THE NEAR FUTURE 7 i enuon onl mb uit 6 mdatiats haw‘s. Padird Andehie iess Ries id i2120 1033 c the "cease fire" message into Mons on Armistice Day. They were led by Sergeant Gordon McMillan, of Toronto, the wellâ€"known cycleâ€"racing champion. McMillan is the ridar on the right end. TRUE PEACEMAKER The 6th ‘Canadian Engmeer_l Cymrapy Cycle équmd, which carried Unique Ph&tograph of a Torpedoed Ship r This photo taken by a British airâ€" man, who was hunting German subâ€" marines, shows the S. S. Andex on fire and sinking after she had been torpedoed by the Huns. ' In conclusion, it need only be said 'that the verbal message sent by wireâ€" less telephony early in the war from America to France heralded a new era in that phase of the science. The days of reconstruction affording inâ€" finitely better opportunity than was possible in war time, here, too, many new developments may be looked for, each and all of them calculated, by linking up the oceanâ€"severed continâ€" ents of the world, to establish, as it never has been, the sacred doctrine of the Brotherhood of Man. system of land line, while in hot climates also violent storms someâ€" times devastate whole stretches of |line-â€"additional obstacles which in the days of reconstruction wireless 'may safely be trusted to surmount. In the daysâ€"toâ€"be an interesting deâ€" velopment of wireless will be noticeâ€" able in transmissions sent from the vessels of the great trade routes of: the world to the pilots of the various air services and vice versa. For in-l stance, the ‘planes of the future will be able to warn oceanâ€"going vessels‘ of onâ€"coming storms, and so afford them ample time to save their awnâ€" ' ings, for instance, which might otherâ€" wise be readily destroyed ; or to clcsel their hatches, which, during lengthy voyages, are sometimes opened in rox‘der to let fresh air into the holds. \ A Life-Slve'. The suddenness of tropical storms being proverbial, it seems to me wireless will have here a distinct opâ€" portunity of manifesting its everâ€" increasing powers. _ On the other hand, the liner will be equally capâ€" able of befriending the fogâ€"wrapped ‘plane by letting it know the Weather, conditions at definite hours, so that | the airmen would know at what altiâ€"‘ tude to fly in order to be least afâ€"l fected by the predicted cimatic con-’ ditions. TORONTO A Zoo Tortoise Dead. The London Zoo has suffered a heavy loss by the death of Georgina â€"Lord _ Rothschild‘s well known giant tortoise, that was hborn on Indefatigable Island, Galapagos, about 250 years ago. Children used to have rides on Georgina‘s /back. Georgina was the first tortoise that learnt to carry people, and it took several months before the animal was trained to the work. A striking feature of the extreme revolutionary movement which is at the back of the uglier aspects of the present labor troubles is that is is largely led by men of alien origin One of the most notorious of the Clyde firebrands is by extraction a Polish Jew. In South Wales a Rusâ€" sian Jew, who swells his audicnces by excellent violin performances, is the fouptain of propaganda of the: most extreme form, and in Belfast an American Jew is the motive power: of the machinery of disaffection. ‘ an inch deep in rows from twelve to fourteen inches apart at the rate of from four to six pounds of seed per acre. The Large Red Wethersfield, Yellow Globe Danvers, and Southâ€" port Yellow Globe are recommended as suitable for the warmer sections of Canada. _ Early White Barletta and White Queen are suitable sorts for pickling, while in the Prairie| Provinces Extra Early Red or Early: Flat Red give best results. | That appetizing vegetable, the onâ€" ion, also occupies a place in this pamphlet which points out that the seed should be sown about oneâ€"half a‘so taken up. The soii, growing the plants, planting, cultivation, blanchâ€" ing and storing are dealt with. Asparagus and Onion Culture. l That luscious vegetable, asparagus, available only in the spring and early ’summer months, might readily be grown much more extensively than \it is. If properly prepared, that is, [well drained, a bed may remain for twelve or fifteen years and will imâ€" prove during most of this period if properly looked ‘after. One has to wait a couple of years for a crop after the bed is set out, but the reâ€" lief from planting, which is necesâ€" sary with most crops, during sucâ€" ceeding years more than offsets this disadvantage. Asparagus culture is dealt with in a practical way in Pamphlet No. 24 of the Central Exâ€" perimental Farm, which is available at the Publications Branch of the Department of Agriculture, Ottawu.] In this pamphlet celery culture is | The communicatior adds that Govâ€" ernment decrees give complete guarâ€" antees of secu;’ay of life and properâ€" ty to all foreign subjects in Hungary. It declares untrue the report that Count Michael Karolyi has been sucâ€" ceeded as Provisional President. The food supply of the capital and the country is declared to be adeâ€" quate. Provision shops and markets are open, and the population can obâ€" tain adequate supplies of food. Seâ€" curity for life and property has been _guaranteed by Government decree and the proclamation of martial law. It is added that enactments have been made giving illegitimate chilâ€" dren equal rights with those of legiâ€" timate birth and making marriage a simple civil ceremony. Also decrees have been issued regulating the cir-] culation of money at banks, n!!owingl holders of current accounts up to! 2,000 kronen to retain control of their money. Directors of banks are to retain their posts and fees, but‘ only to 2 maximum of 3.009 kreaen monthiy. _ The banking business u‘ proceeding in an orderly manner. The message says that complete peace and order reign in Budapest and throughout the country, and that the revolution was carried out enâ€" tirely without bloodshed. Neither in Budapest nor the provinces was a single person wounded, let alone beâ€" ing killed. A despatch from London says:â€" A Hungarian wireless communicaâ€" tion, dealing with the situation in Hungary, was received here on Thursday. It is addressed "to all." PEACE RESTORED IN HUNGARY Bloodless Revolution Complete, According to Wireless From Budapest. Alien Labor Leaders. 15,000 Canadians Cleared * _ From Kimmel Camp in 26 Days A despatch from London says:â€" Upwards of 100,000 Canadian sol. diers have left the British Isles for home since the armistice. The 3rd Division is entirely cleared, and the major portion of the 1st Division is now here. Only 56,000 Canadians remain in France. Since March 1, 15,000 Canadians have been cleared from Kinmel Camp, [ Early in their investigations they 'found that the old slave drivers of Ithe West Indies knew even more about antiseptics than did the modâ€" 'ern German chemists, Slaves caught f trying to escape were severly thrashâ€" ed, to discourage such attempts on jthe part of the others. But it was not to the owner‘s benefit to be long‘ ’deprived of the services of such erâ€" rant slaves, and to promote rapid | recovery the slave drivers used to wash the wounds with a mixture of| sea water and lemon juice. Scientists studied the effect of a mixture of common salt and lemon juice on the blood, and found that, whereas ordiâ€" nary antiseptics tended to destroy not only the germs but also the tisâ€" sues of the body and actually retard the healing of the wound, the old slave drivers‘ remedy promoted the flow of the healing fluids from all parts of the body to the injured part. Allics Found Them Superior to Those Made by Germans. Before the war nearly all antisepâ€" tics were made by German chemical firms. Scientists in the allied counâ€" tries, however, began experimenting and investigating, and soon produced many antiseptics that were superior to the old types. I a Rollsâ€"Royce engine of 360 horseâ€" power, claimed to have a top speed of 130 miles an hour. He plans to start from Newfoundland. ANTISEPTICS IN WEST INDIES The fourth entry in the transâ€" Atlantic flight has registered with the Royal Aero Club. He is Sidney Pickles, an Australian, who will make the attempt in a Fairey biplane with ’ Opinion is expressed here among air experts that the unusually severe weather conditions may postpone any attempts at a transâ€"Atlantic flight until better weather is more certain. The extreme cold and the heavy hailstorms _ severely _ taxed _ the strength of those airmen who have participated in the recent cruises around the Danish coast, and last night‘s flight over the Irish coast.‘ The British airships, it is declared, have behaved splendidly under the, most trying conditions, and there is} every belief that the Râ€"34 and sister‘ ships will be able to surpass the Zepâ€": pelin achievement of 100 hours inl flight. | _ While the first of the three trials , which are expected to precede the | transâ€"Atlantic attempt is regarded | in expert quarters here as highly | successful, there is neverthcless disâ€" | appointment that the airship was unâ€" | able to complete the 24â€"hour test ‘ planned. _ High winds and extreme 'cold prevailed for two days in the waters around the British Isles, and‘ the big airship was heavily buffeted by the gales and snowstorms, and the ‘cold was so intense the water in the: ballast tanks froze. She was forced! to ascend to a high altitude to free }herself from the blizzardly condi-, tions. Great Britain‘s biggest airship, the Râ€"34, which in the near future will attempt a transâ€"Atlantic flight, had its first severe test recently when it set forth from the Clyde for a civcuit of the Irish coast, says a Lonâ€" don despatch. The airship returned to her base after remaining aloft nearly twenty hours, encountering the severest weather. \ UnfavorableWeather _ May _ Delay Crossingâ€"Australian Will Make Attempt in Fairey Biplane. BIG AIRSHIP TO FLY THE ATLANTIC FOUR â€" ENTRIES MADE _ FOR TRANSâ€"OCEAN â€" TRIP Weather Unfavorable for Trip. fikk: a5 1â€"3 world‘s UEDPD O UP: PZUT WITC® ther this be true or ‘not, the basis of the industry remains, and before long it can be reconstructe! and ox. SSE t nuracn d e 2 OLACCCONB CUVUM SD LARELCTS E.l:u:im! knows. Very likely the It was in its way a marvel i him turn out, with no bettor it ment that a tiny .('v(‘l\‘?n;: di soft iron charged with diamond a reduced and perfoct copy in erystal of the delicate shell o argonaut. ‘_!Et_,i: happening now at 1‘% Thirdâ€"Vases,, dishes and paprerâ€" weights of lnpé lazuli, jasper, ctc. Where objects were large, mants‘»> pieces for example, the mcothod |=s been to make the body of slate and cover it with a veneer of lapisâ€"‘lazuli or other semiâ€"precious stone. Fourthâ€"Fraits and flowers iwm,/*aâ€" ted in semiâ€"precious stones and cnâ€" [ tained in vases and CJishes of jazpor. | Never in the world before were such | clever counterfeits made. Grapes o° purple amcthyst or blac\ onyx, respâ€" berries of rhodonite, mulberric: 0* yeliow chalcedony and green 1cve; of the "noble serpentine." . Whit> currants or rock cry *al cut ho">w, with the insid€s engraved to rooveâ€" sent seeds. In a word, there no such art work in this produced at Ekatrinbks» without really upâ€"toâ€"da the Russian artisan in cribed has been rathor his methods. a turn at the trade in Fkaterinburs, and became (so it is ssid) 2 fairly expert lapidary, Within recent years all the bigâ€"job designs used at th» factory have been mado at Peterho? (near Petrograd), being furnished in the shape of wax models. Marvellous Works of" Art. » The output has assumed forms wheh may be classified as follows: Firstâ€"Cut gems. Secondâ€"Caskets, seals and charms. Also cameos engraved with busts of the reigning Czar, other important personages, animals, etc. Czar Alexander I. was #s> interâ€" ested in the business that he took The work (in respect of physical magnitude) has extended all the way ‘d’own from palace columns and monuâ€" ments to the cutting of tiny gems. It has been developed far beyond any similar industry anywhere else in the world. Scattered all over Eurâ€" ope, in royal dwellings and elseâ€" where, the products of Ekaterinburg may be foundâ€"representing #ilts from the recent and other Czars of Russia, by whom they were used for the cultivation of international good will. ' Ekaterinburg was chosen for the site of the original factory (since ’vutly expanded) because it offered unlimited water power. . The work within recent years has"been condu«â€" ted on such a scale that huge masses of jasper or other semiâ€"precious stones (fetched sometimes hundreds of miles on sledges in winter) could be sawed, shaped, polished and otherwise manipulated as marble or granite is treated in our own counâ€" try. _ That remarkably unmoral, ruthless and intellectually superior monarch Catherine II was first to rcognize the value of the resources of the Urals for the production of gems and semiâ€"precious stomes. She founded the great works at Ekaterinburg ({named after her), which, though their operation is now presumably suspended, have made most importâ€" ant contributions to the lapidary art in Europe. We think of topaz as a yellow stong, but the mines of the Urals yield it in white, blue and green, They produce most beautiful agate and rock crystal in masses excepâ€" tionally large and clear; but these latter, of course, are mercly "semiâ€" precious" and not gem material, _ Consider, for example, the green garnets of the Urals, which are mined in the neighborhood of Syssersk. You and I have never seen any, at all events, to recognize them | for what they are. Yet the finest small ones are worth more than emeralds of equal size, for they are very bril. liant, with a play of color like that of a diamond. For the jewelry trade, frogs, fishes, grasshoppers and katyâ€" dids are made of them for brooches and pins, that is to say. # ’ That region is a storchouse of inâ€" calculable riches as yet almost unâ€" touched. Its mines of various metals offer a most tempting promiseâ€"platiâ€" num, for instance, boing found noâ€" where else in real quantity. As a producer of the soâ€"callod "semiprecious" stones, the reglon of the Urals is unappreached and, where gem stones are concerned, it viil in future days yield a wonder®:} conâ€" twibution to the world‘s supply ?w Is Site of Greatest Inâ€" dustry in the World for Develâ€" opment of Precious Gems. A feature of the development of Russia‘s natural resources (when British enterprise gets started in that country) will be the opening up of the wealth of the Urals. THIS REGION Is A srorEHOUSsE OF INCALCULABLE WEALTH Founded by Catherine II. OF THE URALS advantage of â€" t!.{c rather pr up." But wheâ€" ate too the lir iine on and may ra» mot with the Good cockcry. increases the which bad co render indige COMMISs enel clas fact res} var Subâ€"Comn That Th De De W H M Reco fie

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