Sherbrooke daily record, 4 novembre 1937, jeudi 4 novembre 1937
[" rbrnokf iatlg THE WEATHER Light showers or snowflurries.TEMPERATURES Yesterday: Maximum, 34; minimum, 29.Same day last year: I Max.60; min.48.Established 1897.SHERBROOKE.CANADA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4.1937.Forty-First Year.BRUSSELS NAMES PEACE COMMITTEE To Offer Assistance To Japan And China In Effecting Peace Brussels Conference Committee, in Effect, Has a Double Mandate, to Offer Its Good Offices for Restoration of Peace and to Reply to Japan\u2019s Refusal to Attend Parley Called Under Provisions of Nine-Power Treaty-\u2014Reliable Indications Were that Britain, United States and Belgium Would Be on Committee.Hon.J.S.Bourque Welcomes Hon.N.McL.Rogers Brussels, November 4.\u2014The Brussels Conference of nineteen nations decided today to empower a sub-committee to offer its aid to Japan and China in effecting peace between the two nations, and reliable indications were that Great Britain, the United States and Belgium would be on the committee.Italy and France also probably would be represented.The committee, in effect, has a double mandate\u2014to offer its good offices for the restoration of peace, and to reply to Japan's refusal of an invitation to attend the Conference here, called under provisions of the Nine-Power Treaty which pledges respect for the territorial integrity of China.The committee was to be named at a Conference session opening tonight, with the Conference adjourning until then to permit delegates to be received by King Leopold.The mandate given to the committee stipulates that, in extending its offer of aid to Japan and China in seeking peace, it must make clear that this aid is offered, if wanted\u2014it will not be imposed.The sub-committee will study ^_____________________________________ both Japan\u2019s communication of refusal to the Conference invitation and an additional statement issued in Tokyo, defining Japan\u2019s position.Several delegates said they received the impression that Japan had not closed the door to negotiation or to mediation efforts through third parties, provided they be countries possessing real interests in the Far East.?J« Vj* \u2022»;* .J.*J* *J»\t«y.\t«**\t»*» ¦Î* *\tREPORTED IBN SAUD PLAINS *\tTO PROCLAIM HIMSELF *\tKING OF ALL ARABS y'-\t¦'.*3, HON.MR.BOURQUE Pe.ris, Nov.4.\u2014 The Rome 4* correspondent of the Rightist * newspaper Le Figaro today * reported that King Ibn Saud of *\u2019* Saudi Arabia was planning to proclaim himself monarch of * all the Arabs, with his rule 4* extending from Baghdad, Iraq, 4» to Morocco.\t4* If dispatches widely display- 4* ed in the Italian press are true, 4* the correspondent said, Arabia 4-already is in open revolt 4* against Great Britain, in prep- 4» aration for a general Islamic 4* movement against the \u201cBritish 4* oppressors.\u2019\u2019\t4* ?4* 4* 4> 4* 4* 4* 4* ?!\u2022 4* ?4- 4* 4- 41 4- 4* 4* KIWANIS IN CONVENTION Chicago, Nov.4.\u2014Col.Robert Moore, of elect of the times Kiwanis (Special to The Record) Col.the Hon.J.S.Bourque, Provincial Minister of Public Works and Sherbrooke's able representative at Quebec, was delegated by the Prime Minister of the Province, the Hon.Maurice Duplessis, to officially welcome Hon.Norman McLeod Rogers, Federal Minister of Labor, upon his arrival in the Ancient Capital this morning.The Hon.Mr.Rogers flew from Ottawa, arriving in Quebec City during the course of the morning.The Federal Minister was received and welcomed at the provincial Parliament buildings by the Hon.Mr.Bourque and later went into conference with the Prime Minister and members of the Cabinet.The purpose of the visit is to discuss with the Quebec authorities the proposed transfer of the cost of relief to the Public Works Department.It is gratifying to the people of Sherbrooke County to know that * their representative at Quebec is # | held in such high regard by the Thousands Of Fresh And Well-Equipped Chinese Troops Guard Shanghai AicEd by Additional Reinforcements, Premier Chiang Kai-Shek\u2019s Youthful Legions Are Putting Up a Furious Battle Against Japanese Veterans\u2014Chinese Positions in Rear Areas of Shanghai Termed \u201cFormidable.\u201d HON.MR.ROGERS I.Prime Minister and his associates.Lindsay, Ont., governor- L 0n ™ occasions the Hon.Mr.Ontario-Quebec-Mari-: Bourque has been selected by the district Dr.E.G.; Prime, M;mst«'.t0.Perform various Bricker, Winnipeg, governor-elect ! lmP°,rtant Pub^c dutles ^ Pre; for the Western Canada district, and;\tHe.IS one of th?™st ! activa and popular representatives other high officers of Kiwanis Inter' national convened here today for the , organization\u2019s annual council meet-i ing and training school.NO SUGGESTION OF COERCIVE MEASURES French Freighter Attacked By Two Spanish Insurgent Planes \u201cLa Corse\u201d Escaped Undamaged When Several Bombs Were Dropped in Attack in Mediterranean\u2014French Cruiser Escorted Freighter to Marseille.CORN LOANS TO BE FINANCED BY US.GOVERNMENT at Quebec and is ably fulfilling the onerous and important duties to which he has been assigned.GERMANY AGAIN ASKS RETURN OF COLONIES EXECUTIONER\u2019S AXE IS BUSY IN BERLIN s hanghai, Borrowers Will Be Limited to.Bej\u2019lni Newspaper Points Out Farmers Who Complied\tas a Member of with 1937 Soil Conservation Programme.Berlin, Nov.4.\u2014The executioner\u2019s axe fell three times today,-decapitating three Germans\u2014Peter Sauscn, twenty-nine; Adolf Rembte, thirty-five, and Robert Stamm, thirty-seven \u2014sentenced to death by the People\u2019s Court for alleged espionage and high treason.S-ausen allegedly joined the French Foreign Legion in 1936 and later was caught, spying in Germany.Stamm was found guilty of high treason by attempting to form an illegal Communist organization.Rembte was accused of treasonable activity.the League of Nations, May Raise Question at Geneva.,,\tBerlin, Nov.4.\u2014Germany's de- Washington, Nov 4.-The Gov-1 d f 1.eturn of her '1.e.war ernment came to the aid today of I 1q ; were reitel.ated t0^ay by United States corn growers disturb-j h n\tEssen NationaiiMi- Brussels, Nov.4.\u2014 The Brussels Conference on the Far East, which today got down to work after yesterday\u2019s opening, was called by Belgium at the suggestion of the powers under the terms of the nine-power treaty, signed at Washington in 1922, which guaranteed the sover-( ignty, independence and territorial integrity of China.The treaty was signed by the British Empire (the United Kingdom, Canada, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, and India), the United States, France, Belgium, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, China and Japan.Later it was adhered to by Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Bolivia, and Mexico.In addition to the signatories, Belgium invited Germany and Russia to attend the Brussels conference.Continued on Page 2, Col.4.LAST YEAR FOR SEIGNEURS TO COLLECT RENTS Seigniorial Dues that Must be Paid Next Thursday a Relic of Feudal Days in New France.Barcelona, Nov.4.\u2014Two Spanish insurgent planes attacked the French freighter La Corse in the Mediterranean off this port today.Several bombs were dropped near the ship but it escaped undamaged.In response to appeals for assistance, the French cruiser Suffren sped to the side of the freighter and escorted it on its route to Marseille.The attack occurred several miles off Mataro, which is fifteen miles northeast of this Catalan capital.The La Corse is a 643-ton freighter plying between Marseille and French North African ports, Montreal, Nov.4.\u2014A relic of the feudal days, when the \"Habitant\u201d of New France paid his \u201crentes\u201d in pigs and pullets\u2014that is, if he was short of cash, and frequently he was.history records\u2014seigniogfal rents come due next Thursday.And, how times have changed.For history also says there was a \u201cgood time to be had by all\u201d when the \u201cseigneur\u2019s\u201d Unants gathered at the manor house to deposit their dues; the cackling of captive fowls and the clinking of wine-filled glasses lent a sound of symphony to the pleasant occasion.There always was good fellowship between the \u201chabitant\u201d and his \u201cseigneur,\u201d when they met to square their debts.Seigniories\u2014grants of land\u2014 once dotted the shores of the St.Lawrence from Montreal to Quebec, and were given by the King to favored subjects.The \u201cseigneur\u201d allowed the French-Cnnadian \u201chabitant\u201d to settle on the land and in return the tiller of the soil paid \u201crentes\u201d to his landlord for use of the property.He j aid in cash if he had enough of that, and in kind if he had not.\u201cRentes\u201d amounted in value to a few cents an \u201carpent,\u201d not much smaller than an acre, and there wove lesser dues, too, the farmer was obliged to pay.Another condition demanded service in time of war.The dues were payable, every November IHh, Michaelmas Day.And the custom, like the seigniories, have survived to this day, though in TRADE AGREEMENT NEAR London.Nov.4.\u2014The full Spanish Non-Intervention Committee was convened today to authorize Great Britain to solicit co-operation in Spain toward withdrawal of foreign troops as London carried on commercial negotiations with the insurgents.Great Britain, with her industries needing raw materials such as Spain\u2019s rich deposits of mercury, iron, copper and pyrites, was reported to have all but arrived at an agreement with insurgent Spain.The twenty-seven nation non-intervention committee was optimistic of makig a tangible move at last toward withdrawal of foreign soldiers from the civil war\u2014although there was riot complete harmony on the British plan of withdrawal.It was expected the committee would authorize an approach to both the Valencia Government and the Franco regime to solicit co-operation hi the withdrawal plan.Both London's most ardent nro-Frnnco newspaper, the Daily Mail, and the most enthusiastic pro-Valencia newspaper, the Daily Herald, said Great Britain was convinced that.Franco would win the war.The Herald su'd the Government had \u201cdecided to accord do facto recognition to General Franco\u2019s Government at the earliest possible moment\u201d because it had decided Franco \u201cis going to win.\u201d The reported British-insurgent trade agreement would involve an exchange- of \u2018\u2018agents.\u201d Technically it would not constitute formal recognition of the insurgents but would be a stride in that direction.CROWN WITNESS AT HAMILTON Mrs.Maude Roberts, Witness in Durso Assault and Wounding Case, Was Burnt About Face and Arms by Explosion.Montreal\u2014which has 140 seigniorial tenants\u2014there is not much room for cultivation.Proprietors of the seigniories, which have been handed down from father to son when not taken over by the government, always have collected the dues, based on civic valuation of the property.This may be the last year the present-day \u201cseigneurs\u201d will collect the \u201crentes.\u201d Last year, intention was.by Act of the Legislature, that a syndicate redeem seigniorial dues and permit liberation of tenants by paying capital and interest on their holdings up to November 1 1, 1936, directly to the syndicate, and dues after that dale to Ihe city.The Legislature.however, did not pass the enabling legislation then.Hamilton, Ont., Nov.4.\u2014Every detective in Hamilton police department engaged today in an effort to trace the origin of a bomb that was mailed to Mrs.Maude Roberts, crown witness in a court case here, and burned her about the face and hands when she opened the parcel.Police .said the bomb, contained in a hardwood box, would have killed the woman had she not stood clear of it when cutting the heavy twine about the box.She was a crown witness in the hearing of Philip Durso, committed for trial on a charge of assaulting and wounding.The parcel, according to post office, authorities, was delivered to her house yesterday morning but there was no one in when the messenger called.It was thrown back-in the delivery truck and returned to headquarters and not delivered until afternoon.Prior to opening the parcel, Mrs.Roberts had testified in police court she was in Durso\u2019s home when be and Sydney Lawrence, forty-five-year-old taxi driver, were arguing the night Lawrence was found dying on a street.Lawrence, brother of Sam Lawrence, who formerly represented Hamilton East in the Ontario Legislature, died in hospital.Magistrate H.A.Burbridge committed Durso, twenty, for trial after commenting: \u201cA jury would like to hear the evidence of Maude Roberts.\u201d She testified: \u201cI thought there was going to be a fight between Durso and Lawrence and I decided to get out before the law arrived.Police said as far as they knew the explosion victim had not been threatened.She was suspicious, however, of the attractively-marked package, mailed from .Toronto, and held it at arm's length in the backyard of tier home as she cut the olice said the bomb, loaded ed by low prices and arranged to finance 1937 corn loans at the rate of forty-four to fifty cents a bushel.The loans, similar to those made by the Agriculture Adjustment Administration in previous years, will be bandied by the Commodity Credit Corporation with a $75,000,000 advance from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation.Borrowers will be limited to those farmers who complied with the 1937 soil conservation programme and within specified \u201ccorn limit areas.\u201d These areas are Illinois and Iowa and parts of Indiana, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, South Dakota and Wisconsin.\u201cIt is expected that the operation of the corn loan programme in [ newspaper the corn limit areas, where corn \u2018,'iT surpluses are involved,\u201d Agriculture Secretary Wallace said, \u201cwill provide a more orderly system of marketing and prevent the glutting of corn markets early in the marketing season when corn prices usually are low.\u201d The amount of the loan will depend on the quality, or moisture content, with a top of fity cents a bushel for corn of 14% per cent, moisture and a low of forty-four cents for 20% per cent.Farm leaders had suggested a flat sixty-cent loan.The loans will bear four per cent, interest.tung, Declaring that because of \u201cthe growth of Germany\u2019s military strength and the German spirit of determination\u201d the country can no longer \u201cbe treated as a pariah from the colonial point of view.\u201d The newspaper said the Reich will find increasingly effective ways of advancing its demands.Emphasizing the importance of the support given Germany on this question by Premier Mussolini, the Nationalizeitung said that Italy, as a member of the League of Nations, may raise the colonial question at Geneva.The colonies were stolen,\u201d the said , \u201cby a dictated treaty (Versailles) to which Germany is no longer subject.They constitute property illegally held by their administrators.Germany firmly demands her African colonies because she needs them to live.\u201d Commission Is Ready To Probe Dominion-Provincial Affairs November J.-\u2014Thousands of fresh Chinese troops, well-equipped and thoroughly disciplined, poured into Chinese positions today on the Shanghai front.\u201cDuring a personal inspection, I witnessed the arrival of the new troops from the west, smart-looking and apparently utterly unafraid of Japanese bombing planes overhead,\u201d staled James A.Mills, Associated Press foreign staff correspondent.Aided by these reinforcements, Premier Chiang Kai-Shek\u2019s youthful legions fought furiously against the Japanese veterans.Ignoring the circling bombing planes and the Japanese heavy artillery, the Chinese time and again lashed out at the Japanese troops.The result was that Japanese positions along the south bank of Sooohow Creek became almost untenable.\u201cI found the Japanese had landed at only one place along Soochow Creek, where they drove a narrow wedge into the Chinese position south ci the creek.But the Japanese foothold here was so precarious it was doubtful if it could survive a Chinese counter-attack, which was due shortly,\u201d continued Mr.Mills.The Chinese positions in the rear areas are formidable.It was considered likely the Chinese could succeed in holding up the Japanese for some time.It also was apparent the Chinese intend to hold their right flank on the International Settlement * boundary.There they were completing powerful barbed-wire entanglements and sandbag barriers contiguous to positions of the British and French guard outposts near Hung» jao road.If Governments and Other Bodies Presenting Briefs Cooperate as Promised and on Schedule, Hearings Will Be Concluded by Next July 1.SHELLS FALL NEAR BRITISH OUTPOSTS LAST TRIBUTE PAID POPULAR \u2018DICK\u2019 SHEPPARD 0 ttawa, Nov.4.\u2014The Royal Commission on Dominion-Provincial relations stood ready today to [begin the end of this month its quest ifor a more equitable distribution of j revenue sources and financial j responsibilities between the provinces and the dominion.The procedure, itinerary and per-Isonal by which the Commission [hopes to study the problem ami arrive at some recommendations - acceptable\tto the governments of Crowds Throng Streets as Canada were detailed by Chairman Vicar of St.Martin\u2019s-in-1Ne^ton w-Rowe11 yester - 40 oz.*2.50 Seventeenth Annual Course, Including Work in Agriculture and Household Science, Inaugurated Yesterday at Lennoxville, The seventeenth annual Short Course, including lectures and demonstrations on agriculture and classes in Household Science, being held for three days this week in Lennoxville under the auspices of the County Agricultural Organizations, the Women\u2019s Institutes, Lennoxville Branch of the Quebec Department of Agriculture.Lennoxville Experimental Station ir co-operation with Macdonald College, got under way yesterday with an enrolment of forty-eight, twenty-five girls and twenty-three boys, which is about the same as last year\u2019s attendance.In the past, the classes were overcrowded, and it was believed ; that several of the boys and girls I who attended were doing so with | more of an idea of sport than of i the knowledge gained.Therefore, i it was decided that a fee of one ; dollar would be charged, to elimin-' ate those who might not be really j in earnest.This was done last year, and it was found that the classes were not overcrowded and better work was accomplished, so that method was adopted again this year.This course of lectures and demonstrations on agriculture is arranged to meet the needs of the younger men engaged in farming, ! who have not the time to attend a short course at the Agricultural Coilege.Likewise, in many schools, very little training is given in Household Science; therefore, the committee has arranged for a course in Household Science for the girls.It is lei: that the young people of today, who are to keep abreast of the rimes, must grasp every opportunity to equip themselves for their life-work.Farming is becoming more complex every day.Those en-gaged in agriculture must study the scientific and business principles underlying successful farming.Every farmer should grasp every opportuniiy of profiting by the experience of others.The lectures and demonstrations have been so arranged that they will be (of interest to everyone who is able\u2019 to attend, and in order to encourage the young people to take part in the courses, prizes will be offered to those doing H r the best work.Men and women who are experts in their line have been secured to lecture and demonstrate to the boys ! and girls.Last year a sewing class was held for the giris, but this year ; it was decided that a class in cook-i ing would be carried out.This class, : which is being held in Douglas Hall.; is under the direction of Miss Haze! j B.McCain, superintendent of Quebec Women\u2019s Institutes, at Macdonald College, and she is being assist-| Pd this_ year by Mrs.D.A.Finlay-i son, of Lennoxville, and Miss M.I Siddall, of the Sherbrooke High School staff.The girls were divided into six groups of four, and were i given practical advice on the preparation of breakfast, menus, their RETIRED ADMIRALS CRITICIZE UNIFORMS London, Nov.4.\u2014A couple of retired admirals have been levelling caustic criticism at naval uniforms.Admiral Sir William Goodenough would have only dashing young officers attired in full dress uniform.He would like admirals in a plainer, darker attire \u201cwhich didn\u2019t draw blatant attention to the imperfections of their physique.\u201d Admiral B.M.Chambers would do away with the full dress uniform altogether.He says it costs £50 (?247.50) and is only dragged from the moth balls when a brother officer is getting married, \u201cBut if it must exist could it not take the form of detachable embroidery to be added, on certain occasions, to the cuffs and collars of the ordinary uniform frock-coat?'' he asks.individual and collective benefit in the diet, and how to prepare them.This included fruits, cereals, breakfast dishes, hot breads, coffee.In the afternoon further advice and demonstrations were given on luncheon or supper dishe-s, plate salads, cakes, cookies and beverages.In the boys\u2019 classes, which are being held in the Town Hall, lectures and demonstrations yesterday included, \u201cEssentials in Hog-Breeding and Management,\u201d by Professor E.W.Crampton, of Macdonald College; a hog grading and judging bacon hogs, by R.K.Bennett, a hog rater, from Montreal; judging brood sows, by Mr.N.H.Beach, of the local Department of Agriculture; and an ora! examination on what the boys had been taught.Luncheon was served to sixty-seven by the Lennoxville Women\u2019s Institute, under the Ways and Means Committee, assisted by the members.FUND CANVASS PROVING SUCCESSFUL The chief bur.ness at yesterday\u2019s meeting 0f the ! arish Guild of St.George s Church held in the Parish Hall, with the first vice-president, Mrs.E, J.Tapp, presiding in the absence of the president, Mrs, W.A.Bown, was the reports of the members who are canvassing the parish for funds instead of holding the annual autumn supper.It was revealed that most satisfactory and encouraging results are being obtained and the gratitude of the Guild is extended to the parishioners for their generous contributions.A report of the rummage sale held recently by the Guild proved that this bad been most remunerative, and the committee were thanked for their efforts.Mrs.William Paige and Mrs.E.L.Atto were hostesses at afternoon tea following adjournment.MISS ETHEL TAYLOR HONORED Miss Ethel Taylor has been honored by receiving a beautiful medal from the King jn commemoration of the Coronation of Their Majesties, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth.This medal, which was accompanied by a letter from Buckingham Palace, has been received by several prominent persons who have been of noteworthy service to their community and government, and residents of Lennoxville join in extending congratulations to Miss Taylor for having been chosen to receive this honor from the K\u2019ng and Government.Labor Leader Who Provided Drama Is Dead Continued from Page 1.end such things forever.\u201d The stories that sprang up around his life and exploits are Lgend.A hard fighter and bitter opponent, with a flair for starting statements, MncLachlan was probably the most prolific source of nows in Eastern Canada from his rise to power in 1918 until his banishment from orthodox Labor ranks in Cape Breton five years later.He was born in Ecclefechan, Scotland, in the same house as Thomas Carlyle, famous British historian, sixty-nine _ years ago.He came to Nova Scotia when a young man and almost immediately began his ascendancy to power almost equal to that of a dictator.His problem was to sway his followers away from their individual hatreds and differences toward a common enemy.His pointed speech always were dramatized with liberal denunciation of some individual held up as the personification of the alleged evils of the capitalistic system.He welcomed hecklers because be was able to silence them by his lightning thrusts and parries.At one meeting in Sydney Mines at which he presided two men were fatally shot in a brawl that followed some speaker\u2019s words.When he returned from serving a penitentiary term for sedition, a crowd of 8,007 met him in Glace Bay and made his home-coming a triumphal tour.Wherever Jim MacLaehlan was, there was drama.After the disastrous defeat of the U.M.W.in 19'09, he was hunted from pillar to post.Somehow, witu a few faithful followers, he managed to keep the Union alive until its recognition nearly ten y< ars later.In the turbulent post-war years in the coal and steel industry of Cape Breton MacLachiaa ruled almost supreme.His word among the men was law\u2014but he stepped too far.The industry was hi the throes ot almost constant serious strikes.Troops twice had be»?called out and when steelworkers walked out after a dispute with their employers, MacLaehlan ordered his miners out in sympathy.John L.Lewis immediately outlawed the strike and expelled him from the Union.That ended his direct connection with the U.M.W., but until illness foiled him into retirement he continued active in the Labor movement.He ran unsuccessfully for the Dominion and Provincial houses.He edited the Labor Herald and The Miner.He was active in founding the Workers\u2019 party in Canada, later the Communist party of Canada.He went to Russia and studied conditions under the Soviet rule.Then he disagreed with other Communists on matters of policy and withdrew from the party.To FARMERS ï We Need Fat HOGS Will pay full price for Hogs, weighing from 215 to 240.But Must Be Fat NOT WEIGHT ONLY BUT FAT AND THICK.HOVEY\u2019S REPORT FEATURED REP.EKAII MEETING A splendid report by Sister Gladys Dawson, P.D.D.P., 0f the district meeting of Rebekah Lodges in District No.6, held recently in Sherbrooke, featured the regular semimonthly meeting of Myrtle Rebekah Lodge No.28, held last evening in the Lennoxville I.O.O.F.Hal], with the Noble Grand, Sister Hazel' Crosby.presiding.The Noble Grand thanked the committee responsible for the success of the last meeting, and also those members who had taken part in the degree work by this Lodge at the district meeting.A programme was receive 1 from the secretary-treasurer of the Town of Lennoxville, for the annual P.e-membrance Day celebration to be held next Sunday.The accompanying letter invited the members to be Present and parade in a body with other organizations.A communication was read from a member who has been il] in the hospital, thanking the Lodge for the card shower she had received.Under \u2018\u2018Good of the Order,\u201d two much enjoyed poems were read by sister Beatrice Everett.P.N.G.\u201cThe Go-Getter\u201d and \u201cdocker or Knocker.\u201d The members were reminded that, next meeting will be \u201cPatriotic Night,\u201d and a programme will be carried out.Offer Assistance To Japan And China In Effecting Peace Continued from Page 1.Germany declined, as did Japan, but Russia accepted.The treaty stipulated that in the event of any threat to the territorial integrity of China the signatories should meet to consult together on methods to end the hostilities.In the present case there has not been the icmotest suggestion of coercive measures, such as sanctions, against Japan.The treaty binds the powers, ir addition to respecting the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of China, to maintain the principle of equal opportunity for the commerce and industry of all nations and not to seek special rights and privileges that would impair any interests of other powers, The Washington Conference was called primarily to discuss limitation of naval armaments and its chief work was formulation of the Washington Naval Treaty.The agenda, however, included consideration of \u201cPacific and Far Eastern questions,\u201d which resulted in the nine-power pact on China.LAST TRIBUTE PAID AUGUSTUS WHITE ROSS Many Great War Veterans Attend Funeral of Cowansville Man Killed in Motor Accident at Coteau Station.Thousands Of fresh And Well-Equipped Chinese Troops Guard Shanghai General Notes Mrs.E.J.Astell left today for Bath, Me., where she will spend some time visiting her daughter.Mr.and Mrs.W.E.Monroe are leaving today for Fiorida, where they will spend the winter months.9 A.M.to 8 P.M.\tGOOD \u2014 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\t9 A.M.69c\tThis Certificate and 69c\tto 8 P.M.69c FOEVTAIV\tx-nw,of, °.ur\tindestructible $3.00 VACUUM FILLER SACKLESS rOL.NTAI.s Ph.,.-.U^le-Imc napply.You SEE the ink ! A lifetime guarantee with each pen.PLUNGER S' FILLER-ZIP\u2014ONE PULL AND IT\u2019S FULL IJ?\u2019* Pvn \u2018 2n r!' v f?* i,n\\.than any ordir\u2018ary fountain pen on the market! You can write for Three Sjenthr on One I-.dmg! No Repair Bill*! No Pressure Par! Every pen te-ted and guaranteed to unbreaka,,,* for life.Get yours Now.THIS PEN GIVEN FREE if you can tuv s.\t23c Onions red or yellow,\t\tCarrots \t 4 lbs.\t9 c \t\t 15c\t\t McIntosh Apples\tNo.1.\tTurnips \t\t 2 for\t5 c perk \t\t\tCabbage \t2 for\t9 c \u201cMy Gosh ! It\u2019s Tonight.the Rotary Fair HELVIDERE ST.ARMOURY FREE ADMISSION Roily, joint chairmen of the campaign, announced today that they: l'0 ,\t.n, .T ,,\t.\t, had received orders from the follow- I T\"nMl'PVf Pharmaci'' p*'-allee, A.A.Society, Bouffard h Langlois.$2.50 wreaths: Keeler & Cross, Olivier.Reg\u2019d., S.Sharp, Bonner & Povev, Gahrita Ltd., R.N.Ogilvie, ¦ F.W.McCrea, Du erre Store, A.C.! Skinner Ltd.J.K.Edwards, E.! ArmPnge & Co.$2.00 wreaths: Mrs.G.Konnett, H.Budning, F.B.Day, Ansell\u2019s I Drug Store, Jim\u2019s Restaurant.Le-j vesque Ltd.Mrs.F.Wyatt, C.C.\u2019 Chaddock, Boy Scouts, Lennoxville.Sherbrooke Fruit, Chez Poudrette, j May Mitchell.Wig^ett Shoe Store, Clark & Stewart, College Cleaners, Royal Rank.Lennoxville, W.S.Dresser & Co.$1.50 wreaths: Hunting\u2019s Dairv.Rev.Godbout, Catholic Women\u2019s.League.$1.00 wreaths: IT.Pierce.Pharma-Chagnon.H.H.Bourque, J.O.NIrIii *nd HnllHns Colt.: Lennoxvlll.143-W : Sherbrooke 292-J.Lee M.Watson & Co., Reg\u2019d.INSURANCE Fir*.Automobile, Liability, Etc.Sun Life building, Sherbrooke.Phone?» : Office 2951-2950.ing citizens and business Sherbrooke and district: $25 wreaths: City of Sherbrooke.! $20 wreaths: Sherbrooke Chapter, ! I.O.D.E.$10 wreaths: Victoria Ledge A.F.& A.M., Ministry of Public Works, Sherbrooke Trust Co., Dominion Textile Co., Roll Telephone Co.II.C, Wilson it: Sons, Canadian Silk Products.Greenshields Co., Nurses, Sherbrooke Hospital, Page-Sangstcr Co., Beckwith Box Toe, Q.C.R.Railway.$8.00 wreath: Woolworth\u2019s.$5.00 wreaths: B.Howard, F.J.South',rood, Unity Lodge No, S, Bishop\u2019s College C.O.T C., Empire Life, Kipg Edward Lodge No.78, Town North Halley, Consolidated School, North Hatley, J.H.Bryant, Ltd., J.S.Mitchell, Ltd., Sherbrooke News Co., BSNai Brith, New Sherbrooke Hotel, Echenberg Bros., Bishop\u2019s College School, Ascot Lodge, Beck Press, Rev.A.II.Mc- houses of | Audet' Morrisette Ltd.I Citizt as of Lennoxville Ever eat a real English dinner?Potatoes cooked with a beef roast until both are a rich brown colour?It\u2019s one of the finest flavours in the world! Don\u2019t miss it! Try it soon with a roast ordered from: IWharram Bros.MEAT MARKET LENNOXVILLE Telephone 2 \u201cWhere only the best is bought and sold.\u201d Phone 2746 FREE DELIVERY Phone 2746 KR W'T CHEESE 27c CAN '.1)1 AN STRONG CHEESE #£/K3cakes XHE SOAP Qf THE STARS Cakes 22c VELVEETA CHEESE 8 oz.nkt.16c GRUYERE CHEESE 12 Portions 35cPkt.DOMESTIC SHORTENING 20 lb.Pail 2.49 Habitant PEA SOUP McCormick's FIG BARS 2Tn19c Lbs 25c I Clark\u2019s ! SPAGHETTI «-Tins i Primrose Tomato ! KETCHUP, 26 oz.Btl.2T;J9c 17c JAP STUDENTS PROTEST THE ATTITUDE OF BRITAIN.Tokyo.Nov.4.\u2014Three hundred college students demonstrated today in front of the British embassy, performing a snake dance to express their protest against Great Britain\u2019s \u201cattitude toward Japan.\" The students presented a resolution to the British Consul declaring that Japan was waging a holy war for permanent peace in the Far East which Great Britain had hindered \u201cthrough her assistance to China.\u201d i McCONNELL\u2019S Green Gage PLUMS PASTRY 7 lb.FLOUR Bas 29e e89 Tin 15c\tPITTED DATES\t12 oz.Pkt,\t15c \tPlain or\tIodized\t 10c\tPurity SALT\t3 puts.\t14c ALTERATIONS I CORN SYRUP Bee Hive or Crown 5 lb.Tin 39' OPTOMETRISTS Specializing in that brings 54 King St.West - Optometry results.- - - \u2022 1 cl.IN PASSENGER TRAIN SCHEDULES Effective Sunday, Nov.Hth For further information apply to Agents.Quebec Central FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Jamaica Oranges, full of juice, per dozen 19c Brussels Sprouts, qt.23c Fresh Green Peas, lb.20c Sweet Potatoes, lb.5c Fresh Spinach .2 lbs.19c Iceberg Lettuce, large firm head 5c Montreal Celery, Large heat^ 96 Wellington St.North.2 for 25c PAGE FOUR SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1937.Sherbrooke Jlailw ^Rerarh Established Ninth Day of February, 1897.with which ie incorporated the Sherbrooke Gazette, established 1837, and Sherbrooke Examiner, established 1S7S.The Record is printed and published every week day by the Sherbro.oke Record Company Limited, of which Edna A.Beerworth is Secretary-Treasurer, at the office, 69 Wellington Street North, in the City of Sherbrooke, with exclusive franchise of Canadian Press, Associated Press and Reuter\u2019s European News Service.The Record is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulation, and the circulation is regularly audited and guaranteed.No Crash Imminent.The American financial correspondent of the London Times might almost be quoting Arthur Clough, when he said: \u201cIf hopes were dupes, fears may be liars.\u201d In commenting upon the recent alarm that was felt in American financial circles, and the anticipation of another debade like that of 19:29, the writer says that American sentiment is,now optinystic and does not imagine that the worst is yet to come.He says: \u201cWhen the stock market in August and September was violently deflating the extravagant hopes for autumn trade that grew out of the early summer\u2019s crop estimates, the air was filled with rumors of impending calamity.There was much wild talk about \u2018the beginning of the end,\u2019 and it was not Subscription: 75e a month, delivered at any home 1 in the city and suburbs.Post Office delivery to any place in Canada, Great Britain or the United States, #3 oni>\u2019 in Wal1 Street- Washington had its full share of \u2018viewing with alarm,\u2019 and the Administration PRESS COMMENTS per year; three months, $1; one month, 4\u20ace.copy, 3c.Singh SKEKBROOKE.THURSDAY.NOVEMBER 4, 1937.SEA GARDENS.From cleft and cranny of the granite shore The slow, receding tide has whispering run And lies content, with foam-gre-en fingers o'er The pebbly spoils that it so lately won.Now- in the caverned rock and in the deep Rock well is found the lock-tide calm and clear, And what the tide in running could not keep In crystal depth and hollow chill appear.Here are the flowers of the shadowed sea Delicate pink and mauve and palest brown, Here the slow snail, and walking stealthily, The curving starfish, and the bristling crown Of spiny urchins, and the sea-weed hair Of some sirenous mermaid, cold and fair.apparently from sheer nervousness, indulged in some Eastern Townships\u2019 Only English Daily- 5ins,'l*r,>'intpl e\u201c0T'\u201810 br.i,,8.aboul *reïiïai ot confidence.Now that the oscillations of stock prices have ceased to be violent, the fears that they aroused have revealed themselves to he even more unreasonable than the \u2018optimism\u2019 which foreran them.Excitement has died down.There is still resentment in many quarters over the Administration\u2019s hostility to big business and over its determination to manage the country's industry and agriculture in the exercise of an economic philosophy that is widely considered to be unsound, but now it is only the same resentment as before the stock market debacle.After' a week's time to think it over, the public seem to have come to the conclusion that once mose there has been only a false dawning of the day of calamity.Trade is still declining, and so are industrial operations, but what people are generally anticipating now as the next development is a resumption of the recovery movement, not a crash.\u201d A Call To Arms.One of the unnoticed by-pre ducts of the depres-sion\u2014unnoticed, except by those directly involved\u2014 has been a rise in the death rate from tuberculosis.Dr, Kendall Emerson, managing director of the National Tuberculosis Association, pointed this out! the other day, remarking that the death rate from tuberculosis in the United Slates rose from o4.o per 100,000, in 1935.to o-I.S.in 1930.The rise is small, of course, but significant; as Dr.Emerson says, it should be taken a; \"a call to arms.\u201d The country has made great stride; in its fight again-t the white plague in the last few decades.It cannot afford to see it; gains diminished even slightly.You might remember this, when the Christmas seal; go on sale next month.« WHAT WAS THE CAUSE OF THE MARKET SMASH?(Sault Ste.Marie Star) Newspapers are ever so much more interesting than they were a few years ago.In addition to covering the news pretty thoroughly, they now try to explain the significance of things.No it is that this is one reason there has been a great increase in newspaper circulation and influence.An outstanding example of the new service thus given is an editorial in The Ottawa Journal which makes a stab at explaining why the current stock slump came along.Governments have been getting a little anxious for some time that there would be trouble and have been taking measures to cushion the rebound.Like many other observers The Journal picks out the burden of debt now crushing life out of industry as the chief cause.The Journal says in part: \u201cOne answer, many must believe, was on the front page of yesterday's newspapers.It told how President Roosevelt predicted another United States deficit for the current fiscal year of\t00*0,000.It told further how Mr.Roosevelt directed his Reconstruction Finance Corporation and his Public Works Administration to make no further commitments.To stop \u201cpriming the pump.\u2019\u2019 In other words, the flood of millions out of \\\\ ashington is to stop; there must be no more piling up of a debt which has become colossal.The budget must be balanced.\"But why has Mr.Roosevelt stopped \u2018priming the pump?\u2019 It is not because the policy has succeeded.Mr.Roosevelt believed that if he primed the pump enough, prosperity in time would flow by itself.Up to a point he succeeded; recovery could and did proceed merrily on the basis of cheap and ample supplies of banking credit supporting a consumer demand which was expanded by vast relief expenditure and, subsequently, rapid wage increases.Yet try as he would Mr.Roosevelt could not secure any proportionate revival of investment in capital goods industries\u2014housing railways and the power utilities.Partly because it feared the tremendous increase in national debt, partly because rising wages and costs bade fair to destroy profit margins, partly through ^mistrust of the Government\u2019s New Deal activities, United States capital hung back from investment in fixed plant and construction.\u201cThe result was inevitable.Without investment in fixed plant and construction, with private capital remaining afraid, consumer demand reached a temporary saturation point.Manufacturers' order books have grown thinner; the in-take by industry of raw materials and steel has been curtailed; stocks of com-! modities built up in expectation of I an autumn boom now look redundant \\Ye are going to use part of the first fortune left and show substantial inventory losses at current prices.To put the Hitler\u2019s Ten Commandments For The Choice Of A Mate THE FRENCH PRESS Letters To The Editor (Condensed from \u201cPariser Tageszeitung,\u201d Paris).¦-(,vfeu°,'giaA fk®,National-Social-1 6,\u2014\u201cAs a German, choose a mate ist Medical Association publishes the ;only of your own or a kindred race, new version of the ien Command- Only where temperaments and dis-! Cho01f,?f matf\u2019 as Positions blend is there harmony.dfdutedifuyTihe R.ncl1 ® PePartment Where different races mix is dis- of Health.There ^ nothing remark- harmony, which leads to the de- W rw n\t83 SU^\u2019 ieoneracy and declirfe of individuals fopr ihf fW ?t t0k ®tres®es fhe and peoples.The Nordic streak is â \u201ethf h A ,bue\u20acn,,su!:Ttt\u20acti !tic that binds all Germans.You are w antiby the Ministry of part of it and it is your sacred duty Mar, for widespread distribution ;to guard it.\u201d J\t* amongst he army, navy ami air force.1\t7.\u2014\u201cIn selecting a mate for your- Rvn>embci' ^ y0U are a;se,f- fimi out all about the fore-German.You are what you are not;fathers.You do not marry a mate through merits of your own but,but also a family and a\\ice.îors hor°«OSe °f yr peo*Ie:Pere-1 Yainable and sound posterity may ™la11 y,°«r fn10nS COn£lder the -be hoPed for only if there be an commonweal first.\t'equally valuable ancestry.Nothing H R\td\u201e ^ ,s°Ul c?ean- IS rnor« Precious than the seed of a btaj a\\\\ ay from all that is spmtu-! noble race.A contaminated heredity ,11\t°r\t«\u2022«l produce nothing good Never\u2019 marry the one good member of a bad family!\u201d 8.\u2014\u201cHealth is the premise even of physical beauty.It offers the best guarantee for lasting happiness, for o\t,\t,\t, ,\ti* 's a*so tbe premise of spiritual 3\u2014 Keep\tyour\tbody\tclean!\tThe\tharmony.Before marrying submit pleasure of a passing moment may to a medical examination for fitness The Record will be pleased to publish letters of interest from its readers.We reserve the right, however, to reject any letters which we do not feel are in the interest of the general public.Letters must be s:gn-ed, although a pen name may be affixed.Unsigned letters will not be considered.Opinions expressed in this column are the personal views of the writer and the Record is in no way responsible.\u2014The Editor.your temperament.Beware of all that your conscience warns you against 1 All too often, unfortunately, the prospect of money or pleasure causes a person to forget Editor\u2019s Note-Book.All roads lead to the Rotary Fair.* * * \\4e wish it were as easy to write as it is for some of our readers to criticize.« * * 'Whether or not you like it it is November and wild be November for another twentv-six davs.us to pay someone else to write our \"Note Book.\u201d * * * California Civil War veteran who attributed his longevity to the use of rye whiskey died the other day.aged 10 end.* * * Italv is now backing Germany\u2019s Drink was bound to get him down in the tnmg starkly, it has begun to look as though _ Mr.Roosevelt's attempt to kick United States industry into prosperity and to hold it up by deliberately inflating the purchasing power of the consumer, has failed.With the end of his spending reached, unable to trifle further with the nation\u2019s debt, he is compelled to leave I industry without the prosperity h effort to regain i planned.\u201d Hudson Bay Sanctuary.The bird sanctuary which Jack Miner has mad famous is situated about as far south as Ontario dips | ;n into the United Slaies, but Jack Miner and his son.i Man\u2019y Miner, kr, w more about the travel; and nest- That eastern football coach who is teaching i: g of wild birds, especially duck; and geese, than ' coeds the fine points of football strategy ought to any one else in ;he country, and it is in the north - rea^ze that he is just building up a new lot of Mon- that the Miners, father and son.insist a bird sane- - da>' raornin« q^rbacks fOT himself.* * ?tuary nous be esubLshed to save the wild water ,,\t,, n ,, ;\tHoover warns the Republicans that they cannot : hope to succeed without setting up some principle ine sanctuary they plead for would be no trifl-j other than mere dislike of the administration in of Weatern Penilsy]vania about on\u201e n8 aifair but the shores of Hudson Bay no less, | power.Why not?Didn\u2019t the Democrats do it in hundred and fifty years ago, but it Ancre, if tor y have their way, all but natives will be \u2022 , her lost colonies.The time Italian help would reallv !, There ar® n,any ot,h\u20acr explanations ,\t,\t.\t,\t1\t- by speculators, bankers and econo- nave been appreciated m Berlin, however, was back | mists.But the Ottawa paper\u2019s guess will appeal to many as being close to the truth, * * * ____________________________________________ THE ORIGIN OF INDIAN SUMMER.(St.Thomas Times-Journal) This is about the time when we enjoy what is called the \u201cIndian Sum mer,\" although at the moment we would not care to say whether we have had it or if it is still to come.There is some doubt about how the term originated.First mention of such a thing is found in newspapers of Western Pennsylvani forbidden :o hunt water fowl.The Miner; would go further and iorbid the carrying of firearms into this area unies; by special permission of the authorities.Mr.n transportation facilitated, there has been a; in Now that Rheirns cathedral has been restored and Germany has signed a new treaty guaranteeing Belgium's neutrality, Europe is right back where it was -except, of course, for the eight million - rked mnuency of hunters to go by railway or: dead who haven\u2019t yet been brought back to life aeroplane to lue birds breeding places and huntin'/1 \u201e c I r.-r - un us in die Hudson Bav area.Tom Sawyer \u2019 Banned As Communistic.- @ THIRTY YEARS AGO TODAY « From the Files of the Sherbrooke Record.November 4th, 1907.Fire completely gutted the Bartlett Block Island Pond, Vt.Samuel Lemay, an old resident of Sherbrooke at Trey mus have \"Commun:-titis'\u2019 in most virulent.form down in Bio de Janeira, for word comes that the civic authorities have ordered Mark Twain\u2019s classic, \"Torn Sawyer,\u201d removed from the public |tbe ernP!°y °f tlle C.P.R\u201e was crushed to death when did no-t become common in the New England States and Canada until after the beginning of the nineteenth century.Yarious explanations have been given, the most authentic one being that during the wars between early white settlers and Indians, which were always of long duration there was no peace except during the winter.It sometimes happened, however, that after an early spell of wintry^ weather, a short period of warmth intervened, and during that time the Indians resumed their warfare.Thus the whites came to fear what they called the \u201cIndian Summer.\u201d Today, white people look forward with enjoyment to that period.Our ancestora dreaded it.permanently endanger your health and that of your children and become a curse to you,,your children and your grandchildren.Act yourself as you would expect your future mate to act! Remember that you will become an ancestor of Germans.\u201d 4.\t\u2014\u201cYou should hot remain single if you are hereditarily healthy.He who remains single without a good reason for doing so breaks the chain of generations.Y\u2019our own life is limited in time, but your clan and your people live on.YTour physical and spiritual heritage will be revided in them.\u201d 5.\t\u2014\u201cDo not marry without love.\u201d i WORDS OF WISDOM master-art of wisdom, which is to know how to grow old gracefully, »s seen in his pcstcript to the effect that his inclination to remain silent in the present instance was reinforced by the fact that India is not one of his subjects.Lack of familiar- y\t\u201e , j ,\t- ity with any subject has never be-\tf, iLn w madG ^ \"10ncy; fore, bee a use it was not'\u201cone of his|an?friendshiP- an4, talents- anJ own,\u201d caused him to hesitate to I patJronagT ,and famlI>' influences, freely discuss it and permit hLY a.nd good chances, and good posi-tongue to luxuriate in all kinds of i P°ns' and.g°°d health, and good pontificial irrelevancies.The change i \u201ca^ure \u2019 ^ 13 made out of faith, and will be universally welcomed as one that will enable the legion of Mr.Shaw\u2019s admirers to rest their great admiration on his merits without having oceasionaiiy as in the past to have to excuse his ineptitudes.LOGGING OPERATIONS INCAN ADA.(Port Arthur News-Chronicle) With the timber industry still holding first place in Thunder Bay district, as in nearly all parts of Northwestern Ontario, it is interesting to note that logging operations in Canada\u2019s forests provide employment on ECONOMY AND LOWER TAXES To the Editor, Daily Record, Dear Sir:\u2014Col Bourque's apparent pride in the huge expenditures made by his Government in Sherbrooke County, is rather surprising after the dismay he expressed at the extravagances of the previous administration such a short time ago.Why must economy be preached only by the Opposition, and never practised by the Government, no _____________matter which party is in power?and have your future mate do like- : Even the newspapers, which ridicule wise.\u201d\tj the folly of politicians \u201cwho try to 9-\u2014\u201cWhen you decide to marry, [ buy our votes with our own money,\u201d seem to suffer an attack of amnesia when the purchasing takes place in their own backyard.All over the Province the big towns are crying for better roads in their particular district^ Road?which are already better \u2019than the average person can afford or even gets a chance to travel over much, for that matter, are being torn up and rebuilt.No matter how much is done, more is always wanted.Even when a road is \u201cstraightened,\u201d there are still plenty of curves left for future administrations to call dangerous and \u201cstraighten\u201d around election time.Officials in the big lumber companies say there is a shortage of skilled men in the northern lumber district.They attribute this to the fact that many of the men went on relief during the depression and are still there, preferring to do road work at big pay rather than work in the woods.Such high wages are paid on the road jobs that farmers cannot get help without paying more money than they get for their own work.Over three quarters of a million has been spent in Sherbrooke County.If that were multiplied by the ninety constituencies in the Province, consider what that would amount to if every member had done as well for his voters.Sherbrooke seems to have made a racket of getting grants.As soon as all possible has been obtained from one department, a rush is made for an other.Every possible kind of grant has been tried, even the Colonization Department making its contribution for roads in Sherbrooke, with the real colonists CULTIVATING A DESIRE FOR PEACE (La Presse, Montreal) Lord Tweedsmuir, our Governor-General, recalled in the course of his remarks at the dinner of the Canadian Institute of International Affairs that Canada could not disassociate herself from what goes on elsewhere in the world, and that i the moral obligation falls on her I not only to support but also to I cultivate among her people a stronger feeling for peace.Moreover, our own material advantage is enough to encourage us not to hesitate to do that.We trade with loo many countries not to wish that nothing should come to disturb world markets and spoil our chances of doing business.The more we think out our attitude toward the outside world, the more each of us feels a desire to aid in the settling of international conflicts.For, as we must recognize, peace is something that does not come by itself but which must be acquired, often at a great price, choose a companion and not a playmate.The purpose of marriage is to rear healthy offspring.Only if two people be well mated, physically, morally and racially can this supreme goal be achieved, for every race has a soul of its own, and only kindred souls understand each other.\u201d Id.\u201cYou should desire as many children as possible.Only children guarantee the continuity of a people.Y'ou will pass away; what you leave to posterity remains.Y our people live on forever.\u201d virtue, and patience, and godliness, and brotherly kindness and love,\u2014 T.T.Munger.WARNING TO GERMANY (Le Canada, Montreal) The official representatives of ] Germany in this country ought to make it known to Herr Goering that we are not disposed to be the dupes of the Hitler regime.The Germans who have become naturalized Canadians will or will not be Canadians.Let them choose, but when they have chosen to serve first Herr Hitler, they must not be astonished if they are sent back to their country of origin.Our thanks to Herr Goering; henceforth we will watch the people of his race to whom we so liberally give hospitality.In any case we will no: permit that Canadians of German origin form an unassimilable group in Canada.They will be integrally Canadians, according to the provisions of our Constitution; they cannot be, and they will not be, Germans and Canadians, SO THEY SAY About 211 of the 8014 taxicabs licensed by the London metropolitan police are more than twenty years old The pearl-diver lives at the bot tom of the ocean by means of the I pure air conveyed to him from above.His life is entirely dependent on the life-giving Spirit.We are down here, like the diver, to gather pearls for our Master\u2019s crown.The Source of our life comes from above.\u2014Henry Drummond.Experience shows that success Ls due less to ability than to zeal.The the average\tfor about 84,000\tmen\ton\ti winner is he\twho\tgives himself to\this 1 in Newport needing a\tfurther ?2,- a yearly\tbasis, but as most\tof this\tj work, body\tand soul\u2014Charles Bux-1 000 to make their road\tpassable for seasonal nature it\tis\tton.\t[ double teams.Money\tspent there .,\t- !\twould have provided the settlers the Neither\tdays\tor lives can\tbe I furniture, clothing and\tschool books wrork is of a estimated that about 240,COO men derive a substantial part of their employment in the woods.Except on the coast of British A bloc is a group of legislators organized to influence legislation; a lobby is a group of persons not members of a legislative body who try to influence legislation.There has been a drop\u2019 of nearly fifty per cent, per 1,000 of the population in the number of pawnbrokers in England during the past thirty years.made holy doing nothing in them.! they are said to need, as well as a The best prayer at the beginning I better road Columbia, togging is mostly a winter i of a day is, that we may not lose 1 While the road work was in pro-operation, and offsets to a consider-j its moments; and the best grace gress, Sherbrooke was continually able degree the inactivity in many ; before meat is the consciousness ' finding fault with the deplorable ?.er.industries such as agriculture,: tnat we have justly earned our state of the roads during their Cen-cuilding, road and railway construe-; dinner.\u2014Ruskin.\t\u2022\u2022\t\u2022 \u2022 - tion and maintenance at this time of |\t___ the year.In the softwood operations of Central and Eastern Canada, cutting Big things are only little things, put together.It is encouraging to think of this when confronted with usually starts in the early autumn and is completed before the end of the year.As soon as the ground is frozen and there Ls sufficient snow, is ignorance of this fact that makes the logs are hauled by sleigh on iced , some men afraid to try.\u2014 W.P.roads to the lakes and streams.They Warren, are floated out on the smaller tenary (for which they secured another grant).What is \"their attitude now! They \u201cneed\u201d a new municipal building, a second bridge over the St.Francis, a three-lane road to one of which you can easily do.It ic inmnvoTi/'if* c\\ F 4- V» .L L.:\t1.I streams during the spring freshets and on the larger rivers during the A life is the sum of a man\u2019s thoughts and purposes; not the out- summer.The logs float loose in the ward procession of act and incident streams but are collected into booms i _j.c.Geikic for towing across lakes.Each log is library as part of Brazil\u2019s campaign against subver sive and Communist literature.Me do not know how many boys read \u201cTom Sawyer nowadays\u2014it was written a good many years ago and may be considered out of date by the up-and-coming youth of today -but we can say that any boy who has not read this story of boy life has missed something.Most of the story is -aid to be autobiographical If that is true, young Sam Clemens the Mark Twain of literature- i have been a real boy! While the book is screamingly tunny from cover to cover there ts not a character in it that is not true to life\u2014one who may be eneoim'ered, even to this day, in any small town.What the .Spanish translation may be we do not.of course, know ; but even a translation could no! smother the sparkling wit and dry humor that pervade the story and its twin,, \u201cThe Adventures of Huckleberry I inn.\u2019 As for Communism\u2014-ail we can .-ay i- that whoever discovered anything Communistic or subversive in \u201cTom Sawyer\u201d must have had a powerful microscope and a highiy inflamed mind.{ J i uly, the authorities of Brazil must he sufferingi Jrom a had attack of jitters when they ban such wholesome reading as \u201cTorn Sawyer.\u201d struck by a car.Fire de Toyed the house and barn belonging to Mrs.C.To\u2019dd, of Compton.A serious accident occurred at St, Elle d\u2019Orford, when Henri Lafontaine, son of Bruno Lafontaine was caught in the belt of a threshing machine, A marriage of much interest took place at West Brome, when Miss Cora Ellen Call, daughter of Mr.and Mr-.L.Call, of Call'.-, Mill-, became the bride of Milton Allan Miltimore.Among the North Hatley sportsmen who have been | successful in br.nging home one or two fine deer arc-Dr McCrea, D.Bel;, B.H.Ham, L.Taylor, S.Kezar and S.H.Ball, w-/-h Belknap, officer in charge of the Dominion Fi*h Hatchery at Haife Foster, hac been very busy of late disiributing fish to \u2022 everal lakes in the Townships, marked on the end with the brand of the owmer, and on the larger rivers driving operations are usually carried on by driving companie?who sort and deliver the logs to the various mills.In some operations the logs and pulpwood, especially those of hardwood, arc hauled by sleighs to the railways on which they are transported to the mills.Between 2,5,000 and 30,000 horse-s are used in woods operations, and in a few places, chiefly in Nova Scotia, oxen are used and found to be very satisfactory under certain conditions.During recent years there has been a considerable increase in the use of trucks and tractors in place of horses for the portaging of supplies and the hauling of logs.lagging is one industry in which human labor and intelligence are indispensable; each tree cut, each hillside or gully to be logged, and each stream to be driven presents its own difficulties which require ski,l to solve.As the operations extend further back into the forests and the G.B.S.GROWING OLD.(Woodstock Sentinel-Review) Recently George Bernard Shaw was invited by a Liberal party organization in England to attend a lecture on Britain\u2019s relations with .\t._________________ India in the hope that he would have ! cost of extraction mounts, the*neces something to say on the topic under! sity for engineering and organizing discussion.Mr.Shaw replied, how-lability increases and technically ever, that he was obliged by his ad-j trained forester» arc finding place-; vanning years to discontinue his'in the industry.personal activities on the platform,\t\u2019- and he asked that the secretaries of! THE BEAUTEOUS TRAITRESS, a.: social and political societies;\t(Chicago Daily News) should strike his name from their) The Nazi press, which a big task.Remember that it is j Magog and an expensive and un-omy a group of little tasks, any | wanted park at Orford if they can T get grants for all these.In considering her needs, Sherbrooke should limit them to what she can finance herself.We all have to reduce our \u201cneeds\u201d to meet our incomes.A new municipal building would serve only Sherbrooke, so let her pay for it.Col Bourque states there are 2,(KM) bridges in Quebec Province, which need replacing.With so many new bridges built for her, Sherbrooke can do very well with only one bridge across the St.Francis unti! it gets more traffic than it has now.The present road to Magog seems wonderful to the average taxpayer on the rare occasions he travels it after what he Ls accustomed to doing most of his travelling on.As a supporter of the Duplessis Government, this letter is not colored by politics, but by an earnest desire to see economy practised as well as preached.Let our administration get an car to the ground before it is too late so that those of us who listened hopefully to their economy talk may continue to support them at the next election.Neither is there any animosity in my remarks concerning Sherbrooke, for I have nothing hut admiration for her.However, even one\u2019s best friends sometime.-; require a bit of reprimanding.The person with a really good disposition never allows impositions.Yours for lower taxes, GORDON W.GEDDKS.Way\u2019s Mills.The kindest and the happiest pair, will find occasion to forbear; find something every day they live, to pity, and perhaps forgive.\u2014Cowper.W eought to cultivate the friendships of little things.Beauty is one of the surest antidotes to vexation.Often when life looked dreary from some real or fancied injustice or indignity, has a thought of truth been flashed into my mind from a fldwer, the frost, a shadow, clouds, rainbows, stars land sunrise!\u2014George MacDonald.I fee! most strongly that man, in all he does or can do which is beautiful, great or good, is but the order and the vehicle of something higher than himself.This feeling is religion.\u2014Amiel Tutankhamen is interpreted as meaning the living image of Amon, one of the Egyptian gods.In New Jersey a state law makes it necessary for the word \u201crebuilt\u201d to be branded on the side of all batteries rebuilt for sale from second-hand or used materials.I have no purpose but to enter tain myself, I have no desire convert anyone.\u2014H.L.Mencken writer.to Accorihg to the Dictionary of Am-rican Dales, American history goes back to 450 A.D., when a L\u2019uddhlt monk was supposed to have visited the American continent.Several thousand persons in the United States wear contact spectacles.thin, invisible lenses that slip beneath the eye lids and over the eyeball.The finch family of birds is scattered all over the world, with the exception of Australia.Wisconsin is the leading cheese producing state in the Union, with New York ranking second., Dean Cromwell, John Barrymore, Gary Cooper, and Bugs Baer all ^Gr° cartoonists beforo attaining success in their present fields.HAVE A SMILE To be silent, to suffer, to pray when we cannot act, is acceptable to God.A disappointment, a con-tradition, a harsh word received and endured as in His presence, is worth more than a long prayer.\u2014 Fenelon.\t,\t., ,,\t,\t-.\t;\t\u2014\t- .press, which prints \u201e .| fis»?of^ avai,able speakers.Continu-; nothing without approval of the!\u201c\u2019rmt'\u201c .ng in the third person, be wrote that; Nazi government, is denouncing the Mr.Shaw does not ony longer open j beauteous Marlene Dietrich of the exhibitions or bazaars, take the cinema as a traitress to Germany, chair, speak at public dinners, give) Not long ago mention was made in To feel much for others, and little for ourselves, to restrain our selfish, and to indulge our benevolent affections constitute the perfection of human nature.\u2014Adam THE NET.The leaves weave a For the wind Under and over The maple tree.Yellow and red and pale as s They weave the About the wind Invisibly.un breads A A Above, peiow ., The wind is free swirl of light, ift of leaves, hi- name as vice-president or patron make appeal?for money on behalf of any cause, however deserving, nor do any ceremonial public work.\u2018Moreover,\u201d he added, \u201cIndia is not one of my subjects.\u201d Zeno, founder of the Stoic philosophy, of all the virtues made choice of silence.\u201cI hear other men\u2019s imperfections,\u201d he said, \u201cand conceal my own.\u201d Mr.Shaw\u2019s letter leaves no doubt that it is not merely a vocal sit-down strike that he has now entered upon, but, \u2018aking a leaf out of Zeno\u2019s hook, he intends that, however great he has these columns of the invariable habit of novelists, short-story writers and correspondents of endowing their lady spies and betrayers of national ideals with breath-taking pulchritude and glamour.Attention was called to the regrettable fact that portraits of the ladies were usually disillusioning.Therefore the world 'is indebted to the Nazis for discovering an international menace whose close-up is an embellishment to any front page, ami whose famed ambulatory appendages have been accorded esthetic approval throughout the universe Llon\u2019t worry about your work.Do your best.Let the rest go and smile all the time.\u2014Max.TIMELY COMMENTS in the photogravure sections or at the box office.They may have the effect of eliminating the sympathies of many American citizens of German origin from the Hitler regime.Millions of persons of German birth or ancestry have become good American citizens, yet have retained a natural affection for their father-land and a natural interest in Germany\u2019s welfare.They may well a-sk themselves whether Hitler-brands them too, as been in speech in the past, his silence) Mis:-: Dietrich is called a traitress .\u201ctraitors.\u201d And if they ask that m the future shah be permanent.If because she has taken out American j question they are bound'to wonder The observant St.Thomas Times-Journal warns its readers that this is becoming an era of legs.The world, alas, is \"in extremis,\u201d\u2014Toronto Star.G.I.O.organizer ot Kitchen proclaims a \u201ccountry-wide boycott\u201d of the products of a strike-bound rubber factory.Isn\u2019t that stretching it?\u2014 Windsor Slar.-Sara Van Aktyne Allen.:-o, it wili be greater than some of | citizenship papers, Go that she may bis past utterances.It will have all betray Germany.\u2019 the eloquence of discretion.Added! These are extremely harsh words, p.'oof that Mr.Shaw, with his ad-i but they will not in all probability eurity, tolerance and sanity from the vancing years, has acquired th; detract from Miss Dietrich\u2019s appeal land.whether the real betrayers of the German people are not those who have driven enlightment, liberty, se- ll was George Horace Loriiner who said; \"College doesn\u2019t make fools; it develops them.\u201d A wisecrack of the days before the wisecrack was invented.\u2014Detroit Free Press, There will be one big difference between Edward\u2019s fori henni i ng tour of the U.S.and previous visits |o that country.This time \u201cthe missus is along.\u201d \u2014 Stratford TYncon Herald.Two clerks in a department stoi ¦ were discussing a customer who had lust left the store.' He's a human dynamo,\u201d said one.Honest?\u201d asked the other.^ .Sure,\u201d came (lie reply, \u201cevery, liing he has on is charged.\u2019\u2019 Two men were having an ai.ment about their physical powers \u2018Why,\u2019\u2019 said one, \u201cevery morniii; hel ore hreakfasi I get a bucket an null up ten gallons of water fror the well.\u201d \u201cThat\u2019s nothing,\u201d retorted ih other, \u201c[ pot a boat every morninj and pull up the river.\u201d ¦gu- An expectant father (a ebrnmer-c ni traveller), not desiring the post eflicc to know his secret, arranged that, the nurse should, on :ho happy \u2019\u2019ay, send him n telegram in code.H a hoy: \u201cSatimlav\u2019s joint arrived.\u201d U a girl; \u201cSunday's joint arrived.\u201d Imagine the father's surprise upon receiving a telegram: \u201cSatinaiay\u2019s and Sunday's joints arrived expecting a rabbit, on Monday.\u201d \u201cA nice sort of welcome!\u201d said the fa'her viriling in\u2019s son at board oig school.\"1 am hardly out of the train when you ask me for money.\u201d '\u2018\\V< 11, dad, you must admit the \u2018l'ain was twenty minutes late;\u201d The playgoer and his wife : lal1 and the stall:-, attendant 1 lat'-d wh ui he saw them.\u201cThe act has h gun.sir,\u201d he said.\u201c really muriitn\u2019t to go in.\u2019\u2019 \u201cA re I,he r in ; ructions.\u201d a the man, \u201cor are vou giving come friendly advice?\u201d SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1937.PAGE FIVE MARRIAGES SKINNER\u2014WHEELER Barnstcn, Nov.4.\u2014A pretty wedding: took place at the Baptist Parsonage, Coaticook, on Saturday, October 30th, when Miss Lillian Wheeler, eldest daughter of Mr.and Mrs.Henry Wheeler, was united in marriage to Mr.Waldo Skinner, son of Mr.and Mrs.Joseph Skinner, of Haytei, Alberta.Rev.W.Harris Wallace officiated.The bride, who was attended by her sister, Miss Bernice Wheeler, wore a dress of blue silk crepe, blue hat and shoes and a corsage of violets.The groom was supported by Mr.Charles Goodrum, of Coaticook.Mr.and Mrs.Skinner will reside for the present at the home of the bride\u2019s parents.r Cinzi E 43 In The Women's Sphere FRY\u2014NEIL The marriage of Edna Gertrude, daughter of Mrs.E.A.Neil, of A SPECIAL WEEK-END ATTRACTION DRESSES We are offering some lovely woollen and crepes, finest quality at the very low price of $7.95 These dresses are a part of a special purchase made a few days ago.CASH ONLY Ayer\u2019s Cliff, to Mi'.Herbert Fry was quietly solemnized on Saturday, October 30th in the Chapel of Holy Trinity Church, Toronto, Rev.F.C.Jackson officiating.The bride was charmingly gowned in wine crepe with black felt hat and matching accessories.Immediately following the ceremony Mr.ejnd Mrs, Fry left on their honeymoon.=~IE U==^'v£^3C BRIGHTENING UP LIVING ROOM If your living room seems colorless and drab these first gray days, try hanging new chintz curtains and having a slip cover made for the dingiest chair.Beauty Tips Question: \u201cWhat can I do to get unshapely feet into a passable condition in a hurry?I expect to visit a cousin in the South next month and her crowd swims every dav.\u2014 Lola.\u201d You will have to work fast.Start with a good pedicure, treating the toenails as gently and carefully as you do your fingernails.Use cuticle remover not only on your cuticles but on any calluses that need attention, File your toenails into neat, slightly rounded tips.Apply a medium shade of nail polish carefully.When it is completely dry, apply cuticle oil or cream and massage well around the nails and into rough areas.Every night make it a practice to scrub your feet gently and thoroughly with a foot brush, dry and massage with cream or lotion.Find shoes that really fit and you have done about all you can to im-p*ove the appearance of your feet.Social and Personal To clean painted walls, use a | damp cloth dipped into dry baking soda.LADIES.Of Sherbrooke and surrounding district.You are cordially invited to visit our store on MONDAY, NOV.8 Where an out-of-town FASHION STYLIST Will Be Showing The newest and latest in EVENING .-DINNER - -AFTERNOON - -DRESSES 71 Wellington St.N.\u2014 Tel.112 \u201cColds\u201d may come ¦with lowered resistance \u2014 often due to constipation.Kellogg\u2019s All-Bran absorbs water\u2014forms, a soft mass\u2014promotes elimination.Serve as a cereal with milk or cream, or in recipes.Eat two tablespoonfuls daily.Sold by all grocers.AU:BRan Mrs.Oman Noble has returned to her home in Danville after spending several days in Sherbrooke the guest of Mrs.À.R.Wilson, Frontenac street.* » * Mrs.!.A.Kimpton, who has been a guest for a week of Mrs.A.R.Wilson, Frontenac street, returned this morning to her home in Griffin, Que.Mrs.Kimpton was previously a guest of Mrs.B.C.Howard, \u201cHowardene\u201d and also visited Mrs.A.Gordon and Mr.and Mrs, Guy Tillotson in Coaticook.*\t* T Mrs.Edward Holgate entertained the members of the Baptist Ladies\u2019 Aid.at yesterday\u2019s largely attended meeting at her residence on Ontario street.During the afternoon the ladies were occupied with work for the Christmas sale.At the close of a busy hour\u2019s sewing and knitting, tea was served in the dining i oom, Miss Mary Milford doing the honors at the lovely tea table arranged with bronze baby \u2019mums in a jade bowl on a lace cloth.The hostess was assisted by her sister, Miss Margaret Maclver.*\t* » The first of a series of bridge parties sponsored by members of the Catholic Women\u2019s League was given by Mrs.M.Walshe yesterday afternoon at \u201cRockmount,\u201d Mrs.Andrea Robinson\u2019s residence on Moore street.Bridge was played at three tables, the prizes being won by Mrs.J.S.Mooney, Mrs.J.H.Gordon and Mrs.Austin Workman.At the conclusion of the game tea was served in the dining room, Mrs.Francis Hoye and Miss Gladys Mullins doing the honors at the beautifully appointed table which was arranged with bronze baby \u2019mums in a silver basket.* * * Members of the Busy Bee Christmas Club, with Mrs.Leslie Maskell, Mrs.F.A.Richards and Mrs.Harold Sundbury acting as hostesses, sponsored a most enjoyable surprise party last evening at the home of Mrs.G.W.Taylor, Fabre street, in honor of her birthday.The evening was pleasantly spent playing games, and during the interim Mrs.Townsend and Mrs.Maskell presented Mrs.Taylor with a generous shower of pyrex, accompanied by the best wishes of the members for many happy returns of the day.Later refreshments were served, Mrs.F.Phelps presiding at the pretty table which with Chinese lanterns and orange candles in ebony candlesticks carried out the Hallowe\u2019en color scheme.Mrs.J.J.Pcnhale and Mrs.C.McNaughton, of Thetford Mines, were visitors in Sherbrooke yesterday.* * * Mrs.Richard E.Baldwin, of Rouyn.Que., is visiting her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Ernest A.Williams, Camirand street.* * * The many friends of Mrs.J.A.Duplessis, King George street, who is a patient in the Sherbrooke Hospital, where she underwent an operation for appendicitis, will be pleased to hear that she is progressing favorably.* » » Mr.and Mrs.William M.Haselton announce the engagement of their youngest daughter, Whhelrnina Iris to the Reverend Thomas Williams Tyson, M.A., B.Th.The marriage to to take place at Wesley United Church of Canada, Beebe, Que., at seven o\u2019clock in the evening, November the eighth, nineteen hundred and thirty-seven.* * * Mrs.Walter S.Sutherland entertained informally at the tea hour yesterday afternoon at her residence on Quebec street, in honor of Mrs.Berry, of London, Ont., who is visiting her daughter, Mrs.F.A.C.Doxsee.Mrs.F.S.Rugg poured tea, the table being charmingly done with snow-berries in a crystal bowl and white candles in crystal candlesticks.Assisting were the Misses Madeline and Mary Baldwin and the hostess\u2019 daughters, Margaret and Jean Sutherland.*\t* UGG.MIGNAULT.HOLTHAM Grundy, advocates.McManam- & Walsh Building.TO Wellington St.N.Phone 1689.A.GIOVETTI, SHERBROOKE MARKET.Our price for fresh country eggs : \u201cA\u201d Large.50c; \u201cA\u2019\u2019 Medium.45c; \u2018\u2018A\u201d Pullet*, 138c : *\u2018B'\u2019 Large, 40c; \"B\u201d Medium, 35c.(Cash and carry only.As my friend, the late Louis H.Watson, liked to say, perhaps all this doesn\u2019t prove anything, but it ; was fun for East and West while it \u2014 lasted, and it must have been rather and agonizing for the South player when he jotted down the score for six hearts doubled with an overtrick 'L°: OT OF USED MACHINERY CONSIST- TOHN p.WOLFE.B.A- B.C.L.Q.C.K ' against his \u201cpowerhouse.\u201d Budding, Wellington Street North.| Jt does go to show, however, the \\shton a.tobin.advocate.par,t.\t.b.y distribution in the A Ro^bioon, \u201e Bldg.66 Wellington sl making of tricks, and if the example North phot* 62a.\t;Is rather accentuated, it still may- keep the balance clear in the mind high mgton North.Richmond Ph.37.; cards in the hand, and booked ins of four steam hoists of different /1AGNE & DESMARAIS, SHERBROOKE.1 of a bridfe player betw-een capacity.One 40 H.P.gaso.ir.e engine, com- VJT ^ Weiiington North.Richmond Ph.37.| cards in the hand, and h : plcte with hoist, bonsra of different pres- Teachers Wanted ¦ sure, shafts, gears., poles, 25 ft.long, King Street West, Î and 9 p.m.etc.Also 25 telephone wire cables.Apply 531 Sherbrooke, between 7 Ewing r PROTESTANT PRINCIPAL WANTED for the Inverness High School to corn- c CHESTERFIELD.RADIO.120 Brooks Street.BEDS.APPLY McFadden, advocates, | tric.k3 in pl|y-,,\t, .Room 520, at 132 St.Jam« sir«t.! t Apparently South must lose two Montreal.Tel L.\\nc*ter 8733.J.Armitage tr!ckS, SO when hlS Opponents de-Ewins.K.C.George s.McFadden.K.O.: fended with.six hearts, he decided to take them for a ride.The double Architects seemed the next best thing so far as his cards were concerned.37-SS.One with permanent diploma.Apply, giving ex- pi-ete term High School pone nee.age and salary expected, to John McCammon, Sec.-Treas., Inverness, Que.L PRIGHT PIANO, GOOD CONDITION, leasonable price.Tel.SOI Sherbrooke.\\ NDRE ROYER, A.D.B.A.M.R.A.LC., 6 Wellington North.Phone 861 or 294.Qu^ QUALIFIED Den ho Apply Chris, more, Que.PROTESTANT TEACHER im.Salary 150.Board 215 McMillan, Sec.-Treas., Polti- TWO bai CARS OF CHRISTMAS TREES.?am, for sale.Reasonable price on Record, Box 4C*.Auctioneer K.IX TUBE PHILCO ELECTRIC CABINE 1\t- Agents Wanted WIN o ri for f*a«h buyer.6L DEMERS.AUCTIONEER.DIS.ST.Francis.Bedford.Sherbrooke.Ph.1005.Solution to Previous Contract Problem Contract Problem (Solution in next issue) South\u2019s contract is three no trump.West, after holding the first trick with the heart king, shifted to a small diamond, which' South won with the queen.The nine of clubs in dummy is finessed.Should East win the trick?V654 ?\t83 2 *\tA K 10 9 5 4 A J54 V 9 7 2 $ J 7 6 * J876 A Q y 8 3 V K Q 10 8 ?K 10 5 4 *2 N W E S Dealer AAK1076 V AJ3 ?AQ9 *Q3 Rubber\u2014None vul.Opening lead\u2014¥ K.say and Miss Amy Eridgette, all of , New York, Susie, Mrs.Herman I Kingsley, of Alberta, Eva, Mrs.| Ward Brainard, of Vancouver, i Pearl, Mrs.Reginald Patrick, of Iowa, and Mr.Allen Eridgette, of j California, all met together for the first time in thirty-four years.At one time they all resided in Bii-ch-ton.Their parents were Mr.and Mrs.Robert Eridgette.Mr.Brid-gette was a general merchant and Death of Mrs.Eva Taylor postmaster here for many years.Caused General Regret\u2014 Recent caUers atthe home of Mr.M\t¦il\tr\tand Mrs.A.L.Bridg'ette were M'1.Newsy Notes of Interest tOjan^ Mrs.A ! e x Lavalller, 01 Ottawa, Residents of Birchton Pis-I Mr.and Mrs.George Moynan.Of Lennoxville and Mr.ana Mrs, N.E.GENERAL NOTES AND PERSONALS FROM BIRCHTON trict.Apply Record, Box 42 Chartered Accountants AUDITORS\u2014IN COME TAX.S-A SALESMAN WANTED EY \"THE OLD Reliable FonthiL Nurseries\u201d (establish* td 100 years-.Send for Centennial Catalogue end Special Lues.Start now.exclusive territory i: L wn or c.-r.'.ry.libérai term?, free cut fit, Stone & Wellington.Toronto 2.E make, perfect eowiition.Call 975 day E Real Estate For Sale DNEY.ARMITAGE 4 CO.Chartered Acooantacts.66 Weil mgton St.North.Telephone 3285.1 Certified Accountants -L-± Male Help Wanted c APAELE house, wood Box 4-.MARRIED MAN FOR GEN-r.a /-.\t?S0 per month witn milk, garder.Apply Record, 000 Tw0 apartment BRICK house on large lot for ?5.0(KL Or'?1,000 down.All rented.Phone 133, Edwards Realty.Farms For Sale J H BRYCE.C.P.A-.C.G.A., 186 Quebec St.Sherbrooke AUDITOR, | TeL 13(te.[ Financial F R PS- Vj Que.ELI ABLE.TRUSTWORTHY MAN TO work on farm.State references.Ap-Mrs.Alice Goodwin, Ayers Cïif4, OK TWO HUNDRED ACRES IN\u2019 good .state of cult vat ion on Government Road.Wii; sell with or without stock and equipment.Alex, Matthew, Sawyervik -.I> USIN\u2019ESS obtained RE-ORGANIZED.CAPITAL credit ndjuated Confident aj interview G S.Sharpe.104 Bank of Corn-morce B:dg.Wellington St No.Sherbrooke.AN OPPORTUNITY IS OFFERED TO AN ^ energetic young rr.a: between the age-r-f U and 21 to lea\", retail marchande r.g.Apply ov.r handwriting to Box 50, Record, giving detail: -.f ecutation.previous experience, if any, etn.Live Stock For Sale p -JR BLACK PERCHERON MARES, adopt 3,000.Douglas Gilbert, Lime Ridge.Insurance I?J 3( 1 '4M arquette Su Sherbrooke.PE 100.A 9 8 7 Ô V 2 ?8 76 5 + J 1087 4k A 5 2 V A 10 9 8 7 ?\tNone *\t96 5 4 2 N W E S Dealer 4k None VQ-J'S! 3 ?.o 94 32 4 3 A KQJ 1043 V K ?A K Q A A KQ Rubber\u2014\t\t-N.& S.\tvul.South\tWest\tNorth East\t 2 A\t3 V\tPass\tPass 3 A\tPass\t4*\t5 V 5 A\tPass\tPass\t6 V Double\tPass\tPass\tPass Opening lead\u2014A 9.West was Capt.Arthur Hoffman, U.S.A., retired, and East was Fred-! erick Vail, a New York business I man.Today\u2019s hand was played in a j rubber bridge game at the Sheridan Bridge Club in Greenwich Village.To South, there was no hope of a slam when North first passed the heaît overcall, and later failed to show any ace, but chose instead to bid merely four spades, as the partners were using the convention which requires the showing of aces in response to a two-bid.South decided that even though opponents were not vulnerable, the set should be well worth while.Even though he failed to take a spade trick there remained the three solid tops in each of the minors.Dummy\u2019s one club was discarded on the spade ace, and the ace of hearts laid down, dropping both trumps, and seven odd was the result.Even with a club opening six would have been made.Birchton, Nov.4.\u2014Mr.and Mrs.A.E.Eridgette, Miss Doris Brid-gette and Mrs.H.E.Todd were dinner guests at the home of Mr.and Mrs.George Moynan, at Lennox-viile.Mrs.John Bailey and Mr.Eric Bailey, of Sawyerville and Miss Ella Bailey, of Kinnear\u2019s Mills, called on Mr.and Mrs.William Thompson, at The Pines.Mrs.E.J.Monroe, of Lennoxville, returned home on Friday, October 29.after spending a few days in town calling on relatives.The passing of Mrs.Eva Taylor brought much sorrow to the residents of this town.Her kindly ways and thoughtfulness for others,made her very dear to all who knew her.Sympathy is extended to the relatives in their loss.Mr.Jack A.Murray is in Milan to be near his father, who is critically ill.Mr.and Mrs.William Rogers, of Portland, Me., were guests for a week at the home of Mr.and Mrs.A.E.Eridgette.Mrs.F.Harrison spent a few days with her son, Mr.Wilder Harrison and Mrs.Harrison in Sherbrooke.Mr.and Mrs.Alex Hodgman and two children, of Hollis, N.Y., are spending their vacation with Mrs.Erwin Hodgman and family.Mr.and Mrs.R.A.Taylor were visitors in Sherbrooke on Friday, October 29.Mr.and Mrs.Leon DesRuisseaux, of Cookshire, were supper guests of Mr.and Mrs.F.A.Hodge.Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Groom, of Bury, and Mr.and Mrs.Allie Braze!, of Sawyerville.were recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.E.Taylor.Mrs.J.A.Murray was a guest at the home of Mr.M.C.N.Murray, at Milan.Mr.and Mrs.Arnold Jackson, and Mrs.George Jackson, who moiored to Pennsylvania, were accompanied home by Mr.E.Hillar, who is cutting Christmas trees.Mr.and Mrs.Newton Lindsay, ¦who were calling on friends here had just returned from Iowa where a family re-union was held at the home of Mrs.Lindsay\u2019s sister.Mrs.Reginald Patrick.The six sisters and one brother.Jennie, Mrs.Al-den Hall, Edna, Mrs.Newton Lind- Lindsay, of Bay port, N.Y.Mrs.Robert Kirkby attended the reception for Mr.and Mrs.Douglas Butler at Mllby.Miss Letiiii Hawse has beer, a guest of Mr.and Mrs.Herman Rogers.Mr.and Mrs.F.DesRuisseaux and Mr.H.Swanson were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Leon DesRuisseaux, at Cookshire.Mrs.A.DesRuisseaux also spent a week-end at the same home.Mr.and Mrs.Walter Ingram, of St.Johnsbury, Vt., have been guests of Mr.and Mrs.Marvin Hodge for a few days.Miss Helen Picard, who has been a patient in the Sherbrooke Hospital returned home on Wednesday, Octo-1 ber 2.Mr.Oscar DesRuisseaux, of Trois Saumon Station, was home for a week-end.Mrs.George Hodge, of Cookshire, spent a day at the home of Mr.A.E.Eridgette.Mr.and Mrs.Alex Hodgman and children accompanied by Mrs.Ervin Hodgman, motored to St.Anne de Bellevue on Saturday, October 30 to visit Miss Audry Hodgman a student at Macdonald College.|lllilllll'll;lllilllllHlilllllllllllllllllllll'llllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIÜII^IH^^^^^^^^^^' Extension Course in Public Speaking on Friday evenings, commencing November 12th at 6.45, in the New Sherbrooke Hotel.The Lectures will be given by Mr.Robert George, B.A.B.D., Lecturer in Oral English at McGill University and Bishop\u2019s University.Fifteen Lectures at a Fee of $10.00.Those wishing to avail themselves of this rare opportunity to get training in the art of Public Speaking are invited to communicate without delay with the Principal\u2019s Secretary, Bishop\u2019s University, :lll!l!l'!!!!!!!!:ll!l!l!!!i!|l|I ll]IIIIIIHIIIIIIi;llllllltllli!HllllHllllfHlli[lllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllHIHIII DISTILLED AND BOTTLED IN CANADA 25 oi.*1.80\t-\t40 oi.\u20182.70 T A L Sun WITH BECK E Aa?urare*?Cc.Tel.624 N rpWO YOUNG MEN WITH who can :- r.g and play W-WB-Tited for radio \u2022work.18 Laurier Avenue, bef- GUITARS, terr.gongs, i ee Leonard Lobb, : Saturday r.ijrht.;e silver black foxes, some f.-'A breeding stock ; aNo pens and Ahx.Matthew, Sawyerviiie.Poultry For Sale Miscellaneous BISHOPTON T TURKISH BATH AND MASSAGE AT .bherbrooke.Ail treatments given by registered nurse.Phone 2600.Situation Wanted, Male LUT PERI EN CED TRUCK DRIVER WANTS J ERSEY BLACK GIANTS.HENS AND pullets, cockerels.Frank Trudeau, Pk, 1.Ayer\u2019s Cliff.\\ y AN TED HEALTHY HORSES FOR ** mink food.We destroy animals where bought if you wbh.Can McClay, Krvowiton.Optometrist Mrs.John L.Clarke has been visit-; ing her sister, Mrs.Shirley C.Clark, .of Bury., Mr.and Mrs.J.A, Davidson and i daughters, the Misses Jean and 'Janet Davidson, were recent guasts BOLTON CENTRE H.I.ABEREE, optometrist, ' of Mr.and Mrs.Leonard C.Hughes.\u2019ell., Strathcona Sq.Phone 2844.Miss Amy Wells, a student in the Maple Wood Convent, Waterloo, has been spending a few days holidaying here the guest of Mr.and Mrs.Henry McGill at Sunny Acres.Miss Wells sang two solos at the Sunday-morning service in the United Female Help Wanted (V-e Physicians and Surgeons R°lfe (1 rl : kortKtier g Room 20, North.O KEEP SHOP CLEAN AND - t.P ¦ p ; h r.g : ai-.o ex pe r i e r, ced r.d *raGood pay.Apply WrJtir.g Block, 100 Wellington G IP.L WANTED TO HELP IN RESTAU- TT ON EFT, WILLIN' b ^ pc.- week for bhc 51, Record.ENGLISH GIRL, ?3 \u2022- time.Apply Box UOOK GENERAL WANTED FOR SAW-yervUe Hotel.App.y at cr.ce.Phone HUNDRED BARRED ROCK PUL-Price reason .able.E.G.Simon*, Eas.t Ar.g\u2019i-, Que.Wanted To Purchase Highest prices paid fop.mink and al] kinds raw furs.A.Giilman, 92 Wellington South, Sherbrooke.V\\T ANTED SEVEN GOOD J ERNE Y C W.U * * regia lewd, three or four years old, to freshen in April or May.State price and .give reeord, breeding and de^c-iption 5n general.Donald M.Rowat, Aid red Bui.ding,' Montreal.|)K.I-' Th I), S HERBROOKfe VETERINARY HOSPITAL D- L A.Gendreea.14 Front.Pb 2107 Plasterer HATLEY \\\\7ANTED PRACTICAL NURSE.STATS f r-a.e.'y and experience.Apply Box 49, Record Off.e.Situation Wanted, Female r YOU HAVE OLD HORSES FOR SALK or cows killed by bloat, lightning or ao-\u2022 oer.*, be pure to bleed anianals killed r y accident, call Langdon HV! Minkery, T^-r-noxvibe, Phone 2-2.Immediate notifiratio*.pOOK ^ Rerfe GENERAL SEEKS POSITION, furnished.Record, Box Work Wanted rILA.i ROOT CUTTER phone P.B.Bre&ee, SutV/i WRITE OR Mrs.a._________ ______ .\t-\t.c WL-\t^trafkor.na\tPh/.Yi4» 2844.^lr.Sfici ^XrS.ForrGSt HookGT} GKuitTi \\Tre: A C\u2019 Djivi* 3CC01Y1- Mrs.L.J.Hooker and Mrs.J ?\u2022 | panTed hef at thc organ.BoTh motored to Kirkdale, where | hymns were beautifully rendered ;they were guests of Mr.and Mrs.j and ^eatly enjoyed by all present.b.b.SPEER.EYE.ear nose j Harry Rick.\tMr.Graydon True, Miss Elaine rhr,*n.al.w.inrgtor.No Phon.8246.> Miss Anme Jameson, nurse-in-1 Truc Mrs.j.R.Peaslev and little I vn cthiek PHONE «76 54 KING n., trammg at the Sherbrooke Hosp.tal, ; Miss Donna Gay peas]ey motored I >\tnUU nL.^ rrYentN calling on her aunt, to Sherbrooke on Sunday.Mr.Nor- Mrs.Lewis Hughes, and Mr.Hugnes.man peas]eÿ, who is a student in the St.Charles Seminary, accompanied them home for a short holiday.Mr.and Mrs.T.E.Cousens, Mrs.H.E.Cousens, Mrs.Donald Cousens and Mrs.N.I.Beasley motored to Newport to attend the funeral of Charles Cousens.Mr.Walter Miltimore, of Iron , Hill, was a guest at Riverdale on Mr.Ronald Jones accompanied i Tuesday and Wednesday of last Mr.Judson Grenier, his brother, t week.Brigham, and Mayor D.J.Murphy I Guests at Pine Lodge included to Montreal one day last week.! Miss Stella Stowe, Burlington, Vt., Mr.and Mrs.Henry Elliott and Messrs K.and R.Miltimore, Sutton, j family are moving to Brigham where Messrs.E.Osliguay and A.Tou-eard party was Mr.Elliott has accepted a position.: chette, Adamsville; Mr.Grant Davis, AUCTION SALE FOR Miss I.Revend, Tuesday.Nov.9th, AT 12:30 O\u2019CLOCK at Joseph Blais\u2019, formerly Cvrilk-Guimet\u2019s, 1 mile from Tnrnifobia, on Stanstead Highway.Pair working: horses, 12 cows, .*> two year heifers, 7 yearlings, 3 calves, double wagon express, single and double harnesses, hay loaders, 2 walking plows, sulky plow, disc harrow*, mowing machine, rake, separator, 2 sleighs, selds, roller, manure spreader, 35 to 40 tons of good hay, a lot of logs and all small tools about the place.No reserve.Terms: Cash.Farm also for sale.R.M.DEMERS, Auctioneer.Auction Sale of Horses OSGOOD HOUSE Cookshire.for George Kinnear, Nov.8th, at 12.30 o\u2019clock.Extra good lot of colts, 14 yearlings, three two year olds and two three year olds.Some matched pairs ; al L-\u2018\ttS, for $L7',.For appryintrrKrnt cab 1324-W.night 2811-Ft Ming Nor ah BUrour-, 3 7 Belvidfs-*.USED MOTORS All size-: available.Wiggelt Electric 19 Marquette St.Lost And Found ULVERTON L Hear, 03T ABOUT TEN DAYB ¦-a y Ir.\u2018tudio.brown leather AGO.GOLD R^ Those who have seen the King crack j the whip in training camp are bet-iTn-nl ting he will.\tii0,-ai The fans are wondering, too, r p-.t,!,,, whether Toronto Leafs\u2019 untried de- \\ \\ Dezie\u2019i fence will stand up and whether v' r™-,, Eddie Shore will return to his old ip' pn,,rri;''.iorm after a serious injury and lead ¦ p g\u2019pin Boston Bruins to their first cup ! '\t' ' victory in ten years.\tTo-a\u2019 It probably will be months before I pA \u2019' ,\t, .any of these questions is answered\ttw° s^ngs.conclusively hut tonight\u2019s games ! to ^ ^ lS the IeagUS may give some indication of what]1-Toronto\u2019s defence is like, whether Red Dutton's co,lection of stars and -castoffs are imbued with the famed Dutton \u201ckeep punching'* philosophy and what Bill Stewart, the referee-turned-coach, has been able rw to build at Chicago,\ttsiues With brittle-boned Charlie Cor.a- 105\u2014277 ! 72\u2014284 i 81\u2014296! 110\u2014339 ; Cmts 125\u2014366 ! Liddell ________I\tJowett .493-1562 ; McLeod Skip\u2014 R.Armstrong W.McCabe Alf.Walker T.C.Hurn Skip\u2014 J.Stebbins B.\tHoward Bob Cutts P.Mathias Skip\u2014 D.\tMcDonald C.\tOsborne J.Anderson W.Davidson Skip\u2014 R.\tGordon S.\tKinkead Geo.Davidson *R.Benton Skip\u2014 H Loken H.Hopkinson T.\tGelinas J.Scott Skip- E.\tPrice Geo.Mulvagh Ed.Bradley W.Wilson Skip- F.\tCutter J.Kay G.\tRobertson T.Molyneux Skip\u20145 Hotel.j C.B.Howard, M.P., Mayor Emile .Rioux and Col.the Hon.Johnny Bourque are honorary patrons of the league.Eugene Lalonde, of Sherbrooke, was elected vice-presi-; dent and Laurie Dwyer, secretary-treasurer.Mr.Lalonde and Mr.Dwyer have i long taken a keen interest in local ; hockey, and for some years the for-: met- has been connected with Sherbrooke junior teams, j Four of last year\u2019s junior teams ! were represented at the meeting j by the following delegates: Thomas Redmond, St.Pat\u2019s; Hogie Carmichael, Bishop\u2019s; Gordon Meek, Magog, I and Eugene Lalonde, Champêtre.] The next meeting will be held j on Thursday.November 11th, and all junior clubs wishing to enter the j Jeague are invited to attend.Presi-1 dent Kenalty pointed out that jun-; lor hockey is the training ground 1 future Sherbrooke teams, and : the league officials hope for the sup- ] port of all hockey lovers during the i coming season.\t' LIKE A MILD CIGM 12.3 87 100 110 99 150\u20144261 Scott .89\u2014278 Wjls0,n ¦ 108\u2014312 ! W Hatley 94\u2014340 ! Burn .106\u2014321 1 Parsons ______! Mathias Browns .Greens .Whites ., Maroons 611 519 547-1677 standing GORDIE TITCOMBE HURT IN PRACTICE 0 ; Gordie Titcombe, of Lennoxville, 1 former hockey star with Bishop\u2019s j University and standout on the col-1 lege rugby team for three years, was hurt last night in a practice session 6 with the Verdun Maple Leafs of the ; Quebec Senior League.; Titcombe, who is now teaching ! school in Montreal, has made a ! name for himself in Montreal athletics.Last year he played rugby for j The league standing Is at present; ^n0.nfltrea] Iadfns aml durin?tî ,tt> t\t*tt\ta tne wmtei was defenceman for the Montreal Royals in the Senior group.This year he is trying for a place on the Verdun team, and is making a good showing.Last night at practice in the Forum he crashed head-on with.Ernie Pcllissier, and both were carried from the ice unconscious.Titcombe was removed to the Western Hospital for observation and treatment, as it was feared that he had suffered a broken jaw.However he came round and was able to return home under his own power.m .and WEBSTER certainly fills the bill to perfection.mild but full-flavored .smooth but satisfying.\u2019' Made for the men who wants 10c smoking pleasure \u2014 for a nickel.P.w.4 4 4 4 i Eaves.4 Benton .Davidson Molyneux L.1 1 1 1 o F.27 31 26 29 31 31 26 29 28 26 21 27 18 19 A.16 27 26 31 22 24 21 28 28 27 29 30 30 30 CIGARS PERFECTS & CORONAS w.\tL.\tPinfali\t! 15\t6\t11.468 :\t .11\t10\t11.536 |\t» 11\t10\t11.379'\tT( .11\t10\t11,188,\t .8\t13\t10,974\t \t14\t10,7211\t SPORTING NOTES cher all in one piece and Syl Apps ! an outstanding star in his second year, Leafs look great up front.But! Clancy is not on the defence as he .¦\t, was at the start of last season and 'str:nf?verdict over t5ie ______\tNew York, Nov.4.\u2014-The Cieland r\t, n\u201e- .r\t\u201e\u201eT I family from Toronto is invading the tTr-inJv\t1 National Horse Show at Madison , '\t, 1 \u2019 ' It 1 OK 1\tSquare Garden enmasse this year.Cecil Campbell starred last night There are five Clelands here comas the Odd Fellows scored a three peting against the leading civilian Knight?of riders from the United States end UNCROWNED KING OF SPEED AIMS AT MILE RECORD c.ODD\tFEI.l\tJ)\\YS\t\t MeCallum .\t.105\t161\t148-\t-414 Campbell .\t.196\t216\t244\u2014656\t Varney .\t.178\t197\t202\u2014577\t Hatch .,\t.174\t203\t160-\t\u2014537 Quine \t\t181\t174\t229-\t\u2014584 >tal\t\t\t.831\t9*51\t983-\t2768 K.\tOK\tC.\t\t Unsworth ,\t.143\t150\t156-\t-449 .Corcoran .\t.116\t129\t111-\t-356 Letnay .\t.137\t149\t106\u2014391\t B.Chalot\t117\t144\t99-\t-360 Murphy ., .\t.136\t156\t123-\t-415 ¦ tal \t\t.649\t728\t594-\t1971 ; thers and two sisters\u2014all schooled 1 in the way of horses by their father, ! W.C.Cieland.' Lieut.Marshal Cieland and Lieut.] compete in the women\u2019s and open 'classes, flakier, fifteen years of age, Happv Day is gone to Americans i Columbus team in a Y.M.C.A.Five the picked army officers of four oth-Wilhout* Clancy\u2019s leadership and pin Bowljng League tilt.Campbell er countries., the steadying influence of the vet- roBed a S'ingie string of 244 and had ; The contingent includes three bvo eran Day Toronto\u2019s defence cannot ian a^g'refe'a'e °f 656.be as strong.Manager Conny ; Scores >n delai' follow* Smythe is depending upon Red Hor-: ner, Jimmy Fowler, Reg Hamilton' and Bob Davidson, a wingman he j has converted for defence duty.!_ Only Horner has more than a season of N.H.L.defence experience.\t; J Detroit, on the other hand, does not seem to have a clink in its ar-i r i mcr.Doug Young and Larry Aurie! ! are back with the legs they broke 1 I last season in good shape and every M j other unit in the machine that won.\u2019 I the world title last spring is click-] *2 i ing niceiy under the finished coach- ¦ iing of Jack Adams.\t| i Even with the rebuilding Dutton 1 has done Americans are not impres-1 J-?™ Fellows won three strings.\t\u2022\t.\t,\t,\t,\t, sive.In goal they have Earl Robert- v\tstanding to date fol-1 ^1 Storm m the green hunters son, the youngster who made good 1W,; as a substitute for Norm Smith, of | -\tMr.Detroit, in the Stanley Cup games, -\u2022 B.11 'and Day and Johnny Gallagher, 0r Page-Sangster.13 : Detroit, have been purchased to trY^a!?,Lers.i bolster a weak defence.\tFellows.12 But their main hope of surviva! g,irco .19 ' Chumps.9 Mitchell\u2019s.7 S.O.E.if, B.O.D.\u2019s.fi Mutts.3 K.of C.2 Eyston P/lade Dawn-to-Dark Run of 2,000 Miles Yesterday to Capture Three World Records.Bonneville Salt Flats, Utah, Nov.4.\u2014 Britain's uncrowned ''ing of speed, Capt.George E.T.Eyston, calmly regarded his three new records and observed today he would have to travel almost twice as fast Saturday to attain his chief objec- ! lies, as it has for two years, in the j i line made up of Art Chapman, Lome ; j Carr and Sweeney Schriner, the, : league\u2019s leading scorer for two sea ] sons.wiii be here only on Saturday to ' |-jve compete in the junior championships |\t.t, hopa to try f0|.tlic top wor]cI Captain Stuart Bate, leaner of Speec] record\u2014 the one-mile mark\u2014 the Canadian army team, combined j with Lieut, Marshal Cieland to tie the Belgians for second-place honors in last night\u2019s international military jumping conviotition hehin 1 the United Stats?team.Yefterday .'morning Marshal finished third with j Hill f\t'\t'\t' i class.j, 1 In the military competition Mar- 4\tshal rode the veteran Irish-bred 5 5 6 8 9 8 9 12 1 mare, Roxana, and Dunadry.Dun-adry gave a clear performance, tak-;ng every jump, but lost three points by momentarily refusing one fence.Stewart\u2019s leadership may make a great difference at Chicago but hi.-, i new material is untried.He must I i place his reliance on the line made up ' Doc Romnes, Mush March and MAKES SURE OF SEATS FOR OPENING BASEBALL GAME Pittsburgh, Nov.4.\u2014The end of one baseball season is just the be-1 *\t: C\t4- T C~.16 ginning of another for Albert Ploch, ____\t, veteran street car motorman, QUEEN\u2019S AND HOBOES WON I Although the Pirates won\u2019t open Queen\u2019s marked up a three string 'heir, 19^ faK01' .f?r\t?'* ._ _ victory over Carling's ami Hobo«s months.Plod» sent In Mschcck today Paul Thompson and the defence piayi'?0,c \u2022'bring- from the Modernis-,,or ^,x of Ear! Seibert and Marty Burke.ll,ks m last nights Industrial Bowl- -He has a steady second line in Louis,\u2019ntf League games.R.Waller, of Trudel, Johnny Gofctseiig and Gler jQue*n * canded off the individual Brydson, bat any games the rest qf | honors with an aggregate of 557.front row seats for the first; them win will be that much gravy.| CLAIMS ROM ANCE TAK ES MINI) OFF HOCKEY London, Nov.4.-Romance ha?/ no place in hockey, according to George Redding, the former Ham-' i i ton, Ont., player who is coaching f'.arP* Court Rangers in the National j League.He has made each of hisi players sign a pledge not to get married during the hockey season.' Bobby Lee, of Montreal.Earl's: Court centre, who put off his wed-j ding in Canada to sail for England,: baa had to cable his fiancee in Montreal not to come over.They I were to have been married here ' soon.Redding explains that he considers that players should concentrate during the hockey season on winning game* to the exclusion of everything c',r,«.Scores in detail follow: For ten years, Vice-President S.E.Watters said.Ploch has been the first fan to order tickets for Bue-| cancer openers.CARLING\u2019S\t\t\t\t\t\t\t W.McNab .,\t160\t147\t\u2014307\tE.Taylor\t.143\t152\t157\u2014452 .M.Dufresne .\t135\t150\t138\u2014 423\tK, Merrill ,.\t.167\t161\t119\u2014447 E.O.Blais .\t126\t166\t156\u2014448\tI.Smith .\t.151\t157\t114\u2014422 A.B-ais\t.\t156\t165\t175 -496\t'C.Smith .\t\t173\t151\u2014324 J.O.Dufrerue\t159\t181\t173\u2014513\t|\t\t\t\t\t\t L.Whiting .\t\t\t116 116\tTotal\t.\t.740\t785\t672-2197 \t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\ta\t\tnone\t\t-S\t Total \t\t736\t809\t753-2305\tM.Parson*-! .\t.129\t155\t154\u2014 438 QUEEN\u2019S HOTEI\t\t\t\tR.Lefebvre .\t.114\t202\t138\u2014454 *T.Parrel] ,,\t197\t164\t160\u2014521\tA.Choquette\t.137\t157\t125\u2014410 C.Letarte .\t211\t133\t\u2014 349\tF.Salois .\t.131\t146\t! 62\u2014401 C.Moreau .,,\t164\t\t192 -356\tI!.Beaudry .\t.108\t142\t156 - 466 B, McCormick ,\t165\t183\t194-542:\t\t\t\t R.Waller .\t211\t187\t159.\t557\tTotal .\t690\t801\t735-2238 A.Albert .,\t\t196\t141 -3371 Hoboes won\t\ttwo strings.\t\t \t\t\t\tThe league standing to date is:\t\t\t Total .\t948\t868\t816-2662\t\t\tW L Pinfall\t Queen\u2019* won\tthree\tstring*.\t\tQuean\u2019s .\t\t11\t4\t11,986 MODERN ISTIK\t\t\t\tModerniitik .\t\t8 7\t11,793 w.Reid .\t135\t\t\u2014135\tHoboes\t\t6 9\t11,139 G.Dunumore\t144\t142\t131 417\tCarling\u2019s .\t\t5 10\t11,433 Grads are pleasure.V1 Suffer from \u201cnerves\u201d?Science says harsh shaves cause \u201cjitters\u201d.Start ynnr day riglu\u2014with a super-keen Gillette Blue Blade in your Gillette Razor.Here\u2019s the perfect shaving team\u2014precision-built to whisk away wiry beard in no time at all! Remember, Gillette always gi ves you more shaving comfort for your money.5 for 25c 10 for 50c at your dealer\u2019s.GILLETTE BLADES GILLETTE RAZOR theyre made for each other Gillette Blades wosu> FfNtST 5 H & y ?s While kicking stars of the gridiron rely on natural ability and careful training to hoist a long ball \u2014 Grads rely wholly on nature to bring you that satisfying, natural flavour of finest Virginia tobaccos that need no *\"A.F.\" touchy throat or nerves appreciate the soothing kindness of Grads and expert analysts constantly guard their quality.\u2019'Naturals\" for smoking GRADS 7/^natural\"^^ /Vo ^Artificial Flavouring PLAIN or CORK TIP G~2« SHEUBROOKE DAILY BECORD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1937.PAGE ELEVEN LAKE MEGANTIC W.M.S.MEETING WEU ATTENDED Meeting at Knox United Church, with the President, Mrs.McAmmond, in the Chair, Was Great Success.votional exercises, led by the president, Mrs, McAmmond.After the regular routine of business had been transacted, arrangements were made to meet the following Tuesday and pack a box to be sent to the distributing centre at Edmonton.The Study Book, \u201cA New Church Faces a New World,\u201d was taken for study and the first chapter was dealt with.The origin of the first Congregational, Presbyterian and Methodist pioneer churches was studied, the different members of the Auxiliary taking part.Mrs.J.A.McLeod is to take the leadership for the November meet- -\t| ing.The Junior Choir, comprising Lake Megantic, Nov.4.\u2014The re- the Misses Phyllis Campbell, Carroll gular monthly meeting of the Wo- Black, Jennie and Winnie Gordon, men\u2019s Missionary Socirtv\tDonna Clark and Sylvia Stewart in the Sunday School room of Knox \"ing.United Church on \\\\ ednesetay, Ur- The thank-offering was given and ber 27.\ta gratifying amount added to the The meeting was opened with da-i treasury, Mrs.Buxton sang a solo, \u201cI Would Be True,\u201d and Mrs.J.N.Matheson gave a reading.The meeting was brought to - a close with the mizpah benediction, following which refreshments were served by Mrs.M.A.MacDonald, who was assisted by a committee.General Notes Mr.' Sydney McLeod, of Brown-ville, spent a few days in town recently.Mr.J.F.Miller, of Sherbrooke, spent a week-end with his parents, Mr.and Mrs.J.S.Miller.Mrs.Mary McLeod, of Marsboro, is ill at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Murdo A.McDonald.All wish her a speëdy recovery to health.Kve.A.F.G.Nichol, of Hatley, spent Saturday in town.Miss Helen McLeod, who has been the guest of her parents, Mr.and Mrs.N.H.McLeod for a few months, has gone to Boston, Mass.Miss yolina MacKenzie, of Alber-t Mines, spent a week-end at her home.Captain Brett Pei-ring, student in charge of St.Barnabas Church, conducted the services in St.Alban\u2019s Church, Scotstown, on Sunday, October 24.The friends of Mr.K.W.Smith will be sorry to learn that he is confined to his home by illness.All wish for a speedy recovery, Mr.J.A.Stewart and Miss Hazel Stewart have returned from Farn-ham.Miss Margaret McLeod, of Scotstown, spent a week-end with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.N.H.McLeod.Mrs.Fanny Greenway has returned from Sherbrooke, where she was the guest of Mrs.Sarah Duncan and Miss Agnes Duncan.Mr.and Mrs.Earle Stewart, of Sherbrooke, were week-end guests of Mrs.and Mrs.J.A.Stewart.Mrs.Norman McDonald and Miss Effie McDonald have gone to Marsboro to spend a few days with Mr.and Sirs.Andrew McDonald.' Miss Joan Halls spent a week-end at her home in Lennoxville.The condition of Mr.Murdo McLeod, who is a patient in the local hospital, is much mproved.Mr.and Mrs.Collins and son, Wilson, and Miss Cathcart, of Granby, spent a recent week-end at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Allan McDonald.Mrs.William Elliott and Mrs.Robert Mayhew spent a day in Sherbrooke.Mr.and Mrs.William Morrison, of Danville, Vt., are guests of Mr.and Mrs.John J.Stewart and other relatives.Mr.William Boyle has gone to Geraldtonr .Ont,, for an indefinite time.Mrs.Porter Farwell has gone to 'Montreal for a few days.Mr.Bingham, of the-Presbyterian College, Montreal, conducted the services in St.Andrews Church on Sunday, October 24.Rev.Sidney Wood, of Scotstown, conducted the services in St.Barnabas Anglican Church on Sunday, October 24.Miss Margaret McLeod spent a week-end in Sherbrooke.ST.CYR Mr.Lionel Davis is renewing old acquaintances in this district.Mi-, and) Mrs.F.C.Bernard and Mr.and Mrs.R.A.Bernard and family motored to Drummondville and called on friends.Miss Marian Smith has gone to Montreal for an indefinite time.A number from this vicinity attended the supper sponsored by the United Farmers in the Farmers\u2019 Hall, on Friday evening.A fine supper was served to about five hqndrcd people.Dancing, brought a very enjoyable evening to a close.Mr.and Mrs.Austin Church and family spent Saturday in Sherbrooke.Inspector Wells visited school district No.16 on Tuesday.Mr.George Byrd has returned to his home in Williamstown, Mass., after spending several weeks with his sister, Mrs.Stephen Smith.\u201cBoy! that new PONTIAC is easy on the eyes!\u201d \u201cEasy to own5 JL__f 5>> * %m mm - ii Ki IK CONSIDER THESE FEATURES: low finonce and insurance cost \u2014Your car is protected by a policy in General Exchange Insurance Corp\u2019n, a member of the General Motors family \u2014 Payments to suit your purse \u2014A complete General Motors service \u2014 Operated by GENERAL MOTORS ACCEPTANCE CORP.G28-P t ¦ '¦ >r! >' Xw SsBaaqouaSe) Siilffi Mil « I» wH # ft F AVI- A 'Lt?j - - : - ¦' -A -¦ I ¦ 1$%# id t ¦v; : ¦\t't:¦ \u2019 \u2022i '.'X TV, EMM ft AM r.vv^;;V>F>N< tâsmm.mm -I'.!-.\u2022 '-'tA'p-y 2g-rïd ¦.¦¦y.ùiïÀiv psr .i._' ¦mm ;ê&m.M:!: '-.M { « .jwwns\"- liülfi:-;:;! Xri^iftîÿaw « V -1 .iftsi-îîr V.MP -L- ¦' g®.1AST YEAR, Pontiac startled Motoring Canada by announcing one of the finest Pontiacs ever built, at the lowest prices in history.Pontiac repeats for 1938.Heir to a famous fine car line are these two 1938 Pontiac models.A new, De Luxe Six .an All-Time High for Value! And a new, thrifty Special Six .priced at an All-Time Loiv! Twin values to amaze Motoring Canada! Sheer beauty to take it by storm! The new, more striking \"Silver Streak\u201d styling of the new\u2019 Pontiacs reflect character and distinction from bumper to cowl.Both cars are a symphony of flowing lines and sweeping contours.graceful, speedline silhouettes.Both give the silence, safety and riding comfort of new Unisteel Turret Top Bodies by Fisher.Both provide new handling ease.effortless power.lightning \"getaway\u201d.top performance .and matchless thrift! And a ride smoother than words can describe! Exclusive to all Pontiac models is the new SAFETY SHIFT Gear Control that makes Pontiac a joy to drive.Shifting can be done with a flick of the fingers without removing a hand from the wheel.Never was a front seat more perfectly \"built for three\u201d.There\u2019s no gear shift lever to \"tangle\u201d the legs of the middle passenger.Even the emergency brake is under the cowl.Floors are level and unobstructed, both front and rear.See these great new Pontiacs! Take a ride and be convinced that for 1938 Pontiac again outvalues the field.Ownership can be conveniently arranged through the General Motors Instalment Plan that provides monthly payments to suit your purse.1 * ! IH PU WEBSTER MOTORS LIMITED - Pontiac and McLaughiin~Buick Branch: 73 BELVIDERE STREET NORTH, SHERBROOKE.BELANGER GARAGE, MAGOG, DYSON & ARMSTRONG, RICHMOND, \u2014 PHONE 2793.COWANSVILLE MOTOR SALES, COWANSVILLE.\\ PAGE TWELVE SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1937.HATLEY PUBLIC LIBRARY MADE GOOD PROGRESS Sixty-Two Books Were Added During the Year\u2014Officers Were Elected.Hatley, Nov.4.\u2014The annual meet-inf: of the Hatley Library Association was held in the library, with a small attendance.In the absence of the president, Mr.Hall, Mrs.Hugh McClary acted as chairman.The secretary read the minutes of the last meting, which were adopted.The librarian's report showed a slight increase in members and that sixty-two books were added 'during the year, forty-two of which I were donated as the result of a special appeal, making a total of 1,739 books, 2,100 loans were recorded.The officers elected were as follows: president, Miv.Leslie McClary; librarian and secretary-treasurer, Mrs.F.0.Webster.The retiring trustee, C.W.Moulton, was reelected.The names of Elsie Eoyes, Olive Toft and Hilda Bowen were added to the ways and means com- mittee, with Mrs.Arthur McClary as convener.Following is the financial statement for the year: October 1, 1936, No cash receipts on hand; yearly subscriptions, $22.60; fines, forty-six cents; proceeds from play, $18; donation from Women\u2019s Institute, $5.Total $46.06.Expenditures: Books, $14.51; sundries, sixty-nine cents; librarian, $30; balance on hand, eighty-six cents.Total $46.06.Cross-Word Puzzle The Picture Is That of a Former Baseball Star HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 1 Pictured man.jp S 8 He was the\tR rï 5 most famous ball-of his day.13\tBlack.14\tTo pickic.16\tEvils.17\tFinish.18\tImpelled.19\tJewel.20\tRight.21\tUgly monster.23 Small nail.25\tNortheast.26\tTo barter.28\tBehold.29\tVolcanic tuf 31 To assist.33\tElectrified particle.34\tKinsfolk.35\tTo thread.37\tTwenty four hours.38\tNetwork.LlLlvl PATsyfoLjrSE; i KELLY Ac~ 5 EE CO I MASSE E E A'R N E SmMUiP 5 T A R S P A Ü 3 B K A S a T M L vvÂMsi i ^ntsTWTp A EiR PME R D A N: C1 I slave.45 Dunce.47 Stop.49 Fence rail.51 Elms.53 Dry.55\tHe made a record hitting \truns.56\tRelieves.57\tTo bathe.53 Those who read.40\tMusical note.59 He competes 41\tTo accomplish,\tin golf- 43 Domestic\ttoday.IT R A I iN E-Dl VERTICAL 1\tTo exist.2\tTo instigate.3\tBuddhist , festival.4\tSettles an income upon.5\tTo arrogate.6\tLaderated.7\tAn embrace.8\tFoot lever.9\tFrenzied nervous malady.10\tTo bark.11\tEnthusiasm.12 Respiratory sound.15 To hatden.20 He-as a professional player some years ago, 22 Piston packings.24 Hearty.26\tSounder of mind.27\tPertaining ta tides.30\tEggs of fishes.31\tConjunction.32\tAnd.36 Changed direction.39\tTo come in.40\tCavity.42 Instrument.44\tAges.45\tTo.opine.46\tPowder ingredient.47\tBees' home.48\tPoems.50 Wine vessel.-, 52 Electrical unit, 54\tHurrah! 55\tHour.4 21 29 33 35 30 iS 22 in Cc 119 !0 If 6 24 II\t12 \t \t 125 |34 36 |5/ 136 52 59 4b ¦Bf?4i 3 54 15 7 trMUSiSB .5» FOOD STORES SALE OF CANNED FOODS Stock up for the winter at these great savings - « .WAX BEAIS ASPARAGUS mm PEAS 2 EMFO\tIs lins 1\tDEL\tA |\tMAIZ\t£,\tTims COUNTRY\tA 11 oz.HIST\tme Tin» GARDEN\t17 oz.PATCH\tTin ft\tCOUNTRY y\tkist\t4/i's Tin LIFEBUOY HEALTH SOAP\tCake 7c BOKAR COFFEE, Vigorous & Winey, 1-lb.tin 29c 8 O\u2019CLOCK COFFEE, Mild & Mellow, lb.27c RED CIRCLE COFFEE, Rich & Full-bodied, lb.21c Take ANN PAGE Home a Loaf of Sliced or Unsliced 24 oz.«I 1% Wrapped | y' muo A Favorite Everywhere! u General Notes.The Misses Geraldine Parker.Anris Young, Mabel Glidden and Elsie Boyes, of this place, each received a bonus cheque for meritorius teaching during the session of 1936-37.Mrs.George Harrison, of Sher-broke, spent a week at the home of her uncle and aunt, Mr.and, Mrs.Allan Wheeler.Mr.Charles Hamilton, of Waltham, Mass., was an overnight guest at the home of Mr.and Mrs.C.W.Moulton.Mr.and Mrs.Bernard Mitchell and daughter, Joan, of Lyndonville, Vt, spent a week-end with Mr.and Mrs.Kenneth Little and called on other relatives, 3Ir.and Mrs.Gerald Colt and baby daughter, Betty Ann, and Mr.and Mrs.Harry Wilson, of stead, were recent Sunday guests of Mr.E Hodges Mr.and Mrs.Hugh McClary were in Buiwer at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Walter Rogers.M:-s Phyllis Little, who is engaged in the office of the Ingersoll-Rand Company, in Sherbrooke, spent j EAST CLIFTON COUPLE FETED Approximately Fifty Friends Gathered at the Home of cent guests of Mrs.Frank Largie and Miss Bernice Wilkinson.Mrs.P.G.Jack and Master Billie Jack spent a few days recently in Quebec City guests of Mrs.W.B.Jack.Mrs .C.W.Bullock, who has been visiting relatives in Montreal, returned on Tuesday, October 26.Mr.and Mrs.G.H.Henderson were in Sherbrooke attending the Horse Show.Mrs.Turner Webster and little , daughters, of Bury, spent a few n,\t, ¦\u201e\t_ ,, .! days recently with Mr.and Mrs.r/lr.and Mrs.Victor Boll for j Arthur Dickenson.Mr.Webster a Farewell Party for Mr was a week-end guest at the same J\t\u2018 : home.Mrs.W.H.Marsh, of Toronto, is the guest of her parents, Mr.and Approxi- Mrs.T.F.Davidson.Mrs.Edward Schnieder, of Mun-roeville, Ohio, left for her home on Thursday after spending a few days with her daughter, Mrs.John Whitman, and Mr.Whitman.Mr.and Mrs.McIntyre who have recently come to Granby to reside, spent a week-end in Sherbrooke as guests of Mr.and Mrs.David Sails.The C.W.À.of St.George\u2019s Church are giving a snappy little play entitled \u201cThe Incurable Optimist,\u201d in the parish hall on November 4.This is being repeated by special request to give those who were not able to attend when it was presented in March and opportunity and Mrs.L.Hurley.East Clifton, Nov.4.«lately fifty people, including the members of the choir and their families and several friends, gathered at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Victor Bell for a farewell party for Mr., and Mrs.L.I.Huxley, who are leav-1 ing shortly for Ccaticook.As previously arranged Mr.and Mrs.Hurley came to choir practise unaware of the party.During the evening, Rev.A.E.Hagar, presented the guests of honor with a Bible on behalf of the choir members and their families, accompanied by best Star»- I wishes for happiness in their new home.Mr.and Mrs.Hurley thank- ed them for their kindness.Refreshments were served by the of seeing this little well acted com ladies.Those from out of town who edy.attended were Mrs.Herbert Picard, of Montreal, Mr.and Mrs.George Hurley, F.ev.and Mrs.A.E.Hagar j and Miss Bertha McBurney, of Saw- her week\u2019s holiday at the home of I'1-''1-'- her parents, Mr.and Mrs.T.J.Little.Miss Florence Bishop, of Bishop- General Notes.Mr.A.J.Betts and daughter.Vera, also Mrs.James Towers and ton, was an overnight guest at the ! '\t.uxs.\truueis ami home of Mr.and Mrs.C.W.Moul- ! danfhter\u2019 L,ena -^e, were m Coati- eook recently ton.Mr.Herbert Perry, of Lennoxville, was a guest of Mrs.Helen Pope.Mr.George Bishop called on Mr.and Mrs.L.A.Hall.Compton.Mr.and Mrs.Edmund Lemire were in Lennoxville on Saturday, October 23rd.to attend the funeral of Mr.Merton Sanders.Mrs.Helen Pope, Mrs.Maude Howe and Mrs.William Sage left by motor on Monday morning, October 25th, for Florida, where they will spend the winter months.Mr.Ralph Whitcomb accompanied Miss Mabel Glidden to Montreal one day rteentlv, from where she intended going by train to New York, then by boat to South Carolina, where she will spend the winter.Mr.and Mrs.Hugh McClary drove to Keene.N.H., to visit Mr.and Mrs.Donald Markwell.Miss Mary McGale had the misfortune to fall on the sidewalk recently and sustained a sprained ankle and other injuries.She was taken to a local hospital for treatment.Mr.H.D.McCurdy, of Montreal, spent a -week-end with his parents.Mrs.Francis Thierer and little son have returned from a month spent with relatives in Pennsylvania.Mrs.Amos Chartier, of Montreal, spent a week-end with Mr.and Mrs.Harley Chartier.Mrs.Abbie Ferris was also visiting at the same home.Miss Claire Hodgson and Mr.Harrison Jones, of Montreal, were guests of Miss Margaret Bradford.NORTH HATLEY Mr.T.V.Reed has received a letter from his daughter, Laura, Mrs.Frank Dickie, posted at Gibraltar Retail sale of toys in the United States reach an annual value of 391.900,000.Mr.Almon Cairns and Mr.Lewis Woodsworth, of South Paris, Me., were week-end guests of the formers father, Mr.Janies Cairns, and sister, Mrs.Luman Waldron and Mr.Waldron.Mr.and Mrs.George Hall, of East Angus, were Sunday guests of Mr.and Mrs.Albert McConnell.Recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.j Guy B.Waldron included Mr.and i Mrs.Edward Cleveland, of New j York.I Mr.and Mrs.Wesley Bellam and I daughter, Mary Jane, and Miss Vera; which she and Mr.Dickie reached on Be::s were recent week-end guests'the Italian iiner Rex en^ route to of the former\u2019s uncle, Mr.Sternie i Genoa, Italy.Mrs.Dickie reports Pone and Mrs.Pone, of Irisburg, Vt.a very pleasant crossing on one of A large number from out of town j the largest and most palatial boats attended the funeral of Mrs.Ella afloat.One of the passengers was Gray, of Sawyer ville, formerly of t the young son of Premier Mussolini, this place, which was held in the : The Dickies are now in Switzerland, United Church here on Saturday,; having completed the first leg of October 23.The sympathy of the their journey to India, where they community is extended to the rela-' expect to spend the winter, tives in their bereavement.Recent Sunday guests of Mr.and ; Mrs.Guy Waldron included Mr.and children, of Hamilton, Ont., have moved into the apartment recently vacated by Mr.and Mrs.A.Bois.Rev.Baxter has been appointed minister for the local Baptist Church.Miss Marjorie Allen, wrho has been spending some time in Beebe, has returned home.SOUTH BOLTON Mr.Kenneth Burbank and son, Donald, of Pittsfield, N.H., have been visiting their father and grandfather, Mr.James Burbank and Mr.and Mrs.D.W.Johnson.Mr.and Mrs.M.Baird and Mr.Marcel Dufresne, of Magog, Mr.Elric Dufresne, of East Bolton, and Mr.F.Arnold, of St.Gedeon, were recent visitors at the home of Mr.and Mrs.W.A.Randall.Mr.and Mrs.George LaChance and Miss Rose Mary Blodgett, of Lyndonville, Vt., visited at the home of Mrs.A.Blodgett and Mrs.Burbank recently.The oyster supper held in the parish hall on Tuesday evening, October 26, under the auspices of the Ladies\u2019 Guild of Holy Trinity ,\t_ , , Church, proved a decided success, nesday, October 27, calling on Mr, The proceeds of the evening were and Mrs.W._L.Eldridge and Mr.very gratifying.\tand Mrs.E.V .Eldridge.'\u2019,r\" \u2019r'-\" Mr.C.Randall was in Montreal recently.Mr.James Burbank, Mrs.D.W.Mr.Ernest Eldridge had the misfortune to slip and fracture his arm recently.Miss Kathryn Pettes, of Know! Johnson, Mr.K.Burbank and son, ton, was a guest on Tuesday after-Donald, Mr.E.Needham, Mr.John noon, October 26, of her friend, Burbank and Mrs.M.Manuel visit- Mrs.Howard Eldridge.ed Mr.and Mrs.F.Burbank at, Orford on Sunday, October 24.i Master Douglas Barnes, of Call\u2019s Mr.George Lemire, of Slier- Mills, were recent guests of Mr.and brooke, was in town recently.STANSTEAD Mrs.Minnie Chase and Mrs.Har- Mrs.Frank Barnes.Mr.and Mrs.W.L.Eldridge little son, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.E.L.Eldridge.Mr.and Mrs.Frank Barnes were .,\t-, .\t.\t.\ti recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.Wil- old Smith were m Dixvdle on ]iam Banles and Mr.and Mrs.Mun- Thursday, October 28th, o attend d?n Barnes in Call\u2019s Mills.the funeral of Mrs.Chases cousin, j Severa] from here attended the ^rs;\tY\u2019 est°mD\t(farewell party for Mr.and Mrs.C.Mr.Morris Ross, of Burlington, p_ Bunter in Bondville on Friday Vt., was a guest of his brother, Dr.I their departure for Waterloo, but The, Best of Beef is in it Builds up your reserve energy Quickly Mr.J.A.Seguin, accompanied by Mr.and Mrs.Guy Kezar, motored to Laconia, N.H., on Saturday, Octo-| Mrs.Norman Patterson, of Brook-' her 30.Mrs.Seguin returned with lyn, N.Y., Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Saw-I yer, Miss Gloria and Mr, Howard, | of Randboro, Mr.and Mrs.Donald ; MacRae and daughters, Madeline, Mona and Marilyn, of Sawyerville.Messrs.Henry and Charles Craw-j ford, of Stanstead, were dinner : guests of Mr.and Mrs.A.J.Betts j while here to attend the funeral of Mrs.Elia Gray, of Sawyerville.Mr.and Mrs.Jack Glenney and daughter, Mildred, of Bolton, were guests of Mrs.Agnes Thompson.; They also called on other friends while here.them after visiting relatives and friends there for the past three weeks.Mr.Stuart Edgar, of Rock Island, spent a week-end with relatives here.Miss Nancy Leduc spent a weekend with friends in Montreal.Mr.Hollis Corey, of Hawaii, is spending some time with his sister, Mrs.0.R.Bowen and Mr.Bowen, also visiting friends and relatives in other parts of the Eastern Townships.Miss Frances Kezar, of Water- Boss on Thursday.Mr.and Mrs.J.D.McFadyen ; wish\thappiness in their new were in Montreal and Sherbrooke ; home over a week-end.Mr.McFadyen addressed the meeting of the Eastern Star Lodge held in Montreal at the Mount Royal.Mrs.J.A.Peasley is visiting her daughter, Mrs.Frank Brock, in New York.Dr.and Mrs.G.Ellery Read, of Sherbrooke, were calling on friends in town.Rev.A.T.Jones and Mr.P.H.Copey have bought the Stockwell property on Station street.Mr.J.D.McFadyen is supplying at the Congregational Church, Island Pond, Vt., in the absence of the pastor, who is taking a trip abroad.Mr.and Mrs.T.B.Ford, of Portland, visited their daughters, Joyce and Amy, students at Stanstead College.some time in Windsor, Vt., the guest of his parents, Mr.and Mrs.James Armstrong, and sisters, Mrs.Earle Conroy and Mrs.Joseph L.McClay.Friends of Mr.Armstrong, will be pleased to know he is slowly recovering from his serious accident, Mrs.Forest Eldride and Mrs.Frank Barnes attend Brome Ladies\u2019 Mr.and Mrs.Munden Barnes and | Guild at the home of Mrs.Frank .Richard on Wednesday, October 27.Mr.W.E.Eldridge was a guest on Wednesday evening at the home of Mr.Forest Eldridge.Mr.and Mrs.Frank Barnes were guests on Thursday of Mr.and Mrs.J.M.Ladd in Bondville.Mr.and Mrs.Forest Eldridge, Mr.Homer Davis and Miss Helen Eldridge motored to Montreal on Tuesday, October 26, and called on Miss A.A.McGinnis.Mrs.Forest Eldridge, Mr.Homer Davis, Mrs.Harold Prouty and baby, Evelyn and Mrs.Howard Eldridge motored to Granby on Thursday and called on Mr.and Mrs.H.Mr.Leslie Armstrong is spending Robinson.evening.All regret to learn of TIBBITS HILL NEW 4 Purpose Rinse .Brings LIFE LUSTRE and COLOR to YOUR HAIR No matter what else you do tor your hair, no matter what shampoo you use, Lovalon is bound to bring greater beauty.It does these 4 definite things.Highlights the hoir.Gives it sparkling life, gleaming lustre, a healthful glow.Tints os it rinses.Lovalon is made in 12 shades.You can match and enrich your hair\u2019s natural color, or make it a hit lighter, or deeper.Faded, off-color or Mr.George Ellis, of Bury, is ville, spent a week-end at her home ; spending an indefinite time with hi: j sister, Mrs.Beta Cairns.Recent Sunday guests of Mr.and .Mrs.Luman Waldron were, Mr.and Mrs.S.B.Coats, Mr.and Mrs.Osborne Dougherty and.family, of Brookbury, Mr.and Mrs.Ira Dawson, of Bishopton, Mr.and Mrs.Clayton Blair and family and Mr.Donald Willard, of this nlace.CASSVILLE i -f! Peppermint Patties, lb.package.25c Sunnyfieid Flour, 24 lb.bag\t79c Clover Honey, No.1 White, 4 ib.pail\t47c Tomatoes, Iona, 23/2\u2019s tin\t3 for 25c Orange Marmalade, N.B.Pure, 2 lb.jar\t25c Chipso, Large Package\t] 9c Grapefruit Juice, Trinidad, ISVz oz- tin\t10c Iona Cocoa\tlb.tin 19c\t2 lb.tin 33c Macaroni or Spaghetti, Bulk, Ib.\t5c EAGLE BRAND CONDENSED MILK Molly Magic Party Book t% With Every.Ç Tins \u2014 FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES \u2014 BANANAS, Golden Ripe\t4 lbs.25c ORANGES, Jamaica for Juice, Dozen\t23c GRAPEFRUIT, Large Size .\t3 for 23c LETTUCE, Iceberg, Nice Size.2 for 11c GRAPES, Fancy Emperor.2 lbs.19c APPLES, Cooking, 6 qt.basket\t23c A&P FOOD STORES A  2-Y¥ay Curb for Coughs and Colds! If a cough or a cold hangs on, where wiii it end?Even a slight attack should be promptly checked\u2014or you risk health, time and money.Treat that cough or cold Two-Wavs at once\u2014inside and outsidemand see how quickly it disappears.Pasmore's 2-Minuto-Aid Bronchial Mixture for the inside\u2014to loosen the phlegm, soothe the sore membranes, open up the clogged air passages.And outside \u2014 Pasmore\u2019s 2-Purpose Chest-Rub, better than a poulticefor breaking up congestion, easing the \u201ctightness\u201d, tending healing vapors to continue the medical action during sleep.tf.urb any cough or cold promptly with this quicker \"inside and outside\u20191 treat- ____^ nient.1 Your druggist sells Pasmore's 2-Minute-Aid Bronchia! M.s\u2019tife and Pasmore's 2-Ptirpose ____Chest-Hub,\t8 PASMORE'S 2 WAV CURB ON COUGHS AND COLDS Mrs, J.A, Peasley is visiting Mr.and Mrs.F.Brock in New York.Mr.-:.Ralph Vivian and children, have returned home after spending a week with relatives in Melbourne and Kirkdaie.Mr.E.L, Davidson, of Minneapolis, v.s= a guest of his sister, Mrs.W.G Heath.Mis: Iris Clark spent a week-end with Miss Anna Heath.FARNHAM CENTRE Mr \\V.G.Miltimore, of Sweets-burg was a guest of Mr.and Mrs, Gordon Miltimore.Mr.Montgomery has returned to : his heme in Morse, Sa.-k., after spending, a few week- with his ! daughter, Mrs.Gordon Miltimore | and Mr.Miltimore.Mr.and Mi::-;.Frank Guthrie, of i Springfield, Mass., spent a week-1 end with Mr.and Mrs.A.Mahannah.Me-; >v, Carl and Harold Mahan-I'.ah.of Briztoi, Conn., are spending : a few days here with relatives.Rev.If.N.and Mrs.Coburn, of , Prescott, Ont., are guest?of Mr.and | Mrs.Robert Clark and Mr.Ronald I Clark.Mr.and Mrs.George Powers ac-! corn ponied Mr.and Mrs.C.Whit- | comp, o; Kicnso?where they were Mr-.C.T.Powe Mr.and Mrs.j Ross Crawford ! were guests of I Dewel, at Philip d, Vt., to Farnham, guest:: of Mr.and Will Crawford, Mr.and Mr.G.Testy Mr.and Mrs.J.Marvin Crawford Han-on Crawls of relatives in GRANBY Dr.Smyl! who have rec real after spending the summer in and Mss.Smythc, y .eturned to Mont- LIQUEUR WHISKY Bcruoto mo Borrcco in cahaoa 13 »«.*1,15 - 25 ox.*M9 \u2022 40 ot.t3.t5 Ire! an\to, were\tsis of I\tiev.Thomas Scott\tand Mr:% 1\"\tcott at\t\u2022 he parson- age.\t\t\t Mr.\tand Mr:-:.\tT.G.F\ttiler atlend- ed the\tfuneral o\tMb-;\t\\iic® Griggs which\twas held\tat Sh\t.orook.i' on Thur-\tJay, Octcd\tmr 28,\tin Trinity Ghurc\ti.\t\t Rev\t.D.W.\tCobur\tand Mrs.Coburn, of l\u2018r\t\tWOt!.,\tOnt., were Kwr-Xy\ton Wedn\t-.day,\tOctober 27, of Mi\t.and Mr\tJ.(\t.Fuller at \u201cEdge\twood.\u201d\t\t Mr.\tand Mr .1\tb A.Dr\txmarais and Mr.Bob here.The Prince of Wales Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star held a chicken pie supper in the Community Hall.The proceeds were very gratifying.Mr.Kenneth Doak, B.A., spent a week-end in Montreal.Mr .and Mrs.D.R.Bowen and Mr.Hollis Corey spent a day in Drummondville as guests of Mr.ana Mrs.Carl Reed.Mr.Roger LeBaron and Miss Emily LeBaron spent a week-end in Montreal, Mr.Homer Kerr, formerly of Eustis, now of Tate, Sask., is visiting relatives and friends in Eustis, Sherbrooke and North Hatley, after an absence of thirty-five years.Mr.Milton Baker, Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Messenger, and family, of Asbestos, were recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.A.H.Vance.Mr.and Mrs.A.H.Vance, and son, Galen, accompanied Mr.and Mrs.Glen Little, of Ayer\u2019s Cliff, to Kingsey Falls on Sunday.Mr.and Mrs.D.U.Little, of Ayer\u2019s Cliff, were guests of Mrs.Addie Vance, recently.Mr.J.Adolphe Seguin and daughter, Blanche, motored to Bellows Falls, Vt., on Wednesday.Mrs.Seguin returned with them, having spent a week at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Clifford Burns.Mr.and Mrs.Raymond Brodeur, and two children, Leslie and Elaine, of Detroit, Mich., are guests of Mrs.Brodeur\u2019:-; parents, Mr.and Mrs.L.H.Taylor.Miss Maud Kezar is visiting in Ayer's Cliff.Mr.and Mrs.Ervine Burns, the Misses Alice Sampson, Lynda!! Jackson, Irene Lariviere.Nancy Tetrault, Ruth Scguin, and Mr.Winslow Guild were in Sherbrooke on Wednesday evening.Miss Doris Guild entertained a few friends on Wednesday evening, October 27.Bridge was played at two tables, the guests including, Mrs.Stanley Outhbert, Mrs.Glen Bennett, the Misses Elizabeth LeBaron, Nancy Leduc, Adelaide i Kezar, Elinor Turcott, Mrs.Carrie Guild played in the absence of Mrs.Lloyd Kezar.A delicious lunch was served by the hostess assisted by Mrs.Guild.The prize was won by Mrs.Stanley Cuthhert.Rev.and Mrs.R.L.Weis and daughter, Margery, were recent guests of relatives and friends in Montreal, also calling on Mrs.Allen in Waterloo.Miss Lena Woodward, of Massa-wippi, is spending a few weeks with her mother, Mrs, S.Woodward, who recently moved into the Slack farm.Mrs.S.Woodward entertained a small number of friends at her home on Tuesday evening, October 19, the occasion being the birthday of her son.Mr.Frank Woodward.Mrs.S.Woodward and Miss Lena Woodward were recent guests of Mrs.W.Coates, in Sherbrooke.Rev.and Mrs.Baxter, and two Mr.Homer Davis, of Greenwood, Mass., is spending an indefinite time with his cousin, Mr.Forest Eldridge.Mrs.Frank Barnes, Mr.and Mrs.Henry Barnes and Mr.and Mrs.David Bell recently called on Mr.and Mrs.Charles McClay and Mr.and Mrs.L.McClay at Bondville.Mr.F.L, Eldridge, and Mr.H.C.Davis were in Knowlton on Wed- ?gray strands are magically \u201cblended in\u201d, Rinses away shampoo film.Prevents that stringy, straw-like dullness.Lovalon makes a soft, fluffy, youthful head of hair.Keeps hair neatly in place.And you will see how much longer your permanent or finger-wave stays in.Lovalon does not dye or bleach\u2014it is a pure, odorless, vegetable rinse.Affects your scalp or hair in no way, except to make it more radiantly beautiful.Do not be satisfied with ordinary rinses.Insist on Lovalon, the 4 purpose rinse, the rinse awarded the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval, the rinse used by beauty shops all over the world.At drug and dept, stores.35 cents for five rinses.Trial size at 10d stores.\\ \\l LOVALON the purpose vegetable Watr Ri«se 4» IS]!.™ w'i'L.i® ÏÀ DIME b n'' Chain Store goods arc priced with the all important dime in mind.Wherever a saving can be effected, commensurate with a high standard of quality, this saving is passed on to the customer.The result is that his or her spending allowance for practically every household and personal need, goes farther and buys more.More money is thus made available to buy other goods and services and amusements that chain stores do not offer.The business of a host of other people is stimulated.The modern methods of Chain Stores have taken the guess out of shopping.They have inspired many other retailers to adjust their ways of doing business; all to the community\u2019s benefit.Chain Stores help the farmer, the manufacturer, the working man, and the municipality by spending money for wages, farm produce, merchandise ami taxes.In buying goods for distribution the Chain Stores have set high standards of quality and thus they protect the value of the consumer\u2019s dollar.CANADIAN CHAIN STORE ASSOCIATION ' 730 University Tower Building »\t- Montreal Number seven of a lerirs of advêrthnnents published in thit newibaper to acquaint readers tame fully with the community benefits resulting from Chain Stores in Quebec Province. SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1937.f AGE THIRTEEN Ant> ^xT drirint the pem-causing toxin* out ot your blood.BOc and f 1 at all druggist».101 T-R-C's (Templeton's Rheumelio Ctpsulee) l «OTTUtO IN BONO IN CSNSOA- 10 YEARS Oth tO si.*0.85 - 25 es.*7.00 - LOTN[ih'RS.fil I.K OYSTERS.LIVE OR BOILED LOBSTERS PHONE ORDERS TAKEN UNTIL 9 P.M.THURSDAY FOR EARLY FRIDAY MORNING DELIVERY.Marquette at Fr cntenac STRATHCONA MARKET PHONE 2258 Miss Ethel Cornell to Mr.Raymond Whitcomb, of Frelighsburg.Mr.and Mrs.Whitcomb will reside in Bedford.Mrs.Henrietta Scott and Miss M.Scott attended the sixtieth anniversary service in the United Church, Sutton.While there they were dinner guests of Mr.and Mrs.George Hawley.Mr.and Mrs.A.T.Woodley accompanied by Mr.and Mrs.Arthur Carter, motored to Waterbury, Vt.Mrs.Hattie Allan, of Montreal, spent a day at the home of Mr.and Mrs.E.W.Morgan.Mrs.David Bell and young son, Jimmie, of Tibbit\u2019s Hill, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Basil Beals, Mr.Gordon Farrell suent a day in Montreal.Mr.and Mrs.D.A.Tanguay mot-:\t- ored to St.Hyacinthe on Friday, The following are the names of October 29.\tguests who visited at the home of, Mrs.Ralph Murray and young Mr.and Mrs.Frank Swett and Mrs.1 son are spending a short time in Peter Swett: Mr.Kenneth Craig Cookshire.\"\tarKi son> Earl, of Washington, D.C.;| Miss Doris Beals spent\ta week-\tMrs.Suzan Craig,\tof\tBrandon, Vt.; end in Sherbrooke with her grand-\tMr.Ward\tSavage,\tof\tSaxby, Sask.;: mother.Mrs.N.Guiliotte.\tMiss May Swett, of Granby, and Mrs.Stella Bedee left on Friday, Mr.Roy Gallagher, of Shefford Vale.October 29, for Montreal.\t.Mrs.Wilfred Copping is much Miss Florence Stevenson ha; re- improved in health.Mr.and Mrs.turned to Cookshire after spending Fred Copping, of Boscobel, Mr.Roy some time at the home of Mr, and Copping and Miss Leila Booth, of Mrs.Ralph Murray.\tMelbourne Ridge, Mr.and Mrs.C.Dr.N.M.Harris and Mr.Leon- A.Norris, of Waterloo, Mrt.M.Rice, ard Fay snent a day in Montreal.of Montreal, Mrs.H.McGovern, of Mr.and Mrs.E.E.Guiliotte, ac- Warden Heights, Mrs.Frank Swett.eompanied by Mrs.Arlie\tMizener,1\tMiss Jean\tCharest, Mr.J.Booth, of, motored to Montreal.\tMontreal,\tand Mr.\tD.\tOharest, of| Friends of Master James Rollit Warden, visited her during her ill-, will be pleased to learn that he is ness.^\t_\ti gaining nicely after his operation1 Mr.Wilfrid Copping spent the, and is expected home soon.\tweek-end with his wife and daugh-| Mrs.George Porritt spent a week- ter at the home of Mr.and Mrs.L.i end in Montreal.\tiT.Carter, of Warden.\tj Mr.Ernest Wilson accompanied: The Warden branch of the Wo-j Mr.Stephen Morson to Montreal on men\u2019s Institute held its regular mert-Thursday, October 28.\ting at the home of Mrs.C.W.Curt's Mr.and Mrs.W.E.Pettes, of! Eleven members were present.Sherbrooke, spent a week-end in Many letters of thanks for fruits town as guests of Mrs.Alvin Mizen- and cards were read, eight pairs of er.\t: socks are being knitted and repaired Mrs.L.H.Pibus has returned ifor men of this vicinity by some of from a trip to New Brunswick.j the members.After the business, a Messrs.H.Codera, Ralph Cran- letter was read by Mrs.H.Mc-dall and Lawrence Crandall motor-' Govern on \u201cMy First Impression of ed to Montreal on Saturday, Octo-; Canada.\u201d A raffle on a pair of ber 30.\t[book ends, given by Mrs.McGovern.Mr.Norman Guiliotte, of Sher-1 brought more funds.A vote of brooke, spent a week-end at the thanks was given Mrs.Curtis for home of his parents, Mr.and Mrs.! the lunch.E.E.Guiliotte.\t;\t- - Messrs.Sam Windle, Grant Win-: die, H.Seguin and Bill Benoit have j returned home after spending some j time in Noranda.The children of the High School j are making preparations for the commencement exercises which are to take place on Friday evening.Mies Marion Burt, of Bedford,; spent a week-end at the Knowlton : Inn, guest of Miss Rachel Wood-! j burn.Sunday being International Ex-: change Sunday, Rev.J.E.Brownlee, of Enosbury Falls.Vt., occupied, the pulpit in the United Church; here, while Rev.E.D.Mitchell | motored to Enosburg Falls and tookj charge of the service there.Rev.j Mr.Mitchell was accompanied by his son, Manliff.Recent dinner guests of Mrs.Henrietta Scott and Miss M.Scott | were Miss R.L.Woodburn.Miss R.I J.Heath and Miss G.Grandmaison.I Mr.J.C.Moore spent a week-end at his home in Kingsey.1 Messrs.A.B.Foster and Ernest t Foster were week-end guests at the ; home of Mr.and Mrs.Homer Mit-j ohell.The Misse?Watt, who have been ! guests at the Knowlton Inn for some \u2022Jme, have returned to their home in ; Montreal.Mr.and Mrs.Luke Turner, accompanied by Mr.and Mrs.Frank Mizener and Mrs.W.K.Davis, motored to Richmond and visited the Wales Home.The Misses Helen and Shirley Mitchell spent a week-end In Chat-: eauguav and attended a house party Cookshire, Nov.4.\u2014The romance and glamor of British History were vividly portrayed in Cookshire when the Rev.T.W.Jones, M.A., B.D., well known in Montreal and the Eastern Townships, gave a lecture in Trinity United Church, intitled \u201cA Cavalcade of British History,\u201d in which was thrillingly traced the course of events beginning with the revolt against the Romans headed by the heroic Queen Boadicea.and ending with the recent Coronation.Hearts were touched as the shrine near future to the Unknown Soldier was pictured and the gesture described of the Queen, a sister of one killed in the Great War, paying homage to this representative of those making the supreme sacrifie.The unusually fine colored pictures, considered to be the best on this side of the Atlantic, were skilfully related and a natural climax was reached with the beautiful portraits of the various members of the Royal Family, and the King and Queen, for whom a deeper loyalty was pledged.The Rev.T.W, Jones was introduced by an old college friend, Rev.R.W.Carr.In acknowledging the introduction, Mr.Jones referred to a previous visit to Cookshire with a military friend, the well known Padre, Major Buckland, to whose memory he paid a respectful tribute.At the close of the first part of the lecture, an appropriate solo \u201cThere\u2019s A I.and\u201d was splendidly rendered by Mr.A.W.Pratt, who was accompanied on the piano by Miss Marjorie Pratt, of Toronto.The enthusiastic interest of children as W'ell as adults was expressed in the numerous hopes that Mr.Jones will visit Cookshire in the BRIDGE SETS Including cloth 36\u201d x 36\u201d and 4 napkins.Pure linen, hand embroirered.Ecru only.Two patterns.Sets $2o50 and $2.75 CARD TABLE COVERS Rubberized card-table covers.Moire in red, blue, green, brown, fawn, tan and navy.Sizes 30\u201d x 30.\u201d Plain, each .In two colors, each .\t.S1 25 M,50 INITIALS Something new! Have your initials, or your friends\u2019 to whom you are planning to offer a gift\u2014embroidered on sheets, pillow case?, table cloths, napkins, towels, etc.10 day service.\t9^0 Any initial .cOU \u2014Street Floor, Right.C.0.SAINT-JEAN, Ltd.E.E.GOODENOUGH, 21 - 23 Wellington St.North.\u2019resident.Phone 1236 - 1237 fy% Fortin & Frere 116 Marquette St.\tTel.4g9.\t\t\t Is*, f; *» \\\\ h it'j P o ta tof-v.\t.\u20acck\tMaple Syrup, quart .\t25c iL ba# \t\t\tChoice Tomatoes\t3 tins\t25c FLOUR \u2014\t\tTomato Juice, tin 5c and\t30c\t1 Five R',-.-.98 lb.bag\t$3.98\tShelled Walnuts, lb.\t38c Olenma.Oh lb.bag .\t\tShortening, 20 !b.pail 12.42\t P-ooln Hood, 9>| Jb, bag\tI3.S5\tOrange Pekoe Tea, lb.\t58c D -if.'A U.bag\tor\tSpecial Pekoe Tea, lb.\t55c Brodie\u2019s Pa-trv, 7 !b=\t.30c\tFresh Ground Coffee, lb,\t25c Buckwheat or Com Flou\tT,\tPing Sugar\t2 1>.\t15c \t14c\tG ood f.'o/ \u2019 (¦v \u2014 0hocolaUt\t Vt heat Hoort, granrlated\t\tMarmalade.Sandwich.\t \t.29c\t2 ibs.for\t\t\t25c BEEF \u2014\t\tPlain Cookies, lb.\t.\t.\t30c \t.10c\tWo e Beans .\t10 11,:-;.\t30c Low Rib, A\t Hamburg, lb.Beef Chop?!b .Bones for roup, lb.\t.5c\tSeedless Raisins\t2 lbs.\t2.3c \t.12c\tSweet Oranges, dozen\t32c \t.12c\tF a rn e j s e Apple r.per k\t55c \t.2c\tMcIntosh Apples, peck\th'c Head Cheese, ]), Leg of Veal.lb.\t' '\t.'Xi\tCooking Apples, peck\t40c \t.12c\tCabbage, each\t5c tea! kront :b .Beef Liver, lb,\t.32c\tNice Celery, head\t3.0c \t8c\tLarge Lemons \u2022 \u2022\t3 for\t10c Leg of Lam \u2022>, lb\t\t\t25c\tCranberries, lb.\t20c Lamb Shoulder, lb.\t.17c\tPeanut Bitter\t2 lb*.\t25c Lamb Chop\" )b.\t23c\tMaple Butter\t.2 Sr,?.\t25c Loin Roa't of Beef, ro'P\td.\tFresh or Smoked Fillet»,\t \t38c\tlb.\t\t15c Pork Chops or Pork Stes\tk,\tSalt Cod, lb.\t\t9c 1\tlb\t\t20c\tSait Salmon, lb.\t15c Loin Roast of Pork,\t\tSalt Herring, lb.\t8c 1 trimmed, lb\t\t.20c\tHardwood Blocks, cord $2.75\t Onions, rod or white,\t\tHardwood Slabs, cord Ï\t2.00 \u20226 pounds for .\t39c\tSoftwood Slabs, cord\t$2.25\t ) Maple Sugar \t 2 lb\ts, 25c\tCedar Slabs, cord\t$1.75\t BOUFFARD LANGLOIS 111 Marquette St.Telephone 293 - 126 - 127 Cash Specials for Friday and Saturday Jewel Shortening, 20 lb.pail $2.49 2 lbs.for .23c Buckwheat Flour .5 lbs.23c Tomatoes, large tins .3 for 2.3c Case of 2 dozen.$1.73 Red path Sugar, 109 lb.bag $3.39 10 lbs.for .33c Apple and Strawberry Jelly, 1\tlbs.for .39c Peanut Butter .2 lbs.23c Maple Butter .2 lbs.23c |Rice .5 lbs.23c Cooking Raisins.2\tlbs.\t21c Cooking Raisins, seedless,\t2\tlbs.\t23c ! Good Green or Black Tea, lb.11c White Beans.10 lbs.39s Iceberg Lettuce.3 for 23c Syrup, Crown or Bee Hive, 2\tlb.tin .19c Heir-* Ketchup, large\tbottle .\t19c Good .3-cord Brooms, each .23c Best Soap Chip* .3 lbs.23c Frc-'-h Fruits and Vegetables at lowest prices.Choice Meats at.Market Prices.BEER AND PORTER.in Grand Soir.Transparent Velvet A rich and beaulilul French velvet, 3o inches wide.For evening gowns, dinner jackets, evening wraps.Black, wine, green, silver, rust, dark brown, coral,\t7C scarlet, Copen.blue.Yard.4)1 ¦ a u Silk Back Velvet French transparent velvet with silk back, 40 inches wide.Black, Scarlet, Green, Coronation Blue, Coral, QQ QK Coronation Red, Bust.Yard.ijZiüd Cut Velours Black; chiffon background, 40 inches wide.(?Q QK Beautiful designs.Yard.Gold and Silver Lames $2,75 $5 (Street Floor, Right) Evening Slips Specially designed to be worn with evening gowns.Low back, narrow adjustable shoulder straps.Tea-
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