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The Exeter Advocate, 1920-1-8, Page 6111.414,44.444.4.44444..444,4 The ice -breaker 'Lady Grey," iohleb. has been trying unsuccessfully to release or reach the Canadian Merchant Marine steamer `:Canadian Spin - Iter,' which Is caught in the icepack iu the lower St, Lawrence, Wee !y Market Report Breadstuffs, to $4,75; Japans, $5.50 to 35,75 Limas Toronto, Jan. 6.—Manitoba wheat•--• ;17.4 to 1$ �, c. No. 1 Northern, $2.80, No. 2 North-' H'onev Extracted clover, 5 -lb. tins, ern, $2.77; No. 3 Northern, $2,73, in; 27 to, 28c;. 10 Ib, tins, 25 to 29c; GO 'ill. store Fort William, tine, 25c; buckwheat, GO -lb. tins, 18 Manitoba oats—No, 2 C.W., 93 ec;. to oz2-o$4.25z 0 iQ<comb, -o. .00 to $6.50 No. o C.R ., 90e; extra leo, 1 feed, eel/Joh No. 1 feed, 884tc; No,,a feed, hfaple products—Syrup, per romper.. 86e, in store. Fort. Williem. nal gal„ $4.25; per 5 imperial gals., Manitoba barley No. 3 C.W, 34.00; sugar, lb., 29 to 30e,° $1.65; No. 4 C,W., $1,60; rejected, PL-ovisions—Wholesale. feed, $1.341, in store Fort Smoked .meats—Hams, medium, 34 William, to 36c- do., heavy, 29 to 30c, cooked,. Ontario oats -•-No. 9 white, 95 to 98c 47 to 50e; rolls, 30 too 31e; breakfast according to freights outside. Ontario wheat—No, 1 Whites!, per 50c; boneless,40 to 452.toa54e. plain, 48 t car let, 22.00 to $2.01; No, 2 do., $1.97 Cured meats—Long clear bacon, 31 to $2A3i No. 3 do., $1.93 to $1.990 to 32c; clear bellies, 30 to 31e. f,o.la, shipping points, according,to Lard—Pure, tierces, 29 to 29%c; freights, T tubs, 291rs to 30c; pails, 293'4 to 30Yee Ontar;o o. 2 Spring, 7 1,99ito $2,02 prints, 3.0. to 301 e. Compound, to $k,08; leo, 2 Spring, $1,99 to $2.05; tierces, 271, to 28e• tubs, 28 to 28%e; No. 3 Spring, $1.95 to $2.01, f.o.b. ails, 28? . to 28%c prints 293: to shipping points, according to freights. 30e, ' ' Peas --No, 2, $2.76, Montreal Markets. Barley --Malting, $1.60 to 21.65, ac- cording to freights outside. Montreal, Jan. 6.—Oats; extra No, Buckwheat -•$L32 to $1.35, accord- 1 feed $1.06%.• flour, new standard ing `to freights outside. grade, $13.25 to $13.55; rolled oats, Rye -'-No. 3, $1.65 to $1,70, accord- bag 90 lbs., $4,75 to $5.00; shorts, ing to freights outside, $42.25; middlings, $52.25; hay, No. Manitoba flour—Government stan- 2, per ton, ear lots, $24,00 to $25.00 Bard, *13.25 Toronto. cheese, finest easterns, 25 to 28e; but- Ontario flour—Government sten- ter, cho,iee creamery, 67 to 673yc; 'but - lard, 29.30 to $9.45, Montreal and To- ter, seconds, 62 to 63c; eggs, Mesh, ionto, in jute bags. Prompt Alp- $1.00 to $1,10; eggs, selected, 65e; mMeontat. eggs, No. 1 stock, 67e; eggs, No, 2 Milifreal eed f--reght bags included -- ear lots, 22.25 to 32.50; dressed hogs, iCar lots — Delivered stock, 53 to fisc; potatoes, per bag, Bran, per ton, $45; shorts, per .ton, , abattoir killed, *25.00 to $25,50; lard, $50 to $52; geed feed flour, $3,15 to 23.25. Hay—No. 1, per ton, $26.50; mixed, per ton, $25, track, Toronto, Straw .Car lots, per ton, 214.50 to $15.64, track, Toronto, Country Produce. Wholesale. Butter—Dairy, tubs and rolls, 43 to 1 to $9,50; do., common, $6,50 to $7.00; 44e; prints, 48 to 50c, Creamery, fresh hulls, choice, 210".00 to $11.00; do., made solids, 60 to 61e; prints, 62 to medium, $9.00 to 29.25; do., rough, pure, tierces, 37o lbs., 29 to 31c. " Live Stock Markets, Toronto, Jan. 6,—Choice heavy steers, $13.00 to $13.25; good heavy steers, $12,50 to $13,00; butchers"' " cat- tle, choice, $11.75 to $12.00; do., good, 210,50 . to $11.00; do,, niedium,,39.00 CROWNCROWN3EWV,i •S•Consider P' f Wal 63e. 7.00 to $7.25;0Butcher cow, ehoioe, GUARD DOUBLED r;:nce o es Eggs—Held, 52 to 54c; new laid, 80 10.00 to $11.0; do., good, $9.25 to as First Irish Governor to 85e. $9,50; doe medium, 28.25 to $8.50; ye Dressed poultrSpring 'chickens, do., common, $6,50 to $7,00; stockers,. Thick, Hectagonal Steel Bar- A despatch, from London says:--• 26 to 30c; roosters; 25c; fowl, 20 to 37.50 to $1:0.00; feeders, $10.00 to' = 25c, geese, 28 to 3Oc; ciucl:lings, 3Q 311.00; canners and cutters, $5.25 to, ilei at Tower of London. Serious considerat,:on is 1 i ng given to 32c; turkeys, 50 to 63c; squalls; $6.25; milkers, good to choice, $110 in £J. quarters to the question dor., $4.x0. to $175; do., common and medium.. A despatch from London says:•-•-- whether' the Prime o.,, Wales should Live poultry --Spring chickens, 19 $66 to $75; springers, $90 to $175; Never have the British Croom jewels not take the position of 'Viceroy of to 20c; roosters, 20c; fowl, 18 to 22c; Light ewes, 27 to $8.50, Yearlings, been more heavily guarded than new.. Ireland under the new system oe geese, 22c; ducklings, 22c; turkeys, 39 to $10.50; spring lambs, per cwt., In consequence they are to be seen government which the Emerald Isle at the Tower of Lonodn only through will get sooner or later. The matter, windows in a thick heetagonal steel however, is not prey. ing. For some barrier erected around the showcase time ahead the Prince will be fully 37 to 40c. Cheese—New, large, 31; to 32c; twins, 32 to 32%c; triplets, 33 to 33%e; Stilton, 34 to 35c. Beans -- . Canadian, ]hand -peeked 317,50 to 318.50; calves, good to choice, 318 to 521; bogs, fed and watered, 318.25 to 319; do,, weighed off cars, 318,50 to '$19,25; do., f.o.b., 317 05 to 318 00' do d4 •in which they have been on view for occupied by his visit to India, with bushel, $5.25 to 25.75; printer, $.4.25 217.00 to 217,504 years in ties historic place. later journeys to Australia and South. It is only synttomatie of the extreme Africa. care with which this famous eollec- The English Royal family has at tions of jewels is being guarded as no time been personally identified a consequence of score of robberies by with the rule of Ireland within Ire- astute theieves. Besides the steel land. The exception of William, World's Largest Bible, to Aid Crusade of 1921 A despatch from London, says:— Cairo Air Route Started. A, despatch from London says:— An air route from Cairo to Cape barriers around the Crown jewels the Prince of Orange, does not count What is said. to be the "world's larg- 'Town has'been established by an all- barriers has been doubled . nitile room as he was there solely as a su res 1, est Bible is now being written by British firm. The first part of the 'where the jewels are Yo • l ser of revolution, That other Prince' ban' by leading . men and women of. flight is from Cairo to `Nimud,. a des- J x shown and every person entering the room is of Wales who became George IV. closely watched.. To obtain a view of would have gone to Ireland us Lord - the jewels it is necessary to peer Lieutenant and Missioner of Con - through small windows with prison- ciliation if Pitt had acquiesced, like bars in them. The famous Cul- linen ul linan and Kohinoor diamonds are Art 'Windows represented by "dummies." * Although Scotland Yard is reticent Restored to Paris about the suggestion that some of. the craftiest international crooks are now at work, it is known that the detee- the United. Kingdom, Among those arae of 1,500 tin i1 the he second leg - who are participath:g in the world is from Niniud to Ahercorn, and�'tho are: King George, Queen Mary, the last is to Cape Town, roughly 2,000 Prince of Wales, :and the Ca.`binet, miles, Ministers. 1`oungest member oY > ritislh House .ot Commons, kion, J smund HHelms• worth, son of Lord Rotltermere and nephewoY Lord Northcliffe, who was recently elected M.P. for Thanet, being congratulated by his supporters. He is only 21 years, old, France Confident • at New Year A despach from Paris, says: -- France began the new year with far greater confidence than the last. This is in spite of formidable handicaps such as the balance of trade running against her at the rate of about 1,- 500,000,000 francs a month, about 50 per cent. depreciation of the exchange value, of the franc and the consequent difeiculty of procuring raw materials 'and machines urgently needed for reconstruction. France's renewed confidence is derived directly from the result of the recent elections. These are re- garded here as having definitely stab- ilized internal polities, ended all. The book will- contain the complete text of the Authorized Version from Genesis o Revelations, and there is space ,in it for 12,000 hand-written A despatch from . Paris, says:-- contributions. It wi:l be . 5 feet 2 The valuable and ar•e<ent stained inches high and 3 feet G inches vide, lues suspect that some criz'ni tnals glass windows of the aris churches Twelve large goatskins were eogun od P CI Only Cie^} .,ace,, u For President wt A despatch from Paris sayee— o'ietecal circles h .lieve that the nan'e ' of remie. crzenceaih will be •tile active before the war. were engaged that were removed to places of safety for the binding, which is done in red only one . ° .ttecl to Pnrliosnent in recent sensational robberies. French Birth Rate Shows Big Increase A despatch froth Paris says: --A large increase in the birth rate is during the bombardment of the ital by German long-range guns are being rapidly replaced. 1 The wonderful medieval glass of Notre Dame and the Sainte-Chappelle has already been returned, and now the windows of five other old churches, Saint -Gervais, Swint - shown by statistics for the month of Severin, Saint -Merry, Saint -Etienne December, the rate in. Paris having du Mont and Saint-Germain 1 a.0 er- doubled since the beginning of the ruffs, are p all very fine specimens of renals_t year, Last January the birth rate to be ut 'back. These are, sauce art. was 9.5 per thousand, while for the pies•: The windows of only one of the old Paris churches were sereousl;y dam - thousand. aged 'lay the war,' those of Saint - eat month the rate exceeds 18 per Deaths have decreased from 18 per Denis, which were partly shattered by the explosion at Courneuve. thousand' in January to 14 per thous- and this month: The number of marriages is also increasing•. Prince Begins Tour. to India March 1 A despatch from London says: -- The Prince of Wales starts his jour- ney to. New Zealand and Australia and India on March 1. He will be away until` Christmas, Million said. Half Germans Killed A. despatch from Berlin says :— Official statistics just' made public, places the number of Gerrna.ns killed' in battle 1,500,000. These figures do not include those o e who died' in prison ,Camps. Levant Morocco leather. f din when the election for Pre..ident of This huge book will e�exhib to the French Republic takes place, ae- various places, the idea being to at' cording to •Tl e hebo do Paris. tract support to the t ble crusade in - 1921. It is even hoped to take it, overseas to the Dominions, where it: would be shown in a motor car pro- vided with a folding platform and pulpit. Souvenirs For Relatives. A despatch from London says: -1 Relatives of British scidiers who frill's . in the war are to receive capper plaques upon which are inscribed the here's name and the motto: "lie .di d for freedom and honor." , I The plaques are .z 3eut five inches! Muriamies Still in in diameter and show frhe-Es'tish lion Wartime Hiding A despatch from London says:— Although the armistice was signed more than a year ago, Egyptian mummies belonging to the . British Museum. are. still lying in cold, damp, underground tunnels -of a building where they .were...reinterred�so that they might not be injured b y Zeppe- lin raids. Previously having spent centuries in the tombs of kings in Egypt/ if they could speak -the mummies would resent this troglodytic existence, /but school children have spoken for tlsein: They' want to see the 'rummies again, but the museum is still closed to the public and the 'mummies are still left in their Biding , places ..of Zeppelin ir1� overcooling the Prussian, eagle. Nearly a million relatives will re- I' eeive these souvenirs, which are be- : ing made On a government factory' at' Acton. i Olympic to—Resume Her -171 Equipped as an Oil B„r l? A despatch from' New York says: - The 46,000 -ton, British passenger steamer Olympic, of,. the 17 hite star Line, which made her fast trip as-' a troop transport in August "will be re- stored to her run in ;via�rch. it was announced here at ilia office of the' SIR. Wive. OSLL R' p i r site •-'' The noted physician, who diet"! at line, . , The nl,Tisip c, +wise . s• e nem,, >? 5 appears, will be an oil burner— the ford, England, iii. his, 71st year, He' pp : first of the large passenger steamers was born; at l3ond"Read. near 'Port danger of revolut ohhary agitation, far, of the late J, Marshall, I.avenh'IL„,� some time to come and' brought' road, Belfast. about a better atttude by capital acid Sir James Campbell, Dart., Lord labor toward the immense effort. bo- Chancellor of Ireland, has accepted Vice -Chancellor fore France, (the position of ofi Economists and financiers who E Dublin University. have weighed all the elements of the! Isaae• Goldwater of Dublin, was IRELAND. Captain C. B. Calvey, R,A.S.C,,, Ranelagh road, Dublin, has been up- poented to the Order of the British Empire, The death is announced .at Malin Hall, County Donegal, of George Mil- ler Harvey, L,L., in his eighty -.first year. The one hundred and sixty-fifth annual meeting of the Meath ilaspi- tal`evas held raeentlj',, James' Mahiony presiding, ., The Military Cross. has been award- ed to Major A. Marahall, eldest son eiteatiou admit that France still is in fined £5 for sending a quantity of a' most dif,'icult situation,,, but see' beef to Isaac Strongwater, London, indications of great improvement be-' without a incense. fore the end of another year, Captain, Clark has received instruc- tions from the Admiralty to close down the navel transport base at Dublin and Kingstown. Hugh Barrie, of the Irish Depart- t ment of Technical Instruction, has taken over the .de`;ties'oi the Earl of Granath :of the Food Control Com- mittee. .7. Armstrong, St. G. Brown, Henry E. Brown, Dublin, and Griffith E.! Jones, Port Arlington, have been ad- mitted Freemen of the City of Dublin. A service in commemoration of the officers and inen of the Wdlt- :sTire - Regiment 'who fell in the„ war was held in Arbor Hill ''Garrison. _ ; Church, Dublin. How to Make Scrapple. S ripple is made of the waste pieces of moat, the trimming: of the hams and shoulders, the head, the heart,. a small piece of the liver, and the skins from the lard and sausage ,neat. The ears, cal sfully.. cleansed and the !cartilage removed, may be used. The ' hrad ,is split between the jaws, and, after the tongue is taken out, is split; the other way. Cut off the snout, re move the jaw and nasal cavities. Put the head meat and skins into the boiler with water to :cover them, the rest of Ville meat following fifteen min utes later. Boil until the meat leaves! the bones, chop it fine, strain the 1e -i quor and add to it enough water to make five parts liquid to three of meat. Set the liquid to bailing, stip, ring in cornmeal to makea moderately thick mush, stirring all the time. Or half cornmeal; an'l half buckwheat- meal may- be used. Then put in the, meat, mixing thoroughly, and season to taste with salt, red and black pep- per, and either sage, sweet marjoram or thyme, which ever"fiavor you pre- feir. The cornmeal should be fine, made of new 'corn, well dried before grinding, and ; there should be about os mach of it as of the neat: Put the scrapple ` away in pans -in a cold 'place. ' To cook,' cut the scrapple into slices, lay in a pan 'containing hot fat and fry quickly until brown.' I Farmers can not,cope with, city peo- i pie ,in the stauggle'for a square deal with an inadequate and antiquated country school system. Education is Lone of -lite principal factors , in' this , days. I, to be so equipped, 11lope, s niggle• .,Rr✓ o r,n. ..",..s- a,—v73 .t- ,&.C,Tik:.1V 602S3ilA.S111!'J JItV A f3Ftll+�csa�{ UP. t"A 4 Hi R • • • • RED MENACE ON AFGI-IAN BORDER 1 Alarming Situation Exists ' in' Trans -Caspian. A despatch from= London says:—A, threatening situation exists in the. trans-Caspia. where the. Bolsheviki claim that they have occupied' Djebel station,,,80 miles east of Kraenovodss,' in their ads; anee toward that town. , Red reinforcements continue to air- rive inn"'lie Mary region of Trans- Caspia from Central Russia. Thin makes the inennace along the Persian, and 'Afghan borde :.:°ritical. _' The Red 'prop ila 3s •.increasing; in intensity, and all the evidence in- dicates that' the I oviet Govern:iient entertains fax anti-British designs in Central Asia. Poison, gas • .weighing fifteen thou - tend tons was supplied to the British armies in the .feld ire 19L8. siteai.ARE THE. GOLD- Fh.el-t `IOU AR. TIIKIN . C`, ARE 4F CSR Ma rtiF i ,1N A • Off• . 4 IB r E Fal! L'C- Nisi" vil3's /x1,11 ,1:S Gt1ARGIVyay THAM s--;,----1_, NOV/- I'LL J144‹:,-D�I1P. 5- • clIL.L.YOu " P��ttt�C, DOW Ni �,i ThVE GGL D �!%/ fi111?' 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