Sherbrooke daily record, 17 février 1964, lundi 17 février 1964
[" Carnival atmosphere prevails in Dallas as Ruby trial opens H E Q U E .«JURIES-B.WEATHER Sunny with (\u2022\u2022sonabl* fain-parafurat today; wind* north-waitarly IS becoming light by afternoon.High today at Sherbrooke 20.Outlook for Tuesday: Cloudy then clearing.Little change in temperature.By PETER WORTHINGTON DALLAS\u2014 (TNS) \u2014With all change of venue Belli had sup^ the decor and dignity of a Span-poenaed 175 v itnesse-, Rub> | ish carnival, one of the greatjwould arrive in court 15 min-trials of America begins today.jutes before the judge appear-) After spasmodic warm-up ap- and cleared out the photo pearances concerning Grand gtaphers and interviewers.Jury indictments, postpone-\tA \u2018CELEBRITY\u2019 ments, bail hearings and Ruby would hold impromptu changes of venue, Jack Rubyipress conferences and be photo goes to court today as his mur- graphed and quizzed on radio; derer trial begins in earnest and TV.He was as one person On a brilliant Sunday morn- described it, \u201c'more a celebrity ing last Nov.24 Jack Ruby, a than a man fighting for his smalltime striptease joint own- life.\" er and an underworld fringe In recent weeks a syndicated character, sprang from a crowd service has been peddling a ser-of newsmen in the Dallas police ics allegedly written by Jack station and shot Lee Oswald, Ruby entitled: \"I Killed Leo.the accused assassin of Presi-jOswald.\u201d dent Kennedy.\tWhen Jack Ruby isn\u2019t occupy An estimated 150 million ing centre stage himself, Mr.North American TV viewers Belli takes over as master of w ere horrified witnesses to tele- ceremonies and gives what in vision\u2019s first \u201clive\" murder, di-| rect from Dallas.BIGGEST OF ALL Now begins the trial which1 will undoubtedly take its place with other great American trials\u2014the Scopes money trial of 1925, the Lindbergh kidnapping trial of 1936, Sacco and Vanzetti in 1927, the Loeb and Leopold courtroom drama of 1924.Jack Ruby should outshine them all.There never has been, and likely never will be, its\t0 ^ToTcanadian, unused toj £ÊËË Texas-style justice, the whole\t* perfomance has an air of unreality\u2014something beyond nor- OTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Parliament mal courtroom experience.meets Tuesday with a changed Judge Joe B.Brown, hearing executive and a slightly differ-the case, has banned TV and ent.mood from the post-election still cameras from the court session of last May.room.\tThe session, which starts with The protect the dignity of thelthe reading of the throne speech court and to handle press accre-jby Governor - General Vamer, Established 1897 Price: 7 Cents SHERBROOKE, QUEBEC, MONDAY, FF BRI VRY 17, 1964 Sixty - Seventh Year Britain reinforces Cyprus garrison ituation remains tense See \"Carnival\" Page 7 Tension less at NICOSIA tReuter*) \u2014 One hundred British para-' troopers headed for the southern mining town of Polis today where 700 Turkish-Cypriots were reported to he surrounded In Greek Cypriots.\\ l.\u2019nited Nations observer also made a separate trip to Polis.A British military spokesman, announcing the manoeuvre, said the l urks were inside a school building, dispirited and short ot food.Greeks were dug in 100 yards away.There was no shooting overnight but the situation was tense, the spokesman said.I he I N observer.I t-Gen.Prcm.Singh Gyani of India, flew first to Mima, the main administrative centre for western Cyprus, to pick up Grcek-and Turkish - Cypriot district leaders and then on to Polis.I he British spokesman said Mima was tense but otherwise the island today was generally quiet following a weekend which saw bloodshed, threatened intervention bv lurkey and.finally, an appeal for peace by Cypriot Pres-i ident Makarios.j Some 170 British troop rein forcements headed here to hoi stcr harassed British forces who! have been keeping an uneasv 200 and peace on the strife-torn island Sunday night another cease 300 persons lost their lives in the figliling before a British arranged erase fire was ditation, the Sam Bloom Advertising Agency of Dallas has been recruited.The Bloom Agency has arranged for accredited newsmen to get identification cards, buttons with their pictures to wear will be the acid test of the new ministerial lineup and cabinet reorganization worked out by Prime Minister Pearson since the last session ended in December.It also may see less attention WINNING SCULPTURE \u2014 The winning snow sculpture in the Coaticook Winter Carnival Contest, at the homo of Mr.and Mrs.Russell Sage, Ottawa S(\u201e Coaticook, depicts.\u201cMr.and Mrs.Centennial\".The figures are flood lit and i may be seen by visitors to the community cither in the day time or evening.in lapels, and has set up exten- from the opposition parties to sive telegraph, telephone and the issues arising from last press room facilities.\tspring's election that brought POOL SYSTEM\t[^e minority Liberal govern- So manv newsmen are ex- mcn power, peeled to be in Dallas that a The Progressive Conserva pool system of reporters rota-!*ves, fresh from efforts at their ting through the courtroom is national convention to head the the order.\tjparty firmly on the comeback Coaticook winter carnival fire was negotiated at Ayios pro,.|aim(,(i chiistmas Day.Theodoris where fighting be Cyprus is a former British tween Greek- and Turkisli-Cyp C()ion\\ vvhieli was granted iiuie riots broke nut Sunday.A pro pondence in 1960.vious cease-fire negotiated by Three British military police the British was broken.\tmen missing since midnight Sal- In Sunday's fighting British urday, were handed back to military sources said one body British authorities unharmed was found: believed to he thatjSunday.The Cypriot govern-of a Greek-Cypriot.\tment said the ineident was a During the weekend there \u2018'misunderstanding were reports of Turkish naval -movements in the area off Cyprus, which was interpreted as a threat bv Turkey to use their ?Cypriot dispute before Security Council today UNITED NATIONS (AP) \"not give in to threats, pre« 'The Cyprus dispute goes he sure or blackmail.\u201d fore the UN Security Council \"We shall light courageously today as Brilain and the United and resolutely against the do-States seek to head off mili signs or attacks on our island,\u201d 11 ary intervention by Turkey and Tie said.Since the communal Greece.\tfighting during Christmas, there ; The council debate, requested has been virtually no govern by Britain and Cyprus, was menial co operation between the expected to launch negotiations Greek Cypriot majority and the (Or an international force linked Imkish ' 'print minority, lo the United Nations.Its pur PEACE FORCE NEEDED jpose would be to prevent an Britain s chief I N delegate, other general outbreak of tight- s'1' Patrick Dean, was expected ling -between the Greek and 10 tell the 11 nation Security Turkish - Cypriot communilies.Council an international peace force is urgently needed on the Mediterranean island, where about 3,000 British troops have been trying to enforce a ceasefire.Brilain ordered about 300 more troops, including an armored squadron, to Cyprus to give its force more mobility.broke out initially before Christ Tlu, l njU,(i states and Britain w ould p r o in p t Turkey and Greece to send in troops to bark up their Cypriot kin The result could be a war belween I\u2019m key and Greece, eastern an ehors of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.Archbishop Makarios, Greek Cypriot president of Cyprus, broadcast an appeal to both Turkish and Greek Cypriots for George W.Ball, U.S.under-secretarv of state, returned to Washington Sunday night after failing to persuade Makarios to accept a U.S.-British proposal restraint Bui.Makarios warned fo|.a m oon man peace keep that his government meaning ithe Greek - Cypriots would See \"Cypriot Dispute\" Peg* 7 Sports queen is elected COATICOOK \u2014 (Special) \u2014 The 6th annual winter carnival By STANLEY BEERWORTH (Record Correspondent) So far there are about 350 fail, are expected to spend lle!d al newsmen competing for 43 more time on the \u201cshould-bes\u201d:®1^J'^ J** cyoungsters thoroughly enjoyed the various rinks and the courtroom seats.Canadian of the legislative program than street, parade, crowning of a right on intervention on the island conferred by agreements I reached w;hen Ihe 1900 Cyprus jeonstitution was drafted.| Makarios\u2019 pica for peace was! coupled with an assurance that complete with bread loaves, a^g Greeks on Cyprus\u2014repre- Marathon meetings between j satellite, a horse drawn sleigh.son|jng about 80 per cent of Ihe representatives of School com { a Dutch windmill.\t| population of 500,.)()() \u2014 would At the L\u2019Heureux School on \u2018fight with courage and deter- Mediation ta I k s continue No strike solution By IRWIN (Record Staff BLOCK Reporter) ujauiaii!-* > Say When 6) School Teleca»t 8) Art 12) Coffee Break; 10:15 a.m.8) Teddy Bear Playhouse i) Inquiry 8) Breaking Point 12) Jonathan W inters 10:30 p.m.6) Explorations 11:00 p.m.3) New» 5)\tNews 6)\tNews 8) News 12) News 11:10 p.m.3) Vermont Edition 8) News 11:15 p.m.j 3) Weather I 5) Sports 6) Viewpoint 8) Olympics 12) Pulse 11:20 p.m.3) Tomorrow's Weather 6) Final Edition 11:25 p.m.3) Bowling ; 6j Sports 11:30 p nrw 5» Tonight Show I 12) Pierre Berton 10:25 a.m.5) NBC News 10:30 a m.) I Love Lucy 5)\tWord For Word li) Chez Helene 8) Town St Country Time 2) Liberal Arts 10:45 6)\tNursery School 'Time 10:55 a.m.1)\tFalrvlew Weather Forecast 11:00 a.m.') Real McCoya 5)\tConcentration 6)\tI^retta Young 8) Price Is Right 2)\tRomper Room 11:30 a.m.Pete and Gladys 5)\tMissing Link 8> Girl Talk 8) Object Is 11:54 a m.6)\tC.B.C.News 12:00 noon 3) Love Of Life 6> Montreal Magazine \u2022) Your First Impression 12) Theatre 8) Seven Keys 12:30 p.m.3) Search For Tomorrow 3) Trush or Consequences 6) Movie 8) Fathers Knows Best 2) Lunchroom Little Theatre 12:43 p.m.3) Guiding Light 1:00 p.m.3) Weather 5) Ernie Ford 8) Ernie Ford 1:03 p.m.Ti Across The Fence 12 Pulse 1:15 p.m.3) Mixing Bowl 12> Movie 1:30 p.m.3) As The World Turps 5) News 8> Movie 1:45 p m.5) On The Local Scene 8> CBS News \u2022\t2:00 p.m.You 3) Password 5)\tPrice Is Right 6j Password 2:30 p.m.! 3) House party I 5) Doctors | 6» Scarlet Hill 8j Day In Court 2:45 p.m.6)\tQuebec Legislature 3:00 p.m.: 3) To Tell The Truth 3) Loretta Young 6) Take Thirty 8) General Hospital 12) Heres Looking At 3:30 p.m.,3) Edge of Night i 5) You Don\u2019t Say TRUMPS PULLED WITH SAFETY By OSWALD JACOBY N*wtpap«r Enterprise Assn.Today we will be concerned with trump management.There is a pretty good general rule which is that declarer should pull trumps as soon as he can do so safely, provided he has no need to any ruffing with the short hand.South trumps the second heart and if he is careless he will plow straight ahead and draw trumps.It will take him four .leads to get all the trumps whereupon he will knock out the ace of diamonds.East will lead another heart and South will have to ruff with his last trump NORTH\t11 * 2 V\t96 4 J 10 7 6 + «76543 WEST (D)\tEAST + 8 653\t+74 VAKQ74\tVJ 10 853 4 42\t4 A 9 8 + A 10\t+J92 SOITH + AKQ J 10 9 V\t2 4 K Q 5 3 + KQ Both vulnerable West North East Sou.h 1 V Pass 2 V 4 * Pass Pass Pass Opening lead\u2014tf K Card S-ns.Q\u2014The bidding has been: South\tWest\tNorth\tcast last two\ttricks to\tthe\tace\tof\t1 Spd.\tPass\t2 Hrts.\tPass He\twill\tbe\table\tto\tcash\tthree\tclubs and\ta\theart.\t3\tHrts.\tPass\t4 Clhs.diamond tricks,\tbut\twdll\tlose\tthe\tIf South\tis\tcareful\the\twill\tnote\t4 Hrts.\tPass\t4 Spds.\tPass that dummy's deuce of trumps 5 Dia.Pasi 6 Spd».Pa*s\"^ has great potential value.He ?can afford to lead one round of You.South, hold: Spades.K-iclubs before drawing trumps.;J-10-4-2; Hearts.A-3-2; Dia-Then, if West takes the first monds.A-3-2; Clubs.Q-6.club he won't be able to force What do you do now?South with another heart, be- A\u2014Pass.\\our partner was a cause South will be able to ruffjgood hand, but he was willing in dummy.\tto stop at four spades.If West ducks the first club\tToday's Question South can afford to draw You hold the same hand.The trumps.He will have one club bidding is opened to your right trick in and will still make six With one heart.What do you trumps and three diamonds, do?Of course, that play will lose\tAnswer Tomorrow if trumps are three-three and\t\u2014- diamonds four - one, but the\tLOSE EVERY TIME chance of the actual distribution MONTREAL (CP) \u2014 for 18 occurring is considerably great-A ears, McGill University has er.\tsent a debating team to Norfolk penitentiary in Massachusetts, but it has yet to win a match.It seems McGill students do not have as much spare time to prepare their arguments as their Norfolk hosts.\u2018A W, I [.is the sale you've been waiting for! A.Martin's back-breaking Progressive February Fur Sale! This is how it works.Beginning today, you receive 17% off on our already reduced January prices.On February 18th, your discount becomes 18% and so on till February 29lh, when the discount will be a genuine 29%.Remember \u2014- the earlier you buy, the better your selection.Don't wait until (he last few days .what you want may be gone! NATURAL PASTEL MINK PAW COATS PASTEL MINK CHEVRON COATS .NUTRIA COATS (dyed Caramel) .OTER PHANTASY Sheared muskrat dyed) coats BLACK SATIN MINK PAW COATS (dyed) ) .NATURAL MINK TWEED COATS .SAPPHIRE MINK PAW COATS .PEARL MINK PAW COATS .PASTEL mink CHEVRON JACKETS .OTER PHANTASY («hear, ed muskrat dyed) coats PASTEL MINK PAW JACKETS .« 588.00 288.00 368.00 298.00 488.00 288.00 588.00 588.00 168.00 448.00 448.00 limited V.THEROUX 147 Frontenac St., Sherbrooke, Que.Tel.569-2313 Announcing the all-new GMC HAN DIVAN The ideal combination of carrying capacity, loadspace and power! Handi-Van offers you up to 211 cubic feet of loadspace, 2,000 lbs.of cargo carrying capacity on a 7/2-foot flat floor.plus a super economy two-engine choice (90-hp 153 cu.in.four cylinder or 120-hp 194 cu.in.six cylinder power).plus maximum loading ease.163/4 square feet of rear loading access alone.plus top manoeuvrability and top job versatility and tough unitized construction.Handi-Van also offers you the assurance of GMC truck durability and a lasting reputation for GMC Engineering Leadership.See Handi-Van today! A SENSRAl MOTORS VALUB «MC ONE-TON HANDI-VAN iSs; s m Ü1 Éillf ipr W* :\t\" V mm s«i m 8§8S8SaaS»ss in mm m SSisf ' *r policy was not too far posure of a teenage Sherbrooke j off-babysitter.Mr.and Mrs.Lionel Dubreuil Laurier Lapierre wants to melt Canadians into a goal pot.But Laurier Lapierre also believes that under the present federal system, even the bilingualism which may now exist will diasappear.He insists that only if we abolish the provinces and set up a legislative union can bilingualism be taken out of the \u201cwhite elephant arena\u201d and brought into the laps of What could have been of 502 Normandie Avenue, Sherbrooke, had gone to mass yesterday morning leaving the house and their two children in the care of 16-year-old Miss Therese Labrecque, fire department officials said today.As Miss Labrecque was preparing dinner the cooking oil she was using accidentally caught fire and started the curtain and kitchen cupboards burning.Miss Labrecque evacuated the children, Jacques, aged four years, and Sylvie, aged eight months.She then called the fire department.Then she returned to the kitchen and used a portable fire extinguisher on the flames.When firemen arrived at 11:33 the fire was under control.Firemen came from Station No.four under the direction of Captain Francis Boudreau and Lieutenant Fernand Croteau.They also came from Station No.One.There were a total of three fire trucks at the scene, but all returned after a short lime to their stations.Damage done to the kitchen was moderate.A letter received from form-^ er transport minister George J Mcllraith by Mr.Gervais said: that \u201cI cannot of course speak on behalf of my successor, but it is reasonable to expect the announcement will as I have indicated be made before very long.\u201d TO HOLD TALKS Mr.Gervais said that when, the new minister has had timej to organize his department that he intends to hold talks with \u201cthe audience at the zoo\u201d \u2014 ada.Who is Laurier Lapierre?Mr.Lapierre himself had difficulty answering this question.\u201cI existed prior to this year, but all of a sudden people are discovering that this guy Lapierre exists.\u201d \u201cWhy is everyone sur\u2019 enly asking me to sit on boards, commissions, and seminars?\u201d \u201cIs it because 1 am a French-speaking Canadian?\u201d He continued his diatribe: \u201cPeople in Canada today don\u2019t know why they are being promoted, and this is stifling initiative.\u201d Actually, Laurier Laj re is Assistant Professor of history at McGill University and him.When Sherbrooke has estab-; secretary of the French Can-ilshed regular air flights.Mr.j ada Studies program there.Gervais said that the city will] He doubles as moderator be eligible for government of the weekly TV program grants.Council hopes that a 501 \u201cInquiry\u201d, per cent grant will be obtain- The Lac Me°antic native TURNS WHITE The collard lemming, a furry little rodent which ranges from Greenland across Canada to Alaska, turns show-white in winter.THOS.W.LEONARD B.A., IL.L.Contim-nlai Bldg Suite 509 Tel lO.9 2600 was in Sherbrooke Friday night to address the Canadian Institute of International Affairs and was later interviewed in his brother\u2019s North be Ward home.able for a projected air terminal and other grants for the maintenance of the runway.In the Edmonton interview, Mr.Pickersgill said: \u201cThe regional job can\u2019t \u2014, done by a national organization The outspoken professor like TCA,\u201d the minister added.]has made many enemies in the \u201cIt\u2019s imperative that local serv-j past ices are provided by s mailer j carriers with headquarters in] those areas.\u201d Mr.Pickersgill was asked specifically about Calgary-Ed-i monton service.The minister said he is more .familiar with service in New-]v,v\u2019v\u2019v\u2019'\u2019'.foundland and the Atlantic prov-\tHUNTINGVILLE inces.\tAuspices of Huntingvillc few years because he holds a position which very few French-Canadians appreciate - he is a centralist.BRIEFLETS One of the problems in Newfoundland is variable weather, the minister said.Big planes are too expensive to leave on the ground and it is too expensive to fly back and forth from Montreal, he said.A service with headquarters in Newfoundland could take advantage of breaks in the Ladies Aid, Sugar social at the Huntingvillc Community Hall, Fri.Feb.21, 8:00 p.m.Sugar-on-snow, donuts and coffee.Adults 75c, children 12, 40c.INSURE IN SURE INSURANCE All Risks Please Consult \u2014 WATSON & FULLER LTD.Tel.569-5939 \u2014 Sherbrooke LENNOXVILLE Henry IV, Part 1, by B.C.S.Stage, the the men and women of Can- He waves the banner of \u201call power to the central government\u201d for all his autonomist-minded compatriots to sec.That w'ould be bad enough in itself but he does not subscribe to the two-nation concept either.He said that he believes a nation to be the totality of the inheritance of a group of individuals \u2014 their traditions and institutions \u2014 and that this would make Canada one nation, both in French and in English.When asked what the farmer in St.George de Beauee has in common with the farmer in Prince Albert he answered that both had adapted to a new way of life and shared in a land and its institutions.But he goes much further than denying the existance of two nations in Canada.He w'ants to abolish the provinces and create a legislative union out of the ruins of the BNA Act.Mr.Lapierre e x p r e ssed deep concern lest \u201cthe hardening of provincial governments continues.\u201d He posed this intriguing question: \u201cIs the federal government responsible to the provincial premiers or the Canadian people?\u201d He says his new order would do away with this dual responsibility.His legislative union too would make economic planning possible on a national scale.\u201cThe present system of planning nationally with a provincial veto or on a regional base is useless\u201d Mr.La- Players, on the ,,\t.,\t., \u201e\t, , .|\u2014Fri.and Sat., Feb.28 because the provinces have a weather, he minister added,|and 29 8:00 p m Admision SI.vested interest in their nar-and this also applied to the At- gludcnts goc lantic provinces.\t!\tj_____ Mr.Pickersgill was in Ed-\tSHERBROOKE monton to open the new Edmon- \u201e ,\t,,\t, Doctor N.Ï.Dinning, 158 Frontenac, will be absent from his office, February 15 - 23.ton International Airport.LEADING EXPORTS Canada\u2019s five leading export commodities, by value, in 1962 were newsprint paper, wheat, SHERBROOKE The 67th edition of the Sher brooke Record Annual Review lumber and timber, wood pulp\tT-\u201e v and nickel.\ti™11\tfaturday _______________________________March 21st.Additional copies: may be reserved by writing the Circulation Dept., copies mail-; ed in Canada 10c each; U.S.A.15c each.If you\u2019d like to improve your home, why not do it now?Talk to your Toronto-Dominion Bank manager about a low-cost Home Improvement Loan.He\u2019s a good man to know.Interested in modernizing your kitchen, adding an additional room, renovating a -bathroom or installing a new heating svstem?Talk it over with your nearby Toronto-Dominion Bank Manager.Any timeyou want to improve your home(in just about any way) he can be a very good friend.Drop in and get acquainted soon.SHERBROOKE Dinner meeting Women\u2019s Canadian Club of the Eastern Townships.Friday, Feb.21si, at 7.00 p.m.New Sherbrooke Hotel.Speaker: Commodore O.C.S.Robertson, G.M., R.D., C.D., R.C.N.-(Rtd), Topic: The search for; the Northwest Passage, TORONTO-DOMINION BANK Where people make the difference J.L.SERRE, Monoger YOU HAVE A DATE WITH L.0.NOEL inc.470 Wellington St.South \u2014 DROP IN \u2014 February 21st - - - - UP TO 9 P.M.February 22nd - - - UP TO NOON \u2014 INAUGURATION \u2014 FLOORING TILE CENTER Canada, the English here will lose out.\" he said And what\u2019s wrong with Quebec?Bilingualism is too rare.\u201cWhy some officials of ARDA cannot even speak French and they are supposed to explain farming techniques to our farmers.\u201d Then Mr.Lapierre s eyes lit up as he launched into what he describes as his pet topic.\u201cThe confessional school system must be abolished It has created needless division among our people and prevented communication.\u201d SmiiJMj .ric-;: isife \u201cBesides,\u201d he said \u201cthe Roman Catholic hierarchy is a most incompetent bunch in education.\u201d \u201cHow can we progress if they base promut ton., on the number of times a week a teacher goes to mass?\" He went on: \u201cIf a man wants to send his child to a neutral school he cannot, but must accept the church as his child\u2019s tutor.\" His conclusion \u2014 democracy in Quebec is a myth \"In fact Quebec is built on myths ' he went on.But one thing is sure: Laurier Lapierre is no myth.Bishop s University 10th annual carnival to begin Wednesday annual Bishop's University W inter Carnival action Wednesday night on the campus in The tenth will sw ing into Lennoxville.On Wednesday evening at 7:30, students of the university' will hear a concert by the Sherbrooke Harmony Band, to be held in the Memorial Gymnasium.This will lie followed by a girls' hockey game and a mixed broom-hall game in the Scott Rink at Bishop's.Thursday night will feature -\u2014\u2014 \u2014\u2014\t, the long await I'd Revue.This Canadian treesome, formed just year's effort is an especially am bilious one, a six scene playlet with extensive musical accompaniment.The background is set in a Quebec that has sececd-ed from the rest of Canada, with Bishop's being the only stronghold of loyal Canadians left in the province.The plot revolves around the attempt of the Students\u2019 Escape Committee (SFC) to tunnel out of the besciged university.Several familiar characters! will be portrayed, including Dr.C.1.L.Glass (John Whittall), Dr.Walleye MeCubbs (Al Mi Cubbin), The Bursar (John Rspsey) and Prof.Dobson] (Charlie Johnston).Star mem hers of the SEC include Moose Strap (Bill Ballantyne) and Owl] VANCOUVER (CD - Slarva-Biblio (Ron Kaulbach).\tUion and torture suffered by Two other star performers|çanadjan so](|j,,rs jn Hong Kong during the Second World War are killing them off, one of their |four years ago, recorded for RCA Victor, and have appeared at such well-known nightspots as the Chicago Playboy |Club, and the Grill of the Hotel Roosevelt in New York City, Also adding to the musical talent displayed by (he Hootenanny will be folk artists Shirley Singer, Gerry Goodfriend, and the Mountain City Four.Hong Kong said dying off \u201e j Pierre says.n.v.ii.l «it cannot work efficiently row sector.\u201d What guarantee of equality would there be for the French-Canadian in this new Canada?Mr.Lapierre answers that Quebec controls enough poli-: tical and economic power to j be assured of fair treatment without the existence of its provincial patrimony.He would also give Quebec delegates to this new parliament the veto on matters cultural.If his system is not adopted?The attitude that \u201cif English is good enough for Jesus Christ it is good enough for the French\u201d will reappear and the English will become the second class citizens in Quebec the French are in the rest of Canada.\u201cIf the French don\u2019t get their rights in the rest of LAURIER LAPIERRE watcher's ^ E » s n ¦ notes By J.GRAHAM I\u2019ATRIQUIN A good and observant friend,winter planning.Those multi-just solved a problem that had colored pages stimulate 0'v,', , ,I,size schemes for shrubbery annoyed, mildly, for years, what\twjth( of coursCi hosts species of birds feed on the bnl-j of exotic birds fecc|ing in and liant red fruit of the high-bushi,lbout the |eafy COvCr.Perhaps cranberry, the most photogenic j some reac|ers may want to berries in Ihe winter land jchoosc sbrllbs (or annuals) that scape?Well, this sharp-eyed ob-;birds flnd lo lhcjr jjking.Here server caught some Pine Gros-|are a few proven favorites, with beaks lunching on the tart crim-;specics that are attracted.jke Catbirds?If you do, you ,\t, ,,\t,\t|\t\u201e\u201e1 probably enjoy Dogwood enough of the species to clean|KW\u201emc ethcr forccd in lht, son delicacies, and the discovery] makes sense.There aren\u2019t WJl j blosoms, Hiving room while the snow ivs up all that attractive red fruit in Townships hedgerows before; tm on tbc ground( or (>pening spring\u2019s warmer sun melts it natural!y on the hedge.The bird land the bush seem to have a na- will be Vies Sulhrt'n as L Daughin, and John Mclllmur-ray as At Mopsmore.A fourteen piece orchestra, led by student John Piper, will provide an elaborate musical background which includes an overture and seven songs, in eluding such sure hits as \u201cIndépendance Québec\u201d, \u201cThe See,\u201d The Substaff\u201d, \u201cAlas, Alack, nd Woe\", and many others.The songs were written entirely by Piper, with words by John Marl land.Dong Tees, and Alex Henderson.\u201cThe Grate Escape\u201d, as the Revue is titled, will start at 7 pin.in the Bishop\u2019s Memorial Gymnasium.Admission will lx-$1,00 and the public is invited to attend.Thursday night following the Revue has been dubbed \u201cRink Night\u201d as the rest of the programmed events for the even j mg will lake place in the Scott Arena.At 8:45 the t'arnabeMes,] a \u2018precision\u2019 skating group of female students, will display, their many charms on the ice,j and then at 9 the Bishop\u2019s hock-] cy (iailers will meet the Sir George Williams Maroons in aj regularly scheduled OSLAA lea- 0l,Ps gue game.Between periods of the hockey match, the 1964 Icarnival Queen will be crown jed, and the Albert Mines Precision Skating Pageant will also take place.On Friday, the Carnival will jmove to the local Hillcrest slopes for a day of outdoor sports, and an evening of dan icing.The music wil be provided by Bill Walker\u2019s Quintet.Saturday features a Car Rally,] and an afternoon of sports in c r* rtCX/'l I 11 t he arena.'The Rally will start J v.I IvTvilJIv?at I p.m.outside the rink and; will finish there about thrcc/\"OHH i\"l OH hours later.The major event\t*' \u2022'«^l I the Carnival will be the Ball,; which will be held this year at ,uJeJ\u2019ova ih Witnesses from the The New Sherbrooke Hotel!sherhro°ke area will be attend from 9 p.m.to I p.m.vr\u2019h!'\"* a ,hr«\u2019 d»y.Eastern Town-continuous dancing music pro-jships convention lo convene in vided by two bands.\ti,h(> St.Johns\u2019 High School An The Winter Carnival ends'^torium, St.Johns, Que,, Feb Sunday with one of the most mary 21, 22, 2J, Martin Widaiv popular activities on the time-jski, spokesman for the local] table, the Hootenanny, which congregation is also open to the public.The Fire destroys building RICHMOND\u2014 (Special) \u2014 A building (hat once housed Richmond Caskets.Main Street South, in Richmond was completely destroyed last night in a flash fire.The cause of the fire and damages are unknown.Firemen received the call at 7:20 p.m.and Fire Chief Leslie Rattray and 20 firemen came to the scene.Police chief Paul Clair was also there.Several lines of hose totalling about 1,000 feet in length were set up but little could be done to save the building.Flames threatened nearby buildings hut no damage was done to them.The building was about 150 feet by 75 feet in size.It was si ill burning after midnight and some firemen were at the scene all nighl.The Southern Canada Power Company had to turn off Hie electricity near the building because flying sparks were creating a dangerous situation while the blaze was number said Sunday.Jack Goodey, retiring presi : dent of the local branch of the Hong Kong Veterans' Associa lion, said of 1,400 soldiers re patriated after (ho war 958 survive.\u201cWe're dying off from Ihe starvation, the torture and the indignities suffered Ihe hands of the Japanese,\u201d he said in an interview.He said 2,200 Canadians from Ihe Winnipeg Grenadiers and the Royal Rifles of Canada from Quebec wenl lo Hong Kong.Aboul 500 were killed nr mortally wounded in battle and another 300 died in coneentra-tion camps.\u201cAll the tribulations al the prison camps have undermined our health and the after effects are felt today,\u201d he said.\"We have asked Ottawa for some kind of blanket insurance coverage to provide protection for our wives and families.\u201d Some 40 veterans of the Hong 'Kong bailie were present at the annual meeting Saturday.The same plea for special government treatment for Hong Kong war veterans have been made by Eastern Townships officers of the association.A number of veterans live in the Townships area.Witnesses into pale disintegration.The bush-fruit discovery currcd just as our annual supply of seed catalogues came in the mail, and this started some I Sep tural affinity.Mountain Ash is beyond \u2018Bird Watcher\u2019s\u201d Page 7 admission will again be $1.00, and the folk concert will be held at, 2:30 p.m.in the Memorial Gymnasium.Featured performers will be The Raftsmen; Martin Overland, Louis Leroux, and Marvin Burke.This Li* #* for announced today.Setting the program theme, Mr.L.Saumnr, district supervi sor for the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, will launch the assembly with a discussion of the topic scripture, John 21:17, \"Feed my little sheep.\u201d The assembly will stress how ail can profit from additional land improved Bible education.jArea representatives will present discourses, discussions and demonstrations to encourage, all delegates to cultivate proper] Christian attitudes toward the Iworld by effectively sharing! See \u201cFire\u201d Page 7 ^ Jewelry fashion* facts, fêtions ' [their faith with their neighbors, VISITING J A Y C E E S \u2014 t (he President of the Quebec Gerry Winslow, left, Pres- Jayrees, Lionel Mitchell.A ident of the Sherbrooke Jun- delegation of some 15 Que-ior Chamber of Commerce bee members accompanied (English section) welcomes , .Mr.Mitchell to Sherbrooke, to present a program as part of the Jaycees plan of ex-i change visits.J (Record photo by Gerry Lemay) All NEW_ Z-20 EYEGLASS HEARING AID UP FRONT HEAR NQ Budning Drug Store 39 Wellington St.North Tel.562-4773 I\u2019aul Nadeau, Certified Gemologiat of Skinner & Nadeau Ine.' 82 Wellington North, and the Sherbrooke Shopping Centra GEM WISE What's in a name?In the case of precious gems, a great deal! One of the devious ways of selling jewelry is the sale of inexpensive atones under names closely resembling those of valuable gems.The average buyer is often confused by terms such as \u201cReconstructed Turquoise\u201d, Balas Ruby, or Evening Enter aids.\u2022 'ITie plentiful Quartz family of transparent gemstones have been offered as a variety of jewels.Colorless quartz, highly polished, may bear the name of Arkansas, Alaskan, or Cornish diamonds.Yellowish varieties may be called Scotch or Spanish topaz.Tourmaline in its different colors has been sold as Brazilian Sapphires, Siberian Rubies, Brazilian Peridots, or Brazilian Emeralds.The rare and beautdul green garnet has been termed Olivine or Uralian Emeralds.Of course, Ihe Boiler Business Bureau and the Federal Trade Commission have done much lo clarify such misleading terms.The American Gem Society, too, has been in the forefront of making a standard gem nomenclature.In many cases, there is nothing wrong with the tourmaline or quartz stones, for example.They are bonafide and lovely minerals.But it is certainly unfair to pass them off to the consumer as a much more valuable diamond, emerald or ruby.In the case of stones termed\" Reconstructed\u201d, these are powdered gemstones (often the leavings of cutting) ground and then put in a plastic or other type of cementing material and formed into a stone.Turquoise, jade, amber arc often treated in this way.The value of \u201creconstructed\u201d material, is of course, much less than the natural gem.STOP THE ICE lx ice formi on your roof?Insulation will stop the heat from evading through the roof.Keeps co'd and humidify out in winter and will stop ice accumulation.You'll get your money back on fuel economy.MINERAL INSULATION G.Jacques, Prop.133 Big Forks St.\tTel.562-3158 Sbecbrookc Daily'focucd The paper of the Eastern Townships.Established February 9, 1897, incorporating the Sherbrooke Gazette (est.1837; and the Sherbrooke Examiner (est.1879) Published every weekday by the Sherbrooke Daily Record Company Ltd., 119 Wellington Street North, Sherbrooke, Que.JOHN BASSETT\tIVAN SAUNDERS\tHUGH DOHERTY President\tManaging Director\tEditor in chief MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1964 Quebec centenary funds are limited With the signing of agreements with the federal government concerning projects for Canada\u2019s centennial year in 1967, Quebec now has at its disposal SIO million to be used on approved fentenary projects of a permanent nature.As yet, the frames of reference into which \"approved'' projects may fall have not been made public, but it is understood the Quebec government is working on them.It is important, however, that all who arc interested in celebrating the centenary of Confederation (and all Canadians should be) understand that the money being made available will not go very far.The fund is not designed to give financial aid to every local or regional project.It is not supposed to cover the province\u2019s entire centennial program.It represents only one aspect of it.There has been a tendency in the Eastern Townships as elsewhere in Quebec to wait for initiative from the government before proceeding with centennial plans.This is as unnecessary as it is self-defeating, for the fact is that there are hundreds of projects that should be carried out during 1967 which will have no official connection with the provincial government, and which will not participate in the spending of the $10 million fund.Some Townships historical societies have pageants planned, and arc commissioning the writing of historical works.The Quebec Women\u2019s Institutes has in hand a program of rural clean-up and beautification.Not all of these will receive any part of the government\u2019s centennial money.But they arc projects representative of the kind of things that should be in the planning stage now, developed through local initiative, financed through local fund-raising, if this should be necessary.Centennial committees on municipal, county and regional levels arc needed immediately to help plan and coordinate local projects.If this kind of organization continues to wait for government support, it will never get off the ground, because in most cases, the only support forthcoming wall be of a morale-boosting nature.* Most bores as well as most watches Under the guise The trouble with prejudice is that it distorts.Relationships become twisted in religion, in business, in social life and in polities.Normalcy, logic, reason all fly out the window.And there arc few of us who arc entirely free of prejudices of one kind or another.They are difficult to root out sometimes, these distorters, for often they operate under the guise of truth and right.That is why it is wise at any time to examine our own motives and actions in the light of the prejudices we have that inevitably color them.This week is a time for particularly * are .self-winding, of truth and right close examination.It is Brotherhood Week, being sponsored by the Canadian Council of Christians and Jews; a week whose ideals have application in personal, national and international life.The purpose of the council and the week is promote justice, amnity and cooperation among the racial, religious and ethnic groups of our country.There is need for this kind of promotion on every hand.We can find it in the problems of biculturalism; in our day to day dealings with other people; in the councils of the world.But mostly we can find the need in our own hearts.For that is where prejudice must be eliminated first.* ?Maybe a snob passes you up for fear he\u2019ll learn you want to pass him up.Haydn S.Pearson\u2019s COUNTRY FLAVOR Mother bettered Egyptians bread It is interesting to know that for centuries before man accidentally discovered that soured dough would give raised bread, human beings ate rye, millet, oats and barley.Today some 70 per cent of the world\u2019s population depends primarily upon cereals, including corn.All cereals are grasses and grass is the most important herb on our planet.To the Egyptians goes credit for discovering leavened bread, and ever since that unknown day raised bread has been a favorite food of so-called civilized countries.Can you remember when Mother made bread?Remember how she mixed the ingredients and then on a floured board on the old cherry table beside the kitchen stove, she kneaded it?It was put to rise in an old blue ena- mel kettle and covered with a piece of linen.Sometimes in the morning, the dough had risen so much it overflowed the top, and white-gray streams made a modernistic picture on the outside of the kettle.In the morning, the dough was kneaded again, and the plates were placed in the bread pans, to rise again until double in bulk.Mother did not have a thermometer in the oven, but she knew the right heat from solid oak and maple.When the big, brown-crusted loaves were taken from the oven, a heady, nostril-tingling fragrance filled the kitchen.A thick heel piece, with plenty of butter and old-fashioned tangy molasses was a wonderful treat to a 12-year-old when he came in with an armful of wood to sec how the Saturday baking was coming along.Other papers say: Chiang cuts trouble for (Calgary Herald) President de Gaulle of France owes President Chiang Kai-shek of Formosa a warm vote of thanks.Chiang has broken diplomatic relations with France.This spared France the humiliating necessity, imposed by Red China, of France, breaking diplomatic relations with Formosa.Though reluctant to take the step, France was understood to be reconciled to its necessity.But the Formosan government took the initiative.Now the French government, which is to say De Gaulle, can virtuously say it did not abandon an old friond in order to latch on to a bigger, more powerful friend, but that it was the old friend which severed the ties.Thus freed from any sense of guilt and embarrassment, France can now get on with the heady business of being the only major Western power to associate with Asia\u2019s Red Goliath.In practical terms, France has had nothing to gain by maintaining diplomatic relations with Formosa, whereas it believes it has much to 7 gain by establishing relations with Red China.Still breaking diplomatic ties on mere grounds of selfish advantage, is not the sort of thing self-respecting nations are supposed to do.It seems odd that Chiang has chosen to ease De Gaulle from his position of embarrassment.At first, when V* PHflyEH FOR TODAY FROM the Upper Room* Judge not, and ye shall not be judged: condemn not, and ye shall not be condemned: forgive, and ye shall be forgiven.(Luke 6:37.) PRAYER: 0 God, give us courage to face the difficulties that confront us each day in our homes and daily work.Give us courage also to recognize our own failings and to seek Thy grace today to overcome our besetting sins.Make us more and more like Thy Son, in whose name we pray.Amen.de Gaulle De Gaulle announced France was about to recognize Red China, the Nationalists might have been forgiven making a hasty break in the heat of the moment.Indeed, it was believed the French hoped that was just what would happen.And it was believed Formosa was advised to hold off for that very reason.What Formosa has to gain by not forcing France to bow to Red Chinese demands and take the initiative for the break is most unclear.At any rate, with the last roadblock out of the way, France now has a more, or less dignified approach to establishment of relations with the Chinese mainland.Whether it will gain anything is an open question.France hopes to restore some of its tattered influence in Southeast Asia, and doubtless some of its trade.The real prospects of this, however, are not said to be very bright at all.What France can do, is further annoy and aggravate the United States.Here it has better prospects for success.But to what end?Kenya and Ethiopia threatened Impoverished Somalia buys arms to carve oat 'greater Somalia' UNITED NATIONS \u2014 (TNS) - Somalia is a tiny, impoverished desert land on the eastern horn of Africa at the entrance to the Red Sea.The inhabitants number 2.3 million, mostly nomads.In contrast, neighboring Ethiopia and Kenya are relatively developed and have populations of 20 million and nine million respectively.Somalia\u2019s economy is on a barter level and economic development is practically nil.The main exports of Somalia are bananas and incense.Not much, by any one\u2019s standards, you might say.But the Somalis have a different idea of their importance.Ever since they achieved in-dependence in 1962, the Somalis have begun to \u201cthink big.\" The national past-time of this tiny country has-been to discuss ways of achieving the goal of \u201cgreater Somalia'\u2019 \u2014the unification of Somalis everywhere under one government.Strafed Unfortunately for peace in East Africa, the creation of a \u201cgreater Somalia'\u2019 moans that neighboring Kenya and Ethiopia would lose huge tracts of land to Somalia.Even more unfortunate for peace in East Africa is the fact that the Somalis are no longer merely talking about \u201cgreater Somalia'\u2019 they're doing their level best to make it a reality- In recent weeks, fighting on Somalia's Ethiopian and Kenyan borders has resulted in the death of hundreds.Somali raiding parties have gone into Ethiopia and Kenya and killed wantonly.In retaliation.E t h i o p hian jets have strafed the border: both Ethiopian and Kenya troops have begun hunting down the raiders.British troops in Kenya are standing by to lend a hand to the already shaky government of Jomo Kenyat-ta in case the Somali threat BY AARON R.EINFRANK becomes too serious for the Kenyans to handle themselves.The U-N Security Council is expected to take up the matter this month in an attempt to avert an open war between Somalia and her two neighbors.(Kenya and Ethiopia have already signed a mutual defense pact.) Racial The basis for the Somali government\u2019s claims against Ethiopia and Kenya is that Somali tribesmen are inhabitants of the two countries.Somalia wants the areas in which these Somali tribesmen live to be part of \u201cgreater Somalia,\u201d Ethiopia\u2019s Ogaden province has about 500,000 nomads of Somali ancestry.Kenya\u2019s northeast frontier has approximately 250,000 Somali tribesmen.It is these two areas plus French Somaliland, that Somalia is claiming for her own.In an age when Germans have learned to live with Frenchmen, the sophisticated Westerner might advise all East Africans \u2014 whether Kenyans, Ethiopians or Somalis \u2014 to work together to achieve a common prosp rity.But it\u2019s not that easy.Underlying Ihe dispute are the racial, tribal and religious hatreds which have become so common in the \u201cnew\u201d Africa as a whole.The Somalis arc a back people of Hamitic stock with heavy Arabic strains.In spite of their dark color, the Somalis are not Nearoid.In fact the Somali nomads who came to settle in Kenya\u2019s northeast frontier drove out the Negroid Bantus who make up most of Kenya\u2019s black population.After this, Somali migration, Kenya\u2019s black Negro and \u201cblack Arabs\u201d (the Somalis) flew at each other\u2019s throats whenever the British colonial rulers weren\u2019t looking.In some respects, the situa- Fibrcs ACROSS 1 Fibre from flax f> Synthetic libre 11Sauternc source 12 Fastened 14\tHarmonize 15\tIsland group near Fiji 16\tStrand 17\tSticky 18\tKing of Judah (RibJ 20\tVarnish ingredient 21\tSoothe 24 Indian seaport 26 Ttissah fibre 30\tAt all 31\tKuropean river 33\tOahu garland 34\tDisfigure 7 World War II conference R Flowers 9 Triple-bond acid isiiffixl 10\tIsthmus 11\tKxisted 13 Tunisian pasha 19\tSources of sisal fibre 20\tType of vehicle 21\tRich dress material 22\tSingle 23\tConstellation 23 Verbal 27\tCertain hones 28\tFasting period 29\tItuss 31 Personal pronoun Answer to Previous Puzzle ES OP; tTugsi STMEOlTEI zzfeiuyw itTKcn f- r>\u2022*, Rt-Ti.\" iMefi ÀNJ ).iMSilHraraw idralte«awi=* MIsJISlElfelBIM tea nuüëKiM P5dfeii=t\u2014¦ iWliw i mt=tiaiifcti=t I KUMMIglMM iim _MMMI lamratggirâîrt IBWH|lHlltBI 32 Karly English (ab.l 38 Coat's hair fabric 40 Captivate 42 immerse in water 44\tDegraded 45\tLittle devil 46\tThirk carpet (India) 47\tBiblical nam» 49\tMirth 50\tRebels (coll.) 51\tGreek letter 53\tPolitical party lab.) 54\tBoy's nlcknams 93 Void 36\tIncumbents 37\tAncient Syrian kingdom 39\tGuido's high note 40\tConsumes 41\tMinced oath 43 American navy vessels tab.I 45 Western slate 48 Tidal flood' 52 Raid 5-1 Angora wool garment .55\tAdulation 56\tProtozoan 67 Against the thing (Latin) 58 Musical instruments DOWN 1\tStone (comb, form) 2\tPreposition 3\tOf the nerves 4\tSea birds 6 Pheasant brood tiCowiws point FT-'8\",|r'|i8' STTSTTIT 42 43 44 tion between Kenyans o' Negro background and Kenyans of Somali heritage is similar to the situation in Zanzibar where the black Negroes last month rebelled against the \u201cblack Arabs.\u201d The result in Zanzibar was that the black Negroes killed an awful lot of black Arabs.In the case of \u201cgreater Somalia,\u201d it is the black Arabs who are killing the Negro Kenyans.The idea of Somalis in Kenya being ruled by a Negro government is an abomination to the Somalia government.RELIGIOUS As for the dispute wiln Ethiopia, religion more than race enters into the picture.The Ethiopians are Coptic Christians while the Somalis are fanatic Moslems.The Somalia government considers it as much an effront for Moslem Somalis to be ruled by a Christian emperor like Haile Selassie as this same government considers it an affront to have Somalis subjected to Negro rule.This religious fanaticism of the Somalis was brought out in 1962 when a Canadian Menonite missionary, Merlin Grove, was knifed to death by a Somali fanatic in Somalia\u2019s capital, Mogadeshu.The fanatic, who also knifed Grove\u2019s wife, felt he was doing the right thing because he said Grove was trying to undermine the Moslem state religion of Somalia.HOLY WAR The grandiose dreams of the Somalis might have been nothing more than that had the Soviet Union not offered to supply Somalia with $32 million worth of arms late last year.Now for the first time, Somalia is in the position of challenging the American - equipped Ethiopian armed forces which sport F-86 Sabre jets.Somalia has already announced that it will quadruple its army from the present 5,000 to 20,000.Somalia premier Abdirascid Ali Shar-marke has said it might be necessary to call \u201ca general mobilization\u201d of Somalis everywhere in order to achieve \u201cgreater Somalia.\u201d Sharmarke has also offered to turn the reins of his government over to the Somali army so that his holy war can bs fought with the utmost efficiency.In addition to the Soviet military aid, Moscow has also promised Somalia $63 million in credits for economic development.The Red Chinese has also turned up on the scene with a $20 million loan.The Western countries are also filling the Somali till.The U.S.alone has budgeted a half billion over a 20 year period for Somalia's economic development.BANANAS But the Somalis are not thinking about economic development.They are much more interested in those brand new Soviet MIGs Moscow has promised them.Meanwhile, the Somali economy continues to deteriorate.Italy, which along with Britain administered the area until 1962, imports Somali bananas as a favor to her former colony.Italy can buy bananas at a cheaper Bygone days TWENTY YEARS AGO (From the Record of Thursday, February 17, 1944) The Ladies' Aid of Bishop-ton, held its annual meeting at the home of Mr.and Mrs.E.Wabb with a good attendance of members and visitors.Mrs.H.Kenney took the chair for the election of officers, which resulted as follows: President, Mrs.Ralph Gilbert; first vice \u2022 president, Mrs.Ira Dawson; second vice-president, Mrs.Lawrence Weston; secretary, Mrs.Mark Porter; treasurer, Mrs.Henry Kenney.Flower committee, Mrs.E.Webb and Mrs.Ira Dawson; corresponding secretary, Mrs.A.B.W.Skinner; work committee, Mrs.Skinner and Mrs.Dawson.* * * FIFTEEN TUARS AGO (From the Record of Thursday, February 17, 1949) High - spirited Princess Margaret is amused by current talk about her romances, although Royal circles are said to be concerned at the linking of her name with a chain of admirers.Friends say the lively, 18-year-old Princess reads every bit of gossip about her private life and enjoys keeping columnists guessing about her \"favorite\u201d of the moment.Princess Margaret herself has said she wants to marry young.\u2022 \u2022 \u2022 TEN YEARS AGO (From the Record of Wednesday, February 17, 1954) The annual meeting of the Udolphus Lord Aylmer Chapter I.O.D.E., Richmond, was conducted by Mrs.C.E.Manning.Mrs.George Chamber-lain, convener of the nominating committee, presided over the election of officers, which resulted as follows: Regent, Mrs.C.E.Manning; first vice \u2022 regent, Mrs.V.R.Beat-tie; second vice - regent, Mrs.George Walker; secretary, Mrs.H.P.Stone; assistant secretary, Mrs.L.F.Somerville; treasurer, Mrs.Robert Kerr; educational secretary.Mrs.W.L.Pope; \"Echoes\u201d secretary, Mrs.R.G.Frank; standard bearer, Mrs.A.E.Fee.TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Feb.17, 1964 .The League of Nations 31 years ago today\u2014in 1933\u2014 condemned the Japanese occupation of Manchuria.Early in the previous year, the Japanese had formed a Manchuria - wide government, a nd in 1934 henry Pit Yi, emperor of the Manehu dynasty when it abdicated its control of China in 1912, ascended the throne of the newly named Manchukuo.The new country, throughout its life a Japanese controlled territory, was recognized only by Japan, Germany, Italy and El Salvador.1908\u2014Emperor Charles I and the crown prince of Portugal were assassinated.1945 \u2014 Allied armies pushed the Germans back to the Rhine River in the Second World War.price in the world market, but if she did so, the Somali economy would really be on the rocks.It seems no one else will buy Somalia\u2019s bananas.Somalia's other export, incense, has fallen upon bad times.Somalia is the source of 80 per cent of the world's incense production.The Magi's frankincense and myrrh probably came from Somalia.But in recent times, incense has lost its popularity and Somalia can't sell it on the world market.RED ARMS Since the Somalis are going to have to pay in cash or goods for the Rusian arms, the Somali economy is likely to be in for an even tougher time.When the $32 million arms deal was announced, the Somalia government said that it would probably have to appeal to the UN to help it feed many of its citizens.The government said it could not afford to do this \u2014 but it could afford to purchase the arms.By juggling the books, it may even happen that Western aid grants to Somalia wil wind up paying for the Russian arms.An ironic situation could arise with the U.S.taxpayer paying for both sides if the Ethiopian American-equipped army comes to grips with the Soviet-equipped Somali army.But the Somalis don\u2019t care who pays the bill \u2014 just as long as they have the guns necessary to fight for \u201cgreater Somalia.\u201d In Central Africa Now the giants are dying off By AARON R.EINFRANK UNITED NATIONS \u2014 (TNS) \u2014 For three or four centuries, the giant Watutsi warriors were the masters of the kingdoms of Ruanda and Urundi in Central Africa.It was during the 16th or 17th centuries that the Wat-utsis, ranging from six to seven feet in average height, invaded the area just to the north of Lake Tanganyika.The invaders quickly subjugated the local tribes who were mostly Bahutus of Bantu stock.Rather than annihilate the Bahutus, the Watutsi chose instead to make serfs of them.The Watutsis were a pastoral people and needed slaves to grow their food and provide other services that a nomadic culture doesn\u2019t have.In general, the Watutsi set up perhaps the most perfect of feudal worlds.All the lands of the two kingdoms of Ruanda and Urundi were nominally the property of the Watutsi kings who were called Mwami.The kings in turn rented out this land to their liegemen in return for feudal fidelity.The liegemen or nobles in turn allowed the Bahutus to farm the land\u2014at a price, of course.The price was total subjection.The Bahutus, of average height, didn\u2019t like the situation, but they were powerless to do anything about it.The Watutsi were magnificent warriors and that equalizer of little and big men\u2014 the firearm\u2014was unknown to the Bahutns.Besides, the Bahutus regarded the Watutsi as gods because of the great size of these warriors.REFORMS START The Watutsis, consequently, were both hated and feared by the Bahutus.The only real friends the Watutsis had were the Pygmy tribes who lived in the forests of the area.The Bahutus, like the Watutsi after them, had invaded the area and subjugated the Pygmies.When the Watutsis arrived, the Pygmies naturally welcomed these giants not only as gods but as liberators.This feudalistic Watutsi world continued smoothly until the late 19th century when the presence of the white man began to change things.The Germans were the first whites to occupy this region under the mistaken impression that it would enhance their empire.But even the authoritarian state of Kaiser Wilhelm found the Watutsis\u2019 domination of the Bahutus hard to accept, and reforms were introduced.When the Belgians took over the area after World War I, reforms continued.In the late 1950\u2019s under pressure from the United Nations, Belgium was forced to make plans for the independence of the two kingdoms.Elections were held with the result that Rwanda and Burundi (as the two areas were now called) chose entirely different governments.In Rwanda, the Bahutus united to choose a republican form of government with a president as chief of state.The Watutsi class was stripped of its power and the Mwami were driven out of the country.The Bahutus were supreme.When independence finally came in 1962, the Bahutus were determined to use this independence to get even with the Watutsis for the centuries of oppression.The Belgians, who had kept these black races apart for 45 years, were no longer able to interfere.The sole allies of the Watutsis were the Pygmies, but since these little fellows numbered only one per cent of Rwanda's 2.5 million population, they weren\u2019t able to help the giants.Burundi.Although things were generally quiet in Burundi, the Watutsi refugees fleeing from Rwanda created many problems for the Mwami\u2019s government.First, there was the problem of feeding and housing these exiles.Even more serious was the fact that these exiles were using Burundi and the neighboring countries as bases to launch retaliatory raids against Rwanda.I N ACTION Hundreds of Bahutus were killed in these raids along with several white people who got in the path of the angry Watutsis.However, Rwanda\u2019s 1,000 man army, equipped with machine-guns, was more than a match for the raiders.The real tragedy of these raids is that they incited the Bahutus in Ruanda to kill Watutsis at a greater rate than ever before.Hundreds of bodies of Watutsis arc being fished daily out of Lake Tanganyika where they have accumulated after making a grisly slow journey in the Ruzizi River.It is estimated that at least 20,000 Watutsis have been killed and that appr o x i m a t e 1 y 130,000 have fled Ruanda.Many of the Watutsis remaining are also in the process of fleeing.Faced with a situation it helped to bring about by forcing independence on the two countries, the U-N this month began to take some action.Secretary General U Thant has offered U-N assistance to help resettle the exiled Watutsis outside of Rwanda so that the raids would halt.Thant also tried to put pressure on Rwanda so that the slaughter of the remaining Watutsis in the Republic would halt.And as in the case of the Congo, the tragedy of the Bahutus and the Watutsis has evolved out of the U-N\u2019s pigheaded determination to give independence to nations unable to bear the responsibilities of independence.maUf.r W Lakes are nearly universally distributed, but are most abundant in high latitudes and mountainous regions, especially those recently glaciated.Lakes are also common along rivers which have wide flats.© Encyclopaedia Britannica MAW PROBLEMS Armed with modern weapons and outnumbering the bow-and-arrow-armed Watutsi by six to one, the Bahutus made short work of their former masters.In many cases the Bahutus literally cut their Watutsi victims down to size by sawing off their legs at the knees.Tens of thousands of Watutsis fled the country to neighboring Burundi, Uganda, Tanganyika and the former French Congo.In Burundi, the situation was entirely different.Elections had resulted in a Watutsi dominated government led by a constitutional monarch.The king, called Wwami Muwambutso IV, even had the support of Bahutus living in S'hrrbrmikr Daily îSfrnrïi SUBSCRIPTION RATES Carrier delivery in Sherbrooke and Eastern Townships, 40 cents weekly, $20.80 per year.Mail subscription in Canada, Great Britain, 1 year $10.00,\t6 months $6.00,\t3 months $3.00, 1 month $1.50.United States and South America, 1 year $17.00,\t6 months $9.00, 3 months $5.00,\t1 month $2.00.Single copies 7e; Back copies, 7c; over 30 days old, 15c; over 90 days i Id, 30c.\"Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\" Sherbrooke Daily Record PRINTING DEPARTMENT 50 Camirand St., Sherbrooke.Tel.569-3636 \\ Queen crowned Saturday ^rrrrKTSTtnmcr pah.t rttokt), mot., FTTB Vf, Î9M Michele the first rules Carnival THE ROBING OF THE , ed out in Tudor style.Michele QUEEN was a not-too diffi- Bachand, 20, of Cowansville, cult task carried out by Page was chosen from among of Boy Helene Duguay, all deck- i six duchesses to be the Cow- ansville W inter Carnival\u2019s closing dance on Saturday.(Record photo by Studio Eclair) C O \\Y A N S\\ 1LLE \u2014 (Staff) \u2014 A 20-year-old Cowansville secretary - receptionist was chosen as the W inter Carnival Queen here Saturdav night at the closing gala Crowning Dance, bringing to end a week-long, fun-filled Carnival time.Michele Bachand was crowned Michele the First by radio - tv personality Jean-Pierre Masson, more commonly known to the French - speaking people as a miserly \"Séraphin\", on a program of the same name.Well over 500 people attended the closing dance, held in the Hotel Maurice.Civic and government officials were also on hand to lend support to the event of the year.They were Mayor Roland Desourdy; Jean-Jacques Bertrand, MLA, Brome; Heward Grafftey, MP, Brome-Missisquoi.Miss Bachand was chosen as Queen from among six contestants \u2014 each one of whom attended every event during the Carnival Week.The Princesses are: Denise Choimiere, Lyette Harrison, Agnes Koziol, Gisele Larose and Denise Piche.The Gagnon brothers, Jacques (president of the Carnival), and Claude (president of the Cowansville Jaycees \u2014 the carnival producers) were unanimous in stating that this ?Public speaking held at Sutton EVENING IN INDIA SUPPER THEME WATERLOO\u2014 (Special) \u2014 ,n evening in India was the1 rivilege of the parishioners of t.Luke\u2019s Anglican Church ere, February 14.An Indian supper was served t 7 p.m.When the congregation entcr-d the Church Hall they were ompletely transported to the ountry of India.Colorful deorations of silks hung from the ceiling and draped the pillars.Oriental carpets were on the floor.The stage was arranged for the head table with back drops of Indian scenes.Down the centre of the hall was a very low table with cushions to sit on, at least forty children claimed this table as theirs.The adults sat at small tables with Indian articles to decorate as center-pieces.Ten hostesses greeted everyone as they entered.The girls were dressed in bright silk saris, loaned and arranged by Mrs.Gian Khubchandani.The correct Indian manner of welcoming guests was followed by the hostesses.A buffet supper with a large variety of Indian dishes was served from a long table.For the more conservative tastes clieken pies or even frankfurters were ready.A compote of fresh fruit completed the meal.Mr.Worden gave a short talk on India and conditions as he saw it when there at the close See \"Evening In\" Page 7 % Sljcchcoote Daily Bccord CORRESPONDENT FOR Cowansville and Sweetsburg A correspondent for the Sherbrooke Doily Record is required in Cowansville and Sweetsburg.Interested persons are asked to write to: Miss Fannie Williams, Sherbrooke Doily Record, 119 Wellington St.North, Sherbrooke, Que.INDIAN HOSTESSES \u2014 Several of the hostesses at the Indian Supper in St.I.uke\u2019s Anglican Church, Waterloo, February 14 are shown above.They are, left to right; Diane Bowker, Janet Marsh, June McLellan, Helen Streeter, Anne Waterhouse and Diane Reed.(Record photo by W.Bessette) Debating championships to take place Tuesday Something New.Canada Week, first copy to be printed in March.Subscribers to Canada Month will receive balance of subscription, an introductory offer of Canada Week for 50e, or a combination of Canada Week and Canada Month, 1 year of each, $6.That is 52 weeks of Canada Week for $1.Students, $5.Further details on request.There's a treasure of reading pleasure awaiting you in the following Specids: Good Housekeeping, 2 years, $5; House Beautiful or Harper's Bazaar, 2 yrs., $8; Sports Afield, 2 yrs., 55; Town & Country, 2 yrs., $10.50; Ladies' Home Journal, to Feb.20 only, 10 issues, $E50, 19 iss., $2.85, 40 iss., $6; Sat.Evening Post, 50 iss., $4.50, 100 iss., $8.98; Holiday, 15 iss., $4.35, 24 iss., $6.90; American Some, 19 is., $3.80, 40 iss., $8; Jack and Jill, plus record, 10 iss., $3.50,\t12 iss., $4.50.New Subscriptions: Boy's Life, 18m., $4; Ingenue, 16m., $3.36; Atlantic Monthly, 8m., $2; Horticulture, 9m\u201e $2.When It's Magazine Subscriptions \u2014 Don't Forget To Remember: Donald Kilgour SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE AGENT FOR ALL MAGAZINES, GREETING CARDS, NOVEL AND USEFUL GIFTS 1332 Denault St., Room 1, Sherbrooke.GRANBY \u2014 (Special) \u2014 The senior debating champions of the Granby High, Kathy Smith and Peter Heelis will meet the Junior champions, Joyce Tait and Julie Hobbs February 18.This debate will take place during the afternoon and again in the evening at 8 p.m.Anyone who is interested may-come to hear this debate on resolved that censorship of reading material is desirable, is welcome.This debate will determine the school championship and possession of the Lion\u2019s Club Debating Shield.On February 21 teachers in all Protestant schools in the counties of Bedford and Brome will gather in Cowansville for their annual Education Confer ence.On this occasion they will hear experts from the Department of Education and Mcdon-ald College, and will participate in discussions about improvements in teaching methods, changes in the Course of Study.Pupils will not be attending school that day.WATERLOO'S QllEliN Fernande Roy.Miss Roy was one of the \"best carnivals in a long time.\u201d Over 2,000 people participated in about 10 events held throughout the week.\u2014 T he Queen of the W inter Carnival at Waterloo, Miss was crowned last Tuesday.(Record photo by YV.Bessette) treated the audience to an impromptu cabaret - style performance for about an hour, much to the delight of those attending.\"That's what it takes,\u201d said Mr.Claude.Séraphin Masson, who was scheduled only to officiate at the crowning of the Queen, SUTTON\u2014 (Special) The highlight of Home and School night at Sutton High February 11 was the annual public speaking contest.With Roy Seaman, a faculty member, as chairman, and Mrs.Bisson, M, Doke and R.Millin-champ as judges, parents, tea chers and friends formed the interested audience of specta tors as student-competitors moved out upon the stage.There were three classes of division for the event: junior, intermediate and senior.Results, with subjects listed after names of contestants,! were as follows: JUNIOR First, Kathryn Brown, Boys; second, Sharon Lawrence, Upper Canada Y\u2019illage and third, Nancy Darrah, My ambition.The other competitors in this division were: Christina Rock fall, Coming to Canada; Tommy Inglis, Gordie Howe; Deborah Murphy, exams; Ann Dyer, bal let; Paul Jennings, nightmares.INTERMEDIATE First, Brenda Marcoux.Mr average citizen; second, Frank Carr, project (elstar; third prize; Herdon Hooper, The night the mountain moved.Other contestants: Beverly I Garrick, The importance of a sound education; Ronald Marchand, 1 wish it bad been a mis ty morning at Magog; James Lenaeher, Robert E.Frost, SENIOR First, Jean Fordycc, The In-|visible witch; stcond, Lynnis [Royea, Canada, yesterday anc today.The two contestants in senior division also had to give impromptu speeches on other subjects.Jean Fordycc chose unusual hobby\u2014a graphic description of some of her unusual pets.For his speech, Lynnis Royea selected as subject, the Beatles have arrived.YY'hile the judges were making their decisions in another part of the building, Home and School held a short business meeting.It was voted to buy space in the school magazine, See \"Public Speaking\" Page 7 Jt /*|T' Coutls Canada v-4-f antemporary card» Papjferie Pigeon Ltd.444 King W.\u2014Tel.562-8310 -Learn French.\u2014 Take Private Lessons Prof.J.A.Lacroix Retired School Teacher Telephone 569 4984 FREE ESTIMATES Cn Renovations, Repairs & Painting Call Bishop Bros.Ltd.Tel.562-9315 Presentation at Masonic meeting FRELIGHSBURG \u2014 The Fre-lighsburg Masonic Lodge, No.33, held a meeting in the Masonic Hall on Feb.10, when a candidate received the second degree.In between degree work, secretary, Wor.Bro.Calno W.Soule, was called to the center of the Lodge room and presented with a cordless clock, which runs by flashlight battery, in appreciation of favors received by the brethern.GENERAL NOTES Mr.C.A.Soule is confined to his home with injuries to his right leg, under the care of a doctor.Granby dance Friday GRANBY \u2014 (Special; \u2014 The students of grade XI are holding a dance at the Granby High School, February 21 from 8:30 to 12:30.There will be admission of 50 cents per person and dress if semi-formal.There is a\u2019two-fold purpose behind this event.One is to earn money to help meet expenses of the annual educational trip to Ottawa.The other if to support the Schoolboy Curling Bonspiel which is being belt at the Granby Curling Club |February 21 and 22.ism mmm .-f ;\t/''i .| L mfâ I ' WmÊmmÊêm.-% 2l.\u2019iW ^ I'ti I fit:'2 % :2 teaspoon salt l cup butter 1 cup granulated sugar 1 cup brown sugar 1 egg, beaten light 1 teaspoon vanilla Vi cup rolled oats % cup desiccated coconut Measure once-sifted flour and sift with the baking powder, soda and salt.Cream butter and gradually blend in the granulated and brown sugar.Add egg and combine well, then add vanilla.Gradually work in flour mix ture.Then add rolled oats and coconut.Cover cookie sheets with aluminum foil (as the cookies are very rich, the foil doesn\u2019t D\\cd-iii-the-wool \u201cfcdorables\u201d ever, it is always wise to test one cookie in the oven first; if it spreads too much, add a very little more flour.OATMEAL DATE SQUARES I\u2019ve never been quite sure why this is also called Matrimonial Cake, unless it\u2019s because it marries two flavors that are; so perfectly suited to each other\u2014date and oatmeal.Date Filling: 1 pound pitted dates, chopped coarsely 1 tablespoon brown sugar % cup water 1 teaspoon vanilla Oatmeal Mixture: IVi cups once-sifted pastry flour OR 1 cup sifted all-purpose! flour Vz teaspoon baking soda Vi teaspoon salt 1 cup butter or margarine 1\tcup lightly-packed brown sugar 2\tcups rolled oats First prepare the date filling: Simmer dates with 1 tablespoon sugar and the w'ater until very-thick; stir often.Cool and add vanilla.Measure the flour and add-FIRST BAPTIST\t[baking soda and salt.\t! Cream the butter and blend LADIES AUXILIARY jjn 1 clIp brown sugar.Add the! Ladies\u2019;ot-s and combine well.Then Meeting held /tuM WMSl Two sides to the coin The First Baptist Auxiliary held its regular meeting in the church hall on the evening of February 5, with the president, Mrs.N.Bradley in the chair.The devotional pediod was led by Mrs.G.Dun-bury.discussed.sift in the flour mixture, half at time, combing well.This will give a rich, crumbly mixture; if it blends too thoroughly, place briefly in the refrigerator and break into crumbs, using a fork.Spread half of the rolled oat mixture in a greased 8-inch square pan and spread the date Knitted articles made by the ladies were brought in and mixture evenly over top.Cover will be sent to the Dixville1 with remaining rolled oat mix-What group of North Ameri- when they don't have to often Home for Retarded Children, ture.Bake in moderate oven, side 'the \"hat\"to!can \"omen is beginning to take neglect their children and their Refreshments were served!350 degrees about 35 minutes the circles and l'eal pride in their job?\thusbands, thereby paving thejb Mrs wj^eler and Mrs.jjor until nicely browned.M her.The answer to that question|way to juvenile delinquency and;f0i[0Wed by slides be-lCOld cut m squares- use, this desk is easily stored limit to what she\u2019ll come up used to be fille d with com is good\u2014full-time homemakerS|dor back of a piece of furniture or with.So hang on to your hat, Plaul\u2018a abo«t '\"ental\tsh«uld take pride in their job in a closet\u2014DENISE\t| dad.It\u2019s in jeopardy.\t1tl0n' beinS tled dc)w11- fcelin8s and real satisfaction out of 'of inferiority often revealed by it.the phrase, \u201cjust a housewife.\u201d; But they shouldn\u2019t be critical and envy for their husbands of wives who are doing two ling shown by Mrs.N.Bradley.; a commentary on Labra TV and RADIO REPAIRS Call O\u2019BOYLE & PEARCE ltd We also repair small Electrical Appliances.STEAM IRONS \u2014 DRY IRONS \u2014 AUTOMATIC TOASTERS KETTLES - FRY PANS ¦ MIXERS \u2022 HAIR DRIERS \u2022 ETC.1430 King St.W,\u2014Sherbrooke \u2014 Tel.562-2800 envy who.they felt, were lucky to;jobs\u2014who honestly believe and get to leave home every morn- arc often right in their belief ing.\tthat they can hold down a pay- But the letters from full-time ing job without neglecting their housewives today are express- families.ing a different point of view.It isn't easy for a woman to They are beginning to reflect be both a homemaker and a contentment with their lot, pride breadwinner, and some women in (heir job, and conviction that do neglect their families while they are needed most right trying to do both.But it can be where they are\u2014at home.done \u2014 and successfully \u2014 as Many of the letters are even many women are proving, becoming critical of wives who Today a housewife has a work, not because they have to, choice\u2014and whether she choos-but because they want the ex- os to stay at home, or go out tras and the luxuries that two to work, the important thing is pay checks can provide.\t(that her choice is right for They figure wives who work/ Her\u201d and \u201cHer\u201d family.Food Tips For a hearty supper dish, top] hot.cooked Spanish rice in a casserole dish with a layer of fish sticks then bake in a hoD oven for about 15 minutes.The.combination of the golden brown fish and tomato-flavored! rice is exceptionally good.* * * Here is one of those subtle flavour touches which gourmets applaud.Mix 14 teaspoon of dried mint with Î4 cup of melted butter then spoon over two pounds of breaded smelt and oven fry in a very hot oven until the fish are cooked.Matt finest in dairy-fresh ydakc*# products go west to the exotic east let Canadian Pacific jet you there Unravel the mysteries of the Orient.Discover the fragile charm of Japan .the teeming life and commerce of Hong Kong.Fly there on a Super DC-8 Jet .the fastest, most direct service from Montreal to Tokyo, then to Hong Kong.World famous Empress service - and daylight all the way! Choose from low cost Orient tours.Example: 12 dazzling days in Tokyo, Kyoto, Hong Kong - only 5239 plus air fare.Call your Travel Agent or any Canadian Pacific office.UN 1-9361.Gz/iadian (Pacific TRâiNS/TauCKS / SHiRS/*LANES/HOTELt/TCLCCOMMUNICITIOM WORLD S MOST COMPLETE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM \u201c TRAVEL SERVICES & INFORMATION WITHOUT CHARGE*1 VOYAGES MARCEL DARCHE INC.TRAVFI M^r*\u2022 R,e* Boulinjer IKAVtL\t481 Ma.|n Marcel Darche 74 Albert St.Sherbrooke, Que.562 1012 or 562-1013 AGENCY Granby, Que.FRontenac 8-4624 PUBLIC SPEAKING Continued from Page 5 'Waterhouse spoke on the Fcl- CARNIVAL \u2014 lowship of the Church.They Continued from Page 1 urged concentration on being Texan lawyer with s taste forj white cowboy hats, won luby s trust.He headed a group of considered four other Dallas lawyers \u2014, Bird watchers notes Continued from Page 3 1 ST1FRBROOKK DAILY RECORD.MON',.FEB 17, 19«4 ^Sto°K'a ItowVd,and1*n' \u201c,b* MffP * and the subject of offbeat suggest Aluminium i___ *L.ci%xu a ^xs-vtiv\t.i Cum an hllSHM DOlh aflOm WA-\txx____.i- o___i\t«u« _____\t______,-\u2014 room from a man who'called Sumac bu?hes.bo!h affor,J na; tons, Dorothy E.Swales puts the reads the Bible and how deep hlmself Shaefer and who, for a \u2018\u201c[\u201cL?!,?\tün-l'r unerringly upon Pigweed Rubv has become, and how he and'distribution over 100 in number, the Coati-1W* ^ve i« for American preai-pr offered to arrange an\u2019 ex- ^vTs m.d^natuwfLr1131 as cheer boxes, cook Harmony Band were dents (especially Democratic;c|usive inten-iew with Mr How- ouUay is made, nature loot -»,n\tr.ora,io «Iu-mtinny ones).\t'ard \u2014 who can give you Ruby s ivtu mu.as a favorite of Snow Huntings Argus Corp Asbestos 13\u2019r 59\u2018a SO1** 13 s the This column, mark you, never Hell Tel.among the parade attractions, ones) ard \u2014 who can give EVENING IN Continued from Page 5 Floats by the Knights of Col Magazine articles are being,full story.\u201d umbus group depicting the'«riUen about ^e,Ul H,e.is cn recommends the culture of noxi ]Brazil Salvia, a garish but unde-ous piants nor advocates the R.A.Oil YNBELIEVABLE\tniably colorful annual drips propagati0n of garden posts, |; c Knrcst I,\to ftnof enhancing his pubilicity by suing To someone from a staid, nectar that\tHummingbirds known existence of either , an\t,\u201eHsmpn 1 an Saturday Evening Post.Other non-Texan environment like cant resist, ani, while Homy may lead to some good viewing of World War II.The needs of our Canadian ^ood\"m®n' an?lawyers'apparently are upset at Canada, it all seemed quite ex suckle is in bloom, its blossoms that-s all.the country today are great.other on the joys ot campin*., \u2022\t*7\thruthpr traordinarv\talso produce the same beverage ,,\tCan.Cement Janet Marsh spoke on the and hunting the ifIo3t.wltd tbe|(but rival) lgwver is attracting In the * light of preceding Bernes of the Honeysuckle at lhp'p0\u2018ll,r('|rrs t'àin ' Cp on the If*»» S*\tnun, \u201cr Ï clow^! « Jack Ruby w asn\u2019t famous events then, it shouldn\u2019t be sur- ,ract Cedar Waxwmgs by the ridsf at Huntingvillc.Frank * *»'.Aviation R.C.Power Brack \u201cA\" El get more productive, year after R U S C O DEALER OPPORTUNITY Modcrnlite Prime Windows For New Housing & Apartment Construction Storm Windows and Doors Replacement Windows, Commercial and Residential 1.\tAre you presently selling new home and apartment buildings?2.\tDo you sell home improvement products direct to the home owner?3.\tAre you aware of the sales and profit potential in the commercial and residential window re-placeme.f markets?WE OFFER Proven Brand Name Products Protective territory sales rights Complete sales training and technical assistance Proven sales program Write Today Record Box 79 cappeu\t., -\t,\t, ,\tbetween his teeth and demand year, as lale sunn: Iced, partie- |louscroom the Libby kitchen, ularly for Robins, \\\\ axwmgsjsince this was rep0rted.an- and Catbirds.\tother Brown-cap has shown at ] Sunflowers grow easily, and i certain locations, look very feeder, this time Seagrams Dom.Bridge Dom.Tar Dom.Textile ,,\t, Dupont directly j.anious Players across the street from us, mak |,0|.d ¦¦y It is planned to send the pro- On Sunday evening ceeds from the Parish Supper torium of Durand School was In fact a new legal ter,m J5\t_ _lpmlTC to this hospital.\tfilled for an evening of variety emerging from Dallas \u2014 Maehi- CYPRIOT DliPU I t Irving Slack and Mrs.Lewis acts.\tabellian tactics, which imply Continued from Page 1 ___________________________-\u2014-\u2014\u2014-That any manoeuvre is justified- if it helps a client or spreads ing force supplied by NATO na-confusion.\ttions.The archbishop said he Right now confusion is one\twould only accept a force ap-\twell.Their value as bud at substance of which there is\tproved by the UN and made up\t;ractors is unsurpassed, a,ld\t4 707 » 6»* 537 s 73 11 144\u2019 33» 40' 82 263\u2019* 88'» 78\u2019* 31»* 55\u2019* 55»» 37\u2019a 34 517* s UV, 42 80 OS 54 »i 73\u2019.CATCHPAUGH \u2014 To R Leigh and Jeanette (nee Chiasson) Catchpaugh at Schefferville, Quebec, February 14, 1964, a daughter, Wanda Lee, 6 lbs.1 oz., a sister for Christina.FORGUES \u2014 Raymond and Carol (nee Symons) wish to announce the birth of a daughter, February 12 at the Sherbrooke ] Hospital.KERRIDGE \u2014 To Frank and .Gactanc (ncc Dodtcr) the gift of |a daughter, 8 Ihs.11 ozs., on February 15, 1964.at the St.Vincent do Paul Hospital, Sherbrooke.Both well.McCREA \u2014 To Jean (ncc Bowers\u2019) and Francis of Toronto, ; Ontario, on February 13, 1964, Sheila Maureen, 8 lbs.6 oz., « sister for Gerald.Orutlut Overhaul of labor laws due 175\u2019i 28 31 23» 6\u2019 12Mi B 15V4 61»* By ROBERT RICE 78.,\t] OTTAWA (CP)\u2014Two major 34\u2019» B legislative items affecting mil *il '4 Jlions of Canadian workers are '\"'\"'\u201cexpected to be unveiled nt the coming session of Parliament.The measures are: i \u2014A radical overhaul of the soon, D 24 ll's 347 * 15»* 198 62 Mi 38 Mj 79 64 Vi unemployment insurance l>i\u201d STREW, Pearl (Viol*) \u2014 At her gram along the lines proposed |u,mP, :>in Ha\u201ek street, on Sun-by the special inquiry com dayi |>brUary 16, 1964, Viola mittee headed by Ernest ( p0nrl Strew, beloved daughler Gill, a Toronto insurance ex \u201e[ n,P ]ate Mr.and Mrs.Nelson ecutive.\tA.Strew, and dear sister of Lot- \u2014A federal labor code setting out s t a n /WS) *.r Tf!ATS JUST IT- , LOOK L'lL ABNER WANTS MORE MOTHS DIDSBURY, England (CP)\u2014 Manchester\u2019s chamber of commerce testing house wants 200,-000 more moths to test mothproof and other materials.It already has about 100,000 moths.TAILOR For ladies and gentlemen General Repairs F.COLLETTE 84 King St.West,\" (in basement) Tel.562-4334 SHERBROOKE Frank J.Conway Reg'd Complete, Competent Service in all matters of REAL ESTATE 110 Wellington North Phone 567-5162 or 569-8666 NOTICE By-Law No.1383 Notice is hereby given that a meeting of ^property owners of zone B-27 for the approval of the following amendment of the zoning bylaw of the City of Sherbrooke, will be held at the Citv Hall, on Monday, February 24.1964.from 7 to 8 P.M.By-law No.1383 concerning the installation of oil and petroleum reservoirs in zone ,12.Zone .1-2 includes the lots situated on Abenaquis Street approximately 100 feet from Dufferin Avenue.Property owners from adjoining zones to zone J-2 can request to take part in the consultation by sending to the undersigned, within the next five days, a petition signed by at least twelve property owners of said adjoining zone.H.P- Emond, City Clerk./DEEiy THERE'S A likelV SUSPECT\"''ÂTPIN ARRIET.V SHE 'AS AN 'ORRI&LE l: WANT TO GIVE 'ER THE KISS TEST SIR?I D-DON'T THINK IT WILL BE NECESSARY.SOMETHING IN ME TELLS ME SHE'S-uGw.r-NOT THE ONE.?THERE'S A-pAht/'- dRool:>_ SUSPECT.'' s-rr BUTSIR}!' THAT\u2019S LADY PURITY, THE VJELL-KNOWM SOCIAL WORKER.1! i YOU NEVER CAN TELL.'M\u2019D BETTER GIVE HER THETEST\" C-ÉRLADVSHIPS A FAMOUS ?H\u2019ATHLETE!!- / WOULDN'T G/VE TUPPENCE FOR.HIS UFE.r.r-)f CART.EASY MA& AND TME-KIDS- \u2014 MAYSE IF I CONCEUrRATE [ HARPER, ML1 RECALL OlA 7 EENIE! STOP DAYDRDA.\\AlNG\u2022 FINISH CHOPPIM TH AT WOOD THEN SPADE UP AN ACRE FOE CAB8ASES WHILE I'M AT TH\u2019 MOVIE! 3 I'M TRYlNS TO \u2019 REMEMBER! IT'S HARP TO IMAGINE DESERTING A WIFE- AND FOUR.TOTS.\u2014 VE-AH.IT WAS AT TH' TIME, BIS BOY! WELL, 1 AIN'T FOESOTi AND NOW I AIM TO LIVE A LITTLE WHILE V0U MAKE UP FOR TH1 BURPEN 1 HAD to bear raisin' them youngdus ^ \u2014T\u201cS t ALONEd -T\u2014r- * h>m hr vm «, tm.>i.UJ 7\" ALLEY OOP jO MAN, AM r EVER in ^5 / I am JASON, PRINCE o LUCK! THESE FELLAS S OF IOLCUS.ANP MV H SEEM TTHINK I'M n V COMPANIONS, THE ot A GOP OF SOME T 0- (( IPF\" ^3 '' ARGONAUTS ft 4-,\\- :-i7 JASON?NOW WHAT IS IT r KNOW ABOUT JASON ?.OH, SURE.1 HE'S TH1 FELLA WHO WENT AROUND LOOKIN' FOR SOME OC RAM'S HIDE.YES.AND ITS BEGINNING \u2022TH\u2019 OUEST Y TO LOOK LIKE A LONG, FOR TH' GOLDEN ' DIFFICULT JOURNEYX FLEECE/ _t m< q nh.'M- Tjtj.J I 92 ^237025958 m Sixty rinks in annual for SHTRBROOKE DAILY RECORD, MON., FEB.17.19B4 five trophies compete the world o?ET spiel'SPORTS The\t13th annual\tEastern three competing while the Bor-'Claire.Quebec Winter\tClub and Townships Curling\tBonsptel der Curling Club, Montreal\tfrom Nashua.N.H.to\tcomplete opens\tthis evening\twith 60 Caledonia and Montreal Heath\tthe list.rinks\tcompeting for\tthe five er have two apiece.Single en\tLyman Tomkins,\tgeneral trophies at stake.\ttries have been received from chairman of the tournament, is The Sherbrooke Club tops the Windsor, Granby - St list of entries with 21 rinks reg Drummondville, Cow istered while Lennoxville is next with nine and Magog follows Bishop s shortened Gaiters lose 9-4 to Ottawa in weekend hockey match .\tThe Bishop's University hoe-'Ad.Paul, ookmg forward to some very kev\ted no matdrble vansvtlle.keen curling during the weekly thc Universitv o[ 0\u201eawa hot Thetford Mines.Richmond, Bai before the winners are declared University hoc Adam's goal came from a scram in front of the net.with both teams playing one man d\u2019Urfe.Montreal West.Gee Gees on Saturday as they short.with six.North Hatley has Lambert, Outremont ?Two Windsor rinks go this week to Quebec for O'Keefe Golden Bowl St.Saturday evening.The J.S.]ost g 4 {o ttle fast.skating visit- The third period started on ors.\tan encouraging note for Gaiter: Bishop's coach Bruce Coul- fans as Doug Staniforth took a! ,\tter was forced to employ a hur centering pass from center Nils of trophies, llte others are: La ried|J.s}lu{{iet) ]jneUp because Bodtkcr and fired it p.M the Tribune.J.R.angster.Sher-of th\u2018ç a(jSence of three of his Gee Gee netminder on a fine brooke Record and the H.W .\tColin Nelson, classy scoring play.However, the visit Pointe Mitchell Trophy is the main event this year as each season the committee rotates the list S.Downs.Bruce Millar is in charge of players.left winger, sustained a leg in- ors were not to be denied the jury in Wednesday\u2019s loss to the win.as they closed out the the match committee and all University of Sherbrooke, while game with three fast goals by Two rinks from Windsor willlern): Maurice Sears, Canada^!?* ^\t^an perature 5 above.RAMBLER Sales & Service EASTERN TOWN SHIPS MOTORS 2222 King St West Tel.569-3604 Sunday\u2019s final round.\tluel-Secours were Rick Vallee He picked up four birdies and and Pete Dugas as the former an eagle in the last seven holes dumped basket after basket to card a one-under-par 71 and and grabbed most rebounds a record-shattering 280 for the while Pete Dugas set up many tournament.\t[fine plays.On the Green and George Knudson of TorontojWhite squad.Ned Lynch hand-topped the Canadian contingent| led the ball well while D.Char-with a 285.Adrien Bigras ofilebois netted 16 points.Montreal and Henry Mclllree' Playoff action in the Sher-of Hamilton finished at 302.fol- brooke Basketball League seni-lowed by Wilf Homenuik of Win- or boys\u2019 section will commence nipeg and Norman Hunt of[on Tuesday, February 25 when Montreal at 303; Andre Gagnierjsecond place Marymount High of Montreal, 305; Ken Duggan.;meets St.Pat's in a two game Agincourt, Ont., 309 and Mur- total point contest, with the ray Tucker, Toronto, 318.[winner of this meeting the Lea- ; AiaÉâi Somebody forgot to tell Rangers By THE CANADIAN PRESS It was decided much earlier in the season by the so-called \u201cexpert s\u2019\u2019 that St.Paul Rangers couldn't finish any better than fourth in the five-team Central Professional Hockey League.Somebody forgot to tell j the Rangers.j St.Paul, the hottest team in [the circuit at, the present time, dumped second-place St.Louis ! Braves 4-2 Saturday night and followed up with a 3-1 Sunday win over Cincinnati Wings.The four-points gave Rangers Isole possession of third place, three points up on Minneapolis I Bruins and only two back of | Braves.Omaha Knights stretched their lead to 15 points with a 4-2 victory over Minneapolis Saturday night.Maurice Oftebro showed the) way for Rangers Saturday, picking up two goals.Howie Hughes t SI.Hyacinthe: I.Brunelle, and Trent Beatty accounted for Ül»limillllll.iai,aall.llli.all\"iiall.^,ll)Üli.lMll iliiillaUaliai.ll.i'lluU.a SOARING SKIERS \u2014\tning, checking equipment and making certain nobody is Patrot are the nrst to use the stranded.These patrollers, lift each day and the last to seen on the Mt.Echo chair-ski down the trails in the eve- lift at the new Sutton Junr- tion development, are Maurice Cardinal, left, and Jacques Duchesne.(Photo by Frank Gillespie) clipped Boston Brums 5-3 Sun- ^orkl\"5 for\tnow.Fhey Detroit st d Montreal ^ \" hopping 96-mmute penalty im- bruised ribs day night, continuing their win- have la Sa>™s left to play, Chi- Saturdav nj2ht and ;vlontreal rp.position by referee Frank Ld- inert on a str for-win duel with Montreal Ca- caSo only 13.Saturday night and Montreal rebounded to a 5-2 win Sunday' an ln l^e secon(^ Period.stretcher.He returned to take his regular turn in the final 20 minutes and played Buffalo 3, Cleveland 2 Providence 1, Pittsburgh 3 Hershey 3, Springfield 6 ?SUNDAY'S GAMES nadiens for first place in the And\u2019 .apar,1 from 1hc v,°'night.Chicago was shut out 4-0 H\t35'T^,\t, National Hockey League, but fidme Montreal plays nine bv Toronto Maple Leafs m Tor.Bobby Hull s 3oth goal of the Sunday night, assisting on both the Moose was stirred up.ga'nc\" at hon,c and Chicago onto Saturday.In the olher campaign and Stan Mikita s of MacDonald's goals.\tProvincial League ,\t,\tr \u201e .only tour.\tu-ppkpnrl\tWu; Vnrir ï>nn 31st helped carry the Chicago At New York Sunday night, Sherbrooke 4, Drummondviiie 6 tie\u201d: huCttSiths,SJuhaTy tTaul S.GN.F.CANT FACET\tm\" ^dc- Maki s two goals sand- Leafs outshot Rangers 4i-30\t, St.Hyacfnme 4 ing down one of those slippery A breakdown of overall Play ^ Laafs 4\u20192 Suflday ^ in ihatChico^elped s^up pu£d and Camüle Hen^clickeTa^ M^c^Toctron 2 ittle forwards rather than for this season shows just now sm- New York.\tChicago out from behind \u2014 - - «-¦ \u2014-\t\u2014 Toronto 2\u2019 N*w 'ork 4 fighting.\t'mficant this fact is.In 166 ihe schedule resumes Wcd- But there he was, in the thick games, apart from ?ties, .,\t|\t.\t.\t.\t.trouble in the final period, the nesday night, preferring a pair Doug Mohns found the raark:ending Wounded Gump shuts fourth since the theft of Hodge 3-2 5:42 of the final period for the Boston 3j C;iica\u201e0 5 game-w'inner\u2014his 25th goal - American League a five - game winless! Springfield 3, Buffalo 5 Dean string for Rangers.\tPittsburgh 0, Providence 5 other Bower was removed for an Hershey o, Quebec 5 Cleveland 2, Rochester 3 twice for Bruins and Prentice got Boston\u2019s goal.\textra shooter and Earl Ingar- Mikita, who seems to pop up field pumped one into the emptv ,n,er Cl,y Led9\u201ce every time there s trouble byinet with 28 seconds left to wrap (Rock island leads 1-01.contrast, and Autrey Erickson things up before the crowd of Windsor i.Asbestos 3 i (Asbestos leads 1-0).were the other Chicago com-;15,509.batants in the Vasko-Kurtcn- Nobody consulted Q u e b c ^career\u2014and Serge Boudreault abled Americans to nip Cleve-back dispute, squaring off Aces last summer when Mont-'had the others.\tiand.Red Armstrong and Les against Tom Johnson and real Canadiens swapped goal-j p;d Van Irnpe, Bob Turner,Duff counted the other Roches- Teddy Green, respectively, tender Jacques Plante to Newjand Mjke Melnyk scored goals 1er goals.Joe Szura and Dick No one was hurt evidently fori O V for title York Rangers for Lome f0r Bisons to protect a brilliant Mattiussi scored for the losers, but Udvari cracked down hard\t\u2022 Schoolboys curl (Gump) Worsley.It started off badly for Aces.Worsley suffered an injury and Canadiens promptly snatched Charlie Hodge from the Quebec roster.Hodge hasn\u2019t been back.But the convalescent Worsley eventually took Charlie place in the Aces\u2019 nets and they haven\u2019t looked back since.On Sunday:period Sunday, two by Doug had the other Hornet goal.Stan good house of 14.291 in Detroit, draws of the 11-team round-| the Gumper posted his fourth: Robinson and one by Jerry Mel-|Baluik tallied for Reds.\tPULLS SAWCHUK\tjrobin championship.Eastern Townships Jr.B' League Richmond 6, Waterloo 1 Thetford Mines 5, Megantic 2 ?MONDAY'S GAMES Sherbrooke Junior League Carabins vs.Indians (7:15) Beavers vs.St.Francis (9:00) goaltending performance by Playing - coach Vic S ta sink on the principals with majors(CP)\u2014John Colqu-Roy Edwards, who slopped 45 br°ke a 1-1 deadlock with Reds and misconducts, dishing out a doun cclebrates his nth birth-shots.Cleveland\u2019s plaving-eoach earb' in the third period to give raft of minors .ater when things day today\u2019 D900 miles from Fred Glover accounted for both Pittsburgh the win.Adam Kel-;got chippy.\tdome the Canadian school- Barons' goals.\t1er netted the insurance marker Jean Beliveau, his play im- oy curllng championship.Thrpp.for four\twith an open net with 30 sec-Peded as of\tlate by a sore wrist,] Colquhoun, who throws second\tGranby\t36\t21\t14\tj\t129\tns onds left after Providence had\tboosted his\tseason\u2019s production\tstone for the Quebec rink, would\torum\u2019viiie\t36\t20\tis\t0\t159\t114 Bisons scored on\tthree\tof\trepiaccd Giacomin with an ex-\tto 22 goals\twith his three-goal\tee to observe the occasion\tst.Hy.\t36\t19\t16\t1\t134\t123 their four shots of the\topening\ttra forward.John MacMillan\tsplurge for\tMontreal before a\tw'th victories in the opening shutout of the American Hockey nyk.Van Irnpe and Len Lunde John Rodger and Jerry Foley It was actually a tight strug-League season as his club fired the others.Springfield each counted a pair of goals to gle until the final minute of the downed Hershey Bears 5-0 to! marksmen were Dennis Olson, lead Springfield to victory Sat-final period.With Montreal Bishop s ski champs The Bishop\u2019s University Men's Ski team, came up with a strong all-round effort to win the combined title in the CSLAA Alpine] Championship Friday at Mount j Orford.Ernie Richardson tries tor fifth curling crown Ernie Richardson and his Regina curling kings will make their fifth bid for the Canadian curling championship next month and half the competition will be making at least a second bid to unseat him.Six rinks in the 11 - team round-robin bonspiel at Char lottetown March 2-6, including the famed Richardson sharpshooters, are former champions of their provinces.The Quebec rink skipped by Elmer Back of Montreal will be one of the youngest competitors but they\u2019re no strangers to the Canadian curling scene.Black.25, with Bill Ness, lead and John Logan, third, were runners-up in the Canadian schoolboy championships in 1953.This season they\u2019ll have Oakley McRae playing second.Richardson with his brother Garnet, second, and cousins Arnold, third, and Wes, lead, last year won the Canadian title for an unprecedented fourth time, one better than Matt Baldwin of Edmonton and Ken Watson of Winnipeg.MABEY AT THIRD Harold Mabey of Moncton, N.B., will be the only other skip at Charlottetown who has piloted his rink in more than one previous Canadian championship.The New Brunswick ring master, who prefers to call the shots but allows his son Hap to throw the last two rocks, represented New Brunswick in 1960 and again in 1962.Two rinks, skipped by lan Baird of Kentville for Nova Scotia and Bob Mann of Hanover for Ontario, are representing their provinces for the second consecutive year.Art Burke of Charlottetown, 1962 Prince Edward Island titlist and Jack Polyblank of Kirkland Lake, 1961 Northern Ontario winner, make up the six repeat competitors in the Charlottetown matches to decide a Canadian representative in the world championships at Calgary later this month.The other four provinces will be represented by rinks skipped by Dave Pedley of S*.John\u2019s for Newfoundland.Ron Nnrth-cott of Calgary for Alberta, Bruce Hudson of Winnipeg for Manitoba and Lyall Dagg of Vancouver for British Columbia.RINK PERSONNEL The 11 rinks, listing skip, third, second and lead in that order are: St.John's, Nfld.\u2014Dave Pedley, John Taite, George Gian-nou.Bill O\u2019Reilly.Moncton, N.B.\u2014 Harold Ma- h- Bishop\u2019s skiers did not finish in the first three in either the downhill or the slalom events, but the team as a whole performed better than the other competing universities: Loyola, Carleton, Sir George Williams, Sherbrooke, R.M.C., and C.M.R.The Bishop\u2019s contingent was second to the University of Sherbrooke tn the downhill, and second to Loyola in the slalom winning the combined title by a close margin, 503.2 points to 492.1 points, over the University of Sherbrooke.Loyola was third and C.M.R.a distant fourth.Individually, A.Gerry and Que.Challenge Cup stuys here two more weeks The 90-year-old Quebec Challenge Trophy will stay at the Sherbrooke Curling Club for at least another two weeks, following Saturday's defeat by Grattan Crosby\u2019s and Peter Cross\u2019 rinks of the two challenging teams from Metcalfe, Ont.Total points of the two rounds decided the match.Grattan Crosby, playing the first round, defeated the challenging Hank Robertson rink 20-10.Peter Cross met E.Bishop from Metcalfe for a 20-4 victory, making a total score of 40-14 for Sherbrooke.Saturday\u2019s was the 498th challenge game for the cup which has been in play since 1874.The next club in line to challenge Sherbrooke is Perth, Ontario.If the challenge arrives, the game will be played Feb.29 in Sherbrooke.Chris Howlett, of Sir George and Loyola respectively, finished in a tie for first in the downhill, with Pierre Gadbois of the University of Sherbrooke coming in third.For Bishop\u2019s, Jacques Laverdure was fifth, Bob McMahon eighth, and Winn Ough-tred eleventh.In the slalom, stars A.Gerry and Chris Howlett were also among the skiers with the best times, as Michael Annett of Loyola and Gerry tied for first, and Howlett and M.Blench tied for third third.For the local team, Boh McMahon was fifth, Jacques La-verdure tenth.Winn Oughtred fourteenth, and Tom Smith eighteenth.The Individual Combined Championship went to Gerry of Sir George, but Howlett was just .9 points behind.Bob McMahon of Bishop\u2019s was third, and Pierre Gadbois of the University of Sherbrooke fifth.Bishop\u2019s skier Jacques Laverdure was eighth, Winn Oughtred tenth, and Tom Smith nineteenth.widen their gap over the losers to six points in the eastern division standings.' Ed Giacomin shared the goaltending spotlight with Worsley, notching his third shutout, of the term as Providence Reds whitewashed Pittsburgh Hornets 6-0.Buffalo Bisons, buried deep in the western d i v i s i on cellar, were the lone double victors on the weekend.Bisons shaded Cleveland Barons 3-2 Saturday night and edged Springfield Indians 5-3 Sunday.Roger Cote and Jimmy Ander son.Bronco Horvath's third overtime goal of the season, at 1:09 of the sudden-death session, en- urday.Mike Labadie and Gary,ahead 3-2, coach Sid Abel of Bergman were credited with Red Wings removed goalie the other two.Mike Harvey, Terry Sawchuk for a sixth at-Roger Dejordy and Charlie taeker and Claude Provost Hamilton scored for Bears He arid his teammates from Montrcal\t.\t29\tl5\tu\t172\t136 Shawmigan High School \u2014 skip chicago .29\t17\t11\t174\t132 John Fortier, third Craig Hop- Toronto\t_ 24\t21\t9\t140\t136 kins and lead Bill Wallace-Detroit ¦\t22 24 9\t\u201861 faced British Columbia as their first opponent and Newf(#nd-land as their second as a result \u2014 STANDINGS \u2014 PROVINCIAL LEAGUE (Final Standings) P W L T F A Pts 43 40 39 Sherbrooke 36 10 24 2 117 182 22 ?NATIONAL LEAGUE W L T F A Pts 69 69 57 53 46 38 New York Boston 19 28 8 155 183 14 32 10 133 168 Ken Hubbs dies in plane crash; Chicago Cubs seek second baseman dumped the puck into the empty Sunday night\u2019s official draw, end at 19:23 on Beliveau\u2019s setup.Other first - round pairings Sawchuk returned and Beli-pitted Ontario against New veau potted his third one of the BARONS NIPPED PROVO, Utah (AP)- cago Cubs' training camp two years ago, with a rookie's cheerful confidence, Ken Hubbs told a reporter: \u201cYou don't The only other Sunday gamei|iave to worry about second saw Rochester Americans nip]base here for 10 years.\u2019\u2019 the slumping Barons 3-2 The Today tragica|iyi Cubs are previous night IMttsburgh |ookjng for a sccond baseman.The bodies of Hubbs and a boyfriend were recovered a nearby lake Sunday near the wreckage of his pri- downed Providence Reds 3-1 and Springfield took Bears 6-3.lbood The 34 - year - old Worsley from stopped 35 shots in his 32nd AHL game since joining Aces in November.Another veteran, 32 - year - old defenceman Jim Morrison scored twice.Cleland Mortson also had a pair\u2014his 24th and 25th of the season.Cliff Pennington got the other goal.Highlight of the game was a wild third-period brawl that saw,, .T, police pour onto the ice to clear|br,othf -, Keith night eight seconds later.A five-game winning string by Detroit was severed.Bobby Rousseau got Mont-At Chi-;on Utah Lake, five miles westjreal's other goal to reach the of Provo, Saturday.\t120-goal plateau and like Beli- Thcir bodies were recovered veau he has beaten Red Wings in the competition, which ends by skindivers in 15 feet of waterjnow for 10 of them.\tÎFriday, for a total'of 10 games under the ice Sunday.\tBoth Detroit goals came from:for cach 0f rinks represent- CUBS PALLBEARERS\t(Parker MacDonald on power-jng au the provinces and North- Funeral services for Hubbs plays.\t|ern Ontario, will be at Colton Thursday.His In Toronto before 14,326 fans'\tesaon Chicago Cub teammates will Saturday night, Black HawksT0UGH OPPONENTS NHL Big Seven The big move among the scor-Brunswiek, Newfoundland goes ing leaders in the weekend Na-against Saskatchewan, Northern tional Hockey League shuffla Ontario against Manitoba and'was jean Beliveau\u2019s.;MbCr\u2018a : He scored three goals and set Prince Edward Island drew the up a fourth to runshis season.a y \u2018\tproduction to 22 goals and 43 Eleven rounds will be curled assists for 65 points.vate plane.He was only 22, the National League's Rookie of the Year in 1962 when he set two major league fielding records at second base.Last Thursday he took off act as pallbearers.H u b b s\u2019j were overwhelmed by Toronto\u2019s teammates on the Colton Little defensive play.Punch Imlach, League championship team of The irrepressible coach of Leafs, 1954 will be honorary pallbear-ireunited Frank Mahovlich on a opponents for the early going line with Red Kelly and Bobiand met further misfortune Defending champion Alberta, represented by a Stettler High School rink, drew the toughest ers.\u2018It's a shock,\u201d said the Cubs' athletic director, Bob Whitlow, when informed of the fatal accident.\u201cIt\u2019s just too tragic to believe.\u201d Utah slate aeronautics direc-\u201e\t,\t,\t.\t, ,,tor Harlon Bernent said the way from the airport at this central the plane crashed, nose down at Utah community where his' angle ot 70 or g() degrces when skip Doug Scheerschmidt, 18, came down with a mild case had gone to it of fighting fans.Three mis-j^1100' at BriSham YounS Uni' B B\tversify.With him was Dennis Doyle, A three-goal splurge by the an orphan who grew up in line of Ed Mazur, Willie Mar- the Hubbs home at Colton, Calif Nevin and the club responded with an impressive display.Kelly and Nevin both scored.'of influenza Sunday night.He Dave Keon and Bobby Pulford was expected to sec first-day were the other goa! - getters, action, however.Johnny Bower turned in a 25 Alberta drew Manitoba and stop performance for his fourthSaskatchewan as second and shutout of the season.\tThird - round opponents.The Gordie Howe\u2019s pair of goals three Prairie rinks are classed 'conducts and three major pen allies were handed out.Stan Mikita, the leader, picked up a 31st goal to go with his 40 assists and the runnerup, Bobby Hull, counted his goal No.35 to stay two points in front of Beliveau.The Leaders \tG\tA\tPtl.Mikita.Chicago\t31\t40\t71 Hull, Chicago\t35\t32\t67 Beliveau, Montreal\t22\t43\t65 Bathgate, New York\t16\t43\t59 Wharram, Chicago\t29\t27\t50 Gilbert, New York\t21\t31\t52 Howe, Detroit\t20\t32\t53 Oliver, Boston\t19\t33\t52 Goyette, New York\t18\t34\t52 shall and George Ranieri broke; The wreckage of their plane, weather.with the right wing hitting first.ihefore 14,926 in Montreal Satur-jby most experts here as coindicates that the plane had]day night lifted the 35-year-oldjfavorites.In the school chara-been in what he termed \u201ca right winger to the 20-goal pla-lpionship\u2019s previous 17 years graveyard spiral\u201d which caniteau for the 15th consecutive Prairie rinks won 13 times.occur when a pilot loess sight!season.\t| rpde championships, first held;\t_ of the horizons because of badlOVERCOME LEAD\tjin Regina 17 years ago, will be Sherbrooke Doily Record ifcUMMERCI/il Floyd Smith and Alex Delvec- the game open in favor of Reds.'a single\t- engine Cessna 172\tHubbs got his pilots\u2019\tlicence\tchio\tcounted Detroit's other Ranieri had a pair and Mazur which Hubbs had bought a year\ttwo weeks ago.He had\tlogged\tgoals\tbefore the close of the one.Jim Bartlett, Pierre Bril- ago, was\tfound scattered in and\t71 hours and 15 minutes flying\topening period to destroy an tant \u2014 the 100th goal of his around a\t10-foot hole in the ice'time before this trip.\tedge\tHenri Richard gave Cana- held at Exhibition Stadium PRINTING DEPARTMENT where workmen toiled through; Sunday to convert the ice \u201d Camirand St.Sherbroakg hockey rink to a five-sheet curl-\tT**- S69-3636 ing surface.\t\" J ' .\u2014 J - When you think of ale.Manila \u2014 Carlos Ortiz.135, New York, stopped Flash Elorde, 135, Philippines, 14.Ortiz retained lightweight title.Teaneck, N.J.\u2014Vince Shomo, j 149 Vi, New York, outpointed j Isaac Logart, 14964, New York, 10.bey.Hap Mabey, Dave Silli-phant, Harold Keith.Kentville, N.S.\u2014 Ian Biard, Don Campbell, Duncan Smith,} Moe Kennie.Charlottetown\u2014Art Burke, Allan Smith, Bobby Dillon, Stu Lavers.Montreal\u2014Elmer Black, John I^ogan, Oakley McRae, Bill Ness.Hanover, Ont.\u2014 Bob Mann.Ken Buchan, Keith Munro, Rich Palmer.Kirkland Lake, Ont, \u2014 Jack Polyblank, Francis MacDonald, Ken Mclnnes, Wayne Fetch.Winnipeg \u2014 Bruce Hudson, Harvey Mazinke, Ken Little, Harry Martel.Calgary \u2014 Ron Northcott.Mike Chcrnoff, Ron Baker, Fred Storey.Regina \u2014 Ernie Richardson, Arnold Richardson, Garnet Richardson, Wes Richardson.Vancouver\u2014Lyall Dagg, Leo Hebert, Fred Britton, Barry Naimark.\tj -\u2014 .\u2014\u2014\u2014-\u2014-\u2014-.-.\u2014 .y \u2014-.' TV: V .i u l'ivi .iiiniiininmyiiiiyi\t.J.ïrim»*.J.A .\t\t MOLSON EXPORT is the BIGALE in the big land It's the big ale because more people ask for it, open it, serve it, enjoy it, than any other ale in Canada.Open a Molson Export Ale and drink it.We think you\u2019ll find the reason for opening your second bottle inside the first bottle.If you don\u2019t agree, no hard feelings.MOLSON\u2019S-BREWERS SINCE 1786 .and this is a Utile picture oj the BIG ALE I f "]
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