AFRAID or ACID indigestion ? IOU I quick! A couple of IBVNES help do the trick.‘ $8 tb In! of‘ acid indigestion scat-d you bee: enjoying a good meal? Well- lno an and those hers right hack to hep; use‘: land-now that Rennie: In k0 to help you: Beanies are small, blindly-flavoured tablets which vou pep into your mouth and eat like marlin. You can bank on Rennie-s to hip nlive add indigestion at onco ~eflfina or anywhere. Each Renirlie is nipped separately so you can keep a hi! ilfyvu: pocket or handbag. Then- anytime or anywhere that you feda digestive upset starting-you eat a Rennie or two for pleasant. prompt relief. Tholnlds of penons have got eoflltl and relief‘ with Rennies. Toke thin yourself for heartburn. nrid indi- gnfmn, distress after wilting nnd gas. If Reunion do not relieve your tiigcsljve tzvublm, it's high time you new your doctor. 25c and 75c at. all drug IDES. “lull! Paris Fashions By F‘LORL.NCE MILLS PARIS. Feb. 6—\APl—Parls la- shion showings began today and from first glimpses there ivill be nothing revolutionary" about “look ' Although it 1S too soon for fula‘. Judgment, it looks as if last ycai-‘s dresses can be touched up suffic- iently to keep you in style this spring without buying an CHTITE new wardi-obc. Desscs, Balancluga and Pzutuln showed fashions today which mressed both the sllln and lull skirts of 1948. Desaes, the Greek designer-play- ed tricks with slolcs and had them growing out of thfferellt. parts of the skirt and entwinmg the figure. He put hcmllncs 11f inches from the ground but Bal- snclsga. and Paquln both showed stills and day dresses nearly’ l5 inched fmrn the ground. ‘he Spaniard Balcllclacu is. showing varlatlons of has popular “flying panel“ suil. this sca50n_ The panel ls used on both suits and dresses and falls loose straight from the waist. Varialionsincludr a six-incit- rfeep peplurn frl front mrrgm’: in- to e full-length loose panel at the back. Afci-lmson taffeta suit m: it pine} o! closely-gathered 2n‘.- nun flying away from the ccnfzr of the Walsl. No Whiskers, llnion Rules VICTORIA, Fcb. 6 ICP; Growing of beards by Victoria's 13 bu; drivers ‘has been shelved. The Victoria Railwaynlens Union threw out the proposal. sponsored‘ in honor of B. lodges anniversary. after bitter debate. Union officials said they had no jurlsdlction to ponnlt its men to sprout whiskers. The British Columbia Electric Company regulations stipulate that employees must. report properly dressed and clean sllaven. Anyone found with a blt of stub-' ble was liable to suspension. That angle cleared up when company officials ssld they would forget the shaving rulc tllls once l! the men wanted to go ln for fac- ial foliage. But all the fuss over tlle nlatter caused interest ln the project. w log and the whole thing was drop- ped. BUMMERLAND, B.t - The natural color and flavor of ap~ ples fresh from the tree are retirin- ed lrl canned apple juice by l1 "chemurgfc" laboratory process dc- Willey veleped in this Okanngnn Comte. for duty 2 ,t.t§...r.. lAttitutle To 'Russia fllear By 1M. ROBERTS, Jr. (Associated Press News Analyst) Joseph Stalin gave the United Sftlfcs an opportunity this week to lllake its altitude perfectly" clcnl‘ and the Ullltcd Statcs adminis- trillion has taken full advantage of the opening. State Secretary Acheson and President Truman explain suc- ]\'il1\'li)', ullll a good hit or non- rllplormltlc satire too strong cven ‘to bo iOni. ‘Jl translation for for- eign consumption. why you can't do business with Stalin. The United States merely’ says that, while "Good Old Joe" i5 al- wvays talking about disarmament. pence. lifting tllc Bcvlin blockade ‘illtd file ililt‘, he is ilever \villlilg to really get down to business in the counclls which have been act up to handle those problurils. Now he Joust put up or shut up, or ratllcr |lf he won't put up he ‘v\0‘.'l'l he hstened to. So far, the Ultltod States l: lvily ahead on points in the latest propaganda bout ”l‘lvcrc are tun punts. r-sllcr-e the Llmlm Stalin {lull 1v; ~t|u.l All fill; lJllSlHLK“. has. bccll :0- lllg on lllrougll the press. Stalin, ‘a nlastcr or propaganda. has been able to LJEk “zthcut both; llcltl iifll'l'llilii_\' zlcctlttlllfilllc Could lllc Ullztccl Strict. chop :4 trlcckbustcl" into Nloscclvl"; propugzlllzlzl factory 1b) tlskm; l0l'lllall_\ for a router- jt-rlcc of the chicfs-of-statc inl- (nlcdlzllcly, where Russla “ould ‘olllicl- have lo put up or llfllllll by inc." acts. light 1|‘. lllls (‘llrrcilt fllaplfl‘ of the cold “'ai'. lllltt fhc ‘Llnitcd tatcs 2s rlgllt about Iii" nttltudei‘ i United States other Wcsteril [tlrcir presctlcc at .lcy If Sttllm is lll peuuc, Ulfr slte of the meeting doesn't nlatter, nor slloulcl pre- viously taken positions b!» allow- ctl to interfere. All agvwi that such cncc ‘would probably futilc as illl‘ m; any lt-ollccrlzcd, Bu! i‘. cffccllvc l'\|lS\\4‘l" offensive." . The other paint has been soft pcrlaled by f‘\(‘2'_\t\llt‘ liccallsg it ls lcllffictlll to ilflllfiit‘ "without calls- illg tnisllnrlcrslantililg. But Tru- man hinted o! 1t in his inaugural address. If Stalin should adopt “hat many believe would b; his sntavlcst l'F)Lll\f‘, and Prrrnolr a lllll ill lllf‘ cold “or for tlm pur- inc» of milling llit‘ u-orlri m tit-p‘, about the (iRliCPYIl of Cnrlilnulllsl azgrcsslmt, those “lln know tht» (longer might. use this polnl as their best weapon fur keeping the lrV-‘cstrrn ncriplos awake. i Tllr |iOlfll. ix this. Even hcr cxtitlnsiomsln, Russia's very cxistcncc as n ruthless dictator- ShID. her suppression nf the liber- ‘tics of l90.000.0'.)0 people. her own subsrrvlcncc to power-mad men who brat: of their independence of PITOTBilIY. lvcltltl rcmain a van- cer deep in the body of tho world. ‘ Achievement of a formal peace ,_beforc that cancer is eliminated lvrollld be only a sopol-iflc. Arriv- \fng at a day when you can do bus- fincss with Stalin cMlnOt hc the main OhJCCllVI‘. Rcal pc-auo can comi- only with the day when you idont have to rlo ‘nuslncss with h’m. or anyone like him, anywllrrc ‘in the world. llu?\‘(‘\'Cl‘, lllzt, llc relations with Polvcrs demand any such patr- vcalw interested a confor- he entirely agrcttllcnl ls nlzgrht be it most to Stalin's “pCaCE l l l I l without illarness Racing To lBe Revived ln Ottawa i O'I"l‘A\VA, Feb. 6 ~ <CP> - l-lar- ness racing. dormant in Ottawa for many yours. “ill be revived this summer with rt ltlday meeting. it was announced today after a con- fcrctlcc of vcpl-cscntzltivcs of the Oltnu-n Villlcy HHFHOSS Association nnrl the Conn-ought Purk Jockey Club. ’l‘llc rrleetiilg “ill he conducted from June 24 to July 3 at Con- nutigllt Park Oll the Quvbct: side of thc Oftmvzl Rlvcr. Spokpsnqpn f0,- Illc orznnizuflons snid prngrflrng \\'li| lncludo thrcc ruccs daily with frcc-for-alls and stake races. 'lho mectlnr: will bn conducted untlcr supervision of fhc Que-hot, Prolmrirll llolcrnmcill. \\I|il purl‘ mutllcl bolting. %~/{Ziiiii%cl YOUR lflDN EYS delicate , i] dill: “do. " "Ffifli ll uczmncids from Li: on n ailment which yen u added xsegwmuth system ~cllr| work thrown upon y" lid. neya. To llolp keep lilo Ilidmyl in pod udu, "PIP 1'4"‘ 7W! lyllenl oi seem acids and ‘I lined by colds ll other nilmo n n“ ‘: "fir"! mil. Noe-habit faring,- - I/fvrYt/u/Yl Aver/ht 1.... ~~tw~1~ ~~w l4I\' Million Dollars? Market Tipsters Know The Answers By JOHN L. SPRINGER NEW YORK, Feb. 6 - tAP; -~ There's more than one “ay to make a quick million in the stock market, if you believe the tips-tors. A supreme court justice only have restrained the man who made s reputation and $39030 a year predicting Wall Street's fut- uvc from comic strips. But Fycd- erick N. Goldstrlitll. the 82-year- old altalyst vivho was enjoined, vlas just one of malty prophets \\ll0 make thelrPFlving forecasting what stocks will do. At one time. one expert won a following with his dog licence theory, Hc reasoned that stock prices went up when p€0pic wcrc optimistic about. the economic future and down when the same people turned glum. He said orp- tinlislic people also bought licen- sed dogs. l-lc claimed. therefore. that lllc rise Ul‘ fall of dog hcell- ses throughout the cnuntn would tcll what. would happen to stock prlt-rs Anotllcl- tl|l;ll_v.~t' rrccnllv rc- porlcrl that nnmlvcls trrinlcd vll il|\ quarterly tllvldctld t-ltcclt Hum :l in: cfllflflllll) upped lllm off l0 market trends. The checks were nvlnbevcd in alphabetical order. If tllc ilutnbci- of hs t'llcck at one tilnc "was high. ll-- deduced that lhc stock “n1. ilCltl by sznlall hold- c:':~. \\'ll(‘|i the ltutilorr “'35 lolv‘ fllc stock “as held by big OWHETS The unw- to blty, he theorized. was “hon the number “as lo“: He ‘would sell uhrn the nltiwbcr “as lliglt, on his tllcovy that lvlclc pllh~ hr pZlYllPlpBlltJll in a bull nlurlzct signals its approaching and. liver since the Dolphin oracles prophetic utterances were inlcr— pretcd by high pricsts, prophets have bccn trying l0 look into the (t‘tlllOll'llt* futuvc. Crystal gazing info stock pYlCCS stilnctancs gains. fairly nvidc vogue umong the gull- ible people; despite strlltgcnt controls by the Securities and EX- change Ccannrusion and by the Nrw York Stock Ext-bongo and (itncr cyvhangzcs. lipslrrs gain cr-ltvcrfs “ho “ant. quick lflOlliy. fllcy sometimes make motley. ‘They losc, too. The oncs who “in. hkt- to boast about lt. Tllcs’: who losc usually kccp qllict. One thing lcgitimalt‘ stock cxcltnn!" trad- crs ret-ogllizc ls that lips on a stcck. if wvitlcly circulated, will r€~ suit ill enough buying to cause thc stock to rise without economic justification. Thr [Kunming ‘Iftls During the booming "10:, ‘i\l\€ll stock markets were not so strict- ly regulated as today, the Broad- way gambling crowd would at times rlcsccnd on Wall Slrcrf bORVCiTUOlTlS lTl TPSDOHSE l0 it ftp and rcqucst "put ten izrnncl on the nose of XYZ stock." Tips were a dime a dozer. in those days. The New York Stock Dccltungc and many brokerage hcuscs have spent. thousands of dollars to tell the public the exact function of the stock market. It is described as a frec and open market place for the buying and selling of sc- curltics, at varying prices. Qf all the methods USTG in con- ncctlon with buying and sclllltg securities, the Do-w theory" is probably the one most widely enl- ployetl and.tlle most thoroughly misunderstood. It is a well-recog- nized and accepted means for dc- tcnnirliilg a broad frond of New York Exchange prices. . By charting the movemcn ct stocks as nleasurod by the Dow- Jorles index of stock prices, the past trends of the market can be seen. Once this trend is known. the theory is that ft will continue ln a major wave-—up or down, as the cssc may he. The hard part comes in lmorw- lng when lilg tide has turned ln either direction. Even partners ln old established Wall Strcct brok- erage houses. who havc devoted s llfctlnle to n study of thr- market, milll disagree ln their interprets- tlorls of the fine points of fhc Dow theory. REVISITS HALIFAX ‘ AFTER. TEN YEARS HALIFAX. Feb. 3 —~tCPl-Caipt< rlin Slgfrld Erlcsson believed ft was “lust like coming homo" when he brought the SwedlslrAntci-lcnll liner Grlpsllofttt ln lle-re for the first titne tn 10 years. His men call hlnl the "sequin; Samaritan" because of his ship's extensive work tn the repatriation scrvlce during the lvai". In 1942, the Crlpsholnl carried thc first, exchange of prisoners with the Japanese from Portuguese East Africa. The vessel made several trips ferrylng returning nstlonuls to neutral European ports. Nature of his ulissfons made Captain lllrlcsson one of the few-going skippers who slept soundly ln their cabins. BARGEMLN IIONOII. NURSING SISTER NORTHAMPTON. England. Feb. Zl-tCPl-Bugelnen on cuuls be- tween London and Blrnlfnghsm have christened the waterway sys- tem "Ward's Way" tn honor of a u-omlln with one of the largest nursing "practices" in Britain. The nurse. Slater Mary Ward. came heme to her cottage at near- by Beure Stoke alter nursing over- seu during the war. she treated e worker from the Grand Union Canal and soon her name became known along the twisting water- ways. when the canals were not- lonslfzed, Sister Ward received of- flclnl stetus. Now seven mater flnns. and Brltlsh Canals. have en- lr [Qt-inn THE DUKE 0F KENT of all "llllknolvll child in a Labor party leaflet asscl-ting under Stwltllléf, ctwr CIEItPllCJ “Y-Cll iI “an found that t Foreign M BY ARE FICN , OSLO. Feb. tle-iAPl Foreign. Minister Halvarrl Lawn‘. fii°Cll.55-. in: tllc nosvihllilj: NOl‘\\.l_\' \\'lii be inlifctl tn _l0ll‘l n Noiszll Atlantic alliance. sold today Norway aloncl “ill decide her unsuer. l Langc denounced NDYWQKlBIli Communists. llc t‘l\f'tl".;(‘d tllc)" lmvr gitcn Ylloscruv crruncous ill-i furmntloil about Norway's politics! Witllvilll. rclcrving to zl rcceilt, Russian nnm l\\i§lll§ t-lzlrlficaLion‘ of Norway's attitudc. Langc told parliament: “\VhCn we take our stand. it cannot. bc dccidstl for us by what otlicr‘ ilzltlom “all? llb to do or not to tlu. ‘Thc tltrcitling (‘i(‘!ll(‘l'li._ mllsl. bc Olli‘ oun tlmatlon ofl “that secures Nor“ ay‘. interests and best contributes to rrcvont war." Lrlngr- said lllc brctlltdnvvn inst “cck-clltl of l:lik~' nf Ft Scnndin-l Pacific War Left Scant Impression 0n Solomon Isles BY KEN Lilli-LS BATAVIA. Jinn ~- IAPl -_- ‘flu’ most backward destitute islands tn the Pacific today are the ones that gained the greatest lval-tinlc ill-mt‘ the Solomons- ‘This “as lhc report of Cllpl. Irvin: Johnson. United Status skipper of the yacht "Yankee II," after he hatl fmlshetl the most conlplt-ln survey of Pacific islands that has been made since the war. The Sprlligficld, Mass. author and yachtman flTllVCfi in the East; Indies aftcv sailing for almost a year through tlic Pacific and nluk- lng 85 stops, most of tllum at re- mote islands. ' "Shipping in the British and Australian Solonlons is almost at il standstill." Johnson said. "Capra is not. geltlnh: out and the coconut plantations are deteriorating rapid- ly. Many nativcs are going hungry." ‘There arc fcw reminders that the South Pacific was one of the world's great battlefields, or that plnccs like Tulllgl, Bougalltvillc. "Iron Bottom Buy." "The Slot" and Save Island flll monumental places 1n thr- lllstory of the Sec- ond World War. Iboftlng Piers "AI Guadalcanal the piers and warehouses built. during the war are rolling and falling apart." he sald. "Nothing will be left of tllcm ln another your." "Sailing tllrotlgll the Solomons. we spotted n folv hunks of Jap- anese and American landing craft. on “the beaches. but that was shout a . Junglrs have crept m" 1119M, or tho nilflclds. itlthotlgli some le- \'\"lth father, the late Duke, and 'l":le Brxlzsh Labor party was highly cnllitlrra " turned out to be tllc Duke of KFlll. the King. ill the age of eight months. Fllr-lllcl" distribution o AT EIGHT MONTHS mother zrfli \\'ilCll the picture nephew‘ of The photograph “as published British babies arc healthier f 6.000 lCilflCLs was suddenly hc illwtvillzpn \\‘l1‘\ it picture taken that ; before the Labor Govcvnmcnt came to polvcr in l9t5. The '. is n stlldvlll t’\l Eicn. inistcr Gives N0rway’s Views On Pact anon clcfollcr pact. moans that Noruaj’. Sweden and Denmark will llll\‘f‘ to sollc rccurlty problems in the \\‘.‘l_V cacll believes facet :5r~l\'cs llcr own purposes. Sweden sought an alliance based on neutrality. Nolavay" favored affili- ation tn a wider security system- u-itllln the fvanlolvork of the United Nations. "With rcglrd to Norutly.“ Langc Htlfl. "The situtlon is tthat. we have not ycl received any invitat- ion to join talks on an Atlantic alliance. Leaders of various parliament- fll'_V groups. cvccpt for the Com- munists, plcdgcd lhc. Labor Gov- ernlncnt support. The Communists. lvho “on ll of Parliament's 150 seats in 1945. proposed postpone- ment of debate on the fallure of the Scandinavian defence talks, but. were volcrl dolln. cry stretch-rd out for miles ln neat rows. Firtlilffllo‘ and ammunition. Silll usable ill waterproof packing. ‘were found by Johnson's party on ionc islnillcd tltoll. ‘I've "Yaxlks" lulvc el plilcc in ,ll'.l|.l\t‘ lcgcnth, but cvrn those are ‘ ‘tin-tinting vague. 'l‘oday cvcn the bodies o1 American servicemen llllvc D9011 rcmovcd from South Pacific Cr-lnclérlcs. ffhc “Yankee ll." n 96-foot briguntlnr with auxiliary engines, sailed lvllll n crew of 21 from Glmiccsicr, lllllss. in November i947. Johnson. on his fourth world cruisc iil n Milling craft, expects to clrclc the globc and be back in his hornc pol-f in June nr~\l year. He lcfr thc East Intllcs cn rotttc to Africa. War Reparations llit Japtin Lightly TOKYO. Feb. 6 ~ fAPl-Repar- ntlons shipments from Japan to tlntc have scarcely touched flit.- equipment in her arsenals or llel" gigantic \var~supportiilg industries. Japan has lost her big invest.- ments in lllanchuria, where the Chinese Communists rule. Thirty tier ccllt. of her industrial plants were hctlvlly damaged by United States bombers. But Allied countries, including many of those whose industries suffered devastation when contend- lng armlcs fought over their terri- tory. have received little recom- PCIISO. Little more ls likely, until the Fur Eastern Commission agrees on reparations policy. The countries represented nil the commission tire dlvlded. There are those, such as China and the Philippines \\'llo were hard hit. who bcliovr- the interests of -injllred Allied Powers should come first. Others believe reparations must not be allowed to wreck Japuncso economy. The United States. for illSlllllfth lvllnts Japan lu gr-t buck on llnr fcct. to stlve further culls on mulnr. of trucks and unv lllzlclllil- Do your nerves ever get so bed you fool you're Almost being driven to hysteria? Too often, both men and women neglect these signs which rnsy indicate your system is becoming run-down and your nstursl store of nervous energy used up! But you ml stars to correct this condition today. You'll find the tonic elements of Dr. Chm’: Nerve Food of reel benefit in helping you rest and est better . . . and a valuable sid ie restoring nervous energy. So try this time-proved remedy which has helped thousands who were nervous, edgy and run-down! the AllllWlfidfl tnxpnycl" for llclp. / cow/a’. scream ! Pr. Chases ‘Nerve Food contains Vrtnmm Bl, iron and other needed minerals-and ll l0 ' l that: mothers often ive it to high-strung growin dsug ten who are lo, arisen c and nervous due to firm:- tlonel change. Try DnnChaoeb Nerve Food ll the large economy one", to M1 m: rest better, feel better, loot ter. The name “Dr. Cline" il wit suursnoe. a srDr. Chase's illlVl soon might fall into German hands if llllurohlll Warned F.ll.ll. Fleet Might Fall To Germans Puilloatlofiif Sooolld llolilnlo 0f lllolllolrs loglns. NEW YORK. Feb. 6 — \AP)—- Winston Churchill warned Presi- dent Roosevelt the ' British fleet Britain "was left by the United, States to llS fate," Churchill's wal- memoirs reveal. Publication of the second lol- time of Churchill's memoirs, “Thou Finest Hour", began today in the United States. In Canada they will appear m the Moillrcal Stun» dartl. i The former prime minister tells} of a personal message he sent to‘ Roosevelt, at s dark hour of ttlie. war in 1M0 when the Gernlatls; were invading the Low Countries‘, and France. The message said Churchill's. cabinet. jllSl. installed lll offictn, nevcr twould surrender but addcdll "If members of tho present ad- ministration revel-c finished and others cunt: in to tmrlcy amid the; .l'llll'l5. you must n01 lie blind to the ltlvt that the sole rtmainiilg bargaining counter with Germany would bc the fleet, and, if this country- “as loft by tllc Unitedl States to its fatr. ilo on» “ould have 1hr right. to blame tllcsc tllcn rcsponslblc if they lllflilf‘ thc bcsr, terms they could for the surviv-l ing inhabitants. Excuse mo. Mia! Prcsidcnt, putting this nightmare bluntly." ‘ Churchill (iPSCFlbCf poiglliillll)‘ one of the hard decisions he nladcl fn the u-ar - to sacrifice a Brit- ish force at Calais in a gallant effort to llold off German armor and give prcclous extra hours for the evacuation at Dunkerquc. Churchill says that, as head of his government, he continued the‘ intimate correspondence withl President Roosevelt which he had begun before being named prime minister. “My relations with the Prcsi~ dent." he ‘writes. "gradually bu came so close that the chief bus- iness between our two cOurlfrIes was virtually conducted by tllrsr- personal interchanges between him and mo. In this way our perfect understanding was gained." Legal Measures Closely Guarded LONDON, Feb. 6 -,- tCPJ-From a special safe unlocked by three‘ men with different sets of keys. careful officials took a gun-n-lctali cask. From the cask they took a SliVPI-t ed an object in special protective, paper. when the paper was n», nlovc-d they had ll cylindricrll~ shaped piece of plalmuill. They put it under a glass tumbler so none could breath on it too long. Then the oommltteemen solemn- ly entered, the glass was removed and they looked with respectful eyes at the imperial standard pound, on which is based all the legal weigh measlues for Great Britain. This Occasion, ln a building under authority _ of the Board of Trade standards department, was unusual: Normslly, the ignpcflgl standard pound and its companion, the imperial standard yard. ilrc examined officially only once ln 10 years st what is called "the de- cennial comparison of the stand- ards." At intervening “Qulitqugn. nlal cccnparlson of the standards" only flve copies of the Actual standards are examined. But s committee appointed in review existing legislation on weights and measures demanded a special showing of the two "im- Dtrluls." The imperial standard yard ts made of a kind of bronm called Bailey's metal. The exam lfihxtll of the yard-o. standard about which there can be no srgu. ment-Js the distance between two scratches on two gold plulls sunk into a bar of Bailey's metal. buvraltaemanaus. MARTHA ! soap, IT'S QOARDEQQ WAS A TEQQlFlC DEDEAL -1- I'M QUSHED! gilt tlllnlble from which they llftq - To see You Home Aemu! - Rolhlue MENIAL ' CHORES AND COOMlNG» FOR THOSE CPNNIBAL __\rnis_1§UAnx_1, "194, THEY EVEN HAVE i THE APERIENT m COMPLETELY FURNISHED L ' It‘! such a real help in modem llvla , the: every up-to-dote home lho d have the world-renowned open‘ ' dly laxative KIUSCHEN. For yourself and the fsmily-Krus- cbee‘: aperient action is promptly helpful in relieving common con- stipation and the drag , dopey feelings that ofteu go wt it. Knis- dlenoflersyoutheqefouradvnntages: IASY ‘IO TAKE—Dissolves quickly in water, ol- your morning coffee. tell or fruit iuice. bloat folks find the small morning dose is best. 1-} o EVERY BATHROOM ' w uL>-~~.,»s-~i.' .. ‘ .l___.__i /* . C. / och. woilxs FASI—Usually within m. hour. Does not spoil your day, GENRE ACTION-ll: formula is bal- anced to act gently. without dis- comfort. lime-limo - Over 500,000.01... package: sold throughout the world Krusclletfs formula is a uniq. hlend of saline minerals, similar- h; those in famous medicinal spring. ‘that's vlhy, when taken rogulm, liruischcn is a liclp to better, bright. er living. 25c and 75c at all drug SUITE‘. .>.. \ Navy Breaks Tradition In Prize Money Disposal ICP- —"Ntll fill‘ llwtln» t‘)'l'l'AVt'/\. l-‘vb. 6- cntivcly wtlhotlt lcgt lion-encrusted llll\') l3 i)l'[‘t'li\'lll}_.{ t- frzidition of seven CClllUrl05——il|lt| with $2,000,000 in lllc llaluncc. lit all. nctlvly $15,000,000 will com: to Ctlnudll us Sccnntl World \\'ltr nllvy "prim nloncy". ll “its l‘.\ll- mtltcrl today by (hi! liuvy nlllgzlzlllr "Crolvsncst." 'l‘“'o-thirds of it is expected to cu to the Navy's Benevolent Fund. tltc ,ntllt-l‘ $l.OU0.00lJ to fll-i R. f‘ A. F. Boncvolcnt Fund. ‘Traditionally sincc tllt- 13th lcn tury prlZC l\lUIlf‘_\’ gtics lo llll: lll‘.ll who won tho will‘ at scll, But. tllv magazine said. tllc naval bonlll rt-- Puritan Ancestry Neetls Expression Says Politioianl By GEORGE RONALD Canadian Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON. Nb. 6~—(CPl— Ali's. Chase Going “Yoodllousc, buck in the congressional picture after a lWO-yffll‘ absence, semis to have proved that good hard work doesn't hurt anybody. The Caluidian-‘bol-il. fyfi-yeavoltl Democratic representative of Con- necticut's second district. Ila.» led a bur-y, evrtltflll life as economist. author. lecturer and law-maker. She thinks most women halent; ilcaxly enough tilterest in the af- fairs of their country: "There has been a lot of talk." sh said recently. "about. how frustrated the American woman is. let's dismiss Freud and give our sound Puritan ancestnv a chalice to express ltsclf. Work. doing ll. useful job, will put m01't‘ beauty and character info a wo- man's fact- snd more haplness in her soul than to have the new In 1944. after a string of suc- cesses that any man might. cnvv. she was elected to the Howe of Representatives. Horace Set-ly- Bmwn. a Republican. defeated hcr two years later but she bounced back last November. Grey-haired, quiet-spoken Mrs. Woodhouse ls one of two repre- sentatives known as "watchdogs for the consumer." The other is Helen Gshllgiln Douglas Calif» ‘Mrs. Woodhnuse ls e daughter of Seymour Going. |l prominent.‘ figure tn the early days ofAlaskan mining and railrolldlllt; Victoria in 1890 she received her early education tn the United States. She returned to can,“ 1,0 study economics ill: MoGlll Univ- qmlly. and. after graduation. studied tn Britain. Germany and Chlcatzo. In um she married Prof. Edward J. Woodhouse. The following your. Mrs. Wnod-. house became assistant professor of economics at the University of BULL‘! THAN T. WOULD her contention , I I l fliaval-stlr-le-Lac, about B°m l“ |llorth of Montreal ln 1924. llr ha! ‘been re-electcd by acclmlation eler WELL, F02 ONCE ‘EVE GOT YOU WlTH ‘lOUR GUARD DOWN, ADMlTTlNG ‘THAT I WORK HARDER AROUND HERE ' \UIlIl\|"l\(it‘(i t-llllltlhlflull of llvl, ~. i ll\ tllt- lulvyk rust‘ licl-llusc of p. ilFiti IiiHICUIiiPM lllt- profit p», H. full’ tlisllilitltlull null .~|l t-sltrn; llvcrllgt- of only S-lO luv vllclt old». tlry sailor. Nun’ lllc proposal fol‘ tlr-ptisltin. of tllt- lllollt‘) v.ill 1m 1th ml twp, l‘llrl.:llll:-lll ll) thc (It-vivmwr» t,_ 'lllc ltll‘ fort-c culncs ll‘ for .l 5!‘|'|| in tllc ]>l'l..'l‘ mtmt-y because .111" llclpcd in Sfll l-zlpturcs. Culiarllfs contribution to l|\' l‘. ilbil L'ollllii0il“'1*llllll prizc punt in’, :'|:~.lttl of lllc (icvlnall motor Wcscr, vltpttlrctl by ‘ll. M. t ,1 Prlnvc ltnlicrt off the hiPhlfull t-ntlst in 1940. and the llallzin trtf Cttpo Noli token in the St. Latt- ...5\,_ rencc River ill the some year. Chicago 21111 her remarkable r, ll) top rzlnk among United St “cillcil had begun. From 103,", ., I928 she was senior economist o.’ ‘the agriculture departmenvsllome economics bureau. then bOC-lllld economics professor at Connecticut College for Womclv I By 1940 she “as preside“; the Connecticut Wderatlon o.’ Dsrnocratic Women's Clubs, 13in lfor the post of Connecticut sec- rctllry of strltc and was rftmt-d lvltll the highest majority of .:._v state offlcilll. Her coilgress in 15144 “as will] m, support. of such ovganizatinits .'lE the Anlerlcan Fwderatloil of Lag. ‘or. It called her "ollc of the nlnsl. llberalmllndcd “onlrll .n Conncctitrul." "The (‘llllgffivlllflll should he lilf‘ dlstrivt cvcry two WCPks n» at and available not. only for pfllnt‘ interviews but to conduct. forums nn the bills before congress." she said. Mrs. “Villdhfllhfi sneaks equal llnderslandlnf! of \vor.n mice and of family llfc. Slac said to have been a dl-lvlng fc- in the campaign which led inf‘ vrcsslonnl approval of the Brow,” Woods ncreement. for ilfllfillf!‘ And mu- tlme. will-l qluc‘ nllasis, "noting that: her H's:- had been in the Paclfl: us.- lhcs- lro for more than 40 mnnt-lu. m o.‘ u (Tr itold reporters: "I am wtllinz 1hr: ,-'l\e stay as long as necessary lthci" than ‘have his son sent lncre .3‘ to fight 25 your: from nolu“ IPATHER AND SON QUEBEC MAYORS MONTREAL. Feb. 3 __<Cl"' Nlflyut‘ J.l.. Bigras of LaYtliéllf-IP- Lac and Mayor Roland Blgrns of Roxbouo probably hold the zcconi" ‘mp-i lot being the only "father and son mayors" 1n office in Canada. "Monsieur Jos". as the fstllciqfl known, was first elected mayo.- of l8 trailer since. His son was appointed by the provincial government s: mayor of Rcxboro ln 1946. The town ls l few miles west of the northern mo urb of’ Cartier-ville. llc has ‘tiers rccclllly returned“ by nocltlmatiol for another three-year tcitn. Father and son agree on ow point ln municipal administration: "Llvc lvitllln your budget.” H009“ f’? HlTCl-lED TO A PLOW -6A\/, A GQEAT LlGl-lT l5 DAVJM’ ING OM ME 41» '1 OUGHT TO GETA NOTE OF ’ ' P RECINHOY§ ANDA EPONSNE CHORD= election l: M $'\“. '