PAGE | weLVE THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY » MARCH 15, 1929 -- Travelling Libearty -Lindsay--A travelling library has been received from the Department of Education for use throughout the community of Tory Hill, : Hurt in Fall 2 Lindsay--Mr; William Harris hap- pened with an accident on Tuesday when he fell off the top of a bam which he was helping to take down, Mr, Harris was badly shaken up. : - Big Military Ball Picton--Invitations are now out for the Military Ball in Picton Armories on Easter Monday, April 1st, which is being staged by the officers of C. Company, Hastings and Prince Ed- ward Regiment, May Open Canne: Picton--t. is rumored that W. A. Best & Sons and associates are plan- ning to enter the canning business in Wellington this scason, and that they will pack peas, tomatoes and corn as well as a full line of vegetables. Court Next Week . Brockville--The spring term of the Supreme Court of Ontario for Leeds and Grenville will open at the court house here next Tuesday before Mr, Justice McEvoy, of Toronto. There are three civil actions on the docket. Golden Wedding Madoc--The home of Mr, and-Mrs. Malcolm Bristol, Madoc, = was the scene of a very happy gathering on Tuesday, March 12th, when this hon- ored couple celebrated the fiftieth an- niversary of their marriage. No Appointment Lindsay--Mr. John Mark is filling the position of postmaster at Oak- wood temporarily. No permanent ap- pointment has been made though their arq a number of applicants for the position, To Name Successor Belleville -- The appointment of a superintendent for the County House of Refuge rendered vacant by the la- mented death of Mr. John Leigh, will in all probability be made by the committee of the County Council which has charge of that institution, Chamber Progressing Brockyille--Progress in the matter of obtaining additional membership under the new basis and in other questions connected with the advance- ment of the community was reported at a meeting of the council of the Chamber of Commerce held here. Lights For Church Lindsay -- Through the efforts of Mr. A, E, Day and Mr, Harold Her- lihey, the public school children and a local lighting plant the new church at Tory Hill, is now equipped with electric lights which has improved the appearance considerably. Committed for Trial Brockville,--Yesterday afternoon Provincial Officer McLeod of Pres- cott lodged in the counties jail a young man, Harold Coombes, who was committed for trial by Magis- trate P. K. Halpin on a charge of abducting a girl under 16 years of age. EASTERN ONTARIO NEWS Minister Ind Belleville.~Dr, Seymour, of Aus- tralia, who was recently called as' pastor of St. Andrew's x resvyrerian Church in this city, was formally inducted this evening with appro-| Bi | priate service. 8 | Help Miners' Picton--At their March meeting at the home of Mrs. Edgar Williams, the Cherry Valley W. I. decided to ive $12 to the Globe Miners' Fund. e appeal for funds for the distress- ed miners has found a ready response from not only societies inthe county but from many individuals as well, Outbreak of Measles Belleville -- There are 'quite a few cases of the measles in the city, Dr. 'Cronk, Medical Health Officer, said. The cases are of a mild form. At the present time measles are prevalent | throughout the province, Schools at Picton and in the vicinity are closed for this couse, Early Flowers Belleville -- One dozen tulips, two daffodils and a hyacinth are the plants that Mr, W, E, Parks, Cole- man street, admired in front of his residence, Mr, Parks always has car- ly flowers which attract much atten- tion but this year his flowers have been even earlier than before. Camps Closed Lindsay--After a successful, busy season in the woods, the three camps of the John Carew Lumber Co, Ltd, are beginning to break up, The camps have been busy and the cut has been large. It is expected that between 80 and 90 heavy shanty horses will be brought to the Lindsay barns next week and will be sold, Won Degree Contest Brockville--At Belleville Wednes- day evening the degree team of L.O. L., No. 1, Brockville, representing South Leeds, defeated Bowmanville lodge, representing West Durham, in a degree contest, and will exemplify their work before the Grand Lodge in session at Carleton Place next week. 107 Years Old Peterboro.--James Hendley, Ap- sley's grand old man, attains his 107th birthday today in vigorous health and spirits, not a day older in appearance than he was 50 years ago, in the estimation of those who have known him that long. Injured in Fall Brockville--R. L, Joynt, 46 Wall street, is confined to his home with a painful injury sustained when he slipped and fell in the living-room at his home. It was at first feared that one of his hips had been fractured but fortunately such was not the case although the member was badly bruised and strained. Jersey Men Ouzanize Kingston, -- Jersey breeders in the Kingston district have decided to organize and have appointed the following officers: President, Frank Anglin, Kingston; vice-pres- ident, J. C, Cleary, Wolfe Island; AEAT YOUR HOME THE DIXON WAY BUY -- FOR T [ ---- BVI MAKE YOUR OWN SCGAP DISINFECTING | 'Produce Prices in the | TORONTO PRODUCE QUOTATIONS 'Toronto wholesale dealers are paying the following prices, delivered Toronto: Eggs. ! bdr h ly cases 'resh ex- tras, 3c; fresh firsts, 32; seconds, 25c; pul. let, Sars, 25¢, » No. tter--~Creamery, solid -4 to 42 1-2¢; No, P 1.4 to 41 1.2¢. chur ng ara Spec 2% 47¢; No, 1, d6c; 0, 2, 45c, eese--No, 1 large, colored, paraffined a risk sia), 21 1.2c, i . 23 sn aE see Do., 4 t a Do,, under 3 1.2 Young turkeys .. o Suen TORONTO PROVISION PRICES deal ing the Live Dressed | 7°PO Commercial Markets | y day, with and the recent rains bad condition, The proved 1-2c, reaching 27¢, the year. April 'storage packed old ovember refrigerators 'the adyance; March butter fluctuated bly working up to higher levels, Associa ly make of the Amer was. 4,940,748 . pounds. for 1 ts, practically a JL Sent. advance over ear a ' from the previ- 4 . The fio o" Takes creameries 464,924 pounds, an 8 per cent ad vance over last year. Eggs: March, 606; commitments: old, 71; November, new, 19; do., old, 3 , Butter, June, 5; March, 184; December; Chic spot market--Butter, Extras, 48c, Phi, Lo 47 3-4c; tone weak, 'Eggs--Firsts, 2c; tone firmer, MONTREAL PRODUCE MARKET Montreal, March 15,--~Further weakness de- veloped in the market for fresh eggs and values were reds another two cents per hat §e_cggs were now Ly i a ior doll ices to the ) nad Fhcats~Hams, medium, 28 to 30c; cooked hams, 35 to 43; smoked rolls, 25¢; breakfast bacon, 24 to 3c; do., fancy; to 40c; Jade, amealed, 28 to 0c; do, field; directors, Earl Smith, Elgin- burg; Colin Woods, Barriefield; Frank Purdy, Kingston, Gift For Collegiate Brockville -- Adam Fullerton has presented 20 volumes of the American Encyclopeadia to A. E, Thompson, principal of the Collegiate Institute, for inclusion in the new library of the institution, which it will be nec- essary to establish in view of the to- tal destruction of the building and all of its contents last weck, Queen's Journal Editor Kingston, -- J, Lorne MacDoug- all, of Barrie, has been elected editor-in-chief of Queen's Journal. There was a tie in the voting for the position of sporting editor, The candidates for the position are: H. G, Ga' Mungovan, of Arts '30, and Bobby Clark, of Meds '30. The A.M.S. will decide which wii . be appointed to the position. Lake Chaplain Dies Smith's Falls.--Captain ames N. Leeman an old and high:y esteem- ed resident of Smith's alls, passed away here at the age of 78 years. The late Captain Leeman was born in Frontenac County in 1851, He started as an engineer, and work- ed his way to the position of cap- fain ,and was widely known along the Great Lakes and St. Lawr- ence River, Flying Club Onicers Kingston, -- Harry B, Muir was elected president of tho Kingston Flying Club, Ala, =", H, Her- rington, vice-president, and Hugh R. Duff secretary-treasurer; A, C. Hanley and W. H. Leach were ap- pointed by the board of directors to represent the club on the com- mittee of five, the other three be- ing from the city council, which will administr the flying field as a municipal airport, : Looks Like Spring Picton--One of the teachers at the Public School was presented with a buch of pussy willows, well out, this week. On Thursday, though the day was cold and snowy, a robin was no- ticed by a resident on Mary street and heard calling his merry "cheer up," A crow flew above the trees at McCauley's Mountain. Maple sugar makers have been looking over their paraphernalia, getting it into shape so that work can go ahead without delay when the season begins, Can spring be far away? ECONOMY Genera, Moors Woon Hard Wood Blocks, Big Loads, Dry and Good Size. No Small Pieces. Heaping Loads of the Smaller Hard Wood Blocks Being Sold as Scrap Wood For $3. Only $3.50--Limited Quantity. Sirap Wood, Londs of Beard Ende and Sea. G4 00 THE ABOVE ARE ALL LARGE TRUCK LOADS Wagon Loads of Scrap--Big Loads. Good $3.00 JEDDO COAL SOLVAY COKE POCAHONTAS AND CANNEL DIXON COAL CO. PHONE 262 FOUR DIRECT LINES PARTY OF RUSSIANS TO SEARCH ARCTIC Slight Possibility "Balloon Group" of Nobile Disaster May Be Alive USE ICE-BREAKER Better Adapted for Pblar Exploration Russian Savant Says Berlin, Mar, 15~--Protossor Ru- dolph Samoilovitch and the aviator Boris Chukhnovsky, the two most { distinguished members of the So- viet Russian expedition on board the ice-breaker Krassin, which rescued several members of the Nobile expe- dition last year told the correspon- dent in an interview here that they are planning another expedition to the polar regions this summer in the hope of rescuing the members of the "balloon group" believing there 1s a silght possibility that they may be still alive, "It is true," declared Professor Samofloviteh, "that there is not much likelihood that any of the men who were carried away with the. Italia's gas envelope are still { ceitain to get Bisurated Magnesia Magnesia Best for Your Indigestion Warns Against Doping St I With Artificial Digestants Most people who suffer, either occasion- ally or chronically from gas, sourness and in- digestion, have now discontinued disagreeable diets, patent foods and the use of harmful drugs, stomach tonics, medicines and arti- ficial digestants, and instead, follow the ad- vice so often given in these columns, take a teaspoonful of four tablets of Bisurated Magnesia in a little water after meals with the result that their stomach no longer troubles them, they are able to eat as they please and they enjoy much' better health. Those who use Bisurated Magnesia never dread the approach of meal time because they know this wonderful anti-acid and food corrective, which can be obtained from any good drug store, will instantly neutralize the acidity, the prevent food fermentation, and make diges- tion easy. Try this plan yourself, but be ly secretary, John Anderson, Barrie- | Ibs to 3 Cured meats--Long clear bacon, 50 to 70 ., $21; 70 to 90 Ibs., $19; 90 to 100 Ibs, and up, $18; Vghtweight volls in barrels, $11.50; heavyweight rolls, $38.50 per barrel. Lard--Pure, tierces, 16 1-2c; tubs, 15 1.2 Shortening, tierces, 13 3.4 to 14 3.4c; tubs, to 16c; pails, 16c; prints, 16 to 16 1.2¢; 14 Ji pails, 14 34c; tins, 16 3-4; prints, 15_3-dec, Pork loins, 26 1-2c; New York shoulders, 19c; pork butts, 23c; pork hams, 23c. CHICAGO PRODUCE FUTURES Chicago, March 15,~March eggs futures continued the previous day's advance on the t itely off the ) pts were 2, 585 cases, The trade in beans was inactive but 27 Prices were steady, Canadian, hand-picked d at $5.65, and yellow eye at $4.20, a choice, prime beans, at $5.50 per bushel. A fair trade was done ues were unchanged. Receipts were 2,030 packages, Prices today: Cheese, westerns, 22 1.2, Butter, No. 1, pasteurized, 42 1.4 to 42Vc. Fas, fresh cxtras, 47c; do., fresh firsts, AT_ NEW YORK PRODUC ar, 15, --Butter steady; re. New York, ceipts, 15,709, Cheese steady; receipts, 167, 714, tg s steadier; receipts, 26,214, Fresh athered extra 32 to 32 1.2c, extra first 1-4 to 32 1.2, first 31 1.2 to 31 3.4c, seconds, 30 1-2 to Jlc, living--something like two or three chances out of a hundred, I should say, Neverthless, the possibility does exist. Once six Russians who were stranded on the ice near Spitzber- gen, without stores or food were found alive and healthy after six years and seven months." At the suggestion of the Rus- sians, Samollovitch said, the Ital- fans will also fit out a private expe- dition to help in the search for the missing members of 'the Italia's crew, Better Adapted. The Russian savant gave it as his opinion that an ice-breaker was bet- ter adapted for polar exploration than either an airship or an air- plane. A powerful ice-breaker like the Krassin, which went to the re- scue of Nobile and his men, equip- ped with Diesel engines so that man power could be saved, is capable of smashing its way through the fce to the North Pole, he said, In his op- inion, airplanes should he taken along to be used as the "eyes" of the expedition, Expressing his private opinion about the ill-fated cruise of the Ital- ia, Professor Samoiloviteh praised General Umberto Nobile, comman-~ der of the expedition, but condem- ned Captains Zappi and Mariano. The Italian commission of inquiry which recently concluded its inves- tigation at Rome, on the other hand blamed the disaster on Nobile, and exonerated Zapp! and Mariano from the charges brought against them as a result of the death of their companion, Professor Finn Melm- gren of Sweden, Defends Nobile, Asserting that Nobile"s voyage had resulted in valuable additions to man's stock of knowledge of the polar areas, the Russian professcr defended Nobile for having himself saved first of all, He didn't go first because he was afraid, but because he wanted to organize the work of rescue." Samoilovitech said. But the professor could mot un- derstand how Zappi and Marjano: could have left their companion, Malmgren, behind to dle. "We Rus~ sians," he declared, "do not under- stand how a man could leave a com- rade behind on the ice." 'The Russian also thought that the Italians, being southern folk, were not as well fitted for polar expedi- tions as the northern races. ASKS FOR TRAFFIC COURT IN MONTREAL Request Sent to Premier by General Manager of Mo- torists' League Montreal, Mar, 15--The need for a traffic court for the City of Mon- treal is pointed out by 7. C. Kirby, general manager of the Montreal Motorists' League and a request has been sent to Hon. L. A, Tascherean and the city authorities by the leagne to consider this idea, "More than three-quarters of a million dollars annually, pour into the city coffers from cases consis- ting of parking and ell kinds of traffic offences at he Recorder's Court," Mr. Kirby says. 'Is this to become a regular item of profit for the general fund with no part of it appropriated to the study and correction of traffic evils? If the legislature gives us a traffic court at this session, Montreal motorists may well accept the institution as a challenge to study and correct the traffic violation problem througn it. The recorder working in con. junction with e traffic court, could, if supported with sufficient funds considerably reduce this motoring COAL MALLETT BROS. dozen, Another feature of the day was the | A EAST BUFFALO LIVE STOCK . East Buffalo, March 15.--Receipts of 4 800; holdovers, 1,000; market draggy, 10 to 25c lower; weights above 220 lbs. at full decline; 160 to 240. ibs $12.25 to $12.35; 260 to 300° Ibs. $11.90 to $12.10 1;30 Ibs. and down ostly $11.50; packing sows, $10.25 Recei of cattle, 100; active, st A $5.50 to $7.25; i to $9.50, Calves 100; Jedlers_ active, steady, good and choice, $18 to 50, Receipts of 'sheep, 200; odd lots," inbe- {ween grades, fully steady ate, 'ATIONS TORONTO GRAIN oN 'oronto Board Grain, dealers on the Trade are making for car lots: Wheat No. 2, northern, $1.33 1.2, No. 3, northern, '$1.30, No, 4 wheat, $1.26 1-2, No. 5 wheat, $1.16, No. 6 wheat, 9c. Feed wheat, 8c. : i (c.i.f. Goderich and Bay ports. Price on track, 1c higher than above.) 0, 1 feed, 57 1-2. No, 2 feed, 55 1-2c. (c.i.f. Goderich and Bay ports.) American Com .No, 2 yellow, kiln: dried, $1.11, No, 3 4 ed kiln dried, $1.08 1.2, No. 4 'yellow, kiln dried, $1.06. (Delivered Toronto.) sa Millfeed deli i, Montreal bags included~Bran per ton, $34.25; shorts, per ton, $36.25; middlings, $41.25, Ontario oats--Good, sound, heayy oats in car lots, 52 to Sic, f.o.b, shipping points, Ontario good milling ,wheat, f.0.b. ship. ping points, according to freights, $1.30 to butter and val- [ $1.32, Barley--Malting, 76 to 79. Buckwheat--88 to 90c, Rye--No, 2, $1.05, ; others arrived | of. the following quotations JURY & LOVELL Saturday Candy Specials WALNUT BUTTER CRISP 48¢ per 1b. MILK DIPPED NUT LOG ROLL 34c¢c per 1b. Take a pound of these delicious Cbnfections home to the family "SATURDAY NIGHT IS CANDY NIGHT" Jury & Lovell 10 King St. East Phone 2223 For Your Ice Cream and Candy N per nr ---------- = $7.70, Toronto; second patents, in jute, $6.70, Manitoba Flour--First patents, in joe} tents, per barrel, $5.70, Track, Montreal car lots--90 per cent, pa- PROPOSED STREET We offer for sale 16 lots on Mary Street, as shown here. They are If you desire a garden these lots will be ideal--good garden soil and level ground, Some of these lots have finest trees and are exception. ally good for building Restrictions: Houses to cost not less than $3,000, and to be kept back 25 feet from the street line. Get in early on these lots. For further particulars see For Sale 40 5t. x 200 £t. deep purposes. : = GRANGE PROPERTY PINE STREET GARDEN STREET MARY STREET F. L. BEECROFT Oshawa Telephone 324 Build in WHITBY! Choice Building Lots CEES EEEES CC IEEE ENEEEEEEEEEEEEE : h : 5 New designs in Silk Draperies have just been opened mp. There are some wonderful colors and patterns to select from, 50 in. wide that will split for most windows if you are thinking of mew drapes, C Ranging in price from $2.00 to $5.05 yard , Come and look these over. range in price from 50 IN. TAPESTRIES Smart designs in 50 in. wide Tapestries upholstering. A good range of patterns to select from, We gladly submit estimates free for all upholstery work, 30 The Tapestries AND low Weaves, They Ranging in price from ..,. SILK CURTAIN NETS Very dainty are these new Silk Curtain Nets in Swiss and give good service, 36 in. to 43 in, wide, DER srs are extremely smart and will $149, Fine quality oil painted shades mounted Special, each ,....... WINDOW SHADES opaque on good, serviceable spring roller. Some have slight imperfections that can "hardly be noticed, In white or green, $1.00 HIT AND MISS AXMINSTER RUGS A good, hard wearing Axminster Bug at a low price, The |! are nicely blended in these hit and miss Bugs and can be used in any room. Finished with a plain band bor- der across the ends, Size 54 x 27, l $3.75 Low Prices-Easy Terms! Quality rugs in wanted sizes, at reason- able prices, on liberal terms! 9x12 Axminster Room Rugs, $49.50 Full 9 x 12 foot Axminster rugs in new rich colors and pleasing pat- terns. Have deep pile that makes $49.50 walking on them a pleasure, ...o sss, Below are typical values: 9x12 Wilton Rugs, only $69.50 9 x 12 Wilton rugs; in a host of sew patterns and colors. Very A 509.50 9'x10°-6" Wool Velvet Rugs $37.50 A high grade, long wearing rug for little money. Rich i Good zolors and pleasing patterns, Seamless, values at our low sale price. Size 9-0 x 10-6. i prevased for stomach use. § weep seyiEsuas: | CBELAtEc, CDERESEGE. RIES