FOODSTUFFS IN AMERICA.
A DISASTROUS EFFECT FEARED. ' Sy Telegraph.—Press Assn.—Copyright. New York, Jan. 7. Four freight car loads of Australian eggs arrived in Chicago. The entire shipment sold at 59 to 60 cents a dozen, six cents under the wholesale price of local eggs. Tests showed that only six eggs were bad in 150 dozen. It is announced that the venture was so successful that other shipments will be brought, and the local egg market is disconcerted. —Aus.-N.Z. Cable Assn. Washington, Jan. 7. Mr Hagenbarth, supplementing his testimony before the Senate Committee, said that frozen mutton importations from New Zealand produced a disastrous effect upon the American sheepraisers. He declared that 3,000,000 dressed lambs were imported from New Zealand since the spring, of which 1,750,000 were now in cold storage. —Aus.-N.Z. Cable Assn.
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Taranaki Daily News, 10 January 1921, Page 8
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133FOODSTUFFS IN AMERICA. Taranaki Daily News, 10 January 1921, Page 8
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