SPORTIN l TORONTO. Nov. 1 - (or) - Led by the youthful forwards Don al- ~ a ,,,» hi" M" ab: "As has been e case the msi. ‘ 5 l‘ "°°PY O- ’ veral years in the play folnthfi illghtthliefzi-ae 1258yaf£lle Le?!“ “i; sland lntercolle ate ootball title, 0..., u, d1, c-e h, m: "Iglugffu. I 1"“ cm“! ° Imam“ 3"“ 395' keyhague standin s. "lay 55" m‘? "ndeml-Bd 5- 17- e hapless Leafs. w o haven't 8 intermediate squad come through 41th an unexpected victory over Q19 favored P. W. C. team to m1, the series into a third and decid- 111'; struggle which is expected to take place on Saturday afternoon next. won a game this season, outshot the Bruins all the way through the piece but their scoring avera e was much lower. Boston goale Paul Blbeault handled 39 shots and the Bruins fired only 22 at Aldege Bastien in the Toronto nets. § 4 4. 4, Lorne Carr. the veteran Toronto v - right winger from Calgary, scored l Ouipnyed in the first hall by the 200th goal of his N.H.L. career the heavier P.W.C. team, Saints early in_ tho third period on an as- 11_=_;1 [he power and 11131111119, to slst fronl Sweeney Schrlncl". wme back estcrday afternoon in Clinch Hap Day. whose Leafs [he second aif and take. play a, have tied one game and lost four in five starts. iuggled his lineup "in an effort to find a winning com- bination. Taylor went back to his .old pro-army service spot between Schrlner and Carr. Syi Apps made first ps0 ap earance on Tor- onto ice in nearv two seasons ‘title. way from their opponents. Once they had pushed over their try hero was no denying them and lilo third game of the series should provide local football fans itli one d the hardest fought foo ball 8-HT]?! they have witnessed I se- t YQHFS. m o e- 4» e- El u tween Bob Davidson and Mel H Gus Bodnar centred a scrappy and dangerous line with Stewart and Maple Le-ofs_ Headed 11-3 a Dlofetti Boston MBruins Bill Ezlnioki or. the wlriss. ' Bruins wore short Bobby Bauer, out with an in-jury, and used only 14 men, The summary: Flrlt Period l-Jforonto, Taylor (Schrineri .................4:io z-Toronto, Stewart (Ezlnickl) ... . . . . . . . 0:14 fir-Boston, Guidclinl (Gallln er) .‘. . . . . . . . . . . . ..16:26 Penalties: Ezinlcki (2), Gallinger, Guidolin, , semis Period 4--Bosion, Crawford (Cowley) 5:13 b-Boston. Dumtart (Schmi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..10:50 Penplties: Gallinger, Cioldham, Third Period 6——-'I'oronio. Carr (Scllrlner) . . . . ............ 2:22 ‘l-Boston Cvallinlf er (Guldolln, sh n ........ ..1e:2a Penalties: Church. Home in Calgary from Toronto where he was reported to have quit the Maple Leafs ltGCBIIS/e of How ' l/eterans Will ""_ s o Theatres "llottvwooo. OANTEEN " ANDREWS SISTERS. JACK BENNY, JOE E. BROWN. EDDIE CANTOR, KITTY CABLISLE, JACK CARSON, DANE CLARK N I J OHN McCRACKEN, ORES MORAN, . z A c n a n v soon, ALEXIS slnrrn. assess RA STANWYCK, sosaru SZICETI nox- ALD woons. saris: wv- MA , 1mm: nonsnv, CARMEN cavannano SOUBIS . Thursday. 8 EM, Matinee 3:45 RM. , _ _ Honiaoua ‘ii"i"‘r°iu'lflils"’li§’lilidpii"lk m- -Ffl-hv8P-M- c t e n dis , may "m, y, k 1 q Saturday 7:45 - 10 PM. m r sot install ‘drain °rl4ab0’05'ooi'o ' P ff t "I'll!" 3 PM on r e , o - . . - - f“... . . _. ‘ A 3 OT"! Z133 10H .. v _ h "Fed lip and disgusted" with B JOHN D_ HAMILTON "' iiéttél‘.%‘i§‘“‘€.§‘.€"‘25i.€.."'i.l 2:22;.‘ w ,1 1: "u, 1| ml" it?“ “v r we: en s “ for the 05.000. which he believed a n a in pgrgfeljssionglmlljdckgy? some grlght he was worth after talking it over out with the $64 question of the with other players who were get- ting that much, Manager Conlly smyihe immediately charged him with trying no break his word. - 0 0 0 Il- "I don't think I could go back if they oflered me the 55,000." said McCool. "After the way I have been treated I wouldn't have the Ilflht spirit." ‘ O 4- 1|- '0- He had made no agreement to play for 04.500, he said, prior to asking for the‘ 00000 I I . One of the greatest roblsms that will face the Cansdispn Amp.- ur Hockey Association in the next couple of years or will be t0 Prevent the indlscr ate raid- lng of players on the part of such organizations as the British and Scottish’ Io: Hockey Associations. Roach Agreement CALGARY. Nov. '1 -- (OP) — After four days of bickering over guarantee and location of the West. .ern Canada senior football final. Winnipeg Blue Bombers and Cal- gany Stampeders finally came to tel-Ins this afternoon. Stampeders will play s. sudden death game at Winni 's Osborne Stadium Sat. lnday ternoon. President Jack Gmgan of the Stempeders club. notified NEJ (Piffles) Taylor of Regina. pres. ldent of the Western Canada Rugby Union. that the Calvary club hid accepted the Blue Bomber prop. oaition. Amateur llcalis Pros At Tourney 5nd Mt Only will the two afore- nlenteigncd loops have to be m“. tend with, for we feel sure that gall to normalcy, ma: ey leagues are go to be . They will have one place to tum for players anode. the cradle of s. game becoming increasingly in- bernationai PINEH-URST. N.C.. Nov. 17 - (AP) - An unsung amateur, Lieut. Cary Middleooif of Memphis, scored '* * * * atrdsrdrxi“ Q 0n EC B Q. 02w f." “Wwiwéttlfil = huxwsy post lri the north and! mum h“ um toughen prob sglth open golf tmlrnsnlent with a - it has ever had to decide. Nat- ally. control! ckey P - tent, n . I While the firstrday leaders,’ Benny Hogan and Denny Shute; blew themselves off the pace with_ 74's. the Myoar-o ‘Imlnlessean fired a three-undenpar 69 to g0‘ with his 7010f yesterday and grab and. Mike Til-mesa of Knollwood. N.Y..| --whose 60 equalled today's low round by Middleccff, Art Doering of Chicago and ick Metz of Deal. in! thousands of laYtBTS. it is. to s certain the driver's seat. O II 0 O ». But the interests t0 want hockey pl of money behind lone green stuff of talking pretty circumstances. who are going avers have a nilo them. and that has a nasty habit loud. Under such that's one mighty glfliloxgéilfflng wtlly the wCigliA. canflfift-g‘ a.l o irs fourth place o o war 1. bod- . iee as the British andmgcottish Sammy Snead. Hot springs, va.. J-Iockey Asso tions. Amloable ar-' Doering and Gene Sarazen. New rangementi will; llzye to bemade.‘ York, were bracketed at 142. with i Met: and Bob Hamilton. Chicago. -ihe defending champion a shot There is one ides we have been back at 143 mulling over in our mind W11; ""1"" htlv temper the aituatlogil: and that is the C.A.H.A. could en. deliver to effect an agreement with associations like the S.I.H.A., B.I. 13A" United States. Amgtgup and iclflc Coast loop. whereby they my for alayers Just as the National Hockey League does. 0 O 0 iiocliey Scores (It. Buffalo 6. Providence l. Hershey 5,.Pittsburgh 3. While - full 11' ‘ nan AL 13;», hag-flit fiiiflfirili‘. "ill? Boson l. ¥fiorrro”r'f‘°"“ (c0 n ry u large 1111111. he 1t ‘h’ » Quebec Senlolirllocke League .,,g,1,,,,,,,';;;;,lmiggnghigggibsvggg; shawlhlsah Falls s. uli 4. ' not sgn m0"? Players than they ~ an: l.-l.:s.."::i..:.'.-.- "m." ill" - S they sane’; .- + ‘a ow om Frflllflflcliiill We have always felt that. M. wimafiulé leagues such as -_..._ .. fifé‘“fli‘°“..-ii""ii coasters 111.2, I . ~ ‘ “ , on c co ea o..." 1,1,,“ 3553;; gjffggiia] {lather-w Collegiate School so to- day in the first game of a homo- and-homc series for the Brunswick hterscholsstic champ p, If hockey lefsuu outside of Can- ada wmt our p yore, we believe ll his“), ‘furth 1 th t ave payer elrhn any. the clubs some Canada who de- vote o lot of time and money in developing hockey players would receive recompense which is justly ' due them. hromoters such “lbmblcy. and lhrrlngay. 0 llil Joe Elvin, at "Gen. Critchlcy, st 0.01 llirv were hot in it just m.» their YCl. they could “gm; ” hm! a every yczlr and pick up the A uuclcsters in the land without “P "M" I Pound note, Not even into-italic n? 17”“ "l Anffnnd do that“! w l t e CAJI. still-infant National League sea. son today: How will the service veterans perform? _ That little problem is wrinkling the brows of Lester Patrick and Frank Boucher. manager and coach respectively of New York Rangers. as they repare for their 1945 Manhattan ehut. Rangers open at Madison Square Garden tomorow night against Chi cago Block Hawks. In three road games so fur, the blue shirts have ropped decisions to. Hawks and Detroit Red Wings, while winning from Toronto Maple Leafs. Boucher, back in the town where he won fame first as an all-star centrtuforward and later as a coach. was nomcommittal about his Rangers when interviewed at the Garden "Our team is llch better than it has been for the last two years- that's for sure," he grinned. "But a lot will depend on how quickly the fellows coming out o! the ser- vices shape up." The amiable bench-general had something there. Hockey was hit harder thpn any other major sport by the war-simply because most pro-hockey players are Canadians and Canada was involved in the war two years longer than the United States. And take it from Frank Bout-her and Lester Patrick. The reconver- slon of veterans will be a big fea- Wings-d Wheelers won the Inter- provincial Rugby Unloli champion- ship .14 years ago today with a 4- -l victory over Toronto Argonauts at son sans YEO MOTION PICTURE Travelling Circuit- lncluding Equipment. Anvil- BRUCE YEO, Montague REMEMBER WliEil By The Canadian Press After o. 12-year lapse Montreal ture of the N.H.L. this year. "It's _the same thing that hap- gened in baseball last summer’. ouchcr said. "The vets come out of service and they find it tough getting buck their coordination and shooting oycs. Their legs are stiff from marching and they have to get back the feel of the ice. We still don't know what will happen to Rangers. hut it will be important to us-and to all of the other clubs. I-‘ellows like Neil.Colvllle. Chuck Rayner, Jim Henry, Muzz Patrick and Alex Shiblcky of the Rangers all have had military service. And it takes a while for them to get their muscles llmbered up." C H. d Afcdei of a proposed United Netlo Montreal. The Montrealers, who previously won the title in 1907 and 1919 dropped out of football Admiral Charles Daniel has been signed by Architect. Vincent F. Raney for location on San Francisco's Twin" Peaks. is pictured shove. Dominant feature would" be lofty modemistic sky- scraper. at left. for the Secretarlwt, Security Coun- cil, chiefs of staff and archives. Other features oplpetition soon after this LONDON - (CPi-Acting Vice- ppoinoed Third Sea Lord and con- troller cf the navy. l-Ie will be re. sponsilble for naval construction in the atomic age alld the design of ships necessary to retain control of the seas as atomic weapons are developed. ns Center, ae- would hillside. local Bowling Teamiilins Mate At Stellartion A Charlotte last nigh N13.“ team -l> l)’ at The local of 15 I468 inan axhibi l b The ROCHE was as follows: Charlottetown :_. Archie McFarlano R. dgecombe 3g Ear Smitih .. 99 L Brown H, 01 9g 93 ‘ __._. , __ ___ ___ 51L Dummy; Univepgjty was? red and white teem had a definite Totals . . . . . . . . . . . . . -515 s21 499 back lri the running for the no.1.’ edse throush most c! the second- Game t0tal~—l54l. intermediate intercollegiate f0ot- Allholllh lffilllemellll W979 n01 hall championship today, after yes- d8 l6 it WEI BXPOOlfid thllt the Stellsrton:- tag-day dgfggflng the dgfgndtng deciding game would be played o. realey ....... ...1oo las r.w.c. squad s-o in the second next Saturday afternoon- S, F‘ lies .. 0B 4 game of the best of three game The lineatllalli R- CBmefOn series. The red and blue team. 5111"" blilk. 501111: three- A. Munroe holder; (,1 me 11m [Qf 10111- qnarters, Dorsey. C, McDonald. A. l-liscoit years, won the opener 8-0 last Sat- Mclnnls, J, J. McDonald; halves, _ ‘ i-Iammill, Mahar, Mullin; forwards, TO Saline scored the lone try of the L. McDonald. Billie. Ledwell. M4- 0 ll ‘Ii B l' . . . owing S D:- J_ Harrell E I-Iowatt H Mclnnis G Nelson C McLean Total-Z852. _ OFFICE:- J, Strain . . . . . .......1B0 187 207 F. Lafieriy .210 231 152 J. Cameron .. .218 216 237 M. Connolly .241 165 1B4 M. Richard 303 230 i029 1102 i010 Total-Iillil. High single-M. Rlchardf 303. High three-M, Richard: 713. Points: Shed, 0; Office, SHOPS:- 'I‘. Strain B. Duncan Total-3013. High single—J. Bradley: High three—J, Bradley: 717. -Points: Shops, l; B. 8c B. 5. liarnera Banned From wrestling MILAN. Nov. mo Glrnera. would the would include wings for Economic and Social Coun- cil, separate buildings for Gil-odd participating na- tions. l0.000-seat assembly hail and museum in center capped by lilo-foot translucent globe which overlook waterfalls stair-stepping I W sic ‘ATTRACTICN. ;. , iPYTHlAN l- DANCE p ‘i, g SPORTING CLUB _ Tliursdgy, November 8th " _. g _.~\I.00p.n.-l.00a.n.‘ ' ' Messer’; Band soltwllflultruclsun so: o ' r 210N190 .1" IMF! .7350! M” . = V anon smokers-co all Assoc . -. ~ allows ilvfitira . all or assume on clul rox i ‘,_. ll l illfh l- - liosven. Winona, ellevete hugs. If by hi! ' tllh lbitfifl“ y - with Q M“ M»! ans lhmso of m!!!‘ ll‘ i rte at 01:» dis (filled , explosives) u. Vettlfill polities» rs it, right. n. meets! snowy. caused terrific is type of buss bdnb,‘ whio ._' . I 7--+Reuters)—Pri- former world heavy weight boxing tiflist, has been ban- ned from appearing as a wrestler, ilie Italian Boxing Federation an- nounced today. saying that such an appearance the world title he once held. LONDON _- (CP) .- London and the South of England are to get extra salt. ‘I112 supply of dtmestic salt will be increased by 300 tons a week for two months, Food ‘ Ministry said. "disgrace" down town bowling team t defeated a Stellarton. tion game he Nova Scotia centre. oys had s. total pinfall 41 against their opponen 98 115 11B S. D. U. Ev " With P. W. Intermediate game less than ten minutes after the start of the second half when Joe J. McDonald got the oval a- cross after a pile-up on the RW-C- line. Joe Mahar failed by a nar- row margin in his try for the extra points from a difficult angle. P.W.C, had the better of play in the first half but the resurgent Legless. Ace BY GORDON McKEAN Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, Nov. 7 - (OP) —Old soldiers-and airmen-never die — they just play sway, Wing. Cmdr. Douglas Bader, legless R.A.1=‘. ace. has entered the autumn meet. oi the R..A.F. Golf Association at Moor Park. Rickmansworth, and Maj. J.I..C. Dillon, who broke liis neck in two places and hisjaw in nine pieces. is back playing with his old rugbv club, London Irish Major Dillon was indured in an accident in Persia in i943 and spent 45 months in s. Cairo hrspital encased 0 in plaster and steel. but his play. ing was so good in his first some that friends said. "You'd never know Jimmie ever had an accident." Syn thetlc Bu lls The Board of Trade cilill:d a hot rumor that natural rubb-rr gzlf and tennis balls soon would be on sale. "Natural rubber cannot be spared ' for these goods until supplies are much more plentiful," the board said. “Even then, some time must pass between the release of nat. ural rubber and the appearance in the shops of balls made from this material." "For these reasons it is not poss- ible at this stage to forecast when tennis and golf bails made from natural rubber will be available. but until then th-Ey will still be made from synthetic rubber." Ill-s ncilry Hopes Dog Trials _. lop; _ A simple sign at the miles from this southeastern Sask. playground of millionaires. sign says "Trials" and the dog trials that go on at the end of the of the country. Arounll little Gaimborcuglli. 91 sport has been popular for 35 years. the same people have been coming back with dogs for so many years that everyone is quit.- neighborly about it all. Two handlers showed up so often that eventually they bong-ht property nearby and make the district their summer home. The others who come ‘in year after year from the United States. handling dogs owned by wealthy and influential Americans. bring much business. Their average expenditure in the three months they were here this year was $3.000 a camp _ and them are five camps in the district. S0. such sponsoring organizations as the Dominion Field Trial Club of nearby Pearson. Man. and the Great Northern Field Trial Club of Gainsborough are more like glorified boards of trade than clubs in the accepted sense of the word. ‘Phose interested in the sport i ‘Idle one letter hon this ward e0 letters loll Inch I new word: MEAT "SHAVIW-Tako llisififim have the word "dilly: lllll Mail entries to Colgul- 0d Natalie St... Toronto 8, Dept. 30 Every month the Int ten rune. t entries drum celeb win 810 CARH— doubled to IN ll accompanied by lboxwp from Colgate Rapid Shave. Send as IIiIIIY entries aslyou like. Names of winner! will be published. fill?“ ‘Hill. fill. UNI YOU IIIVB HINDU? MIC-fill“! ll| loathe can't reach hairs ll bus where hoard la toughest. Shav- l n gh h u r l s — stu le remains! COLE/HE THE FORUM PROVIDES. l-IEALTHFUL EXERCISE snare ‘I'D-NIGHT, m Autumn Golf Tourney In Saskatchewan Town GAINSBOROUGH. Sask. Nov. '1 have their own publication — The crossing of a couple of trails seven “Tillfif represented it at thl-B YBBFS in ti. l t three months before the trials open, atchewan ‘awn pa ts e “By Th: Putting the animals into condition trail bring the cream of American professional trainers arrived. each setters and pointers illto this part bringing from 40 to 65 does. Train- miies east of Elsbevan. where the i)? billy 1101395 5°!‘ 1156 l" i lbac. ens Series. C. For Island Rugby Title Carthy, Bark Wilson. Mil-tin. P.W.C.: ' quarters, Blanchard, Nicolle, Dall- , Reddln; halves, Brehaut, Mr, Donald. Proud; forwards. Hooper, Robertson, I-Iodgson, Cvormley, Large, Court. Macbennan; subs, Forsythe, Carr Entered In I Gordon Richards, this seaaonils champion jockey for the 18th time in 20 years, believes that 1946 will bring him his brightest chances of riding his first Derby winner. His retainers next year are F. Darling's Beckhampton stable. the Aga Khan, T. Lilley and Stephen Raphael. “This means," Gordon said. “that I can have the nick of the Beek- hampton colt, Edward Tudor. the Aga Khan's Khaled and Lilley’e Radiotherapy for next year's Derby. And as they are three cf the best colts of this season. I must have an evccllent prospect of achievinfl the cnly ambition I have left." Cricket Briefs Eddie Paynter. Lancashire test match batsman. says at 43 he feels the strain of three-day matches and may nct play regularly in first.class cricket next season .. Rcchdale Cricket Club. memitzrs of the Central Lancashire League. have signed Cecil C. Pepper. 28. Australian victory test player. as their professional coach for three vears...Capt. EDR. Eager, 2'7. Oxford cricket blue and Gloucest- ershire amateur. has been appointed iolnt secretary of Hampshire Cthn- try CIlub and will captairflthe coun- Northern Ireland boxers. first "overseas" visitors to England as a team for six years. met. eight English slugger-s at Albert Hall. London. Oct. 22 I Cause Stir American Field and a staff trials. Dogs and trainers arrive for the big events. Al: Gainsborough this year, 50 ers rent buildings from farmers in which to house their dogs, and rent riding hmugh the countryside behind their dogs. Canine Arisfocratc 'l‘h-e trainers also pay the Sask- atchewan government a licence fee of $25 ior five dogs and $1 for each dog above that number. The an- imals themselves are treated like film stars. They eat such things as shredded wheat. fresh meals. com- mercial dog foods and fresh tripe. They go out during the trials to see how many birds they can spot. how they can stack up against the other dogs for form. Dogs are run in pairs. Judges. trainers. handlers and spectators follow on holsebadr. Trainers direct the dogs over the course by word of mouth or by whistle in pursuit of legitimate game-pheasant, partridge, prairie- chicken. a dog spots a bird When it "freezes" or points, and its hand- then pass e iers yell "Point." Judges on the dog. use a whip to flush bird from before him. In the course of a day's work, the judges and trallners may go 45 miles on horse. Prize money ranging from 50 to $30 is offered in the different trials, and this goes to the handlers of the winning dogs. with a. percent- age going to the sponsoring club. While all this is 801118 0n the‘ men who own the dogs sit in their offices in Miami. Chicago, Birming. . Ala.. or some other American centre directing the affairs of i.n-' dustrv. Trainers take the dogs from one trial to another starting hero each summer and working south. and the better their charges show at the trials the more valuable they become. either to the owners as pets or for breeding purposes. Some are valued at 02.000. The Gains; borough trials rank today as the third best on‘» the oositinent. The national trials held Tbnnessee are considered the best: . BIRMINGHAM. Rlltllnd - (W) _ While escorting prisoners by bus from here to Stafford Quarter- sq.- siom. a warden, John Power. of Wedneelluly. was attacked ‘by a handcuffed man. He was taken to hospital with face injuries. For Foot Ailments GIIIBOPOIIIST. _ oonsuvr ll. J. A. BROWN. DJ’ Orthopedic u: Great ltnel onnuionnowu. an A egos seven: _ . " ' _ s u. 1o . TIC-NIGHT Cbdllengie The Whiz Bangs of the R-o an Hardware Company, Ltd. hegeby accepts the Challenge of the Hols mans All Stars, to a Bowling flagella fihursday, November 15th. Bees Make Money In Saskatchewan REGINA. Nov. 7 — (CP) - Saskatchewan been this year 0861f: the honey industry into the $1, I- 000 class and boosted the Province l beekeesers into first place as hon- ey pro ucers of the Dominion with a record output of 7,328,000 pounds valued at $1,253,133. Last year the Province was second to Ontario. Suminerside has eighteen min- utu later than hsrlottctown. PARIS-WOMEN BY FRED BACKHOUSE Canadian Press Staff Writer PARIS. Oct. 24 - (GP) - This only free sights ‘in Paris today are the usual guidebook places and — the women. The returning pie-war inhabit. ant, taking a firm grip on his syn. thetic fruit-juice in the sidewalk Cafe do is Pair, sms some feminine transformations that really rate l. mention by Herr Baedieker. Shoes, skirts, hair and hats have all gone up to the third floor. ixJinch platform-soled shoes have given the girls a haughty new stature, and they swear the cnly reason they wear them is that be- ing made of cork and wood they are off the ration. Incidentally, they are three times as eftpensive as the welLmade leather jobs for which the girls need a coupon. Skirts. according to cursory male observation. have been hitched at least tvro inches since last ranted in macetime Shortens of clo‘h is thr- ows". sold m"- informant Also notable is that most Parlsiennea have naturally or artificially bronzied legs, which is a trick Brit- ish females seem to have aver. looked. Hair - well it seems you can do anything with your n in Paris, provided the movement skyward. One young’ thing at the Place do L‘Opers "looked as ii’ she was on fire. She had plastered her bright red tresses vertically for nine inches or so and then whipped off the ends to lock like flames. Hats are rarely worn, but an similarly mountainous and imagin- ative, with the builLup turban having a slight edge over all others. One creation, however, halted the conversation yvhen it passed ithe cafe It was a carefully-balanced confection of luscious fruits and. vegetables that, made the five. course dinner worn by Carmen Miranda look like a hasty snack. One further piece of fashion in- telligence picked up without going near the salons of “l-laufe Cont. llre" concerns stockings. They are so rare that it is almost dangerous to possess t-hem. A British embassy secretary who walked down the Champs Elysess in a pair of full-fashioneds ,got so many dark looks and whispers of “black market" and, “erocollabora- tionlst." that she ran home and stripped them off. Confirmation of this scarcity came at the "gala of galas" at the swank French officers‘ leave club. ‘Illcy announced that the first prize in the raffle would be s. bottle of champagne. No applause. The second prize. a bottle of brandy Mild enthusiasm. The third, a pair of nylon stockings. The audience fell apart. When a pretty blond was award- ed the coveted hose. the president of the cl/ub dashed forward to kisl her on both cheeks And the orch. estra promptly struck up "The Maiseillaisc " No wonder you comfortable, good looking shaves with the Blue Gillette Biggie! It has the s lpest most beautifully- Flnished. ed es ever I1 l 1t pays {cask for Blue Gillette