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The Exeter Advocate, 1920-7-29, Page 7A�n�,Vl ..y GERMANY SHOWS- HER HAND NOTE OF 187Q FAC . 'despatch from Berlin says: ---Dr. assist in the plans of the Allies for TOR IN 1919 PEACE Simons, the Foreign Secretary, speak- the aid of Poland. Ing before the Foreign Affairs Coni- Germany, continued Dr. Simons, mittee of the Reichstag, declared that would protect her frontiers against in the event the Entente contemplated the troops of both belligerents, and the depsateh of troops through. Ger- any forces violating this order would rftany for the aid of Poland, Germany be disarmed. would vigorously protest. Vdrwaerts says that Germany is re - A note on the attitude of Germany inforcirg her troops on the frontier • k intends to _� d i e in the Russian? -Polish crisis was pxe by iotas defence an �? n s rented et Paris on Wednesday. The! guard the frontiers of the plebiscite German declaration of neutrality in areas with German troops to obviate 'this crisis, said the Minister, was proof; the possibility of a conflict between The death of Empress Eugenie has that the country was at peace withl French and Rueeian troops, which ,revived interest in the historic eor- both Russia and Poland and could not might bring the war to. German sell, re:po•nclence between her and the Kaiser which was responsible for the ALLIES PROMISE - ;FATE OF SUVLA rev is:on of President Wilson's views MD TO POLAND HEROES DISCOVERED early in. the days of the peace confer- mice that Germany's claim to Alsace Lorraine might have a more solid. French and EL.-WAMission tolSkeletons of Intrepid .�. Rritish ft deflation than Premier Ciemeueeatt WRITTEN BY THE .LATE EMPRESS ELIC E ` ME,. Historic Correspondence With Kaiser egardi! g Claim to Alsace-Lorraine. t A ______- 'Warsaw Arrange for Succor. ers Found at Gallipoli. 1 was v, illiug to aihrzit, says a. Paris des - A tics slob iron? Paris sa -Tilt Ade atcb from London says: -One -Clue patch, It p It es traaerstood here that the Em- ellies have decided to take rneaseres of the mysteries of the w.r, the fate press's doeutnettts-at least those con; preparatory to giving military aid to of part of a battalion of an English rented. with: French history_will. ba #'gland, if that should prove necessary) Territorial regiment, the Fifth Nor- itlece:1 in the Freach national arch - A French mission headed by Jules! folks, in the fighting at Salva Fray, Ives, and historians bere are already 3. J'es:seranti, French Ambassador for Gailipoli, has, at last been solved. preelictiug that this legacy by her will the United Stettes. who is borne on, Sir Ian Hamilton, in his despatch go a long way toward establishing the leave, -with General W e-gand, r:ght-V on the fight:ig around Anafart^ on Empreaa s patriotism. hand r;an o. Marshal. Foch, and M,1 Augi:at 12, 1915, referred to the fate. According to a bigh1y placed official Vig an. a chase ce'.:;,borator with Pro-; of the battalion es a very mysterious stere, the Empresa wrote to the kaiser ra er Millerar,d, left en Thursday eight; thing, On the night of the ettael: they. in 1870 begginghim not to be too fel* S'4 erFenes to arrange e far prompt found themselves less strenuensly op- 1.1-sb, espeeially in connection with t.ttecor to the Poles, / :Posed than the rest of the brigade end,* Alsace.Lorraine, wldeh the Empress On the sante train and with the:, wider Colonel Sir H, Beauchamp, the} ecnsiuered essentially Francis in tra f:,nae object there vac, n British n? s ; nen eagerly pressed forward. Some ditioeo, babies and desires, exon headed by Lord Deiebernon, Brij were wounded or exhausted and Annuli -Kaiser Pieelaims Responsibility. tell Ambassador rt x,erlie, General; their way bath, to camp, !! To Icer letter the Balser replied, 3 acicii ie and Sir Met:rice H: nkey. But the Colonel, with 10 aft:ors, f s e- °'±'hese missiurs, it is learned, leave; and 2i')O men," continued IIrntiiton'sI a est% butging theg thatjtce o her tafi i°:•:th full authority to say to the Poles' despatch,'"still kept pushing en, drive; not re saying the healone avis bat rei;parsiUlm for the Govei•nrrietit's that whatever aid ie ne,essnry, either ir,A the enemy before them, Among, decisionthat Germany needed these military c•r f -taste ail, or in the n .tore" the ,e ardent souls was part of afine j provinces in order to prevent future cf t upp ; s, will lie forthec,mieg if the' company enlisted from tete King's i aggrc-sion by the French. 1 elehev:sts pess.et in a des,.ge to Sandringham estates. Nothing morel It was this letter that Premier Cie di se rtlt into st.nctively Polish ter:- Was ever seen or seard of any of them,; meneeau a, kel the Empress's permts- tonn : They charged into the forest and were diem to present to the ""i3id pour" and It is stated to eeneieey, lila on Kee' lost to sight and emend. Not ene of which eonvinee•? Preai;lent Wilson ra .hcrity that this me..n help for them ever came back:' the , .; t}iat Itis attitude regarding t.te restos a- 1".clunci "z: the fart: of trees 'if they The forest into tvhticlt the battalion; tion of these pxovince;; to Fr.^,ttcc was r a; is.q:: rod. gallantly charged was never retaken ` based on a false rremire, the remise r station ftnaneiatil and a -. s t , -•r'e ie t,Y B iii=h. troops. A few.mena. o The- ,a .. I? :.ite,.arS a 1.,.,.c. r..;r lr2r c£ ..Il.f,t A o h I�aleet s real fear at the out industrially in Frame, in Germany t f,:er a tel *nieit t€rne ere with tate fell into the hands of the Tunis, li,, break of the European war was that ' ,•, • ..t,., was afterwards found,bad fallen out! :.,� Iand its Italy, Correspondents are Tc.Ii=1► .,rr,., , ar hi.lt..,. is t.t.Iaie i, will Rcasia avis tnobiliz4144 rapidly and ho f 1 l reseed •d' g to their Hove to Select Edible Mushrooms 1 Those whti, unadvised or ill-advised, of other tube -bearing fungi experiment would gather wild species of brush- with caution: rooms for the table should remember Sixth. Fungi which have a sort of that they aro embarking upon axt'ad- spider web or#loceulent ring about. the venture that may lead'to a sudden aad upper part of the stalk should in gets horrible death, To ask a person to eral be avoided, gather his .own mushroo:.ns tor the Professor Farlow adds that "rules table, without previous instructions one, two and three may, for the be - that will enable hip? to avoid the dead• ginner, be regarded as absolute, with. Iy kinds, is equivalent to, if not worse the exception to. rule two, Amanita, than, inviting Blip to put his unpro- Caesarea, the gills of which are Yet I n• Ices.Rulesthree, four and six have tested hand into a den of rats es a low. our General rules for thio guidance of more numerous exceptions, but these. mushroom hunters ' are trustworthy rules should be followed in all eases and serviceable only when formulated unless tbe collector is content to ex - by experienced botanists. The follow-perisnent first with very s"mali quant; Ing six rules by the late Professor Far- ties and learn the practical result." low will prevent, if scrupulously ob- Other rules that wil help to protect served, the eating of .notoriously from serious poisoning are: poisonous species: Do not collect mushroom in or near First. Avoid fungi when in the but- wooded areas except for study" pur- ton or expanded stage, also these in poses. which the flesh has begun to decay, This rule is' very general, as it floes even if only slightly. , not protect against the green gilled Second. Avoid ail fungi which have Pepiota, nor against an occasional death cubs, stalks with a swollen base Amanita and some otbera, but it does surrounded by a sae -like or scaly en- , prevent the beginner from entering velope, especially it the gills are ,' tbe very "`lair" of the man -killers. white, 1 IDs not accept mushrooms from a Third. Avoid fungi having a milky* self-styled expert, even if you ;rive to iuice, unless the milk is reddish. disoblige a dear friend. Learn the Fourth. Avoid fungi in which the subject yourself. cap, or pileus, is tbiin in proportion to , That an animal (inseet, squirrel, the gills, and in winch the gills are i turtle, etc.) has eaten of a tnusirroo to nearly all of equal length, especially if i es no criterion of the edibility of chat the pileus is bright•colored. 1 musltrooau for man, Insect larvae tl J • Alex. L. Panton. Olympic trials winner, who represent Canada in the 100 yards events, at Attt- werli. Panton is the holder of the Hamilton 11, Ytills Cup, Back Europe Struggles Back to Solvency and Prosperity During the war it was often hard to tell from the articles in the news- papers Wiest the precise truth about the nrilit . y situation was.. To -day it is a1n�c t as difficult to tell what is Fifth. Avoid all tube4 earing fungi 1 thrive and grow fat on the v in which the flesh elsau es color when poisonous Amanita phalloides. cut or broken or where the mouths of Soaking or boiling in water, S A mCi r7 the. tubes are reddish, said in e e .a sosrou e the mss render a Z n Shorts, $61,2x. Hay, No, 2, per ton, Markets Q • ear lots, $29 to $30. Cheese, finest e i Easters's, 261t'� to 2ic, Butter, choicest s not aisle. creamery, 571s to 57Yee. Eggs, fresh, Wholesale Grain. ) 60 to Glc. Potatoes, per bag, ear lots, Toronto, July 27.--Manitobo wheat/ $4.50 tv $5.00. --No. 1 Northern, $3,15; No, 2 North -1 Live Stock Markets. ern, $3.12; No, 3 Northern, $3.08, in • Toronto, July 27. -•--Choice heavy store Fort William. 2 A '1; , p steer-, $15.25 to $15.50; good heavy Manitoba oa s -No, CW, ,,•l,l5,,2; steer, $14.73 to $15;'butchers cattle, No. 3 OW, $1.13i�; extra No, 1 feed : ehoi+.e. $i1,50 to $14.75; do, good, 3L12; ; o, 1 feed, $1.101; No. 2 feed,. 313.50 to $14.251 do, med., $11:50 to 31♦071e, in Store Fort William. ; $12 do, corn 87,50 to 39; bulbs, choice. Manitoba barley -No. 3 Cti'4 , 31.75;n 311.75 to $12.2;5; do, good, 310.i:i to No. 4 GW,. 31,45; rejected, 31,35; feed„ 311.25; do, rough, 36 to 38; butchers' 31.,35, in store Fort William, !cows, choice, 311.75 to 312.25; do, good, American corn --No. 3 yellow,. $3.30; $11 to $11.25: do, com., $6.50 to $7.50; to into ,.:asr�i aeeordi' r: to c•ireutn of the attack earlier•. and not a man t would outelistaace the German Eui- # Ie u n©r c epres c stoat ins nomintil, track, Toronto, prompt ship -1 stoekers, 39 to $11; feeders, 311 to •i• +• of- ( h. 13eaueltatn;i's fore w as made temperaments, to the course of their meat. , 312.50• e ,.:ac: with ; s many c♦iariti.on c?f in-plre♦ This, more than Hatred of this information, or to the of tet they wish, 3 , canners and cutters, $ii to fonts y tank detachments., air forces prisoner. ether` European nations. induced him is Ontario eats---No.*3, white, :nominal.* 36,25 milkers, good to choice, 3100 to ic' l :ry a s try beis orted Rev. C. S. Edwards has `ust return-tothe res;tire from the P rags• to pro the on their readors, Thele ear lot, io wheat -No. 1. Waiter, per a 3165; do, cone and med., 365 to 375; ;aid „ttsi c , tr ., ttx.t pI to yield p still propaganda, commercial and lot, 32 to 32.01; No. 2 de, 3$X,98 iambs ear•lin s, 312 to 31.3; do, in duo time, ed fromvisit to the peninsula on stens and Ioosen the drains of the , a r, political, mixed with the unpartial and to 32.01; No. 3 do, $L92 to 31.93, f.o.b. sprint . X16.50 to 317.50;, calvesgood graves regietration work. Ile says world conflict. conscientious news that some report- shipping points, according to freights.Ito choice-, 316.50 to 318; sheep, 36.50 Mot on going over Anafarta Plains Thies explanation of the Kaiser's ers send across the ocean, and it is/ Ontario wheat -No. 1 Spring, per i to 39; hogs, fed and watered, 321 to he found skeletons of the men of the act, despite his constant declarations a brat r stavorth car lot, 32,02 to .$2.03; No. 2 do, $1,98; $2125• do. weighed off cars, $2125 to ft n hard to cep a the t u OCEAN TRAVELLER TALKS "' ENGLAND fourth and Ftfih Norfolks the Fifth ''that Ile was an emrnis•ary of peace and •Seirolles and the Fourth Harripsltire not of war, forms the bans of te leach from the disingenuous. [to $2.01; No. 3 do. $1,95 to $2.01, f.o.b. ! $21,50, do, f.o.b., 320 to $20.25; do, S t>C shipping a•nts mewling rdm tofreights. 1 i319.75 . Acaf ao icountry is t p pdo, co int n320. , S aWesternp M s ut rt t, cl clear enough that $ e� ., Peas nominal. over • it in a , o <a mile i. front of what wa s •tf volume* w' ie li- , t t , i,.s- i � l a ter of 1 oh to of as tuella it et �, n , •M � i a or again. It �'d � ,��( �` It±uxope ett•n to v k tag i � 1 1 Montreal, July 27, --Butcher steers,. SS wards the first-line trench, tatio�ts published by Princess George 3aileV ?4ialY ng, nominal med.$10.50 to 312; corn., $8 to 310; , -4z er 1?rI Wza ass tc 'Phones to Friend in Essex. A despatch from S. S. Victorian (h,e ring Imperial Press delegates to Ottawa), rays: --"You are wanted. en Us- telephone." 'tl''ith this •astonihing request my et.ilin steward left' me wondering lehet ezel was. really on: a lina::.bniteet for Cana dal or in a lunatic asylum. I was shown the way a few minutes ago to tate Victorian'~ Marconi apart- meets, wheee, sure'enough, was a wireless operator wearing the familiar ear -pieces, apolegi:.ing to someone somewhere for niy delay in appearing. "Chelmsford in Essex wishes to speik to you, sir, Chelmsford is apologizing for the 000 miles between es and wishing the journalists on ;boned a pleasant voyage." The result of the subsequent eon- • versation, conducted as clearly as if I were talking from room to room, is that I ani able to forward for ,,ublication this message, one of the first ever • spoken from a passenger ship at sea to the 'United Kingdom, This :Message was received ht the T�iereoni wireless telephone station at Chelmsford this nfterisoon and trans- matted to London by ordinary'tele- Thane. Apparently the battalions had ad- vfineed in perfeet order and to all ap peorances had been caught by maa- ehine-gun fire, One man had taken cover behind a stone, and a large pile of empty cartridge cases round his skeleton showed he had defended him- ' self to the last. Just behind the Nor- folk front'line leer, Edwards cane • across the remains of about fifty men echo had fallen in a grim hand-to-hand struggle, Touching each ether lay I the bodies of Britons and Turks, the heads of the latter facing the,sea and those of the attackers toward their Nactic"mra lists Shell Greek Brid%ehea s A despatch front Athens says; -An. official coinnttanicatian, issued by the Creels army in Thrace, states 'hat at- tempts made by the enemy to shell the bridges on the Maritza road were inefieetivt and bombs were dropped from Greek airplanes on. the enemies batteries at Lulu Bruges, An attack on the Greek right wing, in the IK:ara gash section, was repulsed.. The largest nugget of gold ever found was the' ""'Welcome" nugget, clic !covered in 1858 at'73akery Hill, Balla- rat, Australia. It weighed 2,217 oz, and was sold for. 352,500. adversaries.' lines. Live Stock at Montreal F©1t' the Prince's Ranch A despatch front Montreal says: - Live stock for the Prince of Wales' ranch in Alberta have arrived in Montreal on the Montcalm, The Ship- nten't consisted of eight flIlies, eleven Dartmoor ponies, eleven colts and two peas of Suffolk chickens. These ani- mals and fowls are being shipped to the West on a special car, in which running water and electricity have been installed. They are in charge of the foreman of the ranch. It is stated that a number of cows will be sent from England in October. .e. Greek Vanguard Enters Adrianople A despatch frons Constantinople says: -The War Office announced it had learned that the Greek vanguard had entero Adrianople. The Turks have destroyed thebridge over the Maritsa River nearw the junction of the Constantinople line with the Ad rianople-Saloniki line, and have also destroyed four bridges within 20 miles of Tehatalja. The Turks are entrench- ed atmany points along the railway between the Maritza River and Tehatalja prepared toharass the Greek advance. essesses is rt eo�er'ng frrm the condition of hatc shacked and dazed suffering into which the war plunged it The only question is whether the burden of war Buckwheat -No. 2,nominal. Rye -No. 3,32.20 to ,32 25 accord - in • to freights outside. ; pito is flour -Government stand- of tab - of Greece, :formerly Princess Marie er heifers, med., 39.50 to $11,50; Bonaparte, which is attracting the at- Y com., 36 to 39; canners, 33 to 34; cut - French military and 1 F f •gl ' 1 ters, 3.4.50 to $5.50 butcher bulls, #carar atics.leading 141 1 fi --G d coni„ 35.50 to $8. Good veal, 312 to literary critics, arch1'i S t fioranto _ $13.50; med., 37 to 511. Ewes, 37 to German People Deluded. people t too great to hat successfully ard,t31. 90 nonxinalaernrt?c�?t rtatLd- 39to Lambe, goHo s 5 to1.50a; tomff ., ""Than the German people, believing , r . r 313$ selects, P L bane c -•en lry as tiling rand th city x Mont - is o Rlillfeed Ca lots, delivered wei ghts 21. Mec1. li ht has 21.50; g ,$ g g,$ , tireutsolves Assailed by ltusslo. and. �by 1 Th b t th t t France. acclaimed the preventive mixed lots, 317.50 to 319.50. • , debt laid upon the shoulders of theO. `tario , l.. is2 i e, inio is a t , wor ors. c es ap n reA1 freig , br: s included: Bran, per not, If Western Europe does not ton, $5'2; shaxttt, per tart,• 361; and fall again into the chaos of war, it feed flour, 33.75 to 34, will gradually work its way back to Hay --No. 1, per ten, 331; mixed, solvency and prosperity. The weals laer ton, 327, track, ;pot is Germany, for the morale as Straw -Car lots, per tan, $15 to $16, well as the resources of Germany has track, Toronto. been sadly weakened. And yet in Ger Country 1?roduce %'+'bola.axle, Ger- many it is political rather than buss Cheese -New, large, 31 to 32e; ness'v incapacity that menaces thetwins, 311,6 to 3211 e; triplets, 323,2. to 133e: old, large, 33 to 34e, do, twins, state, The present government is 331,fi to 341:c; Stiltons, old, 36 to timid and ineffectual; vet any other; 36x�e; new 34 to 85e. would be still more dangerous, for the Butter -Fresh dairy, Choi e, 49 to of Shipping. The aggregate amount radical socialists would inevitably 50e; creamery prints, 59 to 62e. now under construction in Great Bri- swing. Germany nearer the fatal policy' Margarine -35 to 39e. lain is 3,576,000 tons -Che highest am - of the Bolsbeviki, and the monarchists, Egge-No. 1, 57 to 58e; selects, 60 ount ever recorded, would restore a Germany that no one to 61e. Dressed poultry -Spring chickens, else could trust. y France is hard at work and doing'50c;:roosters, 30e; fowl, eye; turkeys, 53 t,, € 'c; ducklings, 28 to 40c; tivabs, <.. xnone headed by their Emperor," the Princess says. Wllhelm'e greatest fault, she adds, was to have been. for so many years the glittering chief of the Prussian General Staff. ,"His crime was to have breathed constantly the ideas of his entourage," slie.says; "to have lived -constantly in 'the professional uniform of war and to have brandished, when - aver he spoke, the sword which was al- ways curled by him as the symbol of Germany's might." The mass of, the German. people, the Princess asserts, did not want war, but the officers of the Prussian fac- tion, dreaming of glory and of colonial lands to be conquered, overwhelmed even the wisest of the German iirtal- Iectuals. "Added to this, there was the pres- Britain in Lead in Shipbuilding A despatch from London says •• Total tonnage now building in the United Kingdom exceeds the amount under construction in the United States by 1,672,000 tons, according to returns published by Lloyd's Register nobly. Although half of its men be dos., tween the ages of twenty and forty: Line poultry -Spring chickens, 45c; e one it is repa the l rasses and C 26c- fowl "Oc .drickli+x a gene, P roosters, ; , a , gs, 35e. once of an important heir, the Crown ravages of war and beginning to cut a Beans --Canadian, band -picked, bus., Prince," she says. figure again in international business $5,25; primes, 34; Japans} $5; Limas, but sure- �' Gzeeba-Slovakia is actually prosper -`Madagascar, $12?�e; Japan, 10 to Ile. ly, the militarists, convinced"Siawhy, til8 iaeoPle ons -the brightest spot anywhere in' Maple products -Syrup, per imp. that breaking force the encirronly metms cling chains by t Central . Furahe. more before had it s 9 $8.40t$3.50; plea saigar ills, l 7 1 troubles acid as nos efo e t but; which the strong nations prevented i� seenxs every weal to stand a 1'ttletto o0c. German conciuest of other colonies, as well. as European expansion." Living Cost 152 Per Cent. Above the Level of 1914 A despatch from London says:- The Ministry of Labor statistics show an increased cost of living in the Bri- tish Isles of 152 Per cent. above the level of 1914.. Thirty thousand. starvingeats are rescued froLondon streets every year. They are painlessly killed, their 'skins being treed for muffs and gloves. 1 firmer on its feet. Belgium is in good Provisions -Wholesale. ease, working steadily and industri- t, Hies..-- ams m , ously. Only in the dismembered frig-i66c rolls,y,4 to40 to 420; 3Go: cottageed,lls, 39 63 to meats of the Austrian Empire, hi de -1 to 41e; breakfast .Bacon, 48 to 52e; tented and humiliated Germany and in backs, plain, 52 to. 54cboneless, 58 to Red Russia is the economic situation 64c. discouraging. Russia of course is the Cured meats=Long 'clear bacon, 27 key to the situation in Central and to 23c; clear bell:es, 20 to 27c. Eastern Europe, end that key will not Lard Pure tierces, 28 to 28efec; unlock the gate to industry and pro- tubs, 2811 to 29c; .pails, 2 ou to 294,e; prints, 291:2 to 30e, Compound tierces, duction while the -Bolshevik theorists 25 to 25? c; tubs, 251 to 26e; pails, prevail, Western Europe meanwhile 25c;, to 261/4,e; prints, 27'to 27ic. Smoked is H , ed 46 to struggles to its feet slowly and pain:- fully ain-fully but with courage and determina- tion. The opal is more difficult to imitate than the diamond. It's a Great Life if: You Don't Wea,ten'. Montreal Markets. Montreal, July 27.• -Oats -Na. 2 C. W., 31.35; No. 3 CW, $1.32? Flour, Man. Spring wheat patents, firsts, new stand. grade, $14.85 to $15.05. Rolled Hon. Harry Milts Labor member for Fort William, in the Ontario Legislature,` and Minister of Mines, who has been elected by ac - oats, 90 ib. bag, 35.85. Bran, $54.25. ciasawcion• 'JR^l.R�#-..l'...♦m••a'.e..^•.619T12iLT:..i,:'GSJQ"� f'6'•S'3^. By Jack Rabbit --ft-V- N11141, 'it4✓< lit^ CM�";t�63 '. "n4tS IN F•irrEi:t�i fin' c? 1hSU CG Q�-1..._. / r6 d ��--� DOCTcnte• -E teSBAND' NEEDS EXE(LClSE Elul' HE. WONT TrK Ai lY /OND 1 1�cNT VC�So.W NOW .i"C? iiv,,,„, MAKE kit N1 ,',,,`. 1"R`•( S-f'UfFIN G ti. pfk1PEg..'INTHE ANNE ;,_ SI1Na c7c= t -l45 KA"T l Atsd f�i f�KE• t-1tM yet E AR 1T O N \i iiFs1v)'( vA`ES 1 - "' �Eit`( Pi YFu', � s � � � r � ��'� SAI -E CHEAR >,-RUN i . ll� a�, t `• jS � . "0-;� � ./* I '.. i 3 � . a�, s,. 3 �,t L, � � '�-1•r�;l _, �_�i !i' . �r : ' �� l .1�� ..nom •Lt�'-': l MOVING ST1CK pit BA<_><'a� . AND BRAN A N( '.� �!L • r�, v e• a ;pia • " ! f 1�' s; �'.; ; A.!' - . " ��i {� t ,•-�` � �' �;�