Sherbrooke daily record, 11 septembre 1936, vendredi 11 septembre 1936
[" §>hprbrnnke iailg Srrnrî) Established 1897, SHERBROOKE, CANADA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1936.Fortieth Year.INSURGENTS RAPIDLY TIGHTENING CHAIN OF STEE AROUND MADRID Forces of Gen.Francisco Franco and Gen.Emilio Mola Have Completed Semi-Circular Line Around Madrid from North, West and South\u2014Rebels Claim All Government Counter-Attacks Have Been Repulsed with Heavy Losses \u2014 Fight to the Death Being Waged, Declared Government Officials in Rejecting Compromise Proposals.Burgos, Spain, September 11.\u2014With the forging of the last link by General Francisco Franco\u2019s legionnairies and General Emilio Mola\u2019s cavalry, the insurgent junta today claimed that its semi-circular chain of steel tightening on Madrid from the north, west and south had been completed.The capture earlier this week of Arenas de San Pedro by Moors and regulars established the strategic link between the two forces required for the offensive on the capijal, headquarters announced.The liaison between the two forces was effected at the village of Parra after Government troops defending the village had fled in complete disorder, leaving fifty dead and large quantities of supplies and equipment, it was said.Prisoners captured by the advancing troops were quoted as saying that the confusion reigned in the Government ranks as a result of contradictory orders issued by untrained officers.General Franco said that a strong attack by Government supporters on the Talavera front had been repulsed with heavy losses, one Madrid column alone leaving 250 dead on the field.New Government attempts to storm Oviedo likewise have been repulsed, it was said, by an effective sortie from the city by the besieged insurgent garrison.Insurgent planes launched a heavy bombardment against Trubia and La Felguera, industrial towns in central Spain, the insurgent command announced.BOMBARDMENT SETS MANY OVIEDO BUILDINGS AFIRE Madrid, Sept.11.\u2014Large buildings, including a Carmelite convent, were set afire today in Oviedo, Government sources reported, by an intense bombardment of the northern city.Government bombers, they said, destroyed the Civil Guards and Civil Governors buildings in a rain of shells which scattered blazes all through tho city.Insurgents, the report said, attempted to flee the city but were barred by Socialist guns.Oviedo was said to have lacked water since September 5th.(The advices from Oviedo conflicted with a broadcast from Seville which said the insurgent garrison at Oviedo had driven back Government militiamen in a battle.) The Government, despite its operations is the north, was reported clumping more and more troops into Toledo province in an effort to drive the insurgents back towards Extremadura, Huelva and Seville, further south and west of the capital.Newspaper articles, declaring the Government more than ever certain of winning civil war, said the Fascists would be swept back into some southern city, there to await the same fate as the besieged Fascists in the Toledo Alcazar.Newspaper reports said the apparent insurgent strategy was to reach the town of Alcazar de San Juan in Ciudad Real province in an effort to surround Madrid.The plan, they said, would be futile because it is already known and orders have been issued to clear the way for military operations in Madrid province and evacuate the towns of San Martin de Valdenglesias and Naval Carnero.Huesca, in the northeast, was reported about to surrender.(A few days ago the Government said it had occupied Huesca).FOREIGN INDUSTRIES ARE RETURNED TO REAL OWNERS Madrid, Sept.11.\u2014Genuinely foreign industries in Spain seized by the Government at the start of the civic war, all have been returned to their owners, a high Spanish official asserted today.Jose Benito, executhe secretary of the Committee for Government Intervention in Industry, said due apologies have, been made for \u201cregrettable errors\u201d in confiscating foreign-controlled establishments.He added that thirty-five foreign factories, stores and shops, incorporated under Spanish law as \u201cSpanish Societies,\u201d still are and will continue indefinitely to be supervised by the Government.INSURGENTS TIGHTENING CHAIN AROUND CAPITAL Burgos, Spain, Sept.11.\u2014 With the forging of the last link by Gen.Francisco Franco's legionnaires and Gen.Emilio Mola's cavalry, the insurgent junta today claimed that its semi-circular chain of steel tightening on Madrid from the north, west and south had been completed.The capture earlier this week of Arenas de San Pedro by Moors and regulars established the strategic link between the two forces required for the offensive on the capital, headquarters announced.The liaison between the two forces was effected at the village of Parra after Government troops defending the village had fled in complete disorder, leaving fifty dead and large quantities of supplies and equipment, it was said.Prisoners captured by the advancing troops were quoted as saying that the confusion reigned in the Government ranks as a result of contradictory orders issued by untrained officers.Gen.Franco said that a strong attack by Government, supporters on the Talavera front had been vepuls-Please Turn to Page 2.ALLIANCE WITH COMMUNISM HAS BEEN REJECTED Trades Union Congress Today Decisively Rejected Proposal for Alliance with Communists in a Popular Front \u2014 Disturbance During Secretary\u2019s Address.Plymouth, England, Sept.11.\u2014 The Trades Union Congress today decisively rejected a proposal for an alliance with Communism in a popular front.The Congress had been asked to approve a united front of all those opposed to Fascism and war.The proposal came before the general council of the Congress, which reported against it.The Congress, meeting here, approved the report of the council with only a few dissentients.The British Trades Unionists took their stand after a scathing attack on Communism by Sir Walter Citrine, general secretary.During his speech there was an-exciting scene when Sir Walter pointed out that the correspondent for the Moscow newspaper Izvestia was sitting in the body of the hall among the delegates.The congress was in an immediate uproar.\u201cGet out!\u201d the delegates roared.The chairman asked the correspondent to leave.The correspondent walked to the side of the hall and returned to the press table whore he sat down.\u201cI imagine,\u201d Sir Walter said caustically, \u201cthat it is only an attempt to demonstrate the practical working of the united front.\u201d Citrine denounced Communists as under orders from Moscow.Communists in Britain were a negligible quantity as a political party, They were abject failures.Fascism was a remote danger in Britain as long as the Trade Unionists kept their heads.R, J.Crane, of the Amalgamated Engineering Union, Birmingham, who said he had been a member of the Communist party for sixteen years, came to their defence.Communists, Crane declared, were not coming in any cringing, cap-in-hand attitude, but because they believed unity essential.Three Rivers, Que., Sept.11.\u2014 Albert Plouffe, thirty-eight years of age, city editor of Le Nouvelliste, local newspaper, for ten years, was appointed private secretary to Premier Duplessis, it was announced today.Plouffe, the father of three children, was born here and educated at La Salle Academy and at St.Joseph Seminary here.¦Sf*- I THE WEATHER | *- ^ SCATTERED THUNDERSHOWERS.Pressure is high on the Atlantic const, and another area of high pressure and cool weather covers the far northwestern portion of the continent with a moderate low area centred over Nebraska.Pressure is also low over Ungavn and has decreased rapidly on the northern British Columbia coast, Light showers have occurred in some sections of Saskatchewan and Alberta and in the more northern districts of Ontario and Quebec.Forecast: Moderate southwest to west winds; partly cloudy and warm today and Saturday with scaterted thundershowers.Northern New England: Mostly cloudy, probably local thundershowers tonight and Saturday; slightly warmer tonight.*-\u2022* ! RUSSIAN MILITARISTS TO | i SHIFT ATTENTION TO I I\tTHE FAR EAST i Moscow, Sept.11.\u2014 Russian ! ! militarists indicated today they I ! would shift their attention I I swiftly to the far east when ! ! summer army manoeuvres on I ! western frontier end tomorrow.I ! While the Soviet Government I 1 pressed Tokyo for the establish- | I ment of a joint commission to ' i try to iron out border difficulties, I I reports from Ulan Bator indi- ! ! cated alarm was felt in Mon- I ! golia because of Japanese-Man- ! ! churian troop movements which ! I some Russian sources viewed as ! 1 a possible encircling march.I\tI -T*-\u20144 TOWN FINDS ITSELF WITHOUT A PHYSICIAN Greenville, Mo., Sept.11.\u2014For the first time in its 117 years, this town of seven hundred population found itself without the services of a resident physician.Both doctors were ill and in a hospital.The same day they became ill, two new' business establishments located here\u2014 both undertakers.PROSPERITYOF UNITED STATES HAS RETURNED President Roosevelt Declares that Country Has Turned the \u201cNow Historic Corner\u201d of the Depression\u2014Tells of Better Conditions in Farm and Factory.Aboard Roosevelt Train En route to Washington, Seut, 11.\u2014President Roosevelt hurried back to Washington today to fill another speaking engagement after projecting a \u201cNew Deal\u201d prosperity and states\u2019 rights issue before a rain-drenched outdoor audience in Charlotte, N.C.He arranged to address the World Power Conference late today.En route to the capital by a special train that caught up with him at the North Carolina city after a 155-mile motor dash from Asheville in the western part of the state, he was greeted by after-dark crowds last night at the three tar heel cities of Salisbury, Higbpoint and Greensboro.He spoke of having turned that \u201cnow historic corner,\u201d the depression; of a \u201cdefinite upturn\u201d in business; of \u201cbetter conditions\u201d on the farm and in factories and homes; of \u201cback in the black\u201d and of record-breaking low' interest rates on borrowings.LANDON CONFIDENT OF VICTORY Aboard Landon Train en route to Maine, Sept.11.\u2014Expressing confidence of victory, Governor Alf M.Landon sped eastward today on his second campaign drive for the great blocs of United States presidential electoral votes that lie between Illinois and Maine.\u201cI am very glad to be on my way to.contribute to the notable campaign which I believe will end in the.repudiation of the present national administration by the voters of Maine next Monday,\u201d the Republican nominee told newsmen.ATTACKSiLÂN OF BRITAIN TO ASSIST FARMER Former Chief Scientific Adviser to Ministry of Agriculture Claims Bonussing of Wheat and Sugar Beet Production Is \u201cIll-Advised.\u201d Blackpool, England, Sept.11.____ \u201cIll-designed\u201d was Sir Daniel Hall\u2019s blunt description today of British subsidies to producers of wheat and sugar beets.Sir Daniel, former chief scientific adviser to the Ministry of Agriculture, addressed the agricultural section of the British Association for the Advancement of Science.Since Great Britain produced only two-fifths of her total food consumption, the choice should be exercised between commodities imported and those of which home production was encouraged, he argued.Wheat and sugar were cheap in the wotld\u2019s markets and easiest to import in time of war.Land was being diverted to them wihch was better adapted to the production of Ihostockand vegetables.Sir John Orv, famous dietician, said the diet of nearly one-half of the population of Britain was below the best standard reported by the International Committee of Physiologists.' This consisted of a daily supply of 1 .1-5 of a pint of milk, a quarter pound of meat, fish or poultry ,ono egg, an ounce of cheese, half\u2019a pound of potatoes, a quarter puoml of vegetables and legumes.He said health requirements demanded nearly double the present milk consumption of half a pint per bead.Brantford, Ont., Sept.11,\u2014Eugene S, Leggett, Brantford native and former newspaperman in Brantford, London.Sarnia and Detroit, SIGN CONTRAQ is \u2018 \u2018 :: .BY GOVERNMENT Premier Maurice Duplessis Announces Contract of licence Plates Will Be Changed \u2014 Magazine Cut Out as Economy Move.Quebec, Sept.11.\u2014Abolition of Le Journal d\u2019Agriculture at a saving of ?100,000 per year, and cancellation of a contract between the former Liberal Government and Signs of Canada, Limited, for manufacture of motor car license placos, were announced today by Premier Duplessis.Emerging from today\u2019s cabinet meeting the Premier said an inquiry \u201crevealed that in 1933, two year\u2019s before the contract then existing, expired, the former Government, following its policy of granting contracts to favorites of the administration, entered into another contract for the years, 1936, 1937 and 1938.\u201d The contract with the company, headed by Oscar Beriau, former Director of Domestic Arts for the Province, was signed by R.F.Stock-well, former Provincial Treasurer and Mr.Beriau, said the Premier.\u201cWe have given the company formal notice this contract will not be recognized,\u201d he added, KINGPtANSTO EXTEND VISIT TO AUSTRIANS King Edward and Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg Held Lengthy Conference at British Embassy Following Successful Hunting Expedition Yesterday .Vienna, Sept.11.\u2014King Edward VIII and Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg conversed at the British embassy today for nearly an hour.The King is believed planning to spend several additional days in Austria.Preparations for his departure on Monday have been cancelled.His Majesty shot a number of partridges while hunting with friends near Trumau, Southern Austria yesterday.Returning to the capital, he again saw Dr.Heinrich Neumann for treatment of his slight ear malady.TURTLE HAD NARROW ESCAPE Wardville, Ont., Sept.11.\u2014Workmen repairing a sidewalk in this Thames River town thought they were making turtle soup in their cement mixer.The sidewalk began to bulge after it had been carefully smoothed over with a trowel.The bulge grew and grew and out crawled a mud turtle.4 | CANADA'S WHEAT CROP ! I 44,000,000 BUSHELS LESS | ! THAN LAST YEAR ! Ottawa, Sept.11.\u2014The first ! | estimate of Canada\u2019s 1936 wheat ! ! crop report by the Dominion I ! Bureau of Statistics discloses a [ i drop of more than 44,000,000 I | bushels from last year.The ! ! current year's crop is expected ! ! to total 232,973,000 bushels, j* I against 277,339,000 for 1935.\t! i The Bureau\u2019s report said the ! I drought this summer was evid- ! i ently more extensive and severe I I than any previously recorded.! 1 Not since 1919 has Canada pro-! duced such a small crop, and in I that year the seeded acreage i was onlv three-quarters of the ! 1936 level.\tI 1 This year\u2019s yield per acre is I I the lowest in twenty-nine years I 1 of continuous annual records, | ! but, as a ray of sunshine, the ! ! Bureau declared the present i ! crop to be \u201cvery high in grade | I and quality, partially offsetting i ! the diminished production.\u201d Large reductions also are in- ! I dicated in other grains.GERMAN PLANES TODAY MAPPING OCEAN PATHWAY GOVERNMENT APPOINTS BOARDSTO HAVE CHARGE OF CAR.AND RADIO S.J.Hungerford, Operating Head of Canadian National Railways for Several Years, Named Chairman of Board of Trustees\u2014Winnipeg Barrister Selected to Head New Board to Control Radio Broadcasting in Canada\u2014Compensation for Members of Abolished Commissions Studied.Ottawa, September dl.\u2014Two of the Dominion\u2019s leading publidy-owned enterprises have been placed under new control by the appointment of a Board of Directors to administer the Canadian National Railways and a Board of Governors to direct the destinies of national broadcasting.Following an all-day Cabinet council, Prime Minister Mackenzie King last night announced the names of those who will shortly take over control from the C.N.R.Board of Trustees and the Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission, both creations of the last Government.Only six of the seven railway directors provided for in the statute were appointed yesterday.The seventh will represent labor and will be nominated by the railway workers themselves by arrangements now being worked out between Railway Minister C.D.Howe and representatives of the workers.Following are the new directors: S.J.Hungerford, managing head of the system since the death of Sir Henry Thornton, chairman of the Board; James Y.Murdock, K.C., Toronto, president of Noranda Mines, Limited; Herbert J.Symington, K.C., Montreal; D.H.McDougall, Montreal and Stellarton, N.S., mining engineer and consultant; Robert J.Mof-fatt, Bradley, Sask., wheat grower and pool executive; and Wilfred J.T.Gagnon, Montreal shoe manufacturer and Minister of Commerce in the Cabinet of former Premier Adelard Godbout of Quebec.ITALO-GERMAN ACCORD TO CLIMAX REICH ANTI-BOLSHEVIK CAMPAIGN Prospective Announcement of Practical Steps to Open Anti-Soviet Crusade by Germany Heightens Political Interest in Europe\u2014Presence of Fascist Delegation at German Nazi Conference Lends Weight to Reports that an Alliance Between Two Fascist Powers Will Be Effected Shortly.Nuremberg, Germany, Sept.11, \u2014Prospective announcement of practical steps to open a German anti-Bolshevik crusade, which -observers believed would climax Nazi declarations against Russia and Jews, heightened political interest here today.An anti-Bolshevik campaign, begun by Adolf Hitler in his proclamation opening the Nazi party convention and deveolped in subsequent speeches by German officials, appeared to be leading so systematically to such action that it was believed widely some definite step was imminent.In some quarters, Germany and Italy were linked in the predicted crusade toward the establishment of an international bloc opposing Russian governmental practices.The presence of a Fascist delegation from Italy at the national Socialist meeting and the cordial reception given the visitors was re- sponsible for the forecast of an alliance between Berlin and Rome.Particular importance was attached.to a statement by Dr.Paul Joseph Goebbels, Hitler\u2019s Propaganda Minister, warning \u201csides must be taken for or against Bolshevism with full acceptance of the consequences.\u201d Goebbels signalled the possible opening of a crusade against Jewry and Bolshevism in a denunciatory speech during a convocation of Nazi Labor Corps recruits.\u201cMay the world act before it is too late,\u201d he cried to climax his description of Bolshevism as \u201can infernal world pest which must be rooted out.The Jew created Bolshevism and bears it forward.\u201cEvery inner Bolshevist struggle is a family fight among Jews,\u201d Goebbels declared.\u201cBolshevism could be born only in the brains of Jews, and he who fraternizes with Bolshevism is sure to die from it.\u201d IL DUCE READY TO UNDERTAKE LEAGUE DUTIES Mussolini Expresses Willingness to Collaborate in League of Nations Affairs Provide Ethiopian Issue Is Not Raised to Embarras Him.Rome.Sept.11.\u2014Italy will resume collaboration in League of Nations affairs, provided the Ethiopian issue is not raised to embarrass her, informed sources reported today.The agreement was reached, these sources declared, during conferences between Premier Mussolini and Joseph A.C, Avenol, Secretary-General of the League.(The Italian delegation to Geneva withdrew last June after Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia appeared to defend his demand the League punish Italy for aggression in East Africa.) The Italian premier was reported as agreeing to forego insistence that Ethiopia cancel its membership in the League.He was represented as believing such a step is not necessary at this time although he sees the Ethiopian withdrawal as an eventual necessity, At the same time, Il Duce was believed to have made it clear Italy could not be expected to participate in deliberations with either the Negus or his delegate present at Geneva sessions.JAPANESE ADD FOUR SHIPS TO Second Craft Making Trip Via Bermuda as Ten-Ton Flying Boat Makes First Non-Stop Flight from Azores to United States.New York, Sept.11.\u2014The thorough-going Germans, with one trans-Atlantic flight record for an east-west crossing stowed away, sought a second mark today with flying boats of the German International Airline, Lifthansa.The ten-ton flying boat, Zephir landed at Port Washington, N.Y., last night, completing the first nonstop flight between the Azores and the United States.It\u2019s time was twenty-one hours and seven minutes for the 2,390-mile trip.It\u2019s sister ship, the Aeolus, was catapulted from the base ship, Schwabenland, off the Azores a few hours later for a second trip between the two points, this one with a scheduled stop at Bermuda.The Aeolus is scheduled to fly from Bermuda to Port Washington tomorrow.The Zephir\u2019s accomplishment and the Aeolus\u2019 project are new in aviation history.The importance of the flight in the aviation world is that air transport men now have added new folios to the fundamental data necessary to the operation of mail and passenger planes between North America and Europe on regular schedules EXCLUDE WIDOW OF HAUPTMANN FROM UOMINION Attorney Lodges Appeal Against Ruling of Canadian Immigration Authorities at Cantic Who Refused to Allow Mrs.Hauptmann to Visit Montreal.OLD GRAY MARE AIN\u2019T WHAT SHE USED TO BE Lebanon, O., Sept.11.\u2014K.P.Hutchenson reports that Nell, his old gray mare, has only onerthird of her tail left.He said-a calf ate the other two-thirds, The calf is recovering and Nell doesn\u2019t seem to mind the loss.CHINESE FLEET INTERNATIONAL REVOLUTIONARY FLEET PLANNED Ambassador Instructed to Serve Warning on Nanking Government that Further Chinese Mob Violence Against Japanese Will Not Be Tolerated.Shanghai, Sept.11.\u2014Four Japanese fighting vessels\u2014three destroyers and one cruiser \u2014 arrived at Shanghai today from Tsingtaô en route to Hong Kong to guard Japanese interests in South China.Nipponese investigators into the reported killing of a Japanese resident of Pakhoi, meanwhile, were expected to arrive at the southern j city tonight.Shigcvu Kawagoe, Japanese ambassador to China, disclosed he had received instruction from Tokyo to | \u201cwarn Nanking Japan will not ; tolerate further mob violence against Japanese residents of ; China.\u201d PRODUCTION OF BUTTER AND CHEESE INCREASES DOg Din NOT COME UP TO EXPECTATIONS.Salt Lake City, Sept, 11.\u2014Eerdic Hines sought a German shepherd dog to attend to the burglars who have been calling at, his home.He told police, he came home to find ,$20, two suits of clothing, three quilts and all of his chickens missing.The dog, he said, was chewing a $25 cheque the visitors had overlooked.has been appointed acting executive director of the National Emergenncy Council at Washington by President Roosevelt.Cheese Production in Past Month Fifteen Per Cent.Above that of August, 1935, and Output of Butter Up 1.5 Per Cent.Quebec, Sept.11.\u2014Cheese production in the Province of Quebec last month increased fifteen per cent, over August last year, while butter output for August this year was up 1,5 per cent, compared with ! (he same month a year ago, according to the monthly statistics issued today by the Department of Agriculture.Butter ouput last month totalled 11,264,00-0 pounds against, ill.097,165 pounds in August 1935; cheese production last month amounted to 4,493,000 pounds com-I pared with 3,907,000 pounds in August 1935.Portuguese Prime Minister Claims Revolting Sailors Planned to Join Ships from Other Nations in Fleet Flying Red Flag.Lisbon, Sept, 11.\u2014Charges that Portuguese seamen planned to form an international fleet flying the red flag of world revolution were made by Premier Antonio de Oliveira Salazar here today.The Premier announced that the two warships which attempted to leave Portugal earlier this week intended to join with ships of other nations to create an international mobile red fighting fleet whose first job would be to aid the Spanish Government.Premier Salazar issued a flat warning to the men of the Portuguese fleet: \u201cSurrender or be sunk1\u201d This will be the alternative offered to any group of sailors who try another mutiny, he said.\u201cNo Portuguese warship will ever bear any other standard than the flag of Portugal,\u201d the Premier declared, \u201cand if any attempts to do it in the future it will be bombarded until it yields or is sunk.\u201d Rouses Point, N.Y., Sept.11.Mrs.Anna Hauptmann, barred from Canada because she could not prove United States citizenship, looked to the Dominion Government today to overrule immigration inspectors and allow her to continue to Montreal.Inspector Emile Levin, of the United States immigration service, who questioned Mrs.Hauptmann and a companion on their return from an unsuccessful effort to gain admission to Canada at Cantic, Que., expressed belief the widow of the convicted kid nap-murderer was \u201cstaying somewhere in the vicinity incognito,\u201d pending action upon her appeal.Levin explained an appeal against exclusion from Canada is automatic-lly filed at Ottawa, and a decision usually is given within seventy-two hours.Mrs.Hauptman's companion, who said he was her attorney but did not otherwise identify himself, told Canadian officials the widow of the Bronx carpenter was on her way to Montreal to check information on the Lindbergh kidnapping.He said she was still trying to prove Bruno Richard Hauptmann innocent of the crime for which he was put to death last April 3.The pair drove across the border here Wednesday night in a large sedan but were turned back at Cantic.Inspector Levin said both appeared greatly agitated.Mr.Hungerford will receive a salary of $30,000 and the directors will receive $5,000 each.The Prime Minister said it had been necessary to select the majority from Montreal and vicinity so that they would be readily available for frequent meetings of the Board.The act creating the Board will be proclaimed on October 1 and before that date the Government will consider what steps will be taken to compensate the present Board of three trustees who have been in control of the railways since January 1, 1934.For the Board of Governors of national broadcasting, who will rec-onimend a general manager and assistant, the Government appointed the following.Leonard W.Brockington, Winnipeg barrister, to be chairman ; Rene Morin, director general of the General Trust of Canada, Montreal, vice-chairman; General Victor W.Odium, Vancouver broker; J.Wilfred Godfrey, Halifax barrister; Prof.A.Vachon, Laval University, Quebec; N.L.Nathanson, President Famous Players Corporation of Canada, Toronto; Col.Wilfred Bovey, barrister and educationist of Montreal; Alan B.Flaunt, Toronto journalist, and Mrs.Nellie McLung, Canadian author, Victoria.Appointment of a general manager and assistant will follow recommendations to be made by this Board of Governors, according to the statute.The Board will serve without pay, but will receive necessary expenses and costs for attending meetings.The new radio organization will take over on November 2 when the act, passed at the last session of Parliament, is proclaimed.It will replace the Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission set up in 1933 and now composed of Hector Charlesworth, former editor of Toronto Saturday night, chaiman, Col.J.Chauveau, Quebec lawyer, vice-chairman, and Col.A.W.Steel.The new C.N.R.Board of Directors will supplant the Board of three trustees set up by the Bennett Government and which took over from the old directors on January 1, 1934.Members of the Trustee Board are former Judge C.P.Ful-J.Edouard La- \u2018Î should have brought my citizenship papers which are in a safe de-j lerton, chairman posit box in Brooklyn,\u201d he quoted I belle and F.K.Morrow.Mrs.Hauptmann as saying.\tj Disposition of the two executive Levin said Mrs.Hauptmann told bodies now to be removed from of him she took out the papers \u201cin New York City in 1932.\u201d flee will be a matter to which the Government will give consideration in the next few weeks.DECLARE CREDENTIALS ARE NOT SATISFACTORY Cantic, Que., Sept.11.\u2014 Record books of the Canadian Immigration Department at this customs port op-posite Rouses Point, N.Y., today Death Toll Among Jewt it Result bore a notation opposite the name Mrs.Bruno Richard Hauptmann, \u201crejected as an alien seeking entry to Canada, but not in possession of proper credentials to warrant her reentry in the U.S.A.\u201d Anna, the blond widow of the Bronx carpenter convicted of the kidnap and murder of the infant son of Col, Charles A, Lindbergh JEWISH LABORERS SLAIN BY ARAB TERRORIST BAND of Twenty-One Weeks of Disorder in Palestine Reaches Eighty-Three as Result of Double Killing.RENOWNED SINGER WILL BE ABLE TO RESUME HER WORK Chicago, Sept.11.\u2014Amelita Gal-li-Curci has won her great gamble.She is going to sing again.A year ago the golden voice of the renowned coloratura soprano was stilled by an operation to remove a goiter, Her friends feared it might never again thrill music-lovers.They termed the surgery her greatest.gamble.But last night Manager Paul Lon-gone announced she had recovered and agreed to appear with the Chi- Jerusalem, Sept.11.\u2014Two Yemen-, ite Jewish laborers were shot to and j death today by terrorists, bringing executed by the state of New Jersey! the Jewish death toll in twenty-one.on April 3rd, went back to New ; weeks of disorder attendant upon the York after Inspector A.Lamothe, of; Arab general strike to eighty-three, the Canadian Immigration Depart- j The victims were called ont by ment, had rejected her application | name while working in Rehoboth for entry to the Dominion to go to I and were greeted with a volley of Montreal.\tj rifle fire.A lawyer who accompanied Mrs.|\t____;______ Hauptmann was told he could enter j Canada if he wished, but he chose to - enter Canada had nothing ' > do with accompany his client back to New Bvun0 Richard Hauptmann\u2019s execu-York, .\t-\ttion for the kidnap-slaying of the He told immigration officers that ; Lindbergh baby, officials of the De-Mrs.Hauptmann wanted to go to ; partment here said today.Montreal to check information given - Departmental officials here said to her concerning the Lindbergh kid-|n0 report on the border incident had napping as she bad vowed to in-! been received here but they under-vestignte the case from all angles in stood Mrs.Hauptmann was on her an attempt to prove her dead hus- ! way to Montreal to obtain a visa band innocent of the crime.\tI\tfrom American consulate-general Mrs.Hauptmann told the officers i there.The visa would enable her to she wanted to see the United States ; remain in the United States.Consul-General in Montreal to ob-j It was understood here the reason tain papers so she could take out the widow of the Bronx carpenter United States citizenship.BAN IIAL NO CONNECTION WITH SLAYING was turned back was her inability to produce evidence of American citizenship.Without it, if she came, into Canada, Washington could re-Ottawa, Sept.11.\u2014Refusal of im- fuse to readmit, her and Canada migration officials at Cantic, Que., would be forced to let, her remain to permit Mrs.Anna Hauptmann to here or deport y$cr to Germany.I 666311 ' PAGE TWO v-f 1 r l ^ SHERBKOOKE DAILY RECORD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1936.SURVEYER AND H.PREFONTAINE GAINED FINAL FINE SUCCESS CROWNED FAIR AT Victories Over Gaétan Cote and Marcel Grégoire, Respectively, Placed Surveyer and Prefon-taine in East Sherbrooke Men\u2019s Singles Title Round.Few of the spectators who witnessed the two semi-final matches of the East Sherbrooke tennis championship tournament last night were ready today to hazard a guess about whether Fabre Surveyer or Hector Prefontaine would succeed to the men\u2019s singles throne vacated by Paul Biron.Both finalists gave equally brilliant exhibitions as they eliminated the\u2019r respective opponents to gain the title round of the 1936 tournament.Surveyer, who bowed to Johnny Hibbard in the recent Eastern Townships final for the Sherbrooke Record Trophy, went four sets to eliminate Gaétan Cote, of the Country Club.The former Montrealer lost but one game in the first two sets, watched Cote rally to save himself from a straight set defeat by taking the third set and then put the finishing touches to his stubborn rival.The scores were 6-0, 6-1.3-6, 6-4.Prefontaine was not so hard I pressed as he made a 6-4.6-3, 6-2 | NORWEGIAN SCHOONER IS conquest of Marcel Grégoire, tne\tRFHFVTn flfFAN VICTIM promising young player who was j OtLltVEU UU1AN VlCllJl ousted by Johnny Hibbard in the!\tI\t.\t_ penultimate round of the E, T.Halifax Agents See Little Proba- flassie.Grégoire could not cope with Prefontaine\u2018s assortment of plays, desoite the fact that he called upon all his resources in an effort to turn thj tide.Many of the games went to deuce, but Prefontaine, on nearly every occasion, had the shots to achieve the winning points.The past season\u2019s play permits but little ground for comparison between Surveyer and Prefontaine.Ths latter has made a fine comeback after being eliminated in the first round of the Eastern Townships title play by Sarto Roy to the tune of 10-?, 6-3.Roy advanced to the round of four where he suffered a 6-3, 1-6, 6-3, 5-7, 6-3 setback at Surveyer\u2019s hands.There are only two matches on tonight\u2019s programme at the Boisvert court on Murray street.At seven Closing Scenes Enacted Early Last Evening After Two Days of Keen Rivalry Among Exhibitors for Coveted Honors in Various Departments.Marbleton, Sept.11.\u2014The Mar-bleton Fair came to asuccessful conclusion last evening after two days of ceaseless hurry and excitement.The weather was ideal yesterday and the attendance was all that could be desired.From an early hour in the morning until the closing the interested spectators viewed the\u2019 many and varied exhibits which filled all departments.With the conclusion of the Marbleton Exhibition the fair season generally throughout the Eastern Townships is drawing to a close.Each year a large number of people look forward to the Marble-ton Fair and this year they were by n6 means disappointed with the splendid showing which had been prepared for their entertainment.To H.H.Bisnop.president of the Marbleton Fair, and his able assistants is due much credit for the success achieved.LABOR STUDIES \u2019WORKERS WOULD VALUABLE MINE DIFFICULTY OF SEIZE CONTROL! OF OF MOTOR FIRM IN COKE WASTE CITY BRIEFLETS ORGANIZATION E.T.BOARDS OF TRADE PRE-! PARE FOR FALL MEETING A meeting of the Executive Com-! mittee of the Eastern Townships I Boards of Trace and the Eastern 1 Townships Settlement Society was j held at the Magog House yesterday Northwestern Ontario Town Held! French Leftist Workers Plan to! Waste Products of Coke Manu- f/Tul^Thibault^?Danvüî^and .G.W.Murphy, of Sherbrooke.Several matters of importance were discussed, one of the main on the agenda being con- Before Trades and Labor Congress as an Ideal Trade Union Centre with Virtually All Professions Organized.Conduct Renault Automobile j Factory as \u201can Experiment\u201d in \u201cIndustrial Sovietization.\u201d facture Promise to Yield a Number of Important Drugs1 Used in Battle Against Disease.ROOSEVELT TO KEEP U.S.OUT OF NEXT WAR Financial News MONTREAL OPENING AND NOON SALES The following quotations of today\u2019s prices on the Montreal Stock Exchange are fur- Paris, Sept.H.\u2014 Leftist French! Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept.11.\u2014 A workers plan to seize the Renault ! valuable untouched mine of medical, automobile factory outside Paris.| insecticidal and other compounds in Democrat Leaders Tell Maine Voters that President Will Maintain Neutrality in Impending World Struggle\u2014Landon Heading for State.Montreal, Sept.11.\u2014The northwestern Ontario town of Fort, .,\t,,\t.\t.,.,\t\u201e \u2022 ,,\t,\t,\t,\t™\t.Frances was '-'\u2022-Id before the Trades!the Government was told today, for | the present waste products of coke Auger, Provincial Minister of T.«W\tcnnJ \u201can experiment\u201d in \u201cindustrial manufacture was suggested today i nization, address the afternoo Sovietization.al Minister of bility Lumber Vessel, Month Overdue on Voyage from England, Will Reach Nova Scotia.Halifax, Sept.11.\u2014More than a month overdue on a voyage from England, to Halifax, the three-masted auxiliary schooner Gad was given up as lost today by her local agents.Since the 240-ton lumber carrier left Sunderland July 2nd, severe storms have churned the North Atlantic and more than one wooden vessel has gone to the bottom.The eighteen-year-oid Gad, owned in Norway, carried a crew of eight or ten men.Bound for Halifax to load lumber, the auxiliary schooner should have made the crossing in about a month, and Labor Congress of Canada con vention today as an ideal trade i\t.\t___ \u2022\t| A delegation representing 1,500 Albert Locking.- of Fort Frances, ' fore™en a\"d teehni«funs\tRe-1 Chemical Society, told of the high state of labor 5au,lt.\u2019yor^s>.on?°| the lai'Sest ! P.J.Wilson, Jr., and J.H.Wells, organization in his\thometown\tand!\tdustnaLplants m\tFrance gave\tthe of the Mellon Institute of Industrial expressed surprise\tat the lack 0f ;\tî!^0!'matlon to Premler Blum\tm\this j Research,\tdeclared such _ valuable organization in Montreal.\t!\t0 'iff' , ,,\t! ^rug5 as\tquinine, strychnine, nico- Not only factory\temployees\tbut!\tTh® ^oup told\tBlum the\tmove-; tme and\tmorphine are closely re- al! retail store, hotel and restaurant meiV was ®ifr''ed dy Communist j lated chemically to the pyridine bas- | employees.I hey declared they had',-es extracted as a by-product from ! received information the extremists ; coal tar obtained in the manufac-were\tplanning to\ttake over the |\tture of coke.plant\tby force and\toperate it for !\tCoal tar already is widely used in themselves temporarily.\t| making dyes and other products.The delegation asked Premier j Wilson said : Blum for a government guarantea ! \u201cPyridine has been used medical-that non-union employees would belly as a respiratory sedative; and as assured of the right to work in the j an antiseptic in a number of dis-eve-nt the \u201cexperiment\u201d materializ- eases, including asthma, angina pec-ed.\ttoris (heart oppression), whooping The Renault plant, located at Bit- j cough, diphtheria and gonorrhea, lanvourt, a suburb of Paris, em-1 \u201cB-lutidine, a homolog of puri-i ploys\t34,000 workers to produce '\tbine, has been applied\tas an anti- ; army\tequipment as\twell as motor j\tdote for poisoning by\tstrychinine vehicles of all kinds.\tj and in tetanic convulsions.\u201d Fresh labor troubles, linked to! Another possible valuable use of workers\u2019 demands for reconsidéra- pyridine is in the treatment of tion of France\u2019s non-intervention policy in the Spanish civil war, brought new worries to Cabinet officials.Minister of the Interior Roger Sa-lengro left the capital hurriedly for Lille in an effort to halt the spread of occupational strikes in textile establishments.item sidération of details in connection .with the fall meeting to be held in Magog on Thursday, October 1st.It is hoped to tiave the Hon.H.L.\u2022 x-RcmuciaLic itJaueifc ucGiaiai/ivu mai ggested todayl nization, address the afternoon ses-! President,.Ro?Tse>:el,t £ faPadl\u20acf 0J, as a fruitful field for investigation j sien and the Hon.F.J.Leduc, Pro- !\twas be by members of the American ! vinckri\t^ p-a*\ti impending world conflict was be- Portland, Me., Sept.11.\u2014Two o'clock Miss Mariette Daigmault and ! said George Webb, of I.H.Mathers employees were members of unions and practically all employers werej committed to closed-shop and wage : agreements.Hotels and stores had; union cards and higher rates of wages were paid to women workers than those provided in the Ontario minimum wage laws, Mr.Locking spoke when the Congress turned down a motion from the Montreal Store Employees\u2019 Federal Union that dues and taxes imposed on them should be reduced.He said if Montreal store employees ; wanted a union they should educate ! the workers ard make sacrifices, i A reduction in dues would not help j them.J.Walker, of the Montreal group, ! said if store employees were not to receive help they could not be expected to continue affiliation with the Congress.P.M.Draper, president of the Congress, said a point had been stretched when \"the store employees were taken in as a federal union.Notwithstanding all the help Congress officers could give, the Union had only ten members.This was due to the apathy of the workers and education was the only way to overcome this apathy.A plea for an active organization department in the Congress to organize al! Canadian workers was made by J.B.Saizberg, of Toronto, who said an organization fund of $50,000 should be set up and live-wire organizers sent through the country to increase membership from some 100,000 to 500,000.glandular deficiencies due to a lack of iodine, it was pointed out.A sodium salt in the drug has been used to inject as much as sixteen grams of iodine into the body.It is also used to provide a dark contrast in X-ray examinations and arsenic-puridine compounds have been found effective in destroying SDpa, t th .Roads guest- ^ Maine Voters oday as the Respeaker at the evening meeting.publican standard bearer, Alf M.It was brought to the attention of ; Land head\u20acd f this state.the meetin.s: that some of the leading! TT\t\u2022\t.\u2022 -.tt highways in rhe province were bad-L Hafy H\u2019 Woodrmg, aering War ly in need of lepairs and that, as a | Becietary, and John J, Cudahy, am-consequence, the tourist traffic jg ; b.assador to Poland, made the asser-suffering.Dr.G.A.Bowen, of i V0\"* ^ democrats rallying for Mon-Magog.reported on the prepress ! day 5 stat\u20ac eIectl0n-made in connection with national | Woodring, former Kansas Gov-parks, and it was decided that the ernor> sa'd th®*- even Liberty League request to have the Federal Govern- ! members had no desire \u201cto return - -\t; to the Hoover Days.\u2019 \u201cThey are the same Du Ponts, Rockefellers and Morgans,\u201d he declared, \u201cwho were but recently begging President Roosevelt to save them and their wealth from destruction by a Hoover depression.\u201d nieh.il by McManamy Open\t\t& Walsh: High Low\t\tNoon Bell Tel\t150>4\t\t150%\t180%\t150% Brazilian .\t\u2022\u2022\tw/j\t13\t121/a\t13 Can.Car .«\t8%\t-2C OO\t8%\t8% Can.Car Pfd.\t20Y4\t20%\t20%\t20% Can.Ind.Alcahoi\t\t7%\t7%\t7% Can.Cement Pfd.\tSGU\t86%\t86%\t86(4 Can.Pacific .\t12%\t12%\t12(4\t12(4 C.Steamships Pfd.\t\t«%\t«%\t6V4 Con.Smelting .\t5 6 Vi\t56%\t66(4\t66(4 Dom.Bridge .\t42%\t42%\t42(4\t42(4 Dorn.Textile .\t68 Va\t68%\t68\t68(4 Dom.S.& S.\t6V's\t6%\t6%\t6(4 Genera] Steel .\t4\t4%\t4\t4% Int.Nickel .»\t67V4\t67 Vi\t66(4\t56(4 Massey Harris .\t4V&\t4%\t4(4\t4 (a McCoil-Frontenac\t14 V.\t14 (a\t14%\t14(4 Mont.Power .\t32\t32\t31%\t32 Nat.Breweries .\t43 Vi\t43(4\t43%\t43% Po-wer Corp.\t14%\t14%\t14%\t14% Quebec Power ?.\t21\t21\t21\t21 Shawinigan .\t20%\t26%\t20%\t20% ment take over Orford Mountain for a national park will be one of ths main subjects discussed at the Magog meeting.OPPOSING THEORIES GIVEN AS TO CAUSE OF FATALITY Young Ontario Woman Died without Being Able to Recall Her Movements for Three Hours Before She Was Picked Up with a Fractured Skull.Striking bus drivers in Paris and syphilis germs in the brain of mice, Miss Pauline Goyette will meet inland Sons, Limited, her Halifax, Congress wouid not then hav ' ladies\u2019 singles semi-final, while at ! agents.eight o\u2019clock Surveyer and Majella : \u2018\u2018In my opinion, if she turns up Charest will oppose the Grégoire i Giere\tb® notWnK Mt of'ner- sîl3 brother:.Connie and Marcel, for thU\tonly carry enough food for right to advance to the men\u2019s I about a month, little more.No, I doubles final.This latter contest will ! can\u2019t see how she could exist after be a be«t three-of-five-set affair.j ^ 1 ^time, Mr.WeDb said.NEW HIGH NOTE RECORDED QUEBEC RACES DOMINATED BY BELGIAN OPERA SINGER\tBY E.T.ENTRIES re to, go begging to Parliament and governments for action, but would be able to make demands and get action.President Draper said he doubted if there were 500,000 workers employed in industry in Canada as he had been checking with the bureau of statistics.The first thing to be done before new organizations could the suburbs took control of garages.Building workers at Metz and mill workers at Epinal declared walkouts.Farmers in Alsace formed a militant society to prevent the occupation of their land by hired hands.The Government\u2019s neutrality policy, meanwhile, received support from 4,000,000 members of the National Confederation of War Veterans.The veterans declared full agreement with the \u201chands off\u201d policy of the Blum Government, throwing their harking against the 5,000,000 members of the General Confederation of Labor which has demanded reconsideration of the neutrality attitude.A rift in the labor ranks became apparent when the Paris Railway Union protested the action of metal workers in seeking to obtain revi- the Pittsburgh scientist said.torso was found.A blood-stained shirt, wrapped in a Tuesday morning newspaper, was found on a nearby culvert.Detective Janies Hogan said the body bore marks familiar to investigators of the five previous decapitations.Three of the other five bodies were found close, to Kingsbury Run.\tÿ Barrie, Ont., Sept.11.\u2014 Just before she died, Charlotte Murtel Sweeney, aged twenty-one, said she was unable to recall her movements for three hours before she was picked up with a fractured skull, it was learned today as Police Chief Alex Stewart and Coroner Dr.E.J, Turn-bull offered opposing theories as to the cause of her death.Both agreed there was no evidence of foul play, but Chief Stewart said he believed she was injured in a fall, whereas Dr.Turnbull said he thought she had been struck by an automobile.Found early Saturday morning, the girl died in hospital yesterday from meningitis resulting from her injuries.SABOTAGE IS DISCOVERED ON BOARD U.S.BATTLESHIP Los Angeles, Sept.11.\u2014The Times said, today a \u201chigh naval official\u201d admitted in Washington attempted sabotage had been discovered aboard the.new United States 10,000-ton cruiser Indianapolis, now lying in New York navy yard.The Times said it was reported a large number of phonograph needles and tacks were driven into an electric supply cable of the cruiser, apparently in an effort to cause destructive fires by short circuit.Several minor fires, the paper said, were declared to have actually been started in the Indianapolis before discovery of the steel particles.The sabotage was said by the paper to be identical with that which caused a $250,000 fire aboard the battleship Colorado in 1931 and similar to a blaze which swept the new heavy cruiser Quincy in recent months.NEW YORK QUOTATIONS Open High Low 2 r m.The following quotations of today\u2019! prices on the New York Stock Exchange are furnished by McManamy & Walsh: \tOpen\tHigh\tLow\tNoon Air Reduction .\t77%\t77 Vs\t77%\t7 7 (4 Steel of Canada\t63\t69\t64\t69 Am.Can\t\t\t125\t1(25\t125 Am.Sugar\t60\t60\t60\t63 Am.Smelting .\t85\t8 5 Vi\t85\t851'4 Am.T.& T.\t178%\t179 Vi\t178%\t179% Anaconda Copper\t40\t40\t39%\t39% Atchison \t\t83%\t83 U\t8 3 Vi\t83 V» Haiti.& Ohio .\t26 (4\t26(4\t26%\t26% Beth.Steel .\t71%\t71%\t70%\t71 Can.Pacific .Chesapeake\t12%\t12%\t12%\t12% & Ohio ., .,.,\t67V2\t67 Vi\t67 «5\t67 Vn Chrysler \t\t\t115\t115\t115\t115 Com.Solvents .\t16%\t16%\t16%\t16% Congoleum Co.\t34(4\t34TA\t34%\t34 Vs Du Pont \t\t163\t162 Vi\t163\t162 V.» G«eral Electric .\t47\t47\t47\t47 General Motors .\t68(4\t63%\t68%\t6S14 Inter.Harvester\t7 9 Va\t79 Vj\t79%\t79 M» Kennecott .\t.\t48%\t48%\t48%\t48% N.Y.Central .\t45%\t45%\t4 5 V*\t45% Sears Roebuck .\t88%\t88%\t87%\t87(4 Stand.Oil of N.J\t6 3 Vi\t63 Vj\t63%\t63 South.Pacific .\t.44\t44\t43%\t43% Texas Gulf Sul.\t38%\t38%\t38(4\t3 8 Vs Texas Oil Corp.\t38%\t38%\t38(4\t38% Union Pacfic .\t138 Vi\t138 Vi\t138%\t138 VI* Union Aircraft .\t25%\t¦ 25%\t24%\t24% U.S.Ind.Alco.\t34%\t31(4\t3 4 Vi\t34 Vj U.S.Smelting ,\t78(4\t78%\t78%\t78% U.S.Steel .\t71%\t72%\t71(4\t71% U.S- Rubber .»\t32\t32\t\t31% Lily Pons Reached High \u201cF\u201d Thirteen Times Before Delicate Recording Instruments Could Capture It.Hollywood, Sept.11.\u2014 Studio sound technicians claimed a Continued from page 8.\t| union, who registered three seconds.In the ; This free-for-all trot, L.Drouin, of Thet- ! do, as ford Mines, led the field in all three starts with Lady Morgan.The results of the races yesterday were ; 2.18 Pace\u2014Purse $300 be established was to get legislation ; sion of the neutrality policy before 1 ; to assure the workers they would ' -v*.\u2014\u2019.-1 j- *1.I : not lose their jobs if they ioined a the executive proposed to the fear of dismissal was handicapping organizers on every hand.new ; Yictoj- Direct, E.Benoit, St.\u201chigh jumping\u201d mark in music rec-| Hyacinthe CLarochelie) .111 .With aid °f Llly : Nat Yolo, C.Taylor, Cook-Pons.Belgian opera singer.\t, \u2022 Tavlnr , JShST'Î hiEh \"F\" in * \u2018m! PeiS Dillon, J MM.highest note ever recorded~on film.The previous top was a high \u201cC\u201d, also sung by her, in a previous picture.Singing the aria, \u201cUnva Voce Poco.Fa,\u201d from \u201cThe Barber of .Seville,\u201d she achieved the high \u201cF\u201d thirteen times before delicate rec-ording instruments could capture it.INSURGENTS RAPIDLY TIGHTENING CHAIN OF STEEL AROUND MADRID Quebec, 4 3 5 4 BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, DEATHS DEATHS GILLANDERS\u2014Died at Winnipeg, Man,, on Thursday, Sept, 10th.1936, David Gillanders, of Elva.Mar.formerly of Leeds, Que., :n his 67th year.loch) .Lillian, A.Drole (Drolet) .Evelyn S-.Vohl, St.Marc des Carieres, (Dussault) Times: 2.11 1-4, 2.11 1-2, 2.10 1-2 Free-for-all Trot\u2014Purse $300 Lady Morgan, L.Drouin, Thetford Mines, (Drouin) 1 Stout Hart, J.Ratte, Que.bec, (Ratte) .2 Keystone, J.Balloch, Wood- stock, (Bailoch) .4 Calumet Annabelle, A.Dor- 2\t2 2 j Continued from Page 1.j ed with heavy losses, one Madrid column alone leaving 250 dead on 3\t5 3 | the field.New Government attempts to 5 ; storm Oviedo likewise have been re-| pulsed, it was said, by an effective 4 sortie from the city by the besieged insurgent garrison.Insurgent planes launched a heavy bombardment against Trubia and La Felguera, industiral towns in central Spain, the insurgent command announced.1 1 ion, Gros Pin, (Dorion) Colonel Forey, P.Larente, Montreal, (Larente) .Senator A.Guy Tillotson, Coaticook, (Redicker) .Imperial Axworthy, A.Can-tin, Quebec, (Cantin') 3 5 FOREIGN OFFICERS USED TO TRAIN REBEL TROOPS 3 4 6 6 6 Times: 2.12 1-2, 2.12 3-4, 2.13 1-4.12 3 DAVIES \u2014 Entered into rest at i Bury.Que., on Thursday, Sept.10, 1936, Mary Lanctot, wife of ! Stephen Davies, in her 63rd year.; \u201e\t, Funeral service Saturday at 2 pi«-f«-an Pace-Purse $300 P.m.D.S.T., at St.Paul\u2019s Church,\t' 1°^' M°nt' Interment in Bown Cemetery.I H a \u2019 TLaroch®i]e^.: Jeanne Iruax, W.Dupont, WHARRAM\u2014At Waterville, Que.St- Hyacinthe, (Bisson) on Thursday, September the tenth, Bedford Grattan, P, Tur-Mary Elizabeth Dawson, beloved! ®ctte< Mattawa, (Red- wife of the late Robert Wharram.! 'c'Ker) .in her 93rd year.Prayers at her Emma Lou> N.Gendron, late residence, Waterville.at 2 Montreal, (Potvin) .7 p.m., Sunday, September 13th.! Bobb>\u201eFri*ǰ, £¦ Spafford, Funeral service at St.James Church, Compton, Que,, at 3 p.m.D.S.T.3N MEMORIAM In mrmory of Br7»r.t Brace Station, n-ho pM.Mcd to rest September Iltb, 1885.S-weet loving face of a heavenly birth.He was too good to live on earth, But in ange! name with a speedy hand, And took dear Bryant to a better land.Ineerted by HIS FATHER AND MOTHER BROTHERS AND SISTER-:.Island Brook, Que CARD OF THANKS .Mrs.T.A.Knowiton wisbea to thank the KnowJton fire brigade for prompt attention, and a)) friends and neighbors who assisted at the time of the firs wh.-b threatened her reeidenee on Thursday morning.September 10th, CARD OP THANKS.We desire to thank a 1 those who are «ted u« in any way in the death and burial of our darling daughter and lister.We aapaei-sliy wish to thank the Rev.Mr.Parry, the: choir and aJj thow who sent flowers and loaned care ; also th* kind frienda at Hatley : Centre who rendered firet aid it oor «odder, bereavement.MR AND MRS.WII.US EMERY, DOROTHY, WINSTON, PHYM.IS.Waterville, Que.TN MEMORIAM, I* loveng memory of Dons McKeag».who eaa railed home on the ITh day of September.1«>8.Ever remembered by DADDY and mother.EREON.GORDON AND MARION.Danville, Que, E.Broughton, (Fraught) 3 Jeanne Stranton, J, C.Taylor, Cookshire, (Taylor) 6 Mack Peter, J.L.Poirier, Mont-Joli, (Tremblay) .5 Times: 2.09 1-4 , 2.10, 2.09.2.26 Pace\u2014Purse $1,50 Virginia Lassiter, H.Ingham, Sherbrooke, (Fraught) .y Bertha Grey, A.Farnell, Quebec, (Gifuere) .5 All B, Jr.(Joncas) .2 Green Lawn, A.Turcotte, Mattawa, (Fahey) .Sunny J., A.Dugre, Three Rivers) .3 Peter C.L.V.House, Quebec, (Houde) .6 Peter Manor, G.Moreau, Rimouski, (Tremblay) ,.g Peter Harvester .9 Lady J.Ray, (Redicker)\t7 Times: 2.15 1-2, 2.15 1 St.Jean de Luz, France, Sept.] 3.; \u2014Major credit for superior disci-ipline of the Spanish insurgents was 4 I attributed today to alleged training ! by German reserve officers and regular Spanish army officers during the past year, when plans for the revolt were reportedly already being formulated.A well-informed Carlist sympath-j izer described the intensive secret ; training by the Spanish and German officers to the Havas Correspondent last month.He said that September 15 originally was the date set for uprising by Carlist conspirators, who buried their differences with adherents of former King Alfonso 1 in order to overthrow' the radical : regime -\t- ; A leak in the insurgent plans ; necessitated a change in.the date _\t4 I for the uprising when the insurgent: 1 learned that the Government was ! preparing to act against the conspir-.ators, the Cariist spokesman said.He added that the \u201ctipoff\u201d was : given to Madrid by Gen.Miguel 3\t1 ! Carrasco, commander of the Lo- I grono garrison and one of the con- 4\t4 1 * 2 6 6 obtaining official approval from the General Confederation.\t.| Catholic war veterans, including | a Canadian delegation assembled at i Lourdes for a gigantic peace dem- ! onstration in the famous grotto and | basilica at the shrine of Bernadette Sourbirous, reported to have seen an apparition of the Virgin there in 1859.war which began July 17 with a Fascist uprising in Spanish Morocco against the Madrid administration.\u201cThis is a fight for life or death,\u201d the Government spokesmen pronounced.They added that the insurgents hold the same view.FOOD SHORTAGE REARING HEAD IN SAN SEBASTIAN San Sebastian, Spain, Sept.11.\u2014 Spanish insurgents renewed their military advance on San Sebastian today as pillaging broke out anew inside the besieged resort city.The booming of Fascist cannon and whistle of shells along Socialist-defended frontiers signalled the end of a forty-eight hour unofficial armistice on the northern battle-front.Refusal by the Government commanders to surrender unconditionally apparently was the cause of the renewed drive by the insurgent columns, whose armed forces encircle the Basque city in three consolidated positions.Basque Nationalists inside San Sebastian, attempting to hold the authority they seized from anarchist groups in the Government militia, struggled to maintain order and prevent destruction of property.By virtue of their numbers, which constitute seventy per cent, of the defending forces, the Basques appeared in control of any future decision concerning the city\u2019s surrender or its stand against the advancing insurgents.Residents of the beleaguered community, meanwhile, scrambled for safety as the fighting began again.In boat.-: and by foot, they streamed toward France and along the coast, seeking shelter from the Fascist assault as the memory of the bombardment of Irun lurked in their minds, San Sebastian, ringed by the insurgents, felt the strain of water and food shortages as the steel lines of the insurgents prevented fresh sup-| plies from being brought in.1\t51 spirators, who went to the capital 2\t3|aT.d reportedly gave the Govern- j ment an outline of the insurgent 4\t4\t2 plans- j The insurgents then decided to_______________________ 5 * «T&teS\u2019SS/ïSX SMALL POND YIELDS SIXTH 7 g ; ment nearly tw-r, months in advance 1 HEADLESS BODY IN A YEAR of the date originally planned, it;\t______ Meanwhile Gen.Carrasco, jOthers, the Body, that of a Man, Had Been Cut by a Skilful Hand and Torso Had Been Sliced in Two Pieces.Meanwhile (icn, Carrasco, un 4 j aware that his alleged betrayal of! -2, 2.13 1-4, ! the insurgent cause was known to j __________________L\t\u2019 : his fellow plotters, returned to his! troops at Logrono.He was shot by COAL CONTRACT AWARDED.a firing squad on July 21, the Carl-Ottawa, Sept.11.\u2014The award of a 1 ist said, contract to the Independent Goal\t-\u2014 Company to supply some 24,000 COMPROMISE PROPOSALS tons of coal of various kinds at a cost of about $150,000 has been made by the Public Work* Department.This is for fuel for Dominion public j buildings for the ensuing year.It comprises 21,000 tons of Dominion Sydney «lack coal from Nova Scotia, 2,409 tons of Dominion Sydney lump coal from Nova Scotia, and 450 ton* of coke.The Independent Coal Com.pany submitted the lowest tender.Cleveland, Sept.11.\u2014Kingsbury Run, a small stream which wander?through the southeast section of Cleveland, has yielded the sixth in the city REJECTED BY MINISTERS\tb\u201edy found within the last year.Like the others, the body\u2014that of a man\u2014had been cut, detectives said, with a skilful hand.The torso had been sliced in two pieces.The head was not found, Firemen with grappling hooks attempted unsuccessfully to find the misaing head in the pond where the Madrid,' Sept.11.\u2014 Compromise j or truce with Fascist insurgents is out of the question, officials of the Socialist Spanish Government declared today.They denied report* the Government and the rebels were a! tempting to negotiate peace in the civil fill lr 1M For 1937, Packard presents the top-quality car in each of four price classes If1937 Packard offers you the A four greatest Packards ever built.Each is the leader of its price class.And each sells for a new low price! Jhc 19.3/ Packard Twelve is the finest car money can buy.It steps so tar ahead mechanically for 1937 that there simply is no other make of car with which to compare it.The 19f'J Packard Super-Eight succeeds both last year\u2019s Eight and .per-Light, and brings to molor-,s.ts a combination of mechanical advancements which promise to revolutionize fine-car motoring, The J9.37 Packard 120 is proof iat a car can be a sensation three limes in a row.This car, whose outstanding performance has been the talk of the motoring world, is an even better car this year.And\u2014ont of Packard\u2019s 36 years of experience in building fine cars, now comes a brand-new Packard \u2014The Packard Six.The greatest low-priced car America has ever seen Priced $1113.00 F.O.B.Windsor, the new Packard Six is a car that is destined to completely re-shape the low-priced car picture! It brings to its field a combination of qualities that no car of this price has ever possessed before.long mechanical.life combined with long style life.The Packard Six, and its brother f ackards, are now ready for you to see and drive.Come in at your earliest convenience and let ns demonstrate the tremendousvalues these I ackards offer this year.THE BRAND-NEW PACKARD SIX «1113-00 And up, includine Tax F.O.B.Windsor.dan.dard accessory *raup extrt THE GREATER PACKARD llfl «1332-00 And up, including Tax F.O.B.Windsor.-'laniard accessory group extra THE NEW PACKARD SUPER-EIGHT $3219-oo And up, includimr T»* F.O.B.Windsor.THE ADVANCED PACKARD 12 «4713-00 And up, including Tax F.O.B.Windsor.n,N* Boscobel to visit other relatives.|\trd ^ .H?ye|v Mr.and Mrs.G.I.Blake, of Gran- ! br^kp a\tw*1'\" by were week-end guests'of Mr.W.; Mrs> Eoy cfllis> aJ Mi, Cillis R.Beers and Miss Mary Beers.j Mr.and Mrs.B.Hayes and two .^ ^ n^ay a aiie Jami^y 1^}lrn- i children spent the week-end at ion took place at the homes of Mr.| Rock Island; Kuest of MrSi Ha , and Mrs.Ladd Lawrence and Mr.: mother, Mrs.D.McKeage.and Mrs.A.,en Lawrence when | Mrs.Victoria Robinson and Miss then- brother and wife, Mr.and Mrs.j Kate Conroy, of Portland, Me., are John McElroy, of Wisconsin, after guests at the home of Mr.William an absence oi twenty-six years, Mr.I A.Davis.and Mrs.S.McElroy, of Manchester, | 'Mr.and Mrs.John Jamieson and N.H., and other relatives to the num-| two children, of La Tuque, were her of twenty-five enjoyed the day ; guests of Mr.Jamieson\u2019s mother, together.Dinner was served at the ! Mrs.Jamieson for a week.Miss home of Mr.and Mrs.L.Lawrence ; Annie Jamieson who has spent the and supper with Mr.and Mrs.A.| summer with her grandmother re-Lawrence.On the same day mem- j turned home with her parents, bers of the number of twelve of the | Mr.and Mrs.Fred Young, of family of the late Mr.and Mrs.P.P.I Compton, w^ere Sunday guests of Fowler gathered at the farm, which | Mr.William A.Davis, was once their home.A picnic lunch ! Mr.and Mrs.Sawyer accompa-was much enjoyed as well as a plea- I nied by Mrs.Ida Smith, of Sher-?ant walk to the sugar bush.\tbrooke, were, calling on friends in -_\ttowm on Sunday.in these colors, with streamers fromji the eeilins*.Shnrtîv After fbe
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