Sherbrooke daily record, 17 juin 1937, jeudi 17 juin 1937
[" j^torbrankr Bailu Swnrî» Established 1897.SHERBROOKE.CANADA, THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1937.Forty-First Year.FASCISTS CAPTURE 3,000 REFUGEES Pitiful Conditions In Besieged Basque Capital Described Women Aboard Refugee Ships in Rags and Children Crying for \u2018\u2018Something to Eat/\u2019 Insurgent Communique Announcing Capture of Three Vessels Declares-Fascist Forces Rapidly Tightening Grip About Bilbao.Mysterious Disappearance Still Unsolved Hendaye, Franco-Spanish Frontier, June 17.\u2014Insurgents reported today their ships had captured three Government shiploads of three thousand refugees fleeing besieged Bilbao, many of them children \u201ccrying for something to eat.\u201d The insurgent besiegers, with their army reported to have effected the crossing of the River Nervion at two places in the drive to bottle up Bilbao, said the three ships were taken when they attempted to slip out of the mouth of the Nervion into the Bay of Biscay.The refugees, mostly women and children, were described as being \u201cin a pitiful condition.\u201d The vessels were said to have been taken to Pasajes.\u201cThey were gaunt and many of them sick,\u201d the insurgents said of the refugees.\"The women were in rags and their children cried for something to eat.Their great agony was shown by the lines in their faces.\u201d Many of those captured, the insur-^_________________________________ gents said, were former inhabitants of San Sebastian who had fled that resort city in September just before it fell to the insurgents.INSURGENTS ATTACKING HILLS AROUND BILBAO Hendaye, Franco-Sipanish Border, June 17.\u2014Insurgent besiegers of Bilbao were reported today to have crossed the river Nervon both north and south of the Basque capital.Border despatches from both Government and insurgent sources indicated Generalissimo Francisco Franco's crack legionnaires were storming the dominant heights west of the battered city.One column, after taking Las Arenas, where the Nervion enters the sea, was said to have forced its way across the broad estuary northwest of the city.South of the city, the second main column moved northward on the highway from Amurrio, after taking the village of Arrigorriaga, five miles from Bilbao on the west bank of the Nervion.The eastern heights overlooking Bilbao and the coastal plain stretching northward to the Bay of Biscay were already in the hands of the insurgents.The northern column finished the cleansweep of the area east of the estuary before taking Las Arenas.The villages of Algorta, Lejona and Lujua were taken in rapid order.The two forces, about equi-distant from Bilbao, were moving to a junction west of the city that would sweep the Basques from the mountain ranges.Should the Basques hold those summits they could make Bilbao untenable for its conquerors.The Basque defenders massed their strength to the northwest to cut off the insurgent advance guard and hold open the vital communication lines to Santander, some sixty miles to the west.An official Government communique declared insurgent planes had machine-gunned the western roads along which refugees were stream- Plcase Turn to Page 2, Col.5.FAMILY FRIEND IS SOUGHT FOR VERDUN MURDER Husband of Murdered Woman Declares Description of IVIan Last Seen with Her Resembles that of Old Acquaintance.Verdun, Que., June 17.\u2014Police scoured Montreal Island today for a suspect in the slaying of Mrs.Elizabeth Armstrong.Although they did not reveal his name, authorities were believed to have established the identity of the man for whom they searched.He was last seen in the kitchen of the Armstrong home yesterday, just shortly before the battered form of the thirty-eight year old mother of seven children was discovered.After Elsie Bruce, fourteen years old, an acquaintance of the Armstrongs, described the man she had seen with Mrs.Armstrong a few minutes before the murder, the shocked husband, summoned from his work as a crane operator, told police the description answered that of a friend of the family.The suspect could not be found at home last night and a statement by Elsie that she had heard him complain to the murdered woman of \u201cbeing out of work\u2019\u2019 and mention \u201ccommitting suicide\u201d caused police to intensify their search.The murder was committed after the girl left the man and Mrs.Armstrong to go to a nearby store.Returning to the home, she discovered the body of the woman on the floor.! There was a blood-stained hammer I lying in a corner of the room.NETHERLANDS LIFTS RESTRICTIONS ON GOLD EXPORTS Amsterdam, June 17.\u2014 The Netherlands today lifted res-| frictions on the exportation of i gold which have been in effect ! since September SO, 1936.The Bank of the Netherlands, [ acting under authority of the ! Minister of Finance, stated it I was prepa.red to allow un-! restricted exemptions from the I export prohibitious laid down ! on gold coins and bullion.| Informed circles said the new | ruling would have no effect on i Netherlands monetary policy, I but would offer an opportunity I for private holders of gold to ! sell their metal in London or ! New York for a better price I than they could obtain in | Amsterdam.iSTRIKES HALT SHIPBUILDING AND SHIPPING URGES PROFITS LIMITATION TO PREVENT BOOM Increased Purchasing Power Among Masses of People Chief Need for Preservation of Prosperity, Economist Declares.Conflicting Theories Advanced In Disappearance Of New York Matron Local Authorities Insist Mrs.Alice McDonell Parsons Was Murdered While Federal Investigating Officials Continue to Act on Kidnapping Theories.Stony Brook, N.Y., June 17.\u2014 Sharply growing differences of opinion beibwecn the federal men and Suffolk County autlwirities investigating the mysterious disappearance of Mrs.Alice McDonell Parsons, Long Island matron, was evidenced today as the government agents pursued a kidnapping theory, Ihc others expressing the belief she was siltvin.A Suffolk County official, who asked his mime bo withheld, said: \u201cTho federal men think it is a kidnapping,\" he said.\u201cWe think it is murder, ami we are ready lo proceed on that theory and to net quickly.There seems to be evidence enough to make it possible to present the| case to a grand jury.\u201d This official said robbery did nol appear to be the motive, so far as ¦ the local men could determine, bull declined to comment further along! this line.Even while tlhis official was tnl'lt-l ing, however, reports were growing that the federal agents, still cling- ing to the kidnapping theory, had established secret headquarters tVenty miles away from the trim little white farm house from which Mrs, Parsons vanished eight days ago.And vt ill another report had it that a person who represented himself as the kidnapper communirated with the Parsons family, promising to return the woman if the $2:5,000 ransom, originally demanded in a note, were paid and immunity from police intervention guaranteed.Neither of these reports could be confirmed at once, since Earl J.Oomielley, inspector in charge of the federal men, and Rhea Whitley, head of the New York office who has been working with him, left here yostoiiday on some undisclosed mission and wore still absent today.Their absence, however, did not hold up the search of the woods which has boon going on since Monday.Some searchers directed their al-Flease Turn to Page 2, Col.4.Kington, Ont., June 17.\u2014 Dr.Isador Lubin, United States Commissioner of Labor Statistics, in an address prepared for delivery here today, advocated government checks against abnormal profits and rising prices to f-\u2014.stall a possible speculative boom.Dr.Lubin told the second Conference on Canadian-Americar.Affairs that if greater profits and prices accompanied continued gains in industrial output it might lead to another collapse such as that of 1929.He suggested the taxing powers, legal imposition of minimum standards of employment and extension of collective bargaining as means of assuring a distribution of income which would be a safeguard against another economic collapse.\u201cWe must devote our energies toward a balanced growth both within industry and agriculture,\u201d he said.\u201cWithout a continuous advance in the income of the farmer we cannot maintain a continued rise in the income of our industrial workers, for it is on this sector of our population that industry both in the United States and in Canada must depend for a large segment of its markets.\u201cThe farmers of both countries must likewise realize that it is primarily a*.iong well-paid city workers, with a relatively high standard of living, that they can hope to find an outlet for their products at prices that bring profitable returns.\u201cNor is it through restricted production that we can hope to achieve the necessary balanced growth of Please Turn to Page 2, Col.4.THE WEATHER *- SHOWERS OR THUNDERSTORMS Pressure is high over James Bay and off the north Atlantic coast, with a shallow low centred over I Lower Michigan moving northeast-| ward.A moderate disturbance cov-! ers Alberta and west Saskatchewan.Showers and thunderstorms have j occurred in many parts of Ontario, I also in northern and eastern Quebec i hut it has been fair over the St.Lawrence Valley and the Maritime Provinces.Light to moderate thundershowers have occurred in many parts of the West where temperature has been considerably above normal.Forecast: Moderate south and southeast winds; mostly cloudy to-nighl and Friday with some showers or thunderstorms; not much change in temperature.Northern New England: Increasing cloudiness, probably followed by showers tonight and Friday.Not much change in temperature.Five Largest Shipyards in New York District Suspend Operations as Result ot Closed Shop Issue\u2014Inter-Union Squabble Affects Coastal Shipping.New' York, June 17.\u2014Labor issues hit shipping and ship-building in the New York area today, closing five of the largest shipyards in the region and threatening to affect more than a dozen vessels sailing out of Atlantic and gulf ports.Closing of the shipyards was due to a strike of about nine thousand workers, tieing up $30,000,000 worth of construction and repair work.The closed shop was the underlying issue, the Industrial Union of Marine and Shipyard Workers demanding it adamantly and the shipyard owners just as steadfastly refusing to grant it.On the shipping front, the clash between the.National Maritime Union, affiliate of the Committee for Industrial Organization, and the International Seamen\u2019s Union, American Federation of Labor ally, resulted in an N.M.U.threat to strike on ten ships of the Eastern Steamship Company.The strike was to be in retaliation against a sit-dow'n of I.S.U.members in Boston.In addition the N.M.U.announced it would take the offensive today to prevent sailing of the line's steamships Cornish and Sandwich from New York if I.S.U, men were aboard.Roosevelt Intervention Offers Sole Possibility Of Solving Steel Strike Johnstown Mayor Urges President Act in Impasse as Strikers Resort to \u201cMost Dastardly Crime\u201d of Kidnapping-Independent Steel Corporation Heads Reiterate Positive Refusal to Sign Any Agreement Providing for C.1.0.Bargaining.glance follows: Suffering from loss of memory after being missing for a week, Miss Diana Battye, twenty-one year old London society girl, shown above in her latest picture, was discovered walking in a street near the home of Lady Cynthia Asquith, mother of Michael Asquith, to whom Diana\u2019s engagement was to be announced shortly.General Profits Tax To Ease Burden Of British Armament British Government Proposal Calls for Impost on Ail Corporation and Individual Profits Over £2,000 Annually to Replace Much Condemned Tax on Increase of Profits\u2014 New Levy Expected to Yield £25,000,000 Annually.London, June 17.\u2014 A Government proposal for a profits tax to pay fox- part of the rearmament programme was before Parliament today.The plan for a five per cent, tax on corporations and a four per cent, tax on individuals making profits of more than £2,000 ($9,880) a year was advanced in a Government white paper yesterday.The Governments expects thereby to raise £25,000,000 ($123,500,000).' The programme would substitute for the scheme proposed by Prime Minister Chamberlain when he was Chancellor of the Exchequer.That plan, which would have taken as much as twenty-five per cent, of the net profits of an industry, met strong opposition from businessmen.Under the new proposal a.taxpayer whose profits -were less than £12,000 a year could make a further reduction to acertain the taxable amount.The reduction would be one-fifth of the difference between his profits and £12,000, A corporation with profits of £4,000 would reckon the taxable amount thus: It would deduct one-fifth of the difference between £12.-000 and £4.000\u2014that is, one-fifth of £8,000 or £1,600\u2014and then take credit for a flat exemption of £2,-000.The five per cent, tax would be paid on only the difference between £4,000 and £3,600, or on £400.Publ\u2019e utilities and professions would be exempt.Depreciation on industries would be considered, and interest on borrowed money could be deducted.SOVIET RUSSIA CLOSING ITS DOORS TO JAPANESE Tokyo, June 17, \u2014 Official circles advanced the opinion today that Russia was endeavoring to close doors of the Soviet Union to Japanese.Authorities were informed the Soviet had cancelled the visas of Japanese delegates invited to the fifth Soviet Union theatrical festival in September.At the same time the Soviet Government brought pressure on Japan to close the Japanese and Manchoukaoan consulates at Vladivostock, Blagoveshchensk, Khabarovsk and other vital points, apparently with the aim of stripping Russia of Japanese residents.Japanese also noted the Russian Government had failed to grant visas to the Japanese delegates to the World Geological Congress to be held in Moscow on July 21.EIGHT JAPS KILLED IN AIRPLANE COLLISION Tokyo, June 17.\u2014-Eight Japanese naval fliers were killed today when two airplanes on a practice flight collided over Kisarazu in Chiba prefecture.bill to establish an export guarantee fund of £50,000.000 ($247,000,-000) was introduced in the House of Commons today.Oliver Stanley, president of the Board of Trade, submitted the meas- - | tire, designed to stimulate foreign London, June 17.\u2014A Government 1 sale of United Kingdom products.GOVERNMENT TO ASSIST BRITISH EXPORT TRADE Italian Merchant Vessel Attacked By Loyalist Aircraft Off Algeria No Casualties Reported as Result of Attack by Spanish Government Planes on Italian Steamer Destined from Port Sudan to Clyde\u2014Ship Slightly Damaged.London, June 17.\u2014Lloyd\u2019s agent at Gibraltar cabled today that the Italian steamer Madda had been bombarded- by Spanish Government aircraft off Oran, Algeria, but that she was not hit.The Madda, a 5,181-ton steamc: out of Genoa, was damaged, hov ever, from (he concussion of the bomb explosions.Her forepeak was \u2018reported flooded and her No.1 hold leaking.Pumps were holding hack the water as the steamer put into Gibraltar.There were no casualties aboard.The Madda was bound for the Clyde, Scotland, from Port Sudan.The news came just after Italy and Germany had returned to the European non-intervention patrol of Spain under a .ol'ety guarantee plan for their warships in the patrol.They withdi >w from the \u201cHands Off Spain\u201d fleet because Spanish Government, planes bombed their ships.C.I.O.DEMANDS REINSTATEMENT Boston, June 17.\u2014Threat to tie Please Turn to Page 2, Col.3.SUICIDES BOOST DEATH TOLL IN RUSSIAN PURGE President of White Russian Soviet Socialist Republic Which Adjoins Poland Took His Own Life After Being Denounced for Treason.Moscow', June 17.\u2014Joseph Stalin\u2019s regime pushed its mass clean-up of opposition elements today after announcing that the President of one of the country\u2019s eleven Socialist Republics had killed himself.With at least 151 persons executed within a year for alleged anti-government activity, officiais disclosed hundreds of arrests had been made throughout the Soviet Union and hundreds of thousands had been ousted from the Communist party.Alexander G.Cherviakoff, leader of the White Russian Soviet Socialist Republic, which adjoins Poland, was said by the Government to have committed suicide.The official explanation was \u201cfamily reasons.\u201d But he had been denounced at a Communist party meeting at Minsk, capital of White Russia, forty-five of his colleagues had been seized on the treason charges, and the former commander of the White Russian army garrison, Gen.I.P.Uborevitch, w'Ss executed June 12 with seven other high army officers for plotting to \u201cdismember\u201d the U.S.S.R.(White Russia has nothing to do with the term White Russian used to describe Czarist opponents of the Communist regime.White Russia, a republic of the U.S.S.R., is one of three great Slav divisions of Russia proper, the others being Great Russia and Little Russia (Ukraine), The inhabitants of White Russia, of which Minsk is the capital, peak a distinctive dialect).A conspiracy to wreck Russian agriculture was alleged in the White Russian phase of the far-flung effort to stamp out anti-government elements.The forty-five arrested at Minsk included N.M, Goloded, president of the White Russian Council of Commissars; ten former commisasrs cf the White Russian republic, and many members of the White Russian Central Executive Committee.The Minsk Communist party meeting, at which Cherviakoff was denounced, brought forth charges of a Polish plot to destroy livestock and crops.High-grade livestock was even inoculated with cholera germs, it was alleged.M.I.Kalmanovitch.only recently removed as U.S.S.R.Commissar of State Farms, was accused at the party session of conniving with authorities in the White Russian Com-missariats of Agriculture and Education to wreck local agriculture.The United States strike situation today at a Johnstown, Pa.\u2014Non-striker stabs two pickets at Bethlehem Steel Corporation plant; Company reiterates refusal to sign C.I.O.contract and charges \u201cdisorder and anarchy\u201d brought into city where Mayor Daniel Shields asks President Roosevelt's intervention.Washington -Philip Murray, Sloe] Workers Organizing Committee scheduled to confer with Secretary of Labor Perkins, then testify at a U.S.Semite Post Office committee investigation of steel strike.Chicago\u2014C.I.0.Chieftain Lewis comes here to confer with strike strategists before Chicago Stadium mass meeting address tonight.Monroe, Mich.\u2014Volunteer citizen brigade of Got), organized on permanent basis by Mayor Daniel A.Knaggs to replace special paid police around Republic Steel Corporation subsidiary plant.Indianapolis\u2014American Legion \u201cnot a strike-breaking organization,\" says its National Commander, Harry W.Colmery.When Legionnaires are deputized, he says, \u201cThey are thus serving in their capacity as citizens, and not because they are Legionnaires.A*?Lansing, Mich.\u2014\u201cLaw and Order League\u201d formation announced, following general labor holiday in city June 7th, to \u201csupply law enforcement agencies with sufficient volunteer personnel to carry out their duties under all circumstances.\u2019 Warren, O.\u2014Telephone operators end strike with wage increases, restoring service to this steel strike city\u2019s forty thousand citizens.Bay City, Mich.\u2014Settlement of Bay Manufacturing Company C.I.O.auto workers strike reached after all-night conference, averting threatened \u201clabor holiday\u201d in city.FRENCH SENATE STUDIES BLUM FINANCE BILL Cabinet Hopes that Measure Establishing Virtual Financial Dictatorship Will Pass Upper House Before Week-End.Paris, June 17.\u2014 Premier Leon Blum laid before the Senate Finance Committee tpday the bill which would give him a virtual financial dictatorship, hoping for final parliamentary approval before the week is out.Blunt and his Finance Minister, Vincent Auriol, revamped the arguments, which won the Chamber of Deputies\u2019 sanction yesterday morn-I ing after an all-night session and a near collapse of the Government, for personal presentation to the Senate body.Political sources forecast the Senate would second the Chamber's approval without bringing repetition of the governmental crisis, although some Senators were, expected to oppose the measure and there may be amendments, The measure would give the Government the right to take any financial action it wishes up to July 31, merely by issuing decrees and not waiting for parliamentary approval.Later parliament would have an opportunity to approve or nullify the action.Blum and Auriol hold they must have the extraordinary nower to meet the problem of an expected deficit of $1,76(1,000,900 in the regular and extraordinary expenditures for the year.URGES CURB AGAINST LEWIS UNAMERICANISM Johnstown, Pa., June 17.\u2014 The $7-5'0.000-a-day steel strike twisted itself today into a question-mark that pointed toward Washington.Would the U.S.President intervene?Would Congress or some other agency of Government swing an Alexandrian sword to cut the knot of deadlock?Before President Rooesvelt today was the message of Johnstown\u2019s mayor, Daniel Shields, charging the strikers had resorted \u201cto the most dastardly crime\u201d of kidnapping.\u201cSave our homes by discouraging Mr.John L.Lewis against such un-Americanisms,\u201d the message said.Lewis was in Chicago.Tonight he will tell as many people as crowd into Chicago\u2019s stadium just what his new labor movement, the C.I.O., intends to do next.C.O.Weaver, member of the American Federation of Labor executive committee, referring to Lewis at Louisville, Ky., as: \u201cAmbitious as Julius Caesar, as autocratic as Louis XIV, as ruthless as death.\u201d Ohio\u2019s Goveimor Martin L.Davey.his own peace efforts having proved futile, considered seriously the idea of appealing to the White House, plants of Youngstown Sheet and He is deeply concerned because Tube and Republic Steel in the Please Turn to Page 2, Col.3.Far Flung Empire Prepares To Mark Centennial Of Its Greatest Queen Laurel Wreaths and Great Bouquets to Brighten Queen Victoria\u2019s Statues Next Sunday, Marking Hundredth Anniversary of Day She Ascended the Throne.AMELIA EAUHART LANDED AT CALCUTTA TODAY Calcutta, India, June 17.\u2014Amelia Earhart landed her plane hero today after a 1,850-mile hop across India from Karachi.The flier is making a leisurely flight a round the world.London, June 17,\u2014Laurel wreathsi and great bouquets will bright-j en Queen Victoria's statues; next Sunday\u2014one hundredth anni- ; versary of the day an eighteen-year- ! old princess was wakened to learn j she was a queen.Wreaths will be j placed at statues opposite Buckingham Palace, at Temple Bar and I facing St.Paul\u2019s, marking the cen- j tenary of the young woman whoj now has more sculpture in her honor! in the Empire\u2019s capital than any j hero or king.Yet one hundred years ago Vic- j toria\u2019s coronation\u2014a year after her; accession\u2014occurred with pageantry j curtailed because conservative peers j did not consider too much public! acclaim \u201cdelicate\u201d for a young! woman.That was the accepted attitude of! the time, and the youthful Queen\u2019s own feeling.She lived to see her golden and diamond jubilees celebrated spontaneously with a fervor never before known in England.Conservative in thought, Victoria \u2014perhaps unconsciously\u2014sped the advance of the machine age by merely pursuing what she considered her duties as a queen.Her patronage called wide attention in their early days to the railway, telegraph and telephone.For instance she abetted the railway in its battle with the stage coach when she rode by rail from Windsor to Paddington in 1842.Railways had first been built in England in 1825 and did not really win out until seven years after they reached London in 1838, but Royal patronage did much to advertise their advantages and dispel fears of unsafety.Introduction of telegraphy got.wide publicity when the Queen received congratulations by that means from Napoleon III on the relief of Lucknow.So also in 1858 when the first cable was established between America and the United Kingdom, the Queen sent elaborate congratulations to President James Please Turn toîPage 2.Col.4. PAGE TWO SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1937.JAPAN REJECTS FINAL APPEAL ON LIMITATION ____ | In Rejecting Roosevelt Plea for Fourteen-Inch Maximum Gun Size, Japan Contends Proposal Will Not Achieve Real Disarmament.: ABERHART REGIME IS HOLDING ONTO POWER Alberta Legislature Will Tonight Prorogue Until Autumn When Major Douglas Will Come to Canada.Tokyo, June 17.\u2014An authoritative source asserted today Japan] had decided to refuse a secret pro- j posai made by President Roosevelt ] for the limitation of naval arma- ] ment to guns of 14-inch calibre.The substance of the Japanese! reply to what was described as the j United States President\u2019s \u201clast! appeal\u201d was expected to be that) Japan adheres to the point of view , that reduction of gun calibres from ! sixteen to fourteen inches would not j achieve real disarmament.Japan would insist, this source j said, that genuine arms reduction ! could be obtained only through ! quantitative curtailment.President Roosevelt was said to j have suggested the reduction j through United States Ambassador j Joseph Grew at the request of Great Britain.Great Britain was reported to have felt Japan was more likely to agree to a limitation to 14-inch guns if a \u201clast appeal\u201d was made by the United States.Edmonton, June 17.\u2014 The Alberta Legislature stood ready to ¦prorogue tonight until the autumn when Major C.H.Douglas, British economist, may be here to supervise introduction of a Social Credit financial system.The Legislature met with two violent factions in the Social Credit party, loyalists and insurgents.It closes with outward evidence of peace and the Aberhart Government safely in power.Seven Social Credit members have not signed pledges to support the economic planning board established by the government and which hopes to hire Major Douglas in a month or two.But seven insurgents are vastly different from twenty to twenty-five who were at open war with the government when the House re-assembled June 7.The man credited with solidifying the party is G.F.Powell, agent of Major Douglas, who arrived here a week ago to look over the situation.From the day he arrived, he preached party unity and apparently he was successful.NEWSPAPER DENIES GUADALAJARA ROUT Popolo d\u2019ltalia Denied that Italian Soldiers Had Retreated in Headlong Flight and Blamed Commanders for Withdrawal.ST.HYACINTHE SILK MILL WORKERS QUIT Refusal of Company to Implement Terms of Contract Caused Walk-Out of 250 Employees in St.Hyacinthe Factory.Rome, June 17,\u2014Italy\u2019s black-shirted legions in Spain were not routed in the Guadalajara fighting of last March but suffered \u2018'hundreds ^ and hundreds of dead\u201d and two thousand wounded through a \"grave error\u201d by their commanders, the Popolo DTtalia said today.In a long article devoted to the Guadalajara battle the newspaper oen:ed Italian soldiers had abandoned their weapons and retreated in Headlong flight which was described tn the foreign press as a \u201cSecond Caporetto.\u201d (Caporetto was the scene of a, rout of the Italian army during the Great War).Th-; Italian troops \u201cadvanced*forty kilometers {twenty-five miles) under extremely difficult conditions and were fighting heroically, hut their commanders committed a grave error in ordering them to withdraw, ' the Fascist organ said.St.Hyacinthe, Que., June 17.\u2014 Two hundred and fifty silk workers in this Bagot County town, employee» of Consolidated Silk Mills, Ltd., were on strike yesterday as the result of a wage dispute with their employers.Claiming the company had failed to recognize a signed agreement made last September promising increased wages, the workers, members of a company textile syndicate, left their machines after a committee had tried twice, unsuccessfully, to interview Maurice Bernstein, manager, with whom they had made the agreement.BRAZIL IS ADDED TO FAVORED COUNTRIES Order.-in-Ccuncil Places Brazil on Favored Nation Basis with Four Other South American Republics that Enjoy Lowest Tariff Rates.Roosevelt Intervention Offers Sole Possibility Of Solving Steel Strike | Continued from Page 1.Mahoning valley remain closed.\u201cBack-to-work\u201d movements in Youngstown thus far have been un-j successful.Their leaders were told | by President Frank Purnell, of Youngstown Sheet and Tube yesterday that the plants could not be opened until there was solid assurance that lives and property would be protected by the authorities.Bethlehem Steel\u2019s quick \u201cno\u201d to a C.I.O.proposal for an exclusive bargaining agency vote among the 15,000 workers of its Cambria works in Johnstown, was accompanied by the charge that C.I.O.had brought \u201cdisorder and anarchy\u201d to the city.Johnstown now has a civilian \u201carmy\u201d of four hundred men, in addition to the regular police force and in two hundred state policemen sent in by Governor George H.Earle.There has risen opposition, however, to the Mayor\u2019s plan to enroll three thousand American Legionnaires for the preservation of order.At Indianapolis, Harry W.Col-mery.Natiqnal Commander of the American Legion, said the Legion \u201cis not a strike-breaking organization.\u201d The problem of the preservation of peace in strike-affected communities has been met in various ways\u2014 by vigilantes, state police and even\u2014as at Monroe, Mich., last Sunday\u2014by calling out troops.At Lansing, Mich., the formation of a \u201cLaw and Order League\u201d was announced yesterday in full page newspaper advertisements.Bay City, Mich., authorities solved the peace problem last night with baseball bats which they provided for use by fifty-three special police who were sent to see that no violence occurred at the Bay Manufacturing Co., a subsidiary of the Electric Auto-Lite Co.Homer Martin, international president of the United Automobile TYorkers Union\u2014a C.I.O.organization\u2014 announced today after an all-night conference that a settlement had been reached with officials of the company, and that the men would return to work at once.Announcement of the terms was delayed.The agreement averted a threatened \u201clabor holiday\u201d in Bay City.The union had sought a bargaining contract\u2014the same point of dispute which brought about the steel strike.As a prelude to tonight\u2019s Lewis mass meeting in Chicago, C.I.O.leaders arranged a twenty-mile parade, winding up at the stadium where the meeting is to be held.Far-Flung Empire Prepares To Mark Centennial Of Its Greatest Queen AUSTRALIAN BILL TO IMPLEMENT STATUTE Measure to Be Introduced into Australian Parliament Giving Approval to Statute of Westminster Establishing Dominion\u2019s Autonomy.Canoerra.June 17,\u2014A tu.i approving the Statute of Westminster, î«\u20ac.v\"i .wh:.cît ze-cognizes the status dominions as defined by the Imperia; Conference of 192^ w\u201d\u2019 t>e introduced :n the Australian Parliament by the Governmer-The move\u2018was announced\u2019in the Speech from the Throne, read at the opening of Parliament todav by th-Governor Genera; Lord Cowrie.An ear.y conference with the states of .ne Commonwealth in regard to nat-insurance ait ïuranc id owed in th< vas lore- Ottawa, June 17.\u2014 Brazil was added today to the long list of countries enjoying most favored nation treatment under the Canadian customs tariff by an Order-in-Couneil just announced.The change puts Brazil, which has for some time accorded Canadian imports the benefit of her minimum tariff, on the same basis as four other South American xepufciics which were previously on the most favored nation basis.These countries, on exports to Canada, receive the lowest tariff rate accorded any foreign country under any trade treatv.Previously Brazil had received the Canadian intermediate tariff, in many eases higher than the treaty rates.The balance of trade in recent years nas been about four to one in favor of Canada.That is, Cana-d.an exports to Brazil have been about four times as large as Brazilian exports to Canada, JURY PLEADS MERCY FOR YOUNG SLAYER Tommy Smith, Nineteen-Year Old \u201cModel\u201d Newsboy, Found Guilty of First Degree Murder in Knife Killing of Girl.Continued from Page 1.Buchanan, arousing interest on both sides of the Atlantic.Disapproving of frivolous conversation and happiest in the country life of Balmoral, Queen Victoria yet gave her approval to introduction of penny postage stamps in 1840, and the telephone, invented by Bell in 1876, was one of the wonders at the Crystal Palace Exhibition during her reign.Photography benefited from the fact the Queen was frequently photographed, and moving pictures were brought to England in time for pictures to be taken of Victoria driving in London, electric light came about 1880, and the first Bentley Daimler automobile\u2014in 1885\u2014was also a product of Victorian times.Victoria never realized her own position gave advocates of women\u2019s rights thcV strongest argument.So definitely anti-feminist she even opposed the marriage of widows, she was thoroughly disinterested in greater emancipation of woman, yet in 1882 her signature was placed on the \u201cWomen\u2019s Property Act,\u201d for the first time entitling married women to the management of their own money and land.The Queen was never absorbed in literature, but compulsory elementary education came into being in England in her time.Kipling -was never forgiven for calling her \u201cThe Widow of Windsor,\u201d but she complimented Browning on his wife\u2019s poetry and sent Dickens a volume of her own writings called \u201cLeaves\u201d inscribed \u201cFrom the humblest of writers to the greatest.\u201d Domestic life interested Victoria more than inventions, even more than politics, and in it she found her greatest success.Three of her children will celebrate her centenary.Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll, who was in Canada during her husband\u2019s term as Governor-General, recently journeyed to London from her country home to be present at a charity affair.A statue of the Queen by this sculptress daughter stands outside Royal Victoria College in Montreal.The Duke of Connaught, Victoria\u2019s remaining son, is recovering from illness, while Princess Beatrice, mother of the former Queen of Spain, celebrated her eightieth birthday by attending a London fashion show.So by the closest of ties London today is linked with Victoria\u2019s London, and when floral and oratorical tribute is paid, her family will note extension of the progress given impetus during the longest reign in British history.Radio will carry the sound of celebration to the corners of the Empire, airplanes will take letters in a few days to countries it took months to reach in Victoria\u2019s day\u2014all of which might or might not amaze the conservative but conscientious Queen who just by doing her duty quickened England\u2019s interest in scientific and social discovery.FOB VO UR HEALTH TAKE BENOL w\u201e.WE.D'crvES'\tHERBAL.Urff rf-»ïr.',-J8EI>I;CED UNTIL ITS FULL CURATIVE STRENGTH HA^ BFF\\ EXTRACTED.BENOL .Vo.1\u2014Stomach trouble., IriSires-tiOM, Faulty digïütioî,, Dy.ucp.ia, Acidity, n-cr comJiîKmj, Jaundice, BiliouneM Scut «tomach, bad breath.Headaches, tl.00.BENOL So.2.Urinary and Bladder trou-nies, Incortmence, bedrrettinj, ÎJ.tiç.BE VOL No.S\u2014Tonic for weak and pale reop.e.Poor appetite, Impure Mord, pimples, Ecréma, V'ervou» debility, ncoraleia, Itch-ingr.ordinary Affliction» of the skin aieepleaaness due to indigestions.Sl.oo BENOL Vo.4\u2014Against worm» and intes-rinal troubiee.Tape worm and aeaociated condition» auch as conetipafion.Pains in the Inteatinw, tdeansirg of the intestlnei.diarrhea, SI.CiQ.BEVOL So.5\u2014Ageirvt cooghingf, tolds hroncbll'm, whooping coughs, grippe, ordinary troat dSfeea**», aetJuna, hay fever, ratarrh, chest trouble*, eorgesHor*, hoarte-res* of the voice, 11.60.Ori-/\u2014\u2014Rheumal ie pain*, confrac* lion of the ma*de».lege and ©ore feet, limbs, tiiff joints, sore ears, aore buck, warts, etc,.M .60.BENOL OINTMENT\u2014Wound*, cot*, old fore#, scabs, burns, bites.Itches, pimples, fezeroa, chapped hand», bruise# and any iichei or pain#, 56c.IMPORTANT One only trial of these BENOL Medicine#, oils or ointment will sure show enough re-ai-Jt» to give a great encouragement to sick rnd afflicted people, by the results obtained Iry them yourself right now.It is worth it, \u2018 WAR PROGRAMME IN JAPAN CRITICIZED Buffalo, \u2019 X.Y., June 17.\u2014 Supreme Court Justice Samuel J.Harris was faced today with deciding whether he will heed the mercy plea of a jury which acted under a newly written state law in convicting Tommy Smith, nineteen-year-o\u2019d newsboy, of the pocket-knife slaying of pretty Mary Ellen Babcock.Smith, the \u201cmodel boy,\u201d grinned when he heard the foreman last night intone the verdict finding him guilty of first degree murder with a recommendation that \u201che he confined to state\u2019s prison for the rest of his natural life.\u201d Justice Harris, however, need not follow the jury\u2019s recommendation.He will pass sentence next Tuesday.Urges Profits Limitation To Prevent Boom Continued from Page 1.output.Such facts as are now available conclusively show that neither the United States nor Can-! ada have ever produced enough to ; afford to their populations even a Isufficience of essentials.\u201d Strikes Halt Shipbuilding And Shipping Independent Newspaper Mi- Continued from Page 1.yako Dissatisfied with Cab-j'-T ÿ Eaj-fr: steamship vessels nut inet's Acceptance of Finan- cial Demands of Army and! a J\u2022v?n;ï-f0!v; hour strike aboard lUpyw\tj the lines New York hardly nad end- iiavy.\tj with the capitulation of eight _ .\t\u2014~,\tj firemen about whom it revolved be- i'.Kvo.June 17.\u2014 The mdepend- fore Thomas McGowan, agent of the National Maritime Union, affiliated with the Committee for Industrial \u2018We will en: newspaper Miyako today criticized the cabinet\u2019s acceptance of t.se financial demands of tne army and navy as \u2018sacred and irreducible\u201d Dree 1 r rease Japan rhe paper a Organization, announced: up the line\u2019s steamers operating cuities m the I out of New York unless the eight be five-year plan to I men are reinstated.\u201d ctive canac-\t- the Cp.NEW ROCKLAND \u2018Ugh lamer der ns tr >rts anc Î defence omic and ;he countr M of land rv- I p* ; pc JEAN HARLOW\u2019S F.STATE ESTIMATED AT 00.000 Angeles, June 17.-.Jean Her-v, screen actress, left her entire i other, Mrs.Jean Bel- j wed when it was fil- j M.< and Mrs.baby, Hell est?of Mr.Armstrong\u2019s ; Misses Dorcas and Iren onar, ¦ Frazer visit A.Torn Charles Armstrong en, were Sunday isters, Arm- INTERNATIONAL LABOR UNIONS LOGICAL SEQUEL OF INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL Kingston, Ont., June 17.\u2014The international character of the labor movement was called a \u201cnatural development\u201d from the \u201ctruly remarkable\u201d international fluidity of capital today by Ernest Ingles, Canadian vice-president of the International Brotherhood of Diectrical Workers.When employers in a great many i cases were international concerne, | it was natural their employees j should work together in their com-i tnon purpose of obtaining and mak-j ;ng secure a decent standard of citi-; zenship, he told the Conference on | Canadian-American Affairs meet-i ing here.\u201cSome political adventurers have j recently made some political capital ; out of this,\u201d he said.\u201cThere is really nothing unusual in international : affiliations.\u201cIt would seem there is no activi-; ty in Canada of any magnitude in i industrial, financial or sciai life which has not international charac- j teristies.i While wage rates in the United states were not always used in certain industries in Canada, they were a determining factor, he said.\u201cThe 1 international character of the labor movement is of value to the work- F to r.er will : r.Harr in, Mr.C.Jonc sends of f to learn and hope The probate petition did ose the va.ue of the estate id un official; y at $200,000.and aunt, , on Sunday, Mrs.F'razer are very of her continued ill-te will soon be reed to health.Mrs.Irene Allen and son, J.and Mr.A.Remington, of jfield, Mass., returned to their home Monday after a short holiday dis- j Tyler with US BETTER meic GOLD CR CosUltUflfts L 9uièdt Mrs.Allen\u2019 1.L.Miller, and Mrs.Mr.and JI.Hawkins and their\tguest*, Mr\t.and Mrs.E.of Is\tew Hampsh\tire, were eaile the I\tHiiier home\ton Sunday.M (\t\u2022\u2022 and Mrs\t.Miller and \tis, Mrs.I.\tM.Alien, M Tyler\tAiien and\tMr.A.Remin ; called at \u201cBalsam F'arm,\u201d the home | of Mr.and Mrs.M.Watters, also home of Mrs.Christena '4Ê mm i at tne horn Jones.Dr.and M London tiub\t£a*Wi*MtK» London\tMEICHERS DtSTILURIFS LIMITED Dry oin\tMt.nl,»,I tnd Surthitmil», f>,Q, town, I Hu I at Thro* Coitloo Ertro Liqueur Ertr* apotlol Whitby Cia: s.R.Stalker and chil-Merrill and Marion, of Orms-Mr.and Mrs.A.Ewen and hi;dren, Mrs.A.Jobe!, of ooke, and Mrs.Lackie, of \u2019, Alta., were Sunday callers home of Mr.and Mrs.James Ad» Conflicting Theories Advanced in Disappearance Of New York Matron Continued from Page 1.tention to a spot about 2,fX)0 yards from the house where an odor indicating the presence of a body was dcftfiotYdd.MANY SUFFERING FROM PTOMAINE POISONING Edmonton, June 2 7.- Twenty-seven persons, suffering from ptomaine poisoning believed the result of eating tainted head cheese, were being treated today in four hospitals here and city health department officials broadcast a warning against certain food.JAIL FOR GERMAN OFFICEHOLDERS WHO ASSOCIATE WITH JEWS Berlin, June 17.\u2014German Government official?will be sent to jail in the future if they or any members of their families associate with Jews, office-holders were advised by police in a formal notice today.fiie decree made only two exception».Office holders may associate th Jew reasons of official MY FAILED TO REACH VERDICT IN LIBEL CASE Case of Montreal Man Against Quebec City Weekly Newspaper Editor Put Over Until Fall Session of Assizes.Montreal, June 17.\u2014A deadlocked jury last night ended the criminal libel trial of youthful Paul Bouchard, editor of the Quebec City weekly, \u201cLa Nation.\u201d The jury was discharged by Mi'.Justice Wilfrid Lazure after fifty minutes of disagreement, and the case moved down to the September term of the Court of King's Bench, after the foreman had reported a verdict appeared impossible.Bouchard, wndting in his weekly \u201cLa Nation,\u201d is alleged to have imputed to Real Denis a connection with the death of Frawas Gagalas, whose body was found below Montreal\u2019s City Hall steps the morning of the last civic election.The tw'enty-nine year old Denis, who said he was one of Mayor J.A.Raynault\u2019s election workers,, took the stand yesterday and said he had not been in charge of an election night garage meeting at which a man was .assaulted.The beaten man, he testified was Ernest Cardinal.Another witness, burly Gerard Tremblay, testified he had beaten Cardinal at the meeting.Denis denied also that he had \u2018raided\u201d the Quebec office of Paul Gouin, Action Liberal Nationale leader and that he had ever been employed by or received money from Premier Duplessis.Pitiful Conditions In Besieged Basque Capital Described Continued from Page 1.ing to Santander in trucks, carts and on foot, and forced the fleeing inhabitants to return to their shell-wrecked homes.Within Bilbao, whole houses were destroyed by twelve-inch shells from the insurgents\u2019 heavy guns.Refugees said the scene was horrible, while the wounded pinned beneath wreckage screamed for help.General Fidel Davila, Franco\u2019s northern commander, ordered his artillery brigades to move up their heavy, long-range guns to new positions to cover the advance of his main body and to lay down a barrage over the town from the hills west of the city.Santander advices said four of Franco\u2019s planes were shot down yesterday when they swooped over the besieged city, dropping bombs and leaflets.Government losses were reported by the insurgents to have been enormous in yesterday\u2019s action.OPENING AND NOON QUOTATIONS ON MONTREAL AND NEW YORK MARKETS MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE stock exchanges are furnished by McManamy & W Open High Bathurst.Bell Telephone.« .Brazilian.Can.Cement., Can.Cement Pfd.Can.Car & Fdy.Can.Hydro Elec.Pfd.Can.Industrial Alcohol \u201cA\u201d Can.Pacific.Con.Smelters .\u2022\u2022\u2022 Dom.Tar .Dom.Steel & Coal \u201cB\u201d .Gen.Steel Wares Gypsum Co.Hollinger Consol.Howard Smith .Imperial Tobacco Imperial Oil .Inter.Pete .International Nickel \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022«\u2022\u2022¦\u2022\u2022* \u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 *\u2022 167 24 16% 103% 15% 77 5% 12% 76 13% .17% 12% 12 11% 29 14% 20% 33% 56% Massey Harris .* .12 McColl-Frontenac ., Montreal Power .National Breweries ________ Noranda .59 9% 30 »\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 Quebec Power 17% St.Lawrence Corp.12% St.Lawrence Corp.Class \u201cA\u201d St.Lawrence Paper pfd.33% 90 Shawinigan .26V2 4% Winnipeg Electric \u201cA\u201d 18 167 24 16% 103% 15% 77 5% 12% 76 13% 17% 12% 12 11% 29 14% 20% 33% 56% 12 9% 30% 3*9% 59 17% 12% 33% 90 26% 4% NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Open High Air Reduction 66 Allied Chemical.216 Am.Can.Am.Sugar .Am.Smelting 90% 40% 83% Am.T.and T.».- 164% Anaconda Copper Atchison .Balti.& Ohio .Beth.Steel .Canadian Pacific \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022a a a \u2022 \u2022 *.a a a a a a> a \u2022 *1* \u2022 \u2022a*\t\u2022\u2022a#**#*»»**** 49% 80 26 Vs 79 Vs 12% Lanaaian racuic «saa.* aaaaaaa #a:« \u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022?\tx*' Chesapeake & Ohio.54% Chrysler Com.Solvents 99% 13% Congoleum Co.35% Del.& Hudson 37% Du Pont.150% Erie R.R.14% General Electric.50% General Motors .49 Inter.Harvester.103% Kennecott.:.53% Montgomery Ward .51% North.Pacific.29% N.Y.Central .38% Penn R.R.37 Republic Steel.32% Sears Roebuck.86 Stand.Oil of New Jersey.63% Southern Pacific .44% Texas Gulf Sulphur .34% .Texas Oil Corp.\t.o7 Union Pacific .131 United Aircraft .24% U.S.Ind.Alcohol.31% FASCISTS TO PREVENT BILBAO DESTRUCTION With Insurgents at Bilbao\u2019s Edge, June 17.\u2014Insurgent shock troops fully equipped for street fighting, were massed at the outskirts of Bilbao today for a quick assault at the first word the Basque defenders were dynamiting their capital.Generalissimo Francisco Franco\u2019s carefully drawn military plans to occupy Bilbao only after the city had been completely surrounded might have to be scrapped, insurgent of' ficers said, to save the city from itself.Along the insurgent front line, from Dos Caminos, just southeast of the city, to the Bay of Biscay, ran an excited rumor that the Basque and tOreir Asturian allies were planning to destroy the rich industrial capital rather than let it fall into the hands of the insurgent invaders.An artillery officer declared or ders had been issued not to destroy the city with shells.\u201cBilbao will not be touched with our guns,\u201d he said.\u201cWe do not want to occupy a city of ruins.But if we see dynamiters starting to work down there, we will risk everything and send in all available troops to halt the destruction.\u201d Insurgent commanders expressed the hope, however, they could delay the occupation of the city until the two columns working around the city from the north and south had completed the encircling movement and swept the western highlands clear of the Basques who had dug in there for a last stand.The way was clear into Bilbao from the east.MANY FRANCO LEADERS CONDEMNED TO DEATH St.Jean-de-Luz, F\u2019ranco-Spanish Border, June 17.\u2014 Generalissimo Francisco Franco was reported today to have condemned Manuel I led ilia, former Fascist chieftain, to death for conspiring against the head of the insurgent Spanish regime.Diplomatic dispatches said eighty other Fascist party chiefs were tried by court martial at the same time.Of these, fourteen were said to have been sentenced to die with their leader, twenty were given life imprisonment at bard labor and the others were ordered deported to Spanish Guinea in West Africa.In addition to Hedilla, who brought the greatest number of supporters to Franco\u2019s ranks, the Fascist leaders of Salmanca, Mur-gos, Toledo and the Province of Vizcaya were reported among those sentenced to die on charges that included \"conspiracy against the security of the country and the state.\u201d Diplomatic circles here advanced the opinion Franco would probably commute the death sentences to life imprisonment and.should the insurgents win the civil war, include the.prisoners In a genenil amnesty.U.S.Rubber U.S.Smelting U.S.Steel .Westinghouse , Western Union .52 Woolworth .45% Warner Bros.12 55 81% 93% a?v.66 21115 90% 40% 83% 164 y2 49 Vi 80 26% 79% 12% 54% 100% 13% 36% 37% 160% 14% 50% 49 103% 53% 51% 29% 39 37 32 Vi 83 63% 44% 34% 67 131 24% 31% 56 Vi 81% 94% 132% 52 45 Vs 12 id New York alsh :\t Low\tNoon 18\t18 167\t167 24\t24 16\t16 108%\t103% 15%\t16% 77\t77 5%\t5% 12 Vi\t12% 75\t75 13%\t13% 17%\t17% 12%\t12% 12\t12 \u201d 11%\t11% 29\t29 14%\t14 Vi 20%\t20% 33%\t33% 55%\t56% 11%\t12 9%\t9% SO\t30 39%\t39% 58 %\t58% 17 Vs\t17% 12\t12 33%\t33% 90\t90 26%\t26% 4%\t4% Low\tNoon 65\t66 2-15\t215 90%\t90% 37\t37 81%\t82 164%\t164% 48%\t48% 78%\t78% 26\t26% 78\t79 12%\t12% 52\t52 98%\t98% 13 Vi\t13% 34%\t36% 37%\t37% 160\t150 14%\t14% 50\t50 48%\t48% 102%\t102% 52%\t52% 50%\t50% 28%\t28% 37%\t38% 37\t37 31%\t32 ¦ 84%\t84% 63%\t63% 44%\t44% 34%\t34% 66%\t56% 130%\t130% 23%\t23% 31%\t31% 53%\t54 78\t78 92\t93 132\t132 49% 45% 11% 49% 45% 11% MONTREAL CURB MARKET QUOTATIONS The following quotations of today\u2019s prices on the Montreal Curb Market are furnished by McManamy & Walsh: Open High Low Noon Abitibi Pfd.\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\t\u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022«\t59%\tvJ 72 60\t69%\t59% B.A.Oil .\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\t\t23\t23%\t23\t23 Cons.Paper \t\t\t\t\t\t17\t17 Vs\t16%\t16% Dunnacona \u201cA\u201d\t\t\t\t16\t16\t15%\tlo% Ford of Canada \u201cA\u201d\t\t\t21%\t22\t21%\t22 Fraser Co.V.T\t\t\t44%\t44%\t44 Vi\t44 V2 Price Bros\t\t\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\t41\t41\t41\t41 Royahte Oil\t\u2022\u2022«:«\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\t\u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022.\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\t42\t42\t42\t42 \t\t21\t21\t21\t21 TORONTO\tMINING EXCHANGE\t\t\t\t The following quotations of today\u2019s prices cm the Toronto Mining Exchange are furnished by Langevin & Company, members of the Montreal Stock Exchange and Montreal Curb Market, 22 Wellington St.North.Yesterday\u2019s business, or may consult a Jewish physician in a case involving danger of death.Aldermac.:.Base Metals.Big Missouri.Central Patricia.Chibougamau .Chromium .Coniaurum.Dome Mines.Eldorado .Falconbridge.God\u2019s Lake .Hardrock Gold.Hollinger.Howey Gold .Jackson Manion.Kirkland Lake .Little Long Lac.Lake Shore .Macassa .Malartic Canadian.McIntyre .McKenzie Red Lake.Mining Corp.Noranda .O\u2019Brien Gold .Paymaster.Perron Gold .Preston E.Dome .Red Lake Gold Shore.Shawkcy .Sherri tt .Siscoe Gold.San Antonio.Rtadacona .Sullivan Mines.Sylvanite.Thompson Cadillac.Teck Hughes.Towagamack.Ventures.Wright Hargreaves.OILS - Alberta Iticific .Calmont.Commonwealth .Dalhousis .Foundation .Home Oil.Mercury.United Oils .Close\tOpening\tNoon 1.00\t1.00\t1.00 .30\t.30\t.30 .45\t.45\t.45 2.85\t2.80\t2.80 1.15\t1.10\t1.10 .80\t.80\t.80 1.10\t1.10\t1.10 10\t40\t40 2.60\t2.65\t2.30 7.25\t7.25\t7.25 .46\t.47\t.47 1.42\t1.41\t1.38 1%\t11%\t11% .37\t.37\t.37 .23\t.22\t.22 1.28\t1.29\t1.28 5.25\t5.15\t5.15 17%\t48\t47% 5.00\t5.05\t5.00 1.15\t1.11\t1.10 13%\t33%\t33% 1.20\t1.20\t1.20 2.90\t2.80\t2.81 18%\t59\t58% 8.10\t8.05\t7.75 .63\t.53\t.53 .96\t.96\t.96 .85\t.81\t.80 .37\t.36\t.36 .52\t.51\t.52 2.46\t2.41\t2.41 3,60\t3.55\t3.55 1.40\t1.40\t1.40 1.42\t1.42\t1.42 1.30\t1.28\t1.28 3.10\t3.10\t3.10 .66\t.65\t.88 4.80\t4.80\t4.80 1.00\t1.00\t1.00 7.50\t7.50\t7.50 6.00\t6,00\t6.00 .46 Vz\t.46 Va\t.46% .84\t,83\t.79 .48\t.48\t.48 1.09\t1.03\t1.03 .40\t.38\t.38 2.50\t2.45\t2.38 .41\t.41\t.41 .35 %\t.*)\u2022>\t.32% A HEALTH BEVERAGE THAT IS DELIGHTFUL Everyone wants to maintain-health and avoid illness.A pleasant way to do both is to drink Porter, with one\u2019s meals.It is a most agree-; able drink, appetizing and strength-, ening.From the moment you sip the; creamy richness of Boswell Cream Porter, you will like its stimulating flavor.Of course, it is the product of Canada\u2019s oldest brewery, made in the old-fashioned way from the finest hops and roasted barley.You will agree that it is a most delight-/ ful health beverage.Country and Dairy Products Prices Montreal, June 17.\u2014Local produce markets ruled steady to firm on all lines except new potatoes, which again declined.There were so sales at tho Canadian Commodity Exchange.Spot Quebec fresh 92 score butter was quoted there at the close at 25c to 25Vie, while butter futures were unchanged at 25c to 25 %c for Junes and 26c to 26%c for Novembers.The open market on butter was generally 25 %c.Small lots to the retail trade were quoted by jobbers at 26c for solids and 26 %c for prints.The cheese market was generally quoted in the afternoon at 15% c to 15Vic for No.1 Ontarios and 14%c for No.1 Quebecs.The egg market had a firmer undertone on top grades, with receipts lighter.Graded shipments were selling on spot in used free cases at 21c for A-large, 19c to 19%c for A-medium, 19c for B and 18c for C.Offerings were posted at the Canadian Commodity Exchange at 21c f/r A-large, 19 %c for A-medium and 18c for C.Small lots to the retail trade were quoted by jobbers as follows: A-l large .A-l medium A-large .A-medium , .B .C .Cartons Loose 27-28c 24-25c 24-25c 22-23c 21-22c 20-21c 2 3-2 4 c 21-22c 20-21c 19-20c The potato market was quoted as follows: N.B.Mountains, 80 lbs,, No, 1, 80c to 90c; Quebec Mountains, No.1, 80 lbs., 70c to 75c; No.2, 60c to 65c; P.E.I.Mountains, No.1, 90 lbs., $1 to $1.10; white, 90c to 95c; New Virginias, No.1, per bbl., $4.75 to $5.00; No.2, $3.75 to $4.00; North Carolinas, bags, No.1 $2.50.The poultry market was quoted by wholesale houses on small lots to the retail trade as follows for A-grade, with B-grade 2 cents per lb.less.Per lb.Turkeys .24-28c Milkfed chickens.25-28c Selected chickens.23-26c Domestic Ducks .15-20c Geese .15-18c Selected fowl .16-21c PHOTOGRAPH TO RECALL ALL-TIMED LARK Windsor, Berkshire, June 17.\u2014 Forty years ago four Eton boys planned a lark.They dressed up as heralds to give Queen Victoria a surprise fanfare as she drove to Windsor.But their timing was at fault.They sounded the fanfare a few seconds before the Queen drove by.The other day the four boys \u2014 now Lord Vivian.Lord Francis Scott, Colonel II.Bryce Jones and Colonel E.L\u2019Estrange Malone \u2014 met in a Windsor photographer\u2019s shop and had their nicture taken to celebrate the anniversary.Moving Out To The Lake?STORE VALUABLES HERE Just pack your silverware.heirlooms, valuable pictures and other bulky articles and leave them here for the sum- mer.The charge is only a few cents a month.SHERBROOKE TRUST COMPANY I SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD.THURSDAY.JUNE 17, 1937.PAGE THREE iNsrmrrE at SPOONER POND HELD SESSION Cross-Word Puzzle The Picture 1» That of a Woolly Animal Many Interesting Topics Discussed at Regular Session of Women\u2019s Institute at Spooner Pond.Spooner Pond, June 17.\u2014 The Spooner Pond Women\u2019s Institute met at the home of Miss Alida Lampron for the June meetinig with a good attendance.Mrs.F.A.Blanchard, vice-president, and Mrs.Clara J.Hannan assistant secretary-treasurer, conducted the meeting in the absence of the president and secretary, Mrs.R.Lampron and Mrs.J.F.Noble.The usual procedure followed.A report was given on the card party held during the month and on the prizes given in School No.7 in history, reading, attendance and French.Mrs.R.L.Rodgers, who was appointed as a delegate to the Provincial convention, will be unable to attend and Mrs.F.A.Blanchard ¦was chosen to go in her place.It was decided to hold the meetings in the evening instead of afternoon.The hostess to serve sandwiches and coffee only.The matter of purchasing library books was left to a later date.Miss Hilda Lampron, convener of agriculture read a very interesting and instructive paper on \u201cThe Method of Controlling the Cabbage Maggot\u201d and \u201cHome Storage of Winter Vegetables\u201d and also demonstrated her home vegetable garden, which is tha best in the district.General Notes.Mrs.R.L.Rodgers and little son, Lawrence, spent a few days with Mr.and Mrs.Charles Lampron, \u2018Richmond.The closing picnic of School No.7 was held in the schoolhouse as the day was wet, but the pupils and guests present spent an enjoyable time.Reports and prizes were distributed and a splendid lunch served.The pupils received many nice gifts from their teacher, Miss M.Robinson, who was also remembered by her little flock and has since returned to her home in Cleveland.Mrs.F.H.Perkins, of Asbestos, was a recent guest at the homes of HORIZONTAL 1 Pictured ruminant.6 Its meat is called -.12\tAbnormal tissue mass.13\tOn the shore.14\tTo maltreat.15\tTo seesaw.16\tCredit.17\tGod of love.21 Solitary.24 Nose opening.27 Types of this animal.29 Advantage.beetles.31 Shoe bottoms.51 Arabian.Answer to Previous Puzzle SHERLOCK HOLMES 32\tBone.33\t3.1416.34\tDry.36\tPreposition.37\tEll.39\tThief.40\tExists.42\tMusical note.43\tWine vessel.44\tSpain.46\tAfternoon.47\tUlcer.49 Genus of 53\tCircular fortification.54\tWraths.55\tTo rent.56\tIts - is valuable for wool (pi.).57\tMesh of lace.58\tIts \u2014\u2014- is used for leather (pi.).VERTICAL 1\tFlower part.2\tWheel part.3\tMooley apple.41 Song for one 18\tBark exterior.19\tHops kiln.20\tPace.21\tLively tune.22\tUnit.23\tSnoul 25\tTo lift up.26\tStructural unit.28 Bellows.30 Number of reams in a lot of paper.32 It belongs to the genus- 34\tSailor.35\tAny red wine, 38 Its young >is called a \u2014\u2014.4\tAurora.5\tAnimal victim.6\tFire lighters, 7\tConsumer.8\tDefinite article.9\tChild.10\tNative metal.11\tBands of nervous tissue.voice.42 To slumber.45\tSanskrit dialect.46\tHead of a person.48\tInlet.49\tMeasure of area.50\tLike.52 Scarlet.ia Î7 |IÔ [i9\tf?0 r- 133 \u202247 4Ô 155 \t34\t\t35\t \t\t\t\t \t43\t\t\t 49\t\t\t\t50 54\t\t\t\t \t57\t\t\t 6\t7\ta\t9\t10\tII 15\t\t\t\t\t 15\t\t\t\t\t 16\t\t\t\t\t \t\t£1\t\tS3\t \tea\t\t\t\t j 51\t\t\t\t\t 3e> EATON COUNCIL MARTINV,LLE PLANS BUYING OF GRAVEL PIT Arrangements Also Made for Reconstruction of Bridge at Recent Session of Eaton Township Council.Eaton, June 17.\u2014The Township i of Eaton will purchase the gravel were Sunday guests of Mrs] Mack pit presently owned by H.V.' anci jir.and Mrs.F.Parker, Weston, the councilors decided at j- their regular June session held un- Mr.and Mrs.J.Butler, of Spring-field, Mass., were recent week-end guests of the former\u2019s parents, Mr.and Mrs.E.Butler.Other guests at the same home were Mrs.T.A.Butler and Mr.Lloyd Butler, of Sand Hill.Mr, and Mrs.C.A.Butler and daughters, Freda and Mary, Mr.W.Maréchal, of Lennoxville, Miss D.Miller, of Sherbrooke, and Mr.E.Martin, of Stanstead.Mr.Dan Desruisseaux spent a few days last week visiting relatives at Sand Hill and Sawyerville.Mr.A.Butin had the misfortune to lose a valuable horse recently.Mr.and Mrs.E.Wilson, of Millby, 44 |5l 155 BALDWIN\u2019S MILLS Mr.and Mrs.Harold Baldwin and *\"wo children and Mr.T.Barbour her mother, Mrs.Eva Rodgers, and j we\u2018\u2019® in Stanstead recently, sister Mrs F Taylor\tI Mrs- Cecl1 May and y°ung daugh- ^ Mr.\u2019 and Mrs.F.Taylor and SOns,i Esethf> we« guests of her sister, Orvis and Orin, spent a day with!'^8, Sydney Hall, at Rock Island, Mr.and Mrs.J.F.Noble, Rich-:fo1: a few days, monel Hill\tI\tMargarette Markwell has BISHOPTON Mr.R.Keith Bishop, son of the late Thomas E.Bishop, of Bishop-ton, and of Mrs.H.R.Graves, of Northampton, Mass., is being graduated with honors from Northeastern University in Boston on June 21st.He is leaving on July 1st for Middleton, Ohixi, where he has a posi- -.ttH-V.\tAiviovinan Rolling Mr.and' Mrs.John Hawker, 0f i Sone to spend a few weeks with her tion with the American ,\tm\u2014 u-j vit \u2014\tMills.Asbestos, were Sunday guests\tHoward Woollerton, in Mr.and Mrs.F.A.Blanchard.Sherbrooke.Mrs.Eva Rodgers has returned,) Miss Vera Blake, of Sherbrooke, after spending a few days with her:®Pen*; a,1 her parents, sister, Mrs.W.Rodgers and fam-1 Mr.and Mrs.Matthew Blake, ily and a dav with her aunt, Mrs > Mrs- Joseph White is spending a Sava H Boast\t1 J®\"7 weeks m Montreal with friends.\u2018 Mr.Allen Scrambler, of Asbestos,! rMiss Joyce Wormsley is spending was calling on friends here on Sun-; a ^ Sizes 6 to 8.fcilU WHITE SHOES Sandal, tie and strap styles.Sizes 3 to 8.Smart\t^9 and comfortable.£,i\\J il WHITE SUPS Rayon satin, lace or fagotting trim.Sizes 32 to 44.Tea rose, white.BROADCLOTH SUITS For the 2 to 6 boy.2 pieces\u2014blouse and pants of contrasting 9Qp colors.fcww ORGANDY DRESSES For the 3 to 6 Miss.Plain white with colored trims.\tRQp Special.dwb Enjoy Real freedom in Knee Highs\u2019 c silk circular ankle lifting hose, with added fea-; of snug-fit below the s.Summer dos, Kull-hinn marks.Pair, SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1937.PAGE SEVEN \"S' For a truly delightful and invigorating summer beverage use Lipton's Iced Tea, Tipton's is the choice of leaf tips from the great Lipton Plantations\u2014it's more flavorful, more economical\u2014preferred by tea drinkers the world over.Ta make the best iced tea, ask your grocer for Lipton\u2019s.CARD PARTY AT ST.ARMAND WAS MUCH ENJOYED Highly Successful Event Was Sponsored by Members of Women\u2019s Institute at St.Armand.SAVE \u201côupûss Every 1 lb.and M lb.package of Upton\u2019s contains a valuable coupon.Save these, they are ex changeable for silverplate.Write for premium list today\u2014Thomas J.Lipton Limited, 4} Front Street East.Toetwsto St.Armand, June 17.\u2014The St.Armand Women\u2019s Institute sponsored a very successful card party Friday at the home of Miss Ella Burley and Mr* Lena Symington.Cards were played at thirteen tables and the prizes were awarded Mrs.George Bradley, Mrs.P.C.Luke, Mr.Clifford Dean and Mr.George^ Hayes.Refreshments were served, bringing a very happy evening to a çlose.Mr.and Mrs.L.Poissant and Mr.E.Desranleau motored to Montreal on June 13th to visit the latter\u2019s wife' and infant daughter.Mrs.J.Thomas is representing the St.Armand Women\u2019s Institute at the annual convention held at Macdonald College this week.Mr.Myron Chappie left for his home in Benton, Alberta, on Friday, after spending some time here as a guest of relatives.Miss Agnes Bradley has been a guest of friends in St.Albans, Vt, and while there went to Burlington for a day to visit her niece, Miss Anne Bradley.Mrs.Helen Yates dislocated her shoulder on June ITth, when she fell downstairs.As Mrs.Yates is of Any and all kinds of business\u2014aj cent a word.Record Want Columns, i PLEASE give me BROCK'S To keep Dick Tip Top in Health and Song give him BROCK'S and TREAT containing YEAST STOCK UP I iheCahej&iuéitX I SUMNER HOME* During tho summer you\u2019ll need lots of these refreshing and easily p r e p a r e d AYLMER Soups Tomato & Vegetable 2\t15c ' ,A.'/ ESTASUSHED FOOD stores KELLOGG\u2019S, QUAKER CORN FLAKES RED LABEL LIPTON\u2019S TEA y2-ib.Pkt.2 SUGAR CRISP IIe Pkgs.27' White Naphtha PEARL SOAP Standard PEAS, Tin - Furuco Light Meat TUNA FISH, 7-oz.Tin JEWEL Shortening, 4-Hi.On.53e CATCHUP Libby\u2019s RAISIN SPECIALTY 17 .WAFERS Christie\u2019s Brighton, lb.bars^BC Be 10c ,J3c 2 'S: 25c 12c 18c A&P COFFEE HOT or ICED Is Supreme.BOKAR\t9q\u201e 1 -Hi.Tin .£317 Vigorous & Winey 27c 21c 8 O\u2019CLOCK Mild & Mellow, lb.RED CIRCLE lb.Rich & Full-bodied Vl-IOfS 6-oz.tin 27c;\t12-oz.tin 47c 24-oz.tin 87c;\t48-oz.tin $1.59 CURD\u2019S GINGER ALE, Contents Only, 2 Btls.35c DR.BALLARD\u2019S PET FOODS\t2 tins 29c CANADA CORN STARCH\t2 l\u2019s Pkgs.23c SHIRRIFF\u2019S JELLY POWDERS, Pkg.\t5c QUAKER PUFFED RICE\t2 Pkgs.25c 1 Large Pkg.CHIPSO AND\tBoth For 3 B\u201e?B11SAL09I SOAP 26c POLKS GRAPEFRUIT JUICE, 18 oz.tin, 2 for 25c CREAMY CHOCOLATE ROLL, Christie\u2019s 20c PEARS or PINEAPPLES, Standard, Tin ,10c Emfo or Libby\u2019s Tomato JUICE, large size, 3 for 25c FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES LETTUCE, Iceberg, Local.3 for 11c CABBAGE, Local, Head.2 for 17c FRESH GREEN PEAS .2 lbs.25c ORANGES for Juice, Dozen .21c NEW POTATOES\t.5 lbs.17c A&P FOOD STORES an advanced age, this is causing grave concern.Mrs.Allard and children, ArdellJ and Arnold, of St.Johnsbury, Vt., were recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.C.Dean.Mayor and Mrs.Luke were in Bedford on June 10th, -where the former attended a meeting of the county council.Mr.and Mrs.Clifford Dean and children, Mrs.E.N.Morgan, Mr.and Mrs.George Kidd and Mrs.H.Hastings were recently in St.Johns.Mr.and Mrs.Stanley Cochrane, of Stanbridge East, spent a day with Mr.and Mrs.B.L.Gardner.Mrs.Grace McCutcheon, of West Brome, spent June 12th with Mrs.N.H.Robinson.Mrs.Paradis, of Val d\u2019Or, has been a guest of Mr.and Mrs.R.Bilodeau.Miss Inez McMullen has accepted a school teaching position at Greenfield Park for next school term, Mr.and Mrs.N.H.Robinson and two sons, Kent and Ivan, were Sunday guests of Mr.and Mrs.Neil Baker, Stanbridge Ridge.Mr.and Mrs.E.Hubbard,' of Franklin, Vt., Mi-, and Mrs.Guy Hubbard and son and Mrs.Lena Symington were calling on' MI\u2019S.Helen Yates on Sunday.Mrs.L.B.Russell recently received the sad news of the death of her father, Thomas S.Paterson, who passed away in a hospital at Glasgow, Scotland, at the advanced age of eighty-three years.Mr.Paterson was predeceased by his wife and one daughter.Ten children, many grandchildren and several great grandchildren are left to mourn his loss.Two sons, Robert and James, reside in New York, one daughter in Quebec, and the other four sons and three daughters live in Scotland.Sympathy is extended to the bereaved family in their great loss.Mr.and Mrs.Miles E.Krans motored to Ormstown to attend the Fair on June 9th.They were accompanied by their guest, Mr.Myron Chappie, of Benton, Alta., and by Mr.N.H.Robinson.Mr.Gaspard Poirier had the misfortune to severely injure his hand while cranking his car.Dr.Montgomery found it necessary to put in several stitches to close the wound.Floyd Johnson.A banquet was served to about one hundred members in the dining hall which was tastefully decorated with spring flowers, much credit is due the committee for their excellent work.On behalf of the chapter the Worthy Matron and the Worthy Patron presented gifts to the Worthy Grand Matron and Worthy Grand Patron.Sister Alberta Rowe, Grand Associate Matron, then presented Sister Ethel Mosher, Grand Instructor of District No.2, with a gift.Speech making was then enjoyed from members of the different chapters which brought the evening to a close.The St.George\u2019s Guild met at the home of Mrs.Arlie Hauver on Saturday afternoon with a good attendance of members and several visitors present.After the business part of the meeting refreshments were served by the hostess.Mr, and Mrs.Merton Derick were dinner guests at Mrs.Alex Hunter\u2019s on Sunday.there Sunday.Mrs.F.Tenney, who has been visiting relatives for a few weeks in St.Albans, returned to her home here with her daughter on Sunday.FARNAM\u2019S CORNER COWANSVILLE Miss V.Godden has returned from a two weeks\u2019 vacation- in Knowlton.Mr.and Mrs.George Watts, of Montreal, were week-end guests of Mr.and Mrs.F.Dougali.Mr.Ulric Mc-Crum, of Ottawa, visited his mother, Mrs.Rachel Mc-Crum at \u201cThe Hedges.\u201d CLARENCEVILLE EAST DUNHAM Mr.and Mrs.Z.Delorme were in North Stanbridge on Monday to attend the funeral of Mrs.Daudelin.Mr.and Mrs.C.Chelifoux and Mr.and Mrs.Peter Benjamin were in Cowansville on Monday evening.Mrs.Lyn S-picer was taken to the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal on'Friday.Her friends wish her a speedy recovery.Guests at the home of Mr.C.Chelifoux on Sunday were Mr.and Mrs.James Dymond and family, Mr.Waldo Chaffee and Mrs.Ida Betters, of Enosburg Falls, Vt., and Mr.John Cook, of North Pinnacle.Mr.Roland Selby, of Dunham, was calling on Mr.John Dymon at the home of Mr.C.Chelifoux one day recently.Mr.Albert Johnson has gone to Sutton to visit his daughter, Mrs.Mvhill, and Mr.Myhill.Mrs.Fordys Ingalls and Miss Eunice Harvey spent a recent Sunday with Mr.and Mrs.J.Westover at Frelighs-burg.Mr.and Mrs.A.Lapointe were in St.Hyacinthe for the past week.Mrs.Herbert Perkins.Mrs.Bernice Russell and Miss Eunice Harvey attended the Rebekah Lodge at Dunham on Saturday evening.A poverty social was held in the church hall on Friday evening, with a good attendance.Prizes were won by Mrs.Cecil Bates and Mr.William Jones.Mrs.Herbert Robinson was at the home of Mrs, L.J.Spicer recently.Mr.and Mrs.II.L.Harvey and family spent Sunday with Mr.and Mrs.Henry Cobb at Stowe, Vt., and also called at their old home.Clayton Harvey remained there for a few weeks.GLEN SUTTON Mrs.D.M.Haggarty is caring for Mrs, Francis Haggarty and infant son.The Rt.Rev.John C.Farthing, Lord Bishop of Montreal, held a very impressive service in the Church of the Good Shepherd Wednesday evening, June He was assisted by the Rev.J.E.King, of Mansonville, and the Rev.D.Andrews, of Gharteris.Rev.and Mrs.D.Andrews were unable to return to their homo in Gharteris on Saturday as they had intended to do.on account of the illness of their little daughter, Harriett.Miss Mary Macdonald has pone to Gamp Gould North, New\" Jersey.Mr.O.C.Brock, of Erie, Pa., and Mr.Bruce Ritenburg, of Dunkirk, N.Y., have left for their respective homes after spending ten days here as the guests of Mr, and Mrs.0- A.Brock.Mr.0.B.Wilson attended n recent meeting of the council in Sutton.Mrs.Darling, of Mansonville, is visiting her daughter, Mrs, George Logan.Messrs.Clayton and Francis Haggarty, of Derby, Vt., and Garth Wilson, of Cowansville, spent a weekend at their respective homes.Mr.H.A.D, Somerville of Hcm-mingford, was calling at O.A.Brock\u2019s on Wednesday last.Mrs.Somerville and young son Andrew, who have been visiting here for a \u2022couple of weeks, returned home with him.The Misses Marjorie and Marguerite MeNiield, of Mansonville.Mr.and Mrs.G- E.Jones, formerly of North Troy, were rerent guests at the home of Mr.and Mrs.C.J.Gib-ney.Mrs.Mabel Jones, of Manclies- j 1er, N.H., was the guest of Miss } Bessie Eastman and Mr.Avery :Joncs for a few days, Mr.and Mrs.William Campbell and yopng son, of Montreal, are j visiting Mrs, Campbell's parents, I Mr.and Mrs.C.C.Larocque j Mrs.D.Andrews and Mrs.H.A-j Somerville were calling in Manson-| ville during the past week.GUTHRIE Mr, and Mrs.Frank Clough and family, of Stanbury, were recent Sunday guests of Mr.and Mrs.Fred Clough.Mr.Neil Lagrange motored to Cherry River on Sunday, June 6th, and visited friends.Mr.and Mrs.Milton Stinchom and son, Russell, of Boston, Mass., and Mrs.Freeman Stinehour, of St Albans, Vt, were recently calling on Mrs.Norman Stinehour.Mr.and Mrs.R.M.Townsend and sons, of Sutton, were recent guests at the home of Mr.Neil Lagrange.Mr.and Mrs.George Hayes, Mrs.W.Hayes and Mr.Edwin Rhicard attended the W.I.card party held at the home of Miss Ella Burley, St.Armand, last Friday evening.WEST SUTTON Mr.Wiilliam Salisbury, of Rich-ford, Vt., was a guest of Mr.Frank Robinson for a few days, Mr.Byron Knuckey of Viscount, Snsk., spent a few days here visiting his brother, Mr.William Knuckey, and was a guest of other relatives and friends.Miss Laura Lavery spent the past week in Waterbury, Vt., with her sister, Mrs.E.J.Desnoyea.Miss Violet Frecmentle, of Sutton, was a week-end guest of Miss Jean Naylor.Mr.and Mrs.Thomas O\u2019Brien and son, Ronald, accompanied by Mrs.N.H.O\u2019Brien, Mrs.William Smith and Mrs.H.Righton, of Sutton, motored -to Montreal on Sunday and called on Mr.H.Righton, who is a patient in a military hospital.There they also called on Mr, and Mrs.C.Lapointe and Mrs.Stewart.Mr.and Mrs.Sylvester Fadden wore Sunday guests of Mr.and Mrs.E, J.Leo.Mrs.Mary Page, Mr, and Mrs.R.J.Page and son.Nason, were in Frelighsburg on Sunday as guests of Mr.and Mrs.James Stapenhill.Mr.an! Mrs.George Robinson were in Riehford, Vt., on Friday.Mrs.A, P.Rumsby and family, of Sutton, were Sunday guests of Mr.and Mrs.A.J.O\u2019Brien.Mr.Arlie Rabator, of Sutton, _ is spending an indefinite - time with Mr.TI.Robinson.Mrs.James Stapenhill, of Fre-lighsburg, spent a week with her daughter, Mrs.Mary Page, and fam-ily.Mr.and Mrs.Clare Maeey and daughter, of Frelighsburg, Mr.and Mrs.Clyde Maeey and Mr.Floyd Maeey, of Sutton, were Sunday quests of their parents, Mr.and Mrs.B.L.Maeey.^ Mr.Willis Adcock, of Champlain, N.Y., spent a week-end with his parents, Mr.and Mrs.William Adcock.Miss M.Mackenzie spent a weekend at Montreal.Rev.D.Nelson attended the United Church conference held at Montreal last week and Mr.0.M.Derby attended as a delegate.Several of the ladies attended the annual W.A.district meeting held at Stanbridge East on Thursday of last week.Mr.Frank Derick motored to Montreal on Saturday.Mr.and Mrs.Charles Galentz, of Pittsburg, Pa., have returned to their summer home.Miss Jenne Hunter, of Frelighsburg, is spending a few days with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.A.L.Hunter.Mrs.Herbert Chilton entertained friends at a \u201c500\u201d party on Saturday afternoon.Mr.and Mrs.Maloney and infant son motored to Montreal last Monday.Mrs.Sam Adam was at Mr.and Mrs.p'red Miller's recently.The Ladies\u2019 Aid of the United Church met at the home of Mrs.Clifford Beerwort on Friday afternoon.After the business part of the meeting refreshments were served by the hostess.Mrs.George Derick and Mrs.Ada Bissell are visiting at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Frank Young at Philipsburg.Rev.J.J.S.Seaman and Miss Aiken motored to Montreal Friday.Mr.and Mrs.D.A.Ceilings, of Montreal, were guests at Mr.and Mrs.A.J.Rowe\u2019s on Wednesday.Mr.and Mrs.J.A.Lewis, Mr.Emmett Beerwort and Mr.Willis Beerwort attended Ormstown fair on Wednesday.Mr.and Mrs.H.H.Cooper, of East Angus, were recent guests at the home of Mr.and Mrs.George McKee, also Prof.L.M.Arkley and daughter, Marion, of Kingston and Mr.C.C.Short, of Philadelphia.Mr.William Adcock, of the Canadian Bank of Commerce staff, is leaving for his holidays and is replaced by Mr.Bellsil, of St.Johns.Mr.and Mrs.A.C.Collins, and Mr.and Mrs.A.L.Hunter motored to Ormstown on Thursday where they attended the fair.The Young People\u2019s Society held a weenie roast at Missisquoi Bay on Friday evening.Mrs.A.J.Rowe entertained at two tables of bridge on Wednesday afternoon, June 9.The Misses W.Clarke, M.Mackenzie, R.Tipping.E.Derick and S.Langlois were callers at the home of Mrs.Usher on Sunday afternoon.Mr.and Mrs.Martin Lodge, of Bedford, were week-end guests at Mr.and Mrs.Marshall Young.Mr.and Mrs.Freeman and son, of Point Claire were week-end guests at the rectory, as was Miss Helen Seaman, of Montreal.Miss Ruth Hawley, of Hartford, is spending her holidays with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Charles Hawley.Miss Lily McFce, of Boston, was a guest of Mrs.George McFce.Rev.W.E.Lewis and son, Kenneth, of Friendship, Maine, are visiting at the home of Mr.and Mrs.A.C.Collins.Mr.and Mrs.Robert Hauver and infant son spent a week-end at the home of Mrs.Alex Hunter.Mr.Carlton Green, of Burlington, was a Sunday guest of his sisters, the Misses Minnie and Myrtle Green.Mrs.A.J.Rowe, Mrs.Alice Mosher and Mrs.Morrison motored to Sutton on Friday and were guests of Mrs.Bliss.A special meeting of Lenox Chap-tor No.13 Order of the Eastern Star was held in the Masonic Hall on Wednesday evening, June 9, when the chapter had the pleasure of entertaining the Worthy Grand Matron Sister Mary Morrison and the Worthy Grand Patron Brother EAST FARNHAM Mr.Galbraith spent a day in Montreal.Miss Marjorie Fiddes, of Montreal, wms a week-end guest of Miss Margaret Shufelt.Mr.and Mrs.Rupert Hall and Miss Adelaide, of Farnham, visited Mr.and Mrs.Thomas Hall.Mr.and Mrs.Lawrence Horner, of Brookport, spent Sunday with her parents.Mr.Fred Hymus is improving in health.Mrs.Margaret Teel is able to be up for a short time each day.Mrs.J.L.Dion and infant daughter are making satisfactory progress.Mr.and Mrs.P.W.Taber spent the week-end in Longueuil with Mr.and Mrs.Thompson and Mr.and Mrs.G.Tait.Miss E.Frances Buck, accompanied by Mr.and Mrs.J.Fuller and Miss M.Nunns, of Granby, attended the funeral of Rev.Aaron Wallace, of Sutton.EAST PINNACLE Mr.0.W.Hancock was in Montreal on Saturday.Mr.and Mrs.Frank Butler and infant, of Cowansville, were Sunday visitors at Mr.Carl Frechette\u2019s.Mrs.Charles Barbar and young son, Dana, spent the week-end in St.Albans, Vt.Mr.Barbar motored CONSTIPATION MAY LEAD TO COLDS Every doctor will tell you the first thing to do to avoid suffering from colds\u2014is to be sure you are not constipated.Constipation clogs up the system.It weakens resistance, and infections take hold.End common constipation by eating Kellogg\u2019s All-Bran regularly.This cereal supplies the \u201cbulk\u201d your system needs for normal, natural action.It also gives vitamin B to tone up the intestines\u2014and iron for the blood.In the body, Kellogg\u2019s All-Bran absorbs twice its weight in water.It forms a soft mass, which gently exercises and sponges out the intestines._ Eat two tablespoonfuls a day, either as a cereal with milk or fruits or in cooked dishes.Chronic cases with each meal.Will help you stay regular without having to take pills and drugs\u2014that often make conditions worse.Kellogg\u2019s All-Bran is sold at all grocers.Made and guaranteed by Kellogg in London.£ $\t¦ gy.mMsmm guarante e Oevery bean wgi! j:-:' ¦ ' ' ¦ ¦ \u2022 .C\"-\"' '\t, 'PSk f\t^ \u2022 t\t\\ l * ; \u20191 LI-:.; mü \u201c k ¦ Firm.tenter,\tco^ed \u2022 i sbfoy s Richer, tastieU^J develops cookmg.,^ flavour* liiifcitiiiKfcl By Mew Patented Libby Cooking fVSethod YOU can\u2019t fool \"educated\u201d bean-eaters! That\u2019s why there\u2019s no mystery about the reasons Libby\u2019s Deep-Browned Beans are doing things to the appetites of bean-hungry and bean-wise people the country over.It\u2019s simply the new and exclusive cooking method developed by Libby! That\u2019s the secret of their sensational success! And here\u2019s how it\u2019s done.Libby selects only plump, sound, healthy beans in the very prime of their goodness.Then they are cooked by the new Libby process, and browned through to the very centre \u2014 every last one of them ! They\u2019re not over-done or under-done \u2014 they\u2019re \"done\u201d just right.And here\u2019s what it means to you bean-lovers.You get deeper, richer colour \u2014 warm and inviting; colour that says \"go\u201d to your appetite.You get firmer, more tender texture\u2014yet with the mealy goodness of a well-baked potato.You get finer flavour \u2014 the kind of taste enjoyment you thought had been lost forever, until Libby re-created that glorious old-time baked bean flavour.So from every angle \u2014 colour, texture, flavour \u2014- you\u2019re certain of enjoyment in Libby\u2019s Deep-Browned Beans.If you don\u2019t agree, you\u2019re still a winner\u2014 you can take advantage of Libby\u2019s liberal \"Double Y'our Money Back\u201d offer.Serve Libby\u2019s Deep-Browned Beans tomorrow.You\u2019ll agree that mere words can\u2019t do them justice.Mode in Canada by LIBBY, MCNEILL & LIBBY OF CANADA, LIMITED, CHATHAM, ONT.DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK! If you don\u2019t\tthat Libby\u2019s Deop'Browned Beans are the best you have ever tasted, from the standpoint of: 1* colour; 7.texture; 3.flavour\u2014Libby will pay you DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK.Just tell ua why, Bending the label with your name and address, your grocer\u2019s name and purchase price to Libby, McNeill & Libby of Canada, Limited, Chatham, Ontario.14 KINDS 1.\tWith Pork and Tooutto Sauce.2.\tVegetarian with Tomato Sauce, (without meat;.15G37B 3.With Pork and Igg» Molasses.fj 4, Kidney Beane with Pork.Dick Tracy\u2014Mki Carr \u2014 THAT'S WHAT MRS.MINTWORTH HAS OFFERED TRACY, IF HE WILL.DEVOTE ONE YEAR OF HIS.TIME TO \u201cMAKING, OVER'HER SON JOHNNY.25 GPANlDf WHY IT TAKES ME FIVE YEARS TO MAKE THAT AÂUCH DOLSOH ON THE FORCE Lfilb W BUT JUST HOW MUCH INFLUENCE FOR \tMitchell, pastor of Knovl- .\t-\t; ton United Church, officiating.WANTED, SLEEP j SlrMMER McKENNEY ON BRIDLE iliary, Canadian Legion, and the Rebekah service.The bearers were Messrs.Ernest Edward Giroux, sister-in-law, ot St.Johns, and M.Boudriau, unde, of St.Sébastien.A large circle of friends extend ! Davis, Oscar Nelson, Philip Heth-.\t-\t- \u2014\t,\t,\t,\t, I\t\u201e\u201e,i t Tomlinson, friends I'yB'PathY t0 the 50rr0WinS husband NO NEED TO FINESSE Declarer Gives Opponent Possible Winner, to Force Return That Will Assure Slam Contract c ARABLE MAID out.Phone 3S56.CAMP; LOG CABIN IN Mrs | yOUNG GIRL FOR LIGHT HOUSE-, j Sidney Tryhorn, Foster, Brome Lake, Que, O woods; beautiful grounds; Rock garden;; ,T\tfDg]«n'd passed away On all conveniences; ideal for children; on pri-;\t*\u2014'IHÎ, after T.lengthy illn6S!*S at vote road with beach; rear Two Lights, j the hcine of lier brother, Mr.Ed- By Wm.E.McKenney, Secretary, American Bridge League.! Coney Island, where New York\u2019s i millions go on hot summer days for ; «wk for luiv md vuou^r Aooiv Mr» C!ipo\tMaine.Write Dr.Rowe.U7i gar Bullard, Leominster, Mass.a dip in the ocean and a chance to.; work for July and August.Apply Mrs.\t£trwti ponla\u201ed, Maine.\tj Ths bearel.s were Me3srs.Jaso\u201e : enjoy unique sideshows, this year is Williams Cousens, Morgan ; ho»t to a championship tournament.OST COMPLETELY Notice in country locals, 15 cents per line, five words to a line ; Lennoxville and City Brieflets.20 cents per line.i -p ELIA RLE GIRL TO WORK IN RB3T-aurant to take charge.Bilingual.Phone ÎS16.Salesman Wanted SALESMAN COVERING WHOLESALE ^ and mamifacturing trade to handle a line of wrapping paper and twines, a good proposition on commission basis.Box 5-, Record.\ti < SALESMAN WANTED BY \"THE OLD \u201e ]RL TO HELp WITH HOUSEWORK.k L- vble For.tr.i.Nurse, les i JO ye* - \\ 1\thome for neat depeudable person, established.Send far Job*» «Ujosu* aad ; ^ ^ and wagM expected, Rerord, special lines.Start now at\tseki*i.L.season.Ex-'.asive territory in town cr -.\u2014- ^mSlo»!tTor^Ts.:res .Situation Wanted, Female ~ ! COLLEGE GIRL WITH DEGREE DE-* ^ sires position.Apply7 Box 64, Record.equipped xnowlion\u2019 and\"John \"Smith! .; There, at the Half Moon Hotel, June J She was born in 1857, the dough-, to ,\tAmerican Bridge Phone 526ri.\tter oî Abel bullard and his wife, Dorina M'ilson, pioneer families of fpwo COTTAGES to let, three tjiis district, and married William and seven rooms, furnished, large,\tEltvland in 1896.\t.\tu four.Pla5n cooking.References re-; screened-in porch, by week, month or sea- 17'Ar y vpt- nf bpv lifo worn .V\u2019dar at this \u20acVent, may perhaps quired.Mrs.L.S.Lee, Cowansville, Phone sou.A-upiy to Kuuhner\u2019s Stare.\tru.j-t.ne -¦1 IUL '\u2022t10 ;hav« a chance to display equal skill 200.\t-:iKnt, 1U, ^nuwiton, where she_ was as she did in safely bringing in her r^v cxwdat W4W1TT, T»4xnT v of I?x:iellent four room heated ; freatly ocioved by a wide circle of small glam contract on today\u2019s hand.F1 '\t~\t.L BTound floor flat, Hiirh street, with hot ÜTends.\tEast\u2019s jump to three spades, after \u2018pond with P.O.Box 399, Magog.Que.- rp | EXPERIENCED M AID FOR FAMILY OF ± League\u2019s South Shore tournament will be held.Mrs.Lottie Zetosh, of New York, 1 who will defend a title won last ground floor fiait.High Street, with hot,\t_\t^\tv~ *______^_____,_____ water all year, $38.Phone Edwards, 135.j She loaves to mourn her passing Mrs.Zetosh, West, had opened, was one brother, Edgar Bullard, of Leo- natural Four clubs was a cue bid \u2022r'IRST CLASS SIX ROOM APARTMENT.\t- \u2022\t\u2022 ¦ \u2019\tnaiuiai.r oui ciuob was a cue urn.Court Street, for immediate rental, §33.' Phone Edwards, 135.Wanted To Rent i mins'er.Mass.; two sisters, Mrs.1 After that East felt that no further ; Sarah Wheeler, of Alston, Mass., ; bidding was needed to assure a and Mrs.Chestina Cook, of Leo-; minster.Mass., and a number of re- ! ; lativcs in the vicinity of Knowlton.! Mrs Wheeler Mr.Edgar Bullard ! 'T'HREE ROOMS AND hath, heated and Mi.Edgar Bullard.Jr., aeeom-or ur.hvaied.State price and location, parried the remains from Massa-Record.Box\tfdi.ucotts Infirment took place in Solution to Previous Contract Problem Agents Wanted chusetts the Know Dll Cemetery.Today\u2019s Contract Problem North is playing the contract at seven clubs.He wins the first trick in dummy, then ruffs a spade and learns that West holds five clubs.Can he make the contract despite West\u2019s apparent trump trick?A None V fi 5 A 8 (1 3 AAKQJ9872 A J 8 V Q 3 2 ?\t974 *\t10 6 5 4 3 Dealer A A Q 7 B 5 3 2 V J 9 7 ?J 10 2 \u2022?« None A K 10 9 4 V A K 10 8 4 ?A K Q 5 A None N.& S.vul.Opener\u20144> J.Solution m next issue.17 rington and J., -.- of the deceased,\tj and famdy.The floral offerings were many ; - - - and beautiful, testifying to the j\t.esteem in which the deceased Was V® ® ® ® ® ® ® * held.The late Mrs.Thomson leaves to ; mourn her loss one son, Mr.Alex-j ander Thomson, of Scranton, Pa., KIllBk : GRANADA and five daughters, Isabella, Mrs | gj William Youngson, of Regina, Sask.; j a Harriet, Mrs.G.A.Kennett, ¦ of Sherbrooke; Ina, Mrs.James S, jg Wilson, of Beebe; Mary, Mrs.Wil- ! L liam Adams, of Aberdenshirc, Scot- i K land; Daisy, Mrs.W.F.Schulze, ! PS friends in this city and in Beebe.MRS.EUGENE MESSIER.ST.ARMAND.NOW UNTIL SAT, What Stars! What A Show! The year\u2019s grandest musical comedy romance! \u201cWake Up And Live\u201d with Walter Winchell, Ben Ber-13 nie, Alice Fay, Jack Haley, Patsy B Kelly, Ned Sparks, aj ADDED \u2014 Every howl tops a thrill.in Wally\u2019s most lovable ® laughable screen triumph \u2014 ,11 | St.Armond, June 17.\u2014 Mrs.Eugene Messier entered into rest, ^\t\u201e\tTJ j here on June 10th, after an illness!?.-\tWallace Beery in ! of about a month\u2019s duration.\tB \u201cGood Old Soak Mrs.Messier, whose maiden name ; K wilh Una Merkel, Eric l inden, was Alma Giroux, was born at Henryville, and lived lome years at St.Alexandre.She spent some time training for a nurse in Montreal, and later in St.Bonifiée.Manitoba, but owing to poor health she gave up her chosen calling and acted as housekeeper for Rev.Father A.N.1 68 Langelier, prior to her marriage | IS in 1918 to Eugene Messier.\tj ^ Six children were born of this | ™ Judith Barrett, Betty Furness, Ted Healy, Janet Beecher, George Sidney.\u2014 LATEST WORLD NEWS \u2014 fill liMI J^OCAL REPRESENTATIVE WANTED agency supervisor &*: because of\tthe\tdistance.\tj who were both unable to attend the\t|\tMrs.Edward Murphy, Miss Gladys ______\tj funeral.Mrs.Sam Neil, of Man-!\tMurphy, Messrs.Raymond and Law- eeted.Apply j.a.Largy, Ascot funeral\tOF\tEDWARD\tDAVIS, sonville is a sister.\t!\trence Murphy, Mr.and Mrs.Elie price on paint this week.Ctmer._____________________________\tCHERRY RIVER.\tj The funeral was held on Wednes- j Benoit, Mr.and Mrs.Miles Lynch.q-jart.\tm \\rf gentle csefvi\" The funeral service for Mr.Ed-' day afternoon at the Fulford United S Mrs.James Murphy, Mrs.Peter: - '\ti\tre,.er,iApply c.E.ward Davis, who was fatally injur-i Church.Rev.W.H.Thompson, of ; Moreau, Mr.and Mrs.Fred Flack, HovFr.\tWat ft\tvi-ie.Phone\tNorth\tHati.y\ted when\the fell from\ta\tscaffold i South Stukely,\ta former\tpastor of\tof Melbourne\tLiage,\tand -ii.\t*\tn- - 13ri3.\twhile painting a house\tin\tMagog, the\tdeceased conducted the service j\ttonio Grandpere\tand Mr.Houle,\tot was held at his late residence on 1 assisted by Rev.Mr.Howe, of West j \\ alcourt.Monday.June 7th.The house was i Shefford.Messrs.Otis Streeter, filled with Mrs.Zetosh, however, saw a wa> < 0f grWantonj vt., Alphonse Tougas, to make her contract sate, and this o?gabrevoiS( George Boudriau and süsw&issisu'sy «s*» 7\t°\u201c\u201dr °f cli.b« md pow^North croid maO.| c ¦\t1\t\u2022 pte.ent wm Mrs.no lead that wouid not give the de- j\t0 clarer all the tricks.\t____r1 _______________ Ü rat.\u201e ADDED\u2014A rich riotous, roman-.: tic, musical comedy \u2014 \u201cHigh Hat\u201d ^ with Dorothy Dare, Frank Luis ther.Frank Pangborn.U Popeye Cartoon, Joe Palooka Comedy, Screen Snapshots.K \u2014GORGEOUS DINNERWARE\u2014 Mass mm bev wsmin/ ONE SIXTEEN FOOT CANVA-SS COVER- e-i\tCash ?15.Phor- 72^5 or 335.VEW MII^H C0W JtJST FRESHENED.- - -.b^et ervaroe:.West.Phone Q A WHITE LEGHORN PULLETS FROM an-: |.,-«t Ricnford.He was nk^hly\t,v.lr G\t.- = needed and will be greatly missed, j 0fe \u2018.T\u2019 .Wi!h»m Jam,es\u2019 Vth w.h°m Announcement.SNELL AUTO SUPPLIES Now open with a complete line of \u201cSuperlastic,\u201d the fully guaranteed Tires and Tubes that sell for less, yet serve you more.Also accessories and parts of all kinds.Our cash system means savings for every car owner, CENTRAL LOCATION 63 Wellington Street North, Phone 2511 PI an?WASHER : BU- J AUDITC FOR PHONOGRAPH Cjl.a barggir, at l Physicians and Surgeons Ed F.COWAN Marisonvdk m, Quebe loonnpanifj the a mo >\u20acC.-Treasn Que.; Streeter D \u2018\t^ Mr.Doe rf when he so Mrs.Doe -¦ with their Miles.nected and will be greatly mi.,,., .\t.\t,\t,\t, ,\t,, The funeral service was held Wed-\t,Td\u2019 and( one ^ughter Mrs.sdav.June 9, at the Church of the ;Vla!l c- Str,s,1?e' ^ho assisted in -There parsed\ti Good ' Shepherd.Rev.C.E.\tScrim- Ithe c\u201ears «f mother during the he home of hi,\tUeour, of Richford, Vt\u201e and\tRev.J.\t|®st /ew weeks of her\tillness also B &gli- Mr K.King, of Mansonville officiating.I her daughter-in-law, Mrs.W.J Mere,\twho\twas born i he -on\tInterment was in the Glen\tSutton\tCulloch, who spared no\tpains to al- i\tDoe\tand Elizabeth\tCemetery beside hi, late wife who\tlegate her suffering.\tTwo sisters uij/.duoui |\t.\t\u2022\u2019 - \u2022 \u2022\t\u2022\tland two brothers, two grand- 's and one nephew also remain to mourn MR.EDMUND DOE, FOSTER.Foster, June 1 acefully away a daughter.Mrs.A Edmund Dt of Williar on Ap Juiien\u2019s Meat Markets,^ Ke Mrs.Doe.whose 459 i predeceased him several years ago.Tnd pent his entire life ini The bearers were Messrs.I,eland, j daughters and several nieces and until three \"years\" ago i Alphonse, Deforest and Noah Judd hi- farm here and with I There were many beautiful floral her loss, n* to Ottawa to reside i tributes.\t!\tfuneral\theld from her laughter M- - \" kvch\u2019r1\t_____-\t| late residence on Tuesday afternoon, * \u2018\t1 j FUNERAL of T.O\u2019CONNELL, j June 8th, and was largely attended.! 70 Drummond Road\u2014Tvl.2001 SHERBROOKE 116 Main Street \u2014 Tel.176 LENNOXVILLE Be! i >% vt \\)H: NOS ^ 810 jNE 67 erapF.*4 KING ST.r.a.ry D VECHE AND LINOEI.AL MED1- T^ENEER PANEL \u2019 CS>.\t.\u2022:T & 810.000 U OR K HAS to N.AUCTION SALE FOR MRS.GEORGE EDWARDS, PLEASANT STREET COOKSHIRE on Saturday, June 19th.rn- M e maiden name wa-\tST.MARY ELY.\t| Rev Dr.S.W.Bovd officiated, idecea-nd her husband ' Funeral services for Mr.Thomas ] |he choir consistée, of Mrs.Dean, 1 1\t1936 Mr Doe ^ O\u2019Connell, who was killed in an p'H\u2019s.ebb and Messrs.Rupert and ur the death of hi-; 1 automobile accident in Detroit, Guy Shufelt.Mrs.S.W.Boyd pre-Archie Mile- about! Mich., on Saturday, May 22nd, sided at the piano.\u201cRock of Ages,\u201d j were held at the St.Mary Church Lead Kindly Light\u201d and \u201cNow the ut three ' on Wednesday, May 28th.Requiem I Laborer\u2019.- Task Is O\u2019er\u201d were ren- : Mr.Doe : weeks prii Tenderly cared for by his daughter 1 Mrs.A.}>.Inglls and Mrs.Archi Miles.Mr.Doe is also survived b- Veterinary Surgeon Real Estate For Sale wns only ill about, lulcc ; ut* »» s-.m»'-j.,\t\u2014.»-i i ,\t.\t.¦ to hi?death and was Mass was celebrated by Canon J.C.ccred very sweetly by the choir.' McGee, uncle of the deceased with Hie flora! tributes were beauti-Rev, A.Dionne and Rev.T.Sev- ful, testifying to the high esteem eigny officiating as deacon and sub-1 in which she was held by a large deacon.\t! e>wde \u2018'I relatives and friends.Bearers were Messrs.Francis For-: The bearers were Messrs.Arthur bes, Darcy and Charles McGee, I Ellison and Leslie Armstrong, George, Charles and Thomas Cogan.I nephews; Allan C.Strange, son-in-Left to mourn his loss are his, ! law, and If.Earl Laurie, cousin, mother, Mrs.O\u2019Connell; two j The funeral cortege proceeded to brothers, Reginald and John, of St.Riverside Cemetery, vS.re the »er Mary; two nephews, Wilfred Pari-1 mains were laid to rest by her late ^ AUCTION SALE Saturday, June 19th, 12.JO, Lennoxvillc Town Hall, for Fred Duval.SLICED BACON, lb.\t19c BEST SAUSAGES IN TOWN\t2 lbs.25c WESTERN BEEF, Round Steak, lb.*.17c Sirloin Steak, lb.\t 17c Porterhouse Steak, lb.17c WESTERN BEET (Tv A1 f »' Optometrist Architects L\u20187 p'.y P.O.;K HOUSE ^ 771 ZED.CAPITAL jiifWd.Got.!:A#Ty*; .104 Bar.y; of O/m- Vlfiy iv.x Insurance Y'yZ f.DtUMf* n of Y « W T H Blast p LAST a E«g.r erer F.R P.R wm, EQVIPintKY, cv^eyat.Covacü St, l*h.6S(-W.S' f/tATT, , v rr *t awn HiKhw* X n/X/M SEW} y KM Wiggett Electric Motors and Wiring 19 Marquette Rt.\u2014 Phone 435* 'it w* n Miscellaneous )OALJ/U7G KT/JVNEIJ! \u2014 DOGS, «wüd hvrfa\thy th* fifty, Jv,\tof Onfay *As r< 4 jyip for .a-.t Mr' T J.!)',:* t 'j\u2019 .jrH, l'hon# 4£\\ W.42 .can', of St.Mary and Ronald Pari-, husband, who predeceased her seau, of Cobalt, N.Y.\tj elevet; month?ago.The deceased was horn at St.\t- Mary Ely on May 18, 1900, son of! MRS.JESSIE THOMSON the iate Thomas O\u2019Connell and Mrs.! The death occurred on Friday, O\u2019Connell, nee Mary McGee, of! May 28th, at her la:e t r \u2022 ideticc, Melbourne.He lived with his par- ! 94-A Laurier avenue, of Mi s.Jc?-ent-.until 1923, when he went to j sie Thomson, widow of William Windsor Mills, remaining there until ! Thomson at the age of seventy-four 1925.From there he wont to 1 years and four months, after an Detroit, whore he remained until his illness of a few months.Mrs.Thom.untimely death.The remains were brought to son was born in Peterhead, Scotland, and married Mr.Thomson Dodge DU Sedan, 1935 Dodge Coach, 1934 Chevrolet Sedan, 1935 TRUCKS Ford Vz-fon Express, 1935 Dodge 2-ton, 1934 Chevrolet, 2-ton, 1934 $725 $495 $750 $495 $450 $350 MORISSET LIMITED 21 Wellington St, South Phone 2015 I Richmond by train and taken to the i fifty-nine years ago.Thirteen chil-home of his mother, at St.Mary.' dren were born of this union, seven I Those attending the funeral from 1 of whom predeceased her, j i distance were Canon J.C.Me j Mr.Thomson was a woman of Gee, Mr.and Mrs.G.MeManamy.i genial disposition, and we, posses.-! Mr .Ernest Paquet, Mrs.Daniel | ed of a remarkable memory, and j Irwin, of Sherbrooke; Mr.and Mrs, i was very active until a few month ! George Cogan, Me .Pat Smith, Mr.before her death.She was a mem-on d Mr's.Frank Cougiin, and Dick her of Granite Queen Rebekah Hinch, Frank Beard, George Cogan Lodge and a life-member of the Wo-I and Erne:- ! Cogan, of Richmond ; | men\u2019s Auxiliary, Canadian Legion.Mr.-.Thomas Cogan, Mr.and Mr:.Charles Cogan, Mr.and Mrs.Thomas Cogan, Mr.Patrick McGee.Ms .William McGee, Miss Mildred McGee, Mr.and Mr:-.Darcy McGee, Mr.Stanley McGee, Miss Mar-gare; McGee, Mr.Edward Keenan, M c Lou; c and Leola Keenan.Mr.and Mi .George Morin, of Melbourne; Mr.and Mrs.Thomas IS oui.:,', Mr, and Mrs.Reginald Healy Mis- Gr-ele Thomas McGee, Mb Gee, and Me: herd.McGee, is .Charles and Mr.and Mrs.and a member of the Episcopal Church, After the death of her husband, Mr?, Thomson came to reside in Sherbrooke ten years ngo, The funeral was belli Sunday, May 30th, a short prayer service in St.Peter\u2019s Church being conducted by Rev.Cecil King.The cortege j then proceeded to Meobo, wlhere the service was conducted hy Rev.! Mr.Harrington, of Sfanstmid, in All Paquet, Mr.Saint's.Church.Beebe.Interment Kathleen Me- took place in Woodside Cemetery,! the!- Beebe, and a service wa: conducted John at the gri 'c bv the Women's Aux- CHOICE LOCAL BEEF Porterhouse Roast, lb.18c Brisket, lb.8c Chuck Roast, lb.IlUc Small-bone Shoulder Roast, lb.12Vic Rump Roast, lb.1 lC Largo Soup Bones, each \u201d>c Prime Rib Roast, lb.14c Rolled Roast, lb.18c Hamburg Steak 2 lbs.25c MILK FED VEAL Leg of Ve.al, lb.IS'/ic Veal Cutlets, lb.18c Loin of Veal, lb.12c Veal Chops .2 lbs.25c Front, Veal, lb.7c Blade Roast of Veal, lb.11c Shoulder Roast, lb.lie Rolled Roast of Veal, lb.12c Vial Shank, each .10c Boiling Veal, lb.5c FRESH YOUNG PORK Pork Steak, ll>.22c Pork Chops, well trimmed, !b.23c Log Roast, lb.(.pin Roast, lb.Mixed Pork, sliced, lb.Blade Roast, lb.Shoulder Roast, lb.Large Pig\u2019s Feet, each Leg of Bam.Swift's, Picnic Hum, lb.Rolled Ham, lb.Windsor Bacon, lb.Porterhouse Roast,\tlb.\t22c Brisket, lb.19c Chuck Roast, lb.12 C;c Small Bone Shoulder Roast, lb.1.3c Rump Roast, tb.16c Rolled Roast, lb.20c Prime Rib Roast,\tlb.15c Western Hamburg Steak, lb.FRESH LAMB Leg of Lamb.lb.Lamb Chops, lb.I oin of Lamb.lb.Front of Lamb.lb.Boiling Lamb, lb.15 c 2.3c 18c 18c 1.3c 10c .20c .20c .16c 16c .15c .10c Ih.27c 11'Ac .21c .39c Spécial ( ellonhane-u rapped Bologna, lb.19c Square Bologna, lb.14c Round Bologna, lb.\t.10c FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES AT LOWEST PRICES Radishes\t.3 bunches 5c Curly Lettuce .3 for 5c Iceberg Lettuce .3 for 5c Rhubarb\t.3 bunches 5c Pasteurized Creamery Butter at lowest prices,in city.FISH Fresh Mackerel, lb.7c Gaspe Salmon, by piece, lb.24c Fresh Fillets.2 lbs.25c Smoked Fillels .2 lbs.25c Small Fresh Fowl, lb.19c Large Pullets, fresh killed, lb.\t2,3c Salt Pork, lb.)2c Beef Kidney, It).12c Beef Henri, each .5c Beef Liver, lb.7c Beef Tongue, lb.12c Suof, lb.5c Pig\u2019s Liver, lb.\t1()c Pork Kidney, lb.18c I\u2019alf's Liver, lb.2.5c Gulf\u2019s Tongue, lb.15c Gall's Henri, cadi .5c m, I SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD.THURSDAY.JUNE 17, 1937.PAGE ELEVEN GIANTS SLICED PACE-SETTING CUBS\u2019 MARGIN Eighth Inning Rally Enabled New Yorkers to Nose Out Pirates\u2014Yanks Stretched Lead to Two Games When They Downed Indians and Their Rivals Lost.The change of air and scenery, from Washington to Boston (and vice versa) seems to have been just what the doctor ordered for Buck Newsom and Wes Ferrell.Last week\u2019s deal between the Senators and the Red Sox already has shown definitely that there\u2019s still a lot of pitching left in the salary wings of both Newsom, now with Boston, and Ferrell, at present serving them up for the Nats.Until they were traded, both were well on the way to having the worst years of their careers.But, whether the change of locale also fixed the well known temperament of each, or whether the new air put some of the old zip back in their \u201csoupbones,\u201d each is now travelling at a 1.000 clip in his new uniform.Ferrell started out by stopping the onrushing White Sox in his first action as a Senator last week, and yesterday topped the Tigers by two to one in twelve innings.Newsom, just reversing the procedure, whipped the Tigers first and followed up with a three to two win over the White Sox yesterday.The rest of last week\u2019s swap appears to have favored the Senators.The combnation of Wes and brother Rick, and lead-off man Mel Almada has lent the Senators\u2019 batting order considerably more punch than has been provided the Red Sox by Newsom and Ben Chapman.The defeats for the White Sox and Tigers helped the Yankees stretch their American League lead to two full games yesterday.The New Yorkers stopped the Cleveland Indians by four to one behind \u201cLefty\u201d Gomez\u2019 six-hit nine-strikeout pitching.The New York Giants came from behind to top the Pittsburgh Pirates with an eight-inning, three-run rally, and thereby advanced to within five percentage points of ( he National League lead, held by the Chicago Cubs.The Cardinals clouted the Phillies\u2019 pitchers for fourteen hits and a seven to six win for their fifth straight triumph.The St.Louis Browns tagged the Athletics by three to two.TORONTO WON SERIES FROM PACE-SETTING BEARS The Toronto Leafs, whose -meteoric start in the Internationa! League was followed by as rapid a decline, believe they've found the winning-combination again.As evidence of their comeback the Leafs today proudly pointed to a feat that hasn\u2019t been duplicated since the first week of the season.They defeated the Newark Bears by six to two yesterday to take the rubber game of a three-game series and become the first team to annex a series from the league leaders since the Buffalo Bisons turned the trick in late April, The hustling Leafs belted Kemp Wicker for twelve hits, among which were homers by Frank Madura and Don Ross.Woody Davis, the Leafs\u2019 rookie right-hander, limited the powerful Bears to six hits and fanned as many.Despite their defeat, the Bears maintained their nine-game lead over the Montreal Royals, who lost one to nothing to the Syracuse Chiefs, Harry Smythe, the Royals\u2019 veteran right-hander, allowed the Chiefs only three hits.The Royals hit Frank Pearce for seven safeties, but tight hurling in the pinches and some steady fielding by.his mates kept the Canadians scoreless.The Bisons moved within one and a half games of Montreal when they eked out a three to two victory over Jersey City.Truett Sewell pitched seven-hit ball for the Herd.Rochester\u2019* Red Wings turned in their third straight triumph when they blanked the Baltimore Orioles by three to nothing.Jake Juelich belted out ;i homer and two singles for the Wings.YESTERDAY\u2019S BASEBALL AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 4, Cleveland 1.Boston 3, Chicago 2.St.Louis 3, Philadelphia 2.Washington 2.Détroit 1.NATIONAL LEAGUE New York 5, Pittsburgh 4.St.Louis 7.Philadelphia 8.Brooklyn at Cincinnati, night game, postponed ram.Chicago at Boston, postponed, ia INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Syracuse 1.Montreal 0.Toronto 6, Newark 2.Buffalo 3, Jersey City 2.Rochester 3, Baltimore 0.THE STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE FAXON, KAYSER AND WESTWARD TOOK LAURELS BRITISH GOLF QUEEN Rubin, City Transit and: Beavers Defeated in Last: Night\u2019s City Softball Lea-' gue Fixtures \u2014 Crampton Homered for Kayser with Bases Full.\tWon Lost\t\tP.C.New York \t\t.30\t18\t.625 Detroit \t\t30\t22\t.577 Chicago \t\t.28\t21\t.571 Cleveland \t\t\t21\t.553 Boston \t\t.22\t22\t.500 Washington \t\t.21\t29\t.420 Philadelphia\t\t.18\t29\t.383 St.Louis\t\t.17\t30\t,368 NATIONAL\tLEAGUE\t\t \tWon Lost\t\tP.C.Chicago \t\t31\t19\t.620 New York\t\t\t20\t.615 St.Louis \t\t\t20\t.583 Pittsburgh \t\t.27\t22\t.551 Brooklyn\t\t\t25\t.457 Boston\t\t\t28\t.417 Philadelphia .\t.19\t31\t.380 Cincinnati \t\t.18\t31\t.354 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\t\t\t \tWon Lost\t\tP.C.Newark \t\t\t\t\t13\t.755 Montreal \t\t.28\t21\t.571 Buffalo \t\t\t23\t.540 Syracuse \t\t.27\t25\t.519 Toronto \t\t27\t27\t.50-0 Jersey City\t\t\t30\t.348 Rochester \t\t\t29\t.442 Baltimore \t\t.14\t34\t.292 YESTERDAY\u2019S STARS Outstandiing players fin yesterday\u2019s major league games were: George Selkirk and Lefty Gomez, Yankees: Former\u2019s double with the bases loaded drove in three runs; Gomez fanned nine and allowed only six hits in four to one win over the Indians.Buck Newsom, Rod Sox; Fanned eight and allowed five hits to whip the White Sox by three to two.Jimmy Brown, Cardinals: Singled winning run across for seven to six victory over the Phillies.Me! Ott, Giants: His single in winning rally drove in two runs for a Paton pounded out a six to four victory over Rubin, Kayser collected a ten to five triumph at the expense of City Transit and Westward trimmed the Beavers to the tune of six to four in last evening\u2019s City Soft-ball League games on the Parade Grounds.Paton clinched the honors in their clash with Rubin in the second inning when they drove five men across the plate.Rubin scored three times in the third, two of them on Min-ard\u2019s double, Fortier tallied twice for the Millmen and Poulin, R.Lessard, P.Lessard and Metivier once each, while scorers for the defeated , team were Minard, Roy, Lehoux and | Lahier.Hurler LeBlanc, on the j mound for Paton, struck out three : and walked two, while his rival, | Kouri, fanned one and isued seven \\ free passes.Crampton\u2019s homer with the sacks loaded in the second inning sent Kayser away to a flying start and four more markers in the fifth frame sewed up the game against the Transit.Roy and W.Kirby slammed two-baggers for City Transit, the former in the sixth when Transit staged a four-run rally and the latter in the seventh with no one on.Audet, Morin and McLean each tallied twice for Kayser and Drapeau, Dion, Pinard and Crampton once each.Scorers for City Transit were Dufour, twice, and Hibbard, Gingue and W.Kirby.Westward scored one in the first, three more in the fourth and two in the fifth in defeating Beavers.McLean.Rousseau, Cote, Heath, Slater and Coates circled the bases for the winning squad, while H.Terry, Bryce, Wootten and Jackson scored for Beavers.Score by innings:\tR.Paton .050 100 x\u20148 Rubin .OOS OOO 1\u20144 Batteries: LeBlanc and Poulin; Kouri and Lehoux.Kayser .150 040 x\u201410 City Transit.000 014 0\u2014 5 Westward .100 320 x\u2014 6 Beavers .000 031 0\u2014 4 The league standing to date follows : Dominion Textile .\t7\t1\t.875 Kayser .6\t1\t.833 New* Wellington .\t3\t1\t.750 Paton .4\t3\t.571 City Transit.4\t4\t.500 Westward.3\t4\t.429 Lennoxville .2\t5\t.286 Hoboes .1\t4\t.200 Beavei\u2019g .1\t4\t.167 Rubin .0\t4\t.000 iii V GOLF five to four victory over the Pirates.Beau Bell, Browns: Sent winning run across with a single to beat the Athletics by three to two.Wes Fen-el, Senators: Pitched eight-hit ball for twelve innings in two to one win over the Tigers.12 &- .v.v.vÿv.\u2019\u2022 Clay Bryant, young pitcher for the Cubs, who is the talk of the National League these days, has turned in eighteen consecutive innings of scoreless ball.» Jill / filpflji mËÊÈmÊM^m Gleaming, modern machines, flashing in swift movement as they make Grads\u2014\"Class\".Huge warehouses stacked high with selected golden Virginia tobaccos, the choice ol experts\u2014tobaccos that need no *\"A.F.\"\u2014\"Class\".Relentless care in every operation of manufacture\u2014\"Class\".And Class will tell\u2014Grads have it and say it soothingly to throat and nerves.GRADS ¦y: FINE VIRGIN A CHOICE TOBACCOS ¦ \u2022 \u2022 NO ^ARTIFICIAL FLAVOURING Ho, hum.A week ago Louis looked terrible and Braddoek looked great.Now it is just the reverse.What is it, a gag?If Louis takes Braddoek and Schmeling (and doesn\u2019t go through with his decision to quit.) Mike Jacobs plans to take him on a tour of Europe next winter.Some of the prizes for amateurs offered in the $10,000 Chicago open golf tournament July 23-25 Included radios, refrigerators, furniture and free trips to French Lick Springs.The U.S.Golf Association kicked and now the amateurs are going to ho limited to three prizes, none to cost more than S50.PRECIPITATION WON \\SCOT GOLD CUP r Ascot, Berkshire, June 17.\u2014Lady Zia IVenher\u2019s Precipitation today won the Ascot Gold Cup, premier event of the Ascot race meeting.Sir Abe Bailey\u2019s Cecil was second and Lord Stanley\u2019s Quashed, the 1936 winner, third.The massive son of Hurry On-Double Life, starting at two to one, outran a field of twelve over the two and a half mile course and finished two lengths in front of Cecil, who in turn heat, the filly Quashed by four lengths.Cecil started at, four to one and Quashed at one hundred to seven.She (sighing): \u201cOh IT met such a lovely, polite man today.\u201d He: Where was that ?She: In the street.Ï must have been carrying my umbrella carelessly, for he humped his eye into it.And I said \u201cPardon me,\u201d and he said, \u201cDon't mention it\u2014I have another eye left.\u201d GRANBY SETTING PACE TODAY IN PENNANT CHASE Red Sox Jumped into Lead Yesterday on Double Victory Over Montreal Black Panthers\u2014Granby Clouted Ball Hard and Often in First Game.Jessie Anderson demonstrates the form which enabled her to win the British Women\u2019s Golf championship.She defeated Doris Park, six and four, in the thirty-six-hole final at Turnberry, Scotland.WINDSOR MILLS DEFEATED DANVILLE The Danville Golf Club went down to defeat at the hands of the Windsor Mills linksmen by twelve to nine in their first inter-club match of the season.The match ivas played on the Windsor Mills course.Scores follow: Danville\tWindsor Mills T.Heron\tG.Noble L.Gartshore\tC.Force 0\t3 D.\tClarke\tD.Lee W.Soutar\tJ.Lagasse 0\t3 R Surtees\tJ.\tG.Harley J.Blair\tJ.\tMcCubbin 3\t0 E.\tLockwood\tJ.Beattie A.E.Ward\tJ.\tBagnall 2%\tV2 J.Watson\tW.H.Morrison E.Attwood\tC.E, Walsh 2\t1 R.Eugler\tA.McCray R.Clevealnd\tA.J.Philip IV2\tIVs A.Dizres\tC.Stevens R.Andrews\tJ.J.Watt 0\t3 Granby, June 17.\u2014 The Granby Red Sox spurted into the load in the Provincial Baseball League pennant chase yesterday when they chalked up a double victory ohri\u2019 the Montreal Black Panthers by scores of thirteen to two and seven to six.Granby experienced little difficulty capturing\" the evening game, called at the end of the sdxth inning owing to darkness.While his teammates were pounding Green\u2019s offerings for thirteen bingles, \u201cShorty\u201d Coderre held the visitors to four hits.The second set-to played under the flood-lights, however, was a nip and tuck affair in which Granby managed to check the Panthers\u2019 determined ninth inning rally, which fell short only one run of tieing up the couni.Score by innings:\tR.H.E.Granby.130 09x\u201413 13 1 Panthers .200 000\u2014 2 4 2 Batteries: Coderre and Corrigan, Bousquet; P.e Green and Powell.Second game:\tR.H.E.Granby .102 100 21x\u20147 10 4 Panthers .200 100 003\u20143 7 5 Batteries: J.Green and Bousquet, Cookson, Green; Fleming and Powell.The league standing to date fellows : W.L.P.C.Granby .9\t4\t.692 Drummondville .7\t4\t.637 Sorel .7\t4\t.637 Sherbrooke .fi\t!)\t.400 Three Rivers .6\t10\t.375 Panthers .4\t8\t.333 BOXING &\u2022 SPORTS FLASHES «5-« Chicago, June 17.\u2014This bustling town is filling up for the big fight.All you hear talked in the spots around the noisy loop is Braddoek vs.Louis, a city World\u2019s Series between the spurting Cubs and White Sox and Saturday\u2019s American Derby boss race at Washington Park.Right now it looks like the odds will be about nine to five on Louis by Tuesday night.Surprisingly little dough is being laid on the line.(The bangtails get it out this way.) Ran into Freddy Lindstrom, former Giant, Cub and Dodger at Kenosha yesterday.Freddy quit the Dodgers last year because he didn\u2019t think he was hitting enough for the coin he was getting.He looks fit and is itching to get back into baseball.Seems some major league club could use him.LOUIS IS TWO TO ONE FAVORITE Chicago, June 17.\u2014The \u201cprince and pauper\u201d world\u2019s title battle set for next Tuesday night has the betting boys jittery.Tlie \u2018\u2018prince\u201d won\u2019t be heavyweight champion James J.Braddoek.He\u2019ll step into the ring against Jee Louis one of the financially poorest boxing kings in hisltory.From a financial standpoint, the Brown Bomber has a better claim to that title.Louis, who has earned more than $750,000 in three years, will climb through the ropes one of the wealthiest challengers of all time.Braddoek never has been in the \u201cbig money\u201d even since beating Max Baer for the title, a chore for which he received but $31,224.Since then he has had to borrow money, so Tuesday night will be his big chance.To date, there has been little or no wagering.One Randolph street commissioner is holding $10,000 he\u2019ll put against $5,000 that Louis wins\u2014and no sign yet of a taker.There are Braddoek betters asking as much as three and four to one odds, bat the impression prevails that the night of the bout Louis will stand about nine to five.! Alternately good and bad form by Louis at his Kenosha, Wis., camp has the \u201cwise money\u201d waiting for a sudden downward shift in the Louis odds the day of the battle.Glowing reports of the physical condition of the champion, idle for two years since taking the title from Max Baer, also have tended to minimize gambling on the big battle.Promoter Joe Foley said rainy weather slowed the ticket sale yesterday, but that about $650,000 already had been taken in.Thus far, 16,000 of the 28,000 ringside seats have been sold, comparable to 14,000 for the Louis-Max Baer fight at a corresponding pre-fight date.Jimmy Dykes, manager of the surprising White Sox.collected $65 in bets for laying off cigars for a month.700 PHYSICIANS AT OTTAWA CONVENTION Importance of Preserving Teeth in Good Condition Emphasized at Canadian Public Health Association Session.MANY REPORTS PRESENTED BY ABERCORN W.I.of Sherbrooke, Mr.N.Bradley, of Compton, and Mrs, J.G, Farwell.Recent visitors at the home of Mr.and Mrs.J.R.Cowan were Mr.and Mrs, J, A.Cowan, of HuntingviJle, and Mrs.H.Ashe, of Sand Hill.Sunday visitors at the home of Mr.and Mrs.J.E.Crawford were Mr.and Mrs.Jack Spray and dau- ghter, Shirley, and Miss Everett, of Lennoxville, and Mr.Charles Crawford of Moulton Hill.Mr.and Mrs.J.R.Cowan were visiting relatives in Ayer\u2019s Cliff recently.Mr, W.N.Brown was a Sunday visitor at the home of Mr.and Mrs.W.Bernard, Waterville.Committee Reports Heard and Interesting Account of County Convention Given at Session of Women\u2019s Institute.Abercorn, June 17.\u2014 The Women\u2019s Institute met in the Union Hall with a good attendance of members and three visitors.The reports of the committees showed that the card party recently held was a success both socially and financially, and that school prizes were given out in the Esty and Abercorn schools, Mrs.Ingalls presenting them in the Esty school and Mrs.Lahue in the Abercorn school.Plans were made to hold a dance in Union Hall after which the report of the county convention held at South Bolton was read by Mrs.Lloyd Ingalls, who gave an interesting and complete account which was much appreciated by the members.The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs.Lloyd Ingalls, when a display of souvenirs from foreign countries will be exhibited.At the close of the meeting tea was served by the members and a social hour spent.FARMERS! We have just unloaded a car of barley Ç*! TfjP which we offer at, per 100 lbs., ground I ¦ f 5if We specialize in MASTFJR FEEDS for poultry and Jive stock \u2014 but we also carry grain, flour and mill feeds.J.B.REED & SONS 200 King St.West.\tPhone 2531 SHERBROOKE, QUE.WHOLESALE and RETAIL General Notes The Montreal Central Y.M.C.A.Boy\u2019s Work Committee, spent the last week-end and held their annual spring conference at the home of Mr.and Mrs.F.F.Fyles.Those present were: Messrs.R.D.Stewart, chairman, A.T.Bone, vice-president, J.P.Kidd, secretary, Nelson McEwen, J.L.Baker, S.C.Carter, Dr.1.Braibander, G.C.Grubb, N.D.Johnston, E.H.Cliff, A.E.Sargent, F.J.Fyles, W.R.Pritchard, R.W.Guess, G.E.Trueman, J.W.Beaton, W, H.White, Ernest Taylor, I.R.Tait and Tracy Strong.IVES HILL Master G.Butler, of Lennoxville, was a week-end guest at the home of Mr.and Mrs.J.G.Farwell.Recent visitors at the home of Mr.and Mrs.A.H.Cairns were Mrs.Gordon Young and family, of Draper\u2019s Corner, Miss D.Cairns, TVIEN GILLETTE IQ GILLETTE BLADES GILLETTE RAZOR (Gold Plated) with Jumbo Handle and USED BLADE CONTAINER srtS 1: GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR CO., of CANADA.LTD.RICHARD ARLISS WzlL-lnown A/ewi Photoytajahat, 50.SJ5 \u201cIn my business, I seldom get a chance to eat at regular hours.But when I do cat, I always include Black Horse Ale with my meals.I know it\u2019s good for my digestion.\u201d KNOW Ottawa, June 17.\u2014Nearly seven hundred physicians and others interested in public health were registered today for the opening session of the Canadian Public Health Association.The three day convention saw the Ontario Health officers Association, presided over by Dr.C.E.Hill, Lansing, Ont., also in conference.An elaborate programme faced delegates, with presentation of papers treating on every phase of public health.In his presidential address, Dr.Hill urged provincial officers \u201cto pursue with more vigor those tasks which promise a larger return for money and effort.\u201d Following Dr.Hill\u2019s remarks, provincial officers got down to the business of discussing common prob- : lems.Importance of preserving the teeth in good condition was em- j phasized by Dr, Arnold D.Mason, I dean of the Faculty of Dentistry of the University of Toronto, DEATHS REPORTED TODAY The following deaths were reported in Canadian Press despatches to ! the Record today: Toronto\u2014F, Barry Hayes, president of Toronto Carpet Manufacturing Company.Sunland, Calif.\u2014 White Horse Eagle, Osage Indian who claimed to be 115.Washington \u2014 Rep.William Connery.chairman of the House Labor Committee and co-author of the Wagner-Connery Labor Act.and uovl should know Black horse ale 15 good for digestion Little Girl: \u201cOh, uncle, you\u2019ve got.your boots on.and mummy said you were too big for tbam-\u201d 1 l 5^ ¦ J PAGE TTTELYE SÏÏEEBUOOKE DAILY EECOED, THUESDAY, JUNE 17, 1937.E.T.SUBJECT OF ADDRESS AT BEEBE SESSION E.Struthers.of Rock Island.Gave Instructive Address on Eastern Townships at Meeting of Women's Institute.Beebe, June IT.\u2014 The regular meeting of the Women\u2019s Institute was held at the home of Mrs.E.Beerworth, with Mrs.W.Haseiton, Miss May Dance and Mrs.L.Miller as assisting hostesses.The meeting opened in the usual manner with the Ode and Creed, after which Mrs.H.Lanctot read a very interesting report of the county meeting at Way\u2019s Mills.Plan- were discussed for the annual picnic, which will be held this year at Mr.Campbell\u2019s cottage at Cedarville.Mrs.J.Turner hindly offered the use of her home for a food sale and tea in July.At the close of the business meeting.Miss E.MacDonald introduced Mr.E.Struthers, of Rock Island, who gave an instructive address on the Eastern Townships, which was much enjoyed.Mrs.John Clarke, Jr., thanked the speaker, Refreshments were served to about thirty members and guests.fortune to fracture a small bone in her wrist while swinging on the school grounds.Miss Prances LePenna.who has been teaching for the past year in Pied Du Lac, has returned home for the summer, Mr.and Mrs.George Stewart and family have moved to Beebe from Xaniteville.Miss Gail Bachelder, of George-ville, has been spending several days with her grandparents, Mr.and Mrs.A.A.Bachelder.Mr.and Mrs.Sidney Fraser, of Montreal, spent the week-end with Mr.and Mrs.Howard Cass.Dr.and Mrs.T.J.Wells motored to Quebec on Sunday for a few days\u2019 visit.Mr.and Mrs.I.B.Corey, Mr.and Mrs.Frank Haseiton.Mrs.R.Wells and Miss Josephine Wells motored to Ste.Agathe des Monts on Sunday to visit Mr.R.Wells.Mr.and Mrs.Harold Beane and Mrs.Edith Bellam motored to Montreal on Sunday.Mrs.Beane is remaining for several days to attend the Women\u2019s Institute Provincial convention being held at Macdonald College as a county delegate.Mrs.Agnes Whitehouse is attending the same convention as delegate from the local branch.The sympathy of the community is extended to Mr.Scott Brown, a member of the High School staff in the death of his mother, on Sunday.June 13th.Mr.Brown is spending a few days at his home.GRADUATED IN MEDICINE \u2022 ¦ OF PRIZES AT DUNHÂ1 SCHOOL Fine Musical and Dramatic Programme and Address by Ven.Archdeacon Gower-Rees Featured Closing Exercises at St.Helen\u2019s School.SWEETSBURG General Notes.Miss Grace D\u2019AIber.as, of Montreal, has been a guest of Miss Alice Turner during the closing exercises of Sianstead College.Miss Margie Tyson had the mis- Mr.Guy Lee spent Monday in Montreal.Mr.Clesson Robinson, of Three Rivers, spent Sunday here with his grandmother.Mrs.M, A.Robinson, and aunt.Miss Lora Robinson, he-bore leaving-on Tuesday for Deer Lake.Newfoundland, to take a posi- ! Maurice Thibault, son of Mr, and Mrs.O.E.Thibault, Ball street, one ; of this year's graduates in medicine I from the University of Montreal.Dr.Thibault will spend a year as interne at the St.Jeanne D'Arc Hospital in Montreal.tion as electrical engineer for the International Paper Company.Mrs, C.B.Jameson and Mr.Ar-! thur Jameson were in Montreal on j Monday to attend the marriage of 1 Mr.D\u2019Arcy Jameson.I Mrs.M.A.Robinson and daugh-i ter, Lora, and grandson.Mr.Cles-| son Robinson, of Three Rivers, were dinner guests on unday of Mr.and Mrs.Clinton Sweet, Iron Hill.Mr.Paul Racicot, of Montreal, was a week-end guest at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Damase DeGuire.FUSE 2746 Take advantage of Shield's special savings on fresh Fruits, Vegetables ______________« _ _ \u201e w and Groceries! Every wise housewife knows there\u2019s \u201cSavings in Self-Service.\u2019 \u2014 Come in tomorrow .or phone your order.Prompt Service and delivery to ail parts of the city.TOMATO SOUP LIBBY\u2019S S LIBBY\u2019S PORK & BEAKS 2 RED COHOE SALMOH IONA FISH EGGS Grade A-l Large, per dozen CORN FLAKES o/fc RICE KRISPIES l Tins i »ns Tall Tin Tins Pk gs.Pkgs.Tomatoes.Choice Quality, 21 2 size tin, 2 tins 21c Peas, No.4, Choice Quality .\t2 tins 19c Heinz Tomato Juice, 26 oz.tin\t2 tins 25c Heilman\u2019s Home Style Salad Dressing, 32 oz.jar 49c; 16 oz, jar 33c; 8 oz.jar 19c Chateau Cheese, Plain or Pimento, 8 oz.pkt.16c JUMBO CANTALOUPES 1 C , Each .California\tO\tOQ, RED PLUMS\t^Dozen\ttvH Extra Fancy\tQC, WIXESAP APPLES.\tDuz.\t / Mining.Living Room Couches .y.)nT>in>nwHWiw»n;'iMj|ijijj with oi Slux m $24.50 Gliders Living Room Suites you more comfort and rest Glider\u2019.A large choice of trong, yet, very marl for Price.-, from $16.95 to $22.50 $49.50 to $125\t$22.50 f|p|||lll§|j Hector LANCTOT THE STORE OF ECONOMY Corner of Marquette end Pe, | Street.Near the C»the
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