Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 30 Nov 1937, p. 7

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Eggs were plentiful at 28 cents for pullets, 33 cents for medium and | 88 to 40 cents for A grades. Butter, sold at 32 cents a pound. y Fresh .:‘nd smoked pork and ;n.her meats es were plentiâ€" ful and bromt the same prices as the previous week. Apples, honey, homeâ€"made baking and &wen were offered at reasonâ€" able prices and there were many Bwinf chickens were 25 to 28 cents, milkâ€"fed 30 cents, and year olds 20 cents. Geese were 22 to 28 cents and ducks 25 to 30 cents. Milkâ€"fed Farmers reported the work on the farm land well in hand, with many farmers making good use of the miild weather the past ten days to #@nish fall plowing. Fine displays of choice milkâ€"fed fowl, induditgaehh:kons. geese and ducks, were wn at the Waterloo market on Saturday â€" afternoon. fow! brought 3 to 5 cents a pound Choice Fowl At Geese, Chickens _ ;> in Demand at the 5 Kitchener Market Milkâ€"Fed Chickens and Ducks 30 Cents a Pound.â€"Egzgs and Butter Plentiful. Housewives who visited the Kitchâ€" ener market on Saturday found little change in prices over last week. Eggs Sell at 30 to 45 Cents, Butter 32 Cents and Fowl _ ; 22 to 28 Cents. 1 At the produce stalls eggs were priced from 30c to 38, 40 and 45c a dozen. Butter 32c a pound. Chickâ€" ens from 22 to 25c a pound, geese 32c & pound and ducks at % and 28¢ a Mr. E. F. Buller of London was a business visitor hore recently Mr. and Mrs. George Kieffer, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kieffer and Mrs. Waechter of Teeswater were visiting at the home of Mr. and Mré. Simon A number from here attended the funeral of the late Mrs. Louis B. Dietâ€" rich. St. Agatha. on Wednesday morning. At the apple stalls: Snows 75c to $1.75; Mcintoshes, $1.2%5; iNorthern €pys, $1.50; Greenings at 75c and $125; Russets T6c; Seoks 85c; Tok man Sweets 75¢c and Baxters 60c. At vegotable stalls: Celery at b¢ a head and three for 10¢, endive 5 and 8¢, ‘Brussel‘s sprouts 15¢ a quart, parsnips and carrots 5c a quart; Saâ€" voy cabbage 5 and 8c a head, cabâ€" bage 5 and 8c a head; root colery three for 10c, squash 10 and 15¢; heets 15 and 25¢ for six quarts; indi vidual squash three for 10c. Mr. and Mrs. John Miller attended the funeral of the late Rev. Father Alban Leyes, Hamilton, on Thursday Mr. Herman Underwood of Bridge port was a business visitor here on Thursday. Meate: Fresh pork sausage 25c. smoked pork sausage at 27c¢, ham, ®acon and ribs 24c, tenderloin 35¢. sirloin 30¢. backbone 18c, jellied meat Â¥%° head cheese 16c and lard 16¢ Mrs. John Mirowski and Miss @lenora Stroh of St. Clements were guests of Mr. and ‘Mrs. Henry Preiss an Saturday. Mr. C. Patrick of Walkerton was a business visitor here recently. Miss Minerva Preiss of Waterloo, deughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Preiss of this place presented her mother with a new electric washer as a Christmas gift. Miss Preiss was the guest of her parents over, thé weekâ€"end. District Markets â€" Want Ads ‘Tuesday, November 30, 1987 Waterloo Mart BAMBERG Brantford Chathain Guelph Hamilton hingston kitchener London Niagara Falls UOttawa Owen Sound Peter boro Sarnia : St. Catharines St. Thomas Stratford . Responding to a hurried call at ©1.30 Thursday night the K.â€"W. Hosâ€" pital ambulance was hit by a car as it crossed the intersection at Doâ€" minion and Park Sts. The fenders of the ambulance were badly damaged What And See A wealthy man decided to commisâ€" sion an artist to paint his new counâ€" try mansion, with himseif as the ownâ€" er, standing in the doorway. SIX MONTHS IN REFORMATORY Gailty of rorging and uttering two vheques for $18 of Dr. N A. Morriâ€" son. ose W sSturm,. Kitchener, was senlenued lo six imonths in the Onâ€" Lime Reformatocy on each charge ‘He approached the artist, who agreed to the proposal. in due course, the picture was completed, but the artist, for some reason, had ceglected to paint in the figure of his client. Woodstock W indsor At Twentyfiveâ€"Give me a man with a purpose in life, with some‘ dopth to him. V ‘‘Why, has he got that on the hire purchase system. too. mummy?" asked the child. Depreciation At Seventeenâ€"Give me a man with curly hair, good looks, good at sports. fond of adventure. "It‘s all right," said the man, "but where do I come in*" The artist tried to pass off the error as a joke. *‘Oh," he said, "you‘ve just gone inside to write my cheque!" On The Instalment Plan? "Gerald," said mother, "you must be a very quiet little boy this mornâ€" ing. The doctor has called to remove daddy‘s appendix." "Ohb, have I?" retorted the other. ‘Then perhaps I"ll be coming out soon, and if I do I will pay you. In the meantime we‘ll hang it up and wait." Ten years ago it required more than 5 minutes to establish a Long Distance comnaction ‘but due to imâ€" proved equipment and operating me thods the average time required toâ€" day is blow 1!4 minutes. Over 90 per cent of all Long Distance calls are completed while the caller reâ€" mains at the telephone "Please buy these tickets for our party and please give Willie an empty box, a piece of wrapping paâ€" per and some string, also sell him a stampâ€"and will you weigh Willie on your scales?" Taking No Chance The negro witness was being crose examined about a former friend. "Do you suggest he is a thief?" asked the counsol. "I don‘t say he is a thief, sah," reâ€" pried the negro, "but I do say din: If 1 was a chicken. an‘ I saw him loafâ€" in‘ around, I‘d sure roost high." A large Order Mom sends little Willie to the siore at the busiest hour of the day with the following notes: At Thirtyâ€"fiveâ€"Give me a man AMBULANCE DAMAGED on d 34 to 00 28 to 29 38 to 40 $ 8.00 to $00.00 $ 8.00 to $ 9.00 34 to 40 § in 32 to 85 00 to 00 36 to 42 7.10 to 00.00 10.00 to 11.00 40 to 00 32 to 33 22 to 25 32 to 40 7.15 to 00.00 8.00 to 10.00 40 to 43 on 33 to 35 25 to 30 40 to 45 5.00 to _ 8.15 8.00 to 10.00 40 to 43 n 30 to 00 al.00 to al.25 35 to 45 x4.00 to x7.00 00.00 to 00.00 15.00 to 00 rer 31 to 32 22 to 25 30 to 40 10.35 to 11.35 00.00 to 00.00 00 to 00 : 32 to 35 20 to 25 32 to 43 7.15 to *10.35 8.00 to 00.00 00 to 00 a Falls 33 to 34 28 to 30 33 to 42 00.0Q to 00.00 U0.00 to 00.00 00 to 00 . 30 to 33 18 to 00 45 to 00 9.50 to 10.00 12.00 to 15.00 50 to 56 Sound 32 to 36 23 to 25 35 to 40 5.10 to 00.00 6.00 to _ 6.50 45 to 50 ro 28 to 32 22 to 25 38 to 45 7.90 to 00.00 00.00 to 00.00 40 to 46 35 to 00 25 to 28 30 to 40 00.00 to 00.00 00.00 to 00.00 43 to 60 harines 30 to 35 20 to 30 32 to 40 8.00 to 11.00 00.00 to 00.00 00 to 00 mas 34 to 36 22 to 27 35 to 45 7.15 to _ 7.85 6.00 to â€" 8.00 42 to 48 rd i 38 to 00 20 to 22 32 to 40 7.15 to 10.35 7.00 to _ 8.00 35 to 00 ock . 35 to 00 22 to 00 32 to 42 8.00 to 00.00 7.00 to _ 8.00 40 to 00 M :orcusculs. 3110 82 25 to 40 00 to 00 11.00 to 00.00 00.00 to 00.00 00 to 00 *â€"Dressed. aâ€"Each. xâ€"Small pigs. Creamery butter at London, 34 to 36¢. Dressed hogs at Hamilton, $10.65 to $10.90. Kingston turkeys, dressed pork, 12 %¢ to 15¢ permund; lamb hinds, $1.50 to $2.50; buckwheat at Windsor, $1.00. The above are principal prices prevalling on farmers‘ markets throughout Ontario on Saturday. Butter Chickens Eggs Per lb. 14 to 00 28 to 29 38 to « 32 to 35 00 to 00 36 to « 32 to 33 22 to 25 82 to $3 to 35 25 to 30 40 to 4 30 to 00 a1l.00 to al.25 35 to 4 $1 to 32 22 to 25 30 to 4 J2 to 35 20 to 25 32 to 4 $3 to 34 28 to 30 33 to 4 30 to 33 18 to 00 45 to ( 32 to 36 28 to 25 35 to 4 ‘8 to 32 22 to 25 38 to « $5 to 00 25 to 28 30 to « $0 to 35 20 to 30 32 to « 4 to 36 22 to 27 35 to 1 $3 to 00 20 to 22 32 to 4 $5 to 00 22 to 00 32 to 4 j1 to 32 25 to 40 00 to ( Prices of Farm Produce in Unlari_t_) on Saturday, Nov THE WATERLOO (Ontario) Co w Rosger â€" Linwood, . was charged with false pretences in conâ€" nection with an alleged unauthorized sale of a newspaper subscription in Kitchener court on Tuesday. He was remanded a week. FALSE PRETENCES CHARGED 38 to 40 36 to 42 32 to 40 40 to 45 35 to 45 30 to 40 32 to 43 33 to 42 45 to 00 35 to 40 38 to 45 30 to 40 32 to 40 35 to 45 32 to 40 32 to 42 00 to 00 WHAT GOES ON IN EVERY HOME F.0.B. 5.00 to $00.00 7.10 to 00.00 7.15 to 00.00 8.00 to _ 8.15 x4.00 to x7.00 10.35 to 11.35 7.15 to *10.35 00.0Q to 00.00 9.50 to 10.00 8.10 to 00.00 7.90 to 00.00 00.00 to 00.00 8.00 to 11.00 7.15 to _ 7.85 7.15 to 10.385 5.00 to 00.00 11.00 to 00.00 It is the same in the case of men. Few men buy impulsively. When they leave home each day for their place of employment, it is not just to get rid of their money. What they buy is, mainly, something whose purchase has been plannedâ€"clothes or other forms of apparel, hardware items, motoring sundries, shaving and other bathroom needs, plants, books, and so on. Men, like women, have been reading advertisements in line with their ripening desires and intentions, and of course they go in largest numbers to those retailers who have been informing them and soliciting their custom. Watch in your own home how The Waterloo Chronicleâ€"or any other good newspaperâ€"is read. The main headlines on the front page are scanned ; but it is a pretty safe thing to say that women readers will turn very early to the advertisements of local firms which advertise fashion items, food items, and other offerings related intimately to current needs and deâ€" Every woman knows what she wantsâ€"not perâ€" haps in the precise form or color, or variety or manner, but certainly in the main matters of her desire or need. This applies to clothes, hats, shoes, food items, beauty preparations and many items pertaining to home furnishing. And so women are eternally on the watch for informationâ€"and for temptation! They are swiftly perceptive of the advertisements which present and propose the things of their desire or need. And ob viously it is those retailers who advertise to them who stand the best chance of their custom. All of us, instinctively, go where the light is, not where the darkness is. Advertisements are light, and so they attract the buyers to those stores which they illumine. The way to get business is to ask for it. Can the truth of this statement be successfully disputed? And here is another equally true statement: The public buys from those who invite its custom. CHRONICLE Waterioo firemen on Thursday re sponded to a call to the new Waterâ€" loo industry , the De Luxe Upholsterâ€" ing Co., located in the former Canâ€" ada Purniture factory, where an acâ€" cetylene torch had started a blaze under the floor of the boller room. $ 8.00 to $ 9.00 10.00 to 11.00 8.00 to 10.00 8.00 to 10.00 00.00 to 00.00 00.00 to 00.00 8.00 to 00.00 U0.00 to 00.00 12.00 to 15.00 6.00 to _ 6.50 00.00 to 00.00 00.00 to 00.00 00.00 to 00.00 6.00 to _ 8.00 7.00 to _ 8.00 7.00 to _ 8.00 00.00 to 00.00 FIRE AT NEW PLANT 00.00 00.00 15.00 6.50 $0.75 to $0.00 0.80 to 0.90 0.60 to 0.75 0.10 to 0.00 0.00 to 0.00 0.66 to 0.170 0.15 to 0.10 0.80 to 0.00 0.560 to 0.00 0.60 to 0.00 0.65 to 0.75 0.00 to 0.00 0.80 to 1.20 0.85 to 0.95 0.65 to 0.175 0.75 to 0.90 0.80 to 0.85 sale, let me know. Apply to David Trussler, R.R. 2, Wellealey, Ont. _ FOR SALE Three Shorthorn bulls; a heifers supposed to be in calf. 25b¢ to FOR SALE 80c; ducks, $1.00 each; 0.00 0.10 0.10 0.00 PAGE SEVEN $0.95 to $0.00 0.98 to 0.00 0.95 to 1.00 1.00 to 0.00 0.00 to 0.00 0.00 to 0.00 0.95 to 0.98 0.00 to 0.00 0.00 to 0.00 0.95 to 1.00 0.85 to 0.92 0.96 to 0.00 0.00 to 9.00 1.00 to 1.06 0.97 to 0.00 1.00 to 0.00 1.10 to 0.00

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