ï¬lls manic Estimator Eubllshed by Canadian Newspapers Ltd is eayneic street Barrie ohmic PAGE FOUR MONDAY MAY EDITORIAL Studies Project Design 3130 Adopt Bold New Face Ileanadian National Railways is moving ahead steadily on project recreate newpublic face for itself awarding to Robert Rice Canadian Press staff writer in Montreal Launched last summer general pro ilflri for brightening and dramatiaing She corporate image of the publicly owned now is under serious consideration in the higher echelon of management When and if it is approved the new face is expected to be unveiled with all the fervor and finesse of Parisian fash ipn preview says Reporter Rice The aihiisto them The design of almost everything the ubilc sees in the railway is being re onsidered from the point cfview of ap earl iplpact idea association run so heart of the program is new Eymueuor the ONEinstead of its time honored black square with yellow letters get bold new public face for on red maple leaf top Canadian designerAllan Fleming of mrcntowas chosen from 20 of Canadas leading gra phlcs experts to develop new trade mark It had to be bright tasteful legible easily remembered and timeless ONE officials have produced the general out line oi what the reilways new face might look like Theyre keeping it under wraps But it could mean the end of the drab washedout look of traditional box car red It could mean hues with distinc tive dash and flavor instead of the green andyeilm colors of ONE passenger trains Timeworn blueandbrass rail way uniforms may be redesigned for maximum appeal and comfort The end result is expected to be more colorful public image for the ONEan image that will keep the railway and its services in the public eye and at the sameltime put new spiritlinto employee more School survey Shocking nomination time is just around the corner for some of our collegiate pupils Similarly round the corner is the time when school teachers in many elemen and high school grades estimate one ieaming capacities of their pupils and recommend their advance tohigher Masses if such advancement has been onted on the years work are all of these pupils ready for in advancement or are some of them going to go on to higher levels of learn ng or worse still out into commerce and industry not too well fitted for the chal lenges which lie before them The editor the Guelph Mercury has found some teresting information from survey conducted by Dr Benjamin Fine or New Yoyk He sent questionnaires to 5000 students in at universities and here is his Wrt he can only combude that these young marl andwomenwho are the future lea ers of the worlds most internationalistic ower know less about the world than ellread 10year old he said Weconsidered 15 per cent as the mark in the test The composite of the students wane Asked to state the approximate popu lotion of the world 2500000000 only four per cent were near the mark ll was4300 wrong answers ranged from 10 million to 5000001miliion lAY 10 1840 The Womens Canadian their guest Mrs Albert Matthews wife of the LieutenantGovernor of Ontario they must try to keep happy and attain the right attitudes of mind Officers elected were Miss Flora McGregor president Mrs Persons past president Miss Lila McPhee vice presidcat Minghoda Young secretary Miss Doris Kearns assistant secretary Mrs Bell treasurer and committee members were Mrs JE MontaguLeeds Mrs Atkey Mrs Walls Mrs Flynn Mrs Chittlck and Niles Anne Frawley An excellent report was given by MrsMontsguLeeds on the part thatrthe club has taken in the formn tion and functioning of the Active Service Club Ganderiag at Sport our little cement in last weeks column despite the transposition of paragraphsljon the revival oflacrosse in town drew some comment much to our surprise not to say delight linuthe knowledge that at least tworpeople read the sirl It appears that the Barrie branch of thoCanai dianALegloh put up trophy several years ago for annual competition arnong junior players in the county and that after it was won by the Al Iandalerfebm there was no fnrther playnnd it has lain dormant overstock it was suggested that this be put up for competition among juniors in town league snow fence around the cush ion in Agricultural Park plus daylight saving would turn the trickl 21News oi Iorlner Years Club of Barrie had as ller inspiraw tlonal talk was that throughout these dark days myself and one other One student listed the population of Great Britain as 700000 Another thought the population of the United states was 493 million it is 180 million Asked to name the six neighbors of Laos 80 per cent of the answers were fantastically wrong iihe correct answer are North Vietnam Cambodia Thailand Burma and China One students list was Ireland Iran Iraq lodeChina India and Egypt Another in his own spelling comprised Greenland Labrador Bolivia New Guinea Pakistan and Sashakech um Worst of all more than 10 per cent did not attempt to answer the question on tralia asked why it has so few popula ion one student answered There is not enough for the people to do An OTIAWA REPORT Rivers Bring In Capitals Wealth Hy PATRICK NICHOLSON when the first warm guns of summer loosen our lakes and rivers from their icy cladding their racing swollen waterI carry wealth of natural riches into the heartof our national capital his is the winter harvest of soft wood logs cut and trimmed by our lumberjscks and stacked on the ieeall ready for the opening offree transportation Ottawa is the quiet and serene home oi our government dest ined by its location to be an in dustrial backwater it makes disproportionately small contri bution to Ontarios huge manu facturing output totalling half that of all Canada Ottawa is un likely ever to become throb PULLING UP CHAIR Khrushchevis Tough Mel Around Paris Summit Table 0n the eve of the summit conference Associated correspondents came up with these details about Premier Khrushchev as diplomatic bargainer uy ran Assoclarnn Panes Nikita Khrushchev gives the impression that he likes to size up an opponent carefully before other wrote lhere is too much waist adiplomatic tusvofwar and act waste lan On current atfairs the students flopped badly Asked to name French colony which in 1960 received independence more than 60 per cent replied Algeria Only three per cent gavethe correct one wer Guinea At least as frightening es the massive geographic ignorance was the atrocious spelling said Dr Fine Hungary became Hungry Poland became Pciiand and Yu goslavia became Vsoslee Mre than 4900 of the students could not spell Czechoslovaklacorrectly They spelled it in everyway from Zoealvarca to Czokulooverklcar MAY Iii 1935 The Childrens Shelter in Barrie beneflited to the extent of 70 poundscf venisonras result ayoung doe being struck by car on High way 11 about two miles south of Strand Blinded by the llghfs it jumpedout of ditch in front accordingly Hamil in all hes tough man to talk to in diplomatic terms By his own admission hes no diplo mat lles fwrn the roughond tumble school of international re lations AP correspondents in Washing ton London farisund Bonn were asked How does Khrushchev act in his private talks with world leaders What do to people whohave talked with in say This picture of Khrushchev at the conference table emerges if he thinks table thumping will lrnpress his fellow conferees he thumps the table But if he thinks quiet persuasive talk will win points for him he talks just thatwey srnznwn AND ourcx lie is shrewd quick to make point or take up challengeno matter how darklylt is hidden He has temper but he can control it Sometimes he may think show of temper can pay off forhlm Heuses phraseslniended to show thathe is sweetly reason the Soviet premier was restrained and businesslike in his talks with President Eisenhower The presi dent told Khrushchev at the out set that histrlonles or propaganda performances would get nowhereL USES EVERY METHOD Eisenhower said later llo is manwho uses every possible debating method avail able io him He is capable of great flights of mannerisms and disposition from negative difficult attitude to the most easy affable sl type of discus SlDD British diplomals say they are vastly impressed by Khrush chevs remarkable fund of knowl edge lie is able to keep up his end of conversation for hours without briefing or detailed guid ance from advisers Khrushchev thumped the table and raised his voice on the Berlin issue when he met with Prime Minister Macmillan last year in Moscow But when Macmillan dis played firm mglving altitude Khrushchev softened his own ap proach Former Prime Minister Anw thony Eden once said The last thing that man of Mr Khrushlt chevs temperament and back ground can endure is anything in the nature of intellectual patron agen BEHAVIOR VARIES Khrushchevs behavior in pri vate meetings depends upon his conferees if they are softspoken he may take it easy But if their drive byw 13 00°F WM had been able then puts in jolter at the words provoke him he can go off lievlng accountant of the BarrleBranch Bank of Toronto Fred Byers and Harvey Donnelly Chprchlll passing at the time took the injured animal home and put it out of its misery Pro vincial Police at Barrie were notified and after constable Hemmer had investigated the matter the deer which weighed 70 pounds when dressed was handed over to the Shelter Raymond Mullens music critic of Toronto Sat urday Night highly commended Walter Mac Nuttof Barrie He said The sonata for violin and piano by Walter MecNutt of Barrie is beautiful work more it is genuine contri bution to the literature of the two instrinnents lwo movementsof the senate were played the lento and allegro con splrito but they were enough to prove that Canada has produced composer of the utmost promise It would be unwise to be too ecstatic concerning composer of whose work one has heard one example only but the temptation is very great The alluring music was extremely well played by Miss Moro lgatret Parsons pianist and Jack Nielsen violin Péfairaphlcauy speaking will Hen lays rial ound has Headline She must have been fright oned by grapefruit hr Norrie Escalate Authorized as second Post Office Departmentstay imuy Sundays and statutory aoudays excepted it wants Publisher All decent Manager CHARLES wanna ounnéu Muller anua Bmflpflaminl Editor snonnarsnrlmn Advertising Man er monocular circulation asng subsmpuao mu oniyey camelwan we p60 your single copy do By mail in Callafly II it in month norms Canada illlunar Univcrsi live rmnm no cure dam Montrealiled Ccorgia strut anvill Member or tincranium only awry pub she Association 1110 Canadian Press had on udit an of difcillltl 11 din Pres11 excludvalyl use For re uhiieatlon of all news men in um apcr ore lted en lim The liner me or or enters and allots localnews1 mun9n therein lpeclal alrpnlnoa inn rights of republication of herein are also reserved rclepnnns Number editorial dullness rArawny m7 wm Its hard to keep your enemies from getting something on you and some of your friends from taking something from you The Lucille BallDesi Arno romance of long standing is on the rocks with each having plenty ed the some rocks thatis iCan We Avoid Inflation The title of on article in trade magazine We can if man up to his neck in water can avoid getting wet columnist says Zsa Zsa Gahor is the rworlds worst dressed woman Any man old enough to be primarily and particu larlyilnterested in what Zsa Zsa wears instead of in Zsa Zsashould have re tired 10 years ago Just as many of us predictedvthe country didnt fall to pieces because of Jack Pas absence from his TV pro end At Camp David Md last fall like firecracker Felix Von Eckardt director of EPORT PROM Ills Archaeologistiind Goddess Statuctte By Mnmrvan noon London England Correspondent For The Barrie Examiner LONDON Digging into old Roman sites in the south of Eng land is the current craze among archaeologists and some amaz ing discoveries are being made One of the most important is the discovery of bronze statuefte loinchcg high and sold by ex perts to represent Venus It is dated as of the second or third century and was discovered by workers of the St Albans Verul amium Museum of which Dr llld Anthonyiis the director The statuette is at present in London being cleaned but it williake its place in niche in Roman wall at the museum after lying for 1700 years in wooden box und er the clay soil of Britain IN TINKERS WORKSHOP The statuette of the goddess was recovered from plank llned squarexpit in what was ap parently the cellar of third century iiakers workshop with in the site oftheold Roman town of Verulamlum The museum lies within the boundaries of the old to And as befits lady of such rure beauty anduiicertuin age she is the centre of fierce though Wellmannered controvere ay It hosbeen established that she lsin fact Venus said Dr Anthony though she is wearing rather it more clothes than 1w ch lovely and costly statuette should have been left in tinkers cellar Although most of the inhabit ants of Roman Britain including the slaves had statuetfes of var los gods goddesses and ancest are in their homes only the vuy rich and powerful could afford one made of bronze Dr Anthony speculates that this particular statuetie could have been left with the tinker for safekeeping onion some sort of alteration But it is definitely dated back to about the second or third ct ury ROMAN VILLA SITES Another paty of archaeolo glsis working on the North Downs in Kent has discovered what are believed to be the sites of two old Roman villas The two sites are 35 miles apart one on Swarllng Farrah near Canter bury The other was unearthed West Germanys federal press of flee who was present at the meetings between Chancellor Ad enauer and Khrushchev recalls One could scarcely listen to Khrushchev without thinking about getting up and walking out But then he would reverse himself and say im no diplomat know diplomats have another way of speaking lm just simple man Excuse me if have io suited you 41 CITIZENSHIP GETS EASIER TORONTO CPMr and Mrs John Noorlsnder had answered all but the final question of their examination for citizenship papers when the magistrate asked them to iiamB Canadas smallest prov D09 There wasno reply Where do you get your po tafaes from prompted the magistrate From the supermarket said Mrs Noorlander Fine said the magis trate if youre smart enough to know where to buy potatoes you are smart enough to he Canadians Ontario Police Win Coniest lit Niagara NIAGARA FALLS Ont CP Canadas entryin the second an nual ringofwar challenge be tween the police forces of Ni agara Falls Ont and Niagara Falls NY wonrthe event Sat urday in record time of just of seconds The best of three challenge feature event of the first day of the annual Niagara Blossom Fes tival took place on the Rainbow Bridge It was the Canadian teams second straight victory Hundreds of spectators lined the bridge to watch the event Mayor Franklin Miller of the On tarlo city and Mayor Calvin Kel ler of the New York twin acted as unofficial coaches for their teams in Eastwood Farm near Farm lngham in Kent Both of the sites haveJgeen denlaged by many yeersol plowing but they are believed to date from the firsi century AD By grounds survey and the digging of trial holes it has been possible to trace the walls of thg villas and the enclosures around them Several pieces of Roman pottery tile brooches objects in iron and bronze and bones have been found in the excavations Work on both sites is being continued throughout this run mer under the dlrccllon of Phllp an amateur archacologlst who is credited with having dis covered them biog centre of industry like the big cities in the golden horseshoe of Southern Ontarios waterfront because it is far removed from the traffic artery provided by the St iiewrence Seaway and the Great Lakes Yet nature gives our capital the necessities to participate in what is still Canadas most lin portant indusiry so it is perhaps symbolic that those softwood logs iosue down the Ottawa and Get ineau Rivers each spring to the gulp and paper mills located ere CANADAS WORLD FAME Manufacturing various forms of paper and the other products of pulped softwood is the leading in dustry in Quebec New Bnlnswlek and Newfoundland In value of produce it is the second most lm orient industry in British Cc umbla the fourthln Ontario and Nova Scotln the ioih in Manitoba Across Canada as whole this most widespread of our market as Christmas trees These of course are allowed to new larger until their trunks true six inches in diameter The Woodmen cut their trinnned trunks here into fourfoot lengths and the mills pay about $2050 for cord containing about no Pieces of this size FROM TREES TO NEWS in the mills these logs have the bark stripped off and are then ground and pulped Prom woodyulp varlew of products is made all forms of paper from thick wrapping pa to thin toilet tissues as as writing papers and also the heavy roofing papers and paper board used in homebuilding But the most important product is newsprint the name given to the paper on which newspapers are printed One cord of softwood yields up proximately one ton of news print which newspaper buys for use One ton of newspaper will provide approximately72000 sheets of paper of the size of newspaper page Thus one of these Ottawa standard logs of wood for which the paper mill pays the lumberiack about lo cents will yield about 650 news paper pages costing $120 Allow ing for wastage this might yield five weeks issues of 20psge newspaper as delivered to your home for which you would pay $180 or five cents copy it seems paradoxical that pile of 25 copies of your news paper can derive from one thin log four feet long The cast of gathering the news and photographs which you an ioy in your paper plus the cost of printing the paper and dies iribuiing it to your homes of our industries employs 650w comso costs more titan the one workers at average wages of $4665 year and the factory price of its products exceeded 61500000000 last year in addi tion it provides winter work with welcome cash income for many farmers and other summer workers who go into ourwcods to fell the needed trees Near Ottawa this raw material for our paper mills consists of the some evergreens pine bal sam and spruce which we buy in QUEENS PARK per cent or so per copy which is the bare profit made on buy nig and selling the newsprint These expenses are covered by payments to the newspaper pub ilshlng company made by stores and manufacturers and private persons who wish to buy space in the newspaper for their ad Vertlsements Advertisiag thus plays an important role in mak ing our journals available to us at less than cost price Hon KelseIioberts Is ii SceneSetter By DON OKEABN TORONTO Kelsc Roberts llon is scenesettcr One Sunday afternoon back in 1949 bunch of us had to go to his house As candidate at the coming leadership convention we had to take pictures of him He had everything ready He was scrubbed llls boys were scrubbed His wife was looking her charming best And smack in the middle of the living room was one ofthose table hockey games Everything was ready for us to shoot the family en masse shooting the works at parlor hockeythe family vote the sportsman vote and the vote of any few who might happen to be parlor hockey addicts IRISH FIREMAN Since then Hon Kelso has sel dom failed to live up On St Patricks day he wears tall green topper in the house On closing day when the gab lery bombs the members with sessional papers he sports fire hat And as chairman of the select committee on boards and com missions he is continuing to live DRESSED UP He has female secretary for the committeeand quite fair to medium doll at that He has ou the fact the as four on the com tee and the of it havln to terlcusly roas examine an one are remo gt He has alleydandy recording systemrun by another dollJar record which wont be trail sclbed but will be available in case it is needed And he is holding the meetings in theximpressive book lined attorneygenerals librarywhich is fine except it isnt large enough to permit anything but folding card chairs for reporters SOME GOOD Style note finished the corn mittee chaired by Mr Roberls has shown promise He started it off with slogan back to the Legislature Deputy Minister of Economlés George Gamercole said the for teation more plainly when he stated it was to get the business of the people back in the hands of the elected representatives How far it will be able to ac complish this remains to be seen One test will be natural inhibi tions of the government members at interfering with their own creations interferes with clear thinking But the committee cant help but do some good and coulddo plenty Everybody will winexcept the reporters who promise to end 11 with coins on their ends up Rilii email will