Sherbrooke daily record, 20 octobre 1937, mercredi 20 octobre 1937
[" THE WEATHER Cloudy and cooler with scattered showers.i>bprbrnokp latlg mwnrb TEMPERATURES Yesterday: Maximum, 65; minimum, 52.Same day last year: Max.44; min.31.Established 1897.SHERBROOKE, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1937.Forty-First Year.HOTEL RUINS YIELD SECOND BODY Searchers Recover Charred Remains Of Oswald Charlewood Considerable Difficulty Experienced in Identifying Second Corpse Found in Grand Central Hotel Ruins-Little Light as to Origin of Fatal Blaze Uncovered at Opening of Coroner s Inquest Into Death of Robert Cooper.\t__ Almosï at the same time that Coroner Eugene St.Pierre began the inquest into the death of Robert Cooper, twenty-five years old, | who died in the Si.Vincent de Paul Hospital from injuries | received in the holocaust which destroyed the Grand Central Hotel on Monday morning, searchers this morning discovered the charred remains of thirty-one year old Oswald Charlewood, the second body to be recovered of the trio trapped in the blazing structure.The body of Charlewood was discovered about 9.30 o'clock in a third-storey bedroom and was so badly mutilated by the flames that considerable difficulty was experienced by his grief-stricken mother, Mrs.Ernest Blodgett, and Mr.Blodgett, in definitely identifying the remains when they were taken to Lord's Funeral Home.With all of the inmates of the hotel except Charlewood and Lancelot Stewart accounted for, the shape and contours of the trunk, all that was left, indicated that it was that of Charle-wcod, Stewart being a man of slighter build.Also resting in the funeral home are the remains of Stewart Grose, twenty-eight, who sacrificed his lifej in a vain attempt to fescue fellow-boarders in the hotel after having brought two to safety.Fears at one time held for the safety of a Toronto salesman, Ralph Askew, missing since the time of the fire on Monday morning, were allayed yesterday afternoon when the latter reported to the police.Suffering from the effects of his forced exit from the hotel, he had taken refuge in another hostelry and had remained in bed for twenty-four hours, not realizing the concern caused by his absence EXECUTED IN RUSSIA DURING PAST FIVE MONTHS Leaving Haven In Ground After Air Raid Moscow, Oct.20.\u2014Sixty-five i executions for anti-Soviet activ-i ities were reported from the ! provinces today, raising to 527 ! the known death toll for sabo-i tage and espionage in five ! months.| Fifty-four were reported exe-| cuted in Ulan Ude, in the Buryat I Mongolian republic, for spying 1 and wrecking on the railroad, ! allegedly at the behest of the Japanese intelligence service.Til îiai.IYHO \" ¦< N * ÎY, « iiii 3 V F\t\u2022 y.c \u2022\u2022 A x:Ly mmm A :lvt «I1ÉÉ5 Further Concessions On Non-Intervention Must Come From Fascist Side Although British and French Governments Are Far from Abandoning Hope, View Is Held that Italian and German Delegates Must Yield on Question of Withdrawing Volunteers Before Grant of Belligerency Rights.This young Chinese mother holds her child tight king, where she has taken refuge with other bomb and the earth and covered with the matted tent, over ly as she climbs out of the camouflaged dugout at Nan-shell-harassed natives.The dugout is sunk deep into which limbs and grass are spread.L Chinese Take Upper Hand In Struggle For North Province Foreign Reports from Tsinan, Shantung Capital, Declare Provincial Troops Under General Han Fu-Chu Are Making Steady Advances Northward\u2014Japanese Retreat Under Activity of Chinese Guerrilla Units.hanghai, Oct.20.\u2014Shanghai $-received today the first inde- ' pendent reports that Japanese The heavy rain which began to fall not only are slowed down but are late this morning was welcomed by being pushed back on one section the Fire Department who hoped that .\tx.,, r,,.\u201e .\t.it would definitely extinguish the , of ^the North China ffnt smouldering: ruins which have given ' Foreign reports from T»man, the Department considerable trouble Shantung province capital, were in the past three days, even as late ; that provincial troops under Genas this morning a call being turned j eral Han FmChu are making steady in for equipment to combat a fresn advances northward toward Teh outbreak in what remained of the roof.Gave Life Saving Boarders.FeHo I His effort to save his fellow boarders is believed to have played an important part in drawing Charle-W(\\d to his death.When he received word of the conflagration, Chari-wood awakened Doug Hunt, now a patient, in the Sherbrooke Hospital suffering from burns and other injuries, and went back into the dense smoke to spread the alarm.It was while on this mission that chow, near the northern provincial border.The Japanese about-face was as-scribed jointly to intense activity of Chinese guerrila units and assertions that overtures are in progress for a compromise between Japanese and General Han.In Shanghai a Japanese spokesman declared Japanese troops were digging their way forward against Chinese on the Shanghai front._ United States Ambassador Nelson T.Johnson made written representations to the Chinese Government asking that Chinese warplanes quit flying over the Shanghai International Settlement and Charlewood was believed to have been overcome by smoke and flame.; dropping bombs in foreign areas.-j The Embassy representations.Inquest Opened Today |_ | presented at Nanking, were based *;\u2022-j on a report by Consul General Clar- The inquest into Cooper\u2019s death once E.Gauss, showing 1,090 Chin-was adjourned until tomorrow ese and sixteen foreigners have been afternoon to hear two more wit-j killed in the foreign areas, nesses, after the evidence submitted j The Ambassador said previous this morning indicated that the fatal 1 Chinese assurances that planes would blaze originated in the vicinity of | not fly over foreign area had not FARMERS\u2019SONS SHOULD ATTEND PUBLIC SCHOOLS KING AND QUEEN jUNITED STATES WELCOMED BY A! NOT COMMITTED LARGE CROWD ON ORIENT ROW Autumn Mists and Cold President Roosevelt Denies Weather Faded to Keep Republican Charge that He Urges Special Effort Be Made to Get Farmers\u2019 Sons to Remain in Schools Placed at Their Disposal.the kitchen early on Monday morning.The witnesses still to be heard are Miss Gabrielle Isabelle, maid in the hotel who discovered the fire, and Constable Picard, who was patrolling Wellington street shortly Continued on Page 2, Ool.6.been fulfilled.He said have been endangered because Chinese planes attract anti-aircraft fire and increase the probability of a repetition of previous incidents in which Chinese bombs fell in Continued on Page 2, Col.3.Quebec, Oct.20.\u2014B.O.Filteau, Secretary of Quebec Public Education Council, urged the Province\u2019s Agricultural Education congress today to devote a special effort to study of means to \u201cget the formers\u2019 sons to remain in the schools we place at their disposal.\u201d The convention, first of its kind in Quebec, was planning great things for the future success of the farming industry through its examination of agricultural education problems and proposals for their solution, he said.\u201cBut all this will be of no avail if first we do not find a way to bring our rural youth to our schools ami keep them there until they have learned what we have to teach.\u201d He said statistics showed 56 per cent, of the farmers\u2019 sons leave foreigners | schools after the fifth year and after Warns Against Dominion Becoming Mere Dependency Of United States Former Secreiary-of-State Attacks \u201cVicious Propaganda\u201d Being Spread in Effort to Have Canada Abandon Portion of Valuable British Market.the sixth year 83 per cent, have gone.\u201cThe problem of keeping these youths in our institutions of agricultural learning is the biggest problem before this meeting.If we cannot keep in the schools the young farmers, who are studying there, and bring back those who have left, there is little use in planning fine, modern courses of farming study for students who do not attend classes.\u201d Mr.Filteau proposed study of methods to give farming schools an \u201cagricultural atmosphere.\u201d In bringing \u201chigher learning\u201d to Quebec\u2019s farmers, care must be taken not to Continued on Page 2, Col.6, People from Turning Out to Greet Their Majesties atj Bradford, Yorkshire.Bradford, Yorkshire, Oct.20.\u2014 j autumn mists and cold weather greeted the King and Queen to Bradford and district today but large ; crowds again turned out to welcome them to this centre of the woollen industry.Their Majesties spent the early part of the day at nearby Halifax.They lunched with the mayor and afterwards were introduced to the j members of the Australian Rugby [ League team which is touring the j country.Bradford factory workers massed : in the streets in numbers estimated | at 100,000 as the King and Queen | entered the industrial city.Sir j Samuel Koare, Home Secretary, ac- ¦ companied the Royal party.Yesterday they filled engagements, at Hull and York.It was the first! time a reigning monarch had visited the latter city since the days of the Stuarts.In the west of England the Duke j and Duchess of Gloucester concluded I a tour of the Duchy of Cornwall i estates.At Elxeter the Duke laid the j foundation stone of a new library j for University College of the South-1 west.The couple were warmly greeted ' as they motored through the country ] lanes of Devon and Cornwall on their | two-day tour.They returned to Lon- ; don by train in the afternoon.EXPLOSION CAUSED $40,000 DAMAGE Montreal, Oct.20.-\u2014A midnight ex- ¦ plosion of undetermined origin destroyed one of the \u201cnit'.ntor houses\u201d: at the isolated plant of Canadian Industries Limited near Beloeil, about twenty-five miles southeast of Mont-! real.The one-storey frame building, locked since the three workers loft; Montreal, Oct.20.\u2014\u2022Hon.C.II.I that \u201ctheir farmers may obtain lar-Cahan, former Conservative I ger and move profitable market Secretary of Slate, declared in an address last night that Canadians should \u201cresist all efforts to make this country a mere dependency of the United States.\u201d Speaking before the Conservative Association of St.Lawrence-St.George, Mr.Cahan denounced what he called a \u201cvicious propaganda\u201d both in respect to trade matters and the \u201cdangerous illusion\u201d that Canada must \u201crely on the naval and military forces of the United States for defence of our Pacific Coast ports against foreign aggression.\u201d The former cabinet member now represents St.Lawrence St.George, a Montreal riding, in the House of ( ,\u2019ommons.On the, question of trade, he declared the United States was now \u201cinviting\u201d Canada to give up some of its Emjjjre preferences in order in the United Kingdom.\u201d To this end, ; | he said, a \u201cmost insidious and per- ! I sistent propaganda is being conduct-i | ed throughout Canada.\u201d \u201cThose who have caused so much loss ami suffering to Canadian producers during the past fifteen years by enacting tbe Fordtiey-McComber tariff of 1922 and the Hawley-Smoot tariff of 1930,\u201d he added, \u201cuntil they have given practical evidence of good faith by farming their own tariff on a lower basis, have no valid grounds for demanding a large share of Canada\u2019s existing markets in the United Kingdom and other British countries.\u201d The United States\u2019 Hnwley-Smool tariff, he asserted, has \u201cserved to precipitate an unurecendontod industrial and financial depression throughout Canada\u201d by raising to an \u201cunprecedented height.\u201d the Continued on Pago 2, Col.2, ITALY PROPOSES THAT INI) K PE NI ) EN T COMMISSION BE SENT TO SPAIN London, Oct, 20.\u2014Italy un- ! expectedly recommended to the ! Non-Intervention Committee today that an independent com- ! mission be sent to Spain to effect withdrawal of foreign 1 troops from both sides of the j Spanish war \u201cas soon as possible.\u201d I FORMED GASOLINE LAKE Columbus, O., Oct.20.\u2014A gasoline truck and its two trailers upset near Reynoldsburg and 0,500 gallons of gas gushed into a creek where a dam impounded it.Motorists were happy.They hackl'd their cars down to the creek and tilled their tank».Has Reached Agreement with Britain to Change Policy.Aboard Roosevelt Train en Route to Washington, Oct.20.\u2014 President Roosevelt headed toward Washington for conferences on farm, budget and housing problems today after asserting the United States would enter the nine-power treaty conference at Brussels October 30th unhindered by any advance commitments to \u2018\u2018other governments'.\u201d A formal statement on the Belgian parley to consider peace in the Orient was issued after a conference at Hyde Park, N.Y., with Norman H.Davis, American delegate to the conference, who sails today for Eu-rope.It was generally regarded as a reply to the statement of Senator Hiram Johnson, Republican, California.demanding the President state his foreign policy intentions in \u201cplain language,\u201d and asserting United States was entering the conference undoubtedly with a prior understanding with Great Britain.Johnson\u2019s statement that the \u201cambulatory\" Ambassador Davis would not be going to Brussels \u201cunless in advance a programme had been agreed on between England and this country\u201d drew this response from M r.Roosevelt : \u201cMr.Davis, of course, will enter the conference without any commitments on the part of this Government to other governments.\u201d There was no comment from the President on the stock market slump, hut officials declared no federal move to close the New York Stock Exchange was under consideration.Stock Markets Swing Upwards Under Heavy Buying Pressure Many Leading Stocks Gained from One to Three Dollars as Large Blocks Changed Hands in Early Dealings\u2014Position of Securities Exchange Commission in Present Debacle Causing Considerable Bitter Debate.CANADA TODAY IS WELCOMING U.S.MINISTER ondon, October 20.-The cabinet today considered a last effort to break the deadlock over Spain.Despite the dark outlook, both the British and French Governments are far from abandoning itope.They see no reason to assume that non-intervention lias definitely broken down.At the same time, from present indications, the concessions must come from the Italian and German side.The British and Franch Governments, it is intimated, hold to their position that belligerent rights for both sides in Spain can be granted only after a substantial number of volunteers have been withdrawn and that withdrawals must be on a proportional basis.Reports that the French are ready to drop proportional withdrawal are not confirmed here.A Havas News Agency report said it had been learned from informed sources that Great Britain and France would adopt the suggestion made by the Italian delegate yesterday that the British plan of July be substituted for the five-point French plan.This, it was said, would force Italy and Germany to lake a stand on the basic question of withdrawing volunteers, and put an end to quibbling over methods of -_ procedure.(The British plan calls for control of non-intervention in Spain, the granting of belligerency rights, and the withdrawal of volunteers, and discussion of these points in that order.) Likewise no confirmation is forth-j coming of Gibraltar reports of further movements of Italian volunteers to Cadiz.The Radical-Socialist ! newspaper L\u2019Oeuvre, of Paris, re-j ports the Italians have established j bases in tbe tiny Coiumbretes Is-i lands west of the Balearics and that the Germans have established submarine bases on the island of Al-boran, about 150 miles east oi Gibraltar.New York, Oct.20.\u2014The stock market swung into a rally today, many leading stocks gaining $1 to $3 or more as large blocks changed hands in early dealings.Brokers said there was an accumulation of buying orders on hand when trading commenced, but that there were some sellers in steels.The extension of yesterday\u2019s late rally, which carried leaders up after the heaviest selling in years, seemed under way, however.Steel shares were lower, with profit-selling apparent, traders said.United States Steel was down around $3, and Bethlehem around seventy-five cents.Chrysler also opened lower.The first block of U.S.Steel to sell totalled 6,000 shares.Woolworth was $2 higher, Sears Roebuck added $2.75 and American Can was boosted $4 in initial transactions.The ticker tape was three minutes behind floor trading early in the session.Youngstown Sheet & Tube was an exception in the steels, gaining $2 in early dealings.Foreign markets were quiet, with a tendency to slightly lower prices on trans-Atlantic stocks.Brokers with foreign connections said early orders from abroad about balanced on buying and selling sides POSITION OF EXCHANGE COMMISSION DEBATED FAMILY BUDGET IS GREATER THAN 1936 Ottawa, Oct.20.\u2014The Dominion Bureau of Statistics\u2019 cost of living , index, based on numerous factors | affecting the family budget, showed a rise of three per cent, in September in a yearly comparison but declined to 83.4 from an August figure of 83.6.Base year is 1926.! Principal contributing factor to the downward trend in the current year was a two-months recession in food prices which ran counter to average seasonal behaviour.Principal recessions occurred in vegetables and beef which declined sufficiently to offset rises in prices of eggs, butter and other meats.In the yearly comparison the food declined from 79.1 to 78.3, fuel ! sank from 86.1 to 84.7, rent was j up from 83.8 to 87.3, clothing from 170.6 to 72.9, sundries from 92.2 to ! 93.1.The total index was nine per cent, higher than the 1933 depression low while wholesale commodity prices were up twenty-four per cent.at the close of their shaft at five o\u2019clock, was wrecked at an estimated loss of $40,000, No one was injured.Claims Debt Repudiation To Replace Social Credit In Aberhart Schemes Conservative Senator Declares Indications Are Premier Amerhart Will Base Plea for Re-election on Statement \u201cYou Have Not Had to Pay Your Debts While I Was in Power.\u201d Government Leaves Cares of Office Aside Today to Greet United States Secretary-of-State and Mrs.Hull.Ottawa, Oct.20.\u2014 The Government today prepared to entertain Cordell Hull, United States Secretary of State, due here at noon for a three-day courtesy visit in Ottawa and Toronto.No cabinet meetings were scheduled for the rest of the week, following yesterday\u2019s council at which a bye-election date was announced for Victoria.The administration\u2019s decision on \\ allowance or disallowance of Alber- i ta\u2019s three contentious pieces of legis- | lation.dealing with credit, banking | and the press, will not be made known til] next week at least, Prime Minister Mackenzie King told a post-cabinet press conference yes- i terday.The Prime Minister announced { Victoria\u2019s bye-election to fill the seat rendered vacant by the death | last week of Hon.S.F.Tolmie, for- j mer British Columbia Premier and Federal Agriculture Minister, will be held November 29.His announcement brought to three the number of bye-elections to be held in the next five weeks.Others are scheduled November 15 in Frontenac-Addington where Hon.Colin Campbell, former Liberal House member, resigned to contest Lsfierine^mcoe wïera SomÆ j Regime Marks Landon Reappearance Rowe, Ontario Conservative leader,!\tiJ\tirr resigned for the same reason.Both Charges that \u201cFailure\u201d in Exercise of \u201cToo Much Power\u201d LL™ ïi'A-At\u2019omriTbyk Largely Responsible for Economic Conditions United p SLtinSd on f«s.2, C0i.V States People Are Facing Today, New \\ ork, Oct.20.-\u2014IVall Street veterans surveyed today a $25,000,-000,000 washout of quoted values in securities markets since August and concluded the, butcher, the baker Continued on Page 2, Col 7.: ENTERS HIGH SCHOOL AT NINE j Corvallis, Ore., Oct.20.\u2014Alexan-jder Hull, Jr., learned to read and recite the multiplication tables when i he was four, and now, barely nine j years old, he\u2019s a high school fresh I man.] It\u2019s his first taste of formal cdu-I cation.His parents recognized he ; had \u201ca gift\u201d when he learned the : alphabet at two and decided grade ! school could do nothing for him.They undertook his education at j home.Drastic Indictment Of Roosevelt Edmonton, Oct.20,\u2014Senator \\Y.A.Griesbach told the West Edmonton Conservative Association last night that Premier Aber-hart's address here Sunday indicated he is getting ready to \"ditch\u201d Social Credit and base his appeal to the electorate solely on the statement \"You haven\u2019t had to pay your debts while I was in power.\u201d Senator Griesbach said he did not know whether the Premier might abandon Social Credit altogether or merely ccasc talking about it in his appeals to Alberta voters.\u201cBut.1 do believe,\u201d he added, \u201cthat from now on the debt-cutting side of his administration will be stressed more ami more strongly, Ran, Alberta Conservative leader, and that Social Credit will pass slowly out of the picture.\u201d | At (he Edmonton Prophetic Bible Conference last Sunday, Premier Aberhart referred to debt-cutting legislation which was ruled uncon-I stitutional and the moratorium on private debts now in effect, and added : I \u201cYour present Government is about ready with another attempt at | .settlement of these burdensome debts \u201d i CLAIMS COMMISSIONER ERRED | IN SUBMITTING REPORT Edmonton, Oct.20.-\u2014I).M.Dug-said here last night Mr.Justice H.I W.Lunney \u201cerred\u201d in submitting [ his road probe report to the Alberta Attorney-General\u2019s Department and Continued on Page 2, Col, 5.ANTI-CZECH FEELING IN GERMANY WHIPPED TO NEW HEAT TODAY Berlin, Oct.20.\u2014 Anti-Czech fooling in Germany was whipped to a new heat by the press today.German newspapers supported editorially the position taken by Konrad Henlein, leader of the Sudeten Deutsche party, who wrote an open letter to Czechoslovakia's President, Eduard Bones, insisting on autonomy for German districts of the Czech republic.Henlein's letter followed a border incident in which Czech police were said to have manhandled members of his party attempting to hold a banned rally.Topeka, Kas., Get.20.\u2014Alf.M.Landon reasserted himself as an active, as well as titular, leader of the United States Republican party last night in a blunt indictment of \"the Roosevelt administration as greedy for power and a \u201cfailure\u201d in the exercise of \u201ctoo much power\u201d already granted.Of Mr.Roosevelt himself Landon said, \u201cHe is not the man who was elected in 1932.It is apparent that Mr.Roosevelt is going through the same process that transpired in the life of every man in history who was given too much power.Power feeds on power\u2014today, just as it did in the days of Julius Caesar.\u201d Government reorganization, he quickly added, \u201chas for its main purpose the placing of practically every federal employee under the thumb of the President.\u201d The Kansan made these criticisms: Social progress\u2014\u201cI agree with Mr.Roosevelt that progress lags.The real reason why progress has lagged ; in America during the last four and one-half years is the failure of the President of the United States to S follow our constitutional method of government and his failure as an administrator.\u201d i\tLabor\u2014Dealings \u201cnot only un- ! satisfactory\u201d but \u201cdangerous.\" When j trouble came Roosevelt \u201cagain failed i to follow the constitution.Men were shot and clubbed.And, according to : press reports, the President shrugged , his shoulders.He said it was a local affair.He said, \u2018a plague on both j their houses\u2019 and went on another ; vacation.\u201d i The Hugo Black Supreme Court ! appointment\u2014Tradition holds that ¦ \u201cwhen a man is to be appointed to an I important, non-elective office he j shall be submitted to the scrutiny j and white light of public hearings,\u201d i World peace\u2014\u201cThe\tPresident\u2019s impulsive quarter-backing is far more dangerous than the same ten-Contmued from Page 1. PAGE TWO SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1937, GRANBY SIGNS NEWCOACHAND FIVE PLAYERS Dick Carrol!, Former Coach of Windsor Bulldogs, Will Handle Granby Team \u2014 New Puck-Chasers All Played in Eastern Ontario Last Year.Granby.Oct.20.\u2014 The Granby Hockey Club has signed five new players and a new coach, Dick Car-roll, who formerly handled the Windsor Bulldogs, for the coming Provincial League season, according to Horner Cabana, general manager of the Granby Arena.The puck chasers signed all played in Eastern Ontario las: year and include Roy Marsh, who was with the Cornwall Elycrs last winter, Normie Darragh.an Ottawa boy who is the nephew of the ,ate Jack Darragh, a great star with the old Ottawa Senators; Ernie Larabm, who played with Lasalle in the Ottawa Ci tv Sen'.-.»- League last year; Jack Wilson, a former Ottawa Rideau defenceman, and St rade, a netminder from Oskawa, Ont.31 Cabana stated that only two of last year's team' are sure of positions for tbo coining sc&sin.They were Alphonse \u201cPeanut\u2019\u2019 St.Onge, a Granby boy, and Don Boyd, ¦ who carte to Granby from tnc Gow-sijsville Vic.mi a team.It is possible, the Granby spot teuton, went on to say.that Murcei Depslteau and Lafontaine will be \u2022rvîtécL cut to prsct'cs \"with the team, and H is still hoped that L.Ce ÎWarns Against Dominion ! Becoming Mere Dependency Of United States Continued from Page 1.'duties on Canadian exports to that i country.When Mr.Cahan was in Paris in ; 1932-33 negotiating a trade agreement with France, he said, diplomatic and consular United States agents there \u201cwere active in representing to the French governmentai authorities the inexpediency of recognizing\" the Ottawa Imperial Conference preferences.Of Pacific defence, Mr.Cahan said that upon the only occasion when Canadian Pacific ports were endangered during the Great War, it was Japan\u2019s fleet that \u201chastened to our assistance.\u201d Now, he said, with American citizens endangered in China, \u201cthe only protection they receive from their own Government is a series of diplomatic notes, which are treated with contempt by a powerful aggressor.\u201d \u201cWhen American citizens call in vain for protection.\u201d Mr.Cahan said, \u201cCanada should hesitate to rely upon a Monroe Doctrine, which is attenuated and ineffective except as a means of intimidating weak and dependent states.\u201cJ trust that Canadians will have sufficient of manly courage to resist ad efforts to make this country a mere dependency of the United States of America.Certainly our existing political attachments to the United Kingdom and the other nations of the British Commonwealth are far more honorable than any other political ties which could possibly framo \u201d A.C.CRITCHLEY SAYS ENGLISH GAMBLE MORE WORLD-FAMOUS SCIENTIST HAS CLOSED CAREER Claims Debt Repudiation To Replace Social Credit In Aberhart Schemes REBELS SLOWLY CLOSING ABOUT NORTHERN CITY Continued from Page 1.urged the Commissioner send a du-plicate report to the Lieutenant-1 j Governor-in-Council so it would be j .vailable for scrutiny.- !\t- j Speaking at the annual meeting!\t- Calgary-Born Czar of Eng- Lord Rutherford, Pioneer in °Af theVVest\tConse,7ativ^iGovernment Bulletin Confirms ^ J\t-\t-\t' Association, Mr.\u2022 Duggan charged \u201cconcealment\u201d of the report was CHATHAM ALSO CLAIMS CARROLL Chatham, Ont.Oct.20.\u2014 Dick Carroll, veteran coach, today for- vWh Chatham \"Maroons of the I VXBY B A SEB ALL OPERATED AT L< ir.hr.Oct.20.\u2014 Ti .113.46 during the 37 Pro-:t The EXPLAINS IMPORT RULE \u2014Clarification of the Canadian .A.H.A.Drastic Indictment Of Of Roosevelt Regime Marks Landon Reappearance TRIPLE TIE IN TEMPLE CARPET BOWLING LOOP Quartettes Skipped by Jack Scott, George Liddell and Ralph Cutts in Neck and Neck Race for Leadership.Quartettes skipped by Jack Scott, George Liddell and Ralph Cutts are ioday^ sharing first position in the Temple Carpet Bov,-ling League as the result of the games played a; :be Masonic Temple during the past week, Scott extended his score to two straight victories by taking j ornniy Hum into camp by eight to r:ve.while Liddell kept his record clear with a nine to eight victory over W.Eaves and Cutts nosed out Tern Molyneux by seven to six.^ In thé other encounters.Bill vidsen led Phil Mathias by ten tn -ee, Geo.Parsons outpointed Bob Whatley by nine to six, Jack Jowctt edged out Bill Wilson by seven to six and George McLeod defeated Reg.Benton by nine to six.The rinks and scores follow: D.McDonald\tJ.Stebbins C.Osborne\tH.Wilcox J.Anderson\tBob Cutts W .Davidson\tP.Mathias Skip\u201410\tSkip\u20143 C.Stirling\tF.\tCutter L.\tDwyer\tJ,\tKay J.Gardiner\tC.\tRobertson Ralph Cutts\tT.\tMolyneux SI#\u2014 7\tSkip\u20146 A.Walker\tH.Ward W.By ham\tAlec Smith T.Johnston\tR.\tArmitage G.\tParsons\tR.\tWhatley Skip\u2014 9\tSkip\u20146 H.\tBarlow\tE.Price J.\tRansehousan\tG.Mulvagh H,\tTribble\tEd.Bradley J.Jowett\tWilson Skip\u2014 7\tSkip\u20146 F.\tCasque\tR.\tGordon M.\tBakar.iyne\tS.\tKinkead R.Broadbeit\tG.\tDavidson G.\tMccLeod\tR.\tBenton Skip\u2014 9\tSkip\u20146 R.Armstrong\tH.Miliar V.Duncan\tW.Oman H.\tMoffat:\tC.Bassett G.\tLidded\tW.Eaves Skip\u2014 9\tSkip\u20148 H.\tLokcn\tF.Sims H.Hordern son\tW.McCabe T.Gel mas\tAlf.Walker J.Scott\tT.C.Hurn Skip\u2014 3\tSkip\u20145 The league standing to date fol- P.W.L.F.A.Scott .2\t2\t0\t22\t10 Liddell.2\t2\t0\t17\t32 Cutts.2\t2\t0\t14\t9 V.' Won.2\t1\t1\t15\t9 Davidson\t- 2\t1\t1\tU\t11 Mathias.2\t1\t1\t13\t13 Whatley .\t2\t1\t1\t15\t13 Hum .\t2\t1\t1\t13\tU Pa:'\u2019 rc\t2\tI\t1\t13\t35 McLeod .\t,\t2\tî\tI\t14\t20 lands Greyhound Racing Industry Says Americans Are Pikers in Gambling Compared to the English.New York, Oct.20.\u2014\u201cYou think the people in this country gamble?Haw! Haw! The man who laughed was General A.C.Critchley, the millionaire czar of England's greyhound racing industry.\u201cWhy,\u201d said the Calgary-born promoter, controlling his mirth, \u201cdo you know how much will be bet on the totalizator (pari-mutuel) alone at mv eight tracks this year?About £10,000,000.\u201d (Editor\u2019s note: that is about $50,- 000,000).\u201cAnd what, General Critchley, do you get out of that?\u201d he was asked.\u201cOh, we take only six per cent.\u201d he said, \u201cbut of course we charge an admission price too, about sixty cents a head, and the average attendance for 104 nights at White City, my biggest track, this season was a little over 20,000.\u201d So you get an idea why the General, who came out of the army to introduce hound racing to England in 1926, feels like laughing most of the time.\u201cIt\u2019s a great thing for the people,\u201d he observed with a twinkle.\u201cThe English people are crazier about gambling than any in the world, Everybody\u2019s got to bet on something every day.The dogs give them a splendid outlet.Why, if it wasn't for the dogs they might be gambling on the stock market.\u201d Critchley is proud of his White City track.It is the \u201chot spot\u201d among greyhound places.One side of the big arena, high up, is enclosed, and there inside, safe from the weather and the rabble, several thousand white-tied \u201ctoffs\u201d and their evening-gowned companions can wade leisurely through eight courses while the programme is being run.Every table offers a perfect view of the track.\u201cYou'd be surprised, though, that these society customers don\u2019t bet any bigger money than those in the the open seats,\u201d Critchley commented.\u201cWhere the money comes from I don't know, but the average wager at ail the tracks in England is approximately 55 shillings ($14.50).and at White City it has averaged 69 shillings for months.The General\u2014a big, powerful man and a crack golfer\u2014has gone into fight promoting a^ a sort of sideline in London.He came over this time with some hazy notion of forming an \\ iancc with Mike Jacobs, but nothing came of it.\u201cTommy Farr came back quite a hero,\u201d he said, \u201cbut promptly began talking too much and spoiled it all.He bragged too much about the amount of money he could make in America.\u201d Radio-Activity Work, Passed Away at Cambridge Following Operation\u2014Well-Known in Canada.Chinese Take Upper Hand In j Struggle For North Province Continued from Page 1.I crowded sections.j Both Chinese and Japanese planes j were active in .f ¦ : M .me.-iking area today.Japanese dropped ; heavy explosives on the Chinese air-' drome at Nanking and Chinese raid-abou sham ed Japanes Chinese air and artillery attacks on the Japanese landing field in the ï angtzepoo area of the International Settlement were believed responsible for the transfer of a number of Japanese planes to a more remote landing field near Woosung, twelve mi.es down the Whangpoo river from Shanghai.Admitted and authenticated Japanese losses in the Shanghai area total fifty planes.Chinese asserted toe y have shot down more than one hundred Japanese aircraft.\u2022Japanese authorities served notice on foreign consuls that the Japanese decline to assume responsibility for the safety of neutral automobiles travelling from Shanghai to Nanking.British consular officials told the:.- nationals that trips outside the International Settlement would be undeitaken at tneiv own risk.They said that if the consulate were notified of intended trips it would attempt to make arrangements with Japanese for protection of auto- Cambridge, Oct.20.\u2014The scien-tifle world today mourned Lord Rutherford, one of its great figures, who died last night after a severe abdominal operation.He was sixty-six years old.Director of the farnpus Cavendish Laboratory for the past sixteen ] years, Lord Rutherford was a pioneer in study of radio-activity, transmutation of elements and the splitting of the atom.His genius as a teacher attracted a brilliant group of men to Cambridge which became the centre for the world in attacks to the structure of the atom.Finally in 1932 he was able to announce \u201ca discovery of great scientific importance\u201d\u2014that Dr.J.D.Cockfort and Dr.E.T.S.Walton, both of whom worked under his supervision, had split the atom, achieving a goal sought by physicists for many years.Death of Lord Rutherford brought sorrow to his colleagues and friends in Canada where he was widely known.He was Macdonald Professor of Physics at McGill University from 1898 to 1907, McGill's regret was expressed by Sir Edward Beatty, Chancellor, who stated that \u201cthe world has lost one of its greatest physicists and scientists.\u201d The Manche ster Guardian today described Lord Rutherford as an example of that \u201cconstant flow of great scientists and scholars coming from the Dominions to enrich the world.\u201d His book on radioactivity was universally accepted.He discovered that partial demagnetization of fine steel wires surrounded by a coil was a sensitive msans of detecting electrical waves, but he left the apparatus for Marconi to adapt for practical use, Lord Rutherford continuing to pursue fundamentals.^ Bern Ernest Rutherford in Nelson, New Zealand, future scientist was a brilliant student in universities in his native dominion and at Cambridge.He went to McGill soon after graduating from Cambridge.While at McGill, he, with other scientists, carried on the research that established the nature of radioactive transformations.In 1903 he was elected a fellow- of the Royal Society.In 1908 Dr.Rutherford, as he was then, was awarded the Nobel Prize for chemistry for his work in the field of atomic chemistry, then practically unexplored.After leaving McGill Dr.Rutherford went to Manchester University as professor of physics.There h:s reputation attracted brilliant students, including Charles Darwin, Hans Geiger and Neils Bohr among With their aid, his experiments progressed rapidly.One of his most Important achievements was the experimental demonstration of the nuclear nature of the atom and the electrical structure of matter.This was the key to atomic physics.In 1914 he was knighted and five years later he succeeded his former j teacher, Sir J.J.Thomson, as Cavendish professor of experimental phy-ics at Cambridge and professor of natural philosophy at the Royal Institution.one of several incidents which he I said indicated clearly \u201cdictatorship\u201d was the ultimate objective of the Social Credit administration.Mr, Justice Lunney\u2019s report as head of a Royal Commission investigating construction costs of Alberta highways was submitted last week to the Attorney-General\u2019s Department and withheld from publication by Premier Aberhart, who holds also the post of Attorney-General in the Cabinet.The Premier announced the report would not be released until the next session of the Legislature.Canada Today Is Welcoming United States Minister Continued from Page 1.j elections.Mr.Campbell already has ; been made Ontario Public Works I Minister.| No statement on appointment of ja Canadian Minister to Belgium will ; be made before Parliament\u2019s ses-I sion.the Prime Minister told cor- : respondents^ Belgium last year ap- around three Government positions j pointed Baron Silvercruys as Min- twenty miles north of Toledo, j ister Plenipotentiary to Canada, an (The Valencia War Ministry ?,n-! action usually followed by similar nounced the British vessel Reina ; reciprocal action on this country\u2019s had been sunk at El Musel on the j part, and Belgian business men made ! Biscayan coast but no further de-I overtures for a commercial treaty | tails \"were disclosed.Lloyd\u2019s lists ! between the two countries.Mr.| no English vessel of that name but 'Mackenzie King said negotiations ! there is a 1,400-ton steamer Reina Insurgent Claim of Genera! Advance in Northern Spanish Territory.Hendaye, Franco-Spanish Frontier, Oct.20.\u2014 A general advance by Spanish insurgents on the Asturian front placed Villaviciosa and Infiesto under their control today, binging the most advanced spearheads within twelve miles of Gijon, their seaport objective in the northwest Spain.General-Franco\u2019s attack\u2019ng troops marched on the Government\u2019s last important stronghold on the Bay of Biscay against \u201cfeeble resistance.\u201d A government field bulletin confirmed insurgent claims of a general advance but did not mention domination of strategic cities./ Reports from both sides indicated that the Aragon campaign in the Spanish northeast had slowed down.(Government reports to Madrid said eight thousand Moorish insurgents had been hurled back near Toledo in central Spain and that six hundred insurgents were killed and many wounded in Lombat ! had reached no definite stage, | The Prime Minister said visit of Mr, and Mrs.Hull has no political significance.; Mr.and Mrs.Hull will be accom-'\u2022 panied to Toronto Thursday night ; by Mr.Mackenzie King.The University of Toronto will confer on I the distinguished visitor an honorary - Doctor of Laws degree at a special I convocation Friday, i While the cabinet rested Conser-j vative Leader Bennett prepared for ; a quick tour through Western i Canada where he has numerous 1 speaking engagements.Mr.Bennett | returned only last Sunday from a similar tour of the Maritimes.He will leave for the west tonight.of Panamanian registry.) Fermars\u2019 Sons Should Attend Public Schools Searchers Recover Charred Remains Of Oswald Charlewood Continued from Page 1 \u2018uproot them from the farms.Facing us is the fact that two- making his way along the eavespout Continued from Page 1.before the outbreak.Five witnesses were heard thLs morning: Dr.A.R.Walters, who gave medical testimony as to the cause of Cooper\u2019s death; William Ross, of Lennoxville, who identified the body; Napoleon Jutras, janitor of the City Hall, situated almost opposite the hotel; Arthur Geoffroy, night watchman of the hotel; and Constable Alf.Chamber-land.Jutras testified tlmt his attention was drawn to the blazing building by the arrival of the Fire Department.Cooper came out of a window on the top storey and began I thirds of the people we seek to | instruct escape us,\u201d the secretary j added.\u201cIf we do not assure, their [presence in the modernized classes | we are planning, we will have assured a sound start to our programme j for future success of Quebec\u2019s ! farming industry.\u201d | The Education Council Secretary ! presided at the final business session |of the Congress, convened by Quebec ! Agriculture Department to study j thoroughly the most pressing needs | of agriculture and agricultural edu-l cation.The Catholic committee of the j Education Council, headed by Hon.Geoffroy, sixty-nine year old night watchman, fixed the origin of the fire in the kitchen, but w-as unable to say how it began.His attention was first called to the i Cyrille F.Delage, Superintendent of blaze by Miss Isabelle, whose room to the adjoining Rosenbloom block.Black smoke was pouring from the windows and at times the young man was completely hidden from view\u2019.Suddenly his knees buckled and he crashed to the street.Jutras then called an ambulance.*-\u2014-+ » *T Believes Fife Started in Kitchen.Stock Markets Swing Upwards Under Heavy Buying Pressure Continued from Page 1.and the candlestick maker had come oft\u2019 better than in the disastrous rout of margin traders in the 1929 ; crash.On paper millions of stockholders \u2018of moderate means\u2014the great middle class\u2014were poorer for the sweeping decline which eliminated half or more of prices quoted last j spring for stocks of some of the I leading industrial concerns.' But analysts pointed out the ; storm had broken under conditions S greatly different from eight years j ago as a result of the use of federal j power to keep the little fellow from flocking into the market on a \u201cshoe I string.\u201d Whether elimination of \u201cshoe Î string\u201d trading had been altogether ! advantageous for the average trader j was questioned by some.The vast 'selling wave yesterday was attribut-ed at least in part to delayed liquidation of weakened margin accounts which might have been sold out earlier had federal margin requirements been lower.However, most brokers agreed high margins fixed by the Federal Reserve Board, plus lessons learned in 1929 and a leaner purse, had operated to thin out the rank and file of the speculative army which in other years might have been expect-jed to answer the lure of rising prices, j How the speculative kings and i capitalistic captains of the money | street fared the last two months i was a matter of conjecture.Some old time big traders insisted [ they had merely become \u201clongtime J investors\u201d and coupon clippers since I the Securities Exchange Commission took control of the stock market.At the same time there have been vague stories of an \u201cAmsterdam bear crowd,\u201d selling American stocks abroad to escape the watchful eye of Uncle Sam\u2019s police force.While many new things under j Wall Street\u2019s sun have come to pass j -ince 1929, mainly from Washington, brokers saw the old tradition of the big man selling while the little j fellow buys carried out recently.This time the S.E.C.provided concrete data to support what in other declines had been largely observations of brokers.Persistently, since the Securities Commission last June started publishing weekly and daily figures on purchases and sales of stocks in less than the standard 100-share units, the buying has outweighed the selling.The buying surplus tended to rise substantially on the wide breaks since Labor Day.Analysts took this as an indication the so-called \u201cpublic\u2014as distinguished from large investors and capitalistic interests \u2014 was buying and \u201cbargain-hunting.\u201d Many small bargain hunters in the 1929-32 decline came out well, even at present prices.Whether the little bargain hunters of 1937 would ring the bell again remained to be answered after the market emerges from the present storm.ta e s is mrnm « »! GRANADA STARTING TODAY \u2014 For 4 Days \u2014 >1.REVELATION IN ENTERTAINMENT! The First Screen Extravaganza in Advance TECHNICOLOR! Glittering Entertainment! Topped Only By Its GREAT HUMAN STORY! A MILLION DOLLARS IN STYLE CREATIONS! j ''The year\u2019* comedy .3, 0,>-j \u2022\u2014 riot by the author % \u2019 ÿof# 'M oi 'Boy M,eu ®ri\u2018 w ¦» m&\\ -\t.«11 done in Ad- K\tvanoed TECHNI- V COLOR 80 dazz-\\ ling that it takes ,0 yemx breath away! ÜiÿW* WARNER BAIIIR sm% BEftSIIH it IN TECHNICOLOR The WALTER WANGER MODELS The Most Photographed Girls in the World Reteased thru UNITED ARTISTS Y ( .Ta Lord Ru peerage in list of 19 Rutherford\t-herford was raised to the the New Year\u2019s honors 31, as the first Baron led the Mo\tngol cavalrymen who co- operated v\t'-\"-h the Japanese across the Chahai\t¦ and Suiyuan, called on the Japane\tso commander and thank- ed him \u201cin\tthe name of the Mongol race\u2019\u2019 fox\tthe \u201cliberation\u201d of Sir yuan \u201cf\trota Chinese oppression.\u201d (The N\tchi Nichi in Tokyo yes- terday pub\tb-hed a dispatch from its Shanghai\tcorrespondent predicting \u2018¦.he Soviet\tUnion would liquidate :ts rhufcua\tassistance pact with Outer Mon\tgolia in order to permit it to retur\tx to Chinese sovereignty and in th\tat manner fight Japan without\trnbroiling the Soviet j i Governmen\tf\t1 (Should\tsuch a move eventuate, i \tnmform the situation in the north,\tsince the Outer Mongo- j \tnourished by Soviet! arsenals, \\\t¦.Tjo] ieved to ho power- \tI and efficiently organ- BUILD CLYDE BRIDGE\t Glasgow\tOct, 20.\u2014 The City Public Education, attended the session.Also to be heard from today were C.J.Miller, Chief Inspector of Catholic Primary Schools; E.Litalien, Chief Quebec School Inspector; Paul Hubert, Regional School Inspector; J.H.Lavoie, head of Quebec's Horticultural Service; L.P.Desrosiers, Agricultural Education Service Agronomist; Brother Bernard Victor, Professor of the Institute of Christian Brothers; J.C.Magnan, head of the Provincial Agricultural Education Service, and Alphonse iDesilets, Public Education Department Agronomist.Tonight the Congress will close with a banquet which Premier Maurice Duplessis will attend, with Agriculture Minister Bona Dussault, Deputy Minister Albert Rioux, and other Government officials.was over the kitchen.He immediately ran to the kitchen but could not enter because of the flames.After ringing the alarm twice to awaken the occupants of the hotel, he sounded the fire alarm but was prevented from re-entering the building which had become a mass of flames.j\t*!» Everything Normal Half-Hour ) Before Outbreak.NOTED BRITISH JURIST AND LEADING SCIENTIST DIE.Today\u2019s news despatches record the deaths of the following prominent persons Crow tice R In answer to questions by Coroner St.Pierre, Jutras stated that he had visited the kitchen about 5:30 o\u2019clock when he found everything normal.The fire in the stove was an ordinary one.There were no signs of gas and he noticed no explosion.Constable Ghamberland declared that on arriving on the scene the firemen af once began lifting ladders to the front windows to rescue a number of women there.He heard no screams or cries for help, and when he first noticed Cooper the (Til.wborough, Sussex\u2014Mr.Jus- J,r, ^a,s fallinK between the sec-l.P.W.Swift, 63, Senior and third storeys.Ghamberland did ^ i r\u2014 .r.,\t\u2014.r.nr Irrinvr nrhnfVim.4^.11 \u201e:-.1 of the High Court of Justice.Cambridge.\u2014- Lord Rutherford, 66, one of the world\u2019s leading physicists, director of Cambridge\u2019s famous Cavendish Laboratory and former professor of physics at McGill University, Montreal.Cowplain, Hampshire.\u2014Sir John not know whether he fell or jumped.T'he jury comprises A.J, Stark, T.R, Clark, Kenneth Kinder, A.D.Kelly, H.Couture and Robert O\u2019Donnell.Hotel, all the patients are making good recovery.Dion had a very bad night, hut is somewhat better this morning.He is suffering from severe burns and shock.So far he has not rallied as well as might be hoped, but his condition need cause no immediate alarm.Douglas Hunt, employee, of the Royal Bank, who is at the Sherbrooke Hospital, is resting comfortably and is in an improved condition.Miss Alma Hudon, suffering from burns and shock, is also much improved.At the St.Vincent do Paul Hospital Raoul Rouillard, Mrs.Clovis Lanetot, of Sherbrooke, and Mrs.Victoria Robins, of Portland, Maine, are all doing well.Octave Cameron, of Quebec, who escaped along the telephone wire, is also in a very much improved condition.Armand Filion is still suffering from his bad burns, but is not in a serious condition.Roger Dion will be confined to the hospital for some time ns he suffered a fractured ankle as well as burns.His condition is, however, quite satisfactory.Reggie Reed, who was treated for cuts and burns at the Sherbrooke Hospital, and Clovis Lanetot, who was treated at the St.Vincent dc Paul Hospital, have left the hospitals.\u2014 ADDED \u2014 AN ALL-FUN ALL-STAR CAST In a gay romance of a little school teacher who got a million \u2014\tand a man \u2014 all in one dizzy-leap! \u201cMY DEAR MISS ALDRICH\u201d with Edna May Oliver.Maureen O\u2019Sullivan, Walter Pidgeon, Rita Johnson, Janet Beecher.\u2014\tLATEST WORLD NEWS - H es ¦ Ü ¦¦ B\ta PREMIER TODAY UNTIL SAT.CAREFREE.CARELESS YOUTH! UNWANTED OLD AGE! See what happens when \u201cYesterday\u201d and \u201cToday\u201d Try to live together! A story of faith and courage as great as life itself! Victor\tBeulah MOORE\tBONDI Tn \u201cMAKE WAY FOR TOMORROW\u201d ivilh Fay Bainter, Thomas Mitchell, Peter Hall, Barbara Reed, Louise Beavers.2nd Special Feature \u2014 parachute jumper PERILLING TRI-MOTORED ROMANCE!/, Love that cut through a maize of crime and mystery, pinning death on a new kind of bandit .the parachute \\\\\\ 1 / ,:i ondition of Injured.Good news concerning the eondi- will build a new bridge the Clvde at Finnie.ston at a more than $3,000,000.Pur-f property on the bridge site eady cost $2,500,000.from 191.8 to 1921.\tj Central Hotel tragedy comes from Lucknow, Ont.-\u2014J.G.Anderson, | the Sherbrooke and St.Vincent do 72, former Liberal Member of the Paul hospitals today.With the ex- Huroa ception of Gerard Dion, 58 year old bartender of the Grand Central Ontario West.Legislature for VIRGINIA FLOODS CLAIM ONE LIFE Richmond, Va., Oct.20.\u2014Swollen streams inundated portions of several Virginia towns today after taking one life, sweeping away crops in lowlands, carrying out bridges and causing property damage which may reach several million dollars.John D.Hounhihan, about thirty, drowned near Huckhorn.REPORTED MISS1NG1 A NSW UNIVCnSAL PICTURE milk WILLIAM GARGAN ROGERS t'« PURCELL mw CAVANAUGH «« FIÏZMAURICE \u201cIrish Pastoral\u201d A Travelogue.Canadian Universal News.GORGEOUS DINNER WAR K \"itil Every 3()r \\dm.Plus 10c.KiEBiiSBgsiünKEnr BOXING LIGHT HP WYWEIGHT CROWN AT STAKE TONIGHT The Jar if E WITH HOOVER LOR LEAD-EKSH1P SEEN.In nor JaDa Dick Tracy \u2014 Tooth And Nail The Western Be PLAN CREATION OF A PUPPET MONGOL STATE OKAY-GET -rmt MOTOP GOING WHILE I FIX THE ROPES.m P< Iping, Oct.20.Ea r! V n e; GRATEFUL LOR RESCUE Holyhead, Wn < , Oct.20.- Mo! 10 L: v.j W TURN APOUND ~ DON'T any-OUCH HOW ARE YOuT THIS IGNITION^\u2019 COMING WITH J A LITTLE TRICKY, THAT CAR?\tBUT ILL GET IT.l£): why, you LITTLE\"»- 0 Vi»*; SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1D37.PAGE THREE APPOINT JUDGES FOR TEMPERANCE COURSE Plan Temperance Work REVIEWS WORK In Ike Sunday Schools Sherbrooke County W.C.T.U.Executive Appointed Officials to Take Charge of National Temperance Study Course\u2014 Books Will Be Sent to Wales Home.Reports of the recent provincial convener, Mrs.Roy Sown, Mrs.W.convention of the Women\u2019s Chris-, G.MacDotgall and Mrs.E.J.Tapp tian Temperance Union held in Len- were in a large measure responsible noxville were listened to with keen interest at the W.C.T.U.executive county meeting yesterday afternoon for the success achieved.Delicious refreshments were served at the conclusion of the card m Douglas Hall, with Mrs.G.G.! games, with Mrs.Nellie Everett as-McCurdy, the county president, in | listing.Mrs.W.T.Evans acted as the chair.Mrs.P.Pergau had charge ; cashier, of the devotional period, which included prayer, Bible reading, and hymns.Tire secretary was instructed to end letters of thanks to the fol-¦5wing for their splendid assistance during the provincial convention: Lennoxville United Church for the use of both the church and Douglas Hall; to Mrs.F.S.Browne, for her faithful service as organist and to the Sherbrooke Daily Record and representative for publicity.Plans were made for the national temperance study course to be carried on in the Sunday Schools.In this work, Mrs.F.R.Matthews and Mrs.P.Pergau will have charge of the local branch, while the county work will be judged by the following: Dr, Mary O.Vaudry, senior work; Miss Wriilis Hunting, of Hunf-ingville, intermediate; Mrs.R.S.Lipsey, juniors, and Mrs.Draper, of Ives Hill, primary work.-The plan of work was discussed and various ways in which the counties may measure up to the thirteen point programme drawn up by the Provincial W.C.T.U.outlined.It was suggested that a supply of books be sent to the Wales Home, and it was decided that the trophy for membership increase will continue to go to the Union securing the most points during the.year.Following adjournment, those present enjoyed an informal tea, and a sale of food was held.Mrs.L.W.Smith and Miss Martha Stevenson ST.MONICA\u2019S GUILD PLANNED PARTY Plans were made for \u201cAn Evening\u2019s Fun\u201d about the middle of November to endeavour to pay off the remainder of the 1921) church loan and interest at the regular semi-monthly meeting of St.Monica\u2019s Guild of St.George\u2019s Church, held yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs.J.E.Thompson, with Mrs.Charles Parkin, the president, in the chair.Miss Delia Sterling, the secretary-treasurer, gave a report on the successful bridge and food sale held recently, when the net proceeds amounted to $48.16.Following adjournment, delicious refreshments were served by the hostesses, Mrs.J.E.Thompson and Mrs.Bruce Clarke, of Sherbrooke.NEWSY ITEMS OFTRADEBODY IN BROADCAST NEW GOVERNOR OF SHERBROOKE HOSPITAL.Mr.T.G.Torrance, prominent Eastern Townships lumberman, of Kingsbury, has been elected governor of the Sherbrooke Hospital.J.L.Foley, President of Sher brooke Chamber of Com JR.C.W.L.PLAY IN AID OF j\tGIRL GUIDES ; The Jr.C.W.L.have sponsored the _.\t.\t.\u2019organization of a Girl Guide Ceffi- merce, Discusses Various | pany in St.Patrick\u2019s parish.A 3 act Aspects of Chamber\u2019s Ac-:comedy-clraraa \u201cGo\u201cin G°!d\u201d AT111 bu ,.fw\t| presented m St.Patrick s Church livlIieS.\tj Hall on Tues, and WTed., Oct, 26-27 ¦-\tI at 8.15 p.m.The proceeds are in aid In another of a series of radio ; 0f the Girl Guide Company.broadcasts, sponsored by the Sher- :\t_________________ brooke Chamber of Commerce, J.! BIOGRAPHIES LAUDED BY REV.L.Foley, president of the Chamber, i\t\\ jj.McGREER, sa\u2018cl;\t1 \u201cAll the marks of the worthwhile \u201cThe Sherbrooke Chamber of book I find in biography,\u201d declared Commerce takes pleasure in pre- ReV- A H.McGreer, vice-chancellor senhng you another of its series ; and principal of Bishop\u2019s University, of broadcasts in the interests of the !in an interesting and informative City of Sherbrooke, and this even- .^jness entitled \u201cBrowsing in Bio-mg \\.e wid direct our efforts to- ; graphy\u201d delivered over the local wards interesting, not only tne radio station.The broadcast was property-owners, but ail citizens as undel, the auspiceg of the Sher-well, since the creation of a more , b k Public Librarv> extensive scope of employment, not \u201eN man closes tbp ,;fe_storv of on y for our present generations I ne of his feil0wS without'bet-but akso for our growing youth, / undel.standing.not only one should be of paramount importance , h ;f\talfhum;m life - said and interest to all concerned\tJ Rev_ McGreer, who included in his To this end your Chamber ef .,eraark a ijst 0f tbe more highly Commerce has directed its contm- ! JLarded biogl.aphies.STUDY PROBLEM 'URGE PUBUC TO OF JAP ACTION | WATCH FOR ROSS IN NORTH CHINA, RANSOM MONEY Members of Y.M.C.A.Speak- Kidnappers Double-Crossed ing Club Given Interesting! Ross Family by Failing to Address on Economic Conditions in Far East.The apparent motives behind the Release Their Wealthy and Aged Victim.Chicago, Oct.Charles S.20.\u2014Solution of Ross kidnapping present Japanese invasion of China!the were outlined last evening to the hinged largely today upon a watch members of the Y.M.C.A.Speaking jfor the appearance of $50,000 in Club by George Christison, of Len- ransom money.noxville, who spoke on \u201cChinese j A public appeal to be on the look-Coastal Cities and their Relation to [out for the 5,250 ransom bills went the Present Japanese Campaign,\u201d :oht after federal agents disclosed Mr.Christison expressed the con-'the kidnappers had double-crossed viction that Japan\u2019s current invasion'the Ross family by failing to release of China was entirely motivated with |their wealthy and aged victim, the object of solving her pressing ¦ Serial numbers of the bills were economic problems.The invasion was idistributed by J.Edgar Hoover, intended to quiet the economic dis-,chief of the Federal Bureau of Incontent and social unrest of the Japa- vestigation at Washington, who nese masses by distracting them with : urged the public to assist by report-military display, while Japan also!ing receipt of the currency.The sought access to China\u2019s vast natural .ransom payment consisted of $ 15,-resources.\t000 ill $20 bills, $25,000 in $10 bills These two objectives had been and $10,000 in $5 bills, achieved to an important extent in; Lack of any known communi-that the under-paid and over-worked cation from the seventy-two year old masses had been entertained by the\u2019retired manufacturer since he was campaign against China, anil the abducated twenty-five days ago led control of the latter country\u2019s rich investigators to consider a number resources was pretty well assured to!of theories as to his fate, the Japs as the result of their seizure i There was widespread belief the and present tenure of the great coast-1 victiln, who suffered from heart w ¦ .\t- vc x ,\tSylvia Thompson; \u201cStorm Girl,\u201d were nY charge of the tea and Miss J h LinJ .E Extraor-Urane presided over the food table.,lln;Tv;, E p\u2019hjllips Ôppenheim; \u201e\t\u201e \u201e\t; \u201cHeather of the High Hand,\u201d Ar- oUCCESSFUL CARD PARTY i thur Stringer; \u201cBlind Man\u2019s Year,\u201d A very- successful bridge was held I Warwick Deeping; \u201cThe Citadel,\u2019 NEW BOOKS AT LIBRARY The following new books, both fiction and non-fiction by popular authors, have recently been added, .\t,\t, to the Lennoxville Library and | i\u2019T t0 Sherbrooke, will absorb our are awaiting the perusal of the ' 1-abo1' assct to the fullest extent, readers: \u201cHonourable Estate,\u201d Vera Brittain; \u201cTestament of Youth,\u201d Vera Brittain; \u201cCities of Refuge,\u201d Philip Gibbs; \u201cSomething of Myself,\u201d Rudyard Kipling; \u201cOf Lena Geyer,\u201d Marcia Davenport; \u201cInheritance,\u201d Phyliis Bentley; \u201cFarewell Romance,\u201d Gilbert Frankan; \u201cNorth-west Passage,\u201d Kenneth Roberts; \u201cRecapture the Moon,\u201d last ev the Town Hall, under the auspice of the Scout Auxiliary, when bridge and five hundred were played at seventeen tables, with a beautiful prize at each table.Mrs.R.H.Fletcher, president of the Scout Auxiliary, received the many guests, and Mrs.W.T.Evans, uous effort with a certain amount__________________________________ of success, and while a certain sec-! THE GRAND CENTRAL HOTEL recy is necessarily advisable in all\tTHIRTY YEARS 4G0 our_ negotiations with firms pro- The Grand Central Hofei, which is j\tt t\th\t, posing to establish branches m f lo\t.\t\u2022 «mono- whirh and present tenure of the great coast- j victiîn, who suitered Irom heart Canada, so that other cities will not Jr.\t\u2022 f \u2019 f X fnl1 J al ports of Shanghai, Canton and : disease, died from shock or was slain outdo us in securing these industries ; *1™ ^ \"1 ÎZ, ui, in the ' Piping.\tN his captors to eliminate the risk as the result of uncalled for pub- I f\u2022 V: A j t d\t«vwtv- ! The speaker was thanked by Gor- of being identified by him later.In- licity, we are nevertheless in close j £ ! \\\t.\t-, , v/', Mr.\u201e_vr, ( don Rothney, after which Harry E.vestigators also theorized Ross might touch with several good prosnects .1V\u20ac\"\"eal\"°f 10lc, , i+.,\t- | Grundy congratulated him on his in- still be held captive while the kid- hich if we are successful in entic- I !?*\u2019\tcenic,rv°x D si esS \u201e I structive subject matter and com-j nappers male plans for a flight.\u201e! the Sherbrooke of thirty years ago.mendable deKv 0 Sargent jgted i D.M.Ladd, head of the F.B.I.9nHr°?o-we\t\u2019 as chairman of the meeting.\t|office here, said the Ross family paid Of these extensive negotiations the 1\t¦ DU, it is seen that thirty; jt was decided that a debate on i the ransom \u201cupon what they believ- oublic in general is not aware, and ; year® ag0 A.\u2018y * if\tI t^le resolution, \u201cConfederation has jed to be definite proof that they were '\t' in contact with the kidnappers.\u201d Authorities were silent on reports that the \u201cdefinite proof\u201d consisted of a written message from Ross, or a hat he wore at the time of his disappearance.Speculation also was rife as to whether the actual kidnappers or anothcr gang collected the ransom.Rotary Spirit Lauded By Vermont Speaker Rotarian George M.Hogan, Twice President of the St Alban\u2019s Club, Assured Local Members that \u201cthe Spirit of of Rotary Will Never Die.\u201d \u201cWhatever its faults may be.whatever its setbacks, the spirit of Rotary will never die.Its moorings are anchored in a great unseen moral obligation,\u201d asserted Rotarian George M.Hogan, of St.Alban\u2019.-, Vt., in a well-delivered and extremely interesting address- before the Sherbrooke Rotary Club at their meeting last evening in the New Sherbrooke House.Rotarian Hogan, president of the Vermont Bar Association and twice head of the St.Alban\u2019s Club, took for his subject \u201cThe Unseen Rotary.\u201d In his opening remarks, the speaker observed that it was remarkably L.Therrien and Ed.Walker.Rotarian Bart Holtham introduced the speaker and he was thanked by Rotarian Lee Watson.Encouraging reports of the coming Rotary Fair were given by Rotarian Everett Goodenough and a grant of $100 was authorized on behalf of the Junior Welfare League.President Rosaire Samson presided at the meeting.DIXON SPEAKING \u2014 Just a short time ago I expressed a certain delight, easy for one Rotarian, whether he \u2019 which was shared by many was a stranger or not, to address |\t.\t.\t,\t^\tA others, as Rotarians the world over ! PeoPle> ln the prospect or are united in a common bond of fel-; having the Centenary lights lowship and good-will.\tI, j\t.f Touching upon some of the char-on again tor Chnst-aeteristics developed by member- : mas week.Now comes the ship in a Rotary Club, the speaker I\t\u2022\t,, declared that tolerance, unselfish-1\tauthority saying that ness, a sense of obligation and a ; it were wiser to tear them high standard of ethics are fostered down at Qn\trather th by Rotary.The unseen lorces con- would therefore question the reason j\t.P^ac!(; ^ ijie Postmaste1 s ; been a success in Canada,\u201d would be for the development of additional j Association of the Pio\\]nce ot Que-j held at the \u201d on Tuesday, Novem-eloctric power, which is to be the ,^6^' Qu the evening of the same da\\ i 2nd, with Wesley Bradley and subject of our address this evening, 'the Sherbrooke Milkmen\u2019s Associa-; Francis Hoye uphoMimr the affirma-\"The shortage of electrical encrw tion met\tand\tdecided\tt0 in-rease thc i\ttive and John Withail\tand Gordon was verv forcibly bo-^nt to Ow Tut1-106 of\tmilk in the c:ty to seven\tRothney the negative.O.\tSargent wi!i tention by the power consumed in cents^per quart._\t_\t.\tspeaker at the next meeting, the electrification of the Cr.v of', Today\tthe\thotel is\tin ruins.^ What;\twith Wesley Bradley actmg as chau- Sherbrooke during its centennial bu!ldl\"F\twill\trise on\trt-s site is Mull,\tman.celebrations, when the want of ad-! \u201cnk\u201dow\"- ^ there retna,,ns.îhe ! ditional current made itself serious-on bunging ly felt.This consumption does rot esen begin to represmit the amount of power which would be required ening in the Troop Room ofl \\ J Cronin- \u201cDeath at 8 Bells \u201d ky tks addition of say two or three *» K»l.«hr & .CTlc.Jr; A.K»»ma.r\twid \"\"\t« «W \u2022***« number of now your wholehearted consideration and i dush'ics vithni *Jie ci'/ limits and support at every opporinniiy.\u2019* ^1500 Uuio Are you smart?Here\u2019s a puzzle that will test your wits.The Scrambled Letters below, when properly rc-arrangod, will spell the name of a Famous Movie Star.Probably you know the names of most of the Famous Movie Stars, hut just to refresh your tmunorA we mention a few.Greta Garbo.Frederic March Joan Crawford, Shirley Temple, Wallace Beery, Clark Gable, Jean Harlow, Dick Powell, Warner Baxter, Ginger Rogers, Gary Cooper and Kay Francis.When the Scrambled Letters above are properly rearramted, they will spell the name of a Famous Movie Star.Start switching the letters around; see if you can figure it out.If your answer is correct, vou will rrreive at once, 1 LARGE SIZE PICTURE OF THIS FAMOUS MOT IE STAR FREE\u2019 -beam ifully colored and suitable for framing-and an opportunity to win Al 10MOB1L1', or $1,500.00 ÎN CASH.Hh flic ttig Winner.2n«I Prize Winner ?»cfs .^500 In Cash ; îlrtl Prize Winner, $100 in Casli; 4th, $800 in Cash; and man> other Cash Prizes.Duplicate prizes in case of ties.SEND NO MONEY! Just your answer to thc Movie* Scramble above.HURRY! DON\u2019T DELAY.USE THE COUPON.Now Is The Time To Build Your Own Home VIMY STREET \tD\t\t>\t \tC\t\t§\t \tto\t\tX\t \tX\t\tm\t \t>\t\tPO\t \t\t\tt/5\t \t\t\tH\t \t1ft\t\tin\t \tH\t\tH\t T5 33 O cn \"0 o H in H ONTARIO STREET Address: corrox j Manager MOVIE SCRAMBLES, j 3 47 Adelaide St, West, Toronto, Can.I My answer.Movie Scrambles 347 Adelaide Street West TORONTO, CANADA A\u2019It if! Stmt HI Send me the ! Picture The district bounded by Ontario.Prospect, Vimy and Durham Streets is one of the most desirable in Sherbrooke for residential purposes.The lots in this development are extra large, having a frontage of 6G feet and a depth of 120 feet.The location is within five minutes\u2019 ride from the centre of the city in the regular buses which run right past the property.Every convenience has been provided for and many substantial homes have already been built in the immediate vicinity.DURING THE MONTH OF OCTOBER A SPECIAL PRICE OF $700 FOR EACH LOT HAS BEEN SET AS AN INDUCEMENT FOR THOSE WISHING TO BUILD NOW OR IN THE EARLY SPRING.I invite you to investigate this better class home location.And I shall gladly help you to arrange financing both the lot and a modern homo.Owning your own home is cheaper than paying rent.JOS.V.AMES REAL ESTATE 'N'lephone 235.\t08 Wellington St.North. PAGE FOUR SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 193?, .\tv\t.jf -yA\tx ieases f01\u2019merly were unPreventable, it càn cure li\\0r01TU j diseases that formerly were incurable, it can perform ^\tV»\toperations previously impossible, it has a far clearer Established Ninth Day of February, 1S97, with which is incorporated the Sherbrooke Garotte, established 1837, and Sherbrooke Examiner, established 1878, The Record is printed and published every week day by the Sherbrooke Record Company Limited, of which Edna A.Beerworth is Secretary-Treasurer, at the office, 69 Wellington Street North, in the City of Sherbrooke, with exclusive franchise of Canadian Press, Associated Press and Reuter's European News Service.The Record is a member of the Audit Bureau of idea of the relation of diet to good health.Yet all of this does little good to the man who PRESS COMMENTS the; labor harmony situation cannot afford to take advantage of this new knowl-1 edge.If doctors did not in so many cases give their! PRINT THE STUFF! NOBODY READS IT.(Toronto Saturday Night) , If there had not been in recent time and skill without thought of fees, the situation; years a very serious decline in public would be far worse than it is; even so, Miss Roche's j rpsP\u201ct for the rights of property, we 1\t\u2019\t, should never have heard of so pre- figures show unmistakably the tragic connection posterous a proposal as that of Mr.between novertv and ill health\t.Aberhait for the seizure wmhout neiween povern ana Hi neaiui.\tJ payment of large quantities of val- In this field as in so many others, we are on thejuable newspaper space iii the perio- i \" ' dissemination of government pro threshold of a dazzling new era of human happiness, j vfion ^of^ ltS US6 f°1' thE Circulation and the circulation is regularly audited 1 We are kept out of it, not by lack of knowledge, but if agenda.The pages of a newspaper and guaranteed.\ti simply because we cannot figure out how tp make t\u2019\u2019\u201c; are the m'01:)erty' directly, of the Subscription: 75c a month, delivered at any home ; more abundant life pay its way.in the city and suburbs.Post Office delivery to any I\t., \" place in Canada, Great Britain or the United States, S3 j\tMotoring Made Dangerous.per year; three months, ?1; one month, 40c.copy, 3c.Singh i Eastern Townships\u2019 Only English Daily SHERBROOKE.WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1937.Hear me when I call, 0 God of my righteousness; Thou hast enlarged me when I was in distress; have mercy upon me, and hear my prayer.\u2014'Psalms 4:1.Opening Of Winter Fair And Horse Show.The 1937 Winter Fair and Horse Show will be formally opened this evening.From tonight until the closing hour on Saturday night the Sherbrooke Exhibition Arena will be the scene of great activity with special attractions for people of all tastes and ages.The officials of this year's Whiter Fair have left no stones unturned to make this one of the most outstanding of such events ever held in Sherbrooke.As a special attraction this year.Winter Fair patrons will be privileged each night to see the famous Musical Ride staged by the Royal Canadian! Mounted Police, an event which was widely acclaimed j at Madison Square Garden.New York, and also in' Montreal.This unique feature has been secured at considerable expense and it is highly recommended to the Winter Fair patrons.It is a spectacle which is certain to please and is more than worth the price of admission.There is also the Poultrv Show to be held in owners of that newspaper, and indirectly of the people who pay their good money to purchase copies of it.In the good old days when property was property, nobody would have dreamed of seizing great portions of this particular kind of property and There are so many phases to motoring and there | using it for purposes desired by the is so much that can be said about accidents and the government but not desired by the owners or the readers ox the news- varied causes leading up to accidents that the question can be discussed from many viewpoints.But there can be no argument to the fact that one of the most dangerous types of motorists is the exhibitionist\u2014the chap who has an exaggerated sense of his own importance when he gets behind the steering | ^a^t^^elhgcnt^readl'r^^of^the wheel and insists on driving with that sense of his importance as his ruling motive.This verdict is returned by Dr.C.H.Watson, president of the National Safety Council.\u201cSafety is a question of performance,\u201d says Dr.Watson.\u201cBecause people know what they should\tdo, ithat\tnobodyis \"to\tsa^would does not.mean that they will do it.'\tiread\tit voluntarily.Even the Alberta One needs to drive only a little while\tto\tunder- ! Social Crediters\tdo not\tREAD it; \u2022 r\t: they\thsten to it,\tover the\tair, m the stand the truth of what Dr.Watson savs.The man mellifluous tones and the sanctimo- paper.On principle the demand is frightful.In practice we cannot bring ourselves to believe that it will be seriously harmful to the Alberta newspapers, nor that it will do the slightest good to the nobie cause of tt maj igent Calgary Herald to the water of pure Social Credit dogma, in the form of a full-page spread in their favorite paper, but it will never be possible to make them drink.We have had to read a good deal of Social dogma in our time, and we know from sad who weaves in and out of traffic lanes, passes other cars on curves or hills, cuts in suddenly, crashes lights and ignores stop signs is displaying all the stigmata, of the man who has set himself up on a pedestal.He also provides the set-up for most of our accidents.# \u2022 Editor\u2019s Note-Book.% -,- Maybe they\u2019d better pour some of the Oil for the Lamps of China on troubled Oriental waters.*\t*\t* Joe DiMaggio will receive $30 a minute for conjunction with the Winter Fair and also the salejP^aYr-?basketball.Wnich places him in the same of prized live -lock\t| category with the late Calvin Coolidge, whose words The 1937 Winter Fair can be recommended with | \"ere \"orth a dollar each to a magazine, every assurance of pleasing and those who fail to j visit the Arena will be missing something truly I Four persons were killed in auto accidents in worth while and hidrlv entertaining.\t' j Kansas City the day the National Safety Council open- Meet us at the \\V:nter Fair.'\t;\ted\tits\tconvention\tthere.\tJust\tto\timpress upon the ________________________________ '\tvisitors\tthe\tseriousness of\tthe\tproblem.,- I\tHi\t*\t* Co-eds charging boy friends for goodnight kisses raise house funds.In the old days that was nious phraseology of the Pious Prophet Premier, but they do not read it in the columns of the Premier\u2019s organ, and that is precisely what makes him mad at the other papers that they do read.On the days when Mr.Aberhart is commandeering a page of the Calgary Herald for his preachments it will obviously be necessary for the editor to condense or omit some of his more normal features; but even so verbose a person as Mr.Aberhart will hardly be able to fill a news-j paper page every day.And we can imagine that with judicious and reasonably pungent comments by the Herald editor.(\u201cThis is tosh!\u2019\u2019\u2014 \u201cThat is damfoolishness!\u201d\u2014\u201cHere the reader will note that the Alberta Government is telling the plain, flat, downright lie!\"), conspicuously printed in an adjoining column, even a page by Mr.Aberhart might not be wholly devoid of journalistic interest.Take heart, good colleagues of Alberta.It might be worse.All you have to do is print the stuff; you don\u2019t have to read it.Cl jOaiiengmg scier remedy !o save moder distinguished surgec astonished a Dartmo assertion: \u201cThe civil: to live .the repro decreasing.'\u2019 Improvement of declared, through in produce leaders of gc than the specialists t But.while scienc seems to rest more u courage to live to il fellow man.in iustic* Courage To Live.e to \u201cremake man\u201d as the only civilization and Nol to SEE YOUR DOCTOR WHEN WELL (St.Thomas Times-Journal) Speaking at the inauguration of a recreation and fitness campaign for the United Kingdom, Premier Chamberlain gave very good advice when he recommended people to see the uth College < zed races are .7\t_*\u2022\tÇ \u2022 1 .Dr.Alexis Carrel, a«ep!ed as the \u201cpayoff for an evening's entertain-j\t\u201cthe lase ment.\t;of people over forty.At that time of ?\t«\t«\tj life most of them begin to lose their | youthful looks and trim figures and Prize winner, idience with th< ising the coura id individuals i «g1 There's plenty of \u201cbeef about the high cost of j they take to nostrums of all kinds ;s meat, but not enough of it is edible.'\tland indulge in sports and exercises i\t'\twmch rr.Piv rin Tn^m mnrp harm rnnn which may do them more harm than \u2019\t! good in an effort sometimes con- Baby, born dead, is brought back to life in a hos- j .i.Maybe the Liberty League would like to hire m a hurry.There comes a time when people are really too old to do exer- >res the race is possible, Dr.Carrel, stitutes of \u201cpsychobiology\u201d toTJh verniner.t and education rather f*-1-® doctors.\tcises, except in a few exceptiona instances, and those between forty and sixty, who are most liable to these spasmodic efforts, should or.no account do so unless they get .nd^tling commisskmep* have I,ad treble in totmglferNSnSA.Tl, «5 any rubles riding against his election.can aid, >n the in best ad system yields, the future of the race! dividual.Only in the; vantage for s civiliza- Joseph Stalin has been announced as the first h ran Abundant Life Only For Those Who Pay.THIRTY YEARS AGO TODAY The trii concerned v make life ea apparently devices aval them, Nowher Thi has Hea as si in a spi ilth As .gene w goc 5 ge ?way ho lac iv Dv ere cl eflvj and Don s problem making these ecreiarv ot Miss Roche me; tragic relationship b annual income.' Between forty rn cans get along on inc said Miss Roche.T major diseases whit of the deaths in the ! rest of the populatior For seven of tl df»ath rale mounts The death rate instance, is seven laborers ?death rats unskilled worker Nor does it -but that takes a man common among the 1 family heads on re physical disability.A the rate is one in i! Jiave twice the disab have.W.P.A.workc forty per cent, above All of tills tbrov problem of the age people the discoverie has turned up for us Medical science t th he asized ?A meric Joseph: re.is a From the Files of the Sherbrocke Record.October 20th, 1907.A syndicate of about twenty business men prin-ipaity from Compton County and Sherbrooke, has been formed under the name of Marsboro Gold Mining buy ! Syndicate.They have secured the mining rights on a j plot of land about six miles from Lake Megantic Village and about a mile from the inlet of Victoria River.The Sherbrooke Milkmen\u2019s Association announce decision to increase price of milk on the first of November to seven cents per quart.Harry Taylor, a Knowl ton Home lad, died at the Sherbrooke Hospital from lockjaw, which resulted from trough Public R oche, and should do and what they should not do.It has been said that more care is taken of livestock than of human beings.At the first sign of disease among his animals a farmer will send for a veterinary, or start doctoring them himself, although his reason for doing so i?probably more economic than anything else.A man or woman wii! take care of the health of a horse, dog or cat, but beyond trying to avoid catching colds, many human beings take no special pains to ensure that the delicate and much abused mechanism of their own bodies are in good condition.Most motorists are careful about thei cars, and if they are going on a long journey, or after they come back, they will take the vehicles to a garageman to see that everything is all right.But if they feel all righ ath rate and injuries received when an iron bar fell on his hand.Mr.and Mrs.M.E.Bowker, of Granby, were honor- I themselves they^do not trouble to go ed by their relatives and friends on the occasion of 1 ^\t-1- the twenty-fifth wedding anniversary.Deaths reported: Mrs, M.Gillis, of Stornoway; to a doctor to make sure that something is not developing.They wait until something happens\u2014then it cad IP! among pro ; thret op cause si ed Slate: ten di ly as thi respirât a- g re ssiona] *\u2018y millier Amen- Richard Laçasse, of Rock Island; Archibald Trudeau, 1 F13*\u2019 be either too .ate or they have '.V-\tc.om.Bridge.Dom.Steel & Coal '\u2018B \u2019 Foundation Co.Gen.Steel Wares.Gypsum Co.Hollinger Consol .Howard Smith .Imperial Tobacco.Imperial OU .\u2022 Inter.Pete .Massey Harris .Montreal Power .National Breweries .National Steel Car .orands Power Corn.Quebec Power .St.Lawrence Corp.St.Lawrence Corp Class \u201cA\" Shswimgan .Steel Company of Canada by McManamv &\t\tWalsh;\t Onen\tHigh\tLov/\tNeon \t11%\tn%\t11% .log\u2019s\t159\t158\t158% lo1»\t15%\t15%\t15% .\t30\t30\t30\t30 \t9%\t8%\t9% \t2%\t2 Vo\t2% \t7\t7%\t7% .,\t15\t15\t14%\t15 \t17%\t17%\t17% \t55\t55\t55 \t7 \u2018s\t7%\t7 /'8 \t51\t49\t51 6%\t6%\t6%\t6% \t13\t12%\t13 \t27\t26\t27 \t12%\t12\t12% \t10\t19\t10 914\t9H\t912\t9% \t6%\t6\t6% \t10%\t10%\t10% \t15%\t15\t15% \t12%\t12%\t12% \ti < ' 3\t17%\t17% 25\t29\t28\t29 \t43%\t42%\t42% \t5%\t5 *2\t5% \t28\t27\t28 , \u2022 ¦ \u2022\to\u2019O\t35 V2\t35\t35% 2012\t\t20%\t2214 41\t44\t41\t« 12%\t12%\t12%\t12% 1 ™\t17\t17\t17 \t5%\t5\t5% 14%\t151*.\t14 %-\t15% 2 £10\t21\t15%\t21 .\u2022\t01\t57\tOl\tD i Selling of Steels, Which Turn- Itemized Statement Given at ed Over in Heavy Volume,' Meeting of Beaver Chapter, Was Said to Reflect Taking of Profits After Yesterday\u2019s Brisk Rally.New York, Oct.20.\u2014Losses of No 7, 0.E.S., Records $61.90 Derived from Supper Served Odd Fellows.Waterloo, Oct.19.\u2014The regular NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE one to around two points in steels meeting of Beaver Chapter No.7, 0.took the edge off a fast-moving F.S., was held in the Masonic Tern-early stock market rally which car- pie.Following the opening cere-ried other groups up fractions to as monies, the secretary, Mrs.Evelyn much as three points today.\t;J.Goddard, presented an itemized So furious was the trading pace in statement of the proceeds of the the first half-hour the ticker tape supper served the Oddfellows at fell about six minutes behind the their district meeting, which showed market.Many leaders sold in blocks the gratifying sum of sixty-one dol-of 1,000 to 6,000 shares.\tGars and ninety cents.Selling of steel?, wThich turned The Worthy Matron, Sister Audry over in heavy volume, was said to Marcotte, invited the Grand Secre-reflect taking of profits after yes- tary, Sister Mary Holden, to ac-terday\u2019s brisk rally of this group, quaint the officers and members U.S.Steel and Bethlehem suffered ¦ with the scheduled Grand Chapter, the worst.\t! arrangements.Sister Holden, in Gainers were Goodyear, Mont- her descriptive remarks, urged as gomery-Ward, Sear?Roebuck, Case,1 many officers and members as pos-Du Pont, Boeing, Consolidated Edi- sible to attend Grand Chapter which son, American Can, Allied Chemical, 'vill be 'held in the Mount Royal Southern Railway, Baltimore & Hotel, Montreal.Ohio, Radio, Continental Can and! At the conclusion of the ceremon-National Steel.\t: ies the ladies adjourned to the ban- Motors and a few metals and: quet hall and enjoyed refreshments rails felt the backwash of selling served by Mrs.Bridge, Mrs.Robin-as business gathered momentum.j son and Mrs.Boyce.Cotton opened uneven.Grains!\t- were a little lower.Bonds were mix-\tGeneral Notes ed.\t1 Miss Lucia Knowlton spent a week-end in Knowlton with her brother, Mr.Morgan Knowlton and Allied Chemical.Am.Can .Am.Sugar.Am.Smeitlng.Am.T.and T.Anaconda Copper .Atchison .Baitu & Ohio .Beth.Stee; .Canadian Pacific.Chesapeake & Ohio .Chrysler.\u2022\u2022 Congoieuro Co.Hudson Motors .General Electric .General Motors .inter.Harvester .Kenneeott.Montgomery Ward .N.Y.Central .Per.r.R.R.Republic Steel.Sears Pujtbuck .Stand.Ou of Ntw Jersey .Southern Pacific .Texas Gulf Sulphur.7exas 0,1 Corp.Union Pacific .United Aircraf1 .U.S.Ind.Alcohol.U.S.Rubber.U.S.Smelting .U S.Steel .Westinghouse .».Warner Bros.Onen ÏL oh Low N\"\"on 147 ÜO 60 G 165 ST SO 5.ru 14 i ,>4 2912 40 H IHSkc -30 6444 40 SOU 162 S6 30 -,2 u 147 ~ 2SU 3912 10 59 34 20 u 1 Q \u2022T.Vi 60 2S1\" 61 \" fili; 36s 17' 30 G 40% 91 i5% 24Ù 60 99 1*3 162 86 SO 147% 29\u2019.! goi.\u201e 10% 7% S6 64 O O 1 ;i 40 ' 3912 T6 36 oc S' *>\t4 19 22 % 16 % 63% 48\u2019 j 19% 40 % 91 13% 17% 26\u2019 00 ' fil it, 100 At the start of trading W'ali Street men insisted involuntary liquidation and not values had play- Mrs.Knowlton.ed the important part in yesterday\u2019s morning collapse of prices.\t| The Tuesday afternoon rally, it: was said by usually well-informed brokers, had resulted from demand from so-called \u201cbargain hunters\u201d and corooration?with funds available to buy back their own shares.The industrial background for; the market was uninspiring, analysts said.\tj The Edison Electric Institute reported a slight downturn in power production in the week ended October 16th.but a five per cent, gain over the like week of 1936.BRIEF SELLING FOLLOWED MONTREAL BUYING FLURRY Montreal, Oct.20.\u2014Prices ran up fractions to a point in an opening stock market rally today.Brief selling followed the buying I flurry, but substantial improvements j showed for Smelters, Noranda.Mori'ot.1 Power, Steel Car.Canada I Tar, Bell.Brazilian and C.P-R.Nickel slid 1 i-2 to 42 1-2.Mrs.Guy Fletcher, her son, Mr.Meur, and his two young sons, of Evansville, Vt., were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Albert E.McKenny.Mrs.Fletcher, before her marriage, was Miss Lillie Sylvester, daughter, of Mr.and Mrs.George Sylvester, formerly of Waterloo.Mr.and Mrs.Alfred Tann, of Hardringe, Texas, were guests of Mrs.Tann\u2019s aunts, Mrs.John Boyce and Miss Margaret Bennett.Mr.Tann is chairman of the United States Board of Civil Engineers.A large number from Waterloo enjoyed the chicken pie dinner served by the United Church congregation at Warden.Mr.and Mrs.Bert Parkinson spent the week-end and Thanksgiving day with relatives in Rawdon.Mr.Candlish Bogie, of L'Avenir, was a guest of his uncle, Mr.Charles vV.Candlish and Miss Car.dikh.He was accompanied home by h.-mother, Mrs.Gordon Bogie, who had ' been spending the week-end at the , same home.Dr.S.J.Bennett, of Inverness, j was a guest of his sisters, Airs.John ! Boyce and Miss Margaret Bennett.| Mr.and Mrs.TV.K.Robinson and Mr.and Mrs.Leland Holden were in Newport, Vt., on Thanksgiving Day.Miss Lucia Graves, Mrs.Evelyn J.Goddard, Mrs.Perkins and Mrs.Col-will spent Thanksgiving Day in Vermont.Mr.and Mrs.Alvin Williams spent the week-end and Thanksgiving Day in Plattsburg, N.Y.Mrs.A.J.C.Darrah and son, Leslie, of Montreal, were week-end guests of Mr.and Mrs.Hubert D Wells.Dr, George Holden and Mrs.Holden, of Montreal, were luncheon guests of Mr.and Mrs.Leland Holden and family on Thanksgiving Day.Air.and Mrs.Frank B.Swett, of Warden, attended the Beaver Chapter meeting.Mrs.W.H.King is a patient in the Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, where she is recovering from a surgical operation.Mr.Walter E.Colbouvne and Mr.Grant Streeter are enjoying a hunting holiday at St.Agathe Mr.and Mrs.Charles Presser.Miss Edith and Mr.Ernest Presser, of Lachine, were Thank-giving Day j guests of Mr.and Mrs.Herbert Wi1-i Hams.Mr.and Mrs.Ernest Stimpson, of Alexandria, Ont., were guests of Mr.and Mrs.E.J.McKenna en route to visit relatives in Richmond.Mr.and Mrs.R.F.Shaw, Mrs.Gordon Bogie and Mrs.C.W.Candlish were in Newport, Vt.Mr.George H.McGuirk, of Fitchburg, Mass., was calling on friend?here.Mr.and Airs.John Dixon, of Foster, were among those who attended Beaver Chapter meeting.Miss Dorothy Hilhouse visited he\u2019' sister, Miss Eileen Hilihouse, of Alontreal, during the Teachers\u2019 convention.Mrs.Robert Sands and Miss Maude Sands, of Boston, Mass., and Miss Marion Robb, of Warden, were calling on Airs.S.J.Irwin.Air.and Mrs.Gagnon and Air.and Mrs.Arcade Alorin, of Montreal, were guests of Air.and Airs.F.A.Morin and family.Aliss Eileen Hilihouse, of Montreal, spent a week-end with her par- L ents, Air.and Mrs.Alvin P.Hill-[there Mr.Neeley also visited Air, house.On Thanksgiving Day Air.! and Airs.W.P.Cox, of Sherbrooke, and Airs.Hilihouse and family mot-! Mr.and Mrs.Henry Hawkins, of ored to Newport, Vt.Dr.and Airs.Al.D.Moyse were in Montreal on AVednesday.Miss Margaret Horan was a weekend guest of Miss Carrière, of Hull.Miss Horan also called on friends in Ottawa.Mr.and Mrs.E.J.McKenna and Air.and Airs.R.B.Moysey were in Newport, Vt., on Thanksgiving Day.Mrs.J.A.Corcoran spent AVeLine s day in Montreal.Aliss Audry Hall has returned from a pleasant trip visit with relatives in St.Albans, Vt.Mr.F.H.Stone in Alontreal.Miss Alildred Jones visited Miss Margaret Snodgrass, in Montreal.Air.James Neeley spent a few days in Lennoxville with his son, Air.Howard Neeley and family.AA'hile Kingsbury, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.C.A.Norris and family.Mrs.John L.Codd spent Tuesday and AVednesday with friends in Granby.Air.and Mrs.C.A.Norris, Miss Bertha Norris, Alessrs.Carl, Albert and Alan Norris and Mr.Kendall Norris, of Alontreal, were among those who attended the Thanksgiving dinner in the United Church Hall, Warden.Mr.Graydon Colwill, who has been transferred from the Bank of Alontreal at St.Eugene, Ont., to the pent AVednesday branch in Toronto, while here vis-1 iting friends over the holiday weekend, was accompanied by Aliss Alildred Jones to Coaticook, where they visited Mr.Colwill\u2019s grandmother, Airs.White.Miss Joyce Hethcrington, of Sher- brooke, and Mr.Robert Hethei ing-ton, who is a student of Macdonald Collage, St.Anne de Bellevue, visited their parents, Mr.and Airs.James Hetherington, over the Thanksgiving week-end.Mrs.C.H.Frizzle and son.Air.I Wilson Frizzle, of Brome, visited Airs.Frizzle\u2019s daughter, Airs.Garrett Chapman and Air.Chapman, on Wednesday.While in AA aterloo they also called on Mrs.L.E.Farmer and Miss Abbie C.Farmer.Mr.and Mrs.Percy Boright and sons, Charles and Robert, attended the family re-union at the home of Mrs.Curtis, in Warden.Miss Hazel Durocher.R.N., who has been caring for Air.Leo Le-febvrë during his convalescence, has returned to Alontreal.Call at the \u201cGift Shoppe,\u201d Mam St., Waterloo for hand-made gifts.Special orders taken.Dressmaking desired.CONTINUING FALL CLEAN UP USED CAR SALE At Slashed Prices ! 1923 BUICK Coupe.1935 FORD Sedan.1935 PLYMOUTH Coach.MARRIAGES 1934 BUICK Sedan.1936 CHRYSLER Si dan.Reg.Price\tSelling Price .$750\t$725 .350\t250 .225\t175 .550\t450 .535\t550 .775\t675 .700\t650 .945\t875 WEBSTER MOTORS, Limited Branch: 73 Belvidere Street S.Phone 2793.Headquarters : Wellington St.So.Phone 1273 Open-Air Lot: Belvidere Street So, Phone 2850 WTIM ÜVE MONTREAL CURB MARKET QUOTATIONS T'bft following quotations o?tc Dnces or.tt real Curb Market 5; sheep and There were .& K\u20ac- a hi a t k -Calves were irnished by McManamy & AAa.sh: Open Hig Abitibi.2% Afcitib: Pfd.2 : %\t22\t% Asbestos Corp, «.»\u2022\u2022\u2022,\u2022\t4-'\t4- B.A.Oil .\t\u2022»«.*\u2022«\u2022\t.14%\t1 \u2022 % Cons.Paper .Dc-snaeona \u201cA\"., %\t7% Ford of Canada \u201cA\".Fra?er Co.F'aser Go.V.T.\t .15%\t17 \tveals were sotd between S Noon\t! and the bulk of the gras: g\tj There were no top veais.22 cj 43\tGood ewes and wethers | Lambs weighing ore hum \t| or more made $6.75.Cull; \tI were $7,75.Sneep were S\u2019r: -.'\tBacon hogs were $8.1 _ 20.__ia.GCsip1\u20195 on tbo .-stock market today 10; calves, 109; hogs.Iambs.170.not enough cattle to firm.The bulk of the and $'J Price Bros.Royalite Oil TORONTO MINING EXCHANGE The following quotations of today's prices on the Toronto Mining Exchange are furnished by Langevin & Company, members of the Montreal Stock Exchange and Montreal Curb Market.22 Wellington St.North.Close Opening $3.50.j fed and .eets drew' one dollar peri t>.Butchers and heavies! extra heavies and lights j-.ys were from $6 to $7.- ; g to quality.\u201cNAKED\u201d WITHOUT GUN Melbourne, Oct.20.\u2014Arthur Dufresne, Fi t-nch-Canadian War Id traveller who has prospected for gold and diamonds all over the world for nearly fifty year?,, arrived here.He said he felt \u201cnaked\u201d without a revolver.Aldermae.Base A.etara .Big Missouri.Central Patricia .¦ ¦ ¦ Chibougamau .Chromium .Coniaurum.Dome Mines .Eldoraco .Falccnbndge.God\u2019s Lake .Hardrock Gold .Hollinger .Hovtey Gold .Jackson Manion .Kirkland Lake .Laguna Gold.Little Long Lae .Lake Entre .Macagea\t., Malart.c C; adian .McIntyre .McKenzie Red Lake Mining Corp.Noranda .O\u2019Brien Gold .Paymaster 1.05 3.7*0 Noon 2.05 1.05 38 \u2019/z 3.70 5.00 .44 \u2019A Cape Town, Oct.20.\u2014A record catch of forty-six whales in one day I was obtained by a fleet of twelve vessels operating from the Don-kergat whaling station at Saldanha Bay, Cape Province.BULWER .80\t.87\t.88 10%\t11\t11% .23\t.2d\t.26 ,20\t.20\t.20 1.12\t1.12\t1.12 .25 4.15\t4.25\t4.25 45%\t47\t47% 4.25\t4.20\t4.30 .90\t.95\t.98 33 %\t31%\t32% ,*7*)\t1.00\t1.00 1.75\t1.70\t1,85 40 %\t41%\t41 3.00\t3 05\t3.30 \u201cVariety programme,\u201d Bulwer Ch.Hall, by Ross sisters and Patty Watson, Lennoxville, Oct, 22, 25c - 15c.PICKEL-SEALE\u2014In the Anglican Church, DrumRiondville, Que., Sat.Oct.16th, 1937, Cora Alay Seale, eldest daughter of Mr.and Airs.J.D.Seale, of Cowansville to Eric Pickel, eldest son of Mr.and Airs.Horace Pickel, Montreal.Rev.Mr.Callas, officiating, IN MEMORIAM In loving memory of our dear father and sbîter, Mr.Charie« Brodin and Mrs.Mamie Wheatley, who depart'd this life on October I7th and October 23rd.Gone, but rot forgotten, Insered by DAUGHTERS AND SISTERS.Sherbrooke and Water ville, Que.IN MEMORIAM DONAGHY\u2014In loving memory of my dear grandson, who died Ocftober 20th, 1936.In my lonely hours of midnight, When sleep forsakes my eyes.My thoughts go to the lonely grave, Where my dear Douglas lies.Inserted by his grandmother, MRS.CHARLOTTE BEATTIE.Sherbrooke, Que.IN MEMORIAM DONAGHY\u2014 In loving memory of our dear 1 brother and nephew, who died October 2C>.h ' 1936.\t\u2022 Though his smile has gone forever, And h.s voice we cannot hear, Wr- shall never lose sweet memories.Of the one we loved so dear.! Inserted by HAROLD Brother.MR.AND MRS J.A.WATT.Uncle and Aunt.i Sherbrooke, Que.CARD OF THANKS ! We wish to thank all the kind friends and r% ighborn who in any way assisted during the doath and burial of the late Henry G.Cairn*.Especially we would thank Rev, A.E.Hager, the organist and choir, all those who sent flowers, letters of sympathy, etc.We wish to assure you one and all of our deepest appreciation.THE FAMILY ; Randboro, Que.A1) .40% Perron Gold \t Preston E.Dome\t\t\t Ml\t.65 .57 2.88\t.08 .55 2.65 \t\t\t.18 O 0 Shawkey \t\t\t\t .29\t.31\t \t1 f)5\t1.15\t1.15 \t\t2.70\t2.80 \t\t1.80\t1.30 \t.\t.50\t.50\t.50 Sudbury Basin \t\t\t 2.30\t2.25 .91\t2.25 ,90 \t2 05\t2.60\t2.05 ,30 \tOP,\t.30\t Teck Hughes\t\t\t\t Fowagamack \t\t4 00\t4.45 .41 4,20\t4.50 ,45 4.50 \t\t6.10 .18\t() 20 OILS - A Jberta Pacific .\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022,\t\t\t.18 \t\t\t \t\t ,15\t.15\t.15 \t\t.40 fiff\t,40 Foundation \t Home Oil\t\t! Q\t\t.90 Mfrcury United Oils .14 ,12 .14 .13\u2019/* .13 tit / Afik f f*é'ù vi.*» / ¦ V,-Î - V A Lovely Home Is Only As Good As Its Lumber Take Advantage of Government Home Improvement Plan! Whatever your requirements in Lumber, we can fill your orders quickly with quality products.\u2014 We Have Always in Stock \u2014 SinV.I.MS, VENEER, PANELS, COMMON BOARDS, DONNACONA BOARDS, HARDWOOD FLOORING, INSIDE DOORS AND TRIM.ROOFING PAPER, FRAME LUMBER, ETC.JOHNNY BOURQUE Bourque Street \u2014 SHERBROOKE \u2014 Phone 1613 Start those gW\u201d.- v*.ukLfc TODAY FOR ARRANGE 1 BATHROOM KITCHEN I Don\u2019t put in another winter with a faulty heating system, a jittery roof or uninsulated walls that let the heat out and the cold in.Make your home cosier and more livable \u2014 as so many others have done \u2014 without financial strain.Do it with the magic of the Home Improvement Plan and, at the same time, put men to work.Select the improvement you need most \u2014 inside or outside painting, a modern kitchen, insulation, a new furnace, up-to-the-minute plumbing or the building of an attic playroom or basement game room for indoor days, and get an estimate of its cost.You will be surprised at how readily these and many other desirable improvements will fit into your budget.LOANS EASILY ARRANGED Any contractor, supply firm or architect can help you arrange a Home Improvement Plan loan if you need it to finance the work for you, or you can apply direct to your banker.No security or endorsement needed: you simply show that you can repay in monthly instalments and the loan is made, the work proceeds, your home is made brighter and more livable and men get needed jobs.Full information on the Home Improvement Plan and what it covers may be obtained from your local committee, your Provincial Chairman, your bank or the National Employment Commission, Ottawa.National Employment Commission UNDER THE AUTHOR! IY OF THE DOMINION GOVCRNIMENT A.F.SlhniHr, Joint Chairman, It We1linnlon SI.\u2019North.Dm.L.Forcsl, Jolnl Chniimnn, 16 Wellinipon St.South.ROOF JO ij-i /pI'K FURNACE Alfred DenHoehera, Scrretary, La Tribune Building, Sherbrooke.(Thf cm! of thh sniet of dthetlhetnriitt %f>nmond by (be National Ini pin) tit nit Commisuoti, has been defrayed entirely by ftubllc\u2019Sttltlted eonccrm and individuals as a tontribntimt towards that \"Natinn-n Ide co-nfieralivt effort\" envisaged by the Varliawent of Canada in the National Hmldoyment Commission AlU) I*\t*.4Ml .\t\u2022.\ty.W'ifA A,'n-vWVwnA.Ml'MFe.A.-i**y* ».\u2022».\u2022ff' If -K s SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1937.PAliË SEVEN Y ou will find it in the Classified Ads One Cent a Word Prices For Classified Advertising : CASH RATE \u2014 10c for 10 words for one insertion: 1 cent for each additional word.CHARGE RATE - 25c for 10 words for one insertion.2c each additional w'ord.ERRORS in advertisements will be rectified immediately on attention being called thereto.BIRTHS\u2014MARRIAGES\u2014DEATHS: Death and Funeral Notices, Card of Thanks, In Memoriam without poetry, 75c an insertion.Poetry included in In Memoriam 10c per line extra.Engagements, Weddings, Birth Notices, 50c.List of flowers included in obituary reports 2c a word.25c extra when charge account is opened.Reader Notice in country locals, 15c per line, five words to a line; Lennoxville and City Brieflets, 20c per line.Female Help Wanted Lost And Found QAPABLE GENERAL, ABLE TO DO J^TRAYED AWAY FROM HUNTING AND plain cooking, small family.Must fur- ^ Loach Restaurant, Lennoxville, Friday, nish good references, Mrs, F.J.McKenna, October 15th, small grey tabby kitten.163 London.\t.Answers to name of \u201cMickey.\u201d Phone Len- noxville 201.Reward, OUSEKEEPER FOR SMALL FAMILY:- on country farm.Wages $3.50 week.j^OUND MAIN\u2019S GOLD RING AND CUFF Hc III 4uj Aru> iXKtnrxr $tiuAt stohy komArx* IttUHKMNK ILLUSTRAT*» BY John Wright Foster, Que.Situation Wanted, Female link, near Drumanondville, Sunday.Owner may have same by paying for advertisement and proving property.Phone 1137 or 26 Elm Street.VrOUNG WOMAN WITH ONE SMALL girl wants situation as housekeeper in Sherbrooke or Lennoxville.Record, Box 78, Poultry For Sale AND \\ TIDDL-B-AGED\tWOMAN DESIRES work as housekeeper for small family, j Ayer\u2019s Cliff.Record, Box 83.\t1 JERSEY BLACK GIANTS, HENS pullets, cockerels.Frank Trudeau, R, 1, \\ GIRL 14 WOULD LIKE A PLACE TO ' ~ work and attend school.Record, Box 84, Male Help Wanted Radio For Sale L'XPEKIENCED SINGLE farm work.Apply, stating wages ex- j pected.C.H.George, Lennoxville,\tj r^XPERIENCED SINGLE FARM HAND; -*-J wanted for general farm work, year , WAVE | around job for right party.Wages $20 per j j month with good board and room.I.J.i bination clock and.six-tube radio.Will |\tLennoxville.__________________| .ell both cheap fur cash.Roccrd, Box 70.j AN T() W0RK QN FAR,M F0R N0J \u201e\t_ T\tj-i-VA ve!mj>er 1st.Apply Horace LeBaron, Wanted To Purchase j North Hatiey.Que.OEE MY EXHIBIT OF LAND AND ^ water fowl at Winter Fair and Horse Show, Sherbrooke.High quality birds for sale.Arthur Goodhue, R.R.4, Lennoxville, Que, MAN FOR : pOURBON RF-D TURKEYS.CAN FUR-nish pairs or trios at fair prices.See them at Winter Fair.Mrs, Ralph Libby, Ayer\u2019s Cliff, Que.$1 EACH.THE STORY THUS FAR.After a year of probation, lovely Margit Agnew has finally consented to her sister\u2019s marriage to Waldo, a young inventor.Margit has her Long Island home, her dressmaking establishment and her emotions under perfect control.Although Waldo tries to rebel at her wedding plans, she suavely argues him down, as always.But her sister, Irene, is the more impulsive type.The latter is out shopping one afternoon when suddenly a sidewalk artist calls to her.Despite her better judgment she approaches his easel.Radio Programme *- CIX TUBE LONG AND SHORT ^ cabinet Philco ; also Westing-house com-J T> ARRED ROCK PULLETS, George Johnston, Brome, BUSINESS DIRECTORY WANTED HIÏALTHY HORSES FOR1 U'XPERIENCED PATTERN MAKERS.AP-' \u2019mink food.Wo destroy animals where ply Canadian Ingersoll Rand Co., Ltd., bought if you wish.Carl McCfay, Knowlton.[ Sherbrooke,_________ OMALL CAR HEATER IN PERFECT CON-j dition, cheap for cash.Apply Record, Box 79.\tI Advocates Situation Wanted, Male Cars For Sale VrOUNG MAN, SPEAKING BOTH JL languages, well educated, seeks position.Worked in restaurant one year.Phone 464.IJ-SED CARS.ALL SIZES, ALL MAKES, all prices.Dufferin Motor Sales, 172 Wellington Street South, Phone 2320.Open evenings.Male And Female Help «7 PLYMOUTH SEDAN DE LUXE.19:ir> for quick buyer.Leraioxville, Tel.Apply 138-J, HAVE HELPED HUNDREDS TO * \u2019 obtain positions as Letter Carriers, Postal Clerks, Customs Examiners, Clerks and Stenographers, etc., and can help you.Write us for proof and free information.106 Main Street, : M.C.C.Schools.Ltd.Toronto 10.Oldest in j Canada.WELLS & LYNCH.ADVOCATES.Lif SUN Life Building.PUGG, MIGNAULT, HOLTHAM AND Grundy, advocates.McManani- & Walsh Building, 70 Wellington St.N.Phone 1580.rOHN P.WOLFE, B.A., B.C.L.Q.CK Building.Wellington Street North.Ashton r.tobin, advocate, Roeenbloom 8 Bldg,, 66 Wellington St-North Phone 623./ t AGNE & DESMARAJS, SHERBROOKE, /JC OLIVIER.«-w O y>ath( $iô.THREE ROOMS AND Ready November first.Phone Edwards Realty, 135.jpiMPLES, BOILS AND A/C'NE CAN RE safely treated with Clement\u2019s Acnetabs, the new discovery sold at your druggists.J WILL SELL MY REMINGTON RIFLE, Rea! Estate For Sale IPWO APARTMENT BRICK PROPERTY, Read Street, Lennoxville, $4,C«00.All model 30 express, Springfield gold head front sight ; also .22 both rifles in see them or v North Hatley.30-06 ml., cnl, rifle, lient condition.Call and W.E.Greer, R.M.D, 1.routed, paying $456 per annum.Edwards Realty.Phone 135, pi RS'T C L A S'S.L ARGE in g lot, Moore Street.Phone Edwards, 135.SIZE, IHJILD-Cnsh or terms, name is Charlie.\u201cIrene Agnew.\u201d \u201cHow do you do?Where do you live?\u201d \u201cBayview.\u201d Irene bit her lip.She had been talking too much.A thing like this would drive Margit crazy.It was really Waldo\u2019s fault.Ever since he had tried to change Margit\u2019s decision about their wedding date she had felt quite upset.She tried to rationalize her predicament.After all it was a rather charitable thing for her to do.The young man looked quite nice.He spoke nicely-used words like \u201catrophied\u201d\u2014whatever that meant.He was probably c-ducated and very poor.As soon as he finished the sketch she\u2019d give him a dollar.Maybe some day he would become famous.He looked like the kind of person who eventually became famous.They\u2019d hang his pictures in the Metropolitan.She\u2019d keep the sketch he was making and when she was a grey-haired old lady she'd probably get a thousand dol- ™.A.H.LADEREE.REGISTERED\t,f°r >>\t^ AL optometrist, 128 Well., str.thcor,.S,.found °ut shed disgraced herself posing on Maoison Avenue sne could Physicians and Surgeons JAR.B.8.SPEER.EYE.EAR.NOSE.\"^Throat.Hfc Wellington No, Phone 8246.ÏYR ETHIEK, PHONE 676.84 KING ST * ' West.Electrotherapy, Urinary Diseast*.ir RS J A.D ARCHE AND LINOE1 Darch*.Eye.Ear.Nose and Throat Private Hospital.92 King Street West.Optometrist A A 10 5 4 V A 4 4 10 9.3 4» Q 10 8 G A K Q J 6 3 V K Q 9 ?72 4.9 5 4 Dealer *982 V 10 7 6 3 2 ?J5 + 732 A 7 V J85 ?A K Q8 6 4 ly 218 T ARGE 3 J tion.L CHEAP PROVINCE OF QUEBEC.T MUNICIPALITY OE THE '\tTOWN OF RICHMOND.:S Veterinary Surgeon ,1HKRBRO0KB VETERINARY HOSPITAL Dr L A Gendrean.14 Fmnt Ph 2107 WINTEiR OVERCOAT, SIZE 40.i At Ontario Street, Phone 1486-J., Uounc the adjourned special mwling of the il of the Town of Richmond, held in the Council Chambers of the said Town, on I SIZE M ATTRUS'S, GOOD CONDI- Wednesday, October 13th.1937, at eipht j phone 2756-W.\ti o'clock in the evening:, at which were nresent | .under the Charmanship of the Mayor S.E.j ¦\\DY'S DARK GREEN WINTER COAT, Dosmarais.Pro Mayor MacRae, Aldermen! Hudson seal collar, size 16 years.First ; Geoffroy, PepW, Rochette, Emond.McKee i rlfi'-s condition, $7.Write Box 42, Brome, and Dyson, and the Secretary-Treasurer also qU0-\tin attendance.WHEREAS a Petition of the Municipal ' 1RST CLASS .30-30 WINCHESTER Electors of the Town of Richmond, in number Plasterer OLASTERER WITT EQUIPMENT.^ Eug.[«vesque.Coiinîil SC Ph.ÎTB9-W COWANSVILLE 1 in The A.Y.P.A.opened their activities for the fall and winter season oke 5.18.ch.-up f.r ensh, Ph-na Sh«r- nmi duly qnnHiirii, roqumthiK this Council j with a very enjoyable Thanksgiving III doc/do by a ISy-L-nv to be submittal to; party ill the church hall.This WHS hi.Municipal Electors on the estahiMimeut ; followed by a marshmallow roast Live Stock For Sale A1 MOTHER SHIPMENT HORSES, LAST of 8 ou son, just arrived.3 year olds, 4 yonr olds, 5 year olds, well broken.A chance to net a horse you need.Apply Hendercon and Lacroix, East Earnham, Que.of a Brarch Store of the Quebec Liqnor Com- jn Mr.McClure\u2019s grove on October mission, in the Town of Richmond, for the : t j Liquors withi.i the limits VTOTJNG * choice GUERN SEY\tBULLS\tF R 0 M breeding stock.Prices reason-Ralph Lfbby, Ayer\u2019s Cliff, Qu 1*2 GOOD SHOATS, 10 WEEKS OLD, $30.Thomas Burns, Oooksh'ire.\"1,,UOrP WiTnM ine imms! Mrs.J.G.Fuller, of Granbv, will WHEREAS the ob In'gat km in which the j\tRU-est speaker at\tthe \\V.M.S.; Council of\tthe Town of Richmond is placed J'RectlDJÏ 111 the church\tparlors\tOH j to su'iimM the .nid By-Law to the anprovni j Thursday evening, October 21.Mrs.|of the Municipal Electors, in virtue of;Fuller will give an account of her Chapter 42, R.s.Q.1025.Article c.\t'trip to Europe this summer.| whereas a Notice of Motion was given ; Mr.D.M.Lockhart spent a recent !\"' ti\u2019eu'!tu!\" \"\u2019\"-\u2019\u2019A rf «'«»\u2019 q> jj.Beach, accompanied by man in uniform.\u201cGet?\u201d he repent \"VT1\tt''' Tm\u2019,?Tr Miss Marie Leonard, R.N,\t[ed.thirl no nth on y of the niomli oi i\tmi\tt\tt\ti- \u2022 i 'lobcr, nineteen hnntlr«d end thirty-seven.|\t\u201e .\t7-7-.J\tCOP beamed maliciously a.|,- iiKMuiMs.\tShivering onuses contraction of 1 Thirty days\u2014for \u201cpeddling without ( AMille, nuruis, N.Y., Scr.-Ttam, 1 the muscles and, like exercise, it (a licence.\u201d True c»i>y.\tjean increase the appetite,\tThe crowd laughed delightedly.Mr.and Mrs.C.Gardner, of Hart-ford, Conn., have been visiting at j the home of Mr.and Mrs.H.Gard-1 to j nor and other relatives here.Misses Helen and Jeanie Consens ; and Mrs.I, Consens, of Bolton Centro, ware recent callers of Mrs.D.[ W.Johnson.Inspector H.D.Wells visited the ( school here one day recently.\t_0\ts, v Mr.A.0,\u2019Ucilley ami mother, Mrs.p.(VReilloy, of Montreal, have1 Repair hemco, s a.m.to 10 p.m.been visiting relatives here.Limited Phone 3060 Enjoy the improvements on the new models This year\u2019s radios are better than ever\u2014 better in tone, better in performance.Easier tuning methods, more accuracy in getting foreign stations \u2014 all the refinements that radio and sound experts have added this year are available now.And the cabinets are real masterpieces of the designer\u2019s art.We have all sizes at prices to fit every budget.Leading makes to choose from.A small down payment connects one to your aerial.Balance on easy terms.SOUTHERN CANADA POWER COMPANY\tLIMITED \u201cOwned by those it Serves\u201d To Insert an Ad in the RECORD'S Classified Section-Call 68 PAGE EIGHT.SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 193V NEW OCCUPANTS daughter, Ruth, Mr.and Mrs.E.Ladd and Miss Phyllis Ladd, were recent guests of Mr.William Mc-.Clay and Mr.and Mrs.Geo.McClay.FAD FA DM AF' -^rs- F- H\u2019 Cummings, Miss Norma Hll K r A 1% ll lli* I Cummings and Mr.D.McClay, were * V*» A il Hill y\u2019 *\t! guests of Mrs.Cummings\u2019 niece, i Mrs.G.Chapman, at Waterloo, one I day last week.G.MACKINNON BEDFORD Mr.and Mrs.C.P.Hunter.Managers of \u2018\u2018Inverness\" for fhe Past Twenty-Seven Years, to Give Over to New Owner, Mr.Roy McLaren.Who Will Work Farm Himself.Bondrille, Oct.20.\u2014Mr.Justice Mackinnon has sold his farm \"Inverness,\u201d to Mr.Roy McLaren, of Buckingham, Que.As Mr.and Mrs.McLaren are going to live on the farm themselves, Mr.and Mrs.C.P.Hunter, who have managed the farm in the past will he moving, away.Mr.and Mrs Hunter will be greatly missed _as they have managed the property for upwards of twenty-seven years.They will spend the winter with their daughter, Mrs.Robb Millin-champ.and Mr.Mt.Lnchamp, of Waterloo.Mr.and Mrs.Hunter have for many years been active in church and social affairs.Mrs.Hunter has long been organist at the little church she loves so well, while Mr.Hunter has been a warden for almost as long a time as his wife has been organist.Mrs.Hunter is the last of the Hillhouse family in this district and has always lived up to that family\u2019s high tradition of community service.Although regret is felt that the Hunters are to leave, it is hoped that they will always continue their heartfelt interest in the neighborhood.Mr.and Mrs.McLaren, who will be the new occupants of the farm ¦with their three children, are extended a hearty welcome and it is hoped that they will long remain in the district.General Notes Recent guests at the home of Mr.End Mrs.Ernest Ladd were Mr.and Mrs.Henri Dansereau, Mrs.Xavier Cote, Miss Gisele Cote and Mr.Georges Cote, of Ste.Rosalie; Mr.and Mrs.P.W.Matthews, of Fui-ford: Mrs.John Love, of Magog, and Mrs.Roxie Johns:in, of Brome.Mr.and Mrs.F.Millinchamp and daughter, Claire, of Macdonald College, were recent week-end guests of the latter\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mrs.C.P.Hunter.Miss Rose Smith, proprietor of the Brome Lake House, has returned to Montreal for the winter, leaving her house in charge of Mr.Haroii Litterton.Mr.and M-s.Ernest Ladd.Mr.Fayland.Miss Phyllis Ladd and Mrs.Eoxie Johnston were visiting relatives in Chtrrv River recently.Mr.Fayland Laid attended the teachers' convention ir.Montreal recently.During the absence of the incumbent of this parish the past two Sundays, the services ir.the Church of the Good Shepherd were very ably conducted by Rev.R ial Dear.Gedve.of Brome, and Mr.Alfred Jenkins, of Montreal.Mr.Frank Cummings and son, Gerald, Mr.Arthur Thornton and son.Grant, of flontreai.spent tr.e Thanksgiving holiday a: their home here with the former's wife and Mrs.L.McIntosh, of Montreal, was the guest over the Thanksgiving week-end of her son.Mr.Sinclair McIntosh, and Mrs.McIntosh.Miss Agnes Reid, who has been the guest of her brother, Mr.J.D.Reid, and Mrs.Reid, has returned to her home in Pittsfield, Mass.Mrs.L.Aldrich, who has been the guest for a time at the home of Mr.and Mrs.D.P.Jones, returned to Montreal on Sunday, October 10, motoring in with Mr.and Mrs.Jones and Miss Nellie Jones.Miss Marion Best, who is attending the Royal Victoria College, spent a recent week-end with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.F.E.Best, while Miss Eleanor Jones, who is also attending the same college, was with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.C.0.Jones, as was also Mr.George Jones, who is at McGill University.Mr.Walter Conrad, of McGill University, was with his parents, Rev.IV.W.Conrad and Mrs.Conrad, at the parsonage for the holidays.Mrs.J.Parker, of Jefferson, X.H., who is the guest of her father, 3Ir.Ernest Best, in St.Albans, V:., was the guest recently, of her grandparents, Mr.and Mrs.Eugene Best.Aliss Jessie Cockerline, of St.Lambert, was the guest over a recent week-end of her parents, Mi.and Mrs, J.W.Cocberiine, while her sister.Miss Margaret Cockerline, of Montreal, spent the Thanksgiving week-end with relatives in Lowell, Mass.Mrs.Leon Guthrie and Master Stewart Symonds have returned from St.Albans, Vt., where the latter underwent a minor operation.Mr.Ernest Best and Miss Mable Green, of St.Albans, Vt., were the guests on Sunday, October 10, of relatives in Bedford.Mr.and Mrs.Leslie Bresee, of Sutton, were recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.Eugene Best.Miss Irene Steel, of this town, who is nurse-in-training in the Sherbrooke Hospital, is at present in Montreal taking a course of training at the Alexandra Hospital.On Monday evening, October 11, Mr.and Mrs.Harry Jones entertained at bridge.The prize for the highest score among the ladies went to Mrs.B.W.Draper, while Mr.Ross Preston received the prize for the highest score among the gentlemen.Among the guests present were Mr.and Mrs.Charles Reid, of Adams, Mass., and Miss Agnes Reid, of Pittsfield, Mass.31 r.Joseph Johnson and daughter.Miss Aileen Johnson, of Montreal, spent a recent week-end at the home of Mr.and Mrs.E.O\u2019B.Gould.Mr.and Mrs.Eugene Best and Mr.and Mrs.F.E.Best and Miss Marion Best motored to St.Albans, Vt., recently, and were guests of Mr.and 3Irs.Clarence Best.A donation of $25 was recently received for the organ fund of St.James\u2019 Church from Mrs., W.A.Sh situs.Mr.Gerald Smith spent a recent week-end in Montreal with Mrs.Smith at the home of the latter\u2019s mother, Mrs.J.Adams.Mr.and Mrs.L.Maxfield and family have moved from Ciarence-viile and 'taken up residence in Bedford.Mr.and Mrs.Emerson Miller and family have also moved here from Clarenceville.Mr.Reginald M oison and Mr.Charles Short, who are attending Macdonald College, spent the Thanksgiving week-end at their respective homes with their mothers, Mrs.Mo -on and Mrs.M.Short.The friends in Bedford of Mr.Aiired Windsor, son of the late Rev.Walter Windsor, for some years rector of St.James\u2019 Church, will regret to learn of the death of Mrs.Alfred Windsor, which occurred on Monday, October 11, after a lengthy illness at her home, Tupper street, Westmount.Mrs.Windsor, who was in her 50th year, was well known in Montreal for her charitable work, being president and head of food distribution of the Anglican Council for Emergency Relief, and president of the W\u2019omen's Guild of the Church of the Advent.The former iCora May Wheeler, she was born in Venice, Que., a daughter of the late 31r.and Mrs.Arnold M.Wheeler iand was educated at St.John\u2019s High ; School.She is survived by her hus-;band, three sons, Thomas Lee Wrind-isor.Charles Arnold Windsor, both ;of Montreal, and Walter de Witt | Windsor, of London, Ont., and a 'daughter, Katherine Margaret Windsor.of 3Iontreal.The funeral was j held from the Church of the Advent at 2:30 p.m.on Wednesday after-jnoon, October 13, with interment in : Mount Royal Cemetery.NEWS ITEMS OF INTEREST FROM GRANBY REGION Large Number of Outsiders Visited Friends in Granby and Vicinity Over Holiday Season.Granby, Oct.20._ Miss Mary Reynolds, of Worcester, Mass., spent the holidays with friends in town.Mrs, D.M.Mitchell, 0f Mount Royal, Montreal, was in town over the week-end visiting her sister, Mrs.C.R.Robinson, and 3Ir.Robinson.Mr.George Browne, of Montreal, 3Iiss Jessie Hall, of Terrebonne, is was a \"uest of his mother, M the guest for the present of Mr ! Windsor Alcombrack on the Philips-jburg Road.A number from Bedford attended the chicken pie supper at Stanbridge East on Thursday evening, October 13.3Iiss Isabel Currie had the winning ticket for the hand-embroidered j cloth, which was drawn for on that joecasion.Mr.and 31rs.Hannibal Sheltus and family, of Lachine, were the ! guests over the Thanksgiving week-jend of the former\u2019s mother, Mrs.W.!A.Sheltus.3Ir.E.A.Buchanan, of Dunham,* was a recent guest of her daughter, 31rs.Eric Kemp, and Mr.Kemp.; Mrs.M.Boomhour and two children, of Stanbridge East, recently ispsnt a week-end with Mr.and Mrs.iPhiio Boekus.| Miss Bernice Schoolcraft was a recent week-end guest of Miss Mar-Igaret Jenkins at Rosenberg.Mrs.James Roseberger has left |for Kir,iso, Alta., where she will be the guest for a -time of her sister, Mrs.George Cornell, and Mr.Cor-; nell.! -Mr.Harry Jones left on Tuesday, 'October 12, on a trip to Guelph, Ont.Canada College, was a recent weekend visitor of his parents, Mr.ar.d Mrs.H.Giddings.Mr.and Mrs.W.A.McCurdy, Master John and Miss Shirley, of Montreal, were recent week-end vis-tors of Dr.and Mrs.McCurdy.Mr.A.G.Kittridge, of Montreal, spent a week-end in town.Miss Evelina Dunn w-as in Montreal over a week-end visiting her brother, Mr.R.J.Dunn, and family.Miss G.M.L.Yabelle, local representative of the Bell Telephone Company, has returned from a pleasant holiday spent in Minneapolis, where she visited her brother, Mr.J.Edward Labelle, bliss Labelle, and also visited cousins in Chicago and Detroit, Mich., and friends n Toronto, Ont.Miss Kathlen Kittredge was in Montreal recently as a guest of Mr.and Mrs.Douglas Watson.Mr.and Mrs.D.W.Harvey and little son, Philip, of Montreal, were 3IacHutehin, of the Sir George Wil- number of little boy friends at a (guests of Mr.and Mrs.F.S- 31c- liams College, Montreal, «pent the holidays at their respective homes.Mr.and Mrs.Oman Cook, of Leominster, Mass., were calling on 3Ir.and Mrs.F.N.Lynch one day recently.Mr, Roland Blampin, of Waterloo, was a dinner guest of Mr.and jof Wakegan, Mich., Mr.and Mrs.E Mrs.Lynch on Thanksgiving Day.I Blowney and son, John, and Mrs, Billie Lewis and Robert Lewis, of ;R.D.Austin, of Schenectady, N.Y.most enjoyable party.Games and 1 Lean.Mrs.J, B.Bailey, of Monte-favors and delicious supper with the ; hello, was also visiting her sister, traditional birthday cake, with nine -Mrs.McLean, for a few days recent-candles gave the children a delight- ! ly.fu! afternoon.\t| Mr, and 3Irs.R.P.Martin Recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.i spent a week-end at Ludlow-, Mass., W.A.Austin were Mrs.Blowney, I with Mr.and Mrs.John Phillips.Lower Canada College, were holiday visitors at the home of thsir parents, Mr.and Mrs.W.O.Lewis.bliss Vivienne MacHutchin, of Montreal, spent the holidays with Mr.and Mrs.Vere MacHutchin.Mrs.H.S.Law-rence was a recent guest of her sister, Mrs.WT.H.Goodhue, and Mr.Goodhue, in Montreal.Mr.and Mrs.Gordon C.Steele and children, Gordon, June and Jay, were dinner guests of the former\u2019s mother, Mrs.W.A.Steele, at Cowansville over Thanksgiving.Recent Sunday guests at the home LEADVILLE bliss Beverly Mayhew, of Coati-|cook, is visiting her sister and ; brother-in-law, Mr.and - Mrs R.Phelps.Recent visitors of Mrs.Clara McCoy were Mrs.Mary Aikens, of Mansonville, and Mrs.D.Brown and daughter, Pearl, of Vale Perkins.Those from here who attended the wedding reception given for Mr, and Mrs, Gordon Perkins, nee Irma \u2022Jones, in the hall at Vale Perkins were Miss Pauline George, Miss Adce Varner and Messrs, Eric Warner and Gus Chalifoux.^ Miss Pauline George, teacher at the Owls Head School, spent the holiday week-end at the home of her parents, Mr, and Mrs.Harry George, at Vale Perkins.STANBRIDGE RIDGE blr.^George Smith recently motored to Sutton.Mrs.Stanley Cochrane has been suffering from severe burns on her hands caused by hot fat.Mr.Dalpe is moving from Pigeon Hill to the Douglas farm here, known locally as the Wells\u2019 place.Mr.and Mrs.Alden Corey motored to Mansonville.Mr.Paige Knight attended the Teacher\u2019s Convention at Montreal.Mr.and Mrs.Mervin Corey and children visited Mrs.Corey\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mrs.Charles Lamp-man, at Frelighsburg.Mr.and Mrs.Archie Sager and Miss Elizabeth Sager motored to Cowansville.They were accompanied by Mrs.H.A.Perry, of Stanbridge East.Mrs.Douglas and Miss Winnie Douglas attended the Guild meeting at Pigeon Hiil.Mrs.Verian Casey has been suffering from an infected finger.Miss Jean Sage was a guest of Miss Joyce Fortin, Stanbridge East.Miss Irene Corey has been suffering from a severe cold.A largely-attended meeting of the Ladies\u2019 Aid Society was held with Mrs.Neil Baker as hostess Lome E.Browne, over Thanksgiv ing week-end, Miss Mary McKirley, who has been_ spending the summer months at Warden with her niece, Mrs.L.A.Booth, and sister, Mrs.James Ferguson, has returned to Granby for the winter.Mr.and Mrs.Wesley bliller, of Leominster, Mass., and Mrs.Martha Stewart, of Bedford, have returned to otheir homes, af\u2019er spending a few days with Mr.J.A.Creller and bliss Ethel Creller.Mr.and Mrs.R.V.Carter, of Agawana, Mass., were recent week end guests of Mr.and Mrs.C.R.Robinson.Mrs.E.J.Raymond is spending two weeks in Waterloo, guest of her brother, Mr.Edward Goodwill, \u2022'and Mr.Goodwill.Mr.Dossett conducted the service at, St.Luke\u2019s Church.Waterloo, on Sunday, October 10th, in the absence of the rector, Rev.Noraan Edger-ton, who was preaching in Knowl-ton.bliss Margaret Tyrrell, 0f Montreal, is spending a few days with her sister.Mrs.D.E.Dozois, and Mr.Dozois.Mr.Ke\u2019th Giddings spent a weekend in Montreal.Miss Mary Finney, of Montreal, was a recent week-end guest of friends.Miss Elizabeth Nunns, of Coati-cook.spent a week-end with her sister, Mrs.J.G.Fuller, and Mr.Fuller.Mrs.P.M.Haves, of Frelighsburg.was recently visiting her daughter.Mrs.Elmer Hutchings, who is HI.Miss Gertrude Porter, of McGill University, spent the holidays with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.C.D.Porter.Mr.Alan Robinson, of Macdonald College, was a visitor of Mr.and Mrs.C.R.Robinson over Thanksgiving.Miss Shirley Bradford, of McGill Unvers'ty, spent the holidays with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.W.R.Bradford.Mr.Regnald Hutching', of Montreal, visited his mother, Mrs.Elmer Hutchings, over a recent week-end.Mrs.J.E.King, of Montreal, was a guest last week of Mr.and \"Mrs.A.E.Wallace.Mr.George Giddings, of Lower recent week-end guests of Mr.and i of Mr.and Mrs.H.S.Lawrence Mrs.Francis J.Dunn.Mr, Campbell McDonald, of Loyola College, was a guest of his parents, Mr.and Mrs.A.G.McDonald, over the Thanksgiving holidays.Mr.Wilbur Swett and Mr.John were Mr.and Mrs.A.E.Smith Mr.and Mrs.W.H- Goodhue, all of Montreal.Master Gordon Steele, who celebrated his ninth birthday on Tuesday, October l?.th, entertained a Gertrude and Fi Mr.Harry Yeat nces , of the Misses Yeats and Montreal.Mr.and Mrs.H.Stewart, of Belfast, Ireland, are spending a few days as guests of Mr.and Mrs.N.A.Austin.Miss Barbara Austin, of St.Hel- Mrs.W.F.Giddings was visiting her daughter, Mrs.E.Longau, in Montreal last week, Mr.H.S.Lawrence and Mr.Watt spent a day in Sherbrooke.' Mrs.K.S.Mitchell, Mrs.C.Kerr Stewart and Miss Phyllis Stewart spent a dav in Sherbrooke.Mr.and Mrs.C.F.Hawke and son.Earl, spent Thanksgiving Day at Brigham with Mr.and Mrs.en\u2019s School, Dunham, spent the i P.V.Hawke.Thanksgiving holiday with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.A.Austin.Miss Annie Yer.ts.of Montreal, was also a recent week-end guest at the same home.Mr.and Mrs.L.J.Allen spent the holidays with Mr.and Mrs.V.J.Allen, at Foster.Messrs.Fred and Guy Brown, of Lake Massawippi.Averts Cliff, wero recent visitors of Mr.and Mrs.G-C.Steele.^ Mr.and Mrs.A.S.M-Lcnn, of Montreal, spent a week-end as Miss Flo Bradford was in Toronto visiting relatives over the holiday week-end, Mr.and Mrs.W.Hindle and soon, Robert, Miss Grace Barton, Miss Esdale, Miss Helen Ross and Miss ¦Jessie Ross, all of Mon':\u2022¦ml, were recent week-end guests of Mr.and Mrs, Albert Coupland, Shefford Mountain.Mr.Stewart Rowell and Miss Edith Richardson, of Montreal, were in town at*ending the funeral of their aunt, Sirs.0.II.Jackman.The idem, Mr.-;.Pattenden, pre- w I sided at the business meeting, Fol-I lowing the opening exercises, the minutes of the preceding meeting | were submitted.Bills were ordered j paid and the sum of $50 voted to the budget fund.Mrs.M.Stahl offered to entertain at the November meet-' ing.An exceptionally large number ! of visitors were present to enjoy the ! social hour and the refreshments I which were served by the hostess assisted by Miss Lois Baker.Mrs.Bah! ' EVERYWHERE I LOOK 1 SEE *joy And .happiness! IT'S 60T, TO STOP/ - HE'S , Risht' \u2019GLOOMS.-, GET AFTER , THOSE JOYS! Ü OH, DADDY-¦ ' MOTHER SAID YOU WOULD Build mb a PLAYHOUSE !.what! mb Build a PLAYHOUSE'?I SHOULD \u2019 SAY NOT ! I'M DEAD TIRED! T/Y 'IK , S' Yj ' I MY 1 f TEAR I r into V 'EM, WHY-WHY.-LEN ! 1 DON'T UNDERSTAND' oh,you wouldn't.' you never.i SHOW ME ANY CONSIDERATION ! YOU Know j need rest! i haven1-Been sleeping well-* But.WHAT DO YOU CARE?\u201c'SX 1 WORK hard All day- LIE awake all NIGHT-AND ALL YOU DO IS THINK UP MORE WORK FOR.ME I WELL- IF You'D DO AS THE DOCTOR SA\u2019D, | YOU'D NOT ONLY SLEEP BETTER, BUT YOU'D 8EA WHOLE LOT EASIER To LIVE WITH » Ilf HE TOLD YOU CAFFEINE-NERVES WAS CAUSING YOUR SLEEPLESSNESS! WHY DON'T YOU QUIT TEA AND COFFEE AND DRINK POSTUM INSTEAD FOR 30 DAYS, AS HE\trY OH- ALL SUGGESTED?/ / RiGHT-, I WILL ï) firiy 'Seat ~ ITMEtf.IVE'RS , LICKED1, POSTUM ALWAYS DR'V£S .c US OUT'J 0 ^ kSi* sUfC .ix/r/jaZ 3o days later.\\\\{\\y Since he csqt rid op his SLEEPLESSNESS, HE'S BEEN A NEW MAN \u2019 \u2019YOU SAID it! 1 SWITCH lN(E) 1 7Ô POSTUM l Sure did j ,THE Trick > FOR HIM.' ' lyouf?MONEY BACK 1 ¦ IF SWITCH!NG TO , POSTUM DOESN'T HELP YOU/, H.If you are one of those who cannot safely drink tea or coffee .,.try Postum's 30-day test.Buy a tin of Postuna and drink it instead of tea or coffee for one full month.If .after 30 days .you do not feel hitter, return the top of the Postum container to General foods.Ltd., Cobourg, Ont., and we will cheerfully refund the full purchase price, plus postage! Give Postum a fair trial .drink it fox the full 30 days! Postum contains no caffeine.It is simply whole wheat and bran, roasted and slightly sweetened.Postum conies in two forms .Postum Cereal, the kind you boil or percolate .and Instant Postum.made instantly in the cup.it is economical, easy to make and delicious.You may miss tea and coffee at iirst.but after 30 days, you\u2019ll love Postum for its own rich, full-bodied flavour.Copr.1037, King Features Syndicate, G.F.Ltd.Liccmi >.y\tW\u201c-.SX;Y.'-PX'>.y ¦ iikmmmmrzT COMES -the only, ears that can make you ah these promises! : iffiY and new Packard Eight\tride Packard 120]\t_a ride that mm ever offered to motorists w STS ,\t' C Yv.1.\t-\t, t hterally\t£°rs\u2019 new Packards UNEQUALLED SAFETY-Thesc\tjs r/ M.utstanding io safety.elimir»»*\u2014 -\u2014\t* tremendously reduced.S\u201c.»d optieoM of Piliex, n nitiipniiiid coiilillilltm Noruiiy I\u2019ine.in eolioeutniIed fol'in, well known for iiu rflVef on ilironl tiioiiibniiiou.Then limite n syrup by slii riiiK two eii|i' of grnmilnleil siignr and one cup of wnler 11 few- moments, until disse_ It\u2019s no Irmiblo 111 nil, 11ml taken but a moment.No cooking needed.Put Ike 1\u2018inex into 11 III oz.holllo and mid your syrup.This gives you Hi ottiK\u2019OM of cough remedy, mtiismilly quick iielins and dopcmln'hh', mid you get, four limes ns inneh cough medicine for your liioney.II never spoil , nml is very plensfllil- ehihlren love il.You\u2019ll hr surprised by the way il lakes bold of severe eongbs, giving quick, sol is tying relief.11 loosens I he phlegm, withes the irritated inemlirniiw.helps clear the air puss,ages, Mnnc., funded if It doesn\u2019t please in every wi vrd.mnl e.v re- WANNA.PLAY-UNCLE JIÜÜIH ?OH-NOTHIN' DOIN'-HM JUST COIN' UPSTAIRS-YOU STAY RIGHT IN HERE-I'M GOING TO E?F=An By George McManus.(! NOW IP I CAN JUST SNEAK OUT WITHOUT THAT BRAT SEEINI' ME- I AKA GONNA' BE LUCKY- WHY DIDN'T YOU SAT YOU WANTED TO PL AY- UNCLE JlGüSp ¦ Li ) t issé&?> i¥:inrv) îiiïî .LLLÜJ \\4lil» PAGE TEK SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1937.ENGLISH HOCKEY LOSES CANADIAN FLAVOR Protest Against Rough OPENING GAMES Play In London League PLAYED IN THE __________________________ PALACE LEAGUE English Sports Writers, Never Having Seen Real Body Checks, Protest Against Hard Hitting Type of Play-Penalty Shot pattonetteS)l^-es and Bour->rom i wo Feet Out Inaugura,ed.\tgL[jes Registered Victories .i ,:uv in i came stops while the teams change1 ^ the PalaCC Mixed BOWl- mg League Inaugurated Season.SCENES LIKE THIS TO BE ELIMINATED IN ENGLISH HOCKEY GAMES London, Oct.20.___ Hockey in ! g-ame stops while the teams change England is losing some of its ends.\t| ,,\t.\t,\t.,, \u201e The preseaitiitaon of the gume Canadian f,a\\or.T.ie adnmm?.ng; tQ0 fojjows a different routine than) of English sports writers, who j the home of its birth.They don\u2019t ! never heard of bruising checkers j start with \"God Save the King\u2019\u2019 fol-: like Eddie Shore or Babe Siebert, | lowed by a long-drawn cheer.by I A couple of \u201cice turns - ,\t.D .M., D * | skating or barrel jumping\u2014launch i Jeek of the Palace Mixed Bowlin.Pius leg.sia: cfr.cisls ars The stem a couple of London rinli npa-gn.îimcd ion and régula;ion altering the gam One three string triumph and a brace of two string victories were fancy recorded in the opening games this Pi of this ) an-up\u201d I COUj fir: evening\u2019s programme.Men and League.Pattonettes swept to a .-ed aLtr j women in evening dress sitting ;n three string decision over the Vais, riots\u201d in ; oIu*h-?eated boxes heated by tteam the Jerries took two from the Jim-; bn4 iu ( radiation clap hands, and suppor.- \u201cties and the Bourguies upset Mar-, Trs\u2019 clubs, bedecked with b g color-.cels in two strings, ed rosettes, twirl \u201cnoise-makes\u2019\u2019 as A.Bourguignon, of the Bourguies j il- gladlai-rs skate .-n t1:;' ii\"-\tsquad captured both single and three; The orchestra plays something string honors with scores of 231 and | rough ; light wh;l > the player-.-l;e practice 526, respectively, a new | shots a: the mt and patven-.of ih\u2014i Detailed scores follow: .The j\tside nsaurants finhth -he r\tBOURG TIES vied to 1 dessert.A the game progt 'eat of j a public address system cavrh t tick.; cxri'a.iatior of th\u201c play on the The- end of the period is a s \u2022?were I to- fpical rr.giish nager tr.of ; : :rg rrk colors mat ' h\u2019to the glare of col; | When the orchestra ;*!martial tune they swe 1 i heat.:d spoü SPORT CHATTER let on the Sher The mogu what the will be their most successful St.Jerome have signed \u2018 Bianchar h forward who pia L'05^93\tE.Pomerleau\t.71\t44 es an\tS.Lefebvre .\t53\t88 .\t\u2018 S.Fortin .\t63\t34 \tE.Houde\tt U\t130 ep^rs\tA.Bourguignon\t118\t182 Jlay-\tTotal .\t3 i o\t4SS e :ce\tMARCELS\t\t \tA.Fortier .\t7S\t60 up a cured\tB.Begin O.Caya .\t93\t78 79 \t.P.Fournier\t111\tm \t; M.Dufresne\t129\t102 43\u2014\t15S 55\u2014196 44\u2014\t130 105\u201480S 231\u201452C BISHOP\u2019S TE AM CONNELL OUITS RETIRES FROM j.SCHOOL LEAGUEi BETWEEN NETS SPORT FLASHES University Found It Impossible Veteran of National Hockey! to Field a Team Without League Announces Inten Violating Nineteen-Year Age Limit.467-1318 108\u2014246 71\u2014242 65\u2014232 76\u2014298 101\u2014332 Body checking, which i?a feature of Canadian hockey, has been banned in England as \u201cungentiemanly\u2019\u2019 and \u201crough tactics.\u2019\u2019 SIGNED AGAIN BY THE ROYALS tn; Europe.Lazzeri.Hector Racine.President of Montreal Royals, Announced that Maranville Received ¦'Satisfactory Increase.\" stole .eadir Total\t\t.499\t430\t421-1350 Bourguies won two strings.PATTONETTES\t\t\t Mrs.Wilson\t.108\t142\t135\u2014385 C.Bilodeau\t122\t135\t123\u2014380 F.Choouette\t107\t131\t117\u2014355 A.Gosselin\t151\t116\t164\u2014431 C.Patton\t.138\t140\t116\u2014394 Total .\t626 VALS\t664\t655-1945 M.Caya\t.78\t77\t65\u2014220 B.Cote\t.77\t104\t106\u2014287 Y.Drapeau ,\t.85\t104\t106\u2014295 P.Marceau\t118\t120\t119\u2014357 V.Morin .\t121\t124\t135\u2014380 Total .\t.479\t529\t531-1539 Red Sox in a Dominion Textile Independent Bowling League match.The other games was won by the Xight Hawks, who captured tf.ree strings from the Mikado team.Detailed results of the games follow\u2019 : NIGHT HAWKS Peloquin .\t105\t105\t105\u2014315 E.Isabelle .\t109\t153\t118\u2014380 R.Lamontagne 115 134 130\u2014379 ]man, was the individual star of the : evening\u2019s play, rolling a 199 single j string and 504 for the best three j string total.The scores follow: WHITE ELEPHANTS Due to the fact that Bishop\u2019s College cannot field a representative team of players under nineteen years old, they have decided to withdraw from the newly formed School Rugby League.When the League was launched at the beginning of the current rugby season, the representatives from Bishop\u2019s College School, Stan-stead College, Sherbrooke High School.Lennoxville High School and University of Bishop\u2019s College decided that all players must be under nineteen years the first of October, otherwise they would not be eligible to play in league games.The University officials have found it impossible to field a team without violating this age limit, and have decided to withdraw I Their game with Sherbrooke High 1 School, scheduled for this after-l noon at the Parade Grounds, has ; been cancelled.J.Burton .Ed.Rousseau G.\tMorin .H.\tPatton ,, C.Jackson ., 119 151\t102\u2014372 108\t93\t103\u2014304 .80\t110\t100\u2014290 101 143 83\t118\u2014302 107\t150\u2014400 P.Laliberte 129\t163\t109\u2014401 H.Garand\t.\t87\t139\t108\u2014332\ti Total \t\t.551\t544\t573-1668 \t\u2014\t\u2014\t\t\t\t\tBARBER COI MAN\t\t\t Total\t545\t694\t56S-1807\ti B.Rousseau .\t137\t137\t137\u2014411 \t\t\t\t; R.Rid\t\t.87\t125\t83\u2014295 \tMIKADO\t\t\ti G.Demers .\t.HI\t112\t124\u2014360 Regimbai\t.98\t85\t76\u2014259\t; Vin.Co; coran ,\t.114\t104\t118\u2014336 Labreoque\t.105\t105\t105\u2014315\tR, Frechette .\t131\t174\t199\u2014504 Bigonnesse\t.77\t106\t90\u2014273\t\t\t\t.\ti Brownlow ,\t74\t129\t10S\u2014311\tTotal \t\t.583\t652\t661-1896 USES IA'I.LABIES TO CUTSET PICK GAME Jt'TERS ! Tamp-1 I la., Oct.20.\u2014 Coach J Walter Burrell hires a Spanish singer to croon lullabies to his Hillsborough High School football players to offset the pregame Utters.He tried it first just before the Plant City game last week.His boys won by 50 to 0.\u201cI don\u2019t know\u2019 if the statogy , worked or not,\u201d he said today, \u201cbut I do know that the team played ; steady, relaxed ball from the first whistle.\u201d R*cva*s JIMMIES a lima y \u2022ed a h news: Chau danger expec very dan-5 pick win-Oh well, from the it is a lot r; toe r men \u2022\u2022Po\u2019n ntreal, Oct.20.\u2014\u201cRabbit\" Mar- Total who piloted the Montreal Pattonettes won three strings, nto second place in the In-;a! League the past season, signed by the Montreal another year.P.acme, president of the notinced last night that' had been given \u201ca saiis-rease over last year.\u201d The i Gervais Total .123 118 151\u2014392\tBarber Coltnan won three strings.-1\tBLUEBIRDS 477 543\t530-1550 M.Beaulieu .115\t100\t87\u2014302 England is said to be sinking into the sea at the rate of nine inches every 100 years.tion of Coaching an Ottawa Amateur Squad.Ottawa, Oct.20.\u2014 Alex Connell has written finish to a notable carreer as a player in the National ; Hockey League, but is .Tready I launched on a new course that may lead him to the heights in another department of the game.After announcing his definite retirement from hockey in a playing capacity, the veteran of_ twelve seasons as a professional with Ottawa.Detroit and Montreal teams said he would | try his hand at coaching an Ottawa ! amateur team this vear.| Officials of Montreal Maroons, i last club with which Connell was | connected, had been pressing him ! as to his future activities and he j said he made the decision during j j the summer.| The best season enjoyed by Ihe | | slim, poker-faced secretary of the | Ottawa Fire Department, .vas in ! 1934-35 when Tommy Gorman j brought him out of retirement to tend goal for his Montreal Maroons.Connell\u2019s brilliant work that season helped the team win the Stanley i Cun, just ter.years after Gorman i signed him to his first professional contract.ConneJl sprang into pronv'nence I with Ottawa amateur teams after I the Great War.He played with jCliffside and Shamrocks where j Gorman spotted him and signed I him to play with Ottawa Senators I who he was then coaching.Re-; maining with the Senators until the 1930-3] season, Connell was a member of the squad that won the Stanley Cup in 1926-27, After Ottawa suspended operations for a year, Connell went to Detroit for one one season.He was i back with the Senators in 1932-33.1 During the 1933-34 season, Connell -4 New York, Oct.20.\u2014 An afternoon along Broadway: red caps scrambling to tote Joe DiMaggio\u2019s bags as he takes off for \u2019Frisco.The boss players trying to dope out the Empire City winners in front of Lindy\u2019s Broadway spot .\u2022 .Also, the gent in front of the brass rail on Seventh Avenue hawking (sotto voce) football pool cards, .Aon smack down a buck.If you p.ck ten winners out of ten, you collect one hundred berries, nine out of nine, ninety cart wheels, and so on.Try and beat it, just once .The guy who peddles \u201cyour home town newspaper\u201d at Times Square says: \u201cI am still a bit low because I picked the Jernts .Jimmy Johnston, ex-Garden maestro, entirely surrounded by free loaders as he presides at high tea at Child\u2019s.Eddie Brannick, secretary of the Giants, buying a new fall lid.Jack Dempsey, freshly shaved and manicured, coming out of a lonsorial emporium.Jake Ruppert, owner of the Yanks, getting his moustache tr'm-med in the basement of one of his Fifth Avenue buildings and looking Eke the cat who has just inhaled the well known canary.was inactive except for one game.Roy Worters, great little New York American goalie, took ill and Connell did a good job of guarding the nets for the Amerks for one game.Gorman brought him back into the game the following season and the confidence he had in his ability was rewarded when the Montreal Maroons brought the Stanley Cup back to Canada.Chicago Black Hawks had won the cup the previous year with Gorman piloting them.Last season Connell was between the pipes for Maroons until February when doctors ordered him to take a rest.Bill Beveridge replaced him and was so brilliant that Connell was not recalled to service.¦ was evsc he wasted no time in hageg-thc \\Y, Royals\t\twithout question.Whe\tn the :\t1937 ,-ea-on got un way it\tlooked\ta?if Maranville wo have hi\ts s nancL\t; full getting the Me realers\t\t:« playoffs.The Roy lost g-a\tme afte\tr game for a diras tr begin n:\tin?.Ho\t\u2019\u2022vc-ver.Maranville w quietly\tto wo\t'¦>: building up his fences\t\tended the season w hi?sou\t\te-cond dace.W \u2022 *¦ -\ti tiie &r\t.v ertement of Mar \tsign m f\t.came the news t the Rq;\trais wii\t¦1 again have a work \tlent ne\tx: year with the Pi: \tPirate\tRacine says that J.Choquette\t.91\t102\tS9\u2014285 M.Lenage\t95\t93\t70\u201425S G.Gosselin\t.131\t113\t113\u2014357 J.Katadotis\t.145\t144\t136\u2014425 Total .\t.\t465\t452\t408-1325 \tJERRIES\t\t \u2022J, .Mathieu\t.\t58\t66\t73\u2014187 B, Cava .\t109\t85\t111\u2014305 W.Bourguignon 111\t\t110\t165\u2014386 J.Mathieu .\t.\t136\t151\t145\u2014432 Total .\t414\t412\t494-1310 Night Hawks\twon\tthree\tstrings, i R.Loubiev .\t.89\t75\t83\u2014247 MAPLE LEAFS\t\t\t! B.Lothrop i C.Baker\t.93\t170 107\t95\u2014358 109\u2014293 Clement\t\t105\t105\tJUo 3lo j Rousseau\t130\t,145\t134\u2014409 R, Berard\t91\t( I\t115\u2014283 i\t\t\t A.Therrien\tSI\t81\t2-, Total\t\t.504\t597\t508-1609 S.Noel .\t.96\t10S\t91\u2014298 j\tTRAMPS\t\t J.Katadotis\t127\t187\t137\u2014451 jT- Wolfe .\t.94\t94\t94-282 \t\t\tL.Gervais .\t.108\t104\t96\u2014308 Total .\t500\t558\tbii-iboy [Jim Burton\t.112\t106\t102\u2014320 RED SOX IL.Lamontagne 107 Jimmies won two strings.E.MARCOTTE LED HARMONY LEAGUE New Sherbrooke House bowlers captured two strings from the Orange Crush squad and the Sherbrooke Pure Milk won three from Kinkead\u2019s in contests played in the Harmony Bowling League.E, Mar-! cotte, one of the Hotelmen, led the field with a total of 525 for the three strings.Following are the detailed results: ORANGE CRUSH A.Jacob G.Lachance G.Boucher .P.Bouchard P.Marcoux Total \t105\t105\t105\u2014315 130\t109\t85\u2014324 .107\t115\t90\u2014312 .78\t103\t87\u2014278 96\t148\t124\u2014368 .\t516\t580\t501-1597 vo ntwo\tstrings.\t - ! Leo Corcoran 3 35 87 98 79\u2014273 114\u2014347 Total .556\t489 485-1530 Bluebirds won two strings, EAGLES W.Gelinas .R.Grimard F.Rousseau 97 96 81 90 85 83\u2014270 77\u2014258 106\t115\u2014302 1.43\t115\t115\u201437 BOXING NUIISEL GIVEN DECISION OVER STRICKLAND Ren by Walter Neusël G (;\tSmith .\t, .127\t143\t137\u2014407 1 J.\tBarries .\t147\t119\t157\u2014423 R.\tEwing\t.165\t120\t120\u2014405 *¦' A ,\tCrawford,\t\t159\t107-266 B.\tThomas\t.131\t143\t144\u2014418 Lo\tw Man\t.100\t\t\u2014100 !\u2022- To\ttüi\t.670\t684\t665-2019 \tNEW\tSHERBROOKE\t\t eh E\tMarcotte\t.153\t199\t173\u2014525 te C.\tWilliams\t146\t104\t149\u2014399 o- R.\tJameson\t161\t115\t117\u2014393 .y R.\tHeath\t.110\t86\t103\u2014299 e.E.\tHallett\t140\t132\t131\u2014403 -e To\t,tal\t710\t636\t673-2019 WINDERS TOOK THREE STRING WIN Winders took the only three string victory in this week's matches in the Paton Duck Pin Bowling League, their .clean cut victory being at the expense of the Yarn Department.The other matches resulted in two string victories for Knowles over the Weavers and the Drapers over the Finishers.Mr.Lemaire, of the Drapers, rolled a total score of 377 for the laurels in the three-string division and W.Sullivan, of the Knowles t-oin.had the best single string of 156.Scores in detail follow: I A.St.Pierre ,, 176\t132 131\u2014439 Total.\t593 528 521-1642 SHAMROCKS F.Patton .M.Corcoran L.Raymond T.Burton .F.Brunelle 92 .87 100 92 100 92 92\u2014276 84\u2014271 83\u2014275, 93 HI.128\u2014332 103 94 9g___293i W.Reid rmjck .Hcnee Dransfield P.Green ., rooke won two string; URE MILK 132 140 181 152 159 Leblance Metivier Auger .Lemaire Lacroix Total .DRAPERS .\t98\t93 .\t108\tItS .\t109\t81 .147\t125 .\t118\t87 77\u2014268 126\u2014,362 96\u2014286 105\u2014377 103\u2014308 17.3 121 128 272 515 467 ___ 580 504 507-1591 FINISHING 1-2.187 103 144 .735 698 KINKEAD\u2019S 182-135-126-124-127- 691-2127 Total.475 489 485-1149 Eagles won three strings.EASTERN TOWNSHIPS LEAGUE OPENED j Coaticook bowlers captured two 'strings from the- Sherbrooke Olympia j squad and the latter team won two i from the Castor Club in opening games of the Eastern Townships Bowling League.A.Bourguignon, ; of the Olympias, registered the best i performance of iihe evening, rolling \u2022 he high single and three string ; scores of 222 and 615, respectively.Following are the scores: OLYMPIA A GLORIOUS EVENT ! DON\u2019T YOU DARE MISS ITÎ THE MUSICAL RIDE Given Every Evening at 8 O\u2019clock by the ROYAL CANADIAN MOUNTED POLICE At The WINTER FAIR and HORSE SHOW SHERBROOKE ARENA, OCTOBER 20th to 23rd Admission: 25c.\tReserved Seats, 25c extra.GO TO THE FIRST SHOW AND YOU\u2019LL GO AGAIN.Phone 926 for your seats \u2014 There will be a crowd.H.S.al! b r Smith\t.148\t154\t1 41\u201444.3 -1 D .M Her\t104\t101\t107\u2014312 n J.Hallett\t.141\t170\t129\u2014440 W.Miller\t113\t110\t120\u2014373 B.Butler\t.169\tno\t128\u2014407 e Total .\t.70.:\ti 645\t625-1975 Pure Mill\tv won t\three si\tbrings.Wag; DYNAMITERS TRIMMED S.O.K.Dc Beni H.M.C.! D.Rc\u2019d F.Simm R, Olivit J.Crock W.Jt me bow.mg premier honors it three string com ri i i.f 295 and 657 S.O.E aggr-gatior mgs to the Dyne eks matches in thi i Bowling League, DYNAMITERS 145\t174 Savoie .\t88\t72\t133\u2014293\tI .Bigonm-s/'e\t.158\t141\t168-\t-470 Paquette .,\t.74\t109\t128\u201431 ]\tF.Marceau\t.156\t,201\t166-\t\u2014523 Low Man .\t.98\t87\t
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