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Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
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mardi 18 juillet 1939
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  • Sherbrooke gazette ,
  • Sherbrooke examiner
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Sherbrooke daily record, 1939-07-18, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" WEATHER Forecast: Fair and Gool, For detailed weather report see Page Two, §>hprbrook?latlu ISrrorb TEMPERATURES Temperature yesterday: Max.65, Min.54.Same day last year: Max.78, Min.55, Established 1897.SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1939.Forty-Third Year.INTERNATIONAL SITUATION RELIEVED - *- Believed War A \u201cMESSAGE\u201d FOR THE DICTATORS Dangers For This Over Year Drop of Wheat Prices to Lowest Point Since 1592 Taken as Indication of Improved Feeling in British Circles-Official Cir- cles Admit that Tenseness Over Danzig and Other Danger Spots Has Abated Greatly.London, July 18.\u2014\u2014A calmer view of the international situation was reflected today in British circles and there was one outright forecast that \u201cthere will be no European war involving Britain this year.\u201d Wheat, a prime commodity whose price rises frequently with mounting fear of war, fell to three shillings, seven and three-eighths pence \u2014 the lowest recorded price since #- AUSTRALIAN AERIAL ARMAMENT ADVANCES Melbourne, Australia, July 18.\u2014 (® \u2014 Two squadrons of the Royal Australian Air Force are gradually being transferred to civil airdromes at Brisbane and Darwin of a temporary basis.Accommodation will be provided men and officers at both strategical centres in portable steel huts.The squadron of bombers at Dar- I WESTERN CROP PROSPECTS ARE MUCH BRIGHTER Demand Direct Japanese Protests Against Soviet Air Raids On Manchoukuo continued their favorable trend.Reports from all sections of the three Prairie Provinces indicate that general conditions are even more promising than at this time | last year _ a bumper crop year.Wheat is practically all headed in | Manitoba while in Saskatchewan [more than sixty-five per cent is, S headed out and Alberta more than | i fifty-five per.cent.I Throughout the grain-producing i | West damage to the new crop atj this stage from all causes amounts ; to less than ten per cent, j Close to normal precipitation 1 figures are reported from most sec- Bastille Day in France saw a great aerial arm ada of British planes over Paris and combined with tions of Manitoba where the aver-French aerial forces, made an impressive sight for Rome-Berlin axis powers to see.More than 100 British age height of the ripening wheat is Winnipeg, July 18.\u2014dJ!\u2014Healthy stands of billowing wheat waved en-j\t.\t________ couragmgiy to farmers 0f Western[pai|Ure 0f Russian-Protected Outer Mongolian Government tharougahoütaythe 7Z2 grain belt| To Heed Protests of Jap-Sponsored Manchoukuo Against Raids May Lead to Direct Action Between Principals As Situation Becomes Tenser.-« THE JAPANESE GOVERNMENT TAKES SERIOUS VIEW OF INCIDENTS bombers, heavy and medium, carried out their flight to France without a mishap and this photo shows a gen eral view of a squadron of Royal Air P'orce planes at Le Bourget airport, near Paris, 1392\u2014about fifty cents a bushel.Win will be engaged mostly on re-Major Vernon' Bartlett, inde- connoitering duty, probably combm- pendent, expressed somewhat the expanding British confidence with » question yesterday in the House of Commons\u2014whether the national slogan, \u201cWe must be prepared\u201d might not now be changed to \u201cWe are prepared\u201d in view of the \u201csatisfactory state of our present armament.\u201d Sir John Anderson, Lord Privy Seal and Minister of Civilian Defence, answered, \u201cWe are proud of the ' response which has already been made to the call to the national service\u201d hut \u201cthe time has not yet come when our efforts can be relaxed \u201d Under a front-page headline, '\u2018Peace,\u201d and in its editorial columns Lord Beaverbrook\u2019s Daily Express recalled its prediction during last year\u2019s crisis that there would be no war, asserting: \u201cThere was no war last year and there will be no Euro-pean war involving Britain this year either.\u201d The agreement between Reichs-fuehrer Hitler and Premier Mussolini on Italianization of the Italian Tyrol, with the Germanic inhabitants permitted to move into Germany, led the Times of London to Comment:\u2014\t\\ \u201cThis proves beyond question the opportunist character of Hitler's policy in regard to German minorities.\u201cIf he desires a political settlement then he is quite willing to compromise with the much vaunted right of self-determination just as! he is ready to repudiate it altogether [ when it happens to operate in favor j of another race.\u201d On the tension side of the ledger I was news from the Free City of | Danzig that forty military supply trucks ,their cargoes concealed, were | driven in from adjoining East I Prussia last night.The truck train reached Danzig shortly before the homecoming of the Nazi District leader, Albert Forster, fresh from conferences I wdth Hitler.Forster would not! comment on reports he had brought1 back a \u201cdefinite plan\u201d for reunion of the Free City with Germany.ing coastguard service and patrolling of the Timor and Arafura coastline.The squadron\u2019s arrival means that the North Australian coastal air force station will be opened about a year before it was expected.Burlington, Vt., July 18.\u2014(/P)\u2014 Remarking that \u201cA man would have to be a magician today to hide behind a woman\u2019s skirts,\u201d Mrs.Martha Smith observed her ninety-eighth birthday with the admonition \u201cIf a woman has any clothes at all, she should wear them.\u201d U.S.NAVAL OFFICER REPEATS ROOSEVELT\u2019S PLEDGES Quebec, July 18.\u2014®\u2014Rear-Admiral A.W.Johnson, Commander o( the United States Navy\u2019s Atlantic Squadron, today told the Canadian Club here that \u201cif this continent is threatened, you can rest assured that we, as Americans, will defend the peace, tolerance and civic liberties which we have built up for ourselves and our children,\u201d he said.\u201cI hold Canada as the finest fulfilment of President Roosevelt\u2019s idea of a good neighbor.\u201d Admiral Johnson's flagship, the New York, arrived here last Monday with the Texas and Arkansas for a ten-day visit.Canadian statesmen attending the celebration of the seventy-fifth anniversary of the meeting in Charlottetown which led to Confeda-a-tion looked back today on three-quarters of a century of Canadian history.The week-long celebration opened yesterday with the unveiling of plaques commemorating the Prince Edward Island Fathers of Confederation.The story of Canada, from frontier days to the present, was told in a pageant in which the symbolized Goddess of Fame urged Canadians not to forget their obligations to the pioneers.History will he made again in this Island capital today when the Do-i minion Treasury Board meets in the Confederation chamber of the Provincial building where the Fathers met se.venty-five years\tThe Chief Hold Series of Staff Talks As Polish Press Expresses 'Teetîn- wil1 j*.made î?ossibl?by Belief Visit of General Ironside Is Decisive Influence On.FedwafTabinet.1 Th\u201dmember^Re- British-Polish Co-ordination Of Defence Now Under Study British Army Inspector General and Polish Commander-ln- Brilliant Scenes Witnessed During Chartottetown Confederation Fetes Charlottetown, July 18_____ (?) \u2014 itended yesterday\u2019s ceremonies.Situation.FIFTEEN KILLED BY EXPLOSION ABOARD GERMAN LINER Swinemunde, Germany, July 18.\u2014l/P)\u2014Fifteen persons were killed and eighteen injured last night when a boiler exploded in the 17.000-ton steamship Berlin about fifteen miles at sea.There were no passengers aboard, said today\u2019s brief announcement.The extent of the damage was not disclosed.The Berlin, owned by North German Lloyd, was steaming to Swinemunde to pick up about 1,000 passengers when the boiler let go.The dead and injured were brought here.Warsaw, July 18.I Sir Edmund Ironside the task of co-ordinating Polish and [ British military strength in long ; jtalks with Marshal Edward Snugly-; jRydz, commander-in-chief of Polish; : armed forces, and War Minister i | Tadeusz Kasprzycki.; Geenral Ironside, Inspector Genar- J ;al of British overseas armed forces,] I also was to confer with Foreign] j Minister Joseph Beck on political-! 'military aspects of the present situ-] [ation in Eastern Europe.| sources Minister Crerar, Postmas jter-General McLeary, Revenue Minis (^\u2014General iter, IJfley\u2019 Lal^or Minister R began today ogers and Transport Minister Howe, at- Mr.Crerar represented Prime now yvell over thirty inches.Deterio ration due to grasshoppers and rust has been reported from only scattered districts and the damage is slight.Saskatchewan growing condition?are reported ideal, with new stands now averaging close to thirty inches in height.Most of the wheat is headed out and the heads are fair to large in size.Clear and warm weather, punctuated by scattered showers, has re Tokyo, July 18.\u2014(JP)\u2014A full report of recent Soviet air raids on rail centres in Japanese-protected Manchoukuo was laid before an emergency meeting of five key cabinet members today.The Government apparently was taking an extremely grave view of the situation which grew out of spasmodic fighting for the last two months along the common border of Manchoukuo and Soviet-protected Outer Mongolia.It vas learned authoritatively that the War Minister Seishiro Itngaki requested the emergency session when be saw Premier Kiichiro Hiranuma today before the regular cabinet conference.The request was granted and Itagaki made a full report to the Premier and the Ministers of Finance, Navy and Foreign Affairs.Minister Mackenzie King at the un-\tjn j-apjfi growth for Southern Alberta wheat.Newr stands are more than twenty-five inches high on an average.A heavy week-end rain drenched EMBARRASSMENT Lynn, Mass., July 18.\u2014 (A5) \u2014 Seems police have very red faces today, trying to explain to Rocco Ceviello, fifteen, about his bicycle.wheat fields of the Peace River dis-'Seems Rocco took advantage of a veiling ceremony.In an address he urged Canadians to maintain their traditions of freedom.Other speakers at the unveiling pointed to the foundation of nation hood which was meeting.Hon.Onesime Gagnon, Quebec\u2019s ] ern Alberta areas fi* nearly a I when down town.Seems the bike Minister of Mines and E tsho.ries, month.Precipitation in some dis-j wasn\u2019t there when Rocco went back, brought greetings from the province i tricts reached more than two inches.Seems a thief took it.known as Lower Canada jn per-Ocn- _________________________________________________________________________________ federation days.He referred to j Prince Edward Island\u2019s entry into j the union six years after Confeder- ; ation.\u201cIf this province delayed somewhat in entering the Confederation,\u201d i he said, \u201cit was not through lack of courage or vision.You wanted, gen-j tlenien, certain of your rights and | prerogatives to be guaranteed i.o the fullest sense.\u201cThus, you have laid an uilmistak-1 able stress on some of the present actual provincial problems and questions and you have set in a better light the sacred principle of autonomy.\u201d laid at the early jtrict and relieved dry conditions j police invitation to all boys'to park which have threatened the North-[their bikes in the police garage Germany Hopeful Of Peaceful Solution Of Danzig Question Although Expressing Optimism For Early Agreement On Question of Future Status of Free City, Nazi Spokesman Refuses to Give Reasons For Revised Attitude\u2014Denies Hitler Seeks New Titles.MOIED MISSION WORKER HEAPS FOR LABRADOR Montreal.July 18.\u2014-W\u2014Sir Wil-| fred Grenfell, who brought hospit- FASCIST PARTY LEADERS CIVEN STIFF DRILLS Berlin, July 18.\u2014(TP)\u2014A Ger-# man Government .spokesman said today that German officials believed the Danzig question was \u201csteering in the direction of a peaceable solu-; tion.\u201d \u201cWe are very optimistic,\u201d he continued, but would not disclose on j what the optimism was based.\u201cBy \u2018solution\u2019 you can mean only the incorporation of Danzig in the Reich,\u201d one correspondent observed.I \u2018Our position on this question and Premier our intentions are so well known Rome, July 18.\u2014(ZP) Mussolini\u2019s Fascist party leaders : that further restatement is unneces- The Polish press displayed new [ als, schools and orphanages to bleak ¦ assembled from all over Italy today sary,\u201d was the official spokesman's confidence that the visit of Generai ! Labrador and Newfoundland sailed to jump through flaming hoops and/ejoinder.'Ironside, who flew here from Eng-¦down tbe St Lawrence today for otherwise prove their athletic fit-] (Chancellor Hitler declared on ; the first visit in four years to the POLICE FIND FATHER MARK GOLDEN WEDDING Quebec, July 18.\u2014(?)\u2014Mr.and Mrs.Victor Germain celebrated here yesterday the fiftieth anniversary of their wedding.A .special Mass, officiated over by their son, Father Victorin Germain, was solemnized in the Germain home.Muskogee, Okla., July 18.\u2014UP)\u2014 Frank Baird, Wilburton bank cashier, was slated for Grand Jury duty.In rushed an embarrassed Federal Court official, whispered a few words to the judge.Baird was excused.The jury indicted Baird for embezzlement.^alrd y esueiday, wculd have a de': land that hails him as its benefac-cisive influence \u2019 on tne situation by ] tor.manv18ThS p '^ ' w\u201c.ln'n£ to\tHe couldn\u2019t remember just how RUT YOUNGSTFR DIFS fva\t?C.v Jr1 1,e'VhPaP®1'\tI many times he had been there\twhen BUI YUUiNvaoI E.K UlUb L^as\tw\tote that \u201cGeneral Ironside\t; he djscussed the trip last ni?ht be.xt * i t 1\tm Try -\t! \u2022P,\u2019', , \u2019Hp'\t^ ®ll^'!fore sailing in the liner North Montreal, July 18.\u2014((?)\u2014Eliort-s of am but also Fiance m that the pur-\t; gtar for St Anthon xfld\tbut Ottawa and Montreal police to\u2019ocate] pose\tof\this visit is to co-onlmate\tdecid,ed it was \u201csomewhere\u201d\tnear the father of a dying fourteen-[military strength.\u2019\tJhis twenty-fifth.Anyway, he was months-old girl proved successful Through all editorial comment 0 in reserve, case his permission was needed far j- an operation Before Critchley could be found, however, physicians said the child\u2019s Uife was past saving.SHARP SLUMP IN CHINESE CURRENCY DISRUPTS BUSINESS cally fit.It caught on and now is an ., don t propose to fall back annual affair.Fascists say it also '\"to th® practices of roywi.y, w.sen makes for spiritual leadership ot after the Kmg s or Emperor s name ou{^\t1\tcame also all his other titles, the The' most .xcltlng stunts ]ast\tcommented, year were those of jumping through flaming hoops and over a hedge of\t.\u201e\u201e\u201e i-,,™,a\tDanzig State would mean recogm- bayonets.One man burned nimseii\t'q,\t, ,\t,\t.\t,¦ tion of a status\u2014two distinct political entities\u2014to which we object.The party leaders must meet daily\tT+ 6:30 a.m.and ride horses to the sh°u\u2019d ^ °fRc,ch\u2019 Besides, for our Fuehrer to assume also the title of chief of the at The spokesman denied that nego- Federal Officials Renew Interest In Louisiana State College Affair New Orleans, July 18.-\u2014(TP)\u2014I charge was dropped, as were the With indictment of five political and ] charges against other top lieuten-business figures on a charge they ! ants of Long, after the Senator was carried out a scheme to sell Louis-1 slain, Weiss paid a $38,746.10 iana State University $75,000 worth [civil claim, of furnishings in a hotel already! Indicted jointly with Weiss yes-owned by the University, the Fed-[terday were Dr.James Monroe eral Government indicated today its ; Smith, whose resignation as presi-renewed interest in the complicated : dent of\tLouisiana State University political structure left by the late several\tweeks ago\t.\u201cbroke\u201d the \u201cKinglish\u201d Huey P.Long.\t; political scandal that launched Seymour Weiss, New York and [numerous state and federal in-New Orleans hotel man who wasjquiries; Louis Lesage, assistant to sponsored by the \u201cKingfish,\u201d was; the president of the Standard Oil named with four others in the in-j Company of Louisiana ; Monte Hart, dictments returned yesterday by the [ president, of Hart Enterprise Elec-lederal Grand Jury.\t.trie Company and member of Cald- Weiss, former treasurer of Long\u2019s; well Brothers and Hart, building political organization, was one of j contractors, and J.E.\tAdams, Baton\ta\thousehold\tof\tsixty-six\tpersons several persons charged with income j Rouge\tchain store\tofficial and\tand\tcontrols\tin all\tthirty\tvotes\tas tax evasion more than four years! r*3phew of the former University all the.children and grandchildren Bgto, Criminal prosecution of the president\u2019s wife#\tvota the shama wav he does.Shanghai, July 18.\u2014CPj\u2014The withdrawal of stabilization fund support for the Chinese dollar caused a sharp slump today in its value in foreign exchange and brought Shanghai business virtually to a halt.From yesterday's quotation of 12 15-16 cents of the United States dollar the Chinese currency dropped to 9?4 and was worth 10% cents in today's closing quotations.Foreign bankers expressed the opinion that, the partial recovery after today s 9% low was only temporary and that the currency would continue to drop at intervals unless a new foreign loan to China were forthcoming.RATHER POWERFUL New Liskeard, Ont., July 18.\u2014 ®\u2014Politicians around these parts pay a Jot of attention to Isaac La-freniere.92.He is the patriarch of and another was stuck with a bayonet.eral orphanages and schools and carried on social work along the Labrador coast and North New-j place of their trial.Once again dur- tiations-Qf kjnd foundland.\tmg the day they meet for another.\twith p0jand Sir Wilfred said that the \u201cgreat | hour and a quarter of horseback p\t_______ thing\u201d the Grenfell missions are | riding.engaged upon now is the building ] The four day programme began of an industrial structure at St.' today with rifle and pistol shooting Continued on page 3, col.3.\tContinued on page 3, col.5.*- -* Tanker Rescues Over Hundred From Sinking Japanese Liner San Francisco, July 18.\u2014CP)\u2014An oil tanker reported today it had rescued all but two of the 110 persons aboard the burning Japanese freighter Bokuyo Mam shortly before the freighter sank in flames in the Pacific 1,125 miles east of Yokohama.Carrying 102 crew members and eight passengers, the 8,619-ton Bokuyo Maru, operated by the Nyk line (Japan Steamship Company) left San Pedro, Calif., July 2 where she put in because a cargo of nitrates taken aboard at Valparaiso, Chile, was smouldering in her forward hold.The Marine Exchange of the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce reported details of the disaster were contained in a private radio message to the Associated Oil Company from its tanker Associated, which picked up the survivors.The 445-foot freighter sent out S.O.S.calls for five minutes.Then the signals were cut off, indicating the fire which evidently started among the nitrates may have disabled the radio.The two persons unaccounted for were a junior engineer and a stewardess, whose names were not known here.All aboard the Bokuyo Maru were Japanese and Hindus.STUDY INCORPORATION WITH REICH Danzig, July 18.\u2014(ZP)\u2014President Arthur Greiser of the Danzig Senate and other members of the Free City government met at the Senate [ building today to discuss the next steps to bring about reunion with Germany.Press officers said that member?of the Senate, the ruling body in Danzig, would discuss any changes in Danzig-Polish relations resulting from last week\u2019s conferences at Munich and Berchtesgaden between Chancellor Hitler and Albert Forster, Danzig District Nazi leader.her get her brother, Clarence, twenty-three, out of Jackson prison, '\"'here he is serving a long term Unarmed robbery.Clara, a slight but attractive blonde, lives with her parents,^ sister and a niece in a two-room flat .\u201cThis is my ywn idea,\u201d Clara said.I want to get.Clarence out of prison and I\u2019m willing to make this sacrifice.He shouldn\u2019t be in prison, you know\u2014he was framed.I talked this over with dad and he consented.\u201d 3Mrs.Smith said jt was the girl\u2019s business who she married whrie Raymond MacDonald, a friend of the family, is trying to persuade Clara to picket the Michigan capital with a sign announcing her offer.Hsinking, Manchoukuo, July 18.- UP).Japanese - protected Manchoukuo asked today that the Japanese Governmenl protest directly to Moscow against, recent Soviet Russian air raids on Manchoukuo railway centres.Previous protests have been sent by Manchoukuo to llie Russian-protected Outer Mongolian Government at Ulan Bator, with no apparent effect.Japanese believe that some, if not.all, the raiding planes are based in Outer Mongolia.The Japanese army in Manchoukuo reported that unusual military preparations were in progress across the entire 5,000-mile extent of Siberia, from the Ural mountains to Vladivostok.Of more immediate concern to the Japanese command was a large Soviet-Mongol concentration north and south of Nomonhan Hill on the disputed Manchoukuo-Outer Mongolia border.Fighting was said to continue in the Nomonhan sector after two invading Mongol units were repulsed Monday.Other Mongol troops may have entered Manchoukuo north of this zone where no Japanese troops were stationed.The border warfare between So-viet-Mongolian and Japanese-Man-choukuoan forces had developed into an extremely serious situation, Japanese officials said.One authoritative source said the next two days would determine w-he-ther the fighting would flare- into j the most extensive thus far.It has [ been continuing sporadically since May 11.Officials were aw:aiting a formal reply from Soviet-supported Mon-[ golia to a protest against Soviet air 'forays into the.Japanese-sponsored state, of Manchoukuo before determining their course.It w^as believed officially that the severity of the protest would hasten a Soviet response.(In Tokyo an emergency meeting of the five-man inner cabinet received a full report of the air raids and the Government apparently was taking a grave view of the situation).The authoritative source declared the Japanese army, not the Tokyo Government, would determine what steps would be taken.He said the.situation would result either in diplomatic negotiations, probably at Moscow, or in Japanese reprisals for the bombing raids.The Manchoukuo protest was against a raid on Furoruji, about 400 miles from the Outer Mongolian border.The protest threatened retaliatory bombardment of Russia\u2019s Siberian base of Blagoveschensk and was followed by a new Soviet aerial attack on the railway centre of Halunarshan, The info rmant pictured events as leading, possibly, to a second Russo-Japanese war in which the advantage would lie with Japan if it started within a year because the best Japanese troops are assembled near the Soviet border whereas Soviet troops there are mainly recruits.Japanese regard the border between Manchoukuo and Soviet-dominated Outer Mongolia as unsafe go long as Mongolians hold positions on the west bank of the Khalka river.The major front in any new fighting, it was believed, would be opposite Halunarshan, along the southern part of the boundary.One official said he feared that if , the Mongolian reply to the protest I Continued on page 3, col.3.CLAIMS HITLER SEEKS PRESIDENCY London, July 18.\u2014(?)\u2014The diplomatic correspondent of the News Chronicle (Liberal) said today that Chancellor Hitler may order Danzig Nazis to elect him president of the Free City.\u201cFrom a very moderate and well-informed German source,\u201d the News Chronicle writer said, \u2018I have had a hint that the Fuehrer may get himself elected State President of Dan- Triple Plan To Revive Neutrality Legislation Studied Ey Democrats Washington, July 18.\u2014(/P)\u2014Despite growing sentiment for adjournment, Government supporters in the United States Congress took under consideration today three possible methods of reviving the controversial neutrality bill at the current session.Senator Alben Barkley (Demo-crat-Keniucky), the majority leader, told reporters that the discussions, while \u201cvery much in the study stage,\u201d were centring on these possibilities:\u2014 I-\u2014The Senate might be asked to discharge the Foreign Relations Committee from further responsibility for the bill, which then would zig.He is already an honorary citizen of the Free City, and it would go directly to the floor for debate.Continued on Pace 2.Col.2.\t2\u2014The legislation might be at- tached to some other pending hill as a \u201crider.\u201d 3\u2014Some member of the F j-reign Relations Committee might be won over to the administration viewpoint, thereby reversing the twelve-eleven vote by which the Committee-recently shelved neutrality legislation until the next session.Barkley approached Senate Republican leader with the suggestion that they go over the whole neutrality question at a conference with President Roosevelt and Democratic chieftains.He said Senator Charles McNary of Oregon» the Republican leader, and Senator Warren Austin of Vermont, assistant Republican leader, had agreed to talk with the President if a situation developed \u201cin which such a conference would be desirable.\u201d t PAGE TWO SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD.TUESDAY.JULY 18, 1939, HEAVY DAMAGE CLAIMS MASKED CONDITION OF GRONDIN GIVEN IN PITTSBURGH BETTERMENT IN I PARTY GUESTS LENGTHY STAY PACKING PLANT TOURIST TRADE MUCH 1PR0VED OF EXECUTION AT SHERBROOKE SOON Eisjht-Alarm Fire Sweeps! Uneasiness Over International Expected That Woman and Hanging Through Large Section of Situation and Unseasonal Child Suffering from Pto Pittsburgh Joint Stock- Weather Caused Slow yards to Cause $100,000 Start, Dominion Director Damage.\tReports.Pittsburgh, July 18.\u2014(fP)- A spectacular eight-alarm fire which swept through the Pittsburgh joint stock-yards on NorShside Island early today caused damage estimated by Fire Chief Nicholas Phelan at approximately $100,000.He said the blaze, which raged for five hours and sent flames shooting 100 feet into the air, apparently started in a bay storage near the Armour and Company plant.Firemen with equipment from twenty-one companies fought to prevent the fire from reaching the packing plant.The fire chief reported only fifteen head of cattle lost in the blaze as it roared through frame buildings and stock pens covering an area of ten blocks long and three block' wide.SPAIN CENTRES ATTENTION ON WORKING CLASS \u2018\u201cFiesta for the Exaltation of Labor \u201d Features Third Anniversary of Outbreak of the Civil War.maine Poisoning Will Leave La Tuque Hospital Within Few Days.Fredericton .July 18.- It \u2014The ! Canadian tourist industry has pick-led up rapidly this year after a slow j start, Leo Dolan, head of the Canadian Travel Bureau, said here.He is on vacation in the Maritimes.The slow beginning was due main- j I,y to unseasonably cold weather and uneasiness over the international situation, he said.The two World Fairs in the United States also were a factor.He predicted the tourist business would benefit for years as a result ¦of the Royal visit, with people wanting to see places visited by the King and Queen.Inquiries at the Travel Bureau\u2019s office in the last eight months were eighty per cent higher than m the corresponding period last year, said Mr.Dolan.of St.Methode Farmhand, Scheduled for Friday, Delayed Until November 17 to Permit Hearing of Appeal.DEATHS REPORTED Madrid, July 18.\u2014(/P)\u2014Spain celebrated the third anniversary of the outbreak of the Civil War today with a \u201cFiesta for the Exaltation of Labor,\u2019\u2019 marking a shift in emphasis from the soldier to the working man.The labor creed of the regime was contained in a message which the Ministry for Organization of Syndical Action ordered employers to read at today's luncheons.It called for \"social justice\u2019\u2019 and salaries not only \"sufficient for the worker and his family to satisfy vital needs but also to permit the humble classes to have access to a higher level of culture.\u201d ^ Grief for those who died in the thirty-two months of warfare that ended March 28 wa.s mingled with the joy of tile celebration.Throughout Spain masses were said for the fallen.^ With an imposing naval escort, Count Galcazzo Ciano, Italian Foreign Minister, was on route home today after an eight-day visit to Spain.WILLIAM STEVENS, OF DERBY LINE, VT.Derby Line, Vt., July 18.\u2014 Mr.William Stevens, of Derby Line, Vt., Lin obi and highly respected citizen of Derby Line, passed away at his home after a long and painful illness.Mr, Stevens was jn his eighty-seventh year.The funeral to jk place at the Stanstead South United Church, Rock Island, on Saturday, July 8.The Rev.H.A.Carson officiated and a large and representative congregation gathered to pay their last respects to an esteemed citizen, a kind friend and a truly Christian gentleman.Interment was in the Derby Line Cemetery.Left to mourn his Loss is the widow; one son, Stanley, of the Derby Line post office staff, and one daughter-in-law, Mrs.Stanley Stevens, besides a large circle of relatives and friends.BURY fee cream social park, Bury, July 2'mh, W.A.Branch No.48.!*.« 9 » « w m m PREMIER Your Last Chnnce Today to See Alan Baxter, Jacqueline Wells in \"MY SON IS A CRI MINAI,.'* Donald Woods, Evelyn Venable, in \u201cHERITAGE OF THE DESERT.\" F op eye Cartoon, Sportliuht.m a * 8 ________________________ B TOMORROW Until SATURDAY É CYCLONIC ACTION! ¦\tDARING ESCAPES! &\tSMASHING FISTS! i Fearless Secret Agents Plunge 8 Into Their Most Dangerous As-|j signment \u201cRisking Their Lives to Protect You and Yours!\u201d MRS.F.WALTER LACOURTURE, OF DETROIT, MICHIGAN Pigeon Hill, July 18.\u2014Another link with the past was severed when on Wednesday, June 28, the body of Mrs.F.W.Lacourture, nee Stella Shufelt, was brought from Detroit, Michigan, to the home of her sister, Mrs.Ella Boomhower, to be interred in the Pipeon Hill Cemetery.Funeral services were held on the following day, Thursday, June 29, Rev.Mr.Stewart officiating.The bearers were Messrs, Frank Sager, Delbert Tittemore, Burton Laycock, Homer Sornborger, Archie Sager and Arthur Martin.Deceased was born at Pigeon Hill in 1883 and spent the early part of her life here.Since her marriage to F.Walter Lacourture in 11)20 her home was for the most part in Detroit, Mich.The many floral offerings gave testimony to the love and esteem in which she was held by her American and Canadian friends.She leaves to mourn her loss her husband, one sister, six brothers-in-law and five sisters-in-law.Sincere sympathy is extended to all in the loss of a loving wife and sister.MRS.GEORGE BATES, OF RKTI-FOR1), VT., FORMERLY OF DUNHAM.Dunham, July 18.\u2014 Mrs.George Bates, the former Belle Cullen, passed away at her home in Richford, Vt.The funeral service was conducted by the Rev.Canon Coffin in All Saints\u2019 Church here and interment was in the All Saints\u2019 Cemetery beside her father and mother.Bearers La Tuque.Que., July 18.\u2014i® \u2014 Improvement in the condition of Mrs.Henri Morin and her small daughter, two of twenty persons stricken with ptomaine poisoning following a wedding party, will permit them to leave hospital in \u201ca day or two,\u201d Dr.Elzear Bouchard, their physician, said last night.The doctor said that eighteen other victims of the poisoning believed to have been caused by con-taminated ingredients of sandwiches eaten at the party were fully recovered.He treated all but a half-dozen who were cared for by Dr.Maxime Comtois.The party was held Saturday at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Omer Fiset whose nineteen - year - old daughter, Lucienne, had been married to Roland Leboeuf.It was attended by Sixty guests and shortly after they had returned to their homes the first of them became ill.Mrs.Morin, twenty-seven, and her daughter were the most violently sick and the only party guests who required hospital treatment.were L.B.Ward, William S.McElroy, A .E.Selby and Edward F.Baker.Mrs.Bates was the youngest daughter of the late Mr.and Mrs.James Cullen, of Chapel Corner, and lived in this district for the greater part of her life.A few years ago she moved with Mr.Bates to Rich-ford where they were residing at the time of her death.The deceased had not been in good health for some time and had suffered from an eye affliction that eventually cost her her sight.Sympathy is extended to Mr.Bates and other relatives in their sorrow.Those attending the funeral were Mr.Wm.Culler, Jr., nephew, Dover, Mr.and Mrs.Myron Bates, of Rich-ford; Mrs.Kennedy, nee Dorothy Bates, a niece, and ether friends from Richford; Mrs.George Con-nington, of Cowansville; Mrs.William Johnson and Messrs.William and Clayton Johnson, of Dunham.ELIZA ANN HUNTINGDON, GOULD.Gould.July 18.\u2014One of the oldest residents of Gould, in the person of Eliza Ann Watson widow of the late I.T.Huntingdon, passed away on Juno 15 at the home of her daughter, Mrs.Donald MacRitehie, with whom she resided for the past sixteen years.tn the year 1864 she married I.T.Huntingdon who predeceased her on November 9, 1930.They were the jpavents of four children.Mr.and Mrs.Huntingdon, with the exception of a short time in Chicago and in Hay Springs, Neb., spent most of their lives in the Eastern Townships.During her life time Mrs.Huntingdon was widely known for her helpfulness as a neighbor and friend, for her readiness to respond to the call of the needy and for her hospitality.The funeral service was held at the deceased\u2019s late home and was conducted by her pastor, Rev.J.M.Beaton.Interment was made in the Gould Cemetery, with W.J.Duffy, M.N.MaeKay, Bernard Atkins and Alex MacDonald acting as bearers.Among those from out of town to attend the funeral were her daughter, Mrs.McKee, of Franklin, N.H., Mr.and Mrs.Rufus Stevenson, of Bishopton and Mrs.A.G.Sherman and her d A ugh ter, Mrs.A.A.Mac-Aulay, of Scotstown.Quebec, July 18.\u2014®\u2014A stay of execution until November 17 was granted yesterday in the case of Achille Grondin, farmhand from St.Methode, Que., who was to be ranged next Friday for the poison-murder of Villemond Brochu whose widow he married shortly after Brochu died two years ago.The reprieve was granted in Superior Court by Mr.Justice Wilfrid Laliberte to permit hearing of Gron-din\u2019s appeal, entered only a few weeks ago after the Court of Appeals had upheld the conviction of Mrs.Grondin on the joint charge of slaving her first husband.Mrs.Grondin\u2019s case has been brought before the Supreme Court of Canada.The Grondins were convicted last fall at St.Joseph de Beauce, Que.Germany Hopeful Of Peaceful Solution Of Danzig Question Continued from page 1.be difficult for the Polish or any other Government to do anything against this election.\u201cThe struggle would then continue on a legal rather than on a military basis.\u201d MUTUAL ADVANTAGE Carbondale, Pa., July 18*-\u2014(/P)\u2014-A transient, accosting Mayor William Monahan, complained his soleless shoes made his feet \u201cterriby sore.\u201d The Mayor took him into City Hall, slipped off a pair of brand new brogans and said: \u201cIf they tit, they\u2019re yours.\u201d They did and the man walked out mumbling his thanks.\u201cThey\u2019ve been pinching me for three days,\u201d sighed the Mayor.ii ORLANDO ROBERSON, star vocalist, who has appeared many times in moving pictures, will be featured next Saturday at the White House Cabaret with CLAUDE HOPKINS and his famous Harlem band, direct from New York.CowansviMe Personal hems ATTRACTIONS AT THE LOCAL THEATRES 8 a K H n 8X 8 8' » N H B a R H a 8 as H ¦ fl 8,t GRANADA \u2014LAST DAY*\u2014 Two Biff HappT Hits\u2014Ann Sothern, Robert Y'ounR, Ian Hunter, in \"MAI-SIE.\" Pat O'Brien, Wayne Morris.Joan Blondell, in \"THE KID FROM KOKOMO.\" News.STARTING TOMORROW FOR i DAYS isyssi with RONALD REAGAN Kestlla Town* * Eddie Fey, Jr.^ \u2014 2nd Attraction IT\u2019S BREEZY! IT\u2019S ZIPPY! f JUNE LANG «ROBERT KENT Ed Bropfiy \u2022 Etienne Girardot Horace Ma68ce8flDoaoooiioo8iioooo888cooaaaofl juuULflJJUUb The valuation roll applicable to business and tenant taxation was homologated at yesterday afternoon\u2019s special session of the City Council when the Aldermen heard ten protests asking reduction and granted one.Originally there had been thirteen protests listed but three of these were automatically withdrawn when study of the claims revealed the applicants were non-taxable.Levesque\u2019s Limitée was the only establishment to meet with any success in having a rental valuation of $5,800 reduced to $3,400.After study of the other claims the Council members decided the figures set by the valuators were justified.Following is the list of firms and persons who protested their valuation figure: J.O.Lambert store, Wellington street, valuation maintained.Alexander\u2019s store, Wellington street, valuation maintained.Levesque\u2019s Limitée, Wellington street, reduced to $3,400.Price and French Gas Station, Depot street, maintained.L.O.Noel, Inc., Wellington street south, maintained.Nadeau Service, King west, maintained.Julius Kayser employees\u2019 store, maintained Attempted Armed Robbery Was Frustrated At Windsor Mills Windsor Mills, July 18.\u2014Three men, one masked and brandishing a revolver, walked into Edouard Thibault's restaurant early this morning as Thibault was preparing to lock up, but their attempted hold-up met with little success.Two different versions of how Thibault disposed of the bandits were told here this morning.One of these was to the effect that when the men held him up, Thibault voiced a lusty shout for assistance, unnerving the trio and causing them to take to their heels.Thibault, in speaking to a Record representative, had a slightly different story to tell.\u201cHand over your money,\u201d the bandits commanded, Thibault recounted.\u201cI haven\u2019t any,\u201d Thibault said he replied.Whereupon the trio turned upon their respective heels and walked out.Chief of Police Bolduc, of Windsor Mills, is investigating.Thibault's restaurant is in Windsor East.QUARTERLY TAX COLLECTIONS COMPARE WELL WITH LAST YEAR\u2019S Collections of real estate and school taxes for the second quarter of 1939 amounted to $113,099.56 as compared with a total of $118,095.49 for the corresponding period last year, City Treasurer Maurice Cormier announced this morning.Figures for April, May and June showed current receipts at $100.111.73 with arrears at $12,988.43.1938 totals for the same three months were $102,-525.49 current and $15,570 arrears.News Items From Coaticook Some ninety members of the staff of D.S.Bachand\u2019s large department store were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Bachand at a picnic party at Little Lake Magog.Dinner was served in a large tent, after which racing contests and sports events were featured.Presiding were Messrs.Antonio Daigle and Anatole Guerin.Mr.and Mrs.Lionel Hurley and Mrs.O.G.Webster, who was a patient at the General Hospital in Montreal, has returned to her home.Mrs.B.B.Smith was also in Die city and accompanied Mrs.Webster upon her return.Mrs.Getty, of Valleyfield, is visiting friends in Coaticook.Mr.Percy Pearsall is visiting his son, George, spent a week-end at grandparents, Prof, and Mrs.A.N.their summer home in Clifton.Miss Caroline Armitage and Miss Elizabeth Nunns were guests of Mrs.Carr, in Compton.The return to Coaticook of Mr.Ralph Berzan and his bride from their honeymoon trip was the occasion for a very delightful reception given them at the Rivoli Theatre where the large stage was decorated as a reception hall.Mr.and Mrs.Berzan were presented by their assembled friends with a very handsome gold-lined silver cocktail set.The evening was spent in dancing and congratuations, after which delicious refreshments were served with the Misses Joyce White, Verian Norris and Janette Charland as uostes-ses.Work on the underpass at upper Main street is progressing rapidly and it is expected that it will be completed in about six weeks\u2019 time.Canadian Pacific Railway, with- JJ; wi]l be a\timprovement to thrv QT-ï-nDQ\t^ tmvn\u2019a on- drawn.Mrs.A.Lavoie, King street east, maintained.Francis Clark, Moore street, maintained.Rev.O.Berry, King George street, with-drawn.Rev.A.J.Milligan, Wolfe street, withdrawn.Wilfrid Bourque, King street east, maintained.Demand Direct Japanese Protests Against Soviet Air Raids on Manchoukuo Continued from Page 1.were not conciliatory a battle might result.(Another Soviet-Japanese dispute centred on rights of Japanese coal and oil concessionaries in Sakhalin Island, which is half Russian and half Japanese.A Soviet communique said a Japanese demand had been rejected \u201cbecause it contains threats and is in the nature of an ultimatum.\u201d (In Tokyo the Foreign Office said no ultimatum had been delivered but that the note had requested a reply by July 18 to forestall actual execution of a Soviet court decision levying a heavy penalty on Japanese firms.Tokyo sources said negotiations over the question were continuing).the appearance of the town's ap proach as well as a much-needed safety measure.Mr.and Mrs.Leonard Plur.ket have as their guests Mrs.Plunket's mother, Mrs.McManus, Mrs.Sullivan and Miss Thelma Sullivan, of Toronto.Mr.Leslie Baskerville and Master Warren Baskerville have returned from a nleasant camping stay at Wallace Pond.Mrs.Laura MacFarlane.of New Haven, Conn., is visiting Mrs.Cora Ferrill.Mrs.Edith Cromwell and sons, Messrs.Stanley and Edward Crom Turnbull.Miss Hilda Girard, who was with Rev.Mr.Davis and family while in Coatioccok and accompanied them to Quebec City, was cailing on friends in Coaticook.Mrs.Girard is to become a member of the domestic staff at King's Hall, Compton.Extensive repairs are being made to the business block on Main street known as the Odd Fellows\u2019 block.The large three-storey building is one of the oldest in Coaticook and with the repairs to the main floor and front will be greatly improved in appearance.A very enjoyable tea was held at the Country Club with Mrs.A.C.Hanson and Miss Dorothy Martin as hostesses.Two tables of bridge were played during the afternoon with prizes being won by Mrs.Charles O.Edwards and Mrs.H .W.Hanson.Mr.and Mrs.Albert Neidner, of Malden, Mass., were guests of Mrs.Elizabeth Tillctson.At the laying of the corner stone of the new United Church Hall in Lennoxville the address was made by Rev.Albert Johnson, pastor of Coaticook United Church and chairman of the Quebec-Sherbrooke Presbytery.Mr.Paul Start, manager of the silk mil] in Coaticook, with his bride, has returned to Coaticook, and has taken up temporary residence at the Corona Hotel.Mrs.John Bruhmuller has returned from a two-weeks\u2019 stay in Mont- well.have returned from a visit real, where her eldest son, Mr.John with friends in Montreal.\tBruhmuller, is employed.CITY BRIEFLETS \"-8 \u2022!*\u201c Papers wanted at once of Mon.July 10, Phone 64.Dance, Tues.p.m., Crawford Grove.Strictly old time dance, Good music.25c per person.NEWSY ITEMS Noted Mission Worker Heads For Labrador Forrest Lord will broadcast over CHLT in the near future.Vivien\u2019s Beauty Shop, Lennoxville, closed July 23rd to Aug.6th.Don\u2019t forget Island Brook dance, Wed.night.Happy Trio.Continued from page 1.Anthony, headquarters of the International Grenfell Missions.This will replace the old wooden building which now is out of repair.Sir Wilfred will leave the ship at St.Anthony and cross to the various mission posts established.\u201cHow would anyone feel about going back to a country he loves,\u201d Sir Wilfred asked when reporters questioned him.\u201cI am excited and impatient.I have waited a long time for this moment and it makes me feel good to be aboard a ship heading north again.\u201d His immediate aim is to try to help Newfoundland and Labrador fishermen.He considers that one of the greatest results of his work was the building of a dock at St.Anthony.It was \u201csomething that the fishermen needed in the worst way.\u201d CROSSBURY Mrs.Guy Locke, and little daughter, Ida and Fay, were recent guests of Mrs.F.I.Turner.Mr.and Mrs.Clarence Barter spent a day in East Angus.Mr.and Mrs.E.L.Barter, of Sherbrooke, Mr.and Mrs.D.Winson, and the Misses Murial Winson, Pearl Worby, D, Mayhew and H.Coates gave Mrs.F, I.Turner a pleasant surprise on the occasion of her birthday.Ladies\u2019 pumps in black, blue, green, rust, wine and japonica for $2.95 at Wiggett\u2019s Shoe Sale.MOZART\u2019S CLOSED TOMORROW AFTERNOON TO PREPARE FOR SWEEPER SALE In accordance with their established policy, Mozart Limited, on Thursday morning, will start their Annual Sweeper Sale with prices slashed to ensure a complete clearance of all MORAL RE-ARMAMENT BROADCAST In a letter received from Philip M.Robins, who is en route to Hollywood in connection with the Moral Re-Armament Conference, reference is made to a short wave broadcast from Hollywood tomorrow evening.The broadcast wnl take place at eight o\u2019clock California time, 11 o\u2019clock E.D.S.T., over station WIXAL, which has a frequence of 6040 k.w.h.This broadcast should prove of interest to many local listeners who are familiar with the aims of the Oxford Group and the purpose of the Hollywood meeting.( LENNOXVILLE I Sacred Heart Hospital Will Be Enlarged By $8,000 Annex Provisions Being Made by Philanthropic Institution to Accommodate Greater Number of Aged Folk and Orphans \u2014 Mid-Summer Construction Activity Proceeding At Comparatively Lively Pace.BROMPTON PULP DIRECTORS VISIT PLANTS R.W.Steele, vice-president, J.I.Rankin, of Montreal, F.C.Baker, of Lennoxville, S.R.Newton and D.J.Sails, of Sherbrooke, directors, L.A.Tucker, controller, P.A.Scowen, general manager, and E.P.Wilson, superintendent, of the Brompton Pulp and Paper Company, paid a visit of inspection to the Bromoton-villo and East Angus plants of the Spring and Summer stock.\t________ In preparation for this big event, fjrm \"yesterday! the store will be closed all Vednes-i\texcursion was for the pur- day afternoon.Watch for tomoriow s p0se 0£ looking over the many im-announcement in the Record and > provemen(.g nlafje during the past take advantage of the money-saving.year jn the mills.Mr.Steele, who is opportunities that will be presented See window display.QUEBEC LAD INJURED Quebec, July 18.\u2014(®\u2014A sixteen-year-old boy named Caron suffered serious injury here yesterday when his bicycle collided with a horse-drawn wagon and the wheels of the rig passed over his body.ed at a special meeting last night provided for issuance of bonds over a two-year period to raise the amount.All relief works projects will be abandoned in Hull Thursday according to an announcement by the Provincial Government.TENANT MUST PAY $1,126 A fewr days ago a tenant of a gasoline service station in Sherbrooke was held liable for an accident sustained on the premises by a ijustomer.Tenants or proprietors of any business or building (private or public) may be called upon to pay for accidents to the public, but this risk can be transferred at small cost to Conway & Conway Ltd., Insurance Advisers, Olivier B!dg.Phone 2520.also president of the Asbestos Corporation, went on to Thetford Mines to visit the plant there.Fascist Party Leaders Given Stiff Drills Forrest Lord\u2019s Funeral Home, Dufferin Avenue, Phone 308; Lennoxville 164.A phone cal] to 308 will he answered by Forrest Lord personally, day or night, from his office Dufferin Ave.If out on business he will be located immediately.Should Lennoxville 164 be called, it wdll be transferred instantly to 308.Out motto is: \u201cWe Serve.\u201d I want work, work on my knowledge and merits only.I guarantee a 30 per cent reduction on funerals.Every funeral will be conducted with dignity, and with a staff of five men, Every ambulance call will be answered promptly, especially emergency calls.Day or night \u2014 Any distance \u2014 regardless if one is able to pay or not.Continued from page 1.and swimming trials.Wednesday the men are to bicycle; Thursday mey ride horses, and Friday they do jumping and truck driving.The swimming tests are fifty metres (about fifty-five yards) free style and twenty-five metres under water.Also included are under water life-saving exercises and weight-lifting stunts at the bottom of the pool.For their equestrian tests the party leaders must take sharp descents and steeplechase jumps.SAWYERVILLE Miss Ciemer Converse, of Orleans, Vt., was visiting her aunt, Mrs.George Hadloek, and Mr.Hadlock, at their residence on Clough avenue on Saturday.Mr.and Mrs.Henry Downs, Jr., Master Donald and little Shirley Ann, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.W, J.Lane at the cottage which they are occupying at Upper Bacon's Bay on Saturday.Mrs.George Schwan, of New York City, is spending some time at Fairview Farm.Mr.and Mrs.Frank Spry and their daughter, Miss Rita Spry, nave returned to their home on Park avenue after a pleasant motor trip through the White Mountains and the Green Mountains.On their I return trip they visited the Marble Quarries in Rutland, Vt.Mrs.Elsie Smith, of Montreal, is! spending two weeks with her bro- ] bher-in-law and sister, Mr.and Mrs.1 E.J.Astell, at their residence on Academy street.Mrs.Howell Smith and daughter, Marion, who have been spending a month with Mrs.Smith\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mrs.E.J.Astell, at Iheir home on Academy street, returned to their home in Bath, Maine, on Sunday, with Mr.Smith, who spent the week-end here.Rev.and Mrs.C.A.Adey and daughter, Marion, of Williamsburg, Ont., were calling on Mr.and Mrs.L.B.Pierce at their residence on Summer street on Friday.Mrs.W.J.Marlin and Mrs.E.M.Smith were visiting rt East Hatley over the week-end where they were the guests of the Misses Mamie and Winnie Ives.The Misses Julia Vaudry and Phyllis Station are vacationing at the Girls\u2019 Camp at Owl\u2019s Head.Miss Hazel Crosby, of Thetford Mines, and Miss Bessie Wilson, of Coaticook, spent the week-end with the former\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mrs.B.A.Crosby, a ttheir home on Main street.Miss Merle Brown, of Draper\u2019s Corner, Is visiting at the same home, recuperating from a tonsil operation at the Sherbrooke Hospital.Other recent guests at the same home were Mrs.Robert Carr, of Massawippi, and Mrs.Gordon Y\u2019oung, of Draper\u2019s Corner.Mr.and Mrs.A.R.Bowen, former residents of Lennoxville, now residing at Clarkville, Ont., are visiting friends in Lennoxville and Sherbrooke.Mr.and Mrs.Lyndon Nichol, of Windsor, Ont., were visiting Mr.Nicbol\u2019s mother, Mrs.John Nichol, at the Nichol Apartments, Mam street, and Mrs.Nichol\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mrs.Nelson Cann, and other relatives and friends in town over the week-end, and have loft for Halifax, N.S., where Mr.Nichol has been transferred by his compand, the Industrial Acceptance Corporation, to take up his post as general manager there.Their many friends here extend their best wishes to this popular young couple for success and happiness in their new home.Mr.Frank Armstrong, of Ful-ford, has returned to his home after spending two weeks with his uncle and aunt, Mr.and Mrs.W.E.Pratt, at their home on Conley street.Miss Rita Pratt is visiting Mr.and Mrs.Herbert Armstrong at their home in Fulford.Mrs.Lysander Rainey Is spending a wecdc\u2019s vacation with her cousin, Mrs.Ernest Rogers, and Mr.Rogers, at their home in St.Johns-bury, Vt.Mr.and Mrs.W.R.Elliott wrere visiting Mrs.Elliott\u2019s brother, Mr.Alex MacKay, in Gould over the week-end.Mr.Clifford Byrnp, of Drum-mondville, was visiting his mother, Mrs.William Byrne, at her home on Prospect street, over the week-end.Miss Edith Titcomib has returned to Montreal, after spending her two weeks\u2019 vacation with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Frank R.Titcomb, at their residence on Summer street.Sherbrooke\u2019s steadily increasing population and the consequently greater demand being made for home and shelter by aged folk and orphans has brought about decision to erect an $8,006 addition to the Sacred Heart Hospice on Belvidere street, it was indicated today in a survey which revealed that construction activity in this city is moving at a comparatively lively pace for midsummer.The Hospice, operated by the Grey Nuns or Sisters of Charity, is today the home for several hundred aged folk and parentless children, and is regarded as one of the outstanding philanthropic institutions in the Eastern Townships.r ,\t.\t,\t,\tThe addition to the Hospice build- In the passing yesterday after-j|ng\tc0nSjst of* another storey noon of Miss Katharine Davis at on onp 0p -yvings, the extra space her residence, 1 Belvidere street, I to be used for dormitories.A $3,000 addition to the Julius DEATH REMOVES mss K.DAVIS AT LENNOXVILLE Popular and Esteemed Lennoxville Resident was Native of Coaticook\u2014Funeral Be Held Thursday.Lennoxville, death removed one of this town\u2019s most popular and esteemed ladies, who had resided here for the past eighteen years.Born at Coaticook, the daughter of Mr.and Mrs.Stephen Davis, she received her early education at Coaticook and then entered Stan-,stead College for further training.After the death of her mother some years ago, she took up her residence in Compton with her sister, Mrs.A.L.Pomeroy, and Mr.Pomeroy, and eighteen years ago came to live with her sister.Miss Cora Davis, at her residence on Belvidere street, Lennoxville.Beloved for her many splendid qualities and characteristics, Miss Davis had won a host of friends, who through her long illness were unfailing in their devotion to her.She was a member of St.George\u2019s Kayser Company was started this morning and tenders are being invited for extensive alterations to the local jail.Among other construction projects is the $30,000 Canadian Pacific Railway freight shed, for which contract has been let to the Stewart Construction Company.Enlargement of offices and provision for more storage space necessitated expansion at the Julius Kayser Comnany.Preliminary work towards building an extension above the boiler room is already in progress.Work at the local jail for which tenders are being called by the Provincial Ministry of Public Works will consist of the erection of a new house for the governor, connecting with the prison.The present quarters of Governor Dupuis will be oon- Church, Lennoxville, a member of .verted into additional cells to relieve the Woman\u2019s Auxiliary of this some of the over-crowding that of-church, and a member of Maple fen exists.Copse Chapter, I.O.D.E., Lennox-ville.She was also keenly interested in any worthwhile organization and greatly enjoyed the various social activities of (he town.She leaves to mourn her passing, two sisters, Mrs.A- L.Pomeroy, of Compton, and Miss Cora Davis, of Lennoxville, with whom she resided, and who tenderly cared for her during her illness.She also leaves one niece, Mrs.H.A.Paice, and one nephew, Lee Pomeroy, both of Montreal.Her mother and father and one brother, Leonard W.Davis, predeceased her.Family prayers will be said at her late residence on Thursday afternoon, at two o\u2019clock, and the funeral cortege will proceed to Coaticook, where interment will take place in the family lot at Details of the new $30,000 freight sheds to be built on Belvidere street north opposite St.Patrick\u2019s Academy were released with announcement of awarding of the contract to the local Stewart Construction Company.Two walls of the present sheds \u2022vill be demolished prior to building of a one-storey, L-shaped structure which will face on both Belvidere street and Marquette street.Concrete blocks will be used and overall dimensions are to be 282 by 40 feet.Mount Forest Cemetery.Miss Davis will be sadly missed by all who had the privilege of knowing her, and the deep sympathy of residents of Lennoxville and the surrounding districts is extended to her bereaved relatives.ANGORA WOOL GROWERS Ship your wool to the Federation of American Angora Breeders.Largest Angora wool marketing agency, highest prices and speediest returns.WOOL CHARTS, ETC., Oft REQUEST.F.A.SUTCLIFFE, Vice-President.Federation of American Angcra Breeders, Textile Division, ABERCORN QUEBEC.Remember this! Town Hall, Island Brook, Wed., p.m., Happy Trio.Nljht ¦nd HoHday Cal]»: LarnnoxvtHa 143-W ; Sherbrooke 292-J.Lee M.Watson & Co., Reg\u2019d.INSURANCE Flra, Automobile Mnbllty.Etc.Sun Life Building, Sherbrooke.Phoneat Office 2851-2350.r I THE RIGHT SLANT ON REFRESHMENT Good things from nine sunny climes! That\u2019s ice-cold \u201cCoca-Cola.\u201d Pure, wholesome, delicious\u2014with a tingling taste\u2014it\u2019s only 5c.Go to the red cooler neat you and enjoy a frosty bottle of \u201cCoca-Cola\u2019 \u2019 now.J.H.BRYANT LIMITED\tg* CB-165-6 i - SHERBROOKE PHONE 299 l PAGE FOUR SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1939, ^herbraokf ^erurb Established Ninth Day of February, 1897, with which ia incorporated the Sherbrooke Gazette, established 1837, and Sherbrooke Examiner, established 1878.¦\u2014 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.Beerworth is Secretary-Treasurer, at the office, 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 of Circulations, its circulation being regularly audited and guaranteed.Subscription rates: 75c a month, delivered at any home 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, $1; one month, 50c.Single copies, 3c.SHERBROOKE, TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1930.He that is over-cautious yr.il accomplish but very little.\u2014Schiller, GREAT BRITAIN AND WAR SUPPLIES The delaij with which the British Government is seeking to ensure the supplies of food and other necessities for existence in time of war is reflected in the announcement made by Geoffrey Lloyd, Secretary of Mines, in the House of Commons.Canada will play an important part in these plans, Mr.Lloyd indicated, being regarded as the best source of supply for lumber for coal props in war time.He also announced a scheme for the control of prices and supplies of coal gas and electricity in war lime which could be put into immediate operation.At the present time, Great Britain spends $16,-380,000 annually for imported pitprops, mostly from Scandinavian and Baltic countries, but the Government plan calls for Canada to get most of this trade in war time.The colliery companies and timber importers have been co-operating, and it is understood that they have already developed comprehensive plans for this importation, The wartime control scheme will have the object of maintaining production of coal at the level necessary for the industrial effort of the nation.Prices will be set and supplies distributed and rationed with priority for essential industries.Supplies of coal gas and electricity will be rationed to domestic users through a system of Government-appointed officers while the export of coal will be prohibited except by Government license with every effort being made to limit exports to allied countries.NAZI FINANCES AND WAR Further support for the oft-expressed belief that the present economic condition in Germany precludes the possibility of an early conflict comes from Norman Cramp, financial editor of the London Sunday Times, who declares that peace is likely because Germany, working her men, money and machines to capacity may not be able to attain the enormous effort required by war.Returning from a continental tour, he believes that the incentive for higher profits would quickly lead to inflation, and Germany is now dodging this by introducing tax certificates which Government contractors are forced to accept in part payment.Thus, even if peace is maintained, their maturity will create a serious financial problem for the Reich.Furthermore, neutral countries, unlike during the Great War, would insist upon immediate payment in their own currencies for at! goods supplied Germany and that would put Germany in an impossible position, and, indeed, constitute the first line of any blockade.Again, business houses with large investments in Germany, fearing expropriation of their holdings, are swinging their great weight on the side of peace, and for these reasons alone, German economists agree that Germany is in no condition to stand a war for more than a few months and Hitler\u2019s advisers realize it.Of course, these are all logical arguments and may weigh little with Dor Fuehrer, whose line of reasoning cannot be calculated in advance, and who often seems capable of accepting economic argument only if it has political applications.CANADA AND THE FOREIGN INVESTOR Renewed proof of the high esteem in which Canada is held by the foreign investor is given by the heavy inflow of capital to this country during the past few months, the international trade in securities during May showing sales exceeding purchases for the fifth consecutive month by a wide margin.Net sales to all countries during the month were almost $10,900,000 compared with $3,100,000 in April and $10,500,000 in March.The balance of sales represented an excess of sales of Canadian securities, sales and purchases of United States and other foreign securities being almost equal.The volume of transactions with all countries during May was practically unchanged from the previous month, but a decline of $\u201c2,900,000 in total purchases and an equal increase in total sales resulted in the increased balance of sales.Canadian bonds accounted for more than fifty per cent, and Canadian stocks over twenty-four per cent of transactions with all countries.The most marked changes in the trade during the month were in transactions with the United States.As sales increased by $5,500,000 while pur- * chases decreased $3,300,000, net sales to the United Stales increased from less than $5,000,000 in April to nearly $9,400,000 in May.The gain in sales of | ^ Canadian bonds was particularly large with the result that practically all the net sales to the United States were in the trade in Canadian bonds, each group except municipals being sold on baiance.Repurchases of about $400,000 of United States stocks by Americans were equalled by Canadian purchases of United States bonds.A small balance of purchases by Canada was recorded in the security trade with the United Kingdom.Canadians repurchased on baiance Dominion, provincial, municipal, corporation, Dominion-guaranteed bonds and other railway issues, while sales of Canadian stocks exceeded purchases by nearly $500,000.The inflow of capital from security transactions executed directly with \u201cother countries\u2019\u2019 amounted to $2,200,000, a decline from the levels of the previous two months.Net sales of Canadian stocks accounted for most of the inflow, only about $250,-000 being due to sales on balance of Canadian bonds.During the first five months of 1939, the baiance of sales of securities to all countries totalled almost $61,000,000.During this period, net sales of all securities to the United Stales were $44,600,000; $2,400,000 to the United Kingdom; and to \u201cother countries,\u201d $14,000,000.* Mountains By Rey.B.S.Murray, M.A.In the dining room of the hotel worship.Within the walls of this where I am staying just now the/e old historic chapel, the Blessed is a Canadian winter scene depict- ! Sacrament was administered, at dif-ing skiers in the Laurentian moun-1 ferent hours, by the clergy of the ta:ns at the end of the day return- Churches of Rome, England and ing to tneir chalet du nord.\u201d There.Scotland.And the members of the is something to be said in favor of Church of England as well as those tms type of scenery when the ther-: of the Church of Scotland endeavor-mometer soars high.Hills and ed to show their appreciation by premountains, however, make their ; seating to the Recollet Fathers sup-greatest appeal in the good old i plies of candles for their altar as CANADIAN AVIATION GROWS For several months now Gmada lias been one of the greatest exponents of civil aviation, and in this respect the year 1938 registered a substantial advance over the preceding twelve months.During the past year there were twenty-three light aeroplane clubs in operation, representing an increase of one during the period.These clubs had 1,240 flying members, or fifty-five more than in 1937.The number of flights made by commercial and all other aircraft was 205,175, an increase of 14,772 and the mileage was 11,652,421, an increase of 898,897 miles.There were 10,611 student pilots carried, 19,965 student passengers and 101,594 paying passengers.The freight carried totalled 21,474,691 pounds and the mail carried was 1,900,309 pounds.The amount of freight was considerably less than in the two previous years but the mail carried was much heavier.An important work was also carried out by aircraft, sketching 13,00(1 square miles, photographing vertically 58,957 square miles and obliquely 43,450; 368 forest fires were detected from the air and reported.The great development of Northern Canada is largely due to the activities of civil aviators, the opening of many mines being possible by this means alone, while with the development of the Trans-Canada mail and passenger service and the early inauguration of the Trans-Atlantic trips, even further advances should be recorded in 1939.summer time.Insistently they lure us away from our daily task, offering rest and change, thereby refresh ing our minds and bodies.And in this trying, uncertain period we need to get away somewhere to recreate ourselves, In the mountains, then, we find anew the value of solitude.In God\u2019s great out-of- well as sacramental wine.Today the Christian faith is under fire in many directions.Never was the attack more intense or better planned by .sects, leagues and societies than it is now.To protect Christianity we must re-unite, for united we stand, divided we fall.If we think clearly, interpret cor- doors we meet the Creator.Soon rectly and live Christlike \u2018we shall our cares are gone; our vision is be one in spirit and purpose.I am clarified that, the daily round \u2022\t\u2022\u2022\t-\t.\t.\t.\t.THIRTY YEARS AGO TODAY From the P\u2019iles of the Sherbrooke Record.July 18th, 1909.City residents will welcome the announcement made this morning that the Eastern Townships Bank has opened a branch office in the South Ward.The original office began operations here just fifty years ago and has grown to be one of the leading banks in the country.Becoming annoyed at auto fiends speeding past his residence raising a cloud of dust, a west end Granby citizen took the law into his own hands and built an obstruction across the road.The police were summoned and persuaded him to remove the barricade, A serious accident was narrowly averted at Bond-ville on Sunday when, as the bell on the Anglican Church was ringing for Sunday School the clapper fell to the roof and rolled within inches of the edge.If it had rolled off the roof it is probable that some of the children who were entering would have been injured.The following officers of Pioneer Lodge, No.7, I.O.O.F., Melbourne, were installed by D.D.G.M.J.D.Smith at a regular meeting held recently; N.G., Bios.W.R.Nixon; V.G., J.J.Sanborn; R.S., L.Y.Yerrill, P.G.; Treasurer, F.J.Verrill, P.G.; Warden, C.J.Hill; Conductor, G.F.Jameson; R.S.N.G., A.J.Irwin; L.S.N.G., J.Dunbar; R.S.V.G., K.Leith; L.S.Y.G., H.H.Walker; R.S.S., J.Mackay; L.S.S., A- Parkes; I.G., T.Harper; O.G., E.E.Fowler; Chaplain, A.Alexander.One of the largest ever built here, an air compressor is being constructed by the Canadian Rand Company to be shipped to Rossland, B.C.Two other large compressors are also -under construction.and common task instead of being regarded as a duty is invested with heroic opportunity.Then we are ready for our tasks which hitherto, because of jaded nerves, were labelled impossible.Canadians should he mountain-minded, for this great Dominion is enclosed by the Rocky Mountains in the west and the Laurentians and the Appalachians in the east.When the Marquis of Lome, in 1877, inspired by the majesty and beauty of the Rockies, gave to the world the now famous hymn \u201cUnto the Hills Around Do I Lift Up My Longing Eyes\u201d he immortalized those mountains.And memories of the Rockies are recalled by Canadians at home and abroad when they sing that characteristic ballad, \u2019\u2019When It\u2019s Springtime in the Rockies.\u201d Of many great men down the centuries it is im.perishably recorded that they loved mountains.The Prince of Life is no exception.Often amid the solitude of the mountains He prayed all the night through.Ararat, Peniel, Sinai, Carmel, Zion, Calvary, Olivet, each shines in the sacred record, with its story thrilling the heart and firing the imagination with great ascents and tremendous conquests.Mother Nature endows hills and mountains as sources of fertility.Streams run down from them bearing argosies to the thirsty valleys.The productivity of the Prairies depends upon the Rockies.So, in the spiritual life, the upward look and the steep ascent bring strength to manhood and flower to womanhood.If we would avoid subtle temptations, vulgar entanglements, tormenting fears, despair, pride and arrogance then try the uplook when the outlo-ok is bad.It is always better to keep the outlook good by looking up than to wait until the outlook is bad and then look up.Those over forty, as well as Youth who have, unfortunately, lost their sense of direction, can find inspiration when they took unbo the hills.Abraham in so doing was enabled to choose Canaan, whilst Lot settled in Sodom, Writ in the very structure of life is the importance of right choice.As members of life\u2019s tong procession we, too.in 1939, must march on, believing that the world makes way for the man who knows where he is going.Journey\u2019s End is only a matter of time.It is the tendency, the slant, the direction that matters most.Whither goest thou?Be ye steadfast unmoveable, the mountains suggest.The lives of great men in our British, Canadian and American history remind us that those who developed these qualities and kept faith, hope and love alive a little longer won in the end of the day.Tomorrow is another day, a new day filled with hope and new' courage.March on, armed with that dream.What a variety of summits there are! The Matterhorn towers over Zermatt.The massive peaks of the Rockies lift themselves above the foot hills.And far above all stands Mount Everest.And many die climbing towards their ideal.Floe then as a bird to the mountains in the summer time and there reconsecrate your imagination to the highest possible idealism.Lift your thoughts beyond things visible.Learn to think straight.\u201cLet your eyes look right on and let thine eyelids look straight before thee\u201d (Prov.4; 25).If we would look with unfettered eyes right into the heart of every moral and spiritual problem and issue that confronts us, how much saner, braver and successful we would be.Such a difficult ideal should challenge us for straight and honest thinking leads to happy sunlit way not pleading for uniformity but for Christian and practical unity.One hundred and forty-six years ago a splendid spirit of understanding and co-operation existed between two great nations as well as two great branches of the Christian Church.That spirit, at all costs, must be recaptured again.Hei-e is a hill to climb which demands adventure and wisdom, energy and will, patience and vision.Other hills, variously labelled, beckon and, with hearts aflame though feet ache \u2022wearily, we bake the trail which eventually leads to the summit.When Canada has people of vision and power, people who are steadfast and true, honest and upright, unselfish and tolerant to match her mountains then will our loved Dominion achieve real greatness, spiritually, morally, mentally, materially.Sermons in Mountains?In silent, golden pictorial language they preach of rest and vision, stability and inspiration as you lift up your eyes and minds to the everlasting hills! PRESS COMMENTS WHILE WAITING FOR THAT THIRD-TERM ANSWER WHO AfZS YOU GOMCT TV tJOVWYATE fo# a r/œsr ter* -.WHAT «f/YP OH W£ATH£H WILL WB have ow eiecr/ofY X>AY /YEXT YEAR?WfATKFR bureau h/HAT ARE YOUR.FLAWS FOR /9YO?AWP, BY THE i/vAv\u2014 what aw r croiwcr TO BE DO/>Y M\u2019rSi lris Bates! cal7e,\u2019 eveb lf and Miss Audrey Bates, Mr.Miller Powers and the Misses Jane and Bessie Mitson, all of Cherry River; Mr.and Mrs.Kenneth M'cKelvey, Mr.and Mrs.Nelson McKelvey and Mr.and Mrs.Robert Moffatt, of Magog; Mr.and Mrs.Everett Martin and Miss Helen, of Ayer\u2019s Cliff; will take her to Lake George, N.Y., and the New York World's Fair.* » * ^ Mrs.Albert Hare, of Dalhousie, N.B., is .visiting her mother, Mrs.Arthur Dean, and Mr.and Mrs.J.Barnes, at their homes in this citv.\u2022 * * Miss Verian Joslin is vacationing at Breeches Lake for a week, where she is the guest of Miss Grace Louise Macdonald.* * * Mr.George T.Phelps and Mr.Norman Phelps left this morning for ouestions, then checking i Amherst, N'H-.to attend the funeral to and wore a corsage of red roses.Miss Alice Ingalls, sister of the bride, was bridesmaid, and wore a gown of pink with white accessories and corsage of red roses.Mr.Norman Pattullo supported the groom.Following the ceremony, lunch was served at the home of the bride, with only the immediate relatives of both families present.Later the bride | Mr.and Mrs.Henry Capsey and the and groom left for a motor trip to , Misses Phyllis, Edith arid Irene Toronto, Niagara Falk and points in Capsey, of Mystic; Mr.and Mrs.the New England States, the bride Fred Carr and Miss Mary Carr, Mrs.travelling in a sand suit with British j Dennis and Miss Kathleen Dennis, tan accessories.On their return Mr.iof Sherbrooke; Mrs.P.W.Herring and Mrs.Campbell will reside in ! and Mrs.Archie Hunting, of Hunt-Bedford it isn't convenient?(b) Stand to carve?ANSWERS 1\u2014\tBeside them.- 2\u2014\tIn a glass.3\u2014\tYes.4\u2014\tAt the tip of the knife.5\u2014\tNo.Best \u201cWhat Would You Do tion\u2014(b).solu- Tested Recipes CASEY\u2014TUCKER BUTTERMILK TURNS A TOUGH \u2022\t\u201e i ivr d t> w .il FOWL INTO FAIR EATING Miss1 Vamel'a^Wood,5' Mr.W.° V.L T,h® Yankees can turn a tough (Wood and Miss Helen Cudmore, of ,£>wl\tt^dear,, tomorrow of their niece and cousin, Miss Miriam Phelps.* * * Miss Clemer Converse, of Orleans, Vt., is spending the summer as the guest of Miss Frances Remick, at her cottage at Ayer\u2019s Cliff.* * * Miss Betty Keene is spending a pleasant holiday at the Hermitage Club, Lake Memphremagog, where she will be the guest for a week of Miss Ann Skelton.* * * Mr.W- W.D-avey, Mr.Guy Bryant and his son, John, returned to their respective homes in the city on Sunday evening after a few days\u2019 fishing trip to the Scott Fish and Game Club at Rimouski.* * * Mr.and Mrs.Walter Riepert, of East Orange, N.J., are spending a few days as the house guests of Mr.and Mrs.Milo M.Lothrop, at their residence on Prospect street.Mrs.Riepert was formerly Miss Marjorie Nutter, of this city.* * * Word has been received from Mrs.P,.Havard, who sailed on June 30th aboard the \u201cEmpress of Australia\u201d for a two months\u2019 sojourn in England.Mrs.Havard stated thnt the crossing had been a stormy one, but that in spite of this fact she is well.Mrs.Gordon Sanders and son.CATELLI PORKond BEANS Bedford, July 18.\u2014A very pretty | Montreal ; Mr.and Mrs.Scott Par-iTh®y aoak £ in buttermilk.That summer wedding took place in St.1 sons, Mrs.Ernest Parsons, Miss ' J.lot on)y sottells lts healt\u2019 Dut aaas j Gerald, and Miss Doris Ross, of James\u2019 Church on Tuesday after- Sylvia Parsons, Mr.and Mrs.Albert\t, .\t.\t.,\ti Lennoxville, Mrs.Cleland Mac- noon, July 4th, at two o\u2019clock when ; McLeod and Miss Alberta, of Scots-!,, Thls bA of wisdom comes Jr®\u2019* | Lachlan and Mr.Donald MacLeod Miss Jean Tucker, of this town, was town; Mr.Clifford Harrison, 0f the new collection of Yankee recipes married to Mr.Merton Casey.The ' Sawyerville, and Mrs.Harley Asker I bY Im0Sen Walcott, called ^\t- ; IT Every 10 c Packet of WILSONS lOc WHY PAY MORE Best of all fly tillers.Clean, quick, sure, cheap.Ask your Druggist, Grocer or General Store.THE WILSON FLY PAD CO., HAMILTON, ONT.Sammy lost his brother\u2019s baseball down that hole.If he don\u2019t get it, Casey, his ma won't give him any tested quality Doughnuts, when he gets home.ALLATT\u2019S Just Phone 724 rector of the church, the Rev.H.V.! 0f Canterbury.Fricker, officiated, and the organist, ;\t_______ Mrs.A.S.McCaw, presided at the1\tDOAK\u2014WARD organ, playing softly during the! Cowansville, July 18.\u2014The mar ceremony.The church was decor-, riage of Barbara Irene Ward, daugh ated with pink peonies, delphinium | ter of Mr.and Mrs.Charles O.Ward, and lavender.\tj of Inverness, and Mr.George Ken- The bride, who was given in mar- neth Doak, second son of Mr.and riage by her cousin, Mr.Jack Shep-1 Mrs.J.H.Doak, of Cowansville, herd, of Sutton, wore a costume of took place July 5, 1939, at eleven Royal blue with a small close fit-1 o\u2019clock at the Anglican Church, ting hat in a darker shade, and car-| Lower Ireland.The officiating clergy-ried a corsage of red roses and ' man was Rev.Cecil Ward, brother of gravy, salt, pepper, lilies-of-the-valley, while Miss Claire - tbe bride\t| Line an earthen baking dish with Tucker, sister of the bride, who wasl T'he br)d,e> wbo was £iven away b-v ; Pastl\u2019y r011^ a?0?1 U4 A110\u201d\t, The Yankee Cook Book.\u201d Read it to awaken your pride in the American way with a skillet.Of course, chicken is all-American in its almost daily use.So let\u2019s take two chicken recipes from the book.New Hampshire \u201cOld Home\u201d Chicken Pie (Serves 4 to 6) 1 One recipe plain pastry, 1 fowl (about 4 pounds), 3 cups chicken of Sherbrooke, motored to Marsboro yesterday.On their return journey they were accompanied by Mrs.Malcolm MacKay and daughter, Catherine, and Mrs.Angus MacLeod and her daughtei, Effie.Miss Effie MacLeod is entering the Sherbrooke Hospital for an operation for appendicitis.News Of Women\u2019s Clubs bridesmaid, wore a gown\u2019of orchid ! ber fatb«r' Mr.C.0.Ward, was , Lay into this unbaked shell, pieces of crepe with hat in corresponding beautlfuI.y ^'«ed m white flovvered ( hot boiled chicken seasoned to suit shade, and carried a corsage of yellow roses and lilies-of-the-valley.Mr.Olsen Casey, brother of the groom, was best man.Among the guests from out-of-town were Mr.Asa Shepherd, Mrs.Symington and Miss Symington, of Dunham; Mr.and Mrs.Jack Shepherd, of Sutton; Mrs.Gilbert Feather and Mrs.Lillian Stewart, of East Hartford, Conn., aunts of the bride; Mrs.Niram Casey, of East Hartford, Conn., aunt of the groom, and Mrs.Arthur Husband, of Stan-brid-ge East, aunt of the groom, Following the ceremony Mr.and Mrs.Casey left on their wedding trip and will reside in Bedford.crepe with tight bodice and floor-The taste, and pour the gravy over length skirt and finger-tip white tulle | this.Put on the top pastry cover, McKELVEY\u2014PARSONS Bury, July 18.\u2014A very pretty wedding took place at two thirty o\u2019clock, on Saturday afternoon, June 10, at St.Paul\u2019s Church, Bury, when Ruby Bernice, second daughter -of Mr.and Mrs.George Parsons, | of Bury, was united in marriage to Mr.Percy C.McKelvey, son of Mr.and Mrs.Archie McKelvey, of Cherry River, Rev, W.W.Smith,; pastor of the ohuirch, officiating.veil with bandeau of lilies-of-the-valley, white brocaded satin shoes and elb-ow'-length lace gloves.She also wore a silver cross necklace set with diamonds and her bouquet was red Talisman roses.The bride\u2019s travelling suit was a sheer navy dress with jacket, white hat trimmed with navy, shoes and purse of the same color and white and navy lace gloves.The bridesmaid, Miss Phyllis Christie, niece of the bride, wore a floor-length dross of turquoise net trimmed with rosebuds, a matching pink mohair hat, slippers and gloves.Her flowers were sweet peas.Mr.Malcolm Doak, of Montreal, the groom\u2019s brother, was his best man.The bride\u2019s mother wore a navy crepe ensemble with white accessories.After the ceremony a reception was held at (he home of the bride\u2019s parents.The decorations in the dining room were roses.The church was beautifully decorated with roses and peonies and rolled 1-8 inch thick, and gashed to allow steam to escape.Bake in hot oven (450 degrees F.) for about fifteen minutes, then reduce heat to moderate (350 degrees F.) and continue baking - \u2014\u2014-\u2022 - TOMORROW\u2019S MENU BREAKFAST: Sliced peaches, and cream, dry cereal, brown sugar, hot muffins, coffee, milk.LUNCHEON: Hot tomato bouillon in cups, chopped egg and pickle sandwiches, fruit bowl, raspberry shrub or tea, milk.DINNER: New Hampshire chicken pie, boiled white onions with parsley, green beans, cucumber and tomato salad, blackberry roll, hard sauce, coffee, milk about thirty minutes longer.In the Connecticut Valley, sweet chicken gravy is used on chicken pies.At church suppers you are asked whether you prefer your music during the service was ren- \u201ejiv[_\t_____ Mrs.C.W.-Hawley, organist\u2019of ; of\u2019the.hhrfJè*8 Ar'nî0 Jobns°n* cousm .chic'ken gravy sweetened or unsweetened.Potted Chicken Cut up a fowl as for fricassee.Roll each piece in flour seasoned to taste.Pack closely in large bean pot and cover with boiling water.Bake 3 1-2 hours.Cover after the water begins to boil.In Plymouth, Mass., they call this \u201ctendering a chicken,\u201d the church, presided at the organ, j Out-of-town guests were Mr.and ?playing the wedding marches and:Mrs.H.M.Doak, Montreal; Mrs.two hymns, \u201cO Father All Great- Aifr\u20acd Miller, Montreal; Rev.E.C.mg\u201d and \u201cLead Us, Heavenly.and Mrs.Ward, Port Daniel, Que., Father, Lead Us,\u201d were sung by the | Mr.and Mrs.A.Hurd, Sawyerville, choir.Miss Evelyn Hurd and Mr.Gordon The church was beautifully dec- Doak, Lennoxville, and Mr.and Mrs.orated for the occasion with a profusion of potted plants, mauve and white lilacs and ferns, the pews reserved for the guests being marked with bows of mauve and white.Given in marriage by her father, the bride looked lovely in a floor length model of ivory satin, made in Empire style, with long, close fitting sleeves, and heart shaped neckline, held in place with rhinestone clips.She wore as an ornament, a silver filigree pendant, the gift of one of her pupils, and carried a prayer book of white kid with streamers of white satin ribbon ending in clusters of lilies of the valley.Her long veil was arranged in tiara effect, held with a bandeau of orange blossoms.She was attended by her sister, Miss Fay Parsons, who wore a grace- Lindsay Miller, Ottawa.Mr.and Mrs.G- McElrea\u2019g grove was the scene of the July meeting of the Brompton Road Women\u2019s Institute, when Miss Verna Hatch, superintendent, presided over the large attendance of members and visitors, and a report of the successful strawberry tea held last week was given by Mrs.W.p.Goodfellow, convener of the Ways and Means Committee.A vote of thanks was extended to Mrs.E.Hatch and Miss Verna Hatch for their kindness jn having the tea at their home.In the reports given by the various conveners, it was stated (hat a quilt had been raffled by the Home Economics Department.In the Canadian Industries Department, Mrs.E.M.Goodfellow read an article from a newspaper, which urged the Government to control the nickel export.Another paper was read for the Education and Better Schools Department by Mrs.C.Sawyer on \u201cWomen\u2019s Ways in Finland.\u201d Communications read by the secretary included an appeal for donations from the Sherbrooke Hospital, I and after a brief discussion, Mrs.William Lavallee, Miss Verna Hatch 'and Mrs.J.Lemuel Clark were asked to collect for this worthy objective.Money was voted for the purchase of materials which will be made into articles for a sale.Mrs.J.Lemuel Clark was appointed as a delegate to attend the quarterly meeting of the Sherbrooke County Women\u2019s Institutes at Cherry River jn August.An amusing point in the meeting was the answering of the roll call with Scotch jokes.After adjournment a picnic lunch was served.GARDEN PARU REPORT GIVEN AT SWEETSBURG Sweetsburg, July IS.\u2014About five hundred dollars were realized as oss proceeds of the annual garden party held at Sweetsburg Park for the benefit of the Brome-Missisquoi-Perkins Hospital.The event was under the auspices of the Hospital Women\u2019s Auxiliary, of which Mrs.E.\tGoyette, of Cowansville, is president.Booths were in charge of the following: Flowers, Mrs.J.J.Barker and Miss Wilma Strange; candy, Mrs.M.\tDomingue and Mrs.Howard Drennan; hot dogs, Douglas McAllister and Billie Hamilton; fish pond, etc., Mrs.George Barker, Mrs.Murphy and Mrs.E.Goyette; soft drinks, Arnold McClatchie and Kenneth Hamilton; food table, Mrs.W.G.Brown, Mrs.A.J.E.Leonard and Mrs.C.H.Whitehouse; tea table, Mrs.C.E.Hayes and Mrs.W.S.Rodger; coffee, Mrs.F.J.Knight and Mrs.J.E.Burnet.Those who won articles in the raffle held for the benefit of the hospital included Donald Carlin, coffee table; Mrs.C.B.Jameson, wool cushion; Miss Elizabeth Brown, white Angora wool scarf; George Barker, case of toilet articles; Miss Juliette FTeury, of Knowlton, flower stand; Mrs.Walter Dalglish, twin quilts (donated by Trinity Church Parish Guild); L.Flannery, set of enamel trays.A thorough-lbred Jersey calf donated by Mr.J.G.R.Shuter, will be drawn for at a later date.The Women\u2019s Auxiliary of the hospital expressed thanks and appreciation at their regular meeting to all who assisted in any way in making this event a success and menlioned especially Mr.Vincent Leonard and his staff at the Court House.General Notes.Mr.J.G.R.Shuter has joined his family at St.Andrews-by-the-Sea.Mr.and Mrs.Akx Taylor, Mrs.Arnot Teel, Mrs.N.J.Wyatt, Mrs.William Craigie and Miss Edna Craigie were among those who visited the C.G.I.T.camp at Brome Lake.Mrs.H.L.Trotter, of Iberville, was the winner of the hand-work quilt given the Parish Guild of Christ Church by Mr.W.O.Shufelt from the estate of his sister, the late Fanny Baker.The quilt was very beautifully made end is an article to be highly prized.Mrs.Homer Sweet, of St.Armand, is a guest of her son, Mr.Howard Sweet, and Mrs.Sweet, in the Hastings neighborhood.Mr.and Mrs.Howard Sweet and family also spent a day at St, Armand, where they were accompanied by Mr.Clinton Sweet, of Iron Hill.Mr.and Mrs.Merrill Beard, Mr, and Mrs.Jem Murray, of Ashland, N.\tH., Mr.E.W.Beard and son, Byron, of Iron Hill, were in town on a visit.Friends are sorry to know that Mrs.Murray has been ill since returning home.Mr.and Mrs.Ear] Derick, of Aber-corn, were guests of their daughter, Mrs.Alton Russell, and Mr.Russell.Miss Juliette DoGuire, of Quebec City, is spending her holidays with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Damage DeGuire.Miss Madeline Rousseau, of Montreal, is spending a month with Mrs.F.\tJ.Tanner and Miss Violetta Tanner.Mrs.M.A.Robinson and daughter attended the miscellaneous shower given in honor of Miss I.Fessenden, at Fulford, accompanied by Mrs.E.W.Beard and Mrs.C.L.Sweet, of Iron Hill.The Perfect Thirst Quencher \"SALADÆ TEA STRAWBERRIES Do not delay ordering your Strawberries for Preserving! 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Or Telephone 113 2 THOMPSON & ALIX Limited 23 King St.West.84BF M4Sm DUE TO EXTERNAL CAUSES Irritation quickly soothed, healing K promoted by useof mildly medicated  CUTICURA OINTMENT SDOIHIIG REUEF WHEN \"\"7 SUMMER SNR IRONIES SUNBURN BABY RASH PIMPLES (dss;£lt) CHAFING INSECT BITES PRICKLY HEAT TIRED, ACHING FEET (Cracks between Toes) Over 50,000,000 lars of Popular Medicated Cream Used! i:/vA \u2022Sfiin CrPtrM \u2022 Don\u2019t suffer needlessly from these painful, ugly skin troubles.It\u2019s easy to get quick soothing relief with snow-white, grcaseless medicated Noxzema Skin Cream.A single application of (his cooling cream usually stops itching, smarting, painful irritation\u2014continued use promotes rapid healing of externally caused skin troubles.Noxzema is a unique formula of 12 tested medicaments in grcaseless, stainless cream form.Surveys show that many doctors not only prescribe it, but use it themselves.Over 50,000,000 jars used in recent years.SPECIAL OFFER: For a limited limt you ran yrt a cake of fragrant, extra-creamy Noxzema Medicated Soap FREE with a m< dium aire jrr of Noxzema.Don\u2019t misa this chance.Get your jar of Noxrema Skin Cream and y nut free cate of Noxzema Soap tot/ay.At Drug and Department Stores.FRIT 16* Noxzema Soap with 34' NOXZEMA P y \"MW \u2022 \u2022 .I MELBOURNE SMITH\u2014ODDY Thetford Mines, July 18.\u2014A very _________________________________ pretty wedding took place at half- ! past two on Saturday, June 24th, at, Mr.Arthur Johnston, friends of the St.John the Divine Church, Thetford groom.Mines, when Cordelia Florence,! Mrs.William Oddy, the bride\u2019s daughter of Mr.and Mrs.W.Oddy, mother, wore an ensemble of blue was united in marriage to Donald flowered crepe with white accessories Edwin Smith, son of Mrs.Edwin to match.Mrs, STnith, mother of the Smith and the late Mr.Edwin groom, wore navy blue crepe with Smith, of Thetford.Rev.Mr.Seeley j blue accessories to match, officiated.\tImmediately after the ceremony a ^, The bride entered the church on , reception was held at the home ofjk'j'tt r ,\t,\t___ the arm of her father to the strains the groom\u2019s mother, where the bride\u2019s \u2018 A.J S|\tP\tnonage, of the Wedding March, played by | table was decorated with white and Mrs.Thomas Johnston and was pink streamers and centered with charmingly dressed in white ruffled a three-tier wedding cake, chiffon with a bolero effect, her floor-i The bridal couple later left on a length veil of white silk net falling motor trip to the United States and graceful folds from a coronet of, other points, the bride travelling in Capt.Philip Linton, of the S.S.Manchester Progress, spent a weekend as guest of Mr.and Mrs.J.P.Ross.Miss Dorothea Coates, of Montreal, spent a week-end as guest of her parents and sister, Miss Winni- 25 Oz.Bottle 40 Oz.Bottle si.90\t*2.85 Distilled and Bottled in Canada m -,\t,\t_ , , , ,r .orange blossoms.She carried a bou-irosewood lace with accessories fu , floor length dress of shell pmk quet of white and red ros and Re%,\tR Coder^ ' daughter.Sybil, of Chicago, were .visiting Mr.'Watson\u2019s father, Mr.Janies Watson, and Mrs.Watson en ! route to Inverness and Montreal, j Miss Miriam Irving, of Hamtiiton, ] Ont., and her niece, Miss Betty Ed-| wards, of Port Dover, Ont., are l spending a vacation at the home of the former\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mrs.William Irving.Mr.John Helgesen is spending some time in Iberville, f Guests at the home of Mrs.D.A.Maclver included Mr.and Mrs.D.G.Maclver, Miss Ethel Maclver and Mr.Alex Maclver, of Marsboro, j and the Misses Thelma and Marion Maclver, of Springfield, Mass.Miss Mary I.Crawford has re- Rev of Sherbrooke, After the religious ceremonies the guests and parishioners were entertained at a luncheon given by the ladies of the parish and were received by Mrs.S.E.Desmarais, Mrs.Edward McGovern, Mrs.A.W.Beausoleil and Mrs.Romeo Marcotte.Among the guests at the table of honor were Mgr.Desranleau, Rev.Father Coiteux, Rev.Canon Vincent, Rev.I.Lavallee, former pastor of St.Bibian\u2019s parish.Rev.Canon Codere, Rev.Father Gervais, Alderman A.Geoffroy, R-P.Laporte, Mr.Albert Goudreau, M.L.A., and Mrs.Goudreau, Rev.J.A.Cote, Rock Forest, Rev.Origene I Miss Evelyn Harris entertained at jher home in honor of Mrs.James , Gerard prior to her departure for Guelph, Ont., where Mr.Gernard has j been transferred.Bridge was play-| od at three tables and Mrs.Jack : Henderson won the prize for obtain-i ing the high score.During the everting Miss Dolena Morrison, on be-ihalf of the friends assembled, presented Mrs.Gerrard with a beautiful silved water pitcher.Mils.Gerrard thanked them all for the gift.Mrs.Lee Davis, of Montreal, and Mrs.Lionel D\u2019Artois, of Philipsburg.were | present.Refreshments were served by the hostess assisted by her mother, Mrs.W.J.Harris.Mr.and Mrs.John Hoffman and Miss Lillian Hoffman are spending some time at their summer home at Missisquoi Bay.Mr.and Mrs.John Emerson and party of friends from Montreal were recent week-end guests of Mr.and Mrs.G.E.Standish.Mr.and Mrs.N.T.French have returned home from a holiday spent at Old Orchard, Me.Miss Helen Brown has left for Worcester, Mass., to visit her aunts, Mrs.Gertrude Cutler and family and Mrs, Malcolm Taylor and Mr.Taylor.She also will visit other-points bef ore returning home /mwwDRY gin .OISTUUD AND BOTTLED IN CANADA 25 sx.51.SU\t50 ox.52.SS turned to Sherbrooke after visiting I Vel, R.P.Tremblay, Mr.and Mrs.her aunt,' Mrs.James Watson, Mr.Watson.and DUBOYCE\u2019S CORNER Mrs.P.C.Duboyce, of Richmond, was calling on Mr.Ray Duboyce.\t.Mrs.Sewell Newton and daughter, j f Coiteux expressed Jns i Olive, spent a week-end with her par-' ents, Mr.and Mrs.Thomas Duboyce.Mr.Newton was a guest at the same home.Miss Margaret Marsh has returned home after spending two weeks as a guest of her sister, Mrs.Ray Duboyce.She assisted in the care of her niece, Barbara Ann Duboyce, who has been ill with the measles.Mr.and Mrs.Ernest Tobin, their two sons, Mrs.D.Cromack and son, Kenneth and Mr.Robert Brown, of Montreal, spent a week-end with their parents, Mr.and Mrs.Dalton Brown.Mr.and Mrs.George Buss, Mr.and Mrs.Reginald Buss and infant son and Miss Eileen Stone, of Knowl-ton, spent a day with Mr.and Mrs.William Stone and family.Mr.C.E.Norton, of Montreal, spent a week-end with his family.Callers at Mr.Dalton Brown\u2019s were Mr.and Mrs.Robinson, of Foster, Mrs.Rhicard Bockus, Mr.Douglas Bockus and Miss Doris Bockus, of Fulford, and Mr.and Mrs.Glendon \u2018 Brown, of Montreal.J.E.Janelle, Mr.and Mrs.Edward Keenan, Rev.Father Morin, curate of the Holy Family Church, Rev.Father Quay, of St.Bibian\u2019s, Mr.and Mrs.Leclair and Mr.Miles Lync'h.In the opening address Rev.thanks to his parishioners for their generosity in reducing the debt of the church by $4,500 in six months and stated if this were continued the debt would be wiped out in a very short period.Alderman A.Geoffroy, representing Mayor, thanked Mgr.Desranleau for aiding in building church, Mr.Goudreau, M.L.A., congratulated Rev.Father Coiteux and the parishioners cn their good work, Rev.Canon Vi .cert extended the best wishes of the Mother Church of St.Bibian\u2019s, and Mgr.Desranleau brought to mind the sadness that accompanies a division in of a parish whose people have worshipped together foe years.Rev.I.Lavallee also spoke.The Misses Dorothea and Lucille Pickei spent a few days in Ottawa.Mr.C.L.Pope and daughter, Dorothy, were in Rock Forest visiting relatives.Mrs.William Murray and daughter, Patsy, of Montclair, N.J., have arrived to spend the summer months with Mrs.Murray\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mrs.S.R.O\u2019Hara.Miss Mary Rose Morrissette, of ¦the Canadian Bank of Commerce staff, spent a holiday at Boston and other points.Miss Mae Ingalls, of Bedford, was of Mr_ and Mrs.James Campbell, a guest at the home of Mr, and Mrs.Mrs_ T g, O\u2019Malley, of Knowlton, Milton Brown and family.\tspent a week-end with her son, Mr, Mr.Dunc-an Bromley, of Saint Myles Enright, and Mrs.Enright John, N.B., was a guest of Mr.Rus-: Mrs_ Leslie DuiTen an(i daughter, sell Sly and also visited ot,^er i xhora, of Foster, spent a few days friends.\t|\twith her sister, Mrs.Myles Enright, Mr.Frederick Muge, of Worces-I and with Mr, Enright and son, ter, Mass., was a week-end guest of - Wayne Mr.and Mrs.Milton Brown and.Master Chester Wing, of Knowl-family.\tton, spent a few days with Master Miss Edith Richmond and Miss, Wayne Enright.Burns, of Montreal, spent a week-\tanc] Mrs.Picard and Mr.and end with Mr.and Mrs.Lawrence, Mrg.Luke Marchessault have re-MacDonald.\t.\tI turned home after spending a few Mir.Charles Morrison has return-1 d at Southbri(ige, Mass., as ed home after spending a few days) ^ of Mr, and MrSt r Guilmette.at Scotstown visiting his uncle Mr.^ a]so visited other friends and Norman Morrison, and aunt, Mrs.I rsja|.jV0!S jn djfferent cities in the Angus MacKenzie and family.luniird States Mr.Ferris, of Saint JohnL N.B., | Mr> and M'rs.J.g.White and Landers, of S.c, A*.».\t~ and Mr.Leon Landers, of Saint .\t.n ,\tthe funeraJ of Mr.Ma,ss., were dmnci guests oi i .ti\t\u2022 \u2022 « f> \u2022 i m town to attend the funeral of Mi., xt ,.c t \"p McMahon and also John, N.B.were visitors of their ; T i M\tj and Mrs.j.r.ivicaviauun uuu biùu -.ha.___i ai\u2014 'Tv-™.- t \u201ev, ,J°nn M.ctaike.\t) visited Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Dunni Mrs.Charles Thompson, of Brig-!an(j famjly.ham, was calling on friends recently, j Mrs.Benham and Miss Ethel Friends of Mr.Jack Cuthbertson gtrange\treturned home after will be pleased to know that he has | spending a £ew days with friends at returned home from the Montreal | jron General Hospital, where he under-1 An agc'd resident in the person of went an operation for appendicitis.| Edward Doonan passed away at the BARNSTON The ice cream social held in the To wn Hall under the auspices of the Ladies\u2019 Aid was very well attended.The Unity Class orchestra, of Coati-eook, was in attendance and played several selections during the evening.Mr.Arthur Godbout has returned home after a most enjoyable vacation at Littleton, N.H., and Boston, Mass.Recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.Gordon Hauver were Mr, and Mrs.Donald Laroche, of Flanders, Mr.and Mrs, Philip Hauver, their daughter, Vera and son, Vernal, of Saw-ÿerville, Mrs.G.E.Hodge and children and Mrs.M.E, Morrow Sherbrooke.DIXVILLE Miss Leola Childs has returned to her home in North Hatley after spending a week with friends here.Most of the farmers here are engaged in haying and a good crop is generally reported.Old newspapers for sale.One cent a pound.Apply Record Office General Notes Miss Sparrow, Mrs.J.D.Smith, Miss Wadleigh and Miss Muriel Clarke motored to Montreal recent- ly- Mrs.Hardolph Westeneys, oi Toronto,, is the guest of Miss Horte-nse Fraser.Mr.and Mrs.F.Henderson and children, of Montreal, are guests of Mrs.Henderson\u2019s sister, Miss Myrtle Dyson.Mr.and Mrs.Charles Nixon, who were the guests of Mrs.Ada Nixon, h:.ve returner1, to St.Albans, Vt.Mrs.S.Messenger, of Sherbrooke, is the guest of Dr.and Mrs.Charles Boast.The Misses Jean and Lois Boast are spending a holiday at the C.G.I.T.Cedar Lodge camp on Lake Memphremagog.Miss Thelma Galbraith has returned after spending a week at the same camp.Mrs.Harry Bedard accompanied by her daughter, Margaret, and son, Harry, motored to Franklin, N.H.Mr.E.S.Coogan has returned of from Granby where he spent a few j days.! Mr.and Mrs.O.Poirier, of Drum-J mondville, were recent guests of the latter's parents, Mr.and Mrs.E.Janelle.Miss Gertrude Burnsides has returned after spending a few days in Montreal Mr.W.Ferguson, of Prescott, was calling on friends here.Rev.William MacMillan, of Col-lingwood, Ont., is a guest of friends.Master Crombie Tanner is spending a holiday at the Y.M.C.A.camp parents, Mr.and Mrs.Thomas Lan-ders and Mrs.Fred Landers.Miss Edith Richmond, of Montreal, spent a week-end with Mr.and Mrs.R.G.Williams and family.Friends of Mr.Cecil Starke regret that he is a patient in the Homeopathic Hospital, Montreal, and wish him a speedy recovery.Mrs.Mae Birch, of Trenton, Ont., was in town visiting relatives and friends.Mr.Earl Dimick has left for Huntsville, Ont., where he will spend a holiday with his sister, Mrs.James Ireland, and Mr.Ireland.Mr.and Mrs.T.Biron, of Sweets-bui'g, were guests at the home of Mr.and Mrs.W.H.Bullock.* Mrs.Fred Burbank, of Sherbrooke, was visiting Mr.and Mrs.Harper A.Pickei recently.Mr.and Mrs.P.Demers and daughter are spending a holiday in Montreal and Chambly with relatives and friends.The Misses Helene and Geraldine Elder have returned to their home at Lachine after two weeks with their grandparents, Mr.and Mrs.George Decker, and aunt, Miss Isabel Decker.Mrs.Percy Bell, of Sherbrooke, was a guest of Mr.and Mrs.Harry Kavanagh and family.Miss Edna Bressette, of South Stukely, is visiting her cousin, Mr'S.Hector Harris, and Mr.Harris.Mrs.Guy Sheldon spent a day at Richford, Vt., the guest of relatives.Mr.ami Mrs.Harold Lavalliere spent a day at Newport, Vt.Mr.and Mrs.Stacey Nutting have returned to their home at Beverly Hills, Mass., after spending a week here as guests of Mrs.Margaret Quigley.Mr.J.H.Dimick has left for- age of 87 after a long illness.Huntsville, Ont., where he will spend ) A11 friends extend their sympathy a few weeks with his daughter, Mrs.| to the bereaved family.James Ireland, and Mr.Ireland j\tMrs> Ann Horan, of Waterloo, Mr.and Mrs, George Morehouse |\tenk a ;£ew ^ayS jn town helping have left for New York City where j.0 care fcr her brother, the late they will attend the World\u2019s Fair They will also visit Washington, Boston and Old Orchard before returning home.Mr.and Mrs.Lee Kinsey and daughter, Wilma, spent a week-end at Scotstown visiting Mr.Kingsey\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mrs.George Kinsey.Mr.and Mrs.W.P.Dimick and Mr.and Mrs.Bressette and daughters, Hazel and Edrna were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Hector Harris.Mr.Cecil Beard and son, Morten, and daughter, Una, are spending the summer months at their cottage at Brome Lake.Friends of Mr.J.L.Kilburn are pleased to know that he has returned home from the Neurologic Institute at the Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, where he underwent treatment.Mr.Arthur Jeune, of Sutton, was in town to attend the Masonic funeral service held for Mr.John M.Starke.Mrs.John Buck, of Sherbrooke, was a guest of her sister, Mrs.Mil-ton Brown and Mr.Brown and fam-ily.Mrs.Maclver and son, Roderick, of Montreal, are guests of Mr.and Mrs.Jack Henderson.Mr.Doonan.Miss Margaret Horan, of Water* loo, was in town to attend the burial of her uncle, Mr.Doonan.Mrs.Gus Solomon has returned home to Montreal after spending a few clays at the home of her parents.CANTERBURY at Kanawana.Miss Joyce Jennings, of Montreal, is the guest of her aunt, Mrs.K.G.Nourse, and Mr.Nourse.The sympathy of the community is extended to Mr.and Mrs.J.A.Grady on the.death of their daughter, Miss Beulah Grady.Miss Calxsta Poulin has left for a holiday at St.Albans, Vt.Her mother, Mrs.Edgar Poulin, accompanied her as far as St.Johns.Mrs.J.Manseau and son, Maurice, of Montreal, were calling on friends recently.WEST SHEFFORD Mrs.Howard Hastings and two ^ daughters, Beverly and Peggy, °t (-rall] Cowansville, Mrs.S.Henry and Mrs.L.H.Hastings and Miss Edith Hastings, of Attamont Farm, on Mrs.Benham.Mrs.Josie Dona-way, of Waterloo, also visited at the same home.Mrs.Cedos Lepiene, her daughters, Jean and Louise, and her son, Paul, of Manchester, N.H., spent a few days with Mr.and Mrs.Myles Enright and also called on Mr.and Mrs.Lewis Dunlavey and other friends in town.Mr.and Mrs.James Campbell, Mr.and Mrs.Rosairo Courteaux and baby, Marie, Mr.Mac Campbell, Mrs.Nellie Wells and Mr.and Mrs.Myles Enright and son, Wayne, were Sunday guests of Mr.and Mrs.Gerald McDonald and family, of Granby.Mr.and Mrs.C.A.McDonald, of anby, spent a few days with Mr.and Mrs.J.P.McMahon.Mr.and Mrs.Harold Enright, of Sweetsburg, were guests of Mrs.L.' Montreal, spent a week-end with Hastings\tIthe tormer s parents, Mr.and Mrs.Mr.and Mrs.Walter Strange and|M.J.Enright, and Stuart Enright, two daughters, Audrey, and Jacque-j Mr.and Mrs.Jay Maynes, of Mr.Carl Mayhew, B.A., left for » trip to the Coast and to the World\u2019s Fair in San Francisco, Mr.Herbert Mayhew spent a day at home before returning to Montreal en route to Wales.He has obtained the position of overseerer od a cattle boat.Mrs.Everard Goodin is seriously ill at her home and Mrs.Osborne Pickford is caring for her.Mrs.Willie McLeod and children have returned home, after having spent two weeks with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.James Dunn, id Lemesurier.Mr.and Mrs.Harly Asker spent! a day with Mr.and Mrs.John Parsons in Bown.Miss Kathleen Cowling is taking a short course at Macdonald College during the month of July.Mrs.James Groom is staying with her daughter, Mrs.Buchanan, while the latter is sick.Mr.and Mrs.Shirley Bennett am! Betty spent a day with Mrs.Hunt.Mrs.Ralph Bennett and Miss Beverly, of Montreal, spent a week with Mr.and Mrs.Finlay Bennett.The Misses Patricia and Annia Joy Bennett have gone to Burlington, Vt., for the month of July and are taking a short course In connection with school work.Mr.and Mrs.Stanley Hazlc, of Stratford, Ont., are spending a few weeks with Mr.and Mrs, Russell Rudd.Mr.and Mrs.Harris Williamson, of Manchester, Mrs.Nugent, .f Sawyerville, and Mrs.Burke and Mrs.Forbes, of Angus, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Finlay Bennett.Mrs.A.E.W.Godwin and baby son, of Gaspe, are spending a few weeks with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Finlay Bennett.Record Want Ads-two cents per word -Cash rates! Minimum line, of Cowansville, were calling! North Grafton, Mass., were guests charge of 25c for ten words or less.KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED.WHAT CO VOU KNOW ABOUT THE 11 HO/T BRIBED A DKKHANbTO TAMPERING THAT'S BEEN DONE 1 DAMAGE iY\\V BOAT,\u201eRECKON HE -T^TC'UjQP'ATKING PLANES\tRAID YOU TO DOTHE5AME W v-3ir:-v (-üüij-1 TO AT KING/ By Zane Grey.3 I ONLY D\\ b WHAT HOYT MADE ME ] DOySESGEANT Kl N£ / I DIDN'T KNOW \"LOOP\" WAG FLYlN\u2019 NITROGLYCERINE TO CROOKED LAKE , .MINE WHEN I BUSTED HIS LANDING) (LEAR / NITROGLYCERINE AND A BUSTED LANDING GEAR,YOU RAT/-MY DAUGHTER'S IN ATKINS\u2019 PLAWE\u201eTHEY'LL BE KILLED IF THEY TRY TO LAND/ 7 LAROUK! We've Got to overtake atkins in \\J ANOTHER.PLANE BEFOEE HE TEIES TO SET THAT SHIP] ¦4-1 TOWN/ Ç- Y, Y zMI BRINGING UP FATHER.C-N ray |nt:k ^ Kmp Foilnres Syndic .I1*'1: ; i By George McManus.AL-L PIGHT-DEAP-I'LL.TiRV to stop cryiwg But IT'S HARD TO BELIEVE THAT AÀY DARLINie GIRL RAM AWAV AMD GOT MARRIED- THAT.'S IT-SEE - MOW THE BABV STOPPED CRVIMG TOO - T spending Ont., as OH-MRS JIGGS- I OUST HEARD ABOUT YOUR BEAUTIEUU DAUGHTER GITTIM' MARRIED-THAT LITTLE ELOWER-JUST A BABY-OH-TO THINK OF HER AWAY FROM.YOU - AND YOU LONGING FOR A CARESS FROLA HER- JITT-'.mmœrn MT I HOPE THE MALI OF HER CHOICE WILL BE KIND TO HER-BUT THESE MEN-MY FIRST HUSBAND WAS A BRUTE- __ THAT'S NICE -GO TO SLEEP- O-»* 19:-7.King Pntyres t idicate.Tnf^ World right* r-rrveA WAH/ SAY-WILL YOU CUT OUT THAT CRYIN' OR ELSE TAKE THE BABY' INTO _YOUR PARTY - __J PAGE EIGHT SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1939.QUEBEC ENDS SAINTS\u2019 NINE-GAME STREAK A\u2019s Nab 7-4 Victory Over Leading Outfit St.Hyacinthe Holds Two-Game Edge On Second-Place Three Rivers In Spite of Setback In Ancient Capital\u2014Quebec Nine Climbs to One Game Behind Third-Berth Sherbrooke Team\u2014Four Runs In Last Two Innings Send Athletics Through.The winning streak of nine straight games that lifted St.Hyacinthe from fifth to first place in the Provincial Baseball League was ended today but the Saints continued to hold a comfortable margin in the top berth.With a seven to four victory at Quebec, the Athletics clipped St Hyacinthe\u2019s sequence of wins last night.All other squads were unscheduled, however, and the loss left Saints still with a two-game edge on second-place Three Rivers.Four runs in the last tw0 innings gave Athletics a victory that raised them to one game behind third-berth Sherbrooke Braves.The four counters came when Athletics bunched five of the eleven hits they collected over the route off the offering-of Lecomte and Andrus.The Saints scored two runs i' their first time at bat bur Que!', got both back in the third fr;iv The Atheltics went ahead with single counter in the fifth but Hyacinthe got this one back in next.DEAN RETURNS TO HEIGHTS IN POP-OFF LOOP With the count knotted, three to three, in the seventh, the Saints filled the bases with only one out.Here Browning relieved Duncan and retired the side by striking out the first two men to face him.Browning received credit for the ; victory when he held Saints scoreless over the rest of the route while his mates pounded Andrus for two runs in their half of the seventh and another pair in the eighth.The linescore: St.Hyacinthe 200 001 001\u20144 It 1 Quebec .002 010 22x\u2014-7^11\t2 Lecomte, Andrus and Ringhofer; Duncan, Browning and Jones.AT QUEBEC St.Hyacinthe \tAB\tR\tH\tPO Fox, 2b \t\t\t3\t0\t0\t4 \u2019heldon, ss .\t.4\t0\t0\t0 \u2019¦tssoway, cf\t.i\t2\t2\t3 u'iask, rf .\t.5\t1\t3\t2 ire, If .\t.5\t0\t0\t2 ng, lb .\t.4\t1\t»>\t6 yliofer, c .\t.4\t0\t2\tS 'J.UWV8\"1» vX X X .\u2022.'.v.v.v.v.v.v.-.v.IP ,., .IMP l KEEPS YOU ID Replaces essential salts lost fypone evaporation Lb By Appointment to \u2019Tweed smuir Govemor- H» Excellency Lord General of Canada Screwball Twirler Opens Up with Verbal Blast at Gabby Hartnett, Chicago Cubs Manager \u2014 Explains Arm Injury.Chicago, July 18\u2014 (A1) \u2014Dizzy Dean may n.ot be his old seif on the pitching mound, but he returned to brilliant form in the Pop-off League today with a verbal blast at Gabby Hartnett, Chicago Cubs\u2019 manager.Hartnett sent Dean home from New York Sunday with his left arm gashed under mysterious circumstances and OI\u2019 Diz didn\u2019t like it a bit.\u201cI don\u2019t belong here, I belong with the team,\" Dizzy told reporters.\"What are they doing, making a goat of me ?I wonder what's behind it, anyway.\"1 know the Cubs are nuts for a winning streak on this trip, and if disciplining me rur something r didn\u2019t do will help-why, hell, I'm glad to co-operate.But 1 shoud be with the team.\u2019\u2019 The versions of how Dizzy cut his arm rolled in from all sides.It was reported he had had domestic trouble, hrfd been fighting, had slipped on a soapy hotel lobby floor, ad infinitum.But Dean said these reports were \"the silliest thing I ever heard of,\u2019\u2019 explaining that be scraped his arm against the corner of a giass-top table as he reached for a phone in the dark in his hotel room Saturday night.Dean will remain here until the Cubs return from their eastern trip.The team now has only twenty payers, five shy of the player limit.The latest injury cropped up yesterday when it was revealed southpaw Earl Whitehill suffered a broken bane in his pitching hand during batting practice at Philadelphia last Thursday night.Outfielder Hank Lciber is in Philadelphia taking treatments for a sore leg and rookie infielder Leonard Merullo has gone home to rest an ailing arm.The other vacancy will be filled by Bill Nicholson, Chattanooga Southern Association outfielder scheduled to report in August.YESTERDAY\u2019S STARS Buck Watters, Reds \u2014 Pitched four-hit four-nothing shutout against Bees for his fifteenth victory of season and seventeenth complete game.Earl Averill and George Tebbetts, Tigers\u2014Former clouted two home runs and latter homer, double and single in rout of Red Sox.Clyde Shoun, Cardinals\u2014Came in to halt Giant rally in eighth with tying and winning runs on base as St.Louis won four-three.Wally Moses, Athletics \u2014 His three doubles and single led way in eleven-eight decision over Browns.Gabby Hartnett, Cubs\u2014Hit pair of two-baggers, scored two runs and drove in two against Dodgers.Bump Hadley, Yankees \u2014 Out picched Bob Feller, giving Indians five hits and two bases on balls in three-nothing shutout.Chuck Klein, Pirates\u2014Two home runs against Phillies ran his hitting streak to sixteen straight games.Murphy, 3b Lecomte, p xAndrus .xxCicero .4 11\t24 Totals .3S xR-eplaced Lecomte in 3rd.xxBatted for Fox in 9th.Quebec AB R H PO A Rosy, It .\u2022 \u2022 Sulik, cf .Flood, rf .Mader, 2b .Gladu, 3b .Bissonnette, Bennett, ss Jones, c .Duncan, p .zBrowning .lb 1 1 0 s 2 13 0 7 0 0 Totals 31 7 11 zReplaced Duncan in 7th.Score by innings St.Hyacinthe .Quebec .290 001 001-002 010 22x- S« Sporting Vein By Allan Bryce.An announcement today from Jean Barrette, president of the Provincial Baseball League, adds Ray Cote and Larry Fischer, of Sherbrooke, to the list of players who will work for Jim Irving and Tom Hammond on the southern nine against representatives of the northern clubs in the loop\u2019s first annual All-Star game, which will be played in Three Rivers tomorrow.* * * Manager Ernie Olson, of Sorel, will have the following players under him: Pitcher Charlie Golenske and Jack Kimball, of Sorel, Glenn Leib-hardt, of Quebec, and Byron Speece, of Three Rivers; catchers Phil Corrigan, Three Rivers, and Art Galen, Sorel ; infielders Ed Albertson and Camille, Durand,\tSorel,\tRoland Gladu, Frank Mader, Quebec, Gene Sullivan, Grover Wearshing and Red Heffner.Three Rivers; outfielders Ray Flood, Ernie Sulik and John Ko.sy, Quebec, Paul Martin, Three Rivers, and Ross Nichols, Sorel.* *\t* Line-up of the southern squad follows: Art O\u2019Donnell, Drummond-ville, Bob Swan and Ted Veach, St.Hyacinthe, Henry Winston, Granby, and Babe Drisko, Sherbrooke, pitchers; Chris Schearer, Sherbrooke, and Jim Castiglia, Drummondville, catchers; Johnny Ayvazian and Leo Manion, Sherbrooke, Jerry Levy and Jackie Huxtable,\tDrummondville, Fletcher Heath, Granby, and Ward Sheldon, St.Hyacinthe, infielders; Joe Cicero and Mike Pociask, St.Hyacinthe, Ray Cote and Larry Fischer, Sherbrooke, and Howard Moss, Granby, outfielders.* *\t* In an effort to stimulate interest and draw crowds, officials of the local ball club are going to run a series of feature nights throughout the remainder of the season.This Friday, when Drummondville plays Sfierbrooke, a Boosters\u2019 Night will be held.Approximately twenty mei-chants of the city have offered prizes, which will be given to the holders of winning numbers on rain checks.Draws will be held throughout the game, and quite a few people are going to catch a big surprise.* * * Sorel comes to town tonight, and, if past performances mean anything, will be beaten by the Hammondmen, who boast three straight victories over Ernie Olson\u2019s team of champions\u2014-eleven-eight at Sorel, six-four here and then five three at Sorel the other day.* * * Tha City Softball League teams were idle last night because of the wet and slippery condition of the Parade Grounds, but will go bar*1; to work Wednesday.The regular schedule will be followed, and last night\u2019s postponed contests will probably be worked in on Friday night.President H.K.Harris said today.* * * In the Industrial Softball circuit play-offs are slated to get under way Thursday night.Two of last year\u2019s squads\u2014Elesco and Rand\u2014face a sudden-death game to decide which will enter the post-schedule series with Canadian Silk Products, Kay-ser and Fairbanks.* * * Willis Kirby, with a sixty-nine, and Harry Fowlis, with a seventy, cracked the course record at Thet-ford Mines in the Southern Canada Power Trophy match and they really turned in some classy golf.Kirby, Bart Holtham, Sherm Peabody and Harold A.Peabody had little trouble keeping the team trophy for the Sherbrooke Country Club.* * * The brand of soccer displayed by Sherbrooke and Magog on the Parade Grounds Saturday was found encouraging by veteran followers of the game.It was felt that the teams played the best game that has been seen here since the old Quebec Central Railway, Y.M.C.A.and Regiment outfits were battling it out with Asbestos for Eastern Townships supremacy.* * * Back in the headlines again after an absence of a few days is Jerome Herman \"the Great Dizzy\u201d Dean.Irrepressible and indignant, Mr.D.is having his say on his latest scrape with authority, represented this time by Gabby Hartnett, veteran manager of the Chicago Cubs.CUBS\u2019 OWNER GRAVELY ILL Eagle River, Wis., July 18.\u2014OP)\u2014J.Louis Comiskey, fifty-four-year-old owner of Chicago White Sox, was gravely ill today at his summer estate near here.Dr.Russell Oldfield, attending physician, began administering oxygen to the baseball magnate late last night but said, however, Comiskey appeared \u2018\u2018brighter\u2019\u2019 and that there was \u201csome hope.\u201d A heart ailment, which has bothered him for years, was aggravated recently by a cold and complications.Comiskey inherited the White Sox from his father, Charles Comiskey, who died here in 1931 at the summer retreat.Injuries To Players Wreck Gotham Giants Lou Chiozza Suffers Broken Leg As Cardinals Best Terry-men 4-3\u2014Catcher Harry Canning Out With Infected Finger\u2014Joe Cronin Knocked Unconscious As His Red Sox Lose 13-6 to Tigers and End Winning Streak\u2014Yankees Blank Feller and Tribe 3-0.CRAWFORD AND FAIRBANKS IN QUIST PLAY IN ! 22-14VÏCT0RY LONGWQOD BOWL! AGAINST C.S.P.Two Australian Davis Cup- Winners Surge to Play-Offs pers Seeded In Famous Net: Berth In Industrial Softball Tourney at Brookline,| League \u2014 Play-Offs Open Mass.\tThursday Night.Brookline, Mass., July 18.\u2014f^Pl\u2014 Seven third round brackets were available and six of the nine seeded players, including Adrian Quist and Jack Crawford 0f the Australian Davis Cup forces, were due to get started today in the 47th Lor.gwood Bowl tennis tournament.Only three of the favored players were on the scene for yesterday\u2019s opening action, during which Gilbert Hunt of Washington, Gardnar Mul-loy of Coral Gables, Fla., and Dave Freeman, United States junior titlist from Pasadena, Calif., all seeded, and six other contestants, advanced two rounds.Top-seeded Gene Mako\u2019s second round match with Austin D\u2019Arey of Boston, had to be postponed for twenty-four hours, along with the Australians\u2019 opening engagements and those of the Murphy brothers.Quist drew a first round bye, which moved him against Sam Fitch of Brookline, and Crawford was bracketed with W.F.Rice of Boston, for a first round match.William and Chester Murphy, seeded fourth and fifth, were called upon to start from scratch by playing against Sam Snow of Quincy, and Devereaux Bendef of Newton, and so was Johnny Docg.of Rumson, N.J-, the former United States titlist, who was paired with Edward Allod of San Francisco, in a postponed first rounder.A twenty-two to fourteen victory over the leading Canadian Silk Products team last night lifted Fairbanks into a tie for third place with Rand and Elesco in the Industrial Softball League and necessitated a draw to determine holders of play-off positions.In the draw between the deadlocked squads Fairbanks drew a bye, and Rand and Superheater will tangle to decide the fourth and last play-off position.There is only one more league game to be played, that between Mitchell\u2019s and Kayser, and play-offs will start Thursday night.Fairbanks went to town on a hitting spree against C.S.P., pounding out twenty-three safe hits off the pitches of Johnny Gardiner and taking advantage of six C.S.P.errorg.Bradley and Carbonneau hit home-runs for the winners while Gordie Waite, Bisson, Baillargeron and Povey collected four safeties each.For Canadian Silk Products Au ray and Turgeon led the eleven-hit attack on the deliveries of Cloutier and Bradley.Auray homering and Turgeon collecting three base-knocks.The linescore : Fairbanks .632 \u2019Ü04 7\u201422 23 2 C.S.P.080 014 1\u201414 11 6 Batteries: Cloutier, Bradley and i Baillargeron; Gardiner and Metiv-\u2019 1er.TIM PECHIEIN WEBT1.INC WIN ON MAGOG CARD LEAGUE STANDING P.W.C.S.P.10 Kayser.9 Fairbanks .10 Rand .10 Elesco .10 Mitchell\u2019s .9 Magog, July 18.\u2014Tim Pechie, of Sherbrooke, defeated Kid Doucet, of Magog, in the feature bout of a wrestling card staged at the local Arena last night.The Sherbrooke lad won the opening fall after twenty-one minuses of strenuous grappling, dropped the second to a rejuvenated Doucet at the thirteen-minute mark and then came back strong to pin Doucet for the deciding toss after sixteen minutes.A five-man battle royal opened proceedings, Young Paquette, Kid Turgeon, K.d Lai be, Young Raymond and A.Carrière, all of Magog, going to work on each other.When the shouting and tumult had subsided, Labbe was the cock of the walk.He cleaned the ring in sixteen minutes and thirty seconds.Leo St, Francois, of Sherbrooke, and G.Ronaldi, of Drummondville, tangled in an interesting struggle, St.Francois finally tossing his man after thirty-one minutes of even wrestling.In another interesting bout, Tarzan Labonte, of Magog, weighing 120 pounds, met Kid Gaumont, of Sherbrooke, who had a four-pound edge in weight The title ended in a draw.Kid Turgeon and Young Paquette, both of Magog, wrestled to a twenty-minute draw ir the fifth attraction.Referee for the full card was L.Paquette.New York, July 18.\u2014(Æ1)\u2014Jimmy Johnston, the fight manager, (who didn\u2019t knew they had been suspended) was at the Polo Grounds Sunday to look over Bill Jurges and Umpire Magerkurth.The Giants have been soaked a total of $460 in fines to date.I Lou Ambers begins training tomorrow at Carmel, N.Y;, for the Armstrong lightweight title fight.STICKLER FOR DETAIL Sent home for breaking training 7 j and refusing to follow orders after ! being found wounded in his New Summary \u2014 Errors:\tBennett, York hotel room.Dizzy explains the Jones, Sheldon; runs batted 'n:i matter by saying he cut his salary Gladu 2, Bissonnette 2, Irving, P°cHai.m on the glass edge of a table ask, Ringhofer, Sulik, Kosy, Flood; wheI1 j.eaching for a telephone in the two base hits: Ringhofer, Andrus, (lark_ Pociask; three base hits: Gladu 2,j jt\u2019s his story, ami he seems to Irving, Kosy; stolen bases: Kosy 2, t,e stuck with it, for the time being Mader; sacrifices: Sheldon, Duncan, at least.Mader, Bissonnette, Browning; left\t« * » on bases: St.Hyacinthe 10, Quebec The East Sherbrooke invitation 8; bases on balls: off Lecomte 3, off tennis tournament swings away to-Duncan 2; struck out: by Lecomte 2, night under lights on the Murray by Andrus 3, by Duncan 4, by street court.Yvan Cote will defend Browning 3; struck by pitches:, his.singles title and Gertrude Joyal Mader and Gladu, by Lecomte; hits: her ladies\u2019 singles crown, off Lecomte 2 in 2 2-3 innings; off;\t» * * Andrus 9 in 5 1-3, off Duncan 8 in The twentieth annual regatta at 6 1-3 innings, off Browning 3 in Little Lake will be held on Sunday 2 2-3 innings; passed ball: Jones; ; afternoon, July 30.it was decided winning pitcher: Browning; losing at a meeting of the Lake Park Canoe pitcher: Andrus; umpires: Ripley j Club.Competition has been keen and Lariviere; time of game: 2:08.jin past years, and it is expected ______________________ ; many from Sherbrooke and sur- I.F AGUE STANDING .\u201cDAWES BREWERY, MONTREAL** St.Hyacinthe .\tW 24\tL 14\tPC .632\tGB1 Three Rivers .\t24\tIS\t.571\t2 Sherbrooke .\t\t19\t\to Quebec .\t.\t20\t18\t.526\t4 Sorel \t\t\t19\t19\t.500\t5 Granby \t\t19\t23\t462\ti Drummondville .\t10\t28\t.263\t14 rounding districts will take part.Owing to the fact that ihe diving board, wrecked in the hurricane of last fall, has not been replaced, there will be no diving, but the other events will be the same as in former regattas.John Dirmann, Tulane\u2019s boxing captain, is pushing a wheel chair at the World\u2019s Fair.Add flops: The late P.G.A.tournament1-financially, that is.Willie Sherdel, the old Cardinal pitcher, is the Republican candidate for sheriff of Adams County, Pa.'ZMM NOPE mE WAS BUNKER- BOUNCER If the experts begin reading New Yrork Giants out of the National League pennant race today, grant them ample justification.At a time when the team should be at full strength to cut in on Cincinnati Reds\u2019 seven-game :ead and protect its own half-game bulge over Chicago Cubs, infieldcr L.ou Chiozza is out for the rest of the season with a broken leg; shortstop Bill Jurges is \u2018\u2018doing time\u201d for rowing with an umpire; first-string catcher Harry Danning, the team\u2019s third-best hitter, is in hospital with a leg infection, and Manager Bill Terry js running out of possible infield combination.With Chiozza, both bones in his left leg fractured, definitely lost, Terry is down to bed-rock.Already he has Mel Ott, a natural outfielder, playing third base; Burgess White-head, a fragile second baseman, shifted over to shortstop, and Alex Kampouris, less than sensational, doing full-time duty on the vital second base patrol.If anything more goes wrong, Terry may be forced against his will to adopt the old Brooklyn Dodger slogan of \"Wait till next year.\u201d Meanwhie the Reds are drawing away and the Cubs are creeping up on the Terrymen.The combination of the Giants\u2019 four to three defeat by St.Louis yesterday with the Cubs\u2019 eleven to two shellacking of the Dodgers and the Reds\u2019 four to nothing shutout of Boston Bees left i Cincinnati seven games in front of | the Giants, the Cubs only half a 1 game behind and the Dodgers and Cardinals only a game out of second place.It was a \u201cblack and blue\u201d Monday all round.In addition to the Chiozza collision with team-mate Joe Moore, from which the latter escaped without injury, Jimmy Ripple of the ; Giants took a header and Ducky Medwick of the Cards was winged by a pitched ball in the same game.The Reds\u2019 Ernie Lombardi was put out with a split finger nail halfway through the neat four-hit shutout battery-mate Bucky Walters pinned on the Bees, Manager Joe Cronin of the.Red Sox was knocked unconscious as his boys came to the end of a twelve-game winning streak in a thirteen to six shellacking by Detroit Tigers, and even the Yankees Joe DlMaggio was hit with a pitched ball by Bobby Feller of the Indi- 3T1S \u2022 That wasn\u2019t the only ball Feller didn\u2019t control, though.He hit just enough bats for the Yanks to beat him three to nothing behind Bump Hadley\u2019s five-hit flinging,.Together with the Red Sox defeat, that raised the champions\u2019 margin to seven games.\t,\t, In the day\u2019s other games, Chuck Klein ran his hitting streak to sixteen straight games as he weighed in with two homers that Pittsburgh to a seven to four defeat of the Phillies in the National League, and the Athletics out-siugged the Browns eleven to ei£h- m the American League.The Senators and White Sox were rained out.JERSEYS STRENGTHEN LEAD The Jersey Giants may not he the best ball club that ever won -he International League pennant n fact they may not, eV\u201c ,?e ^ut fw to win the pennant at all °ut 1 J\u2019 have two things that make them the best prospects m i*6 ™cu't' right now, consistency and the extra something that carries them past Hie tough spots.The Little Giants\u2019 longest winning streak this season has been only four games and the longest losing streak five straight.Yet when then-hold on the leas110 Tad Eas ,Te.n threatened, ^ they\u2019ve risen to then greatest heights,\t, , ,\t.Thev demonstrated that point last night when they walloped Buffalo ten to seven.The Bisons were on the crest of a winning streak that had given them a vrtual tie for second place, only two games off the lead, when last night\u2019s clash started.Since Rochester and Newark were idle, the defeat put Buffalo a half game behind the second-place Red Wings and three behind the Jerseys.Second division clubs accounted for the rest of the day\u2019s honors.The last-place Toronto Leafs bcw.-ed over the Syracuse Chiefs for the second time, four to nothing, behind the five-hit southpaw flinging of Carl Fischer and the Baltimore Orioles bowled over Montreal again, ten to five, to climb within a halfgame of sixth place.Fischer and Jake Mooty waged a good battle for six innings, but the Leafs sewed up the game with two runs in the seventh when Frank Reiber\u2019s triple settled things.Baltimore's victory -.vas the fourth straight.YESTERDAY\u2019S GAMES INTERNATIONAL league Baltimore 10, Montreal 5, night game.Jersey City 10, Buffalo 7, night game.Toronto 4, Syracuse 0, night game.Newark at Rochester, nlaycd at former date.AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 3, Cleveland 0.Detroit 13, Boston 6.Philadelphia 11, St.Louis 8.Washington at Chicago, postponed, rain.NATIONAL LEAGUE St.Louis 4, New York 3.Chicago 11, Brooklyn 2-Pittsburgh 7, Philadelphia 4» Cincinnati 4, Boston 0.LEAGUE STANDINGS INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Jersey City \t\tW.5 ft\tL.36\tP.C.536 Rochester \t\t\t38\t.568 Buffalo \t\t\t41\t.559 Syracuse \t\t.48\t45\t.516 Newark \t\tW\t48\t.484 Montreal \t\t\t50\t.532 Baltimore \t\t\t50\t.425 Toronto \t\t37\t52\t.416 AMERICAN New York \t\tLEAGUE W.L.59\t23\t\tPC.716 Boston \t\t47\t26\t.644 Chicago \t\t43\t35\t.551 Cleveland \t\t40\t39\t.506 Detroit \t\t.40\t40\t.500 Washington \t\t.3ft\t50\t.393 Philadelphia \t\t.31\t4.9\t»:-2 St.Louis \t\t.24\t00\t.304 NATIONAL ; Cincinnati\t\tLEAGUE W.L.47\t29\t\tP.C.618 iNew York\t\t\t37\t.526 Chicago \t\t42\t39\t.519 Brooklyn \t\t\t36\t.514 St.Louis\t\t.39\tft7\t.513 Pittsburgh \t\t\t37\t.500 Boston \t\t.37\t40\t.481 Philadelphia\t\t.23\t43\t.319 FIELD DAÏ AT DROME PROVED FINE SUCCESS Sporting Events and Trotting Races In the Afternoon Followed by Lawn Party on Fair Grounds In the Evening.Brome, July 18.\u2014A field day, sponsored by the Mayor of the Corporation of Brome, w-as held on the Brome Fair grounds, the gates being opened promptly at one o\u2019clock, p.m.The first attraction was a softball game between the Knowlton and Sutton teams, which resulted in a score of six to four in favor of Knowlton.By permission of the Amateurs\u2019 Association foot races were held with contestants and winning times as follows: 100-yard dash: 1 Gagnon, Waterloo; 2 Taylo-, Bolton; 3 Miltimore, West Brome.220-yard dash: 1 Taylor; 2 Miltimore; 3 Derby, Knowlton.Time 25 seconds.440-lards: 1 Taylor; 2 Gagnon; 3 Bob Taylo '.Time 58 seconds.1 mile: 1 Robinson, West Brome; 2 Bob Taylor; 3 Clarke; 4 Derby.Time 5 minutes.The prize given for the mile race was an electric razor, while cups were awarded in the other classes.Trotting races held in the afternoon resulted as follows: Class A: Calumet Dorothy, 112, driver J.Balloch, Jr., Brome; Sir Oliver Rose, 3 2 1, driver, Croteau, Granby; Lee Tige, 2 3 3, driver J.Balloch, Sr.; Senator Rouge, 4 4 4, driver, Martindale, Cowansville.Time 2:20%, 2:19, 2:19.Class B; Miss Gay Volo, 111, driver ,H.Cait, Knowlton; Winnie Cegautle, 2 2 2, driver, Croteau, Granby; The Gay McGregor, 3 3 3, driver Martindale; Lillian McGregor, 5 4 4.An interesting feature was the fact that the first two heats in Class A were won by Calumet Dorothy, a blind mare, with a sixteen-year-old boy as driver.At 6.30 o\u2019clock a softball game between the Frontiersmen and the 75th Battery was played in spite of a drenching shower and resulted in a victory for the 75th Battery.The ever popular \u201cbingo,\u201d under the capable management of Messrs.Freddie Bourgeois, William Chapman, Bill Draper and Bill Gedye proved very successful.In the evening the Ladies\u2019 Guild held their annual lawn party on the Fair Grounds.Those in charge of the booths were as follows: Fancy work sale, Mrs.Albert Girvan and Mrs.C.D.Libby; novelty table, Mrs.C.H, ! Frizzle; ice cream and food sale, |Mrs.E.W.Ray, Mrs.Gardner Stone, Mrs.William Chapman and Mrs.H.P.Jackson; hot dogs, hamburgers and soft drinks, Mrs.J.Edwards, Mrs.CoWan, Mrs.E.Wilson, Mrs.F.Rhicard and Miss Glenna Martin; fish pond, Jean Soles and Betty Ruyl.Mike Jacobs has moved his 20th Century Sporting Club into its new offices in the Brill Building.DISTILLED AND BOTTLED IN CANADA » yuts MA\u201410 «.Sa.SC - 25 oa 52.10 \u2022 40 «a S3.1l U ytin NO\u201413 «.S1.35 - 25 ex.S2.SS ¦ 00 K.S3J0 CORBY DISTILLERIES LIMITED "]
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