Oakville Newspapers

Oakville Star & Independent (Oakville, ON), 31 Oct 1930, p. 2

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German Liner Shewed By Brazilian Fortress 27 Die on Baden W hen R.io de Janeiro Guns Throw High Explosives-- Brazilian Officials Declare Blame Lies With Captain-- Says Vessel W as Ordered to Stop, But Refused-- Berlin Orders Inquiry Berlin. -- The Vossische Zeitung's correspondent at Rio de Janeiro re ports that 27 persons, including 18 women, were killed in the shelling by a rebel battery on October 25th o f the German steamship Baden, which was trying to leave Rio Harbor. The rear mast o f the Baden was shot away by guns o f the fort. The ship will remain in Rio de Janeiro for repairs and then continue to Buenos Aires. · Sao Paulo's Version Sao Paulo.-- The Brazilian Peder.al fortiess of Santa Clara fired on Satur day upon a German passenger ship which, in the excitement o f the revolu tion, was trying to slip out o f Rio de Janeiro H arbor without getting pro per clearance, and caused the outright death of 27 persons and seriously in jured 71 others. ed to live, were placed in ambulances. One of the most pitiful sights was a stretcher carrying off a small child, clasped by its mother, both o f whom were killed by the same shell frag ment. The cagtain was immediately placed under arrest and held by the police, and the latter place the entire blame for the sanguinary incident on the captain's shoulders for not responding to orders, which, it is claimed, were repeatedly given. The German Ambassador, on in structions from Berlin, is conducting an inquiry to place the responsibiity. It was later revealed that Captain Rolin is the brother of the former master o f another German ship. Cape Arcona. The latter captain had been debarred from entering Brazilian ports on account of " grave infrac tions." R-101 Victims Lying In State Th e foreign colonies here and in News Arouses Berlin R io de Janeiro are deeply stirred. A c -1 Berlin.-- The shelling o f the German cording to advices here, the ship, load steamship Baden in R io de Janeiro ed with passengers, left the docks Harbor aroused German editorial shortly after 3 o 'clock in the after opinion to demand that a promised noon without having a clearance cer tificate ,and Fort Santa Clara, at the Brazilian investigation be thorough. It is felt that the action of the Bra mouth o f the harbor, instructed the zilian gunners in the fortress who vesfel to stop. fired the shot is almost incom prehen Three blank shots were fired first by sible, although it is said in som e quar the fort, and the captain was again ordered by signals to stop the steam ters that Brazilian politica figures er, but he refused to heave to, and a w ere aboard at the time, fleeing from high-explosive shell was fired, hitting the military coup d'etat which over threw the governm ent of President the forward deck left o f the mast, W ashington Luis. where a large number o f passengers T h e affair is shrouded in mystery, had congregated. since no direct news despatches have Ship Puts Back com e from Rio de Janeiro-- presum The ship then returned to the docks, ably because o f the strict censorship where twenty-one bodies were re im posed by the Military Junta-- and m oved, and m ore than seventy of the the Foreign Office has had only frag passengers and crew, many o f whom mentary advices from German envoys w ere seriously injured jjid not expect- in Brazil. General view of coffins of victims of R-101 as they lay-in-state in W estminster Hall, L^mdon, prior to burial. 100 Miners Killed Flawless Ruby In German Tragedy Found in Burma Second Mine Disaster in W eek -- Third in Four Months The Markets New Canada Stamp Varied Tragedies Will Be Issued In Many Districts Canada This Year W ill Use 1,400,000,000 Montreal-- The intricacies o f the printing o f stamps were explained to f nonihers o f the St. Lawrence 6tam p Collectors' Society o f Montreal i. *uiy by C. G. Cowan, vice-presi dent of the British Am erican Bank Note Company, Ottawa, w ho print Canada's stamps. The occasion was the annual meeting of the society. Postage stamps have been in use only 90 years, Mr. Cowan said. They w ere introduced in Great Britain in 1840, in the United States in 1845 and in the provinces o f Upper and Low er Canada in 1851. A t first Canada's stam ps were made in New York, he stated, but by 1866 the amount requir ed was large enough to ju stify a Can adian com pany to produce them. The speaker described the surface printing and intaglio methods of pro ducing stamps, the latter of which is nsed in Canada. The intaglio pro cess is m ore difficult, discouraging forgery, and gives a clearer sharper outline. During the first year when Canada produced her own stamps, she used 8,500,000, said Mr. Cowan. This year she will use 1,400,000,000, enough to make a row 19,750 miles long if laid side by side. At the conclusion, Mr. Cowan show ed a number o f stamps which w ill be issued in the near iuture. A new red flve-cent air mail stamp bears the figure o f Mercury, with Earth in the background. A grey 12-eent issue ehows the citadel o f Quebec. The Senate library at Ottawa adorns a 10-cent stamp. A 20-cent stamp bears the picture o f a tractor-drawn binder in a wheat field. The 50-cent issue shows a parish church in Que bec, and the $1 stamp bears a picture i f a snowcapped peak in the Rockies. Saarbrucken, Germany-- The coal mine disaster at Maybach Colliery, Saturday, Oct. 25tli appeared to have taken at least 100 lives. Ninety bodies lay in mortuaries, while all hope was given up for eleven men known to be still under ground. Coming before Germany's flags were hauled up from half-mast mourn ing for the 262 victims o f the recent Alsdorf mine explosion, the Maybach disaster fell upon the nation a a stunning blow. The Saarbiucken disaster was the second major calam ity to hit the German coalfields with in a week, and the third within four months. The July disaster at Neurode, last Highway Fatalities Near Oril Tuesday's at Alsdorf, and Saturday's lia, North Bay and at MaybacJj^Jjave^ between them, , Tavistockr sSuffed o u t s P n m of wMl over 600 Jonh Watters, Eauclaire, in motor miners. accident near North Bay. Mrs. J. McColeman and her 18-year- League Station W ill old daughter, o f Drinkwater's Pit, Span the World burned to death in home. Montreal-- A special radio station George Atkinson, St. Catharines, with a world-wide radius, to be used drowned in Welland Canal. John Henry W elch, 77 Pembroke in time of emergency, w ill be estab Street, Toronto, in motor accident lished for the League o f Nations at Geneva, according to the terms o f an near East Oro. Mrs. Daivid Rudy, aged 72, Tavis agreement signed on behalf of the League and the Sw iss Government, tock, struck by car near home. A man believed to have been George the Department o f Commerce is in Pilsonr 194 Balmoral Avenue South, form ed through a British press report received here from its offices abroad. Hamilton, struck by train. Under ordinary conditions it is to Mrs. Sophie Quesnel, aged 77, o f be run by the Radio Suisse Company. Ottawa, struck by truck. W hen it is run by the League, the * -------------Swiss Government will be entitled to have an observer present, the report states. Boy Lives 14 Months With Broken Neck Antarctic Claims London.-- The Dominions of the An tipodes are rolling their maps south ward. W hile Canada asserts its sovereign ty in the islands o f the A rctic, so Aus tralia and New Zealand are casting glances toward the great Antarctic continent. Discussion now before th'e Polar Committee of the Imperial Con ference reveals that New Zealand w ill probably make claims to the sector follow ing its meridians to the South Pole. Australia is likely to claim the area discovered by Scott and Shackleton. The British Government, it is under stood, is willing to transfer to the Do minions its rights by discovery in these lands. Given Only Few Days After Diving Accident Last Year W indsor-- Richard Vernon Blackmore, aged 19, who fractured his neck 14 months ago when hi dived into shallow water at the W indsor Bath ing Beach, at the foot o f Bridge Avenue, died Sunday in Grace Hospi tal. Local surgeons say it was one o f the most remarkable cases ever to com e to their attention. Blackmore, whose vertebrae were completely severed, was not expected to live more than two days, but he had been clinging to life on his reserve strength until tw o days ago, when com plications set in. W ashington-- New Zealand is the safest place in the world to be born, according to Labor Department stati stics. The Children's Bureau o f the de Total Hours Flown up to October 17th Shown as 13,945 as partment reported that New Zealand Compared With 1929 Total of 1 1,600 has broken its own record for the Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.-- W hen the Maxwell is confident that the total low est infant mortality rate in the flying season is com pleted the Air will reach 14,000. To date six operat world by a new low o f 34 deaths for Operations Department o f the Ontario ing bases have been closed. They are: every 1,000 live births in 1929, just F orestry Branch w ill have established Lake St. Joseph, Caribou, Shebando- half the infant death rate in the a new record o f over 14,000 hours wan. Twin Lakes, Rem i Lake and Oba United States. flown during the year. Captain W . R. Lake. It is expected that the remain DO YOU KNOW M axwell said recently. The highest ing operating bases in the Province previous total was in 1929 when the w ill be closed som e tim e next week. That a wet oven-oloth prevent* airm en rolled up a total o f 11,600 fly During this past w eek most o f the man burnt finger*? in g hours. Reports filed at the depart planes on station returned to Sault That a new casserole should first m ent covering air operations up until Ste. Marie for the winter and for re be rubbed on the outside with a raw Oct. 17 show a total o f 13,945 hours conditioning. The operating person onion to prevent " sweating," then flown. T h e flying operations are not nel, w ho have manned the planes dur placed] in aj vessel o f oold water, yet complete, and there are aonja re ing the summer, have departed on brought slowly to the boll, and left ports yet to come in, so that Captain leave. to cool in the w ater; Air Operations Department Predicts New Ontario Record Lowest Infant Mortality in World in New Zealand PRO D U CE Q U O T A T IO N S Toroi.to wholesale dealers are buyproduce at the follow in g prices: Great Secrecy Preserved Con it g E ggs-- Ungraded, cases returned, cerning W onderful Gem fresh extras, 42 tc 43c; fresh firsts, 37 to 38c; seconds, 25c. o f Great Value Butter-- No. 1 Ontario creamery Rangoon, Burma.-- A ruby said to solids, 30 to 31c; No. 2, 29 to 29% c. be a wonderful gem weighing about Churning cream -- Special, 33c; No. 100 carats has been found in Mogok, 1, 32c; No. 2, 29c. Cheese-- No. 1 large, colored, p a ra f Upper Burma. Great secrecy is bein maintained about the discovery, fined and governm ent graded, 16 to le ^ c . but it is said the ruby is flawless and Quotj.tions to poultry shippers are o f excellent color. »If this is the as follow s: case it will rank among the w orld's Poultry (a liv e )-- Fatted hens, over most priceless gems. 5 lbs. each, 19c: over 4 to 5 lbs., 15c;' The best rubies come from Burma, over 3% to 4 lbs., 13c; under 3% lbs., Siam and Ceylon. The largest ruby 11c. Spring chickens, over 5 lbs., 20c; is ever found weighed 2,000 carats, but over 4 Vi to 5 lbs., 17c; ove.- 4 to 4 V it had a number of flaws, detracting lbs., 15c; under 4 lbs., 13c. Broilers, lbs., 17c. Pullets, straight from its value. A stone o f this size 1% to 2 bred, 2c .".bove chicken prices. Spring is, of course, quite exceptional. One ducklings (w h ite), over 5 lbs., 17c; of the finest rubies ever found was over 4 to 5 lbs., 14c; colored, "2c lb. discovered a few years ago in Burma. less. Old roosters, over 5 lbs., 12c; It has a weight of 42 carats and is over 4 to 5 lbs., 7c. valued at about $100,000. It was Poultry (dressed)-- Fatted hens, dug up just abput the close o f the over 5 lbs., 23c: over * to 3 lbs., 19c; ever 3% to 4 lbs.,; 17c; under 3% lbs., Great War, and was given the name Spring 'hickens, over 5 lbs., of the " Peace Ruby." A few years 15c. later another large ruby w as found 26c; over 4% to 5 lbs., 24c; over 4 to 4% lbs., 20c; under 4 lbs., 18c. in Burma, weighing 21 carats, with . Broilers, 1% to 2*4 lbs., 24c. Pullets, an estimated value of $60,000. This s t r a ig h t bred, 2c above chicken prices, stone is of the finest pigeon's blood Spring ducklings (w h ite ), over 5 lbs., hue, the kind most sought after. 23c; ov.er 4 to 5 lbs., 19c; colored, 2c lb. less. Old -ooitf.-s, over 5 lbs., 15c; over 4 to 5 lbs., 10c. Guinea fow l,1 pair, $1.50. P R O V IS IO N P R IC E S T oronto provision dealers are quot ing the follow in g prices to th<* trad e: Smoked meats-- Hams, med., 28 to 36c; cooked loins, 48 to 52c; smoked Receives Enthusiastic Recep lolls, 34c; breakfast bacon, 26 to 40c; backs, pea-mealed, 34 c; do, smoked, 44 tion and Little Chaffing to 50c. 4 Great Yarmouth, Eng.-- The Prince Pork loins, 2 6 % c ; shoulders, 2 0 % c;. o f W ales has been cheered by many butts, ? 3 % c ; hams, 22 % c to ^3c. types o f many lands. But he got a Cured meats-- Long, clear bficon, new thrill recently when he received 5C to 70 lbs., 22c; 70 to 90 lbs., 20c; an enthusiastic reception, mixed with 90 to 110 lbs., 19c. H eavyw ' ight rolls, Thtweight rolls, 25c. a little good-natured ohaffing, from the 40c; Lard-- Pure, tierces, 16 % c ; tubs, famed Scottish fisher girls who come to Great Yarmouth each year during l rV ; pails, 1 7 % c; prints, 18 to 18% c. Shortening-- Tierces, 1 2 % c; tubs,; the herring season. 13c; pails, 13% c. Despite his many public appear Special pastry shortening-- Tierces, ances, the Prince remains delightfully 15c; tubs, 1 5 % c; pails, 16c. bashful. H e took his courage in G R A IN Q U O T A T IO N S hand on this occasion, however, and Grain dealers on the Toronto Board invaded the stronghold of the fisher o f Trade are making the follow in g girls who, picturesquely garbed in oil quotations fo r car lo t s : skins and slush boots, their heads Man. wheat-- No. 1 hard, 7 8 % c; oovered with gay handkerchiefs were No. 1 N orthern, 77% c ; No. 2 do, 75c; cleaning and picking the silvery fish. No. 3 do, 73c (c.i.f. Goderich and bay. These girls drive the average man p orts). Man. oats No. 1 feed, 3 6 % c; No.i to cover quickly with their wit but 2 do, 33% c. they gave the Prince a rousing cheer Argentine corn, 81c (c.i.f. P ort Col-i and treated him so gently that he b o r n e ). seemed to get as much fun out of the M illfeed, del., M ontreal freights, encounter as they did. bi.gs included-- B rai., per ton, $21.25; shorts, per ton, $22.25; m'ddlings, * -------------$23.25. Woman Sets New Record O ntario grain-- W heat, 68c; barley, Valley Stream, N.Y.-- Mrs. Keith 34c; oats, 3c; rye, 45c; buckwheat^ Miller of Australia set her " Bullet" 57c. L IV E STO C K Q U O TA TIO N S plane down at Curtiss-Wright Airport, H eavy beef steers, $6 to $7.50; but establishing a new w om en's speed re cher steers, choice, $6.75 to $7.50; do, cord for W est-East transcontinental fa ir to good, $6 to $6.50; do, com., $1 flight. It was her second record in a to $5.25; butcher heifers, chfiice, $6.75 few days, for she recently flew to the to $7.50; do, fa ir to good, $6 to $6.50; Pacific Coast faster than any other do, com., $4 to $5.25; butcher cows, member of her sex ever did. Her good to choice, $4.50 to $5.25; do, med., total flying tim e from Los Angeles to $4 to $4.50; can.iers and cutters, $1.50 New Y ork was 21 hours and 47 min to $3; butcher bulls, good to choice,; $4 to $5; do, bologna, $3 to $3.50; utes, almost four hours better than the baby beef, $9 to $11.50; feeders, good,' record o f 25 hours 35 minutes recently $5.25 to $6.25; stockers, $4.50 to $5.75; set by Miss Laura Ingalls. tvlves, good to choice, $12.50 to $13;. do, med., $10 to $11; do, com., $7 to $8;' do, grassers, $4 to $5; milkers, $45 to' NEW FUR WRAPS $90; springers, $60 to $100; lambs,' Sorry you m ay well be if the white choice, $8.50; buck lambs, $6.50 ;j rabbit wrap you purchaser last year sheep, $2 to $5; hogs, bacon w o.c.,' does not m eet this season's fashion $il.'25 to $11.50; do, trucked in, 50c requirements. Best have it altered a cw t. undfer w .o.c.; do, butchers, 75a bit. For the new est models extend per h og discount; do, selects, $1 pet) h og premium. to the hips o r below , and t*ke the -<«-----------'W hat alls the youn;j German Rewrapped form Instead o t the veritable Ubl,to Is wl^at ails flaming youth jacket, much m ore in harm ony wlt£ the flowing lines o f oven taf d r a e m twre--ib o many parties." Prince of Wales Visits Fish Girls t

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