Sherbrooke daily record, 22 novembre 1939, mercredi 22 novembre 1939
[" WEATHER Fair and a little milder For detailed weather report see Page Two, Established 1 897.^hprbronkp latlu mrrnrii SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, WEDNESDAY.NOVEMBER 22.1939.TEMPERATURES Yesterday: Maximum, 37 ; minimum, 8.Same day last year; Max.40; min.S'J.Forty-Third Year.Mines Claim Further Neutral Shipping Italians Now Suffer From Undersea War Large Italian Freighter Reported Badly Damaged Off English Coast by Floating Mine-German Merchantman Inter- cepted Off Iceland as British Intensify Economic Blockade as Reprisal Move.London, Nov.îi.\u2014W\u2014Warfare between Great Britain and Germany intensified today as Britain planned a blockade on German export trade in reprisal for recent shipping losses.Six German planes bombed the Shetland Islands, north of Scotland.British sources said the raiders failed to hit any objective\u2019s.Hie Admiralty announced a British warship had intercepted the 4,110-ton German freighter Bertha Fisser off Iceland\u2019s coast, stating the crew started to sink the ship, took to their boats, and were picked up by the warship.The 6,660-ton Italian freighter Fianona was added to the list of mine victims off England\u2019s southeast coast.Although badly damaged OPERATORS AND MINERS FIGHT TARIFF CHANGE by an explosion last night, she was instill afloat today.She was the sixteenth victim of mine and torpedo warfare off the British Isles in the last five days.In the air German planes recon-noitered the East Coast for the third successive day.A German plane flew ¦over villages along the mouth of the Thames.Beset by anti-aircraft fire and Royal Air Force fighters, it ¦dived and hedge-hopped to shake off the pursuers.Yo air raid warning was sounded.The Government announced that three German fliers who piloted a reconnaissance plane to the east ern outskirts of London Monday had been rescued from a rubber boat in the North Sea and taken prisoner.Two were badly wounded.Previously it had been reported simply that the craft had been driven out to sea.Yesterday a German plane was shot down over the East Coast.As the export seizure reprisal was imposed on Germany the British Government said that neutral traders would receive \u201cthe most sympathetic consideration possible.\u201d The new measure calls for seizure of all German exports on the high seas, regardless of whether they are in the neutral vessels or German.A spokesman said the sole aim was to drive German products off the seas and thereby shut off foreign exchange to Germany, He added that \u201cthe Ministry of Economic Warfare is giving the deepest study to the problem of application of the new measure in a manner not to work hardship on neutrals.\u201d France has decided to take, similar blockade measures.Tugs were trying to bring the badly holed Fiamona into port today.None of the crew of 33 was reported injured.It was not at once clear if the Fiamona carried any passengers.The damage to the Italian iiner was announced just as observers in London foretold swift acceleration of the war at sea in view of Britain s new measures of retaliation Tor what Prime Minister Chamberlain described as the \u201cruthless brutality\u201d tif German attacks on merchant shipping.Stirred by the sinking of fifteen ships\u2014including five neutrals in the last five days, the Admiralty moved to intensify the blockade against Germany by seizing all German exports on the high seas.The blockade hitherto has been directed only against German imports.Continued on Page 2, Col.0.Claim that Reduction in Duty on Venezuelan Oil Will Increase Unemployment in Mine Fields.Washington, Nov.22.\u2014t/P)\u2014Soft coal operators and John L.Lewis' United Mine Workers, often at loggerheads on other issues, loined hands today in opposing the Roosevelt administration\u2019s reciprocal trade programme.Spokesmen for both groups disclosed that they planned efforts to modify.if not terminate, the law authorizing the trade pacts if its extension is considered at the coining session of Congress.The law expires Juno 12 unless renewed.The coal men were incensed by the new agreement with Venezuela, provisionally effective December 1C, which cut the excise tax on crude petroleum and fuel oil in half\u2014from one-half cent a gallon to one-quarter cent.The reduction will apply to imports not in excess of one-fifth of the United States\u2019 production.Asserting the practical effect of the reduction was to give the.im-Continued on Page 2.Col.i.STORM TROOPERS RULE IN PRAGUE French Support British Move To Halt German Export Trade Also Makes German Exports Subject to Seizure at Sea\u2014Air Raids Increase in Number as Fighting on Western Front Is Reduced to Minimum\u2014Believed Germans May Have Some Move Afoot Near Alsace.x h n g ' ; * i m i \u2019ASpt:#-''' X 'iv?Nazi storm troopers now reign over Prague\u2019s Wentelas Square, above, where 12 persons were injured in Czech Fascist demonstration following general students\u2019 uprisings.Nine students were executed, 1200 others arrested, all Czech universities closed for three years as result of outbreak.ESKIMOS FACE STARVATION IN ALASKAN WILDS Unseasonable Weather, Preventing Regular Walrus Catch.Plays Havoc with Diet of Northerners.Barrow, Alaska, Nov.22.\u2014(ÆV Kskimos of this farthest north outpost had no juicy walrus moat nor even an abundance of the usually-plentiful whale or seal meat in their ice cellars today as they prepared for a bleak Thanksgiving Day of prayer and feasting on killed Polar bear.Up here, where turkey known, the Eskimos ask better for a holiday feast than wui vus meat.But hunger has come to many of the native families and more than half of the Eskimos\u2019 dogs have died of starvation or have been killed.Summer and fall weather (strong offshore winds drove the ice.from the northern beach in early July, and it didn't return until mid-October) has robbed the Eskimos of their hunting on the ice for walrus.Even the reindeer supply has Continued on Page 2, Col.7.British Operatives Are Charged With Plotting Munich Bombing Trigged; In Announcing Arrest of Two Men for Explosion Which Nearly Claimed Life of Adolf Hitler.Gestapo Claim that Plot Was Hatched by Two Members of British Secret Service Seized in Netherlands.1 MV 0 1 , freshly-I is un-nothing TWO MURDERED OVER FOUR-DOLLAR FIGHT Aberdeen, Wash., Nov.22.\u2014(/P)____ Two men were shot to death and a woman injured in-gunplay and fire that climaxed a quarrel over $4.Police Chief George Dean tells it this way: William Gessner, mill worker, accused a son of his landlady, Mr By AXEL DE HOLSTEIN (Havas Staff Writer) Paris, Nov.22\u2014 (C.P.-Havas) \u2014 France today joined Great Britain in making German exports subject to seizure at sea.The French Government\u2019s decision, paralleling that, announced yesterday by Prime Minister Chamberlain, is in reprisal for the unrestricted German sea warfare of the past week.Henceforth the Anglo-French naval patrol will not have as its aim tin PREDICTS REAL START OF WAR CANADIAN ARMY FINDING MANY NEW SERVICES British Press Praises Move fo Extend Economic Blockade British Under-Secretary for Auxiliary Air» Condemns Talks of Early Internal Break-Up of Germany.: Glenice Ostrich, of stealing $4.Mr.] Ostrich fled.Gessner opened fire.A s?lzul\u2019e only of contraWnd bound for \u2019bullet nicked her finger.\tj Gei man ports, but will also stop ex- Frank Fergestrom, filling station I\tleaving Germany tor neutral ! operator, attempted to protect her.lp0Ls in neutral ship ! Gessner shot him.j Gessner then set fire to the Ostrich I house with gasoline and was badly j burned as the fluid exploded.Joe Ostrich, 15, shot and fatally I wounded Gessner, who conf essed kill-jing Fergestrom before he died.SEES GERMAN OIL SHORTAGE Albany, N.Y., Nov.22.\u2014{/?)._Hugh Gibson, former United States ambassador to Belgium and Brazil, told the Foreign Policy Association here last, night he believed \u201cGermany\u2019s pressing need for oil\u201d will be felt \u201cby the Hitler war machine some time time early in 1940.\u201d \u201cSome armchair strategists think Russia\u2019s products will offset the German shortage,\u201d he said, \u201cThat is an optical illusion.They overlook the fact that most of Russia\u2019s goods are needed to supply its own huge | ate return barrage by French artil- Intensification of economic warfare was in sharp contrast to the quiet on the Western Front, where the French high command announced for the second successive day that there had been \u201cnothing important to report during the night.\u201d Observers studied the slowly increasing cold, wondering whether the Germans might start an offensive once the water-soaked front freezes hard enough to support a motorized attack.Air raid warnings were sounded again this morning through Northwest France.The alarm ended without incident.The same area experienced an air raid alarm last night.German artillery fire was particularly lively yesterday in the Blies sector.Fire was centered on French advance posts, and brought an immodi- population.A MAN OF COURAGE Cleveland, Nov.22.\u2014 (/P) \u2014 The , lery against the German troop posi-I tions.I In the Wissenbourg region, east of i the Vosges, artillery fire was notice-man of courage who bobs up in the ably lighter.Increase of exchanges crisis appeared today among relief clients whose rent and support were cut off as Cleveland ran short of relief funds.He reported to the relief office: \u201cMy landlady said she would let me stay if I\u2019d marry her.I some movement afoot there.But I\u2019ll be darned if I will.\u201d along the portion cf the Alsace front which is marked by the Wissem-bourg gap and the edge of the Bien forest had led military observers to wonder whether the Germans had Ottawa, Nov.22\u2014IP)\u2014The war so far has been a diplomatic contest which has gone in favor of the Allies and the second phase of the conflict involving active and large-scale military operations is approaching, Captain Harold Balfour, British Un-j dersecretary for Air, said here.Captain Balfour, who is also a member of the British air mission now in Ottawa, told the Canadian Club yesterday that the British Government had no illusions about the war and was preparing for a long and arduous fight.Wishful thinking about possibility of a German internal collapse is dangerous as it was likely to induce a slight diminishing of effort.The Gc u'man pact with Russia was an attempt to terrorize the Allies but failed and the Nazis could find uttle comfort in the present situa-! lion which did not make it clear whether the Soviet was their friend or foe.He said that the mere announcement ol the Empire air training plan ! had a depressing effect on Nazi j leaders and might prove to be the | decisive factor in the war.I The Ri sal Air Force has given a good account of itself in air fights and its machines have stood the rigid tests of battle \u201cbut fine as our aircraft is today, there are even better aircraft coming in the near-future,\u2019\u2019 he stated.\ti Services to Operate for Educational, Religious and Recreational Needs of Troops.Ottawa, Nov.22\u2014(®\u2014Canadian soldiers will be assisted by auxiliary services operating with the forces in meeting many of their educational, religious, recreational and entertainment needs and comforts, the National Defence Department believes.A spokesman of the Department, in the fifth of a series of weekly talks over the national network of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, last night outlined the scope of the auxiliary services.The aim will be to conduct the life of the soldiers so that they may be fitted physically and mentally for the war and also be equipped for their return to civil life better than when they enlisted.\u201cIt is our earnest hope that by provision of auxiliary services on a scale and at a standard worthy of our volunteer army and worthy of Canada itself, we may, in future, reap a rich harvest in young men disciplined in the, comradeship of service, broadened in outlook, and fitted to face and overcome the difficulties of post-war reconstruction,\u201d the spokesman said.There will be five actual spheres of auxiliary service.The educational aspect will he looked after by direct instruction and by establishment of libraries and other facilities for study.Chaplain services will be in charge of the religious sphere ami athletic sports and games of all Gontinued on Page 2.Col.ô.New Brunswick Premier Seeking To W Fill Three Vacancies In Cabinet I FRANCE SEEKING TO SPEED UP MARRIAGE with nineteen Saint John, N.B.Nov.22.\u2014(P1\u2014.the Conservatives New Brunswick speculated today-seats.over the choice of successors in the ! Meanwhile the Government jead-r,\t.\t.er, Premier A.A.Dysart, faced the Provincial Cabinet to three minis- task o{ naming successors to Attor- ters defeated in Monday\u2019s general r.ey-General J.B.McNair, Hon.E.election while the possibility arose J, Henneberry, President of the that the victorious Government\u2019s ; Executive Council, and Hon.A.P.representation in the Legisakure! Paterson, Minister of Education, might be increased by two.\t: Federal and Municipal Relations.J.B.Leger, returning officer in Some observers believed the At-Restigouche County, indicated last j torney-General who lost in York night an official count next Monday , might return to the Cabinet after of votes cast in Restigouche might ja Legislature seat had been found give victory to two Liberal candi-1 for him in Madawaska or Gloucester, dates reported defeated on the basis ' The other two ministers both were of unofficial returns election night, jdefeated in Saint John City.Hon.According to Leger corrected re- C.H.Blakeny, Speaker in the last turns gave majorities to Philibert Legislature, was mentioned as the Leblanc and Samuel Mooers, Rest- Education Minister\u2019s successor, and igouche Liberals, over Conservative J.Andre Doucet, Gloucester repre-Henry Diotte and David Stewart.Isentative and veteran party whip, Confirmation of the returning of-ias a candidate for the post of Exe-ncer's corrected count next Monday (cutive Council President, would increase the re-elected Gov-: Premier Dysart said it was unlike-srnment's following in the 48-seatjiy he would make any decision be-Legi.-lature from 27 to 29 and leave fore next week.Paris, Nov.22.\u2014OP)\u2014The French Government will relax its war measures and\u2014in the interest of tradition and marriage\u2014permit Parisians to dance next Sunday for the first time since the war began.They will celebrate the festival of the 1914 class of \u201cCatherinettes,\u201d girls who l ave reached the age of 25 without marrying.The fete of Saint Catherine every year is one of the most picturesque of Paris carnivals.On this day the \u201cCatherinettes\u201d don special bon-,net= and set out in search of hus-I bands.In the evening there are balls I to which the \u201cCatherinettes\u201d invite j their special candidates for matri-I mony.Southeastern Nations Given Pledge Of Hungarian Peaceful Intentions Budape.-t, Nov.22.\u2014(TP)\u2014Nations Soviet Russia, which now have a of southeastern Europe had Hun- common frontier as, a result of Rus-gary\u2019s assurance today that she is!sia\u201d °Wtion of Eastern Poland.eager for peaceful relations with her He declared it was agreed at a recent meeting in Moscow between neighbors, although determined to ¦ thc Hungarian Minister and the chief of the Russian State\u201d that opposition of interests of the two tales was uncalled for,\u201d protect her own interests and those of \u201cHungarian populations beyond her frontiers.\u201d The assurance was delivered by ^\t_\t- Foreign Minister Count Stefan GERMANY MAY MAKE Csaky, who told Parliament last bight Hungary was \u201cnot inclined to war-iike adventures.\u201d At the same time, however, Csaky JEAN P\\RKER SEEKS DIVORCE Hollywood, Nov.22.\u2014(/P)\u2014Actress Jean Parker s&y- she will divorce j George MacDonald, New York rews-j paper-man.\u201cThe fact Mr.MacDonald i must remain in New York and I must stay in Hollywood has, ruined our marriage,\u201d she said.Married in March, 1936, they separated six months ago.DRIV E 'THROUGH HUNGARY London, Nov.22.\u2014®\u2014The New.s-Chronick today reported German .preparations for an attack on Undeclared Rumania\u2019s attitude toward mania through Hungary, Hungarian minorities in Transylva- \u201cReliable reports from Prague nia \u201chad not made too encouraging state that over 700,000 German an impression on Hungarian public ; troops fully equipped for action arc opinion,\u201d\tnow massed in the Protectorate near Csaky said Hungary would enter 1 Olomouc and Moravska-Ostrava,\u201d no \u201cneutral or other blocs\u201d with .the newspaper -aid.\u201cIt is firmly countries against which she has, ' believed there that the Reich intends claims, unless an effort first were to iaunch an attack on Rumania made to ease the differences.\t| through Hungary in the near future.While avoiding direct mention of, \u201cStrong rumors in Budapest state Hungary\u2019s claims, to Transylvania, i that Italy has promised help to Hun-which she lost to Rumania after the gary in case she should be a racked last war, the Foreign Minister -ug- by Russia or the Reich.No officiai Rested Rumania should co-operate i comment is.available, but it i?widely \u201cin the formation of a modern world r.eHc-ved here that Hungary would not in the Danube.\"\t[give the Germans permission to Csaky also sought to allay anxiety march through Hungarian terri-over relations between Hungary and (tories.\u201d 22.\u2014œ is the only language the Nazis understand,\u201d Thc Times said today , as the press welcomed the Government\u2019s decision to seize German exports.The Daily Herald said: \u201cThe economic consequences to Germany of even partial stoppage of her export trade will be very serious, for it wall make even mm e difficult, her attempts to obtain raw material in spite of the blockade.\u201d \u201cAlready there are.signs that by spring she will be running really shorl of oil, iron ore and other esesitiiil metals to say nothing of fats, cotton and wool.Her continental back doors are open; but she is finding it harder and harder to pay for things imported through them.\u201cOne of her means of payment has been through exporting coal, machiner;, and chemicals overseas through Italy, .Spain and Portugal, to South America am, the Far East.For these goods she, has been getting foreign currency with which to buy imports from Scandirmvia, Russia, the Balkans and Italy.The blockade will deprive her of these resources.\u2019\u2019 The Times said: \u201cPublie opinion, like the House of Commons, will heartily endorse the British Government\u2019s decision to take immediately more drastic measures' against German sea-borne trade, in retaliation for thc extension of piracy on thc part of the German Government.Reprisal is the only language the \u2019 Nazis understand.\u201cIt is purely a wrecking form of piracy, to which the British and ! French navies will without, doubt before long be able to put a stop.\u201d \u201cThe blockade and counter-blockade, will inevitably cause much hard-ship to neutral countries,\u201d the \u2019 Now.-Chronicle said.\u201cBut our ! method, unlike that of the Nazis, | will involve no loss of neutral ships, j no sacrifice oi lives, no frightful- j ness.Neutrals will suffer inconvenience at OUr hands, but that is the ¦ price they must pay \u2014 and should pay ladly lor removal from the I world of the Nazi pestilence.\u201d According to the Financial News, \u201cthe lack of foreign exchange makes ! Germany a bad buyer.\u201d \u201cSo long as the sea routes to this country remain open to traffic, trade from the Oslo states -the Seandina-vian countries, Holland and Belgium -will inevitably trend towards the ; Allies,\u201d the financial organ added.Ht'i'liii, Nov.*22.-(-\u2018J\u2019) The Lest;i|Hi aiiimuiieed Putin limi a Munich pin! 1er had eonl'essi'd [hr NovenibiT S nllenrp! on Ulolf Hitler'' life, and Hint Iwo British opera lives hail been seized.lleinrieh Himmler, Uhirf of the Seerrl 1'nlier, said Grorp l.l'cr, .'!li-year-nld rosideul of Munich, planled a lime bomb in the Na/i beer collar shrine there a I the instigiiation of Olio Slrasser, long-lime Hiller foe, and will) funds furnished by Ureal Britain.He did not link the two captive Britons specifically will) Ihc blast, bul accused liiem of organizing plols in Germany.Himmler said Ibal in trying in reach Swilzerland, Kiser was caught the night of Ihc explosion, which killed eigld persons ami which Hitler escaped by eleven rninules.Kiser did not confess unlil November 11, he said.Several accomplices were arrested, bul Ihr information was kepi secret unlil Iasi night lo expedite other seizures.Himmler appealed for further information regarding Kiser or former associates.-ÿ; jje c|j([ 110(: men(;ion the Governments offer of rewards totalling 900,000 marks ($360,000) for arrest of the Munich plotters, and authorities declined to comment on it.Eight Nazis were killed in the Munich blast, Himmler said a \u201cCaptain Stevens\u201d and a \u201cMr.Best\u201d of the British intelligence were captured November 9 while attempting to enter Germany from Venloo, The Netherlands.He said the Britons had been duped by German agents posing as disgruntled officers.He said that in attempting to organize plots against the Reich, they supplied wireless equipment with which the Germans kept up deceptive communications \u2014\t|until yesterday.New York, Nov.22.\u2014 (/!\u2019i \u2014j (ln London, the Foreign Office MeyiT Nitzburg, 51.a liquor store denied any agent of the British Gov-proprietor who duels bandits with eminent had \u201cany knowledge\u201d of .a champagne bottles, held » four-to- German \u201cdescribed as having placed two lead today over the forces of (a bomb in thc Munich cellar.\u201d b\t| (The Foreign Office said there In six encounters with holdup!was \u201cno connection\u201d between the men in his store since 1935, Nitz- bombing and \u201cthe kidnapping of two Reprisal Is the Only Language Nazis Understand,The Times Declares in Praising Decision to Seize German Exports\u2014Move May Deprive Reich of Badly Needed Fats, Oils and Metals.London, Nov.22.\u2014I®\u2014\u201cReprisal LIQUOR DEALER IN ANTI-BANDIT DRIVE burg has bagged four thugs.Until recently, Nitzburg made all his scores by conking his foes with bottles of scotch and champagne.Bu|, that was expensive - once he missed and smashed a plate, glass window.So last night when a youth entered with the conventional \u201cstick \u2019em up, youse guys,\u201d Nitzburg drew a gun and plugged him through the shoulder.Police booked him as British subjects on the German- Dutch The frontier.\u2019 Gestapo ) report said o f the Britons:\t\u201cContradictory:\tclaim, whether they were captured while still in Holland or when in Germany lare at present being examined.\u201d ' (Varying reports at the time of .the Venloo incident agreed that after a shooting affray, several porous were carried across The Netherlands border into Germany.The To -ph Magagnos, 22, an ex-convict.;^1t(h(\u2018,',a\"ds Government was re-\u2019\t; ported as intending to ask that Ger- i many investign to.) j (SI ras-cr, accused of organizing I Hie Munich plot, broke with Hitler ! in 1930, before the Nazi rise to j power.) Riser, cmlilerl by the Gestapo GERMAN PRESS ENTHUSIASTIC OVER DEVELOPMENTS Berlin, ,!ov.22.-(/]'\u2019)\u2014 Berlin newspapers devoted entire front page today to the Gestapo announcement of a confession in the plot to bomb Adolf Hitler.Hie fuehrer\u2019s newspaper, the Voelkischer Beobachter, snid in headline*: \u201cWith deep satisfaction the German people learns: the would-bc assassin has been caught.\u201d Deutsche Allegemeine Zei-tung headlined the story Georg Elser the perpetrator, intelligence service the employer, Otto Strasser the organizer.\u201d The press published pictures of Elser and two men described as British secret agents.with actually building the bomb \"in a manner unique in criminal history,\u201d was said to have started machinations in September and October, 1938, and to have begun iPu!!;rig his plans together in August I I 930.' First, said Himmler, he built a six-day time clock into a pillar of the beer cellar and, seven days before the annuel Nazi celebration there, the explosive was planted.On November 2 and ,3, Elser failed in attempts to place a detonator in the bursting chamber, .said l.he Gestapo Chief, but succeeded during the night of November 4-5.Then he left for Switzerland, but returned to Munich November 7 to make sure all was in order and to Continued on Page 2.Col.7.Japanese Determined To Rid China Of Communist Menace, Premier Say; Tokyo, Nov.22.-(Æ*) \u2014 Premier vember 29 to discard differences be Nobuyuki Abe announced today ipostponed.Japan would keep troops in China in discussing the United States-umil \"f,hina_ is entirely free from (Japan trade treaty which the United i.ho Communist menace,\u201d\tSta.e has served notice will be ter- In a statement published by thc iminalcd January 26, 1940, Abe said-Germany D short of all commo-I\tPre-'s> th,; Premier said the \u201cIt would be fortunate for both dittos that the' Oslo states produce - f?Lr,;i\"ns.\t«Pmatc under an 'America and Japan if their relations iron ore timber façon arwl rinirv ,'U' -V0 m nn f'ac' Wltn -Japan j were adjusted before abrogation, produce.\u2019 If indiscriminate snhm:,.WOulfl c0\u201dclud.c \u201ch.0!'Uy wUh a new ! However, it cannot be helped if the government for China along the firfd to r n,l7 \u2018\te?h y«Iof anti-Comintern pact of m eti°ll fr the'\t! Japan, Haly, Germany, Hungary stbe w ., hr ' PPinf,\u2019 t1h\u201c Hand Spain, but separate from it sUtes would have no outle- but Ger-¦ - The Japanese Government, he man, for their products.In those\tis tryin to establish peaceful circumstances Germany could make relation, with the Soviet Union and her own terms for payment.\tafter demarcation of the border be- lt mine laying were to continue : ween Japanese-protected Manchou .uo and Soviet-supported Outer Mongolia another commission likely will he established to mark other borders.The newspaper Asahi in a dispatch from Moscow reported Russia had asked that a Soviet-Japanese conference in Chita, Siberia, No- te be as effective as.during the last week, it would represent a real threat to British food supplies.And if it eventually made the Oslo states become virtually dependent upon Go many for a market, the effectiveness of the blockade would seriously weakened.\u2019* treaty expires before readjustment.Measures for coping with such a situation are being studied in the various quarters concerned.SUPPORTS GERMAN ACTION Tokyo, Nov, 22.\u2014 (/P)\u2014Toshio Shiratori, former Ambassador to Italy, today declared that if the war should spread into a world conflict \u201ctoo many Japanese remember the bitte» lesson of the Washington Conference to feel inclined to fight for Great Britain and America.\u201d (Many Japanese feel that in the Washington Conference of 1921-22 Continued on Page 2, Col.3.C$0C PAGE TWO 5HERBKUOKF DAILY RECORD, WEDfJESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1939.Expect Increased Demand For GERRY WIGGETT j Social Happenings In Magog SCHOLARS GIVE Dairy Products Of Dominion British Government Making Immediate Inquiries for Cheese and Evaporated Milk with Butter Demands Likely to Follow if War Lasts Any Time\u2014Prices of Cheese on Canadian Boards Jump.RENAMED HEAD OF MINOR LOOP Toronto, Nov.22.\u2014\u2014 Canadian dairymen may be called upon to supply Great Britain with butter, cheese and evaporated milk if the war is of lonR duration, J.E'.Single-ton, Associate Director of Dairy Products Marketing for the Dominion Department of Agriculture, Ottawa, told the Ontario Creamery Association Convention here today.\u201cThese are products,\u2019\u2019 he said, \u201cwhich the Canadian dairying industry is most suitably organized to supply in volume.Quantities of these commodities which may be required are as yet unknown, but the British Ministry of Food has made inquiries concerning only chct»se and evaporated milk.\u201cThat inquiries have not as yet been made concerning butter is probably due to the fact that officials of the British Ministry of Food are aware that there is no important surplus of butter in Canada, and that maximum prices of butter in the United Kingdom and the Canadian market arc not in such relationship to each other as will permit of export.\u201d Demand for cheese, which will apparently be.freely used in troop rations, probably will be more urgent than demand for butter as there is no similar substitute for cheese as margarine provides for butter.But if hostilities are prolonged, it is possible and indeed probable that increased quantities of all three commodities, namely butter, cheese and evaporated milk, may be required from Canada.\u201cIt is highly desirable,\u201d said Mr.Singleton, \u201cthat insofar as is consistent with supply requirements of Great Britain, no one branch of the Canadian dairying industry should be permitted to expand unduly during the duration of the war at tin-expense of other branches of the industry, and thereby accentuate the inevitable shock of ihe postwar adjustment period.\u201d Available butter supplies for I Britain, be judged, might only be 1 sixty per cent or even less of the volume available in 1038, and butter ; consumption would be about half the peacetime average, with margarine making up the difference.Anticipating a butter shortage, the British Government accumulated large ' stocks of vegetable and whale oils before the war for the preparation of margarine.I Butter prices in Great Britain had been stabilized by a fixed maximum of 34.38 cents a pound to the consumer compared to the present , Canadian price of around 28.48 cents a pound on the Toronto market.Adequate stocks of Canadian but-! ter for domestic consumption during ; the non-producing winter months ; were assured, said the Government official.Stocks now are about the same as they were a year ago.Prices of cheese on rural cheese-boards had risen sharply since the outbreak of war, advancing from about 10% cents to slightly more than 16 cents a pound, largely due , to speculative buying.Canadian cheese lias been selling in Britain, lie said, at about 16 cents ex-warehouse in Montreal for the Canadian producer.Exports of Canadian cheese from Montreal in one week of November totalled 106,938 boxes to the United Kingdom, 1,546 boxes to Newfoundland, the West Indies and the United States compared with a normal average weekly export of some 50,000 boxes.Stocks of cheese in ; the hands of Canadian exporters, he said, were \u201cextremely low, and if not lower than ever before at this time of year, are lower than for many ; years.\u201d j The Women\u2019s Christian Temperance Union was entertained by Mrs.A.F.Howie.Mrs.C.S.Harris, the ! president, conducted the meeting, |at the conclusion of which refresh-I meats were served by the hostess, -\ti Miss Vorinie Hulme\tentertained Officers of E.T.Juvenile, fcVC,iai of her young friends at the it/i-j * in i\ti tea hour on ihursday, the occasion Midget and Bantam Hockey ,being her eighth birthday.Games League Re-elected at An-Kn(f 1conte:; ; WCJ« enjoyed by the nual Meeting\u2014Satisfactory j aroused over the favors\tfound in the Statement\tPresented.\tibirthda.v cake.______\t| The 1925 Club was\tentertained Gerald M.Wiggett was last night ^ tbe\twith .re-elected president of the Eastern *^rs- khonyo and Mrs.J.Broad-; Townships Juvenile, Midget and bent as hostesses.There was a good Bantam Hockey League at the an- attendance.Mrs.E.Moffatt, the inual meeting of the organization Pr®.sidcln^> conducved the meeting.; held in the New Sherbrooke Hotel.! Refreshments were served by the ; Forrest Keene and Francis Kenalty hostesses.were renamed vice-president and ! The Women\u2019s Missionary Society secretary-treasurer respectively.-met at the home ot Mrs.A.E.Representatives were present from Swoger.ihe meeting was conducted Bishop\u2019s College School, East An-iby tne president,.Mrs.E.Bail, and gus, Canadiens, St.Patrick\u2019s Aca-1 the study book was read.Tnere were ! demy and St.Pat\u2019s Grads.\t(eighteen present at the meeting, at ( A satisfactory statement was pre- jtbe conclusion of which the ho-stess i sented by the secretary-treasurer, !selZ, relreshments.showing the league to be in a ( the regular meeting of Harmony healthy financial condition.To date, J AnaP^er -N0- L\tat it was revealed, three applications;^® \u2018Yaa0,nlc 1 enlPle- At this meet-! for membership in the juvenile loop :init t.ie degiees of the order were | have been received, three bantam exen,P !fied\t^rS- teams have applied and two midget ; 'Yas lall-laled' It was decided that teams are rcadv for action.\tt:bls , ulaputer, 'lou ^ work as a unit Sherbrooke High School and Len- for h®\tUosb Society.At the noxville High School are expected ! uonc uslon °I th® \u201c®®ting refresh- .\t¦\t- -ments were served.It was decided that another \u201ctelephone bridge\u201d to enter juvenile teams in the hook ! up, The matter of schedules was left over until the next meeting, which will be held on Tuesday, De-' cember 5.would be held in two weeks.A Remembrance Day ceremony was conducted at the cenotaph, u c 'where a guard of honor was placed there is no limit to the number of .at thg münument.First Great War (teams which may.be entered in any veterans were present as well as the of the three divisions of the league, men of the ^ Batte R c A since its officials are anxious to be c.A.S.F.The Memphremagog Band of service in the development of j played \u201cO Canada\u201d and the Last Post young hockey players.Any group : was soun \u2014 The Yugoslav National Defence Tribunal today condemned a Dr.Jemec to fifteen years\u2019 imprisonment at hard labor as a German spy.A secret radio transmitter was found in Jemec\u2019s home.BIRTHS CALHOUN \u2014 At the Sherbrooke Hospital, Nov.21, 1939, to Mr.and Mrs.Jas.L.Calhoun, (nee K.Elliott), a daughter, Marcia Ann.-* MARRIAGES CLARK\u2014AUGER\u2014On\tSaturday November 18, 1939, at St.John\u2019s Church, Waterville, Que., Canon E.Roy officiating, Thelma Iris, elder daughter of Mr.and Mrs.A.S.Auger, to Ronald Havely, only son of Mr.and Mrs.E.H.Clark, both of North Hatley.DEATHS -* i ELLIOTT\u2014Entered into rest at his home, Sawyerville, Que., on Tuesday November 21, 1939, Samuel J.Elliott in his 70th year.Beloved husband of Esther Lowry.Funeral Friday, November 24, at the late residence at 1 p.m.Interment.at Cookshire.BROOKS\u2014In Montreal, November 22, 1939, Miss Florence Brooks.The remains will arrive in Sherbrooke Friday noon, Nov.24th, at the C.P.R.station and be taken to the Blake and Taylor Funeral Home, 86 Queen street.Funeral to take place at 2 p.m.Interment at Elmwood Cemetery, CARD OF THANKS Mrs.F.A.Bottome, Quebec st__ this opportunity to thank all those vrho helped to make her stay in the Sherbrooke Hosp.Lal a pleasant one.Those who sent flowers, those who visited her, the nurses and Dr.Lynch.CARD OF THANKS We wbh to thank all those who assisted us in any way dur'ng the illness and death of the late James A.Coons; those who sent fiowf'rs and messages of sympathy, especially do we thank the Rev.C.B.McLauchlan, the choir of St.Paul\u2019s Chinch, the bearers and those who leaned cars.MRS.COONS AND FAMILY.Mechanics and laborers are shown as they were working on a Lysander monoplane in the Malton, Ontario, as Canada stepped up her production of war materials \"for use in France.Although not as yet in demand to any great extent, Canada's products are being sent, over.plant at men are WARME.2 Weather has been fair and mild in the M estera Provinces and rather cold in Ontario with light snow and rain in southwestern counties.Forecasts: Fair and a little milder today and Thursday.The maximum temperature yesterday was 37 and the minimum 8.Last year the temperatures were 40 and 32.HELP THE RED CROSS TO HELP WIN THE WAR! v /\\ 1 ^Ijerbroofee tSnhertafemB Ilimiteh E.A.VOGELL, Mgr-45 Dufferin Ave.Phone 236 Funeral Parlors Without Charge Ambulance Service DAY OR NIGHT A { 1 SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1939.PAGE THREE POLICE INTENSIFY SEARCH FOR FUGITIVE Guiliemette Remains Free As Leads Prove Fruitless No Trace Found of Jail Breaker as Police Push Hunt Throughout Townships\u2014Believed He Stole Overalls from Yard of Residence Near Jail\u2014Investigator Sent Here to Probe Jail Break.LENN0XV1LLE W.C.T.U.GROUP HOLDS SESSION Object of an intensive hunt the Belvidere street trestle.He was tin oughout the Eastern Townships, îsaid to be walking in the direction Ernest Guiliemette remained free of Lennoxville.today as police continued their | Police tvei'e also informed ye-iter-search started yesterday morning ; day afternoon by a local resident liv-alter he escaped from the local jail.' ing near the Winter street jail that Sentenced last summer to thirty;a pair of overalls, washed the night years in the penitentiary for a series! before and left on the line to dry, of robberies, Guiliemette, also had disappeared.This information Cash Prizes to Be Donated to j?ecT>orfd \"as informed today by >V.E.Paton, joint campaign chair Red Cross Push To Date Has Netted SCOUTS STAGE Approximately $7,000 Beyond Mark ENTERTAINMENT Funds collected in the Canadian, workers showed this section of UAD OAT A 01 A MC Red Cross Society drive in District Stanstead County to have been rllit lltri AlAirAIlil No.2 of the Eastern Townships to thoroughly canvassed.One worker;\tkj date total approximately $27,000, ; reported travelling ninety-five miles I -\t_ over country roads and interview known as Ernest Gilbert, was brought here to stand trial on three statutory offence charges and one of robbery.Since advised of Guillemette\u2019s successful bid for freedom, Provincial Police under Inspector Donat Mayer have followed many leads furnished them by persons who believed they had seen the wanted man.A number of suspects have been taken into custody and questioned, but released later.One of these leads sent officers to the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks near the highway to Lennoxville, where a man answering the general description of the fugitive was reported seen.The man was found walking along the tracks and apprehended, but was allowed to proceed when it was established that he was not Guiliemette.Municipal police were notified yesterday afternoon that a man thought to be the escaped prisoner was walking along the Canadian Pacific Railway tracks in the vicinity of the trestle near the Franciscan monastery.Radio cars were dispatched to the scene, but no suspicious characters were found.Provincial Police also investigated the report.Soon after the break was discovered, local police searched the houses of two Guiliemette families in the city.The occupants denied having- seen the hunted man and no trace of him was found in the residences.It was learned by authorities yesterday afternoon that Guiliemette had been seen shortly after six o\u2019clock in the morning on King-street west near Nadeau\u2019s garage, and later on the C.P.R.tracks near Prize-Winners in District Temperauce Contests\u2014International Economics Discussed.led to the belief that Guiliemette, clad m a gray shirt and a pair of brown trousers when he escaped, had taken th, garment.The overalls, of one-piece construction, were blue, with red trimmings and brass buttons up the front.Guiliemette was also said to have been wearing glasses when he disappeared.Officials of the Winter street jail claimed today that Guiliemette had made his escape from the ceil block by picking the lock with a piece of wire which he had found.The door on the cell block is doubly guarded, with a lock in which the key mu it be turned twice before it is properly fastened, and a heavy metal har fastened by a padlock.Had the door to the cell block been properly locked, with the key in the first lock turned twice, the bar pulled across and the massive padlock snapped, it would have been * virtual impossibility for a prisoner to escape as Guiliemette did.A special investigator from the Attorney-General\u2019s Department hn^ been sent here to probe the jail break, it was learned this morning.Arrested here last July, Guiliemette pleaded guilty to a long list of robberies and was given the thirty-year sentence by Judge J.S.Couture.He was serving the sentence when brought here to stand trial on four additional counts.After breaking from the jail, he escaped by scaling the wall around the yard, using a plank left, in the yard by workmen to reach the top of the enclosure.' CITY BRIEFLETS Permanent waves like natural curly hair, Mrs.Racicot\u2019s Beauty Shoppe.Service and quality unexcelled.Phone 2063.Records of Nov.10th wanted.Phone 68.I Dance, I.O.O.F.Hall, Sawyerville, ; Thursday, Nov.23.Adm.40c each, | lunch included.Net proceeds given to Red Cross.Billy\u2019s Dixie Boys Orch.Come, help a worthy cause! Tea.St.Patrick\u2019s Hall, Thurs.Hostesses: Mrs.Francis Hoye, Mrs.F.L\u2019Heureux, Mrs.H.R.UnswortH and Mrs.R.Lacroix.Those in this district obtaining highest marks in the annual Dominion-wide temperance campaign now being carried on in the Sunday Schools will receive cash prizes offered by the Lennoxville Women\u2019s Christian Temperance Union.This decision was reached yesterday afternoon at a largely attended meeting of this organization held in the Parsonage, with Mrs.F.R.Matthews as hostess.During the business session, which was conducted by the Union\u2019s pi-esi-d-ent, Mrs.Lansing W.Smith, it was reported that a quantity of magazines had been distributed since the previous meeting, and persons confined to their homes or in the hospital had received visits and showers.The devotional period was conducted by Mrs.Ethel L.Seale.Yesterday\u2019s programme took the form of study groups who discussed international economics under the leadership of Mrs.M.Elizabeth McCurdy, This discussion proved to be both instructive and stimulating.The afternoon\u2019s activities were pleasantly climaxed by an hour's enjoyable conversation and the serving of a dainty tea by the hostess, who was assisted in her hospitable duties by several of the members.man.Thus the objective of $20,000 has been cleared by some $7.000.Sherbrooke's goal of $6,000 has been passed by approximately $4,-000, Mr.Paton announced, while in the Eastern Townships areas included in District No.2 collections amount to $17,000 with eleven branches yet to report.ing seventy-five families and from other districts came similar evidence of careful work.A total of $1,196.80 has been collected to date as follows: Rock Island, $529.10; Stanstead, $360.20; Fitch Bay and Tomifobia, $155.40; North Stanstead, $64.50; Heathton and South Barnston, $41.00.Pro-i ceeds of a football game between Demonstrations in First Aid and Knot Tying Feature Programme Presented at Regular Rotary Club Meeting.Dismissed Claim Local Firm Violated Terms Of Wage Act Action of Joint Committee of Eastern Townships Construction Industry Against L.0.Noel Company Set Aside tn Superior Court Ruling\u2014Alleged Company Paid Lower Salaries than Stipulated by Law.ent dates.$1,196.80 COLLECTED IN ROCK ISLAND AREA Rock Island, Nov.21.\u2014 Returns presented at a meeting of Red Cross 1 Tuesday evening.Featured by clever demonstrations in first aid ami knot tying, an ntertainment.was pre-members of various troops in the Sherbrooke Bov Scout As- The local drive closes officially to-1 Stanstead and Lower Canada col- interesting night, but in outlying districts the leges to the amount of $46.60 were ' sented bv campaign will be concluded at differ- also included.Under the direction of a qualified, .\t.\t- nurse a home nursing course has !SOC!iltlon at last\t* meeting of been arranged.Seventy have regist- Sherbrooke Rotary Club in the ered for the course, which is being New Sherbrooke House, hold at the Red Cross rooms each Following the regular business |session of the Rotarians, presided __! over by President Gerald Wiggott.Ithe chair was taken by Troop Leader -*j Dennis Yeasey, of the St.Patrick's ! Troop, who reviewed the activit ies *- |of the Weal Scout, troops, mention- ling the Christmas Toy Shop, usher-HEARING OF CONSPIRACY ;ing at the Sherbrooke Fair and the CHARGES NEXT WEEK ; campaign for eggs at Easter as Preliminary hearing of the con- among their efi'orts designed to help spiracy charges against Joseph ! °H'ers.Mathieu, Leo Girard, Cyrille Allaire | Three leds from St.Patrick\u2019s and John Doyle will go ahead in Troop, Donald Heinerth, Kenneth Magistrate\u2019s Court next, week, it jDoiron and Milton Kennlty, danced was decided by Judge J.H, Lemay | an Irish jig, accompanied at the | when the quartette was arraigned ; piano by James Strickland.A nutn CROWN LAWYER IS NAMED FOR ASSIZE TERM NEWSY ITEMS FINAL PLANS FOR CHRISTMAS SALE Members of the Lennoxville Women\u2019s League of St.Andrew's Church, Sherbrooke, were busily engaged in making final plans for their annual Christmas sale and tea in Sherbrooke early in December, when they were pleasantly entertained yesterday afternoon at their regular meeting by Mrs.Janies Stewart at her residence on Main street.Mrs.J.G.Trenholme, of Sherbrooke, president of the League, conducted the business session, when Red Cross work was discussed with a view to this League working as a unit under the local Red Cross branch.The matter was tabled until the next meeting.At the conclusion of the agenda a dainty afternoon tea was served by the hostess who was assisted by Mrs.M.Cathcart.Clearing sale at Helen Conway\u2019s, 46 Wellington St., at Jack Echen-berg\u2019s Store, Thursday, Friday and Sat.Don't miss the chance to get a nice hat a greatly reduced price.Bridge at St.Peter\u2019s Church Hall.Tonight! Adm.25c each.Sponsored by the Good Companions.Refreshments served.Everybody welcome! Five diamond ring with pure gold setting.See it on display! s2S ,0 *50\tI AT\tJS JEAN-PAUL\t| PERRAULT 58a Wellington St.North.\t§ Above Sterling \u2014 Room 103 Ü! Bayley Block \u2014 Phone 618\t8 Chicken pie supper, Plymouth Church Hall tomorrow, 5.30 to 7.30.Tickets 50c.J.E.Ally, special Tip Top Tailors iuLn representati e will be at our store Thurs.and Fri., Nov.23rd and 24th.'1 1 Suits and overcoats $25.95.Leo Laliberte the Tailor, Sherbrooke, RESOLUTION LIVELY DEBATED A lively debate on the resolution, \u2018'Life Favors a Short Person,\u201d enlivened the largely attended regular Tuesday meeting of the Anglican Young People\u2019s Association of St.George\u2019s Church last evening in the Lower Parish Hall, Miss Joan Jones and Bob MacKie upheld the affirmative, and the negative side was taken by Miss Marjorie Waite and Douglas Glass.The decision was given to the negative side by half a point.Judges were Miss Bernice Glass and Leslie Cann.During the business period, conducted by the president, Miss Norah Mcorehead, plans were made for a musical evening next week.Mrs.L.M.Watson presided at the piano for the usual enjoyable sing-song, and later games were played, after which the singing of the National Anthem brought the evening\u2019s activities to a Ashton Tobin to Act Jointly with Crown Prosecutor this morning.Cesaire Gervais During Present Term ot Court of King\u2019s Bench \u2014 Raoul\u2019 Gagne Appointed Liquor Commission Counsel.YOUNG PEOPLE STAGED SUCCESSFUL ENTERTAINMENT Among the various activities staged in Plymouth Church hall during the week-end visit of Mr.T.A.Kirk programme of the In a return to the traditional ' ioun?People\u2019s camps across custom of having joint French and ; English-speaking Crown Attorneys ' instructive, Mr.Kirk\u2019s graphic de nominated in the District of St.\u2019 scriptions adding much to the pleas-Francis, the Attorney-General\u2019s De- l,re oi the group of young people partment at Quebec yesterday made for whose guidance and help his visit public the appointment of Ashton t0 Sherbrooke was planned.Tobin to act with Cesaire Gervais, I Other items on the programme in-K.C., during the present session of \u2022 fluffed a skit, \"Not So Dumb,\u201d by Court of King\u2019s Bench.Ratification m e m b c r.s of the Lennoxville Union; of Raoul Gagne\u2019s nomination as ad- piano solos by Miss Jean Larabee; a vocate for the Quebec Liquor Com- j ladies' trio by Mrs.Gerald Spafford, ito Sherbrooke was the j featuring moving pictures 1a; Young People\u2019s camps Canada.These proved most interesting and mission in the district was also received yesterday.Prior to the advent to power of the Duplessis administration in 1936 there had been a tacit understanding here which provided that the Senior Crown Prosecutor in St.Francis District would be French-speaking while the other nominee Miss B.Havard and Miss G.George and cartoons by Dick Armitage.The successful programme concluded with Mr.Norman Tracy playing \u201cGod Save the King.\u2019 DEED OF SALE DECLARED VALID IN JUDGMENT An attempt by a resident of Rock would be of English extraction.This Forest to have a transfer of prop was changed however with the nam- erty declared fraudulent was nulli-ing of Antonio Drolet, K.C., and Ro-.fied today in a judgment handed land Dugre as Prosecutors after the Unio- Nationale victory.Son of the late Senator E.W.Tobin, of Bromptonville, Ashton Tobin attended Bishop\u2019s University, Loyola College and McGill University before entering the Law School down in Superior Court by Mr.Justice C.D.White, who dismissed the action instituted by Joseph Dumont ber of intricate knots were tied and j shown to the Rotarians by Scouts | Robert Simpson ami Fred Allsop, | with their uses explained by Robert ! Bell.The three boys are members of the St.Peter\u2019s Troop.His reasons for being a Scout were told by Patrol Leader Alfred Allen, of Si.Patrick\u2019s Troop, and with Wayne Molyneux acting as the \u201cpatient,\" the Scouts demonstrated skill in administering first aid to an injured person.Among the boys participating in the first aid exhibition were Denluirdt Vincent, of St.Patrick\u2019s Troop, Robert Thomas, a member of the 7th Sherbrooke Troop, and Donald Shaw, of the St.Andrew\u2019s Troop.Rotarian Everett Goodcnough ex-tended the thanks of the club to the Scouts for their programme.Guests at the meeting introduced by Rotarian Francis Hoye and welcomed by Past.President, Doug Stevenson were District Scout Master Ed Waller, Scout Master Earl Turner, Cub Master Gerald Giroux, Rev.A, V.Ottiwel], curate of St.Peter\u2019s Church, Stéphane Roily, of Ottawa, a former member of the Sherbrooke Rotary Club, and Rotarian Lloyd Freeman, a member of the Westmounl.branch.During the evening Rotarians J.R.Sangster and A.C.Skinner were remembered on their birthdays and President Wiggett reminded the.A claim that a local firm had violated the stipulations of the Collective Agreeemnt Act by paying too low a scale of wages to four employees, was sot aside in Superior Court this morning when Mr.Justice C.D.White rendered judgment in the action instituted by the Joint Committee of the Eastern Jownshin.-, Construction Industry against.L.O.Neel and Company, Attorneys for the Joint Committee had alleged that Oliva Pichottc, Joseph Boaunoyvr, Joan Bousquet and Lionel Duranleau worked for three months tor the defendant company and received only twenty cents an hour in contravention to the Collective Agreement Act that specifies day laborers should be paid thirty five cents an hour for regular time and fiftiy-two and a half cents for overlime.According to labor legislation the Noel Company should have paid the four employees a total of $485.95 during the three months, the plaintiff Committee further contended, adding that actually only $262.10 was given out.Thu action was instituted for $268.15, including the difference in the two amounts and interest charges to dale.Principal point in the defence of the Noel Company was that the work d ne by the laborers was such that it fell under the terms of Ordinance Four of the Fair Wage Act and not under the Law of Collective Agreement.This argument was upheld by Mr.Justice White in dismissing the action.WAR\u201425 YEARS AGO TODAY (By The Canadian Prow) November 22, 1914 \u2014 Following Serbian withdrawal, Austrians made successful crossing of Kolubara River in northwest Serbia.Germans reported within It) miles of Warsaw.Turks advanced near Port Sait, reaching Suez Canal.BISHOPTON Rebeknh dance, Bishopton, Friday, Nov.24th.Blue Ribbon Boys.MOTHER REPRIEVED Ilminstcr, England.Nov.22.\u2014®-\u2014 h orty-eight, hours after being sen-lonecd to death |'or the murder of her five-month-old son, a 19-year-old girl was reprieved (o life impris-'onment.The presiding judge, broke down while passing sentence on her.Blake ^Taylor FmEmrmmum 86 Queen St\tSherbrooke Que 2 Ü against Henri Marchand, of Little : ^.TP The chief of Chemical Warfare of the United States army believes nations lacking \u2018\u2018great resources fo production of war chemicals' will not begin toxic gas warfare.Major General Walter C, Raker added,^however, jn an address before the Western New York section of the American Chemical Society last night that \u201cwithout adequate nro-tective equipment chemical warfare might well be decisive.i » RAOUL GAGNE, whose appoint merit as advocate for the Quebec Liquor Commission in the district of St.Francis was ratified yesterday by the Attorney-General\u2019s Department at Quebec.LAI) SERIOUSLY HURT Victor Roy, four years old, of Stratford, is today a patient in the St.Vincent de Paul Hospital here with a fractured skull received when he was hutted hy a ram and knocked to the ground.The accident occurred yesterday afternoon.Hospital authorities said today that the hoy\u2019s condition was regarded as serious.COMPLIMENTARY Manhattan, Ka.x., Nov.22.\u2014(JP) \u2014 A .-lightly skeptical view of matrimony seems to prevail among women at Kansas State College.The title for a Home Economics Division demonstration was \u201cHusbands are good for something.\u201d Emile Gauthier to Theode Dufresne of lot 634-1 Orford.Price $400.Emile Robert to Theode Dufresne I of hi.s rights in lot 634-1 Orford.Price $200.Napoleon Gosselin to Mrs.Antonio Godbout of North East corner of lot 477 East Ward.Airs.Richard Fairlie Morris to Misses Florence F.and Ruperty F.Hunt of her rights in lot 950 and I residue lot 951 North Ward.Paul Rousseau to Marcel David ' of lot 77 15 North Ward.Price $8,-250.Joseph V.Ames to Marcel David of East 16 feet of lot 77-16 North! Ward.Charles W, Armstrong I» Theodore Dobb of lots 342 and 350 Waterville.Price $5,000.Joseph T.Therriault to J.Edgar M.Genest of lot 230 North Ward.Price $29,000.Mr.and Mrs.John A.McKech-nie to Joseph T.Therriault.of the residue lots 731 and 734 North Ward.Price $1,600.David Lefebvre to Edmond Fortier of loD 94, 99 and 100 Orford.Price $5,000.Wilfred Denoncourt to Rev.Maurice Fortier of lot 1537-148 South Ward.Price $140.Sherbrooke Real Estate Co.to, Joseph L.Trudeau of lot 7-403 L, 0>'ster *uPPer> United South Ward.Price $300.\t; Mon.evening, Nov.27, 7 Emile Gauthier to Appolinaire i I VerpaeLst of lot 477 and lot 449-1 misdas Rois.se of lot 729 1 1 1 and i 0r,p?rd- Pri.ci $Lü00._\t(North 16 feet of lot 729-1 10 East, ! The Sheriff of the District of St, Ward.Price $100.H-rancis to City of Sherbrooke of j Leon Laflamme to Aimina La- I nart lot 4 South Ward.Price $550.flamme of one und half of lot 1452-i ; Mrs.W.H.P.Elkins et al to 14 South Ward.Price $750.\t, rhoma- William Oak of part lot; Armand Lagace to Orelius Simon- I 149.4 South Ward.\teau of part lot IB range 14 Ascot.Codere, Limitée, to Rosario La- Price $90.\t1 croix of part lot 1R range 14 Ascot.! James Belanger to Philibert La-i WARDEN A Wanted Gift Every Day in the Year A gift subscription to the Daily Record! A constant reminder of your sentiment and a constant source of information, amusement, and education.An easy-to-order subscription costs only $4 for a year.Just fill in the handy order form below and mail it.Wc 11 send a Csifl Message for you and deliver the first issue on Christmas Eve.Give o daily reminder of your thoughtfulness.Sherbrooke Daily ikeord SUBSCRIPTION: \u2014 ONE YEAR: $4.00 Six Months, $2.00 \u2014 Three Months, $1.00 FREE! Gift message with gift subscriptions! (Rate?same in U.S.A.as Canada) I Church, ( p.m.40c: I REMEMBER THE RED CROSS CAMPAIGN! Gerald Grant to Philibert La-gueux of lot 7-297 South Ward.Price $15,000.Mrs.William Hubbard to Oscar La forest of part lots 111 and 113 Orford.Price $300.Joseph W.Grégoire et al to Hor- gueux of residue lot 617 Orford., Price $1,500.\tI Armand Dupre to Alphonse Dupre i of N % of centre Vz of lot 619 Or I ford.\t.1 REMEMBER THE RED CROSS L_ _ SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD 1 enclose\tfor which you are to send Ihc Record to (he ^ following address for .months, and mail a gift message i in my name*.TO : Name .I Address or R.M.D._\t^ City .[ FROM: My Name .[ My Address PAGE FOUR 3HERBRUU1 a® the end of a year that the in- slepped on and your hat pusaed down over your lace the amid the frenzy of late shopping doesn\u2019t help to develop Christmas spirit.And sales-persons who should be singing Chrislmas carols and hanging holly wrealhs will probably spend Chrislmas Eve with their feet in a mustard bath.Folks who have tried checking off their holiday purchases early have found the holiday season to be a lot less strenuous, and a lot more fun.tdie last war.He watching another war and has no possible crease of prices attained that level.That increase, however, is due to local influences, to speculation far more than to the demand created by war needs.In 1914 the rise in prices was felt first in foods, because reserves of , these were not great.That was cer-jtainly not the case this year and inothing indicates that it will be the j case next year.The fact that almost I every government in the wrorld gives subsidie to farmers because the steps back into a country that is j price of their products is too low, surely does not signify that there is a scarcity of them.In other diree-his kind.Capone once hal almosl a social Standing [ tions it will be much easier than in in an era of jumbled moral codes.Now he rubs his | /gil4;, whô^dn \"it, lHoduct,on and eyes in the sunlight of a society that knows rackets Ithe need of it is felt.In a number of and racketeers for what they are and is determined\t°.f su,clY\u2019îjd such things has been diminished by to stamp them out.\tagreement.j It will be easy to abolish these agreements whenever desired.The facilities' of production are increased also through the fact that certain countries which wore at war in 1914 and in which agricultural production was necessarily reduced -\u2014are neutral today and can furnish the belligerents with what they need.EDITOR\u2019S NOTE-BOOK s amusing how some radio announcers try to m impression Bing Crosby, Rudy Yallee, .Nelson Fddy or some of the other outstanding entertain- give ers are actually in the studio.But it\u2019s still the old record racket.Von can fool some of the people some of the time but not for long.* -d * TIMELY COMMENTS THE NEW BRUNSWICK VOTE Fnliko the results which often follow a straight party light, the party representation in the coining New Brunswick Legislature will approximate the popular vote east.Preliminary figures indicate a total vote of 528,626, of wtiich the Liberal party polled 288,725 or approximately fifty-five per rent.The Opposition gathered in 238,616 votes or virtually forty-five per cent.The two Independents in the field amassed the grand total of 1,285 votes or 24 per cent.Of the forty-eight seals in the Legislature, the Liberals took twenty-seven seats or fifty-six per rent, die Conservatives twenty-one or forty-four per cent, and the Independents none.This is a somewhat sharp contrast from 1935.a hen the Liberals polled 340,137 or 59.55 per cent t)f the 571,544 votes cast but elected forty-three of the forty-eight members, while the Conservatives ivith 229,689 votes or 40.19 per cent had to be con-¦ent with five members, while the Independent vote >f 1,482 got.exactly nowhere.Perhaps after all, the result of Monday\u2019s election is more a matter of evening things up rather than my particular criticism of the administration r\tr ,\t.\t»| Although cooler days are here, a Lei tain radio stations announce a new series of !ma, rie.l man can\u2019t look at a fur coat programmes for \"your listening pleasure\u2019\u2019 and then i'y^hout wiping hL brow.\u2014Toronto hand out the same old records.\t\u2018 \u2019fir\u2019\t______ *\t*\t*\tSome speakers don\u2019t put enough lii'prdl^ of Ihe final onicome of Iho provincial election in New Brunswick, the people saw to it that into the fire.\u2014Brandon Sun.the province had a good strong Opposition.Quebec might have done likewise.* * Did soniebod\\ lo change the date say President Roosevelt was going t of Christmas?* * * The trouble is.that what is Germany's living room is somebody [ rise\u2019s funeral parlor.\u2014Toronto Sat-jurday Night.tho limitless lust of Hitler will be directed toward us.\" Both the distance of this Dominion from the principal theatre of tvar and the assurance of the application of the Monroe Doctrine if Canada is physically attached help to produce a sense of security that is not entirely justified.If Britain were defeated and the Royal Navy had to be surrendered, as the German navy had to be surrendered at the end of the last war, all the strength of the United States would be of little avail to us until that country could triple its naval forces to provide adequate protection for its own Atlantic coast, to say nothing of Canada\u2019s.But entirely aside from the possibility of armed aggression directly against Canada, which is the only point on which we have had assurance from the United States, this Dominion could be enslaved by a victorious Hitler without the necessity for a German troopship, airplane or naval craft crossing the Atlantic.So called \u201cpeaceful\u201d economic renetration by the Germans placed the freedom and independence of certain South American countries in jeopardy for a considerable period a year or two ago when the Reich was theoretically at peace, and this economic penetration was accomplished in spite of the efforts of the United States to resist and nullify it.The fact that American efforts in South America have subsequently been more successful in restoring these countries to the democratic way of trading can be partly attributed to the fact that Hitler has been too busily engaged elsewhere to keep up the pressure upon them.If the Nazis should win the war, they would have very little difficulty in carrying out a degree of economic penetration of this Dominion that would make anything that has occurred in South America appear of small importance.And with sufficiently strong economic penetration, the next step would be the imposition of a totalitarian form of government upon Canadians.Mr.McCullagh has done a service in pointing out that from the Canadian point of view j the THE DAILY TAKE m murder of Ernst vom Rath, a secretary of the German Embassy in Paris, by the seventeen-year-old Polish Jew Herschel Grynszpan.The last of the instalment payments on that fine was due August 15.There has been no official statement about how much of the 20 per cent levy has been collected.According to the best estimates it was approximately $300,000,000, war is very definitely one of onkv three-quarters of the amount self defence.AS WELL BE AT WAR (Belfast Telegraph) It is evident that Germany is bent or.a reckless campaign of sinking shinping of any and every nationality when opportunity serves.Steamers proceeding from one neutral port to another have come off no better than if they were conveying cargoes to one of the belligerent countries.In one day eight Swedish steamers were captured by Germans near the Island of Oeland in the Baltic.If this goes on, unchecked, the external trade of some neutral nations stands a risk of being ruined.The lot of many neutral countries at present, harassed by the activities of German spies, suffering losses by an attempted blockade at sea, and never knowing when they may be subjected to fresh aggressions in some form or other by the Dictator at Berlin, is not a happy one.From the British point of view it is perferable to be actually at war with people capable jpeople.of such enormities.At least we know where we stand and are prepared to meet the worst than can be attempted against us.LEVIES A SIGN OF GERMAN WEAKNESS (New York Post) Hitler has ordered a new property levy against the German expected.Now the ante has been raised and the speed of the legalized theft quickened.The German Jews have one month to produce an additional hundred million.If they fail?There are half-hints of further levies, of increased penalties against the wealthier Jews.The new decree indicates the turmoil within the German economy\u2019.For eleven months the sadistic pogrom against the Jews has been conducted with reduced energy.Not long ago the Government even appealed to German Jewish doctors who had escaped to return to their country and relieves the shortage of medical staff.We might expect a nation at war, faced with the problem of financing wartime expenditures to pass some sort of capital levy, as Great Britain has done.But a well-ordered nation in which the determination to fight is universal obtains financial help from all the It does not heap the burden, as Germany has done, upon those of one religion, making them at once the excuse and the chief sufferers for the military conflict.EATING TODAY IS BIG BUSINESS (Woodstock Sentinel-Review) In any large city the observant individual is almost sure to be King (li'orge and Queen Elizabeth relaxed from war strain by seeing an animated cartoon in a 1.on-don theatre.Even M:eko\\ Mouse is doing his bit for the Empire.* * * the price of men\u2019s shirts is going up.Gentlemen will be less inclined to lose them on tho stock market.* * * A bee sting won $8,000 for a man in a court suit, (hi a proportional basis, a dog bite should be a gold mine.There are sufficient automobiles in this country to carry 130.000.000 persons at one time.\u2014Buffalo Uourier- Express, About all that can be said for 'Oino husbands is that they reduce the number of old maids.\u2014Quebec C liron icle-Telegra ph.Jews.By November 15 the Jews I impressed by the number of places who remain in the Fatherland must j where food is sold or served and produce $100,000,00 in cash, an this leads to contemplation of the amount estimated as 5 per cent of [magnitude of the industry asso-their total property.\t| dated with the supplying and serv- A year ago the Jews were fined ing of food.That this is the nation's 20 per cent of all their possessions, biggest industry is borne out by supposedly as punishment for the some statistics quoted the other day #- »- Me KENNEY ON BRIDGE BY WM.E.McKENNEY Secretary, American Contract Bridge League at the annual convention of the Hotel Association of the United States and Canada, at Montreal.According to A.A.McVittie, president of the National Restaurant Association of the United States, eating gives thi nation its biggest commercial turnover.There are 153,000 restaurants, cafeterias and others units serving five million meals yearly at a monetary value of one and two third billions of dollars.Other stores selling food have a turnover of between eight and nine billion dollars.Last year, the high-class hotels of the United States used fifty-one million pounds of meat; sixteen million -dozens of egg's; twelve million pounds of fish; five million quarts of oysters; forty-six million gallons of milk; forty-one million pounds of coffee and two million pounds of tea.The estimate for Canada would add at least ten per cent to these figures.It.can be concluded that the eating industry readily leads all others in volume of business for not alone does it provide a living for thousands of people who are directly engaged in the catering operations but it provides the principal revenue for many other important industries such as farming, meat-packing, coffee raising, fruit and vegetable culture, of which it uses almost the complete output, and it also contributes to the support of hundreds of other undertakings in the manufacturing line.When the visitor to a large city looks at the number of eating places and concludes that the eiT-tire population must spend most of its time and resources eating, he has made a shrewd guess for if restaurants, cafeterias and h< dining rooms were to be closed the industry of the place wo suffer a great setback.1 SO THEY SAY I shall resist civil disobedience until I find that the country Is prepared for that.\u2014Mahatma Gandhi.The capitalist world is coming ta realize ever more clearly that the Soviet Union is not w'hat they woulc like to see it.\u2014Premier Vyacheslafl Molotcff of Russia, on 22nd anniversary of October revolution.America must be kept strong and ready to defend herself in an armed world, for by strength and with a preservation of strict neutrality, we have high and sincere hopes of steering clear of complications that could lead o graver considerations.\u2014Acting Secretary of U.S.Navy Charles Edison.Had Hitler stopped after Munich, co-operation even with Hitler might still have been possible.\u2014Sir Nevile Henderson, former British Ambassador to Germany.The independent voter is the real salvation of decent politics in this country.\u2014Senator William E.Borah Rep., Ida.).The world is with us.It is our justification; it is the guarantee of our victory.\u2014President Albert Lebrun of France.The Picture Is That of an Important Plant The Allies may end Hitler, hut not HiLerism, for it is only another u.imo for the same old vearning to got on top.\u2014Robert Quillen.Cue t nited States newspaper 'vont» Britain to declare Russia.Whose war is this \u2014St.Catharines Standard.war on anyway?TWO QUICK TRICKS ARE NECESSARY TO RESPOND TO VANDERBILT CLUB This is the third of a series of eighteen articles describing the Vanderbilt Club convention, the earliest and one of the most publicized of all contract bidding systems.It is an authoritative presentation approved by the author of the system, Harold S.Vanderbilt, and by his favorite partner, Waldemar von Zedtwitz.This is the method they use in handling the convention and its corollaries.- *- In the Vanderbilt system, respon- spades, A J 2; hearts, 10 9 8; dia- THIRTY YEARS AGO TODAY From the Files of the Sherbrooke Record.November 22nd, 1909.Une far-sighted citizens, in a letter to the editor of the Record, suggested that Sherbrooke and Lennox-ville be merged into a single city, His suggestion never met with any great approval however and the two places are still independent.Thomas Gilchrist, of Kirkdale.was instantly killed when his rig was struck by a Grand Trunk Railway train at Richmond, Search parties were searching the woods in the vicinity of Bolton Glen for J.Leyland who had been missing for several days while on a hunting trip.V.N.Code was elected president of the V.M.C.A.Basketball League.The newly-organized Windsor Mills Hockey Club elected the following officers; J.R, Hebert, O.F.Du-breui! and Emile Roy.Veterans of the Fenian Raids met in Sherbrooke to name delegates to tho committee which was to wait on the Premier, Hon.Wilfrid Laurier to urge better treatment for those who had defended Canadian territory many years before.The prize-winners nt a euchre party organized by the Monument Nationale were Mrs, L, E.DastOUs, Mrs, L.Dupuy.Mrs.I.E.Panneton, R.Hawkin, L.E.Eastons and Wilbur Fuller.t otincis; \u201cAre you sure that oc- monthr- WaS 011 the 17th 'f thc Y\\ itnoss; \u2018'Yes, it was the 17th.\u201d t ounsel; \u201cNow.remember, vou are °n y\" the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal, where she underwent a serious operation, will be pleased to hear tuat she is progressing favorably.* * * Friends of Rev.Peter M.Dennis, rector of the Church of the Nativity, ill EST COLDS To relieve misery quickly, externally \u2014 rub chest,! throat, back with A/ICKS i W VapoRub BABY'S CRY IS MOT ALWAYS TEMPER DISTINGUISH between your baby\u2019s cry of pain and cry of temper.When it\u2019s the \u201cpain cry\u201d give Baby\u2019s Own Tablets at once.Mrs.May Mundy, of Toronto, finds they work every time.\u201cI am the mother of nine children, three of them prize babies, and Baby\u2019s Own Tablets have been my only medicine in raising them to the healthy children they now are.As soon as my children became a little feverish I at once gave them Baby's Own Tablets and in a very short time the fever disappeared and the children were normal again.\u201d Equally effective for diarrhoea, upset stomach, simple croup, teething troubles and other minor ailments of babies.Easy to take as candy.Quickly effective.~aie and harmless.Contain no opiates or stupefying drugs.Each package gives an analyst s report.Get a package today.Sickness often strikes in the night.25 cents.Your money back if you are not satisfied.Alfred bama Scout Council.Mr.Dennis has.Savage and Mrs.been connected with Scouting: for ai .Crundy were hostesses nUrnber of years, being1 one of the Tine* n t.the former** homo\to\ta.Every Man Likes \u2019Em Stacked Up High! You\u2019ll see a look of satisfaction on his face.when he looks at that plate of bread on the table.He likes to see it sliced real thick.and stacked up high so\u2019s there's no danger of running short at a crucial moment! All varieties! ALLATTS BAKERY Phone 724 carried an arm bouquet of deep red roses.The bridesmaid was gowned in Tunis blue velvet interwoven with a silver thread, her shoulder-length veil of tulle illusion fell from a coronet of velvet flowers, matching shade of gown, and carried an arm bouquet of bronze mums.The bride\u2019s mother wore a chic afternoon dress of alpaca crepe in Bishop violet with black accessories small velour hat in matching shade and a shoulder corsage of Talisman roses, while the groom\u2019s mother was becomingly gowned in Victorian mauve crepe with hat to match and corsage of white roses.Following the ceremony a reception was held at the home of the bride\u2019s parents.The house decorations were pink snapdragon and mums.The bridal party were assisted in receiving by Mr.and Mrs.Nicholson and Mrs.Harriman and a buffet lunch was served under the direction of Mrs.George Armstrong and Mrs.Kenneth Smith, assisted by the ushers, the bride\u2019s table being centred with a three-tiered wedding cake with flower decorations flanked by white tapers in crystal holders and pink snapdragons in crystal vases.Later Rev.and Mrs.Harriman left for a motor trip to various points en route to their home in Fletcher, Ohio, the bride travelling in a black wool suit with satin blouse, the jacket banded with silver fox fur and a Hudson seal coat with Persian lamb collar, small black hat and accessories.Out of town guests included Rev.and Mrs.Malcolm MacDonald, of Avonmore, Ont.; Mrs.W.P.Harriman, of Cedarville, Ohio; Miss Rachel Harriman, of Columbia University; Miss Louise Harries, of Dayton, Ohio; Mr.Eugene Busier, of Piqua, Ohio; Mr.and Mrs.William Buchanan, Mr.Gordon Buchanan, Master Norman Buchanan and Miss Kay MacLennan, of Sherbrooke; Mrs.John 0.MacDonald, of Lake Megantic; Mr.and Mrs.J.j Murdo MacAulay and Mrs.Norman ! MacLeod, of Milan; Mrs.Angus J.! MacLeod, of Gould Station; Miss Jean MacKenzie.Mr.J.Alan Scott .and Mr.Ivan Eiger, of Montreal; ! Mr.and Mrs.W.E.LaGallais, Mrs.| Neil Buchanan, the Misses Margaret j Buchanan, Georgina Lovett, Catherine Nicholson, Margaret Gerrard, j Dolena Nicholson, Mary Thomas, ! Mary MacDonald, -Myrtle Paterson, Elsie White, Billie Murray, Barbara McNutt and Mollie Taylor and Mr.Hector Nicholson, of Drummondville, and Mr.Donald MacDonald, of Wayne, Mich.Mrs.Harry last evening at the former\u2019s home on Woodward avenue for the month- first Scoutmasters in in 1909.He holds a Sherbrooke Scout com- Compares With Business Partnership ly meeting of the Sherbrooke\tlntssion signed by \u201cArthur,\u201d th.; pital Alumnae Association.The Duke of Connaught, and has roceiv-\u2019 members under the presidency of;eci a Thanks Badge for outstanding Mrs.Gordon Sangster voted twenty-i service with the Boy Scouts of five dollars to the Red Cross and Canada, tlis son, William, is a stu- If the situation isn\u2019t quite clear.;\tîeCCwti\tat the University of attended the wedding- were j she can compare herself to a bust- b\tfina,îciauv' a/wei/as soci-illv Arthur Cook, mother of the ness partner who becomes dissatis-;^\t; ., ' \u2022\t* \u2018\tI ' \u201d\t~\t~\t- Vied.And instead of trying to work ^\tsuccess was reported | .\t, .\u201en,., I by Mrs.Harry E.Grundy, treasurer.] tume of Burgundy material, with a small close fitting hat to match, and wore a corsage of Johanna Hill roses.Among the out of town guests i who Mrs, groom, and Mr.Gordon Cook, of Paris, Nov.22.\u2014 IF- Tailored suits and simple hats have become almost a uniform in Paris.Fancy footwear has been vetoed and underpinnings for wartime are heavy-soled, low-heeled shoes.Curls are being chopped off right and left- no time for arrangement and no coiffeurs to arrange them since many hairdressers have been mobilized\u2014that\u2019s the reason.Uniform capes and overseas caps in terra cotta wool are regular uniforms worn on the streets by women volunteers in the Passive Defence group.Women truck drivers garb themselves in ski trousers and wind-breakers and shooting jackets with four flap-buttoned patch pockets are worn by women drivers and cyclists.An anti-gas suit of beige-colored rubber with ski-type trousers and a hip-length blouse with attached hood is selling well in the shops.Handy pocket gasmasks which fold up into small eases, do luxe leather-covered flashlights decorated with your own initials are new wartime accessories.An extra wartime touch for a hnn-d'bag is a white water-proof slip cover with a flashlight porthole to aid the pedestrian during blackouts.Deafened Woman Reports To Her Druggist Mr.Victor Worth, druggist of Halifax, N.S., writes the following: \u201cMrs.Pilcher states she was practically deaf and very uncomfortable at not being able to hear.She told me, after using AURINE EAR BALSAM she now can be entertained by the radio, hear on the telephone and enjoy conversation with her family.\" If you are hard of hearing, have head noises, earaches, ringing and buzzing in the ears get AURINE EAR BALSAM today.Relief is quick.Costg only a few cents a day.Your money back if it does not help you.For sale and recommended by Budning\u2019s Drug Store, 25 Wellington St.North, Sherbrooke, Quebec.Telephone 561.OfSonV*! Alabama.AND COOK\u2014SHEPARD East Farnham, Nov, 22.\u2014A very pretty wedding was solemnized in St.Augustine\u2019s Church on Saturday afternoon, November 18, at four o\u2019clock, when Miss Helen Shepard, of East Farnham, was married to Mr.Lloyd Cook, third son of Mrs.j Fanny Cook and the late Mr.Cook, of Sutton.Rev.G.R.Addy officiated, jand Mrs.Addey presided at the organ.The church was artistically \u2019 decorated with chrysanthemums.The bride was dressed in a cos- Sutton; Mr.and Mrs.George Cook, things out as a partner\u2014-walks out of Sutton; Mr.Asa Shepard, Mr.|one day and slams the door behind and Mrs.J.Symington and Master jhim\u2014leaving the other partner with Richard Lent, of Dunham, and Mr.I all that both have invested in money and Mrs.P.J.Shepard, Mr.and and years.Mrs.L.S.Bresee and Mr.and Mrs.I Of course, there are times when, Lyle Bresee, all of Sutton.\tJa woman is belter off for slamming Itl0n0rs-\t*\t*\t* Many friends filled the church the door behind her.But there are i and joined in wishing them a happy I probably more times when she lives ; JWrs* \"\u201cton I'-0Ss 'vas hostess at married life,\tDo regret the fact that her pride After the ceremony Mr.and Mrs.stood \" in the way of her common Cook left on their wedding trip.On ! sense.their return they will reside in Sut- j We women are so easily fooled by 1IUSBANI) After the brief business session bridge was played for the remainder of the evening and at its close the hostesses served delicious refreshments.Mrs.II.S.Ellis doing the the tea hour yesterday afternoon AFTER ALT PAYS Albany, N.Y.\u2014((P)\u2014A hi.band who will not leave a bar when his wife calls from outside is equally responsible with her if she tosses a brick through the window, Police Justice Edward Kampf ruled.Kampf made the decision hen the woman in the case pleaded guilty after the regular meeting of the ^\u2019 breach of the peace after the brick Ladies\u2019 Aid in St.Andrew\u2019s Church 1 sl,i?htl-v.in:'ur« ^ ot »nothei woman inside the bar.ton.hall.Mrs.W.W.Davey, the presi- ,\t.> , follow SGr|!ence, reprimanded her He suspended husband and ordered him to settle for the dam- Tested Recipes POT ROAST WITH FIXIN\u2019S Grannie used to declare with great firmness, \u201cNo granddaughter of mine is going to grow up without knowing how to cook a pot roast or make an invisible stocking darn.\u201d It was one of our family\u2019s pet jests, but nevertheless we all learned how and have been everlastingly grateful for both accomplishments.One of the things I learned to do to pot roasts was enrich the pan juices and gravies with extra flavorings.For instance, these days I find that a can of condensed tomato soup, poured over a pot roa.at an hour beiore it is finished gives lovely flavor to the gravy.Mock turtle soup is another with flavor possibilities for pot,roast.Pet Roast with Mock Turtle Gravy 4 pounds beef, rolled 3i cup flour 2 teaspoons salt Va teaspoon pepper % cup suet or 3 tablespoons fat Vegetables (1 carrot, 2 stalks celery, 1 onion and 2 sprigs parsley) A cut of beef from round rump, chuck or shoulder is used for pot roast.Mix the flour with the salt and jail the talk about: \u201cToday a woman dent, was in the chair am 'needn\u2019t stay in a marriage that does-1 lnS the disposition of routine busi- n\u2019t suit her.\u201d\tness, arrangements were completed j ^ '\t________ __________ What we are apt to forget is that ; f01' the turkey-supper on the last when a woman walks out of mar-j day of the month, and twenty-five j CO-EDS DENOUNCE CORSET riage she is taking heavy losses on j dollars was voted to the Women\u2019s)\tCORSET COMEBACK the mdst important investment she Missionary Society.\tNew v0rk_____((f)\u2014There won\u2019t he ever made.\t| TJint the rummage sale recently \u2019 Bny waist-pinched co-eds wearing | u d hi the chuich hall had been a bustles around the campus of Hunter great success was also reported dur-.College for a while.Eighty-four per ¦ nig Die brief\tbusiness period.\tAt\tcent of the co-eds answering\ta ques tin: tea hour\ta large number\tof :\ttionn,aire termed wasp-waist\tcorsets guests joined\tthe many members !\tas \u201cunnatural, unhealthy and\tinslru- already assembled in the hall to\ten-\tmeats of torture.\u201d Others\trecoin joy the pleasant social hour.Tea mended them \u201conly for their en Mind Your Manners T est your\tknowledge of correct '\t,'yils\tpoured by Mrs.Charles Ross,\temies.\u201d The average waistline of the social usage\tby answering the fol-\the\tfable being prettily centered\tj girls measures 25 or 26 inches.Bus- lowing questions, then checking\t.\"d*1\thi onze mums in a silver has-\ttie , they say, are clumsy, uncomforl- sgainst the\tauthoritative answers \u2022\t^K\u2019 snme flowers in small crys-\table and hideous.\u201d ))e](nv:\ttai vases also adorning the small 1\u2014\tIs it good taste to begin a busi- l®*3!08 p'ace spent a week-end with Mrs.Marvin Smith.\ti Mi s.A.T.Gould was the guest for s.veral days of her daughter, Miss, Helen Gould, in St.Albans, Yt.The St.James Church Bridge Club : was entertained by Mrs.B.W.Draper, who was assisted by Mrs.Ray- j mond Whitcomb.Miss Margaret Cockerline, of | Montreal, was a guest of her mother, Mrs.J.W.Cockerlin.Mr.William Kiilick, of Lacolle, was a guest at the home of Mr.and Mrs.E.A.Chadsey.Corporal Dale who was transferred from Bedford about a year ago to Toronto, has been transferred from that city to Guelph, Ont., where he j and Mrs.Dale will shortly take up residence.Mrs.Allan Cornell, of Stanbridge East, entertained at bridge in honor BAZAAR PLANS NAME WINNERS ARE COMPLETED IN DENISON\u2019S AT WATERVILLEÎ MILLS SCHOOL Final Arrangements for Pupils ot Maple Valley School Christmas Activity Made by Ladies\u2019 Guild of St.John's Church at Regular Meeting.Waterville, Nov.22.\u2014Mrs.David Johnstone and Miss Kathleen Taylor hostesses at their home Winners of Cup Offered by Shipton Women's Institute for Annual Competition.were on ; Denison\u2019s Mills, Nov.22.\u2014Pupils of Maple Valley School and their teacher, are proud of winning the .\t\u201e\t,\t,\t.silver cup at Hie School Fair held in Main street for the regu.ar meeting Danville the end of September.This of the Ladies' Guild of St.Johns cup is presented annually to the Church.The meeting was exeep-, school receiving the largest number tionally well attended.\t.of I\u2019-'^cs Hir exnibits at the School .,\t.\t,\t., A Bair, held the day before the adult The usual devotional period and ; exhib;tion> Tha 'up niust be won business routine were conducted by ; three years in succession by the before it can be reschool as a permanent ! Bee ford who were present were Mrs.jand final plans were made to hold a j\tThe school competing are \u2022 D.H.Connor, Mrs.W.A.Sheltus, Christmas bazaar in the Jubilee ! an th0se come un(ler the Ship-Mrs.Hannibal Sheltus, Mrs.A.S.; Hall.\tLon School Commissioners.Follow- McCaw and Mrs.George Moody.I At the close of the business ing is a\tprizes won by the Major F.W.Saunders, son of Mr.Imeeting a social time was enjoyed, j].ocai school: and Mrs.F.C.Saunders, of this Refreshments were served by the town, ha?been appointed District ! hostesses.Those assisting in the j Dental Offijer for Military District Mining room were Mrs.Fred Smith No.4 on tiie reorganisation of the and Mrs.E.Jacquest, who poured Canarian Dental Corps.Major tea at the lace-covered table which oi ner sister, Mrs.Heman Hulburd, ,y[rSi Ernest R.Rov, in the absence'same school befo: Sonn iers served through the last'was attractively centered with a war, comnle\u2018:ng hi?course in den- dainty potted plant and lighted tistry at McGill after his return from : tapers, and the Misses Thelma Loo-overseas.\t|mis, Beatrice Charron, Laura Pear- Among those who attended the son and Lillian Charron, who served, wedding of M\".Malcolm McCaw to Sports: Junior girls\u2019 race, 2 Velma Hebert; junior g .is\u2019 broad jump, 2 Fiiyias Rodgers.Senior girls\u2019 broad jump, Pnyiiis Rougers.Junior boys\u2019 high jump, 1 Bruce Mnstine; junior boys\u2019 broad jump, 1 Bruce Mastine; junior boys\u2019 race, I Bruce Mastine.Vegetables: 1 Bruce Mastine, turni] ; 1 Eric Armstrong, potatoes; (i Dennis Carson, beets.Apples : 1 Phyllis Rodgers; 2 Bren- Mi.-s Muriel Gowerby, which took PLANS FOR PLAY MADE e on Saturday afternoon, The November meeting of the ,\t,, November 18.in the United Church Mission Band met at the home of: £\t\u2022 at Montreal West were Mrs.A.S.'^rs- Celon Ball, with the Mi.-ses V : Caw and Mr.Cameron McCaw,\tThelma and Thera Ball Mr.and Mrs.E.A.Chadsey, Mr.and ,ac^K as hostesses.Mi's.Ellison Gould, Mr.Grisdale I P]an?were made for a playlet, \u201cA Gould.Mr.and Mrs.B.W.Draper.of ^hes Were Made, and.Add\u2019» He «tin o\u2019* Mr and Mrs Parts assigned, and a report of the j o\u201eV\u2018 N b.\u201e I f,\u2018 Ehurl VYbrhtman, ' Mr.' Norman Hallowe\u2019en parade was announced.After the meeting the group finished singing songs at some of the homes that had been omitted on Hallowe\u2019en.Mounted wild flowers: 3 Phyllis Rodgers; G Brenda Philbrick.Cooking, Cake: 4 Sylvia Carson; 6 Iris Patrick.Sewing: 1 Velma Hebert, bib; 4 General Notes Mr.Fred Gilman, of Montreal, was the guest over a week-end of Mr.and Mrs.Ralph Oakes.Mrs.George Provent is spending some time in Torrington, Conn., the guest of her mother, Mrs.L.Maire.Mr.Rolland Kiilick spent a weekend in Iberville with Mr.Gabriel Denonville at the home of the latter\u2019?parents, Mr.and Mrs.L.Denonville.Mrs.Lyle Gould has returned to DeueL of Philipsburg.Miss Doris Salisbury.M:ss Angeline Stevens.Air.John Ewing and the Rev.H.V.Fricker and Mrs.Fricker, Mr.and Mrs.D.J.Reid and Mr.Lester Stauffer and Mr.and Mrs.T.M.Brown, of Si an bridge East.A sueCe'sful bridge and \u201c500\u2019' \u2019'arty was held in the Victoria Hall under the ajl-pices of the local branch of the Daughters of Isabella, under the convener.-hip of Mrs.J.B.Goudron.Cards were played at forty-eight table®, the greater majority playing \u201c5 00\u201d.Previous to the serving of refreshments a chorus was rendered by a number of lad-:o=.including M\u201d?.Corrivean and the Mbs'os Larocque.Pare and Dory.A turkev, which was raffed was won by Mr.Murphy, of North Stan-bridge.The proceeds of the card party will be used to carry on the -o-ml service work of (he society.Air.Ellison Gould snent a weekend in Montreal with Mrs.Gould at the home of her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Joseph Johnson.Miss K.Harwood, of Sherbrooke was a week-end guest of Mr, and Mrs.F.O.Smith.Mrs.J.A.Cowan, of Huntingville, was a guest of her brother and sister-in-law\u2019, Mr.and Mrs.D.W.Ayer Mrs.August Anderson, who had gone to Albany, N.Y., to spend a few weeks with her daughter, Miss Winnifred Anderson.R.N., was called home by the illness of Mr.Anderson.Mrs.Stephen Pocock was in Coe.Mr.and Airs.A-rcbie W.Bailey ticook, where she was a guest of he 'and daughter, Lois, are spendnig brother-in-law and sister, Mr.an Lèverai days with Mr.and Mrs.Soap carving; 4 Eric Armstrong.Livestock judging: 3 Bruce Mas Cue.Mr.Bevan Monck gave out many government flower and vegetable seed packages in the spring to all school children, but owing to frost the flowers wore damaged for many I who had excellent results with their j seeds.General Notes Mrs.P.Colquhoun, Mrs.H.S.Ball and Mrs.W.H.Baglow, were visitors of Airs.G.W.Libby in Coa ticook.Canon E.R.and Mrs.Roy, Mrs.Victor Parsons, Airs.H.W.Burton and Mrs.W.H.Baglow were in North Hatley to attend a chicken pie supper at the St.ChMi'and Mrs.Clifford Burton were | efcollent and a11 had 8 men'A' eve' in Coaiicook, where they were guests\t\u201eT ,\tm , of the latter\u2019s parents, Mr.and Airs, j.^ ue\tJI,en 3 C William Wallace.\tI!?K was held atthe\tof Mr.Ar- chie Aloore.Five tables ot cards General Note» The sum of eleven dollars was raised for the parsonage fund of Kingsey .Mission at the Hallowe\u2019en O i masquerade.Those present were lo-s i cal people but the costumes were DÏXVILLE BROKEN REST Up time and again because of kidney and bladder weakness.Take Gin Pills to soothe and tone up the kidneys\u2014 enjoy a good night's sleep.In the United States ask for \u201cGino Pills\u201d.2 sizes In Canada and the U.S.\u2014Regular and new, large Economy size, 22* Bog Kept Awake All Night bg hard eoiieii Slept Like a Top Alter One Dose ol Buckleg's Mixture Mothers, follow this lady\u2019s example and use Buckley's Mixture when any member of your family has a cough, cold, grippe, bronchitis or whooping cough.She says:\u2014\"Last night my son, aged 11, was coughing terribly and could not get to sleep.I gave him a dose of Buckley\u2019s Mixture with honey and he slept the night through.This morning his cough is quite loose.\u201d\u2014Mrs.B.Jones, Verdun, P.Q.Your experience will be just as satisfactory.Buckley's Mixture is the standby in 3 out of 5 Canadian homes.It eases the cough almost instantly, softens phlegm, soothes raw air passages, helps correct overacidity\u2014relieves you of coughs and colds in record time.\t^ OVER lO MILLION BOTTLES SOLDI DUCKLEYC 0 MIXTURE S?Frank Hunphrey, Hatley Centre, and other relatives in that vicinity.Air.Ervin L.McIntyre and Miss Eunice Bailey were also guests at the Humphrey home.Mr.and Airs.George Cunnington, of Coaticook.were visiting Mr.and Mrs.Herman E.Byron, Pleasant street.The seventh unit of the Coaticook branch of the Canadian Red Cross Society was organized under the direction of Mrs.E.L.Slepper and Mrs.Lnbarrc, of Coaticook.The meeting, which was held in the Tanner store, was well attended by !'es of the vicinity.Mrs.Ivor R.Whitehou'e was named as sock convener and Airs.Rene Jean Marie, serving convener.Further committee?w'1! be appointed at the next iyr^J\u2019r or.Air.Maurice Robinson, who snent ®\u2019x wee\u2019- bere with hi?aunt, Mrs.Willis F.AVisgett, and family, has retume 1 to his home in Shawbridge.The Alodern Paving Company Mrs.James Wallace.Aliss Ruby Perkins, teacher at th Ives Hill school, was a guest of hci brother-in-law and sister, Air.an Mrs.Thomas D.Brown.Mr.Gladwish Anderson, of Monl real, spent a few days as a guest o his parents, Mr.and Airs.Augu?Anderson.Mr.and Airs.Arthur Parsons, o Alelbourne, were visiting Mr.an Airs.A.G.Parsons and Alisa Alildre Parsons.Montreal, which was in charge of the construction of the new Coati-cook to Stanhope highway have discontinued the work and closed their ofF'\u201d! hem for the winter season.31\".and Mrs.Reginald A.Mayhew were visitors to Sherbrooke for a dav.Mrs.George Brown and family.Friends are pleased to see Mi John Wilkins out and around aguir after being confined to his home fo.a time through illness.Ataster Douglas and Ernest Wilkins are o the gain following a severe atta of bronchitis.Miss Exilda Brown, of Richmond spent a week-end with her parent Mr.and Air?.George Brown, an.sister, Miss Sara Brown.She wa accompanied by her friend, Mis of Kathleen Brown, of Wallace, Nov; were played and prizes won by Alas-ter Stanley Mastine, Mr.Bert Lock-wood and Miss Jean Shaw.The Ladies\u2019 Guild of Holy Trinity church held a meeting at the home of i Mrs, John Andrews.A very wet afternoon kept most of the member: at home but considerable business i was transacted by those present, i The sum of twenty-five dollars was 'voted for the parsonage fund and mall amounts designated for the metery fund, Red Cross fund, etc.freshments were served by the ostess, assisted by Aliss Aleta An-ews.Seven tables of cards were en-ved at the home of Air.and Airs, 'aides Taylor and Air.and Mrs.Norge Taylor.The collection was i aid of the cemetery maintenance \u2022ind.Prizewinners were Miss Helen carle, Mrs.Wilfrid Costello, Air.oy Davidson and Mr.Ferdette.Friends of Mrs.T.Demers regret at she is confined to bed with a token rib.The injury was suffered i week before it became seriously ainful and the doctor called, so hat it has been considerably ag-¦ nvated.Mr.Fred Armstrong motored to ¦ch Bay to bring Mrs.Arthur arson home.Mrs.Carson will care r her sister, Mrs.Demers.Alias Alice Penny and Air.Eddie Mgers were Sunday visitors of r.and Mrs.Elton Corson.Aliss Doris Paterson has been on motoring trip to Concord and er points.Qu\tHe a\tnumber from here at- tende\t-! a tm\t'upper at the Here- fo-'!\tChurch\tHall.M-\t.Haro\ti Mnvhew accomoamed Mr.\tVN'eo'm Elliott, of Beebe, last\t week\ton a\tmotor trop to Niagara Falls.\tOnt.\tand intermediate points.Pa\tstor At\tsryle Campbell has been corfi\tned to\t' Y room with an attack of hr\tonchiti\t Mj\t.Adne\tv Che'ley.of CoaDcnnk.Scotia.HELP THE RED CROSS TO HELP WIN THE WAR! KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED.' iris ALL WELL AND 600V FOR YOU TO SAV'1 LET'S 6ET ffiD OFTHE ÔIRL AMD THE A10UNTIE BUT HOWCÜ I KNOW I CAN TRUST YOU M '7&r ires \u20acmm imâ f&m Âeé?-'Mw/ During the last war, the Cnnadiun Red Cross raised in Canada 9 millions of dollars for the benefit of Canadian soldiers.The Canadian Red Cross contributed an additional 6 million dollars to the British Red Cross to assist in its great work.The Canadian Red Cross also sent to the front 347,000 bales of goods conservatively valued at 20 million dollars.The total contributions of the Canadian Red Cross in the last war amounted to approximately 35 millions in cash and goods.Now the Canadian Red Cross has again swung into action.Faced with definite tasks which had to be undertaken at once, the Canadian Red Cross has already pledged itself to carry out the following undertakings: 1\tTo build and equip a 300-bcd hospital for Canadian * soldiers at Taplow, England.This is to be culled Canadian Red Cross Hospital Number One.The cost of this undertaking is conservatively estimated at .$250,000 2\tTo purchase wool, cloth and all types of materials \u201c for the immediate needs of Red Cross branches throughout the Dominion.For this purpose, the Canadian Red Cross has already borrowed from Canadian banks and has expended, or appropriated lor immediate expenditure\t$408,000 9 To furnish all branches of the Red Cross In Canada with the wool and other materials they need for the next eight months (conservatively estimated at $150,000 a month).\u2018\t$1,200,000 /& To carry on the normal work of the Red Cross in \u201c Canada, to maintain the Red Cross outpost hospitals and nursing stations, to carry on the work of the Red Cross in frontier distneto.During the last two years the cost of this work was $2,2iKl,(MK).For the coming year the Red Cross will endeavour to keep the cost of this effort down to $950,000 These Four Items Total $2,808,000 Canadians are being naked to contribute $3,000,000 in this drive, which will leave but a small margin to provide for unexpected emergencies, to assist the allied Red Cross Societies with goods and money, and for other needs which are almost sure to arise.NATIONAL WAR DRIVE FOR $3,000,000 0 Every dollar you give will help.Dig in and give lo this great humanitarian cause ., .NOW! DISTRICT COMMITTEES THROUGHOUT THE EASTERN TOWNSHIPS General HcadqimrP rs.District No.2 Sherbrooke.QUEBEC CENTRAL BUILDING.Joint Campaign Chairmen.W.E.PATON\tGEDEON NADEAU By Zane Grey.vi :i d Li-' eons\u2019n.Air.Eugene Smith.Air.Victor Laliberte had the misfortune to lose a sheen which was thought to have b'pnri killed bv dogs.MeR.Je\"n 'O\u2019'hp and Henry A,-> \u2019or we e in St F-hvido\u2019e and St.Wo np hu '\"ess for the Rural Electric Company.MELEORO Cattle thieves have been busy lately in this vicinity, Air.A.R.Johnston having had three cows and a bull stolen.The marauders were so bold a?to back a truck up to the stable door where they loaded the cattle.Air.and AIr=, Percy Tajflor and Mrs.E.Taylor, of Richmond, were tea guests at the home of Mr.and RELIEVE THE MISERY OF BABY'S HEAD COLD Spare your child much of the misery of sniffling, sneezing and smothery nostrils due to colds.Insert n little Mentholatum in noefnle, rub '¦¦n child's chest., neck and back Sooth* ing, healing, MentholaUitn quickly relieves the worst head cold Mentholatum in guaranteed to give relief or money hack.Ask your dr lift-ftist now for a 30c jar or tube.H0NF6T, JONES, j D/DNT COMMIT THOSE 6HC5T6UH MURDER'S.BUT 5AY.Dioyou?ê FOOL SHUT UR THfc'6 WHAT DID I TELL VOD ABOUT éUSPËCTiNÉr J0NE5 ?_ THERE HE (SOEÔ,RUMHIHèr AWAY JUST A MOMENT, J0NE&.I WANT TO TALK.TO YOU / WË -A m I Y sauced t Ccpvnïbi I bv King rciturtj 5>*ndtcite, Im BRINGING UP FATHER.\t\t\t LISTEN-MAGGIE WANTS\t\t\t ME TO GO WITH HEP TO\t\t\t GALLON MISS VIOLA\tI 1 MIGHT BE\t\t AMHARP - SEE IF YOU Cam talk hep out of GOING THERE-WILLYOU?ABLE TO TALK.HEP OUT OF IT-BUT I KNOW I CAN\u2019T OUTTALK MEP- BY GOLLY- A SOW-lhJ-LAW IS A BIG HELP IN A FAMILY-I JUST COULDN'T STAND , LISTENING TO THAT WOMAN SING AGAIN- MENTHOLATUM ~-,vW» COl*irO«.T D*Hy .,iWw i A\til \t4$ 1 $\tm\\ *\tT* jsssj\trv \tis HE PE HE COMES WITH THE GOOD NEWS - By George McManus.WELL-1 FIXED IT- I GOT HER TO CANCEL IT-AND WE WILL GO TO THE OPEKA IVJV King Fraturei Syndicne Inc, World rights fcimed PAGE EIGHT SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WEDNESDAY, INUVLMtiLK zz, W)?.FINANCIAL AND MARKET NEWS OPENING AND NOON QUOTATIONS SB- MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE The following quotations of today\u2019s prices on the Montreal and New York stock exchanges are furnished by McManamy & Walsh: MONTREAL LIVE STOCK MARKET' Country And Dairy Products Prices Bathurst .Bell Telephone .Brazilian .Bruck Silk .Building Products Open 12% 164% 8 4% 17 B.C- Power \u201cA\u201d .25 Can.Cement.Can.Steamships .\u2022\u2022\u2022.Can.Steamships .Can.Car & Fdy .an.Cai & Fdy Pfd.\u2022 Can.Calenese .Can.Ind.Alcohol \u201cA\u201d .Can.Pacific.lJ\"m Tar .Dist.Seagrams.«\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 Dom.Steel & Coal \u201cB\u201d\t.Foundation Co-.Satineau Com-.Gatineau Pfd .Howard Smith .*.Imperial tobacco .Imperial Oil .Inter.Pete .International Nickel .Hake of the Woods .Massey Harris .McColl-Frontenac .Montreal Power .Nat.Steel Car .Noranda .Power Corp.St.Lawrence Corp.St.Lawrence Corp \u201cClass A\u201d .Winnipeg Elecvrie \u201cA\u201d\t.7 4% 14% 27 23% 3% 6 6 21 15% 9 15% 94 17% 15 16 24% 47 23 5% 8 30% 63 75% 10 5% 18% 2% High 12% 164% 8 4% 17 25% 7 4% 15 14% 27 23% 3% 6 6 21 15% 9 15% 94 17% 15 16 24% 47 23 6% 8 30% 63 75% 10 5% 18% 2% Low 12% 164% 8 69%\t69%\t60 Vi\t69 % 113%\t113%\t113\t113;! 39%\t39%\t39%\t39% ] Sterling \u2014 Demand .Cables \\ Australia .New Zealand France .Belgium Italy Switzerland If dland Sweden .Norway .Denmark .Brazil Hong Kong Yen Close 3.93% 3.94% 3.1502 3.1660 .02231 .1663 .05051 .2246 .5310 .2384 ,2274 .1934 .0510 .2475 .2345 Turkeys .Milkfed chickens.Selected chickens .Fresh fowl .Brome Lake ducklings Geese .24\t: impressed upon them the wonderful Mrs.Beal-e, Mrs.de Solla, Mrs.20-23 27 23 MONTREAL CURB MARKET QUOTATIONS » - * The following quotations of today\u2019s prices on the Montreal Curb Market are furnished by McManamy & Walsh: Abitibi .Abitibi Pfd.Asbestos Corp.B.C.Oil .R C Packing .Cons.Paper .Donnacona \u201ca\u201d Ford of Canada 1 Fraser Co.V.T Price Bros.Price Bros Pfd.Robt.Mitchell .Open 1.65 High 1.65 Low Noon 1.65\t1.65 12%\t12%\t12%\t12% 25\t23\t25\t25 22%\t22%\t22%\t22% 16 %\t16%\t16%\t16% 0\t6 ¦ a\t6 %\t6% 8V4\t8%\t8%\t8% A\u201d Bonds and Banks BANKS Last Sale \u2019|lCanadienne .¦¦\t160 ?Royal.184 ?Ex Dividend.CANADIAN BONDS Following are the- closing bids and asked quotations as at November 21, as furnished by the Investment Dealers\u2019 Association of Canada: Dominion Government Bonds: Bid 2,\tJune 1, 1944 .2%, Nov.15, 1944 I 2 1 June 1.1943 .3 Oct 15, 1042 .3,\tPeeps.3.June 1, 1950-55 .3,\tJune 1, 1953-58 .3!i, June 1, 1946-49 3D Nov.15, 1948-51 S1.,, June 1, 1956-66 3% Oct.15.1944-49 4,\tOct.15, 1943-45 .assistance friendship is throughout Gaylor and Mrs.Forshaw attended daughter, Betty, attended the fare- the meeting of the Women\u2019s Auxil- well party given Mr.and Mrs.-\u2014~ \u201c\t! iary Canadian Legion, B.E.S.L., at Charles Brown and son, Earl, in General Notes\t: (-ftg home of Mrs.Jessie Simpson, South Stukely.Mr.Brown has sold Rev.Roy P.Stafford, who took Knowlton.Mr.and Mrs.cle Solla, his farm and is going to Oshawa, the services on Sunday last at the Mr.and Mrs.Beale and Mrs.For- Ont., to live.United Church, was entertained shaw attended the Legion banquet: Dr.r, b.Jacque ; during his stay in Coaticook at the held at the Lakeview Hotel.\t!\"\u2018 his late wife were respected resi- Siscoe Gold Mines Limited dents of this place for many years.Mr.an-d Mrs.Eben Fessenden and NOTICE OF DIVIDEND No.31 AND BONUS- Not Change [4.Oct.15 4-2\t\u201c\t~ 1947 IS 67 13 18 67 13 17 18 67 r11 .i - - 1 I s 18 67 12% F ARMH AM\twas enjoyed by all.r AKINM A.1V>\tMr> Russcll Cook is visiting his \u201e\t,\t,\t, parents.Mr.and Mrs.A.E.Cook, Remembrance day was fittingly\tspl,n(ijng: several months in observed here.A large number of j Lennoxville, where he.has been em-Farnham citizens assembled about |ployed.4% Sept.1.1940 .41 ¦, Oct.15, 1944 .4%,\tFeb.\t1,\t1946 .4%,\tNov.\t1.\t1946-56\t.4%.\tNov.\t1.\t1947-57\t.! 4!-,\tNov.\t1,\t1948-58\t.141 -, Nov.1, 1949-59 .5, Nov 15, 1941 .5, Oct.15, 1943 .Dominion Govt.Guar.: CNR 2 1942 supper.Plans were made to have a\t7,' Christmas supper and sale about mid-.7;\t'11144 December\t1 CNR 2% ! 1946 !!!!!! ! Mr.lack Ko ole y and Miss Marjorie ^ v p -\ti;>.j \u2022 Allen have arrived from Sudbury, f \\ ;V r.M ^ M)' !.! ! ! ! Ontario.\t(\t3 1(,>48-52 !*.!*.! ! Mr.and Mrs.Arthur MoHarg\\ of ( TOMÏFOBIA The Women's Association met.at the home of Mrs.Etta Manning, about twenty-five being present foi at the cenotaph to take part in the impressive service to commemorate the signing of the Armistice and to pay reverent tribute to those, from here who gave their lives in defence of King and Empire.The cold November morning no doubt kept many from attending, but those who gathered about the cenotaph thought lightly of the cold compared to the hardships and sacrifice of those who so proudly marched forward but did not return.The veterans of the first Great War and khaki clad youth ready to do their part in the prosecution of the second Great War marched in a body from the Town Hall.The First Troop Farnham Boy Scouts and the guards of St.Romuald Church attended under the direction of their leaders.The Citizens\u2019 Rand and the Catholic Young Men's Christian Association Band were in a;tendance.Suitable addresses were given by the Rev.R.Gordon Axcah, vector of St.James; Rev.A.B.Lovelace, of Grace United Church, and the parish priest of St.Romuald Church.Bugler Robert Ferris sounded the \u201cLast Tost\u201d previous to the two-minutes\u2019 silence which was broken by the \u201cReveille,\u201d also played by Bugler Ferris.Wreaths were placed on the cenotaph by representatives of many organizations.Poppies were sold throughout the day by the young ladies of the town, and the proceeds were quite satisfactory.Mrs.J.Rainville and Mrs.K.Champagne have left for Detroit, Mich., and other points, where they will visit relatives and friends.Mrs.W.H.Bullock has returned home after spending a few days in Montreal visiting relatives.Mrs.Edith L.McGuire entertained the members of the Ladies\u2019 Auxiliary Lodge at her home.The evening was spent in playing cards.Mrs.W.J.Harris won the first prize and Mrs.H.A.Pickel won the consolation, Refreshments were served by the hostess, assisted by her daughters, Miss Joyce McGuire and Mrs.R.G.Rutherford, and Mrs.K, C.Pattullo.A very pleasant evening Mr.Cedric Wilson, of Montreal, is visiting rotatives and friends.Great Britain has 250 sc pa vat police forces, but one third of the entire police personnel is in the Metropolitan police force of London.Stanstead, were calling on M Mrs.Leslie T rehurst.Mr.and Mrs.Clarence Holt and family, of Magog, spent a week-end with Mrs.Etta Manning.Mr.Jack Koeley, his sister, Doris and the M se- Marjorie and Bat barn Allen were calling on friends in Sherbrooke.HELP THE RED CROSS HELP \\\\ IN THE W VR! 1948-53 .r.amtjrNR jp.-.j.sn .it NR 4%, 1951 K'XR 4%, 1956 .1957 ., 1955 .CNR 5, 1954 .vCXR 5 1949-69 .ICNWISS 5, 1955 tM.liar.5.1949-69 fGTP 3, 1962 ______ fGTP 4.1902 : 'CNR 4%, tCNR 4%, .98% .100% .101% .102% .88 .95% .94% .99% .99 .96% .100% .104% .103% .102% .108% .108% .106% .107% .107% .108 .105% .108% .100 .99% .99% .97 .102 .96 .95% .95\u2019 .93%: .112 .113 .1131.115% .115%.: .116 .116 .116 .94% 105% Asked 99% 101% 102 Vs 103% 89 96% 95% 100% 100 97% 101% 105% 104% 103\u2019- home of Mr.and Mrs.L.I.Hurley.Notice is hereby given that a Dividend Three Cents htc) Per share and a Bonus of One Cent (1c) per share on the issued Capital Stock of Siscoe Gold Minee Limited , has been declared payable on December 15th, of the Royal I 1939, to shareholders of record at the close ! Victoria Hospital medical Staff, and 1 Of business on the 25th day of November, The funeral of Mr.Hayes was Miss Betty Matheson, R.N., of W39- Mr.W.W.Peirce was called to held in St.Stephen\u2019s Church on Sun- Montreal, were guests of Dr.Jac-Toronto by the death of Mr.Chris- day, November 12, and was very ques\u2019 grandfather, Mr.L.E.Fessen-topher Liberty, brother of the late largely attended.Mr, Hayes and den and Mrs.Fessenden, Mrs.Pierce.By order of the Board, H.E.GREEN, Sec.-Treafc Montreal, November 17th.Dr.W.L.Shurtleff with guests, Mr.and Mrs.E.A.Akhurst, Mrs.Luna Hanson, Mr.C.G.Johnson and Mr.Manioc Johnson, were in Sherbrooke.An enjoyable social evening was: spent at the home of Rev.and Mrs.j W.Harris Wallace when the Mission | Band of the Baptist Church and their friends met there for the benefit of j the sock fund.About forty persons! were present.The evening was spent: IO91 i in playing games, after which light 109% i refreshments were served.Approxi-1 107% mately $9.00 was contributed to j : the fund.Mr.and Mrs.S.A, Meade, Miss .Barbara Meade and Miss Evelyn Rowe, Mrs.Robert Akhurst, Miss Hilda Akhurst and others from I Coaticook were in Sherbrooke.Mrs.H.H.Clark, who has for ! three weeks been assisting a friend 100% : in Sherbrooke who is ill, spent a day 18 ' at her home in Coaticook.103 j Mr.M.Adams and his sister, Mrs.9.7 j Allen Grady, accompanied Mrs.03% Adams to the Sherbrooke Hospital ion Monday because of a prolonged \u2022attack of appendicitis, j Mrs, H.Anderson and Miss A, jStenning, of Montreal, who Were I for a short time guests of Mr.and Mrs.Harold Allen, have returned i to Montreal.117 j Mrs.M.Blanchard, of Newport, 117% land Mrs.D.Stevenson, of Sher-II71:, jbrooke, were guests of Mrs, Flo-peu\" ' 1 108% 108 \"s 109% 106% 109% 101 90% 94 % 113 114 ! 14% 116% 116% 10 Irence Gooley.The members of the Hatlev A.Y, Payable Canada and New York.M-A.produced their three-act com- AFTER 11 WEEKS OF WAR, ALLIES LOOK TO THEIR COLONIES -err^xr CANADA 10,671,000 pop.50,000 troops.Sends 16,000 men to war; trains pilots, Pacific Ocean GREENLAND] M) TOLL OF SEA: 1 Br.destroyer, 10 Allied ships, 6 German vessels Arctic If'Qceanj' French Atlantic Ocean NORTH AMERICA BR.WEST INDIES c)\\ Empire British ZZzJ Empire EUROPE THE WAR IN EUROPE Finns jilt Russia as war of nerves develops; Nazis warn at air war; assure Dutch neutrality; Britain extends blockade to ships leaving German ports; Western Front stalemated.Netherlands, Colonies :./T DUTCH WEST INDIES 262,266 pop.Sugar, gold, toffee, rum.BR.OCEANIA 412,536 pop.Sugar, copra, gold, phosphote».| FRENCH OCEANIA 141,853 pop.Iron, nickel, pearls, corn.SOUTH AMERICA FR.W.INDIES 592,131 pop FR.COLONIES 24,148,937 pep.fôL 7 â Pacific Ocean a A ' DUTCH INDIES 60,727,233 pop.BRITISH INDIES! 6,798, 544 pop, j Indian Ocean FRENCH AFRICA 41,747,756 pop.Hope to get bulk ot 2,000,000 troops from colonies here.\t(Y |p| i\tINDIA, BURMA 372,817,548 pop.299,200 troops.Sent aid early in World War; \tt\teUf'r r-oney, men.\u2022 -*v» J 'NN-'-'vv v\\>^.yV.Nearly Seven Million Miles a Year WITHOUT A SERIOUS ACCIDENT Each morning this telephone man elimbs into his green truck ami goes about his job of making telephones talk.Safety rides ivith him as he drives through city streets and over country highways.Last year be, and other Bell Telephone men throughout Ontario and Quebec, drove 810 telephone cars and trucks more than 6.750.000 miles\u2014the equivalent of 2(5 trips around the world\u2014without a serious 63,790,946 pop.Tin, gold, diamonds, copper, ivory, coal.AUSTRALIA, N.Z, 8.411.000\tpop.50.000\ttroops.accident.There were a scratched fenders to he sure ., .hut over 700 regular Bell drivers received safe Driving Awards last year, and main of them have few driven six or more consecutive years without an accident of anv kind.Bell drivers have often been the means of saving life and helping the injured, for every one of the 810 vehicles rarrics a First Aid kit.and 95 per cent of all outside Plant workers are proficient First Aiders.Safe, courteous, considerate driv.ing is an important part of a telephone man's training.Safetv, the duty of every good citizen lo his community, is one of this Company's goals as it goes about its job of furnishing good telephone service at low cost to the user.Quietus in the 11th week of Europe's war gnvo the world n chan re to look over the colonial empires that may be called upon to send troops and supplies to the embattled Western Front.While Dutch at homo pro pared to evacuate 2,000,000 women and children from flood defense area, her colonials wondered if they, too, might he called on to repulse inva.-ion of the mother country.Troop figures are those of actives and reserves stationed in British colonies, Principal exports for wartime use are shown.M.GRAHAM.Manager.i SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1939.PAGE NINE UNITED CHURCH GROUP MEETING AT KNOWLTON Grand, _ Sister Marjorie Crandall, [in town for a day.presided.\tMiss Katherine MacLeod has been The minutes of the previous meet- visiting friends and relatives in Sher-ing and the roll call were read by the brooke and Seotstown.secretary and several matters of Friends regret to learn that Miss business were brought before the Sheila Taylor has been confined to j ¦ meeting.It was decided to close all her home with tonsilitis.|meetings in the future with the Xa- Master Douglas MacMillan, of itional Anthem and also that the j Bolton Pass, spent a week-end at the 'members wuld offer their services home of Mr.and Mrs.C.E.Wiken.ito the I.O.D.E.Chapter here to assist Guests at Sugar Hill Stock Farm, -\u2014\u201c\tjin Red Cross Work.Sister Marion the home of Mr.and Mrs.H.L.Cal\u2019., Much Business Transacted UViPettes was appointed as convener jon Remembrance Day were Messrs.Momhprc nf Wnmpn'd Ac.of this project.\t,R.B.Call and Carl Fraser, of Mont- IV1 eiTIDer\t.A oegree practise took place and real.Mr.and Mrs.Schoch, ot '\u2014e- SOCiatiOn at Meetincj in .plans for refreshments for the next outimi and Dr.Armstrong and his -\t\u2022\t'\tson, of Kirkland Lake, Ont.Mr.and Mrs.J.M.Swett, of Frost Village, were dinner guests of Mrs.Swett\u2019s mother.Mrs.A.W.Mizener.cr\u2019s Association ot tne united\t\"1,\u201cVd*\"\"'d\" TV\tMiss Eleanor Courser has closed Tbrn-ch met in the Church parlor I ^of ^ P,aul s Chu^h wlth V 7 her home on Davignon avenue and Cfauich met in me unuieti panu .ood attendaneei The president,,,\tto Sutton for the winter with a very good attendance of | Mrs.Spencer Symonds, was in I^e,,1l0n^li members.The president, Mrs.G.M.j chair and election of officers for the ! Mr Emerson Bullard spent a , i\t¦¦\u2014 i-i't\t!\t\u2018\t'\t\u2022'\tterloo at the |,ome Fred Stevens, and WORLD\u2019S RICHEST RIVETER ¦\"****» ¦RUMMONDVIUE\u2019 PHIIHARM0N1C CONCERT GIVEN II.Church Parlors.Knowlton, Nov.22.\u2014 The Wom-en\u2019s Association of the United meeting were made.\u2014 NAMED GUILD OFFICERS St.Paul\u2019s Club met in the Guild ° , ,,\t¦ T\tlouig, secieuny-ucasiwci,\t| Mr.James Buchanan, of Montreal, Leadeth Me and Mrs.H.L.Call j George Williams.\t|spent a week with his parents, Mr.at the piano.^ Mrs.Earl Mizenei j xhe remainder of the evening was\tp w Rnr-Vinnan.then read the Scripture lesson from j spent in bridge and Chinese checkers the ninety-first Psalm, Mrs.E.D.; after which refreshments were serv-Mitchell offered prayer and the | ed hy the hostess and hosts, Mrs.K.¦ C.George, Mr, George and Mr.George Williams.' Lord\u2019s Prayer was repeated in uni son.Several bills were ordered paid and various matters of business given attention.The meeting was brought to a close with benediction after which supper was served to about forty guests.LODGE TO DO RED CROSS WORK Colfax Rebekah Lodge No.29 held its regular meeting in the 1.0.0.F.Hall with fourteen members and one visitor present.The Noble MILLIONS GET OLD YEARS TOO SOON Rank carelessness the cause Among your friends there are some of middle age who appear to have retained the exuberance and vitality of youth; while others accept premature ageing as the lot they must bear.Do you want to feel younger, eager to tackle any kind of work or play.rhouBand of people just don\u2019t bother to do anything about constipation.They even refuse to believe they are constipated.They think that if a person is reguZar, h that is all that mat-Jters.Occasionally / they take \"a good ' doseofsomething\u201d when the need is evident.That is de-y finitely not the way.The way to keep l \\\t' Ifeeling fit, to pro- I \\ Y-S IKvA 1 long the years of I A\tyouthful exuber- ance and icell-be-Take off the mask\ting, is to keep the of premature age\tentire system free as possible from Impurities and poisons.That means the blood, the kidneys, the intestines and the bowels.To do that your body must get certain minerals in some way.We make no exaggerated claims for Kruschen Salts, but we recommend the \u2018Tittle daily dose\u201d because Kruschen contains several valuable mineral salts in highly refined form.Each salt has its particular function.In combination they help rid your system of excess poisons each day.Thus free from the ageing effects of accumulated impurities you are much less apt to suffer from splitting headaches, acid indigestion, rheumatic pains, listlessness, because your excretory organs are Bncouraged to function normally.Thousands upon thousands of people throughout the world refer to the general well-being it imparts as\"that million dollar Kruschen feeling\u201d.Start \"the little daily dose\u201d right away and just you see for yourself! At all drug counters 25c, 45c, 76c.TV and Mrs.C.W.Buchanan.Mr.K.C.George, Mrs.Nancy Stone and Mrs.George Wragg motored to Waterloo for a day.Mr.and Mrs.C.A.Mizener motored to Three Rivers where .they were guests of Mr.Thomas Robinson and family for a few days.Mrs.J.W.Bockus and Miss Doris Bockus.of Fulford, were calling on Mr.and Mrs.Elton Bockus and family.Mrs.H.Cutler, of Coaticook.spent a week-end at the home of Mr.'erson, | Cooke, _\u2014 \u2014, \u2014 - - \u2014\t-\u2014.Jeannette Roy, C.Roy and Margaret Buchannan, Airs.Royal Smith, Mrs.S, J.Hinton, and Mi's.H.Dumouret.Air.and Airs.Robert Dalton, of ______ I Plymouth, N.H., vis ted Mr.Dal- 1939-40 Season Inaugurated at Drummond Theatre with over the week-end \\ Orchestra Under Direction ot Gilbert J.Alsey.n.Among others present were nox\\ hie, and Air.Raymond, of Sher* Misses Barbara McNutt, Florence broche, spent a week-end with Mr.Renault, Georgina Lovett, W.Alur- and Airs.Thomas Wilkin.y, Elsie White, Catharine N;ehol-j At s Janet Dunn, R.N., of Mont-son.Margaret Gerrard, Alyrtle Pat- real, is spending a few days with her Ernestine mother, Mrs.William Dunn.Ada Lewis, Breta Dearborn, Ate rs.James and John Beattie, of Lennoxville, spent a few days with Mr.and Airs.H.M.Beattie and other friends.Airs.Alex Guy has returned to her home, in Leeds Village after spending a few days with Mr.and .Mrs.Alex Hutchison.Aliss Irene Oliver has returned to her holi- over tne weeK-enu.\t.M-ss Irene Uiiver lias reti Air.David Ferguson motored to Montreal after spending h Toronto over the week-end and was day- here with her parents, accompanied home by Airs.Fergu- Mrs.Earl Ross, of Ala; .\tv,,\t.u .otv.riif tiii' ivitt! t hrn-a\t.\ti Drumomndville, Nov.22.The Mr.and Airs.Horace Whitehead were calling on friends in Cowans-ville.Miss Alice Mizener, of Foster, spent a week-end at her home here.Miss Lillian Barber was calling on Mrs.H.Belcher in Brome.Air.and Mrs.Ernest Ladd, AD General Notes The Knowlton Badminton Club members held their annual meeting in the Lake View Hall where the gathering was presided over by Mr.Spencer' Symonds.The following officers were elected for the coming year: President, Mr.J.C.Aloore, ,\tCutler and Secretary-treasurer, Miss Judith \\ani^J Wll Cowm.t was decided to play two nights each week.A reception took place at the home of Air.and Mrs.William Mac-Kay in honor of Air.and Mrs.William Boll who were recently married.Five Hundred was played at three tables and prizes were won by Miss Dorothy Sturtevant, Mrs.John MacLeod and Messrs.Robert and David Bell.A prize for bingo was awarded Miss Claire Goldberg.Refreshments were served at the close of the evening's activities, Air.and Mrs.Bell received many useful gifts.Granby High School basketball team played\u2019the Knowlton High School team in the latter\u2019s gymnasium, the game resulting in a 17-10 win for the local team, Mr.G.M.Ransom acted as refree.The Granby High School girls played the local High girls the same day, the score being 9-8 for Granby.Mrs.Robert McKerrell was a recent guest of friends in Coaticook.Mr.and Airs.George Mizener, of Foster, were Remembrance Day guests at the home of Air.and Mrs.F.H.Mizener and Airs.Sarah Williams.Miss Brenda Duggan, of Montreal, spent a week-end at her home here, jparents.Miss Doris Bockus, of Fulford.'croft.: - ¦1»J mWi.v: » uut,\t' ¦ | oiolc i j -AJ-i.ana iai \".\tj.i»«-ji.«.«j Fey land Ladd and Miss Bell, of jon their Golden Wedding anniver-Bond ville, were Sunday guests atjsary.the home of Mr.and Mrs.J.R.Arm-1 Airs.N.C.AlaeLeod is spending strong.\t, the winter with her brother-in-law, Mrs.' C.E.Crandall, Mrs.I.W.|AIr.Peter C.MacLeod, and Mrs.Crandall, Airs.Ralph Crandall and MacLeod, Finch, Ont,\t.'\t'¦\tMr.John C.Morrison accompanied Temporarily the \u201cworld\u2019s richest riveter,\u201d John D.Rockefeller, Jr., (left), wields a pneumatic hammer to drive the final rivet, a ceremonial one of silver alloy, into the final building of the vast Rockefeller Center development in New York.Assisting him is steel foreman N.L.t arpenter.sister, Air.and Airs.Ewcn MacLeod, A ork, anti Air.' Alerrill, of Scar the Misses Mildred and Eileen Cran-dal motored to Granby for a day.Mr.and Airs.H.G.Wells and son, John, Airs.W.H.King and daughter, Mary Jane, of Waterloo were calling on Mrr and Mrs.J.N.Alarsh and Miss Ethel Marsh.Messrs.Edgar Ransom and Ross Ritchie, students at McGill University, were week-end guests at \u201cBroad Acres\u201d the home of Mr.Ransom\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mr.: G.AI.Ransom Miss Kathleen Wright, of Walden, spent a week-end at hef home here Mrs.Joseph Inglis is a guest of her sister, Airs.Guy Bed ,ar.d Mr.Bel) in Montreal, Mr.Hugh Bancroft, of Montreal, spent a week-end at the home of lus Mr.and Mrs.\\V.M.Bancroft, Mr.John French, of Cookshire, to Boston, Alass., recently.Messrs.John D.Graham and Herbert Merrill and Aliss Alone Graham motored to Chartierville.Mr.and Airs.Leslie MacLeod and daughter, Sylvia Ann, of Canterbury, were recent guests of Airs.MacLeod\u2019s parents, Air.and Mrs.I K, D.MacLeod.The Misses Jean AlacKcnzie, Hazel Murray and Doris MacLeod spent a week-end at their homes here.Mr.and Mrs.Homer Graham and E.and Airs.Herbert vale, N.Y., have returned home after spending some time as gues-.s of Air.Graham's father and sister, Air.J.D.Graham and Miss Alene Graham.Air, A Graham, of Oaartlerville, was al a visitor at his home here for a few days.Mr.and Mrs.J.Alurdo AlaeAulay attended the Ilarremnii-Nirholson weddding in St.Paul's church, Scots-town, on Saturday, November 11.Mr.Leslie MacLeod is at his home here for a vacation.was calling .t the home of her bro- j Friends of Mrs.Forest Cousins ther, Mr.Elton Bockus, and family, will regret to learn that she has been Mrs.Gordon Marsh and infant, | confined to her home from injuries -,\ti\tit\ti\t\u2022._ .1\t_ i.il si r\tFT daughter have returned home from the Sweetsburg Hospital.Mr.and Mrs.A.H.Davidson, Mr.Goldwyn Davidson and Miss Leora Davidson, of Ayer\u2019s Cliff, and Miss Bernice Davidson, of Coaticook, were Sundav guests at the home of Mr.and Mrs.J.R.Armstrong.Miss Eunice Bancroft, of Montreal, spent a week-end at \u201cDailey Place,\u201d the home of Mr.and Mrs.W.M.Bancroft.Air.Elmo Ashton, of Foster, was first concert of the 1939-40 season by the Drummondville Philharmonic drel:estra was given at the Drummond Theatre, when an excellent programme of music, arranged by Gilbert J.Alsey, musical director of the orchestra, was presented.Some choral numbers were included.The programme was as follows: overture, \u201cQueen of Autumn,\u201d Carl Bigge; orchestra and chorale, Alavch from Carmen and Toreador song, soloist, Adelard Lungcvin; ' Finland.\u201d J.Sibilius; \u201cTo You,\u201d Gilbert Alsey, soloist, Henri Lc-YciUe; waltz, \u201cDolores,\u201d E.Wald-leufcl; characteristic, \u201cDance Ata-eabre,\u201d O.Saint-Saëns, violin soloist, Landry; xylophone solo, \u201cOle South,\u201d Frank LaRue; orchestra, \u201cAl Fresco,\u201d Victor Herbert, Current films were also shown in conjunclion with the concert.The concert was very well-attended.General Notes Members 0f the Young Women's Auxiliary of the United Church were entertained for their regular meeting by Airs.L.C.Leach at her home on Newton street.There were eleven members present.The présidât, Mrs.,8.J.Hinton, conducted the meeting and the devotional period was taken by Aliss Betty Hill.Miss Atollie Taylor acted as secretary in the absence of Aliss Catharine Nicholson.Red Cross work was given out and the ex remainder of the evening was spent in looking at snapshots, taken during summer vacations, through a rellee-:toseopo.Lunch was served by the bodes , assisted by Misses Alollie .Taylor and Myrtle Paterson, j An aluminum shower was given i in honor of a popular bride-to-be, Aliss Donaldcon Macintosh, by Miser, Grace Flegg and Rosella Donovan at lhe home of Mrs.B.Gilson, Lindsay street.There were twenty-five guests present.Several piano selections were played hy Mrs.Alex son, who spent the past three weeks visiting friends there.Mr.and Airs.Royal Smith were week-end guests of Airs.Smith\u2019s parents, Mr.and Airs.Scott Parsons, i Seotstown.Air.C.Kinghorn spent the weekend in Seotstown as guest at the home of Air.and Mrs.S.Parsons.Airs.C.M.Kinghorn spent the week-end ns guest of her parents, Air, and Airs.F.Hurd, Cookshire.Mr.Clifford Byrne spent the week-end at his homo in Lennoxville.Airs.John Graham has arrived home after visiting relatives and friends in Scotland.Mrs.T.Gerrard has returned to pie and Hill, Mrs.pent a day with Air.Thomas Winldn.Air.Gordon Fortier spent a day in Thetford Alines.HELP THE RED CROSS TO HELP WIN THE WAR1 Airs.1.Gerrard has retained to qU.u.^ 0f wator, add the juice of her home in Watemnlle after visiting 1(,mon8_\toasy- No trouble a ai the homo of her daughter, Mrs.uU ana 1)leasRllt< ' \\\\.l npps, and Mr.( npp>*\ty0 nccj only 2 tablespoonful Lemon Juice Recipe Checks Rheumatic Pain Quickly If you suffer from rheumatic or neuritis pain try this simple inexpensive home recipe.Get a package of RU-EX PRESCRIPTION from your druggist.Alix it with a .4 at Friends of Aliss Fanny Muce wi be pleased to learn that she is making satisfactory progress after her recent operation in the Sherbrooke Hospital.Airs.Arthur Mace has returned from Sherbrooke where she was a guest at the home You need only 2 tablespoonfuls two limes a day.Often within 48 hours \u2014 sometime overnight \u2014 splendid results are obtained.Try this prescription.Feel good.Bo without, rheumatic or neuritis pain again.Costs only a few cents ,c -u,.i\tdaily.Money back if it.does not ot Ah.and Mis.hd]) y0Ui RU_EX PRESCRIPTION two sons, Roland and Glen, of New struck by a motor ear.Kansas City, Nov.22.i/P).Forty-six days without a traffic fatality \u2014a new safety record for cities of,.\t\u2014- 4(H),000 or more population-ended ; Swanson.Refreshments were served yesterday with the death of William by the hostesses, assisted by Misses Sheridan, 75.Sheridan was Rita Aloisan, Bernice Barrett, Susie Donovan and Mrs.Charles King- Richard Elliott.\ti.\t¦-, \u2022\t,\t,\t, Mr.Robert Dalton, of Plymouth, 1 ^ \"y sale and recommended by N.H.was called to town on Wed- Budnmg s Drug Store, 25 Weltang-mesday by the serious illness of his.ton S North, Sherbrooke, Quebec, mother.Airs.Dalton has been moved j Telephone 561, to the Montreal General Hospital.' She was accompanied by Mrs.Charles Ramsay.Directors and members of the local Chamber of Commerce entertained their wives, relatives and friends at the second annual oyster supper and social evening held at the Manoir Hotel.There were two hundred present.Oysters and sandwiches were served and dancing was enjoyed to the music of Jack Strain and his orchestra.LEMESURIER Misses Margaret and Boa Ravage, of Sherbrooke, spent a week-end with their parents, Mr.and Mrs.11.Savage.Aliss Bertha Ross spent a weekend at her home here.Miss Gertrude Wlik'm, of Lon- Before You Insure Consult Confederation t T Life Association One of the World\u2019s Great Life Insurance Institutions.Renowned for Strength, Service and Security Since 1871.Mosby\u2019s Tonic Just What I Needed Says Widely-Known Lady received in a car accident.Her daughter, Mrs.H.Whitehead, is assisting in caring for her.Mr.Kenneth Cady, of Cowansville, was in town for a day.The remains of Airs.Lawrence Mizener, of Chambly Canton, were brought here for burial, on Thursday, November 16, when Rev.E.D.Mitchell officiated.Prior to her marriage Mrs.Mizener was Miss Hazel Donovan.Mr.and Airs.C.E.Wiken and sons, Karl and Richard were in Waterloo for a day.Mr.and Mrs.Charles Barnes were among those from here who attend-edo the \u201c500\u201d party at Air.Leslie Armstrong\u2019s at Tibbitt\u2019s Hill.Mr.J.M.Dunsmore, of Huntingdon, was a.week-end guest at the home of Air.and Airs.Lawrence Crandall.Miss Cecile Guillottb, who is attending convent at Sweetsburg, was a week-end guest at the home of her parents, Mr.and Airs.E.E.Guilotte, Mr.Russell Blackwood, of Magog, spent a week-end at his home here.Mrs.C.C.Jenne, of Sutton, was calling on Mrs.Nancy Stone.Air.and Mrs.Anthony LaPorte and Air.and Airs.Romeo Morris-seau were calling on friends in South Stukely.Airs.Frank Barnes, of Tibbitt s Hill, were calling on friends.Airs.C.C.Ale Clay, of Bolton Pa.ss, attended the last Rebekah Lodge meeting.Miss Barbara Buchanan, of ATont-real, spent a week at her home here.Airs.Thomas McClintock, of Sutton, was calling on Mrs, Malda McClintock at the Lake View House.Wiëm mss ül mi' Wm mi M m il! 11 mm h \\ Mrs.Georges St.Louis Was a Victim of Stomach Gas\u2014 Couldn\u2019t Sleep \u2014Was Nervous \u2014 Had Constipation\u2014Felt Worn Out Be-\t«ai» fore She found this Nevt à 4 Scientific Compound.\tjè *¦ -\t9%.People in all parts of Sherbrooke\tJ|| End this general vicinity are now\t/w taking\u2014and praising!\u2014this\tnew\t/.\t* mixture of roots and herbs and other\tJ splendid medicinal agents,\u2019 knows\t|\t( as MOSBY\u2019S TONIC, which is now\t|\ti .\tMtt k-m being introduced to the public\t*\tIVllL/An daily in this city at The Chagnon\t%\t.,\t.,\t\u201e Pharmacy, 11 Wellington Street f\t%\tRev.Al.N.AlacDonald, of Avon North.And at the same time, many\tmore, Ont., was guest speaker m if the best known residents of this \u2014- Bethany church recently.At ink, m section are coming forward daily MRS.GEORGE ST.LOUIS, town Rev.Air.MacDonald, and M >; with grateful statements, publicly widely-known Three Rivers lady, AlacDonald were guests of Rev.am.endorsing Mosby\u2019s Tonic in the whose sincere statement telling .Airs.Gillies.\u201cThe Manse .newspapers.Druggists say they have of relief Mosby\u2019s Tonic gave her Air, and Mrs, Herbert Merrill, Mrs.never before seen any medicine re- appears below.\u201cThis medicine Homer Graham and Air.Alex Gra-ceive so many voluntary endorse- did me more good than anything jham motored to Quebec ( By re-ments from widely known people, else I ever took,\u201d she says.\tcently.Among the many people who praise - Miss Lillian Graham, of Ashe A os.Mosby\u2019s Tonic none is morc enthusi- foun(] Mosby\u2019s Tonic an-\u2022-** at The CHAGNON PHARMA A never got any real rceulta fr m anything.1 Wellington Street North.ville, Ont., visited her sister, Mrs.D.R.Graham, and Air.Graham and her sister-in-law, Airs.N.D, McTver, for a few days.Other callers at the same homes were Mrs.Alex Mac-1 Rae, of Saskatchewan, Mr.and Mrs.| Arthur B.AlacDonald, of Gould, andj Rev, and Airs.MacDonald, of Avon- Here is McLaughlin-Ruick at its unbeatable best.New in style and design.New in advanced engineering.Ne tv in 72 features that spell pride, joy and satisfaction to you.In every 1940 McLaughlin-Buick you get a big, beautiful brawny car styled to knock your eye out tne fashion pattern for next year.Just look around and sec.You get a car that positively glitters in its brilliance of action, modern as television in the wondrous way it does things.You get a marvellously engineered chassis, keeled like a battleship with its torque-tube backbone.Y ou get for your command that surging, soaring, millrncc power of the matchless Dynaflasli engine, now electrically balanced after assembly to micropoised perfection! u get heavier frames, stronger bodies, richer upholstery and fittings, and belter value for your money.ou Pick your 1910 McT.i brilliant new series.'îuiek from 22 models in five 0t?/y car in the world with all these features \" MICROPOISFDDYNAFl ASH VALVE IN HEAD STRAIGHT-EIGHT ENGINE \u2022 EASY ACTION HANDISHIFT TRANSMISSION \u2022 OIL-SAVING PISTON RINGS IN ANOLITE PISTONS \u2022 SAFETY UNIT SEALED BEAM HEADLIGHTS \u2022 \"CATWALK-COOIING\u2019\u2019 PLUS ULTRA RAPID CIRCULATION UNDER PRESSURE \u2022 AUTOMATIC CHOKE \u2022 BUICOIL SPRINGING FOR THE \"FULL FLOAT\" RIDE \u2022 FORE N AFT FLASH WAY DIRECTION SIGNAL \u2022 STRONGER NEW \"DOUBLE WALL\" TURRET TOP BODY BY FISHER \u2022 TIPTOE HYDRAULIC BRAKES \u2022 FULL-LENGTH TORQUE-TUBE DRIVE \u2022 SELF-BANKING KNEE-ACTION, RECOIL WHEEL MOUNTING «1 u.jjt* Nature to flush exfess Impurities mnre, Ont.nd bloat | j}eVi q j4 anf] Mrs.Gustafson and their daughters, Jean and Andrea, nf Seotstown.were recent guests of iMrs.R.C.Van, who is still confined |to bed to the regret of her many ; friends.All wish her a speedy and I complete recovery to good health.Mr, John D.Graham, his son, Homer, and grandson.Roland, were calling on his brother-in-law and M, WISWÂLL, 73 Belvidere Street Korfch, S! erJirccl-Q.BACH AND & DSONNE LIMETF.E, Co&ticork DYSON & ARMSTRONG, Richmond COWANS VIP J»*\u2019 MOTOR SALFS, Cowansvilfs.M-O I ^748 page ten 5HLKBKUUK.L DAILY KLLUKD, WLDiN£.3L>Ar, -NUVLMtSLK LL, I y SHERBROOKE AND ST.HYACINTHE SHARE TOP Raiders Take Braves; Verdun Ties Lachine \u201cGuîdoo\u201d Roy and Jack Forsey Tally Brace Each as Red Raiders Bang Out 5-3 Triumph in Valleyfield, Red Ryan! Notching Single\u2014Saints Have Two Games in Hand Over1 Sherbrooke \u2014Bulldogs Impress, Handcuffing Rapides for 2-2 Deadlock.LENNOXVILLE ~ DO YOU KNOW UNDER REVIEW Officers Elected and Activities of Summer Reviewed at Annual Meeting of Lennox-ville Golf Club.Stepping out for two goals in the last period, Sherbrooke's Ked Raiders scored their second straight vie-I tory over Valleyfield last night by a 5-3 score and forced St.Hyacinthe Saints to push over and make room for them on the top rung of the I Provincial Senior Hockey League ladder.Trailing by 2-0 with more than half the game gone, Verdun Bulldogs rallied to force a 2-2 draw with Lachine Rapides.Saints have played six games, won five and lost one for ten points, have scored thirty-four goals and have been scored on twenty-seven times.Red Raiders have won five and lost three games, have scored ! | thirty-three goals and have been | scored on twenty-three Limes.Lachine\u2019s Rapides have won three, | lost two and tied two of seven games | i for eight points and third place.| : while Verdun and Quebe c Beavers i \u2018 are deadlocked in fourth position! i with three victories, three defeats and a tie fur seven points.After taking an early lead at Val-! leyfield, the Benedict.Brigade was forced to come from behind to dead-at 3-3 at the end of -WHO MADE LONGEST RUN AT POCKET BILLIARDS /N WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP MATCH ?: -¦ ¦ Wr, | ¦ THREE PLAYERS SHARE LEAD IN INT-AM LEAGUE Max Kaminsky, Butch McDonald and Conny Brown Each Have 10 Scoring Points\u2014 Kaminsky Has Yet to Hit Net.Unpredictable Canadiens In Tie For Top Spot In N.H.L.Montreal's Flying Frenchmen Conquer Harassed Bruins 2-1 on Boston Ice to Move Up on Even Terms with Toronto Maple Leafs\u2014Earl Robinson and Marty Barry Combine for Wmmng#oal After Toe Blake Had Nullified Roy Con-acher\u2019s First-Period Marker.*-\u2014___________ Boston, Nov.21.\u2014®\u2014There is a feeling around the National Hockey League today that the experts have been fooled again by the unpredictable Montreal Canadiens.Rated as of championship calibre a year ago, Canadiens barely managed to squeeze into the play-offs and were eliminated in the first Wt UK '¦ ymm':- X Nearly the entire slate of officers of the Lennoxville Golf Club w;m re-elected for another year at Iho annual meeting held last evening in the Town Hall, at which the report of the secretary-treasurer showed the year had been a most successful and active one and there still remains a balance in the bank with which to carry on.Considerable money had been expended during the year on the club-j lock Iho count house, where new showers and lock- j the middle stanza.In the last frame ers were installed.Membership had i the red team piled in two more goals increased about twenty per cent to salt the encounter away, over last year\u2019s registration, it was I \u201cGuidoo\u201d Roy and Jack Forsey, revealed.\tj flashy wingers, led the Sherbrooke J.P.L.Stewart presided for the, attack, Roy see ring twice and as- ; j sisting on a third goal arid Forsey ; beating Lascellos on two occasions.Red Ryan, sturdy right winger, was : the other Raider marksman.Tony : Demers figured in all three Valley-field goals, notching a brace of tallies and assisting in the third, which Joe Levine scored.Just under the five-minute mark of the opening stanza Forsey started the ball rolling with a goal on relays from Roy and Phil Piche, but Levine tied the count in a passing bout with Marcel Despelteau and Demers.Huguet sent Demers in for the second Braves\u2019 tally at 13:35.Red Ryan\u2019s breakaway early in the second period knotted the count but again Demers came through with a point to send last year's champions in front once more.Roy\u2019s first goal, however, sent the teams into the final period on even terms.Levine was serving a penalty when Forsey got the winning counter from a scramble in front of the net, while Roy ended the scoring with a breakaway goal in the final minute,\t( The rise of Verdun Bulldogs and; the fall of Lachine Rapides began at j 'the same time and there is a strong.H.G.| likelihood that a great rivalry will; runner-up; i grow between these two suburban j ,,\t,.\t,,\t,\t, Cup, II.G.W.Montreal teams before th, towns, Roy b.Clarke, runner-up- H \\V.S.Downs Cup, C.J.Rose, Roy s' Clarke, runner-up.IN WHAT GAME OTHER THAN GOLF-IS THERE A SURFACE KNOWN AS a Tee?\\ SB b\" V V1T* f election of officers, which resulted as follows: Col.the Rev.A.H.Mc-Greer, honorary president; F.li.Matthews, president, re-elected; J.J.Bell, elected vice-president to succeed Lieut.-Col.L.M.Watson; J.E.Thompson, secretary-treasurer, reelected.Appointment of chairmen of the various committees resulted in 11.B.Johnston exchanging the post of chairman of the membership committee with G.B.Christison, who was formerly chairman of the house committee; J, P.L.Stewart was renamed chairman of the green\u2019s committee, and Roy S.Clarke was reelected to head the match committee.Representative of the University of Bishop\u2019s College will bo Rev.Prof.H.C.Burt, and R.G.Ward will again act as auditor.During the season good weather prevailed and matches were played with Dufferin Heights, Orleans, Vt, Windsor Mills and North Hatley clubs.A field day was held and the Eastern Townships Boys\u2019 Junior Championship was also played at Lennoxville.Ptizes won during the year were presented by the president to the following: Rosenbloom Cup, W.Fowlis, C.J.Rose J.P.L, Stewart - mo plated 93 GAMES OH -ollece Football n/THcut missing A MINUTE ?¦w> L-N-ÿy' fj New Haven, Conn., Nov.22.\u2014 \u2014Max Kaminsky, Springfield\u2019s goalless wonder, was forced to share the scoring leadership in the Inter-national-American Hockey League today with Butch McDonald and Conny Brown of Indianapolis Qap-1 !,pun^ t^le Post\"season ser,ies.Con-*-gls.\t[ signed to a cellar berth this season, Kaminsky, in the van since the the Habitants are perched on top in season opened, was credited with no a tie with Toronto Maple Leafs, goals and 10 assists for a total of 0nly Canadiens have the answer 10 points in league statistics made tu the reason for this transforma-public here.\t;tion, but from their showing so McDonald scored a goal and assist ! ^ar thia season it looks as though in Sunday\u2019s game against Cleve- Çoacl1 Pit LePine has instilled in land Barons to give him 10 points \u2014 t!!em sorae of the greatness of the two goals and eight assists\u2014while ttowie Morenz era during which they Brown recorded an assist to put him .won tile cognomen of the Flying into the three-way first-place.tie ^lenc^merl- with four goals and six assists.j .For Canadiens were flying last Pete Bessone of Pittsburgh, with r!lX 35 they beat the ohaupion | 30 minutes in the penalty box, was 1 Pruins here 2 1 last night for their j the league\u2019s \u201cBad Man.\u2019\u2019 His near- fifth straight game without a loss.| est competition was Starr of Provi- -~-nd it was their ability to come j dunce, with 18 minutes.\tj back as quickly as they went for- i _______________________________ j ward that brought them victory over !\tBoston.__260 ! Poy Conacber, the league\u2019s lead- __295 1 i;*g goal-getter last season, sent th' üi îfttl I 1\u2014\tRalph Greenleaf made Detroit, December 16, 1029.2\u2014\tAndrew R.E.Wyant ANSWERS I\u2019D \u201cDO YOU KNOW \u2014 ?\u2019\u2022 a run of 126 against Frank Taberski in world championship tournament ,\t, ,\t\u201e\t,\t-\t- Played in 08 college football games and never was out a minute, formed for Bueknell in 1888-80-90-91 and with Chicago in 1892-9o-94.3\u2014In curling the target is known as the tee.He per- (Huguet) .13:35 Penalties:\tRyan, Bastarache.Matte.Second Period 1\u2014Sherbrooke.Ryan.\t5:19 5\t.Valleyfield.Demers (ITugfJt, Despelteau) .5:55 6\tSherbrooke.G.Roy .12:21 Penalties: Reeves, Reliveau, Maher.Peterson, Matte.third Period 7- Sherbrooke.Forsey (Maher, piche) .8 Sherbrooke.,G.Roy Penalties: Levine, Reeves, Boyer, Piche.Syl Apps Storm Centre Of Debate On Greatest Star In Ice History .8:51 .19:41 Huguet, AT VERDI N WINS PROVINCIAL RIFLE CROWN Montreal, Nov.22__The Eng- lish Rifle Club of Riverfield, com-Piluig a perfect score of 1,500 nosed out ol other Queber teams to become provincial titleholders in the first round 0f the third annual Domin\u2019 m marksmen .22 sporting rjfle championship competition, it was announced today.The CbateauRuay Country Club vd compete next month agai'nst th» eight other provincial titleholders for the Dominion Marksmen Challenge Shield and th,- national title, now held by Sunny Brae Riflo '1uh of Moncton, N.B.The teams Verdun Elcy.season I A round.ends.\t\u2022 I Simon.Rapides hadn\u2019t lost a game until1 Morin.Verdun beat them a week ago and Rounder, that victory was the first of the .1.T .Rounder season for the Bulldogs.Since then Verdun sub Verdun hasn\u2019t lost a game while gram.Walker, Lachine hasn\u2019t scored a victory.innn, Enforce.\u2022 ¦ goal .defence .defence .centre .wing .11 u (ion.Lachine P.Seguin Slater .Demers .Millar .James J Sog-iiin 11 In- Toronto, Nov.22.\u2014(P)\u2014Swooping Sylvanus Apps may not be the! greatest player in hockey history but everyone agrees he\u2019s good enough to start an argument on that point.The swift-skating centre of Toronto Maple Leafs, who simultaneously is a magnificent individualist and a sterling team player, has been so torrid this National League season that managers are debating whether he\u2019s better than \u201cCyclone\u201d Taylor, Howie Morenz and Eddie Shore\u2014to mention a few.Jack Adams, manager of Detroit Rod Wings, started it all after Apps led the Leafs to two over.whelmin BOWLING Racine .78 Mart* 1.101 Tardif .119 W.Bourguignon 152 98- 105- -42.Totals.594 570 481-1595 Night Hawks won two strings.\tNIGHT BIRDS\t\t\t* G.\tGingues .\t102\t63\t90\u2014256 E.\tLanctot .\t88\t120\t93\u2014301 R.\tBilodeau .\t80\t113\t85\u2014278 E.\tBoisse \t\t99\t134\t128\u2014361 L.\tLaframboise\t104\t90\t99\u2014293 Totals .\t\t473\t521\t495-1489 \tBLACK CATS\t\t\t J.\tImrie\t\t80\t64\t85\u2014229 P.\tMarchand .\t88\t93\t100\u2014281 R.\tChampagne .\t66\t90\t86\u2014242 P.\tFilion \t\t80\t64\t84\u2014229 J.\tPigeon \t\t77\t122\t111\u2014310 Totals \t\t\t391\t433\t467-1291 ¦356 ^iu'ns into a first period lead on a play with Mel Hill, but Toe Blake, who topped all point scorers last season, evened the count in the second period after taking a pass from Doug Y^oung.Two newcomers to Canadiens this season, Earl Robinson and Marty Barry, combined on the winning-goal which came in the ninth minute ot the final period.Breaking away from a Boston ganging attack Barry shot a rink-wide pass to Robinson who banged in a hard shot at Frankie Brimsek and then drove home the rebound.Night Birds won three strings.CASTERS IN THREE-STRING VICTORY A three-string victory by Casters over the Black Cats highlighted regular Dominion Textile Duck Pin League engagements.Two-string wins went to the Bazookas over the Foul Liners and the Kidoodlers over the Happy Gang.M.Cava, of the Casters, was high\u2019 man with 180 and 427.Detailed results: L.Butterfield R.Lamarre .A.Tessier .E.Rodrigue .R.Thibault .Toronto .Canadiens Chicago .Boston .; Detroit ,, i Rangers .Americans STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE P.W- L.D.F.A.PROVINCIAL Totals 603 520 MAROONS P.8 6 7 523-1646 Verdun .7 Quebec .7 Sherbrooke St.Hyacinthe Lachine.0 1 17 2 0\t1\t17\t7 3\t0\t11\t18 3\t1\t10\tIS 3\t1\t10\t17 a 2 8 9 4\t0\t4\t11 LEAGUE .L.D.F.A.Marchand Choquette Boulanger Dubois .Chartier .120\u2014286 108\u2014353 129\u2014311 121\u2014407 116\u2014325 BLACK CATS ! Totals 530 558 594-1682 M.Corcoran victories over the Wings last week- C.Polequin .Pennee, Lalonde.Ul- It 11 cost you $11.50 to view Armstrong vs.Ambers from a ringside pew.The teams: Sherbrooke Dion.Bastarache.I\u2019iehc.Alike Jacobs is going to Cleveland to see A1 Hoslak fight Kric Seelig on a big Christmas fund sh w.If the major baseball leagues can\u2019t &RTPO on n siicotYssov to Commission-er Kenesaw Lundis within three months after the office becomes va-cent, cither league can request Die i f, President of th,, United Sinies to I\t\u2022 name the man.Hasn't James F.i ley ' ,,,,tcrs\"n> been mentioned?\tForsey Sherbrooke He was very much in love.\\s they snuggled in the shadow of the bin k-out, he murmured: \"Darling, 1 don't miss the street-1 f-\"!'faire lamps.I have you.Your hair is full of.imprisoned sunshine.Your eyes shine like limpid stars.Your teeth are like lustrous pearls.Sny just one little word to toll me you understand.\u201d Like a zephyr in the murky night \u2014\u2018\u2018Gosh!\u2019\u2019 she breathed.Ernie Enforce and Conrad Bour-cier shared the glory in Verdun\u2019s lie with Tag Alillar's men last night.| Enforce got the tieing goal, with Bourcicr's help, while Hourcier got the first counter on a play in which Lai\u2019oree also figured.Rapides took the load in the first | period on Conny Tudin\u2019s solo rush and increased it half-way througn the second when Jimmy Terriault scored.Bounder'» goal came about two minutes later.! .a force tied the score with less than six minutes to play and the teams went through a drab overtime session, apparently satisfied with the draw.Raiders meet the Rapides at La-chine tonight while Shawmigan Falls Cataracts visit St.Hyacinthe.A, .14:00 and.Tor- 11:50 at v.m.llyitklh lachine subs.Haves, Rastiei Terr mult, llm-w\u2019ix, Majeau, Tudin.IE\u2019! erres : Mn'lis.-n and I.ebel.Firs, Period D-Lachino.Tudin Penalties: Lalonde, riault.Second Period 2 I a Chino.Terriault t Mateau) .A'-'l-dun.,C.Bounder (J.L.Bcun-Yer, I \u2022iforce) , 1 UQ: enaitics: Slater 2, Hurwitz, La Ion de.Th\u2019rd Period 1 \\ erdun,,.La force (C, Bounder) .Penalty: Areand.Overtime Period No score.Penalties: Bell, .Majeau, Terriault.Blais T.Baker R.Frechette 14:16 end.He called Syl \u201cthe best player who ever had skates on\u201d and \u201ca greater hockey player than Howie Morenz ever was.\u201d\t, Lester Patrick, of New York Rang-: Totals ers, shot back that several years | ago he had picked \u201cCyclone\u201d Taylor, the former Ottawa Valley and Pact-, ,.fie Coast star, and had had no rea-1 1 son to change his mind since then1 about the greatest of all time.Dick Irvin, who played against i both Taylor and Morenz, contended' that Apps \u201cgoes by the players of today faster than Taylor or Morenz; ever went by me.\u201d But Manager Art Ross, of thej B> Lothrop Bruins, : r Wolfe .I L.Gervais the 520\t527\t526-15 CASTERS M.Cay.a.180 12 Pat ton .94\t7 Patton .96\t8 | C Jackson .123\t10 j R.Bigonnesse .120 12 .613 Casters won three Maroons won two strings.C.S.P.DUCK PIN SCORES Rainbow and Orient won three strings from Clear-O-Phane and Purple Stripe, respectively, and Deauville ' dumped Aladdin, two strings to one, in Canadian Silk Products Duck Pin Bowling League en-427 counters.87\u2014256\tIndividual honors went to J.P.70\u20142531 Bergeron, who had a single of 149, 149\u2014378 : and M.Dion, who rolled an aggre-163\u2014422jgate of 441.Results in detail: Valleyfield \\Boston .¦ Shawinigan x\u2014Plays games.P.5\t3\t0\tS3\t2D\t10 5\t1\t0\t34\t27\t10 3\t2\t2\t24\t21\t8 3\t3\t1\t25\t20\t7 3\t3\t1\t24\t19\t7 3\t4\t0\t20\t27\t6 2\t4\t0\t16\t25\te 1\t5\t0\t15\t29\t2 four-point away LAST NIGHT\u2019S STARS Earl Robinson, Canadiens, who scored the winning goal as the Montrealers defeated Boston 2-1.Claude Bourque, Canadiens, whose brilliant goaling held the Bruins to one point.Roy Conacber, Boston, saved Bruins from a shutout with first period goal.528\t595-17361 firings.N.H.L.LEADERS Standing \u2014 Toronto and Canadiens, won 4, lost 0, tied 1, points 9.Points\u2014Drillon, Toronto, 5 goals, 4 assists, 9 points.\t; Goals\u2014Drillon and Apps, Toronto, .goal .deft nee .defence .centre .wing .wing .Valley-field Laseelles; NLM league Kov, uhs Maher, U.Harris.Valleyfie\u2019d ,-ubs.Reliveau, Ln-Kusik, Levine, Callahan.Bi ' er.Ala;;:ns.Rivest.Referees: Bennett and Carroll ; Fir-: 1\u2019eriod \u2022Sherbrooke .Forsey ( G.Roy, Piche) ______ .'.4:49 ! Valleyfield.Levine (Despelteau, Demers) .8:16 \\ alley-field Demers INTER M EDI a te EORA1ED ,.\t.H'r-v Rivers.Que.\\oV.22.,r Gnmioli Organization of the Eastern Provin-\u2022 - \u2022' ' \u2022\u2022\u201d>.Hockey League, an intermediate Huguet ( loop, was e.'inpleted last night at a Demers meeting which elected Oliyde AL-C r -polteau thy of Three Rivers as league nresi-Btirke, Ryan, j dent.Roy, Cormier,' Three Rivers.Shawinigan, Vietor-; iavillo and Quelnv have entries in Dm world champion Boston : hadn\u2019t been heard from.\u201cShore, in my opinion, was me i ^ Belanger i greatest player of ail time,\u201d he sub- ! j\u201de], gul.'ton I mitted on behalf of his colorful defenceman, who is closing his career.; Total» Irvin, perhaps in better position: to judge than anyone, wouldn\u2019t ex-!\tFOUL press an opinion on whether Apps j R.Lessard .was the greatest player m history j L.Boutin .\"You\u2019re going to mis» the point ! G.Morin.altogciher if you go off on that : G.Riel.tack,\" he told a questioner.\tI B.Rousseau .\u201cThe point is that.Syl Apps goes j by the players of today faster than ; Totals.BAZOOKAS .120 no .92\t125 .100\t145 120\t123 86\t131 518 634\t604-1756 LINERS 98\t102\t81-284 RAINBOAY.Assists- 6.J.AI.Drouin .\t.71\t82\t90\u2014243 Penalties \u2014 Pratt, Rangers\",\t16 j G.Vallee .\t.81\t120\t99\u2014300 1 minutes.\t G.Se vigny .\t.112\t100\t133\u2014345\tShutouts\u2014Broda, Toronto, 3.\t M.Corriveau\t.121\t121\t121\t363\t Al.Dion .\t.146\t148\t147\u2014441!\tHOCKEY\u2019S BIG SEVEN\t \t\t\t\t Although their team was idle.!\t Totals\t\t.531\t571\t590-1692 Toronto Maple Leafs\u2019 big three\tof i CLEAR-O-PHANE ; a.T repanier .Yullee .E.Sevigny Perusse .Bergeron .101\u2014272 128\u2014307 79\u2014290 89\u2014289 113_340 '.he circuit.Thirty-three schedule games will be played this season tlie first next Sunday.Oiliei- officers are G.Cantin, Vic-oriaville, vice-president, and ArUnn MoXieo'l.Shawinigan, secre-iry-treasurer.Additional Sport on Page a Bom 1820 \u2014 Still Going Suonc.Johnnie IValker Remember it next time Distilled, Blended, and Bottled in Scotland, Faylor and Morenz went by me.That isn\u2019t the whole argument but it\u2019s something.\u201cAs for comparing Apps direcGy with Taylor, that\u2019s almost impossible because conditions are so different.In Taylor\u2019s day there were seven men to a side and that made an entirely different sort of game.\u201d These things Irvin said for Apps; 1.\t\u2014Fie hasn\u2019t reached his peak yet and may cause even more conjecture when he does; 2.\tHe is a better play maker then : Taylor and Morenz, who weren't passers at all to Irvin's way of thinking; 3.\t- He is the most graceful play-! er on record; 1.He is more greatly admired | by his contemporaries than any player ever was,\t; The Toronto coach said Apps still has something to learn about mak-j ing the most of opportunities, Patrick spoke for all when he sn\u2019ct greatest player in 571 619\t450-1640 Bazookas won two strings.Totals ,.Rainbow won 456 three Gordie Drillon, Syl Apps and Bob' Davidson held on to the first three | scoring positions in the National I Hockey League last night.Drillon leads all point scorers with nine while his mates have seven apiece.Last year\u2019s scoring champion, Toe Blake, tallied a goal as Montreal Canadiens beat Boston 2-1 last night to tie Cecil Dillon of Detroit with .six points.Also in the league\u2019s big \t\t\t\tH.Alorm KIDOODLERS\t\t\t\tI P.Bureau M Bollard .\t.99\t78\t81\u2014258\tG.Olson A.Harel .\t.81\t104\t94\u2014279; L.Nadeau\t H.Garand\t.127\t127\t127\u2014381 E.Martin\t G.Afaddiss .\t.124\t126\t91\u20143411\t T.Rousseau .\t.118\t145\t133\u2014396\tTotals .Totals\t\t.349\t580\t526-1655\t \t\t\t\tIv.' allee HAPPY GANG\t\t\t\tR.Ratti .W.Gelinas .\t.81\t114\t90\u2014285\tA.Blais .1.Burton .\t.96\t81\t83\u2014268\tD.Cote ., L.Corcoran .\t.107\t113\t121\u2014341\tD.Ostiguv L.Stocks .\t.103\t133\t158 -394\t Y.Corcoran .\t.106\t133\t104\u2014845\tTotals .\t-\t\t\tDeauville Totals .\t.493\t579\t556-1628\t of New with five points.| Leaders: 522 510-1488 strings.DE A l MLLE\t! seven are Kenny Kilrea of 'Detroit, .6 io8 E 4 ^ ! Mi t.Schmidt of Boston and Mac 7.' 88 ]07 130\u2014325\tof New York Rangers, all .107 101\t134\u2014342 .98\t151\t138\u2014387;\tG ____ j)rji]on( TonjiUo .5 6O0-I6II , Apps, Toronto .5 ! Davidson, Toronto.l -a__ois Blake, Canadiens .4 1\t\u201c Dillon, Detroit .2 K.Kilrea, Detroit .4 Schmidt, Boston .3 Al.Colville, Rangers .2 A.Pts.462 544 ALADDIN - 71\t79 .122 112 .104\t110 .70\t76 .\t106\t98 96\u2014330 76\u2014290 39\u20142,35 80\u201428 ' Apps is \u201cthe hockey today.\u201d No one disputes that, now that Shore is almost through.This wi! be Apps' greatest season so far if ho maintains his present pare, for he is in better health than ever and won't be called on to carry se much of a burden w ith a good stock of reserves on the club.New York, Nov, 22\u2014 {#) \u2014The Illinois Boxing Commission is awaiting the green light from the Attorney-Genera' bef\u2019tv proceeding with the Harry Thomas case- Kidoodlers won two strings.WINS TO AI VROONS, NIGHT BIRDS W D NIGHT H VTVKS ' Night Birds blanked Black Cats and Maroons and Night Hawks seor-| od triumphs over Cubs and Sleepy 1 Heads, respectively, in Kayset Night Men\u2019s Bowling League games.W.Bourguignon relied the high ; ti rer, 42-\u201c.and R.Dubois the best single.176, Following are results: SLEEPY HEADS .473 473 419-136 won two strings, PURPLE Stripe M.Davey* .96\t75 G.Prince .79\t$0 J- P Bergeron .149\t98 P.Sullivan .l?i up O.C'r.arbonneau 106\t90 82\u2014254 82\u2014241 133\u2014380 94\u2014334 91\u2014237 Totals 463 432-1496 Biouin ,, .\t97\t80\t119- 2i
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