Oshawa Daily Times, 15 Dec 1931, p. 8

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TI'ES, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1931 (7 mS i ie EY roduce Prices on the Commercial Markets TORONTO PRODUCE : (Buying) 'oronto dealers are buying at the following prices: igs-- Ungraded, cases return sh extras, 36¢; fresh firsts, seconds, 20c; pullet extras, itter--No. 1 Ontario cream- olids, 21% to 22¢; No, 2, 0 21e. ; urning cream--=Speecial, 21 to 22¢; No, 1, 20 to 21¢; No. 2 17 to 18c. 0 "Cheese--No. 1 large, colored. parafined and government graded 103%c. a Rotations to poultry shippers "are as follows: . A Grade" Alive Dressed Sprin, chickens, hi Bor 6 lbs. .... 16 21.26 20-24 18-22 16-20 each .... +... 14 Over 4% to 5 Ds. Eg each .. .. ++ +. 12 Under 4% lbs. each 11 'Belect 3c less than I milk-fed l Broilers, 13 to 2% hs. 14 ' Over 13 to 1% 5 Ibs. each ...... 12 'Young turkeys, 3 over 12 lbs, .... Do., 10 to 12 Ibs. . Do., 8 to 10'1bs. .. 15 Do., 6 to 8 Ibs, .. E Old hens and toms .. - Young geese, 9 to g" 13 lbs. .e © "Do., other weights Patted hens, over . 5 lbs 'eo 16-19 Over 4 to 5 ts. each .. .. soe: 13-16 Over 3% to 4 11-14 9-12 20-22 18-20 21-25 17 20-24 18-22 16-20 13-18 13-18 11-14 Ibs. each ..o0ss * Over 3 to 3%; je Ibs, each ., vos © Ducklings, white, over 5 s....... 18 Do., 4 to 5 Ms..... 16 Do., colored, 2¢ BL less i 01d roosters, over Db Ds. LL... 15 l Guinea fowl, over 2s, ..... .. 15 .. ; (Selling) (Toronto dealers are offering | produce to retail dealers at the E following prices: " "Eggs--Fresh extras, in car tons, 46¢c; fresh extras, loose, de; firsts 40c; seconds, 25¢; pul- Jet extras, 35c. Storage extras, jo; firsts, 26c; seconds, 22e¢, "Butter--No, 1 creamery, prints, ide; No. 2 creamery, prints, 22c. se--New, large, 13c; twins, ¢; triplets, 133c; new stiltons, ¢. Old, large, 18¢; twins, 3 ec; triplets, 18%; stiltons, . 20%c. "Poultry--Chickens, 5 to 6 bs., le Ib.; 4 to 5 s., 27c; 3 to 4 hy 26¢; under 21; Ids, 32. , over 5 Ibs., 23¢; 4 to 5 s., Ducklings, 25 to 28¢, Geese, to 22c. Turkeys, 30 to 32c. TORONTO FARMERS' MARKET -- The" following are quotations, retail, in effect on the St. Lawr- ence Market, Toronto: Produce Eggs, xtras, doz..... 0.50 " ' SZ.» . 0.46 Da., pullet extras. 0.35 Butter, dairy, m.... 0.30 Do., creamery, Ib.. 0.25 Fruits and Vegetables-- Apples, bus. ....... 1.00 Bananas, doz ...... Cranberries, qt. .... Grapes, 2 18 ...... Oranges, doz, ...,... 0.26 Lemons, doz. ...... Pineapples, each ,.. +... Tangerines, doz." ..o ose Beans, green, qt, .. Brocoll, bunch ,,... Brussels sprouts, qt.. Celery, head ....... 0.10 Chicory, head ...... .... Cucumbers, each ... 0.15 Cress, 3 bunches.... .... Cabbage, doz. ..:...:.... Green peppers, 3 for. Eggplant, each ..... Herbs, bunch ...... Lettuce, head ...... Mushrooms, I, ..... Onions, basket ,.... Potatoes, basket ...,, Parsnips, bag ...... Radishes, 3 bunches. . Squash, each .,.. Tomatoes, Ib, ST oy BD OoOoOOoOTM ed TINIE WTO MDE oz ieee . 0.25 Pr . CoO SoC 0 0000000000900 0H Seo TORONTO PROVISIONS Wholesale provision dealers are quoting the following prices to loca] retail dealers: Pork hams, 11 to 12¢; shoul- ders, 9%e¢c; butts, 11%e¢; loins, 12e¢. Cured meats -- Long, clear ba- cous, 60 to 70 lbs. 19¢; 70 to 50 1bs,, 17¢c; 90 to 110 Ibs, 16e; lightweight rolls, 18c; heavy- weight rolls, 17e, Lard -- Pure tierces, tubs, 10c; pails, 10%ec; 10 to 10%e, Shortening--Tierces, 10c; tubs 10¢* pails, 10%e. Special pastry shoriening-- Tierces; 16e; tubs, 15%c; pails, 16¢, . 95¢e; prints, TORONTO GRAIN Grain dealers on the Toronto Board of Trade are making the following quotations"for car lots: Manitoba wheat -- No, 1 hard, 70%g¢c;No. 1 Northern, 68%; No. 2 do., 623%c; No. 3 do., 60%e; No. 4 do, b57%c (cif. Bay ports), Manitoba oats -- No, 2 C.W., 256; No. 3 C.W., 85¢; No. 1 feed, e, ou antens barley -- No. 2 C.W.,, ec. Argentine corn, 51c plus duty; South African corn, 57%ec, plus U.S. funds (c.f. Bays ports), Milifeed delivered Montreal frelghts, bags included--Bran, per ton, $21.25; shorts, per ton, $22.25; middlings, per ton, $30.- Ontario grain -- Wheat, 61 to 64c; barley 40c; oats, 21 to 24e; rye, 47¢; buckwheat, 40 to 42¢c. HAY AND STRAW PRICES Toronto dealers are paying for hay and straw, baled carlots, de- livered, per ton: No, 2 Timothy .. $12.00 No. 8 Timothy .. 10,00 $11.00 Wheat, straw .. 6.50 Oat, straw .... 6.50 BUFFALO LIVESTOCK Buffalo, Dee, 14, -- Hogs, 6,~ 600; welghts, 160 to 210 Ibs, active; 15 to 25¢ over Fridays average; others slow; barely eteady; 170 to 210 Ibs., $4.75 to $4.85; mixed lots, $4.65; pigs and underweights, 84 to $4.50; bidding $4.20 to $4.60 on 230 to 260 Ibs, Cattle, 1,800; steers and year- ings, slow; unevenly, 25 to 75¢ lowery better Kratos off most; good steers and yearlings, $8 to $9.26; mostly $8.25 to $38.50; medium kinds and .short-feds, $5.75 to $7.75 ;common steers and heifers, $4 to $5.25; outter cows, $1.25 to $2.50. Calves, 1,150; vealers unchapy- ed, $8.6( down, Sheep, 7,200; dependable lamb trade; generally steady; good to choice, mostly $6.25; medium kinds and strong weights, $5.50; throwouts, $5. WINNIPEG GRAIN Winnipeg, Dec. 15.---Insignifi- cant export trade and scarcity of offerings contrbuted to dul) trad- ing in the wheat pit here yester- day Prices at the close were 7% higher to unchanged, World shipments of wheat and flovr last week was slightly less thar the previous week. North America's share of the tota] was 5,802,000 bushels compared with 7,130,000 bushels the previous week Cash wheat met a fair demand at unchanged spreads, Cash Prices Wheat -- No, 1 hard, 60%e¢; No. 1 Northern, 603%ec; No, 2 Northern, 66% ¢; No. 3 Northern, b28%c; No, 4, 48%e¢; No. b, 44% c; No. 8, 423%e¢c; feed, 403%c; track, 59%ec; No. 1 durnm, 77%ec, Bcreenings, per ton, Hoc. Oats -- No, 2 C.W,, 30%¢c; No 3 CW, 27%¢c; extra No, 1 feed, 27%e; No. 1 feed, 25%e¢; No, 2 feed, 243%e; rejected, 20%c; track, 30%ec. Berley -- Malting grades; 6- row. extra No. 3 C.W., 403c¢; 2- row extra No, 3 C.W,, 30%ec. Other griv'es: No, 3 CW, 37 '¢; No. 4 C.W., 348%c¢c; No. 4 CW, 24%c¢; No, 6 C.W., 33%c; No. 6 C.W. 31%.c; track, 371%c. Flax -- No. 1 CW, No. 2 C.W., 94%; No, Thc; rejected, 75%e¢c; 283e, Rye -- No. 2 C.W., 41ic. 08%e¢; 3 CW track, Kingston.--Dr, Bruce Hopkins, president of the Kingston branch >f the Red Cross Society, lias heen elected a member of the executive of the Canadian Red Cross Asso- ciation, Ontario division. Dr, Hop. king has also been elected a mem- ber of the special committee to deal with soldier problems. A Unique Part; ' Morrisburg. Unique in that it was conducted solely by the men of the Holy Name Soclety, the eu- chre party, held in St. James Church basement, Morrisburg, ful. The men of the society pre- pared the games which were at- tended by enough persons to fill 30 tables of euchre: cooked end served the refreshments, and man- aged it entirely without the help of the ladies, Brought Good Price Brockyille.--PBctter quality and a higher percentage of milk-fed birds, brought higher prices at Lyndhurst turkey fair .on Thurs- day than at' centres in Leeds County holding the sales earlier in the week, Turkeys, 21-24, and a few chojce lots at 26 cents, were the prices prevailing, with geese roing at 15 to 16 cents per pound; ducks, 15 cents; chickens, 17 to 25 with 23 as the ruling figure, Fowl sold at 16 and 17 cents per pound. | Barber Asphyxiated Kingston.--Hugh E, Doyle, 52. barber shop proprietor, was found dead in hs shop here. He had been overcome by fumes from a gas heater, It is belleved the gas hose became disconnected, allowing the fumes to escape. Horses Hit By Train Kinburn,--Emery Baird had three horses struck by a freight train near his home in Fitzroy, about noon on Wednesday, Two of the horees were so badly injur- ed they had to be destroyed, They had made thelr way to the high- way and strayed on to the railway tracks, . Organized Chamber Morrisburg.---Through the ef- forts of George D., Howith, a Chamber organized in Morrisburg, proving most successful, The 1embership list is growing daily, and great interest ig being shown hy the business men of the village Arranging Convention Kingston, --T, Thompson, M.P., of Almonte, Ontario, secre- tary of the Eastern Ontario Dal- rymen's Association, was in Kine. ton ¢>mpleting arrangements for the holding of the fifty-fifth Con vention of the Dairymen of East ern Ontario in the Dalry School here January 6 and 7. Mr, Thomp- on has heen connected wth the Dalrymen's Assoclation for gsome- thing over twenty-five years, and was enthueinstiec over the plans for the coming convention which he says "will be the best we have ever held." Enloyable Play Gananoque.~--~Although weather conditions were much against it the attendance at the Lecture Hall Thursday night, was most suscess- EASTERN ONTARIO NEWS LL ------ of Grace United Church was quite large to witness the presentation of the play enttled '"Marryng Anne" by the Young People's 80- clety of Lansdowne Unted Church The play was presented n a cred- table manner and merited the hearty applause that was given those who took part in the even- ing"s entertainment, The play was under the auspices of the Fidelis Club of Grace United Church, Heads Montreal Club Kingston,--James F. Scruton, who was recently elected to the office of president of the Montreal Kiwanis Club, is a Kingstonian and well known here, He was born in Kngston and is the son of the late James Scruton and Mrs, Seruton, Stephen Street. Mr, Scru. ton was elected to the presidency of the Montreal Club by acclama- tion although only a member of that organization for six years, Want New By-law Kingston.--The Retail Butchers and Grocers of Kingston have un- der consideration a proposed change in the city's early closing by-law, and it was learned that at the first or second regular meet 'ng of the City Counell of 1932, a petition will be presented by the retail butchers and grocers askine that these stores be closed not la. ter than 7 o'elock. HATIFAY CHITRA of Commerce has been | and is | CLAIMS TITLF OF 'statesmen were buried long be- fore there was a Protestant com- munity in Ontario large enough to support a church, Little more than a mbnth after the representative of the King of England raised the royal stan- dard on the site of what was to be a 'permanent British settle- ment and military station on the Atlautic coast of the peninsula," Rev William Tutty, of Emman- uel College, Cambridge, arrived in Halifax to unfurl the banner of the King of Kings. And as Corn- wallis and his settlers carved the foundations of a city out of the wilderness, surveyors apportion ed a square or block for the site of a church, ; Material Gathered Material for the building, pine and oak, was brought from Bos- tor, Mass, then a part of the Bri- tish Dominions, and the church was built at the expense of the crown grants from King George II for that purpose, It was mod- elled after St. Peter's Church, Vers Btreet, Ozford, London. Opened for divine service on Sep- tember 2, 1750, historians refer to it as the first Church of Eng- land in Canada, Bo well did the first settlers pujid that the church withstood the test of time and storm, through the hectic periods when Ingland was at war with France and the American colonies and mon of-war and privateers anch- red in the the harbor below the loping hills of the town. There it is today, a monument to Corn- wallls and his band of ploneers, towering ahove new and modern) buildings in a city of about 60, | 000 population, | | When the outsido covering of | the church was removed fn 1926 | OLDFST IN CANADA | showed glgns of decay and re- Out by Article From Halifax Halifax, Murray, Writer) - naturedly Canadian Press Staff Halifax smiled good last week when press in Ontario as to the site of the first Protestant Church in Can- ada A Lutheran church built ot Williamsburg, Dundas County, and opened In 1790, was featur- ed in the reports; and St, George's, Kington, first used in 1793 was mentioned, St. Paul's, Halifax, was opened for services In 1750, one year af ter Hon, Edward Cornwallis founded the garrison city, Not only that, but old St. Paul's {is st'll able to speak for herself. The original building is still the piace of worship for a large con- gregation of Church of England members, and heneith the edi- fice are tombs In which Govern- ors, distinguished soldiers and Claims of Ontario Thrown despatches indicated an argument | | placed with steel and the interior of the building was redecorated. N.8B,-- (By George cl | | | | | | | | | | was found to be | fr as good condition as when placed there 176 years before, \dditions of later years, however, the pine and oa nqafred renewal, During the sum- mer of 1931, the church was clos- ed for eight weeks while the 181- voar-old yooden beams were re-' Notables Buried There Within the weathered walls of gt. Paul's, some of the greatest naval and military heroes of the "new world" worshipped, and of them Ile buried in its an-red precincts, Beneath the hurch are 20 vaults in which are interred T.leut, Governor Lawrence, 1760; Captain Evans of the Charlestown, 1781; Baron {nivhausen, a general in the British service, 1786; Baron de Seitz, a Hessian officer, 1782; ord Charles Greville Montagu, eon of the Duke of Manchester, 784; Goyernor Parr, 1791; Sir John Wentworth, Chief Justice Jonathan Belcher, Iieut Governor Ceorge Stracey Smyth, of New Chief Justice Bryan Finueane, Lieut. General Gard- ner; Hon, Richarl J, Uniacke, Nighop Charles Inglis, and other distinguished persons, tome Branswiek, Car on Wings Built to carry a load of 5850 Ibs for a distance of 500 miles with a crew of two and having a normal flying range of 982 miles in 9% hours flying time, the Ju 52, recently brought from Germany aboard the Can- adian Pacific freighter "Beaver- brae" to the order of Canadian Airways Limited, will revolu. tionize air traffic in Northern Canada, This flying box car will trans- port large pieces of mining equipment, machinery and sup- plies to the Far North, right up to the Arctic Ocean and will help open up new territories, new re- sources of incalculable mineral wealth to effective exploitation, James A. Richardson, president of Canadian Airways Limited, believes that forth of steel, deep in the heart of the North-West Territories and beyond, there lie untold resources which some day will make Canada one of the rich- est countries in the world, The Ju 52 is his contribution towards the man-sized job of unrolling the map of Canada and of giving to the Canadian people the most efficient air travel system with the least delay possible, It has a single cargo space of 690 cubic feet occupying the top rt of the fuselage which can loaded from an autotruck backed up to a large side hatch, having internal measurements, 70.90 by 49.54 inches, located in the rearmost bay and provided with a substantially built platform for a maximum load of 1,463 lbs, An- other large hatch on the roof can be loaded from a crane in the same way as freight is lowered into 8 ocean-going vessel. For further convenience there is a door opposite the side hatch on the other side of the fuselage; a side door in the foremost bay and four loading flaps in the second and third bays, An important innovation fs the Double Wing Junker patent which permits larger and heavier machines to be landed on smaller aerodromes. British Wheat Millers Protest Quota Scheme Dee, 8 Canadiar London, of the two years withheld "to hope of securing contained in a letter Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald by John Westcott, president of the National of British and Irish Millers Limited, Jt was dated December 4, but was made public yesterday, The letter also brands the Na- tional Government's proposed Dom- inion and home-grown wheat quota scheme, "almost impracticable and certainly most inefficient and un- economic." The letter first refers to conver- Sharp criticism heat policy of upplies were extent in the better prices," is addressed to 1 ago whe a laree al Association sations between representatives o the millers and Sir John Gilmour, Minister of Agriculture, when par- ticulars of the home-grown wheat quota scheme were divulged by the zovernment, It then says it 1s evi- dent the. same procedure will De followed concerning the Dominion quota. "We much regret," the letter con tinues, "that before these . steps were taken, the industry principally concerhed was not consulted as we are in a position to prove both schemes almost impracticable and -ertainly most inefficient and un- economic," IMPROVED All that's best in su SUPERHETERODYNE e PLUS TUNED RADIO FREQUENCY, 16 Reasons Why You Should Buy a Ten Tube Fada Radio ONLY A FADA Offers All These 16 Important Features QUIET OPERATION, ever the eternal ham and hiss, the crackle and squeal and all the other un. wanted noises that infest other sets, FADA DYNAMIC SPEAKER. De. signed especially for the Pentods output of the new non-radiating Fada Radio superheterodyne, 9. 10. oe come Silencing for. 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