CLASSICAL RESEARCH | BALLET SYLVIA by Delibes The book is a combin Baron De tury idyll, Aminta, fr ky was so impressed baliet that he wrote ake is poor stuff com- yivia. Nothing during few years has charmed greatly this bailet of as ree acts and four scenes, let reveals the story of the} f Amintas, the shepherd | tal) for the beautiful Syl- | ymphb of Diana, the hun- lis of Orion, the dark terror of the {f the capture of Byl- escape through the aid ros, the God of love; and | iumphant ending for the aminta and Sylvia as they the blessing of Diana ris MOVEMENTS Prelude A horn solo nuted string opens the we depleting the hunt, Then ovely music suggesting a und its movements, the; appear again announcing | of the nymphs t n Jt tells an and f i h There is an ne fanfare of horns with an waniment of flute like nds and violins. The af Diana enter, dancing ing in the moonlight of their dance is} the horns and the owing more and inore all the hues of i displayed in great ( eresses ii ytnn by with t ile, followed by a lovely effectively combin tings in a romantk may Pi init icato—A dainty mel duced in pizzicato om A second melody de intwoduced by the clarinet for eontrast movement ends witt ction of the open- lie VadssaE is. ps and i and nh ti roa izzicalo Bacchas—A trum- nfare heralds the approach warriors, maidens of flowers, the the sacrifice, mimes Terpsichore and her and priests and vestail The accompanying triumphal in character of Sylvia and Aminta Orion, the dark of the le dancing basket with iowni Men fii miVve ie ind terror DIRECTORY ices In all church at 11 a.m. ‘oO pan, Sunday Sehoa at except as shown, \N CATHEDRAL Dunsmuir St, 8:30 am 901 200 p.m | 8. Prockter, BA. B.D, Reetor (Blue 700) ANGLIC Ave, W., at ( nmunion y Sehe Ba FIRST BAPTIST Ave. FE. at Young St Re Fred Antrobus (Green 812) FIRST 4t PRESBYTERIAN Avenue East Aw Wright, D.D (Green 982) t Rev. F FIRST UNITED i 636 6th Ave. West Re L. G. Sieper (Green 613) SALVATION ARMY Fraser Street Capt. George Oystryk School 2:30 p.m (Black 269) iy ST. PAUL'S La THERAN th Ave. at McBride St t Rev, H. ©. Olsen (Black 610) I ST PUTER'S ANGLICAN Seal Cove Iwining (Rector) School 11:00 am Prayer 7:30 p.m (Blue 827%) J B.A., LTH, nday t I REGULAR BAPTIST Sunday School 11:00 a.m Morning Worship Service 12:15 629 6th Ave. E Blue 323 tor: Rev, Leonard A, Thorpe THE EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH Services at 1.0.0.F Hall, Fourth Ave. E.’ ed work of Jules Barbier teinach, and is based on the 16th om the pen of Torquato At another trumpet call, the fauns and baccahantes armed with staves enter; a drum figuri sounds the rhythm and the feast begins. It is interrupted by the approach of Bacchus to the throne with full orchestra sounding, after which the feast continues, the orchestra losing itself in a whirl of abandonment leading to a dazzling climax ‘On the BOOK SHELF 1 LIVE AGAIN by PRINCESS ILEANA OF ROMANIA Wiiew Lis gieal gianddaugh ter of Queen Victoria and the daughter of Marie of Romania, 2 princess in her own right, is happy doing her own work in a modest suburban house in New ton, Massachusetts, she is questionably unique. And as this spirited book of memoirs show, Princess lleana plucky In I LIVE AGAIN, Lleana tells of her own country in the last war, of the avent of the Com munists, of her adventurous ef-) fort to live with--o rin spite of them, of her eventual escape, | and of the way im which she | reached her present Massachu setts home by Way of Argentina Renowned 45 one of the most democratic members of Euro pean royalty, Princess Deana was founder of the first schoo! Social Workers \n Romania, and head of both the Romanian YWCA and Girl Scouts. During World War Il, Mae became a murse in the Romanian Red Cross and opened a hospital on her estate. Her activities in the latter were summarily stopped wher she was foreed into exile by the Communists un is also ior Always close to her people, Princess Tleana has written 4 ‘Continued on page 6) CATHOLIC ISLAND Roman Catholicism is the state religion of the Republic of Haiti between Cuba and Puerto Rico | Sisters held i said ; jher 20,000,000 people about one-} ; quarter h | First Presbyterian Churc persagcr campers Se couse: ‘| | to help the | and hygiene fields. They are sole | last war, is the guest of Rt Rev. | rior | teachers in primary and second-|J. B. Gibson, Bishop. of Cale- lary schools. Some teach in un-|donia, during his stay in Prince to visitors to worship with us. 231 Fourth Ave. East Minister: Rey. E. A. Wright, D.D. | Organists: Mrs. E. J. Smith and John Currie, SUNDAY, JULY 13, 1952 Morning Worship 11 o'clock, Sunday School 12:15. Evening Service 7:30. “Remember the Sabbath Day to keep it Holy.” ST. PAUL’S LUTHERAN CHURCH 5th Ave. at McBride St. Rey. H. 0. Olson You are invited to come and Worship at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church. “The Just Shall Live By Faith” SUNDAY SERVICES July 13, 1952 Morning Service 11:00 a.m. Sermon: “Faith Expressed” Evening Service 7:30 p.m.. Sermon: “Appollos the j | litical ones |Federal Communications Frince Rupert oi INDIAN LORE is the mainstay of Prince Rupert’s museum and to add to the ecolleetion of iter several hours each day in the Abrahany is follow the ancvent custom of b and formerly of Queen Charlotte Islands, she is a Haida In- dian of the Wolf erest. Career-Minded Iranian _ Women Hold Key. Jobs BY RENE Pres QUEBEC—Iranian w voting rights, are more ca) girls, says Miss Chamsol M A of social sciences, Miss Mossaheb returned to her homeland recently after com- pleting a nine-month study per- iod in Canada under a United Nations scholarship. She will visit the United States in the autumn to complete her’ study of North American systems of Canadian doctor farming and adult education in} rural districts The attractive 35-year-old Iranian was so busy touring Que- bee and Ontario centres follow- ing her arrival last September that she didn’t have time to learn women as she wanted. Neverthe- less, she thought her Iranian more key positions than Canadian women. NOT BACKWARD NATION Iran is far advanced and is a‘-beckward nation,” she here in, an interview. “Of not are farmers. The others are well educated. Iranian wo- men hold all types of positions. | “All types, that is, except po-; Women in my coun- try cannot vote. But a campaign to earn them the suffrage right has been going on for years. Men have been taking part in the campaign for a decade and some headway is being made.” She said married women con- tinued to work after they be- came mothers. Some were needed for special duties, others worked family budget. Women rule Trin’s educational iversities and others are sur- Arms Production Slow NEW YORK (AP)—The out- look for color television may be, brighter. but it’s still a long way off Predictions of United States from “at least two years” to “five years or more.” Meanwhile, it’s the | Com- mission will be asked ‘to yecon-| certain |sider the method of color tele-| our present operations casting to be used, with a view to! adopting different standards} from those now in effect. Action of the national produc-| tion authority recently in relax-| |ing its ban on the manufacture jof color TV sets and equipment created a flurry of interest, but its effects on color for the home| will be praetically nil. It will) make it possible for industrial Saturday, July 12, Gie of the few remaining native artists who still as much about Canadiana | Daiiy “New Books , Library More than 100 books were add- ed recently to the Prince Rupert |Public Library shelves, divided jequally between fiction, non- fiction and juvenile. The list is as follows: . FICTION The Widow of Bath (Bennett); Panorama ‘Bentley); My Name is Michael Sibley (Bingham); The Loved and the Lost (Calla- ghan); Mister Johnson (Cary); A Town of Masks (Davis); Heavy, Heavy Hangs (Disney): invisible Man (Ellison); ‘Top of the Heap (Fair); The African Queen’ (Forester); A Ship of the Line (Forester); The Case of the |Moth-eaten Mink (Gardner); The Complete Works of O. Henry (Henry); The Bengal Tiger (Hunter); Journey with Strang- ers (Hutchinson); The Strange Brigade (Jennings); The Groves of Academe (McCarthy); The | Hayburn Family (McCrone); The Ivory Grin (Macdonald); The |Proud Young Thing (Miller); Teacher Lady (Morgan); The Reclining Figure (Page); The Penningtons (Partridge); The King Dead (Queen); The Double Man (Reilly); Three Lives of Elizabeth (Seifert); This Crooked Way (Spencer); Wind- om’s Way (Uliman); The Night Watch (Waish); The Merry . Menth of May (White); The . ~ | Sogue of Padu ‘Witliams); The City Boy (Wouk); Brave Inter- val (Yates). NON-FICTION Culture in Canada (Shea); | Fabulous Beasts (Lam); The Ox- ford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes (Opie); Under the Sea- wind (Carson); Automobile Body Repair and Paint Guide (Athanson); Preparation and Treatment of Wood Pulp (Ste- phenson); Preparation of Stock for Paper Making (Stephenson) ; Listening to the Orchestra (Barne); Honeymoon for Seven (Toombs); Best Plays of 1950- 1951 «