Sherbrooke daily record, 7 septembre 1937, mardi 7 septembre 1937
[" t ^terbronfep ISwnrb Established 1897.SHERBROOKE, CANADA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1937.Forty-First Year.JAPANESE DRIVE Armies Forced Back When Chinese Stage Surprise Offensive SHANGHAI FAILS EGYPTIAN KING REVIEWS TROOPS it; Britain To Press Parley Proposal To End Menace Of Underwater Pirates Flames Across Northwestern Shanghai Lighted Path of Japanese Effort to Regain Territory Lost in Surprise Raids-Chinese Claim Counter-Offensive Has Pushed Japanese Armies Back to Very Banks of Yangtze and Whangpoo Rivers.Shanghai, September 7,\u2014Flames across all northwestern Shanghai lighted the path tonight of a fierce Japanese effort to batter down Chinese resistance that has brought their Shanghai offensive to a standstill.Artillery roared in the Yangtzepoo, Chapei, Kiangwan and North Station districts, laying down blankets of shell fire in advance of Japanese sunset attacks on the Chinese lines.Fires spread across the whole area.The Commercial Press building, rebuilt after the 1932 Sino-Japanese hostilities, was reduced to ashes again after it was struck by three Japanese bombs.The Japanese attack began after the Chinese suddenly shifted from the defensive to a counter-offensive against the Japanese lines fringing the Yangtze and Whangpoo rivers in the northern fighting area of the city.Mayor 0.K.Yui, of Shanghai, said the sudden Chinese thrust had driven the Japanese from the Jukong wharf district midway between Shanghai and the confluence of the two rivers, splitting the Japanese front.Twelve miles to the north, he de-®- dared, the Chinese had recaptures much of the lost ground around Woosung and Paoshan and were threatening the Japanese forces within Paoshan\u2019s ancient walls.Other reports from Chinese sources said Paoshan had fallen.UNITED STATES TREASURY I BOOSTS INTEREST RATES j Washington, Sept.7.\u2014 The | Treasury recognized stiffening | of interest rates throughout ! I the United States today in | ! offering to give investors new | ! securities in exchange for 1 j $817,000,000 in 3% per cent.I government notes maturing I I September 15.\tj ! Treasury Secretary Morgen- j than made public yesterday j 1 two exchange issues offering j i fiiteen-month 1 !4 per cent.1 notes and five-year two per cent, j notes.The two per cent, rate ! is the highest for such obliga-! tiens since 1934.iliil m mm \u2019j « Determined to Hold Nyon Conference Whether Italy Attends or Not\u2014Believed to Have Three-Fold Proposals for Easing Critical Situation Aggravated by Formal Russian Protests Against Italian Submarine Activity.* -1\u2014v.: .sMV ssssss An important item in the defence of a largely desert country such as Egypt is the camel corps, used for patrolling the Sahara region.Above the Boy King of Egypt is seen reviewing the Egyptian Camel Corps, his fleet of \u201cships of the de sert,\u201d during manoeuvres near Cairo.Japanese Warships Bombed Hitler Stressed Solidarity Of Germany, Italy And Japan FEARED THREE PERSONS DEAD IN LAKE CRASH \u2019ch Parties Seek Plane and Three Persons Believed to! A RECORD CROWD! STORMED GATES OE BROME FAIR! TWO SEEKING NEW SPEED RECORDS Bonneville Salt Flats.Utah, Sept.7.\u2014Ab Jenkins, auto speed ace, said today he hoped to get away Wednesday on his oft-delayed forty-eight-hour speed drive here.Capt.George Eyston, British driver, said he planned to make his Search Parties Seek Plane and]Record Opening Day Atten-Ijo^ mLTper^luf mTctrerf °f dance \u2014 Excellent Attrac-i__________________________________ Have Crashed Pelee, Ontario.Off Point tions\u2014Winners of Special Contests Announced.Still further up the Yangtze, two Japanese destroyers and a Japanese cruiser, guarding troop ships attempting to land reinforcements, were bombed before dawn by Chinese warplanes.Mayor Yui said one of the destroyers was in flames and one ¦ bomb had caused a terriffc explosion aboard the cruiser.Japanese army spokesmen admitted their advance was meeting pressure on all fronts with Chinese entrenched in pill-boxes and dugouts.The spokesman said neither Christian churches, Chinese temples, hospitals nor schools would be spare i from Japanese artillery and au bombardment if the Chinese army continued to use them for troop concentrations and bases.He added that it did not matter to the Japanese whether these institutions were Chinese or owned by foreigners.Because of the serious situation along the boundaries of the International Settlement, all British and United States members of the Shanghai Volunteer Corps who were demobilized ten days ago were ordered to return to immediate active duty along the barricades.Boundaries of the settlement were menaced by land and aerial combat.Military experts of the United States forces here estimated Japan\u2019s position at Shanghai today as virtually unchanged from that of August 10 when she started operations by landing naval troops in the Yangtzepoo area.Japan has sixty thousand troops and half her navy operating against Shanghai and is reliably reported to have forty-nine troop ships with an additional sixty thousand men hovering off the mouth of the Yangtze ready to land if she can secure an adequate beach head.Opposed to these, China has fourteen full strength divisions totalling Continued on Page 2, Col.5.Also Made an Emphatic Reiteration of Germany\u2019s Demand for Return of Her War-Lost Colonies, and Termed Attitude of Other Powers Toward this Demand \u201cIncomprehensible\u201d in Annual Proclamation to Nazi Congress.Brome, Sept.7.\u2014 The Brome County Fair opened its gates yesterday and, favored with ideal weather, a tremendous crowd flocked into the grounds to view the finest ^.Exhibition in recent years.Evasive Jap Answer Creates Unfavorable British Opinion ondon, September 7.\u2014Great Britain plans to go ahead with the Nyon conference whether Italy attends or not.No replies have yet been received from the twelve powers to whom invitations were addressed.But, stung by the Russian note charging Italian guilt, the newspaper Messagero, of Rome, declares it is \u201cabsolutely senseless to imagine Italy-can appear in the role of the accused.\u201d In the British view action against underwater pirates in the .Mediterranean cannot be delayed.Continuance of the present situation would be intolerable.British proposals for the conference are understood to include: 1\u2014\tRegistration of submarines in the Mediterranean; 2\u2014\tMeasures whereby submarines of all powers shall be kept within defined zones; 3\u2014\tAn undertaking that the warships of all conferring powers shall defend each others shipping.Foreign Secretary Eden will head the British delegation which intends to make a strong effort to secure collective action in defence of safety on the high seas.But already doubt and fears hang over Nyon.If Italy either declines to attend as a result of the Russian note or imposes conditions on her attendance, Germany almost certainly will follow suit.Thus neither Italy nor Germany will be hound by any agreements reached at Nyon.Both charge Russia vvicn torpedoing the conference.In Russia huge rallies of young .Point Pelee, Ont., Sept.7.\u2014Lake Erie waters were patrolled today by craft w:hose crews sought to learn the fate of a red bi-plane\u2019s occupants after a crash off Point Pelee, forty miles southeast of .Windsor.pîa*\tStr0ng lntimati0nS Given JaPan that Final Rep'y t0 Protest who left Detroit for Cleveland yes-1 acity.The grandstand performance, *'*'*'\u201c''*\t\"\"\t1- r'1 f rrl ç* xr m nvni n rr\tî1M1 ~ 4-.: u r _\t- - workers declare their readinèss rise for the Soviet Fatherland.to CONVOY SYSTEM USED BY MERCHANT VESSELS N uremberg, Germany, Sept.7.\u2014 ; Chancellor Hitler stressed Nazi i Germany\u2019s solidarity with; both Japan and Italy today\u2014against! \u201cCommunist Confuscion\u201d in east and west, His anual proclamation, read tuj i the Nazi Congress by Adolf Wagner, i Bavarian Nazi leader, also made an J emphatic reiteration of Germany\u2019s .demand for return of her war-vst colonies, and called the attitude of, other powers toward this demand \u201cincomprehensible.\u201d Both the Japanese and Italian am- ! bassadors were in the crowd of j 46,000 which heard Hitler\u2019s sta\u2018e-| ment that Germany would stand by ! both Japan and Italy in a defensive\" fight against Communism.It was as if they were hearing the Chancellor's own voice, because Wag- ; ner, who read the proclamation, often j is called Hitler\u2019s \"vocal double.\u201d The Chinese ambassador also was present in red-and-gold draped La;t-pold 1J all.Hitler listened to his own keynote speech from a platform seat.Several hundred bluebloods flanked him.The first few rows of the hall were reserved for the German cabinet, the Italian delegation and foreign diplomats.The rest of the assembly v,as a sea of brown and black uniforms, with one \u201cisland\u201d reserved for fem.-nine guests.Hitler made it plain that Germany's anti-Comintern agreemtnt with Japan served (he same purpose as the Halo-German \u201ccommunity of Continued on Page.2, Col.2.NEWS THAT SUN IS A \"DW \\RF STAR\u201d HAS SET THE ASTRONOMICAL WORLD AGOG Cambridge, Mass., Sept, 7.\u2014 | News that the sun is a \u201cdwarf | star\" and distinctly under par | from a standpoint of brilliance brought small comfort today to ¦ burned sunbathers\u2014but set the j astronomical world agog.Research by the Harvard I Observatory has disclosed thnt | the sun is, relatively speaking, ! a weakling, giving only 7-10 the brilliance of other stars of its type.\tI I hose findings, reported by ! Dr.William A.Calder, re- 1 terday morning.| James Monroe was at the controls , of the plane which left Detroit and is still unreported.With him were Harry Corley, plane owner, and Jerry Teffens, all Detroit residents.Four boats covered the waters off Point Pelee in an effort to ascertain if they were the victims of the crash, witnessed by a member of the Point Pelee Park life saving crew.The Point Pelee life saver said the plane, bound south, crashed into the lake early yesterday.Robert | Grant, park superintendent, sought | trace of the plane by tug untl late i afternoon.His son Lawrence said I ; three plane packets and a pair of | : goggles were found floating in the | ; lake.I j Rough waters prevented a diver | ( descending into the water, twenty-! ! eight feet deep at the point the plane scow including trick and fancy riding, horse racing, music by the Waterloo Concert Band under the baton of George Yroung and stunts by the trained animals of the Christie Circus, is fast moving and essentially clean in character.Aerial stunts by I the Ricardos proved the top attrac- ! tion yesterday and should not be ' missed.\t| Five hundred head of cattle are i entered for competition this year and the quality is exceptional.In the Ayrshire class, out of 138 entries, J, I.Ayers, of Lane\u2019s End Farm, Sweetsburg, was the principal winner.N.W.Miller, of Brome Centre, carried off the top honors in the Holstein breed and W.Elmo Ashton .of Foster, had the finest Jersey herd.Forty babies were entered in the Child Welfare contest sponsored by Against Airplane Attack on British Ambassador to China \u201cShould Not Be Long Delayed\u201d \u2014 Non-Committal Japanese Note Side-Steps British Charge.SOVIET PRESS SOUNDS WARNING OF POSSIBLE \u201cTERRIBLE CONSEQUENCES »\t*\t,\t- -\t-\t- -\t-\t^\tV' i 1\ti VA kj \\ was believed down.A tug.Provincial and Brome County W.C.and two small craft were at -\t- .- .\t.j T.U, with Mrs.H.A.Toof, of Sut- arrange many astronomical I ! the scenb today to start search again j ton Junction, as superintendent.The finest baby proved to be Mildred Blaney, daughter of Mr.and Mrs.William Blaney, of Iron Hill, who won a silver cup.Following are the results of the judging in the Child Welfare contest ; One to six months: T, Marjorie ij.\t¦\t*\t» r r .Sweet, Iron Hill: 2, Marthaleen bolster a sagging Aragon^ front be-, Jone?i Sutton.3; L\u2019ary\u2019page, Knowl.standards, since the luminosity | of the sun is a measuring stick I for brightness and luminosity | of heavenly bodies.Using a giant \u201celectric eye,\u201d I Dr.Calder discovered not only I unsuspected weakness in the I sun s power, but also that the, I mcou is relatively brighter | than astronomers have pre- ! viously believed.; as soon as the waters subside.FRESH SUCCESS SCORED BY INSURGENT COLUMNS Hendiaiye, Franco-Spanish Frontier, Sept.7.- Insurgent columns marching on Gijon and trying to ! Moscow, Sept.7.\u2014 The So-I viet press warned today that ! Italian \u201cFascist aggressors\u201d I have begun a game in the Med-! iterranean \u201cwhich may have ter-' rible consequences.\u201d ' Russia, which has protested i directly to Italy against the sinking of Soviet freighters by \u201cItalian\u201d submarines was represented, however, as viewing ! ! these \u201caggressors\u201d with \u201ccool I ! contempt.\u201d It is awaiting action from f 1 the \u201cAnti-piracy\u201d conference of ! ! Mediterranean powers in Switz L ondon,' Sept.7.\u2014Great Britain\u2019s dissatisfaction with a Japanese \u201cinterim\u201d reply to her protest aganist the airplane attack on the British ambassador to China resulted today in intimations to Japan that a final reply \u201cshould not be long delayed.\u201d It was no secret that an unfavorable impression was created here ! by Japan\u2019s non-committal note, sidestepping the British charge that a Japanese plane machine-gunned Sir by a Hughe Knatchbull-Hugessen while j he was motoring from Nanking to-! ward Shanghai.| The cabinet will review the issue ; tomorrow.| The text of the Japanese Foreign Minister\u2019s \u201cinterim\u201d reply follows: ! The Japanese Government, on re-! ceiving news of the event in ques-ition, took a grave view of the inc' Gibraltar, Sept.7.\u2014The British destroyers Fury, Forester, Fire.drake and Fortune, en route to Eastern Spain to reinforce British naval patrol units, arrived here today.It was learned that merchant vessels trading in the Mediterranean are being formed into groups, wherever possible, as a protection against submarine attacks.Yesterdav four vessels passed together through the Straits towards the west.RUSSIAN ACCUSATIONS AGGRAVATE DIFFICULTY evlond on Friday, the off rial I dent and hastened to con expres, Communist newspaper, Pravda, I\tnf\tJ u;.I i Wetter Water\u201d Opens Up Important Fields Of Engineering Development FEW PUPILS TO HEAR ONTARIO SCHOOL BELLS low Zaragoza, reported fresh sue-, j.0!1 LiSK&'&S!\"* ictrS' TV '\u2022 W ; Girard, Knowlton; 2, Joan Heck-| ley, Bolton Glen; 3, Ronald Sturte-' vant .Iron Hill.-?| In the noilUrwestern drive a costal I force was within twenty mites of Gijon, Biscayan seaport and the last 1 important stronghold that Govern-| ment forces still retain in Oviedo ; Province \u2014 the Government\u2019s last ! foothold in the.northwest.Water Charged with Synthetic Alcohol from Waste Gas of Oil Wells Proves Most Spectacular in Dust Laying and Air Conditioning Operations.R ochester, N.Y., Sept.7.\u2014Wetter water\u2014answer to the prayers of millions for something to take dust out of the air like nothing else ever did\u2014became a reality today.This latest miracle of chemistry was announced to the American this \u201coil well hootch\u2019 \u2019added to a gallon of water actually makes it \u201cwetter.\u201d That is, the water wets whatever it touches almost instantly.Things like yarns that would take an indefinite time, many minutes as a rule, to wet through in water Owen Sound Only City to Re open Schools Today \u2014 Cooler Weather Over Week-) A defence ministry communique End Causes Sharp Decrease f/l1,6 Yalencia Government admit, in Paralysis Cases.| \u201c\u201eLh.'\t\u201c One year to eighteen months: 1, Douglas Davis, South Bolton; 2, Margaret Lefebvre, Knowlton; 3, (John Hanson, Brome Lake.,,\t____ .\tEighteen months to two years: 1, On the upper Aragon front the i«-| Mildred Blaney, Iron Hill; 2, Shirlev surgent force which was driven out | Bak Su.tton 3 Ros{! Sc\u2019ott' Sutton of Bekhite last Friday was report-1 Junction nfiahivin\t*0rth;l?Vt0 hT The babies were under the care «ml pP\u201eTn q f u CaT >f Dr- Douglas, of Knowlton, Nurse and San Pedro and to have placed Gi,b d of Nas\u2019hua, N.H., and Nurse nnH 7n™ y\tDarby, of Sutton Junction.and Zaragoza, under strong pres-1 Fo)iowing are the winners in the j special contests: Boys or girls driving: Elliot Spaf- explair.ed.The Soviet Union, \u201cconscious of its strength, can sneer with 1 cool contempt at provocations of i the Fascist adventurers, who ! are losing their heads,\u201d the ! paner said.Other powers were criticized ' for failure to act.both Chemical Society by B, G.Wilkes'few seconds in \"wetter water.\u201d of the Mellow Institute of Industrial ! Most spectacular was a dust lay-Rcsearch, Pittsburgh, and J.N.ing experiment.In a work room Wickert of the Carbide and Carbons Where the dust was hazy thick and Chemical Corporation, South Char-; breathing risky, an ordinary water leston, West Va.\t| spray fell through the air without \u201cIt\u2019s no pun, but \"wetter water\u201d 1 relief.i.s made that way with alcohol.| \u201cWetter water\u201d Wilkes said, made There\u2019s nothing intoxicating about., the air almost entirely clear, and the stuff.The alcohol is a new : solved the health hazard.The wet \u201csynthetic,\u201d something that does not! water simply soaked instantly every exist in nature.It is made from j dust particle It touched where ordin-waste gas of oil wells.The new fea- ary water drops had boon \u201c\u2022\u2019\u2022lancing lure of this alcohol is the giant size ( off.\u201d of its molecules.\t| Fine sprays of ordinary water ara They have a most peculiar effect , the main reliance of architects and on ordinary water, A few drops of! Continued on Page 2, Col.3.Toronto, Sept.7.\u2014 Schools re-! opened today in Owen Sound but in' almost all other Ontario centres Were still closed because of the outbreak of infantile paralysis, which has afflicted 1,780 persons and caused forty deaths in Ontario.Owen Sound Board of Education) soak in a | decided to re-open schools on the' scheduled date when it learned dur-| 379 since early June, with twenty deaths in Toronto and district.THE WEATHER FAIR; COOL TONIGHT.ing th« weekend that not a case been reported there.Only pupil remain out, because their new building has not been completed in time, and will take another two weeks.Few new cases in the province were reported during the holiday week-end, and the advent of much cooler weather was credited with an apparent cessation in spread of the ailment.Only one death was reported yesterday, that of thirty-four year old Gordon Sinclair, London.Fifteen additional cases in Toronto brought the total in the capital to Pressure is high over Manitoba, nas.tKe Great Lakes and north Atlantic * 01 ; states with a deep disturbance 'centred over Davis Straits extending southward across northern Quebec Light showers have occurred in some parts of Quebec and northern Ontario also in southern Alberta though in other districts the weather has been fair.Temperature has been below normal in all provinces.Forecast: Moderate winds; fair today and Wednesday; cool tonight.Northern New England: Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday; slightly warmer in the extreme south portion tonight* ford, Knowlton.Ladies saddle: Peggy Strange, Knowlton.One half mile pony race: Joan Miller, Brome Centre.Cut flowers, designs and potted plants: Mrs.T.B.Vincent, of Sutton.and Mrs.Bert Phelps.Mrs.B.K.Mizener and Mesdames F.G.and C.D.Johnson, all of Foster.Fruit; W ,T, Daglish, Sweetsburg.Vegetables: H.Bannister, of Knowlton, F.M.Perkins and A.W.Harvey, of Foster.Cooking: Mrs.Edward Hume, of Foster.Mrs.G.Marsh, of Iron Hill, and Mrs.C.T.Horner, of East Farnham.Fallowing are the results of yesterday\u2019s two races: Green Race, Purse $100 Barbara Gratton (Beau- din)\t2\t2\t11 Lino Rex (Jacques)\t112\t3 Silver Scott (Veilleux)\t3\t4\t4\t2 Winnie C.Gantle (Croteau)\tS\t3\t3\t4 Jukcr Hill\u2019(Miller)\t4\t5\t5\t0 Continued on Page 2, Col.1, AMERICANS IN CHINA DEMAND HOME SUPPORT \u2018 sions of profound sympathy to His Britannic Majesty\u2019s Government and to Sir Hughe through myself and the ambassadors to the Court of St.James and to China, respectively, and, at the same time, they sent ur-gvit instructions to authorities on the spot to investigate the case thoroughly.Although the results of these investigations have so far failed to j produce any evidence to establish i the shooting was done by a Japanese airplane, the Japanese Government is taking measures for fur-Continued on Page 2, Col.3.London, Sept.7.\u2014Great Britain and France moved today to save the Mediterranean \u201canti-piracy\u201d conference from the stillbirth threatened ag in diplomatic relations between the Soviet and Italy.Moscow\u2019s sharp protest to Rome, charging the Italian navy had sunk two Russian freighters, and Italy\u2019s brusque reply dealt a severe blow to the prospects of the Conference.Although it was now considered doubtful whether Italy would attend the meeting, called to stop torpedo terrorism against Mediterranean shipping, London and Paris immediately turned to consideration of ways to smooth over the Italo-Russian impasse.The Friday conference of powers affected by a long list of submarine cud other outrages against merchant I ships was the latest Anglo-French j scheme to keep the nearly fourteen-j months-old Spanish war out of the | rest of Europe and the rest of [Europe out of Spain.I Great Britain met the tense diplo-; matic situation with a new incident on her hands\u2014capture of the British steamship Burlington by a Span-j ish insurgent cruiser.The cruiser I Continued on Pag« 2, Col.4.United States Commerce Protests Roosevelt\u2019s Warning that Americans Remain in ChinaatTheir Own Risks.Shanghai, Sept.7.\u2014The United Stales Chamber of Commerce of Shanghai today protested to State Secretary Hull, in Washington, against President Roosevelt's warning that American citizens remained in China at their own risk as ser-ously damaging to the prestige of the United States.Speaking as the representative 0f the American business community, the Chamber of Commerce telegraphed the Secretary of State: \u201cThe American Chamber cf Commerce in Shanghai strongly deprecates any official statement which can be interpreted as indicating any withdrawal or abandonment of American business interests in China as seriously damaging to American prestige in China.\u201d The Chamber, in mooting to consider the representations to the State Department, said it considered Continued on Page 2, Ool.1.Prime Minister Refuses To Debate Veto Of Alberta Acts Any Further Chamber of'\t\u2014- in Shanghai Mackenzie King, in Letter to Premier Aberhart, Declares He Can Find Nothing on Which to Base Argument on Protests and \u201cChallenges\u201d Following Veto of Bank Acts.O' ttawa.Sept.7.\u2014Finding nothing upon which to base an argument in the protests and \u201cchallenges\u201d Premier William Aberhart directed against the Federal Government following its disallowance of three Alberta statutes, Prime Minister Mackenzie King has replied briefly stating the Government's action will stand, At the same time the Prime Minister has written Mr.Aberhart a reassuring tetter in reply to the lat- Provincial Government would proceed as if there had been no interference.In a tetter written to Mr.Mackenzie King by Premier Aberhart August 26 and made public September 2, the Social Credit leader said there were \u201cobvious conclusions\u201d to be drawn from the appointment of the economic commission within a few days of the disallowance order.He criticized the per-sonmel of the five-man commission and declared lev\u2019s criticism of the personnel and] Alberta could not expect due con- terms of reference of the Royal Commission on Economic Relations between the Provinces and the Dominion.Both letters of the Prime Minister were made public here yesterday, although dispatched to Mr.Aberhart September 2.In a letter dated August 26, and following a telegram sent a few days earlier, Mr.Aberhart challenged the right of the Federal Government to disallow pro- sideration of provincial policies from such men.The Prime Minister, in the communication made public yesterday, assured the Alberta Premier the Commission had no legislative power and that its report would be given ample public discussion.He asked for the co-operation of all making its task successful and expressed the belief all the people of Canada would wish to play a part in dealing vincial legislation, and declared the with its recommendations.t PAGE mo SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1937.MALNUTRITION STILL WORLD-WIDE PROBLEM League of Nations Committee Terms Malnutrition \u201cChallenge to Constructive Statesmanship and International Co-operation\u201d.London, Sept.7.\u2014 Malnutrition, from which millions of people in all parts of the world are suffering, remains \u201can outstanding challenge to constuctive statesmanship and international co-o-peradon,\u201d according to a report on nutrition prepared by a League of Nations committee.The report is the outcome of two years\u2019 work by an international group of agricultural and health experts, known as the mixed committee of the League of Nations on the relation of nutrition to health, agricultural and economic policy.A tendency towards better nutrition exists in the countries with which the report deals, but poverty and ignorance remain formidable obstacles to progress, the report says.It includes Canada, the United States, Great Britain, most European countries, Australia and New Zealand.Extension of the movement towards improved nutrition should benefit national agricultural systems, the committee contends.It would call for an increase production of \u201cprotective\u201d foods, such as fruit, vegetables, and dairy produce, and an increased output of various cereals for fodder.Armies Forced Back When Chinese Stage Surprise Offensive Continued from Page 1.almost 250,000 men.Six of these divisions are completely armed and equipped.They are in the front lines while the others are in reserve, almost blanketing the Shanghai delta except for the narrow river margins held by the Japanese.The Shanghai delta is formed by the confluence of the Yangtze river and its broad tributary, the Whang-poo.Twelve miles south of their point of confluence, Shanghai, a commercial city of 3,500,000 persons, lies on the \"Whangpoo.Japan\u2019s first effort was to land troops along \u201cWetter Water\u201d Up Important Engineering Opens Fields Of Development Continued from Page 1.engineers for cleaning the dust out Britain To Press Parley Proposal To End Menace Of Underwater Pirates Continued from Page 1 commandeered the tanker of Pal- of air-conditioned buildings, homes ermo, Sicily, yesterday, and escorted and railroad coaehec.\tI her to the insurgent naval base at The \u201cwetter water\u201d enebanges Palma, Mallorca, where her cargo the deadliness of most bug and in- of 7,700 tons of Russian oil, con-sect sprays.It makes these lethal signed to the Spanish Government, liquids spread faster and farther.! was confiscated.BISHOP OPENS RETREAT TODAY AT UNIVERSITY Old wall paper is said to give up the ghost and start peeling when wetter water hits it.It is also a good remover of the poisons left on fruits from insect sprays, Wilkes reported.The main uses of wetter water are industriaal.These were named as The tanker was under charter to the Spanish Government but flew the British flag.She was owned by the same firm that managed the freighter Woodford which was sunk by an unidentified submarine off the Spanish east coast a week ago.Great Britain promptly protested the capture of the Burlington to the the Yangtze on a twenty-mile beach-,.h \u201c ' bwh;n£, mercerizing Ithe caPtul'e of the Burl: head from Woosung to Liuho and inc\tDlea,ctn ng\u2019 , 115 \u2018j , , A'! Insurgent Government, then advance southward on the citv.' conditioning cotton yarn and abne.| should Italy refuse to sit down at j?6\t-?j dyeing and felting of wool, and uses tbe counei] taJbie with Soviet Russia, I Japs Forced to Change Strategy in leather, paper, ceramics, paints, Qeman was expected to follow lap.» »».\ts\t^ metals, pharmaceuticals, oils and!\u2014-\tt».:».:-» ^-.-.i.Clergy from All Parts of Diocese of Quebec Expected to Be Present at Anglican Gathering at Lennoxville this Week.Chinese resistance thwarted that plan and the Japanese army and navy staffs hurriedly shifted their strategy.Sunday they attacked from cosmetics.Evasive Jap Answer Creates suit.Great Britain and France migh; go ahead with the talks but they would be lop-sided, it was felt, without'the presence of Italy.Informed sources in London con- Americans In China Demand Home Support Continued from Page 1.the stiuation \u2018\u2022untenable.'\u2019 Americans, both missionaries and business men, expressed keen resentment at what they considered the withdrawal of United States protection.Some business leaders drafted strong telegrams to their home offices asking that further protests be lodged with the State Department and the President.They pointed out that the position of the United States in the Far East was largely the result of their years of labor.They said they were unable to understand the government\u2019s attitude and, meeting in informal groups, determined to maintain a standfast policy to retain the United States hard-won stake in China.the Whangpoo and tried to drive the Unfavorable British Opinion sidered Moscow\u2019s blunt note of yes- Chinese directly westward.Their\t_______ ,r,\ttta new plan obviously was a pivoting.\tContinued from Page 1.movement about the northeastern , tflcr investigati0ns by authorities op point of the International Settle- h\tin *rder t0 'pare no efforts ment.Throughout Sunday and Monday fighting progressed along the Whangpoo and on the Yangtze front with the Chinese bringing the Japanese attack to a standstill.The Japanese effort to break Chinese resistance spread over a to ascertain the facts of the case.In these circumstances, it is still impossible to determine whether or not responsibility for the incident rests with Japan.Nevertheless, in of terday as \u201cill-timed\u201d in view of tho fact that Great Britain had entertained hopes that the conference might end quickly what is regarded here an \u201cintolerable situation.\u201d Twelve nations had been invited to the gathering.Relations between Moscow have been notoriously bad since the Span-.ish war began, Moscow siding openly with the Valencia regime and Italy viewr of.the traditional ties friendship which bind Japan and j \u201d\tFranco.' 2,000-mile \u201cfront\u201d with a blockade J Great Britain, the Japanese Govern- ! Moscow was reported to be con-proclaimed against all Chinese ship- ment express their profound regret j jeering convoying her freighters in ' that Sir Hughe should have met with : the Mediterranean but the Russian such a misfortune incidental to hos-1 D&Vy would be in a poor position to tilities that actually were in progress j come to grips with Premier Mussu ping from the borders of Manchou-kuo on the north to Indo-China on the south.^\t1\ttilt* ^ w V****'*J\t-r O -\tj\ttv/ ^ i .f-'tO VYilli -*\tw At the mouth of the Yangtze the jn the region of Taitsang that par- iinps modern navy on its \u201chome A Record Crowd Stormed Gates Of Brome Fair Japanese navy was reported to have sunk two Chinese vessels, allegedly destroying the channel markers in the lower river.The blockade was extended at noon Sunday to cover the entire coast.Hong Kong, the British Crown Colony in the south, was specifically exempted but British naval authorities there were conferring today on attacks made by Japanese warships within sight of the base.field.\u201d Moscow gave no clue of her future course in regard to the curt Italian rejection of the Soviet charges.The Moscow Foreign Office, in tact, did not let it be known there had been Continued from Page I.Huguenot (Draper)\t6 5 6 5 Time\u20142.23 V.2.23 4.\t2.25 4, Hitler Stressed Solidarity Of Germany, Italy and Japan Continued from Page 1.interests.\u201d Italy, Japan and Germany ars bound together in a commumty of interest, he said, for all three are committed to \u201ca defence of world civilization against attacks which break out today in Spain; tomorrow in the Orient; perhaps the day after tomorrow somewhere else.\u201d He added: \u201cThe natural community of interests between national Socialist Germany and Fascist Italy has in renect months shown itself more ticular day, In this connection, I wish to assure Y'our Excellency that Japan forces always take the fullest precautions against causing injuries to non-combatants, and it certainly : was very far from the desire of the | ari Italian replj.Japanese Government ihat suen an\t¦ r/ini v Cltirt rtC unfortunate event should ever occur rnuUlul tRnLT ulMU Ur in the future through any fault of their own.Fresh instructions consequently have been sent to their authorities on the spot to exercise the strictest caution in this regard.I earnestly hope, therefore, that British authorities will on their part kindly cooperate with Japanese authoritie, with the currence DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS The Right Reverend Philip Carrington, Lord Bishop of Quebec, is opening a retreat this evening at Bishop\u2019s University, Lennoxville, for the Clergy of his diocese, which will be continued until Friday.A large number of the clergy from all over the diocese of Quebec are expected to be present to take advantage of this wonderful opportunity.Old memories will be awakened as the clergy attend the lectures at the University at this time, where they listened so often to lectures delivered to them in the past by His Lord-ship, who was formerly Dean of Divinity at Bishop\u2019s.Rome, Sept.7.\u2014 new approach to Spanish non-intervention, and Italo-Rusisan diplomatic relations hung by a slender thread today as a result of the presentation and immediate rejection of a Russian de-\u201e.mand for redress for the sinking of view of forestandmg a re-j t vessels in guerilla submarine of a similar event by tak- .ing such necessary measures as giv-ing notice in advance to Japanese authorities on the spot when entering a zone of danger.warfare.The Soviet Union blamed Italy for the attacks.Various Italian Fascist mouthpieces asserted Italy had been about i to participate in the new non-inter-i vention talks, aimed at ridding the | Medit°vranean of pirate submarines, but now would reconsider tho situa-of the Russian 225 Class.Purse S150.Eva Worthy (Veilleux) 2 1 Gratton Direc bank) Joe T.Patch (Bal-lock) Orphan Annie (Glasgow) Lady Josie (Houver) 2 12 1 12 12 3 3 5 4 Time\u20142.19 4, 2.21, 2.25, 2.24.Today a grand parade of prize winners, headed by the fine Waterloo Band, was held in \u2018front of the grandstand and races in the 2.2'Q and 2.25 classes were run-off.Judging was concluded in the gent\u2019s saddle horse and ladies\u2019 driving classes.The midway and grandstand will be running in full swing tonight and a record second day crowd is expected Shansi Province, capturing the w ed city of Tienchensien.The dispatches said the city, first i tjon j,, ;he light station in Shansi Province on the move, and more an element in defence of through railroad from Peiping to ; jhs belief circulated in many Europe against chaotic imbecility j Suiyuan Province, was invaded, af-, Fascist quarters that the already \u201cOur (anti-Communist) agreement | »er an attack from the air.No oth-j vvea^ relations of the two powers scarcely could withstand this new blow.Relations have not been more than a formality between the fascist and Communist states but it appeared that even the semblance .of diplomatic intercourse might van-private domain of the aged and j ;Sb a3 result of the note handed to highly individualistic war lord, Gen- Foreign Minister Count G&Ieazzo with Japan serves the same funda- | er details were given mental mission\u2014to stand together j If the reports were correct, Japan m defence 0» world civilization.\thad carried htr campaign into a His proclamation vtas a review of\t-\t- third North China province, after ,\t,\t,, \u2022 ,\t!\tcompleting occupation of portions of he came to power\tand\tan outline of\tH * and chahar east of chaPsi, tnp T\u2019™ \u2018kW\"vp\tnf\tthp '*nmnl!r\tShansi has long been the virtually the achievements of the regime since n outline c \u2018 the comm ttie new objective year.Hitler admitted frankly that Ger-; many's chief worry was her food supply.He said: \u201cA German territory without colo-i \u201e ,\tT ,____ \u2022 nies is too small to guarantee, un- ! Ka.gan to Tatung,.\t; p '\u2022 hampered, certain and continuous !rallroad dunetlon P0111'!51\"11 con ] eral Yen Hsi-Shan.I Tienchenhsien is midway from ! oinciais.Wipe your stove with a rag soaked with vinegar before polishing.This removes all grease.nutrition to our people.1\u2019 He declared it \u201cintolerable\u201d that the Third Reich should be dependent year after year on the accident of a good or a bad harvest.This situation, he said, is such an unanswerable argument for the return of German colonies that \u201cthe attitude of the other power?, toward this dels simply incomprehensible.\u201d Ciar.o by the Russian charge d\u2019affaires in Rome.Italian newspapers published attacks accusing Russia of \u201ctorpedoing\u201d not only the \u201canti-piracy\u201d con-I ferenco, scheduled for Friday, but | also European peace.The controlled ! Italian press declared the Russian CONSTRUCTION BY JAPS _______ on the threshold of the conference.Hong Kong.Sept.7.- Reliable /n editorial for this morning\u2019s British\" sources reported today that i\tof II Popolo di Roma saia Japanese destroyers had seized ?n® thing appears clear, upon Rus i centration centre for Chinese troops i from both north and south.new planFbâse under Here\u2019s A Buy.Seven room, self-contained stucco Dwellin?, on Academy street.Lennoxville.Located on the upper level in Lennoxville, this attractive residence is being offered at a price well below cost.Full details on application to SHERBROOKE TRUST COMPANY Despite these difficulties, Hitior \u2022 aid, the national Socialist regime has accomplished these things: 1\u2014\u201cThe Versailles Treaty is stronghold.These sources nearby Pratt Shoals and Lintin Island, on the western fringe of the waters surrounding this British dead,\u201d 2\u2014\t\u201cGermany is free.\u201d 3\u2014\t\u201cOur military po-we tees our freedom.\u201d said the islands jsia fall?the responsibility for this attempt to upset European peace.\u201d A suggestion that Britain and France, authors of the \u201canti-piracy\u201d conference plan, make the next mcce guaran- THIRD NORTH CHINA j were being converted into seaplane jto save the conference was voiced by | bases and great quantities cf gaso- II Messagero.I line and other war supplies \"were \u201cIt is senseless to imagine that ! being landed.\tj Italy could present herself before [the Mediterranean conference in the GRAVE DIGGERS STRIKE ENDS prole of the accused,\u201d II Messagero PROVINCE INVADED Detroit, Mich., Sept.7.\u2014A strike L aid._______ of twenty-six grave digger?, at Holy A typewritten communique of the Peiping, Sept.7.\u2014Japanese dis- Sepulchre Cemetery here was end-1 Press Ministry late yesterday after-patches from the conquered city of , ed during the week-end when union noon carried the disclosure of the Kalgan, capital of Chahar Province i officers and cemetery officials Russian protest and Italy\u2019s reply, and one hundred miles north of here, agreed upon a twelve per cent, wage ; The torpedoed Russian ships were reported today that the Japanese increase.Three funerals were de- not named but the Timiryazev and army had invaded northeastern layed during the short strike.the Blageov were the most recent There is no other tobacco just like Old Chum Camp Fire Companions You know a mon offer you hove camped veth him for a week or (wo.Hii qualify comes out\u2014or the lock of if\u2014by the little tests and trials of life in the open.Some of the firmest friendships are made by the camp fire, For how many years Old Chum has been the cheery campfire companion of fishermen, hunters, prospectors\u2014of men who love the outdoors ! Out of these happy companionships have grown thousands of enduring friendships between Old Chum and sportsmen in every part of Canada.Good Old Chum, tried and true\u2014the choicest Virginia flake cut, mature, mellow, fragrant\u2014its quality has never changed.m EMPHASIZES DANGERS OF SELF CONTENT The twelfth verse of the first chapter of Zephnniah, \u201cAnd it shall come to pass at that time, that I will search Jerusalem with caudles, and punish the men that are settled on their lees: that say in their heart, the Lord will not do good, neither will he do evil,\u201d formed the tasis of a splendid sermon by Rev.Canon G.H.A.Murray to the congregation at St.George\u2019s Church cn Sunday evening.Canon Murray, who took the pulpit in the absence of the rector, the Venerable Archdeacon Albert Jones, the latter spondmg the week-end in Quebec City, where he preached the Sunday morning sermon in the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity, spoke of the danger of over content, whether it be found in a church, community, nation, or an individual.Self satisfaction meant the downfall of either the individual or the group, he maintained, whereas a genuine earnestness to look upward and Strive for betterment, meant for both Christianity and progress.Rev.I.N.Kerr was the preacher at the morning service, and administered Holy Communion at eight o\u2019clock.The music for both the morning and evening services was under the direction of the organist, Mrs.A.Jones, IMPRESSIVE SERVICES AT UNITED CHURCH \u201cJesus, Carpenter and Saviour\u201d was the subject chcsen by Rev.F, R.Matthews, for his sermon to his congregation at the Lennoxville United Church on Sunday morning.The anthem, \u201cRock of Ages\u201d by Dudley Buck, was sung by the choir, under the direction of the organist, Mrs.F.S.Browne, with a solo part by Alien Willard.In the evening, Rev.Mr.Matthews spoke cn \u201cThe Priestheod of Believers\u201d and the hymn, \u201cSummer Suns Are Glowing\u201d was sung as an anthem by the choir.Geneial Notes.The Lennoxville Golf Club was the rendez-vous of golf and bridge enthusiasts on Saturday afternoon when both games were keenly played and greatly enjoyed, Later the ladies had their usual friendly chat at the tea hour, the following acting as hostesses: Mrs.G, D.McManamy, Mrs.Eleanor Fischer and Miss Doris Cillis, of Sherbrooke, and the Misses Carobne Taylor and Winona Bur-bridge, of Lennoxville.The many friends of Miss Bernice McMullen, who underwent an operation for appendicitis last week in the Sherbrooke Hcspita,! will be glad to learn that she is improving daily.Mr.and Mrs.C, Wr.Ross, of Niagara Falls, N.Y., are spending their holiday?: at the home of Mrs.Ross\u2019 sister, Mrs.Frank Spry, and Mr.Spry.Mrs, Lily Marlin has returned to her borne on the Eaton Road, after spend;ng four weeks in the Sherbrooke Hospital, following an automobile accident.Her condition at present is favourable and she is gaining daily.Her many friends wish her a sneedy recovery.Mr.M.H.Pegg has left for Rochester, N.Y., where he will spend two weeks visiting his brother, Mr.Henry Pegg, and his sister, Miss Eliza Ptgg.The Venerable Archdeacon Albert Jones spent the week-end in Quebec City where he preached the Sundav morning sermon in the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity.During bis stay in Quebec City, the Venerable Archdeacon Jones was the guest of The Righ\u201e Reverend Philip Carrington, Lord Bishop of Quebec, and Mrs.Carrington Mr.and Mrs.\\V, E.Glass are attending the Brome Fair today.Miss Jean Pearton.B.A., left yesterday for Montreal, where she will resume her teaching duties after spending the summer with her parents, Mr, and Mrs.James Pearson.Mr.Thomas McClung has accepted a position in a bank at Montreal.THERE\u2019S A LIMIT JN ALL THINGS.Rocky Mountain, N.C,, Sept.7.\u2014 The telephone rang as C.E, Exum and several other volunteer firemen were lying on the floor of the smoke-filled living room of Exum\u2019s home fighting a blaze.Kxum crawled to the phone.Here is what he heard: \u201cThis is Frank Collins at the fire station (who notifies volunteer firemen when an alarm is received).Go to box No.121.There is a fire there.\u201d Exum hung up in disgust.Box 121 is in front of his house.to b*\t1 during the Christmas season is also the Peace at St.Hyacinthe or Artha- ir.August, 1927.while on a fishing, ,\t.artist F\\HTRIT has been studying the j ed.During the same period a total fédéra! intervention.His idea British social services, and in its of 1,S82 projects were constructed, tha- in the situation of 1896 c°m-lfirst report finds that agg^.; comprising 1,038 dugouts, or exca- gate sum oaid out amounts to over I vations to store water, 694 stoc.;-$2,000,000,000 a year, divided am-j watering dams, and 150 small irr ong the following: pulsion was impracticable and that greater concessions could be obtained for the minority in Mantoba by compromise and conciliation than by any legislation which must be imposed upon the provnee by federal authority.A remarkable feature of the controversy, as one looks back, is that the party ranged behind the Remedial Bill commanding restoration of separate schools in Manitoba was led by the statesman (Tapper) who had abolished separate schools in Nova Scotia while the leader of the forces opposed to the coercion of Manitoba was the statesmen who nine years later guaranteed separate schools in the new provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan CANADIAN FOLKLORE (La Presse, Montreal) For several years several friends of Canadian folklore have been busy gathering the songs and airs that -\t,\t.,\ttrace to a large extent the course gation projects.In\taddition,\tsomej0-f\t]jpe 0j.our ancestors.Constructive\tcommunity\tservices ' uncomP^efe4 small\tprojects\twere'\tmaterjai js not lacking.It is which\tinclude\teducation,\tpublic I un(fer construction\tat the end of j a fn^er of choosing it and adapting health,\tmedical\tcare, care\tof the j May, 1jo7.\t| it\taccording to needs and eireum- W0RDS OF WISDOM THE FRENCH PRESS mentally diseased, care of the blind, unemployment exchanges, training centres, etc.DROVE THEM WITH A GUN.(Montreal Star) President Roosevelt has always led the practical professionals in his party with a drawn revolver in his hand.They have never wanted to follow him, but political profit\u2014r.ut to say political salvation\u2014whipped them into line.When Roosevelt carried the country in 19.32, the Democrats had been out of office silice 1929\u2014and were very discouraged and hungry.They were in tavor of almost anybody who could put them next the food-trough.The entire nation was in a panic over the Depression, and the President\u2019s emergency measures looked good to practically everybody.The professional* probably did not understand them but they gathered vote.; and that was the great desideratum.1934 proved it.Before 1936, quite a few Bourbon Democrats had kicked over the traces, however.This was not Democracy as they knew it.But the people soon kicked them back again, Roosevelt was far more popular at the polls than he was In Congress.But at no time was the Democratic party a$ represented in Congress content with Rooseveltism.AT A LONG DISTANCE (Windsor Star) Major Douglas, viewing Alberta Social Credit efforts from far off London, England, says Prime Minister King has made a great mistake in disallowing Mr.Aberhart\u2019s banking legislation.Major Douglas had better demonstrate his ability to make Social Credit workable in Alberta, before handing out advice to the Federal authorities on how to conduct Canada\u2019s affairs.Large community projects cover | stances.Who will take the initiative?the rehabilitation or construction of Who, above all, will inspire our projects on a larger scale than can young people and workers to cul-Social Insurance Services, which i be undertaken by individual effort, j tivate the songs and the dances once include national health insurance, I The basic principle governing the | in vogue in Canada?unemployment insurance, and selection of large projects is to ; Popular recreation cannot take a widows\u2019, orphans, and old-age con- seîul\u2018e a maximum of benefit with'more pleasant form, because it is tributory pensions\tia minimum of cost.\t! accessible to the great mass of Social Assistance Services, which | By the end of March, 1937, work'people, and because it strengthens include non-contributory old-age ; on large projects had been com-11\"6 ties which bind the présent gen-pensions, unemployment asistance pieted.Considered as a whole, the! orations with those of the past.(the \u201cdole\u201d), \u201cand the manifold water development phase of the re-! Let us P,ut lhe Pr«cl?us tr«as9re services of local public assistance habilitation programme has already j °f our f_olklore to use ; it is waiting committees.\u201d\t'provided new facilities for the ir-1 onD f°j' P-eople with initiative and Over 70 per cent, of the cost was! rigation of over 30,000 acres of goodwill.land, besides maintaining water supplies for over 30,0'0'0 acres of established projects.In addition, storage of water supplies for many thousands of head of livestock have been made possible.The establishment of farmstead paid by national and local taxes, amounting to about $45 per head.It is estimated that the services touch about half the population and at many points.A number of these services are given to people who do not need public assistance.Indeed, CRITICAL OF MONTREAL POLICE FORCE (Le Canada, Montreal) The municipal detective force persists in carrying on its investigations in the way that it did fifteen the contributory principle applies to ; ar,d\t, the main benefices, the underlying , protection against high winds, is an ,\t, ,,\t, ,,\t.\t'¦ ri and even twenty years ago.True, in field shelter-belts, to provide Certain cases it can still succeed, W factor being based on pure citizenship.important phase of the rehabilitation programme.The large areas to be dea' CANA- REHABILITATION OF DIAN WEST.(Port Arthur News-Chronicle) While engineers, professional and : Wl\"/ drought conditions is amp,e non-professional, may argue about\tfor «\"tinucus active in the greater part, when it is dealing with premeditated and well-,,\t.\t,\tworked-out crimes, its work is ett- Jv.\tdestined to failure from the begin- ,-ork make time a necessary factor, njrlfr TvtL,.but the substantial progress made m providing same means of security nmg .There should be in Montreal, as in nearly all the great cities of the world, a technical school of criminal investigation, where the detectives would learn the elements the feasibility of the comprehensive development._______^\t|of law, of scientific inquiry, and of pian for irrigation of Westen,\tTnwAPiva akaruhv\t[the methods used by wrong-doers.Canada as suggested by R.O.\t1 AK f\t.\t\u2018 |One thing certain is that the estab- , Sweezey and others, there is no\t{London News-Chronic.e)\tIlishment of such a school would not chance that it would be made effec- Every day\u2019s news illustrates afresh cost so very much ami could do no tive before eeveral years have.the dangerous state of anarchy into j harm.Frankly, our detective foret passed.\tj.which the world is drifting.Th< j sometimes is an object for pity.In the meantime the summers ; British Ambassador is shot at and;\t\u2014\u2014-\u2014 will come and go, each with their wounded by Japanese planes.The| SANITARY HOUSING percentage of chance for new crops ; Japanese are sorry, of course, but,\t(La Patrie, Montreal) on the Prairies.\t; the Ambassador, they say, really | The problem of sanitary housing The one certain thing is that the\tought not\tto get\tin the way\tof |\tia one which has attracted public people are not going to remain idle.;\tpeaceful bullets.\t;\tattention in practically all countries In many sections efforts are being\tOff the\tcoast of\tChina, Japan\tis!\tsince the beginning of the depres- made to improve the conditions to j\tpreparing\tto blockade Chinese ships, i\tsion in 1929.It is particularly acute take advantage of such opportun!-* although no state of war has been in the United States as no less than ties as present themselves and to; declared.Italy, which is officially produce crops.\t| not intervening in Spain, celebrates Dr.H.Barton, Deputy Minister the capture by Italian troops of San-of Agriculture at Ottawa, has writ-J tander.General Franco\u2019s planes ten a review of constructive mea-1 bomb another British ship, sures being taken to establish bet-1 The alarming thing is not so much ter management of the distressed ' that the robber nations openly flout area of the Middle West.\tj international law and decency, but Dr.Barton refers to the terms of that nobody seems very much to How foolish it is to try and cure by argument what time will cure so completely and so gently if ieft to itself.As I get older, the anxiety to prove myself right if I quarrel dies out.I hold my time, and time vindicates me, if it is possible io vindicate me, or convicts me if I am wrong.\u2014Mark Rutherfords \u2018\u2018Deliverance.\u201d We could never have loved the earth .so well if we had had no childhood in it\u2014if it were not the eai'th where the same flowers come up again every spring that we used to gather with our tiny fingers as we sat lisping to ourselves on the grass \u2014the same hips and haws on the auttiniri hedgerows\u2014the same redbreasts that we used to call \u201cGod\u2019s birds,\u2019\u2019 because they did no harm to the precious corps.\u2014G.E.BRITAIN\u2019S SOCIAL SERVICES (St.Thomas Times- Journal) Canada and the United States have been exploring the field of social service* during the past few years.Both have been lacking in these respects, partly because it has not been until comparatively recent times that such a period of depression set in as to make the want of them felt, and partly because of a spirit of independence which cause* the people of the Western world to look askance at anything that savors of state patrimony.It was that need which moved the then Premier R.B.Bennett to bring in a comprehensive programme of social legislation, but it suffered severely at the hands of the Supreme Court, which found that a good deal of the services were obligation.of the provincial authorities.Nevertheless, the nece**ity for that legislation continues.For ; ^ example, the Ontario Government' the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Act and points out that in general the improvementst in farm practice which are being introduced in the drought area are designed to secure the maximum efficiency of soil moisture utilization for crop growth .mind.\u201cCOFFINS OF THE AIR.\u201d (New York Post) Despite the fact that not a singe big dirigible of any major Power is in commission\u2014all save two or and the control of soil drifting.The\t_ ,\t,.\t.\u201e r ^ 4.\t_____________________v.\u201e I three having met disaster\u2014-Gum one-third of the American population is said to have been affected by it.The United States Government, up till now, has been primarily interested in regulating instead of stimulating construction.The ma-l jority of project?aiming to solve this pressing\u2019problem, built by philanthropists, labor syndicates ami co-operatives, have resulted in failures because the rents charged, \u2014even at monthly rates of $6 per room\u2014proved to still be too high for the purpose aimed at.Europe seems to have progressed Knowledge is said to be power.Knowledge is power in the same sense that wood is fuel.Wood on fire is fuel.Knowledge on fire, is power.There is no more power in knowledge than there js in the stones nr stars which you know, unless there be a spirit arid ,ife in the knowledge which give it !ts energy, In proportion as men have this spiritual power do they become strong in the world.\u2014 Alexander McKenzie.We ought not to be careless and indifferent about the future.But as there are goods in life possible to be obtained, and evils capable of being avoided, so we should provide ourselves with proper means to obtain the one and escape the other.Watchfulness and industry are natural virtues, and recommended to us bv the conduct of even brute creatures.If we neglect'our own interest, we deserve the calamities which comes upon us; and have no reason to hope for the compass'nn of others, when we take no care of ourselves.\u2014Bp.Conybeare.Deep feeling is contagious.Words poured forth from burning hearts are sure to kindle the hearts of others.Hearts that can stand everything else are, often molted by a tear.\u2014Anonymous.first of these objective* may be obtained by summer-fallowing the j land at frequent intervals.For the j control of soil drifting various | measures, including strip farming,; cover crops and suitable tillage; method's are available.Strip farm- ; ing is a method of checking the cumulative effect of soil drifting on summer-fallow by alternating grow-1\t, ing crops and fallow in long, narr-.w I\taf\u2018cr b»d- F°r worsc- strips.Cover crops of grain are\t^ ^ sometimes sown in the fall on summer-fallow land to provide protection aginst drifting in the fail or early spring.Cultural practice for the control of soil drifting include the \u201cplow-less fallow,\u201d in which summer-fa).far more than the United States in Charles E.Rosendahl and^5 important domain.England has 'placed at the disposal of its workers homes with rental of from $2 to $1 per room.In Germany, 2,000,000 families have found homes where the average rental does not exceed $4 per room per month.Similar conditions exist in France and in other important European countries.Main reason for all this, apparently, is that construction costs far less in Europe than in North America.mander Admiral A.B.Cook, of the navy s Bureau of Aeronautics appeared before a House committee to urge! building of still more navy dirig-i ibles.For this Government to continue to squander more millions \u2014 even SJiO'O^O'OO for \u201cjust one more dirigible,\u201d as proposed\u2014is to throw to their deaths in these sleek and shining \u201ccoffins of the air,\u201d TOURIST REVENUE (Le Nouvelliste, Three Rivers) Tçurist is an indication of pros- SOME OLD, OLD TREES.(Edmonton Journal) A discussion in England's county i parity on the part of those who newspapers has revealed some inter-1 travel, and at the same time it con-low land is given shallow cultivation j os ting facts about old trees.A ] tributes to ours.In its last monthly without plowing, and other method01 Berkshire newspaper started it with letter, the Canadian Bank of Com- of controlling weed growth wii leave as much stubble and trash on surface as possible with a minimum of pulverization.a casual assumption that the Alder maston oaks or their fellows at Hatfield park were the oldest trees on .\t.\t.\t,\t.\t.\t- the island.They are about six hun- is instituting an inquiry into wages! Where drifting if-: severe, as onjdred year* old.The Yorkshire Post and conditions in the textile indus- exposed areas of light soil, seeding! at once, pointed out that the Cow-try.Had\tMr.Bennett's proposal*\tdown\tto\tgrass for permanent pa:- -\tthorpe oak could boast of at least one been allowed, the probability is the\tturc\tis\tadvocated.The extens.ve\tthousand yean.However the For- strikes at\tPeterborough, Cornwall,\tadoption\tof the foregoing practices\tt.ingale Yew has been awarded the Brockville\tand other places might\tmust\teventually exert a beneficial I decision.This ancient tree in Perth agriculture in have been avoided, for one of hi*, influence on measures dealt with these very drought area, thing*.In the.United States Prc'si- The same article reveal; merce, making a review of the tourist season and its results at the present time, estimates a noticeable progress since last year.The tourist season will last another month in Canada, it says, but already it shows that Ihe expenditures of tourists in the Dominion will surpass those of last year.First figures indicate a fifteen per cent.the shire is said to be 2,500 years of increase in the Dominion, figures in age and the oldest in Europe.What the West and Ontario probably sur-that ir- a story it could tell!\tmu sing this average, while in Que- bec and the Maritime Provinces the increase hovers between the ten and fifteen per cent, marks.The amount of money Americans iwill spend here this year is difficult to reasonably estimate.Ontario j usually receives about sixty per cent.of them, and will probably see an 'increase, since the interest in the Dionne quintuplets seems to increase rather than to diminish, and an amazing number of visitors visit their home although it may not be the chief object of their travels.DEVELOPMENT OF COLONIZATION ROADS (Le Progrès du Golfe, Rimouski) Pursuing its campaign of colonization, the Quebec Government is undertaking important projects in the County of Rimouski.Through the efforts of its M.L.A., Alfred Dube, a thirty-mile road through the forest is to unite Rimouski to the fertile agricultural region of Squatteck.Along this road, through the townships of Chenier, Laroche and others, some hundreds of families will be able to establish their children.This is the first time that such a project has been put into practice there.Some years ago, in that part of the country, a bridge was built, at a cost: of several thousand dollars, but no road to approach it was made, nor any other mode of approach, leaving the construction a monument to a civilization past, which will not recur, vve hope, the age of bridges without roads and roads without bridges.Thousands of dollars have been spent, we might say, to unite Ri-mouski to the southern part of its county.I SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1937.PAGE FIVS MARRIAGES HARRISON\u2014HOOD Hatley, Sept.7.\u2014A pretty wedding took place in the United Church on Saturday evening, August 28, when Miss Ethel Hood was given in marriage to Mr.George Harrison, of Sherbrooke, formerly of England.The church was beautifully decorated wdth masses of flowers and ferns, small bouquets marking the pews reserved for the invited guests.Rev.W.A.Edwards officiated and Mrs.J.F.Woodman presided at the organ.The bride who was given aw'ay by her uncle, Mr.Allan Wheeler, wras attended by her two sisters, Miss Dorothy Hood as maid of honor and Miss Phyllis Hood as bridesmaid.Mr.Herbert Orcutt acted as best man and the ushers were Mr.Oscar Wheeler and Mr.Roger Pellerin, cousins of the bride.The bride looked charming in a gowm of white silk crepe made with long sleeves, with which she wore a tiny sequin-covered cap with wreath of orange blossoms from which her veil of tulle fell in graceful folds.Her bouquet was of climbing roses and sweet peas.The maid-of-honor and bridesmaid were gowned alike in shades of pale pink and green, and carried bouquets of gladioli and sweet peas.During the signing of the register one of the guests, Mr.Frank Stan-iford, of Sherbrooke, sang \u201cBecause,\u201d very effectively.After the ceremony the guests repaired to the home of Mr.and Mrs.Allan Wheeler, where a reception was held.The color-scheme of the decoration was green and white.The table reserved for the bridal party was decorated with streamers of the green and white suspended from the chandelier and a beautiful wedding cake.The gifts were many and useful, consisting of the usual array of linen, glass and china, with several cheques and electric appliances.The groom\u2019s gift to the bride was a cabinet of silver.Going away the bride wore a tweed suit of tan and brown with blouse of shades of brown, with hat, gloves and shoes to match.The out-of-town guests were Mr.and Mrs.Windsor Swallow, Mr.and Mrs.Frank Staniford, Miss Dorothy Staniford, Mrs.Brewer, Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Taylor, Mr.and Mrs.Harry Cuthbert, Mr.and Mrs.F.H.Palmer and Mr.James Hunter, all of Sherbrooke; Mr.and Mrs.Alex Kezar, Mr.Hollis Hussey, Miss Flora Hussey, Mr.and Mrs.Claud Whitcomb, Mrs.Percy Whitcomb, Mr.AVilliam St.Dizier, 3E==3E==j5)(£p3l e Women\u2019s Spher -gir=g=ag5B=m\u2014a=a^i™=a==ai====ir=^3)(S^=ll==s=iE were Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Sherbert, Southbridge, Mass.; Mr.and Mrs.J.T.Barker, Melrose, Mass.; Miss Edna Campbell, R.N., Utica, N.Y.; Mr.and Mrs.A.G.McDonald, Mr.and Mrs.J.Enright, Miss Margaret McDonald, Mr.and Mrs.Ovila La-moureux and Mr.and Mrs.Arsene Dame, all of Granby; Mr.and Mrs.Ovila Jolin, Mr.and Mrs.Damien' John, Mrs.Henri Hubert and son, Rosaire, Mrs.Raymond Campbell and son, Lorenzo, Mr.and Mrs.Francis Campbell and Mrs.Audette, all of Waterloo; Mr.and Mrs.Andrew Campbell, of Warden; Mr.Nicholas Campbell, and daughter, Bernice and Mr.and Mrs.C.A.Dupuis, of Shefford Mountain, and Mr.and Mrs.E.Jolin and family, Mr.and Mrs.Leo Duquette and Mr.Rene La-pierre, GUIDE, DON\u2019T FORBID, SCHOOLGIRL\u2019S MAKEUP CROSS\u2014KIRKPATRICK The marriage of Janet Margaret, daughter of Mr.and Mrs.J.Ralph Kirkpatnicik, of Kitchener, Ontario, formerly of Sherbrooke, to Mr.Douglas Henry Cross, of Montreal, son of Mr.and Mrs.W.G.Cross, of Sherbrooke, was solemnized on Saturday afternoon, September 4th, at the Church of St.John the Evangelist, Kitchener.Pale pink gladioli adorned the altar and small clusters of the same flowers marked the pews reserved for the guests.The rector, Rev.J.N.H.Mills, officiated, and Mr, W.R.Mason, the organist, preside at the organ, playing the wedding music and accompanying the choir throughout the service which was fully choral.The bride was given in marriage by her father and wore a lovely gown of Venus pink pointe d\u2019esprit over satin, fashioned with shirred hip line and long train, the bodice and short puffed sleeves being finished with the same dainty trimming.Her veil of tulle illusion matched her gown and fell from a coronet of orange blossoms, and she carried a shower bouquet of sweetheart loses and baby\u2019s breath.Mrs.Eric Webster, of Sherbrooke, sister of the bride, as matron of honor, and Miss Margaret Cross, of Montreal, the groom\u2019s sister, were gowned alike in delphinium blue chiffon frocks made with floor Mrs.Edith j length skirts and short puffed Corey, Mr.and Mrs.Luke Colt, Mr.,\u2022 sleeves, their head dresses being and Mrs.Archie Mosher, Mrs.Gib-! danker tone chiffon velvet crown son and Hazel Gibson, of Massa- t hats with shoulder length veils, and wippi and Ayer\u2019s Cliff.\t|\tthey carried Johanna Hill roses.couple will reside in\tKirkpatrick, the bride\u2019s oneibrooke.\tj mother, wore a chic jacket ensemble COITEUX\u2014CAMPBELL\tof, ^«-«hored lace, a matching West Shefford, Sept.7\u2014The mar- i velour Jiat and corsage of orchids Social and Personal There\u2019s not much percentage in face after skiing, skating or winter sending daughter off to high school, hiking party.\t.\t, junior college or boarding school In other words, help the\tto without makeup in her trunk or a realize that health is the foundation practical knowledge of cosmetics of true beauty and how important and correct application of them.No good taste is.Set^a .Shining example matter how you feel about rouge, powder and lipstick on the faces of very young girls, the chances are ten to one that your child will use them anyway\u2014or be utterly miserable if she doesn\u2019t.Therefore, you\u2019re a smart mama indeed if you help your daughter - .\t., choose appropriate, flattering cos- her natural blood tones and insist metics, then\tteach\ther or have\tan\tthat she apply it sparingly and blend\t, m\tm n\tf expert teach\ther to get them\ton\tit artistically.Her\tpowder ought to\tMr.and Mrs.E.\tM.Dunn, of perfectly.\tks °f finest quality\tand match exact-\tMontreal, were guests for the week- Emphasize\tthe\timportance\tof\tly or be one shade\tlighter than skin\tend and Labor Day\tof the Misses .'¦\t1 \u2019¦ tones.\t! Bonner, First avenue south.Lipstick is most attractive when ;\t*\t«\t* smoothed on dry lips, then blotted 1 Mf> Henrv Wyatt, M-.W.Gra-with cleansing tissue.The blotting h Miss Hilda Robinsoil aTld Miss sets the color and eliminates a caked\tGcvd) «turned this me rn- s?iX££griSZ'2t&:'-'\t* \u201c>¦ »011 a> about LAND OF MILK AND HONEY NOT SO HOT.Evansville, Ind., Sept.7.\u2014Cecil Newby, thirty-fcwo-years old, just out of the hospital, had his doubts ley avenue.¥ ¥ ¥ Mr, Arthur Ireland, of New York, and Mr.and Mrs.William , Ireland, of Corning, N.Y., were \u2019 guests on Sunday of Miss A.T.Odeli, Prospect street, en route from Lake Mcgantic, where they have been holidaying for two weeks, for attended by hL!jn tjle dining roam.The long table, ,,\t\u201e\t, ,,! covered with an exquisite Florentine Mis.Campbell, the mother of the jace ci0th, was centered with a wed-bride, wore a\tol punted\tca£e decorated in pearl pink fon With navy blue hat, gloves an 1 an \t\t tr.r .\u2014 1 Mrs.J.B.Mrs.I Galvin, Mrs.D.Lavariere, -1 Hubertc Raby, .L.Galvin, Sher- sen baking powder biscuits.Harry Webster, Lenrox-2 Mrs.A.H.Bartlett, Sher-ù Mrs.R.C.Bartlett.Sher- Coruer.Crocheted quilt Vincent, Sutton: Sherbrooke; Sherbrooke.Knitted quil: Sheïlrooke; 2 Mi brooke Pat'll work quilt.\u20141 Mrs.G.M.Beach.Cowansville; 2 Mrs.Mathias Jette.Brompton; 3 Vivian Courte-mancl.e, Waterloo.KNITTING Men's bedroom slippers.\u20141 Mrs.-J.B.Vincent, Sutton.Men\u2019s knitted gloves.\u2014 1 Mrs.\u2019 Omer Cote.Toruifcbia; 2 Leon Colby, j Bulwer; 3 Mrs.A Boulanger, Notre I Dan.e de5 Bois.Lacies\u2019 knitted or crocheted i gloves.\u2014 1 W, W.Shaw, Sher-j brooke: 2 Juliette Pinsonnault, Waterloo- Mrs.Omer Cote, Tomifo- ! ! Sherbrooke: 2 Mrs, C.C.Wilson, j : Fitch Bay ; 3 Mrs.H.L.Wallace, j j Lennoxville.LADY FARMERS' CLUB Sleeveless pullover sweater for j ! men.\u20141 Mrs.Emilien Proulx, St.! : Camille: 2 Cercle des Fermières, i I Paqueteville.Ladies\u2019 under garments.\u20141 Cercle [ des Fermieres, Paqueteville; 2 Mrs.] : Emiiier.Proulx, St.Camille.One tablecloth.\u20141 Mrs.Emilien Proulx.St.Camille Six linen napkins.\u20141 Mrs.Emi-, lien Proulx, St.Camille.One piece of pressed material.\u2014 ! 1 Mrs.Adelard Demers, Rock For-| est.j One piece of ladies\u2019 coat.\u20141 Mrs.: Adelard Demers, Rock Forest.One crocheted carpet, \u2014 1 Mrs.Emilien Proulx, St.Camille; 2 Mrs.j Adelard Demers, Rock Forest, i One braided carpet.\u20141 Mrs.Adelard Demers, Rock Forest; 2 Airs.After the ladies had served rt- One\tpint jai\t\u2022 01 S'\t$*ee'\t\t\t1061\t\u2019.\t\tLad\t.\u2019es'\ttwo Tj\t\t:e knitte\td d\tress or 1 Mr=\tFred S\t, Browne\t\t, Len\tno\t\t\t\t-i\tFloren\tce\tF, Mo:\tmt.\tSher- 2 Mrs.\tHarry\t\\T.~ , V .'v e D :\titer\t, Ler\t\t\t\t\tf *.\t2 Mi-.\tA\t.Belanger,\t\tNotre Olid\tpint\tjar\tof\t\ted\t\tour :\tDarns\t\ts Bois;\t\tMiss Cecile\t\tBeau- pickles\t\u20141 Mr\t-s.Hu\tgh\tWall.\t\ts.L\tcn-\tdrv.5\tF e\t\t\t\t\t noxvill\te; 2 M:\tT\tB.\tVine\tgjV\tt, S\t\t\t\tORES\t\tMAKING\t\t ton\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tMa:\tr.L\t\ti g\tgown.-\t- 1 Alice\t One\tpint 1 ?.r\t\u2022 ef m\t\tird p\t\tvies.\t.\u2014\tBeau.\t\u2022he:\tn i n S V\t:er\tbrooke;\tO ^\t1 f ye\tp \u2022irs.Ij, 1 Mrs\tHugh\tWall\tace.\t, I^er\ti tir\ttXVj\the;\tD&lg:\tic-ai\ti.Sher\t\tyoke.\t\t 2 Mr-\tJlarrv\tWe\t;ter\t.Ler\tLÎ1C\tt x v i\tHe;\t\tDO\tM ESI If\"\t\tWE AY\tINI\t 3 Mrs\tAdrien Dur\t\tnon\tt.Co\t\t\t\tRec\t\tFble b!\tan\tket.\u2014\t1\tEveline \tc\too k:\tLNG\t\t\t\t\tCote.\t\t\u2022rth Sf\t.ikeiv; 2 M\t\trs.\tA.Be- Choc\tjclate c\t: ak e.\t\u2014\tI >\tfa\tde'e\ttne\tlange\t\tCotre D\tan\tte des B-\t\t3 M.Forest\t.Sherh\tirooke\t: 2\t: M:\t\tw.\tS.\tF.C,\tîiar\tbonnea\t\tNotre\tDar\t^ Jes Riche\u2019\trisen.Lenno:\t\t\tle: *'\t\t\t¦ma\tBo: -\t\t\t\t\t\t Beatt :\t?.Lenrv\toxvjL\t\t\t\t\t\tWh\t\thlarVre\t\t-1 Mr-.\t\tBrian- Ligh\t.1 fniit\tcake.\t\u20141\t»f v_\t\tr\t\tge r, .\t\tre Dan:\te «\tles Bois;\t; 2\tEvoFne Elrea.\tSherbr\tookf :\t2\tEve:\tyn\tr\tote}\tCote.\tv0\trth Ltr\tke\tly; 3 Mr\t- F\tChar- North\tStukc-i-,\t\t\t\t\t\t\tDonne\t\tNotre\tDame tie-\t\tPr\t Dsr'\t^ friîit\tcake.\t\u2014\t1 M\t\t\tB.\tOr,,\t\tip ce nf\tpn\t\t\t\t1 Mrs.Mincer\tSut\t\t2\t\\î UC\t\tHa\t\t' Adels\t\tDeme\t\t\tY7ni\t\u2022est; 2 Websri\ter.Iæiî\tnoxvi\tHe *\t\t1 v*\tC\t\u2019ar-\tCor in\tV 1\tGilbert\te.\tLhprhrn\tOk f*\t mor.r.\tt » \u2022 : ! .r ,\tn.Fit\tch\tB?v.\t\t\t\tOr.-\tb pi\tec^ nu:.\t\tlinen har\t\towe! \u2014 Spc;\tye car.\t0.\t\ti\tM- - ,\tF red\t\t: S.\t1 Ev\t\t:e Cote.\t\tXonh 5\t\t\u2022:e!v: 2 Brow r\tt.Lennoxvil\t\tle:\t2 y\t\tdek\ttine\t.Cor-\tp j\t.a! i hern\t\tPhf'rhr'Yr\t\t Forest\t.Sherb:\trooKC\t\u2022 3\tMrs\tc\t8C3Î\tH.\tMath\tits\tJette.\tp\triO-npV-r\t\t Shaw.\tDrumrr\tiondv;\tLe.\t\t\t\t\t1 Wo\tven scarf\t\t,\u2014\tAf.\t\trti De- Ball\thr/ T/TjW\t\tsen.\t\t.1\tv03\t:ma\tmer-.\tp.\tock F o\tiff:\t:-t; 2 Cri\t\tt Lali- Beatt:\t/.Lem\t\t\t2 Mr\t\tG.\tM'>\tberte.\tb\therbroc\td:e\t.O VT\td\tl.Bou- Emilien Proulx, St.Camille.One pair of knitted ladies\u2019 gloves.\u20141 Mrs.Emi'ien Proulx, St.Camille; 2 Cercle des Fermieres, Pa-quetevilie.One fancy work slip.\u20141 Mrs.Emilien Piouix, St.Camille.FLORICULTURE Cut Bloom Antirrhinums.\u20141 Henry Wooller-| ton, Sherbrooke; 2 J.É.Desruis-.\u2022eaurc, Birc-hton: 3 Charles 4 Peter-! son, I ennoxville.i Asters, two blooms.\u20141 Mrs.Des-] ruisseaux.Birchton; 2 Charles A.J Peterson, Lennoxville.Asters, twelve blooms.\u2014 I Mrs.Desruisseaux.Birchton: 2 Charles ! A.Peterson, Lennoxville.{ Dahlias, three blooms, one va-\u2018 riety.\u2014I Henry Woollerton, Sher- great numbers of fish and land am- - j mais including six white whale.Nottingham, England, Sept.7.\u2014 i Many specimens have been sent to j Considerable success has bean ; Cleveland.achieved in the war against un- j \u201cit is too early to arrive at any | necessary noise, tut much remains ; definite conclusion to be done, declared Prof.G.W.C.'isons 0f animals es we ' broldered tablecloth and napkins, previously examined living in ! Mrs.Robins thanked all her ences section of the British Assoc.a-j warni climates,\u201d Dr.Crile stated, j friends, and Mr.Robins expressed tion for the Advancement of Science \u201cgut the tests here have been highly j his gratitude to all.He said the in session here.\t[satisfactory.\u201d\t[past seven years had been among Simultaneously with the telephone, I Mr.Crile and his party went to ! the happiest he had spent in the radio and talking picture develop-1 Chesterfield Inlet on the Steamer j ministry, and he wished the sam-ments in applied acoustics has j Nascopie and plan to remain there | loyal support for his successor as gradually developed a public eons-! some time.While there, they hope i had been extended him.ciousness of the insidious growtn of! to perform metabolism tests on1 .\u2019\t\u2019 the social evil of needless noise, i native Eskimos.which he called a pernicious by-j Scientists studying insect life product attributable in great part [have included R.H.Daggy and D.to the increasing mechanization oi ; G.Denning of the division of ento-civilization.\tjmology, University Farm, Minn.; \u201cWith this growing realization ; ^¦ J- Brown, entomologist from de-the nation is beginning to demand | Pertinent of agriculture, Ottawa and and to receive protection against the ;\tFarley, Carmose, Alta.N.nuisance of outrageous noise, whet'n- ; Bo\u201cm\u2019 an ornithologist from Eng- er generated by public or private |land'was also here.\t., j,\t\u2022 j\tA.D.Bagkov, a Russian, is look- \"u\tlU'.r r\tinto the possibilities of com- On the question of what consa-:mercjal fishing in Hudson Bay.Con-tutes a \"noise [ it was difficult to trary to a Government report which generalize.Prof.Kaye remarked Jnel}îeicj out scant hopes, Dr.Bagkov incountryman votes the noises oi tne |s.sts ^eYe can successful cod city distributing to a high deg: e-e,\tand many other types of but the townsman does not ne,\u2019es'| efjihle fish.sarily find a lullaby in the noises \u201cThe conditions in Hudson Bay peculiar to tne countryside,\t[are almost exactly the same as in the \u2014 -\u2014\u2014-\u2014-\u2014 |White Sea and Kara Sea in north- ern Russia where there is much fishing,\u201d Dr.Bagkov said.\u201cI am sure there will be successful fishing of However in the summer the cod are about half way between the bottom of the bay and the surface as they are feeding on ! capelin.As soon as we find out when ! they gather in schools in the bottom ! of the bay we will be able to fish 1 Miss Esther England accompanied Miss Florence McCurdy, of Lmnox-ville, and Mr.W.Howie, of Pasadena, Calif., on a motor trip to the White Mountains, N.H., and Portland.Me.Master Harry Rankin has returned to his home at East Angus after spending several weeks with his grandparents, Mr.and Mrs.V.Parsons.Miss Mabel Blicr is visiting her uncle and aunt, Dr.and Mrs.F.P.Ball, at Bingham, Me.Mr.and Mrs.F.W.Knowlton and Mrs.C.H.Knowlton, of St.Jo\u2019nns-bury, Vt., and Mrs.Emery and Mr.R.Weyland, of Boston.Mass., were visiting at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Thomas Smith.Rev.and Mrs.J.G.Fulcher have returned home after spending a month\u2019s vacation at Ste.Anne de Bellevue, Chateauguay Basin and Sutton.Mr.R.!.Bag-low, B.A., has gone to Ormstown to take up his teaching duties at the high school there.Mr.Carlyle Woodside has return- PACKARD PRESENTS \"HOLLYWOOD MARDI GRAS\u201d YOU\u2019LL HEAR the golden voice of America\u2019s favorite radio tenor .Charles A.Peterson, Sherbrooke; Lennoxville.Verbenas, six, three blooms, each cod in Hudson Bay dissimilar in color.\u2014 1 Mrs.Gertrude Hall, Sherbrooke; 2 Morris Lenny, Sherbrooke; 3 Airs.J.B.Vincent, Sutton.Zinnias, six, one bloom each, dissimilar in color.\u20141 Charles A._ He- [successfully for them.They are be- ! terson.Lennoxville; 2 Henry Wool- ;jng caught occasionally now but will 'erton Sherbrooke; 3 Mrs.Gertrude jbe jn abundance when we know their Hall, Sherbrooke.\t: habits better.Zinnias, dwarf, three or more | \u201cOther fish which will be caught colors.\u20141 Charles A.Peterson Len- j in commercial quantities in the j mimW .¦FOR YOUR OUTING* TAKE ÂLQN& WRIGLE Y% AIDS \u2019DIGESTION ! YOU'LL HOWL at the quips of the bewildered comedian.; CHARLES BUTTERWORTH YOU\u2019LL CHUCKLE at the world\u2019s two most famous taxi-cab operators .NEWSPAPERS ARE ESSENTIAL\u201d -LEE H.BRISTOL Vice-President inCharge of Advertising, Bristol-Myers Company '¦ Newspapers sre e yential to the well - rounded advertising program.Highly competitive city markets demand the intensive local sales pressure that newspapers provide.\u201d LEE H.BRISTOL Best d.» plays.\u20141 Henry W noil erton.FKrferooke: 2 Morris Lemay, Sherbrooke; 3 Mrs.J.B.Vincent, Sutto-i.Best, bloom in show.\u2014 1 Henry Woollerton, Sherbrooke.Gla.ioli, six spikes, dissimilar.\u2014 1\tKerry Woollerton, Sherbrooke; 2 Robert.Loveland, Sherbrooke; 3 Char'e\" A, Peterson, Lennoxville.Gladiolus, best spike.\u2014 1 Henry Vi oci'erton, Sherbrooke.Gladioli, basket of twelve spikes.\u2014 ! Leery Wool c\u2019-von, Shoroicoke; 2\tCharles A.Peterson, Lennoxville; 3\tRobert Loveland, Sherbrooke.Lark-.our.three color-:, six spikes each.1 Charier A.Peter-on.I.en-: i.oxvi\u2019.e; 2 Mrs.Gertrude Ha!!, Sher- ' ! oroi.\u2019uc; J.K.Des ruisseaux, Birth-! ten, _Na-turtiums, best collect:cm \u2014 1 W.W Shaw, Sh e brooke; 2 Char les.A.\tPeri > .-on, Lennoxville; 2 Mr-:.J.B.\tVivent, Sutton.Pa:rwt-.ve Uoorns with fo-\u2022 liage.\u20141 Mrs.Arthur Fraser, Sher-orookc; 2 Mr-.Ger rude Hall, Sher-urout.r : 1 Ho tort Loveland, Sher- I .Périmes, «ingle twelve, dissimilar : n co'or \u2014 1 Charles A.Peterson, j Lennox \u2022.\u2022\u2019He; 2 Mr-.Desrulszeaux, Birchton; 3 M.Gertrude Hal!, I Sherbrooke.Phlox Drummond\u2019., eight.Moons, ; three «pike- each \u20141 Mrs.J R.Vin-! cent, .SuUon; 2 Mrs.Gertrude Hall, 1\twherbi ooke.Phlox pon-ermial.three color.-, ! three spike- eaeh.- I Ontle« A.Pe-1 te.' .i.ennoxville; 2 Mr .Arthur ; F:\ti\u2019berbrooke; 3 M.Cer- ; trude Hal\u2019, Sherbrooke.ScaVo-a.thsee color», six :.r,ik \\[.Arthur Fraser ' Entomologists find insect growth Mr.',.Gertrude Hail! I\u201d?the sub-Arctic exceedingly rapid, j Grasshoppers for example develop: I twice as rapidly as in southern Mani-i-emi.riJ j - \u2018toba.Hatched fully ® O spros.Sasta Isresh all da^ Lennoville; Sherbrooke; Sherbrooke.Bouquet, corsage four weeks , worn.1 Henry V- ooher-on, Shei- i]ateri tj,ey reach maturity about the i'!™:*:\tb.,.f\t-ame time as their southern brothers.noxvt e; ü Mrs.Gertrude Hall, Sher-Ibrooke Collection of cut bloom, six feet I square.\u20141 Mrs.J.B.Vincent, Eut-i ton.Highest number of points in cut ; bloom\u20141 Charles A.Peterson, Len-; noxvi\u2019le.Falpiglossis, collection in vase.\u2014 1 J.E, Desruisseaux, Birchton; 2 ; Robert Loveland, Sherbrooke; 3 Charles A.Peterson, Lennoxville.With the short summer in this district they would not be able otherwise to reproduce.FORM FILM COUNCIL London, Sept.7.\u2014A british Films I Advancement Council whose objec* is to further the interests of British j films, was formed at a meeting of | representatives of both Houses of | Parliament.\tI COIÎK TIP or PLAIN.Also, Spud Fine-cut Tobacco for rolling your own, 10c the package.ROCK CITY TOBACCO COMPANY.LIMITED, QUEBEC \u2022 Canadian and Independent MS I ANDY (Courit./ 3/ Pepsodent') FLORENCÊ GEORGE DON WILSON RAYMOND PAIGE ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS DONT MISS THIS BIG STAR-STUDDED FULL HOUR SHOW/ a;!,gFCF Every TUESDAY Night ARE YOU LIKE THIS YOUNG MAN?A few years ago he determined to solve the problem of uncertainty of future income by saving $5 every week.He stuck to Lis resolution for a few months and then, being human, he let the weeks and months slip by without saving anything.No one reminded him of his failure to save.Of course not.That was his own personal business.He saved $100; then was tempted to spend it, and did so.Now after two years of hit-or-miss methods he has found with the Imperial Life a savings plan that works.An Imperial Life policy w-ill help you stick to your resolution to build up a savings fund that w-ill care for your dependents should you die, and provide a regular income for yourself after you retire.Four men out of five who resolve to save by other means don\u2019t do it\u2014 can\u2019t do it.But four men out of five who save through the Imperial Life-do keep up their regular deposits.\"Financial Security through Life Insurance,\" by Paul Speither, an international authority, is an interesfinx hook which should he read by everyone who plans to provide (mancial security for himself and family.Your local Imperial Fife representative will make a copy available 10 you without cost.399 sM I ] Imperial life | È 1 I SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1937.PAGE SEvei* Dick Tracy\u2014A Fugitive Surrenders HlS HEAD HA August «9th.She returned to Butler left on Moonday to take up Asbestos.Dain+y refreshments were ; their annual Decoration Day parade ' rir\tAiv* R Y Watsrm of her work at George ville the follow- their duties as teachers.\t| served by Mrs.Denton at the close | here.The service at the cemetery : St.Johns, were Visitor at the homes morning.ed to Sault Ste.Marie, after spending a feiv days with her brother, Mr.Clifford Nutbrown.of this vil-lage.Miss Clara Longmoore returned to her home in Leeds, after a trio to the Gaspe Peninsula.While away she also visited her cousins.Mr.and Mrs.T.W.Longmoore, of Fair-ville, N.B.Master Alfred Nutbrown has returned to his home in Leeds, after undergoing a serious operation in the Sherbrooke Hospital.His friends all wish him a speedy recovery.visitors at the home of Mrs.Charles Ward.Mr.and ! cently 1 Mr.and Mrs.William Hunting, and little daughter, of Quebec City, ] Mrs.F.Bernard, of Danville, and home bi Mr.and Mrs.Fiddes, of Montreal, Mrs.Edith Reed and Miss Winn:- .vuu i,pl.ices at St.Stephen\u2019s Church here ; Unity Lodge, Sherbrooke; F.J.Sal on Saturcay evening and Sunday af- ; way, D.D.G.M., and W.A.Smith ternoon, August 28 and 29.Both ser-j of Pioneer Lodge, Richmond, and: Mr George Allen and daughter I Mr.and Mrs.Ray Hunting and Lois vices being well attended and much j p.Bernard, of Golden Rule Lodge, Miss A\u2019ice Allen have been hi St\u20191 and Mrs.Kittredge, of Springfield, appreciated.\t! Danville.\t[ Cathartnes Ont for a conn\u2019s of ' Mass., recently called on Mr.and Recent guests at the Dickscn home ; Rebekah Sisters present were weeks the'o-uests of Mrs Stewart i Mrs.C.R.Brown and Carroll were Mr.and Mrs.L.Pennington j Mrs.W.A.Smith, of Richmond, ! McCalmm.Mr\" Allen ha« ' returned 'Brown.but Miss Allen is remaining .Miss Jessie Beane was a recent .- w;th hpr pnnt fr.r n lomrpv novioH visitor at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Mrs;^ Louise Smyrhe and Mr.Dale ; fred Reed, P.R.A.of Sherbrooke, j Mr.\u2018and Mrs.F.\u2018 X.Poulin are'be- Mv.Robert Leith spent a day re- j\tGeneral Notes.\t- aTpresent^Mr\u2019\u201d PouHn^Tio8?* nine\" ' family spent a day recently with cently in Thetford Mines.\ti Miss Ada McCullough, who has i ty-one years* of a-e is now h«drid-1 ^ latter\u2019s mother, Mrs.Estelle Mis.H A.Dickson and the Mis- been a guest of her niece, Mrs.J.d\u2018en ' ]\\jrSi \" poujj\" \u2019 j* ej;»h*y-o>v< iRobinson, and Mr.Sidney Robinison.\u2014 Dickson, accompanied by Mrs.D.Grimes, and Mr.Grimes, of Mont- \u2022 vear« olY' * RICHMOND J.H.Gor, Ticehurst Corner.Mr.and Mrs.Roland Drew and Ella Patterson, called on Mr.and , , t , ,\t| years old, and -luite feeble.twf daughte™ Uvfnm°and\tTV WattS\u2019 and Mrk.a?d h Miss f Duboyce and Mrs.Bav-!caddenntalfd Mrs C L.Gilkerson \u2019fir\tRvniu iJamfcs Longmoore on Wednesday, tow and two daughters, Beatrice ;were Mrs.r.H.Cascadden and Miss re?®ntly for Island Brook, geptcIT,ber lst\t_\t; and Ruth, of Schenectady, N.Y., i Dorothy Taylor, of Verdun, Mr.and where they will sPfn(i the winter.| jjjgg Alice Graham, accompanied and Mr.Joseph Miller, of Megantic, Mrs.Arthur Crawford, Mr.and Mrs.Mr.and Mrs.E.inor Alexander, ]^ Mrs.Weston Graham and Mrs.j were recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.| Elmer Crawford, Mr.Merrill Lee, Alberta, are visiting friends ir ; p* McKenzi\u20ac motored to Asbestos, D.\"\t\u2019 Mrs.E.M.Tuttle, of Norwood, N.H., recently visited her friend, Mrs.Harold Beane, and family.of CASSVILLE this vicinity.A number of friends attended! the Majory-Savage reception ! on Monday of last week.Dunlop.Mrs.James Crawford and Mr.Albert - Mrs.George Vivian and two chil- Mrs.A.Olsen and children, David ! Baker, of Barre, Vt., and Mr.N.D.;dren are spending two weeks at Mr.i Recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.and Marilyn, have returned to their ! Cascadden, of Sherbrooke.: Rufus Patterson were Mr.and Mrs.[home in Fitchburg, Mass., after I\t-\u2014- M:ss Audrey Sendey, of Jackson j Wesley McIntyre and son, Howard, : having been guests of relatives here :\tBIRCHTON Heights, Long Island, has returned^ sherbrooke, Miss Margaret Ham,\u2018for the past month.n Vi r> in fs wn ft - vs No Tir V~ ft vL* *S T -f O V* * _ i«-\tvt-\tz-» Z \tt\ti\t.-,\t; Mr.Joseph Morey received the | The young People met in to her home in New York, after Brucej Altâ., Mrs.W.D.Craig, spending _ the summer with Mr=.jlittle Louise Bennett and Mr.Haimy Burham, of Stoneham.Thomas Longmoore, of Leeds Village.Mrs.John Reid, of Saskatoon, Sask., is visiting friends and relatives in this vicinity.Miss Annie Nutbrown, of Sault Ste.Marie, was a guest of her uncle, Mr.William Bailey, and Mrs.Bailey recently.Mrs.Joseph Patterson, who has spent the past month in Stoneham, returned home on Sunday.George Bullis\u2019 cottage at Magog Lake.Mr.F.D.Heath left Sunday to resume his position as teacher in the IAp 1 Ormstown High School congratulations of his many rtiends.!han'on August 27th.The Christian *Ir\u201es; H- ,MiZhe11\u2019 of\tJ?,\u201d on the occasion of his eightieth | eulture convenerj Arthur Pank- birthday anniversary on August 27.Miss Therese DeBellefeuille has entered the Congregation Notre and Mrs.A.Brown, of Whitehall, hurst, was in charge of the meet- ^.Y\u201e_ spent the week-end with Mr.ing, which opened with the B.Y.P.U.song and a short prayer by the lead- ; Joseph Harman.Miss Lois Haskett accompanied Dame in Montreal, where she will \u2022 er> An joined in hinging the hymn.IMrs.Craig when she returned home pursue her studies.\t, \u201cSweet Is the Sunlight After the Mr Norman McCullough has re-; Rain ,, Several passages of Scrip-turned to Toronto after spending | ture dea]i with the theme «Thp recently, and will be her guest for a few days.DIXVILLE Mr.and Mrs.J.N.Fortier motor-json c3ncord- y ¦gue who have been ed to Sherbrooke last week.They, OT]f.sts at the Dickson home here, Mr.Darrell Drew is spending Master Herbert and Gordon Dick- his\tvacation\tat\tthe\thome\tof\this\tn'fri.Y,1'\u20191.! some time at Hyatt\u2019s Mills,\twhere h» -parents,\tMr.\tand\tMrs.\tJames\tMcCul-\t^ere\treaHbvAr-thim PankhursL A .has accepted\ta position.Mr.and Mrs.E.Parker, of Owen read by George Sound, Ont., were recent guests of \"article on \u201cChrist Mrs- Irving Gooley, Pleasant street, ead by Elizabeth j\tHector\tH.French\tof Mont- Bunt.\tA poem, \u201cSo Easy,\u201d was given 1 reaI>, a former\tresident of this p ace, by Arthur Pankhurst, after which has been spending a few days here all joined in the hymn.\u201cTake Time as a gue,st °f Mr.W.George May- were accompanied by Mr.and Mrs.jfeft recently for Sherbrooke where K.D.Parker, of Lemesurier, and ; they wiU j0in th\u20ac Mr.and Mrs.J.D.Fortier.\tMrs.Dickson.^Guests at ^the home of Mrs.R.E.| Miss G.Dickson has returned! Mrs.H.Ponton has returned Wark recently were Miss Dennis and from \\ew York and has left with! home, after spending a week in Mr.and Mrs.Sherman Wark and j ^ fami!y for Montreal where she Montreal, little son, of Quebec.\t.I will take up her teaciiing duties.t ,\t.were read by Arthur Pankhurst.A l0Uvr av tu\t< ir * : story> \u201cWhen We Forget to Re- Miss Alice Thompson, cf East ; memberj\u201e was dr parents, Dr.and, Clifton, was a recent guest of Mr, | Li htwo\u2019od nd an £ u\ti Jand Mrs.Stephen Caswell.\t, and Unit >, was « ft-ft\tVa re ~ v*ft4-n v»-n asi\tvive H\tE-7 ft rN T ft n hoc vet-n vn\t_ .\t,, ~ Recent visitors at the home of: Mi*« Alice Graham and Mrs.J.lend in Montreal with relative Mrs.C.A.Fraser were Mr.and,Grah;m have returned from Lower | Mr.and Mrs.T.F.Pr \u2019 Mrs.Ralph McKee, of Auburn, |jre-;and where they visited Mr.and\u2019Miss Mabel Campbell have Mass., Mrs.R.L.Allan and little yjrs_ Bred (jox recently.\ta motor trip to the New Miss Alice Chartier spent a week- To JBe Ho, The c;nvener th?n H in Viftwrvoo vinfn\torn-oc hew, and other friends.Mr.William Williamson, of Coati- BOSCOEEL Zvc\tI rr \\ v\tÿ 1\u2014 \u2014y - Êevcr I' ire' Itch, Rin^ Worm.Bsrbcr\u2019l fteb.Skin Ailæeîîts.etc.USE WITHOUT DELAI\u2019 son, M:\t\tH\tomer\tWorthen,\tat Beebe, aft\t;er o\tnly\ta fev\t\u2022 days ill!\tcess.The fu:\tnorSi\twa\ts held\there in t\the Advent Ch\turen\ton\tSeptember 2.\t\tInterment \t>k p'\t'ace\tin M\tcCor.nell\tcemeterv.Sy\tmpa:\tfhy\tis ex:\tended to\tthe sons.V'-r\t*.Ho\tmer\tWor-\then with\twhom she rç;\t: id fid\t, ar\tld Mr\t.Orange\tWorthen, of\tVft ft \u2022\t:stcn\tvr., a:\t\u2022d to her\tonly sur- The Record requires a news correspondent for Boscobel.Appliea-j tions should be addressed to Gordon |, Mrs.Clara Core: Two verv fire services were held Be'uah United Church on Sunday irrir.g.August 29.when Miss nna Cass and Mr.Howard Gibson re er.rcl\u2019ed as new member\".The , ,\t_ \u2014\t.\tMrs.Fred Cox recently, son, Jonn, of Lemesurier.Miss M.Malouin, who has spent; the past two months with Mr.and Mrs.W.G.Nutbrown, has returned to her home in Charny.Guests at the home of Mr.and Mrs.John Fortier recently were.,,.,\t,,\t,,, Mrs.W.J.Beattie, Mr.and Mrs.j Milter, Managing Editor.James Watt, of Sherbrooke, Mr.and Mrs.W.G.Thompson, of Kin-near\u2019s Mills.Mr.George Whyte, of Winnipeg, Mr.and Mrs.R.W.Mc-Cutcheon, Mr.and Mrs.K.D.Parker, Mr.and Mrs.J.D.Hutchison, Mr.Roland Hutchison, of Lemesurier, and Miss Thelma Fessenden, of Fulford.Miss Luella Longmoore has left for Island Brook to take up her duties as teacher.She was accom- States.\u201e\t,\t, explained how God gave us the Sab-.\t, ,\t,\t., Prouix and bgth and the commandment to keep co°k- has been visitmig his brother -ve left on|it holy( and we have ahvays the ex.;n-law Mr Oscar Egleston, and England a je jesus>\tmeeting closed, ^rs* Egleston.-\t-\t-\t-\t-\t! Mr.Benjamin L.Gilson, of Mai- Rev.Canon H.O.N.Belford is attending the Synod in Halifax, N.S.Mr.Sam Upton, of St.Hubert, and Mr.Ernest Rice and Mr.W.Read, of Montreal, were recent guests of Mrs.James Kelly.Mr.Frank Cusick, of Montreal, was a recent guest of his sister, Mrs.Fred Henderson, and Mr.Henderson.Miss Leslie R.Woodbum has returned from Queen\u2019s University, Toronto, and is the guest of Mr.and Mrs.George Chamberlain.Mr., Howard Watt has returned from Kirkdale, where he visited his aunt, Mrs.J.H.Mountain, and Mr.Mountain.\t, , Miss Lila Frame and Miss Ethel McCourt, of Windsor Mills,^ were recent guests of Miss Edith McCourt.Mr.Donald Kelly and Mr.Alex Sinclair are visiting in St.Hubert and are guests of Mr.and Mrs.Upton.Miss Evelyn McMann, of Montreal, spent a week-end with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.McMann.Mrs.Arthur Taylor and the Misses Violet and Ada Taylor have returned from a week\u2019s visit with friends in Toronto.Mr.and Mrs.W.A.Smith, of Inglewood, were guests on Thursday, September 2, of Mr».F.L.Robinson, at L\u2019Avenir.Miss Eunice Bonnallie has returned from Bromptonville, where she visited her parents.Mr.Douglas Johnston, of Brown-leigh Place, was a recent guest of Mr.Donald Bushey.Miss Kathleen Armstrong has returned from visiting friends in Montreal.Mr.and Mrs.E.Bate and rtvo sons, Ernest and Donald, were recent Sunday guests of Mrs.W.J.Beard, and were accompanied home by their daughter, Margaret, who has been the guest of Miss Ethel Beard, for ten days.Mrs.Harold Stevens and daughter, Dorothy, of Trenholmville, has been the guest of the former\u2019s sister.Miss Kathleen Armstrong.Mrs.C.Murdock and two grandchildren, of Berlin, N.H., are guests of Mrs.J.Brady.Miss Muriel Cross, of Montreal, is the guest of her mother, Mrs.Fred Cross.Rev.E.W.S.Coates, Mrs.Coates and Miss Dorothea Coates are vacationing at their Prescott, Ont., camp.Mrs.F.W.Dyson has returned from visiting relatives in Montreal.The Misses Ora and Marion Taylor have left for their teaching duties in Percy and Sunny Bank, Gaspe, respectively.Miss Helen KUlingbeek, of Montreal, was a recent Sunday guest of Dr.and Mrs.C.R.Boast.Mr.and Mrs.D.W.Stevens and Miss Gladys Smith were guests of Mrs.F.L.Robinson, at L\u2019Avenir.,,\t.\t\u201e \u201e .by singing, \u201cWho Is On the Lord\u2019s! .31 ,,\tt\t.Mr.and Mrs.Stanley Hall ana i gidei>> after which a business meet- ; den> Mass., was a guest of his si?family and Mr.Charles Tanner are-spending their vacation at Old Or-eftard and other points.Messrs.Robert and Russell Tay- ing and choir practice followed.' ^er\u2019 Mrs.Herman Byron, and Mr.Mr.John Burns, of Island Brook.! By,r°n °n Thursday.BUG BATTLES Port Arthur, Ont., Sept.7.\u2014\u201cIt takes a idiief to catch a thief,\u201d Ottawa Entomological department officials believe.Consequently to rid the iakehead district of caterpillers and army worms two types of fly that live off the pests will be released in the vicinity.IMrs.Cecil Dyson and son, Neil, and : Mr.Frank Chapman, of Montreal, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Lewis BROWN\u2019S HILL La-aL!' N si th- is place er enter Cross-Word Puzzle The Picture Is That of a Woman Diplomat ' An annual total of ,,wa/\t,\t.____ .\t,\tat o t j accidents occurs in the homes ofj^111\u2019103^ \u2018 g ' named bv her motner, Mrs.B.Lons'-' t ¦\t'¦_____ - -,\t-, Eugiai .\t___ilz moore, wno wni spend the winter with her daughter.Mr.and Mrs.J.N.Fortier and family, who have spent the summer ; with the former\u2019s parents, Mr.and j Mrs.John Fprtier, have returned to their home in in Isle Maligne.Miss Ida M.Ross, of Maple Hill, is a guest of her uncle, Mr.W.C.| Ross, and Mrs.Ross.! Mr.and Mrs.R.J.Nutbrown and i son, Albert, have returned from Sherbrooke.lor, of Brown\u2019s Hill, were guests over a recent Sunday of their grand- j\ton Thursday.father, Mr.E.A.Taylor.Mr.and Mrs.J.E.Taylor and daughter, Maxine, have returned t o their home at Fitch Bay, after spending the past month here with relatives.Mr.and Mrs.Ralph Bernard and family, of Danville, were in town over a recent Sunday, j A double christening ceremony 7 00,0 fatal - took place in St.George\u2019s Church on 29th, when the Mrs.Charlotte Young, of Bromc-ton, who has been visiting Mrs.W.H.Martin and family for the past two weeks, has returned to her home.Mr.C.A.Brown, of Boston, was a guest of his sister, Mrs.H.G.Ayer, and nephew, Mr.A.G.Ayer Miss Doris Jones has been spending a couple of days at Coaticook with her brother, Mr.Arthur Jones, and family.Mr.Fraser, of Montreal, has been a guest of Mr.and Mrs.H.J.Norris, and family for a few days.Boiling tea leaves in a fish pan will remove that fishy odor.MADE ISLAND AGAIN Mont St.Michel, France, Sept.7.\u2014The much-discussed dyke which joins Mont Saint Michel with the mainland is to be cut for a distance of 1,700 feet, giving it the status of an island, as originally.COMBAT RHEUMATISM Rheumatism is often caused by uric acid in the blood.Thia Mood impurity should be extracted by the kidnays.li kidneys (ail, and excess uric acid remain», it irritate» the musclas and joints causing excruciating pain».Han to help prevent rheumatism by ktininf your kidneys in good condition.Take regularly Dodd\u2019a Kidney Fills\u2014(or half \u2022 century the favorite kidney remedy.IQS Dodd\u2019s Kidney Pills uzc -r 4 y Answer to Previous Puzzle MILLANVILLE 17 Bordered.IS On top of LLJl 1 N U TT Ë |£l\tSEg! \t dye t a ID RIF Til NGI lj eHTsnrÂrs~tagêi 43 One who paves.49\tForm of \"me.\u2019 50\tLaughter sound.52\tSheltered place.53\tMusical note.55 Lost to view.VERTICAL 2\tTrumpet noise 3\tTo exude 4\tTo regret.5\tDoctor.6\tTo bow.7\tUgly old woman.8\tForm of \u201cbe.\u201d 8 Musical note 57 Knots in wood 10 Bugle plant 61\tShe has done 11 Boundary.-work.12 Electrical 62\tShe is best terminal, known as a 16 Her title.\u2014 - woman.to Norway.17 Otherwise.19 She has been active in- 21\tTo rise.22\tScanty.25 Tribal title.27 Black haw.29 Genus of apple trees.31 Social entertainment 33 Knave of clubs.35 Monkey.37 Peak.41\tTo appraise.42\tNight before, 43\tEmits fume*.44\tGrain.47 Head cook, 49 Wise men.51 Constellation.53\tVarnish ingredient.54\tNorthwest 55\tPluraL 56\tDram.58\tNay.59\tSoutheast.60\tPer.The USED TO WAKE UP WITH A HEADACHE Laura and Florer \u2022\u2022e returned to their | ter spending the past uring the Canadian Nov/ Fresh and Lively Every Morning Here is a man who woke up every morning with a dull headache.Tnen Kruschon transformed his days.Read his letter:\u2014 \u201cI used to wake up in the morn-headache.A year mgs with a d\u201d ago, l started taking Kruschen Saits Wcv Mr: W< Guy , Rev, regularly.Today.1 wake up fresh and lively and can do my day\u2019s work without an yexertion.I can recom-, mend Kruschen for anyone suffer-| ing from headaches and constipa-| tion, and for putting new life into | you, I itend to continue with Krus-j cher, for the rest of my life.\u201d\u2014E.P.! Headaches can nearly always be traced to a disordered stomacn, and to the unsuspected retention in .the system of stagnating waste material which poisons the blood.Remove these poison?\u2014prevent them from forming again \u2014 and you\u2019ll never have to worry any more.And J that is just Imw Kruschen Salts Mrs.Norman Porter brings nuick and lasting relief from Montreal on Thursday headaches.denary meeting held at Lemesur-Que.Saturday, August 28th.Mrs.Edward Little was a recent lest of Miss Alice Little.Miss M.Watson, of Ottawa, was also siting at the same home.MAPLE GROVE £4 6\t1\tÔ\t19\t: Û\t\ti£\t iO\t\t\t£- ÆMzjÿL ¦ j\t\t\t\tr \t\t\t\tIÔ\t\t\t'9 36 Jj F\\\t\t\t\t\t \tLr\t\t\ti2>6\t \t\t\t\t\t :b 27 % 3 ¦p.J.Bell accompanied her Mrs.J.Bruce MeClay, Lake i Conn., who is spending \u2018h® ! gUests, Mrs.Ray and daughters, of Road, spent a week in Sherbrooke ! sunllKei' at\t,'a*'e' a\ti Lennoxville, on a motor trip last visiting friends.\tj the home of Mr.\tand Mrs.\tA.S.\t, week along fche shores of Lake Major L.D.McClintock and\tson, j MeCaw.\t,\tI Champlain and Lake George, re- Austin, were in Montreal one\tday.J\u201ci\u2019.and Mrs.b.A.\tCleary, ot\t.her-1 furn|n~ through the Adirondack last week.\tj hrooke were guests of the hitters j Mountains.Mr.and Mrs.Leslie Grimson and ; ®13ter, Mrs.E.A.I hadsey, and Mi.j\ttV.E.Solomon, of Montreal, two children, of St.Johns, were vis-; Chadsey iting the former\u2019s parents, Mr.and; Mrs.F.\\\\.Jones, .1rs Mrs.H.Grimson, last week.\tJorn and Mrs.R.L .Craighead Mrs.L.Tuxen and small daugh- ! motored to Montreal and spent the ter are visiting relatives in Mont- ' day.real for a week.\tI Mr.Ralph Antell, of Elmira, Mrs.Harold Krause has returned N.Y., motored to Bedford and is a Mrs.Robert Cowan entertained at a supper party on Friday evening of last week in honor of her sister, Mrs.J.G.Edwards, on the occasion of her birthday.Cards were played at three tables, the first prize being won by the guest-of-honor, and the consolation prize went to Mrs.Andrew Thompson.The hostess served a delectable supper, which included a birthday cake decorated with candles.The guest-of-honor was the recipient of many pretty gifts, for which she thanked her friends.At the close of the evening, all joined in singing \u201cFor She\u2019s a Jolly Good Fellow.\u201d Mr.Reginald Stewart and Miss Lilly Buckle has returned from a pleasant holiday spent at Old Orchard, Maine.They spent a weekend at \u201cGlen Cottage,\u201d where Miss Irene Buckle, of Verdun, was also a guest.Mr.Preston Crittenden has returned home from the Sweetsburg Hospital, where he recently underwent an operation for appendicitis.Mr.and Mrs.Edwin Heusser and ¦A \\ OPTOMETRISTS - OPT ICI ANSY^ J.S.Brault, B.A., S.O., MANAGER.Glasses prescribed and repaired.Tel.3462 \u2014 Res.3281-J 52B Wellington St.North, SHERBROOKE, QUE.McKENNEY ON BRIDGE TNT BIDDING REACHES SLAM Opens With No Trump, Even Though He Has Two Suits, and Result Is the Same as One-Over-One By Wm.E.McKenney, Secretary, American Bridge Learue.This is the last of a series of six articles explaining the TNT system of bidding, used in the New England states and originated by Edgar F.Tierney, of Springfield, Mass.Users of the one over one system of bidding may be sometimes shocked when they hear bridge players, using the TNT system, open the bidding with one no trump while holding good two suiters.However, users of the Tierney system claim that this proves no drawback whatever in reaching the correct final contract, even though they delay showing their bidding suits until the second or third round of bidding.Of course, \u201cone-over-one\u201d users w-ould open the South hand with one heart, and North\u2019s response .\tfamily and the latter\u2019s father, Mr., ford by her niece, Miss Betty Reid, Gilman, of Sweetsburg, spent a re- I nd Mrs.James Armstrong l'as sPeït a week at the beach cent Sunday at the home of Mr.the Avar\u2019s Cliff Fair last.heTau'1^ _\t, .\t,\t.and Mrs.George Johnston.\tI Miss Bertha Duval has returned Mrs.J.P.Love, of Magog, is vis- ' from Montreal, where she was a jtjng relatives at Call\u2019s Mills, guest for a week of her brother, Mr.I Mr.and Mrs.F.Collings and I L.Duval, and Mrs.Duval.\tI little daughter, of Cowansville, vis- i ! Miss Minnie Thompson, of Drum- ! jted Mr.and Mrs.Josie St.Enfant Solution to Previous Contract Problem mondnlle, is a guest of hei* sister, j one day ]ast week.4 J 10 9 5 V 10 9 6 ?\t764 ?\t875 4Q74 V52 ?K 10 9 2 + KJ92 Dealer 4 A 8 6 VAQ8 ?A Q J 4Q 1063 4 K 3 2 VKJ743 ?\t8 5 3 ?\tA4 Duplicate\u2014N.& S.vul.South\tWest\tNorth\tEast Pass\tPass\tPass\t1 N.T.Pass\t2 ?\tPass\t2 N, T.Pass\tP N.T\tPass\tPass Opening lead\u20144 4.Contract Problem (Solution in next issue) South is playing the contract at four spades.He has won the first trick with the heart king, and the second and third tricks with the ace and king of trumps.What play now gives him the best chance of' taking seven more tricks?4 K '9 6 4 VQ73 4 J 10 4 ?765 4 J 3 V J10 5 4 ?K752 4 J 10 4 Dealer 4Q8 V A982 ?Q96 4K832 4 A 10 7 5 2 V K 6 ?\tA83 ?\tA Q 9 Duplicate\u2014Neither vul.Opener\u2014V 4.\t1 would not be a forcing takeout, a9 he does not hold a good enough fit.However, in the TNT system tha jump bid is used to show honor strength, in order that the opening bidder, who remains captain of tha I hand, may measure the combined strength and thus be guided in his future bidding.After South had shown his second biddable suit, reaching the small slam is an ea=y; i matter.In the one-over-one as used by most players the same final contract would be reached.The bidding would jnot start so high nor jump so quickly, j In the play seven was made, as I South was able to ruff out two club j losers and discard two on the high i cards in the North hand before I taking the trump finesse and pick-I ing up the doubleton king in tha 1 East hand.\u201e .I is visiting her sisters, Mrs.William j Hsuy 1 Reynolds and Mrs.A.E.Lagrange.! Mrs.Solomon came from Fulford, ' and was accompanied by Mr.and Mrs.E.Davis.LEADVILLE Mr.Scott Brown has been visiting friends in Knowlton and Bolton Mr.and Mrs.George Davis and Ce^CalvU^Litchfield was in Bar- to her home in New York City, after guest of his uncle and aunt, Mr.and ; gUe5ts of Mrs.W.A.Reynolds, spending the past six weeks with Mrs.Ralph Van Horn.\t¦° Mrs.S.Demers, who is visiting relatives in Knowlton and Gnuld.I Mrs.L.Webster, of Sherbrooke, 1 i,er gorl Mr.Charles Demers and ,,\t,.\t,\t., Mr and Mrs.Romeo Brouillette is a guest 0f her sister, Mrs.G.H.j family, 0f Bedford, is confined to\tLI VM^;.uleiP5 and family attended the air page- ] Miller, and Mr.Miller.\t| |]er 1^, suffering from a fracturant in St.Hubert.\t' Miss Jessie Cockerline, who has ecj thigli.Mrs.Doris Wright and son, Clin- spent the past year abroad, return- ! Miss C.Davidson and Miss G.ton, of Swanton, Vt., were guests j ed to Montreal on Saturday, Aug- ; Davidson, of Montreal, were in town of Mr.and Mrs.Harold Wright.j ust 28th, on the \u201cDuchess of Rich-j on Tuesday of last week.- mond,' and will spend some time Mrs.T/j.Cassidy returned on COWANSVILLE\tWith her parînts, Mr.and Mrs.J.Tuesday evening from a month\u2019s _______\tW.Cockerline, before returning to | holiday spent with relatives in Perth Mr, and Mrs.Thomas Boucher, of ; T; Lambei t to resume her teaching ; ancj Ottawa, Ont., and Ogdensburg, Montreal, were last week-end guests T]ILct' ¦^rlor 'to returning home, \\ jj.V.of Mir.and Mrs.Henri L.Boucher.! Miss Gockorline took a special j Mrs.J.R.Frary and Miss Chris-Miss Huguette Gravel, of Mont- course in teaching at Oxford Uni-; tie Frary have returned from a real, has returned to town to resume ! versit?.\t! boat trip through the Thousand her studies with the Rev.Sisters of |\t' .Fricker, who spent the , islands and to Toronto, Ont.the Holy Cross, after spending two ! P.8t «\u2019«hth with his family, at_Mus- j Miss Colville, of Washington, of Mrs A, A, Graham and Miss Hazel Graham.Mrs.Reginald Wallace, of Browns-burg.Que., is visiting her parents, Mr.and Mrs.J.Bruce Paine.,r , , .\u2014\u2014\t___ ru jjai- Mr.R.A.Wiggins and Miss M?.n- Mis.Cedric Has^ .g , ^.\\ ^\tfriends one day last week, tha Wiggins accompanied by their Mr.and Mrs, Rupert Phelps and I guests, Mrs Walter Lengfield #nd Miss Kathlene Brown spent a day in I Mrs.A Grei'g, of Montreal, were in Richfard, Vt., recently attendin parents, Mr.and Mrs.A.Mayhew.Mr.and Mrs.Earl Gallup and son, family, of Milby spent Sunday of last week at the home of Mr.and Mrs.O.R.Boyce.the funeral of Mrs.A.Seers Mr.and Mrs.J.McCanns and daughter.Diana, of Montreal, were week-end guests of Mr.and Mrs.Henry Foster, who with their guests Mr.and Mrs.J.A.Cowan, of|spelvt Sunday of last week at Lake Tuesday evening from a month\u2019s\t3\u2019ld MrS\u2019 Hazel Ashe, | Champlam ,\t: ,\t\u201cdf,.\t___d.-.i, of Sand Hill, were recent visitors at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Cowan.Mr.and Mrs.Albert Holtby, of Ottawa, were visitors at the home of Messrs.W.J.Harkness and A.H.Cairns recently.Mrs.Miss Herbert Perreault!, who has 3- K- been spending a few weeks in the White Mountains, is visiting her mother.Mrs.Dick McWilliams and daughters, Joy and Margaret, were guests last week of Mr.and Mrs.J.Richard Durwick and Mr.R- Robinson and Mr.and Mrs.E.A.me rtoiy cross, alter spending two :\t.-.\u2014- , .mss v.onr.ne, ui » a».*.\t,\tpy.j rhcli VICUCl\tville, Vt, were Sunday callers at the j Mrs.Jamss Baillie and son, Mr.Mrs.R.Bolster,'of Richford, call- home of Mr.and Mrs.Ed Crawford., william Bailiiej üf Aylmer, Ont .ed at the home of Mrs.Cassidy and\t* herDro?k(2>, were in town last week visiting old Mrs.R.Harvey on Wednesday of and Mrs\u2019 C- Bat'er! of Lennoxville, |friftnds.were guests of their sister, Mrs.J.| Nurse E.Simpson, who lias been G.Far well on Tuesday of last week, j spen(}ing several weeks with her Miss Esther Farwell is visiting j nlotller in Douglasstown, N.B., re-relatives in Sherbrooke and Lennox-! turned ]ast wee]j an op tossed wild over first on H.Martel\u2019s easy roller.Before the orgy of errors was concluded two more runs had crossed the plate.Kik made a belated rally in the ninth frame.Farrell singled, stole second and scored when Sherbrooke s third baseman threw wildly over first.After Hamel filed out to centre field, Leslie Ashby, the Montreal hurler, singled to drive in Remil-lard, but Sherbrooke settled down to retire Cote and Maisonneuve and end the game.The second game of the series will be played on Sunday in Montreal and the local team, on their showing, stands an excellent chance of winning and proceeding to the provincial finals.Score by innings: R.H.E.Sherbrooke\t010 020 13x 774 Montreal\t000 009 102 3 6 9 Batteries: Walsh and D.Martel; Ashby and Hamel.MAGOG TRIMMED REEBE\u2019S SQUAD IN CLOSE GAME Lakehead Town\u2019s Seven to Six win Necessitates Third Game for Championship of Stanstead County Baseball League.In a tight pitchers\u2019 battle during which only thirteen hits were recorded, the Magog baseball team eked out a seven to six victory over the Beebe aggregation in the second game of a two out of three series for the championship nf the Stanstead County League.Belanger, Magog hurler, allowed the Beebe sluggers the meagre total of six bingles, while Don Stratton, on the mound for Beebe, was touched for one more hit.The only extra base blow of the game was a double from the bat of Lavoie, Magog\u2019s starry backstop.Beebe had the tying run on third base in the ninth frame but failed to push it over the plate.The first game of the series was won by Beebe by a score of four to two and Magog\u2019s win necessitates a rubber game which will be played at Ayer\u2019s Cliff next Sunday at three o\u2019clock.Score by innings: R.H.E.Magog .002 003 110\u20147 7 5 Beebe .200 120 100\u20146 6 5 Batteries: Belanger and Lavoie; Don Stratton and Dave Stratton.CHAREST BEAT J.HIBBARD IN CLOSE BATTLE Majella Charest Stroked Way to 6-4, 7-9, 6-3 Win Over Johnny Hibbard and Will Meet Bill Shink in City Tennis Title Final.Majella Charest, a steady, methodical strokesman, triumphed over Johnny Hibbard, youthful stylist, in a marathon tennis match played on the Sherbrooke Country Club courts on Saturday night by scores of 6-4, 7-9, 6-3 and thus won the right to face Bill Shink in the final for the city championship title.Charest, whose game is essentially defensive, won because he was able to return everything that Hibbard, last year\u2019s Eastern Townships\u2019 champion, had to offer.The match was featured by long rallies and brilliant placements which brought the crowd to its feet on many occasions as first one player and then the other pulled points out of the fire with brilliant returns or drives.Charest will meet Shink under lights at the East Sherbrooke courts on Thursday night at 8.30 o\u2019clock.On Friday night Bill Shink and i A, W.Bishop will clash with Ashley Hibard and Bob Dunsmore in the doubles semi-finals and the finals will likely be played on Saturday.LEARNED PLAIN The Misses Irene and Laura Drown, of Sherbrooke, spent the week-end at their home here.Mrs.A.M.Finlay, of Bishopton, was h recent guest of Mr.and Mrs.G.Hume and family.Mrs Florence Gray and son, Mr.Wayne Gray, of Columbia Bridge, N.H., were recent guests of the former\u2019s brother and sister, Mr.Henry Sherman, and Miss Edith Sherman.The many friends of Mr, C.L.Mc-Gafferty regret to hoar of his illness and all wish him a soeedy recovery.Mr.and Mrs.G.Hume and Mr.Gleason Hum?visited Mr.and Mrs.W, Wilson in Newport Colony, one day recently.' won the opener in eleven innings by : 'four to three behind Ed Chapman; and then fell before Fabian Kowalik j 1 in the second by five to two.The | | defeat halted a Montreal winning | streak of seven games and was the only Bison victory of a four-game ' series.Nate Andrews and Tony Kauf-\u2019 mann combined to blank Toronto, for Rochester by seven to nothing! in the first game of a double bill,: but the Leafs recovered to win the | nightcap by five to two behind six-I hit hurling by Earl Caldwell.Loons can swim faster beneath1 the surface of the water than on it.' Mrs.\u2022 Edna CARROLL Special Gossard Representative, will be at our Corset Department, This Afternoon Until 6 O\u2019clock, and All Day, Tomorrow, Wednesday.Mrs.CARROLL will be pleased to give you advice on the choice of a foundation garment most appropriate for your figure.You incur no obligation in consulting Mrs.Carroll.\u2014 Saint-Jean\u2019s Corset Shop, Third Floor- C.O.SAINT-JEAN, LIMITED E.E.GOODENOUGH.President, 21 - 23 Wellington St.North.\tPhones: 1236-1237 a ai oi\t\tW.\tL.\tP.C.lebrs; lefeat\tÎ Three Rivers \t\t.2\t0\t1.000 \tDrummondviile .\t.0\t2\t.000 rht to Sixio\tSeries I Sore] \t\t\tB.2\t0\t1.000 \t! Grany \t\t.0\t2\t.050 \tYESTERDAY\u2019S AMERICAN\tBASERU LEAGUE\t\tL accessories.Bei thr pre- tanon j of the awards, one minute\u2019» silence i was observed in memory of Andrew ! Richards, ChamMy rider who was 1 recently killed by a bus wh:!o com- 1 peting near Chambly.Besides the Sherbrooke lads, rid- ! ers from the Montreal C.C.C., Montreal Quilicot Club, Lachine Pirates, j Verdun Wolfe Club and Hull were | entered in the races.Following are the names in order of position of the first fifteen rid-ers in the Montreal-Sherbrooke race: I.Reni Cyr, Montreal C.C.C.; 2.D.Perron, Lachine; 3, G.Robinson, Montreal C.C.C.; 4, A.McConnell, Quilicot; P.Claude, Lachir.6.F.\tBertrand, Hull; 7, P.Andv, Quili-cot; 8, L.David, Montreal C.C.C.; 9,\tJ.Kyarrie, Hull; 10, f, Richer, Hull; 11, A.Guitard, Mon*real r\u2019 G.\tC.; 12, H.Raymond, Quilicot; 13, M.Couture.Hu!!; 14, B.Palidoro, Lachine; 15, R Doran, Verdun, In the Granby-Sherbrooke race: 1, Jacqije- Cote, Montreal C.C.C.; 2, Lyndon Morrison, Sherbrooke* 7, A.Giroux;!, A.Walsh; 5, Riff, Sherbrooke; 6.J.Bavard; 7, ?.Pa-qu'r;; 8, A.Gaihon: 9, W.Thomas; 10,\tC.Young, Sherbrooke; II, C.Jackson, Bromptonvilk; 12, M.Rit-ehoi : 13, A Blanchette; 14, B.Funk; 15.C.Rainville.Boston 6, Washington 2, Washington 2, Boston 0.r r.icago 2, Cleveland 1.Cleveland 2, Chicago 1 New York 6, Philadelphia 3.New York 2, Philadelphia 1.Detroit If), St.Louis 9.Detroit 5, St.Louis 2 national league New York d, Philadelphia 2, ,Ne-.v York 9, Philadelphia 3.Brooklyn 2, Boston 1.Boston 5, Brooklyn 4.Cincinnati 7, Chicago 3.Chicago 2, Cincinnati 1.St.J-ouis 4, Pittsburgh 1.Pittsburgh!), St.Louis 4 I NT ERNAT ION AI, LEAGUE Montreal 4.Buffalo 3, By Appointment to Hi« Excellency Lord Tweedsmuir Governor-General of Canada .A mellow beer, with a full-bodied nutty flavour .try it .DAWES Kim -1 ' : : - ' ' ."]
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