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Oshawa Daily Times, 18 Mar 1929, p. 12

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Scarboro Tax Sale Scarboro.--The adjourned sale of lands in arrears for taxes in Scarboro, will take Piavu av wie touncil chambers, Birch Cliff, on Saturday, March 30. urer J. I, Stewart will act as the auction- per. Accidental Reath Peterboro, -- A verdict of acci- dental death was returned last night by the coroner's jury at the inguest into the death of Fred C. Rooke, who fell from a roof of a building on Simcoe street on March 8. The inquest was conducted by Crown Attorney G. W, Hatton and Coroner Dr, T. W. H, Young, Camp for Cadets Kingston, -- A camp for. cadet corps may be held at Barriefield this summer. There are 111 cadet corps in this military dis- trict and no arrangements can be made until it is nown what amount of money will be available for this purpose. . Superintendent Dies Ottawa, -- Robert Norris Ven- ning, former superintendent of fisheries for the dominion, who for a quarter of a century was a lead- ing figure in the country's fishing industry, died here last night. He had been in failing health for the past few months, Mr, Venning was born in Saint John, N.B, in 1864, Aged Woman Dies Cobourg, -- Word was received here Thursday of the death at Providence, R.I., of Elizabeth Doo- little, widow of Dr. Frank Bird, in her ninety-third year,, She was the only sister of the late Ephraim Doolittle, of Cobourg, Her hus- band was a well-known surgeon, who went through the Civil War n the United States, QUALITY COAL Phone 3060 MALLETT BROS. EASTERN ONTARIO NEWS i Roy Macrow Is Missing Kingston, -- Macrow, aged 21, son of David Macrow, Glen- burnie farmer, has been missing since March 7, and police search has been started. He is mentally weak and fears are entertained for his safety. The young man would go away for a night at a ume but now he has been gone ten days, Air Tactics Planned Kingston.--U, G, Pearce, secre- tary of the United Empire Loyalist celebration committee, uns receiv- ed word from the Minister or Mil- itia and Defense, through Charles Hanna, ex-M.P,, that a fleet of aeroplanes will be "at Deseronto during the celebration, June 16, 17, 18 and 19, Thunder Shocks Prescott Prescott,--The citizens of Pres- cott were startled at 1.30 e'cloc on Saturday omrning by one of the loudest peals of thunder ever heard in this district. Vivid flashes of lightning and torrents of rain made the first electric storm of the sea- son a memorable one, No damage of a serious nature resulted. Honorary Appointment Kingston,~Colonel A. MacPhail, ADC. CMG. D.S.0, reserve of officers, who formerly commanded the Queen's University contingent of the C.0.T.C., and who still takes a very lively interest in the activ- ities of this unit, has been appoint- ed Honorary Lieutenant-Colonel of the battalion, Publisher's Son Dies Cobourg.~The death took place at Wilmette, Ill, last week of Jos- eph C, Wilson, eldest son of the late Isea Wilson, former publisher and proprietor of the. Cobourg Sentinel-Star, and brother of Les- lie Wilson, the present proprietor, His death was due to pleuro-pneu- monia, He had been 1j0r some time assistant manager in the In- surance Exchange at Chicago. To Use Motor Truck Kingston.--~A new motor truck only just graduated from the "hush-hush" class, the first of its kind to be delivered from England in Canada, was received yesterday by the Army Service Corps depot of this military district, and will ASR be: aver to No. 3 Medium Battery, Royal Canadian Artillery, in the course of a few days. 'IH Will Face Murder Charge Kingston, -- Norman and Lawr- ence Menard, serving five and three years in Portsmouth peniten- tiary for robbery committed near Cobourg two weeks ago, were re- moved from the Provincial prison here Saturday to Montreal to face the graver charge of being impli- cated in: the murder of Earl Dur- ham in a hold-up and robbery in the metropolis on February 26 last, . War an Mosquitoes Scarboro, -- Believing (nat an ounce of prevention is worn a pound of cure the owners of Living- stone Park, one of Scarboro"s most popular summer resorts, have ask- ed the township council to wage war on the mosquito, They re- quest that a man under instruc- tions from the Board of Health deliver the first blow this spring by spraying coal oil, the entire cost be- ing borne by the owners. Successful Courses Cobourg, -- During the winter several very successful short courses were conducted on various subjects in Durham County. Dur- ing the month of January, at Mill- brook, short courses in domestic science and agriculture were given, when forty-three boys and forty girls were present to benefit from the teaching of expert in the vari- ous lines, An average attendance dance of thirty-one boys and twen- ty seven girls was maintained throughout the course, FINDS EMIGRATION SCHEME OF VALUE Daily Telegraph Comments on Plan of Canadian Government London, March 16. -- The Daily Telegraph commenting on the ques- tion of Empire migration, says: "The cost of migration operates'as a test, excluding a considerable number of the very men who would most benefit by settlement overseas, The Cana- dian Government has made an ar- rangement with the Overseas Settle- ment Department to provide addi- tional assistance for suitable men without requiring preliminary train- $30,000 Cash Prizes - Attract Many . | Oshawa Entries | There is still plenty of time |i ' and fine picture weather for making an entry in the Kodak Company's $30,000 to this grand sum, Jury and ii Lovell's Rexall Stores offer $200.00 cash to the winner |i of the first prize, $100.00 | each to winners of the mext | 28 prizes, $50,/00 for any of the next 400 and $25.00 for any of the last 800 prizes, The only condi- tion we require is a copy of the entry and picture, Skill is not essential In this contest, so everyone get busy and enter your best pictures. We will glad- ly give you advice on mak. ing entries, and remember our expert photo finishers bring out the best in every picture, Jury & Lovell REXALL STORES Kodaks, Developing and Printing, Films and Supplies King E, Simcoe 8S, Phone 28 ll Moscow, March 18.--~War Com- missar Voreshilov, addressing the Leningrad Communist Party con. ference recently, particularly stres sed what he termed growing anglo- American hostility, going so far as to predict war between the two countries, He also had something to say about the tendency in the Cominwain Party to veer to the r t, elt cin Anglo-American rela- [to fo tions, the War Commissar said, "There is a struggle between two gigantic capitalist forces now being waged with the world as its arena. The United States and England wage a violent, but so far economic THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONwA., .«ARCH 10, . AN AE SOV ERNMENT LEADER and political fight. The United States, grown gigantic after an im- perialist war in the sense of pro- ductive Jominiity and amassing capital, feels tight within the con- fines of its frontiers. The United States seeks new markets for ex- port and investment, thereby clash- ing with a mighty opponent--Kng- lish imperialism. "Que must not be rticularly fur-seeing or a political Bolsnevik réee a solution of the aggra- vated English-American controver- gles lies in the long run in the path of armed conflict, This clash will, in force and violence, exceed all the bloody slaughtera. recorded in the history of mankind." TORONTO PRO E QUOTATIONS Toronto wholesale wit are paying the following prices, delivered Toronto: ) s aded, cases returned--Fresh ex- ly Sc: (rash firsts, Ne; seconds, 25¢; pul. let extras Butter--Creamery, solids, pasteurized, No, 1, 42 to 42 1-4c; No, 2, 41 to 41 l.4c, Churning cream~--Special, 47c; No, 1, 46c; 0, 5 Cheese--No, 1 large, colored paraffined and government graded, 21 1-2¢, Live 25 2-4 24 28.32 2 28-3 26 2 25 27 18 20 38 44 14.18 18.20 16 25 X 2 28 0 TORONTO PROVISION PRICES _ Toronto wholesale dealers are quoting the ing in agriculture, the selection to de- I g prices to the trade: Smoked meats--Hams, medium, 28 to 30c; cooked hams, 35 to 43c; smoked rolls, 25c; pend on fitness, willingness, and exe | breakfact bacon, 24 to 3c; do., fancy, 27 to perience in hard manual labor, "The ranks of 'the younger men, |% pt 40¢c; backs, peamealed, 28 to 30c; do., smoked, loins, 2 1.2c; New York shoulders, for whom mining cannot provide em- | ioc; pork butts, 23c; pork hams, 25c. ployment, must contain many pos- sessed of those qualifications, The new scheme cannot offer opportuni- ties to all; not more than a limited number can receive its be it should prove a useful addition to any relief measure and a valuable PRODUCE AT MONTREAL Montreal, March 18.--The demand for eggs continued fair, but the undertone to the market was casy, Receipts were 1,717 nefits, but | cases. A fair trade was done in butter and values were unchanged, Receipts were 3,- 537 packages... stimulus to the flow of emigration, | Prices: Cheese, westerns, 22 1-2 to 22 5.8, We welcome the scheme as sound | Butter, No. 1, pasteurized, 42 to 42 1-4c, Eggs, fresh extras, 45c; fresh firsts, 43c. and practical," re ------------ A credit manager is authority for PRODUCE AT NEW YORK New York, March 18,--Butter, BE leds the statement that it isn't true that | receipts, 8,966. Creamery higher than extra, a woman always pays.--St, Cathar- ines Standard. 48 to 48 1.2c; extra (92 score), 47 1.2c; firsts (88 to 91 score), 46 1.2 to 47 1.2. Eggs, unsettled; receipts, 25,668, Fresh Produce Prices in the Commercial Markets 11400; market, 30c to 40c higher; 100 to 250 §ithered ext 31 to 3 1.2¢; extra firats, to 30 1-2c; firsts, 29 1.2 to 29 3-4c; sec onds, 29 to 29 1.4c, Nearby hennery mn, fancy to extra fancy, 32 to 3c, Cheese, steady; receipts, 254,363, CHICA PRODUCE FUTURES Chicago, Arch 1h Contined irregularity marked the trading on the Chicago Mer. cantile exchange on Saturday, Futures did not get anywhere under light trading, March butter was _easier, closing at 46 Toc, The June and December delivery remai un- changed, After selling up to 27 3-8¢ March eggs dropped off to a close of 27c, commitments--March eggs, 101; Ap. ril eggs, 1; April storeg eggs, 71; November Sams, old, 1 A November gk, ew, 2 June T, i Ap utter, : arc! ter, 93; December butter, 5, B market--Butter, extras, 48 1.4c; standards, 48 1.4c, tone steady, Eggs, firsts, 27 to 27 1-4c; tome easier, ew York spot market--Butter, extras, 47 1.2¢; no tone, Eggs, first, 29 1.2 to 29%c; tone unsettled, BUFFALO LIVE STOCK Buffalo, March 18.--Hogs, 300; holdovers, Ibs,, $12.60 to $12.65; 140 to 150 Ibs, $12.40 to $12.50; packing sows, $10.50 to $10.75, Cattle, 50; week's trade, 25c to 50c higher; outlets, dependable; good steers, $12 to $13; yearling steers and heifers, $12.50 to $13,75; bulk fed offering, $11.75 to $13.25; cutter cows, $5.50 to $7.25; bulls, $9 to $9.75, Calves, 50; vealers steady; good to choice, $18 to $18.50; cull common, $10.50 to $15.50. Sheep, 100 lam;bs, steady throughout week's quality only fair; good to choice, $17.50 to $17.85; medium, $15 to $15.75; clippers, $15 to $15.50; shom wethers, $10,50; fat ewes, $9 to $9.75, POULTRY AT BUFFALO Buffalo, March 18,--Poultry markets; Dressed poultry, fair supply; demand; slightly stronger; heavy fowls, 33c to 34c; medium fowls, to 37¢; light fowls, 3ic to 3c; old roosters, 25¢ to 28c; roasting chickens, 37c to 44c; ducks, fancy, 25¢ to 28c; geese, 24c to 25c; turkeys (young), 38¢ to 43c; turkeys, (old), 32% to mn 43c to Sle, Live poultry--Supply light; de. ; capons, |' HEAT YOUR HOME THE DIXON WAY BUY -- FOR ECONOMY Generar, Morors Woop Hard Wood Blocks, Big Loads, Dry and Good Size. No Heaping Loads of the Smaller Hard Wood Blocks Being Fr poy Wood For Ouly $3.50. Lo ling a ad : 50--Limited Quantity. Sere Wood! Loads of Bod ni and Seant- £4.00 THE ABOVE ARE ALL LARGE TRUCK LOADS Wagua Lasds of Saap-Big Loads. Good $3.00 JEDDO COAL SOLVAY COKE POCAHONTAS AND CANNEL DIXON COAL CO. PHONE 262 mand good; market steady; heavy fowl, per Ib, 33c to 34c; leghorn fowl, per Ib, 32¢ to 33c; old roosters, 20c to 22; colored springers, 29%¢ to 3b; Leghorn springers, 2% to 30c, TORONTO GRAIN OUOTATIONS Grain dealers on the Toronto Board of Trade are making the following quotations for car lots: toba Wheat No. 2 northern, $1.33 1-2, No, 3 northern, $1.30. No, 4 wheat, $1.26 1-2, 2) o 4 = a ® = N Feed wheat, 89. (c.i.f, Gorerich and Bay ports, Price on track, lc higher than above ,) No, 1 feed, 57 1.2c, No, 2 feed, 55 1.2¢c, (c.if, Goderich and Bay ports.) No. 2 yellow, kiln dried, $LI1, No, 3 yellow, kiln dried, $1.08 1.2, No, 4 yellow, kiln dried, $1.06, (Delivered Toronto.) Oats . Millfeed, delivered, M ! freights, bags included--Bran, ger ton, $33.25; shorts, 383 ton, $34.25; middlings, $39.25, Ontario oats--Good, sound, heavy oats in car lots, 52 to 3c, f0.b, shipping points, Ontario good milling wheat, f.0.b, shipping points, according to freights, $1.30 to $1.32, Barley--Malting, 76 to 7%. Buckwheat--88 to 90c. Rye--No, 2, $1.05, Manitoba flour--First patents, in jute, $7.70, Toronto; second patents, in jute, $6.70. Ontario Flour Track, Montreal, car lots--90 per cent. patents, per barrel, $5.70, TORONTO HAY AND STRAW Local quotations to country shippers are ruling as follows for hay on a delivered ba- sis: No, 2 Timothy, $13 to $14 per ton; No. 3, Timothy, $11 to $12 per ton. Lower grades and stock hay are quoted from $8 to $9 per ton delivered, Straw is steady, with oat straw quotable at $9 per ton, and wheat straw at $9.50 per ton, delivered basis, No. 1 timothy, loose, per tom, $19 to $20; No, | timothy, baled, nominal POG pr Bia Although Style Demands Handbags in odd styles, they remain tre- mendously practical. From $1.95 od $7.50 Nose £ Silk and Vel ays o vet are typical of the bouquets of Paris and just as lovely, sold on the streets SO Fro SUCCESSORS TO NA \ x WN AN <S Rl ANNA NS AN New Easter Gloves Are unusually attractive because of the variety and novelties of the various styles in kid and fabric. From 75¢ct0$3.95 FTHOS, MILIER & Easter Toggery Easter Coats and Frocks in the Paris Manner Never has Oshawa seen such a wonderful array of smart styles as shown at our recent Fashion Show. We are still displaying just as smart garments in our Ready-to-Wear. Come in and look around. We have a delightful range of Frocks at theStore Throughout our depart ments are showing the very latest creations for 1929 derful range Brims Are Important By their brims you will know the mew Hats for Easter 1920, We have as won- EXOMR sov0vnsvsn"rrnne SH eH Hote Ts $2.95 tri FEE RE IE TE ERT Tipp

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