HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED BOYS AND GIRLS Earn Extra Money In Your Spare Time THE BARBIE EXAMINER HAS ROUTE OPENINGS iN THE FOLLOWING AREAS COOKSTOWN STAYN ER MINESING STEELEALEXANDER AREA HIGHLANDGARSON AREA GLENRIDGE ST AREA COOKNAPIER AREA SHANTY BAY VILLAGE OWENGROVE ST AREA BAYFIELD STGROVE AREA ECCLESWELLINGTON AREA I25 I35 WELLINGTON Apts CODRINGTONNELSON ST AREA AMELIA EUGENIA ST VINCENT AREA LETITIA STWEST OF ANNE ST Please fill out the application below and return itto THE BARRIE EXAMINER CIrculatIon Dept i6 Baleeld St BarrIe OR PHONE 7266539 Address Telephone Age ANNOUNCEMENTS SPECIAL NOTICES CASH RATES Death Notices Engagements Birth $500 maximum 40 words additional words cents per word Card of Thanks 25 words $500 Additional words cents per word In Memoriam no verse Verse per count line extra 21 Coming Events $500 cents per line $322 per column inch BIRTHS Mondays child is fair of face Tuesdays child is full of grace Wednesdays child Is full of woe Thursdays child has far to go Fridays child is loving and giving Saturdays child works hard for its liv ing And child that is born on the Sab bath Day is fair and wise and good and gay Children hearing this verse by Counter Cullen always want to know which day of the week was their birth date Keep this and other important in formationfor your childs future Barrie Examiner Birth Announce ment will include the name of your child the day of the week month and year of birth the weight and other vital information printed message can become permanent record in Babys Book or Family Albums The rate for Barrie Examiner Birth Notice is only $450 Maximum 40 words Additional words8cents per word PHONE 7281414 GOOD NEWS STORY When you an nounce the birth of your child in The Barrie Examiner clippings of the notice are available for Babys Book Family Tree Records and to mail your friends and relatives in those far away places Place an announcement after birth Call The Barrie Examiner Classified 728 24 HAPPY OCCASION The birth of your child To tell the good news to friends and neighbors The Barrie Ex aminer Classified Staff are as near as your telephone The day of birth iust dial 7282424 ABlJAOUDENabii and Karen nee McCracken thank God for the safe rival of their first child son Anthony Nbil lb 334 ounces at the Royal Vic toria Hospital Barrie Thursday April 15th 1976 at l008 pm Proud grand parents are Mr and Mrs Abi Jaoude Beirut Lebanon and Mr and Mrs McCracken Shanty Bay and goat grandmother Mrs Roy Mc Cracken Craighurst Special thanks to Dr Turnbull aners McKay RN HASKETT Marlene and Rolly are happy to announce the birth of their daughter Angela Marlene weighing pounds ounces at RVH on Sunday April 18th Proud grandparents are Mrs Betty Haskett Angus and Mr and Mrs Henry Randell Toronto Special thanks to Doctor Young and nurses on 4th floor HUYER With heartfelt thanks to God the giver of life we would like to an nounce the arrival of our daughter Marcia on Friday April I6 1976 slsterfor NatashaJanine and Trevor Kelth and Myrtle Huyer URI ICES FLOW ERS 77 BAYFIELD ST 7281561 Aué FLOWER FAIR The Florist Who Cares GROVE DUCKWORTH PLAZA 7268642 JylS ENGAGEMENTS SCHANDLEN TIPPLE Mr and Mrs Ralph Shandlen of Thornton are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter Deborah Ruth to Donald Leslie son of Mr and Mrs Austin Tipple of Gravenhurst The marriage to take place on Friday May 21 I976 at Collier St United Church Barrie DEATHS MARTIN Anna Bain Turner Passed away at Wellesley Hospital Toronto on Sunday April is I976 Beloved wife of Hereward Martin Dear mother of Donald Oliver of Ferney BC Robert Henry and Hereward Paul both of Bar rie Loving grandmother of Bonnie Wln chester Timothy Gaye Scott Heidi Brenna and David Sister of Wilfred Turner of Toronto and Esther Buchanan of Sault Ste Marie Michigan Predeceased by brother Edward and sister Ruth Hewitt Friends may call at Steckley Funeral Home 30 Worsley St Barrie after 200 pm Tuesday Service in the chapel on Wednesday April 21 at 200 pm interment St Thomas Cemetery Shanty Bay HARGRAVES William At the Royal Victoria Hospital on Sunday April 18 I976 William Hargraves Beloved husr band of Mary Molly of Sandy Cove Acres Stroud Dear father of Brian of Toronto Dear grandfather of Lori and Rick Resting at the Jennett Funeral Home 152 Bradford Street Barrie Visitation from Tuesday at pm Ser vice and committal complete in the chapel on Wednesday April 71 at pm Cremation In lieu of flowers contribu tions to the Ontario Heart Foundation would be appreciated COMING EVENTS COURT KEMPENFELT I337 OF NOW MEETS AT 54 MAPLE AVE EVERY Ist 3rd WEDNESDAY pm Wed April 21 pm CHINESE AUCTION NIGHT All Members WELCOME Bingo Wednesday pm ARMY NAVY and AIR FORCE CLUB George St JACKPOT $200 Opposite Brewers Retail On Anne Street ADMISSION $100 TIF Al9 BINGO SATURDAYS AT PM WEDNESDAYS AT PM South Word Community Hall Gill and Bond Sts Orillio TFTF THURSDAY KNIGHTS BINGO Weekly 730 pm EMBASSY HALL Over $520 in prizes Si 50 odmis includes cards Auspices KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS TTF NOTICE deadline for classified word ads pm previous day noun Saturday 1F FAST RESULTS USE CLASSIFIED BOX REPLIES While every endeavor will be made to forward replies to box numbers to the advertiser as soon as possible we accept no liability in respect of loss or damage alledged to arise through either failure or delay in forwarding such replies however otherwise Frank GilAd CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DIRECT PHONE 7282414 Classified advertisements and notices for these pages must be received by pm day preceding publication with the exception of Classified Display adver tisements which must be in by pm two days prior to publication BIRTHS ENGAGEMENTS MARRIAGES DEATH NOTICES 40 words $500 Additional words cts per word CARD OF THANKS 25 words $500 Ad ditional words cts per word IN MEMORIAM NOTICES No verse $500 With verse per count line 21 cents per line COMING EVENTS $322 per column inch 24 WORD MINIMUM CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Cash Discount Rates apply If paid with days One or two insertions 9c per word inser tion Three consecutive insertions and onehalf cents per word insertion total 36 Six consecutive insertions 8c per word per insertion total $II52 Multiple insertions may be ordered sublect to cancellation when satisfactory results obtained Method of counting fewer than 24 words count as 74 words Each initial abbreviation set of numbers etc count as separate words ERRORS AND CORRECTIONS All phone inSertion orders are accepted as convenience to the advertisers Therefore the Classified Advertising Department requires ad advertisers to kindly recheck their advertlsment Im mediately after first Insertion in order that any error or omission may be reported before am in order that same may be rectified for the following day publication The Barrie Examiner is responsible for only one incorrectly printed Insertion of any advertisement and then only to the extent of portion of ad that involves the mlsprlnt Errors which do not lessen the value of the advertisement are not eligible for cor rections by make goods The Barrie Ex aminer reserves the right to classify revise or reject any want ads PHONE 72324 TEL AVIV AP Israels movie houses are terrorist targets riot sites Kung Fu cheering arenas and the only place in the country where an Israeli can see television commercial in living color They also show films With 32 million tickets sold annualiyumore than 10 visits year for each of the coun trys three million people the cinema in Israel is diversion where crowds often see almost as much action in the aisles as on the screen Several bombs have been found under cinema seats and an Arab terrorist agent lobbed two hand grenades from the balcony on to the main floor of crowded Tel Aviv movie house little more than year ago He kill ed two wounded 60 and blew himself to pieces Purse checks and body frisks at the door have held theatre attacks in check in the last year but managers say they face growing pro blems from young rowdy audiences CROWDS ROUGH We can have some very rough crowds here says general manager of WarnerFox Films in Israel and manager of the Tel Aviv the largest movie house in the country In Jerusalem theatre once billed Kung Fu picture with Bruce Lee and the brother of Bruce Lee and when there was no sign of the Lees in the movie they wrecked the place in riot On the other hand Israel Growing food more papular By JEAN GABLE Barrie Horticultural Society In these days of rising prices for vegetables growing your own has become much more pular and more sensible is one way of beating inflation Besides with dee freezers more commonp ace the facilities are provided for storing surplus supplies of such crops as peas beans cauliflower and oung carrots and beetroots or use later in the year when these are either unobtainable or very expensive vast area of ground is not necessary for ve etable growing Admitte ly to produce wide selection of different crops throughout the year for family of four the requirement is in the region of 100 sq yds The quantity of produce which can be grown on an area only quartoL of this size is amazing however Regardless of the area the soil must be well drained and well manured Heavy sticky wet clay soil is quite un suitable So drainage if necessary should be provided Plenty of organic material sould be dug in during the initial geparation Most soil will nefit from dressing of lime Not only does it sweeten the soil but in the long term it also helps to lighten the soil and make it eaSIer to work For the newcomer to gar dening it is always safer to start off with crops which are relatively easy to row and types which you ike For example parsnips are not difficult to produce And now that potatoes are so ex pensive it might be well wor th planting couple of rows of an early variety such as Cob bier Where more space is available then some of the later main crop varieties such as Chieftan or Ken nebec white potato has good yield and is good keeper or Sebago which is late has no scab Netted Gem is for baking but must have good soil to grow well Seed will be expensive but then so are the tubers that we eat Order your seeds early Seed firms have experienced big increase in the demand The vegetable flower ratio is in the region of 7030 The moral is there One of the main problems with growing vegetables is to ensure continuity of supply This is particularly true with cm such as lettuce or can llower If instead of sowin whole row of lettuce so at once you put in half row at to weeks intervals this will ensure much more even suptï¬ly over period of time If seed is sown thinly thereby saving money very little thinning will be required Thinnings could be used for plantingup for example between rows of peas thereby saving space No more than dozen cauliflower plants should be set out at any one time since this crop has habit of maturing simultaneously This is where the deep freeze is useful for storing the sur plus has had once of the most sophisticated and well behaved audiences an where GilAd said Fe lini and Bergman movies sell out regularly at houses in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv and play to quiet intense crowds Film posters dominate kiosks and cover walls on the streets of Tel Aviv and the theatres themselves adver tise their features with handpainted statues that tower over marquees in the citys busiest nerve centres Even the mana ers con cede that the gau 20foot placards often exaggerate the content of the movies Cinema operators are about ready to sign treaty so that advertisements and ti tle translations will have at least something to do with the movies GilAd said TRANSLATORS LOOSE While changing foreign language titles into Hebrew can be delicate task translators often sacrifice ac curacy for crowd appeal The Russians Are Com ing The Russians Are Com ing was so popular here that when we started screening Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum it became The Romans Are Coming The Romans Are Coming in Hebrew GilAd recalled Theatres screen 15 minutes of televisionlength color commercials before each feature to help generate revenues IsraelIs cant wat ch such ads at home because Israel has no color television Many gardeners have no problem in providing an abundance of fresh produce during the summer months but then find there is nothi available for the dull dar days of winter This is where rows of brussels sprouts tur nips and sprouting broccoli are such boon And they are no more difficult to grow than their summer cousins SOCIETY NEWS The night of April 9th van dals chopped down large Juniper on Spearin Court It was beautiful shrub and will cost $50 $75 to replace one of similar size Surely someone saw or heard the chopping The Gore has homes all around it The Horticultural Society Year Book is now printed and the Membership Drive will soon be underway Notice residents raking debris and leaves right onto the street This is asking for accidents and breaking the law If you bag or box it the rbage man will pick up 10 ags of garbage per household little co operation goes long way Fortyseven members en joyed good tour to the Lon don Paladium Show at OKeefe Centre April Next tour is April 21 to District 16 Convention and sister societies are welcome at the Barrie bus or any in terested people Call bookers May is Tour to Stouffville Sales Barns Reeves Greenhouses and New Craft Dept and Clargreen Greenhouses in Mississauga Cost $5 Call bookers Society badly needs four in chflower pots Geranium Bridge is April 28 at Legion Hall Mr Norman Gilby of 257 Grove St East phone 728w $22 has Tamarack tree and Forsythia shrub for anyone willin to dig them Tamarack is ut inches in diameter Congratulations to Fen dleys on another successful Open House Be sure to take your 1976 Society Year Book along to get 10 cent off box plants and ot er discounts offered Read carefully Len Adams 76 Melrose Ave 7261888 has quarry flagstone he wants to get rid of Call and see him and the stone for deal NATURES WAY garden in the Springtime is oft dreary sight It shows the winters havoc And looks proper fright But when you start to work it with spade and rake and hoe And level it and tend it It soon begins to glow With tulips and petunias WIth roses and with phlox WIth lilacs and with daffodils gladioli and hollyhocks It seems Old Mother Nature Has Ieamed trick or two And in due time rewards us For all the things we do And as we spray and cultivate And mow and hoe and prune She turns the brown of April To the loveliness of June Little Richmond Hill Ont Cinemas in Israel often target for terrorist plots and blackandwhite pro grams carry no adver tisements Movie attendance has drop ped by nearly 40 per cent since television arrived in Israelin 1968 The Barrie Examiner Tuesday April 20 197615 Leningrad attracts thousands to citys school of ballet By ROBERT EVANS LENINGRAD Reuter cannot live without ballet wrote nineyearold girl from Novosibirsk Please tell me how can get into your school If you dont take me Ill die Ill ust die warned 1oyearo from Khark0v The two wouldbe ballerinas are among thousands who focus their hopes for the future on Le ningrad every spring Their letters were among flood of others in similar vein from all over the Soviet Union to the citys ballet school as it pre ares for next Sep tem rs intake Boys too are in the hunt think you would not regret it if you took me wrote an 11yearold Georgian believe have the capacit to become an excellent an oer Applications for entry to the school formally known as the Vaganova Choreographic College come from children of all social groups said its director Yanma Lushina In fact the majority of our pupils are the children of manual workers There are also some from peasant back grounds and the rest are chil dren of whitecollar workers or from traditional musical families SCREENING THOROUGH Each year said Mrs Lush ina 48yearold former music critic and culture ministry official the school selects some 1800 applicants for its entry examinations and from them chooses 90 What attracts the children and their arents is the knowledge at from every graduating class the top seven or eight are taken into Leningrads worldfamous Kirov Ballet For Soviet balletomanes the mystique of the Kirov is at least as great as that of Moscows Bolshoi and many regard the Leningrad ballet asthe better The pupils at the Vaganova school are certainly In no doubt My mother said it would be better to come here and now know she was right said 14yearold Angelika Almakayeva Alik Timurshin 13 agreed started dancing when was small he said was always determined to come here SCHEDULE DEMANDING Angelika Alik and their colleagues at the school which has in its 236year history produced some of the great names in Soviet ballet seem undeterred by heavy workload Entering at the age of 10 or 12 they have all the normal school subjects to study as well as range of themes con nected with the ballet No one can graduate as dancer Imless they pass every other subject as well said Mrs Inshina Ballet classes are given by some of the retired stars of Spinning wheel maker selling to dealers CORNWALL Ont WJ Robidoux has discovered that if you build better spinning wheel people will come to your door Mr Robidoux prefers to sell his spinning wheels to spinners rather than to people who would use them as decoration When he builds new design he checks it in action wheel is only as good as the work it can do in the han is of good spinner he said as he stood in the sawdust on his basement floor The size of the wheels and the way the tension is main taIned are related to the ï¬bres to be spun There are many designs and so far he has built flax wheels doubletreadle wheel and castle wheels Mr Robidoux feels that such things as Teflon bearings are modern im provement but when it comes to the beauty of design and reliable function he depends for his uide on study of an tiquew eels dont know if there is such thing as pattern for me he said The best way is to take apart an old wheel Sometimes even make up my own design In his workshop he keeps collection of tools and power machinery along with stock of fine woods USES DIFFERENT WOODS He has used cherry walnut satin maple birdseye maple and other woods for his wheels On his bench is the early stage of flax wheel being made of fiddleback maple The maple is so named because of an aberration in growth which forms mirror like division of the grain The matching pattern is popular for making the backs of fid dies Mr Robidoux received his supply from lumber dealer who was aware of his interest in fine woods violin maker who had ordered supply of the wood had died before picking it up The dealer complained the wood was taking up space got good deal Mr Robidouxsays Experts say that the spin mng wheels made in Mr Robidouxs basement are as good as the best imported from Scotland Citizens rally to preserv little bit of cities past LONDON Ont Un til the passing of the Ontario Heritage Act in 1975 old houses were demolished without question but now citizens are rallying to preserve their cities past The Ontario Heritage Foun dation OHF founded in 1967 to acquire historical buildings and administer them on behalf of the provin cc said that legislation was needed to restrain careless destruction of historically and architecturally valuable properties Municipalities were con cerned about the inability to protect public buildings private residences and com munity districts Following an appeal to the provincial government for legal rescue program an act was passed in March 1975 to preserve protect and con serve the heritage of On tario The legislation recom mends that municipal coun cil evaluate and prepare register of all buildings houses and districts worthy of conservation Council then is allowed to designate proper ties as being of historical and architectural interest To designate property council must notify the owner the OHF and publish notice in the local newspaper for three weeks If the owner doesnt object to municipal interest in his pro erty within 30 days counci passes designation bylaw NEED WRITTEN CONSENT Once building has been designated as worthy of pre servation neither present nor future owners can make alterations affecting the reasons for designation without written consent of the municipal council Associations in London con cerned about old buildings in clude the London regional branch of the Architectural Conservancy of Ontario the London and Middlesex Historical Society and the London Architectural Con servancy Advisory Com mittee London architect Patrick Coles stresses the importance of the evaluation process before the municipal designation of properties Not all old buildings are worth saving he said adding that it takes about four gener ations before an architectural style is appreciated He said that the public must receive informatIon so that when they see street with old houses they will say Thats better than highrise apartments PRESENT PROBLEMS Designating whole city dis Research program may help dwindling herd of caribou EDMONTON CP Michael Bloomfield graduate student at Univer sity of Alberta has started twoyear research project he hopes will help save small herd of mountain caribou from extinction He says the 75 caribou in 100mile stretch from about 40 miles southeast of Prince George to McBride in British Columbia are in dire straits Its such small gpulation that any distur nce+a bad winter or one illegal hunting incident+can decimate the population in no time at all If Im successful it could be the margin of difference between the animals sur vival and their extinction During the project to end in August 1977 Mr Bloom field will study how the caribou use their habitat to gain food He says the study may have im lications for the lumber in ustr in thearea if it is dis oovere that tree harvesting is affecting the herds food supply FEED OFF TREES The mountain caribou dif fers from the barrenland ca ribou especially in winter feeding conditions The barrenground caribou roots around in fairly shallow snow to get at lichen its primary winter food source However because the mountain caribou migrate in an area where snowfall could be eight to 12 feet deep winter food supply tree lIchen is crit tea have suspicion that their winter diet is totally in adequatethey may use more energy collecting and eating than they are getting from the food supply But Mr Bloomfield says that until study is done this is only calculated guess as to why the range supports dwindling herd He says the project will be difficult because the terrain is rou and the migratory animas are hard to locate and work with He intends to maintain his distance because influencing or changing the animals habits or food supply might alter results of the study WILL DYE FOOD Hell try to tag the animals using spray bombs to eliminate as much contact as possible Instead of inserting metal tags through the ears he hopes to track the caribou by dyeing the food supply dif ferent colors then taking sam les of feces to see how fart animals roam in sear ch of food Ill be trying to determine the use of the forest resources by the caribou If we can credibly evaluate what resources theyre using and under what conditions we might be able to suggest means of ensuring more stable herd populatIon That might mean moratorium on hunting in the area or change in forestry practices trict presents more roblems than individual Buildings the architect said In many cases buildings in cluded in designated district will be public or com mercial and the cost of main taining them would be left to the municipal council he said Theres obviously limIt as to how far municipalities can go in taking over buildings and mnning them as museums Mr Coles said An alternative is toen courage private corporatIons to restore and utilize them he said Strong and durable manufactured lIom RR STROUD 991 painting your house Stelco Siding The tough stuff the smart alternative Call today for free estimate Steel Products 4363775 the Kirov and evenin are devoted to exercise an prac tice six days week It is this pressure that makes some parents reluc tant to let their children come here said Mrs Lushina They are frightened it will be too much for them For many it Is well grounded fear An avera of it of the original 90 ave dropped out of each class by the time graduation year comes around SOME DEVELOP EARLY The children come to the Vaganova after three or five years of ordinary school which begins at the age of seven in the Soviet Union They graduate at 18 In some cases we can see immediately that we have budding star said Mrs Lushina But some dont show their capacities until theyre 12 or 13 In one of the studios in the rambling building which is well over 100 years old teacher nodded towards tiny girl with an elfin face whose long blonde pigtails are tied across her head She could be real find said the teacher But were afraid shes just naturally tiny and will not grow enough In another studio former Kirov ballerina Nadezhda Fyodorova elegant and eloquent took class of 13 yearold boys through series of leaps and landings One of these lads will be star if he can keep his weight down member of the staff whispered ALLOWED TO PERFORM The pupils of the school named after Agrippina Vaga nova rerevolutionary rima ba erina and one of the Soviet Unions greatest teachers of the art are given early contact with the living stage Many play supporting roles in productions at the Kirov Ive already been in five ballets Alik Timurshin told reporter Its great feeling to be out there Half the pupils come from Leningrad where artistic traditions are strong Many are discovered by group of teachers who tour city schools and youth play cen Itres looking for potential talent Some 200 from other areas of the Soviet Union are boar ded in specialhostel run by the Vaganova My parents didnt want me to come because Im their mly child said Alik Timur shin But persuaded them was going to make it UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT °Top Prices Paid CISII For Cars NORTHERN SALVAGE DISPOSAL Dunlop St 7289666 7604 Guaranteed 20 years