Man. wheatâ€"â€"No. 1 North, No_._3 North, 8.03%., Man. oatsâ€"No. 3 CW, 42c; No. 1, 40%c. Man. barleyâ€"Nominal. All the above c.i.f., bay ports. Ont. barleyâ€"~65 to 700. Am. cornâ€"No. 2 yellow, 95c. Ont. Ryeâ€"74 to 78c. Pensâ€"No. 2, $1.45 to $1.50. Millfeedâ€"Del., Montreal freights, mm:u{mmmHummmrmlmnummamvm The Week’s Markets (flat Economical Trqgsporfdï¬o’n- Is next door to each customer Dealer ’A‘ clever manufacturer in a small town found he often lost 1‘ epeat orders from distant cus- tomers because he had no one on the ground to get them. So he supplied each of these good cus- tomers with a. card reading:â€" The H. W. Marks Co. of Deepdale is authorized to telephone orders to The Blank Mfg. Co., Spring- ville, and deduct the cost of the message from our next invoice. Call Spring- ville 156. Our telephone service is organized to give you as good scryico Dmeets all the Standards by which a car is judged Y whatever standard you judge a carâ€"what- ever qualiï¬cations you demandâ€"Chevrolet can meet your closest scrutiny. Chevrolet economy is an established fact. No other car can be run so inexpensively. Chevrolet is the world’s lowest-priced, fully-equipped car. Chevrolet dependability is proven by thousands of owners every day, in all kinds of weather, over all kinds of roads. Chevrolet appearance and con- struction set new standards among low-priced cars. Chevrolet Service is the ï¬nal factor in determin- ing the value of the car. Wherever you travel, throughout the length and breadth of the Domit- ion, Chevrolet service is close at hand. Thch as Chevrolet Dealers and Service Stations every- where, where you can be sure of getting genuine Chevrolet parts and expert service by men who thoroughly understand the car. Weigh all the evidence carefully-wand you will more fully appreciate Chevrolet value. Ask us for a demonstration. 'Ask us about the GMAC Deferred Payment Plan CHEVROLET TORONTO. office P. C. HILL Richmond Hill, Ont. Ill] $1.10; "MIT: Heav butcher good. 5 t4. $6; heifers‘ Cured meatsâ€"Long clear bacon; 50 to 70 lbs., $18.50; 70 to 90 lbs., $13 90 lbs. and up, $17; lightweight rolls. in barrels, $37; heavyweight rolls, Smoked meats-Hams, med, 23 to 24¢; cooked hams, '34 to 36c; smoked rolls, 17 to 18c; cottage rolls, 18 to 20c: breakfast bacon. 21 to 25¢; spe- cial brand breakfast bacon, 28 to 30c; backs, boneless, 28 to 33c. $4; No. 2,'$3-.25 to $3.50 _ Mapie productsâ€"S rup, per imp. gal., $2.50; per 5-ga. tin, $2.40 per gaL; mapler§u>gar,_1b., 25 to 26c. Honeyâ€"GO-lb. tins, 11 to 111/20 per 1b.; 10-1b. tins, 11 to 12¢; 5-lb. tins, 11% to 12c; 2$é-lb. tins, 121,4; to 13c; 90ml} Ahoney! peg d029, No. 1, $3.75 to Live poultryâ€"Chickens, 3 to 4 lbs., 250; hens, over 5 lbs., 26c; do, 4 to 5 lbs., 240; do, 3 w 4 lbs., 15c; spring chickens, 4 lbs. and over, 250: roost- ers, 180; ducklings, over 5 lbs., 260; do,_4 to 5’1bs.,724c. Dressed poultryâ€"Chickens, 3 to 4 lbs., 30c; hens, over 5 lbs., 28c; do, 3 to 4 lbs., 18c; spring chickens, 4 lbs. an(_i over, §2c; goosï¬ers, 22c. Beans;Can'., hand-piékedflbq Gyéc; primes! 6c. Butterâ€"Finest creamery prints, 33 to 340; No. 1 creamery, 32 to 33c; No. 2, __29 to 31¢; dairy, 2_8 to 30¢. 'Eggsâ€"Ex'tras, flesh, in baitons, 30 to 31c; extra, loose, 28c; ï¬rsts, 26c; seconds, 23 to 24c. bags included: Bran, per ton, $25 shorts,‘per ton, $27; middlings, $33 gogd feedAflour, $1.90. Hayâ€"Extra No. 2 timothy, per ton, track, Toronto, $14.50; No. 2, $14.50; No. 3, $12 to $14; mixed, $10 to $12; lower grades, $10 to $12. Strawâ€"Carlots, per ton, $9.50. Cheeseâ€"New, large, 16% to 17¢; twins, 17 to 18c; triplets, 18 to 19c; Stiltons, 20c. 01d, large, 22 to 23c; twins, 23 to 24c; triplets, 24 to 25c. Ont. wheatâ€"No. 2 white, 99c to $1.03, outside. . Ontario No. 2 White oatsâ€"39 to 41¢. Ont. cornâ€"Nominal. Ont. flourâ€"Ninety per cent. pat, in jute bags, Montreal, prompt ship- ment, $4.60; Toronto basis, $4.60; bulk seaboard, $4.25. Man. flourâ€"lst pats., in jute sacks, $6_Per bb_1.; 2nquats.,r$5.670. fai steers, éHoice teers, choice, 8 25 to 56.75: c Eh com fe ,erces, 14% to 15‘Ac; c; pails, 15%.» to 16¢; 1835c; shortening. éc; tubs, 14%.- to 15¢; c; prints, 161,4; to 17c. choice. $8 to $8.50; hoice, $7 to $7.75: do. 0-816 lambs choice ewes, $15.50 to $16; do, bucks, $13 to $13.50; do, culls, $8 to $9; spring lambsI each, $8 to $15; sheep, light ewes, $8 to $9.50; do, culls, $5 to $5.50; hogs, fed and watered, $7.75; to $8; do, f.o.b., $7.25 to $7.50; do. country points, $7 to $7.25; do, ofl’ cars (long haul), $8.15 to $8.40; do. $550; hogs,fed and wu to $8; do, f.o.b., $7.25 1 country points, $7 to $ cars Gong haulL $8J5 select, $8.50 to $8.80. MONTREAI Oats, Can. West. No. 2, 51 to 52c; do, No. 3, 49 to 50c; extra No. 1 feed, 48 to 48%c; No.2 local white, 44 to 45c. Flour, Man. spring wheat pats., lsts, $6.10; 2nds, $5.60; (10, strong bakers, $5.40; winter pats, choice, $5.55 to $5.65. Rolled oats, bag 90 lbs., $2.80 Bran, $24.25. Shorts, $26.25. Mid- dlings,’_$32.25. Hay, No. 2, per ton, $5.65. Rolled oats, bag 90 lbs., $2.80 Bran, $24.25. Shorts, $26.25. Mid- d]ings,’_$32.25. Hay, No. 2, per ton, car lots, $16. Cheese, ï¬nest Westerns, 14%c; ï¬nest Easterns, 131/2c. Butter, No. 1, pasteurized, 293/4c; No. 1 creamery, 29c; 2nds, 282. Eggs, fresh, specials, 32 to 33c; fresh, extras, 29 to 30c; fresh ï¬rsts, 26 to 27c. Potatoes, per bag, cer_ lots, $1.40 to §1.45._ _ Haiood heav'y Isteers, $7; fairly ‘good calves, $5.25; do, com. and med., $4 to $4.75; butcher hogs, $8 to $8.25; selebts, $8.75; sows, $5.50 SHIPS MENACED BY ICE 1N LAKE SUPERIOR Twenty Freighters Are Still Blocked in Floes With Northwest Gale. With a northwest gale raging un- abated, vessel agents hold no imme- diate hope for a break-up in the block- ade, which now directly affects 53 lake freighters. Abatement of the northwest gale rekased the pressure on the ice .jam, and three tugs were trying on Friday to assist the approximately twenty freighters scattered along the six- mile front of the blockade. A despatch from Duluth says:â€" Eight freighters and two passenger ships had made port here through the upper Lake Superior ice jam on Fri- day, but there was no material lessen- ing in the blockade. The Huronic suffered no damage, nor was she ever in any immediate danger. from the heavy pressure im- posed by the thick floes, said her skipper, Captain A. M. Wright. With‘the exception of the men pas- sengers and members of the crew, who were short of tobacco, no one was ’eriously inconvenienced. Epidemic of_ Cholgra A despatch from Allahabad says:â€" There have already been 10,000 deaths from cholera in Bihar this year and the epidemic is spreading. In Cham- paran, the most aï¬ected district, there were 1,000 deaths last Week. Darb- hango, Mizafl’arpur and Shahabad and Saran are also greatly affected, and the disease has recently become epi- demic in Patna and Gaye. Spreading in India EXCEPTIUNAL RIDING CUMFIJ RT Primarily, however, it must be accredited to the greater buoy- « ancy of the new spring equip- ment. The rear Springs are ten inches longer, and underslung. on the marked riding comfort of Dodge Brothers Motor Car. Owners continue to comment Increased chassis length, low- swung body and generous seat depth have much to do With this. [ï¬lilllliiilllii!HHEHEEIIHEHEEEIHEH!iii5ElII!Ellllfllï¬liilllllliiiiilliliflï¬ii ;. M. Palmer & Son I I .. I Hardmod Fï¬oaflm‘h’W sold. mat Muse IEIIIIIHIIIIEHHIIHllilllflllllllllllllllllllllllllilillllllll||IIllllllllflllllllllfllllllillfll commends it so highlyias “Hardwood Floors Throughoutâ€. Hardwood Floors make a house more attractiveâ€"more sanitaryâ€"easier to maintain. Consequently hardwood floors make it easier to sell. Searnan- {ent Hardwood'Floor-, ing is so perfectly matchedâ€"so exact in grading’ -â€"that it is the standard flooring of Canada; There are undoubtedly rooms in your home which would be brighter, cleaner, prettier, if they had hardwood floors. Measure them up. Give us the sizes and we will tell you how little it would cost to lay hardwood floors.’ PERHAPS no single feature of a house re- J x L I |.. INEéES & SIMS RICHMOND HILL DISTRIBUTORS Phone 87J 13 R3 iiiï¬iï¬iï¬Ã©ï¬‚fl D10