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Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
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lundi 14 novembre 1932
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[" S\u2019irprbrooki' Satlg m^tnrib Established 1897 SHERBROOKE, CANADA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1932.HUNTER\u2019S SHOT CLAIMS LIFE OF MONTREAL MAN FRANCE JOBS CREAT RRITAB IN SEEKING RELIEF FROM PAYMENTS ^ Mishap m lerrebonne Woods.Expected that Other European Nations Will Follow Lead of Major Debtors in Requesting Suspension of Further Payments Due United States\u2014President Hoover Calls Successor-Elect to Conference to Discuss Situation Created by Demands.Washington, November 14.\u2014Great Britain and France, each $4,000,000,000 debtors of the United States, today sought relief from further payments pending an international conference on world debt problems.Publication of their formal requcsls, made to a government already on record against further reduction or cancellation, coincided with a telegram from President Hoover to President-Elect Franklin D.Roosevelt, inviting his successor to a conference on the subject\u2014an action without exact precedent in all presidential history.It brought also suggestions of immediate Congressional consideration.Senator Walsh, Democrat, Montana, said that if \u201cit becomes necessary to dispose of the matter at once a special session of Congress should be called.\u201d Representative Ragon, Democrat, Arkansas, who drafted the declaration against further reductions which Congress attached to the Hoover one-year moratorium on inter-governmental debts, recommended an immediate meeting of the House Ways and Means Committee to consider the question.His previous Congressional declaration was stressed by President Hoover in his telegram to Roosevelt, despatched from the train on which he is speeding back to the White House.\u201cIf there is to be any change in the attitude of Congress it will be greatly affected by the views of those members who recognize you as their leader,\" the chief executive said.\u201cI am loathe to proceed with recommendations to the Congress until I can have an opportunity to confer with you personally.\u201d Friends expected Roosevelt to ac- - Terrebonne, Que., Nov.14.\u2014 Amedee Demers, 41, of Montreal, was shot and killed by a bullet which had been fired at two fleeing deer in the neighboring woods.The bullet, of a .30-30 calibre, pierced an eight-inch thick cedar and struck Demers in the throat as he was standing on the other side of the tree.Examination of the body by a local doctor revealed that death was instantan- PREMIER BENNETT PAYS* HOMAGE AT CENOTAPH SINGING LEGISLATORS NOW FIND THEMSELVES JOBLESS cept the invitation.The British and French notes, both asking suspension of December 15th payments of $95,550,000 and $19,-261,438, respectively, were considered only the first of similar requests to be made by all war debtors of the United States for a revision of obligations.December payments are the first due since the expiration of the moratorium.NOBEL PRIZE WINNER A BUSINESSLIKE MOVE IN INTEREST OF WHOLE WORLD London, Nov.14.\u2014The Government proceeded on the assumption today that announcement postpon- ; ing further war debt payments pend-1 ing a final settlement, would speed up world trade and help regain con-1 fidence.\ti The British proposal for suspen- j sion of payments due December j 15th and amounting tp $95,550,000 | as made public in Washington, was 1 officially described here as a business-like move in the interest of the whole world.The officials believed, they said, that their announcement will have j the salutory effect of stabilizing world confidence and promoting re-!] covery of world trade.While admitting Great Britain.will keep in close touch with othei ; nations owing money to the United j States, British sources were empha- j tic in professing that no united front j has been formed by European j debtors, to press the issue.It was said the timing of her note was guided entirely by the American political situation and that, President Hoover\u2019s return to Washington was not awaited because of the short time before the next payment will be due and Congress will meet.Government quarters had but few doubts that the British proposals would he accepted, and recalled the action of the European nations in arranging to decimate German reparations at the Lausanne Conference.They stressed that the Lausanne decision bonding reparations at about, $714,000,(TOO opened the way for final settlement in an atmosphere of \"cool detachment.\u201d It.was not expected that a formal debt conference would Ire called in Washington, but that the United tates would deal with each creditor directly.\t' The official British view also held that any negotiations on debts would not effect, the forthcoming World Economic Conference, also projected in the Lausanne agreement, to vyhich the United States has been invited.The Government stressed the world ttandpoint.in matters of debt, taking the view that the first sensations of economic relief and recovery are being felt and would be encouraged.It was noted that the world trade was less than half its 1929 volume and that.26.000,000 wore unemployed throughout the world.In the face of this situation it was rortendod the British move for final settlement of the war debts was an effort to further the well being of the world as a whole.The Government had the hacking of all Ixindon morning newspapers today in the debt negotiations.The press was hopeful the United Stales would adopt the proposals in the British note.\u201cAcceptance will commit the United States to nothing more than discussion with the debtors.\u201d the Times said, \"ami in any such discussion the American Government will, of course, pursue whatever policy Minnesota Voters Apparently Wanted Legislation Instead of Song.St.Paul, Nov.14.\u2014Maybe the voters wanted legislation instead of song.At any rate, the singing male trio of the Minnesota House of Representatives failed of re-election.O.H.Dahl, baritone, and leader of the singers, lost Tuesday in Mower County, and Matt J.Rhone, 260 pound basso, had a similar experience in Freeborn County, while O.C.Neuman, Wheaton, tenor, lost in the primary.Their harmony had won attention during the dull moments in past sessions of United States Congress.a MILITARY AUTHORITIES CONVERT CUBAN TOWN INTO FUNERAL PYRE Destruction of Wind and Water Stricken Santa Cruz del Sur Ordered for Reasons of Sanitation\u2014Minister of Interior Estimates Dead at 2,500, Although Wholesale Cremation Prevents Close Check-Up on Victims\u2014Government Agencies Speed Work of Rehabilitation.DISARMAMENT PROPOSALS TO BE DISCUSSED In Toronto for the eleventh annual meeting of the Liberal-Conservative Association of Ontario, Rt.Hon.R.B.Bennett, accompanied by leaders of the party, visited the Cenotaph, where the Dominion Prime Minister laid a wreath at the base of the manorial.The picture shows the group after the ceremony.Front, left to right, Mayor William J.Stewart, Premier Bennett, R.C.Matthews, William H.Ireland and Controllers Robbins and Simpson.\t, FANTASTIC PROPOSALS SUBMITTED GREAT BRITAIN BEFORE UNITED STATES SENATORS For his distinguished service in the^ field of chemical research, Dr.Irving Langmuir, associate director of the General Electric Company\u2019s laboratories at Schenectady, N.Y., has been awarded the Nobel prize in chemistry.Dr.Langmuir was the inventor of the gas-filled Tungsten lamp, has contributed new methods of welding and won wide attention for his atomic theories.THREE KILLED IN ACCIDENTS Eleven Persons Also Injured, Several Seriously, During the Course of the Week-End.interests of the United States.\u201d Montreal, Nov.14.\u2014Three deaths and eleven injuries was the toll in the week-end accidents in Montreal.Sgt.-Major Frank Butler, 47, for three years a private of the Coldstream Guards and later with the Canadian corps in France as a member of the 17th and 13th Battalions, was instantly killed when struck by an automobile while crossing a street early yesterday.The car then crashed into a ditch, injuring two of its four occupants.Nine-year-old Giles Belanger was instantly killed when an automobile knocked him down as he dashed across the road near his home.The third victim of an automobile, Joseph H.Hawkins, 92, died in hospital.He also had been struck on a city street.Captain Terrence Finney, 31, well-known Canadian aviator and at present chief instructor at the Curtis-Reid airport here, was in the hospital suffering from a fractured skull.An automobile, the license number of which could not be obtained, swerved from a wedding procession and knocked him down.His condition is critical.Captain Finney, with a girl student, was standing at the side of the road near the airport when, according to witnesses, the car broke from its companios, hit him, and disappeared quickly.The car which struck Sgt.-Major Butler was driven by John McIntyre, 19, and belonged to his father.McIntyre was cut aboui the face and suffered a concussion when the car crashed into a ditch after hitting the ex-soldier.Ruth Shatz, an occupant of the car, was taken to a Die hospital with a broken bone in her back and other injuries.Butler, at the time of his death, was Sergeant-Major of the McGill it I Officers\u2019 Training Corps.He won tingulshed Conduct Medal and bar British Foreign Secretary and, U.S.Delegate Will Talk Things! Over Before Geneva Confer-! ence Is Inaugurated.London, Nov.14.\u2014 Realizing that the United States will revise war debts only if Europe reduces armaments, Sir John Simons, British Foreign Secretary, who is going to Geneva, will carry with him concrete proposals intended to appeal as much to American opinion as to European.The first person he will see in Geneva will be Norman H.Davis, with whom he will discuss the British proposals before submitting them to the conference.The Sunday Dispach publishes a sweeping prediction that Britam will ask, first, the abolition of long-range guns like those that shelled Paris; second, the abolition of the most powerful battleships of every navy and a reduction of the cruiser limit from 10,000 to 7,000 tons; third, the outlawing of all air bombing; fourth, the reduction of European armies, and fifth, a reduction in the size and number of submarines.There was increasing evidence that Sir John\u2019s speech in the House of Commons proposing a new antiforce pact was only a part of what he will propose at Geneva.It is assumed on all sides that Stanley Baldwin was foreshadowing tne Government's propsal when be made his remarkable speech against air armaments in the Commons on Thursday.The speech everywhere is regarded not as an eloquent outburst of one man against the dangers of air armaments, but as a plain hint of what the Government thinks on the subject.In several sources it is asserted that the British Government will appeal for full abolition of all air forces and their prohibition by international convention.According to the Sunday Observer, the Briitsh will also propose an international agreement making the use of civil aircraft impossible for war.Ag an essential preliminary to any .proposals, however, the British will demand that Germany return to the conference by some such equality formula as Sir John suggested in the Commons.Leading Opponent of St.Lawrence Seaway Claims United States Must Annex Eastern Canada Before Proceeding With Scheme\u2014Only Solution Is to Trade Area South of St.Lawrence Against Part of British War Debts.Wshington, Nov.14.\u2014The fantastic proposal that \u201cEngland\u201d should trade in part of Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward'island against part of a war debt, that the United States should \u201cpurchase\u201d by this means all the land in Canada south of the St.Lawrence river before concluding a St.Lawrence waterway treaty, was made to a Senate committee today by Peter G.Ten Eyck, president of the New York State Waterway Association.Ten Eyck\u2019s organization is opposed to the St.Lawrence seaway project.Testifying before a Senate foreign relations sub-committee, Ten Eyck said the acquisition of such lands would be necessary to insure the United States the same benefit that Canada would derive from the waterway development.\u201cThis is the sort of a treaty that should be negotiated before thç present treaty for developing the St.Lawrence canal is considered at all,\u201d Ten Eyck told the sub-committee.The international boundary follows the St.Lawrence from Lake Ontario to a point in northern New York.There the river departs from the United States border and flows more than 1,000 miles northeastward toward the Gulf of the St.Lawrence and the Atlantic.Ten Eyck urged rejection of the Waterway Treaty, asserting that the project over a fifty-year period will cost the United States and Canada $3,000,000,000, and that \u201cit is apparent that it is more logical to subsidize the farmers and producers of the west than to venture into a hazardous, untried and experimental joint waterway development of this magnitude.\u201d \u201cIn any event,\u201d Ten' Eyck said, \u201cbefore the United States should invest United States money in thp canalization of the St.Lawrence River, it should first place itself in a position to be fifty per cent, beneficiary by purchasing all land east and south of the centre line of the St.Lawrence River from the Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean by treaty.\u201cThis could readily be done without great additional cost to taxpayers by crediting England with the purchase price on her war debt.\u201d Of the various reports of the international joint commissions which investigated the waterway proposal, Ten Eyck said: \u201cIt appears they have not reported upon many important features that should be known and to which serious consideration should be given.\u201d He said there had been no mention of maintenance, cost and major repairs, on estimate of the price to be charged for electricity, and no reference \u201cto the hazards of navigating the St.Lawrence which has involved increased insurance rates.\u201d CONDEMNED BY SOVIET PAPER Camaguev, Cuba, November 14.\u2014The town of Santa Crux Del Sur became a gigantic funeral pyre today on the order of military authorities.The destruction of wind and water that also took the lives of probably two thousand five hundred Cubans last week wa* thus completed for the sake of sanitation.This action made it probable that the exact number of lives taken by the hurricane of last Wednesday will never be known.Meanwhile President Gerardo Machado was ready to leave the Capital to inspect the hurricane-torn areas, and governmental agencies sped up the task of relief and rehabilitation.Dr.Octavio Zubizarreta, Minister of the Interior, who estimated the dead at two thousand five hundred, traversed much of the hundred-mile wide path of the hurricane during the night with military authorities.His train carried 3a0 sacks of rice, 6,000 pounds of lard and 20,000 sacks of beans and other rations for temporary relief of the thousands of homeless in Camaguey province.Camaguey City, where more than one thousand injured refugees are concentrated, mostly from Santa Cruz, today effected repairs on the aqueduct, assuring water supply.The military authorities ruled the city, and vaccination to avert epidemics was compulsory.The destruction of Santa Cruz was proceeding with gasoline furnished through the Government.Soldiers and grave diggers were pressed into service to reduce the wreckage, under which many bodies still lay, to ashes.\u201d \u2019 FILM FANS IN LONDON ARE PRETTY PEEVED AT GARBO SIR AUCKLAND GEDDES ON PRIVATE BUSINESS TRIP New York, Nov.14.\u2014Sir Auckland Gcddes, former British Am bassador to the United States, arrived on the Britannic yesterday.Sir Auckland, who is chairman of the Rhokana Corporation, a British copper firm, said his business was purely private.He declined to discuss foreign del ts, politics or business, and denied tha he had come to attend a conference on copper prices.It has been reported that such a conference is to be held in New York soon.during the Battle of Cambrai when he took command of a company, all the officers of which were killed in action.Camille Jodoin was arrested and charged with driving while under the influence ot liquor and failing to have a license following an injury to Mrs.Eva Clements, 49, who was knocked down and severely hurt about the head.Arthur Saulnier, 35.lost a hand which was caught under a moving Canadian Pacific Railway train.1 He was an employee of the company.Other injuries reported were of a minor nature.SLAUGHTER OF UNFIT CATTLE IS SUGGESTED WIDE RANGE OF LEGISLATION IS BEFORE HOUSE British Peer Would Protect the Railways, Tariffs, Treaties and Breeding Industry of the Old\tWheat Prices to Be Dealt With Country by Amendment to\tby Parliament During Coming Embargo Removal Measure.Week.Claim Laid that British Intelligence Service Is Faking Evidence Against Joseph Stalin.j Moscow, Nov.14.\u2014\u2018\u201cThe bear i who walks like a man\u201d is a much-maligned animal, according to his I own story.His arch enemy, tne i British intelligence service, has ; been telling awful stories about j him.They are faking evidence to i prove that ho is responsible for fo-! menting the recent London \u201chuu-iger march\u201d and that he is organ-lizing a civil war in India.All these j Russian complaints are carried at j great length in Joseph Staiin\u2019s official organ, Izvestia.The paper said that in considering the end of the Anglo-Soviet I trade agreement, political observers should ask themselves whether this was \u201conly a factor in the ! struggle between British and Am-jerican imperialism for Canada,\u201d or if it should be regarded along broader lines.\u201d The newspaper asserted the recent breaking of the Anglo-Soviet trade agreeemnt by the British Government \u201copened all flood gates for anti-Soviet propaganda,\u201d and j that British leaders hoped to uis-I suade the United States Govern-| ment from taking action to improve ! its relations with Soviet Russia.The paper said, \u201cA fact which we shall not deny is that Stalin is not only the leader of the Soviet pro-.letariat but that scores of millions of workers, and peasants throughout tha world- see in him their leader.Can this, mean, however, that Stalin is therefore responsible for thd closing of Ford\u2019s plants and ihe bankruptcy-of Insull, or for the expulsion of the British textile industry from the Indian market by Japanese competition?\u201d A report by the London Izvestia correspondent was published staling the British intelligence service, in preparation for Parliamentary interpellation against the Soviet Government, ordered its agents in Riga, Latvia, this month \u201cto fabricate that the Comintern (the third internationale), under the personal direction of Stalin, organized the recent unemployed movement in England and an impending civil war in India.\u201d Hiding Behind a Pair of Horn-Rimmed Glasses Under Name of Greta Gustafsson, Screen Actress Saw London and No One Knew Her.J.A.McLeod, general manager of the Bank of Nova Scotia, who has been elected president of Canadian Bankers\u2019 Association.BRITISH CURRENCIES STRONG.New York, Nov.14.\u2014British currencies opened strong today on local foreign exchanges.The pound sterling continued its upward surge of last week by advancing 1% cents to $3.34 in United States funds.The Canadian dollar firmed one-sixteenth of one per cent, to 89% cents.HERBERT SNELL PASSED AWAY AT MONTREAL London, Nov.14.\u2014 Greta Garbo, the film actress, put on a pair of dark, horn-rimmed glasses, buttoned a heavy blue coat up around her ears and saw the sights of London last week without being identified, it was learned last night.She registered a few days ago ai Greta Gustafsson in a little Mayfair hotel.No one spotted her and now film fans of London are oe-evod.She could not be located last night, so it was not known whether she had gone to Paris, was on her way to Stockholm or had headed for the United States.Miss Garbo created her \u201cmystery role by concealing herself in clothes not generally worn by the women of Mayfair.In addition to the hornrimmed glasses and the heavy blue coat, she put on a pair of heavy black shoes and quite ordinary black stockings.The Sunday Dispatch sought to explain the \u201cGarbo mystery\u201d by saying that she had been banned from the United States by the immigration authorities.The dispatch said that the United States immigration law knows nothing of greatness or romance, and that Garbo to the authorities is just another Swede and must take her place in line for WONG FEE WANTED TO KNOW MORE ABOUT SANTA CLAUS Prominent Business Man and Soldier, Although Only Fifty-One Years of Age, Had Had Very Successful Career.London, Nov.14.\u2014The House of Lords resumed discussion of the Ottawa agreements bill today and had before it a suggestion by Lord Straehie, a former Liberal parliamentary secretary to the Board of Agriculture, that one clause relating to imports of Canadian cattle be amended to force slaughter of all Canadian cattle landed here unfit for breeding.Lord Strachie\u2019s proposal was made in a letter to The Times today.He said unless the amendment were made the whole purpose of safeguarding the British cattle breeding industry against introduction of poor stock would be lost.There was no early indication of the reception his proposal would receive.Meanwhile the bill, already given second reading, was in committee, from which it was expected to I emerge before nightfall.To fulfill the Government's plan that its provisions become effective at midnight, it must be given third reading by the House of Lords and obtain Royal Assent before that hour.! Ottawa, Nov.14.\u2014 Railways, - tariffs, treaties and wheat prices : comprise the parliamentary hill of ! fare for the week.Immediate interest centres on : Premier R.B.Bennett's promised j statement on the action the Govern-j ment has taken to support the wheat j market.Whether it will contain a j forecast of future action or merely !a review of action taker in the past ; since the collapse of prices in 1929 iis problematical.The trade treaty with the United Kingdom is still before the House of |Commons of the whole.After it is (approved the House will wrestle (with the tariff amendments which |give etVect to it.In the Senate railway committee jthe bill containing the recommenda-Ilions of the recent Royal Commis I sion on Transportation will undergo j further study.E.W.Beatty, K.C., president of the Canadian Pacific ! Railway Company, will appear before the committee to outline the attitude of the company towards the new scheme of co-openition between ;tbe two railway systems.IrihS I l .S.BILL 1 () I h.(, ALl/,1.when, and if, Congress shall have SALK OF BEER F\\ LED acted favorably on the question.Boston, Nov.14.State Represen-| Sawyer is a Congregational minister (alive Roland D.Sawyer, of Ware, and long an advocate of the lega n-has fyled Massachusetts\u2019 first bill to tion of the sale of beer and light legalize the sale of beer in his state wines- EVEN CROWBAR WOULD NOT BUDGE IRON DOOR OF CELL After\tFive Hours\u2019\tStrenuous Work With Crowbars and Sledgehammers Locksmith Did, the Trick With Ordinary Key.| New York, Nov.14.\u2014 George Schaffer, arrested\ton\ta narcotics | charge, feared he was in jail for life without flue process of law .When j Ills turn came for arraignment, some one told the magistrate the lock of | his coll had jammed and couldn\u2019t i be opened.So Magistrate Rudich,| court stenographers and attorneys ; grouped themselves outside his cell! ! to take his plea of not guilty | I through\tthe bars, j After\tthe judge\tleft,\tattendants j I worked on the lock five hours with i crowbars and sledgehammers with-| | out budging it.Finally they sent ! for a locksmith.He put the key in the lock and opened the door.He said there was nothing wrong with it.PARAGUAY CLAIMS TWO MAJOR VICTORIES Asuncion, Paraguay, Nov.14.\u2014 ; Two major victories were claimed by ! Paraguay today in the vicinity of I Fort Munoz.It was officially stated I that five hundred Bolivian soldiers had been killed and eighty wounded Montreal, Nov.14.\u2014 Lieut.-Col.Herbert Snell, prominent businessman and soldier, is dead here at the age of fifty-one years.Col.Snell at the time of his death was vice-president and general manager of the Robert Simpson Company, Montreal, Limited, a position he had occupied since 1924.He was a native of Stockbridge, Yorkshire, England, and came to Canada in 1891, receiving his education at Port Hope, Ont.He began business in Moose Jaw under ' his own name, and while in that city served as an alderman foi four years.He married Miss Jessie Margaret Irene MaeNeill, of Broadview, Sask., who survives, as do three sons, Herbert, Donald and David, and two daughters, Marjorie and Patricia.At the outbreak of the war he raised and trained Moose Jaw companies for overseas, and in 1915 he raised and commadnded the 46th Battalion.During his period as commander of the Ith Division reinforcement training camp in France ho had 2,400 men under his command.He was brought to the notice of the Secretary for War in 1917 and was twice mentioned in despatches.After demobilization he was connected with the Gordon Drysdaic department store in Vancouver and Victoria from 1920 to 1922, when he joined the Simpson firm.Col.Snell was a governor of McMaster University and a prominent Mason.The funeral will ht' held here tomorrow, with interment at Port Hope on Wednesday.near Fort Saavedra.It was unofficially claimed the Paraguayan regiment known as the \u201cMacheteers of Death\u201d had annihilated three hundred Bolivian troops anti captured many others near Cua-trovientos.Even With the Best of Intentions One May Get Slightly Mixed Up at Times.Port Alherni, B.C., Nov.14.\u2014 Wong Fee has become a little muddled in his religion.He needed food and clothing, and was advised that if he read his Bible the Lord would provide.Later he was told to be of good cheer as Santa Claus would bring him good things.But Wong was hungry and also needed wood, so he went into the woods near his shack and cut down an old fir tree.Besides the wood he secured a little over one hundred pounds of wild bee honey which sold for $10.Then he entered & local book store and inquired of the puzzled clerk if he had a copy of the Bible so he could rear! about Santa Claus.*¦ ¦ » THE WEATHER \u2014 * BECOMING COLDER, PROBABLY WITH SNOW FLURRIES An area of high pressure and cold weather extends from the lower Mackenzie Valley southward across the Western Provinces to the Northwest States.Pressure is also high on the Atlantic coast, while a deep low-area is centred over Hudson Straits with a shallow trough extending southwestward across the Great Lakes to the Southwest States.Light snow and rain have occurred in many sections of Ontario and Western Quebec, while in the Maritime Provinces the weather has been fair.Forecast: Fresh to strong southwest winds; cloudy, with some light rain.Tuesday : Fresh shifting winds, cloudy and becoming somewhat colder; probably snow flurries.New England: Cloudy; probably occasional rain tonight and Tuesday, changing to snow Tuesday in north portion; warmer tonight; colder in north portion Tuesday.Temperature yesterday : Maximum 35, minimum 29.511117 page ¦nro SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1932.Financial News MONTREAL OPENING AND NOON PRICES The following quotations of today\u2019s prices on the Montreal Stock Exchange are furnished by McManamy & Walsh : \tOpen\tH:Sb\tLew\tNoon Bell Tel\t\t93\t93\t93\t93 BraiiHtre .v,\ti M\t9*4\t9%\t9*4 Can.Car\t\t\t.6\t.6U\tG\t Can.Car Pfd.\t14\t15\t14\t15 Can.Ind.AJcof\t1 2 vs\t2 \u2019s\t2 \"8\t2 Vs Can Pacific \u2022.\t16\t16\t\t16 Con.Smelting .\t67\t67\t\u20ac7\t\u20ac7 Dora.Bridge .\t- 1?\t17\t17\t17 Int.Nickei .\t.9%\t9%\t9%\t9^ M c Col 1-Fro n te na c\tSVj\tSVj\t\t81 j Mont Power\t.\t34*\t\t34\t341* Shawinigan .\t12\t12\tH4»\t11% Steel of Canada\t18U\t15*4\t13\tlb LIBERALS SEEM TO BE IN A REAL FIGHTING MOOD AT WASHINGTON FLIGHT RECORD MANY MEETINGS 'HOPES TO BEAT BEING PLANNED TWENTY SUMMER BOOTLEGGERS HOMES ROBBED ARE OFFERING AT KNOWLTONS REAL BARGAINS Ontario Leaders Challenge Both Lawrence Waterway Treaty Johnson Took Off This Montreal Proprietors Arrived Federal and Provincial Governments to Call General Elections\u2014Favor Free Speech for Communists.Among Matters to Be Discussed Prior to December Session of United States Congress.Horning in Attempt to Better Mark of Four Days and Seventeen Hours Set by Husband, J.A.Molliscn.NEW YORK QUOTATIONS The following quotations of today\u2019s prices ©n the New York\tStock\tExcha\tnye a r\te Par- nished by McMan\tam y &\tWaist\ti :\t \tOpen\tHiiin\tLow\tNoob Am.Can\t\t56 Li\t57\t56\t57 Am.Smeliint; .\tITS\t17-s\t17%\t17% Am.T.&.T.\tIi!H\t112>4\t110%\t112% Atchison \t\t45\t46\t\t4S Ba\u2019ti.& Ohio .\t13\t13\t13\t13 Bctr Steel .\t15\u20194\t\t19\t19% Cari.Pacific \u2022\u2022\u2022\tHV4\t14%\t14 %\tn% Chesapeake\t\t\t\t & Ohio\t\tU'A\t24%\t21%\t24H Chrysler\t\t\t16%\tT6U\t16% General Motors .\t1514\t15%\t14H\t16 Vi Inter.Harvester\t24\t24 7 i\t23 V,\t24% Inter.T.& T.\t11%\tn%\t30%\t10% Sears.Roebuck .\t21M\t21%\t20%\t21% Stand.Oil of N.J.\t33\t33 U\t32%\t33% South.Pacific .\t21%\t21 Vs\t20%\t21 Stand.G.& E.\t18 V.\tisH\tIS\tlb Vi Texas Cult Sul.\t.24\t24l\u201d\t24\t2 4 Hi Union Pacific .\t73\t75\t73\t75 U.S.Steel \t\t»S%\t35 H\t37%\u2019\tZi W\t\t\t\t Toronto, Nov.14.\u2014 The Ontario Liberal party today had cast before the Provincial Government a challenge for a general election in which | it predicted for itself a victory \u201cas sweeping as that of the Democrats'' ; in the recent United States elections.The dare, issued by Mitchell F.low Noon Hepburn, Ontario Liberal leader at Washington, Nov.14.\u2014Capitol| Lyr.tpne.England, Nov.34.\u2014Amy Hill \u2019.vui ; uzz with committee hear-1 Johnson, Great Britain's premier Over Week-End to Discover1 Thieves Had Worked General Havoc in Cottages on Fisher's Point and Conference Heights.Knowlton.Nov.14.\u2014The story of wide-spread robberies cannot be sup-i Today in New York City One Can Get a Cheaper Drink and Replenish the Stock More Easily Than in the \u201cGood Old Days.\"; Country and Dairy Produce Piices \u201cnot far apart.\u201d Mr.Elliott maintained recent by- 1 elections showed a -wing to Liber- of the New :ngs this week m preparation.f or | woman flier and in private life Mrs.pressed for long, the December sess.on ot the Unit- j J.vA.Moliison, took off today for a When the proprietors of various ed states Congress.\t\u2019long flight to South Africa in an at-Î cottages that had been broken into programme gets under way j tempt to beat her husband\u2019s record I and robbed in this district arrived >' with the opening of hearmgs of four days, seventeen hours and over the week-end, the police au- ! thorities were forced to divulge the information that in the neighborhood of twenty summer homes had been ransacked during the course of the past few weeks.Ten or fifteen cottages on Fisher\u2019s Point, about six at Confevenec Heights and one at Bondville were found to have been entered.General disorder prevailed inside the cottages, the thieves having ransacked them and escaped, in' the majority of cases, with valuable pieces of furniture.In one cottage about half the furniture had been removed and the other half packed and prepared to be taken out.In another cottage a case of valuable silverware was forced open but, strangely, none of it was stolen.No trace, as yet, has been found of the culprits.Provincial detectives, working in the neighborhood, arc also investigating this situation.S Th toda on the St.Lawrence \u2019Waterway | nineteen minutes for the same trip Treaty between Canada and the j Mrs.Moliison was flying in her the annual meeting of the Twentieth United States before a Senate fore- new puss moth named \u201cDesert C-entury Liberal Association Satur-\u2019 relations sub-committee.^ j Cloud.\u201d The plane is silver colored day was followed quickly by a sim-j Senator William E.Borah, of and bears bright green registration ilar challenge to the Dominion Gov-! Idaho, chairman, will conduct the ! letters.ernment by Hon.John C.Elliott,\tproceedings, which committee mem-\tEquipped\twith\tspecial\tfuel\ttanks, former Minister of Public Works\tin\tbers believe have an importan: i the\tship\tis\texpected\tto\tbe\table\tto Liberal Government of Rt.Hon.bearing on whether the treaty will j have a flying range of about 2,000 Mackenzie King.\tbe ratified in view of the opposition His assault on Hydro followed a from some Democratic quarters, vaming by Premier George S.: Senators Wagner, of New York; Henry, of Ontario, less than a week! Walsh, of Montana; and Swanson, before that continued criticism\tof\tof Virginia, ail Democrats, will that public utility might result\tin\tshare in questioning witnesses in- its'\u201cpassing out of the picture.\u201d ; vited, among whom are Alfred P., this afternoon, thence was heading The Liberal leader urged a coali-\tThom, of Washinton,\treprésenta-\tfor Colomb Bechar,\tSaharan, Masis, tion of all forces opposed to Con-\ttive of the Association\tof Railway J\tRegga, Gow, Niamely, Duaia, Paola -ervatism in Ontario and said the\tExecutives; Peter C.\tTen Eyck,\tde Loanda, Walfish\tBay.The plane Liberal party extended a hand of\tpresident of the New\tYork State i\t,vlll make a 3,500\tmile desert hop fellowship to Labor and to the Pro- Waterways Association, and C.H.; during the night.Amy spent six gressive because then policies were Tregenza, representing the Great j weeks in plannin- the flight.Che Lakes Seaboard Association.\ti financed it herself, the enterprise Later, Frank P.WTalsh, chairman j costing about £2,000.at\u2014 York State Power\t- miles The aviatrix is wearing the badge of St.Cnstopher, the patron saint of travel, worn by her husband on his trans-Atlantic flight from Dublin.Mrs.Moliison hoped to reach Oran .\u2022coaSAy.v.the , ! ali=m which, in Ontario, \u2019 i credited Authority, is to be called.I to the ability of Mr.Hepburn as a In the course of the hearings, ¦ @ ; campaigner.\t; the attitude of President-elect i i n\t\u201e.»ra tho He turned to attack the Dominion Franklin Roosevelt toward the Montreal, Nu .I-».\t\u2022 , administration for its ratification treaty negotiated last summer, un- ie _ outstanding performers ^ jas; of tfl\u20ac Ottawa Conference agree- der the direction of President Her- - .\t\u201c - ,\t\u201e j ., \u2014 ol me uu,awa ^onxerence agree-\t'¦T.- xxeek, rising* sex ¦\tY\"* ments which committed the country bert Hoover, probably will be clear- on the fresh stock owing to .n- for g\tof five vears t0 \u201etar.ly defined.Mr.Roosevelt opposed very hsnt armais and Mfemg_.jff3 of ,mhcard oî beiç?1ts,\u201d and the United States Government\u2019s ac-Fresh Ontario?, which repre-cn.b,ame4 Pnme Minist\u20acr R.B, Ben- tion in negotiating the treaty with-tne bulk o.what fresh are coming, nfctt for fal]ure to flnd rem\u20acdial out first securing the approval of Tc per\u2019 doze^ \u2019for exrtas, 38c to o-,ea.=ures for the depression in this the New \\ork State Power Author- retateedf0nncha°neeS!d' during the dav the convention An investigation into the Dela-fn carlort massed a resolution favoring right of ware and Eastern Pennsylvania el-2\u201ec\t.4e fo_ extras m car lut 3.fTae 5t^ch for Communist and ot\u2019ner ections will be opened on Tuesday ces5a.before the House campaign funds committee.radical groups and urging tion of efforts to curb them by forceful means.Cartons\tLoose .\t52c\t51c 49c\t48c 4-3 c\t42c ,\t43c\t42c .\t2&c\t27c 31c\t30c 27c\t26c 23c\t22c Durham, England, Nov.14.\u2014Two ! nr-hp\u2019nlv LAUNCH, CAMPAIGN AGAINST miners were killed in an explosion 1- St___0_ at 22c to 24c for extras in carlot 20c to 22c for firsts and 16c to ITc for seconds.Prices to retailers were put up on Saturday and a_:e now at the following levels for Small lots, as quoted by jobbing houses: Special brands Fresh extras .Fresh firsts .Fresh pullets .Fresh seconds .Storage extras Storage firsts .Storage seconds The butter market declined fractionally during the week, ending Saturday mostly 20 3-4c for current receipts and 21c for finest grass No.1 butter, in carlots or l.c.l.lots The cheese market also -,\t,\t,\t_\t.fractionally, ending the week at hotted the -ovi.t masses not to 9c to 9 l-4c for Ontario current re- hide gold in your mouth, for by so | ceipts, and 8 1-2 to 8 S-4c for doing you reduce your ability to Quebec current receipts.\timport necessary machinery.\u201d The potato market advanced 10c The newspaper estimated that per bag last week, becoming 75c per : five tons are required to fill Rus-80-ib.bag for Maritime Mountains, sia\u2019s teeth, and pointed out ihit while 80-lb.bags of P.E.I.Mo in- this gold was precious metal need-tains were 85c to 90c.Local whifes ed for purchases abroad, were cleared during the week at 5Uc The paper called attention to a ANOTHER MARINE EXPLOSION.BROWN\u2019S HILL GOLD STANDARD NEEDED FOR WORLD\u2019S RECOVERY Mr.and Mrs.Huddlestrom, of Opinion Exposed by Governor.[\u201cJSY.S, or turope S Lentral banks at ^irs.Arthur Jones, of Farnham Centre, were recent guest of Mr.and D.Schoolcraft and family.Meeting Yesterday.Basel, Switzerland, Nov.14.\u2014 Governors of Europe\u2019s central banks who mot yesterday at the Bank for International Settlements _ expressed the unanimous opinion that the gold standard is the only basis upon which the world economic situation can be bettered.The bankers discussed financial problems to come up at the world economic conference which will be held next year.Mrs.L.Mr.and Mrs.E.J.Taylor recently entertained his sisters, Mrs.Mildred Varney and daughters, and Mrs.R- Sims and daughter, Margaret, of Windsor.Mr.and Mrs.Homer Keeler and little daughter, of Ayer\u2019s Cliff, were guests recently of Mr.and Mrs.L.L.Gustin.and family.Mr.and Mrs.L.M.Sharon and Miss Thelma Sharon were guests of his parents, Mr.and Mrs.K.G.Sharon and sister, Mrs.S.G.Stod- mi H FIlIlNrÇ IN TFFTH tc>day' in colliery of Pease and a small area, was the second within ; dard, and family, on Sunday, No-vjULD riLLlllVia in icnin par*ners Ushaw Moor near here, two days.Twenty-five miners were j vember 6.\u2014 \u2014\tThe explosion, which occurred deep : killed on Saturday by an explosion ; Mr.L.L.Vaughan.Mr.Fred Soviet masses Exhorted Not to inside the mine, but whose resultant1 in the Edgefield colliery, Aston-in-j Dunn and Miss Jennie Dunn were \u201cHide Gold in Your Mouth, for by So Doing You Reduce Your Ability to Import Necessary Machinery.\" New York, Nov.14.\u2014\u201cBring j back those good old days,\u201d long ! New York's favorite lament, had lost its popularity today.The metropolis considered to set! the pace for the rest of the United t States was more wide-open than it1 had ever been since one Mr.Vol-i stead brought tears to the eyes of j\tW.H.SOMERVILLE.\t1Ile Jllu=u\t- - the thirsty.\t; At a meeting of the Board of j reached at Saturday\u2019s meeting was Close in the wake of the vote : Directors of The Mutual Life Assm-.^ adoption of a ruling _ which landslide that elected Franklin ance Company of Canada, held in stateg that any team winning Waterloo.Ontario, W.H.Somerville, ovjncjaj intermediate champion-was elected a director of the com- j shall in the following season panv, to fill the vacancy created by ; b0 advanced to senior rating, or in the\u2018death of C.M.Bowman.\tlèvent of the team preferring not E.G.Long, K.C., a director of the|tl) accept senior classification, not company, was elected to the execu-1 m0re than three of its original MONTREAL MAN IS PRESIDENT OF CAGE GROUP Joe Hornstein Elected Head of Province of Quebec Amateur Basketball Association at Annual Meeting\u2014W.P.McVie Named a Vice-President.Quebec, Nov.14.\u2014Joe Hornstein, of Montreal, was elected president of the Province of Quebec Amateur Basketball Association when tha-body met in annual meeting here over the week-end.Montreal ana Quebec were represented at the meeting, Sherbrooke and La Tuque failing to send delegates.The most important decision Roosevelt president on a platform containing a liquor-law repeal plank, the traders in illicit liquor sensed an end to their lucrative business.The result was a quick cut in the prices for a synthetic product they feared would be left on their live committee of the Board, to fill j players shall be permitted to p^y hands if and when the goods they call \u201cthe real McCoy\u201d arrived on the market.Today it was cheaper and just about as easy to replenish the cellar\u2019s stock or satisfy immediate per- the vacancy created by Mr.Bow- on atly oae intermediate team.man\u2019s death.WATERVILLE Other officers elected were: Vice-president, R.C.Amaron, Quebec, |W.P.McVie, Sherbrooke, and M.M.Creighton, La Tuque; Miss R-.Ma£-\t.\t, I «hall Montreal ladies, and Miss is.The autumn thanks offering meet-:\t> -\t\u2022 Tu e iadios.Advisory firedamp was believed confined to Makerfield, near Wigan.WHEN NEW YORK WORKS LATE Moscow, Nov.14.\u2014A campaign against gold fillings in teeth was launched last night by the news- ; eased paper Evening Moscow, which ex- to 60e for 80-lb.bags.Dressed poultrv prices remained steady at the following levels: -A\u201d\t\u201cB\u201d Bofling fowl .Roasting chickens Milkfed chickens Frying chickens nonrustirg alloy filling for teeth .which Soviet scientists recently i developed.Boiling chickens .Squab broilers .Roasting turkeys Baby ducklings .Ducks.Goslings .Geese .18-22c 16-2ÜC 20-26c 18-2 4c 28-30c 26-28e 20-21c 18-19c 2 2-2 4c 2 0-22c 2V26e 23-2ie 24-25- 22-2L 29c 19e 16c 15c HUNTINGVILLE LIVE QUOTATIONS Montreal.Nov.14.\u2014Cattle receipts 998.With a much lighter offering of cattle, sellers were trying al b .for higher prices and sales were 6 slow in starting.Early sales of common quality light steers, heifers and common to medium cows to little butchers were made at around $2 to $2 25 per hundredweight and were estimated to be 25 to 50 cents higher.The butcher cattle were Ninety friends and neighbors of Mr.and Mrs.Ernest Cox assembled a-, their home on Friday evening,: October 21, to give their son, Mr.John Cox, a surprise and congratu-Isle him on his twenty-first birth-! l^c day.An enjoyable evening waU 1-c spent with cards and dancing, and refreshments were served.The cli-: max of the pleasant event was the presentation to Mr.Cox of a handsome gold wrist watch.The recip-i ient expressed his sincere thanks to; his friends for their token of es-: teem and their kindness in planning such a happy rurprise.The sale and supper under the auspices of the Willing Workers took place on Wednesday afternoon and evening and was well patronized.On the sales tables were various useful and fancy articles, as well as James and jellies and sever-f cereals and flour donated ; by Mr.Kenneth Hunting.Mesdames J.A.Cowan, Ernest Hunting and Archie Hunting capably attended to the wants of the purchasers, while in a nearby darkened comer Mrs.Townshend, in witch\u2019s guise, cleverly depicted one\u2019s past, present sm-m v\t¦ recent visitors in Sherbrooke.I Mr.and Mrs.C.Waid, of Stan-! stead, were guests of her parents, Mr.and Mrs.F.Dunn, Sr., recently.Those from out of town who attended the baked bean supper at the home of Mr.and Mrs.O.Butler on Friday evening, November 4, were Mr.and Mrs.J.G.Robinson, of North Hatley, Messrs.Clark and Brough and the Misses Evelyn Oliver, Helen Robertson and Doris Clark, of Sherbrooke.Mr.and Mrs.Homer Temple and son, Russell, of Derby, were visitors on Saturday, November 5, of his sister, Mrs.G.C.Curtis, and Mr.Curtis.Mr.and Mrs.O.M.Butler entertained on Sunday, November 6, Mr.C.A.Chapman, Mr.and Mrs.F.E.Chapman and daughter, Freda, and Mr.George Chapman, all of Frost Village.Rev.Mr.Wilson, of Sawyerville, was the speaker here on November 6 at the services in the Brick school-house.The bean supper at the home of Mr.and Mrs.O.M.Butler on November 4, was a general success and a very enjoyable evening was spent.Mr.H.G.Ayer is repairing his horse-barn.sonal needs as in those \u201cgood old ing 0f the Women\u2019s Missionary ,\tG rd Murphy, Quebec, E.days.\u201d' Fifty per cent reductions Society of the United Chprch was .Tr\u2019arb Montreal,' and W.H.were reported in the price of gin, | held àt the home of Mrs.Philip j g^ je Quebec, bringing the cost of a \u2019 product ; Colquhoun with a good attendance.N£rn^an gchiesenger, of Montsmelling suspiciously like bargain The president, Mrs.W.G.Snow, | rea] was e]ected secretary, store perfume, down to fifty cents ! presided.The meeting opened with | p\u2019resident Hornstein will repre-a quart.Bottled goods bearing the j prayer, followed by the devotional ! u , t'hc Association at the Cana-label of a Scotch that brings S4 a ; leaflet on \u201cDorcas,\u201d read by Miss | jjan Amateur Basketball Associa-quart in Canada could be procured Harriet Woodside.A short musical Gon armual meeting at Ottawa o:.the East Side, West Side, almost | programme followed.Mrs.Roy : nexb m0nth.anywhere around the town for half i Beckett delighted the audience with that amount.Beer that sold for ; a piano solo.Mrs.R.L, Gale and! ;£-\u2014-\t\u201cY twenty-five cents a small glass in ! Miss Gladys Swanson rendered j FOOTBALL NOILS i speakeasies almost as old as the ; vocal solos.Mrs.H.S.Ball took this: I ______________________________-\u2014$£ Volstead Act itself, could be had at ! opportunity to read a letter from | ^ ten and fifteen cents.\tj Rev.Ralph and Mrs.Collins, who j (Continued from page 8,) A number of New York\u2019s bootleg , are missionaries in Africa.At the gaturday to meet Westward, the barons were known to be in Nova close of a most interesting meeting,\tQ)d Boys will play their annual Scotia, seeking vessels to transport ; Mrs.Colquhoun served afternoon tea , \u201eame against the present _ pupils, assorted refreshments from St.and a social half-hour was enjoyed.; According to present indications, all Pierre and Miquelon to rum rows1, The Waterville Brotherhood held bbe .aduaje9 wbo ai.e attending Mc-along the Atlantic seaboard.They , >ts opening meeting when a bounti-1 quj and Rjgbop>s wiq ]jne up against presumably figured few juries ful supper was served a large num-i^g £_ Interscholastic title hold-would convict on liquor charges in ber members by the fo.lowing ei.g_ the face of the large vote polled for ;\tMessrs.P.A.Parsons, A.E.|\t- President-elect Roosevelt and his Wharram, J.H.\\Voodside, Arthur j McGill, a team considered at the repeal plank.\tBell and Oscar Johnstop.F0i\u2018°wing b\tthe Intercollegiate sea- - supper, a business session was pre- S(m as the strongest aggregation in RUSSIA\u2019S WH1TF fOLI AR\tn?veLky t,he,.Presl\"en^i Mr- H- the college union, ended their sched- o nniit,\tg.Ball.The election of officers re-;,.\tfoot 0f the ladder.They WORKERS HAVE NEW JOBS su Ited as follows: President, J.H.absorbedC their fourth defeat at ______ , Woodside; vice-president, R.L.Gale; Western's hands on Saturday and TFirfv Thnusanfl to Be Transfer- fecording s^re4aryû Ul L- P£Tker; lost the chance of finishing in a tie imrty inousana 10 DC iransier treasurer, F.E.Holtham; chair-,for sceorld :acc.Varsity, the new red from Office Work to Jobs man of programme committee, Mr.champion?, concluded their schedule H.S.Ball; chairman of entertain- , crut;hing Queen\u2019s ment committee, Mr.S.Pocock.A sing-song and games were then enjoyed by those present.Mr.and Mrs.N.E.Solomon were 0M Boys on the field several times, in Sherbrooke to visit Mr.Taber, of.This stratPgV worked until some transferred from office work to Melbourne Ridge, who is a patient meddlesome spectator discovered the at the Sherbrooke Hospital.\tJ infringement.Mr.and Mrs.Eric Swanson and;\t________________ little daughters, Mary, Esther and Doris, were in St.Johnsbury, Vt., recently, guests at the home of Mr.and Mrs.John Swanson.The many friends of Mr.John in Fields and Factories.Moscow, Nov.14.\u2014Russia\u2019s white collar workers to the number of between 25,000 and 30,000 aire to be jobs in the fields and factories.The change is to be made, it was explained, or.the theory that inefficiency has grown with bureaucracy in the government and economic organizations.The \u201cgreat clutter of minor employees in vir- Austin Workman showed brilliant master-minding by sending thirteen DIXV1LLE Mr.and Mrs.Gordon Bellows and tually every government bureau\u201d I MacNaughton will be sorry to learn sonf\u2019 Harold and Jimmie, veier -is held chiefly responsible.\tthat he is a patient in the Sherbrooke emit guests of Mr.and Mis.I The white collar men who are Hospital.\tAllen, Coaticook.to be discharged will receive twelve days\u2019 notice and then their names will go on the labor bureau register for new work in other fields.Five thousand bookkeepers and clerks will go to work on tne farms.Many others will be sent into the factories.Every state organization in Moscow has been ordered to reduce its staff by December 15 to comply with the new regulations.LARGE CROWD THRILLED AS Miss Frances England spent a rc-1 Messrs, f.J.Grady, N.Beaton, cent week-end in Sherbrooke, guest Ivor VYhitenouse and H.A.Norris of Mr.and Mrs.H.,W.Palmer and motored to Sherbrooke recently to Mr.and Mrs.R.L.Edgecombe.attend a meeting of the Men\u2019s Club Rev.C.P.England has returned which was held in St.Peter\u2019s Church, home, after spending a few days in Miss Anna Favreau spent a re-Cowansville.\tcent week-end at her home in Barn- Among those who were in Sher- ston.brooke to attend the Winter Fair | Rev.J.C.Tannar and Mrs.Tannar last week were Mr.and Mrs.H.W.and Mrs.Cobb attended the funeral Burton, Miss Pearl Burton, Mr.and of Mr.Robert Marsh, at Canaan, Mrs.F.A.Burton, Mr.Clifford \\\u2019t., last week.Mrs.Marsh was Burton, Mr.and Mrs.H.W.Loomis, formerly Miss Amy Bryan, daughter Mrs.E.Deacon, Mr.Arkley Deacon, of the late William Bryan, of this ASBESTOS The Christmas Bridge Club was entertained at the home of Mrs.W.N.Rook on Tuesday, November 8.Bridge was enjoyed at three tables during the afternoon, the prize winners being Mrs.L.H.Gale, Mrs.E.J.Morrison and Mrs.Vivian.At the conclusion of the bridge game, refreshments were served by the hostess, Mrs.Morrison assisting.Mrs.Morrison was a guest of the club for the afternoon.Mr.and Mrs.L.H.Gaie motored to Sherbrooke recently and were guests at the home of Mrs.Gale's sister, Mrs.W.J.Dean, and Mr.Dean.Mrs.MacCarthey, of Montreal, spent a recent week-end with her 'daughter, Mrs.John D.Wilson, and Mr.Wilson.I Miss Alice Woods, Miss Brown and Mr.Luce, of Compton, spent a \u201cPOWDER ROCKET\" CRASHED i j^Æsï s'hF Hor^fafand Sm placc- practically all common to just me dium quality and prices on the few lots of this kind that were sold were estimated to be around 25 cents higher.One load of medium good heavy steers sold.Jor $3.85 and two part loads of heavy, rough steers Ir.good flesh brought J3.35.There were only a couple of loads of good cattle on sale and these were not iT:'\u2018 \u2019'-V-ure from the cards, a task at\tNew Yorkers are\tkeeping late hours\u2014in their\toffices\u2014these\tfays, this\trecent week-end at\tthe\thome of the which she *was fully occupied\tremarkable night\tpicture of Manhattan disclose:-'.Taken from\tthe lofty\tformer\u2019s parents,\tMr\tand Mrs.throughout the entire evening, A\ttop of the central\tbuilding in Rockefeller Con.': ',\tlooking south\tfrom 50th\tHarry Woods.Mr.\tM.\tAndrews, of cawduzt pie from which mysterious\tstreet, the photo\tshows that not ail the bright\tlights are on\tBroadway.\tEastman, also spent a\trecent week- parc-e.: were drawn proved equally The Empire State building, surmounted by its brilliantly lighted tower, end at the same home.I» seen in the center of the picture.\tThe Ladies' Auxiliary of St.An- vn pr popular with the children.A bountiful supper was served, consisting of various hot baked dishes, salads, roiir, ca,:e« and pies, during which victro\u2019a and p.ano selections were! CHANGING THE GUARD old at time of writing A few fed 2r,\u2019-r- A beautiful basket quilt, recalves sold from ?5 to $6.25.Milch Presenting many hours of fine han-cows were nominally quoted a\u2019 $35 £w°rk, had been previously sold.; to $50.\t\u2018Ucky number drawn was held' Quotations: Ewes, $3.25 to ^ Mr-,Emery Lord> fjf Hatley- The $2.50, lambs, good, $4.50 to $4.00, p5oce.c'?,s of the ev?nin8 added sub-, , , \u2014 , _ me, .c i\tjttâriYa.V to thr»\ttV»a e common, $.3 to $4 Hog receipts 4,319.Hogs were slow.There -were only four cars of northwest hogs.The balance were from Ontario and Quebec\u2014the bulk from Ontario.Between 1,2 and 1,500 hogs were sold at $4, fed and watered for good quality hogs.\u201e\t»\t.\t,,\t- - Sows were about steady at $2.50\tan enjoyable evening at which to $3.25.\t|Halloween games and decorations Calf receipts tantiaiiy to the funds of the eo-| ciety.Miss Sarah McKeage, R.N., of Quebec, is spending a short holiday at her home here.Misses Thelma and Jean Hyatt gave a party on the evening of Hallowe\u2019en.About twenty friends 1 predominated.332).Veal calve and fair to good drinkers were -~\u2014 weighed early at about steady $6.50; common prices.Common grasters were slow at just steady prices with th'»» of better quality steady to 25 ceffis higher.Fair to good calves in mixed lots brought around $16 good kinds at $6.50.Common light! of $4.00.He veals brought $5.25 to $5.50.Drink-j olfe' ojr.b-d era ranged from $3 up.according weight, Cul! to quality.Grousers ranged f and medium, $3 to | $6 23; gma sers, $1.75 to $2.50.hb'*P rec' pt* 1,783.Lamb sale», were fairly active at 25 cents or i more higher.Good ewes and weth-| with < r:- W'-\u2019e told for $4.50 with a topi \u2022y .\u2019srr.bj were mostly j it $1 per hundred-, and bucks were un-1 Small sales in mix-._ from\u2019changed at $U ______________ ______- $1.75 to 82.40, with the bulk of v < >-d lots ver» .rede around $1.Sheep; From their grim march and serious mien you\u2019d think there boys were off to war or a riot or something, rales around $2.\t\u2022¦\u2019\u2022ere a \u2022\u2022',;./> stronger, telling from You\u2019re wrong if you do.They're merely changing the guard at Buckingham Palace, London, an old English Quotations: Good and choice veil,'$1.25 to $2.50.\tj\tcustom of the British Capital.Berlin Aviation Enthusiasts Wit- and Margueute MacNaughton., ,T .r, .\tMrs.Ernest Cox and Mr.John nessed unique Demonstration.~ , .,\t-,\t- , Much sympathy is expressed for n al^ the Misses Blanche Mr.and Mrs.Charles Vaillancourt in the death of their little child from \u201en! Orflw! OM nirkn' lluiktlng, Motm-cul.I SHERBROOK^ DAILY RECORD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER PAGE FIVE BROMPTON PULP SHAREHOLDERS TO ORGANIZE CITY BRIEFLETS Sale of fancy and useful articles, Wed., Thurs., 16th, 17th p.m.and eve.M.Hall and Mrs.Bailey, 19 Carmen St., above Federal St.A portrait for Christmas would be appreciated by those who cannot be I I ir U !- I with you.15% discount on all our Local Holders in Paper Concern p\u2018ctures until November 15.Phone Take Action to Protect Inter- '167\u2019 Naka5h studio- ests During Crisis in Industry.COLLISION ON WELLINGTON -\tSTREET Rosy pictures of increased indus- Two cars were badly damaged trial activity in two towns of the ! on Saturday afternoon in a collis-Eastern Townships and more work:1011 on Wellington street when an in the woods throughout the coun- i automobile driven by Miss Alice tryside should the move to segre- ; Criggs, Walton Avenue, struck the gate the Brompton Pulp and Paper ii96-W FVrrna ym f t wavirie.Woodwork MARSHALL PAULETTE, BARNSTON Barnston, Nov.14.\u2014The death occurred here on Tuesday, November 8, of Mr.Marshall Paulette, who has been a resident of this place for a number of years.Mr.Paulette, who was seventy years of age, had j been in poor health for the past few I weeks, but for the last few days was | greatly improved and was up and about bis room on the morning of his.I death.He leaves one s.is\u2019.er, Mrs.I Kimha\u2019l, of Sherbrooke, and two brothers, who reside in the United States.The funeral was held from his home on Wednesday afternoon, November 9.P.ev.W.H.Wallace, pa tor of the Baptist Church, officiated, and the bearer were Messrs.W.If.Auckland, Fred Gilbert, David Smith and Alex.Corneau.The interment took place in the Barnston cemetery.the manager.\tDizier, Massawippi; recording secre- \u201cThat\u2019s Mr.Jones talking to tary, Mrs.F.O.Webster, Hatley; Philadelphia,\u201d replied the secretary, treasurer, Miss M.Paul, Ayer\u2019s Cliff.\u201cThen, tell him to use the tele- The four local presidents of the town phone.\u201d\twere named as vice-presidents, as Mrs.S.Hopper,;, Mr.John Veimeeren, presided ami ented Mr.Fraser with a beautiful ^\t\u2018\tsilk scarf.Refreshments were served.On Tuesday evening, November 8th, the Girl Guides held their regular meeting in the parish room intendent, asked permission to send j pleasant of a Miss Lovering\u2019s report to the local: dancing.\t., Mrs.Raymond, Miss Gwen George, ; opened the meeting with a few re-Mr.E.Sarrasin and Mr.O.Boyce j marks in French and English.After furnished the music for dancing.At.it.fie reading of the minutes, Mr.midnight refreshments were served ; \\\u2019jcholls, the organizer, also address-by the members of the union.The cd the gathering.Among the items proceeds were very satisfactory.j 0f business before the meeting were The Milby Centre Union was en-1 several offers from the local and out tertained at the home of Mrs.[of town dealers in hardware, farm Richard Smith.Owing to the bad implements and mill-feed, etc.These weather the attendance was not as offers give a preference to members large as usual.The meeting was ranging, in the case of feed, up to opened with the usual devotional1 five dollars per ton.I each month.j During the afternoon ! Sunday, November 6, the children of j p,\t.[Mr.and Mrs.McPherson were bap-1 It was moved and seconded that tized and received the names Edward i the amount of $16.96 be paid to | John Ray, William Alfred and Annie; Canadian Line Materials Co., for a [Victoria.Mr.and Mrs.Thos.Harri-1 lighting unit and that the South-; son\tacted\tas\tsponsors for these;\tern Canada Power Company be ' children.\ti\tnotified not to\tput up any more _________________________\tj\tbanners at the\tCorner of Main and DANVILLE\tI\triraig streets,\twithout consent of ! the Council.,\t7,,\t.-I Several accounts were ordered The regular monthly meeting of | id and the meeti\u201eg was adjourn-the Danville branch of the United 'i(j Farmers of Canada, Quebec section, i \u2019\t______ was held in the Town Hall, Danville,!\troncml ; on Saturday, November 5.A large;\t\u2019\t.\t' '\t, : turn-out of members, unbounded1\tMonday evening, November | enthusiasm and splendid results [ ¦\u2018h> a surprise party was given to from the organization \\Vhich is less Mr.Watson r raser by his friends than two months old, combined to ! h\u2019Sj residence in honor of nis make a most successful meeting, i birthday.The Rover Scouts of which The present membership of the local ! ho is a member, attended.Cards, branch was pre \u2014 Added Attraction \u2014< Seamark\u2019s Famous Story, and Unusual Romance.\u201cThe Man They Could Not Arrest\u201d It\u2019s Thrilling! It\u2019s Different! \u201cFAIR PLAY\u201d Comedy, and others.announced as one hun-j muric and games were enjoyed by at cards ami dred and thirty.The vice-president, present.The Rover Scouts pres- 'imii«iiiiiiwiiii'iiiiiiri!i;iii 111 iiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii|iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!il or Mad a Today And Tuesday.\u201cNO GREATER LOVE\u201d with DICKIE MOORE.\u2014 Also \u2014 \u201cHAT CHECK GIRL\u201d with Sally Filers and Hen Lyon.of St.Anne\u2019s Church, under the\t leadership of Miss Alice Dresser.\t after the meeting the Guides held\t a bean supper in honor of Missr\tdiïllm» ayrOUHll Dresser, it being the anniversary\tKJ of her birthday.The girls present-]\t\t\t\t- - \t very nice li|)|i|f|:i!i:i;i!i!i'|[ii:ii|||iii|i|iii|||i|!iiiiii||i!|!i;iiiiiiiiitiiii|i|;|||i|||l|||,||l|ll| BRINGING UP FATHER by G eor^e Mu Mu iinu» r- VgHEHBROOKE PATTERN AND WOOD-working Company, 93 KronVaniu: Jstrwt Ckarlrs & Hatch ami Ralph J.Cutta, wood palVcrna and wood work, /'boot 93, The great new telescope will ! magnify a million timer,, which will jactonirh everybody except the writer of re on literature.TMi PAGE EIGHT ! SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1932.SHERBROOKE EARNED THE RIGHT TO TORONTO LEAFS ENTER PROVINCIAL EMINATIONS TAK_E_VERDICT Athletics Displayed Their Best Form of Season to Trounce OVER RANGERS Quebec Swimmers Here Saturday Afternoon by Twen- OLD BOVS LOST CLOSE FIXTURE TO VOUNGSTERS WEEK-END RUGBY RESULTS ty-Seven to Nothing Score\u2014Convincing Victory Gave Stanley Cup Holders Turned Back Last-Quarter Rally Gave St.Pats T I\tT*\tC\t1 ______1C____1C C1 ^ > J A - .n - l r»\ti\t- ^ ^\t* Home Team Series by Round Score of 28 to 16\u2014Slated to Meet Westward, Winners of Western Section.Ancient Rivals, Boston Blanked Canadiens and Ottawa Dropped Initial Game to Maroons.1932 Team a Thirteen to Ten Victory After Alumni Had Led Greater Part of Game\u2014Supper Will Be Tendered Winners.Everything cotnei to they who t yards but twice.Penalties for off-wait.\t1 sides, interference and not suffic-1 A month ago, a stout-hearted ag- ien: yardage on kicks took a heav- .\t.,\t.\t,.\t.\t\u201e - -\t.play : esis, the Toronto Maple Leafs, and i exhibition on the * VaratiL\u201cïirnnnÂ* thought plays did not click, and, c.l j 0f the firs: quarter.Harper elect- \u2022 today are leading the American i Âge ceded to youth but not untr m all, it looked like a (L^astrous.to attempt an onsice kick alter section of the National Hockey '\t* season.One factor, however, did :\tlong forward pass to Jimmy | League.Ottawa Senators lost their Gilby had placed the pigskin twen-! opening game of the season by two ty-five yards from the Quebec line.! to one to Montreal Maroons and Pniilips, however, caught the spir-:Xew York Americans tied the Blaik al and found his opponents playing: Hawks at Chicago, one-all.All ex- not find its way into the limbo of lost games.It was team spirit which failed to be broken by the heavy reverses andr according to all natural laws, this perseverance in the face of heavy odds had to be rewarded.The team awaited the moment when it would reveal to its loyal supporters the dormant too close.With a clear field ahead cept the Chicago game were plav- of him.the visiting quarter started ed Saturday night, the Hawks to gallop down the gridiron with'opening their home season on Sun-Dunsmore in the van.Five white j day.strips went under his flying feet.Billy Burch started the Bruins ability which lay beneath its black before Dunsmore\u2019s flying tackle) off right with a first-period goal and red uniforms but had never brought him to earth at midfield, at Montreal on Art Chapman's been afforded sufficient opportun- jwo intercepted forward passes re- pa-cs- The dashing Canadiens found ity to assert itself.\tcarded Sherbrooke\u2019s progress andÂje he ivy-hitting defensive play tf A week ago a spark had beer, the second quarfër began without a \" applied to the smouldering hopes\u2018score.Three plays were all that was ; necessary before the Athletics went out in front as the second period got under way- McW.liants took Phillips\u2019 short kick, but Johnny Gilby slipped as he tried an end the Bruins from then on an ins liable puzzle.As Canadiens spent themselves in massed attacks* in the third period, Marty Barry, \"Red\u201d Beattie and young Obs Hex-imer added three quick goals to when the Sherbrooke Athletics\u2019 ancient rivals had their hands full to keep Eddie Wolfe\u2019s aggregation out of the victory column.The psychological moment presented itself on Saturday at'the Parade Grounds, and the heights to which rur~''jjg Sherbrooke\u2019s Q.R.F.U.représenta- accidenté uu^jP\tx.e ^ action lead, one point ores couid a.tam uas indicated -n Harper's SO-yard forward to screak Montreal Maroons, and the unmerciful drubbing whmh the acr0S3 the un\u20ac for five p_0ints_.Har- their total of successive give \u201cTiny\u201d Thompson the first shutout of the X.H.L.season.The Stanley Cup holders' win \u201ever run.He, however, mace up .or hes Rangers put them in the Canadian aecidenta: misplay when he took section lead, me point ahead of home team plastered on the Quebec Swimmers\u2019.By mutual consent, the round score of the annual home-and-home series was taker, to decide who would substitute for Bishop\u2019s in the provincial play downs.The Ancient Capital squad entered the game strong favorites with nearly all the spectators, but Sherbrooke had remained the weak sister long enough.So overconfident were the visitors that Jack Muir, Bert Amy, C-iily Price, \"Moose\u201d Nadeau, Hahy Evan, and other regulars were left behind to spread the news of another victory.However, when the huge autobus which transported the outfit to the Eastern Townships started on its homeward journey it contained a dejected hand, smarting from the twenty-seven to nets boosted victo-ies per completed a forward from over Lester Patrick\u2019s blueshirts to Dunsmcre for the convert.The seven.The first meeting of the Athletics we:,-away and the Swim- Stanley Cup finalists tf last sça-mers crumbled before their un- -:n was as fast and wide open as slaught.Harper-continued his aer- any of their former clashes, ial attack with consistency, while Started by Ken r>oraty's first Buster Tomlinson, Syd Echenberg oeriod goal.Leafs led by four goals and Doug.Hadiock tore through midway through the game.Smooth ' the line for long gains.Uncertain, Joe Ptimeau got \u201dhe second goal! and then gavel the line for long gains.Uncertain, Joe Piimesu got \u2022 the visitors resorted to booting, but of the first period the majority of their punts went into touch.On one of these occasions Tomlinson and Harper paved the way for Syd Echenberg to crash through for the second major tally.Dunsmcre converted from place- for theJ the veterans had thrown a scare into the camp of the youngsters and pr ied to them that the old guard is easier to beat on paper than on the gridiron.Youth, stamina and better conditioning came to the fore in the latter stages of the game after experience had enjoyed its innings.A touchdown in the final minutes of play wiptd out the Old Boys\u2019 margin and gave the school a thirteen to ten victory.What the Old Boys lacked in finesse they made up for in numbers.No less than twenty-one \u201chas-beens\u201d and \u201cnear-greats\u201d dressed ;n a variety of colors, and the exhibition they gave received the wholehearted support of the six hundred spectators .hat witnessed the encounter.Everything went well in ' the elder ranks during the ini 'ial frame.However, when the teams] changed ends, unused muscles be-1 gan to groan and weary legs re- ] fused to keep in tune with willing | minds.All in all, however, everyone enjoyed the sport and the hard-earned victory was not begrudged the younger lads.The Old Boys presented a ixl-orful panorama to inaugurate- Uie proceedings after the two teams] had had their plctu.e taken by vnj Old Boy, Earle Hebert.Sweaters! of every description and color were dug out of attics for the o.casrm E.T.INTERSCHOLASTIC Sherbrooke High 24, B.C.School 2, INTERMEDIATE Q.R.F.U.Eastern Section Sherbrooke 27, Quebec 0.Western Section Westward 21, McGill 3.COLLEGE INTERMEDIATE Loyola 3, Bishop\u2019s 1.INTERPROVINCIAL UNION Montreal SO, Ottawa 1.Hamilton 19, Toronto 1.INTERCOLLEGIATE Varsity 21, Queen's 2.Western 13, McGill S.SENIOR O.R.F.U.Balmy Beach 7, Sarnia 3.JUNIOR O.R.F.U.St.Thomas 13, Kitchener 1.INTERMEDIATE O.R.F.U.Sarnia 35, CamR Borden 0.EXHIBITION St.Pat\u2019s 13, Old Boys 10.LEAGUE STANDINGS The league standings to date are as follows: E.T.INTER SCHOLASTIC Sherbrooke Stanstead Bishop\u2019s .Lennoxville INTERMEDIATE Q.R.F.U.Eastern Section (Final) P.W.L.F.A.P.Bishop\u2019s .4 4 0 86 14 8 Sherbrooke .\t1 3 37 66 2 Quebec.4 1 3 21 64 2 Western Section (Final) P W.L.D.F.A.P.Westward\t.\t6\t4\t1\t1\t45\t31\t9 Ottawa\t.6\t4\t2\t0\t66\t16\t8 C.N.R.6\t2\t3\t1\t21\t28\t5 McGill .6 1 5 0 23 85 2 COLLEGE INTERMEDIATE Eastern Section (Final) Loyola.4\t2\t1\t1\t16\t19\t5 Bishop\u2019s\t.\t4\t2\t2\t9\t17\t20 McGill.4\t1 INTER! LOVINC1AL (F:n~H BISHOP\u2019S LOST HARD GAMETO Lennoxville Boys Held One-Point Lead Until Three Minutes Before Time, When a Perfect Placement Kick Shattered the Local Team\u2019s Hopes of Capturing College Championship.Montreal, Nov.14.\u2014After stalling the season auspiciously with four straight victories before ihey were stopped by McGill\u2019s freshmen, Bishop\u2019s Lniversity returned to Montreal on Saturday to renew their ancient feud of many years' standing with Loyola College -nd lost a heart-breaking decision Dy a three to one count.A perfect placement kick from thirty-five yarns out was the deciding factor three minutes before the end of ne .hard-fought struggle for supremacy land the right to meet Varsity sec-!.D, F.A.P.hinds in the playdowns next week.0 1 124 27 9 i The \u201cFighting Irish\u201d came ba'-k LOCAL SCHOOL TAKES SECOND CHAMPIONSHIP r nd reminded many of the specta- ' vj1 tors of the years when the wearers the1\t- ment and Sherbrooke was leading by twelve points, still three from Harvey Jackson the- : \u2022bird in the midd!3 >er HaroM Darragh backhand ml -\u2018'yj were important cogs in former local Leafs fmal goaL-\t! megat.ons.Flanking Ashley Hib- Bahe betbert, former Maroon .c\td were do ^ a/d t ,n winger, scored Rangers first | Desau:els as i^ides; Le\u201e O\u2019Donmil -nd Hughie CrochetjUre as middles and Don McMahon and Don John Hamilton Montreal Tortnto .Ottawa .P.W.L.D, 5 4\t_\t_ 3\t1\t2\t0\t33\t41\t2]\tstrong in the memorable finel 2\t0\t1\t1\t18\t40\t1\t!\tluarter and climaxed a b-illianr 2\t0\t2\t0\t0\t67\t0\tiphill battle y.-ith John Mcllhona s long kick which passed through the uprights.With the soaring pigskin flew Bishop\u2019s last opportunity of bringing back the Inte'-mediMe Intercollegiate title which last graced the Lennoxville\tmantle m 1230.Outweighed all along the line by their visitors,, it looked like a matter of time before the home team would crumble.The thi'-d quarter presented the best break of the tense encounter when the Eastern Townships squad marched the length of the field to the Loyola five-yard marker.They\thad to !,e content, however, with\ta single 2\t1\t27\t21\t3\t!\tpo:nt.One of the featureo of the tense struggle was the clean play.N it a p\tw\tr\tf\ta\tp i\tsingle-incident of poor,\tsnortsman- r.\tw.\tL.\tr.\tA.\tP.\t.jjjp cropped un to n ar\tthe strug- lé.Ray Sh?ughnes-y and his bro 1\t26 15 2\t63 32 j her Lcurie.sons of the fam >ns » ?£ i*kL McGill coach, \u2019.:re the h-roes 6 24139.Oi on a nass from Drug Brennsn in the robustly played second period | the round \u2019score.Before the Twetve penalties were, inflicted terva.arrived, Hs- arner recovered ms own /Va iouchdown, S.Ech-con-ert, Dunsmore' PE.P-0-MIKT WINT-OdiREEH CUO-VE LIC-O-RICE CINU-O-WON VIU0.I ET rouge.2\u2014Athletics : I to Harper (1).I 3\u2014Athletics: jenberg (5).4\u2014\tAthletics : Id).5\u2014\tAthletics : ! (1).Third Quarter 6\u2014\tAthletics : rouge, Dunsmore ; (1).7\u2014\tAthleths: rouge, Harper (1).8\u2014\tAthletics: rouge, (1).9\u2014\tAthletics: touchdown.Cook | (5).Fourth Quarter 10\u2014\tAthletics: deadline, Duns-4 mere (1).11\u2014\tAthletics: touchdown, Amu-tave (5,1.Final score: Sherbrooke Athletic^ 27, Que be'- Swimmers 0.Dunsmore Windsor Syracuse I Providence\t1 If you\tcuss\tthe\tpower\ttrust,\tSpringfield\t2 you\u2019re a\tBolshevik;\tif you\tdon t,\tPhiladelphia\t1 people fhink you\thave\tfound a way\tQuebec .\t1 no fix -he\tmeter.\tNew Haven\t1 shoes to call the signals, and one c-f his backfield reversed lateral plays proved one of the outstanding con-tnhufiofts of this fert\u2019.le-rninded quarter.Rather than plunge through the j line where their, weight would have] j caused their opponents permanent j injury, the Old Boys adopted end runs and the aerial attack as their I principal offensive weapons.St.Pat\u2019s kicked on first downs in the opening quarter in the hope that a fumble would give them a break, but the Old Boys\u2019 backfield received faultlessly.Two long forwa rd passes placed the pigskin deep in I the School\u2019s territory, and Eddie i Wolfe went over for an unconvert-jed touchdown as the quarter ended.There was no scoring in the second quarter.Mistakes at critical moments impeded the onward rush of the Old Boys, while penalties for minor infractions nullified their hard-won gains several times.As the rest interval arrived, Ashley Hibbard attempted a drop Kick which went aftray and the ball was run back to St.Pat's twenty-yard line, where it reposed when the whistle called time.In the dressing room between halves, several potential plays were mapped out by the Old Boys, but on the field they went astray as a young opponent butted in to upset the apple cart.The Old Boys had been penalized for interference , near their own line when Emmett i McWilliams, tossed a forward pass ! which was intercepted by Paul Mc-; Mahon.McMahon let no grass growl I under his feat as he raced across ! .\t.\t1 with the five points which deadlock ! eague s .arwvngs .o da.e are ecj tj5e coun!;< Shortly after this] | play, the school assumed the lead ] \u2019 as Gardiner kicked neatly through \u2018 I the bars from placement.; The count stood eight to five: i against the Old Boys as the final \u2019 fifteen minutes were started.The ] ] substitute resources were almost ' depleted, and smeLing salts and | other rei'ef remedies were used to j help the veterans get their scond 1 wind for the final charge.It came (before many minutes had elapsed when Edd.e Wo.fe corkscrewed nisi \u2022vay through a broken field after ! Jack Kei.y hed recovered a St.j : Pat\u2019s fumble.Tne convert' was not j (realized.With their backs aga.nst! ! the wall, the School tossed pre-! caution to the w.nds and staged a \u2022 ! last desperate rally which turned j J the tide of victory in their favor i j It al.started when Ray Brooks ,n ! : tercepted a long forward pass in- ^ tended for his brother.Two end! runs were too hard for the Old ! Boys to keep track of, and Pauli McMahon again crossed the line as * \u201cGoosie\u201d Parker clipped the wrong! man.The major tally was not con 1 verted and the final whistle showed I the score: St.Pat\u2019s 13, Old Boys 10.' The exhibition was a huge family affair.There were no less than ] three McMahons on the field, Paul] and Maurice being out to get their \u201cbig?\u2019 brother.Ray Brooks opposed his older brother, who made the team this year at Bishop\u2019s while John and Ashley Hibbard found themselves on opposite sides of the fence and Billie and Charlie Gordon glared at one another across the INTERCOLLEGIATE (Final) P\tW.L.\tD.F.A.\tP.Torerto .6\t5\t1\t0 83\t48\t10 Western .6\t3\t2\t1 59\t39\t7 Queen\u2019s .' 6 1\t3 2 43-70 4 McGill.6\t1\t4\t1 38\t66\t3 SENIOR O.R.F.U.P.W.L.D.F.A.P.Sarnia .6\t5\t1\t0 125\t37\t10 Balmy Beach 6\t4\t1\t1 59\t40\t9 Hamilton .6\t2\t3\t1 66\t64\t5 St.Michael\u2019s .5\t0\t6\t0 25 135\t0 AMERIC .N RESULTS Notre Dame 21, Northwestern 0.Pittsburgh 0, Nebraska 0.Ohio State .19.Pennsylvania 9.Detroit 28.Villanota 12.Navy 27, Maryland 8.Army 52, North Dakota State 0.West Virginia 13.Washington and Lee 0.Carnegie Tech 15, Xavier 0.Colgate 16, Syracuse 0.Brown 7.Columbia 6.Yale 7, Princeton 7.Harvard 7, Holy Cross 0.Michigan '\u20222, Chicago 0.Purdue 13, Iowa 0.Wisconsin 20, Minnesota 13.Illinois 18, Indiana 6.Oklahoma 19.Iowa State 12.Kansas 7, Missouri 0.Maroons .2\t1\t1\t0\t4\t5\t2 Americans .1001111 : Ottawa .1\t0\t10 12 0 j Canadiens .1\t0\t1\t0\t0\t4\t0 Arner \"an Section P.W.L.D.F.A.P.Boston.2\t1\t0\t1\t5\t1\t3 GiB>y Detroit.1\t1\t0\t0\t3\t1\t2 Rangers .\t2\t1\t1\t0\t6\t6\t2 convert, Dunsmore Chicago.2\t0\t1\t1\t2\t4\t1 MOUNT ROYAL LEAGUE P.W.L.F.A.P.Champêtre\t.\t2\t2\t0\t4\t0\t4 Lafontaine\t.\t2\t2\t0\t3\t2\t4 r\t'St.Francois .\t10 12 2\t0 Dunsmo/H of Montreal .110 10 2 0 i Verdun .2\t0\t2\t0\t3\t0 IN TE K N A TIO N A L LEAGUE p.W.L.D.F London .21016 P.Cleveland\t.2\t0\t0\t2 7\t7 Detroit.2\t0\t2\t0 2\t6 Buffalo .101001 Sunday Game.Springfield 4, New Haven 3.STANDING Car.adian-Arnerican League.P.W.!.D.Boston .2 1 6 \u2022i hs win.Ray played a brilliant game ail day, outkicking the beH \"fforts of the Bishop\u2019s boo'eiv \"lass, running back kicks, hitt'ng he line, skirting the ends to counteract the thrusfs of the Eastern Townships team.Laurie, although.not getting the same opportunity to shine, was in on fe rery play, and tackled strenuously and urely to tie un the best efforts of the opposing backfield.Estrada carried the bulk of the line duties and McTeague hanled his team in a smart manner at quarter.Titcomb and Ross were outstanding for the losers, the former cutting up an especially game exhibition.Playing under the handicap of a broken nose, ho hit the line for long gains and was a stonewall on the defence.Ross made several long gains early in the game until the Loyola tacklers learned his methods and stopped him in his traet s as the game wore on.Wisenthai\u2019s plunging was also effective.The first half, although bitterly fought, brought no score.As the second half opened, Loyola staged a bitter attack that ended on Bisn-op's five-yard line.Titcomb ma ie 59 yards in two plunges and the march continued to the ten-yard line.From this int an onside Kick was tried which Shaughnessy grabbed.He fumbled the ball, but McTeague was the hero of the minute when he fell on it, and Bishop s scoring the opening point.Loyola came right back, however, and as the quarter ended the ball vras again on Bishop\u2019s five-yard line.Loyola got a break in the last quarter when the line held_ when the Bishop\u2019s quarter tried to wiggle through on last down for yards.After Shaughnessy kicked over the line and Ross ran it out seven yards, Shaughnessy and Mc-llhone combined to net 20 yards on an end run.A Bishop\u2019s offside on the last down gave Loyola another ten yar-\u2019s to put the ball (n the 25-yard marker.The ball was snapped out to McTeague, who held it while Mcllhone calmly booted ed it over the bar.Bishop\u2019s tried a series of forwards, but only one was successful, and as a dying gesture Munro ran 40 yards on a fa.ee kick on the last down.Loyola\tBishops McDonnell\tfly.wing\tGlass Buckley\thalf\tMasson R.Shaughnessy half\tMunro Mcllhone\thalf\tRoss McTeague\tquarter\tBradley L.Shaughnessy snan\tCurcy Fleury\t, inside Wisenthal Bucher\tin*ide\tPorteous Estrada\tmiddle\tMcCu'loug'n Pvan\tmiddle\tTitcomb Kane\toutside\tBroa'hunA Kierans\toutside\tPibus Loyola subs: St.Cyr,\tBeauvais, Eeely, Haynes, Parker,\tWaite\u2019S, o-vor, Hiriphv, Brabant.Bishon\u2019s subs Lang,' Olmstead, Robertson.B-orks, Muir, Hutclnn-and WhaRpy nlungin\", rippinn the Quebec line for 'ong gains.One of Echenberg\u2019s bucks saw the curly-headed middle hurtle clear over the scrimmage.Balmy Beach provided the, startling unset of the week-end by snapping the Parsaca-less Sarnia Imperials\u2019 unbeaten streak.The victory had no bearing on the standing, There was hilarious rejoicing in a, the Imperials had clinched the the Ath\u2019ctics\u2019 camp when Webb Cook -hampionship already.took Harper\u2019s long forward to send {\t- Sherbrooke five points into the lead .\u201cFight, Fight, Loyola\u201d and \u201cBeat on the series score.Armitage\u2019s Bishop\u2019s\u201d were the two principal touchdown and Bob Dunsmore\u2019s ] cries which rent the Loyola gridiron, rouge afterwards merely satisfied (The maroon-clad warriors did just the local boys\u2019lust for a big margin, j those two things and humbled Hal -\t(Chard\u2019s proteges.It was a hard Shifting Harper to quarter proved 1 game for Bishop\u2019s to lose on their an unexpected success, and aided in showing this season, hut the I.en-no small measure to the team\u2019s vie-j noxville.squad had no alibis to tory, Webb Cook did yeoman work (offer.in his backfield berth, climaxing his!\t- stellar display with a touendown.i Hamilton proved itself worthy stic- \u2014-\teessors to Montreal\u2019s Winged Wheel- Bill McCullough\u2019s contribution was era by trouncing Argonauts.C urry to recover a Quebec fumble and pave Foran\u2019s men ended the season in a the way for Sherbrooke's second ( blaze of glory by smothering th.touchdown.Bill sat down on the pig- luckless Ottawa Rough Riders, skin to give the fans a good laugh.' line of scrimmage.From the standpoint of scientific rugby the fixture was a comedy, but it provided amusement for both players and spectators.To celebrate the School\u2019s victory and the showing the students made this year in exhibition games, the- Old Boys will tender a supper in the Academy gymnasium next Thursday evening.Old Boys Fly.wing Mitton half L Bro des half McWilliams half\tHall quarter\tWolfe snap inside inside middle middle St.Pat\u2019s P.McMahon Gardiner A.Murray M.McMahon W.Gordon Boislard Bachand Moore H.Simms Foley Quinn J.Hibbard A.Hibbard Desautels R.Dastjus Crochetiere O\u2019Donnell outside D.McMahon outside D.Johnston St.Pat\u2019s subs: H.Shields, Quinn, Vogell, Taylor, Mayotte, Dion, R.Brooks, Veaj\" and Mack.Old Boys\u2019 subs\u2019 McKeon, Clark, Parsons, Boisvert, A.Mooney, F.Parker, Hooper, J.Kelly.The summary: First Quarter 1\u2014\tOld Boys: touchdown, Wolfe (5).Second Quarter No score.Third Quarter 2\u2014\tSt.Pat\u2019s: touchdown, P.Mc- \u2019'ahon (5).\t* 3\u2014\tSt.Pat\u2019s: placement, Gar.iin-(3), Fourth Quarter 4\u2014\tOld Boys: touchdown, Wolfe 5).5\u2014\tSt.Pat\u2019s; touchdown, P.Mc-'-Vinn f5l.Fn-\u2019 store: St.Pat\u2019s 13, Old ¦' ys IQ.Sherbrooke High School Captured Second Consecutive Eastern Townships Interscholastic Rugby Title by Trouncing Bishop\u2019s College School by 24 to 2.You can never keep a team down.Bishop\u2019s College School fully realized the truth of this old idiom on Saturday at the Lennoxville gridiron when Mac Dunsmore piloted his Sherbrooke High School aggregation to its second consecutive Eastern Townsh.ps Interscholastic rugby champi' nship.Led by Albie Horsfall, who capped a sensational season with one of the most spectacular games of his colorful career, the title holders crushed the game resistance offered by their heavier opponents under a twenty-four to two count to keep their undefeated record intact.Bereft early in the second half of one of their backfield stars, Billy Kenny,the purple and white squad collapsed completely, and for the re-ma.naer of the- game the Sherbrooke lads tore through Bishop\u2019s re-arranged front ranks almost at will.Long forward passes by Horsfall and Charlie Jowett, terrific line plunges by \u201cSwede\u201d Purdy and jonnny Daniels, and smart work by Bill Cohoon in block.ng the B.shop\u2019s kicks, all combinea to smother the home team\u2019s hopes before the final quarter was reached.And behind it all was the brains of the youthful Dunsmore, a born quarterback, who called the right plays at the right time.It is extremely doubtful that even with Kenny\u2019s presence would Bishop\u2019s have won.The margin would not .have been so big if the Bishop\u2019s squad had remained intact, but ther.was no stopping Horsfall and his cohorts after they had been held to a one-all deadlock at the end of the first half.On the day\u2019s play the High deserved their victory, their co-operation and allround alertness in the latter stages making up for the several opportunities they failed to take advantage of in the first two chukkers.Immediately after their victory, which clinched the crown, the High School authorities began to draft the challenge they will submit to the Westmount High School for the Provincial Interscholastic title.Tho Westmounters are the title representatives of the Montreal High School division.Play see-sawed from end to end during the first half with neither squad showing any appreciable superiority.In the opening minutes Jack Sheppard hoisted forty yards across the Sherbrooke line, and his wings had sufficient time to get down under the spiral and score a rouge.Bishop\u2019s adopted a strong defensive system against the High\u2019s aerial attack, and many forward passing attempts went astray or were intercepted.Horsfall missed two placement kicks against the wind as the first quarter ended with the home team holding a one-point margin.Charlie Jowett was responsible for the tally which deadlocked the count about the middle of the second quarter.Following this point, a forward pass attack brought the High deep into Bishop\u2019s territory, but Referee Hawkins ruled a pass had been interfered with and a golden chance was passed up.At the rest period, the score board read Bishop\u2019s 1, Sherbrooke 1.It was on one of \u201cSwede\u201d Purdy\u2019s bucks that Kenny was injured.He was forced to retire.A blocked kick which Jowett recover- ed on the home team\u2019s five-yard whitewash paved the way to a High touchdown which was negotiated by Horsfall and converted.The High School\u2019s powerful tanks were in action again and nothing could stop them.A second major tally was called back when Referee Hawkins ruled that Horsfall had crawled across I the line.A ten-yard penalty was ] inflicted but on the following play ] Horsfall shot a long forward to ! \u201cNigger\" Martin to add five points.I Horsfall converted and Sherbrooke I led by a thirteen to one margin.] After Sheppard had punted his second rouge, the.remainder of the game was a nightmare for the Bish-j op\u2019s team.Their plays lacked the precision which had characterized ] their first-half offensive, while the defensive system slowly but surely cracked before the terrific pressure , exerted on it.j In the final fifteen minutes Hors-, fall succeeded in kicking three additional points from placement after many tries had failed.The hefty back\u2019s figure dominated the play in this session, during which he added a single on a kicking duel with Sheppa-d, romped over for a ! touchdowm after Henry Kouri had ] recovered a Bishop\u2019s fumble and j Purdy had crashed through for ' twenty-five yards, and brought his j total for the day up to seventeen ] by making the convert.Jowett con-I eluded the scoring of the afternoon with a rouge.j For the past two years the cham-1 pionshlp has hinged on the final ( game of the Sherbrooke High-Bishop\u2019s College School, series.Last year the High eked out a close victory to capture the bunting, but this year their right to the championship could not be challenged on j the basis of the showing they have made.Len O\u2019DonnelTs squad came near defeat but once, when they held Bishop\u2019s to a sixteen-all deadlock in Sherbrooke.They had, however, showed their resourcefulness in the final quarter of that memor-; able day and capped their rally with a forward pass which resulted in the tying touchdown, j Splendid co-operation and good feeling among the individual members of the champions have been secrets of their success.Ernie Hall, Ken Jackson, Mac Dunsmore and \u2018 Nigger\u201d Martin were outstanding in snaring the long heaves made by Horsfall and Jowett during the season, while the kicking of these two players could hold its own with much more experienced opposition.On the line, Bill Cohoon proved an elusive snap whom opponents found difflcultay to keep track of,while the remainder of the shock troops tackled well and plunged when yards were needed most.Wally Wilson, Bishop\u2019s speedy quarter, was the star of the losers, line-up, his broken field running soliciting much applause from the i spectators.The remainder of the squad played but a mediocre brand of rugby, and were far below the class shown by O\u2019Donnell\u2019s proteges.The line-ups were; Sherbrooke Ernie Hall\tfly.win; Horsfall\thalf Kirby\thalf Jowett\thalf Dunsmore\tquarter Cohoon\tsnap Henderson\tinside Lowe\tinside Daniels\tmiddle Purdy\tmiddle Stevens\toutside Martin\toutside Sherbrooke subs: Mead,*Bachei-der, Don Johnston, Jackson, Henry and Harry Kouri, Wooton, 'Martin, Whittingham and Miller.Bishop\u2019s subs : Cressy, Copeland, Lord and Montgomery.Bishop's D.Steven: D.Doheny Kenny Sheppard Wilson McKinnon Rankin Bakei Stove! Doheny Payai; Duncan H.Bob Dunsmore, Paul McKenna and Bill Cohoon were three harassed young men in yesterday\u2019s Old Boys-St.Pat\u2019s fixture.The Old Boys sent in substitutes in droves, the formality of reporting being forgotten in the general melee.FOOTBALL NOTES \u2014 # We take pleasure in announcing the appointment of Mr.Graeme M.Taylor (Formerly of Nesbitt, Thompson & Co.Ltd.) as a Representative of this Company.NORTH AMERICAN ASSURANCE LIFE COMPANY \u201cAll profits belong to policyholders.\u201d Olivier Bldg.\tPhone 2570 V* \u2018 \u2019 ~ZR W.MURRAY, C.L.U., Branch Manager.«at'-iKMEBsaoaa No, lady, the ball did not burst! Buster Tomlinson and Syd Echenberg carried the burden of lino Unless Westmount High accepts Sherbroo! e High\u2019s .challenge or the Athletics travel to Montreal next (Continued on page 2) ACTUALLY________________SHARPER © When v/e say the Gillette BLUE BLAD E is much sharper we mean that exactly.This is not a generality.We have a remarkable machine that proves the fact beyond doubt.Learn this for yourself.Try tl r' ' \"\tF1- B1 de tomorrow morning.71.7u 3l< Ie is made in addition to the regular Cille.Made sold in the green package.I t 9614^0 99 "]
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