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Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
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samedi 30 octobre 1948
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  • Sherbrooke gazette ,
  • Sherbrooke examiner
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  • Sherbrooke record
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Sherbrooke daily record, 1948-10-30, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" 1948\t\tOCTOBER\t\t\t1948\t s\tM\tT\tW\tT\tF 1\tS 2 1\t4\t5\t6\tT\t8\t\u2022 10\t11\t11\t13\t14\tIS\t16 17\t18\t11\t30\t21\t32\t23 24 81\t35\t36\t37\t38\t29\t30 SllcDbmoke iDailiilEecai'd WEATHER CLEAR AND WARM Extensive tog ivatchw this movninR, f \tr\tv 1 V\te «\t His\treference to the\tnext elec-\t\tdf'ino *i\tacy in\tlois\tit lia;\t\ta\tcon\tsti- litre V er i- 1k C- i A {,73-\u2014 Tv.ed at hand.Communist placards week that troops can be with-i showed up inside the city, whose drawn from the coalfields, government defenders insisted they r> vi a .i\u2014 i - r , ¦> ! would fight to the death.\t, nik had afcout ^'cnaPshins'tieUil ' ow said the President had not Bt.Martin-in-the-Fields and a do- The whole Manchurian military \u2022 F \u2018 , \u2018\tthrough à isent \u201c direct order hut had asked VAiU other famous church-s, t he dockers\u2019 strike Ramadier =aid he1 for an explana'lio1 of the American \u201cCollege Youths\u201d- members of a gockcis strike Kamadici said ne iti\tLhe British-Chineso 311-year-o d society of boll-iing- t7gh g!-S P\tset-! resolution.\ters-will set the chimes echoing -icr j.\ti Previously, authoritative sources over the city nnoiu uiy, Vt\u201e O T r.: ci.- and a fireman were kil'c 1 early today and several other., including some p;i.-en.-en-, injured in the colli.ion of two Mon-t-rcil-Bosuon trains ronr here, 'lue uu th bound train, en roule from Montreal fo Boston, wan tion was brief and extemporaneous, tution which defines the power o'| orei atoj by the Canadian Pari Tic.In what might be called the keynote to his address he declared: \u201cI believe that the unity of Can ami depends on the preservation of re tn govern nu nl imd ,u,w the | copie | Railway, The northbound Boston-f the country will govern them-; elves tin ugh I situation was endangered.Sinmin, I rail town 35 miles west of Mukden, was abandoned by national troops who fought their way back into Mukden.Further south, the government was contracting its forces tow-ard Chensi, 25 miles south of Red-held Chinhsien.It offered an avenue of escape through Hulatoao.Residents of Peiping and Nanking were gloomy.Tsingtao, Shantung port practically sealed off from the balance of China by Communist troops, {UP some SCO.OOO tons of fuel on was cheered by the arrival of an | ships inthe main ports The government announced yesterday that \u201can important number\u201d of passenger trains would be suspended as of Nov.3 because of j the coal shortage.F! r t r i f i Fv U « c had Indicated the United States I The Ancient Society of College would support the resolution.| Youths, with 40,000 mmuln-i to-The resolution authorizes sane-! day, was formed in the days of lions against eit.side if they re-1 King Charles I from a group of fuse to obey ir.ders in the NegevF his courtiers who used to acquire the port of Electricity has been severely | Since one of the mediator\u2019s orders a healthy thirst before drinkin rationed.Stores will be for> idden < v-as withdrawal of troops to posi-I bouts by exercising on the belhs.to light advertising signs or show tions held when the recen fighting Today membership of the s, windows.To date the strike ha- began, the Jews feel this cost about 4,009,>00.tons of coal j deprive them of the I .and the dockers\u2019 walkout has tied American task force.Continued on page 8 Two non-Communist mine union leaders w-rote John L.Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America (A.F.T yesterday that the strike is most ly political.Their letters were prompted by Lewis\u2019 proposal that President Truman ec-ek to halt the shootin-of French miners by cutting off Austin audience last night, \u201cboth ! Ullited States aid to France, the Democratic and Republican Lewis made his proposal in a !et- \u20141\t¦\t1 ter to William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor would , ciety is handed down from lather ains in that to son.sect°r,\t, This is the first time the hells The sub-committe- was instruct- will peal for a Royal birth since ed to examine what forceful steps June 23, 1894, when the present the U.N.might tak.against truce- - the rights and sovereignty of the provinces.\u201d Departing often from his pro-pared text, the 64-ye;;r-old former Premier of Ontario attacked Government centralization ami emphasized that \u201cthe people of Canaria are faced today wilh the vil,-illy important task of rebuilding Confederation,\u201d Although he discounted Liberal hopes in the next election, he told Ms audience that \u201cthe Liberal tlicir cnoscn rep tives,\u201d he went on.\u201cTh\" \\v itn people of Canada arc far-the task of res tiring the supremacy of their cleclcl rrpr T:.,n-tives over government, a ,| al-ovc all over a small giotip of official, who at .present arc ext raising almost unlimited povvrr without, responsibility.to-Montreal train was operated by tli - Boston nml Maine Railway.N a ni en of the dead and injured were not immediately learned.One of the dead engineer.-; utr» an employee of the C.P.R., the other of the Bo ton and Maine.The dead fireman was from the Bouton and Maine crew.'lhe t.'.P.R.fireman was taken violators.Continued on page 8 Wind Expected To Clear Fog Truman Heads For Missouri; Dewey Will Stay In New York By CLYDE BLACKBURN Canadian Preens Staff Writer New York, Oct.30.\u2014-OT\u2014De-1 parties will be aware that our fiant, confident President Harry! states cannot be kicked around for Truman headed for his Missouri ! political purposes.\u201d home today after telling New i Socialist Workers\u2019 candidate Yorkers he was confident of a ! Farrell Dobbs was in Milwaukee, Democratic victory in Tuesday\u2019s the Prohibition candidate, Claude election and that he would work : Watson, was in the midwest dry for peace with Russia through any! states, John Crary, \u201cGreenback\u201d \u201chonorable\u201d channels.\tcandidate, was unreachable, Ger- His Republican opponent, for the , aid L.K.Smith, Christian Nation-presidency, Governor Thomas E.alist candidate, was out west and Dewey of New York, remained.John Maxwell, 86-year-old Vege-here in New York where tonight tarian party candidate, was report-he will make his final appeal to ed to be on his honeymoon, the voters at a Madison Square 1 Close to 2,000,000 people by po-Giarden rally.\t, lice estimates, whooped it up and The metropolis yesterday was cheered or stood and watched as host to five of the candidates for Truman swept through two days the presidency but only two of of street parades and impromptu them\u2014Truman and Dewey\u2014are meetings in New York, conceded a chance at the White The President had record mcet-Hous*.\t! ings in Madison Square Garden The Progressive party leader, Thursday and in Brooklyn last Henry Wallace, winding up a 25,- night, and everywhere he was re-000-miIe campaign with a 33- ceived by enthusiastic crowds, speech program in the immediate Republican candidate Dewey vicinity, criss-crossed the Demo- rested here last night except for a cratic and Republican parades last social visit or two accompanied by night as the flood of presidential nearly 100 motorcycle police aspirants put an unprecedented Today he faced \u2019a busy pro load on metropolitan police ee- in the metropolis of his own state c-orts.\tand his meeting tonight in the Gar- Comparatively unnoticed were den promised to equal that of his half of the continent, grounding two others who want to be Preti- Democratic opponent on Thursday | p:ar,e, tangling shipping and mak dent\u2014-Norman Thomas, perrenia! night.\t- Socialist candidate passing through Truman last night virtually proto a Bridgeport meeting, and Ed- claimed his intention of by-passing ward A.Teichert who was at a lo- the State Department if necessary cal hotel after campaigning across ! in order to \u201cpierce the Iron Cur-country for the Socialist-Labor tain\u201d and remove the cloud of Party.\t, \u201cmisinformation and misunder- Other presidential candidates f standing\u201d which he said prevent-were far afield.G-overnor Strom I ed the Soviet leaders from accept-Thurmond of South Carolina, who \\ ing the peaceful intentions of the organized the \u201cDixiecrats\u201d of the ; United States, southern states to fight Truman The President, obviously emart-b«cause of hie stand for civil i ing under the criticism he received rights, was in Texas.\tj ___________________________ he told aa\tContinued on page 8 ! Highest Legion Award Given To Six Sherbrooke Residents Six men, long associated with) campaign and has been in charge! the work of the Canadian Legion ; of most other Legion financial | in Sherbrooke, were presented ia.-t drives.Former mayor Bryant i-night with the Meritorious Service a past president of the branch, i 1 Medal, highest award the Legion .a member of the board of tru.- ' can make.\t! and was chairman of the building! Honored at the Legion's annual, committee for the home, banquet, held in the Ne,.Sher- Mr.Bourgeois is ar.ofl e,- pa brooke Hotel, were W.E.Spack-, preEi(jflnt aml ha been activ,.man, George Chapman, George j the relief and welfare committee.I Bedard, Guy Bryant, J.A.Bnur-1 iooke(i aftcr lhp Home fo- two! \u201cSurely the people of Canada J Lo hospital, along with five railway have had enough cvid.i, v- of i,he i mail clerks.Apparently all were danger of centralized power.I lav-! severely injured, ing arbitrarily occupied th, ibid The injured passenger» appar-,\t,\t,\t,\t,\t1 income, corporatiun and other ently < aped severe injuries.All p.i .y n.is ft great nun to play in taxes which for years w, :\u2022 \u2022 re-! were treated at the.wreck sceme, political life of this gardrd as exclusively provincial, about a mile fro,m hero in an ksolat-the Dominion government las pro-! ed dire riel, and were not taken to reeded lo overtax our people under! hospital.a theory of cyclical -budgetingI The crash derailed both engineH, _ | and mail, baggage and milk cars of one train.the ftitun i com\t\t.i>\t\t id\tUb\the sa iti\tthis futu\tre would not\the\t: realize!\t1 until tin\t[\u2022 Liberal ; part\t\trelumed\t\u201cto the\tprinciple.' 1 of\thi:\tstone liberalism,\t\twhich it | has\tcc\timpletely\tabandoned (lurin :\t I the\tpr\tist few ;\t.cars.\u201d If\tthis oc- i cur.-\t\the said,\tthe Libel\t¦a! party 1 \u201cvvj j\ti t;\tike its pi;\tice in thon\ta changes of (\t\t\u2019ernment\tin the yv>\tirs ahead whic\t\u2022h\tare an e;\t-, eniial pa\trl of our i\tOC)\t¦'alic _scys\t[cm.\u201d\t , \",\tn\u2019t\the said th\tnit the pre:\tsent lead-> ers\tof\tthe Libi\toral party\thad be- ! eomi\t3 C\ticntralistf\t\t \u201cDis\t\tregarding\tour constitution\t ; they\th,\tave asser\tted the proposition\t that\tprovincial\t\tgovern me\tnts have no\trig\thts and\tno powei\tis which cannot\t\tbe set\taside at any time\t Continued on Page 8 ÔÎU Says Strength Can Prevent Another War By D\u2019ARCY O\u2019DONNELL Canadian Press Staff Writer Hull, Que., Oct.30 T\u2014Nations de.siiious of peaîe can prevent a third world war by keeping a preponderance of military strength on their side, acting Prime Minister St.Laurent said geois and Newman Hunter years and gave unsparingly of ni - Charles Kench, president of the time to visit veterans in .lth\u201e\ti.Sherbrooke Legion branch, pinned Mr.Hunter, second vice-pn ider t ,u, ^\t\u2019\t, th medals on these men.all ofj0f the branch, has been «Mive f .r By The Canadian Press Scattered fog patches in eastern Canada are expected to clear today, whisked away by winds swirl-, ing in from the United States mid- whom have devoted more than 20 many years in many Legion years of service to the Legion., j\ta-i\tn\t|Callers at W.B.Sargeant\u2019s.The\tBaptist\tLadies\tAid\tbox Mr> and Mrs.c< E> Davis\tand pa.ty and sa e was held at the two daughters, Ethel and Evelyn,I loung Peoples Hail.1 here was a of Coaticook, were supper guests! good attendance and the proceeds 0f Mr.and Mrs.W.B.Sargeant ' were over seventy dollars.\ti Luev Beane.Mr.and Mrs.Arnold Heath have I The November meeting of the! returned to their home here, after: Women\u2019s Institute wil be enter-! spending the summer at their cot-, tained by Mrs.W.B.Holmes, at! tage at Vale Perkins.\t| \u201cHolmeshurst,\u201d on Thursday, Nov- ! Mr.Urban Courser spent two ember 11, instead of on the re-! ture for Frc it 1er d Astaire ! ng the lines \u2019arade.\u2019 BUTTON sard : Eddy Howard, after a preview: \u201cI wouldn\u2019t say it was j a bad picture but I\u2019ll bet the gov- ! ernment refuses to accept amuse- 1 ment tax on it.\u201d * »!» * Gag of the week: That prop skeiton rigged up to smoke a cigar, move its arms and talk via a Jol Sydne \u2022hi bald ; eel ing Lyle B spe: n Dr : and Mr.ed the P nville.and Mr; days at Glen Sutton.- Mr.and Mrs, William Hammond, of Ontario, were calling at Mr.and Mrs.Guy Smith\u2019s one evening.Miss Geraldine Smith, who is IIar- working at Cowansville, in the esby- telephone office, spent the weekend at her home here.n.Mr.and Mrs.Charles Harvey gular day.An interesting program is being arranged and all members ; are asked to be present.Visitors will be welcome.appear nightly at the UNION HOTEL Cocktail Lounge \u201cSherbrooke's Popular Rendez-Vous\u201d jK6 evening in St.and Mr.and Mrs.Small, of Gard- ns.Mr.nier, Me., vjsited her parents, Mr.j , and Mrs.O.M.Smith and Mr.and Kenneth S.B essem.en, o: yjrSi Arnold Aiken, over the week-:g:; n, D._ un;! hard, dark and lonely,'5j)e,ra^e, in^r.1^u® ^°r P°vvel* : no warfare io\"a\\ we hear.knt out o; it all, it he remains tnumpn song1, ncaev ,\t.\ttie can tiein make\tthe seveal Can\ta lead that will allow you to make I his hearts independently.East, ,mee; - ¦ 3 one C.'a\twith one vo\u2019ce\ttlle maximum contract.Then un- with six trumps, did not make a ''¦ S.-ill we know\tour\tloved / \":' om LVnat\u2018a,\t\"uh .one .v,\u201cce>\tcover the East and West hands trick.They are Gospel.the successes tneir wise.the the di in{ ag\t.\t,\t.ones \u201cOver There\u201d?Surely! Heav-j \u201cd a confidence m its future en i< a home, and in a home wU| J:'°ni ho.ding on to proven truths know each other! The gift of God anvl t° honor.is eternal life\u2014*-not eternal sleep!- and faiji, hope and rove ^ are ine ^ tality.Personal love to tho'sc whose essentials o\u2018 Life from UC Dime | conscious presence vve have awhile Radio Producer Answer to rrfvlou» Patilc EVERYDAY SAINTS -\t,\t\u2022\t\u2022 - 44 l V.O lii U *.L\till » .it .1 .\t\u2018\t' .ueid to wiser leadership,\u201d advices the Brownwood, for the saints of God are j Y K n I r.* '\tT N ,, AT.\t- :\ttv\trt *\t\u2022\t\u2018 i \u2022 v\t.11 gather that while we are hoping, j f0rg0t.corporate love?to all that! j expecting to meet and know our j mjgbty host who form with us the Our generation has saints.There; loved ones \u2014 they are wading.; Body 0f Christ; blended undis-j j a re hundreds of thousands still.| watching, and expecting us.Tiie^ : tinguishably with that Love Divine! .\u201cThe\tworld\tis bright,\u201d\taccording ! have crossed the bar and are now J vvhich vve \u201cthirst and faint and die ; to\tu\tmodern\thymn, \u2018\u2018wuh the joy- ; pioneering\u2019 in reu.ms spintiuu.I pl\u2022ove,\u2019, that Love Incarnate in j ous saints who love to do Jesus\u2019i When our hark sets out across the j whom ;\\]] arc made alive.: will, \\ ou can meet them in sohoo;, j ^ea of Oeath we shau t ind man j j \u201cXo w, therefore, ye are no more ! or\tin\tthe lanes, or at sea,\tin enurch, |.of that heavenly co\u2019ony on th^\u2019; strangers and foreigners, but fel- or\tin\ttrains,\tor in ?ops,\ton a ; tea.; '\u2018ho res to welcome us.So fear not ! ; low-citizens with the saints, and of o f t hi» lex., Bulletin.The Memphis Rt'e&s-Scimitar be*-Iicves that there will be a gradual growth two-party 'system.In another expression of opinion putting responsibility on the Republicans, the Hickory, \\.L., Record observes that there won\u2019t he a tvv svstem until \u201cNorthern reformers confine thoiV evangelistic work to their- own civil -md problems.\u201d ' saints of (iod arc just fob: ; Dne who knows thaï sea and has household of God.\u201d As you e, and I mean to oc one, too.\u201d; been over it will be our Piiot j journey over the Road of Life, like me Diffmüt?Of c in an age when stupidit hatred and selfishness D in especially j Ghnst, and on t ie heavenly shores I worn by the saints before you, \u201cLet greed, w\u2019ll loved ones awaiting.To fan!n0^ your heart b< troubled.Be of prevail.; g-cep here, to wake up there ana good cheer.\u201d At the end of the n\u2019t listen to those who see noth-!fillB\tourselves at home how j roar!, you will behold the saints, good in modern man.Ho :s a .strange v\\i.seem the sudden i\trise in bright array, HORIZONTAL 3 Prevaricator 1,3 Pictured\t4 French article radio director\t5 Indiana\t(ab.) and producer\t6 Airship ! 14 Property\t\u2019f\tIntend transferee\t8 Scottish ! 15 Girl\u2019s name sheepfolds 16 Beverage\t9 Aged i 17 Hung in folds 10 Soul (Egypt)\t29\tDeep\thole 19\tSoak flax\t11 Forefather\t31\tHops\u2019\tkiln 20\tCivil wrong\t12 Heavy blow\t39 Observo 22\tIndividuals\t13 Seines\t,0.\t® 23\tBelongs to her 18 Hebrew letter ''vorm 24\tSymbol for c\t; H\trr\t\tL\t\t\t1 |\tF\tIf\t[A\tC\tE\tL\u2019 R\t'E\tur\t|E\tA\t~s~1\tIej\tLJ\t\t\t\tA\tT\tA 0\t[r~\tEl\t[l~\t\t3J\t\t\t\t\tT\t1\tc\tJ N\t[ô~\tR .\u2022 - -I\t\tff\tid\t\tc\"\"\t\t\t\tT\tN\t6 |E »\t\t\t\tE\ts\t\t.ran\t\to j\tSj\t\tE\tF L\t\t0\tPi\tN\t1 1 1 r* u a 01 c e 1\t\t\t\tL 1\t2\tR\tD\tF !\t\tw |\t|Âl\t\t\t\t\t\t'51\tu 1\tE\t£\t Ch\trw\tE-1\t[pj\tE\tI TtfNGtH 1\t\t\t\tE '\tN\tD\tE\tD El\tA :\tmsiRi\t\t\tL,\t\t\tJ\tY\tD\t\tR\t A\t-^1\t\tv- ¦ i s\t\tcl\t71\tF!\tp\tis\t\tM\tAj\t- \tJj\tËÎ\trm\t\tA\tl|\t0\t\t\t\tO\tS\tE 0\tT 1\t11\tT j\tJj\ts\t\t!DJ\tE\t0\t1\tV\tE\tIS.M\t\t\t\tSt\tT\t! \\\tËJ\t\t\tP\tE\t\tS social cniid, a son Saints' Day reve Ail transition.to tis SAYS ELECTORAL COLLEGE REFORM WILL HELP THE CHALLENGE OF 8 UN I'S THE R\u201cieYh\u2019 f'V C\u201d N>nvf ail(i Observer thinks adop-tio-n 0! the Gossett-Lodge amendment, for reform ot the electoral college, will do more to build up tlle dn\tYv'tem than anything row in s ghi.\u2019 Political reform will come a.- the South gairh tfom industrial reform,\u201d in the opinion of the Duncan, Okla., Light.Georg» sentiment, encouraged by recent Republican state meetings in Atlanta, shows the two-party system may not be far off there.\u201cFrom ail indications, a strong Republican Party i.s in the making,\u201d says the .Macon News.\u201cBy 1952 vve will have a real two-party system,\u201d declares the Col-umbiv, Ga., Ledger ami Gainesville, Ga., Daily Times, \"More and more dyed-in-the-wool Democrats now recognize the necessity for placing Florida in the list of doubtful states,\u201d says the St.Petersburg, Fla., Independent.But the Jacksonville.Fla., Journal believes this won\u2019t come until \u201cafter World War III,\u201d All e glory ot our manhood so that a man need not live in the Jungle any more.\u201cLook at us,\u201d the Saints say across the years, \u201cand learn afresh ; who toil below, the challenge of that all that made us what vve are! Saints of God ns they bid us look! Ghost.the love, the courage, the! Surely you will want a place in the self-sacrifice and the that great Procession! Then, begin Hy of truth which they em- j now and prepare yourself for it.nd so become invigorated by 1 Give your heart to the King of contact with the Eternal | Glory; surrender your all to Him; sted through man.The | then will all your doings be ordered is at Yu\tmr 1\t! is posa\t1 to\tmake\tyou !\tupon fit to be\tour\tcompr\tinion\ts in v i\trtue.\tfaith.We are\ton!\ty orti\ti n n ry\t¦ men\tand 1\ts Ini plie women who\t\tfollowed ir\t\t1 the ?\t;teps ^\tbody ai of Chris\tt and w\t\tlines\tsed, a\tt ail !\tvital « times, to\t> the\tbest.,,\t\t\t\tmanife; Some\twill\targil c\tthat\tall th\tis is |\theroes so remot\te.P(\tM'haps,\t.But\tthe s;\tflints ;\tDivine have p\tLo^rc\t\u2022ssed\tfarth\ter on\tthe j\twhat t' way on\twhic\th we\tmay\tall t r\tavel.\tfit to ikeaded by Christ, the King of i Glory.These come \u201cfrom earth\u2019s j wide bounds, from ocean\u2019s farthest ! shore, through gates of pearl Hear afresh, I beseech all ye stream in the countless host, single ling to Father, Son and Holy t tney arc purer, ran vve arc, thev re a ci y to participai: 1 the Spiri them and welcome s in ail which made t icy are and would make us ! ic numbered with them in | ;gcr, happier glory everlasting.Follow the saints; the ail the more 1 in all virtuous and godly living.IGl( as fellow-(They are shining lights shedding to always what is righteous in His the energies of I beams on have come to! to think ;he path of life, i 1 f them i.s \u201cour pill usten! Can't you hear Christ evi '.'lasting Son.the King of : y, calling, calling, calling you march breast forward in the have become.Th siiip of life, the Christ\u201d in all may share with equal freedom.Their insistence on \u201cBe ve there- in e 111 what they ire\u2019s is a fi How» life which is \u201cin which files seen as vve go : they are shin- tne ; ing spires of the City of God to reach which wc travel.Their formula ?| share Love.Love which is stronger death, love of man rooted of God, love taking he spirit of victory?Gladly leave all behind you and never look back till ¦ize is won.And heaven is ?d! There, with Christ, vve the life that is life, indeed, rubidium 29\tCerium (symbol) 27 Calyx leaf 30\tGot up 34\tGolf term 35\tQuantities of medicine 36\tConsumed 37\tCeremonies / 38 Road (nb.) 39\tHalf-cm 40\tTouches lightly 43 Filth 47 Geraint\u2019s wire 51\tMan\u2019s name 52\tWestern festivities 54\tSiouan Indian 55\tEnvoy 57 Avvakener 59,60 He is a- producer of -plays VERTICAL 46 English conservative 48\tProboscis' 49\tRoman road 21 Investigators 40Partofhand 50 Flat-bottomed 23 Demigoddess 41 On the ocean boat 25\tCoalesce\t\u2022\t42 Labels\t52\tRoute (ab.) 26\tScheme\t43 Accomplisher\t53 Distress\tsignal 27\tCompass\tpoint 44 Heredity\tunit\t56 Near 28\tGuido\u2019s high\t45 Measure\tof\t58 Note in n°te\tpaper\tGuido\u2019s scale ;r than) with our loveo ones who are wait-1 » Electrical unit in ovc _ watching, and expecting us \u201d Ileum (comb.if immor- \u201cOver There.\u201d form) 1\tZ\t3\tH\t5\t6\ti\t\ts\t\t9\t10\tII\tIt\t13 n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t15\t\t\t\t\t\t it>\t\t\tP\t17\t\t\tIS\t\t\t\t\tl!>\t\t 20\t\t\tL\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t \t\t\t2H\tüS\t\t\t\t\t\t\tr\t\t\t Ü7\t\t2?\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t30\t\t31\t31\t33 3S\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t35\t\t\t\t J13\t\t\t\t\t\t\tÆ\t\t\t37\t\t\t\t \t\t\tit\t\t\t\t\t\t\t39\t\t\t\t ','0\tHI\tHI\t\t\t43\t41\t45\tlb\t\t-Nc; '\t17\t\t\tsT\" bl\t\t\t^;.Y.\t52\t\t\t\t\t\t53\t\t51\t\t bS\t\t\t56\t\t\t\t57\t\t\t\tS3\t\t\t 51\t\t\t\t\t\t\t60\t\t\t\t\t\t\t SHLHBKÜÜkE DAILY RECORD.SATL'RD.\\'', OCTOBER 30.lo'0.Fiva A Sherbrooke Daily Record Saturday Features & Around The Armouries ZG\\OU % The Sgt.-MajiH- s e views Vctivities of I rsion Itranohes Throuchout the K.a>tern l\u2019on nship; (ilium; 1) \\W 11 l K 1*K Wi ll THE PARISH AND THE HILL By Mary Doyle Curran -THE PARISH AND 1 HE HILL\", by Mary Doyle Curran, is not so much a noval as suggestive notes for a novel.Mrs.Cu.ian telis about the Irish in a \\ankee miEtown from the days when tue first great famine in Ireland sent them, starved and hungry lor work, pouring into New Eng.and \u2014shanty Irish, mostly, at the oe-ginning\u2014till now, when the worst of the iace-curtain folk are speaking out smugly and truculently about \u201cthe trouble we\u2019re having in Boston with the Jews and the Niggers.\u201d\t, \u201cExactly who is \u2018wc .t c : c-doubtable* Mrs.O\u2019Connor, shanty Irish still and proud of it, demanu-ed of her snobbish, ambitious lace-curtain son Tabby.\u201cThe Irish, of course,\u201d he answered, surprised.Whereupon Mrs.O'Connor wished devoutly and loudly for the strength in her good right arm to give her son the clout that would knock fhe bully out of him.Mrs.Curran\u2019s i ory\u2014and its bones, as such, are meager indeed \u2014is laid in a small industrial town to which County Kerry- folk came in great numbers.John O\u2019Sullivan came there, too\u2014the grandfather of whom little Mary O'Connor, writing her childhood reminiscences in \u201cThe Parish and the-Hill,\u201d speaks devotedly.The way grandfather happened to come was this: Back in County Kerry the girl he was in love with suddenly ran away.She had learned that her father was planning to wed her to a rich old one.But she sent John O\u2019Sullivan this note: \u201cI have gone to America.I have saved all that I earned from my eggs and taken the bit Aunt Bridgie left me.If you want me, you will find me in a place where there are Kerry men.Signed Thomas Heffernan, Schoolmaster, written for Johanna Sheehan, in secrecy.\u201d The sagas of the first, second and third generations of the union of Johanna and John O'Sullivan follow, thinly and desultorily presented, but unfailing in their interest because Mrs.Curran proffers her loosely-strung-together Irish anecdotes with an engaging charm, and she has an eye and a tongue for character.But the action that holds a novel together -\u2014 makes it move \u2014 is strangely wanting in \u201cThe Parish and the Hill.\u201d Instead we have Mrs.Curran\u2019s gentle voice raised\u2014through the persons of little Mary O\u2019Connor, her mother and her grandfather, wise old John O\u2019Sullivan\u2014 to plead for a decent Irish pride in real values, for the honest, outspoken sympathies and convictions of the old shanty Irish of the Parish in contrast with the shallow, self-seeking, showy respestability of the lace-curtain Irish of the Hill.\u201cIt\u2019s a sad story\u201d (this story of Irishman fighting Irishman to get to the pot of gold on the hill), old John O\u2019Sullivan pointed out, and \u201cthere is no end to it yet.\u201d Mrs.Curran, with the love of an Irishwoman for the Irish in her heart, obviously thinks so too, and says so, plainly and appealingly, in* \u201cThe Parish and the Hill.\u201d THE WILD COUNTRY By Lou»» Bromfield Th« \u2018wild country\u201d lay in the Mue hills behind* Ronnie\u2019s grandfather\u2019s stock farm.The boy and his dog were not allowed to explore it for fear they might get lost.But in the year that this story covers, bounded by the summers when Ronnie was thirteen and fourteen, he found wild country much nearer home, in the hearts of people he loved and hated, even in hk own.Ronnie himself tells the story, looking back over more than forty years to events that have become much clearer to him than they were w-hen they happened.The Sequence began when Old Virgil, FALL READING: toosevelt and Hopkins .$6.00 îold To Say .$1.75 'he Wild Country .$3.00 'ictor Book Of Concertos.$3.00 .aughter From Downstairs $3.00 'he Varsity Story .$2.50 .and Below The Wind .$4.00 irinner of the Atlantic $5,000 prize 'he Wood .32.00 An Outline of Christianity.Tru-Vue Stereoscope Films .$2.75 .30 Orders taken for Personalized Christmas cards; come in and see the fine selections at reasonable prices.7 Hooks, Gifts.Handicrafts, Cards.8 Dufferin Ave.Phone 1701R the Valley\u2019s mean ne'er-do-we\u2019l, maliciously told him that Henry \u201chad brunk himself home a chippy\" from the St.Lou:.- World\u2019s Fair.Henry, who owned a neighboring farm, was ten years older than Ronnie and Ronnie's idol.Beyond the disturbing suggestions in \"chippy.\" after Ronnie\u2019s grandfather had thoughtfully explained the word to him, the marriage also aroused a hunting curioeity in the lad and something like jealousy toward experiences that swept his greatest friend beyond his ken.As a wife, Vinnie was all that Henry des ed, but her coming Tit up smoldering fires in the Valley.It kindled to sordid crime the real evil that lurked in Virgjl\u2019e dirty shack, brought out into the open the corruption of too-handsome Wayne To ranee.Valley boy who had been a protege of Ronnie\u2019s grandfather and had made good by becoming the youngest Cen-gressman.Ronnie\u2019s only touchstone to the bewildering play of passion in which he had an unwilling part was the wisdom of his grandfather, who understood the unreason of emotion and condemned only cruelty.Doors into the more distant world opened for Ronme the second summer, when hiu grandfather sent him to Europe, partly to let him see how other people lived.partly so that he could meet :he lady always spoken of in the Big House as Melissa.Ronnie had divined that Melissa was his grandmother.When he first saw her, in Austria, «ha was in her sixties.but her beauty Mill made people turn to look at her.For thirty yeans Melkoa h'ad ! lived in Europe with u lover, a.critic of pictures and music, who had become ill and blind.The few hours that Ronnie spent with them, when the talk turned on the I Valley and on painting, and the t lad\u2019s apperception of the relationships that had existed between has grandfather.Melissa, and the sick man, gave him a clew to \u201cthe tresisury of knowledge and appreciation and interest by which civ- ! ilized people life\u201d .Through, it even the Valley, which he knew better than anything in life, became a different place.That meeting with his grandmother.the grand tour, and the year\u2019s happenings in the Valley made Ronnie grow from a child to a man.He too crot-eed into wild country \u201cthat can be filled with the passion and torment, the confusion and distress which no child , can ever know or understand.\u201d \u2018The Wild Country\u201d gives immediacy to the bewilderment, pleasures and pain of a sensitive youngster who is forced to break out from his own self-centred childhood and find his place among adults, many of whom are etill childish.Its distinction lies in the skill with which Mr.Bromfield shows the feelings of the lad as he became aware ow emotions that i gukled or drove very different! kinds if people \u2014 some of them primitive, even perverse; otheiv, discriminating and self-directing.! The force of the book is limited by ! the boy\u2019s own limitations in experience.In comparison with the larger canvases that Mr.Bromfield sometimes has essayed, it is a \u201csmall\u201d book, smoothly writ- » ten, as a Ronnie passing out of middle age looks back at places' and people who already have tak-j en on some of the qualities of a 1 legend.* * ¥ ROOSEVELT AND HOPKINS By Robert E, Sherwood \u201cI ask you to treat him with | the identical confidence you would feel if you were ta'king to me.\u201d These words, written to Stalin by Roosevelt, show the remarkable relationsMp between Hopkins and F.D.R.They explain why the Hopkins papers reveal eo much about the great personalities and events of the Roosevelt era, why this book .is the most important Inside story of the war in one volume.Regarded by some as an Iowan j eombination of Machiavelli and J Rasputin, Hopkins was closer to; Roosevelt than any man has ever I been to a President.He was * Roosevelt\u2019s eyes and ears and legs, the selfless instrument of Roosevelt\u2019s will.He made it his job to find out exactly what Roosevelt wanted, and then to eee to it thatj neither hell nor high water blocked its achievement.This is the story Hopkins would | have told had he lived.It is the full, matchless inside story, told ¦.by one who fetood at the centre | of it, who played in it a part of incalculable importance.It is the story of the conferences, in London, Moscow, Chungking, Washington, Cairo, Teheran, Quebec, Yalta; of the decisions taken and discarded, of the de»\u2014 perate improvisations, of the j blackest hours, the wide-flung | global plans \u2014 those that went! j wrong as well as those that sue - : ] ceeded\u2014of the top-secret corre-i spordence, the coded cables, the | ! carefully scrambled transatlantic; telephone conversations, the bad j guesses and successful ga m b les on which millions of lives hung.Here are unguarded glimpses of the world\u2019s great: Hopkins,! Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin, Molotov, Litvinov, the Chiangs, Ibn Saud, Dodu.Beaverbrook.March H de G:.; r' Book Weeks Starts In Canada Today Designed to tVcas attention on Canada's achievement* in the literary world, Canadian Book Week is being observed across the Dominion from today until Nov.6.Official opening of Book Week will take place tonight when Bernard K.Sandwell, Toronto editor, will be guest speaker at a The Managing Editor's Coin am DOUGLAS AMARON Bv dinner to be held at Windsor To date this year Cana thors have produ novels; six nove' nine nove Sherbrooke is the subject of articles which will he :> ;¦\u2019.earing shortly in two widely-read Canadian periodicals.Two writers have been in town this week gathering information public and pictures and before the year- Ont.end features on Our Town will t»e hui au- published in The Montrealer an,: ed five historical The Financial Times, of pioneer days; W.H.Ward, veteran Montreal As pa t of the Remembrance Day ceremonies planned by Branch 41.one of the ig events of this j very speeia.day «ill be the Testimonial Banquet to he held on the : \"Nigh: Of the 11th\u201d in the Farm-i ers Had in Danville.This special testimonial dinner is being arranged to honor Roy Smith, one of the oldest^ and most active members of the Branch, whose activities have done so much to build up the Legion in Danville and to maintain increasing interest in both Legion work and in urging others to \"join the Legion in your region,\u201d as wed as for his great work in keeping in touch with the boys overseas during the war years.' Highlight of the dinner will be a presentation to he made by Past Provincial President Hugh Parry, Auxiliary of the Branch, will join with Legion members and their wives and special guests on this momentous occasion to honor their fellow townsman and highly esteemed, Legionnaire.Kcmem\u2019- since Day services for Branch 41 wilM>c held on Sundax, Nov, 7th, with Branch 41 members.the Ladies' Auxiliary.Girl Guides, Boy Scouts and Wolf (Tibs meeting at the Xiunoury at p in.to parade to the Cenotaph for services to which the publie is most cordially invited to attend at 2:30 p.m.Rev.C.Foggo, Bianch Chaplain, will be in charge of the service which will follow the usual Remembrance Day observances, and the divine worship will be purely lion-denominational in true Army style.Danville-Asbestos Co.of 10th Recce Corps «ill provide the .\u2018\t-\ti .\ti\t.\u2022 1\t; *\t1 : L'MWVUl nUkTIl l aiTY IUWUL.\\\t\\\\ Ul j-ii-riviv 1 iiv - of valued human in- newspaperman, is ,lomg the armU of Montreal, who will \u201eav tribute Guard of Honor at the Cenotaph xrr.\" 1 .0 (-lie-.- .c W-n» kii .1 h g Till\" t 'U> \\Totlt '\u2019i'A-.t Y MIlll Will t I'M- a .\t- .\t.\t.!\t* ^ Ul'\t.\tI terest ; 18 biographies; seven books for the Montrealer and will fea of travel; six volumes of poetry tuve the «inter sports attractions and :x volumes of humor.\tof this district.This article is one The observance of Book Week of a series The Montrealer has j given over to the study and pur- been publishing on tourist attrac-1 chase of Canadian-Written vol- tion centres around the province, i umes is the result of efforts by the jt was planned at first to do one, » Canadian Authors Association.double-length feature on this pu t The group maintains that there 0f Townships but the story on 1 no necersity for Canadian au- what we have to offer in summertime is being held otf until next year.Wally Ward, who has had many ; years of agency, newspaper and : free lance experience, is the man j whose organization of press cover- i age for last summer's national Liberal convention at Ottawa won kuddos from the working report- i ers.The groundwork he laid at the ! Libeial convention formed the pat tern for later coverage of the Pro Conseivative's big confer to Mr.Smith's splendid record of service by presentin.g him with the Legion Medal of Merit.President John Philbriek, Branch 41, will act as chairman of the dinner, ami members of the 1 adies' Following the service, the parade will be 'ismissed at the Armoury.Poppies will he on sale by the Branch next week-end.Next Branch meeting.Nov.8th.Business, nomination of officers.til l nit- In the Eastern up an A.D.S.(Advanced Dressing I n« n ships'\tStation) at i T>uv ambulance On vx>m tocs.Lus.the tall and brought two loads of woundod « \u2022\t> itinir.g \u2022.a-.n t, u fuT.\tfrom\t{'™* 4 -IV» g but « * :;t is c ur unit do- > >\">*\t\u2019.VI ^ ,h\u201c A D f' al vu: it?It' you s'm i'er.vtcd\t>' was possible to evacimta in etting ether- know whui yoU',h'Tn1 to \u201c are do g and .in getting some\td ho scheme finished at 4.SO i* .hoT, m.blicitx for vour unh.th*'\t\"*^ch th put a .ho* lvnnc: of vour men retuniod to camp and eupixn.iTO and\tf\t.« dl appoint I\tcamp at ItKK) lira, and \u2022cm one to he vour Regimental\t>« M'crorooke.alter got- Rcivrtor :\tth.\"Around thc she traits to 37 years, completed aqueduct was faultily though she could shade that figure built.George Femmore Cooper ,:own a i0t without being doubted.stood ready to shoot if the con- Did voit notice that ihe munici-struction company encroached on pa] authorities got.those nice his land\u2014as it inevitably would, lights in front of the City Hail all j Part of the reservoir was buttres- painted up and then issued the dim- 1 -ed only with an earth embank- OTit order that keeps them dark?! ment which David feared would _\\nj ti0 vou know that if you want \u2022 give way under its first overload.to ^eep up with the \u201ctimes\u201d travel- | Flood, fire, labor trouble\u2014(and.fi- iing from here to Coaticook and i nally the big freeze'\u2014presented al- hack you have to change your | most insuperable obstacles.Hie job watch 'four times?brought personal problems as well.There was the piquant and beautiful Jessie Gibson, capricious niece of one of the city\u2019s aldermen, whose unpredictable ways alternated, annoyed and intrigued David.Then there was Arnvinata, who encouraged and heartened David Greeley, crusading editor of the up-and-coming Tribune; Nathaniel P.Willis, the Winchell of hie day; Washington Irving; James Feni-more Cooper; and William Cullen Bryant \u2014 come alive on these pages.With David we meet the* \u2022* when it looked as if the dam were ««m at the American Institute going to fail.Her loveliness had hair where Bryant recited an ode; captured his eye the first time he .^he gorgeous water pageant had seen her eight years before, ! ^\u2019hich celebrated the successt o.though he was a long time in learn-1 completion oi the aqueduct; at ing her real worth.\t' skating partie.', pla^s and ev* And while the main characters ! Year's Day calk, in this exciting story are fictitious,! It w\u2019£us on 0110\tD1® Ier oc\u2018 famous men of the era \u2014 Horace casions that the young man drank ______________________,___________|\ttoo deep from the punch bowl, and, later, unaccountably, came into pofisetssioii of Mr.Willis\u2019 famous beaver hat\u2014which episode had unexpected and embarrassing consequences.Bellamny Partridge\u2019s brilliant picture of life in New York 100 years ago is completely authentic.Books, manuscripts, records, documents and diaries, preserved by the American Institute, provided background details which enliven every page.This is a book not only for every Partridge fan, but for everyone who enjoys a good historical novel about America's early days.BOOKS Captain for Elizabeth by Jan Westcott .S3.00 The Husband Who Ran Away by Hildegarde Dolson.$3.50 Big Freeze by Bellamy Partridge $3.25 The Young by Irwin Lions Shaw View N ew Masters .Stereo-Stories for $4,00 $2.75 Xmas NOW READY! Our Selection of Rust Craft, and Personal Christmas Cards.Rosemry Gift Shop 4 Dufferin Ave.Books - Gifts Phone 4634 Handicrafts CAPTAIN FOR ELIZABETH By Jan Westcott History holde few lives as filled with romance, adventure and daring-do as that of Cavendish, captain for Good Queen Bess.When Captain Cavendish\u2019s flagship \u201cDesire\" rode into Plymouth harbor, two years after ehe had left it, her sailors were clothed in silk, her sails were damask and her topmast was covered with doth of gold.On the voyage which ended so spectacularly, Cavendish and his men had truly seen the.world and almost everything had happened to them.But Tom Cavendish remembered best the California coast and what had happened there.It was after they had left the shores of Mexico and were off Cape St.Lu cm, on the southern tip of California, that hr had eap- ll\\C I went of apply-, reading in the newspapers, .king friends to keep a look-out ami so on.1 passed through the usual stages of optimism and despair and emled up with a roof over my head, more or less on the ternis 1 wanu'J.Now, when people who are still houseless ark how 1 got my flat, I always say.\u201cOh, 1 «as very lucky.\" Ami so 1 was, for in spite of the tremendous efforts made to provide new houses and the results achieved, there are many families still se< king a horns of their own.The fact is thfit three-qua r U* r s -of-a-mill i on fa mi ! i e s in Britain have liven rehoused since the end of World War II in new houses or in houses which have been repaired or converted.Haifa-million new houses have been built since 1945, between a quarter and a third of which are classed as temporary houses, Actually, the distinction between permanent and temporary houses is rather a misleading one, sine: m'any of the \u201cpre-fabs\" or prefabricated temporary house-are just as sturdily built as some of the more pretentious looking brick houses that, used to bo run up in great numbers before World War II and are much more convenient and comfortable to l;ve in.Labor Costs Future building program» are rather uncertain, but it is hoped to continue building houses at the present rate of about 2O0,0ÜQ at a time.Costs have increased more than had been expected.It now costs more than three timeis as umch as it did in 1931) to build a typical working-class house.The price of materials has greatly increased, particularly tha: of timber, which has to be imported and costs four times what it did, so that even the cost of the smaller amount now used {of one house ha*: more than doubled.Since the new hous.es are meant to provide satisfactory homes for many years to come, they are being built to higher standards of size and fittings than before World War II, but this has contributed to the higher costs of materials and labor.Labor costs have also risen, partly on account of improved wage rates and partly on account of lower productivity which, in turn, is in part due to the effect of World War II 0n the numbers of young skilled workers in the.industry.It may be neces- sary to cut out some of the small lux in it : which, so fa»-, have been included in all new house».', in order to cut costs.But the houses will continue to go up.There is one new building, at Osi i-rley, neai London, which is now neiu -y complete ami which will bring much happiness to a great mar,y fortunate people.It is going to he a hostel for victims of that terrible ailment called paraplegia, which is the name by which paralysis of the legs b niv.iwn.Many of the » who suffi » from paraplegia (paraplegics, as they are called) are casualties of World War Tand 11, and fora long time »l was thought that there was nothing much that couhl lie done for them, except to give them as comfortable a life as invalids can have.But this hostel repriv-en-ts a new experiment in Britain.The idea is to revive the inmates\u2019 interest and self-respect by making them self-reliant- in oilier win ils, by treating them, not as invalids, but as people who are capable of doing something useful.Osberley is in an area which luis a h umber of modern light iml us fries, and the paralegic will work in these factories.They cannot walk, can get themselves chairs.In the b each paraplegic will hand-propelled chair but they s about in ¦ tel itself, II have a in which he can move himself around and in the garage he will keep a motor-propelled chair to which ho can transfer himself without help.In this he can g\" to his factory, where he will change into another hand chair in which he cap.do hi» factory job.Already some ¦paraplegics have begun to do a daily shift in a radio factory, and the a access fir! results they have achieved ham encouraged this extension of the plan.Encou rag in g Self-Reliance Everything in the hostel i» being planned to make self-reliance possible.The wide doors move on ball-aearings, opening and shutting at the touch of a linger.The tables and furniture have been de signed to suit the height of people who are seated, and a system of cords nnd pulleys has been installed so that, the men can lift themselves in and out of bed or the hath.There are even plans for a swimming-pool in the grounds, and Ihe Government: will help the men to own small motor-ears, in which they can drive their families.Foniet imes Britain\u2019s people are aeomed of paying more ut ici!.ion to the wcl faro of animals than to that of human brings, though the Ktory of the Usu i ley mostol does not back up that strange misconception.1 wonder, though, what a visitor to Uvo llnuse of Common.'.would have made of this question, which Mr.Hugh Gaits-led, Minister of Fuel and Bower, was asked in tin- House of Commons on September 23111.\u201cIs ihe Minister aware,\u201d asked Mr.Freeman, the Halxtr Member for Newport, \u201cthat Hie pit poney \"Ned\u201d in the BedlingUm colliery 1ms developed i 11 ness and that a notice has been placed over his stall forbidding anyone to me him for any purpose; what ns the nature of the complaint ; what was the cause; and will the Minister permit another veterinary surgeon to examine him?\u201d The Minister dhplayed an even more precise knowledge of Ned's cmnj!-lion than, his questioner, Ned, he -aid, had a sore hack, caused by Id- harness rubbing, and he had been, brought to Hie surface, where the inflammation was responding to treatment.Mr.Guitskell did not soom to think (luit a second ©pinion was necessary.Mr.Freeman was not altogether satisfied; hut Ned has won himself a niche in history among the IliouMind and one grievance* .real or imaginoiy, human or animal, trivial or deadly serious, which can he aired in a free Parliament, I to have tho other units who weed in the league lawt year to get ill 1 touch with him and get' the hall rolling for another bumper season.Members of the Battery are-asked to watch the local m w-s-papers for notices regarding 1 h* A rmis\u2019t ice parade as next, weo* j there will Ih- no parades owing ta ; tho Rotary Fair being held in th© \u2022 Armory.j By the way hove, don\u2019t neglect to take a walk up there some even -! lug and enjoy the Fair and alvo help a good cause.12th Armored Regiment (Sherbrooke Regiment) RCAC Training tins week wan very successful with turnouts on both nights very good.Monday light, the first Regimental organized sports parade saw a good turnout, competition was keen, particularly in squadron sports \u201cA\u201d squadr-on «\u2022on the night\u2019s aggivgato in tfcn first meet.Other sports included rope climbing, shot-pirt, threw» eirr-n ('red volleyball, floor hoc-key, ! volleyball, relay race.; Following the sports, a \u201c moker\u201d ws helr( for dl ranks.Wednesday «vening\u2019s liain-itigi j was carried out on anibjects, nodi per syllabus, gunnery, driving and.mai til (nan ce, wireless and Ixisio ; training.More recruits were sigrt-I ed on and new equipment issued : out.We arc glad to welcome a new officer to assist in tho wireless J training.Lt.Robert Hip-well, arn i ex-Active Service R.C.Sign Of-j fleer.Tuesday evening the Regimental Junior Basketball team held thor.\" ; first practice.A good mimoeir : turned out and by all appearances.! «e hope to have a bet\u2019kor team this» year than last, not that our laisb ; year's team wasn\u2019t up to scratch, we thought, they did very woil.The next practice, will lie on Gal .-day afternoon.Let\u2019s see you turn ; out boys.Oyster parlies (stag) held in the Officers\u2019 and Sergeants' messe* Friday night, turned ouS j very enjoyable.The Regime nia!' band combined with the Air Cadet* , to put.on a party a loo Friday ! night with entertainment, a movie nnd refresh morts.This will 'be all for this time, day night at the William Street : don't forget the dance this Satur-Armory, with music by Giz Gag-i non and his band.tured the great Spanish galleon, the famous Santa Anna, and it was on that ship that he met Catherine -Je M-ontoro.And the conquest o Catherine was to him a more exciting and more important matter than the victory over the Spanish! Jan Westcott has captured the full flavor of these adventures and, has made a superb nove! of the ex-| itement, drama arc! heartbreak of: Cavendish\u2019s career.As she did in Border 1/ord, her first novel, Mrs.Westcott has.giv-j en the spark of life to the people, incidents and scenes .-die describes, from fashionable Ivon don and Elizabeth's court to the lush shores of California, from Sir Fra neb Ifrake to dark-eyed Lola, the little Span- The New 3rd Series CANADA SAVINGS BONDS arc still on sale this week/ Get your order in today/ Play Safe -Save Nowl vV.>»*1 l' ! lt> < iis» J*V,' Classified Advertising Dept.Phone 6262 SUBSCRIBERS Receiving HOME DEUVERY may report missing copies or irregular service by calling 6262 before 5:00 p.m.MR REsacrs For Sale (To Let BUSINESS DIRECTORY Advocates a.g.oauMoy.MoMax&mk a wauiu 8U%, « W«mnaSaa 8».No.fho»» l*an.8 M.BOLTHAM.K.O, AflVOUSa'S.IIS, IS WtlUDetaa «A «««\u2022 **- aouscXAij, aowaao a B*Ai>uc* OKvtat SUe^ s ««lUnctoa a».TU.W .\u2014.-a Rqm»mu.E.O, « a BradM.D.a HowarS Oa»nl trl»J n.a LtNCSi.ax.«shsbuiL pbao- «T btaU» »aa U(« EWING \u2022 McKADDEN, (hIXBED BUW.607 FV»e« RKrmm.Maotr^l- T«L L»®-M«Uit ST88.J Armlttt» Bwte«.8-0.G»owt » UcTmMm.SX.__________ Chartered Accountants USED ELECTRIC WAfilUNG MACHINE, in A-l condition.Cheap.52 Wolfe 8t.WOOD.RHICE $2.60 A RUN.APPLY A.Hamilton, Lennoxville.MACHBNEBY.HOUSEHOIT) FURM-ture, clothing and toys.Phone 44W, Len noxville.LARGE CASH REGISTER AMOUNTS UP to $8,000, excellent condition.Box 2*52, (Record.TYPEWRITER DESK, OAK, EXCELLENT condition.Box 281, Record.ROLLLFLEX OAMERA, TESSAR, 3.8 kn«, portrait attachmonte, caae, all ex-oollent condition, $100.Phone Lennox-ville, 10-J.TWO ROOM APARTMENT TO LETT l OK November 1st, heated, furnished.At^Iy 584-A King West, .Sherbrooke.FOUR ROOUf APARTMENT TO LET TO paiiy who will buy furniture.Apply 2 A Victoria Street.SHEftBftOOKE, QÜE.BEC, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1048 Lost and Found CLASSIFIED ADS.must be received by 4 p.m.previous day.SEVEN ROOM HOUSE NEAR SAWVEK-ville.Apply Baron J.E.dcCsavoasy.Smwyerviile.LOST\u2014DOG, FAWN WHIPPET.NAME of Nancy, no licence.Tattooed in right ear, BC 2.43ft King St.Weat.Apt.5.Phone 872^-W.Reward.Rugs Farms For Sale 7* ACRES, 1 MfLE FROM CITY LIMITS on S't.Bile highway.Five room vacant houat, barn, wood.Cheap for cash.Katherine Thompeon, R.R.2, City.Phone RUGS; BEAUTIFUL BROADLOOM RE-vervible saamleba rugs made from your old carpeta, materials, into any sixes or colon, catalogua, information upon raques t.Anglo-French Carpet Üo.2037 Peel Street, Montre*\u2019 Real Estate For Sale p a son a bom.of-ahtercd ao .!a>*.HontrmX_________ Dentist DR.J A LANDRY.BURGEON-DENTIST.IM W«Illn*VjD 9t.N®.OBTW.1U Goart Bomc.Pbon* 8^_________________ Notaries JEAN PANNETON, NOTARY.49 KING St.W«t, Sherbrooke, Qu«._______ Physicians and Surgeon^ CHENILLE BEDSPREADS\tEACH.At wholesale price, first quality beautiful epreads, well tufted, in all colon, for double or alngle bed*.$4.99 each.Fully tufted yO'^lOO*' Completely covered with chenille with basket of flowers in centre $8.98 each.Also Habitant hand hooked rugs, well made, 3 for $4.00 These article* retail at double the price.Sent C.O.D.plua postage.Money immediately refunded it not \u2022atisfied.Handicraft Distributors, 264 Sherbrooke St., West, Montreal, Que.ALL FARM WAGONS AT VERY CHEAP prices.New cook stoves, box, camp stoves.General trucking.Electric and gasoline washer*.Cattle clippers.Francis Ingalls, Sutton Junction, Que.Phone 2rl2.1 HOME COMFORT WOOD AND COAL range, in good condition.Reasonable.( all f»^r21, Bury, Que.HAMMOND ORGAN, HARDLY USED, conditiort and case perfect, suitable for church, hotel, home.Bargain for quick sale.Box 272, Record.TWO BUHNER OIL HEATER, GOOD condition.Phone Lennoxviile, 443-J.Personal HYGIENIC SUPPLIES (RUBBER GOODS) mailed postpaid in plain, sealed envelope with price list.Six samples 26c.\t24 samplts, $1.00.Mail Arder Dept.G-2 Nov-Rubber Co., Box 91, Hamilton, Ont.-\u2014I SLENDOR TABLETS ARE EFFECTIVE.| 2 week*\u2019 supply $1 ; 12 weeks $5, at Budning\u2019s and Lavoie'* Drug Store* ; and Clark\u2019*, Ijennoxviile.Domestic Help Wanted WANTED\u2014GBNEK.A L COOK, WHOLE j or part time work, live out.Apply Mrs.W.E.Hume, Phone 2568.Da BTHTER, PHONE 176.t GORDON BE BJeetr»44i«r»pT.Urinir» D1m»m.Veterinary Surgeon___________ SHERBROOKE VSTTESINABY HOSPITAL Dr.L.A G*mjr*»n.*1 W tlllc «ton South.SINGING CANARIEK.M'BS.WILLIAM Bell, Waterville, Que.HOUSEHOIaD FURNITURE, apply 101 Joffre, or Phone 6285-W.- ONE WHITE ENAMEL GAS STOVE, 4 burners with broiler, in excellent condition.Phone 366-U.Acme Typewriter Co.Reg\u2019d W E.HAMMOND.Prop.Ant&ortfed ReprMentattve for Underwood Typewriters 74 WdUngton SoBtfc-Pbone 3737 BEDROOM SET WITH HOLLYWOOD bed, nsw, never used.Phone 640-J-12 after 6 p.m.Apply 1081 King We«t.Situation Wanted, Male QUALIFIED CL0KK AND TTPIST, Bilingual, veteran, in hi* thirties, requires position with future in office or stockroom.Holds Grade A First Aid certi-j ficate.Phone 2&2i-(R or 2973.A PLEASANT COMPETENT HOUSK-muid, well-recommended.Good salary.Mias J.M.Colby, Stanstead.WOMAN WANTED TO TAKE FULL charge of small house and five children.Apply H.G.Williams, Cowansville, Que.Justness Opportunity BIG PROFITS f SELLING PORTRAITS.Manage your own businee*.Send for catalogue.United Art Co., Toronto 2, Ont ATTRACTIVE NEW SIX ROOM residence with garage, under construction, Drummond Road.Special conditions for vtterans.$1,700 required, balance $36 monthly.Interest included.Possession Christmas.See Hebert\u2019s, 110 Belvidere.Phone 3450.SIX ROOM SELF-CONTAINED HOUSE with sleeping porch and big verandah on double lot.39 Summer St., Lennoxvilie.Occupancy July 1st.Phone 167-W, Lennoxviile.AT ROCK ISLAND.PROSPECT PARK, lovely 7-room 2-storey frame residence, very good condition.Enclosed aunporch, roofed front porch.Basement, concrete floor, laundry tubs, new automatic oilburning warm air furnace and water heater.Garage, small garden.Owner moving to U.S.Call Mrs.E.J.Hills, Rock Island, 233r3.Wanted To Exchange FOUR ROOM FLAT IN VF.RDUN.MONT-r^al, for similar in Sherbrooke or Lennoxviile.Apply 1072 Rolland Avenue, Verdun.Hemlock 2516.Baby Chicks Miscellaneous WOMEN WILL BABY SOT ANY EVE-nitvg.Phone 6194-J.BABY SITTING WANTED, EXPERJ-enced.Apply 250 Belvidere.Mrs.Melville.\ti Wanted To Rent 4 OR 5 ROOM APARTMENT, 8 ADULTS.31 A Kingston Avenue.Phone 1625.W.W.Noel.Zeph Rousseau AUCTIONEER FARM and TOWN SAWYER VILLE Rhone 3 ATTENTION! BULLDOZER WORK: Levelling, Excavating, Road Construction, Reservoirs, Moving H\u2019 uses, etc.HENRI JACQUES General Construction Telephone 4519-W 8 Bergeron Street \u2014 Sherbrooke MAN WITH FAMILY DESIRES POSI-tiôn on dairy Xnrm.Apply to Parker Whitehead, R.M.D.1, Mansonville, Que.Earn Money At Home ïl'ARN MONEY AT HOME SPAKE OR full-time money-makin*.Learn to make candy at home ; earn while you learn.Free equipment supplied.Correspondence course.National Institute of Confectionery Reg\u2019d., DeLormier P.O.Box 152, Montreal, Qur.MODERN HOUSE, FLAT OR DUPLEX, heated, with 6 or 7 rooms.Willing to pay up to $65 a month, with year\u2019s rent in advance.Apply Magog, P.O.Box 4-Uk Live Stock for Sale Cars For Sale FLOOR SANDING * \u201cDone the way you like it\" Expert Workmen\u2014Free Estimates ANTONIO MASSON 10 St.Antoine St.\u2014 Tel.1794-K BALING Hay and straw baled with power baler in field or barn.Baled hay and straw for sale.BARON J.E.de CSAVOSSY Tel SAWYERV1LLE 41 PONTIAC COACH, 1»37, NEW ENGINE, I new tiros.H.S.Sanderson, Ay.tr\u2019a Cliff.TWO 1913 MONARCHS, 1 FRAZEIR MAN-hatten, IMS; also 1943 Kaiser, all four in perfect condition, guaranteed and priced to sell.Phone IOO, Lennoxviile.FORD TRACTOR WITH PLOUGH, HAR-row, snow plough, scraper, cordwood saw.Phone 1(>0, lennoxviile.13 FOUR WEEKS OLD PIGS, 19 EIGHT weeks old.Apply Vern Lowell, North Hatley.Phone 3r32.GOOD DELIVERY HORSE, BROWN, with star, stands anywhere, 8 years old, sound, quiet, gentle, 1,450 lbs., been used on milk route.Cun deliver anywhere.Write Arthur Ghagnon, Waterloo.19 48 CHEVROLET FLEETMASTER Sedan, two tone grey, $300 worth extras, 9,000 miles, $2,425.F.A, Trecartin, Phone or P.O.Box 207, Knowlton.1985 FORD COACH IN GOOD RUNNING order.1336 Plymouth in good condition, radio and h.ater.Apply 64 Court St.1333 PLYMOUTH SEDAN, VERY GOOD condition, new motor.Reasonable for casb.Apply P.O.Box 53, Bury.BISHOP\u2019S WOODWORKING & REPAIR SHOP 14 Magoe St.- Tel.4798w Store Fixtures, Book Shelves, Cupboards Doors, Cabinet*.FREE ESTIMATES I- DO YOU NEED Cement work done, cement, j stone, rock, gtavel and mix-| ers supplied on request.Also [general trucking.Donat Chartier , 30 Galt Street \u2014 Tel.3679 1934 CHEVROLET BUSINESS COUPE, good paint, heater, very good condition.Apply Box 26 or Phone 13r32, North Hatley.1940 CHEVROLET i/2 TON PANEL truck, goo«l condition, new heater, win-temed, YV.Hall, Birchton.1947 NASH AMBASSADOR SEDAN, Excellent condition, new radio, air condi-tioning, over drive, slip covers, low mileage, owner leaving Canada.Must sell.6,1 Montreal Strict, Sherbrooke.1047 FOKD SUPER DELUXE, 5 PAS-senger coupe, fully equipped, 12,090 miles Apply 357 King West 1010 NASH SEDAN, IN PERFECT CON-dition, air conditioned, five new tir«.Phone Lennoxviile, 318 or 10 Clough Avenue.REGISTERED LEICESTER RAM LAMBS, 3 stars and 2 star.Priced to aell.John Pibue, Knowlton, Que.Situations Wanted.Female HIGHLY EXPERIENCED ENGLISH-speaking stenographer desires position.What am I offered?Box 276, Record.UNDER-GRADUATE NURSE WITH Office experience desires position in doctor\u2019s office.Phone 4214-M.Rooms To Let ROOM.HEATED AND FURNISHED, residential locality.Apply by letter to Box 563, Lennoxviile, giving phone number.ROOM TO LET, USE OF PHONE, breakfast if desired, near bus line.Phone Lennoxviile, 146-W.Wanted to Purchase WE ARE BUYERS: CORDWOOD, HAKU and softwood slabs, with edgings «epar abed and bundled.State prices, quantities ana loading point Boire /j ton truck.Apply Saturday afternoon only.73 Caen.Phone M.'29-J.Carpets and Upholstery ^ r.ANED Modern \u201cDuranear \u201d Process Estimates on Request DURA HOME SERVICES REG'D Tel 6080-W TRUCK FOR SALE Chevrolet i/t ton Panel Delivery.Apply; KEELER & CROSS 140 King St.West \u2014 Tel.3927 MATHIAS Typewriter Exchange Royal Typewriters SALESMAN WANTED Must be bilingual, 20 to 30 years of age and preferred with experience in selling men\u2019s wear.References wanted.Permanent position with good chances for advancement.Apply Box 280 Sherbrooke Daily Record Dr.OTTO BENGLE ORTHODONTIST (Straightening of Teeth) ! 85 Wellington North - Room 116 For appointment, Tel.z46 These Leading Places Of Business Will Be Closed ALL DAY MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1st ALL SAINTS\u2019 DAY BE SURE TO PURCHASE YOUR REQUIREMENTS EARLY AND HAVE ENOUGH TO LAST YOU OVER THE HOLIDAY: ARNOLD S LIMITED Arthur blouin limited BALDWIN\u2019S STORAGE BELMONT HARDWARE REG\u2019D J.N.BOISVERT CODERE LIMITED DESCHESNES & FISETTE JEAN-LOUIS SAVARD REG\u2019D ECHENBERG BROS.JACK ECHENBERG FASHION-CRAFT LIMITED FRASER ENTERPRISES LIMITED J.GAGNE & CO.LTD.J.L.GILBERT A.GILLMAN KING HARDWARE LEO LALIBERTE HECTOR LANCTOT LEVESQUE LIMITED J.S.MITCHELL & CO.LTD.A.MARTIN & CO.LTD.(Furriers) EASTERN HARDWARE REG\u2019D (Ferronnerie de l\u2019Est Ltee.) NATIONAL WALLPAPER CO.LTD.J.M.NAULT LIMITED NADEAU & SON NOUVELLE MODE J.A.PELLETIER & SON J.A.PIGEON, REG\u2019D RAYFELS \u201cTHE STYLE SHOP\" MME.E.RENIHAN RENNERT\u2019S DEPARTMENT STORE ROSENBLOOM\u2019S LIMITED J.A.SAVARD LTD.SHERBROOKE PURE MILK CO.LTD.THE MODEL GARDENERS (Les Jardiniers Modèles) THOMPSON & ALIX LIMITED M.SMITH MEN\u2019S WEAR UNITED Sc to $1.00 STORES J.A.WIGGETT & CO.H.C.WILSON & SONS, LTD.KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED TM/S ft THEF/RST\\\tyoUSOTTA HELP 4 PLAC£ RMS\u2019U.LOOK POP YOU, BÊT£\u201e.ÿoü SHOULDN'T By Zane Grey K/OUHDEP ] CHIEF//EHE 60E& TO L 4CHE, THE OEm-J WEIL KHCWTHAT TOUCH .MAH L/TTLEFACTOR/S OOPAIAH/Ji 'J~rVE/SCr TO TRAIL HIM, LAC/ HARD OF HEARING?World\u2019* first alectrital hearing aid manufactorer: AUUU8T1CON Sale* mio Service.Impression and ear molds made.Batteries for all makes of hearing aids Demonstrations in the most prominent cities of the Eastern Townships Information as to date» given on request.Demonstration In Sherbrooke avary Monday from 1:30 to 5:00 p.m.CIT UCTIM\tm! Brew*ter Street.\u2022 ta.litaUlNj Representative \u2014 Telephone 4239-W.243 Office Res 2873 CHAIN SAWS \u201cHornet\u201d and P.M.\u2022\u2022Woodboss\u201d Sales and Service.WHITE GARAGE, COWANSVILLE, QUE.MOTORS (SURE ILL HELP.WE\u2019LL COUP TV LOOKOUT CABLHf Al HEL P you Old: Yousotta help ASEHACHE.JETEAL FURS FOR ybu.UREA LIABILITY TOME HOWS $ '3r f \u2022*N; =V.h*Vl b) VijArn \" forr\"*M ipii by K.'.s i .iuri» Spa»*», t* 2l'iA.;xik\u2018,U 7ft BRINGING UP FATHER By George McManus sjoY'\t,*OT ^ ®%AiD>'Fe I CANT STAND THIS ANV uxeEp; I CAN STILL HEAR HER VOICE -1 WONDER HOW THE JANITOR STANDS YOU MEAN TO SAV VOU LIKE MY WIPE'S voice?I DIDNT SAV HER tT TAKES MV MIND off mv rheumatism i liked VOICE-I SAID I LIKE TO LISTEN TO HER SINÔIN*- WP'b tip».IXS.IOci Fttturw SrndkJU.Repaired and Installed NEW MOiORS: all sizes and voltages WIGGETT ELECTRIC REG\u2019D 19 Marquette St._ Est\u2019d 1903\t\u2014 Sherbrooke.Que, SHERBROOKE DAIU RECORD, SAIL i\t\u2022\t\u2022\tI Commission On Prices To A HANDY GUIDE TO EASTERN TOWNSHIPS\u2019 Draft Report MERCHANTS AND BUSINESS SERVICES \u201e\t^\t, T ! .\u2014 \\LT \u2014x nc I .through the I Coaticool Hauver\u2019s Radio Eectrics Special Fall Offers, leavy-duty Wincharger, 12 Volt, teg.SI60, now S95, (1 only); Hectrohome Air Conditioner (4 rk - Fully-Equipped - Newes Machines: Lathes, Drills, etc.Rear of Drennan Bns., Cookshire.Phone Sherbroole 139S-5V North Hatley BOATS BUILT TO ORDER ONLY Sail \u2014LIGHTNING SNIPE CUB RACING RUNABOUTS OUTBOARD SKIFFS ORDER NOW FOR SPRING DELIVERY Hatley Crafts NORTH HATLEY Magcg Magog Laundry 29 Brasaard St., Phone 2315 Washing, Pressing We Pick up and Delver.G.BELANGER, Prop.Dingman\u2019s Shell Service Station Main St.\u2014 Ph^ne 2271 or 4080 Goodyear Tires 4\u2018 Willard Batteries DEALER FOR Commer Trucks and Hillman Minx Cars \u2014 made liy Rootes Motors Imperial Oil Station Now under n»w management.We now buy and sell cars and trucks.Highest prices paid.Road Serrie Phone 750 MINOR & PELKIE, Props.LI\u2019L ABNER Sawyerville SAWYER VILLE MANUFACTURING CO.Dry 4 ft.Softwood Slabs or Bundled Edgings delivered truck load lots.Radius 20 miles \u2014 $5.00 per cord.12-inch running cord \u2014 $2.00 Quantity of Cedar Fence Posts 3 and 4 inches in Diameter 8 ft.long Peeled 15c each PHONE 67 - SAWYERVILLE SOUTH ROXTON Mr.A.F.Sanborn and Mr.and Mrs.J.C.Sanborn and family spent a week-end in Huntingdon.Mr.and Mrs.A.Taylor and family visited Mr.and Mrs.Gordon Norris, at Ely.Mr.W.Robichaud, of Lennox-i ville, was calling on friends here.Waterloo WATERLOO AUTO BODY Now At New Location Opposite Champlain Service Station on Main St.Free Estimations.G.A.MAINV1LLE, Prop.For Your Fire, Life, Auto, Casualty Insurance See Leon R.Lewis, 989 Main St., Phone 60, Waterloo JOHN'S STORE Groceries, Magazines, Cigarettes.Satisfaction or Money Refunded.From Now on Reserve Your Favorite Magazines.PHONE 580-J.Ottawa.Oc Pv icv s Con1, nus main stagv of tion of the hi# journ^d inCefi no mom: tnei I ho report m bo fore the r.oxt ment, expected pana tory work oi ready un-cierwav.rs time to work | the government.; urt be presented I ess ion of Pania-j n January.Pro-: ¦ the report is al- The mmission begrar Au#.3, after the Ben\u2019* Laundrette now under new management Phone 575-W Wet Wash, Dry Wash and Ironing.Now servicing the following towns \u2014 Waterloo, Warden, Foster, Knowlton, Bondville.Pick-Up and Delivery Service.458 Main St.\u2014 Waterloo Miss C.Taylor accompanied him j to Lennoxville, where she will i spend a two week's holiday.Mr.and Mrs.C.Doe, of Mont-i real, were here at the week-end.Mr.John Gaw, of Queen\u2019s University.Kingston, Ont., Mrs.E.C.Gaw, of Huntingdon; and Miss i Myrtle Gaw, of Waterloo; were sat from February unti j of June studying the same question\u2014why \u201ccommodities in common use'\u2019 coot more today than they did several years ago.Since the pri.e.s inquiry generally got underway early this year the costa and prices of 11 commodities have been probed.The parliamentary commission studied fruit and vegetables, breed, but-I ter.meat and textiles.The commission's adjournment yesterday followed a morning session devoted to a re-examination of two textile eom.panies which had appeared >>efore the Commons committee.During the commission's investigation of the supply and cost of men's shirts, evidence showed that although overall cotton textile production was high, ! shirt production had sagged sub-j etantiaily below pre-war.The commission called two wit-nesses\u2014\u20ac.C.MaeKellar, general sales manager of Dominion Tex-; i- Ltd., and W.J, Whitehead, 1 president of W\u2019akasso Cottons Co.Ltd.\u2014to try and discover why production of shirt materials has fallen.They obtained no clear answer so far ae the industry as a whole is concerned.Mr.Whitehead said that, because of a lack of labor, his firm's production as a whole is lower than pre-war.Mr.MaeKcl-lar explained that, as sales manager, he was a merchandizing officer, not a production man.Commission Counsel H.A.Dyde dismissed him.guests of Mr.and Mrs.J.C.Sanborn, and Mr.A.F.Sanborn.Mrs.B.Blampin has left for Montreal, where she will enter the Royal Victoria Hospital.WAL\u2014«JEST 'BOUT EV'KV ON MARRIED fV'GH.?',) BELLE IN DOG BATCH DONE REGISTERED FO'TH' SADIE HAVKINS DAV RACE NCVEMBER 13th\"' EV'RY GAL-BUT, rr j ONE.TO' GAL/7 AH HEERD INHOOMIN HOWLIN' LAST NIGHT.':'' .AH (AMOVED ''SOMETHIN' FRIGHT FOL WAS A SLINKIN' DOWN FUM TH' HALS.':'' N.^ ?Cv & ion?LAST SADIE HAWKINS DAV VO'CAUGHT FOUR OF'OUR FATTEST VOUNG BACHELORS.\u2019:' VO\u2019 DIDN'T MARRV UP WIF NOME OF 'EM-BUT NOTHIN' WAS EVAH SEEN OF 'EM AGIN-EXCEPT A FEW STRAV COLLAR BUTTONS.:'\u2019 V/E HA!N'T ACCOOSIN' VO' O\u2019 NOTHIN'\u2014BUT IT SEEMED MIGHTV SUSPICIOUS HOW FAT VORE WOLF-PACK WAS FO'THlNEXT FEW WEEKS .E50 By A1 Capp FRANKLY, VE DON'T SEE TH\u2019 HOOMER OF IT NO MORE// \\ % WASH TUBBS By Leslie Turner ' !& SWELL1.HES GOtWG-.THE Vllll&SE VJË WANT' SIR CEDRIC tS i OUR LAST HOPE.a EASV! IFHECfttl'T TELL US WHO |« \"REGGIE\" WAS, \\ WERE SUNK'.l IT'S LAtE.SCROOEV, AND WE HAVE FAR TO GO'.WELL USE PENNV'S CAR BEFORE ITS THEFT IS BROADCAST.HIDE- it AT DAWN, NEAR THE COTTAGE WHERE ROLAND BORROWED TOOLS- f.TOMORROW III FOLLOW EAST'S INSTRUCTIONS AND LOCATE THE TREASURER AM'WE LL V\" COPIT AFTER ' DARK, WHILE 'E MUCKS ABOUT tOOKIM' FOE i REGGIE i.Æ .¦\t.w SORRV TO DISTURB NOU AT THIS HOUR, HODGES, BUT I MUST SEE SIR CEDRIC'.MISS BURKE IS TIRED.AND IT sGUiTE LATE 1 SHALL I PREPARE HER A ROOM ?PLEASE! AND DON'T FORGET N\\N BLUWDEE.BROUGHT OM THIS RACE WITH SHEATH HONEV.AND I'M NOT GIVING UP! VOU'RE STUBBORW.6UT NERV SWEET NEXT WEEK WILL BE TOO LATE! OH1EASV.X GIVE up: WW, ITS MISS BURKE 1 COME IN.THO SIR CEDRIC ISN\u2019T DUE FROM INDIA TILE NEXT WEEK1.A.sçavFF.AF.T.G.U.S.PAT.RDAY, OCTOBER 30, IV15.BOOTS AND HER BUDDIE5 î>evcn ALLEY OOP By V.T.Hamlin Mr GOSH.POatA \u2014 WHAT VDJ PCIN' (PUT HERE?OH.I HEARD THAT AWFUL MONSTER AND I POKABABA! YOUR EYE/ ALLEV GDP.VDU SIS V HEX , ROUGHNECK/ J NOW, , 1.\tW'AJT.HOLD IT OOOLA.C.lT WAS WHILE ESCAPING FROM THE monster I GOT SCRATCHED UP.' ALLEY SAVED MV LIFE/ -\t.-T ALLEY.YOU RE A j AWTH BIG \\ HEROÎ OH.I'M SO J DOPE FELL \\ FROUD OF YOU/ MEAN J DOWN.I HAD TO Ahelptm/ / 3\u2014 iUSSSi, OOP.YOUR EXEMPLARY /\u2022/AKiOl |y*\"-r I A.I CSECU KI C / * u A.U re LITEEALLY -J AW.SHUCXS SNATCHED MET/ OH.\\ 'TWARNT ROM THE / GUZ.TM \\ NOTHIN' MONSTERS I SO PROUD ) ANYBODY CONDUCT IN BEHALF OF OUR ROV'AL GUEST MAKES ME VERY HAPPY/ NOW I AINT OF HIM.' WOULDNTA PONE.' JAWS.' GOT A THING TWORRY m*k iîît'i.\u2019-iv iMiâ M3 r + -1 By Edgar Martin \\/0WOOO-EEtt AW \\ DO \\fe ENCLOSE THt 'GOOY \\N A SCWW , DOOBeY -ACTION EASWNOM RVATV SVECIAV ANiO .WOOV\\'.A X>AXE MAVttE XWtSY'S SO»AV\\W»K® TO TWfe CVOTWES 'aoE.IKiESS MTES AW*.MAV^E XWKVS ÛEEK4 MV TROOIÔVE.: I TOO \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 PRISCILLA\u2019S POP YES,' NE S TAKING A REAL INTEREST IN SOOOL TH'S Fall, ARENTVDU, SON I M Ufa u t PAY Offf By A1 Vermeer Y tVM P ' HE EVEN SAVS HE T LOOKS FORWARD TO COINS TO COLLEGE, TOO! (V WONDERFUL AND WHAT EX?PLAN TO TAKE IN COLLEGE, CARLVLE?FOOTBALL! hi YOU WONT HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT THESE CHILDREN, OFFICER -THEY WON'T CAUSE YOU ANY TROUBLE! / F KIDS HAVE CHANGED! THEY \u2019 DON'T HAVE THE FUN ON HALLOWE'EN THAT WE HAD IN OUR DAY! NO.,, BUT IN OUF?DAY DIDN'T HAVE THE OLD TAGGING ALONG, yviTH US! If FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS BOY ON TH.\t, FTONF SAYS To/ QUICK 1 TELL YOU ( WHFRCS A TWIRP l towel?SEASON , EMERGENCY/ By Merrill Blouser MIGHI AWAY f There'S vanG ^ I hope we're not Too late ! )i :U ijK FANCY BUGGY [ '¦ I :l 'J TIMTS TO CAll /JUST AS I WAS READY TO SCRUB/, / WHAT IS IT, CUDDLES?YOU SHOULDN'T CAll ME DURING OPERATING TIME ' .'/4,/A .\u2022JMiiiAw I'll WAIT, I JUST CURIOUS THERE WAS ANY-¦x, THIKG NEW \u201d 1 Bl TWEEN YOU AND VERA.COPR 11VW1 BY NR A 3FBVICI.INC I M.R JOE PALOOKA By Ham Fisher AFTER THE SIGNING THE SFORTS SCRIBES CORNER J0£.CHAMP., KNOCK Hll SPRING Ml TALK TO YOU AGAIN.'; sf HE BROKE J WHAT A BEEZIES < SNOB ! I WISH I W ^¦¦vrrr A WAS BIG \u2014c ENOUGH X vi' HE\u2019S A TOP-NOTCH BOXER M® PUNCHER .IÏL DO BEST TO PLEASE YOU rruows THO'.______ joe's in 'is best FORM ! HE'S BEEN KEEPIN'lN SHAPE.NEVER LETS DOWN/ GOOD S LOWS, / | f LUCK, V SO LONG,)\u2019 i GANG.' T V \u2019 \\ champ) ^ KEEP.J ^-(^T WE\u2019LL SEE } YA AT.< > trainin .) lr4£ a m'OWNER\tTHEY WERE WORDS MUSTA PUPR *') S/ COMMONLY USED IN -GIVE A GREAT SPEECH 1 GOOD ENGUSH.IW // SURPRISED.\u2014y\" THEY VE SURE ( BEEN GRAND PuFp.'.t THEY SOIT'NY PUT ON SOME (*PUER{!> : Shanghai, Oct.30.\u2014(JP)\u2014 If Communism\u2019s fast flow over Asia is to be stopped, the United States must tackle the knotty problem of China again quickly and find a better solution than any tried so far.Whether or not Communism has been halted in Europe, it certainly has not been stopped in Asia where its encroachment appears geared to China\u2019s civil war.Every time the Chinese Reds score a big victory Communist cells begin to ferment all over the Far Eaet.Red China never looked etronger.The loss of Tsinan, Shantung capital, for example, left Nanking, Shanghai and the Yangtze heartland of Chiang Kai-Shek\u2019s China open to attack.Time draws short.What can the United States do?Veteran observers in China know the answer is not simply granting more money.The money will disappear and the Rede will keep on coming.Observers see these four courses open: 1.\tWrite off China, let China fall, and hope that Chi-neee Communism will not succeed.A lot of people don\u2019t think it would.2.\tAbandon China except for a -foothold on the coast as a beachhead should a war against world Communism come.Tsingtao, United States naval base, seems logical.It isn\u2019t strong now, but it could be built up.3.\tContinue small-scale aid to Chiang in the hope of buying time.This is the present policy, but it hasn\u2019t had much success.4.\tTbow in big-scale aid and try to defeat Communism in China in the hope that thereafter other Asnatic Reds will curl up and die.The fourth course seenic to be the most popular now with Americane except those who would have to administer the job.These last favor the idea but despair of making it work.China is a huge, sprawling land mass, cri~5-crossed by mountains and rivers with few roads and railroads.In its beet days China had little national cohesion.Large sections are a\u2019.moe: autonomous and pay little heed to Nanking.Some of these sections are the richest.Its 450 millions live at peaks of sumptuous wealth and depths of grinding poverty.Literacy k about 10 per cent.Millions of Chinese even in cities don't know the name of their own president.Always badly governed, Chinese have little or no feeling of patriotism by western standards.As to civil war, the average Chinese is more interested in keeping out of the way than in winning it.He isn\u2019t half as concerned about saving China from Communism as the Americans are.To him the Comanunkts are just another conqueror, and he has had conquerors coming and going for centuries without any noticeable change in his lot.He dislikes soldiers, Red or government, end has suffered at the har.de of both.So this vast, looee and indifferent nation, which in its heart dislikes foreigner* much more than it dislikes any special political breed of Chinese, is asked to halt the spread of Communism.Some pretty good United States military brains have come to Chine and tried to bend it to a unified war effort.Most of them admitted they went slightly crazy in.the process.A large segment of foreigners in China believe the United States can stop Communism in China only with a terrific amount of direct intervention in Chinese affairs.They say the intervention must be almost as much as the United States now is exerting in such conquered countries as Japan.Such intervention would be hard to sell to the people of the United States, and it would be intensely unpopular with the Chinese.Six months ago you wouldn\u2019t 11 MY BOSS\u201d MBS Imm 'vkkk iM By The General\u2019s Wartime GIRL FRIDAY mm WILL BE PÜBLIS SERIAL FORM W THE RECORD First Installment Appears Next Monday k ' \u2019\t; to fftyu ¦ ¦ GV'/ '¦Ct L/./VLC a.\ta.*\t^ Inscription: To Captain Kay Summer,'by \u2014 W.A.C.a valued assistant of World War IF with best wishes-DWIGHT D.EISENHOWER.THIS is THE story! It\u2019s the story only one person could tell, Kay Summersby, who was Girl Friday to Eisenhower and, in turn, \u201csecretary to World War II.\u201d She was with him throughout th« years he served abroad.Her story is bright with aneedot* and warm with incidents about General Ike, hia distinguished visitors, and the top personnel around him.Kay Summersby leaves battle strategy and war analyses to the historians.Hers is the inside story of the war, and what went on behind the scenes.Starts In Monday\u2019s RECORD Two Persons Are Injured In Accidents , Two accidents occurred in this city yesterday and two persons were injured.Mrs.Louis Pelchat, 66, 112 St.Louis Street, is a patient in St.Vincent de Paul Hospital suffer ing from a possible fractured arm, sustained when she was hit by a whizzer bicycle while crossing the street.Mrs.Pelchat was crossing Galt Street near Larocque when she was hit by the vehicle travelling west on Gait.The bike was driven by Roger Lemay, 30,\t142:: Galt Street.Constable Oliva Tremblay investigated the a.jn MR.and MRS.DONALD GORDON DUNBAR, who were merned in Shaughnessy Heights United Chureh.Vancouver, 15.C.The bride, formerly MISS SHIRLEY ELEANOR WOLTER, is a graduate of j Wolter.recently of Lennoxville.Mr.Dunbar is the son of Mr.and ] drama\".Dr Frohmn'ii't hiniv The Mrs.W.P.Dunbar, of Trail, BO.lie is in his final year in Civil ' eent'-al Engineering at the University of British Columbia.Dear Mis» Dix: My hue-band inais-ts on buying and arranging : everything in our home to suit his to.-'-e, regardless of whether 1 like ci-oked and niissha-on''\t' j it »»\u2022 not.1 think ho «-houId recognize that it i- tho wife's privilege to She also suffered from chronic\t«* her own in iividuality in tho horn».What do you think about it?A \\Y IF L.Answer: I think the luvi thing for you to do is to talk the matter over with your husband an ! go bO-50 In selecting the furnishing» of your homo.Mest wvnUMI feel t!i:il they h ive a right to monopolize the homo and make it the exprès ion of their ole ta :e, but this isn\u2019t fair.The husband hould at le^ ; I: n e a tew rooms that lie can fix up according to h ¦ notions o!' rein fort But, for go-odn, .ike.quit quarreling ovei tlie matter.sors wmen g-rew in Lower Windsor.7 p.m.\u2014Evening Worship.Baptist Church The bride, given away by her father, was in a grey tailored suit, with a black felt hat and black accessories, and she wore a corsage of red roses.Miss Helen Wark, as maid of honor, wore a grey tailored suit, with a black felt hat and accessories.Her corsage was of pink carnations.Master Robert (Bobby) Bowie Stewart acted as best man for his brother.Mrs.Wark, the bride's mother was gowned in wine crepe, with Telephone liliHd PHONE 37 «ES SHERBROOKE BAPTIST CHURCH Cor.Portland Ave, and Queen St.Rev.O.L.Davidson, Minister.9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.11 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship.Nursery for Children.\t\u2014¦ .v.v^v, .7 p.m.\u2014 Worship with Trinity a black hat and accessories and United Anniversary Services.\twore a corsage of white carnations.\u201cCome thou with us and we will Mrs.James Alexander Stewart, do thee good.\u201d\tmother of the bridegroom wore a _____________ _\t_______gown of grey crepe with a black felt hat and accessories.Her corsage was of white carnations.) Following the wedding a small informal reception was held for the immediate relatives of both families.Later Mr.and Mrs.Stewant left Mr.Andre Panneton, of the University of Montreal, and Mr.and Mrs.Paul Panneton, all of Montreal, arrived last evening to spend the week-end with Judge and Mrs.Dorais Panneton, Quebec Street.* * * Mr.William G.Robinson, of Littleton, N.H., Mrs.Leon Swallow, of South Paris, Me., and Mr.Herbert Robinson, of Waterloo, Mrs.J.R.Simms, Queen Street, left I hu: Way n: :ht to spent two weeks visiting- her Xewtonville, .Mass.cousins, at Mr.and Mrs.Samuel Wark.Mr, Miirilll Wark, Miss Helen Wark, Miss Norma Price, all of Sherbrooke, Mr.and Mrs.Lyle Va.k an l infant daughter, of L.nnox-ville, were in Marbleton and were in the city yesterday to at-i Ridge on Thursday to attend^th tend the funeral of their brother, Stewart-W ark wedding.Mr.John Robinson.Christian Science i p.m.1 Subject: \u201cEverlasting U THE FOURTH CRUCIFIXION\u201d FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST Montreal and Island Street» Sunday Services: 11 a.m.and 7 by motor on a hunting trip.j They will take up residence at Punish- Terrace Bay, Ont.______j The out-of-town guests were Mrs.F.W.Stewart and Miss K.E.Bowie, of Montreal; Mr.and Mrs.Samuel Wark, Mr.Merrill Wark, Miss Helen Wark, Miss Norma Price, all of Sherbrooke; Mr.and Mrs.Lyle Wark and infant daughter, of Lennoxville.Mr.and Mrs.Ross Campbell, who spent two weeks visiting the Isumd Street, on former\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mrs.I .1 Lawrence Campbell, at Metis Beach, have returned to their home on Second Avenue.DO NOT MISS THIS CLOSING MESSAGE IN THE SERIES ON \u201cCHARACTERS AND EVENTS RELATING TO THE CRUCIFIXION\u201d BY MR.WELCH IN GRACE CHAPEL (MONTREAL STREET) SUNDAY AT 7 P.M.With Inspiring Congregational Song Service Before the Message.2.30\tP.M._A GREAT SUNDAY SCHOOL.2.36 were present last Sunday, Try our fine Adult Bible Class.10.30\tA.M._COMMUNION.A welcome to all who know and love our Lord Jesus Christ.LOO P.M.\u2014\u201cTHE GLAD TIDINGS HOUR\" over CRTS.Busses Nos.10, 14 and 22 all stop at the door.reading the 54th Psalm.The .\t*\t*\t,\t! Lord\u2019s Prayer, repeated in unison, i\t,\t^ u- r '\tReports were heard from ! Mrs.M.A.Phelan, of West- t!l0 seereta]'y and treasurer ami .mount, arrived yesterday to be the j visits t)> the sick were .,|so ropol.t_ cd.Among items brought up for crooked were symbols of the two ! central character.-, the dentist and jhis patient, and of the crooked I deed (the disposal of their respective spouses) which wa.s wishfully fulfilled in her dream.There two deaths would make their muni age pc.-i Ible.Her emotional conflict over this «itnation produced her fatigue.I Don't waste timo trying to unravel the symbolism of your own dreani.s, Mrs.L.If you are bolhered by continual dreams involving great anxiety, fear, or suffering, it will pay you to consult a competent.counselor.But there is no dream Book that will give you any help.Queâtion» iwid Answers mue\t'\tQ -What do children \u2018 about inert'.\u2019 '\tA\u2014Phyehologkt Uo.-e\t'/.eliyi | found that tho largerit number The Baptist Ladies* Aid met at ' ^ried about the.health of nvem-the home, of Mrs.K.W.Sanders, 'T?°f ^ ^«'.ly More .nan half Thursday after-iof 233 U-year-old (sixth grade) noon.\tThe\tpresident,\tMrs.R.\tSan-!\tlhild'ren ,woiiise my feelings toward him and ha.become rettle , and dis.ati^fieal.Is there any help for us?E.H.Answer: What made you marry him if you fell that, ho was not in your c 1 :i- Are you perfectly sure that you are so superior to him?A h>|.ol people « ho haven't any blue blood hnrve mighty good, rich, red Mood anal hive amounted to «something in Hie world.My advice lo you is io climb down off your high hone.Quit, being j superior and be a good enough sport to make the best of your mar* riage.The Record will be pleased to receive any letters to this Dorothy Dix column.These will be forwarded to Misu Dix who will answer them as quickly us possible.worry guest of her son and daughter-in-law, Mr.and Mrs.A.(!.Phelan, Prospect Street, for the week-end.TRINITY INVITES YOU TO HER 102nd Birthday Anniversary TOMORROW SPECIAL PREACHER; J.Alex Edmison, K.C.of Toronto A Prince of the Platform.11.00 a.m.\u2014\u201cWhat A Layman Expects From His Church\" 7.00 p.m.\u2014\u201cThe Challenge of Tradition\" A CHOIR OF ,30 TRAINED VOICES WILL THRILL YOU.ment.\u201d Sunday School: 10 a.m.Testimonial meeting.Wednesday evening at 8 o\u2019clock.Reading room open daily from 3 to 5, except Saturday, Sunday and Holidays.Friday, 7:30 to 9 p.m.at His Majesty\u2019s Building.* » * \u201cEverlasting Punishment,\u201d is the subject of the Lesson-Sermon to be read in Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, October 31st, 1948, ! The Golden Text is from Galatians 6:7, \u201cBe not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.\u201d i Among the citations which com-! prise the Lesson-Sermon is the following from the Bible: \u201cThus saith the Lord the King of Israel, ami his redeemer the Lord of hosts; I am the first, and I am the last; and beside me there is no God.I have blotted out, as a thick cloud, thy transgressions, and, as a cloud, thy sins: return unto me; for I have redeemed thee.\u201d (Isaiah ,44:6,22).The Lesson-Sermon also includes j the following passage from the Christian Sc\u2019ence textbook \"Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures\u201d by Mary Baker Eddy: | \u201cWe acknowledge God\u2019s forgiveness of sin in the destruction of sin |and the spiritual understanding that casts out evil as unreal.But I the belief in sin is punished so long i as the belief lasts.Truth bestows no pardon upon error, but wipes it out in the most effectual manner.\u201d (Pages 497 and 11).Mr.and Mrs.Paul H Convent Street, left last evening for Ste.Anne de Beaupre and Quebec City, where in the latter city they' visited Mr.and Mrs.Jules A.Hondo.discussion during the business ses sion, were the arrangements for I the Christmas sale and tea.The Royer, : meeting closed with the recitation of the benediction.A pleasant hour was spent while refreshments were served by the hostess, assisted by Mrs.H.Mi ils.Mrs.Edward Holgate poured tea.Mr.John O\u2019Donnell, of Schu- J Among the relatives who were 'mâcher.Ont., the new skating pro- ; in Sherbrooke to attend the funeral fessional of the Sherbrooke Win- of Mr.John Robinson, Brompton jter Club, has arrived in the city Road, which took place yesterday, and taken up residence on London | were Mrs.W.A.Whipple, of Ot-! Street.Q\u2014 Is it normal for children to criticize their own mothers?A\u2014-Yes, both natural and desirable! Psychologi-cl, Virginia Lee Block had 528 high school boys and girl- list their complaints against their mothers; they totalled 5(1 rather serious complaints, on© of which was \u201cshe holds my sistr or brother up as a model to me.\u201d Never compare children unfavorably with their own brothers or sisters.Q\u2014You are always urging elderly people to learn new things.OId11er,-: can\u2019t do (bat.A They can if they want to! Plenty of r,indies show the main difference is that they are a little slower, But they learn just as well if given more time.Staid today to freshen yourself up and get out of I he rut bef ore it closes in overhead and leaves you entombed.DUDS WELL JUNCTION tawa; Mr.and Mrs.George Con-*\t*\t*\t| way, Mrr.Daniel Truland, Mr.Messrs.Gerald Wiggett, Robert Daniel Truland, Jr., and Mrs.Vein Webster, Geo, go Ewing and Doug-! Robinson, all of Lancaster, N'.IL: las Stevenson, have returned from Mr.and Mrs.Joseph Murphy, of Windsor, Vt., where they attended Gorham, N.H.; Mrs.Rowcna Kates the twenty-fifth anniversary cele- and Mrs.Valmore Doucet, of Con-bration of the Windsor Rotary way, N.H.; Mr.and Mrs.Earl Rob-Club.\tin son and Mr.Douglas Robinson, ' c]u(je(] Mr.and Mrs.xll of Berlin, N.H.; Mrs.A.Swal-1 Matthews and children, Mr.and Mrs.A.H.R.Alleyn, low, South Paris, Me.; Russell Street, are spending the Mrs.Beaman Smith, Mis.Bessie week-end in Quebec City, vistiing Smith and Miss Florie Smith, all Dr.and Mrs.de la Broquerie of Montreal.Fortin, at their home on St.Louis\t*\t*\t» Road.\tA very successful tea sponsored League Week-end guests at the home of Ronald and Marion Westman in- Wiiliam Murray Mr.ami anri Sharrel Jean, also Mr.and KNIT FOR THE HOUSE BKOOKBURY rwjM '¦#' /} ' * m-fw'm P '-vv ff V w r'¥W : I:, r \\\\ \u2018A,\t«*,.¦* \\ yj //\t\u2022 -J - 'i \u2018f\u201c\u2018s^vAfv the bride, and groom.Dancing and singing were enjoyed by all ur.-* til midnight, when delicious refreshments were served by (he hostesses, Mrs.J.Bayley.Mrs.T.Mason, Mrs.R.Martyn, Miss M.Tincarre and othere.The out-of-town guests included: Mr.and Mrs.T.Rogan, Mrs.J.Colby, Mr.and Mrs C.Colby and son, Gary, Mr.and Mrs.E.Colby and daughter, Carol.Mr.and Mrs J.Bayley and Jimmy, Mr.and Mrs.B.Sharkey, Mr, J.Bayley, Sr., Mr.and Mrs.R.Irwin.Mr.and Mrs.B.Wilson, Mrs.W.Neil, Mr.and Mrs.L.Proder-gast, Mrs, McCormick, all from Montreal.Mr.Ronald Currier, from Hartford, Conn.; Mr .J.Smith and two daugliU-! s, Edna and Doris, and Mrs.(\u2019\u2022 ifiord Colby and son and her friend of Sherbrooke; Mr, Jackie, A.Colby, from Lennox-ville: Mr.and Mrs, A.Fairbrother « f HuntingvilL- and Ernest Shaughm-js.y, of Johnville.erk Is Piwres*; ELECTRIC LIMITED 17 Frontenac St, \u2014 Tel.643 \u2018We Service Everything t\\ e Sell ow wall\tundo\tr woy\tin Wa be:r-g\tcove r\ted ar l\tC-\u2019o.-2\td ir.\ti,; !,J the\tcontra\t.or, M\t\u2022.1;).:\ttphat\tKvo \tis ver\tV o ;i !: m\t\tabout\t1 in;c f' .'1 ft\u2019 \u2022(\ttirât it\twill be\tcom\tMeted\t! yaarif, i people to stand behind their rights I ar.-d help the project along with a ' e-enero-tu nurse.You will be asked MR.J.A.ALLARD President Of Slisrlirooke liters Ltd, 22 MINTO STREET TAKES PLEASURE IN ANNOUNCING THAT \\ C.L.\u2019*CeiP Bailey HAS BEEN ENGAGED AS SERVICE MANAGER.Mr.Bailey or Captain Bailey, as he is better known today in the industry, has had wide experience in the automotive field.H« began his career early in the '\u2018twenties\u201d.In 1930 he was engaged by General Motors Products of Canada Limited as district service man* * ager and held this position until 1937.He then went from General Motors to the Ford Motor Company of Canada Limited, where he held the position of district service organizer and remained with the Ford Company in this capacity until 1942.During the year 1942 he entered the Royal Canadian Ordinance Corps as a lieutenant holding this rank to 1943 at which time he was promoted to captain and given charge of mechanical transport inspection of military district number 5.We feel that \u201cCed's\u201d wide experience in the industry will be advantageous to our customers in every respect.He is fully bilingual and capable of taking care of any service problem regardless of product.We invite our present customers who have not had the pleasure of meeting \"Ced\u201d to come in and do so and new customers will be accorded every courtesy and above all \u201cSERVICE.\u201d by Dec-cmbci 1.However, t'i> D; only ore step, truly a big step, to-: ward the acquisition of a covered rii:'; in Waterloo.Another big ,-;ep will be the irri-do work, which b net covered by ths coruractor\u2019: agreeir.snt, In other words, there L wiuit b known rr a Rink Committee, form- j ed of roirc.-entatives of all the in-' duhrial li'r.qt¦, municipal couivil-i lore and local merehan-A.It i* Hie I job of this committee to fee that 1 unbertakii I cause your mo-tii'y will be invoi ced re , who lip,-, been ark- jin a stationary e ITbc, one I hat were I rink Hu.- c pa, t j wild refloat the generosity of the now 1\t,, oppor-1 peoplo of Waterloo.It will be thing toward spent by bwines* men, and will is going to! rot be wasted, you can depend on It plenty to do the inside work, , that.th', cos and not snen-d it foolishly.So, if any©:::* i- interested in thi,s pro.jo :, ; i vi-iRally everyone in W;u: ru n should be, then you are a.sked to be generous when requeued to give toward its work.O:'.1, it i.s complete, and the work ir \u2019o i - done, thera will be a by one and all for rkating and for hockey gam,,.The committee states that ihe chief item will be that the kiddies in town will have i there is a oka-ting surface, lights, dressing rooms, etc., by the time skating time comes.The committee is only too glad to do this, a place where they can skate with-i but first they muK.have money | with which to work.The only way they know how| they can get | enough money to do this work iel So in order to give the children of Waterloo an opportunity of skating under ebeKt r, and to have a covered rink that lias been demanded here for several year.-., let u$ decide to do all we can in furthering this project by being generous when called upon to do .-o, NORTH HATLEY St, Barnabas\u2019 Anglican Guild was entertained by Mrs.Hodgson out \"thought of wind or weather.I ?rnd Mrs.Copp.The president, Mrs.They have the right to expect an Nol;a Deacon opened the meeting ar
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