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Show sAXJt?!,"' m Doily Herold 4A Sears Ym I I I I . . . Sfnfc td r: It. - i i . k Pi ;i3- - II J T '" rtM aV VSP Tt ..- T. - f l1 SiJ A l'ta-i- il i. V V.-- - aav - .Hrf., - -- - I lt v V jV v t 111 ' sN" L, 1 t . CI tH - J I' f V y hmWxwwt I AW ; Vv. W 111 it? h Ii wife, Martlti Montanei ue Casals, leans tJELLIST PABLO CASALS lights hii pipe "ever to say something to him. The oceanic! banquet at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel Telephoto) .'where the Freedom House Award was presented to Mr. Cattls. (Herald-UP- I wait Problems of Living in a Castle By ROBERT MUSEL of the LONDON (UFiy-O- ae drawbacks of living in an ancestral castle is that the place is usually so big that if you put something down somewhere you might not run across H again for a year or so. I Another is that you are liable to ewe the soverien in this case Queen Elizabeth a feudal duty such as presenting her with a snowball when she calls. And what do you do if she calls jn midsummer? . The Duke of Argyll mentions these admittedly minor snags to the formidable prestige of his many honors (from Chief of the Clan Campbell to Keeper of the Great Seal of Scotland) in a new book about Britain'! still flourishing upper class, "The Aristocrats" (Weldcnield and Nicholson). Thirty years ako the Duke had 16 maids and six manser vants to help look after his seat, for things is quite unbelievable." As Hsriditary Sheriff of Argyllshire, the Duke said, his duties Include greeting the Queen with a rose and a handful of snovr taken from the top of Cruachan, a hill that is also the war cry of the Campbells. "On the last visit we couldn't manage the snow," he said. Healthy State Author Roy Perrott, spent a year investigating the aristocracy and found that despite frequent obituary notices the peerage and the Landed Gentry without aristocrats (usually titles) are both in a remarkably healthy state and the honor of a title is still eagerly sought by ' Inveraray Castle. Now he and his American duchess (the former Mathilda Mortimer of Litchfield, Ccan.) make do with cook and a temporary butler, a daily cleaning woman. Argyll's domain has 96,000 acres, his castle has 84 rooms. y "If you put a book down just anywhere it simply disappears," he said. "You can spend 18 months it's looking for it. Really, happened. The amount of time absent-mindedl- j I we spend looking 1 I 1 1 SAVE Decorative plastic table top. Tapered tubular steel leg. Table ex- - 30.07 1" " tends to 7 Piece Dinette . Reg-- Fabric 8514x71!.. aup- -i S ported vinyl covered chair. Delicate 154.95 gig Tubular steel table has two 12" leaves with oak slides. Gull back chair with brass handlea for ease of movement and added decor. , Regular 144.95 Uli y tUUUUSSCU yttt,LCllJ. lajJClCU 1" legs with self level glides. iicavjr Rich metallic bronzetone finish. Britons. Califomian Gains Success In Two Unrelated Careers Calif. BERNARDINO, K. Guthrie is a rare man who has achieved tuccess fa two completely f SAN (UPI)-Ja- mes unrelated careers as a newspaper publisher and as a symphony conductor. i He apparently hasn't had too nsudi difficulty reconciling the paradoxical demands, as business executive and artists, of the two fields of activity. : At 54, Guthrie has risen to eminence in the newspaper field s publisher and executive vice president of the Sun Company, which publishes three newspapers in this community on the eastern fringe of the Los Angeles megalopolis. In 1967 he was elected president of the California Newspaper Publish- ers Association. Well Known ', In the world of music, he's Just about as well known. When only IS he became director of Instrumental music at the nearby Redlands Bowl. He has appeared as guest conductor of leading orchestras in the United the Los States, including Angeles Philharmonic, the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic Symphony, the Pittsburgh Symoh ny and the San Jose," Calif., temperame.it is necessary. But as a publisher and a conductor I wouldn't for anything exchange the trouble and excitement which are inherent In temperamental persons for the peace and dullness which go hand in hand with lack of spirit, talent and Inspiration. "If an orchestra is out of tune, the conductor doesn't last very long. a "In the same context, publisher whose product is bad doesn't last long." Basically, the twin careers were opened up by Guthrie's willingness to work. He became a serious student of music almost by accident. He became interested in the newspaper business while working during summer vacations r.t the paper where his father was an "I am assured by a good source," he wrote, "the applications for a peerage normally amount to 10 times the number that the honors list can sensibly contain in any one year... "The reference books on the British peerage are still the biggest and heaviest in the g world. Burke's Peerage lists about 1,000 nobles of various degrtes; Burk's also lists 4.500 people who, by reason of pedigree or other qualities, can be counted as Landed Gentry and another 1,480 or so have the hereditaiy title of Baronet." The Labor Government announced in 1965 that it would more award no hereditary but this may be peerages reversed if the Conservative party comes to power again. "And neither party, it ap pears, has any intention of 900 the nearly abolishing hereditary peerages currently existing," Perrott wrote. The Earl of Huntington, who; traces his descent from an aide of William the Conqueror in 1066, is a socialist, one of a dozen or so hereditary peers who are on the left wing. He told Perrott that one of the good things about the aristocracy was its general honesty and he insisted that the House of often attacked Lords, by Laborites as a useless anachronism, perform an important function in giving time to honor-givin- j ' executive. "In high school," he recalled. "They needed a flute player for the band and they recruited me. In my senior year the music suffered a heart professor attack and I took over much of his physical work such as time beating." He went to the University of Redlands where he became a minority view. major in English literature but "The House of Lords," he also continued his study of said, heretically, "is one of the music. Later he studied under last bulwark of Symphony. democracy." Alfred Hertz, conductor-founde- r noolcman interviewed Another 1 1n work he has newspaper of the San Francisco Symphony. by Perrott was the Earl of Been through the mill in jobs Pembroke who remembered from to police reporter ranging GAS IN INDUSTRY when there were 52 gardeners night city editor. NEW YORK (UPI) The at his famous stately home,! he tells an "Remember," same gas flame that cooks your Wilton House. Now there a a Interviewer, "I'm a newspaper-Oian- , itood and heats your home has total permanent staff of only too. "I use music like about 28,000 uses ir. industry. five and a few temporaries. Other people use golf." to the Gas Appliance Among his otlxr titles is the "There are similarities in the according Association. Manufacturers Earldom of Montgomery and on two activities," he says. "I'm The industrial roles of gas one occasion an American dealing with ranges from "cabbage" to kilns. visitor said: musicians, and some "Cabbages" are compressed "I must be related to you. My printers and pressmen who axe bales of metal scrap that are name's Montgomery.' Iso very temperamental. fed to powerful-gas-fire- d furna"I had to break the sad news' Involves Artistry ces for Kilns of to her that Montgomery is the "Of course, when artistry Is many varieties, such as for name the family always gave to Involved as in the case of a fashioning bricks, also are jas-- i its illegitimate offspring," the Steel Frame 3 Fieee Lawn ef 2 rrr; chairs Earl said. i. Steel angle frame with baked enamel finish. Shredded polyfoam seat cushion with Adjusts to five positions! Tubu'.ar aluminum with vinyl web felted Simone print op cotton filled back. seat, back and canopy interior. teat. SAVE $1 Unfinished GUARD RAIL Similar 3" Extension Rail. Guard pands from 50 Ex- to 70 inches. Gold color enamel -- tubular steel. 15 to 4 Illustration finished inches high. Swivel stroller with shopping basket, play tray and colorful beads. Adjustable footrest and backrest for baby's comfort. 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