THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1931 UCE MARKET QUOTATIONS ONTO PRODUCE : ) ; 0 -- are buying pro- the following prices: Ungraded, cases returns resh extras, 14 to 1Bc; fresh 12 to 18¢; seconds, 8 to 10c. | No. 1 Ontario cream- ds, 21%e¢; No. 2, 20%ec. ing cfeam---Spacial, 24c; 5 . 3, , se a poe. | colored, affined and government grad- at. ns od on to poultry shippers as follows: pn Grade Alive Dressed stted hens, over 5 to me 22 20 1bs. each ,....20 4 to 5 lbs, each 18 'Under 4 lbs. each ..16 'roosters, over 5 bs. each ....».:12 over b 1bs. each 25 Over 4 to 65 1bs. each 22 ovie ducks, over § bs. each -.. Loves to 5 lbs. each 17 yring broflers (Rocks over 2 Ibs. .....57 Leghorns, over 19 Ibs. ..- 2 i (Selling) he 'moronto dealers are offering soduce to retail dealers at the fallow rices: ; Bees Fresh extras, in cartons, 8c: fresh extras, loose, 20c; Ho, 18¢; seconds, 1bc. : tter--No. 1 creamery, prints, No. 2 creamery, prift eese-- New, large, twins, 11% c; triplets, "tons, 14c. Old, large, 19 %c; Twi 19% c; triplets, 20c; stiltons, 22c. TORONTO FARMERS' MARKET The following are quotations, 1, in effect on the St. Lawr- Market, Toronto: : 2 cress extras, doz. ., firsts, doz. .. .» pullet exiras r, dairy, round ., creamery, 1b. ooo eD C3 L313 tS C3 TRIS 28 30 © © easy yesterday. Beets, 2 bunches... 0.26 Onions, dry, 11 qt. j basket ,.... ,: 0.50 : 0.16 0.35 0.60 0.35 Cauliflower ....... Mushrooms, pound Spinach, peck ..... Leal lettuce, threo r 0.10 0.25 0.10 Head lettuce, two for Parsley, buach ,.... Onions, bunch, three for ..... .. 0.10 Cress, three for .... .... 0.10 Celery, h ih 0.25 Oranges, dozea ...¢ 0.50 Potatoes, bag Cucumbers, each . Lemons, dozen Bananas, dozen Apples, bus, Cal. green peas, 6-qt, basket ..... Green peppers, two JOP siniviviaiins Sweet potat-eg, 2 lbs. Parnsips, basket ... Beets, basket ... Peppers, each Herbs, bunch ...... Radishes, 'uncih . Bro-~oli, bunch ... . Rhubarb, 3 bunches ore oo . ES Ca ER rise Son -- ee vss es save tl Siow iam oe ot Chicory, 2 heads ... Endive, 1b. Strawberries, pint . Asparagus, bunch .. TIED b < scocs sooo se 23 -a 0.50 CHICAGO PRODUCE FUTURES y Chicago, May 7.--Egg market Only fair trade {n- gether with ample arrivals, is mak- ing an avalanche of offerings which are meeting with only moderate buying. All deferred deliveries were easier and lower, Novembers touching 203c; Junes 167%c; and May current option, 16 %c¢;. = Quiet butter market yesterday, followed by rains over this district last night and this morning resulted in general declines on today's spot call. Sentiment mixed; undertone weak and unsettled; prosnects for any immediate turer for the better are unlikely. Novembers turned downward again; establishing a new seasonal low of 241g¢c. Junes and Mays also weaker, although WANTED Local agents to represent us in the sale of Government and Municipal Bonds on commission basis; those having previous experience preferred. In applying please quote Bank reference. Gairdner & Company Limited ay Street Toronto | J] 320 B Telephone Elgin 2301 | little interest was manifested in these options. Open commitments ----- Butter: May, 12; June, 102; November, 493, Eggs: May, 20; June, 7; November, 869. Two maket receipts -- Butter, today, 27,678; last year 20,507. Eggs today, 77,479; last year, 71,- 440. Chicago spot market -- Butter: Extras, 21§c; standards 21%c: tone unsettled, weak. Bggs: Firsts, 15%c; tone easy, TORONTO GRAIN QUOTATIONS Grain dealers on the Toronto Board of Trade are making the following quotations for car lots: Manitoba wheat -- No. 1 hard, 704c; No. 1 Northern, 674c; No. 2 do, 65ic¢; No. 3 do., 58¢c; No. 3 tough, 564c; (c.i.f. Bay ports). Monitoba oats -- No. 3 C.W., 32%c; No. 1 feed, 31¢; No. 2 feed 28%. ' Manitoba harley -- No. 3 C.W., 354c; No, 4 do., 341c; feed, 33%c. Argentine corn, 53¢c (May ship- ment to arrive). Millfeed, delivered Montreal, freights, bags included--Brzn, per ton, $22.25; shorts, per ton, $24.- 25: middlings, $27,25. Ontario grain -- Wheat, 68 to 70c; barley, 28c to 32¢; oats, 25 to | changing rapidly. 30c; rye, nominal; buckwheat, nominal. ITALY CHANGES UNDER IL DUGE Great Developments Appar- ent and Signs of Muss- olini on Every Hand Rome, May 7.--Under the hand of Fascism, the face of Italy is Hydro-electrical development js spreading, Con- crete towers carry high power cables over qmountain and valley. Electrified lines are making rail- way travel, especially in the num- erous tunnels of the Apennines, cleaner and pleasanter., Neat new wayside stations lend an air of prosperity. Along the highways, construction gangs are busy ex- tending and improving Italy's sys- tem of roadways. To one whose last visit to Italy was in the castor oil period which preceded the Black Shirt march on Rome, the change is striking. It is another Italy yet, paradoxi- cal thoush it sound, and Italy pretty much the same. Two years before, Mussolini had 'called to- gether a small group of men in Milan and formed the Fasci dl Combattimento, They were fascism militant, They fought Bolshevism with its own weapons carried a stage further. Bomb was met hy bomb. Shootings, . assault, castor oil--it seemed as though Italy were destined for little better than an era of anarchy, For the police HEART of DETROIT OTEL FORT SMELBY is located in the center cf "downtown" Detroit. It is just around the corner from the Union Station, serving the Pere Marquette, the Wabash, the Pennsylvania and Baltimore and Ohio Railroads. No other large Detroit hotel is so near the Michigan Central Terminal, the principal airports, or steamship piers. 4 The shopping, theatre, financial, insurance and wholesale districts are practically ot its door. Hotel Fort Shelby is known the world over for its luxurious, commodious rooms . . . its inviting lobby .. . its tempting, delicious food . . . its attractive rates and informal hospi- tality. 4 900 units . . . all equipped with servidor and private bath. Rooms as low as $3.00 . . . suites $10.00 and upwards Motorists are relieved of their at the door without service charge. Write for fres roed map, and your copy of "Aglow with Friendliness," our unique and fascinating maggzine. ort S elb YAGLOW WITH FRIENDLINESS" E. J. BRADWELL, Manager - DETROIT of yhose days were almost useless, They kept at a discreet distance when the row started. Fascism got the upper hand, I'ic- tures of Lenin disappeared uol- shevism--any effective . opposition to Fascism--was suppressed, l'ai- liamentary control, as the term is understood at Ottawa and West- minster, ceased to haye any mean- ing. Opposition members escaped on occasion through the roof. The electoral law was "reformed." Par- liament became an echo of the Fas: cist Council, Mussolini was. triumphant. And from the Alps to the Ionian Sea, Italy is still triumphant, The saturnine, half- Napoleonic face greets one at every turn. Those curious eyes seem to search every corner. "Fviva il Duce" is scrawled the length of Italy. On the outside of schools, on public buildings, on walls every- where so it seems, enthusiasts have placed a stencil and dabbed through if in black paint the feat- ures of Mussolini. With Mussolini, Fascism." On strygat cars, on railway locomo- tives, on lighting standards in the streets--no form of Italian activ- ity but bears the rods and axe- head of Fascism, The Black Shirt is so common it soon loses novel- ty. It is omnipresent; from the Fascist guard with persuasive automatic in his belt to the gay youngster selling anti-tuberculosis tags in the street. Opposition to it all, there must be. But the sur- face shows no sign of it. With the excepticq of the Osservatore Ro- mano, the Catholic daily published in Vatican City, the newspapers are all cast in one mould, They all read much the same, Yet with all this lack of in- depesadent opinion, the life of the people flows much as it has al- ways flowed. The Roman gathers tion as Ye loved it when Caesar sifode the world like a Colossus, It lie talks less of politics, he talks of other things more. Mussolini has changed Italy, He has not changed the Italian. EDINBURGH T0 SEE EMPIRE CONGRESS pire Will Hold Quinquen- nial Congress in July Edinburgh, May 7.-- The quennial Congress next July. Before coming to Edin- burgh for the main proceedings, the delegates will spend several days in London. On July Walse at Guildhall, and terwards he entertained at a Gov- ernment luncheon. The pregramme in London will include receptions by the League of Naticns Union, the Victoria League, the English- Speaking Union, and the Univer- sity of London, and dinners by the | Drapers' Company, the Goldsmiths' | Company, and the Clothworkers' | Company, Visits will be made to a number of educational institu- of Oxford and Reading. The congress wiil be opened In Edinburgh on July and will contigue until July 11. Addresses will be given by the Lord Provost of Edinburgh, Sir Donald MacAlis- ter, Chancellor of the University of Glasgow; Lord Meston, Chan- cellor of the University of Aber- deen; and Lord Beauchamp, Chan- cellor of the University of London. Discussions will take place on sub- jects of general interest to uni- versities, including "The University Graduate fn Commerce and Indus- try." "The Standard and the con- ditions of candidature for Ph.D. in relation to other post-graduate qualifications," "Conditions of ad- mission to Universities and their effects," "The provision of echemes of study leading to gen- eral Honors Degrees," "Post-grad- uate study in medicine and #ur- gery in Great Britain," and "Fac- ilities for overseas students in British Universities." There will 'be a civic reception and during their stay in Edin- burgh the delegates will be enter- tained by societies jnterested In University education. + A program of excursions has also been ar- ranged, 100 MUCH TIME SPENT LOOKING AFTER TRAFFIC Police Should Be Catching | Burglars And Mur- derers (h (By The Canadian Press) Manchester, Eng., May 7.---Some people complain that the police, in- stead of catching burglars and mur. When you feel "out of sorts" is a splendid pick-me-up. Mussolini | derers, are all teo busy trying to reguldte traffic on the roads. What, then, will snch critics make of the statement that "70 detectives and inspectors are permanently at work | throughout the country"--for the | | gorry to hear that you have broken purpose of tracking down lost 0 stolen milk bottles and churns? I'ortunately there is no need for more protests from the Bench or letters to the press; these detec- tives and inspectors ave not on th strength of any eountry or borough constabulary. Just as the cinema trade supplies its own censors, so the milk trade provides its own sleuth-hounds. At least six million milk bottles went astray last year for that was the number restored to their rightful ewners by the el- forts of the milkman's mobile po- lice--six million bottles and 22, 000 churns. ground, one can hardly wonder at ! a certain subconscious urge to shed an undeniable encumbrante like a | milk churn. ame n 4 iarson: "Well, Patrick, 1 am off your engagement. How's that? | Patrick: "Well, sorr, she's got no money, nor work, and begorra, how's shé to keep a hushand? A railway official is fond of tell- ing how, when waiting for a cune nection at a junction station, he | walked into the town and saw a bhiggish funeral. He asked a poss- erby who the deceased was and was told a prominent railway offi- cial had died suddenly. "What was the complaint?" he queried. *Oh, no complaint," came the ready answer. "Everybody is per- McLAREN"S INVINCIBLE JELLY POWDERS Full flavored, meltingly tender; exceedingly healthful. Age in the piazza as he once gathered | in the Forum. He loves disputa- | Universities of British Em-| quin- { of Universities | of the British Empire will be held | 3 they | will be welcomed by the Prince of | will af- | | tions, and also to the Universities { fectly satisfied." Stealing milk bottles scems a high specialized form of crime, but after all some of the disappearances are mere due to inadvertence. Near. ly 3,000 churns, for instance, were last year found loitering without visible means of support on various station platforms of Great Dritain. And what can you expect? When people leave even their false teeth behind in trains on London's Under- " INVISIBLE Tommy's mother was helping to A restaurant-owner purchasel collect clothes for the workless |the largest fish bowl he could vad, and their families in the city, lis | filled it with 'water and pnt it in mother found him sliding down the | his window, with a sign veading: | stone stairs of their stoep and ask- "This howl is filled with jin cd: ble Paraguayan goldfish." "Why do you do sugh things?" It required two policemen to "I'm making trousers ror the |keep the pavement in front of fim "poor children," replied Tommy. window cleared, (RB I'eople are mow photographed while hearing their favorite music. One charming study portrays a plumber listening to the gurgle of a burst pipe. "Lapland is one of the most sparsely populated regions of Europe," we read. Not many Lapps to the mile evidently, | MOTHERS DAY MOTHER' ~ LOVE.. L] From the baby lullabyes over the cradle to nights of patient vigil--faithful instruction and words of encouragement stay throughout life's journey, so our greatest debt is to Mother. May we suggest that one and all appropriately remember the occasion of May 10th, Mother's Day, with many kind remembrances of which she is worthy. 4 SPECIALS FOR WEEK OF MAY 7th to MAY 13th LIBBY'S PREPARED MUSTARD 11c siano Chicken HADDIE 1 1b Tin 19¢ CLUB HOUSE BRAND Pimento Olives : 5 oz. Bottle 1 4 Cc ont soron®®. Cg iw. JAR ree SOAP < PICKLES sor 23° Health JUST ONE of MANY SPECIAL--Featuring This Week at a Special Price Unsolicited Testimonial Lifebuoy A 1 7: Letters HORNE'S DOUBLE CREAM CUSTARD Assorted Flavors 23¢ 4 oz. Packages SPECIAL---AYLMER Choice Quality Tid-Bit PINE- APPLE SPECIAL-- Nature's Best Choice Quality To riales MBs --orgrinet 40 No. 4 Sieve wes an wre. pot 1200 ry No.2 Frm Tins t1ement®) =: aman cen me SIE dag o xiddie wBO SEO w $0 450 0g 10BAIT 8 Cy per For All Fine Laundering LUX Large Package 1 4 C Makes Hard Water Soft GILLEX - Package 1 Oc SPECIAL--AYLMER Finer Flavored SOUPS Tin 8c : Assorted except Chicken and Chicken with Rice SPECIAL--QUAKER CORN FLAKES Fresh "and C Crisp Special Choice SNOW FLAKE Pastry Flour 24.ib. 49c¢ bag Hel: 1W-\"Y GROCETERIAS CO. LIMITED Pkg. . o- 9 | and CARRY 99 Groceterias in Ontario WE SELL ~~ FOR LESS