y A town, planned to accommo- jate 40,000 persons before the lirst house is erected, is on wing boards now to become ty when the Ontario Hydro . Lawrence river power project ST. LAWRENCE VILLAGES floods towns along the river's present shore. Iroquois, Ont., at present has a population of 1,100 but the town site will disappear with the diversion of the river, and Iroquois will merge with sev- TO MERGE INTO CO te eral other towns and villages to become one of the few pre-plan- ned townsites in the world. With the example of the towns of the the example of the towns of the MMUNITY OF 40,00 oy] or ---- rest of Canada before them, the designers are allowing green belts and wide highways as well as accommodation for industry. Ottawa Senators Win, Dusty Blair QUEBEC (CP)--Ottawa Senators take the ice against Quebec Aces tonight odds-on favorites to hid the Quebec Hockey League finals after two week-end games that gave them a commanding 4-2 lead in the best-of-nine series. The Senators will be playing at home flushed with a 6-3 victory at | Quebec Sunday night. They missed | a chance to wind up the series during the week-end by going down | 240 Saturday night at Ottawa. | Dusty Blair was the chief marks- | man for Ottawa Sunday counting | two of his team's six goals. Other | On Saturday substitute Quebec | Leo Gravelle, Gerry Foley and Red Johnson, | The Senators dominated play | throughout the first two periods, | building up a 4-0 lead before Que- | bec came to life in the final ses- sion to outscore Ottawa 3-2. Larry Regan, Michel Labadie and Ray Yowell counted for the Aces. GOALIE STARRED On Sturday substitute Quebec goalie Jean Marois was the star of the night. Marois, playing his first Jot AEme for the Aces, turned aside 18 scoring attempts to_shut out the Senators. Quebec took the lead in the sec- ond frame when Ludger Tremblay picked up a rebound to crash the uck past Ottawa goalie Ray rederick from seven feet out. In the final period the Senators tried desperately to tie the game but with only 54 seconds re- maining to play Larry Regan smashed home an insurance mar- Central Press Canadian. ker for the winners. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Parents In Doubt On Success THE DAILY TIMES.GAZETTE, Monday, April 36, 1964 " BILL BOSS ON RUSSIA Stalin's Death Leaves Goals Of Soviet Union Unchanged Editor's Note: Bill Boss is back in Canada after five months as Canadian Press correspond- ent in the Sovie! Unio» ~~ wuved in Moscow, made a 6,000-mile irip to within 500 miles of the Chinese border This story is the first of a s rics of motos un- censored reports on what he learned of life behind the Iron Curtain By BILL BOSS Canadian Press Staff Writer Your average Russian is a con tented if not a happy man. He thinks he lives in a free country--in the only society geared ® Jive the working man a square eal. He sees his country pulsating with life, drive and determination. Day by day he hears, and through this repetition believes that the Kremlin's aim is to give him a better standard of living. He knows he and his wife and children are better off now than a few years ago. IMPRESSES ORIENTALS By Western standards, life for most Russians is impoverished and hard. But visitors from Oriental | countries--China, Pakistan or Indo- {China, . for instance -- would find present conditions impressive. And Mischa Sherbokov, as we may call your average Russian, is in an international deep-freeze. He gets no information by which to compare his life with that of Westerners. | He sees a country and is proud of the ac- POLICY CHANGED | And for reasons clear only to, | the Kremlin, the policy line has | shanged emphasis. The. state now |is telling him that all is not well ion the home front, a unique ad- | mission for the Communists. | But always the angle is that liv- (ing conditions for the Russian | people must be improved. "We need more meat . , . we need more wheat and other cereals . . .» we have done well in heavy industry but we: must do better in production of the things that make e pleasant, . . ." When did the change occur? Those favorable to the Malenkov administration say it was planned under Stalin, months before the first pronouncements last Septem- ber. Those opposed say it has been dissatisfied after -years of waiting for a fuller life. A reporter can't find out as he would in Ottawa, by picking up a telephone and talking to some com- petent official. The Soviets don't do business that way. The people accept official silence and seem to believe they can trust the regime, which already has done much, to ido what is best in future. And {government departments make it (plain they think the answer to | questions about state policy are {none of a forefgner's business. | {REPORTING RESTRICTED | | My reports on how Russians live | "new look" in his are based on personal observa-| future. Traffic regulation |tions--no "'spying" but with some | forced on the regime by the people, (13 to the ruble, but an accurate come parison is impossible. For a for. elgner in Moscow the ruble prob- ably is worth no more than five to seven cents; for Russians it is worth more than that. If they could get a new apart- ment now, Mischa and his wife might find themselves in one room of a two-room apartment, sharing kitchen and bathroom with another couple. But from the number of beds you see, the usual number of occupants to a Moscow room seems to be three or four. Moscow's new buildings are mostly of two types. One is an elaborate skyscraper with ginger bread towers and statuary, car- peted lobbies with television sets and easy chairs. The second is a substantial brick design of 10 or storeys. NEW---NOT MODERN If similar buildings in which for- eigners live are any sample, the new structures are new without being modern, Built-in cupboards are unknown; electric wiring is outside the walls; the plumbin fashioned. Furniture is ornate and costly. But they are a thousand per cent better than the rickety wooden shanties out of which the people are being moved. Few Russians own cars, though Moscow streets have been laid out in the grand scale ooking to the s based on future conditions, too, with one- 42--Female Help Wanted SALESLADY WANTED Fon LOCAL | vy no | conditions. Apply King St. rticles For Sale BARON'S 9th Anniversary Sale 21" SCREEN CONSOLE TELEVISIONS "'window-peeping."' In five months |Way streets and right - turn - only !in Russia I could not get permis | intersections. Foreign observers in Moscow |ion to visit a factory, a farm, any | Most Muscovites go to work by {hostile to the Malenkov govern- other kind of state enterprise ex- [subway, Street car and bus sys- {ment predict it "will collapse un-|cept hospitals and schools or even tems which move 3,000,000 passen- |complishments of his Communist regime. "i: When Twins Live In Glass Box BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) -- Dr. Skinner and his wife plan- MORE TIME TO PLAY Peer Twins Roy and Ray Hope spent'ned the first box in 1945 as a| One of the most enthusiastic sup- 96c much of their first year in a Zlass. | 1ahor saving device while living in | porters of the Skinner boxes is a joc the present development pro- [one of the much publicized work- gers daily. Taxis are fairly ex- enclosed box with a stientifically St. Paul, 'Minn. Henry R. Hope, research psychologist in New York {gram is fully successful. lers' apartment houses. {pensive--and as scarce in bad controlled climate. | father of the twins here, heard City, Dr. Anne Roe, who has five |" aw nothing in my stay. in| But anyone can see that, by weather in Moscow as in Torento The idea was that a baby, withg about it while both he and Dr. |grandchildren--all raised in boxes. |Noscow or my travels within the |Canadian standards, working hours |or Vancouver. nothing but a diaper hindering his' Skinner were on the staff at In- She says criticism that the boxes ggyiet Union to indicate the people [are long and the pay relativel Shopping is a nightmare. There movement, could cavort to his diana University. {deprive children of lové and af-|a.e dissatisfied. low. If Sascha and his wife both |is no rationing, but that does not heart's content and thus develop ELABORATE AFFAIR {fection is *'ridiculous." |AMBASSADOR'S VIEWS |work, they earn enough to support |mean Mischa can buy anything he faster and healthier. The mother | m.o 1ox Hope had built is an el- "Actually," she adds. "the, yon, Watkins, Canada's new am- |their family in only the most mod- |wants, or as much as he needs. would be saved laundry drudgery |... oie affair with glass doors and mother has less dirty work to do pagsador to Moscow, says amazing | est circumstances. Sometimes he can't find what he because she would need to wash | ooo 1c "t0" maintain a constant | 30d there.ore more ume 0 play progress has been made in ton | TAKE 2 -- 22 tumrik oSa wants. Other times the queues to only diapers and sheets. And|ionporature of 88 degrees and "ith and love the child' /ing, clothing and housing the Rus- CONTINUATION OF X1 ° {buy are so long that he can't get #. | neither parent would have to worry | humidity of 50 per cet. Is oc- | The general idea of the box, Dr. gan people since the Second World| But an Asiatic traveller told me: near it. State stores limit the Pleasant ' working employees benefits. Jury and Lovell Ltd. 8 phone 3-2245 2 LADIES, DOOR TO DOOR CANVASS | no selling, to solicit names only. Car | asset, very good remuneration, married | or single. Further particulars and inter- | view dial 5-0380. 6c. SECRETARY, MUST BE EXPERIENC- | ed, 5 day week, salary in accordance | with qualifications, short hand =» ve | ferences required. Apply by letter, Sup- érintendant, Oshawa General Hospital. --~--Y. LIMITED SUPPLY ONE TO A CUSTOMER 426 SIMCOE ST. S. May10 FISHING TACKLE Lown. Boy Rotary Mowers Evinrude Outboard Motors Terms Open dolly also Tues. & Thurs. in Evenings ~ Hannan Marine. Sales 20 Ray &. Dial 3-8853 May23 43--Male Help Wanted WANTED EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEP er for Ajax and Pickering General Hos- | pital. Would consider retired gentleman, | "CLIMATITE" Aluminum Combination Win- dows, Moloney Aluminum eom- bination Doors. a Terms Easy Unbelievable Values TOM BARBER Dial 3-8924 RUTHERFORD'S SLEEP SHOP i eouches, eouches,bed outfi ote, pillows, bed BUDGET TERMS RUTHERFORD'S 156 SIMCOE §. Dial 3-9614 ts, Roll-away spreads, ete. ALL CHANNEL T.V. ROOF AERIALS 49.50 Completely installed BARON'S RADIO & ELECTRIC 426 Simcoe S. Dial 3-2263 ¥ May3 KOOLVENT Ventilated Aluminum Awnings ond Conopies, made in Osh- awa. Free estimates - phone $-4632. KOOLVENT - NASH SALES 94 Bruce Street . After hours: "Les Eveniss Dial 3-2707 'Harry Anderton Dial 5-5227 Poul Harris Whitby 723 MWF May 12 uel Wood DOD FACTORY CUTTINGS, $5 lots. Delivered anywhere. Dial - 3-731. May 2 ALSO April M4. HIXED WOOD, FOOT LENGTH, hardwood. Dial 3.9932. ¢ 1--anrticles Wanted OF TWIN BEDS. WALNUT FIN- or 1 pr. of continental beds. Must in good condition. Dial 5-0357. 96c GANS AND PIANOS. STATE PRICE size of pianos. Will pay cash. Give no. Write Box 649 Times-Gazette. April -e D AND SILVER COINS, ALSO OTH- coins. Highest prices paid. Write Box Times-Gazette. Mayl0 RATS WANTED, LIVE POULTRY , scrap iron, metal, rags and sses. Dial I. Turner, North Osh- 3-2048, collect. Apr2é CEDARDALE SCRAP IRON AND METALS 100 Annis St. East of C.N.R. Station "WE PAY: 'Highest prices for Iron, Metal, Rags, Paper, etc. TF Pick- Satu Dial 5.3433 Res TS » May1s SHAW RAG and METAL #igbest prices for scrap metal, rags, bal ma ete. Factory accounts appreciated & 89 BLOOR ST. E © Died 5-231 -- J). SHAW : Res.: 3-911) [U Mays Greenberg & Sons uy M "WE B! ik Scrap Iron Metal Rags, Etc. . Highest Prices Paid | Phone 3-7333 -- 308 Bloor E May20 2-- Female Help Wanted RIENCED HAIRDRESSER. AP- ly Betty Lou Beauty Parlor, Mrs. Grace ood. 95¢. OMEN TO LOOK AFTER CHILD file mother works with Apply in writing to Superintenden.. 94. WANTED FIFERS, FOR NEWLY formed, Bowmanville Fife and drum and. A d tact Fred Griffen, Phone Bowmanville 904, 1 Hunt st. [0] DID YOU KNOW THAT OVER 15,000 men have found a Watkins Dealership. An excellent way to earn a decent living wage. No lay-offs. We have a vacancy. Dial 3-26532. Apply 365 Park Ra 2. 1 SHEET METAL MAN CAPABLE OF installing forced air furnaces. Dial 5-2426 for appointment 961. Janitors . WANTED Applications will be received at the office of the Board of Education, 179 Simcoe St. S., for the position of assistant Janitors. : Men must be active and' able to do minor repairs as well as taking care of the schools. Only men of temperate habits need apply. Minimum salary $2,730 pet annum. Board of Education W. GORDON BUNKER, Business Administrator 97e SKILLED MEN GET THE TOP-PAY JOBS What about you? Don't let limited ability keep you in the low-paid frequent lay-off jobs. Master the latest methods of one of these top-pay trades. DIESEL (Weldi included) MACHINE SH ' REFRIGERATION OIL BURNER MECHANICS DRAFTING AIR CONDITIONING Steadily earn $2.00 hourly and better. Learn now without in- terrupting present income. Easy fo master on easy terms. Just send coupon for proof of op- portunities. No obligation. STANDARD ENGINEERING INSTITUTE Box 919, Times-Gazette Name: Lucas vrs savers Adress ov. asnvisnnseies City... 964 47 --Legal Notices I Anthony Gardiner, will'mot be respon- sible for any debts incurred in my name after this date, April 24, 1954, without my written consent. Anthony Signed Gardiner Locust Hill, R.R. 1. in its blankets. Today at five Roy and Ray are about as frisky as small boys can et. Their father isn't sure whether the "Skinner box' had any major effect on their development. He does maintain they're "physically precocious."" This, he elaborates {with a slight grimace, means "they're extremely destructive." The box here was one of perhaps several hundred' scattered across of college and university faculty members. The scheme was devised by psychologist Burrhus F. Skin- ner, now at Harvard University. whether the infant was smothering | cupants, clad only in diapers, lay 'on a tightly-drawn sheet protected from most germs. | Hope, head of the fine arts de- | partment at Indiana University, {says 'like all utopian things, the {box didn't work out quite as plan- |ned." | Roy and Ray caught about as many colds as the average baby isince there was no attempt to rear | them in a vacuum-like isolation. for feedings, play and attention. Mrs. Hope summed up the box {in a single sentence: 'It's a help to the mother." Roe says, is to apply the principle of the air-conditioned room to a smaller area. Dr. Skinner says the box he built in St, Paul cost $35. "We found we could keep the baby from crying largely by ad- justing the temperature," he says. | "Her response was so sensitive he perature is ever reached with clothing or blankets. It was neces- sary to watch her surprisingly violent exercise only a few min- the country, mostly in the homes |They were taken out of the box utes to realize how severely re- | strained the average baby is and {how much energy must be directed | {into the only remaining channel-- lerying." Cartagena Bids For WASHINGTON -- Not since the turbulent days of the Main when it served as a fabled treasure port has Cartagena, Colo- mbia, seen so much activity. With modernization of its ancient Dique Canal under way, the city bids to regain its postion as Col- ombia's leading shipping centre. A model tourist centre rising along its shores may become e na- tion's best known seaside resort. In recent years, restoration of his- toric churches and forts have al- ready attracted many visitors. 300-YEAR-OLD CANAL y One of the oldest engineering works in the Western Hemisphere, the Dique Canal has been open almost continually since 1650, says the National Geographic So- ciety. At Calamar, 45 miles east of Cartagena, it connects with the wide, serpentine Magdalena Riv- er, chief traffic artery from the Caribbean to Bogota, the capital. When the waterway's 20 curves are eliminated and its passage- way deepened, barge fleets and cargo ships loaded with coffee, Trade And Tourists nual visit of the 'Plate Fleet", Spanish | whose strong frigates dared the run through pirates waiting off - shore. Engineers commissioned by the Shanish king lavished all their skill on the city's defenses. A mas- sive wall 40 feet high and 50 to 60 feet wide, hewn from coral rock, was thrown around the ris- ing town. Its estimated 60,000,000 cost was a pittance compared to the treasures it guarded RING OF FORTS :. Cartagena lies' upon a short sandy peninsula, with many is- lands and mangrove-bordered bays dotting the harbor entrance. As a protective backbone, its builders erected 29 desperate forts. Atop a small hill just outside the walls, San Felipe served as the defensive key. Miles of tunnels, ventilated by shafts driven 100 feet through solid rock, connected its 12 gun emplacements. It took 30 years to build the fortress. Strangely, the city which serv- ed Spain so well for three centu- ries was the first to declare its in- d dence. Thc of Carta- balsam, hides and preci t may soon again pour into Carta- gena from the rich, highland in- terior. In the last century, Carta- gena has bowed to Barranquilla at the mouth of the river as Col- ombia's Jeading port. Rich in the lore of Spanish con- quistadores ahd swashbuckling pi- rates, Cartagena is the most ela- borate city in South America. Founded in 1533, it served as an ancient - day Fort Knox for the accumulating riches of the Indies which the Spaniards shipped back to their homeland. Here the gold and silver of Peru, emeralds New Granda, and the pink pearls of the Caribbean were sto underground until the an - genians died of starvation and pes- tilence when the Spanish army be- sieged the town in 1815, but six years later it was finally freed by the forces of Simon Bolivar. Today Cartagena offers a curi- ous mixture of modern office build- ings and venerable Spanish homes. Street cars and imported automo- biles course wide, brightly lit streets. On other roadways. nar- row and twisting, overhanging bal- conies almost meet to shut out the hot Caribbean sun. Stores crammed with moder- ately priced goods attract shop- rs. city is noted for its and - wrought silver, wood carv- ings,. and leather, tortoise-shell and mother-of-pearl items, By SAM DAWSON CHICAGO (AP)--There are two ways to look at business today: 1. The lush days of lots of jobs, #8¢. | Overtime, profits, sales are in the NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS In the Matter of the Estate of Francis Joshua Staples, late of the Township of Whitby, in the County of Ontario, Gentle- man, Deceased. All persons against the having claims Estate of Francis Joshua Staples, late of the Township of Whitby, in the County of Ontario, Gentleman, Deceaser, who died on or about the 15th day of April, 1954, are required to send full partic- ulars of their claims to the un- dersigned on or before the 27th day of May, 1954, after which date the assets of the estate will be distributed hav- ing regard only to claims of which notice has then been re- ceived. DATED aot Hamilton, On- tario, this 22nd day of April, 1954, LANGS, BINKLEY & O'NEAL, past tense now. 2. Viewed against the backdrop of last year's dread of what might have happened, the actual dip in U.S. economy to date appears re- latively slight. The recession's bark seems worse than its bite. So, the feeling rows that "it isn't going to be as ad as we thought." Most business and financial ex- ecutives still seem to regard the slowdown as a benign adjustment --correcting the excesses of the boom, reducing producer inventor- 45--Agents Wanted ACT NOW IF YOU WANT TO MAKE money. Join a progressive Sompany. Sell h hold an 4 Every house in your territory a potential customer. No dull season, Wherever you may live write in for details. FAMILEX, 1600 Delorimier. Dept. 1, Montreal. 97f 46--Employment Wanted FOR TRACTOR AND TRE ANTER Can start at once. Apply W. Richardson Pontypool. Phone 81rl6 Orono. 951. NIGHT AND WEEKEND CLEANING 21 Main Street East, Hamilton, Ontario. ! Solicitors for the txecutor. part-time. Apply Montrave Ave. He | LADY WISHES PART TIME WORK Apr2é-May3, 10 | afternoons preferred. Dial 5-2449, wanted by responsible person. Write box 925 T'wver Cae © A~r. 23. Recessions Bark Worse Than Bite, Business Finds fes that were out of line with con- sumer facts. There are others who say it's too early yet for such compla- cency. They say there's still time and chance for a malignant re- cession to grow. RETAIL TRADE SPOTTY Wait to see what happens to re- tail trade this month and next, they warn. For retail trade is the true end-product of most manu- facturing and farming, no matter how many steps along the way. And retail trade is spotty around the country, Employment is also spotty} One example: In the early m s of this year the jobless total grew especially in the midwestern an eastern states where most of the durable goods manufacturers clus- ter. But the states of North and South Dakota and Montana report {employment higher than a year | ago. The reason is oil. The Willis- {ton basin which these states share {is having a building and business {boom based on petroleum. | Another example: For a time the auto, home appliance and farm machinery factories in the Middle West were shortening work weeks or laying off workers. At the same time west coast plants making warplanes and guided mis- siles were building the work rolls to a post-war record Ri TWO EXPERTS CONFIDENT Jesse Jones, the 80-year-old Alouette Coach Says There's Room For Trading Rules MONTREAL (CP) Douglas (Peahead) Walker, the man from the South who coaches Montreal Alouettes, feels there are a couple of things that would make Cana- dian football more pleasing to the fans. He also thinks the United States game could profit by adopt- ing some rules from the Canadian code. Walker was guest speaker Friday night at the Loyola College Alumni Association recognition dinner. He said he would like to see the Canadian rules provide for pro- tection for the pass receiver throvgs unlimited = blocking. He would also like to see unlimited blocking for the punt receiver as a means of eliminating "the sui- cide safety job" and thereby cut- ting down injuries. Walker said he likes Canada's rouge point and feels it would help eliminate many of the tie games prevalent in the United States. Church Basketball Passes Amendments ST. CATHARINES (CP) -- Four constitutional amendments were approved during the week-end at the annual convention of the On- tario Church Amateur Basketball Association held here. The delegates, representing 52 boys clubs throughout the province approved the suspension of Don Ford of Welland for one year for unsportsmanlike conduct following a Church League game in Toronto. Other amendments called for the appointment of the association president and secretary treasurer as official delegates to Ontario Basketball Association conventions and the limitation of life member- ships to five. Officers -elected for 1954-55 were: President, Charles Wyatt, Welland: first vice-president, Wilf Garrett, St. Catharines; second vice-presi- dent, Robert Wilson, Niagara Falls; secretary treasurer, Carl Popkey, Windsor. Canada To Meet Chile. In Davis Cup Opener MONTREAL (CP)--Harry Mar- pole, president of the Canadian Lawn Tennis Association, said in an interview Sunday Canada and Chile will meet in the first round of North American zone Davis Cup play "probably July 15-17." Site of the tie will likely' be the Toronto Cricket Club, he said. If Canada gets by Chile in the first round and Japan defeats Mexico, the second tie will be of- fered to Montreal's Mount Royal Tennis Club, which has staged all Davis Cup matches since the Sec- ond World War. struction Finance Corp. was tag- ged "the greatest money lender of all times," says: "The business decline is moder- ate and isn't hurting us. It ought to be good for the economy to correct the evils of over-expanding and of building up such a top- heavy structure of debt." Lewis Douglas, Tucson, Ariz. banker and rancher, and Mutual Life Insurance Co. chieftain, who was U.S. ambassador to Great Britain, says: 'In the East they're always ex- cited, everyone being carried away at once by some new wave ~f em- 'on, Out here you see things calmly and you see them whole. That's why we're cont. 96b. | Texan who as head of the Recon- |dent." | wondered how a comfortable tem- | | War, The "New Look' is everywhere apparent. \ The amount of new construction {is astonishing, though much of it |is shoddy. Mischa Sherbokov looks |at huge new apartment blocks and new workers' cottages and thinks {that each year brings him nearer {to the time when he can move his family into better quarters. Mischa sees more clothing in the stores and thinks he soon can have two suits instead of one. He sees more automobiles on the streets, {more radios and television sets in the stores. And each year the controlled price of food in the state shops is slightly lower. Mischa reads in his newspapers "These people are better fed, {better cloth and better housed than ours." Westerners are shocked but Asi- atics and Orientals aren't, at the | type of jobs Soviet women do. They pave streets, lay bricks, river | girders, paint buildings and work at other jobs considered far too heavy for Canadian women. The striking thing is their apparent cheerfulness and sense of purpose. WORK AROUND CLOCK Work goes around the clock. Great searchlights shine through the night on the scores of housin proects under way in Moscow, an | ion road and other schemes. | By 1960, Moscow hopes to have | most of its 6,000,000 in modern | dwellings. Rents are heavily sub- | and hears on the radio only what sidized and unbelievably low. Most {the Communist state wants him to paid 28 to 35 rubles a month. The know. official exchange rate is 25 cents quantities of basic foods that any customer may buy. TOUGH ON SHOPPER Time is important, for shopping is a laborious process. Mischa lines up three times for each purchase: once to place his order, once to pay, and once to collect his goods. The jostling in department-store queues is nerve-wracking. One of the first Russian phrases I mastered was: "Comrade, please remove your hands from my back." Mischa seems to take the in- conveniences of Russian living in his stride. The state makes sure he doesn't learn there is a better life in other countries. And, after all, keeping up with the Joneses is little worry in the Soviet Union. The Joneses, too, have almost nothing. ENNISKILLEN MRS. RUSSELL GRIFFIN Correspondent ENNISKILLEN -- In spite of poor weather conditions, a dare: crowd proved that they were neith- er sugar nor salt by coming out to attend the annual Easter concert under the auspices of the Mission Band in the church. Gloria Wright, ably performed the dut The program opened with a short worship service using hymn, ("Christ the Lord is Risen". Pray- ler by Reva McGill, Bible reading |by Ruth Lamb. The president led lin repetition by all of the Mission Band Aim, Watch word and pur- pose. The beginners' Class gave a chorus, 'Jesus Bids Us Shine', and "Happy Easter To You". Three small girls . under five years old recited. They were: Mar- ie Beckett, Ruth Pethick and Gail Stainton. Little Sheryl Ashton sang "Jesus Loves Me". Doris, Betty and Lawrence Wright formed a vo- cal trio, accompanied By their mother at the piano, to sing "Jesus Wants me for a Sunbeam". A short poem was recited by each of a group of five years old: Susan Wearn, Lockie McNair, Che Parsons and Doreen Trewin. Linda and David Stainton played a piano duet. Two very appropriately chos- en vocal solos were given by Betty Jane Werry who sang, '"'Hot Cross Buns" and Wayne Beckett singing, "Here Comes Peter Cottontail". Charles Ashton favored with a iano solo. Nancy 'Wood and Carrol Wright chose as a vocal duet '"'Jes- us Christ is Risen today". Regis Parsons gave a recitation which was followed by two piano solos by Kathryn Slemon and Maureen Mec- Nair. Mrs. R. Seymour delighted both young and old with a story of "A Packet of Flower Seeds". A jano solo by Lois Ashton. Cheryl oad recited a poem, "At Happy Easter Time". Two piano solos followed by Gary Beckett and Lorna Wearn, also two stories by Linda Yeo and Jimmy Rowan. El- enor Heard played a group of East: er hymns. The offering was received by Bert Werry and Garth McGill. An expression of appreciation was voiced by Bert Werry. Lunch of cake and ice-cream was served and the concert closed with the National Anthem. LARGE CONGREGATION A large congregation which was augmented by visiting friends and relatives attended one of the high- lights of the Easter season to en- joy a splendid Easter sermon de- {oerd by Rev. R." Seymour who chose as his Bible Text, Matt. 28, verse 15 with the title for his mes- sage, "The Inevitability of God and Futility of Man." The old but ever mew story of {the Death and Resurrection of Jes- {us was given in a most interesting and enlightening way with special |stress on the spiritual resurrection from the tomb where four Roman soldiers were on guard, Mr. Sey- mour's talk was spiced with a bit of humour which encouraged the belief that a Christian should not be long-faced, but smiling, and pleas- ant. During the service, new members were accepted into the church by Mr. Seymour at the close of a communicant's class of 11 weekly meetings. These young people were resident, Mission Band Easter Concert Pleasing To Large Audience es of chairman. Nancy Elizabeth Wood, Elenor May Heard, Audrey Carrol Wright, Lor- ina Jean Wearn, Patricia Marlene | Atkinson, Robert Louis Mulligan. | |Francis James Mulligan, Garth Dennis McGill, Edward John Yeo, | | William Chester Mills and Bruce Douglas Mills. Mr. and Mrs. Law- rence Wearn were .also received on Nancy Wood returned home with her mother to spend her East~r holidays. Melville Griffin, Blackstock, was a Sunday caller with Mr. and Mrs. Russell Griffin, : Miss Elsie Oke, Toronto, s| the weekend with Mr. and Frank Dorland. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brunt visit ed with Wilfred Marks at Port Perry. M. and Mrs, W. M. Henry, To- ronto; Master Paul Henry, Belle. ville; Mr. and Mrs. Earl Masters, Gail: and Darlene, Bowmanville, visited Mr. and Mrs. A. Sharp. nt rs. profession of Faith. A large choir added much to |the richness of the service by the |rendition of the Anthem "Up from | {the Grave He Arose". Our male | |quartette gave two appropriate sel- | ections: "The Wayside Cross' and | | "Where you There When They Cru- | | cified My Lord". Junior church | was attended by 17 members | where Mrs. Seymour gave the Easter story. Beautiful spring | flowers loaned by Mr. and Mrs. K. | Svanefelt of Enniskillen Green- houses adorned the altar and were much appreciated. TRAVELLING LIBRARY The new travelling library con- [tains books suitable for anyone, (fiction and non-fiction for adults and more children's books than usual. Mrs. M. Hobbs would be pleased to supply anyone who likes ! reading with books, especially the public school children during the | summer holidays. The Service Club met at the home of Mrs. J. Griffin with 17 present. Following the business, the evening was spent with games and contests, and Mrs. E. Masters was pr ted with a icure set from the club as she has mov- ed to Bowmanville. Lunch was served by Mrs. O. C. Ashton, Mrs, L. Stainton, Mrs. E. Masters and the hostess. Next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. E. Trewin on May 4. PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ashton, | Clare: and Douglas were wi Mr. and Mrs. S. Kersey, Hampton. | Sorry to report Albert Oake has | prowmona. e wish him a speedy |recovery. Mr. and Mrs. Les Thompson, Beaverton; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence |Ginn, Cadmus; Mr. and Mrs. Don Lee, Wayne and Ter: Oshawa, were with Mr. and' Mrs. Walter Ferguson. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Ormiston were with Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Ashton, Haydon. Mr. and Mrs. F. Conling, Purple Hill, visited Mr. and Mrs. F. Toms. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Werry have urchased Mr. and Mrs. 'John riffin's new home at the south end of the village. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Collacutt, Miss Faye Giles, Tyrone were with Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Griffin. Murray Barrie, Newtonville, visited his aunt, Mrs. W. A. Wright. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Wilson and Kerry, Mr. and Mrs. K. Svanefelt were with Mr. and Mrs, Geo. Wil- son, Toronto. Roy Werry has arrived home from British Columbia. Mrs. R. Seymour, Mrs. F. Werry and Mrs. M. Hobbs attended En- field W.A. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ferguson were with Mr. and Mrs, Ed. Strong at Bowmanville. Ted Jackson, Port Perry, called on Mr. and Mrs. Fred Toms. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Pethick and Robin, Mrs. Verna Wood, Toronto, Mr, and Mrs. R. Svanefelt, Susan and Deborah were with Mr. and Mrs. L. Cozens at Langstaff. Miss Marguerite Wright, St. St. Catharines; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wright and family, Bowmanville; Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Wright and family visited Mr. and Mrs. C. man Wright. Mr. and Mrs. L. Stainton an family visited Mr. and Ms. C, Mills at Port Perry. Miss Betty Jane Werry spent the weekend with Miss Jean Cole, af Bowmanville. Mr. and Mrs. Reg. Wearing and Rickey, Thornhill, were with her father Mr. W. H. Moore, and visit- ed her mother in hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Garnet Joyce and Barbara, Mr. Wallace Stainton, Toronto; Miss Muriel Reynolds, Bowman- ville; Mr. nd Mrs. William Lamb Caesarea, visited with Mr. an Mrs. Lorne Lamb. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Gri.fin, were Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Banks, Weston, and were callers on Mr. and Mrs. C. Smith's of Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ferguson and family were with Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Bottrell, Newcastle, Miss Marie Boftrell returned home with them for the Easter holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Ormiston and family, Courtice, were with Mr, and Mrs. Walter Ormiston. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Vanstone, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Vanstone, Whit. Towns, Peterboro; th (by, visited Mr. and Mrs. R. Me- | Neil. Mr. and Mrs. Cameron Oke, Osh- awa, Miss Elsie Oke, Toronto visit- ed Mr. and Mrs. Albert Oke. The CGIT will be held in the church basement on Saturday.' April 24. Mr. and Mrs. P. Ellis and family spent the weekend at Cordova Mines. Mr. and Mrs. E. Cox and family spent the weekend with relatives al .|Hilton and Brighton. Masters Clare and Douglas Ash ton attended a birthday party with their cousin, Larry Pooler, Oshawa on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Wearn Claremont; and Fred Standart Oshawa, were with Mr. and Mrs A. L. Wearn. Mr. and Mrs. A. Leadbeater Georgie and Tommy, visited Mr and Mrs. M. Tabb, Bowman ville. Mr. and Mrs. D. Yeo and Lorna Oshawa; Mrs. Bertha Yeo, Bow manville, were Sunday visitors vith Mr. and Mrs. G. Yeo. : Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Waller Dalphine and Joanne. Bowman" I's spent Sunday with Mr. and Ms Russell Griffin. i TORONTO TRI-BELLS WIN TITLE TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto Tri Bells won the international Trip] A basketball title Saturday nigh by defeating Tonawanda, N.Y., El Spent Friday with their parents, . and Mrs. S. R. Pethick, Miss dridge Club 72-58,