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Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
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mardi 26 novembre 1935
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[" Ütorbronfo iailu Swnrô Established 1897.SHERBROOKE.CANADA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1935.Thirty-Ninth Year, LIBERAL ADMINISTRATION RETAINS POWER AFTER CLOSEST FIGHT IN QUEBEC\u2019S POLITICAL HISTORY NEW EVIDENCE IN UNDBERGH CASE RUMORED Newspaper Story Claims Investigators Have Found Wood They Believe Identical with That Used to Build Ladder and Handwriting Samples Matching Ransom Notes.Boston, Nov.26.\u2014The Globe, in a copyrighted story, says investigators, seeking new evidence in the case of Bruno Richard Hauptmann, convicted kidnapper of the Lindbergh baby, have discovered, in Massachusetts, wood they believe identical with thal from which the kidnap ladder was constructed and handwriting samples they believe match the ransom notes.The Globe copyrighted story says of the ransom money The wood upon which they plan, in part, to base demands for a new trial was discovered, the copyrighted story says, in the little town of Ashby, five miles from Fitchburg.The money, which, the Globe says, Hauptmann attorneys have in their possession, is said to have been passed in Boston by a man who, it is alleged, is now directly under suspicion of the kidnapping.The Gtobe copyrighted article said the investigation had been going on secretly here for a month and that the paper learned that the Hauptmann defence planned to reveal new evidence uncovered in Massachusetts before Hauptmann\u2019s appeal is heard by the Supreme Court.The Globe said it learned the de-Continued on page Ï.QUEBEC VOTE MARKS FIRST BREAK I SERIES OF LIBERAL TRIUMPHS With Exception of Social Credit Triumph in Alberta, Liberal Forces Have Swept Through Every Electoral Contest Since the Federal Elections of 1930 M Final Returns Indicate that Liberal Government in Power for Past Thirty-Eight Years Will Have Majority of Six Over Combined Opposition Groups in Next Legislature \u2014Two Ministers Defeated as Opposition Made Big Inroads into Great Liberal Majority in All Parts of Province \u2014 Lawyers Predominate in New House \u2014 Never Before Have Scales of Popular Favor Been So Evenly Balanced.Louis Alexandre Taschereau still sits in the Premier\u2019s chair of Quebec today, but with less ease than at any time during his fifteen years of occupancy.The Liberal party after thirty-eight years in office was given a new lease on life in yesterday\u2019s election, maintaining itself in power by the slim margin of six seats according to final returns compiled by the Canadian Press.Liberals were returned in forty-seven of the province\u2019s ninety constituencies, one Independent Liberal was elected, while the joint Conservative-Action Liberale Nationale opposition captured forty-two seats between them.By party designations, the Conservatives under Maurice Duplessis won sixteen seats, and the A.L.N., directed by Paul Gouin, was vic-torous in twenty-six constituencies.The three leaders were elected with comfortable majorities: Premier Taschereau in Montmorency, the constituency he has represented continuously for thirty-five years; Mr.Duplessis in Jhree Rivers, and Mr Gouin in L\u2019Assomption.\t.\tthe investigators also have discover- Includmg Premier Taschereau, eight Cabinet Ministers were cd bil]s they hope t0 prove as some successful at the polls, while two were defeated, both in Montreal Island ridings.Hon.Irenee Vautrin.Minister of Colonization, bowed to Aid.Henry L.Auger, City Council leader and Conservative, in Montreal-St.James, and Hoii.C.J.Arcand, Minister of Labor, went down to defeat in Maisonneuve.His opponent was William Tremblay, a former Conservative M.L.A., who ran under the same banner.Mr.Tremblay is president of the Montreal Butchers\u2019 Association.In a statement after announcement of results Premier Taschereau declared the recent trend was definitely against all governments, which probably explained at least in part Ihe cut in the large Libera) majority at dissolution of the last Legislature.' From Mr.Gouin came the statement there would he contestations in at least three constituencies.He said those the Duplessis-Gouin joint organization were euie to contest are Mcntreal-St.Louis where Pete: Bercovitch, Liberal, was elected by acclamation; Montreal-St.Lawrence in which Joseph Cohen was re-elected on the Liberal ticket, and Montreal-Mercier where Dr.Anatole Plante was returned as a Liberal.Mr.Duplessis said he had no statement to make at present.The agreement between Mr.Duplessis and Mav Gouin was that if * their oounbined forces were successful the former would become Premier and Mr.Gouin would choose the majority of Cabinet Ministers.As it is Mr.Duplessis will continue to lead the Opposition in the House with a larger support behind him than any previous Opposition leadet since 18P7, when the Liberals began their uninterrupted reign, ¦ Never before since Confederation have the scales of popular favor been so evenly balanced.Instead of the overwhelming majorities behind successive Liberal governments for thirty-eight years, it will be necessary for Premier Taschereau to count noses before he risks a vote.Election of Speaker will reduce the Liberal majority to five.Of especial interest was the rejection of the Government in the province\u2019s two largest cities, Montreal and Quebec.In the metropolis four Liberals out of fifteen were elected, while in only one of the four traditionally Liberal seats in Quebec was the Government endorsed.In Montmagny.where political history was made by the active par-.tieipafion in the campaign of a priest, Mayor J.E.Grégoire, of Quebec, the A.L.N.candidate, was successful, defeating Fernand Choquette, Liberal.Throughout the campaign Duplessis and Gouin were given the backing of Hon.J.C.E.Ouellet, Legislative Councillor and former member of the Taschereau Cabinet, and Hon.Elisee Theriault, Legislative Councillor.Both praised the Duplessis-Gouin union and remarked that Mr.Gouin, like his father, the late Sir Lomer Gouin, Premier of Quebec from 190f) to 1920, was destined to play a major role in provincial affairs.Sir Lomer handed over the reins of government to Mr, Taschereau in 1920.Maurice Duplessis, Conservative M.L.A., for his home town of Three Rivers since 1927, was chosen Conservative leader at a convention in Sherbrooke in 1933.He succeeded Camillien Boude, then as now Mayor of Montreal, who was defeated with his party in the provincial election of 1931.He is a lawyer and a bachelor.In the turnover three former Conservative members of the House were defeated; Hortensius Beique, Mr.Duplessis\u2019 right hand man, was beaten in Chanibly by Alex Thur-bor.Liberal, and in Two-Mountains, Ihirty-year-old Paul Sauve was defeated by a small majority by Jean Rochon, Liberal.Mr.Sauve, the baby of the last House, is a son of Senator Arthur Sauve, former Postmaster General.Hull went back to the Liberal fold.The seat was formerly represented by Aime Guertin, who decided not to run when he was defeated in the same constituency in the Dominion election as a Reconstruction candiate.The agricultural class will be well represented in the new House, all farmers up for re-election being successful.Included in their number is Hon.Adelared Godbout, Minister of Agriculture and a professor at the ngrirultura] college at, ' Ste.Anne do la Pocntiere, who retained his seat in I /Islet.Hon.R.F.Rtockwell.Provincial Treasurer, fared better in this eon-test.than when he first, presented himself in 1931.\u2022 In the last election he squeezed through 25 votes ahead of his Conservative opponent, but this time he worked up a majority in Brome of about five Continued on page 2# VETERAN PREMIER RETURNED LAVAL ACCEDES TO DEMANDS OF THE LEFTISTS Today Agreed to Disband Nationalist Forces, Such as Veterans\u2019 Croix de Feu, to Save Franc and Defend His Cabinet Against Threat of Overthrow.MAJORITY OF EASTERN TOWNSHIPS SEATS TURN OVER TO OPPOSITION Brome, Drummond and Wolfe Alone Remained True to Liberal Cause\u2014Eight Ridings Returned Five Action Liberale Nationale and Three Conservative Candidates \u2014Two Veteran Parliamentarians, Alfred Bissonnet and S.E.Desmarais Defeated\u2014Provincial Treasurer Increased His Majority in Brome.T HON, LOUIS ALEXANDRE TASCHEREAU Returned to power by the narrowest majority ever given a Government in the Province of Quebec, Hon.L.A.Taschereau today embarks on another term as Premier of Quebec Province.The Premier scored a personal victory in Montmorency where he was first elected in 1900 and has represented ever since.He was first named Premier in 1920.Premier Taschereau, now sixty-eight years old, was practically born into Quebec public life.He is the son of Jean Thomas Taschereau, a noted politician in his day who became Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada, while this mother was a daughter of Hon.R.E.Caron, a former Lieutenant-Governor of the Province.ontreal, Nov.26.\u2014 Solid old Liberal Quebec faltered its, traditional Liberalism yester-! day just enough to deal the Liberal | party the first serious blow it has | received in Canadian elections since) 1930, On the heels of a Dominion elec-1 tion in which Quebec led all Canada \\ in sending Liberal members to j Ottawa.Premier L.A.Taschereau s i Liberal Provincial Government sur- j vived yesterday\u2019s election with a majority of only six.From 1930, until this election, i except in the Province of Alberta | Where a U.F.A.Government was replaced by a Social Credit Government, Liberals have .swept through every electoral contest with huge majorities.Similarly Quebec's election mark ROWDYISM WAS RESORTED TO IN MANY QUARTERS Pistol Shots Fired, Ballot Boxes Stolen, Numerous Fights, Impersonations and \u201cTelegraphing\u201d in Keenest Provincial Election Ever Held in Quebec.SUMMARY OF PARTY GAINS AND LINE-UP OF QUEBEC\u2019S NINETEENTH LEGISLATURE Quebec, Nov.26.\u2014Following is a comparative table showing what the make-up of the Quebec Legislative Assembly will be when it convenes for the nineteenth Legislature on January 7, 1935, as compared with the standing at dissolution last May: NEW HOUSE: Liberals .Independent Liberals .Conservatives .Action Liberale Natonale Total AT DISSOLUTION: Montreal, Nov.26.\u2014Outbreaks of ed the.first gain made by the Con- .,\t, ,,\t,,\t., , ,\t, servati've party anywhere in Canada ) vi° enc® !*ft iF.«ftYil\\ath one of the most hotly contested provincial elections ever held in Quebec.Pistol shots were fired by one of a gang of men who attacked two election officers in St.Sauveur division in Quebec City yesterday and grabbed the ballot box they were carrying.The box was recovered when bystanders came to the assistance of the election officers.In Laval constituency, Montreal, three men forced their way into a polling booth, ordered three returning officers aside and made off with the ballot box.Three men were to appear in court here today after a disturbance in a restaurant where windows were broken.Seven members of the Provincial Police force were havjng strength dropped from twenty-four I luncheon in the retaurant when a to five,\tgroup of men entered and shouted The record of Liberal triumphs Mnsults at the officers.The intrud-and Conservative defeats in the last I ers were ejected, but returned to five years follows: Manitoba, 1932,1 break the plate glass windows.Progressive Government changed to I The three whom police claim were Liberal-Progressive and Conserv-1 involved in the disturbance are alive following reduced: British Charles Cousineau, 32.Julian Mo since the federal election of 1930.It was the rebel Liberal organization, L\u2019Action Liberale Nationale, however, which, allied with the Conservatives, caused Premier Taschereau the most grief.Mr.T&schereau\u2019s Liberal membership in the last Legislature was cut from seventy-nine to forty-eight by yesterday\u2019s voting.Followers of Maurice Duplessis\u2019 Conservative i group increased from eleven to six-' teen, while his Action Liberale Nationale allies under Paul Gouin gained twenty-six seats.Just six weeks ago at the Dominion election the federal Liberal party increased its following from the Province of Quebec from forty to sixty ns the Conservative Columbia, 1933, Conservative Government replaced by Liberal and Conservative party wiped out; Nova Scotia, 1988, Conservative Government replaced by Liberal with large majority; Ontario, 1984, huge Conservative majority turned into huge Liberal majority; Saskatchewan, IH'Sf.Co-operative Government under Conservative leadership replaced by Liberal and Conservative following eliminated: New Brunswick, 1935, Conservative Government replaced with an overwhelming majority; Prince Edward Island, .1935, Liberal pm'ty captured all seats in the legislature and turned out n Conservative Government; Dominion.1935, Conservative Government at Ottawa replaced by Liberal after sweeping victory.NOVA SCOTIA STILL HOLDS TITLE FOR NEAR DEADLOCK Halifax.Nov.26.\u2014.Return of Quebec\u2019s Liberal Government with Continued on page 2.rand, 32.ami Rene Dubois, 35.Cousineau was taken to hospital for treatment to cuts from the glass.Armand Laflammc, election organ-I izer for Aid.Henri Auger, success-\u2019 ful Conservative candidate in Montreal St.James, was arraigned yesterday before Judge Jules Desmarais on a charge of having incited others to cause a disturbance at Premier Taschereau\u2019s meeting here on November 20.He was released on $2,000 bail.Charged with impersonation twenty-six wore arraigned yesterday.Eight will be sentenced today as they pleaded guilty.Approximately 150 men and women were arrested by city and provincial police on charges of impersonation and nearly fifty thousand \u201ctelegraphers\" cards were seized.While the city police reported the arrest of twenty-six persons on charges of impersonation and disturbing the peace, the provincial police refused to say how many they had arrested.From an authoritative source, however, it was learned that Continued on Page 2.Liberals \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 .Conservatives -\t.Independent Liberals .Independent Conservatives Vacancies .Total 47 1 46 26 90 60 9 4.1 19 90 Paris, Nov.26,\u2014Premier Lava] today yielded to the demand of the Leftists for the disbanding of nationalist forces, such as the war veterans\u2019 Croix De Feu, to save the franc ami to.defend his Cabinet against threat of overthrow.The Cabinet agreed on a proposal, now pending in Parliament, to appeal to the Chamber of Deputies\u2019 \u201cpatriotism\" for immediate discussion of Laval\u2019s financial measures, combined This decision means Laval will demand an immediate vote of confidence for his decree laws which are intended to defend the franc against speculation and the budget uncertainty now causing a heavy outflow of gold, with danger of eventual devaluation of the franc.The Premier will ask the Chamber to take up the battle against political troops after he disposes of the interpellation of his financial policy.The Cabinet\u2019s decision to support a proposal to disband \u201cseditious leagues\u201d was, without naming the Croix De Feu, taken in the face of a warning from friends nf Col.Francois de la Roque, its leader, that such action would lead to a \u201cbrutal shock and perhaps civil .war.\u201d Laval, confronting political and financial difficulties simultaneously, announced he would ask public support in an address tonight.He let it be known his Government would choose to fall rather than depreciate the franc.The Government goes before the reconvened Chamber of Deputies on Thursday.Former Premier Edouard Herriot, Secretary of State and leader of the dominant Radical Socialists, met with tbo Cabinet.He announced that Continued on Page 2.be provincial political applecart was not only given a severe jolt, but its contents scattered in all directions as the result of yesterday\u2019s general elections as far as the Eastern Townships constituencies are concerned.Since 191:2 the eleven Eastern Townships seats have been loyal supporters of the Liberal administration, the lone exception being Sherbrooke, which for eight years, 1923 to 1931, was in the Conservative column.In yesterday\u2019s voting no less than eight of Ihe eleven supporters of tire Taschereau administration went down to defeat before the attack of the Conservatives and the Action Liberale Nationale candidates.Not only were the Government members defeated, but the majorities for their opponents ranged into the hundreds, and in one or two instances topped the thousand mark.Three Conservatives and five Action Nationales today comprise tbo Opposition representation.The list of successful candidates in the Eastern Townships ridings and their majorities follows: County\tNew Memiber\tParty\tMajority Brome\t\t.R.F.Stockwell\t\t\t Compton\t\t\t\t\t256 Drummond.\t.Dr.A.Rajette\t\t\tLib.\t\t 26 Frontenac.\t\t\tA.L.N\t Megantic\t\t\t\t\\ L N\t Mississquoi.,\t\t\t Richmond.,.\t\t\t.660 Shefford\t\t\t\t Sherbrooke.\t.Col.J.Bourque.\t\t Stanstead,.\t\t\t Wolfe\t\t\t\tLib.\t\t 105 Hon.R.F, Stock\u2019W'ell and Thomas Lapointe are the only retiring members who were re-elected in yesterday\u2019s vote.BRITAIN WILL CONTINUE SUPPORT ! OF CANADIAN SANCTIONS DEMANDS Postponement of Discussion on Extension of Sanctions at Request of France in No Way Changes British Attitude on Adding Coal and Oil to List of Sanctions Following is the Canadian Press list of party gains in the Quebec: election: Action Liberale Nationale gains, twenty-six.From Liberals: Jacques Cartier, Montreal-Dorion, Montreal-Laurier, Montreal-St, Henry, Montreal-St.Mary.Beauee, Champlain, Chicoutimi, Frontenac, L\u2019Assomption, Laviolette, Quebec Centre, Quebec East, Roberval, St.Maurice, Shefford, Sherbrooke, Levis, Labelle, Megantic, Montmagny, Portneuf, Stanstead, Dorchester, Papineau, Temiscamingue.Conservative gains, eight.From Liberals: Beauharnois, Lake St.John, Missisquoi, Richmond, Laval, Maisonneuve, Montreal-St.James, Compton.Liberal gains, three.From Conservatives: Hull, Two Mountains, Chanibly.Independent Liberal gain, one.From Liberal: Montreal-St.Ann.CLAIM ITALIAN AIRCRAFT ARE NEARING HARAR GERMAN DOCTOR AND COMPANION ARE REMANDED ATTLEE TO LEAD OPPOSITION IN BRITISH HOUSE Re-elected Chief of Parliamentary Labor Party\u2014Sir Archibald Sinclair Succeeds Sir Herbert Samuel as Liberal Leader.L London, Nov.26.\u2014C.R.Attlee Reports of Italian Plane Approach Two Charges Laid Against Dr.Said to Be Dampening Ethio-;\tHerman Gortz in Connection pian Optimism Over Supposed\twith Espionage Activities Invasion of Italian Somaliland.Around British Airport.Harar, Nov.26.\u2014Reports that Italian bombing planes were, approaching Harar after bombing Agriralem, between Dagabur ami Jijiga, today dampened Ethiopian optimism at a report that 4 00,000 Ethiopians under Ras Desta Damtu had invaded Intalian Somaliland.The latter report said that the Ethiopian army was advancing rapidly toward Mogadiscio, capital of the Italian colony.ETHIOPIAN LOSSES HEAVY IN BATTLE NORTH OF DOLO Rome, Nov.26.\u2014 One hundred Ethiopians, including two provincial governors, were reported in an official communique today to have been killed during a battle north of Dolo on the southern front.The Italian losses were announced as four native soldiers killed, five wounded and two missing at Dolo, which lies directly on the border between Ethiopia and Italian Somaliland.REPORT DEPOSED EMPEROR OF ETHIOPIA PASSED AWAY Margate.Eng., Nov.26.\u2014 Dr.Hermann Gortz today was remanded for trial in the January sessions at.Old Bailey on the charge of violation of the Official Secrets Act.The mystery woman mentioned in the case when Gortz was arrested last Friday was identified by the prosecution at today\u2019s hearing as Marianne Emig.Gortz was held on two charges, \u201cconspiring to commit offences against the Official Secret Act\" with the Emig woman, and making sketches of the Mansion Royal Air Force station.MYSTERY WOMEN MENTIONED Margate, England, Nov.26.\u2014The mystery woman mentioned in the Continued on Page 2.Addis Ababa, Nov.26.-Lij Y a mi.deposed Emperor of Ethiopia, is dead, authoritative sources announced today.The grandson of Emperor Mcne-lek II, deposed in 1916 after a tribal rebellion and since then central figure in many strange and fantastic tales, died at Tiara Mulata, near Harar, now a strategic point on the southern front of Ethiopia's war with Italy, after a lingering illness.His successor.Emperor Haile Selassie, went into mourning.titude toward oil and coal sanctions remains unchanged.It is expected here that the date of the sanctions committee\u2019s next meeting will be announced shortly.CABINET REVIEWS FUTURE COURSE OVER SANCTIONS will be leader of the Opposition in (because of the grave internal situa-the new British Parliament.He was)tion of France, but the Cabinet\u2019s at today re-elected chief of the parliamentary Labor party.Opposition Liberals chose Sir Archibald Sinclair as their parliamentary leader to take the place of Sir Herbert Samuel, who was defeated in the general election of November 14th.Sir Archibald was already head of the Scottish Liberal Federation and in the general election camipaign he acted as Sir Herbert Samuel\u2019s chief lieutenant.While the Opposition were rallying their forces for the session, Prime Minister Baldwin called a meeting of key Cabinet Ministers at which the present position of economic sanctions against Italy is understood to have been discussed.Unanimously and with loud cheering the new House of Commons meeting for the first time this afternoon re-elected E.A.Fitzroy Speaker of the House.It is Mr.Fitzvoy\u2019s fourth term in London, Nov.26.\u2014 British key ministers met in Downing Street, today in an important conference in which they reportedly discussed the sanctions situation.Meanwhile Clement A.Attlee.Labor leader, was re-elected head of the Labor Opposition parliamentary group in the House of Commons.Summoned by Prime Minister Baldwin, Alfred Duff Cooper, new Secretary for War, Foreign Secretary Sir Samuel Hoare, Chancellor of the Exchequer Neville Chamber- the Speaker\u2019s chair and he had some I Si^ B\"lton Eyres-Monsell, First -\t- -\t-\t- Lord of the homely advice for the members of the new House.He recalled that when last elected he urged shorter speeches.He now has some suggestions to make regarding the conduct of debates.In his view;~said Mr.Fitzroy, a debate ought to bo a debate\u2014in other words a discussion with one speaker following another giving argument for or against the question before the House.He believed a debate should have of cut and thrust.\u201cI have noticed rather more in recent years,\u201d he said, \u201cthat there is a growing tendency for debates to become the delivery of a series of set speeches.That is not carrying out debate in the true meaning of the word.If that becomes the custom T am sure that interest in the proceedings of this House will suffer.\u201d Pirst signs of the turnover were given in Sherbrooke county returns» where the first two or three polls to report showed Col.Johnny Bourque, Action Nationale, leading his opponent, the retiring Liberal member, Emery H.Fortier, by a substantial -\u2014i& margin.Later reports only tended to increase the lead of the Opposition candidate, every ward in the city voting against the Government, the final count placing Bourque's majority at 1,646, the largest ever obtained in a Provincial election in Sherbrooke county.Fortier won the 1931 election by a margin of 394 over Armand Crepeau, Conservative.Compton was the next district to record a reverse, the Liberals early in the evening conceding the eleotion of Payson Sherman, Conservative, over the retiring memiber, William J.Duffy.This morning Sherman\u2019s official majority was placed at 256.In the previous general election, Duffy was elected for the first time, defeating Atbel Marion, Conservative, by 469 votes.Frontenac County, the principal town of which is Lake Megantic, provided the greatest surprise in the way of upsets when practically completed returns gave P.Tardif, Action Nationale champion, a majority of over one thousand, as compared with a majority of 938 obtained by the Liberal candidate.Loms H.Gagnon, in the last election.In the previous battle Gagnon faced Antonio Drolet.Reports of discontent in the Liberal ranks in Megantic County wora authenticated by early returns from this division, these showing the Opposition candidate, Tancrede Labbe, mayor of Thetford Mines, leading J.Ë.Lafontaine, Liberal, by- a ratio of two votes to one.This marks somewhat of a startling comeback for Labbe.who was most definitely trounced in the last provincial campaign by Hon.Lauréat Lapierre, now Sheriff of Quebec, Lapierre running up a majority of 1,635 votes.Frank Pouliot, of Farnham who has fought many a losing battle for the Conservative party in Misiss-quoi, received his rew-ard yesterday when the voters decided to send him to Quebec with a majority of 469 over Anatole Gaudet, the official Liberal nominee, and Maxime Coupa], an Indeepndent-Farmer candidate.Pouliot fell before Alexandre Saurette by 377 votes in 1931.Returns from Richmond, Shefford and Stanstead continued to tell of additional upsets in this district.Liberal since the beginning of the century and represented by a Bissonnet, father and son, for over Continued on Page 2.\u2014-* ondon, Nov, 26.\u2014Great Britain, it is officially intimated today, intends to abide by her support of the Canadian resolution to add oil and doal to the list of sanctions against Italy.The resolution put forward at Geneva by Dr.Walter Riddell on behalf of Canada provided for the addition of oil and coal to the list when the prohibition of their export could be made effective.Great Britain voted for favorable consideration of the Canadian resolution at Geneva and it is stated today the postponement of the League sanctions committqe meeting which was to have been held Friday is not to be taken as implying any change in the British attitude.The British Government, it is understood, agreed to a postponement Admiralty, Anthony Eden, League of Nations Minister, and Dominions Secretary Malcolm MacDonald came to the meeting.Also present, were Ernest Brown, Minister of Labor, and the President of the Board of Trade, Walter Run-ciman.The presence of the latter two ministers gave the impression that the sanctions questions was gone in- _______ to not only on its international side, thF qualities i 'nlt a's0 aR '*¦ affected British trade and British labor.THE WEATHER * \u2022 ADMIRAL SIR EDWARD BRADFORD DEAD Winchester.Eng., Nov.26.\u2014Admiral Sir Edward Eden Bradford, 76, retired British naval commander who headed the third British naval squadron during the Great War.died today.GERMAN EXECUTED FOR BETRAYING ARMY SECRETS Berlin, Nov.26.\u2014Albrecht Spiess, 29, of Berlin, was executed at dawn today for betrayal of military SEVERE EARTHQUAKE Ranchi, India, Nov.26.\u2014A severe earth shock was recorded today at Hnzaribagh, forty-five miles north of here.hut.no damage was reported secrets, immediately.\tDetails of his case were withheld.33; minimum, PARTLY CLOUDY; NO CHANGE IN TEMPERATURE.Pressure is high over the far northern portion of Canada ami from James Bay southward over tha Great Lakes to the southeastern, states, with a shallow disturbance moving eastward across Saskatchewan and another centred over the southwest states.The Atlantic storm has passed northeastward across the Grand Banks, causing strong winds and gales with rain and snow from Nova Scotia to Newfoundland.The weather has been mostly cloudy with moderate temperature in all other provinces.Forecast; Moderate northwest to north winds; mostly cloudy; probably some light drizzle or snowflur-ries.Wednesday\u2014moderate variable winds; partly cloudy; not much change in temperature.Temperatures yesterday: Maximum, 32; minimum, zero.Same day last year: Maximum, 3. PAGE TWO SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26.1933t & m tw QUEBEC VOTE MARKS FIRST fC- A.smart was re-dwied m West- dduav iki ccdICC rtC niouiit.Both ni0n arc vêt-!ans f dKLAK in j£KiLj Ur the Legislature.Approximately the LIBERAL TRIUMPHS same territory sent three Conserva-.tives to the House of Commons, R.r- t- r\ti\t! S.White in St.Antoine-Westmount; Continued f.om rage 1.\tHon.C H.Cahan in St.Lawrertee- major.ty of omy members re-j st George and M.A.Walsh in mded Nova Seouans of their Mount Roj.a] ';*r\u2018tJ,'\"i}ree f0.\u2018\t\u20ac\u2018ei-\u201con\t°-\ti William Tremblay returned to the 19-8, he-.eved to\tbe\tthe closest\tto\t¦ Legislature after an absence of four a provmcva: dead.ock\t:n the his.orj\t! j.ears as member for Maisonneuve.Ca the Doni:n:on.\t,\t! He defeated the Minister of Labor, Hon.E.N.Rhodes, who return- Hon.C.J.Arcand, author of the ed to his native province sn 1925 to Arcand law of collective labor .ead the Consenat,ves in a ' AeeP\" | agreements, by 3,642 votes, the ing victory that ousted the Libera.s ; jargest majority in the province, from power in Nova Scotia for the , Verdun.St.Henry and St.Mary first tune in more than forty years.went to the Opposition, in three or sought a new mandate in 1928 and | four-cornered fights.The-Opposition also took Jwcques Cartier and SHERBROOKE COUNTY STATISTICS The results of the voting in Sherbrooke in detail follows; Bourque the slim maj-The voting majority was 'reduced- went DacL to power ; ority of three seats.Dorion, which went Action Liberale.Liberals held St.Louis, where to two when a Conservative speaker Peter Bercovitch.K.C.obtained an was eleetea in the Legislature oi | acclamation ; St.Lawrence, won by 1929, and the death cf Hon.John : Joseph Cohen; Mercier, which Dr.Mahoney.Minister of Natural Re- ; Anatole Plante held, and St.Ann, sources, later in the year, knocked j which elected the only Independent it down to one.\t| Liberal of the day, F.L.Connors, a The majority of two was restored ; Taschereau supporter who did rot before the 1930 session of the I agree with the choice made by the House, however, when Dr.G.H.! Liberal convention.Wurphv, a Conservative, defeated ¦- p\u201e e.F r.x.X.C.M.P., m the j LIBERAL ADMINISTRATION Hai-fax by-election.Tension was great during the session of 1930, when Hon.E.N.I-lhodes put the Government-control liquor hill through the House, but later in the year several Liberals re- signed to Hen.G.5 successor me: RETAINS POWER AFTER CLOSEST FIGHT IN QUEBEC\u2019S POLITICAL HISTORY la: as rmgton, rentier.Rhodes\u2019 i a com-Govern- contesi fédéra, ncir.gs.\tContinued from Page 1.hundred over Dr.F.H.Plckel.who j was defeated in the last Dominion 1 election when he sought re-election ! as a Conservative in Brorae-Missis-j quoi.Dr.Leo Duguay, a former Con-| servative member - of the House of Commons for Lake St.John, was more successful than his former colleague, Dr.Pickel.He wrested Lake St.John from the Liberal, J.L- Pillion.Both the Liberal and Conservative whips were returned \u2014 Dr.Plante, Liberal, Montreal Mercier, and Antonio Elie, Conservative, in - j Yamaska, Mr.Elie\u2019s work will be Montreal.Nov.26.\u2014The rest of, more strenuous than during the last the province may waver in its al- j session when he only had a handful legi&nce to the Liberal party but the , 0f colleagues to round up when jewel of consistency is still worn j division bells rang, by the fconstitoency of Saint Jear .| Lawyers will again form the Never, since Confederation in IboT j major part of the House represent-has anyone except a Liberal been j aticn.The three leaders are law-xetumed there.Yesterday s provin-.vers, most cf the Ministers are c.xo.coal election was no ex-caption as.| next largest group will be despite a surge elsewhere towards ; farmers, while the notaral profes-the Conservative-Action Liberate ; sj01l be represented by one lone Nationale auiance, D:.Aiexis Bou- j member, Charles Deiagrave, Ltb-thillier was re-elected with an ap- erai,\u2018Quebec-West, oximate majority ox 1.00 over, Support of Libera! candidates in heir respective const!tuteneies by as ce feat eu ;n Political observers today pressed ; the opinion that a majority of six j in the Quebec House would make j for almost as close a battle as that | witnessed in the Neva Scotia Leg.s-j lature, the larger numt er of mem- ; hers increasing the task of party j whirs.CONSTITUENCY OF SAINT JEAN STILL LIBERAL JEWEL of 1,100 over P.Trahan, Action Liberals Nation-1, UiC.\t1 two The closest the constituency has Dominion Ministers did not .\t, , .\t.\t.have the desired effect.In Quebec ever gone toa Lioera; defeat was tr ; E where Hoc.Ernest Lapointe.jXh.i when Philippe Honore Roy had, jj:n-:ster cf Justice, announced his a majority of only eignt.\tJ ;nieI:t:.on to ' quis, Liberal organizer of the A.L.N., won hands down.In Montreal St.James, where Hon.Fernand Rinfret, Secretary of State supported Hon.Irer.ee Vautrin.Minister of Colonization, the CONTESTATION IS LIKELY IN A NUMBER OF RIDINGS! >te for Eugene Mar-Oscar Drouin, chief Montreal.Nov.26.\u2014Smallest majority recorded in the Quebec election was in Montreal St.James, a traditionally Liberal seat, which was captured by Henry L.Auger for the Conservative party with a margin of fourteen votes over Hon.Irenee Vautrin.Minister of Colonisation, j era or Patenaude The seat is represented in the House of Commons by Hon.Fernand Rinfret, Secretary of State.A recount loomed there today.Other small majorities which are like' Raj Poll\tFortier 1\u2014\t19 Windsor St.\t106\t77 2\u2014\t37 Bowen North .\t74\t63 3\u2014\tA-K, 133 King East .\t39\t67 3\u2014\tL-Z, 133 King East .\t33\t69 4\u2014\tA-J, Ô4 St.Michael .\t69\t75 4\u2014\tK-Z, 54 St.Michael St.48\t74 5\u2014\tA-F, 31 1st Ave.S.\t37\t61 5\u2014\tG-Z, 3112 1st Ave.\tS.\t32\t70 6\u2014\t14 Council St.44\t97 7\u2014\t101 Bowen S.\t57\t119 SOUTH WARD \u2014 8\u2014\t67 Wellington S.\t.\t35\t77 9\u2014\tGordon Street .34\t62 10\u201427a Gillespie St.\t55\t111 ,11\u201417 .le'xander St.\t88\tS3 1 12\u201479 Alexander St.\t38\t66 13\u201498 Gillespie Street .\t62\t73 j 14\u201496 Aberdeen St.\t68\t113 1 15\u2014165 Wellington S.\t37\t78 WEST WARD \u2014 16\u2014A-J.48 Gait St.\t62\t82 16\u2014L-Z, 48 Galt St.\t44\t73 : 17\u2014A-J, 135 Alexander St.\t55\t60 i 17\u2014L-Z.137 Alexander St.\t55\t38 : 18\u2014A-H, 148 Galt St.\t54\t5-3 18\u2014J-Z, 148 Galt St.\t39\t68 ID\u2014A-H, 9a St.Louis St.\t42\t38 ! 19\u2014J-Z, 11 St.Louis St,.\t34\t69 £0\u2014A-K, 162 Short St.\t61\t93 20\u2014\tL-Z 182 Short\tSt.\t42\t87 \u2022 21\u2014A-K, 233 Short\tSt.\t.\t47\t99 21\u2014\tL-Z, 215 Short\tSt.\t.\t49\t101 22\u2014\tA-L, 244 Short St.\t54\t99 22\u2014\tM-Z, 232 Short St.\t36\t57 CENTRE WARD \u2014 23\u2014\tA-K, Fed.Hall, King W.\t41\t62 23\u2014\tL-Z, Fed.Hall.King W.\t28\t43 1 24\u2014A-K, 6S Marquette St.\t22\t91 24\u2014\tL-Z, 68 Marquette St.\t25\t68 i 25\u2014104 Marquette St.,\t72\t77 1 26\u2014A-H, 101 Marquette St.\t62\t62 26\u2014J-Z.119 Marquette St.\t39\t54 NORTH WARD \u2014 i 27\u2014Y.M.C.A.* 22\t110 ! 28\u2014Registry Office .21\t92 29\u201410a Queen Street .\t-17\t113 SO\u2014A-L, 21 Queen St.\t29\t64 i SO\u2014M-Z, 21 Queen St.\t37\t67 31\u2014\tA-I, 315 King W.\t55\t120 ! 31\u2014J-Z, 315 King W.\t48\t114 32\u2014\tA-H, 1S9 London St.\t27\t76 32\u2014J-Z, 7 Beckett Road.\t19\t80 RURAL POLLS - ! 33\u2014Lennoxville .54\t65 : 34\u2014A-K, Lennoxville .\t23\t78 34\u2014\tL-Z, Lennoxville .\t33\t84 35\u2014\tA-J, Ascot .36\t47 i 35\u2014L-Z, Ascot .\t34\t39 36\u2014\tR.R.1 Lennoxville .\t40\t59 37\u2014\tHuntingville .42\t63 ¦38\u2014Capelton .34\t29 i S9\u2014Eustis .,14\t38 40\u2014A-J, Collinsville .\t34\t38 40\u2014\tK-Z, Collinsville .\t27\t38 41\u2014\tAscot Corner.53\t25 42\u2014\tA-K, Rock Forest .\t61\t51 42\u2014\tL-Z.Rock Forest .\t71\t53 43\u2014\tLittle Lake .19 44\u2014 Fourth Range .42 45\u2014\tBonnallies Mills .14\t12 46\u2014\tCherry River .56 47\u2014\tSt.Elle d'Orford .\t82\t50 48\u2014\tSt.Erie d\u2019Orford .\t55\t42 49\u2014\tSt.Erie d'Orford - 54\t19 Advance Poll .18\t61 Fortier Maj.Bourque 29 Maj.11 17 1 28 10 18 10 2 38 32 13 35 28 36 7 26 24 38 53 62 42 28 56 28 11 45 28 20 29 6 29 35 34 45 52 52 45 21 21 20 69 43 5 15 88 71 71 35 30 65 62 49 61 11 25 51 11 5 9 21 24 4 11 37 43 CHINA SEEKING TO STAMP DOWN AUTONOMY MOVE iatter was defeated.The opening of the first çessson cf the nineteenth Quebec Lisisla-:ur« is fixed for January 7, 1935.; Officiating will be Lieutenant-Gov-, NEW EVIDENCE IN LINDBERGH CASE RUMORED Continued from Page ROWDYISM WAS RESORTED TO IN MANY QUARTERS Continued from Page 1, at least one hundred men and wo- PRIME MINISTER COMMENTS ON RESULTS OF ELECTIONS al, L Dugu Johr Libe o be\t¦ challenged\twei\t\tDr.A.:.Liberal.in\t\tD:\t\timond.¦six\tvotes; J.T.\tCo\tle.\tLiber- tpe\tNorth, eighty-e\t\tijr'h\t.t; Dr, \u2022uay,\tConservât:\tve\tLa\tke St ¦ine-\t:y-one, and\tE.\tc.\tLawn , Po\tntiac, sixty-\t-sev\tftn.\t Quebec, Nov.26.\u2014\u201cThe people : have spoken and our Government ! maintained in office by a feeble majority, several majority votes only, ! but we are still happy when we look i around us,\u2019\u2019 declared Premier L, A.i Taschereau last night.\u201cThe late months have seen a re-| action against governments, no matter where.We have seen the fall fence obtained wood in Ashby which they consider the same as that used men were picked up by the Provin-to construct the kidnap ladder and cial Police throughout the day and letters were found by which they that all had been released after the hope to ask for a new trial.\tpolls closed last night.It was also t*.\t, /____stated that there were nearly seven The defence .s unwu.ng at ^ .hundred Specials\u201d sworn in by the iime, the story says, to nam \u2022 Provincial Police yesterday to take man -hey ^ay\tl - ; part, nf the nolle; and maintain order.Lindbergh ransom money, Tbe in vestigation my require week, the paper says, arc another the cie- B1GGEST MAJORITY PILED .UP AGAINST C.J.ARCAND of the Bennett Governmlnt, of the.____\t: Government of Prince Edward Is- fence counsel are apprehensive les :t be interrupted by a premature mobiles with one hundred detectives care of the polls and maintain order, while 138 automobiles containing police officers were used in patrolling the city streets.The Montreal police, however, had only fifty auto publication of details.Some of the discoveries were made, the Globe copyright says, a: a on duty and maintained peace with-it much trouble Uniformed constables were plac- Montreal, Nov.26.\u2014 Honor of recording the largest majority ir.yesterday\u2019s Quebec elecion, according to returns available today', went to a Conservative, William Tremblay scored a 3,642 in defeating Hon.C.J.Arcand, Minister 0f Labor, in Maisonneuve, The second largest also went to a Conservative.P.A.Lafieur being :;A2i s.:ered figr -riér 921 a.oead ,r.a tnree M on treai-Verdur.Majorities generally ranged tu :e thousand votes, with many of :!y a few hundred.Big majorities eluded: Arthabaska, Hoc.J.L.srraun.Libérai, 2,4 Of); Besace, Cliche, A.L.N., 2,444; Lotbi-Hon, -J.N.F rancoeur, Liberal, Montreal-S t.Lawrence, J., Liberal, 2,385, and Sher- ,al brocke, Coi.Johnny Bourque, 1,648.OPPOSITION WON ELEVEN OF FIFTEEN MONTREAL SEATS Mor Gov 4 c&pe mini rr.errt wave defeating ti , 26.\u2014The anti- ) which barely; e-> ie Taschereau ad-1 in Quebec Province J is perhaps most strong-! Montreal Island where i were elected.1 red by Cor.ser- they hi e prose ivernr yesterda !v felt but four Libers Eight gains were vatives or Action Liber ale candidates, while Co held three of the seats the last Legislature.Thus of the fifteen : island, the allied Oppot ed an clever, to four strongest anti-Liberal - .tion since 1923 when the Go met severe reverse» in Montreal, only to recoup them largely in subsequent elections.Three members of the Montreal City Council were elected.Henry L.Auger, leader of the Council and a Conservative, defeated llo.Irenee Vautrin, Minister of Colonization io Ht.James, but the majority of fourteen will be checked in a recount.Alderman Zenon Lesage, a member of the city\u2019s executive committee.on Laurier for Action Liberale Nationale in a four-cornered fight.Behind him was David Wolfe, Labor, who made a surprisingly gord showing considering the fate that met most independent groups.The third Cdy Councillor to be returned war.Alderman Francois J.Leduc, A.L.N., who won Laval where a Liberal and an Independent Liberal split that party\u2019s vote.Th\" two main English-speaking wards held firmly to the Conservative banner despite a sustained Lib-< :.l drive.C.E.Gault retained Montreal St.George and Brig.-G;-.land, of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and -f Britain, which fell, one after another, \u201cOur government is maintained, and I very sincerely thank the population of the province of Quebec fo- the mark of confidence which they have given us.We viil have -.orne remarks to make as to the re* -Tv-:, and deal;with the '\"acts which have diminished our majority, but I can assure the people of our pro-vlnce that rny colleagues and myself set ourselves to work, and seek to forget the fight which was waged against us in the present election, and we will give to the people of the province the best of ourselves, o as to ride over the crisis, which »ti!l exist-, and which requires the rpport of all of goodwill, and of everyone, to be vanquished.\u201cWe, have suffered losses, which I sincerely regret,\u201d added the Premier.\u201cSeveral of my colleagues have fallen.I hope their absence will be but temporary, and that we '.vill soon bcc them at our \u201cids again to continue the work of the Liberal party in the province of Quebec, \u201cl very sincerely thank al! who have helped us.I congratulate with al.rny heart our candidates who were elected, and the population cf Quebec may again count upon the active aid cf the government, of my: cciieagueH and myself, and the new tier station to loive the heavy and 1 difficult problems which lie before1 summer camp in the vic.mty of ecj on guard duty at all polls to pre-Vinton Pono, Ashby.The defence vent disorders, while radio crews investigators, the paper adds, made vvere kept on the go all day answer-their headquarters at a filling sia- ing emergency calls for fights and tion owned by Otis Wilbur on the riots.Ashby road.Most of the trouble occurred in station and Globe identified Wilbur, the Globe says, was not Laurier riding, where numerous ; in the confidence of the investiga- calls for fights were reported.' tor*.The paper says the act;vit e» j Questioned yesterday afternoon ! of the investigators aroused the sus- Chief Lou;s Jargaille, of the prov-phdons of Ashby residents and Mas- ! incial detectives, refused to divulge 'ar-hu-et-s state police and that the any information.When asked how iatte- questioned Wilbur, who could \u2022\tpersons were arrested by his them nothing\tmen, he replied: \u201cI don\u2019t know.I WJbur, the Globe says, was ap-'liave no idea- .There are quite a preached or.November 13th, a week *e'v' from other members of the after he had bought the filling sia- *>«\u2022«?f.urther information could tion, by men who wished to rent hi* pc obtained.\u2022 neprbv\tThe InsP^tor A.Brodeur, in charge \u2019 '\t^\t,-fie °f the !ocal detectives, stated that invectivais\t\u201c''ibis men had made thirty-eight ar- | ir e.g or .\t; rests in various city districts and ' DEFENCE COUNSEL UNAWARE\t^ere, ar,rai^ed OF NEW DEVELOPMENTS j Femmgton, NJ Now 26.- C., Rumors of a number of mMp.Lioyd F.-ner, chief of Bruno Rich- pings, some of them involving canard Hauptmanns defence counsel, jidates, were investigated by the said today he had no knowledge that, local police and proved to be'false, investigator* seeking new evidence | One rumor also had it that a can-n the case of the convicted kidnap- u;rjate had been murdered, but this I per of the Lindbergh baby had d;s-| was also a false alarm, covered, in Massachusetts, wood j From the various city hospitals they believed identical with that it was reported that a few persons from which the kidnap ladder was I had been treated for cuts and built,\tI bruises received in fights which oc- \u201cThis is an entirely new story to j curred in polk- and committee i me.\u201d Fisher said today of a Boston {rooms.These were not reported to Globe copyrighted article declaring j the police.The victims, all voters, T-mh evidence had been found.i were sent home after treatment.A large number of private ai LAVAL ACCEDES TO DE-MANDS OF THE LEFTISTS Continued from Page 1.i If they carried out their threat to : overthrow the Ministry, he would res.gr, the party presidency and i would refuse to serve in another j General pessimism prevailed over [ the future of the Lava! Governmnt.: Some sources -aid the financial 1 J crisis, with the Bank of France at-i tempting to stern the itream of ¦ [gold from its vaults, might save the J Cabinet.! Leftist honiiity to Laval was be-j.leved to be diminishing after the bank raised its discount rate from ! five to six per cent, yesterday and I further gold losses became known.I Marcel Regmer, Minister of Finance, announced Wail Street gains were drawing much French gold to New York and said London a Go was.withdrawing some gold sent to Baris before the British election.Uncertainty over application of ; '\ti ;'h ¦ I*-a - in an economic effort to curb DENIES REPORT Washington, Nov.26.\u2014J.Edgar _\t___auto- mobile- and taxicab» which were used by various candidates to trans- Hoover, director of the fédérai bur- P&rt voters to the polls were stop-can o?investigation, said today - Ped .and the occupants questioned there was \u201cno foundation'1 to a re- V police.They were allowed to port from Boston that, wood believed .f'r,ntmue on them way once their -imilar to that in the Lindbergh kid- «'«entity had been ascertained and r.ap ladder and handwriting similar j -her-Ked._ to that on the ransom notes had *-13J if'T were made by the Prov-been found.\t, ,nclaI '\"bee from midnight Sunday He declined to amplify that state- iJnt;: no?n Ffterday.These yielded thousands of telegraphing cards and other documents.The city police only made one raid on Bleury street on Sunday night where they seized upwards, of 20,0CW \u201ctelegraphers\u201d cards.Despite the fact that the sale of liquor in the city was prohibited yesterday, the police had to deal with a large number of \"drunks\u201d who were responsible for the majority of the trouble in polls and on streets.Fight» on the various city streets in the vicinity of polls were also responsible for a number of arrests.the Fascist warfare in Ethiopia, wa« called another factor in the crisis.Although Regnier said he did not consider the situation grave, no one appeared ready to assume power in the event the \u201cGolden Franc\u201d Cabinet should fall on political i.-sues.country Fire-Point Programme of Administrative Reforms Ordered in Effort to Prevent Secession of Five Northern Provinces.CITY BRIEFLETS * ! «-\u2014\u2014 * i LOCAL W.C.T.U.MEMBERS ENTERTAINED I Papers by Mrs.S.A.Jones and Mrs.T.W.Rawson were enjoyed by the members of the Women\u2019s Christ-] ian Temperance Union, who conven-j ed at the residence of Mrs.W.G.S Cross, Montreal street.The presi-j dent, Mrs.Jones, presided and the ; devotional period was in charge of | Mrs.Andrew McDonald.»- BADMINTON BRAZIL REBELS SOUGHT AID OF CRACK REGIMENT Shanghai, Nov.26.\u2014The Chinese Central Government moved to check the North China autonomy movement today by adoption of a sweeping five-point programme of administrative reforms.Responsible Japanese quarters said the Central Government\u2019s executive committee, meeting at Nanking, decided: 1\u2014\tTo establish a Peiping office of the executive body, with War Minister Ho Ying-Chin as director.2\u2014\tTo abolish the Peiping branch of the Military Council.3\u2014\tTo transfer the Council\u2019s business to a military affairs com-mirsion of which Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek would be chairman.4\u2014\tTo appoint Gen, Sung Cheh-Yuan, North China overlord reputedly selected by Japan to head an autonomous nation in that area, to the newly-created post of pacification commissioner for Hopeh and Chahar provinces.5\u2014\tTo order dismissal and arrest of Yin Ju-Keng, Chinese administrator of the demilitarized zone and self-appointed chairman of the newly-formed East Hopeh antonomous state.The Japanese military had given the Central Government the alternative, in effect, of undertaking its own North China reforms or seeing the autonomy movement cut loose five northern provinces, with their population of 95,000,000.The report of the Nanking decision on reforms followed an announcement by a spokesman for the South China delegation to the Koumintang Nationalist Party Congress that Generalissimo Chiang, military overlord of the Central Government, must take a positive stand to hold the newly-won Southern co-operation.The Japanese press had predicted Gen.Sung Cheh-Yuan, virtual ruler of Htpeh and Chahar provinces, would proclaim himself in favor of anto-nomy within two or three days, as the result of conferences at Peiping, unless other action were taken.Chinese officials insisted, however, that General Sung had not yet made any decision in the movement.Gen; Shang Chen, another North China military leader, had come forth vigorously for immediate suppression of the seif-government programme, \u201cby armed force if necessary,\u201d LOCAL CLUBS ARRANGING TO STAGE E.T.TOURNAMENT Interest in badminton has been increasing rapidly and to such an extent that the Sherbrooke Regiment Badminton Club is planning to stage an Eastern Townships championship tournament which will be open to all clubs in this district.The enthusiasm manifest in the friendly inter-club match between Windsor Mills and the local club on the 53rd Armory courts Saturday afternoon has prompted local officials to arrange a preliminary invitation tournament next Saturday.Invitations have been forwarded to all Eastern Townships clubs and numerous entries are expected.Twelve keenly contested matches featured the Windsor Mills-Shcr-| brooke programme.The local play-; ers emerged victorious in eleven en-[ counters, but the actual difference ; in play was not as wide as the score I would signify.Local victories were scored by the Misses J.Kirkpatrick and M.Kirkpatrick over Miss Bagnall and Mrs.Watt; the Misses E.Davies and J.Kirkpatrick over Mrs.Johnson and Miss Thompson; the Misses B.Wal-ley and M.Southern over Mrs.Longmore and Mrs.Witty; K.Bryce and E.Webster over H, L.Johnson and D.Jondreville; D.Bayne and J.Massie over H.L.Johnson and G.Harley; Miss J.Kirkpatrick and M.Soles over Mrs.Watt and B.Harley; Mrs.Palmer and J.Blue over Mrs.Witty and H.L.Johnson; Miss M.Kirkpatrick and F.Palmer over A.J.Philip and Mrs.Johnson; Miss E.Davies and K.Bryce over Miss Bagnall and B.Harley; Miss Siddail and C.Goodhue over Mrs, Long-more and D.Jondreville; Mrs.Palmer and D.Bayne over Miss Thompson and G.Harley, while B.Harley and A.J.Philip earned the visiting club\u2019s lone point by defeating J.Blue and C, McCullough.TOMORROW NEW ZEALANDERS GO TO THE POLLS ONLY FIRST INITIAL STEP IN SELF-GOVERNMENT movement Peiping, China, Nov.26.\u2014Creation of the Eastern Hopeh autonomous state, authorized yesterday, is only the beginning of a widespread self-government movement in North China, it was declared today by Lt.-Col.Tan Takahashi, Japanese military attache here.Lt.-Col.Takahashi predicted General Sung Cheh-Y'uan, North China overlord favored by Japan to head the autonomous state in that area, would participate in the organization of such a government.The autonomy issue, the Japanese Attache insisted, is insolvable to the Nanking government.MAJORITY OF EASTERN TOWNSHIPS SEATS TURN OVER TO OPPOSITION Continued from Page 1.thirty years, Stanstead County rejected Alfred Bissonnet by 498 votes, electing a newcomer to politics, Rouville Beaudry, of Magog, Action Nationale candidate.Stanislas , Desmarais, Liberal member for Richmond for the past twelve years, fared no better than his confreres, trailing his Conservative opponent, Albert.Gaudreau, by 60 votes, as compared with \\ majority of 956 over J.H.Cote, Conservative, in 1931.The sitting member, Robert Baeh-and, was rejected in Shefford in favor of Hector Choquette, Oppositionist, the latter bolding a majority of 542 votes.Bachand defeated Joseph Gingras, Conservative, by 332 in 1931.The first Government member to be assured of election in the Eastern Townships was Hon.R.F.Stock-well, Provincial Treasurer, who defeated Dr.F, II.Pickel in Brome by five hundred.This represents a rub stantial gain for Mr.Stockwell, who held a bare lead of twenty-five votes over L, A.Giroux, Conservative, in 1931.Dr.A.Rajotte retained Drummond for the Liberal party by the narrow margin of twenty-six votes over Joseph Marier, Conservative, and Leonard Boileau, Independent Liberal.This marks a sharp reduction from the 636 majority obtained by Hon.Hector Laferte o'\u2019er Napoleon Garceau in the 1931 campaign.Thomas Lapointe, the sitting member, was re-elected in Wolfe by a majority of 105 over Henri Varh-on, Conservative.In 1931 Dr.J.P.C.Lemieux, ndw Sheriff of Sherbrooke, was given a lead of 472 over Damien Despres and in a bye-election Lapointe was returned with a 626 vote advantage over A.B.W.Skinner.Opposition to Forbes National Government Consists Almost Entirely of Labor Candidates.The guest at the ;ma! hotel was indignant, \u201cDidn\u2019t I ask you to be sure to [ leave me »om« hot water?\u201d he de-j Man\u2014\u201cHe asked me how many manded of the maid in the morn- here were in rny family and I said j mg.\there were five.\u201d \u201cYes.sir, you did,\u201d rcjdifd >, His Wife -\u201cLet me There'*: g;rl, \u201cand to make sure of it, I left me and \u2014 two, three four,-Henry, 1 it for you overnight,\u201d\tyou must have counted younsli?\u201d SLIGHT \u2019QUAKE RECORDED AT TIMISKAMING Sudbury, Ont., Nov, 26.\u2014 The Canadian Pacific Railway train des-patcher here was notified today that a slight earth shock was felt at 9.20 a.m.in Timiskaming, on the Ontario border.It was believed the tremor was an after-shock of the \u2019quake felt generally in the eastern part of the continent on November 2, Timi».-kaming is believed to have been near the epicentre of the major shock.Wellington, N.Z., Nov.26.\u2014New Zealand goes to the polls tomorrow in the first serious test of strength for the National Government which has held office since the financial crisis of September, 1931.Led by Prime Minister G.W.Forbes, the coalition claims a record of steady reconstruction ;n New Zealand, pointing to a reduction of unemployment and increase in export trade.At the concluding session of the last Parliament, early in October, the unemployment tax was reduced, pensions were restored to the level in force before the economy cuts of 1931, and wages in the public services were moved up towards the old level.The Government pledges itself to continue a policy of expanding Empire trade with every encouragement for the dairy and meat farmers of the Dominion to compete in the markets of the world.In its election manifesto the Government also announced the completion of negotiations leading to the early establishment of air services to Australia by Imperial Airways and to the United States -by Pan-American Airways.The Opposition forces, consisting almost entirely of the Labor party, are led by Michael J.Savage, Aus* tarlian-born miner and union organizer, who came to New Zealand in 1907 after playing an important part in the Australian Labor party.The Labor party is in agreement with the Government on the application of economic sanctions against Italy, and the Prime Minister announced during the last session that all correspondence on the subject had been shown to the Labor leaders.The Opposition calls, however, for the nationalization of key industries and a public works programme to absorb the balance of unemployed.Labor claims that enterprises already nationalized in New Zealand have paid their own way while providing goods and services for the consumer at lower prices, For eighty seats there are 265 candidates in the field.In the m«v-enty-six European constituencies 246 have been nominated, seventy-one representing the National Government, seventy-one the Labor party, while fifty run as Democrats, twenty-four for various smaller parties and thirty as independents.In the four Maori seats there are nineteen candidates, one of whom is a woman.In sixty-one constituencies theie are three or more candidates and a puzzling split vote is forecast.Four women arc in the race.One of the successful Maori candidates will have a place in the next Cabinet as Minister of Native Affairs and member of the Executive.Council representing the native race.London, Nov.26.\u2014The King today received Vincent Massey, new High Commissioner for Canada at London, The interview took place at Buck ingharo Palace.Mr.Massey's appointment dates back from November 8, when the resignation of G.Howard Ferguson took effect.Plot Thwarted to Induce First Cavalry Regiment to Join Sides with Communist Insurgents V/ha Are Fighting Government.Rio de Janeiro, Nov.26- An alleged plot to enlist the First Cavalry Regiment, quartered in the heart of Rio de Janeiro, in a Communist rebellion against the Government was thwarted today as reports from authentic sources showed a rebellion death list of from forty to sixty men.Lieut.Lauro Fontoura, detailed to the training of reserve officers, was arrested before dawn charged with attempting to incite a revolt of the cavalry unit.Officials said he had made an effort to bring the crack mounted corps into line with the soldiers who are fighting in northeast Brazil against the Government.From the state of Pernambuco, Capt.Melvino Reis, Secretary of Security of the state, reported that after twenty-two hours of fighting the insurgents had been driven back toward Socorro, the military garrison of Recife, and that about sixty had been killed and one hundred «¦aptured.However, Socialists here in tne capital, who said their information came through secret channels, asserted that the rebel deaths had not been more than forty.The Brazilian Government imposed a state,of siege over the entire nation today and dispatched two naval cruisers to combat the northeast revolt.Authoritative advices indicated Communistic insurgents were holding their gains.The rebels still held the strategic seaport of Natal and the nearby city of Macahyba, in the northeastern state of Rio Grande do Norte, authenticated reports said, after seizing them on Sunday upon the outbreak of the revolutioir.While the two cruisers weighed anchors with arms, munitions and an unannounced number of men, apparently to bear down on Natal, four hundred Government troops made a forced march toward Macahyba in an attempt to wrest that site from the rebels.The sixty-day state of siege, approved by Parliament in an emergency session last night and stripping the nation of many of its constitutional guarantees, was applied sternly by police.Jails were being filled beyond capacity as authorities rounded up suspected extremists.All twenty states and the two federal territories of Brazil were virtual armed camps.Government officials said co-ordinated uprisings at Olinda, Pernambuco, and in the other northeastern states of Alago- ' as and Parahyba were being crushed.The rebels were holding their own in the state of Rio Grande do Norte, however, and were known to be near Recife, seaport capital of the state of Pernambuco, despite successive setbacks at the towns of Olinda, Af-ogados and and Areias.Governor Flores Dacunha, of the state of Rio Grande do Sul, who split recently with the President, instructed delegates from his state to vote for the siege everywhere except in Rio Grande do Sul where \u201cwe have every soldier on a footing of war already.\u201d Private advices from the north said Raphael Ferandes, deposed by the rebels as Governor of Rio Grande do Norte, took refuge on a Mexican coastguard vessel anchored at Natal.The Government's most important agent in combating the movement was Captain Flinlo Mueller, police chief of Rio de Janeiro working directly under the Interior Ministry.Against him apparently was pitted Luiz Carlos Prestes,' Communistic leader of the 1924 Sao Paulo revolution, who returned secretly to Brazil to head the new insurrection.Caught with other institutions of Brazilian life in the disrupting effects of the revolution was the famous Graf Zeppelin, which had been scheduled to land at Recife in the thick of the northeast conflict after a flight across the Atlantic.The great ship swerved from its course ami proceeded to March capital of the state of .Magna:,\u2019 ¦ here if halted, ready to remain there until Thursday, if need be to outlast the rebellion.\u2019I he Graf remained suspended over Maceio, apparently lacking fuel to fly on to Rio de Janeiro or to return across the South Atlantic.GERMAN D0CTCR~AND COMPANION ARE REMANDED Continued from page 1.arrest of Dr.Herman* Gnilz, German, under the Official Secrets Act last Wednesday, was officially brought into the case today.She was identified by the prosecution as Marianne Kmig.In a new charge, Gortz was n\u201emed as \u201cconspiring to commit offence; against the Official Secrets Act\u201d with her, in addition to the previous complaint that he made sketches of the Mansion Royal Air Force station.The prosecution told the court, at the beginning of the public hearing Gortz and the Emig woman, whom the former called his niece, rented a bungalow at, Broadstairs, Kent, where they became friendly with n young aircraftsman stationed at Lee-on-Solent.At the request of the woman, the prosecution charged further,'the aircraftsman furnti-hed photographs of Royal Air Force planes.W hen the two accused persons 'eft England, police said they found in the Brous taira bungalow n sketch of the Mansion airdrome, a copy of an application by Gortz regarding employment with the Ger-man intelligence service, anil a cypher indicator.MONTREAL LIVE STOCK MARKET Montreal, Nov.26.\u2014There were 116 cattle, 81 sheep and lambs, 381 hegs and u6 calves for sale on the two Montreal markets today.A part load of steers averaging nmlium in quality were quoted at $5.The balance of the cattle were common cows, canners and bulls, Gautiers and cutters were $1.75 to $2.25.Light bologna bulls brought $2.50, heavier bulls $2.75 and butcher bulls from $8 to $3.75.Grass calves were $3.50 to S3.75.Vrai calves averaging medium good in quality sold up to $8.50 and just medium calves up to $$\u2022 Good lambs were $8, heavies $7 and culls and bucks $6.Sheen were from $2 to $3.50.Hogs were $7.75 to $7.85 for bacons, fed and watered, with the usual premium on selects and with cuts of fifty cents per hundredweight on butchers, heavies and lights.Extra heavies were cut $1 per hundredweight.Sows were slow at $6 to $6.50.j Country and Dairy Products Prices #>- Montreal, Nov.26\u2014Potato prices, which have recently recorded substantial advances, were generally 5c per bag lower yesterday, this being the first re-action in the market since the upward moves began a few weeks ago.Demand\u2019 was not itoo good; arrivals were heavy, and a natural reaction was expected, dealers said in explanation of the easier levels.Quotations follows; P.E.I, Mountains, 90 lbs., $1.35 to $1.40; $0 lbs., $1.20 to $1.25; cobblers, 90 lbs., $1.30 to $1.35; 80 lbs., $1.15 to $1.20; N.B.Mountains, 80 lbs., $1.29 to $1.25; Quebec Mountains, 80 lbs., $1.05 to $1.10; Quebec Whites, 80 lbs., No.2, OOc to $1.Cheese prices advanced, eggs were a little stronger in tone than at the close of last week, while other lines ruled unchanged.The cheese market was 11 Qe to 11 %c for No.1 Ontario colored, and 11c for No, 1 Ontario white, current arrivals.These prices compared with 10%c to 11c at last week\u2019s close.Domestic demand for current make is better, causing the upturn.There was a stronger tone to the local egg market, with receipts light.Graded shipments arriving in carlots or l.c.l.lots vvere mainly 37c to 38c for A-large, 33c to 34c for A-medium, 31c to 32c for A-pullets, \u201826c to 27c for B, and 24c to 24 tic for C.Small lots to the retail trade were quoted by wholesale jobbing houses as follows; Loose A-l large \t\tCartons A-l medium .\t\t 43c A-l pullets\t\t\t 40c A-large \t\t A-medium \t\t A-pullets \t\t\t 34c B-large \t\t\t 31c B-medium \t\t\t29c G \t\t\t 27c 40c 36c 33c 30c 28c 26c The butter market was quiet but steady at 26c to 26 Vic for No.1 in carlots or l.c.l.lots.Small lots to the retail trade were quoted by jobbers at 27c for solids and 28c for prints.The poultry market was unchanged.Dressed poultry is quoted by jobbers to the retail trade as follows on A-grade.B-grade being two cents per pound less; Per.lb.Turkeys .25c-26c Milkfed chickens.25c-27c Selected chickens.22c-24« Fowl .16c-19c Geese.11c-15c Loans On Securities Applications made here i for advance* secured by the deposit of acceptable listed stocks and bonds will receive prompt action.Rates and terms supplied on request.SHERBROOKE TRUST COMPANY i % SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26.1935.PAGE THREE GENERAL NOTES AND PERSONALS FROM BEDFORD News Budget Containing Interest- made in the year\u2019s work.An official report was afterwards received, w\u2019iiich was quite satisfactory to the Board._ Mr.and Mrs, Franklin G.Guthrie, of Springfield, Mass., were recent guests of their aunt, Mrs.F.G.Guthrie.Other guests were Mr.and Mrs.S.R.O\u2019Hara, of Farn-ham, and Mr.and Mrs.S, O\u2019Hara, of Montreal.Rev.Mr.Adams, rep-resenting the .\t.\t.\t, | British and Foreign Bible Society, ing Account ot Happenings in addressed the congregation of St.Bedford and Surrounding Dis-kTTan\"es,\u2019\tand the Bedford .\t6 i United Church m the interests of tnct.\t| the Bible Society.Rev.Mr.Adarns - j is the successor to Rev.Mr.McLel- Bedford, Nov.2G.\u2014The follow-1 lan, who for many years filled this ing were guests of Mrs.F.G.Guth- j position and last year paid his fare-rie, W.E.McLaughlin, of \u201cArgyle j well visit to this district.House, Knowlton, Rupert and j The official opening of the Bed-Lawrence Mizener, of Knowlton, ; ford Badminton Club w'as held in and Mt.and Mrs.Arthur Mahannah | the Victoria Hall with about forty and daughter, Gene, of Farnham i members present.At intermission centre.\t! refreshments wrere served by Mrs.Mr.and Mrs.C.Parker, of : F.E.Draper and her committee.Plattshurg,- N.Y.,' were guests of About ten members were added to Mr.and Mrs.Wilbur Borden, leav- ing on Monday, accompanied\u2019 by Mrs.Borden, on a motor trip to Albany, N.Y., and Hartford, Conn.A very successful sale of poppies was held under the auspices of the local Missisquoi Chapter, I.O.D.E., which netted $42.65.* Malcolm McCaw and John Ewing were in New York during the past week.Harry Jones attended the annual the club membership, bringing the total membership to fifty.At a meeting of the Bedford High School playground extension held at the Bedford High School recently, it W\u2019as decided to hold a couple of card parties in the assembly hall of the High School to take care of the small deficit in the purchase and transfer of the additional acre of land to the school grounds.Wesley Gilman has returned to meeting of the Ontario Bee-Keep-1 jjontreaj afjCr spending the week ers Association in Toronto.\t1\t¦\t¦ .\t.\u2022\t.1 s AssoLiduoii m ioronxo.\tend with his famjly, .J\u2019 Hosmer, of Tornngton, Conn j Mrs.LegalIai5f of West Brome, is is spending several weeks m Bed-1 a t at tll\u20ac hom,e of Dri an(.ford.\tj Mrs F E Mr.and Mrs.Lyle Gould were' guests of Mr.and Mrs.I.Bowden, ] Huntingdon, An unsuccessful attempt to burglarize the store of H.Langevin on ! Main street w'as made last week.! The would-be burglars attempted j to force the rear door of the store, Draper.Master Ronald Killick- spent a J week-end with his father in Lacolle.j Mr, and Mrs.' Allan, Risk and | three children, of Kingston, Ont., were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Rob-; ert Russell.j Mrs.P.M.Hayes and Miss Josie , ,\t.\t.\t,\t1 ; Hayes and Mr.and Mrs.E.Spencer, ^uï,vfe'rf un?}) S gaÀn c,n^ar!1L nMac ,___,\u2022\t., ___\t,\t.i -c 1 Committee chairmén ara as fcl- The right motive is interpretation; not self-glorification, nor a vague idea that it\u2019s \u201cthe thing to do,\u201d but simply to make the author understood more fully.and although he brought that term of imprisonment upon himself he did so in the undoubted exercise of a constitutional right,\u201d Mr, Justice Hall ruled.He intimated Jacobs, while in police custody here, had given information in connection with a general smuggling conspiracy and had been of assistance to authorities in checking the conspiracy.ST.CHRISTOPHER TURNED INTO HITLER Dusseldorf, Nov.26.\u2014 A large bronze statue of St.Christopher, patron saint of motorists, specially cast to adorn the garage of police headquarters here, was seized by the secret police, acting on orders from Berlin.Reason for the seizure was given as \u201cundesirable religious propaganda.\u201d The local authorities made amends by consenting to have the saint melted down and converted into a dozen busts of Chancellor Hitler and Air Minister Goering, to be placed in the different police stations.lows: Ways and Means.George M.Crossgrove; visiting and investigation.T.N, Rowling; speakers, A.W.W.Kyle entertainment, George M.Alexander; luncheons, G.C, Drew.\u2022» tocre.se I» deposiis of over 848.000,000 within\t^\t^ ALBERTA CABINET PLANS CODE FOR RETAIL TRADE OPENING HELD BY COOKSHIRE HIGH SCHOOL Interesting Programme Staged and Prises Presented at Annual Opening Exercises of Cookshire High School.the year.That is strong vote of confidence in a bank, but behind n lurks the lack of confidence in Reading aloud to oneself gives an ease and con , the politicians who indulge in envy rather than fidence which are necessary before one can give real nrar\u2019isp broad slAtosmanshin\t\u2019\tpleasure to other people by reading aloud to them, practise broad Statesmanship.\t! The practised reader i a real addition to society.Do we Irown on the village politician who] One has onIy_to contrast him with some well-meaning spurns success and thrift and makes a bogey of our financial center, it would be better for the country as a whole.The ability and the craftsmanship of one big man who can so conduct an industry that it is an asset to a whole community is worth a trainload of men who would spume at him.Recovery must be allowed to grow naturally.It cannot be forced.There is a Confidence which is essential to recovery.There is the fundamental fact to be observed that people can earn more as they produce more; and sound recovery is a Cookshire, Nov.26.\u2014The formal opening of Cookshire High School .\t,\t, , ,\t,\t.\t-, was held in the gymnasium on , -\t.\t.\tproperly, control his breathing,!\t- Thursday evening with the chair- cultivate a pleasant tone, varied without being over- D .\t.c ,\t* J -, o man of the Vr-bnnl Rn.-a pn) emphatic and calm without being monotonous.\tProvincial Secretary Admits Pro-1\tsltt posed Lode May Be Regarded I son brought greetings from the as First A.ctual Step Towards f Board to the gathering and opened Application of Social Credit\tfor the eyening very Ideas, persons one has met\u2014persons who have insisted on reading aloud to one\u2014to understand the immense difference between the art as properly practised and the usual bungling that is substituted for it.How many of us have suffered from the prosy reader; from the man who gets so absorbed that he goes on reading to himself in silence and leaves his audience waiting; from the over-emphatic reader, or from one who stumbles and corrects himself?It can be one of the pleasantest of social arts.The ! reader first ascertains the tastes of his audience, and-selects a book likely to prove attractive to them.He waits till his hearers are comfortably settled; he reads: quietly, unaffectedly, with expression but without over-! emphasis, so that he, as a man, is forgotten, and only! , the book remains, directly conveyed to the mind of the! spontaneous process based on genuine confidence; hearers.Only when the reader pauses and doses the engendered among business men.investors and boÿ d?.tke>i r\u20aca]if how perfect a medium for the ] author h:s voice and personality have been.consumers.\tDone in this way, reading aloud is one of the most That the industrial people of L,:.ada are the stronger element, the more numerous, is amply | of themvdves: it interprets fully the audience out iteraturc which, to the bond between man and man, author, reader and hearer, that is one of the most precious gifts of literature.*?- I *- THIRTY YEARS AGO TODAY proven by the resilience of trade and commerce\"in J a- capai>dance, has not been fully revealed, it forms Canada after being battered and banged by the! destructive men who called themselves the antithesis ! of what they are: reconstructionist.They are and were a destroying, a destructive element, and they have been having a delightful innings in both Canada and the United States.Small hucksters who cal! themselves politicians forget even that investors will not risk their money in enterprise until capital can earn a \u201cliving wage,\" as well as labour.Another solution of our problem is drastic economy in government through refraining from the set-up of departments which are purely altruistic and never profitable.Calgary, Nov.26,\u2014The Alberta cabinet during the coming week will consider a general code governing the retail merchandising industry in the province, Hon.E.C.Manning.Provincial Secretary, disclosed in an interview here.The Provincial Secretary, spending the week-end here, said the move, in a sense, might be regarded as the first actual step toward establishment of Social Credit principles in Alberta but added the proposed code was general in scope and only remotely connected with Social Credit.At present the provincial executive was concerned only with the setting of a \u201cmaster code\u201d which would govern all retail activities, he continued.Suoplerrentary codes to govern each branch of the retail trade would have to be evolved later.A similar code was being planned for the wholesale industry, Mr.Manning added.SMALL PIECE OF STRING MAY SOLVE YOUTH\u2019S DEATH THE BANKING BULWARK OF CANADA, 7be year 1936 can be marked down From the Files of the Sherbrooke Record, November 26th, 1905.Wil iam Short, of Farnham, met instant death j with his horse and rig were struck at a level crossing.! Just a- it was 30 years ago there are similar accidents every little while at these level crossings.Principal actors in a play, \u201cPoor Pi\u2019licoddy\u201d presented bv Cookshire local talent: C.C.Planche, f.A.McRae.Mbs L.New ion, Mbs Mamie Sawyer and Mr:.j E.A.Bailey.Officers in charge of the reception for the '.l it of j the Grand Master to Windsor Mills Lodge T.O.O.F.: ! G R, Fowler, C.E.Brooks, David Archibald, Thomas j Ward, F.Beattie, A.A.Briggs and A.If.An sell Body of Twenty-Year-Old Ontario Lad Discovered Just Before Dusk Yesterday After Intensive Search Had Been in Progress Since Last Thursday.Midland, TTi a Li p cot, po as w It erj a I Stewards elected by Minton Methodist Church: R.\u201en 4t \u2022 x- .\t*\t\u201e Dean, J.L.Dean, Samuel Jardine, Robert Bennett, prosperous year, for all the Signs Of the return Of Amo- Kezar, James Jardine, John Wearne, James prosperity have been recorded from time to time Moiyne, H.It.Slack and A.A.Beane.Atag cc«« the 1\u201e, proof «ten tke direclor, rt lhe Bank of Montreal receive the report that there! O-car R.Bowen and Harry B.Whitcomb, has been an increase of $46,000,000 in the deposit' Robert Wilson and family returned to take up j.¦\t,,\t,\t*\t\u201c \u201c I residence in Coaticook after spending some time at in îb .bank during the year.Surely, no further the^r old home in Ireland.proof is needed that we are on the upward climb, j Despite popular demand.Premier Balfour and his That merchants and manufacturers are hèmg\\%%%^ndoïi' re,UMd t0 r,; and ordcr * *\">-cautious and careful in the upbuilding year is I Ayer\u2019s f residents gave a surprise party for 1 \u201cOh, George shown by the fact that their borrowings from the r\" \u2019 ¦ fvd\u2019cy on his birthday, the pro.cnut.v.of won\u2019t let hi.right foot Ont., Nov.26.\u2014Upon a :cc of string tied to his one ce pinned their hopes today a: they sought to solve the shooting which led to the death of Clark Tobey, twenty-year-old Honey Harbor youth.Object of a wide search since last Thursday when his hunting companion, Phileos Moreau, aged nineteen, was found after becoming lost when he set out to bring help to the injured lad, Tobey\u2019s body was discovered just before dusk Sunday around one foot, id he had been wound-t from a \u201cset\u201d gun woods by Indians to re gun could not be i a str; was be by a b placed in : bunt deer, found.you like all purse of money being made by A.G.Clough.bis left one 4a doingl\u201d dancing with ight; hut he know what The certificates for the McGill music examinations were then awarded by Miss Elizabeth Ball, who thanked Miss M.Pennoyer for her teaching of the theory.S.J.McHarg, B.A., presented the awards given by the Athletic Club of the High School to those excelling in sports at the county and Eastern Townships Track Meet.The report for the activities of the school year 1934-35 was given by the principal, Miss Dora Smith, B.A., who thanked the School Board, the Women\u2019s Institute and the staff of the High School for their co-operation during the past year.The prizes for the results of the June examinations were then awarded by Mr.Stevenson, Miss Smith and the staff of the High School in the following order: Grade J: 1, June Hamilton; 2, Weston Bailey; general proficiency and conduct, June Hamilton; spelling, June Hamilton and Betty Des-ruisseaux; reading, June Hamilton.Grade II: L, Evelyn Daniels; 2, Helen Maskell general proficiency and conduct, Helen Maskell; spelling, Marjory Stevenson; reading, Evelyn Daniels.Grade HI: 1, Jean Stevenson; 2, Marie Tulk; general proficiency and conduct, Marie Tulk; spelling and dictation, Eunice Heatherington; reading, David Carr; perfect attendance, Eunice Heatherington.Grade IV: 1, Jean Carr; 2, Jean Grainger; medal for highest marks, given in memory of Miss Lena Baily, Jean Carr; arithmetic, Jean Carr; French, Lois Barter and Barbara Fuller; perfect attendance, Lois Barter, Grade V; 1, Beverly Barter; 2, Gordon Cameron; arithmetic, Lois Hamilton; English literature, Beverly Barter; perfect attendance, Franklin Hearn.Grade VI: 1, Nelson Fuller; 2, Jean L/fiarned; perfect attendance, Meredith Barter.Grade VII; 3, Pauline Meredith; 2, Dorothy Lake; highest marks in arithmetic, grades VH, VIII and IX, Pauline Meredith; perfect attendance, Donald Standi,sh; history, Donald Stand is h and George Macdonald; French, grades VI and VII, Osborne Lake; English literature, grades VI and VII, Donald Stan-di i.h; grade VII prize for neatness and deportment, Pauline Meredith BANK OF MONTREAL Established 1817 presentation, in easily understandable form, of the 'Bank\u2019s ANNUAL STATEMENT 31st October, 1935 $676,944,866.06 29,959,128.50 353,011.79 7,066,426.26 1,784,347 j87 $716,107,779.68 76,665,093.08 $192,172,SI 2.16 LIABILITIES LIABILITIES TO THE PUBLIC Deposits.\u2022 Payable on demand and after notice.Notes of the Bank in Circulation .«ta Payable on demand.Bills Payable Time drafts issued and outstanding.Acceptances and Letters of Credit Outstanding .\t, Financial responsibilities undertaken on behalf of customers (see offsetting amount [r] in \"Resources\").Other Liabilities to the Public .Items which do not come under the foregoing headings.Total Liabilities to the Public .LIABILITIES TO THE SHAREHOLDERS Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profits and Reserves for Dividends.This amount represents the shareholders\u2019 interest in the Bank, over which liabilities to the public take precedence.Total Liabilities .\t.RESOURCES To meet the foregoing Liabilities the Bank has Cash in its Vaults and Money on Deposit with Bank of Canada .Notes of and Cheques on Other Banks\t»\t»\tt Payable in cash or.presentation.Money on Deposit with Other Banks\t\u2022\t.\t* Available on demand or at short notice.Government and Other Bonds and Debentures .\t.Sot exceeding market value.The greater portion consists of gilt-edge securities which mature at early doses.Stocks.Railway and Industrial and other stocks.Not exceeding market value.Call Loans outside of Canada .Secured by bonds, stocks and other negotiable securities of greater value than the loans and representing moneys quickly available with no disturbing effect on conditions in Canada.Call Loans in Canada .Payable on demand and secured by bonds and slocks of greater value than the loans.Bankers\u2019 Acceptances .\t.\t.\t.\t,\t, Prime drafts accepted by other banks.TOTAL OF QUICKLY AVAILABLE RESOURCES .(eqtutl to 71.48 % of all Liabilities to the Public) Other Loans.To manufacturers, farmers, merchants and others, on conditions consistent with sound banking.Bank Premises\t.\t.Three properties only are carried in the names of holding companies ; the stock and bonds of these companies are entirely owned by the Bank and appear on the books at $1.00 in each case.All other of the Bank's premises, the value of which largely exceeds $14.100,000, appear under this heading.Real Estate, and Mortgages on Real Estate Sold by the Bank .Acquired tn the course of the Bank\u2019s business and in process of being realized upon.x Customers\u2019 Liability under Acceptances and Letters of Credit.Represents liabilities of customers on account of Letters of Credit issued and Drafts accepted by the Bank for their account.Other Assets not included in the Foregoing Making Total Assets of\t, to meet payment of Liabilities to the Public of leaving an excess of Assets over Liabilities to the Public of 76,665,093.08 PROFIT and LOSS ACCOUNT Profit.?for the year ended 31st October, 1935, after making appropria-tions to Contingent Reserve Fund, out of which Fund full provision 44,007,302.06 $ 82,711,635.13 27,614,596.16 37,764,631.60 361,769,848.49 103,872.95 18,835,238.07 4,435,736.20 139,252.54 $533,374,811.14 234,461,311.20 14,500,000.00 1,523,432.05 7,066,426.26 1,846,892.11 $792,772,872.76 716,107,779-68 for Bad and Doubtful Debts has been made Less Dominion and Provincial Government Taxes Dividends paid or payable to Shareholders 1,002,089.49 Balance of Profit and Loss Account, 31st October, 1934 Balance of Profit and Loss carried forward $3,005,212.57 2,830,000.00 $ 125,212.57 1,809,820.79 Jl,935,033.36 CHARLES B.GORDON, President W.A.BOG, JACKSON DODDS, Joint General Managers * T The strength of a bank is determined by its history, its policy, Us management TJ and the extent of its resources.For 118 years the Bank of Montreal bas |L been in the forefront of Canadian finance.2, Harold Wootten ; highest marks m English literature, language and composition, Madeleine Carr.Grade IX : 1, Waldo Tulk; 2, Ray Tulk; geography, grades VIII and IX, Waldo Tulk; mathematies, in grade IX, Laura Planche; English literature and composition, Ray Tulk; history shields, Waldo Tulk.Grade X, 1, Gloria Frasier; 2, Rosamond Staples; history in grades X and XI, Rosamond Staples; French in grades X and XI, Louise MacLeod ^attendance, Loui.-.c Macleod, Ford Drennan, Edith Taylor; Glanville Goff and Joyce Stan dish.Grade XI: 1, P,ctty Fondé; French estate award, Betty Forde; 2, Marion MacCaskill; highest in mathematics, James Wood and Marion MacCaskill; Hopkins prize for best all-round student by vote of grade XI, Mary Noonan; perfect attendance, Barton Carr.ROCK ISLAND AND DERBY LINE W.R.Herbert, accompanied by Osborne Watson, Albert Bacon, Albert Perron and W.Denney, motored to Montreal recently.The funeral was held at the Anglican Church of Mr.Harry Smith, who passed away suddenly at his home in Stanstead on Wednesday morning, November 20.Docenswi had been employed at the.Butter-Grade VIII; 1, Madeleine Carr; field works for a number of years and was highly respected by his fellow-workmen.He is survived by four sons and four daughters.Mr.and Mrs.George E.Moir, of Graniteville, spent a day at the home of Mr.and Mrs.J.1.Converse, Rev Li nest L.Kami, of Newport, was the guest speaker at the monthly meeting of the \u201cMen\u2019s Own\u2019\u2019 of the South United Church.His subject was \"The Land of the White Dog.\u201d Preceding the lecture an oyster supper was given.This was followed by a short musical programme.Rev.H.A.Carson presided.The Hart House String Quartette gave the second concert within six months to a near capacity house at the Haskell Opera House, under the sponsorship of Stanstead College and the People\u2019s Entertainment Course.RICHMOND Mr.and Mrs.George A.Byrd celebrated their fortieth wedding anniversary on Wednesday, November 20, at their home, when about forty guests gathered to extend congratulations, A very pleasant evening was enjoyed by all and Mr.and Mrs.Byrd received many beautiful gifts.\u201cMother, a flea is biting me.\u201d \u201cJohnny, that is an error.\u201d Later- \u2018'Mother, another error i.biting nicl\u201d POPE WILL HAVE TO DO WITHOUT ANNUAL GIFT.Montreal, Nov.2lj.\u2014 Pope Piux XI will to do without an annual gift as a result of the Italian ban on imports of Canadian flour.Two barrels of flour lay in the shed in Montreal harbor today, scheduled for delivery to the Italian agent of a local milling company.They will be returned to the company.The agent has always presented the Pope with the flour, an annual present from the company.LOWER IRELAND Miss Ruby Jamieson spent a week-end with Mrs.W.J.Robinson, Miss Jean Henderson spent a few days' with Mrs.William Lowery, Millfield.Mrs.W.J.Robi nson and Misses, Wesley and Charles Robinson, attended the funeral of James Robinson, Millfield, where Mr.Robinson had made his home with his sister, Mrs.James Dempsey, for the last few years.Master Milton Crawford has been ill ami unable to attend school.Visitors at F, [1, Cox\u2019s on Sunday wore Mr.and Mrs.Ed.Little, Steve Little, Mr.and Mrs.Ben Rothney and daughter, Mildred.Lee Thurbcr was visiting his sister, Mrs.Leslie Guy and Mr.Guy, Kinnear's Mills.Lloyd Robinson spent a week-end at Montreal. SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26.1935.PAGE FIVE COLORFUL PAST TO HISTORY OF THIS PROVINCE LENNOXVILLE Since the Year of Confederation Quebec Has Nobly Played Its Pari in the Upbuilding of Canada.Again the people of old Quebec Province have spoken.The nineteenth provincial election since Confederation has passed into history.Another chapter has been written in the political records of Canada\u2019s oldest and largest province.As this issue of the Record speeds from the press to anxious readers the excitement of the 1935 election runs high.The will of the people has been expressed, but there is the interest of studying the detailed results of the campaign.And in the midst of this feverish excitement it is also interesting to delve into the political history of the Province ¦which in the early days was the cradle of civilization in North America.Since the time of Confederation in 1867 this province has been under seventeen Lieutenant - Governors ¦who have represented and acted in the name of His Majesty the Ring.These have been Hon.Sir Narcisse Belleau, 1867; Hon.Sir R.E.Caron, 1873; Hon.Sir L.Letellier de Saint Juste, 1876; Sir T.Robitaille, 1880; Hon.Sir L.F.Rodrigue Masson, 1884; Hon.Sir Auguste-Real Angers, 1887; Hon.Sir Adolphe Cha-pleau, 1892; Hon.Sir Louis A.Jette, 1898; Hon.Sir C.A.Panneton Pelletier, 1908; Hon.Sir Francois Langelier, 1911; Hon.Sir P.E.Leblanc, 1915; the Right Hon.Sir Charles Fitzpatrick, 1918; Hon.i Louis Philippe Brodeur, 1923; Hon.Narcisse Perodeau, 1924; Sir Lomer Gouin, 1929; Hon.H.G.Carroll, 1930, and the present Lieutenant-Governor, Hon.E.L.Patenaude.The previous administrations of the Province have been as follows: 1.\t\u2014Hon.P.J.Chauveau, Premier, July 15, to February 21, 1873.2.\t-\u2014Hon.G.Ouimet, Premier, February 26, 1873, to September 8, 1874.3.\t\u2014Hon.C.E.B.DeBourcher-ville, Premier, September 22, 1874, to January 27, 1876.4.\t\u2014Hon.H.G.Joly, Premier, March 8, 1876, to October 30, 1879.5.\t\u2014Hon.J.A.Chapleau, Premier, October 30, 1879, to July 5, 1882.6.\t\u2014Hon.J.A.Mousseau, Premier, July 31, 1882, to January 1, 1884.7.\t\u2014Hon.J.J.Ross.Premier, January 23, 1884, to January, 1887.8.\t\u2014Hon.L.O.Taillon, Premier, January 25th, 1887, to January 27, 1887.9.\t\u2014Hon.H.Mercier, Premier, January 27, 1887, to December 16, 1891.10.\t\u2014Hon.C.E.B.DeBoucher-ville, Premier, December 21, 1891, bo December 16, 1892.11.\t\u2014Hon.L.O.Taillon, Premier, «-« Mrs.George Doak has returned to her home on College street, after spending a few days in Danville, where she was a guest at the home of Mrs.Charles Brown.Mr.and Mrs.F.J.Marshall motored to Newport on Saturday and were guests at the home of Mrs.Marshall's sister and brother-in-law, Mr.and Mrs.W.L.Peacock.Mrs.Edward Lee and little son, Herbert, of Norton Mills, arc visiting at the home of Mrs.Lee\u2019s mother and father, Mr.and Mrs.Charles White.Mrs.Ross Carter, of Danville, has been spending a week in town visiting friends.Miss Frances Carroll returned to her home in Montreal yesterday, after spending some time a guest at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Harry Aldrich.Mr.and Mrs.George Pickard, their daughter, Madelyn, and son, How\u2019ard, of Birchton, were Sunday guests at the home of Miss Lottie McClintock.Mr.Gordon D.Cole has returned home from Montreal, where he spent the week-end.FINE BULLETIN SERVICE VERY WELL RECEIVED Hundreds of Enthusiastic Citizens Gathered in Front of Record Building to Hear Up-to-Minute Returns Last Night\u2014Amateur Programme Proved Very Successful.a i PREMIER * ¦ I ¦ ¦ YOUR I, A ST OPPORTUNITY TODAY TO SEE George O\u2019Brien in \u201cTHUNDER MOUNTAIN\u201d.Warren William, Patricia Ellis, in \u201cTHE CASE OF THE LUCKY LEGS\u201d.The Great Jungle Serial, \u201cCALL OF THE SAVAGE.\u201d TOMORROW Until SATURDAY The Amazing True Story of the Flashiest Lover and Most Fabulous Spender the Gay White Way Has Ever Known! What a Man He Was! He tossed fortunes to the ravishing beauties who fought for his favor!.\tHis women\tHis Jewels\tAnd his millions be- came the Talk of the World.m # \u2014-\u2014-% I Real Estate Transactions | #-\u2014\u2014-# Registrations at the Sherbrooke Division Registry Office during the past week w'ere as follows: Sherbrooke Real Estate Co.to Mrs.Joseph Palardy of lot 15a-48 range 7 Ascot.Price $160.Patrick Lavoie to William Ber-thelette of part of lot 596 Orford.Percy F.Doyle to Henri Pari-seau of west half of lots 292 and 295 North Ward.Price $500.Eugene Gervais to La Cie Mutuelle d\u2019immeubles des Cantons de l\u2019Est of lot 729-121 East Ward.Price $5,500.Origene Sabourin to Eugene Gervais of lot 579 Orford.Mrs.James E.McGee et al ,to Paul Rousseau of lot 1494-141 South Ward.Price $300.Estate William H.Fuller to Sherbrooke Trust Co.of east half of lots 536-80 and 81 Lennoxviîîe.Price $1,700.John H.Tomlinson to Forrest E.Berwick of lot 181 Orford.Price $7'00.Georges Daigle et al to Armand Daigle of their undivided rights in lot 1444-264 South Ward.Price $5,062.50.Mrs.Adelard Roy to Mrs.Josepn L.Trudeau of N.W.part lot 1444 54, and S.E.part lot 1444-55 and 57 South Ward.December 16, 1892, to May 1, 1896.12.\t\u2014Hon.E.J.Flynn, Premier, May 12, 1896, to May 26, 1897.13.\t\u2014Hon.F.G.Marchand.Pre-'mier, May 28, 1897, to September 25, 1900.14.\t\u2014Hon.S.N.Parent.Premier, October 3, 1900, to March 20, 1905, 15.\t\u2014Hon.Sir Lomer Gouin, Premier, March 23, 1905, to July 8, 1920.16.\t\u2014Hon.L.A.Taschereau, Premier, July 8, 1920, to present.Since i867 Quebec has had nineteen general elections, the dates being: 1867, 1871, 1875, 1878, 1881, 1886, 1890, 1892, 1897, 1900, 1904, 1908, 1912, 1916, 1919, 1923, 1927, 1931 and the election just concluded.While the people of Quebec Province have been left with the administration of their own affairs, free to a large extent from the Government at Ottawa, His Majesty the King has been represented in Ottawa by the following Governors-General : Sir John Yroung, Baron Lisgar, 1868-1872; Lord Dufferin, 1872-1878; Marquis of Lome, 1878-1883; Marquis of Lansdowne, 1883-1888; Lord Stanley of Preston, 1888-1893; Lord Aberdeen, 1893-1898; Lord Minto, 1898-1904; Earl Grey, 1904-1.910; His Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught, 1911-1916; the Duke of Devonshire.1916-1921; Lord Byng, 1921-1926; Lord Willingdon, 1927-1931; Earl of Bessborough, 1931-1935; and the present Governor-General, Lord Tweedsmuir.It was doubtful last night whether the enthusiastic crowd whiefc gathered in front of the Sherbrooke Record office to hear the latest Provincial election returns \u201cgot more kick\u201d out of the actual ballot statistics or out of the impromptu amateur programme which concluded the evening\u2019s activities.There might have been a difference of opinion about the twin features of the evening, but the crowd unanimously agreed that the Record outdid itself in furnishing all the details without delay.The citizens who assembled to take advantage of the Record\u2019s up-to-the-minute service were very sympathetic with the opposition alliance movement and accordingly had plenty of opportunity to cheer.Every announcement of a Union gain from the Libefal ranks brought prolonged applause, while the election of the Government candidates was greeted with very noticeable silence.There was no hitch in the Record\u2019s system.As fast as the results were made known over the teletype machine and over special means of communication the Record installed for the occasion, they were tx-ansmitted to the waiting audience over the loud speakers.When the elecion Johnny Bourque, the local Union candidate, Maurice Duplessis and Paul Gouin were conceded the crowd unleased wild cheei's which could be heard at both ends of Wellington sti'eet.One of the highlights of the evening was the brief address by Sherbrooke\u2019s new\u2019 memiber.As Colonel Johnny rode by triumphantly at the head of a gigantic parade in an open car he stopped his entire retinue in front of the Record building and took advantage of an invitation to thank the citizens of the city for their support.Needless to say the new' member\u2019s remarks were received with wild enthusiasm.And the crowd remained until the end ,held in front of the Record office when the news was learned that a deadlock existed.To fill in the few moments before the results of the last constituency to be heard from were ascertained, members of the audience were asked to contributed vocal selections to the amateur programme.Several younger citizens, most of whom were winsome young ladies, accepted the invitation and sang several popular numbers.Among those who volunteered their services were the Misses Gab-rielle Prefontaine.Patricia Masked.Shirley Xasterooles, Grace Cathcart and Rose Cochrane and Messrs.Jack Codere, Fernand Salois, Johnny Merwyn and Raymond Simard.In the meantime the linotypers and pressmen wTere wasting no time in preparing the Record\u2019s special election edition which made its appearance on the street at ten o\u2019clock.A short time later the street was practically deserted as the Record\u2019s patrons returned home to digest the information the extra edition contained.And another election day was concluded locally when the entire group which participated in the Record\u2019s amateur entertainment joined in rendering the National Anthem, RECORD MARGIN CHALKED UP BY COL J________ RARE ABILITY DISPLAYED BY YOUNG ARTISTS Majority of 1,646 Obtained by;crad\u20ac Seven Pupils of Mitchell Action Liberale Nationale Can-j Sc]î30| Qui£k]y Transform didate Over Emery Fortier ! Greatest Ever Piled Up in Pro- vincial Election in Sherbrooke County Any and all kinds of business\u2014a cent a word.Record Want Columns.¦ m 9 ¦ ¦EE! SMALL PARTIES COST EACH CARL LAEMMLE iGranada LAST m as DAY a s t.Alexandre Dumas\u2019 \u201cThe THREE MUSKETEERS\u201d Francis Lederor.Frances Dee in \"THE GAY DECEPTION\u201d STARTING TOMORROW FOR 1 DAYS! The Most Eagerly Awaited Film of the Season! ACCLAIMED\u2014By Press and Public as the Greatest Success of the Season! The Very Sou! of Life and Love \u2014 The Romance That Will Make the Heart of the World Beat Faster.ms Col.Johnny Bourque, formerly a staunch Liberal who renounced the Taschereau administration months ago to affiliate himself with Paul Gouin\u2019s Action Liberale Nationale group, is today the new repi'eaenta-tive for Sherbrooke County in the Quebec Legislative Assembly.Col.Bourque registered a decisive victory over Emery H.Fortier, Liberal candidate and member in the Quebec House since 1931, in yesterday\u2019s provincial elections when he piled up a majority of 1,646 votes.This is the greatest majority ever recorded in a provincial election in Sherbrooke county.A newcomer to politics, Col.Bourque carried the county in a veritable avalanche of votes, chalking up majorities in all but sixteen of the seventy polls.The City of Sherbrooke was almost unanimous in its endorsation of the policies of the Action Liberale Nationale candidate.Only six city polls gave Fortier majorities.Two of these were in East Sherbrooke.Fortier\u2019s ward, one in the South Ward and thi-ee in the West ward.The Centre Ward and the North Ward voted solidly for Johnny Bourque.The West Ward gave the new member a 381 majority, the East Ward 233, the Centre Ward 173, the North Ward 536 and the South Ward 246, the heaviest margin being supplied by voters in the North Ward.The electorate visited polling booths yesterday in larger numbers than in the last provincial election in 1931.Voting was carried on in an orderly manner and Chief Cami-rand\u2019s bluecoats were not called upon to make any arrests.Similarly, order prevailed last night as crowds lined city streets, pai'ticu-larly in front of the Record Office, to hear the election returns.It was a jubilant crowd, to be sure \u2014 but well behaved.Col.Boui'que\u2019s election was conceded when half the returns had been received.As soon as the results started to pour in at Returning Officer Eugene Olivier\u2019s headquarters on Bank street, it was evident that Bourque would win the county by a heavy majority.Col.Bourque, war veteran and popular businessman, thanked the electors of Sherbrooke County through the intermediary of the Sherbrooke Daily Record today.The Colonel was a busy man this morning.A Record representative visited him in his office.The new member for Sherbrooke was not relaxing after his victory in any strict sense of the word.He was at his desk, answering the telephone, running his business, receiving congratulations from all parts of the province.\u201cThe people of Sherbrooke County have expressed their confidence and faith in me,\u201d he said, \u201cand I am very grateful, Our victory is all the more glorious due to the fact that V\u2019e were handicapped by a shortage of funds.We had no money.We won our election without money and without liquor.That is something to be proud of.\u201d Col.Bourque said that he would go to Montreal on Thursday to confer with his leaders, Maurice Duplessis and Paul Gouin, in preparation for the inauguration of the Quebec session in January.He would not give his opinion as to what would happen at Quebec wfith the Taschereau having a majority of only six seats.He declared he had renounced the Taschereau administration because he believed municipalities were too heavily taxed.\u201cIt was while I was in the City Council that I realized how municipalities were being bled by the Quebec Government.Why, between 1931 and 1934, the City of Shei-brooke alone gave $364,000 in taxes to the Government.\u201cIt is our intention to remedy this situation, and to force the Government to reduce its taxation, especially as regards municipalities.This can be done if the Government is operated on an economical basis.\u201d Nickels into Dollars with Novel Programme to Raise Funds to Pay for Books.Social and Personal PRES) « a ¦ a a a a a ra in a m EDWARD ARNOLD DIArëjjÉJD JIM From the famous novel by Parker Mardi .A Universal Picture with JEAN ARTHUR BINNIE BARNES - ALSO \u2014 ACTION That Zips! ROMANCE That Intrigues! TUNES That Tantalize! The .Screen\u2019s Greatest Co-ed in a Sparkling Romance of College Youth ! MARY CARLISLE in \u201cGIRL Of My DREAMS\u201d «il li Sterling Halloway, Eddie Nugent, Arthur take.Other Subjects - B a.H E .fit = .a IS O 19 9 I» a si rr- v m s\t-R ;\tEverybody' will feel i ^\tthe exquisite tltrili, the enchanting spell that this picture casts over romance! üüSAMUEL.GpLDWYNi presents * n e p n i c MARCH MERLE OBERON HER» E f\\ T MARSHALL IARK AN -ADDED- YOU'LL G ASP I YOU\u2019LL SCREAM! YOU\u2019LL BE BREATHLESS WITH LAUGHTER! GIRLS Meet Handsome WARREN HULL! Direct From Broadway, Plays in \u201cPERSONAL MAID\u2019S SECRET\u201d with Margaret Lindsay, Anita Louise, Ruth Donelly.Other Subjects ¦ ctsKaeaiasBiiiBBKaEiaaBBap' MRS.F.H.BRADLEY OPENED CANADIAN LEGION W.A.SALE Under the gracious patronage of Mrs.F.H.Bradley, wife of Sherbrooke\u2019?Mayor, who opened their Christmas sale, the Women\u2019s Auxiliary of the Canadian Legion Branch 10, B.E.S.L., sponsored a most suc-cessful event for the benefit of their relief fund.The sale was held on Marquette street under the conven-ership of Mrs.A.Jackson.Miss G.Mitchell and Mrs.C.Blackburn.The president, Mrs.G.Kennett, received, the tea table was in charge of Mrs.K.Buck, with members of the Auxiliary assisting, and the fish pond, which delighted the children, was looked after by Mrs.B.Tinker.Beautifully decorated in the Legion's colors, the main booth was laden with an attractive assortment of useful and fancy articles, the sale of which augmented the satisfactory proceeds.During the evening oards were played at four tables, the prizes being won by Mrs.TV.Davis, Mrs.F.\tShorten, Mrs.E.Davis ami Mr.G.\tKennett.Again proving the old adage that \u201cmighty oaks from little acorns grow,\u201d the pupils of Grade Seven of the Mitchell School yesterday afternoon staged their first \u201camateur hour.\u201d And it went over in a big way.The hall was filled and everyone had a wonderful time.One shiny little nickel was all that was needed as the price of admission, but at the end of the afternoon the young performer\u2019s had a neat little suin, neai\u2019ly twenty dollars, to pay for books which were purchased recently for the school.Y\u2019esterday\u2019s programme was novel.There was something new about it that immediately won the applause of the large audience, which comprised, apart from parents and friends of the pupils, the principal, Miss Horton, and the children from the other grades.The variety of the programme afforded ample opportunity for the young performers to display their ability.This they did is such a way that there could be no doubt that these young boys and girls can easily step into the limelight and put their talents to good use.The programme was presented under the direction of Miss Doris M.Cillis and Miss Murdina McAu-!ay, with Mrs.Norris Robins acting as accompanist.It was from Good Will Station S.M.S.that yesterday\u2019s broadcast originated with John Southenx proving a most capable announcer and Donald Jackson acting as secretary.All the celebrities were there.\u201cMajor Hoople,\u201d John Davy, and his amateurs impersonated their roles n fine style.They left little to be desired.How could anyone expect to keep a straight face when the Pink Pyjama Nut Brothers of Magog City, Stewart Miller and Doug.Gallinger, strutted about, their voices blending in perfect harmony?Popeye the Sailor from over the Sea, Jeffrey Wilson, was also right in tune, while the imitation by William Lavallee, as Wallace Beery of the Bronx, left little to be desired.The page dance by Helen Wig-gett and Jean Richardson, as Shirley Temple and Jane Withers of Hollywod, was another headilner, as were the dances by Carol Jamieson and Shirley Walters, two Dainty Dxxmes of New York.Then there were piano selections, the ax\u2019tists being Jean Lavrabee as Mary Gray of Quebec Phyllis Armstrong as Mildred Brown of Victoria, and Joyce McLeod of Brompton City.Beatrice Thorn as Zasu Pitts of London, Roland Deacon and Alfred Simpson as the Simpson Brothers of Siam, and Barbara Davy as Orphan Annie of Hamilton could not have done any better in their respective numbers.The programme also included a qaurter of an hour of dramatics: Grace Pye as Ruby Keeler recited \u201cHow do you do\u201d; Freda Stevenson as Jean Harlow of New York gave \u201cTwo Classes\u201d; Joan Milne as Joan Crawford of Los Angeles recited \u201cSoldiers\u2019 Dream\u201d; Peggy Graham as Miriam Hopkins of Beverley Hills gave \u201cThat's N ;t the Way at Sea\"; and Muriel Mandigo as Gracie Allan of New York concluded the recitations with \u201cPeace.Offering.\u201d The S.M.S.Glee Club sang \u201cHome on the Range\u201d and \u201cThere's a Tavern in the Town,\u201d after which Gx-ade 7 pupils eompletted the programme with the following selections: Song, \u201cLonesome Cowboy Tex\u201d by Gordon McLachlan from Texas; piano solo by Hazel Gifford as Hazel Gill from Newtonville; dance, \u201cPickin Sisters\u201d by Adelaide, McCi'ea and Theresa Fountain of Jacksonville; guitar selection by Lynden Morrison, rope spinner from Nashville; piano solo by Ashton Hallam from Nashville; song by Alexander Udall as Silvin Star of Trail, B.C.; musical selection by James Strickland and his two-piece orchestra from Island City: piano selection by Eta Mittleman of Radio City; paper harmonica tune by Gordon Ross of Montreal Col.R.I.Dean, of Montreal, was a visitor in Sherbi\u2019ooke yesterday.* * * C.H.H.Shaw, of Drummond-vilk, spent the week-end with his parents, Mr.and Mx-s.W.W.Shaw, King street east.> * \u2022 Mrs.R.L.Bishop, Queen street, left this morning for Montreal, to spend a few days with her mother, JÎrs.G.H.Peake.* * » Mrs.M.N.Tatham, of Lowell, Mass., is visiting her mother, Mrs.T.R, Clark, and Mr.Clark, Rock Forest.*\t*\ta Mr.Lloyd McGenty, St.Michael street, has returned from a very successful hunting trip with the Messrs.Kendal], of Windsor Mills.*\t*\t* Mrs.W.Garfat has returned to her home on the Spring Road, after spending a month visiting her sister, Mi\u2019s.R.A.Bai'tlett, and Mr.Bartlett, Brewster street.\u2022\t*\te Miss Phyllis Hume is returning tonight from Montreal, where she was a week-end guest of Mrs.W.H.ward, and yesterday attended a session of the Pi\u2019ovincial Council of Girl Guides.\u2022\t\u2022\t\u2022 Miss M.Twose and Mrs.A.C.Stevens were hostesses at the tea hour yesterday afternoon, following the weekly meeting of St.Faith\u2019s Guild in St.Peter\u2019s Church hall.Mrs.W.H.Lynch presided at the tea table.*\t*\t* Miss Marthe Panneton left today for Montreal to attend Mrs.Gustav Monette\u2019s reception for her two debutante daughters.During her stay in the metropolis Miss Panneton will be a guest of Mr.and Mrs.Gustav Monette.\u2022\t*\t\u2022 The many friends of Mr.F.H.Leech will be pleased to hear that he was able to return to his home on Queen street yesterday, after spending sevex-al months in the Sherbrooke Hospital as the result of a serious accident on the first of August.\tAlthough\tMr,\tLeech\tis making\ta good\trecovery,\the\twill\tbe confined to his room for some weeks yet.the close of which Ernie Johnston voiced their thanks and appreciation to Mr.Williams.The president.Miss Eileen Duns-more, px-esided, and later bowling and badminton tournaments were continued with unabated interest.RENDERED A VERDICT OF ACCIDENTAL DEATH A coroner\u2019s jury under the presidency of Leonidas Bachand this morning rendered a verdict 0f \u201caccidental death\u201d in connection with the automobile tragedy which claimed the life of Leon Girouard, twenty-seven years old, of Arthabaska.Girouard was almost instantly killde on Sunday night when the automobile in which he was a passenger collided with another vehicle on the Brompton road two and a half miles from this city.The car containing Girouard was operated by J.A.Cai'bonneau, of this city, and the other vehicle involved in the collision was driven by Joachim Du-breuil, of Stoke Centre.Congratulations are today being extended to Mr, A.C.Skinner on the occasion of his birthday.* * * The many friends of Miss Jessie Dunsmore will be sorry to learn that she is confined to her home on London street by a heart attack.* * * Miss Marian Davis, of Coaticook, - a bride-to-be of the month, was delightfully entertained by Miss C.Wood at Mrs.I.Gilman\u2019s home on Magog street, During the evening the guest of honor was presented with a basket, pi\u2019ettily decorated in white and silver and filled with a \u201cshower\u201d of miscellaneous gifts, accompanied by the best wishes of her friends for her future happiness.At the close of the evening the hostess served dainty refreshments.» a a Mrs.G.A.Bradford entertained at her home on Laurier avenue in honor of Miss Eva Seveigny, R.N., of Montreal, who is her guest.Bridge was played at two tables, the prizes being won by Miss Alberta Temple and Mrs.Frank Edwards.A special prize was also presented to the guest of honor.The tea table, covered with a lovely hand embroidered cloth, at which Mrs.J.A.McLean presided, was centered with yellow \u2019mums in a silver basket and matching tapers in silver holders.Miss Noreen Dunsmore assisted in serving.\u2022 > > A delectable chicken-pie supper sex-ved by the Belvidere Women\u2019s Institute at the home of Mrs.J.W.Cilles was the culminating event in the keenly fought card contest between ladies and gentlemen, which was won by the former by a large majority.Right royally did the los-ei\u2019s pay their obligations, the ladies coming to their rescue by convening the delightful supper party.The table was attractively adorned with bronze and yellow \u2019mums and upwards of fifty guests enjoyed the lavish hospitality of the losing gentlemen who, with Mr.Chas.j Drummond acting as chairman, were most attentive hosts.After supper a short programme of musical numbers and recitations was put on by the losers.The prizes for the best contributions to the evening\u2019s enjoyment were awarded to Mr.J.R.Cilles and Mr.Astbury, while Mr.Irvin Smith, who gave a short reading, presented the ladies with a large box of chocolates and a basket of grapes as slight tokens of appreciation for the delicious supper.BIRTHS, MARRIAGES.DEATHS &- CITY BRIEFLETS «- ¦ * BOY STRUCK BY MOTOR TRUCK.Paul Lessard, nine yeats of age, residing at 18 Bowen avenue north, was removed to the Hotel Dieu Hospital last evening after being struck by a motor truck at the corner of Bowen avenue and King street east.The lad in crossing the street stepped into the path of a truck driven by Wilfrid Samson, of Cookshire.Samson tried to swing aside, but was unable to avoid the accident.X-ray examinations of the victim are being made to determine the extent of his injuries.The condition of Clark Gale, of Asbestos, injured in an automobile accident last week, was reported as slightly improved by Sherbrooke Hospital authorities this morning.Gale has a fractured skull.Ronald Sampson, thirty-one years old, of North Hatley, injured in the same mishap, is also recovering satisfactorily.Bishop\u2019s University Dramatic So- \u201cMENDELSSOHN\u201d PROGRAMME ENJOYED BY SCHUBERT CLUB Members of the Schubert Music Club were delightfully entertained last evening by Mrs.L.E.Codere | and Mr.John Codere at their resi- BIRTHS DINNING\u2014On November 25, 1935, at the Sherbrooke Hospital to Mr.and Mrs.B.G.Dinning, twin sons.DEATHS BANFILL \u2014 Died at the Alameda Hospital, Oakland, California, on November 13th, 1935, Leon M.Banfill, formerly of East Bolton and Sutton, Que., aged 49 years.McVETY \u2014 Passed away at the Brightlook Hospital, St.Johns-bury, Vt,, November 25th, 1935, at 11.15 p.m., Lawrence McVety, aged 20 years, of Kinnear\u2019s Mills, Que.Funeral notice later.OABD OF THANKS We wish to express our sincerest thanks and appreciation for the many kindnesses | and the help given us at the time of the ' loss by fire of our plant; especially the | boys at the airport, the Marbleton Fire Brigade add all who assisted us in any .way.THE S.N.BISHOP CASKET CO.Bisho-pton, Que.CARD TO THANKS.I wish to extend by sincere thanks to all kind friends and neighbors, to Dr.Robert! Elliott.Dr.W.W.Lynch, of Sherbrooke, Nurses Finlay and Boucher, the S.N.Bishop j Casket Co., Mr, S.N.Bishop.Rev.F.B.j Cooke, the bearers, the choir and rganist, Mr.ajid Mrs.Ollio Jenkerson, Sherbrooke.; Mr.and Mrs.H.D.Willard, North Hatley, ! J.R.McFadden, East Angus, all who Gent i flowers, loaned cars, all who in any way ! assisted me during the illness, death and burial of my beloved brother, the late Aubrey Covell, Signed ; ADA F.COWELL.Bishopton, Que.OARiD OF THANKS.We wish to sincerely thank our many friends and relatives who assisted us during the illness, death and burial of our dear father; also Rev.Mr.Johnston, the Lisgar and Durham choir and to those who sent flowers and loaned cars.Signed : MRS.COLIN BOGIE.Daughter.MISS BEATRICE CROSS, Daughter.MR.CURTIS CROSS, Son.Lisgar, Que.We carry in stock a complete Assortment of Bird Cages and Stands We also have beautiful Canaries, guaranteed good singers.A deposit will hold any bird for Christmas.Get your \u201cJustrite\u201d Bird Food at STEVENSON\u2019S.Goldfish, Bowls, Aquariums and Food all reasonably priced.Florists and Landscape Gardeners.STEVENSON\u2019S LIMITED 140 Wellington St.No.Phone 2400, Sherbrooke, Que.For Fast and Efficient Radio and Electric Service PHONE 3060 Service Dept.Open 8 a.m.till 10.30 p.m.KEELER & CROSS LIMITED 72 Wellington St.North.\u2014hiwi\u2014i ,«ajrr^ff\u2018j~nTHrini»r Night and Holiday CaJls: Lennoxvilla, 143-W ; Sherbrooke, 292-J.Lee M.Watson & Co., Reg\u2019d.INSURANCE Fire, Automobile, Liability, Etc.Sun Life Building, Sherbrooke.Phones î Office 2S51-2950.Tty\tthfe on^acti^je n King street west.\u201cMen- to.¦\u2022\u2022'I l\u201d IT,.,5* feff ' «**\u2022»\u2019 ™ tte composer .looted Interesting Facts About BREAD! To equal 10c worth of Good Bread in Energy Value: Food\tCost Bread at 9c per loaf .10c Milk at 10c a quart .30c Beef at 18c per lb.50c Eggs at 40c a dozen .$1.00 ALLATT\u2019S Just Phone 724w Classified Ads, one cent a word.Drop,\u201d \u201cThe Grand Cham\u2019s Diamond,\u201d on Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov.26-27, 8.15, at the College Little Theatre.Adm.35c.Bishop'* Univer»ity Dramatic Society is presenting three one-net plays: ALL HALLOWS\u2019 EVE THE GRAND CHAM\u2019S DIAMOND THE LAST DROP TUES, and WED., Nov.26-27 at COLLEGE LITTLE THEATRE Adm.35c.\t8:15 p.m.for the occasion and the programme was exceptionally pleasing, several members participating who have not j been heard recently, including Miss Mildred Largie, solo pianist, whose brilliant interpretations of Mendelssohn\u2019s works proved an outstanding feature of last evening's recital.Miss Largie played, Rondo Caprice, Op.14; Songs Without Words, Op.j 19, No.3, Hunting Song, Op.3(1,1 No.3, Consolation, Op.102, No.3, Presto, Op.67, No.4, Spinning Song ; and Scherzo, Op.16, No.2.The instrumental trio, Andante I con moto tranquille, from the trio in D.Minor, Op.49, No.1, by Miss Frcderieka Bradley, violinist, Francis W.Smith, \u2019cellist, flnd Mis* J._\t,\t,.\t_ ,\t\u201e \u201e\u201e \u201e Bnmwell, pianist, was a delightful : Fvegular^meeting, ^Duke of ^VYel- ¦number, as were the vocal duets \u201c1 ! Would That My Love Could Silently i Splendid line of ski suits, pyjamas, dressing gowns, for Christmas gifts.\u2014Florine Mullins Ladies\u2019 Shop.Don't forget the opening dinner at St.Patrick\u2019s bazaar.Wed., Nov.27th, 6.30 p.m.Adm.40c, Big night, Wed., Burrough\u2019s Falls, Art.James, mixed dances, 10 pound turkey given away.Adm.25c.Soup tea and postal sale in aid of Sir John Sherb, Chapt.I.Û.D.E., Dec.5th, at Mrs.J.M.Jenckes.25c or 3 tins of soup.iington Chapter, LO.D.E.will be held Thursday at.3 p.m., at the home of Mrs.S.C.Churchill, 16 Newton St, Don\u2019t wait until Christmas to order your Christmas portraits.Phone 453 now for appointment at Sears Studio.ST.ANDREW\u2019S Y.P.S.ENJOYED TALK ON \u201cESPERANTO\u201d Members of St.Andrew\u2019s Young People\u2019s Society were most inter-estingly entertained at last evening\u2019s meeting in the church hall by Mr.Bert Williams.Choosing \u201cEsperanto\u201d as the subject of his remarks, the speaker held the attention of the members throughout his clever and interesting address, at flowers.Flow\u201d and \"O Wert Thou in the Cauld Blast,\u201d sung by Mrs.J.Keith Edwards, soprano, and E.M.Armit-agc.baritone, aecompaniedby Miss J.Brum well.The lovely vocal trio, \u201cOn Song's Bright Pinions,\u201d arranged by N, Clifford Page, was charmingly rendered by Mrs.F.H.Bradley.Mrs.H.S.Armstrong and Mrs.J.\tG.Ransehousan, accompanied by Mrs.W.G.Cross.At the close of the programme delicious refreshments were served, Mrs.J.G.Ransehousan and Mrs.J.K,\tEdwards presiding at the beautifully appointed table, which was artistically centered with natural S ALE ! Vi inter Cloth Coats anti Suits F ur-Trimmed 25% REDUCED J.A.PELLETIER & SON SHERBROOKE Î ^ PAGE SIX SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26.1935.SHERBROOKETHE SCENE OF MANY KEEN CONTESTS Political History of Sherbrooke | Has Many Colorful Chapters Showing How Both Liberals and Conservatives Have Fought to Gain Coveted Riding to Their Folds.In the early days following Confederation the County of Sherbrooke was regarded as a Conservative stronghold.Each successive election for a time saw a Conservative candidate given the mandate both at Ottawa and at Quebec.But as time went on the situation changed and both parties have had to make strong bids for this coveted seax.Sherbrooke has always been a much-sought-after riding and has been the scene of many lively contests.In 1890 Hon.J.G.Robertson went to Quebec as spokesman for Sherbrooke County in the provincial capital.Hon.Mr.Robertson served as Sherbrooke member until the election of 1892.In 1892 he was succeeded by L.E.Panneton, later Mr.Justice Panneton.It is interesting to note that then-as now the people of Sherbrooke took their politics seriously.Mr.Panneton defeated Hon.Mr.Robertson, a Conservative, and J.Broderick, Liberal candidate, by onlv twelve votes.In 1897 Mr.Panneton was again successful in carrying the county.| this time defeating L.C.Belanger.In 1900, Dr.P.Pelletier, later Agent General for the Province of Quebec in London.England, was the county's deputy, and he held this honored position until 1908, At the Line if his first election Dr.Pelletier had as his opponent L.E.Panneton, and in this fight secured a majority of ninety-one, while in the two successive elections, in 1904 and 1908, Dr.Pelletier was returned by acclamation.In 1911 the county again elected its deputy by acclamation, this time the honor going to C.E.Therrien, Liberal, later sheriff of the district, who made his debut in provincial politics at a bye-election on August 17, 1910.In the following year Mr.Therrien was again the choice of the county, securing a majority of 398 over the Conservative candidate, Mr.Hebert.In the next election, which occurred in 1916, Mr.Therrien was re-elected.Mr.Therrien was succeeded in 1919 by another Liberal candidate, J.H.Lemay, who STANDING OF PARTIES SINCE CONFEDERATION The figures below show the strength of the different parties making up the various Quebec Governments since 1867, the year of Confederation.Year\tCons.\tA.L.N.Lib.\tC.-Ind.\tLab.\tNat.\tTotal 1867 \t\t.\t51\t14\t\u2022 m\t.\t\t65 1871 \t\t.\t45\t20\t\t\t\t65 1875 \t\t\t\t43\t19\t3\t, ,\t\t65 1878 \t\t.\t35\t28\t2\t, ,\t\t65 1881 \t\t.\t49\t15\ti\t\t\t65 1886 \t\t.\t27\t32\t3\t\t 547 Harry S.Quart (C) RICHELIEU (L-532) *J.C.A.Turcotte (L) Acclam.RICHMOND (1,-956) A.Gaudreau (C) 660 ?S.E.De.marais (L) RIMOUSKI (L-211 ) L.J.Moreault (L) 375 A.Dube (ALN) RI VIE RE-DU-L 0 U P (L-1,679) L.Casgrain (L) 1,248 Alfred Dion (ALN) ROBKRVAL (L-299) A.Castonguay (ALN) 800 Gonzague Potvîn (L) J.E.N.Boivin (Ind-L) ROUVILLK (C-14) L.Barre (C) 216 Edmond Robert (L) ST.HYACINTHE (1,-931) Hon.T.D.Bouchard (L) 440 Octave Auciair (ALN) ST.JOHNS (L-1,549) Dr.A.Bouthillier (L) 1,093 P.Trahan (Ind-L) ST.MAURICE (1,-916) Dr.M.Trudel (ALN) 1,478 *J.A.Frigon (L) ST.SAUVEUR (C-25) P.A.Bertrand (C) 1,082 Arthur Drolet (L) Samuel Grégoire (Lab-L) SHEFFORD (L-332) H.Choquette (ALN) 542 *R.R.Bachand (L) SHERBROOKE (L-39-4) J.Bourque (ALN) 1,646 ?E.H.Fortier (L) BOULANGES (L-338) *J.V.A.Farand (L) 375 E.Leduc (C) STANSTEAD (L-852) R.Beaudry (ALN) 498 ?A.J.Bissonnet (L) TEMISCAMINGUE (L-695) N.E.Lariviere (ALN) 1,400 J.A.Raymond (Ind) Oscar Desjardins (L) J.E.Piche (Ind-L) Donat Goulet (Ind-L) TEMISCOUATA (L-156) A.Beaulieu (L) 140 Dr.L.F.Dubuc (ALN) TERREBONNE (L-2,299) Hon.L.A.David (L) 638 Herman Barrette (C) THREE RIVERS (C-41) M.L.Duplessis (C) 1,203 Leon Lajoie (L) TWO MOUNTAINS (C-97) J, Rochon (L) 13 ?Paul Sauve (C) VAUDREUIL (L-262) *E.Snbourin (L) unavailable Dr.L.Bellemarre (C) J.Allan Bray (Ind-L) VERCHERES (L-543) ' F.Messier (L) 941 Roger Ouimet (ALN) WESTMOUNT (C-4,642) C.A.Smart (C) 1,727 Alan Mitchell (L) WOLFE (L-62G) *T.H.Lapointe (L) 105 Henri Vachon (ALN) YAMASKA (0-154) * A.Elie (C) 401 Raoul Dumaine (L) Always Buy the Best \"SALAD# BLIND WRITER PLEASED WITH ISLAND BEAUTY Hslen Ke!!er \u201cSees\u201d Jamaica\u2019s Beauty Spols, v/!ikh She Said Is \u201cSo Varied in Us Beauty.\u201d Kingston, Jamaica, Nov.26.\u2014 After visiting Jamaica's beauty-spots, Miss Helen Keller, blind American writer and lecturer, had praised the island\u2019s scenary, which she said was \u201cso varied in its beauty.\u201d Accompanied by her teacher and j old friend, Anne Sullivan Macy, and her secretary, Miss Polly Thompson,1 the distinguished author spent one | week in Jamaica and visited St.I Ann\u2019s Bay, Roaring River Falls,! Echo Rios and Fern Gully.The beauty of the contrasting! scenery she was able to see through the eyes of Mrs.Macy, the friend who years ago transformed her from a blind, deaf-mute and help-, less «child into a ten-year-old girl I so highly intelligent she was hailed; a's a prodigy.At Fern Gully, Miss Keller said she touched the wonderful fern growth and at Roaring River had been thrilled when she dipped her hand \u2019in the cool water.Before leaving she said she would do something for Jamaica\u2019s blind, particularly the older ones who cannot learn Braille.She promised to send books and gramophone records so they might be able to hear the great works more fortunate persons read.Asked what book she would send first, Miss Keller replied: \u201cThe Bible.\u201d \u201cI.will send a novel or perhaps \u2018Pilgrim\u2019s Progress\u2019 afterwards,\u201d she concluded.BROMPTONVILLE Mr.and Mrs.C.Ellis, of North Hatley, and C.Price, of Sherbrooke, called 0n Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Gray on Sunday.B.Birk, of New York, is spending a few days with friends here.Misses Irene and Bernice Bilton, of Windsor Mills, called on their grandmother, Mr.and Mrs.J.W.Bilton, recently.Mr.and Mrs.G.R.Bilton and family, of Windsor Mills, were recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Gray.The many friends of Mrs.Albert Gray will be pleased to hear that she is on the gain and will soon be home.Cf?fQwp, Edwardsbui\u2019g EROWN BRAND CORN SYRUP FOOD THAT ^ ^ NOURISHED ' tiAS MORE CANADIAN CHILDREN THAN ANY OTHER CORN SYRUP s, A product of The CANADA STARCH CO., Limited Listen In t» RI P S VMPHON'IF.S\" Broadcast every Monday, 8 to 8.50 p.tn., E.S.T.\u2022\\ \\\\C ' ys t,\\cav \u2022 G)0\tA recent news item in a Montreal paper read \u201cDesmond Saunders (23 months old) of 1102 Seventh Avenue, Verdun, talked by telephone on a recent Sunday morning, to his grandparents, Major and Mrs.J.Saunders, 17 Parkcroft Road, Lee, London, Eng.Desmond\u2019s father, Mr.L.R.Saunders, who also spoke to his father and mother in London, says \u2018It was really wonderful.I never believed it could he so clear.\u201d Night rates on trans-Atlantic calls are now effective from 5 p.m.to 5 a.m.They mean a saving of about 30 per cent.M.GRAHAM.Munaget SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26.1935.PACE SEVEN RECORD\u2019S CLASSIFIED ADS.g&Oerfji'Qoke Bail?&etort) Prices For Classified Advertising : CASH RATE\u201410c for 10 words for one insertion: 1 cent for each, additional word.CHARGE RATE\u2014Twenty-five cents for twelve words for one insertion.Two cents each additional word.ERRORS in advertisements will be rectified immediately on attention being called thereto.BIRTHS.MARRIAGES.DEATHS.Death and Funeral Notice, Card of Thanks, In Memoriam.without puetry.75 cents an insertion.Poetry included m m Memoriam.two cents a word extra.Engagements.Weddings, Birth Notices.5U cents.List of flowers included in obituary reports, two cents a word.Twenty-five cents extra when charge account is opened.Reader Notice in country locals, 15 cents per line, f've words to a line ; Lennoxville and City Brief lets, 20 cents per line.Agents Wanted Real Estate For Sale A GENTS WANTED TO SELL FOR THE \u201cOld Reliable Fontbill Nurseries.\u201d Good sales to be made at the present time in hardy Canadian grown trees, shrubs and plants ; exclusive territory in town or country.Commissions paid weekly; handsome free outfit.Stone & Wellington, Toronto 2.pLACKSMITH AND WOODWORKING Situation Wanted, Male /'¦< P.ADUATE AGRICULTURE COLLEGE, ^ office experience, desires position.References as to character, ability, etc., will disclose merit.Record, Box 90.Female Help Wanted TIT AID WANTED, GENERAL HOUSE-work.Apply 10a Queen Street.WEAVERS ' WANTED.PERMANENT position ia available for feirSile experienced weavers by responsible mill in the Province of Quebec.Apply Box 83.Record.Radio Repairing Male Help Wanted shop for sale cheap.Apply Record, Box 87.Poultry For Sale E.T.POLITICAL HISTORY DIVIDED BETWEEN HO DISTINCT PERIODS 1921\u2019* 1923 911 YEARLING HENS JUST FINISHED j moulting.Apply 22 Huntingville Road,! Lennoxville.Historical Review of Provincial Politics in Eastern Townships Shows District Overwhelmingly Conservative Prior to 1897 and Liberal Forces Holding Sway Since That Date\u2014Results of Elections in Eleven Constituencies Since Confederation.Boarders Wanted ARGE WARM ROOM.STREET FLOOR.Special rate for two charing room.31 L Mooro Street.Phone 1241-W.Î DEATHS REPORTED Î AUBREY LEE COVELL, DUDS WELL.1»ADIOS REPAIRED, SHORT WAVE N aerials installed.New Sparton radios sold.Phone\" 435.-Roy J.Wiggett.YUAMT\u2019E0 MAN TO PLAY PART OF \u2019 ' Santa Claus.Must speak French and English.Apply at once to Zellers Ltd.! Situation Wanted, Female | VfIDDLE AGED WOMAN DESIRES j work as housekeeper or invalid\u2019s help, j Mrs.Elizabeth White, Capelton.j jî> E LI ABLE WO M AN j tion as housekeeper, J care of invalid.! 91, Record.DESIRES POSI-maid or taking References.Apply Box To Let Redtclitn In USED CARS i rpWO UNFURNISHED ROOMS SUITABLE j for light housekeeping; also room and i board, central.Record, Box 88.j A rODERN FLATS, $10, $15, $1S,\t$25.! Apply 72 Murray Street.! rpENEMENT TO LET, THREE MINUTES\u2019 j walk from Dominion Textile.Apply 16 i Kingston.34 London Street.I >OOM AND BOARD FOR MATERNITY cases.For information apply 3619 St.Denis Street.Montreal.Room and Board Within the last week Ford Motors ! ~\t^ ~ Company have reduced prices on all UOOM AND GOoD BOARD IN private Ford cars.There is only one thinsr family, for us to do\u2014reduce prices op all used cars on our lot.Come in today! We have some used cars, and trucks that are exceptional bargains and must be moved at once.The Sherbrooke Motors LIMITED 22 Minto St.Phones: 731\u2014732.For Sale ^ soft wood, lengths 12 inches to 4 feet, prices 84.50 to $5.50 per full cord delivered.Phone 3286.T ARGE TWO WHEEL TRAILER, NEW tires.Apply 22 Huntingville Road, Lennoxville.USED CARS -pitEAKFAST SET, ONE DRESSER, good condition.Cheap for cash.Apply 13 Prospect Street, Lennoxville./ \\NE BOY\u2019S BLUE CHINCHILLA COAT, We offer you a list of used cars at ex- size 12 to 15 years, good condition; one rpptional.y low prices.Come in and make girl\u2019s powder blue coat with seal collar, size inquiries.Packard Cabriolet, 1932 model.Chrysler Coupe Specical, 1935 model.Pontiac Sedan, 1931 model.De Soto Sedan, 1930 model.Whippet Sedan, 1930 model.Buick Coupe, 4 passenger, 1928 model.Reo Sedan, 1928 model.DUFFERIN MOTOR SALES, REG\u2019D.\u2022TO Dufferin Ave.\u2014 Phone 2320.5 to S years.Phone 2669-M.Apply 55 Montreal Street.VyELL EQUIPPED RESTAURANT ON \" \u2019 Wellington Street North.Doing nice business.Jos V.Ames, Whiting Block.Phone ' T >A1R HEAVY DOUBLE SLEIGHS AND | \u2022'*\u201c rack; also two colts, six months and j 1 Lit years old.Priced to sell, James Largy, ! Ascot Corner.! l^LOOIi DRYF.R, BARGAIN FOR CASH.Apply 10a Queen Street.Dudswell, Nov.26.\u2014A large and representative gathering of relatives and friends attended the funeral here on Tuesday, October 29 of Aubrey Lee Coveil, one of Duds-well\u2019s honored and respected residents, who passed away on Sunday, October 27 following a brief illness, although the deceased had not en-jeyed specially good health for the past few years.The service was conducted by Rev.Mr.Cooke, of Marbieton, who spoke comforting words from the tert \u201cO death, where is thy sting.\u201d Interment took place in the Anglican Cemetery at Dudsivell Centre.The bearers were four persona! friends of the deceasd, J.R.McFadden, Elwin Barter, William Andrews and Howard Andrews.The choir, composed of H.Harrison, T.E.Evans, Mrs.Elliott, Mrs.Carl Bishop, Mrs.Angus Smith and Miss Freda Harrison, with Mrs.B.W.Jenkerson as organist, sang three hymns, all favorites of the deceased, \u201cLead Kindly Light,\u201d \u201cSometime We\u2019ll Understand\u2019\u2019 and \u201cPeace, Perfect Peaec.\u201d Relatives from a distance who attended the funeral were, Charles Stevens, Dan Stevens, Melvin Coveil and Wilbur Coveil, of Colebrook, N.H.; Loren W.Coveil, Lancaster, N.H.; Francis Cowell, Pittsburg, N.H.; Mr.and Mrs.H.D.Willard, North Hatley; Mr.and Mrs.N.Lacey, Mr.and Mrs.Ollie Jenker-son, Dr.and Mrs, Macdonald, Sherbrooke; Curtis Jenkerson, of Stoke; W.T.Oughtred and Ernest Mun-kittrick, of Marbieton.A spray of carnations was sent by Arnold Munkittrick, nephew\u2019, of Shawdnigan Falls, and a telegram of | sympathy from Mrs.Laura Carlton, | cousin, of Atlantic, Mass.! Mr.Covell was a good worker, a prosperous farmer and his passing will be keenly felt by a large circle of friends.The sympathy of the entire community goes out to his bereaved sister, Miss Ada Covell, who is left alone in the home, He was the youngest son of the late J.M.Covell and his wife, Florence Willard Covell.Two brothers, j Elwin and Walter, and a sister, Mrs.| Fred Munkittrick, pre-deçeased him.! The only surviving member of the family is Miss Ada Covell, who ten-I derly cared for him during his last illness and was ever faithful in the home to assist him in any way.BUSINESS DIRECTORY \"J (YO \u2019T SPARTON TABLE RADIO, LIKE - new, first offer of $33 accepted.Advocates\t\u2022 ! LUEJLbU__________________ YI/ELLS & LYNCH.ADVOCATES, GRAN- ! ^ \u2019 ada Theatre Building.Wanted To Purchase / \\NE DOZEN PLYMOUTH ROCK COCK-T>UGG, MIGNAULT, HOLTHAM AND\terf Is to fatten; two dozen White Leg- Grundy, advocates, McManamy & Walsh horn pullets, laying.Nahum Todd, Cook-Build! g, 70 Wellington St.N.Phone 1589.j shire.JOHN P.WOLFE.B.A., B.C.L., ^ Q.C.R.Building.Wellington St.North.npRAPPERi -*¦ for raw 4 LBERT RIVa ^ cate, 70 Wei ! l A.Gillinan ARD.B.A., L.L.L.ADŸO- ; ShGrlmui;.^ ©Uington St.N.Phone 218.- furtî.Special prices for mink.92 Wellington Street South.~~r j^AT HENS, YEARLINGS.APPLY FRANK .\t,\tr.,, rC n?ir ,\tr-!\tBradJcy.R.3, Sherbrooke.Rosen blooms Bldg.6fc> Wellington St ; -rruthir-:-\u2014 -:-:- North.Phone 623.^ S H T O N R.TOBIN.AD'' FUNERAL OF MRS.ROBERT WRIGHT, LOWER IRELAND Lower Ireland, Nov.26.\u2014The fu-i neral of Mrs.Robert Wright was i held at the United Church on Sunday, November 17th, Rev.Mr, Stewart, of Inverness, officiating.Mrs.Wright had\u2019spent the greater part of her life here, with the exception of the last few years when she lived in Thetford Mines.Mrs, Robert Henderson presided at the organ, and the hymns \u201cAbide with Me,\u201d \u201cSafe in the Arms of Jesus,\u201d and \u201cNearer My God to Thee,\u2019\u2019 were rendered.The bearers were Clifford and Earl Marshall, nephew, Robert Mag-wood, Harry Sterns.John Canning ami Raymond Davidson, of Thetford.Interment too place at Eoutille Cemetery.The political history of the Eastern Townships, insofar as the provincial field is concerned, can be divided roughly into two distinct periods.In the first, from Confederation until 1897, the Conservative party held control of the district, generally carrying all the ridings in this area except Megantic and in the later part of the period Drummond County.The second period dates from the Liberal wave that swept the Province and the Eastern Townships in 1897 and has since held sway.In 1912 the last Conservative stronghold, She fiord, was captured by the Liberals and for twenty-three years not a Tory member has been sent to the Legislature fro-.i the Eastern Townships except for the period of 1923 to 1931 when Sherbrooke returned temporarily to the ranks of the Opposition.In the following historical summary of the results in the Eastern Townships seats an * after the date indicates the result of a bye-election held in that year.1923 1927 1931 BROME COUNTY.In the first election following the: 1919 signing of the British North America Act, Brome county returned Christopher Dunkin as a Conservative.Mr.Dunkin sat for a single term, being succeeded by William Warren Lynch in 1871, who held the seat until his appointment to the bench in 1889.Mr.Justice Lynch was succeeded by another Conservative, Rufus Nelson England, the latter being defeated in 1897 by Henry Thoams Duffy, the first Liberal to be elected.Since that day Brome has registered an unbroken series of Liberal victories, some by acclamation and some by small majorities, as in the 1931 campaign when Hon.R.F.Stockwell was returned by a majority of only twenty-five.The history of the vative, elected by majority of 154.1878 \u2014G.Irvine, Liberal, elected by majority of 631.1881 \u2014G.Irvine, Liberal, elected by majority of 444.1884*\u2014John White, Liberal, elected by majority of 23.1886 \u2014Andrew Stuart Johnson, Conservative, elected by majority of 180.1888*\u2014William Rhodes, Liberal, elected by majority of 98.1890 \u2014A.S.Johnson, Conservative, elected by majority of five.1892 -\u2014James King, Conservative, elected by majority of 474.1897 \u2014George R.Smith, Liberal, elected by majority of 267.1900 \u2014G.R.Smith, Liberal, elected by acclamation.1904 \u2014G.R.Smith, Liberal, elected by majority of 637.1908 \u2014David Henry Pennington, Conservative, elected by majority of 637.1912 \u2014Joseph Demers, Liberal, elected by majority of 402.1916 \u2014Lauréat Lapierre, Liberal, elected by majority of 1,617.L, Lapierre, Liberal .elected by acclamation.L.Lapierre, Liberal, elected by majority of 2,019.Hon.L.Lapierre, Liberal, elected by maj.of 3,189.Hon.L.Lapierre, Liberal, elected by maj.of 1,685.MISSISQUOI COUNTY Missisquoi made its first break from the Conservative ranks in 1878 when Ernest Racicot, Liberal, was returned by a majority of eighteen.The Conservatives regained the riding in 1881 and retained it until the election of John McCorkill in 1897, since which time Liberal candidates have been uniformly successful.The elected members and their majorities follow: county follows;\t| lg67 __jos;ah Sandford Brigham, 1867 \u2014Christopher Dunkin, Conser- ;\tConservative, elected by vative, elected by acclama- ;\tmajority of 729 tion._\tj 1871 \u2014J.S.Brigham, Conservative, 1871 \u2014Wm.Warren Lynch, Conser-\u2019\telected by majority of 399.by acclama-! 1875 1878 1879*- 1S81 1886 1889*- Miscellaneous ADVOCATES rp wing & McFadden.-Li Boom 520.at 132 St.James Street, VVTLL BERNARD SMITH WHO LEFT Montreal.Tel.LAneaster 87SS.J.Amita?e Ewing, K.C., George S.McFadden, K.C.John V.Casgtoin.Auctioneer lumber in my garage please call for enme before November 28th or lumber will be Fold for storage.Lucien Charest, 247 Short Street.Pt M DEMERS, AUCTIONEER, DIS.ST ^ Francis.Bedford.Sherbrooke.Fh.i005.Chartered Accountants \u2019\u2022JJEFUGE NOTRE DAME\u201d (MATKR-nity).Cases of maternity, board dur-iin?confinement, and room for babies.231 Alexander Boulevard.Telephone 3203-F.jp D N E Y.A R M I T A G E Trustees in Bankruptcy.C O Sherbrooke Trust Building.Sherbrooke.Certified Accountants T H.BRYCE, C.r.A.C.C.A.AUDITOR, ^ * 1R{| Quebec St.Sherbrooke Tel.1308 Financial Live Stock For Sc!o VHCU HEREFORD BULL.11 MONTHS old, cheap for cash, or will exchange for colt.Apply Box 125.Aver\u2019s Cliff.J7ÎVE WEEKS OLD TIGS FOR SALE.Milan Derby.Knowlton.Que.BROOKBURY The Correspondent was wrongly informed in reporting that Phyllis and Billie Hatley were ill with the measles, us both are in good health and have not been indisposed recently.TRENHOLMVILLE w: Coneult G.S.Sharpe, Adjuster.Confidential Agent.Room 104.Batik Commerce Bldg.4 Wellington St.No.Phone 3236.\t.r, ____________For AUCTION SALE Saturday.Nov.30th, 84 Dufferin Ave., al Î) o\u2019clock sharp.R.ETH1ER.PHONE C76.84 KING ST Fib Mrs.Duncan MacC\u2019allum, balance of TT,» .\t1\tLato E.W.Far well\u2019s estate, consisting of Physicians and burgeons Beds, springs, mattresses, bedding, antique bed room set, dressers, tables, chaire, docks, oil paintings, pictures, rugs, drap* RS.,1 A.DARCHB AND LIGNE! j cries, verandah furniture, porch shades, Darche, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat.J hammock, fireplace fixtures, Victrola, typewriter, books, sewing machine, Vacuum R.R.R.SPEER, EYE.EAR, NOSE, j cleaner, china.Quebec heater, cook stove, Throat.P.8 Wellington No.Fh.3246.j refrigerator, 2 plate gas stove, electric stove, | kitchen utensils, kitchen eongoleum, trunks, : suit cases, bags, extension ladder, toys, and I) 1) Private Hospital, 92 King Street West, D Chiropractor u LESSARD, D.C., IA GORDON 8T many othei\u2018 hi«h\t««Id»\t1\t' ^ Jm 2376.N.C.M.service.Free consultation.1 >n Rood order.N S Veterinary Surgeon j JlIKRimOOKE VETERINARY HOSPITAL od order.No reserve.Terms R.M.DEMERS, Auctioneer.rhon other Eastern Townships ridings all Conservative until 1897, when Janies Hunt had the honor of being the first Liberal elected.Since then the Liberal party has predominated the elections, Allen W.Giard, who sat from 1900 to 1912, being the sole Conservative in this' period.The results of each election since 1867 follow: 1867 \u2014James Ross, Conservative, elected by majority of 194.1871 \u2014William Sawyer, Conservative elected by majority of 276.1875 \u2014W.Sawyer, Conservative, elected by acclamation.1878 \u2014W.Sawyer, Conservative, elected by majority of 453.1881 \u2014W.Sawyer, Conservative, elected by majority of 507.1886 \u2014John McIntosh, Conservative, elected by majority of 720.1890 \u2014J.McIntosh, Conservative, elected by majority of 770.1892 \u2014J.McIntosh, Conservative, elected by acclamation.1894*\u2014Charles McClary, Conservative elected by majority of 588.1897 -\u2014James Hunt, Liberal, elected by majority of 303.1900 \u2014Allen Wright Giard, Conservative, elected by majority of 337.1904 \u2014A.W.Giard, Conservative, elected by majority of 146.1908 \u2014A.W.Giard, Conservative, elected by majority of 681.1912 \u2014Nathaniel George Scott, Liberal, elected by majority of 174.1916 \u2014N.G.Scott, Liberal, elected by majority of 537.1919 \u2014Camille-Emile Desjarlais, Liberal, elected by acclamation.1923 \u2014Jacob Nicol, Liberal, elected by majority of 980.1927 \u2014Jacob Nicol, Liberal, elected by majority of 1,200.1929*\u2014A.R.McMaster, Liberal, elected by majority of 239.1931 \u2014¦William J.Duffy, Liberal, elected by majority of 469.DRUMMOND-ARTHABASKA Drummond county, formerly Drummond-Arthabaska, has been the most consistently Liberal of all Eastern Townships divisions, returning Conservatives on only three occasions.It has also witnessed the somewhat unusual feature of a man, William John Watts, elected as a Conservative in 1874, gradually turning to an independent Conservative and then a Liberal, being re-elected by large majorities irrespective what his party colors.The victors in the original and divided counties follow: .1867 \u2014Edward John Hemming, Conservative, elected by majority of 181- 1871 \u2014Wilfred Laurier, Liberal, elected by majority of 75i0.1874*\u2014William John Watts, Conservative, elected by majority of 663.1875 \u2014W.J.Watts, Independent-Conservative, elected by majority of 549.1878 \u2014W.J.Watts, Liberal, elected by majority of 345.1881 \u2014W.J.Watts, Liberal, elected by majority of 99.1886*\u2014Joseph Ena Girouard, Liberal, elected by majority of 407.1886 \u2014J.E.Girouard, Liberal, elected by majority of 134.\u201cDourest, a little bird told mo you wore going to buy me a diamond brooch for my birthday.\u201d \u201cIt must have boon a little cuckoo.\u201d FRONTENAC COUNTY The election of 1912 saw Frontenac County first appear on the electoral map of the province, the new riding being cut out of the east end of Compton and the southwest sections of Beauco.Returning a Liberal at the first election, Frontenac has remained true to the Liberal party ever since: 1012 \u2014George Stanislas Grégoire, Liberal, elected by 327 majority.1916 \u2014G.S.Grégoire, Liberal, elected by 830 majority.1919 \u2014G.S.Grégoire, Liberal, elected by acclamation.1923 \u2014C.Baillargeon, Liberal, elected by majority of 30 over G.S.Grégoire, Liberal, and of 558 over V.Lincourt, Conservative.1927 \u2014C.Baillargeon, Liberal, elected by majority of 1,250.1931 -\u2014H.L.Gagnon, Liberal, elected by majority of 938.MEGANTIC COUNTY Contrary to other riding:' in the district, Megantic has been traditi-ionally Liberal, limiting its Conservative support to the elections of 1876.1886, 1890, 1892 and 1908, when Conservatives were returned by narrow margins.The detailed election results follow: 1867 \u2014George Irvine, Liberal, elected by majority of 28i> 1871 \u2014G.Irvine, Liberal, elected by acclamation.1875 \u2014-G.Irvine, Liberal, elected by neelunmtion, 4o76 \u2014Andrew Kennedy, Conser* RICHMOND COUNTY The original riding of Richmond-Wolfe was represented front Confederation to its division in 1890 by Jacques Picard, a Conservative, while Joseph Bedard, succeeding Mr.Picard, who transferred his interests to Wolfe, retained the seat until his defeat by Peter S.G.Mackenzie in 1900.From that date on Conservatives have experienced hard sledding, the Liberal representation being continuous.The results of the elections for Richmond and Rich-mond-Wolfe follow: RICHMOND-WOLFE 1867 \u2014Jacques Picard, Conservative, elected by majority of thirteen.1871 \u2014J.\tPicard,\tConservative, elected by acclamation, 1875 -\u2014J.\tPicard,\tConservative, elected by acclamation.1878 \u2014J.\tPicard,\tConservative, elected by majority of 324.1881 \u2014J.\tPicard,\tConservative, elected by majority of 566.1886 \u2014J.\tPicard,\tConservative, elected by majority of 182.RICHMOND 1890 \u2014Joseph Bedard, Conservative, elected by majority of 218.1892 \u2014J.\tBedard,\tConservative, elected by majority of 179.1897 \u2014J.\tBedard,\tConservative, elected by majority of 196.1900 \u2014Peter S.G.MacKenzie, Liberal, elected by majority of 60.1904 \u2014P.S.G.MacKenzie, Liberal, elected by acclamation.1908 \u2014P.S.G.MacKenzie, Liberal, elected by acclamation.1910*\u2014P.S.G.MacKenzie, Liberal, elected by acclamation, 1912 \u2014P.S.(!.Mackenzie, Liberal, elected by maj.of 1,465.1914*\u2014Walter George Mitchell, Liberal, elected by acclamai ion.1016 \u2014W.G.Mitchell, Liberal, elected hv acclamation.1910 \u2014W.G.Mitchell, Liberal, elected by acclamation.1890 1892 1897 1900 1901 1904 1908 1910 1912 1916 1919 1923 1927 1931 DRUMMOND \u2014W.J.Watts, Liberal, elected by majority of 493.\u2014John Peter Cook, Conservative elected by majority of six.\u2014W.J.Watts, Liberal, elected by majority of 291.\u2014W.J.Watts, Liberal, elected by majority of 272.*\u2014Joseph\tLaferte, Liberal, elected by majority of 831.\u2014J.Laferte, Liberal, elected by majority on 362.\u2014J.Laferte, Liberal, elected by majority of 60.\u2014Louis-Jules Allard, Liberal, elected by majority of 274.\u2014Louis Jules Allard, Liberal, elected by majority of 212.\u2014Hector Laferte, Liberal, elected by majority of 643.-\u2014Hector Laferte, Liberal, elected by acclamation.\u2014H.Laferte, Liberal, elected by majority of 858.\u2014H.Laferte, Liberal, elected by majority of 1,343.\u2014H Laferte, Liberal, elected by majority of 636.1878 \u2014J.G.Robertson, Conservative, elected by acclamation.1879*\u2014J.G.Robertson, Conservative, elected by majority of 636.1881 \u2014J.G.Robertson, Conservative, elected by acclamation.1884*\u2014J.G.Robertson, Conservative elected by acclamation.1886 \u2014J.G.Robertson, Conservative elected by acclamation.1890 \u2014J.G.Robertson, Conservative elected by majority of 270.¦L.Edmond Panneton, Conservative, elected by majority of 12.1897 \u2014L.E.Panneton, Conservative, elected by majority of 499.Pantaleon Pelletier, Liberal, elected by majority of 91.-P.Pelletier, Liberal, elected by acclamation.lOO'S \u2014P.Pelletier, Liberal, elected by acclamation.¦Calixte Emile Therrlen, Liberal, elected by acclamation.\u2022C.E.Therrien, Liberal, elected by majority of 410.¦C.E.Therrien, Liberal, elected by acclamation.Joseph Henri Lemay, Libera], elected by acclamation.1922*\u2014Ludger Forest, Liberal, elected by acclamation.-Moise O\u2019Brcady, Conservative, elected by majority of 298.\u2014Armand Charles Crepeau, Conservative, elected by majority of 203.1927 \u2014A.C.Crepeau, Conservative elected by majority of 496.¦Emery H.Fortier, Liberal, elected by majority of 394, 1892 1900 1994 1911* 1912 1916 1919 1923 1924* 1931 Ha- Tomorrow\u2019s Radio Programme SHERBROOKE COUNTY Joseph Gibb Robertson regarded Sherbrooke county as his pocket borough from 186T until 1892, when he was defeated by another Conservative, L.Edmond Panneton, later judge of.the Superior Court, by a majority of twelve.Panneton, himself, went down to defeat, before Pantaleon Pelletier in 1900, the latter being the first Liberal elected.Twenty-two years of tin-broken Liberalism followed, Moise O\u2019Bready finally recapturing the seat for the Conservatives in 1923, death intervening before he could take his seat.Moise O\u2019Bready was succeeded by Armand Crepeau, who sat until his defeat in 1931 by Emery Fortier, Liberal.Statistics of the provinical political history of Sherbrooke follows: ISC7 \u2014Joseph Gibb Robertson, Conservative, elected by majority of 106.18G9*\u2014j, G.Robertson, Conservative elected by acclamation.1871 \u2014J.G.Robertson, Conservative elected by acclamation.1875 \u2014J.G.Robertson.Conservative.elected by acclamation.SHEFFORD COUNTY Until the election of William Stephen Bullock as a Liberal in 1912, Shefford proved open territory for either party, the electors evidently feeling that' two terms were sufficient for any party and transferring their allegiance from one party to the other as general elections rolled around.Mr.Bullock represented the county from 1912 to 1931, when he was elevated to the Legislative Council, being succeeded in that year by R.R.Bachand.The details of these seesaw elections follow: 1867 \u2014Michel Adrien Bessette, Conservative, elected by majority of 60.¦Maurice Laframboise, Liberal, elected by majority of 233.-M.Laframboise, Liberal, elected by majority of 216.-Jos.Lesiege Lafontaine, Liberal, elected by majority of 126.-Isidore Fregeau, Conservative, elected by majority of 124.-Thomas Brassard, Liberal, elected by majority of 74.-Tancrede B.deGrokbois, Liberal, elected by majority of 265.1890 \u2014T.B.deGrosbois, Liberal, elected by majority of 1,-199.1892 \u2014Adolphe F.Savaria, Conservative, elected by majoi-ity of 45.1897 \u2014T.B.deGrosbois, Liberal, elected by majority of 367.1900 \u2014T.B.deGrosbois, Liberal, elected by acclamation.1904*\u2014Auguste Mathieu, Liberal, elected by majority of 420.1904 \u2014Ludger-Pierre\tBernard, Conservative, elected by majority of 397.1908 \u2014CL.P.Bernard, Conservative, elected by majority of 211.-William Stephen Bullock, Liberal, elected by majority of 261.-W.S.Bullock, Liberal, elected by acclamation.-W.S.Bullock, Liberal, elected by majority of 1,-127.W.S.Bullock, Liberal, elected by majority of 1,400.-W.S.Bullock, Liberal, elected by acclamation.R.R.Bachand, Liberal, elected by majority of 332.1871 1875 1878 1881 1886 1888* 1912 1916 1919 1923 1927 1931 Following are the best radio programmes tomorrow, Wednesday, with the key to the stations in the final paragraph: 6.00\tp.m.\u2014WEAF: Flying Time; WABC: Buck Rogers; WJZ: Animal News Club; KDKA: News.6.15\tp.m.\u2014WEAF: George Duffy's Orchestra; WABC: Bobby Benson and Sunny Jim; WJZ: Ken Spar-non\u2019s Ensemble; CFCF: Today\u2019s Varieties; CKAC: Musical Novelties; KDKA: Operetta Snap Shots.6.30\tp.m.\u2014WEAF: Mary Small, songs; WJZ: The Charioteers; WABC: Vanished Voices; CKAC: Recreative Hour; CRCM: Dinner Hour; KDKA: Those Three Girls.6.45\tp.m.\u2014 WEAF: Billy and Betty; WJZ: Lowell Thomas.7.00\tp.m.;\u2014 WEAF: Amos and Andy; WABC: Myrt and Marge; WJZ: Easy Aces; CRCM: Rex Battle\u2019s Orchestra; CFCF: Uncle Troy.7.15\tp.m.\u2014WEAF: Uncle Ezra\u2019s Radio Station; WABC: Hawaiian Band; WJZ: Capt.Tim Healy; CRCM: Variety Programme; CFCF: Charlie Chan.7.30\tp.m.\u2014 WEAF: Talk; WJZ: Lum and Abner; WABC: Kate Smith's Hour.7.45\tp.m.\u2014WABC: Boake Carter; WJZ: Dangerous Paradise; WEAF: City Voices; CRCM: Songs.8.00\tp.m.\u2014 WEAF: One Man's Family; WABC: Cavalcade of America; WJZ: Rendez-vous.8.30\tp.m.\u2014WEAF: Wayne King\u2019s Orchestra; WJZ: House of Glass; WABC: Burns and Allen; CRCM: Acadian Serenade.9.00\tp.m.\u2014WJZ: Feature; WEAF: Town Hall Tonight; WABC: Lily Pons, songs; CRCM: Premiere at Nine; CFCF: Organ Music.9.30\tp.m.\u2014WJZ: Warden Lawes; WABC: \u201cRefreshment Time\u201d; CFCF: Alex Lajoie\u2019s Orchestra.10.00\tp.m.\u2014WABC: Feature; CRCM: Masters of Music; CFCF; Studio Programme.^ 10.30 p.m.\u2014WJZ: Hollywood Gossip; WEAF: Russ Morgan\u2019s Orchestra; WABC: March of Time; CRCM: Charles Dornberger\u2019s Orchestra.11.00\tp.m.\u2014WABC: Abe Lyman\u2019s Orchestra: WJZ; Songs; WEAF: Sammy Kaye's Orchestra; CFCF; Sports and News.WEAE\u2014New York\t*60 CFCF\u2014Montre»! .SOI CRCM\u2014Montreal .,.\t.\t#10 WGY\u2014Schenectady .\t.\t.\tÏS0 WABC\u2014New York .\t.\tS60 CKAC\u2014Montreal .\t.030 KDKA\u2014Pittebureh .8SO WJZ\u2014New York .Î00 Conservative, elected by majority of 246.1904 \u2014Prosper-Alfred Bissonnet, Liberal, elected by majority of 180.1908 \u2014P, A.Bissonnet, Liberal, elected by majority of 358.1912 \u2014P.A.Bissonnet, Liberal, ¦elected by majority of 229.1913*\u2014Alfred Joseph Bissonnet, Liberal, elected by acclamation.1916 \u2014A.J.Bissonnet, Liberal, elected by majority of 1,- 18:2, 1919 \u2014A.J.Bissonnet, Liberal, elected by acclamation.1923 \u2014A.J.Bissonnet, Liberal, elected by majority of 924.1927 \u2014A.J, Bissonnet, Liberal, elected by majority of 726.1931 \u2014A.J, Bissonnet, Liberal, elected by majority of 852,, WOLFE COUNTY First established as a separate riding from Richmond in 1890, Wolfe county returned Jacques Picard a® Conservative in that year.Picard had previously represented the combined ridings of Richmond-Wolfe since Confederation.The Conservatives retained the county until 1904, when Napoleon Pierre Tanguay scored the initial Literal victory.From that day Wolfe has remained true to the Liberal cause, always' by substantial majorities.The results of the provincial elections in Wolfe County since 1890 follow; STANSTEAD COUNTY For the past thirty years Stan-stead County has been represented by none other than members of the Bissonnet family.Prosper Alfred Bissonnet captured the constituency for the Liberal party in 1904 and [jeld the seat for nine years, resigning in 1913 to be succeeded by his son, Alfred J., who has retained the riding ever since.Previous to the reign of the Bissonnets, Stanstead had been essentially Conservative, although on three occasions members of the Lovell family won the division for the Liberals for single terms.Henry Lovell, the first Liberal to be elected, sat from 1878 to 1881, while Moodie Brock Lovell was successful on two occasions, serving the terms of 1890 to 1892 and 1900 to 1902.The detailed results of the provincial elec-1 tiens in Stanstead County follow:! 1867 \u2014Thomas Locke,- Conserva- j live elected by majority of1 42.1871 ¦\u2014T.\tLocke, Conservative, elected by acclamation.1875 \u2014John Thornton, Conserva- j live, elected by majority of 152.1878 \u2014Henry Lovell, Liberal, elec-\u2019 ted by 263.1881 \u2014John Thornton, Conservative, elected by majority of 252.1886 \u2014Qzro Baldwin, Conservative, elected by majority of 118.1890 \u2014Moodie Brook Lovell, Liberal, elected by majority of 144.1892 \u2014Michael Felix Hackett, Conservative, elected by majority of 600.1895*\u2014M.F.Hackett, Conservative, elected by majority of 726.1897 \u2014M.F.Hackett, Conservative, elected by majority of 78.1900 \u2014Moodie Brock Lovell.Liberal, elected by majority of 288.1902 \u2014George Henry Saint-Pierre, 1890 1892 1897 1900 1904 1908 1912 1916 1919 1921 1923 1927 1931 1933 \u2014Jacques Picard, Conservative, elected by majority of 12.\u2014Jerome Adolphe Chicoync.Conservative, elected by majority of 160.\u2014J.A, Chicoync, Conservative, elected by majority of 701.\u2014J.A.Chicoync, Conservative, elected by majority of 16.\u2014Napoleon Pierre Tanguay, Liberal, elected by majority of 543.\u2014N.P, Tanguay, Liberal, elected by majority of 234.\u2014N.P.Tanguay, Liberal, ¦elected by majority of 171.\u2014N.P.Tanguay, Liberal, elected by majority of 505.\u2014.Joseph Eugene Rheault, Liberal, elected by acclamation.\u2014J.P.Cyrinus Lemieux, Liberal, elected by acclamation.\u2014J.P.C.Lemieux.Liberal, elected by majority of 949.\u2014J, P.C.Lemieux, Liberal, elected by acclamation.\u2014J.P.C.Lemieux, Liberal, elected by majority of 472.\u2014Thomas Lapointe, Liberal, elected by majority of 626.Son (entering office)\u2014\u201cWell, dad, I just ran up to say hello.\u201d \u201cToo late, my boy.Your mother ran up to say hello and got all my change.\u201d Mead Put Mentholntum In the nostrils to relievo irritation and promote clear breathing MENTHOLATUM CJ.e* COMFORT Daily ( PACE EIGHT SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26.1933.AMERICANS WON INTERNATIONAL MILITARY JUMP \u2014 Wampum, Chestnut of the United States Army Team, Won Feature Event on Royal Winter: Fair Horse Show\u2019s Programme Last Night.A NEW THREE- ! CHALLENGE FOR STRING MARK j AMERICA\u2019S CUP SET BY JOBELi IS WITHDRAWN -\tI\t- Local Veteran Posted Three- Prospective British Challenger String Aggregate of 876 in Withdraws with Protest in Y.M.C.A.Inter-Church Against \u201cBig Money Rings that! WAR VETERANS HELD MONSTER FAMILY PARTY Bowling League Fixture Last Night \u2014 Had Eighteen Strikes and Eleven Spares.Control the America\u2019s Cupi Race\u201d\u2014No Series Likely Before 1937.Toronto, Nov.26.\u2014The international military jump, over a handy course that required skilled manoeuvring of mounts on short turns and criss-cross jumps, was won by Wampum, chestnut of the United States Army team, ridden by Captain C.C.Jadwin in the feature event on the Royal Winter Fair Horse Show\u2019s programme last night.Wampum showed only three faults, while four faults were registered by the Chilean Army team entry, Chincol, with Captain August© Silva up.Third place was awarded to Babe Warthem.ridden by Lieutenant H.S.Isaacson, a member of the United States Army team.Second, third and fourth place horses all were tied with four faults, but time was taken and winners were determined on that basis.Chincol was nine seconds faster than Babe Warthem.Cacique, ridden by Captain Enrique Franco of the Chilean Army team, who was fourth, was five seconds slower than Babe Warthem.Fifth was Red Hugh, with Captain D, J.Corry, of the Irish Free State Army team, up.Red Hugh showed six faults.Lisette, ridden by Captain Andre Jousseaume, of the French Army team, was sixth with eight faults.Twenty-seven horses entered the semi-final round after clean performance the first time around, and only six were left with then' record of faults intact when the final jump-off came.In the semi-final round two Irish horses were forced from further competition.Owen Roe, ridden by Captain J.J.Lewis and Limerick Lace, with Commandant J.G.O'Dwyer up.Owen Roe showed three faults and Limerick four.Four Chilean horses also were eliminated in the semi-final.Salitre, ridden by Captain Eduardo Yarez, showed four faults ; Xysme, with Captain Yanez up.withdrew after knocking down the first jump, as did Caupolican, ridden by the same officer.Toqui, ridden by Captain Augusto Silva, also went off via the knockdown route.French horses fared no bet*er and two were forced to the sidelines in semi-final competition Volant III, ridden by Captain Pierre Clave, went out on faults, and Amadon, also ridden by Clave, showed four errors.One of Sherbrooke\u2019s veteran London, Nov.26.\u2014 The Royal trundlers, Art.Jobe!, is today cred-; London Yacht Club has withdrawn j ited with what is considered to be its challenge for the America\u2019s Cup, 1 the highest three-string five-pin J making it unlikely that the ancient bowling aggregate ever achieved on yachting series will be resumed until a local alley.Playing in the Y.M.C.1937 at the earliest.Announcement A Inter-Church League last night, | of the withdrawal of the challenge, : Jobel chalked up the startling total i which was made on August 19 on : of 876, surpassing by seventy-six j behalf of Commodore Charles Fai-pins the record recently posted in i rey, was made yesterday.: the senior five-pin circuit by Jackj Shortly after the challenge was : Hillman.\t| filed the Royal London Yacht Club Jobel made no less than twenty-1 made known that it was Fairey\u2019s ; nine marks as his St.Andrew's ' desire to conduct the series with : quintette practically clinched the Î Class \u201cK\" yachts\u2014slightly smaller ! championship of the first half of : than the \u201cJ's\u201d used last year by T.the schedule.In his first siring the O.M.Sopwith, the British ehal-Presbyterian ace failed to break ! longer, and Harold S.Vanderbilt, of j once, recording eight strikes and: New York.Replying that the four spares for a single string total, America\u2019s Cup should be \u201craced for : of 335 which was nine pins higher I by yachts of the largest and fastest than the former record of 326 held | class racing at the time and eligible by a team-mate.Guy Smith.\tj under the deed of act,\u2019\u2019 the New | The new record-holder broke twice ; York Yacht Club responded that in the second string.He made four w;th at least six \"J ' vessels in the ! strikes and four spares, but posted waters of Great Britain and the a fifteen in the eighth'box and .an United States the \u201cpresent political 1 eight in the tenth frame.But there and economic situation\u201d makes it was still enough energy left in Jo- : unpropitious at this time to start a : bel\u2019s arm for an appropriate climax, new class of yachts.After starting off with a fifteen i Fairey withdrew his challenge Jobel settled down and made a after learning, he said in the course ; strike and two spares before he was: of a newspaper interview, that the faced with a split and could only New York Yacht Club did not wish ! obtain a thirteen.He finished off : to race for the historic trophy with with four strikes and a spare to ; Class \u201cK\u201d yachts.In the interview ! beat Smith's three-string mark of : Fairey protested against the \u201cbig 1 \u2022 756 by no less than 120 pins.j money rings that control the Amer- j | An analysis of Jobel\u2019s playing ! tea\u2019s Cup race.\u201d i last night revealed eighteen strikes, i \u201cThe race has now been reduced; eleven spares, two fifteens, a thir-|to a contest between expensive.Characterized by Addresses Striking High Note of Service, Patriotism and Loyalty, Tenth \u201cBirthday Party\u201d Held by Canadian Legion in Ottawa Last Evening Attended by 1,200 Ottawa, Nov.26.\u2014Canada\u2019s national memorial on Vimy Ridge \\\\ ill be unveiled on Sunday, July 26, 1936, Hon.Ian MacKenzie, Minister of National Defence, said here last night.The announcement was made in the course of the minister\u2019s address at the tenth \u201cbirthday party\u201d of the Canadian Legion, celebrated by a monster banquet at which 1.-200 ex-service men, their wives and friends were present.The function was characterized by addresses all striking a high note of service, patriotism and loyalty.The huge gathering sang the old-time marching songs of the Cana- j dian Corps and listened with great enthusiasm to the reading of numerous telegrams, cables and letters of congratulation from every corner of the Empire.In the chair was Brig.-General Alex.Ross, C.M.G., of Yorkton, Sask.Dominion president of the ! Canadian Legion.Gener.A Ross, re-1 calling that yesterday the body of Earl Jellicbe, grand president of the British Empire Service League, had been interred in St.Paul\u2019s Cathedral, opened the banquet by calling for a period of silence, out of respect for the memory of the deceased admiral.The addresses were numerous and of a high order.Hon.C.G.Power, Minister of Pensions, surveyed the whole field of ex-service men\u2019s problems.The chief of these, '-aid the Minister, centred on the veteran j who, through misfortune, unemployability, inability \"to grasp the hard realities of civilian life, are not in the happy position of being able to re-establish themselves.\u201d \u201cThere are 40,000 of our comrades on the roll of the unemployed.and 12,000 more, in receipt of small pensions for war disabilities, are on departmental relief.Many\u2014 far too many,\u201d continued the Minister, \u201cwill never again be.given an opportunity of handling a pay envelope or a salary cheque.They are no longer employable in an age of keen economic competition.Their plight has attained the proportion of a national problem.\u201d Without \u2018\u2018wishing to shift the burden o£ responsibility,\u201d Major Power called upon all Legion members to give him the \u201c\u2019closest co-operation.\u201d \u201cIn other words,\u201d he said, \u201cit is our job, yours and mine.We must find a solution.I pledge myself to do my part.\u2019\u2019 GOVERNMENT COMPETITION IS PROTESTED Experiment Carried on by U.S.Chamber of Commerce Showed Opposition to Government Spending without Relation to Revenue.ment be within clearly defined limits?\u201d Y'es, 1,813.No, 58, Officials said seventy-three member organizations declined to vote \u2014forty-five objecting to the form of the referendum and the remainder for other reasons.Two women had a heated argument at an \u201cat home.\u201d Later one of them confided in a friend.\u201cYou know, I don\u2019t like Pansy,\u201d she said.\u201cShe\u2019s not fair.\u201d \"No,\u201d said the other, \u201cbut she's dyeing to be.\u201d Washington, Nov.26.\u2014 Overwhelming opposition to Government competition with private enterprise and to Government spending without relation to revenue was recorded in a poll of the Chamber of Com-1 merce of the United States.The Chamber made public results of the poll on these and other questions which it submitted recently to the membership.The questions and the vote on each : 1.\t\u2014\u201cShould there be extension of federal jurisdiction into matters of state and local concern?\u201d Y\u2019es, 45.No, 1,796.2.\t\u2014\u201cShould the Federal Government at the present time exercise federal spending power without relation to revenues?\u201d Yes, 22.No, 1,845.3.\t\u2014\u201cShould there be Government competition with private enterprise \u2014for regulatory or other purposes?\u201d Yes, 56.No, 1,825.4.\t\u2014\u201cShould all grants of authority by Congress to the executive de-i partaient of the Federal Govern- WHALER REPORTED SINKING San Pedro, Calif., Nov.26.\u2014The whaler, California, with forty men aboard, reported today it was sinking near Santa Barbara Island, forty miles off the southern California coast.Coast guard cutters Itasca and Hermes were sent to the whaler- s reported position.\u201cVessel leaking badly.All pumps going full force but water gaining, one message from the whaler said, * The Rich Uncle\u2014\u201cWell, Bertie, how are you getting on with your French?\u201d \u201cSplendidly, uncle.We have got interesting bits to translate now, like \u2018My extremely kind uncle never allows my birthday to pass without giving his loving nephew a present.\u201d % r «RIAL BY FIRE TESTS THE jili METTLE of Gillette steel.This involves the use of a special electric furnace\u2014 and is but one step in the complete chemical analysis given every batch of Gillette steel.Only the finest steel, hardened by exclusive process, is used in the manufacture of Gillette \u201cBlue Blades.\"Try a package.Made in Canada Highest Quality Positively Guaranteed ILLETTE BLUE BLADES u NOW S FOR 2St -ID FOR 504 teen and an eight.The Presbyterians, with Jobel hit- -¦achts which only syndicates can I normally afford,\u201d the newspaper ting the kingpin with such consist- : quotes him.ency, did not miss the services of : \u201cAmerican entries all are syndi-their fifth mar.as they blanked the : c&ted whereas the British yachts Trinity aggregation and were cred-, al'e privately entered.If the Ameri-ited with a new team record of \u2018 attitude is to remain unmodified.2.970.This total was.14U p'ns bet ter than the former St mark of 2.830.In the other game on last night\u2019s Andrew\u2019s 1 owner wil pete.\u201d it is difficult to see how any private be able to afford to com- There was speculation here as to programme Plymouth Church cap- whether Sopwith, unsuccessful chal- .enger last year with tne Endeavour, would challenge again now that ; Fairey has withdrawn.Sopwith had i ordered a new class \u201cJ\u201d yacht from [Charles E.Nicholson, designer of the last three challengers.George A.Cormack, secretary of the New York Yacht Club, in announcing Fairey\u2019s withdrawal, said: \u201cWe feel that it would be far QUEBEC HOCKEY PROTEST WILL BE DISMISSED President of Canadian Amateur Hockey Association Claims No Appeal Against Decision to Send Port Arthur to Olympic Games Would Be Considered.Toronto.Nov, 26.\u2014 No appea: against the decision to send the Port Arthur Bearcats to the Olympic Games would be considered.E, A.Gilroy, president of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association, stated last night in addressing an informal dinner given by the Central Ontario Branch of the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada, \u201cIf we were to consider the Montreal Royals,\u201d President Gilroy said, \u201cwe must also consider the North Battieford team.They were semi-finalists in the Allan.Cup competition, the same as the Montreal Royals.\u201cTne Port Arthur team occupied the same position in the west as the Halifax Wolverines held in the east, Therefore the Bearcats are the logical selection since the Halifax dub found it impossible to keep the Wolverines intact and make the trip.This was decided at the meeting in Halifax and it was the opinion of the members of the committee who considered the question.\u201cThis is definite and the only thing left to be considered is the players who will be picked to strengthen the Bearcats.This has been left to a committee to decide and an announcement concerning it may be made in the near future.\u201d tured tWo\tstrings from\tSt.\tPaul\u2019s and moved ahead of Trinitv\t\t\tand St.Peter\u2019s into third posi\t\t.ion\tin the standing.The detailed results follow\t\t\t H.Ter rey .\tTRINITY \t 146\t220\t174\u2014540 C.Terre y .\t.145\t151\t16S\u2014454 C.Mutch 1er\t\t\t 96\t100\t125\u2014324 A.King .\t\t\t 155\t165\t152\u2014472 F.Lothrop\t.,,,, 155\t207\t162\u201452 4 Total \t\t\t\t \u20ac37\tM3\t7S4-2324 G.Srojth .\tST ANDREW'S \t 215\t181\t169\u2014563 H.Patton .\t\t\t 174\t226\t165\u2014568 \u20ac.Patton .\t\t265\t225\u2014663 A.Jobel .\t\t263\t278 \u2014 576 Low Man .\t\t 100\t100\t100\u2014300 Tela I .\t.\t,\t\t\t 991\t1036\t943-2970 St.A ndrew\t6 won three strings.\t\t H.Maddias .\tST.PAUL\u2019S .\t\t 97\t152\t191\u2014430 K.Wyatt .\t\t 109\t155\t172\u2014436 N.Humphries .741\t\t211\t186\u2014533 H.En they .\t\t 127\t141\t159\u2014427 H.Bench .,\t\t 23?\t135\t144\u2014576 Total .,\t.\t\t\t 711\t854\t842-2407 W Cohoon\tPLYMOUTH \t\t\t 149\t187\t222\u201455# C Holt .\t\t !c«\t156\t233\u2014577 P.Geiir.a* ,\t\t 160\t156\t162\u2014488 W.Wo!ter .\t\t\t 133\t144\t132\u2014519 Low Man .\t\t\t 100\t100\t100\u2014zoo Total .\t.130\t753\t£99-2442 Prymouln won two %trmge.Tne Inter-Church League standing to dabs\t\t\t fe:\tP.W.\tL\tPinfs':! St.Andrew\u2019s\t.24\t21\t3\t21.919 St.Patrick\u2019s\t\t21 22\t9\t16,753 Plymouth ,,\t.\t.\t24\t11\t13\t19.608 St.Peter\u2019# .\t\t21 10\t\t17,212 Trinity ., «\t.\t24\t10\t14\t*9.407 St.Pa-Ü s .\t.24\t6\t13\t17,783 fastest eligible yachts racing tween yachts both smaller and un-lan yachts now the Atlantic would not be consistent with the traditions of cast matches for the America\u2019s cup.\u201d ANGLICAN LADIES GAVE LEADERS HARD BATTLE.Trinity Church's pace-setting en- COCHRANE HAS VISIONS OF THIRD STRAIGHT PENNANT Miami Beach, Fla., Nov, 26.\u2014As Mickey Cochrane sees the situation today his Detroit Tigers\u2019 chances of winning their third straight Am-! erican League pennant are good.The champions\u2019 catcher-manager, newly confirmed in his job and given added responsibilities as vice-president in charge of sale, trade, purchase and release of players, gave his opinion here.\u201cIt will be tough going, however,\u201d Cochrane remarked at the winter estate of the Tigers\u2019 new president, V alter O.Briggs, Detroit industrialist who bought the late Frank J.Navin\u2019s half interest to become sole owner.\u201cBoston will be much stronger.The New York Yankees will be l good.And so will Cleveland.The St.Louis Browns, if they start next season like they finished the last, I will be strong competition.\u201cThe Chicago White Sox?Give them another good pitcher or two ! Total PLYMOUTH H.Jobn*ton\t.R.W.Smith.E.Keilett .\u2014 __ G, E.Hodge.Mr».Mrs.Mr».Mr».Mrs.R.Beor* 345 71 66 -147 -169 ! -121 ! ROYALS GAIN LEADERSHIP OF JUNIOR GROUP Montreal.Nov.26.\u2014The Royal?moved out in front of the Junior Amateur Hockey Association race last night when they registered a three to two victory over Lafor \u2022 taine.In the opening game of last: night':, doubleheader McGill finish-! ed on the short end of a three to two count against Verdun.STANFORD SELECTED FOR ROSE BOWL CLASSIC Los Angeles, Nov, 26.\u2014For the third successive season Stanford was named yesterday to represent; the west in the annual Rose Bov,! football game at Pasadena on New Year\u2019s Day.The eastern foe may be named in a few day».The vote of the ten Pacific Coast; Conference members wa> not unani- try in the Y.W.C.A.Inter-Church| and they will be hard to beat.They Bowling League was hard pressed: were a good bail club last year.\u201d to maintained its position alone at ^\t_____ ______________ the top of the standing last night.} The Trinity ladies were opposed by, m;*» M.\tMttfor-J .77\tcs\u2014nr.i St.Peter's Church and emerged vie- Mrs.J.\tRowell .51\t62\u201411.1 torious by the slimmest of margins Mr*.H.\tc.Barclay .sn\t;c ml \u2014one singie pin.The league lead-\u2019 ers captured the first string with twenty-six pins to spare and lost the second contest by twenty-five pins.The victory was Trinity\u2019s seventh win in eight games, while the defeat was St.Peter\u2019s fifth setback in eight starts.The Baptist ladle* kept pace five! points behind Trinity, They scored I an easy victory over the threatening Plymouth quintette, finishing; thirty-one pins n front of their op-: ponents.\tj Mr*.In the third scheduled fixture the; Mr* St.Andrew\u2019s Aux;!.ary downed the! Mrs, St.Andrew\u2019s G odd by a score of: Mt».E.Mor** 696 to 678.The Synagogue de-;\t\u2014.~ \u2014 faulted its sixth game, giving the ; T,e*1\t.r'02 Lady Amateurs five points.\t:\teT Two presbyterian ladies\tshared iMrt_\twr.vm individual honors.Mr*.E.Morgan, j|\u201e.g Dean .of the Auxiliary, had a high single-; Mr*, a Morriaon string tote, of 106 and Mrs.\tD.\tm.\tRo-.r,» .Gray, of the Guild, chalked\tup\ta\tMr«.\t».\tGray .high aggregate of ]94 Tb# Baptist won fr ST.ANDREW\u2019S AUXILIARY L.G.Burr;*.7!)\t76 FT.Arr.*» .85\t62 R Cot4- .E.KenaRy .46 H7 106 -Mi -3 11 DREW\u2019S GUILD .69 .49 .67 .At 67\u2014136 49\u2014 69\u20141 r; 72\u2014116 H10\u2014121 , âetMied rmv\u2019it* folio* TRINITY Total .Auxiliary won - 678 five pointa.Mie» \u20ac tfiUfrwert M »« E M r».D Terrey Rhoâm .Mr*, h.H'r*#.r4\t.1 r Mm fî Peabofiy 47 67 74 72 79- 77- 44- y 2\" -m -124 -1 95 MSI TrSr.il; ~ 1 54 B&ptR Th* Y.W.C.A.Inter-Church Leagrue tt&nd-r.îî to date ie î Total ST.PETER'S mous.It was understood Stanford\tMr*.\tS.\theimorT, .\t\t\t , .\t.£4\trZ\u2014167 received seven votes and California\tMr*\tM.\tMcA'NuJly \t\t.46\t61\u2014107 three.\tMr*.\tD\tHal \t\t\t\t., 5/i\t61\u201413 i Stanford has made plain that it\tMr*.\tW\t.Fuipr \t\t.M\t79 \u2014 Î 33 prefers to have undefeated teams as:\tMr*.\tD.\tBinh'/p \t\t,.\u20ac3\t95-163 heir opponents, With Princeton and\t\u2022r, * \u201e i\t\t\t\u2014\t Minnesota among the \u201cuntoueb-\t1 OtP I\t\t\t\t?ji A - v r 1 sbles,\u201d the selection would automat-, ically dwindle down to New Y
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