O \ Who's for Bowling? (continued from front page) Take | for 'example the head pin. This pin has no idea of co-operation, falls down nine times out of ten, the rest of the time it remains aloof and you couldn't coax it to fall down, The "club had a head pin prize that was kept on the hop all night as the 18 odd bowlers came up with their share of head pins, This was referred to as the "mouse" and on the last roll it showed-up in the clutches of the Club President, Art Brock; or as he was affectionately called "the hat". Now you take the four pin (I have been trying to knock it down all night) this was the lament of a Con- servation Officer, one Ben Smith. Ac- cording to Ben the four pin is just the opposite of the head pin.. This pin never falls down and it is rumored *. that some pin boys make a juicy sal- ary just kicking it over. However there are no,such shenanigans at the Causeway Lanes as we understand that the four pin is upset by a button in the manager's office. This could not be verified as the 'manager left early. "There wouldn't have been too much fun. bowling alone sp they formed teams. A team is you and four or five other people who couldnt knock down a match with-a barrage balloon. There were several methods of - bowling in evidence on Tuesday nite. Perhaps the most interesting to the spectators was the Double O. Hamil- ton method. In this method you grasp the ball firmly with your fin- ger and the thumb is there to keep the hall from rolling off your finger too soon. Feel relaxed about it all. Bring the right-arm (if you are bowl- ing right-handed) well back and as high as you can.reach. It is a mat- ter of co-ordination and balance. " When the pin boy sees your arm at * its highest point, that is his cue to & start climbing the wall. Just as.the pin boy makes his move, so do you, by taking careful aim at the seat of his pants, then pitch the ball. In the resulting confusion you find you - have missed the pin hoy but have dis- . posed of all the pins. That's good. That~is the Double O Hamilton me- 'thod. We understand that the following day the druggists in Port Perry were sold clean out of . rubbing liniments, 'Ann: Spears--3879, some folks were heading for a horse doctor to get some. oil for their creak- ing joints. Don't let them fool you, it was a success and already plans are being made for the 'Third Annual Bowling night to be held in 1959. No one could win more than one prize, therefor a winner had the op- tion as to which he desired. 'Most strikes -- Sam Naples (8); high single -- Sam Naples (203); high Triple H. DeShane (546); win- ning téam S, Naples, A. Ploughman, H. DeShane, J. Healey--1968. Most blows--Lola McEachern ; low Score-- Ott Hamilton 240. High Ladies-- Lucky number-- Ross Healey. The Club have three ladies as members. The one missing who did not get .into the win column was Mrs. Sam Naples. : JHE GOOD DRINER The most" highly skilled driver; if his Attitudes are poor, is a "bad" driver, Brilliant car handling, razor- sharp judgment, hair-trigger react- ions, perfect physical condition .... can never weigh the scale against ir- responsibilityy recklessness, immatur- ity, selfishness, says the Ontario Saf- ety League. E What are attitudes? How can they be changed? What can be done about the Show-Off, Baby-blow-horn, the Speeder, Mr. Move-over- I'm coming- through? } The Attitudes of human beings are they fit in with what we want. - Only two sets of conditions will change those attitudes. Firstly, we longer. meet the needs that brought change them if we develop new needs for which we have no established Attitudes. Let's be specific. Take a teenager with a slightly inferiority complex, unsure of himself. He feels a partic- ular need to assert himself, to win the finds, or imagines, that he can get | this approval from classmates by absorbine Jr,-and such like and even show-off driving; boys turn to stare, ; PRESENTATIONS EVERYONE John McIntyre, ~~ Chairman. Iai il gl a a a a a a a aT oY WW WUT OUTS ~ Port Perry High School OPEN HOUSE to be held on Friday, May 16th 7.30 until 11.00 p.m, GYMNASTIC DISPLAY Admission Free. . GRANT C. MacDONALD, Principal ¢ FASHION SHOW WELCOME / Edgar Johnston, Vice-Chairman, AY § + oh Se ee L girls giggle and wave. It becomes an Attitude, because conspicuous driving satisfies ene of his needs, But when he gets into his twenties he finds-that the approval he craves no longer comes to him when he "leaves rubber" on starts and stops, or drives at 80 m.p.h. The more mat- ure people he now mixes with regard it as boring, or frightening, His Att- itude changes. He doésn't particularly- ° believe in careful driving, but he gets no approval from his "dragging" habits. : Then he marries. Now he has a need to protect his family in the car. To keep healthy to support them. To pre- serve. the confidence of his employers, which might be lost if he had repeat- ed accidents and "tickets". These new needs change his Attitudes again; now he believes in good driving. Education can change Attitudes by exposing the falseness of imagined "needs"; or by creating new, more wholesome needs. Fear (of enforce- ment, or injury) may curb Express- , ion but it has little effect on Attitudes Dry Skimmed Milk Prices Stabilized The Minister of Agriculture, the Honourable Douglas §. Harkness, announced that the Agricultural Stab- ; ilization Board has been authorized, effective May 1st, to offer to purchase' 'Canada First Grade dry skimmed milk spray process on the basis af 15 cents wed? oe A -- \ eT OS THE PORT PERRY STAR, THURSDAY, MAY 8th, 19585 per pound and roller process on the en to limiting the support price to warehouse, effective for the 12 months production from plants in. existence | from May 1, 1968. basis of 12 cents per pound. + These prices are approximately 107 per cent of the 10 year average and 2 cents below the support price that has | been in effect since March 1957, The price at which spray powder is being stabilized is approximately one cent higher that the support price in the United States. I In the period from April 1957 through March 1958 milk powder pro- duction had increased in Canada by approximately 60 per cent over the previous year. This marked increase in production definitely indicates that the price of 17 cents. per pound for powder was an incentive to duction and that some downward a, was necessary to balance supply with possible disposal. The Government offered up to 80 million pounds of this powder to International Relief Agen- cies for the feeding of children in un- derdeveloped countries 'and for famine relief, but to date approximately 8 million pounds have been taken by these agencies. At the same time the Canadian market was fully supplied. The Minister also stated that des- pite the lower price support for dry skimmed milk the dairy farmers' pos- ition would be bettter than in the earl- ier part of 1957, since the Government has authorized the Board to increase the support price on butter to 64 cents per pound, an increase of 6 cents per pound over the 1957 support. | In view of the difficult surplus sit- uation which has developed in dry skim milk, consideration is being giv- the learned ways of meeting our' needs. We develop Attitudes: because ! change them when we find they no! them into being. Secondly, we willl attention and approval of others. He By Dr. Gustav Bohstedt Emeritus Professor of Animal Husbandry University of Wisconsin Preparing Steers For . Shipment To Market Old-time cattlemen were very much concerned about "drift" or loss of weight in cattle being driven long distances to market. They would make sure of plenty "of grass and water enroute, pro- vide salt and permit the animals sufficient stops for chewing their cud. In other words they would, as much as possible, provide the comforts of home: to keep the cattle con- tented in order to hold the weight losses low. Such loss of weight enroute to market is not eliminated ,by modern conditions t where cattle Dr. Bohstedt are shipped by train or truck. The modern cattlemen are still concerned and careful to mini- -[mize the loss. Mere nervous tension under the crowded and uncomfortable shipping conditions has a tend- ency to pull weight off the cattle. Depending - on the distance to market, this weight may not he -l'entirely "fill," but also actual tis- sue live-weight. For the most part, however, it is the reduction of the contents of the digestive tract, and in recognition of that i fact a buyer weighing steers right out of a feed lot customarily, by agreement, discounts the scale weight perhaps 4 per cent. FEEDING MANAGEMENT 2 packing plant, the shrink enroute can be held down if you follow these pre-shipment management practices: On the evening before shipment and on the morning be- fore loading, reduce both corn and silage, if any is fed, to one- half the customary level. Allow free access to the hay that has been fed all along. and to water all night long, so «that the cattle feel reasonably full and comfort- TV VV VV VVVVVYS MA a aaa aaa oa a alls able. However, you should shut the steers away from water first thing in the morning so they won't be in a sloshing condition during transport. "The modern cattleman's princi- ple here is the same as that of the oldtimers--comfortable cattle suffer less weight loss than those whose comfort has not been con- sidered. VV VV VVVVVYVV VOU VVVVTIPTTITOTOPTOIPOI00O0OOOOCO0O0000O0000000® * Question: How much galt do horses need? } Answer: Studies at Michigan, Missis8ippi and other stations show that horses and mules differ greatly in their individual con- sumption of salt, and they con- sume different amounts at dif- ferent seasons, also according to their activity. In one study the salt intake of 12 horses ranged from a high of 3.26 ounces per day to a low of about 14 ounce per day. Becca of the wide variation it is advisable for horses and mules to have constant access to loose salt. Use of iodized or trace mineralized salt for horses IV OOOO OUVOOOOOOYOIN . Where the steers are to be (weighed at the stock yards or is becoming increasingly preva- lent. Fri., May 9 to Thurs., May 15 CECIL B.DEMILLE' PRODUCTION ~ THE TEN COMMANDMENTS A PARAMOUNT PICTURE IN VISTAVISION AND Yechnicoton AESTON- envi iE. ROBINSON DE CARLO PAGET DEREK - COWARD G.. JOHN i entertainment "An inspiring motion picture . the most significant of our time! ry VOY FV VOU UW as of this date. Cheese Prices The Minister "of Agriculture, the Honourable Douglas S, Harkness, an- nounced today that authority has Been granted to the Agricultural Stabiliza- tion Board to offer to purchase Cana- da First Grade waxed chedder cheese made in Quebec at a price of 33% cents per pound, basis delivery in Montreal, and Canada First Grade waxed chedder cheese made in Ontario at a price of 34 cents per pound f.0.b, / Good Reading for the | Whole Family «News - Facts « Family Features The Christian Science Monitor One Norway St., Boston 15, Mass. Send your newspoper for the time i checked. Enclosed find my check or money order. | yeor $18 0) 6 months $9 [J 3 months $4.50 OJ Name Address' ° State Clry Zone | _ NOTICE | Re: The Port Perry Public School {} Parents who are planning to send children to the KINDERGARTEN-PRIMARY CLASS in September, please The Minister indicated that in re- cent years there had been no direct support under Quebec cheese but that Ontario cheese had been supported . | through guarantees by _the Federal jad Provincial Governments. Guaran- tees for the 1957 production of the announced that authority has been granted to the Agricultural Stabiliza- tion Board to offer to purchase, effec- tive May b, 1968, Grade A Large eggs on the basis of 44 cents per dozen packed in new wooden cases, delivered at Montreal. In making this announcement the same grade totalled 33% cents per Ib. | Minister stated that the Board has The man datory floor price, the | equivalent of 80 per cent of the base price (the average price for the past 10 years, is 26¢. per 1b. for Ontario, as previously announced. The guaranteed ! prices now authorized represent ap- | proximately 110° per cent of the base | prices for Quebec and Ontario. Stabilized Egg Prices The Minigter of Agriculture, the | ! established the following priees at other main storage points throughout Canada: Quebec City and Toronto, 43¢c, dozen Vancouver ............. AI 42¢. dozen Approved Storage Points: In Maratimes and Western Ontario cvveveeneiinnrenne. 4Z¢. dozen In Manitoba 41c. dozen Saskatchewan & Alberta 40c. dozen The Board will advise the industry the Honourable Douglas S. Harkness, ' with respect to other specifications. « year 1958 will be accepted. R. H. CORNISH, Principal. register the child by May 19th. ~~ Send the child's name and date of birth to the school or telephone 3317. Pupils who will be five years of age or older during the R. A. KENNY, Chairman, Public School Board AW, > OPO OEP Ti OVO ooo DEPARTMENT PPPPPPPV9P9PP999P9900909 99RD IOIDIEE IS | STORE @ SUMMER FOOTWEAR Scampers. See these, hd Aa Ja Jaan oo ah BOYS' MEN'S ETT T RP PPR Sisman Scampers now approved by SPORTS COLLEGE Outfit all your family to-day with these new low priced Sisman We now have a complete stock of Scampers . . . Canada's favourite play shoe. See the popular moccasin style with comfortable foam crepe sole for that "walking-on-air' feeling all summer. and many other popular styles for the whole family, at our store to-day. Ladies' Casuals MOCASSIN, STRAP, CASUALS $2.98 and $3.95 $7.95 ...56.95, $8.95 OOOO OOSE Canvas Running BLACK, WHITE TRIM -- MEN'S Prater ties ri iatitiaitreniane Ladies' Dress Shoes PUMPS, Beige, Brown, Black, Patent, Blue, small heel ............................ $7.95 9 4 4 4 . 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 r 4 4 L 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 < 4 Shoes BOYS' $2.50 Dack Shoes for Men $16.00, $17.95, $21.00 Friday, May 9th Thursday, May 15th ONE SHOW NIGHTLY Doors Open at 7.00 p.m. Show starts at 7.30 p.m. SATURDAY MATINEE at 1.30 P.M. . FOV VVOUVYOVYVYVO OVI YIN VII ITIITITITOOO00O0O0O0O00O0000C00CoY FOV OOO YOOOOO MAA Aa a aa a ag 0 Savage Shoes for Children RED SCHOOL HOUSE SHOES-- STRAPS, PATENT OXFORDS SADDLE OXFORDS .......... $4.95 YOUTH'S OXFORDS ....... $4.95 and $6.50 GROWING GIRLS-- PUMPS, STRAPS,"SADDLE OXFORDS, WHITE SHOES .... $6.95 Hewelson Shoes -MEN'S FOAM RUBBER SOLES BAMBOO, TAN, CHERRY, OXFORDS Men's or Boys' Oxfords BROWN or BLACK, MOCCASIN VAMP * NEOLITE SOLES .............. TAR, $7.95 > p p » 4 > p > > > p 4 p p p p p p p 4 4 p b 4 p p p 3 p > p p p 4 p p 4 p p p p p p > p p p p p p p p p p p p p 4 4 4 > > 4 p p p Port Pe Phone 43 rry, B00 00.000.0000.00 40 0 00 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 L 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 or LOAFERS cco, $7.50 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 p p 4 p p < p p p p > p p p Ontario 9909000009090 900909090009909009000000000000Lt lA ar a 4 [] 4 | MAA AAA AL LAA AlLLALALL AL TOTTI VVITTITP0000000000909090000099 DR a os AT wy rs wt