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Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
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mercredi 25 novembre 1931
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[" §krbronkp Established 1897j SHERBROOKE, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1931.Thirty-Fifth Year.: INTRODUCES MEASURE TO NULLIFY GENERAL ELECTION CONTESTATION Hon.J.H.Dillon Gives Notice of Amendment to Controverted Elections Act to Validate Election of Present Members\u2014Only Members Whose Election Is Not Contested to Vote\u2014Review of Technical and Night Schools Presented by Provincial Secretary.FRENCH WHEAT QUOTANOHARM TO CANADIANS Quebec.Nov.25.\u2014Legisia-f lion to dispose of the election contestation cases without clogging court and administrative chaonds is to be introduced in the Legislature by Hon.J.H.Dillon, Minister without Portfolio.Hon.Mr.Dillon, who is Liberal member for St.Ann\u2019s, Montreal, is one of the few members whose election is not before the courts, and is thus enabled to attempt to straighten out the difficulty that at present exists.While the exact text of the bill, notice of which was given yesterday, OTTAWA, Ont., Nov.*25.\u2014 In has not been made public, it is ex- ¦ crease by the French government of pected to take the form of an amend- minimum percentage of native ment to the Controverted Llactions !\tmillers are required to use in Act.One of the provisions of the j bread flour from ninety to ninety-bill is that only members whose elec- seven per cent, will have a com-tion is not challenged can vote on the : paratively slight effect upon Cana-measure.There are ninety members i (jiall exports.Officials of the De-of the Huose, seventy-nine Liberals partment of Trade and Commerce and eleven Conservatives.The elec- gaj^ ;ast night that this increase was tion of sixty Liberals is under fire, | not unusual and simply put the while three Conservatives are meet- i quota back to where it was early in 1930.Canadian exports would naturally be effected but probably not to any considerable extent, it was stated.During the three months of Jan- MAJORITY OF MEN PREFER I THE OLD-FASHIONED GIRL Canvass of Northwestern University Students Reveals Many Interesting Beliefs.EVANSTON, 111., Nov.25.\u2014 The \u201cold , fashioned girl\u201d apparently hasn\u2019t gone out of style after all.The Daily Northwestern, student publication of Northwestern University conducted a survey of the ideas of men students on the question of the ideal girl.Eighty per cent of the men, the sponsors of the canvass said, specified that they were not enthusiastic about girls who smoke, drink intoxicating liquors, or overdo the use of rouge and lipstick.The men for the most part, expressed no preference as to whether the girl be blonde, brunette or red-haired, but they did say she would have \u201ccharm, intellect and sophistication.\u201d Total Canadian Exports of Wheat to France Amount to Only Three Million Bushels.ing opposition.But as the elected Conservatives have generally pronounced their opposition to the general contestation, the bill is expected to carry unanimously.Definite decision on the part ofjuary, February and March, 1930, the Government to bring in remedial action was awaiting the judgments on preliminary objections.The judgments came during last week, and showed such a wide variety of opinion on the part of Their Lordships, followed by consequences which would entail the courts being held from their ordinary work that the decision was reached that the only alternative is to follow the precedent which was laid down in 1901 by the Parent Government, when contestations were done away with by an amendment to the Controverted Election Act.Dr.Anatole1 Plante, Liberal M.L.A.for Mercier, Montreal, has put on the order paper notice of motion to amend the electoral law to permit women to vote in elections.Dr .Ernest Poulin, Liberal M.L.A.for Laurier, Montreal, has given notice that he will introduce a measure regarding persons employed on certain works.It is understood that Dr.Poulin refers to unemployment relief works, and one of his ideas ie to distribute the employment as much as possible, even to the extent of providing three days per week and a system of rotation.Amedee Caron, Lilmral M.L.A.for the Magdelen Islands, has given notice of motion of a law concerning certain methods of transportation of alcoholic liquor.In the Assembly yesterday Jos.Cohen, Liberal M.L.A.fox St.Lawrence, Montreal, secured first reading for a bill amending the charter of the Montreal Light, Heat and Power, Consolidated.This is to permit the company to issue debenture stock to be given to customer-shareholders in lieu to common stock, the choice to be made by such customer-shareholders.Tho bill permitting the St.Luc Hospital to borrow $1,500,000 wa.s given third reading.Provisions for cases where it.is I impossible to procure a court stenographer\u2019s notes is made in a bill which Premier Taschereau has before the Legislature.An article Is inserted in the code of civil procedure to enact that \u201cwhen it has been established that it is impossible, through the death of a stenographer, to procure, within a reasonable delay for preparing the records for the appeal, the transcription of the stenographer\u2019s notes of the evidence, or part of such notes, the Court of Appeal or a judge of such ¦ourt, may order that the ease be ¦stored to the same state at before he trial.In such event, the losing party shall bear the costs incurred from tho first trial up to and including the order referred to by this article.\u201d It is enacted tl'.-d the provisions mentioned are to apph to civil cases inscribed before the ' 'ourt of King\u2019s Bench, appealed since tho first of March 1931.when the French quota was 97 per cent as it is now being made, Canada exported 1,409,509 bushels of wheat to France.During the same period in 1931, the wheat exports to France were 3,277,689.This difference would not necessarily reflect the effect of the quota changes, however, as many factors would enter into the fluctuations of wheat exports.On November 10 the French government decreed that wheat for milling flour might be imported only by license granted by the government and importers were permitted to sell only to millers.The wheat production of France in 1931, according to the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, was recently provincial estimated at 270,000,000 bushels as compared with 238,000,000 bushels for the previous year.NEW ECONOMIES ARE PROPOSED BY RAILWAYS One of Most Drastic Train Service Reductions Ever on Record in Canada Made in Effort to Reduce Expenditure.POPULATION WILL EXCEED TEN MILLION With Three Districts of Dominion Still to Be Compiled, Total Stands at 6,783,429.OTTAWA, Nov.25.\u2014One of the most drastic train service reductions ever announced in Canada has been made by the railways in an effort to further curtail expenditures.Almost simultaneously with that train reduction are ths hearings of the Board of Conciliation on the application of the railways for a 10 per cent reduction in the wages of the running trades in which over 26,000 employees are involved.If this is granted a further saving of close to $5,000,000 annually may üe ! made.| To cope with the unfair competi-| tion of the highways the Quebec Government has already proposed an increased gasqline tax, and it is expected that the Ontario Government at the next session of that Legislature will propose an increase in the licence fees of trucks and buses.It is urged, though, that further steps should be taken and in the direction of some central regulation of the conditions under which trucks and buses operate.The question is certain to receive a full airing before the recently appointed Royal Commission to inquire into railway matters.DWELLING AND\tIS WERE BURNED ENCOURAGING FOR DEMOCRATS Property of Alden Allison Fell Election of Democrat Yesterday Prey to Flames Early Last Gives Party Majority of One Evening.\tin House Membership of 435, FEWER BIRTHS, DEATHS AND MARRIAGES ARE RECORDED Latest Figures Made Public in Report Issued by Dominion Bureau of Statistics.BURY, QUE., November 25.\u2014 Swept by a powerful wind early last evening, flames destroyed the house and barn of Mr.Alden Allison, located about a mile and a half from this place on the Scotstown Read.The house was -occupied by Mr.and Mrs Osborne Dougherty and family, who returned home last evening after being away all day.Mrs.Dougherty and children were visiting at a neighbor\u2019s house, while Mr.Dougherty built a fire in the kitchen stove.The stove fire under way, Mr.Dougherty went to the barn to do the evening chores, and it was during his absence that the house caught fire.Help from the nearby district scon arrived, but the blaze had gained too great headway in the interval and the house was soon reduced to ashes.The flames were swept from the dwelling to the barn, which flared up in no time A voluntary bucket brigade was /organized, but the valiant helpers were unable to check the blaze.A large quantity of hay in the barn, the property of Mr.W.E.Goodenough, of Bury, was destroyed, but most of the stock was saved.WASHINGTON, D.C., Nov.25.\u2014 Democratic organization of the United States House of Representatives appear certain as a result of the \u2018 party\u2019s victory in the fourteenth Texas congressional district yesterday at a special election.Elections of Richard M.Kleberg, of Corpus Christi, Democrat, gave his party a majority of one of the House membership of 435.The new line-up is as follows; Democrats 218, Republicans 214, Farmer Laborite one, vacancies two.The outcome encouraged the Democratic membership as the leaders laid plans to elect Representative John N.Garner, of Texas, as Speaker, and.take over the House after thirteen years of Republican domination.President Hoover scanned the returns at the White House, while Gamer received them at his hotel quarters, as they straggled in from the district that had been held by Republicans since the Harding landslide in 1920.-Thé election was held to fill the ¦ vacancy created by the death of Representative Harry M.Wurzbach, lone Republican from the lone star state.Wurzbach was entering his sixth term.\t/ Kleberg won over a field of eight, including seven Democrats, and one Republican, G.W.Anderson, of San Antonio.He had a substantial j lead over his nearest opponent, Carl | W right Johnson, of San Antonio, Democrat, on the basis of incomplete ! returns.The election also was a victory for the anti-prohibitionists, the former cowboy from King\u2019s Ranch, as well as Johnson, advocated modification of the Eighteenth Amendment.MAYOR WALKER JOINS IN i CHURCH N0TATTRACT1VE FIGHT TO FREE MOONEY ENOUGH, SAYS PRINCIPAL OTTAWA, Nov.25.\u2014Vital statistics for fifty-three cities in Canada for the month of October, issued by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics yesterday, show there were 7,022 births, 3,673 deaths and 2,867 marriages.When compared with last year births show a decrease of six per cent., deaths seven per cent., and marriages 12 per cent.In the ten months, January-October, there were 73,230 births, 38,396 deaths and 25,590 marriages registered.The birth rate showed a decrease of IVi per cent, the deaths 3 Vi per cent., and 11 per cent, in marriages, as compared with the ten months of the previous year.AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT RESIGNS FOLLOWING DEFEAT IN ASSEMBLY Cabinet of Prime Minister Scullin Defeated After Charges of Political Bias Against Federal Treasurer\u2014Opposition Parties Joined With Recalcitrant Labor Group Led by Hon.J.A.Beasley\u2014Election Expected Early in January.* INDEPENDENCE FOR PHILIPPINE ISLANDS PLANNED WASHINGTON, D.C., Nov.25.\u2014 Plans for giving independence to the Philippine Islands are gaining momentum.Two representatives \u2014 Knutson, Republican, Minnesota, and Rankin, Democrat, Mississippi \u2014 announced yesterday they had drafted measures for presentation to Congress which would free the Islands.Will SUBMIT PROPOSALS FOR LOWER TARIFFS ARGUMENTS!N CONTESTATIONS HEARD TODAY' Hearing of Proceedings in Brome and Missisquoi Counties Being Heard This Afternoon at Sweetsburg by Judge Cousineau\u2014Shefford County Case Will Be Heard Tomorrow.Make to Governments of Do minions.Acting as Private Citizen, New Noted Theologian Would Take SOUTH AFRICA REMAINS ON GOLD STANDARD.CAPETOWN, S.A., Nov.25.\u2014 The emergency finance bill to enable South Africa to remain on the gold standard, today was carried in the House of Assembly by a majority of twenty-five votes.The vote was 78 to 53 for the measure NIGHT SCHOOLS REPORT INCREASED ATTENDANCE QUEBEC, Nov.25.\u2014The annual report of the Provincial Secretary\u2019s department was tabled in the Legislature yesterday afternoon by Hon.Athanase David, Provincial Secretary.Probably no other department of the government covers as wide a range of activities as this section.Yooterelay\u2019s report covered matters of public health, incorporated companies, reformatories, insane asylums and education.A slight increase was noted in the asylum inmates and prison population.Letters patent were issued to 906 companies with a total capital of $71,416,136, while 1,500 com-paniifes forwarded annual reports.The total revenue of the department, received from fees, amounted to $119,698.Discussing the subject of special school grants, tho Minister says: \u201cWhilst recommending that the school corporations practise the (Continued on Page Seven.) OTTAWA, Nov.2'5.\u2014Tt is expected that Canada\u2019s total population will exceed the ten million mark when the final results of the 1931 census are definitely announced.Already the figures have been completed for the three Maritime Provinces, Ontario and the three Prairie Provinces.With Quebec, British Columbia and the Northwest Territories yet to come the population is 6,783,429.Placing these at the same figures as in the 1921 census the total for the Dominion would be approximately 9,- 681.000,\tso that to reach ten million all British Columbia and Quebec together would have to gain would be 319,000 and it is generally expected that their gains will be considerably more than that.Before Christmas Canadians should know what is the new total for the entire Dominion, and that total is expected to be in excess of 10.000.\t000.Practically all of the preliminary totals for the various localities are now completed and have been issued successively by the Bureau.Nearly 850 men and women from all parts of the Dominion are engaged on this task, together with a considerable number of machines for speeding the arithmetical work.This census is just twice as difficult a task as that or 1921, for at least twice as many questions, twice the amount of information is asked as in the previous census.A much more elaborate census of agriculture has been taken and has been compiled; there is the special set of questions to cover unemployment in Canada which were not asked in 1921.The notable fact, though, is that on the population schedule the Bureau is considerably ahead of time, and in spite of all the extra tasks of the 1931 census the Bureau is keeping up to schedule.This is made possible by em ploying a much larger number of people and by making use of more and highly improved mechanical devices.HON.ROBERT WEIR ILL.TORONTO, November 25.\u2014Hon Robert Weir, Minister of Agriculture for the Dominion, is confined to his hotel rooms with a cold.While his condition is not believed to be serious, his conference with Provincial Ministers of Agriculture has been postponed.It is expected he will be confined to bed for two or three days.JOHNVILLE MAN WAS SERIOUSLY HURT IN CRASH William Collins, Seventy-Seven Years Old, in Sherbrooke Hospital Suffering from Critical Injuries.York Mayor Will Meet Californian Governor.SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Nov.25.\u2014\u201cPrivate citizen\u201d James J.Walker of New York, who came here to ask a pardon for Tom Mooney, and Governor James Rolph, Jr., of California, from whom he will make the request, marshalled forces today for their formal meeting next Tuesday._ Walker, who except during this visit to California is Mayor of New York, pored over records of the trial and _ subsequent developments concerning the man who was sentenced first to be hanged and later to life imprisonment for bombing a Preparedness Day parade here in 1916.Governor Rolph consulted attorneys who will be present at the Tuesday meeting.Mooney is seeking a pardon on the basis the testimony which convicted him was false.He! has refused to ask parole fearing such action might be construed as admission of guilt.This afternoon Mayor Walker and Governor Rolph will meet here to decide how next Tuesday\u2019s meeting will be conducted.Drastic Action Church Services.to Enliven TORONTO, Ont., Nov.25.\u2014The Church was not making its services attractive enough, said Rev.R.B.McEIheran, principal of Wycliffe College, addressing the annual diocesan laymen\u2019s banquet of the Church of England in Canada, here last night.He gave this as one reason why the Church of England was not holding the younger people.To remedy the situation he suggested formation of an organization similar to the Knights of Columbus in the Roman Catholic Church, with Knights of St.George as a possible name.He called for a change of emphasis which would bring back into prominence the true purpose of the church, which was spiritual.\u201cWe endure the most hideous music in our churches,\u201d he said, declaring church services were not sufficiently attractive.Dr.McEIheran is a former Archdeacon of Prince Rupert\u2019s Land and was rector of St.Matthew\u2019s Church, Winnipeg, prior to his appointment as principal of Wycliffe College.SWEETSBURG, Que., Nov.25.\u2014 Argument in the contestation proceedings in Brome and Missisquoi counties are being heard this afternoon by Mr.Justice Philemon Cousineau, of Montreal, in the local Superior Court.Tomorrow morning argument will be started for Shefford count}-, where the election of R.R.Bachand has been contested.In Court yesterday, Joseph Gin-gras, Waterloo lawyer, stated that the $1,000 deposit in connection with the Brome petition had been made by Edward Hiller, of Knowlton, copetitioner with Frank Mooney, also of Knowlton.Mr.Gingras declared that he had received one thousand dollars from the Conservative headquarters in Montreal, but had returned the money.An attempt to disqualify Sheriff Jamieson was another feature of the hearing.The attêmpt was made by Tancrede Biron, prothonotary of the Superior Court for the district of Bedford, who claimed that there wa.s | no record to show that Mr.Jamieson had taken an oath of allegiance as sheriff.Judge Cousineau ruled out the evidence as illegal, maintaining that public officials are duly qualified.Among the witnesses heard yesterday were Ed.Caldwell, returning officer in Brome county, the two petitioners, Edward Hiller and Frank Mooney, of Knowlton, Bert Mitchell, of Brome, and Carl Stone and Forest Morgan ,of Knowlton.Mr.Gingras was also heard, while Mr.Biron was the last witness at the hearing.CANBERRA, Australia, Nov.25.\u2014¦ The Commonwealth Government today was defeated by five votes on a motion by J.A.Beasley, former Minister of Labor, to adjourn the House of Representatives.Prime Minister J.H.Scullin at once announced the Government would resign and that an election -\t_ I would be held probably in January.Secretary of State for Dominions | The vote on the motion for ad-However, Refused to Say Ex- journment was thirty-seven to actly What Proposal He Would r\tI Allegations had been made that Hon.E.G.Theodore, Federal Treasurer, had shown political bias in distributing unemployment relief, and Mr.Beaoley nressed for the appointment of a select committee to investigate the charges.The Opposition decided to support the motion unless the Government was able to prove the allegations false, with the result that a combination of Mr.Beasley\u2019s followers and the Opposition gave a majority of five against the Government.Mr.Theodore made a complete denial of the charges and the Prime Minister declared he would neither grant a Royal Commission nor a select committee to conduct an inquiry into the charges.Mr.Beasley then moved the adjournment of the House.\u201cYou can have your election now, and it\u2019s a mighty poor issue to fight on,\u201d the Prime Minister shouted across the floor of the Assembly.LONDON, Nov.25.\u2014Rt.Hon.J.H.Thomas, Secretary of State for the Dominions, told the House of Commons that on his forthcoming tour he hoped to place before the governments of the Dominions proposals which would induce them to lower their tariffs against British goods.Mr.Thomas made his statement in reply to a question by Percy Harris, Liberal member of the London borough of Southwest Bethnal Green.\u201cI hope we shall be in a position to put before them certain advantages and I shall expect them to reciprocate,\u201d he said.He refused to make any definite statement regarding the proposals he considered placing before the Dominions.Mr.Thomas explained he hoped to find new markets for British cotton goods during his tour, in view of the decrease in unemployment brought about by the cotton joper.t-ives.He s; id also that the date of the Imperial Economic Conference at Ottawa had been set in July next to insure all Dominions having ample time to prepare for attendance.^ Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald, in reply to a question, said the Government was giving careful consideration to the development of intra-Empire trade and that it was busy collecting necessary information.COURT TO DETERMINE WHAT REALLY CONSTITUTES LIFE Heart of Infant Beat After Birth, But Child Never Breathed, So Court Has to Determine Whether Life Existed or Not.Suffering from serious injuries about the head, William Collins, seventy-seven years old, is in the Sherbrooke Hospital today in a critical condition.Mr.Collins, who is a resident of Johnville, was driving along the highway last evening near the Len-noxville Experimental Farm in a horse-drawn vehicle, when he was struck by an automobile.He was thrown from his wagon by the impact of the crash, and suffered severe cuts about the head The wagon was demolished.The injured man was conveyed by private car to Dr.J.B.Winder's office in Lennoxville, where several stitches were taken in the wound and first aid treatment administered.An ambulance was then called and rushed the victim to the Sherbrooke Hospital.His condition is reported ns critical this morning.NATIONALLY KNOWN STREET RAILWAY HEAD ENDS LIFE Herbert Baker Flowers Shot Himself Through Head in Baltimore, Md.BALTIMORE.Md\u201e Nov.26.\u2014 Herbert Baker Flowers, fifty years old, nationally known street railway executive, committed suicide here yesterday by shooting himself through the head in the washroom f an undertaking establishment.Mr.Flowers, who recently left New Orleans, where he was chief of the street railway system, returned to Baltimore, where ho first gained prominence in his chosen field to take his life, but friends ami business acquaintances could not.ascribe a motive for his ncl BRITISH AUTHORITIES IN INDIA FACE ANOTHER GRAVE SITUATION Developments in Bengal Reported to Be Extremely Serious, With Every British Officer Doing His Duty in \u201cDeadly Terror of His Life\u201d\u2014Menace of Bomb-Throwers Has Forced Lord Willingdon to Abandon Train Travel for Airships.DAIRY PROBE INAUGURATED AT MONTREAL LONDON, Nov.25.\u2014Information received here today from India said that the situation there was grave following indication that the round table conference here will probably end this week without a settlement satisfactory to the Nationalists.The situation in Bengal D said to be especially critical and the Marquis of Lothian, Under-Secvetary-of-State for India, declared in the House of Lords that in some Bengal districts every British officer is doing his duty in \u201cdeadly terror of his life.\u201d The menace of bomb-throwers, it is reported, has recently become so great that Lord Willingdon, Viceroy of India, now travels in aeroplanes instead of by train.\u201cDrastic action must be taken to end this menace to liberty and social peace,\u201d the Marquis of Lothian warned the Lords in grave tones.A resolute suppression of terrorism is imperatively necessary.It is the government's duty to protect the lives of its own servants and others and it is no less its duty to prevent a body of men from deflecting the course of political progress by bringing, not reason and argument, but terrorism and assassination to bear.Tho situation is one of extreme gravity.\u201d Coincident with the Under-Secre-tary's warning, fourteen Indian delegates to the conference issued a statement saying that the mere grant of provincial autonomy to India would not be accepted.\u201cTt would only give rise,\u201d they said, \u201cto a situation of great (instability and perplexity which should be avoided in the interest both of England and India.If such a step is taken the government must bear full and sole responsibility.\u201d BRITISH SHOULD MAINTAIN CONTROL OF INDIAN ARMY NEW YORK, Nov.25.\u2014-Retention I of British control over the Indian Army is urged in a draft report issued by Lord Sankey, chairman of ,the Federal Structure Committee of |the Round Table Conference, it was ! reported here today in a special icable from London.; \u201cThe report also recommends that Britain, through the Viceroy, keep j control of India's political relations i with foreign countries and her rela-jtions with \u2018frontier tracts.\u2019 Commercial, economic and other relations, Lord Sankey suggests, should icome under the jurisdiction of India\u2019s | new federal legislature and its responsible ministers,\" the cable states.\u201cLord Sankey's report mentions the view of Mahatma Gandhi and other Nationalist delegates that India\u2019s self-government will not be genuine unless the army is placed .under control of the legislature.It proceeds, however, to state that a majority of the committee considers it impossible to vest in an Indian legislature, during the period of transition, the constitutional responsibility for controlling defense, so long as the burden of actual responsibility cannot be simultaneously transferred.\u201d McVERNAL WAS FOUND GUILTY OF SEDUCTION Jury Added Rider Asking Clemency of Court in Passing Sentence on Rock Island Man The Crown secured its second conviction before the present session of the Court of King\u2019s Bench 'yesterday afternoon when John McVernal, of Rock Island, was found guilty of seduction of a girl under the age of fourteen years.The jury required but fifteen minutes to deliberate, but added a rider to their verdict that the accused be accorded clemency by the Court.McVernal was undefended.He asked but few questions in cross-examining the witnesses called by the prosecution and made a short address to the panel on his own.be-half.| Mrs.Ida Gallup Kerr, of Sher-brooke, was accjuitted of a charge j of perjury in a case which lasted about three hours.The accusation which Mrs.Kerr faced arose from proceedings in the Magistrate\u2019s Court when Tom Lothrop, of this city, was charged with theft.The accused was one of the witnesses against Lothrop.The witnesses called by the Crown were J.Begin, Court' stenographer, Gerard Gauthier, deputy clerk of tho Court.Allan P.Blue and T.Lothrop, while Mrs.Kerr! was the sole witness for the rie-! fence.His Lordship, Mr.Justice Archambault, in a lengthy discourse summed up the facts' of the case and instructed the jury on questions of law.VETERAN SCREEN RIDER FIGHTING GREAT BATTLE \u2014 LOS ANGELES, CAL., Nov.25.\u2014America\u2019s boydom hero, Tom Mix, who at various times in his career has been a cowboy of real fife, of the screen and of the circus, was near death today.Beset by peritonitis which fol- Commission Appointed to Investigate Dairy Conditions in Province Will Hold Sittings in Various Cities, Including Sherbrooke.MONTREAL, Nov> 25.\u2014 The Quebec Dairy Industries Commission, under the direction of Elie Bourbeau, director of the Provincial Government Cchool at St.Hyacinthe, held its initial session here yesterday.The sitting of the commission in Montreal will last only a few days it is believed, following which members of the commission will proceed on a province-wide tour, sitting in such important centres as Quebec City, Hull, Three Rivers, Sherbrooke, Nieolet, Chicoutimi, Lake St.John, Rimouski and Batis-can.The commission has been created by the Hon.Adelard Godbout, Minister of Agriculture, with a view towards supplying data as to necessary procedures to be taken by the Provincial Government for reorganization of the dairy industries in Quebec.A wealth of evidence will be amassed from farmers, dairy and milk producing agencies, and from milk distributing companies, and will be embodied in a report which will seek to assure producers of milk, ceram, cheese, etc., increased compensation without 'n'I p A v a nr a v juring the position of the large I companies distributing these products.The report will entail complete revision of the provincial laws governing the production of milk and cream and their by-products, it is believed.Two witnesses only were heard yesterday.They were L.P.La-coursiere, of Batiscan.Champlain, and Orner Tessier, of Beloeil.both provincial cheese and butter factory inspectors, who gave evidence as to t)ie classification of dairy products, particularly fresh cream and fluid milk.They also testified as to the working of the agreement between farmers and distributors regarding payment for products on a butter fat basis.This preliminary evidence, given behind closed doors, afforded the commission a dear and well-defined outline of present conditions ;n regard to the price received by the farmers for their produce, and the basis upon which payment was made.LINCOLN, Neb., Nov.25.\u2014A dis.trict court jury was empanelled yesterday to decide a case hinging ' on the question whether breathing is essential to life.The matter involves payment of a $20,000 judgment given the heirs of Henry J, Steurtz, killed in a construction accident.Several months after his death a daughter was born to Mrs.Pauline Steurtz, his widorv.The child\u2019s heart beat ten to twenty minutes, hospital attendants said, but the baby never breathed.County Judge Robin Reid decided heart beats indicated life.Under his ruling Mrs.Steurtz would collect the entire judgment.Steurtz\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mrs.Casper Steurtz, appealed.They contend the baby was born dead.Should their contention be upheld they would collect, half the judgment.In either case the widow would ho entitled to only half the estate in her own right, but if the jury decides the baby lived and, therefore, inherited the other half, she would be» come the child\u2019s sole heir.LUMBER SHIPMENT FROM RUSSIA TO BE ADMITTED United States Unable to Prove Convicts Had Anything to Do With Production.WASHINGTON, November 25.\u2014.A shipment of 3,000,000 feet of lumber from the convict labor section of Russia\u2014due to arrive in New York today\u2014will be admitted.The Government is unable to prove convicts had anything to do with its production.The lumber, spruce, was brought to the United States by the Amtorg Trading Corporation, the Russian business organization.It was pro* duced near Archangel in an area from which importation of lumber has been barred by a Treasury ruling unless importers can show convict labor was not used.PREMIER GRANTED AUDIENCE WITH HIS MAJESTY LONDON, Nov.25.\u2014Prime Minister R.B.Bennett of Canada today was granted an audience by tho King.*- THE WEATHER #- ¦ THURSDAY FAIR AND COLD lowed the rupture of his appendix, Mix spent a fairly comfortable night, but his physician reported It will be three or four days before tho crisis is past.The depression which was over Lake Superior yesterday has moved northeastward into Northern Quebec with increasing intensity, while high pressure covers the western half of the continent.The weather has been moderately cold with local snow flurries in the Western Provinces, and has turned colder in Ontario and Quebec, with strong northwest winds and gales.Forecast: Strong west to northwest winds; cloudy and colder, with scattered showers or snow flurries.Thursday: Fresh northwest winds; fair and cold.Maxi- Temperature yesterday mum 67, minimum 50._ Same day last year : Maximum 56, minimum 30» 0070 8^5565 PAGE TWO SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 193L ST.FRANCIS DISTRICT FARM QUEEN DANVILLE The Danville High School was closed on Monday, November 16.During the week-end a portion of the principal\u2019s class room was partitioned off to form a room in which to teach physics and chemistry.Mr.and Mrs.Wm.Gale, of Fitchburg, Mass., are spending a few days the guests of Mr.Gale's sister, Mrs.George Hamilton.Miss Elsie Elliott, of Shawini-gan Falls, spent the week-end at her hoirie here.Mrs.Norman Leet entertained on Wednesday afternoon at a thimble party.There was a large number present and a most enjoyable afternoon was spent in music, songs and recitations.At the tea hour refreshments were served by the hostess, who was assisted by her daughter, Mrs.Elmer Mathers.Mr.Alvin Nutbrown, who has been spending a couple of weeks in Montreal, the guest of his aunt, has returned to his home in Danville.The Misses Elsie and Gwati Elliott motored to Sherbrooki on Saturday.Miss Irene Laxson spent the week-end in Montreal, the guest of Mr.and Mrs.G.Bowman.She was accompanied home by Mr.A.Nut-brown.Mrs.George Doak, cf Lennox-ville, was the guest of Mrs.C.Brown on Wednesday.Mrs.0.Laxson has returned home after caring for Mrs.R.Perkins and her infant son.Master Erlon McKeage, who underwent a serious operation recently in the Sherbrooke Hospital, spent a few days convalescing at the home of his uncle and aunt, Mr.and Mrs.Vernon Carson, and has now returned home.For appointment, Edgar W.Smith, Notary Public, phone 44.SAWYERVILLE Mrs.H- Stevens, of Cookshire, was a guest recently of her sister, Mrs.Chas.Taylor.BISHOP\u2019S CROSSING Foot trouble corrected, Mrs.Lit-tler, at Mrs.Bostwick\u2019s, on Thursday, November 26th.WATERVILLE Best Remedy for Cough Is Easily Mixed at Home Tou\u2019II never know how quickly a stubborn cough due to a cold can be conquered, until you try this famous recipe.It is used in millions of homes, because it gives more prompt, positive relief than anything else.It's no trouble at all to mix and costs but a trifle.Into a 16 oz.bottle, pour ounces of Pinex ; then add plain granulated sugar syrup or strained honey to make 16 ounces.This saves two-thirds of the money usually spent for cough medicine, and gives you a purer, better remedy.It never spoils, and tastes good\u2014children like it.Xou can actually feel its penetrating, soothing action on the inflamed throat membranes.It is also ab-orbed into the blood, where it acts directly on the_ bronchial tubes.At the same time, it promptly loosens the germladen phlegm.This three-fold action explains why it bring?such quick relief even in those severe coughs which follow cold epidemics.Pinex is^a highly concentrated compound of Norway Pine, containing the active agent of creosote, in a refined, palatable form, and known as one of the greatest medicinal agents for severe coughs and bronchial irritations.L'o not accept a substitute for Finer.It is guaranteed to give prompt relief or money refunded.The Darling! What a care He is, but how pre-cious! Your whole life is centred in him , .If he is to be well it mtm 1 and haPPy> he 1\t' f\tmust be strong ,i\tV\tand robust.7^\tBaby\u2019s Own w\tSite\tTablets help ¥\ti mothers to keep their children well.They are the ideal laxative for children \u2014 a simple and safe preventive, and a remedy for colds, simple fever, indigestion and constipation.They aid in relieving the distress which accompanies the cutting of teeth and generally promote the health and comfort of children.25 cents a package at any druggist\u2019s.BABY\u2019S OWN TABLETS {Dr.Williams'] ns Mrs.Brundage and Miss Mabel Blier, of Lennoxville, were guests j of Mr.and Mrs.A.L.Blier for the ; week-end.Mrs.J.A.Johnson, of Kingsbury, is a guest of her daughter, Mrs.H.L.Parker, and Mr.Parker.Mrs, W.G.Libby and daughters, i Misses Cynthia and Constance Lib-;by, were in Sherbrooke on Saturday.Mrs.John Campbell, Sr., of Sher-jbrooke, is spending the winter months with her son and daughter-in-law.Mr.and Mrs.J.C.Campbell.Miss Jean Coiquhoun, B.A., of Montreal, was a guest of her parents, Dr.and Mrs.P.A.Coiquhoun, | over the week-end.Miss Frances E.Ayer, B.A., of Asbestos, was a week-end guest of Mr.and Mrs.D.W.Ayer.Recent guests at the same home were Mr.land Mrs- J.A.Cowan, of Hunting-| ville.Miss Margaret Gerrard, of Drum-mondville, was a guest of her par ents, Mr.and Mrs.Thomas Gerrard, over the week-end.Miss lone Maskrey, of Sherbrooke, was a guest of her parents.Mr.and Mrs.Charles Maskrey, on Friday.Mr.Wallace Smith left on Sun-| day afternoon for Montreal.Mr.Norris Fisk is in Cookshire, where he is a guest of his uncle and aunt, Mr.and Mrs.George Plaisance.Rev.Dr.Robert Smith and son, Dr.Clifford Smith, of Montreal, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.R.H.Smith, \u201cBroadview Farm,\u201d last week.\u2022 AK?-:'* 'v ''N x\t> 'BROOKBURY AND VICINITY NEWS AND PERSONALS Queen of the Harvest is the title they gave Elizabeth Herd of Hig-ginsville, Mo., at the annual barnwarming dance staged by the College of Agriculture at the University of Missouri.Miss Herd, a freshman, is shown here standing beside a farm horse.BURY EAST ANGUS Dance, I.O.O.F.Hall, Bury, Fri-I day, November 27th.Percy Grey .and his Vagabonds.Dance, Bishop\u2019s Crossing, Nov.27.The annual meeting of the Junior branch of St.Paul\u2019s W.A.was held on Saturday afternoon last at the residence of Mrs.A.B.Hunt.An exceptionally good financial statement was presented by the treasurer.Gretchen Wootten was re-ap-pointed secretary and Frances Burgess was elected treasurer.The various amounts voted to be sent away were: $20 for pledge moneys $2 for expense fund, $2 for the Tilton memorial fund and §2.57 thank offering.Rev.C.T.Lewis gave a short address and then closed the meeting with prayer.Dance, I.O.O.F.Hall, Bury, Friday, November 27th.Percy Grey and his Vagabonds.Hairdresser, Miss Evans, at Ross Barbershop, Mondays and Fridays.Wave 50c,reset free.Finger wave 35c, DUDSWELL JUNCTION Mr.and Mrs.Lawrence Gilbert, ; of Bishop\u2019s Crossing, Mr.E.A.Rowe, Mr.and Mrs.Raymond Bish-lop and Master Vincent spent Tuesday evening, November 17, at Mr.B.W.Jenkersron\u2019s.Mr.Charles Bernard and brother, Peter, have been on a motor trip to Beauce, where they visited friends.Miss Muriel Willard and friend.Miss Chilvers, of Sherbrooke, called at Mr.B.W.Jenkerson\u2019s on Satur-; day evening.Miss Cora Grey was a guest of | Mrs.R.D.Bishop on Sunday.Mrs.Annie E.Mackay and Miss Ethel Mackay spent the week-end in , Lennoxville.Master Owen Mackay is spending .the winter with his grandmother, Mrs.Mackay.after spending the summer at the Morse cottage, Lake Massavrippi.Mr.E.Bes/ is visiting at the home of his brother, Mr.H.Bean, at Beebe.On Friday evening a large number gathered at the Town Hall for a dance staged under the auspices of the ladies\u2019 committee in the interests of the skating rink.The usual refreshments were served and the evening was much enjoyed.Misses Lucille and Cecile Duff, of Way\u2019s Mills, were guests a few days the past week of Mr.George Duff and family.j Mr.Clouatrie, of St.Valentine, Que., has completed his garage and has been grading the yard the past week.Mr.and Mrs.D.C.^Vaite and family, of Fitch Bay, were recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.L.D.Colt j at Greenglen.Mr.and Mrs.H.Colt, of Coaticook, also visited at the same home.Many Meetings Held by Brook-bury Ladies\u2019 Organizations\u2014 Newsy Items from District.BROOKBURY, Que., Nov.25.\u2014 The W.O.T.U.held their regular meeting on Wednesday afternoon, November 11, at the home of Mrs.Carrel Bennett.There was a good attendance of members and visitors.After singing a hymn the president read the Sunday school lesson for world\u2019s temperance Sunday, and prayer was offered.All present responded to their names by a verse of Scripture, and the minutes of the October meeting were read and approved.Letters were read and the plan of work and resolutions printed in the report read and discussed.Money was voted to be sent for the sick.After other items of business were acted upon, the meeting was closed with the Mizpah benediction, and tea was served by the hostess, assisted by Mrs.Guy Bennett and Miss M.Ross.The social hour followed, several remaining until evening.A box social under the auspices of the Ladies\u2019 Aid was held at the hall on Tuesday evening, November 10.There was a fair attendance, and the evening was enjoyed by ail in contests and games, and the fish pond, which was well patronized.The fish pond was in charge of Mrs.Floyd Hooker and netted over three dollars.The boxes were sold by Mr.E.P.Leonard, and brought the sum of §9.40.The net proceeds of the evening amounted to $11.26.The Ladies\u2019 Aid was entertained by Mrs.E.L.Bishop on Friday afternoon, November 13th.After the devotional exercises, a report was given of the box social.It was found that with the money donated by the members of the quarterly board and congregation, that Brookbury\u2019s share for the parsonage roofing could be met, and it was moved and carried that the Aid pay the balance and also the §10 on the pastor\u2019s salary, which had been promised at the last meeting to make the §50 from the society.A rising vote of thanks was given all those who so kindly helped in making the box social a success, for lighting the hall, etc.Mrs.Eva Bennett invited the Aid to meet at her home on December 9, instead of later in the month, this being the last meeting until spring.The meeting was closed with a hymn and prayer by Rev.P.Pollitt.and the Mizpah benediction.A little surprise party by a few neighbors, friends and relatives was given Mrs.Eva Bennett at her home on Friday evening.November 13, the occasion being Mrs.Bennett\u2019s birthday.A pleasant vening was enjoyed in games and music.Refreshments were served at the close of the evening and a small gift of money presented, with best wishes for \u201cmany happy returns.\u201d The St.John\u2019s Guild held the last meeting of the year at the home of Mrs.Arthur Ord, Bury, on Planning A New Adventure Jack Miner in His Book on Current Topics, MONTREAL TEACHER PASSED AWAY MONTREAL, Nov.25.\u2014A native of Prince Edward Island, Dr.Wellington Dixon, former teacher and headmaster of the Montreal High School, died at his home here yesterday.Dr.Dixon taught at the High School for more than forty years, and from 1902 to 1922 was INCREASE IN GERMANY\u2019S UNEMPLOYED BERLIN, Nov.25.\u2014Germany\u2019s unemployed on November 14th totalled 4.840.000, an increase of about 220,000 in two weeks.principal of the school.He retiree in 1922.In the spring of 1914 I drove to Point Pelee, a distance of about fifteen miles, where my intimate friend, Mr.Forest H.Conover, and I pulled three hundred and sixty little red cedar seedlings out of the sand.There were none of them over a foot in height.I brought them home and planted them in the clay on May 15, 1914.1 cultivated them for five years and today fully ninety-five per cent, of them are over twelve feet in ; height and have been bearing fruit for the last three or four years.Now, isn\u2019t that \u201cinterfering with nature?\u201d This is where the five robins that wintered here got their food.This year we have had a cardinal added to the songsters, and there has not been a day but what he has sung for us.He has fairly set me cardinal crazy\u2014 or wise\u2014 and is going to be the cause of more j of my \u201cinterfering with nature,\u201d for I am going to import some of these winter and summer singers.I am going to put a pair in each cage.Then, in March, I will let the male bird out, but I will feed him on the outside of the cage.Here he will stay, just flittering and singing among the trees, but will not go far from nis mate, who is still in captivity.Then, after he has got well acquainted with the whole outside proposition, I will let her out, and in this way I expect to have the whole place cardinal with song.Dear readers, don\u2019t let me try it first.Jump in ahead of me.It can be done.Yes, if you are privileged to live in the country, you can make your home into a little earthly heaven by \u201cinterfering with the balance of nature,\u201d as you call it, but, as I term it, \u201cassisting nature.\u201d You can get seedling trees from our government forestry department free of charge.If you will plant five hundred of them in the proper place and formation around your home, by cultivating them the same as you would hills of corn for the first five summers, which will not take you oyer one day a year, in ten years\u2019 time these trees will be from twelve to fifteen feet high and will break the wind off your home and, on a cold wintry day, will reduce your fuel bill and, if you can be big enough to ignore the criticism of men and take God\u2019s promise as a guide, your assistance will double and treble the quantity and quality | of the bix-ds at your home every j year.Scotch pines I planted on a thickly clay field in the spring of 1914 have now grown into a lovely little forest, but the lower limbs are bent ¦ by the weight of from three to five thousand mourning doves that have roosted there during August, September and October of the last few years.On this beautiful frosty morning, which father used to call \u201cthe seventeenth of Ireland,\u201d I awoke before the stars had closed their eyes, and how could I go to sleep again and miss such a musical feast, for that cardinal I had mentioned apparently had his voice focussed right on my open window, saying in distinct tones: \u201cGood cheer! Good cheer! Good cheer !\u201d This is mingled with the low notes of the song sparrows 'and even the robins are trying to p'oin in the chorus.The lovable ; mourning doves, one of Go'd\u2019s chief j mourners, in low voices, are saying: : \u201cKhoo-coo-coo!\u201d In spite of all this, I will admit I \\ was about to doze back into dream-I \u2019.and again when, all at once, the i honking of at least a thousand wild : i geese seemed to echo from every i ispot on the premises, saying: \u201cHome! again!\u201d Really, my thoughts drifted I nearly one-half century back to the \\ morning we left Ohio, when a dear-old Yankee by the name of Calvin Pease said to me: \u201cGood-bye j Jackie.\u201d Then, as he gripped father\u2019s hand, which I believe was for the last time, he said: \u201cJohn, do you think you can make a living over in Canada for your big family?\u201d Father apparently gripped his hand tighter and he looked him square in the face and replied: \u201cCalvin, we are going to make more than a living\u2014we are going to make a life,\u201d I but never did the interpretation of This statement ring louder in my I living-room than it did this morning, 'March 17th.m Sleepless Nights Restless, sleepless nights\u2014followed by dull and draggy days\u2014are often caused by unsuspected constipation.À dash of ENO in a glass of water every morning assists Nature to function normally\u2014insures sound, restful So Serums She Could Scream SAND HILL Card party in Church Hall, Fri-iday, November 27th.MASSAWIPPI These Hysterical Womenfolk CtYING w .S «s# s ' mam , 1 nee more and m through\" * * * YOU\u2019VE disgraced me for the last time! I\u2019m sick and tired of going out in the evening with you when you haven\u2019t shaved since morning.How you think you can get away with it is beyond me.You don\u2019t fool anyone but yourself by dabbing a little powder on your face.There wasn\u2019t another man at the party with a dirty growth of stubble.I don\u2019t care if it is a nuisance to ¦ shave.What if your beard is tough and your skin tender! T^here must be something wrong with the way you shave.I\u2019m sure there\u2019s a razor blade that will remove your whiskers without hurting your face, and it\u2019s up to you to find it.\u201d How much domestic discord can be traced to scenes like this?Wc might as w ell admit a grow\u2019th of stubble rs repulsive to most women\u2014wives, sweethearts, mothers and all.By shaving carefully once and often tw ice a day, w\u2019C help to hold orw\u2019in the respect and affection of friends and family.A short time ago shaving was a task many men liked to avoid.Today Gillette is offering a razor blade of remarkable quality that shears stubborn beard cleanly and smoothly.Your razor glides so easily you scarcely know you\u2019re shaving.Try this remarkable new Gillette blade on our money-back guarantee.Use a blade or two.If ever)- shave isn\u2019t far more comfortable than any you have ever experienced, return the package to your dealer and he will refund the price, Gillette R A Z OR SB L A D ES loss St.Alexander St., Montreal, Qu.bcw 1 C68D PAGE SIX SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 193Î Record\u2019s Classified Ads.ê>Jjerbroofee JSailp &fcor& PRICES FOR CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING.CASH KATE\u201425c.for 12 words for one insertion; 2 cent* each additional word.CHARGE KATE\u2014Ten cents extra each insertion to cover cost of bookkeeping and collection.ERRORS in advertisements will be rectified immediately on attention being called thereto.BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, DEATHS.Announcement of Death, when funera^ notice is added.Card of Thanks, In Memoriam\u201475c.an insertion ; Engagements, Weddings, Birth Notices, 50c.Poetry and lists of flowers sent, 2c.per word.A cost of' 25c.extra when charge account » opened.REPRESENTATIVES WANTED VIT HAVE AN OPENING FOR ENER-\u2022 ^ getic business men with insurance or investment experience and connections.An exceptional proposition to establish permanent representation of large institution.Reply giving full details, experience, etc., to Box 37 Record.AGENTS WANTED 1 EMPLOYMENT FOR TEN THOUSAND J agents for \u201cAuthentic Life of Ediaon.\u2019 Large illustrated book; low price; quick saies; big profits.Wonderful opportunity to make money.Write for free sample.Winston Company.Toronto SITUATION\u2019S WANTED vyORK WANTED BY EXPERIENCED ' ' general mechanic.Would also work as Janitor.Apply C.F.Smith, Box 134, Waterloo.Que.FEMALE HELP WANTED WANTED TO RENT p OOD FARM AND STOCK.T.O.BOX 6.VY Massawippi, Que.BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, DEATHS| BIRTHS KERRY \u2014 On Tuesday, Nov.17th, i 1931, at Eaton, Que., to Mr.and 1 Mrs.Richard Kerry, a son, Donald i Edward.WATCH YOUR SPEED THERE Stl V ' : PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS DIRECTORY ADVOCATES DEATHS DAIGLE \u2014 Entered into rest at Sherbrooke on Nov.25th, Zephirin j Daigle.Funeral from his late residence, 80 Ball St., on Friday, at 9 a.m., to the Cathedral.Interment at St.Michael Cemetery.LITTLE\u2014Died at Verdun Hospital, Verdun, Que., on Thursday, Nov.19th, 1931, Miss Mary E.\u2018 Little, aged 01 years.Funeral took place ____________________________ Saturday, Nov.21st.Interment in ¦^roBRis & wolfe, advocates, etc .\t-Sortl1 Cemetery, Hatley, Que.Sherbrooke and Richmond, Que.\t! JACKSON\u2014Entered into rest in this \\ITELLS & LYNCH ADVOCATES.GRA-\u2019 \u2019 nada Theatre Building.pUGG, MIGNAULT & HOLTHAM, AD-vocales, McManamy & Walsh Building.70 Wellington St.North.Phone 15S9.pERVAIS & TOBIN.ADVOCATES.22 ^ Wellington North Phone ISO.CERTIFIED ACCOUNTANTS | H.BRYCE, C.P.A.C.G.A., AUDITOR.'\u2022* * 1S6 Quebec St.Sherbrooke.Tel.13ÛS CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS H ASKELL, ELDERKIN & CO., Montreal am! Sherb.ooke.CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS.Trustees in Bankruptcy.T.Ray Edney, Resident Partner.Sherbrooke Trust Building.Sherbrooke.i f '.JO*\t\u2022 in nan :: ! men to read, understand, interpret, | ¦ and to lead public opinion.Of what avail is it that you have learned the principles of political science if you : do not follow the progress of the | Russian experiment, of the strug-j gles of the new\u2019 nations born since j the war to achieve the aspirations of | their peoples, of the efforts of the | older and greater nations to hold | their authority and pre-eminence?! What advantage is it to you to, have j won honors in the study of econ-I omics and politics if you do not fol-! low in the years before you the rise I and fall of nations, such issues as 1 the tariff, agricultural relief, the re-! lation of government and business?| As citizens you owe it to your coun-i try to capitalize the privilege of ; your education at Washington by | forming and proclaiming sound i opinions on public affairs pressing : for solution.\u201cThis information necessary to 'the forming of such opinions is WEDS THRICE i found in the best daily newspaper city, Nov.24th, Eliza Ann Jack son, beloved wife of the late Se\"ry\u201e;T^kS°n; in 5.0r 79111 5ear' , Thc.automobile hasn\u2019t entirely replaced the ox-cart transportation T hardly need urge before this as-Funeiar Tnin .-da\\ afternoon, from system in England.Here\u2019s a team speeding through Durham with its two sembly that you be careful of thc .or .a.e \u2019LV.i.eiue, -u.he home of travelers while the traffic coo stands by to see it doesn\u2019t break the speed .reliabilitv of the information upon of\t'd fe°- KralP\u2019 hmlt\u2019\tj Which you base such opinions.De- \u2019\t\u201c ' a't J'\u2019 1 laJers at the i __- j mand of your daily newspaper that I its COLLECTIONS ' tOLLECTIONS, REAL ESTATE AND t' Estates handled anywbexe.Reliable set-j vice.Lee D.Audet, Broker with The Col- ; lection Brokers, RegV., G6 Wellington St-Phone No.4.ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS house at 2.30, St.Peter\u2019s Church, j at 3 p.m.Intermeut in Elmwood | Cemetery, Rev.Canon Bigg offi-j ciating.i ROGERS\u2014Entered into rest at his residence, Portland, Me., on Tues.| Nov.24th, Wells Rogers, formerly | of Eaton Corner, Que.Funeral from Sherbrooke Undertaking Parlors, Friday.Nov.27th, at 10 a.m.Rev.Dr.Lennon, officiating.Interment in Eaton Corner Cemetery./ \u2019t 3RLS AND WOMEN \u2014 DECORATE greeting carda; we pay 55.00 per 100 ; / \u2019 experience not necessary ; absolutely no sel- \u2022 SYDNEY A.MEADE.QUEBEC LAND ^ Surveyor, Coati cook.Que.Bell phone.ling.Write Acme Specialty Co., Pawtucket, R.I.WANTED TO BUY P.DUBUC, B.A.Sc.GRAD.ENGI-neer, Quebec Land Surveyor.Reg.Patent Atty.4 Well.St.S.Sherbrooke.Beil Te^ PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS CARD OF THANKS.We wish to thank ail those who assisted us in any way during the death and burial of Miss Mary E.Little, who parsed away November 19th.(Signed) MR.AND MRS.BOND LITTLE.Brother anl Sister-in-law, ROBERT LITTLE, Nephew.Hatley, Que.news columns be non-partisan 'no racial discrimination such as is whatever its editorial views be, that I practised '.n some sections; and it i its reports be comprehensive.Do keeps school every day twelve not be a mental and education back-months of the year.\u201d\tslider now that you are going out (Dr.Finley presented to McGill fl'om under the authority of those University on May 29 the Whitney 'vho mark your achievements.The goodwill fountain'on behalf of the ¦ w°Hd will continue to grade you ; committee of Americans responsi-! according to the way you employ' If WNr ArrHY™0 for this tülROF.EUGENE CARON, ORGANIST ST.* Jean Baptiste Church, Solfegio, Piano.: Organ, Composition.Gregorian Chants, Sol- ! esmnian Method.Phone lO'-f^F 93 King E j IN MEMORIAM.In sad and loving memory of our rn, Archie F.Thompson, whom God c ome November 25th, 1925.H :\u2019.u soon his life v.as passed and gone When death came slowly stealing on.We little thought his end so near, Our darling son, we loved so dear.Not far from us he He* at rest, We know our Saviour thought it best.Some day we ll meet when sorrows o'er In Gods own Home to part no more.had not opened.In the space of a j\tingr int° its columns from the four! ^ few hours' the news of the whole j\tcorners of the earth all the news I j world had been received, appraised, |\twhich vigilance and faithful effort ! ! edited, set in type, assembled into |\tcan obtain, and in which intelligent I j pages, printed and distributed to j minds arc likely to he interested, | readers miles away.\tj gives enduring character and i-epu- ! \u201cThe abdication of kings, the eco- i !ab'on aaij determines the public , : nomic policies of a communistic na- ' judgment.| lion, civil war in China, internation-j \u201cAn important parting word to] ! al conferences in Geneva, national |\tyou is to choose good newspapers, to j Lient\tseeking\tlearning\tto\tdistinguish I Abates in Congress or in political |\tread the news intelligently.Your] ; between\tthe -'aLe\tand\tthe\ttrue\tNor campaigns, science, music, art, the ]\teducation here has equipped you to] ! is it difficult for any really literate 1 tbeatre> business and finance, hooks,!'\u201d11''\"\u2019 ^ ',liroWo catiofaeti™ «f Ufa i ! ner=on to choo'e between the news- ibbe bumble incidents of individual i paper which is an educational (lives, accident and crime go into the Double Bill!] T-Æ UU L-fl H i Bmmmi FRCDR3C M^RCH S7Jh+ Sirt A Crippling Social Drama! Added Feature.ROOK FRANCIf fibWlHI V'd^KEY 1SeJi fluence, and the cheap and sensa- news to present a record of the I tional sheet which glorifies the ]twenty-four hours.Some of it is enjoy the durable satisfaction of life and of these suggestions one of the ] greatest is to feel yourself a full citizen of the world in which you live by keeping intelligently inform-.ed of what mankind is doing.\u201d QAhours H G yorcmmoi g\\aun füTUiTl *.sHtRseocKs uvutre pictur PICTURf P LAY H oust! TONIGHT SILVERWARE NIGHT Every Lady will receive a piece of Genuine E.P.N.S.Silverware Absolutely Free.Extraordinary Double Bill.BARBARA STANWYCK in \u201cThc Miracle Woman\u201d GLENN TRYON AND VERA REYNOLDS in \u201cNECK AND NECK\u201d THURS.UNTIL SAT.Her Life Shackled by the Shame of a Sin She Never Committed.Greatest Woman Story of the Year.KfiM FüâfKtf EUCSRBO (ORTH HKADIN DF BRIL lifetime of emotion and drama in but two turns of the clock.il,i;i:|,l.lilii;lllilll!l!lil I,i:iil!tlililtri!|:|,Itl!l;lil!!Hlil,lil;lil!M:i France has the most planes, hut] they cannot save her without the ! Inserted by Father and Mother, MB.AND MRS.JAS, THOMPSON.West Brorae, Nov.25th.1931.I notorious and the criminal in the!trivial> Perhaps, but in a great news.One might as easily separate 1 me:i:°PolliaV newspaper the pro- the hooks from which you have; Portl'\t^ day, challenging the educated ! Quebec.\t|\tboard.\u201cLord Hewart, Lord Chief of Justice of England, who is often a The Story of a Wife Who Made thc Mistake of Telling: the Truth.Directed by Herbert BRENON Special Added Feature.BUCK JONES \"The TCXAS, RANGER OTHER ATTRACTIONS.FURRIERS FARNAM\u2019S CORNER T E \u2022J \u2022 M FARMS FOR SALE TTIGH CLASS DAIRY FARMS; OR-*\tCour.ty, Vermont.£15 acres near COTE.FURS.FUR COATS MADE order.Also Remodel Hr.g and Repairing made v.ith car% by Experts.Work Guaranteed.Prices low.A tris* v.ï.1 convince you.77 Brooks St., Sherbrooke, Que.Te! \u20ac39-W FOR SALE AND EXCHANGE OECOND-HAND STORE.P.BRETON \u2014 ?J We buy, sell and exchange everything.Satisfaction guaranteed.Six years in business.Phone 2123-W, 2'» St.Edward St.Barton on State road, 18 room house, modern conveniences, excellent barn, cement stable for 72 cows, 30 acre* newly seeded, 3 0>0 acre pond for «wimming and fLshing, arjd around 200 tons hay.Price, f15.000.MECHANICS.G A S O L I N E ENGINES REPAIRED, Bi Flywheel Cylinder Grinding with Pistons, Pins Connecting Special t, .Phone 2 acres near Newport, good location.Very , -nachine work good modern nine-room house, 109 ft.barn 14 years old, cement stable for 40 cows, large sugar orchard, around 75 tona hay, pastures for 90 bead.Price Î9.000.Other 15-40 cow farms, £2509-17009.Liberal terms.No cotnmissione to pay.E.C.Field, Agent Federal Land Bark.North Troy, Vermont Rods reb Gears installed.ellington Stree bma' Mo to i South most caustic critic, spoke not long I ago in generous praise of the ser- ] vice of the best type of journalism, j He said :Tn a country that-enjoys, j or has or is supposed to have, rep-1 - : resentative institutions, the new?-] Guests of Mr.and Mrs.Herbert! paper is, of course, a necessity.It Robinson on Sunday were Mr.and! is not any the worse for that.^ But | Mr-.Lloyd Hawley, Arthur and]Jo we always think as gratefully.| Henry Hawley and Mrs.Hooper, of or indeed, as justly as we might of! I Sutton, and Mr.and Mrs.Jay Ladd ! the amazing ability, diligence, care , and family, of Sweetaburg.'\tand learning, the wit, the humor,: Mr.and Mrs.George Bates, Miss ^./P\u2019 a\"j} the versatility, the Dorothy Bates and Mr.Russell Ken- du.t,f\u201clness- the cma-age, the con-nedv.of Riehford, Yt., were calling scle!lt,0^TÎS\u2019 ,anlth* fheer at Mr.and .Mrs.William Johnson\u2019s ^ Jr'h'ch/° to the\tof thc ion Sundav.\t1 ^ ^nd of newspaper?\t| \u2022, .\t,\tI do not mean to ask your ad- : .\\.r.ane Mrs.waiter Mckelyey i rnjration for the men an(j women were at Mr.ann Mrs.Charles Per-: who labor on newspapers.Journal-tins on Sunday.Miss Margaret jsm js jmbued with a sense of pub-: Hooper and Mr.\\\\.Bromby were .i,.service, and that is a substantial ne same nome on Saturday.; part of the reward of such a career., Mr- and M,rs- Luther King spent] We do not a5k you to [je grateful, l\u2019ne week-end at East Pinnacle at as Lord Hewart suggests you might I Mr.and Mrs.Lyndon Royea\u2019s.STORAGE AND REPAIRS Mr.and ,Mr-.Lynn Spicer and G LIVE STOCK FOR SALE A P.A G E ST, \u2022torage, genera > «peciaitze in brake* repair.Phene 2\u201841 '2S\t190 Wei : eg tor.\tSo.! be, for whatever good newspapers jdo, whatever pleasure they give.The newspapers which do repair K EGISTERED LEICESTER XXX RAM be, Sire imported, $10, 112.age« 119 to $!'.John Pibw, Knowlton.of ail deacripti' p Dead ttcrage - - Mr.and Mrs.Westover, of East; me newspapers wnich do supply LAURENT, heated; Dunham, were recent quests of Mrs.; the information which the inteili-j Henry Robinson and Mrs.Eva Rob-j gent and educated leaders of our I ms on.\t^\t|\tmodern world demand, make no such ; Guests of Mr.Cecil Bates and j request.Such journals offer a ser-: Mrn.Eds on Bates on Sunday were I vice which is indispensable to those irfliu.aruj AIrs* Herbert Bates and j who must keep abreast of the pro- JOS.CASTONGUAY.ALTO BODY WORK Finest Dueo Pai; St, Francix Street.\\ TO LET Mr.and Mr?.Carl Bates, of Morgan, Vi 'V'EW FOUR \"OOMS AND BATH, GAR-**¦\tcellar and iro'tàebed, at a r«a'.low prie*?at 136 Brooks.Phone 3124.WEATHER STRIPS Lc TJACTOKY TO RENT ON\u2019 MEADOW\u2019 ST '* f.\u2019-ît floor and baaement, floor If de«i be apprécia* W.R.WpVjp Rent re&fioc t, a.fco lieccnc .d be *een to Aprlr to OUIS ST.LAURENT, METAL WEATH-j window «creeru, window) shades, waterproof caulking compound.Stop; drafts in windows and doors, 190 Welling- j ton South.Phone 2F4L 4 HEATED ROOMS eluding 'le'-tric ehades, gas Etove.Ever: riaas, at IZZ per mon AND BATH.IN-fixturee, 'window \u2019th r g new and f.rxt-th.Edwards, Phone Sacrifice Saie \u2014 of \u2014 Electric Sets ___________ Each.«wfiPaper man who sincere-] 1 Philco 1931 Comb.$97.50 caving th< arr.- evening for Tor- 7 L «ather and interpret the ROSS GARAGE-OIL, GREA?\t^\t.\t.;,-tend the an- ''ev' mak\u201cï.a ^nul,»e Contribution ¦ VMhmg .nd Rcp.in, r,», i« 1 Brunswick 1932 Model Inual\u2019 meeting of the Ontario Bee-i1\t1 ^ nc'wspapcr , for lt ha\u2019s no - Kadiola lo .$30.00 Paul, during Mr.Jon' ,\u2019 absence.\t\u2014;\u2014?\u2014\u2014-:- irt!\u201d\t1 Cro.ley Tabi, Model$35.50\t,MS\t\u201cJÜJr'.fS Fir.ew ard M.re.j w.vV Me\t2 Westinghouse Cabinet 7 '\t' tea >n.honor of bet jthis work.Over «125 has.been ub- Goabout, Phon, 1ÏSS, IWA K.rg w\u201et.\t«OC Cf, u'!\" Mr\"\u2019 ' Kurle;t;h and Mr;-.; scribed by tho village and Stan- -\u2014.-\t\u2014\tucio \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 \u2022 \u2022pc.O.OKf Gf.fifJ 7 y, :\u2018\t\\t) i(\\%< Station, wh.u- tho ; urn f i wan asKinted in $ervinfr refresh-1 $ 10*0 was voted by the council at « Qlie RECORD SPEAKS yor ITSELF Canada has produced many record breakers .but among thc foremost are Norvul Baptic, Canada's world champion skater, and Turrets, Canada\u2019s record holding cigarettes.Turret cigarettes ivrro established as Canada's most popular brand years ago and they still lead all others in public fn'our, due to their supreme quality, mildness and fragrance.After all, nothing ran replace good, honest tobacco; grown and ripened right out In t!,e field nature's own sunlight\u2014nothing artificial that\u2014and the high cpiality is \u201cinbred.\u201d under abou t Quality ami Mildness urret C A.K E T T E s Mack in*, Kire St W.Te!.82M.Ninht T,!.147e-«V.| T RENEE LANCEVIN, SIGNS OP ALL , .t ^ 1 kind,.Phont i2o, ua w,: -z-or, I Atwater Isent 4D North, Sherbrooke, Que., over Kir.keas! i Stor*.OTORAGE, DEAD AND LIVE, I^O W r»U.Bergeron'* Gtrage, St.Frtr.rir Street.Pfoone 1\u20ac2&, yTANADA.FROVINCh O' QI.H.'EC, Xu\tI tÂlf i Gf (ï î f ' ' t r\tof \"t.Frere .\tv I.I\tIIM®\tm «Vlilwwlt tr.erior Cuort.The ïwer.\u2019 -.-I -.4 d,, -\t'\tW Superior Cuort.'I\u2019l.e twenty-firet day November, 1281.Before Me^ere.I^onar i * ] Barhand, P.5.C.CyrtlJe Portier, sentieman.' ™ I.rke Mesantic.B,air.tiff, v*.Chae, Bouffer'' farmer.Lake Meganvte.Defendant is or a\u2019ld beth was a bold horsewoman, \u201ca vv,lthln .tbe.^unci!-chamber she goodshot, a graceful dancer, a skill-1\t^anUy and like m?gm ed musician,\tand an\taccomplished\t:and ?how?d b?vsel£ .a\t*eEOlut,6 scholar\u201d.What more\tcould be\tde.\t; sovereign\tin state affairs\tthe cool- sired in respect of those parts and ! ^ al?d bardeft of.Pol\u201c1zabetb ®®u;d.\twits vlth lish history when such a brilliant | ïbe craftl«b of tnckstsers and give galaxy of great men made their ap-\tunblushmgly falsehood for nearanre nnnn the etoca /if nuhli/» falsehood, and win easy at the dip- pearance upon the stage of public affairs, as when Queen Bess wielded the royal sceptre.We have only to think of statemsen like Walsing-ham, Throckmorton, Burghley, and Sir Ralph Sadler with others; of gallant sea-rovers like Drake, Hawkins, and Frobisher; of brave ad-; mirais like Gilbert and Grenville; : of courtly adventurers like Sir Walter Raleigh and Lord Essex; and it j becomes manifest that there never has gathered around the national j council-board a nobler and braver group of men than those with whom Elizabeth held conference within j her council chamber.Nor can we lomatic game, whether it might be a game of love-making or a mote serious game affecting the interests of the State.And in her fits of rage, which were many, this Queen could treat her nobles like schoolboys, could box tbe ears of her maids, could swear at her ministers in strong, full-pitched oaths that a Billingsgate fishwife wight have envied.Yet she hated war and she loved Old England and with her own hand she wrote letters of State.She could ride from rank to rank through Tilbury camp with a general\u2019s truncheon in her grasp and avow she was ready to live or die amongst the soldiers in the heat of battle, if scorn forget that it was in these golden days the theatre came into its owm.For the first playhouse was erect-\tthTnli.T ed in London about the middle of ! Ilf e?Sp ^ tbin oln5 lt ^°U p \u2022 her reign, whilst before the end of her career there were no less than 1 ,^UIMPe.s jOU(,d daim ade.bei eighteen playhouses in London j realms.\u201d And she could sit waiting alone.Poets like Nash, Kyd, Peele, im a 9ul.et ^oom> ap °\u2018d woman, Webster Greene and Marlowe used ! questioning her maid whether she rhoG1\ti heard not a football as this Queen i/\u2019 v 3 , J3\td 1\t! waited for some token of submis- which exercised an enormous in-1 x\tr i \u2022c' v , fluence upon the public imagina- ll0m mTy tion and did much towards passing (Ibat ]1°F T®?,\tt0he .the material of the new learnini\tJb®\t^14® over to the common crowds.It is!\"?,5 about to dl,e\tth* SCa?3 ! needful to mention William Shake- speare, who portrayed characters | that range over all mankind or the | philisophic pages of Francis Ba-i con, which have changed the whole j outlook upon life for our humanity?| What of the character of Queen Eli-Szabeth?This question has probably I provoked more gossip amongst his-! torians and others, than attaches to : the person and behaviour of any ! other royal personage who ever sat j upon a British throne.Of simplicity j Elizabeth knew little and cared less., Splendor and adulation were the j very breath of her life.She loved j jewels, dresses, ornaments, and i costly suits of all kinds and it is for dramatic art! Of all the plays which have come down to us from the \u201cspacious days of Elizabeth,\u201d her own life and career is the most heart-stirring romance given to posterity.Is it any marvel that it casts an .after-glow across the ages?When a nation accepts a suggestion in principle, that means it is willing to argue about it.The joy to be found in the simple life depends altogether on whether it\u2019s your whim or Fate\u2019s whim.We Solicit your Application for Dominion of Canada NATIONAL SERVICE LOAN.CRAIG, LUTHER & IRVINE ( M l M MEMBERS BRANCH MANAGER, JAMES J.BELL.PHONE 102.Montreal Stock Montreal Curb Market.SUN LIFE BUILDING, SHERBROOKE.face at the time of his death, for McGrath1 until Monday, when they I had retired far into the amoury, j resumed their journey where I indeed saw him.and shed tears for him, but he did not see bye.\u201d As he stood upon the scaffold, ,\t! and gently touched the axe, he re- The morning of Raleigh\u2019s exe- marked, \u201cThis is a sharp medicine, cut ion, hi?keeper brought him a cup but it will cure all diseases.\u201d Even of sack, and inquired how he liked the executioner shrank from behead-A, ,s, 'v , as be who drank of St.ing one so illustrious and brave, un-tiiles bowl as he rode to Tyburn,\u201d j til the fearless knight addressed him answered the knight, and said, \u201cIt with, \"What dost thou fear?Strike.| was a good drink, if a man could ! man!\u201d In another moment the head: tarry by it.\u201d To his old friend Sir;was severed from his body, and his: Hugh Ceeston (who was refused ad- spirit had departed, mittanee to the scaffold by the sher-' Cayley, the antiquarian, desevib-riil), he called out, \u201cPrithee, never ing the\u2018execution, adds, \u201cThe head, fear Ceeston, 1 shall have a place,\" after being shown on either side of: An old bald-headed gentleman who tbe scaffold, was put into a leather pressed forward \u201cto see him, and bag, over which Sir Walter\u2019s gown pray God for him,\u201d caught Raleigh\u2019s : was thrown, and the whole convey-1 eye.who immediately took a rich ed away ill a mourning coach bv embroidered cap from his own head Lady Raleigh.It was preserved by and, placing it on that of the old her in a case during tho twenty-nine man, said, \u201cTake this, good friend, veers which she survived her hus-to remember me, for you have more, band, and afterwards with no less need of it than I.\u201d\tj piaty by their affectionate son \u201cFarewell, my lords,\u201d was his | Carew.with whom it is supposed to cheerful parting to a courtly group, have been buried at West Horsley in who affectionately took their leave j Surrey.Tbe body was interred in °f him, \"1 have a long journey he-j the chancel near the altar of St, lore me, and i must u\u2018en say good* I Margaret\u2019s, Westminster, RADIO TONIGHT IMPORTANT BROADCAST The Premiers of each Province will speak from their respective cities in the following order: Hon.Gordon S.Harrington, Premier of Nova Scotia.Hon.J.D.Stewart, Premier of Prince Edward Island.Hon.C.D.Richards, Premier of New Brunswick.Hon.L.A.Taschereau, Premier of Quebec.Hon.George S.Henry, Premier of Ontario.Hon.S.F.Tomlie, Premier of British Columbia.Hon.J.E.Brownlee, Premier of Alberta.Hon.J.T.M.Anderson, Premier of Saskatchewan.Hon.John Bracken.Premier of Manitoba.10 to 10.30 P.M.Eastern Standard Time.SUBJECT DOMINION OF CANADA NATIONAL SERVICE LOAN Over a Canada-wide Network.i 03282817 ^ PAGE EIGHT SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1931, TWO BIG UPSETS IN N.H1.GAMES EAST EVENING Boston Turned Tables on Canadiens and Montreal Maroons Handed Out a Bad Trouncing to Detroit Representatives.TORONTO, Nov.25.\u2014The two biggest upsets oi the 1931-32 edition oi the National Hockey League campaign so tar occurred in the east last night when Boston Bruins and Monti eal Maroons returned to their home ice and handed Canadiens oi Montreal and Detroit Balcons seven to one and six to one setbacks, respectively.Although both home clubs were conceited a better than even chance of gaining a victory in last evening's tussles, neither was expected to win by such wide margins.The other game on the night\u2019s programme resulted in a tie when a last minute goal by Chicago Black Hawks gave them a split point verdict with New' York Rangers.Dropping a three to nothing decision in Montreal on Saturday when they\u2019 were outplayed for the greater part of the sixty minutes, Boston Bruins returned to the Hub City last night and handed the Flying Frenchmen one of the most humiliating defeats they have met in recent years.From the initial face-off the Bruins banged and \"battered the Habitants and slowed them down considerably.They piled up a two goal lead in the first period when Shore and Oliver both beat Hainsworth and added to this in the second frame when Oliver, Clapper and Touhey all found the net.Going on a rampage at the opening of the third session, the Bruins added to their lead wh;n Cook took a pass from Chapman to make the score six to nothing.Harry Oliver, brilliant winger cf the Bruins, then gave a colorful display of sharpshooting when on ! a pass from Barry he caged his j third goal of the game.The Habi- j tants fought desperately to avoid i a shutout and when Manager Cecil j Hart sent five forwards on the ice the Frenchmen were rewarded with a goal as Howie Morenz took Joi-iat\u2019s pass out from the corner to beat Thompson.Minus the services of their stalwart left winger, Hec Kilrea, j whose eye was injured in Sunday night\u2019s game against the Americans at New Y\u2019ork, Detroit Falcons invaded Montreal last night wit', the hopes of gaining two points from the Maroons.Their hopes, however, faded when the Maroons put on their greatest scoring bee of the season and banged home no less than six goals to their opponents\u2019 one.Play was fairly even through the early periods with the Montrealers having a two to one lead at the end of the second chapter.Coming back for the final stanza the Maroons went on the attack and soon the Stewart-Seibert-Smith combination hit their bearings and rammed home three counters within fifteen minutes.\u201cBaldy\u201d North-cott, a product of the International League, then gave the Montreal club a five goal lead when he swung in fast to take Jimmy Ward's pass in front of the Falcon cage.Chicago Black Hawks still remain the only undefeated team rn the N.H.L.by virtue of their last minute tie with New York Rangers last night.Trailing from the first period when Bun Cook, left winger of the Rangers, scorea on a pass from Boucher, the Hawks threw five men into the attack in the closing minutes of the ga ne and were rewarded with the tieing score when Lola Couture beat Reach on a pass from Jerry Low-rey.The Rangers\u2019 lone counter came toward the close of the first period when the Black Haw-ks were short-handed.A series of long passes about the centre ice zone and a shot on the net by Cook gave the New Yorkers their counter before Bostrum returned to the tee.Shortly after his return he was injured when he cut the tendon in his leg in a collision with Earl Seibert.Abusive talk to the SN- BOWL1NG «- RE- TARIFF RATES DESIGNED TO AID DOMINION INDUSTRIAL \u2018LEAGUE SULTS First Sherbrooke Regiment and Royal Hotel were successful in the weekly Industrial Bowling League schedule by taking three string victories from the Sherbrooke Fish Market and Molson\u2019s, respectively.Jobel, of the Regiment quintette.Advantageous Move Expected at Latest captured the individual honors.' The scores were : First Regiment COCKTAIL GARB NEW ADDITION ONLY ONE MOON PROVES TO BE WELL BEHAVED PARTNERSHIP OF DOMINIONS AUTOMOBILE PRODUCTION ! M A ATV RCWETÏTC WAS LOWER FOR OCTOBER Ifl/ill I DEJNEÎ 11J Canadian Total for Month Was 1,440, Against 4,541 in October of Last Year.Hatch .Lothrop .Poole .Strickland Jobel .Sher.Caron .Moreau , .Loranger .Marceau .Beaudry .155 169 174\u2014498 Ottawa Parley Regarding Exports.Advance in Feminine The Earth\u2019s Moon Only One of Styles Related to Both Afternoon and Evening Dresses.185\t164\t167\u2014516 .158\t141\t147\u2014146 .176\t162\t158\u2014496 .171\t180\t201\u2014552 845\u2014816\u2014847-2508\t\t Ifish\tMarket\t .*59\t122\t132\u2014413 .169\t173\t198\u2014540 .159\t142\t139\u2014440 .146\t1S1\t159\u2014>486 .145\t1S4\t145\u2014474 .OTTAWA, Nov.25.\u2014Within the, CHICAGO, 111., Nov.25.\u2014 And \"J \u2019\u2019W short period of a week\u2019s time the ; now comes the \u201ccocktail dress.\u201d c-o I National Government of the United Which is to say that here is the Kingdom implemented and put into ; answer to that feminine wail of force what is really a prohibitive | \u201cwhat to wear\u201d during the hours tariff, to the elation of the dominions ! shading from daylight to dark, and to the consternation of such | In relation to the rest of the foreign countries as the United ¦ feminine wardrobe, the \u201ccocktail States.\t'dress\u201d is a first cousin to both the To Canadians what is more im- j evening gown and the afternoon portant than the fact that a serious | dress.In some instances a match-blow» has been dealt to the overseas j ing jacket turns an evening dress Twenty-Six in Universe to Follow Well Defined Course.778\u2014802\u2014773-2353 First Regiment won 3 strings.Molson's Rose\t.130\t141\t132\u2014403 Lessard\t.88\t132\t129\u2014349 Mathieu\t.135\t147\t\u2014282 Savage\t.161\t129\t129\u2014419 Goyette\t.148\t175\t124\u2014447 Robinson\t\u2014\t\t115\u2014115 \tC62-\t-724\u2014629-2015\t \tRoyal Hotel\t\t Masked .\t.171\t165\t183\u2014519 Gosselin\t.147\t144\t139\u2014430 McNab .\t.168\t1S4\t125\u2014477 Katadotis\t.156\t195\t174\u2014525 Brownlow\t.177\t187\t165\u2014o29 \t819-\t-875\u2014786-2480\t Royal\tHotel won\tthree\tstrings.trade of this country's next door neighbor is the fact that a one hundred per cent, preference is establish-, ed by Britain for the Dominions.Over $250,000,000 of manufactured into a cocktail frock.As described by smart shops it is the \u201cforma! informal\u201d frock that can stop by for tea\u2014or what have you\u2014and go right on through the ! that at the adjourned Imperial Eco- tain from the United States will be I bridge.stopped, but obviously the chief pur-j It can be as formally informal or pose of this particular division of the j,as informally formal as desired, but new British tariff was to give imme- j the fashion-wdse eye can ferret out diate and substantial stimulus to!the little details that distinguishes Britain\u2019s cotton, steel and woollen i this up-to-the-minute successor to industries.\tI the \u201cSpnday night\u201d frock from its It is on foodstuffs chiefly that Bri-1 cousins.i tain can give real assistance to the I _ The same materials are employed ^ i Dominions, and it is not qoubted here jin these dresses as are used in evening and afternoon garments\u2014velvets, satins, semi-sheers,\tbright crepes, will be given metal cloth and combinations of a new and advantageous deal, and materials.The colors are gayer United States politicians and econo-1 than strictly afternoon but more mists are already expressing them-j-mbdued than for formal later hours.c .T_^ n_\t-nvfPi sjv seives as apprehensive over the ben-! There is an impression of youthful- RESLLlb Uv\tGUM r A a 1 1 that are likely to accrue to the: ness, daring\u2014cocktail.LEAGUE\t; Dominions from that conference.|\t- The Ice Cream\tbowlers took\ttwo\timportant suggestion\thas been\t: f sr^FTTS 4 T n\tIT S strings^ from the\tButter\tsquad\tand\tmade as a means of Britain giving j |\tXx\tUjA jVl H the Milk trundlers he:d\ta similar\ta\tstimulus not only to\tCanada's\t: JL'IiJUllJriljlJ\t1 1 f» I f I »/ margin over the Cream squad in export business with the Mother the weekly Snei-brooke Pure Milk j Country but also to this country\u2019s Company Bowling League.R.Re id,, internal business.It is pointed out of the Ice Cream quartette, cap-j that were Britain to stinulate tha tured the single string honors with ;n any preference given to Canadian 185, while C.Standish, with the foodstuffs that preference would only Milk outfit, had the best two-string apply to geode exported from Can-total of 324.\t; ada to Britain through Canadian The scores were :\t: ports it would give a tremendous Butter _\tadvantage to Canada producers.G.\tCaouette.105\t111\u2014216, a large amount of Canadian F.\tSmith.112\t160\u2014272\twheat now goes to Britain through G.\tSmith .\t.\t117\t107\u2014224\tUnited States ports, such as New C.\tG.Bishop .\t.\t145\t120\u2014265\tYork, Philadelphia and Baltimore, and such a move would serve to increase the export business Ice Cream A.Langlois W.Lemay .R.Smith .R.Reid .A.Morin .C.Smith .C.Standish .F.Armitage Milk Cream E.Rodrigue D.Armitage P.Mennie .M.Armitage 105\t111\u2014216 112\t160\u2014272 117\t107\u2014224 145\t120\u2014265 479__498\u2014977\t im\t 104\t148\u2014252 131\t146\u2014277 148\t173\u2014321 131\t185\u2014316 514\u2014652 1166\t strings.\t 151\t121\u2014272 154\t134\u2014233 159\t165\u2014324 93\t134\u2014227 557-\t-554-1111 95\t101\u2014196 84\t91\u2014175 105\t145\u2014250 166\t143\u2014309 A NEW CENTRAL ORGANIZATION ANN ARBOR, Mich., Nov.25.\u2014 One of the twenty-six known moons in the sun\u2019s family, our own, is the only thoroughly decorous one with no jazz motions in space in annual flight around the sun.This \u201cunique\u201d absence of the modern tempo was reported today by R.N.Petrie, of the University of Michigan, in a mathematical treatise.His calculations show that our moon \u201cis in a class of its own.\u201d \u201cAll moons have two motions, one their orbits around their planets, and the other the course in space which they describe while being dragged around the sun by their respective worlds.Analyzing the resulting path of our satellite, Mr.Petrie finds that it is always concave with respect to the sun.In a diagram the moon\u2019s annual course would look like the curvature of an egg shell, with the yolk representing the sun.Any section of this path whatever would be curved away from the sun, like any fragment broken from the egg shell.lieve that Days of British Empire Are Numbered.OTTAWA, Nov.25.\u2014Production ______\tj of automobiles in Canada for the r , n v .n ' month of October totalled 1,440 uovemor-uenera! Does Mot Be- ears, according to a report isued by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics.When compared with the output tor September, the output of passenger cans fell from 2,108 to 781, while trucks advanced from 538 to 679.The output of all cars for October, 1930, was reported at 4,541.Customs records for the month under review showed that 150 cars were imported into Canada and that 712 cars exported during the period.Figures for the first ten months of this vear showed total imports at 8,604 cars and exports at 13,756 cars as compared with imports of 21,673 cars and exports of 3,990 cars during the corresponding period of last year.Of the total output during October, 743 cars were made for sale in Canada and the balance of 697 were intended for export.The apnarent consumption of automobiles during the month as determined by adding the 743 cars made for sale in Canada to the 150 ears imported, amounted to 893 cars.The number of new cars made available for use in this country during the ton months ending October 31, 1931, totalled 75,682 cars as compared with 127,126 cars in the first ten mon hs of 1930.TORONTO, Ont., Nov.25.\u2014The Earl of Bessborough, Governor-General of Canada, told members of the Empire and Canadian Clubs of Toronto that the creation of equal status among Great Britain and the Dominions is \u201ca splendid deed of partnership, but one which admits of no \u2018sleeping partners.\u2019 \u201d \u201cModern business conditions admit of no deadheads,\u201d the Governor-General said.\u201cIt is no less true that, in any modern association of nations, each nation must pull its own weight.The strength of the chain is its weakest link; if the chain of the British Empire is, to stand the strain that the troubles of this post war world are bound to put upon it, each individual link must be as strong, as truly tempered, as its fellows.\u201d The Governor-General emphasized that he did not think the days of the British Empire were numbered.\u201cIn all history, since the days when clans, tribes and kingdoms first came into being, no association of human beings has ever New Committee to Take Charge of Publicity and Organization Work of National Party.through Canada\u2019s such There could be no fear of wl couver to Britain through the Panama Canal, being interfered with by any effort of the United States at reprisal, as canal treaty rights would have to be preserved.\u2022heat m^tea decided upon the formation eat ' of a new central committee of twenty at their session yesterday afternoon.Nine of the twenty members were appointed, but their names will not be announced until after the completion of the committee today.Completion of the membership of the new executive organization committee was held up pending meetings ta dat awpit nr a d w uat T ,tadaj oi representatives of the Nat-lO BALANCE WAKM rALL Tonal Federation of Liberal Women, -\tland of the Twentieth Century Club! Veteran Navigator Claims Nature ! JPS\tt(> aPP01.nt r.ePresenta- \u201e nr 6 r k\t¦ At : tives from these organizations on the Has Way ot Averaging Nor- new committee, the intention being them Winters.\thave a11 sections of organized Milk won 2 strings._.,\t- \u2014 organized Liberal thought represented.Both j the men\u2019s and women\u2019s section of November the Twentieth Century Club will be Bryan given representation on the new com- RUGBY NEW YORK, Nov.25 450\u2014480\u2014950 has been lovely, Captain Kerrigan grudgingly admitted today, mittee.but watch out for next March and Another decision reached yester-Aprii.Balmy autumns are \u201caver-! day was that the National Liberal aged up\u201d by fierce springs, the cap- Organization Committee will meet tain said.\tonce a year at Ottawa.Thus the ¦# ¦ # All other moons do anything j been less of a rigid political ab-from mild aeroplane-like glides to-jstraction than has the British Em-ward the sun,\tto\treal\tnose\tdives j pire,\u201d he said.\u201cIt is far more com- and even loop-the-lpops.\tGanymede, | parable to a living organism, so one of Jupiter\u2019s moons, does a!readily has it always adapted itself very tight little loop.Gallistro, jto the ever-changing needs of an another of Jupiter\u2019s satellites, i evolutionary world.In nothing has makes a big loop shaped like writ-(that elasticity, that healthy adapting in space a gigantic script let-j ability, _ been more closely shown ter \u201cs.\u201d\t.than in the relations between -\t'the Mother Country and the Dom- MANY INTERESTING WORKS !™s °verseaj- , f , Has this widening of political re- IN NAPOLEONIC LIBRARY sponsibilities .brought with it a cor- _______\tj responding loosening of the ties Rare Volumes in 12,500.Book Library Recently Sold in Jin.\t| in?a stage of development un- dreamed of a few generations ago, is surely preof that the whole is sound.\u201cBelief in the Empire, therefore,\u201d he continued, \u201cmust be .grounded in a true conception of Louise and their son, the ill-fated i\t\u2018\"PU is today, not on King of Rome.\tIa doffmat.m hidebound, recollection The library includes about 12,500\t\u2019*¦ was yesterday, not on volumes besides 1,200 cases of i^]*6 y imperialistic analogies from Napoleon\u2019s war maps\u2014all that re-|ot .r en2P.lre,s\tThose mains of the vast collection that wasif.rnI>!r®s 1°'/ because they were sta-partlv destroyed in the great fire of t'lc\u2022 ^ British Empire goes on be-the Tuileries during the French BERLIN, Nov.25.\u2014Historic campaigns are recalled by the sale in Berlin of the joint private library OTTAWA, Ont., Nov.24.\u2014 The of Napoleon 1, his consort Marie let it be clearly understood\u2014I do not mean that she merely keep in touch with the culture of other nations; I mean that she must water the cultural plants in her own garden, so that Canadian sciences and literature, Canadian art, Canadian music and Canadian drama may thrive vigorously as those other more material activities which are equally part of the equipment of a great nation.\u201d Lord Bessborough at the conclusion of his address, said he would like to see the little theatre repertory movement extended till it became Dor inion-wide and culminated in an annual dramatic festival.Ee believed such a movement of intellectual rivalry would promote good fellowship and create a J!eel-ing of national solidarity.EXPECTED FROM NEW DISCOVERY Medical Men and Scientists Expect that Powerful Microscopic Instrument Will Aid in Checking Contagious Diseases.PASADENA, Calif., Nov.25.\u2014 Fourteen years of application by one man to the development of a new» and powerful microscopic instrument has resulted in what is hailed by medical men and scientists as a discovery that may mean much toward checking the spread of contagious diseases.Before a group of medical men, astronomers and other scientists, a demonstration of the instrument was given by its inventor, Dr.Royal Raymond Rife, of San Diego, Calif.The new microscope was credited with a magnifying power of 17,-000 diameters, compared with 2,-000 diameters, said to be the limit of commercial instrument.Physicians said it made visible forms of bacteria never before beheld by man.Dr.Rife\u2019s microscope, it was announced, has confirmed the belief of Dr.Arthur I.Kendall, of Northwestern \u2022 University, that certain communicable disease germs change their forms and become invisible with ordinary muroscopes when their environment changes.Good times are caused by the shrewdness and wisdom of statesmen; bad times by natural laws over which men have no control.commune in 1871.Most volumes are exquisitely printed, illustrated and bound by leading artists of Napoleonic times, foremost among them Giambattista Bodoni, \u201cprinter of Kings and King of printers.\u201d Many bear the rare imprint \u201cCabinet of H.M.the Emperor and King.\u201d The great Corsican\u2019s taste in books was world-embracing.Besides the French classics, there is a goodly number of English, German, Spanish, Italian and other authors.R.M.C.TV ILL NOT COMPETE FOR DOMINION CHAMPIONSHIP KINGSTON, Nov, 25.\u2014Owing to to even up on the weather.\u201d the lateness of tte season and the | \u201cDo\ttfc\" w; approach of Christmas examina- \u201988?\u201d that is done the new slate will be completed and the names of the ___\t_\tmembers of the new» committee an- \u201cYou\u2019ll pay for this,\u201d said the j parent organizing body^willbTin' a jnounce
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