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The Sherbrooke record
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  • Sherbrooke, Québec :Eastern Townships Publishing co.,1969-1979
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mardi 17 avril 1979
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  • Journaux
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  • Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Record (Sherbrooke, Quebec)
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SOCREDS ANNOUNCE FUND DRIVE MONTREAL CP Admitting his party's coffers are almost empty.Social Credit Leader Fabien Hoy announced Monday a drive to raise $250.000 in campaign funds for the May 22 federal election “It would be a lot better with $500.000.he said, but $250.000 is the strict minimum, and we have every reason to hope we can raise it through the generosity of our workers and sympathizers M Roy said an effort to sign up more party members at $2 a head would go hand-in-hand with the fund drive Membership now stands at about 8.000 and Roy w ould like to see it increase to 30.000 The leader announced 11 more Socred candidates, bringing the total to 37 in Quebec He promised that candidates names in Quebec's 75 ridings would be made know n by Sunday, when the party officially launches its campaign As of April 6.Social Credit had confirmed 18 candidates in the rest of the country As for rumors that some party faithful did not appreciate the support given last week by Premier Rene Levesque.Roy said he was unconcerned Levesque said Quebecers should vote for the federal candidates most likely to defend the province’s interests, adding that Social Credit had been created for that purpose.‘ I'm not a Levesque man,” Roy stated He noted he had asked the support of all Quebec provincial parties to send to Ottawa representatives who would defend the province against the incursions of a “centralizing" federal government THE WEATHER ' A disturbance moving across eastern Quebec will give mostly cloudy skies along with a few snowflakes in hilly areas.Conditions will improve on Wednesday as a ridge of high pressure covers most of the province.Temperatures will be seasonable today and tomorrow.Sunny today with cloudy periods.Wednesday sunny as well.Today and tomorrow, winds will be light and variable.High today and Wednesday 9 to 11, low tonight zero to minus 2.Highlights QUADBUnCT?Quad kids were t>orn to the goat herd of Foster’s Barry Groves, a rare occurrence indeed.Page 2.MILK QUOTAS The producer who operates his dairy herd without a control program is like a driver who drives with his eyes closed, says Cleveland milk producer James St.Cyr.The Macdonald College-Ministry of Agriculture program to put milk production on a scientific basis may be questioned by the traditional farmer, but its worth is obvious, writes Claudia Bowers.Page 2.SPORTS The Canadiens beat the Maple Leafs 5-2 in the first game of their best-of-seven quarter-final series as the NTH.play-offs moved into their second chapter last night.In baseball.Bill Lee pitched a two-hitter for the Expos to beat the Chicago (Tibs 2-0.Bill Rodgers won his third Boston Marathon yesterday in record time.Page 14.Inflation Watchdog Committee.THE SHERBROOKE RECORD The \ oice of the Eastern Townships since 1807 s A M CUSTODY Of SECURITIES We otter a COMPLETE custodial service tor ALL your investments For further information call é : - ¦ t entrai Building >I King M West Nherhiookc Mitt-mu» Other off ires across t anada IT FS|>\\.WMtll 17.1979 15 CINTS Dief recovering after campaign tumble Former prime minister John Diefenbaker.83.who has said this is his last federal election campaign, continued to rest today from a fall in his Prince Albert.Sask .hotel room Satur day.Aides indicated that the fall resulted from a dizzy spell but denied that Diefenbaker is seriously ill Dr Glen Green, his physician, said the veteran Progressive Conservative is weak but recovering Elsew here.Conservative Leader Jot1 Clark returned to the election trail Monday after an Easter break while Prime Minister Trudeau and New Democrat Leader Ed Broadbent prepared to resume campaigning today Trudeau was to visit central Quebec' after a morning news conference in Ottawa Broadbent headed for Saskatoon and Clark for Vancouver Island Clark visited Spruce Grove, a centre in his Alberta riding of Yellow*head.Monday night He announced that a Conservative government would drop Loto Canada by March 31.providing provinces paid a percentage of receipts from their lotteries to a federal fund for amateur sports He pledged that the $37 million raised for amateur sports this year by Loto Canada would not be diminished and would be increased if necessary Clark said the federal lottery duplicates w hat the provinces are doing and is wasteful Loto Canada spent $10 million a year on advertising alone, he mentioned Grits tried to buy opposition: Globe \ LEONELBEAUDOIN .offered grain post TORONTO (CP) - The Globe and Mail says the Liberal government has systematically offered jobs to op position MPs to get them out of key ridings In a front page story the newspaper quotes a Social Credit member of the last Parliament as saying all nine members of his caucus were approached at one time or another since the last federal election in 1974 to accept posts outside the House of Com mons.The story notes that two opposition MPs recently accepted government appointments — Robert Muir, a Progressive Conservative MP from Cape Breton, to the Senate, and Quebec Social Créditer Leonel Beaudoin to a post with the Canadian Grain Commission.Charles Gauthier, the Quebec Socred MP who said every MP in his caucus had been approached, is quoted further as saying senior Liberal organizers in 1974 offered him “an interesting sum of money .nice dollars on the end of the Terrorists attack jet BRUSSELS (Reuten — Police continued the hunt today for Palestinian terrorists who wounded 12 persons during an abortive attempt to attack an Israeli airliner and its passengers at Brussels airport Two members of the terrorist group were captured and taken into custody after a bomb was thrown from a gallery into the transit hall as a Boeing 707 of Israel’s El A1 airline arrived from Tel Aviv All the wounded were Belgians The two were captured after a gun Second tremor reported TITOGRAD, Yugoslavia (Reuter) — A powerful new tremor rocked Yugoslavia’s earthquake-devastated Adriatic coastal region today, causing further damage in resort towns and mountain villages.It was the 10th tremor since the first major quake, which had the force of a 10-megaton hydrogen bomb.Sunday’s quake killed at least 200 persons and injured 1,000, while Albania reported 35 dead and 330 injured.There were no immediate reports of further casualties in today’s tremor, which sent masonry tumbling down from buildings already damaged beyond repair in the earlier disaster and caused fresh panic among the frightened population, 80.000 of whom are homeless They had spent their second night in the open, with only the lucky ones under tents and makeshift shelters Others huddled around campfires when rain began shortly after midnight to add to See QUAKE, Page 13 battle with El Ai security men and Belgian police Police Col Francis de Vos told journalists: “A small group of three or four terrorists, who later said they belonged to the Palestine Liberation Organization (>>»« «V 1 »> i ii«r|>s (>|i T*D H\ AÔ IH) BAM \MIM PAPtRBA( k .TH H'lH a hell on earth for most of the 40 tribes living alongside hi> own small Kakwa clan Refugees have said that a> attempts on his life became more frequent in 1976-77.executions, which began against supporters of the ousted President Obote.spread to the powerful Baganda tribe and other populous clans — to a point that they became almost indiscriminate genocide HUHSWDS Ml RDERED On Oct 19, 1978, the London based human right organization Amnesty International said in a 25 page report on Uganda that since Amin took power at least 100.000 people had been murdered Others put the number slain at 300.000 Widespread arbitrary arrest, detention without trial and large scale killings b\ security forces were not isolated occurrences but regular and systematic practices, condoned or en couraged by the govern ment." the Amnesty International report said Among atrocities Amin was accused of ordering, sanctioning or actually committing —The killing of Anglican Archbishop Janani Luwum and two cabinet ministers in February 1977.only days after Luwum complained publicly of government brutality against Ugandan Interpreting the news Carter facing decision on U.S.oil /tricing BONN ( AP) — The nuclear accident at Harrisburg.Pa., has forced Western European governments to re-examine their nuclear development plans amid criticism that the same thing, or worse, might happen again Most European officials who have spoken out on the Harrisburg affair have insisted that despite the risk, resource-poor Europe has no alternative but to develop nuclear energy But planners at the European Commission in Brussels fear that Harrisburg’s legacy to Europe will be a delay of at least one year in the pace of nuclear development as governments tighten safety standards and calm public fears.Nuclear plants generate only 10.3 per cent of the electricity consumed within the nine European Economic Community (EEC) countries, although there are plans to increase that to 30 per cent by 1985 Non-communist Europe operates 85 plants, compared Harrisburg accident prompts second thoughts WASHINGTON (CP) — President Carter soon must make a potentially explosive decision about whether to end controls on domestic oil prices in June Critics say removing controls will cost U S.consumers an extra $15 bill .on a year and send inflation skyrocketing, while ad' ocates argue it is the only way to encourage exploration and counter looming energy shortages Carter is to outline a new energy plan March 29, when he also will try to convince doubting Americans the current energy' situation is serious and his administration has plans to deal with it.The betting is he will use his national address to announce steps to start lifting controls on domestic oil prices, possibly with a proposal to tax excessive corporate profits of oil companies.The idea is to permit more oil-company profits for exploration, but not for windfall gains.Currently, the administration imposes a ceiling price of about $5.80 a barrel on so-called “old” oil — discovered before 1973 — while “new” oil discovered after that date is controlled at about $13 a barrel.This compares with imported crude oil prices of more than $14 a barrel CONTROLS END On June 1, mandatory controls on U S.crude oil prices end From then on.Carter has sole discretion on whether to continue controls and, if so, in what form Authority for any controls ends in 1981 Carter faces tough choices because he is receiving conflicting advice from advisers within the administration and because public-interest groups are adamantly opposed to letting prices rise.Alfred Kahn, the presidents’ chief inflation adviser, has said publicly he opposes any move to free oil prices before fall Mr.Livingston I Presume.We wouldn't be surprised if Stanley found the missing Livingston through our Classified Ads.Just about everything is there' / CALL 569-9525 THE SHERBROOKE RECORD with 70 licensed plants in the United States, the world’s leading nuclear consumer Britain leads Western Europe with 33 plants, followed by West Germany with 15 The Soviet Union has 26 nuclear plants Voters in the northern West German state of Schleswig Holstein may provide a clue to the depth of anti-nuclear sentiment when they cast ballots April 29 in a legislative election that the Social Democrats want to turn into a referendum on a local power plant One European country pressing ahead with nuclear development is France, which has the continent’s most ambitious nuclear plans The Soviet Union and other Soviet bloc countries also have tended to downgrade the Harrisburg incident and press ahead with plans for nuclear power But elsewhere, nuclear energy is under attack by envi ronmentalists and lawmakers skeptical of industry assurances that European safety standards are too strict to allow another Harrisburg-type accident In Sweden, where the nuclear power issue helped topple the Socialist government in 1976.the present government shelved plans to open two new reactors pending a referendum next year on the future use of nuclear power Here is a rundown of the nuclear debate in other European countries: Britain: British officials say the Harrisburg incident is evidence of the superior safety standards of their gas cooled reactors, which have been in service since the late 1940s with only two minor accidents But anti-nuclear groups have put forward 50 candidates for the May 3 general election, and 19 of these are expected to make trouble for Liberal candidates in marginal seats Finland: The Finnish government announced that it sees no need for special safety measures because the possibility of such an accident at one of its two nuclear plants is non-existent.Italy: Controversy over nuclear safety has held up government plans for an additional 12 plants Massimo Moretti, director general of the country’s electricity monopoly, warns of drastic power shortages in the 1980s if the plants are not built.Austria: Voters turned down a proposal last November that would have allowed the country's first nuclear plant to open And Foreign Minister Willibald Pahr proposed that countries be allowed to say whether their neighbors build nuclear plants near their borders.Switzerland: Voters go to the polls May 20 to consider a measure guaranteeing that “no more nuclear plants be built than is absolutely necesssary.” Belgium : Antwerp city council has expressed concern over a nuclear plant in the city and has asked for safety guarantees.Last week, the mayor of the town of Huy ordered a nearby plant closed, but the national govern ment reversed the decision citizens Anun claimed Luwum was killed in a car accident —The murder of Amin’s wife Kay after she aborted their child shortly after he divorced her in 1973 —Ordering the murder of Dora Bloch, a British Israeli grandmother who disap peared after the Israeli commando raid to free a hijacked jetliner at Entebbe Airport —Murdering Minister of Works Shabai Nkutu late in 1976 after ordering him trussed like a chicken and placed on a table — Feeding hundreds of bodies of slain victims to crocodiles in the Nile —Instigating a massacre in which hundreds of Ugandans from rival tribes were rounded up in a mango grove and killed with sledgehammers as their relatives were forced to watch Two of Amin’s physicians who left Uganda claim Anun is a victim of hypomania, a state in which a rapid sue cession of widely varying ideas hit the mind and receive oral expression Dr John Kibukamusoke, who left Kampala in 1973 saying he feared for his life, claimed Amin ordered one of his many foreign ministers, Michael Ondoga, to be killed and then ate his liver in a Kakwa ritual which is supposed to cleanse the killer He is said to be super stitious about everything, but even his enemies acknowledge he has enormous cunning He was born in 1925 — the exact month and day are not known — the son of a poor farmer Amin had only three years of primary school education, according to biographies He claimed to have fought with the British army Istlet» bears ritual sears whose lari \inin and ad\iser against the Japanese in Burma Biographers say he did not enlist until 1946 He distinguished himself fighting the anti white Mau Mau tribe in neighboring Kenya in the 1950s When Uganda gained in dependence in October 1962 after 70 years of British rule.Amin was one of two com missioned native officers In his 20s.Amin was the Ugandan army’s heavyweight boxing champion In 1966 he was commander of the army when Obote ordered tribal kingdoms abolished and forced Bagandan King Freddie out as titular head of the clans Obote installed himself as president OBOTE THROWN OUT When Obote went to Sing a pore for the 1971 Commonwealth leaders’ conference, Amin ousted him Obote, given asylum in neighboring Tanzania, accused Israel of instigating his overthrow because Amin had been trained as a paratooper by Israelis.Amin invited Israel to expand its eight year old Ugandan aid mission The following year he abruptly ordered Israel out of Uganda, saying Hitler was “right to burn six million Jews ” Later that year he expelled about 50,000 Asians from Uganda on 90-days’ notice Many came to Canada Their exodus left the Ugandan business community’ in a linin'» own tribe shambles Married five times and di vorced three.Amin, a Moslem, once said he planned to have 400 children “Even Amin does not know how many people he has or dered to l>e executed The country is littered with bodies,” said Henry Kyemba, Amin’s long time friend and a former health minister, who defected to Britain in June.1977 RECORD CARRIER WANTED 1.57 —Chombly, Bouchette Forwoll, Pasteur Apply to THE MIKKKKOOkK RECORD Circulation Dept.569 9528 PROVINCE DE QUEBEC VILLE DE SHERBROOKE » PUBLIC NOTICE REFERENDUM BY-LAW NO.2619 ESTABLISHING THE REMUNERATION OF THE MEMBERS OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF SHERBROOKE FOR THE YEARS 1979 AND FOLLOWING DISPOSITIONS OF THE CITIES AND TOWNS ACT CONCERNING CORPORATIONS, PARTNERSHIPS AND ASSOCIATIONS.Corporations, commercial partnerships and associations shall also be entered on the elector al list if they have been entered on the valuation roll in force in the municipality as property owners or as tenants on the municipal electoral list of the Ville de Sherbrooke for the year 1978.They shall vote through a representative authorized for that purpose by a resolution of the board of directors, a copy whereof shall be filed at the office of the clerk of the munici pality at least three (3) days before the date of the referendum which will be held on April 29th, 1979 At the time of voting, such representative must be of full age, a Canadian citizen and an employee, director or member of the corporation, commercial partnership or asso ciation on whose behalf he votes.Robert L.Belisle, Returning Officer.1*1 r ^ Les Galeries de Cowansville ¦ L J W Domaine du parc LES BOUTS D’CHOUX SSA VES Specials on Children's • Clothing Baby-14 Years also Furniture and gifts YES WE FRAME NEEDLE POINTS PAINTINGS RHOTOS etc.COMING EVENTS LOCAL DISTRIBUTOR FOR PINGOUINS défilai aiguille Centra do Couture do * Estrto me Domaine du Porc CowantviNo Quo J?K 3LI *oo Rachat ot Andm JeOtn Tel (SI41 763-5800 Natural medicine - food supplements -Quick remedies - Electric yogourt maker HELP WANTED rolmex inc.Man or Woman Manager full or part time Rejeanne Perron for information call TEL 514-263-0441 ^ RES 263-4484 263-0441 April 19-20-21 Record Album Promotion Dozens of free albums given away by: BOUTIQUE DISCO ALAIN April 26-27 Information Booth COWANSVILLE VOLUNTEER SERVICE CENTRE Drop by and see what is available to you Check this ad the 1st and 3rd Tues, of every month.Your guide to activities at LES GALERIES DE COWANSVILLE Business hours: Mon.Tues., Wed Thurs , Fri.Saturday 9:30 a m-5:30 p.m 9:30 a m.-9 p.m.9 a m.-5 p.m.^omptoir Musical André Robert (Comptoir Musicale Sutton Inc ) formerly Galipeau Musique Enrg Instruments - Accessories Pianos - Organs Sheet Music (mostly recent) Sale - Service Music School (Permit number 419504) 263-0991 46 Lay Away Plan Easy Financing Chargex or Mostercharge 20% Reduction on all spring and summer clothes Tel: 263-6402 AYAtUh From th« world s most famous i«an manufacturers, i 6 — THE SHERBROOKE RECORD — TV ES.APRIL 17.1*7» [ family & lifestyles / UttM» CIL PAINT SALE • Washable • Scrubbable • For every room in your home including trim • Easy to apply • Soap and water clean-up •White and pastel colors Sol* »ndi April 28 TOVWUSATWM h-AT ENAMEL ^Uperla^ social notes Clowery-Alarie Miss Carole Colette Alarie, only daughter of Mr and Mrs Paul Alarie of Hoxton Pond, Que , and Steven Wayne Clowery, youngest son of Mr and Mrs Arthur Clowery of Stanstead, Que , were united in marriage at Gramteville United Church on April 7, 1979 Rev Robert Rennie of ficiated at the double ring ceremony I,run.Golden Age (dub meets LENNOXVILLE The Golden Age Club met on April 3rd at the Gertrude Scott Hall with a very large at tendance The first part of the afternoon was spent playing Pirate Bingo.At 4 p m the group was entertained in the upper hall by the Alexander Galt group of entertainers, under the direction of Mr Bruce Patton Everyone enjoyed them tremendously and hope that sometime they will be able to return Before leaving, six of the members of the Club, who had birthdays during the month, were called up to the front and each presented with a little cake and candle, along with best wishes Happy Birthday was sung to them by the Galt Choir The President, Gerald Frost expressed thanks on behalf of the Club for the wonderful programme given Shortly after 5 p m everyone went down to the lower hall where a most delicious ham supper was awaiting them, which was served by some of the members of the Club, assisted by some of the girls from the Choir A vote of thanks was given to all who helped serve bringing a most enjoyable afternoon to a close Approaching marriage Mr and Mrs Arthur P Campbell of Lennoxville, Que , are happy to announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Deborah McWhirter to Mr Andrew Douglas McTear, son of Mr and Mrs John N.McTear, of Rosemere, Que The wedding is planned to take place on May 19, 1979, at St Martin’s Chapel, BCS, Lennoxville.Que St.George’w Guild meet# LENNOXVILLE — Members of St George’s Guild held their regular meeting in the upper room of St George’s Church Hall, Queen Street, with twelve members present The president, Mrs Lewis Hewitt, opened the meeting with prayer The minutes were read by the secretary, Mrs Russell Foley and the treasurer’s report was favorable Mrs Hewitt extended thanks to the conveners and to all who helped to make the rummage Sale held on March 24, a success.It was suggested that coffee and doughnuts might be sold at the next rummage sale to be held on October 13 A cash donation was given in memory of Mrs Lillian Baker, a faithful member of the Guild This donation will be given to the Church Endowment Fund Dr Kathleen Atto reported ordering fifteen dozen china plates and mugs, with the motif of St George’s Church on them.Mrs Stanley Rainey will convene the up-coming food sale to be held at Martinizing Cleaners Following adjournment, the hostesses, Mrs Sam Bauer and Mrs McLaughlin served refreshments Downtown Sherbrooke, and Carrefour de l’Estrie Spring & Summer fashions shown POLLY S POINTERS Polly Cramer Last Tuesday night, April 10, over 250 persons attended the Spring and Summer Fashion Parade at the RJvervlew Hotel in Bedford.A display by models of beauty salon hair-dressing was also put on.Above, models display summer dresses.A New Style of Shopping Blooms Soon with the Fresh Scents of Spring at SETLAKWE For your Greater Pleasure.& set la k we (liarlet Nathville Bedford blood donor clinic held The annual Bedford Red Cross Blood Donor Clinic was blood were collected.held Tuesday at the Mason Hall in Bedford.About 230 pints of DKAR POLLY — The other day I was using one of those new super glues without having read the label.Some of the glue spilled on my fingers and they were glued together in a split second.Nail polish remover unglued them but it took a long time.I could have saved myself all that ar '*uish if I had read the label first.- MAP.Y S.DE vR MARY S.— I am afraid the mistake you made is one that is all too common.Lack of success in doing various things is very often caused by not reading or following directions.— POLLY DEAR POLLY — Use worn pillowcases as dust covers for clothing that is stored on hangers in a closet.Cut a small hole in the center of the seamed end of the pillowcase and slip the hanger hook through it.Save that old barbecue grill you were going to throw away.It will make a wonderful spray-painting stand.It will speed up and ease the job and you can rotate whatever you are spraying on the grill while the hood holds the spray.— M.K.Ann Landers says' Wasn t allergic to fiance Dear Ann Landers: Please don’t think I’m some kind of a nut I’m writing because there may be others out there who have the same problem and don’t know it.Subject: Allergic to male perspiration.Yes, I broke an engagement to a fine man because l developed a terrible skin rash from his sweat.He didn’t sweat profusely - just a small amount - but it was enough to make me break out all over (As you have probably guessed, the rash appeared within minutes after we had sex.) All this happened three years ago No, I’m not married and I don’t want to be.Prayer has filled the void BRIEFLETS BIRTHS MARRIAGES DEATH NOTICES (2nd insertion ^ price) CARDS OF THANKS IN MEMORIAMS 50c per count line.Minimum charge 53 00 WEDDING DESCRIPTIONS No charge for publication providing news submitted within one month, 57.00 production charge for wed ding or engagement pic tures.News of weddings write-ups received one month or more after event, 515.00 charge with or without picture.Subject to condensation.OBITUARIES No charge if received within one month of death.Subject to condensation.510.00 if received more than one month after death Subject to condensation.All Above Notices Must Carry Signature of Person Sending Notices.in my life that I used to think had to be filled by a lover or a husband I am signing myself — Happier With The Urd Dear Happier: I doubt you were allergic to your fiance’s perspiration.More to the point, you felt guilty about having sex with him and this is what produced the rash It’s a good thing your body gave you the message The marriage could have been a disaster.Thanks for writing Dear Ann Landers: My husband runs his mouth from morning ’til night He wakes up talking and the sound of his voice is the last thing I hear at night He is semi-retired and the only relief I get is when he leaves at 1:30 p.m.for four hours The man has vocal cords like inner tubes Sometimes I wonder where he gets all the air I didn’t think my husband was aware of the problem until one day he said.“Ï must drive you nuts with all my talking.I don’t know what I’d do if I didn’t have you to listen to me.” When he said that I silently thanked God for giving me the patience to listen when I wanted to say “Shut up” at least 500 times.You have said so often in your column, Ann, “Understanding can make the unbearable bearable ” He still drives me up the wall with his constant verbalizing, but I know he needs an audience and I’m glad I have the patience to listen Maybe this letter will help some other woman who is married to the same kind of man Thank you for listening to ME.Ann From Dixie Dear Dixie: Your letter might also help some man who is married to the same kind of woman Thank you for sharing your wisdom PROTECT YOUR FURS AGAINST TOMORROW'S Fl R PRICES.HAVE THEM CLEANED, STORED AND REPAIRED IF NECESSARY BY THE FAMILY THAT HAS BEEN IN BUSINESS SINCE 1909.FREE PICK-UP 562-4006 J.A.ROBERT LTEE.since 1909 1084 King W., Sher., 562-4006 i?«(5AL_LÔN456' ONLY FROM CIL DECOR N.W.LTD.156 Wellington North — Sherbrooke, 565-8484 I 4M > ti 1 ?*4 -t >wNP Vjf Chræ c tvs; .V-^Sv^ metre Main Store, 45 King West Programs Listings supplied by each station and subject to change without notice TUESDAY 12:00 p.m.3 Young and the Restless 6< Coronation Street 5 Password 7 9) Nouvelles 8 $20.000 Pyramid 12 Flintstones 12:25 p.m.9 A La Ferme 12:30 p.m.9 Les Coqueluches 3» 6 Search for Tomorrow 5 Hollywood Squares 7) A Vous De Jouer 8» Ryan s Hope 12) Street Talk 91:00 p m 3) New s 5) Days of our Lives 6» Today From Quebec 7) Personnalité 8) All my Children 12) McGowan & Co l It p.m.3) Across the Fence 1:30 p.m.9) Nouvelles 3) As the World Turns 7) Cinema “Z comme Zorro” 12) Alan Hamel 1:35 p.m.9) Femme D'Aujourd’hui 2:00 p.m.5) Doctors 6) Edge of Night 8) One Life to Live 2:30 p.m.9) Cinema: “Le Mariage ou Mazel-Tov” 3) Gliding Light 5) 12) Another World 6) Take 30 3:00 p.m.6) Bob McLean 8) General Hospital 3:30 p.m.3) M A S H 7) Au Bois De Florence 4:00 p.m.9> Bobino 3) 1 Dream of Jeannie 5) Special Treat 6) Sherlock Holmes 7) Monsieur Tranquille 8> Krofft Superstars 12) Mad Dash 4:30 p.m.9) Contes Orientaux$ 3) Six Million Dollar Man 6) Science Magazine 7) Les tannants 8) Gomer Pyle, USMC 12) Family Feud 5:00 p.m.6) Partridge Family 5) Odd Couple 8) Get Smart 9) Cinema: “Coup de force a Berlin” 12) Price is Right 5:30 p.m.3) My Three Sons 6) All in the Family 5) Hogan’s Heroes 7) Parle, Parle, Jase, Jasee 8) News 6:00 p.m.3) 5) News 6) City at Six 8) ABC News 12) Pulse 6:30 p.m.5) NBC News 7) Grands Cirques 8) Mary Tyler Moore 6:45 p.m.9) Nouvelles 7:00 p.m.9) Monde De Disney 3) CBS News 6) Mary Tyler Moore 5) Carol Burnett and Friends 8) Tic Tac Dough 12) Headline Hunters 7:30 p.m.3) Cross-Wits 5) Candid Camera 6) Consumerscope 7) Oscar Et Felix 8) Joker’s Wild 12) Patsy Gallant 8:00 p.m.9) Grand-Papa 3) Paper Chase 5) Cliffhangers 6) 8) Happy Days 7) Le Saint 12) McGowan & Co.8:30 p.m.9) Riel 8) 12) Laverne & Shirley 6) Riel 9:00 p.m.3) Movie: “Transplant” 5) Movie: “Hard Times” 7) Tetes D’Affiche 8) Three's Company 12) Grand Old Country 9:30 p.m.8) 12) Taxi 10:00 p.m.6) Fifth Estate 7) Tic Tac Toe 8) Ropers 9) Loisirs Voyages 12) Qunicy 10.30 p.m.9) Nouvelles 7) Nouvelles TVA 8) 13 Queens Blvd 11:00 p.m.3) 5) 8) News 6) CBC News 7) Sports 12) CTV News 11:10 p.m.7) La Couleur Du Temps 7) Agenda 9) Cinema “Le Knack et comment l’avoir” of 12» Pulse 11:25 p.m.6 News 11:30 p.m.3 Barnaby Jones 5 Johnny Carson 8 Movie “Lawrence Arabia” 11:45 p.m.6' World at War 11:50 p.m.7 Theatre Des Etoiles 12:00 a.m.12) Movie: “A Day at the Races” 12:20 a.m.7) Informa 7 12:40 a.m.3» Madigan WEDNESDAY 5:45 a.m.8) PTL Club 6:00 a.m.5) 700 Club 12) University of the Air 6:30 a.m.3) Sunrise Semester 12) Morning Exercises 6:45 a.m.8) News 7 :00 a.m.3) Wednesday Morning 5 Today 8) Good Morning America 12) Canada A M 8:00 a.m.3) Captain Kangaroo 7) Petits Bonshommes 8:15 a.m.7) Fanfan Dede 9) Ces Merveilleux Surhommes 8:45 a.m.7) Nouvelles 9) Felix Le Chat 9:00 a.m.9) En Mouvemment 3 Mike Douglas 5) Phil Donahue 6) Thought For Today 7) A La Bonn’heure 8) Good Day! 12) Romper Room 9:05 a.m.6) Good Morning 9:15 a.m.9) Evangile En Papier 6) Friendly Giant 9:30 a.m.9) Passe-Partout 6) Quebec Schols 12) What’s Cooking 10:00 a.m.9) Tam Tam 5) Card Sharks 8) FBI 12) Ed Allen Time 10:30 a.m.9) Magazine Express 3) Price is Right 5) All Star Secrets 6) Mr Dressup 7) Sans Detour 12) Defimton 11:00 a.m.9) Trouvailles De Clemence 5) High Rollers 6) Sesame Street 7) La Mijoterie 8) La verne & Shirley 12) Community 11:30 a.m.3) Love of Life 5) Wheel of Fortune 7> Petits Bonshommes 8) Family Feud 9> Point De Vue 12) Rocket Robin Hood 11:45 a.m.7) Les Satellipopettes 11:55 a.m.3) CBS News 12:00 p.m.3) Young and the Restless 6) Coronation Street 5) Password 7) 9) Nouvelles 8) $20,000 Pyramid 12) Flintstones 12:25 p.m.9) A La Ferme 12:30 p.m.9) Les Coqueluches 3) 6) Search for Tomorrow 5) Hollywood Squares 7) A Vous De Jouer 8) Ryan’s Hope 12) Street Talk 1:00 p.m.3) News 5) Days of our Lives 6) Today From Ontario 7) Personnalité 8) All my Children 12) McGowan & Co 1:10 p.m.3) Across the Fence 1:30 p.m.9) Nouvelles 3) As the World Turns 7) Cinema “Sartana le redoutable” 12) Alan Hamel 2:00 p.m.5) Doctors 6) Edge of Night 8) One Life to Live 2:30 p.m.9) Temps De Vivre 3) Guiding Light 5) 12) Another World 6) Take 30 3:00 p.m.6) Bob McLean 8» General Hospital 3:30 p.m.3) M A S H 7) Au Bois De Florence 4:00 p.m.WEDNESDAY ) Bobino • I Dream of Jeannie Sherlock Holmes ) Little Rascals 7» Monsieur Tranquille 8> Krofft Superstars 12) Mad Dash 4:30 p.m.WEDNESDAY 9 Le Grenier 3 Six Million Dollar Man 6 NFB Film Can 5 l Love Lucy 7 Les Tannants 8 Gomer Pyle.USMC 12’ Family Feud 5.00 p.m.6 Partridge Family 5 Odd Couple 8 Get Smart 9 Cinema “La Fille prairies” 12 Price is Right 5:30 p.m.3 My Three Sons 6 All in the Family 5 Hogan’s Heroes 7 Parle.Parle Jase.Jase ' Jr *V «V > ;\ Vn f — w i.' v ; r A‘* ' ¦ rj l \W -JK ‘É.* THE SHERBROOKE RECORD — Tl ES.APRIL 17.1979 — 7 Au Bon Marché 45 rue King St.ouest west Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission Conseil de la radiodiffusion et des telecommunications canadiennes Notice of Public Hearing Ottawa April 6, 1979 ISSUE NO 1 MONTREAL, QUEBEC JUNE 6, 1979, 9:00 A M The Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission will hold a Public Hearing beginning June 6, 1979.at the Hôtel Méridien, 4 Complexe Desjardins, Montreal Quebec to consider the following QUEBEC REGION LENNOXVILLE TRANSVISION INC., 114 QUEEN STREET, LENNOXVILLE, QUEBEC.Lennoxville, Quebec ,781853700) Waterville, Quebec (781854500) Applications to amend its cable television broadcast ing licences for Lennoxville and Waterville.Quebec as follows: a) to connect the cable television system of Waterville to the Lennoxvilles system b) to abandon the antenna site at Waterville and to be exempted from the condition of licence to own the headend; c) to extend its authorized service area to include Eustin, Capelton and sectors immediately adjacent to the authorized area d) to amend the fees structure, té e) to amend the authorized distribution % Fees Present Proposed Maximum Maximum Fees Fees Installation fee $15.00 $20.00 Monthly fee $ 5.56 (Lennoxville) $ 6.25 à $ 5.00 (Waterville) $ 6.25 [Xt The above are maximum fees however, the applicant A* proposes special fees which are detailed in the applica tion.AUTHORIZED DISTRIBUTION Basic Service (Channels 2 to 13) Lennoxville CBFT CBC WCAX TV CBS CHLTTV TVA WPTZ TV NBC CBMT CBC Cl VM TV ORTQ WMTW-TV ABC Community Programming CFCF TV CTV Montreal, Quebec Montreal, Quebec Burlington, Vermont Sherbrooke, Québec Plattsburgh New York Montreal, Québec Montreal, Québec Poland Spring, New Hampshire CKSHTV CBC Radio Service CBM FM CBF FM CITE FM I Basic Service (Channels 2 to 13) Waterville CBC CBS TVA NBC CBC ABC TVA CTV Sherbrooke, Québec CBFT WCAX TV CHLTTV WPTZ TV CBMT WMTW TV CFTM TV CFCF TV Radio Service CFQR FM CKMF FM CBM FM CJFM FM CKOI-FM CHOM FM WQCR WGFB CITE FM 1 CBF FM Montreal, Québec Montréal, Québec Sherbrooke, Quebec Montréal, Québec Burlington, Vermont Sherbrooke, Québec Plattsburgh, New York Montréal Québec Poland Spring, Maine Montréal, Québec Montréal, Quebec Montréal, Québec Montréal, Québec Moi tréal, Québec Montréal, Québec Verdun, Québec Montreal, Québec Burlington, Vermont Plattsburgh, New York Sherbrooke, Québec Montréal, Québec PROPOSED DISTRIBUTION Basic Service (Channels 2 to 13) Lennoxville and Waterville CBFT CBC WCAX TV CBS CHLTTV TVA WPTZ TV NBC CBMT CBC WETK-TV PBS Cl VM TV ORTQ Montréal, Québec Burlington, Vermont Sherbrooke, Québec Plattsburgh, New York Montréal, Québec Burlington, Vermont Montréal.Québec Community Programming with background music WMTW TV ABC Poland Spring, Maine CFTM TV TVA Montréal, Québec CFCF TV CTV Montréal, Québec CKSH TV CBC Sherbrooke, Québec Radio Service CFQR FM Montréal, Québec CBM FM Montréal, Québec CFCQ-FM Trois Rivières, Québec CKMF FM Montréal, Québec WHOM FM Poland Spring, Maine CJFM FM Montréal, Québec CKOI-FM Verdun, Québec CHOM FM Montréal, Québec CHOI FM Québec, Québec CIEL FM Longueuil, Québec CBF FM Montréal, Québec CITE FM I Sherbrooke, Québec CFGL-FM Laval, Québec CITE FM Montréal, Québec Local Originations Local Originations Location where the applications may be examined 114 Queen Street, Lennoxville, Quebec GENERAL INFORMATION How to intervene Anyone wishing to comment on an application must submit a written intervention, stating clearly and concisely the relevant facts and the reasons for the intervener's support for, opposition to, or pro posed modification of, the application also whether or not the intervener wishes to appear at the hearing Deadline for receipt of interventions at the Commission and with the Applicant: May 16, 1979.To be sent by reg istered mail or personal delivery to Applicant and CRTC Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0N2 with proof of service Must be actually received on specified date, not merely posted on this date Examination of Applications and Documents - At local address given in this notice and at the Commission, Cen tral Building, Les Terrasses de la Chaudière, 1 Prome nade du Portage, Room 561, Hull, Quebec, and at the Regional Office in Montreal, Tour de la Bourse, 800 Place Victoria.Suite 2114, Montreal, Quebec Further information is outlined in Rules of Procedure available for the sum of 35 cents from The Publishing Centre, Printing Centre, Printing and Publishing, De partment of Supply and Services, 270 Albert Street, Ot tawa.Ontario Information: Write to CRTC or phone 819 997 1027 or 997 1328 J G Patenaude, Acting Secretary General CRTC Public Notice 1979 41.Exciting SALE fresh and crispi Newest SPRING- SUMMER FABRICS One of the finest selections of spring and summer fabrics the Bon Marché has ever offered! Group includes 155 cm (45") Polyester and Cotton Prints and Novelties and 160 cm.(60") 100% Polyester Interlock Knits and Prints.Most are SAMPLE fabrics! SALE STARTS TOMORROW! Values to $4.95 metre YOU PAY ONLY.4 L 4 tV?r * l ; i j j - . Warehouse Spring Sale Begins Tomorrow, Wed., 9 AM! II — THE SHERBROOKE RECORD — TIE*.APRIL 17.1979 'àJdm ^ Wl- Compare a» S3 98 1 Compare to $1 49' Ladies' Summer Headwear Compare at $2 981 Compare at $1 981 Children's Play Shorts Save $2 Children's Play Giris' Play Shorts Men's Utex Leisure , Suits 2 to 6X in stretch terry They'll sell fast! Assorted styles, all at one low 7 to 14 in stretch terry color choice.2 to 6X in stretch terry color choice.price Compare at $2 981 Ladies' Tank Tops Don t pay $2 49 You could pay (if regular) to $4 95! Ladies' T-Shirts Extra Value! Thrifty Au Bon Marché snapped up this leading maker's clearance of normally much more expen sive lines in sizes 30, 38, Children's T-Shirts Young Men's 8 to 16.Western style in rugged denim Blue Jeans Big selection! Stock up and save more! Sleeveless T-shirts in 50 polyester/cotton.2 to 6X.Stretch terry, short sleeves, assorted colors.Sizes 28, Narrow leg 31 only i» mini* Don t pay $ 1 98 Compare at $2 48 pr! Children's Running Shoes Tough canvas.Red and navy Sizes 22 to 13 and 5, Well worth 59c! Boys' Camp Shorts Boys' Dress Don’t pay more! Girls' and Ladies' Moccasin-Type Shoes Genuine suede leather, laced front, wanted sand shade; comfortable cush ion soles Girls Exceptionally 7 to 16 Rugged cotton drill elastic waist; assorted col ors.Acrylic knits in choice of colors.saving Ladies' Sun Dresses sizes Compare at 98c! Men's Bikini Undershorts Compare at 79c! By leading Canadian makers! Men's Dress Boys' T-Shirts 8 to 16.Short sleeves for summer.Printed nylon at a saving! Ladies Acrylic knit Big saving! sizes iF'r.y 50/50 polyester/cot ton in attractive prints.Why pay $9.95?Compare to $3 981 Children's "Famous-Maker" T-Shirts 2 to 6X.Short sleeves Stock up for summer! Don t pay to $4 95! Bigger Girls For summer! 7 to 14.100% polyester knit, Canadian made.£> ^ ¦ J, Compore at $2 98 or more1 - Ô Why pay $2 98?Rnvc' T-shirt* rLMJ_-/« L^.¦iTj Stock UP' Girls' Summer T-Shirts 7 to 14 in nylon or cotton knits Compare at SI 98! Irregulars of 79c line1 Girls' Bermuda Hose 44 length in white and col ors.Nylon, sizes 7 to 11 No reason to pay $1 or more1 Boys' Undershorts Canadian made polyester, cotton knits.$147 2 to 6X.Elastic back style in blue.Big ond thirsty1 Cotton Face Cloths Pretty checks A block buster price, so, stock up! Compare (if perfect) to $14.95! Men's Windbreakers Wanted polyester cotton at a bargain price! Jk 1 Àém ¦«.wwikiuo: ‘ l umümkfl - ¦ Polyester knit, zip fly, big choice; some irregulars included.If perfect you could poy to $1.50! Lodies' Panties and Bikini Panties Stock up at the Warehouse Sale! No reason to pay $4 95! Men's Dress Shirts Assorted polyester cotton pastels Per ma press, short sleeves Don f pay up to $5 99 Boys Sweat- shirts ?\ pretty pr ints.8 to 16 Acrylic knit, most with zip front and hoods Compare at $6.95! Irregulars of lines to over $25! Men s Jackets and Pullovers Popular stretch velour High lath ion toi man and young man at a van sationally low price! Choice ol styles, SML in lot Canadian made* Low priced' Children's Play Shorts 2 to 6X in doubleknit poly ester.Compare at $4 95! Girls' Play Suits 7 to 14.Stretch terry, hood ed, assorted colors.You could pay (if perfect) up to $2 98 ¦ Children's T-Shirts 4 to 6X for boys and girls Canadian made! Big choice! Subs.Blue denim.Compare at \ S6.95! Compare to $1 2.95! Jr-Ladies' Swim Suits Why should you pay $1.49?Child- ren's Sun Hats Cotton drill in assorted colors.IT ffiStenssBaBBêf Ladies' Summer Sandals Wedge type with open toe and heel, black or brown.Don t poy $3 98 ! Children's Sweatshirts 2 to 6X.Acrylic knit hood ed or turtle necked As sorted colors.Don't pay to $6 95! If perfect, you could # _ ,JK pay to $9 95! Girls | Jr-Ladies' Sun I and Dresses § Misses' | Skirts 7 to 14 in polyester cotton « choose p|eafed, straight, prints Some are irregular.*5 sheers; mojtly jn 100% polyester fabrics.One or two piece in 7/8 to 13/14.By a better Canadian maker.Compore ot $3 79' Boys' and Girls' Shorts 7 to 18 in blue denim They will sell fast; shop soon! Compore of $5.98! Girls' Summer Pant Toppers 7 to 14 in sheer polyester cotton; white and assorted pastels 10 — TH K SHKKHKOOKK KECOKD — TL'ES., AEKIL 17, 1IT7» INDEX 1 .REAL EÏÏATE #1-019 | EfïlPLOYiïlEnT #20-#39 m AUTOmOTIVE #40-039 m 1 l #60-#79 Lj mucEUAnKM | #80-0100 RATES 10c per word Minimum charge $2.00 for 20 words or less.Discounts for cash in ad vance only Consecutive insertions without copy change 3 insertions less 15% 6 insertions less 25% 21 insertions less 33'/3% 260 insertions or one year less 50% DEADLINE 10 a m work ing day previous to publi cation.Use of "RECORD" Box for mailing replies.Minimum charge, $1.00 (one week service or less).1.Property for sale NORTH Why pay rent?Here is a good buy.Bungalow at $30,000 Ralph Broadhurst, 563 3000, 563 2163 The Permanent, broker WATERVILLE — 2 storey, 7 room house, lot 120' x 160' Interesting price at $21,000 Ralph Broadhurst, 563 3000, 563 2163.The Permanent, broker l i NNOXVILLE For quick sale Home with apartment 562 9134 KINGSBURY 6 room house, m village, with small barn $8,500 Tel 819 826 3019 LENNOXVILLE, 139 St Francis St Solid brick house, 3 bedrooms, large kitchen and dining area, handyman's dream Asking $36,500 Direct sale Tel 565 9612 LENNOXVILLE By owner Splendid Canadian style house, 9 rooms, 12 with basement, heated, garage, sun deck with panoramic view, 2 fireplaces, whirlpool bath, low taxes, country living 51 Baker Tel 565 7062 after 5:00 p.m.7A / Tf=fL SS 7 REVENUE PROPERTY — 3 buildings; 116 to 134 Sanborn, 117 Ball.Rev enue $15,000 00 per year Price; $78,000 00 WOODS ROADS — be tween Baldwin's Mills and Stanstead An old house with land 500' x 800' Price: $8,000 00 BOURQUE BLVD.— Across the road from Rue Mi Vallon.Land with 465 ft.frontage on Bourque Blvd HUGH S.ROSE F.R.I.567 4251 Bonded-Licensed Bilingual Auctioneer L.P.Volcourt Appraiser & Buyer of old guns-Antiques Coins 565-8188 233 Queen St - Lennoxville 7.For rent NORTH WARD 4 room heated apartment, $210 per month Also 5 room semi basement, $185 per month Tel 562 9812 NORTH Near Carrefour, 1st floor, 4'2 rooms, heated, wall to wall carpet, janitor, all taxes included Available July 1st $195 00 per month Magog, 843 7765 109QUEEN ST., Lennoxville, 3 room apt available May 1, heated, hot water, stove and fridge, furnished, $150 per month, taxes included Tel.H4 I 7389 WEST WARD — 3, 3’/*, 4, 4'/2, 5' 7 rooms.Available im mediately May, June, July Tel 566 1911 or 569 4977 LES TERRASSES, Len noxville New apts 3*/2, 4' y, 41 y, rooms Hot water, parking, no taxes, very modern Available im mediately May, June, July Tel 569 4977 or 566 1911 LENNOXVILLE New 3'2 room furnished apartment, to sublet immediately, wall to wall carpeting, washer and dryer outlets, heating, parking with plug in For information call 569 9525 between 9 00 and 5 00 p.m.on Job 20.Opportunities Tel.: [819] h m:ih 14I 8.Wanted to rent 19 YEAR OLD girl looking for living quarters of any sort in North Hatley area Tel 563 6104 WANTED TO RENT — Apartment, small house or cottage, in Ayer s Cliff area Tel 838 4377 after 4 30 p m URGENTLY NEEDED by May 1,4 5 room apartment or country house Phone 875 5194 before 7 00 a m or after 5 00 p m Job 20.Opportunities WANTED NEEDED Some one to teach math at grade level secondary 3, 4, 5, two to three nights or a com bination of afternoons and nights, per week, on a one to one basis, for the next 2 to 3 months, starting as soon as possible Phone after 6 00 p m 569 8408 REQUIRE PERSON year round for household duties few hours per week References required Tel 819 826 3748 Articles for sale 81.Garden center 92.Legal notices Dixviile Home % is seeking the services of a married couple to assist in the operation of a group home for mentally handicapped anglophone children.Salary and fringe benefits will be based on the norms of the Ministry of Social Affairs.For further details, please telephone 849-4831.25.Work wanted ,*q Jampers- 40.Trailers WILLING TO DO HOUSEWORK, 4 days a week, in Sherbrooke Tel 566 2961 LOOKING FOR ODD JOBS Of any kind for the summer Call Steve, 569 4766 HAVE TRUCK WILL TRAVEL Will clean driveways, garages, basements, etc Tel 569 3562 TENT TRAILERS and trailers, pre season bargains, new or used Call Mark Macleod, 569 6161 Professional 28.Services WILLIAM L.HOME, NOTARY 121 Lome St., Lennoxville 567 0169 and Wednesday, R R l, Georgeville 843 8921, or by appointment.PREPARING YOUR INCOME TAX RETURNS Servicing the entire Townships in the home Sunday through Saturday Reasonable rates Please call 819 843 8718 NORMAND F LABARGE, Notary, 6 Wellington South, Sherbroke Tel 569 9859 MONTY, COULOMBE, PEPIN, FECTEAU & ASSOCIATES, 234 Dufferin St., Sherbrooke Tel 566 4466 HACKETT, CAMPBELL, TURNER, BISSONNETTE, BOUCHARD 8.ALLAIRE, 80 Peel St., Sherbrooke Tel.565 7885.40 Main St., Rock Island Tel 876 7295 314 Main St , Cowansville Tel 514 263 4077 45.Boats & motors EVINRUDE 35 H P Ski Twin electric start motor and plywood varnish boat, 14' x 54" for sale All in A 1 condition Tel 826 2103, R ichmond 60.Articles for sale 1,500 BALES Top quality hay for sale, Sawyerville area 819 889 2548 10 SPEED BICYCLE, 19' red Moto Sport LCM, good condition.Tel.877 2415 after 7:00 p.m 351 CLEVELAND MOTOR with FMX transmission $400 Tel 514 297 3455 MODEL RAILROAD 6 diesel locos , 2 transistorized throttles, approx 40 freight cars, 30 structures, track, etc Over $1000 worth.Sacrifice $600 or best offer Richmond area Tel.819 826 5416, evenings 2.Farms 4 acreage 40.Cars lor sale WARWICK — Unusual and interesting farm for nature lovers House, barn, garage, 190 acres Tel 819 358 6129 4.Lots for sale LENNOXVILLE Choice lots close to Bishop s Ready for construction Tel 819 563 1295 5.Mobile homes TWO MOBILE HOMES on wheels for sale 14' x 61' 3 bedrooms, kitchen, living room, frig, stove, washer, dryer Closed in porch with indoor outdoor carpet Blacktop drive.14 x 56' 4 rooms, bath 514 263 3737, 263 6824 MAZDA COSMO '76, very clean, fully equipped, new radial tires Price to be discussed Tel 566 2205 or 563 0522 1974 TOYOTA Hilux pick up Tel 876 2105 1972 RENAULT 10, in excellent condition $750 or nearest offer 842 2607 1975 BLAZER 4x4, mec hanically sound but needs paint job Asking $3000 Tel 567 1666 1979 CHRYSLER Plymouth cars, also quality used cars Call bon Martin, representing Williams.Plymouth Chrysler, 60 Atto Street, Lennoxville Tel 562 - 7062 QUALITY FABRICS Knitting yarns, handmade dolls, toys & pottery The Sawyerville Store, 56 Cookshire St., Sawyerville 889 2801 BUSY MOTHERS, ETC Patons turkey rugs, 27" x 54' only $30 charged above price of material for labour Present time only 514 243 5315 CLOSING SALE — At cost price, refrigerators, kitchen ranges, washers, dryers, dishwashers Brands Kelvinator, Moffat Claude Felteau Refriqeration Inc , 819 King St.West Tel 569 3695 96 97 9 PIECE DINING room set, table, 6 chairs, china cabinet and side board $950 or best offer Portable Kenmore disher washer, excellent condition $300 RCA dehumidifier Tel 819 838 4263 DICTATING MACHINES and transcribers, like new.office and portable Call 563 6181 USED LUMBER g f 30 x 30 size.building.panels, windows, doors, flooring, beams, dry, A 1.Tel 514 276 9372 7.For rent 60.Articles for sale 60.Articles for sale SEEKING A MALE com panion, between the ages of 25 and 45 to share apart ment Call 562 5963 SUBLET APARTMENT AT 1991 Dubreuil Street, 3’ ?rooms, heated, furnished Phone 819 837 2729.NORTH HATLEY - 3’j with view of Lake Massawippi, available May 1st.Tel 842 2607 RAOUL FORTIER INC We Sell New Furniture 1026 Wellington $.$ her brook» Exchanges accepted Dining room bedroom Kitchen sets stoves réfrigéra tors televisions etc 567-3581 HAY FOR SALE, Sutton area Tel 514 538 633/ MAPLE FIREWOOD, block wood or bobbin wood for sale Tel 514 292 3700 61 .Articles wanted ARTICLES FOR Auction dishes, tables, lamps, an tiques, all household items, anything of value Tel 514 263 3180 Call now! WANT TO BUY — Old fur niture of any description, individual items or com plete, old buggies, wagons, wheels and all types of wood burning stoves Call anytime, 514 539 2207 REFRIGERATORS, electric and wood stoves, lamps, clocks, washers, dryers, buffets, dressers, desks, tables, chairs, bureaus, cabinets, bookcases, bicycles, antiques, etc.Nick Turchyn, 819 875 3879 62.Machinery HORSE DRAWN hay rake required Phone after 5 00 pm, 819 845 2871, ask for Jack 66.Livestock 7 DURHAM COWS, with calves at foot, 4 registered & 3 grade To be sold as a group Also 3 Lincoln Red year old bulls, off test soon Tel 875 3495 WANTED TO BUY Sows open or bred Tel 514 248 7156 14 MONTH OLD Hereford bull for sale Tel 514 539 0461 HEREFORD YEARLING BULLS, pure bred, registered, presently on home test, available May 12, 1979 Gerry Semmelhaack, Gereli Farms 514 539 0125 or 697 3888 67.Poultry FANCY CHICKENS, 37 breeds.Also meat chickens, quails, turkeys, ducks, geese, pigeons, pheasants, etc Tel 562 5877 68.Pets BEAUTIFUL AMERICAN Cocker Spaniels, tiny Yorkshire Terriers, champion sired Keeshond and German Shepherd Mason Kennels, Lennoxville Tel 562 5877 81 .Garden center EARLY ORDERS being taken for vegetable and flower plants Order early for good variety for May planting Tel.569 2889 CEDAR TREES FOR hedges, also hedges installed, reasonable price, free delivery Tel 567 5314 AUCTION SALE for Ken Talbot Warden ( watch for signs] Saturday, April 21, noon sharp WILL BE SOLD FURNITURE Wash stand, bowl and pitcher set, tables, bureaus, chairs, marble top table, trunks, crib, high chair, portable sewing machine, flower stand, lawn chairs, 4 card table chairs, radios, clocks, beds, dishes, plant table, ice box, preserving jars, picture frames, electric heater books, step ladder MACHINERY Two furrow 3 pt hitch International plow, tractor trailer, Fidelity electric alternator on trailer p t o drive 25 kw, complete with 30 ft extension cable like new.Thornes 14 ft aluminum boat and trailer like new, rake and tedder p t o drive, electric grinder, 200 ft extension cord, cement mixer, house jack, baler twine, brand new out >iue ooor, windows, new galvanized stove pipes and elbows, smoke stack tor sugaring rig, wheelbarrow wooden wagon wheels, horse harnesses, jet water pump, 2 8 gal milk cans, 100 gal gat herinq tub, 200 gal storage tank, new pressure water tank.Sunbeam cow clippers like new cow stanchions, milking machine pump, sump pump electric fencer battery model incubator, hand cultivator, horse rake 300 fence pos's 1 cord firewood, large quantity new lumber, stone bolt, cir cular saw.skidoo sled lad ders, 1 roll barbed wire, barn roof ventilator, turnip cutter, quantity scrap iron, shovels crowbars, hand tools, many other articles too numerous to mention Cause of sale The farm is sold Terms Cash FOr information call ALDEN TICEHURST Licenced Bilingual Auctioneer South Stukely 514 297 3131 COMPOST — The best fer tilizer money can buy For gardens, greenhouses, fruit trees, etc Place your orders now for early spring delivery Samples available Bulk delivery in Sherbrooke area Tel Angus Curry 819 875 3676 83.Lost LOST DOG Husky mix, all beige, male, lost end of December Reward Tel 562 6426 Business 88.Opportunities TAXI BUSINESS FOR SALE 3 taxis, well located, with good school contract, for information write Box 728, c o Sherbrooke, PO Box 1200, Sherbrooke, J1H 5L6.89.Personal ECKANKAR The direct path to God, a happy way of life, total awareness 30 Wellington St.S., 7:00 p m 10:00 p m Tel 563 1664 PUBLIC NOTICE Mr Bernard Ruel, teacher, domiciled at 1015 De Lamontagne, Apt 3, Sher brooke AND Mrs Francine Caron Ruel, teacher, domiciled at 1015 De Lamontagne, Apt 3, Sher brooke CHANGE OF MATRIMONIAL REGIME Public notice is hereby given that Mr Bernard Ruel and his wife, Francine Caron Ruel, hereinabove mentioned, presently married under the regime of community as to property A thout a marnage contract, the fifth (5th) day of July, nineteen hundred and seventy five (1975), intend to modify their matrimonial status and to adopt the regime of separation as to property as stipulated in a deed signed before Serge Adam, Notary, of Bromptonville, Quebec, the twelfth (12th) day of March, nineteen hundred and seventy nine (1979) A motion for homologation of said deed of modification shall be presented before the Superior Court sitting in practise, for and in the District of St.Francis, on May 15, 1979 at half past nine (9 30 a m.) in the morning or as soon as counsel may be heard Signed at Bromptonville, this eleventh day of April, nineteen hundred and seventy nine (11 04 79) M e Serge Adam, Notary and Attorney PROVINCE DE QUEBEC VILLE DE SHERBROOKE 5?PUBLIC NOTICE By law No.2547 PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that on August 14, 1978, the Municipal Council of the Ville de Sherbrooke has adopted by law No.2547 of the muni cipal by laws of the Ville de Sherbrooke, ordaining an agreement with the Municipalité de Fleurimont for water and sewer services on Des Blés, Des Paysans, Des Mar guérites, Des Lis, Des Quatre Saisons and King Streets; that by law No 2547 has been approved by the Services de Protection de l'Environnement, on March 29, 1979, that the original of said by law No.2547 is kept at the City Hall, in the Municipal Archives, where one can take communication thereof; that by law No.2547 takes effect immediately.GIVEN AT SHERBROOKE, this 11th day of April 1979 Robert L Belisle, City Clerk PROVINCE DE QUEBEC VILLE DE SHERBROOKE ¥ To the property owners who are entered on the valuation roll in force in the Ville de Sherbrooke on April 2nd, 1979, with respect to an immovable situated in zone F 2 as described below PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given by the undersigned, City Clerk, that at a regular meeting held on April 2nd, 1979, the Municipal Council of the Ville de Sherbrooke has adopt ed by law No.2618 amending zoning by laws No.1071 so as to prohibit the operation of service stations at 154 Wellington Street South, and that, in zone F 2, in addition to the usagers presently authorized in the building locat ed at 161 Depot Street, on part of lot 1245, South Ward, and in the basement of the building located at 154 Wei lington Street South could be utilized for the sale and re pair of automobile parts but not for tire recapping and vehicle maintenance works.Zone F 2 is bounded as fol lows as it appears on the plan annexed to by law No 1071, extract of which is reproduced in the present notice: * x - ^ V Vj U- '' v 2 - “\ \ N- that the property owners mentioned in the first para graph who were of full age and Canadian Citizens on April 2nd, 1979, in the case of physical persons, or who will have satisfied within the prescribed delay to the re quirements of paragraph 3 of article 399 of the Cities and Towns Act in the case of corporations, commercial part nerships or associations, can request that by law No 2618 be submitted to a secret poll according to articles 399 to 410 of said Cities and Towns Act; that this request must be made by way of the registration procedure provided for in articles 398a to 398o of the Cit ies and Towns Act and that in conformity thereof all pro perty owners who are qualified to vote on by law No 2618 will have access to a register made available to them at the City Clerk's Office, 145 Wellington Street North, from 09 00 hours to 19 00 hours, on April 25 and 26.1979.that the number of signatures required in order that by law No 2618 be submitted to a secret poll is seventeen (17) persons and that in the absence of this number, by law No 2618 will be deemed to have been approved by the persons qualified to vote, that all who are qualified to vote can consult by law No 2618 at the City Clerk's Office during the regular office hours and during the registration hours that the result of the present consultation by registra tion will be announced on April 26, 1979, at 19 00 hours, in the City Council Room, at the City Hall.145 Wellington Street North, Sherbrooke GIVEN AT SHERBROOKE, this 12th day of April, 1979 Robert L Belisle, City Clerk Steel Service Center Angles * Btomi • Chonnels Plotgs * Sh««ts * Pip#s * Re Bor etc.SHAPE CUTTING AVAILABLE Simmonds Steel Warehouse 1931 Gall East.Shtrbrooke.Tel: (819) 563-4155 BILINGUAL AUCTIONEER COMPLETE AUCTION SERVICES Auction House Lennoxville Sawyerville— Tel 889 2272 ART BENNETT ACCOUNTANTS BELANGER, HEBERT & ASSOCIES CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS 234 DUFFERIN, SUITE 400 SHERBROOKE (819) 563 2331 LAC MEGANTIC (819)583 0611 ROCK ISLAND (819) 876 5585 COWANSVILLE (514) 263 2087 DENNIS GLEZ0S Chartered Accountant 39 Cookshire St., Sawyerville P.O.Box 85 889-3133 Licensed te sell aM vehicles requiring Dept of Trans plates AUCTION HOUSE 140 Highland St WatarviNe 837-2317 Farm equipment ammals and Household furnishings Licenced Bilingual Auctioneer BRIAN DUMOULIN AUCTIONEER Ayer s Cliff Auction Galleries Tel.838-4925 Ayer's U^airgrounds Sales Comrnisfll^t gallery 20% NOW offering to do PRIVATE Sales 10% CALL FOR TENDERS — Ville de Sherbrooke— Ville de Sherbrooke calls tenders for an "EXTENSION & MODIFICATIONS AT THE MUNICIPAL AIRPORT TERMINAL" Tenders documents will be provided by the architects FAUCHER & GAGNON 1144 King Street West upon payment of $100.00 refundable cheque deposit Sealed tenders with inscription "Tender Municipal Air port" are to be addressed to the "GREFFIER MUNICI PAL" City Hall, 145 Wellington North, Sherbrooke and must be received before 11 00 o'clock (E A T.) on Thurs day, May 3, 1979, and will be opened immediately there after.Tenders are to be accompanied by a $17,000.00 bid bond or an accepted cheque payable to the Ville de Sher brooke.This bid deposit will be changed for perform ance bond each one representing 50% of wages and mat erial.Ville de Sherbrooke reserves the right to reject any or all tenders received Robert Belisle, City Clerk.PROVINCE DE QUEBEC VILLE DE SHERBROOKE F To the property owners who are entered on the valuation roll in force in the Ville de Sherbrooke on April 2nd, 1979, with respect to an immovable situated in zones G 23 and C 53 as described below PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given by the undersigned, City Clerk, that at a regular meeting held on April 2nd, 1979, the Municipal Council of the Ville de Sherbrooke has adopted by-law No 2638 amending zoning by law No 1071 so as to: a) widen zone G 23 by reducing zone C 53 (lots 4 8, 4-224 and part ot lot 4 n.s ); b) authorize class j commer cial operations and class 1 industrial operations in addi tion to the usages presently permitted on lots 4 3, part Of lot 4 4, 4 4 1, 4 4 2, 4 5, 4 6, 4 7-1, 4 7-2, 4 7 3, 4 8, 4 224 and part of lot 4 n.s.included in zone G 23 and adjacent to lot 4-224, provided that such usages do not include out door storage; c) authorize public parking on lots 4 9 and 4 10 located in zone C 53.Zones G 23 and C 53 are bound ed as follows as it appears on the plan annexed to by law No.1071, extract of which is reproduced in the pre sent notice: r m ?50 500 that the property owners mentioned in the first para graph who were of full age and Canadian Citizens on April 2nd, 1979, in the case of physical persons, or who will have satisfied within the prescribed delay to the re quirements of paragraph 3 of article 399 of the Cities and Towns Act in the case of corporations, commercial part nerships or associations, can request that by-law No 2638 be submitted to a secret poll according to articles 399 to 410 of said Cities and Towns Act, that this request must be made by way of the registra tion procedure provided for in articles 398a to 398o of the Cities and Towns Act and that in conformity thereof all property owners who are qualified to vote on by law No 2638 will have access to a register made available to them at the City Clerk's Office, 145 Wellington Street 1979^ *r0m 09 00 hours to 19:00 hours, on April 25 and 26, that the number of signatures required in order that by law No 2638 be submitted to a secret poll is eleven (11) persons and that in the absence of this number, by law No 2638 will be deemed to have been approved by the persons qualified to vote.that all who are qualified to vote can consult by-law No 2638 at the City Clerk's Office during the regular office hours and during the registration hours that the result of the present consultation by registra tion will be announced on April 26, 1979.at 19 00 hours in the City Council Room, at the City Hall, 145 Wellington Street North, Sherbrooke GIVEN AT SHERBROOKE, this 12th day of April 1979 Robert L.Belisle, City Clerk i 495494 IIU sm K B KOOK E HKl'ORD — HKS, APRIL 17.If7t « u Stanstead Chapter IODE STANSTEAD DB - The April meeting of the Stan-stead Chapter IODE was held on Monday afternoon April 2.in the reception room of LeBaron Hall.Stanstead College Mrs Agnes Myers.Regent, welcomed members and guests, and with a special poem.wished everyone a happy Easter Mrs Ralph Rogers.Secretary, read the minutes of the March meeting and the correspondence reports Included in the correspondence was a letter from Sunnyside School confirming the use of the school facilities for the annual bazaar to be held on September 29.1979 Mrs Merton Davis.Treasurer, read the financial report and noted that two books for Convent prizes have been purchased and were on display at the meeting Mrs Simone DuBois agreed to deliver them to the Ursuline Convent for prize-giving Mrs Howard Aikman.Membership Secretary, welcomed two guests.Mrs Winnie Dewey and Mrs Doris Edgar, both of Stan stead Later, during the meeting.Mrs Edgar was presented by Mrs Aikman and welcomed into membership by Mrs Myers Mrs Jean Beasse.Citizenship Secretary, commented on the recent problem with the Nuclear Power Station in Harrisburg.Penn, and questioned the proposals for four new plants to be built here in Quebec Mrs Frances Finlayson recommended reading an article in the Winter Echoes entitled Mariko Bando -Visit to Canada Mrs Bando is here from Japan to study and report on the situation of women in Canada in order to draw comparisons with the status of women in Japan Education Secretary, Mrs Florence Gerber, reported that there are several copies of Wind in the Willows available at SO cents each Mrs Douglas Jackson.Serv ices Secretary, reported on the progress of the three layettes and presented a displav of baby articles, noting that one layette is completed The layettes, w hen completed, w ill be sent to Northern Quebec nursing stations and.on request, to Montreal General Hospital for babies of Eskimo and Indian girls born there It was noted that donations to the National Service Fund has made possible the gift of six incubators to the North West Territories, a project that the Stanstead Chapter has participated in A report on the CBC TV program “People Talking Back" shown on March 11 was given by Mrs Simone Dubois Mrs Merton Davis will report on the next program scheduled for April 8 at the May meeting Mrs Jean Beasse and Mrs Ralph Rogers will assist at the April Senior Citizens luncheon The next coffee hour will be held at the home of Mrs Ada Curtis on Friday, April 20 at 10:00 a m It was decided that coffee parties will be carried on during the summer months Mrs Dorothy Renwick will report on the final date for Golden Age KNOWLTON (KT) There was a large attendance for the monthly Bingo put on for members of Knowlton Golden Age Club by the LOOP" Thursday, April 5 The 75 persons attending were in high spirits and it was a really great afternoon Buster Crandall was the caller and Grant Windle kept the games running smoothly from the floor Regular games were won by Grayson Cousens, Mrs Ruth Williams, Mrs.Ida Mclvor, Mrs.Dorothy Frederick.Mrs.Gertrude Christofferson, Mrs Vi.Peek, Mrs.Ebba Parkes and Pearle Windle Winner of the special “T” was Vi Peek and the special X Ebba Parkes Mrs Parkes also won the jack pot (full card) game The Club Game (“H”) went to Percy Honey.There were a number of drawings for maple syrup as door prizes.Winners were-Mrs.Iva Mclvor; Harold Spencer; Herbert Foster; Bruce Bailey, Mrs.Ardell Mason; Mrs.Letitia Jacoby’s bridge NORTH 4-17-A ?K 6 5 2 ?K J 9 ?A J 10 9 3 ?6 WEST EAST ?10 4 ?Q J 9 8 ¥ 8 6 3 2 *10 75 ?86 ?K74 ?A 10 852 ?J 9 4 SOUTH ?A 7 3 ?A Q 4 ?Q 5 2 ?K Q 7 3 Vulnerable: Both Dealer: South West North East South 1 NT Pass 2 ?Pass 2 ?Pass 3 ?Pass 3 NT Pass Pass Pass Opening lead: 4 5 fense will add four club tricks to that one diamond trick.He will be down one for a rather average score since other declarers will fall into that same trap.The rubber bridge player decides he wants to win the rubber.He lets East’s jack of clubs hold the first trick and his nine of clubs hold the next one At trick three he plays a club honor.West can do nothing better than to take his ace for the third defense trick.I^ater on South loses the diamond finesse, but that is the fourth and last trick for the defense.Ask the Experts 4-17-B By Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag The essence of successful rubber bridge play is to go after your contract and to work on overtricks once your contract is safe.Match point duplicate is a different proposition.A match point player wins the first club and takes a diamond finesse.Should that diamond finessse work, he would be sure of 11 tricks and hoping for 12.The way the cards lie, the diamond finesse loses and the clubs are so located that the de- You hold : ?2 V K87654 ?A K 7 5 4 3 ?- - A New York reader asks what we bid.Partner has opened three hearts and the next player has overcalled three spades.No one is vulnerable.We want to get to six hearts and be allowed to play it there.Our best bet is to bid just four hearts and accept pushes to five and six.(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN > (Do you have a question for the experts9 Write Ask the Experts, " care of this newspaper.Individual questions will be answered if accompanied by stamped, self-addressed envelopes.The most interesting questions will be used in this column and will receive copies of JACOBY MODERN.) Crossword ACROSS 1 Obtain 4 Short period (si) 8 Came 1 2 Move quickly 13 Faith healer Roberts 14 Stake 15 Armenian mountain 16 Biblical nationality 18 Wyoming mountain range 20 Have 21 Scatter hay 22 Greek letter 24 Greek island 26 Influence 30 Swig 33 Agar 34 Arabian ship 36 Mix 37 Raw materials 39 Three feet 4 1 Compass point 42 Pertaining to a kidney 44 Examines 46 Beverages 48 Worry at persistently 49 Gosh 5 1 Comedian Sparks 53 Shade 57 Hobby 60 Deutschland (abbr ) 61 Pope 62 Cornice 63 Civil War general 64 Lohengrin s bride 65 City m Israel 66 Before (poet ) DOWN Answer to Previous Pu/zle O A T U ON W W A R G A E P 17 26 1 Mountain 19 pass in India 23 2 DeValera s land 3 Nipple 4 Hinged 5 Tax agency 27 (abbr) 28 6 Gambling 29 game 31 7 Oversights 32 8 Actor 35 Holbrook 9 Begins 10 Feminine (suffix) 11 Accomplish-ment City in Oklahoma Over (poetic) Pale Housewife s title (abbr ) Opera prince Nominal Copious Washing bar Mulct Very (Fr ) Small brown bird Automotive society (abbr ) Joe Friday s forte 43 Actress Turner 45 Exclamation of disgust 47 Mediterranean sailing vessel 49 Yawn 50 Malevolent 52 Control 54 Oeillade 55 Forecaster 56 Corner 58 Confederate States Army (abbr ) 59 Eggs Cousens; Grayson Cousens; Mrs.Elsie Stanbridge, Orval Quilliams; Will Pettes; Mrs Vi Peek; Mrs.Mabel Shufelt; Mrs.Doris Smith; Mrs Tillie Derby; Madame B Leblanc; Mrs.Enid Bailey.Two jars of syrup were also donated by Eric Foster and these were won by Mrs Marie Bessette.A delicious tea of sandwiches.fancy breads and cake was enjoyed, at which time the president.Grayson Cousens thanked the 1.0.0 F and Buster Crandall and Grant Windle for a most pleasant afternoon WATERLOO — A meeting of the Golden Age members was held at the Legion Hall 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 12 13 14 15 16 18 19 ¦ 20 ¦ 22 23 ¦ 26 27 28 29 ¦ 30 31 32 33 ÜH ¦ • ¦ 36 37 38 ¦ 1 40 ¦ 47 42 43 ¦ 1 45 46 47 ¦ 49 50 ¦ 51 ¦ S3 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 Wednesday.April 18 ASTRO-GRAPH Bernice Bede Osol lyjipU REAP! J 1M reading ABOUT we velu [ COURT RULING THAT 5AYS IF.A “SIAIGLE MAM INITIATES' A CÜAJ-VERSATIOM lUrm AM UMATTACHED FEMALE, SHE'S EA/TÎTLED ID HALF HIS ESTATE / VXI CAM) EXPECT \ ( A LETTER V aiy ATTORNEY A ^ r tt j\ ir 71 i tQ} \rcM JJ j f / \ M(\ 7 , J x ^^ÊÊÊm::::rx J ^ - x \Y[jr0 * BUGS BUNNY by Stoffel & Heimdahl YER POOR W/A6 I \CAh I SORROW oren zo 1 | ¦ o\\e cpyer CAX\e RUbhl CANNED (SOOPS7 IN.FUPP^Y.J^l'M PRZ6H our.SHORT RIBS THUMP ONCE FER "YE*" AN I by Frank Hill JUST LOOK AT THAT ONE ENE Three ACTUALLY 2 THOUSHT YOUV£ BEEN l/N { AUFN C^EAT'LG’Ey.^EOS.HOVX ?E^-S!V'E.SHE WAS KINPA OUTEf?SPACE 1 “TOO LONG ALLEY OOP by Dave Graue WHY DO YOUSUF’PDSE I I HAVEN T THE FAINTEST THOSE ARMY TRUCkS IDEA DOC.BUT IT MAkES WERE GOING INTO ONE WONPER WHAT WJND SVENSON'S PROPERTV?Y OF NEIGHBORS WE'VE GOT.I ZOONIES YES, IT CERTAINLY POES! 'S ) SOUNDS FINE.WE y HAVEN'T PAID KATE A VISIT FOR OLJITE FOR DINNER ?by Craig Leggett found out about the rules too late Others had excuses for their apparent violations and promised to follow the regulations in the future \ Amex hardest hit by Ottawa heist OTTAWA CP — American Express appeared to be the main victim of a multi milliondollar postal heist early Sunday and there was uncertainty 48 hours later just how much, and what, had been stolen The police estimate was that perhaps $4 million in American Express travellers cheques, part of a $15 million shipment, was taken by thieves from an unguarded postal terminal here The only person in the three-storey building, which has floors the size of football fields, was a 56-year-old com missionaire stationed at the front door He said a two-year-old could have robbed the terminal The thieves apparently parked a Scout camper truck bearing Quebec licence plates at a rear door, broke a window to open the door, then went to the third-floor registered mail room where they rummaged through bags and cartons When the theft was discovered Sunday morning, pass ports, drugs and jewelry were littered about the floor, along w ith about 50 empty cartons that had contained the traveller’s cheques with face values of $10 to $1.000 It took hours for police to locate an American Express official from Montreal Po6t office spokesman David Carter said the official then ‘came in and left.” leaving police and post office to try to figure out which cheques had been shipped and which had been stolen LIKE TO KNOW We would like to know exactly what was taken,” Carter said of the theft "We don't have a solid figure.” a detective said "We do not have a full listing of what was stolen,” the American Express New York office said Carter said about half the $15 million shipment had been moved to banks across the country before the theft incurred ‘What was left was what should have gone ” Deputy Postmaster General J.C Corkery said he believed “it was a planned job aimed at those American Express cheques The 10-year-old terminal has about 1.200 employees Officials from the Koval Canadian Mint and the passport office were checking shipments against possible losses However.Ed Koworth of Toronto, another postal spokesman, said it appeared the thieves had simply ripped open and discarded envelopes containing passports Officials indicated it may be days before losses are tallied “Some people realized what the> were doing was not legal and the) tried to stop it.” Gorman said in a recent interview In most of the cases already dismissed, it was too late to stop the infractions In the majority of the 18 cases.UK-ludmg the nine al ready dismissed, newspapers had published partisan advertisements that are supposed to be tinned under the Canada Elections Act until April 22 \ \MES BANNED Even after that date, local candidates are not supposed to be named in ads.even for such events as all candidates meetings, says Koger Dube, director of election financing responsible for interpreting the law Included in tin* dismissed cases was a trade union pro motmg in a pamphlet a political party, presumably the New Democratic Party.whose campaign is formally hacked by the Canadian Labor Congress That was considered legal.Gorman said In another case, an enumerator in Calgary quit halfway through his job and refused to turn over the voters' list Gorman said the KCMP persuaded the person to relinquish the list and no further action was taken In one dismissed case.Progressive Conservative MP David Crombie, cam paigning for re-election in Toronto, wrote a column for the Toronto Sun Gorman said ht» believed it was a breach of tin» law but was a genuine mistake so no action was taken Material on each incident gathered by Gorman and his inv estigators is examined by two lawyers on his staff before any final decision on how to dispose of a case is made Quebec Briefs Hungarian retains chess tourney lead Former Bar officer dies Photo Bruce Porter Lending a hand.Monday was a school holiday and these youngsters were having a ball at Marin Park in the West Ward.The wooden fort located there was the subject of some serious scaling, as these two girls lend a hand to a younger boy.MONTREAL (CP) — Lajos Portisch of Hungary retained his lead Monday in the Man and His World Challenge Cup chess tournament fighting world champion Anatoly Karpov of the U S S R to a draw in 17 moves in the fifth round.Portisch now has four points, based on a scoring system of one point for a win and a halfpoint for a draw Karpov moved to one-half point behind the leader Karpov.who agreed Monday to draw a match with Bent Larsen of Denmark which had been adjourned from Saturday s third round, is tied for second place at 34 points with his Soviet countryman Mikhail Tal, who dynamited Larsen’s game for a fifth-round win Monday.West German grandmaster Robert Huebner moved into fourth place with three points, besting Lubomir Kavalek of the United States on Monday.QUAKE their misery RAIN HAMPERS RESCUE The rain, which intensified during the morning, turned muddy country lanes into impassable tracks and hampered rescue workers and relief aid.Special teams with life-detecting equipment and trained dogs searched for survivors in the ruins of coastal towns Blazo Orlandic, the mayor of the port town of Bar, a major cross-point of sea and rail communications, said Monday night that an unknown number of persons are believed still alive under the debris of a five-storey, 100-room, hotel there In Athens, officials reported a moderately strong tremor in northern Greece today, but police said they knew of no casualties or damage.The death toll in Yugoslavia is expected to rise further as rescuers using army helicopters reach devastated remote mountain villages The government said Monday night it is the country’s worst earthquake in terms of the size of the area affected MIGHT HAVE BEEN WORSE But because much of the area affected is mountainous and uninhabited, the number of casualties was not as high as it might have been.However, scores of villages were levelled and Yugoslav Vice-President Fadilj Hodza, who flew over the stricken area in a helicopter, described the scene as “absolutely horrible.” Local authorities issued an urgent appeal for 20,000 tents.Despite a massive relief operation, only several hundred have arrived so far because many roads were destroyed in the quake.Even persons whose homes survived relatively intact fear to sleep indoors.More than 200 aftershocks have been detected since the first major quake.RAIDERS clash.The Israeli command has reported a total of 17 Palestinian infiltrators killed since the beginning of the year, including three on Jan.3 and four on March 10.The military command also announced on April 2 that the navy intercepted a Palestinian ship in the Mediterranean and arrested six guerrillas who admitted they were preparing to land for a raid.There was no immediate report from the military command or from Palestinian headquarters in Beirut identifying which Palestinian ( ontinued from Page 1 organization sent the guerrillas into Israel Monday Meanwhile, Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan touched off a political storm in Israel when he told a group of Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank that if Israel wants peace with Syria, it will have to give up the Golan Heights, which it took from Syria in the 1967 war Dayan denied that he was advocating evacuation of the strategic plateau, on which Israel has established about 25 Jewish settlements.Continued from Page 1 In places it even changed the geography of this coastal resort region, sending slices of coastline tumbling into the sea.The government, which has ordered the release of emergency funds for the re.ief operations, said many historical monuments have been destroyed It said the region’s economy, including a hitherto booming tourist trade, will be paralysed for a long period No casualties were reported among the 2,000 foreign visitors in the area OPPOSITION C ontinued from Page 1 lacking.” He added that no Conservative MP “took the bait” except Jack Horner Conservative candidate for Alberta’s Crowfoot riding, Arnold Malone, who represented Battle River before his riding was redistributed, said Monday he was not offered a job by the government.Ray Hnatysyhn, Conservative candidate in Saskatoon West, said he has not been offered a job either He is running for reelection in a riding the Liberals hope to take with C.M Williams, a University of Saskatchewan livestock marketing specialist “I hear these things from time to time,” said Hnatyshyn, first elected to Parliament in 1974 “I think they’ve got a system where if you’re friendly they’ll come and talk to you.” Hnatyshyn said he is too unfriendly to the governing Liberals to be considered for a job offer, adding “I’d rather starve.” MONTREAL (CP) Funeral services will be held Wednesday for Claude Boisvert, former disciplinary officer of the Quebec Bar Association, who died last Friday at age 42 Boisvert, married w ith four children, hhd served as the Bar’s disciplinary officer the French term is “syndic” for eight years In 1971, he was named a legal observer to safeguard the rights of FLQ member Paul Rose at his trial on charges of murdering and kidnapping former Quebec labor minister Pierre Laporte Beauty salon victim of weird attack MONTREAL (CP) Montreal police didn’t know quite what to think when they answered a call at a beauty salon that had been broken into and discovered all the wigs had been given crew cuts.And they were equally baffled when several young girls had their long tresses cut by a man who did not harm them otherwise.A police spokesman said Monday they may have arrested the culprit during the weekend An 18-year old man faces charges on 66 counts of breaking and entering, 19 counts of possession of stolen goods, and one count of assault for cutting a little girl’s hair Dollar hits new 1979 mark MONTREAL (CP) — The Canadian dollar edged up fractionally against its U S.counterpart Monday to another 1979 high after a quiet business day on world currency markets The Canadian dollar closed at 87.38 cents U S Monday after dipping to a noon low of 87.23.Thursday’s close was 87.31 cents U S.Bank traders said Easter Monday was a relatively slow day for the Canadian currency as trading picked up marginally after the holiday weekend and many businesses were still inactive.FLAT INTERIOR LATEX $8.95 per Gal.SEMI-GLOSS OIL BASE or LATEX $11.95 per Gal.ENAMEL FLOOR PAINT ! $9.95 per Gal.reduction 20% ALL BRUSHES & ROLLERS =r=T= : rLIIIIURLJ Cl SPÉCIALITÉS « UNIVERSEL CIE Ltée.2265 King West, Sher (King Shopping Center) •Interior decorating service •Wallpaper - carpets - paints Prop.: Gaétan Mercier Office: 569-7432 / 7433 BRUNSWICK’ TABLES MAKE EAM1LY FUN 7 BRUNSWICK* SHUFFLEBOARD $425 00 BRUNSWICK* CELEBRITY* $225 00 BRUNSWICK* BRISTOL T“ A Brunswick *avo'>ta at a poou
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