Voir les informations

Détails du document

Informations détaillées

Conditions générales d'utilisation :
Protégé par droit d'auteur

Consulter cette déclaration

Titre :
Sherbrooke daily record
Éditeur :
  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
Contenu spécifique :
lundi 1 mai 1950
Genre spécifique :
  • Journaux
Fréquence :
quotidien
Notice détaillée :
Titre porté avant ou après :
    Prédécesseurs :
  • Sherbrooke gazette ,
  • Sherbrooke examiner
  • Successeur :
  • Sherbrooke record
Lien :

Calendrier

Sélectionnez une date pour naviguer d'un numéro à l'autre.

Fichier (1)

Références

Sherbrooke daily record, 1950-05-01, Collections de BAnQ.

RIS ou Zotero

Enregistrer
[" 1950\t\t\tMAY\t\t1950\t \t1\t2\t3\t4\t5\t6 i\t8\t9\t10\t11\t12\t13 14\t15\t16\t17\tIS\t19\t20 21\t22\t23\t24\t25\t26\t27 28\t29\t30\t31\t\t\t Sbecbrooke TO ail i) Uccocd ^established 1897.PRICE: 5 CENTS THE PAPER OF THE EASTERS TOWSSHIPS SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC.MONDAY, MAY I.I9S0.WEATHER CLOUDY, COOL Cloudy today, occasional lipht rain or drizzl« tonight.Tuesday cloudy with a few sunny periods in the afternoon.Continuing cool.Light winds.Low tonight and high Tuesday at Sherbrooke 42 and 60.Temperatures yesterday: Maximum 66, minimum 25.A year ago: Maximum 70, minimum 38.Fifty-Fourth Year World News In Brief Rome, May 1\u2014 (7P> \u2014Two farm workers were killed and five others wounded last night in fighting between police and demonstrators at Celano.in the Abrur.zi hills.I\u2019olice at nearby Avezzano told reporters by telephone that the trouble began when a throng of some 300 workers ignored polite orders to disband.* * » Stellarton.N.S., May l.-\u2014® \u2014A close vigil was kept today over the Allan shaft mine here tor turther explosions \"hen officials said might \"reck the 47-year-old workings.While the seven victims of a blast and fire Friday night still lay in hospital \u2014 two on the danger list \u2014 mine experts kept an anxious eye on pit-head graphs.M ine manager Ernest Wright said a minor explosion is believed to have occurred Saturday \u2014 on the same 1.200-foot level as the first blast.Quebec, May 1.(CP) \u2014 Cattle population on Quebec province farms increased in 1949 to 1,748.000 from 1,-728,900 in 1949, the provincial Statistics Bureau reported today.The number of milch cows on Quebec farms increased in 1949 to 1,109.500 from 1,-094,700 the previous year.The sheep population fell to 240,200 last year from 260.500\tin 1948 while the number of pigs increased to 1.146.500\tfrom 939,200.There was a drop in the number of horses to 290,000 from 304,200.# * * Winnipeg May 1.\u2014 (CP) \u2014 The bodies of Mr.and Mrs.Nickey Kolt were found in the basement of their home in north-end Winnipeg.police said today.A rifle lay nearby.A roomer discovered the bodies.Singapore, May 1\u2014(/P)\u2014 Police announced today the arrest of a man accused of tossing a grenade Friday night at Sir Franklin Gimson, Singapore\u2019s governor.The arrest led to the roundup of four communist leaders, and discovery of another alleged murder plot.* * * Calgary.May 1\u2014((P>\u2014\\ 22-year-old pilot buzzed Calgary for 40 minutes early Sunday, then crashed to his death.His plane piled into a north-end bungalow.Four persons in (he house escaped serious injury.Jack Harper, advertising and sales employee of Foothills Aviation Ltd., took a twin-engined Cessna crane from the company hangar at 2:38 a.m.Without obtaining permission from the airport control tower he took off from the wrong runway.Paris, May 1.-(Reuters) \u2014Premier Georges Bidault said last night France does not intend to produce an atom bomb, \u201cThere must be some control of all armaments and not only of the atom bomb,\u2019\u2019 he told a local congress of his party, the Popular Republicans, at Montbrisson.Sporadic Clashes Between East And West Berliners Mark May Day Celebrations Picket Parliament Buildings 19,000 Police And Troops Stalin Reviews Mammoth Keep Affairs In Order As May Day Parade In Moscow By The Associated Press Generalissimo Stalin reviewed thousands of cheering Russians today in a mammoth May Day parade celebrating international labor day.The communist slogans in, Moscow's Red Square were echoed around the world, from tense and divided Berlin to distant Burma.The eyes of the world, however, turned anxiously toward Berlin where nearly 1,000,000 persons converged to hold rival communist and anti - communist demonstrations.Tough west Berlin police were quick to suppress the first scattered clashes and incidents.East Berlin police in their Soviet sector also were out in force.Moscow, the capital of all communist-style May Day celebrations, was engulfed in a sea of red bunting.A military parade inarched past Lenin\u2019s tomb and Stalin's reviewing stand.Overhead roared Moscow\u2019s most spectacular peacetime display of Soviet aerial power, led by Stalin s son, Lt.-Gen.Vassili Stalin.May Day, established as international labor day by the socialist international at Paris in 1889, since has been tsaditionally celebrated throughout Europe.But in the United States and Canada, labor day is designated as the first Monday in September.And this year in the U.S.May 1 was observed generally as the time for anti-communist demonsti'a-tions.Mosinee.Wis., had the most e!a- 750.000 West Berliners Jeer Reds.borate show, with the American Legion staging a mock \u201ccommunist insurrection\u201d in which they round-! ed up city officials just before dawn i and took over the newspapers, \u2018 banks, stores and other public ac-i tivities for one day.Wisconsin i communist distributed copies of 1 the Daily Worker yesterday scoffing at the idea.In Canada, everything was quiet; as leftist organizations observed the occasion with parades and : meetings in most of the larger j cities.Police kept close watch at ral-j lies in Montreal and Toronto.At Montreal one man was ar- ! I rested for carrying a banner \u2014 a , papier-mache torch \u2014 in a May Day \u201cMemorial\u2019\u2019 service in Domin- : : ion Square sponsored by the youth \u2022 ! assembly for peace.; At Toronto, 600 persons attend-i cd a May Day rally sponsored by ! j the Labor-Progressive party.Police j j watched as the party's two Ontario | members of the Ontario legislature, J.B.Salsberg and A.A.MacLeod | addressed the meeting in Willow-! dale Park.Speaking in front of the burned-out Reichstag, rallying point of the western anti-communist Berliners, Irving Brown, European representative of the American Federation of Labor, said Berlin i workers were fighting to preserve \u201can island where human decency and individual liberty can survive.\u2019\u2019 Continued On Page 5 Railways Are Ready To Negotiate Ottawa, May 1.\u2014 ® \u2014 Canada\u2019s two major railways today adviced labor minister Mitchell that they are willing to negotiate a settlement of a wage dispute with some 124,000 employees on the basis of two recent federal conciliation board reports.The Canadian Pacific Railway and the Canadian National Railway.- emphasized that \u201cthe additional costs involved can only be met by increasing the charges made for our services to the public.\" The railways estimated implementation of the board\u2019s findings would cost between $19,225,000 and $27,000,000 annually.The majority reports of the two conciliation boards handed down April 15 rejected the 17 railway unions' claims for outright pay increases.They recommended a formula that would give the employees a shorter work week, higher hourly rates and generally, less in the weekly pay envelope.The unions had asked for reduction in the work week from 48 to 40 hours with a five-day week and no loss in take-home pay, plus wage increases above that of from seven to 10 cents an hour.The railways\u2019 acceptance of the boards\u2019 findings was contained in a joint letter delivered to Mr.Mitchell today.The letter was signed by S.F.Dingle, vice-president of the C.N.R.and N.R.Crump, C.P.R.vice-president.\u201cThe executives of the railways have given careful study to the hoards' analysis of this dispute,\u201d 13 Deaths Reported At Week-End Continued On Page 5 14 Sunken Freighters Will Be Salvaged From Atlantic Montreal, May 1.\u2014TP,\u2014Sydney | work, along with his superinten-j.Simon, of Halifax, announced dent, William Parsons, a native of here todav he has purchased 14 ! Newfoundland.Parsons has al-unken freighters and will salvage ! ready been able to salvage two their steel from the bottom of the j boilers from the Watford, which Atlantic off Canada\u2019s east coast, j lies at a comparatively short depth Mr Simon, managing director of! off Cape Breton island, the Guard Wrecking and Salvage! The Kenkerry, a former British Company of Halifax, said the ship, foundered off Halifax in a freighters range up to 10,000 tons j heavy gale some years ago as did and salvage work will begin within | the Advance.The Martin van six weeks.\tBuren, a former American freight- Explosives will be used to blast 1er, was the victim of enemy action the steel from the ships.\t| in the same area.Mr.Simon said some of the j The city of Colombo lies deep freighters still have rich cargoes ! beneath the seas off Liverpool, By The Canadian Press The deaths of three persons in a two-truck crash near St.Zotiquc, Que., were among the 13 fatalities reported in eastern Canada this week-end.A Canadian Press survey shows Ontario accidents claimed seven victims while Quebec had six fatalities.Traffic mishaps caused six deaths and two young boys were drowned.Other aridents included a ourning, a fall from a tractor, a planing-mill mishap, an automobile repair fatality and an accidental shooting.Mrs.Dianna Addison, 44, her 17-year-old daughter, Pauline and Guy Desrochers, 19, were killed when the truck in which they were riding smashed into the rear of a parked truck on the highway near St.Zotique, about 40 miles southwest of Montreal.Four other occupants of the vehicle escaped serious injury., At Almonte, Ont., Harold McGrath, 15, and John J.Lyons, 14, were drowned when their canoe overturned, throwing them into the near-freezing waters of the Mississippi river.They were on a boating expedition with eight other members of their Scout troop.Percival Gaudet, 36, burned to death in a garage when the autobus he was repairing caught fire, turning him into a human torch.The accident occurred at St.Jean Desehaillons, in the Quebec district.At Montreal, Eucilde Mounsey, 73, was crushed under the ax\u2019e of an automobile when the jack holding it up slipped.He was removing a flat tire.Alphonse Bezaire was killed in a fall fiom his tractor near Windsor while Donald Plato.12, was accidentally shot by his father with a .22 calibre rifle at Fort Erie.Norman Smith, 62, a planing mill employee at Kingcardine, Ont., was killed when the pulley he was testing snapped, fracturing his skull.Other traffic victims were: Med-ric Leblanc, 42, at St.John\u2019s Que.; Wtadystaw Haduch, 30-year-old Polish immigrant, at Simcoe, Ont.; and Grant Robinson, 24 near Streetsville, ^Ont.Berlin.May 1-(^>) \u2014 Hun- I dreds of thousands of Berliners jeered each other across sector ; barriers in this tense divided city today during rival east- i west May Day celebrations.; There were sporadic flare-ups but police of both sides kept them from turning into riots.Some 11,000 west-German police, backed up by 8.000 specially-trained western allied troops, kept affairs in the west sector in hand while an estimated 750,000 Germans cheered speakers lambasting ! Russia and communism.A few blocks away thousands of east Berliners converged on the Lustgarten for the communist rally, a demon- 1 stration organized from start to finish and heavily guarded | by communist sector people s i police.At one point anti-communist demonstrators at Potsdamer Platz began surging toward the Russian sector border, despite efforts of west-Berlin police to keep them in check.At the Brandenburg gate, some of the demonstrators began shouting insults at the communist-controlled east-Berlin police, calling them the \u201cBlatik S.S.\u201d ! and \u201ccommunist pigs.\u201d The west Germans\u2014-officials said they appeared to be led by young roughhouse elements who may have been drinking\u2014began throwing stones at east-sector police.| Allied reporters said the east-Berlin police showed restraint, merely' dodging the stones without even drawing their clubs.After this incident, west-Berlin demonstrators seized two east sector civilians and beat them severely.One of the victims was a photographer.West-Berlin police reserves, answering a riot alarm, dispersed the unruly elements.Potsdamer Platz long has been a hot corner in the cold war.It has been the scene of many clashes between communists and anti-communists.While the west-German crowds : converged haphazardly for their ! mass demonstration, regimented j tens of thousands, a few blocks away in the east sector, marched past Soviet and German eommv nist chieftains in a Moscow-'like copy of May Day celebrations of Red square.British and American planes and helicopters soared over the central part of the city, with observers | ready to radio the word to headquarters at the slightest sign of disturbance.West-Berlin\u2019s mayor Ernst Reu- ! ter estimated the anti-communist crowd at 750,000.West-Berlin organizers charged that at least another 30,000 per- | sons had been held back forcibly j from the rally by' communist j police at Soviet sector borders.«*»- «- .ar $ çgi&SmSSismèÀ:: Mi.fmigm ÜcïMtëmemmmS ïü&m&i Protesting unemployment in Canada, these pickets paraded around the entrance to Parliament Buildings in Ottawa Thursday.They made an unsuccessfuI attempt to interview Prime Minister St.Laurent and seven of them, claiming to represent a national convention of unemployed organizations, were removed bodily from the publie ealleiy of the Coinainns when they attempted to read a prepared address to the members of Parliament.They continued their picketing outside.U(fi Photo) Town Of Morris In Manitoba Almost Deserted As Flood Waters Still Rise Dr.Endicott Chiang Says Nationalists Fight Russia i.with ¦(&)\u2014 Winnipeg, May River cut loose blows today at M ni toba.Manitoba telephone system 1 > ials in Winnipeg said the exil ange at the border town of Em-t'son had been flooded out.Four The Rod! new flood southern of- Says He Was Misquoted in their holds and efforts will be made to recover them before blasting.After the hulls have been blown apart the steel will be raised to the surface by means of floating cranes.The steel then will be sent to eastern mills for melting.Mr.Simon listed 10 of the fright-ers as the Kenkerry, Ganby, Guard, Langeliridge, Aranda, Advance, City of Colombo, River RyTe, Watford and Martin van Buren.Except for the Martin van Buren, all the freighters foundered off the east coast in storms.Some of them, said Mr.Simon, lie deep N.S., another victim of the elements, the River Rye, is off Yarmouth, and the others are ail in the vicinity of Cape Breton island.A native Haligonian, 35-year-,old Sydney Simon followed his 75 year-old father, John Simon, into the marine business.Prior to his retirement John Simon operated the Hochelaga Steamship Company between Pictou, N.S.and Prince Edward Island.When the job of salvaging the ships begins special pontoons and diving equipment will be used.Mr.Simon said he estimated it Singapore, May 1\u2014(TP)\u2014The The Dean of Canterbury complained today that \u201cthe United States would not let me through the golden curtain.\u201d The so-called \u201cRead Dean.\u201d Rev.Dr.Hewlett Johnson, was passing through Singapore on his way to Canada by way of London.Taipei, Formosa, May 1 Chiang Kai-Shek today urged telephone operators -living in the iv/kers in Red China to aid the I exchange for the last week\u2014were nationalists\u2019 war \u201cagainst the j forced to abondon the premises, communists and Soviet Russia.\u201d\tT, .,\t, , ! I n«* girls were évacua tori by The nationalist Generalissimo'- I Red Cross workers.Their evacii-May Day message was loaded wit, I ;lll0n en.mt, as u,e Red River touch-claims that his government is \u201ed 46.j g feet at Emerson\u2014highlighting the Russians as well as level, there in 124 years, the Chinese Red.-.\tThe Canadian army moved into Appealing to the workers on the | t¦ ,e flood zone today ns the swell-communist - occupied m a i n 1 a n d t jXg waters of the Red poured to-thiang said:\t; wards Winnipeg.\u201cYou have fully recognized the, Thirty soldier- were rushed to significance of the struggle Morris, 41 miles south, to throw against the communists and Soviet 1 a sandbag dike around a hospital.Russia.Your hatred for the protest amphibious \u201cduck\u201d stood by against the communists, your sabo-j to remove patients if the army ta.ge and strikes, are of equal im-1 faj]ed.portance as the contribution made j All of Morris, a town of 1,100 by workers in the rear.Our anti-communist and anti- dy river water.Scores of resi-j give* and fake\u201d but \u201cat no time | Russian strength lies in the work-j (ient;Si heading their mayor\u2019s warn- did I contrast peace conditions in ers .only thiough thrift and n,.v tn evacuate, moved to Winni- Canada and Russia.\u201d hard work in the rear and through j pt,jr an(| other places.\t\u201cif the reporters say that, I consolidated efforts at the front, Morris was almost deserted.A wa8 misquoted.Soviet * reporters I can Taiwan (Formosa) be held and | hotel and snack bar were about are as human as any others about! victory over communism and Rus- the only business places open.Not| sometimes getting their facts! sian be won.\u201d _\tj more than one-third of its people ! wrong.What I did say was that j He described this island bastion; were .-rill in their homes.The Can- j had seen enough of the onor-j as oui base in the anti-commun,.-.adian Pacific Railway lines on the j mous construction program in and anti-Russian war for national j town\u2019s outskirts were washed out.Russia to convince me the Soviet! salvation.\u201d He added:\t| in Winnipeg the river rose ail Early today it stood ai only five inches below reached in 1948 when! Streets in | were un- Toronto, May 1.\u2014 e 1,0ns, was covered by the mud-jence \u201cat which there was lots of \u2018Our anti-communist war is a j week-end.war against aggression.While 459,-1 23 feet pin their the level 000,000 Chinese now 01 ut I\u2019aiwan, tl isiad aggressor an; ; is also pointed t, in wqier believed treacherous for will take more than two years be- fiving operations.\t.fore the last of the steel is brought Mr! Simon will supervise the ! up.\t I\tINDEX Page\t2\u2014Theatre News ! Page\t3\u2014City News ; Page\t4\u2014Editorials 1 Page\t5\u2014General News Page\t6\u2014Classified Ads.Page\t9\u2014Social and Personal Page 16\u2014Sports News\t Continued On Page 5 Country-Wide Postponed In New York, May 1.\u2014(/Pi\u2014The threat of a country-wide telephom strike in the United States wa-ended today \u2014 at least for the present.Striking telephone installers called off their one-week walkout against coast-to-coa?t Bell system early today and began new negotiations.The back-to-work order flagged down pickets who wouid have marched today in an effort to paralyze phone service.The break came at 2 a.m.after a 15-hour bargaining session with federal mediators, and only four hours before the first pickets were scheduled to walk.But there was a possibility that some of the 10,000 strikers in 43 states might not get the news in time to stop early-morning picketing which had been set for 6 a.m., local time.The strike was called last Monday by division 6 of the Communications Workers of America (C.I.O.) against the Bell system\u2019s manufacturing and supply unit, the Western Electric Cdmpany.Division 6 now will join 23 other C.W.A.divisions in new wage talks j with the Bell system\u2019s parent cor-: noration, American Telephone and I Telegraph Company, and its sev-ieral subsidiaries.nopes on of the Rm communist island ., The president of what is left of nationalist China reviewed the I half-century since the -ilart \u201cf the revolution led by Dr.Sun Yat Sen.Chian.g said the Manclni dynasty has been overthrown, the northern warlords eliminated and Jap-anses ag.gression thwarted, but \u201cnow we are fighting against tne communists and Soviet Russia.\u201d Phone Strike t United States In announcing the end of the walkout, division 6 president Ern est Weaver stated: ; \u201cRefusal by the C.W.A.to fur-; ther support the strike has caused I division 6 to request their mem-: I bers to return to work.\u201d In the back-to-work settlement, Western Electric reinstated the 104, original strikers at South Bend,1 I Ind., who walked out to support! I six workers who refused to cross j to muddy field to work on a tele-: vision tower.The \u201cmuddy field\u201d issue and the! long-standing wage dispute led division 6 to jump the gun and: strike two days before the Presi- j dent strike truce ended last Wednesday.Only a few hours before the; ! truce ran out, president Joseph I ! Beirne of the C.W.A.called off the | big union\u2019s scheduled country-wide : walkout, and bargaining continued.: The postponement did not end the : division 6 strike, but the installers ; had refrained previously from forcing the issue with pickets.Other divisions of the C.W.A,! 1 have been reported near a \u201cpat-! tern\u201d settlement with A.T.and T.j that could be extended to the whole 1 ; union.The C.W.A.originally do-' 1 manded a 15-cent hourly wage in-j crease and about 22-cents-an-houj* 'worth of other benefits.needed peace.\u201d Dr.Endicott referred to another excerpt read by Mr.Pearson, quoting him as having said that if a Canadian refers to Russia \u201cin a positive manner\u201d in his home, the police may drive him into the street and seal off his apart ment.\u201cMr.Pearson should have gone on to say that I was referring to Continued On Page.5 Montreal Girl Is Stabbed In Hand Montreal, May 1 \u2014*CP)\u2014A teenage Montreal girl was stabbed in the left hand with a hypodermic needle last, night by an unknown assailant while she was walking along crowded St.Catherine ftp-rt in downtown Montreal, police reported.Police did not identify the g 1 nor would they say what the needh.contained.The girl told them she was walking along the street when a mat; grabbed her gloved hand and shoved the hypodermic needle through the glove.Police took the girl to hospital for treatment.She was released after preliminary treatment and told to return later this week for a checkup.! rhe last floods occurred j some residential suburb (1er water.The highest water was expected j to reach Winnipeg Wednesday or i Thursday.It seemed certain the I peak of two years ago would be exceeded.Even before Mayor Hary Shew-! man of Morris used a public-ad-I dress system to urge everyone to j leave, an estimated 500 men, worn-: en and children left.The oxod I was resumed in earnest yesterde Emerson, at the international boundary, was the focal point flood news up to Saturday.There New York, May 1.A'i fcle-1 Union representatives said, how-! the Red\u2019s rise wa: almost stopped graph operator and equipment ; ever, they were confident the strike las the flood crest moved slowly maintenance men in all American | would be general throughout the I but relentlessly northward toward i bureaux of the United Pre- As- domestic bureaux of the United ! Lake Winnipeg.\tsociation were called out on strike ! Press.Today Morris tool: the main early today in a wage dispute.! Neary said today\u2019s strike was brunt of thi river's fury.\tLa -hour efforts by a federal ! the first ever called by the C.T.U.eports to Winnipeg over jam- government men ator failed to re- against any one of the three major United Press Telegraph ; Operators Begin Strike d telephone and telegraph line- solve the sput e* .ver-n the news - American news agencies.Neary a: i 12 inehe- of water swirled in-j agen'*;, ar d the Com men ml Tele- raid the United Press made a iast-to the hospital.The town and the grapher- 1 nion (A.F.L.).\tminute offer of a $2.20 weekly R.U.M.P.both called for army help United Press officials did not1 wage increase but that it was rc-co build a higher sandbag wall.| immediately disclose what plan-: jected by the uion.Civilian workers were exhausted I they had for continuing operations after hours of ceaseless work, j in the face of the strike.Twelve patients\u2014including two John Lynch, chairman of the mothers and their three and four-! United Press unit of the New York said.\u2018We came down to $6.50,\u201d Neary osy-old babies and four expectant \u2022 local of the American Newspaper mothers \u2014 were in the hospital., Guild ICA O.), said executives and dome of the patients were serious- business representative!- of the ly ill.Some had been moved in United Press were operating some only a few days ago from another ! teleprinters.hospital now inundated.in New York said Patiala.East Punjab, May 1 \u2014(Reuters)\u2014 Thirty-two persons «ere reported killed and 40 injured today in an explosion which wrecked part of the eastern wall of Patiala tort.Nearby shops in the heart of the town were destroyed, o\u2019hcr people were believed to be trapped under the debris and resuce operations were started by troops, police and the fire brigade.A high state official said the explosion was i^uised by* an oh) ammunition '\u2018dump accidentally catching fire.! A U.P.officia [the service j were operating James T.Neary, secretary-treasurer of the C.T.U.\u2019s Ui»ited Press (division number 47, said 235 teletype operators and 30 equipment ; maintenance men in the United j Press\u2019 35 U.S.bureaux were called I off their jobs.j Neary said the union bad voted j 212 to 14 for a strike unless their demands for a basic increase of $.15 weekly were met.The balloting was done by mail.Harry Ferguson, assistant news I manager of the United Press in j New.iYork, said: \u201cI\u2019fir not sure that all the bureaux !in thd country will strike.\u201d Neary said the basic, xvage for teleprinter operators at the United Press was $90 a week.Equipment maintenance men have the same basic wage, he added.Neary said C.T.U.negotiations ._\tbegan early in March with the s circuits into Canada! United Press on a new contract.( c as usual.\tThey were ended March 31, he said.Then they automatically were extended to midnight, April 30, under a contract clause that provided 30 additional days of negotiation before a strike could be called.Commissioner J.R.Alandelbaum of the fererat mediation and conciliation service met with both parties right up to the strike deadline in an effort to settle the dispute.Twelve C.T.U.pickets were posted outside the entrances to the New York Daily News building shortly after midrtght.Continued ou \\voul< traffic, a business stretching from 12ic - 2nd A.venue Romeo Lanth-\twith the hand\tjust described, the Î be\table to take the king and meld ier, ^3 Wellington N., J.A.Le-\texpert doesn\u2019t\tmake\ta serious e% 50\tpoints, miei/x, 87 Gillespie, Ida Brochu, fort to scrape together a rneld of Parthenon, Marquette St., Rhoda | his own.He would change his mind j Bell Telephone Co., Mme.T he picked up a few wild card?, LaforeH 24 Worthington St., | particularly a joker or two, but he | for her riding e all scene in ,?ider who was heckling singer Ar'j™^rmn!?,,\t,» thundered: Trumpet to the Morn.Somebody oughta tear you apart/ \u201cI loathe the things, she said.\u201d \u201cX get goose eggs ail over and Wayne, Moms you apart, I \u2019m just the man to do it.\u2019 .lean!*?' Rayons, d, 126 Larocque i St., Roland Beaudet, 9b Leonidas ' St., Lewis E.Cox, 47 Courcelette St., H.M.Marango, C.P.R., J.G.Galvin, Park Avenue, Cecile Rouil-lard.New Sherbrooke Hotel, Mrs.A.H.Cross, 83 Frontenac St., Charlotte Quirion, 143 Belvedere | St, W.C.McKinney, Montreal,: Que., Marguerite Taylor, Lisieux ( St., Emile Dubois, 71 Windsor St., I Luciene Lavallee, Ansell\u2019s Drug Store, Richard Lemay, 133a Blvd.St.-Sacrament, M.G.Richards | would not count on such extraor-' dinary luck.Instead, the expert plays the Mr.Jacoby is unable to answer individual questions on Canasta from readers.However, he will include the most frequently asked questions in this column.when .\t.\u2018 Florence Lake, back on the I ever I get near a horse Let\u2019s face screen in \"Ambush\u201d and \u201cThe i it, I\u2019m not the outdoor tyTe Lm- Spark\u201d after a long illness, will «da has to take shots of adreiialm.^ A le Xve\u201e Joseph PlouffeJ\ttI.,\t, marrv Jack Owens, a movie prop j to counteract hex alle.gy to the ig M\tuett R j Keyes, Mont-1\tHighwater, May 1.man '.Coleen Gray\u2019s ex-husband, ; whinny set.\t.\t, real, Que.Redmond Hayes.New! quet was given by the staff of the Rodney Amateau, is working as | Can you dunk adrenalin, i shprhrooke Hotel.Lillian Lachar- Montreal Pipe Line at the High A Farewell Banquet And Presentation Were Given For Mr.And Mrs.J.Cruden And Mr.And Mrs.J, Irwin At Highwater bpnng Formal Routine \u2022 For Parisiennes \u2014 A ban- $50.00 FREE TOMORROW NIGHT In Canada Savinss Bonds PREMIER TODAY AND TL ES.THE \\MiVZING SAGA OK A FIGHTING DOC.AS DEADLY AS A MOI NT!KS GUN! James Oliver l ; wood's \"THE WOLF HUNTERS\" Vith Kirby GRANT, Jan CLAYTON, Edward NORRIS, Helen PARRISH and CHINOOK, The Wonder Do* ALSO A Passionate, Powerful, Drama! Jennifer JONES, John GARFIELD, Perir-o ARMENDARIZ In \"WE WERE STRANGERS\u201d.CARTOON SPORTS NEWS ¦ saiaiiaasasM COMING WED.UNTIL SAT.A RARE TREAT FOR LOVERS OF FINE MUSIC! HEAR THE GREAT GiiGLJ SING .\"Baiser d\u2019Amour\u201d, ¦Tristan\u201d, \"Loh: ngrin,\" \"Carmen, \"La Favorita\", \"Martha'\u2019, \"Rigolet-to\u201d.\u2018\u2018Mipnon.\u2019* rr*.SPECTACULAR.\"-^ HUMAN! .G*Ur 'nit Sherbrooke Hotel, Lillian Lachar-ite, 76 - 1st Ave., S., H.Chartier, 17 Garnier St., Cr.Pepin, 12?Brooks St., Arthur Pelletier, 97 Fabre St., James Muir, Verdun, Que., W.Berwick, Sherbrooke Record, Lucien Roy, 93a Drummond St., H.J.Clements, 36a Wolfe St., Mrs.E.R.Mullin, 48a ] Aberdeen St.L.Cormier, 23a Princess St., Mrs.E.Davis, 45 Island St., C.Proulx, 8a - 3rd Avenue,, Mrs.Muriel Timmons, Quebec, Que., Henry Robert, Lennox-ville, Pierre LatTance, 174 King St,, W., Emile Lafontaine, 301 Wellington S.Miss Brenda Clow-ery, 43 Mt.Plaisant St., S.A.C.Witten, Montreal, Grace E.Bol- water Inn, for Mr.and Mrs James Cruden, who are leading for Alberta.Upwards of fifty guests were present and sat down to a turkey dinner.The guests represented the Pipe Line staff here and representatives from all the stations from Portland, Me., to Montreal.After the meal there were speeches and toasts given and the stall from this, station presented Mr.Cruden with a fine gold wrist watch and Mrs.Cruden was presented with a hand bag.They both thanked their friends in a few well chosen words.Mr.and Mrs.John Irwin, who are leaving shortly for Montreal (lue, 122 Wellington St, N., Emelia vvere ai50 presented with gifts.A (Cote, Lennoxvilie, Que.\t| stick pin for Mr.Irwin, and a \u2022«A/v ALSO\u2014AN EXCITINO NEW HIT Franchot Jean\tMarc TONE\tWA ILL ACE LAWRENCE in \u201cJIGSAW\u201d COior.av TECHNICOLOR LAST TWO DAYS! bit.STARTS WEDNESDAY \\CADEMY AWARD WINNER Of.IV! \\ DR HAViLLAND IN \u201cTHF.HEIRESS\" with Montgomery ( lift.Ralnh Richardson.\"DANCING IN THE DARK,\u201d with William POWELL, Mark STEVENS.Bet-sy DRAKE.A.R.Tibbitts, 58a Court St., Lydia Cote, 45a Princess St., Alex Davidson, 1 King George St., Bill Parr, Can.Ing.Rand, Jenne D.Morin, 1 St.Charles St., Thomas Vlahakis, 74 Bowen South, Mrs.William Lavallee.97 Montreal St., A.Boislard, 112b Brooks St., Mrs.Trefîle Leblond, 10 St.Louis St., Neil Gordon, Brompton, Que., Mme.A.Michaud.86 Court St., Apt.7., Gisele Hebert, 120 St.Louis St., R.St.-Germain, 64 Courcelette St., Jos.E.Fontaine, 23 Laurier St., Mme F.P.Vaillan-court, 119 King St., VV., Apt.5, L.A.Salter, 230b King St., W\u201e John E.Murray\u2019, 105 London St.,] Henri Gaudette, Rock Forest, Que., Leopold Labbe, 176a Blvd.Alex ] uiDDv riarv~\u201dii\\ andre, Antonio Cameron, 1 St.j HMKï «.«KlTr J* j Thpvcsc Sti Bruce Duncan, Len-; noxville, Que., Florian Bergeron,] 222 - 7th Avenue, Charles Kings ley, Lennoxvilie, Que., Mr.Cann, Royal Bank, Irene Cantin, j JOANNE DR»1 brooch for Mrs.Irwin, from the stiff here.They both thanked their friends poi- remembering them.An enjoyable evening was spent.Their friends here wish them success in their new homes.General Notes Services at the Mansonville Baptist Church will begin again for the summer, on May 7.Air.and Mrs.Wilbur Cook and to \u2018b8 family and Mr.and Mrs.Michael ; Cook spent a day with Mr.and Mrs.Trifley Cote, at Vale Perkins.Mr.and Mrs.Ross Claik and daughter, Elaine, of St.Cesaire, spent the week-end with his parents, Mr.and Mrs.H.M.Clark.Mr.and Mrs.Cedric Gilman, of Montreal, were week-end guests of Mr.and Mrs.Joseph McGivern.Mrs.Gilman is remaining for a week and expects to move to Vale Perkins soon into her brother\u2019s house.Miss Angelina Davis, of Man-sonville, is spending a few days with Mr.and Mrs.Joseph McGivern.Mrs.Guy Smith spent a day with Mr.Ernest Aiken and Mrs.Gladys McKelar, at Duntun.Mr.and Mrs.Lawrence Smith, of West Hill, were calling on Mrs.O.M.Smith and Mr.and Mrs.Arnold Aiken, one evening.Mrs.Charles Flink returned to weeks with Mr.and Mrs.William Clark.Mr.Herman Sargent and Mrs.Gerald Warner, of North Troy, Vt., were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Oscar Sargent.Mr.and Mrs.J.P.Cruden have left for Montreal and Toronto, Ont.They will fly from Toronto their new home in Alberta.Greek Cripple Aided By Canadian Science Mirror Best Bet When Selling Hats Vancouver\u2014W\u2014When it comes - a (.so\ti \"THE MAN ON THE\tj EIFFEL TOWEL\t, Montreal\u2014;®\u2014Mary Coulacuo, a pretty 24-year-old Greek girl who] to hats, a saleswomen doesn\u2019t even had to be carried from a ship to have to open her mouth.Mc-j the Montreal dock with a smashed j \u201cYou don't even have to do the Shei\u2019brookc, spine seven months ago, is leaving selling the mirror will do it foi 120 Alexander St.J for j,cr homeland\u2014under her own | you,\u201d says Miss Evangeline Craig Itfl1 Charles Stenson, 45 Queen St., i Aline T.N.Letendre, G.Lussier,] 37 Kingston St., H.A.Plow, New j (Sherbrooke Hotel, Mr.L.Richards ] 21 Belvedere St., J.M.Roland, 21 : Fairmount St.Suzanne Vallee, 54a ] Camirand, Wilfred Hamel, Lac ; ] Megantic, Que., Mrs.Jane Matthew, 95 Wellington St., Mme.Yvonne Laliberte, 325b King St., W., Geral Sutton, 12 London St., Stanley Saunders, 164 Melbourne St., Albert Langlois, 9 Arthur J Lane, Romeo Fortier, c/o Veterans] Taxi, Mrs.Wilfrid Bellefleur, Lac Megantic, Irene Cantin, 120 Alexander St., Mme.Jeannette Lacroix ] 20 Short St., Fern Lareau, 59 i Alexander St.Paul Allard, 151a Queen St., Lucien Cantin, 120 Alexander St., Mary K.Frame, Windsor Mills, A.Lacombc, 2?Landsdowne St., Mr.T.Elliott, 43C King St., W., Denise Chateau-neuf.J9la Drummond St.W.R.BoisvWt, 265 - 6th Ave., Apt 6.(Adv.) steam.Mary will not be walking but it will be next best thing to it.She still needs leg braces and crutches.The girl injured in an automobile accident in Athens in March, 1948, and was told she would never walk again.Eighteen months later she met Dr.Arthur E.Elvidge.of the Montreal Neurological Hospital, who was visiting Athens.Dr.Elvidge advised her to come to Canada where medical science here and the paraplegic rehabilitation centre could help.Taylor, who runs her own millinery-designing establishment in Toronto.\u201cThat\u2019s the only way to sell a hat.All you have to do is produce By DOROTHY W ADDINGTON ] Paris\u2014(Reuters)\u2014Opening of j che buds on the horse chestnut 1 trees which line the Champs-Ely i [sees is the signal for every Paris-' | ienne to think of her spring ward-i robe.And for the traditionally smart Parisienne, this is indeed a carefully planned venture.In all budget groups, the new spring wardrobe consists of one of possibly two dresses and a suit or a co*t depending on the last season\u2019s pur-, chase.Parisian women fail roughly into ] three shopping groups.The first is \u201cchateau madame\u201d;] j next there is the housewife and ] finnally there is the working girl, i Here is how each goes about it.Chateau madame dresses at one of the top (hautecouture) fashion houses.Although a steady client of one house, she will undoubtably first do the rounds of all the top collections.Then, in the setting of luxurious grey carpets and crystal chandeliers she makes her choice of the best which Paris dressmakers have to offer.She generally buys her suits in one house and her evening clothes in another.The housewife: She starts her shopping with visits to as many collections as she can get invitations for.For her, to get an invitation becomes something of a problem and it is first a matter of calling upon all her friends who might have an acquaintance in the fashion house.Once inside, each line she sees at the collection has to be applied to her last year's wardrobe\u2014the black dress which can be brought up to date with white organdy cuffs; last year\u2019s hems that must he shortened this year.\u201cLittle Dressmaker\u201d Combining ideas from the collections and a good fashion maga-; zine, she arrives at roughly the style she wants.The next stop .is a visit to her \u201clittle dressmaker.\u201d By taking the sleeve from one j dress seen at Faith's, perhaps the j corsage of another at Dior\u2019s and I still another line from a dress seen at Piquet\u2019s a new design is made i up.The finished product is always the scientific and medical aspects of narcotic control and to research on the whole problem.Another big task of the division is prosecution of drug addicts and pedlars after their arrest by the Mounties or municipal police.In close touch with the situation, Mr.Hossick says the places which\u2019 give enforcement officers the most trouble are Vancouver.; Edmonton, Calgary, Winnipeg, Toronto and Montreal.The Maritimes have been comparatively free of heavy drug traffic for some time.In addition, rigid enforcement has practically closed off the illicit drug channels on the Pacific coast, he said.Most widely used drugs are opium, morphine and heroin, all - of which are strongly habit-forming.Others used to some extent are marihuana and coacaine.These ! two are not particularly habit- spends precious time reading her favorite fashion magazines.The French magazine carefully and thoroughly analyzes all the new lines.These magazines, coupled with the complete reports of the collecticns in the newspapers, act as her personal fashion service.Next she starts to look at small stores which carry ready-made dresses.The piece goods department receives considerable attention.too\u2014with a view to a new blouse made to order, or possibly a skirt.The average salary of a secretary is about 18,006 francs or $22.50 a month.The purchase ot the smallest article is tremendously important.A tailor-made blouse, for example, will cost her about 1,200 francs (about $3.50) at a department store.PERRY CARMAN Trio Featuring RODDY ELLIS.M.C.& Vocalist Playing your favorite requests * nightly CHICAGO FAIR-1950 SPEED UP that Slow Cash Cycle George S.A\\ay Company 13iOVYU/»*- ^OVJvVLUAvn^ Eastern Division 122 tost 42nd Street, New Toril 17, N.Y.Established 1925 CHICAGO (AIR 1950 B0YS!-GIRLS!13 to18 dor't put up with a m COMPLEXION Do thi : Cleanse with Cuticura Soap\u2014it\u2019s dif-terenti medicated.Then apply Cuticura Ointment to help clear up pimples, rashes and blackheads.Cuticura often succeeds when others fail.Buy at your druggist today.CUTICURA Olh THE NT \u2018sKg; PROCLAMATION NATIONAL TOURIST WEEK A National Tourist Week shall be held again this year throughout Canada from May 1st to the 7th in order to promote this important industry, which has brought to this country last year the imposing sum of $280,000,000, of which $2 70,000,000, in American dollars.On this occasion, I request all the citizens to contribute to the success of this Tourist Week by showing great courtesy and a hearty hospitality to strangers who will visit our City during the coming summer season, considering them as our guests and giving them every attention; expressing in this way our desire to have them visit us again in the future.The tourist industry is profitable to all, including hotel keepers, merchants, restaurant, garage owners, etc.I have, therefore, great pleasure in officially proclaiming the week of May 1st to the 7th as Tourist Week \u201d, in Sherbrooke.GIVEN AT SHERBROOKE, this 29th DAY OF APRIL 1950.C.B.HOWARD, Mayor.models in which the customer looks ] .a personal one, and the cost about her best, rest.\u201d A chapeau the way a francs, roughly ,\t4,000 to 12i,0'00 The mirror will do the ! $12 to $36).j Those \u201clittle dressmakers\u201d who must be built aroundi serve the not-so-rich, are a group OUT OUR WAY a % Calvert .Mount Royal I All the girl had was an unshake\tnevv s),ort hair dos.\u201d able optimism that her helpless] limbs could carry her normally again.The Montreal doctors decided | upon physiotherapy and after three j months she was able to stand with ] the aid of leg braces and crutches.] La«t Christmas she was dtscharg- ] ed from hospital and and lived | with a family in suburban Mont- ] women does her hair.; by themselves.Working in tiny That\u2019s one of the reasons why this apartments or with dummies set spring\u2019s bonnets remain for the ¦ up in the corner of their salons, most part perched on the back they turn out beautiful examples! of the head.The forward tilting ; of French workmanship, ones are not catching on, because The working girl: Hers is a they\u2019re simply not flattering with completely different problem.The ' time factor is important and she By J.R.WILLIAMS Canadian Ulhishg I real west.wonder?\u201d she asked.\u2018That would Doctors are still undecided whe-1 simplify everything.\u201d\t| ther Mary will walk unaided again.\u2019] Steve Cochrane, who is vaca- ! But to the pretty brunette that is i tioning on a farm, wrote publicist ] nothing, \u201cI am determined to Hary Mines at Warners: \u201cI walk- walk.\u201d slie says, ed up a nine-mile hill and discovered that is was nine miles back to 1\t\u2018 the farm.Not at all like the mo-jj0nger and^n more stylish modes,\u201d vies,\u201d\tGeorge told hairdressers\u2019 convention La raine Day is about to sign ortjhere.\u201cOn the other hand, ladies, the dotted line for a N.Y.video\tthe present trend in fashion show from the Yankee stadium, j 0f razor cutting, urchin cuts, tulip I cuts and other short styles, are j reversing the order of the day!\u201d George said lack of interest by the younger male generation in barber ing opens the possibility that ! women may soon be employed in Southsea, Hampshire, England men\u2019s barbershops.\u2014 (P: \u2014Many British men are grow- \u201cThe intake of new blood has ing their hair longer than their almost ceased,\u201d he said.\u201cIf this wives, says President W.J.L.position continues for a few move George of the National Hairdressers years the employment of males Federation.\t1 in men\u2019s saloons will be almost \u201cMen are wearing their hair, a thinsr of the oast.\u2019\" Men\u2019s Hair Longer While Wives Shorn MO.KlOi MO/ NOT ON NOUR LIFE/ NO.HAMR I WOM t allow IT/ SEE TH' GUY EASE !W AND JUMP OUT?HE TOLD ME HE WAS GONNA HIT TH' BULL FOR A MEW LATHE CHUCK, UT HE THINKS FOUND HIM IN A BAP 'NO* HUMOR?\"NO\u2019 IS JUST AS A DECEIVIN' AS\u2019YES\u2019/ TH' BULL'S REALLY IN HIS BEST HUMOR- HE'S 1 REFUSIN\u2019 TO LET HAMP TAKE A dirty job; V' r- ill l NEW HOSPITAL PLAN FOR FAMILY GROUP AND INDIVIDUALS UP TO AGE 70 HOSPITAL - OPERATIONS - DOCTOR BILLS Also add complete POLIO PROTECTION to your present hospitalization for a few cents a month- FOR FULL INFORMATION Write To: HOSPITAL PLAN, 248 Bank Street \u2014 Ottawa, Ont.\\ «-2I THE NOE'S\tIT ni \u2022 \u2022 om UP PwiuU'VM'A THE NEW SHERBROOKE HOTEL SHERBROOKE\u2019S LEADING HOTEL Air - conditioned halls and rooms for banquets, conferences, weddings, dances, exhibits.etc._* TELEPHONE 2600 The Restaurant The best foods at the most reasonable prices.Courteous service - Music.The Mayfair Room and The Canadian Club Dancing from 9 o\u2019clock every evening except Sun.The Wilbryn Lounge Business men\u2019s plates served noon and evening.Hammond Organ during the cocktail hour and evening WANTED \u2014 FOR OUR AUCTION We need anything of value \u2014 New or Old From the cellar to the attic \u2014 even Gold Proceeds for Welfare from Everything that's Sold! KIWAN1S CLUB OF SHERBROOKE INC.Please Phone 3927 or 2116 Sherbrooke and 70 or 167-R Lennoxville.Ije \u20ac\\tv $age SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC.MONDAY, MAY 1, 1950.ONCE \u2014 TWICE \u2014 THREE TIMES \u2014 SOLD! KIWANIS ANNUAL AUCTION AND WHITE ELEPHANT SALE Friday.Saturday, May 3th.6th \u2014 Hcltidcre \\rmoury Truck will call for donations \u2014 Proceeds Welfare Space by: Sherbrooke Auto Electric Inc.Red Cross Opens Whole Blood Drive With Opening Of Clinic Here May 8 The Canadian Red Cross opens its annual drive for whole blood here on May S with the arrival of the blood-donor clinic at the New Superior School on King Street, it was announced today by Red Cross authorities.Scheduled for a five day stay in Sherbrooke, May 8 to May 12, the mobile clinic will also make previous appearances at Lennoxville on May 2, Windsor Mills on May 3, East Angus and Cookshire on Ma; 4, and Rock Island, Beebe and Stanstead on May' 5.The objective of the forthcoming \u2022whole blood drive is to provide local hospitals with whole blood and plasma free of charge, which in turn, will be administered to wanting patients at no cost.Red Cross officials said that donors will be given a haemoglobin test before being registered, and only those in good health will be permitted to give a maximum amount of 380 cc\u2019s of blood.Cards will be sent to individual donors bearing information with regards to blood grouping and RH factor.Authorities say these cards should be carried by donors at all times as a protection in the case of accident or illness.To the civic-minded citizens of the community Red Cross officials appealed: \u201cGet behind this greatest ,of peace time services.Enroll as many volunteers as possible and render a service which will, without doubt, help our hospital pati-ents.\u201d \u201cNever forget, blood is life! Give your blood that others may' live!\" Are You Moving This Spring ?If you are moving this Spring, change your present piano for a new modern space-saving WILSON piano.\t W We need additional used pianos at this moment to take care of the large demand for summer homes.We are prepared to give you an extra generous allowance if you exchange your piano at this time.The generous allowance and our usual easy terms make it definitely in your interest to exchange your piano now.The model illustrated is our style 50.H.C.WILSON & SOIS, LIMITED 37-43 Wellington Street North Sherbrooke, Que.HAVE YOU SEEN THE NEW Ik HP à Visit our store.ond see for yourself why everyone's raving about the new feature-perfett Kelvinators.They're just what you've waited for! For beauty.value.and long-lasting service.it's Kelvinafor of course mn GET THE SPACE GET THE BEAUTY! GET THE BUY! ft AxwflBI SSI\tSt ^\t\u201d REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS Mrs.Frederick Edwin Deacon | to Frederick W.Hunting of part of lot 356, Lennoxville.Rene Hebert to Alfred Labbe of 1 lot 15h-161, Range 9 Ascot.Omer Douville to Lucien Dou-^ ville of the undivided L of part of lot 971, Orford.Dominion Textile Co.Ltd.to Romeo Rousseau of lot 1536-43, South Ward.Louis F.Codere to Hector Morin of lot 730-24, East Ward.Ferdinand Latulippe to Hubert Fortier of lot 7-255, South Ward.' La Caisse Populaire Sociale de Man Escapes From Jail, Is Recaptured Gerard Blais.28, is back in Winter Street Jail cells here today-after more than three days of freedom.Blais, a local resident, was serving a one-year sentence for theft and had about six more months to serve.Biais broke out of jail on Thurs- | day and was captured by police Saturday evening as he attempted to enter his former home.Two local constables had kept a ; three-hour watch on the empty j house and when the man attempted to break in through a rear window he was arrested.Provincial and Municipal police worked on the case and it is not known yet what charge will be lait against Blais.Word of Blais' escape was withheld from the Sherbrooke newspapers by the police but was released to the Montreal newspapers on Saturday.Local police said they did not want to announce the escape because it \"would tip off Blais.\u2019 They said the announcement in Montreal was made by the Provincial Police.Soil Conservation Is Discussed At Final Tribute Meeting Of Farmers In Lennoxville Is Paid To Mrs.Stracchino Mrs.T.J.Rolston Of Vancouver To Address Women\u2019s Canadian Club 5208,000 Paid Out Here Blue Cross Plan I At the annual meeting of Quebec) Hospital Service Association (the) non-profit Blue Cross Plan), held last week in Montreal, E.Duncan Millican, Executive Director, announced that $208,000 have been paid by the Blue Cross for hospital care given to local residents who were hospitalized in Sherbrooke county hospitals.It was also announced that over) | 200,000 Quebec residents have now) been hospitalized under the Blue) Cross Plan since 1943, and that) Blue Cross paid over $11,000,000 in settlement of their bills, to its 75 aMiliated hospitals in Quebec.J.R.H.Robertson was elected | chairman of the Board of Governors; A.Stewart McNichols, vice-chairman; Ernest Charron, D.D.S., L.D.S.honorary secretary, and Irenee Monette, honorary treasurer.Continuing expansion throughout Quebec, Blue Cross now has regional offices in Sherbrooke, Quebec, Chicoutimi, Hull and Three Rivers.Those offices were opened with a view to providing adequate service to all groups, and keeping Blue Cross in constant contact with residents of the most distant localities.Tn 1949, concluded Mr.Millican, Blue Cross paid 97,926 hospital, surgical and medical bills for Quebec residents.Total number of members enrolled, as at 1st January, 1950 was: 504,179 under the hospital plan, 359,318 under the surgical plan; and 254,670 under the medical plan.Quebec Blue Cross is now the largest medical services plan in Canada.Sherbrooke to Edouard Gilbert of part of lot 376, Lennoxville.Camille Pelletier and Uxor to La Société de Rehabilitation, Inc.of part of lot 252, parts of lot 253, part of lot 254 and lot 255, North Ward.Wilfrid Grégoire to Armand Rousseau of lots 4-8 and 12, lots 5-11, 12, 13, 19, 20, North Ward.Romeo Allard to Albert Gali-peau of part of lot 23k, Range 4 Ascot.Antonio Lajoie to P.Henri Gravel of lot 1379, South Ward.Champlain Oil Products, Ltd.to La Cite de Sherbrooke of part of lot 64, Orford.Wilfrid Galipeau to Mrs.Cleo-phas Cyr of lot 729-156, East Ward.Florent Cote to Willie Auclair of lot 730-69, East Ward.Philippe Doyon to Aime Bergeron of lot 15a-141, Range 8 Ascot.Philippe Doyon to Mrs.Clarence Audet of lot 15a-33, Range 8 Ascot.Frederic A.Gelinas to Mrs.Wilfrid Plouffe of lot 5-5, South Ward.Wilfrid Grégoire to Albert Noel of part of lot 54, Orford.Gordon Smith to Gerard Champagne of iot 64-27, Orford.Omer Roy to Stanislas Belanger of lot 730-27, East Ward.Mrs.Charles Tremblay to Misses Jeanne and Annette Tremblay of the northerly- Vi of lot 179 and the southerly % of lot 180, South Ward.Louis Bertrand to Leo Scala-brini of lot 730-6, East Ward.Much interest was shown by ! farmers of the district in a survey or.soil conservation made on Friday evening, in the Lennoxville , Town Hall, during the two day-farm conference sponsored by* the Sherbrooke District Farm Forum A.'-sociation and the Sherbrooke District Concentrated Milk Producers.A lively discussion took place on the signs of trouble which have been seen in the Sherbrooke district in this connection.It was tourd that soil was carried from the fields into muddy streams, that ditches were filled with soil from the fields, that wells and springs are drying up and the water level dropping.Over 75 per cent of those present had witnessed flood damage to buildings and lands as well as wind damage to same.It was discovered that more fertilizer is needed to maintain yields.Loss of soil from fields was attributed to water and wind, to overeutting and to lack of young growth in woodlots.Methods of controlling the trouble, which were suggested at the meeting, were reforestration of land unsuitable for farming, keeping stock out of woodlots, more crop rotation, pasture iniprove-mert \u2014 more suitable varieties and mixtures, more attention to meeting fertilizer needs, beUer use of manure and lime, modified contouring.and dams for flood control.It was pointed out however that reforestration of land unsuitable to farming, better use of manure and lime, modified contouring and dams for flood control, recuire government assistance or action, while the other methods can be handled by the farmer, if he has the proper information as to what to do.An interesting film was shown by J.S.Cram, of Macdonald College, and was much appreciated by the various farm forum representatives at this meeting.On Saturday morning R.L.L \u2019 E c u y e r , Farm Economes Branch, Quebec, spoke on farm management, giving a survey of the cost of milk production among concentrated milk producers in the Townships.In 1948-49, in the four counties, Sherbrooke, Compton, Richmond and Stanstead, (48 herds) the net cost of producing milk was $3.48 per cwt.The return was $3.34, therefore the farmer suffered a net loss of 14 cents per cwt.On the low cost farms, some farmers had a cost as low a $2.50 while others reached a high of $5.00.The subject of farm financing Development Of Resources May Lower Taxes Granby.Que., May 1.\u2014 (It \u2014 Prime Minister Louis St.Laurent said here Saturday that hope for a lighter tax burden in Canada lies in the ultimate development of the nation\u2019s natural resources.Addressing the 50th anniversary of the city\u2019s board of trade and Chamber of Commerce, he said that discoveries of oil in Alberta and iron and titanium in Labrador would eventually make Canada an exporter of these products.\u201cOur annual oil imports from the United States have always represented a heavy expenditure,\u201d Mr.St.Laurent said, \u201cbut the day is not off when our oil fields will enable us to save millions of American dollars each year.\u201d \u201cIron ore discoveries in the Labrador region can make this country one of the most important suppliers of this mineral in America \u2019 \u201cA marked increase in development of our natural resources,\u2019 he added, \u201cwill yield greater wealth to the country and enable us to discharge our responsibilities ant.eventually lower taxes.\u201d The Prime Minister spoke of social security as a form of insurance to protect man from economic burdens.fvi ee: LJ E3 I\u2014 E & 25 Belvidere St.South 25 King St.West F-QJF^fXJITLJFRE \u2014\tTelephone 4410 \u2014\tTel.5060-W RED CROSS BLOOD CLINIC to be held in §t.George\u2019s Church Hall LENNOXVILLE Tuesday, May 2nd from 2 to 5 P.M.and 7 to 9 P.M.was treated in the afternoon by Floyd F.Griesbach, secretary,' Quebec Farm Forums.Representatives wc-e again divided into groups for this meeting and were required to elise'uss the question \u201cWhen is credit required on a farm, \u201cWhat credit services are available to farmers under Quebec Law\" and \"How eio these services suit credit requirements on the farm?\" It was the opinion of the gathering that credit is required when a man starts on a farm.It is also necessary for the purchase of ) equipment, for improvements to fields and buildings.Seasonal credit is required for seeding, and for emergencies.One £roup held that it should only be used when it is certain to bring returns.Credit services available to farmers under Quebec law were listed as Quebec Loan, Ferlerai Farm Loan.Federal Improvement Loan, Housing Act, Banks, Credit j Unions and local lenders.A short ; discussion took place on the suitability of these services to the av- ) erage farmer.At the close of the two day conference a short period was allotted for remarks about the conference, what the representatives did and did not like about it, and suggestions for the future.On the whole it was considered to have been a most successful eon- ; ference and representatives expressed their satisfaction at the) manner in which it had been con-1 ducted, with each man being given the opportunity to bring up the; particular problem or problems: which hud faced him and other farmers in his district, during the past year.TV.P.Laberee, of Bulwer.sug gested that it would be a good idea : to sponsor a \u201cgreener pastures\u201d! competition, with entries spread throughout the area.Charles Drummond, chairman of) the conference, worded a resolution] to the effect that the Farm Forum committee appoint a sub-committee to study the question of the competition an,I to advise the other counties to Wo likewise.Further action could then be left to the committees.Mr.Griesbach, in closing the conference.thanked the committee for organizing the affair, and the Farm Forum representatives for their interest and active participation in the meetings.Mr.Drummond expressed the thanks of the representatives to Mr.Griesbach, and the other speakers who had helped to clear up seme of the very serious problems facing the farmers today.$114 In Fines Coüected Tills Morning It was a profitable day for Recorder's Court this morning as $114 in fines was collected.One woman out on $50 bail for vagrancy failed to appear and thus lost her money while a man out of the same charge lost $20 for failure to appear.Two drunks paid fines of $5 each.Seventeen motorists were fined $2 each for violation of municipal traffic by-laws.Final tribute was paid today to Mrs.Selina Stracchino, widow of Achile Stracchino, who died at her residence at 51 Island Street on Friday evening after a long period of failing health.Mrs.Stracchino was in her 65th year Born in Sheffield, England, Mrs.Stracchino was the daughter of Mr.and Mrs William Hickman Pearson, of Sheffield.She came to Canada 44 years ago and had been a resident of Sherbrooke for the last 43 years.Her husband predeceased her in 1940.She is survived by one son, Edgar Stracchino, and a granddaughter, Victoria Stracchino.Two other sons, Leslie and Vincent predeceased her.Other surviving relatives are: three brothers, William Pearson, of Chesterfield, England, Geonte Pearson, of Grimsby, England, Edgar Pearson, of Bridlington, England.and two sisters.Mrs.Amedee Normand, of North Hollywood, Calif., and Mrs.E.A.Reekmans, of London, England, who is at present residing in Sherbrooke.Prayers were held at Mrs.Stracchino\u2019s late residence at 2.15 p.m.today, followed by the service at St.Peter\u2019s church.Interment was in Elmwood Cenigjery.The officiating clergyman was Canon Russel F.Brown.Suspension On Magog Police Mrs.T.J.Rolston will he the guest speaker at a luncheon meeting of the Women\u2019s Canadian Club of the Eastern Townships on Friday at the New Sherbrooke at l p.m.Mrs.Rolston.who was president story of her energy and vital interest in the world about her.Born and brought up in Vancouver, she has a son and two daughters there.Eight years a Mcmbij- of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia she has served as Chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Social Legislation.While active in local and Provincial affairs, Mrs.Rolston has not confined her attention to these.In 1947 she spent six months touring the devastated countries of Europe.This year she was four months in South America, and since her return has spoken to many Clubs in the West on what she observed on this journey.The topic of Mrs.Rolston\u2019s address will be; \u201cCircling South America.\" I\u2018or Automobile- Insurance -Call or See HENRY WARD 1568-1414\t-\t37 ïving St.West Sherbrooke, Que.Magog, May 1.A suspension j ordered on assistant chief of police, ( ledeon Rouleau, on Saturday, by Mayor Ernest Simard, of Magog, was lifted indefinitely yesterday at a private caucus of the town coun-I ail called especially to discuss the issue.The suspension was lifted on the request of chairman of the police committee.E.Boisvert, who claim that the Magog police force would he s.hort-hanilcd without the services of the assistant chief.On Saturday afternoon Rouleau had given a parking ticket to Mayor Simard, and Saturday evening he was issued his order of uspension \u201con several counts \u201d The mayor claimed that only the hind portion of the car was in the no-parking zone, and ns he had a very long car it was impossible to park it otherwise.\t, At the meeting yesterday the mayor said that though he did not want to be a dictator he would like the respect of all the town employees.He also said that he wished to keep the laws.M Its.T.1.ROLSTON of the Vancouver Women's Cana dian Club for four years and has already made several Canadian Club tours is a woman whose varied career tells an eloquent Tree Survey Will Begin Lennoxville The monthly meeting of the executive committee of the Len- ! noxville and Ascot Community Association was held on Thursday.One of the main topics was the tree planting project.The following proprietors were asked to complete the survey of their streets and adjoining streetf in order to find out the names of all proprietors wishing trees.Academy street; C.Christmas ami G.Loveland; W\u2019ilson street, S.Snow, Mrs.W.T.Pearson, E.Lennon; St.Francis and Atto streets, R.Coombs, C.Dougherty; Warren street, 11.R.Slater and L.Mansell.It was also decided that trees would be offered to the proprietors on High street.All proprietors wishing trees should make application not later than Tuesday next.Proprietors on other streets wishing trees should contact the committee and if trees are still available, they will be supplied with them.FLORISTS Tel.2119 COMPLETE YOUR SPRING DECORATING with smart new Venetian blinds in one of fifteen assorted shades of aluminum or flex-aluminum.Metal boxes and rails at 50c ss\t3S\tCan.and Dom.Sugar\t\u2022)\u2022>\t22 B Bathurst \"A\" \t\t27\t26'* B\tBorden's l\\t \t\t50'a\t\tCan.Silk Prods\t\t34\t Bell Telephone .\t40\u2019»\t41\t| Chrysler\t\t\tos'-»\ttiS \u2018s\t(,on>oIitIate me - eon 11 renee I had previously I msec openly on public platforms' i eia.\" Dr.Eti.l cott said.A f-i ler delivering an address in th« kremlin in March to the Supreme Soviet Council he had handed a \"'P.v of i! io the Canadian em-i bossy in Moscow.United Press Continued From Page 1 The II lh floor of the building is Trading Slow On Livestock Marts Today Montreal, May 1\u2014((IV\u2014Trading was slow because of heavier receipts on the two Montreal livestock markets today.Offerings consisted of 1,348 cattle, 125 sheep and lambs, 389 hogs and 919 calves.The cattle market was slow due to heavy receipts.Demand was weak because of the absence of one large buying firm.One mixed load of good and choice heavy steers brought 27.A few good cows brought 19-21, common 14-16, canners and cutters 10-14.Good hulls sold early bringing 19-22.Calves showed a lower tone, especially in the common class.Good and choice brought 23-25, common and medium 14-22.Sheep were bringing 16-17 for top grades.Prices on hogs were unsettled.Discharged Nurses End Stay-In Strike West Hartlepool, England.\u2014ffi \u2014Two dismissed nurses who staged a six-month stay-in strike in Hartlepools hospital finally have agreed to leave.Elsie and Elizabeth Driver, sisters, were dismissed last October after criticizing the food served the hospital staff.Racked by a nurses\u2019 union, they refused to vacate their quarters.Their stand brought an official probe and the resignation of the hospital management committee.But the regional hospital board upheld their dismissal.The sisters agreed to leave after the hospital management threatened to cut off their meals.They said they were given to understand their leaving would \u2018clear the way for negotiations on our behalf.\u201d utes of speeches.The massed hundreds sands were told to go horn.and avoid any clashes with the communist demonstrators, slill marching in the Lustgarten, a mile away in the Soviet sector.The famed Brandenburg gale, dividing line between east and west Berlin, was guarded on both sides by masses of Gorman police.In contrast to strag-rling crowds streaming into the western sector at the Tiergarten, the demonstration in the cast was organized to the last minute.The east-zone government put on a show by its \"police\u201d which the west claims is a Soviet-sponsored army.Four thousand east-zone police marched by in military formation led by a hand.These were followed by thousands of communist youth, marching 24 abreast.The east-Berlin parade is supposed to last throughout the day, going past a reviewing stand in the Lustgarten.the\teec\tipied by the\tNew York\tbur- \tCiUI\tof the United\tPress.\t ' u p\t1\tho pickets we\te posted on\tor- min-\t(1er\t- from Josoph\tJ.Panico,\tgon- \tera\t1 chairman, am\t1 William L\tAI- ium-\tlen C.\u2019l\tinternational .11.\tpresident of\tthc Xi ary said 8(1 of the 265 teleprinter operators and equipment maintenance workers on strike are employed in the New York bureau of I he United Press.Neary said federal mediators would meet separately with the union ami the company in an ef-fo.\u2019 to find a solution.BIRTHS Three consecutive Want may be inserted for $1.25.Ads DEATHS BOWEN At Broadview Hospital, Newport, Vt., on April 30th, LOO, to Mr.and Mrs.Thom a» Bowen (nee Myrtle Davis), n da ugh ter.BUCK -Ai the Sherbrooke Hospital, on April 28th, 1950, to Mr, and Mrs.Theodore Buck (ne# Agnes Bawdier), a son, Theodqrii Robert (Bobby).RAINVILLE At St.Joseph Hos-pital, Granby, Que., on April 29, Idid, lu .Mr.and Mrs.Ben Rainville (nee Grace Perkins), ot Waterloo, Que., a daughter, Mary Louise Florence.DONIGAN \u2014 At the home of her granddaughter, Mrs.Eugen Arnold, 213 Vimy Street, on Saturday, April 29th, 1970, ('.din rine Heatlierington, beloved wife of the late Joseph A.Doiiigan, in her 84lh year.Resting at.her lute residence, 371» London Stret \\ where family prayers will be held on Tuesday, May 2nd, at 2 p.m.followed by service in St.Peter\u2019s Church.Rev.Canon Russel E.Brown officiating.Interment in St.Peter\u2019s Church Cemetery.Blake\u2019s Funeral Home, Phone 404.In Memoriam, Births, Deaths, Marriages Card Of 7'hanks, $1.00 PER INSERTION Poetry included in In Merooria 20c per line extra.Addition! names over three.10c each.Engagement notice will be it serted in the Social and Person; column.IN MEMORIAM came into their own in America.Heretofore, this breed was almost entirely unknown here.Few breeder - exhibitors possessed Siamese cats because they did not have the financial wherewithal to purchase a s-pecimen.The average price of a Siamese cat purchased in England at that time was $1,000 or more.Present day prices are much more in line.Have yon read the Want Ads lately?Perhaps there is something advertised you would like to buy.HOOD\u2014In fond and lovinpr memory of our d^ar nupband and father, Thomas Hood, who departed this life May Is*, 1923.Ever remembered by MRS.HOOD, Wife.WINNIFRED, VERNA AND ALICE, Daughter?.MILLER In lovin» memory of John S.Miller, who passed away on May lat, 1919.Ever remembered by HIS WIFE AND FAMILY Lake Megantic, Qu*.LEWIS\u2014In lovinar memory of our dea' i brother, Thoma*.Tudor I^e-wis, who paired away April 30th, 194K.You never failed to do your beat.Your heart wa* true and tender, You worked ho hard for those you loved.And ieft ua U> remember We lost our best and dearest brother.Ever remembered by his «inters, MOLLY AND PEGGY Matrojr, Que.SPANSWICK\u2014In sad and loving memory of our dear eon, Sidney, who was kiilerl at WaterviUe railway crossing accident two y^ara a$ro, April 2£th,\t194-H .a o , our dear daughter, Dorothy, who left us j October 19th, 1944.Deep in our hearts lies a picture, More precious than silver or gold.It i* a picture of our loved on, $1.^ $ ; work sox, o pairs, $1.00; work shirts, $1.50; army boots, $2.75; hankies, 15c; work caps, 4Kc : 2 piece underwear SI.air force raincoats, $3.50.We al^o carry a line of tiresa pants, gabardine and wool worsted, from $4.96-$7.95 : Sanforized dregs fhlrta in air force blue, tan, grey and while.$2.95; light jacket* in blue and fawn in various atylea ranging from $2.95-$ 5.97».\tSmith Surplus Store, 272 Wellington.Phone 838.FINDLAY COOK STOVE, FIRST CLASS shape, coal or wood, hot water front.R.S.Lipsey.Lennox ville.Tel.221-R.PAINT, SUPBROLOSS OR FLAT, ALL colors $2.95 gal.and 85c qt.War Surplus paint $2.60 gal.Black paint $l.uU gal.City Delivery and C.O.D.orders accepted.A.Gilman and Son, 92 Wellington South.Tel.455 FOUR HEAD AYR.'HIKES REGISTERED, arcrediatod, 3 to 5 years old.One just freshened, other, to freshen soon.William Beattie.239 Main St.Cowanaville.40 SIT WEEK OIJ) PIGS AND TWENTY ahoats for sale.Henry Carrier, East Farnham.an f for top of car, cheap.Lorne Taber.\tnei rloca wsoc iieiu in j f0U0wjng books were placed and Boa 509.Richmond.\tAnglican Church, on Easter dedicat{£ The new bo,*, have \u2014-| Sunday early communion at .30 , been laced as memoriais replacing la.m., with another communion ser-] ^\tUaA e:n \u201d PUBLIC NOTICE Vice at 11 a m., and Evening Song : beC0J^ obsolete, 0na t\u2018he Toe annus, meeting of the Eaton Cemc- service, at 7 p.m.All three ser- in memory of Mr and Jir3.James rery A-o oct-n will he held i» the Hell vices were largely attended.Be- Wülj Ros ; b theix sons at Eaton, Monday evening.May 8th, 1959, [ fore the eleven o\u2019clock service, Mr.arlH\tThe otvfoe O Onever and Mrs.Ray Martin, of at 8 o\u2019clock.A.W LABEREE.Sec.-Treas.YOUNG SHORTHORN BULLS.READY for service, herd fully accredited and blood tested.C.C.Warner.Phone 302, Lennoxville.12.To Let 2-ROOM electric refrigerator and gas stove, person pr^feçable.Apply 90 Queen St.AUCTION SALE AT THE RESIDENCE OF Willy Campagna, St.Felix de Kingsey.1 Miles from Village, on Government Road.Tuesday, May 2nd, SALE AT 8 O\u2019CLOCK A.M.3 bones, 10, 5 and 4 years, weight 1,600 1,350 and 1,400 lb*.Holstein herd, 22 cows, 10 to freshen, 6 heifers.2 years old, 7 heifers, 1 y.ar old.purebred bull with! ,\tand daughters.\tThe other a prayer \u2022n\tj\t,v \u2022\tVw,\t/\tbook for the prayer desk *fiven by ville,\thad\ttheir\tlittle\tson\toaptized.| Mrs_ c w\tin mclr.orv of The sponsors were the child s par-,Mrs winifred Mart\u2019ini nee Hawley, ents\tand\tMr.Osborne\tQuinn.\tR«v.; Through Mrg.\tHannah Morrow\u2019s -I generosity new\tnumbers were purchased for the hymn board.The HEATED APARTMENT WITH\t, paper-.20 months old, 3 caivos, 3 yeerlings, this herd are ready for beef, 6 sows to NEW 5 ROOM GROUND FLOOR TKNK-ment.Drummond Road, hardwood finish, large cemented basement.$60.Also 4 room private resid nee.Terrill Ave.$30.Immédiate occupancy.Hebert's.110 Bel-viderc, Tel.3450 farrow in April and June, Universal milk-er, 3 pails, used 1 year.2 pairs double and Entirely rermTnted' GUARANTEED FOR International Diesel Power Unit International Model PD-40.\t57 H P, at 1250 R.P.M.Built in 1938.Equipped with radiator shutter and pulley and mounted on wooden soib-fcase.Completely overhauled.New crankcaee-crankshaft and bearings - camshaft \u2022 connecting rods and bearings - piston rings - vaivé* - clutch facings.Injection Pump canwpjetely overhaul-td.Radiator cleaned and repaired ON F 4 ROOM FURNISHED.HEATED.One 3 room furnished, heated.Adults only.Phone 1487 Physicians and Surgeons OR.ETHIER, PHONE «76.\t4 GORDON St.Sherbrooke.Urinary Distaaee Veterinary Surgeon WOOD W 4 R D APARTM ENT H E A T E L), h*.t water, range refrigerator, incinerator, janitor.Now available.Apply La Cie de Finance Des Cantons 1\u2019Est, *iA Wellington North, Room 104.Sherbrooke.SHERBROOKE VETERINARY HOSPITAL Dr.L A- Gendreau.67 Wellington So.DR.J.P.FORTIER B.A.L.M.C.C.Eye \u2022 Ear \u2022 Nose - Throat Eyes Examined (2 to 4 P.M.and 7 to 8 P.M.Daily) TeL 316\u2014New Continental Uldg.Sherbrooke.Que.STEVENS LEVER ACTION CAL.35 Rem., 22\u201d barrel.Gooey bolt action repeater Cal.22, 24\u201d Darrel, 12 guag* Mass Arms Single Shot Shotgun, 16 guage New York Arms Single Shot Shotgun.20 gunge N ickenbecker dou- J 0.Boarders Wanted ble barrel shotgun.All in good condition.reasonably priced.Tek phono Magog 3304 FLOOR SANDING \u201cDone the way you like it\u201d Expert Workmen\u2014Free Estimates ANTONIO MASSON 10 St.Antoine St.\u2014 Tel.1794-K FIRST QUALITY VENETIAN BLINDS ENTIRELY OF METAL \u2014 Also \u2014 WASHING and REPAIRS VENETIAN DISTRIBUTORS REG\u2019D 91 - 93 King St.West - Tel.3708-J F.Boudreau 2.For Sale or Exchange 1945 MODEL, 15 CW*T.FORD ARMY truck, 1-wheel drive, all steel box, 5 good tires.13,000 miles.Overhauled, good condition.Will sell or trade for light oar, 1912 model oi later, in good condition.Apply P.Boy, Sr., jScotstcwn, Quo.4.Property For Sale AYER'S CLIFF BUNGALOW, « ROOMS, fully insulated, new hot air furnace, including new gas stove, large quantity fuelj lot 70x160.Possession in 30 day.-Tel.Lennoxville, 299-W.AYER\u2019S CLIFF, 12 ROOM HOUSE.GOOD condition.Ideal for tourist or convalescent home, large grounds, garage.Tel.Lennoxville, 299-W.\u2022THE WILLOWS\u201d IN GEORGEVILLE re-opening for business May 1st.Phone 2159.Mrs.Tulk, Georgeville GOOD HOME AT RICHMOND.QUE., for elderly pensioners, $35 per month.Apply Mrs, B.Morriseey, Richmond, Que., P.O.Box 51.18.Wanted To Rent 2 «ingle harnesses, dump cart harn«&«, new Apex corn cutter, new Froet and Wood corn hinder with loader, used 1 year, corn - eder.blov/er, McCormick hay loader, used 1 year, new M.-H.rake.Frost and Wf\u2019od mowing machinr, 2 double wagons, manure spreader, wagon on auto wheels, ( buggy, M.-H.dise, smoothing and upring-tooth harrows, 2 plows, truck scale, 2,0(W) j lbs., drag s-aw, circular saw, stationary; rngine.2 engines, 6 H.P., engine, 3 H.P., Î of IV) H.P., in good order, blacksmith , outfit, 3 pairv double sleds, 2 sc-at d covered sleigh, new, 2 belts 1 50\u2019 the other 30\u2019, used i 2 years, potato sprayer, new horn cutter, clover and timothy seed, 25 tons hay, new fence wire, 2 e'cetrie fence 13 milk cans, milk pails, 30 chickens, chains, 75 ton eilo, olectric clippers, part of furniture.No reserve as farm is sold.Terms given at the sale.GERARD LAiFRANCE, Auctioneer.Danville, Que.Tel.26r2.30 DAYS.Price upon request.CHAS.CUSSON LIMITED 284 Ontario St.West, Tel: Plateau 8434.W A N TBD\u2014 F URN 1 SHED ROOM IN EN G -lish family.North Ward.R.Kenniaon, 193 Wellington South.4 ROOM Terrill Splendid location, immediate possession See Hebert\u2019s, 110 Belvidere.Tel.3150 PRIVATE RESIDENCE ne*ak Ave., larc AUCTION SALE Thursday, May 11th, AT 12:30 O\u2019CLOCK for Gerard Labbe, Cookshire-Lcnnoxville Road.6 crossed bred sows, one I'j year old Durham buli, pair of Belgian horses, 9 STORAGE SHED HAVING | years old, 1 yearling Belgian filly, 20 shoals, 4 months old, 7 shoats, 5 months old, 1 sow, double wagon, double eleds, driving buggy, hand plow, breaking plow, M.H.reaper, 5 ft.cut, cultivator, M.-H.eder, turnip cutter, hay rack, M.H.hay loader, disc and spring tooth harrows, good potato digger, double harnesses, 6 ft.mower, G milk cans, Do Laval separator.No.12, hay fork and pulleys, chains, neck yokes, eveners and all small farm tools.Part of household effects, hand washer, WANTED about 3,000 square ft et on ground floor and accessible to trucks.Un heated but dry.G.T.Armstrong ami Sons, Ltd.20.Wanted To Purchase CUSTOMERS WANTED FOR STRICTLY fresh eggs, ftesh poultry delivered weekly in Lennoxville and Sherbrooke.M.S.MacLeod, 588-W-2, Lennoxville.arge cemented basement.' jpQOO MUSKRATS WANTED AT ONCE, beds, bureaus and articles too numerous to 5.Lots For Sale Received this special order, it must be filled.See us first for your top prices.Sam Smith, 272 Wellington South.Tel.x;;s t BUILDING LOTS.CASH OR Situated in Huntingville.Tel.Lennoxville.F.COLLETTE TAILOR Suits made-to-measure Pressing - Repairing Métropole Building 37 King Street West Apt.-m Tel.3761 \u2014 Res.458-M 7.Farms For Sale TERMS- : WANTED 100 ACRE FARM.ON HIGH-429-K.¦ way, near tow\u2019n.State kind of land.Answer by letter to Clovis Cote, R.R- 1.- i Compton, Que.-24.Salesmen Wanted I FA RIM.60 ACRES.WITH OR WITHOUT_____\u2014-\t- I j stock and machinery.Good building*.| REMNANTS AND TEXTILES, BY POUND j close to Sherhiooke.Large quantity tim- | ber and cedar.Splendid location on highway.Reduced in price.Phone 299-W, L.nn ox ville._____________________________________________ j OVER 1C.0 ACRES.THREE MILES FROM Scotstown, on the Megantic highway, with bu« service.House and barn with I mention.20 cords of block wood, 25 cords of stove wood, 7 cords of stove wood, 500 S ft.fence posts, 1,000 six ft.fence posts, etc., etc.Farm is sold.ZEPH.ROUSSEAU, Auctioneer.L.H.HUNT, Clerk AUCTION SALE at Leon Cote and W.Veilleux, HELP WANTED Young men 22 to 28 years wanted.Must be bilingual and have at least high school education.Must be neat, hard working and intelligent.Good starting salary with excellent future prospects for the right party.Must be free to accept transfers if necessary.APPLY; HOUSEHOLD FINANCE CORP.22 Albert Street SHERBROOKE Mr.Fariner IS THIS YOUR PICTURE?and yard, low prices.Experienced sales-j man wanted, with car, to sell to stores.Eastern Townships district.Commission, j Aberton Company, 3167 St.Calhrinej East.Montreal 25.Teachers Wanted Electricity.Apply to Mrs.Murdo Murray.QNp, p Fully Licensed & Insured.Pruning - Taking Down -Spraying Plant & Pest Controls Now is the time to take down dangerous trees! 15 Elgin Ave.\u2014 Tel.3405-YV TREE EXPERTS General Construction Mr.JACQUES 11 Bowen South - Tel.2848-w SHERBROOKE BULLDOZER 15 Ton No Transportation Charge $8.00 an hour Scotstown, Que.8.Cars For Sale WILFRID DAIGLE BUYS FOlt CASD and sells on terms used cars.A'ppiy 55 Wellington South.Phone 2012-.I Residence 3172-J ROTESTANT QUALIFIED INTEK-mediate teacher for principal in Kin-ncar's Mills Consolidated School for coming term.Apply, stating qualifications, experiences, salary expected.Applications considered at once.Murray Nugent, Sec.-Troas.School Board, Leeds South.FORMERLY JAMES BIAIS* FARM Milos From Barford route 3 Canaan Road Thursday, May 4th, 1 O\u2019CLOCK !\t2 horscp 1\u2018200-lbs.6 cows, i 2-ycar-old hoif.r, 1 1-year-old heifer.1 year old bull.| 3 calves.23 hens, mowing machine, horse rake.2 farm wagons, spring harrow, man ure spreader, ?pair of harnesses, 3 pair | sleds, farm kettle, stone drag, M.-H.6 h.p.[ engine, grindstone, drag saw, circular!\tvriT saw, turnip cutter, buggy, 2 horse fork , U ^\t^ , Ivor.\t.- t- and rope, manure carrier.3 cream sep-| CAUSE THIS IS A PICTURE arators, 2 driving harnesses, set of pulley J OF A ROBBER, | blocks, clipper, 3 milk cans and pails.flowers on the altar were in mem ory ot the Hall, Tarrants, ana Hawley families.The Badminton Club held a meeting for the election of officers for the coming year.The new president will be William MacDonald, and the new secretary-treasurer, will be Eugene Bishop.It wt.s suggested that a financial report covering the year\u2019s activities be sent to Col.W.A.Bishop, along with a letter of appreciation for the privilege of playing in the Armory.The club presented Mr.Pro-vis with a sum of money, and thanked him for the interest he has shown towards the club during the season.Mr.Donald Pehlemann, who 'vas called home by the serious illness of his mother, has returned to Weston, Ont., where he has a position with the Hydro Electric Power Commission.Mr.and Mrs.George Astbury, Mr.and Mrs.Samuel Astbury and Mr.Oral Harrison, of Sherbrooke; Mrs.Helen Harrison, Messrs.Kl-win and Clifford Harrison, of Sawyerville; Mr.and Mrs.YV.0.McLeod, of Gould Station; and Mr.A.Pehlemann and daughter, of East Angus, were calling on Mr.and Mrs.Trevor Pehlemann one evening.Mrs.James Shacklady and little daughter, Kathleen, were guests of her parents, in Saint John, N.B., and also visited relatives in Sussex, N.B.Mrs.M.T.Stokes is visiting her daughter, Mrs.H.S.YVoodman, at Lakeside.Miss Eleanor Labonte, of East Angus, visited Miss Lucy Bown during the holidays.Rev.Father Audet, of Sherbrooke, was visiting Mr.and Mrs.E.A.Leonard.Friends are pleased to see Fathei Audet so much improved in health after his serious illness.Mr.and Mrs.John Moffat and daughter, Joan, of Magog, were visiting Mr.and Mrs.T.C.Bown.They were accompanied back to Magog by Misses Lucy Bown and Eleanor Labonte.Visitors of Mr.and Mrs.E.A.Leonard were Mr.and Mrs.Gilles Triiganne and little daughter.Jocelyn, Mrs.Paul Triganne and Miss Louise Triganne, all of Sherbrooke; Mr.Henry Leonard, of Quebec; Messrs.Leonard Hebert and Paul Legarie, of Magog; and Misses Rita Leonard, nurse-intraining, of Sherbooke; and Margaret Leonard, of Cookshire.All Forms of CLASSIFIED ADS Accepted Until 4 p.m.Day Previous to Date of Insertion (with the exception of Ads for Saturday) ALL FORMS OF CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, LEGAL NOTICES AND AUCTION SALES ACCEPTED UNTIL 4 P.M THE DAY PREVIOUS TO THE DATE OF INSERTION.For Saturday\u2019s Issue \u2014 12 o'clock noon on Friday.Stjecbrooke \"Dailq Becord Phone 62S2 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES CASH RATE \u2014 3 cents per word, minimum charge 50 cents for 16 words or less: three consecutive insertions.S1.25; six consecutiv* insertions $2.25.CHARGE RATE \u2014 4 cents, per word, minimum charge 75 cents foi 18 words or less.ERRORS on our part in advertisements will be rectified immediately on attention being called thereto.MARBLETON Miss Madeline Elliott, R.N., of Sherbrooke, has been a guest of her parents, Dr.and Mrs.Elliott.Mr.Ernest Gingrass, M.P.of Ottawa, was in town for the weekend and attended the funeral of the late Mrs.H.G.Weston William Hetherington has returned from Montreal and for the past few days has been quite ill.SUBSCRIBERS Receiving HOME DELIVERY may report missing copies or irregular service by calling 6262 before 5:00 p.m.For quick results Wants Ads.use Record We\u2019ll lend cash quickly to employed men or women willing and able to repay convenient monthly instalments.Cash quickly\u2014it\u2019s \u201cyes\u201d to 4 out of 5.Others not involved.Come in, phone, or write Tk^onol today.EXAMPLES OF LOANS OS 15 MONTH PUMENTPUN\t\t\t $ Cash You Get\t102.79\t205.58\t308.38 Repay Monthly\t$8\t$16\t$24 F I NANCE CO.Loans $50 to $1000 TW£ COMPANY, Above payments cover everything! Loam of other amounts, or for other periods, are in proportion.fCan.J ' THAT HKtS TO SAY Yfir' FINANCE CO.t v 1st Floor \u2022 Rm.103-4, CONTINENTAL BLDG.KING & WELLINGTON STS., SHERBROOKE V.G.Ferguson, YES MANager Phone Sherbrooke 3513\t£* Loans made to residents of all surrounding towns Personal Finance Company o^ Canada \u2022 wBmmam BE- PROTESTANT CENTRAL SCHOOL tllras^inK machine, 2 walking ploughs.1919 MERCURY SPORT SEDAN, FU1.U> equip IMMEDÏ\\TK1.Y.HOT SBKïBP-j er companion for elderly lady.A permanent posit'on for one who is capable, pleasant and dependatbL.Preferably G0-65 years of ajre.Salary $40-$ 15 per month.Personal interview neces-[ sary.Misa Flora J.Hussey, Massa-! \"ippi.Quo.moothinK harrow, cultivator, horse hoe, driving sled, scale cap.2,000-lbs., 235 sap bucket.'.100 bushels of oats, lot of hay, ¦^omc furniture, all will be sold.The farm is offered for sale.Terms : Cash.A.GRENIER, Auctioneer, 144 Main W'est, Coatieook.1VI 320.Box 745.BUT YOU COULD BE A ROBBER TOO AND YVORSE STILL YOU ROB YOURSELF BY TAKING MORE OUT OF YOUR SOIL THAN YOU PUT BACK.BE SURE AND LIME YOUR SOIL WITH 32.Situations Wanted Female YOUNG GIRL DESIRES FULL TIME position as nuise maid, preferably North Hatley.Write Box 243, Record.35.\tBusiness Opportunities WELL ESTABUSHED ELECTRICAL contracting concern ; doing electrical wiring and repairs in Waterloo and surroundings.Reason for selling poor health.W\u2019aterloo.P.O.Box 62.Tel.120-J.36.\tMiscellaneous ALTERATIONS DONE ON LADIES' wear, linens hand hemmed.Aprons made to order, many samples to choose from.Apply 17a Wellington North, Apt.10.AUCTION SALE FOR ESTATE OF George G.Kerr, May 2nd, 1950, AT 12:30 P.M.Farm Located On Highway Between Scotstown and Burv 1 3-piece solid light oak bedroom suite, with coil springs and spring filled mattress, 1 3-piece pink bedroom suite, with coil springs and spring filled mattress, 1 wa\u2019nut all-steel l>ed, l set coil springs, 1 cotton filled mattress, 1 large chest of drawers.2 small chest of drawers, 1 pull - out sofa and mattress, J Kro hier studio couch, 1 3-piece wicker set.1 walnut bookcase, 2 small tables, 1 card table, 2 kitchen tables and chairs, 2 locking chairs.1 battery radio, books, picture frames, tablecloths, bureau scarves, bedspreads, cushions, pillows and quilts, dinner service for 8, miscellaneous dishes and cutlery, cooking utensils, jars, lamps and crocks, 1 electric hot plate, 2-burner, 1 New Williams sewing machine, l American cream separator, 1 cutter sleigh, 1 buggy wagon, double sleighs, double harnesses and 1 driving harness, l mowing machine, 1 hay rake, 1 churn, farm and carpenter tools.Othtr items too numerous to mention.Terms: Ca*h.ARPHLH OLSON, Auctioneer AGSTONE REGISTERED ! AND INSURE BIGGER CROPS.; I In stock for immediate delivery.! | Costs a little more but is worth a lot more.j $4.50 per ton net DOMINION LIME, Limited Lime Ridge, Que.Write for free booklet on how to improve your land.NOTICE All apprentices having an apprenticeship booklet issued by the Building Trades\u2019 Joint Committee, must, between April 1st and 30th, return that booklet for verification, TO THE SECRETARY OF THE BOARD OF EXAMINERS OF THEIR RESPECTIVE LOCALITY.The Building Trades\u2019 Joint Committee of the Eastern Townships\u2019 District.29 Gordon Street.Sherbrooke.Mr.F.Hebert.37.Personals MOTORS IN STOCK »/g to 2 H.P.Single Phase 110 and 220 Vt.NEW LOW PRICES! 1/3 to 125 H.P.Three Phase.550 Vt.SPECIALLY PRICED FOR A LIMITED LIME! ALL MAKES AND SIZES OF MOTORS REPAIRED WIGGETT ELECTRIC REG\u2019D 19 Marquette Street \u2014 Phone 435 \u2014 Established 1903 d 1 HYGIENIC SUPPLIES I RUBBER GOODS) mailed postpaid in plain scaled envelop j with price list.Six aamplea 25c.\t24 samples, $1.00.Mail Order Dept., C-2.Nov.Rubber Co.Box 91.Hamilton.Ont.39.Lost & Found LOST REAR FENDER SHIELD, PALE: green, 3 chrome strip, between Mi'hv Spring Road.Reward.Phone Bud ! Howard, 100.LOST, SATURDAY MORNING, LICENCE X-116, property of Webster Motors.TeL 1273.40.Baby Chicks PULLETS AVAILABLE PROMPT SHIP-meiit, dayold to 5 weeks, starting from; $17.90.Also mixed.Ask for new price-! list.Brav Hatchery, Newington St., East Sherbrooke.Phone 2974 ; end H.Pncielcr, j Gicn Sutton.Low Cost \u2014 Expert Work NEW RADIOS as low as $19.95 RGSS-BERON Electric Limited 17 Frontenac Street \u2014 Tel.645 HOUSE FOR SALE AND DEMOLITION Tenders will be received by the City of Sherbrooke until May 17th, 1950.at 5 p.m.for the sale and demolition of a house situated on lot No.435 East Ward, bearing civic numbers 17-17a-17b-17c- and 17-d Bowen Street South.The purchaser must demolish the house and remove all material within three weeks following the date of the purchase.An accepted cheque equal to 10'< of the price offered must accompany each tender which must he enclosed in a sealed envelope marked: \u201cTENDER FOR HOUSE\u201d, addressed to: Ant.Deslauriers, City Clerk, City Hall, Sherbrooke, Que.The highest nor any of the tenders not necessarily accepted.KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED Commission Auction Sale Wednesday, May 3rd, AT 1 O\u2019CLOCK D.S.T.at W.S, Little\u2019s Sales Stables, EATON CORNER About 75 head of cattle consisting of fresh and springer cows, calves, bulls, about 20 head yearling and 2-year-old steers, horses, pigs, harnesses, and many articles too numerous to mention.Terms : Cash or certified cheques.R.M.DE2MERS, Auctioneer, Phone 376-W, Lennoxville.Que.L.H.HUNT, ClerK.UP TO THIS /WOMENT PlNCHFACE HA\u2019S traveled THE RACK ROAO UWNOTICeO.BUT NOW IT IS FARViE*.KOTCH\u2019S MISFORTUNE TO BE ABROAt) AT THIS LATE HOUR.' WHAT KIND OF A ' CONTRAPTION /S THBT, PINCHFACB ?, \"f'y-S.VOU\u2019LL WISH YOUD NEVep LMC BYES OH IT, NOTCH f I WAS GOlN \u2019 TO SHOOT YOU, BUT IT\u2019LL LOOK BETTER IF.,,.Æ\u2019 ' S X f .YOU SEEM VBE TH\u2019f VICTIM OP A HIT-AH'-PUN DP/VER P i\u2014CPOoe By Zane Grey \u2019ïfêÿT BRINGING UP FATHER LOOK OUT THAR?wm By George McManus C*4 veuvi**' Three consecutive Want may be inserted for $1.25.Ads 1\tK\t?¦ ri .faste, fur.W«rU rucmQ poe goodwe^s'sace/ WS f-'AE?A UUWDCEP P'.ECEO Oc DIGNES\u2014* ___ WITH YOU-WL* ItlK'vL- uav/E A =r \u2022.A.-F* 4AM^-THISI6| QCXX» IDEA \u2014 \" 5ILENCËS,_/ TWAMk'5 -A IT TH' NCI6E !! fllî> 4 29 IkJ\u2019 j'jFPjj F' SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, MONDAY, MAY I.1^50, Seveo A HANDY GUIDE TO EASTERN TOWNSHIPS\u2019 MERCHANTS AND BUSINESS SERVICES The vo* 1 Yÿ\u2019yât)/] LI\u2019L ABNER By A] Capp AYER\u2019S CLIFF H ARISON'S TAXI Ayer\u2019s Cliff, Tel.97 \u2014 Magog, SI.75: Rock Island $1.75: Hatley.$1.00; Way\u2019s Mills.$1.00: Coaticook.$2.50; North Hatley, $1.75: Cassville Church.$1.00: Town.25c.Special prices for groups.Huntingville Magog DRY SOFTWOOD SLABS For Immediate Delivery 4 ft.and 12 inch at our yard or delivered W.H.HUNTING 4 SONS REG'D.Telephone Lennoxville 152-W Cookshire Lennoxville MOVING?Call McKAY TRANSPORT REG\u2019D.C.Gilbert, Prop.Telephone Cookshire 103 Experienced Furniture Moving Anywhere \u2014i Anytime East Angus GOING SOMEWHERE CALL Lennoxville VETERANS TAXI 3 48 21-hour prompt, courteous sertice.BEEBE DRItt\tT) -\t/7\t/ safe nit VweyMâuud' JEAN LOSLIER INSURANCE POLICIES OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS.MAGOG 2a SC Patrick St.\u2014 Tel.271S DINGMAN\u2019S GARAGE 1$ Main Street \u2014 MAGOG New and Used Cars \u2014 Hillman & Studebaker \u2014 General Repairs W illard Battery.Goodyear and Firestone Tires Tel.3115 Day or Night BOSCO ELECTRIC REG\u2019D Dr.Jordan For Better Radio Service See CH1COINE Specialty \u2014 Battery Radios converted to electric.Sherbrooke \u2014 Tel.4822 East Angus \u2014 Pel.102 r 3 MILLFIELD Mrs.Arnold Butler ana Mrs.Willard Marshall, of Inverness, while motorir.\" to Thetford Mines one evening, had a very unfortunate accident.Mr.Marshall\u2019s car turned over on the highway leading to Thetford Mines, but luckily ri one was seriously injured and Mrs.Butler, after having been treated for shock, was able to proceed and spend an enjoyable evening with friends.Friends of Mr.Wesley Davidson are very pleased to hear that he has recovered completely from frost bites received last winter and was able to help Mrs.John Dempsey during the maple sugar season.They have also about completed cutting the seasons\u2019s fire wood.Mr.Herbert Wright and Mr.Champagne have had a very successful maple sugar season, on Mr.Wright\u2019s lot.AGONIZING PAINS OF ARTHRITIS RHEUMATISM Too can find quick relief with DOLCHM .the easy-to-take, prompt-acting tablets blessed by hundreds of thousands of sufferers from the pain of Arthritis, Rheumatism and Sciatica.Get this safe, reliable product today.There are many substitutes for DOLCTN now being offered, usually at higher prices.Be sure you ask for and pet the original DOLCIN Tablets.The letter \"It\" is stamped on every genuine DOLCIN Tablet for your protection.DOLCIN is sold by all druggists throughout the Dominion.1.00 tablets for $2.39\u2014200 tablets for $3.95 \u2014also available in bottles of B00 tablets Dolcin Limited.Toronto 10, Ontario.The Senior Birthday Club met at; the home of Mrs.T.Lees, in Rock Island, on Friday evening, April 21, to celebrate the birthdays of two of its members, Mrs.Agnes Gaiazzo and Mrs.Dorothy Mac-farlane.The guests of honor each received a puise of money as their gift.Many games were played and , prizes were awarded.Five quizzes were enjoyed with winners as follows: Mrs.Mary Wilson, Mis.Ina Wilson, Mrs.Grace Dezan.Miss Mary Lees and Mrs.K.Derusha.Refreshments were served includ-ing a birthday cake made by Mrs.G.Lees.Hostesses of the evening were Mrs.Henry Crawford, Mrs.G.Lees and Mrs.T.Lees.The members were sorry that Mrs.Macfavlane was unable to be1 present, as she had just returned from the hospital.The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs.Grace Dezan, on May 12.Mr.Arthur Hill has returned to jhis home in Selkirk, N.Y., after j S spending the holidays with his | uncle and aunt, Mr.and Mrs.Rus- ! i sell Wilson.Avon Dustin, of Boynton, was a | i guest of Mr.and Mrs.A.M.Sear-| I less during *the holidays.Mr.and Mrs.Conrad Haselton, of Brattleboro, Vt., were visiting re- i latives and friends in totvn over the week-end.Mrs.Lee Brown, Mrs.C.B.i Crook, Mr.and Mrs.Bernard La\u2014 j beree and two children, were in Marbleion visiting Mr.and Mis.Roy Weston and their two children.Miss Gloria Maxwell has returned home from St.George, N.B., where she visited her grandmother, Mrs.Arthur Maxwell, for a few : days.Mr.and Mrs.Gordon Cornell, of Montreal, were week-end guests, at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Rus-, sell W\u2019ilson.| Week-end callers of Mr.and Mrs.| Neil Brevoort were Mr.Raymond ! Sargent and son, Alan, and Mr.La-j 1 porte, of Montreal; Mr.and Mrs.j j Douglas Bliss, of Ayer\u2019s Cliff; Mrs.| George Sargent, of Sheldon June- ^ *©« oil A»pl>e*c*i Night 4 Dav Service 143 Main St.\u2014 MAGOG Tel.4715 or 4902 Clean Clothes Wear Longer .^ For efficient a service and * prompt deliv- ^ ery \u2014\tV | Call MAGOG 4439 \" w\t\u2014 for the ern DRY CLEANING North Hatley Stewart D.Reed General Hardware Sales and Service for Cockshutt Farm Machinery Beatty Bros.Barn Equipment Electric Pumps Asphalt and Metal Roofing De Laval Agent Complete Stock of Parts Lightning Rods \u2014 Free Estimates Telephone 7-r-2 North Hatley, Que.tion, Vt., and Mr.and Mrs.Tom Turcotte, of the town.Mr.and- Mrs.Eugene Shepard and several members of the family were in West Bolton to visit Mr.Charles Shepard, who is ill.INFECTIOUS DISEASE INVOLVING LIVER SPREAD BY WORLD WAR 11 By Edwin P.Jordan, M-D.During previous wars typnoio.typhus, smallpox, influenza and other infectious diseases have often caused serious epidemics.L World War II a disease cal\u2019cJ epidemic or infectious hepatitis, while not as widespread as some of the e p i d e mi es of previous wars, j h a s nevertheless caused a good deal of trouble.The infectious ____\tdisease ha> uo*'\" recognized in occasional outbreaks or individual cases for a long time and was formerly called catarrhal jaundice.It is now safe to say that it is an infectious disease involving principally toe liver.It has occurred in more or less widespread epidemics both, on this country and in many of the theatres of military operation.In about 85 per cent of the patients, there is an early period of tl-.e disease lasting a few days, which precedes the characteristic appearance of jaundice, or yellow coloration of the skin.In about one out of 10 the jaundice appears at the beginning.The early stage is usually accompanied by easy fatigability, slight nausea and almost complete loss of appetite About half of the patients have a fever of up to 103 degrees.Tne j jaundice often gives the victims an.intense yellow color of the skin and eyes and other mucous mem- j branes; sometimes the yellow coloration is very slight indeed.Headache is present in a few.After the jaundice has appeared the second stage lasts from about two to three weeks.A convalescent stage is recognized, too, lasting for one or two months.Usually from six to eight weeks is required for full recovery, though a few patients may not be quite well even at the end of several months.A chronic form has been described.Most seem to recover without any serious or permanent harmful effects.The most important part of treatment is to begin strict bed rest early and to keep it up for a long enough time.A diet containing a high proportion of protein foods is also used and seems to shorten the course of the disease.Succumbing to Science The cause of this condition is almost undoubtedly a virus which is a tiny living organism too small to see under the ordinary microscope.Infectious hepatitis was undoubtedly a more serious condition in the army overseas than among civilians in this country, but this difference can probably not be laid at the door of combat conditions.Although much has already been learned about this disease, we can confidently expect that much more will be known about it within a few years.This is a good example of how new diseases and new health problems keep cropping up as the old ones become conquered.A- - - NEVES :\t.\t^ , s.\u2022V\tNOBODY NEVER! \\*C S-EES Noeco AGiM WHAT TCM N A.NC3LES W,TW TXSEC GUN CARSON SIMPLE ONCE.VARMINT ON EARDaVc SEEN IT PACED THAT\u2014 j AH COOED 1 ft\" unu/.¦ r «Di a c T N A\\ LIVED EXPLAIN ANYBODY THIRD LsUNl S YEW \"\tWwAL\u2014 Ht N TM-SADDLE-'-y WONT nRE WHAT «4 three HAPPENED * T THREE GUN CARSON?________ -BUT AH HAinT GONNA\" It'S SO (c-utnur) EASY.THE.T ONCE FOLKS GOT TH HANG OF EVERYBODY D PL DOIN' I ¦twouldn't ex safe fo'hoo MANiTV EF Ah i.ET OUT TT-r, SECRET- I)» - T.< \u2022 it\" ; ' k-tr-VN.FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS By Merrill Blosser STARTING NUTTY.-_____ THROUGH I\u2019M COMING DOWN A-RORINO.FWr/ hnrorr TLWIVS l COFR Why) BN Nl»St.KVAi INC J WELCOME HOT UMOT f JOE PALOOKA By Ham Fisher KA'W THEN.YOU\u2019LL BE TRAININ' RIGHT 'ERE If-, LUNN\u2019ON AT SOLOMONS GYM AN' IF 'HAT\u2019S , SATISFEC TRY.Y\tYEAH .THAT'S 0\\AY.WE ] [ KIN DO ROADWORK IN V\tHYP! 'A- '\t\u2022 ABOUT ^\u2014, THEM SPARR NT I SENT CUT NOTICES AN Pill A 'S.1 H'ADvf RTlSrVi NT IN THE PAPERS.) JOf I IXPECT YOU'LL Bl 'EARN'\tVM» FROM\u2019EM FER H\u2019INÏERVlfVVS TA T H\u2019 T'DAY.AIN'T MANY i-| ( 7'MC froump iho.^ rrj] ; PARTNER*;- 7 I y NA! AFTI'RKr'oTTT^WRt BIGHT.PINKNfcy- J I\u20147 GRIVs ¦> r \u2019 ABOUT Ab TOUGH 1 A MAN AS I EVfR CAME V , UP AGAINST.AND CAN L.HE BOX\" UP.AN\u2019YOU NEED ?Y S duo____ IT'LL BE TOUGH C AN\u2019T Oil A Ft W V\\( f AN\u2019T GIT A FtW SPARRIN' PARTNERS.) NOT A ONE'S SHOWED/ PLENTY A , BOXIN' H VIC FLINT By Micline! O\u2019Malley and Ralph Lana H-sTWiVa+ecf ^WHO'S THAtYX'RECKON YOU ri BIOND UlLOW \\KNOW BETTER THAN NONE OF YOUlTri YANKEE SARCASM' YOU AVVYA»*' I CALLED YOU/ JFO HKrWsnn! IT WAS GREAT X A LADDER RUNG OF YOU TO COME,\\l5 SAWED THROUGH VIC.WHAT DO /BRAKES SUDDENLY YOU THINK OF [DON'T HOLD, ATRONK'ICODY WANTS YOU , DEAD./ EITHER YOU'VE \\ X YOU CALLED MRS.KYU TURNED UNLUCKY, ALEC-OR SOAAE - IN THERE WITH / I.YOU WIRE THE MR.STEEL?A ONE 'TWAS 1B STORY ?/FALLS OFF A SHELF./- I AVESDROPPING.' ' fe .ri' I V |\u2018AN* COPR 4»H> OV ^14 \u2019Tt hvilt,, INC By EdKar Marim BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES O^Oc'oT.V VCE OStD TW1 V0Î3OKS6 fX9P9.Ori.Cri To p OfX'o\u2019c'X'C Y\\XX\\-9 , CVoSV LKS\u2019bXY.P'O 05 eYKiG XQUCri , iwTW dciri \\Ki6 TV\u2019S ¦wiw i w.| K.OXri\\K>6 VÙYvriX'hri'L\u2019ri TO DO I\u2014 ., W\\Xri YVE/a \u2022 ¦i&i'\t\" ri.Bt-yu MMMSpM :1 n _ -ÆV-Viii^X P2G,:;\tG ; .\u2022Spr-fir ESCOer.\tBY UFA P-.EIlVICF.INC.I.M.Ut'j U.S.PAT, OFF ALLEY OOP By By V.T- Hamlin GOOD.' MAYBE HIS RETURN WILL HAVE A THECAF\u2019EUTIC EFFECT ON PCOK.HK».' SHOULD N ACTIVE IN SAN FKANCISCO TOMORROW > MO>RNING 'y ____ ALLEY RECEIVED .I OUR CABLE ALL OSCAR.', RIGHT.AND BOOM x ON WAS SO , HOME shocked BY THE FAILURE OF HIS SCHEME TO FINANCE A FLIGHT TO the planet VENUS, THAT HE WENT CLOWN v FOZ.the countA yrtUi-eUv.The most powerful gasoline your car ran use ! PRISCILLA\u2019S POP By Al Vermeer OH, BOV! THAT'S i MORE LIKE IT J > I yI AiA ?Activation makes the difference Shell scientists using the finest available crude, activate the molecules by splitting and rearranging them according to Shell\u2019s formula for a perfectly balanced gasoline.The result\u2014Shell Premium, the most powerful gasoline your car can use! ^LTTS, many of today\u2019s engines have been stepped-up .they call for more powerful gasoline! Now Shell gives you the most powerful gasoline your car can use \u2014Shell Premium \u2014it\u2019s \"activated.\u201d Actually, Shell splits mole-* cules to get more power for today\u2019s more powerful engines.So you get a gasoline that\u2019s \"activated!\u201d No wonder Shell is winning more new customers every day.Get a tankful of \"activated\u201d Shell Premium today.Your Shell Dealer is the man to see.v/ SUPPOSE I GIVE NOTHING DOING! I WANT BIG MONEY! I OUGHT TO \\ YOU TEN CENTS GET PAID I A WEEK! FOR DOING /'-r\u2014-, r RIGHT EVERY WEEKS I'-LL GIVE YOU A DOLLAR! COPE 19S0 BY NC* SERVICE.If^C SHELL PREMIUM GASOLINE WASH TUBBS By Leslie Turner EASY.' that's /holv smoke! rr was CASE-.THE WEIGHTED DOWN WITH ONE HE CWeeiED \\ ROCKS, AMD PROBABLY 435,000 IW WHEU \\T0SSED OFF THE LEDGE; HIS PLANE ceASHEDlCSr- I'D KNOW IT .\t.5 i-*4»\t^ WAY FIND SOME TWINS IN THIS POOL THAT-WUP! HIT SOMETHING THAT FELT LIKE A HANDBAG1 BUT THIS FIRE WONT LAST TEN MINUTES! THEN the RATTLESNAKES\u201d MILE NIKI LOOICS FOR WOOD, EASY EXAMINES the CAVE WALLS for A WAY UP AFRAID TWAT£ HOPELESS.NIKI THE LEDGE LEANS \\ < OUT AT THE TOP! \\ EVEN IF WE HAD A LINE THERE\u2019S / WAY TO HOOK ' IT UP THERE! y m MOeswe !ît.Notre Dame Choir Of Rock Island The Foster Presented Its Annual Concert In The Haskell Opera House the guest room door not knowing it was occupied.They finally find the hideous image and things start running smoothly again only to receive a telegram saying that the aunt has been called to England and must postpone her visit.The character parts are played by Misses Irene Julien, Rita Paisson, Jean Bedard, Rita Laberee, Liliane Delisle, Madeleine Paisson and M.Danig- SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD,MONDAY, MAY 1.FUNNY BUSINESS\tBy Hershberger 1950.non.Rock Island, May 1.\u2014 The second annual concert was given by the Notre Dame Choir, of Rock Island, on Sunday evening, April 23, at the Haskell Opera House.The concert opened with overtures, \u201cCarnaval de Venise\", by Luigi Bcrdese.The solo parts were sung by Rejeainne Joyal and Jeannine Audet, the mixed choir joined in the chorus, and \u201cThe Rosary\u201d, by Elhelbert Kevin.The Women\u2019s Choir Mtr.g \u201cLe 1 Two baritone solos were sung iy Aldermand Hamelin, of New-ort, Vt\u201e \u201cWhen Day Is Done\u201d by ' y George J.Trinkans.\tDr.Robert Katscher, and \u201cDan- of welcome ny Boy\u201d by b- Weatherby.v re spiken in French are: Fi g- A comedy, \u201cLa Chance Appn-by R.E.F: tgeau.The pro- voisee\u201d in one act was then pre-.\tcontinued with tw \u2022\t- , ; 1\td.This was of a young mar* ,\tby Mi.- K.-th r Bet;\t< .who\trod\tcouple.She was the niece and \u2022 ÿ,\tark pikil.k.\" by C.heiress of a rich uncle, therefore -.y\tand \u2018 Lullaby\", by she does all she can to remain in r.r B.h'.n::.\this good graces and is planning ntertain him at a luncheon.Mrs.She hires a maid of about fifty* .VIuriel Preston, a young married eight years of age for the occa-woman, whose husband is ».\ton, but before the uncle arrives maid hears that she has come .\u2022 \u2022.s y : r.t with her during \u2022 into the sum of $50,000.She im-rwL, and they are\tmaking\tmediately leaves the home, but .i '.r\tplans for the day\tw hen a i the\tniece decides it would be a announcing\tthe\tin-\tgood idea to\thave the uncle\tand tentions of\tMr.\tPreston\u2019s\taunt\tto\tmaid marry,\tthen she would\tin- visit her for the week-end.This herit the money from both.She and whos\tthe idea over with the hus- are in the band, who agrees providing that iry.\tghe will throw out the dessert for The Prestons\texpect to\tr\tbe luncheon,\twhich contains\tpoi- a share of\ther\tc.-tate, but\t-o\tfar\tson, and was\tto be served to\tthe have rewkved only a gift of a lincle.She agrees to this, and historic image, which Muriel has\tfor the dessert.The hus* donated to the White Elephant band takes it and throws it out s-ale for the church.\t; the door; the uncle arrives only to With the aunt's expected visit be covered with the dessert.He is Muriel tries to find the image, | tieaned up.and she and her friends run into | When the former maid arrives, all sorts of difficulties before sbe is left with the uncle, who finding it, such as wrecking a proposes and is eagerly accepted, car, spraining a wrist, stealing The maid has learned of the the wrong statue from a garden, poison in the dessert and tells the and being chased by a policeman, ; Uncle, who faints.The maid calls mistaking Miss Ray, a mas euse, for help and he is survived by for the aunt, and putting her in -, ,,
de

Ce document ne peut être affiché par le visualiseur. Vous devez le télécharger pour le voir.

Lien de téléchargement:

Document disponible pour consultation sur les postes informatiques sécurisés dans les édifices de BAnQ. À la Grande Bibliothèque, présentez-vous dans l'espace de la Bibliothèque nationale, au niveau 1.