West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 4 Sep 1919, p. 6

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1* HONORING THE BRAVE. H.RH. the Prince of Wales presenting the Military Medal to Sergeant Boulanger of the famous 22nd, French Canadian Battalion, at Quebec. Smoked meatsâ€"H2 48c; do, heavy, 40 to to 65¢; rolls, 36 to bacon, 49 to 55¢; bad hoc: boneless, 56 to 5 Live poultry to 20¢; rooster ducklings, 22¢; Butter, fresh dairy, 40¢; creamery prints, 57 Margarineâ€"36 to 38¢ Eggsâ€"No. I‘s, 55 to 59 to 60c. Dressed poultryâ€"Spring chickens, 40¢c; roosters, 28 to 30:; 7ow|. 34 to 38¢; turkeys, 40 to 45¢; ducklings, 34 to 35¢; squabs, doz., $7. _ _ x ns 83¢; roosters, : ducklin#s, 25¢; squabs, doz., $6 to 29¢; roosters, 25¢; i ducklings, 22¢; turkeys Cheeseâ€"New, large twins, 28% to 29%4c; 30c; Stillon, 29 to 30c. to Millfeedâ€"Car lots, treal freights, bags per ton, ®*5; shorts, {ood feed flour, per 3.50, Hayâ€"No. 1, mixed, per ton, ronto. Strawâ€"Car l track, Toronto. 38 Markets of the World #1.20 /, iN SLOPE POFL WiOoam. o j American cormâ€"No. 3 yellow, nomâ€" hogs, abattoir killed, $32. inal; No. 4 yellow, nominal. ) Live Stock Markets. Ontario catsâ€"No. 3 white, 89 to| Toronto, Sept. 2.â€"Choice heavy 91 c,!a:-mrding to freights outside. steers, $13.75 to $14.50; good heavy Ontario wheatâ€"No. 1 Winter, per steers, $13.25 to $13.50; butchers‘ catâ€" car lot, nominal; No. 2 do, $2.03 to tle, choice, $12.75 to $13.25; do, good, $2.0%; No. 3 do, nomin=‘, f.o.b. shipâ€" $11.75 to $12.25; do, med., $11 to ping points, according to freights. | $11.25; do, com., $7 to $8; bulls, choice, Ontario wheatâ€"No. 1, 2 and 3 $10 to $10.50; do, med., $9.50 to $9.75; Spring, nominal. do, rough, $8 to $8.25; butcher cows, Barleyâ€"NMalting, £1.33 to $1.37, acâ€" choice, $10.25 to $10.75; do, good, $9 ecording to freights outside. to $9.25; do, med., $8.50 to $9; do, Buckwheatâ€"Nominal. com., $7 to $8; stockers, $7.50 to $10; Ryeâ€"Nominal. feeders, $10 to $11.25; canners amij Man‘toba flow=â€"Government standâ€" cutters, $4.75 to $6.75; milkers, good ard, $11, Toronto. !to choice, $110 to $140; do, com. and Ontario flourâ€"Government standâ€"‘ med, $65 to $75; springers, $90 to ard, Montreal and Toronto, $10 to $150; light ewes, $8 to $10; yearlings, $10.50, in jute bags, prompt shipment. $10.25° to $12.50; spring lambs, per Millfeedâ€"Car lots, delivered Monâ€"| ewt., $15.50 to $16.25; calves, good to treal freights, bags included: Bran, choice, $16.50 to $22; hogs, fed and per ton, ®*5; shorts, per ton, $55; watered, $21.25; do, weighed off cars, good feed flour, per bag, $3.25 to $21.50; do, f.0.b., $20.25. $3.50, ‘ Montreal. Sept. 2.â€"Best steers, $12; Hayâ€"No. 1, per ton, $23 to $25; choice butchers‘ bulls, $6.50 to $7.50; mixed, per ton, $10 to $19, track, Toâ€"| canners‘ cattle, $5 to $6; choice butâ€" ronto. chers‘ cows, $6 to $9. Milkâ€"fed calves, Strawâ€"Car lcts, per ton, $10 to $11,} $16 to $15; grassâ€"fed stock, $7; lambs, track, Toronto. |$M to $15; sheep, $7; hogs, best selâ€" Ceuntry Produceâ€"Wholesale. ects, $20.50 per ewt. off cars; other Breadstuffs. Toronto, Sept. 2.â€"Manitoba wheat â€"â€"No. 1 Northern, $2.24%; No. 2 Norâ€" thern, $2.21%; No. 3 Northern, $2.17%; No. 4 wheat, $2.11, in store, Fort William. Ontario flourâ€"Government standâ€" ard, Montreal and Toronto, $10 to $10.50, in jute bags, prompt shipment. Millfeedâ€"Car lots, delivel;ed Monâ€" treal freights, bags included: Bran, per ton, ®*5; shorts, per ton, $55; Manitoba barleyâ€"No. 3 . C.W., $1.35% ; No. 4 C.W., $1.31% ; rejected, $1.23%, in store Fort Wiliam. American cormnâ€"No. 3 yellow, nomâ€" inal; No. 4 yellow, nominal. Ontario catsâ€"No. 3 white, 89 to 91 c, ascording to freights outside. Manitoba oatsâ€"No. 2 C.W No. 3 C.W., 88%¢; extra No. 88%¢; No. 1 feed, 87%e¢; No 84%¢, in ‘store Fort William Honevâ€"Extracted clover, 5â€"lb. tins, to 25¢; 10â€"lb. tins, 23% to 24¢; â€"!b. tins, 23 to 24¢; buckwheat, 60â€"1b. is, 18 to 19¢c. Comb, 16â€"0z., $4150 to doz.; 10â€"0z., $8.50 to $4 dozen. Maple productsâ€"Syrup, per imperâ€" gallon, $2.45 to $2.50; per 5 imperâ€" gallons, $2.35 to $2.40; sugar, 1b., Epa Country Produceâ€"Wholesale Butterâ€"Dairy, tubs and rolls, ¢; prints. 38 to 40c. Creamery, f ade, solids, 52 to 52%¢, prints, res Provisi â€"49 to 50c. ed poultryâ€"Spr lear bellies, 33 to 34c. _ _ Pure tierces, 37 to 38¢; tubs, "3â€"Wholesale c; fowl turkeys, Spr ams, med.. 47 to o 42¢; cooked, 63 + 38¢; â€" breakfast icks, plain, 58 to 58¢; clear bellies, ng chic fowl. 2 , IK. to triplets, choice, 47 to to 58c. n# 56¢; selects, 0 ickens 26 to acon, 34 chickens, to, S2e; to 40¢; , 904%e; 2 feed, 29¢; 20 to 36 to fresh 30¢ 1% The Bible was presented by Dr. N. W. Hoyles, K.C., LL.D., president of the society, in a few well chosen reâ€" marks. The presentation was very fittingly made at the Exhibition grounds, where for many years the society has had a booth for th disposing of Bibles to visitors at the Erhibition. Canada welcomes thee, With open arms and loyal hearts To her rich and vast domains. A free people acctiim thee By God‘s grace our future king, Our Empire‘s hope and bond. May the Laurel of Peace Encircle thy brow! And righteousness and truth Guide, help and preserve thee. In these happy moments May C’anadu adopt Thy motto, "Ich Dien." Upon his recent visit to Toronto his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales graciously accepted the gift of a Bible from the Upper Canada Bible Society. PRESENTED A BIBLE TO THE PRINCE OF WALES THE ADVENT INTO CANADA of H.R.H the Prince of "Wales, K.G. Hail to our bright young Chieftain, Joyous envoy from the Motherland. Scion of a reign beloved, g And heir to farâ€"flung realms, Of valour proved on Victory‘s fields, Yet gentle, kind and lovable. Canada welcomes thee, With open arms and loyal hearts grades down westerns, 25¢. Butter, choicest creamâ€" ery, 56c. Eggs, fresh, 64 to 66; selecâ€" ted, 59 to 60c; No. 1 stock, 53 to 55¢; No. 2 stock, 43 to 45¢c. Potatoes, per bag, car lots, $2.50 to $2.75. Dressed Montreal Markets. Montreal, Sept. 2.â€"Oats, extra No. 1 feed, $1.02%; flour, new standard grade, $11 to $11.10; rolled oats, bag 90 lbs., $4.80 to $5.25; bran, $45; shorts, $55; hay No. 2, per ton, car lots, $21 to $22.10. Cheese, finest 37% to 38e; pails, 37% to 38%4¢, grintl, 39 to 40¢c. Compound tierces, 1% to 22¢; tubs, 32 to 32%¢; pails, 32% to 32%c; prints, 33 to 38%%e. chers‘ bulls, $6.50 to attle, $5 to $6; choic s, $6 to $9. Milkâ€"fed : grassâ€"fed stock, $7; ): sheep, $7; hogs, be 0 per ewt. off cars; wn to $16.50 per ewt. â€"Hamilton McCarthy. i emmants" 7 ‘."' ts <a i: fi»" Best steers, $12; , $6.50 to $7.50; $6: choice butâ€" Milkâ€"fed calves ’ "No one ever doubted that the Prince would receive such a welcome; ’his position, his personality and the ‘ part he played in the struggle wherein the Canadians bore so great a share were sufficient to aÂ¥Bure that. But the people of the Dominion are surâ€" passing all expectations by the heartiâ€" ness of their welcome and by the keen pleasure they are obviously taking in the Prince‘s visit. In the midst of all these manifestations of public inâ€" terest and of his own popularity, the Prince is bearing himself well, disâ€" playing that quiet courtesy and modâ€" esty which have already endeared him to the people at home.‘* Reproducing Rare Carpets. Carpets now on display in a London shop will, in the opinion of the Times, surprise those who are unacquainted with the strides made in the manuâ€" facture of carpets by British factories during the war. T?ga carpets > are claimed to be exact réproductions of rare eastern carpets and are being ofâ€" fered at prices not much higher than those of ordinary loom production. The most remarkable feature about them is considered to be the true renâ€" dering of that eastern lustre which has hitherto defied successful copying. Some of the most notable reproducâ€" tions are those of the seventeenth cenâ€" tury coronation carpets which were made for the Shah of Persia; the Khorassan rug, and the famous carâ€" pet‘ manufactured for the Sheik Isâ€" mail, the original of which hangs in the Victoria and Albert Museum â€" of London; and there are copies of others from the cathedrals and art galleries of the world. The carpets vary in size and have all been made in a British factory during the past three or four years. "People of the Dominion Are Surpassing All Expectations." A despatch f‘om London says:â€"All London newspapers are featuring the extraordinarily enthusiastic welcome the Prince of Wales is receiving in Canada. â€" The Westminster Gazette says:â€" CANADA‘S WELCOME GRATIFIES BRITAIN « KEEP IN TUNE. Communities are like people. They are apt to get "OUT OF TUNE." HARMONY is any community‘s most valuable asset. Without it little can be accomplished. When the town is OFF KEY it is on the down grade. Something should be done ALL of theâ€"time to keep our community in TUNE. We are apt to overlook this, and only TUNE UP spasmodically. In the INTERVALS we are apt to forget we are part of a COMMUNITY. We lapse into mere individuals and lose our COMMUNITY sense. We can‘t go too far in an effort to preserve community Harmony. Let‘s all work in order to keep ON THE KEY. TORONTO \â€" ( \Tpg \~~, Cla? Sb 2 3\ > sR ILNGOGCLIN G â€"UZP PATKEEE Ambassadors have curious priviâ€" leges. Most people know that they and their households are immune from arrest, an embassy being conâ€" sidered a geographical part of the Ambassador‘s own country. But there are many privileges less well known. The Ambassador is the only person about a court who has the right to turn his back on the sovereign or ruler at the conclusion of an audience. And, curiously enough, he always exercises this right, turning to bow after walking three paces. This, of course, refers only to state occasions. This worked rather oddly in Queen Victoria‘s time. To turn one‘s back on a lady would be rude, to retire backward would be to resign a priviâ€" lege, so the Ambassadors always comâ€" s _ GENERAL CURRIE‘S RETURN. The Canadian Corps Commander replying to the civic address of welcome at Halifax \ â€" Ambassadorial Privileges ; Pa : The sword is the Ambassador‘s emâ€" blem of honor. _ It is a long rapier with a blunted point. One great dipâ€" lomatist, the late Lord Dufferin, used to say that the only practical use he ever found for it was to poke fires with and file bills on. Another highly prized privilege of the Ambassadorâ€"one that sovereigns must often regretâ€"is that of being able to demand an interview whenâ€" ever he chooses, at any hour of the day or night. promised by edging sideways toward the door like a crab. Another privilege of Ambassadors is the right of having both leaves of the folding doors thrown open when being ushered into the ruler‘s presâ€" ence. No on eelse can claim this priviâ€" lege. 30,000 Martyrs in Northâ€"West Persiaâ€"Children Hacked to Pieces. A despatch from London says:â€"A terrible story of the martyrdom of: the Christians of Northwest Persia is told in the Daily News. It is narâ€" rated by one of their number, Dr. Yonan. Soon after the war began, Dr. Yonan says, the Russians came to. Urumyah, in the province of Azarâ€", baijer, and induced the Christians from Assyrian battalions to fight against the Turks. There was a batâ€", tle in Urumiyah in February, 1918,‘ in which the Christians were vietoriâ€" ous. After this the heroic, but small, Christian force fought fourtcen batâ€" tles with the Turks and Persians and routed their enemies. But no help came from the allies and the defeat of the Armenians cut off the Chrisâ€"‘ tians from the Syrians. By the. end of July, 1918, their ammunition was exhausted, and the Turks were at the gates of Urumiyah. The Christians who dwelt at Salmas, a fertile p!ain' on the north side ef Lake Urumiyah, had been massacred and fight was the only course left to those of Urâ€". The doctor who discovered the naâ€" ture and the cause of the new pain is a deductive man with Sherlock Holmes in his method of diagnosis, who practiceg in London. He noted that almost all his shoulderâ€"pain patients dwell at some distance, with an uphill climb from the shops. HMe questioned his patients and elicited that they have to make several trudges home weekly with baskets of houseâ€" hold ~provender that the tradesmen cannot deliver. So 75,000 r left their hon taking with they could c« who could n« in the Americ Here terrible Monsignor So mission, died his brethren murdered. Children w open Bibles Meanwhile th ed by the en thousands we "You have not got rheumatism," he told them; "you have strained the shoulderâ€"muscles â€" through _ carrying awkward weights. Your trouble is ‘housewife‘s shoulder.‘ The cure? Make your husband take his turn." Doctors have been puzZfled by numerous cases with symptoms reâ€" sembling rheumatism among patients who have not hitherto suffered with rheumatism. The sufferers are nearly all married women and the pains of the new ailment are confined to the shoulder. who on t] had the . umiy C CHRISTIANS IN WAR o 70,000 men, 1 t their homes, it cing with them y could collect o could not esc the American ar re terrible sce been only co yah. ) 75,000 "Housewives‘ Shoulder. Sonteg wer in escape sought i ) and French mis scenes were en eg, head of the T martyr‘s death â€"religion â€" were laid women in a va such pri hurriedly en and childr vast processio sought the prepe rocession, perty as Those t refuge missions. enacted. e French ath â€" and ere _ also pages children Oi wHPVO MPRTC MBICCCCCC l The "late King Edward received many of these testimonials from his subjects at their death, and of living ; rulers, the exâ€"keiser and the late emâ€" peror of Russia once were the princt \pal legatees of admirers. _ Wilhelm once had left him by a | Munich testator the sum of $25,000, ‘"ag a humble subject‘s mark of ap preciation of the spiendid monarcâ€"ical and statesmanlike qualities which His Majesty has displayed, and to signify | dissent from the criticisms that are | from time to time develed at bim. Not all the Germans who made then : wills in favor of the Kaisor were s |nnterlu¢, for once a tradesman it ‘Berlin sought to make the emperoi ‘his heir only on condition that he ‘ should bring about certain changes in | his mode of public address. The say ings of this tradesmen remained in CIFTS TO KINGS King. Edward VIl. Recipient of Many of the ‘Testimonialsâ€"$1,250 Beâ€" gqueathed to Queen Victoria. Many monarchs of Europe, not to gpeak of other personages of royal exâ€" traction, frequently receive legacies from subjects of whose existence they have been ignorant. _1 x wougusa Edward VII. was the possessO® O € portrait that served as a constant re minder of the most curious will that was ever made in favor of a roy2 family. The picture was that oi Henry W. Gibbs, QC,, CB., who, fo a period of six years, in the fifties was the private tutor of Edward, then Prince of Wales. in the will wherein Nr. Gibbs bequeathed this painting to his former pupil, he a‘lso left tc Queen Victoria a packet of letters "Jn the red box that contains my patent as queen‘s counsel." To the present king, George V. (then Duke of York), and to the then Duchess of Fife, Gibbs left the sum of one hundred guineas each, while to the Princesses Victoria and Naud he bequeathed $12, 500 each. In the case of the latter, however, the will was revoked on the occasion of her marriage to Prince Charles of Denmark, but a codicil made her the recipient of one hundred guineas, so that it should not appear that she was forgotten. Left All to Queen Victoria, An odd feature of legacies left to royalty is that they sometimes come from misers, who, either through enmity toward their own kinsfolk or because they are friendless, make their sovereign their heir. .A well known instance in this relation was that of one "Daddy East," as he was called, who, some thirty years ago, left every cent he possessed to Queen Vietoria. East was well known to Londoners â€" who _ frequented the Bloomsbury region. It is said that he was the most successful beggar that ever prowled that quarter. . He lived in a dirty cellar and dressed in rags, a circumstance that led no one to suspect that he was the possessor of quite a fortune. Berlin sought his heir only should bring a! his mode of pu ings of this t his own family Edward VH portrait that i minder of the was ever ma family. _ The Henry W. Gil a period of s was the priva Prince of Wa Nr. Gibbs b LEGACIES FROM SUBJECTS QUiTE UNKNOWN TO RULERS. Not all t wills in 4 flattering Berlin so But what does the word "drowned" mean? Not dead, necessarily. A perâ€" son may be drowned and yet may "come alive again." So it would at least appear from the records of the coast guard. The lifeâ€"savers of the coast guard are all thoroughly instructed in the art of resuscitating the drowned. They are frequently drilled in the practice of it and know cxactly how to go about the business. The ancient method of rolling a drowned person on a barrel has been superseded by more scientific processes, In many an instance where doctors have declared pefsons to be absoluteâ€" ly and hopelessly dead they have nevertheless been rovived by perâ€" sistent eforts. A standing order of the coast guard reqgaires its lifeâ€" savers in such cases to keep on with \ the work for at least half an hour, even where the heart has stoppeg *~ and there is no sign of life bown:". phno m FEmOE ---v-i 2C EBV UE "l'lu. »â€"Lor cm-”m parts his younger days, was mail tour of India. The testator that £250 should be forward« Majesty, Queen Victoria, a su it was hoped "would help triftimng degree to pay the « expense which the heir a trip had involved." "Found drowned" is a note pears only too ofter on th books of the lifeâ€"saving statio the coast. It would seem, however, that the police had their suspicions, for when he died a thorough search was made by them of his cellar, with the result that over £500 in gold was found hicâ€" den under the cellar foor. Another curious will, made in favor of a member of the Guelph family, was that drawn by an eccentric old country lady at the time Edward, in his younger days, was making his tour of India. The testator directed that £250 should be forwarded to Her Majesty, Queen Victoria, a sum which it was hoped "would help in some trifiing dezree to pay the enormous WHEN IiS A PERSON DEAD EY orowning?: Sergeantâ€""Now, then, are you the ur men with a knowledge of muu\c was asking for?" Chorusâ€"*"Yes, rgeant." Sergeantâ€""Right. Parade fficers‘ Mess 11.30 to move grand )1 iat .apâ€" report along eni GREATWARX A Geeman P metal on on in all Front. stee! hay battieâ€"fle trooj by the Amount of B t WoOo are sini gorapâ€"ir gated s sight is yards t In the â€" thorot In : man j the s been . ing d« t Y W Inj du "Or it is chief Leay go h the 1 t« it L Of al 0'\(‘ ( VHis © n The du T Since NING BAT FIELDS 6F Troops H en t} FOR STEEL oners of Wa

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