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Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
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mercredi 17 juin 1964
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  • Journaux
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  • Sherbrooke gazette ,
  • Sherbrooke examiner
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Sherbrooke daily record, 1964-06-17, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" Bibliothiqut Séminaire de Skerbnoke y n.Pf Federal grant clears way for local airport completion Construction on the long - awaited Sherbrooke airport terminus will start within the next few months, Mayor Armand Nadeau said today.The federal department of transport agreed yesterday to provide the grant that will make the project possible, he said.\u201cWe are very, very happy to finally have a definite answer on this,\u201d he said.\"The project has been proposed since 1959,\u201d The grant was arranged when Mayor Nadeau and Aid.Paul Gervais, chairman of the City Council transport committee, travelled to Ottawa yesterday and met Hon.J.W.Pick-ersgill, Minister of Transport.Mr.Pickersgill had earlier recommended that the Treasury Board approve the airport grant.Mayor Nadeau and Aid.Gervais then met Deputy-Minister Baldwin of the Department of Transport.He asked that the Sherbrooke architects for the project meet with federal government architects.A study of the size of the WEATHER Cloudy today with * few showers; clearing this evening; continuing cool; winds northwesterly 20 with gusts to 30.High today at Sherbrooke 60.Outlook for Thursday: Sunny and warmer.tjecbcoofeePailulRecocd Today's Chuckle A man may not know whrr« his next dollar is coming from, but the chances arc his wife knows where it's soing.Established 1897 Price: 7 Cents SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, WEDNESDAY, JIM 17.19M Sixty - Eighth Year Would delay flag bill debate Winds damage Richmond block Warmer weather seen A break is expected tomorrow in the unusually high wnids and blocks of cold air which\u2019 buildings and other factors dropped in over most of the would then be made.\tEastern Townships Tuesday.Sherbrooke airport ar- while it will be cloudy with showers most of today, the weatherman has predicted clear skies, sunny and warmer for Thursday.The gusts of winds, which imade the temperatures seem lower than they actually were, | caused only minor damage in the City.Sherbrooke police said {this morning they had received no reports of incidents.But strong winds in Richmond were blamed for the falling of bricks from a three story building owned by former Mayor Marcel Roy.The bricks were ripped from QUEBEC (CP) \u2014 Premier! the building on Main Street Lesage said Tuesday night the | next to the Canadian Imperial Quebec pension plan will cover Bank of Commerce about noon, most federal employees work- Heavy damage was reported ing in the province except the chitccts, Boulanger, Faucher, and Gagnon, will travel to Ottawa this week for the study, said Mayor Nadeau.Tentative plans and cost will be set forth by this study, he said.Quebec plan to protect older men RCMP and armed services.He told the Legislative Assembly the exceptiions were made because of the special nature of the 20-year retirement pensions covering members of the forces.However, the Premier said the list of exceptions was not definite and other employees covered by pension plans incompatible with the Quebec scheme could be added.Premier Lesage said the reason for reducing the transition period before full benefits come into effect to 10 years from 20 years was to protect workers No one was on the sidewalk at the time nor were there any cars parked near.But, a Southern Canada Power employee, Jean Tardif was turning into the driveway on his wav back to work seconds! before the bricks feU.He said .he had just turned into the: WIND DAMAGE driveway when he heard a noise of something falling.It; was then, he said, that he noticed the falling bricks and if he had come into the road a fewi seconds earlier, his car might1 have been hit.His sister was a passenger in the car.Some of the falling bricks! fell into a bay window on the OTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Why do it now?Wait until win- I ter! Spokesmen for three parliamentary parties luesday echoed that slogan parody of the federal winter-works program in urging the government to pluck the great flag debate from the House of Commons hopper and proceed with other business.\u201cThis is a momentous and historic debate,'' said New Democratic Leader Douglas, but \u201cthere would have been plenty of time to have dealt with the flag resolution next fall or next winter.\u201d Bert Leboe, Social Credit MP from the British Columbia Cariboo, agreed with Mr.Douglas in claiming Canadians want priority attached to legislation other than the flag.Whv is Utis \u201cemotional do bate before us when mans if not f^ndment that a plebiscite be most of the government s elec- ™ « .rational choice -con tion promises are not fulfilled?\u2019 tm>,es\t, asked Robert Coates.Conserva lBul th(' ^ \" »i m o n s toms live MP from Cumberland.lhm'Ml',;v ,n, an ur'l'nl 1 cm N.S., who has spearheaded a aPl,roval (,f :l mnstitutumal campaign for parliamentary on ^angc to permit survivors to dorsation of the Red Ensign as collect benefits under the pro- continuing national ''\"\u2022se(l ('anac'a\u201e rpr'si,on rla,\u2018 Ibis action follows the neces Canada\u2019s symbol.\t.sary Quebec legislature action Real C a o u e t t c.Cretliti.slc[(|cman(|etj constitutionally and leader who complied with js bt-mg hastened to get it he Speaker Alan Macnaughton s f0l (.tbe British Pai'lianient he order to remove a flag trom his fore the dissolution for lire an desk, urged MPs lo handle the tj(.jpatef| election here, matter quickly and adopt a dis- Mr Douglas led off Hie flag tine five Canadian flag.\tdebate Tuesday with a call for He said his group would open \u2022 mindedness and respon plump with misgivings for the sihilily in the debate and a CANADIAN DEFENSE MINIS 1ER TIM RS CYPRUS OUTPOST Canadian Defense Minister Paul Deliver ins- pects a machine gun manned by Pvt.Albert Hunt of Three Rivers as he tours a U.N, peace keeping forces outpost on Hie roof of a flour mill on Hie Kyrenia road in Cyprus today.\t(AP Radio- photo from Nicosia) tribute to Mr.Pearson for undoubted sincerity and conviction in grasping a netlle on Hie flag choice that cautious predecessors had avoided.Strong winds Tuesday were blamed for the damage to this three-storey building owned by former mayor Marcel Roy on Richmond\u2019s Main Street.Above, Southern Canada Power Company Limited crewmen survey damage and repair electric wires struck by the falling bricks.\t(Record photo by Doug Gerrish) tri-maple-leaf design lo save time, and abandon plans to push a single - leaf version-green leaf centred on a field diagonally split into red and white sectors.That was the model he sought lo display in the House.But Mr.Douglas said his 17\t.\tf\t.man group will move later infN|-x F | T P'fr r fY T fi the debate for a single-leaf ver-\"\t* llwllWIVJ sion of the existing design.\t\u2022 ,\t.\u2022 The debate launched Mon SlTUSlIOn day by Prime Minister Pearson | and followed up by Opposition Leader Diefenbaker with an New parley More killing in Cyprus Hellyer inspects lines NICOSIA (CP)\u2014More killing ending the strife between the Buildings on either side of the struck Cyprus today as world I wo factions.\tigreen line were vacant or capitals pondered the future of Thant called for a three ruined in the creation of a notin' strife lorn island and De-month extension of tin UN man\u2019s land, fence Minister Paul Hellyer of force in Cyprus, now numbering The Canadian minister also QUEBEC T * |! (: .?¦ ' I ' You'll please your Dad with a quality clothing gift from the fine selections found at the two Laliberte stores.lolibertè 6< fils liée \u201cSymbol of quality for over 50 years'\u2019 DOLLAR\u2019AMA RULES 1\u2014.Any purchase, In any of the Shopping Centre stores, entitles you to a participating coupon.2 Write in your Name, Address end Phone No.and deposit your coupon in the drawing basket located at the Shopping Centre.3\u2014inch week at 1.30 on Friday night, a drawing will be carried on.The lucky winner will receive a cash prize of $30.00, whether he is present or not at the drawing.Hewavar, if the winner is present at the brewing and identifias himself immediately, his cash prize will be doubled to $100.00.I ' 1 |\\ 1 101 Wellington St.North, Sherbrooke.\u2014 with a branch store If the winner it not present at the drawing, he will receive his $50 00 but the other amount ef * $50.00 will be added to the following week drawing, and se on from week to week until a winner, being present at the weekly drawing, claims all the accumulated dollars.SHERBROOKE SHOPPING CENTRE \"Home ef the Famou* Cempu» Shop\" The Shopping Centre Merchants, thair employee* and their family, are net eligible to participate.i.WADING Rigid wading pool that snaps together in minutes No nuts or bolts needed.Heavy gauge vinvl bottom, ate.75\u2019\u2019 x 50\u201d x 12\u201d.Great value! USE OUR CREDIT PLAN! Setiifection Guaranteed \u2022r Money Refunded.NO if* NO butt ONLY L ZELLER S KfTalienS TO THRIFTY CANADIAN*» Also available in size of 7'2\" x 16'' deep.___I\u2019 - ^ SHERBROOKE Only SHO PPING CENTRE.17.88 i ; \u2022\twmm \u2022\tCOMÈTÏM TURCOTTE \u2022\tCHEZ HUAIRE \u2022\tSALON OE BARBIR KING \u2022\tUURENTIDE FINANCE \u2022\tFIFTH AVENUE FERRONNERIE CARTIER PHARMACIE RING MARTIKIZiNG DRY CLEANING OUILLES DE L'ESTRIE TRANS-CANADA SHOE UNDERWOOD LTD.DECORATION MODERNE LA BOITE A MUSIQUE BANQUE DE MONTREAL RESTAURANT YUDIZ REITMAN'S s.s.mm ASSURANCES UC.C.LEO LALIBERTE & FILS LTEE J.L.BOULANGER ITEE MONTREAL SHOE STORE ZELLERS SKINNER & NADEAU INC.SALON FEMINA KANDY ANDY SUNBEAM APPLIANCES SERVICE W .\t' wL\" FRESH PORK ru(| a campaign (nr funds for tirelv Invmiruble reaction on the restoration of this histone llie part ol the latter.\tbuilding in May Response lias I he representatives of the been towns, said Mi Baudot, are many j\u2018\u2018ready to give the council j 100 per cent support\".1 his includes the promise; | of financial assistance ifj j necessary, he added.No definite decision was j reached, however, regarding the actual establishment of idle council.h - SUNDAY NEXT IS FATHER'S DAY, JUNE 21st.\t/f .'3 \tf \\ 1.7 X c,.1 TTKi\t1 \\ W I \t* I * T t V\t\\\t \t \t* ¦ SUGGESTIONS FOR FATHER\u2019 Uv*ful and quality marchand)»» for his day from FASHION CRAFT known for »tyli»h gift» , .»ueh ai Dressing Gown», Windbreaker*, Sport and Dress Shirts, Socks, Ties, Pyjamas, Plaid Bermudas, Shorts, etc., etc.^JcLshion - Çhfl LIMITED J.Philippe Dion 2 Wellington So., Sherbrooke Tel.562-7566 Siwf i -itm Æ / i /./ .4haah' r-sjek ¦ 2llE : Ipr® \"BUY AN EYE FOR RENE\u201d \u2014 Neighbors, friends and (he Magog Lions Club have joined forces in Magog to purchase an artificial eye for nine-year old Rene Laçasse, who lost his left eye while playing baseball Iasi week.The people involved had hoped to raise sufficient money 1» obtain a transplant for the boy, However damage to the eye nerves was too severe to allow such an operation.Nevertheless, the drive goes on to obtain an artificial eye.Pictured left to right Monday evening, at a fund raising meeting arc: Mrs.Emile Lehond, a neighbor and one of the campaign organizers, Rene Laçasse and his grandfather, Edmond Gagnon, and Robert Fisetle, Magog Lions Club chairman of the community\u2019s CNIB annual drive for I he blind, now in progress.(Record photo by Charles Cat.chpaugh) At Mount Orford Summer program announced for JMC camp Jeunesses Musicales of Canada announces a full summer program at the JMC Village at Mt.Orford.Events are scheduled as follows: Sunday, June 28 \u2014 Paul Tortelier, cellist and John New-mark pianist.Wednesday.July 1 \u2014 Cecile Ousscl, pianist.Saturday, July 4 \u2014 Vlado Perlemulcr.pianist.Sunday, July 5 \u2014 Christian Larde, flutist, and Marie-Clairc Jamct, harpist.Wednesday, July 8 \u2014 Presentation and excerpts from Debussy\u2019s opera, Pelleas et Meli-sande: Andre Jobin, tenor and PROPRIETORS It\u2019s time to have your house or ceiling insulated! Insulation will protect you against cold-moisture \u2014 will protect your roof and eavestroughs, plus you\u2019ll get your money back on fuel economy.This is your best investment.HOUSE PAINTING SAND BLASTING ON STONE OR BRICK WE ALSO COVER HOUSES WITH ASBESTOS SHINGLES CALL \u2014 MINERAL INSULATION 133 Big Forks St.\u2014Tel.562-3158 Mr.Jacques Hence Mahcux, soprano: and Gaston Germain, bass, and Vlado Perlemuter, pianist.Saturday, July 11 \u2014 Trios for piano and cello: Beethoven Archduke.Brahms B Minor, and Schubert B flal.with Laurent Fenyves, violinist and Guy Fallot, ccllisl.Sunday, July 12 Recital (lo he announced).Wednesday, July 15 Cecile Berard, pianist.Saturday.July 18 \u2014 ( amp students\u2019 concert: symphony, concertos, choral works.Sunday, July 19 \u2014 JMC N'a tional Music Competition; piano, first auditions 2 In 5 p.m.and 8:30 to 10:30 p.m.Monday, July 26 JM( Na tional Music Competition: piano, first auditions.Tuesday, July 21 to Friday July 24 JMC National Music Competition; piano, second auditions.Saturday, July 25\t- Ravel evening: Sonata for violin and ! cello L F enyves and O.Fallot; Trio \u2014 L.Fenyves, G.Fallot.and V Perlemuter: Introduction and allegro with C.To unveil conservation monument WINDSOR Minisler of Land and Forests, Hon.Lucien] Cliche has been invited as guest i of honor at an unveiling of an Operation (\u2019onscrvalion-Protec- S Uon monument here June 21.i A full day of celebrations is planned in couperai ion with the Eastern Townships Forestry Association Inc.A parade, will form on the Richmond road at the Verlue Garage and march to the municipal park at 2 p.m.Hon.Cliche is lo unveil the monument in the municipal park at 3 p.m.Speeches will follow hy local Operation CP president, Phil 1 i ippe Bourque, Mayor Arthur Hamel, Abbe .1 A.Lomay, Hon.j Cliche Then Bolduc, regional j president of Operation O.l\u2019 ; Lionel Bienvenu, president of Hie Quebec Forestry Associa lion, and Dr.Roger Veilleux, president of the Fas tern Town ! ships Forestry Association.BRIEFLETS SHERBROOKE Band Concert, Thurs.June 18, 8 p.m.on Lawrence School 'grounds.Refreshments, kiddies' fish pond.Auspices St.Mary's Guild of SI.Paul's Church.BARNSTON The 131st Anniversary of Hie Barnston Baptist Church, will he held on Sunday.June 21st.! Guest speaker will he Rev.G.F.j ] Gorman, of Scotland, Ontario.Services al 11:00 a m.and 8:00 p.m.Everybody welcome.WATERVILLE Waterville United Church, 102nd Anniversary Supper, Sal.June 20, 5:30 to 8:00 p.m Adults $1 (X), children 60c.most satisfactory with donations given as mem to loved ones who are dead but to whom Hus .school meant a great deal.rhe Building committee ha.-let the contract to George Goodsell, a local contractor.The work hy Mr.Goodsell will include foumlalion repairs to both the school house and ai joining annex, repairs lo roof plates and roof, repairs to Hie entrance .sloop, new door stoop re mortaring loose bricks and many other things.Later llie stone fence will have to he repaired, and oilier small jobs done.II is hoped that the portraits of Hie members ol Parliament in llie Federal .government since Confederation will he brought up to dale In adding some half dozen portraits.Donations ars still coming in and being rcr ived by members of Hie commillcr and Mrs.W II.Rudd, Rock Island, the treasurer.The committee have been must encouraged by tbc contre butions of money.The committee hopes that after the work is completed an open house will be held.THOS.W.LEONARD B.A., U.l.NOTARY Conlkiwilol Sunn 509 - M 10 9 J6Q0 BLAIS & MADRO INC.\"Quality Men's Store\" Custom Tailors \u2014 la?Wellington St.North Sherbrooke, Que.Different By Faith, Skin And Calling But What A Wonderful Adventure Thev Shared! 'He is no! ol out lailh nor of out skin,\" said Moiliet Mona \"But li« is a man ol poitier \u2022 m tf, iHf an\tnt r,i u \\eade tward winnet Best Aetoi \u2019\"t i i toviNG rx r,i who our n»r tHCOuNtrns nve nuns esc two rnou BtvoNO inr.mm in w»u O RALPH Nelsqfs juaSkaia Sianley Adams ADDED HIT! Some Women Beg Love Some Buy It - ¦ -And Some Like Laura - - \u2022 Steal It!! m MIRISCH COMPANY«to BARBICAN FILMS SUSAN HAYWARD .SlblEN HOURS COLOR »* DE LUXE\tmm®BDomits DIANE BAKER \u2014 EDWARD JUDD Co Starring \u2014 MICHAEL CRAIG STARTS TODAY m»- JVoweiâ'f M un LILIES OF THE FIELD\u201d 2.35\t6.10 - 9.45 \"STOLEN HOURS\" 12.50 4.25 \u2022 8.05 Larde ami M.J.Jamet.Monday, July 27 to Tuesday, July 28 JMC Nalional Music Competition, piano, second au ditions.Wednesday,* July 29 Andrew Dawes, violinist.Saturday, August 1 - Richard Verrcau, tenor.Sunday, August 2 \u2014 Mozart evening: Oboe quartet .lac ques Simard; flute quartet \u2014 Christian Larde; clarinet quin See \"At Mount\" Page 13 APPRECIATED GIFTS .Frames Peinting* Lamps Mirrors - v w $3.to $200.mmM.184 Wellington N.\u2014 Tel.562-378$ | FRESH PORK SPARE RIBS ib.51*) ROAST BEEF CROSS RIBS\tIb\t63 ROUND STEAK, Full slice PORK CHOPS, shoulder,\tIb.\t89 48 meaty and lean\tIb.\t VINE RIPENED TOMATOES\tIb.\t29 SUNKIST ORANGES\tO site 163 \u2014\tdoz.\t69 Brome Lake DUCKS, grade A, oven-ready FRESH GREEN CABBAGES r\t\u2019 LOBSTERS, Ha Ib.size.Live or Bo.Pc\tIb.COOKED CORNED BEEF Ib.Ib.ICE per block 55' ,b ae $1.09 1 05 25\u2018 1 LIBBY'S FROZEN ORANGE JUICE 6 01.tins 99' 1 JHei&m yr LENNOXVILLE,QUE (1 m BEER AND PORTER FREE DELIVERY Lennoxville\tA.M, Sherbrooke\tP.M.Tel.562-1531 i '*sn: jSbetbtoobc Bally fiecocd The paper of the Eastern Townships.Established February 9, 1897, incorporating the Sherbrooke Gazette (est.1837j and the Sherbrooke Examiner (est.1879) Published every weekday by the Sherbrooke Daily Record Company Ltd.119 Wellington Street North.Sherbrooke, Que JOHN BASSETT\tIVAN SAUNDERS\tHUGH DOHERTY President\tManaging Director\tEditor-in-chief WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 1964 Major factor in insurance premiums When the present Quebec administration first announced its unsatisfied judgment fund to protect victims of automobile accidents in cases where the motorist failed to carry public liability insurance it claimed that by some feat of financial legerdemain the desired results would be achieved without costing anybody anything.The fund would be financed by the insurance companies themselves.The increased business to result from the tightening of the liability laws would more than compensate them for the amount they must contribute to the government fund, it was argued.Furthermore motorists were led to believe that because of the expanded business, the premiums would decrease.But rates were boosted in 1962 by approximately 17 per cent and Mrs.Claire Kirkland - Casgrain, a member of the provincial cabinet, has announced that another boost is in the offing because of the heavy losses experienced by the insurance companies.Several causes have been advanced ù for the increase in premiums.One is that too many companies arc jostling for the motorists\u2019 business resulting in excessive selling costs.Another is that insurance companies are required to issue policies to anyone who has an operator\u2019s permit.The first is a matter for the insurance companies to work out among themselves.But the second fault can be laid directly at the door of the government which issues permits to almost anyone and permits beaten up old wrecks to circulate on the highways.But a third cause is the method of financing the unsatisfied judgments fund.Instead of imposing a special fee on uninsured drivers to maintain the fund coffers in good condition, a special levy is placed on the insurance firms which must in turn pass the cost onto the insured driver.In effect the motorist who carries insurance must pay an assessment to meet the costs incurred by the driver that does not.?Some married couples don't speak when they're alone\u2014they holler! Would ban US hydro power imports Politics make strange bed fellows, according to some cynical observers of the sport of government both in Canada and abroad.The latest support for this thesis comes from the argument over the export of Canadian hydro-electric power to the United States.Canadian interests who insist the large-scale exports envisioned by the Hamilton Falls and Columbia River developments jeopardize the future of the Canadian economy were given unexpected backing Tuesday by Democratic Sena- ?Wild life is a l«l safer out-of-dti tor Robert t.Byrd ot West Virginia.Senator Byrd declared that steps might be necessary to limit US imports of Canadian power if they grew to abnormal size.Of course Senator Byrd was not worrying about Canada's economic future but rather about the coal industry of his native state.In addition to restrictions on Canadian hydro power imports, the Senator also urged an end to government subsidizing lor atomic power plants which he saw as a menace to coal as a source of power.?rs than in some night clubs.The readers say: Youth activities lacking Dear \"Two Mothers of Teenagers.\u201d If you have ever been to the North Hatley High School you will note that on the north end ot the school building is a gymnasium.This is a beautiful gym, heated the entire winter long.In it one can find equipment for volleyball, basketball or badminton.It also contains a stage and chairs for an audience.In the basement oi the school, which is connected directly to the gym, one finds a sports.cupboard containing such items as ping-pong, < three sets with tables), boxing gloves, shut-fleboard and wrestling mats.Also as a convenience there arc washrooms for boys and girls, showers for boys, and seats around the walls with coathooks and hat shelves.The basement is roughly the size of a tennis court.Last fall this space and equipment was made available free of charge to school children on Friday nights and Saturday afternoons.For teenagers out of school it was available on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings.The other members of the schoolboard and myself spenl all the time we could spare trying to organize a recreation program, hut, without the support of parents (who were approached for help) our program was not a roaring success.After Christmas, through until the latter part of April the gym was opened nearly every Friday or Saturday night tor record hops.These hops were well attended by teenagers but again they had to be chaperoned by teachers willing to give their time.Very tew parents were interested enough to spend just one single night a year to help with the recreation of their own children.Dear mothers, have you ever been to the ballpark where your sons play ball two and three nights a week all summer long?This recreation is offered free by the Canadian Legion.No, Mothers, you haven't been there, 1 would have seen you.Have you, mothers, ever been to see your sons at scouts?No, you haven't, the ones that 1 have seen there, and 1 haven\u2019t missed many meetings, 1 could couni on my left hand with three ting- Support ers closed.Mothers, we have a skating rink available all winter long for your teenagers.It's free and again the Legion sponsors organized hockey for your sons.Mothers, for a mighty small fee your teenagers can curl and enjoy it from December until April and it would be doubtful that they would be turned away from an occasional night at the playhouse when it opens.These organizations are active in giving your teenagers recreation and they arc shamefully underst a f f e d, poorly financed.They will survive.They will continue.Public support is being sought What is sadly lack ing in all these organizations, the big item, is moral support.Dear mothers this is your end of the log.Let's pick it up and carry it for a change.Very Sincerely Yours, GERALD TAYLOR.P.S.Notice to fathers.It you have read this letter, read it again and put the word \u201cfather\u201d in place of the word \"mother.\u201d These teenagers are yours too, aren\u2019t they?\"Well, the One in Pisa's Been an Attraction for Years!\" Accuses Auschwitz guards Trial prosecutors seek to set Nazi past before German people ES23 r ,;i&p 1 \u2022\u2019 mm if.* \u2022ifcjf.r «\u2022ili mm mm FRANKFURT \u2014 (NEA)\u2014 \u201cIf only 10 Germans will listen to us the Auschwitz trial will have been worth-while,\u201d says Joachim Kugler, 37, one of the three prosecutors in the trial of the 22 Ausch witz guards who are accused of mass murder.The statement sounds startling until one reflects that the Lord was willing to spare the cities of Sodom and Gom-morrah if a lesser number of just men could be found.Kugler, blond, handsome and with the chunky build of a squash player, is a representative of the new Germany.He is old enough to have known what it was like under Hitler (he served as an officer in the Wehrmacht), hut he is young enough to have escaped the collapse of the Third Reich without any Nazi taint.« \u2022 * Today this ex-German army officer is prosecuting the Auschwitz guards who are accused of helping to murder as many as four million prisoners at the death camp.He is doing so with passion and zeal and despite every dis couragement.Kugler showed me his correspondence files in which the letters condemning the trial outnumber by 4-to-l those praising it.Some of the letters are decorated with swastikas and come from as far afield as Chicago.Others threaten to kill Kugler.But he is not worried.\"The threatening letters are obviously the vv o r k of cranks,\" he laughs.\"If anyone were going to kill me, lie would not signal his m tentions in advance.\" *\t* I» The present Auschwitz trial goes back to 1915 when a German soldier picked up as a souvenir a batch of pap-pers outside the burning SS headquarters in Breslau.The papers turned out to contain official details of executions at Auschwitz.In 1958 the Auschwitz file was shown to a Frankfurt By TOM A.CULLEN journalist, who, in turn, handed it over to Dr.Fritz Bauer, director of public prosecutions for the Slate of Hesse.This is where young Kugler came into the picture.The task of preparing the trial against the 22 Auschwitz guards was a formidable one.In the first place, many of the relevant document.' either nad been destroyed or scattered.Some were in East Germany; others were in American, British, Polish or Russian archieves.Secondly, there was a scar city of witnesses to the Auschwitz crimes, for those whose testimony would have been most damning had per ished at the death camp, their earthly remains going up the crematoria flues.* * * The pitifully few who survived suffered memory lapses after 20 years.\u201cIf I had known that 1 would be a witness at such a trial 1 would have taken notes,\u201d one former Auschwitz in mate tearfully complained, after his testimony had been shaken by the defense.But the prosecution was not content to secure- the convictions of 22 guiiius.It set for itself the mammoth task of establishing down to the last link the unbroken chain of responsibility which led from SS headquarters in Berlin to the Auschwitz gas chambers in Poland.But Auschwitz was not the only Nazi concentration camp with an evil reputation.There were Altendorn, Treb-linka, Mauthausen, Dachau to name but a few.Some 500 crimes irials are contemplated within the next five years \"Auschwitz was the logical extension of Hitler's totalit arian regime,\u201d Kugler ex plained.\"We had to establish the connection between the two.We had to become his tori;,ns as well as prosecu tors.\u201d With antlike patience Kugler and two assistants set to work to build their chain ol evidence.Over a period oi five years, they interview\u2019d 1,300 witnesses, many oi them living in Austria and in Poland.They studied pho tographs; they constructed models.Altogether, the evidence collected filled 95 volumes.The indictment, itslf, is four times longer than the Bible.* * * The trial which is expected to last through most of 1964 is already beginning to have a depressing effect upon Kugler.\u201c1 come away from the courtroom,\u201d he said, \u201cand 1 look at the man sitting opposite me on the streetcar, and I say to myself, \u2018My God, are you a murderer, too?\u2019\" Since the trial started, Kug 1er teels uncomfortable in hi> native Frankfurt.\"There\u2019s nothing you can put your finger on,\u201d he declares.\"Just the cold way people stare at me in the street.\" During the Christmas court recess, and again at Easter the young lawyer fled to Italy.\"I wanted to be among people whom I felt were incapable of the Auschwitz murders.The Italians are kind-hearted, full of warm, human feelings.These are qualities which I sometimes find are in short supply here in Germany.We are hopelessly divided, every man suspicious of his neighbor.\u201d Observers, however, take heart from the fact that the present Auschwitz trial has been brought by Germans in a German court.At Nuernberg the Allies were the judges.Eichmann was tried in Jerusalem.Bui the Ausch witz defendants are charged under the West German penal code.This, and the fact that the defendants are being tried by a former Wehrmacht officer.are seen by foreigners as sig,- of the emergence of a new Germany.Slows modernization Other papers say: US view on Canadian fl Canada is in a flap over a new national flag.Prime Minister Pearson has offered the Dominion a flag consisting of a w hite field with three red maple leaves in the center.The border at each end of the flag is blue.Parliament will be voting on this new flag soon.However, a nationwide poll just completed by Canadian newspapers indicates that a vast majority of people prefer the Red Ensign as the national flag.Mr.Pearson\u2019s artistry has failed to create any patriotic fervor.This is not surprising since the Red Ensign has been Canada's flag for decades and has been proudly displayed around the globe.The shadow of national discord lies behind the flag issue.When one raises a family of ten children and one of Newport, Yt\u201e Daily Express them is a problem child there is bound to be a lack of harmony in the household.Such is the case in Canada where one province out of the ten is the cause of discord.Quebec has always demanded the biggest piece of cake and the largest wedge of pie from the federal government in Ottawa and the other nine provinces.Canada became a British colony when the French were defeated at Quebec.French Canadians, however, were granted the use of their own language, religion and schools.And In addition French common law was instituted in Quebec as part of a liberal peace settlement.One would assume that such a generous arrangment would produce the best of relations down throofh the v»r* * Political murder stalls Bhutan ag problem Unfortunately this has not been the case.There has always been a certain amount of caterwauling from Quebec as French Canada sought to declare itself a peculiar people unto itself with special privileges and rights.Prime Minister Pearson in an effort to placate a provocative province seeks to shelve the Red Ensign which contains the Union Jack in the top left hand corner in favor of a woodsy flavor of three red leaves.French Canada has a dislike for any flag with the Union Jack in it, a flag under which they have been richly blessed ever since Wolfe won the historic battle of the Plains of Abraham against Montcalm.There is just no pleasing some adolescents.Perhaps it's time Canada stopped try-in«.NEW DELHI (Reuters)\u2014An assassin\u2019s bullet has temporarily slackened the march of the medieval Himalayan Kingdom of Bhutan towards the modern era.The bullet killed the prime minister of the tiny Himalayan state, Jigme Dorji, who was the main force behind Bhutan's silent economic and social revolution.The assassination took place one cool April evening when Dorji and members of Ins family were settling down to a game of bridge at the rest house in Phuntsoling, a Bhutanese hamlet near the Indian border.The single shot fired by the assassin through the window not only killed the dynamic 45-year-old Bhutanese premier but left in its wake a tinderbox of tension between some leading nobles of the kingdom.Army Lance Corporal Jam-bay Dukpa, was arrested and charged with the murder.His reported confession is *1- By V.M.NAIR leged to have implicated high-ranking officers of the Bhutanese Army who were also arrested.OPPOSE CHANCE The aftermath of the assassination has disturbed the centuries-old tranquillity of Bhutan and revealed the existence of a hard core of diehard conservatives opposed to any change in their medieval pattern of life.Indian officials have also hinted at the possibility of collusion between the diehards and the Chinese in neighboring Tibet.Bhutan is strategically important to India because it guards one of the most easily accessible routes from Chinese-ruled Tibet to the Indian plains.While Bhutan is a sovereign state in internal affairs, its foreign relations are \"guided'' by India under the terms of a treaty signed 14 years ago.The Chinese occupation of Tibet and the simmerinc Sinn- Inriian border dispute prompted Dorji to launch a scries of development programs and social reforms with substantial backing of Indian money and experts.His aim was to make the 800.-000 people of the 18,000-snuare-milc state jump 100 years in the next decade.This vision of creating a modern \"Shangri La\" nestling high up in the eastern Himalayas was fully supported by the 35-year-old Bhutanese ruler.Maharaja Jigme Dorji Wangchuk.The king could not devote his full attention because of a heart ailment.He was convalescing in Zurich at the time of Dor-ji's murder and hurried back to resume full control of the administration.GREATEST RAINFALL Nearly 50 inches of rain-equal to 4.645 tons of rain per acre\u2014fell on Baguion.Philippines.over a two-day period in 1911.Not same without JFK White House groups mingle partially WASHLNGTON \u2014(NEA)\u2014 President Lyndon B.Johnson's determined effort to weave together his own staff and the major White House holdovers from the John F.Kennedy regime is yielding perfect results.But the blend works surprisingly well in a time of changing power and personalities.First-hand inquiry among key members of the White House circle discloses this to be the situation a third of a year after Johnson took over from the assassinated president: The White House is not a place of warring Johnson and Kennedy camps, despite recurring reports to the contrary.\u201cThe people who spread these stories never come and ask me what I think,\" says one highly respected Kennedy holdover.« » » The four top Johnson insiders\u2014Walter Jenkins, Bill Moyers, George Reedy and Jack Valenti\u2014enjoy the high regard of the first-rank Kennedy men, who credit them with exemplary behavior toward the holdovers.\u201cIf there is any firing at us,\u201d adds another of the latter, \"I\u2019m convinced it does noi come from those fellows.\u201d The high-echelon holdovers, with very limited exception, feel they are being used effectively and fully and are being drawn candidly into the new President\u2019s inner councils on a continuing basis.As far as can be judged, the attempted blend begins to falter at middle-eehelon level.From here come the complaints of poor communication wdlh the President, of the need to \u201cnegotiate\u201d entry into his presence, of crippling ignorance as to Johnson\u2019s thinking from day to day.» « * \u201cJohnson does not play on the big console of the many minds around the White House as Kennedy did,\u201d says a middle-echelon staff man.This group\u2019s feeling of not being used to capacity, of being left in the dark to the detriment of its effort, accounts in part for the reports of \u201clow White House morale.\u201d Some close-in sources, including an administration official with good lines\u2019 into the presidential establishment, believe it is highly misleading, however, to say that morale is low generally among the Kennedy men.They prefer to say simply that an inevitable letdown has occurred as result of the young president\u2019s death.Even today, it is said, moods of severe depression now and then afflict some in the Kennedy circle.In one man\u2019s view, the sudden wrench of last Novembers tragedy has bred in some of these men a \u201csense of alienation\u201d which makes it difficult for them to cm brace wholly the new president and his different ways.\"It's no one\u2019s fault,\u201d says this official.\"It has nothing to do with liking or not liking Johnson.It's just that things are not the same.\u201d « * * Johnson himself appears keenly aw are of this circumstance.He has not rested with telling former Kennedy aides, convincingly and often, hut he needs their help.He has brought many ol them into presidential social life with a fullhearte.dness they evidently welcome.The late John Kennedy drew a much sharper line between his public and private exist once.Few of his associates ever saw him after hours.Joint :on's dependence on Kennedy men like Lawrence O\u2019Brien, Kenneth O'Donnell, McGeorge Bundy, Myer Feld-m ;n and Lee White is measurably real.All perform important tasks.O'Donnell has turned from appointments work to heavy stress on politics.The president has charged him with crucial groundwork in the big California political battleground.Otherwise, the U\u2019ljrrhriuikr ülathî ôvmirh SUBSCRIPTION RATES Carrier delivery in Sherbrooke and Eastern Townships.40 cants weekly, by mall in City ef Sher brook*, $20.80 par year.Mail subscription in Canada, outside the city limits, and Graat Britain, 1 year $10.00, 4 months $4.00, 3 months $3.00, 1 month $1.50.United States and South America, 1 year $17.00\t4 month* $9.00, 3 months $5.00.\t1 month $2.00 Single copies 7c; Back copias, 7c; over 30 days eld, lie; over 90 dsys old, 30c.\"Authorized as second dess moll, Rost Oftieo Do-osrtment Ottawa.\" work of these men goes on mostly as before.Despite Johnson's celebrated telephone marathons.O Brien labors harder thon ever at congressional liaison.Talk that the \u201cJohnson men now are really taking over\u201d is put down as foolishness by White House people.Gener ally, both holdovers and newcomers are doing what they were doing back in Decern her and January.For White House work, the initial Johnson crew is still limited in background and range.The President recently named to his staff Horace Busby, one of his long-time \"outside\u201d consultants, and a Negro attorney, Hobart Taylor of Detroit.The latter will work with Feldman as associate special counsel.Busby will handle a variety of chores, but not necessarily his spaciality\u2014speech \u2022 writing.Johnson badly needs a skilled speech writer anti idea man to replace Theodore Sorenson.the one really damaging loss among the four \u201cKennedy departures\u201d thus far.Speech Work has been farmed out to a variety of persons, with somewhat un satisfactory results.Johnson clearly looks\tmost to the \u201cbig boys\u201d in the Kennedy White House group, to cabinet veterans\tlike\tDe- fense Secretary McNamara, Secretary of State Rusk.Treasury Secretary Dillon, to such trusted, experienced outsiders as Abe Portas, James Rowe.Clark Clifford.Economic adviser Walter Heller and Budget Director Kermit Gordon command perhaps more of\this\ttime than they did of John Kennedy's.>si (f But it i;- this very emphasis on the leading lights that produces discontent at the middle echelon.Men in this category try to\tclose their \u201cinformation gap\u201d by pumping the first rank officials.Yet these latter resist the process.As one puts it, \u201cafter you have been in a long, candid chat with the President, you don\u2019t feel easy about categorizing for others what he has said.\u201d The \"out-of-touch insiders sometimes broaden their complaint.One says the White House is at once losing tone and narrowing its focus\u2014actually doing less.He explains: \u201cNo forward-looking programs beyond present legislation are being developed.And there are no \u2018anchor men\u2019 such as Kennedy used to give direction to the departments and agencies, and to settle their disputes.\u201d Such discontents as these may produce more White House resignations.Nevertheless, the basic Kennedy-Johnson amalgam seems destined to withstand the hard strains ot transition for some time to come.Bygone days TWENTY YEARS AGO (Frum the Record of Saturday, June 17, 1944) Members of the Sherbrooke High School softball team, champions of the Sherbrooke Softball League are: John Waldie, Bob Davies.Lewis Greenberg, Doug Onions.Gordon Zakaib, Darrell (Sonny) Holtham.Len Young.Merrill Cook, Warren Spalding.Robin Stewart, Earl Gaunter and Raymond Gammon.E.W.Porter, coach, FIFTEEN TEARS AGO (From the Record of Friday.June 17, 1919) At the 64th annual conven (ion of the Stanstead County Women's Christian Temperance Union held in Magog, the following officers were elected: Past president.Mrs.F.A.Johnstone; president, Mrs.George Phancuf; hon.vice ¦ president, Mrs.Eva McKenna; first vice \u2022 president.Mrs.C.S.Harris: second vice-prf '\u2019-nt, M-s.B.Little; corresponding secretary.Mrs.Tovn/in'R recording secretary, Mrs.W.D.Kirk: treasurer, Mrs.S.Taylor.TEN YEA1S AGO (From the Record of Thursday, June 17, 1\u201d5I) A Dueling of the St.Paul\u2019s Presbyterian Ladies Circle was held in the church hall, Scotstown, with Mrs.D.A.Campbell.Mrs.A.A.Mac-Ivor and Mrs, Murdo Graham as bostc\u2019scs.The president, Mrs.William MrcCaskill, conducted the meeting and Mrs.O.J.St.Laurent read the Scripture lesson.In the absence of the secretary, Mrs.Raymond Smith.Mrs.Rodney MacDonald read the minutes.The treasurer.Mrs.Tony Lortitch, gave her report.There will not be another meeting until Sept.1.it* PKSyER FOR TODAY FROM Ciic hnmr Room* It came to pass, that, as he was praying in a certain place, when he ceased, one of his disciples said unto him,\u2019 Lord, teach us to pray, (Luke 11:1.) PRAYER: Our Father we would pray aright that we may serve Thee.Grant us the gifts we a I nu t' M r 1 EXTRA'PIRIY'STAMPS «ill tl-i ctmot ill cmcliit |! Coppertonc SUNTAN LOTION For A Quick Tant io\t\u20191.00 £ Expires June J.i\tO j.HOW TO PARTICIPATE: Print your n*m« addins and tclephona number on tb« label or roatonabla facsimilt of on* of the six products shown below (double site \"PINKY\u201d coupons).Deposit this in the shopping spree box located in your local STEINBERG store, by Saturday night of the expiry week shown on coupon (June 27, 1964).Each week 10 names will be drawn, each ot whom must answer correctly a qualifying question These 10 people then win a FREE 3 MINUTE SHOPPING spree: SHOPPING SPREES TOMORROW AT 10 A M.AT THESE STEINBERG STORES.Rosemere Shopping Centre, 201 Cure Labelle Blvd., Rosemere.3900 Ontario Street, East, near Valois, Mtl.1550 Belanger Street, near Fabre, Montreal 900 St.Zotique Street, East, near St.Andre, Montreal.5201 Queen Mary Road, near Translsland, Mtl.310 Dorval Ave.Dorval Gardens Shopping Ctre 4885 Van Horne, Van Horne Shopping Centre, 2090 St.Anne Boulevard, Quebec, Que.555 Montreal Road, Ottawa, Ontario.101 Frontenac Street, Sherbrooke Que.¦ ¦ SHOPPING SPREE PRODUCTS-OF-THE-WEEK! r s on EXTRA \"PIRKT\" STAMPS «ilk ikit coupon isl oiicksis al; Ahuntsic CHOP SUEY Assorted Varieties! 20 oz E\\ch 35 Tin w ^ $ Expiiub .lime T.\\\t\u2014Save an extra 1 Bc SURF DETERGENT-\u201c:r 99' FUDGE SUISSE, TEA TIME, BEST-O-BICS Reg.price 45c pkg.\u2014Save Bc DARE BISCUITS.*, 39' ANTISEPTIC\tReg.price BSc btl.\u2014Save Be LISTERINE.59' KRAFT MINIATURE Plain & Fruit Flavoured Reg.price 29c pkg.\u2014Save 4e MARSHMALLOWS-\u2019°.r 25' GOOD LUCK YELLOW QUICK MARGARINE.2 it 59' DETERGENT (10e Off Deal) GRAND LIQUID.Z\u201d 49' A&P Saves You Money On .FRUITS & VEGETABLES U.S.NO.1 SALMON FLESH, JUMBO SIZE 27 Cantaloupes ea.each A&P LOW-LOW\tPRICES\t BICK'S SWEET\t\t MIXED PICKLES .\t32 fl- ox- \u2022\t¦ jar\t55c WHITE SWAN LINEN FINISH PAPER\t\t SERVIETTES .\tpkg.of \u201c\t\u2022\t250\t45c HEINZ\t\t BABY FOODS - - .\tI A4 U fl- OX.1 v tint\t99c A PEN (WITH FREE FLINTS)\t\t LIGHTER FLUID - - -\ttwin \u201c\t\u201cpaekdea\t39c U.S.NO.1.SWEET, JUICY, RED CUTTERS WATERMELONS - - ¦ CALIFORNIA RED BEAUTY,- SWEET, JUICY PLUMS.- IMPORTED FROM SPAIN.SWEET.JUICY.SIZE 216 ORANGES -\t-\t-\t- NO.1.HOTHOUSE, FIRM, RIPE TOMATOES- - - - - NO.1, HOTHOUSE.FRESH.LONG GREEN SLICERS CUCUMBERS - - - 2 U.S., NO.1.FRESH.CRISP.LARGE SIZE GREEN PEPPERS - - 3 for TRY IT WITH FRESH FRUIT OR ICE CREAM JANE PARKER LARGE\t ANGEL\ti ' . Trails Went 6; News News 12) Hennespy 7:24 p.m.6) Spoi ls /:3t p.m.'{) To Bp Announced ; 5) The Virginian 6) Provincial Affairs ») O/zie & Harriet 12) Burke\u2019s Law 7:45 p.m.6i Mr Fix It 8:00 p.m.i J) Chronicle 8) Red River Jamboree 8) Patty Duke Show 8:30 p m 3) Suspend ! fi) Perry Mason 8) Farmer\u2019s Daughter 12) Theatre 9:0U p.m.3i Beverley Hillbillies i ¦>) Ben Casey I 12) Bob Hope Special 3) Once Upon A Maîtres* 6) Festival 9:30 p.m.Ji Dick Van Dyke *0:00 p m.3) Danny Kaye 5)\tKieventh Hour 8; 77 Sunset Strip 10.15 p.m.12; Jim Coleman 10:30 p.m 6)\tPublic Affairs 12) Sports 11:00 p.m.1) News i) News 12) Know Your Sports 11:10 p.m 3) News 6) Viewpoint 11:20 p.m.8) Movie 11:25 p.rn.3) Wrestling 12) Pierre Berton 11:30 p.m 3) The Tonight Show fl) Sports Final 12) Jack Paar 11:36 p.m.6) Movie About Television By CYNTHIA LOWRY of Mr.and Mrs.E.H.Spencer.The occasion being Mrs.Crawford's birthday.Mrs.Hannah Elliot is on a Sherbrooke and Miss Marion Hawthorne en tertained at on June 11.The tea table, attractively arranged with spring flowers, was presided over by Mrs.L.Shone.Mrs.Waller Hawthorne assisted the hostess in serving.Mr.and Mrs.Harry Sharpe motored to Otterburn Park to visit their granddaughter, Mrs.Jerry Donahue.We run an education work-ford, Mr.and Mrs.Clark I\u2019ow-shop,\u201d says Mrs.Bertha Mann, ers and Mr.and Mrs.Clarence executive director.\u201cWe have no Powers were entertained on Mickey Mouse courses.Our stu- 10, in Cowansville, al the home dents are drilled in fundamentals from 8:45 to 12:45 each morning.Those who have to work at studios in the morning ran come for tutoring in the afternoon.STRICTLY ACADcMIC \u201cWe have no athletics, no cafeteria, no hotel or boarding department.We are strictly an academic day school.\u2019' The measure of its success: It was the only private school among 15 high schools in the Los Angeles area to he cited by the University of California for the high scholarship of former students.Principal Mary Anderssen de nied the notion that child per- s™\"5 ,r* Phl Kapp\" stork\tshower \u201c Ml at\tWaterville \u201cMany of them are .straight A WATERVILLE \u2014 A surprise students.And they present no stork shower was held in honor discipline problems.They are|of Mrs.Thomas Beaucage of very quiet and well-behaved in St.Elie d\u2019Orford Road, on June classrooms.They want to pro-|8, when over 20 of her neigh-ject a good image of them- hors gathered here at the home selves.\u201d\tjof Mr.and Mrs.Chester Syl- Professionals comprise 20 perjvester.cent of the 420 students, would-! She was advised a birthday be professionals another 40 per'party was being held in honor cent.As you walk through thejof her father-in law, Mr.Wil-narrow halls, you encounter no fred Beaucage, but, when she kooks.\tjarrived, carrying a huge birth- \u201cWe are very strict,\u201d said day cake made especially for Mrs.Mann.\u201cThe boys can't him, she was greeted at the That, in essence, was the finding in an audience study of more than 600 viewers in 14 areas made by the Chicago firm of Social Research, Inc., as re-l»1 Say When 6:30 a.m.j Vi Continental Ciasa room J;QQ a.m.! 3) Test Pattern | 3; Today 7:25 a.m i» Farm New» 7:30 ê.m.I Si College at the Air i »i Today 6:00 a.m.V Capt Kangaroo 3i Farm & Home 8:15 a.m.ii Farm and H-ime 8:25 a.m 5> News 8:30 a.m.15) Today j 8) Town & Country I2i Lunchroom Llttia Theatre 8:45 a.m 8» Teddy Bear Play house 9:00 a.m 3) Davey & Golialh 5) TV School 8) Teddy Bear Play house 9:15 a.m.3) Adventure 9:30 a.m.3) Field & Forest 5) Make Room For Daddy 12) Sound of Twelve 9:57 a.m, tii Today 10:00 a m.J> Mike Wallace & Nows THURSDAY 12:30 p.m.3) Search for Temur row 5)\tTruth or Conse quences 6)\tMovie Matmee 8) Ernie Ford 12:45 p.m.3) Guiding Light 12:55 p.m.5) Day Report he sees He's satisfied with the med ported in the trade magazine ium's coverage of real events\u2014i Broadcasting, news, special and sports\u2014but he\ti-pp^rf found the public was disappointed in last sea-;was gratefu| for' the \u201cincred-son s dramatic shows, lie found : j^p array 0f top-notch, free en lliein depressing, morbid, ®n\u2018l tertainment available;\u201d appre- Per'!elated television\u2019s cultural influ- concentrated on troubled two-weeks\u2019 visit to friends in sonalities.He yearned loi mort'|cnce, and is not complaining so Sawyer ville.\t\u2018 \u2018 Hold surprise escape-type drama.Danville U.C.W.plan social, sale to benefit fund DANVILLE \u2014 The general meeting of the U.C.W.was held June 9, in the church hall.The president, Mrs.F.Scott, conducted the devotional period, with Mrs.J.Baffin reading the Scripture passage.Mrs.N.Mc-Niff was at the piano.It was decided to donate towards the furnishing of a chapel at the Wales Home, after receiving a request for help from the Ministerial Association.A donation was voted towards redecorating the church.Plans were made for a strawberry social and food sale 6i National School 8i Story ot our Granite State 12) Liberal Arts 10:20 a.m.8) Teddy Bear Plaj house 10:2» a.m.5) NBC News 10:30 a.m.3) 1 Love Lucy 5) Word For Word 8) Chez Helene 8) Price Is Right 12) Coffee Break 10:45 a.m.much these days about commercials.But it noted the medical psychiatric and social - illness, themes in many dramatic pro- 3> xime*™ Sch001 grams (the report called the TV ii:oo e.m.year \u201cThe Sick Season\u201d) and 5) The McCoys expressions of a desire for more shows with the good guys winning\u2014and more physical violence, of all things.wear blue jeans or long haircuts and on Fridays they wear coats and ties.The girls aren't al- door by her hostesses, Miss Betty Ann Sylvester and Mrs.Donald Sylvester, of Waterville.A NOT STIMULATED The survey also found the audience was not as stimulated as it once was with comedy shows and variety programs.McHugh and Hoffman, the Birmingham, Mich., TV-radio consulting firm that commissioned the study, concluded that the season's high ratings of comedy and variety shows were in reality a measure of \u201chow few of this year\u2019s television dramas have appealed to the broader American public.\u2019' The \u201cproblem shows,\u201d they deduced, send the viewers flocking to comedy .\t.\tand variety for \u201crefuge and re- to be held June 26, the pro- laxation.» ceeds to go into the redecorating fund.Mrs.N.McNiff was appointed to represent the U.C.W.on >) Concentration 6) Loretta Young 8) Get Tiie Messagt 12) Ed Allen 11:30 a.m.3) Pete & Glady» 5)\tJeopardy 8)Glrl Talk 8) Missing Links 12) Romper Room 11:55 p.m.6)\tNews 12:00 noon 3) Love of Life 5)\tYour First Impression 6)\tMontreal Magazine 8) Father Knows Best 12) Lunch Time Little Theatre 12:25 p.m.3) CBS News 3i Mid dav Report 12:50 p.m.12) Channel 12 Slakes 1:00 p.m 5) General Hospital 8) Matinee 12i Theatre 1:03 p.m.3) Across Tht Fence 1:10 p.m.II News & Wearner 1:15 p.m.3) Mixing Bowl 12) Movie 1:30 p m 3) As the World Turns 5) News 1:40 p.m.5) On the Local Scene 1:55 p.m. conflicts .suggests thaï Cold War a n y revolutionary movemem china-against the es'.aDlished I has ended and Cold War II is oriented against Western influ governments in fcuuth Viet -Nam well under way.\tence.\tand Laos-could bring Moscow The great Soviet \u2022 Chinese By use of such revolutions-perilously close to the lay when schism, the U.S.-Soviet nuclear mounting armed struggles like it would have to choose be-standoff, the emergence of new that in South Viet Nam\u2014L?tween risking war or suriender-nations and blocs, developing Chinese say communism can ing Communist loyalties, cracks in alliances, all confront:\u2018 defeat U.S imperialism step More and more.Cold ^ar II Moscow and Washington with a by step .piecemeal.\tis requiring both C e Unitea need to rethink their diplomacy.Premier Khrushchev, Peking States and the Soviet.Union to Things were simpler during says, scares people iway from deal individually w.th nations of Cold War I.There was a mono- revolutions by contending thatjboth alliances, and to tailor poi-12) T rr For Fishing ijthic Communist world opposed mankind would be wiped out in icies to specific areas of world o 45 p m 51 Newt.Re port 8< Ski Traill fl The Observer 12» Km to Win 6:10 p.m.J* Wedinerwise 5) New» I2i MediUlion 6:15 p.m.J) -Newa 12» Newsroom 12 6:25 o.m.ji V\\edthcr a 30 o.m h N 5» H B fickle v /.0C p.m.3) Henessy 5» Wa^on Irain 6» Ever'nx New» 8) News 12) Sunset Theatre 7:15 p.m 8.News 7:25 p.m.6) Sports 7:30 p.m J) Password 6) Candid Camera 8) 'lhe Flintstonea 8:00 p.m.Rawhide | 6) Lucy j 8) Donna Reed 8:30 \u201e m J 5i Dr Kildaire I 6) The serial ! J) My Three Sons j 12) To Tel) the train 9:00 p.m.6) Camera Canada 6) Griudl 8) Call Me Captain 12) Zero Or e 9:30 p.m.5)\tHazel 6)\tParade 8) Jimmy Dean Show 12)Jack Paar 10:00 p.m 3) Meredith Willson 5)\tKraft Theatre 6)\tHitchcock 10:30 p.m.| 8) Target Golf j 12) Honeymooners 10:50 p.m.8) Celebrity Corner 11:00 p.m.3) News 5)\tNews 6)\tNews 8) News 12) News 11:10 p.m.3) News 3) News 11:14 p.m.6) Viewpoint 11:15 p.m.12) Pulse 8) Weather 11:20 p.m.¦>» Sports 8) Movie 11:21 p.m.B) Final Edition 11:25 p.m.3) Movie 11:30 p.m.6) Sports 12) Pierre Berton 11:36 p.m.6) Thursday Special by an alliance of nations facing a general war which could be conflict \u2014 one policy for this a common threat.\ttouched off by a small one area, another for that.Today, the Communist world This, to the Chinese, is one of is fragmented.A second centre the sins of \u201cmodern revision- p/~ii|i r\\ of Red power \u2014 Peking\u2014chal-ism/' the epithet .hey apply to IjUULL» tenges Moscow.This has loos-Khrushchev and his followers.Mr.Angus Matheson, of St.ened the Soviet hold on a world\tnon-alignment are useful instru-\tJohnsbury, Vt, who\twas\tan network of parties which once\tments,\tsince both can be chan-\tovernight guest oi Mr\tJohn\tMa did Moscow\u2019s bidding unques-nelled against the West.\t;theson, also visited other rela- tioningly.It has .mboldeneviLy-^ ujavh rn ciirrF*;*; |lives in lb® communit).,i-T\t.\t.i\tTWO WAYS TO SUCCESS\tMiss Anna Mclver of St.satellite countries to seek some\t,\t,\t.independence, to weigh national\tThe\tRussians say they still\tLambert, spent the weeken\tai interests against the needs of\tbel'eve\tdictatorship of the\ther home here.to balk at Mos- proletariat is desirable, but The Misses Ruth and Helen they say that armed uprising is Shiring, of Montreal, are spend-not the only way.They do not ing a few days with Mr.and exclude armed struggle, but Mrs.Byron Beaton.Mr.and Soviet policy, cow\u2019s plans for a tightly controlled economic union, and to look Westward for development of trade.FRANCE CONTRARY The United States, however, is not without its alliance troubles.France balks at the domi- they hold that aeutralism and As the Kremlin sees it, nationalist movements as such can lead to a national socialism, which, if sufficiently in .TTC ) \u2022 tcahv, A idebt to the U.S.S.R., can be nant U.S.role in NATO and pur- d toward Soviet.type s0 sues an Asian pohey contrary ^aiism ^ut frw Win r-1-.irxrvf^ir»' o U »«i r n i n i c i ¦ r~i tion.Mrs.Beaton were in North Hat-lety recently, visiting their daughter, Miss Miriam Beaton.Called here for the funeral of Mr.Kenneth Woood, Mr.and Mrs.Jack Morrison, of Chateauguay Heights, and Mr armed revolu-iand Mrs.Gerald Ball, of Mont jpelier, Vt., were guests of Mr Meanwhile, a nationalist state and Mrs.S.R.Morrison.Mr in an underdeveloped area can and Mrs.F.Mayhew and Mr collaborate with Soviet policy/and Mrs.G.MacDonald, of Scot One way to bring this about is stown, were also visitors at the to Washington's.Britain is unresponsive to pleas to curtail trade with Cuba.Japanese and West German businessmen speculatively eye -he potential market of mainland China.Pakistan co-operates with Peking.Cold War II can be just as dangerous as Cold War I.One big danger is that a major crisis - involving perhaps, ües headaches for both the Cuba or Southeast Asia\u2014could| face Soviet policy with a.harsh!- choice: To challenge U.S.power, or to avoid the risk and thus effectively lose the leadership of the world\u2019s Communists to supply such countries with economic aid, equipment, technicians and arms, tying the regime and its economy to Moscow.The course of Cold War II same home.Visitors of Mr.and Mrs.Alan Matheson were Mr.and Mrs.Albert Beliveau and Duane, of East Angus, and Mr.and Mrs.Gordon Matheson and family, of Lennoxvilie.that the DANVILLE The Sunday the memorial committee, a new committee to be set.up in the lowed excessive makeup orlcorsage of baby articles was United Church, sleeveless dresses, and skirts presented to her as she was A donation of a new woolen must cover the knee.Tight, welcomed by the gathering.|blanket was gratefully acept-sweaters?Absolutely not \u201cBut the students go with the rules.They're smart enough to know that directors are seeking that well-scrubbed look.\u201d Jim Backus, the voice of the near-sighted cartoon character Mr.Magoo, next season will join Bea Benaderet as a TV star with two simultaneous network shows.Miss Benaderet has been the Mrs.Beaucage was presented .4 oz.85* 4 oz.$1.35 16 0Z.$2.98 BISMA-REX LIQUID.4 oz.69«! REXALL BLUE ORAL ANTISEPTIC.8 oz.69* 16 OZ.98* REXALL EFFERVESCENT SACCHARIN TABLETS.% gr.400's.Regular 79*.Now 49* EPSOM SALT.Rexall.16 oz.Reg.39*\t.Now 29* CALAMINE LOTION.Rexall.8 oz.Reg.49*.Now 39* REXALL VITAMIN C TABLETS.50O's.(100 mam) Regular $4.50.Now\t$2.25 REXALL MILK OF MAGNESIA TABLETS (MINTED).500's.Regular $2.00\t Now\t$1.29 REXALL TOURISTA LIQUID.For simple diarrhoea and upset stomach.8 ounces.Only $13 Device measures The children learn to read faster! by special means this 'scwl' uses SOOKE.B.C.(CP)\u2014A neatly Superintendent F.A.McClel-printed assignment on thejan, who introduced the system blackboard reads:\tto John Stubbs, says parents of \u2019Deer class it mae raen the selected children have been twdae.Winter is oever.The consulted at every step of the weather is not bad.\"\tprogram.The desk at the head of the \"We got permission from the class is designated: ' Teecher.\" parents before we started and A sign nearby says: \u2018 Waull.\u2019' we have had regular meetings Over the entrance another with parents to get their reac-reads: \"Dor.''\ttion.All have been enthusiastic A little girl at her desk la- about it.\u201d boriously prints: \"Mie name is\t- Leslie.le goe tw scwl.\" They\u2019re not teaching a foreign language in the kindergarten classroom at John Stubbs elementary school.It's English in the form of a new 43-character rCWkl C ItrAniirinM Initial Teaching Alphabet de- lUW J pi UliUCfiiy signed to make success in reading possible from the very NEW \\ORK (AP)\u2014A little start.\t|device is being introduced that The school on southern Van- may make a cow s curves as couver Island is the second in ™p°rt:ain to her and other in-Canada to experiment with the ^eres^ec^ parties as they are to; newr teaching device developed 'vomen- in Britain by Sir James Pit-! Ironically, however, the deman, grandson of Sir Isaac Pit-|v*ce maj' eliminate from the; man, who introduced Pitman ',m\u2018 coquette, the mere; shorthand.The other school is barnyard flirt, for it measures production\u2014not beauty \u2014 efficiency rather than feminine; charm.The so-called Milkograf will; chart the amount and speed of milk flow.A good production; curve, said the manufacturer, De Laval Separator Company of Poughkeepsie, N.Y., will be; one that moves quickly to the! right and slowly upward as the machine is attached.duced it early in March and aR The mfaker sayj (tlle dev\u2018f ready some of the brighter stu- he ps %dair>'man determine the dent can read up to 500 words va,ue 4of a cow\u2019 whetJher !° b?' SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD.WED.JUNE 17.1964\t« Swingin' Unitarians play jazz as they sing the praises of man in Toronto.Mrs.M.P.Hewitt, the kindergarten teacher, says the new alphabet will be replaced with the standard 26-character alphabet when the children have gained a basic mastery of the reading process, AMAZING RESULTS \u2018Tm absolutely amazed at the results we have achieved so far,\u201d she says.\u2018\u2018We only intro KHRUSHCHEVS WELCOMED IN COPENHAGEN \u2014 Sov let Premier Nikita Khrushchev and his wife, Nina, clap hands after the welcoming address by Danish Premier Jens Otto Krag on the Russians' arrival in Copenhagen \u2014and these are only kindergar ten children.\"Normally, they wouldn't start to learn to read until Grade 1.\u201d The system assigns one letter to each sound in the English language.The conventional alphabet spells these 43 sounds 2,000 different ways.In conventional spelling, the letter \u201co\u201d has different sounds in the words move, cove, gone, one and women.Under the experimental system the words become moov, coev, gon, wun and wimen.When the child has learned Ia particular cow and when to remove a cow from his herd.The Milkograf \u2014 whose components are a spring balance scale, 24-hour clockwork motor and graph paper recorder enclosed in a wood housing about the size of an attache case\u2014 records the cow\u2019s milking pattern and gives a dairyman a visualization of the efficiency of cows, equipment and operators.It shows what happens during each milking and reveals such information as the cow's sensitivity to stimulation, rate of milk flow, milk letdown time, .\t,\t,\t,\t\u201e ,\tmachine stripping requirement the sound characters\u2019 he can and reactlon t0 disturbances.read anything written in the It also shows whether the new system.Attei a yeai m-;milking machine is operating struction the pupil is given or- properly and whether it is har.dinary reading books along with vesting the milk {ast e h to his special books m preparationi rmit the cow to attain her for the switch to the regular M1 production potential, alphabet.\tI PROVINCE OS' QUEBEC CITY OF SHERBROOKE TENDERS FOR STREET PAVING The City ol Sherbrooke is calling tenders from local contractors for street paving at different places in the City of Sherbrooke.Specifications and tender forms are available to the interested parties, upon request, at the City Clerk\u2019s office, at the City Hall.Sealed tenders marked \u201cTENDER FOR STREET PAVING\u2019 and accompanied by a certified cheque equal at 10% of the tender, must reach the undersigned on or before June 22, 1964, at 4 P.M.The City of Sherbrooke does not bind itself to accept the lowest nor any of the tenders, H.P.Emond, City Clerk.Champlain area Guide officers mee! at Bedford BEDFORD \u2014 A meeting of Girl Guide officers of the Champlain Area was held in St.James Church hall on June 9, with Mrs.Beckett, Area Commissioner in the chair.The guests were welcomed by Mrs.William Jackson, on behalf of Missisquoi Division.Mrs.Marjorie Monk, of Bran-by, was appointed the new Area Badge Secretary, An Area training weekend for Guides will be held at Knowlton Landing Sept.25-27.A provincial training weekend for ex perienced Guides will be held on the same weekend at Chalet Cochand, St.Marguerite.In the autumn there will be a series of four Patrol Challenges.Reports from the various Division Commissioners were given.The new requirements for the Gold Cord award, were presented by Mrs.Beckett and will become effective in September next.A report of the national annual meeting, held in Halifax, N.S.in May, was given by Mrs.Bcckctl.The changes in age groups, to be effective in September, 1965, were discussed, as also were the changes to the Brownie and Guide laws and promises.A proposed set of by-laws for local associations were read and cookie days and various sug gestions discussed.The next Area meeting will be held in October at the home of Mrs.McIntosh, in Austin.Following the meeitng, lunch con was served by the Bedford local Guide Association, arranged by Mrs.John Pope, Mrs.W.H.Baglow, Mrs.Bruce Kir-win and Mrs.Stanley Johnson.Windsor S.S.picnic held at Granby Zoo WINDSOR \u2014 The annual Sun day School picnic of St.Andrew's United Church was held on June 6, at the Granby Zoo.The day's activities started at 10:30 a.m., with everyone meeting at the church.Proceeding by car to the zoo, and arriving there at noon, when lunch brought by the picnickers was enjoyed, the Sunday School provided the soft drinks.At one o\u2019clock, the tour of the zoo commenced.After visiting and viewing the different kinds of animals, everyone met at the amusement park, where rides were enjoyed by the children.The trip back home started at 4 p.m, after an enjoyable day at the zoo.yesterday to start a three-week visit to Scandinavia.Krag, right, greeted (he Khrushchevs as they stepped ashore from the Russian liner Bashkiria.i AP Wirephoto via cable from Copenhagen) ¦ r s back to 500 Par,yheld at Sutton Jet.night club loop church hail I LOUISVILLE.K\\ (AP) I The trumpet man blows it hot and wild The piano and bass 'pick up the beat.When the ! music stops, a man stands up jto read \"heat\" poetry | But the man is a minister.; Those who listen arc seated in Pews, not at candlelit tables jThe scene is Jazz and Religion, an experimental vesper service at Louisville's First Lnitanan Church ! The reader of poetry and ; moving spirit in organizing this jazz service was William David iltrown, a bespectacled, cner-jgetic young man with red hair I who is quick to tell y ou he \u2018thinks jazz is entirely appropri-jate in a 1964 church service.Mr.Brown (he declines the title of reverend) said \"Jazz is an honest musical reflection of the state of man in the United States today.If it is dissonant it is because we are dissonant.\u2019' He maintained that the more serene music usually played in churches seems worshipful only because people are conditioned to it.TOO SHOCKING But he admitted that he could not adapt the jazz format of the vesper service to his regular Sunday morning service.The congregation w o u 1 ri he too shocked.Brown said he believes the reason many people dislike modern art is that it tells them unpleasant truths about themselves The same sort of feeling, he said, would cause resistance to the use of jazz in church.t he vesper service, tried here for the first time this spring,J had as its theme The Triumph and Mystery of Man.Triumph; here, the Unitarian pastor said, indicated m ans cumulative achievements and the continuation of the species He added that such dedication of a worship service to man was entirely consistent with l intanan philosophy Fnitai ians.he said, '\u2018believe in the worth and dignity ot man and have never accepted his debasement.\u2019' The music for the service was provided by Don Murray and the Louisville Jazz Lab, a group of 21 young musicians., many of them students.Mur ray, a pianist who also com ; poses classical music, wrote; many of the jazz, pieces especially for the service VALE PERKINS Mr, and Mrs.Eric Sullivan were in North Hatley to attend a family gathering in honor of the 25th wedding anniversary of Mr.Sullivan's niece, Mrs.Aubrey Greer, and Mr.Greer, Mrs David Perkins, Scott and Alan, have arrived here by car from Fort Landerdale, Fla.They were accompanied by Steve El dridge, who will spend the summer with them '^ENEIlAl Bearing Service] 111 'Wellington South BALL and ROLLER BEARING timkep distributor 569-3238 111 Wellington South Sherbrooke, P.Q.Church Women's society meets DERBY LINE \u2014 Mrs.Cyril Cargill was hostess at the Uni-versalist Church Women\u2019s So ciety gathering held at.her home on June 9.Dessert was served by Mrs.Cargill.The afternoon was spent playing bridge and canasta, prize winners for bridge were Mrs.Ida Cooper, Mrs.Carl Robbins and Mrs.Hugh !Bel!.The canasta winner was Mrs.Elsie Cow-ens.As this was the 91st birthday anniversary of Miss K.L.Flint, Derby Line, members signed a card which was later delivered to the celebrant by Mrs.Cooper.LISGAR \u2014 Recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.Basil Carr and family were Mr.and Mrs.Roy McIntyre and family, of Hatley, Mr.and Mrs.Gordon McIntyre and family, of Coaticook, Mr.and Mrs.Len Yetter and family, of Lennox-ville.HOLLYWOOD (AP) Mitzi Gaynor is a victim of box-of-jfice chemistry.And that may also be what\u2019s Wrong with the movies.The last time Mitzi was cast opposite the right leading man, jRosanno Brazzi, the picture, South Pacific, wound up sev enth in the lop Hi list of all time money-making films.Her next two pictures were comedies opposite Yul Brynner and Kirk Douglas.Result: Mitzi had lo go into the night club field where she commands $40,000 a week.At the Las Vegas Flamingo she was given two points (two per cent) of the action of Hie entire hotel-casino operation to sign a 10-year contract.lack Entralter of the Sands, who wishes he had her under contract, comments: \"She's the only new night club star to emerge in the last decade.\u201d NO SCRIPTS But there are no movie scripts.Josh Logan once said Mitzi can do more things better than anyone else in Hollywood.That\u2019s partly her trouble.When Brynner and Douglas, both serious actors, chose Mitzi, she was so good that she made them look bad.A smart producer would cast her opposite Jack Lemmon or Cary Grant \u2014 and you would have a female Sandy Koufax pitching against a Willie Mays.Now producer Ray Stark has a broadway show called The Passionate Witch, based on the old Fredric March - Veronica Lake movie 1 Married a Witch.Mitzi's interested, If she takes it, you may see a repetition of the Betty Grable saga.For years, Betty couldn\u2019t get herself arrested around Hollywood.Then she did Du Barry was a Lady on Broadway and the movies discovered her.SUTTON JUNCTION A 500 Iparty was held on June 6, in the church hall, when cards were played at 11 tables.Prizes were won by, Mrs.La-Iflamme, ladies\u2019 first, Mrs M Thompson, second, with the consolation going to Mrs.D.Seaman.Men\u2019s prizes went to It Miller, first, A, Mailloux, second, and E.Dyer, the consolation.Lucky cup and saucer prize was won by L.Reid, while the door prize went to K.Dyer.The proceeds were $25.94, Another party will he held on June 20.GENERAL NOTES Recent guests of Mrs.Frances Kirkpatrick were Miss M.Mar tin, of Lachine, Miss A.Martin, of Ottawa, Mrs.C.Salisbury, of Brome.Other callers at t li e same home included (Mr.and Mrs.Wm.Hamilton, of Brome Night club stay ; LONDON (CP I - Winnipeg-born entertainer Libby Morris was booked into London's well-known Establishment Club for I two weeks but has extended her [run to nearly three months.One critic dubbed her funny woman with a volet which ho said was a surprise.The Sunday Telegraph called lier \"a ferocious doll of a singer who can be funny without being ugly, and tuneful without being pretentious.\" The 29-year-old star sings nine songs during her 40-tnintiU cabaret act.One song, 1 could Fall in Love, was written by Billy Solly, born in Hamilton Ont.When she leaves the estai) lishmenl at the end of June Miss Morris will begin a television panel show called Don\u2019t Say a Word, a charade-type program.HP .»*# Myrtle.Mrs.Earl Bullock; Brown, Swanton.Vt.; Miss Ruth Aseltine, Burlington, Vt.; Miss IG.Perault, Bedford; Mrs.John jCampbell and Mrs.LaDue Norwood, of Lennoxviile.a son, Cedric, of Magog: two granddaughters; two brothers, George 0.Pendexter, of Maple-ton, and Andrew J, Pendexter Waterloo of Presque Isle, Me.; and a sis-!and Mrs.Lloyd Maynes.Miss ter.Mrs.Dolly Day, of Corinna.ishirley Maynes, of Terrebone MISS ALICE O'DONNELL, OF MONTREAL, Formerly of Richmond.RICHMOND \u2014 Funeral services were held on June 3, 1964, for Miss Alice O\u2019Donneli, a native of Richmond and a long time resident of Montreal, who died suddenly May 31 in her 89th year.She was a graduate of Mont Ayer's St.Patrick Convent heie and for many years was active in the Women's Catholic Order of Foresters.On the death of the wife of her brother Francis, she devot-[cd herself to the care of his | five children, who are the closest survivors.They are Rev.Michael James O'Donnell, fr-j , of Me., also many other relatives.Glen Murray ¦ I Sunday,June 21 IS Intermediates participate in school field day MANSONVILLE \u2014 On June 5, j pupils of the Intermediate School participated in the track and: field events.The three Junior, classes enjoyed the competition on the school play ground; while j the six higher Grades were! transported by bus to the town!] baseball diamond.Activities continued from [ 10.30 a.m.until 3 p.m., when every one returned to the school.The older pupils enjoying a ! record hop.which lasted until 3.30.As there was no time left for awarding prizes and trophies! it was necessary to wait until] later for the proceedings.On Monday afternoon the principal, Vance Patterson, assisted I by Edward Beek, awarded the] ribbons, which had been won by] the pupils in the various events.] M.Elsdon, secretary, and B.] Picotte, a past president of the Mansonville branch 154 of the] Canadian Legion, awarded John [ Aiken with a trophy, as best!] shot of the year in the Mansonville Intermediate School!] Rifle Club, A medal for green-shot of the year was presented to] Michael Coleman.Throughout the school year, the pupils, from Grade 4, up-|| wards, participated in compe-] titions, which were divided to the ] four houses.Blue, White, Red, and Gold.\t|l Mrs.Douglas Magoon, donator of the House Trophy, presented] the Douglas Magoon Memorial Trophy, to Veda Perkins and Roland Ethier, captains for the | Blue House.Commendation of the parents!] go to teachers, as well as donors of trophies, in aiding the | pupils in the sports activities.Friends of Mrs.A.E.Storey,]| Western Avenue, will regret to!] learn that she is a patient in] the Montreal General Hospital, 17th floor.Mr.and Mrs.J.E.Dunn were|| weekend guests of Mr.and Mrs.Wellman Smith, Ayer's Cliff.Mrs.Henri Beaudry, Western | Avenue, is a patient in St.Joseph\u2019s Hospital, Granby, Mr.and Mrs.A.Lissaman, ofil Preston, Ont., were weekend; guests of Mr.and Mrs.Arthur] Finder.Mr.Arthur Jordan, of New Zealand, is spending a few] weeks with Mr.and Mrs.Arthur]| LeBlanc.Mr.and Mrs.Heman Wing!| were recent guests of Mrs.Edna Smith, Longueuil.Mr.Roger Mairs has left for | Acton, Ont., where he has accepted a position.Mrs.Mairs I and children are remaining in ] town for an indefinite period.Mrs.Myrtle Gaw has returned home from Quebec City,!] where she has been visiting her] nephew, Mr.John Gaw, Mrs.Gaw and family.Mrs.Fred Marsh and Mrs.!! Cora Marsh were among those ] who attended the funeral of the late Mr.Luke Turner in Knowl-ton.Mr.and Mrs.L.Labrecque | and daughter, Laurie, of Granby.were weekend guests of Mr.Heights, was also a guest at the] same home.LEARNED PLAIN Mr.and Mrs.Sidney White1 Mr.and Mrs.Herbert Redden,] and family, of Ville La Salle.!and Robert and Miss Gladys were recent visitors at the for- Redden, were visiting Mr.and mer\u2019s parental home.\t[Mrs.Albert Redden and fam- Miss Norma Farwell, of ily.in Canterbury.Cliff, was a guest of! Visitors of Mr.and Mrs.Her-!] Mrs Alice Muir,\tbert Redden and family were ] Mr.Lyman White, Mr.and Mr.and Mrs.Clement Ro Mrs.Stanley White and Mr.drigue and family, of Sherbrooke | Truman Walker motored to Bar- and Mr.Edward Rasicoe.ton.Vt.and visited at the Ru?-: Mr.and Mrs.A Brazenall.sell White home.They were ac-!Teddy Coates and Eddy Harper] companied home by Mrs.Mar- accompanied by Mrs.Eva tha McVetty.of'Lennoxviile, Coates.Alf.and Dick, spent a] who is spending a few daysviay with Mr.and Mrs.Garnet] inity.f ard and family, in Minton.Father\u2019s Day FREE T-BONE STEAKS FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY PLUS A BARBECUE GRILL, CHARCOAL AND CHARCOAL LIGHTER FLUID ENTER SUPREME\u2019S FATHER\u2019S DAY CONTEST NOTHING TO BUY FREE ENTRY FORM AT YOUR NEAREST SUPREME FOOD MARKET ARE YOU A JUNE BRIDE OF YESTERYEAR?WIN A WEEK\u2019S ALL EXPENSE PAID VACATION TO c e Pâ ü y Enter The Supreme Food Markets June Bride of Yesteryear CONTEST: Nothing To Buy.Free Entry Form At Your Nearest Store.with relatives in this vicinity.I GRADE \u201cA\u201d, FRYING CHICKENS fresh, eviscerated, oven ready, 2 to 3 pounds, average weight, low priced \u2014 lb.29 y CHICKEN tITe BASKET\tCHICKEN LEGS\tCHICKEN BREASTS Fresh, Grade \"A\u201d Whole chicken cut up\tDARK MEAT\tWhite Meat in a handy package \u2014 lb.\tJr\ttender and iuicy,\tQc extra big, meaty \u2014 lb.\tSwift Premium brand\tÂL\tC.ib Ow RINDLESS BACON Sliced your favorite ports, 1 lb.cello pky.49* !!ll!!!lîllilllll!IIIIWIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllll!IIIIBIIIIIIIIIlrtH!ll!llllllîllllll!!IIIIIIJ |!ti||llllllllllinilI!tllll!IIIWinilllllllllllllllllHllfHllll^l H:i II\" ^ PEANUT BUTTER I\tYork's, homogenized PREM Luncheon Meat 12 oz.cans 89 fir: i ,:IUmiliitflllliii 16 oz.39C llllllillilillll ^lllllllllllllillillllllllllliillilllllllllillliilltillltlililHiiiilHiii MINUTE RICE 14 oz.AOc Pkg.(24 oz.pkg, 81c) IIIHIt; in'\tpWllllinilllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilimillllUlIHlHtlllllllllllHIIIlltilllUIHlllllHilllf ^IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMINIIIIIIIIHIIHIlUIII'illlWlliHlItlII'lllllilMllüiill RITZ\tMONARCH'S CRACKERS\t0IL ; 69' iiitiinimiHummuiiiitimhimiii t f Christie's 1 lb.AKL\u2018 Pkg.32 01 Bottl FLEISHMANN MARGARINE Pure Corn Oil 49£ 1 lb.carton Match Mix em or Match em SCOTTIES FACIAL TISSUES economy size packages *1.00 Match 48 01.cans TOMATO JUICE CORN FLAKES Kellogg's \u2014 3 ü,\u201c 1.00 MEATBALLS IN GRAVY, Cordon Bleu's \u2014 BONELESS CHICKEN Este brand SHORTENING DOMESTIC \u2014 3e off \u2014 3 3 3 7 oz.cans 1 lb.cartons 1.00 1.00 1 00 WAXED PAPER Cut Rite brand \u2014 DREAM WHIP DESSERT TOPPING \u2014 PEACH HALVES Lynn Valley brand \u2014 MARGARINE Golden Girl's, Yellow Quick 41.00 4 xioo 410 1.00 4 '\t1 00 \u201c cartons » \u2022 W PEA SOUP or VEGETABLE, Habitant's \u2014 COOKED SPAGHETTI Catelli's \u2014 SPAGHETTI READY CUT MACARONI, Catelli's ICE CREAM Supreme's, assorted flavors \u2014 Mix em or Match 'em GREEN PEAS Match Match MX îeUHonle eoucM-oai\tc rrvrn oA-amè» _ Monarch vTî'a k \u2022 \u2022 Monarch'», White or Chocolat* Del Monte s, fancy 15 ox.tfj assorted colors 7 X.*1.00 cans m TOMATO JUICE Heinz brand, fancy \u2014\t6\u201d\" 1.00 DESSERT PEARS Garden City brand \u2014\t6 \u201c\".1.00 HOT CHICKEN SAUCE\t6 \u201d\u201c1.00 A La Canadienne brand \u2014\t PAPER NAPKINS SeoH'i \u2014\t6, \u201ck', 1.00 FRESH EVAPORATED MILK Crino brand \u2014 PARIS PATE Meat Patty \u2014 GOLDEN CORN Cream Style, York's \u2014 SLICED BEETS Libby's \u2014 7 s, \",1.00 7\t1.00 7\u201d, \",1.00 T 20 oz.TOMATO PASTE Heinz brand \u2014 CUT WAX BEANS Ideal brand \u2014 VEGETABLE SOUP Aylmer's \u2014 MIXED VEGETABLES Madeleine Verehere brand \u2014 SPECIAL BONUS 700 EXTRA FREE GOLD STAMPS 1001EXTRA G0LD STAMPS RAZOR BLADES Gillette's, stainless steel 10\u2018\t1 45 to pkg.* \u2022 50 EXTRA GOLD STAMPS GILLETTE'S SLIM TWIST RAZOR (free blades $1.29 each 25 EXTRA GOLD STAMPS MIX-0 rate: Vate 69\u2018 Concentrated Javel Water 128 os./^Qe jug 25 EXTRA GOLD STAMPS GLOSSETTE CHOCOLATE Lowney's, Peanuts or Raisins 14 01, C 7c pkg\t^ ' 50 EXTRA GOLD STAMPS NOXZEMA Skin Lotion Medicated 3 oz.7 bottle / O 100 EXTRA GOLD STAMPS SPRAY NET HAIR SPRAY Helene Curtis (1.3\u2019j oz.can free) 12 oz.can 1.88 25 EXTRA GOLD STAMPS FRANKFURTERS Hygrade 1 lb.CQc cello pkg.** \" SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WED., JUNE 17, ]»f>4\t11 Sutton students receive results of music exams SUTTON \u2014 Results of examinations in music, held by McGill University, in Sutton, have been announced.The following I pupils of Mrs.S, N.Persatt [were successful in piano and theory : PIANO: Grade 8, Janice Knights.Grade 7, Darleen Infilis, Erank Carr, Sharron Cowan.Grade 6, Janice Darrah, Kathryn Brown, tirade 5, Heather Cowan, Sharon Lawrence.Grade 4, Nancy Darrah, Margaret Eland, Nancy Lrizzle THEORY; Grade 7, Janice Knights, Darleen Inglis, Janice Darrah.Frank Carr, Sharrntt j Cowan, Kathryn Brown, Lydia Glaser.50 EXTRA GOLD STAMPS RIGHT GUARD forant 1.29 Gillctto'i Deodorant S oz.aerosol can 50 EXTRA GOLD STAMPS FOAMY GILLETTE'S SHAVING CREAM 6'4 oz.\t70c \u2022trosol can * * 25 EXTRA GOLD STAMPS TEA BAGS Lyon'» Di»count US'* 70c to pkg.\"\t\u2022 25 EXTRA GOLD STAMPS SUNKIST LEMONS No.1 from California stiie 140 6\t39' 100 EXTRA GOLD STAMPS SHAMPOO urti« 1.19 Helen Curti» 12 01.\t$ bottle 25 EXTRA GOLD STAMPS TUFFY NUTS 6\tBOLTS Prairie Maids brand 7\toz.ACc pkg.\t^ -7 50 EXTRA GOLD STAMPS KOTEX SANITARY NAPKINS 2 pkg».OQc of 12» FROZEN FOODS 1.00\tORANGE JUICE Frozen, Donald Duck'i \u2014\t3\t6 or.cant\t1.00 \u201d 1 00\tRASPBERRIES Frozen, Froze brand \u2014\t3\t15 or.pkg*.\t1.00 1.00\tFISH STICKS\t3\t8 01.\t89 \tFrozen, Booth brand \u2014\t\tpkg».\t 1.00\tCOD FILLETS Frozen, Booth brand \u2014\t3\t16 oz pkgs.\t89 DOUBLE GOLD STAMPS You get double Gold Stampi on all your pur-chasei when you buy the following tpeciol \u2014 ASSORTED BISCUITS Dion'l \u2014\t40 oz.carton RUBBER CAR BRUSH for cor washing, 24 in.long, fit in a hose, low priced \u2014\teach \u20181.09 *1.29 DONALD DUCK SHOWER ROc fits in a hose, low priced \u2014\teach GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS Mellow and Sweet Quality Controlled i Size Small, \\ Special Low Price, lb.FRUITS and VEGETABLES GOLDEN CORN ON THE COB Fresh, golden ripe, Canada No.1 grade, \u2014 from Florida,\tm big cob» Æ fancy quality \u2014\t^ f0r only ¦ | CRISP CURLY LETTUCE Leaves, fresh Canada\t4^ No.1 grade, Quebec grown, for only HOT HOUSE CUCUMBERS Fresh, Prince variety, Canada, 4^ for 0% ¦» ^ No.1 grade, Ontario grown, j4m only PRODUCE PRICES ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE, *2.69 15 01 can» PRICES GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY, JUNE 20.1964 Quantity Right» Reserved 15 oz FATHER\u2019S GOLDEN RIPE PEACHES Dixie Red variety Preestone Canada No.1 grade Imported from\tOOc rgja \u2014\t|b, Am WILLIAM TELL CIGARS box of 50 l2.39 Georgi PEG TOP or WHITE OWL CIGARS box of 25 U.C.W.enjoys motor trip as closing activity BOUNDARY Tlie closing ho jiivilj until Septcinher of Ihc Slanstcad South Church Circle Cuit, C.C.W , was held on Juno Id, when menilu'rs and friends enjoyed a motor trip in Vermont and tlm townships The trip commenced at u a ut., going to Newport.North Tim amt crossing the international boundarx at Richford and Vbercorn.At Sutton the group toured a haker.x and were gtv on samples ol the products.Ttiox made a stop at the Bruck Mills, m Cowansxillc, and had lunch at St.Paul's Church there In the afternoon the group went to Bronte, to visit St.Be I noil du l ac monastery, where the Benedictine monks mako cheese, then on to the Butters Memorial Hospital, where they toured Hu* grounds.Baccalaureate service held for ADS high pupils DANVILLE \u2014 The baccalaureate service for the graduating class of the Asbestos Danville-Shipton High School was held at the Advent Christian Church on June 7.The church was beautifully decorated with red and while flowers the school colors.Mrs.Fred McCoy played organ music for the processional and recessional and Mrs.Allen Sutherland rendered a solo.The theme of Rev.Mr.Withrow's sermon was \u201cToday,\u201d pertaining to the preparation for life, both vocationally ami spiritually.Demonstration held for 4-H Club SAND HILL The Lennox-ville rguson, the Society president will address the group.Members are urged to come on this outing and to bring friends.\u2022 1*4 k, H1A.te t.M, ll|.II S.Nt Off Milby \u201cH* doesn\u2019t bite! That\u2019s to keep him from eating all the time!\u201d Mrs.Harold Sutton, of Barn-ston, spent a few days visiting her son and daughter-in-law, Mr.and Mrs.Buzz Sutton.Mr.and Mrs.C.Perkins and family, of Dunham, were visitors at the same home and were accompanied home by Mrs.Harold Sutton.Recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.K.Orr were Mr.and Mrs.Ralph Broadhurst and family, Stanstead Road, and Mr.and Mrs.Andrew Christie and family, of St.Denis dc Brompton.Miss Eleanor Craig and Mr.Harvey Dougherty, of Cowansville, were weekend guests of Mr.and Mrs.Howard Smyth.Other visitors were Mr.and Mrs.Stuart Dougherty and family, of Bury.Mr.and Mrs.Eugene Raymond were guests of Mr.and Mrs.B.Turner, in Magog.Miss Carol Rand, student at Macdonald College, is spending the summer holidays with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Lyle Rand.Mr.and Mrs.Howard Smyth were in Cowansville to attend a shower in honor of Miss Eleanor Craig, on August bride-to-be.4 these are the reasons for buying a Fmitlpx stow! SUCCESS\t|\tYOUR POIMTIAC DEALER IS HOLDING A CAR\tSUCCESS CAR SALES SALES CELEBRATION\tCELEBRATION \t.owning a Pontiac \tis easier than ever before! WIDE SELECTION OF MODELS AVAILABLE FOR QUICK DELIVERY Never before hasyourchoice been wider.There are 38 Pontiac models .convertibles, coupes, sedans and station wagons, and many are available so that you can drive away the same day you buy! DEMAND FOR GOOD USED CARS MEANS BEST TRADE-IN DEALS EVER! During the busy summer selling season, the demand for good used cars skyrockets.That means your Pontiac dealer can offer you extra-generous trade-in allowances on your present car.i\t^ 'llfiiii PARISIENNE SPORT SEDAN A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE these are the reasons for buying a Fottllac anytime! EXCITING STYLING THAT MAKES YOU PROUD TO PARK IT ANYWHERE Pontiac\u2019s beauty is the kind that turns heads everywhere you go.From its distinctive over-and-under headlights to the clean, stylish sweep of its rear deck.Pontiac is truly a beautiful and distinguished car.A car you\u2019ll be proud to point to and say, \u201cThat\u2019s mine.\u201d PROVEN PERFORMANCE THAT MAKES YOU EAGER TO DRIVE IT EVERYWHERE Every time you slip behind the wheel of your new Pontiac you\u2019ll feel the adventure and excitement that Pontiac\u2019s great power teams can give you.Ask your dealer to help you pick the right power team so you get the pep and economy for your kind of driving.TASTEFUL, LUXURIOUS INTERIORS WITH SPACE TO SPARE Pontiac interiors are truly spacious.There\u2019s plenty of leg-room, hip-room, shoulder-room and headroom.Just sitting in a Pontiac is sheer pleasure.And every appointment has that certain something that sets Pontiac in a comfort class that\u2019s unique.GO WHERE THE CHOICE IS GREATESTI GO WHERE VALUE IS BESTI GO TO YOUR PONTIAC-BUI CK-AC ADI AN-VAUX HALL DEALER\u2019S NOW! HE HAS A GREAT DEAL TO OFFER YOU! Visiting New York this summer?Be sure to see the General Motors Futurama at the New York World\u2019s Fair.M4é« See your local Pontiac dealer \u2022 AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER IN SHERBROOKE: DE LUXE AUTOMOBILE LIMITEE 1567 King Street West\tSherbrooke, Que.\tPhone 569-9351 Be Sure Fo Watch \"Telescope\" on CBMT Fridays ot 9:30 P.M.and \"Zero One\" on CFCF-TV.Thursdays at 9:00 P.M. s Cliff Fair board holds meeting ROYAL BANK APPOINTMENT AYER\u2019S CLIFF \u2014 (Special) A sum of S25 was voted to \u2014A meeting of the Ayer\u2019s Clill Mr.Bruneau, the County Agio Fair Board took place on Mon- nome.as prizes for the Calf day evening, in the hall of the Club day taking place on June county building with the presi- 20 at the Chagnon farm.Barn-dent, Tom Ride, presiding.jston.Mr.Bruneau spoke on The new prize list books are the day\u2019s program and invited now available and it was re- anyone interested to attend, ported that a new barn for The jra;r board will request swine and sheep is under con- a grant £rom the Provincill struction and will be complet- government to help pay for ed before the fair.Repairs will|Cons£ruc£jon o£ new swlnc be made to the grandstand aruj sbeep barn w hich is partly stage beiore the fair dates.cement, and to pave the floor The fair w ill open on \\\\ ed-0f {be horticulture building.nesday\tmgnt, August 26\tand\t\u201e.\t.\t,\t,- feature\ta parade of bands,\tand\tTHhls >ear,* rul!\"*\t,haJ been\t_ will continue through Thurs-made t0 , allfw allK classes n D , rU\tr* A\tWn^rA day, Friday and Saturday with =heep, exh'0Its t0 be .°Pen ,KlCnmOnCl SCnOOl DOarCI several major attractions' lined ^0mP,0VCfmy.1J\u201cm°r KUb r.\t.up for\ta full three days\tand\t,ecitl!\u2019\tal'L ext u\tmcai\tm\tP t* 8 M fl\t't'hïlC\t\\A/Ool^ four nights of fun.The\tfair;\u2018iüarheunder 1 jearsoit^\timdi meermg\trnis\tweeK will conclude on Sunday after-^ noon when the Massaw ippi!1\" the exblblt^8 n/me> 30 da^ Valiev Horse Show will be Pre,v'0US, ,0 the alr( and ualJ ^ frnembJers, make .\tcertificates must be fi-\t- - PThen 'program will include at ,he time o{ showin* Academy Award Winner Sidney Poitier about to play a choice recording for a group of nuns whom he is helping to build a chapel in the desert.Scene is from \"LILIES OP THE FIELD\" opening today at the Granada Theatre.RICHMOND \u2014 (Special) \u2014pressing his congratulations on up the Ids recent appointment add certificates must be furnished newly-formed St.Francis Plot- .hanking him for the many estant School Board which re-years of service to the school.horse and °o\\en pulling eon-\t\u201ct .««Î*».If.\u2022* ££,.!*\u2022 JST.*!*\"* J23îî\u201c.d!r ticulture and handicraft ex- Mr.W.a Protestant School Board, by MacDougall, and municipalities where tests, grandstand attractions,!Ver^ls*nS committee held -cattle and horse exhibits, hor- meeting which was chaired by ^lectl°\u201cs weiT held ln man> us heartfelt thanks.G.MacDougall, and mumcipanues wnere many were hibits.swine and sheep.The Plans were outlined for adver- \"a,\"*d J®,head\t\u201dew hoards fciUTV committee has spent many »>**>»« o£ the fair.The advenis- ^ fx'>tln= ones Ihe 'lcw R-eh- V-UUI V./\tI II I > hours attempting to make this *n= alld P^gram committee^®\",! board named f'ye men.\t.119th fair a good one.Salur-\"111 mcet a2ain 0,1 June 17 t0 5 rL,^ T ^ L?'d :lh CNtlCîSmS day evening the Hell Drivers comPlete plans and announce ut R>chmo\u201cfl- H.L.trench anu 1 1 1 v-l 311 I 3 will present a show and there t£le program.Other commit- \u2022 ¦\t'\t.' \u2019,,rne 01 I)runimond- ,\tC\t' will be ?n All-Canadian mid-tees are \"lso meeting and com-\th- More-v of Y T O PH bôU V0 pleting their plans.\t|Wmdsor-Brompton\tiiwiii ¦w'ay.The directors agreed to have\t-1 the membership tickets the .\t.\t, same as last year, six admis ACiVISSS humor sions and car good for the -\t.duration of the fair.\tror perspective \u201cWe are living in a province where the winds of change are blowing.People are getting nervous, perhaps too nervous.We need something to put us back in proper perspective.The answer \u2014 humour.\u2019\u2019 In this manner, Ted Fisher, ! I I., rowing wit jConOda Hotels to be charged Two hotels are expected to be charged with violating Sunday liquor laws following an area-wide visit made last Sunday on liquor establishments in the Sherbrooke area by agents of the Quebec provincial police.The majority of the establishments however, were found to ibe closed for the day.A total of 65 persons were found to be consuming alcoholic beverages with incomplete meals in the two establish Inients, police charge.I The two establishments in question aie Le Domaine Mont-joie, near North Hatley and L\u2019Auberge des Pins at Deauville.Le Domaine Montjole was visited at 7 p.m.and a visit was made to the latter place at jabout 3:45 p.m.Sunday after inoon, police said.Le Domaine Montjole is ex-,pecteu to be charged with two (infractions of the law \u2014 selling on Sunday without a complete (meal and selling to take out, L\u2019Auberge des Pins is expeetd to be charged with selling on Sunday without a complete (meal, police said The counties in which these visitations were made were Sherbrooke, Compton, Richmond and Slanstead.\tOTTAWA (CP) The majority of the hotels in ,\\lan Macnaughton the area were found to be closed following a warning by QPP early last week that inspections SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD.WED., JUNE 17.1964 U Financial & Market Report S'Obs COURTESY OF GREENSHIELDS LTD NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Closing H a.m.MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE Closing 11 \u2022\u2022\u2022\"\u2022Is'hertVooke'H^piUl BRAZEL \u2014 John and Jamee juice Alden) are happy to an-nounce the arrival of their (daughter, 8 lbs.6 oz., Christine Myrtle, on June 15, 1964 at the j.c.McMillan The Royal Bank of Canada announces the appointment ol J.C.McMillan as Supervisor of Branches in Quebec.New Brunswick, and Eastern Ontario.He was formerly Manager at St Catherine and Stanley Branch in Montreal Amer.Tel.\t136%\t136-%\tAbitibi\t\t15%\t15% Dupont\t2541\t* 254'\tlAlgoma\t\t68%\t68% General Electric\t79%\t79%\t(Aluminum\t\t31%\t31% General Motors\t88%\t88%\tArgus Corp.\t\t16%\t (Goodyear\t40%\t\t1 Asbestos\t\t20%\t20% Inti.Bus.Mach.\t478%\t\tBell Tel.\t\t56%\t56% Int.Paper\t31%\t31%\tBrazil\t\t3 20\t3.15 Int.Tel.\t54%\t\tB A.Oil .\t\t32%\t32% Johns Manville\t56 %\t\tB.C.Forest\t\t28%\t N.Y.Central\t36%\t\tB, C Power\t\t44\t [Pepsi\t55\t\tBruck \"A\"\t\t26%\t Radio\t32%\t\tCan.Cement\t\t45%\t45% {Republic Steel\t44\t44\tVan.Iron\t\t38\t38% i s Rubber\t50%\t\tCdn.Aviation\tF,l\t9%\t Std.Oil of N.J,\t85%\t\tCdn.Breweries\t\t10%\t10% (studebaker\t7%\t\tCdn.Br.Alum.\tA\t11%\tU B II.S.Stool\t55%\t55%\tChemcell\t\t14%\t144» Woolworth\t84' -¦\t\t(Cdn.Pac.Railw\tay\t47%\t47% MACDONALD \u2014 To Gordon and Violet (nec McLaughlin) at Detroit, Mich., on June 17, 1964.A daughter.Both well.THOMSON \u2014 Robert and Louise 32\u2019» B (nee Castonguay) arc happy to announce the arrival of their daughter, Jennifer Anne, 5 lbs.12 oz., on June 17, 1964, at the Sherbrooke Hospital.0ratlifi ompton The Richmond Board held its n.i-mc-o, ,., , final meeting in St Francis Ql LBU (P ~Alcide Courcy-High School last Monday underAsm'ulU\"'f Mlmslel; the chairmanship of Mr Barrie ob-,CCted Tuesday t0 weekend Armitage with Llovd ' Somer CrlUelSm of hls d'eparlment of' ville, Principal.Also attendim; ficials by.Maurice Sauve> \u2022\u2019e would be made and that those were G.Marveau Alexander dcral ^\u2018n\u2018ster oi Forestry.found violating the Sunday Neil Mountain.William Gee\tSauve made the com- taws would be prosecuted.Keith Dowd, RDA\tsupervisor\tments following a meeting in\tThe law\tstates\tthat on Sun- and M.J.Butler.\tMatane, Que., with provincial\tday\tliquor\tmay\tbo sold only St.Francis High\tSchool\twas\tofliriaIs taking part in the Ag-jwith\ta full\tcourse\tmeal consist- operated by the St.Francis\tCoT\tricultural Rehabilitation and\ting\tof a\tserving\tof juice or Endorse chair s decision THE MARKET TODAY (Grtenshieldt Ltd.) Stock prices were slightly oigher in moderately active trading.Cons Paper Cons.Smelters jfi-n Dial.Seagrams\t56 Dom.Bridge\t22\u2019a Dorn.Tar\t23 Dom.Textile\t271» Dupont\t49;ki Fanious Players 20 Ford \u201cA\"\t199 Fraser\t30\u2019» (ten.Dynamics 30 Great Lakes Paper 24 G Hawker Stddley 8'* Home Oil \"A\"\t19' .\u2022 Hudson Bay Co.I5H lltidson B Mining 64la 50 24 G DAWSON, Albert \u2014 At the Montreal General Hospital, on Tues., June 16th, 1964, Albert Dawson, beloved husband of Violet Brymer, dear father of Sheila, Malcolm, Terrence, Ilona (Mrs.S.Rodriquez).Funeral 271 » P j Friday at 11 a.m., from the Chapel of J.W.MacGillivray and Sons, 5644 Rannantyne Ave.Interment Montreal Memorial Park.50 20 B (Carft of {Bltauka soup, meat and potatoes, with CO- liquor to be served only a G«ri fre« prospedui and 31-year record on lM« simple no penalty plan from any Investment Dealer or Broker or mail thit to CALVIN BULLOCK ltd.C-l-l HOUSE, MONTREAL 5 lege Board from 1855 to 1900 Devel°Pnlent Act program and from 1900 to 1964 by the\tattributed lack of _ Montreal insurance broker in-Board of Protestant School Com- orcRnatlon ln (he plan to Que-heverage with the meal troduced his contribution to the missioners of Richmond.\thoc civil servants and suggest- \u201cgetting Canadians in proper During the meeting, a pro- ct£ a federal-provincial confer nerspective\u2019 cause a« he launch- entation was made to Mr.So- cnce t0 reorganize the plan, ed into a pungent series of merville who takes over the du- \u201cMr.Sauve has no right to humouroru; satirical sketches at ' last night's regular meeting of the Sherbrooke Rotary Club.His humour, a subtle blend of Lenny Bruce and George Gobel was not of the hearty laugh Speaker has won plaudits f r o m parliamentary rules authorities for his decision .Monday to split a two-pronged governnunt resolution on the flag.\tIndustrial Wire A Cable an ¦1 think he did well,\" said|nounced that it will purchase Imperial Oil Ind.Accept.The London stock market was In*- Nickel tinner at the opening\t*ntl Paper Int.Pipe Jam.Public Sen .Labatt Laur.Fin.\"A\" McKinnon Steel McMillan Blocdel Massey Ferguson Molson's \"A\" Coronation Credit reports) earnings lor the nine months ended Apr.30-64 of 30c a share as against 39c a share in the same period last year.Stanley Knowles, New Demo- ^'c iorge division ol Quebc cratic whip and widely-acknowl-j®£t'c£ * inducts Ltd.l.achine, edged leading authority among Q'u - \u2019k*' l,,''lTS wa,< 1101 2 36:1i up 12 421r up -lh Quebec has made clear its by taking 34 roll call votes, 33 of the House of Commons was a OTTAWA (CP)\u2014Members of\tparticipation hinges\ton priority i them to knock down\tamendment\t(resolution introduced\tby Prime the Board of Broadcast Cover-\tin the development\tof natural I to the bill.\tMinister Pearson \"to\testablish\" nors expressed concern Tues-(resources in the province.In More of (he same was in j the proposed maple leaf flag as day that methods used by some effect, he said, this means Que- prospect today but leaders wereithe flag of Canada, and \"to proradio stations in conducting live bee has to recomend and ap- cautiously confident that the vide\" that the Union .lack may interviews over the telephone (prove all research and develop-(southern contingent would offer (continue to be flown as a sym-may be an invasion of privacy,\tment plans under the Act.\tonly about\t20\tmore\tamend\tbol of Canadian membership in BBC Vice - Chairman Carlyle\tMr.Courey said\tMr.Sauve ments.\tthe Commonwealth\tand allé- Allison commented on phone would be better employed urg - giance to the Crown.calls from radio stations solicit big the federal government to\tpcauc \u201cTo establish\" has Ihe con ing opinions from people with- accept riders Quebec has sug-\tnotation of creating something out giving them prior notice, gested for the ARDA program\tworld s greatest land [new, while \u201cto provide\" means, and of taping conversations as' well as acceptance of 29 mountain range is the Himala in the sense of the resolution, to without the person being intei ^PC5I,K ARDA projects costing van\tcontains 11 of the confirm and continue something Retain sales in Canada in Ihe first four months of 1964 amounted to 5947 million an increase ol 8.2', over sales in the same period last year.Wheat flour sales by milling companies in Canada in the first nine months of the current crop year amounted in 38, 115,000 CWT an increase of 32.2'.over sales in the same months ol the 1962-63 crop year.30% 30 B 24'-.8 19% B L,% j FOnOKS \u2014 Wf wl»h I» thank all 641-.'\t- Utoae who helped In any wa\\, 4P', p durtn( Ihe lllneaa and death of our brother Thomas Doctor» and nur*-Iiir slall on 2nd floor, of ihe Sherbrooke Hnspiui.Spec-lal thanks to Itev.Skuao, Mr.Hoytnn, pallbearers, organist, choir, St Margaret's Ciiilld.nil m> neighbors, friends sud tels lives.Your kindness will be remrm heied.Brother, SAMHKI.FQRBKS Sister.HI l/.AHKTH FOB BBS Cook&hlre, Quebec.Noranda\t46 Ogilvie\t15 Price Brus.\t44 Quebec Tel.Sayvctte\t3.10 Shop A Save\t12% Steel Co.\t25% Traders bin \u201cA\" 12% Trans-Can.Pipe 38% Trans Ml.Oil 19% Triad Oil\t1.96 Walker\t34% Zellers\t10% B.Cn.Nationale 78 ni, ut Montreal 66 Ilk ol Nova Scotia 72 Bquc Provinciale Cn.Bk of Comm 86% Royal Bank\t75% Tor.Dom.Bank 65% MINES and OILS Advocate\t8.30 Alla.Gas Trunk 35% Cassiar\t12% Central del Rio 7 9(1 Denison\t13% Falconbridge\t71% Gunnar\t7.20 Hollinger\t27% 27% Kerr Addison 7.60 Quemont\t9.85 fl\t85 Steep Rock\t4.75\t4.80 Northern\t130\t1.3# Kelly\t40 7.85 B 71' \\\\ KHB We wish t.n extend our sincere thanks and appreciation to all our neighbors, friends and rela-in cs, for every kindness shown us at Ihe time of (lie death and hui'lal of our dear one.Bern» E.Webb.Our special thanks to Bev.1\u201e Withrow, Mr*.1 A.McCoy, organist, Mrs 11 Id red Maratnn, soloist, Mr.S.!.Corkwood, the hearers and ushers.sit who called, sent flowers, cards and food, and those who telephoned long distance, also lo Dr.Manning, the nurses and others si the Wales Dome, who were so kind We sh ill remember Ihese kindnesses always CORA E.WKBB (wife) fcl.TON AND LAURA (son and daughter-in-law) cooh We wish lo express our sincere I hanks and apprecletlon In all oui neighbors, triends and rela-lives foi (hr kindness shown us at the sudden death ol our husband anil rather, Arthur Cook, died iune V 1964.A special thanks lo Ibe bearers, to all I hose who sent, flowers, j letters, cards, food and loan of ears In our lime of grief.Thanks to Dr Uulntln and nurses on Hit third flour.Sherbrooke Hospital.Sincerely, MBS ARTHUR COOK AND FAMILY viewed aware that the corner $7,500,000 which have been sub- sation is to be broadcast.j miffed by the province without ' reply.world's 17 peaks of more than already existing.26,00(1 feet Bsm Delivery Twice Daily 350 MARQUETTE ST.FREE PARKING BEER & PORTER ON ICE in all parts of the city.Tel.562-1591 or 567-4588 Follow the TransKebec ad, they have very interesting prices which we accept in order to give our trade more advantages.Our Slogan is always, \"Small Profit for Large Sales.\" THURSDAY WE WILL GIVE DOUBLE STAMPS For Sale \u2014 a combination Gas & Oil Stove.Ideal for a cottage.FARESAVER PLAM! LOW COACH FARE TO FORT WILLIAM $24.50 That's the incredibly low one-way coach fare every day on the new Faresaver Plan.And look what coach travel on The Canadian gives you: Reserved reclining seats with full-length leg rests, Scenic Domes, porter service, and music.And you can purchase delicious meals in the Dining Room or Skyline Coffee Shop.The Faresaver Plan is also available for All-Inclusive (meals and passage) in tourist and standard sleeping cars.See your Travel Agent or any Canadian Pacific office.SHERBROOKE-FORT WILLIAM\tOne-wsv coach fare C/¦) ji To Medicine Hat J42, to Saul! Ste.Mane SIS\tat Enquire about Faresaver Plan to other points Information and reservations: LO.2-ZSÎÎ 50 Sun Up Orange Juice\t14 oi.can 73c Nestle's Chocolate Quik 2 lb.box $1.07 Schwartz Mustard\t24 oz.jar 25c Domestic Shortening\t.\t3 lbs.99c Red Rose Tea,\t.\t60 bags 83c with 15 bags free.Viau Chocolate, Sandwich or Marshmallow Cookies 3 bags 99c Libby's Tomato Juice, 20 oz.can 5 for 79c Lipton Chicken Noodle Soup\t8 envelopes for 89c White Swan Toilet Tissue\t4 for 49c Dream Whip, 20 oz.\t2 for 55c Prem\t.2 cans 89c Cigarettes, All Brands\tcarton $3.49 Colgate Tooth Paste,\ttube $1.09 with a tooth brush free.FRESH FISH Lawton Apples S lbs.59c Ceylon Tea\tlb.pkg.79c Fresh Ground Coffee\tlb.pkg.79c Buffet Hot Chicken Sauce, 15 oz.can 19c with 1 Bar-B-0 Sauce Free.Creamery Butter, First Duality, Fortin, Jersey Gold or Cookshire lb.55c Eggs, Grade \"A\", large\tdoz.\t49c Medium, doz.40c; Small, doz.35c Christie's Milk Bread, 24 oz.loaf 5 for SI.We also have a large assortment of Christie's p-stries, received fresh daily.Kraft Cream Cheese, sliced, Va lb.33c Canadian Mild Cheese\tlb.\t50c See our large variety of Fancy Cheese and Frozen Foods.Raisins for Pies\t2 lbs.59c Pitted Dates\t2 lbs.49c illets of Cod\tlb.\t39c Hitts of Haddock\tlb.\t49c California Lettuce\t2 heads 35c Morocco Oranges, size 252, 2 dozen 79c Radishes\t3 for 19c We also have a large assortment of garden seeds.MADE DECISION DIFFICULT As things stood, ibe members had to take a stand for or against both the new flag and the Union Jack in a single vote.Many Quebec MPs wanted to support only the new flag.Some others wanted to vote against il but for the symbol of Commonwealth connection and loyalty.However, a member could nol vote one way on one part of the Produce Quotes resolution, and the opposite way on the other part.MONTREAL (CP) Agriculture department quotations: Eggs: Wholesale prices to country stations, wooden ear-tons: Extra-large 40 41: large 37-38; medium 30; small 23-24; B 28; C 24.Butter: Current receipt* non-tendcrablc 51%; 93 score tender- AT MOUNT ORFORD Continued from Page I tel - R.Masella.Wednesday, August 5 .lui ques, Venion, violinist, and Gilles Manny pianist.Thursday, August 6 JMC National Music Competition, piano, final audition with orchestra al the Place des Arts (Montreal leslivals).Saturday, August 8 Camp students1 concert, symphony,! jp g\t^ ^ lu fUcimirtam LOWRY In loving memory of * I dour hutbaml, father and «rand* fHthcr, Manly Lowry, who passed away, June ifi, Hi# memory Ik our ktepsaka, With which we\u2019ll never part.Always remembered by, ANNIK (Wife) WAYNK.CLAUDETTE AND LYNN, Vl( TOR, HELEN AND CHERYL, HOG EH AND JIMMY (children A grandchildren) CO AIKS\tIn fond and loving memory of a dear dad and grand* father.Dennis Ellsworth Coates, who left us, June 17.I9fi?lovingly remembered by, Son, CARL Daughter-in-law, HAZEL AND FAMILY able 53; 92 score lenderable 52.|conccr( choral works Cheese: Delivered Montreal, S|ln()ay> AugU8t lfi NOT CONSULTED .\t.I OTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Speaker p .\t.,\t.\t.\t'(an.Alan Macnaiighlon said in the naughton ruled (liai the twojsa|c Quebec white 38; colored!,®1'\t'ft\"1!\" r\u2019_|a_^!or\u2019 an Commons Tuesday there was ideas should be divided into sep* 3514.\tno consultation between him arate resolution, the prime min- Skim milk powder! Spray pro\t\u2014 |*elf and Prime Minister Pear- Moments before Speaker Mac- waxed current receipts, whole istcr said the government had Cp,Ss No.[Gloria Richard, soprano.1 in bags l.i - lJtz,i Friday August 21 \u2014 no intention of splitting the sin- roller process No.1 in bags 12- ni\u201e11B V\t.gle resolution.\t,3: feed 1M2; butter milk pms (\t1 V Opposition Leader Uiefen ,|rr feed 8% 9\tDenise Pelletier baker argued that the two ideas! Potatoes: Wholesale scllingi SaJurfi.1'v aueusI 22 were wrapped up in one gov-|pricc, N.B.75s 3.80-4.00; N.B '\t' Brilan Centre (son, or between their staffs, on his decision Monday to split the government's flag motion.Cred on.< ivaloirc, jtjsjes [,ea(|er Rca| Cannelle \u201e asked Mr.Pearson whether he ernment policy and should notlsos 2.50-2,65; N.B.10s .60 - .62; be split.He was critical of Ihelp.E.l.white 75s 4.25-4.50; P.Ë.qi.in., Britannicus; 8:30 p.m., Le Légataire Universel (Regnard), ,\t.\t- \u2014 -\t,v [Monique Joly, le Centre Drama government earlier lor adopting white 50s 2.90-3.00: P.K wh le ,\t,\t,,\t, \u2022\t«.uu\t\"\" tique du Conservatoire, a two flag policy.\u2019\tio,s .68-.70 Ca/zoeào/i TRAINS'TRUCKS SH'^S % ANLS .HOTELS f TELECOMMUNICATIONS WORLD'S MOST COMPLETE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM p5- S\t.Y.:.IlilSÉ \u2022 .; r TRAVEL SERVICES .v INFORMATION WITHOUT CHARGE* VOYAGES MARCEL DARCHE INC.74 Albert St., Sherbrooke, Due.TRAVEL AGENCY Phone»: 562-1012 or 1013.\t\t.Kmas\t( Bacon, sliced.lb.45c\tor\t3 lbs.$1.30 \t\t\tC Low Rib of Beet\t\t5 lbs.$1.00 \t/ A 11\t\t( Chuck Roast of Beef\t\tlb.39c \t\t\t) Porterhouse Steak\t\t3 lbs.$1.35 \t\t\t4 Fresh Sausages\t\t4 lbs.$1.00 Federal Bologna\t\t3 lbs.$1.15\tf Ground Beef or Pork\t\t4 lbs.$1.00 Blood Sausages\t\tlb.25c i\tf Salt Pork\t\t2 lbs.25c Pork Chops\t\t\t lb.69e\t1\t) Leaf Lard\t\t2 lbs.15c Broiltrs, 2Vi to 3 lbs.\t\tlb.31c\t!\tr Pig's Feet, short, lb.5c\t_\tlong, lb, 19c Ham, prepared with\tSweet\tBrine and\tf> fourteen spots, as of June and six runs on 32 tries.llj;\tBob Johnson trails his fel i Z-, T\tlow Canadiens with a .\u2019160 av \"Suy Lamoureux heads the\t2 White Sox retains top spot, Yanks split Lamoureux heads the lifi as he has an average of .636 «age hitt.ng nine out ol 23 _ getting five runs on seven hits \"\u2022«\u2019*, ^ming m three times.4 wBHe at bat eleven times He Gnmbys Desrochers paces the r, alÿn is credited with the most Knights with .355 as he con- « rips hatted in, as he has sent neeted for eleven of 31 attempts \u201e eght men home.\ticommg home five times and ^\t,\t.sending in four teammates.Sherbrooke Alouettes and Mlthau(| wilh 333 la,|ie(, Vton Vale Beavers didn t clash;five runs on (,1(,v(,n hlls whi|e at hat 33 times.Carlos Thorne 1 ist aver- off the diamond last night as the tamperature nippped toward fiTezing, bringing rain and wind a'gi^''32i\u2018\"wïth\"seven rumii'in along with it.This game has been resched- is below him on the aging eluding a homer, on nine hits :> ,\tbeing at the plate 28 times 1 a uled to take place tomgh at Quy Vincent of Drummond-:' R.30 in Acton, with both clubs vi]jt.has five runs on cjght hits H mini/ In thf* F'ark Avenue .,\t.returning to the Park Avenue Stadium Thursday evening.Sherbrooke is looking for their third straight win against Acton this evening to raise them in the Provincial League st* n dings.match in this while at the plate 2d times.His .308 average includes two RBI\u2019s and 87 men put out in the held In the pitcher\u2019s standing! Paquette and Proulx lead the column lor (iranhy both win-; ning three, losing none, averag 4 stkwart, (iuy Juiras (Post Time 8:00 p.m.) 1ST RACI \u2014 PACf Purii*: 1200.00 MISS (.LENA DIRECT, (îu.v Robiehaud KOVAL PAT, J.(i.Houde MARKET WISE W.Hebert A DIOS WIDOW, K.St.Denis LITTLE HAWK.A Pun 1 in JEAN CLAP H, V.Hifx hu CYRIL\u2019S FL1CKA, C.Grenkr .11 IS 1ER SWEETHEART.F.Nadeau Eligible: Kveana, S.Jacob 2ND RACE \u2014 TROT Purse: $200.00 EAGLE WAY, (i Roy PRINCE GERRY C.A.Beaudoin -CANDY D, A.Rouleau DEFIANCE, G.Roblchaud RAGON.P.Masse MARTIAL LAW, I.Duquette KATIE DID.Guy Jut ran EINDON ABBOTT.C.Sevl^ny El ig i bl e : Shake rbee, .1, P.LavaJlee 3RD RACE \u2014 PACE Purse: $150.00 MISS TRUK LEE, I4\u2019 Desrochers EAR Nil AM EXPRESS, Guy Kobichaud DALEY JOY, N.Lachance liéiSii ing I (KM).PHquette pitched 27 innings, allowed 23 hils, walk-;'1 22 1 In the other longue, (Iranby and Coaticook will meet Saturday, June 20 at Granby.Pete Merrill, another Cana dien.has six hit* and four njnSj'h\" while at Ihe plate ten times.He (ii|| has eliminated 47 men while1 on duty at second base, and two runs have He trails his teammate with a\t, .\t\u201e\t,\t, ,, \u201e\u201e\u201e\ttour.John Knox, plavtng 16 1/3 .600 average.\t,\t, ,, Meccuci has kepi Coaticooka s\u201c.!«l ^ h,ls ,and 11 -spot as he has:walks Past\tbut reulaln^.a 7 J2 0 record, follow member Jim « one, lost; none, played 16, allowed 15 eri II and put out while his teammate has pitch ¦d 25 2/3 innings, giving up 19 7 and putting 13 Acton's Groulx has a 2-0 rec- i \u201e l:,\u201e ord, playing 18, allowing 13 come in on his hits, 1\t1\t¦\t\"\t,\t,\t.i(|\tlints putting 18 out and walking ¦,> : ll!S stop Yankees Steve Mitchell blasts homer to count Yanks' only runs, lose 10-2, Twins pound out win over Orioles A home run with one aboard by Steve Mitchell was all _\tfor Yankees in their game with Senators in the Sher-Lenn SHER-LENN.LITTLE LEAGUE Kittle League last night as they took a 10-2 defeat from the Indians Red Sox Tigers Senato White Sox Twins Yankees Orioles W 4 4 4 .1 .3 $ 2 0 T Pts.kept the TUESDAY'S GAMES Yankees 2.Senators JO Orioles 3, Twins 15 WEDNESDAY'S GAMES (Parade Grounds 6:30) Indians vs Tigers White Sox vs Red Sox postponed) ?* ?PROVINCIAL LEAGUE Won Lost Pet.GBL Senators.Mario Polardy, on the mound for the Senators.Yanks to three hits in his win.Twins ran away from Orioles in the other game played, Twins taking this one by a 15-3 count.Jimmy Martineau was the winner, he had 12 strikeouts in the game.Tonight Tigers and Indians dash at the Parade Grounds.Senators had a 10-0 lead go- ry- ing into the sixth inning as blt*;\t, Polardy kept the Yankee bats The r^\u2018ns bul1' lhe\u2018r silent.The winners got one run UP in eacb innln8 bul tbe fifth.Granby\t8\t4\t.667\t\t j Sherbrooke\t5\t6\t.455\t2' * ! Drummonclville\tfi\tB\t.455\t2' » ! Coaticook\t4\t3\t.444\t21 Acton Vale\t4\t5\t.444\t2[, 1 Orioles got their three tallies in the third a single by F.Boisvert, a base on balls and two infield errors sent the three runs home.Twins were good for 15 hits and found P.Delisle's pitching ! to their liking.Orioles still NOT ON THIS BALL \u2014 Perfect throw from Roger Maris gets away from Yankee catcher, John Blanchard, as Red Sox catcher Russ Nixon charges to safety at home plate.Action took place in second inning of first game of twi-nighter io New York's Yankee Stadium last night.Blanchard pretends he has hall in glove hut error is ob- vious.Nixon scored when Red Sox second baseman James Jones singled to right.He went on to second on the error, (AP Wircphotn) within the top an average of .421.Eight hits, and five runs on nineteen tries Stetnhout has won constitutes his average.\t,, .'.Este gives a better perfor luls and put out 11 for a 100 nrance for Acton Vale getting :ivt\u2018l'a886\t1 jCincinnati \t\t.31\t26\t.544\t3'.a Pittsburgh\t.\t30\t27\t.526\t41 ;2 j Milwaukee\t.30\t29\t.508\t51 2 Los Angeles .\t.29\t30\t.492\t6' 2 Chicago\t\t\t.27\t28\t.491\t6' 2 St.Louis \t\t.29\t31\t.483\t7 Houston\t\t\t.28\t33\t459\t«' 2 New York\t.19\t41\t.317\t17 Runs Allison Runs Batted Cleveland, and amazing.When he as- became Ihe first pitcher to shut ^ sumetl control of the Ubieties out the Tigers this season, last week, McGaha said he Kansas City scored six runs planned nothing drastic.\tafter two were out in the fourth In \u2014 Stuart, Hits\u2014Oliva, 86.Doubles\u2014Brcssmid, 16.Chicago \t\t.\t33\t21\t.611\t\u2014 Baltimore\t.\t35\t23\t.603\t\u2014 New York\t.33\t22\t.600\t1 2 Minnesota .\t32\t27\t.5-2\t3' 2 Cleveland .\t28\t27\t.509\t512 Boston\t.\t30\t30\t.500\t6 Detroit\t\t\t.25\t31\t,446\t9 Washington\t27\t36\t.429\t10' 2 Los Angeles\t.25\t37\t.403\t12 Kansas City\t22\t36\t.379\t13 .\t.\tTriples \u2014 Oliva.Versalles, 43, failed for the sixth straight edged New York Mets 2-t, Flr,t .i^r.;\u2019F.r\u2019,™.r Jy ^Hc\"\t^^Minnesota, and McAuliffen Do- (BOB MITCHELL PACE) Purs*: $300.00 lime Tuesday night to finish CLOSED THE GAP what he started and dropped a John Roseboro doubled home 5-1 decision to Los Angeles Dod- Tommy Davis for a 2-0 Dodger 1 gers.\tlead in the fourth, but the It just may be that after a Braves closed the gap in the National League career span sixth on doubles by Eddie Math- 1 ning 20 seasons, 691 games and ews and Hank Aaron.\t4 4,974 innings, the left arm that Willie Davis then connected has worked so effortlessly may with a two-run triple in the sev- 7 finally be feeling the strain.enth and wrapped up the three- ' ¦ ^vun adios.k Newell Spahn showed no signs of run outburst against Spahn by !l slowing down last year as he scoring on a single by Maury posted a 23 7 record and hit the!Wills.Don Dr.vsdale, bringing 20 - victory circle for the 13th his record to 9-5, checked the i time.But the greatest left Braves on four hits.\t\u2022\u2019 hander in baseball history has John Herrnstein homered for 1 been running into trouble this the Phillies, who scored the de * season.\tcisive run in the fourth on a « THK GRK.AT SPKNCKR.!.Huckins NORTHWOOD CANNON, IV Brunelle ADIOS PEGGY.K.St Denis i i t n SPENCER, k Dupont GOODWILL EXPRESS.YV.St Cv r SARA MITE, L.La rose ADIOS MARCEL.R.Jutras Along with his 5-5 record this double b> Ton\\- Gonzalez.an tn HOMES I RK.I'CH CLAIR, R Roberge ?TH RACE - PACE Purse: $350.00 RHYTHM MAC, A.Beaudoin Bl.l KTT SCO'I'T, F.Desrochers KERA'S BAY, N.Masse N w \\JO BOY, F st Denis GRANBY EXPRESS, P Masse PI ARDO, F.Newell BRHiHTSIDE, G.\" Surprenant WORTHY TIP.A.Velllenx downright ego Segui sent three of the runs tl.nj( -, Sam Snead will be trying for 24th time to win US Open, has never won it, all favorites are competing Runs nesota, 20.Stolen Bases - more, 31.Pitching\u2014Ford 1, .900.Strikeouts\u2014Ford, 82.Killrbrew.Min- Aparicio, Balti- New York, 9- TUESDAYS GAMES Chicago 5-1.Baltimore 0-3 Boston 6-5.New York r>-7 Kansas City 7-6, Detroit 4-0 Mincsota 3.Cleveland à Los Angeles 7, Washington 5 WEDNESDAY'S GAMES Chicago at Baltimore Boston at New York Kansas City at Detroit Minnesota at Cleveland lx)S Angeles at Washington Miss K.Thompson of lennoxville wins CLGU Fieid Day a! Asbestos, 38 ladies took part in tourney The Eastern Townships Di- son of Lennoxville look gross ! vision of the Canadian Ladies honors with a 91, Miss V.Golf Union held their first Field Claude of East Angus followed Day of the season at the Ashes-(with a 94 while Mrs.S.Carter, tos Golf and Country Club on from Sherbrooke, took third Tuesday, June 16.with play place scoring 95.Net honors getting under way at 10 a.m.'went to Mrs.A.Remiilard, of An unusually cold and windy (Lennoxville, with 81 followed by day, complete with hailstorm.Mrs.R.Hull, Asbestos, with an 82.\tThird place went to Mrs.I.Lavallee of Sherbrooke with an 83.In class \u201cB\", first gross was won by Miss F.LaRose of Waterloo who scored a gross 99.Mrs.J.Rousseau and Mrs.G.Blouin, both of Lennoxville, 10TH RACE \u2014 PACE Purse: «179.00 Ml Wi HACKS, K Dupont DIRECT KXPRKSS H, ( ((venter year goes an even less impres- field out and Bobby Wine\u2019s \" sive 4.32 earned-run average.squeeze bunt.Meanwhile, the National Vada Pinson and Leo Carde , League - leading Philadelphia nas hit two-run homers as the 7 Hiillies edged Chicago Cubs 4-2\tReds built an 8-(t lead before Ihe\t1\tMlss pixie\tdu.[.on!\tt Duquett and moved one game in\tfront\tGiants finallv scored anainst\t4\tKAREN r\t4.95 The NîltSe 96 Queen Sf.\u2014 Lennoxville \u2014 Tel.569-5559 K*- -k' \u2022' '\t¦¦¦ mM vvi i .^*fg\u2018 ilinliiiillililil ORDONS BATH 9 Iii'i; 1! EAST HEREFORD \u2014 Owen includfd Mr.*nd Mr».Canaan.Vt.t eason\tHume and Mr.\tami\tMrs.\tAnnie Hovve\tand\tson, Mr.and Mrs\t\\\\ Houe,\tof\tK.\tDawson, of Bury;\tMr.\tGeorge, of Montreal,\twere\tRuest Lennoxville.were \u2022\u2022nests of Mr.\tVaughn\tStraw, Laverne\tand\tof Mr.\tand Mrs, R.\tK.KUmg- and Mrs.Ralph\tKUingwood.\tc.te.\tof Pittsburg.N H\tand\twood Recent guests of Miss Jennie Mr and Mrs Gordon Marsh.Mr.Ronald Owen and Mrs R.'.V 'sfyy* '*¦ *\t'\ta#* SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WED.JUNE 17.L%4\t15 A Owen visited .Miss Agnes Mr.and Mrs.D.Guay were Melrose, also Mr.and Mrs.\u2019guests of Mrs.Laura Wheeler,\u2019 James Rcdiker in Montreal.on her 82nd birthday, June fl, Mr.and Mrs.E.Dupuis and FLEE DEADLY FLAMES IN TURKISH BATH \u2014 Patrons flee down ladder at right as another is rescued from second floor window at left during fire which swept turkish baths at 1st Street and Second Avenue on New York's lower east side today: Firemen found two men dead I ! FROM C O N T R O VERSIAL FILM \u2014 This picture of Prime Minister Pearson leaving his ear is from controver- sial film on the prime minister made for the CBC, which they later decided against using.Both the Prime Min- ister's office and the CBC denied that political pressure was a factor in the shelving of the film.(CP Wirephoto) Travelling Gavel is presented to Knowllon IOOF KNOWLTON \u2014 On June 11, an,Victoria Lodge Ayer\u2019s Cliff were a long and interesting history, interesting event toolc place at|here to present to the Noble The gavel, commencing its the Lodge of Knowlton Oddfel-Grand of Knowlton Lodge with, Iravels in Nebraska, has eventu-lows when representatives of the travelling Gavel, which has ally made its way across the _______________________________________________jUnited States and into Canada.It is now held by the Knowlton Lodge.were GOVERNMENT OF QUEBEC PREPARE FOR THE FUTURE Enrol at the VAUDREUIL INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION CITE DES JEUNES, VAUDREUIL, P.Q.FREE INSTRUCTION * REGULAR PAY COURSES TECHNICAL COURSE: Road and Heavy Duty Machinery Technology, Water Treatment Technology, Industrial Production Technology, Highway Technology.Heating Technology.Trades Course: Public buildings maintenance.Road and heavy duty machinery maintenance, Water treatment plant operation and maintenance.Road and heavy duty machinery operation (Bull-dozers, mechanical shovels, graders, loaders, etc.).To students of Vaudreuil's region, the institute also offers technical and vocational training in: welding, electricity, machine-shop, tool and die making, construction, electrical appliances repairs, woodworking, diesel mechanics.REGISTRATION: till June 25.Competitive entrance examination: June 25 and 26th at 9.00 A.M, To make it more convenient to pupils who wish to register in courses exclusive to the Institute of Vaudreuil, candidates may apply and have their entrance tests at the Institute or Trades School nearest to their home.Scholarships are granted to students who need financial assistance to undertake or resume their studies.For further information, one mav apply directly to the School.DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION (Minimum expenses for accident-insurance, students\u2019 association and caution money deposit: total $8.00 to $10.00).in living quarters above the baths, one on a rot and another under a cot.Ironically, the flames swept the baths only three hours before a new sprinkler system was scheduled to go into operation.(AP Wirephoto) Cookshire lea, sale, exhibit is largely attended COOKSHIRE - Sponsored by the U.C.W.of Trinity United Church a largely-attended tea.sale and art exhibit was held at the home of Mr.and Mrs D.D.MacRae on June 13.The W.A.group assisted w ilh the refreshments for ihe tea.[Helping to serve were Miss Ha zel McVetty, Mrs.H.V.Burns.Mrs.S.McVetty, Miss Esther Farnsworth, Mrs.Barbara Vo-gell, Mrs.Stevenson.Mrs.O.C.Farnsworth poured, and Mrs.McRae received the guests.j The sales table of miscellaneous articles was in charge of Mrs.C.M.Cooper and Mrs.G.W Learned, and the food (able looked after by Mrs.R.B.Learned and Mrs.Heather ington.Ceramics were on view, some of which were for sale.Con tributors were Mrs.D.D.Ma crae, instructress; Mrs.A.W.Standish, Mrs.J.Cruickshank, Mrs.C.Standish, Mrs.J.McDonald, Mrs.J.P.Forand, Emi ly Hamilton, Linda Standish.The art exhibit consisted nf three oil paintings by Mrs Frances Smith, A Hunter's Retreat, Bygone Days, The Old Fishing Hole; three by Mrs.Helen Matthews, Foothills of the Rockies, Autumn, Solitude; two by Mrs.Lois Garneau, View of Quebec from Levis, and Pot of Flowers; two by Mrs.Mary Forand.Spring Blossoms and Winter Shadows; one by Mrs.Audrey Skuce, Copper Pitcher: one by Rev.Robin Skuce, Sea Scape; one by Marie McDonald.Members were present re- I5u,c*1 Scene; one by Barbara presenting I.O.O.F.lodges from /acq\u201ce'S\u2019 Pa-Uel Candle Light: Granby, Walerloo, Cowansville.*,\"0,\tw'nter Won' and Ayer's Cliff.\tde£land\u2019 Safe «orne.Following the meeting re- *ues1s were from Sherbrooke, freshments were served by the jCnnoxvlWc- Bulwer, Birchton.Knowlton Lodge.\t\u2019 Sawyerville and Bury, and many Mr.and Mrs.Stephen Morson 0 ,he ,ownspeople.spent the day in Montreal re-\t*\t\" Mr\" and Mrs.Kenneth Blake.Kinnear\u2019s Mills of Ayer's Cliff, were guests of Mr.Irwine Maxwell and Mrs.Mr.and Mrs.Stephen Morson.Annie Davidson were guests of \\ isitors of Mr.and Mrs.Rob- relatives in Lennoxville and Bui-ert Kirby were Mr.and Mrs.WPr John Kirby, of Magog.Also vis-; Mrs.George Crawford, ha* re-iting at the same home were (Urnefi home after spending a ¦ li.and Mrs, David I'lanagan in Waterville.and Ronnie Flanagan, of Sher- Mr.Fred Crawford and Mr.ro° e'\tCarl King attended Ihe funeral of Mrs.Robert Crawford, in Len-noxviile, the burial was at the Cookshire Boutclles Cemetery, at Inverness.Mr.and Mrs.Egbert Waldron Mr.and Mrs.L.Guy and Lin-attended the 25th wedding an- da were guests of their daugh-Riversary of Mr.and Mrs.ter Mrs.Lawrence Allan, Mr.George Buck, in Ville La Salle.Allan and family a( Blink Bon-They also met Mrs.Edna Lake, nie Farm, of Newmarket, Ont., who will Mrs.W.O.Rothney, Sher be visiting her relatives and brooke, accompanied her son.friends in this district for a few George, here and were guests of wec^s-\tMr.and Mrs.George Rothney Mr.and Mrs.0.Montmany.Berlin.N.H.Mr.and Mrs.Henry Robinson, Thetford Mines were guests of their cousin, Mr.' Irvine Maxwell.Mrs.Lucien Trepanier, spent a few days in Thetford with her sister.Mrs.Alfred Crawford, and family.FREE ESTIMATES On Renovations, Repairs & Painting Call Bishop Bros.Ltd.Tel.562-9315 For 10 days only! pi :p| Ü $£g§ I 11» à.< \\ CHOOSE FROM THESE TOP DOMINION ROYAL TIRES! Now, during Dominion Royal\u2019s special \"Vacation Time\u201d .Sale you can get a complete set of 1 Dominion Royal Tires for the price of 3.Take your pick of Dominion Royal\u2019s best\u2014the superb ROYAL MASTER, the top performance SAFETY 800 fused as original equipment on 1 out of 4 new cars) and the top quality SAFE-WAY.Choose whitewall or blackwall, tube or tubeless, nylon or rayon\u2014but act now because this special offer is for 10 days only.POYAL MASTE R SAFE WAY SAFETY R00 no TIME limit GUARANTEE: All Dominion Rf>y;il Tiros carry « no fcimr limit ffuaranlec againstnormnl road hazard», workmnnahip and manufac turing defect*.y JUBILEE Ask about our easy credit terms DOMINION ROYALTIRES MADE BY DOMINION RUBBER COMPANY LIMITED H«ad Office:\tM o n t r a » I , Quebec 111 la?\tfeOMINIOfl \u2018l ROYAL r1\tfôOMINIOlî ROYAl i IMS/\t' TIRES/\t'tires/ Marquis Tire\tSherbrooke\tDussault Tire Shop Reg d.\tVulcanizing\tSale Reg'd.356 Wellington St., S.\t2439 King St., W.,\t425 Queen St., Sherbrooke, P.Q.\tSherbrooke, P Q.r\tLennoxville, P.Q.Tel.569-9277\tTel.562-0019\tTel.569-3848 fiWMilON] 'l!^0VAl,, ITIBESf Garage Jean Marc Tardif Sawyerville, Que.Tel.889-2241 fBOMINIOfl 'iRirai.,1 \\TIBESf Roger Ashby Ascot Corner, Que.Tel.562 6198 dominion! 1 ROYAL-f \\ tires/\tfoOMINiONj I BOYAU \\ tires/\t[dominionI 'i ROYAL,' urn/\tftOMINIOli , ROYALr 1 tides/\tDominion] i royal,1 1 TIRES f Garage\tGarage\tGarage\tD.Cliche\tParadis Jean Claude\tSt.Pierre\tCouturier\t\tAuto Electric Lescault\tR.R.5 and 22,\tMain St.,\tWeedon, Que.\t6 College St., Chartierville, Que.\tWindsor Mills, Que.\tGreenlay, Que.\tTel.83-S-l\tLennoxville, Que.Tel.656-2242\tTel.845-4121\tTel.845-2373\t\tTel.569 6461 Garage Gedeon Poirier Compton Rd., Waterville, Que.Tel.837-2445 nUlMINION S ROYAL g 1 TIRES/ Desaulniers Automobile Inc.Windsor Mills, Que.Tel.Sherbrooke 562-6844 Windsor VI.5-2737 pOMINIONl iROYAlr I TIRES/ Garage Paul Morin Chemin Windsor, Richmond, Que.Tel.826-3910 [DOMINION] ROYAL I IM/ Garage Jean Champagne Enrg.33 Main Sf.Windsor Mills, Que.Tel.845-2966 \\ V 16 SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WED , JUNE 17, lfW4 Bedford S.S.pupils receive attendance pins BEDFORD \u2014 On June 7 the closing of St.James Church Sunday School for the summer took place with the awarding of attendance pins to students who: had missed no more than four Sundays.Parents\u2019 notes accept ed as legitimate excuses in case of sickness or church attendance in another community.The rector, Rev.Kenneth Trickey made the presentation to the following: First year, Brian Callaghan, Gary Callaghan, Billy Corey, Dale Corey, Laurie Caldwell, Mary Ann Bockus, Sandra Haynes, Colin Johnson, Bruce McKim, Kerry Jess, John Jess, Jimmy Jess, Nancy Doak, Laura Bellingham, Bobby Jess, Peter Jess, Linda Bockus.Second year, Jonathan Bradshaw, Cindy Callaghan, Jackie Corey, Debbie Corey, Ricky Callaghan, Karen Lampman, Bruce Bellingham, Andrew McKim.Third year, Scott Jones, Jane Craighead, Susan Muir, Louise Pope, Carol Haynes, Diane Lampman, Larry Cook, Eden Muir, Vicky Callaghan, Vivienne Muir.Fouth year, Julie Bradshaw, Beverly Gibson, Carol Lamp-man, Charles Martin, Ann Whil-comb, Linda Tambling.Fifth year, John Craighead.Leah Bradshaw, Gower Brad shaw, Carolyn Johnson, Christa [ Staudenmaier, Jim Davidson, Susan Palmer, Patsy Palmer, Glen Jackson.Sixth year, Danny Shepherd, Bill Craighead, Jim Greenwood, Jill McCaw, Peter Jackson, Bradley Shepherd, Gaith Kemp, Debbie Baglow.Seventh year, Pam Davidson and Darlene Campbell.The rector expressed the appreciation of himself and the members of the congregation for the splendid work done by the Sunday School principal, Mrs.R.W.Craighead, and the members of her staff, Mrs.Eric Kemp, Mrs.Ronald Haynes, Pam Davidson, Susan and Pat sy Palmer, Ann Whitcomb, Lin da Tambling.Glenn Jackson, Garth Kemp, and Messrs.Mac G, Muir.Mr.Trickey also ex ' pressed regret at Mrs.Craig head's resignation after two years as principal, and paid high tribute to her work.Members of the congregation were asked to contact the rector, regarding helpers during (he summer months to look after the younger children in the parish hall, in order that parents may attend services.The theme of Mr.Trickey's sermon was the Family Conference, sponsored by Governor-General and Mrs.Vanier.The servier closed with the recessional hymn.BISHOPTON \u2014 Mrs.C.After and family, of Montreal, Mr.and Mrs.A.For-j tin, of Sherbrooke, Miss Judy Smith and Mr.Wayne Smith.I w $500 CASH PRIZE WINNER EES $100 WINNER BI'M1,1!II.'1Jdi-T1IN J Mtil'AVlltltMit hüiflïlliioaj Ofl/mm/t Mrs.CH.MOLINARI 7713 9th Avenue Ville St.Michel, Montreal, Que.Mrs.Gaston Blouin, 225 Des Chenes East, Quebec, Que.Mrs.Juliette Bernard, 1277 Laviolette, Trois Rivieres, Que.Mrs.B.Charron, 7072 Bordeaux, Montreal, Que.Mrs.G.Seetermans, c/o Laurentides, Inn, Ste.Agathe Des Monts, Que.HÜIP: Mrs.Reginald Coates, R.R.2, Eastman, Quebec Mrs.Rene Levesque, 553 de Lanaudiere, Joliette, Que.EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS 1 EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS $100 WINNER Mr.Clifford Bell, c, ,\t.\t.\tl,\u2018 245 Cuffing St., M.Lambert, were weekend Coaticook, Que.guests of Mr.and Mrs.C.V.l Smith.$100.WINNER Huntingville Mr.and Mrs.Victor Masters are on a visit to their daugh* 1er and son-in-law, Mr.and Mrs.Hazle Lowry, and their grand-j son Mr.Harvey Lowry, and Mrs.Lowry, in Belleville, Ont.Miss Myrna Laroche, of Saw-j yerville, is caring for Mrs.Hat-' tie Snow during her illness.Mr.and Mrs.John Camp-hell, accompanied Mrs.C.L.Norwood, of Lennoxville, to Bedford, where they were guests m of Mr.and Mrs.William Tay- 1317 Beauvais, lor-\tSt.Laurent Mr.and Mrs.Carl Griffith Que.and family, of Montreal, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Frank Libbey over the weekend.QUALITY FRUITS & VEGETABLES RED PLUMS Californio No, 1 - Vitamin \"A\u201d Approximately 6 lb.basket California Large size \u2014 thiri Skin SUNKIST LEMONS^ 49* From the finest garden of Quebec \u2014 Grade No.1 1EAF LETTUCE Quebec (arown ITS QUEBEC WEEK AT DOMINION!! Packed in St-Jean \u2014 Special! \"Ideal\" sr 4 CHOICE PEAS 6 ° 1.00 Manufactured in Montreal! \"Catelli\" SPAGHETTI MEAT SAUCE wit\u2019i °Dupon and purchase of V.H.\"SPARE RIB\" SAUCE 12 oi.E£V Bile.Expires June 23rd with coupon and purcha:\u201c of \"Map-O\" MAPLE SPREAD !8t\u201c' 63- Expires June 23rd .EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS I EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS Manufactured Montreal! ASSORTED SPAGHETTI 39< Manufactured in St-Remi! \"Clark's\" with coupon and purchase of \u201cMaple Leaf\u201d PURE LARD 2\t1 lb.Pkgs.Expires June 23rd 25 with coupon and purchase of \"Ahuntsic\" BEAN SPROUTS 28 oi.| Qc Tin * \u201d Expires June 23rd BEANS EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS I EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS With Pork in Tomato Sauce -Mix fem'or Match 'em MILK RADISHES Sp ring Onion & 3 19< SPRING ONIONS No.1 Quebec \u2014 Young and Tender Manufactured In Montreal! \"Habitant\" Sweet PICKLED BEETS ^ for Manufactured It Post, Montreal, $100.WINNER \"Habitant\" Sweet NIXED PICKLES 24 oi.Jar East Clifton Mr.and Mrs.Ronald Bell and Mr.and Mrs.Chilson Lowry! were guests of the former's uncle and aunt, Mr.and Mrs.> Alvin Carleton, Mount Vernon N.H.Mr.and Mrs.Gordon Cairns: and children, Debra and | ' Stephen, South Paris, Me., were) guests of Mr.and Mrs.Victoi Bell.Other visitors were Mrs Mary Harris, New Bedforo Conn., and Mrs.James For grave, Sawyerville.Friends of Mrs.George Row ell regret to learn of the sud den death of her mother, Mrs.Thomas Leigh.Those attending the funeral services at East Hereford were Mr.and Mrs.George Rowell and daugh 1er, Nellie, Mr.Wesley Rowell, Mrs.Leta Cairns.Mrs.Gray-don Montgomery, Mr.and Mrs.Irwin McBurney, Mr.and Mrs.Victor Bell and Mrs.Philip McConnell.Guests of Mr.and Mrs.George Rowell and Mr.Wesley Rowell were Mr.W\u2019ill Roweil and Mr.Harold Rowell, Manchester, Mr.and Mrs.Robert Leigh, Mrs.Ben Danforth and daughter, Hilda, Colebrook.and Mr, Harold Howe, East Hereford.\t^ 45£ IN LARGER MARKETS! Made right in Quebec \u2014 Aluminum Garden or LOUNGE CHAIRS plr?cWe Made Right in Quebec \u2014 \u201cMercury' SEAMLESS Mesh \u201cWhite Swan\" Assorted Colours TOILET TISSUE 2c off \u2014\t^ R°||s 27e \"White Swan\" Assorted Colours \u2014 TOILET TISSUE 4c off\tRolls g Manufactured In Granby! \u201cCrino\" EVAPORATED MILK 3 \u2019L0*1 47e Mr.Etienne Marier, 781 d'Aiguillon, îuebec, Que.$100 WINNER NYLONS EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS with coupon and purchase of \u201cBedford\" choice CUT WAX BEANS 2 4P Expires June 23rd \"Crino\" POWDERED 18' MILK 31bP,tk,a, 1.Pocked in St-Jean! \"Ideal\" Choice (Macedoine 2 ¦ 20 oi.33c) PEAS CABROTS 2\t3 ITS MAINLY BECAUSE ; OEM Government inspected Fresh Milk Fed LEG OF VEAL lb.I Shank removed \u2014 Whole or half \u2014 ' Fathers Day Special! BAR-B-CUE CHICKEN 1.09 \"Coorsh\" Juicy - Tasty ALL BEEF WIENERS Government Inspected \"Biiapage\" PURE PORK SAUSAGES , 49< with coupon and purchase of \u201cMercury\u201d MEN'S SOCKS .98' Expires June 23rd PfF\twith coupon and purchase of \u201cBan\" \tDEODORANT ail\t1 oi.89c or IVi oi.1.25 \tExpires June 23rd EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS J EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS with coupon and purchase of \"Score\" HAIR DRESSING tube »\t\u2022* Expires June 23rd with coupon and purchase of Nickel Plated ICE CREAM SCOOP 99\u2018 Expires June 23rd EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS with coupon and purchase of 12\u201c Hardwood STEAKBOARDS each 69e Expires June 23rd with coupon and purchase of TOMATOES Expires June 23rd DOM/Np'STAMPS | EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS \"Royal Rose\" CORN Choice CREAM STYLE 2 20 oi.fine Choice Diced BEETS., CABBOTS EVERYTHING IS 100% GUARANTEED R EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS with coupon and purchase of \"Coashella Valley\" GRAPEFRUIT 8 or More Expires June 23rd with coupon and purchase of One or more Siie 24 PASCAL CELERY Expires June 23rd EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS ¦ EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS I EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS with coupon and purchase of \"Coq-Hardi\" B.B.Q.SAUCE MIX 1 0I\u2019 ^ Q\u2018 Pkg.V Expires June 23rd EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS ¦ f*™* DOMINO STAMPS Mrs.K.W.David, 7138 Bordeaux, Montreal, Que.with coupon and purchase of \"Majestic\" DETERGENT POWDER 10c off P 4 '¦ Giant size O J Expires June 23rd with coupon and purchase of \"Success\" Crystal LIQUID WAX 32 oi.| OQ tin I.ATr Expires June 23rd 25 with coupon and purchase of \"Carrière\u201d Sweet MIXED PICKLES 48 oi.TFOc 25 with oupon ana purchase of \"Doyon\" Creamed WHITE HONEY 12 oi.*yc We reserve the right to limit Quantities! Prices effective until Saturday, June 20th, 1964, at: DOMINION SHERBROOKE SHOPPING CENTRE and 108 Wellington North, Sherbrooke, Que.Also at 88 Main St., Coaticook.with coupon ana purchase of SALAMI ROLLS Expires June 20th with coupon and purchase of 2 \u2022 2 oz.Pkgs.\u201cCoorsh\u201d SMOKED MEAT Expires June 20th EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS i EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS with coupon and purchase of \"Coorsh\" CRY-O-VAC CORNED BEEF Expires June 20th with coupon and purchase of DOMINION STORES LIMITED 24 oi.sue \"Hygrade\" BOLOGNA Expires June 20th EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS ¦ EXTRA DOMINO STAMPS with coupon and purchase of \"Condor\" Prepared MUSTARD 32 ex Jar Expire* June 23rd 40 oi tin Expires June 23rd ¦ L fr- , % ? Second Section SbctbcookdDaiiii'Eecocd WEDNESDAY, JTNE 17, 1964 Wom*n'* P*g* Comici Massawippi conservation park may be camp area ¦Vv ; «âne area ï£àè : WML OPERATED - r'fp w \u2014 r» w- BfflaBS wm SIGNPOST \u2014 Conservation park is marked by sign beside road.The \u201cmembers only\u201d notice is not meant to exclude the general public, says H.T.Emo, for outsiders are welcome to picnic there.Top-of-lhe-world window cleaner NEW YORK (AP)\u2014About 12 of the 3,000 men who clean the gleaming windows of Manhattan's skyline fall to their deaths each year.And as John Coggin, a fine hand with a squeegee, ate his luncheon plate of corned beef and cabbage, he explained why: \u201cIn most cases they are the result of carelessness.With some people familiarity breeds contempt.\u201cHeight isn't a danger in itself If you take care, you\u2019re as safe up there 800 feet above the street as anywhere.It's what\u2019s down below that can hurt you.\u201cIt\u2019s much harder on the street cleanin dndows from ladders.Twict - 'ell 15 feet off ladders.But * e never fallen from a strap, God be thanked.You get only one mistake with the belt.\u201d The bells are made of linen.Rope cuts, leather rots, cotton\u2019 and nylon fray.But linen lasts and its condition is easily checked.\"It is supposed to be Irish | linen,\" said John, who cleaned, his first window here\u2014it was 171 storeys up\u2014back in 1929, not long after he left a farm in County Cork.PANEFUL LIFE A cleaner handles around 80 window's a day.Goggin, who is 57, has five children (two in college) and two grandchildren, has been on the job 34*2 years.He estimated that in that time he has cleaned about 690,000 windows.His age is no handicap.He still is as agile as when he started, and he goes out the 67th-floor window of the RCA Building as unconcernedly as some young ex - paratroopers who\u2019ve worked with him.By DAY 11) WEBSTER (Record stall reporter) Nestled in the hills nc.tr Hatley is a unique conservation project that may one day be a well-attended camping ground as well as a fish-rearing centre.The park, called the Lake Massawippi Conservation Park, was started two years ago by the \\1as-sawippi Fish and Game Protection Club.Situated just outside of Hatley Village, the 278 acre, former farm is an ideal spot.Its rolling hills arc covered with meadow, brushland, and forest dissected by a small stream which feeds several ponds.Part of it is sugar bush which, according to club president H.T.Emo could support a thousand - bucket sugaring operation.The club has planted over 13,000 pine and spruce trees in the park over the last two years, says Mr.Emo.Eventually, he says, the club hopes to reforest it completely.The ponds are being used to rear fish for Lake Massawippi.The largest one, near the road, is about 200 by 40 feet and is a rearing pond for 35,000 brown trout fingcrlings that were put there last fall.They should be three to five-and-a-half inches in size, now, says Mr.Emo.The Baldwin's Mills fish hatchery brings them free of charge to the rearing pond and w'hen they are of size transports them to Lake Massawippi, he says.The club cares for and Lashes out at 'revolutionaries' Says separatists trying to reverse march to democracy ifi *\t«I!.* itüiirhÿs,\u2019 ; yi; '«\u2018Vi yi,'W in dr: , 1 THIS LAND IS the property of the Lake Massawippi Fish and Game Protection (Tub.feeds them; they consume about three pounds of fish meal per day, he says.¦\u2018People have been catching eight pound trout in Lake Massawippi since wc started our re-stocking program eight years ago,\u201d says Mr.Emo.\u201cThere were none caught before that.\u201d \u201cWe hope to eventually open the park to the general public to be a place where, for a nominal charge they can come to camp and picnic,\u201d he says.The park now sports a newly - bulldozed dirt o'.i.pin i tajOiP' The club hopes eventually to turn the 278-acre farm near Hatley into a public park.H MWiK, TakiiiK in the view is club president, 11.T.l ino.i (Record photo by Doug Gerrish) MONTREAL (CP)- is separ-iatism really popular in Quebec?Do the separatists expect to win power in a free election?The answer to both questions is no, says Pierre-Elliott Tru-jdcau, a University of Montreal law professor and one of tin-province's most prominent and angriest intellectuals.\"1 get fed up when 1 hear our nationalist brood calling itself revolutionary.\" Prof.Tru ileau, 12, wrote in Cite Libre, a periodical devoted to opinion on social, political and economic issues Is separatism a revolution?\"My eye,\u201d thunders Mr.Tru «lean, \"it's a cmmtiT revolution, the national socialist counter-revolution.\" i lie say s separatists are trying : to reverse Quebec's journey toward true democracy, i \u201cThe fact is that, at bottom, the separatists despair of ever being able to convince the public of the rightness of their ideas.\u201c That long work of education road compliments of Couil-lard C o n s t r notion Ltd.which donated bulldozer and operator for two days It also bulldozed oui two small fish rearing ponds Another company, Union Plywood Co., donated a 60 hy 30 foot plastic liner for a rearing pond in which the water had leaked away, says Mr.Lino.Across the road from the rearing ponds is an old house which, he says, will be fixed up as a park headquarters.\"We reroofed it last year,\u201d he says.The house, like the park is not without its wildlife.An upstairs room contains a nest and brood of young birds.When asked about the future Mr.Emo doesn\u2019t mince words.\"We need $2.000,\u201d he says.There are still paymcnls to make on the park property.There is a lot of work to be done, he says, hut it is often hard to get members out \u2014 a small group docs most of the work.The club has about 650 members, he estimates.Stanstead Division Guides and Brownies gather for rally at Waterville school (Éminence FRENCH MADE UNDERWEAR WATERVILLE \u2014 Guides and Brownies from Rock Island, |Magog, Beebe and Waterville gathered at the playgrounds of the Compton-Watcrville school ¦ on June 6 for a rally of the Stanstead division.Interested parents and relatives were guests, for the afternoon program and presentations.Guides Meredith Kezar, Hope Dewing and Melanie Reed, of the Waterville company, directed the visiting groups to the school.Mrs.Lloyd Spafford, Stanstead division trainer, in charge of the activities, introduced Mrs.Hugh Starkey, Quebec Provincial Commissioner and Mrs.J.P.McIntosh, Stanstaed Division Commissioner.The Waterville company leader, Debbie Beliveau called the girls into patrol roll call formation for inspection by Mrs.Starkey and Mrs.McIntosh.The Brownies formed a fairy ring and sang the Brownie song\tHONORED\tGUIDES \u2014 Some of their respective six.In keep\t140\tGuides\tand\tBrownies ing with the Brownie and Guide\tof the\tStanstead\tDivision promise of duty to God, a silent\twere present\tat\ta\trally\theld prayer was observed.i 11 .Tit at the Compton-Watcrville school on June fi.Pictured above from the left are: Mrs.b', Guide Elaine Deacon, of Wat-jerville.color bearer and es-jcorts, Guide Nicole Dubois, of\tStarkey, Quebec Pro- i Rock Island, and Guide Ann Davidson, of Magog, broke flag.lCompany Leader Debbie Bell-after which all sang God Save veau, of Waterville, with the vincial commis sioner, of Montreal; Company Leader Debbie Beliveau, of Waterville, who received her Gold Cord; Patrol Leader Jean Milne, of Magog, one of two Guides selected from the Stanstead Division to represent the Champlain area on a six-weeks overseas tour; and Mrs.1.P.MrTntosh, Stan stead Division Commissioner, who is retiring.(Record photo by Doug Gerrish) the Queen and O Canada.PROGRAM The air pocket Insulation of this fine cotton mesh, provides coolness in Summer and warmth in Winter.Briefs.$2.75 Athletic Shirts.$2.75 Bikini (black and white).$2.25 Small - Medium - Large Extra large léo laliberté & fils Itée Featured at our Two Stores -\u2014 ¦''Symbol of quality for over 50 years\" 101 Wellington North \u2014 Sherbrooke |Gold Cord, the highest award ja Guide can attain, and the ^Waterville girls sang a special A number of items were then sonF *n honor of the recipient.presented by the visiting On behalf of the division, groups.The Rock IslandiGuide Judy Hopps, of Magog, Brownies played a game and presented Mrs.McIntosh with asked all Guides to participate a thanks badge in appreciation in the game of sisters.\tof her service during her six- Beebe Brownies invited all )ear tonm, which has expired, to join them in a song,\tj As a remembrance of the I\t\u201e\t.\t, division, Guide Sue Cooper, of The Magog Brownies played ,,\t.,\t,\t, \u201e\t, , :»\ts.™.«4\tits.Hubble, you might as well give up because you can't fight mysticism an hilariously funny historicai of Magog, and Lynn skit on Laura Secord.Tolstrough, of Beebe, present |ed Mrs.Mclnlosh with a gift.Following this out of doors) Mrs.Starkey spoke briefly program, all assembled in the about the group heritage camps \u2014 with a branch atera at cel SHERBROOKE SHOPPING CENTRE \"Home of the Famous Campus Shop\" school auditorium where presentations were made.PRESENTATIONS Patrol leader Jean Milne of Magog told of events leading to being chosen as a Champlain area representative to go overseas with the Quebec provincial group on a six weeks tour of Europe and Britain.She was then presented with a gift from the division to1(ione in yellow and ; was wish her bon voyage, the pre.|cul anr| scrvH b Mj,s Milne sentation being made by Water-The third dccoratf,d wilh a ville Guide Jane Loiselle and being held this year across Can ade in preparation for the larger camps to be held in the centennial year, 1967.Three large cakes, iced in white, were made for the occasion.One decorated with pink and white roses and inscribed with Our thanks 1958-1964.was cut and served by Mrs.McIntosh.Another decorated with a ship and the words Bon Voyage gold cord in yellow and inscrib- Brownies Debbie Dewing, of d with Br was cut and Waterviiie, and Nancy Nourse, sen,ed hy Mlss\u2019 Beliveau.of Rock Island.\t1 Cold beverages were served Mr» Mclnlosh presented]by the Waterville girls, HOLLYWOOD (AP) \u2014 \u201cMarlon Brando?Richard Burton?Never! Clark Gable was the closest but not e« he had what Rudy had.\u201d Pola Negri was speaking of Rudolph Valentino, the great love of her life.Miss Negri, still every Inch the movie star, reposed in her Beverly Wilshire suite.Her hair is still jet black, her eyes as big as ever and on her left hand was a diamond as large as a flashlight bulb.The setting was exotic as she poured the French champagne She's well off, now.\"I lost two fortunes out here,\u201d she recalls, \"but 1 have good investments in San Antonio, Tex.I will not lose this one.\u201d She's in town fo.a Walt Disney movie.The Moon-spinners, in which she plays a wealthy and eccentric jewel fancier.In the old days, her fiery Temperament used to melt directors and producers but she asked for only one change in the script, which called for her to have a Siamese cat.LIKED IDEA 1 \u201cI suggested that we use.a cheetah instead \u2014 and Walt and persuasion a m 0 n g the masses undertaken by the un ions for many decades, done by llir Social Créditer,s themselves for 30 years\u2014for this the separatists have neither the courage nor the means nor, especially, that respect for the other man\u2019s freedom that ts essential in undertaking it and leading it to success.\"So they want to abolish freedom and impose a dictatorship of their minority.They are in sole possession of the truth, so others need only gel into line And when things don't go fast enough, they take to illegality and violence,\" Mr.Trudeau, at the Univer sity of Montreal since i960, rame into prominence in the 1950s wilh his articles in File Libre attacking the government of the late premier Maurice Duplessis, Educated at the University of Montreal, the London School of Economics and Harvard Uni versity.hr has spcnl a decade advocating social reform in sï'AyS K s V' * Quebec, suggesting at the same time that there is no way In achieve it except by hard work and intelligent planning.In common with several other universit} professors of lus génération and labor leaders, he has expressed the fear that the rising elite of Quebec, instead of rolling up its sleeves, may go looking for a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.CALL FOR UNITY lie was a co author of the Fa-nadian Manifesto published in Fite Libre, calling on Canadians to rise above regional or lan gunge loyalties and take a larger view of the country's opportunities ami problems.Rejecting the idea of a separate Quebec, the manifesto's authors said \"we refuse to let ourselves bo locked into a constitutional frame smaller than Canaria.\" With Mr.Duplessis dead and his Union Nationale administra lion replaced by a Liberal re gime under Jean Lesage, Mr.Trudeau has been aiming his fire at the separatists.,vt ifeü ii loved the idea.You know, I always had a cheetah around the! houes in the old days.\u201d She looked out the window to a busy Beverly Hills street! where land sells for $10,000 a] front foot.\u201cRudy and I used to ridcj horseback there \u2014 and deer would come out of the orange trees.We would feed them together.\u201d ! Valentino, the greatest screen lover of silent days, died in 1926.Women, by the thousands, screamed, fainted and rioted 'at his funeral.\u201cHe and I were to he married the following week,\u201d Pola says.\u201cI have never gotten over his death.\u201d She had three husbands, all |titled \u2014 from count to prince.Rudy was untitled.I \u201cBut he was the king to me \u2014and women all over the world,\" says Pola.\u201cThe screen will never see his equal again.He didn't just Ithrill women.He hypnotized them.He had virility, sex appeal, intelligence, charm, good looks and something that no actor ever had before \u2014 or j since.\u201d ¦ 7 Old Vienna ., light as a lager should be Phntngrnphp.d in Swedish crystal by Roda / Brewed by the O'Keefe Brewing Company Limited Maple Leaf Tenderflake PURE LARD French'! PREPARED MUSTARD Leaver Choice WHOLE MUSHROOMS CHASE & SAUBORN COFFEE j; 87 CHASE & SANBORN COFFEE 99' IR SHERBROOKE T>A1LY RECOBD, WF.Î)., JUNE 17, IfWj Children's Day is observed by Boundary church T)ERBY LINE \u2014 Children\u2019s Day was observed at the June 7 morning service in the Uni-versalist Church.With Mrs.Gales Bascombe, as mistress of announcements, the children presented the following program: Frank Chizmar, gave the Call to Worship, with Geoffrey Price, giving the Avow to Faith.Timothy Stevens led for the responsive reading and the Junior choir sang.Gary Lcavesn gave a reading.Dale Bacon, a trombone solo: David Price recited; Gordon Quigley and cffrey Leavens sang a duet; Valerie Quigley, read a little sermon about building together; a song was ren dered by Valerie Quigley, Leslie Gardyne, and Margie.Rev.Gale Bascombe, minister of the church, presided for the christening of three children.Michael Paul and Marlin Paul, sobs of Mr, and Mrs.Paul Stratton, and Paula Ma rie, daughter of Mr.and Mrs.Gerald Errion.Mr.Bascombe presented each child with a white rosebud at the conclusion of the ceremony.Frank Chizmar sang a solo; Gordon Quigley recited a poem; Dale Bacon gave a prayer, and all joined in repealing the laird\u2019s Prayer.The Junior choir sang, followed by the second little ser mon given by Leslie Gardyne; Randy Wheeler gave a reading.With Kelly Errion, Cindy Leavens, Brian Price, Gordon Quigley, and Jeffrey Leavens, all kindcrgarlen children, Mrs.Bascombe had a little slnry session.Margie Wheeler, Leslie Gardyne and Valerie Quigley, sang a song about the Dandelion anil Ihe Sun.Cindy Leavens and Brian Price gave recitalions; Gary Leavens giving Ihe offertory prayer; Leslie Gardyne played a piano solo.A Few Pennies, was the tille of the third little sermon by Margie Wheeler.Jeffrey Leav ens recited and Larry Huckins gave a reading.Merit pins were presented to Randy and Margie Wheeler, Brian Price, Kelly Errion, Terry Bacon, Leslie Gardyne, Tim Stevens, Dale Bacon, Jeffrey Price, Charles Gardyne, David Price, Gary and Cindy Leavens.Special choir pins were award od (o Valerie Quigley, Leslie Gardyne, Margie Wheeler, Barry Huckins, Denis Jacobs, Gary Leavens, and four honor pins lo Mary Baker, Larry Huckins, Valerie Quigley, and Gordon Quigley.A special choir pin was presented to Frank Chiz-mar.Pansy seeds in small containers were given by the teachers to each child and in the fall a prize will he awarded lo the one who brings in the most blossoms.On behalf of the Sunday School, Margie Wheeler presented Mrs.Bascombe with a lovely fuchsia plant.After a hymn, Randy Wheeler and Mr.Bascombe gave the benedictions.This service ter minâtes the Sunday school and Junior choir activities until the fall.Mrs.Rascnmhe was assisted in the Sunday School for the past, year by Mrs.John Price, Terry Bacon, Mrs.Wil ham Leavens, with substitute teachers, Mrs.A.S.Bacon and Miss Lou Huckins.THREE VILLAGES Miss Bonnie Webb, of the Sherbrooke Hospital staff is spending the weekend 13 with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.Floyd Webb, Stanstead.Mrs.E, Gorman, Montreal, spent a week with her sister, Mrs.P.Murphy, Mr.and Mrs.William Murphy and family, Stanstead, where other guests were Mr.Alfred Gorman and two sons, also Montreal.Mrs.Elsie Young entertained the June 8 meeting of the Border Christmas Club at her home.A guest, Mrs.Bertha Corbett, agreed to join to replace a member who is no longer able to at tend.The evening was spent playing 500, prize winners be ing Mrs.Madeleine Curtis, Mrs.Evelyne Dewey and Mrs.June Dewey.Mrs.Young served re freshments at the end of the game.New Arrivals at IGA Nestle Spraie HAIR SPRAY 12 or.tin 99 Realemon PURE LEMON JUICE s oi.22e bottle Post Cereal CRISPY NUMBERS\t39\u2018 FOR FATHER\u2019S DAY.MAPLE LEAF COOKED HAM 1.55 REDDI WIP WHIPPED CREAM L\" 5T THE TEA THAT DARES\t79\u2018 2V 1 lb.pkg.2\t43\u201c 2 '0 69c A tins ^ ^ SUNKIST ORANGE BASE 2\t39' 59' BUFFET HOT BAR B-CUE SAUCE\t21\" 45' TOP VALU FOIL WRAP\t1\t27' Blue Bonnet REGULAR MARGARINE\t2 p'l 55' Royal City Fancy CREAM STYLE CORN\t4 'l 59' Royal City FANCY NO.3 PEAS\t4 ]lot 65c \u201c tins CUT RITE WAX PAPER 12\" \u2014\t2,(T 55c \u2022*\" rolls ^ CUT RITE WAX PAPER\tH-\t95' refill roll\tX ** Korn LUNCHEON MEAT\t12 oi.tin SOFT-RITE \u2014 White, Pink, Aqua\tor Yellow rolls Libby's Fancy TOMATO JUICE\t48 oz, Jb\tfins DOMESTIC \u2014 3c off label PURE SHORTENING\t1 lb.4Ci pkg*.Mir Dish LIQUID DETERGENT\t4%\t24 oz.jL plastic bottles MIX-0 BLEACH\tplaitlc bottle 63 VANISH DISINFECTANT î0 0I.tin 2 5 '\t NUGGET SCUFF COVER White or Black\t9 *»' 2 oi.bottle 4\" ^ A I A Y LAUNDRY A J/lA DETERGENT\tGiant Size QOc 42 oz.box O jF Betty Crocker BOSTON CREAM PIE MIX\t\" 39'\t Betty Crocker BROWNIE MIX\t15 oi pkg.\t37\t^ Betty Crocker DATE SQUARES MIX\t14 oi.pkg.\t4 1 Lowney'i\tÇ ANGELUS MARSHMALLOWS 39' /\t HOLLANDIA BISCUITS 3\t1.001 Shortbread Swirls, Coconut Rings or Grand'ma Sugar\t Kraft Cheez Whiz CHEESE SPREAD Kraft Miracle FRENCH DRESSING 16 oz.jar 8 oz.bottle 27' KRAFT FRENCH DRESSING d.T.25' Kraft Cracker Barrel OLD CHEDDAR CHEESE n 0I pkg 55\u2018 MAGIC BAKING POWDER , ,b Hn 4V 19 31c CLARK S PEA SOUP 28 oz.tin IRISH OR BEEF STEW 15 oz.tin TURKEY CHICKEN STEW 35' tin Grenache CARAMEL SPREAD 30 oz.tin KOOLAID INSTANT DRINK MIX Assorted Flavours pkgs.53\u2018 29c Black Diamond CANADIAN CHEESE SLICES LV 29' Black Diamond HAMBURGER SLICES 8 oz.pkg.IGA ROYAL GOLD ICE CREAM Vi gallon O Qc container WONDER SHORTCAKE each Wonder RAISIN GALETTES pkg.of 2\u2018* Sunny Frozen ORANGE JUICE L01 29 WAY'S MILLS Mr.and Mr*.R.Gordon Stan-dish and baby daughter, of Don Mills, Ont., were weekend guests of their parents, Mr.and Mr*.Perley Standish.Other guests at the same home were Mr.and Mrs.Wm.Standish and daughter, Angela, and Mr.and Mrs.Harley Standish and family, of Barnston.Mr.and Mrs.T.Walsh and daughter, Wendy, of St.Michel, were at their summer home here for the weekend.Mr.Walsh returned to the city, leaving his family here for the week.Mr.and Mr*.Wm.Buckland and ¦daughter, Gale, of St.Martin Heights, were their guests ofr the weekend.Mrs.M.D.Grainger and daughter, Brenda, of George-ville, Miss Agnes Oliver recently.\tI iiPf M FATHERS DAY JUNE 21 White Owl INVINCIBLES CIGABS pU, \u201eIS, 55' PEG TOP CORONAS CIGARS pkg.of 5's 55c TRUMP CIGARS WITH TIPS pkg.25c of 5'* X «¦* Player's Mild Plain CIGARETTES o 25* 3 5Q carton of \" pkgs.** »\t* Du Maurier Filter CIGARETTES 10 20s 3 59 carton * ^ pkgs.w \u2022 xe y Craven \"A\" Filter CIGARETTES carton 10 20s 3 59 pkgs.O Mark Ten Filter CIGARETTES carton 8 Hi 3.59 Gillette Right Guard DEODORANT\t5 0, t!n FREE: 50 Extra Gold Bond Stamps Gillette K-34 Foamy SHAVING CREAM FREE: 50 Extra Gold Bond Stamps 1.29 79c Gillette Stainless STEEL BLADES FREE: 100 Extra Gold Bond Stamp» 1.45 TableRite Sirloin T-Bone Wing Red or Blue Brand lb Every pound of TableRite meat is a pound of eating pleasure TABUFMSH Canada's Finest Selected Red or Blue Brand Beef ROUND STEAK RUMP ROAST ORAüCïS 49 TableRite Tender, Juicy and Tasty !b.79 OUTSPAN South African Imported doiCIl Navel Variety \u2014 Siïe 88 Freth, Sweet, Juicy and Tasty California Imported RED PLUMS Category No.1 IV 29c Beauty Variety California Imported YELLOW ONIONS 3k:bs Category No.1 \u2014 Mild and Taity 39< f New Jersey Imported \u2014 FRESH BLUEBERRIES JiT, 49 Category No.1 \u2014 Fancy Quality California Imported JUICY LEMONS 6 ,, 29 Category No.1 \u2014 Size 140 FREE 25 EXTRA GOLD BOND STAMPS with the purchase of Beaver Brand Hardwood Charcoal Invalid June ZIHlt Majestic Brand \u2014 BREAKFAST SAUSAGES ib 39 Fresh \u2014 Very Economical FREE 25 EXTRA GOLD BOND STAMPS with the purchase of Schwartz Barbecue Spice 2'« oi.bottle Canada Packers Week Maple Leaf SMOKED PICNICS , Shankless 43* Maple Leaf \u2014 Paysan COOKED HAM X: 59' Sliced \u2014 Smoked \u2014 Vacuum Packed Hygrade COLE SLAW 32 oz.jar Hygrade - Waxed MIDGET BOLOGNA lb.69 37c 35 Invalid afler Juno 20th FREE 50 EXTRA GOLD BOND STAMPS with the purchase of FREE 25 EXTRA GOLD BOND STAMPS with the purchase of Gregory's Hickory Smoke Wheels FREE 50 EXTRA GOLD BOND STAMPS with the purchase of Nu-Fluff Fabric Softener 64 oz.plastic bottle 69 FREE 50 EXTRA GOLD BOND STAMPS with the purchase of Colgate Dental Cream Family Size 1.09 FREE Dsntagard Toothbrush Grill Time Bflr-B-Q Briquets Invalid after June 20th Invalid after June 20th Invalid afler lune 20th I ^ SHFRRROOKK f>ATt.Y RFTORn, WED., JTNE 17, 1W4 fQ ¦ f-' :S-É* CHOQUETTE >1 y \u2022 î&v BLv' :v.jtr j 1., t\" 20 Pine Street MAGOG, Quebec m RIBBON CUTTING CEREMONY BLESSING OF STORE 1 WIS\u2019< i VALUABLE PRIZES Enter CHOQUETTE IGA Fcedliner\u2019s GRAND OPENING OFFICIAL OPENING oo ,v \u2022\u2022\t¦ ¦ 1 AM.JUNE 17th, 1964 STORE HOURS: Wed.June 17th, 10 A.M.- 6 P.M.Fri.June 19th, 8 A.M.- 9 P.M.Thurs.June 18th, 8 A.M.- 6 P.M.Sot.June 20th, 8 A.M.¦ 6 P.M.CONTES 17FS #¦ mM ; iill ?isiissg: ^ FIRST PRIZE: GENERAL ELECTRIC ir PORTABLE TELEVISION SET Vdued at $235.00 m \" nÎPi SECOND PRIZE: Kids' FcsritSier CAR Valued at $39.00 ;w I Mr.J.Aime Choquette, owner of the modern Choquette IGA Food-market, completed his education at St.Alexander College in Pointe Gatineau, near Otta wa.At the outbreak of World War II, he enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force and served for the duration as navigator, stationed at bases in Edmonton, Winnipeg, Portage la Prairie and later in Europe.In 1946, Mr.Choquette was married to Gemma Hamel, daughter ai Denis C.Hamel.They have 4 children, Serge, Marylin, Francine and Daniel.In 1949 Mr.Choquette took a position as buyer for a business managed by Mr.Hamel.After two years in business soiling groceries, dry goods and paint products, he decided to concentrate his afforts wholly to the retail grocery business.The results were encouraging and in 1952 he joined the IGA organization.Since that time, his business has rapidly progressed to the point where it was necessary to enlarge the store to meet the increasing consumer demands 'of the area.The original 1500 sq, ft.store has been increased to an area of 7,000 sq.ft., making it one of the most modern, well-equipped foodmarkets in the area.Choquette IGA Foodmarket is now able to offer the citizens of Magog and area an incomparable variety of the finest meats, produce and grocery products, health and beauty aids and a large selection of non food items \u2014 «II priced to fit your budget.Mr.Choquette and his staff extend a cordial invitation to the citizens of Magog and area to visit the beautiful new store during the Grand Opening celebration.FREE : PEPSI COLA DRINKS FREE : ORCHIDS FOR LADIES FRESH FREE : BALLOONS & LOLLY POPS for all kids accompanied by an adult BROILER CHICKENS FREE to the first 100 customers THIRD PRIZE: mmm mm dryer var s35, HERE'S ALL YOU HAVE TO DO ! During Choquette's Grand Opening Sale, visit your friendly IGA Store, and fill out FREE Entry Blank Forms, entitling you to VALUABLE PRIZES.Deposit your forms at the front entrance of the store ! FREE : POST CEREAL \"CRISPY NUMBER\" Averse 2 to 3 lbs.Jjj FREE : THE TEA THAT DARES BANAKt GOLDEN RIPE PLUMP if.lb J V Quebec Grown \u2014 Category No.1 CURLY LEAF LETTUCE large bunch Size 24 FREE 2-07.pkq.HYGRADE SMOKFD MEAT With the purchasf nf nna 32*07.pkq.HYGRADE /LQC COLE SLAW for FREE 6-ox.pkg.ROYAL , SLICED BOLOGNA With the ptirrhave \u201ef 1-lb.pkg.ROYAL WIENERS for 49' FREE l-lb.pkq.SWIFT PREMIUM CHICKEN LOAF With the purchase nT one l-lb.pkg.SWIFT BROOKFIELD AO# SAUSAGE for \u201c BUTÏEl! 1 lb.ivniiE mm lb.bag LIQUID DETERGENT 24-oz.plastic containers for ROBIN HOOD PACKET PACK £%\ti%f\\ CAKE MIXES\t2\t29 YOUR CHOICE \u2014 9 at.White or 10 oz.Chocolate Bick's SLICED DILL PICKLES\tBick's YUM YUM WAFERS\tBick's SWEET MIXED PICKLES 2- 3 5 ^\t24;\u201c- 45^\t\u201cr 3 5 ^ MIX-0\tCONCENTRATED JAVEL\t128 01 AQt plasf.ctn.\t/ TUFFY NUTS & BOLTS -\t\t- - ;;; 29* GILLETTE BLADES ™5\t\tm 99* STRAWBERRY JAM marquette\tjar ST\t\t DOG FOOD SOCIETY CtiunS and Gravy choice 33 FREE One losf of Sliced IGA BRFAD White or Brown W ith the purchase of 2 T 42' FREE 20-ot.tin RAYMOND MIXED VEGETABLES With the purchase nf |\t20-07.\u2022 tins for 31' FREE 12-oz.Jar Oriental Peanut or Pimento STUFFED OLIVES With the purchase of One 12*oz.jar FREE One 30*oi.Boftle COTTS BEVERAGES HAT.F A HALF \u2014 r r.t h son \\ \u2014 < OI.\\ GINGFR A I F.\u2014 OR ANGE SPRUCE BEFR With the purchase of any #£ your choice at the regular price FREE 12\" Roll REYNOLDS ALUMINUM FOIL WRAP With the purchase of 67< One 18\" roll for FREE 8-ov.Jar PURITAN PEA BEANS With the purchase of One 28*07.(or FREE 20-oz Tin I.0.SMITH APPLE PIE FILLING With the purchase of One 20*07.fin of /| *y{ Cherry Pie Filling FREE 12*07.eorton CROSBY S MOLASSES With the purchase tyf On# 40-ez.\t39< carton for FREE 1 Pint ROYAL GOLD ICE CREAM With thr purvh»».«r 1 Pt.brick O C d for -4** Church groups meet at Brome BROME \u2014 The members nt Si.Johns Ladies' Guild met on June t, at the home of Mrs.G, E Soles, who entertained in honor or her mother.Mrs William Barnes.The proceeds for the day amounted to Ji.'i sift, which included dues, sale of work and a donation.The surprise parcel, donated by Mrs Norman Osborne, was won h\\ Mrs.J.C.Soles.Aftor a social hour, refreshments were served by the hosl* ess.assisted by Mrs, J.0.Soles and Mrs Osborne.EVENING GUILD Mrs.Kenneth Miller entertained the members of SI.John s Kvenine Guild at her home on June 5.The members were asked to donate articles for the sale table.which will he in the mam (buildinK at Brome Fair Several knitted garments, made by Mrs.K.W.Patch, were handled in At the close of the meeting, refreshments were served by the hostesses.Mrs Charles Best and Mrs.Wilson Frizzle.The next meeting will be held m Augut, at the home of Mrs.Hilda Luce.Dates of summer events set by Sand Hill WA SAND HILL The Jubilee branch of the W.V met at the home of Mrs Earl Kearon on June 4, with Mrs.S.l.abaree and Mrs.A W.Taylor, as joint hostesses A visitor, Mrs.E.Davis, was welcomed H was derided lo hold a food sale on June 19, a( Forbes Store, and a strawberry supper on July 2, in the chureh [hall, I During Ihc social hour the hostesses served refreshments.Bride-elect is feted at shower in Lennoxviile STANSTFAD \u2014 Miss Bonn!* Mayhew, a July bride to he.was guets of honor at a shower held on June 4.a I the home of Mr.and Mrs.Colin Huff, in Lcn-noxville.The guesl of honor arriving al ihe home of her aunt.Mis».Huff, on an errand, was completely surprised on entering to find about 30 of her relatives and of Ihc prospective groom, Richard Wing, and several friends, awaiting her.Mrs.Huff presented her with a corsage of yellow garden flowers and escorted her to a chair, which was decorated in yellow' and while.Ten pieces of chrome kitchen ware, wrapped in shower motif, in a basket, also decorated in yellow and while, were presented to Miss May hew.Two quiz gaves were played, prizes being awarded to the winners Refresiments included a shower cake, decorated in yet-jlow and white, in the double wedding ring design Guests were from Derby (Line, Newport, Roek Island, Slanstcad, Beebe, Tomifobia, Hromplonville, Compton, Boulon, Mass , ami Halley.BROMPTON Miss Carol Mackey, of Mont real, spent Ihe weekend with her parents, Mr.and Mrs.W.Mackey.Mr and Mrs.Reg Robinson and children, of Montreal, spent Ihc weekend with Mr.and Mrs.A, E.Robinson.Other visitors were Mr.and Mrs John Rob inson, of Windsor, and Mr.and Mrs.Lyle Robinson and family, of Lennoxviile, and Krista and Marina Winget, of Sand Hill.IRON HILL Wortl has been received of ihr accidental death of Mr.Archie Miltimore, in Eganville, Ont.Mr.J, Miltimore accompanied Mr.and Mrs.Gerald Miltimore, jof Waterville, to Eganville.Mr.and Mrs, Waller Miltimore accompanied Mr.and Mrs.Gnr-|don Bullock to attend the filerai.St.Mary s Mr.and Mrs.Lucien Gou-geon and son, Sylvain, of Cbambly, were guests of Mr.and Mrs.Norman Proulx.SAWYERVILLE Mr.and Mrs.Aubrey Bam.of Massapaqua, N.Y., were weekend guests of Mr.and Mrs.Norman Bain and called on other relatives.They also visited Mr.Desmond Bain, who is a patient in the Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal.Mr.and Mrs.Harry Bradford, of West Charleston.Vt, also visited Mr.and Mrs.Norman Bam.ALMOST WIPED OUT Indiscriminate killing of wolves has made them almost extinct in the 48 contiguous American staHs, although thej* fettOMMl 1» 20 SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WED., JUNE 17, 1964 | Magog social notes Harmtfny Chapter, No.6, in the Royal Victoria Hospital, O.E.S., held its regular meeting at the Masonic Temple on June 8.Guests from St.Lambert included Brother Frank Blather wick, Grand Organist.After the meeting the members ami guests lunched at the Cabana.Montreal, for several weeks.The regular meeting of Unit One of the U.C.W., was held at the home of Mrs.E.Fields, Merry Street on .lune 4.After a diort business meeting, a showing of Canadian Character Dolls Choquette's Magog IGA spells pleasure for shoppers with wide selection, and space to shop in comfort Meetings will resume in the fall, was enjoyed by the membcrs|! ».i\tai-., n,,and friends.This was the last and'daughter, ' Jill, of Chateau meeting before the summer re-guay, were recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.C.M.Styan.Gordon Meek, Mrs.Jeff Mrs.Moynan and Mrs.C.Styan were guests of Mr.and Mrs.W.Torn-quist, Barton, Vt.Friends of Mrs.R.Malcolm will be pleased to learn she has returned to her home on Lau-| rier Street after being a patient cess.The fall meeting will be held Sept.9, at the home of [Mrs.W.Whittier, Victoria Street.The June meeting of the W.C.T.U., was held at the home of Mrs.W.Kirk, with Mrs.C.| S.Harris.A report of the Provincial Annual meeting, held recently in Montreal, was given.The September meeting will be held at.the home of Mrs.G, Phaneuf, Tarrant Street.Mrs.E.Renaud was hostess at the St.Faith\u2019s Guild meeting, held in St.Luke's Church Hall June 10.Results of the Tea and Sale held the previous week were reported very satisfactory.Mrs.W.Pink was the winner of the food basket which was raffled at the tea.Meetings will resume in September.District deputy is welcomed by Crystal Rebekahs ROCK ISLAND \u2014 A meeting of Crystal Rebekah Lodge, No.14, took place in the I.O.O.F., hall on June 9, where the Noble Grand, Mrs.Geneva Lyons and her officers and members welcomed the new District Deputy, Mrs.Madeline Dezan.of Fidelity Lodge, Ayer\u2019s Cliff Final plans for entertaining the youth pilgrimage group here on July 10, will be made at the next meeting on June 23.Mrs.Vera Brevoort, gave an account of the Rebekah Assembly meeting held in Sherbrooke, which she attended as lodge del- at the home of Mrs.Cecil Mc-egate.Mrs.Brevoort stated thatLellan, on June 5.the New Assembly president, Mr.H.Whitehead was visit Mrs.Flora McIntyre, of Bishop- ing Mr.and Mrs.R.McLcllan ton, has an excellent program!in North Hatley.South Stukely Flowers on the altar in St.Matthew's Church on Sunday were in memory of Mr.Wm.Sherwood, given by Mrs.Sherwood.Later they were placed on the graves of her parents, Mr.and Mrs.John Boulton, in (he South Stukely Cemetery.The Ladies Guild of St.Mat- outlined.Regrets were expressed that Richard Middleton, ^tanstead, is a surgical patient in the Sherbrooke Hospital.Mrs.Madge Chamberlain, the immediate Past District Deputy, was presented by Mrs.Lyons with the P.D.D.Regalia.It was announced that the International Association Rebekah Assembly president will shortly be making an official visit in Lennoxville, to which this lodge is invited.Members also stated their intentions lo attend the Rebekah Conclave at Burlington on June 27.The Round Robin was passed and won by Mrs.Aileen Arbery, Mr.and Mrs.D.Nixon, of Melbourne, Mr.Ross Nixon and two daughters, of Gore, were recent guests of Mr.and Mrs.! H.Savage.Mrs.Emily Thomas, of Montreal, has been a guest of Mr.| and Mrs.Laird Thomas.Mr.and Mrs.Laird Thomas have sold their home to Mr.J.R.Wooler, of Montreal.A meeting of the Canadian Bible Society was held in the Seventh Day Adventist Church by Rev.D.Jones.A film commemorating the 60th anniversary of the founding of the Canadian Bible Society was shown.Mr.and Mrs.F.Loach, of Len noxville, Mr.and Mrs.A.White- Fidelity Several Fraternity were present from Lodge, Ayer's Cliff.Lunch was served following the close of the meeting.members head, of Foster, were guests of CWL member entertains group at Rock Island ROCK ISLAND Mrs.Edward Bushnell was attractive with spring flowers on June 6, when she, the president of Our Lady of Mercy Council, Catholic Women\u2019s League, was hostess for a membership tea.Mrs.Bushnell greeeted the members on arrival and the afternoon was pleasantly spent chatting and making plans for the autumn events.The members paid the annual dues to the treasurer.Tea was served the dining table where Mrs.M.HilUker.Miss Minnie Whitehead is spending several days at the same home.Mrs.Bruce Berwick entertained at a surprise pink and blue shower in honor of Mrs.R.Mas-sicotte.The gifts which were placed on a table, were presented by Mrs.Berwick.A social hour was enjoyed, followed by the hostess serving re-Fhe home of jfreshments, which included a shower cake.91st birthday DERBY LINE \u2014 Mrs.K.L.Flint, who celebrated her ninety-first birthday on June 9, received several callers during afternoon.She was also the recipient of an attractively decorated birthday cake, a gift from Mr.and Mrs.Edwin Earle and daugh-fromlter, Eileen, as well as congula-flowers tory card, flowers and other re- and candles in yellow and blue carried out the colors of the league.Mrs.John Bushnell poured.The hostess was assisted by the council executive, Miss Helen Cosgrove, Mrs.Irene Rever, Mrs.Therese Winter, Mrs.Blanche Webb and Mrs.Mari-elle Masse.Tickets for the raffle of $50 bond, to take place at membrances.ADDRESS UNKNOWN TRIKKALA, Greece (API\u2014 At age 19.Athanassois Anag-nostopoulos wrote his uncle in the U.S.asking for a wrist-watch.Recently, at age 65, he got the letter back, marked \u201cunknown\u201d and with postmark a J indications that it had been sent the to almost every state in search October tea, were distributed tojof uncle John Anagostopoulos.go on sale this summer.\t\u201cIt was sad and fascinating to The next meeting of the coun- read what 1 wrote my uncle 46 oil will be held Sept.8.\tyears ago,\u201d said Athanassois.Our congratulations to th« management of Choquette IGA Store! ^Carrier) Air Conditioner The mUTM.IIII DISPLAY COUNTER REFRIGERATION SYSTEM Sold and Installed By Real Beaudin Inc.REFRIGERATION 2855 King St.W.\u2014Sherbrooke\u2014Tel.562-3938 -1- Good luck to th« management of CHOQUETTE IGA STORE on the occasion of their official opening tahon ROLAND UAFLEUR, Manager 1396 King St.E.\u2014Sherbrooke \u2014 Tel.569-2087 Suppliers »o Choquette\u2019s IGA in Magog Thompson &Alx Ltd.2525 Roy Street SHERBROOKE Tel.569-2571 t, u4''\u2019.'ii\"« ' hikji !ih ¦ tuii' ¦ lib \"¦ -I* ¦ \u2022 ibi* Owner respected as Magog citizen J.Aime Choquette is respected by the people of Magog for 'his achievements as a merchant, for his effort as a serviceman during the Second jW\u2019orld War, and as a family-man.Educated as St.Alexandre's College near Ottawa, Mr.Cho-jquette enlisted with the RCAF in 1939, and served in the European campaign.Following the war in 1945, he married Gemma Hamel, and now has four children; two sons; Serge and Dam el, and two daughters; Marilyn and Francine.Community advancement has been somewhat of a hobby with J.Aime Choquette, and during the 21 years he has resided in Magog, the welfare of the community has been one of his major concerns.Best wishes to the management of the new and modern CHOQUETTE IGA STORE where we are suppliers of bread.Boulangerie Bolduc \"QUALITY BAKERY\" 121 Dollard St.\u2014 Tel.843-3541 Magog Suppliers of quality butter to the new Choquette IGA Store.GOOD LUCK TO THE MANAGEMENT! Ayer\u2019s Cliff Creamery Enrg.AYER'S CLIFF, QUE.Tel.838-4275 Shoppers find a wide scleclion at Chostal va^ of who held their annual s,r:uv.yellow mums and mauve lilacs berry Tea recently.\t£ere: ^ J' NOr,hey\u2019 ^ K Povey and Receiving the guests as they!bergh.entered the hall, which was decorated for the occasion with purple and white lilacs, was NEA ® Constantly topping another's anecdote is not a way to win friends.an economical buy in the Mrs.A.Heden- Hostesses were Mrs.Flo By jthe president, Miss Annie Bald- jv K'nkeaci.'Irs- ^ ¦ Pa8e, Mrs.win.Acting as cashier for the t afternoon was Mrs.J.Twyman.Povey and Mrs, Souaid.The table of homemade cook- Pouring at the lace covered \u2018\"S *'as looked after by Mrs.table, centred with a silver bas-h Ross and Mrs.E.Hurley and ket of yellow mums, flanked!!^ \u2018abeA ^ potted plants by by white tapers in silver hold- Mrs' A' AlenSer-ers were, Mrs.O.J.BroadbeltJ The kitchen conveners were: Mrs.W.Laflamme, Mrs.C.[Mrs.T.Bailey and Mrs.J.Coombs and Mrs.A.Spry.The tea replenisher was Mrs.S.A.McVety.The individual tables were arranged with white linen cloths, centred with small varicolored glass vases of mauve and white lilacs.Mrs, J, D.R.Franklin was in charge of the Gillam The lea which was well attended proved to be a success, both socially and financially.ADOPTION LAW By law, only minors may be adopted in the Soviet Union, dining room and the servers Adopters may be registered in were: Mrs.L.Blain, Mrs.R.the birth certificate as the pa-Bartlctt, Mrs.E.Chilvers, Mrs.rents.SWIMMING POOLS \"Best on the Market\" Fibreglass-Concrete Construction.\u2022\t5-Year Guarantee \u2022\tWinter Resistant Friday Evening Clinics 7 till 9.SAUNA BATH Construction \u2022 Private or Commercial ¦ki ll: i .-\u2022A Beaudry Home Improvement Center Tels.569 5161 Night: 569-5165 567-4972 25 Bryant St.\u2014 Sherbrooke RANGE with the EXTRA BIG OVEN the.\u2022\tLift-off oven door.\u2022\tLift-out oven rock supports.\u2022 Keep-clean oven specially designed to take household aluminum foil.\u2022\tTilt and clean tubular oven elements.\u2022\tHigh speed surface elements controlled by 7-heat switches.A budget priced range is th» new 24\" size that gives you an EXTRA BIG family size oven plus many of the work saving features of higher priced models.SPECIALLY PRICED AT ^495° All add up to savings in your pocket and in your housework; See the Findlay new 24\" range today* I FOR MODERN ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES See your favourite dealer or, Southern Canada Power Subsidiary of Hydro-Quebec WE GUARANTEE AND SERVICE EVERYTHING WE SILL MORTY MEEKLE SHERBROOKE DAILY RFXORD, WED., iTC\u2019NE 17, watch yOUG \u2018STEP HB&CL&l SOU CAN ÏZ&PIAŒD 8Y THAT OÛWaiTBS NME BOU0MT LA5TAV>fTH.R&PLbCS M& WITH 71-1 AT MACH IN&?MHV, NOü CAMT eves/ ôermovsoRk' 60?at woesr.*.\u2022< TWt l»« US P«t (Ml Ai Cowansville Rocker presented to pastor and fiancee JACOBY ON BRIDGE session ONE BAD BID SHORTS SCORE\tHearts, K-J-7-5; Diamonds South won the first trick with 2; Clubs.Q-10-8-7 dummy's ace of spades.After a pause to study the play, South cashed two of dummy\u2019s high diamonds in order to discard his second spade.Then he cashed the ace of hearts and ruffed a second heart with dummy\u2019s three of trumps.This gave him five tricks in and left him with a perfect cross-ruff situation for the last eight because all trumps in each hand were now high.He showed his hand and claimed.North and South felt that they should have reached seven.North contended hat when he went out of his way to rebid Busy held by Institute at South Bolton CO\\S \\NSVILI H \u2014 The mem\tThe\tbeautiful^\tarrai\ted tea hers of Unit E of Emmanuel\ttable was centred\twith a\tbride's United Church Women were\tcake,\tdecorated\tin pink and hostesses at an afternoon lea,\twhile\tand small\tvases\tof lily held in honor of Miss Norma]of the valley, lea was poured Archer, fiancee of Rev J.0 hv Mrs.K.B Archer and Mrs McCord.\t\\\\ n Smith, The tea was held in Emma nuel Hall, which was tastefullv decorated with baskets and arrangements ol multi-colored spring flowers.Miss .rchrr and her mother, Mrs.K.B.Archer, were presented with corsages of carna lions.| Mrs.John Elliott, on behalf of the six Units of the U.C.M regular meeting of the U.C.W of Emmanuel Church presented will be held in the church hall Miss Archer and Mr.McCord The guest speaker to be Miss with a reproduction of a Boston Carol,Lane, an oil company re rocker, also a silver cream and present alive, w ho will give , sugar and tray.The honored talk and demonstraiinn on tin guests both expressed their de- packing of Women s W a r ,1 light wdih the gifts.\trobes, for two weeks of travel I- -\tling.p _ I\t0n Jl,nc 1S- Stanbridge East wlOSS ice cream social will take place on the church grounds, at fi p m.sponsored by the United Church proves successful Tr ami ^ Goi.#lll signed for the postmistress, SUTTON - The Blood Clinic of I\u2019ricla.N.Y.Lane, who is not well, urn(C .Stanbridge East Mrs.Terry Couture, of f ar nham.has hern visiting her h.others.Messrs.Ernest am! Arthur Cage, and families du ring the week.On June 18.at 8.00 p.m.the found ready sale among members A get well card.Sutton Blood Clinic Mrs.Lane, who is alsi one for Mrs.Nealson was a patient in a successful; Spicer, w,it visiting Spicer's parents.Mr.ami donors turning up at the clinic Mrs.Kenneth Spicer, and Miss Montreal on junp 9 This number was Hope Spicer.satisfactory, in view Weekend visitors of Mrs.of the fact that so mans res James Witts were Mr and Mrs.What do you do?A\u2014Bid three diamonds.You\thospital.One new: member wasL^nsiderod have a maximum two-heart bid, SOUTH BOLTON \u2014 The W.I.welcomed and if your partner is interested 1T,e, 'n 'ho clubroom on June in a slam you are ready to move 3- \"\"h a ^a\u2018r attendance of with him.\tmembers and young visitors.A good number of articlesj^^c^ege annual were brought in, to fill the later in the month.Christmas stockings for the chil- Mrs.Schoolcraft and Mrs.dren overseas, and some pieces Coates served lunch at the close ! volunteers who helped make this visitors of cloth handed in by Mrs.Hilljof the meeting.\tevent a success.\tklage.Today's Question Your partner continues with a bid of four hearts.What do you do now?Answer Tomorrow It is expected lhat Mrs.Lee, of Mansonville, will be a delegate from this branch, to Mac-meeting, idents are unable to donate Pevley Aiken, of Sweetsburg, blood, due to having hepatitis in and Miss Agnas Ev ans, of Mont the recent epidemics.\treal.The co-chairmen, Messrs.R Mr.and Mrs John Martin, of Millinchamp and B.Coulombe.jl.a Tuque, and Mr.and Mrs extend their appreciation to all Stanley (îage, of (iranby, were of Mr.and Mrs Arthur (HI TS I ROM U.C.W.\u2014 Br» J.I).McCord and Miss Norma Archer, who are to he married shortly, were presented with a Boston rocker and a silver cream and sugar set by the six Units of Emmanuel United Church Women, Cowansville.The nresentation was made at a tea held In their honor in the church hall.(Photo by Studio Eclair) Kinnear's Mills Flower* in the United Church on June 7, were in memory of the late J.M.Allan, given by his family.i The Misses Lorna Crutck-shank and Geraldine Marshall, were received into full membership of the United Church at ,ithc morning service on June 7, I when Holy Communion was cel-iobrated Mr.and Mrs.Arnold Nugent, Mr.and Mrs.Sidney White with their daughters Tammie and Ester, all of Montreal, passed through town en route to spend the weekend with their parents, Mr.and Mrs Edgar Nugent and fa rally.Mr William McVetty and Mr.Dave Smith, of Kingston, Ont., were overnight guests of the formers sister, Mrs.Annie Lowry, on route from the Maritimes to his home.Mr.and Mrs, M I\u2019atton and daughter.Heather, motored here from Montreal to spend the weekend at their summer residence.Mrs Annie Lowry and son, Roger, and Miss 11.Patton were guests of Mr.and Mrs, Vic.Low ry ami Mr.and Mrs, Elmer Suitor, Lennoxville, Miss Pat ton visited her uncle and aunt, Mr.and Mrs.C.Moore, in Birch-ton She accompanied Mr, and Mrs Gerald Robinson back to Montreal.Mrs.Robert Brady and daughter, Marlene, of Lennox ville were weekend guests of her parents, Mr and Mrs.Wendell Marshall.Mr.Fred Crawford was in Lennoxville, called there by the denth of his aunt, Mrs, Robert I Crawford.WEST 4 K Q ,T 3 2 ¥ K Q 8 6 ?.7 8 2 + 2 NORTH (D)\t17 4 A 8 5 ¥ 7 ?\tAKQ76 4 Q 10 8 3 EAST 4 10 9 7 ¥J5 3 ?10 9 5 4 4654 SOUTH 464 ¥ A 109 4 I ?\t3 4 AK J97 Both vulnerable North\tEast\tSnath\tWest 1 4\tPass\t1 ¥\tPass 1 4\tPass\t3 4\tPass 3 ?\tPass\t3 ¥\tPass 5 4 Pass\tPass Pas*\t64\tPass Opening lead\u20144 K Please Dad with a practical gift from the Bon Marché! diamonds before showing his strong club support, South could have afforded to bid seven clubs.South felt that North could have afforded to bid six clubs instead of only five.I was drawn into the discussion and felt that there were a lot of ways to reach seven, but that neither partner had brought up the one bad bid of the hand.I am probably getting old-fashioned, but it seems to me that there was no reason for North to rebid one spade on a three card suit when he had a natural two club rebid.Had North made that logical rebid, South would probably have jumped to four clubs.North then could have bid four spades.This could be read as a cue bid showing the ace.Then South might well have gone right to the grand slam.Incidentally, if West had opened a trump, South would still have made seven, even though the play would not have been quite as simple.Card Sens* Q\u2014The bidding has been; South\tWest\tNorth\tEest 1\tClb.\tPass\t1 Hrt.\tPass 2\tHrta.\tPass\t2 Spds.\tPass SWIM TRUNKS Many, many styles and colours to choose from Father's day special June meeting of Institute held at Cowansville COWANSVILLE \u2014 The June' meeting of the Women\u2019s Institute was held on June 2, at the home of Mrs.A.P.Bibby, with Mrs.C.M.Baird as co-hostess.The program had been ar-| ranged by conveners of agriculture, Mrs.L.Lewis and Mrs.H.Smith Magazine clippings giving garden hints had been given out and these were read in answer to roll call.After business had been com-; pleled and conveners reports] heard, Mrs.C.M.Baird read * good report of the county meeting held recently, to which she was a delegate.An instructive talk was given by Mrs.L.Lewis, telling of the care of strawberry plants.A good collection of slips and plants had been brought and these were exchanged at the close of the meeting.Better quality Bulky knit, Orion, Wool CARDIGANS and PULLOVERS Large (election to choose from FROM CAPE TO CAPE Marco von Veh, 22-year-old Dutch reporter, has hitch-hiked from North Cape, Norway, to Cape Town, South Africa, travelling through 22 countries in 60 days.7.95 Men's TIES Thousands of new attractive styles and shades to choose from, at low, low price*.59< 79* 1.00 300 Men's and Young Men's SUITS Worsted, flannels, serges, g a b a r d i nas, terylenes, wools and soma tropicals in lot.Sizes 34 - 48.FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL 29.95 2 ^ 50.Men's TROPICAL PANTS Wonder choice of styles and colours.Reg.to 11.95.FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL 5.95 to 7.95 SPORT JACKETS Choice of colors and styles.Sizes 34-44.Men's SOCKS Tremendous choice of Nylons sfretchies, Ban-Lon, Fine wool, specially low priced for Father's Day.Men's or FLANNEL 200 Men's highly tailored and imported worsted, tropical, tweeds SUITS Suits uncalled for or late for delivery.Canada's best tailors.Originally selling for $85.to $125.DRESSING GOWNS Choice of styles and colours.t I Reg.value up te 12.95.7.95 BERMUDAS Pre shrunk fabrics in washable cottons, terylenes, etc.Reg.up to 8.95.FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL DRESSING GOWNS Reg.value up to 17.75 Ideal for Father's Day Gift.39.50 2.95 to 4.95 Men's BERMUDA SOX Reg.to 2.98 1.49 and Men's CUFF LINKS Reg.to 3.95 1.00 pr.'\t7''.'; Men's Heavy Bulky PULLOVERS and CARDIGANS 14.77 6.45 7.95 Men's 65% Terylene 35% cotton SPORT PANTS Hug* assortment of shades and full rang* of regular sizes.5.95 ?^ 7 >\t|\tMen's\tMen's '\tj Ç.\tv / M Cw ^ 1 A\u2014A\t\"T\" SHIRTS\tJudo style \tHundreds to choose\tTerry Cloth \tfrom, new shades and patterns.\tBEACH FATHER\u2019S DAY SPECIAL 1.98 JACKETS by famous makers, regular to 7.95 2.98\t4.98 Men's Broadcloth Print\tMen'* PYJAMAS\tSHORT SHIRTS Sizes 36-44.Long sleeves and legs.SPECIAL\tShort sleeves styles \u2014 Plain shades or very fancy s tripes, checks, floral d* 2.98\tsigns, etc.\tCome tee this splendid Men's Broadcloth\tassortment.PYJAMAS\t1.98 Short sleeves and leg; Values to 2.95\tto 1.98\t2.98 STRAW HATS Many different styles of straws and ribbons.FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL \"T\" SHIRTS By famous makers, short sleeves, full rang* of new colours.Reg.value to 11.95 FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL 3.95 2.98\t4.95 SPORT SHIRTS 'No-Iron', short sleeves, many in basket-weaves, ete.0 Y 1.98 0.2.79 -An Him MiiiTlic 45 King SL West \u2014 Sherbrooke t I f 24 SHERBROOKE DAILY RECORD, WED., JUNE 17, 19«4 ,he \"cut up\u201d on a Saturday night Her work, Mostly in Clover.Detailed and dispassionate book explains the problems of medicare Medical Care: Programs andjsincc then on the desirability of Issues (Clarke, Irwin) is a people providing for health care brave attempt to summarize dispassionately and concisely in communally ment in the through govern-same manner as 170 pages a subject whose very they provide for universal edu-mention is most likely \u2014 in cation.But Dr.Thompson care North America at least\u2014to pro- has long vanished into Ontario\u2019s past.But it exists in his memory still and this, as reviewers of the costs of a public program, concludes, has proved statistic- i,is works have said, is an open IS OPTIMISTIC\tally and in practice to be in-door tp an era fuii 0f warm] On Saskatchewan\u2019s experi- caPal3le meeting >ider)uatcly(nostalgia.So it is in A Summer! ence, Dr.Thompson concludes:\tneeds of the population.Burning (Clarke, Irwin)\u2014gen \u201cAll the indications are that the future of the program will repeat the history of the British National Health Service in in- fully includes the arguments voke strong emotions and end- opposing state health care, less argument.\tThe first part of the book is creasing satisfaction, popular- The author, biologist W.P a study of existing state and *ty and pride on the part of Thompson, is the former pres private health care programs in both the public and the medical ident of the University of Sas Europe and North America, Profession.\u201d katchewan who was chairman backed by charts and statistics The programs instituted in of the 1960-62 study committee to .show relative costs and ef Alberta and under consider-! which recommended to the CCF fectiveness.The greater part of ation in Ontario \u2014 prepayment provincial government of the the book presents in capsule through private insurers with day establishment of Saskatchc-form the arguments for and partial government help for the wan's universal, government-against state medical care andjneedy\u2014are little more than cx-backed medical care program, the issues involved in imple-Tensions of existing voluntary He has not altered his views menting, operating and meeting1 insurance which, Dr.Thompson |He, easy reading.! The tale is simple enough.A| young farm boy learns of tobacco and liquor and sex from [3 city youth staying with him; Jfor the summer, ft is the story| iof a boy\u2019s growing up.Woven ! throughout, with skilled sim-| Jplicity, is a picture of life in! irural Ontario in the late 19205.; j Mr.Boyle, CBC radio and tel-| evision producer and columnist, Life on the farm where Harryiis this year\u2019s winner of the Lea-J.Boyle was born nearly a half-Jcock Memorial Award for hu-ccntury ago, in the schools he mor for Home Brew and attended and the village where Patches and author of an ear-i Plant pathologist Lome Clayton Callback of Charlottetown has torned historian in \"The Cradle of Confederation\" (Brunswick Press), a book about Prince Edward Island published for this centennial year of the 1864 Charlottetown Confederation conference.Marika Robert, Czechoslovakia \u2022 born journalist who spoka no English whan she came to Canada eight years ago, traces the story of a young refugee In Paris, Mexico end Toronto in her first novel, A Stronger and Afraid (McLolland and Stewart).The title da-scribes the heroine, any immigrant and perhaps any human being.Superimposed on this story of loneliness is a description of the chief cherecter's struggle with a sexual problem.Behind the headlines tumbling out of Africa are people whom North Americans rarely have a chance to meet.Margaret Laurence, Manitoba-born SPECIAL FOR THE PROVINCE OF QUEBEC YOU CAN by buying a package of the new full King Size Peter Jackson filter-tipped cigarettes % Sj Certificates worth $1,000.00 cash are inserted into a number of packages of Pder Jackson cigarettes \u2014 one of these packages could be the next one you buy.If it is and you answer a skill-testing question correctly, the $1,000.00 cash is yours.BUY PETER JACKSON TODAY AND add TO YOUR ENJOYMENT! length increased from 80 to 85 millimeters - the longest size available across Canada IN PACKS OF 20 AND 25 KINO SIZE FILTER TIPPED A FAMOUS NAME SINCE 1881 I Mr iWK WDiiigli run RMwr v 11\u201e Eky4üii!ii«., ».COMPLETE TRAINING \u2014 Shown arc: Pte.Warren Beg-bie, of 794 Malouin St.Sherbrooke and Pte.Jacques Gravel, of St.Germain, P.Q., both of the 3rd Battalion, Royal 22e Regimenl, who have completed an advance phase of training leading to the rank of an Infantry Corporal in the Canadian Army Regular.This training took place at Camp Valeartier and consisted of field manoeuvres, target firing and section leadership.(National Defence Photo) writer who has lived in West: and East Africa, Vancouver and now in England, introduces .some of the behind-the-scenes Africans fictionally in The Tomorrow Tamers (McLelland and Stewart).This collection of short stories humanizes the problems of emerging Africa and offers some understanding of what it is like to live where freedom is a new and strange idea, meaningless to some who never knew they were shackled.Mrs.Laurence, whose reputation is growing on both sides | of the Atlantic, has just had published in Canada her first work with a Canadian setting.The Stone Angel, a novel.The ability of the Neepawa-born writer is being recognized in the United States this month with the simultaneous publication by Alfred Knopf of the African short stories, the new novel and an account of experiences in Somaliland published in Canada last year as The Prophet's Camel Bell.Title in the United States will be New |Wind in a Dry Land.CMA president hits teix policies Bedford Mr.Rodney McGowan, of St.Albans, Vt., visited his brother, Mr.Leslie McGowan, recently.Miss Diane Harland, student nurse at the Catherine Booth Hospital, Montreal, is spending j her holidays w ith her parents, Mr.and Mrs.George Harland.Mrs.George Provent is the guest for a time of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr.and Mrs.Leo LaFontaine, at Beacons-field.Miss Gayle Patrick, who has been with her parents Mr.and Mrs.Raymond Patrick, has returned to her nursing duties at the Montreal General Hospital.Miss Nettie Lovering was in Ayer's Cliff to attend the funeral of her cousin.Miss Mildred Paul, on June 12.Mrs.Sarah Robinson, who has been a patient during the past weeks in Notre Dame du Rosaire Hospital, has returned home.On June 10, Mrs.Harold Denting and Mrs.Roy Cook were joint hostesses at a bridal luncheon at the home of the former, in honor of Miss Gayle Patrick, of Montreal.Mrs.L.Patrick of St.John N.B , has come to Bedford to reside and has taken an apartment in Mrs.R.M.Lagace's ! apartments, on Massicotte Street.i Mr.and Mrs.James Mullen and son, Bill, of Cornwall, Ont., 'who have been guests of Mr.and Mrs.William Taylor have returned home.Mr.and Mrs.Donald Ditcham, Mrs.Mable Welsch, of Far-nham, Mrs, Ruth Falcon, Mrs.Saidie Veysey, of Stanbridge Station, and Mr.and Mrs.Jean Maurice Bedard and Norman I Veysey, of Greenfield Park, attended the funeral in Franklin, N.H., of Mrs.Baidie Veysey\u2019s daughter - in- law, Mrs.Ralph Veysey, who died suddenly.! The Misses Annette and Ce-cille Kimmell have moved from their home on Main Street, for-jmerly occupied by the late Mrs.Damien Kimmell, to an apartment on the same street.! Mr.and Mrs.Clayton Mun-jeaster and Miss Judy Muncas-ter spent the weekend at their summer home, at Moe's River.Mr.and Mrs.William Jack-son with their sons, Glenn and Peter, spent the weekend at Lake Carmi, Vt.isity, Halifax, came to Toronto in 1934 after graduating and started working with Union Carbide immediately.He spent some time with Union Carbide in the United JStates, a stint with the U.S.Air IForce during the Second World TORONTO (CP) \u2014 Alison War, and then returned with the Gumming, official voice for the company to loronto.next year for 6.000 Canadian\tbecame vice-president in manufacturers, wants the gov- 1903 an(^ president three years ernment to steer clear of what later- he calls \u201ccapricious experi- Married and the father of menting.\u201d\tthree sons, his favorite recrea- .\t,\t¦\t.lions include fishing and hunt- As he views it from his posi- ¦\t6 tion as new president of the Ca- §' nadian Manufacturers\u2019 Association, the Canadian economy is moving along at a good clip.But, he says, if the government starts experimenting with such things as tariffs, taxation and foreign investment without a careful study of the long-term effects, economic growth could be tripped up.Mr.Gumming, a 56-year-old native of Truro, N.S., says the CMA\u2014long regarded by many people as the entrenched bastion of conservative big business\u2014has changed a lot during the last 25 years.\u201cOur stand on the current trade talks at Geneva, for example, is not strongly protectionist.\u2018We recognize that you have Yugoslavia fetes WW 1 assassins SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia (Reuters)\u2014Two men who were imprisoned for plotting the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914\u2014the spark that set off the First World War \u2014are being invited to a commemorative ceremony here June 28.The ceremony marks the 50th anniversary of the assassination of the heir to the Hapsburg throne.The men are Vaso Cubrilovic, 67-year-old professor of history _\u2022\t,\t.\t, _ .at Belgrade University, and to give in order to get.But we\t*\t, woii»,,» \u201e wnv,,,\tCvetko Popovic, 68, a curator at a museum in Sarajevo.Local officials say only one other man connected with the plot is still alive, but he is too sick to move.The three men are the only ones still living of the 16 persons tried and sentenced for plotting the assassination.The commemorative ceremony will take place at the tomb of the other conspirators in an old cemetery on a hill above Sarajevo.Wreaths will be placed around a black marble tablet bearing the plotters\u2019 names, set in the white stone wall of a red-roofed chapel.PATRIOTIC SLAYING The assassination is regarded in Yugoslavia as a patriotic protest against alien Austrian rule.The four years of war to do believe in a healthy Canadian industry, and I know of no case in history where a country attained our present standard of living without, some protection for some parts of the economy.\u201cAll we want is to be sure this is remembered.We know some props will have to be sacrificed, but we hope they will be in areas that will do the least harm to the country and the economy.\u201d BLAMES CANADIANS As president of a large United States subsidiary\u2014Union Carbide of Canada Ltd.\u2014Mr.Gumming not unexpectedly has some strong views on foreign investment.It has made it possible for Canadians to attain their pres- ent living standard and has which it led brought freedom to opened up large sections of the economy, he says.\u201cEveryone says Canadians are conservative and, judging from past performance, I guess we are.So it\u2019s been easy for American, British and other capital to come in and catch us napping.\u201cBut is it fair to blame the other countries?I don't think so.\u2019\u2019 Mr.Gumming expects an other full-fledged round of plant expansion in coming months.\u201cThe last real expansion drive we had was in 1956 and since then, generally, we have Bosnia, now part of Yugoslavia.Both Cubrilovic and Popovic have resisted efforts by Yugoslav and foreign reporters to persuade them to talk about their feelings today, half a century after the historic and fateful event.But Popovic recently wrote a series of newspaper articles rejecting a theory, advanced in some publications about the assassination, that Freemasons were responsible for the killing.According to reports of the trial, Cubrilovic and Popovic, with four other teen-age nationalists, were posted along the been catching up with the ex-j royal route when Archduke cess capacity created then.\u201d Ferdinand drove into Sarajevo He also expects to continue on a state visit to this chief city the CMA\u2019s drive against taxes, of Bosnia, then part of the especially the sales tax on pro- Austro - Hungarian empire, duction machinery and the level They carried bombs and re-of personal and corporation in- volvers, and their task was to come taxes.\tkill the heir to the Hapbsburg Normally a quiet and friendK ithrone.talker who relaxes easily in his\tNedeljko Cabrinovic, a ip.chair, Mr.Gumming takes on year-oid printer, threw a bomb a grimmer air when taxation al the royal car, missing the comes up in conversation, as archduke but wounding an aidc-befits a CMA president.\tde-camp.I KINNEAR'S MILLS Mr.Grayden Reid.Dixvillc Home, spent * few days with ,his parents, Mr.and Mrs.Eve-îrette Reid and family, j Mr.Carl King, was a guest ,of Mr, and Mrs.Alfred Harron.u Lennoxvillt.MUST MATCH U.S.On Canada's corporation tax level, he says: \u201cThere\u2019s no sense in having a higher corporate tax than the U.S.We may be able to get away with it for a year, but not much longer.\u201d On personal income tax: \u201cPeople won't accept a greater gap in their living standard compared with the U.S., and in view of the U.S.tax cut a bigger gap seems likely, to say the least.\u201d ! On the sales lax: \u201cOne government department tells us to be more competitive overseas, and another puts on a tax that increases our produc-dion costs.Now where is the logic in that?\u201d Mr.Gumming, who studied chemistry at Dalhousie Univer- SHOT BY STUDENT About three - quarters of an hour later a student.Gavrilo Princip, also 19, shot and killed Franz Ferdinand and his- wife, the Duchess Sophie, on their way back along the narrow riverside embankment after a reception at the town hall.None of the other plotters, including Cubrilovic and Popovic, then schoolboys of 17 and 18, used their weapons.Five were arrested\u2014one escaped\u2014and tried along with 11 accomplices.Three were executed.Princip and the others lunder 21 could not be condemned to death under Austrian law because of their youth.They received prison sentences.Eight of them died in prison before the end of the First World War.1 "]
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