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Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
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lundi 5 juillet 1943
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Sherbrooke daily record, 1943-07-05, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" V B»terhro0kp Hailu Srrnrù o \u2022 » THE PAPER OF THE EASTERN TOWNSHIPS WEATHER Cloudy and cool.Established 1897.SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, MONDAY, JULY 5, 1943.CITY EDITION.POLISH PRIME MINISTER DIES IN PLANE CRASH Six important Aides Die With Polish Premier Pilot of Plane Only Survivor of Crash in Attempt to Take Off from Gibraltar on Return to London From Middle East\u2014Deputy Premier Stanislaw Mikolajczyk Named as Temporary Successor.*\t\u2014~ JAPAN SEEING NEW PROGRAMME FOR SINGAPORE London, Wladvslaw July 5.\u2014(TO\u2014General j Sikorski, Premier of; the Polish Government in London! and commander of its armed | forces, was killed last night when the Liberator plane in which hej was travelling crashed shortly after i FORMER CONSERVATIVE NOVA SCOTIA PREMIER DIES IN HALIFAX Halifax, July 5.\u2014ÎP\u2014A former Conservative Premier of Nova Scotia, Col.the Hon.Gordon Sidney Harrington, 59, died at his home here yesterday afternoon after a lengthy illness.Premier Hideki Tojo Arrives in Singapore\tfor Personal Inspection\tof\tRecently- Gained Territory of Japan.New York, July 5.\u2014 (Æ3) -\u2014The Japanese radio announced that Premier Hideki Tojo arrived in Singapore today to confer with Field Marshal Count Hisaichi Terauchi, supreme commander of Japanese forces in the Southern area \u201cand to inspect personally actual conditions in the South.\u201d The broadcast, from a Domed news agency dispatch, was an Eng- British Commandos Stage First Land Raid Against Crete Since Evacuation Of Island In 1941 By LEWIS HAWKINS Associated Press Staff Writer London, July 5.\u2014 (A1) \u2014British forces jabbed into the Island of Crete last night, destroying enemy planes on airfields, and withdrew successfully, a special Middle East communique disclosed today.Commando-type operations against Crete disclosed here since it was announced June 1, 1941, that British forces had abandoned that island under the hammering of German air-borne units, (The invaders, however, apparently have never fully conquered the people and such Allied troops as remained behind when British wrr- This was the first landing report-'ships withdrew 15,000 troops to ed since British forces were driven i Egypt and tacitly conceded defeat from the Mediterranean island by | m hisioij « first major test between communists to Determined Resistance dominion soon s To Halt Allied Tim Buck, Leader of Canad- AttâCkS A^31HSt ItSlY ian Party, Declares Organ-\t_____________ ization Convention to Be At Least Forty-Three Enemy Fighter Planes Which Offered Held in Toronto.air-borne invasion forces in May, 1941.There was no indication laid and sea power.Winnipeg, July 5.CP) Tim Buck, leader of the Communist Party in Canada, said in a public address yesterday that \u201cabolition of tlie Communist Internationale hn: done Hon.Louis St.Laurent (Min-Greek ister of Justice) out of an argument of , (Andrew Michalopoulos, ! Minister of Information, announced ! aK®'nst 'he communist Party, the jin Washington last July that 1,500 He.told a United Nations picnic Determined Resistance to Allied Planes Attacking Sicily Shot Down\u2014Allies Disclose Coastal Targets in Vicinity of Rome Object ol Attack.- size of the forces used but it was] British army regulars and various assumed in London military quar- London, July 5.\u2014American air-\t.\t.i men presented a cheque for $400, ls\u2018l'lanS'uaSe transmission reported 'aking off from Gibraltar, the Air to aid the Sea Rescue Squadron of to the Office of War Information.Greek forces were maintaining ters that they were small bands of|™len.{ re.si^flJlee1- »?said ,h« N,\u2019zi* ^\t.actually held only \"a narrow strip Commandos who are highly trained I ammd |jle coas,t,\u2019\u2019 Ministry announced today.jthe R.A.F.Fighter Command Sat-:Domei also said another motive of mvp (.om-mnnciue -aid the okne *ïifdaJv,\t3 party e?lebratT\u2018g !Tojo\u2019s visit was to \u201cprepare the new ine communique caul tne plane t)-ie hundredth rescue from the!\tc ,, crashed into the sea when its engines j Channel and coastal waters, The;pohcy for the Soufchern re&lons- failed soon after the takeoff.| cheque was given on behalf of the! The O.W.I., declaring the broad- Sikorski, six other passengers and: (j.g.Army Air Force Bomber Com- casf did not specify the actual condi- all members of the plane\u2019s crew;\twhich donated half the : tions Tojo planned to inspect, point- except one were killed, reliable re-,money.The remainder of the sum ling out that Terauchi\u2019s command ports said, ^\t_ _\t.\t., '\u2019,vas ra^sed among bomber crews, presumably includes the New Gui- Among the victims was Sikorski\u2019s 1 themselves for what they called ; nea-Solomons area where a strong daughter.Mrs.Sophia Loniowska, i\u201cgood life insurance.\u201d\t'new Aided offensive is underway.twenty-six, who was travelling with_____i_______1_________'¦\t.______\" 1\t.L_ her father as liaison officer between, the London headquarters \u2022 of the i Polish Auxiliary Territorial Service; (Women\u2019s Forces) and the Middle; East.She war wearing an A.T.S.] uniform.Her husband is a prisoner] of war in Germany.The only survivor of the crash was : .he pilot of the big plane, who was I seriously injured.Sikorski had been visiting Polish j armed forces in the Middle East and i was in Cairo as recently as last Thursday.His death came at a moment when] the forces which he had been organizing to fight for the liberation of]\t-\t.\t,\t,.\t.Poland were at last leady to take ; L-' men witn whom ne fought and part in the offensive operations they ; served in \\vu and politics, the body ; had been planning since the humili-1 of Hon.R.J Manion today was car-j ating days of September, 1939, when ried to its grave in Notre Dame! their country fell before the German ¦ cemetery here.\t| invaders.\tFor the r f-emn Requiem Mass The fatal accident first was an- ; chanted by Rev.Joseph Birch, St.nounced by the Polish Government Joseph\u2019s Church was filled .with in a brief statement which gave no ¦ Cabinet Ministers, former Ministers, details.Shortly afterward the Air j Members of Parliament, Government Ministry issued this brie; com- cflicials and military and poli-munique:\tj Ccui associates or the man who died \u201cThe Air Ministry deeply regrets suddenly Friday night, to announce that General Sikorski] Prime Minister Mackenzie King, was killed last night when the gainst whom Dr.Manion contended Liberator aircraft in which he was ?>s leader of the Conservative Party travelling crashed shortly after ; in the 1940 general election, was one j taking off from Gibraltar.\t!\t0f the pa\u2019lhearers.Another was.\u201cThe general was accompanied j Hon Ian Mackenzie, the Liberal Min-] by Major General Klimecki and, jstfc) un,jei whom the former Con- ; other members of his staff.The ! ?erv8 tive leader served the nation, only survivor of the accident is the in this wal.gs National A.R.pilot, who was seriously injured | and is in a hospital.\u201d Other victims included General \u2022 c '«rf Ottawa, and Angus Rob-Tadeusz Klimecki, forty-eight.Chief j ertson of Montreal\ti \u201cHi in such work.While official military sources declined to discuss the operations, the Ministry of Information disclosed that a special broadcast had been made to the people of Crete, warning them not to be tricked into (The fourth largest island in the Mediterranean with a total of 3,235\t\" 6ommiUoo square miles, Crete lies approximately midway between the North African coast and Athens.It is 160 miles long.The pre-war population was 441,687.(It is a logical stepping-stone on Canadian Leaders Join in Triute To Hon.R.J.Manion Prime Minister W.L.Mackenzie King and Pensions Minister Ian Mackenzie Among Pallbearers at Funeral of Former Conservative Party Leader and Later National Air Raid Precautions Director.- - Ottawa.Julv 5.\u2014®)\u2014Surrounded; MINERS BREAK TRADITION IN RESUMING WORK Independence Day Holiday Failed to Halt Speed of Return-fo-Work Movement in United States Coal Fields.thinking this was the start of a real the road back for any Allied in- , vasion of the Balkans and the new ^\t^\t,\t.operation supplements\theavy an The broadcast\turged them to be ; raj(js previously\tcarried out against ] quiet and declared: \u201cThis time no.Axis installations there.) action is required from you.This is\t- nn invndnn\u201d\tMARRIED IN NORTH AFRICA .,\t.\ti Allied Headquarters.North Afri- The Middle East communique an- caj July 3___ ^ .\u201ejos(!phine Me- nounced that \u201csmall British land] Lane, McKeesport, Pa., a member forces carried\tout raids on\tair of the United\tStates\tWomen\u2019s »\tArmy Corps, was married ycster-i fields m Crete\tlast night.\t,\t! day to L.-Cpl.\tHubert\tHeckman, I \u201cThe operations were successful, ]of'the British Army in the first] the communique said, \u201ca number of ] WAC marriage in the North Afri-aircraft being destroyed on the ] can theatre.After a three-day j ground.\tI honeymoon leave she will return ; \u201cAll our patrols withdrew safely.\u201d; t0 regular routine, living at Wo-The raids constituted the first I men\u2019s Army headquarters.crowd a National Communist Party would be organized at a party convention in Toronto August 21 which \u201cwould prepare Canada to take her place as a world power and preserve the rights of the working man.\u201d Buck is chairman of the National i set up to organize the new party.Aims of the new National party, he said, would be Socialism and the party would advocate a controlled economy for the Dominion.Chief concern would be the post-war world.HON.PETER HEENAN AGAIN CONTESTING LEGISLATURE SEAT Kenora, Ont., July 5.-C- Hon.Peter Heenan, Ontario, Min-inter of Labor, wa.unanimously chosen Liberal-Labor candidate during; the week-end for the Ken-ora Rainy River constituency in the forthcoming Provincial general election.Continued on page 2.column 2.Nassau.Bahamas, July fi,\u2014 (C.P.Gable) American officials here were recruiting 1,000 more laborers Saturday to work on farms in the United States.There now are 2,000 Bahamau workers on American farms.The Duke of Windsor, Governor of Bahamas, said in a press conference thal condition® for laihorers in the United States were excellent,.Headquarters, North Afri-.V - (/P)., Allied bombersi bark heavily al Axis nir-Sieily yesterday ami m French Factory Areas Attacked In Continuation Of Air Warfare SeneraS iacMhur Resumes Active Field Army Command Australian anti United States Forces Report Further Gains in Fighting in Central Solomons, Taking Strategic Village on Vangunu Island and Destroying Twenty-One Japanese it ^ Planes Over Rendova Island.- \u2014_____-# - APicd Headquarters, Australia, July 5.TP) Australian and I recorded Pittsburgh, July 5,\u2014GP)\u2014Smash- P.i ing tradition by trooping back into Director.The other?were Col.Har- ! the mines on what had always been a holiday, United' Su tes miners celebrated their Independence Day-love foj Canada has been a by effectively breaking the back of strike since the of the Polish General Staff; Col Andrezej Marecki, Chmf of the,\t^\t^ in tion of the stub borne st aSn a Rrtti?h col- career to its untimely end he United States entered the war.onel! VTctor Alexander Cazalet.who^Ptnt himxf.11 generously for the The c0.al picture was brighter than \u2019 nnij.ic-i ija;=on office'- and physical and moral well-being of at any time since June 1 as through W fellow citizens,\u2019\u2019 ,,id FÏther bo.J O.btano», and of Sikorski\u2019s public speeches.\tB\u2019rch m a brief funeral oration.\tfie.ds the baek-to-worl; current, a The cabinet immediately désignât-\tHf saicl U was not the Roman meve trickle last week, swelled to a ed Deputy Premier Stanislaw Miko- : Catholic custom to deliver eulogies roaring flood.lajezyk.leader of the Polish Pea-j ot the dead but, that rule was waived , from every comer came indica-ant' Party, as Acting Premier, ; in the case of public men who had ! t[0Tls before the end of the week pending the selection of Sikorski\u2019s : proved-themselves worth of God and the great coal strike would be ended.\u2019____?___________.__________i their country and who had shown' The 100,000 or more men in Continued on pace 2.column 5.\t] greatness anq nobility of character.Pennsylvania, Alabama, Virginia .-\t.\u2014\t¦ - \u2014\t¦ -\t\u2014\tand Tennessee who continued rebellious at the United Mine Workers\u2019 ôerman Radio Convinced Rossian mg m hourly of additional locals Offensive Hear On Eastern Frontl^T'^Vui*\u201d?*^ ] today close on the heels of small 'preparatory shifts which readied the London, July 5.\u2014((P)\u2014Following up a smashing R.A.F.-R.C.A.F.attack against Cologne, American heavy bombers rounded out the week-end Sunday by dumping bombs on the airplane engine factory at Le Mans, France, and the U-boat works at Nantes and La Pal-lice while protected by Allied fighter planes, including those from the R.C.A.F command.However, the big attack of the week-end was the one against Cologne, with bombers making side excursions to Hamburg and other targets in the Ruhr, which broke the lull that has held since June 28, when the same two cities were also the targets.Laying such a concentrated load of explosives on the vital Cologne industrial districts cost the raiders thirty-two planes, eight of them Canadian.Fires from the flaming city were visible for 150 miles, pilots who had carried out the 118th bombing attack there reported, while smoke billowed to 18,000 feet.After last Monday night\u2019s pounding, the Berlin radio declared: \u201cThe attack on Cologne has entirely altered its face; all familiar landmarks have been wiped out.\u201d Coupled with the aerial offensive barrage, and the Germans fired hack at irregular intervals, some of their shells falling in the Dover area.The United States 8th Air Force lost eight Domhtrs on the Sunday missions, which involved a round trip of more than 600-miles to La Pallice, and more than 200-miles round trip to Le Mans.Bombing results were good, a communique said, although heavy fighting opposition was met at Le Mans and Nantes, it IN STANSTEAD PROMISES FIRE Allied en, July smashed dromes destroyed al h ast forty-three enemy^ planes wind) offered determinodi resistance \u201cin fierce air battles,\u201d an Allied communique said today* On the heels of Saturday\u2019s daylight n.-sutilts, which had been de« scribed aa the heaviest AMied nie attack* on Italy\u2019s hsland out,postai since Pan teller in fell, the Northwest! African Air Force bombed Catania, Gorbinia, Sciaccn, Gomiso and Milo in a Fourth of July display of power.The communique also disclosed for1 the first time from an Allied soureo 'hat coastal targets near Rome wer© the objective of Allied bomberai Saturday night.(The llnlian Sunday communiquo Miid that the seaplane hase at Ostia, on the mouth of the Tiber river, twelve m'ks Southeast of Rome, and! Fimnk-ino, two miles North of Ostia, across the river, had been bombed.) Trapani ami Comiso also were aU taeked Saturday night, the war bulletin declared.The Coastal Air Force bagged) another enemy aircraft Saturday s .«aid.Allied plans losses numbered thirteen, the communique added.(The I ! a 11 an Monday communique, | as broadcast by the Rome radio ami by the Associated Press, .j claimed that Italian American fm-ecs, with Gen.Douglas Iinumn l.glrter craft m.\t, , i\t.i/«hot down twenty-five Allied planes, MncArthur in din et charge of i, ,\t-\t,, , .'\teighteen of l.iem over the.Catania in operations, tftrust forward in the j plain; that, Certral Solomons Sunday, capturing shot down a strategie village of Vangunu bland and do;-i toying twenty-one Japanese pinner over Rendova.News that.Gen.MacArthur had taker, the field for the second time in eight months wa- followed closely Although Still in Speculative : ),y lhe ann ,u,irement that Am,ri(,,mR Stage, Many Names Men-hind M-i/.eri vum village on the tionecl as Likely Aspirantsj,s,?uthcTn h'V'T VanK\"m\u2019 _ , i o +\tI \u2019 \u201cree hund.erl Japanese were killed tO Federal beat.\tin the opei-.-idion and the remainder -\u2014\t] of the garrison was dispersed.The Stanstead July 5 .Setting the noon communique, said losses were pilitk-al pot a-boiling with the addition of sove.\"a! spicy rumors of can- was said.A number of enemy fight-j c|jr!atos lyho have already tossed their ere were destroyed, the communique ; fats into the ring or arc conlemplat- declared.One American bombardier, Lieut.Harvey H.Wallace, .said the engine factory at Lu Mens \u201cjust isn\u2019t there ing the action, prospects for a bat.tie-royal in the, forthcoming bye-election in Stanstcad County loom imminent.Only one month away from the anymore.They can cress that faeory j qatt of election, set.for August the off the list \u201d\t; ninth, already a baker\u2019s dozen of n Aft nd n r A v firtkfp-* and'county men are, being mentioned as R.A.F.and R.C.A.F.fighter* ar>« aspirant;, to the seat, and set.the bombers ako swept over the Conti- ; ^ief topic for discussion in all parts i horrbers and four Zeros were shot nent Sunday, hitting at railway \u2022 of the county, as the planning of down without loss of a single Allied yards at Amiens and knocking down meeting: and the general gamut of ; plane.Soon afterward sixteen Japa- orted by fighters, \u201crelatively light.\u2019\" Vura village commands the ap-pr -aches to Wickham anchorage on the Southern coast of Vangunu ii land Allied planes and anti-aircraft guns shot twenty-one planes out of two forma1 ions which attempted to raid positions on Rendova.Eighteen Japanese bombers, escorted by a score of fighters, -were pounced upon by a High,' of fighters before] they reached their objective.Five enemy planes, with a loss of four of their own.Britain itself began it?second week of respite from German air raids.elections indicate a very lively cam- i ncse bombers, e: The Berlin radio reported a few was a resumption early today of j \u201cnuisance raids\u201d over Western Ger-heavy coastal artillery duel® across many last night.Isolated bombs the Strait of Dover, usually an indi-] caused light damage to residences, , \u201e\t_\t_ cation a German coastal convoy is said the broadcast, recorded by the j of U1®.Progress.ive -onscryative As-attempting to sneak up the Channel.: Associated Press.It claimed that ! go(:ia^[or]' ,l?9U'')et' stated in Mont-It was the third exchange in a twenty-four heavy bombers and oneir<:!1l tha- his farty, officially, is tak- poign.Foremost among those entering the field is th ; name of Pierre Thomas, ot Magog, Lhe Mayor of that municipality, whose aspirations have won him the nomination of the C.C.F.party.Though Paul Lafontaine, Secretary appeared over Rendova but anti-air craft guns knocked down twelve of lhe bombers in a thirty-minute battle, The others were driven off.iei man interceptors had nolhor twenty-one; and but combined Axis anti-aircraft ] barrages brought down still another j ten, for a total of fifty-six, (Then it was said two bombers ; should have been added lo yester-I day\u2019s communique total of fifty and | asserted that a grand total of 108 1 planes \u2022 \u201cmostly multi-engined'\u201d \u2014 had been lost by the Allies in two days.) The attack en Catania, by the Northwest African F'orce, followed up a Saturday night pounding delivered by R.A.F.bombera of the Middle East command, which dropped bombs on the railway yards North of the harbor after fighting bad weather to roach the targets.Gerbini, one of Sunday\u2019s objectives, is an airport inland from Catania, which is on the East Sicily coast, Sciaccn, Comiso and Milo were among Saturday\u2019s targets.Apparently the Saturday n-igW raid on Trapani was intended to finish off some <:!' the damage started in a raid Friday night ar.d demolition work the Itaiiane had started in the harbor area.Three raid?were carried out in daylight Saturday against Comiso and adjacent airfield at Biscari in Southern Sicily, Sc i ace a in Southwestern Sicily, and Milo, the airfield week, after a long lull.The British guns opened uo with a fifteen-minute fighter were shot down by the Germans yesterday.London, July 5.\u2014 ®\u2014Preparations for a German attack in the Belgorod area Northeast of Kharkov- have been smashed by artillery and mortar fire with heavy loss to ed.The Soviet midnight commun- diggings last night.Many other ique described the action, which it;thousands pledged themselves to resaid included two attempts to ad-'turn tomorrow, vance by the Nazis.\tPennsylvania\u2019s great bituminous From the Russian account o, the field, which last week was crippled the Nazi forces, the Russian midday ] battle it was presumed here that iteby the absence of nearly 48,000 of communique broadcast from Mos-; took place in the Velikie Luki sec- its 117,000 workers, today held pro qq^- \u2014 \u2014 J _____\u2014 J L.\t4-1-a y.\tCj x- ! q 4 ' *-/-»¦»»\t«1 L/*» n 4-\tviîroQ-f-tT\trvo ' 1 o c\tPm ovo +Voo \u2018rvoicoer\tf\u2019>* /-a wa\tT t AT IHi*\t\u2014 1\u2014\tL _ _ 1 _ and recorded by the Soviet Lor, about ninety miles from the monitor announced today.The war bulletin reported mises from U.M.W.officials, back-| Latvian border.\t;ed by votes of locals, that the num- only j From the Berlin radio came re-'ber will be cut at least to 11,000 by minor action had taken\tplace in ]\tports that the Nazi\thigh command ; tomorrow, other sections of\tthe front.\t\u201cSeveral j\tis convinced that\trecent Russian] In Central\tPennsylvania District dozen\u201d Nazi troops were killed\tin a\ttransport\tmeements indicate that\t2, where\tnearly 35,000 were\tidle night raid on trenches in the\tcen-\t\u201ca Soviet\toffensive now is to be\tand only\t10,000 working at\tthe tral front and a reconnaissance de-1\texpected almost any day,\u201d The\tGer-\tweek\u2019s end, votes from\tlocals\tre- tachment was dispersed by ma-]\tman radio also confirmed the\tRus-1 versed the figures, chine-gun fire,\tthe communique ;\tsian announcement\tof fighting in; John Kramrich, field\trepresenta- said.'\tI\tthe Velikie Luki area, but describ- ! tive for the\tU.M.W.\u2019s\tUniontown North of Chuguev, twenty-two\ted the action as a Russian attack\tDistrict 4, said all locals in\tthis miles Southeast of Kharkov, Soviet\twhich had been repelled.\tarea except one voted to\treturn, artillery smashed two self-propelled] The Russian midnight bulletin re- Five more big locals voted to re-German guns which had been she!.- capitulated German and Soviet air turn in Pittsburgh districts, reporting Red army positions, the bulletin I losses for the week, declaring thatjed President John P.Busarello.He stated.\t'Red army\tfliers and anti-aircraft i\testimated\tonly 1,000 holding out a< An attempt by a strong German ]\tdetachments had downed sixty-six 1\tcompared\twith 6,400 last week.\tThe punitive force to encircle a guerilla ; Nazi planes against eighteen Rus-; district has 36,000 members.the Leningrad area were sian losses.Greensburg District 2, numbering unlt in smashed after several days of fight-j The Russians also said in their 10,000 workers, was reported 100 ing.the communique added.\tmidnight report that an enemy per cent at work.Action which developed on the : transport had been sunk in the Bar-; Just as pronounced was the Northwest front ever the week-end, ents Sea above the Arctic Circle, shaftward trend of Eastern Penn-vvhere the Russians said yesterdaj ] Guerilla activity continued in the sylvania\u2019s 83,000 hard coai miners.y \u2018-ad wiped out 800 of 2,400.Leningrad area, the midday com- Virtually all of them were at work .:tk\u2014 'ppored Elite Guardsmen munique said.It announced that a today, despite the holiday, and the - > attempted, to recapture an im-(few mines net work : f expected to portant hill, ad apparently subsid- Continued on page 2, column 7.be operating tomorrow.WAR BULLETINS London \u2014 The German radio asserted today that German submarines have sunk four Allied merchant ships, totalling 21,000 tons, in an attack \u201con a very strongly protected convoy in the Mediterranean.\u201d The broadcast, recorded by the Associated Press, was unconfirmed by any Allied source.The date of the asserted action was not given.* * * \u2022 * New Delhi \u2014 Four-engined bombers of the United States 10th Air Force bombed the jetty at Akyab and attacked the Shweli bridge in Northern Burma yesterday, a communique announced today.Mitchell bombers joined in the attack with heavy raids on Central Burma, dropping more than ten tons of bombs on the railway yards at Shwebo and scoring many direct hits on tracks, rolling stock and warehouses, the communique said.Continued on page 2, column 1.Continued on page 2.col.2.Two Canadian Airmen Play Major Role In Atlantic Glider Voyage irij no part in the bye-elections, it is winely rumored that John T.Hac-kett.K.C., former member for Stan-steaO; may svek his seat again, and Wesley Bradley, Sherbrooke lawyer and summer resident of the County,\t_ _\t___ also has been mentioned as a likely ¦ be il, R.C.A.F., of Montreal, and Lhe\" word \u201cexperiment\u201d London, July 5 adian pilots\u2014Sq-dn.I, Two Can- regarding that was given, Air Min-Air.I4.M.Go- j istry officials preferring to stick to .~~J \u201c\twhen des- candidate, while Albert Fregeau, of Elt.Ltd.W.S.Longhurst, R.A.F., I cribing the flight that originated Rook Island, is also regarded as a !\tToronto\u2014played principal roles possible starter.\t; in the experiment that had a freight In the Liberal camp the name of j l'iaded glider towed across some 3,-the ex-member, R.G.Davidson, has! 500 miles of the Atlantic, the Air been heard from many points.! Minister anounced today.Other names up for the standard-! Sqdn.Ldr.Gobeil shared the bearers are Roger Bouchard, of; tricky and exhausting job of pilot-Coaticook, and his fellow-townsman, ing the glider with Sqdn.Ldr.R.G.C.Samson while the Independent Liberals have been rumored as pre on the flying fields near Montreal.Planned by Sir Frederick Bowhill, Commander-in-Chief of the R.A.F.Transport Command, preliminary experiments were carried out with test hops near Montreal for months before the big transport and it* glider headed for the Atlantic crossing.The final test was almost as trying as the actual flight itself, covering a triangular course to and by way of New-Labrador.wil] also contest the riding, it is I radio officer, and Wing Cmdr.H.P^®n' satisfied with their tests, understood, with the proposals that|Eurner of Dorval, Que., who was irari.sport Command loaded « possibly J.A- Choquet or Aurelien the deputy flight engineer.Belanger, both of Katevale, may I Others in the crew were Fit Lt.enter the rare.Purely conjecture as yet, with the j co-pnor or tne tow piane, ana c,t.,know ag the Dkta exception of the C.C F.nomination.Engineer PO.JC H.\" ormln2ton\u2019; it across the ocean.Seys, R.A.F., while F'it.Lt.Long-hurst handled the controls of the senting either Albert Sideleau, j tow plane.Two other Canadians al-Coaticook, or M A- Girard, ofjso were taken along on the preced-Magog.\t; ent-setting trip, H.G.W\u2019hightman\u2019trom Montreal Maxime Rr.vmond ?Bloc Populaire oL Vancouver, B.C., acting as senior ,jL,?'\u2019\"ar|d and - -\t*\t.-\t~ ¦\t- 1 Then, sat\u2014 the Transpo glider with vaccines for Russia, radio, aircraft and motor parts, at- ! C.W.H.Thompson, New Zealand,!^®?Vuo3) big\u2019 t(.win-enSin®d Go-pilot of the tow plane, and Fit.;£?nuJIa8no C/h4J nS ^ndTea^S the next few weeks will undoubtedly witness one of the most-eagerly contested elections that Stanstcad Coun- The glider used had a wing-span of 84 feet, a freight capacity of 3000 pounds and was fastened to its Staffordshire, Eng.Announcement yesterday of the completion of the hazardous and ty has yet seen, ft remains to be\thitherto untried glider flight of 28\t! mother ship\twith steel attachments known just wnat the final line-up ;\thours duration set aerial\tobservers\t]designed to\ttake a strain of 20,000 will be but, no doubt, the electors ! to speculation that in the near fu-1 pounds.will be fuilv i: formed within a very\tture speedy \u201csky trains\u201d\twould be Pounding\tits way through bad few days.The fire is hot and the]\thurrying war materials to\tthe fight-\tweather most of the time, the transkettle is boiling\u2014who is going to| ing fronts.\t- \u2022tir the brew2\tHowever, no official statement* Continued on Page 2, Col.i .i 99 2.SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD MONDAY, JULY 5, 1943 Knowlton Buys Two Depth Charges'Lafleche \"ec\u2018,snizes To Set Pace In Stamp Out U-Boat Campaign On Its Inaugural Day The Eastern Townships village of Knowlton bought two depth charges in swift succession today, setting the pace in the provincial \u201cStamp Out the U-boat!\" campaign on its inaugural day.An enthusiastic sales force of Boy Scouts scored their first success in the first hour of the campaign, selling War Savings Stamps to the value of $90, or the equivalent of one depth charge.At an informal outdoor ceremony the tally sheet, complete with its quota of 360 War Savings Stamps, was dedicated to OS.Car] Wicken, a Knowlton man now in the Canadian Navy and awaiting assignment to a warship.Meanwhile a second tally sheet was completed as summer visitors to Knowlton rallied to the cause, and the two sheets, each a picture of a depth charge, were shipped to Montreal for transmission to Ottawa.In accordance with the cam- Stamp uut u-Doati^jrc^::,,^.*s?English, Lt.M.Nation and Lt.C.; j deSalaberry, of the C.W A.C., Director Percy Donahue of the' ______________ ! Police and Fire Departments, Leo paign rules, each sheet bears the |\tvwfiU name of the Lake View Hotel, pro- k^nd, P.R.O.,M.D.4 Sgt Vmce prietor Neil Manson, where the U!1.nny\u2019J''K ;, Ik'\t\u2018 aM J .sales drive centered.\t\\(^e, Moo^> afr\t' In Montreal, C.If.Martel and i ^ ml>T nf\tC'i Devis W.Turnbull, respectively ;\tt\t& Chairman and Vice-Charirnan of the ff Provincial War Savings Stamp u;.; the ceremony.vision of the National War Finance! rom a ^aily-decoratcd balcony Committee, announced that the the the New Sherbrooke Hotd, \u201cStamp Out the U-boat!M campaign | ^ay°r A.C.\tread the official was gathering impetus in all parts ; Proc^aîïiatjf>n f f°rrria^y opening the of the province*.Banks, department-! two-day festival at | :d0 Saturday drum and bugle corps taking over for f another half hour a'.9.20.In the words of Leon Trepanier, of i Montreal, President of Civilian Re- ' cruitir.g for M.D.4, and well-known in Sherbrooke as the organizer of the Centenary fete, the blackout was \u201cfar more effective than any we Six Important Continued from page 1.successor.\t,\t\u2022\t_ Gen.Marian Kukiel, Polish Mm-, ister of Defence, was placed in charge of Polish armies to succeed' have ever nai in Montreal, demon-! Sikorski in that capacity, stealing exactly what happens dur- Shortly before Sikorski left for ing an air attack.It is a credit to! the Middle East he spent an hour the C.P.C., Mobile Force, St.Johns!with Foreign Secretary Anthony\t.\t.\t_\t.,\t, Ambulance Corps, Municipal Fire- E(1en, discussing the entire field of HepOPtS TPOm the UttlCialS 0Î men, and 3'ipt.Geo.Guthrie, who Ire!ation8 between Poland and -Rus- LENN0XV1LLE WOMEN DONATE 313 ARTICLES MARKET NEWS MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE COUNTRY AND DAIRY PRODUCTS PRICES al stores, food stores and many res- ! afternoon.In part, H i.: Won-hip de-taurants wore among those co-oper- ' ' iared that during this great two-ating in the drive.It was added that! day display of our Armed forces, many clubs and other organizations j 0UJ* citizens will have an open unity had anounced their intention of ;to witness a realistic demonstration helping it along by sponsoring the |f>f our gallant\tequipped sale of one or more depth chargea with the best armaments in the j world, all manufactured in our great Dominion.Our people will understand better the great all-out effort to their members.Finance Minister J.L.Ilsley has pledged that every dollar raised in this campaign will be devoted exclusively to the purchase of depth charges for use by Canada\u2019s Navy.Two Canadian Continued from page 1 port and its following glider made Communists To Continued from page 1.made by our country towards the preservation of world democracy and the safeguarding of our liberty of fipeech, action and religion, so dear to us,\u201d Brief introductory remarks explaining the purpose of the festival, and outlining the programme were made by Gordon Beerworbh, who in-The labor movement had Kiven i troduced each speaker to the as-the trip at medium altitudes and everything up to winning the war, ;lCrnblcd crowd of citizens and troops at an average speed of 125 miles Mr.Buck «aid, \"but employers were ! gathered at the Depot-King Streets per hour.\ti building huge financial reserves and ; intersection.Unable to climb out of the storms 'doing their utmost to prevent work-! Major-General Renaud, Senator encountered on the way, the two \u201er, from getting modern and more ! (jhas.B Howard, Maurice Gingues, craft made a rough crossing.At p]casBnt working conditions.\u201d one time they were forced to ride | jjore than 450,000 families in out a snow storm for two and a rnn)U|ft W(,re receiving $17 a week half hours, when according to &|dn.|«when the Labor Department state Ldr.Goheil, the glider was buffeted \u201clike nothing to earth.\u201d Essential communications were transmitted between the two aircraft by wireless.Position of the two planes at times when fog or darkness, or both, made the navi- ; gators job almost hopeless, was, determined by Longhurst.who ask for a wage increase because directed the show, that such a re-markable demonstration was so effectively carried out.\u201d Those who were affected by the smok< and excitement of the simulated raid and required first aid or hospital treatment were: Rita Chabot 129 Mt.Pleasant, Anita Bolduc, 16 Galt, Madeleine Lapierre, 128 Council, Jules Lefebvre, 208 Victoria, Clement Brown, 201 London, Mrs, I oblanc, 60 ,Sr Antoine St., Granby, M Omcr Gut rette, Bclvidere St., Jacqueline Plante, 8S Gillespie, Florentine Comtois, Dufferin Court, Mrs, Paul Emile Lemay, Marquette St., 1 Miss Rose Lavallee, 91b Gait St, Ruth Eikas, 7X Alexander, Mrs.Wal-Maskell, The following quotations are s^P the Red Cross Show that plied by Greenshields & Co.: Women Have Had a Busy Asbegtos corP.°pen 'No°n Season.\t; Bathurst Paper ._____! Bell Telephone .The regular monthly meeting of ®ra!z)îian\t\u2022 the Lennoxvilk Branch of the Cana-' Eui^ln^ Ero aian Red Cross was held in the work i E.Power A irom neirur ^oanon, r with Mrs.Lee M.Watson pre- Can Cement he declared that Polish \u2019\t* C.Steamships Pfd.~\tTV o i r\t^ p Can' Car & Fdy- \u2022 \u2022 The Supply Convener, Mrs.R.i Car & Fdy Pfo.sia.He had teen expected to return from Cairo either late today or tomorrow.Sikorski arrived in the Middle East May 27th and was met by Polish and Allied officials.In a broadcast from Beirut, Lebancm, June 28th troops in the Middle East were \u201cspoiling for action.\u201d\t_\t- ,\t, ,\t,, v.v.^ «.\t, Polish troops, the General said,\t.aT±lAwCan- Ind.Alco.\u201cA are equipped with the finest mater- ^eeT1 E\u20acnt headquarters\tj Can.Pacific .ial of war that British and the Past raoft't?'\tmcluue 9o knitted Dom.Tar .United States could give them.In garments for the services, 20 surgical Dom Bridge .\t.an interview, he told correspond-\tcresting», box lirangs, 201 p)orrl g, q \u201cg\u201d ents in Cairo that the future peace Zirls jumpers,_ 4 fextras U4 civilian Foundation Co.should be based of a federated\t30 hispitai bed j^ckeu and ; Gatineau Pfd.Europe with Poland and Czecbo- ^V\u20ac utliF5 0-d.loO surgical dressings, (jypgum Co.in Appreciation for the now lighting \u2018 Howard Smith .system was expressed by Mrs.T.Imperial Oil 13 B 152 24% 14% B 15 A 2714 B 28 A B 8 A I 74 35 OYt B oqii \u201c5% B 11% 8 B Montreal, July 5\u2014The firm trend on the egg market continued .over the week-end, demand remaining very good.Supplies were short on mediums while pullets received slight attention from buyers.Do-minion Marketing Service quotations were generally higher on all grades.Prices to wholesalers on A-large was up % cent at 38 to 38% \u2019cents.Packers were selling eggs 9% A to retailers in cartons one cent 29% 'higher on top grades.Store prices 5% A to consumer also advanced.There 2414 13 Vi A 152 25 35 11 % were no sales of butter on the Com-8% A modity Exchange during the short 2914 A 9 34 A 9% B 15% B 16 A 92 92 7U Tru\tr^frret0v' Es*'h,3r j SloVakla\"taking dominant roïês I russler, 126a Galt, Caroline Truss-1 the Central bloc.Bu'oks^41 Mr\u201d11 \u2019Ilinrv Richard 8qI The preliminary announcement ' Saunders, Works Convener, and she| Inter.Pete .Brooks, Mr.,.Henry Richards, 9lof the accident made by the Polish stated that\t.w\t^ twllnter.Nmkel M.P., and Judge Dalma I.anrlry each spoke a word of welcome, stressing the great contribution that .Sherbrooke had marie to the war a wage of $30 a week is require'l I effort, and contgratulating the citi-to support a man, his wife and one zens on organizing Siuch a gala festi-child,\u201d he said.Another 400,000 women in Canada were working for less than $3 a week each, were not receiving a cost of Hvng bonus, and could not iebermined reached his conclusion by figuring the angle of the two ropes and the longitudinal Axis of the glider.they were not allowed to organize, he claimed.Determined Continued from Page 1.adjoining Trepnni, where aerial reconnuissanen photographs revealed the Italiens wore blowing up harbor CONSERVATIVES IN General MacArthur Continued from page 1 Meanwhile, from Washington the Navy Department announced nine heavy bombing raids on Japanese j installations, Trapani, Northwest_Si-positions on Kiska Island in the cialinn port is only one hundred miles North Pacific, Hits were observed | from Cap Bon peninsula in Tunisia, on anti-aircraft positions, camp areas and on buildings.Weather conditions prevented observation of results of some of the raids.Already, after only five days of the new offensive against the Japanese, Allied forces have gained a firm foothold on Rendova Island within airdrome barge base at Viru on the Southwest coast of New Georgia; dislodged the enemy on Vangunu Island, the Southernmost of the New Georgia group lying athwart ! In-Allied air line of communication between Guadalcanal and Rendova; and made a successful landing at Nassau Bay on the Northeast const of New Guinea below Salamaua.Toronto, July 5.\u2014 .Conservative organizations in every artillery range of tfhe Munda \u2019 Cntario riding were represented al, ne; captured the enemy il cor.ferenc-' in 1 ovonto Saturday .with Lt.-Col.George A.Drew, Ontario leader, to review publicity, organization and campaign plans for the.Provincial election August 4.Candidates so far nominated for the clot cion also attended.Before adjournment was reached Saturday night, delegates voiced a unanimous tribute to the late lion.R.J.Muni.>11, former National Conservative leader, who died Friday, BALDWIN\u2019S MILLS The school picnic was held and a very enjoyable time was spent.Mr.H.F.Baldwin held a sugaring-off in the afternoon, which everybody enjoyed.The sympathy of this place is extended to Mr.Sylvie Charron and his family, of Kmgscroft, in their, tragic grief and lose during a storm ^ which took the life of his son and young farm hand, while Mr.Charron himself was seriously injured.Mrs.Anson Hamilton is spending two weeks with Mr.and Mrs.Leonard Hamilton, in Beebe.Mr.Elvyn Baldwin, Misses Eunice and Alice Baldwin, of Stanstead College, are spending their holidays with their parents, Mr, and Mrs.11.F.Baldwin.Mr.George Gibhs, of Sherbrooke, is visiting at his borne here.Mr.Loren Markwell, Mrs.Alfred Mark-well and daughter, Flora, and Mr.Arthur Hamilton spent a day in Coaticook.Mr.Raymond Markwell, Misses Elsie and Diana Markwell, of Heath-ton, spent a few days at Mr.Lemuel Markwell\u2019s.Mr.Raymond Oharland and Miss val as a tribute to our armed forces.Judge Landry read telegrams expressing regret in their inability to be present, from Premier Adrian! Godbout, Hon.J.L.Ralston, K.C., Minister of National Defence, and; Louis St.Laurent, Minister ofj Justice.Troops drawn up on Depot Street! and the mechanized units up on' King Hill, then paraded to the Exhibition Grounds, led by the Dis-, trict Depot Band.In the line of march were units from T.C.A.12,' Farnham, T.C.43, Lord Sherbrooke, Princess of Wales Own Regiment, Veterans\u2019 Guard of Canada, C.W.A.C.Detachment from Ste.Anne de' Bellevue, the Sherbrooke Regiment, 2nd (R) Battalion, 35t,h Battery, and military and municipal motor-1 cycle police.Major General Renaud took the salute at l.ansdowue Market, accompanied by his entire! ONTARIO IN CAUCUS stair from M.D.-I who were present._______ j Excellent music by the District Progressive ! Ifepot Band, and a brief display of \"1 Physical Training by a picked squad of C.W.A.C.girls, held the attention of the crowd between races, while the afternoon programme was high-, lighted by a mock battle very effectively staged by troops of the Lord Sherbrooke Training Centre.On a specially-arranged terrain which portrayed n sector of German-occu-pio.d territory, the troops assaulted the town, capturing the enemy forces and effectively took over.Special scenery and stage effects gave the appearance of buildings, wooded areas, a stream with actual water crossing in a specially built section, walls, ami various obstructions over and under which the advancing troops climbed in record time.To the accompaniment of artillery fire, bombs and dummy ammunition the attack was most fcialistic, so much so that one could almost imagine they were watching an actual battle.Winding up the afternoon show, the.District Depot Band gave a colorful display of counter-marching and special formations, to the accompaniment of crowd - pleasing rhythms.Solos were given by the lead trumpeter and saxophone player, former members of Louis Armstrong's and Cat.Calloway\u2019s famous orchestra.An open inspection of all military vehicles on display held the attention of the estimated 5000 people for an hour after the National Anthem, many viewing for the first time the h.upe Ram tanks, universal carriers, mortars, and artillery pieces.Ccr-ain privileged few were given the.enviable opportunity to ride in the vehicles, giving onlookers an equal thrill in watching the machines in Fabre, Jeanne d\u2019Arc Vachon, 7ib Victoria, Marie Jeanne Fourand, 101b Marquette, Juliette and Hugh-otte Plante, «8 Gillespie, Mrs.An-tordn Fontaine, 96 Lussier, Rachel Gosselin, »G Champlain, Monique Drapeau, 124 Marquette.These were all treated at the First Aid Post operated by the St.Johns Ambulance Corps, in King George Hotel.Miss J.Trudeau and Alberic Julien were in charge of the women\u2019s and men\u2019s group of this organization, and all members rendered splendid assistance.Military personnel and their escorts enjoyed a dance at T.C.43, guests of Lt.-Col.K.J.Nantel, Saturday evening, music being provided by M.I).4 District Depot Dance Band.the new lights in the)Inter.Nickel Government said:\twork room would better facilitate Mont.Power .\u201cThe Polish Government have re-'the ^ork- alld that the ne£ room Nat- Bre7er'es ceived news that an accident had w<>JuI<1 r«maln °Pen f™1?afternoon ^ Steel Car occurred during the journey of PÜ- a.nd evening, except Saturday, tor;Noranda the preparing of surgical dressings, i Price Bros.aeri \u2014\t_\t.\t.(Quebec Power .St.Law.Corp.Sbawinigan .\t.Steel Co.of Can.ish Prime Minister and Comman___ in Chief General Sikorski.\tj The President stated that the \u201cAt present the Polish Ctovern-™^,01 se^ln« f°5 thUpe£t ment is in special session.Presi-'^.^,fcîn:9iÿÆ\u2019.ird sha 15% B 14% 22 36% 25% 33 B 61 45 B 15% B 16 A 15% '\t15% 15 22 36% 26 33%.61 dent Racziewicz of the Polish Re- Tth1\u201d pi- tViP mppi.tnis expressed the hope that the work for public is presiding over the meet-! ^ worfchy caU£e would 8,0011 shoW ing.The cabinet is considering the 1ar' ln<\u2018ca\u201ce' situation created by General Sik-! .Mrs- Saunders reported the fol-orski\u2019s death.\u201d\t-lowing donations: One afghan for rpL p -\u2022\t-,\t.\t,\t1 Russia, Mrs.H.W.Perry, three The Polish Government snokes-\t- - man said an additional announve- 2% 18 B 66 B 2% 18% A 67 A quilts, P.N.G.Club, two quilts, Mrs.E.W.Dundin, one quilt, St.Monica\u2019s BONDS AND BANKS CANADIAN BONDS Following are the closing, bid and asked quptations as to July 3rd, ment would be made later when Guild', one quilt, Rebekah Lodge, one further details concerning the Pre-.iay\u20actte)\tA, Gilihc-y and Miss : as furnished by the Investment miei 3 death would be usclosed.i Elsie Gilibey, and s*oap, dust bins and Dealers\u2019 Association of Canada.It was reliably reported that a brooms for every room, Mrs.C.C.! DOM.GOV\u2019T.BONDS: F.C.Baker and Mrs.( number of Sikorski\u2019s aides died with .Chaddock, Mr, Sunday morning, Catholic ana\thut their names were not im- E.L.Barter.mediately available.\t| Miss D.Sterling, Treasurer, re- Sikorski had served as Prime rported that two dollars had been re-M mister of the Polish Government j «ajved from fees and the sum of and commander-in-chief of the Pol- $15,8\u20195 had been spent on room ex-ish army since 1939.He was born in 1881 and was educated at the University Techni- H1GHKST RAILROAD DEPOT The summit of Pike\u2019s Peak, Colo., 14,109 foot above sea level, is the highest, point reached by a railroad in the United States.BOY SCOUT NEWS Protestant troops held their own church services, with special music for the hymns being provided by two units of the District Depot Band.At Dufresne Park, Lt.-Col.E.R.Chartier, Senior Catholic Chap-alin, M.D.4, delivered a stirring message, following which Major General L.R.LaFleche, Minister of National War Services, complimented the troops and especially the C.VV.A.C.The church parade at Portland Square was addressed by Lt.-Col.II.F.C.Cocks, Senior Protestant < haplain, M.D.4, his message being: \u201cWhy are we at war?What is the result going to be?\u201d Col.Cocks stressed that selfishness of mankind was responsible for this war, as he went on to illustrate his point, emphasizing the absence and neglect of religion which resulted in this.\u201cTliis is a holy war,\u201d he said, \u201cand we must concentrate on the first principles of Christian teaching, that Christ is a living God.He is behind us in this fight, and will see us through.God Himself put out the fire of London, when man could not do so, He sent rain, a providential rain which quenched the flames, eW must trust in God Examine yourself and determine to live your life for Him, and all will be well with Canada.\u201d Both church parades united at the corner of King and Belvidere, where they were joined by the mechanized units, for a colorful march past of all participating units ai which the salute was taken at Lans-downe Market by Major General L.; R.LaFleche.With the Minister on \u2022\tthe stand wore Col.E.B.Worthington.Cnpt.M.Bouchard, C.W.A.C., Maj.Gen.Renaud, Brig.Blais, Lt.-Col.Xante!, Lt.-Col.Cocks, Col, Chevalier, Oapt.Lacoste, Lt.-Col.'Scott, Maj.Fairweather.Maj.Mig-nault, Capt.English, Lt.Nation, \u2022\tMaurice Gingues, M.P.and Judge Landry.Following the parade, the visitors signed the Golden Book of the City ! of Sherbrooke, a memento of the 'week-end when \"Sherbrooke Hon-! ored Its Fighters.3.June 15, 1950-51 .\t102%\t103 3%.Feb.1918-52 \t\t103%\t104% 3, Oct.1, 1949-52 .\t101\t102 3, Mar.1.1952-54 .\t100%\t101% 3, Nov.1, 1953-56 .\t100\t101 3.May 1, 1954-57 .\t99%\t100% Wartime Issues: MONTREAL CURB MARKET The following quotations are supplied by Greenshields & Co.: Open Noon Abitibi .\t\t\t1.35 B\t1.55 A Abitibi Pfd.\t\t\t14\t13% P.A Oil \t\t\t21 B\t21% Consol.Paper .\t5%\t5% Fleet Aircraft , .\t5%\t5% Robt Mitchell .\t18 B\t18% A penses.Mrs.Watson stated that the cans , _\t-\t, and the nermits for sugar had been cal College at Lwow, where he was ; obtained'by the branch lor the mak-graduated in 1908.\t:nig of jam for Overseas, aiul a com- He was chief organizer of pre- mittee was named to take charge of war Polish military organizations this project.An appeal from head-in 190-9 and served as a lieutenant- quartera, which asked for coarse colonel of Polish legions during the sewing and darning needles to be First Great War, playing a promin- used in parcels, was read, ent part in the defences of Lwow | Members and friends were asked and Przemsyl against the Ukrain- to attend the picture \u201cForever and ians in 1919.\tla Day\u201d to be shown at the Granada He was commander of the Fifth Theatre ,n .Sherbrooke in the near and the Third Army Corps in the future, the proceeds of which are war against the Bolsheviks.\t|to be given to the Red Cross and the In 1912, Gen.Sikorski was nam-i8,4- Johl1 Am*>u!an.ce.ed chief of the general rtaff and aj\tGeneral Notes year later became Prime Minister We wish to advise our customers for a year.He was named Minister and friends, during July and August, of Military Affairs from 1923\tto\tour store will close at 1 p.m.Wed- 1925 and served as commander\tof\tnesdays, W.J.H.McKindsey and\tGerman train had been\tderailed, îhelnLno0W army regl0n from 192'6 H\\,Mont|0Try'\t,\t, smashing the engine and four to 1928.\t1 Mrs.E.E.Atto entertained the coaches.After Poland fell to the German ! members of the St.George\u2019s Guild j The killing of a chief of a Ger-lightning war, he made his home\tin\tsk \"er h°Tiie cn Park Avenue for their\tman intelligence office\tand the England, as an official of the Pol-\trc'&uiar meetinig of the season,\t\u2022wounding of \u201canother high\tofficial^ ish Government in London.\tj Mrs.Fisher presided and thanked the ;guerillas destroyed an auto- He was married and had one dau- members\tsplendid success °^j mobile also was announced, ghter.\t1 the annual sale and tea held re-1 Sikorski lived simnlv in a cmnll1 ceTltly frcm whic,h the sum of one his wife and daughter.His favor- Sppcial thar^ ^ given to the German Radio Continued from Page 1.ite e expense.w .\to-, oipeciai inanKs were given to the recreation was walking, bilence membt.rs oI the ju£or Auxiliary MAGOG was one of his characteristics.Cpl.Ernest Ledoux, R.C.A.F., and y I Mrs.Ledoux, of Ottawa, spent a who acted as waitresses, and to Mr.j week-end in Magog with his parents As Prime Minister ana command- Arthur Bown for the material for er-m-ehief his travels took him from the shields for Mrs.Jones\u2019 booth.London to Iran, where a large body Mrs.F.Spry thanked the members of Polish troops was stationed, to for the aprons donated for sale.Dur-Moscow and Washington.\t! ing the business oeriod $175 was do- ll is relations with Soviet Russia nated to the church wardens, S10 to at times were strained, but in his the Greek Relief Fund, and a sum to |\t____ ._ .j latest statement, made to newsmen pay for the purchase of thirty prayer j spent a week in Magog, the guest of at Cairo last Friday, ne declared books for the church.Five dollars j her sister, Mrs.W.B.Morin, that Poland wanted to live at peace was donated towards this cost by a ! Miss Therese Ledoux, of Magog, with Russia and promised that Poles parishioner, The Treasurer was \"au-1 spent a week in Montreal with rela-soon would be fighting the Germans ; thorized to pay all outstanding hills j lives.in a decisive battle to regain their and members were asked to each1 Ehvyn Buzzell, R.C.A.F., of homeland.\tearn the sum of one dollars for the Cartierville, spent a week-end in Shortly after conferring with , Overseas Cigarette Fund during the ; Magog with his wife.Prime Minister Churchill and ar-1 summer months.The meeting ad-' Mr.and Mrs.John Ledoux and ranging for Polish forces to take ! journed to meet in September.6on, James, of\u2019 Montreal, spent a over Scottish defences in 1940, he I Miss Irene Lessard, Massawiippi i week-end in Magog, the guest of Mr.and Mrs.George Ledoux, and family.Miss Marguerite Morin, of Sherbrooke, spent a week-end in Magog, visiting her parents, Mr.and Mrs.j 0.Morin.Mrs, J.H.Morin, of Sherbrooke, session Saturday, with prices remaining steady.Receipts of butter in the city during the week, including truck arrivals, showed an advance over the preceding period as well as over a year ago.The Board of Trade figure showed a falling off in egg supplies while cheese was higher.Considerable interest was shown in strawberries at the week-end At the Fruit Exchange 8,000 crates changed hands Friday at prices ranging from the open of $3.50 in the morning to the high of the day ranging from the open of $3.50 in of $5 a crate.The average sale was made at from $4.25 to $4.50, however.Saturday morning saw the disposal of 6,000.crates at the same price range.EGGS:\tJob- Re- (e per Spot Quotes lots tail dozen) fGovt.JCom.§ II A-large 38-38% 38-3°\t41-43 44-45 A-med.36-37\t36-36% 39-42 42 43 A-pul.32\t 38-40 B .33-33% 33-34\t36-37 39 C .30%-31 30%-31 31-34 .Commodity Exchange Futures: July 37b.fDominion Marketing Service quotations tCanadian Commodity Exchange close, basis 50-cases minimum.§Small lots to retailers in cartons; 2c per dozen less when bought loose ^Approximate price to consumers in larger retail outlets.BUTTER (c.per lb.): Open Market, No.1 pasteurized, 33%.Small lots to retail trade, solids, 34%; prints, 35.Commodity Exchange Sales, spot, closing quotes: Que.92 score, 33-33%.Futures close: November, 34%-34%.CHEESE (c.per IN.) : Que.and Western white, current make, for export 20 11-13-21.POTATOES (per 75 lb.bag): P.E.I.Mountains .2.20 N.B.Mountains.2.20 Quebec No.i .2.20 P.E.I.Fancy.2.50 N.B.Fancy.2.50 Canada 1 small.2,20 U.S.new crop.100-lb.bag .2.9S Quebec new erop.2.81 POULTRY: 'Wholesale prices to retail trade for dressed stock: Turkeys\u2014Grade A, 6 lbs up .38% Turkeys\u2014Grade B, 6 ibs.up.36% Fowls\u2014Grade A, 5 lbs.up.26 Fowls\u2014Grade B, 5 lbs.up .24 Chickens: Milkfed A, 4 lbs.up.35% Do B.4 lbs.up .33% Grade B, 5 lbs.up.31% Grade C, 5 lbs.up ., .29% b Bid.n Nominal, t Traded.\u2022 x,\t\u2022, .\t1\t.\t- -:\t\u20181\tx-\tV.o k \u2022 C*.J.VU ,\tOO, >Y npp A | > * V V, IV W, u \u2018 - \u2018 -'l \u2018-*0 A-'c- * A ; i V ^ U UC t V\u2019l It a\tluncheon tendered went to Canada to recruit a Polish Street, has gone to St.George do Mr.and Mrs.George Ledoux and i by Lt.-Col.E.J.Nantel, O.C.T.C 43, at the Training Centre, high Frederick Morin, R.C.A.F., Officials of the local Boy Scouts ! action on 'he rough ground of the Association have announced the ap- infield at the rear of the Exhibition pointment of Robert C.Blake, of j stage.Katie Oharland, of Stanhope, spent j Lennoxville, ns Chairman of the Air At the Social Club, at 7.30 p.m., a few days as guests of their cousin, j\tScouts\tCommittee.\tMr.Blake\thas\tthe City of\tSherbrooke was host to Miss Vivian Lyon.\thad a\tconsiderable\tamount of\tex-: the visiting\thigh-ranking army otli- Mr.and Mrs.Robert Brown and |\tperience in scouting and he\thas\tc'als at an\tintimate banquet given daughter, Veda, of Rock Island, J\tplayed\ta prominent\trole in some of\tas a tribute\tto those who had helped spent a few da>Ts at, their home here, the scout troops in Montreal and maso the show a success.Presided __________________________________district.His appointment, as lender ovez by Mayor A.C.Ross, brief of this committee was considered ?oceches were made by Brigadier by the Association to he a step in p-, ivmj, o.C.M.D.5' and Major the advancement, of air scouting in General Renaud, O.C.M.D.4.In reply i this area and it is felt, that with tci the Mayor\u2019s compliments to the arniv and the C.W.A.C., Brig.Blais said.\u201cThis war has built for us j Canadians a great thing.we are ; all pulling together,.our war effort is second to none.The morale of Canada as a whole and especially ; here in our own province is in top j shape Every town and village is _ Miss Marjorie Daniels, of Norton.' doing its part and doing it nobly.\" Vt., is visiting her cousin, Miss Those present were 'Mayor Ross, , Aldermen 0.Deziel.A.Trudeau.J.Genest, Guy Bryant and A.Fi-Citv Clerk Antonin Peslau- legion, and then went on to S\\ ash- Beauce to spend the summer with family , ington in May of 1941, where he'her grandmother, Mrs.E, Lessard.! Sgi.ranking army officers were joined j conferred with President Roosevelt.Mr.and Mrs Jame- Dunn Main ^ Pendleton, Ont,, spent a week-hy members of the Executive t om-1 Almost a year later, in March, Street, accompanied by their daugh-! end in Magog with his wife and to the United tt,rj Mrs.Gordon Johnston, and little children.son and Mrs.G.L.Beattie, of Sher- ^rs- W.Bresee, of Lennoxville, bro-oke, motored to Canterbury yes- was a g-uest of her parents, Mr.terday and were guests at the home aTid_ Mrs.H.Standish.of their son-in-law and daughter, Mr.and Mrs.William McLeod.Mr.Arthur Lessard, Massawippi Street, is spending a few days in : is over.Many factors of army I fer with President Roosevelt and Sherbrooke, the guest of Master Jer-i training are invaluable in building ; «'so visite^ President Avila Coma- rT D:don.: men.and these men will return to ^\u2019ho of Mexico.\ti Mrs.Oral Sample and daughter, make Canada even greater than it The latter part of June Mr.Barbara, of Thetford Mines, are mittee of the local festival.Brief 11942, he returned remarks were made by several of States and discussed Poland\u2019s post the guests, the keynote being given | war boundaries\u2014since then a hot-by Canon Ira Bourassa.Parish ! ly contested point with Soviet Rus-Priest of St.Michael\u2019s Cathedral, \u2022 sia\u2014with President, Roosevelt.At 'who said: \u201cI hope that the discipline'that time he pleaded for full aid j taught in the army will continue to ! to Russia.'remain with the troops and spread! Last December he made a third , through the homes after this war trip to the United States to con- is today.' REnre Complimenting the work Roosevelt sent him a secret letter guests of friends in town.by hand of United States Ambas- ; Mr.Blake's experience and enthusiasm for scouting this new branch will advance by leaps and bounds.All leaders who wish to get any ! further information on air scouts are asked to get in touch with Mr.Blake.this famous Corps.Yesterday afternoon\u2019s program- MYSTIC i ¦ P « 1 i * > L TODAY AND Tl'ES.THRILLS ABOUND.B O M A N C B Vf , visiting BLOOMS Amid the Csrnssre of Buttls * P1 '' l.\t,h and the Holocaust of War I Jam»\tMarkwell LISON, Jane WYATT.Kent TAYLOR in l , Mr.and Mrs.Percy Daniels and \u2018¦army surgeon.^ end smash hit\u2014 i family, of Norton, Vt., spent a day se\u2019.te three rollickinu sons-of-guns I with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.rie-s.Treasurer M.Cormier, Canon in One of the Grande»! Dramas of Love ] Robert Markwell.\tIra Bourassa, Rev Dr.A.H.Mc- and Action Ever Filmed! Fred MacMiTR- Mr.and Mrs.Seth Blake, Mr.Levi Greer, Judge Dalma Landry, Maurice iV'KANC.-: Smith and Mis« Nettie Smith motor- Gingues.M.P.Senator C- B.Howard, rIL \u2019 J k « muJl ^\tJ- K.Flaherty Alphco Gauthier, Gilbert RolAtio, Joseph fev niJcikrsuti ar\tn j\tt\t\u2022 >«\ta' Diek Koran, Betty Brea-er.\u201cRough ON , Mr- A1'Pha Markwell, daughter, Leon Tropamer, of Montre:».Mayor rents-\" a Hilarious Comedy with Edgsr\tar,fi Percy, of Hcathton, Horace Boiviu and Alderman Bruce Kennedy.Latest World Events! extraispent a day at Mr.Lemuel Mark- Payne of Granby.Brig.A.E.Blais.\u2014The Meet Amaiini Serial Ever Dm- \u2018Well\u2019s.\t|Mai.Gen.E- J Ren and.Lt.Col.V, duced! \"Mysterious PR.satan,\u2019*i Mrs.Denis Valade and daughter H.Scott.Maj.B.W.Fairweather.with Edward Oianeili.\twere overnight guests of Mr.and Lt.Col- E.J.Nantel, Lt.Col.Gra- Mrs.Cote, in Rock Island.\t(hair.Lt.Col.B.P.Lyon, Lt.Col.E.Miss E, C.Whelan, of Montreal.1 Cockburn, Lt.Col.E- Chartier, Lt.and Mrs.A.B.Clement, of Barn-1 Co! H.F.C.Cocks, Lt.Col.A.Mrs.D.Mills, of Montreal, visited her parents, Mr.and Mrs.A.E.Smith, over a week-end.Sympathy is extended to Mr.Ray Beane in the passing of his mother.The annual Corpus Christi procession was held from St.Patrick\u2019s Catholic Church.Sympathy is extended to the of the Canadian Women\u2019s Army by, han.li .95 UnltT^i:1 B5'aî?.s,\tMr?.M.Fraser and Miss Laurie passed awav'in Toronto,^OnD, from I Corps, Canon Bourassa remarked .sador Anthony Drexel Biddle, Jr.Fraser, of South Durham, Mrs.double pneumonia.especially on the religious influence 5ne e<,n99f\u2019*s_'lave no^ hrt been dis- Heath and Miss Anna Heath, of\t*___________________ which is of such great import in ?'osed\u2019 There was some speculatio Stanstead, were recent guests of Mr.^\tit may have dealt with the Poush- anJ \\fr, pj -\t-\t- .Russian boundary question.Shortly thereafter Sikorski an- eager ed the 'strong Polish contingent in the \u2022\u2022;c,;î0r?0.8 5!e\u2018\\r,in£ 'm-ghts of o t> .Middle East on a tour through that 4 2 and o 6 .Land music enter- region.tained the huge crowd of some\trecently as last April iStb, 8,000 people, until the military pro-' Sikorski was the target for a bitter gramme got underway.A demon-, editorial in Moscow's Pravda, the Mass., and Mrs.H.Merrill and Mr.stration of field manoeuvres, artil-1 Communist party newspaper.\tClifford Merrill, of North Hatley.'ery attacking an enemy-held posi-i Basis of the Russian outbursts were recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.tion, was given by a unit from the against the Polish Government in Norman Cameron, Spring Road.Princess of Wales Own Regiment.; London was the Polish request that\tMr.and Mrs.\tF.W.Lindop, of\tSt.Showing the use of universal car- an\tinvestigation be made by the\tLambert, were\tweek-end guests\tof riors and the rapidity of setting up Internationa] Red Cross of the their son and daughter-in-law.Mr, machine-guns, these men attacked I German propaganda charge that and Mrs.Say W.Lindop, Hunting-from the ridge behind the track and ; the\tRussians were responsible for\tville Road, took an enemy trench in front of ' the\tdeath of 10.000 Polish soldiers\tptÇi Edwin Langley, of Hunting- the grandstand.\twhose graves the Germans declared don.was a week-end guest of hi'paV- Inspeeting the C.W.A.C., Major- had been discovered in Katyn for- ^ts, Mr.ana Mrs.C- S.Langley, neral LaFleche was accompanied i C!L nea£ Smolensk.\t, Main Street.SCOTSTOWN Dance, Towm Hal!, Wed., July 7 Couple 40c, single 25c, Overseas Club.BIRTHS BROADBELT\u2014At the St.Vincent de Paul Hospital on July 2, 1943, to Mr.and Mrs.Lloyd Broadbelt (nee Phyllis Littler), a son, Denis Lloyd.BUCK\u2014At the Sherbrooke Hospital or.June 30th.1943, to Mr.and Mrs.George Buck, of Sawyerville, a daughter.mes was begun with exhibition \" d that the p0:e^were' .lumping by two smart horses own-\u2019 tQ sfe acUp;l and he reviewe .^ ^ Ci.ii.nt?RUu K, 1 atome» ! e.t.rnr,os Polish rontinffprit in and Mrs.Edgar Groom, Main Street.' Garth Mosher, Main Street, left\t,,\t\u201e\t\u2018 1 ~ cn Tuesday night for Edmonton,\tMrs- RtD'ce Smith and son.David.Aka., to train as a wireless o-nerator and -Mrs.Reginald Corey and daugh-in the R C A F\t*\titer\u2019 Carol, of Montreal, are spend- Mx.and Mrs.F.C.Main.Academy Street, are spending their vacation\t\u2018J YrrH'\t, a* Shove Act?\tylr\u2019 JIrs' Haro'd Smith and Mrs.E.E.'Benson.of Cambridge.\tS\u201c ^mbert are spending a ¦\t6 \u2019 wees with Mr.and Mrs.Kenneth Smith.Mr.and Mrs.Harold Smith and son, Mrs.Kenneth Smith and Mr.Donald Smith spent two days with Mr.and Mrs.Thomas Burns, at Island Brook.DEATHS Ger Capt.E.Engl is ceompanied, Officer in ' COMING WED.UNTIL BAJ, T4ie Glory of the World\u2019s Gtvntœt Romance Lives Again 1 Lois Hayward, Joan Bennett, George Sanders in SON OF MONTE CRISTO,\" the Glorious Suoocesor to Alexander Dumas\u2019 the Count of Monte Cristo.ADDED\u2014The Funniest Comedy in Months .Jail When the Boys Meet the Sheriff\u2019s Daughter! \"CALA- ! Pprkinv BOOSE,\u2019\u2019 with Jimmy Rogers.Noah j Berry, Jr.Mary Brian.Bill Henry, Jean\t, _ Pouter, Marc Lawrence.\tiaIld\tdaughter, of Fitch Bay, |spent a day with his parents, Mr.EKiKn.'B\t¦nr and Mrs, Alfred Markwell.|Charge.Major Fairweather, Deputy|ivit?)dreT ^\t,.Adjutant General, Msj.-Gen.Ren-1 f9ehn-r between.the Kremlin and and Canon Ira Bourassa.Im- \"THEjeton, are spending their holidays at; Genest.Lt.Col.J.E Dansereau.Col.ori.ius i D.Smith\u2019s cottage at Lake :L.Chevaher, Col.Sam Echenberg, Lyster.\tj Maj.B.\\Y.Greenland, Capt.E.Eng- Miss Helen Perkins and Maryllish, Lt.M.Nation, Capt.L.J.La-Laughter Breaks, Qui Hi nan, of Rock Island, spent a I coste.Everc'c E.Goodenough.M.T.in the Calaboose | week-end at Mr.and Mrs.Carl Stonson anj Edgar Genest.Previous to the blackout and mock ¦ inspection he I mediately following ! the Corps u«~isted i ; ceremony nor:ing the thirty-two United Na- ,, Sikorski had conferred several ;., !,enl'a,u ; times with Stalin in the last few w:,.a px\u2019.tec group sup- years an(3 mutual pledges of aid .\t, ,\tand predictions of Allied success !,on> .-.gs on.no »teps o: t::e stage wçre exchanged, at tne rear o: the ottic\u2019.a.party.| At a]j times Sikorski.w Immediately following the CARD UF THANKS Mr.and Mrs.James Keiiy and daugh ter.Patricia, wish to thank their many friends and relatives fo: their kind ex-pression of sympathy in the iosa of their ! son and brother, Szt.Donald R.Kelly ; also | - , ,1.\t, -ii Mr.ami Mis.Erne?* Stevenson Rev.George Harrington.Mrs.John Sir.- request, ^but the bLoer arK) fanrliy, of South Ham.were re-Dlair, the organist and choir of St.Anne's\u2019 cent guests at the home Of Mr and c!mrcL the Canadian Legion.B.E.S.L.No.| Mrs.H.L.Wallace, Main Street \u201c 16-\to! the Canadian Legion, r c.__________________\u2019\t.A.F.Band from I.T.S.No.8.Viotoriaville, ' CEpt.A.J.Philips and troop and Mr.Em-1; The Pcllish Government later she London exile regime did entirely vanish.and I not that post-war Europe strong Central Slavic Mr.and Mrs.Stanley Markwell air raid, the District Depot Band entertained for a half hour, parading back and forth between Éee! and Belvidere St3.on King Street, their needed a 651 c-ogan.bloc with; Poland and Czecho-SIovakia as its dominating members working ciose-ho has ly with Russia and that East Frus-pre- written a number of books on mili- sia must be eliminated as a dagger ,\t.\t.pen- -ary strategy and was considered I pointing at the heart of Poland, jnants.the National Anthem signal-;an authority in\tFrench\tmilitary This was another\tway\tof restat- .ed t.\u2019.e c.ose o; one of the most thought, vowed\tthat\tGermany ing his thesis of a\tyear\tago, that |successful military festivals everjwould be beaten.\t'Poland must have\tfree\taccess to neid in this city.\this recent interview, he said!the Baltic Sa*, GATES\u2014At her late residence on Sunday, July 4th, Mrs.Robert Oate-i at the age of 77 years.Cortege will leave the house at 215 Court St., at 8:45 a.m., Wednesday^.July 7th, for St.Patrick's Church, where the service will be held at 9 o\u2019clock.MacKENZIE\u2014On July 3rd, 1943, at his late residence, Lake Megantic, Que.Murdo D.MacKenzie, beloved husband of the late Margaret Murray, in his 85th year.Funeral services from St.Andrew\u2019s Presbyterian Church, Lake Megantic, on Tuesday, July Cth, at 1 p.m.MERRILL\u2014Lueila Sunbury.wife of late Truman Merrill, formerly of Martinville, passed away at the home of her son, Arthur Merrill, Sawyerville, on July 4th, 1943, in her 91st year.Funeral at the late residence, at 2 p.m., Tuesday, July 6th.Interment at Martinville.Sawyerville Undertaking Parlors, Phone 34.NUGENT\u2014In Montreal on Fridav, July 2nd, 1943, Hattie E.Williamson.beloved wife of Grant Nugent, in her 50th year.Prayers at the iate residence.Sawyerville, Que., Tuesday, July 6th.'at 1:30 p.m.Thence to St.Philip's Anglican Church for funeral service at 2:15.Interment in Maple Leaf Cemetery, sentation of the fo IN MEMOKIAM TURNER.\u2014 In loving memory of Herbe-t C.Turner, of Bury, Qj®.passed away July 5th, 1940.Fond ivas the tie that wg* broken.Dear was the one that is gone, In memory we will keep him.As yea: after year passes on.Sadly missed by HIS WIFE AND FAMILY* FUNERAL CHAPEL 21MELDOUME ST III t CITY and SUBURBAN &!)erf>roo&c ©aüp &etorb SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, MONDAY, JULY 5, 1943.\t\tJ U L\t\tY\t\t tan.\tMon,\tToe.\tWVd.\tTha.1\tTrL 2\tSat 3 4\t5\t6\t7\t8\t9\t10 11\t12\t13\t14\t15\t16\t17 18\t19\t20\t21\t22\t23\t24 25\t26\t27\t28\t29\t30\t31 BRILLIANT ARMY SHOW STAGED ON WEEK-END LaFleche Recognizes Sherbrooke As First City In Canada To Identify Soldiers\u2019 Homes With Honor Pennant Exceptional Success Accorded Two-Day Military Festival As \u201cSherbrooke Honors Its Fighters\u201d\u2014Many Notables Present as Citizens Learn \u201cHow.What-Why\u201d of the Army.At Local Army Festival Canada's Minister of National War Services, Major General L.R.LaFleche, D.S.O., M.C., participating here yesterday in the presentation of pennants to the next-of-kin of Sherbrooke men and women on active service, climax of a two-day military festival, \u201cSherbrooke Honors Its Fighters,\u201d paid special tribute to the accomplishment of the City of Sherbrooke in the war effort.\u201cI want you to know,\u201d he said, \u201cthat this occasion marks the first time in all Canada that any city has given fitting recognition to the contribution of the individual home to the armed servees.\u201d Describing this precedent-setting epoch as he began the distribution of over 400 red, white and blue, maple leaf-centred pennants, the Minister emphasized his belief that such a practice would soon be invoked by the Government on a national scale.\u201cIt is only right that we should give such a fitting means of identification to each Canadian home from which one or more members have gone forth to serve their country,\u201d he stated.\u201cCitizens of Sherbrooke can indeed be proud that such a gesture was launched here in this city as part of this magnificent celebration.\u201d WTith a background of the thirty-two flags of the United Nations supported by members of the Canadian Women\u2019s Army Corps, who figured so prominently in the weekend festival, and a guard of honor composed of the rest of the C.W.A.C.\tunit, Major General LaFleche was assisted in the presentation ceremony by Major General E.J.Renaud, C.'B.E., District Officer Commanding M.D.4; Lt.-Col.Walter H.Scott, Recruiting Officer, M.D.\t4; Lt.-Col.E.J.Nantel, O.C.Lorn Sherbrooke T.C.43; Lt.-Col.H.F.C.Cocks, Protestant Chaplain, M.D.4; Major B.W.Fairweather, Deputy Adjutant General; Col.Sam Ech-enberg, O.C.Jacques Cartier Camp; Col.Leopold Chevalier, General Chairman of the Festival Committee; Lt.M.Nation and Capt.E.English of the C.W.A.C.; Mayor A.C.Ross, Senator C.B, Howard, Judge Dalma Landry, J.P.Mullins, M.P., Richmond - Wolfe, Maurice Gingues, M.P., Canon Ira Bourassa, sa, Parish Priest of Sherbrooke, Capt.Jean Marchand, P.R.O., M.D.4, Lt.-Col.J.R.Dansereau, O.C.Le Regiment de Chateauguay; Capt.Denis, of the same unit, and Capt.Louis Lacoste, E.T.Recruiting Officer.Citizens of this city were treated to an exceptional demonstration o£ how-what-and why of the army as a fast-moving schedule of spectacular events were staged by local and visiting troops, in conjunction with a display of motorized equipment during Sherbrooke\u2019s own unique Army Show.Highlights of the week-end, aside from the main feature, the presentation of the pennants, were vividly-realistic frontline battle manoeuvres performed by the Lord Sherbrooke Training Centre and the Princess of Wales Own Regiment, assisted by 35th Battery, and the stark reality of the supposed aerial attack on Central School during Saturday night\u2019s upper town blackout.Some twenty-seven persons \u201cre- MYRA THEATRE RICHMOND Fri.-Sat, July 2-3 Roily McDowall, Preston Foster \u201cMY FRIEND FLICKA\u201d Joe E.Brown, Judy Canova \u201cCHATTERBOX\u201d ^ ÔNE MINUTE NEWS \\ ABOUT / ' JOHNS-MANVILLE .BANFF GUARDS WATER SUPPLY The fact that the picturesque town of Banff in the Rockies is nearly 5,000 feet above sea level and that winter temperature sometimes drops to fifty below zero, presented Johns-Manvijle engineers with an interesting insulation problem.The pipe which supplies water to the town is suspended over a river at one point and is completely exposed.The question was \u2014 how to protect that exposed section from freezing at fifty below zero.It is twenty-two years since those J-M engineers studied this problem and the proper J-M insulation was apniled to the pipe line at Banff.And drinking water has flowed freely to this famous year-\u2019round vacation resort, without interruption for nearly a quarter of a century! This installation is typical of the long and dependable service which hundreds of users obtain from Johns-Manville Industrial Insulations, , quired\u201d first aid for shock and minor ; injuries, and at, least two were ! \u201csent\u201d to hospital for smoke suffocation, as the grim horror of an actual air raid was strikingly de-1 monstrated by a picked crew oper-I ating under the direction of Capt.George Guthrie, of Military District No.4.Signalled by screaming sirens and the noise of C.P.C.wardens\u2019 rattles, the blackout occurred at 10 p.m., immediately followed by the air raid warning.As the pseudo planes approached the city bombs were dropped and the attack centered around Central School and King George Hotel.Through the use of innumerable smoke generators the suggestion of burning buildings was effective simulated.Exploding bombs, thunder flashes and I flares accompanied the sound system amplification of \u201cThe Bombing of London,\u201d making an unforgettable show that actually brought home the manner in which folks \u201cover there\u201d are continually under attacks.C.P.C.members under Leo Thibault, Mobile Force members commanded by Jean Valenti and Major Wm.Foote, and the Civic Police and Fire Departments under the guidance of Director Percy Donahue, all assisted in the demonstration, the Fire Department\u2019s hugh truck and extension ladder being rushed to the hotel to counteract the fictitious blaze, \u201crescue\u201d attempts being a spectacular part of the half-hour show.Members of the St.John Ambulance Corps rendered invaluable help with their First-Aid work, their emergency room in the King George Hotel being crammed to the limit with the real casualties of the evening.The entire male and female corps were in action, under joint direction of Miss J.Trudeau and Alberic Julien.Concluding the Saturday evening show, a brilliant fireworks display was given by Capt.Guthrie\u2019s men, the like of which had not been seen in Sherbrooke for many years.Star shells, sky rockets and flares all elicited the enthusiastic applause of the huge crowd assembled in the area.Right on schedule at 10 a.m.Saturday morning the first event got underway, as citizens were given a glimpse, of the many motorized vehicles on display.Leaving Belvi-dere and Drummond Street, via Bel-videre, Frontenac, Wellington, Aberdeen, Alexander and Galt Streets back to their starting point, the parade consisted of two 32-ton Ram tanks, the largest manufactured in Canada, several field artillery guns and mortars, anti-aircraft guns, twelve universal carriers, twelve motorcycles, two armored scout cars, six jeeps, a field ambulance, and a lengthy convoy of light and heavy trucks containing men of the Famham Camp and the P.W.O.R.Bright spot of the whole programme for the majority of people was the 55-piece military band, from the District Depot, M.D.4., under the baton of R.S.M.Black, taking part in all parades and providing concert music during the programme, this splendid aggregation of top-notch musicians drew well-meritedi applause wherever and whenever they appeared.Officially opening the new downtown office of the local Civilian Advisory Committee, C.W.A.C., at 11:00 a.m., Major-General Renaud emphasized the important place of the women in the army.\u201cthey are working exceesively hard, and being of the army, constitute a loyal and courageous element who are doing their share in this war,\u201d he said.\u201cThese rooms are opened to enable the Civilian Committee to provide sufficient and correct information to girls wishing to enlist in the Corps.It is the duty of those in charge to see that the malicious and unfounded rumors spread against these girls of the C.W.A.C.are counteracted.Only people with the minds of saboteurs would try to create discord and trouble amongst the finest body of women in Canada.\u201d Brief addresses, of welcome were made by the JoinVPresidents, Mrs.M.W.McA\u2019Nulty and Mrs.Lucien Lavallee, who again pledged themselves and their Committees to the task of providing the much-wanted information to girls from this district, now made easily available through the opening of these convenient headquarters.Among those present were Lt.~ Colonel Emile Levesque and Mrs.Levesque, Lt.-Col.E.J.Nantel, Lt.-Col.Walter Scott, Lt.-Col.B.P.Lyon, Mayor A.C.Ross, Everett E.Goodenough, Lean Trepanier, Major B.W.Fairweather, Brig.-Major C.de L.Mignault, Capt.Geo.Guthrie, Capt, J.A.Lacoste, Col.Sam Echen-berg, Col.Leopold Chevalier, Maurice Gingues, Aldermen J.W.Gen est, J.A, Robert and Lt.A.; Trudeau Misses Madeleine Levesque land Margaret Doherty, Joint-Vice-Presidents, Miss G.Lacombe, Secretary, and the following committee members: Mrs.Paul McKenna, Mrs, Leon Lacombe, Mrs.E.Vaillan-! court, Mrs.J.Labrecque, Mrs.Francis Kenalty, Mrs.Zoel Trudeau, Mrs.John Hume, Miss B.Gosselin, Mrs, F.Steben, Mrs.J.A.Dion, Mrs.\u201c *:T %% v\t\u2022 n\t>\ti enabled Lenin t> reach Russia via 1 bornness\u2019 our deserves the gratitude rales are quoted for both the Gape of Good Hope and necessary to truest and most genuine business success | the fna10US gealed train which was of alt those who want to see Ger-' the Mediterranean routes, the latter are lower.It was not so long ago that the Italians referred lo the Mediterranean as \u201cMare Nostrum\u201d and in 1938, Gen.Valle, 'he Fascist Undersecretary for Air, claimed Italy had enough air strength to deny sea operations there to any group of nations.Today, not only is Italian air and sen strength insufficient to deny the Mediterranean toother nations but it is insufficient to permit Mussolini's warships to clear their own ports.All that is left of the Italian fleet, according to the best information, is seven battleships and a few destroyers, not enough to support the big ships in major operations Most of the fast cruisers that Mussolini built are at the bottom of the Mediterranean.The seven Italian battleships are scattered among the ports of the Adriatic and Tyvhenian seas, dispersed no doubt to prevent a repetition of Taranto where jsnd hastily through Germany from man aggression, whether it be mili-Switzerland to the borders of Rus-! tary or economic, made impossible once arj for all.His unwillingness to de/iate from his position and , would act as a catalyzing influence and bring about a revolution that ! would take Russia out of the war and second is faith in God.\u201d John R.Ainslcy, aL-o ol Boston, puls in lei.-eh.;sja< They calculated correctly that \u201cA thorough knowledge of your work, constant ! the presence of Lenin on Russian soil application, honesty, and steadfast adherence right principle.\u201d Hero are some further qualifications for achiev-j »hu ^qui(iale Germany s 1\tI front mg business success:.\t| In thîÿ war too, the G ermans have Concentration.Interest in one\u2019s business and used the principle of the \"sealed ,\t.\t,\t.\t, train\u201d to confound their enemies.,\t.\t.love lor it as one s life-work.Ilm can come only ;I,uri the st fouT weeks, no less | tl\u2019u't d® Gau le and that is why no i*\ti i\u2019 ,1\t,i i ii ,t ,t orn ''\tnuni rr.atter how much some people resent from an assured fault-or, rather, knowledge that ttm\tthey mit de Gaulle\u2019s \u201chauteur,\u201d while making money the transactions of business arelothei.fm:mer 0ffjC}ais 0f the French\t\"\u201d11 tW ho mutually beneficial to the buyer and seller.\tI Republic and Vichy France have ar- his insistence on riding French polic-al and military life of all traitorous scum and a.l the deliberate organizers of defeat, show his superb political instinct and a rationale that many Allied statesmen and politicians lack.That is why the French people ! ,\t,\t,\t, ,\t,\t(\trived in Algiers These men without Knowledge.,\\ careiul and constant study ot one s oxi.\u201e| tio i würe the poijlicai, dipio- business with an ever-increasing knowledge of Us i matic and bureaucratic organizers of ,\t,\ti i-,\t'\tI the French defeat in 1940.Subse- needs and the nttds of its (Itsltmei.\tIquently, of course, they became Advertising.Truthful, forceful, and persistent ; Vichyi'tes.advertising, free from even the appearance of exag-| their arrival in Algiers, where attorney at Windsor On one hand r\tl thev were received with open arms gérait on.\t| tn Gen Giraud, was preceded by the WITNESSES ENTITLED TO PROTECTION OF COURT Toronto Telegram Considerable comment has followed the convbtion and sentencing to! seven days\u2019 imprisonment of a Crown five Italian warships in BOMBING DAMAGE RECORDED High over the smoking ruins of Ruhr industry Royal Air Force aircraft fly in daylight, not to wreak destruction hut to record it.They are the \u201ceyes\u201d of the Royal Air Force, photographic reconnaissance planes.They follow the giant bombers.\\nd the pictures they bring back have been termed \u201cthe most terrible ever published of die destructive power of the bombing airplane.\u201d No picture taken of London during or after the blitz days was like these photos.The shots these reconnaissance craft took of Dusseldorf, key city in Germany\u2019s great industrial valley, earned for that centre the newspaper description.\u2018 The Dead City of the Ruhr.\u201d Composite pictures show a litter of wrecked and rootless buildings over an area of more tban two square miles.Some fires still smoulder.Fires bave swept through the industrial area.Block after block of buildings have been burned out, the blackened areas of devastation dotted with whitened patches where heavy high explosive bombs removed everything standing.As reproduced in newspapers these first pictures! it has been stated that the incident p»operly show; that no one is above ' the law'.On the other hand the I sentence has been criticized on the ground that the magistrate was mure lenient tnan other magistrates : m ulnl!ran^e f™111 lbe numerate light to y-a(j peen wi)ere the offense was the the extremism of the Cagoulauls satpe \u2014 that of drunk driving.In his advice would be to young men.He said:\tand the Royalists and whose mews Hamilton, for instance a woman 4'Absolute honestv iD'cless indmtrv infiuit-' on military -tuHegy amt tactics ha\\e vvjjJge car j act bumped into two ADSoime lionesu, tt.eitss u uii.i.t, mu m r,U)Von to be antiquated in the course parked cars was sentenced to 21 : patience; carefulness and thoroughness; unfailing, ot this war.\tdays in jail and was forbidden to! courtesv.Avoid speculation or resorting to get-rich- All these men could not possibly driv,- for a year.In another Ham-j \u2018\t,\t,, \u2019\thave loft Franco without the ox- iiten case, a mar.who was fortunate j quick schemes ot any kuul whatever.\tpressed sanction of the Gestapo, that he did not hit any other cars Of course character is of paramount importance.Thev are in fact Germany's \u201csealed was sentenced to thirty days in jail.\t1\ttrain\u201d of HUd.Their arrival in Another feature of the case seems Men respect a strong, positive character It is a gicai Algiers has resulted in much confu- t0 have escaped notice, though it motive power portrays a man at his best, and is the sien since Iney constitute what may equally deserves comment.Coun-.\t1 .\t'\t,\t,\t.\tb*\u2019 described t s a political time-bomb =el for the defence, himself a former guiding influence Ol (its life.It makes Ot him a gpiiberately planted by Germany.Crown Attorney, attempted to ride forceful agent in Ids business associations and a Naive obsm-ver-, have complained, the Crown witnesses in a manner t1 at Getl.da Gaulle is stubborn and Which has been too familiar in some more capable and useful man.\t:that he refuses to meet Liberality.U-v always to give a little more than equally mysterious arrival there c harbor were nut out 0f ,,xPw\u2019l(V(k either in quality ot goods or eftieieney of ern,s aml .,.000 younger French of-L \u2019\t\u2019\tj service\tficcrs whose political convictions action for months in 1940 by one prolonged attack \u2019\t\u2019\t, ,\t.\t-, p h , I-,\u2019 , * ¦ i\t1 asked a luirlilv successful Dnaticial by aircraft of the British Hoot Air Ann.\t1\t^ - The dispersal of the battleships makes them ineffective as a fighting force.Any attempt to gel them together would he a hazardous undertaking, considering the concentration of Allied submarines, warships and air power in the Strait of Messina and the Sicilian Channel.drain on manpower to the armed forces and the munitions plants.They have dene it, too, despite the fact that during the early stages of the war there was little official indication of what foods would be required from Canada and what would not.As a result we lost at least one valuable season in building-up reserves of coarse grains ana fodder which are the essential, raw materials for dairy, meat and poultry products.This was a serious loss because in agriculture, even more than most olhe: industries, one must plan 12 months if not several years ahead if production is to be substantially altered, Hogs, dairy cows and laying.hens cannot be conjured out of thin air.They must be raised to matu-ity before they can produce food Now farmers know where they are going and what is expected of them.To meet the food goals set for this year, and it is vital for all concerned thar we do meet them, we cannot afford the slightest waste.Every acre ol grain and hay, for livestock Ceding next winter, must be saved and to do this will require ample farm trip.That help, moreover, must be on the job when needed, because ti»y and grain does not wait.Every hour it stands after it is mature, there is loss.In domestic distribution of food wo are going to have to be frugal.W\u2019der ratirning and smaller rations of certain lires ma> be necessary.If so, then ihere is nothing to be gained by postponing steps until stocks have icon dissipated.That sort of thing is only encouraging confusion, black markets and hardship.\u201cCome on, man! géant, impatiently.\u201cOn no account,\u2019\u2019 stammered the sentry, \u201care you to let any questionable characters through the lines, except the colonel's wife!\u201d said the ser- so wants me to keep on wearing my j old hats, but he isn't clever enough to think up as nice an excuse as tnat.\u201d Bride: \u201cMy husband admires my taste in hats so much he never likes me to discard one.\u201d Mrs.Longwood: \u201cMy husband al- Directions on an air raid precautions leaflet recently issued in a South Coast town: \u201cIf an incendiary bomb comes through the roof, don\u2019t lose your head.Put it in a bucket and cover it with stand.\u201d McKENNEY ON BRIDGE By Wm, E.McKenney, America\u2019s Card Authority.McKENNEY on BRIDGE ALPH TOP ARMY OFFICERS ENJOY BRIDGE GAME Do iou Know?Many Bridge League executives are now serving Uncle Sam, First [and foremost, Maj.-Gen.Alfred M.ICruentiher is chief of staff of the Fifth Army under command of Lieut.-Gen.Mark W.Clark.Before leaving for over seas, General Gruenther was a member of the League\u2019s executive committee and a member of the National Laws Commission.I received a letter recently from General Clark, teLing me that he and Commander Butcher were playing against General Eisenhower and General Gruenther.General Clark Ibid up to four clubs, and General ! Gruenther doubled.We may have : to wait until the war is over to get line complete hand.I can tell you, | however, that General Clark redoubled and made an ovextrick\u2014 and he has been rubbing salt in the Gruenther wounds ever since.Before the war General Gruenther was secretary of the Vander-jbilt Cup Tournament, Here is an interesting hand from this year\u2019s | Vanderbilt Tournament \u2014 another i hand in w hich clubs played the im-1 ponant paru A A J 8 5 V J 7 5 3 ?94 A A 4 2 A K 6 4 2 ?\tKQ 106 ?\tKQ108 A 5 Dea er A Q 10 7 3 V A 9 8 4 2 ?J A J 10 9 A3 ?None ?A76532 AKQ 8 7 63 Duplicate\u2014E.and W.South\tWest\t.orth 1\t?\tDouble\tPass 2\tA\t2 V\t3 A 5 A\tDouble\tPass Opening\u2014A 5.vul.East 1 V 4 V Pass After winning the opening lead with the queen of clubs, South ! cashed the ace of diamonds and led j a low diamond.West won and re-I turned a heart.South ruffed and jthen made a fine play.He ruffed a | small diamond with dummy's ace of j clubs, ruffed another heart, then ruffed another diamond.East could over-ruff but could make no other I trick.General courts.Of one who was a member Determination is lost.The deter min s essential An Im while man is Giraud halfway.This is stupid non- 0f the Ontario Voluntary Consta-,\t.\t,\t,\t| .sense.General de Gaulle simply biliary, he said that one of Conant\u2019s eu\tman\t0\\CM lues\tOl)Siacle>\tuntl\t,vf.lspg to open the \u201csealed train.\u201d\tCommandos was more or less dan- otherwise\tmean\tfailure.\tDetermination,\tallied\twith\tHe is determined to prevent this\tgorous to have loose in the eom- ,\t.political time-bomb of Fascism from\treunify.Magistrale Menzies prompt- pat ! once, spurs on to stueess.\texploding liter in France.\t1 [y checked the lawyer.\u201cI won\u2019t al- Sunmning up, we see that the following are vital; lie cleatIv sees the danger to|joW that in this court,\u201d he declared.; i\t\u201e \u2022\t,\t\u2022\t'\tFrench democracy later should these ; Defence counsel was compelled to to success\tin\toumihs\t,\tgenerals and bureaucrats be given !\twithdra ¦ his offensive phrase.After Honesty,\tcourtesy,\tcourage,\ttruthfulness,\tindus-\timpoitant jobs now.For this would\tlistening to counsel's attack on one .i\ti,\ti,\u2014« ] > j,\ti,t ,v\u201enAv place them in strategic positions ! witness after another the magistrate in.subnet), concenliation.health, insight genet- *rtei virtor;.and thus enable them:mildly observed, \u201ci hope you are! ositv, imagination, adaptation, and loyal co-opera- to set up a sort of \u201creformed\u2019\u2019 Fas- ; no* making an attempt to blackball cism in France for the purpose of all the witnesses.\u2019\u2019 preserving the German economic, Witnesses are entitled to the pro-control of Europe's industrial plant,\tSection of tne court and in this case a business in which they are already\tthey were gwen it.People who come junior partners.\t! tv court to assist the administration ! Theiv is evidence that this \u201cseal-j by telling what they know do so eel train\u201d operation was planned | generally at.considerable inconven-long.long ago.As early as the 15th ; ience to themselves.They deserve of September, 1942.the French un-! better than to be exposed to brow-dergmund newspaper Le Populaire j beating and belittling from a law-reported that Pttain and Hitler had .\tye» who imagines that his position only one worry and that was to find i\tas an officer of the court gives him someone who could be built up\tthat privilege.Too often the law- against De flaulle in the Allied camp\tvers are allowed to get away with where he would serve as a Trojan lit.lion.EDITOR\u2019S NOTE BOOK If you\u2019re all wrapped up in yourself you carry little weight.* \u2022 » Most of us think we could do much better ii we onlv had the opportunity which we don\u2019t realize Horse of a special breed.The paper j 7\t\u2019\t; further reported that the candidate j we Have.\tmutually agreed upon by Berlin and * * *\t.Vich\\ was General Giraud.The death of a Nazi chieftain in Holland was ^ for the 'atterV m>'sterious ^ Q\u2014Which is correct, Arkansas, or Arkansaw?A\u2014Confusion over the pronunciation of the name of the state finally spurred the General Assembly to agree and proclaim that the correction version is Ankansaw, * * * Q\u2014When was the famous radio distress call, S.O.S., formally adopted ?A\u2014In 1906, at the International Radio Conference at Berlin.*\t* * Q\u2014What athletic stadium in the U.S.has the largest potential capacity for spectators?A\u2014Soldier Field, Chicago, has an estimated capacity of 200,000, nearest rival being Philadelphia Municipal Stadium, 130,000.*\t» * Q\u2014Who was Joe Louis' first ring) victim ?A\u2014Jack Kvacken.Chicago, who j was kayoed in the first round of! their fight on July 4, 1934.* * i Q\u2014What are the English equivalents of the native names of the following foreign countries: Sverige.Eretr Yisrael-Flistin, Muango-Thral 7 A\u2014Sweden.Palestine, Thailand (formerly Siam).NAVAL AIR UNIT INSIGNE HAVE A SMILE FOOD SUPPLIES NOT INLIMITED Financial Post It will be a miracle if food con-cape from the Fortress Koenigstein, ' tinues to be really plentiful in Can- the duration of the war.s not mean that we are in I ime uiraua wr.o cannui want wun- any danger x>f starvation.There is \u2019 out a cano.to lower himself some abundance of bread in sight, but sixty feet from his prison window the outlook for concentrated food to the craggy rocks upon which : like meat, eggs and dairy products.Koenigstein is built\t, is b> no means reassuring and we However that may be.Giraud\u2019s are only going to fool ourselves and presence in Africa and the arrival store up future trouble by shutting of the \u201csealed train\u2019\u2019 contingent have ! cur eyes now.The miracle that may served Germany\u2019s political purpose, save us would be a repetition of last It has produced the sort of confusion year\u2019s bountiful harvest but such the Nazis h«vt always been able \u2019 development fiorr, the late start this to take advantage of.Giraud and spring couplod with an acute short-toe new contingent of officers, dipio- age of skilled farm labor is most mats and bureaucrats that has ar- unlikely.rived in Africa speak for the de Canadian farmers and the food , .\t, ,\t.\t« ,\t,\t,\t; Wendels, the do Fontenelles and i recessing industry of this country vanity tossed to and fro ot them that seek death, pthei French industrialists and fin-j have reason to be proud of their ! enciers who are now in partnership : achievements to date.They have with the German cartels.They do i met a scaling domestic consump-r.ot want this partnership to be tion of food plus a huge addition ; broken after the war and they are to exports of bacon eggs and dairy ; using the scene in Algiers to Lip products to G-eat Britain.They 1 thcii puppets into strategic positions have done this despite the serious HORIZONTAL I Pictured national fiower cf Holland 6 Lacquer 8 They are grown from 13\tFaro term 14\tDutch city 15\tIndividuals 16\tFive and five 17\tLair 13 Dispose cf 19 Ambary 21 Astir 23\tCanvas shelter 24\tToward 26 Angei 28\tMusic nota 29\tShooter marble 30\tSewing implement 33\tWish 34\tSteal 35\tAbove 36\tClergyman 39 Deserve 42\tPedal digit 43\tHypothetical Answer to Previous Puzzle BOMB 1 iN G\t\t\tPR: 1 SONS\t ARE; IT\tO R\t\tE!E:R > VAT\t RE;T SU\tNABOB\u2019 !R A V Ë\t\t\t SLEEP\tiB A N\t\t\t: IS A E M IR A\tb'omKc /QUA« (U/ NAVAL AVIATION)\t\t\tPA Cl- PURER\t\t\t\tS LE EVE a l riefb\t\t\t\tA; i D AR SEPIA\t\t\t\tLi 1 IN E NS r_ .ICR\t\t\t\tMl A EC* C.ARET -'ASS :N E VER ALES; STR A P S\u2019l L :H À TF I SÔNINÉt\u2019s C P: .DELE RE: T AT O N D O N force 45\tAnimal exhibit 46\tStreet (abbr.) 47\tStout cord 49 Garment 52\tWeight (abbr.) 53\tPull 54\tBorn 56 Before 58\tHigh 59\tObserve 60\tJump into water 62\tPeels 63\tGoblin Appears VERTICAL We Landed parcel Notion Throe Projecting ridge American humorist Coin Nee Single thing Conducted Bachelor of Science (abbr.) 19\tNoise 20\tExist 22 Mineral rods 24\tRap lightly 25\tBe indebted 27 Weird 29 Jewel 31\tFemale deer 32\tPounds (abbr.) 33\tColor 36\tPints (abbr.) 37\tDecay 38\tUpper part 40\tLine 41\tNegative word, 44 Thick 47\tPart in a drama 48\tNocturnal birds 49\tRidge of sand in water 50\tThey grow in - 51\tGreat Lake 53 Paving substance 55 Long fish 57\tFirst woman 58\tTantalum (symbol) 61 Print measure of a four-figure bomb load on the heart of the city, attributed to a \"fatal accident.\u201d How easily it could it must have been an extremely dif- sda for are frightening.As they appear under the all-seeing have boon from \u201cnatural causes.\u201d\tj g^Gi^ud^ho^nî^ waïkfith\" ™S dïng eye of the stereoscope, a machine that brings smashed\t* \u2022 \u2022 buildings, crumped factories, hammered railway A large number of Germany's subs have been yards and littered streets into real-life perspective, ordered to German and Italian ports.To help block they are terrible and terrifying.\tinvasion, so they say.Or is i! to save them?Dusseldorf absorbed more tban 2,000 tons of bombs on the night of June 11/12 at a cost of forty-three British aircraft.The town still smouldered when the photographers went over it next day at 25,000 feet.Its streets, many of them, appeared lifeless.It is the same in other Ruhr centres, Bochum, Barmen, Wuppertal.It mean^ Hitler's arms cMies in the Ruhr are crumbling away one by one, that paralysis, sown by the R.A.F.is moving inexorably over this great centre of German war pro 'i\u2019ction.BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY The getting of treasures by a lying tongue is a ity tossed t Proverbs 21:6.* * * Pare to be true; nothing can need a lie; A fault which needs it nrosi.grows two thereby.\u2014Herbert.\u201cWeek Angus,\u201d said Donald, \u201c1 \\ hear ye\u2019ve got married?\u201d \u201cAye, Donald.\u201d \u201cAn\u2019 whit kind of wife hae ye j got?Can she cook?\u201cNo, I don't think so.\u201d \u201cCan she sew?\u201d \u2022No.\u201d \u201cThen whit car, she do?\u201d \u201cMan, Donald, she's a grand singer.\u201d \u201cAch, mon.ye're daft.\u201d said Don-i aid in disgust.\u201cWindna a canary j hae been cheaper?\u201d \u201cI want something* really nice I for a present,\u201d explained the shopper to the assistant.\u201cFor your husband, madam?\u201d \u201cNo, from my husband.\u201d came the reply, sweetly.The sergeant halted the new sentry opposite the man he was to relieve.The old sentry reeled off the routine instructions with confidence, but one of the special orders baffled him.rr\tF\t3\tH\t5\t\t6\t7\t8\t\t4\tIO\tu\tU\t?,\tr\t\t\t\t\t(4\t\t\t\tis\t\t\t\tr rspsan\tJ\t:\t\t\t\tn\t\t\t\t18\t\t\tr\t w\t|i0\t\t\t\tZi\t\t\t23\t\t\t\t\t24\t25 2t>\t\til\tr\u2019vV-C.vi\t\tZS : |\t\t\t\t\t\t\t28\t\t 30 j i l\t\t\t31\tit\tkm i-'\t\t\t\t\t\t33\t\t\t \t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tss\tr\t\t 36\t\t\t\t\tas\t\ts\t\t\t\t34\t\t40\t41 42 1\t\t\t'vN/i\t\t-3\t44\tl\t\t.A >\t\tfir.'.\u2019\t*5\t\t *6\t\t\t47\t*8\t\t\t¦Nd-i\t\t\tSi\tSI\t\t52\t \tJ\t\t\t\t\t54\t55\t\t\tii\t\t\u201d r\t\t \t?3\t\t\t\t\t54\t\t\t\tfcO\t\t\t61 I\t 61\t\t\t\t\t\t^ ;\t\t\t\t64\t\t\tLb\t MONDAY, JULY 5, 1943.SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD IN JR YOUNG FARMERETTE Glorify Yourself Social and Personal TESTED RECIPES MIND YOUR MANNERS FUTURE BRIDE AT LEMESURIER GIVEN SHOWER \u201cFortify\u201d Spaghetti With Protein Foods Mrs, Gilbert Bailey and Mrs.Menzes McF'reavy wine hostesses at a miscellaneous shower at the former\u2019s home, given in honor of the approaching marriage of Miss Lillian J.McElreavy.The roc ms were decorated m pink and white, The bride-to-be, although taken entirely by surprise, thanked her many friends in a few well chosen words for their many and useful gifts.A delicious lunch was served to about twenty-five guests.Tea was poured by Mrs.James Hutchison and coffee by Mrs.Emma Veimo.The hostesses were assisted by Mrs.Leo Beattie and Mrs.Gordon Nutorown.General Notes Mr.and Mrs.Archie Smith and family were week-end guests at the home of Mr.arid Mrs.Gilbert Bailey.Mr.and Mrs.Gordon Nutbrovn were guests at the same heme.Mr.James A.Barr, who has finished a successful term of teaching, has returned to his home in Allan\u2019s Corners.Mrs.John Beattie and son, Aider, of Lennoxville, epent a week-end visiting friends in this vicinity.Mr.William Wilkin is spending some time with friends in Lemesur-ier.Mr.Alex Savage, of Sherbrooke, was here to attend the Stanley-Har-vey reception and was accompanied hack by his mother, Mrs.H.Savage, Miss Mary Savage and Mr.Wyatt Savage.EATON Guests of Mr, and Mrs, W?.S.Locke were Pte.and Mrs.Harold Wilson, of Valcantier, Mrs.M.Worby, Mr.W.Lister and Mrs.A.Martin and two sons, of Groeebury, who also called on Mr.and Mrs.G.E.Lock.Miss Gertrude Grapes, of Man-sonville, is spending her holidays with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.G.Grapes.Mr.and Mrs.C.Davies and Miss Ruth Davies were guests of Mrs.Davies\u2019 mother, Mrs.John Banks, in Sawyerville.Mrs.Howard Kirkby.of St.Johns, spent a week\u2019s holiday with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.A.Innés.Mrs.L.Hall was an overnight guest of Mr.and Mrs.Odell Winslow, in Lennoxville.Mrs.H, Hodge, of Sherbrooke, is spending an indefinite time with Mrs.G.Quimby.Mrs.Gerald French entertained a few small children on the occasion of Miss Beverly\u2019s third birthday.Miss Patricia Innés, of St.Johns, spent a week as a guest of her parents, Mr.and Mrs.A.R, A.Innés.Mrs.Cecil Jenkins and Mr.G.E.Merrill, of Albert Mines, have returned home for the summer months.Mrs.L.Hall is spending a few days in Lennoxville as guest of her daughter, Mrs.Odell Winslow, and Mr.Winslow.The Bible Society held its service and pictures in the Anglican Church one evening, which were very much enjoyed by all.Mr.and Mrs.T.Pehlemann, of Bury, called on Mr.Bert Harrison.BY GAYXOR MADDOX Noodles, spaghetti, macaroni and other such pleasant non-rationed wheat foods need to be \"fortified\u201d with protein, vitamins and minerals to do a full feeding job.Combine milk, cheese, eggs, left-over meat sauce, fish or fow' with them to add to the protein.Noodleo With Frankfurter Sauce (Serves 4-6) One S-ounee package noodles, 1 bunch watercress, V* cup fat, 12 pound frankfurters, 1 teaspoon salt, ^ teaspoon pepper, 14 cup finely diced onion, 14 cup finely diced celery leaves, 14 cup diced green pepper, 4 tablespoons flour, 1 pint hot milk.Cook the noodles in boiling salted water until tender.Drain and rinse with hot water.Add % bunch of coarsely enopped watercress and heat for a few minutes.Meanwhile, cut frankfurters into M\u201d slices.Place fat in frying pan and saute frankfurters until slightly brown.Add onion, celery leaves, green pepper and watercress stems cut into 14\" lengtns.Cook, stirring occasionally until tender.Sprinkle flour into frying pan and stir smoothly into the mixture.Add salt and pepper.Add milk gradually, about % at a time After last milk is added, bring to a boil and cook for one minute, stirring constantly.Arrange hot noodles and watercress around edge of hot platter.Fill centre with frankfurter sauce.Garnish with short cut watercress.TOMORROWS MENU I BREAKFAST: Stewed black- j ! berries, cracked wheat* créai, I | raisin toast, butter, coffee, mi'k.LUNCH: Creamed victory , garden vegetables on whole-I wheat toast, iced melon, hot tea, milksnake.DINNER: Scrambled eggs with brains on toast, broiled tomato halves, country fried potatoes,' green salad, bread I and butter, stale cake with stewed peaches, tea, milk.«-\u2022 Baked Eggs on Spaghetti (Serves 5) One and one-half cups broken spaghetti, 2 tablespoons butter or margarine, 3 tablespoons flour, l1,2 cups milk, Ibi cups shredded American cheese, salt, pepper, 5 eggs, soft hi ead crumbs.Cook the spaghetti in boiling salted water until tender; drain well.Make cream sauce with the butter, the flour and milk.Add Iti cups of tie shredded cheese and stir until it is melted; season to taste.Add the spaghetti, and pour into a shallow baking dish or platter.Make five depressions in the mixture and break an egg into esch.Sprinkle crumbs around the cage ot the dish, and place it in a very moderate oven (315° F.) until the eggs are done and the crumbs lightly browned.Sprinkle the remaining cheese on the centre of each egg, and return to oven just lone enough to melt the cheese.Serve with sliced garden to-metoes sprinkled with chopped scallions, green peppers and celery.Try Combining Bath Powder and Cosmetic Scents a S Its Noxzema for Sizzling SUNBURN -SOOTHING RELIEF -WITHOUT STAINING CLOTHES JANE WYMAN: teams scents.BY ALICIA HART This summer when temperatures rise and sweat glands work a 24-hour shift, don\u2019t run the risk of offending others about you.Besides using an anti-perspirar.r, keep yourself sweet and fresh with a light perfume too.And you\u2019ll find that the scent lingers on and on if you use bath powder and cosmetics of the same odor, as does Warner\u2019s pretty and feminine star Jane Wyman.Ensembles of scents are the most economical way to buy your bath salts, dusting and face powder and perfume.For ont enhances the odor of the other not counteracts it, as is the case when several bouquets are mixed.And here's a tip Jane says will often save you money.Before buying a new perfume and accompanying cosmetics, test the scent for its lasting qualities.A perfume which may linger for hours on one woman, sometimes fades away completely from you in a very short time.EAST ANGUS Mrs.F.S.Parsons, of North Bay, Ont., has received word that her son, Lt.F.W.Parsons, has arrived safely somewhere in England.Lt.Parsons was born and went to school in East Angus.erv/ce Overcome Shyness and Be a Public Speaker Don\u2019t let sunburn spoil your fun \u2014keep you from your job! The minute vour skin starts to sizzle, burn and hurt, smooth on cooling, soothing Noxzema.See how glorious it feels\u2014how quickly it seems to take the \"fire\u201d right out of your skin\u2014 what grand relief it gives you! Noxzema is snow-white, non-sticky, greaseless; it won't stain clothes or bed linen.You can dress and be ' \u2018on the go\u201d right after using it.For years medicated Noxzema has been a standard treatment for sunburn at Miami, Coney Island and many other famous American beaches.Try it iotyour sunburn.See how quickly it helps relieve that burning pain and make you comfortable again.Geta jar today! At drug and deoartment stores.SUNTAN CREAM ' SUNTAN OIL FOR A RICH.EVEN TAM WITHOUT PAINFULBURNINÛ SPEAK ON THE RADIO Have you always wanted to be * radio personality?Is this your secret ambition?You must have a good voice, of course, and above all you must be able to speak in public.Do you tremble at the thought of standing up and making a speech, or even a little talk in front of people?You must overcome this feeling If you want to succeed as a speaker, either in public or over the radio.So many people get stage-fright at the sight of an audience waiting to hear them.Others lose courage when they get in front of a microphone.No need to be in the background! Practise will soon give you the confidence and self-reliance you need to appear before people.Our 32-page booklet will help you to make a friend of your voice, to develop it and put your character in it.The booklet tells you how to make your audience like you as well as how to prepare and deliver your speech.If you\u2019re toastmaster at a function, don\u2019t worry about it\u2014read our booklet with instructions.Parliamentary order is also Included.Send 15 cents in coins for your copy of Public Speaking Self Taught to Sherbrooke Record, Heme Service, Sherbrooke, Que.Be sure to write plainly your name, address and the name of booklet.Sgt.-Major Balby Brooks Morkill, Fet.'iwawa.is a guest at the Magog House.\u2022 \u2022 \u2022 Mrs.L.Bowen, Holyoke.Mas*., was an overnight guest of Miss M.Bowen at the Continental Hotel, * * « Mrs.E.A.Bailey, Queen Street, returned home on Saturday night after spending a few days in Montreal.\u2022 * * LAC.William M.Cleary.Lsohine ; Manning Depot, spent Iht week-end j with his un-'le and aun;, Mr.and Mrs.A.S.Cleary, Dufferin Court.* * * Friend* of Mr.Michael O\u2019Donnell, of Richmond, will regret to hear that ho is a patient in the Sherbrooke Hospital, where he has undergone a serious operation.* % \u2022 Mrs.Rod MacLeay returned on Saturday night to her home on Good-hue Street after spending her vacation in St.Lambert, Montreal, and The Laurentians.* * * Mr.and Mrs.Leonard H.Weyland, Alexander Street, who were guests of Mrs.H.Weyland and family in Notre Dame de Grace, have returned home to Sherbrooke.* * * Nursing Sister Dorothy Kerridge is arriving tonight from Kingston, Ont., to spend two days leave with her parents.Mr.and Mrs.F.E.Kerridge, Quebec Street.* * * Mr.and Mrs.Roger Houde, 7th Avenue, have returned from Montreal, where they were guests for a few days of Miss Rosa Houde and friends.?Miss Maiy Elizabeth Hove is returning to Boston tonight, after spending ihe American week-end holiday at home with her parents, Mr.and .Mis, Francis Hoye.* * * Mr.and Mrs.Francis P.Kenalty anh their children, Master Clement and Miss Maureen left on Saturday to spend a two weeks holiday at \u2018\u2018Linger-A-While Cottage,\" Woodland Bay, Lake Massavvippi.* * * Miss Delia Ingraham, who has been a guest for two weeks of Mrs.J.W.Kirkpatrick, Montreal Street, left this morning for Ste.Anne de Bellevue, where she will re-assume her losition on the Military Hospital Staff.* * * Mrs.Mamie Blanchard, who has been a guest for the past five weeks of Mrs.Douglas A.Stevenson, has loft for Newport, Vi., to visit her sister-in-law, Mrs.William Bond, and Mr.Bond.* * * Mrs.J.W.Dior and her little son, Billie, have returned home to Lcn-noxville from.Montreal, whither they journeyed to meet Mr.J.W.Dior, of the Merchant Navy.During their ¦lay in the metropolis.Mr.and Mrs.Dier and son were guests of Captain J.C.Anderson.* * * Sgt.Peggy Cilles, C.W.A.C., has returned to Montreal after sipending the week-end at home with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.A.E.Cilles, Belvi-dere Road.Miss Jean Ferguson, of Montreal, is spending the summer in Sherbrooke, a guest at the same home.>1» * * Mrs.William Bowen has returned home to Magog after spending a few days with her son and daughter-in-law, .Mr.and Mrs.Ralph Bowen and family in Nitre, Quo.She was accompanied on the return trip by her granddaughter, Misis Madeline Bowen, who will spend her holidays in Magog.* * * Mrs.Donald M.Hutchison, who ha.s spent some time with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Henry Wooilerton, Kingston Avenue, left yesterday to spend a few days with her brother and sister-in-law, Mr, and Mrs.Roy-ce Wooilerton, in Montreal, \" hence she wiil leave by plane for St.John\u2019s, Newfoundland.* * * Mrs.F.S.Rugg entertained at luncheon or.Saturday at her resi-j de nee on Queen Street, in honor of I Miss Marjorie Haley.Covers were laid for nine, and included among the guests was Miss Edna Osborne, Montreal, formerly of Sherbrooke.The hostess presented the guest of honor with a personal gift.Mrs.Ethel Mackay left last week for Attleboro, Mass., to spend » Ww weeks visiting her daughter, Mrs.Charles Cook, and Mr.Cook.* * * Cp!.Noiah I Buddy) Walley, R.C.A.F, (W.D ), Uplands, Ont., spent the week-end at home with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.N.E.Wafley, Yimy Street.\u2022 \u2022 \u2022 Mr.and Mrs, Jack Buchanan, of Quebec, who have been guests of the Misses Hunt and Mrs.R.F.Morris at \"Prospect House\" for the week-end.returned last night to the Ancient Capital.\u2022 * * Mrs.Stan'ey Pitts.Montreal, is a guest of her -ister, Mrs.E.M.Wig-gett anfi Mr.Wiggett.Queen Street.Mi.John Dixon and Mr.Bill Dorsey, students-in-medicine at McGill University, Mintreal, were also guests for the week-end at the same home.HATLEY Mrs.Robert Vaughan, of Montreal, was a guest of Mr.and Mrs.Elwin Vaughan and called on other friends.Miss Barbara Young has completed her duties as teacher in the Johnson Memorial School, at Thet-ford Mines, and is at Highland Place with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.C.P.Young.Miss Alice Ayer, of Rock Island, was a guest of her mother and brother, Mrs.Harriet Ayer and Mr.Homer Ayer.Mr.and Mrs.Howard Ayer and Mr.Homer Ayer attended the Holstein picnic at Mr.Samuel Clark\u2019s on the Brompton Road.Mr.George Bulling, of Rock Island, spent a week-end with Mr.ami Mrs.H.F.Webster.Miss Margaret Moulton, who spent two weeks with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.C.W7.Moulton, following a throat operation, has returned to her duties in the office of the Johns-Manvillc Company, at Asbestos.Mr.and Mrs.Harold McClary wore guests of Mr.and Mrs.Gerald Haseltine, in Moc\u2019s River.George Emery accompanied diaries Moulton and George Bulling to Rock Island.Mrs.J.F.Woodman and Mr, and -Mrs.Leon Parker accompanied Rev.H.G.Rice and Mrs.Rice to Way\u2019s Mills and attended the anniversary service there in the United Church.Mr.and Mre.Alby Wheeler and Mrs.Sunbury, of Sherbrooke, spent an evening with Mr.and Mrs.Allan Wheeler.Mrs.J.F.Woodman accompanied Mr.Howard Ayer to Sherbrooke.Mr.and Mrs.Fred Savage and little son, of Sherbrooke, were guests of Mrs.George Harrison, at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Allan Wheeler.Miss Helen Ayer, who visited her brother-in-law, and sister, Mr.and Mrs.Earl Remick and family, in Burlington, Vt., has returned home.Miss Cross, who has cared for Mrs.Harriet Ayer for several weeks, has gone to her home in Eustis.W.M.S.MEETING AT COOKSHIRE KINGSBURY The Misses Muriel and Marion Chilton are visiting relatives in Waterloo.Mrs.R.Kerr and Mr.Jack Ken-have returned home from Montreal, where they visited relatives.Her father, Mr.J.Wilson, of Montreal, who was their guest, has returned to his home.Mrs.N.Champigny and children are visiting her parents in St.Liboire.Mr.and Mrs.R.Noble spent a day with their daughter, Mre.Car-son, and Mr.Carson, in Melbourne.Miss Jean Kerr, of the Wales Home staff, Richmond, is at her home here.Mr.and Mrs.M.Watters were in Beebe to attend the funeral of their brother-in-law, Mr.W.Duncan.Mr.and Mrs.Elmer Crack and children spent a day in Granby and visited Mr.and Mrs.A.Crack.Visitors at Mrs.WHlliam Fowler\u2019s were Mr.and Mrs.G.Healy and son, Elmer, and Mr.W.Day, of Cleveland, and Miss Jean Beattie, of Richmond.Mr.J.Ward is spending a week with his daughter, Mrs.W.Mc-Morine, and Mr.McMorine.Mrs, P.McNab, of Watson, Sask.visited her sister, Mrs.Elmer Crack, and Mr.Crack.MANSONVILLE Harvey and Marvin Hamelin, of Troy, Vt,, were guests of their grandparents, Mr.and Mrs.P.E.Hamelin, for a few days.Mrs, P.M.Hayes and Miss Joeie Hayes, of Frelighsburg, were guests of Mr.and Mrs, L.B.Eldridge and Airs, George Newell.Miss Margaret Boright, of Montreal, is spending the summer with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.C.N.Boright.relatives in St.Etienne de Bolton and Eastman.Cpl.Grant George, of the R.C.A.F., Dartmouth, N.S., who is at present taking an advanced course in the Wireless School in Montreal, spent a week-end with his parents, Air.and Mrs.L.A.George.Miss Ruth Heath is spending a week in Montreal the guest of Mi-> Dorothy Gittus.Pte, Hubert J.Nixon, of Montreal, spent a week-end at the home of Air.and Mrs.R.L.Kirby while on sick leave, but was taken ill and obliged to return by army ambulance to Montreal.The Parkes\u2019 Group from Montreal were in charge of the service at the Baptist Church.Miss Evelyn Aiken was a guest of Rev.and Mrs, N.A.Brock, in Gien Sutton.Miss B.Gatley, Mrs.Asa Squires and little daughter, of Waterloo, attended the Gatley-Gardener wedding and were the guests of Mrs.Ala bel Gatley.Mrs.Lilia Jersey is staying at the home of Mrs.Guy Smith, in Dunkin.for an indefinite time.Berton Bailey, Harvey Martin.Shirley Aiken, Evelyn Aiken and Berna Wighlman spent an evening in Cowansville.Several from here attended the reception for Mr.and Mrs.Lyle Gardner, in Vale Perkine.Miss Evelyn Aiken was the gueet of Mr.and Mrs.Leon Aiken, in Highwater.Master Garth Wightman has re-jturned from Montreal, where he ¦.-.as a patient in the Royal Victoria Hospital, Miss Mary Kirby, of Cowansville, spent a week-end with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.R.L.Kirby, and family.Mr.Henry Royea spent a pleasant afternoon with his skter, Mrs.David Kirby.Mr, and Mrs, Harold Boyce were guests of Air.and Mrs.R.L.Kirby.Master Lindsay Kirby, youngest son of Mr, and Mrs, R.L.Kirby, spent some time with his sister, Mrs.Harold Boyce.The Misse* Dorothy Levoy and Margaret Kirby are spending a week with Mr*.Harold Boyca, MARIAN MARTIN Pattern 9388 Go bnck to the farm .do your victory gardening .or work in a factory\u2014in Pattern 9388 by Airman Martin.It's an all-in-one «lack outfit with trim yet.wonderfully action-free lines.Use sturdy denim or seersucker for this style and make the short version too.Pattern 9388 may be ordered only in misses\u2019 and women\u2019s sizes 12, 14, Hi, 18, 20, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, Size 16 requires 3% yards 35-iueh.Send twenty cents (20c) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this Marian Martin pattern.Write plainly size, name, address and styh number.Send your order to Sherbrooke Daily Record, Pattern Department, Si.or brookc, Que b e e.KNOWLTON Ali.s Mary Farmer accompanied Air.and .Mrs.James F.Carberry, of Worcester, Mass., to Montreal, to attend the ordination at St.James' Cathedra], when their son, Mr.Paul Carberry received the order of nubile aeon.Mi.and Mrs.George Price, of Montreal, spent a week-end nl their cottage, at Brome Lake.Mr.William Arnold, of Foster, called on Mr.Frank Mooney.Mr, and Mrs.John Sanborn, of Brome, called on Mr.and Mrs.Harold Sanborn and family.Graham Randall, who attended High School here, has returned to his home in South Holton.Mrs.Eva Bradley has returned to her home, after nursing the late Alias Minnie K.Scott, for nine weeks.Among those from here at attend the dance in Foster Town Hall were Mr.and Mrs.Walter Fuller, Mrs.Royea, Mrs.Roger Benoit, Mre.Edna Warden, Miss Beulah Clarke, Mrs.Pierre Page, Mr.Gerald Vail, Air.Frank Mooney, William Blackwood and Douglas Dryburgh.Airs.Kenneth Willey and Miss Helen Needham spent a day in Waterloo.Mr.and Mrs.E.J.Bock us, of Bolton Glen, called in town, Mr.and Airs.Ray Cunningham, of North Hatley, called on Mrs.Alice Boyce en route to Cowansville.The many friends of Mrs.William Pi bus regret, to learn that she war.very ill at her home here.Air.David Roberts was a guest of Mr, and Mrs.Eric Stanbrklge, at Bolton Glen.Mis: Bessie Carter, of Cowansville, is the guest of her grandparents, Air.and Mrs.John Carter.Air.and Mrs.James F.Carberry and Mr.Paul Carberry have returned to Worcester, Maes., after a short visit at the home of Mr.and Mrs.John B.Farmer.Mr.Cedric Stone has accepted a position in Waterloo.Mr.and Mrs.J, A.Lefebvre called on friends in L* ome.Mr.Frank Mooney, accompanied by Mrs.Edna Worden and Mr-, Dolly Williams motored to Cowane-ville.Mrs, Eva Bradley motored to Fulford and was a dinner guest of Airs.Arnold Badger.Mrs.Wilfred Benoit and little daughter have returned from visiting Mrs.GenoitV.parents in Sutton, Mrs.W.G.Knowlton, of Foster, was in town to assist in the care of her mother, Mrs.William Pibus.Mr.and Mrs.George Robert* and daughter, Evelyn, of Detroit, Mich., were dinner guests of Mrs.Florence Sbanbridge at the Lake View Hotel.Mrs.Solomon, of Granby, called on Airs, H.L.Mandigo.Mrs.C.E.Crandall spent an afternoon in Waterloo.Mr.and Mrs.A.C.Carter attended the Newton-Roes wedding in Sherbrooke.Mrs.Edith Boyce, of Dunkin, was the guest of Mrs.Alice Boyce.Avery Booth has returned tu his home in West Bolton, after attending High School here.He was the guest of Mr.and Mrs.L.A.Turner.Air.and Mrs.Harold Worden and Cookshire, July ft.The regular meeting of the W.M.S.of Trinity United Church was held r.t the home of Mrs.J.A Butler.The President, Mrs.Carr, was in the chair, and the meeting opened with the hymn, \"God Bless Our Native Land,\" followed by prayer in unison.The leaflet, \u201cThe Churches in Captivity,\" with stories from the \u201cCourageous Churches in Europe Today,\u2019\u2019 was read, Mrs.Carr acting as loader.Mrs.Paysan Sherman, of Scots town, Vice-President of the Presbyte rial of this district, was present, and offered prayer.The main feature of the programme was an address by Mrs.A.A.Ale A11 lay, also of See tat, own, giving a most in tores ling report of the meeting* of the Alontivnl-Otiawn Conference, iveontly hold In Montreal.Mrs.MoAuley is a very fluent speaker and the account of t.he meetings was thoroughly enjoyed by those present and heartily applauded.Mrs.Pratt tendered a vote of thanks to Mrs.Me,Auiay.A temptranee reading was given by Mrs.A.11.Goff, Eleven numbers answered the roll call, and there were five visitors.The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved, and several items of new business diseased.The Tr.\u2019a.vurrr gave her report and it was decided to augment the funds by the raising of \u201ctaient money\" during the summer.Mrs.Butler\u2019s name was added to the Finance Committee.The meeting clewed with the hymn, \"Lord Speak To Ale That, I May Speak\" ami the Mizpah Benediction.Refreshments were served by the hostess on the spacious verandah.Rev.Mr.Carr and Rev Air.Gustafson, of East, Angus, joined the ladies at the tea hour.RED ( ROBS ACT 1V1TIE8 Plie Cookahire Red Cross room will be closed during the last two weeks in July and a.l workers are requested to send in their supply of work before that date.Special appeals are being made for more workers, although their days may tie buoy, nil arc asked to make a special effort to supply the needs of (ho bojc at the front.All those who have not been workers are asked to call al, t.he Cooks'llire Rod Oroiw rooms and get a supply of sowing or knitting.Those who hnvo been regular workers, please renew your efforts.Test your knowlcdgo of rect social usage by answering tho following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers given hetow: 1.\tWhile talking at table, should you gesticulate with fork In hand to put a point across?2.\tIn restaurants whore toothpicks are provided, is it permissible to pick one\u2019s teeth in public?3.\tIs it bad manners to take large bites of food?4.\tShould several kinds of food be.shoveled onto a fork at one time?6.When you have finished cutting meat is it necessary to transfer the fork to your right hand before eating?What would you do if\u2014 Your children are school age\u2014 (a)\tServe them just as they happen to sit, at table?(b)\tServe them after the grownups have heeti served?(c)\tServe them before tho grownups?Antwers, 1.\tNo, 2.\tNo.3.\tA'es.4.\tNo.6.No.That is optional.Better \u201cWhat Would You Do\" solution.(a) or (h).daughter, Janet, motored to Dolton Springs.Mrs.Eva Bradley was in Waterloo with her friend, Miss Ivy King, at the home of Mr.and Airs.Lyman King.Mr.Frank Mooney, Mrs.Edna Worden and Miss Janet Worden were in Granby.Mrs.William Tibbifs spent a day in Waterloo.Mr.H.A.Mitchell attended the funeral of Mr.Charles Christie, at, Cowansville.Mrs.Douglas Backus, of Fulford, called at the home of Mr.and Miv.Elton Bockus, Mr.W.D.Soles was in Sutton on business, Air.and Mrs.W.E.Pettee, of Sherbrooke, were guests of Mrs, A.W.Mizener and Mr.Karl A.Mizener.Mr.and Mrs.George Roberts and daughter, Evelyn, of Detroit, Mich., and Mrs.Eric Stanbridge j and son, Frank, of Bolton Glen,! were dinner guests of Mr.and Mrs, Harry Roberts.Mrs.Roger Benoit was an overnight guest of friends in Dunkin.Air.and Mrs, Walter Fuller, Mrs.Edna Worden, Air*.Pierre Page, Miss Pauline Stone, Mr.Frank Mooney and Mr.Cedric Stone wen* in Waterloo for an evening.Mrs.Patty Shu felt has been assisting in the care of Mr.William Chapman, Sr., in Brome.TIPS FOR TEA-STRETCHERS I Measure; don't guess.Save a spoonful today; enjoy a cup tomorrow.Use only young TENDER leaves.More fragrance .more flavor .more satisfaction .in every cupl Ask for\u2014and be sure you get\u2014Tender Leaf Tea! ¦*v\t.At your grocer's in two convenient sizes .alto in improved FILTER tea ballt.BLENDED AND PACKED IN CANADA Take Care 01 Your Health Use Our \u201cB.1\u201d Bread ALLAH\u2019S PHONE 724 For Informationt Tclcphona 2540.TODAY AND TOMORROW \u2018ud ABBOTT ^-cosmio MAfON RUNYON'S way Ci«t IfcOOlUlD (atiliuuur Nk, tKMOWt Mwt IAKÏ *0*tt IM Illi Diilntn^ Added Attraction with JOHN LODER-RUTH FORD* MARION HALL* RICHARD FRASER \u2022 PAUL CAVANAOH Latest News and Canada Carries On\u2014\u201cROAD TO TOKYO.\" ff ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ am\tw W\" m7 ¦\"\u2019¦\"¦iot\u2014^ STRAWBERRIES! The Strawberry Season is at its best this week.Fake our advice-\u2014 PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW WITH YOUR GROCER OR BUTCHER Do Not Wait and Risk Disappointment.THOMPSON & ALIX LIMITED ¦ H i i i 1 I UllKlfl 1 SHERBROOKE DATEY RECORD MONDAY, JULY 5, 1943, Interesting Notes from Brome A card party was held in the Brome Town Hall, under the able management of Scout Master R.V.Mason, for the benefit of the Brome Boy Scout Group.There was a good ' and Ulverton, respectively.! \u201cGoapel Fircelde Hour\u201d ia being < 1 held each Sunday ervening at eight, o\u2019clock, in the Melboro Consolida ted, - School.People of aE ago* are wel- Mrs.L.B.Elliott has gone to come.Marbleton to spend a few days vis-i The Young People\u2019s Union held its Ring Dr.Robert Elliott and Mrs.meeting in the Kingsteury Town Hail Elliott.\ton Thursday evening.June 24th.Miss Hildred Vail was in Knowl-lThcre was a good attendance of News Items From Waterloo attendance of parent* and friends, ton to attend the funeral of Mise | member# ând several visitor*.Presi \u2018\u2018500\u201d was played at seven tables and Minnie E.Scott.\tcent Lloyd otevena opened the meet at twelve o\u2019clock a delicious lunen Mr.William Lefebvre was in mg with hymns Prayer was offers was served bv Mrs G.A.Mason, Knowlton for a day.assisted by Mrs.William Chapman, Friends of Mr.W.H.Patch will Jr.The ladies\u2019 first prize went to i regret to hear that he is confined to a Montreal hospital, where he is receiving treatment.Mrs.James Mason, and ladies\u2019 sec end prize to Miss Nellie Marsh.The gentfemen\u2019s first prize went to Mr.Selwyn Mason, the second gentlemen's prize went to Gordon Marsh, and the.ladies\u2019 consolation went to Mrs.Henry Daigneault, and the gentlemen\u2019s to Mr.A.H.I,add.The proceeds netted the sum of nineteen dollars and fifty cents.Mr.Jack Greig, of Cowansville, was a business visitor in Brome.Mrs.Annie Chapman, of St.Johns, N B., was a guest at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Albert Jacobs.The feast ot Corpus Christi was celebrated nere when a procession went from St.Edward's Roman Catholic Church.A large number of children and adults marched through the streets, as Rev.Father Saint-Pierre carried the Host.The streets were appropriately decorated with flags for the occasion and an altar was erected on the lawn of Mr, Maurice Morriseau, and was attractively arranged with quantities of evergreens and flowers, where the benediction was given.The driveway was lined with small evergreen t ees and flags were used in decoration.Mr.C.W.Davis was a visitor in Knowlton.Mi',-.Adelard Lacroix has gone to Montreal to visit relatives.Mrs.Lucien Ouellette has returned from the Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, and is at her home here.Her condition is very critical.Pte.Gerald Vail, of Lachine, was a week-end guest of his friend, Pte.Ronald Eldrldge, at the latter's home here.Congratulations are being offered to the teachers and schools for their success in winning the prize; offered by the Fisher Trust Fund, of Brome County.The prize consists of five dollars for the school and five dollars for the teacher.The following are the teachers and schools winning the prize: Miss Lorna Lewis, Brigham School; Miss Carol Mizener, Bolton Glen School; Miss Thelma McCutcheon, West Brome School; Miss Evelyn Page, East Hill School; Miss Edythe Aiken, Esty School; Miss Madelene Wells, Lakeside School; Miss V.I).Waldron, Learned School; Miss Jean Lowry, Pettes School; and Mrs.M T.McCutcheon, N'ortn Sutton.Mrs.Clovis Laporte, of F.nst Hill, Mr Paul Pazinet, of Sutton, was in town.Mr.James Franklin was an overnight guest of relatives in Lennox-villc.iffered by Rev.S.Milley.Minutes of previous meeting were given by Secretary Ernest Wi.lcin* and were approved as read.During the bu*inea« period it was decided to invite, th-e Richmond Young Pevrplc\u2019s Society to be guests at ««me future meeting.Plane were made to hold a picnic at some lakeside, the date and place to be announced later.Three hearty u\tai \u201e Ai™*,\tcheer* were given for Lance Gpl.e, Swde burg\tLloyd Fowler New Westminster, M.and'Mrs Andrew Thompson,\tand \u2022?\u2019** Mae Doherty, of of Mansonville, were dinner guests j^sfown, who were former mem-; «'ri .i*i\t\u201e\tber».Trveir many friend* wen?a\\.,i' , ri'.»\ti .* i pleased to have them among them Major L.D.McClintock, of Knowl- thf\tGam\u20acg were \u201dnjoythc Mrs Mary J.Fletcher and ««n,:\tu a for the Greek War Relief Fund.Miss Mae Doherty, of Scots town, Kfpent a few (toys as guest of Mr.and Mrs.Lome Ames.Mr.and Mrs.Lyle Ponceau have returned from their honeymoon trip.Mr.John Hutchings, of New Rockland, spent a few days with his daughters, Mrs.D.J.Stevens, and Mrs.Percy Dunbar and their families.The Misses Thelma Dunbar and spend their vacation with relatives.Miss Beryl Hillier, of Boston, Mass., who is visiting Mrs.Evelyn J.Goddard and Miss Lucia Graves, is spending a few days with relatives in Richmond.The Rev.H.E.Parsons and Mrs.Parsons will spend their holidays in Montreal, wfiere Mr.Parsons has been invited to act as guest speaker in Trinity United Church, for the month of Jmy.During his absence fiom St.Paul\u2019s Church, Waterloo, the morning service will be in charge of the Rev.Mr.Burnett, of Montreal, July 4, and on the two last Sundays of the month, Mr.Allan Willard, L.R., of East Angus, will be the guest speaker at the morning services in St, Paul\u2019s.Announcements will be made for each Sunday.St.Paul\u2019s Sunday School held its concluding classes of the summer.The awarding of prizes will be made at the annual picnic to be held in August.Mrs.J.H.Labelle and Miss Gabrielle Labelle visited relatives in Ottawa.Ar the regular meeting of St.Paul\u2019s Women\u2019s Association held in the lecture room of the Church one afternoon, under the presidency of Mrs.M.D.Smith, it was decided to discontinue the active work of the orgarization until September, when the meetings will be resumed.Mr Joseph Gingras, of Montreal, spent u few days at his summer home at Libbey\u2019s Lake.The Misses Isabelle Charlebois and Jacqueline Gariepy have been holidaying a' Bowker Lake.Mr.and Mrs W.K Robinson were in Montreal.:VL and Mrs W.A.Parkes, Mrs.Walter Rearishaw and Mrs.O.T.Pickford were visitors in Montreal.Miss Claire Millenchamp, of Ste.Anne dc Bellevue, visited relatives 1 in Waterloo for a few days.Mrs.K.W Wallace, of Montreal, is visiting opj sister, Mrs.George A.Taylor and family, of Clarence- vilie.Later Mrs.Wallace will spend ^ a few days in Waterloo as guest of her sistçr, Mrs.W.K.Robinson and family, Court Street.Mr.H.Foreman, of Montreal, visited his son-in-law and daughter.Mr.and Mrs.Harry Williams, Dufferin Avenue.After completing her teaching term in Roc\u2019way Valley, Miss Clara Montford ia enjoying a holiday at her home on St.Patrick\u2019s Street.LAC.G.A.Young.R.C.A.F., Otta.wa, Ont, was a week-end guest of his family.After completing his examinations from Lower Canada College, at McGill University, Mr.Irving Slack spent a few days at his home in Waterloo, before leaving for a Cadet Training Camp, in Arnprior, Ont.Mrs.Alvin Hillhouse spent two days in Montreal with her daughter, Mist Eileen Hillhouse and other relatives.Mrs.Ralph Wallace, of Montreal, is caring for her sister, Miss Abbie Farmer, who is ill at her home near Foster Square.Mrs.W.D.Schofield has returned to Montreal, after visiting her parents Mr.and Mrs.C.W.Slack for several weeks.Mrs.Garret Chapman and son, Howard, accompanied by Mrs.Frank Cummings and daughter, of Ottawa, Mrs.Douglas MacLean, of Montreal, and Mrs.C .H.Frizzle, of Brome, visited Mrs.John Chandler and Miss Mullin, in St.Armand.Miss Myrtle Gaw visited Mr.and Mrs.Alex Purdy and Mrs.P.S.Ashton, of Granby, over a week-end.Mi Robert Greig, of Vercheres, j visited Mr.Garret Chapman and l family 1 Mrs.Eric Thomas is visiting relatives in Arvida.Mrs.Harold Sanborn and daughter Deanna, of Knowlton, called at the homes ot Mrs.Farmer and Mr.and Mrs.S.W Hamilton.Mi a.id Mrs.Lorn Crawford, of Montreal, visited Mrs Edward Goodwill over a week-end, LEEDS VILLAGE Mr and Mrs.W.G- Nutbrown.whe ha've sold their farm here, left foi Danville, where they will visit Mrs.Nutbrown s mother, Mrs.Arthur Patterson, ana Mr.Patterson, for a few weeks All are sorry to lose ther from the village, but wish them every success, whereever they make their new home.Mrs.R.E Wark has returned fiom Sherbrooke and was accompanied by her niece.Mrs.S.Marlin, who returned home the following day.Mr.Ross Pau* and Miss Sharp, of Montreal, wno were guests of the fermer\u2019s aunt, Mrs.W.C.Ross, and Mr.Ross wjve called home by the sudden death of Mr.Paul\u2019s father, Mr.Harry Paul.They were accom-panted to Montreal by Mr.and Mrs.W.C Ross.The Right Reverend Bishop Carrington, Lord Bishop of Quebec, and several other clergymen, are spending a few days at the Anglican Boys\u2019 Camp, which has been opened.There are twenty Lk ys in residence.The friends of Mrs.William Bailey will be sorry to learn that she is ill and under the care of Dr.Fortier, of Thetford Mints All hope that she will soon legair.her usual health.Miss Helen Rothera, R.N., of St.Johnsburv, Vf.and the Misses Dora ara Mildred Rothera, of Montreal, are in residence at their summer home.Mrs.John Beattie and Mr.Alden Beattie, of Lennoxville, were callers at the home of Mr.and Mrs.William Bailey.Friends of Mrs R.Davidson will b* sorry to learn that she is ill at the home ot her daughter, Mrs.Howard Scot:, and is under the care of Dr Fortin, of Thetford Mines.All join in wishing her a speedy recovery Mr and Mrs.Gordon Nutbrown, ot Montreal, and little niece, Juanita Smith, are spending their vaca-tioi at their old home here.The proceeds, amounting to one him , dved doll ans, were donated to the Lksie Booth were among those from Greek Relief Fund.\t| here who attended the graduation The Misre* Muriel and Marion ''unce at tuc St.Francis College Blake ami friends, Mrs.Harold Hl$! School, Riçbmond.Wolfe, of Montreal, and Mr.Harold \u201dJ1S'S Hiizel Sinw, of the teaching Wilton, of the R.C.A.F., Mont.Joli,\tat lne St.Francis College, spent a week-end at the Blake home, Rxthmond, ha.-; returned to her home \u201cOdlewylde.\u201d\t: here to s'Pen w_ |)avjs was' a visitor 0f i \u2019\u2019h* appearanm of this fine building.relatives in Maplodule.Mrs.lln-'ry Barber was in Mont-\tCLAPHAM No.35 A.F.and A.M., attended di vine worship at the United Church, Knowlton, with Rev.Mr.McFayden, of Stanstead, delivering a special message.real for a time.Among those from out-of-town The Pastor, Rev.F- , D.J attending the ' card party held for Mr.and Mrs Charles Evans and lard sang as a solo, \u2018\u2018Under ills Wings.\u201d The Scripture lesson was taken from 1 Corinthians XH1 and Psalm XIA'1 was read responsively.The guest speaker delivered a most inspiring address- on \u201c the Geometry ;\t\\|,.an, of Life.\u201d \u2019IV service was brought ; |\u201en ,|unPI to r.close with the singing of \u201cGod] u'r ylv.Save the King.\"\tj Mrs M Messrs.W.'Tiam Blake and E.11 Foster were business visitors Knowlton.Mr.H.A.Osborne attended the Masonic service held in Knowlton.Miss Lillian Barber, of Montreal, Centre.Miss Flos.-ie Oroeke and daughter, .Mrs.Gordon Jackson, of Verdun were nftemom visitors of the Chap-I man family son arteiulod n miscellaneous shower lor Miss I.M 'Millnn at the home of Mrs.A.McCammon in Inverness.Mrs.K.Johnson, Mis?M.Johnson, Misses Joan and Jane Briggs and i Mis.Il V Toof.of Sut\tu ^ ion.were visitors in town, i ] U *.n\\U.atul Mra\u2019 T\u2018 Lear- , .\t, .\u2022 mouth in Inverness.A.!.Ware and Mr.: Miss Vivian Marshal, of Shor- t the home ol Mrs William Rock irtVrmU m!'^ 7 hoUdY%'y,bh m i \u201e.,ai\t'IKI patents, Mr.and Mrs.J, Mar- 1 W Oil.\t, Mr and Mrs.Robert Hamilton and \\i' c-«.\t,\t\u201e Nf- ¦\"! 1\t\u2022 M\u2018U,,U' Khi7,v'i! lames' AVra sjvnt a day as gue'Is mo orod o t.ranhy and spent a day.0!- Ml\u201e.Me,rose Irwin.\u2018 S -,\t.\t.\tMrs.I ha les Austin and Mrs.H.ri,._\u201e,i\t, .n was a few dap guest of friends anri> p ,,;loUs\u201e\u201e caiip(1 on Mrs.William I\tLambe,t Can?m« relatives in Brome.Mrs.Paddy Shufelt was in Knowlton one afternoon.Mrs.L.B.Elliott, of Bedford, was a week-end guest of her parents, Mr.and Mrs.William Baines, at \"Rock ledge Farm.\" Mr.and Mrs.J E.Soles spent a day in Montrer.' ,,\tand family, of Inverness, were Sun- h.vkwell an.Mrs.Emma Tibbits.day guests of Mr.and Mrs.J.Mar-M' \\ UU.O khieard has gone to ,hall.Miss X.Canning remained for \"!UP,m,1°\u2019 Al°\"\tshp ,'.vl11 a week with her grandparents, spend sonic time with Mr.and Mrs.Mrs.Jessie Annistey returned to Aides Estes.\ther home in New Ireland having Mr.Eugene Gagne, of Waterloo, 5^nt a month as guest of Mrs E w ;s in Brome for an evening.\tJohnson.Mr.Albert Turton is a few days viritim?their \"T\t.M.T\tMr- «nd Mrs.Weasley Robinson daughter, Miss Jean So es R \\\t!\"V af ^b,t,vcs in Montreal.\tand little son.of Lennoxville, were Mr.and Mis.Norman Osborne \"\t°n'\t, 'iyUWl ton' 'veek-end guests of his mother, Mrs.were among tho\u2019se attending a C ^\t^ h°r h°n,C ^\t, ,\t, , Mr^AlVert 'tumm\t\\- -\t.Miss J\u2018c,.\u2019!.T!'n.e(,y\thcr s.chopl \"'t're tea guclts ofWs.'I|.Johnson! Vokey, of Montreal are a*few liVv#\u2019 !ho Hni\" \"\tHol!.'\\n' a Mr*\u2018 M t:ar and daughter and nf t'mam r \\ V\ta/ P u n u* on t he common.Miss 1 racex Mr.D.\\\\ n :hi wore dimur iriK'st* of Con aL farnilv \u201cThTp '\t'\"\u2019s n\u2019lunu''i l\" \"ome here to Mr.and Mrs.VY.ChrE '' Mrs W tic ; Pn \u2022 .Ti C i\u201d?,' \"!'ond the summer.\tMr.and Mrs.Ernest Porter and F ni ma Tibhits «-wo*\tand William Blake were Mr.and Mrs.E.Moore, of Thetford see Mrs Henry Smith Kno\"'lton to 0,1 1 fishing trip on Brome Lake and Mines, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Yfr j v.-« i p \u2018q ,\t\u201e cad Hie good fortune to secure seven W.Christie.Mrs.Ernest Page, Mr.Lawrence HikWpv b\u201ej mi.\u2019\"A\tMrs.William Rockwell Mrs.Em- oÆi H U\tt'P;tn,dc 0,ui \u2018X \u2019 ma Tibhits and Mr.and Mrs.M.A Manv\tihi-\u2019u1 \u2019vl\"0 PJ1° ai,yi Uarnes nu,t°ied to Sutton one dav.tvf dan/e hllf Bt Ha y\tMv' r'- N \u2018'o\u2019M'-e w as a visitor in n \u201d ^ beld n' Ho'vard f Hal], : Sherbrooke Brome Ponn, one evening.L.-Bdr.Cecil Sturtevant, of Sussex, N.B.was a week-end guest of Mr.and Mr; George Wray ami Master James Yvtay spient an evening as guests of Yfr.and Mrs.J.Marshall.Mrs.E.Johnson called at tile same home.Miss M.Johnson accompanied bv a number of the children from here Air.M il nim Davis, son, and attended the \u2019.ce cream social at daughter.Aliss Glenna Davis, of Maple Grove one evening.ai 1rs parents \\ir nnJ r VT, of Knowlton, were dinner guests of Mr.Mr.Prescott Walker, of Addentey.tevant\tM C\u201d F\u2019 Stur' 1 a«d Mrs.Frank Davis.\toalled on Mr.J.Walker and family.Mr John\t/ o : Mr- Jn>'ws Tracey, son.Garald.A tUMuber from here attended the burg tvns S vilitor^n t f Swpets* ' aad daughter.Violet, of Richford.Maekmnon-MeMilkn wedding AH Bruce ,ott If r?'\"' \u2022 o Vl\" '^itpd relatives in Brome.\tInverness.«nice Alnott, of Gilman s Cor-' Mr p0t0r Drvburo\u2019 of\t- Oulbeo %h0rt H0XVipe t0|attS'na thp ! 'vas a visitor a.the home of Mr ami Quebec Short Horn Breeders\u2019 Asso- Mrs Albert «lacolx# incffialFFa?nfa Men he8* theE*per~ I Mr.and Mrs.Robert Gardner and delightful basket' mcni/nWh05^ * snn\u2019 of\twere in Brome for hour *\t\u2019 P f the noon;an afternoon.LAWRENCE Pte.Ronaid Eldridge.of Camp ! Borden Ont., Miss Barbara Over, I R.C.A.F., of Trenton, Ont., and a\u2019 party of friands, were guests of the MELBORO Pte.and Mrs, Harold Wilson, of Quebec City, have returned home, I after spending a week at the home of Air.and Mrs.Walter Wilson.I Missies Dorothy Smith and Row- ! Iona Wilson called on Mrs.Rav fomer's parents AlVarJAirVr \u2018v\tMol\u2019boro Consolidated School i ^ caJ01b in Sherbrooke.Eldridge.\t'\tolosed with teachers, pupils and par Master Wendell Martin, of Cross-\u2018 '\tV - .«V l .V- , V\t« .IVl\t«\t.' \u2022 V - V-SW Mr.Thomas Pratt, of Montreal : *nts c?i0,Y;p,i 8\ton the school1 was a guest of Master Trevor was a week-end guest of relatives Brome.grounds.Games were played and at; A''iIson for a few days.111 noon a picnic lunch of sandwiches.Airs, Alfred Martin and »cn, Air.and Aî^-s Adplnr^ g* cr *\u2022 cake and lemonade was served.Dur- M ayne, and Mi's.G.Waixi.of Crosa-were afternoon visttoT^ pr \\t artla ing the afternoon the reports for the , bury, visited Airs.William Alartin.Mrs.F.Caver\u2019and* fami t v ^ Mr' Snd ^™^tary room .were given out.They also called on Airs.Walter Rev Canon G A \\t_ * *\t,\t; This was followed by races for which AA ilson.* \u2022 J-anon i,.a.Mason and Air.\t-ru.\ti.\u201e\u201e\u201e j rsQ3gnp B.\u2022o \u2018The Pine\".v nft»,» \u2022 home \u2022 The teacher's.Principal Gordon Phil-\u2019dren and Alias Marjory Cooper, of dav in the cite ' T 8 few\ti and Miss Gwene-th Alassey, re- Brookbury.were calling on relatives Vt r t 'g i \u2022\t»\t; eeived several remembrances from \u2018 here.^uest of'her fri^rf iS- vdays\u2019 ;!,pir PuP\u2019;!s- Mr' G- ^«b-'ick an i Miss Winifred Stratton, of Ful-\u2018Want; at\u2018«Twin Mn i 1S«8 ^01nla 'Mls?G- Mass y have since returned tord, spent a week with her parents, jven., at twin Maples.\tto their homes in Dennison\u2019s Aid Is Mr.and Airs.William Stratton.mm A *5^ LEAR OF UNIVERSITY for 1270 young men from 1/ to 22 Open to civilians and serving-soldiers who can qualify PRINT ALL INFORMATION CLEARLY THE Canadian Army University Course Number Two is now available to young men from 17 to 22 who have completed university entrance requirements and who are medically fit.The course embraces Physics, Mathematics and Engineering.At the completion ot University Course and Military Training, the successful candidates may become eligible for training as officers.The University will grant credits tosuccess- ful candidates toward University « degrees later on.While taking the course, candidates will receive free tuition, board, lodging and text books.They will also receive standard rates of Army pay and their dependents will receive the same allowance as those of other serving-soldiers.Free dental and medical care will also be available.Volunteers under 17 years and 6 months must have the written consent of their parents.Serving-soldiers who are not older than 22 on the first day of August, 1943, and who have completed University entrance requirements must make application to their Officer Commanding.Civilians who are not younger than 17 and not older than 22 on the first day of August, 1943, and who have University entrance requirements, must fill out and mail the coupon below to the Registrar of the University concerned.A request for further details does not commit you to enlistment.Kami.Ape»*.#»»_____________ Date ot Birth\u2014Givf dav, month and yeif .____ High School Attended.Grade Completed.T wish to juhmit an application for the Caned:.:- Army l niversity Course Number Two.\tq jo J iptafure.\t.Mail this coupon to the Bursar of the University at which you wish to take the course.UNIVERSITIES AVAILABLE FOR STUDIES 1 l'xivîRsm-or Toronto .Mount Allison Universitv University or Montreal Acadia University .\t.McGill University .Queen\u2019s University .- - Toronto, Ont.\tMcMaster University .\t.\tHamUlon, Or,!.Safkvil/e, X.B.\tL'niyersity or Saskatchewan\tSaskatoon, Sash.Montreal, Slue.\tUniversity or Aleerta -\tEdmonton, Alta, fkol/emlle, X.S.\tUniversity or British Columbia Montreal, Que,\tVane outer, B.C.Kingston, Ont,\tWestern University .\t.\t.\tLondon, Ont, DEPARTMENT of NATIONAL DEFENCE (ARMY) MONDAY, JULY 5, 1943, 5HERBKUOK.E DAILY RECORD 7, USE\t\u2022AY A\\T \\]\t\tFOR THE\tJrViJ 1\tr\\L\t\tQUICK RECORD\tPhone 6i\t3\tRESULTS Examination Results From Eastern Townships Schools GALLUP HILL DAVIDSON HILL AND BETHEL BUSINESS DIRECTORY Advocates RUGG.UiGN AULT.HOLTHAM AND GRUND1.McM»namj t Walsh Building.70 ellingtoia SL North.Phone IWSL ASHTON R.rOBIN.ROSENBLOOM Bldg., 66 Wellington North.Phone 623.GAGNE & DESMARAIS.s5« WELLINGTC^ North.Richmond Offic*.Phone 37.LYNCH « LANCli FACILITIES FOR dealing w-ui income and Excess Profits Tax.Sun Life Building Sherbrooke.ROUSSEAU.HOWARD & BRADLEY.OU-vier Bldg .i Wellington South.Phoat 727.Auctioneer* CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES CASH RATE \u2014 3 cents per word, minimum charge 50 cents for 16 words or less.CHARGE RATE \u2014 4 cents per word, minimum charge 73 cents for IS words or less.BIRTHS - MARRIAGES - DEATHS \u2014 Death and Funeral notices.Card of Thanks, In Memoriam w ithout poetry, ?1,00 an insertion.Poetry included in In Memoriam 20c per line extra.Engagements 75 cents.Weddings and Birth Notices $1.00.List of flowers included in obituary reports, 5 cents per word, 25c extra when charge account is opened.Reader notices in country locals 15c per line, five words to a line; Lennoxville and City Brieflets, 20c per line, minimum charge of 50c for two lines.There will be a charge for postage of ten cents for a Record Box number.ERRORS, on our part in advertisements will be rectified immediately on attention being called thereto.Miscellaneous BURY HIGH SCHOOL\tprizes, repvrls and a treat from their June exanmation results from teacher.Mrs.Ruth Morrow.Thu Bury High School.List includes f ires which were donated by the pupils arranged in order of merit.King George Y Chapter of the Sher-Grade I to IX inclusive.Class 1; 80.hrooke, I.O.IVK.and hv Mrs.Mor* NO TICK - 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE for any accounts contracted by my son, Cedric Allison, after this date.Alden Allison, Bury, Lost and Found F UND - DARK BROWN CO LUE DOG.fair siie, about two years old.Owner may have same by paying expenses at Arthur Bailey's Pound, Sawyervilk, Que.i 100 per cent; Class II: 65-70 per 'cent; Class HI: under 65 per cent.Grade 1, Class I: Seottena Lawrence, Robert Stokes, Walter Armstrong, Betty Lasenbn, Arthur Shelton, Dorothy Matheson, June Olson, Helen MacLeod.Class Id: Gail Gil lar, row, went to pupils of 1st and 2nd rank in each grade, and to the folic wing; Grade I Arithmetic, Travov Wilson; Most improvement in writing, Prescott: Young; General improve- ; present were Mr.and Mrs, Frederick A very pleasant afternoon was v>eVnT*k':ri^nwhof enhu-indw a Ml- Mm.Austin Ingram and 1 rcvuieh Kitf, who entoita.ncd \u2022 ;chil>:\t£ Richmond, spent a day uumocr of trurkis at a birthday i.,r tl, 4\tt party for their daughter, lL;;vhr.rà.!! \u2018 .U\u20180vh;'n \" ^of ^ After many enjoyable games a deli- ^ und\tGeor*e Bowe5> clous lunch was served.The table | was centered with a three-tiered I Mrs.Annie Ingram has returned beautifully decorated birthday cakej la her heme m South Durham, with thirteen lighted candles, made l Mrs.Arthur B.Davidson and by the young hosier- and contained amusing favors and intriguing verses.Miss Barbara received many pretty and useful gifts and cards with happy wishes for which she thanked her little friends.Those Rugs Glass SHEB- ?BOX K.M.DEMERS, AUCTIONEER, brookc.Phone 224-W.ARTHUR OLSON.AUCTIONEER 322 Megantic.Phone 210.F.BURTON, WATER VILLE, Auctioneer, Dist.St.Francis.V£ day sale $25.Chartered Accountants EDNEï, ARMITAGE t CO., CHARTERED Accountacia, 72 Prospect St Phone 3285.P.S.RCSS & SONS.CHARTERED AO-countant*.MortreaL Male and Female Help Wanted EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER FOR Eastern Townships Flying School \u2014 male or female.Excellent pay for right man or woman, but novices not considered.Apply National Selective Service.Dentist : DR.J.A.LANDRY.SURGEON-DENTIST, X.-ray, 100 Wellington St.North, opposite Court House.Phone 898.F A.HAMEL.DENTIST.SPECIALTY Dentures.17a Wellington.Tel.3245.Floor Sanding EXPERIENCED MEN.DUSTLESS MA.ehihte.J.Peauoom.232 Vimy.Tel.1693-J, Marriage Licences MARRIAGE LICENCES.W.H.BRADLEY, Olivier Building, 4 Wellington South.Optometrists Ai-BERT TRUDEAU.B.À.S.O., EYESIGHT Specialist, 39 Wellington No.Phone 267.Open 9 to 6 every day.J.S.BRAULT.B.A., S.O.EYE-SIGHT' Specialist, & Wellington St.N.\u2014Apt.1.Phone 3462.Physicians and Surgeons DR.HARRY EINBINDER.FORMERLY resident-physician in New Jersey and Ottawa, wishes to announce that he has opened an office at 44 Queen Street.General Medicine-Surgery-Physiotherapy.TeL 4440.Office hours: 2 to 4 anc 7 to 8 p.m.Dh.ETHIER.PHONE 576.\t84 KING oT.West.Electrotherapy, Urinary Disease.DRS.J.A.DARCHE & LIONEL DARCHE.Eye, ear, nose and throat Private Hos-pita*.92 King Street West Electro-Surgical Clinic SPECIALTY: RHEUMATISM.ARTHRITIS Neuritis, X-ray laboratory, Diagnosis of sb mach, intestines, heart, Electro-Surgical remova.of tonsils, hemorrhoids, warts, corns.Dr.Horn.85 Court St Phone 3636.Real Estate NOTICE - ALBINI SAMSON.REAL Estate Asent, will b-jj, leil or eichanze all kinds (if property throughout the Pro»-Ince.For eomplete information write Sox 627.Sherbrooke, or 8 Kin* East.Apt L Phone 1657-M.Storage FUN ITU RE, ETC., IN SEPARATE rooma.Phone Prichard, 626rl.Veterinary Surgeons SHERBROOKE VETERINARY HOSPITAL.Dr L.\\ Gendreau 67 Wellington South.AUCTION SALE Wednesday, July 7th, AT 12:30 O\u2019CLOCK for P.W.KNIGHTS, At North Hatley on Eustis Road.Good pair of mares, 2,600, 10 eood cows, mostly Holsteins and Ayrshires, one purebred yearling Ayrshire bull, 12 hens, almost new double harnesses, mowing machine, rake, farm wagon body and rack, disc and spring tooth harrow, sulky plow, walking plow, gravel body, sleigh, electric fence, 5 eight gallon cream cans, strainer, 4 shoals, 2 months old, 15 cords of block-wood, all small farming tools, some household furniture.Terms : Cash.Positively no reserve as Mr.Knights has purchased Kezar Bros.\u2019 Store and is leaving farm.Good farm, modern buildings, will be offered for sale.R.M.DEMERS, Auctioneer.Need An Auctioneer?Julien Levesque 116 Main St.\u2014 Lennoxville wishes to announce to the general public that he now is a LICENSED AUCTIONEER Lf you want an appointment Call Lennoxville 287 or 97-J.Teachers Wanted For Sale __________________________Charles Bean.Vance Tarrant BROADLOOM TWEED REVERSIBLE, III Jackie Aulis.ruga mads from your old carpet» anti | (.trade 111, t nr,-.I: Anna Lawrence, materials Cslalogue and information on ! Class H; Annie Provis, Dale Olson, reguert.Anglo-French Carpet Co., Drum.| Hazel Doh.\u2019rtv .Beverley MacLeod, mond Building, Montreal.improvement, FARM ALL foot cut.Brome.\u201cA\u201d TRACTOR MOWER, SIX Apply M unden Barne*, West PROTESTANT, ENGLISH-SPEAKING, having Intermediate certificate.New school, 35 milts from Montreal, irequent bus service to city.Modern living accommodations\u2014excellent recreation facilities available.Apply Mr.J.D.Wright, Nitro, Que.EAST DUNHAM Mr.and Mrs.James McCullough BABY\u2019S CARRIAGE IN GOOD CONDITION.! ami two children, of Farnham.were h.m.Lee, 21 Goodhue street, Sher- visitors of the former\u2019s parents, Mr.kc-______________________land Mrs.M.McCullough, and family.Mr.and Mrs.Z.Delorme and Mr.and Mrs.Jack Delorme were in HA'\u2019 LOADER, SIDE RAKE AND TED-der.Apply Edgar I.Jameson, 290 King Street East, Sherbrooke.Phone 4076-M.MODERN, NINE PIECE DINING ROOM Ardis Mn-shoi ; Good work, Eric Marlin.Grade Y\u2014General Dorothy Dickens.Grade \\T Most stars in spelling, Donald Rudd, Grant Olson.Class j Leona Heegsma; General improve-111: Merlyn Coates, Donald Provis, n ent, Jean Dickons; G«od work, Ines Ray Strapps.\tj Coates.Grade IN, Glass l: Gwyneth Law- Two special prizes in History, rence Class II: George Matheson, : given by the Ring George V Chapter, Isabel Pe hie maim, Angus Mad.eay, 11.O.D.K., in memory of Mrs.Minnie Lome Aulis, Eugene\tBishop.Glass i\tHnllowell Bowen, were awarded to ITl: Fletcher Smyth,\tGloria Coates.|\tJoy Olson and Patricia Westgate, Donald Annesley, Devi Clark, Donald | whose respective averages on their McCormick, l.eola Lawrence, absent year's work in the subject were 88 for examination, promoted on year\u2019s'and 83.work.^\tI Five of the pupils: Lila Coates, v ,\ttv\t,\t\u201e\u2022\t-,\t.\t\u201e\u201e,y,+\t'\tGrade V, Class II;\tRachel Charle-j\tJean Dickens, Ardis Mosher, lues Notre\tDame to\tvisit then\tdaughU\tr\t: yj0jm Harrison,\tJean Buchanan,\tCoates and Evelyn Wilson, who as- Alifrcd Gl'Uip, and Franklin Marguerite, Burn 11.A social evniing was held in the Parish Hall which was well attended.Cards were played at several tables.The proceeds amounted to over six dollars.Mrs.Charles Lavlgan spent a day with MBs Klir.n Burrill amt Mr.ami Mrs.II.Buvrit'l.Mr.and Mrs.Matthew Pollock entertained Mr.and Mrs, Edgar IL Stimson and Ronald at tea.Male Help Wanted EXPERIENCED AUTOMOBILE PAINTER.Apply National Selective Service, 4 Wellington Street South, Sherbrooke, Que.BARTENDER, BILINGUAL, NEAT AND accurate Apply National Selective Offices.Female Help Wanted Phone 1942-W.Real Estate For Sale SOLD four- $6,500 HEAD WAITRESS-; ALSO WAITRESS bilingual.Apply National Selective Offices.Wanted To Purchase ONE PAIR OF MILITARY SHOES, SIZE 11.Phone 333S-J.Wanted To Rent WAFTED BY LADY ALONE ONE ROOM apartment or large heated unfurnished room with kitchen facilities in Sherbrooke or neighborhood.Box 10, Record.*\t7\t* #¦ ' i .>\t.\t a guest of Mrs, Lewis Ward and Mr.Ward.The many friende of Mr, F.dward F.Baker arc sorry to hea>' that he is in the General Hospital, Montreal, under obson at ion.The Gonpus Christ! procession took place from St.Croix Church.The repository was on the grounds of t.ho St.Joseph\u2019s Convent.The day was beautiful and the ceremony was well attended, A very successful dance was held at SoJlby Luke Pavilion, sponsored toy Maple Leaf Chapter O.E.S., F re Highsllmrg.The night was dark and there was a heavy storm in the early evening but the hall was well filled.Paul and his orchestra provided the music.There were many spectators who enjoyed the music.The sum of ?!>s).B0 was realized.The bedsprea I for which the O.F., S.had sold tickets, was drawn at the dance.Miss M.Wee lover, Stnn-bridge, held the lucky numher.Mr.and Mrs.Ewart Martin and son Rolland, are spending their holidays at Nclhy Lake, in Miss Dunn\u2019s cottage.Mi.and Mrs.Murray Ruiter and Miss Joan Ruiter have opened their cottage at Selby Lake for the sum- plies, as well as numerous Christmas gifts widen were distributed at the mon, Anne Gagnon.Class II: Lomu annual Chr.stmas tree; MncRae, Evelyn Kirkpatrick, Mae! To King George V,'the Duke of 1 arrant, Haro thy Olson, Kathleen Wellington airl [j.'lnl Regiment Chun Blanchette, Ruth Pchlemann.Class J \".T /A ^ *'\t\u2019 \u2018 1 ^\t\u2018 \u2019 * fy GIVE YOU GOOD-LOOK/HG SHAVES FASTER, POUT THEY?Ill : Elwilyder Clark Grade Villa (Latin pupils) Class IT.Evelyn Oison.Class III: Elaine Olson and Beryl Kirkpatric, equal.Grade Vlllb (Non-Latin pupils) Class II: George Lawrence.Class HI- Annie Olson Wilmcr Doherty, Yvette Richards, unranked.^ Grade ViUc (Canterbury pupils) Class HI: Eleanor Murray, James Quigley, Opal Coates.Grade IXa (Latin pupils).Class II: Nina Panons, Gertrude On pupils).Class L Rita Pchlemann.Class II: Austin Hodge, Lawrence Aulis, Emerson Kirkpatrick.MILAN\tjnig with Mrs.C.D.Baker and Mrs.Cora Harvey, in Richmond.Miss Anne Goodin, of Scotstown, I Mrs.James Blundon, Mrs.Kath-vas a guest of Mise Alene Murray.! leen Myers and Miss Elsie Myers, of Mr.and Mrs.Charles MacDonald, j Asbestos; Mr.Irmin Atkinson and of Sherbrooke, spent a week-end at j Mr.Howard Frost were tea guests the home of Mr.MacDonald\u2019s par-1 of Mr.and Mrs.Robert Sells, ents, Mr.and Mrs.N.A.MacDon-j Mise Kay Roschek, of New York, aid.\tj and her nephew, David Quesic are Miss Hazel Murray has returned ;\tMt\u2019 anti home, after spending a few months Mls\u2019 Geoige^ Roschek as nurse-in-training in the Montreal) Sunday owner guests General Hospital.The regular monthly meeting of BISHOPTON INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL Following is the report of the Bishopton Intermediate School: Grade I.\u2014 Ona Bostwick, Keith '/intimer, Ruby Jackson, Donna Davis j Grade II \u2014 Llody Betts, Laura ! Betts, Arnold Hardcastle.Mrs.Margaret Buchanan, of Dan-| Grade III-Marilyn Andrews, Nor-vhle, called on friends here.\tma Herring, Edgar Orr, Charles Several Jadio.?from here attended, Kf;r(|castle, Ivan Gilbert, Douglas the regular monthly meeting of the j;vangi Women\u2019s Association held at the Grade IV.- Grace Bell, home of Mr?.Frank Biown.\t[ Grade V \u2014Grant Sampson, Elaine Mis?Eva Johnston spent an even-, Lar;castel, Keith nellneU, Glailys \" \"\u2019,Hl r n Ra^r Mrs- Porter, Philip Hooker, Marion Mac Aulay.Grade VI.Marion Gilbert, Patricia Bishop, Lawrence Betts, Beverley Hading.Grade VII.\u2014 Lorraine Jenkarson, Ruth Ainsworth, William Baxter, Marjorie Bostwiçk, Ardyth Bishop, Marjorie Francis, Elizabeth Hading, June Evans.Beaulah Vintinner.Grade VIII, Class A, with Latin Harold Blake were Mis* Doris Sells.1\tGilbert, Neonia Stevenson, Ian, Nancy and Peggy Smith and ; Class B.witflout Latin-Lome Bish .,\t-\t.\t,\ton\tnh Prvff m* A/Tttrx; ÎJiiirvl- icrs, I.O.D.K .which furnished cocoa and biscuits for the school during the winter.Nearly al] of the pupils were promoted on the basis of their year\u2019s work.The list of pupils in order of merit follows: Grade I Irene Gagne, Arlington Spaulding, Carol Stratton, Trevor Wilson, Prescott Young, Grade II -Gardner Cooper, Norma Westgate.^ Grade III.\u2014 Dora Gagne, Thelma Coides, Rcttv Mosher, Elsie Gagne, Robert Bunvash, L.Smith, Stuart Cooper, Malcolm Stratton.Grade IV.John Swift, Evelyn Wilson, Eric Martin, Ardie Mosher, | me (Melvin Young.\ti Mrs Artimus Ross, a former rcsl- Grade V Joy Olson, Lillian Smith, Fient of Dunn.un, died at her home in Dorothy Dickens, Albert Dickens.Swan ton, Vt.The funeral service R/GUr!LOHCER-IAST/HG \\ BLUEGtltETTEBLADES ARE TOPS AHY WAY YOUF/GUREf Grade VI Patricia Westgate, Lila Coates, Leona Heegsma, mes Coates, \u2022lean Dickens.Grade VII\u2014Louise Martin.of Mrs.DIXVII,LE INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL The folxnving is the report, of the June examinations in the Dixville Infei'mediate School: Grade F: David Ward, Arnold Mollify re.Grade II.A: Elsie Stock, James Johann.Grade II, B: June Elaine Melrose, Otto Pedersen.Grade IV: Errol Cushing, Joan Byron, James Bellows, Clifford Wright, Gordon McIntyre.Grade V: Constance Stock, Lydia Hamm, Grace McIntyre, Cecil May-h w, Leonard Johann, Stewart Fox, Olive McIntyre.Grade VI: Marilyn Norm's, Harold Bellows.Grade VII: Velma Byron.Grade IX: Dougfias Pedersen, Beulah Thoma\u2019S.Mr.Irtnan Atkinson, of Asbestos.Miss Bertha Valier is ill at her the W.M.S.was held in Bethany Church.Due to the unfavorable tendïncethere ^ & ^ Sma11 speedy recovery.' Miss Sylvia Goodfellow, of Sher-! Mrs' Mal'«aret Buchanan\u2019 of Dan-brooke, was a guest of Miss Bernice MacDonald.Mr.Edward MacLeod, of Mont- : real, spent a week-end with his! ville, is a guest for a week of her daughter, Mrs.H.Perkins, and Mr.! Perkins.Mayor and Mrs.W.Corriveau spent the week-end with relatives in op, Ralph Porter, Mary Buick, Myrle Sharron.Grade IX, Class A, with Latin\u2014 Thelma Gilbert.Class B, with Science \u2014 Madeline Elliott.Class C\u2014 Laure] Westman, Lenora Cote, Marion Westman.DUNHAM ! Asbestos.Mrs.C.Biake, of Sherbrooke, was LAWRENCE SCHOOL Some fifty pupils and parents gathered at the Lawrence School for their annual closing.After playing AT 11 A.M.SHARP 30 milk cows, 3 horses, 1 six year ola SOn, Canadian Class A purebred stallion, 22 brooke.spring heifers, 5 one year old heifers, i i Mrs.Donald MacKenzie and chil-two year old bull, 4 sows, i pig, 6 sheep, : £irerj) 0f Detroit, Mich., are spend-1 aide rake, 1 mowing machine, disc harrow,!-\ttjme w]th Mrs.MacKen- finishing harrow, 1 big wagon, 1 pair double harnesses, 1 separator.Everything will be sold without reserve.Terms: Cash.mother, Mrs.Ewen MacLeod.Mrs.K.D.Murray, of Sherbrooke, ; was a visitor at the home of hen guest of her son, Mr.Leonard games in the open, everyone gather-daughter Mrs.J E.MacDonald,\t^ f and Mr.MacDonald.Mr.and Mrs.Kenneth Ro&s and !- Donald, were visitors in Sher- ; ed inside for the distribution of Cpl.Robert Robinson, R.C.A.F., and Mrs.Robinson, of Moncton, N.B., who were guests of Mr.and Mrs.O.O.Seltoy and other friend« for two weeks, have returned to Moncton, N.B.Miss Muriel Small is spending her holidays with her mother and torot'h-er, Mrs.S.J.Small and Mr.Donald Small, at their home here.LAC.Raymond Sharman, R.C.A.war held in All Saints\u2019 Church, Dim-ham, the Rev.T.R.Millmore officiating with interment in AH Saints\u2019 Cemetery.Mrs.Ross was before her marriage, Miss Mary Ann Doherty.Mrs.Eva Robinson has given up her apartment in Fnvreau\u2019s block and has gone to East Dunham for the summer.Miss Anita fitowe, of Cowansville, was a guest of her aunt, Mrs.U.S, Selby.Mr.and Mrs, Eric Kemp are spending a few days in Dunham, while on their holidays.Mi.Joseph hJlis has resigned his position at tiie Torrington Company, Bedford, and with Mrs.Ellis, is coming to Dunham to live.They have an apartment in Mr, William Doherty\u2019s house.Friends welcome Mr.and Mrs.Ellis to this town.Mr:.John Armstrong, of Montreal, is n guest for a week of her sister, Miss A.E.Émail.Mr.and Mrs.Alee England, of Montreal, wore week-end guests of Miss A.E.Small, at her rummer home, \u201cMaplewood.\u2019\u2019 Mrs.John Quillet and Miss Jean Guillett are spending the summer at \u201cChez Nous,\u2019\u2019 Selby Lake.Miss Carrie Baker is in Montreal so a- to he m-ar her brother, who is a patient in the General Hospital, Mrs.T.A.Knowlton, of Montreal, is spending the summer at the Baker home.Mrs.E.Bracey entertained at cards one evening in honor of her son.Cpl.Hubert Bracey, who was home on furlough.¦¦w X \u2022 Here\u2019s why precision-made Blue Gillette Bladesgiveyou easier, cleaner shaves .and more of them per blade.Edges are the sharpest ever honed.The steel is diamond-tested for hardness.Result: Easier shaving, longer life.Try them.Satisfaction guaranteed.PRECISION-maria to fit ymir Gilletta Razor exactly and avoid aernpa and irritation of misfit blade».GiWeUe f y KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED.ADRIEN MAURICE, Auctioneer.FOR SALE Bankruptcy articles\u2014National cash register, MrCaskey cabinet, small desk, platform scale, 500 pounds, platform scale, 240 pounds, vegetable rack, shew case, meat or fruit press electric meat grinder, electric meat slicer, butchei block, electric motor, compressor with 2 coils, good size for butcher shop, electric sign, two 30 lbs.Toledo scales.Albert Comtois, Room 202, Canadian Bank of Commerce Building, 6 Wellington North.NEWSBOYS OR NEWSGIRLS WANTED To Deliver The Record in North Ward and Centre Ward During July and August.ALSO: 2 GOOD RECORD ROUTES FOE SALE Apply to Circulation Department J&edmjoke patlg Jhecerb Phone 94 zie\u2019s mother, Mrs.Margaret Morrison.Miss Sylvia Stewart, of Lake Megantic, was a guest of Miss Don-alda Morrison at the home of Angus N.Murray.Misses Dolena Nicholson, of Drummondville, and Muriel MacDonald, of Bury, are spending the summer vacation at their respective homes here.Among visitors at Lake Megantic were Mr.N.M.MacLeod, Mrs.John Bailey, Mrs.George N.MacDonald, Misses Muriel, Catherine and Marian MacDonald, Mrs.James Matheson and Miss Donalda Morrison.\t\u2014 W/L£ DOC /S BEING PERSMDED TOV/EW EVIDENCE OF MERRVS TREACPERV, KING AND K/D ALSO APPROACH 7NE PLANE'S HIDING-PLACE\u2014 WHADPAYA KNOW/AN ^ UNDERGROUND HANGAR, KING WE LL CUT A SLIT-AND IN WE GO THE DOORS ARE HEAVY CANVAS, KID, PAINTED TO LOOK LIKE ROCK/\u201e \\ / te fcej**» SievriM* I* XJ bj K.ftj tt'ortd otfin 1 CANT BELIEVE MERRY WOULD DOUBLE-CROSS ME riiTTFF?' By Zane Grey.\u2019A /follow us down' TOTH-HANGAR, ' TT7 DOC,AND ^ V/E'LL PROVE.m BRINGING UP FATHER, By George Mc Manu*.T I'M GLAD MAGGIE'6 SISTER.15 GETTIK)' MARRIED - MOW ! SHE KIM RWD FAULT WITH ! SOMEONE ELSE AM' STOP I ____ FiCKIKP ON ME'.' _____> I'LL PUT OM THIS MEW TIE I GOT FOR YOU - I WANT JIGGS TO SEE YOU ALL DRESSED UP.' I'LL STAY STAUDIN' UP UNTIL HE COMES GRACIOUS-WHAT WAS THAT IT SOUNDED A F YEP Fl ANC TOOK A NOSE DIVE - WHAT HAPPENED* THIS TIE IS TOO HEAVY-PICK ME UP AND TAKE IT OFF// YOUR WANT PHONE f teo (&=== ; ,C«pf.15-IÎ, King Ftafurts Syndicat,, Inc , World LÉLLLCCLmi » 8.SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD MONDAY, JULY 5, 1943.BOISSONNEAULT CONTINUE TO HEAD LOOP Takes Fifth Game As GOOD RACE CARD East Ward Reports Win Boissorneault'g Chimney Sweeps took their fifth straight game of the season yesterday afternoon when ! they defeated the Notre Dame squad j 4-1 in their second encounter of the season.In the other end of the ! double-header played, the East Ward team came thtough for the first time this season, defeating the Mount Pleasant Club 8-7.After their fifth in a row the Boissonneau't players now feel quite confident that they will be able to go through the remainder of the sea *- BASEBALL FEATURES LOCAL' ARMY FESTIVAL Three Base HTf ¦ /***\u2022>\u2022 YESTEKDAVS GAMES INTEK.N ATION AE L E A G U E Jersey City 4, Newark 2.Jersey City 11, Newark 7.Montreal at Rochester, double- ! header, postponed.\t.\t.keen interest, especially due to the Halt,more at Syracuse, doublehead-\tavérai of the horses were er, postponed.\tI.\t.\t.Commanding more than usual interest in the inaugural meet of the, present season, three fast trotting! events were run off on Saturday af-: temoon at the Exhibition Grounds, as a feature of the military festival.! Under the direction of Norrey! Price, the various starters provided son without much worry as to the | Toronto at Buffalo, doubleheader, just bun^ r «\u2018do n .u the outcome, and vesterday's game was i postponed, much more assuring than any of\tAMERICAN LEAGUE ?he others.In the game between the East Ward and the Mount Pleasant Club the tide turned just as was expected and the East Ward team who have been doing a good job of holding dov i the cellar position have started their upwards climb and there is more reason than one to believe that they will line up very near the top by the time the play-offs wear around.Notre Dame scored the first point in yesterday\u2019s game when one run was knocked in in the first inning and no further scoring was done until the third when Boissonneault took their first two runs to move into the lead 2-1.The other two Boissonneault points came in the fifth and the seventh.[n the other game the East Ward accounted for a point in the first but dirt not score again until the ninth when they brought in all their other runs to take the game by the narrow margin of one point.In the first four innings of the game it looked ns if the Mount Pleasant Club really had the game in the hag because their twi run* in the second, three in the third and one in the fourth made the chances of the East Ward club look very slim and the three hundred people who attended the game felt that the.jinx team would still hold down the lower berth, but a series of errors on the part of the Mount Pleasant Club in the Inst few minutes of the game gave the bottle collectors an opening and they were by m means slow at taking advantage.The following is the summary of the two games played at the Park Avenue Stadium yesterday after noon.BUsonneault Caron, If .Morissettc, 2h IHonnt, 3b .Longpre of .Lapointe, ib .Rouillant, ss .Kourassa, e .Blais, rf .Dupuis, p .AB R H PO 0 0 Î 4 13 1 6 1 0 New York 1, Detroit 0.Detroit ti, New York 0.Chicago 5, Philadelphia 2.(Chicago 5, Philadelphia 1.St, Louis 4, Washington 2.St.Louis 10, Washington 3.Boston at Cleveland, doublchcad-<>r, postponed, NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia 2, Chicago 1.Chicago 5, Philadelphia 2.Boston 3, Pittsburgh 1.Boston 13, Pittsburgh 0.St.lamis 2, Brooklyn 0.St.Louis 7, Brooklyn 2.New York 6, Cincinnati 5.Cincinnati 6, New York 2.SATURDAY\u2019S GAMES INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Montreal 5, Syracuse 2.Baltimore 5, Toronto 1.Toronto 7, Baltimore (i.Rochester 2, Jersey City 1.Buffalo 0, Newark 0, AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit 6, New York 5.Detroit 10, New York !).Boston 12, Cleveland 4.Washington (i, St.Louis 4.Chicago 6, Philadelphia 4.Philadelphia at, Chicago, second gam ', postponed.NATIONAL LEAGUE ,\\ nv York 7, Cincinnati 3.New York 7, Cincinnati 1.St, Louis 5, Brooklyn 3.Pittsburgh 10, Boston 1.Chicago 0, Philadelphia 1.1 1 i\\ ummer track season.Two heats were staged in each event, with the following result Colt Race King Sherbrooke (C.E.Coombs) .Kid Mnrtinville (Beaudoin) .2 Eva McElwyn (Perrault) .3 Time: 2.30 1-2, 2.2fi 1-4.2.26 Pace and Trot Groat Britain (C.E.Coombs) .3 Some Day (G.Madore).4 Madeleine Carroll (E- Vaillancourt) .5 Lieut.Ray (Dr.R.Veil- leux) .2 Manchester Bell (C.Chute) .1 Time: 2.It; 1-4, 2.10 1-4.Eree-for-All ITarry G.(Colin Campbell) .2 Virginia Lassister (A.Tou- tant) .2 Wild Cat Vola (S.Madore) Time: 2.12 1-4, 2.14.Officiating in the judges\u2019 stand were the well known race officials.O.M.J.Ingalls, starter, and PL E.Spafford and Dr.Romeo Veilleux, timers.1 1 OUTSIDERS ARE BET FAVORITES ?L .fl r ELEVEN AFTER j Holiday Games Apparently HARNESS PURSE Dashed Brooklyn Prospects Cleveland, July 5.\u2014(TP)\u2014Eleven crack three-year-old trotters, including Hambletonian favorite Volo Song, compete today in the $9,000 American Stake, feature event on North Randall\u2019s Grand Circuit track By J'UDSOX BAILEY i Associated Press Sport Writer In baseball there is an old say-1 ing that the club which leads the j league on the Fourth of July will splitting a doubleheader at Detroit while the second-place Washington Senators were getting pushed around twice at St.Louis.In the Detroit show Ernie Bonham, the big Yankee ace, pitched mu « tri * î w \u2022 , p\twin the pennant, but m the Nation-1 four.h5t ba!^for a j.q £hutout ln , Tflh\\*eldu mcludes\tever> League there is a new saymg- the first a!r,e but Frank (Stubbv) topflight\tthree-year-old trotter ex-1 that\tthe club which led the league\t0vermir the Tigers<.r(>okie star cept\tAustin\tHanover.\ton the Fourth of July already has\treta!iated with a five.hit 6.0 white.won the pennant.\t| washing in the nightcap.Lt.^ Louis Cardinals battered j Washington was beaten 4-2 and Brooklyn Dodgers twice yesterday 16,3 by the Browns, whose recent to complete a sweep of their three-!Spurt, has brought them eighteen game series in Ebbets bield and to- | victories in 27 games although they cay were on top by four ful games have moved up only to seventh \u2022p TKur Lie Cardinals, even'p]ace jn ^be standings.Chet Laabü with\tJohnny Beazley, Terry Moore\thit two of the five home runs the and\tEnos (Country) slaughter m\ttwo games produced.tho iinmin wore Q 1 _9 o-emoe Trotters expected to view with Volo Song, last year\u2019s two-year-old trotting champion, are Worthy Boy, Hester Hanover, Good On Gray, Dean Sheppard, the Nutcracker, Nedwin Darnley, Milt Hanover, Phonograph and Chucklin.Post time will be 2:30 p.m.(East-day Daylight Time) set following a decision late yesterday by track of- the lineup, w-ere 9 1-2 games back! Chicago White Sox swept tt.vo abandoned for the remainder of the sensationally and spoiled the 01-nr»i,r rvi o ri o Tufano's Market Wise hailed as possible winners of today's ninth run-\\Y HERE THEY PLAY TOMORROW Ining of the $50,000 'added Mas: a-INTERNAITONAL LEAGUE ichusctts Handikap- richest stake of Montreal at Toronto, doublehead-, phe New England turf season er.\tmany racing fans are set to go to Rochester at, Buffalo, doublchead- Suffolk Downs and bet against the PI-\tfavorites.Newark at Jersey City, double-, To(]ay,a raMi as in the paM> may 0! \"n '|!;\tiQ\t111, Mum out to be n field day for the h But more at, ovracuse, double-,, , .\t,\t,, ,\t, U , j\t-\t1 ongshot punters.Patrons remember Boston, July 5.\u2014(TP)- The Green-j July Fourths while the lowly Jersey of tree Stable's Shut Out and Lou ' Giants went slightly insane and bat-L a Totals\t\t Notre Dame\tAB Blanchette, ss\t.5 Dion, 2b\t.4 Charland.lb .\t,, Asselin, If .\t Dube rf .,\t.4 Sirois, of .\t.4 Farrell, c .\t.4 Boaudette, n\t.4 Phillippoon.,vb\t9 Totals\t\t Batteries: Dunuis\t Bcaudette and\tram Score by innings\t Boissonneault\t902 0 Notre Dame .\t100 0 East AY\u2019aid\tAR Chabot.If .\t Marquis, 2b .\t.4 Dube, rf .\t.4 ¦I.D.Walsh, <\t.5 Frechette, ss .\t-.5 Croteau, of ,.\t«> Lefebvre, 3h .\t.t Adams, lb .\t J.H.Walsh p\t<> ., »> Totals\t\t«7.7 Mt.Pleasant\tAR Kmord.ib\t.5 Trottier, 2b\t.* r> Dion, ss\t\u2022 ft Dussault, cf .\t.4 O'Connor, 8b .\t.4 Gauthier, rf .\t.4 Guav.If\t.4 Jutras.c .\t.4 Fountain, p .\t.4 Perusse, p\t.0 Totals \t\t 4 8 A MERIC \\N LEAGUE Washington at Detroit, double-heude r.Philadelphia at Cleveland, double-heador.New York at St- Louis, double-header.that only two favorites ever won tihe famous handicap by sending Ralph McCabe, younc PO A E 6\t0\t3 1 in 0 0 1 1 0 1 dollar per dollar.Shut Out and Market Wise go to the post at 6:30 this afternoon Boston at Chicago, douhleheader, equally weighted at 126 pounds and N A 1TONAL LE YGUE\tj heading a field of ten.It is expected Pittsburgh at New York, double- the holiday throng will surpass 40,-header.\t()00 and send more than $1,000,000 Cincinnati at Boston, doublehend- througli the mutuel machines.; Other in the field are Attention.Don Bingo, Abbe Pierre, Firebroom, Kansas, and A.B.Plock\u2019s Woodford Lard, Montreal Royals, one of the six teams that spent an idle holiday because tho weatherman was not cooperative.Not only did the Little Giants defeat the Boars but they combined i pitcher last year with Wilkes-Barre, good pitching with lusty hitting for and Sid Goldstein, also a hurler, to have the twin triumphs, 4-2 and 11-7.I Albany of the Eastern League.-Sea- In the first game, ken Trinkle Le: gue activities Saturday saw biscuit in 1937 and W'hirlaway last I had a one-hitter up to the seventh Montreal Umt Syracuse 5-2 and To-j year\u2014and that both paid oil' at one when the Bears scored both their ronto and Baltimore split a double- tallies on singles by Ed Levy and ! header, Baltimore taking the first Don Savage plus a triple by Larry name 5-1 and Toronto winning the Rosenthal after two were out.afterpiece 7-6.Newark dropped a The nightcap was entirely differ-, 6-0 decision to Buffalo while Ro-ent.Bill Vo is elle started for Gabby rhester squeezed by Jersey City 2-1.i Cubs\u2014Johnson held Chicago\tto five\tI 5,ec°nd S^e\tthe Cards simply made j hits in winning first game and Lee\t|\tthTe Dodgers, winning j pitched seven-hit rebuttal to win \"\u2019j-h Man Lamer punching six-By The Associated Press Hartnett\u2019s crew and in the fourth ' second game.\t! d ar:d *1's teammates getting Six clubs\tin\tthe\tInternational\ti he\twas\tout\tin\tfront\tby\t9-0\tbefore\tDon Gutteridge and Chet\tLaabs,\tj* L menu.mg\thome runs by Walk- League spent, s-ine\tas\twell\tas\tsoggy\t| the Bears\tproduced\ta\tfour-run\trally\tBrowns\u2014Guttjridge made\tthree\t| £r Cupper,\tWhitey Kurowski and their own that sent him to the hiUs in first game and Laabs hit home Danny Litwhiler.nowers,\tin each contest as St.Louis swept tcred out a pair of victories over: Newark kept right on rolling in ! cieubleheader from Senators, the second-place Newark Bears.j the fifth and actually had the win-] Mel Ott, Giants and Ed Heusser The two defeats pulled the Beau ning run at but with one out in the Reds\u2014Ott hit third home run in- to within half a game of third-place lx.I: before the veteran Bill Har-j three days to take major league lead -\tu a DMC'rrtM\t«.«\u201e\tu\u201e\u201e,\u201e ¦ ' hut the door.\t, with eleven as Giants won first game\tBARNSTON\tSmM Mg ike beautiful hymn Toronto Maple Leafs,! and Heusser pitched seven-hit ball\t-\u2014\tI \u2018 *L f!ill the leai\u2019.'üe loaders, were idle : to win nightcap,\t| Mr.George Hadlock, of Lennox- ^r* ari^ Mrs.Howard Mayhew, they broke into the news columns\t- j ville, was a guest at the home of!0/ \u2022rer^» Ont., were guests of _the ADDERLEY\tMr.and Mrs.Levi Cleveland.He j lies were beaten in the second contest 5-2 as Bill Lee held them to seven hits, two of which were homers by Buster Adams and Schoolboy Rowe.Saturday in the National League New York took both ends of a doub-leheader from Cincinnati, 7-3 and 2-l, while St.Louis trimmed Brooklyn 5-3 and Pittsburg-h smothered Boston, 10-1.Chicago dropped Philadelphia 6-1, In the American League that day New York dropped two one-run decisions to Detroit in a doubleheari-er, losing by 6-5 and 10-9 counts.Chicago beat Philadelphia 6-4, Washington took St.Louis by the humbled New York Yankees managed to hold a one-game advantage at the;same count and Boston top of the American League by ; Cleveland 12-4.sister, Mrs.Albert Par- 24 10 6 Bournssa ; R TI E k\u2014 l 8\t2 , Chicago at Brooklyn, doublehcnd-!,v- ] St.Louis at Philadelphia, doubde-1 header.INTERNMTONAL LEAGUE STANDING H 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 8 1 10 J DO 10 \\\tK 0\tft n\t1 0\t0 1\t0 0\t1 0\t0 t\t0 t\t6 \tWon\tl.ost\tP.C.Toronto , ,\t\t46\t09\t.590 Newark .\t.'M)\t84\t.53 1 Montreal\t.k'N\t34\t.528 Baltimore .\t,«\u2022* 35\t32\t.522 Rochester .\t\t81\t56\t.486 Syracuse .\t\t 33\t56\t.478 Buffalo .\t\t rA'2\t5S\t.457 Jersey Citv\t\t30\t46\t.100 AMERICAN\tI.M WD M\tSTANDINti\t \tWon\tI ,ost\tP.C N 0 w A' 0 rk .\t35\tOf\t.517 AY ashington\t\t36\t52\t,529 Detroit .\t\t31\t.608 Chicago ,\t.t f\t31\t.608 ¦ Boston .\t.t f.v 53\t33\t.500 |.Cleveland .\t*'\u20185\t33\t.492 St.Louis .\t.\t.51\t5\t.492 I\u2019hiladclphia\t\t30\t40\t.129 N ATION \\l\tl.EAGl E\tS , ANDING\t \tWon\tLost\tP (' I St.1 .ouis .\t\t 12\t24\t.6 16 Brooklyn\t\t 42\t81\t5 7 5 Pittsburgh .\t, , .! ,.>\t81\t,580 Cincinnati .\t33\t84\t.198 Philadelphia\t.» .52\t: ' ; 1\t.478 ; Boston .\t30\t55\t.162 Chi ago .\t.30\t30\t.426 Now York .1\t\t\t\t\t\t27\t42\t.391 M MGR LEAGUE LE VDERS By The Associated Press National Batting: Dahlgreu, Philadelphia.Runs: Vaughan, Brooklyn, 5,8, Runs batted in: Herman, Brooklyn, 49.Hits: Vaughan, Brooklyn, 88.Double- : Herman, Brooklyn, 22.Triples: Musial, Cardinals.10.Home runs: Ott, New York, 11.Stolen bases: Vaughan.Brooklyn.8.Pitching:\tSewell, Pittsburgh, 1 1 2.American Batting: Curtright, Chicago, .343.Runs: Vernon, Washington, 43.Runs batted in: Etten, New York, and Stephens.St.Louis.45.Hits: Wakefield, Detroit, 89.Doubles: Kellner, Cleveland, 19.Triples: 1.indell.New York, York, Detroit, and Johnson, Washington, 5.Home runs: Keller, New York, 10.Stolen bases; Case, Washington, 11 :\u20198 R -S IN 11ARNESS Score by innings East Ward .100 000 007 Mt.Pleasant \u2022 231 010 000\t.\t, Batteries: J.H.Walsh and J.D.! Walsh; P.Fountain, Pcrusse and1 Jutras.TRUSSES Fitted and adjusted.Satisfaction guaranteed.Gaudet Pharmacy 29 King St.W.Tel.3868 Near Bus Terminal Get faster, smoother shaves with Pal Leather-Stropped Blades and save ISii on every pack you buy.k-'-VNY., Pitching: 7-0.Candini, Washington, BEEBE News Items From Ayer\u2019s 1 Mrs.Clifford Stewart and son, i Bi'ly.and Master William Porter, ei'u a day visiting her aunt, Mrs.i David Currie and family.Guests of Mi.and Mrs.Roy Walker and family, were Mr.and Mrs.Harold Wright, Mr.Kenneth Matthews, of Thetford Mines, Mr.William Giggs, of North Hatley, and Messrs.Prescott Walker, Charles I , Diapeau, Gs.ald Currie and George I Currie, Mrs.John Currie and Mr.1 Elmer Bai'ey, o) Kinnear\u2019s Mills.I Miss Christena Bullard has return.I er, home after assisting Mrs.Wilfred - -rv g'eon.Mrs.A.Bryan, who spent three Mr, and Mrs.D.X.Vaughan, Mr.Mi.Chaînes Drapeau is assisting weeks here with Mrs.T.D.Hunter, ! E.A.Johns:on and Mrs.R.P.Staf- Messrs.Edward and Stephen Little has returned to Compton to tihe j ford, of Coaticook, went to Way\u2019s will haying.home of her son-in-law and da ugh-: Mills, where they assisted with the 1 Messrs.Andrew and Robert Bul- music at the anniversary service of' lard spent a day with their parents, the United Church.Following the Mr.and Mrs.William Bullard, and service the choir was delightfully | family.entertained by Mr.and Mrs.W.B.Messrs.Roy Walker, David Cur-Holmes.\t; rie and son, Gerald Currie motored Mr.and Mrs.Norman Somerville !to LYster an 1 other Points\u2019 and Mrs.A.B.Somerville, of the Bissell Road, Fitch Bay, wore guests at the home of Mrs.Norman Somer-jville's parents, Mr.and Mrs.Homer Dustin.Mr.and Mrs.Grover Dustin I was accompanied by Mrs.Leslie \u201c\"s, and Mr.Parson*.I Whiting and Mrs.Rawlings, who ! Miss Donna Parsons is spending a ; were also guests at the same home.! few weeks in Coaticook, where she I During the service at the Baptist has temporary employment at the Church, the pastor, Rev.Lome1 Roj-al Bank.Lone Star !s Right ter, Mr.and Mrs.Fred Ball.Dr.A.and Mrs.Voisavd and family and Judge Walsh, of Montreal, have arrived at their cottage here, at Round Bay, for the summer months.Air.and Mrs.A.Everett Bayley, of Sherbrooke, were guests at the home of his parents, Air.and Airs.J.E.Bailey.Mr.and Airs, H.H.Gifford and Air.and Mrs.Reginald Currie :¦ pent a day visiting Air.and Mrs.William Bailey.Air.and AUs Charles Little, Airs.William Little and Airs.Ibrey Batley party, of Sherbrooke, are holidaying j and family, of Magog, were also spent a day in Plessisville.' guests at the same home.\ti M\u2018- and Mrs.Edward Little and ,,\t,,\t.\t,\t\u201e son.Stepnen, spent an evening at Mr.Ernest Mosher, of Beau\t^ in their cottage, at Elmwood Parke Lake Massawippi.Alias Patricia Oliver, of Cole-brooke, N IL, is spending a part of her holidays with her grandparents, Mr.and Airs.AV.L.Oliver.Mr.and Mrs.George Chamberlain and son, Donald, of Riehmond, spent a week-end at their cottage, at \"Sunset Point.\u201d Pie, Gerald Mosher, of Debert, harnois, spent a week-end here with his father, Mr.Percy .Mosher, Mr.K.D.Cooper was in Alomreal to consult Dr.Palmer.Mrs.U.A.Wyman and Aliss Clara \\\\ ynvan, of Fitch Bay, spent a weekend at the home of Mr.and Airs.Joseph B.Wallace.X.S., spent a short leave with his Mr.S.A.Gust in and Miss Lena father, Mr.Percy L.Mosher.Aliss Gustin.who spent a few weeks at Vivian Mosher, of Lower Ireland, Lake Edge, the home of Air.and also visited her father.\t, Mrs.F.J.Brown, left for Fitch Bay, Airs.J, A.Doyer, of Sherbrooke, I where they will visit relatives for a is at her cottage, at Round Ray, : while.for the season.\t! Capt, J.R.K., Taylor, of AYash- Mr.and Mrs.Harry Hall, ofUngton, D.C., spent a few days at Asbestos, have returned heme, after: Lake Massawippi.spending a week here with her par- : The friends here of Mrs.Irving etits, Mr.and Mrs.J.E.Lavers.: Moulton, of Sherbrooke, a former Mr.and Mrs.F.A.Johnston ac- ! resident here, will be sorry to hear j eompanied the Rev.R.P.Stafford.! that she has been very ill but wid Stafford and Aliss Dorothy ! be pleased to knew that she is now Alias Ann Ewan, of AA\u2019aterbury, AT, visited her grandmother.Airs.Jessie Ewan, and other relatives.Mr.and Airs.Carson and son.of! Airs.\t.Montreal, are guests of Mrs.Car-j Stafford, of Coaticook, to Lachute, \u2022 improving, and all hope that she son's parents, Mr.and Mrs.Arthur | where they attended the funeral of may soon be restored to her usual Lepanna.\ta relative.Air.David Stalker.;good health.^ Aliss\tFlorence\tDalpe.\twho has,\tMrs.Harold AA\u2019aite.accompanied!\tThe be-autiful flowers, wmch have been teaching in Rock Forest, and !\tby Mrs.F.M.\tWyman, Airs.R.G.\tbeen\tplaced\ton\tthe\ta,tar\tat\tSt.! Aliss Frances Lepenna, of the East !\tAÎeHarg, Mrs.\tE.R- Rousseau and\t]George s\tChurch\tduring\tJune\twere ; Angus High School, have returned1 the Misses Alarie Emo and Ruth in loving memory of Airs, C.L.; to their respective homes.\t, Dyson were visitors in Sherbrooke.Brown.Miss\tYolande\tDalpe,\tnurse-in-\tFlt.-Sgt, Harold M.AVyman, of training at the Sherbrooke Hospital.1 St.Hubert, spent a week-end with i visited her parents, Air.and Mrs.| his parents.Mr.and Mrs.Fred M.Edward Dalpe.\t! AVyman.i Mr.and Airs.Gordon Baehelder ! Mr.and Afrs.H.S.Beane and ! were in Sherbrooke for a week to .\tdaughter, Aliss\tBarbara Beane, of be near their son, Allyn, who is\tBeebe, Capt.J.\tS.AlcHarg, of Alent- i critically ill in the hospital there,\treal, and Airs.\tAlcHarg and daugh- ! following a mastoid operation.Iter, Ttvnnie.of Sherbrooke, Aliss Miss Josephine AA'ells, of Beau-1 Jimmie MacDonald, of Seotstown.harnois.spent a week-end with her and Mr.and Airs.AA .R.Sargeam Mrs.C.Sparkes.uncle and aunt, Mr.ami Mrs.Frank and Aliss Amy Davidson, of AVay\u2019s Mrs.Catherine Haselton.the Rothnev homes, in Kinnear\u2019s Mills.Aliss Betty Bullard is at home having spent five months with Mrs.P.Cook Mrs.AA'ili\u2019.am Bullard and daughter, Myriila, nas gone to Millfield to visit relatives for a few days, Miss Frances AA'alker spent a week-end in Thetford Mines.Mr.Roy AA'alker spent a day at the same place visiting relatives.Air and Mr- Joseph AA'right spent a day visriiw at the home of Air.and Airs.Carol Crawford and family.Mr.AYilliam Aiarshall was a supper guest.Air.Robert Kean called and j spent a few hours at the same home.! Alessrs.William Giggs, Gerald j Currie, George Currie and Airs.John , Currie spent an evening visiting Mr.| and Mrs.Joseph Wright.Mr.and | A'rs Reginald Currie called at the same home.MINTON Buy a MUOMSON^ÇPODUCT OF >N,0M'Z2 1ÎA\" FlPST -puLL.^haYcpn 1 f HETisDRDCAACSrA.'-., (NY2 WITHII3 AI.AA'yman and Mrs.R.G.Mc-Hai-g.Miss Jean Ferguson has returned to Three Rivers and Alias Beryl Gibb to Abbotsford, after teaching in the Intermediate School.Air.Carroll Cooper is spending a week-end with Mr.S.Brown at his home in Alansonviile.AC.2 Malcolm Elliott, of Trenton, Airs.Robert Carr, in Compte Ont., spent a few days with Mrs.returned home.Davis spent Mills, were visitors of Air.and Airs, week with her daughter, Air-, Ce Air.and Mrs.Charles Daintrey and Aliss Catherine Daintrey attended the marriage of Miss Alary! , Hurley and Air.Joseph Ashe, which Miss AI.L.Kezar went to Mont- ;ook place in the United Church, in real to attend a meeting^ 0: the - East Clifton, and the reception Executive of the AA om.cn s Insti- which followed the ceremony at the! DTes.\tj home of Mr.and Airs, Volney Hur-j 1 ley, in Sawyervilie, Mr.^ and Mrs.William Banfill, their three sons and their daughter, i of Richmond, were guests of Air.and Mrs.Howard Banfill.Mr.and Airs.Alfred Ryan and ; their son, Robert, visited Air, and Airs.Curtis Brazel, in Lennoxville.I Air.and Airs.C.S.Daintrey and laughter were in Ayer\u2019s Cliff to attend a meeting addressed by Mr.| FULFORD Alias Elliott and Aliss Hamilton Montreal, are visiting Air.and Clarkson, and Air.Clarkson, in Sut-Junotion.Air.and Airs.Oscar Mr.and Airs.John Campbell, of Davis spent a day at the same home.> Andrew Johnson, of Thetford Mi Magog, were visitors of her father, i Air.and Airs.D.E.Alooney spent Mr.Percy L.Aïosher.\ta day in North Hatley attending a Mrs.George Hunter, who spent convention, two weeks at the home of Mr.and Air, and Mrs.Dalton Brown, of has Duboyce\u2019s Corner, spent ar.evening at the home of Air.and Airs.John :es, Ray Atueilev caught 164 games for I Sacramento last season, 102 in row, I He had be m behind bat in 34 of realized.C'ncinnati\u2019s 36 games when put out Air.and Airs.Clair Libby have bv bruised hand.\tmoved to Star,stead.Elliott and his parents, Air.and ! Mr.and Mrs.George Leach, of Boekus.Airs.B.R.Elliott.\tSherbrooke, are spending a holiday Airs.Catharine Davis and Air and Tho auction sponsored in aid of at the L.E.Alien cottage, Bacon's Mrs.Oscar Davis called on Air.and the Red Cress quilt fund was a Bay.\tAirs.Cedric Hastings, in Iron Hill, decided success, over $150 being; Mr.and Airs.Guyie Clough and Cpl.Ray Hastings and Airs, very in the mt reunty.Boys and gi: rood belonging ir.d X joined attending a pic ts of education in this Is of this neighbor-to Grades VIII.IX their classmates in ',:c on the lakeshort * PIUS OR TAXES daughters.Betty.Ruby.Elaine and Hastings, of Lachine, called or, Mrs Rita, of Magog, were guests at the Catharine Davis and Air.and Mrs.home of Mr.and Mrs.L L, Clough.Dscar Davis,\tiAt.B to mark the close of school.The pupils from this section who have already received their reports are | to be congratulated on making a j creditable showing.Mr.and Mrs.Howard Banfill and amily were visitors of Air.and Mrs.Corev.at Kins-soroft.Y CANADA'S^ ÆASTÆSr SELLING CIGARETTE TOBACCO i "]
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