Sherbrooke daily record, 25 juillet 1942, samedi 25 juillet 1942
[" V 0>lirrbr0okp iailu Srrnrb \u2022 * \u2022 THE PAPER OF THE EASTERN TOWNSHIPS WEATHER Fair and cooler.Established 1897.SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1942.Forty-Sixth Year.; NAZIS ESTABLISH NEW BRIDGEHEAD ACROSS DON Action Creates New Menace For Rostov Defence Germans, Ignoring Tremendous Losses of Men and Equipment, Make Crossing of Lower Don in the Tsimlyansk Sector\u2014Russians Claim that Red Forces Are Still Retaining Grip on Rostov Despite Heavy Assault.By EDDY GILMORE, (Associated Press Staff Writer) Moscow, July 2o.\u2014(Æ5)\u2014Gorman forces screened by a heavy bombardment have established a hazardous bridgehead across the Lower Don in the Tsimlyansk area and the invaders have wedged dangerously into Russian defences at Rostov, 120 miles to the S'oirth-vvest, Soviet dispatches said today.\u201cOnly skilled operations, courage and self-sacrifice by our troops Yvill save Rostov from the Fascist invasion,\u201d the military newspaper Red Star said.Dispatches indicated the Tsimlyansk combat left the Don flowing red with the blood of the fallen.The first German thrust across the river, a natural defence line before the Lower Caucasus, wTas frustrated and the infantry regiment in the van wiped out, the midnight communique announced.Later advices, however, said that in a second big push, supported by heavy forces, sorall units readied the South Shore and dug in.These were declared \u201cbeing dealt with,\u201d but the situation indicated an ominous parallel to the original German crossing of the Upper Don at Voronezh.Counter-attacks were declared to have bettered the Red Army position in some sectors before Rostov and the city\u2019s approaches were reported dotted with thousands of German dead, but the numerieally-superior invaders occupied several new positions to the South to establish a four-ply offensive.\u201cOn one sector the Germans succeeded in breaking into the positions of our troops,\u201d the Soviet Information Bureau said.\u201cIn fierce battles which frequently developed in hand-to-hand fighting our men annihilated over 2,000 Germans, set fire to eighteen German tanks and destroyed three self-propelled guns and fourteen machine guns.\u201d A Nazi advance also was recorded in another section of the Rostov zone, but this was declared to have been made only at a disproportionate cost \u201cafter the defenders of these positions died the death of the brave, fighting to the last drop of blood for their native land.\u201d (The German high command claimed yesterday that, although mopping-up operations remained, Rostov had been captured.The Vichy radio said block-destroying explosion of delayed action bombs planted by the Russians v;ere hindering the Nazi occupation.) Red Army men fought around j the clock to check the grave threat to the trans-Caucasus, a region of 94,405 square miles containing a j wealth of petroleum, timber and ! minerals coveted by Hitler.Mora than four hundred miles to the Northwest, other Soviet soldiers i knifed into German lines on the Bryansk front in a diversion supplementing counterattacks at Vor-, onezh.A communique announced ¦ REPORT EPIDEMIC ON INDIAN RESERVATION Montreal, July 25.\u2014((P)\u2014A report reaching here yesterday says that an epidemic of diphtheria has broken out in the Indian reservation at Sen-r.eterre, 750 miles Northwest of Montreal in the Abitibi mining district.No figures were given as to the number of cases but it was said there had been many deaths including \u201cseveral babies.\u201d The report said Royal Canadian Mounted Police are supervising medical arrangements for the outbreak that was first noted a week ago.CONVICTS USED IN COMBATTING FOREST FIRES Long-Term Prisoners Form Committees to Help Guard Confreres in California Experiment.Famed Texan Now Traditional Figure At Newfoundland Base ANOTHER GOVERNMENT COMMUNIQUE; YES IS NO Montreal, July 25.\u2014(CP)\u2014-An official of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board here yesterday said a tomato, which is technically a berry, is considered a vegetable by the Board thus rating no sugar for canning.San Quentin, Calif., July 25.\u2014(JP) \u2014Convicts who had not been outside San Quentin prison in twenty years were among 100 prisoners dispatched yesterday to fight brush and timber fires on the Coast Range hills West of Coalinga.The men will be paid forty-five cents an hour under a plan worked out by the State Board of Prison Directors and the State Forestry Division.The plan was instituted to alleviate the shortage of trained civilian fire fighters.Officials said some lifers and long-term prisoners, who cherished the privilege of working outside, formed committees to help guard all convict workers, knowing that any escapes might put an end to the programme.The convict fire fighters joined between two hundred and three hundred men already fighting the flames.Three guards accompanied the prisoners.FINE WHILE IT LASTED London, July 25.\u2014(CP1\u2014Because someone misunderstood regulations airmen at a R.A.F.Station had their hair cut at the expense of the Gov-vernment it was revealed when the equivalent of $500 for barbers\u2019 fees was included in Auditor General\u2019s report.bfariîication Of Retail Delivery Orders Announced By Trade Board CHINESE PRESS AGAIN DEMANDS SECOND FRONT Aggressive Action by United Nations Required at Once if Axis Advances Are to Be Halted.Continued on Page 2, Col.5.Chungking, July 25\u2014 (/P) \u2014The Chinese press acclaimed today the Thursday-night speech of the United States Secretary of State, Cordell Hull,- in which he promised maximum aid for allies of the United States, but editorial writers asserted the United Nations must seek to gain the initiative at once to achieve victory.\u201cAn immediate Allied offensive \u2019s necessary,\u201d declared the Central Daily News.\u201cAn offensive is not only the best defence but the only way to route the enemy.\u201d Ta Rung Pao said the Allies should \u201cform a second front in Europe and aid China for a land attack by launching sea and air offensives in the Pacific.\u201d \u201cThus only may we week out our enemies and attack them at every point on the globe,\u201d the paper added.The press generally endorsed Hull\u2019s asserttion that after the war some international agency must be created which could\u2014by force if necessary\u2014preserve peace.Continue of page 2 col.5 Mexican Labor Leader Declares Argentine President Aids Axis Mexico City, July 25.\u2014(/P)\u2014Mexican Labor Leader Vicente Lombardo Toledano yesterday accused Argentina\u2019s President.Ramon S.Castillo, of Axis sympathies, and warned against possible German-inspired uprising in South America as a Nazi means of distracting the United States from creating a second front in Europe.The President of the Latin American Labor Confederation told a labor meeting here that Castillo\u2019s conduct was one \u201cof provocation and insult for all other governments\u201d in America, and said Castillo was \"connected with the economic and political interests of Axis subjects in Argentina.Brazil and Chile.\u201d \u201cDuring the next three months,\u201d he said, \u201cthere can occur in South America coup d\u2019etat, pronouncements in favor of the Axis powers, or military incursions of Nazi-Fascist forces supported by their active J co-believers in some countries in the South.\u201d Buenos Aires, July 25.\u2014 (/Pi \u2014A group of Radical (Liberal) deputies last night introduced a bill in Congress asking the ernment to carry out the Rio de Janeiro accord, which recommended a diplomatic rupture with the Axis, in order \u201cto make an effective participation in the solidarity and defence of the American continent.\u201d This action came shortly after a newspaper report which quoted Foreign Minister Enrique Ruiz Guinazu as saying that if a vote had been taken on the diplomatic rupture issue at j last week\u2019s Congressional interpel-; iation and secret session, there would only have been five affirmative votes.Ruiz Guinazu disavowed this re-I port.- # - j Ottawa, July 25.\u2014(CP)\u2014Consolidation and clarification of regulations | governing retail sales, deliveries, pickups, refunds and exchanges was j announced today by the Wartime i Prices and Trade Board.The new order, effective Monday, | extends the list of exceptions to the : regulation that goods to the value of less than $1 may not be delivered.One provision in the new order allows retailers to deliver orders when several customers have clubbed together to bring the amount of their joint order up to $1 or more.Under this provision, one house address, one apartment, office or one factory may obtain deliveries of any number of small orders, provided the total value of the whole delivery to the one address is $1 or more.The Board announced that goods sold to fill medical doctors\u2019 prescriptions are added to the list of exceptions to the dollar delivery clause.It said the complete list of exceptions now includes \u201ceggs, fish, except when canned; fresh fruits and | vegetables; bread and bakery prod-; ucts such as cakes and pastries; I dairy products including milk, but-i ter, cream, cheese and ice cream; \u201cFuel in any form; meat, lard | and shortening; goods from a drug ! store to fill a medical doctor's prescription; articles such as cement, sand, ice and those too cumberstone or too heavy for the customer to 1 carry; and article in cases where j the customer claims he is too ill or ! otherwise incapable of calling for ! the goods or carrying them home; \u201cDeliveries by freight, express or parcel post; newspapers or magazines delivered by a retailer over a regular route; box lunches or soft drinks delivered therewith; photographs, blueprints or photostatic copies.\u201d Retailers now are also permitted to deliver items worth less than $1 to replace goods delivered by mistake or forming part of an order previously given and valued at $1 ! or over, the Board said.The announcement said \u201cchief change in the rules regarding exchanges, refunds and pickups is a provision allowing twelve clear business days in which customers may return goods for refunds or ex-i change instead of the six previously allowed.To eliminate possible waste, , provision has been made for ex-: changes or refunds on paint, wall-: paper and knitting wool.\"Exchanges, but not refunds, now are permitted when goods are found to be incorrect in size or were sold for the purpose of a gift.\u201cSales and deliveries on approval are still forbidden except for individual items of house furnishings j retailing at more than $10, collec-| tor\u2019s postage stamps and sheet j music.\u201cPick-up of goods for return it prohibited excepting goods delivered in error, found to be defective in ; material or workmanship and too 1 bulky or heavy to be returned by the consumer m Dersozu\u201d Fliers on the trans-Atlantic ferry route all know Michael Patrick Ryan Efferson.In this last of a series, Don Whitehead, Associated Press staff writer, tells the story of this amiable Texan.By DON WHITEHEAD (Associated Press Staff Writer) An Air Base Somewhere in Newfoundland, July 25.\u2014- (/P) \u2014Newfoundland never had seen anything like Michael Patrick Ryan Efferson.a self-appointed ambassador of good will from the United States.He sort of dropped in unannounced on this remote outpost on the trans-Atlantic ferry route, looked the situation over and proclaimed himself the Mayor and President of the Chamber of Commerce, of which he is the only member.Officially, the red-faced, blue-eyed Texan with a battered canvas hat over his thinning hair holds an important position in the Royal Air Force Ferry Command.A plane seldom leaves the field for the long hop to Britain that he doesn\u2019t see it off and give the boys a thumbs-up.\u201cAnd I ain\u2019t lost a ship yet that I\u2019ve given the old thumb,\u201d Mickey boasts.He greets all visitors with a speech of welcome and presents them with the key to the city\u2014which he promptly takes from them to be autographed.The names of Molotov, Franklin D.Roosevelt, Jr., Col.Bill Donovan, Lord and Lad- Halifax and others are thick on his key.The Newfoundla-.ders still can\u2019t figure out the shrewd, good-natured =f Texan.They see him hobnob with cooks, laborers, truck drivers and the lowliest of the workmen.Five minutes later he\u2019ll be chatting with a visiting ambassador or an Eng-'RoVcll lish lord.\t1\t¦¦ Efferson came here only a few weeks ago, but already he knows most of the people by their first names.If there ever is an election, Mickey could win hands down.\u201cThese are right nice folks up here,\u201d Mickey says, rattling a pair of battered dice.\u201cThey don't know much about crap shootin\u2019 but they sho\u2019 are eager to learn.And I'm just the man.as mayor of this fair city, to teach my constituents the old American pastime.\u201d The Newfoundlanders gather around in droves to listen to Mickey talk to the dice, and they see an old master in action\u2014for the mayor has been known to m-\u2019ke five passes in a row.Mickey is one of the Ferry Command\u2019s biggest assets at this remote spot, for he never loses his good humor and he has made the state of Texas a legendary place peopled by daredevils whose exploits arc on the Paul Bunynn side.The Mick is a product of Brady, Texas, and a veteran of the First Great War, He got his start in aviation as a parachute jumper and wing walker in the old barnstorming days.He\u2019s twice a member of the Caterpillar Club\u2014men who have ped from planes to save their es : He was with Gate's Flying Cir 4us, billed as Diavolo, the -world\u2019 greatest daredevil, AXIS SUFFERS FURTHER PLANE Jump Ijves.Wider Responsibility For Leahy Favored In Washington Quarters By J.F.SANDERSON.(Canadian Press Staff Writer) Washing-ton, July 25.\u2014((P)\u2014President Roosevelt\u2019s appointment of Admiral William D.Leahy as his Chief of Staff has met with a mixed reception since it was announced earlier in the week.It'has generally been acclaimed as a step in the right direction, particularly insofar as it relieves the President of routine paper work, but it has failed to satisfy those who believe the United States, and the United Nations as well, should have a unified military command under the direction of one man, divorced from service duties.When he made the announcemerft, Mr.Roosevelt emphasized that he, and he alone, would exercise the powers of his office and that the victory.The President must be carried along by the military and political leaders of the United Nations on any plan or idea or it fails.That does not mean that President Roosevelt is trying to run a one-man show or is attempting to push into the background men like Prime Minister Churchill, Premier Joseph Stalin, Gen.Chiang Kai-Shek.It merely means that circumstances and events, plus the industrial wealth of the United States, has elevated him to a position of eminence and he is too great a man to take advantage of it.It is for that reason that the appointment of Admiral Leahy has a significance far beyond the borders of the United States, even if his powers are limited.The chief criticism of the appointment is that it LOSS IN EGYPT Air Force Damaged More Than Twenty Axis Aircraft on Ground at El Daba Landing Field.Cairo, July 25.\u2014«fi \u2014 The R.A.F.damaged more than twenty Axis aircraft on the ground and shot down three others in air fights during attacks on the El Daba landing field yesterday in a ronlinuation of the sustained air offensive, against Field Marshal Erwin Roirmel's forces, British headquarters said today, The ground fighting consisted mainly of nr'dUvy duels in the Central and Northern sectors with some parmi activity.In the Southern sector then e was nothi n.; to report, the communique said.In addition to three Axw aircraft shot down in air lights over El Daba, two other.-, ernshci, in taking oil' to challenge the R A F.bombers, the commun.'iue raid.R.4.1>.fighters ranged over the battle area in which British troops were roipiolidating- nev, ly - won ground ard 'Su;rcssfully attacked\u201d enemy vebicies, in comniunique reported.Alliul planes lave been raiding El Daba day at, night for several days in an effort to cut down the air support for Rommel\u2019s forces.Torpedo-carrying aircraft of the R.A.F.went across the Mediterranean into the \u2019onian Sea to attack Debating Of Estimates Precludes Any Hope For Session Closing Today Finance Minister Rejects Proposals of Opposition Leader that Business Leaders Be Taken in Confidence in Preparation of Budget \u2014 Conscription-Enabling Legislation Given First Reading in Senate.\u201e \u201e\t- \u2019\t* By C.R.BLACKBURN, .Writer) AIRPLANE WORKERS VOTE FOR STRIKE Montreal, July 25.ffl \u2014 Four hundred and fifty-six of the 550 employees in the aircraft section of tho nearby Turcot plant of the Canadian Car and Foundry Company here yesterday voted in favor of going on strike to enforce a demand for recognition of their union, Aircraft Lodge 712, International Association of Machinists, as their bargaining agency to negotiate, agreement with the Company, Employees in the aircraft department, of the plant, who also work at times in other sections of the factory, are engaged chiefly in production of wings for Anson trainer-bombers.Continued on page 2, col.5.VETERANS\u2019 GUARD CAMPAIGN IN QUEBEC Quebec, July 25\u2014'CP)\u2014A campaign to enlist 2,5(10 men for the Veterans\u2019 Guard of Canada will gel underway here next Monday, it was announced yesterday.first Group Of Internees From Japanese Areas At African Port sixty-seven-year-old Admiral and former Ambassador to Vichy would j the United States army not even be his deputy but a man to i which has been evident do his leg work, index work and summary work.Time and the inexorable pressure of global warfare may change this relationship, with Adimira! Leahy-becoming less of a Chief of Staff and more of an executive assistant to the President in the field of military affairs, but at the present time be lacks the power to impose his will on anyone connected with the United States army or navy.\thave preferred it if a recognized Through no formal ap-pointment or i military authority.\u2014and Admiral agreement, President Roosevelt has ! Leahy is one\u2014had been given un-become the No.1 man among the j limited power over the two services United Nations, with power of veto j with res'pon.-ibility only to the Presi-over any strategic plan or concept, j dent.They suggest that only then largely because the United States is j would the war effort of the United the power house of the Allies, not States be on the plane of teamwork only for munitions but for the extra under a man who has made war a manpower required for ultimate | life study.Lourenoo Marques, Portugue East Africa, July 25.\u2014 (Delayed) \u2014 UP)\u2014The first diplomatic transfer of nationals between the United States and Japan since the start of the Pacific war was completed here today when more than 1,100 North and South Americans boarded the Swedish liner Gripsholm to take Ihe places vacated by Japanese diplomats and their families brought from America.The Americans arrived here on the liners Conte Verde and Asama Maru.They walked down the gangplanks of the two ships as the Japanese left the Gripsholm and the two groups moved along the quay in parallel lines to their new state-| rooms.Soon after moving to the APPEAL COURT SAYS ALBERTA ACT NOT VALID perpetuates the divided authority of | Gvipsho]m> the Americans were per ami nayy j mittetl to disembark and tour the since tne|cjtVi Japanese stiuck at Pearl Harbor.Four Associated Press corre-1 he, two other services, one utMler j spondents arrived with the group.(,en.George C.Marshall, ^nd the i Following are portions of a corn-other under Admiral Ernest J.King, I p0f;j[e story on conditions in Japan are responsible only to the President | and Japanese-occupied territory as Commander-in-Chief and only 'written by the correspondents, he has the power to order one or [gome parts of the, story arc omitted both to follow a line of action.jto conform with official requests Those who would like to see the from Washington that nothing be principle of unified command im-;done which could interfere in the posed in the United States would I slightest with the welfare or repatriation of Americans still in Japanese-occupied territory, The Divided Judgment Rules that Legal Proceedings Suspension Act Is Ultra Vires of Legislature, ruJo< WAR BULLETINS Berlin, (from German broadcasts) \u2014 German sailors have entered the Japanese merchant navy to help in the task of supplying the oriental Axis partner, the German radio said today.?* * * * Durban \u2014 Durban, a seaport of 150,000 population and third ranking urban centre within the union of South Africa, was under air raid alarm for an hour and 13 minutes last night, but it was lifted without incident.Defence authorities announced an unidentified plane had flown over the city.***** London \u2014 A military commentator said today British troops had withdrawn from \u201cone or two positions exposed to heavy enemy artillery fire\u201d in the fighting in Egypt.Informed military opinion in London today was that although the British forces retain the initiative in Africa, the arrival of a single Axis convoy could swing the balance to the other side at any time.Edmonton, July 25.\u2014 0) Aibcrla Appeal Court has that the Legal Proceedings Suspension Act, passed at the lust session of the Legislature is unconstitutional, The judgment, written by Chief Justice Horace Harvey, was issued yesterday.It was concurred in by Mr.Justice II.W.Lunney and Mr.Justice W.R, Howsor.Two other members of the court, Mr.Justice.A.F.Ewing and Mr.Justice Frank Ford, wrote dissenting judgments.The Legal Proceedings Suspension Act was proclaimed in April.L Joseph Dynan, who ! suspended debt actions until sixty and Vaughn Meis- days after the Privy Council rules on Hong Kong at its the validity of the Debt Adjustment I Act.The.latter was declared ultra Some of the returning American vires last December by the Supreme nationals reported that some prison- .Uourt 0f Canada.An Alberta Gov- correspondents are Max Hill, Chief of former Associated Press Bureau in Tokyo; Reiman Morin, who was in Indo-China; was in Tokyo ling, who was in capitulation ).ers were threatened with the guil lotine by Japanese authorities seeking to obtain admissions of guilt from men charged with espionage.There was a general food shortage, in Hong Kong and Americans and Canadians held there suffered from beri-heri, pellagra and other ailments caused by diet deficiencies.Some lost as much as sixty pounds in weight and the average was twenty pounds.In the.Northern areas of the Japanese Empire, internees suffered from cold during the winter.Those held in Korea and Manchoukuo endured unheated cells and houses with temperatures below zero.There were no reports of deaths among American prisoners from mistreatment, but a number of British nationals committed suicide in prison.A score of American priests, captured in Hong Kong on Christmas Day, said they were marched to a ravine for execution, then reprieved at the last moment, They were held in a garage for three days, tied in groups with insufficient w-ater and food.ornment appeal Privy Council.now is before the C.R.B'L (Canadian Press Staff Ollawit, July 2,'L (Cfi- Instead or adjourning today, as planned more (ban a week ago, ihe House of Gommons was scheduled to hold morning, afternoon and evening sittings but, with no hope of completing Us sessional work unlil late next week.Yesterday saw considerable progress wilh three of Ihe six budget bills passed and sent to the Senate, and the bulk of the Agriculture estimates passed.Hills amending Ihe Excise Act, the Customs Act and I lie Special W ar Revenue Act, were passed ami there was a long and involved debate on the intricacies of the Excess Profits Tax Act but the latter, the Income Tax Act and the Succession Duties Act remain for consideration next week.At the request of Conservative House Leader Hanson the debate on the report of Chief Justice Sir Lyman Duff on the dispatch of Canadian troops to Hong Kong was fixed as the first order of business Monday.The Senate gave first reading to Bill 80\u2014the conscription-enabling measure.The bill, which will empower the Government to impose conscription for Overseas service by Ondcr-in-Council, will be debated on second reading in the Upper Hou.c Monday, Tho Land Settlement Bill was passed and first reading was given a bill to amend the Excise Act, part of the 1942 budget proposals, From late afternoon until adjournment last night the House, in.Supply Committee, discussed many angles of the Agriculture Administration with Agriculture Minister Gardiner under constant questioning.All but a few of his estimates totalling $18,406,000' were passed hut a number of items were allowed to stand over, some at his own request, for information he wishes to obtain for members, j Replying to a question from 11.! H.Hatfield (Conservative, Victoria-The ; Carlcton) Mr.Gardiner said there was a programme underway to in-creas sheep flocks by 1,000,000 head through co-operation with the Provinces.The Government is supplying rams ami paying freight on ewes shipped from one place to another for breeding purposes.Mr.Gardiner told other questioners of progress made in providing a supply of garden seed from domestic sources to make up for the lost sources in Europe.Percy Black (Conservative, Cumberland) asked the Minister if any plans were underway to use potash, deposits in Malagash, N.S., to make up for shortages resulting from the war.Mr.Gardiner said the supply now available was sufficient and them was no serious problem in connection with potash.Supplies were coming in from the United States and Mexico.Continued on Page 2, Col.5.Continued Allied Dive-Bombing Halts Flow Of Supplies To Base Allied Headquarters, Australia, | The divebomber which is playing July 25.\u2014'(I1 \u2014Steady Allied dive-1 a big part in Allied operations oven bombing has broken off the landing New Guinea is the twin-engined of Japanese supplies in the newly-1 Douglas A24, first used by the occupied Buna-Gona area of New United States navy and then by the Guinea and several fully-loaded army, officers said, enemy vessels have withdrawn Buna, surrounded by grassy Northward under naval escort, a plains suitable for air fields, controls communique announced today.the only passable trail to Port CO OP.HATCHERIES BUSY Quebec.July 25.\u2014(P \u2014 Some 4,- 275.000\tchicks have been hatched in the co-operative hatcheries of the Province this year, compared with 3.200.000\tfor the corresponding period of last year, it was announced yesterday.Some 100,000 chicks were sold to j the Province of Ontario, Allied headquarters of General Douglas MacArthur said 45,000 pounds of explosives and incendiaries were dropped yesterday on troops, invasion barges, stores and installations in that region low on the Northeast coast of the Papuan Peninsula.Large fires were started and an anti-aircraft battery was silenced, the communique reported.Eighteen Japanese bombers and Moresby.Natural obstacles halt vehicles only twenty-six miles from.Buna at the Government station of Kokoda.From there, the route is hazardous even for foot travel.A wire suspension bridge permits passage across the Kumusi river, fifteen, miles farther Southwest, Just beyond the river is an almost perpendicular hill, 800 feet high.Then ccmes gorges, high mountains, a sixter-n-plane fighter escort were jungles, reported, meanwhile, to have struck U.S.army fliers first detected the ineffectively at the airdrome of Port sea movement of the Japanese down Moresby, advanced Allied base onithe Papuan Peninsula from their New Guinea's South coast 110 miles ; older bases at Salamaua and Lae below Buna.\tlast Monday and three Japanes» \u201cThere were no casualties and | transports were listed among the in-only slight damage,\u201d it was said, jvasion craft destroyed. I SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1942.HONOR COUPLE ON DEPARTURE FROM KNOWLTON Mr.and Mrs.Arthur E.Graham Leaving Shortly to| Take Up Residence in Lancaster, Ont.Knowlton, July 25.\u2014Honoring Mr.and Mrs.Arthur E.Graham, who are leaving Knowlton to take up residence in Lancaster, Ont., where Mr.Graham has been transferred to the Bank of Montreal, a party was held at the home of Rev.and Mrs.E.D.Mitchell, on July 18th.A sing-song, various games and a pleasant social hour was enjoyed, after which delicious refreshments were served by several ladies of the church.Rev.E.D.Mitchell, on behalf of his congregation, presented the honored couple with an upholstered chair and expressed the regret of all that it was necessary for Mr.and Mrs.Graham to leave our midst but extended every good wish for their happiness in their new home.Mr.Graham in return stated that it was with a feeling of regret that they were leaving our community but would always remember the happy years that had been spent in Knowlton.Those present included: Mr.and Mrs.James R.Armstrong and daughters.Barbara Jean and Fay; Mrs.H.R.Allen, Mr.Wesley Mti-chell, Mr.and Mrs.E.B.Mizener, Miss Eileen Robinson and friend, Rev, and Mrs.E.J).Mitchell, Miss Dorothy Strange, Mrs.F.Holden, Miss Edith Nichols, Miss Jean In-glis, Miss Alice Mizener and friend, Miss Lucia Knowlton, Mr.and Mrs.L.M.Knowlton, Mrs, John Badger, Mr.Gordon Badger, Miss Heather Bullard, Mr.and Mrs.A.Leroy Bullard, Mr.and Mrs.R.B.Call, Mr.and Mrs.D.H.Mapes, Jr., Mr.and Mrs.H.L.Parkes, Mr.and Mrs.A.E.Graham and Mr.and Mrs.Elton Bockus.Genera! Notes.Guests at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Harold Sanborn included Mr.and Mrs.Lyell Hand and Mrs.Jessie Rollins, of Graniteville; Mr.Henry Rollins, of Beebe; Miss Beatrice Dumas, of Worcester, Mass.Mr.and Mrs.Fred Weldon, of Montreal, are guests at \u201cBriar-hurst,\u201d the home of Mr.and Mrs, R.B.Call.Friends of Mr.E.E.Guillotte regret to learn that he is a patient in a Montreal hospital, A special service for Peace was held at St.Edward\u2019s Catholic Church on Sunday evening, with Rev.Paul St.Pierre officiating.Master Robert Godue, of Farn-ham, has been visiting his grandparents, Mr.and Mrs.William Godue.^ Mrs, Thomas Boyd and son, Tommy, are guests of Mrs.Boyd\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mrs.Ian W.Crandall.Girl Guide am! C.G.I.T.Groups, from Cowansville, are camping at Brome Lake.Dr.and Mrs.W.W.Lynch and two children are in residence at their summer home here.Mrs.Peter Templeton spent a day in Montreal.Miss Lucia Knowlton, of Waterloo, spent, the week-end with Mr.and Mrs.L.M, Knowlton.Miss Knowlton is spending her holidays with Rev.and Mrs, A.E.Hagar, at Saw-yerville.Friends will be interested to learn that Pte.Orlando Soles, who has been Overseas for over a year, has returned to Canada.Mrs.Donald Levoy spent Friday in Montreal, where she called on Mr.Levoy in the Royal Victoria Hospital.Mr.and Mrs.W\u2019illiam Hamilton, of Brome, were calling in town on Tuesday.Mrs.Dwyer and two daughters, Patricia and Betty Ann, have returned to Montreal, after spending a holiday at the Knowlton Inn.Master Gyles D\u2019Artois, of Phil-lipsburg, who is visiting his grandparents, Mr.and Mrs.John Bockus, at Fulford, spent a day at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Elton Bockus.Among those from out-of-town who attended the Rebekah Lodge meeting here were Mrs.Laura Bradford, Mrs.Stevenson, Mrs.Stella Grey, Mrs.Madge Samworth, Mrs.Sarah Butterworth, Mrs.Neil, Mrs.Doris Ball, Mrs.Lillian Neil, and Mrs.Lerea Neil, all of Granby; Mr.and Mrs J.Devers, Mrs.Carrie Jordan, Mrs.Ethel Maver and Mrs.Lile Jordan, all of Montreal; Mr.and Mrs.Thomas Riddick, Mrs.Braddock, Mrs.Harris and Miss Evelyn Harris, all of Favnham; Mrs.R.J.Buckle, Mrs.Miltimore, Mrs.Annie Stetson and1 Mrs.W.Hall, al! of Sutton; Mr.and Mrs.John Bockus and Mrs.Douglas Bockus, of Fulford; Mrs.N.Snodgrass, Mr.G.C.Whitcher, Mrs.D.Hume, Mrs.Durrell, of Foster; Mrs.Ian Boyd, of Montreal; Mr.and Mrs.William Stone, of Duboyce\u2019s Corner; Mr.and Mrs.C.C.McClay, of Bolton Pass; and Mrs.Albert Girvan, of Brome.Mrs.William Tihbitts and family spent a day with Mr.and Mrs.H.H.Prouty, at Bondville.A meeting of Conveners in connection with the United Church Garden Party was held at Briar-hurst, the home of Mi', and Mrs.R.B, Call, on Tuesday evening, when final arrangements for the event were completed.Miss A.Leblanc spent an afternoon in Cowansville.Mrs.A.Leroy Bullard and daughter, Heather, spent a day in Granby.Mr.and Mrs.Donald Hume and son, Douglas, of Foster, were guests on Sunday of Mr.and Mrs.Ian W.Crandall.Mr.and Mrs.C.E.Wiken spent an evening in Cowansville.Mrs.Robert Scott, of Brantford, Ont., was visiting her parents, Mr.and Mrs.C.B.Bullard.Mrs.J.Brand, of Montreal, is the guest of her daughter, Mrs.George B.Dryburgh, and Mr.Dryburgh.Mr.and Mrs.W.Leonard Eldridge spent a day with Mr.and Mrs.H.H.Prouty, at Bondville.Friends of Mr.Harry Bannister regret to learn that he is a patient in the Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal.Mr.Wesley Mitchell, of Magog, spent the week-end at his home here.Miss Eileen Brown, of Bolton Glen, is spending a few weeks at the home of Mr, and Mrs.Kenneth Patterson.Miss Alice Mizener is visiting at the home of her grandmother, Mrs.T.E.Miller.Mrs.Nina Barnes, of Tibbitts, spent a day with Mr.and Mrs.Basil Beals and Mr.Charles Beals.Mrs.G.M.Owens, Mrs.P.Dow and Miss Norma Owens, of Brome, spent an afternoon in town.Mr, and Mrs.Horace Whitehead and son, Frederick, were guests of Mr.and Mrs, Grayson Couscns, at Bolton Glen.Mr.and Mrs.Donald Frizzle and family, of Springfield, Mass., were guests of Mr.and Mrs.F.A.Frizzle.Mrs.Jason Marsh have returned from spending several days with Mr.and Mrs.George Foster, at St.Lambert.They also called on friends in Montreal and Terrebonne.Miss Peggy Strange, of Montreal, BEEBE 'Debating Of Continued from Page 1.spent a week-end with her mother, Mrs.S.Strange.Crandall^motored'to Magog\"' ^ ^ jvif£\tMack* Mr- B\u2019ack su^sted * -ould b/ On Sunday morning at St.Paul\u2019s M d Mr« \u2019 Dean Snuires ard better 13,151,1655 from eYery Church, Master Billy Boswell, of two rcMldreii of Worcester Mass I P01\"1 t0 d^elop the Nova Scotia Montreal, beautifully rendered the\tof Mrs SonfreC deP&slts rather thal1 t6> imP°rt 11 solo \u201cGuide Me, 0 Thou Great W^E\tWr and\tMr's\tHarold:from another country' Jehovah.\u2019\u2019 Master Jonathan Robin-|SeJiker\u2019\td\tM\tHarold, Bruce McNevm fLiberal, Victoria, son, also of Montreal, accompanied j Migg Beatrice Cass> of Montreal, ;\tini him on the organ.\tUpent a week-end at her home here.|0 f\tt , September' Mr.,nd Mr,.H.IMn*.S*,.J\u201e\u201ee, Wilson o, P.Uw,^.\t! rno kerÊPMnrS Tn/wilc'^ ^ h producer.He said there was wide-, m j, ler, Mrs.Ina W d.,on.\tspread dissatisfaction among pro-: Mrs Dmkson of Island Pond, yt.,.dPcers in 0ntariQ T\tni T*KÊhter\u2019 MrS- C!a*r| When the House was discussing Libby, and Mr.Libby.\t.\t! bills based on budget resolutions, The Misses Shirley and.Eunice Hangon suggested that the sys.Sheldon spent a week-end in Feta-¦ j.em preparjng Canadian budgets .vawa, unt.\tI be changed to permit the Govern- I n l**-\tEugene\tCarbonneau, of\tment\tto make fuller use of the know_ ! Miss\tJudith\tCowin\twas\ta\tguest\u2019\t,wltb\tÇall30nneau\t| ledge\tof practical business men.vus.s\tjmmn\tuowm\twas\ta\tgucsr, iSpent a\tshort\tleave\twith his parents,\ti-rUp,,\ttheir views nr nro-i Miss Elizabeth Pibus, at\tInghs Mr and\tMr«\tA.I\tCarbonneau anj\t1 ney\t^srWg\u2019ve y^r views on pro , ianrf\tf1/\u2019.-Ylr*- A- d-uar£°nr,eau-ana1 posed taxation before a House Com- Wss Vera Porritf\tof\tQuebec\tCity !hVw° S1^erS\u2019 M^S' E1^0ni Mî>s8 inittee,\ti Mis., vera pormt.\tot\tyueoec\tcity, and jlrs.Elmore Moss.On Sunday!\tpinanop Minister TkW said he is spending the holidays with her!}le was n-uect at a familv oicnir a*' rimince jammer ilSiey said ne oarenU Mr and Mrs Georee Por-'lif u «ucst at a lamny P16nlc a- preferred the method of preparing pa enu, Mr.and Mrs.üeorge Bor -the home of his wife\u2019s parents, Mr.|lhe budifet in secret with ^id 0f ni*i ,,\t_\t,\t,\tland Mrs.C.L.Bliss, where he was Mrs.George Burnham and\tMiss |p]easantjy surprised with a shower CHURCH NOTICE sons, of Tihbitt\u2019s Hill, were calling on friends in town.Mr.and Mrs.Joseph McClay and two sons have returned to their home in Windsor, Vt., after visiting Mr.and Mrs.James F.Armstrong.Mrs.A.W.Mizener, Mrs.Lillie Swett, Mr.K.A.Mizener, Mr.Earl B.Mizener and son, Alden, spent an afternoon at Foster.of Island.,the budget in secret with the aid of Government experts and having injustices corrected later.Chinese Press Continued from Page 1.\u201cWith the United States now pro- Marjorie Burnham, of South Bolton, 10p appropriate gifts, presented by were calling on Mrs.William Pibus;Mrs.Albert Bliss.Everyone wished and Miss Bertha Pibus.\ta Speedy and safe return.Mr.IT.R.Allen, °f St.Thomas, if^geng (hanked his friends for their Ont., is arriving on Saturday to lgifta and thoughtfulness.spend a week at the home of Mr.i Mr, and Mrs.Moses Joyal and, .and Mrs.A.L.Graham, where Mrs.\tand Mr.and Mrs.Wilfred j moting everlasting\tpeace backed\tby Allen and daughter, have been Diimas, °f Rock Island, were callers | force, we\tforesee\ta\tnew peaceful spending the past few weeks.! at the Carbonneau home on Monday 1 world with collective security for Sgt.Archie Robinson, of Coal evening.\tj\tall,\u201d said\tthe Central\tNews.Harbor, B.C., spent a few days with ; Pupils, parents and friends of the l\t\u2014- his father, Mr.H.N.Robinson, and United Church Sunday School spent! SEES WARNING IN SPEECH grandmother, Mrs.Mary Robinson.a pleasant afternoon at Coutt\u2019sj Buenos Aires, July 25.\u2014 (IP) \u2022\u2014 Mrs.Emma Peasley and Mrs.C.Beach, on Saturday, July 18.Swim-! Cordell Hull\u2019s Thursday night J.Farrell, of Bolton Centre, were miing was enjoyed, followed by : speech, in which he pictured the war visiting Mrs.William Pibus and |races and a picnic lunch.\tj\tas a worldwide fight for the pre- Miss Bertha Pibus.\tFriends here of Sgt.Thorstein servation of human freedom, sound- Mr.and Mrs, Charles Barnes spent\tHelgesen, R.C.A.F., son of Mr.and\ted a seriouh warning which\tshould an evening in Cowansville.\tMrs.Einar Helgesen, of Sherbrooke,\t\u2022\tbe heeded, the newspaper\tEl\tMundo Pte.Henry Noel, of Debert, N.S.,\twere sorry to learn that he had been\tdeclared today, is spending a furlough in town.\tkilled in action on July 13.\u201cTorry\u201d\t'\t\u201cIn his clear analysis,\tSecretary Mr.and Mrs.Eugene St.Pierre with his parents and brother, John, ; Hull proved which are the real dan-motored to Montreal and was accom- were residents of Beebe, for some ! Fers threatening the world and how panied home by their little daughter, Mime and attended High School here,;excessive confidence in liberty can who was a patient in the Royal Vic- where he made many young friends ' weaken and CVen kill it,\u201d the paper toria Hospital.\t; who sincerely regret his death.Sym-; said- \u201cTo love liberty is not en- Mrs.T.E.Miller spent several | pathy is extended to his parents and i ough\u2014we must fight for it.\u201d days in oMntreal with her daughter,'brother.\t(Hull said professions of neu Mrs.C.A.Mizener, and Mr.Miz- j Mr, David Newlands has returned oner.\t| home from the Montreal General Mrs.Nelson Whitman has return-! Hospital, where he has been a ed to Sherbrooke, after spending a j patient.holiday in town.\t|- Mrs.A.Rich and Mr.Albert! Rich, of Montreal, were calling on 1 MANSONV1LLE Mrs.William Pibus and Miss Bertha i\t______ Pibus.FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST Montreal and Island Sts.Sunday School, 9.45 a.m.11 a.m.\u2014Morning Service.Subject: \u201cTruth.\u201d Testimonial meeting Wednesday | evening at 8 o\u2019clock.\ti Reading room open daily from 3 to 5 except Saturday, Sunday and ! Holidays, Fridays 7.30 to 9 -p.m., at His Majesty\u2019s Building.* » * \u201cTruth\u201d is the subject of the Les-! son-Sermon to be read in Churches of Christ, Scientist on Sunday, July 26th.The Golden Text is from Hebrews 4:12.\u201cThe word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any ! two-edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.\u201d Among the citations which comprise the Lesson-Sermon is the following from the Bible: \u201cHeal me, 0 Lord, and I shall be healed; save me, and I shall be saved: for thou art my praise.\" (Jeremiah 17:14).The Lesson-Sermon also includes the following passage from the Christian Science textbook \u201cScience and Health with Key to the Scriptures\u201d by Mary Baker Eddy: \u201cChristian Science brings to the body the sunlight of Truth, which invigorates and purifies.Christian Science acts as an alterative, neutralizing error with Truth.It changes the secretions, expels humors, dissolves tumors, relaxes rigid muscles, restores carious bones to soundness.The effect of this Science is to stir the human mind to a change of base, on which it may yield to the harmony of the divine Mind.\u201d (Page 162).All Kinds Of Berries Were Plentiful At Local Market Black currants appeared on the New cheese, Quebec.35c Lansdowne Market yesterday for the Old cheese .40c to 45c first time this year, and were selling Oka, lb.\u2022 \u2022 \u2022 48r' at thirty cents a quart.Raspberries! THE FRUIT MARKET were plentiful and fresh-looking, and Canteloupes (Calif.) .20c were down to the same price per Cherries, lb.Soc quart.Blueberries were listed at j Grapefruit (California) .2 for 25c thirty cents a quart, gooseberries at; Grapes, lb.30c twenty cents a quart and white and I Lemons, dozen.35c to 40c red currants were of good quality Oranges, per dozen .20c to 60c and were being sold at fifteen cents New Transparent Apples, lb.$1.10 a basket.\t: Peaches, dozen.20c to 40c There still were small straw-: Plums, dozen .25c berries, the price of which was thir-I Red Cherries, lb.ty cents a basket.Vegetables of all kinds were offered in abundance.Local new potatoes sold at fifty cents a peck, a T\tr.i r .i\tLAC.Sturtevant spent a week- Mr.Ian Boyd of Montreal, spent end at the honle of his pai.entgi Mr.tbe, '»»ek\"eTd aJ,, home of Mr.and Mrs.James Sturtevant.!nird ^î.rS' ,IanJW\u2019 Lrandall, where, Mr.and Mrs.R.F.Cowan and Mrs.Boyd and son, lommy,\tare\tdaughter,\tMary, Mrs.Mary\tAiken gU6 .¦\t.\t,\t'and Mrs.\tEthel Bailey were\tguests Miss A.A.McGinnis has returned |of Mrs.Alice Allen, in Sutton, to the home of Mr.and Mrs, W.i Miss Ethel Bourne was the guest Leonard Eldridge, after visiting Mr.i0f Miss Ora Courser, in Sutton, and Mrs.H.H.Irouty, at Bond-: Mrs.Lilia Jersey has returned to ,\t,\t,,\t\u201e\tJher home, after spending a week Master Jonathan Robinson, of\ther granddaughter, Mrs.Carl Montreal, is presiding at the organ |Merriam, and Mr.Merriam and at St.Paul s Church, for two Sun-; farnjiy.days, while the ^ organist,\tMrs.\tHubert\tNixon, of Knowlton, George Williams is away on\thoh-|vsited at\tthe home of Mrs.\tMabel .r\t,\tiGatley and Mr.and Mrs.Frank Mrs.Donald Levoy and Mrs.Grace Aiken.Levoy accompanied Mr.and Mrs.p(e Raymond Cabana, of Debert, Archie Levoy, of Newport, Vt., to^.S., spent a week-end at his home Montreal, where they visited Mr.here Donald Levoy, who is in a hospital j \u2018 Mr.Maxime Hamelin, of Rutland, r,1?' v-\t\u201e\tVt., visited his mother, Mrs.Elie Pte.Norma Wiken, of the C.W.A.j Hamelin, and Mr.and Mrs.P.E.C., at Montreal, spent the week-end , Hamelin.with her parents.Mr.and Mrs.C.E.i Miss Marion Atwell was the guest Wiken.\t,, Mr.and Mrs.Harry George at Mrs, Horace Whitehead was call- |their camp on Lake Memphremagog.trality in the present conflict were \u201cabsurd and suicidal\u201d and asserted that \u201cthere is no surer way for men and for nations to show themselves unworthy of liberty than by supine submission and refusal to fight.\u201d (Argentina is one of two South American nations still maintaining relations with the Axis powers.Chile is the other).Watermelons, each.$1.50 THE VEGETABLE MARKET Beets, local, bunch ._.05c slight reduction over last week\u2019s Cucumbers, local, each .05c to 10c price.Peas, beans and radishes were Carrots, pound .U7e crisp and firm.\tCarrots, new.bunch .Ooc Prices of dairy products remained Cabbage, meal, bunen.Ooc steady.Farmers and dealers were Cauliflower, ioca., each.loc getting forty-five cents a dozen for Celer;, Ont., bunch .10c Grade A-l and forty cents for Fresh string beans, lb.\t\u2022 \u2022 T® Grade-A large eggs.\tLoca! iceberg lettuce, head .05c There was not a large market in Loca; lettuce,\t.05.mea.during the afternoon and New Potatoes (Md.) peck .60c prices remained unchanged.\ti*)ejv omens.,l3., \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 Dealers and farmers reported that Onions, fresh, green, bunch .OSc Spanish onions, Spinach and rhu- Tomatoes pound, local .loc to 2oc barb were off the market for the Radishes, bunch.v-e first time in a.month.Oranges in- Peas, local, lb.creased ten cents a dozen and were THE PROVISION MARKET selling at sixty cents and the orice Boiling m^at, per lb.*c to 15c of apples per peck dropped from Bacon, per lb.35c to 40c $1.30 to\t$1.10.\t; Blood sausages, lb.18c The detailed prices:\t;Calf liver, lb.50c | Chickens, lb.32c oq\t'Cottage rolls,\t!b.35c \u2019 \u2019 Fowl lb.25e Ham, per lb.35c DAIRY MARKET Butter, best creamery, lb.Butter, best dairy, ib.Sac of the motor to Three Kivers to bring to) Penmans Limited, of Paris, Ont., \"\tN.181)\u2019 ''ou;cl .oe Coatieook Mrs.Grady\u2019s cousin, Mrs.I and H.P.Long, Superintendent of\tt0 v|*it Sherbrooke during Isabelle Flemming, who has been in ! Mills, were in town on business at tae , t,I%v5.CK m September, and hospital there for sevei-al weeks.! the Penmans Mills here which are '*rs- t.H.Emerson, of Sherbrooke, Mrs.Flemming underwent a serious i closed as usual at this time of the .and Mrs.Orr, of Milay,^ were ap- WARNED AGAINST DAMAGING TREES Director of Police Percy Donahue today warned children who play in city parks not to damage trees.He added that charges will be laid against their parents if the children ar apprehended by police while damaging trees or flower beds.He said that the department has received reports that children playing at the various parks have been j cutting branches from trees.Director Donahue said that any j person found guilty of damaging trees on city property is liable to a fine of $20 and costs or two months\u2019 imprisonment under the city by-law.IN MEMORIAM DAVIS.\u2014In loving memory of our dfar mother.Goldie Davis, who passed away on July 24th, 1941.A door swings briefly open, And a loved one slips away.Slips from life's dark shadows, Into bright eternal day.Where earthly griefs are over.Where pain shall he no mere.To peace past understanding.God has opened wide the door.MRS.WALTER STONE.Daughter.MRS.CLARENCE FLANDERS.Daughter.MISS HAZEL DAVIS.Daughter.; ments for her to speak at schools who has land in other places during her stay operation ami is reported to be con- year for inspection and repairs to j P0'11^^*0 charge of arrange valescing very satisfactorily.\tj machinery.\t' Word has been received of the Mr.Bernard Williams, __________________ ____ sudden death of Mrs.Parker, widow j been seriously ill from stomach in the city, of the late Byron Parker, at trouble for the past week, was taken At the close of the session, the Everett, Mass.Mrs.Parker was at I on Thursday morning by ambulance, hostess served tea and dainty re-one time a resident of Coatieook, I to the Sherbrooke Hospital.He was freshments.her maiden name being Stasie Hur- accomuanied by Mrs, William*.\t-.\u2014.' ' ¦\u2014 DETAILED WEATHER PUNIRAI CHAPEL 21 MU60UHNE ST liât 171 ¦ FAIR AND COOLER Forecasts: Light to moderate winds; generally fair and slightly 'cooler.The maximum temperature yesterday was 82 and the minimum 55.Last year the temperatures were, 90 and 64.SJ-FEREtROOKE UNDERTAKING PARLORS LTD.PHONE 45 DUFFERIN AVE.236 MORE Than EVER the services of a TRUST COMPANY as your Executor are necessary in meeting promptly, from its own funds, heavy Succession Duties without sacrificing investments you wish held in your Estate.Let us detail the advantages of a corporate Executor.SHERBROOKE TRUST COMPANY ! I I 3 CITY and SUBURBAN iHertirooke ©atlp &ecorb SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1942.\t\t\tJULY\t\t\t Sun.\tMon.\tTUC.\tWed.\tTha.\tFrL\tSat.\t\t\t1\t2\t3\t4 5\t6\t7\t8\t9\t10\t11 12\t13\t14\t15\t16\t17\t18 19\t20\t21\t22\t23\t24\t25 26\t27\t28\t29\t30\t31\t Prohibit Sale Of Potatoes Less Than Inch And Half In Diameter Growers of new spuds who offer^ potatoes less than one and one-half inch in diameter on the Lansdowne Market arc likely to have their potatoes confiscated by order of the Dominion Department of Agriculture inspectors, it was learned to- ! day.Yesterday an inspector for the de- j partment went around the various I stalls, took a gander at the pota- 1 toes, and warned some produce > grotvers that they must no longer : deal in small potatoes.Dealers, while not sure, were un- i der the impression that growers might be able to sell the \u201clittle marbles\u201d which are preferred by spud : eaters who eat them with their jackets on, and who are not fussy whether they come big or small pro- ! viding they are cheaper than the; larger size grades.FURNISH BOYS OVERSEAS WITH SMOKES SUPPLY Employees of Shawinigan Water and Power Company Have Been Active Since Outbreak of War Shipping Cigarettes.Employees of The Shawinigan Water and Power Company have But regardless of the taste of the been exceedingly active since the buyer, or the fact that the grower outbreak of war in furnishing Over-cannot pull the big potatoes out of 'seas troops with a continuous sup-the ground and leave the small | ply of smokes.A group known as ones to grow bigger, the inspector i The Tobacco Fund Committee was has ruled them off the market.\tj formed shortly after war broke out, The Department of Agriculture : to supply all members of the staff has only two grades for new pota-j who joined the forces and went toes: No.1, new potatoes must be Overseas, or who are on active naval at least two inches, and No, 2 grade! duty, with cigarettes or tobacco, can be as small as one and one-half; At present, out of a total of 180 inches\u2014-but no smaller.\tj employees who have signed up for So if the growers in the Eastern j active service, some fifty-two are Townships find someone measuring, either Overseas or on active naval potatoes with a pair of calipers onjduty.On receipt of information the local mart next week, they; to the effect that a man has joined this group, 300 cigarettes or one pound of tobacco are forwarded on the 1st and 15th of every month.In addition to keeping members of the staff supplied, it is found possible every second month to ship 81,000 cigarettes Overseas for distribution to a number of Quebec regiments.These are sent directly to Major Humphrey, Director of Auxiliary Services, Canadian Military Headquarters Overseas, who forwards them to the officers com-jmanding the following regiments LEE M.WATSON & CO.REG\u2019D.for general distribution: Royal 22nd WINS PROMOTION Record\u2019s Second Cigarette Campaign For Overseas REPORTED MISSING had better be prepared to tell the man that they only have them there as exhibits, and that the small ones are not for .ale.Incidentally, a spokesman from the department stated yesterday that regulations would not be made more elastic in wartime.War or no war, a potato less than an inch and a half across the hips is a very small potato which should be left in the ground to grow until it is oil enough to be exposed to society.INSURANCE Fire, Automobile, Liability, etc.Sun Life Bldg., Sherbrooke.Phones: 2951 - 2950 Night and Holiday Calls: Sherbrooke 1542W miUE DUSSAULT SAYS: We have just about reached the Saragosa Sea of the Summertime when everything seems quiet and lifeless.But this year there is a war on and there should be no letting down in the effort to win.Save and Conserve must be our motto.Regiment, Three Rivers Tank Regiment, Les Fusiliers de Mont Royal, Royal Montreal Regiment and Black Watch.There being approximately a total of 4.500 troops in these regiments, this quantity is enough for each man to receive a package of twenty cigarettes on each shipment.In addition to the above, members of the company\u2019s executive ; taking a keen interest in this work, ; have from time to time, forwarded parcels of 1,000 cigarettes each to every member of the staff Overseas on special occasions such as Christmas and Easter.Since the outbreak of hostilities and the inauguration of the policy of keeping as large a supply of cig-i arettes as possible flowing Overseas, Captain W.A.Macintosh, who was recently promoted from the rank of Lieutenant.Capt.Macintosh was born in Lonnoxville in 1919 and is the second son of Mrs.A.J, Macintosh, now of Shawinigan Falls, and the late Mr.Macintosh, of Ayer\u2019s Cliff.He attended the Ayer\u2019s Cliff High School, Stanstead College and lastly the Royal Military College, at Kingston, Ontario, from which he graduated in June, 1940.In July of the same year he left for England, joining- the Imperial Army where he has since been in service, CROP OF HONEY WILL BE UNDER NORMAL OUTPUT for them so that they will not become burdens.If I could help you to inspect them, perhaps suggest money saving improvements, I should be glad indeed.I'd like to have you give me a call whenever you feel like it.98 Wellington St.N.\u2014 Room 18 Phone 4000 See that!niore than 0,10 nnUion cigarettes i \u2022! ,.\t,\t,\t| have been sent.your buildings do not deteriorate; protect them and care they Our Congratulations to; F.A.Briggs, on the occasion of his birthday tomorrow.NO BANANAS\u201d IN CITY, NONE LIKELY SOON NEW ADDRESS: 15 BALL ST.SHERBROOKE Irenee Langevin SIGNS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION Phone 320 \u201cYes, we have no bananas,\u201d is the theme song of fruit merchants in Shenbrooke today.For more than three weeks the succulent fruit has vanished from fruit stalls throughout the city, and citizens have taken up the chorus, \u201cNo bananas today.\u201d When asked by a Record reporter-yesterday if they expected a shipment soon, the fruit vendors shrugged their shoulders and looked blank.\u201cMaybe we\u2019ll be without them for the duration,\u201d a few commented.tm < f* mr ¦ ' V/WA-.'-V Yield in Eastern Townships Reduced by Fifty Per Cent this Year, According to Farm Beekeepers \u2014- First Honey at Local Market Yesterday.The 1942 honey crop will be a comparatively small one in the Eastern Townships, according to farmers at the Lansdowne Market, who are members of the Beekeepers\u2019 Association.One stated today that present prospects indicate only about one-half of the normal crop.The reduced honey yield comes at an unfortunate time with sugar rations reduced.A normal honey crop would have enabled many householders to substitute honey for sugar in numerous home uses.Honey has been in demand for months by soft drink and candy manufacturers as a substitute for sugar, it was explained.Honey is said to be particularly adaptable in the manufacture of such carbonated beverages as ginger ale.Honey made Its first appearance at the local market yesterday.The regular small section of honey-comb was selling for thirty cents apiece.The Record's Cigarette Fund has no» but $48.78 in the bank.In view of the many letters received from the Eastern Townships lads 0\\erseas who have benctitted by this fund and the generous response which it received from the Record readers here at home it has been decided that a second campaign will be launched.George^ E.Ewing who so kindly offered his services as Honorary treasurer ot the Campaign, has again consented to act in this same capacity.A word of praise for the splendid assistance rendered by Mr.Ewing may not be amiss.The money subscribed to the Fund was regularly handed over to Mr.Ewing and deposited by him in a special bank account.Then regularly cigarettes, tobacco and other comforts were sent Overseas.Mr.Ewing's services.were, of course, given gratis and every cent subscribed to the Fund was used to buy the boys\u2019 comforts.There was absolutely no outside expense and no salaries or remunerations of any kind were paid.Appreciation is also expressed to Miss Doris 1\u2019rire.Cashier of the Record Company, who kindly looked after the subscriptions as they were received and then forwarded them to the Honorary Treasurer.Miss Price's efficiency greatly facilitated the work involved.The total amount subscribed by Record readers totalled $655.24.233,000 cigarettes were purchased and sent Overseas up to July 14th.1942.In addition nineteen and a half pounds of pipe tobacco were also forwarded and express charges paid on thirty-three pounds of cranberry sauce sent in time for last Christmas.This sauce was supplied through the courtesy of G.T.Armstrong and Sons, a gesture on their part which is verv much appreciated.The balance on hand on July 14th, 1912 was $48.78.The Record's Second Cigarette Fund w ill he carried out along the same lines as the first one.Mr.Ewing will again act as Honorary Treasurer and the Record will gladly publish daily the donations received.As was the case with the first campaign, the cigarettes will he sent to various units Overseas with which E.T.lads are associated.Record readers throughout the Townships are asked to remember this campaign and to do their part to keep cigarettes going regularly Overseas.The Record seeks no credit for this or the previous campaign.Rather we consider it our duty and a privilege to place our columns at the disposal of such a worthy-cause.: ^Ü' I Inter-Provincial Conference Of C.P.C.And Â.R.P.Officials Soon ¦« MAM ENJOYING ST.LAWRENCE RIVER CRUISES Week-Ends Find Thousands Cruising and Touring River Between Thousand Islands and Saguenay River.Lured by the impros.-ive beauty of the Saguenay River Fjord, and the stately mingling- of mountains and tidal waters, more Canadians than ever arc spending their vacations! afloat in the picturesque mid-St.j Lawrence areas,\tBouter, Pas-1 , f, .\tamateurs directed by William \" '\\m tlu\u2019 Wwoung.; |0j, (genera] Manager of the S.u-nts of the bague- The t,roupei klKnvn as Sgt.-Pilot John Benson \u201cJackie\u201d Locke, son of Mr, and Mrs.Arthur Locke, of Lennoxville, who has boon reported missing as the result of aerial operations Overseas, Machinery Is Being Set Up To Encourage War Savings CITY BRIEFLETS Dance, Willowdale Tavn.Sat.p.m.From coast to coast in Canada, machinery is being set up for an intensive drive by the Government to bring War Savings to a higher level and prevent loss of any present savings plans that may be operating.Sherbrooke is one of the centres where an office has been established.It is in Room 15 in the Sherbrooke City Hall.Chief feature of the early part of the new drive will be a plan to have War Savings Stamps sold in a!! retail establishments.At least six i hundred establishments doing cash | business in Sherbrooke County yvith i the public will be asked to handle the sale of the stamps.Other numerous innovations are planned by the four newly-appointed chairmen.The War Savings drive is all part of the work carried on under what is known nationally as the National War Finance Committee.It is charged with the responsibility of raising nearly two billion dollars through the medium of voluntary savings by the purchase of stamps, certificates and bonds.Among the features of the forth-coining drive will be the appearance oi \u201cMiss Canada\u201d-\u2014girls who will se-i stamps at public gatherings.They will be suitably attired, i Sherbrooke County National War Finance Committee members are L.R.Hebert and H.A.Clarke, Sheri brooke County organizers; Jacob Nicol, Provincial executive; D.J.Sails, Chenier Picard, Louis Codere and Mayor Henry W.S.Downs, of Lennoxville, Chairmen.2,000 PEOPLE FROM El AREA ON PILGRIMAGE Mew DID roofni ivil/i DONNA60NA HARDBOARD Here's the newest and most adaptable building board available today-Donnacona Hardboard.It's grainless, all-wood, moisture-resistant and strong\u2014don't fail to investigate this remarkable board 5 you're planning any remodelling in your home\u2014or new construction.With its smooth surface which takes any finish Donnacona Hardboard brings a new smartness to redecoration\u2014for any room in the house including bathroom and kitchen.Let us give you full information.\tr* L.0.NOEL, INC.Lumber\u2014Building Supplies Coal 178 Wellington St.S.Phone 2250 JOHNNY BOURQUE Lumber\u2014Building Supplies 5 Bourque Street Phone 1613 Some 2,000 persons from Lhe Eastern Townships, including 1,40-0 from Sherbrooke, alone, travelled to Ste.Anne de Beaupre last evening by special Q.C.R.train in one of the largest pilgrimages out of this district.J.A.Mctivier, city passe.nger agent for the Quebec Central Railway and the Canadian Pacific Railway, stated this morning that the excursion was made up of two trains, one of which left here at 9 o\u2019clock to proceed direct to Ste.Anne, the second making a number of stops between East Angus and Thetford Mines.Rev.Father Irenee Pinard, of the Bishop\u2019s Palac-c, organized the pilgrimage, which will return this afternoon.This is the first time this annual event has been held on a week day, as usually it is scheduled for a Saturday.LENNOXVILLE Guests recently of Mr.and Mrs.Edgar Groom were Mr.and Mrs.Henry Graham, of St.Johnsbury, Vk, Mrs.Abbie Coates, Mr.and Mrs.Shirley Bennett and two children, Betty and Reuben, of Canterbury.The Executive of the Lennoxville Branch of the Canadian Red Cross would like to take this opportunity to thank all the local ladies who volunteered so willingly to pick raspberries and all who donated berries, sugar and gave cash donations for the making of raspberry-jam to be sent to Britain.On July IGt.h, eleven ladies picked berries and 36 cans of 21-i pounds of jams were made and on July 23rd nineteen ladies picked and several donated berries and 80 cans were filled making 116 cans which equalled 290 pounds of jam.The thanks of the Branch is also extended to the United Church Board for the use of the Church Hall kitchen, Mrs.A.E.Abercrombie for the use of her canning machine, Mrs.Ross Healy for supervision, all ladies who helped cook the berries and all who loaned cars to convey berry pickers and also Mr.H.Webster, Church Janitor, and any one who helped in any way zjui.t üùs venture such a success.NO SHORTAGE IS FEARED OF CANNED MILK A producer and retailer of condensed milk today spiked the rumor that very shortly there will be none available for use in baiby feeding.Several reported that there are parents who have been buying up cases of canned milk.Some time ago, however, one manufacturer pointed out, there was a threat of a shortage, but the attitude of both the Government and the producers is that in wartime, a.s in peacetime, the health of the baby comes first.Accordingly, there will he canned milk available, just as there will be canned strained baby foods.QUIET PERIOD FOR FIREMEN Director of Police and Fire Percy Donahue reported today that there were no accidents or fire calls received by the department during the past twenty-four-hour period.However, police were notified that a Spaniel d-og owned by Mae James, who resides in His Majesty\u2019s Building on Wellington Street North, apparently was poisoned last night.Miss James told police that she had taken the dog for a walk and when she returned home, the animal sprawled on the floor and became violently ill.It was later destroyed by police.Authorities have started an investigation before a dog-poisoning epidemic spreads in the city.CONES OF ICE CREAM EXEMPT FROM TAXATION Ice cream cones are frozen in more ways than one, which will be good news to kiddies and adults alike in Sherbrooke and the Eastern Townships.It was announced today at the local olfico of the Wartime Prices and Tiade Board that ice cream cones were exempt from the new taxation, There have been some complaints that merchants have been adding an extra cent to the price of ice cream cones which is contrary to the regulations.Merchants who served double dip cones during the basic period must give the same portion at the present time, Bert Wiliams Art Shop still open for business\u2014 116 Wellington St.N.Tel.3053.It being impossible to import any European goods during the war, we have decided to sell out all stock in our gift department.Take advantage of these low prices on Lamps, Dinner Sets, Vases and Ornumcnts of all kinds.Chez Poudrctte, 15 Wellington St, North.For Sale \u2014 Small Record Route, West Ward.Apply Record Office, Phone 94.It\u2019s a date! Dance, Crawford\u2019s Pavilion Saturday p.m.The office of Ur.S, Marcus will be closed from Saturday p.m., July 25 to August 10, Dance at Burroughs\u2019 Falla tonight.Don Dixon\u2019s liand.'The best music in the land.Everybody up! July 29th to August 11th.1942, the office of Dr.G.H.Jaquith, Osteopath, will be closed.Have your dinner at ArmilngcV Dining Room, Sunday, July 26.Raost Turkey, 75c.Recital of Sacred Music by Mrs.Carswell, of New York City, assisted by Mr.C.V.Cha-mbcrland at the organ tomorrow (Sun,) at 4 p.m.at Plymouth Church.songer Traif.fie Manager of Canada Steamship Lines, announces.Week-ends find an average of around three thousand people cruising and touring the St.Lawrence between the unrivalled glories of the | Thousand Islands i forested cscarpme nay river.Nightly, palatial steamers of Cana-a-da Ste«m.-hip Lines reach Montreal after shooting the rap,dis east of the metropolis; and connect with other steamers which glide through Normandy in America to walled Quebec, chic Murray Bay whore the Manoir Richelieu plays host to travellers of the entire continent.Then, on to historic Tadoussnc, at the junction of the St.Lawrence and Saguenay rivers, where the New Hotel Tndous-sa-e is delighting new generations of rest-seekers.To the hotel, now, is added the attraction of the Chauvin House, replica of a French trading post built in 1600, w hich is a museum for relics of the French regime 1n Canada and of Indians of the north-lands.Leaving Tadous-sac, the vessel enters the Kingdom of the Saguenay, I ¦floats on a \u201cbottomless\u201d stream from I 600 to 900 feet deep, between verdant, cliffs rising 1.800 feel.\u201cRiver of Deep Water,-,\u201d the Indians have called (he Saguenay through the ages.Today, it leads to a new industrial section which clusters around Bngotville an.I Chicoutimi, termini of the Saguenay tours and six-day cruises.Director of Police and Fire Percy Donahue and Alderman Paul Hamel j returned to Sherbrooke yesterday i after attending the tenth annual I Province of Quebec Police and Fire Chiefs\u2019 Association convention in.| Montreal, and the funeral of Chief t Constable Thomas Cravel, of Outre-wont, who died Tuesday and was j buried yesterday.Director Donahue said today that j an inter-provincial conference of ! C.P.C.and A.R.P.officials will probably take place in the near future to : seek enactment of legislation gov-! erning that type of work in tha Province.j He said he learned that heads of j police and fire departments of ; smaller centres have \u201csome job\u201d on i their hands as residents of distant municipalities still were convinced 1 that the danger of enemy attacks was very far off.Edouard Lorrain and Romeo Forget, both of the Provincial Police Identification Department, gave an illustrated address on identification by fingerprints and photographs, Mr.Donahue said.He added that the guests were entertained by a troupe of young amateurs directed by William' Dun- S.P.C.A.Bill\u2019s Family,\u201d gives weekly concerts in the forces.In a brief address, Director Biga-ouette, of Quebec City, thanked the Association for the outstanding cooperation given by all members during the past year.He expressed th» belief that police and fire chiefs faced a very difficult task in the coming year.Mr.Donahue said that special présentations were made to director Bigaouette, Police Director Fernand Dufresne and Fire Director K.E.Pare.CALL\u2019S MILLS Mrs.Master M ass., MEETING HELD BY GUILD AT BROMPTONVILLE Garden Party and Sale of Work Will Be Held to Raise Funds to Send Comforts to Boys Overseas.BAND CONCERT TOMORROW NIGHT The following programme will be given by the Sherbrooke Harmony-Band under Prof.Charles Delvenne at a concert which will be held tomorrow evening at Dufresne Park at 8:15 o\u2019clock: O Canada; A Mighty Fortress Is Our God.J, S.Bach; Barnum and Bailey\u2019s Favorite March, K.L.King; In Shadowland, waltz, J.Stanley Brothers, Jr.; The Mil] in the Forest, idyll, R.Eilenberg; Q ,., Como le Va 7 tango, J.Valverde; Sari, selection, E.Kalman; The Marines\u2019 Hymn, L.Z.Phillips; \u201cWhispering Flowers,\u201d F.V.Blon; The Old Church Organ, W.P.Chambers: Gems of Stephen Foster, American Fantasia, M.Tobani; The Squealer, march, Will Huff; Finlandia, choral, J.Sibelius; .God gave tie.COUNCIL SAID UNANIMOUSLY IN FAVOR OF FILTER PLANT Erection of n fill ration plant fo ¦ Sherbrooke was more of a reality today than ever before when it was learned at City Hall that all members of the City Council are in favor of it.According to a City Hall source, the several aldermen who were against the installation of the water purifying plant, will be in favor of it, when the matter is discussed at the next meeting of City Council.Alderman Eugene Thibault, Chairman of the Finance Committee, told \u2022 Record reporter last night that the city is growing steadily and the time is close at hand for c modern filtration plant.City officials said they believed that work on the plant probably would be started before the end of the year.LOCAL YOUTH IS REPORTED DEAD J.A.Boisvert, 101 Drummond I Street, has been notified that his i son, Sgt.-Pilot Joseph Alphee Bois-1 vert, already reported missing as | the result of aerial operations over ; Germany, was killed on active service.The 27-year-old Sherbrooke youth joined the Royal Canadian Air Force before the start of the war, and went Overseas in May 1941.The Internationa] Red Cross have now advised that he was killed in a 1 raid over Germany and buried in j \u201cprincipal cemetery\u201d in Dortmund, j Essen, Germany.University of Javia, Italy, was founded by Lothaire, grandson of Caariemagne, in, 825.HOSIERY Mill AT RICHMOND RESUMES WORK Difficulties Which Resulted in Shut-Down of National Hosiery Mills Ironed Out.Difficulties which resulted in the shutdown of the Richmond plant of the National Hosiery Milks have been ironed out, according to J.H.Kitchen, manager of the plant, who said today that the employees arc returning to work immediately.Earlier this week, five employees in the .sewing department went on strike in demand for wage adjustments, but a compromise was reached yesterday.The strike actually centered around the five employees who aru receiving a piece rate and sought an adjustment to an hourly rate, Mr.Kitchen said.Th» employees agreed to resume their duties until adjustment in salary is made, pursuant to instructions from Ottawa, after a conference with an official of the parent company at Hamilton, Ont.According to company officials, some 125 employees were affected as a result of the shutdown, but only a fraction of these were actually on strike.COOLING ICE CREAM TO UNIT ON MARCH Les Fusiliers de Sherbrooke today virtually were singing the praises of Alderman R.W.Reid.Genial Mr.Reid, who is manager of the Sherbrooke Pure Milk Company, drove to Little Lake Magog yesterday afternoon and distributed seventy-two dozens of ice cream rolls to the boys in the unit.Leaving Sherbrooke yesterday morning and marching under a hot sun, members of the unit more than welcomed and appreciated the ice cream.The unit today still was cn route via foot to the Farnham military camp, where the soldiers will continue their training.In rousing cheers the soldiers .thanked Mr ïLcul fox lu» iULnarasakv.Brompton, July 25.A regular meeting of the Bromptonville St.Lawrence Guild was held on Wed nesriay afternoon at the home of Mrs.Arthur Gray.The afternoon was spent in making plans for a garden party and sale of work, which will be held in aid of local boys Overseas.The proceeds will he used to send each boy a box in the near future.It was decided to hold this in place of the next regular meeting, Mrs.Arthur Gray kindly offered her grounds for (he occasion.It was decided to hold it between the hours of four and seven p.m., and it was hoped that all local citizens and friends from surrounding communities would attend and make it a success financially.Miss Joyce .Jackson ami Miss Freda Hilton wore then appointed to solicit the food.Considerable fancy work was turned in and prices were sol on same.Letters of thanks were then read from three more local hoys thanking the Guild for cigarettes and chocolates sent them.A folder of views of England sent by Pte.R.Fortin proved very interesting.As the afternoon drew to a V.L.Hastings and son, Vollen, of Swansea Centre, Mr.and Mrs.II.M.Aitken, of Springfield, Mass., and Mr.and Mrs.F.i).Aitken and little daughter, Cherral, of Ontario, arc spending a few days with Mr.and Mrs.Preston Crittenden and family, at Glen Dale Farm.Mrs.C.L.Williams, Mrs.Holby, Mrs.Donald Healey, Miss Hunault, Ali-s.Gordon Alillcr, Mr.Douglas Edwards, and several others, of Granby, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.J.G.Edwards during the week.Mrs.B.Konis and little son, Kenneth, of Boston, Mass., are spending their holidays with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Edward.Mr.and Mrs, Pet-I inguild and daughters returned lo their home in Montreal, after spend-ling a pleasant two weeks\u2019 holiday at the same home.Several from Call\u2019s Mills attended the Sunday School picnic at Jack-son\u2019s Bridge, near Brome.close, tea was served by the hostess assisted by the Misses Jackson and Billon.Wireless Instructor Raymond E.Smith, of Sunmierside, P.E.I., is spending his furlough with his parents, Mr.and Mrs.A.Smith.Mrs.F.Bcnjaficld and daughters, Barbara, Dorothy and Joan, and little Miss Betty May Lane, of lienttharnois, are visiting Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Gray.MOVIE THEATRES m > c/> H m to a: H O * 2! C/J 3C \u201c5 C/3 MYRA THEATRE Sun.-Mon.-Tues.\u201426-27-28 Claudette Colbert, John Payne, \u201cREMEMBER THE DAY\u201d Jean Rogers, William Lundigan, \u201cSUNDAY PUNCH\u201d 2 FREE ENLARGEMENTS with each roll of film developed or ten reprints, all for and 5c mail in stamps.Photographic Laboratories P.O.Hex 545, Sherbrooke, Que.25c A RELIEF FOR WOMEN AND GIRLS Orange Lily suppositories arc a local application designed for the benefit of women and girls suffering from inflammation and congestion, catarrhal conditions, also itching and irritation caused by leucorrhoea.They are an aid to the relief of monthly pain and help to prevent irregularities.These safe, antiseptic, cleansing and healing suppositories help to relieve bodily suffering and to safeguard personal daintiness.Send 10c for a 10 days\u2019 trial.Regular size, price $2.00, Sold at Leading Drug Stores Everywhere.MRS.LYDIA W.LAD!) (Dept.15), BOX 191, WINDSOR, ONT.J.W.BLAKE Funeral \u2014 Ambulance Service Tel.404 (Lung Motor Oxygen Tank) 86 Queen SL, Sherbrooke. 4.SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1942.jlberbrctcib ïBaib Kerorb Established Ninth Day ot ?et5mary, 1897, with wh;th is incorporated the Sherbrooke Gazette, established 1837, and Sherbrooke Examiner, published 1878.\u2014 Eastern Townships\u2019 Only English Daily \u2014\u2022 The Record if priulcC and published every weekday by the Sherbrooke Record Company, Limited, of which Edna A.Beer worth is Secretary-Treasurer, al the office, 69 Wellington Street North, in Ihe City of Sherbrooke, incorporating the news services of The Canadian Press, The Associated Press, and Reuters.The Record is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations, its circulation being regularly audited and guaranteed.Subscription rates: 75c a month, delivered at any home in the city and suburbs.Post Office delivery to any place in Canada, Great Britain or the United: States, $4 per year; six month?, $2; three months, .$1; one month, 50c.Single copies, 3c.0 God, Wfio art the author of peace and lover of concord, defend ns Thy Ihumble servants in at! assaalts of onr enemies.THE COUNCIL SHOULD ACT NOW A definite lead has been given the Sherbrooke City Council in the matter of the construction of a filtration plant by Théo J.Lafreniere, Chief Engineer of the Province of Quebec Health Department, who declares the City should go ahead with such a project at once.The arguments lie presents in support of his plan are sound and brook little real contradiction except on the grounds that the initial cost is $200,000.However, the operating costs are small and à filtration plant will prove a distinct advantage over proposals to seek a fresh source of supply to replace the admittedly poor water coming from the Magog river.Furthermore, the financial position of Sherbrooke is such that the expenditure can be met without any undue burden upon the ratepayers or the credit of the city.Mayor Ross has taken an active part in the campaign for improving the local*wafer supply and indicates that the whole matter will be threshed out at a special meeting of the City Council to be held next, week, ll is to be sincerely hoped that something definite will result from this session, for the matter of securing an adequate supply of good safe drinking water has long been something of a municipal football, to the detriment of Ihe health of the citizens.Mr.Lafreniere has slated a definite case for filtration.Perhaps some other alderman might have an alternative.If lie.has something that he can present, he should do so at this meeting, because it is imperative that something be done without delay.No man can argue that the Sherbrooke water is good, or even safe, for human consumption.Time after time it lias been graded as poor, bad or even dangerous by the Quebec Provincial Department of Health.This body has, no axe to grind, other than offering suggestions for improving the health of Ihe citizens, and certainly one effective way of doing this is to improve the water supply.\u201cLiberty Ship'\u2019 London sources are informed.The situation facing the Reich is reflected in official British reports that cf the 9,000,000 tons of merchant shipping with which Germany and Italy started the war, G,250,000 tons had been sent to the bottom prior to last December.How much tonnage the Axis has lost since then is largely a matter of speculation, but Allied communiques indicate that it is considerable.While the British and United States navies have virtually throttled Germany\u2019s Overseas commerce, she is struggling tremendously to maintain vital supply-lines in European waters, particularly in the Baltic and the Mediterranean.In the Baltic, German freighters are moving iron ore from Lulea, Sweden, to North German.ports and supplying Nazi troops in Russia and for their Finnish allies.With Soviet submarines on the loose in the Baltic this is becoming a Hazardous job, and the Germans are reported to have resorted recently to convoying.In ihe Mediterranean, Germany is largely dependent upon Italian shipping space to keep her armies in North Africa supplied, to maintain service to Spain and Unoccupied France and bring oil in tankers from Rumania.British warships and R.A.F.patrols have been taking a heavy toll on these routes.The blockade has forced Germany to exert vast efforts to attain a degree of self-sufficiency, at great cost.For instance, British experts estimate, Germany is obliged to keep 11,000,000 men employed in the food industry alone\u2014men the Nazis can ill afford to spare from their armed forces.By contrast Britain, through the aid afforded by Overseas supply-convoys, has only 1,000,000 men tied up in agriculture.Thirty Years Ago FROM THE RECORD FILES It is estimated that nearly one hundred persons lost their lives in the vicinity of Pittsburgh in the second serious flood to strike the district within one week.One of the methods in which the Dominion is expected to assist in the British naval rearmament programme is through the provision of facilities for arming of merchant vessels as armed cruisers.Reports from various parts of the Eastern Townships indicate that extensive damage is being caused to the foliage by the plague of caterpillars infesting the district.Officials in Sherbrooke deny reports from Richmond that the Stanstead and Sherbrooke Mutual plans to absorb the Richmond, Drummond and Yahaska Insurance Company.The Dominion Government plans to establish a number of demonstration farms throughout the district in an effort to combat the weed menace.Those pupils who passed the 2nd Academy examinations at the Sherbrooke High School were Charles Drummond, Evelyn Price, Blossom Le Huray, Jennie Smith, Douglas Hyndman, Isabel Coleman and Pearl Harwood.The scarcity of milch cows and the heavy demand for cream from the United States has caused butter prices to surge up to 26 cents.SITTING IN ON THE SECOND-FRONT TALKS CONCENTRATING PRODUCTION Concentration of consumer goods industries in a few strategically located plants in the United Slates, as announced by Donald M.Nelson, Chairman of the War Production Board, will follow (he principles of the system in Great Britain where, the publisher of \u201cModern Industry\u201d says, it has been successful.Under the concentration method, says Eldridge Haynes in the current issue of his magazine, all plants in an industry can remain solvent and keep their brand names alive by providing for production in the industry\u2019s most economical, efficient plants with a division of the profits among all the plants.Whether brand names would lie preserved under the American version of [he system is not yet clear for it was indicated by the W.P.B.tiiat standardization and simplification of a product -probably with emphasis on \u201cVictory\u201d models would accompany concentration.Nelson said the war programme lias reached a point where the curtailment and limitation orders issued up to now to trim dow n manufacture of civilian goods did not go far enough toward mobilizing the resources and facilities needed for arms\u2019 manufacture.The War Production Board, he disclosed, therefore lias approved broad policies designed to go far beyond mere curtailment and enable W.P.B.to designate, arbitrarily, certain plants which will carry on the civilian business of entire industries.Absorption In The Non-Essential Prof, the Rev.H.C.Burt, M.A., D.C.L., Lennoxville.RUSSIA\u2019S SECOND FRONT While Allied leaders discuss the problem of diversionary attacks to ease Nazi pressure on the embattled Russian armies, there is a continuing possibility that the Russians will face a new front in Asia even before Britain and the United States can open up any sort of a second front in Western Europe.Japan is believed to have upwards of 500,-000 troops\u2014some sources estimate, as many as 750,000\u2014stationed in .Manchukuo and easily accessible parts of Northern China.A strong proportion of the Japanese air force also is based in Manchukuo, according to the best! available information, with additional facilities, air fields, fuel supplies, spare parts, repair bases, long since completed so that combat operations could | begin the moment the needed extra planes had been flown in from China or the Japanese home islands.If the Japanese should attack Siberia, and the Aleutian occupation well may have been a move to protect their flank for such an operation, there is little likelihood that it would he set in motion however before late September or early October.In recent weeks there have been indications,! however slight, that the Russians feel they are prepared to meet anything the Japanese may throw at| them.Still sticking to their principle of keeping' all their military developments strictly secret, the! Soviets nevertheless have hinted that their Siberian armies and air force are in full fighting trim.There J is no definite information on the strength of these Russian armies.Estimates have ranged all the way from 300,000 to 600,000 troops.These troops are said to be hacked up by 600 to 700 planes.In some quarters in the United States a Russian-Japanese clash would be welcomed on the theory that, by way of the Aleutians and Kamchatka, it would open a road for a direct United States attack on Japan.A CONSCRIPTED VILLAGE Word comes from England of a modern \u201cDeserted Village.\" A strange thing has happened.A historic English village, on the Southeast Coast facing France has been taken over by the military authorities.All the inhabitants have gone.Many have lived there all their lives.\u201cGear and implements,\u201d says The Times of London, \u201chave disappeared from farm buildings and fields.\u201d Even the brasses have been removed from the church where most of the population were baptized and married.This piece of news is enough to give wings to the imagination.Why have all the inhabitants gone away?Is this a porlemt of coming great events?We may be certain that although the inhabitants are no longer about, to do their little tasks and to chat \u201cof an evening\" the village is not actually deserted.Quite probably it throbs with a new life.Soldiers are seen on the village green.Great guns are mounted on the cricket field.This village has been conscripted.Perhaps its name will go into history as being the scene of an act in a world drama of which the final act will be the fall of Hitler.St.Luke X, 41: \u201cThou art careful and troubled about many things: but one thing is needful.We have here a most convincing librium of the inner spiritual life, picture of the life of a Christian We can imagine the Saviour saying: home; we see Christ, not as Master |\u201cMan, man, thou art careful'and and Lord, but as friend and guest in |troubled about many things: but a family circle.In all probability, lone thing is needful!\u201d It stands to He and His disciples had arrived un- reason that the individual whose expectedly, and there was naturally every thought and energy is some stir in the household.\tabsorbed in the rush and compe- It was characteristic for Martha ^t\u20190n.°f these feverish days will to take the simple home duties pnd it extremely difficult _ to turn very seriously; she was particularly jh's thoughts and affections on anxious to provide fitting entertain-i'^nings above, where Christ sitteth ment for such honored guests.For:at the right hand of God.\u201d a time, apparently, Mary had assist- In a highly excitable age like ed her in making the necessary prep-'ours, one of the gravest dangers we arations for the supper, but after a jhave to face and overcome is this while she had slipped away to sit at j\u201cdiffusion of energy.\u201d Even St.the feet of Jesus and listen to His i Paul felt this peril in his own day; words.This makes Martha rather jhis own people were in a state of indignant, and she does not hesitate religious and political turmoil to voice her complaint.Whereupon, j while the Greeks to whom he preach-the Master gently reminds her thatjed were, he complains, forever on she.was in clanger of laying too;lhe look-out for \u201csome new thing.\u201d much stress on matters that, how- To overcome this tendency towards ever necessary in their way, wore \u201cdiffusion\u201d in himself, he adopted only of secondary importance.It is|as his life\u2019s motto: \u201cThis one thing not so much a rebuke as a reminder, |l do!\u201d that, while \u201cthe meat that perisheth\u201d j Let us, then, in this febrile and is necessary for man, still more Tempestuous age, follow the example important are those \u201cgifts that of the Great Apostle, and seek the nourish and enrich the soul\u201d!\t|\u2018\u2018one thing needful\u201d; let us make up In the inimitable language of the our minds to put first things first, Authorized Version Martha was!to cultivate the essential in place \u201ccumbered about with much serv- of the trivial, that \u201cwe may be de-ing!\u201d\tI fended from all adversities that may \u201cCareful and troubled about happen to the body, and from ail many things.\u201d\tevil thoughts that may assault and j How true this is of us today.It is hurt the soul.\u201d a common weakness, to magnify the ' trivial at the expense of the allessential; to follow the \u201cignis fatuus\u201d\u2014the \u201cWill-\u2019o-the wisp\u201d\u2014 instead of the true light.Even in religion, the bitterest controversies rage around, not the essential groundwork of the Christian Creed, but slight variations in belief and practice that are not of the \u201cessence\u201d of that Creed.So it is also in the arena of polities.A study mmmmm IS.¦SP* 4 : % r - PRESS COMMENTS WHAT THE AIRGRAPH MEANS St.Catharines Standard From the London Bureau of The Ottawa Journal comes an interesting note about condensed air mail, of \u201cHansard\u201d confronts one with a i the airgraph system, a remarkable farrago of nonsensical futilities, j development and the progeny of What a \u201cflogging of dead horses\u201d! What \u201cbeating about the bush\u201d! What, endless repetitions, and long drawn out explanations that explain nothing! Days, and weeks, and months of such debate (?) while the whPe fabric of Christian civilization hangs on the verge of the abyss! i \u201cCareful and troubled about many things.-while ONE THING IS I NEEDFUL.\u201d How could one find a more accurate description of Government Leadership in Canada to- war.Briefly, as the note says, the system is one which, thanks to microphotography, enables 4,500 letters which would normally represent a deadweight of one and a half hundredweights to be reduced to just a single pound weight .This is an instance of one modern scientific process playing helpfully into the lap of another.The camera reinforces the plane.The airgraph was started, homeward bound, from our troops in the Middle East.It dav*\thas developed into a two-way traf- \u2019 But we must go back, and apply ific 'vhich represented twenty thou-tho teaching of this text to ordinary ^amUeUers ^D\u2019^nly s BttL over people, like you and me.The path \u2019 .of life is beset with hidden dangers all conspiring to divert our attention from the \u201cone thing needful.\u201d And yet these dangers and temptations have their part to play in every individual\u2019s training in the great a year ago, and today totals nearer seventy thousand daily So far the full total is eleven million letters sent from home abroad, and thirteen million received from abroad here at home.Even at the modest fee of three-pence per School of Life: without danger |1«\u2019tter sent airgraph, it works there is no temptation, without atl\tconsiderable revenue.EDITOR\u2019S NOTE-BOOK Nobody knows why a wrong number never is busy.* » * Love usually finds a way -but often by a very-expensive route.* * * Saying a person is one of your oldest friends may not be a compliment.* * * Many a man thinks he is a big gun until he gets fired.temptation no struggle, struggle no victory.Even little children have their temptations; so has the veteran wayfarer of three-score-and-ten or fourscore years.The child in due course ! passes from the \u201cworld of school\u201d | into the \u201cschool of the world.\u201d There, on the threshold of manhood, he faces new dangers and temp-tations.The novelty of his surroundings, the absence of the accustomed restraints, the exhilarating sense of complete independence, may prove to be pit-falls, unless he has the \u201cone thing need-: ful,\u201d the fear and love of God in his heart.without1 B1\u2019* this is a bagatelle compared with the amenities the airgraph confers on the society it serves.In how many other directions have coveries and developments which the vicissitudes of war produced diswill be of general advantage to humanity after the war?Science | and ingenuity will surely be able to write big chapters; every week there ! is something new reported, not overlooking that radio story from : London that Britain had an anti- j aircraft defence which was every- : thing before it.The story was to j have been told in a London paper, : by official release; another London i paper protested the advisability of having it told for the enemy.At, the last minute, publication was i withheld.Robert St.John , of NBC, told of the incident and in such a way as to give strong credibility to the development.\ti ____ -\tt GANDHI, NEHRU CALLED FOES By B.de Casseres in Detroit Times If I were asked to name the greatest enemies of India, I should name Gandhi and Nehru.Both of these men arc mediaeval-minded, dangerous pseudo-mystics a la Hitler, and both are enemies in the abstract not only of individual Ijberty but, concretely, of the liberties of every individual in India.Maybe the average Hindu likes this regimentation for his philosophy.; His religion, for thousands of years, has insisted on the nothingness of the individual ego and the absorption of his being in absolutist ideas.That j attitude of mind is just meat and | drink to the German and Jap con-; quistadores.\t| What the Hindu really bates in the | Briton is his individualism.Self-j assertion and self-reliance as typified in the Anglo-Saxon are a sort of sin among true-blue Buddhists and j Mohammedans.Gandhi has, by his doctrine of non-resistance, done everything possible to cheek what healthy progess the.Hindus were making toward Western individualism.There is a juggernaut loose in the j world.You can\u2019t destroy it by lying down under it.Britain says to the Hindus: \u201cGet on your feet and fight!\u2019\u2019 Gandhi says: \u201cLie down!\u201d But so ridiculous, so deathly is his advice that he himself is sometimes forced to acknowledge its stupidity, for he has advised \u201cresistance\u201d to i Jap invasion.Nehru reveals, in his new book, ; that be is also an enemy of indi- ] vidulism.He\u2019s a Communist.He admires the ways of the ants, their sameness, their group ethics, their \\ brutal, mechanistic life.He advises that the family sacrifice the indiv- j idual for the community, for the, country, for the \u201csoul,\u201d for \u201cthe | whole world.\u201d This rigmarole is put forth by a ! leader of a people threatened with annihilation.Nehru hates the British.He seems, indeed, to hate everything but the Orient.It is this sort of man who might well lead a general Oriental jehu against the Western nations, for he has the supreme ignorance and fanaticism of the dictator type.It is astonishing that all famous Hindus hurry to England and America for their \u201ceducation\u201d and then relapse a thousand years when they return home.Which proves the dominance of the instincts over book-learnin\u2019.Most new taxes will be deducted at the source\u2014so there is a chance that you -won\u2019t miss what you have never had.\u2014Chatham News.Gandhi has been ordered to take a much-needed rest.The war and all seem to have got his goat.\u2014Hamilton Spectator.Today\u2019s Favorite Poem COASTAL ISLANDS For peace of island waters give thanks\u2014for blue of sea beyond the dusty mainlands resolved publicity; for isles, whose static hours are deep as trust, as long, where wind and wave are ever the multiple of song.Where gulls brush pride of plumage against the amber sand, there is a warm enchantment unknown to fettered land.\u2014Marguerite Janvrin Adams.CANADIAN PROVINCE McKENNEY\tON BRIDGE By Wm.E.McKenney, America's Card Authority.\t RETURN LEAD SETS STAGE FOR SLAM\thearts\u2014in which case, if a spade were returned, declarer could cash seven clubs, three diamonds and two A group of eight of us from New : York recently went down to Balti- .spades.So West returned a heart, j hoping to find his partner with the 'ace\u2014and now the hand was a spread \u2018for a slam.HORIZONTAL 1 Depicted .province of Canada.8 Net proceeds (abbr.).10\tPriority (prefix).11\tNorwegian river.12\tDove's call.13\tLittle demon.14\tFemale saint (abbr.).15\tRinglet.16\tSeine.17\tSymbol for tellurium.18\tFragrant oleoresin.19 Editor (abbr.) 20\tCompass point 21\tAlternating current '(abbr.).'23 Perfume.25 Its fertile prairie extends from the-bor- der to the Saskatchewan river.31 Walking Answer to Previous Puzzle Tm Jtîü\t\t1 N\tH!A ^ff\ti F\tL O\tO IR\tV\tLL N\tC o\tIhL, E|L\t\t c\tFIS\tN\tUB\t\tG\t5'»',\ts\tT\tE\t\t\ts A]R&\t\ts\tN\\A\t\t-AtV\tR\t0\tA\tD\t:Y)S\tA\tT \t\t\tC H\tE\tT\tN\t1\tK\t\tEjB\t\tA REÎR\t\tc\tH |\t\t\t\tL\tE\tA\tDIE\t\tR \t?A\tp\t3ÉI\tm\t\t\t'r$\t\t\t1 \t\t R\t1Â6T1\t!b\tsi,.,\t\t\t\tF\tA\tC\ttIo\t\tR E\tNlD\tPI\tPJMIHflllvVllH\t\t\t\tE\tt\tiîtâ\tsu\t\tE E\trbi\tT\tR1\t\t\t\tE\tT\tA\tv.l SR A\t\t L\t\tH\t\t\ti L\t\tT\t1\tR\tE\t\tL \tMR|\tO\t\tu\tL E\t\tÉ\tIN\tE\tO\tNT\t \tiv\tu\tGIOIS\t\tL rt\t\thi\t!\tA\tJNT\t\t sticks.32 Rigid.34 Dawn (comb, form).36 Deep hole.38\tSift (Scot.).39\tSouth Dakota (abbr.).40\tCupidity.42 Feminine undergarment (abbr.).44 Valor.46\tKinds.47\tHoly person.49\tScintillate.50\tBorn.51\tQuarrelsome person.53\tAppointed.54\tLike.55\tAutomotive device (pi.).VERTICAL 1\tMineral.2\tEquipped.3\tSeptember (abbr.).4\tMultitudes.5\tItalian royal family name.6\tLittle.7\tArea measure.8\tConstellation.9\tRegulate by law.12 Billiard stick.15 Cleaners.18 European state.20 Pig pens.22\tIncorporated (abbr.).23\tSiamese coin, 24\tSail yard (Scot.).26\tNarrow fillets of cotton.27\tGirl\u2019s name.28\tSoak flax.29\tNova Scotia (abbr.).30\tIts capital 33 Experts.35 Heraldric shield fillet (Pi.).37 Test.39 Step.41\tPiece out 42\tInfant.43\tPoker stake.45 Within (comb.form).47\tDry.48\tThrice (music) 51\tDirect current (abbr.).52\tSun god.infringement ! of that ancient and wonderful Code the event, Bert Lebhar and Sam GERMANY\u2019S SHIPPING NEEDS Germany, pinched for shipping space after almost three years of war, has started a campaign to salvage vessels sunk along the European const and is pushing a programme for the construction of standardized merchantmen similar to the American BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY the slam.Feeling sure my partner was counting on me for an ace, and also that the six-club contract would To die is landing on some silent shore.Where billows never break nor tempests roar; Ere well we feel the friendly stroke 'tis o\u2019er, \u2014Sir Samuel Garth.* \u2022 \u2022 So let it be in God's own might We grasp the weapons He has given\u2014 The Light, and Truth, and Love of Heaven.\u2014Whittier.of morals which we term the Ten Rossant were second, and Mrs.Commandments.But there are less j McKenney and Peter Leventritt obvious enemies\u2014shall we call them [finished fifth.\u201cFifth Columnists\u201d?\u2014lurking and! On one hand we were pretty hidden dangers, which, in all prob- ' lucky.I_ had bid five hearts, hoping ability we might not characterize as'to play it there.My partner, feeling \u201cdangers\u201d at all, because they art [I should have at least one ace for so subtle, and are called by\u2019such'all my bidding, decided to try for inoffensive names.Even Aristotle would seem to have realized that every good has its corresponding 1 evil, that every pleasure carries with j be defeated, I thought there might it its own distinctive temptation, its be a chance at six no trump, if out-own possibility of perversion and opponents could not guess the aces abuse.Things harmless in them- right, selves may be positively deadly by j That is exactly what happened.A over-indulgence.There are all sort's : diamond was opened and West won of dangerous trifles inducing \u201ccare [with the ace.The bidding had indi-snd worry over many things\u201d to the irated to West that the declarer must neglect of the one thing needful.! hold seven solid clubs and a single-The rush and competition for ma- ton heart.West thought from terial success tends to obscure the North\u2019s strong bidding, he would be transcendent importance of higher more likely to hold the ace and \u201cvalues.\u201d and to disturb the eoui- queen of spades than the ace of A J74 VA ?9 2 *AKQJ874 A 10 6 5 3 2 V J82 ?A7 4 10 5 2 A A Q8 V 9 6 5 ?\t8 6 5 43 ?\t63 McKenney A K9 VKQ 10 7 43 ?\tKQ J10 ?\t9 Duplicate\u2014None vuL South\tWest\tNorth\tEast 1 V\tPass\t3 A\tPass 3 V\tPass\t3 N.T.\tPass 4 ?\tPass\t4 N.T,\tPass 5 V\tPass\t6 A\tPass 6 N.T,\tPass\tPass\tPass Opening\u2014\t\t?4.\t 25 1\tZ\t3\t\t\t\t\t4\t5\t6\t7\t\t\t\t9 IO\t\t\t\t.rp1\t\t\tII\t\t\t\t\t2\t\t 13\t\t\t\tSI;\t\t\t14\t\t\tft\t15\t\t\t 16\t\t\t\\\t\t\t\t17\t\ti\t18\t\t\t\t 19\t\t\tX *\tsu\t:\tr\t\tMS\t20\t\t\tT- CyV, L\t21\t 30\tm\t22\t\t\t\ti\t\t23\t\t\t\t24\tI\t33 \t25\t\t26\t27\t26\t29\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t \t$||\t31\t\t\t\t\t#\tJi\t\t\t\t\tÊ\t 3*\t35\tm\t36\t\t\tm\t37\tÉ\t36\t\t\tpi\t39\t 40\t\t\t\t\t\u2018M yuÿ.V\t42\t\t43\tWÈ\t44-\t\t45\t\t 46\t\t\t\t&\t47\t\t\t\t46\tWi\t49\t\t\t SO\t\t\t11 rrï, ff\t51\t\t\t\t\t\t52\t\tS3\t\t 54-\t\t1\t55\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t25 I i SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1942.SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD 5 THE WOMEN\u2019S SPHERE OFFICERS ARE INSTALLED AT COWANSVILLE Sister Laura Bradford.D.D.P.of Riverside Rebekah Lodge, Officiated at Ceremony.\u2022 Cowansville, July 25.\u2014The installation of officers for the ensuing term, featured the regular meeting of Prosperity Rebekah Lodge, No.32, held on July 20th, in the I.O.-O.F.Hall.Sister Laura Bradford, District Deputy President, of Riverside Rebekah Lodge, District No.2, assisted by Deputy Marshal Sister Pearl Stephenson; Deputy Warden Sister Stella Grey; Deputy F.Secretary Sister M.Samworth; Deputy Treasurer Sister Butterworth; Deputy Recording Secretary Sister Rumsey; Deputy Chaplain Sister Neil, with Sister Darby, pro tem; Deputy Inside Guard Sister L.Neil; Deputy Outside Guard Sister Laura Neil; and Pianist Sister Doris Ball, installed the following officers in a very efficient manner: Junior Past Noble Grand, Sister May McClat-chie; Noble Grand, Sister Alta Forster; Vice-Grand, Sister Marion Reynolds; Recording Secretary, Sister Violet Stevenson; Financial Secretary, Sister Muriel Cassidy; Treasurer, Sister Mary Knight; Warden, Sister Pearl Isaacs; Conductor, Sister Helen Goheen; Pianist, Sister Isabella Beattie; Chaplain, Sister Ruth Hastings; R.S.N.G., Sister Cora Smith; L.S.N.G., Sister Violet Strange; R.S.V.G., Sister Lela Peron; L.S.V.G., Sister Viola Barrette; Inside Guard, Sister Ola Sanford; Outside Guard, Sister Gwendolyn Stowe; R.A.B., Sister Maude Smith; L.A.B., Sister IVin-nifred Johnson.After this impressive ceremony remarks were made by the various officers of Riverside Lodge.The District Deputy, Sister Bradford, in her remarks stated that the Assembly President, Sister Beatrice Dever, of Montreal, is starting a fund for a Mobile Canteen and trust?that all Lodges will do their utmost to extend their efforts to raise a goodly sum for this worthy cause.On behalf of the members of Prosperity Lodge, Sister Lela Peron presented the District Deputy President, Sister Laura Bradford, with a gift, for which she expressed her sincere thanks and appreciation.As six of the officers were not present at the installation, they will be installed in their offices at a later date.Those absent were Sister Alta Forster, Sister Gwendolyn Stowe, Sister Marion Reynolds, Sister Cora Smith, Sister Helen Coheen and Sister Pearl Isaacs.At the conclusion of the business Lodge closed with the singing of the National Anthem.A salad lunch was served and a social hour enjoyed by all.General Notes Mias Marion Paintin, R.N.of New York, is spending her holidays at the home of Dr.A.C.Paintin and Mrs.Paintin.Mr.Carl Bates and family, of Morgan, Vt., Mrs.Roy Wilson, Mr.and Mrs.Harry Wilson and Mrs.Raymond Hayward were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Eugene Vail.Mr.Carl Bates, of Morgan, Vt., was a guest of Mrs.Darrah and Mr.Kennison Mudgett.Mr.and Mrs.J.D.Stevenson, Kenneth, Margaret and Douglas .i Breaking the Ice With Party Games Social and Per sonal Married In Sherbrooke Bishop\u2019s College School LENNOXVILLE, P.Q., CANADA 106th YEAR Country Boarding School for Boys from eight to eighteen.Separate Preparatory School for Junior Boys Michaelmas Term begins September 10th, 1943 C.G.M.GRIER, M.A., Headmaster For Prospectus apply to F.R.Pattison, M.A.Scholarships for High School Graduates The Board of Governors of Sir George Williams College announces, for the academic year 1942-43 twenty Entrance Scholarships of $50 each in Arts and Commerce and $70 each in Science, tenable in the first year of any of the regular programmes of study in the day division of the Faculty of Arts, Science and Commerce.Entrance Scholarships will be awarded to worthy young men and women on a basis of: (a) standing on High School Leaving or Matriculation examinations of 1942 or previous years, (b) scholastic ability, and (c) economic need.Courses offered lead to degrees of B.A., B.Sc., B.Sc.(Com.); diplomas of Associate in Arts, in Science, in Commerce; and senior matriculation.Classes will open October 1st.Applications for scholarships will be received until August 1 5th.Information regarding scholarships and courses from The Registrar, 1441 Drummond Street (MA.8331) Sir George Williams College OF THE MONTREAL V.M.C.A.\u201cWeather Report Slays \u2019Em! When you cat make bashful guests lose their se.f-consciousness in the first five minutes of your party, you\u2019re a brilliant hostess\u2014an artist! You can do it! Start by playing \u201cWeather Report.\u201d Your friends not only TALK about the weather but hilariously AC.'.' IT! Guests divide into .earns and each team acts out a word like \u201ccloudy,\u20191 \u201cfair,\u201d \u201cdownpour.\" Dignified Jill and Jack look p.etty funny\u2014hurrying about in the \"rain\" with newspapers on their heads.But the fun skyrockets when you play \u201cKing's Commands\u201d! The \u201cvalet\u201d cries, \u2019 The King wishes his crown!\u201d And up from his chair leaps the player who is \u201ccrown,\" shouting \u201cCrown!\" Or the valet may cry, \u201cThe King wishes his brush!\u201d\u2014and up jumps \u201cBrush!\u201d When \"The King v.ishes his uniform!\u201d everyone jumps up to change seats, the valet scrambles for one, and whoever\u2019 loft is the valet.Breathless\u2014and fun! Our 32-page booklet, the answer to a hostess' prayer, describes dozens of gay ice-Dteakers, games and amusing stunts Has special bright ideas fo.costume parties.Send 15c in coins for your copy of \u201cParty Games for All Occasions\u201d to Daily Record, Home Service, Sherbrooke, Quebec.Be sure to write plainly your name, address, and the name of booklet.Stevenson were guests of Mrs.Stevenson\u2019s brothers, Messrs.Rogers, of the Centre Ro^d, in Swaas-burg.Mrs.R.Besette was a guest of her daughter, Mrs.Jodoin, at Woodlands.Mrs.C.Bartlett and child, of Sbawinigan Falls, are guests of Mr.W.J.Bell.Mr.and Mrs.T.Snow were guests of the former\u2019s aunt, Mrs.William Johnson, and family, at Dunham.Mrs.Myrtle Hay, of Brockton, Mass., is a guest of her mother, Mrs.N.Steele.,-r teat STANSTEAD, QUE.EST.1872 MATERNITY CORSETS AND BELTS, ETC.Fitted and adjusted by qualified lady expert.Gaudet Pharmacy 29 King St.W.Tel.3863 Near Bus Terminal Miss Mary Baldwin has returned) from Little Lake Magog, where she was a guest of Mrs.N.F.Dinning at her summer home.* * \u2022 Mr.A.L.Parker, Mr.C.E.Soles and Mr.L.W.Cook are holidaying at the former's camp at Chain of Lakes.\u2022 * * Mr.S.R.Fuller, who has spent several days at his home on Queen Street, is returning to New York to-1 morrow night.* * * Master Jack Geddie, of Verdun, is spending his summer holidays with Mr.and Mrs.Roy Trussler at their home on York Street.* « * Miss Gladys Hale left yesterday to spend a few days with Mr.and | Mrs.P.H.Skelton at their sum-1 mer home at the Hermitage Club, i *\t*\tv Miss Lillian Gillman and Miss ! Dorothea Miller are leaving by motor this afternon to spend a week\u2019s vacation at Nymark\u2019s Lodge, Ste.Sauveur des Montes.3\t*\t* Mr.Donald McLeod, of Outre- \u2019 mont, was a guest of his nephew j and niece, Mr.and Mrs.W.^ Good-) fellow, and other relatives on! Erompton Road.» * » Mr.and Mrs.J.Harry Blue and their daughter, Miss Elizabeth Anne, who have been spending a few days ; at their camp at Breeches Lake, have returned home to \u201cGrey Court.\u201d ; * * * Mr.and Mrs.C.S.Cook and son, Bill, of Outremont, are spending their holidays at the home of their cousins, Mr.and Mrs, W.S.Good-fellow, Hillslope F.rm, Brompton Road.*\t» * Miss Ruperta Wiggett has returned to her duties at the Howard Residence, Y.W.C.A., after spending-a two weeks\u2019 holiday in Coaticook, where she was a guest of Miss Robertson.* * \u2022 Miss Marjorie Haley, General Secretary of the Y.W.C.À., in Sherbrooke, left last night to spend her holidays in Wolfvifle, N.S\u201e where she will be a guest of her brother-in-law and sister, Dr.and Mrs.Elliott.?* ?Mrs.J.O.Asselin has returned to Kromptonville after spending a few days in Montreal, during which time she accompanied her daughters, Miss Mary and Miss Susan, to a girls\u2019 camp in the.Laurentians, where they will spend several weeks.* * * Mr.and Mrs.Hamilton Rider, who with their children have been | holidaying at Ayer\u2019s Cliff, are arriv-' ing in Sherbrooke today to pick up ; their daughter, Miss Martha, who, ! during the interim, has been visiting j her grandparents, Mr.and Mrs.S.; R.Fuller, and after spending the week-end in Ayer\u2019s rliff they will all return to their home in St.Hyacinthe.* * ¥ Friends in Sherbrooke, their former home, will be interested in hearing that Mr.and Mrs.A.W.Reid are now settled in their new home at Netherby, Billing\u2019s Bridge, Ont., and that they are planning for a Sherbrooke Day picnic to be held there next Saturday, August 1st, when they hope to have among their guests about one hundred Slier-brookers who are presently domiciled in Ottawa and its environs.Complete Wardrobe With Croeheled Hals Mr.and Mrs.Gerald Wiggett.who; motored to Montreal for a day or two, have returned home to Sherbrooke.* * * Miss Sylvia Soles,\twho\thas\tbeen ' visiting\ther\tparents.\tMr.\tand\tMrs.! Clinton\tE.\tPoles, is\treturning to) Montreal next week.» * * Mr.Bruce Stewart, who has been, visiting his parents, Mr.and Mrs.) R.E.Stewart, for a few days has j returned to the Maritimes.* « * Mr.and Mrs.Frank Thompson and their daughter, Miss Barbara Thompson, are spending the summer at the Shore Acres Club, Little Lake Magog.* * \u2022 Mrs.George E.Ewing entertained informally at bridge yesterday afternoon for Mrs.W.S.Fry, of Kelowna, B.C., who is a house guest, of her cother-in-law and sister, Mr.Justice and Mrs.C.D.White.MARRIAGES ROSS\u2014INGALLS Cowansville, July 25.\u2014A marriage of much interest to the people of Cowansville took place in St.James\u2019 Anglican Church at Orillia, Ont., on July 17, at half-past seven o\u2019clock in the evening, when Evelyn Muriel, eldest daughter of Mr.and Mrs.V.R.Ingalls, of Cowansville, was united in marriage with Trooper Donald Edwin Ross, Canadian Armored Corps, son of Mr.and Mrs.Robert Ross, of Peterborough, Ont, The marriage was solemnized by Archdeacon A.G.Emmett.Sweet peas and delphinium formed the floral setting.The wedding music was played by Mrs.Roberts and Mr.Glenn Coats sang during the signing of the register.The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore white brocaded sheer over white, taffeta, with a draped bodice, the skirt ending in a short train, her veil of tulle was fastened to her hair with flowers and she carried a bouquet of Sweetheart roses.Mrs.W.H.Cairns was matron of honor and wore a floor-length gown of pink jersey made on the same lines as the bride\u2019s.Her headdress was of natural pastel flowers, end she carried a bouquet of roses.Mr.Wallace Card was the best man.Following the ceremony, a reception was held at Grey Gables, Athorley, where the bride\u2019s mother received, wearing, a beige, crepe ensemble with navy accessories and a corsage of Talisman roses.The groom\u2019s mother, who assisted, was wearing ?navy ensemble and a corsage of roses.Later the brida! couple left on a short motor trip, the bride travelling in a powder blue sports suit with navy accessories and a corsage of roses.Out-of-town guests included Mr.and Mi's.V.R.Ingalls, of Cowansville, the parents of the bride; Mr.and Mrs.Robert Ross and Miss Dorothy Ross, of Peterborough, parents and sister of the groom; Mr.and Mrs.E.IT.Spencer, of Frelighs-burg, uncle and aunt of the bride.The best wishes of this community are extended to Mr.and Mrs.Ross.Sri :\u2019;-ri ,\"'1ri : ?** MIND YOUR MANNERS A non-sectarian residential co-educational school with a fine home atmosphere situated in the fimst country surroundings of the Eastern Townships.a 1 m Complete Elementary and High School courses leading to High Academic School Leaving Certificate, Junior and Senior Matriculation, \u2022 -\t, Piano.Organ, Violin, Voice and Theory taught in Eastern Town- MUSiC ships Conservatory of Music.Orchestra and Chorus._\t.\tElementary and arîvanc d «ourses in Bookkeeping, Stenography, Business Typewriting and Secretarial work given in Bugbee Business ' College.r>\tArt, Domestic Science, Manual Training, Religious Instruction.F eatures Farm with fine Holstein herd.Spacious athktic grounds.Trained nurse.Modern fireproof main building opened spring 1940.Moderate Fees.Fall term opens Wednesday.Septtmber 9th.For Prospectus \"H\u2019\u2019 write Stanstead College, Stanstead, Qua.ERROL C.AMARON, M.A., B.D., Principal.Take Care Of Y our Health Use Our \u201cB.1\u201d Bread ALLATT\u2019S PHONE 724 Sacred Heart High School VICTORIA VILLE, P.Q.t*tu i * ï I îSjTSI NEW\tFIREPROOF\tMODERN CLASSICAL\tCOMMERCIAL UNIVERSITY AFFILIATION Prospectus on demand ¦ïïê\u2019ïlM V,/y\t.\t- ^__J \\j In Alice Brooks 57346 This crocheted calot with a big lacy bow, or a snood accented with \u2019puff s:itch can be all your own ! handiwork.They cost so little to make you can have them in varied colo; \u2022.Pa '.ern 7346 contains directions for hat and snood; illustrations jof stitches; materials needed, j To obtain this pattern send ! twenty cents in coins (stamps can-ihot be accepted) to Sherbrooke Daily Record, Household Arts Department, Sherbrooke, Quebec.Write plainly name, address and pattern number.Test your knowledge of correct social usage by answering the following questions; then checking against the authoritative answers given below; 1.Is \u201cI\u2019ll come if I can\u201d a courteous way to accept an invitation?i 2.Is it gracious to say to a friend you meet on the street, \u201cI\u2019m just ashamed to see you, for I've meant to invite you out and have been too busy to get arounrl to it\u201d?i 3.Is it ever necessary to answer a wedding invitation?4.\tShould a maid say \u201cYes\u201d and \u201cNo\u201d to the woman for whom she works?5,\tShould a maid be taught to answer the telephone with \u201cHello\u201d or by giving the name of the person for whom she works?What would you do if -You are calling friends to invite them to your home\u2014 (a)\tSay.\u201cWill you come to lunch on Tuesday?\u201d (b)\tSay, \u201cWill you come to a luncheon party on Tuesday?\u201d Answer* i 1, No.Be definite, j 2.No it sounds as though the oth-! cr person has been sitting around j pining for an invitation from you.3.\tYes.Invitations to house weddings must be answered, and so must invitations to church weddings if one is invited to the wedding re.-ception.4.\tShe should say, \u201cNo, Mrs.Brown\u201d or \u201cNo, Ma'am.\u201d 5.\tShe should give the name of j her employer.Better \u201cWhat Would You Do\" solution\u2014 (a).BRIDE-ELECT GIVEN SHOWER AT EAST ANGUS Event Held in Honor of Miss Martha Cunningham with Some Thirty Friends Present.East Angus, July 25.\u2014Mrs.J.W.McLaughlin and Mrs.Reginald Webb entertained at their home on Gookshire Street, in honor of Miss Martha Cunningham, a bride-to-be of the near future, Some thirty friends were present and a very pleasant evening was spent.During the evening Uie guest-of-honor was presented with a lovely dinner set and several other useful gifts, accompanied by the good wishes of all present.Miss Cunningham thanked her friends most sincerely for their thoughtfulness.Later delicious refreshments were served by the hostesses.Mrs.Mary Cunningham, mother of the bride-to-be, presided at the attractive lace-covered tea table, centered will) pink and white peonies, in a crystal bowl with white tapers in matching candlesticks.General Notes.I Mrs.Beatrice Bailey and Mrs.C.French are guests of their brother, Mr.Ernest Bowen, and Mrs.Bowen.Guests at the home of Mrs, M.A.Smith and Mr.and Mrs.Alden Wilson were Mr.and Mrs.Byron Wilson, of Lennoxville; Mrs.Harry Scott and Mrs.Lena Scott, of Pittsburg, N.H.; Mr.and Mrs.Douglas Wayland and Mr.Wilfred Greenwood, of Sanford, Me.Mrs.W.Cooper, of New York, was in town for a few days, called here by the death of her brother-in-law, Mr.Harry Rowland.Mr.and Mrs.Frank Rowland are guests of Mr.and Mrs.Fred Webb at their cottage at Mirror Lake, for two weeks.at the same home on Tuesday were Viola Dezan, of Stanhope, and Mrs.Fannie Goodrow, of Ayer\u2019s Cliff.Master David Rowat, of Lennoxville, has been visiting his aunt, Mrs.L.Bur/.yck, and his grandparenIs, Mr.and Mrs.Lewis Schoolcraft, CANTERBURY EAST The Farm Forum met at the home, of Mr.Clayton Shaman last, Monday with a fair attendance.After listening to Mrs.Chapman on \u201cFoods,\u201d a general discussion took place.The meeting closed by singing the National Anthem.Mr.and Mrs.Milton Goodwin .«.pent a week-end in Keith with Mrs.W.S.McCaskill.Mr.and Mrs.Dan McLean, of Scotstown, are visiting Mrs.McLean's mother, Mrs.Lintott, for a few clays.Mr.ami Mrs.Sternie Coates and Mrs, Jacklin were in Sherbrooke on Monday.CONSERVE MEAT JUICES A good way to conserve the meat juice when broiling under a gas flame is to place the meat in a frying pan instead of on the grill.Juices of course will remain in the frying pan and may be more easily served than if allowed to drip into the broiler.Cellulose forms the greatest part ] of the framework of ail plant I tile.MASSAW1PPI Massawippi, July 25.\u2014During the electrical and wind storm of July 19, a bolt struck the large barn at \u201cMaplewood Farm,\u201d Lake Road.It was milking time and the herd were in.the barn.Three of the animals were knocked down and tb-e daughter of the farmer, who was helping, but ail ell the names of five well-known animals, and hav letters left over.The names of the animals begin A, B, G, I) an respectively.What arc they?JUNIOR CROSS-WORD PUZZLE 1\t7.\t3\t\t\t3\t 7\t\t\t\t\t\t \t\t\tto\tm\t!'\t \tHfli?\t\t\t\t\t Iv\t\t\t\t\t17\t 18\t\t19 gUg\t\t20\t\t It\t\t\t\t\t\t HORIZONTAL 1-Wander 7-\tFish eggs 8-\tMale descendant 9-\tUnit* 11-\tAnd (Latin) 12-\tSunken track H-Father 18-Close by IS-Corn-spIke 20-\tSouner than 21-\tFnncied VERTICAL 1-Fell 2-\tEternlty 3-\tChange to another course g-Becautie 6-Diglt 6-Penetrated 10-Unlver*al light 13-Abound 15-Swiss river IT-Part of verb 'To be\u2019 1 9-Prefix.Backward WORD SQUARE 1.\tSmnll Pacific (wean island.2.\tWithout moisture.8.Boy\u2019s plaything.4.Paradise.CHARADETTES 1.\tMy first is a vegetable, my second the fruit of a tree, my whole is a nut.2.\tMy first la necessary for all, my second Is a weight measure, my whole is the name of a large city, 3.\tMy first Is possessed, my second Is a wharf, my whole Is a fish.4.\tMy first Is an Interjection, my second Is a cooking device, my whole Is a fruit.E.My first Is a blemish, my second is to permit, my whole is a color.8.My first Is a public vehicle, my second Is to decay, my whole Is a vegetable.ACROSTIC My first Is a small valley.My second Is to state.My third Is attention.My fourth is a land measure.My fifth is to rip.My sixth Is an Image.My seventh Is a precious stone.My eighth is an Egyptian river.My whole Is time for fun and Joy- Beloved by every girl and boy.REHEADINGS 1.\tBehead a hot vapor and lenv* a set of horses, 2.\tBehead to assign to duty and get a net fabric.3.\tBehead a sword-llke implement and get to grease.J ^ IE ,U l \\U Av VUAaavV a^ /! li{ (To le colored with points or crayons.Whenever you come to a wont spelled in CAPITAL letters use that color.J Teddy wears a White sailor suit Joan Goes A Shopping LET\u2019S have a.picnic out on the GREEN grassy lawn!\u201d says YELLOW-haired Susie May to BROWN-haired Teddy and YELLOW-haired Tommy.\"Sure!\u201d cries Teddy.\"Let\u2019s have PURPLE grape juice and ORANGE (use RED and YELLOW mixed) orangeade!\u201d \"I like YELLOW lemonade!\u201d says Tommy.\u201cThrough a long YELLOW straw!\u201d \"I like BROWN-bread sandwiches!\" says Susie May.\u201cHere are some sandwiches for you boys.I will put them on our BLUE tablecloth beside this YELLOW bowl of PURPLE plums.When mother gives you a penny to buy a bit of candy she usually either sends you to her bureau drawer to get her poeketbook or takes it from a little box she keeps in which to drop her spare change.But, if your mother were an Immigrant\u2014people who used to come to this country from foreign lands were called Immigrants \u2014 instead of your own dear mother, she would carry her money in strange fashion.If she were a Swede or a Norwegian she would carry it in with a RED collar and tie.His collar has a White star In the corner.He has a BLUE cap with a White star on the top, too.Tommy wears a PINK (use RED lightly) blouse and BLACK tie.His trousers are BROWN and his shoes are White and BROWN.Susie May wears a light BLUE dress and her hair ribbon is light BLUE, too.She wears BLUE socks and BLACK shoes.There is a GREEN leaved gooseberry bush near Susie May.The gooseberries are PINK and YELLOW.a poeketbook so big that It contains enough leather to make a pair of shoes out of.The Italian immigrant prefers a small tin tube which he hangs about his neck by a small chain, and the Hungarian stuffs his money into his long boots \u2014along with his knife and fork and spoon! Germans keep theirs In a belt strapped around their waist under their clothes and the French are partial to a small brass case about as large as the average poeketbook.Teddy.\"We take sandwiches and cold pop in my RED picnic basket and just pick a suitable spot anywhere within reasonable walking distance then just sit down and spread out our lunch and cat.\u201d \"Isn\u2019t the sky pretty and BLUE?\u201d says Susie May.\"Oh, It\u2019s perfect picnic weather!\" says Tommy.All three children have PINK cheeks and RED lips.Paint (he border of this picture ORANGE color and (ho lettering GREEN with BLUE exclamation point and quotation marks.CUOSS-WORI) PUZZLE ANSWER D\tE\tvh\tA\tT\tE R\tO\t\tS\tO\tI\\1 ON\t\tE|S\t\tE\tT P\t\trIu\tT\t\tE P\tA\tSn\tE\tA\tR El\tA\tRjü\tE\tR\tE D\tR\te|a!m\t\tE\tD JUNIOR COOK baki:d stuffed tomatoes 6 Tomatoes, IMj Cups cooked noodles, % Cup soft bread, 2 Tablespoons chopped onion, 1\tTablespoon chopped parsley, Teaspoon salt, % Teaspoon popper.2\tTablespoons limited butter, 2 Tablespoons milk.Wash tomatoes and remove the centers.Stuff with the ingredients.Fit into shallow baking pan or dish.Add half an inch of water and bake in moderate oven for 30 minutes.Baste several times.HAPPY is the house mother whose Handy Boy son has provided her with one or two of these carriers for she will no longer need to handle steaming Jars of fruits or vegetables right out of the cooker nor have such great risk of scalded hnnds.The carrier will handle six one-quart jar.1 of the usual size at one time and may he easily loaded and carried any where.We shall ncf-d one bottom Vin x ft\" x 13 Vi \"* Two ends x 4\" tapered to 2 Vi\" x 3 3\" long.Bure a ¦%\" hole through the end 3 % \" to the center from the bottom of the end.Mark the center on each side of each end 4 H \" from the bottom end and bore a %\" hole from each side to meet In the center, or boro JOAN dearly loved to go shopping.It always gave her a thrill to spend money and to receive something In exchange.So when her mother called her from the side lawn where she was playing with Toodles, her little shaggy puppy, and said, \u201cJoan, dear, 1 am making a cake and I am short of eggs.Please go up to the corner grocery and get me six,\" the little girl was delighted.Sometimes there was a penny left over when she went on an errand like this, and in that case, she often had this for herself.Sometimes there were three or four pennies, or even a nickel, and so \u201cShopping for mother\u201d had delight ful possibiltles.So in just a few minutes, Joan was trotting down the street with Too dies In tow, and a little basket on her left arm in which to carry the eggs safely.In the bottom of the basket was her little red poeketbook with some money in it to pay for the eggs.\u201cHurry, dear,*\u2019 Joan's mother had said, and Joan really meant to go straight to the grocery and come hack ns «juiekly as possible.But sometimes Joan forgot and became interested in other things, and then time passed without, her having the least idea, how many minutes had flown away.There was a funny little old man at the corner with a monkey and a hand organ.The hand organ played high pitched, and rather wheezy music, but Joan liked the sound of it, and the monkey was amusing.Then by the time she started on again, Toodles had discovered a oat just inside a fence they were passing, nnd was determined to got that oat.He barked and barked and it took Joan several minutes tu persuade him to com© along.She had to tug on the string, and ns the string wasn\u2019t very strong, it broke and away went Toodles under that fence and after the cat.When the mistress had captured him again and tied a knot in the string, the idea, of eggs and cake making was quite far away, When Joan got to the grocery, there were a lot of people there waiting to be served, and she had to stand about until her turn came.Over in one corner was a counter where a pink cheeked, young girl was soiling ice cream cones.As she scooped up the cool, delicious looking, yellow-tinted ion cream and plumped it into the cones for the custom or.\",, it fairly made Joan\u2019s mouth water.She kept on watching and wish ing for one for herself, and when the young man clerk came up and said: \u201cWhat would you like, little lady.\u201d Joan stood quite still for a minute.For the lifo of her she couldn't remember what her mother bad sent her for, although she searched about in her mind io try and re* member.Perhaps the clerk wasn't feeling very good-natured that day.Ho might have had a toothache, or perhaps his collar was too tight.Anyway his manner became quite impatient, and he said n, bit sharp-ly: \"Hurry up, little girl, there are others walttmr.I can't ape ml all day with you.What la It you wa nt?\" Now there wan no doubt In Joan's mind wliat she wanted, and until the hole extends UiI'oukIi.Be careful and fditht the bit to Insure that tlie Pole avemiies straight.Also a 1\" hole, or a.hole to lit the handle I'A\" from the top to the center as shown.Make two side rails Va\" x 1\" x 15%\"; bore four \u2022Hi\" holes 4%\" between centers In the middle of each rail.Four %\" dowels I (Mi\" long.One %\" dowel Jt>%\" long.Nall ends to the ends of the bottom with 8d common nails: drive them somewhat slantingly for maximum strength.Cut a.piece of broom handle, any 1\u201c In diameter and IDIi* long.When the carrier Is assembled drive brads through the rails and «idea and through the ends into the dowels and handle.ing itt the cord trying to get over to the meat counter where there was a box of beautiful bones.So Joan, feeling she must say something, replied promptly: \"Two ice cream cones, please \u2014 one choc'lt and one vanilla, and a bone for Toodles.\u201d The clerk served her, and of course there was nothing to do but to trot right out.The little girl didn't feel as happy as she might have done, and for some reason or other, she didn't start for home.Instead of that she went across the street and sat down in the littlo park on one of the preen benches.Toodles promptly began to enjoy his feast.Joan took a bite out of one ice cream cone and then out of the other, but both were a little disappointing In favor A bird flew down on the grass and began to hop about and to eye Joan eagerly.Then all at once she remembered \u2014it was eggs she went shopping for, and not ice cream cones! Bho finished the two of them hurriedly.Maybe it was because she ate them so fast that they gave Joan Was Trotting Down Tho Street With Toodles In Tow her a stomach-ache.Anyway Joan, began to cry.There wasn't any money left now to go and get the eggs, and she wasn't sure what would happen If sho went home without thorn.\"Well, well, what are all these tears for?\" said a smiling voice rigid, near her, and Joan looked up to see a kind old gentleman smiling down at her and leaning on his cane.Before she know what was happening, sho sobbed out the whole story.The old gentleman shook his head.No wonder yufl have a stomach ache, my dear,\" he said.\"And the next lime you are trusted with money, 1 wonder what you'll do with It!\" Joan looked up with her blue eyes wide open.\"I know,\" she said, \u201cI\u2019ll buy what I go after, and If 1 forget I'll go back and find out about it.\" The old gentleman nodded delightedly.\"What a wise little girl,\u201d he said.\u201cWe all make mistakes sometimes, hut what counts Is learning not to make them the second time.Come, my dear, and wo\u2019ll go hack to the grocery, and 1 believe l can find money enough to put with what you have to buy the eggs for your mother, and I hope you haven't kept her waiting too long.\" When Joan reached homo, she found that unexpected callers had come, nnd ho her mother had been delayed and the eggs were In time.She was very glad of that, and now when she goes on an errand, she remembers to go right along and to hurry hack.1*1 y.ZLE ANSWERS P/Vh' ANIMALS The ohlerts are: PAN, PAIL, KA It.HO AT, NOTE, LOG anil TIRE.The animals are: ANTELOPE, HEAR.COAT, LION and TAPIR.WORD HQUARB W A K It A RID KITE E I) E N CHARADETTES /, PEA-NUT.Ü, WASHING TON.1.HADDOCK.ORANGE.5, SC A It I, ET.0, CARROT.ACROPTIO Vale Aver Care Acre Tear-Idol Opal Nils REHEADINGS l.Rteam-Team.2, i larc-Lnce, 3, Poll-Oil.Brother's Adventure y VV.V.'V: !'\u2022;\u2022 (V;, IH/JK'/'f' mm /\"Y MCE when me an1 brother played at campin' out, (Brother, he's the baby\u2014two years old about) He got into trouble an' broke up our play; Funny how it happened, it was this-a-way: Grandma s big umbrella was our tent we played, An' we raised and tied it in the porch's shade; When we was settled I left brother there And went out a huntin' for a deer or bear; 'Fore I had got far, though, I heard somethin' foil An' a minute after he began to bawl.I went back a-fiyin' an' I saw a sight, Under the umbrella he was fastened tight: Must have pushed the catch in so the thing shut down, An' he lay there yellin' and a-kichin\u2019 round'; Tried to get him quiet, but it was no use Wrecked Grandma's ufnbre\"a 'fore I got him loose -'/e both got a scoldin' an' Ma to -J us fat: \"No more playin' campin' if it ends like that!\" \u2018T love picnics like this:\u2019\u2019 says Carrying Money ToodlOH wmh wlilrnporintf and pull- The HANDY BOY AT HOME BT CHARLES A.KING.STATE NORMAL SCHOOL, PLYMOUTH.N.H.lb\"\u2014 ______2J S- H vm é> Tv U=4) :i,- : ly v -1 - v \u2014 lo',\" - HOT JAP CARRIER \u20ac I i I 301101 8.SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1942.LAABS PRESSES HOME RUN SLUGGING RACE Registers Nineteenth Clout For Brown\u2019s Win Circuit Trip for Double Counter Gave Browns Three-to-Two Victory Over St.Louis\u2014Giants Shift Line-Up to Resume Winning Streak\u2014Spud Chandler Continues to Lead Yankee Pitchers.By AUSTIN BEALMEAK, Associated Press Sports Writer.There are more ways than one to win a baseball game, but the formula employed with increasing success by New York Giants is to harness all the power available, even if it means sending infielders to the outfield and regulars to the scrap heap.The latest of masterful Melvin Ott\u2019s experiments took Big Babe Young off the bench, which he had warned all seasor because Johnny Mize was doing a brisk business at the Babe\u2019s old first-base stand, and spotted him in centre field.Young came through yesterday with an eleventh inning power \u2014 his second game-winning- circuit clout, in as many days \u2014 to give the Giants a three to two decision over Cincinnati Reds At St.Louis, where an unusually large crowd of 21,000 took advantage of the 5:30 starting lime, the Red Sox whipped the Browns, five to three, :n a twilight opener of their bargain bill but once under the lights, the teams battled eleven innings before Chet Laabs gave the Brownies a three to two victory with two-run homer.It was tho nineteenth of the year for Laabs and tied him with Mize and Ted Williams of the Red Sox for the major league leadership At Cleveland, +hc Indians edged out Washington Senators, four to three and five, to four, to climb within two nercentage noints of the Red Sox.Jake Wade registered his second straight triumph sine» being picked up by Chicago White Sox, shading Dick Fowler as he pitched a two to one victory over Philadelphia Athletics in a night contest, The only afternoon game in the American League saw the Yankees blank Detroit Tigers, three to nothing, on the four-hit pitching of Sped Chandler, who gained his eleventh triumph against two defeats.Brooklyn Dodgers and St.Louis Cardinals maintained their one-two pace atop the National League with little trouble.Whitlow Wyatt stopped Pittsburgh Pirates with seven hits as Brooklyn triumphed, six to* four, and preserved a seven-game lead.Lefty Max Lanier shut out Boston Braves on six hits while his Cardinal mates collected sixteen and coasted to an eight-to-rothing vie- The Baseball Standii GIANTS READY TO INTRODUCE NEW PITCHER Jean Pusie Seems Headed» For Toronto World Championship tory.À night Cubs and postponed.game between Chicago Philadelphia Phils was London.'.(P)\u2014Secondary leather for shoes from the instep to the heel, is the suggestion advanced by 11.G.Durston, director of civilian footwear, for saving sole leather, now becoming scarce and manufacturers are in favor of the idea.I YESTERDAY\u2019S GAMES INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Montreal 10, Jersey City 4.fDisputed game of June 12).Montreal 3, Jersey City 1, twilight game.Baltimore 2, Rochester 1, twilight game.Baltimore 2, Rochester 1, night game.Toronto 2, Newark 1, night game.AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 3, Detroit 0.| Cleveland 4, Washington 3, twilight game.Cleveland 5, Washington 4.night game.Boston 5, St.Louis 3, twilight game.St.Louis 3, Boston 1, night game, game.Chicago 2, Philadelphia 1, night game.NATIONAL LEAGUE New York 3, Cincinnati 2.St.Louis 8, Boston 0.Brooklyn 6, Pittsburgh 4, night i game.Chicago at Philadelphia, night game, postponed.WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Montreal at Jersey City, twilight game.Toronto at Newark, Rochester at, Baltimore.Buffalo at Syracuse.AMERICAN LEAGUE New York at Detroit.Boston at St.Louis.Washington at Cleveland, Other clubs not scheduled.NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati at New York.Pittsburgh at Brooklyn, St, Louis at Boston.Chicago at Philadelphia.INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING Newark , .Jersey City Toronto .King Levinsky, Having Passed Army Requirements, Ready to Serve for Country.By SID FE'DER (Pinch-Hitting For Hugh Fullerton, Jr.) Associated Press Sport Writer New York, July 2'5.\u2014 CP) \u2014 The Giants are getting ready to pop with a new pitcher .Don\u2019t look now, but King Levinsky not only passed his physical, but also his mental exam, for the army .and now is ready to go into his \u201ctransom\u201d for Uncle Sam .Willard Marshall used one of Johnny Mize\u2019s forty-ounce bats against the Reds yesterday and clouted one of the healthiest homers seen in the Polo Grounds this year .Needless to say, Big .lawn now has a pardner .Today\u2019s Guest Star: Tim Cochane, New York World Telegram: \u201cCleveland baseball fans now have reached the perennial stage where they are ready to give the Indians back to the Indians.\u201d Poem : Will McKechnie, the good deacon, Has an infield that is leakin\u2019.His pitching\u2019s weaker; hittin\u2019s dead.Guess the Reds shoulda stood in bed.Good Gee : The horses will no doubt be glad to learn they don\u2019t have to be shot any more when they break a leg .Bill (Baltimore Sun) Boniface reports that John Bosley, Jr., the W.K.trainer, has discovered good old Baltimore mud, mixed with epsom salts and vinegar, can cure \u2019em .It's worked on four so well they\u2019re running again .And you spanked the kids for makin\u2019 mud pies! .Athletes At War Buffalo .Baltimore Syracuse Rochester New York .Boston .Cleveland ., St.Louis .Detroit .Chicago .Philadelphia \\V ashington Brooklyn .St.Louis ¦ New York Cincinnati Chicago .Buy Wor Savings Stamps from «ANKS .POST OFFICIS .OHUGOISTS mtPHONS OFFICES .TOBACCONISTS DEPARTMENT STORES .OROCERS BOOK STORES and oth.t RETAIt STORES Boston ., .\u2019hihulelphin W on\tLost\tr.c.58\t30\t.508 .51\t44\t.637 \t 52\t48\t.520 \t50\t¦IS\t.510 \t45\t50\t.474 .15\tr)'5\t.460 \t39\t01\t.390 LEAGUE\tSTANDING\t Won\t1 .fist\tr.c.\t64\t20\t.688 .51\t39\t.5-67 .52\t42\t.555 \t48\t40\t.511 \t47\t50\t.486 \t;\\s\t52\t.422 .3t9\t60\t.3,04 .36\t57\t.887 LEAGUE\tSTANDING\t Won\tLost\tP.C.65\t\u201827\t.707 \t57\t\t.633 \u2022 ¦.*.49\t13\t.588 \t47\t44\t,516 \t45\t49\t.479 \t48\t,461 .¦ \"8\t58\t.806 .i-5\t(>5\t.278 By SCOTT YOUNG (Canadian Press Staff Writer) News of Canadian athletes in tho armed forces will be welcomed for inclusion in this weekly feature and should be sent to \u201cAthletes at War\u201d, the Canadian Press, 44 Victoria Street, Toronto.Toronto, July 24.\u2014((P)\u2014Five players from the Moose Jaw Millers of last season have joined the Canadian armed services.Bill (Regina Leader-post) Good writes in with the information that Butch McDonald who played with Detroit Red Wings and Indianapolis Caps before his Moose Jaw sojourn, is in the army.Roy McBride and Paul Platz are in the R.C.A.F., with Hughie Bell and Roy Allen in the navy.By SCOTT YOUNG\ti (Canadian Press Staff Writer) Toronto, July 25.\u2014W\u2014The lesson today concerns one of our greatest; natural athletes, a leading figure! in Canadian folklore.He was onej of this continent\u2019s finest hockey i players, but he preferred to baitj league presidents, conk referees and.chase heckling customers with a! chair.As a fighter, he couldn\u2019t beat his.way out of a cloud of smoke, but he! made a career of starting riots.He; is an accomplished after-riot speak-! er, thusly: \u201cI have been thrown out) of better leagues (teams, cities, ho-' tels or crap games) than this one.\u201d! He can\u2019t wrestle, but he may have! a championship by Christmas if the; humor of the situation doesn\u2019t make! him forget his script.If Jean Pusie reads this, he willj turn to someone at this point, take! bis newspaper and exclaim grandilo-| quently: \u201cMy fran, this could only! be me.\u201d As always, Pusie is right.It\u2019s him.It\u2019s probably news to everyone about Pusie winning a wrestling championship.I don\u2019t know exactly! what we can do for him in this line,! but one of the most popular in To-! ronto this season is laughingly! known as the British Empire'heavy-; weight wrestling championship.It is held currently by a bulky character; named Whipper Billy Watson.For Pusie, it will be as good as any.Pusie\u2019s ventures into wrestling have been sporadic, and largely unsuccessful because he has been naive enough to accept odd bouts in outlaw leagues in Quebec and the Maritimes.But a few weeks ago he was called to Toronto to substitute in a preliminary.It occurred to several of us at that time that although Pusie always had been beaten previously, he would win here, because the Torouto wrestling league is among the best-organized on the continent.Talent h'.s been scarce lately and it is about time for a change in champions.Pusie is colorful, would make a good box-office draw as champ.So without knowing whom the wild French- man from Chambly Basin, Que., would fight, we figured he would win.He did.He also won the following week.Unless the wrestling league has switched its signals, the build-up is on.The champion should be easy for Pusie.He won\u2019t be scared by the Angel\u2019s face, cr Nanjo Singh\u2019s turban.He is a man with a rare and wonderful courage which is illustrated best by his own story of the night j the Boston Bruins called him up ; from Boston Cubs for an import-; ant game with the New York Ran-, gers.He was sent to the Boston de-! fence with Eddie Shore.\u201cWhen Pusie meets someone who! is smarter than Pusie, which is not! often, Pusie will listen,\u201d the great! man relates.\u201cSo when Eddie Shore | \u2014who is one pretty good' hockey, player, you know\u2014calls me over just; after we get on the ice, I listen.\u201c \u2018Pusie,\u2019 Eddie Shore tells me, \u2018when the Rangers rush down the ice, you pick out your man and knock him down.Make sure you do that, don\u2019t worry about the puck.I\u2019ll look after that.\u2019 \u201cSo the game starts, and right away a rush comes down the ice.1 pick out .ny man and knock him down, just like my fran Eddie Shore say.The puck goes past me and Eddie Shore starts for it.But a Ranger goes around me, beats Shore to the puck, a\"d scores! \u201cIt is terrible! The crew,! groans.I look at Eddie Shore.He is skating back toward the blueline with his stick in between his legs and his head down.He is looking as if to say: \u2018What a terrible hockey player this Pusie is, letting the puck get through.\u2019 \u201cWell, I don\u2019t know why I do it.But there are 17,CK)0 people there and they are all ivatching.And I skate over to Eddie Shore and I put my arm around his shoulders and say: \u2018Never mind, Eddie.That could happen to anybody\u2019.\u201d At this point in his story Jean Pusie pauses and sinks back in his chair.Then he reflects softly: \u201cThe next day I am back with Boston Cubs.\u201d DOUBLE DEFEAT REGISTERED IN SINGLE INNING Rube Fischer, Jersey City Right-Hander, Victims of Unusual Situation in International.Gib Sellers Heading Tam O\u2019Shanter Event News Budget From Richmond Lieut.Gordon Bauld of Halifax, former ranking Nova Scotia tennis player, a high scorer in basketball in the Halifax city league and former member of Halifax Wanderers rugger squad, has transferred from the Royal Canadian Artillery to the Princess Louise Fusiliers, a motorized Halifax infantry unit.Lieut.Rod McGill of Winnipeg, Manitoba open s: dom ski champion,! helped train men of Military District 10 in special opera Lons nonrj Winnipeg in 1941 before going overseas with the Queen\u2019s Own Cameron Highlanders in Canada.Lieut.McGill is 24.Thomas A.(Mountain Boy) Link-letter of Spring-hill, who pitched the Springhill Feneebustors to the Nova Scotia baseball finals for several years just before the war, is with the R.C.A, at Halifax.mm There are about 25,000,000 insect.-in the air above each square mile of the earth\u2019s surface, according to estimates, BENEFIT SHOW for the VACATION COLONY At JACQUES CARTIER BEACH Wednesday, July 29th.at 8 p.m.MUSIC, COMMUNITY SONGS, AMATEUR CONTESTS.ETC, An evening of enjoyment for you.and days of fun for the kiddies.Admission : General 25c, Children 15c.Reserved seats, 50c and \"5c.SOLDIERS ADMITTED WITHOUT CHARGE.George Stuart, of Edmonton, a member of University of Alberta hockey and football teams for four years, joined the R.C.A.F.He was coach of tho interfaculty football champions The Aggies.last fall.Robert (Bobby) Coulter, Toronto football star, joined the air force last May.He was instrumental in building several fine football teams at North Toronto Collegiate where he was a teacher.Mally Hughes, 21-year-old goalkeeper, is an ordinary seaman in the Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve.Hughes was one of the best junior netminders in Manitoba when he played for Portage la Prairie Terriers in 1940-41.Last season he was the backbone of the Manitoba senior champions- Winnipeg R.C.N.V.R.NEW MEETING FOR ZALE AND ABRAMS WHITE HORSE DISTIUERS lTO, GLASGOW HORSE SCOTCH WHISKY Chicago.July 25.\u2014()P)\u2014Sheldon Clark, Chairman of the Illinois Athletic Commission, said today plans are being considered for a title rematch between Tony Zalo.middleweight champion, and Georgie Abrams, whom he defeated for the crown eight months ago.The bout, Clark said, would be held in Chicago, probably in September, if plans go through.Proceeds would go to the U.S.O.Both fighters now are in the Navy.SINCE 1746 DISTILLED, BLENDED & BOTTLED IN SCOTLAND WHISKY WITHOUT SODA Tendon\u2014 d\"- Arthur Coomber who bequeathed his wines, spirits and cigars to William Gilbert, Newmarket saddler, advised in his will; \u201cthat the very old whisky distilled in 1895 should not be mixed with soda, but be drunk either neat er with two-thirds plain water to one-third of whiskv (about).\u2019\u2019 The followin gare the results of the Grade Ten Examinations at St.Francis College High School Richmond.In order of merit.Pupils who took Latin: Lois Boast, Claire Irwin, Lucy Healy.Pupils who did not take Latin: Helen Hills, John Kerr, John MacNaughton, Jean Fee, Doris Woods, Frances Lockwood.Mrs.George Jamieson, Mr.James Day, of Melbourne, and Mrs.Ernest Johnston, of Gallup Hill, have returned from Waterville, where they were called by tho death of their brother-in-law, Mr.Seldon E.Whit-j comb.Mr.and Mrs.Wilfrid Driver and Miss Marion Driver, of Clevemont Avenue and Mrs, E.O.Desmarais,! of Main Street, were guests of friends in Granby.Master John Manning, of College Street, is spending a holiday at Breeches Lake, with his grandpar-1 ents, Dr.and Mrs, J.A.Butler.Miss Sheila Fee, of Melbourne, lias been visiting at the home of Mr.and Mrs, James Miller, South Durham.Miss Helen Blais, of Sherbrooke, spent a few days this week as tho guest of -Miss Bertha Marcotte, of College Hill.Mr.George A.Chamberlin, of I Aberdeen Avenue, has returned home from his vacation spent at his summer cottage, on Lake Massa-; wippi, near Ayer\u2019s Cliff.Mrs.Chamberlin and Master Donald are remaining at the cottage for an additional two weeks.Mr.James Johnston, of Sherbrooke, was the guest of his nephew, Mr.Arnold Johnston, of Janesville.Mr.and Mrs.John Porter, of Ottawa, have been holidaying at Mrs.Porter\u2019s parents.Mr.and Mrs.G.G.Price, in Melbourne.Mrs.C.E.Manning and Master Peter Manning are spending a short vacation with Mrs.G.A.Chamberlin, at her cottage on Lake Massa-wippi.Mr.and Mrs.Oliver Poirier and son, Master John, enjoyed a two weeks\u2019 vacation at Frompton Lake.Mr.and Mrs.D, Keenan, of St.Katharines, Ont., are calling on friends and relatives in this vicinity.Miss D.Lauzon, of Montreal, is tho guest of Dr.and Mrs.Chaput, of ! College Street.j Miss Eileen Gleason, Miss Irene I Laroche, Mr.\u201cChippie\" Rattray, Mr.j Galen Brown and Mr.John Worthen ; spent the week-end at Brompton i Lake, as the guests of Mrs.William Gil lan, Mr.Galen Brown, lately a member of the staff of the Chrome Limited, was the guest of honour at a delightful farewell party given him at the Brunswick Hotel, by his friends.Mr.Brown is taking up duties in Montreal.Mr.and Mrs.Torrance Reid and daughter.Shirley, of Montreal, were guests of the Misses C.and B.Cross on College Street.Guests at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Philippe Perron, College Farm, were Mrs.Perron\u2019s, Mrs, Ix'uis Gagnon; Mrs.Gagnon's son, Mr.Albert Gagnon with his wife and two children.Sonny and Janet; and Mrs, Aurore Renaud, all of Salisbury, Mass.Mrs.Muriel Ewing G Ulan is occupying her cottage at Brompton Like, for the summer months.Mrs.Stone, of Mont Joli, is mak- ; ing an extended visit with her sis-; ter, Miss Violet Russell.Mr.Harry Hardy, of College j Street, has recovered sufficiently to: be out on the verandah.Mr.and Mrs.laicien Carrier, of Main Street .have returned from a motor trip in Ontario.Mrs.Philippe Perron, of College Farm, Mr.Alfred Gagnon, Mrs.Louis Gagnon, with their father, Mr, Luc Gagnon, were visiting friends and relatives in St.Adrien de Ham, Fecteau\u2019s Mills, Wolfestown and St, Philippe de Chester.They were accompanied by Mr.and Mrs.Albert Gagnon.Mrs.Bessie McEwen, of Pontiac, Michigan, is spending the remainder of the summer with her sister, Mrs.J.A.Grady, Aberdeen Avenue.Miss Lucy Healy, Miss Jean Fee and Miss Katherine Ewing are attending the C.G.I.T, Camp, Cedar Lodge, Lake Memphremagog.Mrs.Howard Hills and Miss Helen Hills, of College Street, spent the week-end in Bvockville, as the guests of Mr.and Mrs.Harry Fennel.Mrs.George Walker was a guest of Rev.H.O.N.Belford and Mrs.Belford, at Richmond Lake.Miss May Davis has gone to the Laurentians for a short visit with friends.The Misses Stella Brazeau, Eleanor Beibev and Gertrude Davis motored to Richmond Lake, where they were guests of Mrs, Beard.Miss Celestin Poulin, of College Street, is recovering very nicely from her illness.Miss Therese Tremblay is occupying one of the cottages of Mr.and Mrs.Angus McIntyre, Sherbrooke road, for a few weeks.Mr.Robert Brown, of Waterloo, spent the week-end with Mr.and Mrs.M.T.J.McKee, College Street, Mrs.VV.Beauchamp and son and Miss Mina Smith, of Montreal, are guests of their parents, Mr.and Mrs.J, D.Smith.Arrangements are being made for an illustrated lecture by Rev.T.W.Jones, of Calvary United Church, Montreal.This will be under the auspices of the Richmond and Melbourne United Church Y.P.U.Mr.and Mrs.Eddy Gagne, of Wottonville, were visiting Mr.and Mrs.Philip Perron over the weekend.Mrs.Martha Swetland has returned from Sherbrooke, where she was the guest of friends.Sympathy is extended to Mrs.C.Nixon and family in their recent bereavement.Miss E.McCourt has returned to her duties after a week's vacation.Mr.and Mrs.Real Laroehelle, Jeanne and Louise Laroehelle were week-end guests of Mr.and Mrs.Philip Perron.Mr.and Mrs.W.Stevens, Miss Ada Ross and Miss Gladys Smith spent a day in Sherbrooke.The Misses Alice and Margaret Boa spent a day with Mr.and Mrs.Skillen of Ulverton.Rev.S.G.Woolfrey, Henry Healy, Robert Boa, Ronald Stimson motored to Shore Acres to attend a boys' camp, which opens this week.Mr.Woolfrey is to be the swimming instructor.Miss Edna Arnold, of Sherbrooke, spent the week-end with her parents, on Craig Street.Mr.and Mrs.Philippe Perron, Mr.and Mrs.Albert Gagnon and children were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Eddy Gagne and Mr.and Mrs.E.Nault.of Wottonville.The members of the Ladies' Division of the Relleview Golf Club entertained several officers of No.3, I.T.S.Victoriaville and their wives at the Club House.Mr.R.Mills, of Sherbrooke, was a guest of her parents, Mr.and Mrs.A Fee.Mrs, Annie Hayes has returned Rube Fischer, Jersey City right bander, long -will remember July 24, 1942.That is the date he was officially charged with two International League defeats although he pitched in only one-third of an inning.Here\u2019s how it happened.Montreal and the Giants played off the protested game of June 12 in which the Royals had scored eight runs in the ninth inning to take a commanding lead only to have them nullified because dimout regulations prevented the Giants from completing their half of the frame.However, the Royals charged the Giants were stalling and the protest was upheld by League President Frank Shaughnessy who ordered the last of the inning played out.That was done before the start of the regular game yesterday, with the Giants scoring one run to make the final count ten to four in favor of Montreal with Fischer the losing hurler.Fischer started the regular game, but was taken out after pitching one third of an inning in which he gave up two runs which was all Montreal needed for a two to one triumph.All the other games last night were decided by the same two to one score with the exception of the one between Syracuse and Buffalo which the Chiefs won, three to two.Baltimore Orioles took a double-header from the tail-end Rochester Red Wings.Jim Turner, former Cincinnati hurler, made his debut for Newark Bears but Jim Ripple spoiled it by smashing a two-run homer to give Jack Hallett and Toronto Maple Leafs the victory.Jack Tising gave only three hits, but Buffalo Errors and his own wildness proved his undoing as Syracuse defeated the herd.By GAYLE TALBOT Associated Press Staff Writer Chicago, July 25.\u2014i/P)\u2014Leading the nation\u2019s topnotch golfers as the $15,000 Tam O\u2019Shanter open swung into the third round today was one Gib Seilers, a strapping professional from Walled Lake, Mich., whose brlliant rounds of 68-69 the last two days lifted him abruptly out of comparative obscurity.Gib (short for Gibson down in the Arkansas hill country where he was born and-learned his golf) was a stroke ahead of the defending champion, Byron Nelson, and two blows in front of his next closest pursuers, | Clayton Heafner and Dick Metz.! It was heady company for a player; who in thirteen years of golf had! reached his heights by .winning the Arkansas and Michigan open titles.' Despite Gib\u2019s whirlwind start, Nelson remained the favorite.The tall Toledo star still was at the top of his game, and when he is like that he comes close to being impossible to beat in a medal tournament.Lawson Little, who shared the lead with Nelson after the first round with 67\u2019s, fell off to a poor 73 yesterday and was three strokes off the pace.Meeting in the 36-hole final of the Tam O\u2019Shanter amateur championship today were Corp.Marvin (Bud) Ward, the National Champion, and Wilford Wehrle, of Racine, Wis., former Western amateur titl-ist.It was a natural, and promised to draw a good portion of the huge crowds swarming over Tam O\u2019Shanter.~ ' FOR NEW INDUSTRY AT SCOTSTOWN MAJESKI HEADS HITTING LISTS New York, July 25.\u2014(TP)\u2014Henry Majeski, third baseman of Newark Bears and the mosc tonsistent of the aspirants to the hitting leadership of the International League, is setting the pace for the second straight week.He maintained an even keel with a .344 average, just one point less than a week ago, and at the close of Wednesday\u2019s programme had a twenty-point lead over Johnny Welaj, of Buffalo.Based on 200 or more times at bat the ten leaders were Majeski .344; Welaj .324; Norman Jaeger, Jersey City, .317; Bill Johnson, Newark .213; Gene Moore, Montreal, .308; Art Metheny, Newark, .306; Ed Robinson, Baltimore, .304; and Sid Gordon.Jersey City, .303.Tommy Byrne, of Newark, continued to top all the pitchers with twelve victories and two defeats.TWIN KNOCKOUT FOR MADDUX IN EVENING San Diego.Calif., July 25.\u2014()P)\u2014 Jimmy Maddux, Canadian junior welterweight and former Omaha boxer, was knocked out twice in the same night.Maurice Woods, San Diego Negro welter, stopped him in two rounds.Then Maddux, leaving the ring, was angered by conuments of bleacherites and swung on one.It happened to be Kid Lester, San Diego middleweight, and down went Maddux again.from a visit to Asbestos, where she was the guest of Mr.and Mrs.Legendre.Miss Natalie Walker has returned from Brompton Lake, where she has been vacationing with Mrs.W.Gillan.Mrs.Allard, of Coaticook.spent a few days with her sister, Mrs.J.L.Burns.Misses Sheila and Patsy Walker were guests of Miss Ethelwyn Ewing, at Brompton Lake.Miss Margaret Boa motored to Massawippi.where she is to be the guest of friends.Miss Helen Hills is spending a few days with friends in Waterville.Mr.George Walker, College Street, has returned from a trip to Ottawa.Mrs.W.E.Perkins and Mrs.A.D.Gleason spent two days in Quebec.Mrs.Alec Stuart has left for Charny, where she will visit friends.Miss Eleanor Beiber has been vacationing at Richmond Lake, where she was the guest of Mrs.Beard.Mr, and Mrs.Howard Hills, College Street, journeyed to Avon, Mass., to visit Mr, Hills\u2019 parents.Miss Norma Knowled, of Cleveland.entertained Misses Sheila and Patsy Walker.Fit.Sergeant G.MacNaughton, of Newfoundland, spent a few days at the home of his aunt and uncle, Mr.and Mrs.Stuart MacNaughton, Clevemont Avenue.Rev.B.and Mrs.Watson, of Len-noxville, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.L.F.Somerville.Mr.Kitchen, of Hamilton, spent a short time in Richmond, on business.Mr.and Mrs.E.Ashcroft with their guests, of Montreal, spent a pleasant day at Richmond Lake.Mrs.George MacLeay, Clevemont Avenue, is visiting her sister, at Salem, Mass.Citizens\u2019 Committee Formed to Obtain New Industrial Enterprise \u2014 Scotstown News Budget.Scotstown, July 25.\u2014A meeting of the townspeople was held in the Town Hall for the purpose of forming a citizens\u2019 committee, pertaining to the establishment of an industrial enterprise.After some discussion, F.X.Lizotte, A.H.Cowling and A.Choquette wele appointed to confer with a representative from the industrial department of the C.P.R.A.O.Rousseau was named as Chairman and Hugh Burrows as j Secretary, with the appointment of i a genera! committee as follows: F.l X.Lizotte, Alex M.MacDonald, A.! Choquette, A.H.Cowling, J.N.Mac-Iver and Victor Dustin, NEW LIBRARY BOOKS The following books have been added to the Scotstown Public Library: \u201cThe Bar Twenty-three,\u201d Clarence E.Mulford; \u201cFigure of Fight,\u201d Compton MacKenzie; \u201cThe Doctor of Lonesome River,\u201d Edison Marshall; \u201cCopper Lion,\u201d Edwin Bateman Morris; \u201cChallenge of the North,\u201d William Byron Mowery; \u201cBar-20 Days,\u201d Clarence E.Mulford; \u201cBrass,\u201d Charles G.Norris; \u201cThe Wave Breaks,\u201d Barbara Noble; \u201cThe Postmaster of Market Leighton,\u201d E.Phillips Oppenheim; \u201cCawferry Isle,\u201d Edward Percy; \u201cThe Secret of the Snows,\u201d Josephine Plain; \u201cThe Signature of Venus.\u201d Diana Patrick; \u201cLisa Vale,\u201d Olive H.Prouty; \u201cK,\u201d Mary Roberts Rinehart; \u201cGolden Apples,\u201d Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings; \u2018The Auld Alliance,\u201d Lettice Miine Rae; \u201cIt Is Never Too Late to Mend,\u201d Charles Read; \u201cBucky Follows a Cold Trail,\u201d William MacLeod Raine; \u201cFour Square,\u201d Grace Richmond; \u201cSun and Storm,\u201d Unto Sappenan; \u201cMiss Buncle's Book,\u201d D.E.Stevenson; \u201cLast Hope Ranch,\u201d Charles Alien Seltzer; \u201cMurder on the Cattle Ranch,\u201d Charles H.Snow'; \u201cLove at Arms,\u201d Rafael Sabatini; \u201cThe Great Hotel Murder,\u201d Vincent Starrett: \u201cJohn Cayther\u2019s Garden,\u201d Frank R.Stockton; \u201cClear the Trail,\u201d Charles H.Snow; \u201cThe Chal- lenge to Sirius,\u201d Sheila Kaye Smith; \u201cThe Garden,\u201d L.A.G.Strong; \u201cThe Great Divide,\u201d Alan Sullivan; \u201cThe Stray Lamb,\u201d Thorne Smith; \u201cThe Nutmeg Tree,\u201d Margery Sharpe; \u201cThe Third Round,\u201d Sapper; \u201cTumbling River Range,\u201d W.C.Tuttle; \u201cLonesome Ranch,\u201d Charles Alden Seltzer; \u201cMagic in the Air,\u201d F.E.Penny; \u201cA Farewell to Arms,\u201d Ernest Hemingway.General Notes.Mrs.Donald MacKay, of Montreal, is a guest of her niece, Mrs.Malcolm Nicholson, and Mr.Nicholson.Mr.and Mrs.Roscoe Prescott, of Manchester, N.H., are visitors of the latter\u2019s sister, Mrs.D.A.Campbell, and Mr.Campbell.Mrs.Murdo MacArthur is spending some time with Mrs.Ewen Mac-Lcod, in Milan.Miss Cuyla MacAulay and Master Wayne MacAulay are spending a vacation with their sister, Mrs.W.E.Jackson, and Mr.Jackson, at Mirror lake.Their sister, Miss Anne MacAulay, of Quebec, is also spending a holiday at the same cottage.Mrs.A.A.MacAulay has returned from spending the week-end with her children, at.Mirror Lake.Mr.Raymond MacLeod, of Danville, has joined Mrs.MaoLeod at the home of her mother, Mrs.Malcolm Morrison.Friends regret that Mrs.Morrison, her daughter, Mrs.Gordon Bennett, and young son, are shortly leaving town for a new home in Danville.Mr.and Mrs.Romeo Boulais and daughter, Suzanne, have returned to their home in Lyndonville, Vt., after spending a week-end with Mrs.Boulais\u2019 parents, Mr.and Mrs.A.Boisvert.The friends of Mrs.Oscar Filioit regret to learn that she is a patient in the St.Vincent do Paul Hospital, in Sherbrooke.Mrs.Charles Snow, of Springfield, is spending a holiday with her sister, Miss Katie MacAulay, and her brother, Mr.Donald MacAulay.Mr.A.D.Morrison, who was a patient in the Sherbrooke Hospital, has returned to his home.His friends regret that his illness still continues.Mr.Harry Mitchell has returned to his home in Montreal, after spending the week-end with Mrs.Dora Stearns and Miss Katie Morrison.He was accompanied by Mrs.Mitchell and daughters, Carol Ann and Lorna, who had spent a vacation with their aunts, Mrs.Stearns and Miss Morrison.Mr.and Mrs.Arnold MacKenzia and Mrs.K.R.MacLeod spent a week-end in Keith, where they visit, ed Mrs.MacKenzie\u2019s mother, Mrs.W.S.MacCaskill, and Mrs.MacLeod\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mrs, Dan T.MacDonald.new JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTORS Permit has been granted for completion of 9,8 H.P.ALTERNATE TWIN MOTORS Almost finished when manufacture was stopped.OUR ALLOTMENT IS 3 MOTORS ONLY WHO WASTS THEM?\u2014 Wire or Phone! 1941 PRICES \u2014 AUGUST 1st DELIVERY HATLEY CRAFT \u2014 North Hatley ^ONOmlCd/ BOTTLE CARTON D06D "]
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