pene | oer LJ CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, Aug. 6, 1964 “THIS WEEK AND NEXT. By RAY ARGYLE | An ambitious scheme to bring a world of : ’ tee CHILDREN'S conten if Pe wuts Fad atees y ¥ ee : wy eB ree ee i ttn "ts parents and teachers to Ca- nada in 1967 has run afoul of plans are changed-another Canadian will have fallen under the out- right control of U.S. inter- ests, The Canadian Home and School and Parent Teacher Federation had planned to bring representatives from as many countries as possi- bie to a world Ottawa in Canada’s centen- nial year. " The idea was somewhat retentious: to ut the merits of the pro- posed conference are of secondary importance com- pared to the domination’ which the U.S, Parent Teacher Alliance has been permitted to exert over the Canadian organization. At the recent annual con- vention of the Canadian TENT 2. fh \ . 3 4 <4 NJ ais S: cL eVIIN a, 7h ak AY 9] TM to{ % 16° Here is a plan for lawn figures. You can make them from stiff paper or if you prefer, from plywood. Paint them any color you. like. - SHOWCASE WEEKLY REPORT ON THE LIVELY ARTS group, U.S. served notice that’ if dele- gates from commu countries were invited, the American PTA would not participate. Faced with the choice of losing either Russian or . American: participation, the Canadians knuckled under to this apparent manifesta- tion of Goldwaterism and meekly accepted the U.S. ultimatum. Whether i: was because the Americans offered fi- nancial support, or whether the Canadian Home and School national executive doesn't have the brains to organize a world confer ence on its o-n, hasn’t been explained. ‘ But the fact remains that in yet anothér area of Cana- dian life we have witnessed once again a. virtual take- over by Americans of decl- sions which we should be making on our own, dictated ele by. our own best inter- e : As far as I have been able to find out- and I have ‘served as president of my own Home and School ~ group-the Ottawa .confer- ence was to have brought together delegates from various countries to’: seek better understanding of common problems in the fields of education and child welfare. Home and School and PTA groups do not lack for critics in this; country: But’ there is a valuable role for ig a watch- dog atti- tude toward educational in- novations, and info: parents of trends and prob- - Tems in education affecting their children’s welfare. If the idea of a world con- ference sponsored by Cana- da has any merit, it surely loses all justification when political interference is per- mitted to widen further the between Communist Tands and ‘the West in’ an area of non- political activi- Arnold Edinborough, the distinguished editor, of Sat- ENTERTAINMENT NEWS & VIEWS . By AL CONNOR * When Elizabeth - Taylor steps on a sound stage at * MGM in September for a scene in The Sandpiper. it will mark the first time she © has worked in. Hollywood since Cat on a: Hot Tin - Roof almost six years ago. Most of the film, which ‘co- _stars Miss: Taylor’s hus- band, Richard Burton, be filmed in th Call- for a big sale. Exodus ‘and Battle Cry have al- ready made Leon Uris well known. In Armageddon, a saga of Berlin, Uris has ‘built a theme of epic score and meaning. The novel, : broken into four parts, be- gins in 1944 and ends with the Berlin Airlift of 1949. *' flowering — the days of By BILL SMILEY As:/ateacher of English,’ anda former weekly editors: “wish X’could claim St for me I note” with despondency’ that standards in the week- lies are:sagging rather sor- rily since the days when the.’ | weeklies found thelr finest Smiley, ‘that is. ! Cannibalizing my favour- ite weekly today — that’s + what you do, you dont read it, you cannibi —Ibit : into an item that te soft, squashy, pulpy, tasteless and meaningless. Both as an editor and an English teacher, I must pro- test it. Pretty soon there'll be nothing to cling to in this country but stumpy maple leaves and soggy two-line fillers. The “filler’, as all new- spaper people know, is. an item, anything from one line to a paragraph, that fills out” the page. The whole page 1s made up, and there's a hole left, ‘a blank space. You stick a filler in it. ‘The filler is a vital compo- nent of the newspaper, and the main source of the Nber- al education of some read- ers. It says, ‘The natives of Baffin Land are immune to lung ‘cancer because they smoke only potato peelings dried in cow manure’ Or something of the sort. Another one might inform you, more briefly, that ““Swo hundred and twenty- four unwed fathers are born | “every third Wednesday.” Or of the sort. Clyde’s Choice OF A NEW HOVIE By CLYDE AILMOUR fornia. A’ television series. on family life entitled Under One Roof is running on CBC-TV again this summer. Program dates for. August — are the 10 and 17, with final shows Sept. 7 and 14. Under One Roof deals: with situations such as being .a teen-ager, courting, the ar- rival of the first child, and ° other aspects of family. life... “ persons. “DEAR .DORIS —When my. youngest son (of). six ) was placed with a Mr. Jones, a : citizen, aa have the gout. Mo room for a lbel suit. But what suggestions and impli- cations and ‘allusions and suspense were in those five words! What a turmoil of . speculation and comment! From those who did not know him — “Who is Harold Jones”. “From ‘those who had never heard the word — “What 'in the world is. the gout”. From’ those who . had heard it — “I’m not surprised.’” From those who didn’t know what it was, but wouldn't admit it — ‘I won- der if he’s jaidng ans for fer This was all very well. I considered it my high point as a weekly editor. It was a short story that Hemingway would ‘have applauded. The ‘English ‘was © impeccable, Stripped to the bone, true alive. And what do I read in the same weekly five years la- ter? This ‘mushy, : slushy, phony, wordy, sentimental filler: ‘‘Mr. “Harold: ‘‘Skin- “ny” Jones is suffering from the gout, again.” Isn't that disgusting? He is now. “Mr. Jones, He is now addressed in the false intimacy of a nickname. He no longer: “has” the. gout, . -che “suffers” from it, a hide- ously’ hackneyed phrase. And the word “again” has about as much impact as the statement that. Canada “again” spent more on l- ‘quor than mist ions,“ ° : I think it’s time I'took an- other whirl at weekly, edit- ‘ing, if only to prevent such » desecration of genuine works of LI L PEDRO. = By de la Torre babysitter, he ran away ite find mother!" school where I teach, he; Made the woman's life mis- erable begging her 12 Phone : me. In grade one‘ an irritable teacher: strapped ‘him. for trifles., Resentment built up and he began tripping peo- ple and so on. A later teach: « er put him in her Failure We ‘Then I took him into my class and he improved. Phy- > sical symptoms which’ had : begun’ to appear — ticks, shrugs, coughs — decreased .. Now he has failed again. It seems there has been some brain damage, ‘likely at birth, but he 1s not clasred as defective. TEACHER MOTHER — DEAR TEACHER — In those early ‘days> your My" psy says many adults have had some brain fe at birth; omen fe eituone any Teeded. care and security are present. © His repeated failures hava. My. family ‘se! here after: I; finished’ high school so that I:might make ‘my «way in‘Iife just.a little easier;:I have been ‘passing “for: white. ever. since: uve changed to. one. near the « been ‘here;"I hav~a:wi roommate, I have a’ good Job. ‘Recently: 1°: have been ‘thrown ‘constantly : wit + Negro ‘man. who facea fot know I am Negro but ‘is: at- ‘tracted: to | me.I, feel” the same:way about him. I want - to tell him “so ‘badly... What would he say or think? What would : the: white: men “who have ‘dated ‘me ‘and’ taken + me into their homes to meet thelr’ families ‘think? Dorls my heart is 50 1 heavy What can Lido Pesci, PAS! SING DEAR ‘PASSING, —-Tell him, Have done with your house of cards before it falle in around you. Doh't contin- ue living a Ue. ‘s DEAR DORIS — Our family has been Hving In L — for about a week. I am 15 and I would ‘like to meet the kids on the street, but I don’t know how I could. In’ D—— ‘I had lots: of friends but they cannot get out here ‘to, see. me. I sit around the. house bored stiff. ‘Would you please help? BORED DEAR BORED — . Where there’s life — young life — there-are things, going on. Read this newspaper ‘to:lo- cate them. And visit your lo- cal Y¥, or Rec. Dept.; syinty ming pool or library, to co tact more of them: You only need one “new. -friend, to sat something : sent me Castlegar’: Ss. GREEP'S ELECTRIC * Phone ‘365.3571 CASTLEGAR. PLUMBING & HEATING ak at Thurs., “AU. 13. LET'S ‘SING OUT (CTV). - Folk music from Guelph, Ont., agricultural . college. urday’ Night is one Home and Schooler who intends to do something about this, He plans to introduce two resolutions at the Septem- ber meeting of his club. One will be to demand cancella- , tion of the Ottawa confer- » ence as presently planned. The other will be a non-con- fidence motion in the entire national "executive of the Canadian Home and School - and PTA Federation. I plan to do the same, I hope you will, too. "You're grown up now, All. it's time you married a few hune -dred women and satflod E down” mle THE ANSWER TO THIS’ PUZZLE. 18 IN BOSSE'S and Natural: Gas.and Oil © Heating | Specialists Phone $65-8284 ARROW LAKES ~ MACHINE | SHOP Precision Machiniog ° Gas and Electric Welding General Machine Repairs” Phene | 365-5432 GEM: 6LEANERS At the Foot.of Pine Service AcROs8 ESI part 32 Transgrestioas Sone ee pahiderataah TE Greet ree os, ae AD ON PAGE 3 Ip 4 1k Packing dowm: Sa Fr ik Stings $F: Sia quarrala iS Aa ae arn - 21. Own 3 3 Gratien > Bosse's also: has the s me: 4, Pauses 26. Horse's x Brine abet S ttre tne __ answer to all your 3 Bre worse Mee eins JEWELLERY NEEDS 35: Goal 4 47 Cooking tans 00", : : ae Bi oy br 2a Cama Ce ms af t forwan® ie : 41, Plece of work ~ Ez Anite ce: i iB. Q Ga af 47, Emotes = i 43 Beer lng FS ae id ia SE Insects a 8S. Printing 4: DOWN) 1. Deeds eae ita a ga = w va ree 7S 7. Myself 5 Bewey bodies all ae 10 Metal Listener. 11, Dronkard ie } 16, Supports i firing BOUNDARY | Electric: (Castlegar) Ltd. Electric. Heat Specialists _ Medallion Homes ot Phone 365-7241 GRAVEL EXCAVATING . DITCHING KINNAIRD TRANSFER Phone 365-4228 or 365-4004 New Homes Remodelling General Construction All Work Guaranteed. P & G Construction Ltd. | Phone 365-8151 “Across from the Arena” Box 80 — Castlegar, B.C, ee General Contracting | Custom Homes a. <2 LORETTA’S " BEAUTY SALON | : in the: Silver Birch Trailer’ Court Ph. 365-7200 OUTBOARD MOTORS WALDiIE SERVICE CENTRE Ph. 365-7451 J. 1. LAUGHTON Box 130 — Castlegar, B.C. OPTOMETRIST * TOP JOB PRINTING CASTLEGAR: NEWS Free Estimates. Fess 365-5160 JOHN VOGWILL Open 6 a.m. to 12 pm. Not just:.another place to eat <| But the; place. to: eat- another Phono 365-3881. 2 Ascredited Public Accountant ‘Wed, 230 to 8 pm. “Phone 365-8212 . PARSLOW’S x Enterprises Ltd. : Gunsmiths : Locksmiths |. Sporting . Goods Ph, 368-5025 1319 BAY — TRAIL, B.C. NO JOB TOO BIG a - SAVINROTE: ‘CASTLEGAR th. $65-8822 ‘COMMER! = “HOUR OR. CONTRACT — REASONABLE’ RATES JESSE BELFER ‘Ph. 365-5988 - *\ KINNAIRD CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, : NO JOB TOO SMALL + Phone 365-3262. Built to the measurement of the Golden Rule: BULLDOZING - LANDCLEARING Phone 365-2754 Dewis . Contracting Castlegar CIAL | PRINTING “OUR. SPECIALTY CASTLEGAR NEWS “Ph, 365-7256: ~ GASTLEGAR NEWS wandered around in Johnson.” until: his back into place. A White House ceremony | sacpoines ns this little fellow's father to an important office didn't impress George Hearn, 3. With his lollypop ‘ata jaunty angle,he front of President | mother dragged: him HOUSEDRESS IS STILL IN EXISTARCE ! ‘Whatever: happened .to the housedress? Shifts; ‘coulottes, slacks, field. Miss Beba Kryger Honored at Shower Miss Beba. Kryger was hon- ored at'a recent social event in Kinnaird when Mrs. Paw: lyk was hostess to a bridal sho: Miss Kryger ‘is-'to. be. mar- ried to Mr.. Eldon’ Adams ‘of Martin Luther The still exist in a limbo at the back.of some budget department and it is de-| ver. a as a button front cotton washes ‘well, -has,, elbow ie requires’ ‘starch and is worn: inthe house.:)°'" ‘Well that definition has no at. the Evangellcal Church, in Nancou; * the: bridal. shower hosted many. of er’s friends here and also included several members of: Public: Health’ per- sonne], her co-workers from the appeal to modern Jeans, shorts, or r slacks are the big favorites ‘with:the great ma- jority of women today for their practical comfort while doing household chores. They Are -us- and of the past several years. ‘The: ‘black’ satchel"’: of: the Public, Health Nurse wer on Wednesday of last week. | § CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, Aug..6, 1964 - AT THE STORE WHERE YOUR DOLLAR BUYS ‘MORE! ALPHA -swi FTS IPREM tin 39¢ “BLUE. MOUNTAIN Sliced or Crushed . ese Pineappie A tins BabyFoods 10 tins $1. the “many: gifts By Miss: Clair Geddes.:’ Pink ‘and ually more attractive later in the day. ie starched housedress is still worn, however, by many older women. In Canada the housedress business is still fair- ly. substantial accoraing’ to ma: white chair: of honor and tertain: ment “created a serap ’ book which*traced the bridé. and “HEINZ - HEINZ Zz GAL. § SIZE TOMATO JUICE Soe groom's Bast: life and +| their -f whos out across the country year | and year out. 4 this “district;;were told: in’ a7 poem composed by Mrs, ‘Geddes: and read’-by her ye ar THE MIGHTY MIDGET” ‘THE WANT AD Will Do the Job for You : will be wedding ‘attendants. ? Miss .Kryger’ takes her de-|f ‘| week. The newlyweds will make ‘ Miss Miss “ PEsther; Nettoetiold and Miss Myr. just prior : to ‘the : sentation of the'gifts.::, -Mr; and ‘Mrs. Martin Pawlyk parturé:from :the’ district this their-home‘at Campbell River. ‘ Invited guests atthe Pawlyk chome for. the sh shower were: of the ‘prid 's ex- | 1 MILK 6 tins 89c | Milic’3 ts. box 89c | Sie a 78. WESTONS LEMON BLOSSOM COOKIES 3 pkgs. $1.00 PARTY TIME ICE CREAM 3 pt. carton .. 49c NALLEYS TRIPLE PAK BOX: .. POTATO CHIPS... “ CATELLI MACARONI DINNER 4 pkgs. oe. BAKING 1 LB. BAG’ WALN UTS light | Pieces . ALL BRANDS | FLOUR 25 Ib. beg. : “JEWEL PURE. | SHORTENING 3 Ib. tin : 49c -49c . 89e $1.99 E Swi FT’S BROOKFIELD CHEESE 2 Ib. box 99 GRADE A FRESH KILLED | Frying Chicken lb. 39¢ YARROW PUI STRAWBERRY na Birch; all of Trail. Miss Ed- wina Hart of Grand Forks. Mrs. Harry. Haines, Mrs. Bill Brown- Pherson and Miss Kathy Mutzzin of Trail. “(CEMENT P & G Builders Supply ACROSS FROM THE ARENA. PLYWOODS - LUMBER FLOOR TILES DOORS _WINDOWS MOULDINGS YOUR ‘BUILDING’ SUPPLY’ “ HEADQUARTERS © (Phy 965-8151 ° ii mm a i i ni an oe i tT TOMATO SOUP 4 tins ?54 FORD... [Castle M - = Car Specials | 159. 3 ton dump truck, ready. to go to = OS sworke io $1395 = 759: VAUXHAL VELOX: ‘$1095 = 61 FALCON .... $ 61 VOLKSWAGEN .. otors d oar NEW ‘ ‘ f JAM 48) 2. C AB oF tn | Ms Potatoes 10 tbs 59c [FIRM RIPE - TOMATOES tube . ae . 23c. “JELLO INSTANT. ) CANNING : PUDDINGS 2 pkgs. 2 29¢ “AYLMER” : -49e | KERR WIDE. MOUTH 8. doz. 39¢| Apricots box $2.25 ENCORE LAUNDRY. DETERGENT 5 Ib. bag . GAY. Liquip DETERGENT 30, OZ. bottle 79¢ 99¢ And Many More “ Non-Advertised © SPECIALS our Lucky Doliar Store” WE RESERVE THE ‘RIGHT TO LIMIT. ‘QUANTITIES. OPEN DAILY... EXCEPT: MONDAYS. FROM 9: AM, TO 12.NOON & SATURDAYS To 5.30 |: Phone 365-5353 TO9 PM...