Canadian grocer January-June 1910 . The Markets—Sugar 60c. Dearer than Last Year Season of Heaviest Consumption i^ About to Open With Price Away Above ThatWhich Prevailed a Year Ago—Prospects are Bright for Heavy Fruit Crop —Sugar Market Interesting—Canned Goods in Demand With Stocks Light—Cur-rant and Raisin Crops Suffering From Adverse Weather Conditions. See also Provisions, Cereals and Fruit, Vegetables and Fish Departments on pages following. QUEBEC MARKETS POINTERS— __ Sugar—^Firm at advance. Japan Tea—Will be higher. Currants—Higher for new crop. Prunes—Scarce. Montreal, June 2, 1910. S


Canadian grocer January-June 1910 . The Markets—Sugar 60c. Dearer than Last Year Season of Heaviest Consumption i^ About to Open With Price Away Above ThatWhich Prevailed a Year Ago—Prospects are Bright for Heavy Fruit Crop —Sugar Market Interesting—Canned Goods in Demand With Stocks Light—Cur-rant and Raisin Crops Suffering From Adverse Weather Conditions. See also Provisions, Cereals and Fruit, Vegetables and Fish Departments on pages following. QUEBEC MARKETS POINTERS— __ Sugar—^Firm at advance. Japan Tea—Will be higher. Currants—Higher for new crop. Prunes—Scarce. Montreal, June 2, 1910. Sugar is firm at the recent advanceand is selling much better than formerly. There seems to be a weather con-spiracy against trade in general. Near-ly every day it has rained for somehours and thus deterred many countrybuyers, who would otherwise have beencoming in, from doing so. A x-eccntnewspaper report states that everythirty-five years we have an exceptional-ly rainy spring and summer, and this isthe year we


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