Sherbrooke daily record, 22 juillet 1940, lundi 22 juillet 1940
[" WEATHER TEMPERATURE?Varm with thunder showers.Established 1897 §h?rtn*onkp Saily mwnrù SHERBROOKE.QUEBEC, MONDAY, JULY 22.1940.Yesterday: Maximum, fit; minimum, 67.Same day last year; Max., 60; min., 45.Forty-Fourth Year.GERMAN AIR RAIDERS SUFFER EXTENSIVE DAMAGE Thirty Planes Lost In German Week-End Raids Churchill Held Uniting Force Against Chaos In World Today Against British isles Bomb-and-Run German Raiders Keep Up Harassment of British Isles Today While Public Expects \u201cNo Compromise\u201d Reply from Government Spokesmen to Hitler s \u201cLast Chance\u201d Peace Overture\u2014Destroyer, Vitally Damaged by German Attacks, Downs Three Planes Before Sinking\u2014Foreign Secretary Expected to Emphasize Ideological Issues at Stake.London, July 22.\u2014 '®\u2014Bomb-and-run German raiders kepi up harassement of the British Isles today while Britons anticipated an emphatic \u201cno compromise'\u2019 reply from their Government tonight to Hitler's \u201clast chance\u201d peace overture.With Nazi bombs exploding in widely scattered areas, Foreign a speech expected to reiterate Montreal, July 22.\u2014v(lt\u2014If Hitler has made himself the incorporation ! of Germany, so Winston Churchill is really the incorporation of ! Britain, and \"these two men are the very symbols of the struggle going on in the world,\u201d Dorothy Thompson | , declared in a radio address last ' I night.The noted American newspaper-! woman and commentator spoke over : the national network of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.! \"On the one side is the furious, i unhap-py, frustrated and fanatic ! figure who has climbed to unprecedented power on the piled-up bodies -of millions of men, carried and PRAISES RECORD ; PUS*1CyQ skin soft, cleai and smooth.Buy BOTH at your druggist\u2019s today.ROAD MINISTER IS HONORED BY TRIBE Montreal, July 22.\u2014TP'\u2014Honorary Chief lo Ha Hi lo of the Pipe of Peace Clan of the Mohaw Tribe was oempanied Rev.and Mrs.J.G.Ful- installed Saturday night in ceremon-cher to Inverness and Kinncar\u2019s Mills ies at nearby Caughnavaga Indian last week.\treserve.He is Hon.T.D.Bouchard, Mrs.Robert Cole, of Cookshire, Quebec Minister of Roads and Public will arrive in town tonight to attend Work.the funeral of Mrs.William Stacey) \u201cBeautiful Road\" is the English tomorrow.\t! translation of Mr.Bpuchard\u2019s new Mr.and Mrs.Ralph E.Mosher and title, bestowed upon him after he un-family spent the week-end at Mrs.derwent close scrutiny by several Mosher\u2019s mother\u2019s cottage at Bacon\u2019s tribal leaders attending the pow Bay.\u201cEMERGENCY\u2019\u2019 CONDITIONS Edinburgh, July 22.\u2014iCF\u2014The officers of state responsible for care of the Scottish Crown Regalia met today for the first time in lift years because of the \u201curesent emergency.\" pow.Among the dignitaries examining the new chief war Dr.C.A.Kirkland, Liberal Member of the Quebec Legislative Assembly, initiated two days earlier.Old newspapers for sale.One cent a pound.Apply Record Office.(Continued from Page 1) capital is that Parliament will prorogue about August 3 as suggested last week by Senator Dandurand.The unemployment insurance bill received second reading last week after being introduced by Labor Minister McL,arty.By tbe time it comes back to the fuse bid.'' implementing budget taxation changes and various estimates should be out of the way.The unemployment bill calls for the building up of an insurance fund, from contributions by employees, employers and the Government, from which payments would be made to those participants in the plan who become unemployed.Several classifications of workers and those earning more than $2,000 a year are not covered in the bill, the $2.000-a-year-or-more class being only five per cent, of the Dominion\u2019s wage earners.The Senate will meet Tuesday.As regards by-elections August 19 m Saskatoon, Csrleton, Waterloo Xorth and Kingston, Conservative Leader Hanson said during the weekend the.nominating of Conservative candidates was up to local party organizations.It is entirely s matter for local Conservative organizations,\u201d he said, \u201cI am a strong believer In local autonomy in such cases.\u201d Already a Conservative candidate ha= been nominated in the traditionally Conservative scat C arleton.ness made it susceptible to pitfalls.The problems to he discussed ranged over this field: 1\u2014\tExamination of Western Hemisphere neutrality in the.light of such unpredicted recent development as the capitulation of Holland, Belgium and France to German armed forces.2\u2014\tThe attitude of the Americas toward Western Hemisphere possessions of conquered European nations.3\u2014\t-\u201cFifth Column'' activities in the Americas\u2014-their extent and possible precautionary measures to be taken.4 \u2014 Re-settlement of refugees, prisoners and other victims of war.5\u2014Economic co-operation \u2014 or what possibilities exist for employing United States capital to mutual advantage in helping Latin American states from being drawn into the barter system of totalitarian powers.Hull conferred individually with the heads of various delegations immediately after his arrival yesterday.and it was reported these talks had disclosed a strong desire for concrete action to cambat any possible menace to continental security and internal regimes in the Americas.Fear was expressed by some, however, that Argentina might prove a stumbling block to the adoption of j a solid front on both defence and j economic questions.Argentine delegates failed to appear for pre-con- j vention discussions.It was announced, meanwhile.from San Jose, Costa Rica, that the j German legation there had withdrawn its note of two weeks ago ; expressing hope the Central Amer-1 ican states would do nothing \u201cun-neutral\u201d at the conference.The source also said that those in the chief officer\u2019s boat suffered \u201cterrible hardships.\u201d Some were washed overboard and ethers died of exposure.After four days three survivors reached a British port.They were the Portuguese chief officer, the second engineer, a Greek, and a seaman who is also a Greek.men, was commanded by E.C.Bickford, who was promoted to commander and decorated December 21 for sinking of a submarine and scoring hits on the German cruisers Liepzig and Blucher on the same day she sighted the Bremen.As the air war continued today, Royal Air Force fighters drove off a lone bomber over a Scottish town.; of Home Security announced others jThe raider dropped incendiary bombs loosed theirs with \u201clittle damage\u201d in (which started small fires.Damage the Midlands and on the Northeast | was reported slight, coast.\tt | Other planes believed to be Ger- The Salmon, one of the Shark class j man appeared this morning over with a normal complement of forty ithe Southeast Coast.Continued from page 1.eral Crérar had a distinguished record as did General Anderson, a fif-ty-nine-year-c-ld native of Ottawa and also a graduate of R.M.C.General Anderson served as Chief of the General Staff since November, 1938.General Anderson will start immediately important inspection duties in connection with thé' Atlantic coast defences with special reference to Canadian activities in the Newfoundland area.-?up by searchlights and immediately enveloped in bursts of shrapnel.Flames poured from the tail of one of them as they went into a dive and observers said it seemed certain at least one had crashed into the sea.A third bomber also was caught in the searchlights, ran into a heavy curtain of fire and suddenly nosed-dived and crashed.These planes dropped no bombs, but the Ministry Detailed Weather Repcrt WARM WITH THUNDER.SHOWERS The weather has been warm over the week-end in Ontario and the j Prairie Provinces with thunder-I showers occurring in many districts.Forecasts; Mostly fair and warm (today and Tuesday with thunder-|showers in a few districts; light to j moderate variable winds, j The maximum temperature yesterday was 84 and the minimum 67.jLast year the temperatures were 80 and 45.Speaker (desirous of raising money)\u2014\u201cAll who will give $10 stand up.'\u2019 (Aside to musician)\u2014\u201cPlay God Save the King.\u201d WHAT J A C K - 1 8 0 5 WORE ROOSEVELT RESTING FROM HECTIC WEEK Hyde Park, N.Y., July 22 -(.ff5)\u2014 Pi*, on' RcosaveP retu'.ned today to 11?\u2022ambling houot t 1-\"locking the Hudson to rest up from a week of torrid weather and political activity in Washington and to obtain from Ambassador William v.Bullitt a complete account of how France suecumbcj to German military migh and then formed a dictatorial gov ernment.Tile Ambassador to France, arrived frem Eurcpe, rede on President\u2019s special train from \\V ington to Hyde P \u201d.'k to elabor.it his report begun in the capital night and perhaps assist tne P dent in appraising future Fra American relations.ht just AUNT OF PRESIDENT DIES Bslmville, N.J., July 22.\u2014 '.-PI \u2014 (Funeral services will be conducted I i today for Mrs.Dora Delano \"Uube-.' 92, aunt of President Roosovel .with.I burial tomorrow in Fair Hawn.! Mass.! With Mrs.Forbes when she died j i yesterday were her two sisins.Mrs.; I James Roosevelt, mother or ! President, and Mrs.Price Collier, of | Tuxedo Park.N V , and her broth r, of j Frederic A.Delano, National Plan -1 ring Board Chairman.'maigri HE ALE YOU GREAT-GRAND H RANK / SMtKBKUUhvt DAILY RECORD, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1^40.PAGE THREE TWO DEAD, SEVEN INJURED IN E.T.MISHAPS Seven Taken To Hospital As RECRUITING IN Father Lost Life In Futiie 2,000 J.O.C Result Of Two Auto Mishaos TOWNSHIPS FOR Attempt To Rescue Young Son MEMBERS HOLD CONGRESS HERE Four Lennoxville Persons Injured in Collision on North Hatley Road Near Main Highway, While Three Others from Sherbrooke Were Hurt When Their Car Overturned on Kate-vale Highway.71 H-111H I!Nil Oscar Brosseau, of St.Adolphe de Dudswell, Dived into Silver' 3 *\tLake After Youngster Who Had Fallen in While Playing' Hussars.Amalgamated with Royal Rifles of Canada,! Mobilizing as an Infantryj (Rifle) C.A.S.F.Regiment.with Brother\u2014Verdict of Accidental Death Returned at\tfrom All Sections of Inquest Conducted this Morning.Recruiting for the 7th, 11th Hus- Seven persons were admitted to turning from their summer cottage hospital here last evening following overturned on the Kateva.e road, motor car accidents on the North Mr.Greenberg was driving as the .y\ti i j\tfamily were returning to Sher- Hatley and Katevale roads.\tbrook;, when suddenlv the car Injured in a collision near Stanstead highway were Mr.and ing Mr.Greenberg who was at the;Rifles of Canada for mobilization as Mrs.R.H.Fletcher, and son, Dudley, wheel to lose control of the car.!an and Sydney Raycraft, all of Len- The, vehkle swerved towaids tne.'Deon inaugurated in the Eastern last Drowning and motoring accidents in the Eastern Townships evening took a toll of two lives and sent seven persons to hospital.A double fatality occurred at about 7 o\u2019clock at Silver Lake, near Marbleton, when Oscar Brosseau, thirty-four-year-old resident of St.Adolphe de Dudswell, lost his life in a futile attempt to rescue his fourth® struck \"a bad place in the road cans->ars in amalgamation with the Royal year-old son, Roland, who had fallen into the water.\u2022\t- \"\t'¦\t\u2022\t\u2019\t\" \"les of Canada for mobilization as Four persons were injured in an automobile collision on the North infantry (rifle) C V.S.F.unit has Hatley road and three others^ were hurt when the car in which they were \\\t' \u201c\u201cI driving overturned on the Katevale highway.,r> mnnwnrnteH in thn Rnslorn\tThe Brosseau deaths were declared accidental at an inquest tonductod ditch and overturned.noxville.\tbul '\t\u201d'\\va'\" eal!ed at once'^,0'vnEnil1s\u2019 ** \" ^ announced today.; yds morning at Marbleton by Dr.Albini Menard, of Garthby, when details Victims of the other accident, from TheXoLWaBnd the \u201cthtee The newly-organized unit has al-| of the mishap were placed before the Court, which occurred when their car l«t.\ttaken to the Sherbrooke Hos- ready taken in a large number of .t1h\u2018 tragedy occurred during a» thH Mad Mois0VrïeëXr^ andeth^; pita1\u2019 whe« the>' Placed nnder!officcri and about 10o men from the ;\tf 1° and Mrs.Moses Greenbeig and the.r, the care Qf Dr A R Walters: Al-I\u201e 12-year-old son, Louis, of\tj though having undergone a Thf first of these two accidents j Siuu\u2019ofidng Sdl^'wfth'gla^ desired: It is expected that the j\t^d^Tf took place near the Sherbrooke-1 Mr.Greenberg\u2019s condition is ryort-\toï^n^chortlv under IheNvatcr.when Roland, receiving a Derby L,»e.h.bhw.y .» the North\toî' M.i.'r E.V Me- ! pDyfol _ push, lo.l.Ms bol.nee end 17th, 11th but recruits from all sec-! and Mi\\«.Willie Beauregard, mem-^ lions of the Eastern Townships are | hers of the party, .testified that .1,1 .'.s i i.i.\tv-u.,, +L« '7+1-.: vnnnp* T\\.'hind and his brother were Hatley road when a car driven by Raycraft collided with an automobile operated by Fletcher, as both vehicles topped an incline.They met head-on.Fletcher was accompanied by his wife, two sons, Dudley and Harry, and his daughter, Shirley, while i Raycraft had Robert Worthen, of | Lennoxville, and a young lady from S'orth Hatley with him.The cars were badly smashed, almost beyond repair.Worthen and the girl, although badly shaken up, tions and bruises about the and face 1 head'Mannis and will carry on as usual I tuJJ}hied into the lake.Xirau .\t.\t.\t.\t,\t.\trl nr* -f.-.tLn,.o ?\tHi WAR jwith training of militia for home do fence a^id act as a feeder to provide reinforcements for the C.A.S.F.unit.Recruiting offices have been opend lat Danville and Bury.Headquarters |for the regiment will be in Quebec City, with training carried on at Valcartier Camp.Officers from the 7th, 11th Hus- July 22, 1915.__ Austro-German 'sans forming- part of the new unit in- i troops beiseged Ivangorou.Polish jclude Lt.-Col.T.G.MacAulay, D.j fortified town on the River Vistula.C.M., E.D., Major \\\\ A.Bishop, E.25 YEARS AGO TODAY (By The Canadian Press) The father at once dived into the lake, fully dressed, and is believed to have died of heart failure as he struck the water.Alfred Lacroix, a neighbor who rushed to the scene, saw the bodies come to the surface once.Only about six inches separated the father from his young son.A second later they had disappeared from view.R land\u2019s body was recovered about a half hour following the accident, but artificial respiration practised by Dr.A.E.Tntras, of Marble! n, proved futile.Brosseau's body was taken out of the water at eleven o'clock.Coaticook Expected To Contract For Purchase Of Local Power Townships Gathered in Sherbrooke Over Week-End.scaped with only minor injuries as Italians advanced near Tolmino on 'D., Major T.A.Johnston, Major E.lid Shirley and Harry Fletcher.The the Isonzo front and French forces jE.Denison, Capt.J.W.Johnston, njured passengers were rushed at mce to the hospital where treatment was given by Dr.J.B, Winder, of Lennoxville.Mr.Raycraft, who was the.least j severely injured of the group, was j released from the hospital this morning S&TfcTiS&r ifir-ÆS W \u2022*,» -\t«2» shock, bruise.\u201end l.c.r.ti.n.bout «JTSSÆS.~ the head and face.Mrs.Fletcher seized vantage points near Mucnster in the Vosges Mountains, H AY FEVER SWEEPS PENNSYLVANIA Harrisburg, Pa., July 22.\u2014(A3)\u2014 ;as ,£\u201cc.3;r«i \u2019k | »>.™T ,**,«».rjee vonnvtpj ns \u2018Vnnd.\u201d Mr.'year\u2019 is building Pennsylvania hay- ind Dudley sustained severe shock ind bruises.Capt.J.N.Wood, Capt.S.M.Ban fill, medical -officer, and Lieutenants F.N.Royal, W.A- Royal, H.C.Lax-son, F.X.Lyster W.E.Tulk and E.W.Denison.Major M.A.Parker and Lieutenant William Bradley, formerly of Sherbrooke and now of Quebec City, are also on the staff.weed conditions, caused by heavy spring rains, practically insure a \\ heavy swirl of ragweed p lien next! month, authorities said.The season | Roger Fletcher, son of the injured I ;g aYready open for persons suscep-larents, was himself hurt later m the «vening in another collision when he ¦an off the road.Although consider-ibly shaken up he was not in a ser- j \u2022ous enough condition to be taken to ;he hospital.tible to timony and rose poPen.ROCK ISLAND AND DERBY LINE Moses Greenberg, his wife, amt ;welve-year-old son are all in hos-: Consult H.J.McConnell.Opto-pital this morning suffering from ] metvist, concerning your eyes and njuries sustained late last night fitting of glasses, at the Del Monty when the car in which they were re- Hotel, this coming Wed., July 24th.MAGOG DRILL NIGHTS Capt.Ashton Tobin, who has been appointed in cc.mmand of the Magog Company of the Sherbrooke Regiment (M.G.), announced today that drilling in the textile town will bo held on Tuesday and Thursday nights.Lectures will be given in the Armory at Magog, but the drilling will lake place in the r aid of St.Patrick\u2019s School, which has been placed at the disposal of the Regiment.A total of Infi men were recruited in Magog last week.Coaticook, July 22.\u2014A contract for the purchase of from three hundred to five hundred horsepower from the City of Sherbrooke will most probably be ratified at a special meeting of the Town Council this week, A.Pilotte, Coaticook\u2019s Mayor, announced this mc-rning.Mr.Pilotte said that the Councillors met on Saturday to study and discuss terms of the contract drawn un by the Sherbrooke Electricity Department and have tentatively agreed to all of the major clauses.Some minor changes are required, however, he said, and these will be effected this week by attornevs for the Town of Coaticook.Aid.A.C.Ross, Chairman of the Sherbrooke Gas and Electricity Committee, told a Record representative this morning that under the terms of the contract the city will guarantee not less than three hundred and not more than five hundred horsepower for a period of five years.Before the power can be delivered Coat- ¥ / ).DRIVE FOR QUICK SERVICE ON YOUR NEW CAR Insist on Goodyears.More new cars are equipped with Goodyear DeLuxe tires than any other kind.They're built and balanced to car makers\u2019 specifications \u2014 yet they cost no more icook will have to crct fourteen miles of transmission lines to connect the town with the Sherbrooke-owned plant at Eustis.Cost of the poles, wires, rights of way and equipment over the fourteen-mile stretch will be about S'lU,-000, Aid.Ross estimated.Before tin-deal can- be closed it will probably have to be approved by the Coaticook ratepayers.Although Coaticook has its own electrical supply system with a capacity of about 2,000 horsepower there are different times in the year when low water in the rivers and lakes make for a serious shortage of power.This was especially true Iasi winter when some of the local industries had to shut down because of insufficient electricity, CITY COUNCIL STILL BENT ON WASTING $6,500 Special Meeting Convened for this Afternoon to Rush Through Greenhouse Proposition.Marking the first anniversary of the one hundred and five couples who were united in a mass marnage ceremony at Montreal a year ago, more than two thousand members of La Jeunesse Ouviiere Catholique gathered here yesterday for the Diocese of Sherbrooke J.O.C.convention.The delegates came to \u2018.his city from all sections of the Eastern Townships, with a special train bringing a large number from the Danville - Asbestos - Richmond area.There were also several from Berlin, Now Hampshire, as will as Provincial J.O.C.officers from Montreal and Quebec, headed by Rev.\\ i tor Marie Villeneuve, General Chaplain, and Maurice Donaldson, Federal President.Wearing their characteristic uniforms of blue and white, the Joeist.-and Jocistes gathered yesterday morning at St.Charles Seminary and Mont Notre Dame Convent and after registraticn proceeded to SL Michael\u2019s Cathedral where a spectal High Mass was celebrated, fhe sermon was preached by Monsignor P.S.Dcsranleau, Coadjutor-Bishop of Sherbrooke, who stressed the value of the J.O.C.movement, and the pan it is playing in the development of French-Canadian citizens.Dinner was served at the Vacation Cokny Pavilion «id inaugurated the afternoon\u2019s proceedings during which various phases of J.O.C.work, especially as applied to this section of the Province, were discussed.Reports of committees, a talk by Rev.Father Villeneuve and selections by a hundred-voice choir were also features of Hie afternoon\u2019s programme.Following lunch at the Pavilion the delegates formed ranks and marched in a body to the local baseball Stadium where about five thousand persons had gathered to take part in the evening\u2019s programme which was opened with an address by Mr.Donaldson, the J.O.C.Federal President.Mayor Joseph La-brecque and Maurice Gingues, M.P., also spoke and the main address of the evening was delivered by Rev.Canon Ira Bourassa, Curate of the Cathedral, who represented Mgr.Desranleau and charged rhc Jocists and Jocistes to build for a better future for themselves and for their country.A choir of young people from St.Patrick\u2019s Parish, Magog, each member of which carried a torch in com-memoratkn of last year\u2019s great celebration in Montreal, rendered \u201cSois Fier, \u201cOuvrier!\u201d and \u201cSouvenir Chante du Congres.\u201d Motion pictures of the 1939 mass marriage ceremony completed the programme.Dedication Of Scout Camp At Lake Alymer FINAL TRIBUTE PAID MEMORY OF A.M.STEVENS Despite the fact that public opinion is very definitely opposed to the purchase by the City of Senator C.B.Howard\u2019s greenhouse, in Howard\u2019s Park, the deal will bo ratified at a special meeting of the City Council this afternoon, it was learned this morning.That the meeting is being convened for the sole reason of rushing through the greenhouse proposition is evident from the fact that no other item of business, than routine matters, is on the agenda.Usually extremely cautious when it comes to spending money on worthwhile project', the Aldermen actually seem to be in a burry to pay out .$6,500 for a structure which is intended to supply shrubs and trees for city parks.There has been little or no talk of the $200,000 loan by-law to be put before the ratepayers for approval or rejection within the next month.It is thought the members of the City Council will soft-pedal the loan issue until the greenhouse purchase is settled definitely with the hope the taxpayers will be lulled into submission with the passage of time.f The district camp of the Sher- j broke Local Association of the Boy [Scouts\u2019 Association, at Lake Aylmer, I now Itas t he official name of Camp I Twocdsmuir.The dedication took j place at a brief ceremony on Sat ur-jday afternoon, attended by mem-Ifcct's of the Association, scout» leaders, boys now in camp and a group of their parents and friends.Ideal summer weather, a perfect _______ Lite and a group of hoys already r-\t-ii\tbronzed from a few days in the out- Well-Known FigurG in LOCcll doors lent all the local color needed Railroading Circles Laid to ^ -1 snouting event.Rest Yesterday Afternoon.\u201e led that the camp was now in its third Final tubu-.c to Aden Moody .lev- ;ve!U.0f operation, but.that no suit-enswell-known figure in loçal rail- able name had ben decided upon until reading envies, was paid yesterday :,j,p suggestion was mad« several by a large nunîbot of teiat t\\os\tby Lewis Rosenbloom, and friends at funeral servtecs n;st].il.t Kin, r Leader, that the name conducted at his home on _ King ;of r.ulada-s latc Governor-General Mu-et Most and at Ft.I etci s An- ?|louid be commemorated.The As-gucan Church.Conducted by Rev.Canon 11.Reginald Bigg, a short service for the family was held at the home at two-thirty o'clock followe ! by the church service at three o'elock.Led by the choir, the congregation sang the hymns \"Rock of Ages\" and \"Lord of Mercy and of Might.\u201d A large number of floral tributes sociation at once adopted the proposal, with (he approval of Provincial headquarters.Mr.Grundy said that no more suitable name could have been decided upon, for Lord Twocdsmuir had been in every sense a \"good Scout,\u201d as well as being a very great citizen of the Empire.The registration parchment re- ,\t.\tcoïnizing the camp as an official one and messages of sympathy were re- ivi ,, thi, lu,w namCi was thon ceived from friends both from the1., ,\t, ,\t, c, .presented to the District Scoutmaster, E.T.Harbert, who nailed it to the notice board.With the Scouts at the alert and their friends and lenders grouped about, the Union Jack was hoisted to the lop of the flag staff, and a min-here Friday night, had completed ll|e's silence in memory of the late city and from out-of-town.Interment took place in Elmwood Cemetery.Bearers were Walter Byhum, J.O.Lambert, Harold Enright, Norrey Wiggett, Percy Johnston and John Powers, Mr.Stevens, who died at his home twenty-four years in the service of the Canadian National Railways and at the time of his death was passenger and ticket, agent in this city.He was born in Coaticook and came here as a young man in 1903 to enter the employ of the railway company in Governor-General and Chief Scout for Canada was observed.The Provincial Fbeld Secretary of the Scout Asoseiation, Frank Hicks, spoke briefly and complimented the Sherbrooke boys and their leaders on the improvements being made to the the capacity of passenger department jCamp, and urged on them the neces- clerk.Transferred to the freight de- sity of conservation of forests, ad-partnSent in 1916 he received further j vising them (o only out down what promotion the same year when he ti\u2019ees were necessary and those which was appointed to his latest position, could be cut without permanent loss.A member of the local Chamber of The ceremony over, the officials U TODAY ON FULLY GUARANTEED TIRES.WE HAVE THEM AT THE PRICE YOU WANT TO PAY! \u2022 Let us equip your car with safe, brand new, guaranteed Goodyears today.We have them in every price class.Every one is \u201ctops\u201d in mileage and safety at its price\u2014every one has these three essentials for long, economical service: centre-traction for non-skid service; two protector cord plies under the tread for extra strength; new Supertwist cord for blowout protection.Drive in for a tire check today! DICKIE\u201d BALL REPORTED DEAD IN ENEMY LAND Flying Officer Albert Ransom Ball Was Member of Family Well Known in Eastern Townships.Commerce, Mr.Stevens also belonged to the Sherbrooke Country Club and to the Masonic Lodge.Relatives attending the funeral were, besides his widow, his sister, Miss Julia Stevens, of Coaticook; two sisters-in-law, Miss Mary Anne Dcardon, of Holyoke, Mass, and Mrs.A.E.Gadley, of Montreal, and a niece, Mrs.W.C.Perron, and her husband, of Ottawa, Out.Civic and railroad representa- ind parents inspected the camp, visited the boys and enjoyed a swim.A playing field has been cleared and partially levelled this summer, and work will be continued on it.A well has been dug, where good drinking water is now available.The boys now in camp are from the 5th Sherbrooke Troop, of SL Peter\u2019s Church, under Fred Hicks, with several Wat-crville boys with them.They went into camp Wednesday last, and will A member of a family well known in the Eastern Townships and particularly Rock Island, Flying Officer Albert Ransom (Dickie) Ball, of Westinount, has died in a German military hospital, it was learned over the week-end.Twenty-five years old, Flying Officer Ball was a member of the Royal Air Force and on May 13th last was reported as missing, later it being learned he was a prisoner of war in the Reich.From reports received by his brother, Dr.Sydney Ball, in London, the aviator was progressing favorably but Saturday his mother, Mrs.H.S.Ball, was informed her son died in a hospital near Cologne, Germany.When last seen by his squadron leader, Flying Officer Ball was being attacked by five German planes and was most likely forced down behind the German lines.Flying Officer Ball was the son of the late Sydney Ball, of Montreal, and Isabelle Shearer Ball, formerly i of Rock Island.He was the grand- CRAWFORDVILLE Mrs.James Cairns and son, Jimmy, Mrs.J Harvey, Miss Helen Harvey and Master John Harvey, of Montreal, were week-end guests of Mr.and Mrs.Fred Crawford.Mrs.Katie Jamieson, of Kinnear\u2019s Mills, and Mr.and Mrs.Samuel Allen, of Maple Hill, were guests of Mr.Roh and Miss Jennie Jamieson.Mr.Ernest Bailey, of Montreal,! on of the ]ate wil]ian1 R.Ball of is spending a few days as the guest\tand Rock ]sland) am] of his brother, Mr.Tommie Bailey.)\tF; p gan and g land, lives included Pro-Mayor A.C.,be under canvas until the end of this Ross, E.E.Goodenough, Harold F.n week.Previously this summer the St.right, of the C.N.R.city staff, Mont-|Patrick\u2019s Church and St.Andrew\u2019s real; F.C.Elliott, C.N.R.General iChurch Troops camped for ten days Passenger Agent, Montreal; J.S.jeach, so that the camp has been in Mooney, C.N.R.Express agent here; (constant use since the close of the J.E.Beaulieu, local C.N.R.Station school year.Several former leaders and Freight agent; G.E.Krunelle, (and members of the Local Associa-of the C.N.R.city office staff; J.A.Hon have also been in camp for the Metivier, city passenger agent for past week.the C.P.R.; W.F.Norcross, C.P.R.I_____________________________________ express agent for the city; T.R.Me- ! Kenzie, route agent for the C.P.R.Mrs.George Coombs, Mrs.S.Mc-Ex,press; O.A.Trudeau, C.P.R.dis-i('oimick, of Mechanicsville, N.Y.; Irict pasenger agent, Montreal; John (Mr.and Mrs.A.S.Cleary, Miss Edna Powers, District Freight agent for iBcerworth, Miss Maude Wilson, Mr.the C.N.R.; George Robins, formerly (and Mrs.J.R.Simms, Mr.and Mrs.of the Quebec Central Railway, and |J.Russell and the following from Frank Cutter, of the Q.C.R.\t(Windsor Mills; Mayor J.W.Quinn Others attending the funeral were: ' Ernest\tDcsaulniors, Mr.and\tMrs, W.F.Bowles, K.C., and Mrs.Bowles, (W.F.\tDenrden,\tMrs.W.\tE.\tPen- of Cowansville; Mr.ami Mrs.E.A.jdcr, Dr.McCabe, Mr.and Mrs.C.Ohadsey, of Bedford; the Misses Walsh, the Misses Mary-Anne, Desaulniers, of Richmond, J.K.(Elizabeth and Catherine Whal-Flahcrty and Mrs.Thomas Flaherty; |cm George Libby and Miss Annie George Van VIlet, of Encolle; G.Â.Libby,\tMrs.!\u2019.\t( astello,\tMiss E.Smith, A.B.Conway, Fred Conway, iBrady,\tMiss K.\tMcCabe,\tMr.\tUr- Mr.and Mrs.D.Irwin, W.Davidson,'fluhart Pender and Miss Patricia J.II.Gunning, H.E.Goyettc, W.Pender.Nutt, F.Vaughn, F.W.Webster, William McManamy, Mrs, J.Frap-pier, Mrs.C.Crochetiere, Mr.and Mrs.William Daniels, Henry Daniels, T.Read, E.Faucher, Mr.and Mrs.Ainslie, Mrs.Walter Coombs, Hall, Wednesday, July 24th, SAND HILL Cards and erokinole in Church % YOUR OWN BRAND V BRYAN is\" EXTRA DRY \\ GINGERALE ^HE PERFECT BLEND' 7 |%1H.BRYANTLU.k&J Sherbrooke Que* Quality Deverô&s Snce.IÇÔ6 City BriefEets MORISSET Ltd.WEBSTER MOTORS Ltd.J.M.WISWALL Reg\u2019d.\u2014 Sherbrooke Que.,\t»\t,\tL,\tRichmond and his brother, Mr.Jomm.e «alley.d.nephew of E.Mr Lionel Lachance has returned p Ral, of Rnck ,,h home from Timmins, Ont., where he spent the past few years.Mrs.Robert McKee, of St.Johns-bury, Vt, was a guest for several days of her daughter, Mrs,.Lyman Morrison.Mrs.Andrew McRae received the = ad news, of the death of her sister, Mrs.Charles Clouston, of Maymont.Shoes valued at $8 for $2.95 at Sask.,\tj Wiggett's Shoe Sale.Mrs; Fred Crawford called at the.)\t- home of her uncle and aunt, Mr.and1 St.Peter's W.A.will assemble at Mrs.G.M.Henderson, of Millanville.church for funeral of Miss Twose.Mrs.Everade McKee was a guest of her sister, Mrs.Dick Wright, at Lower Ireland.Friends of Mr.Arthur King are very sorry to hear of his illness.RECRUITS Join the Royal Rifles of Canada in Amalgamation with the 7 11th Hussars.A medical board will be at Danville, Tuesday, July 23rd, 7 p.m.; Richmond, Wednesday, July 24th, 7 p.m.: Danville, Thursday, July 25th, 9 a.m.; Windsor Mills, July 26th, 7 p.m.CAPTAIN (Major) E.E.DENISON, Recruiting Officer, Danville, Que.mmm mm KILLED NEAR STE.AGATHE Ste.Agathe des Monts, Que., July 22.\u2014W\u2014A Montreal man, tentatively identified as A.Lazar, was instantly killed when he and his.young woman companion were struck by a truck near here last night.The yourg woman, Jeanne Joseph, twenty-five, also of Montreal, suffered a broken leg.\t\tI \t\t|\tWANTED \t\tYoung man or young lady to assist in editorial \t\twork.Thorough knowledge of English essential.\"Th« Ale of Good latte\"\t\tApply Business Office, Daily Record. PAGE FOUH ^freyvarracfKr: rmrCY rccoopcr?, rvrcrvDAT, jul-T zz, 194a ^lrarlnrook^ail§ îvecurî) Established Ninth Day of February, 1897, with which is incorporated the Sherbrooke Gazette, established 1837, and Sherbrooke Examiner, established 1878.w Eastern Townships\u2019 Only English Daily \u2014 The Record is printed and published every week day by the Sherbrooke Record Company, Limited, of which Edna A.Beerworth is Secretary-Treasurer, at the office, 69 Wellington Street North, in the City of Sherbrooke, incorporating the news services of The Canadian Press, The Associated Press, Reuters and Uavas.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, $4 per year; six months, $2; three months, $1; one month, 50c.Single copies, 3c.SHERBROOKE, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1940.0\tGod, Who art the author of peace 1\tand lover of concord, defend us Thy humble servants in all assaults of oar enemies.WARTIME BOOSTS FLAGMAKING Flagmaking, like munitions manufacture, is a booming industry in wartime if statements made by Vancouver manufacturers are to be believed.It is estimated that Vancouverites bought four times as many flags during June, 19 i0, than in any other single month before the war.Flag makers predict that more than 40,000 flags may be manufactured there before the end of the year, mostly Union Jacks and Canadian ensigns.The orders come from all sources.Patriotic citizens who never thought of flags before, buy them in wartime and all boat owners seek to have a flag on their vessels.The biggest orders however come for ensigns and signalling flags for the Royal Canadian Navy.An official of one Vancouver flag-manufacturing firm, said that many orders are received for foreign flags.No one has ordered an enemy flag since the start of the war, and the ofiicial adds, that such an order would not be filled anyway.den must be tended assiduously, kept active if it is to be fruitful.It needs constant care, planning, enriching, ordering\u2014thît it may produce of its best and give to you the pleasure and recreation that you so much desire.No day should be allowed to pass without adding its measure to the beauty and fertility of this your precious possession.ItéTs your privilege to garden in words\u2014to choose words as you would seeds, that they may bear beautiful flowers and good fruits.When you transplant into your mind the words you have carefully chosen in the great field of prose and poetry, such words not only become an integral part of your mental garden, but they produce thoughts of their kind.What words will you choose?This is largely a matter of personal taste and purpose.But the words you habitually choose and use will have a vital influence upon your life.There are sturdy words to choose like valor, potent, amplitude, dynamic, steadfast, virile, enduring, majestic, energetic, hardihood, stoical, combatant, stronghold, autocracy, paramount, incomparable.You may select pleasant words such as felicitous, enchantment, superb, fascinating, luxuriant, loveliness, embellishment, halcyon, delectable, eminent, meritorious.There are dainty words like amiable, rippling, serene, filament, elusive, refinement, alleviate, quaint, gentility, beguile, delicacy, quiescent, winsome, decorum, symmetry.You will need a wide range of words such as receptivity, melodious, dhastened, predilection, taciturn, sublime, ambiguous, desultory, poignant, affluence, palpable, obeisance, buoyant, alluring, ephemeral, austere, invective, unplumbed, equipoise, zealous, content, portentous, exquisite, fragmentary, discursive, apathy, incredulous, mischievious, girded, fantasy, misconception, tedium, avarice, evasive, delightful, discomforting, rebuke, magnitude, apprehensive, charming, loathsome, seraphic, ineptitude, assuage, sedentary, parsimonious, precipitous, unscrupulous, frolicsome, ineffable, pugnacity, whimsical, reticence, picturesque, magnanimous.GENERAL CHARLES DE GAULLE: A Biography General Charles de Gaulle, who was Chief of the Military Commission in the Reynaud Government, broadcast from London on June 18 a PRESS COMMENTS OUR JOB\u2014HOLD FAST AT ALL COSTS (Daily Herald, London, Eng.) Hitler\u2019s European Empire of mechanized robots and hungry stirring appeal to all French officers jslaves will find it harder and hard-and men, engineers and others to !er to feed itself as months go on.prevent \u201cthe flame of French resist ance\u201d from being extinguished.General de Gaulle was born at Lille in November, 1880, graduated from Saint Cyr, in 1911, and was attached to the 33rd Infantry Regiment then commanded by Petain, whose influence on him always remained great and to whom his book \u201cAu fil de l\u2019Epee\u201d is dedicated.Please do not infer from this that the war will somehow and suddenly be transformed into a miraculous victory for Britain.Remember, first of all, the not unimportant question whether we can successfully repel the threat of invasion in the next two months.Don\u2019t suppose that the risk of a famine next winter will in the least impede Hitler\u2019s Like most of France\u2019s great mili-|plan of invading Britain before tary leaders, he fought in the last [the winter comes.And there is an-war and was several times mentioned other rather large query.It Hitler in despatches.He was wounded in August, 1914, at Dinant, in March, 1915, at Mesnil-les-Hurlus and again in 1916, when he was also gassed and taken prisoner.After several unsuccessful attempts to escape he finally succeeded in December, 1917, as a result of which he was awarded the Croix de Guerre, avec palme.obtains virtual land contact, as he may, with Spain and North Africa, can Britain make the tremendous naval effort necessary to prevent ships coming across the Atlantic from bringing goods to ports which he controls?Nobody can answer this question for certain at this moment.But those best able to judge After the war he was successively, have reasonable hope that the A1 attache in Poland, a member of ( lies, even in the new situation, can Marshal Petain\u2019s staff with the army ; still\tmaintain\tthe\tblockade.\tSo in the Near East and a member of the j there\tit is.Hitler\thas called\tup Conseil Supérieur de la Defense! the grim spectre of hunger, on top nationale.He then commanded a of every other human evil, before formation of tanks, and has fought the eyes of suffering Europe.Our in the present war at the head of an ! job in Britain\tis to\thold fast at\tall armored division.Later he became costs\tin the\tcoming weeks and Under-Secretary for National De-, months.It is for us to see that fcncc-\t_\t_\tiwhen the threat of famine does Although General de Gaulle is a arise, it is turned as a weapon brilliant soldier, his reputation is not ' against the Hitler regime which is primarily based on his military 'responsible for it, and used as an career.1 ranee has many great sol- instrument for the liberation of Eu-diers who fought in the last w:ar and rope not merely from hunger but have been fighting again in this.Gen- i-rom tyranny and terror as well, oral de Gaulle is famous as the man' who fought, too, through twenty] - years of peace, for the victory of the I , .T\t,\t.\t, idea that the machine had trans-]and in Ja,luaT7 ofth\u2019s year he wrote formed the army and military strate-,a rePort ur£iaf Fl'ance ^ make a gy, and that the concepts which ruled suPerhuman effort t0 Produce tank* military strategy in the last war and aeroplanes even at the cost of were therefore now nut of date.demobilizing troops w order to re-He fought for the creation of jlea^ tke necessary labor, motorized and armored divisions!.The two following quotations make manned by a professional army.Hisjl^ c,far.kow accurately General de book \u201cVers 1\u2019Armee de Metier,\u201d pub-1^116 forsaw France s danger.The lished in 1934, passed almost un- Kirst .mlSht al™ost be taken as a noticed in France, though it was ! de- crlPti0n the\tfacned, b^\u2019 translated into German and received\tSen?.,oraJlat an: The garden Of the miiicl can be cultivated in high much attention in Germany In !\tJtSer wit?°the Lonr n\tFrance, however, it was noticed by i .\t, ,\t,,\t, q1 \u2019-ne \u201e degree.Different minds need different sustenance, on\u201e 1T.an at ]eas,t_^ Revriaud hoirame plateau and the Ardennes form b« «11 *«.1* sunshine hi hindlv senhmen, and\t^ the enriching qualities of noble words.\tjn\tj,] Reynaud\u2019s book \u201cLe 'the result of a mistake, a surprise The vocabuiarv of most people is quite absurdly'Problème militaire français\u201d echoed |attack- °J,' negligence.The first de-.\t}\t11\t1\t| General de Gaulle\u2019s plea, and m !feat, ln1 Flanders,or Ha',tlaut-'vou\u2018d March of the same year M.Reynaud ! s>nl,Iar'y make the™ vulnerable In inFmrhincuH o Kill Tav fKo AvoaHnn nf\tflflt PicllIlS thd O RIG 116 i th G T THEY'RE OFF! m n A GOD WHO OVERRULES limited.Many men and women arc content to go through , introduced a bill for the creation of [walls nor ditches to help defences, no DICTATORS FROWN ON GREAT MUSIC Like many other lir.es of human endeavor, music is feeling many odd reactions from the war in Europe and it is the physical side of art that suffers most.It is true that in certain lands, particularly Germany and Russia, dictators have ruled out music.The Soviet has objected to works by Tchai-kowsky and Rimsky-Korsakoff because they are presumed to he steeped in the old regime and, therefore, dangerous to young Communists.Hiller has frowned on certain composers because they ¦'re Jewish.But time has shown such conditions are likely to relax after the zealots cool a hit\u2014they already have in Russia, says John Selby of The Associated Press.The real danger abroad is that music will be directed as well as supported in part by governments, and that blood or political ideas rather than ability will govern.Europe\u2019s loss is, theoretically, North America\u2019s gain.The Rachmaninoffs, Kreislers and Lehmanns long have spent most of their playing time in the Americas.But ,if there follows a financial tightening Americans will be competing against a larger field for fewer musical jobs.So far the opposite is true financially.offer guidance to the life using twenty or thirty adjectives to describe every | J^tpS\t- rivers paral- scene, emotion, person, or idea that they meet.Taud put forward the hypothesis,!1®1 t0 tlle Y01^' Geography gives Tj n i, \u201e\tnnrsplves nndorslood in\tthis\t! then considered so unlikely, of an in-! PassaS?et°\tthe\tinvaders\tm\tnumerous 1 hough we\tmav\tmake oui series undu stood in\tvasion of R0if,iunlj ami predicted the ! Places\u2014the valleys\tof\tthe\tMeuse, the way, good English conversation rcfjuircs tar rnorc(Cyents which we have just exper-\tthe Scheldt, the Scarpe, the \" , .\t,\tion red\tLys, where rivers, roads and rail- precision than that.\tieacrccl:\t\u201e ,\t, 1\t,\t,\t,\t.\t.I- \u2022, j\tLet us assume, he said, that To take one example only, it is, in a limited sense, | ge]gjum js invaded.It is an event true to describe\ta primrose, a dandelion, sand\tand\tnot without precedent.If we have mustard all\tas\tyellow ; but everybody knows\tthat\timmediately to her aid and to help these four are reallv of quite different colors.The her to cover her eastern frontier, «#» 1» ww* migil filly fembo H* tint as \u201ca rich, fierce gold, while to apply such 'army may be pushed back to the sea.o d i eel i ves In iLp i,rimro«n would be absurd' or he For us that means 350 kilometres of !K\u201c\"S\u2019 crossing ditches three yards adjecines to the ptimiose would Pc ansurct, oi n®.fronticr to def\u20acnd in the ^orth of iwide climbing banks thirty feyt high, might speak of the \u201csharp, crude, yellow\u201d of mustard France.Is there anyone here wh0 i ,cnlsli:ng trees, walls, everything will to distinguish that particular shade from the pale yet \u2014\t\u2014.^\tbe th« backW \" ^ mellow warmth of sun-kissed sand.Adjectives are by no means the only parts of speech in which many indeed, most people appear to be deficient.We make, for example, the commoner verbs do far more than their fair share of work.Wh en we must make ourselves more comprehensible, we usually confine ourselves to qualifying these with ways all enemy.\u201d The second gives a picture of tank warfare as the troops in France have experienced it.\u201cA strongly armored brigade crossing fields as fast as a horse at the gallop, armed with 150 medium and 400 smaller guns and 600 machine crossing ditches three yards SWEDEN DISPLAYS ITS NEW GENIUS Present conditions with many of the important trade routes cut off has caused the Swedish Government to institute recently another state organization, \u201cThe Board of Inventions.\u2019\u2019 The aim will be to exploit to an increasing extent one of the Swedes' most valuable resources, their \u201cinventive genius,\u201d whereby it is hoped to bring out valuable contributions for the solution of many current crisis problems.The chairman of the Institution, Helge Eric-son of the Swedish Telegraph Office, explained some of its functions.The Board is established to promote and utilize inventions and technical ideas which in so far as they can be realized with necessary despatch and at reasonable cost are of value for the national economy and the defence of the country.In the first place the Board has to give consideration to the utilization of Swedish raw materials in any of the plans submitted, and in that way bring out substitutes for commodities which are difficult to obtain from abroad.The Board is composed of three members, appointed by the Government, but will have the power to call on outside collaborators and advisers for assistance in judging specific cases.All documents relating to inventions will he kept secret and matters will be dealt with in the simplest and most expeditious manner.accepts in advance the idea of seeing Tf yne oacKoone of the large units, the richest provinces nf France onec Uth~ HAVE A SMILE -4\u2018 The newest hats, they say, are built To give the features under A look of not exactly guilt, But rather wide-eyed wonder.And not alone the bonnet will I Affect the face so bounded, j For poppa, when he sees the bill, I Will also be astounded! \u201cDo you think autos are ruining ! the younger generation?\u201d j \u201cNo, I think the younger genera-i tion is ruining the autos.\u201d The employer was accustomed to being cut of the office a good deal on business, and was rather worried as to the behavior of his typist while he was away.Scnding for the girl one morning, he asked her: \u201cI hope you just don\u2019t sit and twiddle your thumbs when I\u2019m not in the office ?\u2019\u2019 \u201cOh, no, Mr.Jones,\u201d the girl replied at cnee, \u201cI have my embroidery.\u201d Fat Man (in a movie, to little boj sitting behind him); \u201cCan\u2019t you see, little fellow?\u201d Little Felkw: \u201cNot a thing.\u201d Fat Man: \u2018\u2018Then keep your eye on me and laugh when I do,\u201d SONGWRITER HORIZONTAL 1,3 Man who \u2022wrote the song, \u201cThe Rosary.\u201d 14\tDry.15\tSheafs.17\tMinute object.18\tFinale.19\tCloud.20\tFrozen water.21\tTo nullify.22\tCircular ornament.25 Spar.27 Afternoon meal.30\tPaid publicity.31\tThicket of bushes.35\tCoffee pot, 36\tOne who dallies.37\tBeam.38\tMorindin dye.39\tOleoresin.40\tHam.42 Failings in duty.47 Classes.51 Gun.Answer to Previous Puzzle EAT /ÂjQTlTlUEjHRMA OoHEWwiEÎAiDIŸ SiL N E E DjS AMS® ABLE AP ACiBR !ME ay-U-HQ 52 Odor.¦ 56\tBefore.A 57\tLiver secretion.58\tChamber of law.59\tSeaweed.61\tHe was chiefly a -of songs.62\tHe studied music in-.VERTICAL 1 Babylonian deity.2\tElm.3\tAsafetida.4\tNorse mythology.5\tUlna.6\tMooley apple.7\tRebel.8\tThree.10\tTo eject.11\tIniquity.12\tPassage.13\tCompass point (abbr.).16 Undermines.21 He had a- talent for music., 23\tSportsman.24\tHe was a native of 25\tMother.26\tTo muddle.28\tAge.29\tSome.32\tMeasure of length.33\tTo expire.34\tRuby.38 Form of \u201cbe.\u201d 41 Glass marble.43\tMoney changing.44\tPart of hand.45\tGait.46\tMembranous bags.48\tClose.49\tHence.50\tTo harvest.53\tEggs of fishes, 54\tPlural pronoun.55\tMister (abbr.l 57 Before Christ (abbr.).60 Musical note.r\t2\t3\t4\t5\t6\t7\t8\tu\t?\t10\th\t12\tiTj \t\t\tSi5\t\t\t\tlo\tP\tÏT\t\t\t1 j\t~\t\tir\t\t\t\t\t|||\t2CT\t\t\tr 21\t\t\ti\t¦ft\tH\tm\t22\t23\t\t\t\tb] t\tm\tm\ts,\t\t25 \u2018\t26\t\t\t¦\t1!\tÜ\t 27\t\t2?! !\t| §l|j| n\t\t30\t\tiSîSÉ m\t31\t32\t33\t34\t 35\t\t\tIII J\t5:\t1\t36\t\t\t\t\t\t 57\t\t\t\t\t38\t\t\t37\t\t\t\t \t11\ts\tiifek J*\tHi\t40\t\t41\t\tHi\t|||§§j\t\t 42\t43\t44 : ¦\t45\t46\tM\tw\tif I ¦\t47\t\t42\t49\t50\t ?\t51\t\tM52\t53\t5-1\t55\t\t§È\tsT\t\tL\t 57\t\t\tHi58\t\t\t\t\tgg|57\t\t\t\t60 bT rrrmm\t\t\t\t\tJ L\t\t\tL\tr\t\t\t ?2 SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD.MONDAY, JULY 22, 1940.PAGE FIVE Social and Personal Mr.Xorman M'alk^r, who has.been holidaying in Muskoka, has re-j turned home to Sherbrooke.* * * Mr.and Mrs.Walter Wood havtj left by motor to visit relatives in Kingston, and will also tour other points of interest in Ontario.Major C.L.H.Bowen, who has been a guest for a few days of Mrs.M.P.Smith, Gordon Apartments, has returned to Ottawa.Mr.Kenneth Barlow, son of Mr.and Mrs.Leonard Barlow.Fulton Avenue, left last night for Toronto, to join the R.C.A.F.* * Mr.and Mrs.H.J.Bishop, of Santa Barbara, Calif., are guests of the former\u2019s brother, Mr.C.Guy Bishop, and Mrs.Bishop, Quebec Street.* * * Social events at the Sherbrooke Country Club, including the weekly bridge-teas, are very popular this season and on Saturday afternoon Mrs.W.L.Reford Stewart convened one of the most successful weekly parties yet held at this comfortable rendezvous.The assisting hostesses were Mrs.E.E.Coders, Mrs.J.W.Black, Mrs.A.R.Walters, Mrs.John Hovey, Mrs.C.P.Buckland and Mrs.A.W.Kerridge, the latter doing the honors at the pretty flower bedecked tea table.Mr.and Mrs.Gordon Lynch, ot Westmount, were visitors in Sherbrooke on Saturday.*\t*\t# Mrs.James A.Donald and her small son, John, of Colombo, Ceylon, are guests of Mr.and Mrs.J.K.Edwards, Dominion Avenue.»\t*\t» Mrs.Harold Dorey has returned to Drummondville after spending a week in Sherbrooke as a guest ot Mr.and\tMrs.\tW.\tCarter,\tIsland Street.if *\t* Friends of Mr.Geraid Giroux, King Street West, will be interested to learn that he left last evening for Toronto where he begins training as an observer in the R.C.A.F.In The Womens S pH ere & mount.Miss Gertrude Currie, of, resume of the address given by Miss Montreal, who was a week-end guest Margaret Anne Gray, Organizing at the same home and attended the Secretary for Quebec City and Dis-Broadhurst-Orr wedding in Len-;trict Branches of the Canadian Red ¦ noxville on Saturday, ha?also re-j Cross Society, before the Shcr-.turned to the metropolis.\tj brooke Branch in the City Hall last *\t*\t*\tTuesday evening.Mrs.Sawyer also Miss Evelyn MacDonald.K:ng-i gave a delightful paper on \"Rayon ston Avenue, is leaving this after- Romance.\" noon for Montreal.\tAfter adjournment the session *\t,\t*\tclosed with God Save the King.Mis?A.M.Jameson has arrived There followed a pleasant social ; from Westmount to spend some time hour during which the hostess serv-at Connaught Inn, North Hatley.cj a delicious salad tea, Mrs.Joseph *\t*\t*\tSawyer and Mrs.Hawker doing the Mr.Melville Gifford, son of Mr.honors at the pretty tea tabic with .and Mrs.H.H.Gifford, Portland silver services at either end and ! Avenue, is leaving today for To- lovely pink and white peonies ar-^ \u2018 \"\tranged in a silver bowl as its at- tractive centerpiece.Assisting were Mrs.!.Clark.Mrs.PUTTING CHIC DOWN IN BLACK AND WHITE r Red Cross News :ronto to join the R.C.A.F.» »?* Mr.and Mrs.E.A.Chadsev.oi Mr.and.Mrs.Charles Irony, the latter a sister of Mr.David Echen-berg, Prospect Street, of New York, have arrived in Capelton, where they have taken up residence.* * * Mr.and Mrs.Carroll Lee Cate announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Elizabeth (Betty), to Mr.James Hamilton Lowe, of Sherbrooke, the marriage to take place in North Hatley, August 3.\t| Mrs.W.S.Morris, of Montreal, spent the week-end in Sherbrooke visiting her mother, Mrs.Y.H.Mercereau, \u2018\u2018The Bellevue,\u201d Melbourne Street.Bedford, are spending a week\u2019s holi- Stuart Billing, Mrs.Wesley Billing.! day visiting relatives in Sher- the Misses Dorothy Moe, irma La-1 j brooke and Ayer's Cliff.\tvallee, Virginia Brown, Thelma Bon- \"\t*\t*\tnallie and Myrtle Page.Mr.Robert A.Peck, of Montreal, was a guest for the week-end of Mr.\t-\u2014 land Mrs.W.D.Brosseau, Walton ._________________________________ Avenue.\t1 *\t\"\u2022 MARRIAGES !Mrs.W.F.Wilson, who has been a guest for a week of Mr.and Mrs.O.H.Parker, Short Street, left yesterday for her home in West- j ¦S*- HE WAS THE GIRL OF HIS DREADS- till he took her in his arms \\ SALLY WAS SALLY\u2019S mirror told her she was pretty, but it didn't tell her that she was often repulsive to others.It is surprising how\u2019 many otherwise smart people are Hot-Weather Offenders\u2014when they think they are immune! This is a mistake\u2014especially during this hot, sticky weather.Perspiration, left on the body, under the arms, around the waist, soon goes stale\u2014decomposes.Then YOU have \"B.O.\u201d Don't let \"B.O.\u201d ruin your romance, business and social chances.Check it before it starts with Lifebuoy.For Lifebuoy contains an exclusive deodorizing ingredient not found in any other leading Ihf adult skin has 2 to 3 million swrat glands which act as a cooling system, giving off from 1 to 3 pints of perspiration daily\u2014even when we are silting still.If perspiration stopped, we would die from hyper-pyrexia (heat stroke).Because much of the water in perspiration evaporates, we do not see or feel it.Summer heat, nervous excitement, heavy clothes or warm rooms quickly decompose this sweat deposit\u2014turn it stale\u2014 cause offensive ''B.O.'' (Body Odor).toilet soap.Used in your daily bath, Lifebuoy stops \"B.O.\u201d\u2014\u2022 its peppy, purifying lather washes stale perspiration deposits away.In addition, it is kind to the skin\u201420% milder than many so-called \"beauty\u201d and \"baby\u201d soaps: 'l DONT UNDERSTAND IT,1 HE TOOK ME IN HIS ARMS.AND - THEN.JUST LEFT.V^v /) ha\" SiÜPfcb MAY I MAKE A ONE-WORD SU&OESTlOW AS AN OLD MARRIED WOMAN.LIFEBUOY \"SALLY YOU'RE SO LOVABLE.SO FRESH -AND DAINTY.JUST LIKE THEGIRLOF \\ 'gee! THIS RICH, PEPPY LATHER IS PRETTY KEEN1 LIFEBUOY, YOUANÜ I ARE STARTING A NEW \"H I I IFF TTYrETHFi?MY DREAMS 7M?WEEKS LATER \u2014 OH JOHN ! .IM SO HAPPY, HOLD ME TIG-HT !\" LIFEBUOY NEXT TO OTHERS - VÜU NEED ME MOST/ TOWNSHEND\u2014NEIL The marriage of Bernice, daugh- -r ,\t,\t, 1er t)f Mrs.David Neil, and late Mr.Mr.and Mrs.Arnold Wheeler and Ndl t0 Gunner jaraea Townshcnd, Raymond Stevenson | of Retawawa, Ont., was quietly solemnized in St.Peter\u2019s Church at five o\u2019clock on Saturday afternoon, July 20th, the Reverend Canon H.R.Bigg, officiating.The bride was given in marriage Mr.Gordon Neil, a floor length gown of Mr.and Mrs.spent the week-end in Ottawa, and while there called or, Mr.and Mrs.Walter Demary.* * * Dr.and Mrs.S.J.Usher and their son, Master David, of Montreal, are\tbrother spending a week in Sherbrooke as wore a f1( guests of Mr.and Mrs, David white chiffon s!Tc\\.,a vvhite'hat and Echenberg, Prospect street.\taccessories, and she carried a Colo- nial bouquet of pink sweet peas tied Mr.and Mrs.Irvin Smith, their with white chiffon streamers Mi?son, Master Bruce, Mrs.James Cil- Daisy Harding, the bride's only at-hs, Miss Peggy Cillis and Mrs.Elsie tendant, wore pink sheer fashioned Perkins spent Sunday with the iat- on similar lines to the bride's, a ter\u2019s son, Private Lloyd Perkins, white hat and accessories and car-R.C.A.M.C., in Montreal\tried an arm bouquet of blue delphi- *\t*\t*\tnium and rust colored snapdragon.Gunner Jack Brown, of Petawawa, acted as best man.Following the ceremony a buffet A WELL-EARNED REST The splendid response to the appeal made tao all branches of the Canadian Red Cross Society for increased effort at the time of the invasion of Holland, Belgium and France has resulted in the accumulation of a large stock of hospital supplies and refugee garments, it was announced today by S.J.Corriggal, Commissioner, Orders have been received to slow down for the time being, and from July 27th until September 3rd the work rooms in Red Cross House will be closed.$n his communication to the local branch.Commissioner Corrigall added: \u201cAt this time we take the opportunity of expressing our deep ap-pit .nation of your splendid cooperation ami we thank all those who have so generously given of their time and energy and have worked with such unselfish devotion.We wish you ail a well-earned rest and an enjoyable holiday.\u201d Mr.and Mrs, Thomas Mason, of East Angus, announce the engagement of their eldest daughter, Dorothy Irene, to Mr.Claude Rolfe, son : supper was served at the home of of Mr.and Mrs.Oscar Rolfe, also The bride\u2019s mother, 50 Wolfe Street, of East Angus.The marriage to where a three-tiered wedding cake take place about the middle of\u2018centered the bride's table.August.\t:\t- *\t* *\tBROADHURST-ORU Mrs.J.E.Smith, of Ottawa, and The home of Mr.and Mrs.Edgar her granddaughter, Gillian-Mary ; A.Orr at Milby was the scene of a Donald, of Colombo, Ceylon, are j very pretty wedding on Saturday guests of Mr.and Mrs.A.M.Ed-! afternoon, when their daughter, wards, Dufferin Avenue.Mr, Smith, Wenda Aileen, became the bride of who was a guest for the week-end! Mr.Ralph Savage Broadhurst, of at the same home, has returned to.Waterloo, son of Mr.S.G.Broad-the Capital.\tJ hurst, of Quebec City, and the late *\t*\t*\t| Mrs.Broadhurst, Rev.F.R.Mat- Among the guests who spent the Thews, Pastor of the Lennoxville Uni- week-end at Connaught Inn, North ' ted Church, officiating.Hatley, were Mr.and Mrs.F.K.The ceremony took place at three Ryan, Mr.and Mrs.Taylor and Mr, o\u2019clock on the spacious lawn, where F.M.Raphael, Montreal; Mr.and ( the bridal party stood between tall Mrs.W.S.McCutcheon, Westmount, standard?of delphinium and other and Mr.T.Comrie, St.George de .summer flowers.The wedding march Beauce.Guests on Sunday included , was played by Miss Marion Gurnham, Mrs.Doyle, of Ottawa, Mrs.Frank of Valleyfield.McCrea and Miss Vera McCrea, The bride, who was given in mar-Sherbrooke.\triage by her father, looked lovely in *\t*\t*\ta gown of white georgette over taf- Mrs.D.MacDonald entertained at feta, with a shirred jacket, fashion- an enjoyable suprise party on Sat- ed with short puff sleeves and trim-urday evening at her home on Bel- med with tiny buttons from the high videre Street for her niece.Miss neckline to the waist.Her long flow-Evelyn MacDonald, who left today ing veil was caught with orange for Montreal.Cards were played blossoms and she can-ied an arm bou-at two tables and later little Mary quet of Rapture roses and fern.Isabel MacDonald, the hostess\u2019 dau- Miss Barbara Broadhurst, R.N., of ghter, presented the guest of honor Montreal, .sister of the groom, acted with a tray, laden with many lovely as bridesmaid, and looked charming land useful gifts, the best wishes of in a long pale pink georgette gown her friends being affectionately ex- fashioned on the same lines as that of pressed on the cards attached to the bride, with matching satin jac-the daintly wrapped parcels.Later ket.She wore a large pale pink iace the hostess servd delicious refresh-'hat, with pink accessories, and Garments, assisted by Mrs.R.D.lried a colonial bouquet of roses and Young, Mrs.R.Norton, Miss Ade-j sweet peas.laide MacRae and Miss Agnes Mor- Mrs, Edgar Orr, mother of the risen.\tj bride, was becomingly gowned in a *\t*\t\u201c¦\ti navy blue sheer tnsemble, with white Mr.and Mrs.C.Guy Bishop en-; hat and accessories, and she wore a tertained at a delightful family re- corsage of American Beauty roses, union dinner party yesterday in Mr.Weston H.Orr, brother of the ; honor of Mr.and Mrs.H.J.Bishop, bride, acted as best man.| of Santa Barbara, Calif., who arc Following the ceremony the young ! their house guests at their home on couple received the congratulations Quebec Street.Dinner was served in and best wishes of their guests on a private dining room at the Plea- the lawn, and shortly afterward a i sant View Hotel, North Hatley, ! bridal tea was served at small tables where covers were laid for twenty-.on the lawn, the bride\u2019s table being six.The guests included, in addi-,\twith a linen cloth and center- Tion to Mr.Craig Bishop, of Mont- ed with the beautifully decoratetd | real, and Mr.\tBruce Bishop, sons of\tfour-tier wedding cake, made by the The\thost and\thostess, Mr.and Mrs.\tbride\u2019s mother and\ttopped with a George MacDonald, the latter the tiny vase of sweet peas.A crystal host\u2019s sister, Montreal, Mr.Henry bowl of pink roses on cither side of Bishop and family, Marbleton, Mr.the cake completed the decorations, and Mrs.Gerald Bishop and family, Lea was poured by Mrs.A.Corcoran, Mr.\tand Mrs.\tDean Bishop and fam-\t°f Waterloo, aunt of\tthe groom, and ily,\tMr.and\tMrs.Reginald Bishop\tMrs.O.H.Parker,\tof Sherbrooke, and family, and Mr.and Mrs.Mer- aunt of the bride.Baskets of summer A black and white rayon chock dinner dross is smart enough for dinner and dancing at the country club, yet casual enough for dining at home.It\u2019s the sort of thing you can slip on after a late afternoon swim instead of slacks or a day dross.Unless you are more than size 16, the cut of this mode! makes a girdle unnecessary.Mrs.J.A.Young, of Island Pond.Yt.; j Mr.and Mrs.W.H.Hills, Miss j Helen Hills, and Mr.P.Doyle, of : Richmond; Miss K.Hope Scott, of ; Scotstown ; Mr.arid Mrs.E.0.Boat-tie, of Watervillc.ROSE\u2014ROSS Leeds Village, July 22.- The marriage of Ida May, eldest daughter ! of Mr.and Mrs.Leonard Ross, of j Lcmesurier, to Mr.Hugh Sutherland Rose, eldest son of Mr.and ' Mrs.E.C.Rose, Brnmpton Road, Sherbrooke, took place quietly on ; Saturday evening, July 13, in St.Trames\u2019 Church, Leeds Village, Rev.E.Walker officiating.: Mrs.John Hicks, of Loretteville, , aunt of the bride, presided at the organ, playing the wedding marches, The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore a floor-length gown of pale pink organza over taffeta, a large picture hat and white accessories.After the wedding ceremony an informal reception was held at the home of the bride\u2019s uncle and aunt, Mr.and Mrs.W.L.Ross, Leeds Vil-: lago, where the couple received the congratulations of their friends, after which lunch was served.Later Mr.and Mrs.Rose left for St.George de Beauce, where they will reside, the bride travelling in a blue tailored suit with pink acces-! sories.I D HATE TO BE A WOMAN_ Asked.\t\t\t18% Bid.22 Asked.37s New York Stock Exchange Air Reduction .Am.Car .Am.T.& T.Anaconda Copper .Baltimore & Ohio .Bethlehem Steel .Can.Pacific .Chesapeake & Ohio Chrysler.Du Pont .Genera: Electric .General Motors .Kennecott .N.Y.Central .Texas Guif Sulphur Texas Oil Corp.United Aircraft____ U.S.Rubber .IJ.S- Smelting .U.S.Steel.Woohvorth .Open\tHigh\tLow\tNoon 40\t40\t40\t40 95\t95\t95\t95 160%\t160 Vi\t160%\t160% 19\t19\t19\t19 3 Vs\t3%\t3%\t3% 7 5 Vi\t75%\t74%\t74% 2%\t2%\t2%\t2% 37%\t37%\t37%\t37 Vi 63%\t63 %,\t63%\t63% 157%\t158\t157\t157 31%\t31%\t31%\t31% 43%\t43 %\t43%\t43% 25%\t25 Vs\t25 Vs\t25% 11%\t11%\t11%\t11% 31\t31\t31\t31 38%\t38%\t38%\t38% 33\t33\t33\t33 18%\t18%\t18%\t18% 49%\t49%\t49%\t49% 51\t51\t50%\t50% 32%\t32 Vi\t32%\t32% Country and Dairy Products Prices BONDS Last Sale D.of C, 48/52 3M % 100% Montreal, July 22.\u2014Steady to slightly easier prices ruled local markets over the week-end.The day\u2019s market renort EGGS *Commerce BANKS Last Sale .\t141 Small lots to retailer, cents 34 32 30 follows: At Comm.Exch.cents Net Change Net Change + 1 Carlo ts cents A-l large A-large .24%\t32\t24Va-25 A-medium 23-23 % 30\t23%-24 Pullets , .\t28 B.1914-20 25-251/2 19-20 C .15\t21\t14M-15 Eggs to retailers, as quoted above, are in cartons; when bought loose, prices are 2c per dozen less.BUTTER (cents per Ib.I: At Commodity Exchange: Sales, spot, none.Closing quotes: 92 score, ¦23i/8-%.Futures: Sales, none.Close: November, 24-24%.Open Market, No.1, 2314-%.Small lots to retail rrade, solids, 24; prints, 2414.Cheese (c.per lb.) : Open Market: Ontario white (current make) 14, Ontario colored (current make) 14.POTATOES (per 75-lb.bag) : Quebec No.2 new .\t.90 Virginia (100 lb.bags) IB .\t1.90-2.00 POULTRY: Wholesale prices to retail trade for dressed stock.Per rb.cents 25-26 231/2-24% 20-21 FOREIGN EXCHANGE In Montreal Saturday the buying rate for United Staten dollars was 10 per cent premium and the selling rate 11 per cent premium.Sterling buying was 4.43 and selling 4.47.The following were the nominal closing rates in New York: Sterling\tClose Demand .3.89% Cables .3.90Vi Australia .3.1173 New Zealand .3.1330 Switzerland .2273 Sweden .2390 Brazil.0510 Hong Kong.2472 Yen .2346 Turkeys\u2014Grade A: .Grade B: .Grade C: .Milkfed Chickens\u2014 Grade A :.Grade B: .Selected Chickens\u2014 Grade B: .Fresh Fowl .Brome Lake Ducklings.fCNWISS 5, 1955 .115% 117M fM Ear 5.1949-69 .115% 117M *\u2014Payable Canada and New York, f\u2014Payable Canada, New York and London.\u201cWe must tighten our belts.We must take up again the healthy habit ol toiling hard for small rewards.\u201d The Swiss have done that before.After the Napoleonic era the hardy mountain folk built national prosperity by toil and frugality.Switzerland's valleys are not naturally fertile.There are few mineral lesources.There is no seaeoast.So the Swiss toiled with their hands and tilled the world\u2019s markets with watches, tools, embroidery \u2014 whatever skill and patience could make better and cheaper than their neighbors.On that international trade\u2014augmented by a healthy tourist business \u2014was built Swiss prosperity.Now the trade overseas is cut off sharply, products manufactured for neighboring France are without buyers, and the tourist hotels are empty of paying customers.The 600,000 foreigners who swarmed across the Swiss frontier into the famous Alpine resorts during June were not tourists, but the wounded, war-weary soldiers cut off by rapidly advancing Nazi troops.Few had even a thin French franc, in their uniforms.They could buy nothing.Good-hearted Swiss literally swamped them with gifts.Switzerland's tough little citizen army of 500,000 has been demobilized and sent back to farms and factories.For a while there was some profit from the war to counter-balance the loss of other trade.Arms industries were expanded.The largest orders, however, came from the Allies\u2014and now that trade is lost.Germany and Italy are poor customers.They need the same raw materials Switzerland does, and manufacture much the same goods.PARLIAMENTARY MEMBERS STUDY COAST DEFENCE Group of Forty-Five Parliamentarians Inspect Defences at Halifax and Make Trip to Sea on Destroyer, j _____ By FRANK FLAHERTY (Canadian Press Staff Writer) Halifax, July 22.Oi\u2014A group of naval-minded parliamentarians turned towards Ottawa today, convinced the life of a sailor m ttte Royal Canadian Navy is interesting but arduous.After a day of sight-seeing, inspecting the harbor facilities at Halifax and some of the coastal de-, fence units the forty-five members went to sea with the Navy last night.Aboard a destroyer they passed through the harbor mouth into the broad waters of the Atlantic and f.\u2019l ihe cold spray pour over them' as the dull grey craft whooped >! up to some thirty knots an hour.\u201cBring on that German raider\u201d) sa hi a veteran member from the drought area f Saskatchewan as he struggled to keep his feet in the prow of the warship.\u201cWe are ready for him any time,\u201d, replied a youthful sailor.The sea was calm but the occasional splash of water over the) decks gave* the Parliamentarians an inkling of what life on a destroyer: might be in a rough sea.Many of them met lads from their home con-: stituencies who turned to the Navy , ns :\\ means of doing their hit for; the defence of Canada.Members from British Columbia, j the Prairies.Ontario and Quebec, kept officers and men on the de-j stroyer busy answering questions; about the ship, the guns, the life of the navy.They were particularly interested: in the \u201cpom-pom\u201d guns for anti-j aircraft and were given a demon-1 straiion as several rounds were fired.The veteran Conservative member frr Yukon, George Black, was) one of the few members of the party ! of forty-five who had ridden a war-; ship before.He recalled a visit to) the Grand Fleet during the last war.While convalescing from a wound received in France he was one of; two Canadian officers given a ! chance to go aboard a warship in j the North of Scotland.When word came that the German fleet was cut he was asked to go ashore.\u201cI have no place to go but back to the trenches,\u201d he said.As it happened the ship had received two machine guns for antiaircraft use and no one on board' knew how to unpack or set them : up.So Mr.Black was permitted; to remain on board and make him-j self useful while the Grand Flee! scoured the North Sea in vain search for the enemy.Gordon Tsnnr (Liberal, Halifax) organized and led the group from Ottawa.He was chairman of a study group of Liberal members j which concerned itself with naval i affairs and when the group decided to visit the.coast to see the navy at work an invitation was extended to members of other parties.EAST ANGUS a month with her daughter, Mrs.Hebert Reid, and Mr.Reid, at Hem- mingford.Mr.and Mrs.Clifford Wilson and family have left for their home at West Point, Ya.Friends of Dr.Martin Banfill regret to learn that he is a patient ;n the Sherbrooke Hospital, where he recently underwent an operation for appendicitis.All hope he will make a satisfactory recovery.Mr.and Mrs.Allen Burns and daughter, Miss Aileen Burns, of Montreal, have returned home after spending their holidays as guests of the former's parents, Mr.and Mrs.Joseph Burns.Friends of Mr.Jack Martyn will be sorry to learn that he is quite ill in the Sherbrooke Hospital.Word has been received from Captain Frankie Hughes, who is with No.1 Canadian General Base Depot, in England, that he has received his Sergeants\u2019 stripes.Mr.and Mrs.Aider Wilson were in Sherbrooke to visit the latter\u2019s mother, Mrs.M.A.Smith in the hospital.She remains about the same.Mr.and Mrs.George Rowley and son, James, are at their cottage at Mirror Lake.Mrs.T.H.McElroy, Mr, Chester McElroy, the Misses June and Ruth McElroy and Master Tommy McElroy were week-end guests of Mr.and Mrs.Frank Bell.Mr.A.G.Ware, of Quebec, also spent a week-end at the same home.Mrs.A.G.Ware has returned toi Quebec, after spending two weeks ns a guest of her parents here.Mrs.George Barrell and son, of Claremont, N.H., and Mrs.F.H.j Barter, of Bury, were guests of, Mrs.Ina Sunhury.Mr.and Mrs.Murray Labonte an* spending two weeks at a cot-; tage on Lake Memphremagog.Mr.and Mrs.Lynn Parsons, of Bury, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Henry Labonte.Mr.Barclay Westgate has returned from the Magadalen Islands, where he spent ten months.Mrs.Samuel Cooper is spending TWO MONTREAL WOMEN DROWN I.nbelle, Que., July 22.\u2014t®\u2014 Searchers dragged the waters of Riviere Rouge today for the body of Mr- .II.Harau'-t, twenty-four, who was drowned with her sixteen-year-old sister, Laurette Blanchette, Friday night.Both were from Montreal.It is believed that Mrs.Harault got into difficulties while swimming.Her sister went to her rescue and they both disappeared.The younger girl's body was recovered n few minutes later.FOREST FIRES IN B.C, Nelson, B.C., July 22.\u2014®\u2014Forty-four new forest fires, twenty-one of 1 h in in the immediate Nelson area, were being fought by fire crews today after Saturday\u2019s electrical storm.The outbreaks were believed under control.Old newspapers for sale.One cent a pound.Apply Record Office.Record Want Ads\u2014Cash rates: two cents per word \u2014 Minimum charge of 25c for ten words or less.28-29 28-31 25-26 19 27 STOCK AVERAGES Compiled by tne Montreal Stock PLANS LAURENTIAN WALL STREET STOCKS RESIDENCE SCHOOL RECORD MINOR GAINS Ste.Marguerite, Que., July 22.\u2014 :(P)\u2014Plans for the establishment of a residential boys\u2019 school for Britisn evacuees ana Canadian students on \u201cDemain d'Esterel,\u201d Baron Empain\u2019s modern Laurentian esta/, near here, were considered Saturday by a special committee of the Compagnie Mobiliers de Ste.'Marguerite, a branch of the Em pa in interests in Canada.After the netting, Col.Wilfrei Bovey, Chairman, said the Committee had formed a \u201cfavorable'\u2019 opinion of the preliminary survey of the $3,000.000 resort's grounds and facil ities, submitted by Prof.Ross Winter of Queen's University, Kingston.If adopted, the plan would call for the converisor.of sonic o\" th ¦ nsort\u2019s lavish cabins and wt n the commercial buildings overlooking Lac Masson, into residences and classrooms for abcut 250 guest students, most of them from Britain.New York, July 22.\u2014(Æ*)\u2014Minor gains for leaders crept into the stock market today, but many issues failed to move.On the upside at a slow opening were U.S.Steel, Bethlehem, American Telephone, General Electric, Montgomery Ward and Pennsylvania.North American and IVool-worth were down a shade.While domestic purchases are continuing at a relatively high level, it was added, previous heavy coverage is causing some consumers to withdraw at least temporarily from the market.Exchange:\t10\t20\tSO\t15 \tUtil\tInd.\tComb\tGolds Close .\t53.6\t58.3\t56.7\t62.00 Prev.day\t, 53.1\t58.7\t56.8\t62.GS Week ago\t.52.0\t57.4\t55.6\t58.18 Month ago\t51.7\t57.9\t55.8\t59.06 Year ago\t66.8\t74.4\t71.8\t112.55 1940 high\t.69.2\t92.2\t84.4\t100.81 1940 low\t50.7\t56.0\t54.7\t55.16 1939 high ,\t.70.1\t93.8\t84.9\t126.48 1939 low\t.55.9\t63.2\t62.7\t83.60 1238 high\t.69.3\t88.8\t81.9\t130.77 1938 low .\t.57.6\t61.1\t60.5\t103.06 1929 high\t3 98.4\t174.5\t182.8\t 1029 low .\t125.0\t83.9\t98.6\t.LATVIAN PRESIDENT IS GRAVELY WOUNDED CANADIAN BONDS Following are the closing bids and asked, quotations as at July 20, as furnished by the Investment Dealers\u2019 Association of Canada: Dominion Government Bonds: Bid Asked 2,\tJune 1, 1944 .9.9% 100% 2Vi, June 1, 1943 .101% 102% 2Vi, Nov.15, 1944 .101 % 192% 2Vi, Nov.15, 1944 .102% 103% 3,\tPerps .87% 3 June 1, 1950-55 .96% We Take Pleasure in announcing the appointment as our representative in the Eastern Townships of ALLAN G.MUIR 45 Vimy Street \u2014 Sherbrooke.Phone 3282 Nesbitt, Thomson & Company LIMITED 355 St.James Street West, Montreal Branches in the principal cities of Canada FOR CANADA THE EMPIRE AND FREEDOM DO YOUR PART ENLIST NOW THE ROYAL RIFLES OF CANADA CANADIAN ACTIVE SERVICE FORCE m AMALGAMATION WITH THE SSI HUSSARS RECRUITING STATIONS AT QUEBEC 88% 97% 06% KNOWLTON For sale at 132 William St., Cowansville, Que., attractive modern seven-room house.Sunporch, garden.London, July 22.\u2014 (® \u2014Yn Exchange Telegraph report that Gote-borg quoted Swedish sources today saying that Karl Ulmanb.former President of Latvia, was gravely wounded and in a hospital at Riga.fiONTRËâi \"The Ale of Good Taste\u2019 Before transforming Latvia into a Socialist Republic and petitioning for membership in the Sovi- Union, the country\u2019s new Communist rubrs decreed the ouster last week of sixty-two-year-old Ulmanis, who helped write the Latvian declaration of independence in 1918.3,\tJune 1.1953-58 3%, June 1, 1946-49 .3%, Nov.15, 1948-51 3%, Feb.1, 1948-52 .3%, June 1, 1956-66 .13%, Oct.15, 1944 .101% 102% 4,\tOct.15, 1943-45 .105% 4.\tOct.15, 1947-52 .103% 4%, Sept.1, 1940 .100 4%, Oct.15, 1944 .108% 4%, Feb.1, 1946 .109%\t110% 4%, Nov.1, 1946-56 .106\t107 4%, Nov.1, 1947-57 .106% 107% 4%, Nov.1, 1948-58 .106% 107% 4%, Nov.1, 1949-59 ___107% 108% 5,\tNov.15, 1941 .104%\t105 5, Oct.15, 1943 .108%:\t109% Dominion Govt.Guar.: jCNR 2, 1942 .100%\t101% CNR 2, 1943 .100\t101 .95 V .100% 101% .99% 100 Vi .99% 100% 97%\t98% 106% 104% 100% 109% COURTESY AIDS WAR EFFORT Revelstoke, B.C., July 22.\u2014(P\u2014N.Nalley cf Tacoma.Wash., has made $100 contribution to Canada's war effort in appreciation of courtesy shown him by the Canadian people on a hunting trip last fall.The cheque was received by J.A.Abra-hamsen, Secretary of the Rsve!-stoke Beard of Trade.jCXP 2%, 1944 CNR 2%.1946 CNR 3, .\u2019944 .100% 101% .98%\t99% .102% 103% CNR 3, 1945-50 .96% CNR 3, 1948-52 CNR 3.1948-53 .CNR 3, 1954-59 tCXR 4%, 1951 jtCXR 4%, 1937 rCNR 4%, 1957 .tCNR 4%.1955 CNR 5.1934 96 .95% .94% .110% .111% 113 .111% 113 .113% 115 .114% 115% 97% 97 96% 95% 112% fCNR 5, 1949-69 .115% 117 THE NEED IS URGENT SPEED IS ESSENTIAL ENLIST IN THE SHERBROOKE REGIMENT N'.P.A.M.A MECHANIZED MACHINE-GUN BATTALION NOW MOBILIZING FOR THE DEFENCE OF CANADA TRAINING IN MACHINE GUN AIR DEFENCE TANK DEFENCE SIGNALLING MAP-READING The regiment will soon pro ceed to camp for special train ing in musketry.Enlist in your home-town unit for the defence of your country Courses of instruction soon be under way.will RECRUITING 9 a.m.to 9 p.m.DAILY AT THE WILLIAM ST.ARMORY COLONEL M.W, McA\u2019NULTY, Officer Commanding.RECRUITS WANTED BY: THE ROYAL RIFLES OF CANADA CANADIAN ACTIVE SERVICE FORCE, (Lieut.-Col.W.J.HOME, M.C., COMMANDING), in amalgamation with Hie 7/111h Hussars.The above C.A.S.F.unit is now recruiting to full strength and will accept applicants who meet the medical standards for immediate enredmest.Apply to the nearest of the following recruiting stations: The Armouries, Quebec City, or\tRiverbend, Danville,\tGaspe, Bury,\tMatapedia, Kenogumi,\tComeau Bay.Rr -ruitJ who nre atterted and pc -
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