Sherbrooke daily record, 9 août 1943, lundi 9 août 1943
[" ¦ V â>hprltrookp Irrnrù \u2022 \u2022 * THE PAPER OF THE EASTERN TOWNSHIPS WEATHER Warmer with thunder, showers.Established 1897.SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 1943.CITY EDITION.FURTHER REELING BLOWS DELIVERED Allied Forces Tighten Pincers Around German Defence Line In Sicily Take Great Chunks Out of German Lines in Week-End Assault to Bring Right Wing Within Forty-Two Airline Miles of Messina\u2014Allied Air and Naval Forces Continue Heavy Bombardment of Coast.#- INITIAI STAGE OF SALVAGING BIG SHIP ENDS By DANIEL DE LUCE, 'Associated Press War Correspondent Allied Headquarters, North Africa, Aug.9.\u2014(A3) \u2014 Allied armies slashed great chunks from German defence lines across the Sicilian bridgehead in week-end assaults and the Allied right wing was poised today within forty-two airline miles of Messina.The British 8th Army swept through Acireaie, a port only forty-two miles by air and less than fifty miles by road from Messina, in a nine-mile drive up the East coast from Catania and also captured San Maria de Licodia, high on the Southern slopes of Mount Etna, wtiere British armored charges knocked out Nazi tanks.Detachments of the U.S.7th Army, starting the attack from the sea be- CRASH1NG AIRPLANE SMASHES UP FREIGHT WTendover, Utah, Augfl 9.\u2014(A5)\u2014A United States army bomber crashed seven miles East of here early today, tearing up Western Pacific tracks and causing a freight train derailment.One flier died in the Wendover air base hospital shortly after the accident.His name was withheld.Ten other fliers were injured, some critically.The train crew escaped injury although 29 cars piled up, causing damage which railroad men at the scens estimated at approximately $100,000.Salvage Officials Hope to Bring Lafayette, Formerly Normandie, to Forty-Five Degree Angle Today.| New\u2019 York, Aug.9.\u2014(TP)\u2014Com-ipletion of the first major step in the | redious task of righting the U.S.S.Lafayette, formerly the French liner Normandie, was expected today when salvage engineers hope to raise the giant vessel to a 45-degree angle, enabling her to be moved.The once-great liner, which has lain partly submerged on her port iside at her North River pier since ! February 9, 1942, was floated at I high tide yesterday afternoon when she reached an angle of 49 degrees from vertical.At this point, Capt.B.E.Man-| seau, United States navy officer in charge of the huge salvage job, said: :\"The ship is essentially afloat.Buoyancy and -weight being equal, she is Continued on page 2, column 6.Aircraft Workers Seeking To Break Strike Deadlock Principal Industrial Cities Of Italy Mass Of Flaming Ruins As Allied Air Forces Renew Attack London, Aug.9.\u2014 01 \u2014 Large I down to almost nothing during the areas of Milan, Turin and Genoa \u2014j course of the hour-long raid.the last big raid on the R.A.F.lost cities that contain two-thirds of j In contrast, Italy\u2019s war industry\u2014were reported ! Turin on July 12 in ruins today under the hammer ! thirteen planes, blows of Britain-based Lancasters of! (Enormous fires visible from the R.A.F., which blasted all three j Ohiasso on the Swiss-Italian frontier Saturday night.\t1 indicated that the attack was Milan's The triple attack was the heaviest I heaviest of the war.The fires burn-since Italy was warned more than ^d all night and billowing clouds of Vancouver man Nazi Reinforcements 1AKES LEAD IN Faj| To Ha|t NAVAL SALVAGE a week ago by Gen.Dwight D.Eisenhower that the Allied air assault would be resumed and intensified because of Premier Pietro Badoglio\u2019s resistance to peace moves.The weather was good and the Air Ministry said \u201cwell concentrated\u2019\u2019 attacks were carried out on war factories at Milan and Turin and on shipping facilities and yards at Genoa.The Italian high command admitted in a Rome broadcast that \u201cdamage was considerable, mainly in the centra! quarters\u2019\u2019 of Milan and Turin.The Fiat Automobile and Engine Works and the Italian Royal Arsenal are located at Turin.Resistance to the night raiders was described as sight.Few enemy fighters appeared, and anti-aircraft j previous ones were forced by wea fire, which Rome claimed accounted i ther.But that is not the case this for the two bombers lost, simmered i time.i smoke still rose over the city more : than twenty-four hours later, Swiss | advices said.) | While the heavy bombers were at-! tacking the three Northern Italy l cities, R.A.F., Mosquito bombers i smacked the Rhineland and night | fighters shot up air fields and rail | targets in France.| Sweeping over in two waves, the ( first at rooftop height, R.A.F.Hos-i tons slammed bombs into the naval ! stores depot at Rennes, Franco, yos-I terday.One flier said bombs fell 1 among sheds, barracks and large i buildings and the target was \u201cwell : and truly plastetred.\u2019\u2019 ( German planes, apparently busy I elsewhere, have been absent from i Britain\u2019s skies since July 31.While j there have been longer lulls, the After Making Splendid Record in Iceland, Peacetime Salvage Worker Now Moving to Sicilian Theatre.Ottawa, Aug.9.-\u20140)- In the sal vage and towing business up and j down the British Columbia coastline j he was known as \u201cBill Dolmage.\u201d ! Now it's Lt.-Cmdr, W.G.Dolmage, j R.C.N.Y.R., of Vancouver, and he\u2019s I putting his peacetime experience to ! good use with the Royal Navy in one of the most unique occupations of the war.The Royal Canadian Navy told today in a press release how in less than two years he has helped send one hundred stranded or disabled ships back to sea, including a Naz.i U-boat which fell into British hands.Lt.-Cmdr.Dolmage, thirty-seven, joined up in September, 1940, on the understanding that he would be Continued on page 2, column 5.Drive On HEAVY BOND FOR ESPIONAGE AGENT Washington, Aug.9.- (TP)- Rond of $50,000 was set today for Roberto Lanasa Vallccill, 35-year-old foreign language translator in the Office of the Co ordinator of Inter-Ameriean Affairs, charged with espionage.He waived preliminary hearing and, unable to make the bond, was returned to jail pending removal to New York.United Nations Hold Initiative orT^he^Nmff^coas^ofnficiiyS,Itcap- Union Officials to Visit Ottawajji Effort to Arrange for Re-| |f] $0UtH Pacific, tured San Fratello and San Agata, the latter but fifty miles from the Axis escape port.Another American force seized Cesaro in an eight-mile advance from the captured inland citadel of Troina.\u201cThe United States 7th Army ! °f the International Association of made an unopposed landing behind Machinists.(A.F.L.) would go to the enemy lines and drove back | pttaw\u2019a today to seek a means of enemy reinforcements moving West, ! breaking the deadlock resulting capturing 300,\u2019\u2019 the communique -from the strike of 20,000 aircraft said.\t, workers from three Montreal dis- \u201cSan Fratello and San Agata were : trict plants, captured yesterday and our troops ! the same time, a meeting of are now pushing forward to join the the Montreal Trades and Labor opening of Strike-Bound Montreal Plants \u2014 Congress Leaders Charge Government Effort to Break International Trade Union Movement in Dominion.- *-\u2014.Montreal, Aug.9 .\u2014 ((f) \u2014 Union officials said last night that officers landing force.(Fifteen miles) further South, Cesaro, was captured yesterday.\u201d Council Executive was called for t today \u201cto discuss action that would j help to settle the aircraft shut San Fratello was also overrun by down.\u201d The Council has voted \u201ccom- «\tO ?\t^ _ rr+'U A .\u2022\tnlnfo c^'nnnrf,, fnr +.d a tv r> raff vvnrk- the United States 7th Army in the North coastal push, wiping out German efforts to establish a defensive anchor at that point some five miles Southwest of San Agata, it was disclosed.These gains in the coastal sectors came as British, Canadian and American forces were closing a trap plete support\u201d for the aircraft workers who left hteir jobs last Tuesday seeking payment of a back cost-of-living bonus.Paul Fournier, President of the Council, said in a statement last night that \u201cWe are prepared co do anything to help Lodge 712 (J.A.M.) U.N.CHIEFTAIN CLAIMS QUEBEC AUTONOMY LOST Duplessis Tells St.Johns Audience that Federal Government Seeks Tutorship for Quebec Province.St.Johns, Que., Aug.9,\u2014((E>\u2014 Maurice Duplessis said in a public address here last night that the By WILLIAM F.BONI, Associated Press Staff Writer, Allied Headquarters, the South- troyers.I was aboard the flagship of the American task force.(Gpp.Douglas MacArthur's corn- west Pacific, Aug.9-\u2014(JP) \u2014 Gen.munique of August 8 said one cruiser bring about a settlement of this dis-1 Union Nationale Government when on fleeing German forces in the Cen- pute because we realize that there | it was in power had allowed no tral region of the strategic road i is more at stake here than just the breach in alltonomy of the province) but had kept intact the eonstitu-tional rights guaranteed to the Province.\u201cIf our autonomy is not safeguarded, if we are not masters at home, it is useless to speak of progress and prosperity, because he who junction of Randazzo Northwest of Mount Etna.Capture of the port of Acireaie placed the right wing of the 8th question of the aircraft workers\u2019 bonus.\u201d Mr.Fournier said \u201cThe issue involves the whole question of the Army forty-two airline miles from Labor Department\u2019s apparent de-Messina.\ti termination to smash our interna- (The Monday Italian communique, tionai trade union movement,\u201d and broadcast from Rome and recorded added \"It is possible we will send by the Associated Press, said that1 representatives to Ottawa to see if ! is not master is a slave, and has no \u201cfierce fighting\u201d was raging without anything can be done immediately ! control.The French-Canadians are let-up in Sicily and that Allied naval to help break the deadlock before !not a race of slaves, buta race which and air forces again had bombed the Montreal labor situation be- deserves the respect of everyone, coastal routes on Sicily and Calabria, comes worse.\u201d\ti\t\u201cWe want no federal tutorships or on the Southern Italian mainland.The Government, through a joint j curatorships.We are not minors, (The Italian report said that two ; statement issued by Munitions Min- but majors.We are over twenty-Allied destroyers had been hit in ister Howe and Labor Minister Mit-j?06 years of age and have centur-Ydcilian waters by German planes.) chell.announced last week that the j ies of heroism and loyalty to our Units of the 8th Army, of which plants were closed and would re-\u2019 credit.Never will we tolerate tutor-the Canadian 1st Division is a part, main closed until the workers were 1 ship, whether from Ottawa or from ___________________________________i -(foreign sources.\u201d Mr.Duplessis said that \u201cin these matters lies the future of our children, and grandchildren, that the | future is impossible if we have not: the right to live in the manner guar-! anteed to us by the constitution.\u201d Speaking of the war.he said it was not his party but his adversar-1 ies who had declared war, but that' once war was declared it was for all j citizens to respect the law and con- Douglas MacArthur said today Japan has used her fullest resource of concentrated attack on the Pacific fronts, \u201chas failed, and is now on a defensive.\u201d \u201cThe margin was close but it was conclusive,\u201d the commander-in-chief of Allied forces in the South and Southwest Pacific said in a statement expressing supreme confidence in final victory.The statement that Allied victories \u201chave been decisive of the final result\u201d gained added significance from the words of Gen.MacArthur's spokesman, who said he would interpret it as meaning that \u201cthe final outcome of the war in the Pacific now is clear.\u201d Commenting informally on the war\u2019s progress in this sphere of command, Gen.MacArthur said: \u201cWe are doing -what we can with what we have.Our resources are still limited but the results of our modest but continuous successes in the campaign have been cumulative to the point of being vital.\u201cA measure of their potentiality can be obtained by imagining the picture to have been reversed, with the enemy capturing Guadalcanal and besieging Port Moresby, rather than we in possession of Munda and at the gates of Salamaua.\u201cSuch a contrast would have meant defe t for us in the war for the Pacific.\u201d and two destroyers were definitely sunk and the fourth vessels \u201cprobably so,\u201d in a battle which started shortly before midnight of August fi.And, it added, the United States forces sustained no losses.) From the bridge deck and the di reclio.platform above, I had an un-\t- opposed view of the entire, battle in ! Portland, Me., Aug.9.\t(7P) Navy the narrow gulf between strong Secretary Frank Knox today labelled Japanese bases on Kolombangara and afi \u201cfoolish optimism\u201d the belie! that Vella Lavella islands.\tj the war will end this year.I saw the Nipponese cruiser, a And, \u2019 he added, \u201csuch optimism three stacker with an airplane hoist, is not at all useful.\u201d explode soon after it was hit by tor- in Portland for an Exceptional Powers Given Goering in Nazi Shake-Up Hitler Virtually Deposed in Favor of Military Triumvirate Headed by Reichsmarshal Goering, Reports Reaching Madrid Indicate\u2014Believed Desperate German Attempt to Win Peace Even Though War Lost.-* - Knox Doubts War Will End By Christmas pedoes and shells from our ships in the waters Northwest of famed Munda airfield on New\u2019 Georgia Island which is now in American hands.The cruiser, standing broadside to , first caught fire in her bow from ^ torpedoes, and when our gun hat- i,\t,\t, teries opened upon her I saw addi-ifar- \u2019 he said.\u201cSicily is only an out-tional fire break out followed by a post and its fall would not mean the terrifying explosion.The blast sent flames thousands of feet in the air, enabling me to take down notes as if under a hun-dr< - watt lamp.Continued on page 2.column 5.Continued on pace 2.column 4.DESCRIBES SINKING OF JAP VESSELS Aboard the Flagship of a Naval Task Force, Aug.7.\u2014(delayed) \u2014 (JP)\u2014A light American naval force sank at least four Japanese warships today in one of the most daring attacks of the war.The United States ships steamed right into the enemy\u2019s stronghold in .\t, ,\t,\t,\t¦\tclllzens respecx me ;aw ana con-[\t'n ^ Solomons and des- st'tuted authority, and he.knew he ! tr°yed 0ne cruiser and ^ deE- Italian Press Offers Ambiguous Statement On Delays By Badoglio ARMY SHOW STARTS EASTERN CAMP TOUR Toronto, Aug.9.\u20140)\u2014The Army Show\u2019s company of 145 men and women left today for Petawawa to stage shows for the troops there [August 10-11 after playing to 13,-1965 persons in a repeat seven-day engagement there.In its first eight-day Toronto run, starting March 31, the show was seen by 15,960 persons.The show will he presented to Soviets Take Teavy Toll of German Armored Units Making Vain Attempt to Halt Isolation of Kharkov.Key Industrial Centre of the Ukraine\u2014Central Front Forces Register Gains in Bryansk Offensive.By HENRY C.CASSIDY, Associated Press Staff Writer, Moscow, Aug.9.(A1) Russian Bulk forces crashing back toward Hit* gates of Kharkov from llio North have encounlered slubborn resistance from fresh German reserves rushed into the battles raging near Dolzhik, fifteen miles Northwest of that big industrial cou I re of the Ukraine, front lino dispatches said today.Soviet infnnlry was reported, however, to he moving up through the pa Hi of German wreckage left by Ihoir big armored units, and to ho mopping up and consolidating their gains in preparation for renewed advances.The capture nf Bogodukhov, t railway town, and Holshava Pisa-revka and Taiasovka, all Northwest of Kharkov on the upper reaches of lhi> Vorskla river, was considered to have reduced German chances of rushing further reinforcements into that area.In capturing Krnsnopolye, another column of the Russian forces driving in from the North had driven to within twenty-one miles of Sumy, rich Ukrainian agriculture centra which bos about eighty miles Northwest of Kharkov.Bogodukhov\u2019s fall also severed the second of two rail lines linking Kharkov with Bryansk, rail juncture 260 miles Northwest of Kharkov also threatened by Soviet columns crashing Westward from fallen Orel, Bogodukhov and Dolzhik were (he most important of the sixty popular ed places which the Russians reported they had swept into their bag in the day's fighting.All were located North and West of Kharkov.There was no further mention of activity by the Red Army troop concentration in the Chuguyev sector to the Southwest of Kharkov, which would be the most likely .starting (mint of a companion column in a pincers move.The German retreat apparently was being carried out with a los-.of mm and material comparable to that suffered by the Nazis in the earlier stages of the Russian offerraive.The communique said that the Germans lost 77 tanks and 125 planes in combat, and that the Red Army captured forty-eight German tanks;, .\t,,\t.,\t\u201e -r\t,\t,\t.\tI leaders are reported to believe\tthat\tincluding fifteen Tigers, in working In\tthe\t.South\tPacific\twe\thave\thad jf jf.a|y withdraws from the\twar it Girder.A large number of Germans success but we are a great many will be the result, of administrative , were reported killed, mi)- fiom Tokyo, our objective, and chaos as much as a public clamor for] The Russians said their columns there\tis a\tlot\tof\ttrouble\tin\tbetween.\" ! pe2,tc'\t, ,\t,\t.\t,\t!\tmoving toward Bryansk captured I he reported developments\tin\tGer-\t130 villages in an advance of bc- many were characterized in London tween four and nine miles.Among a; \u201cdesperate\u201d German attempt to j them was the district centre and \u201cwin the peace even though the war railroad town of Narishkina, twelve is lost.\u201d By CHAULER S.FOLTZ, Associated Press Staff Writer, Madrid, Aug.9.-~-{/P)~ Press dispatches reaching Spain from Berlin yesterday said I hat, \u201cpowers of great magnitude\u201d have been given to I Reichsmarshal Hermann Wilhelm I I Goering following a meeting of I j Nazi party chiefs and army leaders.News of the meeting at Hitler\u2019s Î headquarters, announced by Berlin j during the week-end, lent color to I various reports current in Spain that the army is taking over conduct of German affairs in preparation for a j long defensive war.Although, these reports say, Hi! ! 1er remains as a figurehead leader, I the real rulers of Germany are Goer : ing, Field Marshal General Wilhelm inspection of Keitel, Chief of the High Command, the United States navy\u2019s training and Grand Admiral Karl Doenitz, base here, Knox said in an interview I Commander-in-Chief of the Navy.German reports reaching Spain indicate the German army considers) it necessary to retain the Nazi party, as a facade behind which it can oper.ate without, can: ing an upheaval that the civilian population must prepare \"mentally and spiritually for a long, hard contest.\u201d \u201cWe have had minor successes so end of the war.We still have to gain within the country.This view, it was said, was prompted by recent disorders in Italy, which jettisoned the Fascist party when a foothold on the European conti- ! the military dictatorship of Marshal nent itself\t(Pietro Badoglio took over.German By THOMAS HAWKINS Associated Press Staff Writer |the Fascist dictatorship have been\t___ , Berne, Aug.9.-4P)-The ambigu- retained and even strengthened.\" XnGraved ?or the dLroe on ous assertion that Premier Pietro an.l describing the new Italian Gov- RALSTON IN OTTAWA Ottawa, Aug.9.\u2014 0) \u2014Defence Minister Ralston was back at, his , office desk today after an absence,: of several weeks in Britain where) Continued on page 2, column 4.miles West of Orel Continued on page 2, column 4.troops at Three Rivers, Que., August be conferred with military authori-13 and will visit Quebec, Saint John, N.B., and Sussex, Debert and Halifax in Nova Scotia before returning to Toronto where a second edition of the show will be prepared.Badoglio now- is studying the probes lem of \u201chow to conduct the war to an honorable conclusion\u201d was offered by the Italian press today as an explanation of the policies of the two-week-old Rome Government.Dispatches to the Tribune de Geneve said the explanation was printed in a number of Rome papers on the heels of the Allied breakthrough in Eastern Sicily and the renewal of massed air raids on Northern Italy.Meanwhile, advices from Italy indicated, underground political parties agitating for peace are emerg- of Hitler and everything personified by Hitler.ernment as \"Fascism without Mussolini.\u201d (Madrid dispatches said reports from Rome yesterday told, of fresh | MEMBER OF NOTED FAMILY peace disturbances in Ban and de-;\tMISSINC dared that Italian troops had refus-\tMontreal Aw 9_0',_«;Hnn nf ed to obey when ordered to fire in-;\t; , .\u2022 \u2019\t9', } r\u201e10?to a crowd of demonstrators .The ; T® %\tT'r* utv fam' troops were reported to have been ;S.^- P'lot\tMercier,, son marched to their barracks and re- °* '.ne *ate Honore Mercier, Minister placed by others who broke up the:°f Lamis and Forests, and grandson demonstration.\tof the Iate Premier Honore Mercier, (Stockholm advices said that115 reported missing on air operations while rigid censorship continued to over Wupertel, Germany, Hie mo- to govern neutral correspondents in Italy, information reaching Swed- ing into the open despite a ban on | ish newspapers through private their activities.\tI channels seemed to indicate a new The Swiss newspaper Volksrecht, | crisis in Italian affairs is brewing.quoting dispatches from the fron-twr, said the Italian Socialist party was appealing to workers, farmers and middle class intellectuals to join in a eeneral strike to force an end to Italy\u2019s participation in the w-ar and abolish the monarchy.The Volksrecht said the appeal was contained in a resolution printed in an Italian Socialist newspaper condemning?Premier Badoglio because \"behind the phantom ^of mili* (The Stockholm dispatches sug- ther resides at Ville de Ley, Chat-eauguay, NAZIS REPORT JAP LOSSES New York, Aug.9.\u2014rf|Ue with little more than a reso-ort Silvercruys, Belgian Envoy Ex- ]ute courage to guard their home-traordinary and Minister Piempo-, ]an(j.Today they are, in the words of tentiary to Canada, Friday presen,.- ^ prjmc Minister, as much a part ed the Belgian .Military Service ^ Britain\u2019s regular army as the Cro- F irst C ass, to Group Capt.| Grena(].G d A.an Elhs C'B E., commanding of-j f)nc f]jfTerence ig thcy don.t get Training School at^edicine HaL^\u2019 Th®y must do their e88ential period of greatest training.These are the men who weave an intricate network of defence over every square mile of town and country, charged with defending their home, districts with rifle, bombs, bayonet and antiaircraft weapons.Foreign Secretary Eden called them to the colors first in May, 1940.They were then the \u201cLegal Defence Volunteers.\u201d They drilled with broomsticks and wore armlets instead of uniforms, there was nothing else for them then.Some were fortunate enough to possess sporting rifles or shotguns.They brought them along to drill with, used them to patrol the countryside when invasion seemed so imminent and meanwhile trained on map-reading, field-craft and sabotage in the event Hitler sent his men against England.Gradually these men were given and to Sqdn Ldr R F) Watts A F : 0ivi'ian j°bs but in other than work-; rifles, then helmets and eventually C commanding officer of No 31 1 inK hours they come under army, uniforms and advanced equipment.F'lemcntarv Plvinc Trainin'/.Bchool i reKul»tions and discipline.They are | Their basic weapon remains the aVde Win ton.'\t^\t\" I organized into sections, platoons, | rifle but in addition every man is Announcement of the présenta- cornPan\u2018eR an,i battalions and wear i trained in the use of machine car-tions w a« made today by No.4 Air ) the badges of their county regiments, bines, light automatic rifles and Training Command, R.C.A.F.\tBritain on a Sunday morning I machine-guns with close attention The Minister, travel ing by air, ! bristles with them.Uniformed men ; paid to the bayonet and grenade, and making hi;-; fir-t, official visit to ! with rifles slung on shoulders walk Training varies with the area de-schoois where Belgian airmen are i every village street, every main road, fend-d by the unit.A city unit con-training.later left for the West every country lane and every city coast.\tthoroughfare at the week-end, their Continued on page 2, column 5.\"K 2, MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 1943^ SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD W.I.MEMBERS FLAN SUPPER FOR SERVICEMEN Event Sponsored by Melbourne Ridge Women\u2019s Institute to Be Held at Richmond on September 4.Melbourne Ridfre, Aug.9\u2014 The regular monthly meeting of the Melbourne Ridge Women\u2019* Institute was held at the home of Mr*.J.Baker, with Mr*.S.Morrison assisting as hostess.Mrs.G.Frank opened the meeting in the usual manner.There were fourteen members present and several visitors.The roll call was an- REAVIC OM.Y TWO PAYS LEFT TO SEE THIS GRAND DILL.A SURE-FIRE HIT, A THRIU- YOU'!,!, NEVER FORGET »« thi* honrt-wurm-in* re»l Hf» dr»m» with muik unfolds on the screen! Mery Lee.John Archer, Me jorle Lord In \"SHANTY TOWN\" with Hurry Davenport, Billy Gilbert, Frank Jcnke, Cliff Neearro, Alfalfa Switaed.Matty Malneck end hie orchee-tm Added-\"MYSTERY MAN OF THE WEST\u201d .A thrilling »t«ry of dramatic eltuation» and faat-moving action I \"THK GHOST RIDER\u201d with Johnny Mack Brown, Raymond Hatton, Revcaly Boyd.Hurry Wooda.\"TWO SAPLINGS,\u201d a hiiariou* comedy with George Glvnt.J§ \"CHAMPIONS TRAINING CHAM- ¦\tPIONS,\u201d a war aervlce apeclal In tech-^ nlcolor -Latret, world \u2018-venta COMING WED.UNTIL BAT.5 The whole world'» a uipey-turvy mad jjj house of merriment aa youth rldea high 5 on the creel, of romance In one big.® (prend and gal-orloue «how frolic! Ahd ft Sheridan In \"WINTER CARNIVAL.\" jt with Richard Cerleon.Helen Parrleh.¦\tItoherl Armstrong.Virgin» Gilmore._ Added.The Falcon'» brother takee over ® In a one-man war of revenge egalnet ¦\tthe underworld I George Sander», Jane Randolph In \"THE FAI,CON'S RROTH- ® F.R.\" with Tom Conwiy, Keye I.uVe, m Charlotte Wyntore.swcred by the members aaming a menober of Parliament.The Treasurer\u2019s report showed a balance of $26.81 on hand.Letters were read from Mrs.Malboeuf, Mrs.Abercrombie and Mrs.Wataon.Quilt blocks were turned in by members.Mrs.J.Baker offered to put quilt blocks together, provide the lining and tie the quilt for the Red Cross.Mrs.Bacon, a guest from Montreal at the home of Mrs.Baker, offered to furnish quilt batt and help tie this quilt.The final arrangements were made for the supper for boys in uniform.Plans were made to have this supper on September 4, in Richmond.All boys in uniform will be welcome.The committee in charge of the food is as follows: Mrs.E.Kelson, Mrs.R.Pariseau, Mrs.G.Frank, Mrs.R.Kerr, Mrs.,1.Barrington, Mrs.L.Driver, Mrs.C.Taber, Mrs.Adamson, Doris Johnson and Mrs.G.Brown.Mrs, R.Kerr and Mrs.A.Mc-Morin were asked to look after distribution of wool and collection of knitted articles for the ditty bags.Most members present and several visitors took wool home to knit tuck-ins and mittens for the sailors.The member* were asked to give a one-minute talk on conditions they would like to see after the war.It was moved and seconded that this Institute, continue its lunches as in past years, leaving it up to the hostesses to serve what they wish.It was also moved that this Institute send a letter to the Wartime Prices and Trade Board regarding extra sugar for this area.This area has only received a ten-pound per person allotment and the members thought that this was not fair as fiften pounds per person were promised rural areas.Fruit will soon be going to waste if more sugar is nox allowed immediately.Mrs.A.Bachelor was asked to prepare a paper on Canadian Industries for the September meeting.It was announced that the next meeting will he held at.the home of Mrs, Garrett, on September 7.The meeting adjourned with the National Anthem, after which lunch was served by the hostesses, assisted by Mrs.A.McMorin and Mrs.Bacon.RECTORY HILL L\u2019AVENIR Mr.and Mns.Dale Smythe have returned to Montreal, after being guesta of Mrs.II.A.Dickson and family.Mr.and Mrs.Samson, of Levis, called on their son, James, who is at All regret the accident of Mr.Ambrose Lynch at his home here and extend best wishea for bis1 speedy recovery.Mr.and Mrs, Richard Desjardins,' of Island Pond, Vt., are visiting Mr.Harry Mullen for a few days.All are pleased that Mr.Harry.Mullen is recovering from a severe; shaking up, having fallen from a load of hay.Mrs.Ovila Legare, of Sherbrooke, visited her mother, Mrs.Hugh Kelly, and family.Mis* Leona Bernard, of Montreal, has returned home, after spending a week with Mrs.Hannah Brady and family.Sympathy is extended to Mrs.Harper, Mrs.Allen and Mr.Ernest Wright, in the death of their father, Mr.Charles Wright, of XJlverton.Miss Juliette Boisvert accompanied her brother, Master Gilea Boisvert, to St.Germain, where Master Giles had hu: tonsils and adenoids removed.A number from here attended the funeral of Charles Wright, in Ulver-ton.Mr.and Mm.Labonte and daughter, of Providence, R.I., and Mr.Donat Labonte, of Norwich, Conn., are visiting their mother, Mrs.Pierre Labonte, and family.Mr.and Mrs.Harry Hardy, of Richmond, were tea guests of Mrs, W.E.Bogie and family.Col.M.L.Brady is not enjoying his usual good health and all hope for his speedy recovery, Mr.and Mrs.Richard Desjardins, of Island Pond, Vt,, and Mrs.Albert Laine spent a day in Drummond-ville.Miss Leona Bernard, of Montreal, was a visitor of Mrs.C.S.Bogie in the Ste.Croix Hospital, Drum-mondville.Mias Alice Benoit, of Montreal, is spending a few days visiting relatives here.I Mies Juliette Boisvert has returned to Sherbrooke, after spending a holiday with her parents, Mr.and I Mrs.Arthur Boisvert and family.Miss Mabel Husk, of Sherbrooke, j was a visitor of her parenta, Mr.and Mrs.Stafford Husk.A reception was given Mr.and Mrs.Lucien Brousseau, nee Lena Smith, at the home of Mr.and Mrs.Joeeph Brousseau.the home of Mr.Rufus Patterson.Mr.and Mrs.Raymond Leith and sons were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Robert Leith.Rev.Mr.Apps and, the Misses Rothera were guests at the Dickson home.^azi Reinforcements! Continued from page 1\t| Allied Fcexes Continued from page 1 The Russians acknowledged that after capturing BiancaviUa, Aderno the Red Army met with stubborn and Bronte is a Northward advance resistance West of Orel but said : through Etna\u2019s Western foothills Nazi counter-attacks, supported by \u2019 during the week-end, were within aircraft, were repulsed with the j artillery range of the Troina-Ran-Germans suffering heavy losses.Idazzo highway, main escape avenue West of Kromi the Southern wing \\ for enemy ^ troops falling back before of the Russian force advancing on Bryansk killed more than one thousand Germans and took a large number of prisoners and war material, the war bulletin declared.Although the Russian communique made it clear that the major operations were directed against Bryânsk and Kharkov, both important Nazi bases, there was much activity in the Voroshilovgrad area and in the Donets Basin sector around Izyum.Excetional Continued from Page X.| The London Sunday dispatch ' warned that a military dictatorship would have the full consent of Nazi party chiefs.\u201cThe Nazis would just go underground and re-emerge later,\u2019\u2019 the paper held.The paper also expressed belief j that Hitler\u2019s removal was, in fact, : accomplished several months ago.Other London comment expressed i the view that the shift was nothing 1 more than an attempt to shove the ;Nazi party and Hitler into the back-! ground in an effort to gain better terms after the inevitable defeat.I Aircraft Workers Continued trom Page 1.: ready to return without payment of the back bonus, i Aircraft Lodge 712 announced 'last night that Canadian Vice-Presi-Ident D.S.Lyons, of the I.A.M., and j Grand Lodge Representative Robert ' Haddow would go to Ottawa \u201cto explore ways and means of opening up the way to a settlement.\u201d , The announcement added \u201cIt is expected they will interview officers of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada and various Government officials who have been concerned in the dispute.\u201d an American onslaught East of Troina.Should the British and Canadian soldiers cut this highway, only im-p?c- -able mountain trails would remain to the enemy.(Ro:-:s Munro, Canadian Press war correspondent, reported last night in UN1IE!) STATES AIDS MOTHERS IN WAR PLANTS MONTREAl LIVE STOCK MARKET MARKET NEWS COUNTRY AND DAIRY PRODUCTS PRICES Special Services Being Set Up in Many Communities to Make Life Easier for Wives Working Overtime.Washington, Aug.9.\u2014(JP)\u2014Am- Montreal, Aug.9.\u2014Receipts foi ; the week as reported by the Board of Trade show a distinct falling off Montreal, Aug.9.\u2014®\u2014Receipts in eggs, butter and cheese.All were on the Montreal livestock market below the preceding week but only were cattle 1,275.calves 1,487, hogs cheese was behind a year ago.There 674, sheep 681, it was reported to- was iittle change in local items over - .\t.\u201e.day by the Dominion Department of the week-end.The egg market con- a delayed dispatch from Sicily that er,can communi.ies are setting UP ' Agriculture.\ttinued steady under demand for top a joint Canadian Division and British : new services to make life easier for Today\u2019s receipts of cattle were grades while* butter and potato mar-78th Division drive hammered home the thousands of housewives work- the heaviest this vear to date.Prices kets were firm, near the plateau City of Aderno';\tovertime on the assembly lines on bulls about steady with the close EGGS: broke the Mount Etna defence line ! ,\t^\tt of the week.Prices on other classes, (r per Spot Quotes dead in the centre.He added that'01 war Piant®' _\t0f cattle were not established, buy- dozen) fGovt, JCom.following that attack\tthere was \u201ca! An Office of War Information sur-( ers bidding\tlower prices.Lambs and\ta- subdued atmosphere\tof victory\u201d jvey today disclosed, for example,1 veals are strong.Hogs steady.Com-\tlarge\t431444\t4314-44\t48\t51-53 around the Canadian\theadquarters j that more than four thousand com- mon calves\tbarely steady.The early\ta- as the success of the\tthrust was aimunities have set up welfare com-isale® were\tmade up of bulls only\tme A'Yr'-Y ' fayette to as even a keel as possible, c\u2019> ' 0 \u2022 t»\t.later returning the ship to her! position at the pier.102% 103% .104\t104% .101 102 .101 102 .100% 101 sent flowers.MRS.IVAN WILLEY (wifel.MRS.DOUGLAS GIBBS (wife).BROTHERS AND SISTERS.Richmond, Que.IN MEMORIAM NEWBERY.\u2014Not just today, hut everr day, dear mother and dad.Your children, MAY.LOUISE.KATHLEEN, EVA.ALFRED AND RONALD.ADDERLEY Recent week-end guests of Mr, FARNAM\u2019S CORNER IN MEMORIAM -\tMcLAUGHLIN.\u2014In loving memory of my and Mrs.John Watton were Messrs \u201c et husband and father.Andrew E.Mc-Benjamin Watton and Howard Kerr ^8u*hlin- who passed away August 9, 19U.and Mr.and Mrs.Joseph Wright, i Gone from us, oh how we miss you, Guests at the home of Mr.and:\tLov,r,a ycu dearly, your memory we k eep ; shall we forjret you, hearts is the place wher« you sleep.\u201d Always remembered by his loving WIFE AND SON CLAIR, Mr, and Mrs.Herman Somberger, ,, T, _ ,,\t,\t-, Miss Sornberger and Mr.Hodge, of \u201cJrs' R,°?r Wa\u201e1i;eT and family were Never while life'last* S:anbridge East, were callers of Mr' ancl JIrs' Bu.lock and family, d a- to our beau Mrs.T.W.Westover and Mr.of Beebe, Mr.William Ford, of I Llewellyn Westover.\tMontreal, and Mr.Elmer Bailey, Mr.and Mrs.Kenneth Miltimore of Kinnear\u2019s Mills, and two daughters, of Sutton, were ^r\u2019 and ^rs- Reginald Currie visitors of Mr.and Mrs.Carrol visited the !atter\u2019s brother and sis-! Tvl!T1n, memoriam Farnam.\tter-in-law, Mr.and Mrs.James1,.l\u2019 F,' ^ lo''ma \u201c«\"«y o* our dear Miss Connie Robinson, of Mont- Bailey and daughter, Shirley, at.\t£ (0V*A®\u2018\u201cC 9! real, spent a week-end at her home Klnnears Mills.\t(mi.\t» m on Augu-t here,\tCallers at the home of Mr.and Somewhere heck of the «unset Mr.and Mre.John Delorme and Mrs- Joseph Wright were Mr.and loveliness never dies children, of Vallevfteld, spent a Mrs- s- Henderson.Mr.and Mrs.?,h*\t^ land 0f Glory week with their parents\tReginald Currie and Messrs.Carl ™st th« *\"4 the gold of the .icy S Mrs.Margaret Draper, of Sher-: crawford and George Guy.\ther Wh°** 'brooks, and Mrs.S.White, of Mont-\t^'!rdo McKinnon, Rob- Brought many tear, w«'n eheriah h*i .real, spent a few days with Mrs.ert Bullard and Prescott V alker memory Towner Westover.\t| spent an evening at the home of Mr.Always to brighten her passing years.Mr.and Mrs.Gordon Coates, of and ,^rs- Boy Walker and family.Ever remembered by her Abbotsford, were visitors of the lat- Miss Dorothy Bullard, of Brook-ter's parents.\tlj'n> N.Y., is spending a two weeks' Mrs.Harry Harvey received the vacation at the home of her parents, news of the death of her sifter-in- -Mr.and Mrs.V illiam Bullard, law, Mrs.J.E.McNamara, of - _______ :.: Montreal.Misses Eunice and Ida Harvey attended the funeral in : Montreal.Kev.Mr.Hamilton, of Dunham, has charge of this circuit and has jtaken over his duties.DETAILED WEATHER WARMER WITH THUNDER.SHOWERS Forecasta: Fair and moderately The night after the fatal riots in New York\u2019s Harlem Negro section proved quiet, with none of the dangerous flare-ups that were feared, thanks to the coolness of 3700 city policemen and 1500 volunteer auxiliary policemen.Many of the latter, like Auxiliary Walter Johnson.left, above, wore Negroes.Johnson is pictured as he set out on dir.y with Patrolman Barney Tepper, FIRST CANADIAN MOSQUITO warm today, followed by scattered IN ENGLAND\tthundershowers late tonight and London.Aug.9.\u2014(C.P.Cable)\u2014 part of Tuesday.The first Canadian-built Mosquito1 The maximum temperature yea-bomber has reached England safely :erday was 71 and the minimum 38.i after being flown across the Atlantic.Last year the temperatures were 'it was 'named today.\tSI an i 40.SISTER.PERiSIg COLBY, BROTHERS.RUFUS, JOHN.STANLEY.IN MEMORIAM \u2014In fond snd loving memory of our dear eon snd brother, Thomas William Hood, who depart.d this life August 9, 19SS.Dearly loved and sadly missed by his mother and sisterc, MRS.THOS.HOOD, (Mother).WINNIFRED, VERNA AND ALICE.(sisters). CiTY and SUBURBAN IHerbrooke ©aüp ftecorb SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC.MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 1943.San.\tMon.\tAUGUST Tut\\ Wed.Tha.\t\t\tPVL\tflat.1\t2\t3\t4\t5\t6\t7 8\t9\t10\t11\t12\t13\t14 15\t16\t17\t18\t19\t20\t21 22\t23\t24\t25\t26\t27\t28 29\t30\t31\t\t\t\t BLOOD DONOR CLINIC OFFICIALLY OPENED Enthusiastic Response To Request For Blood Donors Evident As Clinic Opened ARMY BAND TO GIVE CONCERT TUESDAY NIGHT Many Matters Were Discussed At LOCAL AIRMEN Session Of Huntingvilie W.C.T.U.OBTAINED WINGS ON GRADUATION ____\tI reported ll',') knitted purse win;:: for civ-I Evidence of the enthusiastic publie response to the request for volunteer blood donors from the Eastern Townships was seen this morning as the Sherbrooke Blood Donor Clinic at 84 Dufferin Avenue was maugurated with the first donors passing through its portals shortly after ten o\u2019clock.Seldom has there been so widespread a feeling of sharing in the battle efforts of the gallant Canadian armies as that shown by those who thronged the clinic to give their three-quarters of a pint of blood.Operated by the Canadian Red Cross Society for the sake of saving live* of badly-wounded servicemen, tha local Clinic now affords the opportunity of local citizens to do a really tangible bit of war work.In charge of Mrs.J.F.C.Thomson, the Clinic technician, a full staff of volunteer workers assisted by a number of registered nurses, are hard at work registering, typing and bleeding the many men and women who wish to give their blood that a life might be saved \u201cover there.\u201d With Doctors S.Marcus, H.S.Ellis, A.C.Hill and Paul McMahon officiating at the Clinic, the registered nurses assisting this morning included Mrs.Ruby McKay, Mrs.Jean Burt, Mrs.Stella Saunders, Mrs.Doris Mabbet, Mrs.Olive Bryant, Mrs.Ann Campbell, Mrs.Marjorie O\u2019Keefe, Mrs.Katherine Har-bert, Mrs.Rita MaeCallum and Miss r OKI MINÜT1 NEWS \\ ABOUT / 1JOHNS-MANVILLE HOW CAMOUFLAGE FOILS THE ENEMY In wartime the friendly beauty of moonlight can be a deadly menace when reflected on a ship, a plane, a tank, a bridge, or a military building.That\u2019s the reason for that dull, lustreless finish you\u2019ve probably noticed on army trucks and jeeps.That non-re-fleeting finish is achieved by a Johns - Manville product called Jelite, which, in painter\u2019s language, is known as a \u201cflatting agent.\u201d That means, -when Celite is mixed with paint, lacquer or enamel in the proper proportions, it prevents the reflection of light \u2014makes vehicles, ships and building* much less visible to enemy bombers or gunners.Celite for nse in camouflage paint is another example of a Johns-Manville product developed originally for peacetime uses but now vital in war.Today, more than a thousand J-M products are aiding the war effort of the United Nations.Olive Meredith, the latter of Cook- j shire.In the words of Dr.Ellis, \u201cthe ! Clinic is operating very efficiently j indeed, and we are more than pleased j at the manner in which all donors i are so willing to help, and the cheer-; fulness with which they go through i the brief and absolutely-painless : operation, which surprises many of \\ of them at its very simplicity.\u201d Dr.Marcus stated to the Record that \u201cthe Clinic is certainly getting away to a splendid start, and we are intensely gratified with the smoothness with which things are operating.\u201d The Chairman of the Local Clinic, setting the example by being the first to give his tgood this morning, was back at his desk shortly after.\u201cIt really surprised me, the whole affair is so brief and so absolutely j devoid of any discomfort,\u201d he said.Giving his blood for the ninth time this morning, E.S.Hethering-j ton, of Cookshire, infonned the j Record that \u201cit is a real tonic and I am out to reach the goal I have set by promising that I would secure 1,000 volunteer blood donors for the Canadian Red Cross.\u201d \u201cThere is absolutely no weakening effect, and there never has been,\u201d he said._ Many men and women in the service themselves were among the first to visit the local Clinic this morning.Not satisfied with giving their own services to their country, they are eager to give their blood too, that some comrade\u2019s life might be saved.Among those who were present this morning was Squadron Leader E.K.C.Burden, R.C.A.F., of Windsor Mills, S.F.T.S., who gave his third donation, entitling him to a bronze medal.\u201cThis Clinic is very efficient, and very well organized,\u201d he said.\u201cThere is nothing for anyone to worry about.It is an absolutely painless procedure.\u201d Sgt, H.Duval, of the Canadian Army, stationed at the local E.T.Recruiting Office, gave his fourth donation and says \u201cI am out to get that gold medal they promised me.\u201d Pte.C.Taylor, also of the local recruiting staff, gave his first donation this morning and he smilingly informed the Record that \u201cI didn\u2019t even feel it.Personally I don\u2019t think they took enough blood from me.I\u2019m ready to go again any time.\u201d Others who were among the first to volunteer their blood at the opening, and who were interviewed, were Miss M.Buck, of Sawyerville, who \u201cnever felt better, and I really enjoyed the whole affair,\u201d and R.J Marshall, of Sawyerville, who said \u201cThis is my first time and believe me I am proud to say I can do my bit.I am much enthused about the Blood Clinic and hope I can do still more towards this great cause.\u201d Antonio Parent, of East Angus, who has only one arm, also gave his blood this morning, proving that it is not just the rugged and perfectly-normal individuals who can share in By the kind permission of Lt.-Coi.: B.D, Lyon, Officer Commanding, the Band of the Sherbrooke Regi-jment will give a concert at Dufresne Park, on Tuesday evening at ; 8.15 p.m., under the direction of Lt.Rodger Havard, bandmaster.The programme wrll consist of: \u201c0 Canada\u201d; \u201c8 D.G.\u2019s,\u201d march; \u201cSilver Sails,\u201d waltz; \u201cWaltzing Matilda,\u201d popular; \u201cOperatic Mingle,\u201d selection; \u201cOn the Quarter Deck,\u201d march; \u201cNights of Gladness,\u201d waltz; \u201cComing In On a Wing and a Prayer,\u201d popular; .Favorites,\u201d s e 1 1 Bogey,\u201d march; \u201cRussian Hymn, \u201cStar Spangled Banner,\u201d \u201cGod Save the King.\u201d The August meeting of the Hunt-' supplies ingville Women\u2019s Christian Temper-; ,.,Pnts t-,r tho {orceg nrce Union was held at the home of|i;;,nSi 213 RarmenV.hospital gar-Ingham with ten_ members j ,nt.nts n0_ sur(Tical hox ]iriinirs 1Pi Oonserretion Department.20 Mr.F and one visitor present.Mrs.W.A.Hinders on, the Preside .t.presided; ^tg and 3 fXtras and led in the devotional period, which consisted of the union pledge, The Secretary, Mrs.Andrews, read the minutes and correspondence which consisted of cards of thank.1\u2019otal Of 15,600 Voters Eligible To Cast Ballots In Bye-Election: Record Will Give Returns Tonight gar- ii total of 526, besides from the surgical dressing department, 13,708 dressings,\t, ,\t\u201e ,\t,\t.n\t.,\tdon, Ont., during the past week-end.'1rs.Uunsmore commented on the\t, Three young local men received their wings in graduation ceremonies at Uplands, St.Hubert and Lon- splendid effort put forth this month etc., whine Mrs.F.Ingham, tho!\u201cM V10\tgarments, wnioh wer Treasurer, reported a subttantial!\t,0 an emergency\t.tT .\t,\t, Horuw sum in the treasury and that the1 r!!.1 tvo\u2019\" headquarters, stntmg that\t^ oK::.' recently hold rummage sale was a[ with only a few steady sewers, fifty Two of the graduates who received their pilots wings were Ira Lloyd George, of Lennoxvillo, who decided success.Plans were made to hold another in the fall.The roll call was answered by hospital bed jackets were made and returned in twelve days and cighty- Mnrtin, of Sherbrooke, who led lus class at St.Hubert.IV illiam 11.Roberts, of Sherbrooke popular; \u201cOld-Time each member pledging some article M nt.\u2019n 'n two weeks.Another rush.^ j >nd e c t i o n; \u201cColonel to help fill a number of comfort C01*-Sl.e,nment of work has lust peon jj ^ , .: \u201cRussian Hvmn.\u201d hno-,,\treceived, winch consists of hospital:.IMMUNIZATIONS DURING JUNE TOTALLED 2,709 Health Units Report that During June 895 Child Welfare Clinics Were Held, in Which 98.000 Children Were Examined.The fight against diphtheria is ; being carried on with increasing intensity, particularly in those sections of the province which are served by the Health Units of the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare.In su.mer it is easier for the health specialists to hold clinics and for parents to attend them, because of greater transportation facilities.Since the beginning of June, 2,709 immunizations against this dread disease have been completed.In perusing the monthly report of the Health Units, it is evident that not only children, but mothers as well, benefitted by the hygienists\u2019 advice.During such time, 895 child welfare clmics were held at which doctors and nurses examined over 28,000 infants and 30,000 children under school age.40,000 school children were also examined.Three hundred and thirty-three lectures on school age hygiene were given in June and attended by 7,928 persons.Maternal hygiene necessitated 1,258 demonstrations in private homes and 2,375 pre-natal visits.It is by spreading the knowledge bags Mrs.F.Ingham also gave a splendid report on the county convention held in Sherbrooke, and Mrs.R.Ashe read a most interesting address given by Canon McGee at this meeting, which encouraged the members in their work.The matter of sending Christmas boxes to the local boys in the services was discussed and it was deeded a social evening in aid of this cause would be held at the home of Mrs, Elmer Douglas on August 13.Several donations wrere received for the boxes at this meeting.Mrs.R.Aahe thanked the members of the union who with the members of the Huntingville Ladies\u2019 Aid provided hot lunches for the pupils of her school during the winter months, also for the prize money given.The meeting dosed with the Miz-pah benediction and a dainty lunch i'Y suits of pyjamas wore made and mooKo, gimhialed as an Air Bomber at Ao, 4 Air Observers School, ondon, Ont.Roberts, who en-hospitalj>n tho R.C.A.F.immediately sheets, nightingalles and handker- ''I\u2019011 giaduution from the Bher-0 fewer than in the las: Federal election, are being called upon today to elect a representative to the House of Commons for Stan-stead County in a bye-election necessitated through annulment of R.G.Davidson's election on grounds that his party organizers were guilty of corrupt practices during the 1940 campaign.Among those seeking election are Mr.Davidson as otlicial Liberal standard-bearer and two newcomer.\".RECORD TO GIVE SPECIAL SKlt VICK For the convenience of its subscribers the Sherbrooke Record will provide a special service on the results of today's hye-elee-tion in Stanstead County.Returns obtained directly from the Returning Office at Magog will he given over the telephone at 164 and a progressive hullelin service will he provided ini the Record window.Polls close at six o\u2019clock and first results should be available a few minutes after that.to the.political scene representing the Bloc Populaire and the G.C.F.Candidate for the Bloc is Armand Choquette, 89 years old, of Kato-vale, funner and former President of the Kntevale branch of L\u2019Union Untholique des Cultivateurs.Mr.Choquette, the father of nine chil-dron, is Secretary of the Kntevale I Municipal School Board.The C.C.F.nominee is Pierre Thomas, Mayor of Magog, to which office ho was elected in 1942.Mr.Thomas, a former farmer, taxidermist and contractor, has been interested in municipal i politics for many years and was jelected Mayor of Magog in 1934.Several meetings were held by the three parties during the weekend, the popular after-mass rallies on public squares or church steps being in evidence in many of the niunieipnlities.During the campnign of the past two or three weeks, the j Liberal party brought several M inisters to speak on behalf of Mr.Davidson, including Hon.Louis St.Laurent, Minister of Justtcc, and Hon.Mr.Fournier, Public Works Minister, while the G.C.F.and its leader, M.J.Coldwell, address a rally at the Border Theatre in Shansi eud hut the \u201cbig guns\u201d in the Bloc.Populaire organization \u2014 Messrs.Raymond, Chaloult.and Lacroix \u2014 were conspicuous by their absence.Leo Deseve, of Magog, Returning Officer for Stanstead County, stated today that there were a total of 44 polls in the county, with about 16,-600 voters being eligible to mark thetr ballot.Of these 4,600 are in Magog and about 2,1100 in Oonti-eoolc.The total is 200 fewer than in the 1940 general election, tins due to many men having joined the services or left for other areas to work.Winnipeg, Aug.9.(®\u2014Voters in Humboldt constituency in Saskatchewan ami Selkirk in Manitoba today went to the polls to elect their Members of Parliament, ending Federal bye-election campaigns that started some three weeks ago.Polls in both constituencies opened at eight a.m.and were to close at.six p.m., G.D.T.In Humboldt, the electorate will choose between Frank S.Krenn, of Bruno, Liberal, Joseph W.Burton, C.G.I''.of Humboldt, both members of the Saskatchewan Legislature, and Theodore 1 auigdenhoff, Social Credit.There are also three candidate1* in Selkirk.They are C, E.Fillmore, Liberal, William Bryce, C.G.F., and Miss Salome llnlldorson, Social Credit.The Humboldt seat wa* vacated through tho death of Dr.H.It.Fleming.Appointment of former War Services Minister Thorson as President of the Exchequer Court of Canada necessitated the Selkirk bye-election.WILL ADDRESS LOCAL ROTARY i It was also stated that this new rate any objection against the requests would be in force from May 1, J943.1 made which any interested parties In the other request the City ask- may make.Pilot Officer Craig Miller Killed While On Active Service Overseas BODY OF RADIO OFFICIAL FOUND NEAR MAGOC MAJ.LBCHTKER HEART ATTACK Which of You Would Pay the Bills?pERHAPS the privilege yon value most in \u2022* life is that of providing for yonr wife and family.They will never lack anything that ia within your power to give.Have yon faced the possibility that your life\u2019s partner may someday be left without you?Have yon provided so that you \u2014 and not she \u2014would meet the costs of living for those who are left?Ton can make such provision through life insurance.Ton can use it to provide a guaranteed monthly income that will come in with clocklike regularity.Life insurance arranged in this way is the most con-(renient and practical financial protection for your loved ones it ia possible to provide.thb Manufacturers Life Insurance Company (EstablUhed 1887) HtAD OSTIC»\tTORONTO, CANADA Offlc* \u2014 124 Wellington St.North, Sherbrooke.J.E.CARON \u2014 Manager, Sherbrooke Division.1 Another Eastern Townships lad with the Royal Canadian Air Force _______ | Overseas has made the supreme sac- Rotarian Arthur Lageux, Imme- rifice, with word received today diate Past District Governor of the from Ottawa that Pilot Officer Crai/ Quebec districts, will be the guest Miller, 19 years old of.Brome, was speaker at the regular weekly lun- killed on active service Tuesday i heon of the Rotary Club at the last.New Sherbrooke Hotel tomorrow The young airman, who left noon .\tKnowlton High School to enlist in Past District Governor Lageux1 November, 1941, was born at has inaugurated twelve new Rotary Brome, the son of Mr.and Mrs.M.Clubs in his term of office.Topic ;W- Miller, and has been Oversea: ,*V,S .a'^ress, j®3, not.given sinee April last.Upon joining the but it is expected that he will speak on Rotary.J.A.Archambault will introduce Past District Governor Lageux and he will be thanked by B.N.Holtham.Body of Elmer C.Grimley, President of R.C.A.Victor Company, who fell form his sailboat into Lake Momphrcmagog near the Hermitage Club on Tuesday afternoon last, was found at 8:45 o\u2019clock this morning R.C.A.F.he trained at Toronto, St.near the scene of the accident.The Eugene and Dauphin, Man., where body was floating on the surface of he received his wings, and later took an officers\u2019 course at Charlottetown, P.E.I.He leaves his parents; three the lake; and was found by S.Cor-miei, of Montreal, professional d.ver who was on his way to the scene to resume his diving operations.Grimley was sailing with his wife brothers, Grant, in Vaudreuil, Doug- an dniece between the Hermitage ¦ as, who is employed with the Que- Club point and the Three Sisters Is-oee Central Railway in Sherbrooke, Jar,fis when he is believed to have and Robert, at home; and four sis- suffered a heart attack ami fell from ers, Marilyn and Jacqueline, at the boat .His wife immediately low-chool, and Christine and Isabelle, ered sail but Grimley failed to come The death occurred in the .Sherbrooke Hospital on Sunday of Maj, J.J.lyeightizer, 68 years of age, who was the Officer Commanding of No.13 Company, Veterans\u2019 Guard of Canada, stationed at the Exhibition Grounds.He is survived by his wife, who Jives in Charlottetown, P.E.I.Maj.Leightizer, who has served actively with the Veterans\u2019 Guard for over three years, took command of No.13 Company in April of this year.Prior to the aforementioned appointment he was in command of No.6 Company of the Veterans\u2019 Guard, and had before that served on the administrative staffs of several internment camps.Enlisting in the 2nd Siege Battery in July, 1.915, the deceased was soon promoted to Battery-Sergeant'Major, and soon after he received hi: commission.Prior to the armistice he was promoted Captain, and second-in-command of the 7th Siege Battery, verseas.Maj.Leightizer served in England, France, and Bel gium, before he was demobilized in 1919.TIPS FOR TEA-STRETCHERS l Measure; don\u2019t guess.Sava a spoonful today; enjoy a cup tomorrow.Use only young TENDER leaves.More fragrance .more flavor .more satisfaction .in every cup! Ask for\u2014and Ire sure you get\u2014Tender Leaf Teal wmmi; WM,\u201e.both of Montreal.Decrease Of 116 In Number Of Pleasure Cars Licenced Noted to the surface.The lake at that place is about 55 feet deep.Widely known radio execut'vej Mr.Grimley waR spending the weekend with his family at their summer htme on the Hermitage grounds.I w»nt to know how be*t to provide a monthy income of $ for my dependent* within the means 8t my disposal.It is understood that yonr advice doe* not place me under any obligation.Aft-\u2014.\t.- Nam* Aidresn .JMbII (hit eevpon to local odd rati given above) Pleasure Cars Taxi Cabs Farm Trucks .Commercial Trucks 1941\t1942 1943 4,739 4,511 4,395 103 237 615 37 183 71 13 15 83 10 14.3 114 258 696 37 180 72 13 28 41 14 154 99 259 727 34 177 63 13 37 32 17 161 REV.CRANDALL NAMED RECTOR AT KNOWLTON this great work, hut that it i* a cause that is available to all, as long as they possess good health and are between 18 and 60 years of age.;\t\u2014- Rejeanne Ducharme and Mrs.R.: A decrease of 116 pleasure cars | of the permits sold during the Jan-Winslade, botht of this city, inter-\tjn this\tdistrict was noted over the ! uary\t1\tto June 30 period for the past viewed in the recovery room imme-\t\u2022\t,\t.To.,,,,-,, (\tfour\tyears, diately following their donation, both f* Tmonth® penod lfr°m+ JanUa7nT said, \u201cI am fueling fine, and every\"\tt0 f\"\u2019?6 f3- T®ccor'hn* fto.® rL thing went very nicely.What sur-\tmade by the Department of National prised me the most was the ease and\tRevT!l DUrmg\tÏ i * ?a butter lack of any pain as the blood .\tpen01d.\tther* wef';.\ta,.tottal 4\u2019396 was taken.We are delighted at this cars llce™ed !cn this district as corn-chance to help.\u201d\tpared with 4,511 cars, for the same M t , Howard Sims and Othnil Carrière.!Ppn°d last year.Taxi cabs have motorcycles.also of Sherbrooke, both were giving also decreased in the area and there Farm Trailers th-eir first donation.\u201cIt was eo easy, ^ present only 9D taxis opérât- Commercial Trailers and a very simplified process,\u201d said\tDistrict.This is a de- Auto Buses .Mr.Sims.\u201cTOs is a very sood idea\tcrease of four over the 1942 Period-\t-Service Trucks\t.for Sherbrooke to start and I hope\tThirteen auto buses are at present\tX Markers the idea spreads, as it is somethin gr\toperating in the city and this total\tHearses and\tA mb.everybody can help in.I am proud bas remained the same for the past Truck, Bus Permits _______________ _____ ______ , to do my part,\u201d\tsaid Mr.Carrière,\tj\tthree years.In the hearse ambulance\tf; .ductor Licenses 6,176\t6,486\t5,324\t1 ed from McGill in 1938\twill\ttake The canteen\tthis morning was\tdivision three more vehicles have\tChauffeur Licenses\t978\t1,903\t966\tover duties as rector of\u2019the Parish operated under the direction of the\t;\tbeen added since last year and the\tGarage License\t40\t47\t45\tof Knowlton, replacing\tthe\tRev Elizabeth S.Hume Chapter, I.O.D.E.,\u2019total now stands at seventeen.1 Dealers Licenses 12\t9\t10 Canon G.A.Mason, who has been who served hot\tcoffee, Coca Cola.\tA total of 5,324 drivers permits\tTransfers\t451\t285\t545\tdirecting the activities of\tthe\tpar- Former McGill Graduate, Who Has Been Serving at Yel-1 lowknife, N.W.T., Appointed to Succeed Late Rev.A.E.Rollit.- | Rev.Cecil Randall, who graduate, LEARNED PLAIN Miss Beatrice Harper, of Sherbrooke, spent the week-end at her home here.Miss Ethel Harper, who has been in Sherbrooke for two week*, has returned home.Mr.and Mrs.George Molloy and Miss Decoteau, of Island Brook, were evening guests of Mr.and Mrs.Thomaa Kinsley.Mrs.G.Hume has returned from Sherbrooke, where she spent a few days at the home of Mr.and Mrs, Elgin French.Mr.Garnet Card, of Sherbrooke, was a week-end guest at Mr.E.Harper\u2019s.At your grocer\u2019» In two convenient sizes .also in improved FILTER tea balls: BLENDED AND PACKED IN CANADA K3D MYRA THEATRE RICHMOND Tues.-Wed.-Thurs^ Aug.10 - 11 - 12 \u201cTENNESSEE JOHNSON\u201d Van Heflin, Lionel Barrymore News and Short Subject» and cookies to the donore as they: wer* »old_ for this area at the local entered the recovery room after giv- ! office, This represents a decrease of ing their blood.\t: 162 over the game period last year.-\t! While a decrease was noted in the An old marriage custom takes ^ drivers\u2019 permits, bruck and bus per- place at a party given on the eve of 1 mits were up slightly and the figure the wedding in Wales.During the for this year totalled 161 as compar- party, the bride runs away and hides ed with 154 for last year.\tBusiness and Professional Women\u2019s Arthahaska, prior to hïs \"new ' an- and the groom has to hunt hex out.The following is a detailed report I Club tonight.\tpointaient.ish since the death of the Rev, A E.Rollit last winter, it was announced at the Montreal Anglican Office.Rev.Mr.Randall had been serv-_\t,\tling at Yellowknife, in the North- There will be no meeting of the west Territories under the Bishop of CITY BRIEFLETS BLOOD DONORS WANTED MEN AND WOMEN \u2014 18 TO 60 YEARS \u2014 Apply \u2014 CAN.RED CROSS BLOOD DONOR CLINIC 84 Dufferin Ave.\u2014 Sherbrooke \u2014 Tel.2404 536117 85556^ SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD fa ¦.% tm vtipîx TOWNSHIPS' BLOOD DONOR CLINIC THE CLINIC With the co-operation of Record advertisers whose names appear at the bottom of these pages, the Record is pleased to be able to present the story in picture and words of the Red Cross Blood Donor Clinic which is today formally open at 84 Dufferin Ave., Sherbrooke.This, so far, is the only Blood Donor Clinic in the Eastern Townships, but it is a part of a national service under which the Canadian Red Cross Society furnishes human blood voluntarily given by Canadian men and women, eighteen to sixty years of age, which is then made into powdered form and shipped overseas.Among all forms of war services this is one of the outstanding because it costs donors absolutely nothing, but it gives them the satisfaction of knowing that they are helping to save the lives of fighting men of the United Nations.In the preparation of these pages support and co-operation readily came from the Sherbrooke office of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, which is in charge of Corporal Murray Smith, and Constables J.J.H.Charles and C.J.F.Georget were assigned to visit the Clinic.These pictures show Constable Charles, left, and Constable Georget, right, as they stood on the steps of the Clinic.Below they are seen as they relaxed in the spacious and inviting waiting room, where donors will wait for their turn to donate blood.The top picture on the opposite page shows the smiling Constables as they chatted with Mrs.J.A.C.I homson the former Margaret Cross of Sherbrooke, who is technician of the Clinic.Below, the Constables are pictured in the bleeding room.The members of the local R.C.M.P.were among the first to offer their blood and gave their names for the first clinic this morning.The Sherbrooke Clinic is located in one of the famous old homes of Sherbrooke and is ideally suited for the important work to be carried on there.Although located in Sherbrooke, the Clinic is for the use of the Eastern Townships as a whole and its success is dependent upon the support which it receives from the people of the Townships.Already co-chairmen have been named in all principal towns and villages and it is hoped that when called upon residents of these towns will readily give their names as donors.These donors will, in time, be contacted and arrangements made to have them brought to the Clinic.It is likely that in the future mobile clinics will be held in a number of adjacent towns.THE \u201cM0UNT1ES\u201d AT THE CLINIC mwm i\\ OhsOli Bi UiWitiS vw;.| '|:?j ^\"Ws ' : ¦ mm W?fm- Wmm.¦ ¦?****-om spreading, due people saw clearly that no; 10 the partlcl,lar cond!tlons created Justice, Temperance and Fortitude.The jacks were replaced by four-young French Republicans.A political candidate could teil all about his policies with cards like these.I colleye at Stellenbosch where he A.-d, V, '\t, L, ,\t\u2022 j-, , \" .by the war, the aggravation of the V , 1\t,\t,, f ., .I \u201e .I .N' u'':l!lty Act could isolate\ti hope mat this will be none on a junder basis than that demon- England, the land of his hereditary | ,an> sr\"est's °f Mr.and Mrs.from Windsor, Ont., where he spent aunt, Miss Amy Wells, 44 Dominion1\tDaker.six weeks, Capt.Blier spent a week- Avenue.\t| Mias Rhenn Pnrisenu, of Montreal, end here with his wife and son,!\t+ * »\t1 was a week-end guest of her parents Frank, prior to leaving for Val-j Mr.and Mrs.FL K.Longley ofl\u2018^r' and Raymond Pariseau.Cat d\t' franklin, N.H., who have been week-, .miss Laura Peareon was a guest end guests of Mrs.L.W.Tempie _________ for a few day6 of Mr.and Mrs.'sister of Mrs.Longley, and Mr! James Burnell and Miss Louise Temple, and also visited Mrs.Greg- '\t,,\t.\t\u201e\t, Jory O\u2019Boyle, Short Street, returned Rev.and Airs.A.E.Teale and ; to Franklin today, children, of Granby, Conn., were!\t* 1 * * guests of Mr.and Mrs.Oscar John-! Mrs.Albert Wheeler, her infant MrsdKemm!sd^rq>,A KX JghnSOn' n\"\u2019 Bryan Mitchel]> and Miss Violet FLY-AV/AY TRFSSFS Mrs.Kemmis, of Sherbrooke, was Page, King George Street Sher- ^ W/'1\t1 mUTIOLlb ÂlexejohLon ParentS\u2019 Mr* 8\u201dd Mrs'1 brooke\u2019 a\"d Mr.and Mrs.Hugh Mac- STAY PUT WIT! I The ATissps tu\ti -ru Rmnon, Leimoxvillc, have returned Rankfn\tand The1I.ma-4\tTO\t.540 Ray S\tandors and Harry Brecheen,\tCincinnati .\t\t54\t47\t¦535 Card inn\ts: Sanders singled home\tBrooklyn .,\t\t50\t.510 win ning\trun in first game to beat\tChicago ., .\t., .4 G\t53\t.465 Pirates;\tBrecheen\u2019s second game\tPhiladelphia\t\t 47\t56\t.456 pitching\tmade it double triumph for\tBoston .\t\t 43\t52\t.453 Cards.\t\tNew York .\t.37\t68\t.370 still hold down second place but wiu p;ve series for t.be league champion-drop back several points behind the ship.Notre Dame were last year\u2019s Mu'll: Robert and Gaston Blais league leaders.Ibis game, for the champions and they then went on (PTeatoJ Gertrude and Rone -loyal league leadership should be quite through to take the championship of '-7; 7-;\t8-1,\tMarthe Tanguay and\tclose and the competition should be\tthe province.They still have many and Darche.In\tthis game\tthe rallies\tNormand\tBreault defeated Annette\tvery keen so that all softball fans\t0£ their old players on the line-up were long\tand\thard\tand\tthe cross\t«\u2019barest\tand\tGaston Gagnon 6-1;\t\u2022 who really want to see one of the\tan(j there is just a slight possibility ! court play\tmade the\tgame both in-\t6-1.Carmen\tand Majella Charest\tbest games of the season should go\tthat they will win the championship to watch.The won by default.M.Houd and Paul to the grounds of the Grand Semin- this year.Before they can take a probably the best doubles game of 6-3; 6-2.the week-end.Both teams were Mined Doubles: fairly evenly matched and the game had to go into the third set before a deer ion came in favor of Simard te rest ing and exciting score for this match was 6-4, 2-6 and 6-3.In Sunday\u2019s games two of the befit matches were a mixed double play1 between Gaston Blais and Marthe between Majella Charest and Marcel) Gagnon 6-3; Darolie and R.Perron and J.Kelly In the Blais-Robert match the games were very close and competition was particularly keen.From David defeated Joan Curphy and.aire on Seventh Avenue at about Joan Beaudry 6-1 and 6-4.\tj seven o'clock.Women's Singles:\t' The following is the league Ida Goyette defeated Pierette Cou-, standing to date: ture 6-2; 6-1.\tj\tP.W.Men\u2019s singles:\t\u2018Pariseau .16 12 Y van Boisvert defeated Roger Canadian Silk , 14 10 6-4.I Notre Dame La Tribune 15\t10 16\t6 L.4 4 5 10 D.PC.0 .750 0 .714 0 .666 0 .375 rack at this they will have to take another game away from the Mount Pleasant club and this will have to lc done some time during this week so that the two finalists can get underway next week-end.In the Boissonneault-East Ward Men\u2019s Doubles: A.Renaul and J.Fortier defeated Philip Carey .15 5 9 0 .333 R.Mailhot and J.M.Beaudry 8-6; Dominion Textile 11 2 12 0 .142 6-2.J.Cote and M.Turmel defeated.\u2014 A.Fortier and J.Dansereau 6-1; ' ,\t,\t,\t,\t.,\t,\t, .,-\t., 6-0.Rene Joyal and Normand day when be emerged the victor over the third run came m the second, j Boissonneault scored their first two ; \tAB\tR\tH\tPO\tA\tE Rouillard .\t.4\t1\t0\t0\t0\t0 Couture, Tb.\t.3\t0\t1\t14\t1\t0 Caron, rf.\t.3\t0\t1\t2\t0\t0 Longpre, cf.\t.3\t1\t0\t0\t0\t0 Dionne, 3b.\t.3\t1\t0\t0\t1\t0 De Lot\u2019nville,\t4\t0\t1\t8\t0\t0 Lavatle, If.\t.4\t0\t0\t0\t0\t0 Morissette, 2b.\t.2\t1\t1\t2\t1\t0 Duplain, p.\t.4\t0\t2\t1\t7\t0 Lapointe, lb.\t.2\t0\t1\t0\t0\t0 Totals \t\t32\t4\t7\t27\t10\t0 East Ware\t\t\t\t\t\t \tAB\tR\tH\tPO\tA\tE Frechette, ss.\t.3\t0\t0\t3\t0\t0 Dube G., rf.\t.4\t0\t1\t1\t0\t0 Dube L,, c.\t.3\t0\t0\t10\t1\t0 Dube A., lb.\t.3\t0\t0\t4\t0\t1 Lefebvre, 3b.\t.3\t0\t0\t0\t2\t1 Proteau, cf.\t.3\t0\t0\t4\t0\t0 Marquis, 2b.\t.3\t0\t0\t5\t3\t0 Denault, If.\t.3\t0\t0\t0\t0\t0 Charland, lb.\t.3\t0\t0\t0\t3\t0 Totals \t\t28\t0\t1\t27\t9\t2 Boissoneault.\t210\t001\t000\u2014\t\t4 7\t0 East Ward.\t000\tO'OO\t000\u2014\t\t0 1\t2 Notre Dame\t\t\t\t\t\t \tAB\tR\tH\tPO\tA\tE Blanchette, ss\t.4\t3\t0\t1\t3\t0 Bergeron, 2'b\t.5\t3\t3\t5\t2\t0 Dion, If\t\t\t2\t2\t0\t0\t0 Dube, p\t\t.5\ti\t2\t0\t6\t0 Charland, lb.\t.5\ti\t2\t14\t0\t0 Sirois, cf.\u2022 .\t\t0\t0\t2\t0\t0 Latulippe, rf.\t.5\t0\t3\t2\t0\t0 Philippon, 3b.\t.5\t0\t0\t0\t1\t0 Fanell, c.\t\t0\t1\t3\t1\t0 Totals\t\t44\t10\t13\t27\t13\t0 Mount Pleasant\t\t\t\t\t\t \tAB\tR\tH\tPO\tA\tE Emend, lb.\t.0\t1\t1\t12\t0\t0 Dore, 2b.\t.5\t0\t2\t4\t5\t0 Dussault, cf.\t.4\t0\t2\t4\t0\t0 Dion, ss.\t.5\t0\t0\t1\t3\t2 O\u2019Connor, 3b.\t.3\t0\t2\t0\t2\tï Perusse, rf.\t.4\t0\t1\t2\t0\t0 Gauthier, If.\t.3\t0\t1\t2\t0\t0 Lamontagne\t.4\t0\t0\t2\t1\t0 ¦Fontaine, p.\t.2\t0\t0\t0\t3\t0 Jutras, rf.\t.1\t0\t1\t0\t0\t0 Totals .\t36\t1\t10\t27\t14\t3 which team would come out on top., v>-v.\t.v\t«.mi .vuiuuiuu i \u2022 ,\t_.\t.In the three sets the scores went Breault defeated Gaston Gagnon and M 10 \"crsey clu\" , .\t.above six each time and in the Me- Paul Biron 6-3; 3-6; 7-5.L.and r.; ms former mates clubbed him foi m the sixth 0.although xhe final point of the game came Not.Dame 202 030 210\u201410 13 0 when Boissonneault Mt.Pi\u2019sant 100 000 000\u2014 1 13 2 ciding one the score went 8-6 in favor Gagnon defeated G.Proulx and M.of the Blais-Robert team, In the; Ger vais 6-3; 6-3.Y van Boisvert and ot her game the expected happened ! Paul David defeated J.Huot and Guy because there was little doubt that) Bureau 6-1 ; 6-1.Majella Charest and last year's champion and the runner-j Marcel Darche defeated R.Perront up would be able to take the pre-1 and J.Kelly 6-3; 6-4.«ss:.:: ,r A ¦\t'\t.Bring The Home F rout News To The Bat lief rout ! Many of us have a son, a daughter, a brother, a husband, a sweetheart, or a friend on Active Duty.Chances are they're kind of lonesome for some of the news about the going's on\u201d back home, and there isn't a better way of letting them know than by sending daily a copy of the Sherbrooke Record.It s a gift that will be appreciated.The Record has a special rate for members in the Armed Forces wherever they may be.Fake advantage of this special offer.FOUR MONTHS S Months $2.00 12 Months $3.00 The Sherbrooke Daily Record EASTERN TOWNSHIPS\u2019 ONLY ENGLISH DAILY Rudy York Regains Old Time Ability As Leading Slugger .ix blows while his new friends found Crip Polli for only a pair of hits.Montreal also won the first game, 5-1.with Hal Gregg the winning pitcher.The sweep of the day\u2019s double-barrelled attraction wasn't a Montreal patent, however.Newark took a pair from Rochester, 8-2 and 5-1; Syracuse mastered Buffalo twice.6-3 and 3-2 and Toronto annexed both games from Baltimore, 3-1 and 10-7.Blue Bombers football ace, na.In Saturday\u2019s games, Toronto got arrived overseas again with Can-| a temporary setback after its long adian paratroopers, Eddie (Winni ; string of victories but T, :- Canadian Sport Snapshots by ALLAN HARVEY, Canadian Press Staff Writer.Toronto, Aug.ftP\u2014Noting!and who knows?\" .that Jeff Nicklin, former Winnipeg v, By TEtD MEIER Associated Press Sports Writer Rudy York, whose home run bat ha: revived unexpectedly, ihay set a major league record by hitting nineteen or more round-trippers month.The husky Detroit first baseman hc-s lost fifteen of eighteen games, socked three homers yesterday in; Cleveland pul ed to w.thm half a leading Tigers to a double win over fame of Do ro.t and M into Sox by the Chicago White Sex Fhe circuit \u2019;a\tUrns Browns tw,ce 6-5 Baltimore ^\t^\t_ for Buck Walters\u2019 third straight win orioles had to go twelve innings to PCS f\t.\t.T - do it.The score was 8-7.Montreal ments: The first time the Jeffer Armstrong com- and eighth of the season,\t,\tT\t^ The fading Brooklyn Dodgers nosed out Jersey City 3-2, Syracuse went over he was a lieutenant took it on the chin for the tenth s'lut out Buffalo by a 9-0 score and phis time he docked as a major straight time when Elmer Nieman Rochester defeated Newark 3-1.doubled Tommy Holmes home in the this) ninth inning to give the Boston Braves a 5-4 victory.Brooklyn now One more trip for the big feilow- elouts gave him the major league leadership with eighteen, but more important, they gave him a total of five for the first week of August.It was six years ago.in August.1937, that York walloped eighteen homers for a major league mark that still stands.If he continues to connect for five homers in each of the remaining three weeks of August he is certain to break his own record.York's booming bat, which whacked twenty-one homers last year and twenty-seven in 1941, backed up superlative pitching from Virgil Trucks and Tommy Bridges as Detroit tied the White Sox for third place.York hit two of his homers m the first game while Trucks beat the Sox.8-2, limiting them to six hits.His third round-tripper came the second game as Bridges twirl- in fourteen innings and 5-2 behind; Jim Bagby\u2019s five-hit pitching for his ; twelfth win of the year.Washington divided a bargain bill with Boston Red Sox.Jake Early, batted in three runs with a homer NEW CHALLENGE BATTLE MAY BE ANNUAL EVENT .,\t,,\t,,\t,\t, Detroit, Aug.9.\u2014(JP)\u2014As captain four-ball matches, ana double as the Senators took the : 0£ American Ryder cuppers, who opener, 4-3.The Sox took the night-\t\u2018 cap by the same score as Rookie George \u201cPinky\" Woods outpitched Milo Candini.The Philies swept a four-game series from New York by winning both ends of a doubleheader.5-1 and 8-2.thus regaining sixth place.Saturday in the National League Philadelphia took New York 9-6.Pittsburgh beat St, Louis 4-1, while Cincinanti trimmed Chicago 4-1 and lengers.\u201cThen every second year we, 16.could send the best against the Stolen bases: British in Ryder play.\u2019\u2019 The Ryder matches with the Brit- ish are played every two years.That Detroit likes the all-star series idea was further shown yesterday by the 10.000 gallery at the Plum Hollow course that poured 335,000 into Red Cross coffers to see Wood\u2019s squad capture six to eight singles matches to dominate the two-day affair.The Cuppers carried over a one-point lead from Saturday's Boston downed Brooklyn 7-4.In the American League Washington came out on the short end of a 7-5 score against Boston, Cleveland dropped a 2-0 decision to St.Louis, Detroit was the loser in a 7-4 contest York trim- now hold a 3-1 series edge over Domestic challengers.National Open Champion Craig Wood thinks golf should have an annual all-star show even after international matches with the British are resumed.\u201cThere's no reason why we can't cago, 78.have two captains and two all-star Hits : Wakefield, Detroit, 187.squads for a big match each year,\u201d Doubles: Keltner.Cleveland, 29.declared Wood after he had led his Herman, Brooklyn, 29.cup squad yesterday to an SH to 3M Triples: Musiai, St.Louis, 14.triumph over Walter Hagen's chal-[ Home runs: Nicholson, Chicago, MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS By The Associated Press National Batting: Musiai, St.Louis, .343.Runs: Vaughan, Brooklyn, 81.Runs batted in; Nicholson, Chi- in ______ .\t-\t, rd a four-hit 3-0 shutout.Altogether York drove in five runs for the day with Chicago and New and boosted his season R.B.I.to 64,| med Philadelphia 3-1.despite a humble .266 batting aver-;\t\u2014 -.^The Yankees, with Spud Chandler\tSERVED twirling a five-hitter for his 14th\tf 1-1/ win of the year and, in addition, lacing out a home run.walloped Phila-j delphia Athletics, 7-1, but had to, come from behind to win the second j game, S-4, in 10 innings.The Bronx: Bombers now move on to St, Louis ¦ with a three-game winning streak! and a nine-game lend.\ti\t______ The Cardinals stretched their leadi py the Associated Press to thirteen games by beating the1 It wasn\u2019t more than two week second-place Pittsburgh Pirates; that Tom Sunkel, now pitchin twice.3-6 and 5-2.\t3 Montreal Royals of the International Cincinnati moved within half a ; League, threatened to give up base-game of the Pirates by splitting a | ball but today he probably is happy-twin bill with Chicago Cubs.The; that he didn t.Cubs took the opener, 4-3, as Hi Sunkel sulked when sent down to Bithorn came to Claude PasseauV the Jersey City Club by the parent1 rescue to stop a late Red rally.A big; New York Giants and then was seven-run outburst in the fifth game shunted to the Roya.s.gave Cincinnati the nightcap, 10-7, But that was all forgotten y es ter- Vaughan.Brooklyn, 13.Pitching: Sewell, Pittsburgh, 17-3.The father of Bobby Managoff, Montreal version of world wrestling champ, collapsed from the excitement during a bout while seconding hie son.Prooably poppa hadn\u2019t heard who was supposed to win that one\u2014and was the strain ever terrible! Incidentally : Bill Westwick of the Ottawa Journal relays a rumor that Billy Taylor, Toronto Leafs centre, may-plan hockey in Ottawa next winter with the army ., .Doug Vaughan of the Windsor Star says he still has reason to believe Cleveland and Buffalo will be in the National Hockey League next winter.\u201cIf nothing else,\" writes Doug, \u201cthe shortage of manpower will probably be sufficient reason to cause the American League to suspend operations for the duration of the war\u201d .Ralph ( Highpockets) McCabe.the Belleville, Ont., pitcher who started the International Baseball League season with Toronto, then was sent down to Albany, now is back in Toronto\u2014this time with the army, TRUSSES Fitted and adjusted.Satisfaction guaranteed.Gaudet Pharmacy 29 King St- W.Tel.3868 Near Bus Terminal MONTREAL WITH REAL VICTORY ago \u2022\tIv .\t,\tx\t.y ?¦ CIGARETTE uiiw Ttit sflvmos "]
Ce document ne peut être affiché par le visualiseur. Vous devez le télécharger pour le voir.
Document disponible pour consultation sur les postes informatiques sécurisés dans les édifices de BAnQ. À la Grande Bibliothèque, présentez-vous dans l'espace de la Bibliothèque nationale, au niveau 1.