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Titre :
The record
Éditeurs :
  • Sherbrooke, Quebec :Townships Communications Inc,[1979]-,
  • Sherbrooke, Quebec :The Record Division, Quebecor Inc.
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lundi 28 décembre 1981
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  • Journaux
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The record, 1981-12-28, Collections de BAnQ.

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Monday Births, deaths .7 Business.5 Classified.8 Comics .8 Editorial .4 Living .6 Sports.9-10 The way coimervationlits and environmentalists keep warning us about ecological problems, you'd think we were down to our last planet.Shovel Weather, page 2 Sherbrooke, Monday, December 28, 1981 30 cents Trudeau: Martial law may prevent repression How do you're not squad?" know a hit OTTAWA (CP) — It’s hoped the declaration of martial law in Poland will put that country on stable footing by curbing the excessive demands of the national Solidarity union and preventing severe represssion by the Communists, Prime Minister Trudeau says.It was obvious that the strain of a bankrupt economy and a demanding union movement in Poland meant "something had to give," Trudeau said in an annual year-end interview with CTV, to be broadcast today.Trudeau was defending earlier remarks about the Polish crisis which caused a stir among Polish-Canadians when he said martial law in the beleagured East European country is better than civil war, "Well if it’s one or the other, better to have, I suppose, the Polish generals and soldiers maintaining order rather than having the Soviets doing it."But one could argue well what is so good about having the army maintain order?Nothing so good except in this case hopefully the military regime will Angry Afghans march on Soviet embassy be able to, not only keep Solidarity from excessive demands, but keep the Communist government from excessive repression and it seems to me better than having the shooting ” “We have to try and find ways of peace, and that means talk and that means disarmament negotiations and so on.” On his own political future, he indicated he will continue to be as unpredictable as ever about when he will step down simply because he won’t know himself until the last minute."It won’t be signalled long in advance,'' Trudeau, 62, said of his retirement."I would think in a matter of a few weeks at some point I’ll see the time seems to be right in terms of my successors, in terms of the way the liberal, small T liberal policies are developing in terms of my usefulness “1 don’t think I'll know many months in advance.I’ve never planned it that way.” Monopoly game is murder WHEELING, W.Va (AP> - A father has been charged with killing his 26-year-old son after an argument over a game of Monopoly, police say.Robert Peggs, 57, was released on $10,000 bail Sunday following his arraignment on the Christmas Day shooting, Patrolman William Barry said.Peggs's son, Douglas Allen Peggs, was shot Friday after he accused his sister, Peggy, of cheating in a Monopoly game and began hitting her, Barry said.The mother of the two tried to intervene in the dispute, but the son also began beating her, Barry said.He left the home briefly and then returned and began beating his mother again.The son was shot after his father tried to stop the beatings, the policeman said.________ ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - A crowd of Afghans shouting denunciations of Soviet intervention in their country attempted Sunday to march on the Soviet Embassy, the second anniversary of Moscow’s military action, the local magistrate said.Magistrate Nasrullah Khan said the protesters were detained but would be released in small groups on the outskirts of the capital.The Soviet Embassy was closed Sunday and its staff apparently was unaware of the incident.The Dec.27, 1979, Soviet intervention led to the overthrow of Afghan President Hafizullah Amin and the installation of Babrak Karmal as the Norway fire delays cruise MIAMI (AP) — All 820 passengers aboard the world’s largest cruise liner, the Norway, were evacuated Sunday after a fire broke out near the boiler room, fire officials said.No one was hurt in the fire, which sent thick black smoke billowing over the skyline of the Port of Miami.“What we had was a lot of smoke, a lot of smoke,” said fire department spokesman Grant Sheehan."But it was controlled quickly." ¦mmmwt?new ruler.Thousands of Afghans and Soviet soldiers have been reported killed in an anti-Communist insurgency throughout the landlocked, rugged country which borders on Pakistan and the Soviet Union.In Moscow, the government-controlled news media presented a picture of increasing calm in Afghanistan.“The process of normalization is gaining momentum,” said Radio Moscow’s English-language service.PRAISED PEOPLE President Reagan, meanwhile, praised the “courageous people of Afghanistan” and said in a statement issued in Washington that the resistance movement has “effectively” denied the Soviets control of their country.In addition, some 300 anti-Soviet protesters gathered near the Soviet Embassy in Washington.In Cairo, Egyptian Foreign Minister Kamal Hassan Aly called on Moscow to withdraw its troops so Afghanistan could determine its own future.In New Delhi, about 100 Afghan men, women and children ended a 24-hour sit-in and hunger strike outside the Soviet Embassy in the Indian capital.The protesters, members of the United Afghan Front, began their fast at noon Saturday to condemn what they called “the Soviet occupation of our motherland ” Food, medicine short in Poland RECORD/PERRY BEATON McKenna paces Beavers Asbestos native Sean McKenna (12) scored four goals last night to lead Sherbrooke Beavers past Laval 7-5.Some of the younger members of the crowd were more interested in playing with their Christmas gifts and if the toy is any indication these young hockey fans are counting the days until the snow melts and the Expos make another stab at obtaining a berth in the World Series.See page 9.m ASSOCIATED PRESS Poland’s martial-law regime began its third week in power by cutting monthly meat and butter rations for most Poles and predicting worse food shortages in the new year.Western reporters in Warsaw said antibiotics and medical supplies also are in drastically short supply.It was food shortages that provoked the nationwide strikes in Poland 16 months ago that spawned Solidarity, the first union in the Soviet bloc independent of government control, and ration cuts last summer spurred a string of Solidarity strikes.Lech Walesa, leader of the now-banned Solidarity union, was named Time Magazine’s Man of the Year for 1981 Sunday for standing out “not only as the heart and soul of Poland’s battle with a corrupt Communist regime, but as an international symbol of the struggle for freedom and dignity.” Walesa has held by the government at an undisclosed location in Warsaw since shortly after martial law was imposed Dec.13.The latest cuts in the already depleted Polish menu were announced Sunday by Warsaw Radio, which predicted that next year the situation "will be worse than this because of considerably lower imports and lower poultry output." RATIONS CUT The radio said the martial law regime was trimming January’s butter and meat rations to 2.5 kilograms a month for most Poles Children, pregnant women and the elderly and the sick will be receive four kilograms of each commodity a month, it said, and manual workers will be exempt from the cuts.Meat and butter rations were cut off completely for farmers with more than one-half hectare of land, the state-run radio said, presumably because farmers have access to their own food stocks.Last August, rations were cut for a month to three kilograms a person from 3.5, but even then supplies were still so scarce that Poles had difficulty buying the meat and butter to which they were entitled.A London Times report from Warsaw published Sunday said recent visits to Warsaw hospitals disclosed a tragic shortage of medical supplies.It said people were dying because the government lacks hard currency to buy antibiotics, because disposable syringes and needles have to be used as many as 100 times and because there is not enough detergent to wash lied linen.The Sunday Times newspaper in London quoted Jan Nowak, national director of the U.S.-based Polish American Congress, as saying Solidarity leader Lech Walesa is in "a very weak condition” after being on hunger strike since Dec.19.In Rome, Archbishop Luigi Poggi, Pope John Paul’s special envoy to Poland, said Sunday night on his return from a trip to Poland that Walesa was not interned but was in what the archbishop called enforced residence.Settlers to remove barricades TEL AVIV (AP) — The Israeli government called on Jewish settlers in the northern Sinai to remove their barricades and discuss “the compensation they deserve” for homes and shops they will give up when the area is returned to Egypt in April.During its weekly meeting Sunday, the cabinet also agreed to hold a special session to discuss the evacuation of squatters, who have taken over houses in the Sinai town of Yamit and surrounding settlements No date for the meeting was set.The settlers have balked at more negotiations, saying the government is not offering them anything new.Sources in Yamit said the settlers welded two of the town's three gates shut Sunday, piled up sandbags, dug trenches and stockpiled helmets, shields and clubs in preparation for a possible clash with Israeli soldiers.Haitian protest ‘mob’ driven away with gas Technical difficulties blamed for sailors’ death MATANE, Que.(CP) — A confused abandon-ship operation, fire hoses that did not work, a lifeboat cable that snapped and a leaky raft all contributed to the deaths of four sailors in a Christmas Day fire on an oil tanker, survivors say.Bodies of four crew members have been found and a Transport Canada official said early today that little hope is held that three missing sailors could have survived in the frigid St.Lawrence River waters.Armand Cloutier described the missing as “three bodies — because a person can only survive 10 minutes in the zero centigrade water." Some of the 14 survivors would like to know why the lifeboat cable snappped while it was being lowered into the waves with eight men in it.“The captain told the men to try and climb back aboard," said deckhand Raymond Kennedy.“Five of them got back up.” Kennedy said four sailors abandoned the Hudson Transport before the captain gave the order, which added to the confusion of the operation.He said another six men tried to escape in a rubber raft over the opposite side as the lifeboat, but it leaked and started to sink.¦COMPANY'S PROBLEM' Crewman Phillipe Dussault got off in one lifeboat.“We could hear men secreaming on the other side We wanted to go around to save the others, but our motor wouldn’t start There were other lifeboats on the other side.If they were broken, that’s the company’s problem." The survivors also said the water hose didn’t work when an attempt was made to put the fire out in the cabin area of the vessel, and complained that it took six hours for the coast guard to begin rescue operations."We have an army here in Canada, why did we have to wait so long?” asked Pierre Lemieux.“We had time to die ten times.” Some of the survivors of the Hudson Transport were grey, incoherent and without shoes when a Canadian Forces helicopter from Summerside, P E L, picked them up near Matane, Que., on Christmas Day, a member of the rescue team said in Summer side.P.E.I.“They were lying in the (life) boat, so weak they couldn't move,” said Major Bill Misener, co-pilot of the helicopter.Misener said the men — especially those in the lifeboat — would have died of exposure within an hour if the helicopter had not picked them up in the lower St.Lawrence River.Four men were rescued from the lifeboat at about noon Friday, more than eight hours after an early morning fire broke out aboard their 4.000-tonne oil tanker MIAMI, Fla.(AP) — Hundreds of Haitians who had massed for a weekly demonstration outside a detention camp charged and scrambled up fences before club-swinging guards beat back what officials said may have been an effort to free Haitian refugees.After the protesters were driven from the Krome Avenue federal immigration camp amid tear gas Sunday, several Haitians set fires in the nearby Everglades underbrush and five hectares burned, said Metro Dade Sgt.Joe Wiche.“The plan seemed to be to help break out the interned entrants,” immigration spokesman Beverly McFarland said “They stormed past the security line and were climbing the fences to get in.” About 30 Haitian detainees escaped over a back fence in the confusion, but 20 returned voluntarily or were recaptured, McFarland said.The others disappeared into the crowd, where about 300 Haitian immigrants were shouting their support to the more than 200 who chanted "Liberté, liberté" as they tried to scale the fences.Metro Dade police and immigration security guards used clubs and Mace to drive back what one officer described as a “mob-type” rush The protesters were dispersed by about 6 p.m,, officials said.McFarland said no injuries were reported, but a lawyer for a Haitian refugee centre said police used unnecessary force in subduing the crowd.About 625 of the 701 Haitian refugees held inside the Krome Avenue camp 30 kilometres southwest of Miami have been boycotting meals since Christmas Eve to protest their internment.But they apparently were not involved in Sunday’s disturbance.Demonstrators have gathered outside the camp for the last four months About 500 demonstrators appeared Sunday.After about 15 minutes of chanting and singing Haitian anthems, 200 demonstrators charged and overran security guards.They rushed to the gates of the camp and began climbing over them, McFarland said.POLICE CALLED IN Wiche said Metro police, state police and Immigration and Naturalization Service riot officers were called on to assist security guards shortly after the disturbance began.278405 78405 27-12-81 The folder entitled Prize of $100,000 1 movecib 107974 943391 883703 285407 604708 All winning tickets, without eiccption, c#n presented to» pev^ent et Loto Quebec 2 OOO Bern $t , Montre»! M31 «N5 Who are the winners with / Ix>to-Québec?” I »nyi lo *1 Free tick HAPPY NEW YEAR in the rfvwnt of di*crep»»*cy between thi» lut »»kJ the offici»! winning hit.the letter *h#H pre*»i! is available at most Loto-Québec sales kiosks, and at Loto-Québec offices.K 0 Qlotoquebec t \ $ i 2—The KKC'ORl)—Monday, üacember ïk, Mt8i Bothersome britches mean friendly war for brothers OWATONNA, Minn.(AP) - Hoy Collette and his brother-in-law have been exchanging the same pair of pants as a Christmas present for 11 years — and each time the package gets harder to open.This year they came wrapped in a car compacted into a one-metre cube.The trousers are in the glove compartment of the 1974 Gremlin Now Collette's plotting his revenge — if he can get them out.It all started when Collette received a pair of moleskin trousers from his brother-in-law, Larry Kunkel of Ben-senville, 111 Kunkel's mother had given her son the britches when he was a college student He wore them a few times but they froze stiff in cold weather and he didn’t like them.So he gave them to Collette, Collette, who called the moleskins “miserable," wore them three times, then wrapped them up and gave them back to Kunkel for Christmas the next year.The friendly exchange continued routinely until Collette twisted the pants tightly, stuffed them into a one-metre long, 2.5-centimetre-wide tube and gave them back to Kunkel.The next Christmas, Kunkel compressed the pants into a 17-centimetre square, wrapped them with wire and gave the hale to Collette.Not to be outdone, the next year Collette put the pants into a 60-centimetre-square crate filled with stones, nailed it shut, banded it with steel and gave the trusty trousers back to Kunkel, Two years ago, Kunkel installed the pants in a 102-kilogram, home-made steel ashtray made from 20-centimetre steel casings and etched Collette’s name on the side.Collette had trouble retrieving the treasured trousers but succeeded without burning them with a cutting torch.Last Christmas, Collette found a 270-kilogram junked safe and hauled it to Viracon Inc.in Owatonna, where the shipping department decorated it with red and green stripes, put the pants inside and welded the safe shut.The safe was then shipped to Kunkel, who is the plant manager for Viracon's outlet in Bensenville.Last week, the pants were trucked to Owatonna, 90 kilometres south of Minneapolis, in a drab green one-metre cube that once was a car.A note attached to the 900-kilogram lump advised Collette that the pants were inside the glove compartment.'This will take some planning,” Collette said.“I will definitely get them out I’m confident." But he’s waiting until January to think about how to recover the bothersome britches.B.C.camper rescued after 13 days in snow News-in-brief RICHMOND, B.C.(CP) After 13 days stranded in the British Columbia wilderness, a 33-year-old resident of this Vancouver suburb was rescued — thanks to a CB radio operator in Colorado who was ill at home with a virus.Harry de Weyer left home Dec.6 for a week camping in the mountains northwest of Harrison Lake, about 80 kilometres east of Vancouver.De Weyer, a truck mechanic, took along a supply of food, a tent, a camp stove and his dog Toby, all packed in a four-wheel drive vehicle.Three days into the trip, about one metre of snow fell, prompting de Weyer to leave his campsite.When he had travelled about two kilometres, he began to skid off the road.Efforts to pull the vehicle back on the road with a winch resulted in a broken steering mechanism.De Weyer settled down to nine days of radioing for help on his citizen’s band radio De Weyer’s first successful call went through to Fort Worth, Tex."All they said was that 1 was in no immediate danger,” de Weyer said in an interview."The fellow down there couldn’t pronounce Skookumchuck (a tiny town about 32 kilometres north of Harrison) or Lillooet."I tried to call back and correct him, but the signal kept fading out." He also got through to operators in Oklahoma and Nebraska, but the messages received from the U S.by Pemberton RCMP — 50 kilometres north of where he was — were scrambled.Then de Weyer tried to walk out using snow shoes."The snow shoes didn’t work worth a darn,” he said."They kept falling off.” So he returned to camp where he had enough staples left for about a week.He had run out of dog food so Toby ate granola and porridge.Life less than idyllic for stranded sailors KENTV1LLE, N.S.(CP) With scanty rations, no shelter, and not much hope of immediate rescue, three Canadian castaways are finding life on a Pacific atoll more nightmarish than idyllic.John Harrison, 39, an industrial designer from Vancouver, and his two daughters, Micki, 20, and Kristen, 13, became stranded on remote Palmyra Atoll on Dec.8 after a typhoon ripped the masts from their 13.7-metre trimaran Sisythus and they ran out of fuel.Jennifer Poapst, Harrison’s girlfriend, said Sunday the Harrisons are in a fairly weakened condition, emotionally and physically.She hears from Harrison via the shortwave radio owned by the island's only resident.The calls are picked up by a Honolulu resident who has telephoned information to Poapst and Harrison's former wife, Collette Marquis.“I have heard that they are eating fish and coconuts," Poapst said in an interview from her parents’ home in this Annapolis Valley town."They are actually without shelter and are just living under the elements.“The youngest girl has been hysterical, 1 have heard.When it was suggested at one point that a boat come out and rescue them, she just went into hysterics and said she would never get on another boat again." ABANDONED BASE The Palmyra Atoll, 1,600 kilometres southwest of Honolulu, was a U S.military base during the Second World War but was abandoned in the 1960s, Poapst said.All that remains is an airstrip that is apparently inaccessible to any large aircraft.Stewart James, who lives with Marquis in Los Angeles, said the Canadian government has said it would be too expensive to send a boat to rescue the Harrisons."The Canadian government's annual rescue budget in this area is less than $100,000 so it’s reluctant to see so much laid out at once for only three people," James said.The U.S.Coast Guard would not send a boat to rescue them because their lives were in no immediate danger.Consumers borrowing to qualify for free turkeys TORONTO (CP) Some consumers have been stockpiling food and borrowing money for other purchases so they can buy enough groceries to qualify for free turkeys from supermarkets, says the Consumers’ Association of Canada Shirley Northrup, association policy director, said despite warnings from her group, some shoppers increased their borrowing during the Christmas season after spending a lot of their cash on large quantities of groceries in order to claim free turkeys through offers from Loblaws and Dominion stores.Loblaws had been giving shoppers "free bonus turkey vouchers” when they purchased quantities of groceries or specific bonus items.Shoppers could redeem the coupons for turkeys after collecting a certain amount of vouchers.Weathe Cloudy today with light snow flurries and a high of 0.Tonight and Tuesday, snow with a total accumulation of 5 cm.Low tonight and high tomorrow, -4.a J After the Loblaws’ announcement, Dominion offered a 20-cent turkey coupon for every $10 purchase of most groceries, and also offered limited redemption of Loblaws turkey vouchers for four times their value until two weeks after the Loblaws offer ended Dec.24.NEED LARGE PURCHASE The consumers’ association warned last month that the Loblaws offer could require shoppers to purchase $1,200 to $1,300 worth of groceries within four or five weeks.Quebecers warming to Joe?MONTREAL (G’P) — F'or Joe Clark, 1981 has been the year that Quebecers began to swerve in their devotion to the federal Liberals and warm, however moderately, to his Progressive Conservatives.In doing so, he says, they warmed up to him personally, particularly for the manner in which he directed opposition to Prime Minister Trudeau’s original plan to patriate the constitution unilaterally.Cultists continue hunger strike NEW CARLISLE, Que.(CP) - The leader of a doomsday cult and one of his followers, both charged with criminal negligence in the death of the follower’s two-year-old son, continued a hunger strike Sunday they began on Christmas Day.Roch (Moses) Theriault, 38, and Jacques (Nathan) Giguere, 28, refused their Christmas dinner and have not eaten since, a prison official said, but the two have not said why they are refusing food.Opposition ‘extremists’ — Clarke OTTAWA (CP) — Joe Clark says a new Toronto-based organization working to oust him as leader of the Progressive Conservative party is "a small extremist group" that is proving a persistent headache.John Morrison, founding chairman of the new committee, has been working against the interests of the Conservative party for some time, Clark said in a weekend interview with Standard Broadcast News.Protestors mark Afghani coup OTTAWA (CP) — About 40 demonstrators gathered in front of the Soviet Union Embassy Sunday to mark the second anniversary of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, The protesters carried signs and shouted slogans, demanding the withdrawal of troops.They also called on the Canadian government to halt grain and high technology exports to the Soviet Union.Crombie wants Clark’s job TORONTO Nadeau Inc., 12 Wellington St., N , Sherbrooke.HOME PICK UP —Tohelp Arthur Laforest continue his work Furniture, household articles, clothing, children's articles Tel.567 9714 12 9 t.f.retired people — New doctor *t the Rolling Hills Residence, Lennoxville.Private room and dtluxa board» lovely site, excellent kitchen, 24 hour surveillance, devoted personnel, transportation servlcee.Tel.562 2147 or 567 5234 62.Machinery ALLIED LOADER with manure and gravel bucket, $950., Curtis snow cab, $300., snowmobile trailer, $80., circular stair case, $150 Tel.843 2777 before 8 p.nv 12 28 30 Austin Glove Mfg.Co.1140 Panneton SI.Between Pepsi and Bloc Vibre Tho Sole Continues.December 28.29 end 30 From 9h00 to SHOO Discontinued Lines and Seconds Wool Gloves and Mitts — Vinyl Gloves — leather Gloves and Mitts 10% off an assortment ot ski gloves and mitts 10% off sweaters For the Whole Family / The Mayor's report on the financial situation of the Municipal Corporation of the Town of Lennoxville in conformity with article #474.1 of Bill #105 "Municipal Democracy".1.- Financial Statements - 1980.The Town of Lennox ville ended the 1980 financial year with a surplus of 9 553,00 $.Revenues Taxes 918 174 $ In lieu of taxes 378 1 89 $ Services rendered to other municipalities 12 612$ Other services rendered 23 434 $ Miscellaneous revenues 87 049 $ Unrestricted transfers 122 440 $ Restricted transfers 135 616 $ Total Revenues 1 677 514 $ Expenditures General administra tion 261 771 $ Public protection 276 158 $ Roads 210 680 $ Public Health 155 786 $ Cultural & Recreational 129 632 $ Other activities 258 031 $ Other expenses 300 903 $ Transfer to reserved surplus 75 000 $ Total Expenditures 1 667 961 $ 2.- 1981 Budget In spite of tight control of expenditures, we will probably fin ish the year 1981 with a small deficit.In the present state of the economy, it is getting almost impos sible to accurately forecast expenses that will occur almost a year after their estimate.High inter est rates and inflation affect municipalities, as well as individuals We are also, during the year, always faced with unexpect ed expenses which result in unbalancing the budget, as care fully prepared as it has been.3.- 1982 Budget The 1982 budget is now being prepared It should be present ed to the Council on the 21st of December 1981.We must be realistic and take into account the present state of the Canadian econo my.Each expenditure will have to be fully justified and all non essential expenses will be simply eliminated.All efforts will be made to keep at a minimum the in crease of property taxes in 1982.4.- Projects in 1982 This year, many pro jects were completed , construction of connecting water mains and sewers on Reid, Gordon and Queen North Streets, paving on Moulton Hill Ter race and Champigny Streets, purchase of a street sweeper vac uum type construction of the Herring reservoir and its water main.For next year, the principal projects will be the construe tion of a pumping sta tion at well #3 and the connecting of St Francis Street wat er main to the Queen North Street water main.Many other projects were put forward by our engineers but high interest rates and escalating costs are forcing us to postpone them in or der to lighten the fl nancial burden of our taxpayers.November 23rd 1981 C W Dougherty, Mayor JEANS ABACA Enr.OPENING BONUS FREE Sweatshirt value of $14.97 with purchase of jeans of $25.00 or more Latest Styles Available .817 King St.West 567-2949 STOOPS l PONY MlNP WAûAN'S corfWnvÉWWs.MILTON FRIEDMAN byDcPlSneyd tr$ THÉ WAY HÉ’S PU* THE PECIAWLIW Of THE DEFICIT TO THE RIGHT THAT BOTHERS ME/ WJID UX) UKE.TD UÜ Ladies’ Sweat Shirts 30 only! Fleece lined Compare at « ran $9 95! One to a cuitomar 4.UU Ladies' Tailored Blouses 48 only'Flannelette plaid Compare it o CH $9 95' One to a cuttomei aJ.t)U Ladies’ Knee-Length Sweaters 47 only' New' Fashionable' Compare at P $14 95! One to a customer O.UU Ladies’ Dresses 98 only' Ware to $14 97! nn One to a cuitomar D iUU Ladies’ Sleepers 3.00 Men’s X-Country Ski Socks 2.00 Heavy quality wool bland Previously $4 99' One pair to a customer Canadian Forces Arctic Mitts Previously, Ganumal Warmth in eatreme cold $13 97 Ona pair par customer 5.00 Men's Sport Shirts Polyester knit in navy, light blue.Were sale priced at $9 97! One per customer.Men’s Pullovers Bulky knit, turtle-neck, blue.Rug $9 95! One to a customer Men’s Sweaters Polyester-cotton turtle-neck pullovers Slightly irregular Were $4 99 One per customer 4.00 4.00 2.00 Girls' (size 10) Winter Coats Special group.Compare at $49 95! u g* One to a customer.____________1Q.UU Children’s Slacks m 4 to 6X Elastic waist, doubleknit polyester.Compare at $2 98! One pair per customer.Children’s T-Shirts 1.00 4 to 6X.Canadian, polyester-cotton, striped.V« or short sleeves Compare at $3.98! ^ g»#» One per customer ._____________ 1 .UU 37 only! Stretch terry irregulars et lines to $8 98* One to i cuslomer Men’s Leather Boots Warmly pile lined bieck or brown snow boots Our regular.$41 95 One pair per customer 4.U.UU Le NAC Jr-Ladies’ Sets 14 only' Culotto-ikirt end matching bloute Wore $14 77 Ono tot par customer .BOYS' DEPT.Boys’ Polojamas 8 to 14.tloeco lined, 'jogger” style Compere it $10 One per customer 4.50 MENS MEZZANINE Girls’ Dresses 7 to 14 in polyester-cotton prints Compare at $9 95! One per customer Girls’ Dress-Slacks Sets 2 to 3X Polyester-cotton prints Compare at $8 95! One per customer Children’s Winter Parkas Fur-tike pile.2 to 6X Compare at $14 95! One to a customer 2.50 2.50 5.00 m -Î* 8.00 Men's Overcoats Tweeds, camel hair-like labrics Compare to $100' One per customer 50.00 POUR VOUS MADAME DEPT.Jr-Ladies' Pullovers 88 only! Clliilc Argyll design acrylic knits Compere it $12 95' - One to i customer., 4.UU Jr-Ladies' Jeans and Pants 69 pair' Denim» and corda by FRUIT at the LOOM Compare to $20' Ten Ono to i customer f.üU Jr-Ladies’ Dresses 86 onty'Wore titp priced to S?4 97! u p, nn Ono to i cuitomor I U.UU Separates Ladies stocke Compas Misses Dresses and Holiday Dresses sa only! Slzat 8 to T6 Were site priced up to $28' One per cuslomer Jr-Ladies' Slacks-Vest Sets Wine shade sitin Regular $40 ^ r> rt/t One set per cuitonwr 1U.UU Ladies' Blue Jeans 28 only! By Quebec Adios Just Sizes 25.26.28 only Compare to $25! Ont parr pot cuitomor.,
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