Page 2 The Haileyburian Thursday, May 26, 1960 THE HAILEYBURIAM and COBALT POST Published byw Temiskaming. Printing: Co. New Liskeard, Ont. Ltd. Member Canadian Weekly Newspaper Association. Issued every Thursday, from The Haileyburian Office, Broad- way Street, Haileybury, Ontario. Authorized. as Second: Class., Mail, Post. Office; Department, Ottawa. In Canada.-- $2:50)per; year: in advance: In United States -- $3:50)\per. year. in. advance. [ See by E PAPERS | OTTAWA -- To-day's Ottawa|| brides are getting "new. look" bou- quets, Long-stemmed red: rosses , form- erly led in popularity, Now. bridal bouquets run, the gamut from. ger- aniums to orchids, predominantly white. Ottawa florist Saw Low, who has |' been preparing bridal bouquets for 80 years, says brides to-day want "something different' along. with "something old, something new, something borrowed and: some~ thing blue." The difference is often in the bouquet. Some brides incorporate the four requirements ofthe old. saying in a new different. bouquet, A bit of heirloom lace, for in- stance, is blended with flowers tied with a blue ribbon. The blue ribbon is concealed in the bouquet if it doesn't blend with the predom- inant wedding color scheme. "Something old", such as a ring, is also concealed in the bouquet. Colored bridal bouquets tend. to complement the color schemes chosen for bridal'attendants, ar- tificial tinting being used 'if neces- sary. Mr, Low has even been asked to defy. superstition in bridal anrange- ments. An old SEnglish saying, "'where the ivy grows, no man pro- pose,"' is said.to be responsible for banning greenery from wedding arrangements, Green is also considered an un- jJucky wedding color. However, Mr, Low has been called upon to make up an all-green bridal along with bouquets of ivy. for the attendants at one wedding. PRESTATYN, Wales. -- Anyone hamed Jones can have a cut-rate bouquet, | 7 vacation here. in. September. under- a. plan announced by local; board- inghouse-- keepers as a. tribute to Antony. Armstrong - Jones, who married«Princess Margaret. | trade. said there would be a. sub- stantial. cut in prices for Joneses. The exact amount has not yet been. worked-out, "We plan to. hold competitions, confinedto the Joneses, to find;the champion Jones bowler and golf- er,' he-said. "Girls will be able to compete. for the honor of being, the country's most glamorous Jones." PARIS -- Nikita. Krushchev made.some hay although the sun wasn't. shining. It happened this way: * The. Soviet priemier- spent the night at nearby Brunoy, where Russia's ambassador to France, Sergei Vinogradov, has a summer home. Shortly before noon the premier decided to take a walk in the near- by countryside. Strolling a leafy lane, Krush- chev came to a. house. Seeing the door open, he looked inside and asked for the owner. "Monsieur Blondin is outside making hay," said a young girl. "Making hay?" asked the prem- ier, himself an old farmer, '"'what do you mean?"' "T mean he's cutting the long gyrass," said the girl. , The exchange took place through an interpreter. Thanking the girl, the Russian leader went outside. A. short dis- tance from the house he. found Blondin swinging a scythe. Krushchey introduced himself, watched for a while and then ask- ed the man. if he could have a go. _ "Of course," replied Blondin who related the incident to reporters later. "Mr. Khrushchev has a fair cut- ting motion,' he explained, "but as he's a. stout gentleman, his stomach interfered: with his swing." : }\ REMODEL | i REPAIR | Haileybury Phone OS 2-5202 BEN J. BOURGET Repairs and Alterations Boats Made or Repaired General Contractor and Estimator Houses Built Orillia Haileybury, Ont. HOW TO CHOOSE YOUR FAMILY MONUMENT For your. free copy of Rock of Ages' new fustrated booklet *'How To. Choose Your Family Monument"' visit.us today, AUTHORIZED DEALER SANDERSON MONUMENT CO. LTD. - Ont. LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE T. G. TULLOCH S XY Rus \auES, Phons OSborne 2-5218 | This seaside resort's chamber. of} | LONDON -- The cult of the hard black. derby--bowler to the British -- is spreading west in a spring- time surge of manly fashion, { Once it was almost exclusively the badge of the off-duty guards officer or the business executives who inhabit that square mile of London called the City. _ Now the fashion is rolling from London?s. financial quarter-in_ the City, an undulating sea of black derbies, to the plush offices of the west end. ' | Lawyers, advertising executives, public relations men and auto s$alesmen are wearing them, Der- bies bloom in Piccadily. And delighted hat-makers pre- dict that soon.women. will be.in on the act. It's about time, they say --women last caught the craze in 1948. | PETERBOROUGH -- The site of 8 onetime Iroquois Indian "'metro- polis" has been discovered near Mount Pleasant in Cavan Town- ship, 12 miles southwest of here. ! Walter Kenyon, assistant cura- tor of the Royal Ontario Museum, said some 1,000 Indians probably lived in the village 500 to 600 years ago. ' Mr. Kenyon said he considers the, discovery. important. because of its large size -- it covers 15 to, 20 acres.-- and because of its lo- cation. "I have never seen such a big settlement, or one in such a re- mote area,'"' he reported. 'This thing was a metropolis -- one of the big ones." Iroquois villages were usually situated beside navigable lakes or rivers. The largest in Ontario are in Huronia, the area between Lake Simcoe and Georgian Bay, and on the shores of Lake Erie. George Wilson of Mount Pleas- ant discovered the site while work- ing on land he owns obaut three miles east of his home. Mr. Kenyon plans to organize a party of 15 or 20-students to make a thorough study of ithe village. He said the location is probably the most easterly of the large vil- lages of the western group of Iro- quois Indians. Algonquin tribes liv- ed in the. areas of the Canadian Shield farther north. Mr. Kenyon said he located 'heaps of pottery", arrow points, flint. knives, scrapers and. other tools, a stone net sinker, bone awls, pieces of pipes and stone. axes and a community grindstone." TORONTO -- _ Restauranteur George Pavlovic was_ surprised when a woman handed him a cheque in payment for a cup of coffee. It was a ten-cent refund-on her 1959 income tax. WASHINGTON --. Mike, the pio- neer space monkey, is up. in- the clouds again. He is a proud father. Dr. Theodore Reed, director. of the antional zoo, reported. that: fa- 'ther, mother and off-spring. were doing well. Although Mike's first off-spring was born two weeks ago, its sex has not been determined because the monkey has. kept zoo keepers. away. F Mike reached a height of 37 miles in 1959 in a United States rocket- and returned safely to earth, His flying companion, Pat, another Macaque monkey, died later when Mike bit him. Mike comes from the Philip- pines. His mate in the Washington Zoo isa crab-eating monkey who has never been higher than the top rung of a trapeze. DETROIT -- A turtle named Dis- aster broke behind the field, but turned on the power in the stretch to roll across the finish line and win the international turtle derby day race at the University of De- troit. Disaster, a 10-year-old, carried the colors of the university to vic- tory, draped in a horseshoe made of a lilly of the valley. Nanook of the North, the Univer- sity of Alaska entry, crawled. to victory in the international cup, barely edging Flying Fritz from Heidelberg. and Sir Velocitas of Oxford, AMERSHAM, Eng.--Candy shop owner E. G. Cornes couldn't be- lieve his eyes when eight ducklings in a line walked into his store. As the proprietor and three cus-]' tomers gazed in amazement, the 'ducklings halted in front of al. candy counter _-- and collapsed. Police found the ducklings -- Speed Record Set At {14.65 mph Scuttling the idea that high en- gine speed is necessary to high boat speed, Hu Entrop, famed Seattle racing boat driver, set a new. world outboard speed record of, 114.650.miles. per. hour. with. an engine turning a leisurely 4900 re- volutions per minute: | Entrop. drove his Starlite Too, a 14-foot racing hydroplane, pow- ered by an Evinrude V-4 75 H.P. engine, to the new mark on Na- vasu Lake on the California- Arizona border, March 29. Making. the record even more impressive was the fact that the only-a:few. days old -- had walked from a lake two miles away, cross- ing, the traffic-clogged London highway and three minor roads. Police. were. unable to say if Cornes' candy attracted the duck- lings. Anyhow, the ducklings. were revived and put back in their lake. standard compression and displac- ment engine was equipped with. stock spark plugs and burned the normal fuel mixture of regular gasoline and outboard motor oif available at filling stations, rath- er than-a racing fuel mix of ak cohol . The ultimate speed of the pump- kinseed-like. boat. was limited not by the V-4's ability to respond to, more throttle, but by the fact that the boat sought to leave the bare stability of its sponsons- and be- gin to '"'kite" -- become air-borne, - Harry Cupp, Knoxville, Tenn., official referee of the National Outboard Association, which sanc- tioned the trial and certified the record, commented: "This was the simplest- trial I've: ever handled. : They just put the boat in the wa- ter, started. the engine, ran the. course as required and came. im with. the record." é Timed by Otto. Crocker, Sam, Diego, chief timer for the Ameri- can Pofer Boat Association, the. new mark. was faster by almost, seven miles an hour than man had ever before travelled in an out. board powered boat. Wy ts lg = -- av WOW 77 o7»r77nnni WLwVy 6. i} HWW ° DD BOTTLE D 10,000 bottles required Have the bottles ready for Scouts,and, Cubs to pick up. MA ¥ June Att WMG WS pe = Al,., OPE OUSE TRLTOWN ELKS LODGE 421 2°>p.m, to 4 p.m. REFRESHMENTS ONTARIO HOSPITAL PREMIUM DUE? -- keep. insured! READ YOUR ONTARIO HOSPITAL INSURANCE- GUIDE --if you haven't one, ask your employer or write be a blessing to you some day. INSURANCE Make sure to pay when due. Don't take chances. Prompt payment of Hospital Insurance premiums safe- guards your future protection. It may ONTARIO HOSPITAL SERVICES COMMISSION eee TORONTO 7, ONTARIO a ED, § #