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The Westmount examiner
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[" roots 46 Ga © PETITE ar oy pe oli = a on pu -< oo ?wR - First move in power revamp program -: 1$117.300 committed for power, lighting A total commitment of $117,300 was made by West- mount City Council at a meeting Monday evening to cover the cost of new street lighting on Victoria, Grosvenor, Cedar, Montrose, Edgehill and Lexington avenues, part of .a two-year program for revamping the city's electrical .35 5 CENTS facilities.I Assistant City Manager Norman Dawe stated later that preliminary work on these streets will be done this fall, the remainder to be completed in the spring.The commitment provides for removal of existing standards in these areas, and installation of 124 new light , standards, plus additional power supply.Young PC's plan political free-for-all Tories and non Tories will have an opportunity to fire questions on VOL.XXX, No.43 MONTREAL, FRIDAY, OCT.23, 1959 24 PAGES jar.\u2014 At a motion in council, tender* lof Peter McCuaig Lid.in the amount of $3,590 for electrical installation at Glen and Oliver street substations was accepted.This was the lower of two lenders for the work submitted before deadline, Alderman Bovaird explained, four contractors have been invited to tender taking out plans and specifications, BUSY WESTMOUNT McGILLIANS: Work piled up for law students (left to right) Bob Cowling, Anderson, avenue, and Jamie Plant, Breslay road, as they prepared for McGill's Open House weekend, which opened today.Mr.Cowling and Mr.Plant co-chairmen of the Open House Committee, have planned a heavy scirediile™-of visits to sexhibits Lansdowne avenue, Jon ~~ and departments of the university by Montreal schools, as well as arranging for tour guides, drawn from student volunteers.Mr.Anderson is co-producer of \u201cRevuer\u2019's Choice,\u201d a selection of songs and skits from such past successes as \u201cMy Fur Lady,\u201d \u201cWry and Ginger,\u201d and \u201cReign or Shine,\u201d which makes its debut tonight, 8 p.aa., at Moyse Hall.\u2014Tedd Church Photo Oakland Historic ceremony at Trois Rivieres as monument dedicated to Ezekial Hart Alan Judah Hart of Westmount, descendant of the first Jew to settle in Canada, took part in a Commitment was subsequently made of $4.840, covering the cost of electrical installations at the substations, plus work to be carried out by the Light and Power Department, contingencies, and supervision, Additional commitment of $4,635 was made by council for repairs to Bethune street subway.Alderman Gates stated that the original commitment of $10,600 was based on an estimate by Creaghun & Archivald Ltd.for a fixed sum of $7,000 for certain portions of the work, plus an estimated $3.500 for removal and replacement of unsound concrete.He added that the amount of unsound concrete that it was necessary to remove has proved to be double the original estimate.| FIVE YEAR GUARANTEE Commitment of $3,500 was made covering the cosl of repair- | ing selected portions of \u201cspalled\u201d | sidewalk on Sunnyside and Clarke avenues.Concern abou! the erosion of sidewalks has led the city government policies and programs at two members of the present federal government, when the Young Progressive-Conservative Association of St.Antoine-West- [to conduct research to establish ithe specific cause of the pheno- historic ceremony at Three Rivers yesterday when that city and the HEWARD GRAFFTEY Sei ri atm ct mae ps Canadian Jewish Congress dedicated a monument to Ezekial Hart, son of Canada\u2018s first Jewish settler, Aaron Hart.Ezekial Hart, twice elected to the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada in 1807 and 1808, was each time refused the right to take his seat in the house.He lived to see the passage of the Act of 1832 which granted full, rights and privileges to all citizens \u2014 the first such legislation in the British Commonwealth.Mr.Alan Hart represented the Hart family at the dedication, part ot the current celebration of the National Bicentenary of Canadian Jewry.Another Westmounter, Samuel Bronlman, president of the Canadian Jewish Congress, made the presentation of the Hart monument to the province's representative, Hon.J.Paul Beaulieu, Minister of Trade and Commerce.Mr.Lavy M.Becker, Bicentenary chairman, presided during the ceremony, and Mayor Laurent Paradis of Trois Rivieres accepted a commorative plaque to be set in the city's Champlain Park.Next week's weather DESCENDANT OF FIRST JEWISH SETTLER IN CANADA: Alan Judah Hart, of Westmount, fifth generation descendent of Aaron Hart, the first Jew to settle in Canada, represented the Hart family yesterday in Three Rivers, where a monument was dedicated to Ezekial Hart.\u2014Ashley & Crippen Photo menon as yet not pinpointed.The present work will be carried oul by Metallicrete Floor Co.Ltd.who have placed a five-year guarantee on their work.QUARTER CENTURY CLUB City employes Harold Matiland Rowe and Edward Lewis Den- beigh of the Fire Department.and Thomas Mitchell of the Roads Department were nominated for admittance to the Quarter Cen- fury Club Monday night by Alderman Drury.An official dinner is to be given laler in the year.Acting Mayor for the months of November, December and January will be Alderman 1.W.Bovaird.wi Jv Rae, en Church News .10, 11 REE Classified Ads .18 Editorials .000006 4 Obituaries .044200000 2 Sports 0000000000 19 This Week in Westmount 5 Unity Boys' Club .2 Women's and Social .12-17 By ERIC NEAL October 24 to 31 Morning frosts or cold mists, with bright days and clouding evenings.Tropical storms often pass near or through our regions at this time.Temperature range 30-55°F, but colder in the north.This is the time automobiles should be winterized.Sunny intervals, with cold showers and some thunder; snow in the north.Becoming much colder at night, Warming again, and improving generally for a clear, pleasant : weekend.ha mo © lai 1 oe outre menti aes A ieee bean ame rae any oars av ornament oe om mount hold their semi-annual poe litcal question and answer evening.Thursday.8:15, at Victoria Hall.The meeting is open to the public.MP's Heward Grafftey of Brome-Missisquoi, and Egan Chambers of St.Lawrence-St.George, will take the stand in the Green Room at Victoria Hall, and attempt lo answer all questions from the audience \u201cIt is audience participation which will make this \u2018political free- for-all a success,\u201d pointed out a young PC spokesman.\u201cAt a similar meeting last March with MP's John McGrath of Newlound- land.Frank McGee of Toronto, and Henry Best, executive assistant to the Minister of External Affairs, a large and keen audience made a very lively evening.\u201d To address underwriters Mr.G.M.Morton, upper Bele mont avenue, a long-time associate of The Manufacturers Life Insurance Company, will address the Niagara Peninsula Sales Congress today in Hamilton, Ontario, where the group |s currently meeting, A member of the Life Insure ance Fraternity, Mr.Morton will speak to 800 Life Underwriters, He has been sought as an inspice ational speaker at similar gathe erings in many eastern United States and Canadian cities./ i | | | \u2014 hd hs 2 The.Weetifiount Examiner, Friday, October 23, 1959 Obituary Westmount YMCA At Unity Boys Club ruthr 525 we.Anthony Blair heads slate :nesday from the Chapel of Tees e © P C rnival tonighi and Co.Ltd., for Edith Leonore f J ° Hi Y d b enny La enna aed eae wre QF NEW Junior Fii-1 CU for member S and par ents rd ate e le A new junior Hi-Y Club was organized at the West- graduate of Macdonald College.mount, YMCA last Friday evening, with club executive i By MAURICE MARIASINE She was, until her retirement | as follows: president, Anthony Blais: vice-president, Ronald Club members and their parents are invited to attend rea.Tactician for the MoJannett; secretary-treasurer, David MacRae; chaplains, Unity's 1959 Penny Carnival which takes place this evening| school Board and served for DOnald Guadagni and Peter Svendson; program committee, at 7 p.m.The funds derived from the carnival will be many years on the board of John Tilley and Peter Svendson; service committee, Donald turned over to the Red Feather Campaign.directors of Hoe Murray Bay Guadagni and Paul Latcur.: .ie à \u2018e onvalescen ome.A Fun galor e is in store for the Joungsters who attend Re He member of The club's advisor is Garry Norris, one of West- variety o carnival games has n planned and a large|,,.pietetic Association and of mount Y\u2019s Fellowship secretaries who is attending Sir J number of prizes will be available for the more skillful the Montreal Business and Pro- George Williams College and is employed at the YMCA.; and also for those holding lucky door prize tickets.Come fessiona omens Club of Mont- Garry will help the group to plan and carry out their ° and have your fortune told by Indian Lore Expert Louis Miss Hunter is survived by a own programs, which will include among other things Thomas.ister, Catherine, and\u2019 brother, swimming and basketball.As usual, the Unity Boys\u2019 Club will hold a Hallowe\u2019en George, arherine, and a brother Junior Hi-Y is a club program for girls or boys, who Party for its Club members.On Friday night, October* are attending the Westmount Junior High School or in 30th, the Unity Teen Hop will conduct a special Hal- looking for a leatherwork in-| grades seven-nine.The clubs have adults as their advisors lowe\u2019en Dance with novelties, prizes and refreshments.me first meeting of the cur.| 30d meet either in the homes of the club members or at Tomorrow afternoon, the younger set will romp and ent season of tbe Unity Boys: the YMCA building.If there are any boys or girls who are play at a party starting at 2 o\u2019clock.Prizes will be awarded Club Committee for Manage- interested in forming their own club; or parents who wish for costumes, best, original and most comical.Refresh- ment takes place on Thursday, more information regarding the organization and programs ments will also be served.b Pom.under the chairmanship of Junior Hi-Y groups, they are asked to contact Ron Musical Director Fred Johnston (ained at Lake Placid, N.Y.for The Seventh Annual Father Watt, Youth Work Secretary at the Westmount YMCA \u2014 is at the Club every Tuesday a district Rotary Conference.Re- ._ .evening from 6:30 p.m.to cond- quests for futurre shows come and Son Ma an pe Shith WE.7-3916., .uct rehearsals and auditions for from Binghampton, N.Y.and Annua de an aughter The Y\u2019s Teen Club will not be operating their dance , .Banquets held in conjunction : the Unity Boys\u2019 Club Talent Boston, Mass.Local shows in- with Unity\u2019s Sports Award tomorrow evening, however they will resume dances Parade which provides entertain- clude the Fairmount Chapter of Night, takes place in Novemb- on October 31 at 8.45 p.m.This dance will be a \u201chat ment .for publie ere .organiza: the Cee, \u2018ae Ted: er.The actual date has not as dance\u201d with prizes awarded for the funniest hats with a ons a : service.- e \" , .; th lected, h it i \u2019 ober 8, the Talent Parade enter- cent de Paul.lt is also expected ve ee se ec ee Lis Hallowe\u2019en theme.The club executive and members are #that the group will return to 18 of November or the 24 ani planning a few special events and would like all teen- \\ the Queen Mary Veteran's Hos: 95.An announcement will be agers 15-19 years of age who are interested in assisting \\\\// , (1, pital to do a Chr Istmas Show for made next week.Tickets will| With program to come to the weekly meetings at the Y, ; D As A hi Ray Sta st 8, no be available on October 31.| Mondays at 4 p.m.Contact Club president Alex Ross for ; (©) Ke, cally as one of Montreal\u2019s top IP addition to a sumptuous further information regarding membership in Teen's | D in > > dance i nstructors, is at, the dinne nts va eo Club and its program.¢ W.FRIEDRICH Thussdoy asd Sature Tuesday: sonalities from the World of Plans for this year\u2019s Annual Hobby Show are under- à .Thurs ay a oar day for in.Sport.Awards will be presented Way, With committees and members of committees, being Swiss Watch Repair Expert struetion in tap, rhythm ana © Unity's best athletes for selected during the next four weeks, in order to start ; 1243 Obie: VE precision dance routines.Danny 1958-59.; making tentative plans for the event, to take place during H (Opposite Steinberg's) Smith is responsible for the tre- Boys and girle (who wil be the Easter Holidays 1960.If there are any teenagers who j mendous succes achieved by the Unable to attend wi er own i i i 3 p WE.7-1855 Starlites and the Charleston Parents are urged to register are interested in working on one of the many committees i Group who this year made such early, so that arrangements can they should ask Ron Watt, Youth Work Secretary as soon | a big hit on Talent Caravan be made with members of the as possible.i SUITS & COATS over CBMT and Canadian Tal- Westmount Rotary Club, to act The Girls Hi-Y Club making plans for their Annual ent Search over W Burling.as foster parents.Children\u2019s Hallowe\u2019 i 355 wr ton.Danny is in charge of the Mona O'Brien's Majorettes| of October Further Informatie > i cat fast Friday Made to your measure from a Unity Cuties.a precision danc.meet every Wednesday even-y : n next week.large selection of best English ing group and is also in the pro- ing .the Rifle Club started - woollens.Work Guaranteed.cess of preparing a junior group last Saturday at the RMR Rifle word as to whether or not they Senior \u201cB\u201d and Juvenile Girls.\u2014 + for future variety shows.Club Range.Matthew Roguski\u2019s get the requested printing press No word has been received from Ladies\u2019 ond Gem's members who would like to be- Woodwork classes are being \u2014a decision will be made on the Junior Girls and the Senior : SLACKS 5 5 long to ome of the dancing held every Monday and Wed- October 20th .regular movie Girls as representative teams but \u201c Mode groups may enroll with girls\u2019 nesday.The Library is now nite is Thursday at 6 p.m.it is possible that a four-team i Mode to measure work supervisor Crystal Cun- open three times weekly All the basketball teams have house league will be in operation.} Sport Jackets Made ningham.« « « the Laurier Club meet re- now started to practice in earn- Te Meoture .$35.wp There is still time to enroll gularly and the newly-formed est \u2014 the teams that will be* tf Alterations & Remodelling.in one of the various arts and film group also have weekly entered in Montreal Leagues this Reasonable Prices crafts classes.The following arts sessions.The Printing Group year are as follows: Biddy, Ban- ° and crafts are being conducted patiently awaiting the final tam, Midget, Juvenile, Junior, Avenue Tailors regularly: woodwork, embroidery.TE .§ puppetry, paper sculpture, F d f | | & VALET SERVICE creative crafts, copper tooling, ounder o contro society i 1166 GREENE AVENUE figurines, art woodwork, paint ' (Just below St.Catherine) ing and art.As soon as leaders ~ dd f WwW 3 WE.3-5908 become available, other selective d resses orum tomorro i classes will begin, We are still) Mr.B.H.Lloyd, 531 Claremont standing speaker in Canada and [ UR COUNSEL à avenue.will deliver a talk to those the United States.on pre-need ar- | attending the Third Annual All rangements has been School Crossing Day Quality Control Forum, Am- ROSEDALE hel pful to many erican Society for Quality Control, point .ilies; such counsel is at L'Ecole Polytechnique, 2500 ?° ffered without Cuyard street, Saturday.Over 200 EDGAR A.WRAY 0 : .Guar di ans Wanted persons are expected to attend.charge or obligation.Mr.Lloyd, director of industrial F uner al Chapel Hours of Work: Approximately 3/2 Hours Daily.cconomics, Price Waterhouse and WURLITZER ORGAN BA Collins Co., holds a bachelor degree in INC.5 Days Per Week mechanical engineering form the 4911 COTE DES NEIGES RD.; ba HUNNS A WHLIANS University of Toronto where he South of Queen Mary at Decelles SM0 SHERPROOKE STREET wis?i .specialized in mathematics and -686 \u2018 Hours on Duty: 8.30 to 9 a.m.\u2014 11.45 a.m.to 12.15 p.m.statistics.He is a Fellow and a RE.1-6868 12.45 p.m.to 1.30 p.m.-\u2014 2.30 p.m.to approximately founding member of the American Society for Quality Control and has 4 pm.{| served in numerous capacities with the Society.among them, national ee Rate of Pay: director, member of the editorial pla, .board of industrial quality control, 3 7 $75.per month during school term and chairman of the Montreal Sec- PR | Te tion.He is recognized as an out- ii i al FILE For Appointment w LS S \u2019 Ph p | Offi Youngster hur Î Five Generations one ersonne ice Nine-ycar-old Tina Cross was f T adit onal Service taken to Queen Elizabeth Hospi- 0 radii tal after sustaining a cut in the ; WE.5-8531 E Av ; top of her head following an accident while passenger in u car WESTMOUNT CITY HALL Crone soa Terman sess COS.C.UrAr &BRO.| isi d sh Mondays to Fridays, 8.45 a.m.to 5 p.m.after Hoon.on ray Funerau DiRECtORS Saturdays, Phone Police Station, WE.5-3525 Strathcona avenue intersection, 1234 Mountain St.Phone:UN.6-6363 R.Fletcher of Hampstead. \u2018| Interiors \u2014 Draperies oN u : MULLINS ANTIQUES Regd.T.M_0 LIN ESTABLISHED 1899 1317 Greene Ave., WE.5-3894 e ae WATCH REPAIRS - BR ANTIQUES BOUGHT 74) rer: 5 Certified Watchmakers | and SOLD \u2019 Custom Furniture .e * i ® O H MAN $ Uphoistery Repairs WE.3-4046 1216 Greene Ave.VOL.XXX, No.43 MONTREAL, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1959 TT a 3 | Capacity crowd gathers | for Roslyn H-S meeting The large gymnasium of Roslyn School was crowded to capacity Monday night when parents and teachers gathered for the first Home and School meeting of the season.Highlight of the evening was a talk by Principal W.A.Wilkinson, successor to Mr.George Penrose who retired last year after 25 years at Roslyn.\u201cThe thought of stepping into the shoes of such a beloved principal as Mr.Penrose could have been frighten-! ing, if he hadn\u2019t told me he\u2019d felt just the same way 25 years ago.His predecessor was at Roslyn for 24 years, | Qicrieve,\u201d said Mr.Wilkinson.Mr.Wilkinson, whose dry sense of humor soon had the large audience chuckling, explained that he was not there to lecture parents, I | HN oy must be faced, and you should be happy to face these with your | child, but not for him.\u201d Mr.Wilkinson pointed oul.\u201cOnly your POELE NE but to help them bring out the best in their children.To this end he had prepared and distributed à paper entitled \u2018How to Study\", and emphasized his points under four heads \u2014 parental interest.provision of essentials, place-time study habit, and plan.child can do the learning.Be willing to look at what they arc doing, and have them explain it to you.\u201cAttention to school work is attention to acaemic progress.\u201d he emphasized, \u201cChildren want and | need direction and discipline.Pa- POR RNY + Ah a al LL EY Parental interest, he said, can be established by the home atmosphere; where mutual respect between parents themselves, and between the parent and the child, plays an important part.\u201cPraise should not be lavish,\u201d he stated.\u201cShow your love in care for the children, not in gifts.\u201d Life is full of problems which radoxical as it may seem.the aim; of cvery parent must be to make themselves unnecessary to their children.A child must become independent of his parents, and the only way to do so is through bitter but profitable experience.\u201d The rights of a child include a place of his own in which to study.Mr.Wilkinson continued.even if it is only an orange crate beside his bed.He has a right to proper food and rest.to adequate materials\u2014but not elaborate\u2014lo a quiet study hour when some- a) | | HERE'S HOW IT'S DONE: Roslyn School principal, Mr.W.A, Wilkinson points out an item on a paper he has prepared entitled \u2018How to Study\u201d \u2014 an aid for parents as well as pupils, With him is Roslyn Home and School Association president Mr.W.G.Buchanan.The paper wus (he main theme of his address to parents at Roslyn School Monday evening.\u2014 Tedd Church Phote Leslie Macintosh FOR one else answers the phone and F ; ; Enelist à CU | messages are out until study \u201corm prize for English: and, BETTER ENGLISH time is over.Finally.he said, a the General Proficiency prize in ce e A ; child has a right to recreation.for passing McGill Junior Cer- q p À New class for beginners, The place-time study :habit can tificate exams with first class ar J a vai a.\u20ac | atfernoon or evening.be set through the parents\u2019 co- honors.Taking the train at Westmount Station?$5 MONTHLY \u2014 operation in removing distract- Mr, Stovel was also the re- Park your car here while on your trip NO REGISTRATION FEE ing influences for this period, he Cipient of a Bishop's College | Parking, washing, greasing, etc., aot reasonable rates ALSO DAY OR NIGHT YEARLY CONTRACTS stated.And this is the place to hear the child's lessons, a place School tankard, one of only four 1430 Mackay Street Î WE.4-1402 and definite time which parents I must respect as his study hour.a ¥ EE of a plan or - OPERATED BY GIRARD AUTOMOBILE INC.PRIVATE LESSONS school were outlined by mr.wil- 370 Victoria Avenue (Just below Sherbrooke) HU.56-0767 § kinson.The child should [ill in IN MATHEMATICS this plan himself, with the help of his parent.and when he finds i J ; that other activities are eating e ] Former Assistant - Professor [|into his home-work time, must ] 0 Westmount Residents | at the University of Liège, decide what to give up.3 } \u201cThere is no pill or injection two master degrees, is giv- ; for learning,\u201d the principal coning private lessons in and mt Te and Phone WE.3-8563 h ly way to learn.\u201d ne V et the only way to learn J Business Firms 3 : STOVEL | Genuine Wins honors PRUCE STOVE Promoting and maintaining a high standard of civic Enalish d Scotch studenis in the school to be thus : nglish an cote TWISTS, TWEEDS, WORSTEDS, REVERSIBLE TWISTS, and MOHAIRS of highest quality in stock distinguished, | : 1 A ever: \"e vevreries ! at Bishop's cos pone ecm e e e prize-giving tion of his lirst year as a student Eighteen-year-old Bruce Stovel, in the Province of Quebec.He had ! previously attended the University 494 Wood avenue.walked off with | cight prizes and one scholarship administration is of vital importance to the continued progress of the City of Westmount.Since 1908, the Westmount Municipal Association has helped the City Council to achieve sound objectives.of Toronto School, entrance to which is only acquired after: passing stiff examinations.He is the son of Mr.and Mrs.or The Association now has a membership of nearly 2,000 imported by request.In All Shades and Patterns.\u2018 men and women who are taking an active interest in this Ladies\u2019 and Gents\u2019 SUITS & COATS al Bishop's College School's an- S.R.Stovel, and the grandson community's municipal affairs.nual prize-giving day in Lennux- of Mr.and Mrs.J.R.Robb, for ers .MADE-TO-MEASURE ville recently.many years residents of West.Every citizen and every firm doing business in West- IN ONE WEEK Now a first year arts student mount, 500 students and parents mount is urged to join and assist in this important work.: Customers or eur own material a he ner or th Cant Stove were present at the annual BCS Annual Membership dues are a token $2.00 and are col- 1 ., - prize-day which co-incided with e REPAIRING © REMODELLING dedication of a new school chapel.: ® REFITTING QUICK SERVICE F.L.SILVER LADIES\u2019 & GENT'S TAILOR 1235 Greene Ave.\"ville Greenshileds Memorial Scholarship, and various prizes for academic, athletic and all-round ® ToT mT ability .A ability \u2018Catholic Hour\u2019 talk His awards included the ; Governor-General's medal; the This week the Catholic Hour program will feature a talk by Lieutenant-Governor's prize for Latin; the Warren Hale Essay Reverend George F.Thoms, | lected solely to cover routine office expenses.Application forms are available from the Secretary-Treasurer, MRS.LYMAN DUFF, 24 Melbourne Ave., WE.2-2659 o_o e e de.irs) prize; the Vice-Chairman's| pastor of St.Gabriel's parish, | W M | iY WE.2.6633 prize; the L/Cpl.Gerry Hanson entitled \u201cWhat tink you \u201cor estmount Unicipa Association NS ° prize for history; the Sixth|Christs Mother\u201d.| THE FA W > ur T aminer Nerving the City of Westmount since 1938 $135 Western Avenue, Montreal 28, Que.Head Office: 7005 Kildare Road, Montreal 29 MONTREAL, FRIDAY, OCT.23, 1959 Circulation Dept.\u2014 Display Advertising HU.9.1201 Classified Advertising (To 8.30 p.m., Tues.& Wed.Only) HU.1.04%) Editorial Department \u2014 Accounting Department HU.1-2771 John W.Sancton President and Publisher Lou Miller, Managing Editor Hugh E.McCormick Chairman Hugh R.Mount, Advertising Manager Miss Evelyn McKinnon, Circulation Manager The Examiner alms to be un independent, clean newspaper for the home, devolrd te publie service.Muil aubncriplions: $2.50 per veur; $1.20 half year.Five centa n copy, Authorized us Znd Class Mail, Post Office Dept, Ottawa.~ WESAY YOU Criticism of schools begins in the home HY do you send your youngsters to school?Principal of a school in this area \u2014 unidentified here because the penetrating observations apply almost universally \u2014 this week took advantage of a \u201c\u2018\u201cmeet-the- teacher\u201d night to tell off nicely the big attendance of parents.Kids arrive at school sloppily dressed.Sloppy dress means sloppy habits, including of mind.A sloppy student can't be a good student.Kids arrive too early.Inadequate breakfasts and certainly inadequate lunches are indicated.What's worse, they wear thamselves out for classes at too-hard, unsupervised play on schoo! grounds.Kids are, surprisingly enough, not getling enough play.Parents who insist on foo many extracurricular classes in ballet, art, music, judo, and what-have-you are depriving young people of the need to relax, play games, hobnob and explore as they please which is their right in out-of-school hours.Kids aren't doing homework.They aren't given a quiet place to study.they are not denied radios, TV and telephone sessions for stated periods, and parents aren't hearing their work.Before castigating the principal, the teachers, the curricula, the school system, how about some probing of the situation at home.By the way .HAVE been deeply moved by the number of election candidates who have accused their opponents of \u201ctrying to win voles.\u201d The accuser Is apparently always completely convinced that he himself would never stoop to such a despicable trick.\u2018The last thing he wants is à vote, \u2014Beachcomber » \"a No bad manners * .° during K's visit Dear Sir: After having read a Canadian uewspaper article referring to the bad manners of Americans in their reception of Khrushchev on his recent visit, 1 can state as one of the crowd in New York which saw Khrushchev, that there was no display of bad manners.Rather.this was a subdued, undemonstrative audience which had not become so brainwashed by TV and press coverage as to think that the leader of the country which has swallowed up ten countries since World War 11 had genuinely come here seeking peace, except under his terms, called co-existence.Khrushchev has said\u201d that the choice for America (and Canada) is co-exist- ence or war buf what he really means by co-existence is takeover of our countries by any means short of a shooting war, Communist tactics may change but the Communist aim of world domination is unchanging.It may be sweetened by a visit of the head man of the US.S.R.to the U.S.but underncath the affable exterior is a ruthless determination to further the cause of international Communism throughout the world.We need to see this, to face it squarely, and Lo see how the hate, greed, fear and selfishness of each of us, which creates confusion and division in our couniries, are the strength and essence of Communism, As long as Khrushchev can keep our minds occupied by our own personal schemes, ambitious causes and petty jealousies, friends can take.over the nations of the world one by one, while we are caught in the web of our own small world.As a Canadian from the Town of Mount Royal, who has been living in New York for the past eight months, 1 have seeh what a unique position Canada holds in the eves of the rest of the world.We are, because of our location, closely tied economically, culturally and militarily with the U.S.and incidentally, very highly regarded by Americans.We are an important member of the Commonwealth, NATO, the UN, and because we have had no act of agg'ession against any other nation in our history, the newly-indepen- dent countries of Asia and Africa look upon us favorably.The challenge to each one of KORE Es ESS CoN THEY SAY! There is so much good in the worst of us, and so much bad in the best of us, that it behooves all of us not to talk about the rest of us.\u2014 Robert Louis Stevenson he and his Familiar figure to local students celebrates thirtieth anniversary By JANE BARTLETT Bill Green, custodian of Westmount High School, and good friend to more students who have passed through its halls than he cares to remember, celebrated an anniversary this month: it was exactly 30 years ago that he left the Westmount Police Force and joined the Westmount School Commission, where he started as custodian of Roslyn School.Veteran of two world wars and hundreds of colorful adventures, Mr.Green was born in Blackburn, Lancashire, England.He was 16 years old when he first donned the uniform of the British army, travelling to the front in Fran-e, later to Ireland during the rebellion of 1916, then on to Malta, where he served for two years.Returning to England, he found unemployment and general depression, and was soon on his travels again as a fireman aboard ship, with the hope of settling in Australia wnen and if he arrived there.The trip was an eveniful one \u2014 New Zealand, Australia, Tasmania and Tahiti \u2014 but he wes fated not to become an Austrialian.His fellow-firemen were determined to land, however, and jumped ship \u201cdown under.\u201d leaving Bill Green the only fireman on the ship.\u201cWe were 55 days getting to Tasmania,\u201d recalls Mr.Green, \u201cand was 1 seasick until T got used to those tropical storms!\u201d Arriving in Montreal in 1925, where his sister lived, Mr.Green promptly joined the Westmount Police Force, remaining with it until 1929.\u201cA lot of walking,\u201d was his succinel comment on this phase of his life.\u201cWe'd do three hours out on the beat, work 14 hours on the night shift, 13 in the day.And the night shift had to answer fire- calls with the Fire Department as well.\u201d In 1929, on a Saturday in October, Mr.Green walked his last beat.and on Sunday joined forces with the Westmount School Commission, whom he has served ever since.He spent his first year at Roslyn School, and in 1930 moved {lo Queen's School, where Mr.A.W.Seaman was principal, and \u201cone of the best men 1 ever worked with\u201d.Mr.Green has never been one to do things by halves.In 1939, with the outbreak of war, Mr.Seaman left Queen's School, a new principal arrived and one day later Bill had enlisted in the Royal Montreal Regiment, RCASC, He us and to our nation as a whole is clear \u2014 are we going to be brainwashed by Communist-in- spired ideas, live in division amongst one another in our own land, be blinded by our greed to the ideological weapon of trade offered by Khrushchev, live so in fear that we grab al vague disarmament proposals as our only hope, and allow our pride and smugness as a nation to destroy the indispensable unity with the United States.Or, are we going to truly live a positive alternative and accept absolute moral standards of honesty, purity, unselfishness and love under the guidance of God, so that He shall truly \u201chave Dominion from sea to sea.\u201d The choice is quite clearly put before us in the words of William Penn who said \u201cmen must choose to be governed by God or they condemn themselves to be ruled by tyrants.\u201d Let us choose God's way and make Canada the nation she is meant to be with the destiny she is meant to have.Yours truly, SHEILAGH M, HICKIE.Bill Green and friend As a member of the Army Service Corps, he travelled to and from Britain on hospital ships and vessels carrying prisoners of war.And these were no lowly cargo boats\u2014 the Queen Mary, the \u201cQueen Lizzie,\u201d the Athlone Castle, and four others, none of which were sunk during his voyages.\u201cThe only trouble we ever had was outside Liverpool,\u201d says Mr.Green.\u201cWe were mixed up with a convoy, stuck in the middle of the Mersey, with Jerry dive- bombing all over the place.We just sat tight until it was all over, and came out safely.\u201d His Atlantic crossings did not end with World War IT; he continued until 1946 with the Army Service Corps, bringing British war brides across the ocean to Canada.Westmount couldn't seem to do without him, however, and in 1946 W.R.Bertram, superintendent of the school board, wrote asking him {o come back to Westmount High School as its custodian.With the close of another chapter in his life, in which he had seen little of his family ex- cepl daughter Joan, who was a member of the Army Show which toured England, Canada, and the front, Mr.Green spent a well-deserved, month - long holiday al home, then taking up his duties at WHS.In the past few years, Mr.+ Green has also been custodian = of the Alouette Majorette squad.An avid football fan himself, he travels to Grey Cup games when the squad attends, and one year found himself in charge of a grunting piglet, \u201cMiss Ella Welta,\u201d which was presented by the Mayor of Edmonton to the then Miss Alouette.His daughter Joan.now living in Long Island, N.Y., now has four children; another daughter, Olive, one; and son, Bill Junior, a member of the West- mount Fire Department, three.UNICEF's goblins set for Hallowe'en If an apparently fresh kid knocks on your door this Hal- lowe'en and shakes a can in your face while mumbling something about a \u201cshellout\u201d\u2014 don\u2019t get annoyed, The youngster may nol grasp the full meaning of his mission.But if he is wearing a small black and orange UNICEF lag, he is on a work of mercy.He will be one of several hundred West End and Verdun youngsters abroad in the neighborhoods this Oct.31.The pennies, and the larger coins he collects, will go towards purchasing milk and medicine for children in the deprived areas of the world.I SAY! Families used to be considered shiftless if they lived from poyday to payday.Now they wish they could.\u2014 Vesta M.Kelly neat: re SE f ! POUR.rar eI LL Es This week in Westmount Adam Sherriff Scott top art show choice By VALENTINA RAHR THE BALLOT BOX at the exhibition of the Independent Art Association was opened last night, and the results were announced.First place went to Adam Sherriff Scott, RCA, Western avenue, for his oil painting \u201cKelp Gattierers\u201d; second place to Miss Alice Rawstron, Grosve- nor avenue for \u2018\u2018Peonies\u2019\u2019; and third place to Harold Boyes for \u201cBath Rock, Mass\u201d.The show will continue until tomorrow at the T.Eaton Co.Ltd.on the ninth floor.RT.HON.LORD SHAUGHNESSY, Metcalfe avenue, is president of the Royal Commonwealth Society.Montreal Branch.\u201cCanada now contributes 50 million dollars a year in goods and services for the countries of south and southeast Asia under the Colombo Plan\u201d stated Dr.O.E.Ault, director of economic and technical assistance branch (ET A & B) Department of Trade and Commerce, Ottawa, to a meeting of the Royal Commonwealth Society recently.\u2018 \u201cCanada\u2019s aid is given in goods and services.In the bilateral aid programs, (that is, the Colombo Plan), to the West Indies and Ghana, no money is given as such.Projects are agreed upon with a high Canadian contest.and the resultant machinery, locomotives, construction equipment, etc.are sent to the country concerned.Services are provided by experts who are needed to build, organize, construct, study or direct the project.Trainees also come to Canada to study our methods.or to take professional courses or post-graduate work at our universities.\u201cWe now have over 400 fellows and scholars in Canada under our aid program, from 23 countries.Next year we shall have a further 125 under the Commonwealth Scholarship Plan.We have 60 Canadian experts abroad.and have requests for 50 more.These experts remain in the assisted countries for a period from 3 months to 5 years.The range of need is very wide.Sharing our resources, our knowledge, our accumulation of experience with others,\u201d concluded Dr.Ault \u201cis a great national pride.\u201d Lord Shaughnessy chaired the meeting.YVES THERIAULT.Victoria avenue, versatile Canadian bilingual writer, took\u2019 part in a panel discussion with.Jean Simard, novelist, and Naim Kattan, journalist and critic.at a meeting of the Anglo-Canadian and French writers held recently at St.Sauveur des Monts.Later on during the week, poel Frank Scott.Clarke avenue, conducled- a -panel discussion on Anglo-Canadian literature.Jehanne Benoit.television and radio personality, Church Hill, had a laste of acting dur ing the past summer, and is gratefully returning to her regular programs.The.reason?Summer theatre is too difficult and wearing, and the craft of good acting cannot be picked up during one season only.In connection\u2019 with \u201cLe Bal des Oiseaux\u201d to be held tomorrow in the Ballroom of the Windsor Hotel.Mme, Ludmilla Chiriaeff is currently having a display of some of the decor in one of the windows of the T.Eaton Co.Ltd.on University street.This is to HERALDIC BADGES.CRESTS, COATS OF ARMS or any COLLEGE.SCHOOL or \u201cCLUB CREST as wall plaques by FARQUHARS OF SCOTLAND Sculplored, cast In aluminum and hand painted in registered colours.Unmounted or mounted in oak.Enquiries to \u2014 R.STEWART 4404 Western Ave., Westmount, Que.7 LL aa ET Now ! Let's see, your T.V.repairman must have made a wrong connection.JOHN WATSON LIMITED C.Grainger Tomkinson PLUMBING & HEATING CONTRACTORS DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE Service and Quotations on request 1359 GREENE AVENUE WE.5-4689 >.promofe the tour of Les Grands Ballets Canadiens, which begins Sunday, and which will continue through Eastern Canada for six weeks.Diesel shop in Glen yard in CNR plan The Canadian Pacific Railway has awarded the contract for construction of its projected new rail diesel car serving shop at Glen Yards, in Westmount, to the Robert M.Miller Construction Company Limited.of Montreal.The agreement for the $233,500 project was announced two weeks after the closing of the call for tenders, which were accepted from August 20 to September 17.The shop.a one storey.steel frame building surfaced in concrete and with a flat metal roof, will measure 260° by 47°.It will function as a maintenance centre for work on RDC \u2018Dayliners\u2019 in operation on CPR lines.Services Dayliners will receive in this shop will be the customary ones received previously.They will be inspected, Jubricated, have their transmission apparatus checked.be watered.cte.However, fueling or repairs, in this garage-type establishment will not be done.RDC stands for \u2018\u2018rail diesel cars.\u201d Foundations for the service shop will be laid this fall, and the entire structure is expected to reach completion by the spring of 1960.In a discussion of \u2018Changing policies for university entrance \u2014 Where does your child fit in?\u201d held at Westmount Junior High, Colin McDougall, registrar of McGill University had this to say: \u201cA policy of limited enrolment will have to be followed if we are to maintain our present educational level, and te prevent McGill from becoming an unmanageable colossus.\u2019 Forecasts predict that by due to the \u2018\u2019baby boom\u201d of the forties.McGill student capacity should be at least 14,000.Not more than 9,500 or 10,000 students can be handled if we are to Culfill 1965.COLIN M.McDOUGALL McGill's future.À process of selection will have to be installed,\u201d he slated.Although the process of selection is still in the hypothetical stage.a process of limited enrolment will follow along these lines: 1.Transcript of school studies.to be ready by Easter or March, to be shown by applicant: 2.Recommendation from principal of the school attended; 3.Results of examinations written not later than winter or early tastes, + the ! spring, such as the American Col- The Westmount Examiner, Friday, October 23, 1969 McGill plans, SGW swamped as college enrollment soars lege Board Tests, would show the capacity of a student to meet the work requirements at McGill.To maintain its tradition, McGill would still keep open about 1,000 places for students from foreign countries, and 1,000 places for students from other provinces, he explained.No Canadian student able to meet the entrance requirements has ever been turned away from McGill, TURNED AWAY HUNDREDS Douglass Burns Clarke told the meeting that Sir George Williams College has been watching McGill ta see how they would handle the \u201chatte of the bulge.\u201d but that the emergency condition had already reached Sir George last year.\u201cWe are operating on a \u2018first come first served basis\u2019, he said, We cannot think in terms of ten years from now, or what will happen in 1965.Last September we turned away hundreds of applicants.The emergeney conditions exist now.Watching McGill, we are tempted to raise our entrance requirements also, to cut down the.number of students.\u201d Mr.Clarke (old how students | come to them for advice on what | they can do for a lifetime, what should they do.what are they fit-; ted for?\u2018No one can tell.\u201d he commented.\u201cThe most perishable of all commodities is youth.It is! unpredictable.Personality changes, | attitides change rapidly.Vidor 9-8689 5 What should a student do.what course to take, is he fit material for a college training\u201d If you cau tell us how a student will react when he first falls in love \u2014 will he brood and stop his studies?\u2014 will he become fired by ambition and work harder?then 1 can tell you what kind of a risk he is.\u201cThere ave other fuctors involve.ed.How will he veact in a family crises?finacial reverses?other emergencies; in case of his father\u2019s death: in case of a broken home.His whole general motivation counts to show what kind of a risk he will be, and not only how many marks he gained in a test\" Mr Clarke went ou to say that tor the present no changes are cot- templated for entrance require ments , \u2014 that they would rather take in more and make sure that they really got the ones who be- lung in college, than take in less, and perhaps miss out the one who should be at college.VI.9-8952 DITTRICH WATCH LABORATORY High Grade REPAIRS of all makes of watches, clocks also ANTIQUE time pieces and jewellery.Clocks called for.1010 SHERBROOKE ST.W.(Briween Peel & Metcalfe) YOUR PHOTO DEALER WHERE YOU WiLL EVENTUALLY BUY United Photographic Store Ltd.758 ST.PETER ST.MONTREAL Hamburger Beef Sausage Sliced Bacon Farmer Sausage Blood Pudding Frankfurters Save 3 \u2018cents Grade \u2018A BOLOGNA .25° BUTTER (A) LB.63Y2° EGGS uv poz 39 Grade PIERRE MEAT SHOP \"RETAIL at WHOLESALE PRICE\" 3400 ST.ANTOINE ST.(Corner Greene) T-BONE & ROUND STEAK FOWLS 2-3 lbs.Don\u2019t Miss This Buy! SLICED BACK BACON 1901 WELLINGTON ST.(Corner Madeleine) \u2018A co A The Westmount Examiner, Friday, Octeber 23, 1959 6 omg 0 Sh eer o .SL.Bid \u2018Canadians for Canadian museums\u2019 stressed as Gyde Shepherd begins curatorial studies Gyde Vanier Shepherd, 23, of 431 Mount Stephen avenue, is one of two curatorial students to begin studies at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, in co-operation with the National Gallery of (Canada.The announcement was made this week by Dr.Evan H.Turner, director of the Museum.Lack of professional Canadian staff over the years has forced museums 10 give their key posts to non-Canadtans.Grants from The Canada Council have permitted two curatorial trainees to begin studies at the Museum here.After two months, they will transfer to the Royal been active In college art circles, Director of the course is Prof.W.G.Constable, internationally- known art authority.He has been director of the National Gallery of London, the Courtaultd Institute of London, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, an advisor to the National Gallery of Canada Ontario Museum and finally., \u2019 : complete their academic year at and, in the past, the Montreal the National Gallery in Ottawa, Museum.He is also a distinguished author, Alsy studying at the Montreal Museum is Miss Marie-Louise Recently, he officially opened the Lord Beaverbrooks Gallery in Fredericton, N.B, Prof, Constable will hold seminars for the two trainees in each of the cities where they study.In addition, he will accompany them in New York to introduce them to the operation of the international art market.While here, Mr.and Miss Funke will work under Dr.Turner, Associate Director Edward Cleghorn and Miss Ruth Jackson, the Museum's registrar-cataloguer.They will also be required to undertake some academic work at McGill\u2019s Fine Arts Department.Shepherd At the Museum, the studenisyx¢3Me a virtual blueprint for the Funke, 34, of Morrisburg, Ont.Mr.Shepherd, nephew of | Governor General George P| i BUT Vanier, has studied in Canada, the United States and England, | majored in history and poli- | tical science at MeGill and | Oxford Universities, and has.Mhiede BARBER SHOP 4927 Sherbrooke West {Noar Claremont) HAIRCUTS 85° SATURDAY 95¢c | Mon.to Thurs.| 8.30 a.m.to 6.30 p.m.! Friday 8.30 am.to 8 p.m.i Saturday 8.30 a.m.to 6 p.m.§ MAY SEEM A LITTLE BIG FOR IT, IS HALLOWEEN FOR AFTER ALL \u2014 IT UNICEF / É WESTEND RESIDENTS! NOW - A CONVENIENTLY LOCATED WESIEND CAR RENTAL SERVICE.Compete in tennis playoffs will do research, cataloguing and marking, install exhibitions and assist in the selection of material for the Gullery XII exhibitions.lowing the procedures of hanging and dismantling an exhibition, Mr.Shepherd and Miss Funke were selected over four other applicants for the course.Each received a $2,000 grant as well as travelling expenses, Prof.Constable said he has been aware of the \u201cextraordinary shortage\u201d of competent Canadian museum staff since 1928, when he was asked by the trustees of the National Gallery to undertake an extensive study of art in + development of the National Gal- Ty.In 1955, he was retained to make a second survey and ,suggest how museums in Canada could be developed and expanded.Handling of treasures will be considered important, as well as fol- One of his recommendations was that Canadians be trained to run this nation's museums.The Massey Report advocated a similar policy.With Alan Jarvis, until recently director of the National Gallery, Prof, Constable took up the problem with The Canada Council.The council agreed the question was within its terms of reference.The course at present runs from Oct.1 to June 1\u2014the regular university year \u2014 but it is hoped to extend it in 1960-61 for a full 12 months.It is alse hoped that Canada Council will help the trainees in further studies in Europe.Canada.His recommendations be- oe West Indies South America {CRUISES from New York 4 Canadian Pacific WHITE EMPRESSES Jan.11.14 days Jon.18.10 days Jan.27.19 days Jan.30.12 days Feb.13.14 doys Feb.17.19 days Feb.29.14 days Mar.9.19 days Fares as low as $250.AAA ABOARD WESTMOUNT INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL SERVICE HU.8 - 3941 HU.6-4948 4935 SHERBROOKE ST.W.We Also Have a Wide Choice of Other Cruises Penelope M.Hugman, daughter of Mr.and Mrs.V.W.Hug-' man, 22 Arlington avenue, was | Jamong four Middlebury College ; Why travel all the way downtown when TAB Rent-A-Car is so conveniently located in Westmount.Choose from a selection of new models.| automatic or standard transmissions.All cars equipped with radio at no extra cost.And, remember, it costs no more to rent a car from TAB.Drop im or phone .5-1104 Jor further details WE.5-11 Lawrence \u201ccompanied by students who competed in the ; Eastern Collegiate Women's T'en- nis Championships at Bronxville, - N.Y., last weekend.| Miss Hugman, a freshman at the college, played in singles and\u2019 doubles competition at Sarah College.She was ae-! fellow students : Molly H.Dugan.Patricia J.Knox and Anne K.Thornton, all of the U.S.Each girl represents one of four undergraduate years at Middlebury.Rotarian | convention Saturday Members of Rotary Clubs in Montreal will meet in Ottawa Saturday for a lour-da, Annual District Conference of Rotary International, District 704.Present at the meet over which district governor Preston Eagleson is to preside will be Montreal Westward Rotary Club president Mel Blanchard with vice-president Aubrey Legge; Westmount Rotary Club president Frank Sharpe, and officers from Saint Laurent \u2014 Mount Royal, and Verdun Clubs.| ne N- \u201cLine.Ill send them right home\u201d Welcome words at meal-time! Usually a phone call or two among the neighbours rounds them up.How many cold meals and frayed tempers and moments of uncasiness have you been spared because your tclephone was handy ?.How many \u201cman-hunts\u201d when small ones have wandered off ?The telephone helps make a neighbourly commu- nity\u2014helps us all to live more securely, to get more things done, more easily.Yes, your telephone is a wonderfully low-cost, wonderfully efficient servant.¥ THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF CANADA (EP.me oan eam Toe san | me at Sma SEUSS aur M e Times Russian correspondent to speak on Soviet challenge Eminent Russian correspondent to the New York, Times, Mr.Harrison Salisbury, addresses the Temple Emanu-El Forum Wednesday New Look at the Soviet Challenge\u201d.A newsman of stature in the field of foreign correspondence, and author of \u201cAmerican in Russia\u201d, Mr.Salisbury\u2019s records indicate a long history of prominent news- coverage.Formerly editor of the University of Minnesota Daily, he covered the Chicago gang wars for the United Press during Prohibition, and the Income Tax Evasion trial of Al Capone.During World War II was London manager of the United Press, and covered North Africa and the Big Four meetings.He accompanied Eric Johnson.president of the U.S.Chamber of Commerce, through Russia in 1944, and in 1945 was foreign 7th piano clinic speakers\u2019 list evening at 8.30 p.m.on \u201cA news editor for United Press, joining the New York Times as Moscow correspondent in 1949.In Russia for 5 years, he has covered the Soviet Union extensively, visiting the Ukraine, Leningrad, Stalingrad.In 1953 he covered Soviet Central Asia \u2014 the.first time an American correspon | dent visited this area.In 1957 he made a prolonged tour of Soviet satellites, including Yugoslavia, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Rumania, Poland, Bulgaria and Albania.This year, Mr.Salisbury spent four months revisiting the Soviet Union, including a long visit to Mongolia, and was one of the newsmen to accompany Vice President Nixon to the Soviet Union.Lately he represented the New York Times on Khruschev's American (our.Mrs.Adelaide Hoodles, who MR.MONROE ABBEY, 3519 Clarke avenue, Montreal, chairman of the National Bicentenary of Canadian Jewry, will present the proclamation of faith and thanksgiving to Mayor Sarto Fournier at Montreal City Hall, Wednesday at 10 a.m.| founded the Women's Institute, at Stoney Creek, Ontario, in 1897.also introduced the teaching of domestic science in Canadian schools and was one of the founders of the National Council of Women.\u2014Quick Canadian Facts The Westmount Examiner, Friday, October 28, 1989 7 McGill plans welcome for 50,000 McGill students are planning to welcome 50,000 citizens of all ages {{to the campus for the third Open House in the university's history, on Oct.23 and 24.Plans for the mammoth event were announced by R.Jamie Plant, law 3, Chairman of the Open House Committee which has the active cooperation of professors and researchers.In issuing a welcome to the publie, the student Chairman stated that \u201cwe want to show citizens, and particularly the young, the facilities McGill has | to offer in education and research, and how the university i is adjusting to the needs of : modern society.| \u201cWe, the members of the Open , House Committee, believe that the advantages of higher educa- ; tion will be graphically displayed | in the Open House exhibits and, as well, ways and means of finan- | cing a college career will be detailed through an explanation of « visitors the university's bursary-loan system.\u201cStudent guides will tell Me- Gill's story In both English and French.On the opening afternoon special arrangements are being made to greet high school students.Members of the faculty will be on hand to explain the work of the various departments and divisions, and discuss career opportunities.\u201d Don\u2019t Be Taken By The \u201cVitamin Racket\u201d How many extra vitamine do vou reully need a day?Can a food supplement make men more virile, women more receptive?November Reader's Digest answers many questions about vitamins and gives you a chart to use in checking the brand of vilamins you buy! (iet your November Reader's Digest today: 36 articles of lasting interest.is announced Opening its seventh consecutive season on Tuesday, November 17, \u201cThe Piano Clinic\u201d will again be | held in Victoria Hall, Westmount.! Frances Goliman.founder-chair- : man of the series has announced | the guest speaker for the 23rd session of the popular series : Ernest Hammond, known as \u201cMr.Music\u201d from coast to coast | through his educational courses, across the continent (from Halifax to Vancouver) for RCA Victor which he organized during 25 years with the well known record firm.A classical singer, who studied for the concert stage prior to his association with RCA Vie- tor.he knows the musie \u2018business from every angle; Samuel Schecter, insurance broker, impressario and amateur musician, who recently returned from a tour of Russia with the noted photographer, Gaby, wrote a series of articles on culture in the USSR where Mr.Schecter and Gaby were both accepted and entertained by the greatest artists of Russia.Henry F.Whiston, CBC Producer of \u201cJazz At Its Best\u2019 who has built up a wide following in this field for his weekly broadcasts which are highly respected in the United States and who is considered one of Canada's top authorities on jazz music, Among the many who have participated and spoken at \u2018\u201cThe Piano Clinic\u201d are the following well-known people : Dr.Pauline Donalda, Eugene Kash, Eric Me- Lean, M.Mulet-Descamps, former Consul General of Guatemala in Montreal, Oswald Michaud, Pat Pearce, Gifford Mitchell, Frederick McLearon, Inglis Willis, Carl Little, George Little, Thomas Archer, Montague Willis, Alexander Brott, Jacob Siskind, Gord Sinclair, Saul Hayes, A.J.Me- Murray, Ethel Tiffin, J, K, Snyder, Mary Beetles, Edward Duplantis, Violet Archer, Shirley McKyes, Morley Calvert, Mary Xenos, Archie Etienne, Lewis V.Elvin, Donald Mackie, Joseph Berljawsky, Thomas Marshall and Dean Marvin Duchow.NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR DIVORCE NOTICE is hereby given that PHYLLIS LOUISE CLEMENTS HARRIS, of the City of Montreal, in the District of Montreal, in the Province of Quebec.and presently residing in the said City of Montreal, bookkeeper, will apply to the Parliament of Canada at the next or following session thereof for a Bit of -Divorce from her husband, STANLEY CHARLES HARRIS, of the City of Montreal, in the District of Montreal, in the Province of Quebec, and presently residing in the said City of Montreal, in the Province of Quebec.clerk, on the grounds of adultery.MONTREAL, October 16th.1959.CAMPBELL, WELDON, McFADDEN, LAIDLEY & WALSH Attorneys for Petitioner 456 Craig Street West, Moutreal, Quebec.$695 First Class.See your travel agent or Italian Line, 1410 Stanley St., Montreal VI.9-2142 Eleganza .the word for Ttalian Line The continental charm of your shipboard companions .the gracious manners of your Italian hosts .spell the elegance of your Italian Line crossing.You'll delight in luxurious appointments, superb service, gourmet\u2019s cuisine, choice vintage wines.You'll play .doors on the balmy Sunny Southern Route.Ecco, sail in elegance .sail Italian Line to Europe! Choose the gallant Cristoforo Colombo or Augustus for an express voyage.Or enjoy more leisurely Cruise- Like Voyages of the Conte Biancamano, Saturnia and Vulcania calling at many extra ports.Special feature for 1959 our 40-Day Mediterranean Festival Cruise, M/v VULCANIA sailing from New York December 23, 1959 returning February 1, 1960; from $547 Cabin Class.from .relax .out- Malian Line eo rence ges ge en ave Lams TTS ee ve = a?~ - Cu te nae suse + ane us 0 0 TT memes es -.- ye + _.Le \u2014 2 .8 The Westmount Examiner, Friday, October 23, 1959 \u2018 SE ONLY THE LETTERS SHOWN IN PSACK = Oa LANTERN \u201c\u201c AND TRY TO FORA?E/GHT WORDS 70 Rr/7 THE EOLLOWING DEE/NITIONS.4, CLOSE 2, 80oL7 IA CONTEST OB SPEED RQ, MIGRATE SCLIQUE 6 FUEL 7, Body OF WATER 8 A77ENT/ON PX DD IL PTL THO ® AIO LS CNEL FOX E VIO7 2 XWVINUT SNOUNT er rt a a HALLOHEE* SIJADNIS D YOUR MANDS /N FRONT OF À LIGHT, INTHE POSITIONS NOWN .THEY Will CAST LARGE SHADOW PICTURES UPON TE WALL.THEN TRY YOUR MAND AT CREATING SONUE OX Youve own.24 HALLOWE EN PICTURE .62, Te .8 (Conne cr THE DOTS , | aL © 64e 66 12 * 14 COUNTING BY TWO S ° 40 38 34 .36 2 e 46 rT >° 20 .sme \u201842 ° 8 - 4 48, 44 70 .19 CY se Pres Cee HI, KIDS Y SEA LARGE PAPER BAG THAT Will EIT OVER YOUR HEAD 70 MAKE TANS MASK, RAW IN THE FACE AND CUT OUT THE HOLES 70 FIT YouR Ey ES, ALSO CUT OUT AND BQSTE ON THE EARS.LASH THE BAG N1TH YOUR SC/SSORS TO MAKE THE BEARD.A STEP BY STEP DRAWING LESSON FOR LITTLE ARTISTS STE A J arr POE ACROSS L A TREE 5, A DI/ISEM BODIED SPIRIT 6.THE (UPPER ATMOSPNERE DOWN 2 HUMOROUS GHOST JF, STAGE OF L/FE ROVE OF A TRIBE OF IND/ANS TRAME AININY FACE MASKE / , \u2018BH 25H E MOOFS Z INMOE , ANSP 2 Sows EG HSV SSX, coms\u201d OTHER TO THE NEXT CORNER Ne VIRGIL by Len Kleis WATCH VIRGIL TUT ON SOME SPEED Now DCE MF, A @ 1s fr - % ve © 15 tn .: C y CA \u2014 A @; pe ae Book desk in children\u2019s library ke Electric dumb-waiter for books Westmount Library's chief librarian, Miss Kathleen Jenkins, looks pleased with this innovation at the library, which opens to the public Monday.The gadget will save librarians many footsteps as it conveys books from one level to another.\u2014Tedd Church Photo J.C.A.Laferriere: Ability of society to forgive plays big role in prisoner rehabilitation A jail can be either a human warehouse or a rehabilitation centre, and the architectural aspect of prison has very little to do with the heart of the problem, according to J.C.A.Laferriere, Deputy Director, Federal Training centre, St.Vincent de Paul.Speaking to members of West- mount Rotary at the club\u2019s weekly luncheon meeting Wednesday, Mr.Leferriere explained that in a human warehouse, any change of attitude from bad to good on the part of the inmate is purely incidental.Being sentenced, he said, does not create the same impression on every individual.Age, family situation and relationship, first or repeated offence, nature and circumstances of the offence \u2014 all these will be influential factors.For the \u2018\u2018old fish,\u201d he continued, imprisonment is but the consequence of a calculated risk; for the young first offender, being sent to prison often causes feelings of fear.sorrow, despair and in some cases sincere remorse.Borrowing a phrase from the former warden of Wisconsin State Prison, John C.Burke, Mr.Lafer- rier said: \u201cWhat counts in a prison is \u2018\u2018a strong and practical educational system for the rebuilding of men.\u201d In the old order of things, he explained prison schools and educational systems were merely tolerated.Today they are, and must be.insisted upon.No prison and no reformatory can claim to offer protection to the public unless it conducts within its wall a strong and practical educational system for the rebuilding of men.Giving him human and decent treatment is one step towards changing his interior dispositions but .if, on the other hand, from the moment of his first offence the young inmate is left to fect that he is rejected by society it will be extremely difficult for him to adopt a wholesome attitude towards this society, he said.Through the Citizens\u2019 Participation plan, Mr.Laferrier continued, which is the complement to our local treatment program, citizens on the outside are called upon to do exactly what good parents do when their children have done wrong.The inmate choir which your Club has been sponsoring so generously for the past three years, provides our inmate population with living examples of good citizens.This, in fact, is more eloquent than any verbal teaching.It is a type of training that will last for life.\u2014 long but not too high \u2014Tedd Church Photo The Westmount Examiner, Fridey, October 23, 1959 Sunlit corner for Young browsers -\u2014Tedd Church Photo Westmount Public Library re-opens Monday: expansion will accommodate 100,000 books Westmount Public Library staff are preparing for an influx .of .eager viewers .and hungry .book-borrowers when the library re-opens its doors to the public Monday.It is a very different library that visitors will sce \u2014 more room for browsing, cheerful terra-cotta and pale oyster decor, re-ar- rangement of books and librarians\u2019 desks.Biggest feature is the completely new children's library.Total expansion is aimed at eventualy accommodating 100,- 000 books.The summer and fall months during which the library was holiday, states Miss Kathleen Jenkins, chief librarian.Stafi members had to pack every book in the library into some 1500 cartons, which were stacked to the roof of the reference department.16 was a standing joke among librarians that most of the cartons bore the labels of two well-known Montreal breweries, who had donated them.This work fell to Miss Jenkins and her eight staff members: children's librarian Miss Catherine Fraser, Miss Margaret Good.Miss M.Martna, Miss Muricl Brown, Mrs.Margaret Rollit, Mrs.and Mrs.Mary Nicholls, Ten thousand feet of steel shelve ing in the newly located book- stacks provide tor expansion, and re-arrangement of librarians desks will facilitate greater supervision In the stacks and in the reference department, Miss Jen- kines states.\u201cIt\u2019s amazing how well the old building has fitted into re- planning, * she added.\u201cal though there was a greut deal of renovation work there that we couldn't forsee, resulting in The old children\u2019s library has been converted into offices and workrooms for the staff.closed for renovations was no Nora Bryant, Mrs.Helen Clayton.inevitable delay.\u201d \u2014\u2014_\u2014_# \"TIME and TIDE WAIT FOR NO MAN I\u201d .and WINTER WONT WAIT FOR YOU ! Ts TIME To THINK ABOUT YOUR AIR CONDITIONER We now offer you complete maintenance which includes these important points: £500 SERS cas, sf Si WAY All these included in one year contract ë Yigg res era | +4 COMPLETE WEATHERPROOF COVER FOR WINTER 4 COMPLETE INSPECTION OF SYSTEM FOR ONLY % PROYECTIVE WAX TWICE YEARLY % TIGHTENING OF LOOSE FRAME PARTS k v PAINTING OF SYSTEM 5] 2-00 plus other features to keep your unit in top operating condition.+ ss et hen ng jee \u201c ÿ AIR COOL MAINTENANCE 210 VILLENEUVE V | 4-91 43 24-HOUR PHONE SERVICE 1 0 The Westmount Exominer, Friday, October 23, 1959 CALVARY UNITED CHURCH Dorchester St.West at Greene Ave, Westmount Rev, Charles KR.Plasketl, Minister Mins Valerie J.Lewin, Assintant \u201cTHE CHURCH IN JAPAN\" 11 00 un Speaker: MISS GWEN SU\u2018TTIE 70 pm \"THE INFLUENCE OF CHARACTER\" iY 00 wan.The Church School in ali departiments Alice Smiley, A.Mus.McGill), Organist { DOMINION-DOUGLAS Westmount Blvd.and Lansdowne Ave.Ministers: Rev.KR.Dousiux Smith, B.A, B.D.D.D Hev, Keith HH.Eddy.M.A., B.D 10:00 am.Intermediole & Senior School 11:00 am.Crib Corner, Nursery.Kin dergarten, Primary & Junior Departinents 11°00 am.Dr Douslas Smith \u201cYou Are There 7:00 pm.Rev.Keith Eddy Neglecting Our Best Seller\u201d 8:00 pan.Young People\u2019s Union Orgunist and Cholrmaster Mr.John Robb, Mus Bac.ST.ANDREW'S CHURCH WESTMOUNT 101 Cote St.Antoine Rd., near Argyle ave.Li Ministers: Rev.D.M, Grant.BA, B.D, 8:00 an Kev.D.C Hearfuss.B.A, B.D.9:30 a.rn.Sunday, October 25th 9:45 am.Noam Dr Giant \u201cTaking Out 11:00 am.Faith Seriously\u201d T0 pin Dr Grant \u201cSongsters of .The Shadow\u201d 13 11:00 am: Church School - Crib Corner, Kindergarten, 7.30 pon.Beginners, Primary & Juniors 10:00 am.Intermediates and Seniors ST.8.4% pan.Teachers\u2019 Training Program 7:00 a,m.Organist and Choir Director Mr.Erie J.Adams, B.Mus., AR.CM.10:00 am.UNITED WESTMOUNT PARK- EMMANUEL CHURCH Cor.11:00 30 5:00 8:10 11:00 Lansdowne & Western Avenues Director of Music: Hom.Minister REV.CALLUM THOMPSON, C.D.B.A, B.D.ic: Mr.Wayne Riddell \u201cPROTESTANTISM AND THE MODERN WORLD\u201d Broadcast over Station CBM) put.p.man.wD Broadcast Vesper Service over stutlon CJAD.Medita- tlon \u201cWhen Ye Pray\u2019 Teeners Fellowship Young Adult Forum Church Nursery 7°30 pan: THE CHRISTIAN IN THE CRO .School and Infant ANGLICAN ST.MATTHIAS CHURCH Westmount Cote St.Antoine Road and Church Hill Rev.K.B.Keefe, Rector 22nd Sunday after Trinity 8:00 a.m.Holy Communion 9:30 aon.Holy Communion Preacher: The Rector 10:00 a.m.Post- Confirmation Class 11:00 am.Matting Preacher: The Rector 11:00 aan.Nursery, Kindergarten and Sunday School 7:30 p.m.Evensong Preacher: The Rector WEDNESDAY 11:00 a.m.Holy Communion Organist and Cholrmaster: Arnold Bellis ANGLICAN Rev.Canon FL.TRINITY MEMORIAL CHURCH 5220 Sherbrooke Street West The Venerable R.Kenneth Naylor, 0D.D.Rector Whitley, Hon Assistant M.A.Rev Allen Goodinss, B.D, Assistant A.R.C.A.(London) C.V Frayn, Organist and Choirmaster SIMON and ST, JUDE, 22nd Sunday after Trinity Holy Communion Grade VII, Confirmation and Bibie Class Main Sunday School Mallins Preacher: The Rector Valaptine Nursery, Kindergarten, Primary Department Evensong.Preacher: The Reclor WEDNESDAY A.&M.Holy Communion THURSDAY Holy Communion WESTMOUNT BAPTIST Mrriher Baptist World Alliance Sherbrooke Street West at Roslyn Avenue Nearest Downtown Baptist Church Minister: Minister Director 11:00 A.M.7:30 P.M.REV.EDGAR J.BAILEY, M.A., B.Th.Emeritus: Rev.J.A.Johnston, B.A.D.D.of Music: Galt MacDermot, B.A., B.Mus.\u201cCHRIST AND BUILDINGS.\u201d \u201cTHE MORAL ORDER.\u201d Church School \u2014 11 a.m.Midweek Service \u2014~ Wednesday - 8 p.m.UNITED Church of The Advent Corner of Wood and Western, Westmount Rev.Alexander Mellor, Rector Honorary Assistant Rev.Canon S.B.Lindsay 22nd Sunday after Trinty October 25th 8:00 a.m.Holy Eucharist 9:45 a.m.Sunday Schocl, 10:15 a.m.Maltins (said) 11:00 a.m.SOLEMN EUCHARIST 4:30 p.m.Holy Baptism 7:00 pn.Evensong and Address.Holy Eucharist daily at 7:00 a.m.except Wednesday at 9:30 am, Annual Parish Bazaar \u2014 November 7th | CHRISTIAN SCIENCE First Chureh of Christ, Scientist, Westmount 390 Lansdowne Avenue at Sherbrooke Street BRANCH OF THE MOTHER CHURCH, THE FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, IN BOSTON, MASS.\u201c11:00 a.m.11:00 AM.7:30 P.M.9:00 P.M.ST.JAMES UNITED CHURCH 463 St.Catherine Street, West Convenient to Hotels REVEREND NORMAN RAWSON, Minister Gifford Mitchell, B.A., B.Mus., Organist & Choirmaster \u201cTHIS WONDERFUL LIFE\u201d Reverend William Morris, B.A., preaching The Members of the Golden Age Group will observe their Second Anniversary REVEREND NORMAN RAWSON WILL CONDUCT THE MORNING SERVICE \u201cJEZEBEL, STAY AWAY FROM MY DOOR!!!\u201d Rev.John Hoffman, B.A., B.D, preaching Fellowship Hours Sunday, October 25th 11:00 a.m.Sunday School Church Service.Lesson-Sermon: Subject: \u2014 \u201cProbation After Death\u201d Golden Text: Psalms 37:27.Depart from evil, and do good; and dwell for evermore.EVERY WEDNESDAY 8:15 p.m.Testimony Meeting READING ROOM In the Church Edifice Open to the public Tuesday.Thursday and Friday.2 to 4 pan Wednesdays, 6.30 to 8 p.m.RADIO AND TV PROGRAMS \u201cHow Christian Science Heals,\u201d CXAD, : Dial 800.every Sunday morning at 9:45.Channel 5 every Saturday Channel 3 and 8 every Sunday.(See TV listings for program times) UNITARIAN CHURCH OF THE MESSIAH UNITARIAN Sherbrooke St.at Simpson Sunday.October 25th SUBJECT: \u201cOn Losers, Weepers, Finders and Keepers\u201d Speaker: The Rev.Robert L.Cope Professor St.Lawrence University Canton, N.Y.SYNAGOGUE TEMPLE EMANU-EL 4100 Sherbrooke Street West Westmount, Montreal Dr.Harry J.Stern, Rabbi Otto O.Staeren Cantor; F.L.MeLearon, Organist and Choir Master: Miles Wisenthal.M.A, Educational Assistant FEAST OF CONCLUSION AND CONSECRATION SERVICE Saturday Morning, October 10:30 o\u2018clock.Rabbi Dr.Harry J.Stern will officiate.At this service a group of boys und girls entering the Rellgious School for the first time will be consecrated and presented with minlature Seler Torahs.A reception in honor of the consecrants will follow the worship under the auspices of the Home and School Association.MR.WALTER O'HEARN OPENS FIFTEENTH SEASON BOOK LOVERS Wednesday Afternoon, October 28th, 2.45 o'clock in the Temple Sanctuary.Walter O'Hearn will review **The Walch That Ends The Night\u201d by Dr.Hugh MacLennan.RELIGIOUS SCHOOL Regular classes Saturday Mornings at 9:30 o'clock; High School, Confirmation and Post-Graduate classes: Sunday Morning, the Junior School, Pre-Kin- dergarten at 9.30 o'clock: Daily Hebrew School, Monday thru Thursday afternoons at 4 o'clock.\u201cA NEW LOOK AT THE SOVIET CHALLENGE\" Mr, Harrison Salisbury, eminent Correspondent for the New York Times.speaks at the Temple Emanu-E) Brotherhood Forum.Wednesday evening, October 28th at 8.30 o'clock in the Temple Sanctuary.The meeling Is open 10 the public.Cards of admission may be obtained through the Temple office.TEMPLE YOUTH SOCIETY Youth Conclavette takes place the weekend of October 20th - November 1st with Youth Groups from Boston, West Hartford, Malden, in attendance, with Temple Emanu-El Youth Group as host.SCHOOL FOR ADULTS The 32nd year of the School for Adults will open on November 9th with registration and regular classes.Members a.+ a au és + .AL are invited to participate in (his eul- tural program.co.| sus ho sus sao 24th at [ wid By R.Kenneth Naylor, Bulbs and buildings The Venerable Rector, Trinity Memorial Church D.D., The city will be a lovelier place next Spring because the Guides lit upon the idea of planting Golden Tulips to mark their Golden Jubilee; but the tulips will be no more interesting to see than were the Guides in thelr uniforms getting the ground ready for the bulbs on the third Saturday in October.1 did not realize that twenty girls could do so good a piece of digging even with the help of a lone Ranger.There are all kinds of ways in which the Guide Association could have marked its half-century, and some of them might have left more permanent effects; but none could exemplify the ideals of Guiding better than the planting of bulbs, which in six months are to spring into Golden Tulips.They will be a reminder of the Guide Association to their fellow-citizens; they will also be a reminder to the Guides themselves that they have used their own muscles and their own funds for the beautifying of their own City.Not a cent will come back in return.It is self-sac- rifice for the sake ol sheer beauty.If you will it is just plain extravagance.But someone has said that extravagance is a part of religion.Compare this with the attitude of the Councillors and real estate operators who would take the most precious asset of our city, as far as beauty is concerned, and cover it with steel and bricks and mortar simply to enrich Lhe operators.No one pretends that it will beautify the city.There is no hint the city will be better off.There will mere- iy be more people crowded between Cole des Neiges and Peel street.Most people would say that there are too many already.The best that any Councillor has been able to say is that the defenders of the Mountain are making a mountain out a mole-hill.If it were possible to do such a thing many cities\u2014who envy Montreal-\u2014\u2014would be glad to work such magic.A at- ural park like Mount Royal is a thing to envy.Naturally the real estate operators want to go through with their scheme.They are not concerned in the city as it will be a century from now.They are concerned in a lovely situation for so many apartments at so much per month, with a total net revenue of so much.No one can blame them.Their business it to make money.But when it comes to a showdown I prefer Girl Guides who create beauty with no return to builders who ruin beauty even at a profit.Saturday Morning, at 10.30 a group of over 50 boys and girls entering the Temple-Emanu-El religious school, kindergarten and primary departments will participate in the procession of Scrolls led by confirmants and nigh school graduates of last year, Dr.Stern will present the member of the consecration class with miniature Sefer Torahs.A reception in honor of the con- secrants will be held in the social auditorium.Temple Emanu-El Youth Group will be hests to the following Youth Groups from New England: Beth Israel Youth, Hartford, Conn, Temple Sinai Youth, Boston; and Tifereth Isralel Youth, Malden, Mass., on the week-end of October 30- November 1, A program of religious, educational and social activities will be followed.A special youth service will take place Friday evening, October 30 at 8.15 p.m.in the Temple Sanctuary following a Kid- dush reception.Harrison Salisbury, eminent Temple Emanu-El youngsters to hold procession of scrolls Russian correspondent of the New York Times opens Temple Brotherhood*season with an \u2018ag: -dress Wednesday evening at 8.30% p.m.in the new Temple Sane- tuary.Admission per person .\u2014 $1.50.Ladies invited.The meeting is open to the community.Admission tickets may be obtained through the Temple office, WE.7-3575 or through the following co - chairmen Peter Zinman, RE.7-0756 or Lou Pont, HU.8-5949.We acknowledge with gratitude the donation of four scrolls of the Law given to us by.the following of our Temple Board of Trustees Messrs .Hyman Grover, George Hollinger, Sigmund Beckow, Wiilliam Morris, Temple school holds regular clasees Saturday mornings at 9.30 a.m., high school, confirmation and post graduate departments; Sunday mornings at 9.3¢ o'clock, Pre- Kindergarten, Kindergarten and Junior School, Daily Hebrew classes Monday through Thursday afternoons commencing at 4 p.m.SYNAGOGUE PRESBYTERIAN SHAAR HASHOMAYIM 450 Kensington Avenue, Westmount, Que.Rabbi Wilfred Shuchat Hazrzan Nathan Mendelson Rev.J J.Promm CONCLUDING FESTIVAL SERVICES Friday, October \u201c3rd \u2014 HOSHANO RABBO.Shachris at 6:45 a.m.: Candle Lighting at 5:35 p.m.: Mincho-Kabbola Shabbos V'Yom Tov at 5:45 p.m.SHEMINI ATZERES The Sabbath, October 24th, Shachris at 8:30 a.m.: Memorial Services at 10:20 a.m.; Sermon at 10:45 a.m.; Mincho at 5:45 p.m.; Maariv and Hakofos at 6:30 p.m.; Candle Lighting at 6:40 p.m.SIMCHAS TORAH Sunday, October 5th, Shachris at 8:30 a.m.: Hakofos and Scriptural Readings at 10:00 a.m.: Mincho at 5:55 p.m; Maariv at 6:25 p.m, BAR MITZOVOH Michael H.Vosko, son of Mr.and Mrs.Irwin Lyon Vosko, will Simchas Torah morning be called to the Reading of the Torah in celebration of his Bar Mitzvah.WEEKDAY SERVICES Shachris at 7:30 a.m.Mincho-Maariv at 5:55 p.m.; Next Friday vening, October 40th, Candle Lighting at 5:25 p.m; Mincho-Kabbolas Shabbos at 5:35 p.m.SCHOOL NOTES Parents and children are reminded that there will be no school sessions on Sunday.October \u2018ith in honor of the Succos Festival, Regular sessions in our Foundation School and Hebrew-Religious School resume on Monday, October 26th, \u2018 san 44 28 aren) P WHTMOUNT ood ierona AVES.@ Rev.J.D.Wilkie, B.A., Minister Donald S.Moore, B.A., Student Assistant Sunday, October 25th 11:00 am.Mr.Wilkie: \u201cNo Other Gods\" Services 11:15 a.m.Church School DORIS KILLAM A.R.T.C., LL.Mus.(McGil}) Organist and Choir Director The 124 bus stops at the door MELVILLE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Westmount, P.Q.The Rev.Chas.C.Cochrane, B.A., B.D., Minister Sunday, October 25th 10:00 a.m.Bible Class 10:00 a.m.Senior Study Group 11:00 a.m.Church School 11:00 a.m.\"Public Worship\u201d Lester A.Woodin Organist and Choirmaster Visitors \u2018Are Cordially Welcome Cheer ia : ve nee otumann Bb naze re +\u2014- race aan s .October 23, 1959 * 3 The Westmouat Examiner, Friday 11 +++ Attend the Chueh of Ym Hail + + + Christia \u201cThe Christian religion is the only one which offers new and real vision to the peoples of Asia,\u201d stated Rev.Sun Chool Chough of Korea at a press conference prior to his appearance al Wesley United Church Friday evening.Mr.Chough is one of a four- man mission team which arrived in Montreal Friday to begin a two- month stay in Canada, under the auspices of the United Church of Canada, telling of the work which they are doing in their homelands.All four were at Wesley Church.Mr.Chough's church in Seoul, Korea.is connected with the United Church, and was founded in 1898.Jn a land which has been the battleground of many wars and invasions, including the Japanese and Communist Chinese influxes, he spends a great deal of his time among refugees.Koreans traditionally have followed the old religions of Shamanism and Buddhism, or subscribed to the ethical code of Confucius.Both the traditional religions have lost their vigor and become decayed, Mr.Chough feels, and Christianity.which co-incides with the coming of Western culture, is the only replacement which has proved acceptable.He believes that Christianity is now one of the strongest influences in Asia.EASIEST CONVERTS Also in Asia.Rev.Timothy Tamx of Hong-Kong faces the problem of refugees from Communist China, the bulk of which are non- Christians.In his missionary role, he finds the easiest converts among those who subscribe to moral or ethiral codes, such as basic Confucianism, \u201cChristianity offers a way of life, a belief and hope in God where before none existed for these people,\u201d he says.Mr.Tam is a second-generation Christian, the son of a minister.His church is a member of the inter-denominational China Union of Churches.Asked whether the many schisms and sects of Christianity confuse or bewilder converts, Mr.Tam stated that these are explained as due to the far-flung nature of the Christian Church.He states that in teaching Christianity in China.he attempts to interpret it within an Oriental framework.SEARCH FOR TRUTH Rev.Roy Nechall, who works among many Hindus and Moslems of the East Indian population of Trinidad, describes his work as \u2018a search for truth\u201d, \u201cIn approaching these people, the Christian worker must start at their religious level, not his, and lead them to the fuller revelation,\u201d he stated.\u201cWhat these people believe in is not bad; it is merely.in our belief, and incomplete revelation of God as compared with Christianity.\u201d \u2018\u201cEducated Hindus, for example, believe in one God, but many manifestations of that one God.It is very difficult of the uneducated Hindu to distinguish betwcen the God and the manifestation, and so they come to worship the manifestation,\u201d he added.\u201c\u2018Our work in Trinidad is two-fold: the n- going work of the church among Christians, and the work among non-Christians.\u201d The United Church of Canada has had a great impact in Trinidad, he stated.There has always been a strong connection between Canada and Trinidad in trade and industry, but the Canadians who came representing the church stayed.\u201cSome of our best candidates for the ministry are converts,\u201d he said.\u201cWe have not been gaining new members en masse \u2014 perhaps 100 a year \u2014 but most of our evangelistic work is done by these people, by ordinary members in daily contact with the non-Chris- tian population, who impart the | | | 1 | anniversary.nity offers new vision of Asia oral tradition and way of life.\u201d Out of 410 parochial schools on the island of Trinidad, 356 are carried on by the Presbyterian Church of Trinidad, which is directly connected with the United Church of Canada.NOTED MUSICIAN Senor Henrique Sukuakueche of Angola, Portugese West Africa, 1s a preacher of note, and a fine musician whose organ performances and choral work are famous in his home land.Mrs.Lovell Baker and her husband.missionaries of Dominion- Douglas United Church, visited Angola last year and were treated to a \u2018singing welcome\u201d by Sr.Sukuakueche and his Currie Institute Choir, a popular form of welcoming honored guests in that country.\u201cIt was as much of a thrill as attending the Milan Opera.\u2019 stated Mrs.Lovell, who was present at the press conference.Sr.Sukuakueche was unwilling to enlarge o nhis musical achievements, but disclosed that he was working towards ordainments as a minister, and might extend his Lwo-month stay in Canada to study further.He places a high value on education, and admitted that he had recently sold his organ to! finance the university tuition of his .LWO sons.: the Christian clubs and organizations, discussing their work in Asia, Africa, and Trinidad.Left to right : Rev.Sun Chool Chough of Korea: Rev.Roy Neehal of Trinidad: Senor Menrique W.Sukuna- kueche of Angola; and Rev, Timothy Tam of Hong Kong, -Tedd Church Photo FACES FROM OTHER LANDS : A four man mission team drawn from far-flung parts of the globe arrived in Montreal Friday.under the auspices of the United Church of Canada, to begin a (two-month tour of Canada, during which they will give public lectures, speak to Westmount Baptist God's constancy is sermon theme Rev.E.J.Bailey of West- mount Baptist Church will discuss \u201cChrist and Buildings\u201d Sunday morning at the regular service, The theme of the sermon deals with the importance of building to man in this age of great cities, constantly changing, related to Christ\u2019s statement that change and decay do not affect God.On one occasion He replied to a request lo view the wonderful building of the temple of Jerusalem, saying that the day would come when not one stone should be left upon another, a prophecy that was subsequently fulfilled.Golden Age anniversary At 11 a.m, Sunday The Golden Age Group, at St.James United Church, 463 St.Catherine street west, will observe their second Reverend Norman Rawson will be in charge of the service.Reverend William Morris will preach the sermon and has taken for his topic, \u2018\u201cThis Wonderful Life\u201d.Your home will look like a new place with trees and shrubs planted about if.Our experts in landscaping will help you plan your grounds.Herbaceous Planting \u2014 Hedges \u2014 Evergreens \u2014 Shrubbery Shade Trees \u2014 Bedding Plants \u2014 Perennials \u2014 Turf Garden Soil Fill \u2014 Fertilizer \u2014 Peat Moss \u2014 Grass Seed \u2014 Colored Cement Flagstone for Walks & Terraces - 18\" x 18\", 2\" thickness \u2014 Garden Supplies \u2014 Tools \u2014 Etc.LARGE VARIETY OF IMPORTED DUTCH BULBS VISIT OUR NEW GARDEN CENTRE BULLDOZER AND LOADER RENTAL JACK VINCELLI LANDSCAPE CONTRACTOR LTD.Office & Nursery 5803 Westminster Ave.HU.8-5301 HU.8-5279 em ret ENROUTE TO VANCOUVER e Your choice of routes\u2014one way vin Mexico; one way across Canada e Luxurious International service all the way See your Travel Agenl, Rail Agen! or ony Conadion Pacific office, Canadian Pacific AIRLINES international Aviation Bldg., phone UN.1-936] a 60 MORE 27 DAY SPECIAL FARR oxpires November 30, 1959 + toc bu.\" wil ode $ .\u2026 Consult Malcolm Gregory \u201cHe won't promise you a trip through the skios on a Magic THE EXAMINER Carpel, but he will CARPET MAGIC mo Home!\" GREGORY'S ASL ELE Aaa a mm mm ea a ES The Women's Association of St.Andrew's Church Westmount will hold its meeting on Tuesday at 2 p.m, in Hutchison Hall.Tea hostesses will be Mrs.W.D.Robb and the ladies of group 2.The Red Cross group will meet at 10 a.m, Mr.Leo M.MacGillivray, assistant city editor «\u201d the Gazette and public relations officer for Place Des Arts will the guest speaker at the annual tea and reception of the Business Women's Unit of the Catholic Women's League being held on Sunday, October 25, at 3 p.m.at the Windsor Hotel.The newly-formed Montreal Branch of the Kingston General Hospital Alumni will hold a coffee parly on Monday evening, November 2, for all KGH graduates.For further information contact Miss R.Rowan at OX.5-5069 or OX.5-5592.The Venture Club of Montreal held a business meeting at the home of Mrs.Barbara Jones, 3400 Queen Mary Road on Tuesday.The first Town and Gown tea of the season will follow a general meeting of the Women Associates of McGill on Tuesday, October 27, at three oclock in the Faculty Club, 3450 McTavish street.Guests will be received by Mrs.R.E.Powell, patroness and Mrs.J.Gilbert Turner, president.Presiding at the tea table will be bring your ORIENTAL RUG tO.415) M.Cathorine Se.W.Westmount WE.2-4277 Evenings RE.8-4605 VEY VEY McRae, Mrs.David Bates, Mrs.J.S.Polson, Mrs.L.T, Rhea and Mrs.T.F.Morris.Mrs.H.H.Jasper, chairman of the Entertainment Committee will be assisted by Mrs.R.G.B.Gilbert, and Mrs.V, W.G.Wilson.Honoring the National Bicentenary of Canadian Jewry, which is being sponsored by the Canadian Jewish Congress, there will be historical and cultural displays in leading store windows beginning October 26.The chairman, Mr.Lawrence M.Lande is being assisted by Mrs.M.E.Coshof, Mrs.H.J.Erdrich, Madame Pauline Donalda, Mrs.Ben Rutenberg, Mrs.H.D.Cheifetz, Mrs.H.Sing- erman, Mrs.Emanuel Miller, Miss Annette R.Wolff, Miss Alma Hart, Mr.Sidney S.Shulemson, Mr.David Rome, Mr.Wm.P.Wolfe and Mr.H.Gorfinkel.Mrs.Samuel Bronfman, OBE, is the Honorary Patroness of the exhibition of paintings and sculpture by Canadian Jewish artists which will be opened at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts on Thursday, October 29, al 5 p.m, by the Hon.Ellen Fairclough, marking the National Bicentenary of Canadian Jewry, Mrs.Jacob Elkin will be in charge of the reception, assisted by Mrs.H.Mayero- vitch, Mrs.Philip Joseph, Mrs.Louis M.Dorsey, Mrs.Saul Hayes, Mrs.Joseph H.Fine, Mrs.Lavy M.Becker, Mrs.Monroe Abbey, Mrs.Lawrence M.Lande, Mrs.Harold Lande, Mrs.Edward Barkoff, Mrs.F.Victor Elkin, Mrs.Michael WOMENS CAL MONTREAL, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1959 MR.AND MRS.JOSEPH URNER GOLDS- McKENNA OF COTE DES NEIGES ford and of the late Mr.Florists RE.8-1124 JE JR em mm IE IE NA EE IE ewe se we WN TS \u2014Arnott & Rogers Photo Bamford Sr., of Mrs.G.W.Bourke, Mrs.A.K.Garber, Mrs.H.M.Schneider,| BOROUGH, photographed following their wed- Westmount, and Mr.Goldsborough is the som Hugessen and Mrs.W.Taylor- Mrs.S.Godine, Miss Muriel ding recently in St.James United Church.Mrs.of Mrs.Joseph Charles Goldsborough and of Bailey.Joseph, Miss Alma Hart aud| Goldshorough was formerly Miss Olive Gwendo- the late Mr.Goldsborough of Baltimore, Mary- Hostesses are: Mrs.Joseph Mrs.Maxwell Cohen.lyn Bamford, daughter of Mrs.Thomas Bam- land.Cohen, Mrs.E.A.MacNaughton, Mrs.GG.C.McMillan, Mrs.D.L.(Continued om page 15) 1383 Greene Ave.FURS INC.Your Handy Furrier ® Modest Prices {Corner Sherbrooke) WE.3-3270 ® EXCLUSIVE 1378 Greene Avenue PRO ARTE REG'D.@ HIGH CLASS JEWELLERY JEWELLER WATCHMAKER DESIGNS WE.2 - 4551 By Experienced Operators Spcclalizing in Ot Scalp Treatments and Hair Reconditioning under most modern steam equipment, nino Facials.Try our new, exciling Steam Perma.Miss Olive G.Mr.Joseph U.The marriage of Olive Gwendolyn, daughter of Mrs.Thomas Bamford, and of the late Mr, Bamford Sr.of Westmount, to Mr.Joseph Urner Goldsborough, son of Mrs.Joseph Charles Goldsborough, and of the late Mr.Goldsborough of Baltimore, Maryland, was solemnized on Saturday at two o'clock in St.James United Church.The Reverend Norman Rawsan officiated with Mr.Gifford Mitchell at the organ.Mr.and Mrs, Tom Tucker sang a duet.The church was arranged with standards of white and yellow chrysanthemums.fant skirt sweeping into a French dip hemline, Her veil of tulle illusion was held by a coronet of stephanotis flowers and she car- and Mrs.Frank P.Brady, who Bamford weds Goldsborough were gowned in bouffant frocks of Empire blue silk organza, With matching velvet wing caps, and carried colonial bouquets of shasta daisies.Miss Dawn Dolphin, niece of the bride, wore a whiie sprigged nylon frock over yellow taffeta, with matching velvet bandeau and carried a nosegay of yellow shasta daisies.Mrs.Bamford, the bride's mother, was in a mist teale blue * gown with matching satin hat | and a corsage of white orchids.Mrs.Goldsborough, was in a deep midnight blue taffeta frock with a cerise hat and a corsage of white orchids.| Mr.Edwin C.McFeeley, and Mr.William Pitt, Jr.| The reception was held at the Naval Officers Club, where while matching costume of willow green wool under a pastel mink stole.Upon their return, they will reside in Baltimore, Maryland.Among the out-of-lown guests were Mrs.Joseph Charles Golds- borough, Mr.Allan H.Burns, Jr., Dr.Stephen Van Lill, Mr.Edwin C.McFeeley, Mr.William Pitt Jr., Mrs.Katherine Herbert, Mrs, Helen DeVerter.all of Baltimore, Maryland, Mr.T.Yates Golds- borough of Washington, D.C., Mr.and Mrs.Thomas Bamford Jr., of Ottawa.and Mr.Wesley Bamford of Chicago, Illinois, THE , Cavelier ROOM For Reservations Just Call UN 66-6492 | i The bride, who was given away Mr.Allan H.Burns, Jr., acted | Luncheon WESTMOUNT BEAUTY PARLOR |b, ber brotherinav.Mr.Har.borough and the ushers were Mr.Dinner Dancin | old B.Dolphin, was in an original Porough and the ushers were Mr.\u2018 i i 5122 Sherbrooke St.W.gown of white Italian Rhodia Frank P.Brady, brother-in-law _ Just west of Westmount Theatre brocade, fashioned on simple of the bride, Mr.T.Yates Golds- Air-Conditioned HUnter 6 - 8636 lines with a high neckline and borough, uncle of the bride- 1 Always Ample Parking Latest Hair Styling long sleeves, its shaped bouf- groom, Dr.Stephen Van Lill.\" nent, Tints and Bleaches in hall the ried her mother\u2019s prayerbook de- and yellow poms were used to | \u201cWITH OR WITHOUT corated with stephanotis flowers decorate.Mrs.Miriam Simon APPOINTMENT \u2014 NO WAITING i i i PER UTAIRE HAN DRYERS and trailing ribbons.played the piano.| HOTEL mn Dries Your Hair in 20 Minutes The bride was attended by her Later, Mr.and Mrs.Golds- | © OPEN FRIDAYS TO 9 P.M.© sisters, Mrs, Kenneth U.Lunny, borough left for the United a J, S Â L ; States, the bride travelling in a |___ 19:51 i Ÿ CONVENERS FOR THE Buffet-Bazaar of the Alumnae Association of the Sacred Heart to be held at the City House, 3635 Ad- water avenue Thursday October 29, from 3.30 to 9.30 p.m.All former pupils and friends are inviled (0 attend.Left to right: a\u201d 3 J ES =e | Mrs.D.Jodoin, convener of snack bar; Mrs.Tan Turner, Mrs.Jacques Leger, co-convener buffet-supper; Mrs.Guy Hudon, Mrs, Jacques Langevin, co-convener buffet-supper; Mrs.J.H.Flynn, convener of toys and Mrs.Roland Rinfret.\u2014Posen Photo COM DESSERT CARD PARTY: The Villa Maria Alumnae (English Section) is holding a dessert card party Monday, October 26 at 7.30 p.m.at the convent, 4245 Decarie boulevard.This event is co-convened by Mrs.J.Fred Gallagher and Miss Roslyn Britt.Mrs.J.L.D.Cleary and her committee are in charge of refreshments.ANNUAL CARD PARTY: The Alumni of St.Paul's Academy, Westmount, is holding its annual card party Wednesday, October 28.There will also be a fashion show, door prizes and refreshments will be served.For reser- VI.2-4444 ING Drop in and let us suggest appropriate flowers to help make your wedding a memorable one.Naturally there is no obligation House of Howers Mountain St.al Sherbrooke EVENTS vations call.RE 8-6821 or RE.3- 5863.RUMMAGE SALE: Monklands Chapter IODE is holding a rummage sale at 1 p.m., Friday, October 23 at St.Stephen's Church Hall, corner of Dorchester street and Atwater avenue.BUFFET-BAZAAR: The Alumnae of Sacred Heart is holding a buffet-bazaar, Wednesday, October 28 from 3.30 to 9.30 p.m.al the City House.3625 Atwater avenue, All former pupils and friends are invited to attend.ANNUAL FALL EVENT: The Westmount High School Alumnae Association is holding its annual fall event in the Westmount Jun- | jor High School Wednesday night November 4.A lecture will be given by Dr.Charlotte Whitton entitled \u201cWoman in a Man's World.\u201d : DOLL TEA: The Women's Auxiliary of the Catherine Booth Hospital is holding a doll tea and sale of dolls \u2019clothes Friday, October 23, in the Nurses\u2019 Residence, 4413 Montclair avenue.Many lovely dolls and dolls\u2019 clothes dressed by the ladies will be on display and for sale.RUMMAGE SALE: The Ladies Committee of the Royal Montreal Regiment is holding its semi-an- nual rummage sale Saturday, Ocl- ober 24 at the Armoury, 4625 St.*Catherine street, Westmount, at CANADA SAVINGS BONDS Beat» [OT ROSES 2 p.m, Armoury will be open to receive contributions until Oct.24.Mrs.J.Pratt assisted by Mrs, R.B.Massey and ladies of the committee will convene this event, SILVER SHERRY PARTY: The Ladies Auxiliary, RCAMC-RCDC, 4600 Lacombe avenue is holding the annual sherry party November 14, from 5 to 7:30 p.m.in the Officers\u2019 Mess.Co-conveners are | Mrs.A.W.Downe, Mrs.1.A.Grimsgaard and Mrs.V.E.Fryer.SHERRY PARTY: The Ladies Auxiliary of the Resurrection of Knights of Columbus will hold a membership sherry party Saturday, October 24, at 8.30 p.m.in the Council rooms, 2304 Old Orchard avenue.ANNUAL CARD PARTY: Our Lady\u2019s Sodality of St.Malachy\u2019s Parish is holding its seventeenth annual card party Tuesday evening, November 3 in the parish hall, 5330 Clanranald avenue under the convenership of Miss Helen Larock.There will be table and door prizes and refreshments will be served.Tickets may be obtained at the door.DESSERT BRIDGE PARTY: The Inner Wheel Club of Montreal will hold a dessert bridge party October 28 at 12.30 p.m.in the Windsor Hotel.Table holders are requested lo take their own playing cards.Mrs.C.A.Hersey is chairman of the event, Proceeds to aid work of the Club.ANNUAL BAZAAR AND DANCE: The Swiss Women's Club \u201cEdelweiss\u201d annual bazaar and dance will be held Saturday afternoon and evening October 24, in the Ballroom of the Shera- ton-Mount Royal Hotel.RUMMAGE SALE: The American Women's Club is holding a rummage sale at 11 a.m.Friday, October 30, in St.Stephen's Church Hall, 4006 Dorchester street, west, corner of Atwater avenue.Silver Cross Mothers The RCAF \u2018Remembrance Association\u2019 of the Silver Cross Mothers, will hold a social meeting on Monday, October 26, at 2 p.m.Westmount Examiner, Friday, Oct.23, 1959 What Shall 1 Tell My Daughter?- A mother who has thought deeply about the problem hus made her decision.In November Reader's Digest she says she is \u2018nognaive enough to think that little chats about conception and bodily structure are sufli- cient.\u201d She plans to arm her teen-age dnughter with one single neglected word ., |.Get your Reader's Digest today \u2014 35 articles of lusting interest.Clayart studios Contemporary Ceramics © LAMPS & SHADES in a variety of shapes VASES - ACCESSORIES VISIT OUR STUDIO SHOWROOMS 1368 GREENE AVENUE WE.2-7478, Westmount 2095000 =UE 13 - MR.EMILE'S Widely acclaimed \u201cSOFTY\u201d PERMANENT The so-flattering \u2018Softy\u2019 has earned a well-deserved reputa- tien for unusual permanence.It's particularly well suited to bleached or tinted hair.$10 1347 GREENE AVE.Phone: WE.5.0562, WE.5.2484 mile BEAUTY SALON in the YWCA on Dorchester street.Our Lord Council No.4368 of the! Who have been located at for 19 years will be having a in November at mA Mo Oct.Notice MacDONALD Reg\u2019d.Dresses \u2014 Suits \u2014 Millinery 390A VICTORIA AVENUE - HU.6-6676 AN Speino Ss Millon Fashion Show Victoria Hall | 8:30 p.m.HU.4-3717 Admission $1.00 4866 Sherbrooke St.West new location sometime early nday 26th Y4 The Westmount Examiner, Friday, October 23, 1969 Autumn Each Season has its beauty Why should we mourn for June?When Autumn, with Of color, is in tune?Goldenrod and asters nod, A magic sheen of rusty sod.Of Summer leaves, there is no dearth, And logs, are gleaming on the hearth; Why look for Spring or Summer air With ail this splendor everywhere?! Cv dans: Church book club Contribute a current book, after checking with the committee, and enjoy a winter of varied reading.This is the suggestion of FROM THE ORIENT Shown above ln a Murucvo Leather Puff, one of the many attractive gifts now on display at Gregory's.Alse Moroccan Camel Saddles and other leather goods, handivomed Kilims, Wood Carvings, Hand- bealen Brass Bells, Tables and Novellies from India besides a wonderful selection et Oriental Rugs and Broadlooms.GREGORY'S ORIENTAL RUG CO.4151 St.Catherine St.W.(Near Greene) WE.2-4277 ENP re hp HN EK Sn EST ES EE A Ti | its glory DOROTHY SPROULE DR.GERHARD R.G.STAHL- BERG, Consul-General of the Federal Republic of Germany, will be guest speaker of the Social Service Department of the Montreal Women's Club Monday, October 26 to 2:30 p.m.in the Sheraton-Mount Royal Hotel.His subject will be \u2018Post-War Germany\u2019.The address will be followed by motion picture in color and sound of Germany.St.Matthew's Anglican Church Book Club.- Anyone interested may call Mrs.H.E.Mosher, HU- Evenings: RE.8-4605 HOR Mrs.W.J.Wilson, HERE'S EASY ENTERTAINING .AT BUDGET PRICES with privileges of Private Dining Room without additional COMPLETE cost FULL COURSE PRE PARUING A DINNER from 5:30 p.m.LUNCHEONS, from $750 DINNERS, \u2018 CLUB MEETINGS, PARTIES (usual value elsewhere $2.50) For Reservations Phone: UN.6-5484 inty 1236 St.Catheri RESTAURANT ne Street West Book Lovers Forum marks 15th season October 28 will mark the opening lecture of the fifteenth season of Temple Emanu-E!'s Book Lovers\u2019 Forum.Mr.Walter O\u2019'Hearn, managing editor of the Montreal Star, will review \u201cThe Watch that Ends the Night\u201d, by Hugh MacLennan.The meetings this season will take place in the beautiful new sunctuary of Temple Eamnu-El, 4100 Sherbrooke street W.All meetings commence at 2.45 p.m.On November 25 Rev.R.J.Berlis will review \u201cElizabeth the Great\u201d, by Elizabeth Jenkins.Other lecturers this season will include Rev.Edgar J.Bailey, minister of Westmount Baptist Church; Mr.Robert A.Speirs, headmaster of Selwyn House School; Rabbi Harry Joshua Stern, spiritual leader of Temple Emanu-El, and Dr.Douglas Wilson of the editorial department of the Montreal Star.At the meeting on October 28, the general chairman, Mrs.Harry Joshua Stern, will preside, and co-chairman of the day will be Mrs.M.Edmund Gordon, program chairman, Book Lovers\u2019 Forum was founded fifteen years age by Dr.Harry Joshua Stern and Mrs.Stern for the purpose of studying current literature and for bringing together into a cultural fellowship women of various denominations.Book Lovers\u2019 Forum is of city wide interest, with a membership of almost seven hundred.Non-members are always welcome, The members of the executive committee of Book Lovers\u2019 Forum include Mrs.Harry J.Stern, general chairman; Mrs.Josef Aron, vice-chairman: Mrs.Joseph M.Bambiger, publicity; Mrs.M.Edmund Gordon, program; Mrs.William Gross, membership; Mrs, Abbey Sankoff, hospitality, and Mrs.Maurice Schwartz, sec- retary-treasurer, Noted artists donate work for VON sale Fleur Cowles, the famous American magazine personality who was President Eisenhower's Special Ambassador to the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth, will be one of the contributors Lo the sixth annual VON Art Show and Sale.The show takes place, with Mrs, Charles E.Frosst, of West- mount, as chairman, at the YWCA, 1355 Dorchester street west, on Wednesday, November 4, from 11 am.until 9 p.m.Miss Cowles, who now makes her home in England, has an exhibition of her paintings on at a New York gallery this month.Earlier in the year she held an exhibition of paintings at a London gallery.Her contribution to the Montreal show is an unusual and striking flower study, framed in silk and gold leaf, and she has donated the painting to be sold to aid VON work here.Montreal women met Miss Cow- les when she spoke here a few years ago on the \u201cPropaganda War in the Far East\u201d.She has just published a new book this year on Salvador Dali, and her writing career has included the work of a foreign correspondent, a newspaper columnist, and magazine editor.With entries now closed for nounced that some 75 artists the show, the committee an- from the West End of the city will be among the 200 taking part.Entries have come from Canadian points as far away as Fort Churchill, in Manitoba, and one artist who specializes in flower painting, in New York, will be sending two oil paintings to the show.Well-known artists who will be helping the VON this year will include H.McRae Miller.RCA, Adrien Hebert, RCA.and Oscar de Lall, RCA.UNICEF depots| in Westmount Westmount lists depots for UNICEF, arranged so children will nol have to cross busy intersections.23 Willow, 502 Elm, 325 Red- fern, 368 Grosvenor, 375 Gros- venor, 510 Grosvenor, 661 Gros- venor, 701 Grosvenor, 530 Argyle, 28 Oakland, 1 Hudson, 4343 Montrose.310 Roslyn, 416 Roslyn, 565 Roslyn, 597 Roslyn, 709 Roslyn, 100 Somerville, 478 Victoria, 501 Victoria, 604 Victoria, 650 Victoria, 638 Murray Hill, 120 Aberdeen.540 Prince Albert, 247 Kensing- ton, 345 Lansdowne, 441 Lans- downe, 658 Lansdowne, 760 Lansdowne, 465 Mount Pleasant, 18 Anwoth road, 45 Thornhill, 425 Wood avenue, 345 Metcalf, 455 Strathcona.27 Summit Circle, 50 Belve- dere, 89 Arlington, 4840 Bona- vista, 4850 Cedar Crescent, 4355 Claremont, 613 Belmont, 730 upper Belmont, 229 Melville, 138 Abbott, 119 Blenheim Place, 4375 Westmount avenue, 381 Clark, 356 Kitchener, 315 Olivier avenue, 1090 Green avenue (Unity Boy's Club), 45 Chesterfield, 59 Windsor, Baby Shaw christened \u2014Trower Photo BETTY SPEIRS of the Speirs- Miller Studios, who will present a fashion show Monday, October 26 at 8.30 p.m,, in Victoria Hall, Westmount.The show will feature tots, juniors, teenagers and senior fashions.The models are graduates from the Speirs-Mil- ler Studios.Betty Speirs will do the commentating in her own inimitable manner.For The Finest QUALITY BEEF Obtainable Phone HAINES OF WESTMOUNT \u201cNoted for Quality\u201d English Family Butcher and Grocer Purveyor of High Class Quality Meats, Groceries Fruits and Vegetables OUR SHERBROOKE FAIR BEEF WILL BE READY ABOUT NOVEMBER 1st 4466 St.Catherine West Near Metcalfe Ave, Gary Stephen The christening of the infant son of Mr.and Mrs.Kenneth Shaw of Hamilton, Ont., took place Sunday, October 11, in Calvary United Church, Westmount, Rev.Charles R.Plaskett officiated.The baby was given the names, Gary Stephen and the godparents were Mr.and Mrs.Garth Gil- hooly.Following the ceremony a reception was held at the home of the maternal grandparents, Mr.and Mrs.Albert Gilhooly, Irvine avenue, Westmount.Among the many guests were Mr.and Mrs.John Shaw.paternal grandparents of the child; Rev.and Mrs.C.R.Plas- kett and Mr.and Mrs.C.A.Locke of Arvida, uncle and aunt of the baby.Westmount Mrs.John Shaw assisted the WE.7-9455-6 hostess in pouring tea.j me = = QUEBEC ANTIQUES 4500 St.Catherine Street West WE.2-4781 (Corner Abbott) Specializing in Early Pine Furniture, etc.ram mm as rar EN VO CAT BEAT CANVAS for PROTECTION, BEAUTY, DURABILITY, ECONOMY CA\" \"© for: Awnings, Umbrellas, Summer Furniture, Boat Covers, Sails, Winter Covers, etc.CANVAS NEEDS: Both for winter storage purposes and for next summer's needs.MOST IMPORTANT by placing your order NOW you can get PROMPT, EFFICIENT SERVICE and SAVE MONEY.AND AT THE SAME TIME You will relieve the winter unemployment lull, which, in turn, serves to improve the economy of your community.Recover \u2014 Repair, Order Canvas NOW NAS au WE.7-7775 CANVAS CONVERTERS Ltd.winter months.4270 ST.JAMES STREET WEST OA Your Best Protection! \u201c4 RE Ee | CHARLOTTE WHITTON who will be the speaker at the annual fall event of the West- DR.mount High School Alumnae Association to be hi ld in the Westmount Junior \".igh School on Wednesday nignt.November 4, Her topic will be \u201cWoman in a Man's World\u201d.Proceeds of the event will go to the educational awards which are a university scholarship of $500 and Tea Causerie The Business and Professional Women's Club will hold a Tea Causerie at the Club House on Sunday, October 25, at 4 pm.Pouring tea will be Mrs.Mona Greenlees, Mrs.Muriel Seale and Miss May Reddy.The guest speaker will be Mr.J.D.Memory, Who is a member of the Investment Dealers Association and the members are looking forward with interest to.bis address, which is entitled\u2019 \u201cConsideration in Planning your Investments.\u201d | Trinity Senior WA The Senior WA of Trinity Memorial Church wil\u2019 hold its meeting Oct.26, at 2.30 pan.in the ladies room.All members are requested to be present and new members and friends are most welcome, Lecture at Museum Mrs.Robin Watt, wife of the well known Canadian portrait painter, will speak on \u201cSome Aspects of Portrait Painting\u201d on a vocational scholarship of $150.| Wednesday.October 28 at 3 p.m.0 IN THE / \u2019 Women 3 INeaim McGill Alumnae The Alumnae Society of McGill University will hold its meeting Tuesday, October 27, at 8:15 p.m, at the Royal Victoria College.Mr.Stanley Lewis, noted Canad- jan stone and marble sculptor will be the guest spcaker.He will give an illustrated talk entitled \u2018'Mi- chaelangelo and Modern Sculpture.\u2019 During Mr.Lewis\u2019 three years in 1u\u2018v on a scholarship awarded by the Greenshields Foundation, he carried out the research work for Irving Stone who is writing a book on Michaelangelo.Re-creating the tools used by Michaelangelo in his sculptures and obtaining his marble from the same quarries, Mr.Lewis copied one of Michaelangelo\u2018s great works the \u2018\u2018Madonna and Child.\u201d This.reproduction was presented to the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts by Mr.Greenshields.Regional meeting The fifth regional meeting of the Montreal Presbytery Woman\u2019s Associalion of the United Church of Canada will be held October 23 in Verdun United Church beginning at 10 a.m.and continuing till 3.30 p.m.AL the morning session the secretaries will speak on the work of their departments fullowed by a discussion.The speaker at the afternoon session will be the Rev, N.M.Slaughter, MA.minister of Erskine and American United Church.All United Church women are invited to attend, Mrs.THE HOOVER \"It Beats as It Sweeps as It Cleans, Gets The Deep-down Dirt Other Cleaners Miss\u201d Latest models now on display Consult the rug moan, Malcolm Gregory GREGORY'S ORIENTAL RUG CO.415) ST.CATHERINE dat WEST Fe\" WE.2-4277 ) 3 Eve.RE.8-4605 Turn in your oid Hoover oa a New model «in the upstairs loyer of the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Tea will be served following the lecture.This program is onc of a scries of weckly Wednesday lec tures and teas sponsored by the Museum's Ladies Committee.The lecture is open to the public free of charge.Ladies Curling Club The St.George Ladies\u2019 Curling Club will hold its first combined curlers and general meeting of the season at the clubhouse.3685 The Boulevard, Tuesday, October 27 at 2 p.m, Potters' Club Margaret Friend's work will constitute a special one man window show for two weeks beginning October 26.Mrs.Friend was born in Germany where she learned pottery and she has also studied in Italy and England.In 1950.she came to Canada and joined The Potters'* Club.She is one of the teachers at the Club.Mrs.Friend particularly enjoys making tea and coffee sels decorating with scraffito.She has exhibited widely, WA \u201cDoll Tea' In connection with the forthcoming Sale of Work, the Women\u2019s Auxiliary of.the Catherine Booth Hospital will hold a \u2018Doll Tea in the Nurses\u2019 Residence of the Hospital, 4413 Montclair avenue, en Friday.Oct.23.at 2.30 p.m, Many lovely dolls dressed by the ladies will be on display and for sale, also a large variety of dolls\u2019 clothes.Guest soloist will be Mr.Jack Wellens.barl- tone, accompanied at the piano by Mrs.H.S.Briegel.Chairman.Robert Japp.St.Faith's Mission The annual meeting of St.Faith's Mission is being held Wednesday, October 28 ut 2.30 p.m.in the Allan Shatford Hall, 1439 St.Catherine street west, with the Rev, Canon Ralph R.Latimer presiding.Miss Cecily Desausmarez, a Bishop's Messenger of many years will give an address illustrated with colored slides.Hospital Alumnae The Alumnae Association of St.Mary's Hospital School.of \u201cNursing wil be holding a \u201cmother and daughter\u201d communion breakfast on Sunday October 25 ,at 10 am.in the Nurses' Residence, Guest speaker fur this cvent will be Rev.Father C.N.Rush- man SJ, of Loyola Colege.Catherine Booth WA The monthly meeting of the Women's Auxiliary of the Catherine Booth Hospital will be held on Oct.28 at 2 p.m.in the Nurses\u201c Residence of the Hospital on Mont- clair avenue.After the business meeting a millinery demonstration services rendered by Social & Personal (Continued from page 1) Mr.Lyon W.Jacobs, QC.Fellow of the Royal Empire Society and noted Domestic Relations Lawyer and Family Counsellor will be guest speaker at the 21st annual Trafalgar Banquet of the -Mont- real Ex-Naval Men's Association to be held at Tetrault Hall, 5120 Wellington street, Verdun at 8 p.m.October 28.Mr.Jacobs will be presented with a long service insignia jewel for distinguished him to the Montreal Ex-Naval Men's Association, as the honorary legal advisor during the past (wenty years.The honorary president of the Association is Commodore Paul Earl, MLA.forrser chief of Naval Affairs of the Province ol Quebee at Donnacona, Montreal.Mr.Jacob's subject will be entitled \u201c\u2018Kruschev's Trip \u2014 Kru- schev\u2019's Talks \u2014 \u201cWhat we pained and didn't gain.\u201d H.K.Sukuakueche from Angola Africa, one of the four-man team visiting in Canada under the auspices of the United Church was the guest of Mr.and Mrs.Harold Mills of Westmount, hy §3BEBEBABIBABIBLBIBEBLBERABABEBABIBALABALEBABIBEBIREBIBABIBIBIBIBEBIBIBIBIBABIBEBABILEBLBIB3EBIBHBHBEBIVABBE ~~ will be given by Mrs.R.Raine.over the weckend.Mr.Sukua- kueche is a fine musician and performed during his visit in.Montreal.THREE LOCATIONS IN GREATER MONTREAL The Westmount Examiner, Fridey, October 23, 1959 The Fall Reunion of St.Paul's Academy Alumnae will be held Thursday cvening at 8.15 pm, October 29, in St.Paul's Auditorium.After a short meeting to welcome the new graduates into the Alumnae, a fall hat show will be presented Mrs.NC.Pineo 18 chairman of the event, Miss Margaret Martin, president of the Alumnae assisted by members of the executive will serve refreshments.A members and their triends are invited to attend.The first \u201cArtists in \\etion\u201d evening will be held in the lee ture hall of the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts on October 28 at 8 p.m.Models and materials will be supplied to those who wish to try their hand at drawing and clay modelling.Artists will be in attendance lo advise while the audience may learn by watching.Open to the public, This program is sponsored by the Ladies Conunittee of the Mu- seam, Mrs.M.Stirling Maxwell, 430 Wood avenue, Westmount.is co- president of the Ladies\u2019 Commit- lee, The Business and Professional Women's Club will entertain members and their guests at a Hallowe'en Bridge, at the Club rem) BEAUTY THAT DEFIES TIME : BI LV WBABEBEBEBEBEBEBEREARIDIHTREIRAREBEBIREIBIREREBHRIREIBARANHBABABRBE .\u201cNN BIRKS A \u2018Hampstead\u2019, B \u201cEben Coker\", C \"Georgian\", D \u2018Melon\u2019, 635.00 BIRKS BUDGET lRRMS AVAILABLE 15 House, on Wednesday.Octeber 28, commencing at B p.m.Fellow- ing bridge, refreshments will be served, W.Muxwel Ford.BA, BCL, will speak on \u201cThe debl we owe Hammurabi, Justinian and Napoleon\u201d at the lecture of the Women's Art Society te be held October 27 at 11 am.This has been arranged by the literature committee composed of Mrs Guy Fisk, Mru NS.B.Earle and Miss Helen Huffman, Miss Alice Lighthall is president of the Women's Art Society.Open meetings are held in the Chateau de Ramessy and other meetings in the Montreal Museum ef Fine Arta The Women's Art Society will hear W.Maxwell Ferd, BA, BCL, discuss \u201cThe Debt We Owe Hammurabi, Justine ian and Napoleon\u201d on Tuesday at 11 am, in the lecture hall of the Museum of Finc Arta The studio group meels en Thursdays in Trinity Memorial Hall, The instructor fer this year is Oscar de Lal, RCA, the wellknown artist, The group chairman is Mrs, Cyril Cunningham.HBOBEBHBUBLHIHBHBLBEBEBHBHUBEBHBLBY BUBLBHBHBHBHBE BE BLEU LH ILHBHE EE It's Silver Week at Birks 2 2 2 5 3 2 Ë ; : Ë 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 : en = For four generations of Canadian hostesses, Birks © Sterling tea and coffee service has constituted a a treasured possession as well as a symbol of ca gracious living.Designed and created in our own ca silver craftshops, Birks Sterling holloware 2 combines authentic design with £3 superb craftsmanship.\u20ac: 465.00 635.00 575.00 * Prices given are for a four-piece set: coffee pot, tea pot, sugar and cream, Afatching travs are available.RKS ERSMITHS 3888E856688384888983888888688a3868E8 = ( PHILLIPS SQUARS DORVAL CIRCLE 3 | ROCKLAND PHILLIPS SQUARE STORE WILL BE OPENED FRIDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9 PM. | The Westmount Examiner, Friday, October 23, 1959 + The clothes that Men like! .helps you solve the old problem by JILL BUTTERFIELD When falling in love gets a habit by Corinne Calvet \u201cMY problem,\u201d said Corinne Calvet, who wore glass slippers, a white satin negligée, and + looked exactly like a girl who knew no problems, \u201cMy problem is that men spoil me.\u201cWhy, even a newspaper seller in Hollywood gives me a IF is a well-known fact that men are fashion blind.I paper every time I pass and have been to parties where almost every woman was refuses to accept my money.soh-nric I chp dress and almost every man You see, that is his own small in a high-priced black sheath y way of making a fuss of me.clustered around the one girl who ~asn\u2019t.How do you reconcile the clothes you like to wear with the ones he likes to escort\u201d It is a question that worried Sheba to the end.Normally daytime\u2019's no problem.You can take care of the boss, maybe even try out a few fashion gimmicks the main male might never like, Spoiling me.\u201d Miss Calvel smiled a dry martini smile and said: \u2018I have a dreadful habit of falling in love and marrying young men.Both my husbands were in that class.< Shimmering sheath dress of black jersey bul at night-time that old question keeps coming back like a dirge.I've asked the smartest, the necessarily anonymous (they never like to let you know they nolice more than your eyes) men aboul the night-spotls just what they like.Now 1 know night-spots are nol national.Bul even if your normal date is a shandy and a cinema (and a box of chocolates il il's Friday) you still have the many occasions when you want to go gay.So here are the results of my research \u2014 with pictures to help.TOP SHAPE \u2014 the full skirt \u2014 winning by seven to three over the slim one (although those that like them arrow-narrow are pretty \u2018er- vent about il), Men like skirts which swish and swing stiffened by masses of petticoats (though these should be a hidden virtue).Waists must be there (\u201cnice to get hold of\u201d) defined by belts.cummerbunds or clever shaping.NO BLACK TOP COLOUR \u2014 white.Our male census thought it good for all ages.Didn't consider it an ingenue's exclusive.that the \u201cmind-your-eyes\u201d strapless bodice is oul unless its prettied with frills, tucks or draping.The girl with an almosl bare bosom is a riot \u2014 but only when she's with somebody else.TOP FABRICS \u2014 the stiffened sheers (nel, nylon over net and organza), Coming up, fabrics with \u201cinterest\u201d \u2014 moires, two-lexture satins.New loves \u2014 anything with glitter \u2014 lots of it, woven in.London Express\u2014MONEWS Oh yes, the psychiatrist.\u201cMoney-wise.I am not a rich woman.I moved out of the Dor- chester \u2014 $325, wilh tips, for four days was too much.This apartment cost me $110 a week.\u201cWe went through the inventory this morning.Il took hours.Four china ashtrays.One cracked.Two chipped.Why do they do that?It bores me.\u201cOh yes.I've been to a psychiatrist.I usually go along after one of my marriages has broken up or a love affair has gone wrong.\u2019 \u201cYou know, my dear, men like to make excuses for their failures in love.They blame the woman, of course.Say all sorts of unkind things.They're untrue, but you can't help wondering.So you go along to get unravelled.Although | have never been unravelled.Please go, they say \u201cYou sce, I'll be damned if I'm going lo pay out 75 dollars a session indefinitely.So each time 1 fecl bad, J take the GI.Test.That's a 150-dollar standard exporatory examination, based on the Government's test woven with a gleaming gold lurex thread.Simple, relies on fabric for an undoubtedly stunning effect out of proportion to price \u2014 Liked, too, orange sheirbel (\u201cthe colour French girls wear.Ils sizzling on a blonde\u2019), pale primrose (\u2018because it's so clean-looking™).Out (surprisingly but unanimously) \u2014 plain basic black.to assess the mental condition of troops.The result is supposed to tell you how long you'll need treatment, \u201cBul the doctors say: \u2018Don't bother us, Miss Calvet.We've got really sick people on our hands.Please go away.So I never find out.\u201d FOOTNOTE: Miss Calvel is here in London to make \u2018\u2018Bluebird\u2019s Ten Honeymoons,\u201d with George Sanders.Then a Broadway play: \u2018The Headshrinker.\u201d\u201d Sayings - | of the week | \u201cI never look back into the past.That's why 1 hate to do \\ my autobiography.When 1 start a film today.I'm just eager to Coffee cream, satin-spotted short evening dress, bell, Photographs by NORMAN EALES cuffed bodice.TOP TOP \u2014 dozens of different answers but all agreed do the best possible job, 1 always work very hard.There is no point in always glamorising the good old days.\u201d \u2014 JOAN CRAWFORD.\u201cPeople are too sensitive these days.Nobody wants to be the villain, In the good old days we could always have a German heavy.Not now, Doctor Adenauer would complain.\u201cNow we're on the point of losing the Russians, with all this good will going around.I ! suppose we'll have to depend on the Red Chinese in future\u2019 .\u2014 ALFRED HITCHCOCK.] London Express\u2014MONEWS | White Tricel jersey dress, .beautifully draped.Looks expensive, washes at home like a dream.With it, white satin pill-box, frilly bodiced dress.Note veiled for femme-fatale wide belt, jewel buckled, entrance.ae ov te ae \u201cem \u201caa Ep yp ESPN to / si 1e Dreamy.languorous short evening dress in primrose yellow nylon with a finely tucked bodice and cold-shoulder stole.Attractive, cifective\u2014 Aes Apricot crystal organza (other colors too) makes a \u201cham eae mtu sa The Dessert Fall Bridge of the the Notre Dame de Grace Women's Club to be held in Victoria Hall, Westmount, on Monday, October 26, at 1 p.m, will be a pleasant + afternoon for its members and friends.Mrs.L.M.Fraser and her committee have contributed much time and effort to guarantee the success of this event.There will be table prizes and door prizes Mrs.W.A.Routledge and her House and Hospitality Committee will be in charge of refreshments.Would subscribers please leave used playing cards for the Veterans of St.Anne\u2019s Military Hospital.Mrs.J.S.Williamson and her Military Hospital Visiting Committee will appreciate them.All proceeds go work in the community.Reservations may still be made through Mrs.G.W.Leveretie, HU.6-4829.Mesdames A.Shute.R.Blais.C.H.Rivard, E.W.Drinkell, Fred.W Webber, H.Kennedy.H.Fuller.G.E.Toye, G.W.Foote, B.Snor, H.Greenhalgh, J.Z.Lalande, R.Campbell, G.Watson.Miss E.Hen- schell and Miss L.Vaz.Mesdames M, Glen, A.P.Thomson, W.L.Gatehouse, A.Proulx, J.Lussier, W.Cooke, M.Crockett.{1 1F McGill 4 it congress of Carmelites Mr.John Farrell McGill, of 5162 Earnscliffe avenue, Snow- don.Montreal, is in Philadelphia this week (o attend the International Congress of the Discalced Carmelite Tertiaries.Mr.McGill was asked to go to this Congress to represent the English speaking Tertiaries of Montreal and Canada.This invitation he received from Father Charles of Ste-Therese OCD secretary to the Most Reverend Father Anathasius of the Rosary OCD Superior General of the Discalced Carmelite Order.This Congress is being held at the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel in Philadelphia, and attended by over 400 Carmelite Tertiaries from various parts of the United States and Canada.The Third Order Secular of our Lady of Mount Carmel and St.Therese of Jesus, is an order of lay persons who, though living in the world, desire to aim at Christian perfection in the way most suitable to their state in life but according to the spirit and under the direction of the Discalced Carmelites headed by the Father General in Rome, The Very Rev.Fr.Albert of the Blessed Sacrament OCD Superior Provincial and His Eminence John Cardinal O'Hara, Catholic Archbishop of Philadelphia will meet each member attending.Mr.McGill will be bringing back to other members of the Third Order in Montreal special greelings and the Apos- ' tolic Benediction of Pope John XXIII, sent to the Carmelites in Philadelphia through John Cardinal O\u2019Hara, CE i$ Buffet-Bazaar The Alumnae Association of the Sacred Heart is holding a Buffet-Bazaar al the Cily House, 3635 Atwater avenue Thursday, October 29 from 3.30 to 9.30 p.m.Mrs.Jacques Langevin and Mrs.Jacques Leger are in charge of the Buffel Supper which will be strictly a la canadienne accompanied gy accordian music, Miss Margaret McLaughlin is the general convener for the Buffel-Bazaar and other conveners are Mrs.D.Jodoin, Mrs.Ian Turner, Mrs.Guy Hudon, Mrs.Roland Rinfret and Mrs.J.H.| Flynn.À AM former pupils and friends | are invitèd to attend.°° J eat.came PU ~ Additional list of su bscribers for N.D.G.Bridge to charitable * You al} are invited to join the fun and excitement of Hahowe'en by participating with the children, in their campaign to help other children, and to deposit your pennies and coins in their UNICEF ; \u201ctreat-box,\u201d Saturday.October J.M.Moody, J.Lindsay.J.W.31, when they call \u2014 else the Craig, C.A.Buoih, L.A.Jackson.Goblins will get you.if you don't! E.Slomon.R.MacConnachie, R.} The merchants of Westmount, H.MacTier and Miss Edna A.the fifty-three mothers who are Hamm, \"offering their homes as depots to Mesdames O.Marchand, R.each child in his own neighbor.Longley.A.L.MacLachlan, 1.'hood, where he and she can get Pow.J.H.Flett.E.Clarke.H.their \u201ctreat-box\u201d \u2018look for the Temple.H.E.Andison, J.Smith, UNICEF poster in the windows) C.H.Bradford G.L.Drysdale, teachers in schools and Sunday J.W.Dobson, W.A.Routledge, Schools, who are posting lists of H.R.W.Goodwin.depots in their classroom \u2014 all are showing great enthusiasm and Mesdames T.D.Handrahan, R.| cooperation to make the project Drain, G.Modgson, L.Baum, J.success.Six young people's Cerini, R.Thomson.W.A.Fal-\\groups are supporting the cause coner, R.W.Smith, L.A.Hutchi- of UNICEF as one of their pro- son, J.L.G.Brown, Miss Anne jects and will be helping on Hal- Robertson, Miss Violet Smith andllowe'en as will the Guides, Miss Lillian Kedley.Brownies, Scouts and Cubs.The 2% DAY SPECIAL FARE expires November 30, 1959 Westmounters participating in Hallowe'en for UNICEF\u201d Westmount Examiner, 17 Friday, Oct.23, 1959 for helpless children in remote, impoverished arcas of the world.Nearly a billion children, or three owt of four \u2014 ave in need of help to fight malnutrition and disease Pharmacy, \u2014 such as leprosy, TH, and yaws Anthony's, \u2014 so Widespread In these priml- tive countries, Westmount Public Library, the YMCA, Grindieys American Drug Store.Steinberg's, Green avenue and Sherbrooke and Victoria Stow branches, have posted lists of depots.The Toronto Dominion Bank, Studio 16, Continental Can, Bathurst Paper Box, Westmount Printing Co.and Young's are all! doing their large part It is not surprising, therefore.that the amount collected for the, United Nations Fund (UNICEF jumped from $970.00 in 1955 to\u2019 $44,000 in Canada in 1958-\u2014\u2014which t ' } A complete was brought about by a terrific grooming volunteer effort.The expenditure service for the Westmount drive to date) boarding is $4.00 for postage.Your pen- | trainin nies and coins contributed llal- f 9 + lowe'en night are brought back or your pet.to the depots in the \u201ctreat-boxes,\" counted at the bank and shipped to the United Nations Comunittee \u2014UNICEF branch and will be used to pr ovide witk and \u2018medicine SHEILA HOUSTOUN HU.1-4615 PICK UP AND DELIVERY ENROUTE TO Y VANCOUVER e Your choice of routes\u2014one way via Mexico, one way across Canada e Luxurious International service all the way MORE See your Travel Agent, Rail Agent or ony Canadian Pacific office, Canadian Pacific AIRLINES Internotionel Aviation Bidg., phone UN.1-9361 SMART WOMEN READ and USE OUR CLASSIFIED ADS When she wants to buy she checks the Classified for better bargains! When she wants to sell she uses the Classified for bigger, better results! A LITTLE GOES A LONG WAY WHEN YOU USE A CLASSIFIED AD ingly low! Be money! We all know a bargain when we see it! The classified ads, chock-full of human interest, attract the most readers! Results are dramatically quick, cost surpris- | phone: HU.1-04 51 TODAY ADTAKERS AT YOUR SERVICE TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY EVENINGS TO 8:30 a classified fan\u2014get more for your ® TV © RADIO © APPLIANCES SALES & SERVICE TV Antennas our specialty HI-FI Equipment and Transistor Supplies TELETRONIGS CORP.LTD.4119 St.Catherine W.WE.5-9282 2 Property Wanted HOUSE \"wanted in Westmount, seven to nine rooms.Convenlent location.Price up to 340.000 Please call W.H Lee, HU.1-7197.: INTERESTED in ~ rooms in buying house.7-9 Westmount.In desirable location, Price up to $40,000.Please call HU.1-6305, Office To Let | Western Avenue AT VENDOME Bright, corner, private freshly decorated, conveniently located for trunsportation (buses, Westmount Station) and parking facilities.Idea) for oue- = an vrofessional or business undertakinæ \u2018accountant.salesman, agent, ete.) desiring good address at moderate rental, office.Telephone snswering can be arranged with adjoining West- \u201cmount Examiner office.Call Mr.Mucbean, HU.1-2771.Greene Ave.MODERN OFFICE.500 SQ.FT.HEAT ED.Alt CONDITIONED, SERVICED PARKING SPACE.$150.00 MONTHLY.WELLINGTON 2-1545 i } | The Westmount Examiner Classified Advertising 11 Stores To Let _\u2014__ BASEMENT urea 25 x 38.healed, 220 vults.suitable for any business or storage.PO.06-0881, days only.12 Apartments To Let 3260 Ridgewood Sublet, 4b, until May at $110.00 or new, longer lease.Sunny, balcony.new refrigerator.RE.43-8007, Bachelor Apt.Westmount, sublet, ideal location, unfurnished or partly furnished.Immediate occupancy.Call days, WE.7-7761.local 10; evenings, WE.2-8622.ST.CATHERINE West, 7': rooms, per month: heated, water taxes WE.13-5533.16 Flats - Duplexes To Let Victoria Avenue Sublet.December 1st occupancy, 5 bright rooms.lower, corner duplex.garage, reasonable.Call RE.7-3288, $120.paid.Trades and Professional Cards Same Price as Regular Ad Cartage and Moving Are You Moving ?Call a reliable mover.Experienced men.Frea estimate.No job too small.Town or country.CALL ROGER WELLINGTON 3-1491 ___ Dentist 20 Rooms To Let WESTMOUNT.St.Catherine near Met- calf, quiet furnished room, medium size.kitchen privileges.OX.5-5738.21 5 Wanted Rooms Wanted ROOMS WANTED IN PRIVATE HOMES FOR OUT OF TOWN VISITORS, FOR FRIDAY.OCT.30TH, VICINITY SHERBROOKE AND KENSINGTON.WEST- MOUNT.EXCELLENT REMUNERATION.PLEASE CALL MRS.SOLOMON, RE.77-2358.LADY requires room In homely atmosphere.Has plano.Maximum $10.00 weekly.Write Box 598, c.o Examiner, 5135 Western Avenue.22 Room and Board To Let EXCELLENT room and board In good home, for discriminating.elderly lady.Apply Box 560, c o 7005 Kildare Rd., Montreal 29.26a Parking Space To Let WESTMOUNT.corner Metcalfe, Sherbrooke.Outside parking.Electric outlet.Small car.$8.00 monthly.WE.2- 2803.26 Garages To Let Westmount Near Sherbrooke Garage space available, on yearly leases, Also dead storage.Automatic doors, Apply Supt.435 Grosvenor Avenue.WELLINGTON 5-0760 .Furriers HAVE your furs repaired or reslyled at Floimen Exclusive Furs, 1235 Greenc Ave, WE.2-3312.Iron Work WAI.TER'S Iron Work.Fences, balconies, etc.Special iron work done to order.Gas and electric welding.645 Atwater, Room 5.Evenings, RE.8-5079.DR.JACQUES N.VISSAC DENTAL SURGEON Offices: Suite } at brooke Sireet West.4460 Sher- Telephone: Office: WE, 5-3102 Residence: WE.4-1512 Draperies Shop at Home Service CUSTOMIZED DRAPERIES FREE MAKING BFAUTIFUL FALL LINE FROM $1.60 UP.FREE WALL TO WALL INSTALLATION.ALL TYPES OF CARPETING AVAILABLE FIOM $4.79 SQ.YARD AND UP.FREE WALL TO WALL INSTALLATION.ALL.NAME BRANDS OF FURNITURE DIRECT FROM FACTORY CALL ANYTIME MR.MORRIS.UNIVERSITY 6-0595 Dressmaking EUROPEAN designer, gowns, suits, coals made to order! Work guaranteed.Alterations HU, 989-2045.EUROPEAN dressmaker - dresses, suits, conta made Allerations Specializes in Sherbrooke.Apt EUROPEAN designer, gowns, suits, coats, made to order.Alterations.Work guaranteed HU.9-2043._ Educational THE ROYAL BUSINESS COLLEGES 9627 Sherbrooke West, 8802 Park nue.CR.17-7798.Individual and relresher courses.Day, Evening.now.___ Furniture Repairs ANTIQUE furniture restoration, refinishing, Cabinets and furniture made \u2018designer, to measure.lace.5110 Ave- Class Start to order, repaired, remodelled.John's Cabinet Moking Rea'd., rear 1381; G.tene.WE 7-4879.: __ Marriage Licenses MARRIAGE LICENSES Milton W Winston, notary Days, UN.86-6556: evenings, HU.9-2820 - Music Lessons lessons for beginners, capuble Reasonable terms.Lessons pupil's homes.Phone WE.PIANO teacher.given in 5-1667.Painting & Decorating CEILINGS and walls washed.Also Floors cleaned by ex- painting done.perienced man.W.Campbell, Ri.7- 0222.Performing Arts Speirs-Miller BALLET TAP \u2014 SOCIAL DANCING SINGING \u2014 ELOCUTION REDUCING MODELING - CHARM PHOTOGRAPHY SHOWROOM FASHION SHOW T, V.TRAINING TOTS, TEEN-AGERS, ADULTS PLACEMENT BUREAU HUNTER 4-3717 Tamara Nijinsky PERFORMING ARTS STUDIO MUSIC, DRAMATIC AND DANCING 9-8311 \u2014 MO.5-4388 5650 VICTORIA AVENUE, APT.| RE.Examiner Classifieds \u2018 Give Quick Results HEATED garage.Prince Albert Avenue.$15.00 per month.Phone HU.8-5768 wie Avenue above West- mount Avenue, nice garage, HU.B-6457.27 Garages Wanted WANTED: garage, vicinity Sherbrooke ÿ M BONE VOIR AMC WN IRA ARCIRIEr i Fh PRE BY EAR i \u2014 PHONE YOUR ADS \u2014 % FY 10 Ww d 50° ; \u2018 À ords [> HUnter 1-0451 .ple NW 4c for each additional word b TO ots ter 0 tt re AAR SE Ac anti ot en oi r, # Please phone your Ads early in the week.No Ads accepted after 10:30 a.m.Thursday for current issue.For your convenience, Adtaker on duty Tuesday and Wednesday 4 until 8:30 p.m.\u2014 HU.1.0451, Boris CAE igs Nani SR, et, + NSAI so.dA HAIR FRR NR HSE IR + à PA ES rames in 29 1 Desk que tab poker For Sale Suitable For Doctor\u2019s Office holder: chairs: table; coat desk: 8 libra te: table: liquor anti- ry brand new bedroom suite; cabinet; large square dining room (able, Sheraton Connor sorted Dric-a-brac pieces.CR.mahogany.8 washing and oth chair, machine: as- br er 1-6359 or RE.7-3826.Household Furniture Beds: dressing tables; ete.All Ply to specialty, cessories.chesterfield: washing lamps; gatelez 1 good condition.VI.5-68 Do It Yourself wood.lumber, your specifications.kitchen hardware a HU.1-1179.arborite, c machine; table.86.ut Our C Hot w galvani blower 5:30 p.r Beautif trimmed Wonder Sacrifice jacket heater; hot eed tank.40 gallons.motor: all for $25.00.Call m., HU.6-6242.ater ul French models; cape; velvet coat, siz ful bargains.HU.1-9691.Wild Mink Coat Perfect able offer condition, size 16-20: accepted.HU.4-4954.suits; water electric after Cocktail Dresses fox e 12.reason- UPRIGHT PIANO GOOD CONDITION REGENT 3-9628 and Greene.Call evenings, WE.2-1443.CARTONS: fibre barrels: boxes: Cases; cord.ele.Excellent for packing.WE.29 For Sale 2-3038, Free cartons to anyone moving.® SIMMONS hide-a-bed in excellent con- Mr Fix-It dition.light green with small floral : design.$85.00.After 4 pan.HU.4-8861.SERVICENTER CHILD'S 6 drawer chest, light finish, WILL REPAIR ANYTHING EXCEPT A BROKEN HEART Specializes in repairs on rotisseries, irons, toasters, vacuum cleaners, polishers, radios, etc.Lamps mounted, shades made to order and re-vovered.Free pick-up and delivery.HU.4-8332, 5323 Decarie.Rummage Sale St.Stephen's Church Hail, 4006 Dorchester Street West, corner of Atwater.Friday.October 30th.11 a.m.American Women's Club of Montreal.PARCHMENT SHADES Made to order, All sizes and shapes.Reasonable.HU.4-7412.PIANO STEINWAY HUNTER 9-1645 COLEMAN pot space heater, good condition, 36\" high, 16 x 16.With 45 gallon drum, wooden stand and etc, including draft pipe and 12 straight and 3 elbows all 6, $45.00, Double bed spring, good condition.Will include mattress if required.$10.00.G-9187 or 169 First Avenue, LaSalle, after 5:30 p.m, KITCHEN sinks; plumbing fittings: cabinet sinks and cabinets: all styles.Olsen.and Co.8063 Monkland Avenue.laundry tubs: HU, 1-1179 HUMIDIFIER, 2, new; bought from Eaton's for $89.00 each; good for five rooms.Can be used as air coolers in summer, $30.00 each, or what have you to exchange?PO.8- avt days only.WILTON rug, 9 12, $23.00.4188 Decarie, Apt.1.HU.8-8526.BARGAIN! Closing Estate.Beauittul Persian rus: rave paintings; china RE.8-0303 HIGHCHAIR \u2018collapses to playtable and car scat, 85.00 for both: girl's winter coat with leggings and hat, English import, size 4-6, perfect condition, cost $40.00, for $15.00.HU.1.8867.$15.00; 1 swivel rocker, {weed covering.$30.00.HU.6-1586.BLACK Persian lamb coat, mink trimmed.size 14-16, presently stored at furriers.Call HU.4-1133.« HEINTZMAN walnut upright piano.WE.3-3146.DINING room set, very reasonable.9 pieces, w HU.4-8730.alnut, DISHWASHER, Hotpoint: Gurney electric stove.5 p.m.Good condition.Call HU.1-9343.after SECTIONAL 4 piece chesterfield; 4 dining record chairs; buffet: coffee cabinet.HU.4-5468.table; 31 Wanted To Purchase USED groove; what h GIRL'S wanted.clothing, \u201clumber; tongue planks; beams; ave you.PO.6-6961.days g, size 3 and 6 HU.6-245], building and plywood or only.years 32 Domestic Help Wanted Housekeeper Experienced.with good references.required Locatio Own room.Al 5 pm, After after family N.D.G.Char modern conveni _HU 4-8828.to look n, central of 3.kept.ences.33 Domestic Employment Wanted Domestic Placement Service For all types of domestic help call HU.9-5682.THOROUGHLY ED.AV Chars AILABLE ALL DAYS.HUNTER 9-5682 EXPERIENC- RELIABLE WOMEN.BATH & CLOSET DECOR BOUTIQUE GIFTS BERNARD PINSLER Interior Decorator Established 1886 New Address 1433 ATWATER AVENUE (Forum Building) WE.5-3354 Custom Furniture Upholstering \u2018Repaired e e Draperies \u2014 Curtains \u2014 Bedspreads 34 Help Wanted Female Are You Prepared For The Xmas Season?MAKE THE MOST OF YOUR SPARE TIME DURING THE COMING MONTHS.LET US TRAIN YOU AS THE IMPOR- AVON REPRESENTATIVE IN YOUR OWN NEIGHBORHOOD.1N- QUIRE NOW, UNIVERSITY 6-3629 Baby Sitter Living close to yor Avenue for school aged children.Mostly evenings.HU.8-3950 Part-Time BILINGUAL.TYPIST FROM 11 A.M.TO 1:30 P.M, 5 DAYS WEEKLY.GREENE AND ST.CATHERINE.WELLINGTON 5-1189 35 Situations Wanted Female LUROPEAN dressmaker; skirts and alterations.5075 Cumberland.HU.8- 007.BRITISH West Indies\u2019 woman cooking family \u2014meais for Thoroughly experienced.Call 8146.PART-lime | Small office, 36a desires evening.WE.3- ons.5-3168.position .for aft typing.ete.WE.Help Wanted Male - Female BOOKKEEPER for general office work in privately owned real estate office, bilingual, Westmount residence.WE.7-3706.BOOKKEEPER.capable, experienced, senior, fuil set books, trial balance and typing.full or part time.Phone WE.5-1667, 38 Sales Help Wanted Male - Female HOUSEWIVES can make Christmas expenses in next 90 days by giving leads on possible gas appliance users.No collecting.canvassing.Call Western Natural Gas Corp.HU.1-9053, between 2 and 4 and 6 and 8 p.m.SMART university or high school students can earn their tuition in next 90 days, on our special campaign.Big pay for spare time, easy work.No money to collect.Call between 2 and 4, and 6 and 8.HU.1-9053.40 Found FOUND on Sunday morning, Kensing- ton Ave., black cloth suit belt.size 10.HU 6-2310.a - Domestic Pets Blue Poodles Registered.etc.Airfreiæht.Tully, 12 Circle Ridge.Toronto 15, 42 Personals OLD, WEAK, RUNDOWN AFTER 407 Ostrex Tonic Tablets help thousands feel younger.Only 68c.At all druggists.43 Transportation PRIVATE secretary, hours 8:30 to 3.wishes to join daily car pool, from vicinity Greene, Sherbrooke to Wellington.Bridge Streets.Please telephone WE.5-4104, after 6 p.m.45 Money To Loan MORTGAGE LOANS Attention! Mortgage loans quiche.Contractors, privates.RA.9-433, EN RE TNE The Westmount Examiner, Fridey, October 23, 1959 19 FIL HERE\u2019S HOCKEY IN the air and it has come at the - right time, when the frost really hit on the weekend.The hockey will be amateur with the Metro league un- Ë.folding four games on Sunday with such district clubs as Verdun playing at home to Canadiens of Grockville; Snow- don Ponsards and N.D.G.Monarchs playing away.Both clubs will be at home at the Forum on Monday.Alex McLeller ended up with 10 teams and only one section.Quebec and Cornwall did not make it.Of course the Metro Special Junior League, (players of juvenile age) will operate again, but not for several weeks.In Verdun, The Playground Juvenile league will be in action next Tuesday with three games.They have gained two new entries this year.3 They will show two of their clubs prior to the Leafs\u2019 Sun-| MEMBERS OF THE Bulls football team of the city of Westmount Kight-man a day game with Canadiens and every junior game there- Tackle League receive instructions from their coaches, Huey MacDonald, left and after.Allan Turner, right.The players are, left to right: Red Madden, Pat Fennell, Bill x Le * NICK COSS, of Saint Laurent, scout for Detroit telephoned to say that Ron Harris of Grants in Verdun juvenile league will play\u2019 his hockey out of Edmonton this year with the Oil Kings.Nick said that Skinner and the Red Wings think that Harris has a lot on the ball and will make a good hockey find for the American club.He might have played for Hamilton but the club is only allowed one transfer from branch to branch, so Harris went out West.* * * It nice to know that some juvenile player has made good and not with Canadiens.It would also be nice if the pro clubs would give some kind of a grant to the club the player last played for.It would help the amateur club in such a way that he would have enough to carry on for another year, hoping that he\u2019ll have another in that year or two hence.* * * The pros could help the amateur clubs a lot more than they do.With Canadien.having everything in an amateur way sewed up, other NHL clubs, who would like to help in some way have their hands tied by that gentlemen\u2019s agreement and it may be a hard fast rule of 50 miles, everything belongs to Canadiens.There will come a day when the pro will have to help the amateur STAR Case Sex XE pa >, \"po Sr, © A+ ERE ry End » Another notable achievement in 1883 was the creation of the distinguished Canadian ¥* * club more in order to help him- 4 self.* * * FROM HOCKEY, the talk is football in more ways than just the pro.Amateur clubs, like those in the juvenile and bantam league are battling for their lives to make a playoff berth.In the intermediate section of the QRFU, Verdun need one more win as their rivals, Lakeshore have two games left to play.But, Verdun club officials say that even if they lose that last game with Lakeshore, they have beaten the Flyers three times, tied once in five starts.= * + In juvenile action, Point hold the best cards.If they win their remaining games they can keep Verdun in the playoff, otherwise Rosemount may step in front of the Braves, At the same time, St.Lambert are the team to watch.They have won the last three games out in their drive for a playoff spot.Strange as it might seem they have held their opponents to 13 points.No matter what four teams make that lucky circle it will be an interesting series.Point stand an excellent chance of winning the title won by Ville Emard Rams last year, who have been ousted, although they still have one more \u2014 + Sez RE =.> ps pa © Ke.Rye Whisky, Seagram\u2019s \u201883\u2019.Generations of i WV Canadians since 1883 have enjoyed the distinctive v oi flavour and bouquet of this fine whisky.¥ AA A pi Seagtams ; py nw Vi V.[22 ++ 66 99 : A a 1 et 0 4+ 4 À (5) ++ EVENE Musto, Jimmy Copland, Ross Teylosley and Allan Driver.xit seems when game.Another favoured to win the title are East End.* *# k In bantam football, Verdun are a sure bet for the playoff.La- chine are the best in this race and Saint Laurent are still fighting for a playoff, but will have to work hard in their remaining games.In midget, Saint Laurent Spartons seem te have it all their own way and their overage players next year will make a juvenile club happy over their find.*k 3 * Pee wee and mosquito are also supplying lols of anxious moments as their schedule draws to a close.One thing which league officials could weigh next fall is that their schedule seems to be a little too long.For my money, pee wee and mosquito should be almost finishing their season now, instead it will go to almost the week before the Grey Cup.In fact, it would be a good idea for all minor sections Lo shorten their schedule by at least two weeks.I'm sure they'll find il to not so long with a more interesting finish, owing to the shortness of the season.* 3k k In junior, it is Maple Leafs all the way.They have had an easy season, at least that's the way the Leafs play.Start easy, like against McGill, 6-0 at the half, and the game ended 25-0.The Leafs won't have that chance against an Ontario club.They will also miss that game with the Maritime.It has been one sided in the past, but a game that helps the winning club.It does and does not mean better competition but it helps a great deal.If the Ontario winner is AKO from Windsor then you can bet they'll be good.They are just about due for a winner for they have been hanging on during the past few years.Leafs have a long way to go.They could lose it right in the QRFU series.Touch foothall TERMITE \u201cA\u201d P Als, Riders upset experts; tough games coming up The Almost Right Football Selection Club took it on the chin, just like the experts when Montreal pulled of a 4-3 win over Toronto and Ottawa came through with a 17-16 squeaker, Our sports editor had two wrongs, but still leads with 15 rights and nine wrongs.Tom Malt.by, our plant super gained a split and his count is 14 rights and 10 wrongs.Ziggy Biclinski, the engraver, two selections lost on the weekend and now has a 12-12 record while Nat Bernstein, editorial staff member, split by picking Ottawa to win and Montreal to lose.Me also has a 12-12 count.The schedule goes into back-to- back games in two week-end stands.Hamilton will be playing Montreal twice, Cats decided to play it easy lo ease up injuries so they will have sound men for the playoff, Montreal would make the grade.But again, Ottawa and Toronto face each other twice, and that could be a little tougher series to pick than Cats and Als.So, here are the Almost Right selections for Oct.24 games: Bielinski picks Montreal to win on Bernstein and Jones like Ottawa and Hamilton and Maltby takes Toronto and Montreal.There cer: tainly is a wide choice this week, Tackle Football Toronto STANDING r w +.F A Pis Brones .7 Ô 2 152 wm 10 Mules LT 5 1 1122 1 10 Huskies 21 2 7 4 4 105 M5 6 Bulls 7 1 #8 71 150 2 NEXT GAMES Satuiday.October 24, 9:30 am, ; Huskies vs Brones: 10:30.Bulls vs Mules, King George Paik.SUDDEN DEATH PLAYOFF Saturday, October 3).10:00 am.Brones vs Mules, King George Park.LEADING SCORERS GP TD ST C Pts.R w L PP.|Munro, Broncs 7 11 0 8074 oyals .8 4 1 3 11 Brabant, Huskies 6 10 0 0 60 Rams .,.8 4 2 2 10 pratt.Mules 7 9 1 05 Regals .8.0 5 3 3|Driver A, Mules 7 4 0 0 24 TERMITE \u201cB Madden, Reg, Bulls 7 4 0 0 24 r w L ND Pia, Madden Ray, Huskies 7 4 Q 0 24 Crowns .12 5 0 7 17 Beaubien, Brones .5 #8 0 0 18 Crusaders .12 3 0 9 15 Dench, Breones 5 3 0 6 16 Scouts I | 2 3 7 11} Rothwell, Bronces a 3 0 0 18 Terriers .12 1 8 3 5 Adams, Bropes, 7 2 0 0 12 1 Desjardins, Bulls 7 2 o 6 1 MOSQUITO Fennell J.Bulls 7T 1 0 51 r w L D Pts Donnelly, Huskies 7 1 6 3 0 Roughies .8 4 0 4 12 - 4 Atherton, Mules .7 1 0 2 8 Bombers .8 4 } 3 1 = Indians .8 0 7 1 1 Doxas, Bulls 2 1 0 60 # > a Gagne, Huskies .2 1 o 0 6 PEE WEE \u201cA Russell, Brones .2 1 0 0 6 r won D PIs.Besner, Mules 5 1 ¢ 0 # Varsity .8 5 0 3 14} Grant, Huskies .6 1 0 0 6 McGill.8 4 2 2 10} Duncan, Mules 5 1 0 0 @ Western.8 0 7 1 1} Hull, Brones \u2026.5 100606 PEE WEE \"BR\" Kerrigan, Muskies .8 1 © 0 6 P w L D Pts.[Driver A, Bulls .6 1 0 0 6 Lions .8 > ù 3 13|Loftus.Huskies .7 1 0 0 86 Argos .8 3 3 4 6 Camilli, Mules .72 1 0 0 6 Alouettes .8 1 4 3 $ Griffiths, Mules .7 1 6 6 6 and what if the ; and Saturday.- Tedd Church Photo School Grid MON.OCT.tu.41d P.M.SR.\u201cB\u201d LCC v« MWHS at Hodyson Park.BAN.MRHS va WINS at Westmount Park.JR.WHHS vs.BHS at JRHS.TUES., OCT.27, S.15 P.M.SR.\u2018A (Fast) 3rd.vs Sth.SR.\"A\" (West) 3rd.vs Ath SR.\u201cB\"\u201d DO'C vs LHS at LHS.JR.(Earth Jrd.vs Sth.and Ind ve 4th.WED.OCT.28.3.10 P.M.SR.\"A (East) 2nd.+x 41h.SR.\"A\" (West) 2nd.vs 4th.B.EGoodrich 2-TIRE SPECIAL MRAILMANER TUBELESS TRACTION TWINS 2 r0 45°.Recappable Trade-In INSTALLED AND YOUR OLD BATTERY TRADE-IN $9.95 BUDGET TERMS $1.00 Down \u2014 $1.00 Per Week BEGoodrich 545 Cathedral St.At St.James Street UN.6 - 1656 20 The Westmount Examiner, Friday, October 23 1959 O\u201d Han 7$sa1e hear This Wñler.\u2026 UseTOLOIL Fuel oil fé Hye Hé Hydrogen ~treated x (lm) 4 Increase gd Tuo h) § the life of your furnace £1 = and give you the cleanest burning oi you can buy =) Hr Hydrogen-treated Toloil fuel oil reduces the sul phur content rls 7s a ra thus decreasing the corrosive effects of the flue gases Hy drogen-treated Toloi!l-Fuel oil also minimizes odour ©) 58 | and ensures exceptional storage stabilifg Montreal's most complete home heating service OIL BURNERS HEATING OILS HOT WATER HEATERS LOIL TOLHURST OIL LIMITED CRescent 9-7271 ! .a "]
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