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The Exeter Advocate, 1919-7-17, Page 7r. t:L 'Markets of the World Breadstuffs. Toronto, July 15, -Man. Wheat - !No. 1 Northern, $2.241/2; No. 2 North-, ern, $2.211/2; No. 3 Northern, $2.171/2; No. 4 wheat, 32.11%, in store Fort William, American corn -Nominal. Manitoba oate-No. 2 CW, 83%e• No. 3 OW, 80%c; Ex. No. 1 feed: :80%e; No. 1 feed, 791/2e; No. 2 feed, 75e/ . Ontario oats -No, 3 white, 77 to 78c, according to freights outside, Ontario wheat -No. 1 Winter, per ear lot, 32,14 to 32.20. No. 2 do, 3211 to 32.19; No. 3 de, 32.07 to. 32.15 f.o.b,, shipping points, according to freights. Ontario wheat -No. 1, Spring, 32,09 to 32,17; No. 2 do, 32.06 to 32,14; No. 8 do, $2.02 to 32.10 f.o.b., shipping points according to freights Manitoba barley -No. 3 CW, 31.27; No. 4 CW, $1.23; rejected, $1.18; feed, 31.18. 2 A despatch from Berlin says:- Prince Henry a Prussia, brother of the former German Emperor, has now come to the aid of the dethroned war lord, and adds his pies, to that of the others or abandonment by the allies of their project to bring the former m Kaiser to trial fon his cries against :nankin& Prince Henry, in a telegram to King. George begging him to desist in the effort to extrad'te the former Monarch, pledges himself to assist the King in bringing to light "the truth regarding the war and its conse- quences." Pea s -N o. nomi naI weighed off cars, $24; do, f.o.b., $22.761 Montreal, July 15. -Choice lambs, $18 per cwt; sheep, 38 to $10; milk - fed calves, 38 to 315; choice steers, $12; others, 39 to 311; butchers' cat- tle, 36 to 310 per owt, or both bulls and •cows; canners, $4,60. PRINCE HENRY OF PRUSSIA PLEADS FOR EX -KAISER Barley -Malting, 31.18 to 31.22, nominal. LIST OF GERMANS Buckwheat -Ne. 2, nominal. Rye -No. 2, nominal. Manitoba flour-Governmen dried, 311, Toronto, Ontario flour -Government t sten- AWES WOULD TRY sten. (lard, 310.50 to 310.75, in jute bags, Toronto and Montreal, prompt ship_ British, French and Belgians ment. Millfeed-Car lots delivered Mon- treal freights, bags included. Bran, . 339 to 342 per ton; harts, 342 to 344 Per ton; geed feed flour, 32.90 per bag, 1 -ay --.-No. 1, $21 to $23 per. ton; and Belgians wish. to put on -trial in - mixed, 318 to 319 per ton, track, To- eguig; tont°. i Prince Rupprecht, of Bavaria, for Strew--Cer lots, $10 to $11 per ton, deportations from Lille, Roubaix, track, Toronto. Turcoing and other pieces. Country Produce -Wholesale. General von alachensen, or thefts, Butter -Dairy,. tube end Ile 36 incendiarisin axec:atone In Ru - to Me; printe to 40e; Creemeeee, frech made -sond, 49 to 4iliee; prints,, ""'" 49 to. 50e. General von Buelow, for the burning Eggs -New laid, 40 to 41e. ot Andehne and shooting of 100 people. Live poeltryeaSpring Clic:kens, Baron von der Daneken, head of the broilers, 30 to 40e; heavy fowl, 2$e; German political department in Drs - light fowl, 20e; old rooters, 19e; old sells, who was ,concerned in the mur- ducks, 20c; young ducks,. MI old der ot Edith Cavell and Captain Fry - turkeys, 30e, delivered, Tomato. Wholesalers are selling, to the ratt e -e . Admiral von Duelow. for the 'burning tail trade et the following prices; ' • bilitv .or L -boat outreges. Cheesee-Naw, large, 32 to 89'.e'• utenant Wilhelm Wernher Com - twins, -321e e3e; triplets, 33 toLie e -- • .J3I.Se; Stilten, to 34e.. mender Max Vele:Muer and Com- Buttee'ree-a tae --A ; ary, eboiee, to Mandel: YOU PerkitnEV, for sinking hos- 46e; creemery orints. 52 to 54e." pital slaps. Maegariiie-ellto ege,alae•or von Manteuffer. for the burn- ., Egaa- :NM laid. 44 to 45e; new Ing of Louvain, laid in ain't:me,: 48e., aiajor von Bulow. for the destruc- Dressed poultry -Spring lhIe.ens, lion of Aersehot and .the -execution of GO.; roosters, .25 to afht; fowl, 45 to. 15o eivintins. 50c; turkeye, 40e; ducklings. lb... 40e.; Genertd Oleen von t`assel, for cruel - 'squabs, doz.., $7; geese. 28 to 30e. 40 ties la Doberitz. Live poultry -Spring chickees, to 45e; fowl. 33 to 5e. ,, Lieutenant Ili:diger, for cruelties at e Potatoes-Ontnrio, f.o.b., track, To-. Ruhleben. ronto, ear lots, 31.75; on track out - '&de, 31.65. Beans -Canadian, hand-pick., bus., 34.50 to $4,75; primes, 33.75 to $84-; Imported hand-picked, Burma or In- dian, 33; Limas, 13% to 140. Honey -Extracted clover: .5-1h. tins, 25 to 26e lb.; 10 -lb. tins, 24% to 25e; 60 -lb, tins, 24 to 25c; buelewheat, 60 - lb. tine, 19 to 20c. Comb: 16 -oz., 34.50 to $5, doz.; 10 -oz., $3.50 to 34 dozen. Maple products -Syrup„ per imper- ial galloe, 32.45 to 32.50; per 5 imper- ial, gallops,. 32.35 to 32.40; sugar, lb., 27e. •••••••••, Submit Names of Those Thought Guilty of Atrocities. A despatch from London says: Germans whom the British, French Provisions -Wholesale. Smoked meats -Hams, med., 47 to Major van Gomez, for cruelties at Magdoburg. The brothers Niemeyer, the bullies, Heleininden and Claustbal camps, who 111 treated British prisoners. General von Tesny, for the ern:nary execution of 112 inhabitants of Arlon General von Oatrowsky, for the pil- lage of Deynze and the massacre ot 163 civilians. General Liman von Sanders, for massacres of Armenians and Syrians. TWO brothers named Rochling, who were arrested by the French in the Saar valley. Vast quantities of stolen machinery, covering nearly twenty 48e; do, heavy, 40 to 42e; cooked, 65c; rolls, 37c; bkfast baton, 48 acres, were found in their possession, reato 56c; backs, plain, 50 to 51c; boneless, 60e; dear bellies, 41e. RB ITISH WON WAR, Cured meats -Long clear bacon, 32 MARSHAL HAIG SAYS to 33c; clear bellies, 31 to 32c. Lard -Pure, tierces, 36e; tubs, A despatch from London sayse..... 371,4,e; pails, 37Vec; prints, 39c. Com- Field Marshal Haig, receiving the pound tierces, 311/2 to 320; tulee, 02 to . freedom of Newcastle, deprecated the 321/2c; pails, 321/1, to 32 31.c; prints, 33 tendency to minimize the British to 331/2.c. army's achievements in the war. Montreal Markets. "It is right to speak of our allies," Montreal, July 15. -Oats, extra No. he declared, "but it was the British 1 feed, 91e. Flour, new standard army that won the war; it was Bri- grade. $11 to 811.10. Rolled oats, fain that bore the brunt of the fight - bag 90 lbs., 84.25 to 34.40. Brae $43 inF, in the last two years. to 843.50. Shorts, 345.50 to 346. Ilay, 'I hope everyone will realize that . No. 2, per ton, car lots, 330. Cheese, fact and stick by the fellows who fought and suffered, and their depend - finest westerns, 29c. Butter, choicest ; creamery, 54c. Eggs, selected, aea;lents." No. 1 stock, 48c; No. 2 stock, 42 to 44c. Dressed hogs, abattoir killed, $31.50 to $32. Lard, pure, wood pails, 20 lbs. net, 38,aec. Live Stock Markete.. Toronto, July 15. -Choice heavy steers, $14 to 314.75; good heavy be the greatest in London's history. steers, $13.50 to $13.75; butchers' cat- It will be seven miles long, and, from tle, choice, $13,25 to $13.50; do, good, .the route arranged for it to pass, two 312.25 to -313; do, med., $11.50 to $12; million people will be enabled to see do, corn., $9.75 to $10.25, bulis, choice, from the buildings and the streets MONSTER PEACE PROCESSION IN THE EMPIRE'S CAPITAL A despatch from London says:- The peace procession on July 19 will $11.25 to 311.75; do, med,, $10.25 to 310.75; do, rough, $8 to $8.25; butch- ers' cows, choice, $11 to 311.75; do, good, $10.25 to 310.50; do, med., 39 to 39.25; do, cone., 37.50 to 38; stock- ers, $8.75 to 311.75; feeders, 312.50 to $13; canners and cutters, 34.50 to $6.25; milkers, goorto choice, $90 to 3140; do., coni. and med., $65 to $75; springers, $90 to 3160; light ewes, 310 to 311; yearlings, 313.50 to $15; spring lambs, per cwt., 319.50 to 321.50; calves, good to choice, 318 to 321.50; hogs, fed and watered, $23.75; do, 1 as against seven hundred thousand who saw King George's coronation parade. PEACE CELEBRATION DAY IS SATURDAY, JULY 19 A despatch from Ottawa says: - Saturday, July 19 has been officially fixed as a public 'holiday for the cele- bration of peace. The date coincides with Peace Day throughout the Em- pire. WELL. EN -se GOLLY I'M ON TIME IT NO SIGN OF MAGe4lEl KEEP THE TOWN SPIRIT ALIVE. Is our town on the DOWN grade? Are Mingo slackening up? Are the weeds commencing to grow on our main thoroughfares? Do people shun ,our cenammity? Maybe it isn't as bad as all that. And yet we feel that all is not right. The hustle and bustle of bueiness is wanting. We don't get TOGETHER as often as we wed to. Bach man is keepieg too close to himeelf. If this is eo, our town needs a TONIC. We muet GET AFTER our- selves. We must shirt a campaign in the interests of HOME TRADIO. We must keep our town ALIVE at all costs. Even if it DOES cost money to keep the town spirit alive, it Is surely money well spent. There's no use in waiting. We must make things Hum now. 1 location for our people," commented FrOW tin' Doukhobor leader, speaking at IZ' .1 BRITISH Grand Forkm. From the Sunset Coast Major John Ley Retallaelt, the als IS DISTRIBUTED pointee to the position of commis- sioner of public utilities for British ) Columbia, is clearing .decks for ac- tion. e For the first time since the start of Rhine Forces Total 206 000- the warSeattle and Victoria golfers will meet an the Oak Bay links in com- petition for the Diggerstaff Wilson trophy, Another link in the chain of provin- both in the British Isles and. France, ARNY Capt. Alfred Carpenter, V.C,, presented 3375 to the Chidren's Add Society of Victoria. Preliminary plans have been formed at Victoria for the Interstate Realty Association convention, to he held in July. Jack 'McGillivray, formerly of the Klondike, a brother of Lady McBride, of Vieteria, 'succumbed to an acute ill- ness at Vancouver. The New Bra League at Vancouver decided to send a letter to the Chief of Police expressing their appreciation of the work the police women are do- ing. A municipal delegation waited upon Hon. T. D. Pattullo, Minister of Lands, stating that the city of Victoria is not anxious to go ahead -with the National Dousing Scheme. News of a rich gold strike in the Atlin district of British Columbia, surface dirt paying from 30 to 50 cents a pan, has been brought by a White Horso resident to Vancouver. By the appointment of Captain Charles Tennant and Captain James Falkner, M.C., as travelling inspectors of the B.C. Provincial- Government Labor Bureau Department, the or- ganization of that branch has been I completed. Norman DeGraves, a lacrosse en- thusiast at Vancouver, has returned from France after several years over- seas and is again assisting in bringing the national game back in Vancouver. The management of the Provincial Exhibition plan to spend $75,000 at New Westminster in order to put the grounds and buildings into shape and provide a prize list for the autumn fair. "In selling our land for returned soldiers' settlement we would like the Government to give us sufficient time to send a representative to Australia and South Africa to prepare a new France and Flanders MAO -- Large Units in India and Egypt. A despatch from London says:- cial labor bureaus, British Columbia, Reuter learns, in regard to British was recently established at Kamloops forces overseas, that the army on the by J. D. McNiven, Deputy Minister of La.bar. Rhine numbers 206,000, and the army in France and Flanders 214,000, the Captain Harry Black, of Vancouver, latter mainly for salvage work and who won the Military Cross Overseas, also to supply the line of communica- was given a warm welcome upon his tion for the Rhine army, of which it is to act as reserve in the event of further hostilities. There are 11,000 British troops in. Italy, including troops for elearing-up purposes, and also a battalion forming part of the international garrison of -...e.-. Fiume. Ratified the Peace Treaty to Save Germany from Anarchy troops, besides Indian troops, inciud- There are in India 44,000 British A despatch from Weimar says: -In ing 22,000 in the Caucasus, with the. the debate on the ratification of the object of keeping order pending the! return to his native city. A great reception was given at Van- couver to the famous 7th Battalion, 1st B.C. Regiment, upon their return from the front. OCEAN LINER STRIKES ICEBERG 666.0.6 Grampain Saved By Prompt Ac' tion of Her Captain, A despatch from St. John's, Nfld., says: -Two men were killed and two injured when the Allan liner Gram- pian, Montreal for Liverpool, eollided with an iceberg off Cape Race on Wed. nesday night. The killed and injured were mem- bers of the erase, who were asleep in the bow of the ship when she struck. 'Virtually all the passengers were awake, but although there were more than 500 women and children aboard, there was little excitement and no panic. That the Grampian did not suffer the fate of the Titanic, with consider- able less of life, is believed to have been due to the decision of the Captain to strike the ,:ceberg bow on instead of taking a glancing Mow on the side. Tho 'berg, which was very large, was enceentcred 45 miles off Cape Race, in the early evening. When it was sighted thrcugh the fog it was too late to clear it, although the ship was proceeding slowly. The Captain sad that he realized that a glancing blow whieh would r.. ir through, the eldn's side wauls1 Fink ter. The course was changed and the Grarne.hin struck the ice mountain Fquare:y head on. The en- tire foreeart of the ship was enmeh- ed in n'ewe the water line, the stem being driven Seek nearly 46 feet. The .eseel wee viamaged below the v. -Ater rite, bee:ever, as the portion of the "herg which she s'sruek proved to I.e an over;etinging ehelf. The two men killed were stewards. Their bodice were caught in the me zee of wreekeee of the bow and hal not been reeevered when the Grampinn vine In. ee. The steward and stoker who were inured by pieees of weed torn locee in the cole lision were eat seeleusly hurt. 32.000 CANADIANS STILL OVERSEAS A despatch from London says: - With the sailing of the Cermania on Saturday with 2,495 troops and the sailing of the Tun'eian on the Fame . day with 203 troops, 255,413 Cana- dians have been repatriated since the 'date of the armistice. The number of Canadianoverseas, iis now approximately 32,000. This, of couree, incindes hospital staffs, pa- tients, working ranks in Franee and ! permanent cadres and headquarters here. Shipping has been secured for , the return of the remaining Canadian troops as fast as they are available. Oxford Cireus House, a supplement- ary office to Argyll House, was closed Saturday. KING GEORGE SENDS MESSAGE BY AIRSHIP R-34 A despatch from Ottawa says: - The first British airship to cross the Atlantic brought a message of good wishes from the King to the people of Canada. The message was address- ed to His Excellency the Governor- General, and reads as follows; Buckingham Palace, June 28, 1919. To His Excellency the Duke of Devonshire, K.G., G.C.M.G., G.C. V.O., Governor-General and Com. mander-in-chief of Canada. I take this opportunity of sending by the first British airship (R-34) to cross the Atlantic a message of good wishes to the people of Canada from the Old Country. (Signed) GEORGE, R.I. crtuisEns TO ESCORT PRINCE ON VISIT A despatch from London says: - Reuter learns that the warship Re- nown, escorted by two cruisers, will probably take the Prince of Wales to Canada. INVITE EX -KAISER TO RETURN TO GERMANY A despatch from Berlin says: -The central office of the "League of Ger- man men and women for the protec- tion of the personal life and freedom' of Wilhelm the Second" at Gorlitz has addressed an open letter to the ex - Kaiser inviting him to return to Ger- many. treaty in the German National Assem- establishment of peace conditions. bly, Dr. Peter Spahn, leader of the The recent troubles in Egypt and the, Catholic Centre party, said: "We unsettlement in Asia Minor necessi-t agreed to the treaty under hard corn-. tate the presence of 96,000 men, in - pulsion, to save ourselves from an- archy and to preserve the Fatherland eluding 10,000 Anzacs in Egypt and from internal ram.' Palestine. Herr Kreizig, Socialist; Prof. Schu- ecking, Democrat; Dr. Traub, Nation- al Party, and Herr Kahl, People's Party, all spoke, violently protesting WOULD LEAVE KAISER the injustice of the treaty, the impos- TO WORLD'S CONTEMPT _ would ccme. ing that the day of Germany's libera- tionsibility of _._its_feilfi.:l.__mexrt, and declar- the long list of prominent Britishers A despatch from London says: -In ENGLISHMEN TO DEVELOP opposed tothetrial of theex-Kaiser is Lord Beresford, who says: BRITISH COLUMBIA LANDS "It would revive support for him - in his own country. At the present A despatch from London says:_ moment the whole world regards him Lord Cowdray and others have ob- as a discredited and contemptible cow- tained control of the Cold Stream and who deserted his troops in the estate of 13,000 acres and the White face of the enemy when the critical Valley Irrigation System near Vernon, moment arrived. The trial would land B.C. with the intention of selling or us in countless ' cu ies, withe chance that the ex-Kais r i ht f Blake invented the stone -crusher in 1858, and Lenaine the steam -roller in I developing the esta.te. f d t i I t " 1859. e m g su er no a equa e pun s imen Jia 3lEt. 142- 41 3C XV G1.4 1LT 3E"" agit..M° 3Mit. 51-1E5 ONE HouR AlsAo A HALF LATE L3UT I'LL A LITTLE LON<IE.R- eeeeen. . 77. 15 Two HOURS LATE • _T :01,411,4' 'SO I'LL. GO I 4uESS SI-iE A ./ 1 , A • *.tir 1,11 0 <IIV.E HER A PIECE OF IV? MIND WI-IEN SHE 411- t-enaiE FOR KEEPIN %TiNN011: AROUND Ek LIKTHAT - /ev$ • F." Fsk_ WH -1 olorTr YOU MEET ME - LUCKIL-N. I WAS TWO HOURS LATE. OR I WOLILO HAVE. EWEN s'r,\Tm o1N4 THERE AL,L. THAT WAITING FOR YOu ( 1 4 4 41 1 1 4 1 711 1 4 411 4 .• 1