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Titre :
Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
Contenu spécifique :
jeudi 13 février 1930
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  • Journaux
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  • Sherbrooke gazette ,
  • Sherbrooke examiner
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  • Sherbrooke record
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Sherbrooke daily record, 1930-02-13, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" > s ~ w I ) w A N F.T £ A ! : I S.NiNf Ü3U Hatlg Sworî» Established 1 897.SHERBROOKE, QUE., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1930.Thirty-Fourth Year.JAPAN QUITE WILLING TO AGREE j TO NAVAL HOLIDAY UNTIL 1936! Theirs Is Newest Royal Romance L NO NEED TO BE ALARMED ABOUT WHEAT MARKET Also Ready to Reduce Tonnage of Battleships to 25,000 Tons and to Reduce Maximum Calibre of Guns to Fourteen, inches\u2014Statement, Which Has Been Eagerly.Awai'.ed in View of British and United States An-ncuncements of Naval Aims, Said that Japan Was Also! iieady to Agree to Prolongation of Life of Battleships1 from Twenty to Twenty-Six Years.London, Feb.13.\u2014 The * Japanese delegation in a statement given out this afternoon declared that Japan v/as ready to accept a holiday in battleship construction until 1936, to reduce tonnage of battleships to 25,000 tons and to reduce the maximum calibre of guns to fourteen inches.The maximum tonnage of six-inch guns cruisers should be from 7,000 to 7,500 tons, and that of flotilla leaders and destroyers should be adequately limited, the statement said.The age limit of cruisers was suggested at twenty years, and that of destroyers at sixteen STRATFORD, Ont., Feb.13.\u2014 5 ears.\t_\t| E.J.Garland, M.P., for Bow River, The statement, which has been , Alberta, ric hired in an address here eagerly awaited in view of the Bri.j yesterday that the Argentine wheat tish and United States anouncements j crop is not the only factor contri-of naval aims, said that Japan also buting to the present condition of I vas ready to agree to the prolonga- i the wheat market.Speculation in > tion of the life of battleship! from : grain is on: of the biggest factors, j twenty years to twenty-six years.\the declared, and he envisioned the E.J.Garland, M.P.for Bow River, Envisioned Day When League of Nalions Will Be Called Upon to Deal With Short Selling in Food Comme-; dities.\t1 Japan attaches special importance to cruisers armed with eight inch guns, and wished to maintain \u201cthe minimum force sufficient for the | needs of national defense, taking into consideration the forces possessed by other powers.\u201d Japan is convinced, the statement said, that because of the geographical location of her country the submarine is necessary as a mean-of defense.At the same time Japan will co-operate with the other powers in strictly regulating the employment of submarines against merchant marine.Japan proposed to limit its submarine tonnage to its present force Actual Figures Of Naval Limitation Discussed By Leading Delegates Of Britain, France And United States LONDON, February 13.\u2014(By George Hambleton, Canadian Press Staff Correspondent)\u2014Premier Ramsay MacDonald, of Great Britain; Premier Andre Tardieu, of France, and Colonel Henry Stimson, of the United States, met in the British Prima Minister\u2019s room at Westminster this afternoon for discussion of the actual figures of naval limitation.Beyond that and the meeting of experts to consider classification of special vessels, the Conference delegates spent a quiet day.It is expected both the French and Japanese will issue memorandums on their policy tonight.Irish Beauty RADIO BROADCASTING IN CANADA SHOWS MARKED DEVEDPIENT PREMIER TASCHEREAU LIKELY TO TAKE UP BUDGET DEBATE TODAY Jewish School Question Was Brought to Fore in Legislative Assembly Yesterday by Joseph Cohen, M.L.A.for St.Lawrence (Montreal)\u2014Other Speakers Were J.E.Piche, Liberal Member for Temiskaming, and J.E.Charbonneau, Liberal Representative for Laprairie * QUEBEC, Feb.\" 13.\u2014 It Is dav whin rhe League of Nations j will be tailed upon to deal with i\t,\t,\t,\t^ short selling in food commodities.These are busy days .or Dan Cupid Canada has positively no need to in Europe\u2019s royal courts, and a new .Ireland\u2019s most noted beauty and a 1 leader in British society is the Marchioness of Dufferin and Ava, I shown above in a new portrait.She \u201c\u2014 -\ti is in the public eye as the wife of While Many of Original Stations in Canada Employed the Speaker of the House of Transmitters Rated at from 50 to 250 Watts, There Arej Now Several Stations Equipped With Transmitters ^co^^c}^lP^^ROyi Rated at 5,000 Watts\u2014Canada Making Sound Progress WASHINGTON, b.C., Feb.13.\u2014 in Many Fields of Radio, Such as Use of Short Wave The brief but encouraging reports Beam System, Installation of Radio Beacons and Direc-,\tcontinued^ today, \u2019^tendants that the former Chief Northern Ireland.\u2014*- tion-Finding Stations for Safety of Navigation.OTTAWA, Ont., Feb.13.\t\u2014 Canada will not be behind its ! neighbors to the south in the i character and power of its radio j broadcasting stations if the recom- j mendations of the Royal Commission on Radio Broadcasting are car- i reporting i Justice had ! night.spent a very restful be alarmed at present, he said, be- regai romance looms in the reported | ried jnto effect, A.N.Fraser,^Chief c .thf'e ¦ as 1}I0,tuhirl« to be alarm- engagement of Princess c about.The Wheat Pool in the 0\t.?\t,\t, , , ,, west knew what if was doing and Cnstma, above, second daughter every pound of Canadian wheat now King Alfonso of Spain \u2019 in storage\twould be needed\tbefore\tNicholas, below, of Roumania.\tTheir this year\u2019s\tcrop is harvested, he\twedding may take place this\tyear, declared.\tPrince Nicholas and his sister, \u201cIf the wheat stored now were Princess Ileana.whose engagement sold at the present prices it would to Count Hoehberg has just been bring two\thundred million\tdollars\tannounced,accompanied Queen\tMarie less than\tlast year\u201d, he\tstated,\tto the United States several\tyears \u201cThat would mean, in effect, two j\tago.hundred million dollars less pur- :\t- chasing .power.For every, cent MAN AND WOMAN SHOT BY POUR UNKNOWN GUNMEN The dimensions of submarines should j vv]le&t riac3 ;n price it will mean ; not 1 c limited but the age limit ; two and a half million dollars added i thauld be fixed at thirteen years.; to the purchasing power of Canada !\t- Another suggestion was that the ! next year.\tWoman We* KW.rn\tDance limitations of the Washington treaty j \u201cThe transportation companies\u201d,\ta TV with regard to aeroplane carriers .he added \u201chave nothing to worry j should he extended to vessels of this | about, because they will get the i class of less than 10,COO tons.\tgrain when it begins to move.\u201d j The memorandum further sug-\t:\t*\t' gested that the age limit of aero- WORCESTER POLICE CALLED plane carriers of more than 10,000, T.~.rurrv tavipad Dirvrc tons should be prolonged to twenty-\tID LnLUh.IAAiUAd KiUliS six years but should be fixed at j\t- twenty years for other types.\tPITTSBURGH, Pa., Feb.13.Maria ! Engineer of the Radio Branch, De-.j partment of Marine, declared to-01 ; day, addressing the Engineering and Prince Institute of Canada annual meeting on the \u201cDevelopment of Radio in Canada.\u201d While many of the original stations in Canada employed transmitters rated at from 50 to 250 watts, there are now several stations equipped with transmitters rated at 5,000 watts, said Mr.P\u2019raser.That these still fall short of the power employed for broadcasting in the United States was shova in the Hall Hostess, While Man Was Gambler\u2014Killers Escaped in Automobile.DEVELOPMENTS ARE PREDICTED SUGGEST THAT AMERICA ALTER NAVAL POLICY INVITATIONS TO CONFERENCE AT OTTAWA ISSUED Increasing Production of Bacon, Butter, Eggs and Cheese Will Be Main Hopic at Meeting OTTAWA, Feb.13.\u2014Invitations went forward yesterday from the Dominion Department of Agriculture to each of the provincial Ministers of Agriculture, in- expected that Premier Taschereau, who adjourned the debate on the budget in the Legislative Assembly, will reply to his critics today.Yesterday the chief speaker was Joseph Cohen, Liberal M.L.A.for St.Lawrence, (Montreal), who introduced the matter of the Jewish School question, but steered away from the merits of any problems which may happen to be before the Government.Fla took it for granted that there is to be Government legislation, a statement which strengthens the viewpoint that the Government will take hold of the bill brought Captain E.W.Stedman Draws president Hoover Told by Wo- Luse\"Canadians are eating thiny- AUer\u2019ion of All Who Besieve,\t__i____________r\u201eJ0n Airships Impracticable to Reception Which Steamships Mel in Early Days.viting them or their represen- .,\t, tatives to attend a conference m m by Peter Bercovitch, Liberal Ottawa on March 11 and 12.The j M.L.A.for St.Louis, Montreal, object of the conference is to de-| anc] wjth such amendments as is the produetkm\tfittir'S- brln« 11 bef°re eggs and cheese.Representatives of j the House as its very own solu-cooperative societies and various , tion of the vexatious issue which livestock organizations will also be invited.The letter, -which was sent out by J.H.Grisdale, Deputy Minister of Agriculture, points out that the volume of livestock products available for export is steadily decreasing.Ten or twelve years ago, -or example, Canada exported large quantities of eggs.In those days Canadians consumed fifteen dozen eggs per head of population.Today Canada is producing twice as many eggs as she did ten years ago, and vet there are none for export, be- Infernatinnall es'Uie for one dozen Per caPita each yea5-mess s international League lor!Canadians are said t0 bc the great C^\u2019TAWA.fOnt., Feb.13.->\u2022 The statement that American stations ; design of the two great British air-are employing many broadcast; ships R-100 and R-101.rests on a transmitters rated at 50,000 watts.| better scientific foundation than has Transmitters of four times this ! been the case in any previous Peace and Freedom that Programme of Delegates at London Conference Clearly Vio-Lales Policy Outlined by Him.WASHINGTON, Feb.11 -The est egg-eaters in the world.In 1920 the per capital consumption of butter in Canada was 23.61 pounds, and in 1928 it was 29.01 In-4-füO per capita consumption of cheese in this country was 2.71 [spoke thankfully of the help which pounds and in 1928 it was 3.54.The I the Government Is rendering, saying first year records were kept of the | that the colonists are faced with has been perplexing the legislative mind for these past eight years.As noted, Mr.Cohen brought In the school issue incidentally, his main contribution to the jungle of figures being to say that it wag not whether the people pay the odd cent or more per capita than in other provinces, or pay the odd cent less than other provinces\u2014which happens to be the case\u2014which counts, but what matters is how the money is spent, and the fruits which flow from the golden output.Other speakers yesterday were J.E.Piche, Liberal M.L.A.for Temiskaming, and J.E.Charbonneau, Lib.eral M.L.A.for Laprarie-Napier- ville.Mr.Piche referred to colonization conditions in Temiskamug, and milk consumption was in power have been successfully oper-j lighter-than-air craft, Group .Cap-! Women\u2019s International League for i\tcanadians, on an average, ated in experimental tests, so that! tain E.W.Stedman, chief aero-j Peace and Freedom yesterday tele-; consumpd half a pint of milk a day With regard to vessels of special A dozen riot calls yesterday sent classes Japan said it felt that she police to various parts of the East must have a force proportional to end section where taxicab companies that of other powers but that she 1 attempted to resume service halted was willing to reduce it proportion- hy a strike of drivers, in progress ately as the forces of other powers s;'nce January 12th.wore reduced.\t| a young woman was trampled by a horse, a mounted patrolman was BRITAIN BASES HER HOPE disarmed by a crowd, four drivers mi?WORTH PRATF ON THF were SfTlt t0 hospitals after suffer-I UK YYUKLU r£.rtLL UTN iiiE.inp.beatings and numerous stonings BR1AND-KELL0GG TREATY of cabs occurred, according to police LONDON, Feb.13.\u2014Great Britain bases her hope for world peace on the Briand-ICellogg pact, and \u201clooks forward to a period in which arme 1 conflicts need not be expected\u201d an 1 on these grounds can limit her cruiser fleet to fifty instead of seventy, Prime Minister MacDonald told the House of Commons today.CHILDREN\u2019S MALADIES CAN BE CHECKED, SAYS DOCTOR Dr.F.W.Jackson, Dire:tor of Manitoba Communicable Disease Department, of Opinion that Seventy Pc.* Cent, of Diseases Can Be Prevented.WINNIPEG, Man., Feb.13.\u2014 Seventy per cent, of the children who succumb to diseases are victims of maladies that can be prevented, according to Dr.T'.W.Jackson, director of the Manitoba Communicable Disease Department.Addressing the Dental Association, Dr.Jackson declared that fifty to fifty.it is reasonable to expect to sec j nautical engineer in the Department | graphed President Hoover at his j transmitters employed in Canada of ! of National Defence, told members ] Long Key, Florida, fishing base, ' considerably higher rating than\tof the\tEngineering Institute of | asking him to\tinstruct\tthe\tAmer- NEW YORK, Feb.\t13.\u2014A woman\tthose at present in use, continued\tj Canada\tin annual convention here i jean delegation\tat\tthe\tLondon\tNav- identified as a dance hall hostess Mr.Fraser.There are at present ; today.\tal Conference to change its an- and her escort were killed early upwards of half a million radio re- 'plie gi^at care exercised in thc\u2019nounced cruiser and battleship con-today by four gunmen who alighted\tceiving sets and sixty-six broadcast-\tch0ice 0f material and in the work-_ struetkm policy, from an automobile,\tchased them\ting stations in Canada.\tmanship\tof the two ships, the \u2018 \u2018 when they fled in opposite directions j Some Organized System of j speaker declared, was such as to in-and shot them down.\t'\tBroadcasting.\ti spire confidence in the outcome of The killers escaped in their auto- ; whether the report on radio Britain's great experiment in Em-mobile.The woman was May Smith, hmadcastinz is adonted bv Parlia-1 pire communication.\u201cIt would ap-\t,\t.\t\u201e twenty-four and the man Carmine\tin whole or in part, it is anti- pear that all that, is necessary is a ! said that, it only remains for the Barelli, thirty, known as a gambler.c;pated that it will eventually re-! reasonable amount of encouragement ; others to say ho,c low they a ( g ¦ -\tI cUit in the development of some 1 and public interest during the per- It canno be too low for us.RT.REV.STEHLE DEAD ! organized system of broadcasting,*iod that airship builders and oper- At the London coherence the PITTSBURGH, Pa., Feb., 13\u2014! enfpiS high power stations locators are overcoming their initial American delegation\u2019s .programme The Right Rev.Aurelius Stehle.cated at strategic points across ; difficulties\u201d, he said.O.S.B.52.the only arch-abbot m Canada, the speaker went on.\t! Group Captain Stedman traced the United States, died at St.Fran- M,._ jrraEer pointed out that Can- the development of the rigid air proportion to any other.Having By 1928 the consumption had creased to a pint a day.It is in order to keep pace with this increasing consumption and get held of export trade that this get-together conference has been arranged Dr.Grisdale will preside, On Armistice Day the telegram j since Hon.W.R.Motherwell, Min-said, \"the American people v.-e!- \u2022jgt;er Africulture, has not entire-corned your courageous pledge, \u2018we F recovered from his recent illness, shall reduce our naval strength.,n liowever.Mr.Motherwell will sit in at many of the sessions.It will he pointed out that the prices of livestock products under 1922, ! many difficulties.He suggested that his county would be the better for several additional industries.There was much talk of cheaper electric rates in Ontario, but Mr.Piche did not lend much ear to that talk, since he said, the people in Ontario just across the river paid fifteen cents a kilowatt hour, J.E.Charbonneau, Liberal M.L.A.for Laprairie-Napierville, said he did not want his county divided.He said that the Opposition was too fond of depreciating agriculture in this province, and believed that the Opposition should change its attitude if it wished to create a better agricul- reports\t_ _\t^\t___ __________ __\t.Several arrests of men bn suspk-i- cis Hospital here last night after ad^'is^rnaking sound progress in : ship from Its earliest days through ous person charges were made.ia short illness.\tj many fields of radio, such as the the successive stages when Count _____________________________________\u2014\u2014\t_\t.\u2014- use of the short wave beam system, [ Von Zeppelin was meeting with I installation of radio beacons and success until the present, when the O FiFMCFâU IS GENEROUS IN HIS\tIsS^fïaviEation^10^ f°r t,K IgffiUrîng ready use^n new vL'Lfi.lllllllvLlfUU «U tjLulJUAWUÜ III llilJ\t| Th; radio beacon, or the radio Empire routes of communication.i:\t.consideration are fairly good and | tural mentality.He saw no reason that increased production would not for making the people believe that seriously affect them because of the the Government has been badly foreign demand.It is thought that treating the farmers, the farmers, once they appreciate ; C.A.Paquet, Liberal M.L.A.fop this, would take steps which would i Montmagny, added a few words as the Conference as expected by |\tin'increasing^their revenue; to what the Government has done i\t^ : TmT* lisa nnfxr\t?Tun\t#» A _ millions o* peace advocates have been supporting you.\u201d by increasing their production.; for his county, and the Premier adjourned the debate.lighthouse, as it might be termed, He drew the attention of those who is the latest development in direc- believe airships impracticable to the '! T\u2018: I U-Wn I Ijr Vf Al*1\u201d £ lifJll LiEiAllEiîC^'lion-finding, and Canada has already reception which steamships met in VJ.kl t KVIU-YA VA\tA AUt-»\tatP\testabljshed tcn fully-automatic stat-Uhe early days when the first three ____________\tlions, Mr.Fraser stated.These are companies were borne down by the ,\tlocated on the Atlantic coast, in the difficulties which attended the car- ; Marshcl Fccn Accused of Insubordination and General John! Gulf of St.Lawrence and on the rying out of a new departure.! p\u201e,.-K;rlcr Rpn.vnnr'KoH\tNn* TFrrtvzincr Amp-riran Great Lakes, and will be followed \u201cIf we could look forward an- J.I cubing Kepioached to.HO.Ihrcn.ing American! s00n wjth othcrs on the Pacific other century, or even a much Troops into rrent Lines When rrenen forces Yvere| Coast.These stations have a range shorter time\u201d, the speaker declared, nj-rj\t___I atP Woodrow Wilson Held Un for!°f seventy-five miles, and auto- \u201cit is possible we should see just as riara rrested Late tv ooaro at wiison rieia up\tmatically fend out distinctive sign- great developments in air nnviga- Admiraticn as £ Visionary, But Criticized tor His ; als.These beacons enable the na- tion and in the airship itself as we Politic»! Inexperience____Final Messoce O* Man Who1 viKating officer aboard ship to take can see by looking back on the de- rc,.uc_t inexperience rlrîal\t, n\tI his bearings instead of having to velopment that has taken place in CHINESE BANDITS ARE PILLAGING TOWNS AND HOLDING UP VESSELS WOULD CHANGE CIVIL CODE DEALING WITH INJUNCTIONS Led France to Victory Is Sad and Skeptical.reply on an operator ashore.the past century in steamships.\u201d PARIS, Feb.13.\u2014 A violent attack on Marshal Ferdinand Foch, whom he accuses of insubordination, and bitter reproaches directed at General John J.Pershing, for not throwing American troops into the front lines when the Freticn ?* *:\u2022 * .wbe,n they gave When life begins to \u201cget you down,\u201d ?nn oyst*rvsup,p\u201d ln th Miss Eva Evans and Gooley on Wednesday afternoon, ; Mrs.F.W.Walker for the ladies, February 5th, with a large attend-> and Mr.F.W.Walker and Mr.Paul ance.The president, Mrs.Grady, j Tremblay for the gentlemen, opened the meeting with reading! The standing in the Checker and prayer.After the business ; Tournament here on Saturday night part of the meeting the remainder ' after the games had been finished is of the afternoon was spent in sew-! Mr.R.M.Ross, 24 games, 34 points; ing.About four-thirty o\u2019clock sup-; Mr.W.J.Ewing, 20 games, 19 per was served by Mrs.Gooley to; points; Mr.C.B.Caswell, 24 games, all present.Mrs.Frank Humph-! 25 points; Mr.J.O.Marchand, 32 rey kindly invited the Guild to: games, 30 points; Mr.Ed O\u2019dell, 5 meet with her on Tuesday after-' games, 7 points; Mr.A.E.Dyson, noon, February 18th and to hold a ; 20 games, 9 points; Mr.M.L.baked bean supper in the evening'Brady, 22 games, 20 points; Mr.R.at the same -rlaee.M.Graham, 24 games, 30 points; of imense heat.Previous to th's v, - n and orget Mr.and Mr! winter Daytona, Fla., has been the, farthest southern point they have ;on visited, where the climate is cool- j = er ar.d more salubrious._Mr.and Mrs.McDougall, of \u201cThe Firs,\u201d bare been entertaining their cousin from Montreal for a.*tort time.was visiting at Mrs.Mina Wright\u2019s Sunday.KINGSBURY The W.M.S.of the United Church held its monthly meeting at the Manse on Wednesday after-both noon .February 5th, with thirteen The meeting was on that account there are many from other places working in Marsboro just now.Something very unusual is hap-1 pening in Marsboro this winter.E i \u2022 Tj FI\tJ ¦^en houses are broken into and LXDiainS HOW £
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