Sherbrooke daily record, 29 septembre 1943, mercredi 29 septembre 1943
[" V â>brrbrook?Satly Srrorb .\u2022 \u2022 Established 1897.THE PAPER OF THE EASTERN TOWNSHIPS SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC.WEDNESDAY.SEPTEMBER 29.1943.WEATHER Cloudy and Cool CITY EDITION.NEWS OF NAPLES\u2019 FALL EXPECTED MOMENTARILY 5th Army Drives Germans Out Of Mountain Posts Huns Pursued on Plain Within Fifteen Miles of Naples, Fall of Which Appeared Imminent Today\u2014Allies Now in Complete Possession of Sorrento Peninsula, Separating Bay of Naples from Gulf of Salerno.London, Sept, 29.\u2014(CP)\u2014The Press Association said today it had learned authoritatively in London that British troops have entered Pompei, near Naples.By NOLAND NORGAARD, Associated Press War Correspondent.Allied Headquarters, North Africa, Sept.29.\u2014(Æ*)\u2014The oth Army has driven the Germans from their last mountain positions above Salerno and is pursuing the enemy on the plain within fifteen miles of Naples, the fall of which appeared today to be imminent.The Germans, routed out of the mountain strongholds in six days of heavy fighting, were in general retreat, leaving the Allies in complete possession of the Sorrento Peninsula, which separates the Bay of Naples from the Gulf of Salerno.British and American troops of Lt.-Gen.Mark Clark began the final attack on the enemy\u2019s extremely strong mountain positions at dawn yesterday and by noon had captured Nocera, vital road centre at the beginning of the coastal plain leading^- CANADIAN WIRE FIRMS MODIFY U.S.CONTRACTS Merger of American Companies Compels Change in Existing Contractual Obligations.Montreal, Sept.25.\u2014ÏP)\u2014The Canadian Pacific Communications and the Canadian National Telegraphs | said last night in a joint statement I on the proposed merging of the ; Western Union and Postal Telegraph that their two companies will con- { tinue to accept telegraph traffic ofj all classes destined for the United ; States.(A Washington dispatch yesterday said the Federal Communications Commission approved the merger of the two United States companies in a move designed to give that country one vast telegraph system that coul-o operate efficiently and economically) The statement noted that Western Union has been the exclusive connection of the C.N.T.and Post Telegraph the exclusive connection of the C.P.C.for the interchange of telegraph business.\u201cThe merging of the two American telegraph systems has made it necessary to modify to some extent existing contractual obligations of Continued on page 2.column 4.Several Nearby Towns And Villages Seized Allied Headquarters, North Africa, Sept.29.\u2014(A3)\u2014Allied troops were only a few miles from Naples today and news of an entry into the Italian metropolis «as expected any moment.London, Sept.29.\u2014\u2014The Berlin radio said today that German troops had evacuated several towns and villages Northeast of Naples, the big Italian port threatened with imminent capture by Allied troops.Two towns named in the broadcast, however, are Southeast of Naples.These were named as Castel San Girogio, three miles East of Nocera, and Baronissi, five miles North of Salerno.Berlin also reported that American reinforcements had arrived in the Salerno sector and that an Allied attack had been launched on the road leading from Vietri, on the Sorrento Peninsula West of Salerno, to the Northwest.The Germans said that in the sector Northeast of Naples their troops had withdrawn to shortened positions in the mountains and had evacuated Montoro and other towns after destroying all military installations.Montoro is about eleven miles North of Salerno and due East of Naples.Canadians Occupy Important Town Is Climax To Twelve Hour Siege to Naples.Castellammare, important naval vase on the Southern shore of the Bay of Naples, also fell quickly into Allied hands as the Germans withdrew in a flight that may not cease until they reach the River Ventura line, well North of Naples.(In London, the authoritative British Press Association said it had learned that 5th Army forces had entered historic Pompei at the foot of smoking Vesuvius and only thirteen airline miles from the heart of Naples).The breakthrough on the extreme Western end of the front extending across Italy from coast to coast was accompanied by a general advance on the entire 8th and 5th army line.Troops on the 5th Army\u2019s right flank smashed their way six miles Northward against crumbling enemy opposition and were within seven miles of Avellino, road and nail junction which is the key to inland communications East of Naples.The capture of Avellino would constitute a threat to any German effort to make a new stand anywhere East or South of Naples.The British 8th Army, including the Canadian 1st Division, meanwhile wiped out the deep salient on its Western flank, previously reported, and established a straight line between San Angelo and Malfi, \u2022while along the Adriatic Gen.Sir Bernard Montgomery\u2019s forces stormed Northward from Marghe-xita di Savoia and occupied the town of Zappanetta on the Gulf of Man-fredonia, due East of the Great Foggia air base.British troops on the extreme Southwest end of the Allied front began the final shove against the enemy in the mountain line North and Northwest of Salerno and encountered the bitterest kind of fighting at the town of Sala which already had changed hands many times in recent weeks of the furious struggle.This time Allied troops seized it Continued on page 2, col.4.May Accord Italian Nation Status Of A Co-Belligerent By EDWARD KENNEDY, Somewhere in Italy, Sept.26.\u2014 (Delayed)\u2014(fP)\u2014Despite the Badog-i lio Government's obvious desire for \u2018 recognition as a full-fledged British-! American ally, it n'ow seems possible i that Italy may be accorded the status | of a co-belligerent and that any con-: cession she may receive will be measured by the aid she delivers.' There have been indications during the past week that Premier Badoglio has been on the verge of declaring war upon Germany in an effort to line Italy up with the Allies.This would be purely an independent action, however, and it is expected that Italy\u2019s new' war role and her relations with the United Nations will be fixed shortly through negotiation.Many difficulties lie in the way of granting Italy anything even approaching United Nations status.One is the reluctance of the troops who have been fighting the Italians to accept them as allies\u2014a feeling doubtless shared by a large part of the public in Britain and the United States.The attitude of London and Washington, on the other hand, seems to be that since the Italians apparently wish sincerely to help in the fight against Germany it is only common sense to make use of them.How much Italy can help to wage war on Germany is, of course, a question.Her capacity to help may be limited mainly to behind the lines assistance to the British and American armies, but having the Italians with us might simplify our occupation problems and aggravate those of the Germans, possibly relieving several Allied divisions from occupation tasks and tying up five or six German divisions.GOVERNMENT LOSES ON PULPWOOD DEAL Montreal, Sept.28.\u2014((P) \u2014 By a court ruling here today the Government, as custodian of enemy property, failed to recover $3,828 in insurance premiums paid on a cargo of pulpwood loaded at Montreal and destined for France but which got only as far as Quebec.The fall of France and the subsequent application of \u201ctrading with the enemy\u2019\u2019 regulations intervened before the ship cleared the port of Quebec.U.S.LEND-LEASE REACHES NEW HIGH Washington, Sept.29.\u2014(.(P)\u2014Lend-lease supplies to the Allied Nations now total nearly 1514 billion dollars, it was disclosed yesterday by President Roosevelt.The President\u2019s announcement came after a hint of the possible trend of next year\u2019s invasion campaigns implied in the disclosure by Lt.-Col.William S.Gaud, of the United States Army General Staff, that 10 per cent of military lend-lease shipments for 1944 have been earmarked for such countries as France, Belgium, Norway and Greece.NEW PROGRAMME DRAWN UP FOR LIBERAL GROUP By C.R.BLACKBURN Canadian Press Staff Writer Ottawa, Sept.29.\u2014-t®\u2014With a new executive and a new programme the National Liberal Federation today began a period of organizational activity after being virtually inactive since the 1940 Dominion elections.The special meeting of the Federation Advisory Council and more than 300 additional members registered as non-voting delegates, completed a two-day meeting late last evening.A series of resolutions were adopted but not made pubilc.It was intimated that they would be consolidated in a single programme which will form the basis of the Federation\u2019s educational campaign in the coming months.All the meetings were closed to press and public but an official spot sman said the resolutions might be made public later when they have been ' reprinted.Senator Wishart Robertson, of Halifax, 52-year-old former member of the Nova Scotia Legislature for Shelburne County, was the unani-mous choice as President.It was the first national meeting since before the outbreak of war, but henceforth thev will be held annually by virtue of an amendment to the constitution making annual meeting's mandatory.The resolutions dealt with such subjects as social security, labor relations, agriculture, fisheries, lumbering and mining, The resolution on labor relations was said to have demanded efforts to bring about a better understanding between cap-bai and labor, and to widen the recognition of labor\u2019s rights.In the following delayed dispatch William Stewart, Canadian Press war correspondent in Italy, describes the first serious opposition Canadian troops encountered since they landed September 3 on the toe of Italy with the British 8th Army.Until this fight the Canadians had experienced difficulty in keeping up with the rapidly-with-' -awing Germans.By WILLIAM STEWART Associated Press War Correspondent.With the 8th Army in Italy.Sept.20.\u2014(Delayed)\u2014(C.P.Cable)\u2014Canadians occupied an important town in the hills of Southern Italy after a 12-hour siege fought from neighboring slopes.Difficulty of approach to the town made it possible for light German rearguards to hold the Canadians off until Royal Canadian Engineers had cleared the roads of mines and built a detour around a demolished bri \u2019 -e to open the way in.While they worked tanks, which later rolled into the town with the first troops, sat in the hills blazing away at cleverly-concealed German machine-gun nests.Canadian artillery behind the tanks also battered various defensive locations.Canadian infantry who moved slowly into the town took a few German prisoners who were among the first captured since the start of the invasion of Southern Italy.Both infantry and engineers came under rapid fire of German machine-guns and suffered slight casualties.We joined the Canadian spearhead force of reconnaissance, infantry, tarks, artillery and sappers late Sunday afternoon and got.to within two miles of the town at nightfall.It, was slow progress because engineers had to repair bridge demolitions carried out a bare half an hour before the Canadian advance, and sweep roads of mines.At one time forward elements of the Canadian force ran into four lorry loads of Germans preparing demolitions and there was a sharp exdfiànge of gunfire.The Germans fled but a Canadian mortar was brought quickly into) action and dropping its missiles over the crest of a hill onto the snake-like road scored a direct hit on one lorry which blazed fiercely.The Canadian column moved on with the lieutenant-colonel commanding the force riding in a jeep directly behind the leading carriers and tanks.The column, throwing up a cloud of white dust, wound through the hills, every tank commander surveying the surrounding country through BITTER BATTLE FOR JAP BASE NEARS CLIMAX Australian Soldiers Reported to Be Exacting Heavy Toil Among Japanese Detenders at Finschhaten.Allied Headquarters, the Southwest Pacific, Sept.29.\u2014 (.\u2018P) \u2014The bloody battle for Finschhafen roar-eo toward its finish today, with Australian soldi) rs exacting a heavy toll among the .lapanese defenders and !r.e supporting bases of the enemy fe'- 300 miles to the Northwest along triie New Guinea coast bombed into impotence.More than (10 planes were destroyed at Wewak Allied bombers and fighters Monday.Three tankers and four merchant ships, just arrived in the Wewak harbor with supplies which could have been intended for overland movement South, were blasted to the harbor bottom.Less than a mile North of Finschhafen, veteran Australian ground troops struck hard at Japanese po-s'tions on high ground, inflicting heavy casualties.Huns Counter-Attack Strongly In Effort To Hold Bridgeheads Germans Unleash Concentrations of Troops and Tanks in Battle for Dnieper River\u2014Russian Attacks Reported Frustrated at Several Points\u2014Press Three-Pronged Drive on Kremenchug.UTMOST EFFORT NEEDED UNTIL VICTORY WON Canl>f*rr«, Aunlrnlia, Sept.29.-((P'- Australia's 1943*44 war budget was introduced into the House of Representative* today with the Commonwealth T reas-urer, J.It.Chifley, warning: that nothing less than the utmost effort would suffice until victory had been won.The budget estimated total expenditures of £715,000,000 (about $2,574,000,000), an increase of £44,000,000 over last year.Approximately £570,000,000 was «le-voted to war outlays and the remainder to civilian costs.The budget contained no *ur-priset and no increases of direct or indirect taxes.Two More Years Of Hard War lie Ahead, Warns Churchill Continued on page 2.column 4.URGES GREATER FRANKNESS IN WAR REPORTING By EUGENE BURNS, Associated Press War Correspondent Pearl Harbor, Sept.29.\u2014 (/P) \u2014 Greater frankness in war news presentation today will prevent cynicism and lack of confidence in leaders later, U.S.Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., (Rep.-Mass.) said in an interview after war front visits; where \u201cI saw the reaction of our | fighting men to habitually-optimistic news reports.\u2019\u2019 He will report to Congress that \u201cour fighting men are mad because of the false optimism of our news.\u201d j \u201cIt\u2019s a general condition of our : news reporting, our communiques,! our radio commentators and our desk i writers,\u201d he said.He noted that censors perhaps j overlook the fact that, unlike the last war, the news they censor gets ; back by radio within 24 hours to the Continued on page 2.column 5.\t^ Continued on page 2, column 4.MAN SUSPECTED OF POISONING MOTHER OF TWO Toronto, Sept.29.\u2014(ffl\u2014Mrs.Oliver Casselman, mother of two children, is dead and 53-year-old Walter D.Holland, with whom she lived for 11 years, ifi under arrest charged with her murder.The woman died suddenly yesterday after she had taken a capsule, believed to have contained poison.Police said the capsule had been given to her by Holland the previous evening when she asked for a pill to relieve a headache.The 32-year-old Mrs.Casselman, who, police said, had left her husband and who had lived with Holland in Peterborough, Ont., and Windsor, Ont., before coming here, died in hospital soon after she had collapsed ir a house on Woodycrest Avenue.Driver for a cleaning firm, she became ill in her truck and had gone Pilots Fighter Aircraft At 840\tFaster Than Any Human Has Ever Travelled A U.S.Fighter Base, Somewhere in England, Sept.29.\u2014®\u2014 Lieut.Robert H.Knapp, of Norwich, N.Y., was believed today to have achieved a speed of approximately 840 miles per hour in a dive during an airfight over Emden, Germany, last Monday.If true, then Knapp, pilot of a Thunderbolt fighter which helped escort heavy bombers in a raid on the German city, probably hap flown faster than any human being ever has travelled* before.Authorities did not explain how they arrived at the estimate of his speed, however.The greatest speed previously officially recorded by the pilot of a fighter plane was that of Col.Cass Hough, also of the 8th Air Force Fighter Command, when he dove a Thunderbolt \u201cmore than 780 miles an hour,\u201d which is the speed of sound, in a test flight in England last spring.MARSHALL PROMOTION IS NOT DENIED By DOUGLAS B.CORNELL Associated Press Staff Writer Washington, Sept, 29.\u2014 (fP) \u2014 President Roosevelt left the gate swinging wide today for Gen.George C.Marshall, 63, Army Chief-of-Staff, to move to any new or enlarged command over Allied arms.The President made no effort at a news conference yesterday to deny reports that Marshall had been picked for world command of all Anglo-American forces.In fact, he admitted there had been what he called some leaks in prominent places.Mr.Roosevelt read to reporters excerpts from two editorials in the New York Herald Tribune which he apparently endorsed.One editorial remarked that in all the columns about what had been intimated, learned, or said by \u201cauthoritative sources\u201d about Marshall, \u201cthere has not appeared a single solid fact backed up by a man who would put his name to it or support it, explicitly.hv evidence that a freshman in ki.storv would look ot tniica.\u2019\u2019 WAR BULLETINS Ottawa.\u2014Members of an R.C.A.F.long-range fighter squadron of Coastal Command in Britain recently destroyed three German flying boats over the North Sea in one day, two of the planes being knocked down by pilots on their first operational sortie, and the third by one of the squadron\u2019s flight commanders, Headquarters said today.***** New York.\u2014A communique from the Yugoslav Army of Liberation, broadcast by the United Nations radio at Algiers, said today that the Adriatic seaport of Split \u201chas been evacuated as the result of enemy pressure after heavy fighting.\u201d War materials stored in the town were saved, said the broadcast.***** London.\u2014There are strong indications in London that Italian crews and Italian troops ashore are actively engaged in organized effort against the Germans\u2014in addition to previously-acknowledged activities behind the Nazi lines.CHARGES ARE DISMISSED IN RIOT INCIDENT Recorder Declares Evi-I dence Offered in Plage Laval Case Was \u201cContradictory.\u201d Plage Laval.Que., Sept.29.\u2014®\u2014 Charges of \u201cresisting police\u201d and \u201cdisturbing the peace\u201d against Rene Bolduc, 23-year-old son of Police Chief Leo Bolduc of this beach resort near Montreal, and Andre Bi-gras, 18, wore dismissed here last night by Recorder Desire Desbois.The Recorder said police evidence in the case had been \u201ccontradictory.\u201d When he left the courtroom, Bolduc was picked up by Royal Canadian Mounted Police on a charge of failing to report for a militarv médira1 \u201creboard\u201d August 30.Poice said he may answer the charge in police court in Montreal today.Bolduc last week had changed his pita to \u201cnot guilty\u201d after the Recorder accepted his argument that oefentive hearing had caused him to misunderstand the question put him at his first appearance the week before.Bolduc gave himself up two weeks ago, several weeks after a warrant had been sworn out for his arrest.He explained that he had been away in the woods and did not know of the warrant.The charges arose out of a disturbance at a dance hall here July 25 when 75 persons of the summer colony mixed in a battle in which Mot Hcreovitch of Montreal received eye injuries necessitating hospital treatment.Recorder Desbois described the incident as part of a \u201cracial war between Jews and French Canadians.\u201d The evidence, which Recorder Desbois said was conflicting, was given by Constables George Perrotte and R.Heathfieid.Perrotte testified that he had ordered Bolduc out of the restaurant and that Bolduc had not resisted, Heathfieid said that Bolduc had pushed both constables and was ejected from the hall forcibly.London, Sept.29\u2014Britain must be prepared to continue its unified and concerted war effort through the fifth year of war or the rixlh year, if need he, Prime Minister Churchill declared here yesterday addressing a conference of 6,000 women in Albert Hall.\u201cIn the forthcoming year,\u201d he .said, \u201cyou will see larger armies fighting, you will see more powerful air forces striking at the heart of the enemy\u2019s country, but the actual demand upon the British population cannot greatly be increased.\u201cAlthough you cannot say that the peril is as imminent us it was in 1940 or during that year when we were all alone,\u201d he said, \u201cnevertheless if this war were so handled that unity of national effort were diminished, that its pace and vigor were slackened, that we fell apart, that apathy overtook i s, and if this were typical throughout the forces of the United Nations then indeed another set of dangers, not perhaps so catastrophic in their aspects but none the less deadly in their character, would march upon us.\u201d Mr.Churchill, who arrived at the Albert Hall about half-an-hour after the conference started, emphasized again that the strategy of the Germans was to retreat from East and South inside their boundaries and thereby prolong the war and force the United Nations into a negotiated peace.\u201cThey hope they will be able to consolidate in their central fortress Europe or in their remote hone islands of Japan to extract from our weariness and from any divisions which might appear among us the means of making terms to enable By HENRY C.CASSIDY, Associated Press Stall* Writer.Moscow, Sept.29.(,T\u2019) \u2014 Un* leashing concentralions of Iroops and tanks in Hie battle for the Dnieper river, the tomans counter-attacked strongly today in a bid to maintain their bridgeheads on the Eastern bank.Frontline dispatches said tha enemy, holding favorable positions, was launching 19 to 12 counter* attacks daily with powerful air support.The Communist Party newspaper Pravda reported that at one point a Red Army was put in a \u201ccritical siluation\u201d at one time, but Soviet artillery came lo its relief.No further progress was reported immediately in the directions of.Zaporozhe and Dnepropetrovsk, two major objectives on the lower Dnieper.Zaporozhe lies on the East bank of the Dnieper behind a solid ring of fortifications.The main part of Dnepropetrovsk, the suburbs of which already have been reached, lies on the West bank.(Today\u2019s German communique, as broadcast by Berlin, said German troops, engaged in heavy defensive fighting on the Dnieper warfront, lost ground temporarily yesterday hut wiped out their losses with counter-attacks.(The communique added Russian attacks at several points on the West bank of the central Dnieper were frustrated.It reported Russian bombers raided Constanta, Rumanian Black Sea port.) Continued on page 2, column 4.London, Sept.29.\u2014® - Investment of Kremenchug, one of the few remaining escape bridgeheads across the broad Dnieper available to Hitler\u2019s battered legions in their retreat from the Ukraine, appeared imminent today as Red Army troops pressed a three-pronged drive on the citv from the East, South and North.Capture of this important city on the East bank of the Dnieper would pave the wav for a westward surge of Soviet forces across the 1.//00-.yi.rd wide river, carrying with them, an obvious threat to German concentrations on the Western bank behind Dnepropt trovsk to the South, nkso under siege by the Red Army troops.A Rusisan communique placed So-v.et troop ' nine miles from Kremenchug in the East, while other columns were .said to have reached the Dnieper at points North and South of the city.German defence positions were reported taking a ter-ri!ic pounding from Soviet guns Continued on page 2.column 5.Industrial Unrest In Britain\u2019s Factories Causing Deep Concern PROPERTY OWNERS ASK BETTER TERMS St.Johns, Que., Sept.29.\u2014®\u2014A session of the 11th annual convention of the Union of Property Owners\u2019 Leagues of the Province of Quebec passed resolutions: 1.\t\u2014Condemning the Quebec Government \u201cfor allowing the real estate mortgage moratorium to lapse;\u201d 2.\t\u2014Asking the Federal Government to limit to five per cent interest on real estate mortgages, both urban and rural; 3.\t\u2014Requesting that the Quebec Government, after an immediate inquiry, institute a system of credits for urban realitv owners.By DOUGLAS AMARON, Canadian Press Staff Writer.London, Sept.29.\u2014®\u2014The buoyancy with which the nation, greeted the success of Allied arms had a paradoxical effect in war industries where good news led to some relaxation of the all-out effort workers have been making since Dunkerque.Britain\u2019s factory output is higher than a year ago and the hourly output per worker is greater than in the United States or Germany, but there have been in recent weeks signs of industrial unrest which are causing concern.Late in September 20,000 workers were on strike in Britain and other strikes were threatened.In many cases the grievances were what one industrial reporter termed \u201cfrivolous\u201d and the real reason was believed to be the conviction that \u201cthe war is as good as won.\u201d The Government, however, as evidence in Prime Minister Churchill\u2019s speech to the House of Commons Sept.21, does not hold such an optimistic opinion, contending that the bloodiest period of the war is still to come.The industrial unrest has Government departments worried.Sir Stafford Cripps, Minister of Aircraft Production, met 1,000 representatives of the aircraft industry in London the day Mr.Churchill spoko to hear and discuss their complaints and to tell them the Government\u2019s programme.For some months there has been unrest among aircraft workers, provoked by what they claim are \u201cinexplicable delays and lack of work.\u201d Daily Mail Reporter Charles Sutton wrote that there had been strange stories, though little evidence, of fighters being assembled in one factory and dismantled in another.Urgent work, it was reported, was deliberately being left undone.Shop stewards charged that managements refused to co-operate with workers on the joint production committees and that they were concentrating their energies on post-war production at the expense of Royal Air Force output.Whatever truth there may have been in these reports, there were few signs of disunity at the Cripps\u2019 meeting.The Minister spoke to the representatives for 90 minutes, then answered questions for more than an hour.At the end of the meeting, during which a message from Churchill was read, a pledge was made that the industry would devote its untiring Continued on page 2, column 3. 2.SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 19-43.MM SHIPPERS VOTE TO JOIN ASSOCIATION At a meeting held at the Sherbrooke Arena the shippers of milk to the Carnation plant at Sherbrooke voted, to join the Milk Producers of Sherbrooke.The shippers as a whole were represented by two ond_in some cases more men from each truck route.The meeting got under way with H.A.Ross, the President of the Milk Producers\u2019 Association, in the chair, assisted by W.Smith, the Secretary of the Association.It was agreed that since the directors of the Association had been eiected for one year, it would be inconvenient to disturb this body.However, the fiuid milk men felt that the Carnation shippers should be equally represented on the Board of Directors.Mr.Ross asked that they appoint eleven directors to balance it up.This took a great deal of time, but after much deliberation, the following men were appointed for the full year.Each of the following has as his responsibility the areas given to him at the meeting: J.E.Bouford, Stanstead and Ayer's Cliff: Hollis Burns, Cookshire, Saw-yerville.Island Brook and La Patrie; Norman Cameron, Spring Hill and East Angus; H.Oborne, Windsor Mills, St.Claude and Richmond; W.Couture, St.Francois and Bromp-tonville; John Peters, Magog and Cherry River; C.W.Moulton, Hatley and Waterville; C.Begin.Coati-cook and Dixville; M.Paige, Rock Forest, Suffield and St.Elie; L.Cloutier, Brome, Foster and Knowl-ton; H.Wheeler, Johnville, Bulwer and St.Edwidge.After going over the routes it wes found that about 85 per cent were represented.Mr, Ross asked for a motion from the floor to carry the directors named, into the body.The motion was moved by G.Turner and seconded by Mr.French, of Flan-ers.It was then time to discuss the question of the half-cent payment for the Association fee.It was agreed that the committee would meet the Milk Committee Board, and discuss w\u2019-ys and means of getting this arrangement put on a solid foting.Should the committee grant this, then all who go into the Carnation plant will be members of the Milk Producers\u2019 Association.War Service Work Continued from page 5.COMPLAINTS RE ROLL RECEIVED City Clerk Antonin Deslauriers said today that seven complaints have been registered at the City Hall in connection with the 1943 valuation roll.The roll, which was deposited at his office on September 1st, will rema'«i open for inspection until Saturday.At a meeting of the City Council on October 18th, Mayor A.C.Ross and the aldermen will take into consideration and decide upon the complaints against the roll and will proceed with its examination, revision and homologation.ISLAND BROOK Dance, Thursday, Sept.30th, in Town Hall, at Island Brook.GRANADA (Tel.2940) STARTING TODAY Until Friday Come In And Meet Your Favorite Stars.LANA TURNER \u2014 GREER GARSON WALTER PIDGEON ROBERT TAYLOR \u2014 WILLIAM POWELL All Guest-Starred in the Greatest Show of the Year r - W- W ¦.te\u2019.lW'4 m ' \\ Get Ready For Fun! Not since \"Springtime In The Rockies\u201d have you seen such a gay, gorgeous fllmusical as \u201cCONEY ISLAND\u201d a technicolor hit starring Betty Grable, George Montgomery, Cesar Romero opening at the GRANADA THEATRE SATURDAY, OCT.2nd.SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION TODAY UNTIL FRIDAY °t*\"/ «fl ijl'P \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 that carried*' \u2019Wh°»tnh«?\\ v - « Herrin GEORGE SANDERS ^ m stem WARD BOND \u2022 DENNIS NOIY \u2022 SIC HUMAN LATEST NEWS the details of the tremendous amount of work acc mplished jn all the subdivisions but I would like to pay tribute to the members for their untir-.ing zeal and unremitting bbor in ; the many activities of social ser- j vice,\u201d Mrs.Vallee said.\"We co-operate with the different ! social welfare agencies\u2014the Victor- i ian Order of Nurses, St.Vincent de Paul Society, Junior Welfare League, Sisters of Service, Red Cross,! Child Welfare Clinic and have re-presentutices on many of these boards.\"Reports received from sub-divis-1 ions show that $32.43 was spent on medicine, eighty-five articles sewn; and distributed, $98.09 spent on j clothing, $5 taxi fares for school children, \"Outstanding has been the work of the Hospital Committee wrho made 537 hospital visits and 80 visits to homes.\u201d Miss Margaret Doherty, the Corresponding Secretary, referred to Ihe honor bestowed on Mrs.Francis Hoye, who was asked by Miss Hutton, the National President, to be one of her conveners in charge of Lay Retreats.\"This is the second time the Sherbrooke Diocesan Council has been so honored,\u201d Miss Doherty remarked.\"Miss Gladys Mullins w-a.s formerly National Convener of Publicity and we now have Mrs.Francis Hoye as National Convener of Lay Retreats.I know we can be assured that the high standard of the League will be maintained.\u201d Miss Doherty recalled in her report that during the year Mrs.P.J.McGarry, the National President, sent a letter to all Diocesan Presidents urging them to forward to their sub-division Presidents a resolution re the construction of chapels for men and women in the armed forces.This resolution was to be sent to the Prime Minister, the Defence Minister and the local Member.Two More Years Continued from Page 1.them to repair their losses, regather their forces, and open up the world in, it may be a dc-cade, another war ; even more terrible than that through which we are passing,\u201d he said.Mr.Churchill praised the war effort of the British nation with particular emphasis on the part women have played, and stressed, as always, the righteousness of the cause in which they are serving.\"I have no fear of the future,\u201d he concluded, \u201clet us go forward into its mysteries, let us tear aside the veils which hide it from our eyes, and let us move foiward with confidence and courage.Every problem of the poet-war world, some of which seem so baffling now, will be easier of solution onee the decisive victory has been gained, and once it is clear that the victory gained in arms has not been cast away by folly or by violence when the moment comes to lay the broad foundations of the future world order and when the hour has come to speak great words of peace and truth to all.\u201d 50th Wedding Continued from page 5.Satisfactory Report Continued from page 3.Industrial Unrest Continued from Page 1.effort to provide the R.A.F.and fleet air arm with the greatest output of aircraft within its power.The aircraft industry has not been the Government\u2019s only headache.I Shipwrights on the Clyde struck in a j demand for payment by results instead of time rates.Vickers Armstrong, Ltd., engineers left work because, they said, their employers failed to implement a national arbitration tribunal award of last March.Miners at a Nottinghamshire colliery kept a pit idle in portest against the fining of one of their number.There were sporadic strikes in other coal fields, Birtain has weathered greater threats to industrial production than those she faces at present but the coming weeks and months are important ones and the Government is stressing the fact that every bomber produced now, every ship sent down the slips, every ton of coal mined, will help speed the end of the war.Canadians Occupy Continued from Page 1.binoculars.Suddenly the column halted and the wireless crackled with the news that enemy tanks were believed ahead.Infantry took to the side of the road and crept along in ' single file as the column started cautiously forward.It crept two or three hundred yards around bends thick with bush-r-s, affording good concealment for any enemy.The alarm about enemy armor proved false and the entire column speeded up as the sun began to sink behind a purple ridge.Progress was soon slowed down once more, however, while sappers rooted up and exploded mines planted in the road.sHCRtROOIC* STAR UXG TODAY PAGAN LOVE! PRIMITIVE HATE! UNFORGETTABLE DRAMA! A TECHNICOLOR TRIUMPH THE SCREEN HAS NEVER MATCHED .THRILL to the Volcanic Eruption, the Earthquake, the Giant Tidal Wave! SgKp' .\u2019\t-\t\u2018\u2022'S t; Th,000 short of the vote pelling able-bodied men to get into received by the Conservatives, action, but the considerations re-1 -pha third parties of twenty-three portedly influencing the Govern- years ago were class movements, ment \u2014 for which reports there is just as the Socialist C-C.F.is a class logical foundation\u2014will show us in ^ party.Neither they' nor the C.C.F.a distinctly unfavorably light.\ti today were truly representative of So long has the Government de-! all the people of Canada.The layed taking this step, it can have j U.F.O.Government disappeared af-no complaint now if it is accused ter four years er month, permanent posi- tion.one free day each week.References._______________ Box 87, Record.NOTICE There will be a meeting of the j Compton County Winter Roads As-| sociation in the Birehton Church Hail | on Friday, Oct.1st, at 8 p.m.All in-i terested parties are urged to attend.GEORGE HURD, Secretary.Advocates tUGG, MIGNAULT AND GRUNDY.Me-Manamy & Walsh Building, 70 Wellington Street North.Phone 1589.3 A R T HOLTHAM, K.C., ADVOCATE.Rcom 7, 44b Wellington St.Phone 75.k S H T O N R.TOBIN.ROSENBLOOM Bid*., 66 Wellington North.Phone 623.fAGNE A DBS MARAIS.85a WELLINGTON North.Richmond Office.Phone 37.;YNCH & LYNCH, FACILITIES FOR dealing with Income and Excess Profita Tax.Sun Life Building, Sherbrooke.IOUSSEAU, HOWARD & BRADLEY.Olivier Bldg\u201e 4 Wellington South.Phone Til, Auctioneers L M.DEMERS, LEN\u2019VILLE.2H-r-2J.IRTHUR OLSON, AUCTIONEER, BOX 322 Meg&ntic.Phone 210.P.A.BURTON.WATER VILLE Auctioneer.Dish St Franc!,.Vi day »ale $20.Chartered Accountants DDNEY, ARMITAGE & CO.CHARTERED Accountants, 72 Prospect St.Phone 3285.P.S.ROSS & SONS.CHARTERED AC-eeuntanta, MontreaL Collection Brokers ICCOUNTS, NOTES AND CLAIMS OF any kind collected anywhere.Prompt service.Collection Brokers Reg'd.44b Wellington Street North.Phone No.4.Dentist: OR.J.A.LANDRY, SURGEON-DENTIET, X.-ray.100 Wellington St* North, opposite Court House.Phone 898.DR.A- HAMEL, DENTIST.SPECIALTY Dentures.17a Wellington.TeL 3246.BEAUTIFUL PRIVATELY-OWNED BUICK special 4- °ther Sunday Schools, the tresf, small refrigerator, chairs.Tables,] idea q! things SChieNtfu, aiLl ^thO$rt book shelves, other household effects.; hoped for, was stressed b) the buper-Phone eô.Coaticook, Que.\t; intendant.Christian Education Week ! extends, from September 26th to extension couch, KiTCHEiN chairs, October 3rd, and tentative plans were £?\"'* o'V™*- c\u201d\"how\u2019 f,c\u201c Ul** *'\u201c\u2022 I discussed for a social get-together of \u2014JfiL JU\u20141____________________________i Sunday School children, parents and white IRON bed.Spring and MAT- ! S.S.and day school teachers.It.waf Financial CASH HELP For Men and Women I\u2019O PAY OLD BILLS, FOR MOVING OR FOR ANY OTHER SOUND PURPOSE.GET A CASH LOAN AT CAMPBELL'S.YOU MAY OBTAIN FROM $20 TO $1,0«0 ON ANY ACCEPTABLE SECURITY; OR, IE YOU PRETER.WITH CO-SIGNERS.ARRANGEMENTS ARE STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL AND THERE IS NO FUSS OH BOTHER WITH DETAILS.PHONE OR CkLL IN AND SEE A FRIENDLY CAMPBELL EXPERT.CAMPBELL FINANCE CORPORATION LIMITED Established 192'\t27 Branches in Canada 9-A Wellington North, Room 11, Phone 3637 Sherbrooke.Que.AUCTION SALE Tusedav, October 5th, AT 10 O'CLOCK A.M.Clarence W.Morse, 2 Miles from Ayer's Cliff on Brown\u2019s Hill Road Pair of work horses, 3,000 lbs., good workers, OU3 hc-rse, 1,300 lbs., 2 Ayrshire cows, one Holstein, one Hereford to freshen in January, a Hereford heifer, a pair of Hereford extra good beef steers, 2 yearling Hereford heifers, yearling Ayrshire heifer.PRIVATE SALE OF HOUSEHOLD FURNI-yearling Hereford bull, bull calf 10 months ture at 90a Laurier.Apply between 10 old, F vet and Wood mowing machine.5\ta.m.and 6 p.m.months, horse rake, sulky plow, No.4 Me- Cormick separator, scales 1,200 lb.capacity, HOSTESS ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR drill seeder, good 3 horse disc harrow.\tfor tent to responsible party.\t1st\tclass smoothing harrow, double wagon, box.rack\tcondition.What offers?\tPhone\t3902-W.j and stock rack, moccasin sleds, manure sleds, harness, small farming tools, grain grinder, sheep power, rtchet jack screw, iron kettle\tIngalls, Sutton Junction,\tQue.and brass one, one cross cut saw, some tress, $s ; bro«-n bed, pull-out mattress, ' flnnouncotl that Sunday, September $3: Quebec heater, $5; stove pipe.$1 ; ; 26.was the date set for Rally Day, table; and chairs, kitchen range.[ arll} that parts in the already arrang-trunk.$j ; brown winter coat with iur : ed programme were assigned.It was collar $3; navy blue coat and hat size 2.reported that Mrs.Rov Waldron had oOr.Other clothing.Mra.Sadler, 95a 1\t^\t- Montieal Street.| been appointed Cradle Roll Superin | tendent, replacing Mrs.Ross 'Itiylor, electric hemstitching machine, who has moved away from our midst.Singer good working condition.Apply It was also reported that Crayton Box 90, Record.\t^\u2018 lumber, cream cans, cooling can, some hay\tEstâtC For Ssiis fork tracks, etc.Farm of 275 acres for - Floor Sanding EXPERIENCED MEN.DUSTLESS MA.ehinea.J.Beaudoin.232 Vimy.TeL 1693-J.Marriage Licences MARRIAGE LICENCES.W.H.BRADLEY.Olivier Bldg, 1 Wellington South.Optometrists ALBERT TRUDEAU, B.A.S.O., EYESIGHT Speeialiet, 89 Wellington No.Phone 287.Open 9 to 8 every day.I.S.BRAULT.B.A.S.O., EYE-SIGHT Speeialiet.V Wellington St H.\u2014Apt L Phone HO.Physicians and Surgeons DR.ET HIER.PHONE 876.\t84 KING 3T.West Electrotherapy.Urinary Di»ea,e.DRS.J.A.DARCHE & LIONEL DARCHE.Eye, ear.nose and throat Private Ho*.pitaL 92 Kin* Street West Prepare For Post-War Conditions Specialized training \u2014 52-year-old Institution approved by many leading industries and educators.Free counselling service.INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS Canadian Limited.Leonard Moore 100 Wellington St.N.Sherbrooke.Phone 256 Electro-Surgical Clinic SPECIALTY: RHEUMATISM.ARTHRITIS, Neuriti*.X-ra/ laboratory, Diagnoaia oi tU mac h.Intestines, heart, Electro-Surgical removal, of tonsils, hemorrhoids, warts, corns.Dr.Horn, 85 Court St.Phone 3636.Real Estate NOTICE - ALB INI SAMSON.REAL ES-tats Ascent, will buy, sell or exchange all kinds of property throughout the Province.For complete Information write Box 627.Sherbrooke; or 6 King East.Apt L Phone 1657-M.Storage FURNITURE.ETC., IN SEPARATE rooms.Phone Prichard, 526rl.Veterinary Surgeons SHERBROOKE VETERINARY HOSPITAL)1 Dr.L.A.Gendreau, 67 Wellington South.FOR SALE MONTREAL STREET PRIVATE RESIDENCE We offer for immediate sale the very fine reiidence at 64 Montreal at a low price.This is one of the finest locations in Sherbrooke, one block from Parade Grounds and Portland Square.Good paved street and right on the bus line.Parlor, den, dining room, kitchen, large pantry on ground floor, six bedrooms, bathroom, private toilet on second floor, and one large bedroom third floor.Good hardwood floors, and steam heating.Very large cellar with two furnaces, one for mild weather, the other for winter.Front vestibule and extra wide verandah and good garage.Extra large lot about 66 !£ feet by 134 feet.Enough extra room to build another property.This property including lot would cost at least $10,000 to build today, and for a quick sale we offer same at the sacrifice price of only $7,500 You pay $3,000 and we lend you the balance.No better location for private residence, doctor\u2019s office, etc.Write or telephone: Edwards Realty and Investment Co., Inc.sale, well watered with pasture enough for G,OOD ^EWS.THE EDWARDS REALTY 1 On' hood of cattle with standing timber and pulpwood.Lunch and noon.No reserve.Terirus : Cash.Ix,.M.DEMERS, Auctioneer.Simpson had kindly volunteered to j make jig-saw puzzles for the Mis-: sion Band Christmas box.It was I suggested that the Sunday School I children be asked to contribute to-; wards a gift for two invalid children i in the Children\u2019s Memorial Hospital, ) Montreal, in whom the Sunday School is interested.A revision of the ght teach-and fifteen m the Home Department.It was thought beneficial to the school to continue the teaching of the gospel of John, during the \u201cWorship\u201d period __________________ as given by the Superintendent.Mrs.Company sold their nineteenth property j t OX stated that Bible lessons would yesterday and everybody more than aatis-1 also be given, based Oil \u201cSongs that children love,\u2019 visualized for use stock rack, moccasin sleds, manure\tA-hnol is inlprpslpd A rpvi , wunv sleich double harnesses drivine NEW RENFREW COOK STOVES.CREAM\t.s nut 11.ua.v It'* s.jmn* sleigfi.double harnesses, driving\thi.v_ membership roll showed Cl ness, turnip cutter, buggy, puLey blocks, sepaiaur., v ashing machines, used bio\t,\t,,\tm.,11 farming tools, grain grinder, sheep cl a.Vulcanizing.Hydraulic dump.Francis ÇL, thlltj-thiee pupils dl charge of \u201cFir*! Aid,\u201d and during Mrs.Lax, with their family, were the recreation period, a quiz pro- for many years esteemed residents gramme, with prizes, proved amus- of this town, and were prominent in ing, the grand prize being won by social and business activities.Mrs.Mrs.Lada.Rev.Graham Barr acted Lax is a daughter of the late Mr.and thought, \u201cYou are never in the min-\tss\tquiz-master.This school affordr\tMrs.John Black, who came here ority.as long as you are\tin\tthe\ta grand opportunity for recreation\tfrom Scotland, among the early set- right.\u201d\tinstruction, fun and fellowship.The tiers.^lr.Black later becoming pro- - I courses should be both interesting) minent in buainess and municipal COMMUNITY SCHOOL\tand profitable.Attention is drawn affairs.A very successful opening\tof\tthe\tt0\t(ho Si.John Ambulance course;\tMr.Charles Beaudoin has entered Community School was held\tin\tDie\tin\tFirst Aid, which is most impor-\tLaval University, in Quebec, as a tant.It is hoped tljat a large per-j law student.centage of the townspeople will takp Mr.and Mrs.Richard Cook, of advantage of this opportunity for j Lennoxville, are spending several education advancement.\tj months with the latter\u2019s mother, Mrs, I C.M.Smith.Mr.Cook is substituting General Notes\ta.s Manager for Mr.H.A.Scarth, in Friends extend sympathy to the1 the Canadian Bank of Commerce, family of Mr.Herman Lax.who Miss Kathleen Wolsley, who was passed away after a lengthy illnes.a guest of Miss Marietta MacLeod, at his home in Montreal.Mr.and has returned to Springfield, Mass.High School building, with an in teresting and instructive programme.The' film, \u201cNew Cities For Old,\u201d son, read by the Superintendent, wa« ing.by Mrs.E.A.\\\\ nson.and on the theme, \"Achievement,\u201d tak- Household Mechanics, by Mrs.\\\\.ing the words of St.Paul, \u201cLet us go A.Ladd.\"Information, Please, was unto perfection, that we may grow in charge of Mr.Emile Beaudoin.X.P.who gave a talk on municipal affairs.Mr.F.J.Buck was in fied.AUCTION SALE Monday, October 4th, AT 12:30 P.M.SHARP E.J.Astbury, | WELL-ESTABLISHED ROOMING HOUSE j in Sherbrooke, fully equipped, good pay-in?business.Apply Kuahner\u2019s Store.Farms for Sale 265 ACRE FARM, 2% MILES FROM FITCH j with the flannel graph board.Men-I tion was made of the National Tem-i perance Study Course to be conduet-I ed during October.Special mention was made of Thanksgiving Sunday and it was decided to continue with ! a monthly presentation of mission- Haute 2, Ayer\u2019s Cliff, Que.Brown\u2019s Hill, at the Myron Huntington Farm, 4 Miles from Ayer\u2019s Cliff.Fair chestnut horses, 10 and 12 years old.weight 2.600 lbs., well matched, 4 registered Wanted To Purchase Jersey cows.3 three years old, one 11 years- old, a 1 bred, 3 grade Jersey cows, 3 and 4 years old, all bred, 3 registtred Jersey bulls from 5 to 10 months old, 2 registered Jersey heifers from 4 and 8 months old, 2 grade Jersey heifer calves, 4 months old, new double harnesses, extra good rubber tired double wager, bug-gy wagon, moccasin sleds, pung sleigh, old fashioned sleigh express harness, new Frost-Wood rake, McCormick-Deering mowing machine, disc harrow, i AM,\tIN THE MARKET FOR\tGOOD spring tooth harrow, Massey Harris plow,\tyoung\tdairy cows to\tfreshen within the hay rack, Yega cream separator, cultivator,\tnext\tsix weeks ; also\ta few bulls\tfor exspade, milk cans, forks, shovels, organ.No\tport.\tApply Colin\tGoodfellow,\tPhone reserve.Terms: Cash.R.M.DEMERS, Auctioneer.Bar.Good brick house, food barn.Will ary teaching through story or prosell with or without stock.Roy West, ject.The consecrated and united ef- PIPE OR PIPELESS FURNACE.GOOD or rcpaiifible condition.Write George Johnson, or Phone 374, Rock Island, Que.WILL BUY ONE CAR MODEL FROM 1936 up.Must be in good condition, good tires and must be cheap for cash.Apply 11 Ontario, Apt.2.Phone 3692-R after 6 p.m.238-W-4.Rooms To Let AUCTION SALE I WILL SELL FOR P.H.Covey, S&Uroad Street, Stanstead, Que, AT 1 P.M.Saturday, Oct.2nd, 1943, Spade cultivator, tooth cultivator, large pulley blocks, new wheelbarrow, large new kettle, iron bar, iron pipe, driving sleigh and 3 wool robee, round heater, gasoline stove, small bench, saw and motor, full sized lathe, small planer and sand*r, small electric heater, piano, radio, complete brass bed, iron beds, 2 chiffonieres, roll top desk, chest of ROOM TC LET, CENTRAL LOCATION.Gentleman preferred.Apply 97 Short Street.Phone 4313-W.Lost and Found LOST, ON SEPTEMBER 19TH, 2 HORSES and one mare from pasture.Davila Poulin, Way\u2019s Mills.Phone 36rl4.TRENHOLMVILLE fort of the Sunday School staff makes the prospect for the new year seem hopeful.The Superintendent reported that the booklets, entitled \u201cWhat God Has Promised,\u201d which were purchased by the contents of | the children\u2019s Good Cheer bank, have ! been ordered for the soldier\u2019s Christmas boxes.It was reported that .\u201cEchoes From Cedar Camp\u201d had | been given on Sunday by Alan Wood-! side and Wayne MacAulay, who, with the Pastor, Rev.Graham Barr, spent a week at the camp.The September meeting of St.Andrew\u2019s Women\u2019s Missionary Society was held in the Church Hall, and was directed by the President, Mrs.A.A.MacAulay, who announced the theme, \u201cChrist for all the world, and for all of life,\u201d and gave the Call to Worehip, after which a hymn of Isaac Watt\u2019s was read in unison, followed by the Litany.It was announced that the sectional meeting would be held in Bury, with Miss Ida MacKenzie, Field Secretary, as guest speaker.Mrs.J.D.Cox and Mrs.A.A.MacKenzie were appointed to take charge of the worship service.It was decided that commencing with October, the meetings will be held at 2.30 p.m., in the Mr.and Mrs.Fred Patch, of Ver- drawees,\trifle (a2\tlong),\ttables,\tchairs,\tpie'\tÿh,\tf^sts of Mr\tand Mrs\thomes\tinstead of in the Church Hall turcs,\tdishes and other\tarticles\ttoo\tnumer-\tHarold St even s.Mr.and\tMrs.Roy\tj during\tthe winter months and that a Patch, Mr.Wallace Patch\tand Miss\t; cup 0f\ttea wjn be served, Mrs.Mac- Merle Patch, of Notre\tDame de\t^u]ay\tkindly offered to entertain Grace, were guests of Mr.and Mrs, \u2022 ! Henry Mastine, ous to mention.Terms: Cash.F.A.BURTON, Auctioneer.AUCTION SALE for Rodolphe Grenier, At Late Miss Monroe\u2019s House COMPTON VILLAGE Saturday, October 2nd, 1943, AT 12:30 P.M.Electric washer, kitchen cabinet, kitchen range, heater, dining room set, bedroom set, beds, double and single, linoleum cover-! ing ani square, chesterfield set, sofa, lounge, Perkins, Ml*, ^towart Perkins and 12 battery radios, one with new batteries, Miss GlenPOSe Perkins, R.N., of ! kitchen table, odd chairs, dishes, bedding, Byownleigh, were guests of Mr.and ! wardrobe, trunk, 2 dressers, sewing machine, Mrs.Fred Mastine.I hay carrier track, side saddle, sleigh robe, j^rg_ Qrrin Taylor is spending i books, pictures, Coleman lamps, writing\t.-, B I .,\t, ,\tsome time in bcotstown visiting leiu- | desk, clocks, flush toilet, hammer mill ,.\t, c r\t& (grinder), suitable to use with tractor, near- *'1'eS anU tnenclS.| j ly new.Many articles not listed.Terms : 1 Cash.\t- - Miss Frances Mastine spent two days with her uncle and aunt, Mr.and Mrs.Grant Davis, in Danville.Mr.and Mrs.Grant Harris, of Asbestos, and Miss Bertha Dresser, of Richmond, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Henry Armstrong and Miss M.Healy.Mr.and Mrs.E.Wentworth, of Melbourne, Mr.and Mrs.Herbert the next meeting.An article relevant to \u201cResearch in the Cause of Temperance,\u201d was read by Mrs.A.A.Mackenzie, and the Literature Secretary, Mrs.Payson Sherman, reported having copies of the Blue Book and Study Book.An encouraging Mission Band report was given by the leader, Mrs.Mackenzie.An item on \u201cChristian Stewardship\u201d was read by the President, and the study book, \u201cFor All Of Life,\u2019 was given a dramatic introduction, \u201cThey Are Finding A Way,\u201d by Mrs.J.D.Cox, Mrs.A.A.Mackenzie and Mrs.R.A.Scott.It was announced that the October meeting would be the Thank-Offering meeting.The programme closed with the monthly APPLICATIONS FOR INCREASES, DECREASES OR FIXATIONS OF MAXIMUM RENTALS After October 1, 1943, application forms for increasing, decreasing or fixing maximum rentals will be obtained from the following offices of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board in the province of Quebec: AMOS\tMONT-LAURIER\tST-HYACINTHE CHICOUTIMI\tM0NTMAGNY\tST-JÉR0ME DRUMMONDVILLE\tMONTREAL\tST-I0HN GRANBY\tNEW CARLISLE\tSTE MARIE, BEAUCE HULL\tPAPINEAUVILLE\tSHAWINIGAN FALLS J0LIETTE\tQUEBEC\tSHERBROOKE J0NQUIÈRES\tRIM0USKI\tS0REL LACHUTE\tRIVIERE DU LOUP\tTHETF0RD MINES MATANE\tR0BERVAL\tTHREE RIVERS M0NT-J0LI\tR0UYN ST-GE0RGE, BEAUCE\tVALLEYFIELD NEW ACCOMMODATION -FIXATION OF RENT Any landlord who lets or has let any housing accommodation for the first time after December 10, 1942, must apply to have the rent fixed by a Rentals Appraiser within 30 days of making the lease, otherwise the tenant may withhold payment of the rent.REASONS FOR INCREASE OF A MAXIMUM RENT A landlord may apply to a Rentals Appraiser for an increase of maximum rent on the following grounds: (a) An increase in municipal taxes or water rates payable by the landlord.(5) Provision of more space for the tenant or the supplying of furniture or additional services by the landlord.(c) Renovation of the accommodation at a cost of not less than 10% of the municipal assessed value of the accommodation.( Vfl 1 Y-?r#1 \\ \\ TO SEUL ORD TIRE A few years before 1910, electric broughams became « popular means of transportation.These quiet, dignified carriages offered a temporary threat to the superiority of the then noisy automobile.It was during this period of the brougham\u2019s popularity that B.F.Goodrich first placed on the American market a tire made from individual cords, each embedded in rubber.Prior to that time tires were being made from square woven fabric.The superiority of this new construction was immediately apparent.Frirtion inside the tire carcass was reduced\u2014less heat was generated .with the result that the new F.B.Goodrich Silvertown Cord Tire gave greater mileage than ever before.This was another historic \u201cfirst\u201d in rubber, given to the motoring public by B.F.Goodrich .the company that as early as 1895 established the first research laboratories in the rubber industry.The intensive research program that has continued to be a paramount part of this company\u2019s activities has since resulted in many other \"firsts\u201d that have helped to make rubber serve man better.X#\t/¦ ¦/ £%¦ 'Vi\t''it' v, 4 V:\tV I \\,« \\ \\ '.ii il Ç ( K J X* 'X ;
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