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Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
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lundi 29 mai 1939
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  • Sherbrooke examiner
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Sherbrooke daily record, 1939-05-29, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" WEATHER Partly cloudy with showers.For detailed weather report see Page Two, S\u2019hrrbniokc ÎRprnrî) TEMPERATURES Yesterday: Maximum, 80; minimum, 66.Same day last year; Max.75; min.45, Established 1897.SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, MONDAY, MAY 29, 1939.Forty-Third Year.WEST COAST WELCOMES ROYAL PARTY Longest Drive M DELAY1N XTr?\ti T*-,\tREFITTING OF Ur Royal Four In Vancouver Vancouver Streets Jammed at Early Hour as Coast Residents Await Fifty-One Mile Parade-Ships in Gala Attire Make Waterfront a Blaze of Color - China- town Celebrations in Full Swing.Vancouver.May -9.\u2014®\u2014Early crowds lined Vancouver\u2019s downtown streets today as the silver and blue train carrying King George and Queen Elizabeth to the Pacific came out of the Coast range mountains into the green pastures of the Eraser valley.Street cars started service two hours earlier than usual, carrying crowds to vantage points along the fifty-one-mile motor route, beginning at the downtown station almost immediately following the arrival at 10 a.m., P.S.T.The waterfront, only one hundred yards from the station, was ablaze with color as ships displayed strings of holiday flags and bunting.Ferries dotted the harbor, carrying throngs to the city from North and West Vancouver in the North Shore of Burrard Inlet.Streets along the route and downtown buildings were decorated last week but during the week-end new flags and streamers appeared on thousands of homes.On the route and off, few houses could be found without some sort of decorations.Temporary grandstands by the score\u2014most at street level but some | on building roofs\u2014sprang up everywhere.Seats ranged from $1 to $30 for \u201chigh-class vantage points\u201d with refreshments included.Chinatown began its celebration Saturday night.The golden-headed, man-carried Chinese lion\u2014-symbol of hope and peace\u2014did its fantastic dance through Chinatown as hunch eds of whites and Orientals looked down from roofs and Windows of surrounding buildings.Chinese boys and girls lined up at attention after the dance, carry-ng the Union Jack and singing \u201cGod Cave the King.\u201d Just after the turmoil in Chinatown quietened\u2014police had been unable to keep the throngs off two blocks of street\u2014a heavy rain drenched the city and most other coast centres.Citizens awoke Sunday to find flags and bunting of their homes sodden, but warm sunshine between afternoon showers repaired most of the damage.The King was to review a guard-of-honor posted by a battalion of Seaforth Highlanders of Canada, *- THE ROYAL DAY IN BRIT-ISH COLUMBIA ROYAL VESSEL Four Montrealers Arrested For Possessing Counterfeit Bills Vancouver.p.m.\u2014E.D.T.\u2014Arrival, p.m.\u2014City Hall reception.3:40 p.m.\u2014Procession through parks where school chi Idren assem-bied.p.m.\u2014Civic luncheon at Hotel Vancouver.,\u2014Drive about city.\u2014Departure\ton steamship Princess Marguerite for Victoria, Victoria.-(Tuesday)\u2014 Arrival.(Note: Times given are four hours faster than Pacific Standard Time effective in Vancouver and Victoria.2:00 3:00 5:00 6:30 9:00 1:00 a.m.Dispute Over Wage Rates May Delay Task of Refitting Empress of Britain for Return Voyage of Their Majesties.London, May 29.\u2014(C.P.-Cable) \u2014 Repaie work aboard the liner Empress of Britain which will bring the King and Queen home from Canada next month will be held up unless a shipyard dispute at Southampton is settled, the Daily Herald said today.\ti The newspaper says that men who have been brought to Southampton from Portsmouth are being employed at Portsmouth wage rates which are substantially less than those prevailing in Southampton.The trouble started over repairs to H.M.S.Rebus, Not only has all overtime work been stopped on the j Rebus, but the unions have decided that unless the matter is adjusted the ban will be extended tomorrow to the Empress of Britain and other ships.Montreal, May 29.\u2014 Four men were arrested yesterday in Montreal and district by Royal Canadian Mounted Police who seized seventeen allegedly counterfeit 810 bills and printing equipment that police said was capable of turning out the notes.Two of the men were taken into custody on the highway east of Yarennes, Que., when police stopped their automobile and found one of the notes in their possession.A search of their Montreal homes brought to light fifteen additional bills and the printing equipment.Later a twenty-one-year-old man and his brother were arrested here and another note seized.Police reported the bills were good photographic plate imitations of Royal Bank of Canada money, although recognized easily by experts.They were said to have made their appearance in several Eastern Townships towns about three weeks ago and since then at least twenty-five have been passed in stores, restaurants and hotels.MINER SUFFERS LITTLE INJURY IN LONG VIGIL LARGE CHINESE COAL FIND Tokyo, May 29.\u2014-(C.P.-Havas) \u2014 Discovery of a Chinese coal bed with an estimated yield of 28,000,000,000 tons in the northern reaches of Japanese-occupied Shansi Province was reported today by Domei, Japanese Ness agency.The bed is said to lie partly beneath the old Tatung coal mine, which is working a bed estimated at 12,000,000,000 tons.Entombed Beneath Earthslide Since Friday, Operator of Bootleg Mine Suffers Slightly from Shock After Rescue.YVONNETAKES LEADERSHIP AS CANDLE BLOWER Only One of Five Candles Remain Lighted as Yvonne Dionne Out-Blows Four Sisters in Birthday Cake Contest.FRANCO RUSHES EVACUATION OF FOREIGN AIDES Expected that Last Group of Italian and German Troops ÜS(h0 Pai'ticipated in Civil Although Soviet Government Has Given No Outward Sign of War Will Leave Before\t.Chamberlain Increasing Popularity With Country As Russian Treaty Nears Week-End.Shenandoah, Pa., May 29.\u2014(fP) Callander, Ont., May 29.\u2014((P)\u2014 \u2014Laughing and joking with rescuers, | Yvonne, second last in the weight Robert Galligan, thirty-eight-year- j ,\t.old anthracite miner, was dug out of 1 column> IS the champion candle-coal hole early today, apparently blower-outer of the Dionne quintuip Mystery Plane Raises Hopes For Safety Of Errant Flier Small Craft Sighted Over Northern Ireland Believed that of Twenty-Four-Year-Old Flier Who Took Off from Old Orchard in Unauthorized Flight to Europe Yesterday\u2014 Had Ample Gas Supply.uninjured after sixty-five hours im I prisonment under tons of rock and ! dii\u2019t.j Rescuers who had toiled uneeasing-I ly, first with a steam shovel and then j with pick and shovel, reached Galli-; gan at 1:55 a.m., E.D.T.Hoisted up shaft seventy-five feet deep, Gal- DUPLESSIS TO MOVE AGAINST NAZI PICTURES Londonderry, Northern Ireland, May 29.\u2014(/P)\u2014A small plane passed over here this afternoon and while coal there was no immediate identifi- caRet!;., Galligan s ligan greeted fellow' miners on the j surface with a \u201cgimme a ciggic j (cigarette) and let me sit down a ; while.\u201d He was taken to a hospital, where ] physicians said he was suffering slightly from shock.A sudden slide of rock trapped the miner at 11 a.m., Friday, as he worked in the mine, one of the many so-called \u201cbootleg\u201d workings which dot this eastern Pennsylvania hard section.Two lets.She outpuffed her sisters as they celebrated their fifth birthday, only one of five candles on her Personal cake weathering the blow.As a last-minute surprise the children were presented with individual cakes besides one large angel I cake for the party yesterday with their parents, sisters and brothers.Marie, Annette and Emilie scored three candles with the pffffs.Only two flames bowed to the effort of little Cecile.The children started the sixth year of their lives with gifts prized more than any other of the thousands they have received\u2014five dolls from their companions es- i mother and father.Large sleeping j dolls with brown eyes, they were eighty-year-old father, ; gowned in the particular color of Attorney-General\u2019s Depart-! ment in Communication! with German Consul Over! Montreal, May 29.\u2014(ffi\u2014 Seizure here jLcently cf a \u201cpro-Nazi film\u201d has been followed by the ordering of the Quebec Attcrney-Gencral\u2019s near the depot this morning before ELpartmant to \u201ctake the necessary he and the Queen continued their j procedures.\u201d Premier Duplessis drive to the City Hail for a civic | said today.The film was seized reception.\tI by Provincial Police in a downtown , At 5.00\tn.m., after a drive j club, through the East End and North \u201cAfter the film was seized, I r*e- | and West Vancouver, Their Majes-Î ceived a letter from the German I ties were to board the coastal steam-j Consul in Montreal.\u201d the Premier | es Princess Marguerite for the raid at a press conference.And I1 eighty-mile trip through the Gulf j replied.I have ordered the Att-or- j of Georgia to Victoria, where they iLy-General\u2019s Department to take! was no cation some thought It might be that Patrick, who had kept vigil at the | each quint.Immediately the gifts of Thomas Smith, American flier at-.scene from the time his son\u2019s plight I were presented, other playthings tempting to span the Atlantic in his was learned, was among the several j were set aside.light \u201cBaby Clipper.\u201d\t| hundred spectators who witnessed , Birthday cards, gifts, flowers and The\tnloiTP flvino-\tat a\thioih\talti\t' rescue.The son greeted his father j\tjuck c}]iarm,g\tcame from all parts of ine piane, flying at a tugrt am- wlth \u201cH va, Pop, I m okay but a\t.j,,,\tqtJtpa a tude, came from the direction of the, little hunirv\u201d\tU ;?a and the United Mates.A AHniiHe\tnctie nungry.\t| greeting sent by two amateur short- ,\t\u2019\t_\t! Loose dirt covering Galligsn s le-\tradio operators in New Bed- \u201c¦on P*S,led rVMTLonn°nn2nrry ! *«8*.».small.chamber Vhich did not | ford Mas was delivered, after G.M.1,\t( 10.20\ta.m.\tcaVe in made the rescuers task |\tbei icked\tan.d reiayed by 0ther double difficult Toward the end the |\t\u201eham?\u201e in\tM,orrisburg, Ont, and rescuers worked two and thiee at a j\\fortb j;ay eleven and one-half miles time m space only four feet square fr b under the constant threat that they too might become engulfed by new | flew when she crossed the Atlantic slides, A one-inch pipe driven through the wall of dirt into the miner\u2019s :20 p.m E.D.T.) The plane was' heading toward r\t_\t, , England, and if it was the \u201cBaby Seizure ot Nazi Propaganda; clipper\u201d it apparently had followed Film.\tI the route the late Amelia Earhart from Harbor Grace, Nfld., May 21, 1932, and landed near Londonderry.It was seen by hundreds who had tomb early last night gave Galligan been scanning clear skies for Smith\u2019s 670-pound, one-motor plane which took off from Old Orchard Beach, Me., at 5:47 a.m.E.D.T.Sunday and was expected to reach the Irish Coast about noon E.D.T.today.air.Before he was hoisted to the surface, Galligan was blindfolded to prevent injury to his eyes by the [ doctor, suddert emergence into a glare of Besides Dr.Allan Roy Dafoe kissed each of his famous charges tenderly as he visited them in the nursery before the party yesterday.He was rewarded when each of the children kissed his forehead today\u2014the fifty-sixth life milestone of the little country Madrid, May 29.\u2014(TP) \u2014 Spanish Nationalists declared today that General Francisco Franco's promise to send home all foreign troops upon the consolidation of his civil war victory would be fulfilled by the end j of -this week.Italian legionnaires at Cadiz, on the Southern Coast, are to say \u2018\u201cAdois!\u201d Wednesday when they embark for Italy in the transports Toscana, Piemonte, Sicilia and at least three other troopships.The hospital ship Gradisca is to carry wounded Italian soldiers.Nationalists said all Italians who participated May 19th in the victory inarch in Madrid would quit Spain this week.That number was estimated at 12,000.The German Condor Legion, numbering 5,000, sailed Friday from Vigo to Hamburg.A Portuguese contingent of approximately 500 was in Salamanca preparatory to crossing the frontier.Many Moorish troops already have returned to Spanish Morocco and other units are proceeding homeward.A large part of the Nationalist army rapidly is being demobilized.Approval of Proposed Mutual Defence Pact, British Press and Public Regard Alliance as Accomplished Fact-Immediate Danger of War Decreasing.-* ARAB GROUP ACCEPTS BRITISH PLAN AS BASIS Jerusalem, May 29.\u2014(/P)\u2014An Arab group led by Ragheb Bey Nashashibi decided today to accept Great Britain\u2019s new Holy Land policy as \u201ca basis for negotiation.\u201d About 150 representatives of the so-called Arab moderates met here at Ragheb Bey\u2019s home to consider the British plan which envisages ultimately an independent.Palestine with an Arab majority.Five Arabs were killed, one wounded and five captured in a skirmish on the Northern Frontier with British troops.Near Jaffa, police sought slayers of four Arab women and one man who were lulled by shots fired at close range.St.Zacharie, Que., May 29.\u2014 ((P)\u2014 Fire destroyed the wooden Brochu sawmill in this Beauce County village during the week-end but was checked before surrounding structures were threatened.Unscheduled Auto Trip Marks Royal Holiday In Mountains London, May 29.(TP)- Primp Minister Chiunberlain\u2019s popularity appears to be inakiug a marked upswiii» as fear of war a bu les.Although (lie Soviet Government lias given no outward sign of approval of (he proposed Anglo-French-Kussian mutual assistance pact, the British press and public regard the alliance as an accomplished fact.It was in this belief that Britain\u2019s millions thronged to beaches and the mountains for the Whitsuntide holiday.Some informed circles believed that Ivan Maisky, Soviet ambassador in London, would be instructed to accept the proposals when lie returns today from Geneva.In these circles there was no doubt an agreement would be concluded by lire lime Parliament reconvenes on June o.as Mr.Chamberlain pre- dicted last week.Whether or not the acceptance by Russia comes so soon, newspapers generally hailed the alliance as the \u201cgreatest assurance of peace\u201d and agreed that the immediate danger of war was decreasing.Many Britons thought that after switching the Government\u2019s course from appeasement he had done an outstanding job toward building alliances and strengthening national defence, Lord Beaverbrook\u2019s Daily Express- called the Prime Minister a \u201ccommonplace man transformed by great events.\u201d stay two nights at Government House as guests of Lieutenant-Governor Eric W.Hamber and Mrs.VI am her.Victoria crowds will welcome the Continued on Page 2, Col.3.the necessary procedures.\u201cThe Quebec Government will not tolerate any Nazi propaganda, Gcmmunisit propaganda or any propaganda \u2022whatsoever which is, HEAVY FOG VEILS PROGRESS Old Orchard Beach, Me., May 29.\u2014(A5) \u2014 Only the North Atlantic knew the whereabouts today of twenty-four - year - old Thomas H.Smith and the \u201cBaby Clipper\u201d he lifted from Old Orchard\u2019s hardpack-ed sands in an unsanctioned experimental flight to Europe, Into yesterday\u2019s dawn, the Los floodlights erected cuers.to aid the res- BULLET IN BRAIN\u2014LIVES J Chicago, May 29.\u2014(TP)\u2014\u2018Catherine Dressen, twelve, was discharged from a hospital today\u2014with a bullet in her brain.Physicians said it would probably remain there the ¦ rest of her life.She was washing i dishes in her home April 19 when ! struck by the bullet, fired as two their parents, Oliva and Elzire, the quints played hostesses to two of their brothers, Daniel and Oliva, Jr., and their sister, Pauline.Ernest, Rose and Therese have returned to their schools in Quebec, and baby Victor was having trouble with teething.\u201cIt was the happiest birthday we i have spent with the children,\u201d said I Dionne after arriving home.His wife nodded in agreement.\u201cEverything; was fine and the quintuplets were j all ready for us, dressed in their | Continued on Page 2.Col.2.Angeles birdman nosed his 670- Parliament In Desperate Effort To Conclude Legislation By Week-End Ottawa, May 29.\u2014(CP) \u2014 Parliament resumed its labors today with the possibility that prorogation might be reached by the end nf the week.Little legislation remains to be; disposed of, but the unfinished busi- youths engaged in target practice.Catherine\u2019s right side is paralyzed.; Sunday frocks.\u201d I ,\t,\t.\u2022« j.î Physicians decided not to remove\u2019 Only outsider at the party was I i pound monoplane with its fonr-cy 1- thc\" bul!et when s,he showed signs of Rev.V.E.Pilon, Roman Catholic' ; mcer, 65 horsepower engine on a .\tinj\tuge of hei.hand and arm.priest at nearby Corbeil.course associates said was plotted j 6 for a landfall at Slyne Head, Ire- ; j land ,nearly 2,800 miles away, about | noon today.i Fog and rain clamped a low ceil- ; ! ing over the first third of his route.! No word came of the tiny ship\u2019s! passage over Newfoundland, but at I Saint John, N.B., airport officials j\t- heard a plane they thought might i Chicago, May 29.\u2014(TP)\u2014Cordeilj be Smith\u2019s.\t| Hull, Secretary of State, spoke j t The former transport pilot had agajns(.a policy of isolaton for tbei gallons of gasoline\u2014he calcul ways.The Finance Minister\u2019s important bill to set up a Mortgage Discount Bank has been referred to the House Committee on Banking and Commerce for study and discussion, and ]^q much of the week was expected to ated ^ wag en0Ug,|1 t0\t}rim be taken up with evidence Lom | 3,600 miles at a cruising' speed of United States Isolation In Future Conflict Impossible, Declares Hull force said.what they covet,\u201d Mr.Hull ness has accumulated, and some j presentatives of leading lending in- ioq members consider it is too much to ' get through before the first week in June.Among major items on the programme was Finance Minister Dunning\u2019s bill for authority for the Government to borrow up to $750,-; UODjOOO for refunding and other purposes.Social Credit and Cooperative Commonwealth Federation members have opposed the measure through the preliminary tages with alternative suggestions for an issue of currency to accomplish the same purpose.The Government, however, has been equally | insistent tha.there will be no such inflationary step.Probably due for resumption today was debate on a Senate bill providing compensation for railway workers who lose their jobs or ar- stitutions and Government on banking.There is another committee sitting, the Public Accounts Com-1 mittee inquiring into the National' Defence Department contract with i John C.Inglis Company, Toronto, for manufacture of 7,000 Bren light machine guns for Canadian army.A big sitting is expected tomorrow,, when Col, George Drew, Ontario Conservative leader and author of! a magazine article that precipitated 1 the whole investigation, will be m ' the stand.The debate on the report of the j Committee on Electoral Affairs may! also come up before the session over.If the House is to debate the 1 Banking and Commerce Committee j report as well, with special refer- ence Bank to :ha Mortgage Discount Bill, work may have to be t\tmiles an hour\u2014when he rose exPer's; from the beach at this ocean resort lat 4:47 a.m.E.D.T.(5.57 a.m.A.D.1111 ;Y ) yesterday Smith had the equipment to fly Wind, if necessary, but no wireless.His only means of communication consisted of three canvas message bags he hoped to drop to ships at sea.Mr.and Mrs, Harvey Smith expressed themselves as \u201camazed\u201d when news of their son\u2019s take-off reached them at Clarksburg, W.Va.\u201cWe had no advance notice,\u201d said the fathter ,a lawyer.Nor did the Civil .Aeronautics Authority, officials said at Washington, adding they had given no permission for the flight.Most recent of the many airmen who have set out on that trail was United States last night, declaring that international economic relations were \u201cindispensable to the well-being of our country and of every country.\u201d MAY DELAY SHOWDOWN i Washington, May 29.\u2014(TP)\u2014Criti-1 c:sm of the neutrality recommenda- ! tions of Cordell Hull, Secretary of State, strengthened the belief of, many political observers today that a showdown in the Senate might be In a speech before the Chicago j deferred until next year.Sunday Evening Club, he asserted a.The biggest argument was over policy of national isolation carried {he Secretary\u2019s foremost suggestion to its ultimate conclusion would:\u2014repeal of the embargo on arms necessitate an economic readjust-¦ shipments to warring nations.Sen-ment \u201cof such magnitude that it'ator W.E.Borah (Republican, could not possibly be accomplished Idaho), senior member of the For-without far-reaching intervention \u2019 eign Relations Committee, contended on the part of Government, with the change would \u201cmake an arsenal ' dangerous social effects.\u201d\tout of the United States,\u201d while UNITED STATES TO REINFORCE STANDING ARMY Intensive Campaign to Secure 115,000 Troops or Reinlist-ments in Next Thirteen Months Being Undertaken by Government.Washington, May 29\u2014-(TP)\u2014United States army officials are preparing the most intensive recruiting campaign since the Great War, with a goal of nearly 115,000 recruits or re-enlistments in the next thirteen months.The drive is designed to meet replacement and expansion needs of the Air Corps and other branches of the service.Eighteen huge recruiting stations on wheels, new slogans, posters, motion pictures and the radio will be used.Major Harold Gilbert, recruiting officer-in-charge, said some \u201chigh pressure salesmanship\u201d might be used to assure that the Air Corps, particularly, gets properly qualified Continued on Page 2, Col.8.demoted as a result of co-operativ measures between the Canadian Na-| extended into next week, tional and Canadian Pacific Kail-! The Senate will resume tonight.Charles Backman, unreported, on a solo hop to Sweden in a \u201cflying gas tank\u201d not much larger than Smith's little ship.Some, he said, argue in favor of national isolation from the point of view that by withdrawing from normal relations with other nation.-, the United States could ensure for itself freedom from risk of embroilment in war.\"No country can ensure peace for itself by merely proclaiming its desire for peace, when there are in the world nations willing to challenge I \u201chelp and fight oihcr nations to gain bylwai.\u201d Senator Bennett Clark (Democrat, Missouri), said: \u201cThe plan Mr.Hull proposes is simply calculated to lead us into war in the same way Wei were led into the last war,\u201d A number of administration fol-1 lowers, on the other hand, were sup-1 porting the six-point programrm j which Mr.Hull submitted Saturday night with a statement that it would' to keep this country out of Enthusiastic Reception for Their Majesties at Field, Kamloops and Revelstoke Causes Delay in Schedule of Royal Train Bearing Couple to Vancouver\u2014Week-End Visit to Banff DEMAND SAFEGUARDS Featured by Simplicity.\tJ\u2019OR DEFENCE POSTS Revelstoke, B.C., May 29.\u2014((P)\u2014 The Royal train rolled down the Pacific slope today, carrying King George and Queen Elizabeth from the rugged grandeur of thc mountains, through the Fraser Valley\u2019s patchwork farms and down to the blue waters of the Gulf of Georgia.Before them lay Vancouver\u2019s reception.Behind were nearly two days of relaxation in the beauties of Banff National Park, an unscheduled motor drive over the Great Divide into British Columbia and the scenic train ride through the mountain ranges.The King and Queen rode in a locomotive cab cn route.The rest period, first long freedom from crowds and official functions since Their Majesties landed at Quebec May 17, started on arrival at Banff, Alta., at 7:30 p.m., M.S.T., Friday.It ended yesterday when the Royal Couple boarded the train again at Field, B.C., after motoring fifty-six miles from Banff by way of lovely Lake Louise.A crowd of one thousand cheered with true mountain vigor as the Royal party of forty reached Field and boarded the train at 1:20 p.m.Another crowd of eight thousand shouted a lusty welcome during an unofficial stop at Revelstoke and ten thousand more greeted Their Majesties at Kamloops, the city\u2019s population almost doubled.The Royal Couple went motoring at Banff, rode in a horse-drawn buggy, climbed from the highway on Tunnel Mountain to the 6,600-foot peak and generally enjoyed themselves as ordinary sightseers.Ideal weather and the sympathetic understanding of Banff residents, who let Their Majesties wander about unattended by crowds, added to the enjoyment.After leaving Banff Springs Hotel the Royal party attended a special prayer service in St.George\u2019s Anglican Church at Banff, then set out on the Lake Louise road with Jim Brewster, mountain pioneer, and Park Superintendent J.P.Jennings travelling in Their Majesties\u2019 car, Brewster driving.They saw deer grazing along the highway, a beaver, Rocky Mountain goat and scores of elk.' Their Majesties, enthusiastic photographers, got a snap of one of Canada\u2019s rarest animals\u2014an albino moose, feeding in a swamp eleven miles west of Banff.The King also got a picture of a large black bear, The party stopped thirty minutes at Chateau Lake Louise, standirng almost 11 rrted\u2014the season has not opened\u2014beside the ice-ocated lake.On the drive the Queen woiL one of her most stunning ensembles of deep sky blue.The long, light wool coat, trimmf d with double bands of blue fox, fell to the hem cf her simple crepe frock.Her hat was high-crowned, brimming cut at the front, and she wore high H clod pumps of grey suede.Thu King, hatless, was dressed in a grey-checked suit arid grey topcoat.At Braverai\u2018uth, sixty-three miles west of Field, the Royal Couple left the comfort of the bill1 Continued on Page 2, Col.6.London, May 29.\u2014(O\u2019) \u2014 Measures to safeguard the jobs of men called for national service were urged today in a resolution unanimously adopted by the annual conference of the British Legion in Queen's Hall here today.Major Sir Francis Fathers ton* Godley, National Chairman, introduced the resolution with comment that while the Government had agreed to such protection in principle, the Legion proposal envisaged j something broader, j Major General Sir Frederick Man* j rice, President of the Legion read a j cable from King George, sent yes-j terday from Revelstoke, B.C., in re-| ply to a message sent by the con-j ference.The cable expressed Their ; Majesties\u2019 sincere thanks for the Legions\u2019 message of loyalty.A message also was read from Marlborough House replying to a telegram sent to Queen Mary expressing hopes for speedy recovery from the effects of her recent accident.A resolution expressing concern over the Government\u2019s failure to make full use of the organized ex-service men in organization of the defence forces, was approved.It urged the Government, in co-operation with the Legion, to draft a scheme immediately to make full use of these men, especially in forming home defence units within the Territorial army with no limit as to age.The Government would have got Continued on Page 2, Col, 1.Ten Persons Met Death In Series Of Week-End Accidents In Ontario Toronto, May 29.\u2014((P)\u2014An automobile crashed through a steel gate on a bridge over the Cornwall Canal early today, killing its four occupants and raising the week-end death toll in Ontario to 10.The car plunged sixty feet down-ward and landed upside down on an embankment between the canal and the St.Lawrece river.Killed were Lawrece Currier, twenty-three, and Lawrence Coleman, twenty - one, Maxville, Ont., and Wincey Mac-done]!, 20, and Agnes O\u2019Brien, 23, both of Alexandria, Ont.A heat wave in Peterborough, where the mercury touched ninety-two degrees yesterday, was blamed indirectly for the deaths of Ted Zinston, twenty-one, and Percy Hetherington, thirty-five.Zinston fell to a cement floor at the Trent Canal liftlock after swimming to escape the heat, and was injured fatally.Hetherington was found dead in a field near Lakefield.Mrs.Stanley Lockwood drowned in bathtub in her Hamilton home.Nine-year-old Stanley Erasseur slipped between a rowboat and a Lake Ontario seawall in Toronto harbor and drowned.Mrs.Sarah Abbot, seven, died in a Toronto hospital from an injury suffered when struck by an auto at an intersection.At Kingston.Fred Dennison, sixty-five, one of Frontenac County\u2019s best-known residents, died of injuries suffered in an accident a few days previous when a car backed into his cart at the Hartingto» cheese factory.CORNWALL ( RASH CLAIMS FOUR Cornwall, Ont., May 29.\u2014 Barrir, in \"SAINT STRIKES BACK.\u201d Lre Trarv.Peggy Shannon, in \"FIXER DUGAN.\" I\t¦ ¦i.'KlIi,.¦ Duplessis To Move Against Nazi Pictures Continued from page 1.contrary to the democratic institutions of this Province,\u201d Although the \u201cso-called good Federal Government\u201d was supposed to control such matters, the if was much \"propaganda\u201d and al! sorts of \u201cobjectionable literature\u201d abroad in Canada, said Mr.Dupiessis.Quebec was doing its part in this province.The Premier vidoculUd reports that Provincial élections will be held this summer.\u201cIt is not true,\u201d he said.\"But as to when elections are to be held, we won\u2019t consult Mr, .Godbout (A de lard Godbout, Provin-icial Liberal party leader) or Mr.Taschereau (ex-PremXr Alexandre Taschereau').\u201d Mr.Dupleswis said a conference recently had bi* n held with banker\u2019s \u201cin connection with the easing of Montreal\u2019s finances\u201d and that he ' ad conferred last week and this v \u2022 ok with representatives of the ipulp and paper industry.The parleys had been held \u201cin the interest 1 of the province.\u201d i The Prem&r scud that he will meet the King and Queen June 12 at Levis.Quo., as the Royal train heads towards the Maritime Prov-i inees, but that bp did net \u201c 'xpcct\u201d to bo at Sherbrooke.Quo., whim ; Their Majeatr'.'s arrive there the jsiame day.At the Eastern Townships\u2019 centre, the Quebec Govevn-Iment will be iDwesectad by Works Minister John Bourque and \u201cothe-m Blisters.\u201d j The Commisoion appointed last week to supervise financial re-or-gmnization of tD' Univeiv-i'y of Montreal will soon begin its work, including the study of contracts, the Premier said.\u201cThe Provincial Sports Commission is a nvatibev of wide i.D.errt in ' thg Provint'.',\" he said.\u201cWe must study recommendations frmi different sources before the Commision\u2019» members all are named.\u201d Mr, and Mrs.Charles Cruickshank, of Thetford Mines, were overnight guests of Mr.anti Mrs.R.Annesley.Mr.and Mrs.Beamis Amadou, of Vermont, are home to spend a few weeks with her mother, Mrs.Keefe, and relatives.Guests of Messrs.Natt and Irvine Amadou were Mr.and Mrs.Hubert Bennett and family, Mr.and Mrs.Beamis Amadou and Messrs.Jonas Kimball, H.Keefe and O.R.Bennett.Mr.and Mrs.Herman Bennett spent a day with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Edwin Little, in Millfield.Mrs.Otis Bennett spent \u2022a few days with Mrs.E.A.Johnson and the Misses Johnson, of Clapham, and accompanied them to Quebec City for the arrival of the King and Queen.Others who went to Quebec from here were Rev.James Barnett, Mr.and Mrs.Randolph Annesley, Mrs.I.Annesley and Miss P.Hughes.Mrs.George McReylond\u2019s has gone to New Hampshire to visit her sister, Mrs.F.Row den.Mrs.Alice Nugent has been spending- a few days with her son, Mr.Albert Nugent, and Mrs.Nugent, Master Lawrence Bennett spent a week-end with Master Dufferin Annesley, of Bennett.Mr, and Mrs.Byron Bennett and son, Gerald, spent an evening with Mr.and Mrs.Grant Annesley.Evening guests of Mr, and Airs.Otis Bennett, were Mr.and Airs, Beamis Amadou, of Vermont, Air.and Mrs.Leonard Bennett and Mr.J.Kimball.Rev.James Barnett motored to Quebec City, accompanied by Mrs.Bert Dinning and Mrs.N.Porter, and attended the annual Women\u2019s Association meeting of the Diocese of Quebec.EAST CLIFTON Savona, B.C., May 29.\u2014(® \u2014 The Royal train carrying King George and Queen Elizabeth stopped here for five minues last night and Their Majesties who stepped to the platform of their car, were greeted by a large crowd.A violinist played \u201cGod Save the King\u201d before the Royal train headed westward.Savona is twenty-five miles west of Kamloops.informal review of veterans massed around the Royal train, when he visited here.\u201cI was quite surprised when the King greeted me by name,\u201d Peters said after the train had departed.\u201cHe called me Peters.\u201d The two then recalled incidents of the drive they had together.\u201cIt was a ramshackle sort of an old car and was always breaking down,\u201d Peters recalled.and Mrs.Bellam.Mr.John Bain and daughters, Hazel and Shirley, were in Sherbrooke on Saturday.Mr.and Mrs.W.E.Bellam were in Newport, Vt., and called on the former\u2019s uncle, Mr.Sternie Pope, and Mrs.Pope.Mrs.Sarah Cairns is spending a few days in Sawyerville with Mr.E.Waldron and Aliss Marjorie Waldron.Miss Shirley Bain was among the pupils from the Sawyerville school who went to Montreal to view the Royal tour.Miss Iva Cooper, of St.Petersburg, Florida, was a guest of Mr.and Mrs.Guy B.Waldron.Mrs.Guy Waldron, Miss Eldire and Mr.Lawrence Waldron, Misses Iva Gcioper ami Martha Cunningham were in Pittsburg-, N.H., recently.Mrs.Roy Waldron, Miss Glenna Waldron, Messrs.Alton and Bennie Waldron and Mr.Newell Percy were in Lennoxville, visiting Miss Kathleen Wdldron.Mrs.Albert McConnell, Mr.and Mrs.Frank McConnell and sons, Malcolm and Willis, and Mr.and Mrs.Philip AlcConncll were calling on relatives in South Durham and Lisgar, Mrs.Guy Waldron, Mrs.Frank McConnell, Miss Eldine and Mr.Lawrence Waldron were in Sherbrooke recently.The Busy Bees met at the home of Miss Eldine Waldron recently, with a large number of members and visitors present.During the afternoon the president, Aliss Irene Dempsey, on behalf of the Busy Bees, presented Airs.Philip McConnell.nee Alice Thompson, with silverware as a wedding gift.Airs.AIcConnell thanked her friends for their kindness.Lunch was \"served by the hostesses, Airs.Frank McConnell and Aliss Eldine Waldron.PHILIPSBURG Dr.and Mrs.T.E.Alontgomery were in Alontraal to be present for convocation at McGill University, where their son, Thomas Montgomery, received his B.C.L.degree.Rev.A.C.Ascah, of Frelighsburg, conducted services in St.Paul\u2019s Church here.Mrs.Edgar Naylor has returned home from St.Lambert after spending a few days with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Reid.Mr.and Mrs.B.J.Hastings, of Stanstead, were in town visiting relatives.Mr.C.S, Powers, Manager of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, and Mrs.Powers, of Farnham, were guests of Mr.Powers\u2019 sister, Mrs.J.B.Deuel, and Mr.Deuel.Air.and Mrs.W.F.Kay, of Sweetsburg, spent a day at their home, Mr.and Airs.John Bockus and Miss Bockus, of Fulford, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.L.D\u2019Artois.Mrs.George Derrick has gone to her home in Clareneeville after spending a number of weeks here with her daughter, Mrs.F.Young.Mr.Norman Deuel has left for Torrington, Alass., to spend the next few weeks.Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Grevatt, of Afontreal, spent a few days here visiting relatives and friends.Mrs.Ross Crawford, of Montreal, has arrived in town to spend the summer at her residence here.The monthly meeting of the Women\u2019s Association was held at the home of Airs.E.Naylor.After the business meeting, which was conducted by the president, Airs.G.Bradley, the remainder of the afternoon was spent in piecing blocks for a quilt Delicious refreshments were served by the hostess, assisted by Mrs, D\u2019Artois.FITCH BAY Miss Gladys Dustin, of Ayer\u2019s Cliff, was a week-end guest of Mr.and Mrs.R.L.Cooke.Other guests at the same home were Mr.and Airs.L.A.Rollins and family, of Holland, Vt.Mr.Gordon Watson, of Ayer\u2019s Cliff, spent a week-end at his home.WHICH IS MR.CHAMBERLAIN?OOlf, ALE The Happy Gang met with Mr.Lawrence Waldron, when Air.Gordon Bellam gave an address on \u201cHunting.\u201d The Club is becoming well organized.Air.Hagav addressed the members on \"Public Speaking.\u201d Mr.ami Mrs.Wesley Bellam and daughter, Alary, were in Coaticook recently.Mr, Newell Percy, of Newport, Vt.is spending an indefinite time in town with relatives.Mr.Gordon French, of Flanders, was a guest of Air.and Mrs.Ray Waldron.A number of medals received at the three schools here as gifts from the Dominion Government and also ,Miss Thelma and Air.Bruce Cal-j medals from the East Clifton School bac entertained delightfully at their Board were distributed among the home in St.Elie in honor of Miss | pupils in commemoration of the visd Regina and Mr.Oscar Filteau, who! of Their Alajesties King George A I are leaving shortly to take up resi- and Queen Elizabeth to Canada, dence in Sherbrooke.The evening j Mr.and Mrs.Gilbert Walsh, of was spent in dancing, music being .Bcynton.acermpanied their son.Air.furnished by Messrs.George Wll-j Howard Walsh, and Mrs.Walsh, of Hams, of Brompton, and Gerard j Derby Line.Vt.ho' and wore Dube, Real Fournier, Bruce Calbac ,guests of the latter's father.Air.and Arthur Hamel, of St.Elle.Re-jJod'.n Waldron, freshments were served, the hostess i Mrs.Lillian Hall, Air.Edwin being assisted by Miss Therese Alar- jHarranand Air.and Airs.Odell Wins-ceau.Bruce Calbac and Robert j low.of Eaton Cornel , were guests of Benoit,\tthe former's son, Mr.AV.E, Bellam ST.ELIE D\u2019ORFORD f - -, hearty cheering throng.This time the rikraned fifteen minutes became thirty-orb and the train again was forty-one minutes behind when it pulled westward, VETERAN OTTAWA PRINTER DIES Ottawa, May 29.\u2014 (® \u2014 Charles Thomas Ball, fifty, member of a family of printers and for twenty years a Linotype operator at the Ottawa Journal, died in hospital here tonight following an illness of two months.\u201e\t,\t\u201e\u201e\t, ,\t\u201e ;place.After completing his studies Connecticut man asked fc.a ; he entere- CITY BRiEFLETS Sport Coats\u2014to your measure, sions and then, freed from the r'a!I'Ti 11.an',son; Angus restraint of considerations of social\t.L1/1 prestige or family traditions offer! ,\u2019s' Martin Knutson and Mrs.A.j expert and disinterested advice to , ?y.Abercrombie, of Lennoxville, ami \u2022 the young person about to set out *,IS:S \u201c\u2019LL Sherbrooke, acted on a life of usefulness to the community and of credit to himself.This can only be accomplished by an advisor who is well acquainted with the individual and who, himself, has in addition, the necessary background.\u201cIt should primarily form part of the contribution of the as judges.The hall was artistically decorated with festoons of red, white and blue, and flags.Amateur Hour, .Sand Hill, May 30.See the arrival of Their Majesties from specially-erected bleacher seats.To arrange reservations telephone 3725 or 2722, Levesque Ltd., Wellington South.schools, as they embrace the major- LLL \u2022Ip,an Campbell, organist and j,.\u201eP ______(\u201e.,,i ,.,\t.cnoir directress of this church, MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT The Junior Girls\u2019 Choir of the l ennoxville United Church and ! students in vocal and pianoforte of 8 Miss Jean Campbell, organist \u201cLittle Women,\u201d Plymouth Hall, June 1st, 8:15 p.m.Adm.25c.W.A.Trinity Church meets Tues., p.m., 85 Laurier.ity of pre-employed boys and girls Reserved seats for Royal Visit, $1.00, 89 Dufferin Ave.Tel 2397-M.M.Brown.McLaughlin -BUtCMi.WEBSTER MOTORS LIMITED\u201473 Belvidere St.No., Sherbrooke.BACHAND & DIONNE LIMITEE \u2014 Coaticook.DYSON & ARMSTRONG \u2014 Richmond.COWANSVILLE MOTOR SALES \u2014 Cowansville.DELCO PUMPS at the Lowest Cost Ever! Bring you running water aulomaticallv ! AS LOW AS $65 $10.00 DOWN Balance by Easj Payments.R0SS-BIR0N Electric Limited 17 Frontenac St., Sherbrooke.Phone 613 Free lecture on Christian Science, ;by Judge Frederick C.Hill, C.S.B., ; of Los Angeles, Calif., in Church | Edifice, Montreal St.Thurs.eve., (June 1st, at 8.15 o\u2019clock.FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST Sherbrooke, Que.cordially invites you and your friends to attend a FREE LECTURE on CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Entitled Christian Science: The Law of God Demonstrating Substance and Supply.ay JUDGE FREDERICK C.HILL, C.S.B., of Los Angeles, California, member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church, the First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston, Massachusetts.IN THE CHURCH EDIFICE Montreal Street THURSDAY EVENING, JUNE 1ST, 1939, at 8.13 o\u2019clock.Tip Top Tailors are showing nice tweeds for Sport Coats, also Tropical Suits.White serge or fancy trousers.; Leo Laliberte, Tailor, Sherbrooke.Miss Campbell is deserving of much credit for the splendid progress which her students are making, and the girls\u2019 choir, which she organized about Christmas time, gave a fine account of themselves in several renditions, one of which was sung a canella.Although tho entire programme i\t- wr.s greatly enjoyed, the highlights ! Barn Dance, Wilson\u2019s, Milby, Wed., were the performance of tho First \u2022 May 31.Admission, 25c.Movement of \u201cSonata Pathétique\u201d j\t-\u2014 (Beethoven), by Miss Mary Ward.| St.Peter\u2019s Guild, Salad Tea, Fancy and Curtis Lomery\u2019s playing of ; Work, Mystery and Food Sale, Wed., Mozart\u2019s \u201cMinuette in E Flat.\u201d j May 31, 3 to 6.The other Students and their ;\t-* '\u2022h rtions wore as follows: Choru®.I *\u2019ost;\u2014Brown leather purse, initial-\u201cLavender\u2019s Blue\u201d and \u201cMay Day.\u201d Icd< containing driver\u2019s license, keys bv tho Junior Choir: riario solo, and money ;2 miies south of Gould on \u201cA Little Waltz\u201d (Williams) by\tB\u2019jry\thighway.\tReward\tif\treturned Roberta McKinven: piano solo,\tto\tMrs'\tw-\tE.Baker,\t55\tMelbourne \u201cFireflies,\u201d by Donald Sutherland; j street, City, piano duet, \u201cAugustin\u201d (a German ' folk tunc), bv Allan and Donald Sutherland: piano solo, \u201cDrink to Me Onlv With Thine Eyes.\u201d by Annette McKinven; piano solo.\"Marketing\u201d (Benson), by Allan Sutherland: piano duet, \u201cA Little Journey\u201d (Williams) by Annette and Roberta McKinven; niano solo, \u201cFairies' Dance.\u201d by Catherine Pierce; piano solo, \u201cHelen Waltz.\u201d by Grace Beaton: vocal solo, \u201cTipton\u201d (Carew), Continued on page 5, col.1.CANADIAN LEGION All returned men are requested to | attend the presentation of new j colors, Tues., May 3'0, 8 p.m., Legion [ Hall.SUTTON Consult H.J.McConnell, Optometrist, concerning your eyes and fitting of glasses, at the Mountain View Hotel, next Wed., May 31st.A&P SUPER MARKET GRAND OPENING SOON WATCH THIS PAPER FOR GRAND OPENING ANNOUNCEMENT FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES \u2014 RECEIVED FRESH DAILY \u2014 A GARDEN FRESH VARIETY THAT WILL DEMAND YOUR INSTANT ATTENTION \u2014 CARRYING A FULL LINE OF FANCY FRUITS AND VEGETABLES.hEjj.M.m.Hia I I PAGE FOUR SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, MONDAY, MAY 29, 1939.js&erbrooke.^ailw ^Recarb Estabiijhed Niqth D*y ot February, 18a7, with which is incorporated the Sherbrooke Gazette, established 1837.and Sherbrooke Examiner, established 1878.Eastern Townships\u2019 Only English Daily \u2014 The Record is printed and published every week day by the Sherbrooke Record Company, Limited, ot which Edna A.Beenvorth is Secretary-Treasurer, at the oi'fice, 69 Wellington Street North, in the City of Sherbrooke, incorporating the news services of The Canadian Press, The Associated Press, Reuters and Havas.The Record is a member of the Audit Bureau ot Circulations, its circulation being regularly audited and guaranteed.Subscription raies: 75c a month, delivered at any nome in the city and suburbs.Post Office delivery to any place in Canada, Great Britain or the United States, per year, six months, $2; three months, $ one month.5üc.Single copies, Sc.SHERBROOKE, MONDAY, MAY 29, 1939.Every once in a while we read about a group of school children getting a trip to Washington.What a way to disillusion American youth.THE SENATE SHOWS THE WAY For the first time since the organization of the Canadian National Railways, a unit of the Canadian Government has taken a definite stand toward the solution of the serious railway problem facing the country today.Rejecting the majority report of the special committee favoring the policy of co-operation between the two major systems and voting in favor of unification, the Senate has placed the situation squarely before the Government, whom the taxpayers might reasonably expect to do something to relieve the heavy burden now being carried by the country.The opponents of unification seem afraid to face the real issue and are blighfeiy imping that something will happen to ease the burden.Just what this something will be they do not know\u2014in fact have no real idea\u2014but to them anything seems more favorable than antagonizing the vote of railway labor and those who for some reason or another find the present overload of railways to their own personal benefit.Unfortunately, the stand of the Senators does not have the support of the other branches of the legislative machine as both parties in the Lower House are definitely opposed to unification in any shape or form, especially under private ownership.The Government from time to time has made it abundautly clear that it does not like the idea and in fact has taken steps to delay any opportunity of unifying management or substantially reducing the burden, the action over the Montreal terminal being a case in point.Similarly the official Opposition leader is an archfoe of unification, his repeated declarations to this effect leaving his stand clear.However, the Senate adoption of the minority report has done one thing.It has brought the matter formally into the open and has made the matter a definite issue on which the Government must take action sooner or later.The matter cannot be allowed to drift much longer and in forcing the issue, the often-abused Senate lias done a valuable service for the country.CANADA-JAMAICA TRADE The announcement that the existing Canadian-West Indian trade agreement would be abrogated and a new one negotiated serves to direct attention to the important place which Canada holds in the West Indian market, and particularly in Jamaica.During 1938, the Dominion\u2019s percentage of Jamaica\u2019s import trade was the fifth highest since 1927 when the present agreement was made effective.Canada\u2019s percentage was 16.1 as compared with 14.9 in 1937.In value imports from Canada in 1938 were the fourth highest on record, having been exceeded only in 1927, 1928, and 1929.Reductions suffered by Canada in imports in foodstuffs since 1929 have been offset during the past four years by increased sales to Jamaica of Canadian manufactured goods.According to a detailed report to the Department of Trade and Commerce by F.W.Fraser, Canadian Trade Commissioner at Kingston.Mr.Fraser reports further that the total value of Jamaican exports to Canada in 1938 was the highest on record amounting to £1,309,213 as compared to £1,188,105 in 1937.The Dominion took seven-eights of the sugar, ninety-six per cent of the coffee and ninety per cent of the raw cocoa shipped from Jamaica.Flour was the most valuable single item of Jamaican purchases and of the 413,631 bags of 196 pounds imported in 1938, Canada supplied 228,750 bags to the value of £262,726, he states.Of the total of 18,238,721 pounds of dried salted fish (mainly cod) imported into Jamaica in 1938, Canada shipped 2,b9«>,8(l pounds valued at £25,903 as compared with 2,280,145 pounds valued at £27,105 in 1937.Mr.Fraser states that the considerable increase in imports of Douglas fir from Canada, amounting to 2,929,078 feet in 1938 as compared with 354,338 feet in 1937, was mainly due to \u201cspecial and intensive trade promotion done in Jamaica on behalf of the British Columbia timber industry.Additional steamship service between Vancouver and Jamaica has been provided, and, although under the Canada-United States trade treaty the Jamaican tariff preference on Canadian timber is fixed at 8s.per 1,000 feet, there is a definite improvement in the prospects for the sale of Canadian Douglas fir in Jamaica.\u2019\u2019 WHEN DAY COMES By Grenville Kleiser.A night of pattering rain.Tardy drops still play a soft tattoo.Day dawns, silent with adoration.Dewdrops lay like pearls on the grass.Rosemary and mild lavender fill the air with aromatic scents.Breezes stir the woods to motion and all the trees breathe anew.The hills are drenched with light.Silver birches gleam in the sunshine.Nature stands with an armful of bounty.Brooding mystery spreads like a mantle over the valley.Honey-colored cattle move delicately to the sound of bells.While sheep cluster on the hillside.The cool sound of running streams is on the moving air.The merry bobolink enlivens the scene.Here and there are clumps of daffodils, marsh-marigolds, and bushes of andromeda.The sharp, sweet smell of burning brush greets the nostrils.The sky is aflame with rose and saffron.Swallows swirl in swift flight.Grain fields are yellowed to gold.All nature revels in unwonted contrasts.It is the ecstacy and festival of summer.jA^'iler roses sprawl themselves radiantly over the wall.The trees malle and whisper to the streams.Fruits swell and grow golden under the benign sun.A flame-throated robin sings on the topmost bough.Swiftly the fugitive hours speed by.It is a day of pleasant surprises.A subtle and indefinable charm pervades the atmosphere.New ambitions press upon the fancy.Satin buttercups lie in drifts of yellow across the deep grass.Spendthrift colors stalk the landscape.Birds are flirting in the tulip trees.The sunlight spreads at a gallop along the hillside.It.is midday.The sky had become a polished copper kettle scoured by the wind.There comes a spacious sense of the amplitude of life\u2019s possibilities.Ineffable splendor crowns the day.The mind is full of capricious mischief.Dry leaves scurry about in mad caper.The air is freighted with scents and sunshine.Filmy clouds sail slowly overhead.A distant organ shudders like a forest of pines in a tempest.The river sings with its lips to the pebbles.Earth and sky and sea are dyed with the magic tints of sunset.Birds twitter drowsily.The sun sinks slowly in a sea of gold.Amethyst shadows lengthen.Dusk deepens.Night is enthroned.The stars are attentive.TIMELY COMMENTS \u2022i . OO M AND BOARD.PRIVATE FAMILY, ^ 3 Convent, corner King.Phone 464.T>EA'1TY CO PER TUB ELECTRIC Washer, lilte new, for 75c weekly.Beatty Washer Store, 10 Wellington South.Phone 2755.Radio Programmes - - TODAY Double\twagon, partly new,1 \u201e nn suitable for one or tw0 horses.S Bclvi-! .- \u2019 p.m.\u2014-\\\\ IliAt ; Ml\u2019.District Someone has what you want to i dr re Street, Lennox ville, Phone 369-W.Attorney; VV J Z : Orphans of Divorce ; -' CKAC: Amos \u2019n\u2019 Andy; CFCF: Man CANADIANS FLOCK to PALM beach ; m the Street; Organ Music.winter resorts, Nurses resort to Palm 7 Un p.m.~WABC: Eddie Can Collection Brokers Chartered Accountants AUDITORS\u2014INCOME TAX Nurses resort to Palm Bench While Shoe Cleaner.7\" Prospect Street.A R M I T A G E & CO.intants.lelephont; 3285.I?D N E Y, Chartered Accountants./ MI ARLES-EMILE BELANGER.B.A.M ^ Com., L.I.A.C.A., Chai-iered Accountant, 53 Wellington North.Phone 1641.1) S.ROSS & SONS.CHARTERED AC-\u2022 eountants, Montreal.Certified Accountant T II.BRYCE.C.P.A., C.G.A.AUDITOR.* * \u2022 186 Quebec St., Sherbrooke.Tel.1308.Financial 7.30 tor\u2019s Caravan; WEAK: Frontiers of angora rabbits FOR SALE.HEAVY ; Geology ; WJZ ' Jimmy Walker, Com-wooiicrs.Leo Corbett.Waterviilp, Qu .menlator; CFCF: Uncle Troy; - \u201c\u201c\t\u201c\t=1\t: r\" =¦ jCKAC ; French Programme.Live Stock For Sale liy, 8'0l)\t: DPaul ,M\u201c1'tin\u2019s ____________________________\t_____ |Music; WEAP : All Pearce s Gang; \"MINE ACCREDITED GRADE JERSEY ^ cows, freshened this spring.George, 0 Laguc, Mansonville, Que.\tb.eiO p.m.\u2014WEAK: Studio Pro Z\t\u2014\tgramme; WJZ: Keature; WABC- puREBRED DURHAM BULL.FOUR- Model Minstrels; CBF: Weekly James b-.Song Sheet; CFCF: Theatre Review; CKAC: Radio Marathon.9.00 p.m.\u2014WEAK: Hour of ! Charm; WABC: Radio Theatre; WJZ: Feature: CFCF: Departure WABC : Cavalcade of America; pring.''cecmè;(:BQF\u201e:nEie'ht Musical Maids.8.d0 D.m.-W-KAL- St.nr DURHAM teen months, dark red.Christie, R.F.D.1.Island Brook Real Estate For Sale QCOTSTOWN, EIGHT ^ vv i I h ROOM HOUSE with electricity, hot and cold wafer, barn with garage, land for small garden, located in a desirable portion of the town.Will sell for town valuation.Apply to Mrs.iVturd*» Buchanan, Scotatown, Quo.I .1>USINESS RE-ORGANIZED.3 , CAPITAL ' obtained, credit adjusted.Confidential interview.G.S.Sharpe.Suite C.uosen-bloom\u2019s Bldg., 66 Wellington No., Sherbrooke Foot Specialist E of the feet.VALUABLE lumber lot for sale nwir Magog.Ai-ply to Record, Box fi'i.Cars For Sale Feature; CFCf oJ Their Majesties fnr Victoria.^ !).:;0 p.m.\u2014CBM: Royal Visit; W\u2019KAK: Eddy Ditch in\u2019 s Forum.10.On p.m.\u2014WEAK: Contented Ilonr; WABC; Guy Lombardo\u2019s Orchestra; CKAC: French Programme; WJZ ; True or False.10.30 p.m.\u2014WJZ: Magnolia Blossoms; WABC: Columbia Workshop; WEAK: AI Donahue\u2019s Orchestra; PWART G.MORGAN.M.I.A.O.LONDON.! Record, Box fif, Eng.Painless and scientific treatment .81 Frontenac St.Phone 720.1 *>\t.ture.i 11.00 Win ton\u2019 til'll.cheap for cash.Apply General Repair Work LOT OWNERS .j wishing special work done such as HOUSEBUILDING, floors SANDED.| RTtivi\u2019s planted, monuments cleaned, refinished.repair work.C.G.Maoon.j etc., arc requested to leave their re-Phanc ms:l____________________j ouiiTmcnts as soon as possible.Insurance\tElmwood C emetery Co.Hines CFCF; CKAC 7.00 WFAb W ABC p.m.WJZ: News; Barry s Orchestra; WRAP: Joe Orchestra; CBM: News; Sporting News; News; Sports; Pianologue.TOMORROW p.m.- WJZ: Easy Aces; : Mr.District Attorney; Amos \u2019n\u2019 Andy; CEM; La u,mb(j\t.36 .58\t.53\t.57 \t.15B\t .20 U\t.21\t2014 .80\t.79\u2019e\t.79 M .21\t.21\t.21\u20194 2.46\t2.50\t2.50 .15\t.MB\t 1.50\t1.45B\t 31 %\t32\t32 2.65\t2.68\t2.69 1.39\t1.39\t1.40 5.25\t5.15\t5.15 1.16\t1.16\t1.16 \u2022'> 9\tOO\t32 1.77\t1.80\t1.85 1.46\t1.47\t1.47 41%\t41% 6.00B\t41!» 3.10\t3,10\t3.20 4.90\t4.95\t4.85 2.13\t2.1-1\t2 ] 4 .72\t.72\t.73 5714\t5712\t5712 1.20\t1.30B\t .47\t.45B\t 1.35\t1.C3B\t 1.11\t1.12\t1.12 2.45\t2.50\t2.55 3.05\t3.00\t3.00 .45\t.44\t.44% 1.45\t1.41\t1.41 1.83\t1.78B\t 1.S2\t1.85\t1.S5 1.54\t1.55\t1.57 1.05\t1.66\t1.05 1.25\t1.37\t1.40 i \"9\t.1.58\t1.58 .50\t.50\t.51 .56\t.55\t.54% \t.81B\t .13 U\t.13\t.14 4.25\u2019\t4.20\t4.15 4.90 6.0 OB\t4.20\t4.80 .13%\t.14B\t 8.05\t8.10\t8.10 1.05\t1.04B\t 2.10\t2.10B\t 34\t.32B\t \t.38B\t .30\t.29 UB\t 2.19\t2.18\t2.IS 1.10\t1.Ü7B\t MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE Che following quotations of today\u2019s prices on the Montreal and New York stock exchanges are furnished by McManaray & Walsh: Bathurst.Bell Telepnone.Brazilian .Can.Cement.Can.Cement Pfd .Can.Car & Fdy.Pfd.Can.Ceiarese .Can Ind- Alcohol \u201cA\u201d Can.Pacific.Con.Smelters Dist.Seagrams Dom.Bridge Dom.Steel & Coal \u201cB\u201d Gatmeau Com-Gypsum Co.Imperial Oil .Inter.Pete International Nickel Lake of the Woods Massey Harris Montreal Power National Breweries Noranda St.Lawn.nee Corn- .3t Lawrence Paper Pfd.Shawimgan Open\tHish\t1 .(TW\tNonn 6%\t6%\t6%\t6% 176\t176\t176\t176 10%\t10%\t10\t10 £\t8\t8\t8 23\t93\t93\t93 21%\t21%\t21%\t21% 10\t16%\t16\t16% 9\to\t2\t0 hi\t4%\t4%\t4% 40%\t40%\t40%\t40 Vf 18%\t18%\t18%\t18% £8%\t29\t2(8%\t29 11%\t11%\t11%\t11% 14%\t14%\t14%\t14% 5%\t5%\t5 Vi\t5% 16 Vs\t16 Vs\t16 Vs\tlev's 25%\t25%\t25 V»\t25% 4S%\t49%\t49%\t49% 16\t16\t15\t16 5 Vs\t5 Vs\t5H\t5% 32\t° 9\t32\t32 41\t41\t41\t41 73%\t79%\t79%\t79% 2%\t2 r,.L\t9 r/ ,4-\t2% 25*?4\t25 %\t25%\t2.5% 19%\t29\t19 Tâ\t20 NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE MONTREAL LIVE STOCK MARKET STOCK AVERAGES Compiled by the Montreal Stock Exchange: Montreal, May 29.\u2014(P)\u2014Receipts Close .on Montreal livestock markets today Prev- Day.were 999 cattle, 2,071 calves, 211 Month Ago sheep and 1,900 hogs.\tj j* «u- Ago .Prices on all grades of livestock : ; 939\t' ' were steady to firm.Good steers sold at $6.70 to $7.25 I with a few of the best at $7.50.; Medium steers made $6 to $6.75 and common steers from $4.50 to $5.75.; Heifers ranged from $3.50 to $6.50 I with tops at $7.Cows were strong at $5.25 to $5.75 for good, $4.25 to $5 for medium and $3.50 to $4.25 10\t20\t30\t15 Utii\tind\tComb\tGold- 65.5\t71.1\t69.2\t112.26 65.9\t70.8\t69.2\t112.21 64.2\t69.4\t67.7\t107.92 62.3\t67.7\t65.9\t116.53 70.1\t85.0\t79.1\t126.48 00.4\t66,5\t65.4\t103.86 63.3\t88.8\t81.9\t130.77 57.6\t61.1\t60.5\t103.06 92 5\t122.2\ttoy 5\t146.59 64.7\t66.2\t65.9\t98.24 138.4\t174.5\t182.8\t.125.0\t83.9\t98.6\t> « \u2022 \u2022 1938 High.1938 Low .1937 High .1937 Low .1929 High .1929 Low .1926 avers ge equals 100.! for common.Canners and cutters were $2.50 to $3.25.Good bulls made $5 to $5.75, with common from $3.50 to $4.75.Calves were steady.Medium to good veal calves were in demand.The bulk of the offering was made up of drinkers and common veals.Good veals made $7 to $7.50 with CLARENCEVILLE Mrs.Flora Miller spent a few days as a guest of Mr.and Mrs.Martin Brown at Iberville and motored to Montreal to see the King and Queen.Mrs.Ada Bissell has returned to | her home in Stanbridge East, her home and was accompanied by-two calves at $8.Medium kinds her son, Mr.Roy Bisseil, and Mr.\tOnen\tHi oh\tI,ow\tN,-,.-,n Am.Smelting\t\t\t43%\t43%\t43 * Î\t43% Am.T & l \t\t\t\t64%\t64%\t6 414\t64% Anaconda Copper \t\t24%\t24%\t24%\t24% \t39%\t30%\t2-9%\t23% Bethlehem Steel\t\t\t5C%\t5-8%\t58\t53 Vs Can.Pacific \t\t\t\u2022-AS\t4 Vs\t4 Vs\t4% Ohenapeake & Ohio \t\t\t31\t34\t34\t34 Chrysler \t\t\t69%\t69 %\t68%\t6S % Com Solvents \t\t11\t11\t11\tii Congoleum Co.\t\t\t\to /1 .;\tÇQ 1\t23%\tÇ 0 1 Del.& Hudson\t\t\t .\u2022 ¦ .\t18\t18\tIS\t18 Du Pont \t\t145%\t145%\t145 %\t145% General Electric \t\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\t35%\t%\u20193 %\t175 %\t35% General Motors\t\t44%\t44 ''8\t44%\t441 \u2019 Inter.Harvester .\t\t59%\t53%\t59 Vi\t59% Kennecott \t\t\t\t32%\t32%\t32%\t32% Montgomery Ward\t\t \u2022 ¦\t51%\t51%\t51 Vi\t51% Northern Pacific \t\t9 %\t9 Vs\t9%\t9% N Y.Centrai\t\t\t\t15%\t.15 1 »\t]/a\t15% Penn.R.R\t\t\t18%\t18%\t18%\t18% Sears Roebuck \t\t\t75%\t75%\t75 Va\t75% Standard Oil of N.J.\t\t-i .« i\t44%\t4 4 %\t44% Southern Pacific .\t\t14\t14\t13%\t13% Texas Oil Corp.\t\t\t\t49%\tMO %\t40 Vi\t40% tinned Aircraft\t\t38%\t38%\t38%\t3-8% U.S.Rubber \t\t\t41%\t41%\t41%\t41% U.S.Steel .\t\t49%\t49 */\"s\t48%\t4-8% Westinghouse \t\t .\t95%\t95%\t95 %\t85% Woolworth \t\t\tj c, i \u2022;\t1314\t46 Vi\t46% Sexes; CBM: !\u201c\u201c9ic for November.The open spot Summer Concert.I market was 21 ^c, and small lots 7.30\tp.m.\u2014\tWJZ; Around New\t York ;\tWEAF:\tChuck Shan\tcs\u2019 O-r- chc-sitru\t; CRM:\tLyric Trio;\tt\u2019FCF: Uncle\tTroy.\t\t 8.00\tp.m.\tWABC: Big\tTown, drawn\tWJZ; 1\t'.tide Story,\tdrama : WEAb\t: Johnni\tPresents;\tCFCF.Jack Bain\u2019s Or\t\t¦11 -stra.\t 8.G0\tpan.\u2014\tWABC: T\tuci.-i.toiy Ni gin\tPartv ;\tWJZ: Inf, i\tmitiori Please\tWEAF\tFor Mon\tOnly; CBM:\tlie mi o Ri\tbir.-.-ff, violii\tis.'t and Orchi s\tira.\t\t 9.00\tp.m.\tWABC: \\\\\t\u2019e.the 9.30 p.m.WABC: Ben v AUCTION SALE Wednesday, May 31st, to the retail tvaue were selling by Grodman\u2019s Orchestra; WEAR- Fib-jobbers at 2! He to 22c for solids her McGee and Molly; WJZ: Mary and 22c to 22 tic for prints.\t\u2018and Bob True Stories; CKAC: The open cheese market was French Programme.10 Le to 1014 for No.1 Ontario?.10 00 pm.WJZ: If T Hud the Graded shipments of eggs in used Chin ' ; WABC: Time to Kmno; free cases are selling on spot at WFAF: Bob AIR AND MRS.1.E.CRAWFORD.IVES HILL Ives Hill.May 29.\u2014Funeral services for Mr.and Mrs.J.E.Crawford, who passed away following a brief illness of pneumonia, were held at St.Barnabas Church, Milby, on April 22, Rev.Canon Kelly, of Compton, and Rev.Albert Johnson, of Goaticook, officiating.The hymns, \"Abide With Me\u201d and \u201cNearer My God To Thee\u201d were sung by four members of St.George\u2019s choir of Lcnnoxville.Bearers were J G.Farwcll, A.H.Cairns, E.A.Orr, B.Urwick, C.H.George and George Kendall.Interment was in Milby cemetery.The floral offerings which covered the caskets were very beautiful, messages of sympathy and tribute to this worthy couple who will be greatly missed in their borne and community.They were lovely and pleasant in their lives and in death were not divided.John Edward Crawford, the son of the late Andrew Crawford and his wife, Sarah Armstrong, was born were mostly $6 and common veals down to $5.Drinkers were $4.25 to $4.75, averaging around $4.50.Spring lambs were $4 to $7 each.A few sales were made at $12 per hundredweight for lambs averaging around thirty-two pounds.Sheep were from $2.50 to $4.25, mostly $4 to $4.25.A large percentage of the hogs were delivered on former contracts.I Fresh sales were $9 to $9.25 for I bacons, fed and watered.Selects drew $1 premium with the regular : cuts on off grades.Feeder hogs ; sold up to $9.50.Sows were $6 to $7.Hogs sold on rail grade brought j $12.50 to $12.60 cold weight.The St.George\u2019é Guild met at the home of Mrs.Stuart.and Mr.Taylor attended the banquet and inspection of the Swanton Grange.Mr, and Mrs.H.M.Chilton and Mrs.Flora Miller were guests of Mrs.Flora Derick.Mrs.Miller remained fo a few days and was a tea guest of Mrs.Herman Johnson.BURY Cornell.Mrs.A.J.Rowe and Mrs.A.C.'Mrs.II.D.MonagTian, Mr.and Mrs' Play and dance, Bl.-hopton, Wed., Collins motored to Richmond, where R.Miller, Mr.and Mrs.A.C.Collins, May 31.Sherbrooke talent.Mr.and Mrs.Leon Derick, Mr.and I\u2019-A.TT.F) VT o mi cTn h n AT r n n H AT >¦ g WHAT THE WELL-DRESSED CROQUET PLAYER V/ORE 1880 CANADIAN BONDS Following are the Closing bid and j asked quotations as at May 29, ;¦ j furnished by the Investment Dealers\u2019 Association of Canada: Dominion Government Bonds: AT 12:3(1 O'CLOCK P.M.ADV.TIME For P, W.Young, Moo's River, 2 MILES FROM COMPTON 2 horses, one 4 years old : 6 good cows.Durham and Holstein.2 year old new Pros! and Wood mowing machine, new McCormick horse rake.plow, harrow, cultivator, double wajron, hurry express wagon, s oirh.pung sleigh, double harnesses, driving harness, new cream separator; two long ladders.3 tons of straw and small farming trois, some household furniture.N.reserve as farm is sold.Terms: Cash.R.M.DEMERS, Auctioneer.Phone 1005.\tSherbrooke, 20 1 re for A-large, IS-lSVic for A-niedium, 18c for 1! and 10c for C.Offering's at the Commodity exchange were at 20 Ms, 18c K, 18c and IGe respectively.Small lots to the retail trade were selling by jobbers in cartons, and two cents less for loose, as follows: A-l large, 28-29c; A-medium, 26-27c; A-l heifer, j pullets, 24-200; A>1 large, 24-25c; A-medium, 22-23e; A-pullet 22c; B 22-23c ; C, 20-2 le.New potatoes were, per 100 lbs., $2.50 for California, Alabama or South Carolina No.1 and $1.90 to $2 for B, while Texas No.t in 50-lb.bags were $1.40.Old potatoes were $1.40 to $1.50 for P.E.I.Mountain Soli Hope: CBM: Geoffrey (September 8, 1846, and had spent the m Conducts\tgreater part of his life on the home m WEAF- U-elo Wat- farm- Mrs.Crawford, nee Georgia W r d'd! net 1.0.30 p far\u2019s Dog House- WABC ; Dovi.-RVd:\tSengs; CBF: Dane\" Orchcu- rvn; CBM: Royal Vis t \u2019 Victoria.11 00 n.m.\u2014 WEAF; V-w! Noble s,.\u2019.- Orchestra: WJZ \u2022Vinunv n.v 1 v' Orchestra: WABC New = : CFCF: Speriste.- Wilcox, daughter of Norman and Nancy Wilcox, married Mr.Crawford in 18S6.They resided in Milby for a few years later coming to the farm in Compton.Of this union three children were born, Ruth, j Mrs.George Price, who predeceased 11.30 p.m.WJtr.Ricl- val ! her parents three years ago.Walter Filings To Remember 1\t\u2014 Chevrolet & Oldsmobile 2\t\u2014 Webster Motors, Limited 3\t\u2014 \"Bud\u201d Cook, Phone 765-1273 21- Himher\u2019?C vllenva- O'-elvstva : ; 0\"chestrr.W \\BC; WEAF 90 lbs,, $1.23 to $1.35 for N.B.Mountains, $0 lbs., and $1.25 to $1.20 for Alberta No.2 90 lbs.On the poultry market wholesale :nn< v's CKAC-Montreal \t\t\t rsn WF.-\\F\u2014New York \t\t.W(»Y \u2014 S'Vicnectaviy \t\t| Or»*' K D T\\ A - Pitt «s bu rsrh \t\tnCA CHT/T\u2014Sherbrooke \t\t.CRM - Montres! \t\t\t CFCF \u2014 Modtres 1 \t\t\t\t\t «\t\t600 FOREIGN EXCHANGES .r.The following rates furnished by houses were quoting the retail trade :ho Bank of Montreal are the ap-the following prices for dressed proximate quotations for transac-stock, A-grade.and two cents less lions between hanks at the close of for B-erade : Turkeys, 27-'28c: milk- business Saturday: C:ib|E-.on the home farm and Blanche, \\y | Mrs.Jack Spray, of Lcnnoxville.I Mrs.Jennie Gilman, only surviving member of the Crawford family, who-! resides in Florence.Mass., and Mrs.Nellie Dennison, only sister of Mrs.Ci aw ford, of : .omerville.Mass., were | unable to attend the funeral.There are several nieces and nop-i hews in Sherbrooke.Lcnnoxville, I United Slates and .in Western Can-iada.Five grandchildren also sur-! vive.fed chickens, 27c to 29c; selected chickens, 2(\u2019c to 27 lie; selected fowl, 22c to 25c: Brome Lake ducklings, 27c; geese, 22e to 23c.New York Montres New and Used Motors Bought and Sold Wiggett Electric 19 Marquette St.Sterling\u2014 Demand Cables .Australia .New Zealand Close.4.68\u2019s 4.68 Vi 3.74 3.76 Close Quebec, May 29.\u2014F\u2014The city traffic department reported yoslev-.iay that 2,161 bicycle permits h-.-d 158 taxicab 1\u2019cem* s had been issued to date this vear M.P.Debs Royal \tFrance .\t\t.026\t.027 IS\tBelgium .\t\t.170\t.171 Last\tNet .Italy\t\t\t,053\t.058 Sale\tChsngt Switzerland -\t\t.225\t.226 50%\tuneb.Holland .,\t\t.537\t.538 \tGermany .\ti\t,\t.\t.\t.401\t.403 ;s\t|Sweden .\t\t.241\t.242 Last\tNet Norway .\t.\u2022\t.235\t.236 Sale\tChange I lenmark .\ti \u2022\t.\t\u2022\t.209\t.210 187\t.'Brazil .\t.\t.053\t.055 1 Quebec.May 29.\u2014 .CP'\u2014Arthur Leblanc, prominent Canadian pianist jand a native ef Moncton, X.B., mw |been appointed a member of tit ! staff of Laval University here, it I was announced yesterday.(Poland.188\t.189 .Hong Kong.291.\t,292 (Yen.273\t.274 I U.S.dollars.9-32 P.Can.dollars .\t9-32\tD.j 2's, June 1, 1944 \t\t93%\t100%.!2% s.Oct.15.1939 .\t110\u20194\t101% 2%\u2019s, Nov.15, 1944 .\t101%\t102% 2%'s, June 1.1943 .\t102\u20194\t103% 3's, Oct.15, 1942 \t\t.103%\t104 % 3\u2019s, Perps\t\t94\t35 ;3's, June 1, 1950-55 .\t99 U\t100% 3-\u2019s.June 1.1953-58 .\t98 %\t99% |3%'s, July 1, 1946-49 .\t103%\t104% 3%'s, Nov.15.1948-51 .\t102%\t103% ! 3V4\u2019s, July- 1 1956-66 .\t101%\t302% 3%'s, Oct.15.1944-49 .\t103 %\t104% 14 s, Oct.15, 1939 \t\t100%\t101% M's, Oct.15, 1943-45 .\t107%\t108% M's, Oct.15.1947-52 .\t107%\t108% 4% s.Sept.1.1940 .4%'s, Oct.15, 1944 .\t103%\t104% \t111\t112 4%'s, Feb.1, 1046 .\t111%\t112% 4'»V.Nov.1.1946-56 .\t110%\t111 % 4%'s, Nov.1, 1947-57 .\t110%\t111% M\u2019-.'s, Nov.1.1948-58 .\t111%\t112% 4%'s, Nov.1, 1949-59 .\t112%\t113% jo's.Nov.15, 1941 .\t107%\t108% 5\u2019s, Oct.15, 1943 .\t111%\t112% Dom.Gov\u2019t.Guaranteed\t\t C.X.R.2's.1942 \t\t100%\t101% iv.N.R 2's.1943 \t\t100\t101 .C.X.R.2%'s.I Ml\t\t100%\t101% C.X.R.2%\u2019s.1246 .\t98 'S\t99% C.X.R.3's.1944 \t\t103%\t104% C.X.R.3's, 1945-50 .\t99%\t.100% C.X.R.3's.1948-52 .\t995 \u2022\u2019\t100% C.N.R.3's, 1948-53 .\t99 1 \u2022>\t100 % C.X.R.3's.1954-59 .\t98\t99 tC.X.R 4%'s, 1251 .\t114%\t115% fC.X.R.4\u2019- 's.1356 .\t115%\t116% \u2018¦'C.N.R.4%'s 1957 .\t116\t117 vC.X.R 4%'s.1955 \t\t117%\t118% C.X.R.5's, 1934 .\t118%\t119% \"iC.N.R.5's, 1949-69 \t\t119\t120 ni N W 1 S S 5's.\t\t 1355 \t\t119\t121 \u2019Mont.Harboi 5's.\t\t '\t1949-09 .\t119\t121 vG.T.P.3's.1962 \t\t99 %\t101% tG.T.P.4's, 1962 \t\t109\t111 t\u2014Payable Canada.New York and : London.\u2019\u2014Payable Canada and New York.¦ ¦ \t What he satd was jlf(£ THE ALE YOUR GREAT-GRANDFATHER DRANK / SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, MONDAY, MAY 29, 1939 PAGE SEVEN CAPITAL CLOSE-UPS By ROSS MU.NRO Canadian Press Staff Writer.Ottawa, ay 29.\u2014 © \u2014 Parliament grapples again with the railway problem in the session\u2019s dying days but the major developments are intra-party differences.There appears to be cniy a meagre chance anything will be done about the rail question this year.\t_____________________ A behind-the-scenes sensation was | Libera! from Toronto, caused when Senator Arthur Meigh- Labor Minister who do en, Conservative leader in the Upper House, wrote a minority report of the Senate railway committee findings and urged unified management of the Canadian National and Canadian Pacific Railways.The bombshell exploded when he told the Senate he could not support the party\u2019s railway policy which opposed unified management.shower f:r Miss St.Urbm at th ! home of Mrs.W K.Davis.Miss St.Urb-in is to be married on lune 3.| Among these awar.fd prizes in the temperance contests sponsored by the W.C.T.U.were the Misses Rita Cousers and Vera Hastings and W-O'srs.Hugh and Leslie Paige.Other scholars in the district who passed in the contest were g ven commemorative bocks.Mr.an ! Mrs.Glendon Brown and inflections of his voice make his ipeeches theatrical masterpieces.Its a real show when the Outremont Senator gets on his feet, particular-1 iy when he is driving home a point concerning the railway question.His elaborate delivery, however, annoys Senator James Murdock, the not stand |were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Wd-on formality.Senator Murdock as- Ram Smith, of North Trey, tounded the Senate the other day with the caustic comment: \u201cCan the comedy.\u201d Robert Finn (Liberal Halifax) came back to the Commons this week after a month\u2019s illness.A.E.Mac-Lean (Liberal Prince) is still in hos' .ing on Mr.Gordon Lenz, who was j kicked in the stomach by a horse.Mr.and Mrs.H.Williams and Mr.and Mrs.M.B.Williams, of Foster, were calling on Mr.and Mrs, C.B.îlcLaughlin.Mr.and Mrs.Howard Salisbury were guests of Mr.and Mrs, H ,C.Salisbury and visited Mr.and Mrs.F.A.Honey.Thev also attended the plav, \u201cThe Road Back.\u201d pital recovering from an operation, i The two Maritimers\u2019 greatest reget On the other hand^, there also rt a i is missing the Royal visit and the 'presentation of M.P.\u2019s to Their Maj- f-eud among Liberal leaders over the same railway problem.Senator Raoul Dandurand, Government chief in the Senate, brought the majority report from the Committee which urged continuation of co-operative measures between the two railroads and this is understood to clash with the view held by many members of the Government.Several cabinet ministers do not sympathize with the co-operative plan and did not want the committee to report along that line.Lengthy cabinet meetings are reported to have been held.Ottawa Sidelights Senator C.P.Beaubien (Conservative, Quebec), has greater flair for the dramatic than any other member of the Red Chamber.His gestures and DOWN TO THE SEA BY TRAIN TO THE SPECIAL LOW FARES! RETURN PRIVILEGE UP TO 21 DAYS METIS BEACH, Rivière du Loup, Cacouna, Bic\u2014all these and many other of the loveliest resorts on the Lower St.Lawrence, reached conveniently and economically by two of Canadian National\u2019s fine trains.The Ocean Limited and the Maritime Express offer special summer fares (June 15\u2014 Sept.4 ) .provide direct service and the comfort of modern travel.Here's a holiday all can afford .everyone will enjoy.« Descriptive literature and complete injormation jrom your local Agent.A.M.STEVENS, City Passenger and T'ckct Agent, 23 Wellington St.North, Sherbrooke.CANADIAN NATIONAL TO eVCRYWHCRE IN CANADA .\u2014 FORECAST \u201cSETTLED\" Why fear hospitality?\u2014 who\u2019s afraid, though the pace of the party is fast and furious?There\u2019s always the double de Kuyper Tor the final round.This fine Hollands Gin, prized for its fresh, unusual flavour, makes peace with the warring elements within; in the morning brain and eye are clear, hand steady.Every man of experience lookstode Kuyper to look after him, and it never lets him down \u2014 the best friend a fellow's got.\u2019Distilled and Bottled in Canada under the direct supervision of JOHN de KÜ Y PER & SOU Distillers, Rotterdam.Ho Established 1695 -feKujfer am/ /I\t290 ITCHING MO BURNING Of mmk Irritation quickly soothed by use of usually effective, mildly medicated Cuticura.Also helps heal externally caused pimples and rashes.Buy Cuticura Soap mid Ointment.Each 25*.At all druggists.tvHuq-.i:1 SOAP OAtd OINTMENT I esties at the Parliamentary dinner Laughter is recorded in Hansard, the official record of parliament, as \u201cSome Honorable Members; Oh, Oh.\u201d Spark?Street scene: John Mac-Nicol (Conservative, Toronto-Dav-enport) jingling a handful of change on the crowded main street of the capital looking for a large cent to weigh his close-to-200 pounds.Country scene: Health Minister Power sitting with his wife on the running board of their ear outside a roadhouse near Ottawa eating double-dip strawberry ice-cream cones one bright afternoon.No spectators or newsmen are permitted in the galleries of the Senate or the Commons during the first few minutes of each daily sitting\u2014that is the time for prayers.Corridor Gossip Speculation about cabinet changes is the talk of Parliament Hill again and the latest rumors maintain that Fisheries Minister Michaud will drop from the Government.His successor as New Brunswick representative in the cabinet is not likely to take the Fisheries portfolio.The next minister even might be from the Pacific coast.The position of Deputy Minister of Fisheries has been vacant for nearly six months and some difficulty has been encountered in selecting a man.Monetary experts in the Commons WEST BOLTON A very pleasant meeting of the Ladies\u2019 Association of the Creek United Church was held, with the secretary-treasurer, Mrs.H.C.Salisbury, with an average attend-anej.The president, Mrs.L.L.Pearson, presided and the pastor, Rev.W.H.Thompson, offered prayer.The secretary-treasurer read the minutes of the last meeting, and the roll call.The meeting closed with the mizpah benediction, after which the hostesses fox the day, Mrs.G.C.Whitcher and Mrs.H.C.Salisbury, served lunch.Proceeds amounted to $3.25.The Young People\u2019s Society met for their regular meeting in the basement of the church.In the absence of the president, S.G.Quilliams, the vice-president, W.R.Mizener, presided over the devotional exercises, after which Winfield Durrell and Phyllis Allen, the host and hostess for the evening, provided contests and games.Mr.and Mrs.Percy Tittemore, Master Charles Tittemore and Mrs.Emerson, of Butler, Pennsylvania, were guests of the former\u2019s sister, Mrs.F.M.Perkins, and Mr.Perkins.Mrs.L.A.Smith and son, of Outremont, were guests at the same home at the tea hour, then spent a week-end with Mi-, and Mrs, E.H.Perkins.Mr.and Mrs.Perkins accompanied them to Cowansville, where Mrs.Smith visited her old friend, Mrs.L.D.Phelps, who has been confined to her room all winter._\t.\t_\t_\tMts.V.J.Allen is again in çesi- Mr.and Mrs.Tobin and children, of deuce at her home here, after spend-Montreal weib week-end guests at jng the winter with her daughter, Bcnnieburne.\u201d Miss Cora Spence:', j Mrs.L.L.Mizener, and family, at » of Montreal, was at the same home, j Duboyce\u2019s Corner, and her son, Mr.Mr.and Mrs.__Grayscn^ Louwns j j.Allen, and Mrs.Allen, in Granby.Mr.Earl Marsh has a position in the South Stukely Creamery.Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Whitehead attended the auction sale of their mother\u2019s household effects.Several pupils from here attending Waterloo and Knowlton High schools, had the opportunity of seeing Their Majesties in Montreal.Mrs.Charles Shepherd was call-in.'T o.i Mrs.W.R.Bockus, in Foster.Mr.C.A.Goddard, of Ottawa, was a guest of his nephew, Mr.H.Salisbury, ard Mrs.Salisbury.AUSTIN Rev.Mr.and Mrs.Stark, Misses Leola and Marion Stark and Mrs.Ehrin Bryant motored to Montreal to see the King and Queen.While there were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Donald Francis.Mrs.John Patterson and Mr.and Mrs.Donald Patterson spent a day in Sherbrooke.Mr.and Mrs.Reginald Pibus and baby daughter were visitors of Mr.and Mrs.A.L.Bryant.Mrs.Donald Francis, of Montreal, is visiting at the parsonage.Recent visitors of Mr.J.A.Patterson\u2019s were Dr.and Mrs, W.H.Hatcher and daughters and Miss Frances Patterson, of Montreal; Mr.and Mrs.William Bowen and Miss Marion Bowen, of Magog, were also callers at the same home.Mr.and Mrs.Fletcher Bryant and daughters, Betty and Pamela, were week-end guests of Mr.J.M.Bryant, Sunday visitors at the same home were Mr.and Mrs.Vei n _ ,\t.\t.\t, ,! George, of Vale Perkins, Mr.ami Mrs.Ray Duboyce entertained at : Mrg, Roy Brown, and Mr.and Mrs.a family gathering in honor of her ! Andrew Dunsmore, of Newport, Vt., little daughter and her mother, Mrs.; Mrs.Ethel EccJ.es and Mr.and Mrs.Carmi Marsh, whose birthdays are on the same day, Tuesday, May 23rd.who champion the issuance of large | The guertc included Mr.and Mrs.sums of currency to aid in stimul- Marsh, Mrs, Margaret Marsh, ating the Canadian economy have Messrs.Frederick, Earl, Cecil and run into a stone wall again this session in Finance Minister Dunning\u2019s insistence that the Government will continue to follow strictly orthodox financial practices.Mr.Dunning describes his policy as \u201can expansionist policy of easy money\u201d and appears little impressed by the lengthy arguments of the Social Créditera and even the C.C.F.i group that special currency issues should be made.There is only a remote possibility of Prime Minister Mackenzie King accepting a knighthood following the Royal tour if one is offered him, in the opinion of Parliamentary observes here.He has been consistently opposed to such honors for Canadians ^ during his regimes as Prime Minister and it is unlikely he will make any concession even under these particular circumstances.When Parliament winds up there is going to be a great exodus of tired M.P.s to vacation spots for a few weeks\u2019 rest.Dr.Manion is already planning a rest in some holiday retreat.t Postmaster General McLarty won his spurs as a new Minister when he piloted his estimates through the Commons with the ease of on old-time front-bencher.It was quite an achievement for him to become so well versed in his Department\u2019s complex administration in the few months he has held the portfolio.Capital Personalties One of the treats around the centre block these days is to drop into the Banking and Commerce Committee and hear Graham Towers, suave, imperturbable.Governor of the Bank of Canada, say just what he wants to and no more.By devious questions, various committee members seek to have Mr.Towers dxpress opinions on such matters as public works spending and desirablity of inflation but he always answers: \u201cI think I should refrain from expressing opinions on matters of Government policy.\u201d Daniei C.Roper, new United States Minister to Canada, at his first public appearance at a luncheon here displayed that valuable ability common to U.S.public men of being able to read a speech yet make it appear an extemporaneous utterance.But he departed from his prepared script to tell about his conversation with the King concerning Their Majesties\u2019 forthcoming trip to Washington and New York.\u201cI did not tell His Majesty, however, that I was afraid there might be some doubt about the Queen getting back to England,\u201d he laughed.Lawrence Marsh, Miss Katie Cowan and Mr.and Mrs.W.A.Watt, of Sherbrooke, Mr.and Mrs.G.A.Duboyr-.of Montreal, Mr.E.A.Duboyce and Mrs.Doris Allen.Mr.Cecil Marsh has purchased Mr.H.H.Turner\u2019s farm.Mr.and Mrs.B.E.Phelps and Mr.and Mrs, G.B.Mizener spent a few days in Montreal and attended a gathering of the Grand Lodge of the LO.O.F.Messrs.Arthur and Lynford Snodgrass, of Montreal, spent a week-end with their parents, Mr.and Mrs.J.N.Snodgrass.Mr.Ian Hume, B.A., of East Bolton, was at the home of Austin Eccles and daughters, of Sherbrooke.The Ladies\u2019 Association met with Mrs.Hazen Bryant.EAST FARNHAM ents, Mr.and Mrs.E.Hume.Miss Helen Little, of Inverness, who witnessed the reception of the King and Queen in Montreal, spent a'day at the home of Mr.and Mrs.C.Marsh and family.Mr.H.Shonyo spent a few days with his sister, Mi;s.R.Seale, in Granby, during the illness and subsequent death of her husband.Mr.and Mrs.Thomas Besette, of Burlington, Vt., were guests of Mrs.Besette\u2019s brother, Mr.Frank Rollins, and family, and her sister, Mrs.L.D.Dimick.The play, \u201cThe Road Back,\u201d presented by the Knowlton Dramatic Club, under the auspiices of the Miss Margaret Shufelt has returned after spending a pleasant week in Montreal and Ottawa.Mr.and Mrs.J.A.Wilson, Mrs.Rupert Hall and daughters and Miss Buck, all of Farnham, were calling on Mr.and Mrs.C.F.Buck and Miss Helen Buck.Bliss Marion Collins, R.N., of the Children\u2019s Memorial Hospital, Montreal, has veen very ill.Mrs.Sarah Dougall was in Brigham.Mr.and Mrs.Rupert Shufelt, of his par- | Knowlton, were guests of Mr.and Mr.and Mrs.M.D.Cameron and little daughter, Marilyn, of Currier, I Mr.A.C.McManus, of Sherbrooke,! .\t,\tand Mr.J.Isherwood, Mrs.F.W'.j T j ¦ j »\t-x.\t, .\t\u201e The subject under discussion for the ; WhRtakel.and- Mi,\u201e Joan Whit-! nr,d , A880^.10\" of Ath Creek j evening was the Co-operative Move-! tak of Potton Springs, were re united Church in the Association ment m Nova Scotia.\u201d\ti «mt\tof Mr ¦ m! \\Tr« 1 run- Hall, South Stukely, proved a decided | Mr.Herman Rogers, of Birch- £\t¦\t.*\t\u2019 \u2018 success from every point of view.| ton, has been assisting Mr.Stanley Musical selections were rendered byiHowse.Miss Carol Blizener, with Aleck Boc- j Mr.and Mrs.George Edgecombe, BOLTON GLEN Mrs.B.Sweet.Mrs.Noel Chabot has been taken to the St.Hyacinthe Hospital for an operation.Miss Gertrude Shepard is visiting her parents, Mr.and Mrs.W.D.Shepard.Mrs.Archie Dryden entertained the Guild.Plans were made for a lawn social.BRESSETT\u2019S CORNER The meeting of the Happy Day Study Group was held at the home of Mr.and Mrs.A.E.MacRae in North Hatley with eighteen present.You\u2019ll know it\u2019s a better cigarette tobacco the moment you see its richer colour.And when you feel those long, silky threads of Virginia leaf, when you drink in the full, satisfying fragrance, you\u2019ll realize that Old Virginia Fine Cut is truly a grand cigarette tobacco.s extra fine cut for smooth, even rolling.Old irginia Fine Cut lies snug and even in the paper, rolls up smooth and clean and lights up to ve you a taste and a flavour you\u2019ll revel in; TRY THIS NEW FINE CUT TODAY ! You\u2019ll like the fresh flavour of Old Virginia Fine Cut.And whether you buy it in the large 10c.package or the } ¦> lb.tin at 75c you get fullest value for your money every time.Look for the signature \u201cD.Ritchie & Co.\u201d on the label\u2014it guarantees the genuine Old Virginia.OLD VIRGINIA Fine Cut BEWARE OF IMITATIONS- INSIST ON THE GENUINE OLD VIRGINIA There's one SURE way to protect your home \u2014 use a \"quality\" paint \u2014 Pure WRITE LEAD IN OIL.It has greater durability and protective qualities than any other.Take no chances with \"Cheap\" paint\u2014 insist upon Pure White Lead and give Painting may be paid lot out oi income through a Home Improvement .Loan.Your Painter will arrange the detail».son motored to Richmond and other points recently.Visitors at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Percy Wilson were Bliss Ruth Merrill, Mrs.D.Monroe Wilson and Messrs.Allan and Ralph MacRae, of North Hatley.BOLTON CENTRE kus at the piano and Barter Williams at tl.\u2019i drums Mr.A.Woodley, of Knowlton, was heard in a solo.Ice cream and candy met with ready sale.of Johnville, were callers at the home of Mr.and Mrs.N.Bergstrand recently.Mr.and Mrs.John Knutson, Jr., | and family motored to Asbestos eron at Highland Farm.Mrs.C.BI.Clark has returned to Sherbrooke after spending some time at the same home.Mr.and Mrs.D.H.Taylor motored to Montreal to see the King and Queen.Mr, and Mrs.C.B.McLaughlin j where they \u201evis;ited Mrs.Knutson\u2019s and son were visiting Mr.and Mrs.] sister, Mrs.Perley Reed, and BIr R.H.BIcLaughlin in South Stukely.j Reed.Mr.Clinton McLaughlin was call- Blessrs.Rudolph and Archie Nel- BETHANY Mrs, Fred Clark and Miss Ellice Clark entertained a large number at a dance a pleasant evening being enjoyed by all.Refreshments were served at midnight.Those attending from a distance were Mr, and Mrs.Otis Fowler, Dir.and Mrs.L.Driver, Mr.Wheeler Fowler and Mr.Henry Fowler, of Melbourne Ridge; Miss Doris Davidson, of Ulverton, and others from South Durham, Davidson Dili and Boscobel.Mr.and Mrs.Bismark Truax were guests of Mr.Arthur Truax, Miss Jeanne Dalpe spent a day at L\u2019Enfant Jesu.Mr.Fred Clark and Miss Ellice Clark passed a day at Boscobel.Mr.and Mrs, B.Truax, of Boscobel, were recent visitors of Mr.and Mrs.George Oboand Mrs.Has-lette.Mr1, and Mrs.E.Montigny, Mr.R.Montigny and Messrs.Andre and Maurice Lavallee motored to St, Louis de Bonsecour and visited Mr.0.Montigny.Mr.and Mrs.Arlie Moffatt and Blaster Harvey Moffatt were visitors of Mr.and Mrs.James Ilambletonat Roxton Falls.BIr.and Mrs.Ernest Marsois and baby, Andre, of Roxton Falls, were visitors at the home of BIr.and Mrs.Arthur Favreau.Mrs.Noil Norris and Messrs.Gordon and Percy Norris spent a day at Granby.BIr.Ben Truax, of Waterloo, was the guest of his brother, Mr.Arthur Truax, fU'ncere sympathy is extended to Mrs.R.T.Seale, of Granby, in her recent, bereavement, Messrs.Gordon and Percy Norris attended a play in Ulverton.Mr.Aldege Favreau and Mrs.Arthur Favreau visited relatives at Granby.CORRESPONDENT WANTED for STANBRIDGE STATION PEARCETON Miss llene Addis is spending a few flays at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Charles Durocher at North Stan-bridge.BIr.Donald Gardner and Bliss Catharine Gardner were in Montreal to see Their Majesties King George and Queen Elizabeth.Mr, J.M.Hunter, was in Brigham calling on Mr.and Bit's.C.F.Thomas and Mr.and Mrs.W.H.Tilson.Mr.William Chandler spent a day in Farnham.Mr.Charles Short, of Bedford, was a guest of Mr.and BIrs.George Goyette.Mrs.Nellie Jones, was a guest at the same home.Messrs.Dan Gardner and Harry Goyette have been ill.Record Want Ads\u2014Cash rates; two cents per word \u2014 Minimum charge of 25c for ten words or less.XING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED.By Zane Grey.Mis® Ruth Hastings was married to BIr.Car! Dudley, of East Berkshire, on May 8.Her many friends in the Glen fxtend best wishes for a happy future to the young couple, Mrs.C.H.Brown attended a Lemons Check Pain cf Rheumatics in 48 Hours Oh, what joy awaits the sufferer from rheumatic or neuritis pain who use?this simple inexpensive home recipe.Just get a package of the RU-EX PRESCRIPTION from your druggist.Mix it with a quart of water, add the juice of 4 lemons.It\u2019s easy.Xo trouble at all and pleasant.You need only 2 tablespoonfuls two times a day.Often within 48 ; hours\u2014sometimes overnight \u2014 pain | , leaves, stiff joints are limbered.Try j this prescription.Feel good, years i ! younger, enjoy life again.Costs | I only a few cents daily.Money back ; ; if it does not help you.For sale and j recomn ended by Budning's Drug I Store, 25 Wellington St.N.Phone 661.TRAPPED ABOARD A MY5TERIOU6 SUBMARINE OPERATING OFF THE COA&T OF= BRITISH COLUMBIA, KING 16 FORCED TO OBSERVE THE SEARCH FOR HIS.OWN BODY BY HIS PARTNER LAROUX.5-2.9 LOOK,SERGEANT king.vourfriends FIND YOUR OVERTURNED DORY\u2014-THEY WILL GIVE YOU UP FOR DEAD- PERHAPS-BUT THEY WILL STILL CHASE THIS SUBMARINE/ that's a submarine's PERISCOPE ALL RIGHT/ QUICK,M\u2019SÆU R\\GGS, WE FLY TO NOTIFY THE COASTAL PATROL/ 1.1 & .\u2022.-\u2022vY TJ KING OBSERVES THAT LAROUX HAS -RJSCOI Stephen Slcimger, Inc King Feature» Syndicat W-rlcl right; fXTvfrl SIGHTED THE SUB'S PERISCOPE / BRINGING UP FATHER.By George McManus.IF YOU'D ONLY SAY SOMETHING -THEN D KNOW W1-4AT YOU WANT SAY- SONNY- COME DOWN AND GET THIS LITTLE RASCAL TO STOP CRYIN' I'M EXHAUSTED- HE'S O-KAY NOW-I GOT HIM TO STOP CRYING- M>, I GAVE HIM YER WATCH SO I HEAR-BUT TELL ME - HOW DID YOU DO IT?Lr Opr 19.19, King Features Syndicate, Inc i World ruhts rcterved. PAGE EIGHT SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, MOiNDAY, MAY 29, 1939, MONTREALER WINS RIFLE MEET AGGREGATE Malcolm Lemieux Hits Off High Mark Of 774 Former Member of Canadian BisleyTeam Edges Out A.VV.\u2019 Seaman, Also of Montreal, by One Point\u2014E.F.Patton,! of Sherbrooke, Third in Aggregate Standing\u2014George Mulvagh and Ashton Tobin in Good Performances.SHERBROOKE JUNIOR NINE WINS Sherbrooke defeated Granby elcven-eiRht at Dufresne Park yesterday as the Eastern Townships Junior Baseball Leai;ue swung into action.Windsor Mills is the other squad in the loop.Mnlaoilm Lemieux, of Montreal, a former member of the Canadian Bisley team, carried off the aggregate prize Saturday in the annual outdoor shioiot held at the Sherbrooke Regiment rangts under the auspices of the Sherbi < oke Miniature Industrial Rifle League.Lemieux chalked up 774 out of a possible 800 points, to edge out a fellow Montrealer, A.W.Seaman, by ome point.Third position in thp aggregate standing went to E.F.Patton, of Sherbrooke, who posted a total of 761.The snipers shot in tricky wind conditions and performances were quite good when this fact is oonsSdeitid.Ashton Tobin and George Mul-1 vagh, of the Sherbrooke Regiment I Rifle Association, turned in credit-1 able performances in addition to Patton, while D.E.Miller, of Granby, who has shot for Canada against the Empire\u2019s finest m the Dewar Match, also shot steadily.Aggregate prize to f I mieux was presented by Russell Blinco, centre player for Chicago Black Hawks in the National H> ckey League.It is expected a Lea! squad will travel to Lachine on June 18 to participate in a smallbore competition spon@oi!j(.l by the Province of Quebec Rifle Association.Detailed results of the meet: Extra scries 50 yards: 1, A.W.Seaman.100; 2, A, R.Tobin, 98; 3, G.W.McIntyre, 98.Extra fpi'ies 100 vard-s: 1.A R.Tobin, 98: 2, W.Bell, 96; 3, A.W.Seaman, 95.First match, 50 yards : 1.A.VV, Billy Hitchcock, now with Kansas City, has been tagged by the Yanks as Rod Rolfe\u2019s succes&oo at third base.It\u2019s a pity Joe Sawyer, pro at Rip\u2019s Sutton Place tennis courts, don\u2019t give a darn for autographs.^ The other day he played against ! Katherine Hepburn, Helen Wills I Moody and Rudy Vallee in succes-| sion.Seaman, 97; 2, A.Mccodie, 97.Second match 10(1 yards: 1.A.R.Tobin, 97; 2, D.M: cRue an 1 G.H.Mulvagh, 97.Third match, 50 and 100 yards: 1,\tM.Lf mieux, 196; 2, D.E.Mill r, 196.Dewar course match; 1.M.Lemieux and A.VV.Seaman.387; \u2018i.G.H.Mulvagh, 3.35.Aggregate : 1.M.Lemieux, 774; 2,\tA.W.Seaman, 773; 3, E.F.Patton.761.ENJOY THE FUN OF A BICYCLE-HIKE ON AN &a6tf-$u*t*Unq OOM* \"DALMY DAYS, smooth roads, the miracle of Spring on every side\u2014 what could provide a more perfect setting for a bicycle-hike into the country on an easy-running C.C.M.bicycle?With a C.C.M.you can pedal through the country hour after hour and still be free of leg-weariness.This is because the three principal, fast-moving parts of a C.C.M.bicycle are made with great accuracy from the finest of steels, heat-treated to give extra hardness and, therefore, years of extra service.The finish on C.C.M.bicycles is as enduring as the mechanical parts\u2014several coats of enamel baked-on; all bright parts chromium-plated over C.C.M.20-year nickel.Strong steel rims, rustless steel spokes and Dunlop tires add further to the high quality, long life and easy-riding pleasure of owning a C.C.M.Ask your C.C.M.dealer to show you the various C.C.M.bicycles and then choose the one which suits you best.C.C.M.models include track-racers, road-racers, delivery models, standard bicycles and the C.C.M.modern streamlined bicycle, the \"Flyte\u201d.For the children, your C.C.M.dealer can offer you C.C.M.Joycycles, Bike-Wagons and sidewalk Bikes, all made as staunchly and with the same care and accuracy as C.C.M, bicycles.15M Kg ¦v.3 '¦M* fitke-Wayon |Tr- STRONGLY BUILT- EASY-RUNNING \u2022 TRUE VALUE LOCAL DEALERS FOR the FAMOUS C.C.M.BICYCLES J.S.MITCHELL Ê?COMPANY 78 - 80 Wellington St.N.LIMITED Telephone 2300 COME IS AND SELECT YOUR C.C.M, BICYCLE TODAY WE HAVE ALL MODELS CODERE LIMITED 18 Wellington Street North.\tTelephone 807 VVE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF C.C.M BICYCLES SEE THEM TODAY! H.MUNKITTRICK 19 Belvidere Street South.\tTelephone 574-W - 3 -ri BRUCE LOTHROP WINS COUNTRY CLUB \u2019STAKES Shoots Net Score of 69 to Capture Opening Sweepstakes-President Vs.Vice-President Match Postponed.Bruce Lothrop posted a net of 69 ito carry off first place in the sweep-! stakes that marked the opening of ; activity at the Sherbrooke Country I Club on Saturday afternoon.The scheduled President vs.Virt-Presi-jd'cnifc Match is expected to be played | next.Saturday, In v r.d position, one stroke b ¦ ¦ ¦ - ; ! L t\u2019.: 0.was G.NarTau, I while Don ElWctt, Gerard Mc-1 Marwmy and Stan Pearson shared i third place with identical 78\u2019s.Twenty-six members of die club pla;!d in the sweep, twenty-three turning in card's.Detailed results follow: Bruce Lothrop .69 G, Nadeau .70 D.\tElliott .73 G.McManamy .73 S.Peartsicn .73 R.N.O'gilvy .74 R.Badger ., ,, 71 R.Brocks .75 N, Welsh .75 R.Welsh .77 G.\tDavidson .77\ti H.\tA.Peabody .771 L.Dunn .77\t; Phil Robins .77 IT.Shea .77 R, Costello .77 J.G.Armitii'(\t 78 B.\tN.Hdtham .78 F.Breshnahan .78 E.\tB.Peabody .80 C.\tBeaton .82 E.A.Senkler .84 E.B.Hall .83 *- JOHN SOUTHERN EXCELS IN McGILL TRACK MEET Montreal, May 29.\u2014(
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