EASTERN ONTARIO NEWS FAST TIME AT GANANOQUE Daylight saving went into effect in Gananogue at midnight last night and will continue until mid- night, September 2nd. MARKET AT KINGSTON Saturday's market at Kingston ly large, and there was -- salt " produce.' Eggs sold at 25 and 30c per dogen; butter, 42 to 44¢ per pound; veal, 15 to 18¢ per pound; beef, 13 to 15¢. Pota- toes sold at $1.75 per bag. Poultry sold at $1.50 to $2. ARRESTED IN PETERBORO Arrested in Peterboro', John T. Millett was taken to Toromto by Detective Mulholland on a warrant charging bigamy, On July 10, 1920, Millett is alleged to have gone through a form of marriage with Lillian R. Holdstock. Police stated that Millett's wife was at present liviag in Toronto. STRIKE NOT SETTLED M. S. Campbell, Chief Concilia- tion Officer of the Dominion De- partment of Labor, is still at work in his effort to bring-about a set- tlement of the plumbers' strike, which has continued in Kingston since April 2, He will return to Ottawa today and have another conference with the Building Trades Council, PETERBORO MARKET Eggs at 28 and 30c a dozen and butter at 43c a pound were offered on Peterboro market Saturday morning. Chickens were 35¢ a pound. 'The opposition to gandling and grading 'of eggs, avhich prac- tices have been enforced by a Do- minion Government inspector for the past few weeks, is dying out, as most of the eggs are firsts or better. Little pigs, $8 and $10 a pair; potatoes, $1.75 a bag; cauli- flower and cabbage plants, 20¢ a box; rapsherry calles Z5c a dozen. HAMILTON PLANE CRASHES Captain M, E. Jones, piloting the plane 'Jack Elliott" from Hamil- ton to Montreal ,had a miraculous escape when he was forced to make a landing just east of Prescott yesterday for gas. In taking off his engine stalled and he was obliged to choose either, the St. Lawrence or a rocky field for a landing, He choose the latter with the result that his plane turned a somérsault and was considerably "damaged. Captain Jones escaping uninjured. An auxiliary plane arrived this morning with new parts, and Cap- tain Jones expects to be in Mont- real Tuesday morning, BELLEVILLE MARKET Fresh dairy butter at the Belle- ville market Saturday sold at 85 cents for two pounds, Eggs, 256 and 26 cents per dozen, Chickens, $1.25 to $1.50 each, Pickerel, 25¢ per 1b, Pike, 15¢ per 1b, Eels, 25c. Pota- toes, $2 per bag. Cucumbers, two for 25c. Leaf lettuce, 10¢ bunch; radishes, three bunches, 25c; car- Arcade News TUESDAY-- A Sale of GARMENT BAGS Made of Colored Chintz Large size with attachment for hanging Eight Gar. ments, completely covered and away from dust. 212 COUPON NO, ad, each night. You numbers, Save Our Cash Coupons THIS WEEK $5 FREE MERCHANDISE Three Prizes given each week. Look in this, 418 1ST PRIZE may have the winning TUESDAY-- A Sale of LADIES' HAND BAGS All Traveller's Samples Bought at a great discount, All kinds to choose from, A large assortment of styles and colors. A Great Bargain. 98c to $745 Shop at the Arcade PHONE 1000 sz PROMPT DELIVERY Jrots, two bunches, 285e; strawber- | Canada res, 3Ye a box; vegetables, beets, SU¢ a peck; onions, Uc a Peck; parsmips, 40¢ a peck; onions, 50¢ & peck; parsnips, 40c a peck; celery, 20 and 25¢ a head; sage, Hc a bunch; hay, $12 a ton; noney, 50¢ a pail for amber, and 60 cents for white. 'MARKET AT PRESCOTT Many attractive offerings, such as table onions, lettuce, radishes, spinach, rhubarb, etc., were among the commodities on Saturday at the Prescott market and.trading was brisk, Eggs and vegetables wer plentiful, eggs remaining firm at 30c a . butter, 43 to 45¢; maple syrup, $2 a gal, maple sugar, 25¢c a pound. Fowl was scarce, nothing being offered but chickens at 30 to 35¢ a pound; potatoes, $1.50 a bushel; turnips, 60c a bushel; carrots, 10¢c a bunch; onions, 5¢; radishes, 5c; lettuce, b to 15¢; celery, 15 to 20¢; spinach, 2 pounds for 25c; beets, 2 bunches for 26c; tomatoes, 25 to 30¢ a pound; rhubarb, 15¢ a bunch; hay, $10 and §12 a ton; oats, 65 to G8c a bushel. PORTRAIT UNVEILED & portrait of the late Chester D. Massey, presented to the people of Newcastle by his sons, Hon, Vin- cent Massey and Raymond Massey, was unveiled in the Newcastle Com- munity Hall here Sunday night. The occasion of the ceremony was a church service, one of the several undenominational gatherings held yearly in this hall, given to New- castle by the late Mr, Massey, Five hundred people were in attendance to pay tribute to the memory of their friend. Rev. E. R, James of the Newcastle Anglican Church, Rev. E. D. Cook of the Newcastle United Church and Rev, Dr, Cleav- er of Toronto officiated during the service, Then the portrait was un- veiled by Wellington Foster, an old friend of the late Mr. Massey, Wal- ter Seldon, a former secrétary of the Massey family, and Dr. Cleaver spoke following the unveiling, re- calling Mr, Massey's kindness and philanthropy. Because of his Minis- terial duties Hon, Vincent Massey was unable to attend the service, and Raymond is in England, UNIONISTS WIN CASE J The large number of churches that went into Church Union in and the Presbyterian Church in Canada as well, were all deeply interested in the Grafton church case, tried at the Supreme Court sitting in Cobourg, After a hearing lasting for nearly a day and a half, Mr, Justice Rose dis- missed the action, The action was brought by John Aird, acting on behalf of himself and the Presby- terian congregation at Grafton, to regain possession of what was long known as St, Andrew's Presbyter- jan Church, and now used as a place of worship by the United Church; also what was formerly known as St. Andrew's Manse. The case centred around ,certain deeds made by the late John Grover of the site upon which the church stands, and by the late Hon, George Strange Boulton of certain property upon which was afterward erected a house k.own as St. Andrew's Mahse. It was contended that the original deed provhded that the property was to be used by the followers of the Westminster Con- fession of Faith, The late John Grover also reserved a pew in the church and a family lot in the burying ground. The plaintiffs ask- ed also for a declaration that the provisions of the Grover and Boul- ton trust deeds were still effective, WAR ON LOCUSTS Jerusalem, May 6.--An official bulletin states that "a large swarm of flying locusts entered Palestine from Transjordania on May 2 and settled densely over an area of ten square kilometres on May 3, in the neighborhood of Semakh and Dag- aniah. At Tiberias and Nazareth field companies, working all night, by moonlight, with flame guns, restroyed a large proportion of the swarm. The remnant left on the morning of May 5 in a north-east- erly direction and passed into Syrian territory." FINED $20 AND COSTS Two men, A. Hulbroke and James Martin, who were arrested last Saturday afternoon on a charge of being intoxicated, -ap- peared before Magistrate Hind this morning in police court and were both fined $20 and costs. The docket was light this morn- ing these being the only cases to be tried by His Worship. [elephone 262 {4 Lines to Central) for COAL "Jeddo" The Best in America COKE "Solvay" E> We are Sole GMC. ts WOOD Dixon Coal Co. HE USHAWA LAWLY 1 SAFETY CONVENTION ROYAL CONNAUGHT HOTEL Hamilton IOOOD DELEGATES } OTOWN LADY MARY BAILEY'S FLIGHT OF 8,000 MILES .Braving the vicissitudes of the elements and the mysteries of the Dark Continent, Lady Mary Bailey, wife of Sir Abe Bailey, South Af- rican millionaire, has completed an 8,000-mile solo flight from London to Capetown--the first of her sex to ac- complish this feat. But Lady Balley conquered not only the natural obstacles that faced her; she also won out over obstacles placed in her path by the authorities who withheld their apprbval of her venture---merely because she was a woman, She succeeded in cutting the red tape, however, and now has the laugh on them. Lady Bailey, who marriage to one of Cecil Rhodes's "bright young men," in 1911, was the Hon, Mary Westenra, only daugh- ter of Lord Rossmore, a decendant of one of Ireland's oldest noble fam- ilies, hopped off from the Croydon Aviation Field just outside of Lon- don on March 9. Carried Only Suitcase Her plane is a de Haviland Moth, capable of remaining in the air for ten consecutive hours, Her object, the aviatrix explained, was to show that the flight could be made by a woman, but she was not out to break any speed records, She said her journey was really a summer vaca- tion trip to rejoin her husband, and she took with her only a suitcase. Right at the start, Lady Bailey was forced down at Sacy le Petit in the Department of the Dise, France, by fog after crossing the English Channel, But she was up before sun- rise the next morning and reached Le Bourget Aviation Field, Paris, at sunrise, Before landing, she gave her French fellow-aviators an ex- ample of her skill in navigating a plane, looping the loop and perform- ing other stunts. She left Paris the next morning, March 11, and stopped for lunch at Lyons. Resuming her flight in the afternoon, she encountered a violent mistral, the cold northwest wind of Southern Eurepe, over the Gulf of Lyons, but flying in the face of the storm she made a safe landing at Marignane Airdrome at Marseilles in the evening. The next days she flew to Pisa, Italy, and on March 13 reached Naples without further incident, Con- tinuing her flight on schedule time, she landed at Catania, Sicily, the following afternoon. ' , - Oyercomes Obstacles From Catania she flew across a stretch of the Mediterranean the next day, getting to Valetta, capital of Malta, in the afternoon. Despite the warnings of the Bri- tish authorities at Malta, she hop- ped off again and safely reached Aboukir, near Alexandria, Egypt, on March 18. On her arrival in Cairo, afficials of the British residency held her plane for several days, informing her that a lone woman aviator had no business flying over Africa and that she would not be allowed to go be- yond Khartoum unless she was ac- companied. Lady Bailey persisted in her deci- sion to continue her flight and finally got permisgion to hop off again after agreing to bave an army flyer ac- company her over the disturbed Sou- dan region, She resumed her flight on March 27 and landed at Assouan on the Upper Nile the same day, before her pr NE Lady Bailey arrived at Khartoum in the Soudan on April 2. Three days later she flew over the danger zone to Uimule, accompanied by an army plane. ' The southward flight along the East Coast of Africa was interrupted at Tabora, in the region of Lake Tan- ganyika, when Lady Bailey's plane was damaged as she made her land- ing on the rarely used flying field on April 9. She succeeded in having her plane repaired and resumed her flight a week ago, safely reaching Capetown on April 20. In 1927, Lady Bailey was .desig- nated a "champion aviator" by the International League of Aviators, sharing the honors of the year with Col, Linibergh. She is thirty-eight. CAT AND DOG FIGHT' COSTS FAMILY HOME Cochrane, May 6. -- Wilfred vielleux, a setler at Hunta, west » here, his wife and five young children are homeless because of a cat and dog fight. The ani- mals, family pets, staged a quar- rel in the house and when the cat leaped on the kitchen table the dog followed and upset the lamp. In a moment the building was in flames and all efforts on the part of Vielleux to extinguish the fire was in vain, the building and most of the contents going up in smoke. ITALIAN SUBMERSIBLE ACHIEVES WORLD RECORD Spezia, Italy, May 6.--The sub- marine Balilla Saturday attained a depth of 101 metres (231 feet) setting a new world record. IMES, MUNDAY. MAY /, 1940 EE ------------------------------------ ------ HARMONY SCHOOL REPORTS FOR TERM Junior room. of merit. Jr.ll--Ethel Petre, Ross Edwards, Donald Frayling, James Townson, Clifford Rodgers, Richard Cobourn, Raymond Grills. Sr.J--Margaret Sugden, Pearl Ford, Joyce, Smith. Sr. Pr.--Donald Sugden, Vera Ma- son, Helen Wilson, Lyndia Powell, Audrey Kellet, Doris Petre, Eileen Luke, Jackie Sanders, Doris Stockill, Gladys Sugden, Marie Allison, Eunice Chipps, Vinienne Hern, Albert Dart, Wilhelmine Crawford. Jr. Pr.--~Dorothy Wiggins, Audrey oni Names are in order . Terwillegor, Cameron Smith, Edward Saunders, Dorothy Ross. "A" Class--Marjoric Billing, Albert Rodgers, Raymond PickeH. "B" Class--Hilda Taylor, Bruce Ferguson, Joyce Powell, Murton Al- lison, Ethel Dart, Earl Crawford, Tommy Hart, Mildred Jones, Annie Smith, Frank Stockill, Clarence Gerow, Earl Pickell, Floyd Sutton. L. K. Mackey, teacher, Intermediate Room Jr. 1I--Edith Edwards, Henry Ford, George Hunking, Eileen Trull, Morley Lewis, Nellie Townson, Vera Petre, George Barlow, Joe Grills, Betty Lewis, Earl Wakely, Douglas Best, Bertha Hern, Jack Dart, Au- gustus Tooley. Sr. TI--Helen Cobourn, Catherine | Latest Food and Ice | Saving Features par 20 41 or The most pop- frigerator for the home. well made box lined with Gal- vanised with large top Icing $19.50 Enamelled In. terior $2250 | Ex trao r size Re- A Steel Com- tment, Size 16 x 183% x 12 high with White Lander, Cletus Dycr, Stella Wenn, Ruth Tooley, Velma Smith, Jimmie Pickell, . Jr. TI--Jack €larke, Irene Fleming, Doris Dart, Greta, Hunking, Ross Winter, C. E. 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