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Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
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lundi 19 juin 1944
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[" V #hprtirookp üatlu Swnrù \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 Established 1897.THE PAPER OF THE EASTERN TOWNSHIPS SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, MONDAY, JUNE 19, I9-R WEATHER Thundershowers.CITY EDITION.Summer May Bring Full Success To Cause Of Freedom-Churchill U.S.TROOPS LAY SIEGE TO CHERBOURG DEFENCES Gen.Montgomery Building Up His programme is Forces For Typical \u201cMonty\u201d Punch mapped out by British Premier Says Invasion Was Launched In Full Accord With Reds; OMINOUS LULL GIVES CANUCKS Rocket Bomb Base Bombed Backed By Thousands Of Big Guns British Division Breaks Through German Defences in a Small Breach 11 Miles West of Caen\u2014U.S.Forces that Severed Peninsula Busy Widening Their Break-Through Path to Atlantic Coast\u2014Germans Unlikely to Succeed in Destroying Port of Cherbourg.Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Porce, June 19,\u2014® ; \u2014American troops laid siege today to the defences of Cherbourg while to the Eastern end of the beachhead at Tilly sur Seulles, 11 miles West of Caen, a British division broke through German defences in a small breach.The British forces were reported fighting in the streets of Tilly.All along the rest of the beachhead front there were brisk small ' JAP ASSAULTS ARE REPELLED ON MARIANAS U.S.Soldiers and Marines Fight Their Way Through Cane-Fields Halfway Across Saipan Island.Pearl Harbor, June 19.\u2014(Æ3)\u2014 actions as Gen.Montgomery, Allied Ground Commander, built up his American soldiers and Marines, forces for atypical \u201cMonty\u201d punch backed up by thousands of big guns.5g,h,tin\u2019f\tway through cane- East of Tilly, too, British forces have made lighter gains in minor jn the Marianas and repelling Jap- attacks, and have beaten off German counter-attacks in the woods there, anese assaults by tanks and by lanJ- mg craft, drove down toward the There have been small gams by British and Canadian 3rd Division island\u2019s principal harbor and naval troops in the area around Caen, while a small advance has also been 13886 at Magicienne Bay today.made Southeast of Bayeux.\t?The spearhead of the American drive to capture this big port, developed by Napoleon, was the U.S.9th Division.It was this division that broke through German defences to take Bizerte, Tunisia, thirteen months ago.United States forces that severed the Peninsula were busy widening their break-through path to the Atlantic Coast, which even last night was seven miles wide.They were driving the Germans down toward La Haye du Puits, big road junction seven miles South of St.Sauveur le Vicomte, into what appeared to be another trap, for one American transpeninsular spearhead has been within four miles of La Haye for several days.If this spearhead takes the town of Le Haye, the Germans in that area will be in another pocket\u2014between St.Lo D\u2019Ourville and the Atlantic coast.A third American column struck South of LLson to within six miles of St.Lo, important rail and high QUEBECC.C.F.^^!.^iseÏ!5!™ïfHANCETORESrjEarly Today R.J.Lamoureux Elected President of Quebec Section of C.C.F.Party, Succeeding Dr.Frank Scott.By GUY BEAUDRY Canadian Press Staff Writer Montreal, June 19.\u2014 ((I1) \u2014Delegates at the closing session of a two-day provincial convention of the C.C.F.party yesterday mapped out a large-scale organization provincial plan to familiarize Quebecers with the draft of their programme they adopted during their meeting here.Definite phrasing and wording of the programme was left to the Provincial Council after delegates in closed and open sessions decided on the principles of the programme.R.J.Lamoureux, assistant direc- ister Churchill, in a speech delivered permanent co-operation and to build « M°ican E\u201e,b«,y I.w ,1»,,\tSS'fe ago ami permitted to be published uween aj] our nations and will sue-only today, said the months of this.eccd in preserving peace.\" summer may \u201cbring full success to \u201cWe look forward to the future the cause of freedom.\"\tin which the rights of small nations He said the invasion of Nor- will be upheld ami protected and in mandy was a great tactical sur- which the strong will use ther power prise to the Germans who did not under the law for the protection of know it was coming until they saw : the weak.\u2019\u2019 the ships and \u201cit may be that events Whether the Germans are defeat-will occur in the next few months ed \u201cthis year or next, the British which wdll show us whether we are and American peoples will never soon to be released of the curse | falter or withdraw their hands from which has been laid upon us by j the task which they have under-' the Germans.\u201d\t| taken,\u201d he declared.\u201cTogether with 1 The invasion was launched \u201cin our Allies wo will go on to the end.full accord\u201d with the Russians and and the end will be the more teethe decisions reached at Teheran, he 1 rible for our foes the longer their added, \u201cand although the execution | struggle continues and the longer of the plans adopted there is far this war is protracted.\u201d from being complete, it is being ; Referring to the inconvenience steadily unrolled, and the months of j caused the diplomatic corps by re- tor of District No.6 of the United I this summer may by the victories of strictions on communications to pro- Chinese Lose Added Ground NearChuchow former American base had been shelled last Thursday, gave no indication as to whether an invasion was in prospect.Fifteen hundred miles to the South, just below the Equator, medium bombers and (fighters temporarily neutralized Chungking, June 19.\u2014(/P)-\u2014Jap-: Japan\u2019s last remaining effective air-anese forces have made an addi-: base in New Guinea.They destroyed tional advance Southward toward !50 , e\"en3y Planes at Sorong and .,\t\u201e\t, rr ,\tsank five enemy merchantmen and the vital Canton-Hankow railway ;half a dozen sma]ler vesse)gi junction of Hcngyang, driving sev-1 Radio Tokyo rep0rted that hun-eral miles South of captured Chu-'dreds of bombers and fighters at-chow in their Hunan Province off en- tacked two islands, in the Kazan sive, the Chinese high command said'grouP ^50 miles Northwest of v ;\t,\ti Saipan, Friday.American planes '\t'raided the Kazan and Bonin Islands This force reached the North for the first time on Wednesday, Steel Workers of America (C.I.O.), was elected President of the Quebec .\t.section of the C.C.F.party.He suc- mg crait, drove doxyn toward the eeeds Dr.F'rank Scott, of Montreal, National Chairman of the C.C.F'., who had held both offices for a Slightly more than 100 miles number of years Dr.Scott remains Southward, American warships on the Provincial Council, bombarded Guam heavily for the! Other members of the Provincial first time in the war.Admiral | Council whose job will be to imple-Nimitz, in announcing that this (ment the convention\u2019s recommendations, were elected as follows: Vice-Presidents, William Long, International Union of Machinists (A.F.L.) and Guy Merrill Desaul-niers, legal adviser of the Canadian Congress of Labor; members of the escorting j executive, J.M.Bedard, Harry ' Wilks, F'rank Watson, Dr.N.Wev-rick, Dr.Frank Scott, all of Montreal, Lucien Lepinay, Ph.Vaillan- R.court, both of Quebec, and Laroche, of St.Lambert.Here is a summary of the adopted draft programme to be presented to Quebec voters at the next provincial elections : 1.\tPublic ownership of public utilities.2.\tLong- range planes for the de-, velopment of social ownership of natural resources.this Allied campaign bring full sue-j serve secrecy Churchill said, \u201cthe cess to the cause of freedom.\ti lives of a million men mav be en- Toucbing on political aspects of j gaged now on both sides\u201d of the the war, the Prime Minister said ef- present struggle in France.Fighter-Bombers, Attacking at Rate of One a Minute, Drive Home Three-Ply Assault in Direct Support of Invasion Forces\u2014Pilotless Explosives Hurtled Over into England.By GLADWIN HILL, Associated Press War Correspondent; Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force, June 19\u2014(A3) \u2014U.S.heavy bombers 500 to 700 strong hammered Hitler's rocket-bomb launching area at Pas de bank of the Lu river, less than sev- destroying 47 Japanese planes and enty-five miles Northeast of Heng-: sinking or damaging more than a; .a- Creation of provincial commis-yang, the high command said, also dozen ships or small water craft.j\t.reporting that in the suburbs of en- 1 The Saipan beachhead established 1 duce and sel1 essentml commodR.es, e circled | sions with exclusive right to pro-and sell essential commodities, Public ownership of breweries.ChangsLa, fierce fighting bv Marines, with the support of,.\t.\t,\t.\t,\t,, way iunction in the Vire River Val-1 continued unabated.Across the army infantry units, at last reports )-.lrleknesrand distilleries under the '\t.extended from Agingan P-n?.n ! Q«®bec Liq ley, 42 air miles South\tof Cher-1 Slang river from the besieged Chin-\textended from Agingan\tPoint\ton bourg.\t! ese bastion, in the foothills of the\tthe\tSouthwestern tip 514\tmiles\tup Beach areas were quiet, with the\tj Yue-hlu mountains, other sanguin-\tthe\tWest Coast almost to Grapan, wind at \u201cforce two,\u201d and\tunloading\ti ary fighting was reported in pro-\tthe\tisland\u2019s largest town, of men and materiel proceeded at aigress.rapid rate.One officer returning to Britain said it was quieter behind the lines on the beachhead than in Southern England, where the Germans sent over 'hundreds of rocket bombs, causing casualties and damage, particularly among the civilian population.But in six days of incessant bombardment with the new weapon, the Germans had failed to halt the dispatch of a single ship to the beachhead.On the beachhead side the German air force virtually had dis-peared, which might be an indica- Continued on page 2, col, 3.Although the Chinese portrayed : Cihangsha as still in their hands, the situation appeared virtually hopeless, and the main body of Japanese1 who by-passed the city appeared definitely to have Hengyang as their goal.Their protective columns were branching out both East and West of the Canton-Hankow railway.In the maritime province of Che-! kiang, the high command admitted j belatedly, Westward-driving enemy forces have taken Lungyu, a railway town about thirty miles West -of the enemy base of Kinhwa.The Japanese have captured three important Chinese strongholds in their Hunan offensive aimed at clearing the Canton-Hankow railway.; EDMONTON AREA IS STRUCK BY SEVERE FLOODS uor Commission 5.\tEncouragement to producers and consumers, co-operatives, credit unions, mutual insurance companies and non-interference with existing co-operatives in Quebec.6.\tPrivate ownership of the farm with a programme of large-scale drainage, assistance to producers, extension of farm credit, provision of cheap electricity, provision for price floors, development of industries using agricultural products, legislation to deal with indebtedness of farmers, crop insurance.Protection of the \u201cfundamental\u201d Canadians Preparing for Next Phase in Their Campaign After Fighting for Days and Nights with Little Sleep.By WILLIAM STEWART, Canadian Press War Correspondent.With the Canadian Forces in F'rance, June 19.-(1® Cable) \u2014 The last week has bean quiet on the Canadian sector of the Normandy front but the lull is ominous.It has seemed unnatural to assault troops who in their successful landing fought their way up beaches and kept lighting for several days and nights with little sleep.The Canadians have made use of the lull to rest up and get ready for the next phase but all the while Calais today as more of the pilot* they have had one car cocked for\t1 an outburst that might be the signal less explosives hurtled over into for another of those jabbing counter-1 England, and other big Allied attacks by which the Germans tried ,\t,\t, ,\t_ to break a hole into the bridgehead [ l,lanes struck heavily at German positions._\tj air bases in Southwestern France.A lull in the battle, of course, I n- , ,\t,\t,\t.doesn\u2019t mean a complete stillness in | Fighter-bombers, attacking at which the droning of bees can be the rate of one a minute, drove « three-ply assault in direct The second-front air cover is as great support of the invasion forces.One as ever provided anv army.\twave pounded trapped German 1 hen there have been artillery!\tJ exchanges and mortar fire and Cana- .forces on Northern Cherbourg clian and German patrols have work-; penjnsuia.Another battered coined then-way through the tall grasses .and crept along the nedges at night !\troutes to the South- on reconnaissance.\tj east 0Ver which the Nazis were But generally it\u2019s meant a lay-up .\t.\t.,\t., .\t, for the infantrymen who fought\tto reinforce their armored magnificently after marching quickly i divisions in the Tilly-Caen sector.in from the beaches and diggino- in.m\t,\t,\t,\t, ,, By EDWARD KENNEDY\tMoscow, June 19.\u2014 (JP) \u2014Soviet | In forward areas, the lull has pro- ; The tlllrd stream bombed the are®.Associated Press War Corres- [field dispatches declared today that.'lured a picture of soldiers, stripped ! North of Paris, disrupting enemy pondent\t!\tthe Red Army had smashed forward | to the waist, sunning themselves in ; rpinforeement lines Vatican City, June 19.\u2014W\u2014The , to the threshold of Viipuri, key city I the green fields into which they have Allied occupation of Home finds the ; in Southern Finland, after breaking cut their life-saving slit trenches.College of Cardinals reduced to for-(the Mannerheim Line and capturing As long as there is no shell or mor-ty-two members\u2014the lowest number [ Koivisto Fortress at the mouth of : tar lire close to them, they doze, in 144 years.\tI\tViipuri Bay.\tj But the whistle and explosion of one The normal complement oi the! Farther inland on the Karelian j or two enemy projectiles sends them College theoretically is seventy al- j Isthmus the Russians were reported : underground.though it is practice always to have ; t0 i^vg dnven two and one-half miles : Sometimes there is a httle gunfire some vacancies.\t!\tpast the Mannerheim Line in the for a while, then the guns behind There are no prospects for an im-i mediate increase as Pope Pius XII NO CARDINALS WILL BE NAMED TILL WAR ENDS College of Cardinals Now Reduced to 42 Members, Lowest Number in 144 Years.SOVIET TROOPS ON THRESHOLD OF KEY CITY Have Smashed Through Mannerheim Line and Captured Koivisto Fortress at Mouth of Viipuri Bay.Moscow, June 19.\u2014 (fP) \u2014Soviet Murila sector.\t\\ the Canadians will open up with a .j ., .\tWhile the Red Army\u2019s left flank dozen rounds or so.A few minutes has decided not to created new C -.h d d the m0fit\tprogress along\t1 after\tthey\thave fired, German\tshells nir±rf^i iflerW \"i h She Vatican ^ Gulf of Finland,\tdispatches said\twill come\tsinging over.P Th/rp Uuve hern re no ids that 'the right wing of the opposite side Because the war on the Canadian ?by,Po\u201eHff Lcrecf named some1 of the Isthmus now\twas.advancing\tfront\thas\tbeen moi c or less\tstatic, Cardinals under a process known aS:al™K Lake Ladoga,\tcapturing nu-, with\tonly\tnibbling movements here petto\u201d but these reports are j meroua pointe._______\t.and heie, fewer German prisoners in denied authoritatively.There were sixty-two Cardinals! London.June 19 -f/Pj- at the conclave at which the present i khrongh the old Mannerheim line-1939.His eleva- F inland s third and last mam do- jare seen lately.Sniping also has -Smashing j practically disappeared.The Canadians have had more time to examine the hulks of German The American heavy bombers slashed at rocket installations after a night assault by the R.A.F., in which one plane was lost, and a raid in the same area Sunday by 250 big U.S.bombers.Other formations hit airfield targets including Bordeaux-Merignac, Oazaux, West of Bordeaux, and Corne Ecluse near the coast West of Cognac.A rare stretch of bad June weather still was hampering air operations.Fighter-bombers blasted to pieces one concentration of several hundred Germans.One fighter group saw what looked like a big procession of citizens out for a ride in horse shays, but when the pilots; \u201cbuzzed\u201d Pope was elected in lava, j-.io c'-.c-\t,\t.: - .- .i *\twc tion to the Papal reduced the num-l fence\tsystem\u2014with a speed\twhich tanks thrown against\tthem last\tweek 1 the\tcavalcade for a closer\tlook Ger- ber to sixty-one.Two Cardinals indicated Finnish resistance was and decided they are 46-ton panthers man soldiers dived for covei died before the war started and ( failing rapidly, the Russian army rather than 60-ton tigers.The | ammunition - loaded \u201cshays\u201d Residents Report Loss of rights °f the working class, positive .\t.I, 1\t,\t, recognition of the right to work and LiVeStOCK, WSSh-OUt Ol to economic and social security for ^ ^\t^ ._ Railway Roadbeds and 'vorkers; repeal of Quebec\u2019s new la- American, Argentine, Spanish, H Highways and Evacuation of Low-Lying Districts.seventeen have died since.\t| closed in today on the port of Vii-; panthers are worthy opponents for Of the surviving forty-two Car-\tPuri, fall of which ended the 1939-40\t(any tanks and it is remarkable to dinals, one is a Canadian, Rodrigue 1\twar between the two countries.\t: see some that have been knocked out.Cardinal Villeneuve, Archbishop of; Cracking of- the Mannerheim line Evidence of the success of the Quebec.\t_\tI was announced by the Soviet High beachhead buildup is more apparent Tweflty-five are Italian, four are\tCommand last night in a communi-\tin rearward areas where many little\t.w*., F'rench, two Germans and one each\tqUe which said the Red Army had\troads are busy with Allied military | age\tof motor vehicle Tho were sent up in a string of firecracker explosions while horses scampered across the fields.The Germans apparently are making increased u-e of horsedrawn vehicles, indicating perhaps a short- German Pilotless Planes Proving Only Nuisance To British People bor legislation.7.Free and compulsory education up to 16 years, free and uniform text books; recognition that educa-Edmonton, June 19.\u2014«k\u2014The : Lon is within provincial jurisdic-worst flood in 35 years struck Belve- Lon; taking over by the province of dere.Manola and Rossington, about 60 per cent of the cost of education; 65 miles Northwest of Edmonton, ; programme of education for adult during the week-end following heavy ganan, Irish, Australian, Polish, | Viipuri yesterday after seizing Koi- The nightly increase in bridgehead ! bombers hammered oil refineries Portuguese, Belgian\tand\tSyrian.\tvisto.Western anchor\tof the shatter-\tanti-aircraft defences j>.just one of\tand storage\tplants in the Hamburg Eighteen Cardinals\tare\tliving ,n\ted Finnish defences.\tthe ways of measuring the solidified 1\tarea and three enemy airdromes in G^rmfn-TontrMÎed territory Ve five\ti .Dispatches relayed\tfrom Helsinki\tAllied position in Normandy.Fmm j\tNorthwest\tGermany yesterday.^\t\u2019\tv,a Stockholm this\tmorning said\ta £uris °n the night of landing\tvvhile 250\tother heavy bombers un- advanced to within 17 miles of traffic.\t| More than 1,300 American heavy (in addition to those in Rome) in c ,\t.\t,\t¦ , .i ; United Nations territory and five j f.ov,et trooPE already were working s.in neutral countries.All the Car- Llein waj aiong the shores Oi Viipuri ttay, and predictions were freely Continued on page 2, col.4.Continued on page 2.col.6.rams in Alberta\u2019s foothills that sent swollen rivers over banks in several districts.\t_ I Loss of livestock, wash-out of rail- ! way roadbeds and highways, and.temporary evacuation from some low-lying areas were reported while ( fllg\u201c residents of Cadomin, Luscar and Mountain Park, about 165 miles West of Edmonton, were short of food supplies.Trucks took food to Coaispur, 30 i miles East of Cadomin, during the week-end and latest reports from j Continued on page 2, col.6.Continued on page 2, col.2.By ALAN RANDAL.\tipected to get bombed once the sec- Canadian Press Staff Writer.jond front opened and who developed Somewhere in Southern England, a mental and physical defence June 19.\u2014C.P .Cable)\u2014There\u2019s a against regular bombers to a Wellsian atmosphere in living on degree.Southern England since Hitler de-.The people have been assured cided to bring Britain's little people ; mastery of the new weapon is back into the front line by putting coming soon but week-end papers to use pilotless planes\u2014or more suggested that the best method correctly winged bombs \u2014 which would be to push the Normand-, Britons have known for some time mvasion frontier so far back, Old ^ëtowng of the coal branch district he had been holding up his sleeve.Eng and would be out of range of were tha.suppIies were sufficient to | It s a weird ieeimg, like getting Continental buzz-bomb bases.\t]a^t through today\t1 a glimpse of some world of fantasy,' Air commentators suggested it Main line Canadian National Rail-to know these so-calieu buzz-bombs, was quite conceivable these winged wavs trains w re rerouted via Cal-! rumble bombs or come: planes are bombs could be built to greater size, ' ga;.y Canadian Pacific\"* Railway shooting through English skies day increasing the range, but any in- fines to Vancouver due to washouts! and night, without regard for mill- crease would bring with it ditfi- between Edmonton and Edson.tary objectives and likely to strike culties.Any increase in the range Railway roadbeds also were wash- ' anywhere.\twould nave to be made by providing ed out in'the Belvedere.Manola and' Generally, Britons seem to feel more space for fuel which would Rossington areas.Amount of live-! that if Hitler is laughing at what reduce the bombload, unless the stock Iceses in the district was not: he believes is British terror, the last whole thing were increased in ratio, immediately determined, laugh definitely will be with Britain If this happened, a bigger launching At Athabasca, 100 miles North f because it is generally agreed he is ! base would be needed and the big- Edmonton, the drinking water supply wasting his time if this weapon is ger the base, the more vulnerable it was cut off late Saturday due to the supposed to win trm war for him would become to attack.Obviously, rapid rise of the Athabasca River.Buzz-bombs are nothing like as bad if there were no more bases there\tThe North C\u2019aekatchewan\u2019s high rS even the pocket blitz on London would be no more buzz-bombs fly-early this year.\ting around.If there is any advantage in using So the suggestion is that if Can-a crewless, bomb-carring plane it is ada and the United States are wor-purely a mental one.T:.e uncan- tied over the German pilotless niness of a crewless bomber seems,__________________________________ a bit upsetting to people who ex- Continued on page 2, col, 6.waters caused families in the flats at Edmonton to evacuate last week.The river, however, dropped five feet during the week-end but when the flood waters reached Northwestern Saskatchewan they overflowed the banks at North Baitleford.WAR BULLETINS Chungking.\u2014The Chinese High Command announced tonight the withdrawal of Chinese troops from the Burma Road town of Lungling.* * * * * Kandy, Ceylon.\u2014Allied troops have compressed further the Japanese defensive arcs at the enemy\u2019s North Burma bases of Mogaung and Myitkyina, and have advanced steadily on the Kohima dent in India despite Monsoon conditions and enemy demolitions.* « * * * An Advanced Landing Ground in France.\u2014American fighters and fighter-bombers began operating form this base yesterday and by supper-time fighters had run off seven missions in close support of troops.The planes took off as fast as they could be refueled, re-armed and strung with bombs.\u2022 \u2022 « * * London.\u2014Algiers Radio reported today that the British 8th Army entered the Southern suburbs of Perugia, 129 miles North of Rome, this morning.Reports from Italy, however, said merely that armored units of the 8th were at San Martino Delfico, less than three miles from Perugia.voiced in the Swedish capital that should Viipuri fall the Finns probably would sue for peace.Finnish Premier Edwin Linkomies : acknowledged last night the Rus-' Sian,?had scored \u201cconsiderable sue-' cess\u201d in efforts to knock Finland out; of the war, but nevertheless he' .\t,\t_ _____ ca.ifd upon his people to fight to the Associated Press War Correspondent | taken ansi strong pressure is being French ~\t\u2018 ' Battalions Seize Greater Portion Of Island Of Elba By LYNN HEINZFIRLING, | line, but more villages have been death.\u201cWe are fighting for our freedom,\u201d Linkomies said in an address to the Finnish people broadcast from Hei-einki.\u201cWe cannot imagine life here except a.s a free and independent people.\" Th® ML of Koivisto represented a both flanks and in the centre of their ô-j-mne advance in nine days along line, takincr Assisi, birthplace of St.Francis.the Western coast of the Kraelian LUhmus for the Russian Army under Marshal Leonid A.Govorov which launched its offensive at Beloostrov June 10.exerted against the stubborn German garrison at the central sector road of Perugia, 85 miles North of Rome and about 72 miles Southeast of Florence.Eighth Army troops captured Assisi, 12 miles Southeast of Perugia, and Deruta, South of the bitterly-contested roa.j junction town.A communique said heavy fighting also has taken place at Citta Della Pieve, 22 miles Southwest of Perugia.In the , ,\t, ,\t,\t\u2022 Adriatic sector, Allied troops are rounded up several hundred prison- approaching the Tronto River.Rome, June 19.\u2014(/P) \u2014 French Colonial battalions captured Porto- : F\u2019erraio and now hold the \u201cgreater part of the island of Elba,\u201d Allied Headquarters announced today, while on the Italian Peninsula mud-spattered Allied troops made gains on Beating down determined German resistance on Elba, the French have The Russians said their forces had !CrS\u2019 inc!ud.in* ;cve,r\u2018l1 hi*h officers-! Referring; to'fighting along the cracked the Mannerheim Line at Murila, 12 miles South of Moivisto.a communique saic.\tWest Coast, the communique said, .A field dispatch said the French\t\u201cWest of Highway 2,\t5th\tArmy They\tdeclared\tthey had scored\tLad seized more than two-thirds of\ttroops have driven the\tenemy\tfrom important gains all along a 72-mile L'ba.\timportant defensive positions and in front extending Eastward from Koi- Before taking Fortoferraio, the the coastal sector have taken Cam-visto to\t\\ alkjarr'i\tand Rautu.Valk-\tcapital on the North Coast, the\tpagnatico and are some\tmiles\tNorth jam is\t25 miles from Lake Ladoga.\tFrench captured Napoleon's Villa,\tof Grosseto.\u201d on which the Eastern end of the The invading force brought artillery The weather also hampered Allied Mannerheim Line is based, and Ran- j against the Germans bitterly con- air operations from Mediterranean tu is about 14 miles nearer the lake.! testing control of Porto Longone on and Italian ba cs yesterday, but Swedish dispatches from Hensinki ; the East Coast.\tfighters of the 1st Tactical Air Force quoted the Finns as saying that the Allied 5th and British Sth Army made a sweep over enemy commu-Rucsians had hurled more Continued on page 2, coL 2, than troops in Italy are meeting increas- nications in Southern France, des- -j ing resistance as they drive the Ger-1 troying six locomotives while Spit- 2- mans back toward the Pisa-Riniini fires hit objective, iu Elba.7832 I 2.SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD MONDAY, JUNE 19, 1944.ALCOHOL TOLL IN SAINT JOHN NOW THIRTEEN Sixteen More in Hospital as Police Scour City for Twenty-Five Gallons of Poison Still Unaccounted for.Saint John, N.B., June 19.\u2014((B\u2014 With thirteen dead after drinking methyl alcohol as a beverage, police scoured this city today in search of twenty-five gallons of the poison etill unaccounted for.Sixteen are in hospital for medical treatment and some are in a critical condition.Two iron lungs are being vised for those more seriously affected by the alcohol.Authorities said the alcohol was part of a shipment going Overseas for the Canadian Red Cross and that it disappeared from a shed on the waterfront at West Saint John early last Friday.Most of the victims arc stevedores, Deaths of four men and a woman were reported during the week-end.The woman was Mrs.Julia Ewart, No Cardinals Continued from page 1.dinals in countries held by Germans are believed to be in their Sees except for Cardinal Augustus Hlond, Primate of Poland.Cardinal Ulond came to Rome after the German invasion of Poland, later moved to Southern France and, when the Germans took that area, is said to have left f°r Spain.The Pontiff\u2019s resolve to appoint no Cardinals during hostilities is based on his feeling that the creation of a Prince of the Church is^ a joyous occasion and war, with its destruction and suffering, is no time for it.It is expected that he will call a consistory shortly after the war is ended at which time a large number of Cardinals will be named.It i sexpected that ho will call Pope Benedict XV created several Cardinals during the last war.REAUf TODAY AND TUES.THE WEST'S MIGHTIEST EPIC of Gallant Love and Adventure I , , In Gorgeous TECHNICOLOR l Randolph\tGlenn\tClaire SCOTT\tFORD\tTREVOR \u2014IN \u2014 \u201cTHE DESPERADO\u201d with Evelyn Keyes, Edgar Buchanan.\u2014SECOND HAPPY HIT-FUN AHOY! 3 Sailors on 48 Hilarious Ilouds\u2019 Leave! \u201cSAILOR\u2019S HOLIDAY\u201d with Arthur Lake, Jane Lawrence, Bob Haymes.\u201cYOU DEAR BOY,\u201d a Roaring Comedy with Vera Vague.Latest World Events.EXTRA\u2014MON.and TUES.\u2014Republic's Smashing Serial Sensation \"S P Y SMASHER,\u201d with Fane Richmond.COMING WED.UNTIL SAT.UNBELIEVABLE ! Your First Opportunity to See the Most Amazing Story the Screen Has Ever Told! \u201cTHE LADY AND THE MONSTER,\u201d with Vera Hruba Ralston, Richard Arlen, Erich von Storheim, Helen Vinson, Sidney Black-mer.ADDED\u2014THE KINGS OF COMEDY IN THEIR GREATEST LAUGH RIOT! Stan LAUREL, Oliver HARDY in \u201cSONS Or THE DESERT.\u201d.EXTRA \u2014The Greaaest Show on Earth\u2014On the Screen in TECHNICOLOR! \u201cBEHIND THE BIG TOP.\u201d mill Soviet Troops Continued from page 1.2,000 planes into the Karelian offensive and that Soviet air superiority was overwhelming, despite assistance offered by German airmen based in Finland.Before smashing through the Man-nerheim Line the Russians had driven through two other intricate defence belts which Moscow advices quoted Russian officers as saying were the strongest they had encountered in this war.Soviet dispatches, however, said that the Finnish troops \u2014 whoso fighting qualities the Russians always have respected\u2014were not offering the same desperate resistance as they did in the winter of 1939-40.There were no reports of large-scale action elsewhere on the Russian front, but the Karelian campaign generally was regarded as only a prelude to greater Russian blow's elsewhere.In this connection, Associated Press War Correspondent Henry Cassiday said in a dispatch last night from the Karelian front: \u201cThere are signs that this offensive, while of major importance in the aim of knocking Finland out of the war, is only a sideshow to the Red Army as a whole.A further offensive carrying out the Russian part of the Teheran pledge of combined blows at Germany from East, West and South is expected.\u201d Saint John, who died late Saturday.Her husband, Henry B.Ewart, was admitted to hospital and his condition was announced as serious.Police fear that some of the alcohol may have reached the hands of bootleggers and subsequently doctored for sale.Every available police officer is engaged in a city-wide search of the premises of all persons known to be or suspected of being active in bootlegging.TODAY AND TOMORROW w iN and now that I've found you \u2014 nothing can keep us apart!' * 'fv .M-G-M msents ÎÇ Jr1 '~*TWÊêKÊIIÊÊÊHSMÊMÊÊÊÊÊKÈ sone of RUSS1X -ON THE S VME BILL- RED SKELTON'S GREATEST FARCE! \u201cWHISTLING IN BROOKLYN\u201d with Red SKELTON and Ann RUTHERFORD _ PLUS \u2014 Disney\u2019s Colored Cartoon and World Events.Gen.Montgomery Continued from page 1.tion that Marshal Rommel was conserving hus forces for an all-out attack.The German-held Channel Island*, Which have many heavy guns, may give the Allied Western flank a good deal of trouble, but so far British and American battleships have been able to deal with any coafttai defences encountered.While the Germans were expected to attempt destruction of the port of Cherbourg, they are unlikely to prevent its use by the Allies.The naval docks, especially, are hewn out of solid rocks and there is little the Germans can do against these.Nor is it likely they can seriously cripple the great mole, which dates back to 108f; and is largely a work of Sebastien de Vauban, Marshal of France, who became a great engineering authority on sieges and fortifications.It was disclosed today that on the Eastern end of the beachhead Ger.Montgomery has under his command the British 7th Armored Division, famed as the \u201cJuba,\u201d or \u201c'Desert Rat\u201d division.\u201cMonty\u201d apparently was biding his time, as always, to launch an all-out blow to beat a way out of the ] beachhead and into the open country of France.When the time comes, it is more than likely that the \u201cDesert Rats,\u201d ¦who Montgomery insisted be brought to England, will be playing a major role in the assault, j There was no E-boat or U-boat .activity reported) and the great in-: vasion armadas sent an unending j stream of supplies to the beachhead, j without interruption.| Neither today\u2019s communique No.j27 nor that of last night, made specific mention of action on the Can-ladian front where 3rd Division I troops were last officially reported jholding German armor tightly en-! gaged on the Eastern flank of the | jagged invasion front.In a dispatch last night, Ross Munro, chief Canadian Press War I Correspondent in the field, reported British columns in this area were maintaining strong patrols on the German defence perimeter around embattled Caen, aided by Canadian patrols which also were in action night and day.Meantime, American troops have forged a seven-mile band of steel across the Cherbourg Peninsula after isolating the strategic port of Cherbourg itself with its 25,000 to 30,000 Nazi defenders, whose fate now appears sealed.This new victory apparently assured the ultimate possession of Cherbourg, France\u2019s third most important port as a base of operations from which the Allies might enlarge and solidify the continental toe-hold which their military leaders already have declared secure against any attack the Germans may bring against it.Isolation of the strategic peninsula was accomplished early yesterday by United States forces, headed I by the battle-tried 9th Division, j Thus today the Allies held an ever-firmer bridgehead in France.; Further, the strategically vital [Cherbourg Peninsula was one-third clear, with an almast certain prospect for its complete occupation.This would give the Allies necessary freedom of manoeuvre, and build-up of supply, for a full-[ scale drive inland.And even yet the Allies had not [shown their real strength.Their I accomplishments thus far had been achieved with no real sea base, but (had been fed from a beach by an j almost incredible cross-Channel [shuttle of every available craft.I A seven-hour battle developed after the 9th Division reached the ;sea at Barneville-sur-Med.The Nazi 77th Division attacked in waves and Iran into the heaviest concentration I of mortar and artillery fire laid idown since D-Day, 13 days ago.Its 'shattered remnants finally retreated j to the North, harassed by Allied ] fighters and fighter-bombers.The Americans enlarged their [corridor to the Atlantic coast.Today it appeared doubtful that Cher-I bourg could remain long in German hands.Elsewhere there were few major changes in the situation along the beachhead front yesterday.In the centre of the front.Allied troops were within six miles of St.Lo, Vital road junction, on the Eastern ! flank Canadians and British forces .still were locked in battle with Nazi I armor.iYesterday 1,300 Flying Fortresses anil Liberators hammered targets in ; Germany, while lighter craft supported the beachhead forces.The American drive to the sea placed Lt.-Gen, Bradley's troops i firmly on an 18-mile stretch of the ! Atlantic coast between Cape ! Carteret and St.Lo-D'Ourville, cutting off 400 square miles of the Cherbourg Peninsula.The next indicated move was en-I largement of the four-mile sector at St.Sauveur le Vicomte, the area of greatest peril from Nazi counterattacks.down the road and rail routes to La Haye da Puits.Yet another threat to the port of 1 Cherbourg was an American drive in the Montebourg-Quineville sector, .some 14 miles South of Cherbourg.Allied Headquarters announced [yesterday that the bag of prisoners in the beachhead operation had reached 15,000.Associated Press War Correspondent Don Whitehead, writing from the front described the German 77th Division\u2019s fanatical and fruitless attempt to break the American trap on the peninsula as i \u201cliterally a massacre\u2014the massacre of St.Jacques cle Nehou.For that is where the Americans battered the Germans in one of the bloodiest encounters of the invasion.\u201d St.Jacques do Nehou is 4'é miles Northwest of St.Sauveur.\u201cThe enemy literally is running in circles trying to find a way out of the Cherbourg trop,\u201d Whitehead said.Munro said in a dispatch from Ally-held Baveux last night that Maj.H.B.Gooding, formerly of iPort Colborne, Ont., had been 1 named Head of the First Civil Affairs Detachment to establish itself in France in the wake of the in- American Sailors Saved German Pilotless Continued from page I.COUNTRY AND DAIRY PRODUCTS PRICES Up the side of the British destroyer \u201cBeagle\u201d go American sailors rescued off the French coast after their landing craft was sunk during the invasion of France.Fortunately, they were none the worse for their dunking in the Channel.planes, they can forget about it and settle down to let Britain work out a quick solution.Meantime, \u201ctoo little and too late\u201d is the verdict of British experts.Used by thousands months ago, they might seriously have interrupted with invasion preparations.On the scale they are appearing now, they are only a nuisance.Already a good number have been destroyed in the air by gunfire.But their very presence is changing the British way of life a bit.Shelters are more crowded at nights and tin hats are becoming the customary thing for civilians and service people alike to sling over the shoulder.The German-controlled Paris Radio quoted a Berlin announcement as saying that in addition to London, targets hit by the rocket bombs included Plymouth, Southampton, Portsmouth, Welmcuth, the Isle of Wignt, Brighton.Little-hampton, Hastings, Filkestone, Dover, Margate and Gravesend.Montreal, June 19\u2014Local produce] items were steady at the week-end j with little change reported in prices | The egg market continued about the same under lighter receipts.Butter was steady with arrivals somewhat improved both over the _ previous week and a year ago.Cheese re-1 ceipts were also higher.EGGS: (c.per doz.) Govt, spot quotes: A-large, 35-35!& i A-medium, I TÏ-'lMtÇ; A-pullets, 27-27!ai B, 30-1 30lb! C, 23-23lb.BUTTER (c.Der lb.): Open Market.No.1 pasteurized SSTs-'a.Small lots to reail trade, solids, 35-351,* prints, 35Vb-35%.\t, CHEESE (c.per ID.;: Que and Western white and colored.' for export and local trade, 20 11/16-21.POTATOES iper73-!b.nag): P.E.I.Mountains.1.70-1.75 N.B.Mountains.1.50-1.75 Quebec No.1 .1.35-1.60 Quebec No.2.1.00 a Offered, b Bid.n Nominal, t Traded.Programme Is Continued from Page 1.MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE 8.\t\u201cRational\u201d development of ar-atble lands in colonization districts.9.\tConservation of public health with expaneion of sanitary units, a programme of adequate nutrition, campaign against social diseases, building of recreational facilities, garden-cities and summer camps.10.\tA complete programme of social security with old age insurance replacing the old age pensions at the age of 60.The following quotations are supplied by Greenshields & Co., of which J.J.Bell is heal Manager.MONTREAL LIVE STOCK MARKET Montreal, June ID.\u2014Oiler-h.g* on the livestock markets today were the her, icst in several months.All classes were steady.Receipts: cattle 1,108; cakes 1,997; sheep 252; hogs 1,202.About 50 per cent of the offerings were made up of bulls and cows.Good quality steers made 12.50-13 with tops selling up to 13,25.Medium were 11.59-12.25 and common down to A.Heifers ranged from 7.50 to a top of 12 and fed calves or baby beeves were 10-13, Good cows were mostly 9.50-9.75 with a few tops at 10.Medium kinds were 8-9 and common butchers down to 7.Canners ana>\u2019ty politics, racud\t^ j nfc^i^other word\u2019s',' lie* explained, ou Id influences, form last genesis a nation ana as a people m me.greatest drama that has ever been | It might be do.ter tor enacted upon the stage of the world.I visualize the dangers that could ma-\u201cOnly in such a fashion can we exert terialize as a pure result of present our greatest endeavors, and only in policies, and to join with the loyal PLAN TERMED CONSCRIPTION INSTITUTE AT ASCOT HOLDS Miss Ann MacMaster, Of Vancouver, Elected New President Of C.W.L.London, Ont., June 19.\u2014Election of Miss Ann Macmaster, of Vancouver, B.C., as President for the coining year highlighted the closing session of the 24th annual national convention of the Catholic Women's ] League of Canada at the week-end.I Miss Macmaster, who moves up from the office of First Vice-President, succeeds Mrs.P.J.McGarry, C.B.E., of Kitchener, Ont., who has completed a two-year term.A resolution dealing with imrnod- returned from a journey across the Dominion.\u201cWorking in the fight against inflation we are learning to forget sections,\u201d she stated.She had found, she said, that in meeting with women dealing with problems affecting home and Canada they were working as one.\u201cIn the fifth year of war we are better off and better fod than ever in our lives,\u201d stated Miss Sanders, noting that more essentials than ever before were being consumed.\u201cThe cause of inflation is too much money for too few goods,\u201d she explained.Half of total produc- ed.J.S.Bourque, M.L.A., for _____B_________ _\t_\tSherbrooke, one of three speakers op\u2019s College with a B.A.degree in ; addressing an open air meeting at 1937.Entering McGill University ! Asbestos, described Canadas pres- nïTOT^ OPPOIAM the same year, Lieut.Trenholme j ent system of mobilization for the Klj^l\tnj graduated from that institution in armed forces as \u201cconscription\tfl WAJUL/avil 1940 with the degree of Bachelor of shrouded in hypocrisy\u201d and who j Commerce.\tcalled upon Premier Adelard God- ^ largely-attended meeting of the ,\t.\t,\t.\t.\t, The only son of Mr.and Mrs.J.ibout to keep his promise to resign Ascot Wû,men-S InSltitute was held es9\u2019 in àress of girls and women G.Trenholme, he married Edith H other than voluntary military ser- at th\thotn\u20ac of Mr.and Mrs_ waspassed,Itstates:\u201cWhereasim- Marion Havard, daughter of Prof, vice were instituted.\t.\t\u2014 j-v- j.*.'-'- and Mrs.R.Havard, January first,! The other speakers were Onesime 1 qaq\ti Gagnon, M.L.A.for Matane, a mem-\t.,u ,\t.A-,\t,,\t, .ko Aq OnrinoHi™ in fko\t\"was in the chair.After the usual The deceased leaves to survive ker 0:f the Opposition in the Quebec\tj ™\t^ ^ Pearson report- - - \u2014-> - ¦ f him his wife, his father and mother, Government, and Emile Boiteau\t^eBin^^.fthe honoi roll where as the C.W.L.of Canada in acty.and one son, James Graham, eighteen former M.L.A for Bellechasse, ^ which was nlaced ¦]\u201e tke Ascot Con- convention assembled views with | Miss Sanders spoke of the way months old.\tmember ot the National Union\t¦)J) club and a cial alarm the disastrous effect of these, which the Government was meeting Another charge made by the three ! vote of thanks was extended to Miss Present-day fashions on the welfare this problem through subsidies of speakers was that the real reason Thel-ma Crawford of Lennoxville who ially on the niorals of youth on the'directives and rationing.' stability of whom rests the future1 She said that it should be rea-men \u201e\t/^ki; Walter Blodgette, Johnviile Road, modesty in dress of girls and women _\t, Mrs w d RiMiarrUon the President *,as become so flagrant that decent- cion was pemg spem on w.u .s., WIUI Mls.W.s.Richardson, the President, minded\t,e look upon the gitu.wartime incomes nearly double there ation with deep concern; and was only\tGie productive cap- SGT.ALLSOP Sgt.Fred J.Allsop, 22, the son Mr.and Mrs.Fred Allsop, 48 Bowen iOmt Premier Godbout did not make prepared the roil Avenue North, was born in Sher-;11^ racilo afldress Friday night and Mrs.^ T Pearson\t^ our Christian life.Be it resolved dized that the Government was try- brooke in 1922.He received his announce the date of the election in elected as official delegate to attend tkat the 0at;loijc Women\u2019s League ing to find the solution best for the education in this city, having attend-1 Quebec was that he had a Sas- the annual conven-ion at Macdonald of Canada wage an untiring cam- whole country.ed the East Ward School, the Mit-i \u201e\t^ c \u2022\t1 a °\tg) iege, as .m ee^ega ^paign against such immoral fashions Through subsidies the consumer chell School, and receiving his «rad-jt ederal and\tS\tun'abk throughout their national, diocesan has been saved a rise in prices; *u_ation diplorna from the Sherbrooke - ^ouncr \u2022,con=crips\u201d for military ,,\t, and subdivision units.\u201d\tthrough distribution the small re- Hp?ioSrCto0his enlistment, Sgt.All-! trail?\u2018n^ ?nKd overseas duty as they sop was an employee of th^ Chadian ! T0Uld not be arüund in time to vote Fairbanks-Morse Company Limited., tQ recall f0I.merly Rejected men so While m civilian life, Sgt.Allsop thpv \u201emil .hp i in the forthcoming elections, and , Mrs.D.A.McElrca gave a splen- That ex-service men of the small tailor has been did report of the Farm Forum Rally gaiary class be given assistance was;- recently held at Macdonald College suggCSfed jn another resolution1 which she attended as a delegate.; which states; \u201cWhereas in our study ,\t.\t.\t\u201ec icjc.cu aSa,n\t, Correspondence included a letter of rehabilitation plans for ex- was keenly interested m the Boy the' told it had bJeen arranged for from Mrs.Smallman, which was dis- service men and women, we find Scout movement, and was also a them by the Liberal members of cussed, and a most interesting letter that there is apparently one class member of the Trinity Uniteo Church ^j^rlicirngftt\tfrom IVIrs» Smith, u.Scottish corres- ex-service msn which h&s been and Sunday School,\tj They were addressing an open air\tpondent, who gave a splendid des-\toverlooked, the man who does not \u2014- I\tmeeting organized by G.Albert\tcription of Glamis Castle, which she\trequire vocational or university IGaudreau, M.L.A.for Richmond\tbad visited.Another member exhi-\ttraining, is not interested in farm- County in the Duplessis Government\tbited a calendar, which she had re-\tjng or fishing and is not pensionable in Quebec between 1935 and 1939 ceived from a Scottish pen friend.I_jn short the man in the small land a prospective candidate in the The roll call was responded to by salary class.Be it resolved that the Îforthcoming provincial elections.\t\u201cWartime Economies.\u2019\u2019 Conveners\u2019\tEdmonton Diocesan Council, C.W.! Mr.Gaudreau himself presided at\treports were then given.Mrs.D.\tL., recommends that such ex-service the meeting and told about 2,009\tMcElrea, agriculture, reported the kept in business.ONE MINUTE NEWS \\ ABOUT y* JOHNS-MANVILLE ^ HISTORIC LETTER SET SOUND POLICY In the Johns-Manville files there\u2019s a mighty interesting letter written in 1868 \u2014 seventy-six years ago\u2014by H.W.Johns, one of the two founders of Johns-Manville.This letter reads in jart; \u201cWe would invite your attention to the newly discovered uses of asbestos by which we have been able to add greatly to the value of our manufactures.We promise and claim less than many others, but shall endeavor as heretofore to furnish the best materials of the kind, and to make every resource available for their improvement.\u201d For more than 76 years this statement of policy has guided Johns-Manvilh in its continuous effort to make better products for less money \u2014 serving the home owner, industry and now our country at war.And today, the J-M mine at Asbestos, Que,, is the largest asbestos mine in the world.OFFICERS WERE RE ELECTED BY FIFTH C.M.R.All officers were re-elected, in-,\t.\t.\t.\teluding Major Lynn H.Atto, M.O., -\t-\tmen be given assistance with the\tWpoUiorffi at thpnn- | spectators\tthat he was\tnot yet a\tsum of 810 voted for the\tannual\tabove-mentioned\tclasses on an equal\tnuai business session of the Fifth candidate,\tand suggested\tit was up\tCounty School Fair work and\tprizes,\tbasis in the purchase of a home.\u201d\tCanadian Mounted Rifles Associa- ! to the people themselves to.call a Mrs.G.L.Robinson read several A petition that the Federal Gov- yon heM hero on SatuMav I j?Pv,entl0n\tand cb°ose\ttheir can-\tshort items on national and\tinter-\teminent record\tall citizens, either\tOthers returned to office for the ; ^p\"?*\t.\t.,\t.\tnational relations and Mrs.\tM.A,\tborn in Canada\tor legally natural-\tconiine- vear were Honorary Urcsi of Smiley read an article on legislation.jzed as Canadians, is contained in \u2022\t\u201d '\t-\t' \u2019\t- the Montreal Light, Heat and Power Onesime Gagnon said that Premier dent, Brigadier-General D.C.Drap- AT LENNOXVILLE The final business session of St.Georgo\u2019s Guild was held in the parish hall.A report on the annual tea and sale recently held showed a decided success.The sum of $200 was voted to the church wardens, $75 to the local Red Cross branch and sums to the Queen\u2019s Canadian Fund, Minesweepers' Fund and \u201cV\u201d Bundles of Lennoxv illc.Mrs.W.A.Down offered her home and garden for a party during the summer w'hidh was accepted.The President expressed thanks to the members for fine splendid work and co-operation during the annual tea and sale and special thanks to Mrs.E.Deacon for making the splendid fruit cake and wish-was used for a guess cake, and wished all members a happy holiday during the summer months, as no regular meetings will be held until September.Tea was then served by the 'hostess, Mrs.G.Povey.SCOUT MOTHERS\u2019 AUXILIARY Mats.G.M.Sutherland, First Vice-President, presided at the June meeting of the Scout Mothers\u2019 Auxiliary which was held in the troop room.The meeting was opened by repeating the Scout Mothers\u2019 Prayer in unison.Following the roll call the Treasurer\u2019s report, given by Mrs.A.L.Kuehner, showed a satisfactory balance.A donation of $25 was voted for the aid of expenses of the Scouts\u2019 summer cam]).Each member of the Auxiliary is asked to raise the sum of $1 talent money during the summer months when no regular meetings will be held, unless an executive meeting, until September.Cigarettes are to be sent to former Boy Scouts on active service overseas, and following adjournment three boxes were packed under the convenen&hip of Mrs.C.S.Langley to be sent to these boys overseas.General Noie» them to the fullest assertion of that endeavor can we take pride in our common citizenship,\u201d he declared.Pointing out that the Allies are a long way from Berlin, the speaker said there was no reason to l>e complacent and over-confident, adding that the successes which have mark citizens of Canada in a resolute and determined effort to win the war, inid so perpetuate the liberties which they would lose under a system of state socialism.\u201cThe moment of tha supreme trial is yet to come and against that moment we must gather all the force CITY BRIEFLETS Red Cross workers please note'blindly follow those betrayers will that hand fewere are urgently need- corne to the consciousness that they ed at the work room for the mak-j are being led along dangerous, de-mg of plaster cast boots.\tj\tvjous, and deceptive ways, and real- VVoid has been received by Mrs.] jzc that only by national unity, both Ernest V-arnes, Reid Street, Lennox-j jn days of peace and days of war, ville, that her husband, L/Cpl.Er-; can liberty of worship and their lib-\\\\ arnes had been wounded with erty of life be perpetuated and estab- Mrs.M.S.Richardson then gave another resolution, pointing out or.Honorary Vice-Presidents Gol .Godbout had called the directors for a^tlmnoL^VhonorW toT\tCanada is recognized as one of w\u2019 Rhoades, D.S.O., M.C., of To- of that company robbers and then erocted ;n Lennoxville f0t the A-en-\timportant powers in the United j-onto; Major-General G.Pearkes, I had\to-iven them\t«290 OOfl 000\tHe\terect®d ln Lennoxville ioi\tLie Ascot\tNations, and is given equal status\tvr\tn o o ¦yr\tp (jor Pacific 1*3?\telycn yiem\t$-W,UW,UUU.\tfile\tand Lennoxville men\tand\twomen in\tr>n the war council of the United\t,v.\t\u2019\t, '\t,\t'V\" .,, : did not explain this reference.He\t,\t°.n jne war council or me umieu Command, Captain Charles Ruther- ' declared also that\tPremier Godbout\t1 ' '' \u2019*¦\tNations, and young men of all na-\tfordi\ty.C., M.C.,\tM.M., Royal Can- had\ttold the people he would\tsave\tMrs.M.T.Pearson\tread an article\ttionahties are fighting side by side\tadian\tMiiitary Academy, Kingston, ithem money through the expropria-\ton education and\treported that meet-.in the present war to the extent\tLt.-Col.B.C.Hutchinson, V.D., of ] tion, and then he had mod the Que-\tmgs were being\theld in Lennoxville\tmaking the supreme sacrifice.\u201d\tMontreal, and Major Guy Bryant, ; bee Hydro Electric Commission to to arrange for adult school classes A total of $117,198.24 contributed yj jj , 0f Sherbrooke; Vice-Presi-1were Mr.and Mrs.M.W.Miller, make nice jobs for his friends sucti and urged members to do their best and expended for war objectives to- de-nt\u201d\tj j Harold, of Mont-1 Miss Marilyn Miller and Master Bob- as Senator T.D.Bouchard with a\tto take advantage of these classes\tgether with money collected for the\troa]) \u2019and Angiis Morrison, of Sber-\tby, of\tBrome, the\tMisses\tIsabelle ]salary of $18,000 and Ernest\tif possible.\tnational war effort, was recorded\tin\tb Y Sperpiarv Henrv\u2019Richards\tand Christine Miller,\tand\tMaster i Latreille, \u201ca small time engineer of j In the absence of Mrs.R.S.Lip- the war services report of Mrs.E.V.\t\u2019-\t-\t\u2019 y Quebec,\u201d with a salary of $15,000.\t! sey, Convener of Home Economics, Sullivan, of Fairville, N.B., read by Contending that compulsory edu-j Mrs.T.Billings, introduced the Mrs.C.Fewings, of Saint John, N.B.the Canadian Army Overseas.Mrs.Albert Hall, Main Street, and Mrs.John Andrews, Sherbrooke, have returned home after being called to St.Johnsbury, Vt., by the serious illness of their sister, Mrs.Fred Morrison, who i.s a patient in the Brightlook Hospital.Sunday guests of .Mr.and Mrs.W.T.Peareon and daughter, Anne, cation had been instituted here at1 guest speaker, Miss Stewart domes-' This showed donations to the cig an inopportune time, he maintained tic science teacher of the Lennoxville arette fund amounting to $551; a that larger and better schools should i High School, who gave a very inter- total of 17,642 religious articles sent have been built first and teacher\u2019s | esting addresses on \u201cCanning,\u201d des-'to chaplains; 33,189 knitted, 88,950 salaries increased.\tIcribing different methods, various 1 sewn articles and 26,603 garments Joseph Isabelle, Mayor of Asbes-; containers and causes of spoilage.1 for evacuees, as Red Cross wor!c;\t;n the neace era It vu decid tos, and Wilfrid Labbe, who will be, shp «v-nlnirwl t>w> manv Sn,n-r.0c Cash donations and expenditures of p?G,aA xup»peaC^\ti 3 dtC10 of Sherbrooke, and Treasurer, Clar-j Hilly Dewhurst, of Montreal ence Price, of Sherbrooke.\t-\u2014\u2014 The dominant note of the gather-1 ing was the part such an organization plays in the task of winning the present conflict and tie opportunities facing its members for the rehabilitation of the fighting men of fished for all time,\u201d he added.\u201cWhat must those gallant French- Card party and lunch, Sand Hill Hall, Wednesday evening, 25c.Dr.Gordon Loomis\u2019 office, 55 Melbourne Street, will be closed until Thursday, June 22nd.Plymouth W.A.garden party, Rockmount, 45 Moore Street, Thurs., June 22ml, 4 to 7 p.m.ed the recent campaigns in Italy and and all the power of men and of ma-the magnificent exnloits of the Allies terial that will be necessary to put in the recent invasion naturally give the final issue beyond doubt,\u201d he said, cause for satisfaction.\t\u201cWe face today as we have faced \u201cBut it is still true that the worst before the urgent complete necessity service we can render to the cause of establishing a real concentration; for which we are fighting is to as- of our resources for the one purpose S'ume that the end is in sight,\u201d he of winning the war.continued, \u201cand consciously or un-' consciously diminish the measure of our endeavors, so as to retard the intensity of our war effort.\u201d Remarking it was obvious that the great test is still to come, General Draper said Canada shall have to marshal all its might in men and material before Germany and Japan are overthrown, and peace is restored once again to this tortured world.\u2018Tjet us realize, as never before that this is no time for self-congratulations and over-confidence, as this is the time to concentrate and to dedicate every effort to the great purpose of winning the war, nor from that endeavor must we be diverted in any shape or form,\u201d he stated.\u201cI know that there are thousands of men in Quebec who realize and understand the necessity of unfaltering and undiminished prosecution of the war effort, but I know equally well that there are thousands of others whose ineffectual self-interest blinds them to the fact that civilization and freedom in which they live is in jeopardy and danger.\u201d Those who lead these men along the path of disunity assume a terrible responsibility, General Draper asserted, for they arc betraying civilization itself, and the very freedoms under which they are permitted to carry out their nefarious purposes.Charging that any man who would seek to intensify racial discord in time of crisis, such as this, is knowingly or unknowingly betraying his country and his fellows, he said, for the sake of spreading the insididiou.s doctrine of racial nationalism, he would sacrifice unity in time of peril and national effort in time of need.\u201cI often wonder when those who Slacks are decidedly in the news! Solid partners for play-girls! Well tailored slacks that actually flatter, teamed with slick jacket, basque shirt.See them at the Style Shop.Rayfels\u201482 Wellington St.North, Two very good Record routes for sale in the North Ward.Apply at the Record Office, Circulation De« partment, Tel.94.BÎSHOPTON Refoekah Dance in Town Bury, Thursday, June 22nd.Lobb's Orchestra.Adm.40c.Hall, Lea A Spanish saman invented a steamboat with a speed of threo miles an hour in 1543.THE IDEAL GIFT FOR THE NEWLYWEDS Lovely Frames and Mirrors make the most admired and ap])re-ciated gifts of all.They attractively decorate the new home and will win you an ever lasting remembrance.J.0.Dufour Ltd.37 Wellington St.South \u2014 Tel.449 ed that the Association should work .WILL GET DETAILED PARLEY REPORT I.H.Barnes & Son DISPENSING OPTICIANS Wilfrid B.Gervais GRADUATE OPTOMETRIST Expert Eye Examination and Glasses Prescribed.Phone 2457 44 Wellington St.North \u2014 Skinner Building \u2014 Room 9 Business hours; 9.00 a.m.to 6.00 p.m.Except Friday: 9.00 a.m.to 9.30 p.m.oldiers, and for this voted a Mrs.W.S.Richardson then gave 70d being donated.\ttubercular t-iip monthk- Red c -n?~ rpnnrr whlrt\tServing as blood doners were 2,63o\tUI '\u2022uuertuidl j showed that one quilt and several\t2?embersU 70?f sisting at cfinics.\tthe Association voted a| A\tdetailed report\ton\tthe annual ! fur erarmputs were donated and 6f I or tbe Merchant Navy, 2,606 ditty\t\u201e , I convention of the Canadian Federa- teengna?w of ^ock- fourteen two\tbags were made and filled, $10,032.21\t, The\tmembers of\ttr.e group, fol-rtion\tof Mayors and\tMunicipalities, vear Md dressp and nantipc thrpô\thaving been expended for them and\tlowing\tthe business\tsesmon, march- attended by Mayor J.\tW.\tGenest and 1 nafrs b^\tto sailors\u2019 elute, Navy ed to the cenotaph on King Street! five city officials last week, will be ! hfldhpe-ni^d^ FortheRp^Pro^1 League, etc.War Savings Stamps West, where a short service was I tabled at a regular meeting of the ^d Women f f o\u2019Wp^ and re ^ and Victory Loan sales through the held.A wreath was placed in mem-! City Council this evening.Adjournment fo.lowed and re-, ç^l.came to $186,828.80.\t.ory of the fallen comrades in the] City Clerk Antonin Deslauriers I esses\"1 Mrs \"w 2Btod'rotro' Mrs^W A!' the fil?htin£r in Eur0De u'ould First Great War- 'The bugle band also said that much routine business in servi T.Clement.All the fighting in Europe would First Great War.The bugle ! RrowVpud Mr-\tT/c- fpi not mean a thin! if Canadian men of the Sherbrooke Regiment (Re- Brown and Mro-, T Billings assisted came home to find a country wreck- serve) led the parade and played Di *lrs- A' uouins and ed by inflation, declared Bryne Hope several selections at the ceremony.Sanders, Ottawa Director, Consumer] The regimental colors wore de-Branch, Wartime Prices and Trade posited at St.Peter\u2019s Church yester-Board, speaking to the League at anlday morning when the members of open meeting in the Catholic Culture i the Association attended a service.Centre.\tI The Rev.Russel F.Brown, Rector Miss Sanders paid tribute to the j of the church, preached the sermon, women of Canada for the work they \u2019 The business meeting and the had accomplished already in the banquet was presided over by Pres! fight against inflation.She has just dent Atto.One of the RANDBORO Mrs.L.Betts, of Randboro, is very ill in the Sherbrooke Hospital.All join in wishing her a speedy recovery.will be disposed of by the City Fathers, inasmuch as the session wifi probably be the last until September.Although fibe Council adjourns for the summer months, special meetings are called tb deal with important matters.guests attending tire reunion was Captain Rutherford, V.C., winner of the last war whilo serving with honored the 5th C.M.R.IF THERE WERE NO LIFE INSURANCE! .what want and suffering would exist among families whose breadwinner has passed on, with little or no estate to leave them.For remember this\u2014of all the money left at death, by far the largest portion comes from life insurance, the best system yet discovered to protect the family of the average man.If you do not possess adequate protection for your family, don\u2019t put off buying life insurance.See our Representative - M.RAYMOND PROVENCHER, - DO IT Can.Bank of Commerce Bldg.,\tDO IT NOW!\t6 Wellington St.N,\tNOW! Sherbrooke, Que.\t- Since!889 HMD OFFICE WATERLOO.ONTARIO 352992 424963 ^ 77^731 4.3 M L K B K U U R t L» A 1 L ï K L L U K Ü MONDAY, JUNE 19, 1944.\u2022 THE RECORD\u2019S EDITORIAL PAGE ^Lfbrookc llailu '^Rerorb Eastern Townships\u2019 Only English Daily The Oldest Daily in the District.Established Ninth Daj of Fchruary, 18D7, «'ilh which is incorporated the Sherbrooke (.azette.established 1837.and Sherbrooke F.xaminer.established 1878.The Record is printed and published every weekday by the Sherbrooke Record Company, Limited, of which Edna A.Beerworth is Secretary-Treasurer, at the office, 69 Wellington Street North, in the City of Sherbrooke, incorporating the news services of The Canadian Press, The Associated Press, and Reuters.The Record is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations, its circulation being regularly audited and guaranteed.Subscription rates: 18c a week, delivered at any home in the city and suburbs.Post Office delivery to any place in Canada, Great Britain or the United States, $5 per year; six months, $2.75; three months, $1.50; one month, 75c.Single copies, 3c.I 0 God, Who art the author of peace and lover of concord, defend us Thy humble servants in all assaults of our enemies.KING GEORGE ON THE NORMANDY FRONT The visit of King George VI to the troops fighting on the Normandy front is in keeping with the traditions established by his father during the First Great War and with his own course of action in the TIGHTENING WAR FRAUDS LEGISLATION No one will lake issue with the desire of the Government to provide greater maximum penalties for those convicted of defrauding the Government in the handling of war contracts and general support will be given Jusitce Minister St.Laurent in his proposed amendments to the Criminal Code providing for the jumping of these penalties from two years in jail and a $5,000 line to seven years and a $50,000 fine.The old penalties may have been sufficient when originally introduced hut in view of the ever-increasing cost of modern warfare, with armament, contracts amounting to millions of dollars being let; to a single firm, they appear almost nominal under preesnt conditions and the maximum punishment does not seem excessive.Fortunately, few cases of fraud have been uncovered so far in the distribution and fulfilment of war contracts in Canada, but the few cases which ; have come before the courts have ajl involved substantial amounts which justify the increased penalties.The use of war contracts to defraud the Govern-j ment is one of the lowest forms of criminality and will find little or no sympathy on the part of the Canadian public who are carrying a heavy taxation burden to finance the war and they will generally support any effort being made to put greater pro- ONE WAR PROFITEER WE'RE ALL FOR § icxm fen PAV ,it£> mm.v.v, : From The Record Files Thirty Years Ago The Eastern Townships is en fete for the visit of the Governor-General, the Duke of Connaught, the Duchess of Connaught and Princess Patricia.The party was given a civic reception at Sherbrooke by Mayor James Mackinnon.Later the Duke received an honorary degree at Bishop's University and the group visited many of the scenic spots of the district.Granby has been selected as the site for the next meeting of the Eastern Townships Associated Boards of Trade, The delegates to the meeting at Hatley discussed the caterpillar pest, fish and game protection and peddler's licenses.Officers elected at the annual meeting of the Alumni Society of Bishop\u2019s University were Dr, E.A.Robertson, Dr.Lansing Lewis, Rev.H.C.Burt, Rev, W.H.Moorhead, J.,Ramsay Montizambert, W.B.Scott and Rev, E.Roy.The Lennoxville Town Council has accepted the proposals of the Provincial Government in connection with the hard-surfacing of Main Street.Mr, Ben Coates and family, of Bury, had a narrow escape from serious injury when their automobile left the road and plunged into the river at the Lanctot bridge near Bury.Twenty Years Ago present conflict to date.Refusing to quit the British Isles even during the height of the German aerial assault in 1940 and 1941, His Majesty kept in constant touch with his people and was often among one of the first persons to visit a badly-bombed area, spreading such cheer and encouragement as was possible during these trying days.Now with the United Nations turned from the defensive to the offensive it is but a continuation of his practice to learn conditions among his fighting men at first hand.In this he has an important aide in Prime Minister Winston Churchill, a man who could only be persuaded to abstain from accompanying the initial invasion wave with the greatest of effort.And this abstention was of limited duration, for hardly had the first wave of the attacking armies established themselves on the beaches of Normandy than the Prime Minister was among them to see for himself the progress of the war.It is such actions by the King and his First Minister that have done so much to strengthen the British form of government in the minds of the people of the Empire and resulted in the survival of the British Crown when thrones elsewhere in the world were toppling.But both men have proved themselves the real servants of the people, tection around the expenditure of their tax monies.THE BATTLE OF GERMANY TODAY One of the strangest and most crucial battles in the history of warfare is going on inside Germany.The opposing \"armies\" are Allied bombs and the Nazi military and secret police.The \"battlefield\" is the German people.The prize of victory is their morale.This is made clear in a Swiss newspaper story by a man who returned home in March after spending months in Germany and undergoing sixty air attacks in Berlin.Even before the pulverizing attacks of the last six weeks, he reported that seventy or eighty per cent of the Nazi capital\u2019s factories were destroyed or damaged.He also disclosed that residential bombing had knocked out tens of thousands of small home workshops serving armament production.But of equal military importance is Ins story of the terror of German's war-sick people\u2014terror of the bombs and of the Gestapo.\"Fifty per cent of the German population is already demoralized,\u2019\u2019 he writes.\"It is unthinkable that the German people can bear the existing conditions for an indefinite period.Feoplc now say quite frankly that if the air offensive is further intensified, a way out must be found.There can, however, be no thought of a revolution.The Gestapo and the SS are too powerful for the whole German people to dare to rise up against the National-Socialist system.\" It is obvious that the air offensive has been tremendously intensified.And as we attack in growing strength, the Gestapo and the SS surely are finding that their job is also tremendously intensified.First of all there are the physical difficulties.Each attack adds thousands to the dazed and weary homeless, deprives sections of a city of light, gas and water, disrupts transportation.But there must also be a weakening of morale.Each Allied plane over Berlin is another harbinger of German defeat.Each explosion echoes the ever emptier ring of party boasts and promises.As late as January, the Swiss writer says, the faithful Nazis were boasting that Berlin could never be attacked by day.Bat the daylight raids came, and party prestige must have fallen even more.Against fear, discouragement and weariness, Hitler\u2019s brutish police are fighting a grim battle, but a losing one.They are still strong, but we are stronger.Even the Gestapo's guns cannot delay forever the German people's desperate search for a \"way out.\" BRITAIN\u2019S FOREIGN TRADE NEEDS Behind the enthusiasm with which political and business leaders in Great Britain back the idea of clearing channels of world trade after the war and creating an expanding world economy is an urgent ( need for increasing Britisli exports.Authorities estimate that if the British people are to import goods after the war on the same scale as before the I war they must export from forty to fifty per cent more than they did before the outbreak of hostilities.! The principal commodities imported by the United Kingdom arc food and raw materials for factories.Unless food eomes in as before, the standard of living will go down.Unless such raw materials as cotton come in as before British industry; slows down, exports slow down and things become worse.This necessity for more imports than before the war arises out of the price Britain has paid and is paying for victory and freedom.Foreign investments which in earlier times brought millions of pounds in interest and dividends into British pockets have been cashed in to pay for war materials abroad or through the conquest of territory by the enemy.Proceeds from these investments enabled Britain to buy more goods from the rest of the world than it sold abroad.Now if the same amount of goods is to be bought more must be sold than before.The problem is claiming the attention of both government and business.For the immediate postwar period there is no particular concern.It is believed that Britain will have to supply much to the rehabilitation of Europe and that continuance of lend-leasc or mutual aid principle will obviate any immediate difficulty over payments.While it is fairly generally accepted that some control and direction must be given trade in the future it is recalled that Britain's wealth and prosperity in earlier times was largely built under a system of free trade.Hard times came in the period between the wars when tariffs, restrictions and currency fluctuations became common.It was during this period that Britain turned from a policy of giving equal opportunity to all in the British market to preferential tariffs for Empire countries and bilateral agreements with others.Now the question of the respective merits of bilateral and multilateral trade agreements is a live one.Pending an assurance that the rest of the world and particularly the United States will enter into a multilateral trade system the British Government has made no comment.There is reason to believe, however, that if a multilateral arrangement can be made, whereby all or the leading- trading nations would lower the barriers to trade and set up currency stabilization machinery, the British Government would welcome such a step., Participation in such an arrangement would probably mean the end of Empire preferential tariffs either immediately or by a gradual process.Letters To The Editor The Record will publish letters from its readers which are considered in the public interest providing they bear the signature and address of the writer.Opinions expressed in this column are the personal views of the writers and not necessarily those of the Record.PRESS COMMENTS RESURFACE BRIDGE SIDEWALK To the Editor of the Record, Dear Sir: Now when our City Fathers have at long last decided on a new sidewalk on Strathcona Square, may [ suggest when they have finished this job, and have all the necessary equipment at hand, to continue a few yards further on to Dufferin Bridigs and resurface the sidewalks on both sides of the bridge.At present, specially on the West side, the sidewalk is in a disgraceful condition and should have been resurface many years ago.Yours truly, NORTH WARD.EARLY ATLANTIC CROSSING To the Editor of the Record.Dear Sir; I have read with interest your editorial regarding the first steamship ever to cross the Atlantic.I have heard my grandfather say on several different occasions that he came to Canada from England on the first steamship ever to cross the Atlantic.My grandfather was the late William Burnll, who lived at Kirkdale many years, later moving to Melbourne to the farm now owned by Holland Burrill.I have before me an old autograph album with the following in my grandfather\u2019s handwriting: \u201cWilliam Burrill, born in the City of York in the year 1810, came to America in the ship Earl FiU William, which was wrecked on the Island of Anticosti and stayed there seventeen days.This ship was commanded by Captain Jackson and was owned by Mr.Moxon and sailed from Hull.\u2019\u2019 Unfortunately he did not give the date but I expect it could be supplied by some of the Burrill family who live in Melbourne, although most of the early Burrill records were lost in a disastrous fire many years ago.I remember he said it was a very uncomfortable trip, as it was a side wheel steamer and whenever the ship rolled one wheel would come out of the water and the.ship would start to turn around.I have no knowledge as to how or by whom they were taken off the Island Yours trulv, ARTHUR S.BURRILL.Indian Head, Sask.THE FOOD IS IN THE FIELDS Kingston AVhig Standard Four years ago, Canada had a huge stock of farm and dairy products held in reserve.Today that | surplus stock has almost disappear-! ed, drained away by the heavy de-\u2019 mands of war.The warehouses are nearly empty, and they must be re-'pienished if our fighting men and our Allies are to be assured of Canada's continuance as a main source of supply for their larders.We have the food to replenis.i these stocks\u2014plenty of it\u2014hut it is in the fields.Farmers all over Canada have planted every available foot of land.Crops this year, particularly in Ontario, promise to give the heaviest yields of grain, hay, vegetables and fruit in many years.But this abundant harvest comes at a time when farmers are facing the most acute shortage of farm workers in history.The Ontario Government is mak-i inf an urgent plea for more volun-i teer helpers to get in the crops.| There are several organizations I which supervise volunteer workers\u2014 the Farm Commandos, Holiday Brigades, service clubs, business men and neighborhood groups.For three years these associations have supplied thousands of workers to help save the food so necessary to victory.This year, with heavier crops anil shortage of existing supplies, additional thousands of workers are needed.The war is at a most critical stage, and we need every scran of food we can get to make sure there will be no shortage of supplies for fighting men.The food is there\u2014in fields.All we have to do is get it in.People who join the Farm Service Force are helping to win the war, and their help is desperately needed right now.The governments of Canada are appealing to Canadians in this crisis; we feel confident the appeal will not be made in vain.TIMELY COMMENTS Hitler burns as Rome fiddles\u2014 and dances in the streets.\u2014Hamilton Spectator.With the liquor ration split, Ontario\u2019s biggest organization now is the short-snorters.\u2014 Toronto Telegram.Scotland reports a shortage of bagpipes.We don\u2019t believe it.We have heard false reports on the Millenium before.\u2014 Kingston Whig-Standsrd.The Nazis are said to be short of metal.Soon they will learn that they are also short of mettle.\u2014Chatham News.Because of the wsr bathing suits are even shorter this season.Thct puts the girls in a tight fix.\u2014Chatham News.Somebody has formed the Young Liberal Federation of Canada and as far as we can see its purpose is to provide an audience for Old Liberals to talk to.\u2014Toronto Saturday Night.A corn shortage threatens the United States.This, definitely, does not refer to the radio variety.\u2014 Brantford Expositor.Eventually youth will grow up enough to know that holding a lovely hand means four aces and a king.\u2014Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph.Whenever a situation demands a choice of action, the easiest, most enticing course is almost certain to be the wrong one.\u2014Fort Erie Times-Review.A neutral nation\u2019s lot is not a happy one, but it is high time for neutrals to realize that they must live after the war in a world with a long memory.\u2014Buffalo Courier-Express.NO MORE KHAKI Windsor Daily Star Brown tones will be avoided by soldiers after the war, says a group : of style arbiters in the Southern ! States.This prediction is quite rea-| sonable.There will be an inevitable j revulsion against anything that 1 ternis to remind these men of their | military service.They will, for a | time, want to avoid anything that | even looks like khaki.I But this effect will be felt for I only a comparatively short time.Within a year or so, the boys will seize every opportunity to get out and parade in the old uniforms, taking a justifiable pride in those reminders of their valiant service.A refrigerator is a place where you keep leftover food until you are ready to throw it in the garbage can.\u2014Galt Reporter.Some \"tycoons of finance\u201d are lucky if they can borrow a couple of bucks from the wife.\u2014Woodstock Sentinel-Review, M.D., D.D., and LL.D.also stand for Mairzy Doats and Dozy Doats and Liddle Lamzy Divey.\u2014Quebec Chronicle-Telegrah.Imagine Mussolini blowing off steam to the Romans from his funk hole far in some Northern, highly-guarded retreat.\u2014 St.Catharines Standard.McKENNEY ON BRIDGE By Wm.E.McKenney, America'* Card Authority.Do You Know?BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY And this is the promise that he hath promised ns, even eternal life.\u2014I John 2:25.* .\u2022 * \u2022 Eternity is not an ever-lasting tlux of time, but time is as a short parenthesis in a long period.\u2014 Donne.CLEVELAND TOURNEY DRAWS BIG CROWDS It was a pleasure to return to Cleveland and find that the Ohio State Tournament still draws the biggest crowds.It is one of the feu-states that runs a two-session women's pair event, in which 5 5 women's pairs turned out this year.Miss Florence J.Stratford, of Cleveland, president of the women's national committee of the American Contract Bridge League, and Mrs.Ralph AY.Gordon, of Buffalo, won the event.Miss Stratford, one of the country\u2019s outstanding women players, demonstrated her ability-in the hand shown today.She won the first trick in dummy with the ace of spades, then took three rounds of diamonds, the third in her own hand.East discarded a low heart.This was the only tip Miss Stratford needed for her next play, a low heart from her own hand, finessing dummy's -nine.Now she took the last diamond trick in her own hand and led a low spade tc dummy\u2019s queen.The ace of hearts and king of Miss Stratford AK62 VKJ107 ?KJ75 *104 *J7543 V 5 4 ?932 *965 Dealer *108 VQ 8 6 32 ?\t84 *\tA J 8 7 *\tA Q 9 V A9 *\tAQ10 6 *\tK Q 3 2 Duplicate\u2014None vul.South\tWest\tNorth\tEast 1 ?\tPass\t1 V\tPass 2 *\tPass\t3 N.T.\tPass 6 N.T.\tPass\tPass\tPass Opening\u2014\t\t* 10.\t19 Q \u2014 What European king was elected by the people to be the first of a hereditary royal line?A\u2014Haakon of Norway, elected in 1905.He was a Dane.\u2022\t*\t* Q\u2014What is deaeration in the food industry ?A \u2014 Removal of oxygen from feeds for fresher storage, \u2022\t*\t* Q\u2014How long has the U.S.been operating under the four standard time zones?A\u2014Since 1883.Before that, there were some 50.set up arbitrarily.\u2022\t\u2022\t\u2022 Q\u2014AVhst new\tuse\tmight the army- soon make of salt ?A\u2014Experiments are being conducted with salt solutions as a substitute for blood plasma.spades were cashed and East was helpless.She had to discard either a club or a heart.She decided to blank down to the ace of clubs, whereupon Miss Stratford led a dub.East was forced to lead a heart into the king-jack.Sunday Schecl Teacher: \"When | th prodigal son arrived home, what happened, Tommy?\" Tommy: \"His father ran to meet him and hurt himself.\u201d \u201cWhy.where did.you get that?\u201d \"It said his father ran and fell on his neck.I bet it would hurt you to fall on your neck.\u201d Postal service in Toronto, Montreal and many other leading- centres of Canada is virtually suspended today as a result of a strike of the post office workers.Conflicting orders had led the employees in the smaller centres to continue working however.The great Chicago train robbery, in which two million dollars in loot was stolen from an express train, has been virtually solved with the arrest of four members of the hold-up gang while four others are being sought.Due to the attitude of the Mexican Government in demanding the recall of the British Consul-General, the British Government has broken off diplomatic relations with that country, The United States legation is looking after British interests.Among those taking- part in a play presented by the young people of Windsor Mills were Mrs.Charles Chapman, Mr.Charles Goold, Mr.Clifford E.Force, Miss Margaret MacLeod, Mr, S.Mackenzie Paige, Miss Ursel MacIntyre, Miss Lila Frame and Mr.Lawrence D.McConrt.Officers for the second annual Sherbrooke regatta have been named as follows: C.C.Cabana, C.B.Howard, L.Mc-Gannon, P.H.Dubuc, F.J, Conw-ay, Emile Levesque, R.E.Richardson, A.W.Reid, L.Chevalier, Charles Mackenzie, Clarence Hawkins, Gordon Pender, J.P.Watson, Dr.V.Olivier, James R.Duncan, Charles Kinkead and Jack Lunn, * Ten Years Ago A split between President von Hindenburg- and Chancellor Adolf Hitler is believed responsible for the recent attack of Vice-Chancellor von Papen against the extremist views being displayed by the Nazi administration in Germany.One of the heaviest spending sessions in United States Congressional history was ended today.In addition to the $6,800,000,000 made in direct appropriations, bond issues for various government agencies totalling $7,000,000,000 were approved.British and United States naval representatives are carrying on informal talks with Japanese officials to lay the groundwork for the 1935 naval limitation conference.J.R.Royer was this morning elected as Alderman for the West Ward succeeding- Omer Blais who recently submitted his resignation from the Sherbrooke Council.Among those taking part in a concert presented at Farn-ham were Doris Rainville, Frank C, Dorrance, Cecile Geoffrey, Georgette Gouger, Alban Berthiaume, Irma Dorrance, Louis Boucher, Gaston Pouliot, Simone.Gaudet, Fernand Berthiaume, Martial Leguin, Dolores Boriglit, Mrs.Gladys Dorrance, Yvonne Demers, Mrs.L.E.Campbell, Mrs.C.Spicer, Jean-Paul Geoffrey, Armand Demers, Louis Despins and Rene Lebrun.Five Years Ago The British Government is making direct representations to Tokyo in an effort to ease the tense situation at Tientsin.It is seeking to have the Japanese blockade of the foreign concession in that city lifted.Eighteen Arabs were killed and twenty-four w'ouhded as the result of a new outbreak of terrorism in the Holy Land.Nearly a hundred lives have been lost in this same district within the past six months.The economic position of the French islands of St.Pierre and Miquelon have been set back many years as the result of a disastrous fire which swept tfce capital city.The Supreme Court of Canada has opened hearings on the reference of the legality of the Provinces abolishing appeals to the Privy Council in civil matters.Crop conditions in Western Canada have been materially improved during the past few days as the result of drenching rains over the drought areas.Officers elected at the annual meeting of the 5th Canadian Mounted Rifles Association were H.L.Alto, M.C.J.J.Herold, M.C., C.G.Price and H.R.Richards.A MONDAY, JUNE 19, 1944.SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD THE WOMEN\u2019S SPHERE Members Of Richmond Girl Guides Present Annual Closing Programme Richmond, Juive 19.\u2014The following Lois Lovett, H.Galbraith; Farm programme was put on by the Girl Worker: Mary Fraser, Lois Lovett, Glides, at their annual closing:\tiH.Galbraith; Horsewoman: Helen Opening: \u201cGod Save the King\u201d; Galbraith, Lois Lovett; Ambulance: Horseshoe Formation; March on the Gertrude Beard, Doreen Bilson, Joan Colours; Guide Promise, Roll Call Harrington, Helen ^ Galbraith, L.and Inspection; Presentation of ; Lovett, L.Poulin, N.\tH.Fee, Badges, by Mrs.George Walker; I.Irwin, M.Fraser, G.Dyson, D.LO.D.E.Convener of Girl Guides introduced Mrs.C.E.Force, Captain Members Of Sherbrooke's Beta Sigma Phi of the Windsor Mills Girl Guides; Presentation of Sendee Stars, Miss M.Bedard, Lieut.72nd Guides, 1.0.D.E., Richmond; \u201cWhile Strolling Thru\u2019 the Park One Day,\u201d Guides; a ! Perkins, L.Stimson, J.Macintosh, i Guides receiving St.John Ambulance Junior First Aid Certificates: G.\tBeard.D.Billson, J.Harrington, H.\tGalbraith, L.Lovett, L.Poulin, N.Ross, H.Fee, I.Irwin, M.Fraser, __\t_________ _______> _ G.Dyson, D.Perkins, L.Stimson, dance by Miss Lois Lovett with Mrs.J.Macintosh, J.Pearson, E.Duval, A.E.Fee at the piano; \u201cWild Nell M.Campbell, of the Plains,\u201d Melodrama in three ,\tGeneral Notes Acts, Characters: Reader, Janet Macintosh, Mary Fraser, Doris Perkins, Joan Harrington, Margaret Campbell, Norma Ross, Isobel Irwin, Gertrude Beard, Lucille Poulin and Marguerite McMannis; Silver Collec-l -\t- -\tweek-end with his tion for Guide Funds, amounting to\t1\t, -, ronro-o $12; Presentation of St.John Am-grandparents, Mr.and Mrs.George balance Junior First Aid Certificates: by Mrs.L.Somerville.Camp Fire 1,\t.\t, _\t, .Songs; \u201cGirl Guide Hike Song,\u201d \u201cMy ;ln .I.5lan1 t- e High Silk Hat\u201d, \u201cThe Puff Billys,\u201d! Mr-\u201cDown by the Old Mill Stream,\u201d i Sympathy is extended to Mr.E.J.! Ashcroft, who received word of the death of his brother, in Los Angeles, Calif.AC.2 Charles Gilchrist, of Mohawk, Gilchrist, Clevemont Avenue.Mrs.Bean is spending several days K.G.N ourse has returned ' from Montreal, when he attended \u201cHoldiridia Walking Song,\u201d \u201cFor Pm!*®.Montreal-Ottawa Conference, in the C.G.I.T.,\u201d \u201cLullaby,\u201d \u201cTaps.\u201d j ^c^hwas held at St James U,1Ked There were two leaders and thirty- j \u2018Mr_ ôonaW Bowen, of East Hatley, two Guides present.\tcalled on friends in town.The Guides displayed the afghani Miss Catherine Ewing, Miss Mary which they have made for the \u201cChil-1 Harrington, Miss Jean Boast, Mr.dren of Great Britain.\t!\tRobert Brown and Mr.John Mac- The Service Stars were presented.! Naughton have returned to their In order to win a Service Star, a | homes from Lennoxville, when they seventy-five per cent attendance must have been attending Bishop s Uni-be made.There were twenty-eight I versity.meetings during the winter and i Mr.J.Grady, Miss Frances Grady, Isobel Irwin, Helen Fee, Helen Gal-! Mr.and Mrs.Allan Grady and Mr.braitfi and Margaret Pope had per-: John Adams were guests of Mr.and feet attendance and with the follow- ¦ Mrs.J.A.Grady, Aberdeen Avenue, ing received Service Stars: Janet1 Mrs.Grant Campbell and Mrs.L.Macintosh, Rita Daigle, Susie Blem- j Gagnon were guests in Montreal, ing, Doreen Bilson, Doris Perkins,; Mrs.E.J.Ashcroft and Mrs.Le-Margaret Campbell, Norma Ross, melin spent a few days in Montreal.Virginia Gunter, Barbara Riff, Paul-! Rev.H.W.Burnett spent a few j ine Mailick, Lyla Stimson, Lucille! days with his daughter, Mrs.C.R.j Poulin, Joan Harrington, Joan Pear-! Boast.Mr.and Mrs.Burnett have; :'>on.Mary Fraser, Sheilah Walker,: returned from St.Petersburg, Fla., j ± n(j Lois Lovett, Isobel Daigle, Mildred and arc guests of Mr.and Mrs.Ralph j Canadian Lemoine, Patricia Pearson, Jean ' Lett, in Toronto, Ont.Adamson, Eileen Duval, Ruth Co- Mrs.C.Delaney and Miss M.De-imou^j1 burn, Adele Rodgers,Gertrude Beard,1 laney attended the graduation exer-l The members of the first Sherbroooke Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi, which was formally installed on June 8th, are shown above at their inaugural meeting.They are, left to right: Front row, the Misses Jacqueline Meloche, Marion Libby, Alice Strickland, Margaret Drummond, Mrs.George H.Carr.Social Sponsor: Mrs.Melita O\u2019Hara, Travel Councillor; Mrs.Gordon B.Loomis, President; the Misses Margaret Montgomery, Margaret Heinerth, Barbara Thompson, Joyce Richards.Back row: Mrs.G.M.Spufford, the Misses Ann Crochetiere, Eleanor Leith, Marguerite Cotton, Helen Wiggett and Mrs .Porter.RED CROSS NEWS MEETING TOMORROW The quarterly meeting of the I Canadian Red Cross Society, Sher-| brooke Branch, will be held in Ply-Hall, Dufferin Avenue, at 2.30 p.m., Tuesday.¦ cises ot at.Mary s iiospitai, wnum j A large attendance of all persons 1 was beW m L°yo!a College.Miss, interested in the work of Red Marion Smith, Geraldine Dyson and Marguerite McMannis.\t! was held m Guides receiving proficiency Bad- j Kathleen Delaney received her Nurs-1 Qross js earnestly desired, ges; Cook: Margaret Pope, Virginia ; Certificate and returned home j jea wj]i ke serVed at the Gunter, Isobel Irwin, Mary Fraser, wltb her mother, to spend three ) 0£ tjle meeting, Patricia Pearson; Laundress; Mar- * weeks\u2019 holidays at her home on garet Pope, Virginia Gunter; Mins- ! Cleyenaont Avenue._ - -\t-\tMiss Jean Macartney is spending a two weeks\u2019 holiday at Lunenburg, j ^ X-s-\t¦pending on the Walker spent a week-end ; i3ack tkem up Social and Personal WOMEN\u2019S CLUBS \u201cBusy Bees\u201d And \u201cHappy Gang\u201d Join At East Clifton To Fete Bride-To-Be East Clifton.June 19.\u2014 in the form of n mock for a few days\u2019 visit.Mr.Fred Bellam, Mr.and Mrs.James Parkinson and Mr.and Mrs.James Bellam and family attended the Bartor-Hyatt wedding in Comp-ron and Mr.Crescent Bain, whose! ton on Saturday evening, June 10th.marriage will take place shortly.,\tMr,-.John Reed and daughter, given by the \"Busy Bees.\u201d and \"Tin Happy Gang.\u201d was held at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Victor Bell, when over a hundred friends and relatives gathered to fete Miss Audrey Wald- The rooms wore tastefully decor-j Pnuhne, a ted, pink and white being the color ¦ Sawysrviile.were scheme.\tMrs.Ia?ta Cairns.On the arrival of the bride and; Mr.and Mrs.K.D.McConnell and groom-to-bo, they \\voro osoovtod to.pon^ Alaloolm and Willis, spent a two nicely decorated chairs by Mrs., woo|.(vn j -n gu(j1 Durham as guests Victor Hell and Mrs.(laiton Blair, j ot- re|a\u2018ivt^.to the strains afT|b® ^odd!''l\t! Mrs.John Reed.Miss Pauline and played by Mrs.Donald MacRae.Phc Mi, RpKinal(l Roo'di of Ssuvycl.vi]le, Frank Barber.A shower]guests of Mr.and Mrs.Robert Leigh, wedding, j Mrs.Leigh accompanied them home T.C.recent Tench, guests \u201cmock\" bride and groom at the same ¦\t.,, time entered the room from another ',',1 ! ^\t^ ' f Stanbrldge Ridge, and Airs.Anderson and little daughter, of Bouton, Mass.Mr.ami Mrs.Frank Anderson, of Ontario, are spending an indefinite time here.Miss Saxe Cornell, nurse in the Homeopathic Hospital, Alontreal, spent a few days at her home here.Mr.and Mrs.J.E.Ives are spending a few weeks at Fitch Bay, driving there by horse and carriage.Mr.Antoine Codere received the sad news of the death of his mother, in Bedford.Mr.and Mrs.Malcolm Boomhower and family have moved into Miss Hazel Odell\u2019s house at Rhieard's Corner.MIND YOUR MANNERS The Situation: You have a school friend who is working Mr ar,,i Mrs- vt f T'rmirti nfllu Kom \u2019n aU oos Committee for j fia]G?woman\tjn a downtown AH.and Mis.H.C.Bendall, of, the election of officers of Canadian' Montreal, who spent the week-end Federation, these were selected and in Sherbrooke, left this morning for recorded.Quebec, having journeyed here to j After a brief discussion on sum-bo present at the induction of their mer meetings, Miss Sara Hall moved! daughter, Miss Ctrristobei Bendall, ] the meeting be adjourned, who on Saturday morning was \u201cset j_______________________________________| high as a ! store ! during the summer months.Wrong Way: Slop by the store nnd ehet with her for 10 or 15 minute -; whenever you happen to be down town.Right Way: Realize that your apart\u201d a.s Deaconess of St.Peter\u2019s Church.Her sisters, Miss Vera Ben-dall, Alontreal, and Airs.Alex Grigg, of Quebec, were also here to attend the service, which took place at ten a.m.in St.Peter\u2019s Church.Miss Bendall, who has been a parish worker here for tfte past year, was \u201ccet apart\u201d as a Deaconess of the church by the Most Reverend the Archbishop of Quebec.The Venerable Archdeacon Jones of St.George\u2019s Church, Lennoxville, pre-eented\u2019the candidate, and the Lit-anyT, followed by the service of Holy _ Communion, were conducted by the Archbishop and the Rev.Russel Brown, Rector of St.Peter\u2019s.The Rev.Canon E.K.Aloffatt, of the Church of the Advent, preached, speaking specially of the ministry of women in the church as workers and helpers since the early days of Christianity.caster and family.Mrs.R.Favreau daughter, Mrs.Adrien Mr.Beauregard and Longueuil.Miss Agnes Lavallee visited her Beauregard, family, in friend is working for a pay check and shouldn\u2019t be interrupted by the visits of friends during working hours.________ 0f Acton I Tbe old England pound was orig- V ale, spent 'a f ew days' here at the! in3lly the weight of 7(180 grains of wheat \u201ctaken from the middle of the ear and well dried.\u201d b) Alice Brooks BETHANY Pride of any home-loving hostess.\tAir.\tFred\tClark,\tof Granby, spent this double-duty pinafore that k'a\tfew\tdays\there and was the guest glamorous and practical, too.A of Airs.W.Lancaster and family, pocket hides behind one pansy.]He also called on Air.and Mrs.Plenty of glamor for a paltry George Oborne and Airs.Haslett.sum.Pattern 7077 contains a trans- Mr.W.Proulx, Mrs.J, Proulx fer pattern of embroidery; neces- and Airs.Robinson, of Davidson sary pattern pieces; directions.]Hill, were dinner guests at the home Send twenty cents in coins for]of Mrs.AV.Lancaster and family, this pattern (stamps cannot be ac-j Mr.Janvier Favreau and Miss cepted) to Sherbrooke Daily Record, i Yvette Favreau, of Granby, were Housenold Arts Department, Sher-j visitors of Mr.Arthur Favreau.brooke, Quebec.Write plainly rame, I\tMr.\tand Airs.\tG.Lavallee, of address, Pattern number.\tActon\tVale,\tcalled\ton Airs.W.Lan- STOPS PERSPIRATION/ home of her parents.Mr.and Air:-.Alexander Lavallee.Other visitors at the same home were Mr.and Airs.Joseph Montigny and family, of St.Hyacinthe, and Air.and Airs.Andre Lavallee, of Boscobel.Air.and Mrs.Uldege Favreau en tertainod relatives from Roxton Falls one Sunday.Air.and Mrs.Alexander Lavallee, Mr.and Mrs.Andre Lavallee and the | Alisses Agnes and Claire Lavallee! were tea guests of Mr.and Airs, j Bourassa at West Ely.Air.and Airs.Edward Montigny and children, Clarisse and Denys, of! St.Hyacinthe, were callers at the] home of Mr.and Mrs.George Oborne and Mrs.Haslett.Aliss Jacqueline Duval has returned to her home, here, after spending some time with relatives in Waterloo.Air.Noel Dabois attended the funeral of his uncle, Mr.Noel Beauregard, at Roxton Falls.Air.Beauregard was accidentally killed rm June 10.He had been working on the track and was walking between the tracks when two trains passed ! C.I)L\t\u201e\t-, * J him and it is thought that he war, OtSf lliarmaCy, Keg U pulled under the train by the suction I\t.\t.\u201e of the fast moving train.He was! 65 We,linKton St\u2019 North born and brought up in this locality.\u2022\tStnflt under-arm perspiralion and odour 1 to } days.\u2022\tAniisepric.Non-irritating to normal skin.\u2022\tHarmless to even delicate fabrics.\u2022\tPleasant.No need to rinse.Dab on .dress___dash ! 1 »z.Compare value 00«»lE jll For a cup of Tea you\u2019ll never forget.Remember the name At your grocer\u2019s in two con* venient sizes.also in improved FILTER tea balls.Blended and packed in Canada Take Care Of Y our Health Use Our \u201cB.1\u201d Bread ALLÂTTS PHONE 724 for B£TT£R SLEEP.BETTER D/GEST/ON.BETTER HEALTH! Dr.(hase's Nerve Food 'tllir.lHI!\tI.: ' ¦\tA ¦ ¦- ¦ \u2022 .V\";\t\u2022 ' , There is only one FLY-TOX C 6.SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD MONDAY, JUNE 19, 1944.Senior Students Present Programme To Home And School Club At Sutton it run- Sutton, June 19.\u2014The Home and operate a bus service to and from School Club met in the Hi^h School, the Village of Sutton, via -members, guests and students.Archdeacon Charters opened the meeting with the Lord\u2019s Prayer repeated in unison and a special prayer for the armed forces.He especially remembered the many boys wbo have attended this school and who are in the many fields of action.A splendid programme was given by the senior students, consisting of a duet by Misses Madaline Milti-more and Barbara Olmstead; a piano solo by Miss Helen Eastman; a vocal solo by Barbara Olmstead; and a vocal solo by Helen Eastman.Miss Girigras accompanied them.A speech giving contest was of great interest.Those taking part were Douglas Miltimore, Wesley Dow and Joyce Bennett, of Grade IX, and Joan Miltimore.Robert Douglas and Hugh Salisbury, of Grade VIII.The members of the School Club acted as judges.The lucky winners were Douglas Miltimore of Grade IX, and Robert Douglas, of Grade VIII.A very fine tribute was paid Miss Tannahill.It was composed by students of Grade IX, and was read by Madaline Miltimore, showing the high esteem and never-tiring efforts of Miss Tannalbill as Principal of the High School for seven years, and regretting her departure.Mrs.Webb, Honorary President, on behalf of the Home and School Club, also paid a very fine tribute to Miss Tannahill for her never-failing cooperation with the Club, and wishing her much happiness and success.Mrs.Webb then presented Miss Tannahill with a beautiful sterling brush and comb set, in their depest appreciation of her splendid work with the club and school.A beautiful bouquet of spring flowers was presented to Miss Tannahill by little Miss Dawn McKell, showing the deep affection in which she is held by the students and club members.The boys of the manual training class, under the splendid supervision of Mr.Russell and Mr.Earle Oliver, held a sale of their woodwork.A great display was on hand consisting of deskis, stands, benches, tables, corner shelves, magazine racks and other articles, which were quickly disposed of.Much more could have been sold.Great credit is clue this class of boys on their excellent year\u2019s work.Miss Powers, teacher of the Domestic Science Class had on display a fine lot of sewing, consisting of blouses, peasant aprons, dirdnl skirts and pyjamas made by the class during the year.Mias Powers gave a very interesting talk on her work during the year, with her domestic science students.A delicious lunch was served by tine cooking class, showing the splendid work the girts are doing with Miss Powers acting as hostess.ring out of Sutton, CHURCH PICNIC The United Church held a social, which took the form of a family picnic.The choir contributed of their talent and Misa Helen Eastman gave a vocal solo; which were much en-joyed.Miss Eunice Tannahill was presented with a Bible from tine Trustees and Women\u2019s Organization of the church, showing their appreciation of her services and interest in all the activities of the church.Mr.W.Boyce was also presented with a hymn book aa a mark of appreciation from the Women s Missionary Society for his help and interest in the concert given by them.\t, , Mrs.Hollis Dyer was presented with a wooden tray as a gift on her departure for Ontario, where she will join her husband, who has been there for a short time.The delightful evening closed with a picnic lunch.LODGE.CARD PARTY A card party was given at the home of Mrs.Percy Webster in aid of Golden Rule Rcbekah Lodge, No.20, I.O.O.F., with a good attendance.Five hundred was played at eight tables.The ladies\u2019 first prize was won by Mrs.N.Lee, and the gentlemen\u2019s first went to Mr.C.L.Man-digo, and the consolation to Mr.W.Boyes.À delightful lunch was served at tho close of the games by the hostess and her committee, and a very pleasant evening was enjoyed.General Note*.Mr.J.L.Deslieres has bought the building now occupied by Mrs.F.Jeune, and dwellings, on Main Street.The firm of Smith, Flannery and Jenne has been a long-established business in this town.Miss Eileen Seeley, nurse-in-training, in Montreal, was home over a week-end visiting at the home of her parents, Mr.and Mrs.William Seeley.Mrs.Harold Poirier, of Cowansville, was in town over a week-end visiting friend* and relatives.Mrs.Eugene Dyer, of Cowansville, was in town to attend the Rebekah Lodge card party, and also visited her daughter, Mrs, Norman Goyete.Mr.C.Boright, of Abercorn, was in town for an evening.Mrs.Myrtle Vincent, Grand Instructress, District No.2, attended a meeting of Maple Leaf Chapter No.2, in Frelighshurg.It was the official visit of Mrs.Anne Harvey, Worthy Grand Matron of the Grand Chapter of Quebec, O.F.S.Mr.and Mrs.Wanton Hall, of Abercorn.were in town attending 'J.E- Adams, and her brother, Mr.James Adams.Mr.Mason spent the week-end at the same home.The Ladies\u2019 Guild of St.Matthew\u2019s Church was entertained at the home of Mrs.Hcr.rv H.Savage.Mr.Samuel Carson spent several days in Montreal with friends.Mr.Orval P.Quilliams, of Ste.Therese, spent several days at his home here.Mrs.W.N.Swett, Mrs.Henry H.Savage, Mrs.M.C.Martin, Mr.J.J.Savage and Miss Merinda Racicot were in Sutton Friday, June 9th, where the interment of Mr.Arthur W.Savage, of Montreal, took place.Mr.and Mrs.Wiliam P.Dimick, Mr.and Mrs.Ernest Bressette and Miss Edna Bressette spent a day in Richmond with Mr.John Crook.Mi&s Merinda Racicot, of Verdun, is spending several weeks with her grandmother, Mrs.W.N.Sweet.ster, Mass,, and hU son, Mr.Arthur R.Savage, of Springfield, Mass,, were the guests of Mrs.R.A.Savage, Mr.J.J.Savage and Mr.and Mrs.Henry H.Savage, while in Montreal nd Sutton to attend the funeral and interment of Mr.Arthur W.Savage.The Ladies\u2019 Aid of the United Church was entertained by Rev.W.H.Thompson and Miss Alice Thompson, Mrs.W.C.Courville spent several days in Montreal to be near her son, Mr.GeoVge CourVille, who underwent an operation for appendicitis in the Notre Dame Hospital, Montreal.FORDYCE Mr.Herbert Laduke, of Pearceton, called at the home of Mr.J.B.Moore.Mr.and Mrs.A.C.Strange, of East Farnham, and Mr.and Mrs.Mr.Frank A.Savage, of Leomin- George Hooper went to Stanbridge Ridge one evening where they attend the wedding reception for Mr.and Mrs.Hamilton Douglas.Among those who attended the Farm Forum rally at Macdonald College, Ste.Anne dc Bellevue, were Mr.and Mrs.Fred Gelz, Mr.and Mrs.Bert David, Mrs.Wilton Dry-den, Mrs.John Bowling, Mr.and Mrs.William Mason, Mr.and Mrs.Murray Mason, Mr.George Hanson, Mr.and Mrs.Hilton Smith, Mr.and Mrs.Lynn Bell, Mr.Albert Carter and Mr.and Mrs.George Hooper.All report a day well spent.Mr.and Mrs.James Moore motored to Richmond where they visited the Wales Home.Mrs.Hillyward returned home with them for a visit.GOULD The remains of Mrs.P.W.Buchanan were brought here from Montreal for burial in Gould Ceme- tery.They were accompanied by her family, relatives and many friends.The funeral service wa= held in Chalmers\u2019 United Church, with Rev.W.H.Thomas officiating.Mr.and Mrs.William MacKinnon and son, Allan, of East Thetford, Vt., Mrs.Charles Buchanan and Mr.William Buchanan, of Limerick, Sask., were here on account of the illness and death of their sister and aunt, Miss Catherine (Dolly) Buchanan, which occurred at the home of her brother and sister-in-law, Mr.and Mrs.J.R.Buchanan.Mr.and Mrs.M.N.MacKay and Mrs.Duncan MacKay spent a few days in Cowansville, St.Armand and Montreal.Mr.and Mrs.W7.H.Thomas motored to Montreal, where Mrs.Thomas remained for a visit with her daughter, Mrs.Halpin, and Mr.Halpin.Sgt.Roscoe Morrison, of Ed- monton, Alta., is spending a week\u2019s leave with his father, Stearns Morrison, and his grandmother, Mrs.Christie Morrison.Miss Pearl Gates, R.N., was at home for a week\u2019s vacation, with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.W.Gates LAC.Kenneth Maclver was at home from Rockclifîe, Ont., for a week-end as a guest of his parents, Mr.and Mrs.K.N.Maclver.Mr.and Mrs.Herbert Atkinson and daughter, Elizabeth, were guests of Mrs.J.N.Cowan.Miss Edwina Beaton has returned home from Sherbrooke, where she remained to be near her uncle, Mr.Archie Milloy, who was a patient in the Sherbrooke Hospital, where he underwent an operation.He is now making a good recovery.Miss June Hamilton spent a weekend in Cookshire as a guest of her father, Mr.W.O.Hamilton.Mrs.Murray, of Scotstown, was a guest of her sister, Mrs.MacKay.Duncan \u201cWORN our AND WORRIED Dragging around each I day, unable to dol housework \u2014 cranky I with the children \u2014 1 feeling miserable.I Blaming it on \u201cnerrea\u201d I when the kidneys may I be out of order.When I kidneys fail the system I clogs with impurities.Headaches \u2014 backache, frequently follow.Dodd\u2019s Kidney Pills help dear the system, giring nature a chance to restore health and energy.Easy to take.Safe.Hi Dodd's Kidney Pills .*1 lOO i v VV CAI-» Cl -/ .' \u2022 ~ beautiful table was laid with aitlie Rebekah Lodge card party.A lace cover, the decorations being carried out with pink candles and flowers.Mrs.Webb and Mrs.Baker poured for seventy-five guests.Mrs.Douglas, the President, spoke a few words, on behalf of the Home and School Club, of Miss TannahilTs seven successful years as Principal, and with deepest regret at her departure, and expressed the Club\u2019s deep appreciation of her co-operation through these years, and wished her happiness and suc-cesh as she travels through life\u2019s path with a smile.BLOOD DONORS VISIT CLINIC The Sutton branch of the Canadian Red Cross Society wishes to express its thanks to those who attended the Blood Donors\u2019 Clinic in Cowansville, and to Mr.Jack Shepard, who helped in this work.The donors were as follows: Mrs.L.Hawley, Mrs.Cecil Woodard, Mrs.Guy Chamberlain, Mrs.A.J.O'Brien, Mrs.Harold Woodard, Miss N.Butler, Miss J.Beauvais, Mr.Jack Shepard, Mr.K.Miltimore, Mr.W.Russell, Mr.W.Liebercht, Mrs.E.Robinson, Miss H.Vail, Miss E.Tannahill and Mrs.Agnes Willey.TOWNSHIP COUNCIL The Municipal Council of the Township of Sutton met in the Town House.There were present Messrs.Lloyd Hawley, Earl Derrick, George Ingalls, A.Cote, Napoleon Tetreault, O.B.Wilson and the Mayor, P.B.Bresee.Items of business aside from the regular routine were the appointments of Harry Westcott as fence inspector, and L.A.Smith as valuator.VILLAGE COUNCIL The Municipal Council of the Village of Sutton met in regular session.There were present Messrs.A.J.Greeley, R.Miltimore, A.Maynard, J.L.Deslieres, F.A.Olmstead and J.E.Hoskins, all Councillors under the presidency of Mayor A.A.Thompson.The Council was in favor of L.B.Solais being granted a permit to \"Gentle way to slop constipation \"Believe me, you should try all-bran for constipation \u2014 if it has the same cause mine had.For nothing I tried keeps me so regular, so gently.\u201d No dosing\u2014no nasty harsh purgatives.Here\u2019s all you do\u2014if your constipation is due to lack of \u201cbulk\u201d in the diet.Simply eat KELLOGG\u2019S ALLBRAN regularly, and drink plenty of water.This nutritious cereal helps to produce smooth-working \u201cbulk\u201d, and prepare wastes for easy elimination.You\u2019ll like the happy relief so much you\u2019ll want to stay regular.Eat tasty, toasty all-bran daily.Grocers have it in 2 handy sizes.Made by Kellogg's ia London, Canad- Mrs.Sadie Cowan, of Alva, spent an evening in town attending the Rebekah Lodge card party.Mr.Myron Hastings, of Brome, was in town for a short time on business.Mr, Garnet Hackwell, of Spring-field, Mass., was in town calling on friends.Miss Greta Flanagan, of Farnham, was at home over a week-end visiting her parents, Mr.and Mrs.J.Flanagan.Mrs.J.Robertson was in town over a week-end visiting her parents.Mr.and Mrs.John Bowers.Mr, and Mrs.George Cooke, of Knowiton, and Mr.and Mrs.Lloyd Cooke motored to Knowiton to consult a doctor.Mr.and Mrs.Emile Rossier, of Montgomery Centre, Vt., were in town calling on Mr.and Mrs.Homer Bresee.Mr.Ronald Beauvais, of Farnham, spent a week-end as a guest of his parents, Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Beauvais.Mis* Edith Gotlo.of Montreal, was home over a week-end as a guest of her mother and sister.Mrs.Earl Oliver was in Cowansville visiting at the home of her son, Mr.Arnold Oliver, and Mrs.Oliver.Mr.Llewellyn Jenne, of Lennox-ville, was in town on business.Mrs, Alton Russell entertained in honor of her young daughter, Audrey, at her home on the occasion of Audrey\u2019s third birthday.Miss Marion Blake, of Brome, was a visitor at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Robert Townsend.Mr.and Mrs.Robert Townsend and Mr.and Mrs.Orton Baker motored to Stanbridge Ridge to attend the reception for Mr.and Mrs.Hamilton Douglas.Guest* of Mr.and Mrs.F.X.Carr were Mr.and Mrs.Walter Knowiton and Mr.George Knowiton, of Foster.Mr.F.N.Carr was in Montreal on business, returning the same evening.Mr.H.Whitford and daughter-in-law, Mrs.Stanley Whitford, were in Montreal visiting Mrs.Henry Whitford, who is ill in a hospital there.Miss Eva Vincent, of Montreal, was home over a week-end visiting her mother, Mrs.T.B.Vincent.Miss F.Godue, of Stanstead, was in town visiting her mother.Mrs.Frank Jenne spent a days in Lennoxville visiting her eon and familv.few SOUTH STUKELY Mrs.Harry H.Allen, of Farnham; Miss Minie Whitehead, of Lennoxville, and Mr.Grand A.Whitehead, of Sherbrooke, have been visiting Mrs, Mary Whitehead and Mr.and Mrs.R.P.Hilliker.Mrs.W.N.Swett spent several days in Ste.Rose with Mr.and Mrs.Erie M.Martin and Miss Susan Martin, and in Verdun with Mrs.George E.Racicot, Miss Merinda and Master Bruce Racicot.She also called on Mrs.Arthur W.Savage and Miss Bessie Savage.Mrs.James Mason, of Montreal, is visiting her parents.Mr.and Mas.## * WEU M/TMA/N- tufmmt/MRMP/ ,\tOf.a WEARITON YOUR ARM Yes, we need your help .and need it badly.This is the biggest job we have ever tackled ! Everything depends upon Victory.Canada\u2019s Army needs volunteers NOW! And, that means you and you and you.Wear Canada\u2019s Badge of Honour on your arm.You\u2019ll be proud of it, so will your family.Every man who is able has got to do his bit! Maybe you don\u2019t think this means you .\u2022 * that it\u2019s a job for the other fellow.If you do, you\u2019re wrong.It\u2019s your war, too .a war for every7 man who is a man .for everyone who has a stake in Canada.Yes, this means you all right and we need vou now for the months of intensive training to make you fighting-fit.We did it before and we can do it again .but we need your help.J * MONDAY, JUNE 19, 1944, SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD 7.Rock Island and Derby Line Mayhew, in Dixville.Mrs.John Hackett, of Montres! ' is spending a fes^ ! Newport, Vt\u201e on account of illness., l Mr.Lemuel Markweli, of Rock Island, was a guest of Mr.and Mrs.The Boy Scouts, of Derby Line, Mr.E.P.Lyon, in Ayer\u2019s Cliff.i ^J® ®-Yith Edwin Earle as their leader | Miss Aîphonsine Gosselin, of New.-Iona .laj, of Rock Is.a i, \u2018 * euged a patriotic programme on port, Vt, has been visiting her bro-j\tspending a \"efK \u2018\u2018i; \u2018Flag Day\u2019\u2019 at the Village Hall, in i ther-in-law and sister, Mr.and\tMr*\u2019 Hal0l visited\u2018relatives and friends in| COMPTON advice.the importance of observing patriotic j for her home in New Hampshire, for; c a n n m\t?J\tk os, ' 0 f the U.holidays and the consideration of the1 the summer.ideals for which these anniversaries are marked.S.Army Air Force, and Mrs.Pinkos, \"Bob\u201d Moore is spending a leave J r]ee Arjene Laroche, were guests of with his mother, Mrs.Luhaip Moore, ; and jjrs.Traffic Laroche, in After the singing of patriotic'in Derby Line, before leaving for [ Rock Island, songs a patrol quiz based on the his-! Pensacola, for special training.|\t.\tM wiiriam Tf.,v-ov nnri tory and proper use of the flag was | Mr.and Mrs.Kenneth Brown and, ^^\"\u2019flrb^'Liîèw^e guests of put on by the Scouts.This resulted I son, of Rock Island, and Mr.and Mrs.-j.?11-';\t»« Enmm Bat in a tic between the patrol of Jesse, Milton Drew, of Newport, Vt.were Walsh and that of Arthur Judd.The ; guests of their parents, in Holland, prizes awarded were a double set of;Vt.semaphore flags for each patrol.A; Mrs.Ruth Schoff, of Newport» Vt., solemn commemoration of \u201cD-Day\u201d i was a guest of friends in Derby Line.,\tu,, s~sw\ti sS » h\u2018\u201eh ».Æ mg the group singing of the hymns,; Bedell, of Brook me, Mass., have ar-, \u201cEtehnal Father, Strong to Save\u2019\u2019i rived at the Nelson Homestead for i\tmm-e.and \u201cOnward Christian Soldiers\u2019\u2019 led: the summer.\t| Mr.and Mrs, A.G.Ayer, Judy and by C.R.McLean and prayer by Rev.| Mrs.Curtis McLean and daughter,; B,u'ddy\u2019 7»01,VI*T?\tg,UesbA C.R.Stetson.The Village Hall was I Susan, of Derby Line, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Donald Hibbard and filled to capacity with relatives and Mrs.Fred Davis, in Holland, Vt.i Greydon Carr, in Rock Island.1\t-\t1 Mrs.W.C.Palmer, who has been chelder and Miss Cora Atkins in Brownington, Vt.Mrs.Batchelder returned to Derby Line with them.Miss Eloise Aulis, who has been friends of the Scouts and indicated; Leo McCaffrey, of Coaticook, was,\t^ their appreciation of the patriotic af- ! a business visitor in Rock Island.\t! spending^some^Gme^mother, fair arranged by the new troop and its leader.Mrs.A.H.Fuller and son» A.H.Fuller, Jr., have left for Worcester, Mass., to attend the graduation exercises at Becker College of Mrs.F.Fuller\u2019s daughter, Patricia Jean.Mrs.A.H.Fuller has received Mr and Mrs Leon Seguin' 0f\tMrs-Golda Standish\u2019in Rock IsIand\u2019 Sherbrooke, were guests of relatives\tj bas If for Palmer, Mass where in Pock Island.\tsbe wlll sPend a few weeks with rela- \u201c\t4\tI tives.Mr.and Mrs.Roy Beshaw, of Der-;\t\u2019\t_\t.\u201e\t, ., x t., , by Line, spent a week at their camp ;.^.1S® Bessie Bacholder, of Rock Is-e.Alow vs\t! land, has been spending a few days \u2019\t' at her home in Mountain View.Mrs a runer nas receiveu ^rs- Ldward Chapman, of West i Donald and Nancy Nason, of Der-jS; A\u2019,\tx .rlerr »\treceiveu\tcharleston, Vt., is employed at the\thv T :np vic-iipj m,- .md Mrs Avei-v word from her father, E.H.\tRieakby,I\tB .f, ld\u2019 ,\t.; Dl V Li\toy Line, visited Mr.ana Mrs, Aveiy in Pncadpnn Tfilif announcino' that I\t, w\tDavis, in Heatbton.in Fa.adena,_ Lain., announcing, t at\tjjrs_ pauj Lahme and Mrs.Don- » and Mr» Gilbert Hutchison of he was leaving for Derby.Mrs.1H H\u201eidpn Ax ¦Rr,nt.Tclnnd attended\tMr5',-niS011\u2019,0t Ricakbv has\tbeen staving\twith her Holden.ot Kock islancl.attenaea\t, DerLy Line, visited their parents, ivicaKny nas\toeen^staying\twitn ner,\tth.e ?raduatlng exercises at the Sa-j M\u201e aJn/,\tr.harW CWm, .t Deri.Those who contributed to the \u2018\u2022Allied Post Fund\u201d for Christmas cheer for sailors of the Allied ships then in Canadian prts.will be interested to learn that Miss Todd, the canvasser, has received letters from sailors of different nationalities acknowledging the receipt of parcels and expressing their gratitude and thanks.The home of Mrs.Gaudreau, at Hyatt\u2019s Mills, was the scene of a happy event on June 6th, when she was hostess at a miscellaneous shower for Miss Mary Hyatt, a popular bride-to-be, who on her entrance was presented with a huge bouquet of flowers, The decorations were carried out in pink and green The many gifts were arranged on a table and after the presentation dainty refreshments were served by Mrs.Gaudreau, assisted by Mrs Ride, Mrs.Green and Mrs.E.Hyatt Guests at Mrs.Todd's home were Mrs.Ella Smith, Mrs.H.Banfill, of Milby, with their guests, Mrs.William Brown and two children.Marilyn and Dick, of Saint John, N.B.Mrs.Foote, of Waterville, visited friends here.Mr.Clifford Reilly, of Ottawa, was a guest at the St.Laurent home.to the beauty of the service in the special hymns beautifully rendered, including the \u201cVeni Creator.\u201d assisted by the choir of the Church of the Ascension, West Brome.The Bishop's address will be long remembered as this was the first visit of his Lordship to Mrome since his consecration.Following his remarks, which will leave an indelible spiritual impression on all who heard them, he urged his hearers to continue doing their utmost through the present perilosu times.The Bisho; this locality for a few days Mr.R.V.Beerworth and son, John, of Brome Centre, were guests in town.Mr.and Mrs.Cecil Thompson and family, of Waterloo, were guests at \u201cThe\u2018Elms.\u201d Mr.Arthur Midgley and son, Gordon, of Lachine, were guests at \u201cJourney\u2019s End.\u201d Mrs.John Ewing, of Bedford, spent a week-end with relatives here.^\t,\t, ,, Mr.and Mrs.C.W.Davis wore was a tea guest at the home of Mrs.dinner guests of Mr.and Mrs.Frank Lyla Owens with Mrs.G.A.Mason Davi6.Mrs.Wallis Sayers, of Brome son-in-law and daughter for two|c -Heart Convent in Newport; Vt.-nrno 1.-c ranrd VvntS ovnrmf tn vornrn +(%:\t__\t.\t.r.\t, weeks, and both expect to return to Pasadena, Calif., in about three ¦weeks\u2019 time.News also came to Mrs.Fuller that her brother, Robert T.Ricakby had left Pasadena, Calif., by motorcycle for Vermont.He has only two weeks\u2019 vacation during which he expects to cover the 3,300 miles to Vermont and return by motorcycle.Mr.and Mrs.Joseph Prue, of Boston, Mass., were called to Rock Island by the death of his mother, Mrs.Frederick Pdue.They also visited Mr.and Mrs.Fred Parker and Mr.and Mrs.Burns Fairbrother, in New.port, Vt.Little Donald Lindsley, of Newport, Vt., is visiting his grandparents, Mr.and Mrs.Hugh Bell, in Derby Line, while his parents are moving into the new home which they have purchased on Third Street, in Newport, Vt.Miss Faith Gaffield, of Derby Line, was a guest of her grandfather, Harry and William Heath, who have been visiting relatives in Maine, have returned to their home in Derby Line.Mr.and Mrs.Edward Frasier, of Rock Island, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Hiram Belknap, in Baldwin\u2019s Mills.Mr, and Mrs.Wilson Howe, of Portsmouth, N.H.,are visiting his parents, Mr.and Mrs.Charles Howe, in Derby Line.Mr.and Mrs.L.Arsenault, of Rock Island, spent a week-end with his parents, Mr.and Mrs.Arsemrult, in Baldwin's Mills.Miss Muriel Cameron, of Rock Island .spent a week-end at her home in South Bolton.Mr.Maynard Schoff, at one time of the Derby Line Immigration Patrol, who has been spending some time in New York City on special duty, has returned to his home in I Mr.and Mrs.Charles Copp, at Darling Hill, before leaving for Burlington, Vt., where Mr.Hutchison has secured employment and will live with their daughter, Frances, who has been employed there for several years.Mr.and Mrs.Kenneth Baldwin and daughter, Abigail, of Rock Island, attended a birthday party for P.B.Buckland, at the home of Mr.and Mrs.John MacKinnon, in Way\u2019s Mills.Miss Mae Bean, of the Butterfield office staff, has been confined to her home in Beebe by illness.Mr.and Mrs.Albert P.Bliss, of Rock Island, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.J.C- Bullock, in Heathton.Mrs.Charles Gilman, of Derby Line, is visiting relatives in Massachusetts and Connecticut.Miss Vivian Wheeler, of Derby Line, spent a week-end with her sister, Mrs.Wells Brown, in Beebe.Mrs.Blanche Banville, of Orléans, Bring The Home FrontNews To The Battlefront! Many of us have a son, a daughter, a brother, a husband, a sweetheart, or a friend on Active Duty.Chances are they\u2019re kind of lonesome for some of the news about the \"going\u2019s on\" back home, and there isn\u2019t a better way of letting them know than by sending daily a copy of the Sherbrooke Record.It\u2019s a gift that will be appreciated.The Record has a special rate for members in the Armed Forces wherever they may be.Take advantage of this special offer.FOUR MONTHS 8 Months $2.00 12 Months $3.00 The Sherbrooke Daily Record EASTERN TOWNSHIPS1 ONLY ENGLISH DAILY CROSSBURY A very enjoyable evening was spent on June 8, at the home of Mr.and Mrs.E.King, when a number of relatives and friends gathered as a surprise to Mr.King on his birthday.The evening was spent in dancing, music being furnished by Messrs.Shirley Sylve\u2019st and Elmore Barter.A delicious lunch was served at midnight.Mrs.Allen Worby and daughter, Deanna, of Meyersburg, Ont., Sgt.Earle Worby, R.C.A.F., of Lachine, Mrs.Alfred Martin and two sons, Wendell and Wayne, Mrs, M.Worby and sons, Frederick, and Mr.W.Lister were in Ayer\u2019s Cliff as the guests of Mr.and Mrs, Allen Norrie, at their cottage on Lake Massawippi.Mr.and Mrs.Oscar Rines and Mr.and Mrs.William Rines, of White-field, N.H., were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Sylvest.A number of relatives from here attended the Barter-Hyatt wedding in Compton.as point hostess.Later a short reception was held in the Brome Town Hall most attractively decorated with flowers, flags and pennants amt formed a most appropriate setting.A very large crowd assembled to enjoy the generous hospitality of the members of the St.John's Ladies\u2019 Guild.Mrs.Arthur Midgley, of Lachine, is spending a week\u2019s stay at \u201cJourney's End.\u201d Mrs.A.Hebert and Mrs.Gordon Hebert were guests of their brothers and uncles, Messrs.William and George Brock, in South Bolton.Sir.A.D.Vail and son, Henry, were visitors in Cowansville.Mrs.Lloyd Elliott, of Montreal, was a guest at \u201cRoekledge Farm.\u201d Mr.and Mrs.R.B.Allen, of \u201cBroadlands,\u201d motored to Cowansville.M rs.William Hamilton and twins, of Foster, were guests of their parents and grandparents, Mr.and Mrs.C.C- Salsbury.Mr.and Mrs.Wifred Lampron, son.Hector, and daughter, Jeanne, were evening guests of Mr.and Mrs.E.Lafontaine, at Waterloo.Mr.and Mrs.S.Hunt, of Gilman's Corner, motored to Knowlton one afternoon.Mrs.Andrew Libby and son, George Edward, of Rich ford, Vt., were guests of friends in Brome.Rev.K.Bolton and Mrs.Bolton, of Knowlton, were in Brome for an evening.Mr.and Mrs.William Barnes were in Cowansville for a time.H.H.Hauver has sold his hotel in Centre, was a visitor at the home^ of Mr.and Mrs.Nelson Johnston! and family.Mrs.Hilda Chapman motored to Knowlton.Mrs.Armand Fournier, of Montreal, is a guest of her parents, Mr.and Mrs.William Lefebvre.Mr.H.A.Smith was a business \\isitor in Knowlton.Mrs.George Dow was a visitor in Sutton.Cedric Davis was at Knowlton visiting friends.Munden Barnes and son Douglas,! called on Mrs.William Rockwell.Sympathy is extended to Mr.and ! Mrs.Amos Davis, of the Knowlton Road, in the loss of their home ! through fire.Messrs.Carl Mizener and Luke Turner, of Knowlton, were in town.Mrs.Mary Desmarais, of Sutton, is a guest of Mrs.William Rockwell for an indefinite time.LAWRENCE Messrs.Walter Young and Darrell Wilson spent a week-end with the iatter\u2019s brother, Mr.Eric Wilson, in Sawyerville.Mr.and Mrs.James Marshall and two children and Mr.Charles Martin, of Bury, spent a week-end with their mother, Mrs.William Martin.Miss Jennie Olson, of Sherbrooke, is spending a week with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.A.Olson.Messrs.Hugh Wilson, Charles Smith and Howard Coates were visiting the latter\u2019s aunt, Mrs.B.Thompson, in Bury, over a weekend.Mr.and Mrs.G.Grapes and Mr.and Mrs.W.Graves and family, of Sawyerville, were tea guests of Mr.and Mrs.J.H.Smith.Mr.Edwin Coates has gone to Quebec for a few days.Wte Do you f§el old«r than you »r* or suffer 0«tf\t-\u2014 -T T\u2014 from rtting Up Night*, Backache.Nervouf-~*aln - \u201c '\t\u201c nest, I>eg Pains, Rheumatic Palna, Burning, acahty or frequent passages?If bo, remember that your Kidneys are vital to your health and that these symptoms may be due to Kidney and Bladder troubles\u2014in euch cases Cyetex usually gives prompt and Joyous relief by helping the Kidneys clean out poisonous excess acids and wattes.You *iave everything to gain and nothing to lose In trying C\u2019yetex.The iron clad money-back agreement assures a refund of your money on return of empty package unless fully satisfied.Don\u2019t delay.Get Cyetex (Sisa-tex) from your druggist today.on return or empty i Cystex «T Hilpt CUtn Kltfltti Try prompt rdiaf thia proved way.Great world-wide success! 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C.R.HEALY A BIG *5.00 WORTH Invest $5.00 and receive immediately a guaranteed contract that will: 1.\tPay you a regular income when your own salary ceases, or 2.\tProvide protection for your wife and family, or 3.\tInsure your children\u2019s education, or 4.\tPay off your mortgage.Simply give us twelve post-dated $5.00 cheques\u2014one for each month.Can you think of an easier method of obtaining the life insurance protection you need?C.R.HEALY Branch Manager NORTH AMERICAN LIFE 4 WELLINGTON ST.S.TELEPHONE 2570 i « -o -\t¦ X.NORTH HATLEY The last meeting of the Ladies Guild of St.Barnabas\u2019 Church before, the summer recess was held at the Guild Hall.Mrs.Ernest Clark and Mrs.Robert Little acted a.-hostesses.After the regular meeting, delicious refreshments were served by the hostesses to members and guests.A pair of crystal candlesticks were presented to the President, Mrs.Richard Allen, as a fare well gift from the Guild, as she is leaving soon for Toronto, where she will make her home.Mrs.Richard Sprigings, who will take Mrs Allen\u2019s place as President, made the presentation, after which Canon Roy said a few words on behalf of the members of the Church.The North Hatley Branch of the Women\u2019s Insittute was very pleasantly entertained by Mrs.Charles Best at her home.Mrs.Roy Bowen, Vice-President, conducted the business meeting and several items o! interest were discussed and reports were given by the different Conveners.At the close of the meeting delicious refreshments were served by Mrs.Best.Mr.and Mrs.Richard Allen have as their guests Mrs.John Wells and Mrs.Harlow Bachelder, of Barre, Vt., and Mr.and Mrs.A.A.Bachelder, of Beebe.Mrs.William Sim was the guest of friends in Beebe.John Cowan, Jr., of Ives Hill, was a guest of his friend, Galen Vance LAC.William McCrea, R.C.A.F., has returned to his duties, after spending a few days with his parents, Mr.and Mrs.J.E.McCrea.Ptc.Albert Seguin, of Farnham, spent a week-end at his home, here.Miss Nan Leduc is visiting friends in St.Johns.Pte.Joseph Bampton, V.G.C., of Grande Ligne, spent a week-end at his home here.Mrs.J.A.Seguin, of Montreal, is spending some time with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.L .H.Taylor.LAC.Edward McCrea, R.C.A.F., is visiting his parents, Mr.and Mrs J.E.McCrea.Mr.and Mrs.Allen have three sons overseas, Gnr.Donald Allen, R.C.A.F., Fit.Sgt.Larry Allen, R.C.A.F., and LAC.Norman Allen, R.C.A.F.Mrs.Wellington Raymond.Miss Doris Wilkins and Mrs.Charles Knapp, of Sherbrooke, were guests of Mrs.Mary Raymond.Mr.and Mrs.Moody Merrill have received word of the safe arrival overseas of their son, LAC.Roger Merrill, R.C.A.F.The Misses Ruby and Barbara Allen have returned from Sudbury, Ont., where they were guests of their brother-in-law and sister, Mr.and Mrs.Jack Keeley.TO All Tired arms and aching backs find surcease in homes where this smartly beautiful Westinghouse Cushioned-action Washer has brought freedom from washday drudgery.War needs have limited our production .but one of these days there will be a dependable Westinghouse Washer for every home that needs one.If out WESTINGHOUSE DEALER In spite of difficulties and shortages, he has stayed\"on the job\u201d to answer your service requirements.and to meet your needs when electricappliances art again available.ElECT RIC A L A P P l I A N C E S CYOT ECTQ* i£V CANADIAN WESTINGHOUSE COMPANY HAMILTON, CANADA fctutornca; VANCOUVtR, TRAIL, CALGARY, EDMONTOK.REGINA, SASKATOON, WINNIPEG, FORT WILLIAM, TORONTO, SWASTIKA, LONDON, MONTREAL, OTTAWA, QUEBEC, HALIFAX 8 SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD MONDAY, JUNE 19, 1944.WATERLOO The members of St.Luke\u2019s Youn\".town, who were present were Mrs.People\u2019s Club enjoyed a picnic and ! Richard Eockus, Mrs.Ellis Bockus mountain climb on Mount Orford.|and Mrs.Donald Bockus, all of Conveyances to and from the chosen ; Foster.pleasure grounds were provided by The auction sale of household the Rev.Sidney Wood Melvin, effects held at the home of Mr.and Chartier and Veldon Coote.An en-1 Mrs.P.D.McGrail was well attend-joyable afternoon was spent.\ttd.All of the goods disposed of During the visit of Mrs.John brought satisfactory prices.Acton, of Astoria, Oregon, at the j Sgt.George A.Young, R.C.A.F., home of her brother, Mr.J S.Mar-; was home from Ottawa, over a donald, Mrs.Macdonald entertained | week-end.at a bridge in her honor, the prize ' Mrs.Edward Goodwill, of Mont-being won by Mrs.A.J.Buckland.jreal, who spent a week-end at her Mr.C.W.Slack, Mr.W.A.j Waterloo home, had as her guests Parkes and Mr.Robert Millenchamn J Mr.and Mrs.D.Lome Crawford, have returned from an enjoyable j of Montreal, fishing holiday spent at Lake Mar ' Mrs.J.A.Corcoran spent a week-cottc.\tlend at Sally\u2019s Pond, a guest of Mr.Mrs.Sidney Wood entertain sev-^and Mrs.Ernest Inglis, of Foster, eral friends at the tea hour one I who are at their summer home, afternoon.\ti F/O.1.Gibbard, Ferry Command, Mrs.Romilly J.Graves is spend-! R.A.A.F.was a guest at the home ing a month at the home of her'of Mr.and Mrs.David R Hughes mother, Mrs.Willett, at Cascapae-land family over a week-end.dia, Gaspe County.\tj Mr.and Mrs.Almus Hayes and Mrs.W.A.Parkes, Mrs.Robert; Miss Hayes visited Mrs.John Hut-Millenchamp, Mrs.O.T.Pickford j ton and family, in Sherbrooke, and Mrs.Eric Thomas were guests I Mrs.Eugene Bradley is leaving in Magog.\tI this week for Richmond, where she Mr.and Mrs.Leonard Porter, will enter the Wales Home, have returned from their honey- Mr.and Mrs.J.G.McKergow moon spent in the Laurentians.spent several days in Montreal.Mrs.L.Keith Allen spent a day Mrs.H.B.Seybold visited her in Montreal.\tI parents, Mr.and Mrs.Campbell and Mr.and Mrs.W.K.Robinson, ! family, of Lachine.Airs.V.A.St.Denis, Miss Nancy j Friends will be glad to learn that Ann Robinson and Miss Jill St.|Mr.E.P.Corcoran\u2019s condition is Denis were visitors in Sherbrooke, j improving at the Sherbrooke Hos-While there Mr.Robinson called on pital.Mr.E.P.Corcoran, who is still a, Mr.and Mrs.C.A.Robidoux visit-patient in the Sherbrooke Hospital, led relatives in Sherbrooke.Mr.Clifford McGrail, of Montreal,! Mr.W.E.Colbourne is enjoying spent a week-end with his parents, a holiday in Florida.Air.and Mrs.P.D.McGrail, Foster; Mrs.Charles Slack spent part of Square.\t;a week in Montreal with her daugb- Mrs.Arthur Wade spent a day in Iters, .Mrs.W.D.Schofield and Miss in AlOntreal.\t! Janet Slack.Air.James Standish, of Toronto,! Mrs.Robert Millenehamp and visited his parents.Air.and Mrs.'Mrs.W.A.Parkes.were guests in James Standish, Western Avenue, ! Granby.over a week-end.\tj Airs.J.S.Macdonald, accom- Mr, and Airs.Duncan MacMillen, panied by her sister-in law, Mrs.Miss Ruth MacMillen and Mr.Gil- John Acton, of Astoria, Oregon, bert King, of Montreal, visited Mv.i visited relatives in Sherbrooke.It King\u2019s mother, Mrs.Leroy Hayes, | has been twenty-five years since and Mr.Hayes.At the tea hour.Air.Airs.Acton has visited her Canadian and Airs.Hayes and Aliss Mary relatives.Faith King and their visitors were A well-attended meeting of St.guests of Mr.and Mrs.H.D.Wells Luke\u2019s Young Women\u2019s Guild was and Mrs.Clara Wells, Dufferin held at the home of Mrs.Leonard Avenue.\tiAdam.The early afternoon was Lieut.Arthur Wade, of Valcartier spent in completing articles for the Camp, visited Mrs.Wade at the sale and tea to be held in the Church home of her parents, Mr.and Airs.Hall.During the devotional and W.K.Robinson over a week-end.business part of the meeting, the -Mrs.Bert Fisher entertained at, President, Mrs.Albert Dix was in a miscellaneous shower in honor of the chair.Minutes of the Alay meet-her sister, Miss Phyllis Aiken, whose ing were read by Mrs.J.C.Mar-marriage to Mr.Harold Bockus, of cotte, and after the meeting Airs.Foster, is solemnized on Saturday,1 Pickford and Airs.Thomas, the June 17.The gifts received by the , hostesses of the afternoon served bride-elect included many useful refreshments.and desirable arUcles for which Miss] Rev.and Mrs.H.E.Parsons, of Aiken suitably expressed her ap-jVars, Ont., were overnight guests preciation.At the conclusion of a at the home of Air.and Mrs.Cleve pleasant social evening, delicious re- Coote and family.Mr.Parsons left freshments were served by Mrs.the following morning for Montreal, Fisher.Among those from out of where ho attended the Montreal- COATICOOK Those who received the Red Cross Blood Donor\u2019s badge at the Clinic held on Tuesday, June 13, were Gordon Bellows, Scott Dresser, Gladys Faulkner, Rita Fortin, Austin Grady, Robert ^ Guimond, Mrs.Norman Howe, Earl Keenan, Walter Knowles, E.J.AlacDivitt, E.E.Markwell, Pierre Maurice, Dorothy Meade, Frank Peters, Mrs.J B.Robinson, Jeanne St.Louis, Mrs.E.K.Wiggett, and Charles Williams.These badges indicate that the wearer has made three donations to the Red Cross Blood Benk.Other donors present at the Clinic included Maurice Be-lislc, Mrs.Jack Brown, Harry Cartwright, Lorraine Dawson, Madeleine Demers, Mrs.Louis Fecteau, Nar-cistse Francoeur, Mrs.A.A.Hopkins, Trueman Howe, Marguerite Laurence, Hermas Lahaie, Jeanne d\u2019Arc LeBel, Mrs.Myrtle Pyne, Phoebe Pyne, Angus Smith, Mrs.Jama, Smith, Laurence Snow, Cecile Tremblay, Mrs.Arthur Vincent,! Samuel Valade and Mrs.E.Wright.The members of the Baptist Young People\u2019s Union concluded their meetings for the summer with a social evening at the home of Mrs.A, J.Mayhew.Miss June Parsons, B.Y.P.U.President, made a presentation of a pyrex baking set to Miss Wilda Cutler, one of the members, who is to be married shortly.A presentation was also made by Rev.Lome Smith to Mrs.Mayhew in recognition of her generosity in providing the use of her home, for the B.Y.P.U.meetings throughout the year.Mi.ss Cutler and Mrs.Mayhew expressed their thanks for the gifts, after which games and refreshments were enjoyed by all those present.The many friends in town of Mrs.George Sylvester, of Waterville, will be pleased to know that she is progressing favorably in the Sherbrooke Hospital.Miss Lorna Wearing, of Rochester, N.Y., was a guest at the home of her uncle, Mr.E.B.Parker, and Mrs.Parker, Court Street.Mr.and vfrs.A.R.Chesley and daughters, of Montreal, and Mr.and Airs.W.J.Ryther, of Newport, Vt., were week-end guests of Mr.and Mrs.Archie Chesley.Mr.and Mrs.Fred Chesley, of Hatley, were visitors at the same home.Mr.Gordon Mayhew, of Rromp-tonviile.was the guest of his mother, Mrs.A.J.Mayhew, during the weekend.Mrs.Alayhew accompanied him to Sutton, where they spent some time with Mr.and Mrs.Rupert Phelps.Word has been received by friends of Air.and Airs.M.H.Orcutt, 5201 Alaywood Avenue, Los Angeles, California, that they will celebrate their 60th wedding anniversary quietly at their home in Eagle Rock, on Tuesday, June 26th.Invasion Wounded Return Home CLEARY\u2019S STATION CHotàèt OF A WAY OF LIFE # The Four Freedoms implied in the Atlantic Charter represent a way of life which it is hoped will be achieved for all freedom-loving peoples.The Four Freedoms are \u2014 1.\tFreedom of speech.2.\tFreedom of worship.3.\tFreedom from want.4.\tFreedom from fear.Life insurance also represents a way of life for our families.With adequate insurance we can make certain that even should we not live to see our plans for our family carried out they will at least be able to maintain an independent standard of living.See Your Discuss with your local Imperial Local\tLife representative how best you can Representative insure your family\u2019s way of life.Imperial Life bounded 1S97 Head Office - TORONTO local Office in The Skinner Building, Sherbrooke Mr.Lyle AlcCutcheou, of Farr-ham, spent a week-end with his nmlher, Airs.Rosanna McCutcbeon, and brothers, Earl and Willie.Ottawa Presbyterial.Mrs.Parsons motored to Scotstown to visit her parents, Mr.and Mrs.R.C.Van.Air.and All's.L.Keith Allen visited their son-in-law and daughter, Mr.and Airs.W.H.Baglow.in Bedford.Air.and Mrs.C.A.Norris and Mr.Carl Norris are visiting Mr.and Mrs.Fred Lambert, of New London, Conn.Aliss Joyce Hetherington, of Ottawa, spent part of her vacation with her parents, Mr.and Airs.James Hetherington.Miss Irene Stretch, of Montreal, is a guest of her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Raymond Stretch and family.Mrs.Fay Regan, Pte.Liston Regan and Miss Janet Regan, of St.Albans, Vt., visited at the home of Mrs.Regan\u2019s sister.Airs.James Hetherington, and Mr.Hetherington, for two days.Pte.Graham Bockus.of Farn-ham, is enjoying a fourteen-day furlough at the home of his parents, Mr.and Mrs.F.W.Bockus and family.Mr.and Mrs.Clifford Alason have returned from Attleboro, Alass., where they were guests of Mrs.Mason\u2019s parents, Air.and Airs.Charles Gage, and other relatives.Mr.and Airs.I.J.Hamilton, Airs.Bruce Bean and little son, of Magog, visited Air.and Airs.S.W- Hamilton and family.Sgmn.Thomas Dix.of Vancouver, B.C., is enjoying a furlough with his mother.Mrs.Albert Dix, and sisters, Mary, Joan and Dorothy.This week Sgmn.Dix is visiting friends in Stanstead.Inspector D.0.Bartlett and Airs.Bartlett, of Sherbrooke, were overnight guests of Air.and Mrs.H.D.Wells.Airs.George Neil and Mrs.Albert Dix visited friends in Sherbrooke.Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Bartlett spent a week-end in East Angus, where they were guests of Mrs.Bartlett\u2019s nephew, Air.Raymond Hutchison, and family.LAW.B.I.Forbes, M.P.O., ot Trenton, Ont., whose home is in Saskatoon, Sask., visited her uncle and aunt, Air.and Airs.Janies Booth, in Farnham, over a weekend.During her stay there LAW.Forbes and Airs.Booth drove to Waterloo and visited Airs.Forbes\u2019 aunt, Mrs.Lillie Woodard.Mrs.Curtis and Airs.Bridge are spending two or three weeks with relatives in Abercorn.Mr.and Mrs.Ralph Ruiter and children, Norma and Robert, of Richford, Vt., were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Charles Dow and Mr.Arthur Ruiter, who is convalescing from his critical illness at.the home of his daughter, Mrs.Dow, and family.Mr.and Mrs.R.A.Greenlief, of Montreal, were overnight guests of Mr.and Airs.H.C.Wallace, Airs.Raymond Wallace and son£, Donald and Ralph.Mrs.Donald McLellan spent a day in Sherbrooke.Airs.L.A.Kenyon, of Alontreal, was an overnight guest of her mother, Mrs.F.B.Perkins, when here to attend the meeting of Beaver Chapter No.7, O.E.S.Aliss Mildred Carter, of Sherbrooke, visited her uncle and aunt, Mr.and Mrs.H.C.AVallacc, Airs.I Raymond Wallace aud sons over a -\\v ppV-pttH mum jyiirawfiiiiivJ.v- i .tv Wounded British soldiers, among the first to meet enemy fire when the Allies stormed the coast of France, are helped ashore from an LST transport at an unnamed British port.BISHOPTON The Junior Refugee Club met at the home of their leader, Aliss Ina Hooker.The meeting was opened by the President, Miss Verna Gilbert.The Lord\u2019s Prayer was repeated in unison.Mrs.Hugh Vintinner reported on the Len Lobb concert and dance proceeds, which were $29.28, and the raffle proceeds were $22.65, making a total of $51.93 for the evening.The election of officers then took place, which resulted ae follows: President, Marjorie Bostwick; Vice-President, Gladys Porter; Secretary, Ruth Ainsworth ; Assistant Secretary, Lorraine Jenkerson; Treasurer, Verna Gilbert; Assistant Treasurer, Thelma Gilbert.The new officers then carried on the business meeting.The sum of fifteen dollars was voted for the Hong Kong Prisoners of War Fund.The sum of £6 is to be sent to England to the Children\u2019s Hospital.Ona Bostwick moved that the club give $5 to the Kinsmen\u2019s Fund for milk for British children.This was seconded.This is a new fund for the club to support, as both the Hong Kong Fund and the Children\u2019s Hospital Club have been given support each year.Some material was ordered to be bought to finish garments.The collection was thirty cents.The meeting closed by singing \u201cGod Save the King.\u201d Air.W.Oldfield, of Sherbrooke, was an evening caller at the home of Mr .and Mrs.Charles Oldfield.Air.and Airs.Cyril Littler and son, Roger, of Sherbrooke, have moved to their cottage at Alirror Lake.Air.and Mrs.Leon Bennett and son, Denzil, were guests in Sherbrooke.The Ladies\u2019 Guild was entertained at the home of Air, and Airs.Ernest Jenkerson.There was a good attendance of members and visitors.Routine business was transacted and at the close of the afternoon, refreshments were served by the host- ess, Airs.E.Jenkerson, assisted by Airs.Herbert Howes, Airs.Ivan Jenkerson and Aliss Irene Harriscn.Air.and Mrs.J.Collet, of Beebe, were guests of Air.and Airs.B.L\u2019Heureux.Air.and Airs.Edgar Bertrand, of Alontreal, were guests of Air.and Mrs.Bertrand L\u2019Heureux.Aliss Teresa.Collet, cf Beebe, was also a guest at the same borne.Miss Dora Berwick spent the week-end as a guest of her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Charles Berwick, in Bury.Air.and Airs.Lionel Allison and family, Beth, Betty, Beuiaü, Barbara and Gary, were evening callers at the.home of Mr.and Airs.Scott Allison.Mr.George Howes, of Rock Island, spent a week-end at his home here.Air.and Airs.Roy Harrison, of ' Rock Island, were week-end guests ' of Mr.and Airs.E.L.Bishop.Air.and Airs.John Clark were ! guests of Air.and Airs.Donald Clark.i Sincere sympathy is extended to | Airs.George Hall, of East Angus, ' and the family of Air.George Hall in | :heir sad bereavement by his death.Mr.Roger Vincent, of Gowans-ville, is a guest at his home here.Airs.Rupert Gilbert, of Lennox-ville, is a guest at the home of Air.and Airs.A.B.W.Skinner.Tea guests at the same home were Air.Ernest Gilbert and Airs.Henry Riley, of St.Adolphe.Aliss Eunice Bostwick, of Bury, was a week-end guest of her parents, Air.and Airs.Roy G.Bostwick.The term \u201ciron horse\u201d for steam locomotives was coined by Sitting Bull, Sioux Indian chief.A NATIONAL ELECTRICAL SERVICE'- means ' -\t¦\u2019\t'\t;;.v r .vt.! :: * x /-x\t/\t/ *\t* N*'/' \u2019 .\t>,/'* , Hi SHBIT of service\t^ ae «aunes aad\t* noN f° deiver e, ¦1||\tre9uired.If IN WAR AND IN PEACE | Ôp\tr | Northern t/ectnc\\ SUPPLIES- Wires and Cables Telephones ;! Power Apparatus Radio Equipment for Air and Land l;|\tElectronic Devices Ip Illumination Electrical Supplies Household Appliances Overhead and Underground ; - Nsi ; 5SSS r It i NvjF Equipment #ÜIP' Defence Communications Fast.The feeling of \"it must not happen here\u201d motivated the order from Canada\u2019s Defence Authorities which called for the manufacture and construction of a vast system of coastal defence communications.And so we went to work.Radio, telephone, telegraph, teletype \u2014almost every known form of communication-entered into this stupendous undertaking.And it is understandable that in the time permitted we could not possibly manufacture all the thousands of items needed.So the hands of our distributing organization reached out\u2014located suppliers and set in motion many sub-contractors across Canada.The necessary materials were supplied on time\u2014our radio engineers, linemen and skilled installers went right into the field \u2014and Canada's defence communications system came into being.We believe that only a truly \"national electrical service\u201d could have achieved such a result\u2014in the precious time permitted.X I Northern Electric Company Limited + iSpi\til ta ' S* È&Aw'WsJh\t' ¦¦ ^ llL\ty v ' vSN-SSS: \u2022 .w.N.\u2019 il m I jriAL-ift**- \u2019 j,-.> \u2022 SAINT' JOHN.NB QUEBEC -AND ITS EMPLOYEES- ÏQ A NATIONAL ELECTRICAL SERVICE QUEBEC\tSME RBBOOKE\tOTTAWA\tTORONTO\tLONDON\tKlBKLANO LAKE SUOBUBT\tWINNIPEG CALGABY\tVANCOUV* TBOIS BIVIEBCS\tMONTREAL\tVAL OOP\tHAMILTON , WINOSOB\tTINMES\tPOBT ABTMUB\tBPCINA VICTORIA C P\t.EOMONTON VERNON WINNIPEG CALGAAV\tVANCOUVEI» > ____ v\tdrrziM a\tvirrnaiA I MONDAY, JUNE 19, 1944.5HLKBROOKE DAILY RELORD 9.USE\t\u201cWANT À1\tDS\u201d\tFOR THE\t?rvi i x\tr\\J\tVJ vj\tQUICK RECORD\tPhone 6\t8\tRESULTS OBITUARIES BUSINESS DIRECTORY Teachers Wanted Advocates QUALIFIED TEACHER WANTED FOR CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES CASH RATE \u2014 3 cents per word, minimum charge 50 cents for 16 words or less.MRS.HANNAH BAILEY There entered into rest on May 6th, Mrs.Hannah Bailey, at the home of her son.Archie, in Stanstead, j following a week\u2019s illness.I The deceased was born in Lennox-ville on May 2ôth, 1S59, the daughter ' of Mr.and Mrs.John Butler, formerly of Sand Hill and of Summer- RUGG, MIGNAULT AND GRUNDY.Me-Manamy & Waish Building, 70 Wellington Street North.Phone 15b6.awiy 1 to°r PrincipaL\u2018SSMMLad\u2018ec^e.CHARCE KATE \u2014 4 cents per word, minimum charge 75 cents for 18 ton.in 1887, and lived in Clifton up they will visit friends, and to AY ear closed the event.to Stanstead.Que.BARI HOLTHAJ1, K.C.Room 7, 44b Wellington St.ADVOCATL.Phone 75.ASHTON R.TOBIN, EOSENBLOOM Bldg., 66 Wellington North.Phone 623.GAGNE & DESMAftAIS.:5a WELLINGTON North.Richmond Office, Phon« 37.LYNCH * LYNCH.FACILITIES FOR dealing with Income and Excess Profit Tax.Sun Life Building, Sherbrooke.ROUSSEAU.HOWARD & BRADLEY.OU-vier Bldg.4 Wellington South.Phone 727.TEACHERS WANTED BY THE PROTEST-ant School Commissioners Township of Stansttad.Principal holding Intermediate diploma for the Consolidated School at Georgeviile: also Principal for the Intermediate School at F.itch Bay.Please state experience, qualifications and salary expected.Apply to L.E.CarpenUr, See.-Treas., Tomifobia, Que.Female Help Wanted i WANTED WOMAN TO ASSIST WITH housework.Good wages.Apply Mrs.Bert Lyons, Mont eal Road.words or less.BIRTHS - MARRIAGES - DEATHS Auctioneers F.A.BURTON.WATERVILLE.Pa 85r2.a M.DEMERS.LEN\u2019VILLE.TEL.2Hr23.Chartered Accountants EDNEY.ARMITAGE & CO.CHARTERED Accountant*.72 Prospect SL Phone 3285.Livestock For Sale GENERAL MAID TO ASSIST WITH REGISTERED HOLSTEIN BULL, FIFTEEN housework Apply 27 Vimy Street.Phone months old.A.Martel, Lennoxville.2180-J.WAITRESS FOR SUMMER DINING ROOM.po|.\tor Echange High school or otherwise.Selective Service.Apply National Situations Wanted, Female P.S.ROSS & SONS.CHARTERED AC-countant-, Montreal.Dentist DR.A.HAMEL.DENTIST.SPECIALTY Denturer.17a Wellington.Phone 3245.DR.J.A LANDRY, SURGEON-DENTIST, L-ray.100 Wellington SL North, oppoeite Court House.Phone 398.Electro-Surgical Clinic SPECIALTY : RHEUMATISM.ARTHRITIS.Neuritis, X-ray Laboratory, Diagnosis of stomach, intestines, heart.Electro-Surgical removal of tonsils, hemorrhoids, warts, corns.Dr.Horn.85 Court St.Phone 3636.Marriage Licences MARRIAGE LICENCES.W.H.BRADLEY.Olivier Bids:.4 Wellington South.Optometrists YOUNG WOMAN WISHES POSITION AS housekeeper on farm or country.Box 41, Record.moved into the tenement belonçinir hospitality nml then extended the in illustrated lecture on \u201cBurma,'' to Mrs.Charles Kobinson, on School\tbest\twishes of all\tto the guest of the\twhich\t\" as very interesting.The of- Street.recently vacated by Mr.and\tevening, assuring\thim that he anil\tfleers\tfor the year were elected as Mrs.D.W Vaughan and family, his comrades in all departments of follows: Mr.Albert Parsons, Fres-Mrs.Hand only spent two days hero,\tthe\tflying service\tare never forgot-\tident,\tand Miss Jean Rose as Secre- going on to Beebe, where she has\tten\tby those who\tremain at home,\ttiny,\tto replace Mrs.Fritz Pope, accepted a position.\tHe asked him to convey to his who resigned the oftVe this year.Mr.Arthur Raymond spent a comrades, that they are always re- While in town Mr.Franck was en-week-end in Derby Line.Vt., at the membeved in our prayers and that tertaired at the home of Mr.and home of Mr.and Mrs.Walter Curtis our best wishes fol ow them at all Mrs.Albert Parsons.Mrs.Mary Bean, of Beebe, spent times.He then asked F 0.Miller to The sympathy of the community a week-end with her sister, Mrs accept from his friends present a is extended to \u2018Mr.Gordon Hauver Fannie Goodrow.\tg|ft that he could carry with him on an(j family, of Ayer's Cliff, recently Miss Vivian Richardson and her his return to England, a reminder of 0f Barnston, on the death of Mrs.setshire, England.She was married niece, Miss Rheta Richardson, have his many friends in Lake Megantie.Gordon Hauver, who passed away at to Clarence Chiltson Bailev, of Clif- left for St.Johnsbury, Vt where The singing of the National Anthem ^er home, on June 13.\u201e\t,\t'.*Ve*t c!oî 11 1Norcn\t1 oy\u2019.\t\u2019\t,\trowsmith, Ont.,\tis\tat the\thome of\t\\rr\tClifford Tuvior and eon James Mrs.Lila Jersey was a week-end ,\t\u2019\tH slack, and Mrs.calLd m^Mrs D 1R Brown guest at the home of Mr.and Mrs.,,\tc.uiod on .vn.-,.n.mown.Fronk Aiken and son\ta , ' ^ec)1s.\u2018,\tMr.and Mrs.Thomas Duhoyce Mr, and Mrs.Frank\tAiken\tand' .^rs\u2019\tGibson was a\taild\tMr.Gordon Duhoyce called on son, Harold, Mrs.Lilia Jersey,\tMor-\tVlslt0r ^ Mrs.Albert Nei!,\tin Mont-\tMr.\tand Mrs.John Flanagan, in ris and Ardis Galley called on Mr.real- PTing into he city to accom- Waterloo.and Mrs.Leon Aiken and Mr.and Pany h.el ^ughtei.Mis.William, Mr.Charles Russell, of the Vet-Mrs.Fred Aiken.\tAlexander, and little daughter, i eransi (juarrji Ottawa, and Mrs.Ruft- Little Miss Verna Galley, who has Lancy>.oi, k°,a!rlar!ue\u2019 to acr :sell, of Knowlton, were dinner been spending a few days at the home hn™e> m Ayers Cliff, where they guestf.0f their daughter, Mrs.Wil-of Mr.and Mrs.L.Mattin, of New-; wl,Lspen j a/ew,Jve.\t.I Ham Badger, Mr.Badger and fam- port Centre, Vt., returned to the\tantî Mrs.V.A.Davis were in ^ jjy) an(] a]so caiic.(i on Mr.and Mrs.home of her grandparents, Mr.and\t,0IL Tuesday, where Mr.\tj Williams.Mrs.Fred Aiken, where Morris Lavjs trended the meeting of the.;\tMr, and Mrs.Stewart Wilson Andes and Verna Galley are staying,\tltch\t\u201e m®.ry Association.I\ts.ncnt\tan evening with Mr.and Mrs.while Mrs.Gatley is assisting at\tMrs\u2019\t11 \u2022 H-.\t,Klder>\tof Montreal,\tf M.\tDuboyce.the home of Mrs.Leon E.Aiken.| ?;as aa overnight guest of Mr.and; Mr.and Mrs.A.I.White and eons !\tJohnston, were dinner guests at the home of 0 ^ie family of Mr.Hauver, who ATr anri Mr?Plnrp P.prlavH\t1 recently moved here from Barnston, ! Mr.Gerge Burhart, of ' Boston, ' the sympathy of the community is ' The many friends of F/O.John F.Mass., was a visitor at the home of extended in their bereavement by : Miller of this place, were very glad Mrs.Ada Bedard.\tI the death of Mrs.Hauver.Thej to welcome him home on furlough Mrs\t\u2019VTahcl Gatlev has returned\tfuneral was held in Beulah United\tafter more\tthan\tthree years with the to her\thome\tChurch on Thursday afternon, June ;\tair service in\tEngland, Italy and Mr.and Mrs.Carl Merriman, of fL &nd the large attendance of rcla-; other countries.The Women\u2019s As-North Trov Vt were at the home lives and friends showed their re- soeiation of Knox United Church, oftheir parents,\u2019-Mt-f and Mrs,6 Frank '\tsped for her.\tj\tunder\tthe leadership of its President, Aiken.\t1\tMrs.\tLillian\tPaul,\tMrs.C.J.:\tMrs.\tGordon Gonyer, invited the Mr.and Mrs.Frank Aiken and Rhompson, Mrs.il.O.Dustin, Mrs.members of the church to meet I\u2019 /O\u2022 Harold, Mrs.Mabel Gatley and three A.H.Slack, Mrs.William C.Dustin, Miller at a supper in the Church children were at the home of Mr.Mrs.M.K.Leavitt, Mrs.Lydia Paul Had, under vhe convene!snip of Mis.and Mrs.Floyd Macey and called on and Mrs.L.L.Clough were 'on J.N.Matheson.A delicious and Mr, and Mrs.Homtr Bates and Mns.Brown\u2019s Hill, where they attended bountiful supper was served to over A.G.Brown in Sutton.\ta farewell party in honor of Mrs.fifty guests.F/O.Miller, his mother, The\tyoung people of Dunkin held'A.F.Emberley, of this place, at the\tfather and\tnear\trelatives were scat- a party at the Mansonville Baptist\thome of Mrs.Gordon L.Temple.,\ted at the\thead\ttable.\u20191 he Pastor, Young People\u2019s Hall.There was ai Mrs.F.0.Rand and Mrs.Frank Rev.John G.T\u2019ulcher, at the close of good crowd and a good time was Hibbard, who have been living in the supper thanked the ladies in the enjoyed.\tj Stanstead for six months, have name of all present for their gracious LAKE MEGANTIC i\" ¦ VOUR wife is just as much concerned about post-war planning as anyone, but she thinks in terms of her home and family now; She wants security, but she must rely on you alone to guard against the hazards that threaten it.What assurance has she that the family will have money to buy the necessities of life if you are taken from them?Life inn su ranee provides a means by which you can guarantee to them a continuing income; To provide this security in any other way is quite impossible for most husbands.To do it through systematic and regular life insurance premiums is both practical and sure.THE Manufacturers Life Insurance Company ( Established 1887) HEAD OFFICS\tTORONTO, CANADA Office \u2014 124 Wellington St.North, Sherbrooke.J.E.CARON \u2014 Manager.Sherbrooke Division.I want In know flow best to provide a monthly income of $ for my dependents within tlic means at my disposal.It is understood that your advice docs not place me under any obligation.Name.Address.I !.(Mail thlt coupon to local address ftivon abovo) KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED, After CAPTUR/N& THE MURDEROUS SCIENTIST, KINO /S CONFRONTED WITH ANOTHER CASE.THE DISAPPEARANCE OF CUNT'S $/00,000~.By Zane Grey.MEANWHILE,ENTERING- TOH/NLfc rJEEPERSfA BEAUTY5HQPU NEVER WA 5 //V ONE OF THE/A PLACES.^ THE PROFITS OF YOUR CRIME, EH ?.WELL,6HE WON\u2019T GET FAR WITH IT' GONNIES'AM I RICH!A WHOLE HUNDERT THOUSAND DOLLARS', 5 IVY TRICKED ME.' SHE STOLE AAV \u201e money/j-^A Tl ~\\S\\\tti V m M, *d»c*d b» V»|iUn Situn/ft, I opvnght 1944 by K>n| I«loi» VylAutt IN\u2019 BRINGING UP FATHER By George McManus.l\t2\t3\t4\t4\t\t\t7\tft\t\t\t\t\t 3\t\t\t\t\t\t10\t\t\t\t\t]r|^ w\t\t II\t\t\t\tYyJ r '\t12\t\t\tif\t13\t\t\t\t \t\t14\t\t15\t\t\u2022F/'/e\tit\ti?\t\t\t\t\t IB\tiq\t$Ê\t20\t\t\t\tIi\t22\t\t\t\t\t n\t\t26\t\t^5\t\t\t21*\t\t2)\th\t29\t\t Ï0\t\t\th\tiLî\t32\t\t\t33\t\ti4\t\tis\t36 \t\t3)\t\t30\tl\u2019v'V'd\tit\t\t\t40\tfyâ\t41\t\t 42\t43\tI\t4a\t\t\t\t4k\t\t\tirr\t\t4^\t \t\tso\t(m\t51\t\tiri\t\t\t\t\t54\t\t ts\t\t\t\t\tÉ j: u.0\t5)\tsâ\t\tV-\t54\t\t60\t61 62\t\t\t\t\tfc?\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t \t\t\t\t\tu\t\t\t\tb7\t\t\t\tii '-N WELL-IF THAT ISN'T A SIGHT FOR SORE EVES ' I\u2019LL FOLLOW THE DIRECTIONS JUST AS D1NTV GAVE 'EKA TO ME !! __^ LJn Copr 1944.King Fcatum Syndicate, Inc , WctSJ right*, rfirrved FOR YOUR WANT ADS.PHONE 7AV- BUT VOL) LOOK HAPPY -MOTHER/ I\u2019M OVERJOVED'DIO YOU SEE FATHER?HE IS ACTUALLY WORKING IN THE GARDEN-1AM 50 GLAD TO SEE HIM TAKE SUCH AN IN ,TEREST At* k TEREST IN ÆLVt fn FLOWERS- Lf 4 WHAT DO YOU MEAN - FLOWERS?HE IS GOING TO HAVE A CABBAGE PATCH// AL ! I 10.SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD MONDAY, JUNE 19, 1944, SHERBROOKE DEFEATS DRUMMONDVILLE 4-3 Dussault Singles Home Tieing Run With Bergeron Crossing Slab With Clincher In Ninth Hole-In-One Scored At Lennoxville A wild pitch in the last of the ninth by Provencher, allowing Bergeron to race home with the fourth Sherbroke run, last night gave Notre Dame a 4-3 victory over Drum-mondvilie in a scheduled Provincial Baseball League game played at the Park Stadium before a crowd of some 1,300 fans.Leading 3-2 going into the last half, Brault, pinch-hitting for Le-andre Couture, reached first on a base on balls and advanced to second on a beautiful bunt laid down by Bergeron.Normand Dussault, Notre Dame power-hitter, then lined out a singleto right field that brought Brault home with the tieing run.Then disaster struck at Drummondville and Bergeron crossed the slab on a wild pitch to give the locals a hard-earned victory.Leandre Couture, recently-acquired Notre Dame pitcher, made his first start a successful one, fanning eight men, walking six, and giving up only five hits to the visitors.Provencher, Drummondville strikeout ace, sent ten men down swinging, walked four and gave up six hits.Oh&rland, Notre Dame first sack-er, was the locals\u2019 hitting star with two hits.He also scored two runs, coming home once on a passed ball by Dubuc.The other Sherbrooke hitters were Normand Dussault, Lamontagne, Caron and \u201cTon\u201d Bergeron.Dussault, besides producing the game-tieing run, also played a flawless game in centrefield.His amazing running catches repeatedly drew rounds of applause from the crowd.Two of the visitors\u2019 five hits were garnered by Bernier, their young rightfielder.Bernier knocked home one of the visiting team\u2019s runs with one of his hits.Roland Vandal, tall leftfielder, collected a double in the fifth while Dubuc, catcher, also slammed out a two-bagger.The other hit was obtained by Couture.With the bases loaded in the first, Drummondville almost took a substantial early lead when Allard poled out a high one to centrefield.However, Dussault, racing over the ground, made a beautiful one-handed catdh to retire Allard and the side.In the second frame, the locals pulled off a beautiful double play Provencher singled to shortstop.Blanchette scooped up the ball, tossed to Bergeron at second to cut off Laporte who had drawn a base on balls, with the ball being relayed to first to catch Provencher before he could get on.Provencher also got out of a tight spot in fihe second when he loaded the bases with a hit, an error and a walit.He bore down hard and succeeded in fanningf the next two to ture.face him, Blanchette and L.Cou- The visitors\u2019 big inning came in we third when two successive bases on balls, a fielder\u2019s choice and a wild throw brought home two runs, with the third crossing the plate on a hit, an error and a walk.Sherbrooke scored their first run in the.third also when Charland lined out a single, and advanced to second on Lamontagne\u2019s fielder's cnoice, and then raced\u2019home when Dpbuc missed a ball after Caron had walked.In the next inning, the fourth, both pitchers racked up three strikeouts, with Provencher facing only three men and Couture four., ^'th the bases loaded in the eighth, Perusse was sent in to pinch-hit for Blanchette but grounded out, pitcher to first, for the last out.The locais then came up with their two-run outburst in the last of the ninth to win the game.Drummondville\u2019s throwing was qu.te a bit off with this fault accounting for three of their six errors.The Notre Dame players were guilty of three miseues.Henri \u201cTibi \u2019 Couture, Sherbrooke catcher, was forced to retire from the game in the third frame when one of Leandre Couture's pitched balls struck him on the wrist.Lamontagne replaced him as catcher for the rest of the game.and aid to quell the miniature riot.DRUMMONDVILLE (3) AB R H PU A E Dubuc, c .4\t0\t1\t9\t2\t3 G.Vandal, 3b .\t3\t1\t0\t2\t2\t1 U.Couture, 2b .F 1\t1\t10\t2 R.Vandal, If .\t4\t0\t1\t0\t0\t0 Bernier, rf ___ 3\t1\t2\t0\t0\t0 Allard, ss .3\t0\t0\t2\t0\t1 Guilbeault, lb .\t4\t0\t0\t8\t0\t1 Laporte, cf .\t3\t0\t0\t2\t0\t0 } Provencher, p .\t3\t0\tC\t0\t5\t1 Totals .33\t3\t5\t24\t9\t6 SHERBROOKE (4) AB R H PO A E Bergeron, 2b .5\t1\t1\t2\t2\t0 Dussault, cf .4\t0\t1\t4\t0\t0 i Charland, lb .4\t2\t2\t8\t0\t0 \u2018 Dion, lf-3b __ 4\t0\t0\t111 ; Lamontagne, 3b-c 3\t0\t1\t8\t2\t0 i Caron, rf-lf-ss ,301\t210 H.Couture, c .1\t0\t0\t10 0 Blanchette, ss .2\t0\t0\t1\t2\t1 L.Couture, p .3\t0\t0\t0\t4\t1 xDube, rf .3\t0\t0\t0\t0\t0 xxPerusse, If .1\t0\t0\t0\t0\t0 xxxBrault .0\t1\t0\t0\t0\t0 Playing at the Lennoxville l Golf Club on Sunday afternoon in a foursome with W.McCabe, G.Sutherland and W.Hunter, Norman Flint achieved the desire and ambition of every golfer by scoring a hole-in-one.Playing the No.3 hole, and using a No.5 iron,Norman and his partners watched the ball land on the green, roll eight or ten feet and disappear into the cup for an enviable hole-in-one.This is the second time that a hole-in-one has been scored on this hole at the Lennoxville Golf Club.! Totals .33 4 6\t27 12 3 1 xReplaced Couture in 3rd.xxReplaced Blanchette in 9th.xxxHit for L.Couture in 9th.Summary \u2014 Runs batted in: Bernier, Dussault; two base hits: R.Vandal, Dubuc; stolen bases: Caron 2, Dussault; double play: Blanchette to Bergeron to Charland; left on bases: Drummondviile 9, Sherbrooke 7; bases on balls: off Provencher 4, off Couture 6; struck out: by Provencher 10, by Couture 8; hits: off Provencher 6 in 9 innings, off Couture 5 in 9 innings; passed ball: Dubuc; wild pitch: Provencher, Couture; winning pitcher: Couture; umpires: Gerry Mathieu and Dubois; attendance: 1,200; time of game: 2:15.PROVINCIAL LEAGUE W L P.C.Acton Vale .4\t2\t.666 Sherbrooke .5\t3\t.625 Drummondville .\t.4\t3\t.571 Victoriaville .2\t4\t.400 Three Rivers .2\t5\t.285 SYD SPANSWICK TAKES TOURNEY AT LENNOXVILLE Syd Spar.swick, competing in the Lennoxville Golf Club open field day-on Saturday, won Class \u201cA\u201d honors with a net of 68.He was tied for the honors with La cry Pergau who also had 68.However, Spanswick won the draw to take first place in the competition.Second place went to J.Fowlis, of Lennoxville, who tied with Harry Mariasine, of the Mount Pleasant, but who won the toss to take the second position.In Class \u201cB,\u201d top honors went to Gordon LeBaron, of the Sherbrooke Country Club, with a net of 62.N.Flint, of Lennoxville, was runner-up with 65.J.McKnight won a five-way toss for third position in this class.G.Graham and E.Gilbey tied for first place in the Class \u201cC\u201d tourney while L.Wil son won the toss for second place honors.68 68 St.Pat\u2019s Sports Day Held For DETROIT TAKES Children At Vacation Colony DOUBLEHEADER FROM ST.LOUIS Over three hundred youngsters ' Shirley Coley; 2, Pauline Dion, of the St.Patrick\u2019s parish took part: 25 yards, ages 6 to 8 years; 1, in a picnic and aporte day at the June Kenalty; 2, Elizabeth Morin.Jacques Cartier Vacation Colony on ;\t50 yards, 3-legged, ages 11 and Saturday afternoon, sponsored by over: 1, Theresa Fisher and Gwin the Sherbrooke and Junior sub-di- Begbie; 2, Angela Veilleux and visions of the Catholic Women\u2019s Elizabeth Toner.League.\tj\t40 yards, 3-legged, ages 6 to 10 A large number of parents accom-1 years: 1, Jeannie Moran and R.panied the children, and saw them ! Archambault; 2, Pauline Bindley spend a thoroughly enjoyable after- ; and Frances Timmons, noon, partaking in the various eports! 75 yards, egg and spoon, ages 9 events set forth on the programme.Mo 12 years: 1, Elizabeth Toner; 2, Officials of St.Patrick\u2019s Parish | Louise Fortier, in attendance included the Reverend i 25 yards, shoe string, ages 6 to Canon J.C.McGee, parish priest, i 8 years: 1, June Kenaity; 2, Pauline and Reverend Father Moisan, cur-:D'°m ate of the parish, while the Reverend ! Special, boys\u2019 and girls, 3-legged, ! Savard Blanks Richmond 9-0 To Remain As Yet Undefeated By JOE REICHLER, Associated Press Sports Writer.Hal Newhouser, one of the Detroit Tigers, is finally fulfilling the promise he gave five years ago of becoming the finest left-hander in the American League.The 23-year-old southpaw became the first pitcher in the league to win 10 games, yesterday, helping the Tigers take both games of\u2019a double; header from the league-leading St.' Louis Browns, 7-3 and 7-5.noon\u2019s events, At the close of the afternoon prizes were awarded to the winners by Mrs.R.C.Winslade, President of the Catholic Women\u2019s League, John Galvin, President of the St.Pat\u2019s Old Boys\u2019 Association, William Steele, Secretary-Treasurer of the ________,\tHe joined Bucky Walters of the Brothers Berchmans and Joseph, as- a,£\u20acS *0 to ^ years: 1, Louise For- \\ Cincinnati Reds as the only 10-game sisted by several senior members of: ^ier ar,d Fortier; 2, Pauline Dion|Winners ;n majors.th,\ttook =h\u201eg, of ,1,\t.¦\u201d!\t! In Pitching his ssV.nth complets ages 14 and over: 1, Dorothy Coley\t/A * ^ i\u2019 f UP !1X and Robert Winslade; 2, Beverley ^S, any ffnn®d five\u2019A hom® run Parker and David Steele.\tI Kudy York wath one on m the ninth i!nv«\u2019 irvTrvTc\tlgave tne ri8'ers a cleaa sweep ol the i.uis kvivtib\t'two games.Paul Trout, in relief, 100 yards, ages 15 years and over: ; won his eighth victory of the season.L R- Winslade; 2, D.Steele.\tThe New York Giants took botli _ .\t100 yards, ages 12 to 14 years: 1, ends of a twin bill from the Boston St.Patrick\u2019s School Board, and T.i R- Fortier; 2, E.Gendron.\tI Braves, 9-2 and 7-1, to climb into D.Walsh and F.Hoye, past wardens I co yards, ages 9 to 11 years: 1, K.third place in the National League of St.Patrick\u2019s Church.\tj\tHetherington; 2, L.Dorey.\t| Standings, a half game ahead of the The youngsters showed their ap-' p yalÿs\u2019T a*C?s 5 to ^ years: 1, M.; Reds.Phil Weintraub homered in predation of the afternoon bv voic-l \u201eSrs; 1 L'\t^ i the first game, but had to leave in ing three hearty cheers for Mrs.R.! w\",\u2019 yard\u201es\u2019 p;'ep° and under: Y Don .the third inning due to a strained C.Winslade and Miss G.Workman\tj\u2019 P- Drapeau.\tmuscle.Cliff Melton, making his the two ladies mainly responsible 7J yardd ^-legged, ages 11 years first start since May 19, was the win-for the afternoon\u2019s piogramm* and 0V%I:T!'h Ç^ron an J H.Le- ner m the nightcap, but had-to leave Officials were: Starters, M.Par- C°c,n'fl P' ®t®ele and R- Wms.ade.m the seventh inning complaining y.?\"\u2022' Mm C»lvin; ihgo., H.L&fj'S\u2019 IS.Vrw.i S-\u201c ;M \u201c Dotalj, W.Steel,.S.1\tD B.iâï.rd,\t\"I ,**\u2022\tAttletks down- Hansford and F.Irwin; scorers, J.j 50\twhpelhnrrntv\tiq ed the New York Yankees tw-ice 4-4 T.Hawkins and Francis P.Kenalty;'*, and o\u2019vcr: LG.Lindler'and R ?nd 8-6 to drop the world champions ACTON VALE IN 6-0 WIN OVER VICTORIAVILLE _ Acton Vale pounded out a 6-0 victory over Victoriaville yesterday to remain in first place in the Provincial Baseball League, a half-game ahead of Sherbrooke who took second place last night by their 4-3 triumph oyer Drummondville.Though winning 6-3 over Three Rivers on Saturday, the Drummondville squad dropped to third position with an average of .571.Lamothe hurled the Acton Vale crew to the triumph yesterday while Cote, Victoriaville pitcher, was charged with the loss.Gaby Meunier, Actor* Vale third baseman, led the hitters with three safeties, including a double.He also pilfered three bases to bring his total of stolen bases to fourteen._ F.Gagnon and H.Malfara, both Valemen, also connected for two hits, including a double apiece.Roland Meunier batted in three of the Valemcn\u2019s six runs.Lamothe was touched for only five hits while Cote gave up twelve to the league-leaders.A little diversion was provided around the ninth inning last night when a fan got a little hot under the collar and started throwing his fists around.Police broke up the first fight but the gent beg'an an-Dtaer brawl in another part of the stands, with several fans becoming invoked.It took the concerted efforts of the guardians of the law policing the stadium to break up the scrap.Herve Perusse, a member of the Notre Dame team and member of toe local police force, was also called upon to hop the railing MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS American League Batting\u2014Tucker, Chicago, .371.Runs\u2014Doerr, Boston, 43.Runs batted in\u2014Spence, Washington, and Hayes, Philadelphia, 36.Hits\u2014Doerr, Boston, 71.Doubles \u2014 Culbnbine, Cleveland.!9.Triples\u2014Gutteridge, St.Louis, Savage and Lindell, New York, Moses, Chicago, 5.Home runs \u2014 Cullenbine.Cleveland, and Hayes, Philadelphia, 8.Stolen bases\u2014Case, Washington, 15.Pitching \u2014 Ryba, Boston, and Maltzberger, Chicago, 6-1.National League Batting\u2014Walker, Brooklyn, .386.Rums\u2014Bordagaray, Brooklyn, 50.Runs batted in\u2014Weintraub, New York, 48.Hits\u2014Walker, Brooklyn, 86.Doubles\u2014Walker, Brooklyn, 20.Triples\u2014Musial, St.Louis, and Barrett, Pittsburgh, 7.Home runs\u2014Ott, New York, 18.Stolen bases\u2014Lupien, Philadcl-phna, and Ryan, Boston, 8.Pitching\u2014Munger, St.Louis, S-l.\t\tG ross\tHep \tClass \u201c\tA\u201d\t s.\tSpanswick, L.\t83\t15 L.\tPergau, L\t\t84\t16 \tS.Spanswick won\tdraw.\t J.\tFowlis, L\t\t80\t11 H.\tMariasine, Mt.P.\t84\t15 \tJ.Fowlis won to\t\t G.\tMcManamy, C.C.\t86\t14 D.\tC.MacRae, C.C.\t82\t10 R.\tMcCabe, C.C.\t83\t10 B.\tN.Holtham, C.C.\t80\t7 L.\tG.Dunn, C.C.\t86\t11 J.\tLagasse, C.C.\t87\t10 Ilex Nurse, Mt.P.\t\t88\t10 W\tC.McCabe, L.\t90\t12 H.\tL.Gagnon, C.C.\t95\t15 K.\tC.Mills, C.C.\t103\t15 \tCla*« \u2018\tB\u201d\t G.\tLeBaron, C.C.\t82\t20 N.\tFlint, L\t\t88\t23 J.\tMcKnight, L.\t87\t20 R.\tL.Curphey, C.C.\t91\t24 C.\tDavidson, L.\t86\t19 H.\tMacCallum, C.C.\t92\t25 F.\tNorcross, L.\t90\t23 \tJ.McKnight wor\ttoss.\t li.\tCrime, L\t\t96\t25 F.\tPattison, L.\t95\t23 A.\tW.Kerridge, C.C.\t96\t23 A.\tDavidson, ]\t\t97\t23 R.\tBlake, L\t\t98\t23 B.\tBaker, I\t\t99\t23 G.\tSutherland, L.\t98\t22 H.\tMoffatt, L.\t101\t25 1).\tMcLean, Mt.P.\t103\t25 R.\tClarke, L\t\t98\t20 J.\tBell, I\t\t95\t17 C.\tA Beaton, C.C.\t96\t17 M.\tCloutier.Mt.P.\t104\t25 H.\tW.S.Downs, L.\t105\t24 W\tDuncan, L, .\t105\t' 24 E.\tMessenger.L .\t105\t A.\tHutley, Mt.P.\t192\t20 T,\tMoiyncux, 511.P.\t109\t22 \tClas» \u201c\tC\u201d\t G.\tGraham, C.C.\t94\t E.\tGilbey, L\t\t.VI\t78 L.\tWilson, C.C.\t100\t32 P.\tDauncey, L.,\tHU\t36 \tL.Wilson won to\ts.s.\t A.\tR\u2019OSeS, L.\t97\t28 P.\tGeddcs, L\t\t106\t36 N.\tBaldwin, ]\t\t102\t30 J.\tV.Staggs, L., .\t102\t29 L.\tDwyer, L\t\t105\t31 F.\tO\u2019Donnell, C.C.\t104\t26 J.\tHcrold, I\t\t112\t32 E.\tSmith.L\t\t112\t32 R.\tStevenson, L.\t106\t26 H.\tHu tie y, Mt.P.\t123\t30 L.\tGillander, Mt.P.\t122\t28 announcer, F.Si nuns.Prize winners were as follows: GIRLS\u2019 EVENTS yards, shoe string-, ages 6 to 40 yards, ages 9 to 11 years: 1,years: 1, P.Drapeau; 2, M.Veilleux into sixth place.Luke Hamlin 69 69 72 72 73 73 75 77 78j 78\t1 80\tI 88 62 65 67 i 67 67 67 67 71 72 73 74 75 76 76 76 78 78 78 79 79 81 81 82 82 87 « 66 68 68 69 70 72 73 74 78 80 80 80 93 Jean Barrière Wins Nod Over Young Lebrun In Arena Fight Jean Barrière, 133 pounds, of Montreal, put a damper on Young! Lebrun\u2019s hopes of a succcissful come-! back when he gained a ten-round | decision over the local fighter in A1 Knurl\u2019s second 1944 boxing programme at the Sherbrooke Arena.Packed with action, the final had the fans cheerin.g lustilj as both fighters gave it all they had and landed repeated telling blows throughout the ten rounds to the body and head.Lebrun, veteran of the ring, showed a wide knowledge of ringcraft and landed most of his blows to Barriere\u2019s body.The Montreal fighter, a fast, hard hitter, displayed superiority over Lebrun, however, ami earned the nod by a wide margin.The local boxer came out frist at the opening bell and carried the fight for the first few rounds.Barrière, cool as a cucumber, concentrating on sizing Lebrun up and also landed several jarring blows to Lebrun\u2019s face.\t1 In the fifth round, Barrière began to open up and let fly with a series of right crosses to the face which staggered Lebrun several times.Both fi.ghters kept up a blistering pace and were sti going all out when the final bell rang.The referee, Andy Ashton.raked Barriere\u2019s hand, squashing Lebrun\u2019s first attempt on the comeback trail.In the semi-final bout between Rene Leclerc, 162, of Sherbrooke, and Stan Bailey, 158, of Timmons, the Sherbrooke fighter won by a technical knockout in the fifth round of an eight-round bout.Bailey hit the canvas ten times before his manager threw in the towel in the fifth round.Displaying plenty of gameness.Bailey kept bouncing back for more but was no match for the experienced Leclerc, whose victory Saturday marked hi- second win here this year in lass than a month.Kid Ben Charetie, 112 pounds, of Sherbrooke, and Lefty Young, 115, of Montreal, fought to a draw in a fix-round semi-final.Young, a clean, experienced fighter, won the judges\u2019 favor for his exhibition of skill in the first three rounds as he outboxed Charette as the local boy came out fast with the apparent in-ientkm of putting Young out of the way, Charette became more aggressive in the last three rounds and had Young on the go all the time.In the preliminaries.Tiger Ryan, 132, of Sherbrooke, gained a decision over Emile Destafano, 128, of Sherbroke in a four-round bout.Ryan came out fast and hit hard for two rounds.He weakened somewhat in the third but came back strongly in the fourth round to outclass Destafano completely.In another preliminary, Albert Pelletier, 132, of the Lord Sherbrooke Training Centre, scored a K.O.over Yvon Marier, 130, of Farnham, in the third round.This fight was fast and furious with Marier becoming groggy at the end and a helpless victim for Pelletier.Knocked cold, Marier remained unconscious for over two hours.In the first bout on the evening\u2019s programme, Kid Provencal, 132, of Sherbrooke, scored a technical knockout over Wild Cat Choin-iere, 130, of Sherbrooke, in the third round.Completely outfought, Choin-iere was knocked clean out of the ring in the third round but came back only to absorb a terrific shellacking.His manager tossed in the towel around the end of the third.ISLAND BKOUK Mrs.D.W.Ewing spent a week with friends in Eaton Corner.Mr.Samuel Dawson, of New , York, is spending a few weeks with Mr.Sternie Stronach and other relatives.Visitors at the Ewing home were Miss Ruth Lobdell, of Dorval, Miss Bernice Ewing, of Montreal, and Miss Dorothy Ewing, of Sherbrooke.Mrs.Larigee, of New Hampshire, was the guest of her daughter, Mrs.Gordon Lister, and Mr.Lister.MACDONALD\u2019S British Con CANADA\u2019S FINEST CIGARETTE TOBACCO ¦ ' v ; æ *'Yy \u2022 ssws yy ''dï''' wyM year.-, and over: 1, G.Lindley and R.Fortier; 2, P.Gedbout and B.La- , ,\t, , ,,\t.\t.casse.\t1 bianked the rankees witn lour hits 25 yards, wheelbarrow, ages 9 to'!1?,,^6 0Pen.er\u2019 wjth Frank Hayes 103 yards, ages 15 and over: 1, 12 years: 1.K.Hetherington and F n 1 l, t i n g his eighth homer to tie Roy Rita Berube; 2, A.Corcoran.\ti\tCorcoran; 2, A.Palmer and M\tDva-\t; Cullenbine for tne league\tlead.A ,50 yards, ages 12 to 14 years; l,1\tpeau.\t-\tlax-run first inning enaoled\tthe A\u2019s Rita Beruoe; 2, Louise Fortier, '\t25 yards, shoe string, ages 6\tto 8 w.n the second, 8-6.The Chicago White Sox took two close games from the Cleveland Indians, 3-2 in 10 innings, and 6-5.A home run by Wally Moses in the.10 th won the opener for relied pitcher Gordon Maitberger, his sixth win of the year against one loss, the best mark in tne loop.Mose s triple and Leroy Schalk\u2019s single in the ninth gave the White Sox the second game.Joe Haynes gained his first victory of tne season.The Brooklyn Dodgers and Phila delphia Phillies divided their two games, the Dodgers winning the firsi.7-3 and the Phillies taxing- the second 6-2.St, Louis Cardinals and Pitts burgu Pirates split a douole header.Moit Cooper won his sixth .game in tne opener, 12-2, and Fritz Ustei muelier tamed tne Cards 3-1 witn three hits in the nightcap.Stan Musial connected for two triples and a double in the opener.After losing the opener to Boston 9-6, Washington took the night-cup 1-0, behind tne four-hit pitening of Early Wynn.The Reds defeated the Chicago Cubs 5-2 m the first game of a double header before -10,222 fans, the largest crowd at Wrigley b ield.Harry Humbert, making ids first start for tne Reds, was tne winner.The second game ended in tie called after 13 innings on account of darkness.Bill Nicnolson hit two homers for the Cubs.NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia .101 003 000\u20144 7 0 New York .000 0U0 000\u20140 4 0 Batteries: Hamiin and Hayes; Du-biel, Johnson (9) and Hemsiey.I Second game: Philadelphia .600 010 100\u2014S 13\t3 New York .001 200 021\u20146 13\t1 Batteries: Christopher.Berry (9) and Hayes; Page, Lyons (11 and Garbark.Chicago .100 100 000 1\u20143\t8\t1 Cleveland .000 000 020 0\u20142\t7\t1 Batteries; Dietrich, Maltzberger (9) and Tresh; Klieman, Reynolds (9) and Rosar.Second game: Chicago .000 500 002\u20147 12\t1 Cleveland .000 110 400\u20146 13\t2 Batteries: Lee, Haynes (8), Humphrey (9) and Castino: Kennedy Poat (4), Cromek (6), Smith (9) and Rosar.Boston .004\t003\t001\u20149\t16\t1 Washington\t.\t001\t012\t200\u20146\t10\t3 Batteries: Judd, Barrett (1), Ryba (6) and Partee; Leonard, Wolff (6), Garrasquel (6) and Ferrell.Second game: Boston .000 000\t000\t000\u20140\t4\t1 Wash., 010 000\t000\tOOx\u20141\t10\t1 Batteries: Woods, Terry (S) and Conroy, Wagner; Wynn and Guerra.St.Louis\t.\t200\t001\t000\u20143\tC\t5 Detroit ______ 001\t010\t23x\u20147\t11\t1 Batteries: Kramer, Caster (7) and Mancuso; Newhouser and Richards.Second game: St.Louis .200\t210\t000\u20145\t8\t2 Detroit .300\t020\t002\u20147\t10\t0 Batteries: Galchouse, Shirley (4), Potter (5) and Mancuso; Gentry, Trout (5) and Svilt, NATIONAL LEAGUE New York .400\tOOU\t104\u20149\t15\t0 Boston .100\t10O\t000\u20142\t5\t2 Batteries: Fischer, Seward (2) and Mancuso; Tobin, Cardoni (2) Klopp (9) and Mas!.Second game: New York .102\t020\t020\u20147\t12\t0 Boston .001\t000\t000\u20141\t7\t3 Batteries: Melton, Adams (S) and Lombardi; Andrews, Hutchinson (8) and Hofferth.Brooklyn .031\t000\t300\u20147\t15\t0 Philadelphia .200\t000\t100\u20143\t7\t2 Batteries: Hoad and Owen; Raf-fensberger, Karl (S) and Finley.Second game: Brooklyn .000\t100\t010\u20142\t9\t1 Philadelphia .500\t010\tOOx\u20146\t9\t4 Batteries: McLish, Branca (1) Osgood (3) Webber (7) and Owen; Gerheauser and Peacock.Cincinnati .100 011 101\u20143 14 0 Chicago .00(1 00 2 000\u20142 5\t1 Batteries: Gumbert and Mueller; Wyse, Vandenberg (8) and Easter-wood.Second game: Cin.000 030 030 000 fl\u20146 9 0 Chi.100 102 101 000 0\u20146 r 2 fCaliel end 13;h, darkness).The Savard entry in the Sherbrooke Intermediate \u201cA\u201d Baseball League yesterday blasted out a 9-0 victory over Richmond in a game played at Richmond.By the 9-0 triumph, the Savard squad increased its lead in the league and kept its winning streak going at four straight.Couture, limitin.g the Richmond sluggers to five hits, gained honors as the winning hurler.Grégoire, Richmond pitcher, was charged with the loss.Leading bitters for the squads were Gauthier, of Savard, and Hume, of Richmond, each connecting for a two-base hit.The Savard men got off to a fast start, pushing three runs across the plate in the first inning.The game tightened up and neither side was able to score until the fifth when Savard knocked in one run.They repeated this feat in the sixth and shoved another across in the eighth.In the last frame the Sherbrooke team again got rolling and hit Grégoire for enou.gh safeties to net them three runs.The hit total for the Savard crew was eleven.Scores by innings: Savard.300 011 C13\u20149 11 Richmond .030 090 030\u20140 5 Batteries: Savard\u2014H.Couture and L.Couture; Richmond\u2014Grégoire and Bouchard.WATERLOO TOPS FUSILIERS 19-4 Waterloo yesterday moved into second place in the Sherbrooke Intermediate \u201cA\u201d Basebell League when they gained a 19-4 victory over the Fusiliers in a game at Waterloo.Having won two and lost two, the Waterloo men take over second place as the Fusiliers and Richmond, by their losses yesterday, slipped back into a tie for third.The Waterloo crew made a walkaway of it yesterday as they pounded three Fusiliers pitchers for fourtee.I hits.They scored one run in the ! first, three in the second, four in the ; third, six in the fifth, two in the j sixth, and one in each of the eighth ! and ninth innings, j The Fusiliers lost a lot of ground on errors, six being committed by 'the Sherbrooke players.The Water-j loo men were guilty of three mis-cues.FUSILIERS (4) AB R H PO A E Chabot, 2b-3b-c\t5\t1\t2\t5\t2\t1 Boutin, ss-2b-rf .4\t0\t0\t0\t2\t1 Faquin, cf .5\t0\t2\t1\t0\t0 Lapoint, lf-2b-lf 5\t0\t2\t1\t0\t0 Latuiippe, lb .f\t2\t2\t6\t0\t1 Turgeon, c-p .2\t0\t2\t6\t0\t0 Laçasse, 3b-p-3b 3\t0\t1\t3\t11 Goyette, rf-ss .401\t112 Fontaine, p-rf-2b 4\t1\t1\t0\t1\t0 Totals \t 37\t4\t13\t24\t7\t6 WATERLOO\t\t(19)\t\t\t AB\tR\tH\tPO\tA\tE Cook, lb \t\t 6\t1\t1\t13\t0\t1 Perrier, 2b .5\t3\t2\t3\t0\t0 Elroy, rf .5\t2\t2\t1\t0\t0 Lucia, c \t 4\t3\tn\t8\t0\t0 A.Morris, If .5\t3\ti\t0\t0\t1 B.Morris, ob .4\t1\t2\t0\t1\t0 Dauplaise, ss ., 2\t1\t0\t0\t0\t0 Gibbs, cf \t 3\t1\t1\t0\t0\t0 Cameron, p .5\t3\t1\t1\t7\t1 zRacir.e, ss .2\t1\t2\t0\t0\t0 zzRouselle, cf .2\t0\t0\t0\t0\t0 zzzJones, rf .1\t0\t1\t0\t0\t0 Totals\t 44\t19\t15\t27\t14\t0 zReplaced Dauplaise in 5th.zzReplaeed Gibbs in 5th.zzzReplaced Elroy in 7th.Score by innings\tR H E Fusiliers .\t100 10O 011\u2014 4 13 S Waterloo .=134 262 011\u201419 14 3 Indiana, Iowa and Wisconsin each have a village named Honey Creek.Out of Nowhere (5KAf2LEY HoST£TL££ é-tAD\tOur Or O^OANIZEO BALL YAAPS' «an m E Sut AT \"'AND (2UNMIN& BASE ES AMO CL-ASI'iMS FL'ES A tVfLipCgr CEFflRD GOlFffi TAKES THIRD IN t® EC MATCH Quebec, June 19.\u2014®\u2014Gaston Amyot, Royal Quebec Golf Club, won the 10th annual 36-hole Duke of Kent Tournament Saturday, scoring 153 to lead a field of 23 competitors in that major links competition played on the beautiful rolling course of the Royal Quebec Golf Club at nearby Boischatel.Adjutor Dussault, also a Royal Quebec Club member, took the second place one stroke behind Gerard Huot, Mount Orford, was third with 16.L.P.McConvey and Bert Barnabe, both of Laval-sur-le-I.ac, came behind with 158 and 159 respectively.It was the first time Gaston Amyot won the historical trophy donated by the late Duke of Kent in 1935.Amyot paced the listed golfers through the first 18 holes with a 73 card\u2014one above par\u2014but Adjutor Dussault, a previous winner, and Best Barnabe proved to be very-dangerous rivals scoring 74 and 75 respectively.Amyot managed to maintain his narrow one-stroke margin when he came back with an 80 score in the second round to chalk up his victory.Barnabe could do nothing better than 84 in the afternoon to end in the fifth place, one stroke behind McConvey.Gerard Huot, on the other hand, played steady golf to end the tour-neyney with a pair of 78.A Macauley, Royal Quebec, won the 11th invitation tourney with a 05 net score.J.E.Laçasse, also of Royal Quebec, was second with 66.CANTERBURY The bears have come again to this district, this time taking a sheep out of William Mayhew\u2019s pasture one right and the next night one cut of F.G.Bennett\u2019s.The men of the neighborhood gathered and surrounded the woods where he had dragged the sheep, hut old Mr.Bruin was too cunning for them and had left.j Mr.and Mrs, James Groom, Mr.and Mrs.Lindsay Groom and Master Wendell Groom motored to Hatley to attend Mr.Bond Little's funeral.Mr.Little was Mr.James Groom\u2019s brother-in-law.Mr.and Mrs.Charles Cowling spent a day in Lennoxville and Sherbrooke.Messrs.F.G.Bennett, H.K.May-hew and N.G.Bennett spent a day in Lennoxville and visited Mr.and Mrs.E.P.Bennett.Mr.and Mrs.Shirley Bennett and : family were guests of Mr and Mrs.James Harrison.Mr.Harley Asker and Mrs.John Parsons spent a day in Sherbrooke and called on Mrs.Asker in tho hospital.Mr.and Mrs.Edgar Groom and Miss Brenda Groom, of Sherbrooke, visited Mr.and Mrs.James Groom.Miss Irene Cowling has gone to Sherbrooke for rn indefinite time.The teacher and pupils of the 'Consolidated School held a picnic when a treat was given to the pupils by Mrs.Milton Goodwin, their teacher.Batteries: Konstanty, Delacruz (5), Shoun (8), and Meuller; Derringer, Erickson (8), Fleming (9), and Easterwood.Pittsburgh .030 000 110 \u20142 6 2 St.Louis .603 100 02x\u201412 13 0 Batteries: Sewell, Cuecurullo 12', Rercieno (8) and Camelli; M.Coop-per and ODca.Second game: Pittsburgh .300 009 0C0\u20143 6 0 St.Louis .000 000 ,00-\t1 3\t1 Batteries: Ostermuller and Lopez; Lanier, Schmidt (9) and W, Cooper.YESTERDAY\u2019S GAMES INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Montreal 11, Jersey City 2.Montreal 2, Jersey City 0, Newark 9, Buffalo 7.Newark 10, Buffalo 1.Rochester 8, Syracuse 6.Roschester 7, Syracuse 0.Baltimore 20, Toronto 6.Baltimore 4, Toronto 3.NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn 7, Philadelphia 3.Philadelphia 6, Brooklyn 2, New York 9, Boston 2.New York 7, Boston 1.Cincinnati 5, Chicago 2.Chicago^ 6, Cincinnati 6 (tie).St.Louis 12, Pittsburgh 2.Pittsburgh 3, St.Louis 1.AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia 4, New York 0.Philadelphia 8, New Yorfe 6.Detroit 7, St.Louis 3.Detroit 7, St.Louis 5.Chicago 3, Cleveland 2.Boston 9, Washington 6.Washington 1, Boston 0.SATURDAY\u2019S GAMES INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Syracuse 4, Montreal 3.Toronto 5, Baltimore 1.Rochester 6, Jersey City 5.Buffalo 7, Newark 1.NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston 5.New York 1.New York 6, Boston 5.Brooklyn 4, Philadelphia 3.Chicago 2, Cincinnati 1 St.Louis 2, Pittsburgh 1.AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 2, Philadelphia 1.Philadelphia 5, New York 3.St.Louis 5, Detroit 0.Boston 11, Washington 4.Only games scheduled.WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Jersey City at Montreal.Buffalo at Syracuse.Newark at Torcnto.Baltimore at Rochester.NATIONAL LEAGUE New Y\u2019ork at Brooklyn Philadelphia at Boston.St.Louis at Chicago.Only games scheduled.AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington at Nev.York Only games scheduled.INTERN ATION A L LEAGUE STANDING \tWon\tLost\tP.C.Baltimore .\t.29\t22\t.569 Buffalo\t\t.30\t24\t.556 Rochester .\t.31\t25\t.554 Montreal .\t\t24\t.529 Jersey City .\t.28\t25\t.528 Toronto .\t.25\t27\t.481 Newark \t\t.20\t31\t.392 Syracuse .\t.19\t31\t.3S0 NATIONAL LEAGUE\t\tSTANDING\t \tWon\tLost\tP.C.St.Louis .\t.2f\t16\t.632 Pittsburgh .\t\t22\t.560 New York .\t.29\t25\t.537 Cincinnati .\t.9S\t25\t.528 Brooklyn .\t.27\tOQ *-0\t.491 Boston .\t\t34\t.414 Philadelphia .\t.21\t30\t.412 Chicago\t\t\t30\t.362 AMERICAN LEAGUE\t\tSTANDING\t \tWon\t{.ost\tPC.St.Louis .\t.32\t25\t,ô 31 Boston \t\t.31\t2Ô\t.534 Chicago\t\t.25\t24\t.510 Detroit\t\t.29\t28\t.509 Washington ,.New Y'ork\t.27 .25\t29 28\t.482 .472 Cleveland ,, ,\t.26\t31\t.456 Phila!clphia .\t.25\t30\t\t.453 TRUSSES Fitted and adjusted.Satisfaction guaranteed.Gaudet Pharmacy 29 King St.W.Tel.3868 Near Bus Terminal a "]
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