A OUR FOURTH ANNIVERSARY EVERY Slli'GlE nut .lN STOCK GREATLY REDU SAL E- ! 59.50 OVERCOATS Slas TERRIFIC BARGAINS bed to 25.00 QNUHIY.-gggu; 40.50 EIIGLISH WURSTEII SUITS Now ONLY 29.50 39.50 MEN'S IIVERGDATS 15.00 i 5.00 HATS HOW 1.95 OVIICOATS Finns Make Nationally Known Over- Guoruateod. Assorted ooh-Quality 3?-and myios. Regular Prices to . NOW -- .......................... .. .. 25.00 piziminns 7 1-”... BIB WOOL 94.3 2-" MEN'S SLIRGOATS iittzt. f15. BOYS' PARKAS 9'3”?-i 7-” MEN'S PARKA8 brown and navy Drill Parkas. linings. Showerproof, dproof. Regular 31836- NOW ..................................... .. Heavy ted wool 9.95 ALL W'00L MEN'S JAB-SHIRTS 5.99 l 14.95 BOMBER JACKETS now 8.95 I 7.95 ALL WOOL woiiii mus 4.95 I 4.50 IJOESKIH WORK SHIRTS 2.95 MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS BOYS' PLAID SHIRTS Sits BROKEN INES AND SlZES- BEST QFALITY T0 336.95. TO CLEAR 1-'9 I Men's Pullover SWEATERS 2'” MEN'S ZIPPER FRONT OVERALLS SANFORIZED 3-” 2.95 8. BOY'S MEN'S WEAR IIIGESS IEITIME Ontario Farmer cww;.n2e?om ....v:e1,-,;Seeks To Produce comes around within shooting distance. It was that same, l EXETIER. Ont. (CPL-The Paio-, trick that the two young foxesi were playing now. Too-smart must hrive slilnllfd mino is the subject of s two-veori m"e ma” 9”” '5 he 5”” ha"-breeding experiment on the farm M5 91” W” W0”””5 Wt H5 of Kirby Crocker near this south-I didn't run too hard. didn't hurryiwenem Omar” town. Jumper too much. He didn't want, Mr. Crock" in twins to produce 90 5" -I"mP" "3"-V mlhipnm-"a true palomino breed. Other horse A” m” m'"' s”f"'Eye3 ""5 ibreeders are watching with inter- orouchcd behind a pile of brush.iPS,' although some say on cm” His was all at to spring out andlbe donu- tuke Jumper by surprise. Of course.l i- r - - Rte couldn't know for quite a while s,,cZ::S'f.f,,U” 3.75 J'”Ck,'f,:f(e:"'”7.,.1,f, If 11" 3m9" mm” DI” W” '93”-Vihoping Dllf mtlres stick true to working out. All she could do was form and mmw . couple more be patient. and wait. Exams this springs. Mi 19"! "1" we 59W I” ""31 The palomino is generally an distance what looked like a snovi'-iacvidem 0, color and mm, appear 5'” b”"”'”m' In U” d”'eC”0"- Y”" in any breed. The Palomino Horse "Si Jumpfwls 9"” W” Snowy Association. of America lays down white. Only the tips of his ears me" qmuncmiom. - and his eyes were not white. They ..The body mat color M A palm W9” bmck bmi M C0"”9- 31 U imno shall be that of a newly distance they W1'I'9 just little black mimpd Unwed Sm,” mm mmt. 39”" "Oi "”''"”m”' The -”””V Mane and tail must be white or !” 5” he? '9” "my I" 9 5W1” blnnde and white face markings leap. Nurer and nearer came are nnmvedp Jumper the Hare. Twice he stop-1 ped and sat up very straight to! look back. He seemed to look ahead: i! More Than Color only just r-nmiuli to avoid run-l Mr. Crocker demands more than. ningblrrihto l1hlnizsl.1 He was li'3lCh-,cOlnr. He Mud. 1 im nd or t at fox. He wnnt- .. - ed to be or V:.:0:.::..r::.::'”:i."isleti was still being followed. The oniy,mm mm IVS mug” Maybe rut W” h” mum be 5”” W” m wmviiever see it in my lifetime but I' um” 1'" "mm "L ” ghmps" M feel that even if I make some the red coat. that Too-Smart worrnlsman cnnmb,mnn in developmg The m""”"L he 53”?” E glimpse a real palomino breed all this work of something moving among theiwm be worm no ' ""95 he W""!d bmmd MVR3" N9”! His main stiirl horse is Pal-0- Jump" II” ' "r”"k 3" h'5 0WmMine three-duartcrs Arabian and that those young foxes knew noili-lm, pfans to use Gokien MAXIM; one in: abotit. Every now and thcnior his mo bnwdmg mm.” more he jumps high in the air for aiempmively in the Imure ' general look around. He jumpsp Two hlommos brm' mgebhcr high "muzh I” be ml” "9 Umkimav produce a horse of a different 0'" ""Wlb0""K b"5h""- I"il5v'mior but so far Pal-0-Mine has 'mmps' and mck"' He mm” ”"e'su-ed two palomirlo foals out of the "I the" high Ob5""'"”0” -I"mp5'tn-o palomino mares Also two of I'M" he W" (lime "9" "mugh its three colts by alnon-palomino for the fox in hiding to leap outnimnre we" pnlominos HS '”"" '"Jm"'hmg "d behmd 8' Mr Crocker thinkca true pa'o-' "'"” 9”” "I b””"- "9 ”'”"'dUmiiio' breed, may be established around in the air. a trick he had smme time within moi mx; 40 learned long ago. When he landcdwiwm-. he was headed in another direc-f Hui he Mm phi.os0ph3Cam,, lion. Thn smart trick of tboseK.M . . young foxes had failed. at :,1y::e&'lltoT.5.ke T complem 100' contract Bridge Continued from page 1 the soc. East was inclined to congratulate himself land pFltlnPri for defentinz the vulneinblc game contract, but when ihr session was over andi .n... LI" "”'V"”nH 5”I''''511p5 99"” I3” Natives of western Samoa. un- consulted. hc innd West! saw Ihallllftr New Zr-alantl administration. tI"'"' m3"?hsP”l"'v 5”” 0" "U5 are ('hristians of various denom- board was not impressive. Norlimmons, C should it have been! East's spade return. to get the setting trick then and there. was extremely mis- guided. A heart return was clear- ly indicated, and it would have raised the penalty and the match- point score very tipprcciiibly. Dark Lightning Helen Topping Millet Synopsis Gary Tallman, young petro- leum engineer from Alabama, misses his bus to San Antonio. Mona Mason wife of a cattle rancher gives him a lift. At her place a hog runs out into the road. she loses control of the car and crashes into I. ditch. l'nliurt herself, she has the injured Gary taken to her house. Hrl" twenty-one-year-old daughter. Adelaide, helps nurse him back to health and Gary falls in love with her.. He sus- pects that there is oil on the Mason land and goes with Ade- lnide to old llughey Father- gill to find 3. geological map of the county. CHAPTER V "Got 'em all here." Old I-Iugbcy droppcrl on ri stool and ripread the soiled sheets over his knees. "Here she is. "Look a' here." He traced with it long and filthy finger- nnil. "There, she lays...there's the Sabine uplift - where they found the big pool and over here there aiirt nothing. Lime and salt Wl'lli'l', I tell you.” - With swift, tratned vision Gary st.iicl:ed the map. It. was an old print, he noted. twenty years old. There was the uplift but to the north of it it fault - and on the edge of that - his breath be- gan to quicken it little. "Thanks, Mr. Fothergill." He handed the map back. "I guess you're i'iglit. I-lcre btiy your- self some tobacco." "Willi a minute," shrilied the old maxi. fumbling Vi'lK.l'l the shoe- string. "I ain't told you yet about that time down to Beaumont. I was there. There wlicn Spindletop come ill. I got me a liali-acre. too, and there was oil under it plenty, but some Pennsylvania fcllers got their well down first, two hundred foot UVPF my line. and they over- shot and drcened the oil from my land before I could raise me e- nough money to hire a drill rig. I sold my piece for ten thousand dollars. Then I went up into Okla- homy and lost it all. Bought me on eighth and she came in a gas- ser and catchcd afirc.” "Have to get iilong. You're quite sure there's no oil under these structures?" "Mister, there ain't any oil be- tween the bottom of this oounty Radar Bases in North Warn of I&II(IhI Enemy Planes illlv-ilcollr. lsunai In at- oblects in the sky. tell the mani- a and U3. dtlee. est aspects when to direct the Nlllmnilv deunob hen. l and Chinyl If they was - I wouldn't be a-setting here. I'd be riding wound in a big black Bums mobile with one of them brass horns tootin' on it. Mister. you ain't got the mate to this here two bits, have you? I could use me two or three pork ch0P5- C0"?9 dark. I ain't ot a pork chop in 8. time." Gary found the mate to the quarter, handed it over. "Shake yourself well." advised Ade- laide oshe went back to the car. "I got the cold shivers when he grab- bed you. I was sitting here wonder- ing if I ought to go yell for the police." "Heis got the map - but it's an old edition. I'll have to write for a new one. I guess." "But. that will take days let's telegraph. can't we? That would be quicker. Dad always wires for the Chicago cattle prices - snd this is more important." "If I sent a wire somebody would start talking," he said. "You can't hide oil - or even a suspicion that there might be oil. Any- way - there's no hurry. If the stuftf's down there well. it's been there ever since the ocean moved off and left this part of the earth. Ever since the sea- weed and the little crustaceans and the minions of little crea- tures died, and the river silt covered them and the salt water seeped in and protected them. while the pressure of the heaving strata. down. there crushed them into oil." "Gary Tsllman - you did see sometlurig on that map! You can't fool me. You're trying to be mys- terious and obscure. but I can see right through you. You've got red spots in both cheeks." "Fever," he said. "I've been with you for hours. How do you ex- pect me in keep my' temperature down?" "We're going straight home to tell Dad. I believe you'd simply get up and go off to Mexico - and not say ll. word. knowing all the time what was on that map. Well, you're not going one step. mister. Not till we know for sure." "There is a fault on that map - it does look interesting. But it may not be I. geotynicline. There may not be all under it. It merely looks a. little like a place where oil could be." "I know it. I knew you were keeping it to yourself." "But - it's because it's all in- definite. Going down after all - unless you're pretty sure it's there - is corps-naive. I wouidntt want to raise any false hopes." "Dad could hire a geologist." "A survey costs money, too. The big oil companies keep their own crews. but an independent owner would have to take his own risks." "Oliver works for a big oil com- "I-le sells leases. He doesn't know about production. If there were any indications that there's, oil under your place, Kimball would want your father to sell out to somebody." "And he'd want all the credit, and grab it. too. And probably half the money. I wouiavt trust Oliver an inch. Don't say a word, Gary, when Oliver is around." Osry agreed promptly because he did not like Ollwr. either. oli- ver's condescending attitude had made his fist; tingle already. "I hope nobody come in tonkht - then we can tell Dad and Moth- er." Adefhiae run an excitedly. "And you can advise Dad what to A SINGLE SIP TILL! WHY weiiisv-I uiixwss ll canny: nmm muse warn you Coughs COID3 - ASTHMA - UIONCNTTIS Insane I Is I bl&ly Inland Dinn- BUCKIEYS MIXTURE No Early End Seen To Bloody Mau Mau War I (By Richard G. Mus I.) NAIROBI, Kenya. (AP)-British bombers are driving a shadow army of Mali Mau killers from, Kenya's dense bamboo forests so that ground forces can get all them. But authorities in this troubled Crown colony soc no quick end to the anti-white terror- ism. They predict the bloody war.l which In 15 months has cost Bri-E lain more than 510,000,000. will last until security forces bring in, the Man Man's top leaders---in-' cluding Dedyan Kinathi. who boasts the title "Field Marshall Russia." l Peace also depends on the shift- ing loyalty of Kenya's 1.2500001 Kikuyu tribesmcn who fill the fertile fields around Nairobi and have been subjected to unconsing Man Man pressure. The Man Man want the Klkuyus. who number almost one-fourth of Kenya's Afri- can population, to help them clrlvc oui. all foreigners -the 154,000 Asians as well as 42,000 Europ- cans. ''It would be folly to suggest that an end to the Man Man fight is in sight. That depends on a change of heart on the port of the Kikuyul," declared Brig. W. L. Gibson, Kenya's information director. 196 Civilians Dead Man Man atrocities have cost. the lives of 796 civilians -668 Africans. 13 Asians and 16 whites. Gen. Sir George Erskine, Bri- tish commander in Kenya. con- tinues to press his fight against the Man Man over some 7,000 square miles from the Aberdtiro range to the slopes of Mount Kenya. His forces total 34.000 men-10 battalions of British troops and King's African Rifles. 8.000 regular police and 20.000 part-time police. Twelve British bombers are herding lhe Man Man out of 3,- 000-square-miles of highland for- est. A major on Ersklne's staff said the Man Mau are suffering a dc- flnlte setback and expressed be- lief the fighting might end this year. Authorities estimate that .'l.200 Mail Man have been killed. 300 wounded and 900 captured. About . get millions of dollars-" she was breathless and her eyes were like two hot. bumlng stars. "What could you buy with it." Gary drawled, "that would be any better than what you have now?" (continued) do. Oh, Gary -- suppose we did- i00 others have been tried and hanged for murder. Security for- ccs are still killing off about 300 Man Mail a month and capturing another 150. The jails are crowd- ed with 30,000 suspects. ('ntch No. 2 Leader Last week. the Man Man's No. 2 field lcatler. Stanley IGeneral China) Miilhenge, was wounded and captured. The founder of the Man Man, known as Burning Spear Kaiiyatla, is Ierving a seven-year jail term. A Mail Mail "queen," Waglri, of the Thomsons Falls district, has hccn sentenced to 10 years for inking the oath in a"coronntion" L-crcmony IiISl June aimed at div- eriinsz Kikuyu attention from the crowning: of Queen Elizabeth. But Field Marshal Russia and a group of seasoned Mau Mau commanders are still carrying on the fight. Despite the leaders' use of Rug. sin and China in their names. little evidence is found of Com- munist support. Britons say Com. munism is almost non-existent in Kenya. Soviellnduslry Unable To Meet China's Demands By Seymour Topping IDNDON. (AP) - The Krem. lin has told Peiping that Soviet industry cannot fulfil all Red China's demands for vital tools and machinery. Western diplo- mats report. The Russian action has dealt a sharp blow to Mac Tze-tunes five-year plan. The Chinese trade mission now dickerlng in Moscow was said to have been informed that nussiui factories are too hard-pressed wltn norm demands to meet any of Peiping's orders. These respon- sible sources think another fac- tor may be that Mao just can't pay the bill for any substantial increase in Soviet exports. The Russians have dodged mak- ing big loans to their Chinese al- lies. and Peiping has been com- pelled to barter agricultural pro- ducts for soviet machinery, trucks and building equipment. Little For Export Hedging on the payment ques- tion. the Kremlin is believed to have made its excuses for holding down on deliveries on the basis of these factors: Soviet plants have been going full blast to satisfy the vast needs of the armed forces and the pro- gram for industrial expansion. Now on top of this, Premier Georgi Malenkov has called for a huge output of consumer goods such as radios, shoes and sewing machines. As a result, nothing much is left over for export be- yond the production already ear- marked for Red China. If these reports are true-and they are based on the best in- formation available to the West- Mao will be compelled to cut drastically his scheme to indus- trialize Red China at high speed. The rebuff from the Kremlin may force Mac to approach the West for industrial equipment now embargoed as strategic. But even if the trade bans are lifted. experts here believe Red China's critical shortage of foreign ex- change will make her a poor mar- ket for Western business men. The Kremlin's reluctance to fork over a bigger share of Rus- sian production is not expected to cause any serious rift with the Peiping regime. The first popular house of as- sembly for Nova Scotia at Hali- fax was elected in 1758. Polar Test Flight Sompletetl40Minute9 Ahead Schedule STOCLKHOLM, (AP) - Boundi- navian-Airlines' "Clorm Vlkiru Super-Cloudmsster landed 40 min- utes ahead of schedule here early today, completing a 6,00)-mile polar test flight across the top of the world from Los Angeles. The company hopes to inaugur- ate regular Scandinavia-to-I..os Super-Cloudimaster landed 40 min- The four-engine DO-GB loft Los Angeles passenger service an the route by May 1 if neoaau-y agree- ments can be concludm with can- ada and the United states. The four-engine DC-GB loft Lox Angeles Friday and flow by way of Edmonton. Churchill. Frobielie: Bay. N.W.T.. and Greenland. It landed here at 4:35 am. 10:36 pm. EST Sunday. after a nine-hour nonstop flight from Greenland. The Pacific Ocean. greatest of the world's oceans. is 10,000 miles wide at the Equator. Prove CONTINUES The Values MEN'S STORE 144 Gredt George St. YOURSELF ! We believe. . . and customers tell "there's N0 Sale Values to equal GllEENDAL'S!" You can spend a few profitable mlnules proving this. THIS AMAZING SALE The GREEHIJAL Co. Ltd. It For ALL WEEK! Are Here ! LADll'3S' SIORE 150 Great George St. r A COCK. scratching his joy have been. But you will be sure you The Cock and the Jewel the ground for something to eat, turned up a Jewel that had by chance been dropped there. "Ho!" said lie. "a fine thing you an. no doubt, and. Ind your owner found you. great would for me! give me 1 single grain of corn before all the jewels in the world." I MORAL: it's far more important to have the things you really need, to have luxuries. That's why you should do as so many other far- - sighted Canadians do-build up a savings account at The Canadian Bank of Cormna-es. Then noodnevergowlthbutthe necessities of life. Visit our nearest branch today. llluuuioa Ildaeuas Edition of deaf: The , Canadian Bonk of Commerce byArfAsrReoUIOlN:.?ul'N