EASTERN SODA ALLLLDLLD., ded -v PITIVIOPPO ew Appeal Board Met Peterboro, -- The Federal Appeal Board on Thursday completed a thee day session, which has been n the council ch r, ci A The board SE ambe jh frig ex-soldiers and their dependents. ' Ex-Mayor Honored Gananoque. -- Something very fine and rather unique in municipal life took place at the Provincial Hotel on Monday evening last when friends of Ex-Mayor "Billy" Wilson, retiring after eleven years' service as chief magistrate, tendered him a banquet and presented him with a substantial cheque. Sold Valuable Horse . Gananoque. ~Mr, J. F. Fitzsim- mons, of Rockport, has just disposed of another valuable colt, Noble Patch, a full brather of Johnny Patch. The purchasers were New York State horsemen. Purchase Rink Peterboro.--Mr. W. W. Redden has purchased the old curling rink at Norwood, and is having it removed to his farm, Annual Meeting Held Gananoque.~The annual mc ting of the Gananoque Horticultural Society was held at the Town Hall Wednes- day, and the reports presented there were of a most satisfactory nature, MOTOR TRAVEL CUTS RAILWAY RECEIPTS Haileybury, Jan. 27.--The Tem- fskaming & Northern Ontario Rail way dropped $150,000 in passenger receipts last year through increas- ed motor car traffic in Northern Ontario, George W. Lee, chairman of the railway commission said Saturday night at a dinner given here to the company's telegraphers. SPANISH DICTATOR | ASKS FOR RULING THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, JANUARY 27, 1930 Queen City All-China Basketball Team Seeks Decision From Army and Navy as to Re- tirement Madrid, Jan, 27.--General Primo de Rivera, premier and dictator of Spain, growing impatient at reports | Buy .., CELESTIAL STUDENTS FORM 5 I GROUP OF LIVE-WIRE PLAYERS "he photographs here show Toronto's all-Chinese basketball team, com- the scene of their "workouts" is the Central Y., where the young Chi d of students from Varsity, collegiates and technical schools. They play | have their under the banner of the Toronto Chinese Young Men's Christian Institute and | Locke. (3) ym. classes every week. (1) Joe Mark, who plays centre. (2) Vong Yow. (4) Geo. G. Lee. (5) Bill Ing, and (6) Hong Wong. at home and abroad of the weak- ness of his government and of im- pending trouble, today called upon the army and navy which had plac- ed him in power, to say flatly whe- have scen one of these animals there is Henry Forsythe of Oakland, who | is an experienced woodsman and has hunted caribou. According to the story, purporting to come from Mr. been carried on the statute books, notwithstanding that for pretty near- ly three decades there have been no caribou to protect, In the old days considerable herds ther he should continua his efforts | to govern the land. The premier issued a formal note to the heads of the army, navy and civil guards at 4 a.m. today, seem- ingly impulsively, for he had glven no previous indication of any such | intention. With a dramatic ges- ture, he said he would resign with- in five minutes should the reply b that he is no longer wanted. Caribou, as most people know, were j once, very plentiful, in Maine and | then for no cause that anyone has been able to explain, they got up and got out and so far as known they have never returned. Sometimes | woodsmen have reported seeing them, | but these reports were rarely, if ever, | authenticated. BODY HARD HARD SLAB SOFT SLAB. W00D Cut to Stove Length And Guaranteed No. 1 and Dry Also General Motors Hardwood DIXON COAL CO. Tele. 262 Five Direct Lines out, there is nothing to hinder them CARIB I ARE | moving in if they took the notion | They are found ihr New Brunswick ito Maine, even if only for a call Return to Pine Tree State! Lake Moxie, almost certainly there After Absence of Thirty ge that nor ported before, for it is not often that But of course if the caribou moved | and Quebec and being migratory ani- BACK IN MAINE mals would very naturally drift back 1 hdd But almost invariably caribou travel _ _- at | in herds, so that if one is up around are others, If any are there, it is not strange that nonc has been re- Years a man gets into that section. -- It was about thirty years ago that Portland, Me., Jan. land Express, in commenting rially on the reports of caribou hav- | ing been seen in the northern parts of Maine, says: There is nothing in- herently improbable in the report that a bull caribou has been seen in the Lake Moxie region, as brought out by a man who has been up in the section. The person who is said to not get out in one year, but aiter the migration began, it was about five The old bag limit for game in Maine was one moose, two caribou 'and three deer. cut down to one and therc has been perpetual closed time on caribou for a number of years. This law has Phone 1000 THE ARCA TUESDAY A Day of One Hour Sales ; A Unique Feature of Our Mid-Winter Sale WATCH The Merchandise and The Time It Is on Sale SEE THE WINDOWS TO-NIGHT Out They Go At sto 6 P.M. NOVELTY SILK HOSE, Clearing at, per pair ... - ' Eight only, Pleated Skirts. Clearin Each TE KR wa rivie! savaraeabeesse $1 69 : Novelty Rubber Aprons at less than half price. Three groups . verveninnenne@7¢, 39¢c and 49¢ each 9 to 10 A. M. -- Ladies' Raincoats, 99¢c Each 1t02P. M. A selection of Wash Fabrics easily worth double the price we are clearing them out at-- 14¢c Yard at, There Will be Six Other Specials in Non-Advertised Merchandise Of a very special nature, featured for each of the other six hours of 6ur business day. Watch for them. Forsythe, he was near enough to the animal so that he knew what it was. | the caribou quit this State. All did | German Deputies Look For- years before the last one was seen. | The number of deer has been! | | | | | evacuation of the Rhineland by the | of them roamed the woods of Maine from the Dead River region north and being a very curious animal it was not very difficult to shoot them. Anything unusual was pretty sure to attract their attention and up at Moosehead Lake one scheme for hunting them was to build a big | brush shelter on the ice. The cari- | bou, if they saw it, would proceed to | investigate, and were an easy mark | for the hunters hidden in the blind. The caribou that used to be in Maine is a species of reindeer known as the woodland reindeer, in contrast with the barrens reindeer which abound up around the Arctic circle. REIGHSTAG FACES IMPORTANT WORK | ward to Young Plan | Debate BILLS DRAFTED | Cabinet Anxious to Assure | Rhineland Evacuation By June 30 Berlin, Jan, 27.--The Reichstag met | Thursday for the first time in 1930 | faced with the most improtant leg- | islative work that any German par- liament has had to accomplish since the Dawes plan was accepted six years ago. Though the bill conferr- ng the German match monopoly on ne Kreugers Swedish match trust in turn for a guaranteed loan 'to : Government occupied yesterday's agenda, the interest of the deputies ; almost exclusively centred upon pending debate over the Young n, which the Government plans to toduce in the Chamber on Febru- y 3. A time-table has been prepared by the Cabinet by which the Young an will be railroaded through the eichstag by February 20 at the lat- ¢st in order to assure the complete rvrench by June 30. Already the bills giving legislative effect to the Young plan have been drafted by the de- partments connected and the next week they will be presented to and adopted by the Federal Council, which is the Upper Chamber of the German Parliament. Following this will come a week of J grand debate on the Young plan to: be inaugurated by a speech in be- half of the plan by Dr. Julius Cur- tius, Foreign Minister. The Govern-! ment plans to allow the Reichstag only two weeks for debate, assum- ing that this will be sufficient in view of the fact that the Dawes plan bills were put through the Reichstag in just twelve days in 1924. Three Bills The Young plan bills cre three in number, these being, first the final protocol of The Hague conference, which, with its annexes, includes all the agreements reached at the Dutch camtal; secondly, the new German rai'ways bill, and thirdly, 'ths new Reichsbank statute. It is around this last measure that it is believed the most violent par- hanientary battle will be waged. The Sacialist + desire to insert a , clause therein making the president of the Reichsbank subject to recall by. the Govesnment. The Cabinet may seek to avoid a defeat on this issue by submitting a compromise proposal by which Dr. Myalmar Schacht, the pre sent president of the bank, shall in future be prevented from meddling in the foreign policy of the Goverament while taking care not to interfere with the independence of the Reichs- bank. The elimination of the highly un- popular German-Polish liguidation treaty from the Young Plan bills is regarded as increasing the prosjects of the latter being adopted. If the Young plan is adopted by the French and German Parliaments before the end of February, as was planned at The Hague, German officials expect the Bank for International Settle- ments can begin business around March 20, thus definitely inaugurat- ing the period over which the Young plan. will be in force. This would allow the French three months for a complete evacuation of the Rhine- land before the end of June, four months being the time estimated by the French military authorities as needed for this operation, Eye Gashed Lindsay.--Mr. Dan Hennessy, the Gull River Lumber Company in the Ross Memorial yspital, a a result of a serious accident w occurred while at work, It that Mr. Hennessy drove a nail against another one hidden in the wood, causing a splinter to fly up, striking the right eye and gashing it quite badly. Another Fire Peterboro.--~A small chimney fire occurred at 377 Water strect Thurs- day evening, requiring the attention of the City Fire Department, who used a chemical extinguisher, Safe for the Youngest Child There's nothing in Veno's Cough Syrup to upset the most delicate inner system, yet with the sip it brings quick relief in any form of bronchial trouble. first Veno's is safe for every member of the family including the baby. Your druggist-has it or can get it for you. | valorem from 35 per cent, former- S| ly. In the alternative various rates Two sizes, 35c. and 75¢c. Harold F Ritchie & Co. Ltd., Toronto. Sales Agents: AUSTRALIA RAISES TARIFF T0 CANADA Plywoods and Veneers Up 30 Per Cent.--Other Items Hit Ottawa, Jan. 27.--Increases in Australian tariffs on several com- modities exported to that country from Canada are noted in this week's issue of the Commercial In- telligence journal. The increases | apply to plywoods and veneers ap- ply to plywoods and veneers, chains of iron and steel, carburef- , onions and electrical appara- duty on plywoods and veneers is raised to 65 per cent ad per 100 square feet are provided according to thickness, but as be- tween them and the al valorem rate, the rate returning the higher amount is to apply. The rate on onions {is raised from six pounds per ton to eight pounds. The carburetors will entail a duty of three months each where formerly the duty was 60 per cent. | ad valorem. Electrical fittings and | apparatus are advanced to 75 per| cent, from 50 per cent. Dynan and electrcal motors will ha duty of five pounds plus 15 lings per horse power each, or (0 per cent, ad valorem if that alter- native is higher. The duty on dry batteries up to one pound welght will be sixpence, on those over one pound in weight, 10 pence The old rate was 60 per cent. Duty on iron and steel chains is raised to 60 per cent fro 40 per cent, in SMALL VILLAGE IS LAUDED BY GANDHI Bombay, India, Jan. 27.--Maha ma Gandhi, holy man and 1 the independence movement in In- dia, has bestowed the bless of the Indian NAtionalist Congres: lon the small village of Khak! chi, near Katipara, in Central dia, where farmers are providing an outstanding example of the workings of the new passive resist. ance campaign against British rule, Stubbornly resisting the system of "forced labor" which prevails in that and many other districts, the Khakhrechi farmers have re- fused also to pay any taxes and ready have had conflicts with police. Eighteen of them are der arrest. Gandhi has conse to dispateh a large force of "pa ive resistance volunteers" of bot sexes with the idea of helping the farmers, TABLE LAMPS Very smart decorated Vases with Parchment Shades to match. All reduced in price. Ranging from $4.75 "¢q4 72 $11.75. Special prices. Ranging from 63 King St. East. PRI FLOOR LAMPS Well-made silk and georgette junior shades fine ¥ ished with silk fringe. ished standards, Reg. $20.69. Special FLOOR LAMP A very handsome crushed velvet shade in rose tailor made, mounted on fine brass standard with 3 upright candle style fitting Reg. $45.00. Special . . BRIDGE LAMPS New style figured bookcloth shades mounted on walnut finished standards. $39.50 CIEE SRA Res. $9.50 Sesser Essen BRIDGE LAMPS Bridge shades in silk and georgette finished with silk or bead fringe mounted on walnut finished standards at special $1350 LUKE FURNITURE CO. Phones 78-79 Reg. Special sisi siniens nine FLOOR LAMP Junior shade in vellum art mounted on antique brass standard. CES Mounted on walnut-fine 310.95 moderne design, $16.95 | LB LJ I TTT ------ ST PER THREE TE TO BT IEW