April 13, 1967 ing. ACROSS 1-Complaint 6-Title of respect 11-Cause 12-Placed in line 14-Preposition 15-Speechless 17-Girl's name 18-Unusual 20-Renovate 23-Openwork fabric 24-Oceans 26-Body of water 28-Compass point 29-Veracity 31-Sandy wastes 33-Designating certain tides 35-Rockfish 36-Drinkable 39-Jewish teacher 42-Above 43-Faithful 4i-Falsehoods 4-Inlet 4s-Caudal appendages 50-Pigeon pea 51-Path 53-Country of Asia 55-Symbol for tantalum 56-Atmospheric disturbances 59-Crown 61-Ardent 62-Church official Company, Terrace Bay: ine Belliveau 3504, Denise Rochon 3249, Carla Cald er 3535, Leslie Cotton 3669, Judy Kurylo 3597, Beverly Legault 3201, Falzetta 3383, Teresa Falzetta 3383, Celina Landry 3556, Maureen Mikus 3640 and Kerry Waghorn - Simcoe Plaza. Visitors at the home of Mrs. Lawrence were: Mr.& Mrs. R.Linnet, Mr. & Mrs. Maley and daughters , mMr. & Mrs. returned to Sault Ste. Marie to continue her school- OLD UNIFORMS TO BE DONATED TO INDIANS A recent local association meeting, presided over by Mrs. S.Duquette announced that Mrs. D.Bougie has been appointed Brown Guider Badge Secretary. Mrs. Hilda Hiebert, Uniform Convenor, reported that a number of old uniforms would be forwarded to needy Indian companies. Clare, Lorraine and Gerald- Marilyn Kujbida 3610, Judy C .Turnbull . Lynda Lawrence has 11-Perch ei] 3] a] 7S} a] 5] 9] v3) 18-Tropical Wi3lal vi 1a s|w]3] o/s] 16-Wife of vi LBW y is! STN] YF] Geraint UVa RS] TT [Vv] 1] ye Aerial ; S/S] 117 39/3) 1 In| 21-Without enc BEE0e BPEUROE Germany VIN] la] EWEN 25-Take S| 1} 3] 3] 9/3] aH] 2] Aye] meta fully BE BEBRBE SHES 27-Pertaining to the kidneys ain} DEE 1c] a/o} a0-Nun's |v] STO}N| 3] [0 W) IN] garment * [dain ify] NOSBME) 32-Enthusiastic iw] Vl aly] Wee ld] flo} 34-lIentreaty 36-Inversion of stitches (pl.) SOLUTION 37-Narcotic 44-Omit from o2-Unit of 38-Protective considera - energy shield tion o4-Insane 40-Device that {7-Ox of 27-Pronoun whips a8 58-Senior 41-Religion of Celebes (abbr.) the Moslems 49-Go by water 60-Prefix;duwn DOWN 1-Sex 2-Sun god 3-Doctrine 4-Rain heavily 5-Go in 6-Parent (colloq.) 7-Man"s nickname 8-Noise 9-Later 10-Simplest Me" <A? 1 im R505 eee Oo ~ BES oO 4 ee ' a od axe Dox peed TERRACE BAY NEWS The following girls have volunteered Free Baby- sitting services for anyone wishing to see The Tinder box. The girls are members of Girl Guides First Page 9 It was also announced that Miss Elaine Long and Mrs. P.Boutlier have received official leader registration. Notes of thanks and appreciation were sent to those who worked on the Bake Sale, at which $201. was realized - a big improvement over past years. Mrs.D Kurylo reported preparations complete for the Guide C.G.1.T. and Catholic Girls and Brownie Banquet. Club have offered to serve for the banquet. As in past years, cookies will be sold on May 8. Mrs. P.Jones and Mrs. P.Boutlier reported on a recent training session held in Marathon. | NEW EXECUTIVE ELECTED The Catholic Women's League of Terrace Bay held its regular meeting April 9 when yearly reports for 1966-67 were read and approved. President, Mrs. Yolande Boudreau, outlined the work done by the league and thanked members for their co-operation Two parts, two colours. Take a flip of nautical navy and pleat into a swinging skirt. Pair with a long stretch of jacket sparingly sleeved and strikingly striped with citrus lime. This is the look of Spring -- groovy, moving skirts, long tops -- bound, striped or trimmed for bi-colour beauty. Size yourself up. For a sleek. custom-tailored look; know your pattern size and figure size and figure type. The pattern companies offer several: figure types -- Teen, Petite, Junior and Misses. Each is available in a range of sizes. Figure-type is a body shape Not an age. Grandmother may be a "teen" type while her teen- age granddaughter may be a Half-Size". Find your type and stick to it for fewer alterations and more flattering styles. In the swim. Even if you're not bound for a southern holi- day, now is the time to plan the backbone of your summer wardrobe. While the stores in- troduce exciting resort clothes, plan a sewing spree using these new colours and lines. Summer bonus: the sleek styling and wonderful figure control of the One-piece swimsuit with halter and turtle necks. hip-belts and FASHION CONSULTANT TO THE 160 SINGER CENTERS IN CANADA. ge 10 BY NANCY GAYLORD tunic-skirts. To cover-up, top with a matching mini-skirt -or mini-tent. Fun-loving fabrics re- flect fashion's gay mood: poor- boy ribs, velvety velours, Pucci- print jersies, piqué and boucle. Sun-drenched colours vibrate in stripes, florals and African ab- stracts. Built-in belts are the newest idea on casual tweeds and plaids. The belt (of leather or suede) is actually the waistband on smart skirts and slacks -- less bulk for a smaller, neater waist. Tlie secret of elegant women: rich, beautiful fabrics plus ul- tra-simple styling ... a formula any home-fashionmaker can master. Translate a design that frankly flatters into a multitude of luscious colours and textures to wear round-the-clock. Elimi- nate fussy details and non-es- sentials and sew carefully, to produce a dress that enhances "you" without stealing the show. To wear now, glass or brass bubbles to swing from your ears by fine gold chains. In enameled pastels, marbled jewel shades or brilliant polished me- tals, to bob and sway as you "frug" in your new tent dress.