Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 17 Jun 1926, p. 6

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Ma. 10. ptodfictrâ€"Syrrup, per {my} \galn 2.30 to $2.40; per 6131.. $2.25 to] $2.30 per 8111.: maple sugar, 1b., 25 to; ’860; maple syrup. new. per gal. $2.40. to $5.25; butcher bulls, good, $5 to $6.25. Botognas, $3.50 to $4; canners and cutters. $2.50 to $4; good milch cows, $85.00 to $95.00; springers, choice, $95.00 to $115.00; med. cows, 345 to $60; feeders, good, $6.50 to $7.50; do, fair. $5 to $6; calvesn choice, $11 to $12.50; do, good, $9.50 person 31, 191 out of cembex Cured meatsâ€"Long clear bacon, £0 to 70 lbs., $24.26; 70 to 90 lbs., $23.75; 20 lbs. and up, $22.34; lightweight malls in barrels, $42.50; heavyweight 10113, $39.50 per bbl. Lardâ€"~Pure tierm 17% to 18¢; tubs, 18 to 1859c; paiis, 18% to 19;; 13:11:13. 20 to 21¢: shortemng, fierces, 14% to 15¢; tubs. 15 to 15%0; pans, 16 to 1635c; blocks, 17 to 17350; Ottawa, 0nt.â€"~Income announced in the budge third reading in the Ho Dressed poultryâ€"Chickens, spring, 1b., 55c; chickens, 1b., 27c; hens, over 4 to 5 lbs., 26c; do, 8 to 4 lbs., 26c; oosters. 25c; ducklings, 5 lbs. and up, Be; turkeys, 40c. Beansâ€"Can. hand-picked. $2.80 pot bugyelg primeg, $2.4Q per bushel. Honeyâ€"~504b. tins, 11% to 12c per 11).; 10-1-1.» tins, 11% to 12c; Sâ€"lb. tins, 12 to 12550; 2%“). fins, 14 to 1455c. Smoked meatsâ€"Hams, med., 34 to 86¢; cooked hams, 48 to 52¢; smoked rolls, 250; cottage, 28 to 30¢; break- fast bacon, 35 to 40¢; special brand breakfast bacon 39 to 42¢; backs, boqeless, 40 to 48¢. amendmen EggsaFresh extras. in cartons, 39 to 40¢; fresh extras, loose, 880; fresh fir§t§, 35c; fresh sgconds, 30 to 31c. Live poultryâ€"Chic? ens, spring. 11)., 4%; chickens, 1b., 22c; hens, over 4 to 5 1135., 22c; do, ‘ to 4 lbs., 20c; roost- brs 20c; ducklings, 5 lbs. and up, 300; tuéxeys, 30c. Cheeseâ€"New, large, 20c; twins, Be; tri lets, 22c; Stfltons. 23c. 01d, rge, 2 c; twins, 26c; triplets, 27c. Butterâ€"Finest Creamery prints. 89% to 40¢; No. 1 creamery. 38 to 390; No. 2, 37 to 38c. Dairy prints, 29 to 81¢. INCOME TAX AMENDMEII'IS RHEIV THIRD READING IN FEEEERAL Millfeedâ€"~De1., Montreal heights, bags included: Bran. per ton, $31.25; ghorts, per ton, $33.25; middlings, 4925; good feed flour, ger»bag,.$2..80. Ont. good mi'lling wheatâ€"$1.37 to $1.39. f.o.b. shipping points. according to freights. Barley, makingâ€"82 to 84:. Buckwheatâ€"~No. 2. 72¢. Ryeâ€"No. 2, 85¢. Man. flourâ€"First put" $9. Toronto; doLseconfl pat, $8.50. Ont. flour~Toronto, 911 per cent. pat" per barrel, m cat-lots, Toronto. $5.95; seaboard, in bulk, $6.05. Strawâ€"Carlots, per ton, $9 to $9.50. Screeningsâ€"Standard, recIeaned, f. o.b‘.__bay pogt‘a, pcr_ton. $22.50. ' 0nt.'o“ats-â€"44 to 46¢} 't.'o.b. Eififipi'ng points. Am. cor-n; track, Torontoâ€"No. 2 yellow,‘ 86p; yo, 3 ygllow, 84g Man. wheatmNo. 1 North., 51.62%; No. 2 North., $1.58%; No. 3 North, $1:5317é. Man. oatsâ€"No. 2 CW, nominal; No. 3, not quoted; No. 1 feed, 50c; No. 2 feed, 47%c; Western grain quotations in c.i.f. bay ports. NORMAN McMILLAN, age 22, of 15 Westminster Avenue, fractured sku’ll, concussion and internal injuries. SLIGHTLY INJURED. W R. W. ALLAN, 273 Ba-in Avenue. DULCIE BOSLEY, age 16, sisterorf the dead girl, serious head and in- ternal injuries. GLORIA GRAY. age 20, of 104 Maitland Street, left shoulder broken, head injuries, and possibie fracture of the right arm. iposa Avenue, serious; head injuries possibly a fractured skull, and in- rtermall injuries. Toronto, June 14.â€"â€"\Vhen a motor car driven by Wiliiam Patterson, Claremont Street, capsized in a ditch while guing at a fast rate past 'the home of Lady Bail-1e, about two miies west of Oakviilc, Ont., on the Torontoâ€" Hamflbon Highway, at 2.15 Sunday morning, oné young woman was killed, four of the occupants were badly in- jured and may not recover, and five others, one young girl and four men, sustained siight hurts. The victims are as follows: ONE WRMAN KILLED, NINE INJURED, IWOK‘S‘EEIEE‘SRBRCI‘EEEER IN AUOMIIRIIE CRASH NEAR "IIIRONTO mama-non wginZn. Defending DEAD. LORETTA BOSLEY, aged 19, of 107/Peter Street. Miss Boerey died in a motor car while on her way to St. Joseph’s Hospital. SERIOUSLY INJURED. GUSSIE PERRY, age 18 of 40 Mar- avides “Divid iat se, tom 3. Prop ster :plamir THE MARKETS dends actually declared by a mcom lcnmg on personal corpora- med by Hon. G. H. Boivin, f Customs. The new clause 'ehc TORONTO tax change were give substitu 131-1 am Two Students of Western On- tario University Lose Lives in Georgian Bay. Midlandâ€"Resolved to join a tennis )club at Port McNicoll, and ignoring V,warnings not to attempt the passage, .two young men, William C. Duddridge, [aged 28. and Ray Eden, aged 21, both iof London, Ont., set out from Triple ,Bay Park, and were drowned when the llG-foot canoe which they were padâ€" dling was swamped by the heavy seas running in Georgian Bay. Cheese, finest wests., 19%c; do, fin- est easts., 19c; butter, No. 1 pasteurâ€" ized 36%.c; eggs, fresh extras, 37 to 88¢; do, fresh firsts, 34 to 35c; pota- toes per bag, c'ar lots, Quebec, $2.20. Med. and fairly good veal calves sold together, $8.50; common suckers and pail-fed calves, $6.50 to $7.50; grassers and thin drinkers, $5.50 to $6. Hogs, good quality, $15.75 to {$15.90. Oats, Gan. West. No. 2, 63¢; do, No. 3, 580; do, extra No. 1 feed, 55%c. Flour, Man. 3 ring wheat pats., lsts, ‘$8.70; 2nds, $ .20; strong bakers’, $8; Winter pats., choice, $6.70 to $6.80. Red oatsâ€"bags, 90 1105., $3.10. Bran, $29.25. Shorts, $31.25. Middlings, $38.25. Hay, No. 2, per ton, eat lots, $15 to $15.50. The Senate gave final reading to two Government bills: one changing the income tax rate, and the excise bill, which affects the sale of Canadian toâ€" bacco in foreign ports and reducing to $3 a thousand the excise on cigars put up in boxes of ten or less. Ray Eden and William C, Dud- dridge were students of the Univerâ€" sity of Western Ontario, London, and members of the college students’ror- chestra. Bill Passed to Restrict A. G. Elson, proprietor of Triple Bay Park, and by whom they were employed, attempted to swim through the breakers to their assistance, but was compelled to return to shore alâ€" most exhausted. Ottawaâ€"The Belcoprt bin, to imâ€" pose further restrictions on the sale or possession of firearms other than hunting rifles, passed all stages in the Senate. It now goes to the House of Commons. Both young men were capable swimâ€" mers, but the icineSS of the water and the difculty of making headway through the turbulent waves proved too much for them, despite the fact that they were only some 200 yards from the shore. to 21. Both drawn. YOUNG MEN DROWNED ‘WHEN CANOE UPSETS dependent fats, ffo.b.,' $14; sele'ct' pkéfifiufii,’ $‘2’I'9'éi to $10.50; do, lights, $6 to $7.50; good lambs, $14 to 315; do, medium, $12.50 to $13; do, culls, $10 to $11.50; good light sheep, $8 to $8.50; heavy sheep and bucks, $5.50 to $6.50; Yoga, thick smooths, fed and watered, $15.10; do, f.o.b., $14.50; do, country points, §14.25_; 510,95 car}, $15.50; do, thick The party, ten in all, were on their way to Hamilton when the mishap oc- curred. The outing had been arrang- ed by Patterson. who both owned and drove the car, a large machine. All Went well with the party until they got past Oakville. There the car was espled by an Oakville constable, tear- ing along at between forty or fifty miles an hour. In fact, he said, the car was traveling so fast that he was unable to catch the number, despite the fact that the highway Was fairly well lighted at the spot. ‘ After an investigation by Chief of Police Kerr, of Oakvi'ile, Patterson was taken into custody on a charge of manslaughter. He is heid without bail. Inquiries at the hospital last night gained the response that those seri- ously hurt had only a bare chance for life: McMillan, it is said, is in the worst condition. The body of the dead girl was re- moved to the Morgus, where an ex~ amination showed that practically every bone in her body had been broken. . THOMAS J. McELROY. 129 Marâ€" gueretta Street. ALMA PHILLIPS, 15 Seymour Avenue. WILLIAM PATTERSON, age 22, Claremont Street, driver of the car. LEO TRAVERS, 409 Lansdowne Avenue. pets Ianadia Henri i £411.54! {[111 ahan MONTREAL. 11116 the dl‘e f the Sale of Firearms ndmen ts mxg 3t sheik e, the e ‘rom 18 ‘xem; Nit Hamiltonâ€"Taking a sudden turn for the worse, Mrs. Percy Cook, the young woman who was attacked by a thug with a hammer at noon on Thursday last when she resisted his attempt to rob the cash register of S. Needle’s shoe store, on Barton Street East, succumbed in the Gen- eral Hospital On Saturday afternoon. Moscowâ€"The Soviet Trades Union Council, on June 8, turned over to the British Miners’ Federation 400.000 roubles, representing the fifth instal- ment of a total of 626,000 roubles (about $313,000), according to Tass, the official news agency of the Soviet. Orangeviiie, Ont.â€"-To find his best horse dead, caused by some persons having cut off its tongue near the root, was the startling discovery made by Ross Dobson, a young farmer in Muimur Township, Friday afternoon. The animal, valued at $150, was in a pasture on the next farm. A week be- fore, a Large black horse received a four-inch incision on the neck, just missing the jugular vein. Dobson, who is a veteran of the Great War. is at a loss to know the reason of these rash acts as he has no known enemies. W'l Joe Barty, burly Hungarian steel worker, her alleged assailant, is now on remand for one week charged with assault and attempted robbery, which may be raised, authorities §tate, after the inquest is held. He was arrested before he could escape from the store. Soviet Workers Send $313,000 to Great Britain Horse Found Dead With Tongue Cut Off Mrs. Cook is said to have suffered a fracture of the skull as a result of the blows from the hammer. She was reported Thursday night to be improv- ed and her recovery is expected. Cook \held on to {be powerful foreigner and both were in a clinch when Inspec- tor Cruickshank reached the store and used his “billy” effectively. Powerful as Barty was, Cook and; Needle, both small men, rushed upon: the brutal assailant and grappled with] him. He shook them off several times; by sheer strength, and bit and clawed! like one mad. Cook was bitten badly on the nose and neck. Needle feared Mrs. Cook’s life was ebbing away and‘ ran to the street’ for help. Meanwhile; Barty entered the store under the pretence of buying a pair of shoes. Mrs. Cook is usually aione in the store during noon hour. As Mrs. Cook ap- proached to wait upon him, Barty, it is alleged. struck her two cruel blows on the head with a hammer. She fell to the floor and ivas believed to be mortaltly wounded. He Jame garia ed be shoe store, where she is the efi’ort of the cash re: amiiton Woman, Defending Cash Till, Clubbed With Hammerâ€"Tussle With ‘ Police. Ontat l A London.~The Russian Bolshevist ECharge D’Afi'aires, M. Rozejobz, at- )tended the Royal Court at the Palace fwearing regulation court dress of ' satin knee breeches, silk stockings and ’ a jewelled court sword; but no decora- tions. Unusual weather cdnditions have! resulted in the berries ripening earlier; than usual and those of certain parts of the United States, particularlyl Missouri, being retarded in ripening,’ so they are now being shipped at the‘ same time to the Prairie Provinces of ; Canada, where they have to be sold at exceptionally low prices. Victoria, B.C.â€"â€"Agitation by British Columbia strawberry growers for a dumping duty on berries brought; into Canada from the United States has the support of the Provincial Depart- ment of Agriculture. An item of $402,550, for harbors and rivers in Nova Scotia, and a further amount of $69,900 for harbors and rivers in Prince Edward Isivand were also included. Chief among the itsems was one for $5,344,000, covering improvements, re- pairs, heating, and the like, of Domin- ion public buildings. :Other votes for public buildings included the follow- ing: For the Maritime Provinces'gen- erally, $43,000; Quebec, $448,920; On- tario, $530,243; Manitoba, $78,0d0; Saskatchewan, $20,000; Alberta, $40,- 000; British Columbia, $210,650. Russian Bolshevist B.C. Strawberry Growers Are Seeking Dumping Drity Parliament Appro-Ves of Total Expenditure of Over Seven Million Dollars. Ottawa, Ont.â€"-â€"Estimates of the De- partment of Public Works totalling $7,450,263, were passed in the House of Commons. ESTIMATES PASSED FOR PUBLIC WORKS 0rd and Lady Willingden Wears Court Dress I Unknown. Pekin.â€"â€"A coolie who murdered Mrs. W. E. Sibley, wife of Rev. W. E. }Sibley, a Canadian United Church {missionary at Cheng’tu, was armed {with a heavy sword with which he ’severed his victim’s head from her body. according to a report on the murder submitted to the United Con- .‘sul here. Luau 13.11 011. nun. me was LUUHU WWI: Oslo, Norway.â€"â€"King Haakon has . . , awarded the decoration of Commander iggv‘gsbmtffgvihginge‘p soon ar- of the Royal Order of St. Olav to Thomas H. Johnson of Winnipeg, for- W' '~' met Minister of Public Works of You rob children when you let fine Manitoba, for his work during thelloose in the Woods. Fifty million acres Norse-American Centennial celebra- of young growth in our Dominion be- tion in Minnesota last June. Long to the next generation. Decoration From Ngxway is Given to Witffiipeg Man Mrs. Sibley, a native of Nelson, Man., is survived by her husband and one daughter, at present a. student at Alma College, St. Thomas, Ont. The murderer was wounded by so].â€" diers and died shortly after. The Inc- tive for the crime has not been estabâ€" lished. Medical evidence was to the efiect that the children an sufiered from slow starvation. CANADIAN MISSIONARY MURDERED BY COOLIE Criminal Died Shortly After- wardsâ€"~Motive for Deed is Mrs. Dwyer is defended by F. D. Kerr, K_.C., and Judge E. C. S. Huycke is presiding. Londomâ€"Lord Willingdon has been } appointed governor-general of Canada [to succeed Lord Byng of Vimy. George, 10ayear~old brother, was an- other pathetic figure as he told the same story of want and hunger and beating, but perhaps not so much in anything else as when he admitted that he had never been taught a. pray- er until he came to the Children's Shelter. The Crovm Prosecutor, J. K. Mac- Kay of Toronto, paused often in his examination to wipe the little girl’s eyes with his handkerchief and still her sobs. Nelvlie. aged 13, the third of the al- leged victims, told in heart-breaking manner of the privations suffered in the rude Dummer shack, of early ris- ing to a breakfast of dry porridge, of beatings given the boys, and of hard work on bodies that were, she said tearfully, “mostly hungry.” Peterboro’.â€"Startling evidence was produced in the trial of Mrs. Geo?ge Dwyer of Dummer on a charge of neglect of her step-children, one (if whom died in March last in a terribly emaciated condition. Another, George, lay for a long time in hospital, sufferâ€" ing from frozen feet and hands. A statement made by Mrs. Dwyer was read, telling of the boys being beaten with a blacksnake whip wielded by their father until the whip brokev and of how he then continued to belabor John, aged 11, with the stock. When she tried to interfere, she, too, was beaten, and the dog that took the boys’ part was beaten OE. 335356 CGUPLE DROWNEB, FQUR RESCUED, WHEN AW) LEAFS DAM He was Liberal member of theitoria. Later, in 1913, he was appoint- House of Commons for Hastings fromied governor at Bombay with its 30,000 1900 to 1906 and member for the Bod- ' population, and after a tenure of six min division of Cornwall from 1906 toI years in that office, he added a fur~ 1910. From 1906 to 1912 he was junior'ther time as governor of the equally lord of the treasury. The viscountimportant presidency of Madras. was a member of the Sussex Imperial Early this year Viscount Willing: yeomanry and lord-in-waiting to the don Went to China, at the request of King. the British government, as chairman He married in 1892 Marie Adelaide,;of a commission to consider an the the youngest daughter of Lord Brasâ€" | spot the whole question of the best use sey. She is the “Marie” Brassey who v, of the funds accruing from the remit- figures on almost every page of that ted Boxer indemnity. CHILDREN SUFFER FROM SLOW STARVATION Pathetic Tale of Want, Hun- ger and Whippings Un- folded in Court. Viscount Willingdon, before receiv- ing his title of baron in 1910, was known as Freeman Freeman-Thomas. He was a great cricketer, having been captain of both the Eton and the Cam- bridge elevens. NEW GOVERNOR-GENERAL HAS SERVED AS VICEROY 0F BOMBAY AND MADRAS Angii and Mrs l The machine, which was a manureâ€" spreader and loaded, and evidently been jacked up and in some way the props gave way, letting the heavy load fall on him. He was found later iby his little daughter. Help soon ar- lrived but life was‘extinct. In British Honduras he found the ] “bleeding” tree, another relative of l the Paduac of India and Africa, which .is used in the making of fine furniture. { So Dr. Samuel J. Record, professor Jof forests’ products at Yale, explain- Eed in announcing the diseovery on a 'recent trip to Central America of a ldozen new species of trees, one the g“cow tree,” and a tree whose sap is I blood red. , Creamy white latex gushes out of [the “cow tree” when it is cut with an gaxe, Dr. Record said. After tasting } the sap and finding it free from stickL l‘ness, he said his only regret was that -he had no way of carrying a supply back to his camp to pour on a dish of bananas. Peterboro, Ont.â€"~â€"Thomas Star, a wen known resident of Asphodel, was instantly killed on Saturday, when a machine he had been repairing fell on him and crushed him to death. Asphodel Farmer Crushed by Machine The Socialists raised their objection now because the agreement will come up for ratification in the Chamber soon. The announcement is a warning that the party will fight ratification unless the settlement is altered. The failure to include any clause safeguarding France from paying be- yond her capacity or any transfer clause such as Germany was given under the Dawes. plan to prevent pay- ments if they lower the payer’s cur- rency is the reason given for the So- cialist opposition. Paris.â€"â€"The Socialist party, with 100 votes in the French Chamber of Deputies, will vote against the United States debt settlement. FRENCH SOCIALISTS OPPGSE U.S. DEBT PLAN Party With 100 Votes Will Vote Against Settlement in its Present Form. Another tree he has reported to tho Bureau of Forestry at Washington is one whose wood is excellent for cab- inets, but whose sap is poisonous, inflicting deep burns. New Haven, Commâ€"Indians of Eastern Guatemala have at least one advantage over more civilized peoples which must depend on cows and goats for milk. Whenever a Guatemalan feels thirsty all he has to do is to go into the jungles and cut a gash in a “cow tree.” Discoveries in Central Amer- ica Include Tree That Furnishes Milk. EXPLORER FINDS NEW SPECIES OF TREES Viscount Willingdon has already had considerable experience in the af~ fairs of the empire. He was A.D.C. to his father~inâ€"Iaw, Earl Brassey, when the latter was governor of Vic- toria. Later, in 1913, he was appoint- ed governor of: Bombay with its 30,000 population, and after a tenure of six years in that office, he added a fur~ ther time as governor of the equally important presidency of Madras. fascinating voiume, “The Voyage of the Sunbeam," in which her mother. the authoress, portrayed the life of the family during the long time spent in their researches of the oceans. pe thr puning the mbankmewt aw the ace escue. Hi the rescue the top of re driving he north V0

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