Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 12 Apr 1923, p. 3

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reported as of poisonin‘ quito bites. malady. T ‘fipon the e old Egyptia to his death Carnarvon 0.53 at Cairo Lord Carnarvon, the Joint dis of King Tutankhameu‘s tomb. w N 77‘ , _...-J, v. w v.\. UVUA\AII5, Ava». Eggsâ€"New laids, loose, 31 to 320; new laids, in cartons, 35 to 36¢. Live poultryâ€"Chickens, milk-fed, over 5 lbs., 25c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 25c; do, over 5 lbs., 24c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 21 to 24c; do, 2 to 4 lbs., 18 to 210; hens, over 5 Ibs., 28c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 26c; do, 3 to 4 lbs., 220; roosters, 17c; ducklings, over 5 lbs., 30c; do. 4 to 5 lbs., 280; turkeys, young, 10 lbs. and up, 80c; gee§e, 18c. V Dressed Poultryâ€"Chickens, mlik-‘ fed, over 5 lbs., 85c; do, 4 to 4 lbs.“ 33c; do, over 5 lbs., 80c; do, 4 to 5 lbs.,‘ 25c; do, 2 to 4 lbs., 25c; hens, over 5 lbs., 30c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 28c; do,'8 to FAMILY IDEA FOR NATIsz RUST PRE- ,,, VAIL, DECLARES LORD ROBERT CECIL Buttei'â€"â€"-Finest creamery prints, 58 to 55c; ordinary creamery prints, 50 to 52c; da‘igy, 3:1 37f. Cogking, 24c. Cheeseâ€"New, large, 282; twins, 28%c; triplets. 30c; Stiltons,'31.c. Old, large, 31 to 32c; twins, 33 to 34c; Sti_1tons, 35c. Hayâ€"Extra No. 2, per ton, track, Toronto, $14; mixed, $11; clover, $8. Strawâ€"Car lots, per ton, track, To. ron’go, $9. ‘ Manitoba flourâ€"151: pats., in cotton sacks, $7.10 per barrel; 2nd pats., $6.60. - Ontario wheatâ€"No. 2' white, $1.14 to $1.16, according to freights outside. Ontario No. 2 white oatsâ€"49 to 51¢. Ontario cornâ€"Nominal. Ontario flourâ€"Ninety per cent. at, in jute bags, Montreal, prompt 5 ip- ment, $5.10 to $5.20; Toronto basis, $.05 to $5.15; bulk seaboard, $4.95 to s 1\248anitoba wheatâ€"No. 1 Northern, 1. . Manitoba oatsâ€"Nominal. Manitoba barleyâ€"Nominal. All the above track, Bay ports. Am. cornâ€"No. 3 yellow, 9455c; No. 2, 92%c. Barléyâ€"Malting, 59 to 61¢, accord- in_ to freights outside. uckvrheab~No. 2, 75 to 77¢. Rye-No. 2, 77 to 79c. Peasâ€"No. 2, $1245 to $1.50. Millfeedâ€"Del., Montreal freighfs, bags included: Bran, per ton. $26; shorts, per ton, $28; middlings, $28.50; good fee‘d flopr, $2. Tomnto, April 9.â€"-It is only at odd times that Canada really comes to Hose grips with the warm heart of the Motherland and that the veil is lifted long enough to give Canadians vision of the great purpose of the gritish Empire in the scheme of east- ence. That purpose is the betterment“ of humanity, and the championing of the cause of universal peace; and it required a gathering such as the Naâ€" tional Conference on Education and Civilization, which came to a close at assey Hall on Saturday night, to let he people really appreciate the big‘ art which the British are taking in his crusade, and it required, as well, the appearance of such men as Lord obert Cecil and Sir Robert Baden- owell to bring the type of final mesâ€" sage which they brought on Saturday night before Canadians could feel that behind the British mask there is the beating of a heart which really feels the sufferings of the world and which is working quietly and persistently 10 maintain the balance of world-wide peace. The first few days of the Con- ference must have carried something of that message of British purpose to the people of Toronto, if the monster gathering which greeted Lord Robert Cecil and Sir Robert Baden-Powell is any criterion, for Massey Hall was not only filled, but many people were turned away, and those who were for- tunate enough to hear the messages must have been inspired with a new confidence in the crusade of the British. ' In making his appearance before :the big gathering, Lord Robert Cecil 'felt that the cause of National Educa- xtion and Civilization was as great a ,crusade as any which is to be found in the whole category of human as- pirations, and he was particularly pleased to see the part which the peo- ple of Canada had taken in strength- ening the hand of the Empire. At the same time, Lord Robert was confident that the movement was a world-wide one and that it was needed in the Old World as well as in the New; for there was a sincere desire all over the world that the doorways of education should be unlocked, not only to the chosen few, but to the boiling multi- tudes. For the time has come when something must be done in the way of international affairs to set the world on a new basis and to “remove the stain that nations cannot settle their disputes other than by the shedding of blood, or without death, torture and mutilation.” So education must truly occupy one of the most important po- sitions in the affairs of the future world, for it was only when education had advanced to that stage where all people will appreciate that they can have peace and happiness only when there was peace and happiness in all other parts of the world, that those ideal conditions will be brought about for which the greatest of the British people are striving. Cause of National Education and Civilization is as Great 8 Crusade as Any to be Found in the Whole Category of Human Aspirations. There .is much specu effect 01 tomb poison: ian curses in their re recovering f : said to b TORONTO succu Weekly Market Report *om due latlo Comm calves. c to 45%: tags, pe 5 Heavy steers, choice, $7.50 to $8; butcher steers, choice, $7 to $7.50; do, good. $6.25 to $6.75; do, med., $5.25 to $6; butcher heifers, choice, $6.75 to $7.25; do, med., $6 to $6.50; do, com., $4.50 to $5; butcher cows, choice, $4 to $5; do, med., $3 to $4; canners and cutters, $1.50 to $2; butcher bulls, good, $4 to $5; do, com., $3 to $4; feeding steers, good, $5.75 to $6.25; do, fair, $5.50 to $6; stockers, good, $5 to $5.50; do, fair, $4 to $5; calves, choice, $10 to $13; do, med., $8 to $10; do, com., $4 to $8; milch cows, choice, $70 to $90; springers, choice, $80 to $100; lambs, choice, $14 to $15.50; do, spring, each, $8.50 to $17.50; sheep, choice, $8 to $9; do, culls, $4 to $5; hogs, fed and watered, $11 to $11.15; do. f.o.b.. $10.25 to $10.50; do, country points, $10 to $10.15. MONTREAL. Cornâ€"Am. No. 2 yellow, 93 to 94c. Oats-â€"Can west, No. 2, 65 to 660: do. No. 3, 60 to 61c; extra No. 1 feed“ Lardâ€"Pure tierces, 16 to 16%c; tubs, 16% to 17¢; pails, 17 to 17%0; prints, 18%c. Shortening tierces, 14%. to 15%,c; tubs, 15%. to 1591c; pails,‘15% to 16%c; prints, 17% to 18%c. $85. Smoked meatsâ€"Hams, med., 26 to 29c; cooked hams, 36 to 42c; smoked rolls, 26 to 28c; cottage rolls, 32 to 35c; breakfast bacon, 30 to 381:; spe- cial brand breakfast bacon, 35 to 38¢; bagks, boneless, 34 to 40c. 11 Cured meatsâ€"Long clear bacon 50 to 70 lbs., $18.50; 70 to 90 lbs., $18; 90 lbs. and up, $17; lightweight rolls, in barrels, $38; heavyweight rolls, our Beansâ€"Cam, hand-picked, 1b., 7c; primes, 6%c. Oleomargarine, 1b.â€"21 to 27c. ~ Maple productsâ€"Syrup per imp. gaI., $2.50; per 5-gal. tm, $2.40 per gal. Maple sugar, 1b., 28 to 25c. ' HoneyLGO-IE ti'nsyliyznto- V1~2'c per 1b.; 5-21/2â€"lb. tins, 12% to 13’7’2c per lb. Ontario comb honey, per dozen, 33:75 to $4.50. 4 lbs., 240; roosters, 24c; ducklings, over 5 lbs., 30c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 29c; turkeys, young, 10 lbs. and up, 40c; gegse, 22c. I Potatoeé, Ontariosâ€"No. 1, 85¢ to $1; N9. 2, 75 to 85c. vochrane Ha The 3 to $154 Cheeseâ€" )u $30 TIC 3 Over 600 Branâ€"$72 ); middlir !, per ton orce :1 white, 571/210 ing wheat pats., . $6.60; strong pats, choice. $6 â€"bag of 90 lbs.. and sh 5, $33 .to car lots, lery Pota S28 The death of the Earl of Carnarvon comes shortly after the culmination of the exploit that brought him chief- ly into public noticenâ€"the discovery of the rich tomb of the Pharoah Tutank- hamen, in the Valley of the Kings, in In 1895 he married Almina Womb- well, daughter of the late Frederick C. Wombwell. His wife inherited much of the fortune of the late A1- fred De Rothschild. A despatch from Cairo sayszâ€"The Earl of‘Carnarvon died peacefully at 2 o’clock Thursday morning, He was conscious almost to the end. His death was due to blood poisoning through the bite of an insect, with the later development of pneumonia. When the end came, Carnarvon’s wife, daughter and son, Lord Portchester, who at- rived from India a day or two ago, were at the bedside. Earl of Carnarvon Discovered Tomb of Pharaoh After Seven Years of Fruit- less Excavation. EXPLORER SUCCUMBS TO BLOOD POESONING M stress of chael Sad' the leadin FORD MOTOR COMPANY 01' CANADA LIMITED; FORD; ONTARIO 2323 eading figures in the world of education. Tl‘ ree C Hall BRITISH EDUCATIONISTS IN CANADA m the Motherland are visiting Canada just now at- Iouncil of Education meetings at the University of visitors are shown, Sir Henry Newboit, lecturer and pieted a tour or Canada: \Iiss Gilpin (centre). head- )ol. Weybridge, a notable Euglis-hwoma‘n, and Sir , vice-Chancellor of the University of heads and one Finland is encouraging the domestic cultivation and manufacture of flax. If you cannot find an opportunity, set to work and make one. The tomb, which contained an un- precedented quantity of objects of the greatest historical value, as well as the undisturbed sarcophagus of the Pha‘roah, is said to have been the richest find ever unearthed in Egypt. He was reputed to have spent more than $100,000 maintaining the expe- dition, which finally uncovered the Pharoah’s tomb last December, after seven years of fruitless excavation. His father, the fourth Earl of Car- narvon, was British Colonial Secre- tary under Lord Derby, and while holding this portfolio, moved the sec- ond reading of the bill for confedera- tion of the British North American provinces. Resigning upon the pass- age of the Reform Bill in 1867, he again became Colonial Secretary under Disraeli, in 1874, serving until 1878. Later he served for two years as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Egypt, by the archaeological expedi- tion which he headed. * Alwa 3 look for the blue and w ite Fprd service Sign, the sign of satisfac- tion. W. G. Baldock, Ltd., Dealer Repair work performed by us is guaranteed to be free from defective work- manship and to be first class in every particular. Our work is handled on a flat rate system. The customer will know in advance the exact cost of the labor. Under no circumstances do we use any but Genuine Ford Parts in our repair work. ‘ Richmond Hill, Ont. A despatch from St. John’s, Nfld,, sayszâ€"The steamer Sagona, the fit“ of the Newfoundland sealing fleet to return from the ice fields, has just at- rived with 11,367 pelts. She has been absent just four weeks. The Segena reported that she made her catch 115 miles off Cape Race, and that the other vessels of the fleet now are working there. Unless conditions improve, the Sagona’s will be the only paying catch among the fleet, as she is the smallest vessel, and least expensive to operatt The total kill of the entire fleet up to the present is 78,500. A despatch from Montreal says:-â€" Quick action on the part of a G.T.R. locomotive engineer probably saved' the life of W. B. Clark, whose leg was severd by a train at the St. Rémi Street crossing. The engineer imme- diately brought the train to a stop, and cutting ofl" a piece of the bell rope, made a tourniquet, which he applied to Mr. Clark’s bleeding limb and part- ly stopped the flow of blood. The leg had been severed below the knee, and when the victim was admitted to the Montreal General Hospital, itgwas found necessary to amputate above the knee. Mr. Clark was reported to- day as resting comfortably. Newfoundland VSealer Returns With 11,367 Pelt: First Aid to Man All possible remedial and preven- tive measures have been taken by the authorities. Simla, India, April 8.â€"The plague is raging in almost all the provinc ‘ of India. The statistics for the w ending March 24 give 9,000 new cases for all India. of which 8,000 were fatal. The death rate is especially heavy in the Central Provinces, the United Provinces, Bombay Presidency, Punjab and Delhi. In Calcutta there have been only three deaths. 9,000 New Cases Occur in Week, of Which 8,000 Have Proved Fatal. INDIA OVERSWEPT BY SERIOUS PLAGUE Run Over by Train

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