{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0440216":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/contributor":[{"value":"[Gibbon, A. W.]","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2024-02-21","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1967-07-01","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0440216\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" \u2022Mtfaoii Uailn 3faw\nweeKeno\nNelson, B.C.\nVOL 17, No. 26\naGazin\nJULY 1, 1967\nI\nYOUTH TAKES OVER EXPO\n\u2014   .\nIt's wonderful to be a ^oung Canadian,\n<?\u00a54\n-\u00ab\u2022>*\u2022*\nZrX\nT \u00ab-\nf   ifL^Wli \u2014\ni   fe^m\u2014\n\u2022\u25a0\u25a0    '.   -  ':\"\n2jj| l\/V^Lajri\n^\n.\u00ab  mm     *L\n^1X i^il\n,...-!>\n\u25a0\u00a3&\nt*    <^\\m\njF'*m+&MA\n+\u00a3\u00ab\u00bb a, m\/\n?\u00bbf\n--.:>* \u2022.\nEire\n Wei\nand 20 million strong\nTHIS IS WHO WE ARE\nA Weekend team crossed\nCanada to produce\nour centennial portrait\nBy Philip Smith\nWeekend Magazine\nPhotos by Bruce Moss\nWeekend Magazine\nCANADA, we are often told by those people who furrow their\nbrows over such things as our collective soul, is not a melting pot;\nnot thc crucible of national strains that the United States has become. Our 100th birthday is as good a time as any to examine\nthis proposition.\nAnd having just travelled from coast to coast seeking out the\nCanadians whose pictures appear on these pages, I submit that it is\nnonsense. There has been a lot more melting in Canada than perhaps wc have been aware of, or willing to admit \u2014 and the process\nhas been going on since long before Confederation, to our inestimable benefit.\nBy 1867, the population of Canada was already more varied\nthan is generally realized. True, the 2,110,502 British counted in\nthe 1871 census constituted 60.5 per cent of the population, and\nthe French, with 1,082,940, made up 31.1 per cent. But in numbers,\nrather than percentages, the \"other races\" were strong enough to\nhave bequeathed a healthy mixture to our heritage during the past\ncentury: there were 202,000 Germans, dating from 1750; 29,000\nDutch; 21,000 Negroes, and smaller contingents of Swiss, Italians.\n2 - Weekend Magazine No. 26, 1967\n I\ngnatius Sullivan is 14,\nthe descendant of generations of Irish\nfishermen in the Newfoundland\noutport of Ferryland, founded in\n1621. A couple of years ago his\nfather found himself unable to support his family on the few hundred\ndollars a year he could make in\nhis dory. He works now as a carpenter in St. John's, 45 miles away,\nsees his ex-teacher wife and nine\nchildren only at weekends. Ignatius\nis in Grade 10, averaged 87 per\ncent in his last exams. He will be in\ncollege at 15, would like to travel\n\"all round the world.\" Like so\nmany young Canadians now receiving\nan education denied their fathers,\nhe will have to travel \u2014 there is\nscant opportunity for a university\ngraduate in Ferryland.\nFamines at home brought thousands of Irish to Canada in the\nearly 1800s \u2014 people made cheap\nballast for ships taking lumber\nback to England. At Confederation,\nthe Irish numbered 846,000 \u2014\nmore than either the English or Scots.\nBy the 1961 census, last to detail\nethnic origin, this figure had grown\nto 1,753,351.\n1\nohn Buchko's parents, Ukrainians living in the\nold Austro-Hungarian empire, died when he was 10 and he\nwent to work on a farm. He came to Canada in 1912\nas a young man of 24, unable to read or write. He worked\nas a plasterer in Winnipeg for 25 cents an hour, saved\n$330 in a year and bought 80 acres of land at Anola, Man.,\ngrew wheat, barley and oats on it until five years\nago. Of his eight children, two now live in Ontario,\nthe rest in Manitoba. He has 20 grandchildren, including\n12-year-old twins Patricia (left) and Phyllis Krawchuk.\nThey talk to Grandpa only with their eyes \u2014 he has\nnever mastered English.\nThe first Ukrainians, \"the men in sheepskin coats\", came\nto Canada in 1891. By 1961 they numbered 473,337.\nOriginally prairie farmers, they have spread to all provinces,\nproduced many teachers and agricultural scientists.\nSpanish, Portuguese and Chinese.\nAt this stage of our history, it is impossible to unscramble the eggs that made the Canadian omelet.\nTake the two founding peoples, as the British and\nFrench are fondly called. They are not so \"pure\" as\nthey sometimes think. The British are a well-seasoned\nstock, the original Stone Age inhabitants of the\nislands having been joined through history by dark-\nskinned invaders from the Mediterranean, Celts from\nthe northern Alps, Picts, the painted men, Romans,\nSaxons, Vikings \u2014 and, of course, the Normans.\nAnd consider for a moment the Normans. They\nwere the largest single group among the original\nFrench settlers in Canada. But when they invaded\nEngland in 1066 they were led by William the Conqueror\u2014 like his lieutenants, a descendant of\nVikings who had colonized the mouth of the Seine\nmany years before.\nThese are things the census figures cannot tell us.\nAnd there are others. There are well over a million\nGermans in Canada today \u2014 the largest national\ngroup after thc British and French. But many of these\n\"Germans\" are no more German than Winston\nChurchill and Charles de Gaulle. They are the descendants of German soldiers serving in the British\narmy in the 13 colonics at the time of the American\nrevolution who, remaining loyal to the crown, elected\nto join the United Empire Loyalists in Canada.\nSince the census questionnaire traces a Canadian's\nethnic origin back along the male line to the first\nancestor to set foot on this continent, it makes no\nallowance for thc number of Irish, French, English\nor even Transylvanian girls who have married into\nthe family down the generations. So while a man\nmay have a German name he may, for all practical\npurposes, be simply an English-speaking \u2014 or even a\nFrench-speaking \u2014 Canadian. The Scots engineer we\nchose for this \"Faces of Canada\" feature turned out\nto have a Pennsylvania Dutch \u2014 or German \u2014\nmother.\nCanadians are often accused of being anti-American, and yet we have our fair share of American\nblood. The United Empire Loyalists were Americans,\nif it comes to that, and between 1899 and 1904 our\npopulation was augmented by 159,565 immigrants\nfrom the U.S. \u2014 more than the 137,036 who came\nfrom Britain during the same period. No one has\nthe slightest idea how many descendants they have\nhad during the intervening years.\nEnglish-French relations are undoubtedly Canada's\ncentral political problem, but here again the Canadian experience proves that the two peoples can live\namicably side by side. The 1961 census showed that\n101,334 men of British origin had French wives, and\nalmost as many French men had \"English\" wives.\nAssuming that these couples each have two or three\nchildren, there are something like half a million Ca-\nContinued on next page\nWeekend Magazine No. 26, 1967 - 3\n \/\\ few years ago, Marcel\nBelanger announced that he was\nleaving home to marry a girl in the\ncity. Since he is an only son \u2014\nhe has six sisters \u2014 the news caused\na family crisis. For Marcel and his\nfather work a farm that has been\nin the Belanger family since 1640,\noverlooking the St. Lawrence at\nl'Ange Gardien, within sight of\nQuebec City. He later changed his\nmind, married a local teacher\nand the farm will remain in the\nBelanger name. Marcel, who is 27,\nwanted to go to Niagara Falls\nfor his honeymoon but was afraid\nto because he speaks no English.\nNevertheless, he opposes the\nseparatists and considers himself\n\"a good Canadian.\" One of his\nsisters is working as a housemaid\nin Toronto, to learn English so\nthat she can be an air hostess.\nThere were 1,082,940 French in\nCanada at Confederation \u2014 31.1\nper cent of the total population.\nWhile their numbers have increased\nmore than five-fold in the past\ncentury, they now make up a\nslightly smaller proportion of the\ntotal population \u2014 30.4 per cent.\nH\norst Koster was a coat presser in West Berlin\nwhen he and his fiancee, Helga, decided to emigrate\nto Canada. Horst arrived in 1953 and found a job\non a farm at Swift Current, Sask. When Helga joined him\nthree months later he moved to Regina, worked in\nthe construction industry. Now 36, he makes $135 a\nweek in charge of an electric furnace in a Regina\nsteel-pipe plant. He and Helga have three daughters:\nBrenda, nine; Sylvia, six; and Wendy, five months. They\npicked the names out of a baby book. \"There's no sense\ngiving them German names,\" says Horst. \"They're\nCanadian kids.\" He built family's two-bedroom bungalow\nhimself; his hobby is gardening on his one-acre lot.\nGerman settlement in Canada is almost as old as\nBritish, dating from 1750. In 1961, there were\n1,049,599 Germans here; immigration since then has\nincreased that figure by almost 50,000.\nTHIS IS WHO WE ARE\nContinued from preceding page\nnadians of joint English-French birth.\nSimilarly, it is not easy to find a census area in\nOntario without at least some people of French\norigin \u2014 and the same goes for some of the other\n\"English\" provinces. A man may no longer speak\nFrench, and his name may be Peter, rather than\nPierre, Laplante \u2014 just as there are McGregors and\nMcCleliands in Quebec who don't know a word of\nEnglish, their male ancestors' tongue. And is not the\nQuebec premier's name Daniel Johnson?\nSo, \"Who are the Canadians?\" The Citizenship Department regularly issues a book called Notes On\nThe Canadian Family Tree. The latest edition, to be\npublished soon, details the history of no fewer than\n46 ethnic groups whose representatives have made\nCanada their home. And that list is not complete.\nEither because of lack of space, or because not\nenough information is available, the book lumps together all the West Indian countries and several\n4 - Weekend Magazine No. 29, Iter\nMiddle Eastern countries. There is, I submit, more\ndifference between an Egyptian and a Lebanese than\nthere is between the descendant of a Ukrainian\nfarmer on the Prairies and the descendant of an Irish\nimmigrant to Newfoundland.\nThe first Christmas tree ever lit up in Canada was\nerected by a German general who commanded a\nHanoverian regiment for the British during the American revolution and settled in Sorel, Que., in 1781.\nHow many non-Ukrainian children paint Easter eggs?\nHow many non-Asian adults enjoy Chinese food?\nCanada's heritage is richer than most Canadians\nsuspect. The people whose pictures appear on these\npages vary in age and sex, in background and prosperity, in achievements and prospects. They were\nchosen at random, merely to give a hint of the\nvariety of the ethnic origins of our 20 million people\n\u2014 and we apologize to the many other national\ngroups for whom we did not have room.\nAll these people have in common is that they are\nCanadians, old or new. And that they are proud of it.\nThe Canadian character has not been forged by a\n1066 and all that; our blood remains unspilt in a\nrevolution or civil war; and somehow, the pundits\nwho fret about such things seem to suggest, this is\na matter for regret, rather than congratulation. From\ntime to time, someone worn out by prolonged contemplation of the Canadian navel bemoans the lack\nof a Canadian identity. Canadians, they say, lack\ncolor and confidence and a sense of being Canadian.\nAs an English immigrant to Canada of fairly recent vintage, I don't believe it. And nothing arouses\nmy distaste more than to hear a Canadian selling\nhimself and his countrymen short. There is just no\nreason for it.\nIt has been my good fortune to see Canadian\nengineers and diplomats at work in many countries\nof the world. I have seen Canadian soldiers keeping\nContinued on page 6\n You can't\nbeat\nthe taste\nof Player's\nfilters.\n-tUnou?\n&&&\nwwa\n M\nrs. James J. Jardine, wife of a salesman in Calgary, is the\ndaughter of an American who emigrated to Canada before World War I.\nHe bought a farm near Drumheller, was president of the\nCalgary Chamber of Commerce in 1938. Since her mother insisted on going\nhome to have her babies, Mrs. Jardine was born in Richmond, Va.,\nbrought to Canada six weeks later. She considers herself thoroughly\nCanadian. So does her daughter Laura, 18, who recently returned from\nsix months at a fashion-design school in London, would like to work\nin Montreal because \"French is such a beautiful language.\"\nIn 1961, 283,908 people in Canada reported they were born in the U.S.\nrelsford Daniels's grandfather, a sailor from Barbados,\nmarried a Scots girl and settled in Nova Scotia. Welsford was\nborn in Halifax, moved to Montreal with his railroad-porter father\nwhen he was three. He went to sea at 16, later worked his way up\nfrom office boy to accountant in a Montreal publishing company. Six\nyears ago he became a salesman in a department store and within\nsix weeks was promoted to management level. He is bilingual\nand a past master of his Masonic lodge. He has four sons, the eldest,\naged 20, a miner at Lynn Lake, Man. He feels Negroes are accepted\nin Canada \u2014 \"but if there were more of us it might be different.\"\nThere were Negroes in Canada as early as 1628; more came\nduring the emancipation struggle in thc U.S. The 1961 census\ncounted 32,127; about 17,000 have come as immigrants since then.\nTHIS IS WHO WE ARE\nContinued from page 4\nthe peace in Cyprus, Canadian civilians tending the\nsick and teaching the children in Africa.\nIn common with everyone else who meets them\noutside this country, I have respected and admired\nthese Canadians for their friendliness and tolerance,\ntheir initiative and their optimism, their ability to\nsolve problems \u2014 and many other qualities which\nexist across Canada but are sometimes overshadowed\nby the divisions that undoubtedly bedevil us.\nMuch of the rest of the world envies Canadians \u2014\nour space, our prosperity, our prospects and, above\nall, our freedom. Perhaps only an immigrant can\nfully appreciate Canada's freedom, whether it be freedom from secret police and persecution or merely\nfreedom from an ossified class system.\nOn my journey from Vancouver to St. John's,\nI was struck not by the divisions in Canada; disagreements and conflicts of interest are inevitable\nin such a huge country, and much more virulent\nissues divide many much smaller nations. The most\n6 - Weekend Magazine No. 28, 1967\nremarkable fact about Canada, it seems to me, is\nthat people separated by so many miles of often\nempty land, and by such diverse backgrounds, do\nin fact share a Canadian identity and are proud to\nconsider themselves Canadians.\nI remember the first Canadians I ever met. They\nwere attending an army training course at Aldershot,\nEngland, during World War II. Fresh from the\nfighting in Italy, they were older than the rest of us,\nand we held them in great awe because of their\nmedal ribbons, their self-confidence, and the carefree\nswath they cut through the ranks of local girls.\nOne day, a Brigade of Guards corporal famous for\nhis acerbity was lecturing us on a wildly improbable\nanti-tank weapon called the PIAT, which you were\nsupposed to fire like a rifle, at the risk of dislocating\nyour shoulder. Unfortunately for the corporal, he\naimed his opening sally \u2014 \"I don't suppose you\ngentlemen have seen one of these before\" \u2014 straight\nat one of the Canadians who hailed from Quebec.\nImmediately, a furious English-Canadian leaped\nforward and seized the corporal by the front of his\ntunic \u2014 a most unmilitary manoeuvre \u2014 ordering his\ncomrade at the same time: \"Show him your back,\nFrenchie.\" The French-Canadian proving reluctant,\ntwo of his pals grabbed him, turned him around,\npulled up his shirt and revealed a deep scar in his\nback as big as my hand.\n\"You see that, Mac?\" said the English-Canadian,\nshaking the corporal gently. \"He got that holding off\nthree Tiger tanks with a PIAT while the rest of his\ncompany got away.\" It was a satisfying moment for\nus all, except the corporal.\nAll we Englishmen knew about Canada was that\nit had more than its fair share of snow and wheat.\nBut if these were Canadians, mid this their spirit, then\nit must be a fine country.\nI have lived in many parts of the world since then.\nI have settled in Canada. And I, for one, am not\nworried about the Canadian identity.\n Mr\nLrs. Anny Bercndsen, a bubbling grandmother who loves\ncamping and swimming, teaches physical education in Halifax. She and\nher husband emigrated in 1954 from Holland. He tried several\nlaboring jobs but none lasted. Down to their last $6, they divided it\nand he walked to Ontario, seeking work, sleeping in ditches\nalong thc way. Mrs. Bercndsen picked potatoes and mended clothes\nto feed their three children. Her husband returned still jobless, but\neventually found security as a school caretaker. Despite the initial hardships, she loves Canada and says: \"You're so free in this country.\"\nThc first Dutch in Canada were United Empire Loyalists. By 1961,\nthere were 429,679, and more than 14,000 have emigrated since.\njorraine Bloskie, seven, and her sister Rachel, nine,\nlive on a farm established by their Polish great-great-grandfather at Wilno, in Ontario's beautiful Madawaska Valley.\nWilno was settled in the 1840s by Polish Roman Catholic fishermen, tired of religious persecution by Prussia. All but two\nof the local priest's parishioners are still Polish and\nmany Wilno children learn Polish before English. Lorraine's\nfather, farmer Dominic Bloskie, would like all his four\nchildren to go to college, though he knows this would mean\nthey would have to leave Wilno.\nThere were 323,517 Poles in Canada in 1961, more\nthan 70,000 of them post-war immigrants.\nJ\names Grcyeyes is 21, a full-blooded Crcc \u2014 and a symbol of\nthc new opportunities opening up for thc Indian as Canada\nheads into its second hundred years. He went to high school in\nPunnichy, Sask., and is now a constable in the R.C.M.P. detachment\nat Sumas, B.C., 50 miles cast of Vancouver. He has six sisters and\none brother, all at school in Fort Smith, N.W.T., where his father, an\nex-soldier, is director of Indian affairs. James believes there are\nbig changes ahead for his people. \"I think thc Indians arc trying to\nmove off thc reserves and take their place in Canadian society,\"\nbe says. \"They want their children to get an education, and living\nstandards and working conditions will improve as more go to school.\"\nAs Canada's original inhabitants, Indians and Eskimos arc\ncounted together in the census figures. There arc about 13,000\nEskimos today, and 225,000 Indians \u2014 more than thc estimated\n200,000 who roved the country when thc while man came. No\none knows how many other Canadians share Indian blood. One\nestimate says a quarter of a million, but it could be double\nthat, or even more. Thc statistics arc just not available.\nMore pictures on next page\n THIS IS WHO WE ARE\nConcluded\njol. W. G. Swan's father was born on an emigrant ship\nbetween Scotland and Canada. He himself was bora in Kincardine,\nOnt., and helped to build what he describes as \"a damned good\ncountry.\" An engineer, he worked on railroad construction in Quebec,\nsettled in Vancouver in 1910, became chief harbor engineer,\nlater founded his own company. He won the D.S.O. in France in\nWorld War I. There were 1,902,302 Scots in Canada in 1961.\nL rthur Selwyn Coster was a teacher before entering the\nchurch, is now Archdeacon of Fredericton. His great-grandfather was one of three brothers, all churchmen, who emigrated\nto New Brunswick from Berkshire, England, between 1822 and\n1830. Archdeacon Coster has two sons, one a mill superintendent,\nthe other a high-school principal. \"Canada can go nowhere\nbut forwards,\" he says.\nThe 706,000 people of English descent in Canada at\nConfederation were outnumbered by the Irish. Today they are\nthe next largest group to the French \u2014 4,195,175 in 1961.\nI\nosie Levitt, 24, is a nurse at the Jewish General Hospital\nin Montreal. Her father was born in England, brought to Canada by\nhis Russian-born parents 50 years ago. Her mother's parents\ncame from Austria. Josie's main current interest: Expo 67,\nwhich she feels puts Canada on the world map.\nThe first Jews in Canada were British soldiers, in 1759. Russian\npogroms brought thousands between 1880 and 1914; later\narrivals fled Nazis. The 1961 census counted 173,344 Jews; the\nCanadian Jewish Congress puts present figure at 225,000.\n8 - Weekend Magazine No. 26. 1967\n illen Tsuji, 21, is a secretary in the city of her birth,\nToronto. Both her grandfathers came to Canada from Japan in\nthe early 1900s, worked as landscape gardeners. But her parents,\nshe says are \"just ordinary Canadians.\" Her father, a mechanic,\nand her mother were born in B.C., forced to move East during the\nwar. Ellen notices little prejudice against her Asian origin and says:\n\"People who discriminate may have a good reason, I suppose,\nbecause of the war \u2014 but I wasn't around then. I feel\ncompletely Canadian.\"\nChinese (58,197) were the largest group among the 121,753\nAsians in 1961 census. Almost 50,000 Asians have come\nsince then, including about 17,000 Chinese and 12,500 Indians.\nidward Feuz came from Switzerland in 1903, has spent his life as a\nmountain guide in the Rockies. Two years ago, to celebrate his 81st birthday,\nhe rose at 3 A.M. and climbed 11,600-foot Mt. Temple. During his\ncareer, he was the first man to stand on the top of at least 50 peaks in the\nRockies and Selkirks. He lives in Golden, B.C., where his father and two\nbrothers were also guides. His wife is Swiss, too, and they have two daughters.\n\"I saw this was a country with lots of opportunity,\" he says. \"If you\nwork hard and live decent you can make a fortune.\"\nNo one knows how many Swiss there are in Canada; census takers\ncount them as French, German or Italian according to their mother tongue.\nBut they date from Loyalist days and one of their number, Sir Frederick\nHaldimand, was Governor-in-Chief of Canada from 1778 to 1784.\nN\nick Vcntola had just\nfinished first grade when the war\nclosed his school at Bari, on the\nsunny Adriatic. He spent his boyhood working in a bakery, came\nto Canada in 1951. Unable to\nconvince anyone an 18-year-old\ncould have 10 years' experience as\na baker, he took a job as a dishwasher, taught himself English by\nbuying all three Toronto newspapers\nevery day. Four years ago, he\nopened La Sem, a colorful patisserie\nwhere he serves 20 kinds of ice\ncream and exotic Italian pastries to\nas many as 2,000 customers a\nweekend. He took his Canadian-\nItalian wife to Italy for their\nhoneymoon, was charged $7 an\nhour for a gondola ride in Venice.\n\"They could tell we were Canadians\nby our clothes,\" he says.\nThe 450,351 Italians in Canada\nin 1961 have been joined by more\nthan 130,000 immigrants since,\novertaking the Ukrainians as the\nfourth largest national group\nin the country. <\nWeekend Magazine No. 26,1967 - 9\n Our Young People, Expo and 1967\nSOMETHING MAGICAL HAS HAPPENED\nBy Harry J. Boyle\nOur cover picture wai token in front of the\nPeople   Tree   at   the   Canadian   Pavilion   by\nWeekend Magazine's Frank Prazak\nExpo has something to say to the\nkids of today\u2014like the ones in\nthese pictures taken on the site.\nAnd they dig its message. It shows\nthem the world as it should\u2014 and\ncould\u2014be. A place for all men,\nwith the artificial barriers down.\nStop talking and try listening to\nyouth for a change, urges writer\nHarry J. Boyle. He did and\nhe liked what he heard\nt \u00a5\\i\nPhotos by Bruno Massenet\n10 - Weekend Magazine No. 26. 1967\n MOST PEOPLE like talking. Few of\nus enjoy listening. In this Centennial\nYear by listening you may discover\nsome amazing qualities in the so called\n\"lost\" youth. They're having a ball\nand finding out a surprising amount\nof exciting things about themselves,\nthe 20th Century and Canada.\nFor a time 1967 had the earmarks\nof a horror. Canadians dreaded more\nsoul searching about identity. Politicians were all set for a blather orgy\nabout John A. and Sir Wilfrid with no\nintention of emulation'. January of\n1968 promised to leave the country\nlooking like a carnival ground the day\nafter the event, with most people feeling like temperance secretaries with\nhangovers.\nIt's not going to be that way at all.\nSomething magical has happened to\nmake up for the picket-fence painting, the weary TV documentaries and\nthe patriotic pump priming. Expo happened as a catalyst for youth.\nBefore the year is over the gloom-\nand-doom people may discover young\npeople are not just a collection of acid\nheads and hippies with a concentrated\ndosage of French-Canadians thirsting\nfor separatism. Nor will the remainder\nbe what editorial writers dub as \"old,\nyoung people who are looking for lifetime security.\"\nA majority of Canadians are less\nthan 25 years old. Bewildered by history and the inconsistency of an older\ngeneration, they are finding answers\nin the environment of today. They\nwelcome individual fulfilment in place\nof group conformity. Others may be\nless revolutionary in outlook but are\nnevertheless disturbed by the inadequacies of a consumer-oriented society. They are less inclined than their\nparents to accept American society as\na norm, but also feel that a narrow\nsense of nationalism can lead to folly\nin a world where men must be equal\nin more than pious platitudes.\nIf you're a parent worried about\nthe communications gap and the irresponsibility of youth not accepting\na role, try watching them against the\nbackground of Expo. Here you find\nthey fit in to the world they yearn\nfor, which is really the one Marshall\nMcLuhan says we're living in but srub-\nConlinued on next page\nm i\nMl\nWeekend Magazine No. 28, 1967 -11\n Our Young People, Expo and 1967\nSOMETHING MAGICAL HAS HAPPENED\nBy Harry J. Boyle\nExpo has something to say to the\nkids of today\u2014like the ones in\nthese pictures taken on the site.\nAnd they dig its message. It shows\nthem the world as it should\u2014and\ncould\u2014be. A place for all men,\nwith the artificial barriers down.\nStop talking and try listening to\nyouth for a change, urges writer\nHarry J. Boyle. He did and\nhe liked what he heard\nOur cover picture wai token in front of the\nPeople   Tree   at   the   Canadian   Pavilion   by\nWeekend Magazine's Frank  Prazok\ni vAt\nPhotos by Bruno Massenet\n10 - Weekend Magazine No. W, 1967\n MOST PEOPLE like talking. Few of\nus enjoy listening. In this Centennial\nYear by listening you may discover\nsome amazing qualities in the so called\n\"lost\" youth. They're having a ball\nand finding out a surprising amount\nof exciting things about themselves,\nthe 20th Century and Canada.\nFor a time 1967 had the earmarks\nof a horror. Canadians dreaded more\nsoul searching about identity. Politicians were all set for a blather orgy\nabout John A. and Sir Wilfrid with no\nintention of emulation'. January of\n1968 promised to leave the country\nlooking like a carnival ground the day\nafter the event, with most people feeling like temperance secretaries with\nhangovers.\nIt's not going to be that way at all.\nSomething magical has happened to\nmake up for the picket-fence painting, the weary TV documentaries and\nthe patriotic pump priming. Expo happened as a catalyst for youth.\nBefore the year is over the gloom-\nand-doom people may discover young\npeople are not just a collection of acid\nheads and hippies with a concentrated\ndosage of French-Canadians thirsting\nfor separatism. Nor will the remainder\nbe what editorial writers dub as \"old,\nyoung people who are looking for lifetime security.\"\nA majority of Canadians are less\nthan 25 years old. Bewildered by history and the inconsistency of an older\ngeneration, they arc finding answers\nin the environment of today. They\nwelcome individual fulfilment in place\nof group conformity. Others may be\nless revolutionary in outlook but are\nnevertheless disturbed by the inadequacies of a consumer-oriented society. They are less inclined than their\nparents to accept American society as\na norm, but also feel that a narrow\nsense of nationalism can lead to folly\nin a world where men must be equal\nin more than pious platitudes.\nIf you're a parent worried about\nthe communications gap and the irresponsibility of youth not accepting\na role, try watching them against the\nbackground of Expo. Here you find\nthey fit in to the world they yearn\nfor, which is really the one Marshall\nMcLuhan says we're living in but stub-\nConlinued on next page\nwm\nWeekend Megazine No. 26, 1967-11\n Constipation\nBecause\nitActually\nAids Digestion\nWhen you're constipated, you may\nalso suffer from \"fat\" indigestion.\nYour system just doesn't digest\nfatty foods properly and you get\nthat over-full bloated feeling that\nmakes constipation even more distressing.\nTo get real relief from constipation, take tile laxative that millions\ndepend on to keep \"regular.\" It's\nmore than a laxative for it actually\nhelps you digest both fats and proteins . . CAROID AND BILE\nSALTS TABLETS.\nCAROID AND BILE SALTS\nTABLETS act so gently\u2014yet so\nthoroughly\u2014never cause cramping\nor griping. They contain: 1. Selected laxative ingredients that\ngently give you a full bowel movement. 2. The exclusive ingredient\n\"CAROID\"* helps you digest proteins. 3. The \"Bile Salts\" increase\nthe flow of liver biie to help you\ndigesc fat.\nSpecial Introductory Offer: Save\n30p! Send 20p to P.O. Box 3000,\nDept. CW, Aurora, Ontario. We\nwill send you a regular 50(S size of\nCAROID AND BILE SALTS\nTABLETS. Send today. Offer Good\nOnly in Canada.\n\u2022\"Caroid'Tradc Mark ReR. for a digestive ferment of Carica Papaya.\n12 - Weekend Magazine No. 26. 1967\nSOMETHING MAGICAL\nHAS HAPPENED\nContinued from preceding page\nbornly refuse to acknowledge.\nThe whole Expo picture is a new\nexperience for most of us. Older\npeople have a habit of merely comparing it to past experience without\nattempting an understanding. Try letting gol Let the sights, sounds and\nsmells create an environment you approach, like a skin diver in a Bahamian cove. Then you're ready to join\nthe young ones. But look at them without blinders. Above all, listen to them.\nThere are busloads and trainloads\nof ruddy-cheeked school girls and\nboys with semaphore ears that stand\nout against their cropped hair who are\nan answer to the long-haired ones.\nNuns disclose ecumenically-released\nankles as black habits brush against\ntwinkly girls with astonishingly long\nlegs that stalk under minute miniskirts.\nOthers from farms and other country\nplaces are wearing dresses and suits\nstill showing mail-order wrinkles.\nPrim young men from monasteries\nwalk beside sedate young men from\nthe cloisters of business corporations.\nSprinkled through the whole group\nthere parades the rag, tag and bobtail\nmercenaries of the protesting ones\nwith their tight denim pants, salvage-\nsale costumes, the swaying long hair\nof both sexes and the mismatched\nsplashes of color like marching banners. Emerging above all is the pant\nsuit, armor plating against chilly St.\nLawrence breezes but above all a kind\nof uniform in practical design with\nhues that make a rainbow look conventional.\nPut a check rein on prejudice. See\nthem objectively. It's a new generation\nwhich already outnumbers us. They're\nturned on, no matter what the costume may be. This is a world they\nunderstand and move in without hesitation.\nThey agree with Marshall McLuhan\nwhen he says, \"Expo is a composite\nX-ray image of the world we live in.\nA mosaic image of our new technology. An art form. It shows us things\nof our environment that would otherwise remain invisible.\"\nPerhaps this is what Dick and Jane\nhave been trying to say for a long\ntime. There's a lesson in those turned-\non expressions and their appreciation\nof this world of senses, shapes, dimensions and tactility. Do you remember\nnow how hard it was to keep Dick\nand Jane plodding down the linear\nline of school texts when thc television\nset was waiting for them with a world\nof simultaneous happening? They've\nalready seen the devastation of a\nbomb, felt the paralyzing grip of the\nCuban crisis, witnessed the assassination and funeral of a president, felt\nthe sensation of a man treading the\nweightless void of outer space, and so\nmuch more. They've absorbed it as\nwell without defensiveness.\nThey know what electronic satellites\nmean. It's just a way of people talking to each other. It can show people\nto people. But, they add, you have to\nwant to talk before it can happen.\nThey're afraid we'll debase it to trying\nto convince underdeveloped countries\nto get busy and buy up the superfluous luxury items which threaten to\ninundate our own society.\nIn our world a fair or an exhibition\nis the place for a crazy, round geodesic dome or a structured nest of\ndwellings called Habitat. Architects\nwill commiserate with their clients\nabout waste space and lack of functionality and go back to designing flat,\nplain, plattered filing cabinets of\napartment and office buildings. Not\nDick and Jane.\n\"Why not? Isn't living and being\nhappy more important than all that\nnonsense?\"\nIn another age the established order\nwould simply wait for the youngsters\nto mature into appreciating time-honored conventions. This time it will not\nhappen. Ask them and listen to what\nthey say, these turned-on members of\na new generation.\n\"Why do you like Expo?\"\nThe girl who answered was not a\nhippy. She was slim and proper in her\ndress and manner, her high cheekbones glistening in a soap-scrubbed\nface that betrayed Slavic ancestry.\n\"Because this is the first real thing\nI've seen. This is the way the world\nshould be. It's just real to met\"\nHer world, because she is barely 20,\nbegan, in a sense, on the day the atom\nwas fractured. The environment was\nadvanced precipitously by an anomalous and destructive peace mission in\n bombing Hiroshima in 1945. It was\ntransformed further when thc first\nsatellite moved around the outer space\nfringes of earth. Man knew then he\nhad conquered the tyranny of distance\nas far as communications were concerned. If man debased thc importance and potential for understanding\nthe satellite into commercial and espionage purposes, youth hasn't.\nThis is their world. One-third of the\nCanadians living in 1961 were less\nthan IS. Statisticians say it's safe to\nassume more than 50 per cent of Canadians alive today are less than 25.\nIn other words, most Canadians have\nno ties with the pre-1939 world. They\ngrew up with the promise of peace\nfrom the United Nations and the\nsanity of man, and have witnessed a\nsuccession of hot and cold wars and\nconfrontations conducted like Russian\nroulette in thc shadow of a totally destructive force.\nThe change-over from a mechanical\nto an electrical world cut the umbilical cord of nostalgia. Ancestral memories, thc Empire, the hardships of religious, political and economic persecution, pioneer days and the Depression are curiosities like antiques. The\nequating of financial success with virtue and according thc spoils of war\nand peace to the strongest simply does\nnot make sense to them. They distrust\nreligious tenets which are loudly\npreached and often not practised. If\nthey have not learned a spiritual\nethos they are at least enemies of\nhypocrisy.\nThey don't have to wear the symbols of protest to have protest in their\nhearts.\n\"What's the hang-up in communication?\" demanded the young computer\nexpert, smarting under criticism of the\nfact one of the computers at Expo\nhad been fouled up by soaring attendance figures. \"What really is the difference between black men and brown\nmen and white men? They all want\nthe same thing. The hell of it is that\nwith our technology we could help\neverybody get it. The trouble, as I see\nit, is we won't help any other color\nunless they promise to turn into\npseudo-whites.\"\nThe lack of basic difference in\npeople becomes real to them at Expo.\nPeople from all over the world arc\ncoming to Canada and they're excited\nabout what they see. They're not different. Thc girl from Thailand or\nBurma and the Czech girl and the\nDutch girl born in Indonesia are\nsimply human beings. A soft-talking\nAmerican from Georgia whose parents carry a flag of fear in the face\nof all blacks is intrigued by an African co-ed.\nThey're shedding traces of inferiority. The boy from Pouce Coupe, B.C.,\ngrew up on the Alaska Highway thinking Americans from Texas, Wyoming\nand Alabama were supermen, but he's\nnot so sure after a day of watching\nEthiopians and their tough little king.\nA Rosedale lad, whose father is fanatical about French-Canadians and\ndidn't want hi..) to even go to Montreal, has found something like contagion for French-Canadians,\n\"This city is the real, living end of\nit all. You have to give them credit.\nIt's not just Expo; they're really living\nin Montreal. I wish I could find a job\nhere.\"\nHe had not inherited prejudices\nabout villages dominated by church\nspires, simple habitants, domineering\ncures and separatists with anarchy and\nhatred in their hearts. He says it's thc\ngreatest city in the world, and if Jean\nDrapeau can accomplish this maybe\nhe should take a crack at bringing\nCanada into the present.\nValues?\nWho's going to defend our set of\nvalues to this group of young people?\nThey've seen our values on television,\nfrom the killing of a statesman they\ncould identify with to the outlines of\nVietnamese bodies frying in flamethrower blasts. They've compared the\nappeals for food for starving children\nwith the glossy lures for tempting delicacies for the pampered dogs and cats\nof North American affluence.\nThey haven't lost an instinct for\nvalues. They are formulating new\nstandards of values. They respond to\nPaul Goodman and make his book\nGrowing Up Absurd a campus bestseller. They echo him when he says\n\"Youth has resigned from the organized system of production sales and\nits culture.\"\nA young man from Saskatchewan,\njust graduated from university, rejected the offer of a new car from his\nfather. He is a descendant of refugee\nGalicians.\n\"My father was hurt because he\nwanted to prove through me that he\nwas a success. He had to clean offices\nat night to get to school. It was bound\nto happen, but he hasn't listened to\nme in 10 years. I want to make it on\nmy own and he got mad when I said\nI was going to join the Company Of\nYoung Canadians.\"\nHe paused and said finally, \"He\nwas afraid if I worked with the Indians it would make Premier [Ross]\nThatcher mad and hurt his business.\nI said to hell with it. I'll go to Africa.\"\nThen there are the doubters about\nyoung people.\n\"They're delinquent and dirty,\" said\nContinued on next page\nDoes it\nseem too good\nto be true?\nOne day of summer\nis no different from any\nother day of summer.\nTampax tampons,\nworn internally,\nmake it possible.\nThey let you high dive,\nswim or sun\nno matter what day it is.\nBetter yet, you feel so free,\nso fresh, so cool\nand comfortably confident\u2014\nin or out of water.\nAvailable in\n3 absorbency-sizes:\nRegular, Super and Junior.\nThe way to total freedom is\nwith Tampax tampons.\nWhy\u2014it may even be your best\nsummer yetl\nDEVELOPED BT A OOCIOB\nUSED IT M.U.I0NS Of WOHIH\nTAMPAX TAMPONS ARE MADE ONLY  BY\nCANADIAN TAMPAX CORPORATION LTD..\nBARRtE.   ONTARIO.\nWeekend Magazine No. 26,1967-13\n SOMETHING MAGICAL\nHAS HAPPENED\nContinued from preceding page\nthe stylish matron from Rosedale, in\nToronto, \"and they live in awful\nhovels.\"\nHer daughter went to Montreal with\nfive others after a painful confrontation. I found her in a rented apartment, sharing food and accommodation with the five and working as hat-\ncheck girl. She was sitting on a pile\nof cushions under a very large photo\nof Humphrey Bogart.\n\"He was gentle inside, but tough\nenough not to get pushed around,\"\nshe said.\nThe furnishings were sparse with\nthe accent on mattresses, cushions and\nrugs. There were two record players.\nThe boy from Oakville, Ont., explained: \"Possessions are the traps of\nold folks. My God, my parents bought\na new hi-fi last year. They never play\nthe monster. It was better than the\nold one which they put in the rec\nroom which they never use. Here we\nhave what we need, not what we're\nbrainwashed into thinking we need.\"\nA long-haired 23-year-old, he can\nget a job in a band if he cuts that\nmane.\n\"Her mother is worried about her.\nDid she tell you anything about herself. This girl was raised in a home\nwhere there was a marry-go-round.\nShe could wake up in the morning\nand wonder who her father was going\nto be for that year. Who judges values\nand morals?\"\nPot? LSD?\n\"If you want to smoke pot or take\na trip we have a house rule. Do it\noutside. Not in Ihe pad. No one will\ncriticize you. We just keep it outside.\"\nA 20-year-old University of Western Ontario dropout exclaimed, \"With\nthat crazy turncd-on Expo, who needs\nacid? It moves you.\"\nThey paint, sketch, write poetry,\nlisten to music, mostly sitar, and play\nhand drums. They work when they\nneed bread. They're not trying to invade   the   creative   or   commercial\nworld. They do it for enjoyment and\nwhen the fine weather comes they\nwill \"really go and live in that place\nout there on the river.\"\nNo pictures, please!\n\"We don't want to haunt our families. They're O.K., but they think\nwe're dropouts from society. We're\nnot really. We've just dropped out of\nthe part we don't like. Everybody is\ngoing to have to do that or the world\nwill end up, as Ezra Pound said, being\nan insane asylum.\"\nThat's a stiff dose for an older generation to stomach. The young people\nhave some bitter experiences ahead,\nand yet you can't simply write them\noff. Consider the fear our group has\nof leisure.\nAugust Heckshcr, Commissioner of\nParks in New York, did what ever so\nmany of his predecessors overlooked.\nHe made Central Park an oasis of\npleasure in the evening by simply illuminating the place properly.\n\"Play,\" he says, \"is at the heart of\nleisure society. This should not seem\nstrange; indeed, it should seem very\nobvious \u2014 except that a genius for\nplay has been conspicuously absent\nfrom modern leisure. This leisure has\nbeen marked by entertainment, amusement and distraction. It has been\nmarked by work in the disguise of\npleasure and by massed, competitive\nassaults in the form of games. All this\nis fine so far as it goes; it is, after all,\na part of the way people spend free\ntime when it comes to them in quantity. But it will begin to pall \u2014 the\nhobbies, the travel, the television\nshows, the spectator and even the participant sports, unless there is a sense\nthat life itself is a kind of a game, a\nconviction that everything we do is a\nhalf-serious search for new forms, thc\nembodiment in new fictions of the\nelusive reality we can never quite\ntouch.\"\nThe \"elusive reality\" will be captured in part by many young Canadians this year. They carry no tire\nsome baggage in the form of cliches\nabout identity because they simply\naccept themselves as Canadians.\nWhether they demonstrate their alienation in hippy ways or not, a majority\nof those less than 25 years old are\ndifferent than their parents. They are\naware of thc relevance gap, and point\nout that the majority of academic education is simply irrelevant in an electronic world.\nThe young, and even not so young,\nare gentle because they feel toughness\nsolidified by the cliches of national\npolicies is bullying us into a holocaust\nover Vietnam. They're tough enough,\non the other hand, to advocate love\nin a pure and not erotic sense and\ndemonstrate in gatherings called \"be-\nins\" which are probably the most frustrating thing they can do to older\npeople. It takes toughness to make\nand sell flowers as a token commercial gesture in a computerized, mass-\nproduction-oriented society under the\nharassing hoofs of middle-aged policemen discharging the inherited fears\nand prejudices of middle-aged law\nmakers.\nMainly they are plaintive when they\nsay there is a \"communications gap\"\nwith older people. These young people\nwho blossom in the freedom of Expo\nwant to talk but they also want someone to listen.\nIf you listen you'll be rewarded\nwith the knowledge that age does not\nautomatically make a \"communications gap.\" There's solid hope in thc\nfact that 500 campus editors meeting\nin Washington applauded Walter\nI.ippman, almost to thc exclusion of\nall the other prominent middle-aged\nspeakers. The others wanted to tell\nyouth. The 77-year-old columnist listened and he sensed their obsession\nwith what he called, \"the imaginative\nfeelings for what really matters to\nhuman beings, whether they travel in\njet planes or on foot.\"<\n14 - Weekend Magazine No. 26,1967\n Stan's a goer.\nWherever he goes,\nhe can take his\n10 lb., battery-powered\nPhilco portable.\nMike burned up\nwhen tubes burned out.\nPhilco's answer:\nPatented Cool Chassis\nconstruction.\nAdrienne\nwanted \"something\nwith chic.\"\nShe flipped for\nPhilco's new\nFurniture Look.\nDave's thrifty.\nPhilco gave him\nbig-screen\nentertainment\nat the portable\nTV price.\nGrace's days were gray\nPhilco brightened them\nwith exciting,\nportable 20\/20 Color.\nI Philco thinks of you first\n^ 1 in portable TV- color or black & white\nTwenty-four new portable TV models in tive screen sizes, including Philco's 19 color portable and ril   I |       ^\"*\"C\"~\"i\ntransistorized, battery and\/or AC-powered 9\" model. Features include patented cool-chassis con- +^ \u25a0   \u25a0 ' \u25a0 \u25a0V\u00bb*V^\nstruction, power transformer, pre-set fine tuning and fully transistorized signal system. All models .**\u25a0\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab <kr<\/\/\/\/is,;- Yu-m\/i<,ny,\nbacked by Philco's famous warranty: one full year on every part, plus 90 days' free labour, rwico cosra\u00abrio\u00ab of c\u00abmjm UwiID. oo\u00bb whs. mtum\n Andy O'Brien Says    MEET THE\nThe net bulges as Gaylord Powless, around whom Canadian team will be built for the all-Indian lacrosse tourney at Expo (Aug. 4-6), breaks through in a\n16 - Weekend Magazine No. 26,19tr\n MARVELLOUS MOHAWK\nworkout against his home team (Oshawa Green Gaels) with which he set 266-point scoring mark in 1966.\nIT WAS just 100 years ago that lacrosse, by\nan act passed in our then brand-new Parliament,\nbecame our national sport. So how better to mark\nthe anniversary of this date than to show you the\nman who is perhaps the best player in the sport\ntoday?\nGaylord Powless, a full-blooded Mohawk from\nthe Six Nations Reserve at Brantford, was voted\nCanada's \"outstanding Indian athlete\" and winner\nof the Tom Longboat Trophy in 1965 at the age\nof 18. Last year he made a shambles of Canadian\njunior lacrosse records by scoring or assisting in\nscoring 266 goals as he paced Oshawa Green\nGaels to an unprecedented,, fourth-consecutive\nMinto (junior title) Cup win.\nAround this spectacular, 185-pound Mohawk\nwill be built the Canadian team that will participate in the North American all-Indian tournament\nat Expo's Automotive Stadium in Montreal\n(Aug. 4-6) against the best Indian players in\nthe United States. In keeping with the historic\nsignificance of the event, the centuries-old Indian\ngame will revert for duration of the tournament\nfrom \"box lacrosse\" (played mainly by six-man\nteams in hockey arenas) to field lacrosse, with 10\nmen to a side on a playing area 100 by 60 yards.\nFittingly, too, Powless will compete in the international meet under the coaching of his famous\nfather, Ross Powless, himself a two-time Longboat Trophy winner.\nWhat will the Expo crowds see in Gaylord?\nHis coach at Oshawa, lim Bishop, says: \"They\nwill see a rare combination of athlete who is\nfiercely competitive yet remains a team player,\nas his assists total indicates. In a punishing game\nthat calls for almost sadistic training to keep in\nchampionship calibre condition, he actually reacts\nbetter when he's being knocked around. He has\nthe best co-ordination and reflexes of any athlete\nin any sport I have ever seen.\"\nThe Expo crowds will see something else. In\nlacrosse the face-off is much more a key play\nthan in hockey where a centre may get the \"draw\"\nonly to see an opponent take over the puck almost immediately. Getting the draw in lacrosse\nis more important, because if the centre gets it\nthis usually assures his side of possession for\nsome time \u2014 perhaps all the way to a goal. In\ncentre Gaylord Powless viewers will see the best\n\"draw man\" in lacrosse.\nIt's an old game, and it holds your interest.\nOnce it held the interest of some English soldiers\ntoo much. A friendly game between Chippewas\nand Sacs was held on lune 4, 1763, outside the\nMichigan fort of Michillimackinac in honor of\nGeorge Ill's birthday. As the game progressed the\npeople inside the fort became more interested and\ncame out to get a better look. Suddenly the\nIndians dropped their lacrosse sticks and grabbed\ntomahawks. Only three in the fort survived \u2014\nand the game's popularity dropped for a while.\nTo younger eyes, the game is also incredibly\nsimple. Because the only offsides occur at face-\noffs, a goaler can pass from crease to crease, so\nyou could have a score against an opposing team\nfour seconds after the goaler makes a stop in the\nother end. The game may also be faster at times\nthan hockey simply because a fast runner can\ntravel 100 yards more quickly than a hockey\nplayer from a standing start. The skater would\ntake over after 100 yards, but that's the length of\nthe field. The mixture of track, football contact\nand flying wood adds up to training demands\nthree times harder than in hockey.\nAs for Gaylord Powless he's looking forward to\nthe Expo tourney for a special reason. \"It will\nprove to TV-brainwashed people,\" he says, deadpan, \"that Indians don't always lose.\"<\nWeekend Magazine No. 26.1967-17\n 18 - Wevkend Magazine No. ?6, 79*57\n It Walks\nBy Night\nBeing the further adventures of White Fang,\nmy unspeakable three-year-old daughter\nBy Paul Rush\nWeekend Mogozlne\nIT WAS PERHAPS 2 A.M. when I had this strange dream \u2014\nsomething small and heavy was walking across my face. I\ngroaned and rolled over on my sleeping side. Suddenly I was\nawake.\nSomething, I thought, something small and heavy is standing\non my left ear.\n1 looked up, cautiously. Of course, it was the loathsome\ntraveller, White Fang, my three-year-old daughter, looking for\na place to sleep.\n\"Why don't you sleep in your own bed?\" I asked.\n\"I can't,\" she said. \"There's a Thing in my bed.\"\n\"What kind of thing?\"\n\"I don't know, Daddy. I don't know what a thing looks like.\"\n\"Then how do you know the thing is there?\"\n\"Because it wet thc bed.\"\nSometimes, such as 2 A.M., it's better not to match wits with\nliny children. I moved to the edge of the bed and White Fang\nsnuggled down, all elbows and feet, between my wife and myself.\n\"Is it morning time yet?\" said White Fang.\n\"No,\" I said. \"It's bed time. Go to sleep.\"\n\"Daddy?\"\nI grunted.\n\"Daddy, can I play with Julie?\"\n(Julie, aged 11 months, is a bit of a martyr. When White Fang\ntalks of playing she means games like \"row the boat\", in which\nJulie plays the part of the boat.)\n\"No,\" I said. \"Julie's asleep.\"\n\"She wasn't asleep when I poked her.\"\n\"Don't poke her. Don't touch her. Don't think about her.\nThink of sleep. Close your eyes. Shut your mouth. Sleep.\"\nI closed my eyes, shut my mouth and pulled the pillow over\nmy head. White Fang rustled about a little and then all was\nquiet. Too quiet.\nI came out from under the pillow and propped myself up on\nmy good elbow. Then I heard this strange creaking noise. Like\nfurniture being moved. I looked out into the hall. A small figure\nthundered by carrying a large bundle.\n\"Drop that!\" I shouted.\nThe figure stopped, the bundle dropped. Then thc bundle gave\na loud \"gleep\" and started crawling away.\n\"Jenifer,\" I said, using the real name of White Fang. \"Where\narc you taking Julie?\"\n\"She wants to play.\"\n\"How do you know?\"\n\"I poked her and she said yes.\"\nI got out of bed. \"Listen,\" I said. \"Julie doesn't talk, she\ngleeps.' And she doesn't 'gleep' yes or no, she just 'glecps.' Now\nyou start acting like a human being. It's 2 A.M. ...\"\n\"Is it morning time yet?\" said White Fang.\n\"Aaarghhh,\" I said.\nI stomped down the hall and grabbed Julie by the scruff of\nher sleepers as she nosed toward the stairs. She started gleeping\nlike a Geigcr counter. Then my wife woke up.\n\"Why did you get Julie and Jenifer up?\" she asked. \"It's just\n2 A.M.\"\n\"Let's have breakfast,\" said White Fang.\n\"Aaarghh,\" said I.\n\"Gleep,\" said Julie. <\nIllustration by Ceorgine Strathy\nwhen\nyou're at\nexpo\ni^tmf\u20acJ<eM^)\nLewis P. Beers,\nManager\nSupreme comfort. Wonderful food.\nIn the Casino, one of North America's finest dance orchestras.\n\u2022 18 Hole Championship Golf Course. \u2022 Fishing Lodge and Cabins.\n\u2022 Salt water heated Swimming Pool, Lido Beach, Tennis Courts.\n\u2022 Horseback Riding, Putting Greens, Lawn Bowling, Croquet.\nRATES: from $23 a day, including meals, plus tax. For reservations-\nphone manager now. (418) 665-3701.\nHOW TO GET THERE FROM MONTREAL\nBy Air: Quebecalr direct to Charlevoix Airport or Air Canada to Quebec.\nBy Motor Coach: Provincial Transport.\nBy Train: Canadian National to Pointe-au-Pic.\nBy Highway: from Montreal, take Route 2 or 9 to Quebec,\nthen Route 15 to Murray Bay, Pointe-au-Pic, Quebec.\nFor further information, reservations and full colour folders write:\nHOTEL DIVISION\nCANADA STEAMSHIP LINES\nP.O. Box 100, Montreal 3. Tel.: (514) 288-0231\nWeekend Magazine No. 26. 1967 - 79\n William Hind Painted\nWILLIAM HIND (1833-1888) is the forgotten painter of Canada's past \u2014 but thanks to\na couple of Canadian curators, he is making\nthe scene in centennial year.\nJ. Russell Harper, chief curator of the Mc-\nCord Museum, McGill University, and Kenneth Saltmarche, director of the Willistead Art\nGallery of Windsor, are the men behind an exhibition of Hind's paintings that is touring the\ncountry.\nEntitled A Confederation Painter in Canada,\nthe exhibition is appearing this month at the\nToronto Public Library. Next month it moves\nto the Norman McKenzie Art Gallery, Regina,\nand in September it appears at the Art Gallery\nof Greater Victoria. The exhibition has already\nbeen shown in the East.\nHarper, who became interested in Hind after\nhe found some of his paintings stuck away in\nstorage at the McCord Museum, says the\npainter has caught the spirit of Canadians at\nthe time of Confederation. Hind painted\nminers in the Cariboo, duck hunters on the\nPrairies, deep sea divers during the pioneer\ndays of the Atlantic cable, and Indians in\nLabrador.\nHe travelled all over Canada, but until Saltmarche got the idea of putting a Hind show\non the road, few Canadians had heard of him.\nConfederation Canada\nPublic Archives, Ottawa\nProspector Panning For Gold, Cariboo\nBreaking A Road In Manitoba!)\n HaaaaaBaaaaaaa^aaaT,*a\u00bb',\u00bbiaBa\u00bbaaaaaaaaaa\u00abBaaaalaiaaaaaaaa\u00bb.    -\nDiary Page For Tuesday, May 10: Three Men In A Boat <\nAnd it's taken him 100 years to gam publk recognition\nWeekend Magazine No. 26, 1967 - 27\n EXPERTS SAY:\n\"stainless steel\nhas the edge,\nnfM...Mmth-Rit\u00a3 98\nhas the point\"\nonly 98c\nMr. Gerald Johnston, manager of one of\nthe largest testing laboratories in Canada,\noperated by Warnock Hersey Company\nLtd., says: \"Our extensive tests at tbe\nNorth-Rite plant have proven tbe superiority of their new Stainless Steel point over\nthe brass points. It eliminates ink leaks on\nhands, clothing and paper.\"\nNorth-Rite \"98\" is the first 98C pen in Canada to adopt the\nStainless Steel bail and socket instead of old fashioned brass.\nStarts faster - writes smoother - writes for miles!\nMmthRitE\nKl COMfAHI THA7 MAKtS A P0IH7 OF OUAIIlr.\nNew for Hemorrhoid Sufferers!\n12 Suppositories for hemorrhoids\nNupercainal\n12 Suppositoires pour Mrnorrotdes\nPuis nain\nto sleep\nNupercainal Suppositories give\nlong-lasting relief from pain!\nNupercainal Suppositories concentrate on the pain of hemorrhoids! Nupercainal contains an effective local anesthetic that\nquickly relieves soreness, burning and itching.\nIn minutes, prolonged relief begins. Soreness, discomfort disappear. Pain actually goes to sleep.\nFor years, Nupercainal in ointment form has been known and\nrecommended for its ability to relieve pain. Now it's even more\neffective than ever for hemorrhoid sufferers, in easy to use\nsuppository form.\nNot only do Nupercainal Suppositories concentrate on the pain\nof hemorrhoids, they contain ingredients which soothe and\npromote healing as well.\nNupercainal Suppositories (with handy pocket case) or\nNupercainal Ointment  available at your pharmacy.\n22 \u25a0 Weekend Magazine No. 26,1967\nACCORDING TO\nDoyle\nA\nMadeleine holds wheel as she and Doyle wear vintage clothes to go with car.\nI Was Dolled Up And Let Down\n\"YOU DO a lot of talking,\" said the\nman in the next office, \"about centennial projects. But what's yours?\"\n\"My project?\"\n\"Yes. You haven't hooked a rug,\"\nsaid he accusingly. \"You haven't crocheted a Canadian flag. You haven't\neven dressed up in a Canadian costume. You haven't ...\"\n\"Hold it!\" I interrupted. 'Take a\nlook at me in centennial finery.\"\nI gave him this picture.\n\"A wedding suit worn by a Manitoba bride in 1905, that's what I'm\nwearing,\" I told him. \"That suit came\nfrom Neepawa. And the woman with\nme is wearing a mantle that's even\nolder. The late 1890s. It came from\nQuebec and ...\"\n\"What a beauty!\" exclaimed T.M.I.\nT.N.O.\n\"Her?\" I asked. \"Or me?\"\n\"The car,\" said he, \"What a beauty!\nWho owns it?\"\n\"I also had on high laced boots,\" I\nsaid. \"And there are darling parasols\nto go ...\" .\n\"The car,\" he interrupted. \"It's a\nmodel T Ford, isn't it? What year and\nwho owns it?\"\nSo I had to talk cars instead of\nclothes.\nAs a matter of fact, the car IS a\nbeauty. A 1917 touring car. lack Mc-\nGuigan, the Winnipegger who owns\nit, is the president of the Manitoba\nClassic And Antique Auto Club, and\nhe has four other old Fords, a model\nA phaeton, a 1915 roadster, a 1915\ntouring and a 1926 coach.\nHis car hobby is what started his\nwife, Madeleine, on her hobby \u2014\nclothes of the era of the cars, or\nearlier.\n\"She has a turn-of-the-century\nbathing costume,\" I told the man in\nthe next office, \"with pantaloons and\nlong stockings. And she has men's\nsuits and hats and some jewelry and\neven some maids' aprons. And look\nat that beaded purse I'm holding. Isn't\nit . . . ?\"\n\"Look at those lamps!\" interrupted\nT.M.I.T.N.O. \"Gas lamps; I think\n1917 models were the last ones to use\ngas lamps.\"\nSo I stopped telling him about centennial clothes. Some people have no\nappreciation of old things!\nSure-Footed\nA certain mother says that from\nnow on, if she sees that her small son\nhas his shoes on the wrong feet, she's\nnot even going to mention it.\nOne morning he crawled out of bed\n wilh one bare foot and one with a shoe.\n\"Why didn't you take both your shoes off\nList night?\" she asked.\n\"You always get mad when I get them on\nthe wrong feet,\" was the answer. \"So I left one\non to make sure.\"\nShake A Leg\nIan Philp, a United\nChurch minister in Saskatchewan, is a friendly man\nwho enjoys the usual\nafter-service greetings he\nexchanges with his congregation.\nBut one Sunday he felt\nthat I HEY were enjoying\nit almost too much. They were laughing as\nthey came up to shake hands.\nFinally he looked behind and saw the church\njanitor's dog, paw extended to shake hands\nwith anyone who paused beside him.\nEating Like A Bird\nThe chickadee is, as any bird lover will tell\n>ou, a friendly chap who tames easily. So a\nhouseholder in Huntsville, Ont., wasn't too surprised when the chickadees he had been feeding finally became so tame that they came and\nlook peanuts from his hand.\nBut his chickadees turned out to be discrim-\ninating as well as friendly. Running out of his\nregular brand of peanuts, he held out a handful\nof the dietetic type that have had most of the\noil removed.\nImmediately a chickadee zoomed in and took\nraie and flew off with it.\nAlmost immediately he flew back with it,\ndropped it back with the rest and flew away.\nObviously, decided the bird lover, this bird\ndoesn't have to watch his weight.\nSigns Of The Times\nHetty McDonald, of Ottawa, sends along\nthis picture as her nomination of centennial\nyear's most popular sign.\nI was with six other sea rangers of SRS.\nAlhabaskan Crew when we came across it on\nloronto Island,\" she says. \"It was such a nice\nwitch from the usual Keep Off The Grass\nsigns that we had our picture taken with it,\"\nDoyle Klyn\nWeekend Magazine Women'f Editor\nNot the usual sort of sign and these Sea\nRangers just couldn't resist its invitation.\nf\n\\\n$S\u00a3fiC\n\u25a00tft<f\n\u00a3m\nStripe now has clinically tested fluoride in it.\nSo we can make the anti-cavity promises you've\ncome to .expect from a proven fluoride formula.\nPlus one new promise: Your kids will actually\nlike to hrush with Stripe.\nFluoride toothpaste can't help a kid\nif he doesn't use it.\nStripe\nFLUORIDE ml >\u2122<\u00bb\u00bb\"<    j\n URE THINGS\n. _.. _ Chorllt King - Weakand Mogoiine\nKebabs make interesting barbecue fare. These are (L to R) Luncheon Meat, Chicken-Pineapple, Mixed Grill, Japanese Shrimp, Lamb, and Pork Tenderloin.\n24 - Weekend Magazine No. \u00bb, >967\n ON A SKEWER\n\"DON'T KNOW why all the fuss about making\nkebabs,\" says a friend of mine. \"We've made them\non our barbecue for years. As long as we have a\ngood charcoal fire and some green twigs, bent coat\nhangers, chopsticks or even genuine metal skewers,\nwe're in business! After all, people all over the\nworld have been making kebabs for centuries. It's\nan easy way to good food.\"\nAnd she's right. Fortunately, shishkebabs are becoming more and more a part of our summertime\nliving \u2014 probably because they add so much to the\nvariety of barbecue meals.\nThe kinds of kebabs you can make are endless.\nAs a matter of fact, I have never tasted any combination of things strung on a skewer and cooked out of\ndoors I didn't like. And here are a few ideas I like\nparticularly. I'm sure they are only a beginning for\nyou. You'll go on finding more and more good\ncombinations.\nTESTED RECIPES\nMIXED GRILL\nVi Ib. ground beef\n3 tbsp. minced onion\n'A cup fine dry bread\ncrumbs\nIV2 tsp. minced parsley\nV2 tsp. salt\nVa tsp. pepper\n'A tsp. Worcestershire\nsauce\nI small egg\nMelted\n'A cup milk\nDash monosodium\nglutamate (optional)\nVeal kidney, cut up\nBacon\nCanned whole onions\nCanned whole\npotatoes\nBrown-antl-serve\nsausages, cut in half\nbutter\nCombine ground beef, minced onion, bread\ncrumbs, parsley, salt, pepper, Worcestershire sauce,\negg. milk and monosodium glutamate in a bowl.\nShape into small meat balls (no more than 1 inch in\ndiameter). Chill well.\nWrap each meat ball and each piece of kidney in\na half strip of bacon and string Ihem on large skewers alternately with canned onions, potatoes and\npieces of brown-and-serve sausages. (Allowing 3 meat\nballs per skewer, you should have enough for 8\nskewers.)\nBrush well with butter and broil over medium\nhot charcoal fire until all meat is cooked through.\nTurn often and brush with butter.\nBREADED SHRIMP\n12 cubes cooked ham\n12 mushroom caps\n1 cup fine dry bread\ncrumbs\nVi cup melted butter\nLemon wedges\nVi cup prepared\nmustard\nVs cup ketchup\nVi cup Worcestershire\nsauce\n1(> large raw shrimp,\nshelled and cleaned\nMix mustard, ketchup and Worcestershire sauce.\nAlternate shrimp, ham and mushroom caps on\nlarge skewers, allowing 4 shrimp, 3 ham cubes and\n1 mushroom caps per skewer. Brush both sides with\nmustard mixture. Roll in bread crumbs.\nBrush well with melted butter and put over moderately hot charcoal fire. Broil about 10 minutes or\nuntil shrimp are tender, brushing with butter often.\nServe with lemon wedges. (Serves 4.)\nMore recipes on next page\nSALADA \u2022 SHIRRIFF - QUALITY FOODS fSalada\nNowShirriffhas\n8 delicious ways\nto top ice cream.\nIf yours is a family with kids.. . then you know about dessert\nwarfare. That's when you try to get everybody to agree on one ice\ncream flavour for dessert.\nCourage Mom ... now you have 8 delicious ways to settle this\n... once and for all. First arm yourself with your family's\nfavourite flavours of Shirriff Sundae Toppings. (Don't forget,\nthere's a New Mint Chocolate). Next lay in a supply of ice cream.\nThen when it's \"What's-for-dessert-Mom?\" time ... surprise them.\nTake a roll call of their favourite ice cream sundaes. With 8\ndelicious Shirriff flavours to choose from, how can you miss?\nOr, why not let your gang 'mix-'n-match' fancy ice creams with\nShirriff Sundae Toppings?\nStock up on all 8 flavours of Shirriff Sundae Toppings soon.\nThey're great for settling a dessert war and tops for any ice cream.\nWeekend Magazine No. 26. (967 - 25\n '\u00a7e( th\ne \"Wy food energy that SUg    '\n'^\u25a0^.^e7z:z:ks\n\u00bb\"\"%>;\nGOOD FOOD\nContinued from preceding page\nLUNCHEON MEAT\n1-inch pieces cooked\ncorn on the cob\nMelted butter\n1-inch cubes canned\nluncheon meat\n1-inch pieces dill pickle\nAlternate meat, pickles and pieces of corn on\nskewers. Brush well with melted butter and broil\nover hot charcoal fire, brushing often with butter\nand turning often. Cook just until meat is browned,\nabout 5 minutes.\nLAMB\nlb. boneless leg or\nshoulder of lamb, cut\nin IV2-inch cubes\nLemon juice\ntsp. salt\n1 tsp. pepper\nI tsp. rosemary\nOlive oil\nCherry tomatoes\nSquares of green pepper\nMushroom caps\nDip cubes of lamb in lemon juice, tlicn sprinkle\nwith a mixture of salt, pepper and rosemary.\nSlip on skewers, brush with olive oil and broil over\nhot charcoal fire until meat is well browned, aboul\n15 minutes, Brush with oil and turn often. Slip pieces\nof meat off skewers with tongs, then replace Ihem,\nalternating with cherry tomatoes, green pepper and\nmushroom caps. Return to grill for a few minutes\njust to warm the vegetables. (Serves 6.)\nPORK TENDERLOIN\n7 medium onion, cut\nin wedges\n'A cup olive oil\n1 tbsp. ketchup\n1 tbsp. soy sauce\nV2 cup sherry\nV2 tsp, dry mustard\n'A  tsp, oregano\nCherry tomatoes (opt.)\n2 zucchini (each\nabout 6 inches\nlong), cut in I-imh\nslices\nOlive oil\n1V2 lb. pork tenderloin,\ncut in I-inch cubes\n1 tsp. salt\n'A tsp. pepper\nPut slices of zucchini in a bowl and cover wilh\nolive oil. let stand al least 1 hour.\nSprinkle cubes of pork with salt and pepper. Put\nthem, slices of zucchini and wedges of onion on\nskewers. Cook over fairly hot charcoal fire until\nmeat begins to brown.\nCombine remaining ingredients except tomatoes\nand use to brush meat and vegetables often. Turn\nskewers often. Be sure not to cook too quickly. Meat\nwill need about 25 minutes cooking time. Slip a\ncherry tomato on the end of each skewer just at the\nend of cooking. (Serves 4.)\nKITCHEN HINT\nCanadian Sugar Institute, 40a canaoa cemcht bloc, phili<ps souARf. MONtREftt\n26 - Weekend Megazlne No. 26, 1967\nIf you must prepare salad ahead, put dressing in\nbottom and add wedges of tomato. Tear greens\nin on top hut don't toss. Tomato will marinate\nnicely nnd raise greens out of dressing so that\nthey won't wilt. Toss salad just before serving-\n JAPANESE SHRIMP\nIV2 lb. large raw shrimp,     'A cup sherry\nshelled and cleaned        V2 cup soy sauce\n2 tsp. sugar\nSlip shrimp on skewers, alternating heads and tails\nas shown in our color picture. Combine remaining\ningredients and brush over shrimp. Cook over hot\ncharcoal fire, brushing constantly .\u00abith sauce until\nshrimp are tender, about 10 minutes.\nMIXED VEGETABLE SLAW\n2 cups shredded\ncabbage\n2 cups shredded red\ncabbage\nV2 cup chopped celery\nVi cup slivered green\npepper\nI medium carrot,\ngrated\n2 tbsp. thinly-sliced\ngreen onions\n'A cup sliced radishes\nV2 cup commercial\nsour cream\n1 tbsp. vinegar\nVi tsp. sugar\nV2 tsp. salt\nFresh-ground pepper\nToss vegetables together lightly and add mixture\nof sour cream, vinegar, sugar, salt and pepper. Chill\nuntil serving time. (Serves 4.)\nCHICKEN-PINEAPPLE\n1 up lemon juice\n\u2022A\nV2 cup soy sauce\n'A cup brown sugar\nI small clove garlic,\ncrushed\nV2 tsp. onion powder\n3 cups raw chicken\nchunks (3A to 1 inch\nsquare)\n3 cups fresh pineapple\ncubes (3A to 1 inch\nsquare)\nV* cup salad oil\nCombine lemon juice, soy sauce, brown sugar,\ngarlic and onion powder.\nPut chicken in shallow glass pan and pour lemon\njuice mixture over. Let stand in refrigerator at least\nI hour, stirring occasionally. Drain.\nSlip chunks of chicken and pineapple cubes alternately on large metal skewers. Broil over hot charcoal\nfire until chicken is tender, turning often and brushing with salad oil. (Serves 6 to 8.)\nBEEF-PINEAPPLE\nPrepare marinade as for Chicken-Pineapple, except\nreplace onion powder with 'A tsp. ginger and add\n1 tbsp. salad oil. Marinate VA Ib. sirloin steak cut\nin I-inch cubes in the mixture at least 1 hour. Lift\nout and thread on metal skewers alternately with 1-\ninch cubes fresh pineapple. Broil over hot charcoal\nfire, brushing with marinade often, until meat is well\nbrowned.\nWIENER\n(5 wieners\nCanned pineapple\nchunks, drained\nFresh mushroom caps\n'A cup sugar\n1 tsp. dry mustard\nVa cup liquid honey\nVa cup white vinegar\n6 hot toasted hot-dog\nrolls\nDash cloves\nCut each wiener in 4 pieces crosswise. String on\nskewers alternately with pineapple chunks and mushroom caps.\nCombine remaining ingredients except rolls in small\nsaucepan and bring to a boil. Turn down heat and\nsimmer 10 minutes.\nBroil wiener kebabs over hot charcoal fire, brushing often with honey mixture and turning often.\nCook just until wieners are nicely browned, about 7\nminutes.\nSlide off skewers into hot-dog rolls and serve immediately. (Makes 6.) <1\nBeen avoiding recipes that call for\nlemon, because of all the bother?\nAll what bother?\nReaLemon lemon juice is real, uniform lemon\njuice that comes in a bottle. Use it exactly as\nyou would lemon juice that you squeeze yourself.\nREALEMON\nBRAND\u00ae\nlemon juice in bottles ready to use... instantly.\nSleepless\nnights?\nWhen the day has\nleft you full of tension.\nCranky. Dreading the\nthought of another sleepless night.\nNow's thc time for\ncaffein-free Postum.\nLARGEST\nDISCOUNTS\nOn Every Record\nAVAILABLEIN\nCANADA\nlit these giant\ncatalogues\nFREEli\n\u2022 300 page catalogue listing over\n30,000 L.P.'s of all labels and\nmanufacturers, plus Club Magazine listing over 500 best sellers\nat discounts up to 70%.\nFrom Record Club of Canada,\n62 Richmond St. W., Toronto.\n\u2022 Choose L.P.'s from any label\nat the lowest prices in Canada,..\n(never less than 30% discount).\n\u2022 No obligations, no minimum\npurchases, no monthly card to\nreturn \u2014 no unordered records\nreceived. Order only the L.P.'s\nyou want \u2014 when you want.\n MAIL COUPON NOW \u2014 \u2014-\nRECORD CLUB OF CANADA\nDEPT.1010\nII atchfiwnd St W., Toronto, Out\nSend me information on Record Club ot\nCanada along with my frM catalogues\nwithout cost or obligation.\nffl\nNAME\t\nADDRESS  \t\nCITY  PROV\nWeekend Magazine No. 25. 196? - 27\n v   ! I\nm>j<\nV\n~\n\u25a0\nr>\nYtit\n\u2666\n Governor-General Roland Michener\nThe role of Governor-General is one of\nservice to Canada. And for Rt. Hon.\nRoland Michener, born in Lacombe, Alta.,\nsuch service is already an established\ntradition \u2014 as a lawyer and Q.C., as a\nMember of Parliament from Ontario, as\nSpeaker of the House of Commons and as\nour High Commissioner to India.\nThese portraits of the Governor-General\nand Mrs. Michener were taken by\nKarsh in the front hall of Government\nHouse (Rideau Hall). Wearing the\n1937 and 1953 Coronation Medals, His\nExcellency is the proud successor\nto a demanding and honored position.\nPhotos by Karsh\nCopyright \u00a9. 1967, Karsh, Ottawa\nWeekend Magazine No. 26,1967 - 29\n \u25a0\u25a0\nNEW KOTEX NAPKINS\nWITH\nSOFT IMPRESSIONS\nJni\nnew\n\" Softlmpressions\n\"\u25a0-    form tiny inlets\nthat absorb faster,\ndeeper, better.\nAnd only new Kotex\nnapkins have them.\nThis cushioned surface\non new Kotex napkins has\ndozens of tiny little indentations. Soft Impressions,\nwe call them, draw moisture quickly to the most\nabsorbent depths of the\nj napkin. The surface stays\nsofter, fresher, nicer. You\nsense the new gentleness,\nthe feeling of more security and comfort.\nIf you seem fresher,\nmore poised, more relaxed, it's because you are.\nLook for new Kotex napkins\nT&tl\/i Soft Impressions. Kolex-\nprifirreA hy more women limn\nall olher napkins combined.\nKOTEX is a trademark of\nKimberly-Clark of Canada Limiled\n\u25a0\n30 - Weekend Magazine No. 26. 1967\nthis weeKeriD\nAND NEXT\nHe's Too Fat For Conn-\nWhen we ran a cover photograph (June 10) showing Weekend's Sports Editor Andy O'Brien watching\ngolf champion Arnold Palmer at work, we thought\nit had everything: action, color, crowds, timeliness,\nand a perfect illustration for the inside story.\nThe last thing we expected was a complaint. But\nget one we did.\n\"May I urge that if our view has to be obstructed\nby your men at work you use thinner sports writers,\"\nour complainant writes.\nIf you look closely, you'll spot him in thc white\nshirt at the extreme left, trying to peer around the\nbulk of O'Brien. And if you look even closer, you'll\nspot that he's a man of distinction, the retired dictator of thc Toronto Maple Leafs' empire, Conn\nSmythe himself.\nNext Week\t\n\u2022 Mobile Command \u2014 Canada's biggest armed unit\n\u2014 is exactly what it says. Founded la 1965. the\n26,000-man unit is ready to move at short notice to\nfight in the tropics, jungles, snow, mountains or\ndesert. Completely self-contained, the unit comes\nwith everything from helicopters to guided missiles\nthat are fired from jeeps. Next week Weekend\nMagazine takes a look at the men. the equipment,\nand the idea behind Mobile Command.\n\u2022 Julie Andrews is everybody's girl. Attractive\nrather than beautiful, nice rather than glamorous,\nshe's the supcrcalifragilisticexpialidocious movie star\nwith a string of successes \u2014 ranging from Mary\nPoppins to Thoroughly Modern Millie \u2014 behind\nher. Then, of course, there was her beautiful portrayal of Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady on stage.\nStaff Writer Bill Trent is just one of her millions of\nfans, and next week he writes about thc girl he'd\nmost like to be on stage with \u2014 the star of Star!,\nthe film biography of the late Gertrude Lawrence.\nTHE EDITORS\n Caprn Squid\nppi\nus!\n'7   \/<7^\/    A rl\nJ\\if A )ly7\nmBfl     fc'oy-Tl\nJrwT\nU\n1 I\nTOO MANY SQUARE MEALS?\nTurns get rid of acid\nindigestion fast!\nGood eating and drinking is something we all\nlike. But indigestion is the course that finishes\nthe meal for too many of us. When that happens,\ntake Turns. They're pleasantly mint flavoured,\nneed no water and get to work fast on heartburn,\ngas and stomach upsets. And long-lasting Turns\nare really effective: they consume 93 times their\nown weight in excess stomach acid. Turns cost\nso very little, try them soon!\nCorns spoil your fun?\nGet happy feet with\nD-'Scholl's\nZINO-PADS\nDr. Scholl's Zino-pads work two ways.\nA super-soft pad relieves shoe pressure and friction; a separate medicated\ndisk softens corns for easy removal.\nGet Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads for corns,\ncallouses and bunions at your nearby\nvariety, drug, department or shoe store.\nKeeps your\nfeet happy\nEXPORT\nPLAIN\nor FILTER TIP\nCIGARETTES\nREGULAR AND KINGS\nWeekend Magazine No. 26, \u00bb67 - 31\n BETHE BEST-DRESSED GIRL UNDERTHE SUN\nMot*\nHere's your chance to wear the world's newest fabric in the year's most colourful pattern.\nThe fabric is called Keybak, and it picks up where paper clothes\nleft off. It's a viscose rayon fabric that has breatheability and a cloth-like feel.\nThe cape and hat are durable, yet soft and smooth. And they stand\nup to water so well you can wash them, up to four times. And iron them.\nThey're even easy to order. We've got one style, one pattern, one size,\nand a choice of two colours. Order today, and be ready\nto be the sensation of the summer. On the beach. In the garden.\nOn picnics. Send $2 and 5 Clark labels (any product) to:\nSUN OUTFITS, BOX 3200, SAINT JOHN, NEW BRUNSWICK.\n^^^M \u20ac.\nMail to:\nSUN OUTFITS\n\/BOX 3200\nSAINT JOHN. N.B.\n\/*   Please use boxes to show\n\/the colour you desire. Provincial\ntax must beadded where applicable.\niNo stamps please.) I enclose two dollars and five Clark labels. Please send\nme one outfit in-\nCOLOUR \"A\" \u25a1     COLOUR \"B\" \u25a1\n fAtUcn. iatli %tm#\nCOMICS\nLI'L   ABNER       byALCAPP\ni\n SATURDAY, JULY 1,1967\nWEEKEND COMIC SECTION\n WEEKEND COMIC SECTION\nSATURDAY, JULY 1,1967\n SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1967\nWEEKEND COMIC SECTION\nanything   \\VJT>\nimportant?) ^\n WEEKEND COMIC SECTION\nSATURDAY. JULY 1,1967\n\"Of course we can'! afford- ii . . . but who'll know fhaf if       \"Rain dances are for squares . .. This is a protest dance!\"\nwe ouv irv\"\naaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaS^aaaaaaaaaaaa>aaaHaHHaa>a>aaaam.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.a>.aaaaaaai\nAnd after you've read him two or three chapters, his\nlittle eyes will start to close . . .\"\n\"Oh, let's spend some money and have some fun\/\"\n SATURDAY, JULY 1,1967\nWEEKEND COMIC SECTION\n WEEKEND COMIC SECTION\nSATURDAY, JULY 1,1967\nOH,ANOSHOijOHlMARRM\n\\jAU)J0OMFV0UMAVE A\nFIRM JAlO,Wl) CANT LOSE!\nKEEPA6TIFFUPPERUP,\nAND SHOO) THEIR PITCHERS\nHAVERS IN TO EVES AND\nA Flft\/VUJAlO!\nWEMAVU)IN1MEBALL6AME(\nBUT Wi'6 RUINING AW FACE!\nmm*W    A^SSSmW I       % \\       l^^U^^S^^^^B\n SATURDAY, JULY 1,1967\nANDV CAP\u00a3\nWEEKEND COMIC SECTION\nf Ort,QREAT\/'\\\n\\... pygmies\/J\n-\nti\\ytu\u2014-l^'r,-J.\njtj^j'i\nW^y>J~\\\\\\^f\nsA\n*j *\ns*yifei\nj\/1\nTHE BOYS WILL\nTOW  YOU  (SACK\nIN THE \/VORNIN&\n.... BY CANOE\n WEEKEND COMIC SECTION\nSATURDAY, JULY 1,1967\n\/LIKE  r\nf     WAS ONLY L\nV         65\/\nME,   ^\nTOO    J\n1^*3,\nP\u00bbSRr3\n?P\u00a3\ni\u00bb\/fVinn\nmmVl     'YCT'\nUJ1 c'JfllL-,\n SATURDAY, JULY 1,1967\nWEEKEND COMIC SECTION\nHeadline News\nA CHARMING daytime, tar the\nwoman who wean \u25a0 half-size.\nNo. (051 with PATT-O-ltAMA\nit in sizes 12h to 26' 2, bust 33 to\n47. Size UK. K bast, 2>, yards\n\u2022I4S\".\n8251\n12V4-26V4\nNeatly Tailored\nHOUSECOAT, or daytime dress for your\nbusy at-home program. Wear belted, or\nnot, ond sew a shorter version to wear as\n\u2022 smock.\nNo. 8303 with PATT O RAMA ii in\nsizes 32 to 44. Bust 34 to 46. Size 34, 36\nbust, short sleeves, dress length, 4s.\nyards of 35-inch.\n8308\n32-44\nYoke-Top Skimmer\nTHIS YOUNG dress with its\ngraceful yoke and small sleeves\nis the essence of beautiful simpli\ncity. Weor it for special occasions\nNo 1293 is for sizes 9, II, 12.\n13, 14, 16, IS, bust 30', to 38\nSize II, bust 3l!i, with sleeves,\n3 yards of 35\".\nT-Z\nDress portents send 60c each with your tome, address, pattern number\n\u2022ate) size 10 Patterns (care of Mm newspafew), 231 St. James Street W.,\nMontreal, Quebec.\nI\nI\nI\nBusy Kittens!\nEMBROIDER these colorful and busy\nkittens on a set of kitchen rowels for\nan amusing touch! Ideal for bazaars\nor gift giving! Pattern No. 5895-H\nhas hot-iron transfer for 7 designs;\ncolor chart.\nTO ORDER\nNeedlework patterns send 50c\neach with name, address, pattern\nnumber and size to Polly-Patterns\n(care of this newspaper), 231\nSt. James Street W. Montreal,\nQuebec\nPOLLV'S\nDEAR POLLY\u2014I have pierced ears\nand needed a holder for my earrings.\nI took a plain necklace chain and\nthumbtacked it across my jewelry box\nand the earrings will 90 through the\nchain links and hang freely without\ntangling.\u2014JANET\nDEAR POLLY\u2014Add a few drops of food\ncoloring to bubble water ond the children\nwill find that bubble blowing becomes \u25a0\nprettier ond more absorbing pastime \u2014\nLARRY -^\nDEAR POLLY -The other day my little girl wanted to wear a dress but\ncould not find the belt. To keep her\nhoppy I slipped one of her elastic hair\nbands over her shoulders ond down\naround her waist. It looked fine ond\nstayed in place. This would be o good\nsubstitute for lost belts.\u2014JOYCE\nDEAR POLLY\u2014When a child does not\nwont to drink his milk try letting him use\na colored drinking straw. This will usually\nsolve the problem\u2014MRS. E. R. K.\n. 9\nDEAR POLLY\u2014In case an ice bag 11\nnot handy when needed it is wise to\nkeep a small plastic bottle filled with\nwater in the freezer. It is always ready\nas a  substitute.\u2014MRS.   E.  C.\nPolly pays a dollar  tor every  idea  used.\\\nSen<i them to her, core of this newspaper.J\n WEEKEND COMIC SECTION\nSATURDAY, JULY 1,1967\nIT'S 150 FEET\nTO THE RIVER ,\n-r-   BATMAN '   .Jb\n^ I'M AFRAID SHE HASN'T\nX.             a_   A CHANCB,\nti-ffrlf-mx^A     CHUM \/   ^\n-^e -,\nrjlJ^^E^\n\u25a0mivfVS'\n7-*^\n\/*%,_\nlaa^KC      \"7)*^   \/A          l^\/t \/^^\"^\\\n|Ht,    r\niaaaaaaaaaaafe\n\/0-^rwZ1\n SATURDAY, JULY I, 1967\nWEEKEND COMIC SECTION\nPRINTED IN  U.S.A. BY IHE GREATER  BUFFALO PRESS, INC.\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"See 1967-07-03 for accompanying newspaper issue. <br>The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1967_07_01","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0440216","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Nelson Museum, Archives and Gallery: https:\/\/nelsonmuseum.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}