__PAGEF OUR | Underwear | LIVE STOCK MARKETS. Montreal. May 18. -- Butcher Montreal, - 1 nari "THE CLUB" | We carry a full range of \ MEN'S and.BOYS' UNDERWEAR Two-piece and Combination. 112 Princess Phone 1372] $13 to $15; medium, $12 to $13; common, $10.to $12; butcher heifers, choice, $12 to $14; medium, $11 to $12; common, $8 to $10.50; butcher cows, choice, $10.50 to $12.50; me- dium, $7.50 to $10.50; canners, $5 to $5.50; cutters, $6 to $7; butcher bulls, goad, $10.50 to $13; common, $8.50 'to $10.25. The calf market locked stronger and sellers were looking for fair lots to sell around $12. Spring lambs were cuoted at $10 to $14 each; ewes, $11 to $12.80. Hog quota- tions : off car weights, select, $20.75 to $21; sows, $16.75 to $17. Toronto, Toronto , May 18.--Heavy steers, choice, $14 to $15; choice butcher, $12.50 to $14.50; medium butcher, $10.50 to $12.26; common, $10.00 to $10.50; light, common, $8.00 to $9.00; heifers, good to choice, $11.50 to $12.00; butcher cows, choice, $10 to $12; bulls, choice, heavy, $10.00 to $11.50; bulls, good, $9.00 to $9.75; bulls, light, $7.00 to $8.00; camners and cutters, $5.25 to $7.00; stockers, 800 to 900 1bs., $9.50 to $10.50; feeders, 950 to 1,000 lbs, $11.50 to $12.00; sheep, $13.00 to $15.00; heavy sheep, $13 to $14; calves, $12 to $16; calves, medum, $9.50 tp $11.00; hogs, fed and watered, 20.25; hogs, off cars, $20.50; hogs, to farmers, $19.00; hogs, f.0.b,, $19.25. Buffalo. Buffalo, May 18.--Cattle--Heavy lower; shipping steers, $12 to $13; butchers, $9 to $12; yearlings, $12.50 to $13; heifers, $6 to $10; cows, $4 to $10.50; bulls, $7 to $10; stockers and feeders, $6 to $10; ffesh cows and springers, $65 to $150. Calves 50c lower, $6 to $16.50. Hogs 25 to 75c lower; heavy, $14 to $14.50; mixed yorkers, light yorkers and pigs, $16; roughs, $12; stags, $7 to $8.50. Sheep and lambs steady, un- changed. Chic: SH Pe PIE cS Ee gi R J.D. KELLOGG" Ar A great talker may not be a fool, Put people 'who believe all he says are foolish. _ @ive the boaster a chance to make good and watch fim fade away. Fo ¥ Y. AND WiL ago. Chicago, May 18 --Cattle--Beef steady to 25c lower; yearlings and good light steers holding up best top top heavy, $13740; yearlings, $14; CVERY™ |}, all weight, $11.25 to $12.90; she stock steady; bulls steady to low- er, with bolognas mostly steady; calves mostly 25 to 50c lower; stock- ers and feeders steady to lower. Hogs mostly 25 to 40c lower; top, $14.60; practical late top, $14.50; bulk, $13.- 55 to $14.25; pigs, steady to 25¢ low- er, with bulk desirable 'at $12.50 to $13.50. Sheep slow and uneven, mostly 50 to 75¢ lower; prime, 95 pound wool lambs, $20.25; medium to good California spring lambs, $18 to $18.75; bulk short lambs, $16.75 to $17.25. GRAIN QUOTATIONS. | Toronto. hs Toronto, May 18.--Manitoba oats "If Your "Victory Bonds" Were Burnt or Stolen They might prove a total loss. So with Stock Certificates Promissory Notes and other Negotiable Securities. Do not leave Valuable Papers at home or at the office, where there is always danger of fire or theft. Keép them in a Safety Deposit Box in the vaults of this Bank. The highest measure of security and protection against loss is afforded, at a small annual rental. THE MERCHANTS Mead Office: Montreal KINGSTON BRANCH, . Parham, Verona and Arden Branches, J. W. McClymont, Manager. Safety Deposit. Boxes to rent at Kingston Branch, Bl JUDGED EN REE i STEELE, oon Cy BANK Established 1864, H. A. TOFIELD. Manacer. eo AS eele, Briggs' Seeds for nearly fifty themselves: unexcelled for yield. : Insure a bum Bt Shot 0 iall, varieties of Fh pen y ded Steele, Briggs' "J » umbo, Sima fp ears have proved erop of big, sound by sowing some of --No. 2 C.W:, $1.18; No. 3 CW. $1.15%; No. 1 feed, $1.13%; No. 2 feed, $1.10%; extra No. 1 feed, $1.15; Fort William, in store. toe,-$15.10. $15.90, fs toba_wheat--No. 1 northern, 5 good... Manitoba wheat Ly grrrNo:S $2.80; No. 2 northern northern, $2.73. American corn--No. 2 yellow, nominal, $2.40, track Toronto, prompt shipment. Canadian corn--Feed, nominal. Manitoba barley, in store, Fort Willlam $1.66%; rejects, $1.61; feed, $1.61. ~ Ontario wheat--No. 1, $2.00 to $2.01; No. 2, $1.98 to $2.01, f.0.b. shipping points, according to treights; No. 3, $1.92 to $1.93; No. 1 spring, $2.02 to $2.03; No. 2, $1.98 1to $2.01; No. 3, $1.95 to $2.01. Ontario 10ats--Neo. 3, $1.10. Barley--Malting, $1.87 to $1.89. Buckwheat--$1.75 to $1.80. Rye--No. 2, $2.20 to $2.25. Peas--No. 2, $3.00, according to freight outside. Ontario flour--Nominal. . Manitoba flour and government standard, $14.85. Mill] feed--<Carloads, delivered Montreal; shorts, $61; bran, $54; good fed flour, $3.75 to $4. Hay--Baled, track, Toronto, car lots, No. 1, $30 to $31; No. 2 mixed, $25 per ton; straw, car lots, $16 to $17. Montreal. Montreal, May 18.--Oats, C.W,, No. 2, $1.31; do., C.W., No. 3, $1.28; flour, Man new standard, $1435 to $15.05; rolled oats, bag, 90 1bs., §5.- 50 to $5.60; bran; $54.25; shorts, $61.25; hay, No. 2, per ton, car lots, $31 to $32. Chicago. Chicago, May 18.--Corn--No. 3 mixed, $2.09; No. 2 yellow, $2.10 to $2.12. Oats--No. 2 white, $1.14% to $1.16%; No. 3 white, $1.10 to $1.14. Rye--No. 2, $2.19% to $2.20. Barley, $1.60 to $1.86; timothy seed, $10 to $1150; clover seed, $25 to $25; pork nominal; lard, $20.12; ribs, $17.50 to $18.50. - Minneapolis. Minneapolis, Minn.,, May 18.-- Flour unchanged; shipments, 39,647 barrels. Bran, $53. Wheat, cash, No. 1 northern, $3.15 to $3.20. Corn, No. 3, yellow, $2.03 to $2.04. Oats, No. 3, white, $1.06% to $1.07%. Flax, No. 1, $4.60 to $4.65. ' ----rgie GENERAL TRADE. Montreal. Montreal, May 18.--Butter--No. 1 solids, 57¢ 1b.; prints, 58¢ 1b.; No. 2 solids, 66c; prints, 67¢; dairy, 50c. Eggs--Strictly new laid, b4c per doz. Lard--In prints, 30c per 1b. Shortening--28¢ 1b. Hams--Large size, cooked, 40c; bbc. Cheese--Old, 32c per 1b.; new, 29¢. Bacon--Windsor boneless, 50c per 1b.; breakfast, 40c to 48c per lb. Dressed poultry--Milfed chickens, 42¢ to 45¢ per 1b,; fowls, 30c to 34e; geese, 30c; turkeys, 57c; ducks, 40c. Honey--White clover, strained, 26¢ per 1b. New maple syrup--Imperial gal- lon, $3; sugar, 30c Ib. Beans--Canadian hand picked, $5.50 per bushel; peas, $5. Dressed hogs--Fresh killed abat- toir stock, $29.50 to $30 per 100 1bs. Cane sugar--Granulatad, $18.50 to $19 per 100 1bs. Flour -- Government standard, spring wheat, $14.85 per bbl., car lots; winter wheat flour, $12.50 to $13 per bbl., car lots. Millteed--Bran. $564.26 per ton. ex-track; shorts, $61.25. Hay--Baled, per ton, in car lots, No. 1 timothy, $29 to $32; No. 2 timothy, $28 to $30; clover, mixed, $217, ex-track. ' Potatoes, per prices, $6.50-87. Onions--Quebec reds, per 100-1b. bags, $11-$12; imported, $10.50. ---- 90-1b. bags, jobbers' Toronto. ' Toronto, May 18 --Butter, choice dairy, 62¢ to 63¢; do., creamery, 70¢ to 76c¢c; margarine, 1b., 37c to 40c; eggs, new laid, doz, bbc to 60¢c; cheese, 1b., 35¢ to 40c; fowl, 1b., 40¢ to 46c: chickens, roasting, 45c¢c to 50c; turkeys, 1b., 55¢ to 60c; apples, bkt., $1 to $1.50; do. Dbl} $6 to $12; oranges, doz., 50c to $1.25; lemons, doz., 20c to 25¢; grapefruit, each, 10¢ to 20c; pineapples, 30c to 40c; rhu- barb, bunch, 10¢ to 15¢; strawberries, box, 30c; beets, bag, $2.25 to $2.50; carrots, bag, $2.50; do. new, bunch, 12¢ to 15¢; cabbage, each, 15¢ to 40¢; celery, head, 10¢ to 25¢; cucumbers, 10c¢ to 20c; horseradish, bunch, 15¢; leeks, bunch, 10c te 30c¢; lettuce, leaf, 6 for 25c; lettuce, head, each, 20c to 30c; onions, Bermudas, mea Be to 10c; potatoes, bag, $6.50 to $7; do. peck, $1.25; parsley, buneh, 10¢; parsnips, bag, $2.50 to $3; tur- nips, bag, $2. 200 Windsorites Seek Divorce: Windsor, May 19.--At least two .| hundred applicants are on lists of I barristers awaiting .action on bill now pending before Parlia- ment which will give Ontario the rts, as well as cut the cost from $1,000 to $100. One lawyer during the past two weeks has had twenty applications. : seven unhappy Windsor pairs have been started standing the almost prohibitive cost, | Three-fourths of the actions are be- ing brought by men, the majority of veterans. Declines Offer. 19.--The position and Lecturer sure, 45¢ to 45¢; do. green, bunch, |; GOSSIP FROM AUSTRALIA. Labor Man Has Become Governor of One by one the great builders of Australia are passing through death into history. Parkes, Deakin, King- ston, Barton, each with their work well done are gathered to their well earned rest. There were giants in those days, and the men of to-day recognise the pre-eminent mental and THE DAILY . BRITISH WHIG Markets Reports -Roral-stature-of their-bygone lead gir Edmund Barton, who death occur- red early in March, has been termed) 'Australia's Noblest Son." He was a great statesman, one of the founders of the Commonwealth, and Jatterly a great judge. At the state funeral which took place in Sydney, and which was attended by all the most prominent cititens of Australia, there was one pathetic little touch which more than all else seemed to express the place which the dead statesman held in the hearts of the people. Amidst the mass of elaborate floral tributes was one small bunch of violets. It was inscribed "To a Great Man" and was signed "A Citizen." A sensation has been caused by the appointment of one Lennon, a former Labor 'Minister and later Speaker of the Queensland Legisla- tive Assembly, to the position of Lieutenant-Governor of the State. Each state in Australia has its own state governor, in addition to the Governor-General. The present Gov- ernor of.Queensland, Sir H. Goold- Adams, is nearing the end of his term of office, and pending the ap- pointment of a successor a Lieuten- ant-Governor has to be appointed to carry on. In the past the invariable practice in such cases has been to appoint the Chief Justice, who may be expected to be judicially impar- tial, to the office. It has remained for Mr. Theodore, the Labor Premier of Queensland, to change this prac- tice and to appoint his late Minister- ial colleague, Lennon, to the position. Intense indignation has been caused, not only because Mr. Lennon is essen- tially a political partisan, pledged to the Labor platform, but because it is alleged that during the war he en- dorsed the disloyal utterances of a fellow Minister, Mr. Fihelly, who de- clared that England was the "home of cant, hypocrisy and humbug." It is quite clear that the Colonial Of- fice has been hoodwinked into recom- mending His Majesty to agree to the appointment the true facts of the case having been withheld. Numer- ous protests have already been lodg- ed, and it is more than likely that Mr. Lennon's appointment will be re- considered. The Queensland Govern- ment is notoriously "Bolshevik'" in its tendencies, and the appointment of a man pledged to support its plat- form as the impartial representative of the King in the state is a standing scandal. In connection with the coming visit of the Printe of Wales, a prom- inent prohibition leader has stated his intention of asking the prince to have no alcoholic liquors served at any dinner or reception extended him in Australia. If the prohibition- ist has the bad taste to carry out his threat he is likely to get badly snubbed for his pains. If Governors and Governors-General have, from the very nature of the positions they hold, to be careful to avoid the slight- est appearance of taking sides on a matter on which there is such a divi- sion of opinion, how much more must this be the case with the Prince of Wales? It would be execrable taste to place the young prince in such a position, and the party gullty of the gaucherie would not be likely to strengthen its hold over the gom- munity. The actors of Australia are moving heaven and earth to organize a Fed- eration on the lines of similar bodies in America and England with a view to protecting the interests of mem- bers of the profession. So far they have met with a great deal of opposi- tion from the Theatrical Managers' Association, in spite of the fact that that body is registered under the Arbitration Court. {Two attempts have been made by the Federation to secure registration, but on both occasions it has failed owing to the. fact that all grades of the profession, from stage hands upwards, are in- cluded in the membership. An inter- esting phase of the position is that many of the leading artists at present in the country, including many visit- ing stars from England and America, are supporting the Federation in its efforts to improve the lot of the small men. Theatrical conditions in the Commonwealth are good, but they are not so geod that they might not be better. A strike of theatrical artists is one of the pos- sibilities of the near future unless the managers adopt a more concilia~ tory attitude. a 's country parson ing rich on £40 a year; it is cheering to find that the race of such men, died Sate 4 Namenleomit Italie minister Bristol, Already divorce proceedings for | man stopped in Parliament, notwith-| der what T= Why the Chandler Holds Its Leadership Chandler car has attained and held its place of leadership ong all sixes, by steadfast pursuance of worthy policies. There is but one Chandler car, one Chandler chassis. To that chassis, for seven years, have been devoted the ambitions and the engineering ability and the dincere purposes of its builders. Featuring to a plane approximating perfection through these years of re and development. motor. - They know its its endurance. They Nearly eighty thousand Chandler owners know the wer, and the flexibility of its power. They know it affords all the ow its economy. this sturdy chassis is the famous Chandler motor, brought finement excellence of this They know speed that any responsible driver would ever wish or dare to use. know that on mountain roads it leads the way up. They body, buil cu On this one chassis are mounted six handsome and comfortable of t by America's best body-builders and splendidly hid gd You _Will Be Delighted With a Chandler Seven-Passenger Touring Oar, $3,500 Four-Passenger Dispatch Car, $8,600. _ Seven-Passenger Sedan, $5,000. Four-Passenger Coupe, $4,650 All prices f.0.b. Kingston Local Distributor SIX SPLENDID BODY TYPES Limousine, $5,750. H. F. LEBERT - Four-Passonger Roadster $8,500 and include Spare Tire, Bumper and Chains «" KINGSTON CHANDLER MOTOR CAR COMPANY, CLEVELAND, OHIO a A AT LL The v ENF Sold everywhere in Canada. Stomach Begins digestion, but the most important work is done by the bowels, liver and kidneys. Failure of these to act efficiently allows the whole body to be poisoned BEECHAM'S PILLS do more than produce bowel movement. Liver, skin and kidneys are influenced to more active effort with resulting increased effect. it is always safe to take Beecham's Pills In boxes, 25¢., 50c, When a man is discharged he thinks that his former made the mistake of his life. Use Blue-jay like best. as you Apply The Scie employer Only a fool tries to dodge the worst, by sitting down and hoping for the best. or use the sure. 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