ERE % i of THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 1932 idson- new power plant, transmission sys~ Sem, Squipment and fittings, the and Egsex cars for the season are lower, "more , better in appear~ equipped than ever Real Custom Touch ° Parallel in design but dimensioned 10. Shit their own characteristics, the and Essex cars are note- worthy for having introduced this / year a real custom touch in the pop- ulay field, New departures in automotive style are attained by the minute attention to detail in the ex- terior appearance as well as in the y-to-date equipment with which new bodies are fitted, The body, I pes are new from the tips of the V-shaped radiator to the molde ar, the blended lines of which in artful concealment of unsight~ dy parts, differ from any rear en- semble of any other standard car, The Hudson Greater Eight en- ne, now mounted on the Standard ries 119, Sterling Series 126 and Major Series 132 inch r.o.m, a gain of 14 horsepower ver that of last year, and the Essex Six Engine, on its 113 inch wheel- base chassis, (112 inch for Export) develops 70 horsepower at 3200 r.p/m., a gain of 10 horsepower over 'last year, As a result both cars are faster, with a decided gain in performance throughout the entire speed range, : They are high compression en- gines having a higher ratio than any other stock Canadian car so far as is mn, and are designed to oper- ate on standard fuel. Because of the high compression ratio the en- es show an outstanding economy . in _spite of their increased power, The use of the patented Hudson combustion chamber, the new mani- fold and improvements in the car- buretion system and balancing are responsible not only for the power increase but for the improved smoothness of operation and better economy, No longer are any wood parts re- lied upon to fulfill structural body duty in Hudson and Essex cars. Year by year these bodies have been made more and more completely of steel and the 1932 body is a culmina- tion: of this trend, The hodies are built upon a structural system which is unique, The sheathing of the body is not relied upon for its strength, instead the Hudson and Essex bodies are built on a box r structural skeleton to which, eet Jet body shell is rigidly and silently secured, The New Bodies Completely insulated for quietness well as against engine fumes and draits, the new Hudson and Essex bodies meet the new requirements hich have been made prominent rough selective free-wheeling, The integrity of the body is maintained through the life of the car by heavy box girder construction throughout, Diagonal tension roof straps run. ning from corner to corner, consoli- date the body structure and at the wheelbase chasses, develops 101 horsepower at' NEW CANADIAN AUTO PLANT Essex Automobiles on Display Last week, Hudson-Kssex of Oanads, Limited, announced its plants for the manufacture of Hudson and Essex cars in a new plant which has been established d | the new Canadian factory at Tilbury, Ont, in Ontario, The ab 2 photograph same time anchor the entire top assembly, An unusually complete system of upholstery spring suspension. has been worked out on the new cars, There are transverse, lateral springs which are mounted as a foundation for the vertical coil springs in the upholstery, This combination of horizontal and vertical springs gives a neutralizing action which greatly reduces the throw of the passengers blue and green--all optional with the purchase. The upholstery in every case, even to the silencing strips of felt in the windows, har- monize with the body colors, One of the important features of the new cars is the new instrument board, This has been entirely re- designed so that the dials have figures that are two and a half times the usuab size, A glance is all that is necessary to read them, horn button turns up to provide a vanity mirror, New Features New on hese cars for this year are "such features as thermostatic carburetor heat control, improved intake manifold system, quick ac- celeration devices, anti-flood choke, intake silencer, anti-back fire de- vice, improved torsional vibration dampener, silent-second synchro- mesh transmission with selective INTERIOR OF THE NEW HUDSON SEDAN SPECIAL The above photograph of the interior of the new Hudson Sedan Special, one of the new models an- nounced today and being shown at the showrooms of Ross, Ames and Gartshore, shows the roomy nature of this model, the panel. King Street West, specially designed seating and the attractive instrument in travelling over rough and un- even roads, The ride control of the shock absorbers is such that their action can be widely varied, thus making the new cars pre-eminently luxurious, Wide Color Range In planning the colors of the new models, black, of course, has been made available on all models of every car. In addition there are three other basic colors--brown, Hudson and Essex feels this is a real safety measure and keeps the driver's eye on the road, In place of the ammeter and oil gauge auto~ matic ruby lights are provided which indicate a dangerous condi- tion of too low a battery charging rate or oil pump failure, The posi- tion of the instrument board at eye level is also an important feature in making the instruments legible. free-wheeling, retractive reverse free-wheeling, triple-sealed oil cush- ion clutch, new double-drop frame with diagonal trussing, bigger brakes, dash-operated ride control on shock absorbers, quick vision instruments mounted on eye-level ipstrument board and a wide variety of minor refinements and improved fittings, The cars are completely silenced and insulated against heat On the more expensive models the and fumes, | EASTERN Q:TARIO NEWS Blames Small Markets Kingston.--Lack of markets is L' largely to blame for the present on aL. A. Zuten, Bh declared Professor superintendent of Bastern Dairy School, ad- g the Dairymens Assocla- of Bastern Ontario here, He this was the first Winter he © could recall in which the price of butter had falled to advance during January is On Ice Bishop's Mills.~--~ The Young ' People's Society held a delightful . skating party on the creek here { on Thursday evening. Bonfires were built on the ice and, after skating was enjoyed for a while, ' the company , repaired to the "United Church parsonage where & pleasant social hour was spent, we -- : - Qornwall,--Nothing has been seen or heard of John Kinghorn, aged 46, of Cornwall, since he left his home on Monday evening saying that he intended to take a walk down town, It is feared that he may have wandereq from the town and be unable to communi- cate with his relatives, It is said that he has heen worrying over the ill-health of his elder gaugh- ter, To Banquet Casselman Brockville,~Citizens of Pres- cott, through the Chamber of Commerce, are to teader A, C. Casselman, K.C., Member of Pars lament for Grenville riding, a complimentary banquet on the evening of January 14th, Give Good Meals Belleville.~--S8eventy-five meals were served at the city's lodge for transients, from and including | Produce Prices on the Commercial Markets TORONTO a | Toronto deplers are bu; : uce Ry pI tue BR re- , fresh extras, 29¢; 240; wecond:, 8c; 19c. == No, L-Ontario cream- 21% to 21%0¢; Ne 2, g cream -- lal, 31 = 120 tp 216; No. 3, 0. ' ~ No, 1 large, colored, and government grad- a to poultry shippers aon are offering to retail dealers at the 4 to B lbs, 220. Ducklings, 22 to 20e; weese, 18 to 20c, 'fur keys, 25 to 800, _ FARMERS' MARKET The following are quotations, setail, in efiect on the St. Law. rence Market, Toronto: Produces Eggs. extras, doz, ... 0.40 Do,, firsts, doz. ... 0.80 Do., pullet extras , .., Butter, dairy. 1b .... 0.20 Do., creamery, Ib, 0,25 Fruits and Vegetables Apples, bus, «+... 1.00 Rananas, doa. +... .. Oranberries, qt. +... Grapes, 2 Iba, 440 Oranges, doz, .....4 Lemons, dos, ...... Pineapples, each" «, ,langerines, dos, ... Hea 0.36 0.10 0.18 dinner up to and including break- fast on Thursday, Through the generosity of citizens, sausages and 'potatoes were served in- stead of soup for forty-two meals of the seventy-five, Every day eight or ten meals are served to unemployed men, who are resi- dents of Belleville, The same men are not always included in this number they come only when it Is necessary for them to do so, Last night twenty-one men slept at the lodge, Nynod To Meet Kingston. --Election of a new WINNIPEG GRAIN Winnipeg, Jan, 9, -- In sym- pathy with weaker quotations at Liverpool, wheat prices sagged bere yesterday, Prices closed 7% cent lower, Export interest was disappoint- ing and advices from seahoard were to the effect that little new business had been worked during the past 24 hours, Broomhall reported a pressure of new wheat from Australia and Argentina in Liverpool, There was no demand for cash wheat and prices remained une changed. Cash Prices Wheat == No, 1 hard, 60%¢; No. 1 Nor.,, 60%e¢; No, 2, Nor, 663%c; No, 8 Nor, 51%¢; No, 4, 47%c; No, 5, '44%e¢c; No, 6 A1%ec; feed, 40% ec; track, 59 %e, No. 1 dur, 81%e¢c. Oats -- No, 2 CW. 20%c¢; No. 8, C.W,, 87%¢; Ex. 1 feed, L£6%¢; No, 1 feed, 26%c; No, 2 feed, 23%e; rej, 18%c; track, 20 le, on y rley -- Malting grades -- 6 row Ex. 3, CW, 40%¢; 2.row Ex, 8, OW, 40%.0. Other g --No, 8 O.W,, 87%¢; No, 4 C.W., 84 %o0; No, 5 C.W,, 33%¢; No, ¢ CW, 81%o0; track, 837%c. Flax -- No, 1 C.W,, 9730; No, 2 OW, 93%c¢; No, 3 OW, T4ie; rol, T4%e; track, 97jc. Rye ~~ No, 8 C.W,, 48%e. TORONTO GRAIN = Grain dealers on the Toronto Doard of Trade are making the following quotations for car lots: Manitoba wheat -- No, 1 72%; No, 1 Northern, 70¢ 3d fo; N Py + { 21st next. Bishop to till the vacancy caused by the election of Bishop C. A. Seager, to the Diocese of Huron, will be made at a special session of the Synod of Ontario, it was decided at a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Synod, The date for the meeting will be set by the Bishop of To- ronto, as senior hishop. Fis Lord- ship Bishop Sweeny, of Toronto, who is senior bishop of the He- clesiastical Province of Ontario, has consented to preside at the session, and the naming of a date was left to his discretion, It is known, however, that the meet. Ing will bo held before the end of January, Remains As Inspector Brockville.~=At the request of the Minister 'of Education, TA, Cralg, veteran inspedtor of pub- lie schools in Grenville county, has withdrawn his resignation from that office, which he will continue to occupy until August Mr, Craig contem- plated retirement from the in- spectorship at the commencement of the year, New Year's Dance Camden Kast.--The weather. man was not very kind to the of ficers and members of the Cam- den Fast Women's Institute for the progressive euchre and old time dance which was held in the parish hall on New Year's night. Throughout the day a heavy snow storm prevailed, but despite this there was a large attendance, and all enjoyed the splendid hospital. ity of the Institute members, Golden Wedding J Ploton,--Mr, and Mrs, Alexan- der McKee, who reside at corner Queen and Bomery streets, cele- brated their golden wedding an- niversary, on December 28, They were married at Stella, Amherst Island, by the late Rev. James Cumberland. In 1905 they re- moved to South Bay and in 1924 came to Picton, where they are highly respected residents, Kingston, ---- An incapacitated bittern, ploked up on the out akirts of the city was handed 'over to W, H. Robb of a local bird sanctuary. The bird, rare at this time of year, apparently had & an overhead wire, It Was uns fly, but it grabbed \ and cheek in ita and severely lacerated him. | S-- and [the inaugural 'mee HUDSON PLANS BASED ON FAT (By A. E. Batit, President, Hud- son-Essex of Canada Limited) The plans of the Hudson-Essex of Canada Limited are hased on faith fn the fact that the Cana- d:an people will never want to gel along without automobiles, We have noticed that people con- tinue to pay for their automobiles and that they are the last things given up, ; Every youth coming of age looks forward to the time when he can own an automobile, It is the first thing that young couples buy after they are married, The A. BARIT automobile is established in the Jdves of our people, Nothing takes its place, It is not my Intention to pre- dict because predictions have gone out of fashion, Too few of | them have been proven to be cor- tect and able to stand the test of time, Neither Is it my inten- tion to make the current state- ment that the automobile indus- try will lead us out of our pres- ent economic situation, This is not true, No industry will lead the way, but all will work their way out together in ome grand march, Today we have more proauc- ive capacity than the ability of our people to consume, This sit. uation is true of many industries, There is more coffee in the world toduy than peopte can drink and yet a superior brand placed in a superior package, will sell--just as a superior automobile giving greater value and finer appear- ance will sell, There is always a demand for a product which stimulates the desire of owner- chip, Such products willl get a goodly share of the business it they are backed up by earnest and intelligent merchandising ef- forts, With a product qf outstanding value the palm is sure to go to those who back up thelr offerings by plain, simple, intelligent, hard vork, DWARF DEER IS FOUND BY HUNTER Fully Developed Specimen Was Only Two Feet/High Duncan, B.C. -- When Albert Holman, cougar hunter, saw an apparently fully developed deer enly two feet high, bounding across his path the other day he blinked, imagining his eyes were Maying pranks on nim, However, he soon convinced himself of the reality of the spec tacle and set off in pursult, = A fow minutes later he was carry- ing home the little animal he calls Rosle--for no special rea- son- -and veteran hunters throughout the Cowichan country say they never saw a creature Just like Rosie hefore, Just as there are dwarfs am- ong human heings, there are occa sionally similar freaks among wild animals, Rosle proves it, An she stands this deer is about two feet six inches from head to teil and only fourteen inches tall at the shoulders, fawn-like, but her body has a more mature appearance, Ex- erts say that she is about eigh- teen months old and that she will never grow any bigger, Her weight is about twenty pounas, That Ropie must have had a good mother and that it is a won- der the little animal is alive to- day, is the belief of woodsmen, who wonder how Rosle managed to get along in the wods without being killed hy cougars, The miniature deer---Hglman says she makes an ideal playmate for children--has a good home now. and a few hours after cap- ture was quite tame, Rosie can run about-the same speed as a man, Not one of her toes Is alike. The front view of elongated bow-legged dashund | Corsa, 4 This yéar it was reported from Cowichan that two Nanaimo hunters shot a deer with only three legs, but was of ordinary growth, of the official's residences. On the return to the hall, short ad« dresses were given by Mayor F. W. Dubrule, Mayomselect Dr, T. B. Patterson and other officials. ; Kingston. DF 3 isfiop M, J, O'Brien bl to serve a d has Her head is |, her legs remindg one of those | Capitalism Has to End Slump or New Orleans, Jan, 7, -- A warning to capitalism "to clean the dirt of depression" from {ts foundation or be devoured by some form of Boclalism was sounded by Dr. Irving Fisher, eminent economist, Speaking at the closing ses- sion of the conventicn of the Am- erican Association for the Ad- vancement of Science, Dr, Fisher, Professor of Feonomics at Yale University, sald that under a So- cialistic state there could be no depression because there would be no private profits, He described depression as a "private profit disease" and said that capitalism was a "system of private profits." Had the Fed- eral Reserve Bystem not been so timid, according to Dr, Fisher, it could have headed off deflation Lefore it got out of control, Defects in the 20th century money system. and not overpro- be Devoured duction of goods, were factors contributing to the present situa; tion, he said, Discoveries Announced Dr, Fisher's talk was the clos- ing feature of the program of 2,- 000 scientists which has been running continuously for five days, During the week mhny new discoveries designed to make the world a better place in which to live were announced by the 27 societies which make up the as- sociation, In his discussion of "the first principles of booms and depres- sions," last night, Dr, Fisher said unexplored, for many decades t! tide flowed sluggishly, In rec years, however, there has been quickening of the current, the : sult of which is plainly evident a which will become more so wh the spring breakup raises the ten orary barrier in to the northland that in times of depr Pes auidatior does not have the in- tended effect of reducing debts. On the contrary he argued, ligui- dation {increases debts in the sense that it increases the bur- densomeness of each dollar in each "unpaid item." Planes Bring Rich Mineral Area Near Qutside World McMurray, Alberta, -- Cane da's western northland faces the coming year with more. optimism than any other part of the Domin- ion, Developments and activities in mining and aerial transportation during the past year indicate the opening of a new and prosperous empire on the fringes of the Arctic circle, Rich and vast deposits of radium- bearing ore and equally rich de- posits of silver have been discovered at Great Bear Lake, 1,500 miles north of Edmonton, Alberta. Radi- um deposits at Labine Point and silver deposits at Echo Bay have proven to be very valuable and could easily meet the high cost of transportation--$400 per ton, states Dr, Hugh S, Spence, mineral tech- nologist of the Federal Department of Mines, in his report of his sur- vey of the Great Bear Lake dis- trict, Continued expansion of aerial transport and passenger service is bringing these rich mineral fields within casy distance.of the outside world, Waterways, Alta, 300 miles nort of Edmonton, is the nearest railway point, and ore is now ship- ped here from the north by airplane, One of the largest airplanes in Canada, a Junkers machine built for Canadian Airways Limited, for ser- vice in the north may be used for freighting ore and supplies from the mineral fields this winter, Mail Deliveries A flying base has been established at McMurray, and weekly mail de- liveries are made from here, Poverty, unemployment and de- wression are things practically un- ¢nown in the Wortheast Territories. The Eskimos at the Mackenzie delta are in a prosperous condition and are the possessors of many schoon- ers with high-powered auxiliaries, These schooners, costing from $3,- 000 to $7,000 each, provide floating summer homes as the people move about the delta or along the sea coast, Credits to the natives and trappers hive been cut down this year and fur nrices are lower than usual, but they have ample supplies and a good crop of fur 1s expected, Canada's far north country is be- coming more and more self sustain- ing. Wild game provides plenty of meat for the skilled hunter and each man grows his awn vegetables --the crop along the Mackenzie river last summer was the best in years, Health prevails everywhere. Doctors, who are the only profes- sional men in the north, would starve it they were not hired by the Government to give medical atten- tion to the Indians and Eskimos, it is said, ---- !| We believe we have PRICES now where we want them. It is going to be our effort this year to give you, our friends and customers, ad- vantage of every bargain opportunity we can possibly manage to put over, Follow our week-end sales closely and know that you are get- ting the very best value your money will buy in Drug Store Needs 76¢ Hospital Absor- DeRt ssesenieee.s 49 $1.25 Lydia Pinkham's CO ¢ocrrvnnne $1.00 Peptona c 1 79c oe $1.00 Dextri Maltose C 60c Riker's Milk of , Magnesia ......., 39¢ $1.00 Mf 31 Antisep- U8 oesniieiesraa 89¢ 4 rolls Navy Tissue 25¢ 6,000 Population The Northwest Territories covers two-fifths of the total area of Can- ada, but' there are only about 1,000 whites and 5000 natives throughout the whole country, An influx of prospectors, mining men and tour- ists, however, is expected in the coming year, owing to the interest surrounding the Great Bear Lake radium. discoveries. Activ in this area last year increased freighting along the MacKenzie River enor- mously, More than $10,000 was ex~ pended on road building and ime provements at Smith Portage, a 16- mile portage on the MacKenzie River near Fort Smith. Prepara- tions for an active year in this dis- Hudson's ° Bay Company river steamers, formerly only used for the transport of their own cargoes and the company employes, now are available for tourist travel, Northward the tide of empire certainly niakes its way. Since the time Peter Bond established a port at Lake Athabasca before 1800, when Southern "Alberta, Britis Columbia and Saskatchewan wer trict during 1932 are now underway, ji i 60c Pepsodent Tooth Paste sev evovne., 8 cakes Vinolia Cas- tile 50c Kleenex 39¢ 25¢ 35¢ 25¢ sere irennes 2 tins Snap 26c Borden's Eagle Brang Milk ...... 23c 50 Klenzo Shaving Crem ..coveves. 39c¢ $1.25 Nujol $1.00 25c A. B. 8. and 19¢ $1.25 Burdock Bloog $1 Bitters cooveeusse Watch our windows and counters, When in need of Drugs QUICKLY" 'phone REXALL DRUG STORES Jury & Lovell King E. Simcoe 8. Phone 28 Phone 68 ANNGUNCING NEW MANAGEMENT OF West End Service Station PARK ROAD AND KINGSTON ROAD WEST -- Formerly Operated By -- F. J. McDONNELL -- Now Operated By -- Harold Mackie & Cliff WITH A COMPLETE Mills General Automobile Repair Servic -- AND -- British American Gasolene and. Oils For Prompt and Efficient Service Phone 216% Car Washing and Greasing-- Towing Service