The record, 10 juin 1988, vendredi 10 juin 1988
Weekend I Hi v l lieiicn.• «uuiiih i with f iuk \ t u & fa Births, deaths .12 Classified .8-9-10 Comics .11 Editorial .4 Environment 5 Farm & Business .7 Living .6 Sports .13-14 Townships .3 In Townships Week this week: North Hatley’s The Piggery has a summer season of exciting plays in store for local and Montreal audiences and Tadeusz writes about those nasty pear thrips.Inside Environment Quebec is going to court to close Fitch Bay marina.Page 3.A $100 thousand face lift is changing the look of West Bolton's Brill Church.Page 2.In sports, a profile of local body builder Karen Hornby.Page 14.Weather, page 2 Sherbrooke Friday, June 10, 1988 50 cents ‘They had no acceptable answers** Ciaccia unhappy with CHUS on Slowpoke By Rita Legault SHERBROOKE — Following a meeting Thursday with representatives from the Centre Hospitaller Universitaire de Sherbrooke (CHUS), Energy Minister John Ciaccia says he is not satisfied that the hospital needs to install a 10-megawatt nuclear reactor to produce isotopes it claims it needs for nuclear medicine.The CHUS announced April 27 it plans to build a $7 million nuclear reactor to produce radio-isotopes and to heat the hospital.The CHUS, a leader in nuclear médecine in Canada, said at the time it was mostly interested in the reactor for “scientific reasons” — that is to pi-oduce radioactive isotopes for nuclear medicine and research.But that announcement was contradicted what the CHUS had said earlier.The hospital first said the Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd thermal reactor was to avoid doubling heating costs in the fall when Hydro Quebec ends a program which supplies surplus electricity to institutions.AECL SUBSIDIES In a phone interview from Quebec City, Ciaccia said he is unhappy with AECL subsidies the reactor will bring the CHUS.He said they represent $300,000 a year compared to the cost of heating with natural gas.He said if the CHUS were being offered the energy at its real costs they couldn't afford it.AECL is so anxious to build the nuclear reactor in Sherbrooke that the Crown corporation has offered to build and operate it at no cost to See CHUS.Page 2 No language veto for provinces — Mulroney Hands-on art studies By Penny MacRae QUEBEC (CP) — Prime Minister Brian Mulroney said Thursday there is no question of giving the provinces a veto over minority language rights in Canada.“Nobody has a veto over my right as prime minister to come to the defence of the English-speaking minority in Quebec or French-speaking minorities elsewhere,’’ Mulroney told a news conference where he was accompanied by Premier Robert Bouras-sa.At the same time, Mulroney sought to reassure Quebec that his government’s bilingualism bill does not threaten the province’s survival as a French-speaking society.‘ Tt is not our intention to infringe on the rights of anyone,’’ he said.The Conservative government recognizes that the Quebec legislature has a clear, historical responsibility to ensure the future of French language and culture, said Mulroney, whose party faces a byelection test later this month in Quebec.At a private meeting later with Mulroney, Bourassa said he insisted Quebec could not be considered in the same “symmetrical” light as the other provinces when it comes to protecting its anglophone minority, as English is dominant in the rest of the country.Quebec maintains such an interpretation is implicit in the recognition of Quebec as a distinct society in the Meech Lake constitutional accord.ACCEPTED DEMAND Earlier this week Lucien Bouchard, federal secretary of state, accepted a Quebec demand that Ottawa seek the province’s approval for future programs to promote English in the province but said the federal government would have the final word.Bouchard said the federal government would work out framework agreements with Quebec and the other provinces before applying the proposed bilingualism bill in their jurisdictions.Bouchard said he believed that language rights should not be interpreted symmetically across the country.Mulroney did not use the same terms, but underlined he believed “the backdrop must always be the guarantee of the survival of the only French-speaking majority province in Canada and in North America.” Bill C-72 revamping the Official Languages Act commits Ottawa to “enhance the vitality and support the development of English and French linguistic communities” across the country.The pledge by Bouchard, who is seeking a seat in the June 20 byelection in the Lac-Saint-Jean riding vacated by Tory MP Clement Cote, was intended to calm Quebec’s fears the legislation might undermine its language law making French the official language.But the federal Liberal Opposition has demanded that Bouchard appear before the Commons committee studying the new Official Languages Act so that he can explain his remarks.The federal Liberals contend Bouchard went far beyond what is in the bill in his statements but Mulroney disagreed.“I think what Mr.Bouchard was probably indicating was what we have been doing in other areas,” said Mulroney, who noted Ottawa is already working out a plan with Saskatchewan to assist its French-speaking minority.Three prisoners on the run after gunfight with guards LAVAL (CP) — Three prisoners grabbed a guard as a hostage, wounded another in one of several gunfights and used a forklift and a garden hose to get over a high wall in a wild escape on Thursday from one of Canada’s most notorious prisons.The three men, two of whom were believed injured in the gun-fights, completed their getaway by commandeering a car and taking its driver hostage outside the Laval Institute, a maximum-security penitentiary north of Montreal.The hostages — guard Therese Gagne and an unidentified woman motorist — were found unharmed three hours later, about 30 kilometres southeast of the prison.They told police one of the convicts was shot in the elbow and another in the shoulder, said Const.Andre Blanchette, a Quebec provincial police spokesman.The injured prison guard, Pierre Blouin, was shot in the shoulder and leg, said Paul Fournier, the institute's assistant director.Blouin was reported out of danger, Fournier said.The prisoners — Rene St-Amaud, 26, serving 12 years for armed robbery, his brother Pierre, 24, serving seven years for robbery, and Robert Henley, 29, serving life for murder — could not be found despite extensive police searches in Laval, Montreal and communities south of Montreal, said Blanchette.“They could be anywhere, including the United States,” Blanchette said, adding there was a one-hour delay between the time the hostages were released and the time they found a telephone to call police in Candiac, 50 kilometres north of the Canada-U.S.border.They said they had to walk through fields before they were able to contact authorities from a farmhouse.The escape began as Gagne, in her 30s, was returning to her post after checking out a disturbance ; in one of four workshops she s guards from a tower.She was overpowered after inmates climbed up on a forklift that was in a workshop and cut through a wire mesh.They then grabbed her rifle and revolver and took her hostage as other guards went to help, said Fournier and Pierre ) Chapleau, an official with the ) union that represents the guards.After a brief exchange of gun- j fire, the prisoners drove the for- | klift to the perimeter of the prison ; wall, threw down a 12-metre-long i hose and descended with Gagne • before they all ran off, said Chapleau.Chapleau said Blouin, posted in | a tower on the wall surrounding the prison, was shot at “whene- | ver he popped his head out to see i what was happening.” A few minutes later, the priso- \ ners and Gagne were spotted by s two guards who were searching a ; truck belonging to a courier ! company.Another gunfight ensued between the guards and two ) of the prisoners, said Yves Dube, the driver of the truck.“I didn’t hang around to see j what happened, but I heard about j 30 to 40 shots,” Dube said.The convicts then stopped a | passing car.took the driver hos- j tage along with Gagne and hea- j ded toward Montreal, Fournier j said.Carole Gattiker spends volunteer time with students at North Hatley elementary school teaching art through the use of literature and poetry.Students are free to create whatever they want through ‘interpretations of selected use.’ Each 35-minute lesson deals with a different technique of art.‘It's a RECORIJ/GRANT SIMEON hands-on experience, says Gattiker.Some oj the best student work is on display at North Hatley Library.Claying hide-and-seek with the photographer are three of the young artists, (left to right) Graden Johann, Taurie Wright and Carl Monk.Bourassa’s powerful vision upheld by Court By Peter Lowrey QUEBEC (CP) - A contract is a contract, Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa said Thursday, and the one governing Churchill Falls hydroelectric power won’t be reopened.The premier’s made the comments at an impromptu news conference after the Supreme Court of Canada rejected Newfoundland’s claim to a greater share of the electricity from Churchill Falls in Labrador.However, Bourassa hinted that Newfoundland might get a better shake on the Churchill Falls contract if it joins with Quebec in building new power projects on rivers that flow through both their territories.The court, in a 7-0 ruling on an appeal heard a month ago, gave few reasons for its decision.Newfoundland had challenged an electricity-sharing formula worked out in the 1960s when Hydro-Quebec, Quebec’s provincial utility, financed the Churchill Falls project, built on Newfoundland territory.Newfoundland eventually found the small amount of power it was allotted insuffi- cient.WON’T REOPEN “So a contract is a contract,” Bourassa told reporters.“Wedon’t want to reopen the contract as such because that would create a precedent.” Bourassa referred to his book Power from the North, written several years ago, where he presented his vision of vast hydroelectric developments supplying the power needs of the 21st century.“We are open to discuss with the government of (Newfoundland Premier Brian) Mr.Peckford if we could have, as I wrote in my book a few years ago, a joint development.Then the sharing of the profits could be taken into account,” he said.He said he has already mentioned the possibility of joint developments to Peckford last November at a conference in Toronto.Asked if that meant that Newfoundland would get more of the Churchill Falls profits, Bouras- sa said, “We will see, we will have to see the contract, we will have to discuss the conditions.Bourassa said any joint developments would be on rivers common to the two provinces.We’ve had some informal talks.there are many issues involving Quebec and Newfoundland,” he said, adding that there are almost continuous negotiations between Hydro-Quebec and Newfoundland.Newfoundland’s last hydro battle ends By Gerard McNeil OTTAWA (CP) — Newfoundland reached the end of the legal line Thursday as the Supreme Court of Canada rejected the province’s claim to a greater share of hydroelectric power from the Churchill Falls development in Labrador.AH Churchill Falls power is contracted to Hydro-Quebec and the Supreme Court ruling ended any hope in St.John’s of getting a profitable chunk through court action.The court took less than five weeks to dispose of Newfoun- dland’s appeal in a three-paragraph ruling.The seven judges who heard the appeal May 3-5 said simply that they agree with the Newfoundland Court of Appeal, which said it wouldn’t be “economic orfeasible-”to force Churchill Falls (Labrador) Corp.Ltd.to supply 800 megawatts of power annually to the province.The case arose in 1976 after the Newfoundland cabinet passed an order-in-council requiring Churchill Falls to supply the power.“Obviously, it was the last signi- ficant legal challenge that we had,” Premier Brian Peckford told reporters in St.John’s."It has been ongoing for 12 years so I’m extremely disappointed.” Peckford said the ruling means that political attempts to get a better deal for Newfoundland will be stepped up.In Quebec City, Premier Robert Bourassa said he wasn’t surprised by the Supreme Court ruling.‘ ‘ I hope that this does not prevent a political agreement with Newfoundland,” Bourassa said.“We’re still ready to negotiate.Police Commission recommends Cosset be fired By Felicity Munn MONTREAL (CP) — A Montreal policeman acquitted of manslaughter in the shooting death of an unarmed black teenager should be fired from the force, the Quebec Police Commission recommended Thursday.Const.Allan Gosset’s actions during the arrest of Anthony Griffin, 19, were “negligent, thoughtless and lacking in vigilance and judgment,” the commission said in a report that followed a three-week inquiry.Cosset shot Griffin in the forehead after the teenager obeyed a police order to halt as he tried to flee custody outside a west-end police station last Nov.11.Gosset has said his revolver went off accidentally.The 16-year police veteran was later acquitted of manslaughter in the shooting.The acquittal, which the Crown is appealing, enraged Andre outraged by bank service charges OTTAWA (CP) - A 62-year-old widow seeking change for a $20 bill so she could do her laundry was charged a $2 service fee by the Bank of Nova Scotia this week.The bank, after learning the issue was being raised in the Commons, admitted it made a mistake and has promised that Clara de Gruchy will get her money back.But the incident caused a row in the Commons on Thursday anyway.Consumer Minister Harvie Andre said he found the incident outrageous, “particularly if there wasn’t a big sign that said ‘we charge for making change.” And the minister suggested consumers should boycott the Sco-tiabank.“If I were that customer, I wculd have no further dealings with that bank and I suggest other customers takethe same action,” Andre told the Commons.The white-haired Ottawa widow said in an interview she went to the bank Monday because she needed quarters to do her laundry.That, incidentally, was also the same day that the Commons fi- nance committee was releasing its scathing report into what it felt were unfair banking service charges.Although de Gruchy has an account at another Bank of Nova Scotia branch, something which she told the teller, the branch to which she went for change still charged her a $2 service charge.“I didn’t think it was right,” said the soft-spoken de Gruchy.“I was too tired from walking” to put up much of an argument with what she described as two determined tellers.black community leaders who accused the 4,500-member Montreal police force of racism.However, the three-member po-.lice commission said it could find no evidence the shooting was racially motivated.Gosset, who was suspended without pay after the shooting, is collecting unemployment insurance.The commission said Gosset, 38, violated police procedures in several ways.He failed to search the detainee to see whether he was armed, he didn't handcuff Griffin even though he had been told the teenager was violent and he failed to “take all reasonable steps” to prevent Griffin’s escape.Gosset pointed his revolver “without justification” and used unjustified force” in the incident, the commission concluded.The final recommendation was that Gosset be dismissed from the force.1 i 2—The RECORD—Friday, June 10, 1988 The Townships Rocard ‘A hell of a lot more than I ever thought’ — owner West Bolton’s Brill Church is back as $100,000 facelift nears By Roy MacLuren church are almost complete.has a farm within walking distance WEST BOLTON — Renovations The landmark’s owner Vincent of the church, estimates it will be to West Bolton’s historic Brill Prager, a Montreal lawyer who ready for use within the next 1Ü - ; « MM WM K «,-t .C \’ mmm X-'j.-X days.What it will be used for he’s still not sure.The municipality of West Bolton has already moved its office into one corner of the former church and Prager has toyed with the thought of making the rest into an art gallery to display the work of his grandfather Joseph Oppenheimer.On the other hand he might turn it into a country restaurant, or simply rent it out as a home.Prager had the church moved Qd m mmm.West Holton’s Brill Church is getting a $100,000 facelift thanks to new owner Vincent Prager and neighbor Fred Kichenherger.away from the road and onto a new foundation earlier this year after he discovered the original foundation was in need of extensive repairs.According to Fred Eichenber-ger, a West Bolton farmer helping to restore the church, there was some opposition to the move.“At first some people weren’t happy.People are kind of atached to it there.It’s a landmark," he said."But now they still have the Brill church, it’s just moved back a little bit.” Prager has tried to keep the original flavor of the church as much as possible despite having added a basement, a second floor, a new foundation, a new roof, electricity, plumbing, insulation, and thermal-pane windows.“There was a lot of concern that I not change its character and I’ve tried to keep it as much like it was as possible,” Plager said.“For example with the windows it would have been much easier to just put in normal ones.Instead we kept the originals and had someone in Sutton put in thermal-panes.” There has been a church on the site since the 1880s, although the present building was built in 1941 as a replacement for the original which had burnt down.The Brill church was named after a West Bolton settler who dona- Economics, culture, sports, technology Charest comes back pleased with signed deals from official trip completion ted the land.It was first a Methodist church, then became United when the Methodists.Congregatio-nalists, and some Presbyterians joined together in 1925.It was forced to close in 1955 because of a declining congregation.Prager bought the church two years ago from the son of Richard and Margaret Angus, who once owned the farm next to the church property.The Anguses kept the church after they sold the farm and are buried in a small cemetery next to the original foundation.AFRAID OF COST The previous owner offered to sell to the municipality but West Bolton refused because council was afraid of the cost of restoration, Prager said.“It’s ended up costing a hell of a lot more than I ever thought it would,” he added.“It had to be moved out of its foundation but once you start doing that you keep going and going and going.” Prager estimates it will cost him at least $100,000 by the time he has finished.“Everybody seems to like it now,” said part-time contractor Eichenberger.“The local people, even if it belongs to somebody else, it’s still their church.Some of them used to come here.It will always belong to them in a way.” to Morocco By Rita Legault SHERBROOKE — Sherbrooke MP and Minister of State for Youth and Fitness and Amateur Sport Jean Charest says his recent official trip to Morocco was well worth the time and money.At a meeting with local media yesterday Charest outlined the many deals he signed with his Moroccan counterparts, including preparations for the World Francophonie games to be held in Morocco in 1989.Charest said Morocco is interested in strengthening its economic and cultural ties with Canada and that this country can only benefit from exchanges with the North African country.“This is important for Canada because it represents for us the port of entry into African markets,” Charest said.TECHNOLOGY TOO As well as signing bilateral agreements with Morocco for sport exchanges, Charest also met Morocco’s prime minister and employment minister to discuss possible technical exchanges.Among other projects was a $300 million deal with Bell Canada which Charest said will likely be signed in the next few weeks.The Canadian utility would supervise rebuilding Morocco’s communications system, Charest said.Among bilateral agreements singned between Charest and the Moroccan sports minister are deals for Canada to train in Moroc- co and vice-versa, with teams from Morrocco coming to train at Canadian universities.The two countries also signed an anti-drug agreement and Canada promised technical assistance for the organization of athletic events.FIRST GAMES As president of the Francophonie (French-language countries) ministers’ conference on sports and youth, it is up to Charest and Canada to organize the first athletic games, planned at the summit of francophone nations in Quebec City last fall.“The francophone games are the most visible element of all the agreements concluded at the summit,” Charest said.Canada has expanded its finan- cial contribution to the games from 25.5 per cent (about $15 million) to 30 per cent, he said.France, largest nation in the French equivalent of the British Commonwealth, is contributing 35 per cent.“Tradition dictates that France’s contribution be ten per cent more,” Charest said.“This shows the Canada’s important commitment to the success of the games.” SPORTS PLUS The games will include competitions in track and field, men’s soccer, women's basketball and mens’ and women’s judo as demonstration sports.But the games will not be limited to athletic events.There will also be competitions in the arts — per- forming arts like signing and dance as well as visual arts and a video contest.Canada is also taking care of other organizational details such as promoting the games, planning radio and televison coverage and seeking private sponsors for events.There are 28 nations in the francophone commonwealth but the games are open to all French-language nations — about 48, Charest said.The largest delegations wil come from Canada, France and Belgium, he added."Our goal is to have the largest number possible of participating nations at the first edition of the Francophone games.” Jean Charest.A port of entry into Africa."HUS will have to produce better answers, says Energy Minister Ciaccia Continued from page I the hospital.“No one has justified the needs for thatdegree of subsidy," Ciaccia said.“Especially when another Quebec corporation is offering the same rate as the surplus-energy program Hydro has discontinued.He says the hospital is not really penalized and c an still heat the hospital for the same cost with natural gas.Assisting Persons lend a hand SHERBROOKE (RM) —A group of Eastern Townships health and social workers has formed an organization to help with care of the handicapped, elderly, and anyone who needs medical attention, supervision or help.The Banque de Personnes Ressources de l’Est rie (the Eastern Townships Bank of Assisting Persons) was launched at a press conference Thursday.Largely the brainchild of Colette Perron, a Youville Hospital worker who is group president, the organization will do anything from providing a nurse to help with injections to providing supervision for sufferers of Alzheimer’s and helping the elderly move.All members of the group must take an English language course.“We aren’t going to make them be able to have a long conversation in English but just so they can understand what the people want,” said Perron.There are several English-speaking members of the group already.“We guarantee that our clients will get professional help,” said Perron.All members are required to take a home care worker course before they can join.The course will be given in English at Bishop’s University later this year, she said The group will charge a fee — $8 an hour for a helper during the #1__ttgl mam George MacLaren, Publisher.569-9511 Randy Kinnear, Assistant Publisher.569-9511 Charte» Bury, Editor.569-6345 Lloyd G.Schelb, Advertising Manager .569-9525 Richard Lesaard, Production Manager .569-9931 Mark Gulllette, Press Superintendent .569-9931 Debra Waite, Superintendent, Composing Room.569-4856 CIRCULATION DEPT.819-569-9528 KNOWLTON OFF.: 514-243-0088 Subscriptions by Carrier: weekly: $1.80 Subscriptions by Mail: ‘Canada: 1 year- $69.00 6 months- $41.00 3 months- $28.50 l.month- $14.00 U.S.& Foreign: 1 year- $140.00 6 months- $85.00 3 months- $57.00 1 month- $29.00 Back copies of The Record are available at the following prices: Copies ordered within a month of publications: 60c per copy.Copies ordered more than a month after publication: $1.10 per copy.Established February 9, 1897, incorporating the Sherbrooke Gazette (est.1837) and the Sherbrooke Examiner (est.1879).Published Monday to Friday by The Record Division, Groupe Québécor Inc.Offices and plant located at 2850 Delorme Street, Sherbrooke, Quebec, J1K1A1.Second class registration number 1064.Member of Canadian Press Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulation The CHUS has signed a deal with Gaz Métropolitain to supply the hospital with natural gas for heat while awaiting a green light from the Atomic Energy Control Board, a provincial-federal environment to the needy night, $10 during the day, $12 an hour for an auxiliary nurse qualified to do everything except administer intravenous injections, and $15 an hour for a licenced nurse.For people who are unable to afford the fee, there will be five workers on a grant from the provincial government and who will be available free of charge.“Our group is young.We re like an egg and we’re going to hatch and expand,” said member Marie Thibault.“There is definitely a need for this kind of service.It’s been asked for and now it’s here,” Thibault said.The organization’s phones will be manned 24 hours a day in case of emergency.For more information phone 821-2411 from 8 a.m.to 4 p.m.committee and the Quebec cabinet.Ciaccia qualified his meeting with CHUS director general Normand Simoneau as “interesting” and said it clarified that the hospital doesn’t need a reactor.“They had no acceptable answers," he said.“They obviously don’t need a 10 megawatt reactor.” John Ciaccia.Still at ‘persuasion stage.’ Ciaccia said the proposal has two important aspects — radioisotopes for nuclear medicine and heating.He said the hospital doesn't need a 10-megawatt nuclear reactor for the production of radio-isotopes.“I indicated very clearly, that I could not accept that there would be that degree of subsidy if nuclear research is their goal,” Ciaccia said.“We can try and persuade those in authority that if there are other ways of producing isotopes, then they should find those ways.” “We are still at the persuasion stage,” said Ciaccia.“There are many other steps to go through before the program can be put in place.” “For the time being the people at the CHUS and at AEC1 are fully aware of the position of the energy ministry and the government of Quebec,” Ciaccia said.“We cannot accept a project of this nature if it would displace other forms of energy by the injection of such subsidies.” Ciaccia said he would rather persuade both AECL and the CHUS to seek other ways of obtaining isotopes and go to either Gaz Métropolitain or Hydro Quebec for energy.Ciaccia said that if and when the hospital switched off natural gas it would be at the expense of other users.Gaz Métropolitain is run strictly on a cost basis, he said.It gets a guaranteed return on investment and the more gas the company can sell the better the price for consumers.Taking away the $900,000 — the yearly cost for heating the hospital with gas until it gets the nuclear go-ahead — would mean a big increase for other natural gas users, Ciaccia said.“The door was not closed to further discussions,” Ciaccia said.“They know our objections and I hope they will come back to me.” Asked what he would do if the CHUS ultimately gets the reactor approved, Ciaccia put on skates.“If we ever reach that bridge — not that I will jump off it then — but we will have to cross it when we get there,” Ciaccia said.“I am hopeful reason will prevail.” Weather Today will be sunny with increasing cloudiness in the afternoon.A high of 18.The forecast for Saturday is sunny with cloudy periods.The low will be 8 and the high 21.Doonesbury BY GARRY TRUDEAU 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IT'S GO THROUGH ONLY YOU! THIS EVERY MORNING.W1 3=> k The RECORD—Friday.June 10.1988—;t The Townships —______ttej ftttscara Still open with no permits, but ‘it's nobody's business' — owner Larkin Fitch Bay marina: Environment Quebec wants court to close it down By Roy MacLaren SHERBROOKE — Environment Quebec is going to Superior Court to force the closing of an unlicensed marina in the ecologically fragile 'Narrows' of Fitch Bay.The ministry has been forced to take legal action because owner Lawrence Larkin is ignoring more gentle warnings, says government lawyer Pierre Renaud The ministry sent a legal warning ordering him to have his docks out of the water within 15 days, said Renaud.Larkin, also owner of Deauville's Marina 2000, received the letter on May 19.As of yesterday the marina was still in place.Pierre Henri, Environment Quebec official in charge of the marina case, visited Fitch Bay from his Montreal office on Wednesday to confirm that Larkin had not removed the docks.SUPERIOR COURT The next step is to obtain a Superior Court injunction forcing Larkin to remove the marina until the case is heard in court, Henri said.According to lawyer Renaud, Larkin's docks contravene article 22 of Quebec’s Environmental Quality Act.He failed to obtain the proper permits before starting construction of the docks last summer.Larkin also broke the provincial Waterways Act by failing to get permission to build on the provin-cially controlled lake bottom, Henri said.He faces fines of up to $30,000 a day if he is convicted of breaking the environment laws.Obtaining the injunction could take up to two weeks depending on whether Larkin co-operates, Renaud said.But that prospect seems unlikely.The marina owner refused to speak with The Record but in an interview earlier this week with The Stanstead Journal, Larkin claimed to have received an extension on the court order.He would not say who he got the extension from.‘NOBODY’S BUSINESS' "It's nobody’s business from who, but I have an extension and I’m taking advantage of it," he told the Journal.Environment ministry officials refute Larkin's claim “I have never heard of that," said Pierre Henri.He said any extension “certainly wasn’t from me or Pierre Renaud and our legal ser vices.” Stanstead Township Mayor Eric Evans says the matter is now out of the municipality's hands."We re out of the picture, that's between the Environment and him (Larkin»," Evans said."Originally we approved it (the marina» because we had no bylaws at the time," Evans added."But that was on the condition the Environment approved it too.If they did, we’d go along with it." 18 MOTORBOATS Larkin’s installation can accomodate up to 18 motorboats in the 20 to 25-foot range."Based on information that has been known for a long time this is not an appropriate site for establishing a marina for boats of that size," Henri said."These boats will cause environmental damage." Henri said that when the water level drops during summer boats at the marina will scrape the lake bottom and disturb sediment depo sited by a small stream which enters the Narrows’ nearby.According to Henri, Larkin had earlier proposed to dredge the area around the docks.“Obviously we did not grant him permission," he said.Teardrops in court: 6I wouldn’t have been able to live with myself' Smuggling trial: Ex-wife says she put the bags of cocaine in Aguiar’s jeep it and she told him she would go By John McCaghey GRANBY — José Aguiar’s smuggling trial took a strange turn in Sessions Court Thursday.Aguiar is accused of smuggling 2.6 kilograms of cocaine into Canada through Philipsburg customs on September 19, 1986.His ex-wife said Thursday she had borrowed his jeep and had stashed the illegal drug, with a street value of between $800,000 and $1000,000, under a seat.She said she did it for a Colombian friend and when he came to pick it up the jeep had disappeared.Maritza Perez, 30, was represented by legal aid lawyer Robert Sa-chitelle.She was granted protection under the Canada Evidence Act and cannot be prosecuted for anything she says during Aguiar’s trial.Sessions Court Judge Bernard Legaré told her she had to tell the truth.FELT REMORSE Perez said she had pangs of remorse after she learned Aguiar had been arrested.He is the father of their five-year-old son.Perez said she went to defence lawyer Raphael Schachter on May 23 and told him she had important information about the Aguiar case.She said she told her story briefly, then Schachter had her tell it again in the presence of his associate Isabelle Schurman.They advised her to consult a lawyer of her own and make a decision.“I contacted Me.Sachitelle, told him the same story and he told me the decision was mine to make.I had read that Louis Kaperonis had been acquitted and I wouldn’t have been able to live with myself,” Perez said.She said she and her lawyer went to Schachter’s office where he questioned her at length.“I found out when his trial would be held and talked to his sister.She told me they were very pessimistic and it got to my nerves.I couldn’t work properly and took the decision to see his lawyer,” the Ecudorian-born social worker said as she choked back a sob.KEPT COCAINE Perez testified she had a Colombian friend, Jorge Diaz whom she had known for 10 or 12 years, and she had kept packages she knew contained cocaine three times before the Aguiar incident.She said she was paid $300 a week to keep the packages and he gave her the last two packages of about one kilo each during the first week of September 1986.She said she had recently remarried and didn’t want her new husband to find the drugs.She said she held the packages at home for two days, then telephoned Aguiar and borrowed his jeep.She said she left her job at the N.D.G.YMCA and went to a parking lot behind a restaurant on St.Jacques West, unscrewed the rear seat, stashed the two packages and put all the screws but one back in.She said she wore gardening gloves while handling the drugs and screwdriver and forgot the screwdriver in the jeep.Perez said she knew Aguiar usually used his car and the jeep was locked when it was parked outside his home.She said she wasn’t too dismayed when it first disappeared, as his sister and brother-in-law were visiting and they might have been using it.NEW GIRLFRIEND She said Aguiar’s current girlfriend Sylvie Ponton told her of his arrest.Perez said Diaz arrived to pick up the cocaine on September 26, 1986 and didn’t believe her story, which she substantiated with press clippings.Diaz still didn’t believe and make a full declaration to the police.She said he told her to forget it and that his loss was between $30.000 and $40, 000.Diaz hasn’t been in contact since.Perez upheld her story under cross-examination by federal pro-secuter Serge Champoux.In her closing comment to the defence Perez said the affair is “a heavy load to carry and even if he was aquitted 1 would have felt guilty because of our son." MOTHER NEXT Schachter then produced Aguiar’s ailing 63 year-old mother, who confirmed his testimony about her telephone call to his house on the day his sister and brother-in-law had arrived from Miami for a vacation in Canada.Mrs.Aguiar told her son that earlier that day a doctor told her that she had cancer in her right breast.She corroborated her son’s testi- mony about the turn-around trip to Florida and said she heard her son’s side of a conversation with his business partner Kaperonis."1 told him my problems could be sol ved and if he had a good business opputunity to return to Montreal and complete the deal,” Mrs.Aguiar said.Gregorio Lleonart, Aguiar’s brother-in-law, confirmed the tele phone call from Mrs.Aguiar.He said Aguiar left for Miami on September 18 with the intention of staying five days.Following Lleonart’s testimony Schachter declared his proof complete and the Crown said it had no counter proof to offer.Earlier in the day during Cham poux’s cross examination Aguiar contradicted earlier testimony.The lawyer’s will submit written arguments and Judge Legaré delayed the case until September 23 for his decision.By keeping manure in the gutter where it belongs Newport inventor, Rock Island machinists hoping to clean (up) on cattle By Melanie Gruer NEWPORT, Vermont — Louis Prue’s happy cows don’t get shocked every time they have a bowel movement.A farmer from Newport, Prue is inventor of a device which prevents cattle from messing in their stalls — the first “non electric extendable trainer” for cows, a product he believes will revolutionize barn management.The trainer is a black metal bar which attaches to a cow’s stall.Every time the cow arches her back to urinate or have a bowel mo- vement, the bar forces the cow to back up.That way the manure drops in a waste gutter behind the stall instead of collecting on the floor of the stall itself.Prue says the trainer makes life much easier for the farmer and a little easier for the cow.The farmer doesn’t have to spend as much time cleaning up after his animals.And the cows don’t find life as shocking.Traditional trainers used in barns across Canada and the United States are electric and give the cow a shock every time she arches her back.TOWNSHIPPERS IN BUSINESS Prue’s non electric trainer that has put four Eastern Township-pers in business.He has sold manufacturing and sale rights for the cattle trainer to Rock Island Industries, a local machine shop.The trainer has made nonfarmers Henry Dolbik, Shaun Hudson, Allen Wing and Michael Wing gain new respect for cows.The four are hurriedly painting their offices in the former Butterfield Canada building in Rock Island so they can begin assemblyline production of the trainers.Prue says he was sitting around last winter looking for a project when he came up with the nonelectric trainer.He says he always hated conventional electric trainers because they give cows electrical shocks.In October, Prue’s prototype cow trainers were installed in the bam at the farm he works at.Now he says his cows are happy.Other non electric trainers are on trial at the federal government experimental farm at Lennoxville “The old trainers have a low voltage of about 12 volts.But the cows are sometimes drinking water or standing in manure which is wet.Then they hit the trainer and all of Henry Dolhick.Once the offices are painted.that gives them an extra boost,” Prue said.BETTER MILK “In the past I would clean out their stalls twice a week.Now I only have to do it once a week.” “Electric trainers have worked but they’re impractical.People get shocked because you are working in humid conditions,” Hudson said.As well as cleaner barns, Prue says the nonelectric trainer means the cows produce better quality milk.The trainer reduces the leucocyte, or white blood cell count in cows.If the leucocyte count is high in a cow, it means she is sick and the quality of milk she produces is inferior, Prue said.Prue said a normal leucocyte count is about 300,000.He said because of the non electric trainer, his cows have a leucocyte count of between 80,000 and 90,000 — less than one-third that.PREVENTS INJURIES “It also prevents slippage so the cow doesn’t injure her hocks or legs or bang her udder, As well it keeps the animal clean,” Hudson said.Dolbik said based on conversations he has had with farmers, Prue’s trainer will do well.“There are 16 million dairy cows in Canada and we haven’t even approached the beef market yet,” he said.The non electric extendable trainer will sell for $39.95 Canadian as soon as Rock Island Industries begins production — hopefully sometime next week The company plans to make 100,000 trainers in its first year, most of which will be sold in Ca nada.As for Prue, he’s working on another project to make life a little easier on the farm — a manure gutter cleaner that will work on rollers.RECORD/GRANT SIMEON Louis Prue invented the gutter user and next, the gutter cleaner.‘We want to see further than our eyes and our stethoscopes’ — Cardyn Vet says charging farmers for lab fees endangers animal health and welfare interpret them because they didn’t understand them,” Cardyn said He says vets may have to make sure farmers are going to pay for the service before they do it or insist farmers bring their carcasses and samples to the labs themselves.This will mean going right back to where they started, he said.Blais claimed making farmers pay for the service will be dange- rous because many farmers will be tempted to just bury dead animals or to ship carcasses out without bothering find out why they died.On topof losing their cow, a farmer will now have to pay $40, the cost of having the carcass analyzed, he said.Cardyn agrees this may be a danger.“Farmers are already doing that now,” he said.He added Parents and guardians be careful Coroner finds diver would not By Rita Legault SHERBROOKE — A Coaticook veteranarian says he doesn't want to get caught in the middle when farmers boycott payments of government laboratory services.Dr.Paul Cardyn said the government’s decision to charge farmers for lab services is a step backward and may have a long term risk on farm animal health and welfare.Charges for lab services will be included on veterinarian bills starting July 11.The services were previously paid by the provincial government.On Tuesday local Union des Producteurs Agricole (UPA) Jacques Blais called on farmers to boycott payments for laboratory pathology services.The boycott stemmed from a UPA general meeting last week.The UPA says the government is imposing user-fees for services which should be free.Pathology services include autopsies of dead farm animals, tissue samples, toxicology samples as well as other lab tests for parasites and viral infections.“We are stuck between two fires,” Cardyn said.“We can’t pay $40 out of our own pockets for autopsies and analyses if they aren’t going to pay for it.” But he says vets are in a bad position because they cannot negotiate with the government.“The mins-try’s the boss,” he said.The government sets rates for services to farmers.Cardyn says the logical solution may be for the ministry to bill farmers for the services and for the vets to get the lab reports.Cardyn says the ministry argues the pathology lab is a service to veterinarians.The ministry is leaving the veterinarians to sort out the problem, he said.Cardyn said lawyers for the Order of Veterinarians are looking into whether they can refuse these services.He said veterinarians are stuck in the middle because they have to prescribe the lab analyses.“In the past farmers brought their own animals and samples to the government laboratory, but it was a waste of time and energy because it was impossible to do proper work.” Cardyn says farmers who would bring ten-day-old carcasses for autopsies, didn't know how to take samples properly and often the results were falsified because of badly stored or contaminated samples.“And when the farmers got the results they couldn’t analyse and SHERBROOKE — The coroner into the drowning of a four-year-old boy in the Magog River in Sherbrooke has found the victim would not have been saved if the rescue squad had a diver on hand.Tommy Levesque died last January after he slipped into an open stretch of water on the river The city fire department had to use a boat to find the boy.It took three hours before his body was recovered downriver, under the ice.The inquest had been told it would take a diving team at least an hour before it would ba able to farmers would lose even more because they would also lose the $25 they would get from sending the carcass to the meat rendering plant.The total loss adds up to $65.“This could bring long term risks of disease we could have prevented,” Cardyn said.“We want to see further than our eyes and our stethoscopes.But this is going to slow down our work and our effectiveness.” have saved boy go into the water to try to rescue someone.Coroner Roch Heroux says that wouldn’t be quick enough to save a life.He recommends parents and guardians be careful when their children are near water.5 4—The RECORD—Friday, June 10, 198H —________fagl nscorci The Voice of the Eastern Townships since 1897 Editorial The stuff Disney movies are made of Either Newfoundland’s Sprung family has been watching Walt Disney’s Cinderella or they believe in fairy tales.Something of the kind must be brewing in the land of the famous jokes if judged from the cucumber family’s latest move.Queen Elizabeth II’s youngest son, Prince Edward, visited with Newfoundlanders this week to celebrate the province’s 100 years of municipal government.As part of the visit, Eddie went for a tour of the giant Sprung greenhouse.The government-subsidized greenhouse is famous because of the cucumbers it produces, and because of complaints from growers in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick who accuse Sprung of dumping its cucumbers in their provinces at prices below cost.The 24-year-old bachelor prince decided to visit the greenhouse after his curiosity was aroused when he caught a glimpse of it on his flight into St.John’s.The greenhouse looks like a giant white asterisk from the sky.What is really interesting about the royal tour of cucumber land is the Sprung’s choice of guide for Britain’s most eligible bachelor.It was Dawn Sprung, the unmarried, youngest daughter of company president Phil Sprung.Now, I ask you, is this not the stuff Walt Disney movies are made of?I don’t remember reading anywhere that Prince Eddie, fifth-in-line for the throne of England, is on a wife hunt — or, to be exact, lady hunt.But you never know with these royal types.An announcement from Buckingham Palace could come any time now.Who knows, Eddie may be riding through the land sometime in the near future, searching for the girl whose foot fits into a certain special slipper he found while visiting the Sprung greenhouse.ROSSANA CORIANDOLI Woman general calls for testing OTTAWA (CP) — Canada’s first woman general Thursday defended planned trials to determine the effect of using women in combat roles and said the Canadian Forces have made substantial progress in employing women.Brig.-Gen.Sheila Hellstrom dismissed arguments that further tests aren’t necessary.“I personally believe that we’re going the right way having trials,” Hellstrom told reporters following a meeting of the committee on women in North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces.“The information from other countries (on women in combat roles) is still very new.This way we'll get a good deal of information specific to our own forces.” In February last year, the Canadian Forces set up a program designed to test the impact of mixed-gender units on operational effectiveness in occupations still closed to servicewomen, such as combat arms, service in naval destroyers and fighter pilots.A two-year trial period is scheduled to begin in the fall of next year.A forces news release noted that high technology hasn’t made combat any less physically demanding than in the past.It said land soldiers must carry and operate a plethora of heavy arms and equipment while on combat ships, every sailor must have the physical strength and stamina to contribute to the ship’s survival when it is hit with torpedoes or missiles.“Strength and endurance are as important as ever,” it noted.Hellstrom said Canada is a world leader in the occupations it has made available to women.The number of women serving in the forces has risen to about 8,200 from 1,500 in 1971, representing 9.5 per cent of the regular force.Within NATO, only the United States, with 10 per cent, has a higher percentage of women in the military.SUCCESS VARIED Delegates from other NATO allies reported varying degrees of success in integrating women into their forces.Maj.Berit Ovesen of Norway said surveys indicate that 75 per cent of men consider their female comrades to be equal, while a higher percentage of the women believe they are treated as equals.Women serve in all roles in the Norwegian forces.But Col.Mary Willis of the U S.army said a recent survey indicated that women serving with the U.S.forces in the Far East felt they don’t have the same opportunities for advancement as their male collea-gues.“They speak of incidents of individuals being harras-sed and being made to feel like less than full members of the team,” she, adding that the U.S.forces are pursuing a major education program to promote sexual equality.Brig.Shirley Nield of Britain noted that women are not allowed to serve in combat roles there, but few wish to do so because they can serve in other duties with any unit anywhere in the world, including combat units.Lieut.-Col.Emma Staf of the Netherlands said not many women in her country want to join the infantry, but they are free to do so and are treated on an equal basis with men.The committee on women in NATO forces holds annual meetings to share experiences and review each nation’s progress in integrating women in the military.The three-day meeting that ended Thursday in Ottawa discussed the use of women in combat roles, changes to legislation brought about or made necessary by women in the armed forces and changes in the armed forces due to the presence of women.PQ lags behind Liberals in provincial poll By Penny MacRae QUEBEC (CP) — These days.Premier Robert Bourassa has the look of the cat that swallowed the canary.That’s because he has outmanoeuvred his Parti Québécois foe, Jacques Parizeau, at just about every turn.Confirmation of this came in a recent poll that showed the Liberals grazing the stars with the support of 58 per cent of decided voters while the PQ had one foot in the political grave with only 27 per cent.The results must have been gratifying for Bourassa in the wake of predictions that Parizeau, the former PQ finance minister, would become his political nemesis.After a high-profile run for the PQ leadership in which he was billed as the party’s savior and even the “future and first president of a sovereign Quebec,” Parizeau has become virtually invisible.Parizeau, who coaches the PQ cau eus long-distance while teaching public finance in Montreal, says he is lying low to concentrate on rebuilding the party after its messy family feud over independence.But even when the pinstripe-suited Parizeau does speak in public, his convoluted comments appear calculated to put the average voter to sleep.PQ FUNDS LOW Since he took over the PQ, Parizeau has managed to boost its membership to 106,000 from 58,000- but the party is sun in dire financial straits.It reached its $1.6-million fund-raising target only after the campaign was extended, but its coffers can’t compare with the Liberals’ $7.1-million war chest.Perhaps awakening to the fact that Quebecers aren’t ready to support an outright separatist platform, Parizeau is proposing a “two-track” policy — one for achieving independence, the other for dealing with day to-day issues.Or, as one cynic described it, “independence if necessary, but not necessarily independence.” Parizeau admits there are “urgent problems which must be solved within the context” of the Canadian federation and there are “other policies we can only achieve when we are independent.” It was a significant change in tone from the man who had vowed the PQ would be an independence party “before, during and after the next provincial election.” SEEN AS CLUMSY The portly Parizeau executed his turnabout “with all the grace of a bus in a field of strawberries,” remarked columnist Jean-Jacques Sampson in the Quebec City newspaper Le Soleil.To observers, this suggests a return to the “good government’ ’ program of party founder Rene Levesque or the “national affirmation” policy of his successor, Pierre Marc Johnson, hounded from the leadership by Pari zeau supporters.In 1976, when the PQ first won office, it pledged honest, sound administration and put the question of independence to Quebecers in a separate vote four years later.Heeding the “no” result of the referendum, Johnson’s policy recognized that Quebecers did not want sovereignty and proposed the province increase its powers within Confederation.It would be “sadly ironic” if Parizeau adopted the step-by-step approach of Levesque and Johnson which he publicly disavowed when he quit the party in 1984, noted editorial writer Gilles Lesage in the Montreal daily Le Devoir.BORROWED IDEAS Bourassa, meanwhile, is avoiding the scandals that brought his first administration to its knees in 1976, moving swiftly to cork any whiff of impropriety.And he is cannily dovetailing his policies with those of the PQ to head off Parizeau at the pass.The premier, for instance, is taking a tough stand on language — even tougher than the PQ in such areas as promoting French-language cinema.He has grabbed the support of entertainers and artists — traditionally PQ territory — by handing out more subsidies and tightening up copyright laws, something the PQ refused to do.And last month’s provincial budget proved so popular that even Parizeau hud trouble picking holes in it—especially since its baby bonus scheme had been lifted from an old PQ policy paper.Bourassa also attacked Ottawa's recent free trade bill as an invasion of provincial turf and asserted Quebec’s autonomy by announcing the province would pass its own laws to conform with the treaty.Parizeau, who had been demanding virtually the same thing, was left without a soap box.BYELECTION HOPE The PQ will get a boost if former cabinet minister Pauline Marois breaks the party’s long byelection losing streak on June 20 in the Montreal riding of Anjou.Marois is running against an unknown and observers say that if she wins, it will be despite her political affiliation.Parizeau is counting on Bourassa stumbling sometime down the road, providing the PQ with the political opening it is seeking to take power and declare Quebec an independent But by then, Parizeau may be long gone from politics.The increasingly sure-footed Bourassa and his Liberals look as if they are settling in for a long run.If the Meech Lake constitutional accord is scuttled, Bourassa could feel a few bumps.But it “would take an earthquake” to dislodge him politically, wrote Le Devoir editor Paul-Andre Comeau.Letters Fear and prejudice have no place in the church Dear Editor, I feel compelled to respond to a couple of articles that appeared in The Record, Monday, Juneë.Both the articles entitled “Baptists want gays to treat their ‘disease’ first,” and an editorial by Rosanna Coriandoli, were inaccurate and/or ill-informed in presenting reflections on the deliberations and vote undertaken on a resolution dealing with "Sexual Orientation’’ held at the Centennial Assembly of the Baptist Convention of Ontario and Quebec (Hereafter BCOQ).First, with regard to the article that appeared on page 2, the headline was totally misleading.In no place do either the background paper for the resolution or the resolution on Sexual Orientation propose that gays “treat their ‘disease’” (your quotation) before they would be accepted by or within a Baptist Church of the BCOQ.On the contrary, both documents urge the church “to minister God’s love and forgiveness to the homosexual person and, through prayer, encouragement and counsel, to facilitate the work of the Spirit in her/his life.” Further, they both condemn as sinful the rejection of homosexual persons.Such, the resolution says, “is based on fear and prejudice and has no place in the church.” Even the individual quoted, David Simmonds, whose personal statement seems to have been used as the basis for the headline and translated into the voice of all Baptists, did not assert such as the headline suggests.That your newspaper would engage in that type of sensatio- nalism is indeed regretable.Also regretable, and ill-informed was the editorial by Ms.Coriandoli who sought to address the BCOQ resolution, but who seems to have confused the Baptist Church with the United Church which is currently debating the ordination of homosexuals.As of the present time, the BCOQ has not engaged the question of homosexuals in the professional ministry.The resolution presented to the BCOQ Assembly in Kitchener was considering the inclusion of the term “sexual orientation” in Human Rights Legislation.The intent of the resolution was not to foist Baptists as somehow above any other group of people, or to offer the image that Baptists “judge people’s worth simply on the basis of their sexual preference,” but rather HEY, MAN, I’ve Been There.v •"•''farrs}*#.NONS-NEA '///¦*» 4 1 U the intent was to express, as a denomination whose polity and practice of faith it is hoped are determined by Scriptural principles, a concern for the perceived erosion of traditional family and societal norms which have undergirded our country’s development from inception.The resolution, whether one agrees with it or not, was the attempt of a people of faith to express God’s will for human sexuality as they, Baptists of the BCOQ, interpret it according to Scripture.One more thing needs to be mentioned.The Assembly in Kitchener was comprised of delegates from the churches of the Baptist Convention of Ontario and Quebec, not “Baptists across the country,” as was asserted.The Baptist Church in Canada extends far beyond the BCOQ, and no other Baptist Convention, Union, or Fellowship is bound by the resolution in question.In fact, any local Baptist Church, even within the BCOQ, is free to dissociate itself from the resolution, should it so choose.It is my hope that this letter will foster a better understanding in all your readers.sincerely, REV.FREDERICK D.RUPERT, Pastor, Coaticook Baptist Church, North Hatley Baptist Church, First Baptist Church, Sherbrooke Delegate to BCOQ Assembly 1988 Sherbrooke Lack of manners Dear Mr.Bury, The article about Prince Edward’s visit, on the editorial page of yesterday’s Record (June 6) refers to the Governor General of Canada, Her Excellency the Right Honourable Jeanne Sauvé, as “Sauve”, without even the courtesy of the accent on the “e” or the prefix “Mme”.His Royal Highness is called “Edward" and Mr.Paul Dick (Associate Defence Minister) is just “Dick”.What has happened to manners in modern journalism?Yours sincerely, LORNA CASGRAIN, North Hatley P.S.If you print this, please leave the U in honourable.Thank you.Soviet churches are being moved not destroyed By Susan Cornwell YAROSLAVL, Soviet Union (Reuter) — A Romanian religious leader has denied that churches were being demolished in Bucharest as part of a rebuilding program in his country’s capital, saying they were only being moved.“They may have been moved from one place to another but they have not been demolished,” Antonie Plama-deala, the Orthodox Metropolitan of Transylvania, told an interviewer in the Soviet city of Yaroslavl on Wednesday.He said eight churches in Bucharest had been moved in the last two years to help plans to modernize the city centre, including a new boulevard Reports that Bucharest churches were torn down were western propaganda, Plamadeala said.Many streets in Bucharest city centre have been cleared of old buil dings recently to make way for a grand scheme of offices and apar tments, including a Communist party citadel.Keston College, a British-based religious rights monitoring organiza- tion.said in a February bulletin that 30 Orthodox churches were demolished in Bucharest in the last four years.The college said in 1987 that one Orthodox church, the Sfinta Ion Nou.had been moved on its foundations and was to have a new apartment block built in front of it.Romanian government officials have denied that they were demolishing religious monuments.Metropolitan Plamadeala gave the interview during a two-day trip to Ya-roslavl by an international group of religious leaders.The members of the group, including the metropolitan and Romanian Orthodox Church Patriarch Teoctist, are visiting the Soviet Union during its celebrations of the millennium of Christianity in Russia.There have been some reports of public resistance to the Bucharest ci ty rebuilding program.In June 1987 witnesses said several hundred people burned candles as they watched a 140-year-old Orthodox church the Sfinta Vineri being demo- lishpH Diplomatic sources said Romanian authrities in August 1986 demolished a Seventh Day Adventist Church in Bucharest whose adherents staged a rare protest against its destruction.Plamadeala said churches had been moved in order to protect them.“It is in order to preserve them,” he saiid.“They are historical monuments.” Some churches have been moved 500 metres, and some of them more, he said, adding that the moving was done at state expense.The metropolitan said Bucharest’s 16th century cathedral would not be touched by the city's rebuilding program.CATHEDRAL STANDS “It is still there and it will remain there,” he said.“So will the patriarch’s palace next door.” A Romanian Orthodox priest appointed by the patriarchate to serve communities in Belgium andthe Netherlands, Ion Dura, wrote an open letter to the World Council of Churches last October about fears the Bucharest cathedral may be demolished.Plamadeala said religious leaders were still waiting to see whether village churches would be affected by Romanian President Nicolae Ceau-sescu’s planned rural systematization program that does away with villages considered unviable.“That is a new thing,” Plamadeala said.“We don’t know about it.” He also said Romania has no need to ease restrictions on religious practice in the same way Moscow appears to be doing for Christians inthe Soviet Union.“We did not have the same situation as here (in the Soviet Union),’’ Plamadeala said “Our churches were not closed as they were here.So what is happening here is new.” Soviet officials have shown a more sympathetic attitude to the Russian Orthodox Church ahead of the millennium.allowing some churches that were closed by the state to reopen.Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev met Russian Orthodox Church leader Patriarch Pimen in April and pledged the state would not interfere with religious practices.i The RKCORD—Friday.June 10.19SK-5 History 1______ftc.1 itscora ‘To pass on to their children whatever knowledge they possessed' The evolution of protestant education in Kingsey Township By J.Clifford Moore The Township of Kingsey, Drummond County, is located on the east side of the St.Francis River.It is bound on the north by Simpson Township and the south by Richmond County.There are nine ranges in the Township, each running north-south.The first three are cut off by the river, while the rest run the full length of the Township.There are twenty-eight lots in each full range, approximately 200 acres in size.The first lot starts at Trenholmeville and the twenty-eighth ends at its So it happened in the spring of 1800 that Captain William Wa-dleigh arrived with his wife and family.He brought with him all his wordly goods as well.His wife.Mary Blaisdell, was so enchanted by the beauty of the oxbow that she persuaded her husband to locate their new home on the bluff overlooking the river, probably Lot 27 or 26.Soon other families arrived and by 1806 the Moores, Wentworths, Abercrombies and Blakes had settled along the river on Lots 12 to 25 in Ranges 3 and 4.Like the Wa-dleighs, they came from the United States and followed pretty much the same route down the St.Francis.Other families soon arrived and by 1820 the Evans, Trenholmes, Armitages and Nunns had located on the upper reaches of the St.Francis in Ranges 1,2 and 3.They had come mostly from England.Around 1827 quite a number of French-Canadian families started northern boundary, to come in from the Lower St.Lawrence.They settled mainly in Ranges 5 and 6.THRIVING COMMUNITY This area soon developed into a thriving community and one immediate concern of early settlers was the education of their children.Probably some of the earliest instruction was carried on in the home.Quite a few of these early inhabitants had a good basic knowledge of English and in their own way endeavored to pass on to their children whatever knowledge they possessed.Most of the earliest schools seem to have been adjacent to the river.One of the first was built in Range 3, Lot 13(c), close to Maplewood Cemetery.Another was at the Cross-Roads.Still another, Riverside School, was built in Range 3, Lot 17(d), near the Towne sawmill.There was a school on Mr.Richard Wentworth’s property in Range 4, Lot 17(b).There seems to have been one on Mr.Perkins’ property Picture taken of pupils in senior classroom, probably around 1913 or 1914.A snap taken around year 1920.Back row, left to right: Clifford Moore, Alice Lyster, Muriel Bradford, Mack Andrews.Second row, left to right: Archie Moore, May Mastine, Gwen Bradford, Evelyn Wright, Everette Lyster.First row, left to right: Reggie Carson, Edith Mastine, Addie Wright, Ethel Sutherland, Mildred Lyster, Bertha Mastine.Appended is a list of all the teachers whoever taught in the Kingsey Consolidated School Principal Assistant 1905-06 Mr McKay Miss G.Palmer 1906-07 Miss I.Parent .Miss M.Belnap 1907-08 Miss I.Parent .Miss M.Belnap 1908-09 Miss L.Shaw .Miss V.McCaig 1909-10 Miss Blois .Miss V.McCaig 1910-11 Mr.G.Philbrick .Miss Arbina Moore 1911-12 Mr.G.Philbrick .Miss Arbina Moore 1912-13 Mr.G.Philbrick .Miss Arbina Moore 1913-14 Mr.G.Philbrick .Miss E.Armstrong 1914-15 Miss G.Bogie .Miss M.Adcock 1915-16 Miss B.Galbraith .Miss B.Everette 1916-17 Mrs.P.Carson .Miss K.Moore 1917-18 Miss M.Lefebvre .Miss K.Moore 1918-19 Miss M.Lefebvre .Miss K.Moore 1919-20 Miss E.Moore .Miss H.Husk 1920-21 Miss E.Moore Miss H.Husk 1921-22 Miss E.Moore Miss A.Moore 1922-23 Miss P.Benham Miss J.Cockerline 1923-24 Miss J.Mitchell Miss K.Moore 1924-25 Miss E.Moore .Mrs.E.Towne 1925-26 Mr.C.Moore .Miss M.Healy 1926-27 Mr.C.Moore .Miss M.McKay 1927-28 Miss J.Snaden .Miss K.Moore 1928-29 Miss F.McAdam .Miss M.McKay 1929-30 Miss F.McAdam .Miss M.McKay 1930-31 Miss M.Fraser .Miss S.Beattie 1931-32 Miss M.Fraser .Mrs.I.Fallona 1932-33 Miss M.Fraser Mrs.I.Fallona 1933-36 Miss M.Fraser Mrs.I.Fallona 1936-37 Lora E.Martin Elaine Lemoine 1937-38 Ethel Powers Margaret Towne 1938-39 Muriel Watt .Margaret Towne 1939-40 Lillian Ross .Eileen Elliott 1940-41 Ruth Stanley .1.E.Y Bisson .2.Mrs.Spencer Brock 1941-42 Ruth Stanley .Mrs.Murdena Campbell 1942-43 Mildred Brown .Thelma Mills 1943-44 Mildred Brown .Thelma Mills 1944-45 Mildred Brown Elizabeth Moore (Sept, to Jan.) .Sylvia Reif (Feb.to March) .Loma Wood (Apr.to June) 1945-46 Mildred Brown Thelma Stevens 1946-47 Charles Sells Alea Wentworth 1947-48 Roger Malboeuf .Ruth Lockwood 1948-49 Roger Malboeuf Ruth A.Lockwood 1949-50 Doris Welch .Beulah I Paige 1950-51 Senior pupils transported.Earl Dunn, (Sept, to Dec.) to Richmond .Beulah I.Paige (Jan.to June) near Sydenham Church.One of the last was located in French Village.Range 4, Lot 12(k).All were established on the lower part of the St.Francis between Lots 10 and 28 and served mostly the English-speaking population, although mixed schools were coming into vogue.TEACHERS One of the earliest teachers of these one-room schools was Daniel Moore.One of the last was his grandson, John G.Moore, probably best qualified of any of the teachers at that time.He possessed an Associate in Arts diploma from St.Francis College, an affiliate of McGill University.He taught in the French Village school during 1898-1900.He was given a bonus for successful teaching each year.The certificate was signed by R.J.Hewton, inspector.Other teachers were Mrs.O.C.Shaw, L A.Wentworth, T.A.Abercrombie, Mary Blake, Lucie Perkins, Mary Moore, L.Blake and John Bean.The sum of their teaching spanned about 80 years, from 1820 to 1900.MORE SCHOOLS Other schools were soon established along the upper reaches of the St.Francis near Trenholmeville.The first was at Poplar Hall.Mr.William Trenholme taught here from 1823-1825, when he was killed by a falling tree.From Yorkshire, England, he must have been a well-educated man.Another school was built of brick near the church, probably around 1830.Still another was erected around 1854 on land owned by Mr.John Trenholme (now Mr.Wintle’s property).About the same time a school was put up in Range 1, Lot 3(b) on what is now the Reid property.Another was built on Lot 2(c), Range 3, near the town line.FOUNDING FAMILIES Quite a few teachers were drawn from founding families.There was a Mrs.Sarah Sewell, Victoria Trenholme, Caroline Trenholme, Matilda Trenholme, Mrs.Thomas Evans.Others who didn’t seem to belong to the area were Mrs.Hicks, Mrs.Bishop, Major Thompson and Mr.Alexander Campbell (later Dr.Campbell).Until 1905 all schools in Kingsey Township operated under a mixed board of school commissioners established in 1846.Rev.Bedard, curé in French Village from 1846 to 1849, was first president or chairman.Secretary was notary J.B.Vincent.Commissioners were Messrs.Joseph Cloutier, Joseph Morin, J.A.Brock and Zephirin Chainey.Second chairman, in 1850, was Mr.John Trenholme.He occupied that post again in 1854, 1860 and 1867.In 1884 John Col-bourne Moore became chairman.Until 1905 all other chairmen were of French descent.Composition of the board seemed well divided between French and English.CONSOLIDATION At the turn of the century a movement towards consolidation was started by Wilton Wadleigh and John G.Moore, descendants of the first two families to settle in Kingsley.The plan advocated that all one-room schools should be closed and all English pupils of the municipality brought to a single building.A site was chosen on a portion of Lot 12 in Range 3 of the school district.This spot was selected because it was considered to be the epicentre of the municipality.The farthest distance was within the five-mile limit, so no pupil would have to travel more than five miles to get to school.To accommodate all these aspects of consolidation, the protestants had to dissent and form a board of school trustees.They proceeded to erect the necessary buildings.The two-storey structure turned out rather an imposing building.A large basement housed furnace and wood for the winter.TWO CLASSROOMS The first floor was divided into two large classrooms.Each seemed well-equipped — two large desks for each teacher as well as very sturdy double desks for the pupils.Slate blackboards lined each wall.Pupils vied with one another to write on them.They seemed to be a reward for good behavior.There was a globe in each classroom as well as maps and an interesting collection of rocks which students seemed to find most intriguing.A library of sorts graced each classroom.It must have been quite good as the pupils were very quiet during reading or library period.The top floor was made into a playroom where pupils could play during inclement weather.A bit of noise was tolerated here, but woe betide the individual who exercised that privilege too vigorously.fe ! f Kingsey Consolidated school.At the rear was a large outhouse divided into two cubicles designated “boys” and “girls".A high wooden fence separated the pathway to each one, so never the twain should meet.At the back of the property was a large stable of ten stalls and a shel ter for each rig.It was the duty of the senior student in each vehicle to look after it.He had to put it under cover, unharness the horse and put it in its stall.At noon he had to feed the horse and at 4 o'clock hitch up and drive his brothers and sisters home, a distance of four or five miles.He or she was lucky to arrive home by 5 o’clock.Lumber for all elements of the school was from the Doyle woodlot nearby.It was sawed and shaped into boards of various patterns and designs for a wood structure such as this at Ed Towne’s mill.FIRST IN PROVINCE Kingsey Consolidated School, first of its kind in the province, opened in September 1905.Mr.McKay was the first principal and Miss Palmer his assistant.The board of school trustees was made up of Mr.Charles Wright, chairman, Mr.D.F.Towne, secretary, Mr.James Armstrong and Mr.Richard Beard, while Mr.Albert Doyle was manager.The grade structure at that time went like this: Grades 1 and 2 Primer; Grades 1, 2, 3 and 4 Elementary; Grades 1, 2 and 3 Model and Grades 1 and 2 Academy.Today this would be equivalent to the end of Grade 10, or Secondary 4.When consolidation was first discussed there was strenuous opposition.particularly by those farthest from the centre.When the project was finally approved by consensus, its opponents started legal proceedings.Apparently the issue provoked a spirited debate, in which the press participated.Those opposed lost their action but rumblings persisted for years.ACROSS THE RIVER Not only did Kingsey Consolidated School serve its own community well.It became a centre of higher education for pupils from across the St.Francis in Ulverton.The Husks, Bogies, Ricks, Atkin-sons, Ployarts and Carsons (Merton) all received their education to the end of Grade 10 here.They crossed by boat in summer and over the ice in winter.Its greatest contribution may have been to teaching.At that time the entrance requirement to the elementary diploma course at Macdonald College was Grade It), As a result many Grade 10 graduates went directly to Macdonald.On graduation they often returned to the Consolidated School for at least their first year of teaching.GRADUATES Many important people graduated from Kingsley Consolidated School: C.E.Ployard (he was inspector of protestant high schools in Quebec for some years); Organe Val, a Roman Catholic Bishop , Co lonel Howard Rick who served his country well; Pierre Brodeur, a well-known jeweller in Valley-field; and many others.With better roads and faster transportation, it was felt pupils would receive better instruction in a larger system.As a result, a resolution for annexation with Richmond School Board was passed Nov.29 1951.On May 21952, the last minutes were recorded by the Kingsey Protestant School Board.Union with Richmond took place July 1 1952.Without any fuss or fanfare Kingsley Consolidated School slipped quietly away, a legend in its own time.• ,y,*.A snap taken around year 1912.Back row, left to right: True Blake, Stafford Husk, Clem Ployart, Howard Rick, Dan Sharpe.Second row, left to right: Joy Husk, Hope Husk, Emma Matthews, Minnie Reif, Clara Perkins, Jennie Armstrong, Melvina Wright, Kathleen ?, Nellie Doyle.First row, left to right: Harland Morrill, Morrison Perkins, Maria Perkins, Ada Moore, Enid Moore, Quila Noble, Alice Lyster, Mary Brown, May Wright, Clifford Moore, Clifford Bradford.• - * r m RECORD—Friday, Juno 10.198»—9 .Classified Call (819) 569-9525 or (514) 243-0088 Between 8:30 a.m.and 4:30 p.m.#¦_____tel ifecara P.O.Box 1200 Sherbrooke, Que.J1H 5L6 Or mail your prepaid classified ads to: Hobbies — Handicrafts Articles for sale 70| Garage Sales Miscellaneous Antiques LIQUIDATION SALE.Reason: illness.All reasonable offers accepted.Big inventory from primitive pine and Victorian style furniture, collectibles, porcelain, bronze and orientalia, etc., etc.Big commercial local for rent or will sell inventory with rented local space.L Au-tantiquaire Enr, 4495 King Street East, Route 112, Ascot Corner Call (819) 821-2376 or (819) 563-5246 residence SOLID BRASS fireplace tools: poker, shovel, etc., with brass stand.Call (819) 848-2009 SUPERB SOLID WALNUT Gibbard bedroom set: dresser, high boy, double bed, night table, vanity and chair.Beautifully refinished.$3,000.or best offer.Call (819) 846-4895 60 Articles for sale TUILES EDDY BIG SALE INC ON DURA-VINYL TILE Self-Stick.49' sq.ft.ARMSTRONG TILE No Wax - Self-Stick Wide Choice of Color 99‘ s,.t FOR RESIDENTIAL l COMMERCIAL CENTRE TAPIS COUTURE 820 Wellington St.S.Sherbrooke Tel: 569-7375 ROCKWELL BEAVER 10 inch bandsaw; Lionel hardtop camper, sleeps 6; collection First Day Cover stamps.1959-1972, and many mint plate blocks.Call (819) 839-2830.WASHING MACHINE, Gold, about 5 years old, $250.3 piece Colonial living room set, beige Call (819) 842-2726 or 842-2471.40 ACRES of standing hay.Yours for mowing same.Georgeville (819) 843-2317.LITTLE FORKS CERAMICS and Gifts.We sell greenware, finished products, paints and supplies.Also crochet and hand-knitted articles for sale 6 Conley Street, Lennoxville.Call (819) 822-0445 65 Horses 61 Articles wanted BOOTS S WESTERN CLOTHING.Saddles, purses, hats, western jewellery.Speciality: boot repair 315 Main Street.Magog.Tel: (819) 843-9407 FARRIER PETER THEYSEN Corrective and normal shoeing.R.R.3 Foster, Que.JOE 1R0.(514) 539-1304 SMALL YOUNG DOG, preferrably a Cocker Spaniel orTerrier.Call (819)838-5812 after 5 p.m.ARIENS ROTO-TILLER, rear digger, 7 h.p., electric start, $850.Three 5 h.p.front diggers at $275.each.Dougherty Equipment Enr., (819) 821-2590, Lennox-ville.ARTIST'S OR DRAFTSMAN S drawing board, 28"x48', folds away into Mahogany cabinet with doors, panel straight edge included, $75.Also steel fireplace, Selby design, with basket, screen and hearth tools, $45 Call (819) 848-2009 BENJAMIN MOORE PAINT at contractor's prices.Ferronnerie Wellington, 31 Wellington St.South, Sherbrooke.Tel: (819) 564-8525.BUY DIRECT from the manufacturer.Quality bedding, any size mattress and box springs at wholesale prices (save 50%).Free disposal of old mattresses Free delivery.Call anytime (819) 837-2463.Waterville Mattress & Bedding.COMMODORE 64 computer, disk drive, color monitor, printer, software, $700.: bee hives; 36"x31 fireplace screen, $15.; down-filled mummy sleeping bag, $50.Call (819) 563-8418.CONTEMPORARY MASTER BEDROOM set.5 pieces.Asking $1,200.Also antique Gibbard walnut buffet, $250.For information call (819) 563-3123 after 4 p.m.FILTEX INC.inventory surplus sale of first and second quality knitting yarns on June 16, 17 and 18 at 12 Main Street, Sutton.HERBALIFE independant distributor.Call me for products.Madeleine (819) 562-3666 INTERNATIONAL NO.46 hay baler in top condition.Allis Chalmers 3 furrow plough.Farm hand rake in top condition.Band saw; hydraulic press, never used Call (819) 843-2317.LUMBER FOR SALE — About 5000 feet of new and used lumber consisting of 1” boards, 2” planks and 2x4".Also clapboards and fence posts.Call (819) 875-3504.MILK COOLER, DeLaval, 200 gallon.Make offer.Call (514) 263-2651.ODD CHAIRS, tables, lamps, dishes, rugs, ladies clothes, books, records, jewellery and other miscellaneous items.Call mornings only, Monday to Friday, Sutton, (514) 538-2417.SEE OUR ASSORTMENT of pretty and practical summer dresses, convserva-tive styles, at The Wool Shop, 159 Queen Street, Lennoxville.(819) 567-4344.2VTED Any old guns Especially Winchesters, ‘Marlins, Black Powder Guns, Swords, Enfield Snider, Amunition, Old Catalogs, Advertising, Loading Tools, etc Complete or in parts.Cell anytime after 6:00 p.m 819-563-2140 Long distance calls accepted.P.S.We also buy deer & moose antlers.Also wanted: Military medals and Insigna SPECIAL AUCTION SATURDAY JUNE 11th, 1988 12:00 Noon HEMMINGF0RD HORSE SALE HEMMINGFORD, QUEBEC We will have something for everyone at this auction, from Shetland ponies to 16 H P Thoroughbreds.50 Head of fancy horses from the U.S.Regular quarter horses, paints, and Appaloosa.A truck load of new & used English & Western equipment at prices that can't be beat.Don't miss this auction! 1-514-247-2113 62 Machinery 68 Pets INTERNATIONAL CUB CADET model 1250, hydrostatic drive, floatation tires with 44” mover Asking price $3,200 Please call after 6 p.m.at (819) 562-2282.KABOTA TRACTOR, diesel, 18 h.p., with power take-off, double wheels $2,700 Call (819) 565-4131.NEW HOLLAND model 1010 bale wagon.Removes bales in field and discharges directly on elevator or stacks.Very good condition.$2,500., negotiable.Call (819) 567-6746.USED LAWN TRACTORS to clear.Kabo-ta B6000, diesel, 4 wheel drive, rotary motor and snow blower, $8,500, John Deere 400,20 h.p., power steering, front-end loader and snow blower.$8,500.Case 444,14 h.p., with 48" mower, $1,100 Columbia, 11 h.p,, 38" mower, $1,100.MTD, 11 h.p., 38" mower,$1,300.MF12.12 h.p., 42" mower.$l,100.Cub Cadet 383,11 h.p., 36" mower, $1,600, Cub Cadet 80, 8 h.p., 36" mower, $1,300.MTD, 11 h.p., new motor, 50" mower,$1,600.Bolens, 14 h.p., mower and blower, $1,400.2 Ariens riders, 8 h.p., $800.each.1 Cub Cadet 60,6 h.p., $700.Also many specials for the handyman - make an offer, all to clear.Dougherty Equipment Enr., (819) 821-2590, Lennoxville.FREE! 4 adorable, cute, cuddly kittens to give away.Don't miss your chance to give these kittens a home.Call (819)849-3891.ROTTWEILER PUPPIES due mid-July.Reservations accepted now Also large Dobermann male at stud.For information, ask for Cathy, (819) 835-9204, WELL BRED Springer Spaniel puppies, black and white or silver and white.Also stud service and Cocker Spaniel puppies, Call (514) 248-2160 70 Garage Sales 63 Collectors PRIVATE COLLECTOR would like to buy works of art and paintings, new or old, by Canadian.American and European artists.Call 562-5416 or 566-1570.FOYER WALES - THE WALES HOME Un avis public est, par la présente, donné par le Foyer Wales -The Wales Home, que l'assemblée annuelle aura lieu mercredi, le 15 juin 1988 à 14:00 heures afin de recevoir les rapports de l'année se terminant le 31 mars 1988, aussi pour procéder à l'élection d’un vérificateur pour d iscuter de tout autre sujet d’intérêt pertinent.Richmond, Québec 1er juin 1988 R.K.Maclver, Secrétaire FOYER WALES - THE WALES HOME Notice is hereby given that Annual Meeting of Foyer Wales - The Wales Home will be held at The Wales Home on Wednesday, June 15,1988, at the hour of 2:00 in the afternoon for the purpose of receiving reports for the year ended March 31,1988, election of an auditor, and any other business as may come before the meeting.Richmond, Quebec 1st June 1988 R.K.Maclver, Secretary LENNOXVILLE 35 Summer Street, Lennoxville on Saturday, June 11 from 9 a m.to noon Spool bed.large tent, vacuum, numerous other items No early birds.Rain or shine LENNOXVILLE 14 Warren Street.Quality household items, Tupperware, Braun coffee grinder.Cormngware, games, dresser, wardrobe cabinet, rocking chairs, bike stand, electrical motors, wall hangings, skiis, 10 speed bike.Antique items.Some in need of repair Saturday, June 11 from 9a m, to4p m.If raining, June 12 LENNOXVILLE Saturday, June 11 from 8 a m to 1 p.m.Furniture, dishes, children's bikes, "the thing , and many other items.96 Parker Street (off St.Francis), Lennoxville If rain, Sunday, June 12.LENNOXVILLE 126 Lome Street Saturday, June 11 from 8:30 a m.to noon Baby carriage, car bed, curtains, dishes, slipper chair, craft kits and wool, toys and numerous household items.MAGOG Multi-family garage sale on Saturday, June 11 from 9 a.m.to 4 p.m.at492 Victoria Street, Magog.Rain or shine.Toys, girl's bicycle, etc.Something for everyone NORTH HATLEY Saturday.June 11 from 9 a m to 5 p.m.at 805 Sherbrooke Road.Many household items, 12' tandem trailer, Peaugot 10-speed bike.Also ducklings and miniature rabbits.SHERBROOKE Garage sale at 2580 Prospect Street (North Ward), Sherbrooke on Saturday, June 11 and Sunday, June 12starting at8 a.m.Rain or shine.WATERLOO 2932 Route 112 (between Waterloo and Frost Village).Multi-family sale.Saturday and Sunday, June 11 and 12 from 9 a.m.to 5 p.m.80 Home Services EAST ANGUS 160 Gosford Road.3 family sale.Roller skates, typewriter, dishes, T V., Avon bottles, linens, etc, June 11 and 12from 9 a m.to 2 p.m, FLEURIMONT Flea Market (open year-round), 2455 King East, Fleurimont (La Tasserie) Come in every Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m.to 5 p.m.to see our selection of articles for sale.A few tables are still available to rent.Call René Joyal at (819) 567-3458 for more information.HATLEY 73 Main Street.Saturday, June 11 from 9 a.m.to 3:30 p.m.Something for everyone.Cancelled if raining.LENNOXVILLE Yard sale at 19 Academy on Saturday, June 11 and Sunday, June 12from 9 a.m.to 3 p.m.82 Home Improvement 88 Business Opportunities 89 Personal BRICK & STONE MASONS Frank McGowan Inc.Tel (819) 563-4549 AFFORDABLE interior/exterior painting.Free estimate Call (819)566-7162 or 569-4646.ALS PLUMBING SERVICE REG.Service of all plumbing and heating problems.Renovation in plumbing and heating.Call us for free demonstration and estimation of new super-economic oil furnace 88.8% eff.Lennoxville, Sherbrooke, Magog, Ayer's Cliff and area.Call Rep.Robert Stewart at (819) 569-6676, MOULTON HILL PAINTERS - Registered licensed, class A painters Also wallpapering, commercial and residential spraying, apoxy paint, spray gun, gyproc joints By the hour or contract (in or out of town).Free estimates.Call (819) 563-8983 or 567-6585.IS YOUR PRESENT JOB holding you back from making real money?Become a mail order agent.For details send self-addressed and stamped envelope to: Villar de Lans Dist, P.O.Box 951, Sherbrooke, Que.J1H 5L1.FRENCH GENTLEMAN, affectionate, would like to meet a lady, with or without children, for a stable relationship.I am 32 years old, 145 pounds, 5 9 ' tall, blue eyes, speaks English and like conversation and dancing Reply to Box 81.c/o The Record, P.O.Box 1200, Sherbrooke, Que.J1H 5L6, IIAWKKYE Hi.I’m having another alack of wisdom which is a real pain because 1 no longer get free visits to Agent Brunelle paid for by the Daily Planet Oh well, I will just have to clench and bear it.I just can't afford a visit to the Butcher right now.Have made preliminary plans for June Triumverate.Will problably arrive in Big City for second week of summer concentration Just in time for this year's crop of berries with cream and maple sugar on the island.Am waiting to see if NANCCCCC's hideout is being painted or not.I may have to make alternative aran gements.I’ll be in touch.L.L.AUCTION SALE For REV.WILLIAM (BILL) PROVIS 200 Maple St.in village of Ayer's Cliff SATURDAY.JUNE 11, 1988 at 10:00 a m.WILL BE SOLD: Beautiful old solid walnut bedroom set 6 piece, twin beds, chesterfield & chair, kitchenet set, 4 chairs, & buffet, davenport, combination stereo, fridge, 2 complete bedroom sets, 5 leg antique table, antique hall mirror, old oak bookcase, 2 antique chairs, odd arm chairs, table & 2 chairs, coffee tables, antique desk & chair, bookshelf, odd cabinets, chairs, hall tree, electric typewriter, 2 electric adding machines, Kirby vacuum cleaner, clocks, oil lamps, plant stand, many dishes some antique, dehumidifier & humidifier, movie projector & screen, picture frames, trunks, silver urn, electric fan, fireplace tools, electric heaters, set of drums, tri-lamps, rugs, 2 section hutch with glass doors, electrical appliances.SHED STOCK: Wooden lawn swings, lawn table & benches, gas lawnmower, electric chain saw, hedge clippers, lawn chairs, B&D work bench, lawn sprinklers, bicycles, many carpenter tool, garden tools, ste-pladders, gas lantern, chicken brooder, screens, doors, windows & many things too numerous to mention.Canteen on grounds.Terms: Cash or cheques from known buyers.HARRY GRAHAM JR.Bilingual Auctioneers Sawyerville, Que.Tel: 889-2726 AUCTION SALE For MRS.RUBY WALDRON 20 Lisée St.in village of Sawyerville SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1988 at 12:30 p.m.WILL BE SOLD: Maple kitchen table and 4 chairs, complete bedroom set in walnut finish, 1 complete Queen size bed In maple, chesterfield & 2 chairs, 19" color T.V.with remote control, fridge, Kenmore 7 cu.ft.deepfreeze, Admiral stereo 8 speakers, G.E.vacuum, rug cleaner, secretary desk, 4 shelf oak book case glass doors manufactured by Globe Wernicke Co.Ltd., roll top desk, commodes, bureaus, chests & end tables, arm chairs, platform rocker, beautiful Duncan Phyfe table, sewing machine, quilts, large beveled glass mirror, hanging lamp, muzzle loader rifle, converted Aladin lamp, dehumidifier, plant stand & plants wicker, Kerosene lamp, electrical appliances, dishes, punch bowl & cups, crock pot, electric heater, electric fan, school bell, picture frames, hat pins hooks for tying shoes, bean pot, iron kettle, scales, wooden bowl, rugs, Christmas decorations, fancy work, dolies.doll carriage, tobacco tins.SHED STOCK: Gas portable generator new, skill saw, vise, hand tools, Honda F-500 roto-tiller, electric whip, 20’ aluminum ext ladder, ex.cord, picnic table & seats, hand sprayer, hand fert.spreader, lawn chairs & many things too numerous to mention.Canteen on grounds.Terms: Cash or cheques from known buyers.HARRY GRAHAM JR.Bilingual Auctioneer Sawyerville Tel: 889-2726 AUCTION SALE For LOWELL WOODWARD 7 miles from Magog, take Rte 112 from Magog, then take Rd.to Austin, watch for arrows SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1988 at 10:00 a.m.WILL BE SOLD: Kitchen table and 4 chairs, chesterfield and 3 chairs.15 cu.ft.deepfreeze upright freezer, Vi bed complete, wood air tight stove, washer & dryer, dehumidifier, coffee table, end table in pine, electronic organ, 2 box stoves, large office desk, 2 vacuums, child's desk & chair, card table & 4 chairs, picnic table.ANTIQUES: Hall bench, wrought Iron tri-lamp, 2 pine commodes, large dove tail cedar chest, wash boards, viewer complete with volumes of pictures of Netherlands, Italy, England, Switzerland, South America, Egypt & Ireland, Captain's chairs, Irish shellaigh, map of Memphremagog, tool box, chairs, secretary desk.SHED STOCK: Homelite chain saw XL-12, tree trimmer, Lawn-Boy mower, 16' ext.ladder, hedge trimmer, skill-saw, Sander, vise, bench saw, B B.Gun, 10" ban saw, 16 steel gate, tin, sod lifter, fishing equipment, stepladder, grinder, garden tools, come-along, chains, paint, work bench, downrigger for boat, gas lantern, ice cream freezer, brush sythe, electric fans, fire ext., wheel barrow, 2 humane traps, 40 gal.gas tanks, buoy, 2 cords cedar kindling, 16 ft.boat with 35 H.P.motor 1986 & boat trailer and many things too numerous to mention.Canteen on grounds.Terms: Cash or cheques from known buyers.HARRY GRAHAM JR.Bilingual Auctioneer Sawyerville, Que.Tel: 889-2726 AUCTION For JEAN-MARIE LETOURNEAU 188 Petit 11, Roxlon-Falls.Johnson Co.SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1988 at Noon TO BE SOLD: A nice herd ot 129 head of sheep including: 110 Ramboillet sheep, many of them purebred and the others Ramboillet and Hampshire cross; 15 ewe lambs for raising; 2 Hampshire rams, purebred registered with papers; 2 Ramboillet rams purebred, registered with papers; 2 very nice Canadian mares, purebred registered with papers; 1 Brown Swiss-Holstein cow, 6 bee hives, 2 living with all the extraction materials.MACHINERY: I Massey-Ferguson 275 diesel tractor with MF bucket quick attach only 1800 hours; 2 sets of ring chains like new; M.F.7 foot strap mower, 3 pt.hitch ati; Acrobat filer; New Holland 2 top haybine; 2 6-wheel wagons with platforms; 1 M.F, no.9 hay baler; 20 foot bale carrier with motor; 120 bushel manure spreader on P.T.O.; Hesston mower-conditioner P.T.10; 3 furrough M.F.plough 3 pt.hitch att.; chemical fertilizer spreader on wheels; 4 pannel finishing harrow; ditch plough, 3 pt hitch att ; Cockshutt 11 disk seeder; M F.7foot leveller, new, 3 pt hitch att.; saw bench, 3 pt.hitch att ; electric welder, 2 chain saws; rest of straw harvest; some sawing wood; the 350 acre farm is for sale Conditions: Cash.Reason: Departure.For information; J M.Letourneau 514-548-2635 or JEAN GUY CHAMPIGNY INC.Auctioneer 51 Granby Blvd.Roxton-Falls, Johnson Co.Tel: 514-548-5733 or 548-2172 At your disposal for all types of auction: Farm - Industrial -Home - Etc.TO PLACE YOUR PREPAID CLASSIFIED AD: TELEPHONE: (819) 569-9525 (514) 243-0088 BY MAIL: Use this coupon IN PERSON: Come to our offices 2850 Delorme Street, Sherbrooke or 88 Lakeside Street, Knowiton OFFICE HOURS: Monday to Friday 8:30 a.m.to 4:30 p.m.DEADLINE: 10 a m.working day previous to publication ALL ORDERS MUST INCLUDE STREET ADDRESS AND TELEPHONE NUMBER PLEASE PRINT 11c Per word- Minimum charge $2.75 per day for 25 words or less.Discounts eitni for prepaid consecutive insertions without copy change: 3 insertions-less CLEARLY 10%, 6 insertions - less 15%, 21 insertions - less 20%.ADVERTISER'S NAME_________ CATEGORY NAME CATEGORY NUMBER STREET ADDRESS PROVINCE______ POSTAL CODE.TELEPHONE ( )____________________ PLEASE CHECK FORM OF PAYMENT CHEQUE ?MONEY ORDER: CREDIT CARD CREDIT CARD PAYMENT MASTERCARD ID VISAH CARD NO___________________________ (25 words) MAIL THIS COUPON TO: The Record P.O.Box 1200, Sherbrooke, Quebec J1H 5L6 COST OF ADVERTISEMENT: (min.$2.75) $0.11 x_wordsx_days = $_ EXPIRATION DATE SIGNATURE ______ THE RECORD RESERVES THE RIGHT TO REJECT OR EDIT ANY ADVERTISEMENT. 10—The RECORD—Friday, June 10, 1988 Classified Call (819) 569-9525 or (514) 243-0088 Between 8:30 a.m.and 4:30 p.m.—______tel itccora P.O.Box 1200 Sherbrooke, Que.J1H 5L6 Or mail your prepaid classified ads to: ms Have you thought of cleaning out your septic tank?Industrial and Residential Enterprises lnc.| Sales and Service 220 Valiquette St.— R.R.5 Magog Tel: 843-5504 Cars, trucks, campers, motorcycles or boats lor sale?Place an advertisement in The Record classified section and sell your vehicle! Call (819) 569-9525 or (514) 243-0088.AUCTION SALE For DORTHY MILLS of Sherbrooke and other consignments to be held in the hail of Ayer’s Cliff Fairgrounds SUNDAY, JUNE 12,1988 at 10 a.m.TO BE SOLD: Admiral refrigerator, electric stove, washer & dryer, B&W TV, upright freezer, odd chairs, bedroom set with double bed, chesterfield, swivel rocker, rocking chairs, dressers, oval rugs, portable sewing machine, mirrors, linens, snow shoes, Lawnboy lawn mower, electric lawn mowers, steplad-der, book stand, picnic table, desk, barn fan, bench grinder, small tools, filing cabinet, golf clubs, bruder, cages for 1200 chicks & grower cages.ANTIQUES: Art Deco dining room set in excellent condition, beautiful 9 piece oak dining room set, oil paintings, whatnot stand, high back bed, chamber set, medicine cabinet, small table, silverplate tea set and other silverplate pieces, Nippon pieces, pressglass, bulls’ eye lamp, Gingerbread clock, wicker chairs, sterling, flow blue platter, book ends, milk pictures, set of dishes, occupied Japan, dolls, jewelry boxes, Depression glass, vases, silverware, large cedar chest, cruet set, trunks, and many other articles too numerous to mention.Terms: Cash.LARRY WHEELER Auctioneer Hatley, Quebec Tel: 838-5681 AUCTION OF FARM MACHINERY ON CONSIGNMENT JEAN-GUY CHAMPIGNY INC.61 Granby Blvd., Roxton-Falls, Route 139, Johnson Co.TUESDAY, JUNE 14,1988 at 10 a.m.TO BE SOLD: ABOUT FIFTY TRACTORS OF ALL KINDS.WITH OR WITHOUT BUCKETS.FROM THE SMALLEST.TO THE LARGEST.INCLUDING: Renault 651-4 with bucket and cab; Inter 824.4 tires bucket and cab; 1981 J.D.3140, 1310 hours; 1983 Fort TW20, complete new motor, 1 year guarantee; White 2-105, 4 wheels, cab; Zetor 5211 only 200 hours and others.many corn weeders, many mower conditioners and rotators; round haybaler as well as ordinary; N.H.and M.F.mowers; half-carry roller harrows; N.H.& J.D.filers; manure spreaders in all sizes; 4 wheel 16' trailers and others; snowblowers; piquet vis" 3 pt.hitch att; wood splitters; wood wenchs; 30,000 alternator with Perkins gas motor; J.D.330 gas thresher, cab and grain shelf; many boxes of grain with covers; ensilage box with carts; 2-6 and 8 inch grain au gers tin bottomed bale carrier; horse trailer with 5th wheel; wagon with rack for bale carrier; lift cap.6,000 lbs.; 3 M.F.33 grain seeders; 1000 gallon diesel tank with meter; J5 Bombardier gas very good condition; tractor cabs; about 30 lawn tractors; 1980 Dodge pick-up; 1979 Suburban; much more machinery This list is only provisional and subject to change.SALESPEOPLE: INDUSTRIAL SERVICE: Bring your machinery in for sale.FARMERS AND BUSINESS PEOPLE: Change your in ventory into cash.BUYERS: Takeadvantageof our many services.License transfers; finan cing available for qualified buyers; private airport nearby.THESE AUCTIONS TAKE PLACE EVERY 2ND AND 4TH TUESDAY EACH MONTH.ENQUIRE.JEAN-GUY CHAMPIGNY INC Auctioneer 51 Granby Blvd.Roxton-Falls, Johnson Co Tel: 514-548-5733 or 548-2172 AT YOUR DISPOSAL FOR ALL TYPES OF AUCTION.FARM INDUSTRIAL.ESTATE HOME.WE SELL AND TRADE BETWEEN AUCTIONS.AUCTION SALE OF ANTIQUES AND ETC.For MR.EARL HOBBS of North Hatley and MRS.ENGLISH of Sherbrooke at 290 Queen St., Lennoxville SUNDAY, JUNE 12, 1988 at 12 p.m.Greek key oil lamp, Bull eye lamp, pressed glass, Bone China cups and saucers, picture frames, mirrors, pitcher and basin set and etc.Mahogany Duncan Phyfe dining room set consisting of table, 6 chairs and china cabinet, Wing back arm chair, walnut marble top bureau with mirror, Mahogany Duncan Phyfe dropleaf table, oak table, apt.size Weber piano, wicker round table, cedar chest oak buffet, many odd bureaus and chairs, two 21” color TV's, Coldspot deep freeze fridge, new 24" Hotpoint stove and etc.Columbia 10HP riding lawn mo wer, Rototiller, hand push lawn mower, garden tools and lots of small tools, and other articles too numerous to mention Terms: Cash.Canteen.RODNEY LLOYD Auctioneer Graduate of International Auction School Tel: 566-7922 ASTM^G/MPH Bernice Bede Osol cfour «Birthday o-o*o* n *0*0*0 Thank June 10,1988 Benefits will be derived in the year ahead through individuals with, whom you share close emotional ties.There is a possibility you may go into an enterprise with a relative.GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Today you could have a change of heart regarding a situation where you felt you were being imposed upon.Play it smart and don't voice your discontent.Major changes are ahead for Gemini in the coming year.Send for your Astro-Graph predictions today.Mail $1 to Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O.Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.Be sure to state your zodiac sign.CANCER (June 21-July 22) You may be a trifle competitive with someone with whom you are closely involved.Stop fueling the one-upsmanship game.LEO (July 23-Aug.22) The person you are expecting to help you today with something you are hoping to achieve may not.However, an effective substitute could step in.VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept.22) Your ideas and your mate's may conflict today.However, if you sit down and talk things out, you should be able to come up with a solution that will please both of you.LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.23) If your resources are presently stretched a bit thin, don't do anything now that will strain them further.Clear up old obligations before assuming new ones.SCORPIO (Oct.24-Nov.22) A course you're presently pursuing may be objectionable to your associates.Try to make adjustments that will arouse their enthusiasm and support.SAGITTARIUS (Nov.23-Dec.21) There is a hurdle that must be cleared today where your work is concerned.Get it out of the way as early as possible for peace of mind CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) Try to avoid getting involved with groups or cliques today that include members who make you feel uncomfortable.Why spoil your day?AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.19) A member of your family may come under attack by an outsider.Let this troublemaker know where your loyalties lie.PISCES (Feb.20-March 20) Someone who can be helpful to you, provided you can make contact, will be more easily approached if you let a friend intercede and break the ice.ARIES (March 21-April 19) A situation might present itself today that has profitable potential, but may not be in accord with the way you like to do business.Evaluate it carefully.TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If a misunderstanding occurs with a person who is usually your ally, don’t let it go uncorrected too long.It could turn Into a barrier.Checking Please look over your ad the lint day it appears making sure it reads as you requested, as The Record cannot be responsible tor more than one insertion.O’ EF O* *0*0*0 y V V s ^ viÏBS» ,, If you have horses, livestock, poultry or pets for sale.Try selling them through the Record classified section/ Call (819) 569-9525 or (514) 243-0088.CARRIERS WANTED TO DELIVER Secdnl Please apply to: The Record needs carriers for the following routes: Lennoxville- Rte 222: Queen St., Glendale, Maple.Rte 242: Winder, Carl, James, Down Circle.Circulation Department 569-9528 cfour «Birthday June 11,1988 The year ahead, unlike the past several years, will be a time when you'll be able to expand arrangements, ventures or operations that have a sound base.Big things could be in the offing.GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your hunches and perceptions will be more on target than usual today, especially regarding matters that pertain to your career or material security.Trying to patch up a broken romance?The Matchmaker set can help you understand what it might take to restore the relationship.Mail $2 to matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, P.O.Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.CANCER (June 21-July 22) If you feel a trifle luckier today than usual, there will be justification.Lady Luck is in your corner — be optimistic regarding your involvements.LEO (July 23-Aug.22) Your possibilities for achieving important objectives are very good today.Focus on targets of consequence and fire your best shots.VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept.22) Knowledge you’ve acquired from past experiences can be utilized to your advantage at this time.Don’t downplay what you know.LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.23) Favors you seek will be treated generously today.However, don't request something for which you have no immediate need.SCORPIO (Oct.24-Nov.22) There is a close friend with whom you always have luck regarding arrangements you perform together.Today will not be an exception, so team up.SAGITTARIUS (Nov.23-Doc.21) You are now in a cycle where your earning potential is much better than usual.Look for ways to generate more income from your present endeavors.CAPRICORN (Doc.22-Jan.19) Take time to reorganize something that recently has been causing you problems.If you put it in proper order, it will produce benefits instead ol headaches.AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Fob.19) Your luck should come through for you today just when you need it the most.Don't despare it you are a few paces behind when the finish line is in sight.PISCES (Fob.20-March 20) Conditions in general are starting to look up as of today.Some good news for which you’ve been hoping could usher in the new trend.ARIES (March 21-April 19) This is a good day to take stock of your financial position.If you’ve accumulated a little surplus, devise a way to use it to make you more.TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You could be more fortunate than usual today in arrangements where you are the one in charge.Pull the strings yourself without being abrasive or dictatorial.«Your «Birthday June 12,1988 In the year ahead you will be able to place greater emphasis on your personal ambitions.Self-interests about which you feel strongly will be successfully advanced.1 GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Do not be laid back or indifferent today in situations where you should assert yourself.If you don't look out tor your own interests, who will?Gemini, treat yourself to a birthday gift.Send for your Astro-Graph predictions for the year ahead by mailing $1 to Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O.Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.Be sure to state your zodiac sign.CANCER (June 21-July 22) If you are in need of assistance today, don't suffer in silence.You have several friends who would be happy to help make things easier for you LEO (July 23-Aug.22) You are not in a cycle where friends and contacts will begin to play prominent roles in your affairs.You won't mind the intrusions because ’heir input will be beneficial.VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept.22) Be hopeful if you get involved in competitive developments because the odds are slanted in your favor.Concentrate on winning, not the opposition.LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.23) You may be tardy putting your plans in action today, but once your get on a roll, you'll chalk up the results you desire.SCORPIO (Oct.24-Nov.22) You'll be very adept today at helping others sort out their affairs or in showing them how to get better results from the resources they have at their disposal.SAGITTARIUS (Nov.23-Dec.21) The secret to enhancing your popularity today is to take time to make everyone with whom you associate feel he/she is special.CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) Someone you know on a friendly basis can be instrumental in giving your career a boost.It's someone who has helped out previously.AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.19) It s to your benefit today to disassociate yourself from involvements that are tedious or commercial.Fun activities will revitalize your outlook.PISCES (Feb.20-March 20) This is a good day to catch up on the little things you promised to do for your family but haven’t had a chance to get around to.Get moving.ARIES (March 21-April 19) Try to be both a keen observer and a good listener today.What you see and hear can be used to your personal advantage.TAURUS (April 20-May 20) There are several financial opportunities around you now that are worthy of exploration and development.Make the most of what is within your reach./r/ r If nSSI ~ liBCmil has designed a special package for you to get your Garage Sale off to a great start.In conjunction with your prepaid ad you'll receive a Special Garage Sale Package which includes everything you'll need fo let your prospective customers know about your sale and to help you get things organized.What you get for only $8.00 Up to 25 words for 3 days in our classified “garage sale" column.11* per word per day for extra words.Plus • 2 large Garage Sale signs e 2 large arrows e 32 price tags e 2 inventory sheets e Your Garage Sale Checklist complete with helpful tips And if any merchandise remains after the sale, give Classified a call.Our Merchandise classification will help you sell what's left.and accepted.Get the whole family involved and start today to plan for your Garage Sale with the help of Beoanl Come in and place your Garage Sale ad and pick up your special Package from Uccanl Monday to Friday 8:30 a.m.to 4:30 p.m.If you cannot come in, we will accept collect calls for placement of your Garage Sale ad, and mail your Garage Sale Kit.($1.25 extra for postage) Payment is required with your order.I MtÊÊÊÊÊKÊÊÊÊÊ I Stanbridge East Norma Miller Mrs.Maurice Benjamin and Mrs.Hilda Truax, Franklin.Vt.were calling on their brother Guy Martindale.Mr.and Mrs.Ronald Butler, Richmond, were weekend guests of their son John Butler and family.Mr.and Mrs.Evan Mercy, Rich-ford, Vt.were calling on the former’s uncle Guy Martindale.Friends of Miss Nicky Blinn.daughter of Mr.and Mrs.Peter Blinn are sorry to learn she has been a surgical patient in BMP Hospital.Mrs.Ruby Edgerly, Hartford.Conn., has been a guest of her brother Charles Bockus and visiting other relatives and friends.Randy Yates and son of Dixville spent a day with their mother and grandmother Mrs.Grace Yates.The RECORD—Friday.June 10, 1988—11 Crosswords ACROSS 1 Reel thing 5 Lily plant 10 Wingding 14 Related 15 “Let’s Make —” 16 Chase of theater fame 14 17 20 124 15 18 21 17 Nomad pad 18 Red wine 28 29 20 “I” problem 22 Hold up 23 Extreme degree 24 trinity 35 39 40 43 26 Worry word 28 Red wine 46 136 ¦ 41 144 31 Suit part 35 Ailing 36 Timber wolf 38 Author Irwin 39 End of the line 41 Band leader 42 Detest 43 — Domini 44 Whiskeys 45 Torn or tear 46 Make another stat 48 White wine 52 Actor Sean 54 Untrue 55 Pen pal?58 Author Kingsley 60 Sp.dictator 63 White wine 66 A party to 67 Nastase 68 Revolver?69 Cop 70 Thurmond of basketball 71 Comeback 72 Actress Daly DOWN 1 London gallery 2 “.fizz like wine in —” (Marquis) 3 White wine 4 Complete 5 Hack 6 Citrus drink ACROSS I Fountain treat 5 Pilfer 10 Calabria cash 14 Deer 15 Welshmen 16 — of March 17 Coup d’ — 18 Rent again 19 Tidy 20 Start of quote by Browning 23 Mimic 24 Kiln 25 Tufted 29 Chin, river 31 Vehicle 32 God of love 33 Foxy 36 More of quote 41 Coastal bird 42 Importune 43 Helper 44 Cozy 45 More of quote 48 Map of land 50 Danger color 51 End of quote 59 Quiet state of mind 60 Having a dull surface 61 Particle 62 Existence 63 Moving about 64 Niche 65 Peasant 66 The ones here 67 Sheltered DOWN 1 NY stadium 2 Vow 3 Colorless 4 Aleutian isle 5 Predicament 6 Abounded 7 Singer Logan 8 Solar disc 9 Landing craft of WWII 10 Elongated II Concepts 12 Respond 13 Book of the Bible: abbr.21 Make lace 152 47 55 56 57 63 64 67 70 : j 58 31 19 I:, 11 12 13 6 .ii } *8 ••«*?*«***¦#»* UmtiKl F«atur« Syndical**, Itu .^ c-Wk « WINTHROP® by Dick Cavalli J OO YOU WANT TO ] f NO, r k 1 KNOWHCW lOOT / V DON'T, y V e>0 DIRTY'?/ ^ 1 iÜ' ® by NtA me ^ £-to OKAX BUT YOU'RE A MISSING THE 5TÜRV J OF THE CENTURY./ ^— nty > AvAliJ FRANK AND ERNEST® by Bob Thaves try A Top/\Y -pD IGNORE 7-Hf APVICE op 2 OTHFPX Vw '• V \ • IVM Dy Nf A Inc.Have;» 6-io THE GRIZZWELLS™ by Bill Schorr PÜP5A FA5T- fCOP wvptjF EEK & MEEK® by Howie Schneider WHAT BOOK ARE
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