Governor,General To Tour i lkcinching Lets Him Live In Uranium Fields, Marilimes l lly HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer t)i"rAWA tCPI "Please. t'.uu-iiy. please come out to the rin' . The little girls' plea was irresist- iiilc The slight. spare man put down his pen. He had been work- ing on still another extensive tour. itniither speech that might stir and provoke thought; that might lead Canadians towards greater unity. "Come on. Gawdy-" He smiled. slipped into his blue nu-rcoat. his battered brown fe- iiiira and grey wool gloves and railed to his dogs. Duff. an abod- ieiit golden retriever. and Rufus. I mischievous cocker spaniel who appears to be wondering whom he ought to nip next. Then out to the spacious grounds at flidsau Hall. SHORT FOR GIIANDDADDY ”Gawdy' is the name affec- iioiiately pinned by his grandchil- tircn on Rt. Hon. Vincent Massey. i'anada's first native-born gover- iinr-general. who on Feb. 28 will mmplete his first five years in nl'it'c The story goes that one of the ihildren had difficulty saying tlranddaddy" and turned the word into ”Grandgawdy" and then iiitii just plain ”Gawdy.” Mr. h'lassey's term has been ex- tended for another year or so. to about June. 1958. But no gover- iiur-gencral has had two exten- sions and there is I question of year-old governor-general is tackl- vihat the future will bring- Whatever the future. the 70 - ycarold governor-general is tackl- ing his exacting job with the same zeal and love with which he first approached it. He has cov- erfd more mileage in Canada than any of his 17 predecessors, I rec- nrd 129.448 miles. and has gained at first-hand in his five years a itriieirating knowledge of Can- ada's growth. "l don't think we could ever tie- roiop an Elvis Presley in Can- iitia." he once remarked to a friend. "We shirk from sensation. Our national characteristic in moderation." NATIONALISTIC TREND But he also has sensed I quick- eiiing in the growth of national- ism in Canada. a move which he prefers to call ”the growth or self- rriiance. self-confidence. I natural pride in ourselves." lie feels that within the frame- uork of moderation. this is I posi- iIi'lt move for Canadians, "that we will develop in our own quiet way, in a way that is distinctive from that of Britons and Americans." And he has stated "Within the next five yours. to Jcars. i think that unbelievable things will happen in this coun- iiv I WON for words. But you utli see evcn greater unity and grriiicr self-confidence. ' it this we must not underesti- m:i.c the contribution of New Ca- nadians lor they are tremen- -inusiy keen. You can see that In thc way the New Canadian chil- tlicn hunger for books on Can- aila " IINZFYINIG lt'ORf'E Above all else. sees the t-i-nwn. "the supreme Canadian symbol." remaining as the main unifying force in Canada. As for the Commonwealth. it will grow and change but will become of increasing importance as a true symbol of the family of nations. The crown. as I symbol. is one that can be understood by every- one. he says-by children. adults and those on the rim of civilisa- tion. the lndiana and Eskimos. Canada": sense of moderation. he believes. springs from at least two developments The lnatlnctiva sense of compromise that has Home from relations between Can- adals two main races. the snails! and the French: and the climate- ”nm- t.-ii-for is that we are the only northern country. the tall! PIUSVILLE The funeral.of the late James T. Gallant was held at st. An- 'h0ny': Church on Wednesday. Rev. rather Petra Fall bearers were Warbuton liltin- "'t,v. Anihonyynlanchard. Pat Gal- iant. .lohn -r. Gallant. Herman Cor- thran and Fred Lutiletell. Mr. and Mrs. Aubtn Gallant mot- md to Charlottetown on 'rhura- day. They were accompanied by Joseph Gallant and In. Charlies Csiiant. Mr. Joey Gallant returned to his ftar at- he emsoats ' : Mr. larl MacArthur. Vb DOS!- R 315E large northern country. with no hot climate in our south I think that has definitely a'fccv.'d our temperament." On the economic scene. the Tar- into-born Mr. Massey has noted C I n I d i I n s have "tremendous physical drive" and believes Scot- land has had I lot to do with this. "The Scots have played a ire- mendous role in our pliyslcal de-' velopment and this is out ni sill proportion in the numhcr of Scots in Canada. They have the spirit of adventure, endurance. tenacity and enterprise. CULTURAL GROWTH "True. we haven't had lhr same. drive in the rultural field but wel are developing. it would be un-I wine to judge our efforts purely on patriotic grounds alone. They must be judged by the interna- tional yardstick. The theatrical ventures at Straiford. 0nt.. suc- ceeded because there was no com- promise. They had to be good on world standards. not simply those in Canada.” ' The role of governor-grin.-ral is an exacting one. with Canada's role in world affairs increasing. more and more of the world fig- ures visit Ottawa as gin-sis at the spacious vice - rcgal rcsidcnce llll suburban Rockcliffe. I .Mr. Massey has plan-d host to Queen hiother l-Jllzabciii. the Prin- cess Royal. the Dukc of Edin- burgh. i-resident Eisenhower and Prime Minister Nehru of India. Thousands of Canadians also have. been invited- I in the five ycars ho has had about 47.300 guests: 1.400 have come to lunch. about 5,400 in tea; 13.500 to receptions; 17.000 to gar- den parties; 4.800 to dinner; and about 5.200 to balls. Mr. Massey tolerates no air of pomposity. He loves it iokc and many a time he has joked about Mr. Massey enjoys good health and he puts in a full day. from about 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. His study is his workshop where he writes and polishes his speeches. pre- pares dlapatchea to the Queen and receives his mail. in the five years. travelling by: plane. train. car. naval ship. snow-l 1 mobile and dogaled. he has visited Eskimos and Indians. inikrd with. minors a mile or so below the: lcarthis surface. inspected the fish-l ermen's catch ers' problems. He treasures letters received from some of the 300.000 schoolt children he has spoken to. Some of them are in the centre drawer of his (task. I This attachment has probably grown from his love for his own grandchildren ilane. ii: Evva, 7; and Susan. 5. daughte s of his secretary-son. Lionel; and Jona- than. 6. and Caroline. 10. children of his other Ion. Hart. an archi- it is they who have named grandfather "Gawdy." t HANDY RELATIVE I At times these children show a youthful disregard of the grandeurl surrounding the governor-generab . - in- t On the other hand. thry tin rem at aiize how I governor - gener . might come in handy at times.l Jonathan was told by Mr. Massey to stop fighting with his boy friend on the rink. 50 Jonathan quit fight- heard to say "if you hit me again, I'll gall my governor-general aftcr yott!"y The children love to he with their "Gawdy" but often hc has to leave them. Soon he will be on the move again. in liiay he will he nlf mi in 5.- himself. Once he rcmarkod that ill the old days that power of II gnvi-rnon general was such that he could do no wrong. "it is perhaps still true that the governor general can do no reason is that he cannot do any- thing anyway!" lgion and from there into northern wrong." he added. "but now they .000-mile trip in tour the uranium lfields of Ontariols Blind River re- llanilnba and Saskatchewan and ;ihcn I swing-about to Nova Sco-p I list. And perhaps in September there. will be another extensive tour lntot lihe tiny hamlcts of the Maritimes. i l I lTliui-sday. Feb. 28. 1957 The Guardian Page 11 Country He Loves To Paint . GRAND!-I PRAIRIE. Alta. tCPIiio make room for homt-steadera.. The Nl)N'lICl('d man it ah bed SWIIILV with his brushes. attempt- set himself. Artist Robert Symonds ex- plained that the nine-by-six-foot mural must he finished by May I 'hrcause I have to get the cat- tle out on the range and the crops plantrd” Mr Symnns has a 4.000 - acre ranch in the Fort St. .lohn area nu lmed I" (aim 'nI the PCICPVRIVPT block. Rant'h- present herd --into the valley. ing lets me live in I country that Ly I love in paint.” he says, PAINTS IN WINTER He leaves the ranch alter ihe' annual fall roundups of his hard of tall cattle. and In the spring returns to seed his grain crops. Between 195i and 1956. his win- icrtime treks were to the 31,000.- 000 Saskatchewan Muscum of Na- tural History at Regina. where he painted Z) duoramas curved b kd ' .' 'h' h . '-. ltect. Jane. Evva and Susan llve.,:gcn,. rl:.rls'it:',.ga',:l:,:Vh::.0l: M'll:i"m'e hm," '"n "I9 I-"'"”"d5 9' Ride” "5" "Id I were placed. Thai assignment led l survived by a son. Charles. em- "I9" in his commission for the hoteI.ploycd with The mural hcre. His paintings of Western Can- ada's mountains, prairie and bush are based on ”a couple of trunk- fuis" of sketclics made during his in yours as it game warden in Saskatchewan and British Colum- bia, iiilr Symons comes by his Mini- ing talent honistly. His father, a well-knnwn British artist. did mo- saic work in Westminster Cathed- ing. got off the rink and promptly. L T h H, I ” V, . 4 ti-. ma 1 ;.".."....'.t.' .:.'.:...”"r.':.. :.:.:t”"a' W” 7”” "I9 ""1 0' ”" ""m' I" ""1. and a sister Ht-tl.v now is a I40nd9n1:s'(lliCn('t'ti to death for the murderl fashion artist. LURE OF THE WEST He was srltcduled to hcgin a ;formal training in painting when was scnicnccd to be hanged aftcr' the reached in. but tales of t.he.the court found he killed Myrna (iaiindian Wcst altered his course. ;He raised his piissag hy scllingling licr chickens anti in i9i.'i rcacltoti Maple Crcck in southwest Saskat- chr-wan After the Fir-zl World War he returned to ranching btii his lease nn gnvcrnmcnt land was cancelled Couple Lose Lives In Montreal Fire IilON'l'REAIi tf'Pl A man Midi After two seasons trapping tat .northern Saskatchewan. he be- .mi: in complete the new hotel's came I game warden in the area mural by the spring deadline bet and for it years 'never travelled without a sketchbook and pencil." t p Between lii2B'Ind 1941 he aoldl l 150 paintings. - in 1943 he joined the ac. uniel service and three years later re- signed in set tip his ranch on tilel I upper (ischv Creek about 50 mll' northwest iii Fort si. John. iiei-ii-I ing 20 rattle -the nucleus of his lDies Just Before IO2nd Birthday I MONTRHAI. t(?Pt Mrs. Fanny Ifinnkson died at home Tuesday lwithin a fcw days of her lfiznd hirihday. She was born March 4. 1834. A rs-iii-i-d fashion l1IiyPI'. sh? had living in retlrment. She is Montreal Star, and two granricliildrt-n. Death Sentence Ends Sensational 1 Murder Trial I nunnnx, siiiiui Africa ineu-' ti-rst -- Smith Africa's most sen-1 with a travelling salesman lot a girl wliosr body was foiiud 1 through spiritualism. l Clarcnco Gordon van Buuren. 83. i.ioy Akcn last October by shoot-l Thc ill'('ll)' iii-yi-iir-old": nude hody. its abdomen and buttocks! iniutiiiilod and some of its organsl ymissiniz. was found eight days fol-l lowing the murder in a culvert 50f lmllcs friim here after a sauce" was holrl in lucnlc ii. 1 Police found a piece of bone. at iiilt nf hair and blood stains Inf van Buureu's car. hliss Akcn's body wits found by, Mistin Palmcr. former tencheri llntl spiriiunlisl. who hold the It-. ant-it and ilu-n. accompanied hyl hcr two brnthcrs. drove to the ex- offlctatlnm , ..I.! rt 3 Dairy Ft:Irmers' Boycott Causes Sporadic Violence NEW YORK (AP) --Spnradlctpulice near Monroe. N Y.. Mon-l violence Monday night marked a day after a rifle was fired into! 503"-I0" "I da"'Y f3l'mP"5 I" Newln tank truck. causing its load of York New Jersey and Ponnsyh milk in run oil! on tho highway. woman died early Tuesday 1nd! lllP other persons cscapcrl in 7'” SW" w''(''9 ”" b0dY I33" night attire as H fire of unknown; ”'l'”'"I1 "'9 l5'd3Y "mt ll” Muse licked mmugh me ()ld!(l'flVlll charged that van Buuren Exchange Hotel. I northcastcrn'E"'V9,3, "do I" Ml” Allen B"" Mammal iandmark. lsho finished work. But instead of The dead Wm. m(.mm,.d 35-iialtlng hcr in Pinetown, outside Louis-Andre Fayette. .15. and Mrs. l ""'”l""'u Wm” "WY bmh ""d- "W Mann, schmim 35' af-Si'IllllPfI anti ihcn shot her. I Van Riiiiren rnnfessed that he: vanla who are wlthholrliu" milk , , Nn rianiagc esiimaio has nvailw . in an anon .0 Re! higher ppm”. At Port Jervis, N.i.. ii tankwhi, in u". bin". which mg," hit) her hotly but pioadod not guilliiyl Most of the incidents centred in truck was stnppcd by I group of. downstairs about 4 mm. and nf- '1 "W"'l'f3 "' k''"'13 "I3 3l Orange County. New York. hi-art men who opened a valve llldifpcipd the ground-floor Palermo of the metropolitan New York spilled the milk. Shooting lncl- Club. ll tavern and the office of. ”milkahcdt" The boycott started dents were reported in Sussex the adjacent Static I-Jxchangc. Sunday. County. N..l.. involving tuvo trucka Firemen said hnth victims Five men were arrt-sled by state i headed for (loshcn. N.Y. , lnf asphyxiation. t WELSH CIIURCII l The only church of slrictiyl died Wclsh orig'n is the Calvinlstlcl llilctiiodist Church of Wales. . l ulIIIllI1?l5a&u'&J5-y? ' .3uItci:itiflt. PANCAKE l In sum... 5.; - 3. BIJTTERIIILKI Tholuttarntilkierljttlnitto i; itsowiiti An.-iatiiviiiiiotrunisttt-'. I : -- .. miiitsoliattt.-oi-odor... toadorhd'.Ielovttr't:.' mm” bwwd Nsweridi . . ' I -i Ibo:-Id&&anuIrbodatDOMIN& O-upnuooraitl-out buyunapjtmhkpdnq-inj--dentotulvloild IheIIuatto4qunI0-IiatDOMIIOIlan-hv&ItQlvtII-as: aaanntia-iodh-nrhovaseiVa6vQsus-i-sin-nuehmaataad auimi-.ai....u-uiw Mliaposvmalaovvklemnthl: to-ely-loa.np-totitnitudmhuloy-i-ht-tyo-nebouv It:-Ioolb-Cnnlu-was-pad The-yal--aria-alidlodi-:inet.I.lsiI Ivawhui-i-at-is uipyun-iii-anon-in Iaurhmo ran helmet Foe a quad old-i-ii-mind Ina! -i moat .. bynouittloti IIII unlit CHOICE QUALITY ISLAND STEER LADE ROAST SWIF'I."S EMPIRE SLIGEII OVEN READY Evicserated MAPLE LEAF WIENERS FRESH TASTY BEEF LIVER SWEET & JUICY ORANGES FLORIDA PINK GRAPEFRUIT 5 I LB. ('EI.l.O 45c 37c i""i5.-.”'.I” 59c IIZE M 2 FOR NOVA SCOTIA FANCY LARGE FIRM Iceberg LETTUCE RED RIPE TOMATOES 2 canon" Spanish Onions 2 W- I Mclniosh Apples 5 arm: 65C Earn 25: 43c 25c ITS. DOMINION FROZEN CON(' ENTRATE ORANGE JUICE SEA SEALD FISH STICKS IIIRIYS EYE GREEN PEAS ZERO PAK Cut Wax BEANS FRE -IL” I9: ';.'::- 39: 29c 31: WITH MAP OF VOL. THE CANADA Ivan AILI on "It now. ro. uuooav DOCK-A -Ill! MOI ILLUSTIATIIIHOME tiaiuitil zscrctorrmiiimi 1 sum YOUR I SET mu 7! A BACON W BROILER ITO FRFASI-I Haddock Fillets 39: i IDEAL DAIRY Cottage Cheese AVERAGE 3'4 LBS. 55” I LB. TUB 25c ' FEATURES AT AUNT JAMINA Pancake FLOUR 2 . CROSBY GOLD STAR MOLASSES CROWN BRAND CORN SYRUP RADIO CHOICE PEAS BOSTON CORNED BEEF PERFECTION F'IR,ST GRADE Creamery Butter 13.335 39: um 31: '.l”.1'i 3i: 2 1.32" 39: . 33: 3 m 62: DOMINION SPECIAL 25 LR. RAG ROBIN HOOD FLOUR 1 1.65 FRUIT COBBLER 13 OZ. PKG. NEW DELICIOIFS .VIONAR('H PEACH. PINEAPPLE & (IHEHRY 37” 'MAnvnNs cnoconarn MARSHMALLOW CAROSEL BISCUITS IR DISC. CEI.I.O 33” All Mnvsltandisv sold at your Dominion Store is Guaranteed to Give IOOIZ, Satisfaction STORE tiouits MON.. TIIES-. WED. TIIUIISDAY 82.10 a.m. to 0 pm. . O FRIDAY 8:30 a.rn; to 9:80 p.In. sA1'liIII)AY 8:30 a.tn. to O p.li. Voiaos lffoerlva Thurs. Fri. sat. - res. 29 Mar. 1 a 2 I981