The record, 18 mars 1981, mercredi 18 mars 1981
Price index up 12% OTTAWA (CP) — Consumer prices were 12.2 percent higher in February than they were a year earlier, the largest annual increase registered since December.1974, Statistics Canada reported today.The latest increase in the consumer price index, a commonly used indicator of inflation, was largely due to a 1.7-per-cent increase in food prices since January and increased housing charges and clothing prices.The January food price increase was 0.5 per cent.In contrast, the non-food items included in the index rose only 0.8 per cent in February compared with a 1.5-per-cent rise in January.The annual increase of 12.2 per cent in the consumer price index last month was up marginally from 12 per cent in January and sharply higher than the 11.2-per-cent for December.The December, 1974, increase was 12 5 per cent.Higher prices for vegetables, especially tomatoes and potatoes, coupled with increased prices for dairy products were largely responsible for a 1.7-per-cent rise in food prices.Slightly dampening the rise in food prices were lower prices for selected beef and pork cuts, sugar and regular coffee.An increase in housing costs and higher clothing prices were major factors in a 0.8-per-cent increase in non-food prices.PURCHASING POWER DOWN The index shows that the same basket of goods and services that cost $100 in 1971 cost $226.40 in February.The purchasing power of a consumer’s 1971 dollar was 44 cents last month The month-to-month increase in prices, adjusted to eliminate seasonal variations, was 0.9 per cent last month.This included a 1.3-percent rise in food prices and a 0.8-percent increase in non-food prices.In February, food prepared at home cost 15.5 per cent more than it did a year earlier; the cost of eating away from home rose 8.8 per cent over the year .Inside EATING IN There's fish for everyday and there's rich time-consuming fish, not for every day.A little bit of each on Page 8 H.GORDON GREEN Gordon Green, who teaches at the only Mohawk school in Canada tells why he's ashamed to have been born white.Page 3 Snowflurries Weather, Page 2 Sherbrooke, Wednesday, March 18,1981 25 cents Boards slow to offer French education?MONTREAL (CP) — English-speaking parents in Quebec are pushing for adequate French-language education for their children but often meet resistance from school boards, says a report by the Council of Quebec Minorities “There’s a great will on the part of anglophone parents to see their children adapt to the francophone reality in Quebec," Susan Schachter of the council said at a news conference Tuesday where the report was made public.“Institutions have been relatively slow in making adaptations; parents have been pushing to adapt to reality.” The report says rapidly-declining enrolment in English schools, particularly in rural Quebec, is creating tension similar to that facing Franco-Ontarians, I PHOTO/STEVE AAcDOUGALL Premier Levesque and candidate Denise Skoropad: We will do our best to help them.' English speaking parents come into conflict with other parents if they opt to send their children to a French school, the report says.Parents also clash with teachers over French instruction, because increasing the use of French in a school can mean the loss of jobs for unilingual English teachers.And school boards fight with the government for financing and compete with each other for available students in order to keep their teachers employed and their local schools open “In many areas of the province, because of financial reasons and the job security of unilingual anglophone teachers, school boards are resisting parents’ demands for improved French instruction," the report says.“In many cases parents have responded by enrolling their children in French schools,” further eroding the viability of the remaining local English school.This echoes a report released Monday by Quebec Education Minister Camille Laurin, who piloted Bill 101 through the national assembly.Laurin, campaigning for re-election, said the decline of French school enrolment was double that of English schools until the law was passed, but the situation has been reversed.Asbestos takeover during campaign?By STEVE McDOUGALL RICHMOND — Local issues took on provincial importance here yesterday as Premier Rene Levesque and the Parti Québécois campaign entourage wended its way through the Townships.But while reporters wanted to know more about what the premier would do following the Supreme Court ruling permitting Quebec to go ahead with plans to expropriate Asbestos Corp., the premier was reassuring 150 victims of last month’s Richmond flood it wouldn't happen again if he was elected.Fresh from a morning spent with Johnson riding hopeful Carmen Ju neau, Levesque made no direct promises.“All that we have ever said we would do as a party, we have," said Levesque to sporadic applause, “we feel that you can trust us this time.” Levesque added that the question of low-cost housing has “high priority” with the government since the flooding took place, but again, no commitments were made.Accompanied by his wife, Corinne Cote, and Richmond PQ candidate, Denise Skoropad, Levesque spent most of his time describing the type of aid available to those flood victims present.At one point, he received a repri mand from Mayor Andre Lupien, who stated his annoyance with the lack of government action up until now on solutions to get rid of the flooding problem Levesque’s only response was to point out that what was required was a master plan for the St.Francis River, jh] April 13 not the smaller, uncoordinated plans that the environment officials have been making over the years and which are never executed.“I'm no expert on these things, but I think that if we took the time to make a complete and consistent plan for the By ANTHONY ROSS SHERBROOKE Sherbrooke county Liberal candidate Alain Cousineau kicked off his campaign yesterday by accusing the Parti Québécois of com plete lack of economic leadership in (he Townships.Cousineau called the PQ’s economic performance over the last four years a tragedy.He also accused the PQ of stealing his own economic themes from a submission he made last May called Batir 1’Estrie, the title of the PQ plat form in the Townships.“The Parti Québécois has shown no leadership in the economic problems of Quebec during their term in office and river, things would get done.” Later on, Levesque fielded numerous questions from local reporters and journalists following him on the party’s campaign bus.The main question they had for Levesque was the Supreme Court ruling Levesque denied that the government was buying a “white elephant” as one See ASBESTOS, Page 3 things have gotten worse rather than better,” said the University of Sher brooke prof.Cousineau criticized finance minister Jacques Parizeau and particularly his latest budget .Cousineau said the increase in the provincial deficit has done more than anything else to retard Quebec’s economic growth.He explained that although deficit financing is in the ory supposed to stimulate investment and development in the province, the opposite has been true during the PQ’s tenure.In formulating his economic argu ments against the PQ, Cousineau cited See COUSINEAU, Page 2 Cousineau blasts Parizeau budget BIRTHS, DEATHS.7 BUSINESS.5 CLASSIFIED .16 COMICS.17 EDITORIAL.4 LIVING.6 SPORTS .9 Product guarantee: “If you are not completely satisfied, simply return the unused portion of this bottle and we’ll cheerfully refund the unused portion of your money.” “I don’t care if you do live together, you can’t list ;., him as a dependant.’’ Walkout costs profs ST.JEROME, Que.(CP) — A judge of small claims court has ordered teachers at a junior college in this Laurentian town to pay $300 to each of five students left without classes by a seven-week strike in 1978.In his verdict Tuesday, Judge Jacques Duquette concurred with testimony by the students from St.Jerome Junior College who said their career plans were disrupted by the teachers’ walkout."It isn’t so much winning the money that’s important, it’s winning the right to classes when you are a student,’’ Gabrielle Gendron-St.Louis, one of the plaintiffs, said after the decision.More than 50 other students had filed similar claims of between $200 and $499 but agreed to suspend their cases pending a verdict in the test case decided Tuesday.Several teachers picketed the courthouse during proceedings Tuesday.Won games in Poland spark worry in West WARSAW (AP) — Warsaw pact manoeuvres that caused advance concern in the United States and Western Europe have begun in Poland and neighboring countries, the official Polish media announced today.The number of soldiers participating was not announced But Soviet officials in Moscow told a U S.representative fewer than 25,000 soldiers would be involved and there would be no large-scale crossings of the Polish border.U S.officials in Washington said this alleviated some of the Reagan administration's fears that the exercises would be a cover for Soviet military intervention in Poland to put down the independent labor movement But in Moscow, Foreign Minister Bohuslav Chnoupek of Czechoslovakia noted historical parallels between the situation in Poland and events leading to the Soviet invasion of his country in 1968 to suppress Alexander Dubcek’s liberal Communist regime.In Warsaw, Deputy Premier Mieczyslaw Rakowski said Poland's right to resolve its economic and social problems without intervention from its Communist neighbors “is not being questioned by anyone ” But he said Poland’s friends in other East bloc countries have the right to ask "to what extent does the development of events in Poland strengthen the socialist community and to what extent is it weakening that community ’’ Dart stars represent Quebec By JAMES DUFF Meet Brandon Naeve and Andre Masse.They’ll be representing Quebec at the Canadian Darts Championships in St.John’s Newfoundland - and they’re plenty proud of being Town-shippers.Naeve, 24, of North Hatley and Masse, 37, of Huntingville earned the title of Quebec’s best in Cap de la Madeleine last weekend, beating 150 other teams for the doubles championship.In the singles event, Brandon and Andre eliminated everyone else to meet in the finals, Andre having thrown four 180s - four perfect scores - to get there.“But he beat me for the singles title," said Andre.In fact it was hearing about this hot-shot kid from North Hatley that prompted Masse, championship calibre player years ago, to re-enter competition.And it wasn’t long before the Townships’ two best players teamed up "Darts players are very competitive in the Townships, but they don’t compete outside because they don’t think they can win,” says Brandon “But we went down to Cartaret, New Jersey, to a $5,000 tournament and placed in the top eight in the singles.It paid for the trip.” The two have radically different approaches to life and it’s reflected in almost everything but the scoreboard Brandon is a potter, runs three miles a day and throws with a $54 set of tungsten dars.He even has two sets so he doesn't have to walk back and forth as much while practicing two to five hours each day.Andre owns an auto-body shop in Huntingville, never exercises and uses a beat-up old set of $4 darts which he doesn't even think they make anymore.But they share a love for the game that comes close to religious.“It’s the perfect sport for Canada,” says Brandon.“We all spend so much of our time indoors.What better way is there to spend it, than to have an ale and throw a few darts?” Both agree the game gives them a high they are hard put to describe.“The high in darts is incredible.Every r Paris pfirtS RECORD/PERRY BEATON Brandon Naeve and Andre Masse: Why not Townshippers?game you play is a high ’ ’ The high is what drags them to places like New Jersey and Cleveland to play North America’s best “While we were down in the States, three television shows interviewed me , they called us the crazy Canadians," says Brandon.Of course, the money's the big thing.There is $500,000 in prize money at 30 tournaments across the continent.In Cleveland alone, 80 of the best players pay $30 each to compete for a $47,000 purse.Brandon began playing the gartie three years ago, learning it from his older brother, Gavin, who had picked it up while at school in England and already Brandon has made about $1,600.In Cap de la Madeleine, they picked up $250 each, with Andre winning another $500 in the Masters tourney the next day In the last 13 tourneys with purses of $500 or more, they’ve won nine and come second twice.But the St.John's (rip is the plum.Their plane tickets, rooms, and meals are paid and they get plenty of spending money as well, all sponsored by the Canadian Darts Federation and the many breweries and other backers.If they win in St.John’s, it’s off to England for the World Masters.All expenses paid Not bad for a couple of Townships boys.r ) V 2 WED., MARCH 18,1981 St.Pat's O' tor the federal cabinet OTTAWA (CP) - The O’uellets.O’Trudeaus, O’Hnatyshyns, O’Sauves, and O’Mazankowskis of the world were wished a happy St.Patrick’s Day Tuesday by that most Irish of fellows, Steve O’Paproski Paproski, the jovial, rotund, Polish-born former Progressive Conservative cabinet minister who normally goes without the O’ he added to his name for the occasion, told the Commons it was “a great day for the Irish and those who wish to be Irish.” In consequence thereof, the former multiculturalism and amateur sport minister, Edmonton North MP and former Edmonton Eskimo football player extended best wishes, a happy St.Patrick’s Day and one final ‘‘Erin, go bragh,” (a typical Irish greeting) to all.Consumer Affairs Minister Andre Ouellet, Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, Commons Speaker Jeanne Sauve — all French-Canadians — former Tory energy minister News in brief Kay Hnatyshyn and former Tory transport minister Don Mazankowski — of Polish and Ukrainian descent, respectively — grinned widely as Paproski singled them out for special attention during his 20-second speech, which won universal applause BROUGHT CHRISTIANITY St.Patrick, the Roman Catholic missionary who brought Christianity to the Emerald Isle, would perhaps have approved less, however, of the use to which he was put earlier in the day.Former Conservative finance minister John Crosbie led off the daily question period in the House by wishing his Liberal successor, Allan MacEachen, a proud Scot, ¦‘top of the afternoon .or top of the gallows, one or the other.” The whole experience was so frustrating for Crosbie, MP for St.John and the only non-Catholic, if not the only non-irishman, to speak to the subject, that he finally told MacEachen Canadians “are getting tired of this minister’s blarney — not just today, which is St.Patrick’s Day, but every day of the year.” High-kicking Texas schoolgirls strutted down Dublin’s O’Cdnnell Street Tuesday in the annual St.Patrick’s Day parade while the Irish and Irish expatriates around the world toasted the abstemious saint with religious dedication.The all-girl drill teams, the Springfield Tigerettes from Bellaire and the Blue Belles from Quinlan, drew rousing cheers from the 150,000 people who braved chilly weather to watch the annual Gaelic hoedown.The 4,000-strong parade took 90 minutes to pass the reviewing stand in Dublin’s main thoroughfare, outside the General Post Office, the symbol of Irish nationhood where Padraig Pearse declared Ireland an independent republic during the Easter Rising of 1916.In New York, one million people cheered as Mayor Edward Koch and Gov.Hugh Carey — both wearing the colors of the Irish flag — led 100, 000 people marching to the drums of 196 bands in a parade up Fifth Avenue.On Sunday, Terrence Cardinal Cooke had urged the New Yorkers to ‘‘moderate any grossness in the spring festival that has been growing up around St.Patrick’s Day." In Memphis, Tenn., they got down to some serious drinking early with the fifth annual St Patrick’s Day Pub Crawl and Marching Ensemble.Aer Lingus, the Irish airlines, flew in 200,000 sprigs of shamrocks from Ireland for parades in New York, Boston, Los Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco.A consignment to Toronto was eventually released after a three-day battle with federal agriculture department officials.FOR TOWNSHIPPERS-BY TOWNSHIPPERS We Settle Estates.Provide Financial Administration.Tax Plan Your Income.Arrange Annuities or Tax Sheltered Investments (You can defer income tax on investment income to age 75).YOUR NEEDS ARE OUR CONCERN Professional Advice Call 514-263-4123 W.D.DUKE ASSOCIATES LTD.109 William St., Cowansville, Que.J2K1K9 PRESIDENT: W.D.Duke, B.Comm.C.A.VICE-PRESIDENT J.R.Boulé, B.A.Poland obstacle in Can.-Soviet talks BUDAPEST (Reuter) — Mark MacGuigan, Canada’s external affairs minister, said Tuesday one of the obstacles to a U.S.-Soviet summit meeting would be removed if Moscow clarified its intentions over Poland.MacGuigan, who wound up a two-day visit to Hungary his first official visit loan Eastern European country — said he assured Hungarian leaders during the talks that the U.S.wants to continue detente and avoid a return to the cold war.Mafia-CIA linked in Castro plot PROVIDENCE, R.I.(AP) — A confessed killer claims in an interview published Tuesday that reputed New England organized crime boss Raymond Patriarca was asked to provide gunmen to kill Cuban President Fidel Castro in a mob-CIA plot.Nicholas Palmigiano told The Evening Bulletin that Patriarca backed out of the deal after contacts in Cuba failed to convince him his gunmen would get out of the island alive.______ Weather Wednesday will have intermittent snow with moderate to strong winds causing blowing snow.Thursday will be cloudy with snow flurries and a total accumulation for both days of between five and 10 centimetres.High Wednesday, -5, low, -8, Thursday's high will be -5.#1________________™L1 rascara George MacLaren, Publisher .569-9525 James Duff, Editor .569-6345 A.J.Bayley, Advertising Manager.569-9525 Richard Lessard, Production Manager.569-993) Debra Waite, Superintendent, Composing Room 569-9931 CIRCULATION DEPT.—569 9528 Subscriptions by Carrier: 1 year $52.00 weekly : $1.00 Subscriptions by Mail: Canada: 1 year $39.00 3 months $15 00 6 months $22.00 1 month $ 9.00 U.S.& Foreign: 1 year $70.00 6 months $40.00 3 months $25.00 Established February 9, 1897, incorporating the Sherbrooke Gazette (est.1837) and the Sherbrooke Examiner (est.1879) Published Monday to Friday by Townships Communications Inc./Communications des Cantons, Inc., 2520 Roy Street, Sherbrooke, Quebec, JlK ICI.Second class registration number 1064.Member ot Canadian Press Member ot the Audit Bureau of Circulations All of the following must be sent to The Record in writing.They will not be accepted by phone.Please include a phone number where you can be reached during the day BRIEFLETS BIRTHS CAR DS OF THANKS INMEMORIAMS.50c per count line Minimum charge $3.00 WEDDING DESCRIPTIONS.No charge for publication providing news submitted with in one month, $10.00 production charge for wedding or en gagement pictures.Wedding writeups received one month or more after event, $15.00 charge with or without picture.Subject to condensation.ALLOTHER PHOTOS:.$10 00 OBITUARIES: No charge if received within one month of death.Subject to condensation.$15.00 if received more than one month after death.Subject to condensation All above notices must carry signature of person sending notices.DEATH NOTICES: Cost: 50c per count line.Deadline: 8:15 a.m.Death notices received after 8:15a.m.will be published the following day.To place a death notice in the paper, call 569-9931.If any other Record number is called, The Record cannot guar antee publication the same day.One killed in Andes crash LIMA (AP) — A freight loaded with tin ore smashed into the rear of a passenger train in an Andes mountain town Tuesday, killing at least 30 people and injuring 100, Aeronautics Minister Jose Gagliardi said.The passenger train is generally used by tourists visiting the southern part of the country, including the Inca fortress city of Machu Picchu near Cuzco.Townships talk LYSTER (SM) — A doctor who thought he was being called in to attend to an emergency was subdued by thieves who tied him to a chair after forcing him to open up the medical centre’s pharmacy.Dr.Paul Emile Leblanc arrived at the centre at 12:45 Monday morning to find three men, one armed, who demanded that he co-operate or be killed.According to officers of the Arthabaska detachment of the Quebec Provincial Police, the men got away with an unknown amount of drugs, expensive typewriters and tape recorders.Meanwhile, police report that Peter Cormier, 19, is at large after escaping from the Waterloo detention center Sunday.Cormier, who has blue eyes and brown hair weighs 66 kilograms and is 1.7 metres tall.Anyone having any knowledge about Cormier should contact the Quebec Police Force Montreal detachment at 514-395-4155, or get in touch with the nearest QPF detachment listed in your phone book.GRANBY — The St.Francis Kennel & Obedience Club will be offering an obedience course to be held in the St.Benoit church basement in Granby, starting March 18, 7: 3o p.m for ni he weeks.Open to all dog owners, the course provides a competent instructor.Owners will learn how to teach their dog basic manners; to stay with them on or off lead, to come when called, to stay and lay down when told to do so.Lessons are approximately 45 minutes each Thursday night, starting 7:30 p.m.Interested owners may call 514-539-0732 or simply go to the first lesson with their dog to register.• SHERBROOKE — Local residents are being warned not to give any donations to solicitors claiming to be collecting money for the benefit of the Dixville Home for the mentally retarded.Members of the Dixville Home Foundation say they are not soliciting door-to-door in the Sherbrooke area and that any money collected is being pocketed by the collectors.Anyone wishing to make a donation to the home may do so by mailing a cheque to the Dixville Home Foundation, P.O.Box 90, Dixville, JOB 1P0.Official tax receipts will be given.• EAST ANGUS (SM) — Eight locked out workers at the Commerce Bank in East Angus have been given the support of the Canadian Labour Congress, who will urge their members unions to boycott the Imperial Bank of Commerce across the country.The congress, which has over 80 affiliated unions in Canada, and some 2.3 million members, claims that such a boycott could result in $850 million in union funds being withdrawn from Commerce accounts.The eight workers have been locked out of their jobs in East Angus for at least a year and this action by the congress has been the first sign of support that the mostly tellers at the bank have had in their quest to form a local union.US lying deliberately — Toss MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet news agency Tass has denounced as “deliberate lies” U.S.state department charges that the Soviet Union was accountable for aid given three hijackers who took more than 100 persons hostage aboard a Pakistani airliner."The Washington decision to fabricate a false version of the hijacking seems to be designed as an additional impetus to the campaign of allegedly Sovietbacked ‘international terrorism’ they (the Americans) have launched,” a Tass news analyst wrote Tuesday.End extra billing — Begin OTTAWA (CP) — Federal Health Minister Monique Begin raised the hackles of doctors and some of provincial counterparts Tuesday by calling for an end to extrabilling of medicare patients.Begin told reporters she is recommending to cabinet that extra-billing be banned starting in April, 1982, ànd she hinted that federal medicare funds could be withheld from provinces which refuse to co-operate.Que.Indians lose court fight MONTREAL (CP) — Quebec’s 6,500 Cree Indians have lost their legal bid to make the provincial government pay them an immediate $13 million to improve health services in their far-northern communities.After Quebec Superior Court rejected their injunction request Tuesday, tribe leaders said health conditions would continue to deteriorate in eight villages unless the province comes up with enough money to remedy unsanitary conditions.Harp seal hunt ended ST.JOHN’S, Nfld.(CP) — Longliner crews filled their harp seal quota Tuesday as they and the larger hunting teams rode a roller coaster of frail, broken ice on swollen seas off Labrador.The international harp seal hunt ended for the landsmen as of midnight Tuesday night and fisheries officials expected a few of the big sealing ships will complete their harp kill today before the hunt for hooded seal pups starts later this week.Can.girl found in Mexico OTTAWA (CP) — A Canadian girl missing for one year walked into a newspaper office in Mexico City on Tuesday and staggered officials who had almost given her up for dead.Kathy Sweet, 15, of Milton, Ont., simply disappeared without a word in February, 1980, while vacationing with her parents, said an external affairs spokesman.Snow shuts down NB SAINT JOHN, N.B.(CP) — A storm that staggered New Brunswick on Tuesday virtually ended daily activity in Fredericton and Saint John.Snow driven by high winds kept schools closed and emptied streets, government offices and most businesses by mid-day in communities across the north, central and southern areas of the province.Hardest hit was Fredericton where up to 35 centimetres of snow was expected before the second St.Patrick’s Day storm in five years softened to flurries in the evening.Judge may request mail opened att°ck sa.,es tax OTTAWA (CP) — Currently illegal mail openings by police and customs agents should be allowed when authorized by a judge, a report on postal security recommends.The seven-month, one-man commission of inquiry by Judge Rene Marin recommended Tuesday that police and customs agents be allowed to intercept, demand, seize and open mail if they have a judicial order to do so.Anti-brucellosis cattle banned OTTAWA (CP) — U.S.cattle vaccinated against brucellosis as adults will not be allowed into Canada starting April 1, the agriculture department announced Tuesday.But a spokesman said in an interview tightening cattle import regulations under the federal brucellosis eradication program will have no significant impact on the numbers of U.S.cattle now being imported.Canadian regulations only permit the vaccination of calves, while in the U.S.entire herds are vaccinated against the disease, including adult cattle.OTTAWA (CP) — The country’s daily newspaper publishers warned Tuesday that a federal sales tax on advertising in some newspapers “is only one short step away from control of editorial content.” The 82-member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association, appearing before the royal commission into concentration in the newspaper industry, said “direct taxation of newspapers or advertising is contrary to the public interest” because it leads to “the power to control.” Texaco cancels untimely ad OTTAWA (CP) — Texaco Canada officials felt they got burned last week when a local talk-show host discussed a boycott of firms allegedly involved in oil price fixing — including Texaco — and then ran a commercial message promoting Texaco’s services.Texaco promptly cancelled $10,000 worth of advertising which would have lasted another two weeks.Texaco spokesman Jim Tannian said the positioning of the commercial in the middle of the show made it appear that Texaco was sponsoring the program.Cousineau: Decentralization a must Continued from Page One a number of statistics concerning the region’s performance over the last four years.The number of unemployed in the area has increased from 7,000 to 12,000 since 1977 and 40 businesses have closed their operations.He also said Sherbrooke residents have the lowest average wage of urban centres in Quebec, at $12,914.72.Cousineau also lambasted the government for their refusal to decentralize economic development and concentrate their efforts on a regional basis.“Despite the advice of many experts calling for the government to concen- trate their efforts on a more regional basis they have made little inroads in this area.” Although Cousineau plans to run his campaign on economic issues he claims not to have forgotten the social and cultural problems of Quebec in the process.“We must concentrate on improving our economic situation and then the social and cultural problems will be easier to deal with.” Commenting on his PQ opponent Ray-nald Frechette, Cousineau called him an opportunist and said the simple fact the local riding decided to dump Gerald Gosselin in favor of Frechette helps prove his point about the lack of leadership in the Townships.“The fact the PQ has decided to choose another candidate after four years enhances my argument that there has been a lack of leadership in this region.Members of the party have been unhappy with the performance they have received from the government and their representative,” said Cousineau.In concluding his press conference Cousineau said the important confrontation between Frechette and himself will be when they meet for a televised debate.Seminar registration still open COWANSVILLE - Persons interested in attending the Townshippers’ Association Education Seminar will be allowed to register at the door on the day of the event, but are urged to notify the Town-shippers' offices in advance so planning may continue.FORMER EMPLOYEES of SPACE RESEARCH CORPORATION (QUEBEC) INC.IMPORTANT MEETING at Mansonville Town Hall Friday, March 20,8 p.m.RE: Developments on back salary claims Potential applicants should call the Town-shippers’ offices in Cowansville (514-263-4422) or Sherbrooke (819-566-5717) and give their name and choice of workshop topic if they plan to attend the March 21 meeting.This notice will enable organizers to plan for the number of meals and the amount of workshop materials that will be needed.The seminar is globally titled “What do you expect from the English school system?” and will focus on four sub-topics.They are French second-language acquisition, the future of local small schools, the gifted child and adult learners.Several interesting speakers will address the assembly.The seminar starts at 8:15 a.m.at Massey-Vanier Regional High School, 429 River Street, Cowansville.A $5 registration fee will be charged to cover the cost of resource materials and lunch.Correction In the report of Townshippers Inc.in Friday’s Record, it was reported that Townshippers’ Director David Weiner had been ‘notably absent’ from a hearing of the Conseil Régionale de Santé et des services sociaux at which Townshippers presented a brief on health care.In fact it is the association’s policy that all briefs and presentations are presented by board members Weiner and staff helped prepare the brief, but were not asked to attend.The Record regrets any misunderstanding.Galt plans parents night LENNOXVILLE — Alexander Galt Regional High School will be holding a Parents’ Night on Thursday, March 19 between 7 and 9:30 p.m.Parents of students at Galt will be given a chance to meet their child’s teacher and discuss last week’s interm report card.The Townshippers’ Association will be holding a public meeting on Monday, March 30 at 8 p.m.at Len-noxville Elementary School addressed by the Association President, James Ross All are welcome.A slate of candidates will be presented so that a local executive can be elected for a regional table.About 500 of the association’s 6000 members reside in Len-noxville.Membership applications will be available at this meeting, as well as a display detailing the work of the organization and a selection of the wares offered by the association.Founded in October 1979, the association seeks to provide a voice for English-speaking residents of the Townships.Over the past year, it has been particularly active in the fields of education, heritage and culture, health and social services and encouraging participation in Quebec society.For more information, please call 819-566-5717, April 13 QUEBEC (CP) — Premier Rene Levesque displayed the barbed wit for which he is a campaign legend Tuesday night, as he compared Liberal Leader Claude Ryan to the biblical Salome, revealing the Liberal electoral platform through a mystifying dance of the seven veils.In his most colorful speech so far in the campaign for the April 13 provincial election, the premier had an audience of 1,000 Parti Québécois supporters roaring, as he drove his points home with the gestures, voice inflections and sense of timing of a stand-up comedian.“Let’s say that Mr.Ryan is starting to look like Salome.She danced for her uncle Herod to obtain the head of John the Baptist on a platter,” he said, explaining that in this case John the Baptist represents the people of Quebec.Ryan's campaign tour for the April 13 provincial election on Tuesday began in Alma, about 220 kilometres north of here, with a one-hour delay caused by a frozen engine on what journalists with Ryan have dubbed the flying Igloo.The campaigning was already an hour behind schedule when the 40-seater, twin-prop Hawker-Siddley finally roared off for the northern mining town of Chibougamau.The delay in Alma caused the cancellation of a visit to a copper mine near Chibougamau, but Ryan squeezed in a brief stop at a memorial to the 48 people who died in a community-hall fire in Chapais on New Year’s Day, 1980.MONTREAL (CP) — Alain Genereux, a small-town lawyer, grabbed the Parti Québécois nomination in Berthier riding northeast of here Tuesday defeating Jean-Guy Mercier, the sitting member Mercier, a backbencher whose voice was seldom heard in the national assembly, rankled the party hierarchy recently with public statements questioning the PQ policy of making it easier for women to obtain abortions in Quebec hospitals.Aï f) WED , MARCH 18,1981 3 The Townships #1____g«ei UCCOltl Asbestos Corp.expropriation during campaign?Continued from Page One person in the audience had earlier described it."Asbestos products may not be in demand right now, but this product has a way of bouncing back very quickly," said Levesque, who said that expropriation would become feasible once production of asbestos-related products took hold in Quebec."We don’t go after Johns-Manville because they have a completely integrated operation with a factory that is processing brake linings and textiles.Asbestos Corporation is the type of company whose main product is large holes in the ground and bags stuffed with asbestos crossing the U.S.border and profits stuffed in their own pockets." Levesque did confirm that the Supreme Court ruling gives the Quebec government the right to expropriate during the present election campaign.He says he’s not ruling out the possibility of such an action if Asbestos Corporation does not bargain in good faith in the coming months.He did not want to set a time limit on negotiations.“Bell mines gave us the price we wanted to pay last year, and if we can't get a fair price from General Dynamics (owner of Asbestos Corporation), then we will expropriate,’’ confirmed Le- vesque.The original negotiations for the Asbestos Corporation had bogged down over the price of the company’s shares.Asbestos wanted $99 per share, while the government offered $42.The only other issue were accusations by opposition Liberal leader Claude Ryan that the Parti Québécois is racist by its reference to the Liberal party controlled by “anglophone" interests.“These types of accusations just show the amount of panic in the Liberal party as our campaign is getting off the ground," responded Levesque, who f described the Liberal approach to this campaign with these types of statements as “absurd and ridiculous".JiCvesque went on to clarify his party’s position on anglophone interests What he meant was the Liberal party, in his opinion, was being ruled by "privileged interests".He went on to say that some of those interests happen to be anglophone business sectors “who pull certain strings, including that of Asbestos Corpora tion".H.Gordon Green For the rest of the Richmond tour, Levesque inspected the Ewing furniture plant in nearby Melbourne, heavily damaged by the floods and has only been back in operation since last week.He wished the bilingual work group a happy St.Patrick’s Day "to all you Irishmen here" in English, and then went on to remind them of the aid program of the government if they were af fected by the flood.Levesque’s last stop was at a Richmond old-age home where he told the elderly crowd that "they were lucky to be in Quebec since 1976".Levesque claimed that since his party came to power, the number of accommodations for ‘lx?s troisième age" have increased 26-fold Further increases would be minimal because, he said, "We, as Quebecers, have to live within our means," referring to the recent cutbacks in social ser vices that the government made in their budget last week, the day before the election was called ¦ i Richmond flood campaign trail.Photo • Stephen McDougall victims applaud Premier Rene Levesque, in town last night on the Brousseau jailed in 1966 death MONTREAL (JM) -Jacques Brousseau, 54, held criminally responsible for the drowning death of his 46-year-old wife Jeanne in West Brome on August 6, 1966 following a coroner’s inquest in Cowansville last week, was ordered jailed when he appeared in provincial court here yesterday to obtain a new bail hearing on a charge of attempted murder on his 42-year-old second wife, Micheline.His bail and preliminary hearings were continued to March 24.MUC police spokesman Normand Couillard said Brousseau is charged with attempting to strangle his second wife with a scarf and leaving her for dead behind a building at 1370 Chabanal West about 5:40 p.m.on Feb.4.He was arrested by Sgt.Det.Paul Couture and Const.Guy Milette outside his office building at on Feb.and was BU part-time students lobby for changes By PATRICIA TRACY LENNOXVILLE -There’s more to Bishop’s than football games and weekly pub nights and football games — and the university’s part time association is out to prove it.The national president of the Canadian organization of Part-time Students was on campus last night and the local group gave her an enthusiastic reception.Over 670 students were enrolled in part-time courses at Bishop’s last semester, compared to a full-time student population of about 800.But part-time students get a raw deal, says George Mc-Kelvie, president of the local association.McKelvie, studying for psychology degree in the evenings, says part-time students lack the social milieu granted to full-status students and are permitted little representation on the university's committees.Because most of their courses are at night, part-time students have little chance to participate in the same activities as the others.At Bishop’s, only fulltime students are represented on committees which make decisions.A member of McKelvie’s group is permitted to attend Senate meetings and participate in discussions, but has no vote.The Bishop’s group has been officially recognized by the university, but receives no funds.The only money comes from a $2 assessment from students tak- Brieflet WATERVILLE A Five-Day Plan to stop smoking will be held in the Waterville Town Hall from March 29 to April 2.For more information please call 838-5691 or 567-1064.La Quotidienne WINNING - | S NUMBER I 2-7-0 | ing courses.The number of part-time students’ associations in Canada has tripled in the past four years, says Norma Grindal, president of COPUS and founder of the University of Toronto Part-time Students’ Association.In some universities those studying for a degree by taking one or two courses per semester outnumber the fulltime student population.While some full-time university student associations deal in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, the COPUS budget is only $20,000 — $1 per member or 10 per cent of a university association’s budget.Two of the main problems COPUS is trying to solve for part-time students are equal opportunity in education and representation on university committees.Finding the right courses to take is also a challenge, Grindal adds.Often only 100-level courses are given in the evenings and students hoping to complete a degree end up taking some day courses to do so.Christine Vercoe, COPUS’ sole permanent staffer, notes the Ontario government is financing a study, working jointly with COPUS, on part-time students in that province.The national organization is working to have similar studies done in other provinces.U of T’s part-time student group is a model for the rest of the country, says Vercoe.The organization has members on most university committees, operates a drop-in centre open all day, has the only student-operated credit union in Canada and offers counselling and course evaluation for its members.Although the budget is small, most of the work is volunteer.The changes are coming slowly.Women used to account for 35 per cent of the part-time student population; now they are close to 85 per cent.In 1970, there were only 10 campus groups.COPUS was formed in 1973 and now there are 23 part-time student organizations "in some form or other” Grindal concludes.arraigned on Feb.6 when he entered no plea.He was allowed his provisional freedom on Feb.9 with a $10,000 cash deposit, accompanied by a court order restraining him from any direct or indirect contact with his wife.He violated the condition and was arrested again on March 9 after he bad posed as a policeman in an attempt to obtain her travel itinerary.The coroner ruled there was insufficient evidence to incriminate Brousseau when he appeared in 1966.Coroner Jacques Guertin who heard Brousseau as the only witness on March 8 concerning the 1966 drowning ruled his statements were sufficiently contradictory to hold him criminally responsible.Bedford Crown Attorney Claude Noiseux confirmed yesterday he had issued an arrest warrant in the event Brousseau is granted his provisional freedom in Montreal but refused all other comment on the case pending eventual arraignment.Corporal Yvon Fauchand and Const.Victor Judd of the QPF homicide squad are in charge of the investigation into the 1966 crime.It was originally investigated by Const.Irenee Dion, who is still attached to the Cowansville detachment.The prettiest girls in Canada are not in Montreal Not quite.They are across the river in the Indian Reserve of Caughnawaga where l have been teaching ever since our father which art in Quebec declared me officially senile and put me out on pension.The Mohawks, you see, are not convinced that a man ought to be content to rot in his socks simply because he has survived 65 or 70 birthdays, and I have been teaching agriculture in their high school ever since its inception in 1978.Now if there is any easier job in the world than teaching I haven’t yet had the good fortune to discover it.but in all my years in the classroom I have never enjoyed myself more than 1 do right now, and those lovely maids who grace my classes with their pulchritude are not the only reason for this.Seems to me that the Mohawks in general are a refreshingly sane, far-seeing people who probably have as much to give us today as they did when their ancestors presented our ancestors with corn, beans, squash, pumpkins and potatoes.(Tobacco was added to the list when the Indian eventually discovered what a miserable, thieving bunch we really were.) Little wonder that the high school in Caughnawaga — which, by the way is the very first Indian high school in all America — should attach so much importance to the study of agriculture.The school already has its own sheep, horses, beef calves, and rabbits and a brand new barn to house them.And it plans to add hens, pigs and perhaps a few dairy cows in the near future.But now they must answer a very troublesome question.Will there be enough good land on the reservation to support so ambitions a project?Believe it or not the reserve, when it was first set aside for the Mohawks, comprised 33,000 acres, most of it prime land, but by 1885 it had shrunk to less than half that.The exact details of how much of their reserve was lost to them is none too clear in the history books but the Indians will tell you that the Jesuits who held the land in trust for them were to blame, and that the land on which the present cities of Candiac and Delson now stand is really Indian land.Be that as it may, there were still over 15,000 acres until the seaway came along and not only swallowed up some of their very best farms but piled mountains of rubble and rocks on the farms adjoining.The new double highway to Chateauguay took another giant bite.Today, of the original 33,000 acres given the Mohawks, only 12,500 remain.This in spite of all the solemn promises that their land would be theirs and theirs only "as long as the grass grew green, and the waters ran down to the sea and the sun rose in the east”.And now comes the government of this province with the suggestion that the building of a giant dam at the eastern end of the reserve might be its next big hydroelectric project.The fact that it would drown out another 600 acres of Indian land seems to be a minor concern.Well, even the author of the just society, the Rt -Honorable Pierre Elliott Trudeau once said impatiently that "treaties aren’t forever!” Getting back to this job of mine teaching Indians, there’s just one thing wrong with it.There are times when you have to feel awfully ashamed that you happened to have been born white.Richmond group opposes closing By CLAUDIA BOWERS WINDSOR — Nearly 80 parents and supporters turned out last evening at a meeting of the Morilac School Commission to present a petition requesting a stop to the closure of Mount St.Patrick School in Richmond.The petition, circulated for only three days in Richmond and vicinity, was signed by over 1,100.Recent developments in Richmond have indicated the board is considering closing Mount St.Patrick and placing those students in St Michael’s, traditionally an English Catho lie school.Camille Picard, candidate for the Union Nationale in Richmond has given his full support to the campaign to keep the schools as they are “The idea of introducing francophones into anglophone schools could cause irreparable damage to both groups.I am astonished that a French school system would consider action that is contrary to all moves previously made by the Quebec government since 1976,” said Picard.Three main proposals presented at the meeting involve changes in the location of students at Mount St.Patrick’s and St.Michael’s.One suggests incorporating the St.Michael’s students into the Protestant school system at St.Francis Elementary in Richmond, necessitating the transfer of funds from one school board to the other, resulting in a loss of revenue to the Morilac commission.The proposed program of budget cuts will be referred to the several school boards under Morilac commission within one week and if more meetings are called all discussions must be ended by April 21, the deadline for final acceptance for one or more of the proposals GENE WILDER RICHARD PRYOR THE MOUNTAIN MEN CAPITOL Theatre 59 King M*t BBO-OTn Week Sun Men tin Men 7 30 Stu 9 25 Stir 1 30.5 15 9 15 3 35, 7 20 Parking faciM- CAMP OUAREAU in the Laurentians Girls 7-15, Camper - Staff 3:1 2nd year of our successful BICULTURAL PROGRAM » 4 childien lent or cobin • Individual programming •Quality instruction in camp activities •Illustrated brochure Mrs.J.R.Allen (owner-director) 29 Summer St., Lennoxville, Clue.JIM 1G4 - 819-562-9641 (collect) Accredited member the Ont.& Oue.Camping Associations r ¦SB ’ (ST>'f'Tr*y,v: CARREFOUR de LESTRIE «I Boulevard Portland SHERBROOKE MY RKOTY ^WÆlYnXE CINEMA 2 565 0366 (J1 18 YEARS W-D 7:20-9:00 W-E 1:00-2:40-4:20 6:05-7:40-9:25 We're celebrating St Patrick's Day Sé From March 17th to March 21st at ft r/7ril Monday thru’ Friday Business Lunches GIANT SURF 'N TURF or CAPTAIN'S PLATE, ^ $30.00 for 2 person^ÉSftà^ 100 Webster St.—DowntowriT Sherbrooke (3rd floor parking SPRING LEG OF LAMBn z kg 4.17 lb 1.89 LEAN STEWING BEEF CUBES kg.4.83 lb.2.19 FRESH PATE DE FOIE kg.3.06 lb.1 .39 MINUTE STEAKS Cubed round kg.6.37 lb 2.89 FRESH HADDOCK FILLETS kg 5.05 lb 2.29 ICEBERG LETTUCE size» .49 SUNKIST LEMONS 6/.S9 NEW WASHED CARROTSu sa 2 ibs.57 BLUE RIBIER GRAPES .b.1.19 SCOTIAN GOLD APPLE SAUCE i9 oz.69 NEW MAPLE SYRUP Grade "A* 19 fluid oz.2.75 SOS PADS IVORY LIQUID DETERGENT save «sc 10 pack .53 1 litre 1 .69 FROZEN ORANGE JUICE Old South 12 01.J9 DELSEY BATHROOM TISSUE 2 roiis .79 Tel.562-1531 4 WED , MARCH 18, 1981 Editorial The Voice of the KaHtern Townships since 1897 Letters On behalf of Greenpeace, Amnesty International.Kdllor; Amnesty International, The Greenpeace Foundation, the Fund for Animal Welfare, and other pro-life philanthropic groups recently blasted on The Record’s editorial page might prefer not to dignify the charges against them with any kind of response at all.However, though 1 personally belong to none of these groups, 1 do know their work and their leadership well enough on a professional basis to feel I should respond, lest gibberish left unanswered become gibberish believed.The attack against Amnesty International came from a reader, as a letter to the editor.It accused A.I.of acting as a communist front, and specifically claimed several A I officials are communists.Some probably are: A.I membership cuts across the whole spectrum of political philosophies.But to claim that A.I neglects human rights violations in communist countries is to neglect the 40 to 50 per cent of each A.I.newsletter that is devoted to pleas on behalf of Soviet Jews, Tibetan Buddhists, Czechoslovakian poets, Rumanian feminists, and all manner of other nonviolent dissidents behind the Iron and Bamboo curtains.From month to month, A.I.activities do shift focus, as repression becomes more intense in one part of the world than in the others.A.I, has consequently been attacked as ‘Zionist’ when defending the Soviet Jews, ‘anti-s emetic' when revealing Israeli use of torture on Palestinian prisoners, so on and so forth.Some people, including that letter-writer, apparently think other people of various different beliefs deserve to be tortured.Amnesty International fortunately disagrees, working to free and protect all peaceful dissenters of whatever beliefs.I might note here that I occasionally receive the A.I.newsletter in exchange for my own publication, SAMIS DAT, precisely because their New York secretary hopes we can help people in communist prisons.1 am disappointed that we've so far been unsuccessful A colleague, however, James Cooney of THK PHOENIX, has en joyed considerable success working with A.I.to publish writings of both Russian and Chinese dissidents, particularly within the past year.Editor James Duff himself attacked the Greenpeace Foundation by name and many other groups by implication, in this March 4 diatribe: “Are the Green-peaceniks or the other bleeding hearts clamoring to be let out on the ice willing to expend the same amount of energy and money to save the millions of human children dying of starvation, disease and abuse in all corners of the world?No chance.’’ As a matter of fact, Greenpeace Foundation and Fund for Animal Welfare membership overlaps considerably with the list of donors to C.A.R.E., the Children's Relief Fund, U.N.I.C.E.F., and numerous other organizations that are, in fact, spending many times the money the animal groups get, precisely in the attempt to save human children.These organizations even use the same mailing lists in some cases: people concerned with abuse of life in one form are usually equally concerned with abuse in another.Sometimes some forms of abuse, like the seal hunt, get more media attention than others, such as the starvation in North Africa, which resulted from drought resulting in turn from climactic changes caused to great extent by our own misapplied technology.This isn’t Greenpeace Foundation’s fault, but it might be the fault of newspaper editors who’d rather take a cheap shot at a group with a high profile than do some critical digging into what’s happening where our rubber, chewing gum, bananas, and coffee come from.Apart from that, only a particularly insidious form of chauvinism can, hold a human life automatically more valuable than a seal’s, or than that of any other animal.A living being is a living being.Suffering is suffering, reduced not at all by the sufferer happening to belong to some other species.The argument that it is better for seals to suffer than people is, by extension, the same argument holding that it is also better for black people to suffer than whites, women than men; it is racism, conscious or not.Recognizing the sacred value of all life, and promoting this recognition, is the common thrust of Greenpeace, A.I., et al.Their leading members understand that the attitudes promoting abuse of animals and those promoting abuse of people are one and the Let’s hear it There were a few amused looks when we asked Solicitor-General Robert Kaplan if the federal government was planning any form of control on the proliferation of gold and silver recovery merchants across Canada.The point we made was that residential break-and-enters are up an average 75 per cent in every major city in Quebec and to a man, police chiefs say these burglaries are being carried out by juveniles, often organized and directed by an adult.Their loot is jewelry and any precious metal they can find.Stereos, television sets and works of art are ignored.Since we first became aware of the dramatic increase in the burglary rate, we have published numerous stories to the effect that most police forces want to see better controls on who buys and sells old gold and jewelry.Despite the obvious allusion to their professional ethnics, the people operating these quick-cash stands have yet to reply.In fact, most refuse comment.Whether or not the crow'd mocked, Mr.Kaplan expressed interest and said he would bring the matter up with his department.But we’re sorry to see the minister following Quebec's lead in changing their Juvenile Delinquents Act.Now it’s called the Young Offender’s Act.Whatever the euphemism, the basic direction is the same — any rights the delinquent has gained have been lost by society.Already, a 17-year-old Quebecer can steal with relative impunity — and he can even refuse to appear in court.At the same time, the modish new federal and provincial legislation tends to give far more importance to the rehabilitation of these youthful offenders.Does it make any sense to concentrate all our resources on punishment and rehabilitation and none on prevention?This is precisely what we’ve done.Force the gold and silver buyers to bond themselves and hold all stock for at least as long as is required of pawnships, wdth the same accountability.Amend these wishy-washy laws to ensure a young offender isn’t going to be able to return to school and brag about how he got away with something to his peers.Because that’s exactly what’s happening right now.We’re creating future generations with about as much respect for the law as the average pancake.Does anyone dare to say otherwise?J AMES DUFF IM AOT KO sues VHANA PSAR, W.HAYS TO ASK MOTHSe if ioi amin's RUNNING CANAOA NOYY kS tmcnom mi same.Changing these attitudes is often a matter of promoting the same alternative, as exemplified by the vegetarian movement.The pro-animal activists are often vegetarian to avoid taking animal life, while anti-starvation activists are vegetarian because fattening meat animals wastes protein that could feed more people, more directly.No Greenpeace member could make a more positive contribution to starving children than this, nor could anyone favoring world peace do more to help than by simply refusing to participate in needless killing, whether for fur coats, the table, or the sake of defending editorial, pulpit, and political platitudes MERRITT CLIFTON, Brigham No excuses Editor: I read with interest your article Parenting’.1 accept your facts and figures but must refute your final paragraph, ‘In other words, those who say the family concept is dying because of today’s morals, have got it backwards.More and more choose to be childless because it costs too much.We are a generation of excuse-givers whether we like the title or not and the price tag is an excuse.What we really are saying is we don’t want children.Some couples are going to say that’s not true, we like children.Wanting and liking is not the same.Liking children does not require adjustments in ones lifestyle.Adjustment is the key word.Without it we would cease to be.That may sound trite with regards to no more babies no more future.But if our preceding generations had lived by an unchanged set of rules for living, civilization would surely have stood still.The changing morals (conduct accepted or rejected by society) and the constant adjustments which must be made have brought us to this point in time for better or worse.We are the human species and we are very adaptable -if we want to be.An old saying comes to mind.‘Where there is a will there is a way.’ G.HYAM, Lennoxville On Freud demolition Editor: Re your photos of the destruction of the Freud house in North Hatley.Could they not have waited until spring, to give time for this recently-widowed fragile lady to gain strength from the ordeal and suffering she has gone through, to remove the last mementos of her late husband?This Mills man must be chuckling.Really too bad.There was a mistake.The hunter shot the wrong man.L.ROY, Lennoxville.Editor: So the town has smashed the Widow Freud’s house to bits, including the stove and Sink and souvenirs.And they have the effrontery to make this bereaved lady pay for the bulldozer, backhoe and drivers My God! They must be proud of themselves.For 30 years I lived in Germany in 1937 we began to see this type of bullying, low-brow hulking brutality developing.Unless curbed NOW, it will spread like a cancer.Is the peace and charm of a beautiful area going to be blighted by this belligerent crude mentality?Mayor Card and his buffoons should resign now, before an enraged citizenry kicks them out.How about electing a lady mayor?H.ROSS Sherbrooke Alleluia Editor : Alleluia! for Miss Clouston and all the other Sisters and Brothers In Christ on their stand taken for Our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ! Although self-pride is sin, being proud of being a Child of the King is righteous.Paul warned us not to be ashamed of the Gospel of Jesus Christ and since I have received God’s Precious Gift of Jesus-Christ as my Saviour and King, I will let everyone in on this Good News! May all those that are seeking, find and those that knock, the door open.If everyone who is born of the Spirit took a stand for Him, I imagine many would be surprised at the number there would be.Come on, God’s children, let us be heard ! What a joy to belong to The Family of God and how proud we should be, to be honored to be Ambassadors for Him.Sincerely In Christ, BOBBIE GAUTHIER, North Hatlev U.S.files reveal top Soviet espionage agent is aide to Waldheim ; WASHINGTON - After pressure from the Soviet Union.U.N.Secretary General Kurt Waldheim has extended the employment of an assistant who is described in secret U.S intelligence reports as the KGB’s top espionage agent in the United Nations l The KGB man is Viktor Lesiovsky.Vvho was scheduled for retirement January 4 from his post as a special assistant to Waldheim.The Soviets wanted to keep their spy in this sensitive spot, and the Americans wanted him extricated.I Caught in the middle was the harried Waldheim, who needs both American and Russian acquiescence if he is to continue in his job for a third five-year term He compromised by giving Lesiovsky another six months, instead of the year the Soviets demanded.The pressure play behind Waldheim's decision was unprecedented in U.N.history - for the sim- Jack Anderson pie reason that it was the first time the KGB had infiltrated the U.N.administration at such a high level.Members of the U.N staff are supposed to maintain their pnmarv loyalty to the international body, not to their spy organization While no one seriously believed the Soviet employees took this requirement seriously.Lesiovsky’s case was more flagrant than others.In 1978.Lesiovsky was identified as a KGB agent by Arkady Shevchenko, the top-ranking Soviet known to have defected to the West A highly classified CIA report reviewed by my associate Dale Van Atta details Lesiovsky's strange career in the United Nations The report describes Lesiovsky as "a sophisticated Soviet official who has had tours in Burma.Thailand and Australia, and came to the United Slates in 1961.‘ In Asia.Lesiovsky became close to the late U.N.Secretary General U Thant - an in' that apparently got him his job at the United Nations.Lesiovsky was and is.the CIA report states bluntly, a senior KGB official.’ More sociable than most Soviet diplomats, Lesiovsky speaks "fluent English with an American accent." the CIA reported.When Shevchenko defected in April 1978.the Russians began pressuring Waldheim to move Lesiovsky up to the prestigious position of assistant secretary general This would have given him access to far more information - and influence - than he possessed as a mere "special assistant " to Waldheim Lesiovsky apparently complained to a colleague that Waldheim had reneged on a promise to promote him.and added the startling predic-tion that if the promotion never did materialize.Lesiovsky "hopes to accept an offer from the Smithsonian Institution for a two-year research contract." How this alleged offer occurred, the CIA did not explain, but the agency was clearly alarmed: “Should this (appointment) materialize, it would give the KGB access to an important medium for reaching sophisticated American influence builders," the CIA noted As it turned out.Lesiovsky didn't get to be Waldheim's assistant secretary.and no one in the Smithsonian's farflung branches has any record of an offer being made to the KGB's man at the United Nations Lesiovsky may have been deliberately planting false information for Byzantine reasons of his own Instead of letting the unmasked KGB agent go January 4.Waldheim gave him a six-month extension on grounds that Lesiovsky s successor won t arrive in New York lor several months.So the Kremlin spy in the United Nations was given more time to create mischief UNDER THE DOME: Rep.Jim Jones.D-Okla .is now a certified member of New York City’s “subway alumni" - though regular riders on the Big Apple's underground may-well challenge his credentials, in their cynical big-city way.On a recent visit to Manhattan, the House Budget Committee chairman was the guest of Rep Steve Solarz.D-N Y, and was treated to a trip on the subway that can best be described as unusual The Transit Authority produced a special non-stop train that was not only spotlessly clean and free of graffiti - but was miraculously empty of other passengers.- Dismayed by the Reagan administration's de-emphasis on human rights, liberal Rep Don Bonker.D-Wash .struck a small blow for the cause by renaming his Subcommittee on International Organizations It will now be known as the Subcom- mittee on Human Rights and International Organizations - Some prominent Republican senators were distressed over the timing of President Reagan's delivery of his penny-pinching budget to Congress - just before he took off on a vacation at his California rancho."People will not take kindly to the idea that while they re being asked to tighten their belts, nearly $150,000 is being spent for the president to go to California, a GOP senator lamented."We don't need this." - Less than two months after ho was sworn in.freshman Rep Charles Schumer.D-N Y .is already the target of a federal investigation, according to reliable sources The 30-year-old.Harvard-educated Schumer headed a special investigations committee while in the state assembly But while supposedly ferreting out fraud and corruption, the committee allegedly became little more than a government-1 unded campaign office for his congressional race.< » WED , MARCH 18,1981 5 Business 1- fogj iiccara SHERBROOKE TRUST Western farmers feel overlooked by feds EDITOR’S NOTE: E.K.(Ted) Turner, 53, one of Canada's leading farm spokesmen, has been president of the Sas- katchewan Wheat Pool for tl'a years.The pool, with 70,(MH) members, is Canada's largest agricultural co-op.In this article, specially Spruce worm sparks debate FREDERICTON (CP) - One side calls it forest protection; the other calls it chemical addiction.For 29 years, the spruce budworm infestation has played havoc with the province’s forests despite annual aerial spraying.A spring spray program has yet to be announced, but already the main anti-spray group and private, provincial and federal forestry officials have locked horns over whether sprraying should continue."The evidence is overwhelming that chemical spraying simply increases the budworm problem," said Jean Foster, president of the anti-spray organization known as the Concerned Parents Group “It is time for government and industry to admit their mistakes and stop sending good money after bad.Three decades of spraying is more than enough time to prove it doesn’t work — it’s time to stop.” OUTLOOK GLOOMY While New Brunswick’s forest resource is being exhausted by a combination of factors that include past over-cutting and high budworm kill, 1981 is expected to produce a bumper crop of budworms.Egg mass counts show the voracious bug, which feeds on the needles of fir trees in its larva stage, has spread throughout the forest-rich northern half of the province The Canadian forestry service forecasts a high level of defoliation this year.“The forest is the number one resource in New Brunswick.It employs more people and provides more spin-off dollars than any other aspect of life here, and if anybody i thinks the budworm is going to go away and leave us alone, they are badly mistaken,” said Ed Kettela, the federal forestry officer in charge of aerial spraying operations.Foster’s group wants the spraying halted, believing the infestation will collapse on its own.A collapse could be helped along by intensive wood salvage operations, the planting of budworm resistant trees and use of environmentally acceptable bacterial sprays, she said.CAUSE UNTREATED “This constant spraying isn’t doing a thing to help cure our sick forests — it’s just an environmentally dangerous, ineffective dose of medicine applied every year to treat the symptoms of our forest problems, not the cause,” Foster said.New Brunswick's last infestation, from 1916 to the mid-1920s, ended after fires and lack of food ended the budworm cycle.But Kettela said such a course would be disastrous.“If one were to be so callous as to say, ‘well, let the infestation collapse, run its course,’ you would be spelling the doom for many communities in this province.” Sears to release debentures Simpsons-Sears Limited announced that at a board of directors’ meeting of Simpsons-Sears Acceptance Company Limited held Tuesday it had approved the issue of $75,000,000 1434 per cent Secured Debentures Series V, to mature April 1, 1996.The debentures will have the benefit of a purchase fund which would require the corporation to purchase, on a quarterly basis, up to $1,250,000 principal amount of Series V Debentures.The Series V Debentures will be offered to the public through a group of investment dealers led by Wood Gundy Limited.The final prospectus for the Series V Debentures will be filed in all provinces across Canada this week.written for The Canadian Press, Turner discusses the frustration farmers feel and suggests action the federal government should take.Hv E.K.(Ted) Turner REGINA (CP) - Settlement of the legitimate needs of agriculture is long overdue It must be achieved in the interests not only of food production but also in the interests of Canadian economic development.The "alue of agriculture to this country is indisputable.Its principals spend considerable sums on a wide variety of goods and services; their capital investment is enormous.Its products help provide work for people in the transportation industry and many other aspects of the nation’s services sector.Its contribution to Canada's international balance of payments position is significant.For these reasons and many others, western farmers want — in fact, demand — an end to federal indecision on agricultural questions.In Saskatchewan, farmers, indeed the general population.are not separatists; they’re used to devoting their efforts toward getting along with one another.They don’t even have feelings of alienation.FARMERS ARE ANGRY They do, however, feel overlooked and they are frustrated and angry.The federal government has been too slow in acting in the West’s interests, particularly in agriculture.Ending the turmoil would be simple for Ottawa.The solution has been oft-repeated pay attention to the reasonable proposals of western agriculture, as identified by the organizations that represent farm consensus.¦ ^ Tt> pay attention and to initiate the positive programs that are needed is to act in the nations's best interests.Inaction by the federal government on numerous issues of concern to agriculture is causing unrest among Saskatchewan farmers.Heading the list of items demanding resolution is the achievement of a better transportation system to ensure increased grain production gets to market.The Canadian wheat board sees prairie grain exports of 30 million tonnes by 1985 and 36 million by 1990.Before they grow by these amounts and more, farmers need to know if the railways will be ready.NEED MORE MONEY To provide cars, upgrade branch lines, streamline the mainline, double track where necessary, the railways insist they need more money.Where is the money to come from’> Under a proposal of the Western Agricultural Conference (which represents about 50 organizations, including Saskatchewan Wheat Pool) a freight rate would be established that would meet railway costs of operation.Under this “conpensatory rate" farmers would pay exactly what they pay now and the federal government would pay the rest (or “shortfall”) to the railways.Later, when conditions dictated an upward revision of the new rate, there would be discussions on who would pay how much of the additional portion.In any discussions about rates, Saskatchewan Wheat Pool’s position is that farmers continue to pay only the Crow rate as they do at present and the Pool is committed to work hard to attain that goal.It is clear from statements by Prime Minister Trudeau that the present statutory rate will remain, at least for a time, but it is not clear what future federal commitment to railway system improvements exists.TRUDEAU SHOULD AGREE Significant and welcome contributions have come from the government in the past.Farmers feel government should provide funds in the future, and that Mr.Trudeau should publicly accept this role for government.As well, farmers urge the prime minister to say aloud that his government is committed to the principle of ensuring that Western Canada will have a rail transportation system capable of meeting the needs of agriculture.Once Mr.Trudeau’s assurance is given, farmers can feel comfortable in the knowledge that details will be worked out in the best interests of farmers and of Canada.While the transportation question is being resolved, farmers believe fast action is also required by government to: —Eliminate the dual marketing system for feed grains.—Compensate farmers for income losses due to Canada’s support of the U.S.embargo on grain sales to Russia.—Control inflation.Workers victims of system MONTREAL (CP) — A worker who loses his job when a plant closes is a victim of “the system” in the same way as a person run down by a car, and should be just as well compensated, the president of the Quebec Federation of Labor says.Louis Laberge, speaking to journalists Tuesday after a three-day union conference on plants closings, said a funa should be established to pay full wages to victims of shutdowns while they are being retrained for new jobs.The fund would be financed by employers.“Someone who loses his job this way is a victim of the economic crisis,” Laberge said “He loses his job because a company wants to make better profits, not through any fault of his own.” The conference, attended by more than 500 people, approved a document which blames most plant closings and mass layoffs on companies extracting profits from Quebec and reinvesting them elsewhere in areas where wage rates are lower The document also criticized governments for allowing companies to close unionized plants, then open facilities elsewhere An important message for Guaranteed Income Supplement or Spouse’s Allowance benefit recipients.To continue receiving your Guaranteed Income Supplement or Spouse’s Allowance after March 31, 1981, Health and Welfare Canada urges you to fill in, sign and return your application form immediately.If you have any problems in completing your form, or have any questions, contact your Income Security Programs Office.If need be, personnel at the district office listed below will tell you where the temporary office nearest you is located.Health and Welfare Canada, 1335 King Street West, Belsar Building, Suite 303, Sherbrooke, Qué.J1J 2B8 Telephone: (819) 565-4950.Business hours: Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m.to 4:30 p.m.¦* Health Santé el and Welfare Bien ètre social Canada Canada Canada -Provide better agricultural research programs and more money for research.—Introduce meaningful policies for the livestock industry.MUST CHANGE SYSTEM A few years ago, despite farmer objections, government imposed a system for marketing feed grains outside Canadian wheat board jurisdiction.The system has cost farmers money.It must be discarded.Farmers agreed with national policy on the grain embargo on the condition that they were not hurt financially.The policy, in fact, restricted their ear- nings, but so far Ottawa has done nothing on com pensation.Farmers cannot pass along costs they incur due to inflation and see it as a clear responsibility of government to introduce measures to curb inflation Agriculture — and therefore, Canada can benefit from the effort of qualified researchers who tackle the many aspects of farm production and practices that require at tention.Extensive federal funding is a must.New policies and programs are required to ensure a permanent and vital cattle industry in Canada Because of the complex system of federal regulations and national and international forces that come into play in the meat industry, leadership in solving problems has to come from the federal government A further concern of farmers is that they are assured of energy supplies to enable them to carry out their job properly Government has recognized this concern and fortunately is prepared to meet it.One of the ways will be to provide funds for a possible venture by Canada’s co-operatives that could enable them to share in ownership of energy resources.James Evans Sherbrooke Trust an nounces the appointment ot Mr.Evans as Personal Trust representative.Mr.Evans has many years experience in the Personal Trust field.His many clients and friends are invited to contact him tor their personal needs such as Estate and Financial Planning and related Trust Services.You want to fly an airline that’s as professional as you are.You can rely on KLM.s KLM lias built Us worldwide reputation on professionalism.Reliability.Punctuality.Care.All things that are so important to important people who travel.KLM's home base is the most professional airport in the world — Schiphol.Amsterdam— designed with the business traveller foremost in mind.KLM’s Business Class offers special cheek-in, seating, and on-board service extras — the Dutch Touch' that can make such a dillereuce to your trip.And KLM offers Canadian travellers one more thing; convenient connections.A KLM 747 from Toronto or Montreal can be the fastest way to destinations in the Middle Last.Germany.Scandinavia or beyond.So next time, ask fora flight on a KLM 747.We've been Hying business people longer than any other airline in the world.(You can rely on KLM Cargo, too!) The reliable airline of Holland 94 rue principale, Granby, Québec Voyages Granby 372-3624 kEASTERN TOWNSHIPS a Travel Potticne 2339 King Shopping Center Tel.(819) 563-7343 Long Distança; please call Zenith 53870.Asbestos Shopping Center INC Qu»b»< ticensee ROCK FOREST TRAVEL AGENCY Inc.Plaza Rock Forest —Tel.(819)564-8055 Quebec Licensee æ fSlIT/J Voyages Trans-Ocean Travel 66 King St.W.-Sherbrooke-Tel.(819) 563-4515 Permit Ne 12780896 0298 Nearer to serve you better! VOYAGES ESCAPADE Inc.Sherbrooke 119 Frontenac St 563 5344 Orummondville 222 Henot St 477 3717 Victonaville 43 St Jean Baptiste 758 3151 Permit No 13686993 1201 Business Monday Tuesday Hours Wednesday 9:00 a m 5 30 p.m Thursday Friday 9 00 a m 9:00 p.m.3050 Portland Blvd Tel 563 7131- 563 7132 Saturday Hotdei pi a Quebec Permit 9 00 a m, 5:00 o m lam/R ages % 6 WED., MARCH II, 1981 Living Becoffi Businessmen say a prayer for work VANCOUVER (CP) - Some top Vancouver businessmen say they are better persons after 10 years of breakfast prayer meetings every Wednesday morning at a downtown office building For the last six weeks Ed Phillips, chairman of Westcoast Transmission Ltd.; Ray Loewen, funeral homes owner and local developer; Winston Stothert, head of a corporate group that includes Stothert Engineering and Stothert Holdings; and 11 other Vancouver businessmen have been studying the Lord's Prayer Other weeks, they might study a book of the Bible, or a particular aspect of faith of special interest to one member of the group Topics are varied, open and unspecified, as are prayers offered for friends, the community, government and even politicians None of the members professes to be a theologian, and all come from varying denominational backgrounds.But each shares a commitment to upholding Christian faith and tenets and applying them to relationships with family, friends and business colleagues.PRINCIPLE SEEN "One of the Christian principles is to look collectively to one another and to God for wisdom, strength and guidance," says Loewen, a former Social Credit member of the B.C.legislature."The concentration is of a spiritual nature," Phillips says."We’re not there to discuss last night’s hockey game." "A quiet affirmation of faith is a significant way to bring ourselves to a better understanding of a firm belief in Christian faith,” says Stothert.The group isn’t seeking publicity and members don't want to present themselves as special or exceptional it’s just a group of friends searching for the truth," Loewen says, ‘it’s not," Phillips says, “a Christian Vancouver Club." Nor is the group meant to be an alternative to traditional church activities "This is not a substitute for (members’) work in their congregations," Phillips says."Each one is also active in his own congregation, in his own denomination." What they get out of it, they say, is a chance to examine life’s priorities among themselves and to establish a better relationship with God, loved ones and work associates.“I don’t feel that it’s right for me to impose my ethical standards on our people,’ Phillips says.“1 can only set an example." Ann Landers7 Ï Conduct may cause sexual frustration Dear Ann Landers: Of late you have been printing letters from a number of sexually frustrated wives As a man who admires and respects women (1 have been married for 25years), may 1 offer a point of view that will probably be resented by the majority of your female readers?We men, for all our vaunted masculinity and self-reliance, can be extremely sensitive to a woman's conduct.What a woman perceives as a man’s sexual inadequacy may be caused by her behavior.Does she nag or complain’’ Does she talk too much’’ Is she critical’’ Demanding?Extravagant?When he is tired and worried does she insist he go places of her choosing?If all or any of the above is true, he can be turned off so completely that sexual activity is physically impossible.So ladies, with all due respect, if the man in your life can’t deliver satisfaction, consider the possibility that you may not be the victim but the cause.— Know Whereof 1 Speak in Modesto Dear Mod: Any woman with half a working brain cell would have to agree that you have made an excellent point.Usually I hear from women complaing about inconsiderate, unaffectionate (not to mention unshaven and unbathed) husbands who expect instant lovemaking at the drop of a verb.Thanks for reminding us that men need to be “conditioned," too.Dear Ann Landers: My husband is friendly with two guys at work.Their wives are OK, but not the kind I would pick as chums on my own.Buddy likes to go out every Friday and Saturday night.We have a standing arrangement with these two men and their wives.Usually we go to a combination restaurant-tavern that serves good food at a reasonable price There’s a three-piece combo in the cocktail lounge.After dinner the men talk business and the two men dance with each other.I sit there like a dummy because I don’t like to dance with another woman.Men cut in and they will dance with anybody who asks.I told Buddy I think it’s cheap.He says it is perfectly OK because their husbands are there.When I complain about the boring weekends, Buddy says I should shut my trap and be happy he doesn't go out alone and cheat.What do you think?— Open Mind In Wyoming bear Open: Don’t you people have homes?Why must you spend all those hours in a tavern?Break the pattern by inviting them over for a meal next week.Include another couple, somebody YOU like, for a change.The routine you describe sounds deadly.Dear Ann Landers: We named our son after my grandfather, who was a distinguished judge When the boy was about six months old my husband started to call him “Stinky.” The name stuck.He s now four, too old for a name like that.How can I put a stop to it0 — Lone Voice In O.City.Dear Voice: When the boy starts school the teachers will call him by his given name.So will his classmates.If his given name is stiff and formal, make up another nickname, and I'll bet “Stinky" bites the dust.3-DAY SALE MARCH 19-20-21 FOR YOUR SUN VACATION M Terry Velour Sun Back Dresses, White Suits • Polyester, Cotton Blouses, short & long sleeves.Sweaters, short sleeves, 3-piece Denim Suits.Blazers, Skirts, Slacks, Cord Velour Pant Suits, Bathing Suits, Cotton Evening Dresses.Skirts - Cotton, Polyester.% Off PARKING AREA, ENTER KING OR PEEL Boutique Feminine INC.235 King St.West — Sherbrooke 567-8545 Social notes Christening The infant daughter of Mr.and Mrs.Russell Perkins of Bury, was christened following the morning service of worship, on March 8, at St.Paul's Anglican Church, in Bury with the Rev.L.Westman, officiating.The child received the names Angela Marie.The godparents were Mr and Mrs.Osborne Lowe and Miss Patsy Bilodeau.Angela wore the traditional white christening dress with matching hat.Following the service, Mr and Mrs.Perkins entertained at the Legion Hall, in Bury.A cold plate dinner was served.In the afternoon many enjoyed playing cards while the children played games At night, supper was served buffet style.Angela was the recipient of many lovely gifts and currency.Angela’s godmother, Mrs.Rosemary Lowe, made and decorated the christening cake.The cake was a beautiful large cross with a stain glass window.It was given to Angela as one of her gifts from her godparents.Among those attending were Rev.and Mrs.L.West-man, Mr.and Mrs Oscar Perkins, Mr and Mrs.Reggie Thompson, Mr and Mrs.Real Bilodeau, Patsy, Donnie, Susie and Tony, Mr.and Mrs.Rejean Lapointe, Geoffrey Engagement Mr.and Mrs.Art Boschman of Grande Prairie, Alta., are pleased to announce the engagement of their second youngest daughter, Patricia Ann, to Gordon Stanley, second son of Mrs.Ruth George and the late Mr.John George of Sherbrooke, Quebec.Wedding to take place May 2, 1981 at Grande Prairie, Alfa.La Grange Vitraux d'Art mJT/ *All necessary supplies and wide selection of stained glass *All the tools required by the hobbyist or artisan ‘Custom styled TIFFANY lamps ‘Custom windows ‘Finished products for sale Give us your specifications We will gladly complete your order.Business hours, 10:00 to 17:00, Monday to Saturday Friday night tii 21:00 Evenings and Sundays by appointment only.10% discount on stained glass only, per person per order if this ad is shown, except if already getting a student's discount.4 Cemetery St.SUTTON Tel.: 1-514-538-3629 and Victor, Mr.and Mrs.Ricky Dougherty and Amanda, Mr and Mrs.Osborne Lowe, John and Edward, Mr.and Mrs.Burton Lowe.Billv-Joe and Julie.Mr.and Mrs.Robert Coleman, Kelly, Robin, Jodi and Michael, Mr.and Mrs.Lome Gilbert, Carmen and Chantal, Mrs.Betty Dougherty, Mr.and Mrs.Johnny Thompson, Marie Claude Roy.Mr.and Mrs Burton Lowe and family attended the church but they were unable to attend the dinner after.Engagement Mr.and Mrs.James Anderson of Lennoxville are pleased to announce the engagement of their youngest daughter Kathy Lynne to Mr.David Webb, son of Mr.and Mrs.Wilfred Webb of Hamilton, Ontario, formerly of East Angus.The wedding will take place June 13, 1981, at the Lennoxville United Church.Congratulations Congratulations to Harold and Jessie Patterson of Inverness, Que., on the occasion of their 35th wedding anniversary, March 18.From all the family.ACW-UCW meeting WAY'S MILLS - The March meeting of the Way’s Mills A.C.W.-U C.W.was held on the 11th, at the home of the co-president, Marion Mayhew, with a small attendance of six due to illness among the members.Reports received showed the past month to have been a busy one.Several visits were made, labels and stamps collected and sent off, articles made for summer sale, a cone of cotton purchased for knitted bandages and a successful World Day of Prayer service held Letters of appeal from Jennifer Warren and Mary Hatfield concerning the Youth Forum to be held April 3, 4 and 5 at St.Francis Elementary School.Rich- mond, were read.The ladies were happy to gr e financial support to this project.Notice was given of the annual meeting of Quebec-Sherbrooke Presbyterial U.C.W.in Knowlton on April 9.The Mission study was led by Muriel Cass who continues a careful review each month.At the worship service the journey from Jerusalem to Calvary was taken through scripture readings from Mark 14 to 16.This was found to be a good Lenten exercise covering the Last Supper.Gethsemane, Arrest and Trial, Crucifixion and Resurrection.The thankoffering meeting will be on April 8 at Muriel Cass’ home.ACW meeting COATICOOK - The ACW of St.Stephen's Church was held at the rectory with Rev Ron Smith as host, on Feb 25 with nine members present Pres Mrs.Winston Adams opened the meeting with prayer and Rev.Smith spoke about the quiet Quebec Lodge weekend Treas Bea Grady gave the financial report, and Sec Lillian Matthews read the minutes.which were adopted as read by the Misses Cunnington and Hazel Bishop The travelling basket was reported to be at Mrs.Glenda Huff's.Sent a donation to the Arctic Diocese Mrs Grady moved a vote of thanks to Mrs Laming for auditing the books, seconded by Mrs Gordon Bellows World Day of Prayer held on March 6 at 2 p m at the Baptist Church, Mrs Norman Andrews was the speaker.Mrs Amy Hudson invited the ACW to her home for the next meeting A delicious lunch was served by the host.Rev.Smith Meubles Bon Gout member G A.•46 Principal® St.In Iron! of Galarla» da Granby GRANBY — (514) 378-3919 Furniture ot good taste.S - j Polly's pointers BY POLLY CRAMER Odor in polyester POLLY’S PROBLEM DEAR POLLY — I would like to know how to remove a perspiration odor from polyester fabrics.As soon as I perpire, an embarrassing odor develops, even when I’m wearing a just-laundered blouse.I have tried changing deodorants, laundry soaps and wearing dress-shields but nothing helps.Please help me.— CLAIR B.DEAR CLAIR — Perhaps one of the following letters that was sent in answer to a similar problem that Lillian had will be of help to you.Always test anything tried on your garments to see effect on color and fabric.Good luck.- POLLY DEAR POLLY - At least five years ago I read in Polly’s Pointers a way to remove perspiration odor from the underarms of garments and I still use it with no worry of harming the fabric.Mix liquid laundry detergent and baking soda until you have a paste, spread this on the underarms of the garment and then wash as ususal.Old odors may require more than one treatment, but it will work if repeated.NANCY DEAR POLLY - More than 30 years ago, I used Borax to remove odors and stains from baby's diapers and do the same with my blouses.I simply sprinkle a little Borax in the washer with both colored and white blouses and wash on the delicate cycle.They come out fine and with no trace of odor.— MAXINE DEAR POLLY - Do tell Lillian that to remove perspiration odor I hand-rub and wash the underarms of the garments with laundry detergent and rub Borax into this wet area, let it stand 10 minutes or more and then machine wash and dry.For many years I have enjoyed this method with the pleasure of odorless ironing and wearing of clothing.— RUTH DEAR POLLY — I suggest that Lillian tries that old standby vinegar for removing perspiration odors.Soak garment in vinegar water or put a pint of vinegar in the rinse cycle.It is also a good water softener, too.— HILDA DEAR POLLY — I am a great one for sending in labels for refunds, but when trying to soak them off some jars, the jars kept floating to the top.My husband suggested I fill the jars with water and put on the tops.This really worked.— DORIS Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper coupon clippers if she uses your favorite Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her column.Write POLLY’S POINTERS in care of this newspaper.DEAR POLLY — Instead of using smelly insect repellent while working in the yard (especially in the evening when the gnats are so bad) I use a well-known skin-softening bath oil.This keeps the insects away and smells great.When finished I go indoors, jump in the shower and wash it all off.No bathtub ring and my skin feels soft and smells good.— MARION DEAR POLLY — When using a spoon in molasses, flour it well first and the molasses will roll right of without sticking.If homemade bread is sliced before it is wrapped for the freezer it is a cinch to take out a slice or two when needed.The rest stays frozen.I use one of my old checkbook covers for carrying coupons in my purse.The pockets at each side will hold a nice assortment of them.Nuts, fruits and raisins will not sink to the bottom of a cake if they are heated in the oven and mixed with a bit of flour before being added to the batter.To prevent hard-boiled egg yolks from breaking when cutting, dip the knife in hot water.— LUCILLE DEAR POLLY — We do not have a humidifier and the air in our house is very dry.I usually use a cream rinse on my hair to prevent static electricity, but the last time I washed my hair I was out of the rinse.When I brushed my hair it was completly uncontrollable, so I decided to try using a fabric softener dryer sheet.I rubbed it all over my hair, brushed it snd it was again manageable and with an added pleasant fragrance.— MRS.J.D.as your child changes.: Make a special tradition of keeping the memories with professional portraits taken at Sears 20 color portraits includes 95C deposit No age limit Photographic package includes two 8x10s.three 5x7s and 15 wallet size color portraits.95C tor each additional subject in portrait.Choice ol backgrounds.Poses our selection.This offer is effective for photos taken from March 16th to March 21st inclusive.Carretour da I'Estrie — Sherbrooke HOURS: Mon toWed 9 30to 17:00hrs Thurs & Fri.9:30 to 20 30 hrs.Sat 9:00 to 16.30 hrs Sears Portrait Studio BABIES • CHILDREN • ADULTS • FAMILY GROUPS IT ^ «0*09004 loo* Sears your money's worth .»nd more l r Committee recommends rezoning WED , MARCH 18, 1981 7 KNOWLTON - The Consultive Committee on Zoning has recommended sections of Knowlton Road be rezoned from residential to commercial Councillor Gilles Decelles, chairman of the committee recommended to the March 9 council meeting that Knowlton Road be rezoned commercial as follows: • on north side from old CPR right of way to the lot past Atlas Aluminum; • on south side from CPR track to lot 97 IP just past Brome Building supplies: • no rezoning on Knowlton Road east of Lakeside The committee also determined there was no evidence of need for a master zoning plan and if businesses need regulations governing building facades and signs, they should form a task force to recommend regulations to council.Yves Desgens, Shell fuel i./.V We’re doing it now: We’re stopping the leak widi the UI Report on Hirings.•• • f- ¦ V"V 1 .* ’» rrrÿg '*rn f \ J./ This prograni stops abuse.Not everyone who continues to receive unemployment insurance after starting a new job is cheating.They may still be enti-tied to some benefits.Or sometimes they’ve made an honest mistake.Unfortunately, a great deal of money has been wrongly paid out in the past to people who don’t report a new job.Now our Report on Hirings program is putting an effective halt to this, thanks to employers who participate.Soon, people getting UI will know they must tell us that they’ve found work and report all their earnings.Big and small companies are helping us succeed.Together, the Canada Employment and Immigration Commission and employers are detecting potential overpayments.With Report on firings, employers give us the starting date and Social Insurance Number for each new employee or send extracts from computer payroll tapes.We cross-check this information with the Social Insurance Numbers of people getting UI.When the system detects people wrongly collecting benefits, we investigate and a penalty or prosecution may follow.But our job is not to penalize or prosecute the people.It’s to pay benefits to people who should get them - no more and no less.¦ Employment and ¦ W Immigration Canada Lloyd Axworthy, Minister Emploi et Immigration Canada Lloyd Axworthy, Ministre Report on Hirings.It’s simply successful oil dealer, presented a petition signed by 65 of the 80 residents and businessmen of Knowlton Road requesting council zone the road commercial from Lavigne's Plumbing & Heating to Brome Building Supplies Council agreed to reconsider and Decelles says the committee will revise its recommendations for the next regular meeting of council.Mayor Homer Blackwood pointed out that certain properties along the street fell under the green zoning regulations of Bill 90.He had already met with the district Agronome M.Hebert who had indicated willingness to consider changes.Hank Rotherham, representing the Municipal Association, stated that the original recommendation closely followed that of the association.He suggested additional zoning did not seem to be justified by market needs and commercial zoning of areas which were primarily residential would tend to lower property values for those residents.Blackwood reported that no commercial properties were available for sale on the main street but several people pointed out that properties were available on Knowlton Road as well as on several other streets.One businessman reported that he had two properties for sale on the street.Gerry Wood, owner of the Knowlton Pub and the Lone Star Saloon, spoke in favor of controls on types of commercial buildings and on aesthetics of signs.Wood pointed out that despite one or two industries, Brome Lake was primarily a tourist town and it was important that the town present a good face.He suggested there would be greater concern for this situation if there were at least one member from Knowlton on the consultive committee.Wood urged stricter codes since the only apparent restrictions were against exposed concrete block and unpainted steel construction.Mayor Blackwood and Decelles concurred with the desirability of such regulations Decelles pointed out the need for the content of such restrictions to come from the business community concerned.+ + + Three tenders for provision of gas for town vehicles were discussed.The previous agreement with Imperial Oil had been cancelled when they delivered fuel at a higher than tendered price.Shell Oil, Yves Desgens and Petrole Lavigne submitted bids Most feeling was in favor of accepting the Desgens bid as being lowest on one type of fuel and being more likely to henor the price than Imperial Oil.However, the mayor pointed out the requirement to accept the lowest bid.Therefore, if Imperial declares price still holds, they will be the supplier.Other business: — The council approved closing of certain streets to accommodate the runners of Le Tour du Lac Brome on June 28, 1981.— A motion was made by Councillor Swift to require the installation of smoke detectors in all new construction — Fire report declared three fires in the town during February including one in the Youth Hostel at Mont Glen.— The town received one bid of $429.for 1969 Ford Van from Jacques Beauregard.Accepted.— Meeting was held March 10 of the committee for the Habitation Lac Brome - the senior citizens’ home under construction on Maple Street.Committee members are Messrs.Flynn, Poitras, Blackwood and Deborah Rotherham.Business before the committee was selection of a part-time manager and of a selection committee to select residents.On a point of privilege raised by Mrs.Rotherham, it was agreed that preference would be given to residents of Town of Brome l-ake.- Agreed to provide $6,000 additional for purchase of appliances and materials for recreation hall In Foster.— Agreed to approach federal government for employment assistance on three programs - seven students to set up summer programs for 6-12 year olds, four students to clean up and repair the municipal beach, an unspecified number of students to clean up and repair the newly established Parc Fleury, provided ownership of the land can be cleared up by summer.— Townshippers Association has proposed to provide two students to act as tourist information guides.Agreed.They are to be based at Brome Museum.— A proposal from Iron Hill to change street names was tabled for further discussion.Agreed that some names were impractical-changing Iron Hill Road to Huntingdon - as they lose their directional value.However, others seemed to make sense - changing Fulford Road to Blvd.Bromont.— Agreed to rezone the old Stockwell Lumber Yard from commercial to residential.— Joyce Hartwick of Knowlton was granted a council resolution approving her proposal to establish a non-profit day care centre in Knowlton.She will then be able to obtain provincial government approval of the project.— Council adopted By-law number 71, Demolition to Prevent Fire Spreading This provides for demolition by the Fire Department of any structure deemed to present clear danger of fire spreading.Fire Chief Jean Grenier stated that in the case of demolition in these circumstances, jurisprudence had established that insurance would be paid as though the structure had been destroyed in the fire.Philathea Unit UCW LENNOXVILLE — The Philathea Unit of the Len-noxville United Church Women held their regular meeting in the Douglas Hall lounge.Mrs.Monty Sewell presided for the meeting, welcomed all and opened with the U.C.W.Purpose.Mrs.Roy Suitor was in charge of devotions, the theme: Keeping the Lord’s Commandments and a poem entitled, Friendship is a road.Closing with the Lord’s Prayer, and the singing of the hymn When I Survey the Wondrous Cross, with Mrs.Geddes at the piano.Mrs.Lyman Rothney, secretary, read the minutes and reported eleven visits made to sick and shut-ins, with 12 in attendance.The treasurer, Mrs.Herman Edgecombe gave the financial report.Mrs.Dorothy Geddes, convener of welfare and social services for this unit, reported on the recent shipment and asked that all donations and collections for this unit be left with her, to be forwarded to Mrs.Stewart Aird for shipment in the fall.Mrs.Gail Brown reported on the World Day of Prayer Service held in St.Anthony’s Church, Queen Street, which was well attended by all local church women.Members were asked to volunteer their services for the up-coming annual spring rummage sale to be held in the Scott Hall, Queen Street, March 19-20.Members were invited to hold their April meeting, Secret Pal night at the home of Mrs.Albert Raycraft, 14 Academy Street, on April 14, with Miss Dorothy Smith, assisting hostess.Mrs.Sewell closed the meeting with prayer and a most enjoyable white elephant auction was held with Miss Edna Davidson and Mrs.Hugh Wallace in charge.A most favorable sum was raised, to add to the funds.To climax this session, Mrs.Roy Suitor and Mrs.Olive Painter served delicious refreshments, assisted by Mrs Allan Suitor.The lace-covered tea table was centered with an appropriately decorated shamrock cake, flanked by matching candles, and a social hour was enjoyed by all.OES Pinnacle Chapter SUTTON — A regular meeting of Pinnacle Chapter No.11, Order of the Eastern Star, was held in the Sutton Memorial Fraternal Hall on Wednesday evening, March 11, at 8 p.m.In the absence of the Worthy Matron and Worthy Patron, due to illness, the meeting was Border Curling Club News BEEBE (IH) — The season for the Border Curling Club nears an end with a committee planning the closing dinner on April 4, at which time league prizes and trophies will be presented.It has been a good season under presidency of Jon Kuni-holm and the ladies’ president, Vivian Cochrane.As usual the Canusa annual ’spiel marked the outstanding event, but all invitationals were a success.For a number of years a Business Girls’ Bonspiel took place the month of March but in 1980 was not held.This year, as a replacement, a Tam’O’Shanter was held and was a success, hosted by the Ladies’ Club.Events got underway Friday with a casserole supper and curling.Curling continued on Saturday and the new trophy donated by Border Petroleum was presented by representative Lyse Belknap to the winners, the team of skip Georgette Roffey, Edna Runions, Audrey Allanson and Martha Welsh of Sherbrooke.They were in close competition with Judy McCrea’s team from North Hatley, only four points apart.Other teams came from Len-noxville, Montreal West, North Hatley and Border.Saturday the ladies were assisted by Hugh Gordon, Stuart Edgar, Perry Fitch and Lucien Gagnon Where there is Mary Loiselle and Elizabeth Cass there is always music, as Mary plays the piano and Elizabeth leads for singing, such was the case during the sherry party Saturday evening, prior to the delicious dinner served.The event was so successful, they plan another in the 1982 season.presided over by Mrs.Alyce Farnam, of Dunham, and Mr.Alfred Lengacher, Immediately after the formal opening ceremonies and presentation of the Canadian flag, Miss Isabella Beattie, of Cowansville, Grand Organist, and Mrs.Doris Masson, Grand Instructor, of Otterburn Park, were introduced separately, welcomed, and escorted to the East.In an impressive ceremony, the altar and Charter were draped in memory of the late Leland Sanford, who passed away on the 21st of January A contribution to the Canadian National Institute for the Blind was made as a memorial to him.As this was the official visit of the Grand Instructor for purposes of instruction, all phases of the Chapter ritual work, with the exception of the ceremony of initiation, were exemplified by the officers.Mrs.Masson congratulated the officers on their excellent work and attention to detail.A gift from the Chapter was presented to her by the acting Worthy Matron, for which she thanked the Chapter and wished everyone a happy and successful year.Immediately following the formal closing of the meeting, lunch was enjoyed in the dining area, and the gifts from the Penny Fair were distributed WATERLOO Allre Ashton Members of St.Luke's Church Women are making plans to hold a Flea Market and Craft Sale in the Church Hall, Sat.April 4 from 10 a m.-3 p.m.Anyone wishing for information may phone Mrs.D.Wilson, 539-0712.After several months of failing health, Miss Clara Mountford passed away on March 11 at the Bailey Nursing Home Mrs Alan McKergow was in Montreal for a few days during the past week as guest of her sisters, Mrs E.McKenny, Mrs McGill and Miss Ivy King.Mrs Walter Williams and Mrs.Beulah Williams of Iron Hill were recent guests at the home of Mr.and Mrs.George Grubb Mr and Mrs, Jim Dunn spent a week at the home of Mr and Mrs.Dick Stoddard while they were away on holiday.Mr and Mrs Arthur Armstrong of Montreal were Sunday visitors of the lat ter’s cousins, Mr.and Mrs.Lloyd Maynes and Shirley.Mr and Mrs.Ervin Keniston of Gananoque, Ont.spent a few days with Mr and Mrs.Heman Wing.Mr.and Mrs.George Grubb were in Burlington, Vt., to attend the wedding on Feb.21, of their niece, Carol Jewett and Gary Francis.Mrs.Howard Smith has been spending an indefinite time in Ottawa with her daughter-in-law, Mrs.Walton Smith and grandson, Steven during which time her son Walton, has been very ill, in hospital.Mr.Bruce McPherson has been a patient in Sherbrooke Hospital, for a few days having knee surgery.EAST ANGUS Mrs.Murray Labonte The Helping Hand Bridge Club met at the home of Mrs Roy Martyn on Wednesday evening Bridge was played at two tables and prizes won by Miss Dorothy Shattuck, Mrs.Thomas Rowland and Miss Audrey Hall.Refresh ments were served by the hostess, assisted by Mrs Thomas Rowland and a social hour enjoyed.Mrs.Emily Calder of Two Mountains spent a few days guest of her sister, Mrs.Roy Martyn and Mr.Martyn.CLEVELAND Friends of Mr.and Mrs.Clarence Pease of Richmond, our former neighbours, were sorry to hear they had to be evacuated from their home due to the flood in Richmond, but have now returned home.Mrs.Molly Sloane, a recent surgical patient at the Sherbrooke Hospital, is spending an indefinite time with her daughter, Mrs.Lillian Johnston and family.Mr.and Mrs.Lloyd Oakley and Mrs.Charles Oakley of Richmond called on Mrs.Agnes Oakley, a recent surgical patient at C.H.U., at the home of Mr.and Mrs.W Macdonald in Windsor.Mr.Harry Smith of Brock ville, Ont.is a guest of Mr.and Mrs.Everett Banfill and family.In Memoriam McKERGOW, Kenneth — In loving memory of our son and brother, Kenneth, who passed away March 18, 1979.Sadly missed and always remembered by MUM, DAD, ROBERT, LEON 8.MARGARET E.PROVOST MTS.IK.20, ISth Av«.North, Shorbrook* J69 1700 S6* S2S1 /^nfîxAuthorliod Dealer / KULK \ ol Rockot Ages Vatcv / «nd Eventide Monuments with Perpetual Guarantee FREE DELIVERY IN THE PROVINCE OF QUEBEC For Melbourne and surroundings see Mr.Gordon McKeage Tel.128-1512 For Sawyervllle and Cookshirearea, see: Mr.Gordon Smith, Tel.: 889 2829 Birth HAILEY — Tu Linden and Barbara (nee Cosgrove) on March 11.1981 at 00.39 a m.a daughter, Lauren (Krystal), and sister for Bobbie-Lou.Weight 10 lb.5 oz.length 20l j inches.Deaths O'BRIEN, Charles J.— In loving memory of our dear brother and uncle who passed away March 18, 1963.His memory is as dear today As in the hour he passed away.Always remembered, MYRTLE VINCENT (his sister) and FAMILY PIERCY — in loving memory of a dear husband, Algernon Wykeham Piercy, who passed away March 18, 1980.0 love that wilt not let me go, 1 rest my weary soul in thee, I give thee back the life I owe.That in thine ocean depths its flow.May richer, fuller be.Sadly missed by THELMA (wife) BOUCHER.Emma — At the C.H.U.on March 16, 1981 at the age of 68, Emma Thouin, wife of the late Conrad Boucher, of 2600 Portland Ave., Apt 508, Sherbrooke.She is survived by her children, Mr.& Mrs.Georges Casavant (Monique), Sherbrooke, and Miss Michelle Boucher, Sherbrooke as well as brothers and sisters, Mr.& Mrs.Eugene Thouin, Repentigny, Mr.& Mrs.Edouard Thouin, Lachine, Mr & Mrs.J Leo Hachey (Denise) Bathurst, N B., Mr.& Mrs.Charles Provost (Jeanette), Montreal, Mr.& Mrs.Marcel Bourbeau (Hortense), Pierrefond, Mrs.Estelle Langlais, Montreal, Mr.Paul Boucher, Montreal, Mr.Eugene Boucher, Montreal and grandchildren Philippe and Elizabeth Casavant, Sherbrooke.Funeral will be held on Thursday, March 19, leaving the Brien & Monfette Funeral Home, 716 Short St., Sherbrooke at 10:45 a.m.for St Boniface Church where the service will be held at 11 a.m.Interment St.Michael s Cemetery.Visitation 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m.and from 8:30 a m.on Thursday.CURTIS, Marjory (Smith) — At CHU, Sherbrooke, on March 14, 1981, in her 72nd year, beloved wife of Arthur E.Curtis, dear mother of Carman (Mrs.George C.Dobbie) of Cambridge, Ont., also survived by a sister (Mrs.Dorothy Eddy) of Chatham, N.B., predeceased by a brother, Dr.Ralph Lea-man Smith.Resting at Cass Funeral Home, 39 Dufferin Rd , Stanstead, where funeral service will be held on Wed., March 18 at 2:30 p.m.Rev.R.Rogers officiating.Spring interment in Maple Hill cemetery.In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Stanstead Historical Society, Stanstead, Que., and would be gratefully appreciated.VANCOUR, Sophronia ( Brainard ) — At her home in Tomifobia, Que., on March 16,1981, in her 92nd year, beloved wife of the late Richard Vancour, dear aunt of Roy Brainard, sister-in-law of Mrs.Inez Roy.Resting at Cass Funeral Home, 39 Dufferin Rd , Stanstead.Funeral service will be held on Thurs., March 19 at 2:30 p.m., at Sacred Heart Church, Stanstead, Rev.Father Y.Malouin officiating.Spring interment in Mount St.Mary’s Cemetery.Visitation on Wed.from 3:30 to 5 and 7 to9 p.m.Card of Thanks ASHMAN — I would like to thank all my friends who called or sent cards while I was in the Sherbrooke Hospital Special thanks to Drs.Taylor, Klinck and Paulette and also the women who looked after my husband.May God bless you all and I will not forget all you did for me here.MRS.JOHN ASHMAN Ayer's Cliff cMss a son ltd ¦^¦FUflfFAl DiPEC’CmS AYER'S CUFF STANSTFAD 819876 5213 SHERBROOKE 300 Queer, Blvd N Webster Cass 819 562 2685 lENNOXVIUE 6 Belvidere St R.L.Bishop & Son Funeral Chapels SHERBROOKE Q10CCOOQ77 lENNOXVIUE *: 300 Queen Blvd N 017 D0Z 73// 74 Queen SI V! Gordon Smith Funeral Home sawyerviue 819 562 2685 / 889-2231 cookshire 8 WED., MARCH 18,1981 .H, - - Living #1__ uccoru A fish dish for the hurried and the gourmet Fish.It can be as simple or as complex as you are.On the complicated side, we present three awardwinning recipes from chefs at Holiday Inns in Canada Rich and time-consuming, these little works of art are not to be attempted an hour before the guests are scheduled to arrive.On the simple side, a can of salmon or tuna will go far when feeding a family.Most of these recipes use canned vegetables as well - more nutritious at this time of year than the ones ripened in transit.TURBOT PATE AU DIM, (Michael Ois, Executive Chef, Holiday Inn Toronto Downtown) Ingredients: 5 lb.turbot fillet I • m.brandy Smoked backfat (approx.1 lb.) Preparation: Grind turbot twice.Place minced turbot fillet into a chopper and let it work through until pasty.Add egg white slowly.Pour in cream a little at a time Eating BY PAT TRACY until well mixed Let mixture rotate until very shiny and smooth.Add the liqueur and seasoning.Shortly before taking out, add chopped dill.Slice slabs of backfat thinly and line pate mould.Fill in fish mousse and cover with backfat Wrap mould very tightly with tinfoil and place in a water bath.Let pate slowly poach for approximately 2Vi hours (325 deg F).When Stir fry fish uses frozen fillets and spinach, both easily found in the winter.cooked, cool and slide pate out of the mould.Slice with a warm knife.Serve pate with a smooth mayonnaise flavoured with sour cream, and finely chopped dill.(Serves: 15 - 18) + + + SALMON WELLINGTON (Robert Sandford, Chef, Holiday Inn Toronto West) Ingredients: (i oz.boneless salmon fillet 1 hard boiled egg 2 oz.heavy Bechamel sauce 7-inch round of inch puff pastry I crouton 3" x 2” Preparation: Dice egg and mix with cold Bechamel sauce.Open salmon fillet M>-inch deep with knife.Place egg mixture in the incision.Place stuffed fillet on crouton and wrap in puff pastry - half moon shape.Wash with egg and bake at 425 deg.F.for 35 minutes.(Serves: One) + + + BAKED HADDOCK A LA PORTUGUESE (Fernandos Campos, Catering Manager, Holiday Inn, Ottawa Centre) Ingredients: 4 lb.haddock (preferably whole fish, head on) 1 lb.onions 1 lb.tomatoes 2 lbs.small new potatoes Bay leaves Paprika Salt and pepper to taste 1 cup olive oil 1 cup dry white wine Preparation: On a buttered baking tray place whole fish, onions, tomatoes and potatoes (cut in quarters).Sprinkle with bay leaves, paprika, salt and pepper.Add wine and olive oil.Bake at 375 deg.F.for 40 minutes.Baste fish, turn over vegetables and cook further 20 minutes.(Serves: eight to 10) MAP1 For the chef with a lot of time on his hands, Turbot Pate au Dill, created by the executive chef of the Toronto Holiday Inn.FAR EAST STIR FRY FISH I lb.frozen cod fillets II teaspoon ginger 11 cup soy sauce 11 cup oil 1 cup diagonally sliced celery 11 cup sliced green onions 2 tablespoons cornstarch 1 teaspoon sugar ‘ j cup chicken bouillon 1 Ih.spinach, washed, drained, torn into bite-size pieces Hot rice 'l- lb.fresh brean sprouts Thaw fish just enough to ease cutting, about 30 minutes.Cut into strips, 2” x 'a”.Combine ginger and soy sauce; pour over fish and marinate 15 minutes.Drain fish and reserve marinade.Heat 2 tablespoons oil in large wok or frying pan.Add fish and stir fry, turning carefully, until it flakes easily.Remove and keep warm.Heat remaining 2 tablespoons oil and stir fry bean sprouts, celery and onion just until vegetables are tender crisp.Combine cornstarch, sugar, chicken bouillon and marinade.Add to vegetables, stirring gently until thickened.Add spinach and stir fry quickly just until spinach begins to wilt.Return fish to pan and toss lightly to combine.Serve immediately with hot rice.Serves 6.SALMONSPOONBREAD 1 can (7:,4 oz.) salmon 2 cups milk 2 tablespoons butter 1 teaspoon sugar I teaspoon salt :,i cup cornmeal II cup finely minced onion 4 egg yolks 4 egg whites, stiffly beaten Drain salmon juices into heavy saucepan.Add milk, butter, sugar, and salt; bring to a boil.Add cornmeal slowly, stirring constantly.Continue stirring over low heat 3-5 minutes until thickened.Flake in salmon, including well-mashed bones, onion, and egg yolks.Stir.Fold in beaten egg whites.Turn batter into greased I'/j quart casserole.Bake at 375 degree F.for 30-35 minutes or until a toothpick comes out clean.Serve immediately accompanied by tomato slices and mixed vegetables, if desired.Serves 4.SALMON KANOODLE 10 oz.mushroom bits 1 tablespoon butter 2 cups cooked macaroni or flat noodles 2 cans (7:im oz.each salmon or 1 can (154 oz.) 1 can Cheddar cheese soup 1 cup croutons 11 cup butter, melted Saute mushrooms in butter.Place cooked pasta in greased casserole.Spread mushrooms over.Drain salmon, reserving juices, and flake over mushrooms along with well-mashed bones.Blend soup and reserved salmon juices and pour over salmon.Toss croutons in melted butter and sprinkle over all.Bake at 350 degree F.for 20 minutes.Serve immediately with crisp green salad.Serves 6.+• 4* CODDLED SALMON 1 can V r-; - ’ r> ^ WAREHOUSE WAREHOUSE 121 Depot St.iV: mmm By TERRY SCOTT WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.(CP) — You don’t have to be a mathematical wizard to determine that Jerry Manuel will be one of the players on Montreal Expos’ 25-man roster when the National League baseball club breaks spring training camp early next month.With the trading of infielder Tony Bernazard to Chicago White Sox of the American League over the winter, the Expos were left with one man familiar with second base and shortstop.That man is 26-year-old Manuel, who has been knocking on the door for major league employment since 1972.The door opened for parts of the 1975 and 1976 seasons with Detroit Tigers and for six atbats with the Expos last September, but for the most part, Manuel has been Vet Bahnsen longs for Series stint By TERRY SCOTT WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.(CP) — A lot of pitches have been thrown by the resilient right arm of Stan Bahnsen since he broke in full-time with New York Yankees of the American League back in 1968.Bahnsen, now 36, was voted rookie of the year that baseball season after fashioning a won-lost mark of 17-12.He remained in New York three more seasons before spending four with Chicago White Sox where he had a career-high 21 victories in 1972.Several times that year his rubber arm performed with only two days rest "until I finally told them I didn't want to be used like that any more.” Then there were three years, 1975-77, in Oakland with the A’s, w'hom owner Charlie Finley dismantled piece by piece, trading many of the players who helped win a world championship three consecutive years, 1972-74.Finally, on May 22,1977, Bahnsen was dealt to Montreal Expos of the National League for first baseman Mike Jorgensen.For the last two seasons, Bahnsen has been one of the most effective middle relievers in baseball, winning 10, losing seven and compiling an earned-run average of 3.10.SOMETHING MISSING He has enjoyed a healthy and prosperous major league career, but one thing is missing."This is my 14th year and I still haven't been on a World Series team," Bahnsen said.Bahnsen and his team-mates came close to getting a shot at winning it all last season, losing the East Division title to Philadelphia Phillies on the second-last day of the season.Bahnsen served up a two-run home run to third baseman Mike Schmidt in the 11th inning that clinched the crown for the Phillies but the Expos pitcher didn't let it ruin his winter back home in Boca Raton, Fla."No, the pitch didn't haunt me,” he said.“I know the job I did during the year.“If people are looking for an escape hatch, and want to blame me for the loss, they can look at anyone on our team at different points of the season and find them equally guilty at one time or another.Take that one game even.I was the fourth pitcher to enter that game.” ATTRACTS PHILLIES When the season ended, the unsigned Bahnsen became a free agent, and one of the clubs seriously in the running for his services were the Phillies.Montreal offered a better contract but money was only one of the factors that influenced Bahnsen."To me, John McHale is the best general manager I’ve been associated with as far integrity and truthfulness, the whole thing," Bahnsen said of the Expos executive.“He said not to make any move before talking to him, and finally we worked something out."I felt this club was better, even though the Phillies won it all last year.I think this year we're a little hungrier than they are.” Bahnsen spent much of the off-season riding a stationary bicycle and exercising his leg muscles, hoping to avoid a recurrence of hamstring pulls that have plagued him for two seasons.Ex-Ticat Back dies HAMILTON (CP) — Len Back, 81, Hamilton’s Mr.Football, died Monday while on holiday at Cocoa Beach, Fla.Back had been associated with football as team manager of the Tigers and then the Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League since 1919.He was honorary manager when he died.Back was named to the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1971 as a builder A few years ago he was given the annual Canadian Rugby Union Award for meritorious service to football, at the Grey Cup dinner in Vancouver.a man in waiting.Perhaps because he’s been turned away before or perhaps because he’s learned that anything can happen in the game, Manuel speaks cautiously of his future.“Last year when I was called up.they put me in some tough situations for a guy not playing on the team all the time,” he said."I figured that if they’re showing that much confidence in me, they’d give me a good chance in the spring.T feel I did a fairly decent job last year.” PLAYS DEFENSIVELY Although he appeared in only seven games with Montreal in 1980, Manuel was used primarily as a defensive replacement when the Expos used a pinchhitter for shortstop Chris Speier.The move usually came in the late innings of games in the final two weeks of the season as the Expos battled for the East Division title Manuel acquitted himself well in the field, but it was to be expected.He has always been recognized for his prowess with a glove.If the Expos can get him to come anywhere close to the .277 batting average he posted last season with Denver Bears, their Class AAA farm team in the American Association, it will be an unexpected bonus.“Early in my career I was known for my ability to get big hits,” he said."My manager used to tell me that if I played every inning like I did the ninth, I’d hit .300.” Manuel earned some marks early this spring by collecting three hits and a walk in the Expos’ first intra-squad game.SETS THE MOOD The performance set Manuel in the right frame of mind, a mood he tries to retain even in the face of adversity.Manuel prepared for the possibility of making the Montreal roster by working with weights over the winter to improve muscles he uses for batting.He also tuned up his mental outlook with readings from such noted philosophers as Mahatma Gandhi.“I read mostly Gandhi simply because Martin Luther King was my hero,” Manuel said of the slain civil rights leader in the United States.Spring Fabric Sale Continues with FT.j v7) 5?.*1 A ITEMS AGAIN 1 :.£-A‘ -W m Si Too much bench time slows you down Get active.Get in shape and put yourself in the clear Fitness is fun.Try some.Rfs il » • ~ « I Mi T* pamiapacTiam * \ Jp* On Sole Thurs., 9 a.m.• SPECIAL PURCHASE! 2000 Meters of Famous Internationally-Known Country-Style "Old English Type Prints /# , ^ $ • i 100% pre-shrunk cotton.Most defects in printed designs are so slight the untrained eye would have great difficulty spotting them.A BIG selection, but they'll surely sell fast at the low Warehouse price, so shop early.We can't mention the famous maker's name, but the regular price (when perfect) is over $6 a meter ! m ll i i meter 14 WED., MARCH 18, 1981 «¦___9*1 Kcccnti Wl MEETINGS WATCRLOO - The annual Branch meeting of the Waterloo-Warden W.I.was held on March 4, at the home of Mrs, G.Cousens with Mrs.M.Plunkett and Mrs.A.Marcotte as co-hostesses.Mrs Emmett presided, opening the meeting with the Creed and the Ode.Motto of the month: “Make new friends as you travel through life, so you won’t be left alone,” Roll call was answered by ten members and one visitor, who also joined that day, by paying their year’s membership.Minutes written by the retiring Secretary, were read by the new Secretary, Mrs.Maynes, accepted and signed.Mrs.Sicard gave the financial report.A motion was made and seconded that $15 00 be sent to Prov.Office to help defray A.C.W.W.“Conference Planning,” members expenses, also to send $10.00 to Save the Children Fund.Pennies for Friendship were collected and dimes to go to Coupon No.569 project.Convenors annual reports were read: Agriculture -Mrs.Bowker, absent; Jacoby's bridge Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag Top and bottom team play NORTH ?A J 9 8 7 6 V K 10 2 ?7 6 4 ?5 3-18-81 WEST ?32 *865 ?K ,19 ?Q 10 8 4 2 EAST ?4 V A J 9 3 ?Q 8 3 ?K J 9 7 3 SOUTH ?K Q 10 5 ?Q 7 4 ?A 10 5 2 ?A 6 Vulnerable: Both Dealer: South West North East Pass Pass Pass 2* !?South 1 NT Pass 24 Pass Pass Opening lead +4 By Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag At both tables in a Swiss team match the bidding was identical.North's two-heart call was a Jacoby transfer to ask South to bid two spades.After South complied, each North jumped to game and both Wests opened the four of clubs to East's king.At table one South took his ace, played two rounds of trumps and led a low diamond.West’s nine held the trick and he led the eight of hearts.Dummy and East played low and South took his queen Now he played ace and another diamond.West was in with the king and led a second heart to give East two heart tricks and 100 points plus.At table two, South ducked the first club.East led back a diamond.South ducked.West took his nine and led that same eight of hearts to South’s queen.Now South drew trumps, discarded a diamond on the ace of clubs and played ace and another diamond.The suit broke, so after ruffing in dummy, South came to his hand with a trump and got to discard one of dummy's hearts on the last diamond to wind up with 10 tricks and 620 points.South number one was unlucky.West had to be able to win both diamond tricks and East had to hold the heart jack, but the diamonds broke 3-3 and that gave South number two an extra chance that was the winner.(NEWSPAPB7R ENTERPRISE ASSN.) Crossword ACROSS 1 Electrical unit 5 Pine tree 10 Jostle 14 Song 15 Boys Town city 16 Quechuan 17 One who disapproves 19 Cheese 20 Certain English schoolboy 21 Coddles 23 Crossword clue, for short 24 Eastern European 26 Scorch 27 "Of-I Sing" 29 Inattentively 33 Gray 35 Rill 36 Hasten 37 Sly look 38 Worked 39 Tableland 40 Village of the Tell legend 41 Momentous 42 Pugilistic weapons 43 Almond cookie 45 Land of 16A 46 Give off 47 Despot Yesterday’s Puzzle Solved: ElUiAIM Djl+tti Mil INMAIRIE IN E M B OTS 1 **' S A*l O.E.N.S E.S,S,E;S 49 Aves.52 Ancient Italians 55 Moving vehicles 57 Guinness 58 Naval “time off” 60 Metal thread 61 Claw 62 College course: abbr.63 Henpecks 64 Cleaned 65 Northern European DOWN 1 Walked in water 2 Wife of Alcinous 3 Visible part of a hazard 4 Mountain lake 5 Scene 6 Iowa community 7 Fink 8 Cut up 9 Annoyed 10 Baker's utensil 11 Where the main hazard lies 12 Cicatrix 13 Certain radio operators 18 Iron: Ger.22 Submissive 25 Differing 28 Possessive 30 Borscht base 31 Inventory 32 Certain votes 33 Astringent 34 Vaccines 35 Nile queen, for short 38 Formal objections 39 Russian village 41 Cheshire cat's expression 42 Wild 44 Linen vestments 45 Part of PTA 48 Razor sharpener 50 Displaced bit of turf 51 Odor 52 Cut 53 Inter — 54 GBS 56 Sense 59 Cheer for a matador Citizenship - Mrs.Cousens, at each of two meetings, a roll call was reported, stamps, soup labels and Dominion Store cash slips were saved and sent to Prov.Convenor and a film, “The Hoodless Homestead" was shown and local elderly citizens were remembered at Christmas.Education - Mrs.M.George read interesting items at several meetings, conducted a contest at one meeting, also a contest at semi-annual meeting and arranged to have Mrs.Marilyn Lemay as guest speaker at a meeting, her topic being A.F.E.A.S.At this meeting, eight members of Melbourne Ridge W.I were also guests Home Economics - Mrs.Maynes and Mrs.Marcotte -Read items from Consumers News and other sources, had one contest, also had Mrs George Courville as guest speaker at one meeting, her subject being Nutrition and diets for the elderly.Publicity - Miss A.Ashton, reported all meetings to the press, read items at several meetings, and one Silent Auction.Welfare and Health - Mrs M.Hilliker, read several items, had a silent auction with proceeds going to CanSave Fund, Christmas Cheer arranged for shut-ins and Nursing Home patients.One card party was held, a donation made to Waterloo Public Library, articles of handwork were entered in J.& P.Coats Competition and also at Prov Convention.Hand-made articles were raffled with proceeds going to general funds.Officers for 1981-82 are as follows: Pres.- Mrs.M Emmett; Vice-Pres.- Mrs C Bowker; Secretary - Mrs L.Maynes; Treas.- Mrs.M Sicard Convenors - Agriculture Mrs.C.Bowker; Citizenship Mrs.G.Cousens; Education - Mrs.M.George; Home Economics - Mrs.A Marcotte; Publicity - Miss A Ashton; Welfare and Health Mrs.M.Hilliker; Greeting Cards - Mrs H, Ramsay Hostesses -Mrs.Hilliker Mrs.G.Cousens and Miss A Ashton were named as Program Committee.While refreshments were being prepared for serving, Mr.Cousens kindly set up his projector and showed slides of the Hoodless Home and also come colorful ones of Florida.Our new member, Mrs.Dorothy Grenier, will entertain the April meeting at her home.EAST ANGUS - The Women’s Institute held their monthly meeting on Wednesday evening, March 9, at the home of Mrs.Marjory Rowland with Mrs.L.Wilkin, assistant hostess.The meeting was opened by the vice-president, Mrs.Rowland, and the members repeated the Club Woman’s Creed in unison.Seven Astro Bernice Bede Osol cfour ‘Birthday March 19,1981 You will develop a new set of interests this coming year.They could take you away from persons with whom you've been associated in the past, though your new group of friends will be thinking along similar lines.PISCES (Fob.20-March 20) Don't let others speak for you or make important decisions for you today.Although their intentions might be good, they may not handle matters as you would.Romance, travel, finances, luck and possible pitfalls are all discussed in your Astro-Graph which begins with your birthday.Mail $1 for each to Astro-Graph, P O.Box 489, Radio City Station, New York, N.Y.10019.Be sure to specify birth date.ARIES (March 21-April 19) In order to gel persons to come to your aid today you might be a little too liberal in promising what you intend to do for them in the future TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Guard against tendencies today to be too possessive or even jealous of someone about whom you care a great deal.Do nothing you’ll later regret.GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Nor- SURPLUS STORE 326 Boucherville, Sherbrooke Springtime Sandals END OF PRODUCTION.CANCELLED ORDERS.Boucherville St « Rauli 55 Monday to Wednesday 10a m 10 5:30p m, Thursday and Friday 10a m.to9 p m.Cirrtfour di I'Estrii 9am to 5 p m members answered the roll call by paying their annual dues.The secretary, Mrs.L.Bailey read the minutes of the February meeting, which were approved.The treasurer, Miss Marion Ord gave the financial report for the year as follows: Bank balance March 1980: $210.67; Receipts for year: $133.97; Expenditures: $249.16; Bank balance March 1981: $95.48.Mrs.Helen Hayes of the Ways and Means Committee turned in $25.00 talent money, which had been collected for the year 1980-81.The treasurer’s books were audited by Miss D.Shattuck.Correspondence included a letter from the Provincial Finance chairman for the A.C.W.W.asking for $1.00 per member towards expenses for the A.C.W.W.conference.It was voted to send this from the funds.It was decided to buy two small pincushions from Miss Margaret Rowland, to be sent in to the Q.W.I convention at Macdonald College in May.Convenors’ reports: Citizenship, Miss D.Shattuck read a letter published in The Record to General Haig, State Department, Washington, from individuals and groups from Sherbrooke, expressing concern about U.S.A.military assistance being provided to the E.Salvador Junta.Health and Welfare, Mrs.Helen Hayes read about “handicapped year being a rip-off’’.Home Economics, Mrs.L.Wilkin, read an article, “Sniffers” stand best chance of finding ripe pineapples Members signed a get-well card which will be sent to our president, Mrs.R.Joyce who is in hospital.Miss D.Shattuck was appointed as delegate to the annual County meeting in Canterbury on May 4 A tentative date of September 14 was set for the W.I.card party to be held at the Cultural Centre.The mystery parcel was won by Miss D.Shattuck.The meeting was adjourned and refreshments served by the hostesses, assisted by Miss M.Rowland.The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs.Helen Hayes.nally you re not easily discouraged, but today if you experience some setbacks you may want to toss in the towel too early CANCER (June 21-July 22) Rather than tell it like it is today, you may be tempted to embellish the truth a bit.Unfortunately, you're not a good story teller and your tales could come back to haunt you.LEO (July 23-Aug.22) This may not be one ot your better days for managing your possessions and resources with wisdom.Carelessness could have a high price tag.VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept.22) Take a firm position on important issues today.Unless your supporters know exactly where you stand, you might have problems getting them to back you up.LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.23) This is definitely not a day to try to sweep your responsibilities under the rug.Things left unattended could cause you even-more-serious problems in the near future.SCORPIO (Oct.24-Nov.22) Have high hopes today, but don't take risky or foolish moves in order to try to advance the timetable for bringing them into being prematurely SAGITTARIUS (Nov.23-Dec.21) Your prospects for success are only fair today.You’re likely to take things for granted which your better judgment caution you shouldn't.CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) If you size up situations too hastily today there's a chance you'll overlook small, but important, aspects.Don’t rely too heavily on your first reading AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.19) Business conditions could be a trifle tricky for you today, especially if you're involved in a situation similar to one which wasn't too lucky for you in the past.For All Your Needs >, 2 l 2 DENIM JEANS PRE-WASHED 2 For Young Men Sizes: 28-36 2 2 ATTENTION OPENING HOURS 2 Noon 2 Noon t 2 t 2 t 2 2 2 i 125 Sherbrooke St Magog 2 E < MARKET INSIDE ill ' A FIRST IN THE TOWNSHIPS! IES •.VP Les Galeries Orfori Exit 121, Eastern Townships Autoroute turn right towards Magog.y2 Mile 1700 Sherbrooke St.Magog, Que.Dealers - Merchants Some space available for rent OPEN: Thursday.Friday: 1 ’til 9 p.m, Saturday & Sunday: 10 a.m.'til 5 p.m.M.Gaston Labelle — MAGOG — 1-819-843-8845 OPEN SUNDAY f t LEA MARKET INSIDE • FLEA MARKET WED., MARCH 18, 1981 15 —____tel icecora On stamps BYM.M.WOODMAN I am back again and I hope I shall be able to write something for you each week.After spending most of February in the Sherbrooke Hospital, they sent me home.I am still very weak, but a lot better.+ + + Brighter subject to talk about this week.Just before I wrote my last column I offered some Canada mint, never hinged Scott *50, which is the half-cent Jubilee, for $50 each, which 1 admit was cheap.They are all sold now ; a woman bought the last five I had.+ "f* + This week I am showing you what the next set of stamps from Great Britain will look like.They are being issued to commemorate the International Year of Disabled People.There is a set of four and will be available on March 25.This means that I should receive them about May if the postal system continues to go as it is at the moment.+ + + Speaking of the postal system, we have friends in Edinburgh, Scotland, who send us the weekly paper from there every week, and this week I received four issues.One was dated September 28.So cheer up folks — you may get a Christmas card yet.That is why they want an increase in pay.+ + + No word yet from the White Ace people about the 1980 supplements I have waited so long for.I ordered on December 2 and have written twice about it, but no reply Other dealers have not received them either.I guess we will just have to wait.4“ 4“ 4“ While on the subject of supplements, albums and all kinds of supplies, I will not be able to furnish after present stock is cleared.My health is just not good enough to do this.I have done many for years and they have never bought any stamps from me, I have done it as a favour and at a loss, which doesn’t matter, but stamps I shall be able to furnish until they run out.Canadian mint and used I can supply, I am sure, for years, especially the ones from 1951 and on to date.+ + + Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man are still releasing some nice stamps and not too often — About four or five sets a year.Some countries seem to have one every UCW Meeting- rsr • • 25' \ y y r- New books for library month, which is a bother and gets expensive.+ + + If you are one who uses the Bileski Plate Block Album and pages, I want you to know that I have none left A few pages, maybe 50, and will have no more unless I need one for my own collection, which when ordering for myself, I will get you the number you want, but keep none in stock.-(- + + I have had phone calls from Vancouver, B.C., and also Thunder Bay.Ont., this week about stamps -(- + + My one-time office, or hobby room, now contains my bed, typewriter and desk.No more public.It is hard after all these years to finally cut dow n, but remember I started in 1946.so that was 35 vears ago.I have enjoyed every minute of it, more so since 1 have been trying to help collectors get items they need.Once I was looking for customers and now I am telling them to slow down.I still am keening on mv old customers and everyone is a friend.You will never find a hobby, I am sure, where you will make more lasting friends than in stamp collecting.Just don’t get taken in with these so-called packets of stamps.They are fine for children, but not once you have reached the age of 14.Be careful and work your way back with two or three countries.Your choice of course, but 1 would al-always pick Canada as the number one.+ + + If you have any questions, go ahead and ask me now before I am unable to help you.I am not worried about my stock of stamps as I know one of my sons, in fact both of them are interested, so many will be packed away in safe keeping for them.My mail from here on in will show stamps of the time when it cost five cents to mail a letter and it took about two days to get to you.Now I have to use three of them, plus two cents to get one to you in a week’s time.SHERBROOKE - Recent acquisitions to the Sherbrooke Municipal library are as follows: Index to occult sciences.Rogers, Carl Ranson: A way of being.Wilson, Colin: The Geller phenomenon.Hebbleth-waite, Peter: The year of three popes.Batten, Jack: Lawyers.Boswell, John: Christianity, social tolerance, and homosexuality; gay people in Western Europe from the beginning.Epstein, Edward Jay: legend: the secret world of Lee Harvey Oswald.Fiedler, Leslie A.: Freaks; myths and images WINDSOR — St.Andrew’s U.C.W.met on Wednesday evening, March 4, at the home of Mrs.F.Harper.Eight members answered the roll call.Mrs.Wm.Jandron opened the meeting by reading a selection, theme being “Acknowledging our Faith’’.The minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved and the treasurer's report given.A motion was made to have outstanding bills paid.These included handicraft supplies and the outdoor carpeting which had been purchased.The amount of $300.00 was voted to the Board of Stewards.Mrs.Harper was the winner of the gift donated for Thinking about those hot summer days, dive into Sears Spring & Summer catalogue Call 24 hours a day 563-9770 Credit available COME PICK UP YOUR CATALOGUE! Come to our sales-by-catalogue counter at Sears, Carrefour de I'Estrie, where we will give you a copy of this fabulous catalogue filled with a multitude of quality articles at reasonable prices.Hurry, because our quantity of catalogues is limited.First come, first served.Then you just have to make a purchase list, in the coziness of your home and order by phone - 563-9770, 24 hours a day, or you can come to the order-by-catalogue counter at the store at the Carrefour de I'Estrie.The catalogue, a complete store at your fingertips ! Simpsons-Sears Ltd.Reg or was refer to Sears prices.Shop m person, use our 24 hour Teleshop service 563-9770 or phone your nearest catalogue sales office Carrefour de I'Estrie Sherbrooke your moneys worth.and more of the secret self.Jones, Ann: Women who kill.McNulty, Faith: The burning bed.Malkiel, Burton Gordon: The Inflation beater’s investment guide; winning strategies for the 1980s.Gould, Stephen Jay: The panda’s thumb; more reflections in natural history.Peterson, Roger Tory: A field guide to the birds; a completely new guide to all the birds of Eastern and Central North America.Aguilar, Nona: Nopill, no-risk birth control.Betty Crocker’s International cookbook.Celebrate! V; the Wilson Senior Citizens enjoy luncheon a drawing.The meeting closed with the Mizpah benediction, followed by lunch served by the hostess.The next meeting will be on April 1st at the home of Mrs.D.Morey.ROCK ISLAND (DB) -The monthly senior citizens dinner was held in the Stanstead South United Church hall on Thursday, March 12, when a good number of people from both sides of the border enjoyed corn chowder and French bread with cake and icecream for dessert.The group was welcomed by Mrs.Lillian Goodwin, who also gave the blessing.Mrs.Mildred Goodall read an item in a paper dated 1909 about the “Old Elm tree” on the corner of Baxter Park, which at that time was estimated to be about 267 years old, and measured 76 ft.4 inches in height, 6 ft.3 in.around at ground level and estimated to have about 10 solid cords of wood.The townspeople decided to keep it as a landmark and give it special care.Mrs.Goodall also read an article about a skit “Country School Days” held in the vestry of South United Church some time around 1923 and kerosene lamps were used to light the stage.She read the names of the players and some were there at the dinner.The members of the Ladies Aid would like to thank Mrs Fern Dewey and Mrs.Anna Gain, LOD E, members, for their help in the kitchen.Cards were played for the remainder of the afternoon.A birthday card was passed around and signed by everyone for Mrs.Ivy Hatch who would celebrate her birthday on March 16 and was unable to attend the dinner.The next senior citizens dinner will be on Thursday, April 9, in the church hall annual for cake decorators.Cole, KC.: What only a mother can tell you about having a baby.Hobson, Phyllis: The soybean book; growing and using nature's miracle protein.Kastein, Shulamith: Raising the young blind child; a guide for parents and educators.Moscow, Henry: Domestic descendants; based on the television series Wild, wild world of animals.Saidi, Mohammad H : Female sterilization; a handbook for women.Stephens, Mark: Three Mile Island.Yntema, Sharon Kathryn: Vegetarian baby; a sensible guide for parents.Goldsmith, Barbara: Little Gloria.happy at last.Martin, Billy: Number 1.Mouton, Claude: The Montreal Canadiens, a hockey dynasty.Rodgers, Bill: Marathoning.Allen, Woody: Side effects.Bird-well, Cleo: Amazons; an intimate memoir by the first woman ever to play in the National Hockey League.Caputo, Philip: Horn of Africa.Corman, Avery: The old neighborhood.Elegant, Robert S.: Manchu.Freeman, Cynthia: Come pour the wine.Gaskin, Catherine: Family affairs.Jakes, John: The lawless.Kanin, Garson: Smash.Lofts, Norah: A wayside tavern.Rohmer, Richard: Periscope red.Steel, Danielle: The ring.Straub, Peter: Shadow land.Truman, Margaret: Murder in the White House.Bagnell, Kenneth: The little immigrants; the orphans who came to Canada.Deighton, Len: Battle of Britain.Earle, Sylvia A.: Exploring the deep frontier; the adventure of man in the sea.Moorhouse, Geoffrey: Prague.O’Neill, Thomas: Back roads America: a portfolio of her people.Senger, Valentin: No.12 Kaiserhofslrasse.Simpson, Jeffrey: Discipline of power; the conservative interlude and the liberal restoration. 2, night table, 16 x 17, iron and wood bed with mattresses Tel.567 6606 L.P.'s records, country and western American, low price.Call between 5 and 6 p m., 565 0527 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS BELANGER, HEBERT & ASSOCIES CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS 234 DUFFERIN, SUITE 400 SHERBROOKE-(819) 563-2331 LAC MEGANT1C (819)583 0611 ROCK ISLAND (819) 876 5585 COWANSVILLE (514) 263 2087 DENNIS GLEZOS Chartered Accountant 39 Cookshire St., -Sawyerville P.O.Box 85 889-3133 fiïïTjîf RAOUL FORTIER INC We Sell FJew Furniture 1026 Wellington S.Sherbrooke Exchanges accepted Dining-room, bedroom, kitchen sets, stoves, refrigerators, televisions, etc.567-3581 - ) BULWER (MP) - On March 10, the U.C W.met at the new home of Leigh and Peggy Grapes The President, Margie McBurney, read a clipping which sounds just like some of the clubs and organizations we all belong to.‘‘This is a story about four people; Everybody, Somebody, Anybody and Nobody.” There was an important job to be done, and Everybody was asked to do it.Everybody was sure Somebody would do it; Anybody could have done it, but Nobody did it.Somebody got angry about that because it was Everybody’s job Everybody thought Anybody could do it, but Nobody realized that Everybody wouldn’t do it.It ended up that Everybody blamed Somebody when actually Nobody asked Anybody.The meeting opened by all • repeating the Purpose Hilda Little led the Devotions, reading Scripture from Deuteronomy 33; verse 12, Lamentations 3 verse 25, and Isaiah 52; verse 7.Her Devotions were entitled, “March Winds and Sunshine”.She read about a sandstorm where everything was blowing away and getting buried.People were 61 .Articles wanted [92.Legal notices AYER'S CLIFF Auction Gallery now open for the season to take reservations for spring and summer auctions on location or at the gallery If you are planning an auction this season, please call now for professional prompt discreet action.Also interest in purchasing any or all estates or goods for cash.Brian Dumoulin, auctioneer, Ayer's Cliff, 838 4925.INTERESTED IN BUYING all kinds of old postcards (pre 1950), old envelopes, sheet music and magazines.Call Charles Chute at 819 875 3855, Eaton Corner WE BUY OLD GOLD, coins, gold jewellery diamonds, Skinner Nadeau Inc., 82 Wellington St,, N., Sherbrooke.gold and 8.WOULD LIKE TO rent a camper, to sleep 4 for the 3rd or 4th week in July Responsible person.Tel.563 2227 5 PIECE BEDROOM SET, 12' x 12', grape colored rug, boy's 3 speed bike, air hockey game.Call 569-6952.GRADE A maplesyrup, 4 litre can $17.00, 2 litre can $9.00, 26 oz.can $2 50.Larry Kerr, Tel.875-3501.62.Machinery SPECIAL PRICES ON Oregon chain saw chains and bars.Send us your needs and a self addressed stamped en velope.We will send you a price.Pat'^ Mini Moteur Service Inc., Stanstead.Que., JOB 3E0.No phone calls.__ Antiques - stamps Do.Cfftns PRIVATE collector wishes to buy works of arts and paintings by Canadian or European artists.Discretion assured References available.Tel.562 5416 — 566 1570.MARCH 21 and 22, 10 a.m.to 4 p.m., dishes, furniture, garden tools, some antiques, odds and ends and junk.To settle Hasting's estate.48 Turkey Hill Road (4 miles from Knowlton on Mt.Echo Rd.) Tel.514 243-6561.67.Poultry ONE SOUND SYSTEM, sacrifice at $1,900.00.Still on guarantee Tel.565-7238 after 5 p.m.CHILDREN'S CORNER, student's desks, $3.50, 5th to 12th grade, $9.50; chairs, $4.50 $6.50 & $8.50; black boards 4x5, $35.00.Call between 9 a.m and 5 p.m., 569 9286.PHEASANTS FOR SALE, dressed $2.75 per lb.or alive.Tel.514 292-5779.80.Home services WE HAVE JUST received a variety of oak desks, such as one section of drawers, 30 x 42 $65 00, 2 sections of drawers, 30 x 50, $90.00 , 30 x 54, $95.00 .30 x 60, $125.00, 34 x 60, $125.00 & $150.00 , 36 x 72, $150.00; typewriter desk, 30 x 54, $75 00 & $85.00, 30 x 60, $90.00 & $125.00.Call bet ween 9 a m.and 5 p.m., 569 9286 HANDYMAN — Painting, papering, minor repairs and other jobs done at reasonable rates.Tel.837 2928 after 6 p.m.REGISTERED licenced painters.Also wallpapering, commercial spraying, gyproc joints.By the hour or contract.Free estimate.Tel.567 5417, 562 9988, 563 8983.83.Lost UNEXPENSIVE and good quality divan, 4 places with 5 chairs, $75 00; tables 22 x 38, $15 00, 30 x 72, $35.00; fans, $10 00 $15.00 $25.00, waiting room chairs, series of 3, $25.00; upholstered chairs, $15.00; rocking chairs, $15.00; waste paper baskets, $0.50, metal frame on stand, 22 x 38, $5.00.Call between 9 a.m and 5 p.m., 569 9286.MAN'S DARK RIM glasses lost at King Shopping Center.Reward.Tel.562 5116 PUBLIC NOTICE Mr.Albert Beliveau, operator, residing at 10 Hor ton, East Angus.—and— Dame MURI ELLE JOHN STON, accounting clerk, residing at 10 Horton, East-Angus Modification of matrimonial regime Notice is hereby given that Mr.Albert Beliveau and his wife, Dame Murielle Johnston above named, actually married under the regime of community moveables and acquest intent to modify their matrimonial regime and to adopt for the future the regime of separation as to property as shown in a deed passed before Roch Coderre, notary, 48 Hôtel de Ville, East Angus, the 6th day of November 1979, under the number 3981.A motion for homologation of the said deed of modification will be presented before the Superior Court sitting in practice for and in the District of St Francois, the 23rd of April 1981, at ten o'clock a.m.or as soon as tne case migm oe heard.East Angus, the 11th of March 1981 ROCH CODERRE, notary Attorney MEUBLE D'HIER ENG.Antique reproductions, chairs a la capucine at $82.00 each.290 Queen St., Len noxville.567 7373.DISCOUNTS on classified ads will be given only when ad is paid for in advance.Send your ads and payment to -Sherbrooke Record, Classified Ads, P.O.Box 1200, Sherbrooke, Quebec.J1H 5L6 or come to the office.2520 Roy St.Lenn.-Ascot Historical and Museum Society The regular monthly meeting of the Lennoxville-Ascot Historical and Museum Society was held on Monday-evening, March 9, in the Scott Hall, Lennoxville.President Eckhard Rothe chaired the meeting and welcomed the 30 members and guests.Routine business was looked after and several interesting items of correspondence read and discussed.Among these were a letter from the Seigneurie des Aulnaires Inc., drawing attention to the historic Seigneurie, now completely restored and open to the public from June 24 to September 8; a letter from the E.T.Historical Society outlining their project on early mayors of Sherbrooke ; a letter from B.A.Humphreys of Canadian Inventories of Historic Buildings, Ottawa, requesting information for their study on early schools in Canada, hoping to locate any schools in the area constructed prior to 1930.Graham Patriquin, reporting on the progress of Vol.2, History of Lennoxville, asked for any information available on the Home and School organization that was active in Lennoxville before the establishment of the Regional School.He would also appreciate photographs of the Lennoxville Police and Fire Departments for the years covered by the History.At the close of the business meeting, John Davey, Programme Chairman, introduced Gilles Durand.Mr.Durand, a graduate of the University of Montreal, had served as Archivist in Chicoutimi, Quebec and Montreal.He came to Sherbrooke in 1979 and set up the National Archives of Quebec for Region 05 at 740 Galt Street West.This Archives centre is part of a provincial system and its mission is to preserve public records.There are records from the Courthouse for St.Francis district, Bedford, Missisquoi and Granby.The oldest records date from 1799 and are from Missisquoi.Documents include civil registers of births and deaths, notarial deeds prior to 1879, including apprenticeship papers, business contracts, personal inventories, case files on bankruptcies.The services include a resource room available to the public, document reproducing facilities, etc.The centre is always willing to cooperate with all organizations in the Eastern Townships and welcomes the public.The facilities are presently open Monday to Friday, from 8:30 a.m.to 4:30 p.m.Mr.Durand concluded his presentation with slides, first showing some of the Archives centre itself and then pictures of “Old Sherbrooke” including Wellington, Frontenac and Dufferin Streets, These were most interesting and thoroughly enjoyed by all.Mr.John Cruickshank expressed the group's appreciation to Mr.Durand.Refreshments and a social hour followed.City of MAGOG PUBLIC NOTICE 91.Miscellaneous BANQUETS and receptions, super deluxe, around an inside swimming pool with fireplace on the shores of Lake Memphremagoq.For information call Denise Brandt, 843 3313.MOTEL DES CANTONS Sawyerville, formerly Burt's place, every Friday, Saturday and Sunday with “Les Kon cord's".Sunday amateur contest, chug a log and queen of hearts Animator Michelle Ange New administration Mr Julien Pouliot Restaurant now open URGENTLY NEEDED Do you have furniture and household effects such as linens, pots and pans, etc., to give to welfare family, Tel, 566 6378 after 1:30 p m.BILINGUAL AUCTIONEER COMPLETE AUCTION SERVICES Auction House Lennoxville Sawyerville—Tel.88#-J272 ART BENNETT PROVINCE DEQUEBEC CITE DEMAGOG PUBLIC NOTICE Adoption of By-law No.753 and Revision of the electoral list.PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given by the undersigned clerk of the Cité de Magog that, at a regular meeting held on March 16, 1981 the Municipal Council of this municipal ity has adopted by-law No.753 amending construction and zoning by law No.362 so as to reduce the set back line on Cabana Street in zone CT-1, from twenty-five feet (25') to twenty feet (20') on both sides of the street and on its whole length.To the tenants of immovables located in zone CT 1 and in zone adjacent to said zone CT-1.Take notice that the list of tenants who are qualified to take part in the consultation or to vote if need be on by law No.753 is now deposited at the City Office where any interested persons may take cognizance thereof until March 24, 1981 inclusively, during the regular office hours; Also take notice that applications to enter or strike off names must be made in writing and filed at' the City! Clerk's Office not later than March 24, 1981 ; Also take notice that the sitting of the Board of Revision will take place at the City Clerk's Office, at the City Hall, 7 Main Street East, Magog, on March 26, at 9:00 hours a.m.; Zone CT-1 is bounded as it appears on the sketch reproduced in the present notice; Said project of by law is available for consultation at the Perception Office, at the City Hall, 7 Main Street East, Magog.MEMPHRF.MAGOG Given at Magog, this 18th day of March, 1981.Jean Paul Lange, c.m.o.Les Ent.LAJOIE Cookshire Inc.WINDOWS DOORS Sliding pa]j0 P'c!ure Entrance Casement - Thermos inside Renovation Vinyl Type Garage Double Hung Wood or steel Vinyl Etc Barn Windows Millwork .R.1, Island Brook Rd., Cookshire, Que.875-3933 PAYOR EVENING watching hopelessly.We are in such turmoil in the world, it seems we almost watch life hopelessly.Just as the sand storm obscures the sun, so do troubles when they surround us, but God’s love will bring us safely through.Nineteen members answered the roll call, and there was one visitor.The Secretary, Marian La-beree read the minutes of the last meeting.The treasurer, Roberta Smith, gave her report, showing all bills paid, with a good balance.We decided to send two young people to the Youth Forum in Richmond on April 3,4 and 5.Marion Laberee reported on the Workshop on Disabilities which she attended that day in Cowansville.Ideas for celebrating the 115th Anniversary of our church were given to our representative, Hilda Little, to bring up at the Executive Council to be held on Thursday night.Our Young People are sponsoring a Sunday Brunch on Palm Sunday, April 12.The World Day of Prayer Service was well attended by our members, as well as the Johnville Catholic ladies, who also took part in the service.A donation was voted for Cookshire School Flee Market on May 9.A delicious lunch was served by the hostesses, Peggy Grapes, Helen Johnston and Catherine Lowd to twenty ladies and eight kitchen guests, CANTERBURY EAST Mrs.L.MacLeod 657-4661 Mr.and Mrs.Reggie Drake of Bulwer and Mr.and Mrs.Albert Sargent of Thamesford, Ont., were recent dinner guests at the home of Mr.and Mrs.E Rudd.Mr.and Mrs.Lindsay Groom of Bury were recent visitors of Mr.and Mrs.Les MacLeod.Mr.and Mrs.Earl Coleman spent a short holiday in Kingston, Ont., guests of their daughter and family, Mr.and Mrs.Doug Carey.Friends extend their sympathy to the Chapman family, in the passing away of Mr.Tom Chapman after a long illness.Tom will be missed very much in the neighborhood by all his friends.FOR YOUR AUCTION NEEDS IN THE EASTERN TOWNSHIPS CONTACT: JAMES D.TODD Licensed Bilingual Auctioneer BEDFORD 514-248-4294 By PROPRIETOR BELVEDERE HEIGHTS Bungalow, 7 rooms, 5 years old, large lot, taxes: $597.00.Asking: $37,500, will sell cheaper.Make offer._____Tel.: 819-563-2768 PROVINCE DE QUEBEC VILLE DE SHERBROOKE PUBLIC NOTICE By-law No.2749 PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given, that on January 12th, 1981, the Municipal Council of the Ville de Sherbrooke has adopted by-law No.2749 of the municipal by-laws of the Ville de Sherbrooke, amending zoning by-law No.1071, so as to create residential zone D 40 by reducing part of zones F 6 and G-2 located be tween Belvedere, Frontenac, Peel and Marquette Streets and to prohibit commercial activities within said zone D 40 other than those listed in article 240 1, those benefit ing from acquired rights and those authorized within the recycling of a building formerly utilized as a service sta tion; that said by-law was approved by the property owners and tenants qualified to vote at the referendum held on March 11th, 1981 ; that the original of said by-law is kept at the City Hall, in the Municipal Archives, where one can take communica tion thereof; that by law No.2749 takes effect immediately.GIVEN AT SHERBROOKE, this 18»h day of March, 1981.Me Pierre Huard.City Clerk 1 r 724281 WED., MARCH 18,1W1 17 FROM WOOP5TOCK?I 1 DEAR FRIENP Of FRIENDS, DIDN'T EVEN KNOW HE AM ON MV WAV TO WAS 60NE.5AN JUAN CAPISTRANO I TO SEE THE SWALLOWS m l L / » ^RETURN." ^ YXV Jr^ m T s J cb f i » .t.£3 1 mm \ 'UlILL U)RITE MORE LATER.VOUR FRIENC?UIOOPSTOCK-P5.WHERE 15 CAPISTRANO?DO SOD Ufct.IMNOT LôWT 50C£.I LOIMDN^ J C,Ot55.0M.WOU)« bD SOD LôN^T fcRCfrNÏ '100'50 INDtOtOlveS 'too 5HOOOD MWX OP VCÜP-M1MD OOICOX ^MD PiRMlS.^ ÆÎ, IL-** 1 CO > CO O JxC Ü Q >.J3 Q.0 CC 1 1-z $ CO YOU THINK I'M BEAUTIFUL,, WINTHROP'?© IWl try HE* me U S P»l * CM Oft I THINK INFLATION HAS PUN IT5 COURSE, ANC THINGS WILL BE IMPROVING.i-w ptc^ I THOUGHT I (SOT OUTOF THAT RATHER NEATU/.(0 0) > CO -Q W UJ z CC LU a z < z < DC u.^s, You’re SoPP°ifD To WEAR THE transparent Kind, ErniE.© 198' by ne*, inc TM u S P»» 8 TM Oft THAMES )- IB WE HAVE 1 TÏMÏDRWÎIW wsrvouR , DREAM y PLEASE STAKJD |Ê 1901 by N€A Inc TM Reg US Pat 6 1M Off OCCASIONALLY X RUN INTO SO/VIE Ifa OPERA MATERS.I'D ^URE LIKE ID KMOW VUHAT IT WAS I THOOOHT I ORDERED FROM TUB FREW6H OIDE OF W mXJ.tPk I WISH YOU'D LEARN the correct way TO CARVE A ROAST C3cac5 SCOOPS M/wtucar spttCM coülp krH£ first step ohm RQAPlOACQflmK! m by Doug Sneyd ^ FOR THF p^ociwnc %RTY r»>rr World Day of Prayer COOKSHIRE - The U.C.W of Trinity United Church held their March meeting at the home of Mrs.Pauline McVetty with Miss Esther Farnsworth as joint hostess.The first vice-president, Mrs.Elke Rodger, presided, and Miss Farnsworth was in charge of the worship period.The minutes were read by Mrs.Gladys Parsons and approved as read.Mrs.Barbara Vogell gave a very satisfactory treasurer’s report A card of thanks was read from a member who had been remembered by the ladies with a gift while she was a patient in the Sherbrooke Hospital.The ladies decided to order some china plates with the picture of the church on them, which will be for sale later on.A number of ladies were appointed to take orders for daffodils in aid of the Canadian Cancer Fund, these flowers will be delivered on April 2nd.It was suggested that we participate at the Elementary School Flea Market, to be held on May 9, also that we have a SOUTH STUKELY Myrtle Hilliker 297-2535 Mrs.Gladys Hayes of Cowansville spent the weekend with Mr.and Mrs.Russell Savage and on Sunday accompanied them to Barre, Vt.when they attended the 75th birthday party for Mrs.Frank Guillemette Ken Bockus has returned home from the C.H.U.Hospital, Sherbrooke after having heart surgery.Mr.and Mrs.Douglas McLellan and daughters Dayna and Tracy of Montreal, were dinner guests on Saturday of Mrs.Myrtle McLellan and Stewart.Callers at thë same home on Sunday afternoon were Mr.and Mrs.Elgin Decoteau of Lennoxville and Mrs.Hattie Bell of Sherbrooke.Mr.and Mrs.Murray Bockus and daughters Sandra and Amy of Brossard and Mrs.Irene Poulin of Sherbrooke were Sunday guests of Mr.and Mrs.Ken Bockus.Wilbur Bullard is a patient in the Sherbrooke Hospital.We all wish him a speedy recovery.strawberry social in the early summer.The next meeting will be held on Thursday, April 9, at the home of Mrs.Gladys Parsons.Following adjournment, a guessing game was held, Mrs.Nellie Parker being the winner The hostesses served deljcious refreshments at the prettily-decorated diningroom table, in keeping with St Patrick’s day.WAY’S MILLS — The 1961 service for the World Day of Prayer on March 6 was prepared by native American Indian women who represent tribes from south, north, east and west.In the Way’s Mills area, the r bilingual service was held at 2 p.m.in St.Wilfrid de Kingscroft Catholic Church, hosted by the ladies of that congregation.Due to the mid-term break at school, seven teenagers were able to attend and share in the worship.The theme, "The Earth is the Lord’s” was indeed timely and its questions should be of interest to all, namely: “How do you act in relation to the earth, the air, the ‘fruits’ of the earth0 Do you abuse or use them0 Are you able to share in some way with those in need?Do you make your voice heard in the local and national community in support of proper use of the earth and its resources?” The leaders, Marie-Ange Lagueux and Leora Pedersen were assisted by the following readers: Jeanne d’Arc d’Amours, Suzanne d’Amours, Madeleine LeBlond, Alyce Pope, Lorraine Harrison, Muriel Cass and Marion Mayhew.Special organ music was played by Gladys Holmes, who also accompanied the four hymns.Claire Madore brought the gifts to the altar.Refreshments were served in the church parlor by the ladies of the host church.A social hour was much enjoyed, after which Mae Palmquist thanked everyone who had helped to make this Day of Prayer so meaningful.Y NATURAL HISTORY NOTEBOOK National Museums ol PRESENTED BY.THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF NATURAL SCIENCES, OTTAWA Canada SHORTNOSE STURGEON SSÉV/ROSTRUM lîie onlij ûiuJidn occurence.£>f ftii* small sturgeon, up 1c I4Î cm (aft 9m.) m UfujIFi, is m Ifie St.Jolitt nwer, New Brunswick.In the United Stiffs,luttere it i5 cJa&sified J5 endanqened, ife ran^e i5 ftv’.tiAal rvers % coastal water* frem Maine Florida.Pue mamlrj 1c pollution, Iwei/er, if fw5 disappeared from much of this range.ENDANGERED CD itew^li a rare spea*s Canada, some are caught acadentdllq in commercial fishing operations,and, according To size limitations, mag be marketed.Recommendations 'fer* protection include pollution Controls, larger gill net mesh Size S- the use of traps instead of q,U nets.FOR FREE REPRINT WRITE TO THE MUSEUM Jenny’s arm didn’t cost Süooaooo fbutitcost enoufihJ SLuSfi JUi: mi 4., Jenny Dubeau is one of our CHAMPS a member of our Child Amputee Program.Jenny knows bionic arms exist only on TV.This year CHAMP will buy Jenny the next best thing an electronic arm called a myo-electric.It will cost $6,000 It won’t be bionic, but it will look and function much like her sound arm.It will give her the chance we think she deserves to live a normal life Health plans won’t buy her a myoelectric.But we will .using your Key Tag donations.The War Amps .run by amputees for amputees A With to call ut?Dial toll frea: Metro Toronto resident»: (416) 488-0600 The War Amputations of Canada Key Tag Service Area codes 519, 613, 705: 1-800-268 8821 140 Merton Street, Toronto, Ontario M4S 1A5 All other codes: 1-800-268-8917, Charitable Institution Registration number 0R86831-09-13 • available in tvtry alort - *omn era ciaaranca itama and at !*«•»* RdCM.will Mil fast.So plaaaa don't blame lha managar If ha it add out of tha Itam you want Bui doni atop looking — H'a worth tha hunl visit all tha Radio Shack storat In ybur araa All Hams ara tub|act to prior aata Moil carry lha ragular Radio Sha^k guaranta# w# kra not MaMa tor typographical arrort.^ k .All raglatarad Iradamarkt ara tha proparty of Tandy Corporation, Tandy Ittftrnnifa llinHod baing a raglatarad utar *0-2121 6995 *8., ¦9n0l I Consult the white pages for the Radio Shack store nearest you £*dbSitic * ’ b,3ci( \
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