Sherbrooke daily record, 26 octobre 1936, lundi 26 octobre 1936
[" s>hprhrnok?lailu Hprnrù Established 1897.SHERBROOKE, CANADA, MONDAY OCTOBER 26, 1936.Fortieth Year.CHARGE RUSSIANS WITH PLANNING [LEON DEGRELLE TO SOVIETIZE IBERIAN PENINSULA DEFIANT AFTER NIGHT IN JAIL Portuguese Note to Non-Intervention Committee Directly Charges Russia with Fomenting Spanish Civil War and Seeking to Plant Seeds of Revolt in Portugal\u2014Claim One Hundred Russian Military and Propaganda Experts Accompanied Newly-Appointed Soviet Ambassador to Madrid.Crowded Moment During Roosevelt\u2019s Vote Swing Through New England MEMBER OF PROMINENT E.T.FAMILY PASSES ON London, October 2o.\u2014An amazing scheme to Sovietize the whole Iberian peninsula, including Spain and Portugal, was charged in the Portuguese reply to the Non-Intervention Committee, it was disclosed today.The reply directly accused Russia of inciting the Spanish civil war and also charged the Soviet with attempting to plant the seeds of revolt in Portugal.The Soviets were accused of sending fifty-five army officers to Barcelona in September and also secret agents.Among these latter, Lisbon charged, was Bela Run, the former Hungaiian revolutionary, whom that country deported to Russia in 1928.The Portuguese charges, listed in a document of twenty-one pages, gave the names of reputed Soviet agitators, diplomats and soldiers, and specified cargoes of Russian arms and munitions alleged to be streaming into Spain.The note denied Russian and Spanish charges Portugal aided the insurgents.It charged the Soviet was not interested in successfully applying the \u201cHands-Off-Spain\u201d agreement but sought to foment a war.The Portuguese Foreign Minister, Armindo Monteiro, drafted Lisbon's note, which described the arrival in Barcelona last March of \u201cAgitator Bela Kun, accompanied by Comrades Neumann, Janson, Riedel, Primac, Berzine and Losovski.\u201d In detail, the note contended the Spanish civil war was the result of Soviet meddling.It referred to the Comintern (Communist International organization) in Moscow last February when, the Portuguese charged, plans were drawn up to Sovietize the Iberian peninsula.A lengthy list of aims ascribed to the Comintern included one described as \u201cprovocation of war against Portugal as an experiment in revolutionary warfare.\u201d The reply charged the Soviets also purposed to undertake a revolution in Portugal in order to provide a base for attacking the Farcist armies of General Francisco Franco, the leader of the Spanish insurgents, from the rear.It dh'araged the arrival of Russian agitators at Bercelona was followed by large quantities of arms and other munitions in Russian ships, adding \u201calmost all items in the plan were laid out by the Comintern a few months ago and have been carried out in the part of Spain which the Government of Madrid rules.\u201d Portugal declared the Madrid Government was dominated by Marcel Rosenberg, the new Soviet Ambassador to Spain, \u201cassisted by three men recognized for their revolutionary experience: SokoTine, Bondarenko and Winter.\u201d Winter, \u2022he Portuguese charged, a an expert vu armaments.The Lisbon Government charged 140 Soviet agents accompanied the Soviet ambassador to Spain and averred Vladimir Antonoffovseenko, Russian consul in Barcelona, not only dominated the Catalan Government but also named Russian Officers who commanded troops in the Spanish civil war.A scheduled meeting of the subcommittee of the Non-Intervention Committee was postponed until tomorrow afternoon, the Foreign Office announced.The Earl of Plymouth, the chairman, was called away to Wales on private business.Leader of Belgian Rexists Announces He Will Carry Out Threatened \u201cMarch on Brussels\u201d with 150,000 Followers \u2014 Machine-Guns Posted at Strategic Points by Government Police.Descendant of a family prominently linked with the life of Marble-ton since early pioneer days, William Thomas Oughtred passed away at his home this morning after a long illness.Brussels, Belgium, Oct.26.\u2014Still defiant after a night in jail, Leon Degrelle, leader of the Belgian Rexists and so-calied \u201cHitler of Belgium,\u201d announced today he would carry out his threatened \u201cmarch on Brussels\u201d with 150,000 followers.Degrelle was released from the central police station early today following a series of clashes between Fascist advocates and police yesterday, the twenty-second anniversary of the Great War battle of the Yser.\u201cMy motive,\u201d Degrelle said, \u201cwas to prove to the nation that exsoldiers are behind the Rexists.\u201d Degrelle\u2019s threat to lead his followers into Brussels to overthi\u2019ow the Government caused the Cabinet ¦to order four thousand gendarmes with rifles over their shoulders and wearing extra cartridge belts to patrol the heart of the city and all roads leading into Brussels.Machine-guns were posted at strategic points, ready for action.À1 except half a dozen of the several hundred arrested yesterday were released.Degrelle himself will be tried on a minor charge of breaking police rules.Scores of persons were hurt and at least one man shot during the Sunday disorders, which followed a reviewr by King Leopold of veterans of the Yser battle.The Government, banning political demonstrations, frustrated Degrelle\u2019s plan to bring Rexists into Brussels from all over the country.But those already in the city swarmed through the streets to shout their desire for a non-parliamentarian regime.The war veterans\u2019 celebration itself was without serious incident.But the trouble started when waves of young Rightists, crying \u201cVive Degrelle\u201d and singing patriotic anthems, poured down the Boulevard Ansbach into Brouckere Square and into the Boulevards Adolphe Max.IS How close to his audiences President Roosevelt got on his swing through New England is shown in this picture of the throng that press-ed against his automobile in Boston.His car served as the speaker\u2019s platform in Boston Common, where 175,000 persons overflowed into the side streets.W.T.OUGHTRED PASSED AWAY AT MARBLETON London, Oct.26.\u2014Prime Minister Mackenzie King today lunched with the Duke of Connaught, Governor-General of Canada 1911-16.Descendant of Pioneer Marhieton Family Had Spent Practically His Entire Lifetime in Eastern Townships and Was Associated with Many Important Projects.WOULD BALANCE GERMAN-CANADA COMMERCE FLOW Germany to Make Available All Foreign Exchange Accruing from Sales of German Goods in Canada for Purchase of Canadian Csoods.BRITISH CLAIM CHARGES OF PORTUGAL SUSTAINED London, Oct.26.\u2014Investigations INSURGENTS PREPARING FOR FINAL DRIVE AGAINST SPANISH CAPITAL Fascist Commanders Predict that Rebel Troops Will Occupy Madrid within Ten Days\u2014To Launch Great Push within Next Forty-Eight Hours\u2014Occupation of City May Be Slightly Delayed Due to Desire of Insurgent General to Spare Capital from Air Bombardment.Insurgent Field Headquarters, ft Illescas, Spain, Oct.26.\u2014General Francisco Franco will launch his big push against Madrid within forty-eight hours and will be in the streets of the capital within a maximum of ten days, insurgent leaders predicted today.The major offensive is expected to last from three to ten days and insurgent leaders are convinced that by British Government represent- the fall of the capital already is 'rnrvfinn_if ï C of» mi_nfTl f»i fl 11 V\t^\tÎ11 atives confirm\u2014it is semi-offieially intimated' today\u2014that Russia has broken the international agreement not to ship arms or ammunition to Spain.They further show that Portugal lias observed the agreement.This supply of arms by Portugal but to supply of arms by Portugal but to charges that Portugal has been used as a base of supply.It does not, however, apply to the period which preceded acceptance of the agreement.Anthony Eden, British Foreign ¦ Secretary, is to make another effort to secure the release of prisoners in Madrid, Britain fears a massacre should the Spanish capital fall to the insurgents.Eden\u2019s efforts so far have failed.A few days ago he communicated both with Madrid and insurgent headquarters at Burgos, appealing for exchange of hostages.Madrid in reply declared it hold no hostages but merely prisoners who had revolted against properly constituted authority.Burgos did not reply at all.CLAIM TWENTY THOUSAND RUSSIANS ARE AWAITED Lisbon, Portugal, Oct.26,\u2014Refugees from the Spanish war today declared Catalonian authorities were waiting for the arrival of twenty thousand Russian volunteers.Portuguese citizens, arriving here from Barcelona, Spain, said the Soviet brigades were ready to embark from Black Sea ports and wore expected shortly to join the Catalonian forces against the Spanish Fasciste.Unconfirmed reports in Paris said Russia had requested use of French ports should Moscow decide to intervene actively in the Spanish civil war.The newspaper Echo de Paris said the Soviet was believed to want Please Turn to Page 2, Col.4.SETTLEMENT OF BABY RACE MAY MEET OBSTACLE certain.The Socialist .militiamen who abandoned their strong positions at Navalcarnero will not be able to hold out against the crack troops hurled by General Franco in the final attack, they said.The ¦ insurgent generalissimo wants to spare the capital from heavy air bombardment and has decided to leave the defenders one venue of escape\u2014'the highway linking Madrid and Valencia via Tran-con\u2014which was the only road open from Madrid after the Fascist \u201cscissors\u201d snipped all routes to the south yesterday.The double-edged offensive carried the insurgents to the banks of of the Jarama River yesterday.The attack started at dawn from the villages of Asana, Pontoja and Lp known contestants Alameza.General Gonzaloqueipo de Llano, Spanish insurgent commander, broadcasting today from Seville, said Madrid Government losses were 2'0,0(H) killed and 50,000 wounded since the end of August.\u201cDespite French and Russian help, Madrid will be captured shortly,\u201d he said.\u201cAt the same time, ' Bilbao will fall and the people of new Spain may join Germany, Italy and other countries to organize a front against Communism,\u201d Qucipo de Llano asserted the Madrid Government lost 565 killed and 1,235 taken prisoners in an unsuccessful attempt to recapture Ses-sena and Las N'avas did Marques.FASCISTS TIGHTEN GRIP AROUND SPANISH CAPITAL Madrid, Oct.26.\u2014Fascists, overwhelming fierce Government resistance, captured a vital highway-railroad intersection today about twenty-five miles south of Madrid.Forced hack closer lo the capital JPkase Turn to Page 2, Col.i.Clause in Vital Statistics Ad, which Allows Registration of Birth Year After Its .Occurrence, May Complicate Matters in Fantastic \u201cStork Derby.\u201d Toronto, Oct.26.\u2014A clause of the Vital Statistics Act allowing registration of a birth within one year after its occurrence was seen today as offering possibility in postponing final settlement of the award in Toornto\u2019s \u201cstork derby.\u201d To some close observers of the legal entanglements surrounding the fantastic will of Charles Vance Millar, the possibility was remote.All it is taken for ITALY SEEKING JAPANESE SUPPORT FOR ANTI-COMMUNIST AGREEMENT Semi-Official Italian Government Spokesman Hints that Japan May Join Italy and Germany in Tripartite Alignment Against Soviet Activity\u2014II Duce Reiterates Belief that He Has No Hopes for Lasting Peace and Therefore Depends oh Force for Preservation of Italian Security.R SOVIET CARGO STEAMERS PASS THROUGH BOSPHORUS Marble ton, Oct.26.\u2014 The people1 Ottawa, Oct.26.\u2014Canada\u2019s trade of Marhieton today mourn the pass- relations with Germany enter a ing of an outstanding citizen, a sue- : new phase on November 15th, when cessful businessman of the Eastern the provisions of the new trade Townships and one whose family has and payments agreements come into been prominently connected with the.effect.life of Marhieton since the early1 Trading experts, of the Dominion pioneer days.\tGovernment expect the new ar- The death at an early hour this rangement will do away with the morning of William Thomas Ought- present adverse balance of trade red, at the age of seventy-six years, and bring Canadian exports to Ger-removes a guiding figure from the many on a level with Canadian im-life of the community and one whose P°rts from that country, father and grandfather before him The agreements are the result of had helped to lay the foundations lon8\u2018 negotiations begun by Hon.I upon which the village of Marhieton: W- D- EllleL Minister of Trade and has grown.\t1 Commerce, when he visited Berlin i William Thomas Oughtred was the ! ^ August.Following Mr.Eul- j 1 er s visit the German Government , sent Dr.Hans R.Hemmen to Ot- ; tawa to continue the negotiations, j with the result the agreements ; were signed by Mr.Euler and Dr.j Hemmen last week.The trade agreement makes no i change in the present status of trade between the two countries, but the payments agreement cuts into the handicaps German ex- ! change control has placed upon | Canadian exports.Its vital clause | is an undertaking by Germany to j make available all the foreign exchange accruing from sales of German goods in Canada for the purchase of Canadian goods.Canada\u2019s exports to Germany in ' the twelve months ended September.1036.totalled only $5,745,021, while imports from Germany totalled $10,716,631.Prior to the institution of exchange control machinery by Germany in 1934 Canada\u2019s exports to Germany ranged in the neighborhood of $10,000,000 each I year.\t! Thus the curtailment of exports recently is attributed to the inability of Germany importers to obtain exchange or credits in foreign currencies with which to pay for im- McMAHON DENIED RIGHT TO APPEAL CONVICTION Lord Chief Justice Terms Story Told by Man Who Threw Loaded Revolver im Front of the King a \u201cCock and Bull Story.\u201d London, Oct.26.\u2014George Andrew McMahon today was denied permission to appeal his conviction on ;a charge of producing a revolver \u201cwith intent to alarm His Majesty\u201d during a parade on Constitution Hill headed by the King last July.He has been sentenced to a year at hard labor.Lord Chief Justice Hewart, pre- I Istanbul, Oct.26.\u2014 Tw-elve ! Russian cargo steamers, report-! ed without confirmation to be ! loaded with cereals, ammunition I and military equipment, have ! passed through the Bosphorus I during the last two weeks, it I was learned.I They gave their destination I as Cartagena and Alicante, ftSpain.SOME PHEASANT Pelee Island, Ont., Oct.26.\u2014 Many a tall tale will be told of the Pelee Island pheasant shoot this year, but this one is vouched for by more than one nimrod.A hunter came up to Gar Wood, world-famous Detroit speedboat siding, termed McMahon\u2019s story that ! \t,\t, r\u201e,i , Tvniu,.' ;n ,,\t¦ , flned to Oota.Bishop, also a member Under .Millar s will the residue of -\t,\t.\t,\t, ¦ !of a prominent Eastern Townships his estate, estimated at more than $500,000, is left to the Toronto mother who has borne the most children in the ten years after his death \u201cas shown by the registration under the Vital Statistics Act.\u201d From Hon.Harry C.Nixon, Provincial Secretary, came the statement there have been no late registrations and \u201cthere will be none.prominent Eastern Township family.On January 1.1935.Mr.and Mrs.Oughtred celebrated ther golden wedding anniverary, when they were showered with greetings and good their correct this difficulty and make possible a move or less balanced trade between the two countries.The agreement allocates 63.1 per cent, of the exchange among a specified list of commodities, the largest allocation, thirty-five per cent., going to wheat.The remaining 36.9 per cent, may he used for the purchase of unspecified goods.Copper and nickel, two of Canada\u2019s important products in demand in Germany, are among the unspecified commodities.On some of the specified com-modities a maximum is fixed be-j vomi which exchange will not be | granted regardless of whether the percentage has been used up or London, Oct.26.\u2014Belgium desires definitely to keep clear of all entangling alliances in Europe.According to the terms of a Belgian note to Great Britain released for publication here today.Explaining the declaration of neutrality made two weeks ago by King Leopold HI, the Belgian note said in effect that Belgium could not continue to carry obligations beyond its capacities to fulfill.Modern armaments are such, the note went on, that Belgium could be shattered by invasion long before ew York, Oct.26.\u2014If the vot-s of the United States namo overnor Alf Landon their president on November 3rd, the Republican candidate today was pledged to make the country an \u201coasis of peace\u201d and shun the League of Nations and World Court.He discussed foreign affairs before an audience of fifteen thousand at Indianapolis Saturday night and revealed this projected programme to avert war: Promotion of mediation then arbitration.REICH HOPES TO SHARE IN ETHIOPIAN AFFAIRS Berlin, Oct.26.\u2014 German hopes of sharing in the economic development of Ethiopia were raised today as the result of disclosures by Count Galeazzo Ciano, Italian Foreign Minister, elucidating the Italo-Ger-mar, agreement.\u201cWe have regulated economic matters anent Ethiopia,\u201d he said, \"and various other questions will i be solved to the satisfaction of both first, ! countries.\u201d Inspired German comment declar- Restoration of \u201cinternational con-1 cd, \u201cIt is only natural that Ger-fidence in the good faith\u201d of the ; many made certain definite arrange-United States Government which, ments with Italy for economic co-lie said, had been \u201cshattered by the operation in Ethiopia.Germany will contradictions\" of the Roosevelt j share in Italy\u2019s work of building up administration.\tj Ethiopia.\u201d Co-operation in the reduction of | The Nazi press deekumi the Italo-German joint, policy envisages \u201cno adventures and no expansion,\u201d It called attention to the promise by Italy and Germany to respect Spanish territory including colonial armaments.Assistance toward \u201clowering world-wide trade barriers.\u201d Should war grip the world, the Kansas Governor said ho would attempt to keep America disentangled possessions\u2014thereby setting at rest by:\t.\t,\t.\t.\t! fears expressed in some quarters Deveioping a neutrality policy j that victory by the Spanish insur-which, w hilo Got an absolute £uar-.gGrit£ would lead to the cession of antee of peace, is \u201cone of the great Mallorca, in the Balearic Islands, .\t.\t,\t! to Italy and the Canary islands to Enactment of legislation f°rl Germany \u201ctaking the profits out of war,\u201d The first flush of editorial com- &-® wishes from the members of >iot.immediate family, relatives.The trade agremeent is called a friends and admirers._\t.\u201cprovisional\" agreement because it Mr, Oughtred is survived by his states it is the intention of the two widow; four sons, namely.Lawrence governments to replace it as soon I would not attempt to stand as ri}.\u201d\tLambert; Clifford T., of as possible with a general treaty a judge to whether all these births took place.I'm not going to decide who Should get this $500.006,\u201d he said.Another week-end development was the discovery by lawyers for Mrs.Grace Ragnato that two of the nine children she claims eligible are not registered.Mrs.Bagwato, expecting a tenth eligible child before the end of the week, declares she will attempt to have them regi-tovod.Mrs.Bagnato said that in 1932 Kimberley, B.C.; Harold H., nf Que- of commerce and navigation, bee City, and Richard W.> of Cook- It provides for the mutual expire; one daughter, Mary H., Mrs change of most-favored-nation Walter II Wood, of Sherbrooke, treatment by each country to the and eight grandchildren,\tproducts of the other country.The A characteristic trait of the late agreement, will come into force Mr.Ougthred was his desire to work fourteen days after the exchange for the general good of his native \u201cf™'Rations and remain in force that its fortification would village and of the Eastern Townships \"nt,! Noxcmner 14, 19.->7, or there-without assuming any positions nf after until either of the two gov-prominence.\ternments shall have given two months\u2019 notice of anv guarantors could come to its I ment by metropolitan newspapers j I THE WEATHER aid.In releasing itself, therefore.found the Republican Herald Tri-i^__________________________________ from obligations which were heavier A,u,le lauding Landon for pointing | than it could bear with its own I the country toward 'freedom of|\tFAIR AND COLD, strength, Belgium considered that it ;\tJj\u2019îîf.8» A disturbance of suengui, rseigmm considered ma;, ir i.\t\u2014 , V .\t.\tYY .! A disturbance of increasing in- was contributing more to the peace |Democrat, warned that | t\u20acnsjty, passing eastward across of Europe by removing any pretext 1 Hwcountix cannot uve comfortably nortjleast QuejKiCi has a trough of of attack upon Belgian territory.After explaining that the times had changed vastly since the Locarno treaties of 1925, notably as a result of German rearmament, the Belgian note said that, the system of alliances created by France risked dividing Europe into two hostile camps.This created for Belgium the dan- off its own fat.The Times reminded Please Turn to Page Ho declined frequent petitions to \u2019Months\u2019 notice of termination, him to serve as Mayor of Marhieton, 1, 'r provision in the agree preferring to art ns Councillor.He lease 3 urn to Page 2, Col.6.she went to the registrar's office was also one of the main promoters- and asked about registrations and of the Marhieton Fair and was over eoivagement to Please turn to Page 2, Col, i.\tready to lend his support and en- ment.be any worthy move- viewed as nothing but a continuation of the Maginot line, the note said, an impression which could only increase the likelihood of an invasion of Belgian territory in the event of a Franco-German war.The note added that Belgium\u2019s policy was not prejudicial but advantageous to tho British Govern- of r ,\tJ0'\"\u2019 extending south westward to \u2019 Col 3 ' Pennsylvania, while high pressure ==\u2014===!.\u2014 and cold weather is spreading over ment, since anything that helped j 0ntT'io a*! wist Quebec from the keep Belgium out of war would help iJJprtlnvest.Rain, with snow in some Britain, which considers the invio- !\t,has occurred in Ontario lability of Belgian soil to he an es.;and .Quebec though in the other sintial condition of its own security, j Provinces the weather has been fair.^ 1 Strong winds and gales prevail m BELGIAN CABINET PREPARING DECLARATION Brussels, Oct, 26.\u2014Besieged by aj questioning Europe, Premier Paul! of.moderate gales; cloudy and colder van Zeeland and his Belgian oab-Arith snowflurries.inet today drew up a declaration to | and cold.eastern Canada.It is becoming some-jwhat milder in the West.Forecast: Strong northerly winds udy and colder Tuesday\u2014fair clarify King Leopold\u2019s recent \u201cneutrality\u201d speech.The ministers hope to present the statement to Parliament tomorrow or Wednesday.Northern New England: Rain, turning to snoxv and much colder Tuesday, partly cloudy, much cooler with freezing temperature tonight, on the coast. I» AGE 1 WO SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1930, ?MEAL SECRET LABOR MEASURE EYES OF NOTED WAITS SUPREME BUND WRITER COURT RULING 'LANDON WOULD SHUN ! LEAGUE OF NATIONS AND THE WORLD COURT Continued from Page 1.nor that his party\u2019s platform calls for \u201cthe stiffest kind of protective and prohibitive tariffs, and demands the immediate repeal of the reciprocity trade pact.\u2019\u2019 Landon did not mention the reciprocity agreements.He scored the Canadian-American and other agreements in earlier addresses.He followed his pledge to seek lowering of trade barriers with a promise to do \u201ceverything in my power to bring New York, Oct.26.\u2014The secret! Washington, Oct, 26.\u2014 An an-; this about.\u201d eyes through which Helen Keller, nouncement as to whether thai _ He declared himself against sanc-the famous blind woman, sees the 1 Wagner Labor Relations Act would tions, cast aside the League of Na-world were reveaaled today by the ; added to the \u201cNew Deal\u201d litiga- ! tions collective security system be STOCK LEADERS TAKE TOBOGGAN ON WALL STREET Scottish Woman Served as Real ' Associated Press and Motor Eyes for Miss Helen Keller for! Coach Company Appelants in Fourteen Years \u2014 Story of Strange Household Told.Effort to Have Wagner Labor Relations Law Overthrown.second great tragedy of her life.The story is that of a Scottish woman who lived three lives for fourteen years and had to see everything she looked at in three different ways.Today that woman\u2014Miss Polly Thomson.Miss Keller\u2019s secretary\u2014lives only twice.Her third ¦self,\u201d Mrs.Anne Sullivan Macy, Miss Keller\u2019s teacher, died last week.Until Mrs.Macy\u2019s death, the woman from the Scottish Highlands was an unsung heroine of one of history's most amazing households.For a decade and a half she buried her identit* in the task of serving as eyes for the blind and deaf Miss Keller and for the virtually blind teacher who led Miss Keller to international fame tion to be passed on during the next ; cause \"we cannot use war to end few months was awaited today from [ war\u2019\u2019 and rejected the W orld Court the United States Supreme Court.^ as J?, \"P®.\t\u201e\t, Cases involving the Act were filed! The Times found the Governor s by the Associated Press and by the ; reasons for believing the country Washington, Virginia and Maryland ' *h ,\t,\t*\t.\t,\tfnr i the advantage of Dominion and Provincial policies, whereby those farmers who take farm workers for\t be ambitous for a higher standing te,a in+f th,e ,ch\u201cch ,^!or~ Those who attended enjoyed the event and next rear.A verv appetizing sunner \u201e\t, :____a W-\tr-u.;.v found the young ladies very pleas- ant hostesses.Mr.Elton Thompson, of Sherbrooke, formerly on the Bank of Montreal staff, Knowlton, is spend-|-[ie ing part of his holidays at the was served in the Anglican Church Hall after the meet.GUESTS LOCAL Y.P.B.WERE OF SUTTON Thirty-three members of\tTT Knowlton Y.P.B,.with their lead- Ra,1Le%lev'T, ers, drove to Sutton on Friday .and Mrs.D.-I.Main on are evening, October 16th, and were m Montreal lor a few day=, guests of the Sutton Society in the Ünited Church hall.Very interesting addresses were given by Rev.Mr.Mallalieu, Rev.E.D.Mitchell,\t- and Rev.Mr.Ross.\tHis friends will regret to learn Following a musical programme, that Mr.F.E.Spencer, a resident games were played and social hour of this place until a few years ago enjoyed, after which refreshments and now living in .Waterloo, is in a were served.IRON HILL merits were served by the hostesses.Mrs.Routhier, of East Hamnton, Mass., is a guest of Mr.and Mrs.E.H.Ashton and Mr, and Mrs.Clarence Hanna.Miss St.James, of Montreal, is a guest of her niece, Mrs.C.L.Hanna, and Mr.Hanna.Messrs.Andrew and Clayton Bcw-ker, Mrs.E.H.Ashton.Mr.Ray Ashton, Mr.H.Senay, Miss Florence Senay.Mrs.Routhier and Mr.and Mrs.C.L.Hanna were among those who attended the one hundredth anniversary celebration at Grande Ligne.Piecent visitors and callers at the home of W.G.Knee-land were Mr, General Notes.critical condition from a stroke cf\td' E-\t°f K.ngston, paralysis and kidney trouble.Mr.Out., Mr.V eldon Lewis, _of Ste.Spencer was a man cf sterling * nîle Mr.Leslie Roberts has returned\trespected in thiS home from a trip to Noranda.Mr.M ^ Mrs_ James Ma30n Roberts made the trip by plane, de Bellevue, Que., Miss C Hill, who has been caring for Mrs.H.Russell for the past few weeks Mrs.Curtis, of Warden.Que., Mr.\t.,\t, .\t\u201e ,,\tand Mrs.L.C.A.Eastman, of leaving Noranda\tat rdne o\u2019clock and\tv1t-Jî?Ûïends\tlJL\t.\tLunenburg,\tMass.,\tMr.\tand\tMrs.arriving at the\tsea-p!ane base\tat\t, Little V ayne\tMason, v.no\trece -\tCharles\tRand,\tof Burlington,\tVt.Cartierville five\thours later.\t^ Tas °?fated\tfor, ^\t\u2019\tW.hn-rjp\tat Sweetsburg\tHospital, is\tnow -,j, t> ¦' r!- \"home and able to play and run as j \u201c\t\u2018 before his illness.and Mils Lora re- ' -h c.ç i Mrs.Robinson Recent callers at the home of Mrs.H.A.Soles were and Mrs.Smith and Major Steele, of the Salvation Army headquar- _ , .\t, \u201e ters.Montreal, after attending the Robinson, of Cowansville wci- W.C.T.U.convention in Cowansville.cent vl'Itors of arA Mrs' f Mr.and Mrs, James H.Wilkens, of Carlisle, Mass., have returned to their home, after visiting Mr.H.V.Truell, \u201cSweet Acre.\u201d Mr.and Mrs.V.Owens, of Mont- Tomorrow\u2019s Radio Programme The following are the best radio real, are guests at the Knowlton Çi,e5î a,t Austin, \u201cThe Knoll.\u201d Mr.and Mrs.J.C.Soles, Government road, were programmes tomorrow, _ Tuesday, also at the same home visiting Mrs.\"dth the key to the stations in the Soles\u2019 parents, Mr.and Mrs.Austin., final paragraph: Mr.Norman Williams was a\t\u201e nn \u201e\t1V7\u201e n\t, he home of his parents.\t-I*- : Easy Aces.\tE- Mr.and Mrs.Oswald Williams.AF: Amos and Andy; CRCM: Pres-Mr.and Mrs.D.F.Sweet are Elizabeth Sample, Personal Christmas Cards of established w^o pas6e(j away at the home of her reputation, $1 dozen up.Deal direct with - r __\t_ old firm and enjoy quality and prompt service.Established quarter century.Distributors also wanted.Also wonderful opportunity for men and women with cars to sell\t,\t.\t_\t_ gift calendars and boxed Christmas cards ; sorrowing relatives an Norton) Vt., all whom -*\u2022*' take wood, bread, milk, etc., in part\t.\t_\t>\t_\t»\t2\t.payment.Phone Edwards, 135.C sale or will exchange for young son, Lennoxville; (Myrtle Rebecca,) Phone 2i0r2i.\tj Mrs.D.T.Meredith, Cookshire ; and Wjxi,' iGertrude Mary Eleanor,) Mrs.E.survive her and were at her bedside when she passed away.She also leaves one brother, George Wilson, Lancaster, N.H.; three sisters, Mrs.Hugh Wilson, Cookshire; Mrs.Margaret Vivian Miss Catherine Wilson, Cranbourne, and a number of grandchildren and great-grandchildren.CNN TRUMPET\u2019.CHEAP FOR CASH.Apply Box 45, Record.ri ERHARD HEINTZMAN UPRIGHT piano, first class condition.Any reasonable offer accepted.Marion Bush, 12 Jubilee Street.yyiNCHESTER REPEATING RIFLE, 22 calibre, $10; single bed complete, couch, $4.Box 43, Record.$6 ; MR.A.J.E.FARLEY, WARDEN egistered black soottie PUP- Warden, October 26.\u2014On Thurs- R.eal Estates For Sale Insurance F \u201c 4 Marquette St.Sherbrooke.Ph.100.Talk with becker.Sun Life Assurance Co.Tel.634.Real Estate Agents Fred cun way, real estate agent.Olivier Bldg.Phone 2520.Property bought, sold, exchanged, leased.^ ROOM BRICK MODERN RESIDENCE, Reg pies, also st.Bernard female puppies, day, October 8, Mr.A.J.E.Farley Egbert Healy, Richmond.Telephone 128.passed away here in the home where he had always lived, and in the room where he was born, on June 24, 1863.^\t.\t,\t\u201e\t, .,\tSon\tof the late Mr.William Far- Dominion\tAvenue.\tTwo\tbathrooms,\t,\t* ,\t.\tL wm lev, for many years a prosperous two eunporehes, two ear garage, etc.Will .\t*\t*\t,, aeii much less than city valuation.Phone miller here, he succeeded to his fath-Edwards, 135.\ter s business which he followed im- -!- til his death.In fact it was in the TTOUSE FOR sale, lewis street, \u201co]d ped mill\u201d that he was stricken 1 1 Waterloo, Que.Apply G.H.Streeter, witj, arl illness which continued for Newport Veneer Co., Inc., Newport, Vt.i nearly three months, tittle lake, two modern FUR-L Of a retiring though not unfriend- TWO uished cottages.Apply C.FOR SALE Oldsmobile Sedan, standard five passenger, 1934, only run 17,000 miles, in very good condition.Apply J.A.PALMER Phone 622\t-\t- EAST ANGUS AUCTION SALE at.the late Edgar Humphrey Farm, V/t miles above Dixville, just oft Norton Mills Highway.Thursday, October 29th, at 9.30 a.m.8 cows, 5 yearlings, 2 calves, 50 Barred Rock henâ, 20 cockerels and pullets, 180 bushels potatoes, 160 bushel oats, 100 bushel barley, Massey-Harris sulky plough and small-bools about the place.All household furniture consisting of beds, dressers, dining room set, 2 largo leather chairs, organ, rockers cook ntove, clock», rugs, dishes, lots of bedding and linen».Term» of moveables cash \\ farm of 156 acres, good bindings, sugar nf wafer, house end Furniture will 200 to rierht party.311, Richmond.G.standish.py personality, he preferred a quiet life, but was well read and, retain-Farms For Sale\ti 'ne\u2018 Le read, was an interest- -; ing conversationalist., ACRE farm, six miles from The funeral was held at his home Richmond, brick house, easy terms on Saturday.October 10th, Rev.Apply c.L.Brock, Box Norman Egerton, of Waterloo, of-___________ ____________________________j ficiating.Ane hundred acre farm in town i _ ^ fearers were Messrs.F- B.u ot East AnirJa.35x90 barn, brick reel- Swett L F Delorme, M.A.Kenne-dence and other ontbuildrnfrs.all in excellent, *Y_Ta , ^\tBowker condition.Bargain for quick buyer.Apply ^ He leaves to YYIOIUTI his loss Ills Box 38 Record.\tsisters, Mrs.A.P.Marston and Mrs.- J.S.Richardson, of Warden, and Poultry For Sale\tMrs.H.Boileau, of San Francisco, and their families.Those from a VTEW HAMPSHIRE pullets, April distance attending the funeral were \u2022F7 hatched, ready to lay.Apply Mrs.H, Mrs.H.Rice, Mrs.James Barr md Sweeney, Birchton.__________________| Mr.and Mrs.H.H.Allen and sons, of Montreal.100 BARRED ROCK PULLETS, each.Strâhan, North Hatley.Cars For Sale Lai V, ARGE FIVE PASSENGER SEDAN IN pince, orchard, plenty of water, house nn-l barn.Eaay term» on farm, be acid in forenoon.Lunch at noon.R.m.DEMERS, Auctioneer MRS.SUSANNA YALE, DANVILLE, QUE._\t\u201e Danville, Oct.26\u2014On Septem- very good order, licenced, Î100.Box 42,.^ 28th) the d^ath of Mrs.SusRnna .\u201c\u2014.I- 1 Yale, widow of Aretus B.Yale, oc- 1 G OP FORD coupe, $25 cash,-curved at the home of her son, Mr Hnenee included.Ernest NeiiiJ Edward P.Yale, after a fortnight\u2019s Lennoxville.Phone EU0r2.\tillness from pneumonia followed by a paralytic stroke.The daughter of the late Charles Matthews and his wife, Lydia Albina Bickford, she was born September 27, 1844, and was the eldest of nine children, and is survived by one brother, Mr.Henry Mat C8RAHAM CONVERTIBLE COUPE, 1929, * good running condition, good tires, licenced.Bargain for cash.Carl Mayhew, North Hatley.Class 30.Ladies\u2019 saddle horse, seven entries: 1, Love Dare, H.B.Norris, Montreal; 2, Prince Getley, E.E.Spafford, Sherbrooke; 3, Pea-vine Lad, Fred Vincent, Montreal; 4, Stonnalong, Roy Anderson, Montreal.Class 6.Heavy carriage horses, single ov* 1S-2, three entries: 1, Lady Humewood, J.W.Nesbitt, Montreal; 2, Lady Lofty, J.W.Nesbitt, Montreal; 3, Seaton Stranger, Scott Draper, Compton.Class 25.Saddle pony ridden by child over twelve and under sixteen years, five entries; 1, June, Miss Nancy Murray, Georgeville; 2, Skip, W.W.Levesque, Magog; 3, Brown Beauty, C.Billings, Rock Forest; 4, Queenie, N.W.Price, Shei-brooke.Pair of roadsters under 15-2, three entries; 1, Catherine Î and Peggy Evans, O.M.J.Ingalls, Danville; 2, Ruby H.and Justina.John Peters, Magog; 3, Midget and Alice, W.Whitcomb, Hatley, Class 17.Harness tandem, 14-2 and over, two entries: 1, Commander and Commodore, J.W.Nesbitt, Montreal; 2, Lady Humewood and Lady Lofty, J.W.Nesbitt, Montreal.Class 10.High steppers, single 14-2 to 15-2, three entries; 1, Commodore, J.W.Nesbitt, Montreal; 2, Commander, J.W.Nesbitt, Montreal; 3, May Day, A, Lamontagne, Sherbrooke.Special road hack class, five entries: 1, Big Boy, H.B.Norris, Montreal;.2, Stormalong, Roy Anderson, Montreal; 3, Rex, John Peters, Magog; 4, Judy, Miss Nancy Murray, Georgeville.Class 35: Ride and drive horse, three entries: 1, Judy, Miss Nancy Murray, Georgeville; 2, Midget, W.Whitcomb, Hatley; 3, Jubilee Queen, Mrs.E.A.Labonte, Birchton.Judging Competition The results of the boys\u2019 judging competition were as follows: Best judging of heavy horses: 1, F.\tG.Young, Coinpton; 2, A.H.Hall, Hatley; 3, Eugene Bowen Hatley; 4, Gordon Kirkpatrick, Bury; 5, Leo Hebert, Compton; 6, Earl Lavalle, Bromptonville.Best judging of beef cattle: 1 Arthur H.Hall, Hatley; 2, G.B.Kirkpatrick, Bury; 3, Eugene Bowen, Hatley; 4, Gerald Springing, North Hatley; 5.Leo Hebert, Compton; 6, Lome Butler, Inverness.Best judging of sheep; 1, Earl Lavallee, Inverness; 2, Lome Butler, Inverness; 3, Eugene Bowen, Hatley; 4, Camille Labrie, Compton; 5, G.Kirkpatrick, Bury; Best judging of bacon hogs: 1, Earl Lavalle, Bromptonville; 2, Newton Bennett, Bury; 3, G.Springing, North Hatley; 4, Lorne Butler, Inverness; 5, Leo Hebert, Compton; 6, G.Kirkpatrick, Bury.Best judging of oats: 1, Francis Paige, Lennoxville; 2, Arthur H.Hall, Hatley; 3 Gordon F.Young, Compton; 4.G.Springing, North Hatley; 5, Newton Bennett, Bury; 6, Leo Hebert, Compton.Best judging of potatoes for table use: 1, Earl Lavallee, Bromp-ton ville; 2, Gordon F.Young, Compton; 3 J.P.Soucy, Compton; 4, J.H- Fox, Sherbrooke; 5.Lome Butler, Inverness; 6, Leo Hebert, Compton.Best judging of heavy horses; 1, Carlton\" Whitcomb, Massawippi; 2, Allen Learinouth, Inverness; 3, Ed.G.\tHyatt, Compton; 4, Aurelien Rivard, Ascot.Corner; 5, Leslie Richardson, Lennoxville; 6, Alford Ross, Sherbrooke.Best judging of beef cattle: 1, Dan MacDougall, Lennoxville; 2, Allen Learmouth, Inverness; 3, Don MacMillan, Inverness; 4, Alford Ross, Sherbrooke; 5, Leslie Richardson, Lennoxville; 6, Rolland Carrier, Waterville.Best judging of sheep: 1, Ed.G.Hyatt, Compton; 2, Milton Kir-bey, Bulwer; 3.Allen Learmouth, Inverness; 4, Rivard Aurelein, Ascot Corner; 5, Keith Rose, Sherbrooke; 6, Dan MacDougall, Lennoxville.Best judging of bacon hogs: 1, Allen Learmouth, Inverness; 2, Dan MacDougall, Lennoxville; 3, Aurelien Rivard.Ascot Corner; 4, Carlton Whitcomb, Massawippi; 5, land Carrier, Waterville; 4, Andrew Bull two years and under three : Smith, Compton; 5, Keith Rose, 1, H- B.Norris, Georgeville; 2, J.Sherbrooke; 6, Don MacMillan, In- A.Woodward, Lennoxville; 3, \\\\.verness*\t\u2022 P'Funarthree ^eara and under six ! St'Hyacinthe;'2,\u201cCemle Agricole: 11, Howard Murray, Magog; 2, J.A.Bull three years ana unaei .ra BrompJtonvjlle; 3i Harold W.:\tRWV\u2019\u2014w -T Karlen Loomis.Waterville.Swine Prize winners in the sivine department were: YORKSHIRES Boar born between August 1, 1935 and January, 1936: 1, A.O.Fowler, Kingsbury.Boar born between January 1 and July 1, 1936: 1, Ernest Sylvester, i Kingsbury; 6, J.A.McBurney, Saw.D.I yerville.CHEVIOTS Emilien! Ram born in 1935: 1, Howard Murray, Magog; 2, John A.Ruse, Sherbrooke; 3, E.C, Rose, Sherbrooke.Ram lamb born in 1936: 1, How.ard Murray, Magog; 2, H.J.Snad-en, Danville; 3, John A.Rose, Sherbrooke.Ewe lamb born in 1936: 1, Howard Murray, Magog; 2, J.A.Rose, Sherbrooke; 3, H.J.Snaden, Danville.Pen of four lambs born in 1936: Horses ! and up- 1 \u2018Z.and A.Lavasseur, ; and January 1, 1936: 1 John Nichol .iTr ,\t\u2022\u2018¦IX\t\u2019\tT A TV/f ,.niiT7-7ûx'\tCone T .13 V1T7 A YV î 110 \u2022\t9 W W.three years ana unaer six years: 1.C.E.Sharman, Canter-Prize winning exhibitors in the j^.y.2, R.C.Johnston, Danville, horse department were:\t, ' Bull from R.O.P.dam,_one year STANDARD BREDS Stallion foaled before January 1, 1934; 1, A.L.Pope and Son, Coati-cook; 2, R.A.Cameron, Cowansville; 3, O.M, J.Ingalls, Danville.Stallion foaled in 1935; 1, Harold W.Loomis, Waterville.Stallion foaled in 1934; 1, W.Whitcomb, Hatley.Foal of 1936: 1, W.Whitcomb, Hatley; 2, Harold W.Loomis, Waterville.Mare foaled in 1934; 1, Harold W.Loomis, Waterville.Sow born between August 1, 1935, Waterville; 2, J.A.McBurney, Sawyerville.Senior and grand champion, male: C.E.Sharman, Canterbury; junior champion, male, P.W.Sharman, Gould.and Sons, Lennoxville; 2, W.W.Nichol, Lennoxville; 3, Ernest Sylvester, St, Hyacinthe.Sow born between January 1 and July 1, 1936: 1.Ernest Sylvester.St.Hyacinthe; 2, John Nichol and Heifer born January 1 to April j Sons, Lennoxville; 3 Ludger Soucy, 30, 1936; 1, Rita Delisle, Bulwer ; Bromptonville.\"\t\u201d T\tThree pigs born after August 1, 1935, and before July 1, 1936, both 2, F.G.Bennett, Bury; 3, J.A.Woodward, Lennoxville.Heifer born September 1, 1933, to December 31, 1935: 1, C.E.Sharman, Canterbury; 2, H.B.Norris, xx x \u2019 1 j\t¦\t100*\t1\tit ,,\tGeorgeville;\t3,\tW.\tP.\tSharman, Mare foaled\tm 1935:\t1,\tHarold\tqou|(] Snaden, Danville.\tj J Heifer born January 1 to August Mare foaled before January 1, 31 2935.y q.E.Sharman.Can-1394: 1 H, H.Ingram, Sherbrooke;, tg^ury.2 W P Sharman.Gould; 2, O.M.J.Ingalls, Danville; 3, W.3 A]]^ Learmouth, Inverness.W.Nichol, Lennoxville.\ti 'Heifer born September 1 to De- Progeny of\tdam: 1,\tW.Whit-\trember ,31.\t1934: 1,\tH.\tB.Norris, comb, Hatley; 2, Harold W.\tLoomis,\tGeorgeville\u2019\t2.\tW\tP.\tSharman, WaterviHe.\ti Gould 3) C.E.Sharman, Canter- Get-of-Sire: 1, W.Whitcomb, bury.Hatley; 2, Harold W.Loomis, Wat- j \u2018 jl'hot two years and under three erville.\tI\tyearS' 1, j.A.Woodward, Lennox- HACKNEYS\t|\tvjile.2, C.E.Sharman, Canter- Stallion foaled before January 1, burv 1934: 1, John Peters, Magog; 2, J.H\u20ac'rfei.two years and under three E.Jamieson, Lennnoxville.\tj yearg.^ j.A_ Woodward, Lennox- Stallion foaled in 1935: 1, J.E.vii;e.'2, C.E.Sharman, Canter-Jamieson, Lennoxville.\tbury\u2019; 3,\u2019 W.P- Sharman, Gould.Mare foaled before January 1,1\tc'0\u2019v three years and over, quali- 1934: 1, R.A.Cameron, Cowans-j fied in r.o.P'.: 1, J.A.Woodward, ville; 2, J.E.Jamieson, Lennoxville.Tiermox.ville.2, R.C.Johnston, Ponies Under 12 hands.| Danville\u2022 3, Z.and A.Lavasseur, Stallion foaled in 1934: 1 J.W.Waterville.Price, Sherbrooke.__ j Cow three years and under six Foal of 1936: 1, N.W.Price, milk wdth own salf at foot, born Sherbrooke; 2, W.Whitcomb, Hat-; before June 30, 1936: 1, C.E.Shar- IejxV\t\u201e , ,\tT\t, j man, Canterbury; 2, H.B.Norris, Mare foaled before January b .GeoïeevjHe.3 R.C.Johnson, Dan-1934: 1, N.W.Price, Sherbrooke; 2, xHle\t\u2019 W.Whitcomb, Hatley.Mare with foal at foot: 1, N.W.Price, Sherbrooke; 2, W.Whitcomb, Hatley.Mare foaled in 1935: 1, W.Whitcomb, Hatley.Ponies 12 to 14 hands: 1, Mrs.D.Reedshaw', Sherbrooke.Light draft, mare or gelding: 1, H.B.Norris, Georgeville; 2, E.C.Rose, Sherbrooke; 3, A.L.Pope and Son, Coaticook.Commercial, double horses under 2,700 lbs.: 1, H.B.Norris, Georgeville; 2, Joe Hamilton.Lennoxville; 3, George Lavallee, Bromptonville.Cattle Principal winners among the cattle exhibitors were; Cow, three years and under six yeai\u2019s: 1, C.E.Sharman, Canterbury; 2, PL B.Norris, Georgeville; 3, A.E.Dyson, Richmond.Junior champion \u2019female, and grand champion female: 1 Rita Delisle, Bulwer.Sénior female champion: 1, C.E.Sharman, Canterbury.Herd bull over one year and four females under six years: 1, C.E.Sharman,\tCanterbury;\t2,\tH.\tB.Norris, Georgeville; 3, W.P.Sharman, Gould.Breeder\u2019s herd: 1, C.E.Sherman, Canterbury; 2, W.P.Sharman, Gould; 3, J.A.Woodward, Lennoxville.Get-of-sire: 1, C.E.Sharman, Canterbury; 2, W.P.Sharman, BROWN SWISS\ti SiSie3\u2019 * Bull calf, born before April 1, Progeny of one cow: 1, C.E.1936: 1, Lucien\tBergeron,\tWest\t'\tSharmarii\tCanterbury;\t2,\tH.\tB.Shefford; 2, Romeo Champox, I Norris, Georgeville; 3, W.P.Shar-Wotton.\t! rllarli Gould.Yearling bull: 1, C.L.Sweet, Special, best, pair of Shorthorn Iron Hill; 2,\tMrs.\tE.\tE.\tNeil,\tcalveg.x\tc.E.Sharman,\tCanter- Granby.\t,\t,\t.\ti\tburv; 2.Ph G.Bennett,\tBury; 3,\tW.Bull, three years and under six: : p sharman, Gould.1.\tW.A.Jolley, Granby; 2, Lucien | 'special, best Shorthorn female: Bergeron, West Shefford; 3, Romeo t j Woodward, Lennoxville; 2, Champoux, Wotton.\tj R.C.Johnston, Danville; 3, Z.and Heifer calf boni before April 1, ; A Lavasseur, Waterville.1936: 1, W.A.Jolley, Granby; 2, j .Special, best Shorthorn bull: 1, Mrs.E.E.Neil, Granby; 3, C.L.j c.jj.Sharman, Canterbury; 2.PL Sweet, Iron Hill.\t, j G.Bennett, Bury; 3, A.E.Dyson, Yearling heifer: 1 C.L Sweei,,, Ric]lmond_ Iron Hill; 2, W.A.Jolley, Granby; ¦\tABERDEEN ANGUS 3, Mrs.E.E.Neil, Granby.\t1 gu]] horn January 1st to April Cow in milk or in calf, two years 139^, 1936: 1, Mrs.M.Hodgman, and under three: 1, W.A.Joiley, | BircHbn; 2, H.E.Teel, Cowans-Granby; 2, C.L.Sweet Iron ILH'> ' ville; 3, Howard Murray, Magog.3, Mrs.E.E.Neil, Granby.\t; huj] horn September 1st to De- Cow three years and over, dry, {Mmber 31st, 1935:\t1, Mrs.M.in calf: 1, W.A.Jolley, Granby; : Hodgman, Birchton.2.\tC.L.Sweet, Iron Hill; 3, Mrs.j Bull born September 1st, 1934, to E.E.Neil, Granby.\tAugust 1st.1935: 1, Mrs.M.Hodg- Cow three years and under four, jBil.chton; 2, H.E.Teel, Cow-m milk: 1, W.A.Jolley, Granby; 2, ; ansv;jje_ sexes to be represented, the pro geny of one sire: 1, Ernest Sylvester, St.Hyacinthe; 2, Harold W.Loomis, Waterville: 3- O.A.Fowler, Kingsbury; 4, George Petit and Son, Waterville.BERKSHIRE® Boar born between August 1, 1985, and January 1, 1936: 1 H, Carpentier, Clairvaux.Boar born between January 1, 1936.and July 1, 1936: 1, James W.Woodward, Lennoxville; 2, H.Carpentier, Clairvaux: 3, Ernest Sylvester, St.Hyacinthe.Soov born between August 1, 1935, and January 1, 1936: 1, Ernest Sylvester.St.Hyacinthe; 2, H.Carpentier, Clairvaux: 3, James A.Woodward, Lennoxville.Sow born between January 1, 1936, and July 1, 1986: 1, James A.Woodward.Lennoxville; 2, H.Charpentier, Clairvaux; 3, Ernest Sylvester, St.Hyacinthe.Three pigs born after August 1, 1935,\tand before July 1, 1936, both sexes to be represented, the progeny of one sire: 1, H.Charpentier, Clairvaux; 2, James A.Woodward, Lennoxville; 3, Ernest Sylvester, St.Hyacinthe; 4, M.W.Miller, Brome.TAMSWORTHS Boar born between August 1, 1936,\tand January 1, 1936: 1, W.W.Phelps, South Stukely; 2, Ernest Sylvester, St.Hyacinthe; 3, O.A.Fowler, Kingsbury.Boar\tborn\tbetween\tJanuary\t1, 1936, and July 1, 1936: 1 Ernest Sylvester, St.Hyacinthe; 2, W.W.Phelps.South Stukely; 3, G.B.Miz-ener, Foster.Sow born betwen August t, 1935, and January 1, 1936: 1, Ernest Sylvester,\tSt.Hyacinthe ;\t2, Arthur Gerard, St.Hyacinthe; 3, W.W.Phelps,\tSouth\tStukely.Sow\tborn\tbetween\tJanuary\t1 1936, and July 1, 1936: 1, W.W.Phelps, South Stukely; 2, George Mizener, Foster; 3, Ernest Sylvester, St.Hyacinthe.Three pigs born after August 1, 1935, and before July 1, 1936, both sexes to be represented, the progeny of one sire: 1, Ernest Sylvester, St.Hyacinthe; 2, W.W.Phelps, South Stukely; 3, Maurice Sylvester, St.Dominique.MARKET HOGS Three bacon hogs, 7veight 190-230 lbs., bred, raised and exhibited by Rose, Sherbrooke; H.J.Snaden, Danville; 4, H.Charpentier-, Clairvaux.SOUTKDOWNS Ram born in 1935: 1, Mrs.C.A.Odell, Waterville; 2, H.J.Snaden, Danville; 3, W.S.J, Hodgman, Birchton.Ram lamb born in 1936: 1, H.J.Snaden, Danville; 2, Mrs.C.A.Odell,Waterloo; 3, Howard Murray, Magog.Ewe lamb born in 1936; 1, Howard Murray, Magog; 2, H.J.Snaden, Danville; 3, Mrs.C.A.Odell, Waterloo.Pen of lambs born in 1936: 1,\tMrs.C.A.Odell, Waterloo; 2, H.J.Snaden, Danville; 3, Howard Murray, Magog; 4, W.S.J.Hodgman, Birchton.WETHERS Best Shropshire: 1, Gordon Mc-Elrea, Sherbrooke; 2, Douglas Ross, Sherbrooke; 3 H.L.Cameron, Læii-noxville.Best Oxford: 1, H.L.Cameron, Lennoxville; 2, F.C.Caswell, Lennoxville; 3, E.C.Rose, Sherbrooke.Best Hampshire: 1, W.S.J.Hodgman.Birchton; 2, I.J.Parnell; Lennoxville; 3, N.L.Cameron, Lennoxville.Best Leicester: 1.Gordon Young, Compton; 2, I.J.Parnell, I^nnox-ville; 3, H.J.Snaden, Danville.Best Cheviot: 1, H.J.Snaden, Danville; 2, Howard Murray, Magog; 3, N, L, Cameron, Lennoxville.Best Southdown: 1, Howard Murray, Magog; 2, H.J.Snaden, Danville; 3, W.S.J.Hodgman, Birchton.MARKET LAMBS.Best three market lambs 80-100: bred by exhibitors 1, W.S.J.Hodv-man, Birchton; 2, N.H.Beach, Lennoxville; I.J.Parnell, Lennoxville.Best three market lambs, 80-100 lbs, to be owned at least thirty days by exhibitor previous to making entry: 1, Douglas Ross, Sherbrooke; 2,\tW.S.J.Hodgman, Birchton; 3, George Lavallee, Bromptonville.Best six market Iambs, 80-100 lbs.: 1, George Butler, Ayer\u2019s CliiT; 2,\tGeorge Lavallee, Bromptonville; 3,\tN.L.Cameron, Lennoxville.CAPELTON Masquerade dance, North Hatley, Friday, Oct.30th.Local old-tim® music.Lunch, prizes.25c each.BOLTON CENTRE Mr.M.L.Willard suffered a shock on Monday evening of last week.At present Mr.Willard is on the gain and his many friends hope for his speedy recovery.Mr.and Mrs.H.Dewitt and daughter, Miss Priera Bell, of Denver, Colorado, were guests of Mrs.De-¦' E.~ - witt\u2019s sister, Mrs.S.E.Consens, breeder: 1.F.A.Burton.Water-|and Mr.Consens last xveek.ville; 2, George Lavallee, Brompton ville; 3, John Nichol and Son, Lennoxville.Best five bacon hogs, weight 00-230 lbs., owned by exhibitor thirty days previous to making entry: 1, George Lavallee, Bromptonville; 2, John Nichol and Son, Lennoxville; 3, N.L.Cameron, Ijcnnoxville.Sheep Principle winners in the sheep department were : Lucien Bergeron, West Shefford; 3, Mrs.E.E.Neil, Granby.Co7v four years and over, in j 2) jyirSt M.Hodgman, Birchton milk: 1, W.A.Jolley, Granby; -, Junior, senior and grand c Bull three years and under six years: 1, Howard Murray, Magog; Mrs.E.E.Neil.Granby; 3, Romeo Champoux.Wotton.Herd, junior, bull and three females under two years: 1, W.A.Jolley, Granbv : 2, Lucien Bergeron, West Sheffodd; 3, Mrs.E.E.Neil, Granby.Get-of-sire, three animals, eriher sex: 1, W.A.Jolley, Granby; 2, C.L.Sweet, Iron Hill; 3, Lucien Bergeron, West Shefford.Junior, senior and grand champion, Howard Murray, Magog.Heifer born January 1st to April 30th, 1936; 1, H.E.Teel, Cowansville; 2, Howard Murray; 3, Mrs.M.Hodgman, Birchton.Heifer born September 1st to December 31st, 1935: 1, Mrs.M.Hodgman, Birchton.Heifer born January 1st to August 31st, 1935: 1, Howard Murray, Progeny of dani: 1.W.A.Jolley, j^°g; 2, Mrs.M.Hodgman, Birch-Granby; 2, C.L.Sweet, Iron Hill; ' ' Heifer born September 1st to Derr ,\t,\t, -\t- .\t, j cember 1st, 1934: 1, Mrs.M.Hodg- Herd, one male and four females,, 3.Mrs.E.E.Neil, Granby.- nr a t n\tr- u I man, Birchton.any age: 1, W.A.Jolley, Granby;! \u2019 To Let T ARGE FRONT ROOM WITH Mrs.Roy WiEgctt, 125 London.rpiIRKE STOREY FACTORY WITH ELE- noARD.1 thews, of N'orthampbon, Mass., and ; three sisters, Elcina, Mrs.George H.Hannum, of Worcester\u2019, Mass,, Harriet, Mrs.George P.Allen, and Phonq Edwards, 135, Wanted To Rent Phona 1005.Sherbrooke.rjMWO FURNISHED ROOMS IN QUIET AUCTION SALE Wednesday, October 28th, AT 12:33 FOR O.H.Price, AYER\u2019S CLIFF All houMhold Furniture, pi»no, dining room and kitohen furniture, atove.chertor-Hold suitt, >wd complete, table, rug», dirbe».rooking utensil».Everything about the place rmiM.be «ôld.U.M.DEMERS, Auctioneer.home.Apply Record, Box 47, blower For Sale 1\" blower, good ns new.with pipe am! linngers, suitable for blowing shavings or for ventilation.A real bargain io a quirk buyer.Apply J.A.Blais, Record Oilier.'«tor, »e«lcs,^miiwny siding», etc., $50.jfljgg Cora Matthews, both of Brook- 1 line, Mass.When a young woman, the do-ceased became the seconci tvife of Mr.Aretus Yale, ahd cared for his three sons and also reared six children of their otvn, and in after years brought up two grandsons, which made eleven children, to whom she gave a mother\u2019s care.Mr.Yale\u2019s death occurred forty-nine years ago.She is survived by four children, Mr.Edward Yale, and Cora, Mrs.B.E.Webb, of Danville.Edna, Mrs.Charles F.Chase, of Manchester, N.H., and Mr.George E.Yale, of Calgary, Alta., and three grandchildren and thirteen great grandchildren.Practically all her life was lived in the vicinity of Danville, and the past twenty years were spent with her youngest son, Mr.E.Yale, ami Mrs.Yale.During her last illness they wore assisted by her two daugh-nesday, Oct.28.In this load, there, Mrs.Webb and Mrs.Chase, are ,6 mares and 14 geldings, ngod Ulld daughter-in-law, Mrs.Cyrus Janies Elliott, of Blstckie, Alta., has another car load of horses due to arrive in Thetford Mines, on Weri- from 3 to 10 years and will weigh from 1200 to 1700 lbs, In all 1 have 27 head to pick from, several well-matched teams and right nut-of-work ami ready to go to work.All well broken.Anybody wanting horses to work in the woods should Yale The deceased was a faithful Christian and for many years a member of the Adventist.Church.The funeral was held on September 30th, from the home of her son and conducted by the Adventist pas-come and look them over and be lor, Rev.W.Merton Snow, assisted their own judge.James Elliott, by Rev.Mr.Sproule, Presbyterian pastor.One of her favorite hymns was sung by a quartette, Mrs.F\u201e McCoy, Miss E.Adams, and Messrs.E.Fowler ami James Porter.The interment was in the Danville Cemetery beside her loved ones.Those present from a distance were her daughter, Mrs.Chase, of Manchester, and sister, Mrs.Allen, of Brookline, Mass.Many tributes of flowers bore witness of the esteem in which the deceased was held in the community where her life of ninety-two year's was spent.C.L.Sweet, Iron Hill; 3, Lucien Bergeron, West Shefford.HEREFORDS Bull born January 1 to April 30, 1936: 1, C.D.French, Cookshire; 2 Clark Jones, Beebe.WANTED DISTRIBUTORS RELIABLE FIRM want» steady, active man with experience and connection» in the grocery business, tavern and hotel trade, to act «h dietribulor.Capital required $2.001) to $3,000, Affcncy should pay profit of approximately $5,000 per year nt present and can be built up to much larirer fljrures.Write, jrivinsr reference», in first instance to Canadian Advertising Acency, Limited,.C.I- L.House» Montreal.Heifer two years and under three j years: 1, Howard Murray, Magog; 12, Mrs.M.Hodgman.Birchton; 3, I H.E.Teel, Cowansville, j Cow three years and under six l in milk with own calf at foot: 1, Bun * born'September 1, 1934, to I ^0'vavd Murray, Magog; 2, Mrs.M.August 1, 1935: 1.Clark Jones, IBirchton.\u2019\t\u2019\ti Cow three years ami under six: 1, Bull' three years and under six toward Murray Magog; 2, Mrs.M.years: 1, C.D.French, Cookshire.| HoTd*man- Birchton.Junior, senior and grand cham-! T\tchampion, female, H.E.pion, male: 1, C.D.French, Cook-j16!1- PowansVlle- ,\t, j Senior and grand champions.Heifer born January 1 to April j female.Howard Murray, Magog.30, 1936: l, C.D.French, Cook- Herd- bul1 ov«.r 01,6 year a!d four shire; 2, Clark Jones.Beebe Heifer born September 1 to December 31, 1935: 1, C.D.French, Cookshire; 2, Clark Jones, Beebe.Heifer born January 1 to August 31.1935: 1.C.D.French; 2, Clark Jones.Beebe.Heifer born September 1 to December 1, 1934: 1, Clark Jones, Beebe, females under six years: 1, Howard Murray, Magog; 2, Mrs.M.Hodgman, Birchton.Breeder\u2019s herd: 1, Howard Murray, Magog; 2, Mrs.M.Hodgman, Birchton.Get of sire; 1, Mrs.M.Hodgman.Birchton, j Progeny of one coiv: 1, Howard i Murray, Magog; 2, H.E.Teel, Heifer, two years and under, Cowansville ; 3, Mrs.M.Hodgman, three: 1, C.D.French, Cookshire; ( Birchton.2, Clark Jones.Beebe.\tI\tMARKET CATTLE Cow three years and under six:* Steer- 1,000 to 1,200 lbs: C.D.1.C.D.French, Cookshire; 2, Clark!French, Cookshire; 2, Robert Jones.Beebe.\t; Woodside, Lonnoxville; 3, W.K.Junior, senior and grand chain-1 Mayhew, Bury, pion, female: 1 C.P.French, Cook-! .Steer 800 to 999 lbs: 1, Howard shire.\tI Murray, Magog; 2, R.C.Johnson, Herd, bull over one year and four Danville; 3, Henry Woodside, Lcn-females under six: 1, C, D.Frencb, j nox\u2018viIle.Cookshire: 2, Clark Jones, Beebe.| Baby beef steer or heifer: 1.C.Breeder\u2019s herd' 1.C.D.French.D.French.Cookshire: 2.E.Goulet, Cookshire: 2.Clark Jones, Beebe\tI Garth by; 3, K.C.Johnston, Dan- Get-of-sive: 1, C.D.French Cookshire; 2, Clark Jones, Beebe.Progeny of one cow; 1, C.P French; 2.Clark Jones.SHORTHORNS ville.Champion Shorthorn steer: Emilien Goulet.Champion Aberdeen Angus steer: Howard Murray.SHROPSHIRE®.Ram horn in 1935: 1, E.C.Rose Sherbrooke; 2, N.L.Cameron, Lennoxville; 3, James A.Woodward, Lennoxville.Ram lamb born in 1936: 1, James A, Woodward, Lennoxville; 2, E.C.Rose, Sherbrooke; 3, E.B.Mizener, Foster; 4.I.J.Parnell, Lennoxville; 5, N.L.Cameron, Lennoxville; 6, George Lavallee, Bromptonville.Ewe lamb born in 1930: 1, E.C.Rose, Sherbrooke; 2, I.J.Parnell, Lennoxville; 3, George Lavallee, Bromptonville.Pen of four lambs born in 1936: 1, E.C, Rose, Sherbrooke; 2, I.J.Parnell, Lennoxville; 3, James A.Woodward, Lennoxville.OXFORDS Ram born in 1935: 1, H.W.Burton, Waterville; 2, F.A.Burton, Waterville; 3, F.G.Bennett, Bury.Ram lamb born in 1936; 1, S.Wesley Boyd, Cowansville; 2, F.G.Bennett, Bury; 3, H.W.Burton, Waterville.Ewe lamb born in 1936: 1, F.G.j Bennett, Bury; 2, S, Wesley BoydJ Cowansville; 3, H.W.Burton, Wat-j erville.Pen of four lambs born in 1936: i 1, S.Wesley Boyd, Cowansville; 2, PL G.Bennett, Bury; 3, H.W.Burton, Watevillle, HAMPSH1RES Ram born in 1935: 1, PL W.Burton, Waterville; 2, J.A, Burton, Waterville; 3, H.B.Norris, George-1 ville; 4, W.S.J.Hodgman, Birch-ton.Ram lamb born in 1936: 1, H.W.j Burton.Watervillle; 2.H.B.Norris, I Georgeville.Ewe lamb born in 1936: 1, H.B.j Norris, Georgeville; 2, H.W.Bur-j ton, Waterville.Pen of four lambs born in 1986:! 1, H.B.Norris, Georgeville; 2, H.W.Burton, Waterville.LEICESTER® Ram born in 1935: 1, H.Charpentier, Clairvaux: 2, I.J.Parnell, Lennoxville; 3, John H.Pibus, Knowlton.Ram lamb born in 1936: 1, John H.\tPibus, Knowlton; 2.H.J.Snaden, Danville; 3, I.J.Parnell, Lennoxville.Ewe lamb born in 1036: 1, Ernest Sylvester, St.Hyacinthe; 2, H.Charpentier, Clairvaux; 3, H* J.1 ¦ Snaden, Danville,\t! ;» Pen of four lambs horn in 1934:1^ I,\tH, J.Snaden, Danville; 2, H.j® Charpentier, Clairvaux ; 3, John H.ijg Pibus, Knowlton; 4, I.J.Parnell, ' Recent week-end guests at Cottage Hotel were Mr.and Mrs.R.H.Shilson and son, Manrice, Mr.and Mrs.Ackerson, of Cedars, Mr.and Mrs.C.J.Farrell and Mr.D.Fuller, of Knowlton; Mr.and Mrs.G.H.Webster, Mr.F.Armstrong, Mrs.Gladys Bolstridge, Mr.and Mrs.J.Hunter and children, Messrs.Elmer and M.Crewhurst and Mr.Sawyer, of Eastman.Mir.C.F.Denzim and Miss Doris Denzin, from Craven, Sask., were guests of Mr.and Mrs.J.M.Cameron, Highland Farm.The Misses Ila and Connie Cass, of Georgeville, Mss Muriel Cameron and Mr.J.C.Holland, of Rock Island, Mr.J.Wright, of Potton, and Mr.and Mrs.Murray Cameron, of Currier, were also guests at the same home.Miss Gladys Fisk, R.N., has returned to Sherbrooke after a few days\u2019 visit at her home here.LICHSBlIHHHS'aaæ.jGRANADA E ONLY TWO DAY\u2019S LEFT to see a great new song show \u2014\u2022 death-defying feats of hilarity \u2014 P Dick Powell.Joan Blondell, War-11 ren William.Frank McHugh, in i, \u201cSTAGE STRUCK\u201d u: ADDED \u2014 Halfway round the IS world he races neck and neck with death \u2014 Warner Gland, in \u201cCHARLIE CHAN AT THE P R ACE TRACK\u201d with Keye Luke, Helen Wood.¦tj\t\u2014 Latest World News \u2014 *3\tComing\u2014WED.Until SAT.SHIRLEY TEMPLE *4\tin her greatest of all k;\tscreen hits! \u201cDIMPLES\u201d with Frank Morfran, Helen Weatlcr, Kofct.H Kent.Slepin Fetchit, the Hall Johnson p- Choir.Edward Arnold.Victor Jory, W Nana ''tirant.in \u201cMEET NERO ÇÜ WOLFE,'1 9 9c9 a ¦ ffi ¦ H H ¦ PREMIER TODAY AND TUESDAY A Broadway hit comes to the screen \u2014 Gertrude Michael, Walter Abel, Erik Rhodes, in \u201cSECOND WIFE\u201d ADDED \u2014 Mystery, Love, Action and Thrills in Nature\u2019s Greatest Wonderland-\u201cYELLOWSTONE'\u2019 with Henry Hunter, Judeth Barrett, Alan Hale, Andy Devine.Musical, Comedy and Cartoon.COMING WED.UNTIL SAT.By popular demand The bis: dramatic smash \u201cFURY,\u2019* with Sylvia Sidney-Spencer Tracy.Walter Abel, Bruce Cabot-Ako Lnutae Fazenda, Maudo Aburne.Ann Rutherford, Eddie Nusrent.in * DOIUHNUTS AND SOCIETY.\" Bull born January 1 to April 30, Champion Hereford itcer; C.D.Lennoxville; 5, Frank Stalker, H B S B' S ¦ ¦ ¦id» I PAGE EIGHT.OTTAWA, McGILL jPITT PANTHERS WESTERN UPSET BURIED NOTRE GRIDIRON DOPE DAME\u2019S DREAMS GRANBY PROVED EASY PREY TO LOCAL BOWLERS RougRriders Smacked Hamilton Tigers, Redmen Conquered uieam ^ nauonai ruoi Varsity and Mustangs Downed Recognitjon Lays Buried Queen s in Week-End of Un- ^ 1 e 11\u2014n-expeded Form Reversals.______ t For Sixth Straight Season of Post- Four Sherbrooke Quintettes De-Rockne Era, Fighting Irish feated Granby Opponents by Dream of National Football| Margin of 1,743 Pins in in Friendly Inter-City Series Here Saturday Night.Smacked helter-skelter in a midseason revival of downright emery treatment, eastern Canadian football favorites\u2014not one of them unbeaten\u2014dragged one weary foot slowly after another today in a spectacle that was painful and em-barassing to the experts.There may be life in these once-robust gridiron conquerors after what occurred on Saturday, but you would scarcely recognize it today.Only the Sarnia Imperials, scoring a routine twenty-nine to three win over the Hamilton Cubs in the Ontario Rugby Football Union, escaped the scourge that beset favorites.The Hamilton Tigers, meek and mild in the face of a demoralizing Ottawa attack, bowed to the Roughriders by twenty-one to nothing.The Montreal Indians, still a futile force in the clutches, went down by twelve to four before the 'teady Toronto Argonauts.The results left all four Interprovmcial Union teams retaining nlay-off chances.\t.Bill Storen\u2019s Western Mustangs, fast developing into the hardest-striking team in the Intercollegiate Union, whipped Queen\u2019s by ten to three in Kingston and the Red-men of McGill contributed a_ far more surprising turnover by beating University of Toronto by eight to three at Montreal.When the four-sided uprising was over for the day, such young players at Charlie Letourneau and Cam MacArthur.of McGill; Boyce Sherk, Doug Shales and Claude Moore, of Western; Andy Tommy, Tommy Daley and Joe Zelicovitz, of Ottawa; Bobby Coulter, of the Argos, and Mike Hedgewick and Arnie McWatters, of Sarnia, stood out as stars.Letourneau plunged through after a Varsity kick had been blocked and fell on the loose ball on Toronto\u2019s four-yard line.Captain MacArthur sliced through a gap on the first play for the game\u2019s lone touchdown and Letourneau converted, to give the Redmen a cix to two advantage at half-time.McGill had opened the scoring in the first quarter when MacArthur punted to the deadline and Varsity had gone ahead by the odd point in three when the Montrealers ceded a safety touch in the second quarter before MacArthur scored his major tally.MacArthur hoisted a rouge fer the lone third-quarter point and Bob Isbister punted a rouge in the final fifteen minutes to conclude the scoring.In the final minutes of the game, Varsity staged a desperate drive and brought the pigskin to McGill\u2019s four-yard line.The Red-men threw the Blues back three times without yielding an inch, and recovered the ball on the third down, to hand Varsity its first setback in three starts.Sherk, stocky Western backfield-er, led his team to victory by scoring the Mustangs\u2019 first nine points.He kicked a placement, scored a touchdown and then converted, while Shales added the tenth point in the last quarter.The setback dimmed Queen's hopes of a third straight senior college championship, and placed the Mustangs in a tie with Varsity at the top of the standing.The Kingston squad, riddled by injuries, put up a game but futile battle against the speedy, smooth-working visitors.They rallied in the last chapter, carrying play to London\u2019s one-yard marker with one down to go, but an extension went wrong and Western stopped the play ten yards out and were given possession.In the third quarter Queen\u2019s showed something of an offensive for the first time during the game, carrying play to Western\u2019s twenty-yard stripe.From there Ed Barnabe kicked a field goal for his team\u2019s only points.A placement kick by Tiny Kerman in the second quarter, coupled with a touchdown, a convert and two rouges gave Ottawa a halftime lead which all but settled the game.In the third quarter the Roughriders nailed another touch on a Hamilton fumble and sent their point total to twenty-one with a major score in the final canto.Tommy and Daley burst away for repeated gains through the broken field, the former in Ottawa\u2019s first touchdown when he gathered in one \u2022of \"Buck\u201d Welch\u2019s spirals on hi* own forty-yard marker, started for the right and then cut back as he crossed midfield.Tommy was travelling at top speed at the Hamilton forty-yard stripe when he flipped the ball to Zelicovitz and the latter romped the rest of the seventy yards for a touch, Tommy and Zelicovitz were responsible for the other Ottawa touches.The old Varsity combination of Coulter and Connolly used the lateral pas* with deadly effect and they spun off many a good gain around the ends against the Indians.Twice the slippery Coulter broke away for twenty-three-yard runbaeks when it counted.The Montreal squad led by two to nothing at the end of the first quarter but were behind by five to three at half-time.The Scullers added a single point in the third period and outecored their visitors by six to one in the final frame.Failure to take advantage of opportunities played a prominent role in Montreal\u2019s third reverse in four games.The two greatest rugby machines western Canada has known rode toward a second play-off game with the Winnipeg*, national champion*, leading the Regina Rough-rider1-' by five points.The Riders smothered the \u2019Pegs under a diversified attack at Regina to outplay the champions in cvciy department except punting, but they lost by seven to four be- Debris of Humiliating Defeat by Pittsburgh.South Bend, Ind., Oct.26,\u2014It has been five years since Knute Rockne crashed to his death on the Kansas prairie, but at no time, perhaps, has Notre Dame missed the great football master as it did today.For the sixth successive season of the post-Rockne era, the^ fighting Irish dream of national football recognition, a goal the immortal strategist crossed so often, lay buried in the debris of a humiliating twenty-six to nothing defeat by Pittsburgh on Saturday.The crushing defeat, most decisive setback suffered by the Irish since Army whipped them by twenty-seven to nothing in 1925, unquestionably reduced Notre Dame\u2019s once proud football spirit to an all-time low.And you cannot blame them for feeling downhearted.During Rockne\u2019s thirteen-year command of the South Bend gridiron stalwarts, Notre Dame won 105 games, lost twelve and tied five.Under \u2018'Hunk\u201d Anderson, who led the team three seasons, and Elmer Layden, in his third season as cooch, the Irish have lost fourteen.That is two more lost in less than six seasons than Rockne\u2019s ri evens dropped in thirteen.What's wrong with Notre Dame*?The answer can be found in three reasons; 1, The loss of Rockne and his amazing personality.2 The football consciousness cf other universities, large and small.-who no longer sit idly by and watch stars in their territory pack their grip sacks and catch the firrt train for South Bend.3.Stiffer scholastic requirements at Notre Dame.Of the three answers, Rockne\u2019s loss unquestionably is the biggest.While the Panthers were routing Notre Dame, six other major United States football teams were wiped off the undefeated list and Minnesota\u2019s Gophers, turning loose the power for the first time this year, rolled up their twenty-first con-secutice victory.Upset by Duquesne in shocking fashion a week ago, the Panthers whipped Notre Dame before a crowd of 70,000 to put themselves hack in the running for a possible Rose Bowl nomination.Meanwhile, 50,000 watched Minnesota roll over Purdue, previously unbeaten, with a tricky lateralpassing offensive which produced a thirty-three to nothing triumph.The Boilermakers put up a great fight in the first half, but bowed to Minnesota\u2019s superior reserve strength in the end.Joining Notre Dame and Purdue in the beaten list for the first time were St.Mary\u2019s of California, Michigan State, Duke, North Carolina and Catholic University.St.Mary\u2019s lost a gruelling seven to six decision to Fordham\u2019s Rams after piling up a six to nothing margin with two field goals; Michigan State suffered a thirteen to seven setback at the hands of Marquette; Duke, which had looked like one of the nation\u2019s finest, bowed to Ter.nesee\u2019s fighting Volunteers by fifteen to thirteen in a spectacular engagement at Knoxville, while North Carolina was no match for Tulane\u2019s undefeated green wave and surrendered by twenty-one to seven.Holy Cross, Villanova, Army, Yale and Georgetown remained in the undefeated class, although the last named was tied at seven-all by New York University.Holy Cross struck once after being held in their own territory for three periods and beat Carnegie Tech by seven to nothing; Villanova whipped Boston University by twenty-five to seven; the Cadets made a thirty-three to nothing conquest of Springfield, and Yale finished on the long end of a twenty-eight to nothing count against Rutgers.In the midwest, Northwestern kept its undefeated record intact by trampling Illinois to the tune of thirteen to two as Michigan upset a favored Columbia eleven by thirteen to nothing and Ohio State knocked off Indiana by seven to nothing.Washington, Washington State and Southern California remained unbeaten in the Pacific Coast Conference race, Washington downing California by thirteen to nothing; I Washington State nosing out Ore-I gon by thre to nothing, and South-* ern California doubling the score on Stanford by recording a fourteen to seven win.The results of other important games follow: Collegiate 41, Lafayette OjPrinceton 7, Navy 0; Dart-j mouth 26, Harvard 7; Cornell 13, I Penn State 7; Maryland 20, Syra-! euse 0: Boston College 26, Provid-i ence 0; Kentucky 7, Florida 0; ; Kansas State 26, Kansas 6; Nebras-| ka 14, Oklahoma 0; Georgia Tech ! 0, Vanderbilt 0; Louisiana State I 19, Arkansas 7; Mississippi State 0, Texas Christian 0.SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1936.LOYOLA SCORED 55-POINT WIN OVER BISHOP\u2019S Montreal Collegians Recorded Fifth Straight Triumph by Routing Lennoxville Students Saturday Afternoon \u2014 Brennan Scored Four of Loyola's Nine Touchdowns.The second inter-city bowling series of the season to date was staged here Saturday night when four Granby teams travelled to Sher- Montreal, Oct.26.\u2014Loyola College continued to run roughshod over its Intermediate Intercollegiate Football Union opposition Sat- brooke and tvere decisively defeated | ur^ay afternoon when the Temec-by four local quintettes.With Sher.j )-0 T'rojans whipped Bishop\u2019s Uni-brooke\u2019s representatives, both male , versity decisively to run its string and female, in better-than-ordinary 0f consecutive victories to five, form, Granby went down^ to defeat ¦ After getting away to a whirlwind by no less than 1,743 pins in the start by converting the Lennoxville four encounters.Local lady trund- kick-off into the first of nine con-lers contributed 966 pins to this : yertgd touchdowns, the local col-margin and the men alleyists sup- i ]egjans piled up an imnressive plied the remaining 777 pins.[total of fifty-five points and kept The record for a ladies\u2019 team pin- ! their opposition scoreless, fall went by the boards when the ! Paul Brennan led the touchdown aggregation led by Yvette Drapeau : parade with four major tallies, and posted a spectacular aggregate of j jack Shaughnessy was credited 1,817 to rout their Granby oppon- j with tw-o five-point scores.The ents by 611 pins.Miss Drapeau other three touches were shared by was the high-scorer in this engage- j Ben Hammond, George Moore and ment with a single-string total of Ernie Tyler.Walter Morley kick-171 and a three-string score of 4381 eci seven of the nine consecutive \u2014the only lady to better the 400-, converts, while Long- and Tyler mark during the evening.\t[\tcontributed the other three singles.The other local ladies team | Brennan scooped up the Bishop\u2019s boasted of the holder of the highest ; kick-off and beat all invading single-string mark, Juliette Loubier, tacklers to go over for a major who started her evening\u2019s activities score in forty-five seconds.Long with of toal of 175.This Sher- converted kis effort from place-bi-ooke quintette emerged with 355 ment.A driving Loyola line carried pins to spare, Miss Loubier.also ; play deep into Lennoxville terri-heading the three-string column | tory and Long booted to Knox be-with a mark of 377.\tj hind the Bishop\u2019s line for a single.In the two ladies\u2019 fixtures, no First quarter scoring was brought Granby lady could break the 306- : to a close as Ben Hammond broke mark for three strings, while there through the visitors\u2019 front rank for were only four players who bettered five points.Tyler added the con-the century in a single string.j vert_ to make the score thirteen to Henry Klein\u2019s boys added 433 i nothing, pins to the Sherbrooke margin when | The second quarter was virtually they hung up a team total of 1,937 1 scoreless, Loyola only managing to as against the 1,504 for Granby.I add a touch and convert to its The Kayserites were paced by ! total when Paul Brennan climaxed Herve Courchesne and Alex Ma- a long down-field drive with a guire, the former with a high single- 1 plunge through centre that went string total of 171 and Maguire, \u2022 for a touch.Morley\u2019s placement lead-off man, with a three-string j was good for the extra point, aggregate of 453.\tj Brennan seemed out to create a The contest between Fashion'new' individual scoring record, Craft and Granby proved the closest1 plunging across for another major on the programme.The visitors, ! score early in the third quarter, after putting up a strong battle in i Morley\u2019s convert again sailed be-the initial string, were outclassed in ; tween the posts.The maroon shirts the other two tilts and finished 344 i began to unleash their forward pins behind the Sherbrookers.Arm- ! pass attack and Phil Shaughnessy and Bourguignon was the star of i tossed a long one to George Moore, this encounter, his single-string ¦ the latter going across the Leu-score of 190 and his triple aggre-: noxville line standing up.Another gate of 503 being the best of the; aerial barrage led to the next evening\t1 touch, Brennan ploughing through The respective final pinfall totals ' after Moore had carried Shaugh-were; Sherbrooke 7,431 and Granby ; nessy\u2019s pass to the two-yard line.5,688, leaving the homesters an ad- Morley\u2019s convert brought the count LOVE\u2019S LABOR LOST -The Trouble vrw vbt/, HEMMmWAV, /s you're not \u2018SHOWNG ENOUGH Fl&Ht mm - f it ütljliltff fÊÉSfei?ATHLETICS WON ANOTHER CALI OVER GRADS IN ! FOR HEIP FROM CLOSE CONTEST Percy Kraushaar Capitalized on Quebec Fumble to Give Sherbrooke Boys a Six to Three Decision Over Grads Saturday [ Helplessly in High Seas Near Afternoon.\tj Sicklow Head Off Irish Coast.vantage of 1,743 pins.The detailed results follow; LADIES GRANBY F.Hough .\t.83\t69\t83\u2014235 G.Nicholson\t.83\t97\t102\u2014282 M.Fuller .\t.79\t60\t90\u2014229 B.Buck .\t.93\t60\t73\u2014226 M.Stapleton\t.73\t72\t89\u2014234 Total\t\t.411\t368\t437-1206 SHERBROOKE\t\t\t F.Choquette\t.115\t102\t131\u2014348 S.Xasteroole-1\t.109\t74\t109\u2014292 ' Y.Drapeau\t.171\t153\t114\u2014438 L.Begin .\u2022\t.9o\t138\t129\u2014362 B.Cava .\t.116\t123\t138\u2014377 Total\t\t.606\t590\t621-1817 Sherbrooke\twon by\t611\tpins.\tGRANBY\t\t j V, Williams\t.60\t76\t49\u2014185 ! Mrs.Ball .\t.61\t81\t69\u2014211 (Mrs.McComi\tskey 97\tHO\t85\u2014292 I.Reith .\t.83\t107\t85\u2014275 : B.Kashe .\t.69\t103\t92\u2014264 : Total\t\t\t477\t380-1227 SHERBROOKE\t\t\t i B.Houle .\t.120\t107\t84\u2014311 ! O.Gava .\t.92\t103\t87\u2014282 | J.Loubier .\t.« 175\t93\t109\u2014377 iT.Precourt\t.100\t114\t127\u2014341 C.Bilodeau .\t.99\t93\t79\u2014271 Total\t\t.586\t510\t486-1582 Sherbrooke\twon by\t355\tpins.\tMEN\t\t \tGRANBY\t\t W.McKenna\t.87\t104\t103\u2014294 G.Steele .\t.103\t137\t89\u2014329 H.Sorenson\t.\t91\t211\t91\u2014303 H.Collins .\t.82\t92\t106\u2014280 iL.Nicholson\t.97\t110\t91\u2014298 Total\t\t.460\t564\t480-1504 JULIUS KAYSF.R\t\t\t A.Maguire .\t.155\t156\t142\u2014453 P.Drapeau .\t.115\t101\t88\u2014304 C.Ka tad oti?.\t.137\t119\t132\u2014388 H, Courchesn\te .171\t141\t116\u2014428 H.Klein .\t.140\t108\t116\u2014364 Total\t\t.718\t625\t594-1937 to thirty-seven to nothing.Three more major scores were added in the final quarter, Jack Shaughnessy being credited with two and the other going to Ernie Long f.wing half The teams were: ivola.\tBishops.Bennett McMahon Lyster Knox Hibbard Frederick Perkins Carter Greenwood middle Carmichael outside\tRogers outside\tCodcre Loyola subs ; Tingle Moore, Mc-Morlev, Pare, Villelo, Sen- Brennan\thalf P.Shaughnessy quarte: McNally\tsnap Sheridan\tinside Clacy\tinside Verdicchio\tmiddle Lorrain STÂNSÏEÂD WON FIRST GAME OF TITLE DEFENCE FRESHMEN AND GRADS ANNEXED OPENING GAMES CRIPPLED SHIP American Shipper, Carrying Twenty-Two Passengers and Cargo of Whisky, Wallowing Quebec, Oct.26.\u2014 Opportunity-knocked only once during the Sherbrooke Athletics-Quebec Grads rugby fixture here Saturday afternoon \u2014but the .visitors, were, ready.As a result of capitalizing on the \u201cbreak,\u201d ¦ the Athletics finished ahead by six to three and moved into a contending position for the Quebec Rugby Football Union championship.The homesters were out in front until the third quarter and it looked as though they were about to duplicate the feat of their intercity rivals, the Granites, who blanked the Athletics by five to nothing in the' Eastern Townships city two weeks ago.The visitors continued to stage a plucky battle and were rewarded when a fumble occurred with play deep in local territory.A faulty pass-out saw the ball evade a Quebec half.Tire pigskin bounced avvay and in the duel which resulted Percy Kraushaar gained possession of the loose oval.A few steps and Kraushaar was over the Quebec goal line for the five points which swung the verdict in Sherbrooke\u2019s favor.I \u2014 * BASEBALL Homesters Took Advantage of [Grads Defeated Seniors and Sherbrooke High School |\tFreshmen Nosed Out Sopho- Fumbles to Produce E.ght to\t_c Schecluie.0pe\u201ei\u201eg Keown strings by nosing out the Weaving department.Johnny Northey, of the Inspecting, rolled a high single-string total of 164, and R.Fortier, of the leaders, was credited with a three-string sion.The detailed scores follow: FINISHERS R.Enair ¦ ¦ R.Lessard D.Auger .R.Bateson R.Fortier Total .65 81 36 131 148\u2014346 99\u2014286 104\t103\u2014293 85\t127\u2014343 133 106 135\t125\t134\u20143941 .498\t553\t611-1662 INSPECTORS L.\tJutras .\t103\t101\t127\u2014331 P.\tLemaire .\t107\t125\t125\u2014357 M.\tSeminero .\t108\t65\t133\u2014306 J,\tNorthey .\t164\t85\t124\u2014373 W.Sullivan .\t120\t139\t79-338 Total .602\t515\t588-1705 Finishing won two strings.pins.GRANBY N.Hutton .93\t129\t93\u2014315 G.Miller.119\t91\t107\u2014317 J.\tKachegensky 146\t110\t117\u2014373 M.McComtskey 95\t102\t131\u2014328 K.\tHutton .' 171\t133\t114\u2014418 L Baker .R.Beaulieu B.Cote .H.Buckley E.Goulet .Total .WEAVERS .147 .101 .66 .97 69\t96\u2014312 127\t118\u2014346 124\t119\u2014309 98\t119\u2014314 123\t112\t120\u2014355 534 540 .572-1636 Total 624 565 562-1751 cause of a touchdown fumble and a Winnipeg defence that refused to crumble.The \u2019Peg'-: add two points to their total score in the series to be concluded here next Saturday because they led Regina by that margin in the western conference.The aeries score is nine to four.Probably the Regina-Winnipeg winner will meet the Cal'ary Bronks in the western final at Calgary.The Bronks won the Alberta title at home on Saturday by defeating the University of Alberta by eighteen -to seven in a game from which four regular Bronks were missing due to injuries.Any and all binds of business\u2014a «eat a word.Record Want Column».FASHION\u2019 CRAFT IA.Bourguignon 190\t172\t141\u2014503 G.Lernay .122\t116 158\u2014396 G.Mathieu .108\t140 157\u2014463 ! T.Rousesau .147\t107\t114\u2014368 J.Kad&dotis .99\t185\t139\u2014423 Total.666 720 709-2095 Fashion Craft won by 344 pine.FINISHING SQUAD RETAIN LEAD BY TWO STRINGS.The four teams in the Paton Bowling League maintained their respective positions in the standing today following Saturday afternoon\u2019s contest*.The pace-setting Finisher* retained their two-string lead over the field by scoring a two to one decision over the Inspecting quintette, while the second-place Warpinv an\" r,î'arion increased thei' margin over thud position to four WARPING C.Quine .92\t101\t88\u2014281 W.Pel key .92\t118\t106\u2014316 L.Tremblay\t.\t122\t95\t116\u2014333 O.Duperron\t.\t117\t129\t123\u2014369 E.Quine .108\t139\t143\u2014390 Total .531\t582\t576-1689 Warping won two strings.The Paton League standing to date Finishers Warping .Inspectors Weavers .P.12 12 12 12 W.10 8 4 2 L.2 4 8 10 Pinfall 7,063 6,589 6,613 6,263 SEVERE EARTH SHOCKS IN TOKYO Tokyo, Oct.26.\u2014 Severe earth fhocks in Tokyo and Yokohama sent sleeping citizens fleeing into the streets in night attire early today.No immediate damage was report'd and there were apparently no casualties.One Win in Opening Game of E.T.High School Rugby League Schedule.Stanstead, Oct.26.\u2014 Stanstead College\u2019s 1936 gridiron aggregation \u2014with only two of last year's regulars on the starting line \u2014 inaugurated the defence of its Eastern Townships High School Rugby League championship by downing the Sherbrooke High School to the tune of eight to one.A Sherbrooke fumble produced the lone touchdown of the game; a long kick-off was responsible for a rouge, and a bad snap resulted in a safety touch for Stanstead\u2019s eight points.A recovered fumble behind the Stanstead line .went for a rouge and saved the visitors from shutout.The engagement was played under ideal weather conditions on a field which was in fine shape.The homesters had somewhat the better of the play but costly fumbles lost them several good chances to score, mis-plays resulting in loss of the ball on third downs on no less than five occasions.Both teams were victims of hasty whistle-blowing by the officials.Poaps, of Stanstead.tackled a Sherbrooke back heavily after gaining considerable giound on running back a kick.The bail bounced out of the carrier\u2019s hands and was scooped up by Kelley, who ran twenty-five yards for what appeared to be a touchdown.Belief that the carrier had held the ball when tackled caused the referee to halt the proceedings and Sherbrooke was given possession where the ball had been fumbled.On this play Poaps, who was out all last season because of a sprained ankle, was removed from the game suffering from a slight concussion.Midway through the first quarter Abbott punted over the Sherbrooke line and followed down unde)' bis kick to fall on the fumbled ball and give Stanstead the .five-point lead they held at halftime.The visitors attempted a field goal which missed the posts and Millet ran the ball out of danger, while Abbott raced from behind the goal lines when Sherbrooke tried to enter the scoring column with a rouj, Sherbrooke recovered a Stanstead fumble on the local twenty-yard line during the second chapter but a penalty hampered their progress.\\s the intermission neared the visitors made yards three times, once by means of a forward pass, and the kick over the line was fumbled by Millet.The Stanstead receiver recovered, however, and was rouged for Sherbrooke's lone marker.Abbott\u2019s kick-off at the begnning of the third quarter raised the Stanstead point total to seven when Cotton rouged the Sherbrooke receiver, while later in the same stanza a bad snap sailed over the visiting kicker\u2019s» head and Cotton grounded him for a safety touch.Perkins had a chance to add five points to the home squad's total toward the end of the game but a forward pass slipped through hii fingers as he was crossing the Sherbrooke line.The line-ups were: Stanstead\tSherbrooka Millet\tquarter\tBradley Poap*\thalf\tHardy Abbott\thalf\tFuller Mackay\thalf\tHeath Mullins\thalf\tBean Gordon\tsnap\tCarter Jobin\tinside\tLeHuray Waterman\tinside\tPotter Borighl\tmiddle\tWillis Peat\tmiddle\tSavard Perkins\tend\tFrench Kelley\tend\tLeech Stanstead subs; Sisco, Austin, Cotton and Cooper.Sherbrooke aubs; Jackson, Rad- mores m Fixtures of Y.M.'C.A.House Basketball League.The Grads and the Freshmen were victorious in the opening games of the Y.M.C.A.House Basketball League schedule Saturday night.The Grads registei'ed a thirty-one to twenty-two triumph over the Seniors, while the Freshmen nosed out a twenty-one to eighteen decision over the Sophomores.The Grads established a twenty-one to eight advantage over the Seniors in the first half and succeeded in partly suppressing their opponents after the intermission.The Seniors, paced by Billie Jowett, i made a gallant stand in the second I half but were only able to reduce j the deficit they faced by four .points.j Syd Ball started off well in quest ! of individual scoring honors when I he accounted for thirteen of the j winning team\u2019s thirty-one points.Jowett was a close second to the | lanky forward with an even dozen points, while Amby Wootton, of the Grads, ranked third in the scoring with five field baskets.The line-ups and individual scorers follow; Grads\u2014A.Wootton 10, S.Bail 13, D.Wootton 4, A.Stocks 4, G.Petti-grue and J.Mutchler.Total 31.Seniors\u2014N.Munkittrick 4, O.I Stocks, L.Varney 2, G.Taylor 2, j C.Standish 2, and W.Jdwett 1?.j Total 22.! Three of the thirteen points the Freshmen scored in the first half of their encounter with the Sophomores proved the final margin of victory.The Frosh outpointed their rivals by thirteen to ten prior to the rest interval, and both teams registered eight points in the second half.Nick Vlahakis, of the Sophomores, led the point-getters with four field baskets, while Trevor Stevens, of the Freshmen, Occupied the runner-up berth in the scoring coMmn with six points.The line-ups and individual point-getters were; Freshmen\u2014S.Lothrop 4.T.Stevens 6, II.Gray 4.B.jowett 3, F.Cooper and D.Cohoon 4.Total 21.Sophomores\u2014W.Cohoon 4, I).Reid, 2, N.Vlahakis 8, J.Lowe, A.Bryce and C, Whatley 4.Total 18- Bill Peak handled both fixtmvs with D- Whatley as umpire and D.Barfrild ns timekeeper.$ \u2014 ! #\u2014 FARNHAM CAPTURED QUEBEC AMATEUR DIAMOND TITLE Farnham, Oct.26-\u2014Farnham annexed the championship of the I'rc-vincial Baseball Association yesterday afternoon by scoring a ten to six victory over the Montreal Police in the deciding game of the final series.On Saturday the Farnham nine had evened the title play-off by downing the Policemen in Montreal to the tune of six to two.The home team came from behind to triumph yesterday.The Montrealers scored three times in the initial frame, but the homesters rallied to tally twice in the second stanza, square the count in the third chapter and sew up the decision with a five-run outburst in the fifth canto.The score by innings was: R.H.E.Police .300 100 200\u2014 5 12 2 Farnham .021 051 lOx\u201410 15 2 Batteries: Lariviere, Leblanc and Gohier; Braddock, Baker and Bou-char.Dublin, Oct.26.\u2014 Crippled and buffeted by heavy weather in the Irish Sea, the American merchant liner American Shipper today appealed for more help after two tugs failed to take the disabled vessel in tow.The office of Lloyds Ltd., in Liverpool, relayed a message from the distressed ship saying, \u201cTwo Dublin tugs made fast at 6 a.m.but have not power to handle the vessel The American Shipper radioed she had lost her rudder and was wallowing helplessly i'n high seas near Wicklow Head, off the Irish Coast.The Gus Alexandria and Broclde hurst \"were to start from the Mersey River at one p.m., (8 a.m., E.S.T.) to tow the ship to Liverpool.The American Shipper, 7-430-ton vessel, carried twenty-two passengers and a cargo which included 5,-006 cases o fScotch whiskey.The line denied the ship sent out v- S.O.S.last night.Officials said ffle liner wirelessed its own company asking for assistance after it had lost its rudder.The ship left Liverpool Saturday ea route to New York and called at Belfast yesterday.Ten words, ten cents.Want Ads.No sooner had the little family talk on economy ended than the postman arrived.\u201cThat\u2019s another hill!\u201d said father.\u201cJust as we have decided to put something aside for a rainy day.\u201d \u201cWell, that\u2019s all right, dear,\u201d replied mother.\u201cThis is the account for my raincoat.\u201d FORMER CRIPPLE NOW PLAYS TENNIS Rheumatism in Feet Relieved Here is a story of a young man who had almost given up hope of taking part ia active sports with his fellows again.He telle how he tried one remedy after another and how finally a former sufferer put him on the way to recovery :\u2014 \u2018Two years ago I started with pains in the feet which gradually got worse.I tried \u2018everything under the sun\u2019 but to no effect.Whilst waiting for treatment one evening, another patient advised me to try Kruschen Salts.That was twelve months ago ; the relief was not sudden, but the pain and swelling gradually left my feet, and in six months I amazed my friends by taking long walks into the country.This year I have played a good deal of tennis, a thing which I had begun to think I should never d> again.\u201d\u2014C.W.Rheumatic pain and swelling is frequently caused by excess uric acid accumulating in the body.Kruschen contains two ingredients which are notable for their work in dissolving uric acid deposits.Other ingredients in Kruschen assist the internal organs to expel this dissolved acid from the system.cot, Falkncr, Ross, Peabody and Vineher?.Officials: L.N.McCaip; and L.G.McGilton.LENNOXVILLE HIGH SCHOOL DOWNED ST.LAMBERT Montreal, Oct.26.\u2014The Lennox-ville High School gridiron aggregation today counted its fifth victory in six starts as a result of an eleven to six triumph over the St.Lambert High School here on Saturday.The friendly contest, played on a mud-covered field, saw the visitors came from behind to score the deciding touchdown in the final quarter.Early in the initial stanza Fred Byrne surprised the .Saints by intercepting a pass on his own fif-ten-yard line and galloping the entire length of the gridiron for a major tally.The homesters rallied find led by a single point at halftime as the result of a touchdown and a rouge.Late in the last quarter, Lennox-villc\u2019s star line plunger, Les Ray, crossed the St.Lambert goal line for the five points that gave his team a four-point margin, and Bud Lane added the extra point with a forward pass to Doug Glass.c H a Flowers of the California lilac bush produce an abundance of cleansing lather when rubbed in water.There's a Nip in the Air.q Time to think of Winter.Give a thought to your underwear needs.When the temperature drops you\u2019ll appreciate Penmans fleece-Lined Underwear.The soft, thick fleecing is comfortable next to the skin and provides adequate warmth.The Penmans name and trademark is your assurance that it is knitted to fit correctly, and will give a full measure of long, satisfying service with effective protection to your health.It is made right here in the Province of Quebec.Available in Shirt and Drawers and Union Suits including the popular Nucut style for men and boys.UlUui'L'M PFQ3436 EECE-LINED UNDERWEAR "]
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