FIFTY-SIXTH ANNIVERSARY Belleville, -- Victoria Avenue Baptist congregation celebrated the fifty-sixth anniversary of or- ganization on Sunday when spec ial commemorative services were held in homour of the event, | -- AUXILIARY FORMED Kingston.--To Kingston goes the honor of forming the first auxiliary of the Prentice Boys, It was in Kingston that the first Prentice Boys' Lodge was organs fged, so that Kingston indeed holds a unique position, KICKED BY HORSE Kingston--While grooming a horse, Charles T, Pearson, suffer- ed serious injuries when the uni. mal kicked him, knocked him un- conselous and then trampled him, He was removed to the General Hospital and his condition is crit- eal, LEAVES 104 DESCENDANTS Kingston,--Survived by a fam- ily of eleven sons and daughters, seventy-seven grandchildren - and sicteen great-grandchildren, Mrs, Manda Victoria Laderoute, widow of Alexander Laderoute, died re- cently in Westmeath, Renfrew county, near Kingston, ROYAL ARCH MASONS TO MEET Kingston.--Business sessions of the annual convention of the Royal Arch Masons of Ontario will open bere Tuesday. It is 39 years since the Arch Masons met in Kingston, Distinguished visitors will be pres- ent from Ontario, Quebec, British Columbia and Alberta, CAR RECOVERED Belleville.--A car reported stolen by the Brockville police early Sunday was recovered by the Trenton police late yesterday af- ternoon. Three men, Leslie Wil. son and George Craddock, Mont- Mothers, Do This -- When the children , rub Mus. terole on their throats and chests, No telling how soon the symptoms may de- velop into croup, or worse, 's when you're glad you have a jar of Musterole at hand to give prompt relief, As first aid, Musterole is excellent, Keep a jar ready for instant use, _ It is the remedy for adults, too, Re- lieves sore Shroat, bronchitis, h croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, tongestion, pleurisy, rheu- oo. Das 3] ies 51 or joints, sprains, sore ehilblaine, frosted | feet and colds of the Vv. A. Henry Insurance & Loans 175 Simcoe St. 8S, Phones 1198W--0Office 1858) Residence COAL Machinery Repairing NOTHING TOO LARGE NOTHING TOO SMALL Adanac Machine Shop '261 King St. W. Phone 121% =-- | real, and Frank Durant, no fixed address, were taken into custody |' after a stern chase, ---- X EH CONTRACT _ Tweed--A. new contract has been received by the Steel | * ust be ugh and Machine Company of this town, The local firm, will 1a} future manufacture the Marion steel 'dump bodies through an ar- rangement with the Marion Steel Body Corporation of Marion, Ohio. ---- DEATH OF FORMER PASTOR Kingston.--The many friends of the Reverend Samuel Shibley will learn with regret of his death which occurred at Ottawa Sunday, Mr, Shibley was in his seventy- eighth year, He came to King- ston first as 'pastor of Princess street Methodist Church where he labored successfully during the pastoral term of three years, OIVIL SERVICE CHANGES Brockville, --Gordon N, Phillips has been given permanent stand- ing in the Civil Service as super intendent of the Cornwall canal, Herbert R, Wilson is promoted from assistant inspector of Cus- toms and Excise at Belleville to be inspector of Customs and Ex- cise at Winnipeg, Charles N, Baker is appointed postmaster of Moulinette, PRESCOTT MEMBER ARRESTED Ottawa.--L, M, Auger, Libera) member of parliament for Pres- cott, Ont, was arrested last night charged with a serious offence against a girl, He was lodged in the Ottawa jail and bail had not been arranged up until a late hour, Details of the charge against Mr, Auger were not determined, GETS YEAR IN REFORMATORY Belleville --~James Curlett, of this city, who was arrested in a Yeomans street home about a week ago, after he had broken in with two companions, appeared before Magistrate Mikel yesterday morn- ing, and was sentenced Lo serve one year determinate and one year indeterminate in the Ontario Re- formatory, Curlett is an old of- fender, YOUNG FARMERS FILED Cobourg.--A pleasant event took place at Campbellford when the newly organized Rotary Club of that place entertained at Jun- cheon the young farmers who had been there during February taking the short course in agriculture, Howard Lapp, manager of the Bank of Commerce, gave an ad- dress on "Banking." It was a 100 per cent. meeting of Rotarians, and the boys enjoyed it very much. DEBATE ABRBRANGED Kingston.--Not in many years bas student government at Queen's university been under fire so much as this session, so much so that arrangements are being made for a debate to be staged at Con vocation hall to discuss the all- important question as to its suc- cess or failure There are those Children's Colds Doubly Dangerous After the Flu Physicians advise that the chief danger in this epidemic is after in- fluenza. Then, more than ever, colds attacking the weakened sys- tem may lead to bronchitis, pneu- monia, or a second and more se- vere case of flu. This is espe- clally true of children. Flu nearly always leaves the stomach upset. Internal mredica- tion should, therefore, be avoided, as it so often further disturbs the digestion and thus retards recov- ery. But if a fresh cold comes, don't let the child keep it overnight. Just rub Vicks on throat and chest at bedtime. As it is applied externally, Vicks ean be used freely even on the youngest child, with no fear of upsetting delicate stomach, NOTICE In the Saturday issue of the Oshawa Daily Times a picture was shown of one of the Dixon Coal Co. Trucks containing Gen. eral Motors Wood--a heaping load--the same size as they always camry, of good, dry, and large blocks of the finest wood procurable--the same wood as used in the construction of General Motors cars. It Must Be Good Buy It, Try It, And Tell Your Friends DIXON COAL CO. Phone 262 bx Heat Your Home The Dixon Way who claim that student govern- ment at Queen's is a "wash out," a student government in name only, ACCIDENTAL DEATH Brockville.--"We find that the late David Empey came to his death as the result of the break- ing of a pole which formed part of an appliance used in the load- ing of ice, We consider his death purely accidental." This verdict was returned by & jury sitting under Coroner C, J, Hamilton at the court house, Cornwall, to in- quire into the death of David Em- pey, who died in the Cornwall General Hospital on Feb, 6, fol- lowing injuries received while engaged in hauling ice at Dickin- son's Landing, LAKE CAPTAIN PASSES Orillia.--One of the best known boat captains who sailed the up- per lakes passed away at his home here in the person of Capt, Sam- uel Hill, He was in his 71st year, He was born in County Antrim, Ireland, in 1858. He came of sea- faring stock, his father and uncles all being ship captains He ac- companied his father to Canada in 1872, In 1889 he entered the ser- vices of the Muskoka and Geor- glan Bay Navigation Co, and sailed for years on the Georgian Bay, for Waldie ahd Wright, His was the first boat to reach Fort William in the storm on Lake Superior in November, 1913. which resulted in loss of so many boats and lives, NOTED DRAMATIST USES SHORTHAND British + Press Discovers G.B.S. Has Unusual Procedure London, Feb, 26.--The British Press has discovered that George Bernard Shaw, noted dramatist, writes all of his plays and most of his correspondence in shorthand, rather than longhand, tnis being true of the new Shavian Allegory "The King and the Doctors," pub- lished Friday. This interesting sidelight on the dramatist's method of workng has provoked a considerable amount of comment in the British Press. It is also said he works with green tinted paper, which he says he finds "easier on the eyes." Shaw's shorthand notes are written rapidly and in such per- fect form that he is able to pass the manuscript to his secretary, Miss Blanche Patch, for transcrip- tion without further elucidation op his part, When asked for a specimen of his shorthand "handwriting," Shaw scribbled rapidly on the back of a card and passed the nore to Miss Patch, who transcribed them and handed the sheet to the reporter. If read: "What the devil does the Sunday Chronicle want with a specimen of my shorthand. G.B.S." NO DUTY ON PAPER IN U.S, IS DEMAND Washington, Feb, 25. -- After seven weeks of arduous labor, the House Ways and Means Committee completed hearings on all 15 see- tions of the Tariff Act relating to rates and teh free list. Only the ad- ministrative provisions of the law remain to be considered before it begins writing a new bill. Canada figured largely in Sat- urday's testimony, United States newspaper publishers urging con- tinued free entry and redefinition in the law of newsprint paper and various lumber interests proposing ea duty of 25 per cent. on all clusses of lumber. The lumber representa- tives complained of Canada placing a duty of 25 per cent. on all classes tured lumber, while the United States permits that country's lum- ber of this type in free. Opposition to a lumber tariff also was voiced. Elisha Hanson, Washington, re- presentative of the rican News- paper Publishers' Association, told the committee that the policy of ad- mitting newsprint free had been long established and that his prin- cipal concern was over the wording, "Standard mewsprint paper," in the present law. He said there was no such article in the trade, and to eliminate con- fusion in its classification at the €ustoms House, he suggested that the present phraseology be changed to "printing paper, excepting roto- gravure paper, for use in manufac- ture of newspapers." AGRARIAN GRIN BY RUSSIAN GANG Class War Sharpens in Vil: lages Says Moscow : Paper BE. Moscow, Feb, 26,--"The class war sharpens in the village" has be- come a stock headline in the Soviet newspapers of the last few months That this phrase expresses a real- ity and not a mere propaganda slo- gan is evident if one compiles a few of the items from what might be called the village class war front in the Moscow press during the first two weeks of the year 1929, From Ashkabad, a town in Rus- sian Central Asia, near the Persian frontier, comes the news that a group of beys, or Turcoman feudal chiefs, "savagely murdered" a poor peasant, Yagmur Said Muradov, who was a member of the local elec. tion commission, On January 7 a dispatch from Mozir, in the swamps of White Russia, reports the mur- der of the village correspondent, Senko, and the burning of his home, Eleven suspected partici- pants were arrested, Gomel, an- other White Russian town, on the same day reports a death sentence passed o nthe kulah (rich peasant) Danyuk for burning the farm of the president of his village soviet, Tseluiko, On the following day the Gomel court sentenced the ku- lah Basov to be shot for attacking the secretary of the village soviet, A dispatch from Vitebsk of Jan- uary 9 reports an attack on the soviet of a Jewish village, Kolishi, by a gang of kulahs and hooligans. 'On January 10 the day's news in- cluded reports of the passing of a death sentence in Ufa on two Bash- kirs who had murdered a member of a collective farming group, and of the killing by a shot through the window of one Kovyak, president of the Committee of Poor Peasants in the village Klinovka, Poltava prov- ince, in Ukraine, On January 12 five kulahs of the village Zarovni, in the Kiev district were sentenced to death on charges of earrying on counter- re- volutionary agitation among. the peasants, holding secret meetings where suspicious persons from abroad were present, and conspir- ing to murder the president of the And simultaneously a group of brother kulahs in Western Rus- sia burned down the best collective farm in Smolensk province. This was apparently only a link in a chain of violence and reprisal, as the motive of the' burning was stated to be revenge for the exe- cution of a kulah, Kuznetzov, who in his turn had murdered a peas- ant social worker named Volkov, One could fill many pages with this chronicle of agrarian terror- ism, but the characteristic cases al- ready cited. afford proof that the tempo of these semi-political assas- sinations, which, according to the statement of Bauman, a high offi- cial in the Moscow Communist party committee, cost the lives of 45 officials, village correspondents, and Soviet workers during the two months which ended on October 15 has not appreciably slackened. What is the background for this "sharpening of the class struggle in the village?" It would seem to date from the adoption of 'the so-called "extraordinary measures" with their strong element of com- pulsion, . which were employed to induce the peasants to part with their surplus grain last spring and summer. True, these measures were officially repealed in July, but they left a legacy of bitter memory among the more prosperous peas- ants, which was strengthened last autumm when the richer classes in the country districts were subject- ed to special individual taxation, which. as was subsequently admit- ted, often bore heavily on peasants who could fairly be characterized not as kulahs but as "seredniaks," or middle class agriculturists. Now there is a new factor of ex- citement in the country districts in the shape of the village soviet elec- tions, which are not held on a sin- gle day, but spread over a period of weeks or months, KING IS SHOWING Bognor, Sussex, Feb. 26. -- Al- though King George's bedroom windows had to be closed all day yesterday owing to grey skies.and 2 biting east wind, his Majesty passed 2 good day, it was officially stated. He sat up for some time. The King's progress since his ar- rival at Craigwell House has been such that he is now able to take an interest in the events which oc- curred during the long period of his fliness, when he was unable to read mewspapers or be made ac- quainted with what was happening, it was learned today on high auth- ority.. He is gradually beginning to pick up the threads of current events. His Majesty also spends some day local committee of poor peasants. |3s Produce Prices in the Commercial Markets ONTO PRODUCE QUOTATIONS 430R0 wholeslae dealers are paying the following prices, Toronto: aded, cases returned-Fresh ex. wh ig Wei tre firsts, dle; seconds, ullet extras y. . Baler " ners solids, p No, he No. 1 large, colored, paraffined and government graded, 21 1.2c, 5 32.34 31-33 Roosters... Young geese, .. Ducklings, 5 lbs, Do, 4 to 5 lbs, Do, 31-2t0 41 MONTREAL PRODUCE Montreal, Feb, 26,--Owing to the good demand and the small supplies coming for. ward a stronger feeling develo in "the egg market and jobbing prices lor all gra. des were advanced one to two cents per dozen, Receipts were 1,008, A feature of the butter trade was the demand from local buyers for New Zea land butter to arrive at Halifax about the middle of April and sales of about 1,000 packages were made at 38 per Ib, for finest, and at 37 1-2c per Ib for first grade, g.i.f., Halifax, while Western ReaTaded No, 1 pa steurized creamery butter was offered at 3-4c per 1b, f.ob, Saskatoon, The trade in spot supplies was quiet, but values were firm, Receipts were 1,393 packages, The cheese trade continued quiet, but val- ues were steady, Receipts were 39% hoxes, Quotations: Cheese, Westerns, 17 1-2¢ to 19c, Butter, No, | pasteurized, 43 1.2c 10 43 3-4c, Eggs, storage extras, 43c; eggs, storage firsts, 40c; eggs, storage seconds, 37c; eggs, fresh extras, Sic to Sic; eggs, fresh firsts, 52c to 53c, . NEW YORK PRODUCE New York, Feb, 26,--RButter steady, Re- ceipts, 15,589, Creamery higher than extra, to 50 1-2c; extra 92 score, 49 1.2¢; first 88 to 91 score, 47 1-2c to 49; packing stock, current made, No, 1, 30 1-2 to 3lc; No, 2, 29 1-8e, . Eggs weak and unsettled. Receipts, 19,. 554, Preah gathered extra, 42; il first, dlc; first, 39 1.2¢ to 40c; seconds, 39c, Near-by hennery white, closely selected extra, 40c to 42c' near-by and near-by West- ern hennery white, extra first to average extra, 39% to dic; near-by Se nacy brown, extra, 44c; Pacific Coast whtic extra, 43c to 44c; do., extra first, 4 CHICAGO PRODUCE FUTURES Chicago, Feb, 26--Open commitments. -- February eggs, 176; March eggs, 186; April eggs, 47; November eggs, 108; June butter, 1; February butter, 234; March butter, 148; December butter, 3. Chicago spot market--Butter, extras, 4834; standards, 48/4; tone steady; eggs, firsts, -39; tone weak. New York spot market's butter, extras, 49%; tone steady to firm; eggs, firsts, 3975. 40; tone unsettled, Three Markets receipts--Butter today, 38,- 366; last year, 20,998; eggs today, 38,95; last year, 40,342, Street stocks--Butter today, 106,103; last 96,965; eggs today, 36,427; last, year, Movement at ton markets--Butter, net out, 95,529; last year, net out, 305,716; eggs, net out, 964; last year, net in, 800, Twenty-six cities--Out tomorrow. Closing prices--February eggs, 37 5-8¢; M gs, 26 3-4c; November eggs, old, 30 3-4c; November eggs, new, 30 1.4c; April eggs, old, 28¢c; February butter, 49 1-8; March butter, 47 §-8¢c, re CANADIAN EGG M. TS Ottawa, Feb, ed supplies are till very scarce in a alan Canada, and rm, have worked sharply lo Montreal--Receipts of all sections, and prices are Edmonton--Egg receipts here are scarce, and prices have advanced. Dealers are now quoting country shippers; Extras, 37c; firsts, 35¢c; seconds, y Vancouver--While there has been some increase in receipts here, orders are still far in excess of the supply, Dealers are now quoting producers: Extras, 35c to 36c, firsts, 3lc to 32c; pullet extras, 29¢ to 3lc. Chicago--Spot, 39¢; February, 38 1.4c, TORONTO HAY AND STRAW Local quotations to country shippers are ruling as follows for hay, on a delivered basis: No, 2 timothy, $12 to $13 per ton; No, 3 timothy, $10.50 to $!1 per ton, Lower grades and stock hay are quoted at from $8 to $9 per ton delivered, Straw is steady with oat straw quotable at $9 per ton, an wheat straw at $9.50 per ton, delivered ba. sis, No, 1 timothy, loose, per ton, $18 to $19, No, 1 timothy, baled, nominal, EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, Feb, 26.--Receipts of hogs, 8,500; hold-overs, 300; market slow; 180 to 250 pounds, 15c lower at $11.50, packers hold. ing back, bidding $11,35; 130 pounds down, 25c lower, $10.50 to $10.73; packing sows, arch wer, eggs are light from firm, * | $9.50 to $10, Receipts of cattle, 1,150; market active; steers and yearlings, 25 to 50c higher; cows and bulls strong to 25¢ higher; good steers and yearlings, $11.25 to $13.25, one load $13.50; bulk short-fed, $10.75 to $12.25; cut- ter cows, $5.25 to $7; medium bulls, $8.75 to $9.50, Receipts of calves, 1,200; vealers active; steady; good to choice, $18 to $18.50; cull and common, $10,50 to $15,50, Receipts of sheep, 7,600; lambs fairly ac- tive, steady to 25c lower; good to choice, $17.25 to $17.75; bulk bettering at $17.50, one deck $17.85; medium, $14.50 to $15; fat ewes firm, $8.50 to $9.50, TORONTO GRAIN QUOTATIONS Grain dealers on the Toronto Board of Trade are making the following quotations for car lots: Manitoba Wheat No. 2 northern," $1.36, No, 3 northern, $1.32 1-2, No, 4 wheat, $1.29, No, 5 wheat, $1.18 1.2, No. 6 wheat, $1.02, (c.i.f. Goderich and Ba track, lc higher than a Mani No, 1 feed, 61 1-2¢, No. 2 feed, 59 1.2c, (c.i.f. Goderich and bay ports.) rican Ame; No, 2 yellow, kiln-dried, $1.08 1.2, No, 3 yellow, kiln-dried, $1.06 1.2, No. 4 yellow, kiln-dried, $1.04, : (Delivered Toronto.) . Millfeed, delivered, Montreal freights, bags included--Bran, per ton, $34.25; shorts, per ton, $36.25; middlings, $41.25, Ontario oats--Good, sound, heavy oats in car lots, 52 to 55c, f.0.b. shipping points, Ontario good milling wheat, f.0ob. ship- Jing points, according to freights, $1.30 to Barley--Malting, 76 to 7%, Buckwheat. to S0c, Rye--No, 2, $1.05, ports, Price on ve.) Oats Manitoba flour--First patents, in jute, $7.70, Toronto; second patents, in jute, $7.10. Track, Montreal, car lots--90 per gent. patents, per barrel, $5.70, FERGUSON WARNS POWER COMPANIES Says They Must Cease Try- ing to Undermine Hydro ~ Toronto, Feb, 26, -- Announce- ment of a Hydro poliey and hydro | |! service for Northern Ontario: warning of "Hands off!" to all private power interests, American controlled' or otherwise, who may be seeking to undermine and de- stroy the great Hydro enterprise; and 8 declaration--if merely a re- iteration, as he terms it-- of his policy on the matter of the St. Lawrence waterways, came from Premier Ferguson in the Legisla- ture yesterday with a suddenness that fairly electrified the slim House. Hydro for the North Mr, Ferguson minced no words on any one of the three points. Through the linking up of a num- her of private powers, all recently acquired by the Goverment. Hy- dro, he announced, would soon be able to give the North the same ad- vantage and benefits as enjoyed by Southern Ontario. The imsidious propaganda sup- posed to be conducted by the United States interests in the hope of uprooting the Hydro structure would stop, if the Government had to order the Commission to exprop- riate and put their plants out of business. And as for the St. Lawrence project Canada should not, he ar- gued, put itself in the position of being "minority stockholder in the greatest enterprise the country ever had." Mr. Ferguson's statements fol- lowed the request of Thomas K. Slack (Progressive, Dufferin), that he declare his sand on the Hydro and St. Lawrence waterways question. Winnipeg, Feb. 26.--Blackened ice-coated walls were all that re- of the Fashion Craft Building, a five-storey business . Fire swept the structure Saturday night, causing a loss esti- at $350,000. heart of the downtown bus- , the fire was a stub- tled more than five hours before it was brought under control. Several firms located in the building suffered total loss, while the United States immigration of- fices on the third floor lost many valuable records whch it will be impossible to repace, WAYTO Hospital Method Doctors Now Advise For Home Use Helps Many Here to End Colds Miss Bertha Lee, trained nurse, is still another, like numbers of Oshawa people, who has found the pleasant hospital method doc- tors now advise for home use is the quickest to end a head cold, cough or chest cold, Miss Lee awoke with a slight fever and "achy," irritated feeling in her nose, throat and chest, In- stead of ending it at once by prompt treatment,' she neglected the cold to nurse a patient who was seriously ill, That night the cold bothered her so she could not sleep and hy morning congestion caused her to fear pneumonia and call one of the hospital physicians. Acting on the doctor's advice she tdok double strength doses of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral--the hos- == NURSE FINDS QUICKEST _ RELIEVE COLDS pital certified medication of wild cherry, terpin-hydrate and other ingredients used to help reduce fever, clear up congestion and drive the cold out of one's system, Relief began almost insiantly, She felt its comforting, healing warmth--from her nose passages deep down into her chest, In a few hours her fever was normal, the "achy" feeling had disappear- ed and in just a day or so all trace of the cold was gone, Note: See other cases--all attending physician, Pleasant spoonfuls of Ayer's now and you, too, Jill feel certified by the Just a few Cherry Pectoral like a different pe: by all druggists, a ER Pec tora Chetty, $ adb7;, COLDS «/COUG TIFIED rson . HOSPITAL CE} BILL AMENDING THE FISHERIES ACT AROUSES INTEREST Halifax, N, 8., Feb, 26. -- The Bill amending the Fisheries Act, introduced in the House of Com- mons by Hon, P, J, A, Cardin, Min- ister of Marine and Fisheries, and given first reading on February 14, is of particular interest to the Mari- time Provinces, providing as it does that a trawler not registered as a British ship in Canada and not owned by a Canadian or Canadian company, may not operate to or from a Canadian port. The Bill also Jiovides that no one shall leave a Canadian point to fish for lobsters either inside or outside Canadian territorial waters, unless he has a license, costing twenty-five cents, from the Minis- ter of Marine and Fisheries, This is now a provision of the regula- tions, and its effectiveness would be assured if it were made by Sta- tute, Only one license would be is- sued to an individual to fish for lobsters in not more than one dis- trict during the year. Mr, Cardin introduced another measure making statutory the sea- son for lobster and smelt fishing. i NEW MARTIN NOW PLAYING Reginald Denny ro Wo Red Hot Speed Fox News NOW PLAYING "Wings" we WITH CLARA BOW CHARLES ROGERS RICHARD ARLEN GARY COOPER Regular Prices 10c, 80c, 40c ed exactly Time and money are very closely re- lated in our present day business rela- tions. But the saving of time is where we gain most--doing the most, prop erly, in the least time. A guaranteed delivery service allows you to accurately allot the time at your disposal for any particular unless guaranteed material is furni in conjunction with a guaranteed de- livery service, the improvising neces- sary loses almost all you have gained through promptness. These two are with us synonymous. You must have quality lumber deliver- it costs no more than inferiors Oshawa Lumber Co. Limited TIME job, but when you 'want it.....,,.and THE ARCADE Limited We Have Just Placed in Stock New Spring Coats That are Decidedly Different, Smart and up to the Minute in Style Made from a wide range of Tweeds and Plain Cloths At Popular Prices