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Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
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vendredi 15 août 1930
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  • Sherbrooke gazette ,
  • Sherbrooke examiner
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  • Sherbrooke record
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Sherbrooke daily record, 1930-08-15, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" Sailu Swnrè Established 1897.SHERBROOKE, QUE., FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1930.Thirty-Fourth Year.R-100 CONTINUES TO MAKE GOOD SPEED IN SPITE OF SEVERE RAIN British Dirigible, Forging Homeward After Her Visit to Canada, Last Night Narrowly Escaped Terrific Storm\u2014 Navigation Officers Manoeuvred Ship Down to 1,000 Feet Above Sea Level and She Cleared Disturbed Area Soon After\u2014In Spite of Weather, Ship Continues to Maintain Her Pace and AH Is Well on Board.STILL GOING STRONG ST.LOUIS, Aug.15.\u2014 The endurance monoplane Greater St.Louis, piloted by Dale Jack-son and Forest O\u2019Brine, had been in the air 598 hours at 5:11 a.m.(C.S.T.), today, more than forty-four hours longer than the previous record for sustained flight, SHAMROCK CHEF KEPT REGULAR DIET FOR CREW FIFTY-TWO NEW CONCERNS HAVE BEEN REPORTED Aboard the airship* R-100, Aug.15.\u2014 The R-100, giant British dirigible, forging homeward after her visit to Canada last night narrowly escaped a terrific storm which came rushing down upon her shortly after sunset.As evening fell the temperature dropped sharply and great black clouds filled the sky.Navigation officers manoeuvered the ship down to 1,000 feet above the level of the sea and she cleared the area of the disturbance soon after.Passengers watching the onrush from the promenade deck, were loud in their praise of the ship and the ease with which it was handled in a situation which, for a few moments, looked like an emergency.Shortly afterwards a deluge of rain poured down from the dirigible i 586,076 for the previous week, and but seemed not to check her spead in i^ith seventy-four, with a capitaliza Had Authorized Capital of $6,-071,000, According to Monetary Times, for Week Ended August 13.TORONTO, Aug.15.\u2014New companies to the number of fifty-two with an authorized capital of $6,-071,000, were reported to the Monetary Times during the week ended August 13, 1930, as compared with seventy-nine with a capital of $16,- RAIN REDUCED ATTENDANCE AT WATERLOO FAIR PROVINCE IS READY TO AID UNEMPLOYMENT Premier Taschereau Says that Provincial Government Is Ready to Co-operate to Utmost With Federal Government.Storm or Calm Failed to Interfere With Charlie Dann Preparing Three Square Meals a Day on Board Shamrock V.NEW LONDON, Conn., Aug.15.\u2014A famous general once said that ; an army travels and fights on its | Quebec to co-operate to the limit in ! stomach.If, by the same token, a | relieving any unemployment which I crew sails a racing yacht on their may exist in this province.Premier QUEBEC, Aug.15.\u2014Reaffirming the decision of the Province of Close Heats Featured Final Day\u2019s Racing at Waterloo Fair\u2014 Interesting Horse Display Seen at Grand Stand.WATERLOO, Que.Aug.15.\u2014The weather man was most unkind to the managers of the Shefford County Agricultural Association on this concluding day of their three-day fair here yesterday.Threatening clouds hung over the surrounding country all the morning and before noon a gentle rain began to tall, which kept up all the afternoon.Doubtless this had the effect of keeping thousands away from the grounds.As it was hundreds of the least.She continued to maintain i t'on o1 $1-1,994,800, for the eorres-j\t.'¦be e,ernents and her pace and all was well cn board, j Ponding week of last year.From .'ere * ^ repal^°r t]1\u20acll pa\u2018ns\u2019 the weeh ended January 6, 1929, i) |\t.sawrT,, best racing oi the week ended August 10, 1929, new 1\tThe\t\"'as very heavy companies totalled 3.576, with a P?alm,ost ankle deep in mud anil anrl from ! '«oke events on the card would have to be declared off, but the horsemen ere anxious to race and the di- ¦jehow, the boys on the Shamrock V, Sir Thomas LiptqWs fifth challenger for the America's Cup, should line up and give a hearty British seaman\u2019s cheer for old Charlie Dann.Charlie was cook aboard the Shamrock V on her stormy passage and one every one of the twenty-six days at sea he serveu up three hot meals.Charlie is in his 61st year.He found and passed the last forty-four of life\u2019s milestones out on the deep blue water as a ship's cook, having listened to the sea\u2019s call at the age of sixteen.There were days of calm and days of storm during the voyage over but each day old Charlie mixed up a batch of dough and baked a fresh batch of bread for twenty-; three robust appetites.Charlie was I past the age whan his Majesty ex Taschereau and Hon.J.N.Franco eur, Minister of Public Works and Labor, announced at the close of the meeting of the Cabinet that means were being taken to carry on effective relief.\u201cThe Province of Quebec is ready to co-operate with the Federal Government in meeting the requirements,\u201d staged Premier Taschereau, \u201cand if you see Hon.J.N.Fran-coeur.the Minister of Public Works and Labor, he will tell you what stand he has taken in this connection.\u201d From Hon.J.N.Francoeur came the declaration that he had already acted on requests made by Senator Gideon Robertson, regarding the situation in this province.\u201cI have been asked to supply to the Minister of Labor, in tOtawa, j figures regarding unemployment in : f-Us c\tCP 1,\t\u201e Î ~ » _ C T _l-_ DISCUSSING RETURN OF AIRSHIP IN SEPTEMBER! capital of $1,189,566,590 \u2019 and'from j 1}_J^ked_atiuone tinjG a* if all thro -\tj week ended January 4, 1930, to i *\" ABOARD THE AIRSHIP R-100, j week ended August 13, 1930, there I D< August 15.\u2014 Safety, comfort ami ! were 2,8?8 with $564,003,950 of |w\t, ,\t,\t,\t, , capital.\ti rectors, although they had a good 1 excuse not to comply with their wishes and thus save the association several hundreds of dollars, resolved to keep faith with the horsemen.Although all three rai»ss were run in straight heats, several heats ! furnished close and exciting con-\\ tests.: The results of the races were as j follows: 2:23 Class, Purse $130 , ,\t! Estella U (E.Dionne) .1 1 1 commercial air travel.Should this > Bishops of Anglican Church at Vo,° Gale (W.H.Rediker) 2 2 4 he the ease the mrshm.ai, W i\tConfereaw ''_______'Ereraom,\tChevalier «\t\u201d\t\u2019 pected his subjects to come to the ! this province.The Minister of Labor j colors, but ne signed on ot course I has to;d me that; as far ag Iarge I as a seagoing cook, and ms bit cities and towns were concerned, he lasted four and a haif years in the was getting }n touch personal]y navy during the late war.And any with Ule situation to get figures re | man who can keep his kettles on a speed of airship flight are beinu amply demonstrated on this flight.Early in the afternoon, after flying for fifteen hours, the ship passed the Canadian Pacific steamship Empress of Australia, which left Montreal thirty hours ahead of us.The encounter between the airship and the liner was an impressive contact between the new and the old.According to plans which have been tentatively discussed, the R-100 may return to Canada in September to inaugurate regular trans-Atlantic MANY MATTERS ARE DISCUSSED AT CONFERENCE jgoucy ouuiic wml - a racing sleep plunges and dives through 4,000 miles of sea and spray is spry enough and game erough to fight a few more wars for his King uni country.Charlie wanted advice about New London.\u201cRum go.this prohibition, he complained.\u201cEh, what?\u201d garding the number of unemployed.As a iresult, I have limited my inquiries to the smaller towns under TSINAN REPORTED RECAPTURED I HANKOW, Aug.15,\u2014Despat-1 j ches early today said that Nan-1 king troops this morning recap- j | tured Tsinan, important North J ! China city.The Northern army : was reported fleeing northward j ! and leaving behind large quanti- i ! ties of ammunition and supplies .-* SATISFACTORY GRAIN EXPORTS FROM DOMINION PRACTICALLY NO HOPE HELD OUT FOR SAFETY OF ENTOMBED MINERS Probably Forty-Eight Lives Wiped Out by Tragedy in Blakeburn Mine at Colmont, B.C.\u2014Rescuers Themselves, Working Heroically to Reach Their Comrades, Came Out of Mine Portal Reeling Like Drunken Men, Semi-Poisoned With Deadly Gas Which Pervades Workings.\u2022* Some Very Gratifying Information Contained in July Report of E.A.Ursell, Statistician to Board of Grain Commissioners.FORT WILLIAM, Ont., Aug.15.\u2014 Gratifying grain exports from Canada are noted during the 1929 crop year just brought to a close, in the July report of E.A.Ursell, statistician to the Board of Grain Commissioners.RINCETON, B.C, Aug.15.\u2014Early today hope was virtually abandoned for the safety of forty-six miners entombed in the Blakeburn Mine at Colmont, B.C., for the past day and a half.The rescuers themselves, working heroically to reach their comrades, came _____\t| out of the mine portal reeling Duch.li .f A,hull Carrying Teui^rlS AIRSHIP CREW LEFT BY BOAT FOR HOMELAND Members of Westbound Crew cf R-100 Back to England MONTREAL, Aug.15.\u2014 One technical expert and nine members of the westbound crew of the R-100 m,ari92s?\u201eyÆ.hw\u201c!,r?dS:;\u2018*IM **»*\u2022* Tb\"ak P1* culties were encountered in the mar- ! rnorn,n£ on Canadian Pacific keting of the exportable surpluses : liner Duchess of Atholl.Glad to be of grain than in any previous year ' on their way home, the crew mem-in the recollection of the Canadian I bers were somewhat disconsolate at grain trade\u201d, says the report.\t|\thaving to revert to the older mode Mr.Ursell\u2019s figures on the total1 of trans-Atlantic travel, after mak- carry-over of wheat included the ! ing their first crossing by air.j no/i\tt_ wheat in transit in the United States j The crew members, who boarded ! day and a haif of\tpierce prevades the workings.The stark reality of the tragedy which has probably wiped out forty-eight lives, including those of two 1 miners whose bodies have already been recovered, has gathered upon the colliery town, and only faint hope remains in the breasts of wives, children, parents and sisters of the lost men.Despair hangs like a pall today over the stricken mining town of Coalmont, B.C.Down in the depths of the Blakeburn Coal Mine, in the gass-filled confinement of a caved-in-shaft, forty-six miners are trap- LOYOLA COLLEGE RECTOR HAS LEFT FOR WINNIPEG and\tat United States points, placing j\tthe Duchess of Atholl late last the\tcarry-over for 1930 as actually |\tnight, are Riggers F.Williams, J.less\tthan tnat of a year ago.]\tc.Flatters, L.Cutts, C.H.Rumsey ten\tHtoiiMnd\t^onnletinn\tI During the crop year, the report ;\tand Engineers E.J.Stupple, D.Lel- ed\tto\tdo\tI\tdo\tnit1 think I wifi be i\t°UV Eu1î'opeanJ c\"Jntrie?!lott- R- Ball< J- SU-geon and J.Mil- ea to do.l do not,think i will be reaped exceptionally good crops of ward aoie to get an the figures m before : wheat and coarse grain.In addition \u2019\t________________ the 20th as suggested in the letter, , to their native supplies, Argentina *r A fïTïimn\trv m view of the meeting of the Labor had shipped very large quantities oUmAlgVLv IJL||| Council in Ottawa.This is very little 1 unsold wheat, although all storage I\"/\u2019! Ill LuJ lUjlil/ time to get all the information on spare at the various ports were : hand.I have also applied to the 1 fully occupied and the vessels in Government employment bureau at which _ r\tStrWIgly Lady Jose (P.E.Hauver) 5 Defended Christian Standard Do^y Dewey M.L.Martin- of Family and Marriage and Timef 2.25\u2019;\u20192!24-i-4;\u2019 2 284 Also Took Up Question oF 2:20 Class, Purse $150 Birth Control.\tiJoe Hil1 Archambault) 1 I Laura Mac (A.O.Choniere) 2 be the case the airship, on her re- j turn voyage to England, will carry Premier R.B.Bennett and his colleagues to the Imperial Conference.Delegates in this way will save valuable time, enjoy a very comfortable journey and learn at first hand the value of air travel and the inevitability of its development in the very near future.Newspaper representatives aboard the dirigible, seeking to be helpful, got themselves in Dutch with the ship\u2019s officers.They volunteered to pump petrol to the engines; in some fashion a dump valve had been left open and an irate officer demanded to know what they meant by pumping petrol into the sea.Luckily the mistake was quickly discovered and ! clearly felt moral obligation to limit fuel\t\u2018 \u2018\t.\t_ t wras arriving had to be large to co-operate.\ti charted as storage accommodation \u201cI must admit, however, that I do ! until they could be unloaded.To not really believe that the situation ! l0 this, several European coun-^ Rev Dr Eric G Bariletf SJ for \u2022 H this province is as bad as in other ! tylcs\u2019 partly owing to financial \u201e\t*\t* V,\u2019\t, ! sections of Canada.What proves j ^gency and partly to encourage Five Years Recior of Loyola i this is that out of a few hundred I\till\u2014a College, Y/iil Be Attached Jesuit Parish in Winnipeg.LONDON, Aug., 15\u2014The Lambeth I PearLG?ie'?od\u2019 P\u2019 K Conference of Bishops of the Ang\u2019.i- 4 dr.MEETING WITH THEIR LEADER through to the interior, are still toiling, but almost hopelessly.Equipped with masks and the latest safety devices, the rescue crews have struggled along two-thirds of the mines 3,500-foot shaft, but the last portion is the hardest, task.Relief workers are being rushed in for short shifts, but in the close air of the coal passages, worker after worker is hurried back to the pithead semi-conscious.The entombed miners are believed to be nearly 1,800 feet down a twenty-degree slope, starting more than.1,500 feet from the entrance to the haulage tunnel.Reports of a formal inquest into the death of two men whose bodies Hauver) can Church, which was just conclud- Pe^e\u201e^P- ^Chi-te) i ed its sessions, strongly defended the ; Christian standard of the family and j of marriage and also took up the question of birth control.On this the conference agrees that methods of control might be used in \u201cthose cases where there is such a only a few gallons of precious was lost.or avoid parenthood\u201d.Provided this j were done in the light of Christian I principles, birth control from motives of selfishness, luxury or mere j convenience was strongly condemn-! ed.1 The suggestions of the bishops, published in a lengthy encyclical I yesterday, were given wide promi-j nence in the London press and the i reports overshadowed even the j voyage of the R-100 and the troubles in India.It was remarked that if I this newspaper display accurately - I gauged public interest, the frequent June Figures, Showing Exports contentions that the community has become indifferent to religious mat-to Canada from United States ters seemed wide of the mark.I l enn nnn nnn tl Onc seventy resolutions pass-Less by l(iiU,UUU,uUU than led by the Lambeth Conference of Fmnnrlc AUn :-^ugfican Bishops, which has set for P\tfive weeks under the chairmanship ! of the Archbisop of Canterbury, FIGURES SHOW A DECREASE IN EXPORT TRADE Time: 2.25 1-4, 2.24 1-4, 2.26.Free-For-All Class, Purse $230 Holt (H.Bouchard).1\t1\t1 Polly Peter (C.W.\tChute)\t3\t2\t2 Marque (Simmons)\t.2\t3\t3 John S., (E.Dionne)\t.\t4\t4\t4 Time: 2.20 3-4, 2.19 3-4, 2.21 1-2.The track officials were starter, announcer and judge of light harness horses, O.M, J.Ingalls; judges, R.M.Demers, Di.C.E.Hayes, Walter Coombs; clerk of the course, Armand Boulay.By special request, Mrs.C.A.Odell of Waterloo, exhibited one of her beautiful saddle horses and some of her ponies in front of the grand stand.They were much admired and roundly applauded by the spectators.MONTREAL, August 15.\u2014 Rev.\t.Dr.Erie G.Bartlett, S.J., rector of they wish to get west Frontier Showed Little for the afternoon shift, of whom There is still work quirements position, as import re- j were unusually small, i Loyola College for\tthe past five\t- ava'^a^e and, when the cases are .\tIn addition, although there was a'\tChange Yesterday.years, left last night\tfor Winnipeg\treally needy, ones, generally work\tgreat scarcity of wheat and food in I\t- where he will be attached to the ,can be supplied.\u2019\tja large area of northern China, the; BOMBAY, India, Aug., 13.\u2014 Jesuit parish of St.\tIgnatius.The\tI Pending final action by Ottawa,\tdecline in the value of silver effec-1\tThe prisoners of Poona\tand\tthe former rector made\tmany friends\tj the Government here has taken a ¦\ttually prevented the sale of a larger |\tprisoners of Allahabad\tmet\tagain ion ' Portion of the surplus in the oriental * yesterday in Mahatma Gandhi\u2019s! during his stay in Montreal, both J very energetic stand in connection ! for himself and for the institution 1 with the relief of unemployed.In | market than was actually taken.| quarters in the Yeroda jail, but ter-of which, until recently, he was the addition to the large number of Under these circumstances it is a j minated their conversion abruptly head.\t1\t\u2019\t'\t.\ti™».\u2014 .j ->- \u2014* \u2019\t*'\t-\t- An active man.Father Bartlet brought to his work as head of the only one escaped, John Parchelle.who was released by the rescue crews near the mine-entry.C.A.Smith, forty, and Albert Cole, nineteen, are the two men whose bodies have been removed from the shaft.Last Year ^ewer.WASHINGTON, D.C., Aug., 13.1 j declared: \u201cWhere there clearly felt \u2014Exports to Canada from the Unit- i moral obligation to limit or avoid ed States during June were about parenthood, the metned must be de-$20,000,000 less than for the same I C1^0f\u2018 on ^ hnstian principles, month last year.Imports were ! an encyclical summarizing the about $88,000,000 less.\t! «suits of the five weeks\u2019 délibéra - The figures are, exports: 1930\u2014 !lons> H s.a!d -in ^dition: \u201cEmpires $59,715,152;\t1920\u2014$80,483,894.Imports: 1930\u2014$36, 503.217; 1929 \u2014$44,315,288.Canada usually the best customer of the United States, maintained that status during the month.Contraction of foreign trade of the United States during June in absolute totals was .110ft evident in the exchange with Europe, but the realtive decline in exports was greatest in South American trade.Figures from the commerce department showed both imports and exports to Europe were approximately $300,000,000 less in June this year than ;n the same month of 1929.Similarly, United States imports from Asia dropped off between the same two periods by about $34,-000,000, a part of the decline being attributed to low prices for rubber as much as to decrease in quan-lity of goods moved.LANDS CALMETTE CULTURE OSLO, Norway, August 15.\u2014 During discussion at the International Tuberculosis Conference, which is meeting hero, Dr.E.A.Watson, Canada\u2019s representative, yesterday, commenting on the effi-\u2022acy of Dr.Leon Calmette\u2019s anti-Lu\u2019 crcular vareiratbn.Dr.Watson stated he had been able to obtain lesions of tuberculosis during experiments on animals conducted with strains of the Calmette culture.have perished before now because the dry rot of laxity and corruption in home life set in.\u201d The Bishops\u2019 treatment of marriage and di\u201dorce, it was said, was considered to reaffirm the principle and standard of marriage as \u201clifelong and indissoluble union for better of for worse of one man with one woman to the exclusion of all others on | either side.\u201d\tj Other subjects developed in the I conference report were the growing tendency toward Christian unity throughout the world, denunciation of armaments a dar per to peace, affirmation of non-exclusion of any one from a worship on account of color race and humanization of religion with a \u201cnew \u2019 emphasis upon the appeal to the mind as well as to the heart.\u201d TWO TRAINMEN WERE KILLED IN ACCIDENT CHAPPELLS, S.C., Aug.15.\u2014 Beneath the twisted wreckage of a Southern Railway passenger engine the bodies of two trainmen lay buried early today, while wrecking crews worked to extricate them.Two coaches and a Pullman car followed the engine from the tracks last night, when the speeding train crashed into a cow.The cars did not overturn, however, and no passengers were injured.NAMED VICE-CHAIRMAN OF men employed on road work, repairs i I1,lat;ter °f much gratification that until today after a session of two! T ONDON Ann- 15____.ïii- Afalcnlni have been started in several public ! ^\tof Canadian w-heat and j hours.\t; Robert son a ndS ir A^h i \" aid Wei- buildings, and most likely some im-\tY \u201cl?16 than ! .\tWednesday\u2019s participants.; have been appointed' deputy portant public works will be started j ya®\u2019250\u2019000 bushels fùr the crop including the Mahatma himself, the chairman of the Royal Empire^o- shortly in Quebec.Three Rivers \u2018 T,\u2018\t., .,\t,\t- ,,\t' t1w0 *se\u201crus and -?1rs.Sarojini Nai- c:etv ^ aoDointnunU bpircr as- \"¦nd the metropolis\tThe official statement of the carry-I du, were present, as v/ere Sir Tej ; -Pk ; .u appointments being as .nd the metropolis.\tover, issued by the Dominion : Bahadur Sapru and Mr.Jayakar !lnbld to thJ S.oclety s frowmg mem* Bureau of Statistics yesterday, indi- ( the moderates of the workers\u2019 con-: berSalP an\u2019 w c''tor Mr' s*rn>'\t-\t-\t8- ust 10th.\t(Joseph McVetty.Officers of Ladies\u2019 Auxiliary, Frontier Branch cf Canadian Legion, Elected.STANSTEAD, Aug.14.- At a meeting held on Wednesday, August 6th, a Ladies\u2019 Auxiliary was formed in connection with the Stanstead Frontier Branch, Canadian Legion cf the British Empire Service Legion.Fifteen ladies attended this meeting and elected the following members as their officers for the ensuing year: President, Mrs.P.Milnes.Stanstead; first vice-president, Mrs.C.Miller, Beebe; second vice-president, Mrs.G.Duncan, Graniteville; secretary, Mrs.M.Struthers, Rock Island; treasurer, Mrs.G.Mann, Graniteville.The first general meeting is called for Wednesday, September 10th, at eight o\u2019clock at the home of Mrs.H.S.Beane, at Beebe.All ladies shall be eligible for membership in the Auxiliary who have served with the forces of the British Empire or the Allies in the Great War, or in any of the wars of the Empire, and the mothers, sisters and daughters of - I such women, widows, wives, mothers, motored to Middletown Springs, Vt., -u^3\u2019 iBaker ana ^ Gra1t\u2019 °Diisters and daughters, also grand-during the past week, where there Montreal, were Sunday guests of j mothers, granddaughters, eighteen were guests at the homes of the MrJ-and MIS\u2018 H.Davideon.\t! years and over, of the men who Messrs.Lawrence and Thomas Gem-\tE' Ç.ralg has ^turned home, [served with the said forces during mell.\t:, a\u201c?r sPendin& some time in Mont- - the Great War, may also become Mrs.Margaret Moulton Jias re-|re^\u201e p\tiuti\u201e\tmembers.It is hoped that as many as possible will endeavor to be present.Helen Bailey, of Watertown, Mass., September 16th.were guests on Tuesday, of Mr.and | LADIES FORMED ORGANIZATION AT STANSTEAD ASFESTOS ORFORD LAKE Mr.and Mrs.Ben Bush, Mr.and Mr.and Mrs.C.L.MacKay, Mrs.Bert Kendall and the Misses Messrs.Douglas and Lawrence Mac-Kendall.of Sherbrooke, were visit- Kay were recent guests of Mr.and ors on Sunday at Mr.J.A.Beli\"s.' Mrs.Wesley Bidgood, at Rich-Mr.E.A.P.owe left on Monday mord, night for Bridgeport, Conn., to Miss Florence McVetty, of Bos-visit his aste- and her family.: ton, Mass., is spending her hoK- turned to her home, in Groveton, j\tMc^ee and ltt e sons' °* N.H., after a three-months\u2019 st!>''\u2018 - _ontrea1' with her sister, Mrs.Sarah Smith, i\tT -c\tnr - i Sunday guests at the home of Mr.¦ \u2022\t^°\"\u2019a °f\u201e?ILntrea'' and Mrs.A.H.Cairns were Mr.and\tp/ly th Mr' and Mrs.Horace Cairns, Miss Edith T:\tL 5 f «\t, Cairns and Mr.Hugh Cairns, of vTherWeT|k'^d^1Uensts of ^ and Sawyerville.and Mr and Mrs.Alf.Robinson, of Sherbrooke.\tS- 4G'\t\u2019 f Mon\u2018real* and \u2019\tMiss Hazel Dmgman, of Magog.j Vr\tCowan, of this place, | xhe >fiSSes Maymie and Marjorie and Mr.R.Ashe, of ^and Hill, were Parker are spending a few days at HATLEY Mr.and Mrs.Vincent Avery and i days with her parents, Mr.and on a fishing trip for a couple of Longueuil.Vetty,\tdays, during the past week, and re- ____________' Mr.and Mrs.Stanley Bell left on (Mrs.Joseph Me Friday_night.en route for Phiiadçl- Mr.and Mrs.Alvin Burwash and ; port a very good catch.phia.From there they will motor Master Donald Burwash, of Sher down to Valencia.Pa., to visit the .brooke.were Sunday guests of Mr.former's parents, Mr.and Mrs.F.£nd Mrs.J.L.Pope.L.Rowe for an indefinite time.Mrs.Margaret Lowery, Miss Mr.M.A.Covell, of East Angus, Maggie and son, Mr.Henry Wilson was at Mr.A.L.Coveil's, on Aug- spent Sunday with friends in Wes-ust 11th.\tlevville.Mrs.Percy Hal! was the guest \u2018Mrs.John Forgrave, Jr., was of Miss A.Covell, on Saturday, Aug- called to Moe\u2019s River recently by ust ^9th.\t_ _\t\u201e,\t.\t, the illness and death of her mother, Mr.!:.invars, of 'herbrook?Mr;.Austin.Mr.Forgrave and Mr.wa- at Mr.E.A.Rowe's on August; and Mrs.V.G.Wilson attended Ihfh.\tthe funeral of the late Mrs.Austin on August 5th.Miss A.Brown was the week-end Murray Martin, Mrs.Wm.Gorringe guest of friends in Lennoxville.Miss and Miss Isabel Gorringe were visit-Brown also visited her sister, Mrs.1 osr m town on Sunday.Roy Suitor, at the Sherbrooke Hcs- Mr.Earl Steward was a week-pital.\t! end guest of his parents, Mr.and Mr.and Mrs.John Gemmell were Mrs.J.A.Steward, in Lennoxville, on Monday to see Mrs.B.Sprague and children re-Mrs.Gemmell\u2019s sister-in-law, Mrs.turned to- Boston, Mass , on Saturday Alec Sanders, who is quite ill.: having spent the past three weeks, - ; the guests of her mother, Mrs.Fin- COATICOOK\tlay MacDonald.Mrs.W.W.Mingle, of Drum- Dance at the Wigwam, Newport, j m°nd CourtA APartments, Montreal.SCOTSTOWN Mr.and Mrs.J.L.Pope were in Sherbrooke, Friday and were guests Big crowd every Saturday night.st -Mr- Alvin Burmash\u2019s.Silver Lake Pavilion, Marbleton.BROWN\u2019S HI LI - i again.Mrs.M.Nicholson, of Richmond;; Miss The Misses Veneda and Minnie Olsen, Master George and Cari Olson, of Sherbrooke, are guests of Mr.and Mrs.Verne Wilson.\t\u201c\t, .Miss Lillian Taylor has been vis-|A.McLeod, of Lowell, Mass., and .\tvisitors of .Mr.and Mrs.Ring friends in Sherbroooke and^Rev.Norman McLeod, of Schenec- Baa.geL were, ,^lss Hrece East Angus.\tjtady,, N.Y., were callers at the Fhilco Radio orchestra fashion follies.MELBOURNE bbo and Miss Marjorie Farquhar, of (North Hatley, accompanied Mrs.H.j A.Martin home, from the Sher-! brooke Hospital.Her many friends are pleased to see Mrs.Martin home Mrs.Wm.Gymer, of Indiana; Mr.Christine MacLeod, R.N., Dance at The Shack Sat.Night.BEEBE REC.C.RITCHIE BELL TO TAKE SERVICES AT ST.ANDREW\u2019S The preacher on Sunday in St.Andrew\u2019s Presbyterian Church, both morning and evening, will be Rev.C.Ritchie Bell, B.A., of Truro, N.S., formerly of Sherbrooke, where he received his early education.Mr.Bell, is spending part of his vacation with his sister, Miss Christina Bell, renewing friendships.In the jnorning Mr.Bell will take as his subject, \u201cThe Call to Advance.\u201d In the evening his announced subject is \u201cThe Voice of God in Humanity.\u2019\u2019 daughter, Harriet, of Barlin, N.H , | were the guests of Mrs.Wm.Byrd recently.Miss Elsie Elliott was in Drum-mondville on Monday.DANVILLE NICOLE! FALLS Mr.and Mrs.H.Grégoire and Mr.and Mirs.Ed Pope motored to St.Hubert and Montreal over the week-end.The friends of Miss Annie Barlow regret to hear that she is a patient at the Sherbrooke Hospital.The ladies of the Windsor Mills Golf Club played here on Wednesday afternoon.Mr.and Mrs.Stephen Byrd and Recer Wright and Mr.and Mrs.Homer Dr.and Mrs.Albert McBurney ; home of Mrs.J.G.Ewin^ on Sa'ta-Mosher Mrs.Humphrey ana Mrs.&nd Mr.and Mrs.John McBurney ; crdav evening.Waaer Wiggen.Messr*.Ray Wood- wer6 jn Sherbrooke on Thursday.; Mr.and Mrs.R.M.Fisken and fiwî flr.H Rri *r.H KaHçrftr a nt sher-\t|i , .\t, ,,\t_ - daughter and Mrs.A.M.Cooke, or NORTH HATLEY ; Montreal,\twere the week-end j - ; guests of Mr.and Mrs.K .L.Cooke, ard, and Roland Badger, all of Sherbrooke.and Mr.Lindsay Humphrey, of New York, and Mrs.W.G.Badger.Mrs.Badger is remaining for an indefinite stay with her son.Mr.and Mrs.Wray Badger and pn;,1
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