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Titre :
Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
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mardi 6 novembre 1951
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  • Journaux
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  • Sherbrooke gazette ,
  • Sherbrooke examiner
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Sherbrooke daily record, 1951-11-06, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" < 19.M\t\tNOVEMBER\t\t\t\t1951 \t\t\t\t|\t\u2022»\t3 4\t5\t6\t7\t8\t9\t10 11\t12\t13\t14\t15\t16\t17 IX\t19\t20\t21\t\t23\t24 25\t26\t27\t28\t23\t30\t Established 1897.PRICE: lierbcookeDailijEecocd THE PAPER OF THE EASTERN TOWNSHIPS .\u201e 5 CENTS\tSHERBROOKE.QUEBEC.TUESDAY.NOVEMBER 6.1951 WIATMIK tVNNY\u2014COLD Mahttr sunny today but with tn* ervaitlng doudlnesi lata this after* noon.Continuing vary cold.Light wtadsi Pi tty-fifth Year '*jpsp' rite , ¦ ' ¦ ¦ \u2019 ¦ i l.1-1 ROOIP FRUI S ET LEG mm fft dS DRUMMONDVILLE \u2018 >^00 «s?Wiiae?\u2022' S:>>\" «\u2022>:\u2022 iMï-v \u2022 .\u2022y:- ^ - s Wi>\\cp' s-zfiri.-y*'\u20141\u2014r\" ri'ninjfiii njt anij^fei; \t V.v j^S'V's: >*&w \u2022A* ti PHOTO BY GliRRY I.KMAY Auriol Proposes Meeting Of Formal Truce Churchill, Truman, Stalin Opposed By Communists By MAX HARRELSON Paris, Nov.6.\u2014 (/P) \u2014France\u2019s President Vincent Auriol suggested today that President Truman, Prime Minister Churchill and Generalissimo Stalin meet for private talks in Paris during the session of the United Nations\u2019 General Assembly opening today.The suggestion was made in a speech prepared for delivery before the 60-country Assembly\u2019s initial meeting.Auriol did not mention the American, British and Russian leaders by name, but referred to them as the \u201cdistinguished men to whom all anxious eyes are turned.\u201d He said he feels sure, if they came here to consider their differences in private and within the scope of the U.N., that progress could be made toward easing current world tensions.Truman has replied to previous suggestions for a big-four meat-ing by saying that he would be glad to meet Stalin in Washington.Stalin, on the other hand, never has been willing to go so far from Russia.There has been no indication that either leader has changed his mind.The U.N.delegates, meanwhile, gathered for a session which even before Auriol\u2019s suggestion was being described as decisive for peace.Here is the way the French President put his suggestion for a big-four meeting: \u201cI will make bold to say that if the distinguished men towards whom all anxious eyes are turned were ft) come here to attend this pesSion, not of course to partici- pate directly in your proceedings, | but to establish human contact with each other, to exchange ideas personally, to consider their dit- j ferences without any agenda or public debate, and to try within the scope and in keeping with ; the principles of the United Nations jointly to reduce the disa-1 greements which paralyze the world\u2014if this should happen, we 1 would welcome them with a joy which I am convinced would become wbrld-widc.\u201d Auriol reaffirmed France\u2019s faith in the U.N.and at the same time pledged his country\u2019s co-operation in efforts to build a strong collective-security system.And with the U.S.reported ready\u2014in the face of almost cer- ' tain Russian opposition\u2014to propose a world-wide census and sweeping inspection of atomic weapons and other armaments, Auriol declared: \u201cWe have no fonder wish than to see the establishment of a permanent and simultaneous control in all countries of all armaments, whether conventional or atomic.\u201d The American proposal is reported to be part of a new dis-1 armament plan in which, for the first time, the U.S.will agree not only to a count of conventional weapons of war.but also of atom bombs.Until now Washington has refused to agree to such an atomic count.The Americans are sure to insist that a census of weapons, both conventional and atomic, be com-! plete and painstaking\u2014subject to Continued On Page 5 By NATE POLOWETZKY Munsan, Korea, Nov.6\u2014(/P)\u2014 The United Nations\u2019 command spokesman said today the communists want to call off I he fighting in Korea without signing a formal armistice.The U.N., he said, will have none of that.Brig.-Gen.William P.Nuckols, the spokesman, said the Reds tipped their hand Tuesday when they rejected the latest allied proposal.That was an offer to set aside the stalemated cease-fire buffer-zone issue for the moment and take up other items that must be settled before a formal armistice can be signed.The Reds demanded, Nuckols said, immediate \u201cfinal, formal solution\u201d of the buffer-zone matter before proceeding to the rest of the agenda.Nuckols said this would in effect allow a de facto cease-fire\u2014 an end to the fighting without formal agreement\u2014and let armistice talks drag on indefinitely.There was speculation the communists wanted an unofficial armistice (1) to get relief from allied air poundings, (2) because it might pin down a great amount of the west\u2019s available military forces, and (3) because they can\u2019t stand another U.N.offensive.Nuckols said the only incentive that makes the Reds keep talking is \u201ccontinuing pressure of pos- i Continued On Page 5 AT DRUMMONDVILLE: This photo, by Gerry Lemay, 9 was taken yesterday when Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh were in Dmmmondville, their only stop in the Eastern Townships on their trans-Canada tour.Royal Couple Reach Maritimes For Final Phase Of Their Tour By JACK BRAYLEY Canadian Press Staff Writer Fredericton, Nov.6.\u2014 ® \u2014The Royal tourists arrived here today in bright sunshine and a sharp November wind to receive their first official Maritime greeting.Six days from now they will conclude their North American tour at Portugal (Jove, Nfld, when they board the big Empress of Scotland for home The northern New Brunswick lumbering town of Campbell-ton gave the Princess and the Duke of Edinburgh a warm impromptu first greeting in a chilly midnight stop there.Four thousands stayed in the cold for the late arrival of the Royal train and cheered the visitors into making two appearances at the back of the train.The ceremonial arrival here was accompanied by the cheers of thousands who swelled the 15,000 population of the old town under tall, stately elms.They came in cars, special trains and buses from the surrounding area.The Royal couple were met at the train by Lieutenant-Governor D.L.Maclaren, Premier John B.McNair and Mayor H.S.Wright.There was a guard of honor, a band playing a lively serenade and a 21-gun salute.The Premier gave the Royal couple a matched pair of motor J rugs whose design includes the R.i I'.A.F.tartan.The pair drove through crowd-lined streets and paid a brief cal) 1 at the Bonar Law-Bennett Library on the University of New Bruns-: wick campus.The library contains ! a valuable collection of papers of the two New Brunswickers who became national political leaders \u2014Bonar Law, Prime Minister of Britain and Viscount Bennett, last Conservative Prime Minister of Canada and later a member of the House of Lords.The library was established by another New Brunswicker who made good \u2014 Lord Beaverbrooke, : i Chancellor of the university which j traces its origin back to Loyalist founding in 1787.| The next stop was tall-spired Christ Church Anglican Cathedral, one of the few public buildings which protrudes above the big | elms.This was the first new cathedral foundation on British soil | since the Norman conquest of 1066 and its cornerstone was laid in 1845.Lined up for inspection outside the cathedral was a group of United States war veteran paraplegic basketball players.They then went across the street and into the Legislature building which, among other things, has one of the two complete sets of Continued On Page 5 Eisenhower Ends Brief U.S.Visit By ELTON C.FAY Washington, Nov.6.\u2014fTP)\u2014Gen.Dwight D.Eisenhower, who came to Washington to report on the status of Western Europe\u2019s defences, goes back today, presumably with some fresh information for his own guidance.There seemed reason to believe that out of a series of conferences the supreme commander of allied forces in Europe, among other things, had learned: 1.\tHow fast American production could equip a Western Europe defensive force of up to 30 divisions.North Atlantic treaty forces which are equipped and combat-ready now number only about half that; and 2.\tThe latest over-all plans for strategy and tactics of the Washington military chiefs, possibly including revisions in battlefield techniques indicated by the advent of atomic arms in troop-against-troop warfare.A final round of meetings included a scheduled session with \\ the standing group of N.A.T.O.in Washington and a meeting with the joint chiefs of staff.Eisenhower spent a full day in conferences yesterday.At the day\u2019s end the public didn't know much more about what military matters were talked over, and very little more about Eisenhower's attitude toward the Presidential race in 1352.\t; Continuedll'\u2019.» Page 5 i Britain\u2019s Plans For Future Outlined In Throne Speech London, Nov.6 \u2014'\u2019(P)\u2014 Prime Minister Churchill today outlined to Ihe country his proposals for overcoming the economic and foreign troubles facing Britain.Recalled to lead the country after 6'A years of socialism, Churchill annoflneed in the speech from the throne opening the new parliament that his Conservative government will: 1.\tStand pat in Egypt and press for a Middle-East defence pian.2.\t\u201cTry\tto fepair\tthe\tinjuries (British) rights and interests suffered in Iran.\u201d 3.\tDe nationalize the steel industry\ttaken\tover by\tthe\tsocialist government.4.\tAttack cartels\tand\tmonopo- lies.5.\tTake\tdrastic action\tagainst growing inflation.6.\tStrengthen home defences.The speech from the throne is usually read by Britain\u2019s Monarch.But because the King is still convalescing from his lung operation, today\u2019s address was read for him in the House of Lords by the Lord Chancellor, Lord Simonds.A forecast in broad outlines of the reigning government\u2019s plans for the country, the speech is written for the King by the cabinet.Commonwealth governments would be invited to confer on action to close the present precarious sterling gap, the speech said.Running at the rate of about $1,680.000,000 a year the gap af fects Britain\u2019s position as banker for the whole sterling area.Churchill was scheduled to elaborate on the speech later today.The throne speech said that a \u201cfull disclosure must he made to the nation\u201d of the recent serious deterioration in Britain\u2019s economic affairs.It described the problem as \u201covershadowing all other domestic matters.\u201d After a special cabinet meeting last night, the government was re ported to have laid drastic plans for a fight to stave off another devaluation of the pound.The reports said Churchill is ready to slash imports by as much as one-quarter, ask all sterling-bloc countries to cut their gold and dollar spending, appeal for more American financial aid to carry out the huge rearmament program and retain her tight controls over trade with European countries.The plans also included a boost in the production target by about four per cent of the national income, and possible suspension of the five-day week in key industries, coupled with a wage-incentive system for the workers.Such an attempt to get the country back into the black would likely mean less available food, gasoline rationing, harder work and a general increase in the austerity program.The speech condemned Egypt\u2019s abandonment of the 1936 Anglo-Egypt treaty and the 1899 Sudan condominium agreement as \u201cillegal and without validity.\u201d It said Britain, the United States, France and Turkey will \u201cpress forward with their proposals for joint defence arrangements in the mideast.\u201d Meanwhile, it said, Britain \u201cwill maintain its position in the canal Continued On Page » I Two IN HOLLYWOOD hy Erskine Johnson NEA Staff Correspondent MGM DOESN\u2019T WANT CREDIT LINE ON SKELTON TV SHOW Hollywood\u2014 Exclusively Yours: Latest explosion in the Hollywood vs, television knock-down-and-drag-out has MGM telling Red Skelton \u201cYou can\u2019t dood it.\u201d For years the studio demanded the credit line \u201cRed Skelton appeared through the courtesy of MGM studios\u201d on all of his radio shows.But on television\u2014uh\u2014uh! Studio brass blue penciled the line when Red automatically tagged it onto his first video script.\u201cBut why?\u201d demanded Skelton.\u201cIt's a good plug for the studio.\u201d MGM's answer was: \u201cThe the- AT THE GRANADA MOW SHOWING! m Howard Keel plays the irresistible gambler, Ravenal, and Ava Gardner the tragic Julie in \"Show Boat,\" Technicolor version of the immortal musical play by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammer-stein, 11.Kathryn Grayson is the third star of the big production, which remains at the Granada Theatre until Saturday.M-G-M presents the mighty musical of the Mississippi ! SHovl tUtring KATHRYN AVA HOWARD JMÏS0N \u2022 GARDNER \u2022 REEL wuii jUc.E.BROWN - MARGE, and GOWER CHAMPION, Robert Sterling, Agnes Moorehead, William Warfield.ADDED ACTION HIT! IDMARK ANDREWS IfviERRILL f ater owners might get mad if they hear it.\u201d To which Red\u2019s grinning reply was: \u201cIf the theater owners are watching television, Hollywood IS in trouble.\u201d * * * Linda Christian is listening to movie ten percenters about another try at stardom now that she has achieved motherhood.Ty Power says he won\u2019t stand in Linda's way if a picture turns up for her.No Fireworks There won't be any fireworks between Shelley Winters and Bette Davis over their star billing in Fox\u2019s \u201cPhone Call From a Stranger.\u201d The studio legal department made peace by arranging for Shelley\u2019s name to appear first in all ads, just above the names of Gary Merrill and Michael Rennie.\u201cAnd Co-Starring Bette Davis\u201d will appear just over the title.* « \u2022 Members of the WAVES may snicker about it, but Hollywood censors ruled the regulation WAVE bathing suits are too revealing for movie audiences.Alterations in strategic spots were made for dolls wearing them in 1 Esther Williams\u2019 \u201cSkirts Ahoy.\u201d * * * The battling Matures\u2014Vic and his wife Dorothy\u2014reconciled following a two-week secret separation.Vic moved in with his friends Jim and Henny Backus while Dorothy defrosted her emotions.* * * Paramount is denying reports that a new screenplay is being I written for the cat star, Rhubarb, ! to cash in on the success of his SyERBROOKE DAILY $ECORD TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1951 Noted Air Chorus Devotes 25 Years Back On Networks To Boys\u2019 Welfare In Winter Series On Ontario Farm AT THE PREMIER m ?na sb a si nij BIG DOOR PRIZES 1 EXTRA! EXTRA! TONIGHT! 12 A BRAND NEW STAGE SHOW! GOOD FORTUNE NIGHTS EVERY TUESDAY ARE SPONSORED BY FRECHETTE AND BLAIS, INC., DOYON & BRUNELLE, MAGASIN MODERNE, UNITED CIGAR STORES! NANKING CAFE (Formerly White Tower), BOUDRIAS STUDIO.NADEAU & FILS, SALON FELIX, LION BOTTLING CO.LTD., H.C.WILSON & SONS LTD., LAROCHELLE & FRERES LTD., LA PAPETERIE PIGEON (Stationers).LAST DAY \u2014 ADVENTURE AND SPECTACLE IN TECHNICOLOR! \"ROGUES OF SHERWOOD FOREST,\" Starring John DEREK.Diana LYNN, Geo.MacREADY, Alan HALE.ALSO A NEW ACTION DRAMA! \"THE CRIME DOCTOR'S DIARY,\" Starring Warner BAXTER, Stephen DUNNE, Lois MAXWELL, AUele JERGENS.PLUS\u2014THREE STOOGES COMEDY-SERIAL\u2014SPORTS\u2014NEWS.NEW PREMIER THEATRE STARTS TOMORROW 0Î?Î on°iy FOR THE FIRST TIME IN THE HISTORY OF THE SCREEN, THE INSIDE STORY OF THE BULL RING! One Of The Season's Greatest Motion Pictures! The Thrilling Adventure Of Flashing Steel And Deadly Horns .Temcestuous Action-Filled Romance! EM#»#- TALE OF ROMANCE.OF DARING.AND OF DANGER! first picture.Some of the Hollywood wags have been saying that the feline would next appear in \u201cI Was On Him Like a Cat,\u201d based on a saying by Tom Neal, of course.* * * Bob Hope, told it to the Camp Pendleton Marines: \u201cI now have a new draft classification\u20145Q.That means that in case of invasion, I stay behind the lines and fold parachutes for Bernarr MacFadden.\u201d «\t* * * Linda Darnell the only girl in a cast of 12 men.The role\u2014in the Broadway-bound play, \u201cStrike a Match\u201d which Mel Ferrer will direct\u2014is her\u2019s if picture commitments can be juggled.There will be a three-week Dallas, Texas, tryout before the company moves to New York.Does\tLinda\tlike the\trole?\u201cDoes\tshe\tlike it?\u201d\tgrinned Mel.\u201cShe\u2019s already memorized all the dialog.\u201d No Romance Patricia Neal is being Miss Clam-Up of 1951 on the state of her romance with Gary Cooper.When 1 asked her about rumors linking her with Palm Springs real estater Jerry Nathanson, she shrugged her elegent shoulders.\u201cThen tell me if you and Gary have quarreled,\u201d I asked.\u201cQuarreled?\u201d echoed huskyvoiced Pat.\u201cI never quarrel with anyone.\u201d \u201cAre you going to marry Jerry?\" \u201cNO!\u201d snapped Pat.\u201cIs it a split-up between you and Cooper then?\u201d \u201cWe were never together, so how can we split up,\u201d GULP! \u2022 * * Mark Stevens ashcanned the \u201cSexy Rexy\u201d song his writers prepared for his night club tour.It\u2019s a barbed satire on Rex Harrison, with whom Mark almost came to blows in the days when both were under contract to Fox.¦ * « The title-switch parade: MGM is recalling prints of \u201cAngels in the Outfield\u201d and will re-I release it under a new' tag.Paramount started the title-juggling I trend by changing \u201cAce In the i Hole\u201d to \u201cThe Big Carnival.\u201d London, Ont.\u2014 One of the most successful husband-and-wife teams in radio anywhere are Don and Lillian Wright of London, whose 14-voice mixed chorus has just started another winter season on the CBC network.While Don Wright himself conducts the seven men and seven women of the chorus, his wife works on the control room to bring out the best in tone and volume.Average age of this chorus, well-known in Canadian radio, is about 25 years.The male section includes an oil company salesman, a surgeon, a shoe store manager and an advertising agency executive.On the female side there are four housewives, an assistant librarian, a receptionist and an office worker.All 14 of the chorus are Londoners.Max Magee is the organist and Frank Monaghan the pianist.Wright broke musical tradition by using an equal number of male and female voices in his group heard on the \u201cWestinghouse Presents\u201d hour.The usual choir of this kind is either male or female, seldom mixed.But Wright's belief is that mixed choral groups will be in demand for a long time, providing they stay clear of orchestrations.He says the most important aspect of the work is the interpretation of a song; a chorus should concentrate on natural use of the vocal chords instead of trying to imitate an orchestra.Some 75 numbers have been added for the new season, making a repertoire of 350 songs for the chorus.W\u2019right himself prepared about 40 new arrangements during the I summer.He has previously written two books on the technique of treating the changing voice, now widely used in Canadian schools, and has also written a book designed to make it easier for youngsters to read music.Another winter feature, the national farm radio forum, started its 12th season on CBC networks on Oct.29 with a series of discussions on farm co-operatives.Keith Morrow, a native of Charlottetown who knows agriculture both in theory and practice, has been appointed supervisor of farm broadcasts for the CBC in succession to A.R.Kemp, who has resigned from the corporation.Morrow is a graduate of the Ontario Agricultural College at Guelph who worked as a dairy assistant and agriculturist at the Charlottetown experimental station.After service in the Canadian navy in the second world war he returned to the CBC as an assistant maritime farm broadcast comment-atoT in 1945, and last year was appointed assistant to Kemp at Toronto.\t^ Mitchell, Ont.\u2014 The story of an elderly woman who has been j mother to a thousand sons is about ! to end.Since 1925 Miss Baker's farm in < Fullarton township has been home at one time or another for more than 1,000 boys who have made false starts in life.Cared for by the kindly woman, the majority, committed to the farm by various welfare authorities, have returned to society cured of anti-social tendencies.Few have failed her.At present Miss Baker has seven boys on her farm, but it may be that these are her last.A quarter-century devoted almost exclusively to the work of rehabilitation hasn't been easy.Hattie Baker's interest in boys\u2019 welfare can be traced to her father who opened his farm for youth in need of a home.His daughter continued the tradition and often had as many as 60 boys under her care, both in her home and at the homes of neighbors.The young Miss Baker acted as welfare officer, visiting foster homes to check on conditions and treatment.Miss Baker\u2019s rehabilitation program centres around work and education.She claims that once you\u2019ve taught a boy to work you\u2019ve taken the first steps in saving his soul.Sticking to her philosophy, she has the boys get up between seven and eight o\u2019clock, according to their ages, and help with the house and farm chores before going to school.Children of public school age are then taught by Miss Ethel Kennedy on the farm while the others attend Mitchell High School.No boundaries are placed in the way of the boys while they are on the farm.On its 150 acres they help in sowing and harvesting the crops and each has his daily assignment.All this Hattie Baker, farmer, social worker and educationist accomplishes with plenty of hard work and what she terms \"the help of the Lord.\u201d * land medical health officer at Fort Vermillion.\u2022 We shall never be rich,\u201d Dr.Hanna confessed, \"but we love the people and the life at Fort Ve^ million.We find it cold after the heat in Palestine.Last winter the ! temperature went down to 65 be-i low and stayed there for six weeks.\"Our patients come to us by I horse sleigh and dog sleigh when the roads are too bad for travelling by car.But we have a hospital ; and my parents are with us.And ' thanks to the oil companies, we have some good roads.We do not want to leave.\u201d BREATHLESS MOMENT .From the John Wayne production \"Bullfighter And The Lady\", the gripping inside story of bravery in the bullring starring Robert Stack, Joy Page, Gilbert Roland, which will have its first Sherbrooke showing at the New Premier Theatre starting tomorrow with a hilarious new comedy \"Father Takes The Air\", with Raymond Walburn, Walter Catlett, Florence Bates.FORDYCE # With berg and daughters, Barbara and Susan, Mr.and Mrs.M.Lewis, Miss Audrey Lewis and Master Stanley Lewis, Miss Ruth Dryden, Miss M.Bromby, Miss Margaret Stevenson, Master Blair Bowling, Master Douglas Stevenson, Mrs.Fulford and Mr.James Fulford.Those from here who were in Montreal on October 30th, to see their Royal Highnesses, Princess Elizabeth, and the Duke of Edinburgh, were Mr.and Mrs.J.Sy- Mrs.J.Jones and son, Mr.James O\u2019Brien and Mrs.O\u2019Brien, Mrs.Scullion and son, of Montreal, were calling on Miss Guila Jones, one afternoon.Miss Guila Jones has returned home, after spending two weeks with Mr.and Mrs.David Bull, at Fulford.Mr.and Mrs.J.D.Stevenson, Miss Margaret and Master Douglas Stevenson were dinner guests of Mr.and Mrs.Garnet Rogers, of the Centre Road.Mrs.William Mason is visiting Miss Fannie Lewis, in Plattsburg, N.Y.Penicillin first isolated in 1943.Women\u2019s Group Cheers Grey Nuns\u2019 Patients Regina.\u2014 The term Mrs.Catherine Murray uses to describe the work done by the lady patronesses of the Regina Grey Nuns Hospital is \u201cjollying-up.\u201d It is as useful in 1951 as it was in 1909 when Mrs.Murray began visiting public ward patients in the hospital.At that time the work of the lady patronesses consisted of hospital visiting and helping the nursing sisters.Then a new hospital was built, and the ladies\u2019 group helped solicit money for operating room supplies and extras for the nurses.Their work of visiting the ward patients continued as the main part of their program.\u201cThere were no cigarettes in those days,\u201d said Mrs.Murray, \u201cbut that\u2019s about the only difference in our visiting work.\u201d Now the lady patronesses visit every ward and every patient twice a month, giving them cigarettes, candy, fruit and a cheery smile.In addition to their public ward visits, which include men, women and children patients, the lady patronesses have begun an ambitious program in another wing of the hospital.There, cancer patients can have the benefit of an occupational therapist, who will teach them weaving, ceramics and other j crafts.Wrens\u2019 Commander Has Varied Career Winnipeg.\u2014 Manitoba\u2019s senior women naval officer has tried her hand at every thing from fencing to a newspaper career but she still professes one secret ambition.Lieut.Joan Brackenridge\u2014a woman with a wide grin and close-cropped hair\u2014is in command of H.M.C.S.Chippawa\u2019s women reservists at Winnipeg.Once a week she leaves her husband at Gretna, Man., and drives 75 miles to look after her 35 Wrens.She\u2019s responsible for their administration, discipline and morale.All Wrens take their training courses with the men.Mrs.Brackenridge\u2019s secret ambition comes from three year\u2019s experience in the newspaper business.She was once assistant music critic on the Vancouver Provincial and later wrote music reviews for the Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph.\u201cI've always wanted to write an advice-to-the lovelorn column,\u201d she says.Mrs.Brackenbridge is also a handy woman with a golf dub and a fencing foil.She once held the British Columbia fencing championship and was a runner-up in a Dominion final.When music doesn\u2019t interfere she raises prize dogs.During the second world war she served more than three years as a Lieutenant with navy intelligence.She met her husband at Halifax while he was serving as chief engineer in the Royal Fleet auxiliary, a branch of the Royal Navy.Mrs.Brackenridge now runs a landlocked household at Gretna where her husband is chief engineer of a pipeline station.New Woman Doctor Has Many Friends In Northern Town Winnipeg.\u2014 A telegram of good wishes from some 3,000 persons in the north was a great inspiration to Dr.Hanna Kratz, taking an examination here to qualify for a permanent practice in Canada.The message was sent on behalf of 1,200 Indians, 1,000 half-breeds and 800 whites in the community of Fort Vermillion, Alta., 600 miles north of Edmonton.Dr.Kratz and her husband, Dr.Julius Kratz, arrived at Fort Vermillion in 1949 to take over the medical care of the community.Fort Vermillion, subject to severe winters, had had no doctor before the Kratz couple arrived after years of wandering as political refugees.Julius and Hanna graduated in 1932 from a school of medicine at Frankfurt, Germany.Hanna, an anti-Nazi, fled to England when Hitler came to power and Julius fled to escape concentration camp.They were married in London and then went to Palestine.For 14 years they practised together in Jerusalem, where their two children were born.Then the war between the Jews and Arabs forced them out.They reached Canada in 1948 and worked for a year in Quebec as internes.With a license as interim practitioners they went to Fort Vermillion.Dr.Hanna Kratz took the final stages of her Medical Council of j Canada examinations here this ; month.Dr.Julius passed the examination last year.He is coroner 1 ronge baiser Paris sends you her favorite lipstick \u2014 40 shades of glamour from which to choose.Now at leading cosmetic counters.The lipstick that^is kissproof.tUiiiiéuAotA \u2014 Web & Company COMNfJcJ division 1231 Green Ave., Montreal, Que.Mde.GOBE IL 250 Vimy Street Tel.3-3368 \u2018\t%igfi X ¦ .Vfi*.!' - V'.\u2022¦C.àjB-.-Tjii; all the family nieo ae KNITWEAR ' P0% pure wool \u2022 shrink-resistant \u2022 budget-priced \\\t:\t\u2022\t' -\to.REAL REASON There is some justification for the idea that rattlesnakes do not live where white ash trees grow.White ash grows generally on a rich, moist soil in thick woods and near water, while rattlesnakes prefer, as a rule, open, dry, stony, sunny places.Thus, they are not likely to be together.HERBERT J.YATES presents A JOHN WAYNE Production BULLFIGHTER AND THE LADY starring SOBERI STACK-JÛÏ PÂEE\u2019GIIM ROLAND with VIRGINIA SREY \u2022 IDRN NOBURD - KATTIOIADt ALSO A HILARIOUS NEW COMEDY HIT! Sky-High, Panic-Propelled Hilarity .The Screen's First Femily Of Funl \"FATHER TAKES THE AIR\" with Raymond WALBURN, Walter CATLETT, Gary GRAY, Florence BATES, Barbara BROWN, M'Liss McCLURE.PLUS\u2014PAU, The Wonder Dog, In \"PAL FUCITIV* DOG.\" Latest News Including \"THE ROYAL TOUR,\" \"CONSERVATIVES WIN IN ENGLAND\".\"BATTLE OF BLOODY RIDGE.\" MAGOG THEATRE TONIGHT ONLYI Gene Tierney, John Lund starring in \"MATING SEASON\" COMING! Wed.\u2022 Thurs.\"LE FILS DE MONTE CRISTO\" (Ft.Version of \u201cSon of Monte Cristo\u201d Louis Hayward, Joan Bennett Also \"SI ÇA PEUT VOUS FAIRE PLAISIR\" featuring Fernandel, Mona Dol Dick Turner CARNIVAL kholl west ctm*AC7d£.t m.*?* u.§.pat rm OOWL cc.IQfi.\"Which do you mean\u2014the eatimate, or the estimate of the , difference between the estimate and what it\u2019s gonna cost'?\u201d COMFORT\u2014Lasalle Coke gives maximum heat, burns easily and efficiently.CONVENIENCE \u2014 Minimum furnace care with Lasalle Coke, less shaking \u2014 much less ash.forget your worries about shortages, supply is assured.CLEAN \u2014Lasalle Coke is dust-proofed before delivery to your home.You can\u2019t buy a cleaner, casier-to-handle solid fuel UNIFORMITY \u2014 Lasalle Coke's quai ity is controlled throughout manufacture to assure complete satisfaction.SUPPLY \u2014 Order Lasalle Coke and ECONOMY \u2014 Because it contains over 90 per cent carbon, Lasalle Coke gives you maximum heat, maximum value.Order Lasalle Coke Today FROM YOUR REGULAR FUEL DEALER Lasalle WaAtrUli udtluuU waàie For Your Printing Requirements dial 3-3636 Cttp .ipage SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1951, 7tloU Ttwt O.t'fi\u2019M.rt?KLEEN* FLO rutlOtlCONDITIONtH TOyOUKKItlOll NO SMOKE !\tA NO CARBON! 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Chrm And Graciousness Of Royal Couple Won Hearts Of All Those Present For Visit To Drummondville By MARGARET DOHERTY Drummondville, Nov.6 \u2014 Along with the rest of Canada, citizens of this thriving industrial town were smitten by the charm and graciousness of Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip as they made a brief stop here yesterday en route to the Maritimes and the final lap of their Canadian tour.A crowd of more than 15,000 gathered at the Canadian National Railways station well ahead of the scheduled arrival of the Royal train and spontaneous cheering broke out as their Royal Highnesses stepped onto the platform to be welcomed by Mayor Antoine Biron, K.C., and Mrs.Biron.It was a damp cold day, butt?) chilly feet and hands were forgotten for the moment as the flag waving crowd caught their first glimpse of their future queen and her gallant consort.Princess Elizabeth, a trifle pale, but appearing quite relaxed and happy after her Laurentian weekend, was wearing her full length Canadian mink coat, a mustard colored off-the-face hat, dark rrown gloves, brown alligator shoes and carrying a matching bag.She also wore tiny pearl earrings and as she mounted the reception platform, one caught a glimp'se of what appeared to be a mit in the same shade as her hat.The Duke wore a loosely belted camel hair polo coat, and was hatless.Following the introduction of a lew out-of-town guests, members of the city council and their wives, the Princess turned to Mayor Biron and she said she would like to descend from the dais to greet some of the children and members of the armed forces.She did so, much to the delight of the spectators, both she and the Duke pausing to chat with several people standing in the foreground of the roped-off square.Mrs.Audrey Richards and Mrs.James Fieldsend, who respectively lost husband and son in the last war, were noticed by the Princess and she spoke a few words to them.Her husband did likewise and also chatted with Miss Mary Demers and Mrs.S.Hesfernen, whose brother was killed in action.He seemed particularly interested in the Legion and asked President Fred West several questions, wanting to know the percentage of French and English-speaking members in the Branch.R.Q.M.Ernest Bundle, of Sherbrooke, who served with the 30th Field Ambulance, and came from Fairmouth, Cornwall, England, was asked by Prince Philip how long he had been In Canada and how he liked it over here.The Duke also showed interest in the Boy Scouts, asking Rich Christman, of the First Drummondville Troop, how many boys were enrolled in the group.Press men covering the Royal Tour said that Princess Elizabeth, who looks like a young girl, rather than the mother of two children, was more relaxed yesterday and smiled her lovely smile more frequently than on any previous occasion.Three little girls, Madeleine Biron, daughter of the Mayor, Gisele Corriveau and Anne-Marie Thibodeau, both daughters of local aldermen, presented a bouquet of red, white and blue carnations to Her Royal Highness, who received it with a smile.The young ladies were dressed alike in dark green velvet fitted coats, with poke bonnets of the same material, white corsages of carnations, white stockings and black patent leather slippers.Perhaps two of the happiest and proudest people in Drummondville yesterday were the Mayor's children, Jacques and eleven-year-old Madeleine, who were favored with a Royal greeting.After signing the Golden Book the Royal Couple returned to the train, smiling graciously and waving to the crowds.They went in- GRUMBACHER ARTISTS\u2019 SUPPLIES Brushes \u2014 Colors Artists\" Materials JKATIOHAL \\WALLPAPCI v& PAINTS s,LI MITCD, nbtsittiateâu eU PtiséiOM et -^7- 76 Wellington North Tel.2-1537 Continued On Page 5 Extended Term For Mayor To Be Sought An extended term for the mayor and an increase in the poll tax from two dollars to five dollars highlight the proposed changes to the municipal charter according to the terms of a draft bill accepted by the Sherbrooke City Council at its regular session last evening.This bill will be presented to the session of the Quebec Legislature which opens tomorrow.The first clause of the four-point bill simply states that Article 48 of the Cities and Towns Act be replaced by the words: \u201cThe mayor is elected for three years by a majority vote of the municipal electors.*' If the clause is approved by the Legislature, it is an open question as yet whether it will serve to extend the term of Mayor Charles B.Ho\\«d for a year.Under the present™et-up his two-year term expires in March 1952.In all likelihood this matter will be settled by the Legislative Assembly, which can amend the provision of the private bill to be presented by the city adding the words that the change applies\u2014or does not apply \u2014to the present incumbent of office.Mayor Howard is known to be in favor of extending the mayoral term to three years, believing that j it gives the chief magistrate a \u2019 better opportunity to carry through j his policies.He argues that the I mayor needs one year to get used to office, another year to institute j his program and a third to carry it out.But he also has stated on various occasions that as a matter of justice to the electorate, the change should become effective only with the incoming mayor.However, he has never voiced any determination to resign at the Wtfy NOT - - -Have your diamond ring electrically cleaned?Fast service.PHONE 2-9906 Sherbrooke Electro-Plating 151 Drummond St! \u2014 Sherbrooke, i end of two years and if the Legis- | lature sees fit to make the extension apply to his term of office, he will continue for another year, j The change would bring the term of the mayor in line with that of ! the aldermen who are elected for i three years, three being named in J each of two years and four in the third year.The second clause covers the increase in the poll tax while the ! third regularizes street lines for a street in the rear of Hotel Dieu hospital in East Sherbrooke.The fourth would fix the assessment of the extension to the Bruck Mills, Ltd., in East Sherbrooke, built in 1951, at $65,000 for a ten year period.v Em sr* * 1L^ ft* r « ii Lieutenant-Governor Visits Optimists And Presents \u201cGood Attendance\u201d Pins BUY HOUSE PLANTS NOW Adopt a house plant NOW for happy hours all Winter long.They do best if brought into the home at this season.MILFORD'S 138 Wellingfrm N.- i m AT DRUMMONDVILLE: Elizabeth and the Duke\tare shown in the upper picture accepting the salute from the guard at the Royal train.Mayor Antoine Biron and Mrs.Biron, of Drummondville, are shown at the right of the I\u2019rinee, while Hon.Hugues Lapointe, federal minister of veterans affairs, is standing beside the Princess.Mrs.Lapointe is in front of the R.C.M.P.escort.The army officers, from left to right, are Lt.-Col.L.M.Draper and Major Harry Biain, both of Sherbrooke.Mayor Biron and the Princess are shown together in the lower picture and another Sherbrooke soldier, Maj.Jaek Hawkins, is seen saluting at the right.(Gerry Lemay photos).Liens Hold iiness ft Gilles Gamache, of Montreal, Lieutenant Governor of this Optimist district, paid his first official visit to the Sherbrooke Optimist \\ Club at their weekly dinner meet tng held in the LaSalle Hotel last night and presented 19 members; with \"good attendance\"\u2019 pins.Those honored were: 4-year pins, Uasey Vincent.Don Clowery, Eric Marquardt, in absentia; Henry Urochotiere, and Paul Nadeau; 3-year pins, President «lac quos Laliberte, Joseph Gilbert, in absentia; and C.J.Buzzell; two-year pins, Vic Jarjour.Fred Bean, in absentia; past President, Paul Lefebvre and Henri Blais; t year pins, Yitol Scheib, Raymond Cyr,i Jack McCabe, Marcel Bernard, Gaston Roy, Ken Ross and Paul Allard.Members absent for this cere ninny all had good excuses, Eric Marquardt is visiting his mother j in Germany.Joseph Gilbert had a military parade to attend and Fred Bean, secretary-treasurer of Watcrville, was at a town council session.Two new members and two ! guests were introduced at the | meeting.Don flowery introduced1 Michael \"Mike\" Skenn and Mau-j rice Hudon did the honors for Marcel Rousseau.The new mem hers are Arthur Bergeron, introduced by Vic Jarjour, and Paul Delorme, introduced by Paul I Lefebvre.Ken Ross reported on the sale] j of Oyster Party tickets for the! function to he held at the Arena a week Thursday, one ot the fea-turcs of \u201cOptimist Week.\" Henry ! Crochetiere told of preliminary ; plans for a hockey night for youngsters, another aspect of the \u201cWeek.\" A gift by member Stan Cuth ; bert was raffled off, all proceeds going to service club work.Gaston! Roy won the prize.In a short but lively address, Lieut.-Governor Gamache, one of the charter members and immediate past president of the Laurentian Optimist Club, Montreal, told of \u201cOptimist matters.\u201d \u201cOptimism,\u201d he said, \u201cis a group of business and professional men banded together to promote the spirit of Optimism, to aid youth in line with our slogan, \u201cFriend of the Boy,\u201d to take an active interest in civic affairs, and lo promote friendship among all peor pies.\u201d He lauded the Sherbrooke Club as \u201cthe best club in the district,\u201d as they have already won the Julien Trophy for being just that and have attained an International banner for having the best club attendance.\u201cThe officers of this district are Home And School Assoc.Meeting Spirited; Or.O\u2019Neill Guest Speaker f NOVEMBER SPECIALS! 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J.BEAUDOIN 58 Wellington St.South Tel.2-7544 Last night a large assembly of parents and teachers gathered in the Lawrence school Auditorium to discuss problems concerning the home and the school.Guest speaker for this meeting of the Sherbrooke Home and School Association was Dr.J.J.O\u2019Neill, a specialist in neurology and psychiatry who is on the staff of the St.Vincent de Paul Hospital.Dr.O'Neill\u2019s address was on \u201cBehaviour Problems\", a topic which was chosen by the Association through a topic popularity survey.Dr.O\u2019Neil! divided the normal behaviour problems of children into two classes, intellectual and emotional.Upon considering the first, intellectual, Dr.O\u2019Neill said that such problems arise through each individual student\u2019s capacity for understanding and memory of the school curriculum presented to him and the social interaction in which he is forced to take part.There are instances where the student may be slower than the average pupil in the class which is apt to impress upon that student his own inferior standing.Symptoms in such cases vary but are often seen when the child's sleep, speech or behaviour are affected.These students cannot be blamed for something that is out of their power to help, rather it is the problem of the teacher whose job it is to recognize and respect the' child's capacity and aid him in reaching an understanding of the problem in question.Dr.O\u2019Neill, on the other hand, spoke of the child whoSe intellectual canabilities exceed those of his classmates.In these cases a more prevalent symptom may be that of depression, an emotion that is aroused when the child finds that he is bored with the pace of study set by the average students in the class, finds that he is a misfit.This invariably inspires jealously and resentment ia the other pupils.The overly intellectual ichild as a result can become very unpopular.The effect such cir-.umstances could have might be very strong; he might become J aloof, distant, introverted or a number of other reactions, may occur.But then, too, there is the other 1 alternative, often chosen by children who are above the normal and that is the endeavour to come down to the level of his fellows by caring little for his studies, allowing his marks to lag in order that he may reach equality with others I in the class.Regarding the second class of 1 problem mentioned, the emotional ! stand-point of the child, Dr.O\u2019Neill spoke of the need for self-assurance.This is a problem to be dealt with not only in school but principally in the home by the parents for it is the parents to whom, the child turns for guidance.Before school age, children are forever learning without the handicap of prejudices; they learn from all that they see done by their parent\u2019s actions and words; actions and words that they take as the ! true and right thing to say and do.Home is where their most immed-1 iate needs are satisfied therefore, j it is essential that each parent i maintain to the best ability, con-! sistency in the home in all things I in the best possible way he or she sees fit.This Is a requirement that takes thought, time and pa-| tience on the part of every parent.It is a thing that should not and must not be neglected.At the close of his talk, Dr.O\u2019Neill was thanked on behalf of the Home and School Association and all who were present by Charles Taylor, Lawrence school representative.The question of prizes for the elementary schools was brought to the attention of those present for it has been made apparent that there is a definite lack of prizes i which are the tangible means ; whereby the student is able to see i his efforts materialize and not go ; unheeded.Several sources were discussed concerning where these prizes or trophies might come from and, in an effort to see do-i finite results, a committee was np pointed to look after the matter.During a discussion period that followed a question of great con troversy arose among the parents present concerning a certain history book which is now being used in the elementary schools.The book is entitled, \u201cDays and Deeds\u201d [which is an American publication and a history of the United States.The rather strong objection ! that was raised was that the child-i ren were not being taught sufficient Canadian history as things stood and parents asked why are Canadian children being taught a Business matters occupied mem ! hers of the Lions Club at their weekly meeting last night.Wilfrid Routhicr reported on the Gourmet's Dinner that will lie held al Olivier's new dining room on the Montreal road on Dec.6.This special dinner, at $25 a plate, will be limited to 100 per sons.Changes in a number of commit-, tee chairmen were announced.! with Hugh Hose being named head of the program committee, Neil Tracy in charge of attendance, Jos.Begin looking after Lions informa lion and J.A.Bourgeois heading up the membership committee.President Alberic Julien an nounced that charter night will be held on Nov.24.A directors\u2019 meeting of the club will follow the regtdar meeting next Monday.very proud of you,\u201d Mr.Gamache stated.The Lieutenant Governor reviewed briefly the history of the Optimist movement from its inception in Buffalo, N.Y., in 1911.Ho told of its rapid expansion until today where it numbers 36,000 members in 140 clubs in 40 states of the Union and the District of Columbia, si\\ Canadian Provinces, Clubs in Mexico and Cuba and an honorary club in Bristol, England.In June, 1919, Mr.Gamache stated, the first convention of Optimist Clubs was held at Louisville.Ky.when 11 clubs got together and found they had adopted by-laws so similar that they banded together and formed headquarters for the purpose of developing and spreading Optimism.\u201cIt is a remarkable co-lnci dence,\u201d he said, \"that these clubs knowing little or nothing about each other, adopted constitutions and pledged themselves to big objectives so similar that later, when they came together, «hey were one in purpose and high en thusiasm.\u201cOne can ask no further proof of the fundamental need for and spontaneous acceptance of Optimism.We belong to a fine organization,\" he said.Mr.Gamache was introduced hy Paul Lefebvre and thanked by Don Clowery.Afterwards, a get-to-getber was held in another room so that members could have the opportunity of meeting Mr, Gamache.The Lieutenant-Governor is a! ready well known to a number of members, having attended a regional convention at Quebec with Ken Ross and Paul Lefebvre and having been the instructor at Of ficer\u2019s Training Corps.Brock rillo, Ont., of Mr.Lefebvre and Optimist Ivan Dugre.President Jacques Laliberte presided at the meeting and sealed at the head table with him were: Mr.Gamache, Mr.Croche-ticre.Mr.Ross.George Garard and Jean Louis Dupuis.EAST ANGUS Friends of R.J.Westgate regret to hear that Mr.Westgate is a patient in the Sherbrooke Hospital where he underwent an operation.s.s.s.c RED COAT AND Vest Tailored-to-m«a«or» LIO LALIBERTE & FlU \u2014 TAILORS \u2014 61 Wallington St.N- BRIEFLETS Dance at Island Brook Hall, Fri., S'ov.9th.Auspices Calf Club.Continued On Page 5 Carry On.Club tea, sale and food table, Plymouth Church Hall, Wed-:nfcsday, Nov.7th, 3 to 6 p.m.Annual meeting of the Sherbrooke Snow Shoe Club, Club House, Wed., Nov.7th, 8 p.m.St.Paul\u2019s Ladies\u2019 Guild cold roast, tea and Christmas sale, Tues., Nov.20th, 3 to 6:30.Tickets 50c.EVENING COURSES AT BISHOP\u2019S UNIVERSITY Six Friday Evenings:\t9H» to Dee.14Ht New Arts Bldg.\u2014 8 p.m.p* vv SCIENCE AND THE CITIZEN\tV Nov.9 Geology\u2014Dr.H.G.Way of Ascot Metals 16 Physics\u2014Dr.J.S.Marshall, McGill University 23 Chemistry\u2014Dr.J.W.McCubbin, Bishop\u2019s University 30 Biology- Dr.A.N.Langford, Bishop\u2019s University Dec.7 Science and Religion\u2014Dean W.R.Coleman, Bishop\u2019s Un.14 Panel Discussion\u2014Principal A.R.Jewitt (Chairman) \u201cOUR CANADIAN HERITAGE\" Nov.9 Our Political Heritage\tSpeakers: 16 Our Economic Development\tDr.D.C.Master*.23 Regionalism In Canada\tBishop\u2019s University 30 Personalities In Canadian History\tand Dec.7 A Canadian Culture\tMr.G.Patriquin, 14 Our Foreign Policy\tBishop\u2019s College School.FRENCH CONVERSATION for those with previous experience.Instructor: Mr.René Bernier, Ecole Supérieure, Sherbrooke.MAN AND THE STATE Ancient Theories: Plato & Aristotle\tSpeaker: The Origins Of Contemporary Democratic Ideas Hegel & Mark\tMr.F.Anderson Differences Between Fascism\tDept, of Philosophy and Communism\tBishop\u2019s.Theories Of The Individual In Political Thought \u2022 * \u2022 MINIMUM ENROLMENT for any course: ten.REGISTER NOWI REGISTRATION: Telephone 3 3480 or write to the Secretary, Eastern Townships Committee for Adult Education, Bishop\u2019s University, Lennoxville, Quebec, preferably enclosing registration fee of $3.00.Make cheques payable to the Eastern Townships Committee for Adult Education.$ I LOOK! 68 PCES.DINNER SET 34 PCES.SILVERWARE 48 PCES.GLASSWARE 150 Pee.ENSEMBLE $3P COMPLETE SERVICE FOR » PEOPLE $10 MONTHLY NO INTEREST OR EXTRA CHARGES ON SPECIAL SALE \u2014 WHILE THEY LAST, AT Sharbrooke'» Large»-* Furniture Stora, Four- - SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, I95Î Sherbrooke Daily Eecocd The Oldest Daily in the Distfict Established Ninth Day ot February.1807, with which is incorporated the Sherbrooke Gazette, established 1837, and Sherbrooke Examiner, established 1878 The Record is printed and published every week - day by the Sherbrooke Daily Record Company Limited, of which Edna A.Beerworth is Secretary-Treasurer, at the office, 69 Wellington Street North, in the City of Sherbrooke, incorporating the news service of The Canadian Press, The Associated Press and Reuters.Subscription Rates: Carrier delivery in Sherbrooke and Eastern Townships: 25 cents weekly, $13.00 per year.Mail subscription in Canada, Great Britain or the United States: 1 year $9.00, 6 months $4.50, 3 months $2-50, 1 month $1.00.Single copies 5c.\u201cAuthorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\u201d will adopt a more positive approach toward federation.Nothing could give the idea a bigger boost than the wholehearted entry of Britain into the framing of a sound, practical unity program.It is an objective warmly endorsed by Americans, who see in their own country the rich fruits of collaborative effort politically, economically and culturally over a wide geographic area greatly diversified in every regard.They believe similar rewaids await the people of a unified, resourceful Europe.Washington Column Til Race You!' SIDE-STEPPING THE ECONOMY ISSUE Finance Minister D.C.Abbott would have the people of Canada believe that no really effective economies can be made in the cost of government.On a half-hearted pledge to cut down non-defence expenditures, the guardian of the national treasury declares that of the total national budget of $3,700,000,000, only about $500,000,000 comes under the controllable class.Interest on the public debt, subsidies to the provinces, payments on railway rates, old age pensions, family allowances, etc., cannot very well be touched, he says.This may be true as far as it goes, but Mr-Abbott will have a difficult job in convincing the Canadian taxpayer that no important economies can be achieved in the realm of defence spending.They cannot be, in the sense that what is necessary for our defence, at home and abroad, must be provided.But within the defence expenditures there is certainly room for many major economies.Some disturbing and generally well-substantiated reports, for instance, come from military establishments as to how vast sums of money are spent in unessential ways.There is too great a tendency to think that just because a military development is necessary, money is no object and that it can be spent as freely as anyone wants to spend it.More than a quarter of the national budget is going for defence and certainly in that vast sum there is room for great economies.No one is suggesting the services should be stinted, or that every possible economy should not be made in civilian expenditures.It is just that wherever money is being spent, on defence or otherwise, care should be taken not to throw it away.UNITED EUROPE The cause of a united Europe may make important strides this month.France, Italy and Belgium all are planning to put forward new proposals for the political integration of Europe.This great project, long the dream of far-seeing statesmen on both sides of the Atlantic, has thus far not made the headway hoped for when the Council of Europe was created.But the new plans in the offing all envisage making more effective use of the council.While efforts at political federation have lagged, bolder steps have been made toward the economic and, lately, the military unification of Europe.Somewhat ironically, it is this very progress which is now compelling new attention to the idea of a broader unity.The Schuman plan for pooling Europe\u2019s coal and steel industries is advancing to final approval.The Pleven plan for an integrated European army has been accepted, and details of its make-up are being determined.But it is agreed that the top authorities in both instances must be answerable to some sort of European parliament, however limited in power.Thus it is no accident that three different nations will be ready with new ideas for a Unified Europe.The need is specific and pressing.The organization of Western defense and the future economic well-being of the Continent appear to depend in considerable part on political coordination of the member nations.There is not yet any clear index of the content of the various pending plans, but it seems evident that they will propose a parliament carefully restricted in authority.Europe is not ready for sweeping relinquishment of national sovereignty to a supra-national government.Nevertheless, it is fair to take encouragement from the sharp renewal of interest in European federation.No realist expected other than slow progress.When it comes, it must be recognized and applauded.Only damage is done to the cause by lamenting at each forward ; stride that \u201cthe goal is still a long way off.\u201d The return to power of Winston Churchill is a further heartening development.Under! the Labor Party, Britain has lent itself only to ! the idea of a loose sort of unification without a real central authority.This view actually kept Britain aloof from its associate nations severely handicapped the progress of unity.But Churchill is an eloquent champion of a United States of Europe.The Continent there-|fore has jusll reason to hope Britain hereafter j FRANCE MAY APPROVE GERMAN PARTICIPATION IN WESTERN ARMY By PETER EDSON NEA Washington Correspondent Paris \u2014 (NEA) \u2014 \u201cGerman rearmament will never be approved by France,\u2019\u2019 says her present Minister of National Defence, M.Georges Bidault.\u201cFrance cannot accept a revived Wehrmacht,\u201d he told a group of American newspaper correspondents now on a tour of Western Europe defense installations to inspect the progress and obstacles to rearmament of the anti-communist countries.\u201cNo one who has ever fought Germany will accept a revival of German militarism,\u201d says the wiry and now graying little Defence Minister.Bidault speaks with considerable feeling on this subject.He spent seven years in the French Army.But he went on from there to become a wartime leader of the French underground against Germany.And after the war he became France\u2019s Foreign Minister and later her Premier.So he speaks with authority, as a leading French political figure.But banning complete German rearmament, however, Bidualt does not exclude the possibility of including German units in a European Army, such as General Dwight D.Eisenhower now envisages.This is an important distinction, perhaps not fully realized in the United States.Negotiations to bring Germany into the Western Europe defense effort have now been going on for more months at both Paris and Bonn, between American, British, French and German representatives.But when they come to some agreement, no one can predict.IKE WANTS GERMANS TO MAKE OWN DECISION Eisenhower has observed at these talks.When he first came to Europe to take command of Western Europe forces, he felt that the subject of German rearmament should be allowed to rest.It had been talked up to the point of confusing the German people.They felt they were being pushed into some-thing.Eisenhower believed they should be allowed to make up their own minds, in their own self-interest.Now, however, he talks of the tremendous advantage of bringing Germany into the European army.He does not believe the Germans can be brought into the Western army as inferiors and he does not want them in as mercenaries.The Hessians were no good to the British in the American Revolutionary War.There is no reason to believe they would be any better now.So the counsel for the Eisenhower headquarters has been to work for a flexible agreement\u2014one that will one of principle, not substance.This is now taken to mean that there will be no hard and fast limitations on the size or number of Germany units that might be included in a European army.The agreement would thus become one of principle, not subtance.In the meantime, Bidault gives every assurance that France will keep her word\u2014will keep every commitment she has made on building up her own armed forces.This will include an army of 850,000 men, with 10 divisions along the Rhine by the end of this year.FRENCH HAVE TEN DIVISIONS IN FAR EAST Bidault calls attention to the fact that this is not the entire French armed force\u2014a fact generally overlooked, here are 10 more French divisions in Indo-China, and two divisions in North Africa.The Far Eastern troops are approximately one-third French, one-third native Vietnamese.Nor is this the complete French effort.The plan is to have 15 divisions in Europe by the end of 1952 and 20 divisions by the end of 1953.Behind these divisions will be reserves based on the French universal military service program\u2014capable of expanding some of the regular divisions into two and three divisions.The idea is to bring these reserves into a state of readiness where they can be mobilized within 48 hours.This is a tremendous speed up over the old-five-day and 30-day mobilization plans.France has standardized her divisions and her ammunition with American organization and specification.An inspection of the 93rd Infantry Regiment, near Paris, showed U.S.30 caliber rifles, semi-automatic, automatic and Tommy guns, machine guns, rockets and grenade launchers in use.Some of these weapons and all of their ammunition will be of French manufacture.The French rearmament program calls for building a French air force able to support fully all French ground troops, though this strength is not now available.The debate stirred up over the building of additional French airfields on which to base this growing airforce has now been solved and quieted, says Bidault.qHoIhez Bitter WiNTei £0°fluT «EA Strriu, fat Historic Carpet At Regina House Now Under Cover Regina.\u2014 Saskatchewan's most historic carpet is going under cover.The carpet that has lain on the floor of the provincial legislature since 1912 is being covered by a new rug, not so faded and bearing none of the marks of times or tradition, as yet.The older one had many of those marks.It was trodden by virtually every Governor-General of Canada since it was laid, as well as by the Duke of Windsor when he was Prince of Wales in-1919.The present King George and Queen Elizabeth walked on it in 1939.It has felt the weight of the late Stanley Baldwin when rfe was British Prime Minister in 1927, Mrs.Eleanor Roosevelt and many other distinguished visitors.It has also softened the fall of the occasional legislature member who fell asleep during droning debates and toppled over.The old carpet was woven on a soecially-made loom in Scotland.The new one, going down right on top of the old, was obtained at a cost of $12,000.The red carpet is part of the chamber redecoration program.The old rug is being left in place because otherwise a mat would have to be laid down to protect the underside of the new one.But the new carpet wall also cover wiring for loud-speaking, broadcasting and recording facilities, devices that hadn\u2019t been heard of when the original carpet was laid.From The Pen Of E.T.Writers THESE WILL ENDURE There will be beauty always Beyond the touch of wars: Music of falling waters And trânquil sunset skies.Apple trees in blossom.Bird song beneath the eaves.Velvety, crimson roses And Autumn leaves.Rainbows spanning the heavens.Fragrance lilacs distill.And across the purple darkness A moon-drenched hill.Pale dawns and moonbeams\u2019 silver.Wide spaces and emerald sod.There will be beauty always, Beauty, and God.Danville, Que.\u2014ETTA M.ATKINSON, Questions and Answers Annual milk supply of the United States is 57,000,000,000 quarts, with a valuation of $8,000,000,000.Q\u2014Has Igor Stravinsky composed any operas in recent years?A\u2014A new opera, \u201cThe Rake\u2019s Progress\u201d by Stravinsky had its world premiere in Venice, Italy, on September 11, 1951.* * * Q_When were all-steel railroad passenger cars introduced?A\u2014In 1908.* * Q\u2014What does \u201cghost writer\u201d mean?A\u2014In American usage, a ghost Jacoby On Bridge By OSWALD JACOBY writer is one hired to do work, especially of an artistic or literary nature, for another person who takes the credit.\u2022\t*\t*\t* Q\u2014Does the President of the United States ever wear a uniform?A\u2014No.He\tis\ta civilian al- though commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces.*\t*\t* Q\u2014How large is the flag atop New York-New Jersey\u2019s George Washington Bridge?A\u2014Sixty-by-90 feet, the second largest in the world.#\t*\t* Q\u2014How many different animals are there?A\u2014Zoologists recognize more than 900,000 species of living animals.There are a great many more which are now extinct.WHAT\u2019S A WORM?Blind-worms are lizards; apple-worms are the young of moths; chestnut-worms are the young of j beetles, hookworms are nematodes; and ship worms are mollusks.So, what is a worm?PRESS COMMENTS sflr POST THEM AT THE DANGER SPOTS Ottawa Journal The Quebec Government, it is announced, is adding 50 constables to the traffic division of provincial police, with a special school to train them for their duties.One needs only to glance at this year's traffic tragedies, in Quebec as in all the provinces, to realize how much needed is this step.Whether the best possible use will be made of these men remains to be seen.Too often we see traffic constables patrolling stretches of straight road ready to pounce on any motorist who has ventured a bit beyond the legal 50 mph although no risk to anybody has been involved.Almost never have we seen a constable on his motorcycle watching traffic in the danger spots \u2014 the hills and curves.Most drivers, on curves and hills, exercise commendable caution, have their vehicles under control.But a reckless fellow turning out to pass when the road ahead is hidden from his view may put in deadly peril the occupants of two cars that are committing no fault \u2014 one approaching from the opposite direction, and the other the car that is being passed.A piece of recklessness such as this explains ! most of the three-car smashes.There are such danger spots on the North Shore I highway in Quebec on the Gatineau Highway, and ! on the Aylmer road at Tetreauville, on the approach ! to Hull.With more constables it should be possible for the Quebec police to pay more attention to these | places, and to be stern and even harsh with law ; breakers who are such a menace to the public safety.| RIGHT PLAY WOULD HAVE I SAVED TRICKS \"Please settle a problem for us\u201d requests a San Diego reader.\u201cWhen the accompanying hand was played, South was very clever\u2014but we don't know what to say about East.Was he weak-minded or just unfortunate?\u201cWest opened the jack of hearts! and dummy won with the ace.Declarer then immediately returned the four of hearts from the dummy., \u201cSouth saw that he was bound to lose a trick in each suit if the king of spades happened to be be hind him.This play in the heart suit was an attempt to avoid the loss of a trick there.\u201cEast stewed and stewed at this' second trick.Had his partner led from jack-ten-deuce or from jack-deuce?In either case the opening lead would have been the jack.If his partner had the ten of hearts, it was up to East to play low; but if South had the ten of hearts, it was up to East to play the king.\u201cEast finally decided to play a low heart, and South won the trick with the ten.Of course South drew trumps hastily after that, and made his contract with ease.\u201cWas there any way for East to know what was going on\u2014or was he just unlucky?\u201d East couldn\u2019t be sure of what was going on, but she should have played the king of hearts anyway.Suppose South ruffs the king of hearts\u2014what difference does it make?South cannot get to dummy to get a discard on the queen of hearts, for East has the ace of diamonds and the ace of clubs.East can surely take the first diamond and cash the ace of clubs.Jf West has the king of clubs.East can lead a second club to make «ire of that trick.In short, the defenders can surely set the tricks that are coming to S WEST\tNORTH (D)\t6 A 84 ^ A Q 6 4 ?K O J 10 6 AQJ EAST AK75\tA 62 V J2\tV K 9 8 5 3 ?8 2\t?A54 *986532\t* A 10 4\t North\tSOUTH *\tAO J 10 9 3 V 10 7 ?\t9 7 3 A K 7 Both sides vul.East South West 1 ?\tIV\t1 A\tPass 1 N.T.\tPass 4 A\tPass Pass\tPass Opening lead\u2014V J\t Video Cowgirl HORIZONTAL VERTICAL them in diamonds and dubs even if East puts up the king of hearts and has it ruffed away.Playing the king of hearts couldn't cost anything.Failure to play it, as East found out, cost the rubber.CVRD SENSE Q\u2014The bidding has been: East South West North 1 N.T.Pass 3 N.T.Pass Pass Pass.You, South hold: Spades J-10-9-7-5, Hearts K-J-4, Diamonds Q-7-5, Clubs A-2.What do you lead?A\u2014Lead the jack of spades.You must certainly lead your long suit since you have several probable re-entries and may well be able to establish and run your suit.The correct card to lead from the spade suit is the top of the sequence, the jack.TODAY\u2019S QUESTION The bidding is the same as in the question just answered.You, South, hold: Spades Q-J-10-7-5, Hearts K J 4, Diamonds 8 7-5.Clubs A-?.What do you lead?Answer Tomorrow 1 Depicted actress, Barbara- 8 Flower 13\tAntennae 14\tPersian water wheel 15\tObese 16\tFish 18\tProvide with weapons 19\tMeasure of type 20\tRaged 22\tEpistle (ab.) 23\tExist 24\tAnd (Fr.) 26 Asseverate 28 Castle ditch 31\tMinute skin opening 32\tGrafted (her.) 33\tEnthusiastic ardor 34\tIrritate 35\tBristle 36\tDisease (suffix) 37\tDiminutive of Edward 38\tSymbol for tellurium tf9 French Island 41 Engravers 47 Symbol for rhodium 49 Frozen water 51\tCourse 52\tOriental porgy 53\tBarter 55 Capacity 57\tShe has appeared on video with Gene- 58\tViolently forced air through hose 1\tOut of danger 2\tGroup of players 3\tWile 4\tSymbol for nickel 5\tEndure 6\tMasculine appellation 7\tBelgian river 8\tPoker stake 9\tThus 10\tMalayan pewter coin 11\t\"Emerald Isle\u201d 12\tSloping way 17 Long meter (5ib.) 20\tEvening song 21\tMarks against 23 Scold The Record Short Story LAUNDROMAT LOVE By ROBERTA YATES \u201cIt\u2019s a good, clean job anyway,\u201d Jean Allan would say apologetically, because her girl friends worked in downtown offices, and here she was in Tom Courtney's small, surburban laundromat.But the truth was that she liked the fresh scent of clean clothes and the whirr of the washers, and she liked Tom also, though she would not admit it to herself.Tom was a fine boss, good humored and considerate.It was fun to dance with him and to ride with him in his only car, a battered old truck.What Jean didn't like was that Tom, in many ways, was like her own dad.Oh, dad was wonderful.Everybody loved dad, but somehow he never managed to make good in any business.He shifted hopefully from job to job, always trying and always failing.Tom was on the way to failure j The color came back to Rex\u2019s too.He had invested in a laundro- face, and he gave a reasonable fac-mat without a parking lot.A few, simile of his usual cocksure smile, doors away was a big place with\t\u201cDumb jerks!\u201d he said, fifty machines and space for fifty | \u201cWere they gangsters?\u201d Jean cars.Naturally customers, drove on.Naturally, too, the appliance firm might lose patience and take back Tom\u2019s 20 washers and three dryers any minute.But Tom, like dad, kept trying and smiling and lugging big baskets of washing.It was pitiable.Jean wondered irritably why the big dope had to look like Gregory Peck.asked in awe.\u201cNo, just laundry drivers, sors because I took their customers.\u201d \u201cRex, you mean that laundry you brought us.\u201d He laughed.\u201cDid you think 1 w'as doing it for charity?Not me, baby.I sent out cards.Bundle done for two bucks.That\u2019s under the regular price, so people jumped at That was the situation when Rex it.The laundromats do the job for Bart drove in to the laundromat and into her life.Rex double-parked his red cbnvertible, carried in five baskets of laundry without mussing his expensive sport shirt, and said: \u201cI\u2019m helping out the folks without cars in my apartment house.Be back,for these later.\u201d Then he gave Jean a double take.\u201cI mean sooner,\u201d he amended.\u201cYou can have the laundry in an hour,\u201d Tom said eagerly.\u201cFive will be okay if that\u2019s when you\u2019re off,\u201d Rex said to Jean.Rex was a salesman in a used car lot, but one felt that this was only the first step of a born go-getter toward success.He talked about angles, and how 10 would always get you 20 if you were hep.He talked about going to a big town like Chicago, wheÆ a guy who knew the angles could really get in the money.He took Jean to expensive restaurants and drive-ins, always in a flashy car.The girl who married Rex would never have to worry about a bankrupt laundromat or even where her next shrimp cocktail w\u2019as coming from.It became routine for Rex to bring in baskets of laundry frequently, and call for them and Jean in the evening.If Tom noted, he said nothing.He didn\u2019t ask Jean to go dancing or ride in the 45 cents, so I clear one buck fifty on every basket.Smart?\u201d Jean didn't answer.She thought of Tom filling and emptying the washers, and helping Rex carry the baskets in and out Rex went on bragging.\u201cCan and gas cost me nothing.I tell the boss I need a car to show a customer.All clear profit.Hey, what\u2019s the matter, baby?\u201d Jean was out of the car, her cheeks hot, her blue eyes blazing.\u201cThat\u2019s à chiseling way to make money,\u201d she cried.\u201cAh, baby, don\u2019t be silly.\u201d But baby was silly.She walked to the highway.The canary yellow convertible honked beside her for a moment, then went in.Click, click went her heels, and drip went a tear on her nose.Another car slowed beside her, and gave a familiar, senile honk.Tom stopped the truck and said: \u201cI\u2019m here with too little and too late as usual.I was worried for fear you\u2019d get hurt.\u201d Jean climbed in the truck.She was hurt, deep down in her own smug little ego that had thought itself so smart.\u201cI was afraid those guys after Bart would start a fight,\u201d Tom said.\u201cThen you knew he was making us do the work while he col- Jean to go dancing or ride in the lected three times what you chare-truck any more, perhaps because etj?\u201c jean cried.Rex\u2019s cars made him ashamed.cars Tom was looking haggard and tired, the way dad did when a job was folding up.Jean suppressed her pity by reminding herself of how hard mom had to work.Not that mom ever complained.She loved dad.But a girl would be stupid to repeat mom\u2019s mistake.\u201cA guy with my angles can go anywhere,\u201d Rex said.They w\u2019ere drinking malts outside a drive-in, and, as usual, he had the handsomest car in the line-up, a canary yellow convertible.He put his hand over Jean\u2019s ed?\u201d Jean cried.\u201cSure,\u201d said Tom.\u201cBut you can't pass up business.\u201d He added: \u201c1 have a new angle.Maybe things will get better.\u201d \u201cI hate angles,\u201d said Jean.\u201cWhat is this one?\u201d Funny how much more comfortable the old truck felt than the yellow convertible.\"Well, Bart\u2019s boss at the used car lot got sore about Bart using his cars like that.But it gave both of us an idea.This fellow, the used car lot owner has parking space in back of his building.So we figure he\u2019ll rent parking and include pick-up and delivery of laundry to the cars while people shop.\u201d How about you going too, baby?,Tom stopped.\t^ It was a proposal at which a crying.^ it such a rotten idea or ?.™rt J™uld\u201e.S:.hu}t ! are you in love with Bart and this worries you?\u201d kept thinking stupidly of the empty washing machines at the laundromat.\u201cWhat would the people whose laundry you bring in do without you?she asked foolishly.\u201cThat\u2019s penny ante stuff,\u201d Rex said.Just then a car stopped beside them, and two large men got out and closed in on the convertible.\u201cYou Rex Bart?\u201d one demanded.Rex nodded, his face pasty.\u201cYou got to cut out muscling in on our business, Bart.\u201d \u201cYeah, Bart.We don\u2019t want to pull any rough stuff, but we will if we have to.Better be a good boy.\u201d \u201cOkay, fellows,\u201d Rex said weakly.\u201cHeck, I\u2019m getting out of town.\u201d \u201cThat\u2019s a good idea,\u201d they told him, and drove atvay.Shut up about him,\u201d Jean sniffled.She remembered the pride in mom\u2019s eyes when dad came in with a new job.\u201cI think it\u2019s a wonderful idea,\u201d she said.\u201c Aad what I want is a man just like the man that married dear old mom.\u201d Answer to Previous Puzzle [-iiaiai sasia ataa THE END OF TWE TRAIL 25\tExplosive 26\tMimics 27\tRodent 29 Husband of Gudrun 44\tMean dwellings 45\tFamous English school 46\tCity in Nevada 30 Golfer\u2019s device 47 Fury (pi.)\t48\tHastened 39\tCosmic order 50 Dine 40\tUnbleached 52 Make a lace 42\tThree in carda edging 43\tSymbol for 54 Doctor (ab.) cobalt\t56\tNear (ab.) (coll.) \tl\t5\t4\t£\tfc\t7\t\tr\u201c\t9\u201d\t\tII\tll \t\t\t\t\t\t\tn\tIH\t\t\t\t 15\t\t\t\tlb\t\t\t\t\tÊ\t4\t\t 19\t\t\t10\t\t\t\t\t\ttl\tWi\tu\t \t\t\t\t\u2014j\t\t\t\t\t29\t\tb-i\t?r Vo\tn\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t28\t\t\t 51\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t3i\t\t\t 55\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tJh\t\t\t 55\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t36\t\t\t \tj\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tiè\tr\t\t 59\tHO\t\tHI\tHZ\tHÎ\tHH\tH5\t\t\t\tH7\t48 \t\tso\t\tii\t\t\t\t\t\t51\t\t bi\t\t\tSM\t\t\tss\t\t\t56\t\t\t SI\t\t\t\t\t\t58\t\t\t\t\t\tfe From The Record Files THIRTY YEARS AGO November 6th fell on a Sunday.TWENTY YEARS AGO The Crown resumed its efforts to link Canadian Communists with the Communist International at Moscow when nine Canadian Red leaders, including Tim Buck, went on trial at Toronto today.They are charged with acting as members of an unlawful association and with being parties to seditious conspiracy.TEN YEARS AGO Officers elected at the annua! meeting of the Sher« brooke Snowshoe Club are as follows: Honorary president, W.S.Allen; president, Bert Williams: first vice-president, H.Hawley Griffith; second vice-president, Howard Kennedy; treasurer, Howard Thompson: secretary, E.T.Harbert; sergeant \u2022 at \u2022 arms, Harold McCullough.At Vichy, Marshall Retain asserted today in a message to a French unit which had joined the German Army in a drive against Russia that it was defending France and French military honor in a German-led \u201ccrusade.\u201d FIVE YEARS AGO Republicans, with a comeback of landslide proportions, bad the House of Representatives at Washington within their grasp today and reached for control of the U.S.Senate as well.In the \u201cHouse,\u201d the G.O.P.have 202 of 435 seats with 68 still to be heard from and had elected 46 Senators and were leading in six of the nine remaining seats of the 9G-man Senate.MEMORIAL STADIUM The football stadium of the University of Illinois, with a seating capacily of 66.572, is a memorial to Illinois students who died during World War I. SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD.TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6.1^5! -Fît* Police Probe Ayer\u2019s Cliff Night Thefts Det.-Sgt.Stenio Brasseur and Det.Rene Coupai, of the local office of Provincial Police, are probing two break-ins which occurred at Ayer's Cliff within a few days of each other.Approximately $400 in cash and equipment were taken from two Ayer\u2019s Cliff firms in after-dark entries.Between dark and daylight of November 1 and 2, a thief or thieves entered the office of the B.B.Glove Manufacturing Company by a rear door, which was unlocked, and took more than S75 from the company safe, which was open.In the darkness of November 3-4, a forced entry through a rear tvindow of the John W.Hunter hardware firm, also of Ayer's Cliff, relieved the store of a quantity of toasters, pressure cookers, and other electriçal goods\u2014valued at more than $300.Formal Truce Continued From Page 1 sible hostilities.\u201d Nuckols said Red rejection of the allied proposal was in effect a turn down of a previous understanding that hostilities would continue until an armistice was only tentative and subject to final revision.U.S.Eighth Army Headquarters, Korea, Nov.6\u2014-| WA/VT-R/M- i ALL AH KNOWS IS, AM LOVES VO', AN'AIMS T' KETCH vo; AN' MARRV VO' WHO FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS YOU WOULD-BE VALENTINO.' SO MV WARNING about thf.nifty nelcs WASN'T ENOUGH ?\t,- TtjlpTVT DELICIOUS MENUS \u2014 BEST HOT DOGS \u2014 Sherbrooke's only Restaurent with complete assortment of CANDIES, CONFECTIONERY, FRUITS 8 Marquette (opp.LaTribune) Tel.3-1776 27 King E., Tel.3-1446 Johns- Manville Guards Air Supply For Diver Husband Winnipeg\u2014In the average family the wife's job is to keep her husband well fed.But pretty Mary Bieber goes a step further\u2014she sees to it that her husband Carl keeps breathing.Most of the time Carl works as a switch foreman with the railway.Then for three months of each year he goes back to what he claims is his first love\u2014diving.While he works far below the surface of the water, his wife maintains a constant vigil to see that his supply of air never stops.Dressed in blue demin longs and jacket and rubber boots, Mary never leaves the boat while her husband is working.She guards j telephone connections with Carl j and keeps a weather eye on the j three helpers who man the air i pump.Before Carl enters the water, ; Mary and the helpers aid him in ; putting on the heavy warm cloth-1 ing he must wear.This is followed by the rubber suit, 20-pound boots and a final good-luck kiss before ; the big metal helmet is clamped over his head.\u201cUnusual?Sure my job's unusual,\u201d says Mrs.Bieber.\u201cBut I like it and my husband feels he can j trust me more than anyone else.I He isn't wrong about that either.\u201d Carl says he loves the business ; and wishes he could do it the year round.He first started diving nine : i years ago while in the Canadian ! navy.\t, .Both he and Mary admit to a j few narrow squeaks.One of the ; most frightening was last win i ter when he was working below the ice in the Assiniboine river.The swift current swept him off balance and he had consider- j 1 able difficulty finding his way I back to the place where he had entered the water through a hole in the ice.Another time he was barely conscious when pulled to the surface.He riped his suit in 60 feet of wat-! er while repairing submarine nets on the east coast.-Tii\" A\u201d VA i\tI \u2022 n » Ü *\t^ \\ v-v , 5\t/ V; i n mi m4 Hepe's where you lose YOUR HUNIING LICENSE/ HAND OVER THOSE TWICP IA6S.'\tJ But.cprAMPUFr you know the RULES / WITHOUT MV TAGS I'LL , HAVE TO R6Y FOR THIS CLAMDAKI / By Merrill Blount .\u2014\u2014 1\t^ EXACTLY/ WHAT YOU NEED S A LITTLE CAPITAL.PUNISHMENT / COP»» 1 «*\u2022 » ftv Nf A SERVICE INC M REC II s PAT Off, JTy r .v'll 7/» W VIC FLINT NOT EVEN A BULOE TO i-MOW I'M CARRYING?A RO&COE.MAW MAW HAW/ By Michael O'Bready and Ralph Lane Sidewall beauty for your home! Attractively grained and available in gay new colours, Johns-Manville Cedar-grain Asbestos Siding Shingles add charm to any home.Widely used on new homes, J-M Cedargrains are also easily and economically applied over old sidewalls in remodelling.Made of asbestos and cement, they are unaffected by weather and never require painting.Before you build or remodel, consider the economy, beauty and long-lasting qualities of J-M Cedargrains.Available in five eye-appealing colours; Redtone, Graytone, Browntone, Greentone and Dover White.W WAT'S\u2019 YOUR NEXT /\u2019PORT OUGHT TO BEL/ORRV BUT ALONG IN A MINUTE,/I DONT FLINT BUT LET G LIKE TO ) MYSTERY TALK ABOUT ^\\TALK f-HOF/ ABOUT; AYR CRIME.- C\t.-A-, 3CRIBE?V NF.A RVH.f .INC., I WAVE A NEW PLOT IM GOING TO CALL \u201cTWE IMPERFECT crime;' ALL right; 6-PORT DON'T LET ON TWERE'6 ANYTHING WORRYING > YOU./'ho«m atra lor delivery fat your kitchen with Five-Year ProtecHoft Plan.Prices and specifications subject te chance without notice.will show you the superiority ©I EXTRA-IARGF ov* BOTTLE mmm SPACE visitors at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Morton Evans and also called at the homes of Mr.and Mrs.A.E.French and Mr and Mrs.Robert L.French.Mr.and Mrs.George Berwick, Mr.Fred Berwick and Miss Dorothy Berwick were dinner guests of Mr.and Mrs.Clinton D.French.French with a purse of money asj Mrs \u2019x 0 Farnsworth and Miss a token of their best wishes 1°^ a Esther Farnsworth, of Cookshire, long and haPPy married life.Mr.were caners at the home of Mr.CUnton French then tnanked | and Mrs Robei.t L< French> everyone for the gift and good wishes expressed to them.The ; pleasant evening was brought to a close by singing, \u201cFor They Are Jolly Good Fellows \u2019 and \u201cAuldi Lang Syne.\u201d General Notes Mr.and Mrs.Elgin Frencli and family, of Sherbrooke, were recent week-end guests at the home of Mr.and Mrs.A.E.French.Mr.J and Mrs.Clement P.Flaws, of | Sawyerville, were tea guests at the same home.Films from the National Film Board were shown recently at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Edmund Bowker when a good number gathered and spent an enjoyable evening.Recent visitors at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Robert L.French include: Mr.and Mrs.Lloyd \\ French and family and Mr.and Mrs.C.P.Flaws, of Sawyerville; j Mr.and Mrs.Gilbert Ross, of Cookshire; Mr.and Mrs.Archie W.French, and Mr.Kenneth French, Mr.James H.French and Mr.William French.Mr.and Mrs.Claude Harvey, of Chelmsford, Mass., were recent) ¥es, get the refrigerator that gives you more food storage space for your dollar than ever before.In this big new \u201c7Va\u201d you\u2019ll find a place for everything that needs refrigeration\u2014from frozen foods to lettuce, meats, apples and beverages.There\u2019s nothing like it on the market today! See it\u2014inspect it today! HERE'S WHAT THE NAME KELVINATOR MEANS TO YOU! It means unvarying high quality .in every model.The accumulated \"know-how\" of 36 years of pioneering in electric refrigeration.You can choose no finer refrigerator for your home._____ \"IT\u2019S NICE TO KNOW YOU HAVE THE BEST\u201d SET THE SPACE! GET THE BEAUTY! GET THE BUY! Cet KEIVINATORI OWN!» IV THOB6 tt \u2022\u2022tV|« if you ¦¦\ti \u2022 .FREE a T I I % k la \u2022 don t agree.SHIRRIFF\u2019S &»c«ùUc éMeikix is the best you ever tasted we will give you\u2014 DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK Bedford High School in observ-1 ance of United Nations Day, a special assembly was held for the | pupils, to commemorate the occa- j sion.During the day the flag of ) the United Nations made by the ! French specialist, Mrs.Edward Piche, Jr., was flown on the flagpole ujCer the Uniop Jack.Mr.Lome Derrick, of St.Johns, spent the week-end in Bedford with his parents, Mr.and Mrs.H.Derrick.CO »/f WAifc So sure are we that Shirriff\u2019s Chocolate Cake Mix is the best you\u2019ve ever used that we invite you to try it on a \u201cdouble your money back\u2019\u2019basis.Make up just one ShirrifTs Chocolate Cake.If you don't agree it\u2019s richer in flavour and lighter in texture than any other, we will give you DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK on return of box top with your comment to Shirriff\u2019a, Toronto. SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD.TUESDAY.NOVEMBER 6, 195! Nin« Social and Personal In The Women's ^DUPpp Md Birthday Celebrated At FORDYCE Mrs.John Maffre and young 1 Mr.and Mrs.Victor Crawford, ion.John Jeffrey Hale Maffre, of of Lachi le.were recent guests of Montreal, are spending a week Mr.and Mrs.Wesley Billing, at sith the former's parents.Mr.and their home on Wyatt Avenue.Urs.F.W.McCrea, f Montreal\t» * * street.\tFriends of Mrs.Chester Dowd.*\t*\t*\tWellington Street South, will re- Mr.and Mrs.D.F.Allen and gret to learn she is a patient in :hildren, Sue Ann and Stephen, of the Sherbiooke Hospital.?lainsfield, Vt., were guests dur DOROTHY DIX omen* s Clubs Tomifobia had received a letter of \u201cthanks\u201d from Mrs.Wright, superintend Mr.and Mrs Murray Mason en d^nt 0f the B.M.P.Hospital, tertained the Farm Forum Group Sweetsburg, expressing her appre-at their home one Monday even ciation of jams artid jelly received , ing, when officers were elected from the Forum members and I for the coming year.The Forum friends.
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