.k 195! ' (..-.-.-'rU.'.v:v:.i.-.4 '41! Sacred concert in Honor of Margiieritebourgsoys Ali enjoyable concert was held in St. Augustine's Convent on Friday srternoon and Friday evening in honor of Blessed Marguerite Bour- geoys, foundress of the Congrega- tion de Notre Dame. The main play ”Le Voyagere de Marie". was in three acts. The role of Mar- glicrite Bourgeoys was ably played by Bernadette Plneau. In the first act we see Marguerite, a young girl. greatly perplexed as to ihc state of life she should choose. France, represented by Gisele Pain- cliaud, calls her to stay in her own country to enjoy the pleasures and comforts of! life. Canada. Carmella Kadeau. in her turn begs Marguer- itc to come and teach the Canad- ian children. However, Faith, Elsie Caiiont. will triumph. in the second act Marguerlte's doubts are disspelled when the Blessed .Virgin, in the person of olive Gallant, appears and says, "Go, I shall never abandon you!" This is one of the most beautiful isbleaus. While Marguerite prays for light the Ave Maria by Rose- ulg is sung. The last scene shows Marguerite with her first two pu- pils. Mr. ivfaisonneuve; played by Alice Dulong. promises her a sthlilo as her first school. Mar- izllcriie asks him to plant the cross on Mount Royal. As the stone closes we see Marguerite Bourgeoys in the piocession which is preceded by the cross. and we ll0i1l' her gentle voice repeating the "Our Father" while a Vesper hymn 1.. being played at a distance. The programme was carried out as follows:- bPDuo: First Wsltses-F. shu- .i-i. song: Le Canada to prie. Piano: Marche des Pretrea- liicridclssohn. . Act I: Lo Voyagere de Marie. Piano: Sonata in G. manur- Mozart. Act II: La Voysgere do Maris. solo: Ave Maria-Rosewig. Act 111: La ,Voysgere do Marie. sketch: A miracle in Marguerite Bourgcoys life. Song: We sing to thee. 0 Mar- liucritc! ' Choral speaking: Glolre a Mar- mioi-in-. nourgeoysi "song with tableau: O Marguer- l f'. A large number of parents were present. All expressed their ap- nrccintion in words of praise and ronimendstion on the splendid :i'n(i1I in which the play was car- lP . Loose Dandruff Try This Home Treatment For Quick Ease and Comfort Here is a clean powerful pene- trating oil that brings speedy re- lirf from the itching torture and discomfort. b 76. Is,ALAsKAv . I-Ir-.i.tsI.1..'. tiAifAlMI 2sie:liir.saiizI.-iris.-sir.-..i? By CLARKE BEACH Alaskan residents don't think very highly of the Pentagon's present d f 1 th 1 territory. purge:-oxyeaei-sent.sl:eig Go:elrnor and their delegates in U. 3. Congress have pleaded for expenditures amounting to many times the sum now programmed to build up Alaska's defenses. The matter was brought sharply to focus when a subcommittee of the Senate armed services committee reported recently on its study of the millltsry situation in Alaska. Committeemen found the people of Nome (population. 1,86d) in an uproar over the fact that all combat military forces had been removed from the area. Marks Field, their little military air strip. had been closed. Only small non-combat det chments remained. Nome residents are among the closest American neighbors to the Soviet Union. Nome is the southern shore of the Seward Peninsula, which at one point is only. 56 miles from Siberia. Yet the military have no plans to defend any part of the peninsula by ground action, accord- ing to the report. . The idea behind this is that northern Alaska's vast Tundra. with- out highways, railroads or even trails, could not possibly be kept in- violate from an enemy lodgement at some point. But unless the enemy got possession of the air fields and the small transportation system in the south, he could do nothing in Alaska that would give him much milltiiry advantage. so the plan is to center Alaska's defenses on the three air force bases, Eimendorf Field at Anchorage and Eielson and Ladd near Fair- banks; on the Army base at Fort Richardson. Anchorage, and on the naval base'at Kodiak. the big island south of Anchorage. only moderate sised forces will be garrisoned there-entirely too moderate in the opinion of Alaskan spokesmen. when housing and faculties are-available, 34,000 men will be kept in the territory. The original plan was to have the full force there by July, 1962. Now, ac- cording to the committee. the program has been speeded up. some of the faculties ' for completion in 1952 will be ready this year. On the seaward Peninsula are the only U. 8. tin deposits of any consequence. If the Malay Peninsula, the principal source for U. tin were lost to the Communists, the Seward supply might be of crit. iooi importance. Another. important consideration iattha oil in the Point Barrow naval resenJ.lands-I-far out ofi the undefended margin. Up then on ;l::"Ar1t:isc5p::tn”t,h3ooNoa7w8yol1ia:hbeenJzxplorigg pontintlal all lands for - . . e r c a - 000 Ignore by Dec. 31. .1952. p.” " -P ' "Md WW0” o big oil fields of great comm ci l im t h . govern But Just recently the Naevry lbs-ougplfi): ix?"two":oXSf..?.”".,fff,, b.ndoIg:&l'oigislt:!r:re fairly confident that a rich oil area will some day Alaska are not very The military supply command and would an influx of heavy well forces there are barely adequate for the present Dr l-Olllly ihadeo ate to give logistic support to reinforcements, said the report. Naval, Air Force and Army reserve programs in the te i-it been quite unsuccessful. Th i ill 1' ow mu LMORLC: 1:”: popumum 0: lcmv components number only about M” "W W "fairly adequate" said the committe n Rd. h I th I 9. It ufe ;.dE;:"g::e' ” 5"b5'-"lull Progress is being made in building up 0 ormation has been available as ti .5:.":..'::..:.0 ::'.r.:i...:::.::.:i iii2”it.:2Tf.”.?:w".i.'il.lf..';” i y at Tscotna. t V" W gt K:;kok;i:i:0:u:ieera.r Macclrath, which is northwest of Anchorage o o A km” He o:ll'ul1I;' tillbtllllltlofll whi are lfuskokwin. r.. n sum t from the 'umgn he Yukon River by sedimentation. "wsur stones '- snows.-gs VITAL was QUESTIONS A powerful answer to all thy,- Q"""9"5 3150111 Why American N009: are fighting in Korea is given in the gripping documentary motloln picture. "Why Korea?" 09611 as day at th P . ward Theatre. 9 thee Ed Compiled by Twentieth century- Fox Movietone News from hund. reds of thousands of feet of news- to where the new radar sta- mi 9”" the river. however. as its mob"5."i:'ai.?,;";3J running of Marichuris by the Jap- Inese: the invasion of Ethiopia and the uncontrolled Nazi aggres- sion. It shows how the world urned its check the other way an attitude . 'hi h ' World wmjluc contributed to "Why Korea?" illustrates how W9 "m9 Plttern and emphasizes "'9 importance of stopping 13!; 5. sion before it goes too far. I Don't dig with fingernails. that only serves to spread the iroublm Jusi uu equal parts .of Moono's Emerald Oil and olive oil. APPW izenily with the fingertips once a day and shampoo every fourth day. You'll find this treatment not only soothes the itching and torture but Mina promote more-rapid healing -more floating dandruff becomes a ihing of the past. I sip clears "ii and hair begins to hielssn. You can obtain lnisnld on in U1! nri lnal bottle wherever drugs are Mi: - ' A 00. am. nsaassaoiz lillaliag DRUG The - I A 3306. ' 3' refused. Communist aggression is following 10 . The so minute rub) t AUCK '. new vwhy Kore”... In the . ec was LAND, N.Z.-(CP)-The mmc won, 0, the events w:i":;' :gg':::9';:lI;ow:iy Moviewne News labor shortage is acute in New led 0!: to the United Nations police tween Presld as d conference bk zemmd md ma” the" u” 09"" Icuon in me 1,," Elm" hvenmth Cmegit FTruman and inks for nearly 40,000 men and we. The mm mghnghtf me me O! and D." 1 Fur? ox Production men workers. Machinery in many uunonm ma Hm": the ovum mm)" D 38 iaulfsllllllgknlzs Wash- i,r;d:ls,terle:9lles idle because of a lack ' t " - rs rs. ' ms GUARDIAN. May Have Real cure For Baldness By Howard W. llakeslee Associated Press science Editor NEW YORK, March 2l-(AP)- Is the baldhcadeci man about to be emancipated? Has medicine, after 5000 years of complete failure-mostly unadult- erated fakery-come up with a magic hormone that will trans- form a shiny pate into a. samson- isn growth of beauty? ' If it has, then minions of bald- les are due for new lives. The cause of all this is a press an ouncement made a few days ago by the United Research Lab- oratories. Philadelphia, a small chemical concern. The announce- ment sald they had isolated a new hormone from the pituitary gland in the brain. , Rubbed on the heads of two men who had been bald for five Years. this hormone. the announce- ment ssid, induced growth of somewhat sparse hair to a. length of half an inch in five weeks, and that it was not fuss but real hair. Identities of the men and the doctors giving the hcrmone were This is the first claim for a specific hair hormone-for the on. thing all baldies have dreamed. It comes in a cream. You just run it on the bald spot and out comes the hair. HOWGVN. the Philadelphia. hor- mans is not on the market, and won't be unless the United states Food and Drug Administration says the claims are true. And the United Raearch people say they won't ask for a ruling un. til other scientific institutions support the hair-growing claims. Only the pituitary hormones- not the new one but those prev. iously known-have put on any h ir. and thus far cnly a special t pe of baldness known as alopec- ia. If you ask your doctor. he pro. Milly W1" tell you that this hair Vould hive grown back anyway. However records to the contrary about alopecis exist at American Medical Association headquarters in Chicago. 1 Im Betting phone calls about the new hormone. day and night, what do I think? I have no prg- dicticns. I've done a lot of investigating of the Philadelphia company and of the scientific recordg, 1 11”, found nothing to rule out the peg. sibliity that a new hormone may have been discovered and that it affects hair. Nor is there any proof yet that this hormone helps bald men. Of Course. what the doctors say 1-91'” some to discourage us bald. s. .....m....ggg N. Z. LABOR SHORTAGE ;;.::3I!' tllio!-9, (capers with silior nukes; (ML; as amt as 95.00 novel GHARLOT'l'E'llOWN llow Iiritlsli V” Vlsspon lisslgnsii g Against submarines 3! AIIII Harvey Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, March 2i-(OPi- A new British weapon designed to make life a lot tougher for even the speediest subm in has caused ripples of speculation. One British writer hailed it as capable of doing for the navy what radar did for the R. A. F. during the Second World War. The new device--its name and details are on the secret list-was mentioned in the House of Com- mons last night by James Cal- laghan. parliamentary secretary of the Admiralty. It is a mechani- cal brain which locates. attacks. aims and fires automatically. Callaghan told the House that Britain will have 232 new ships in her navy when the three-year naval program is completed. He asked 538,000,000 (O834.000.000) for the navy this year. The new units would include six aircraft carriers. eight destroy- ers. 24 frigate: and almost 2!) mineswcepers and patrol boats. Discussing the new weapon. Callaghan said: "I have seen a demonstration of this equipment. which now is un- dergoing trials at sea. It is a most remarkable evidence of the way in which anti-submarine weapons have developed since the last war." Naval writers took over from there. With remarkable unanimity. correspondents for leading news- papers said they "understood" that the secret equipment con- stitutes a further development of the post-war "squad," a' multi- barrelled mortar which lays down a pattern of shells for underwat- er explosion. A. J. Mcwhinriie wrote in the Labor Daily Herald that the new weapon produces a more-devastat-. ing explosion than has ever been known in anti-submarine warfare. Nowell Hall, naval correspondent for the Conservative Daily Tele- graph, said ihe nerw bombs would pierce even the toughest hull if eioploded within a. certain distance. W. A. Crummley, naval reporter for the Daily Express, said the secret of the new equipment is that it prevents U-boats from es- caping destruction at the last minute. "It cuts out the nsdic 'blind spot' in which the destroyer lost contact with its target in the last half-mile of its full-speed run-in to drop depth charges." said Crummley. "It cuts out human calculations-and errors." Asdlc stands for Allied submar- ine detectlon investigation corn- mittee. and was the means used for detecting U-boats in the Sec- ond World War. The new device SPOTLIGIITED-Seldom photo- graphed these days, Earl Browder. former head of the Communist Party in the U. 5.. is pictured as he arrived at Federal Distrct Court in Washington to answer a charge of contempt of Congress. He had refused to answer ques- tions of the Senate Armed ser- vices Committee. Y. M. G. A. News The Alpha and Beta Phiat Chap- ters got together last Thursday for a trip to one of the local depart- ment stores. The girls Spent 918 evening discussing the effect of colors on figures and feelings. sur- rounded by bolts of colorful ma- terials, the girls tried color schemes and harmony in order to find out those shades most suited for each individual. The discus- sion was led by Miss Marjorie Hill of the Vocational School. The Phalanx Fraternity held a successful bridge party on Friday evening with a crowd of over sev- enty in attendance. The prize winners for the progressive tables were Mrs. Christine Agnew and Mr. J. C. Saint. and for the non- progressive. Miss Phyllis Murray and Mr. Don Wonnaoott. Prizes were presented to the lucky win- ners following a delicious lunch. The Hi-Y News for the week is centred upon the two boys' clubs with the Acmy boys interested and busy at their dancing class and the Alpha Club putting on a rum- mage sale last Saturday afternoon. This latter was a very succe 'ui project. The'Delta girls held a. special meeting during the week in order to work on curtains for the Hi-Y Club room. The last regular meeting of the is said to leave asdic far behind. So-Ed series was held on Monday I .. r u PAGE ssvifmijssiv. & Expect 25th Brigade To, a A Leave For Korea Soon .. .'sosso time no as Thg1;ri:rivyYAr"epoMrtfex:h Ciabaddgpgtth 5 m”""' '9" Vum” t” m. Korean casualty Saturday as plans ""03 bwhl” "W5 W” '4” ma wem mad for gmppmg 5,000 mg” examinationd had show; was Ilka Canadian troops to that threatre '-0 W P9955 b9c"e:”thn "funds. to help buttress the front aglinst T04!!! 1159 I1”-"nV'md a "nun a possible Chinese spring offensive. I'M" MN” 5" 9 '5 1 gr Lg is, 1'! dead, so wounded and five in: 3553:6133! trig ofgitogth mire lured in NW0 I00id'"i'- likely, early in April to board Am- The lists nevegusgtfbylthculhgll erlcan troopships for the Far East. 0851103193 WC" 5 9 1 "a be Brig. Frank Fleury. senior csn- In it 1"" W" 0' "ii 30” T adian officer at Gen. MacArthur's hind W0 Wwll it-)m:ld””"','d1 umgbf Tokyo headquarters. flew into 0t- the Wounded W0 r Y” tawa today to go into conference 30 111013 W8 "D115 111110 Y- with army officials about the move- 31'18- 11WW'3 "'1'"! "um Tiwy" mm. is the signal for army heldautri-4 Above Average Casualties ' era to launch wide-ranging discuh it Meanwhile, the fourth casualty 3;”:e:to':)1onu!:; gbaut mgvqggi N 11” ""m 'm" "” mu B"'"u”"' Join the Patrlciaa but about deval- Princess Patricias Canadian Light opmenu m Km,” "gm infantry, went into action about MM.” ,9 ,, Feb. 20 indicated casualties are oc- wgxzgifln Mplgi: wnnnlfu 1:" curring above the average Defence week the United Nguou mm" -1.. lnrilgraiasjter Claxton has said is an.c- bung mmorud with an on”: ' i bi cl and other troops ' Mi-. Claxton told the pigvldgia gwm cmmemm.. night with a good crowd in -at- mainly 3 DOSIWO chim” 59'1"” tendance. We hear that we have offensive. ' an expert group of golfers now and It still 151115 fillet-T Igihfti-har wlfg that our public speakers are also offensive is com nE- - Comma I0 1 . Th Canadian brigade should be in ac- itzsxijrbiiftoere IiJr?bt:lfar:?:p;i1aY;:1 ifsspeclatl tion against "9 Wm” um” "Hy m Hillbilly party to wind up things May since it Wm mm” on April 2nd. three weeks to cross the Pacific. can't Sit Still No, Siree, we can't sit still and let the ladies have all the fun-so we join in celebrating the opening of our new Ladles' Wear Store by offering for the next few days HM) OFF EVERYTHING IN THE stone . NO MATTER WHAT YOUR. NEEDS MAY BE - - - FOR MAN OR BOY! GBEENDALJ MEli'S' STORE CLOTHES FOR Handbags loomy; made ll'i'ilI'f. 1 beautifully handbags of many fine materials. offer a choice to the well groomed woman of her favorite accessory. Tl-ICE FASHION SHOPPE THIS SPRING. AS ALWAYS. sMAiir”, The backbone of your Spring ward- robe ls your suit. silhouette . . at our store. USE Smartly slim in appealing, yet long wearing of fabric . . . in a color that's a perfect reflection of Spring '51 fashions. Here now for your select- ion, are our Gabardines, Rayons, Worstedscand Tweeds. Price Range - 29.50 to 79.95 ' Gloves i Gloves are all-important to the well-groomed woman. 39W"Ch"'Y 'M!lh Your Y-IW fashion-right and colorful. OHM W"? 01' With Your fav- See' the handsome new OF"! 3M?! - - - I DPOINIO leather and fabric collection WW1 one of 'il'io blouses OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN The i'.-'ASHlONl S; 1 . i” A , i in or. ososos or. please: from our Spring-themed new collection. Embroidery trims . -. . solid colon and -gay prints. - ' Indications were that the oath in between We "15 W" V”” T