JANE! NOW WELL — JOHNNY COULD YOU DO SUCH A THING’ BENIIST AIOVI’ IAD IIEATN PAIVlCllS-SIOI SIAGNANT SAUVA O00 NEW IMPROVED! New polishing action ‘Soapiess enetratin loam I ouble ric minty flavor r Snow- white color Colgate ‘YO CO MAI IAD IIEAYH, I IICOMMND COLGAIE D841 CIEAMI POI ‘MAI 1N 7 Olll O INSTANT“ 5 OIGINATES iN THE MOUINl 25c 45c 75o cleans your breath —while it cleans your ieethl Copyright Board“ m Rejects 0B0 Request 1 IJITAVIA, Feb. 4 -tCPt ~— The Copyright Appeal Board has re-‘ jrcted a CRC request for a rcdut-t- ion‘ tn the royalties it pays ‘for itse‘, of works in the repetoire of thct Crmposers. Authors and Publish-l ers Association of Canada. l The board. headed by Mr. Just-l ice J.'I‘. Thorson of the 1~‘""h"" Cotirt. i-tiled today that the CBC niitst pay the C.A.l‘..-\.C. $131618‘ for 1949. A similar amount will be. paid by all private stations as a group. At a hearing last. month. John F GENERAL the sive ELEIHRIC aarucroa noootioiirs For extra hours of playtime in League, General Electric give plenty of light for the young puck chaser: on your street. Like all General Electric lamps, the G-E hard glass R40 Floodlight lamp is inexpen- ‘(ANADIAN GENERAL ntcnu is Jennings. rouiisel for the CBQ 3S1. czi that the ‘Jteth-lii oi assessing the rot-allies be changed so that tur [CBC stations would pny less an:1 the priiate stations more. At present the royalties are as» sessed at lhe rate of l4 cents for each lit-rinsed radio-receiving set in Canada. The CBC and the priv- ate stations each pay seven cents . of the assessment. Ml‘. Jennings suggested that the private stations pay nine cents and CBC stations five cents of the basic . assessment. The board in its ruling made no change in the assessment. which will again be stibjeci to review next year. C..\.P.A.C. handles royalties for its members whose works are used by radio stations. bands. orchestras. movie theatres and the like. _ ____.~J1 Neighborhood Hockey and stays brighter longer. ‘lilgh Towers" Gostain Novel 0f New France 0f Gaps lretoa Scots. tlly ‘the Canadian Paolo) If La Salle could have known the muddy. mushrooming settle- ment- of Ville Marie do Montreal would moduce such empire build- ers as the Le Mayne family then the greet French explorer might have died easier during his Mis- sisstppi ventures. For La Selle onVlSlDhQd aNct-oh America ruled by France and the Le Moynes of Longueil were to bring e. measure of reality to his dreams. And it is of this fabul- ous. fighting French-Canadian family that. Thomas B. Contain writes in “High Towers" tMoGlei- lsnd and Stewart). The author found little enough to go on for today iihe 10 Le Moyne brothers who placed devo- tion to an unworthy monarch far above self, slumber in virtual ob- sourity. Casual vital statistics in the Montreal archives compose their only official record-not even en- ough to build a. physical descrip- lion of these shadowy French- Canadian heroes. So Contain. a native of Bran‘.- ford. Ont_. has struck out with a work that is historical i'iction.laid in and about. Old Montreal near the close of t.he 17th century. His characters walk streets and squar- es vnhich are trodden today such a: Rue St. Sacrament and Plarc d'Armes of historic downtown Montreal. Here it pictured the every-day life of a Irowlnl! French settle- ment in time of peril and exer- tion . . nearly - naked Indians . _. zlinting musketiu. brown- clad priests mingling rtrith soldiery and men of the forests and fur trade. I‘. is a life enmeshed in the web of intrigue spun out from the court of l-‘rance The areat. Charles Farcn de Longueuil. thr- Sr. Lawrence under t-h- four tall towers of his chateau is not alone though 1t l< he. in utmost devotion in France. who master- minds "The Plan". Intriguors are' ==nt anainst. him hv the leeches in the French court. Yet. he sfrurzrles on in tiirocfion of a cori- ceritiori \\'l'il(‘l'i is nothinc lc=$thati mas-tern of a continent for Franco. Tn this. as the oldest of t‘.1= brothers. this man crown rich in the fur trade. ls t-he home-front administrator. Alit-‘d are the other I." hiovnes. though ruilv two he- sides Chart". nlav important. roles Le Moyne. livintz across in "l-ilch Towers." Pierre Le lifovne dlberbille, sailor. exrflorer and warrior can- Pfres Newfoundland and Hudson's Rav from the Eivzli=h and leads the fir-Ht to establish French rule at the mouth of the Mississippi "tilv to die of the plague. ‘Then lbrre t: Jean Baptiste de Bier.- rile. builder. administrator and fntinde-r of New Orleans where the story ends on a note of ophrnisrn for French fortunes On the feminine side there is Feliciie I-lalay. a. purely fictional character who becomes a ward of the Le Moynes. grows tip with their devotion to "The Plan" and surfers for ii in her first but brief’ marriage. to a villian from the courf. of France. In the end she marries her ohildhood sweetheart from Longueuil. Philippe Girard. a carpenter and orphan survivor of the lroqtiois massacre of Lach- ine. o o o , "The Hitzhland Heat" in Nova Scotia" rsaundersl is the story of a. fierce. but. wistful and kindly Hebridean people. transplanted from the misty isles to Canada 150 years azo. More specifically. it deals with a Cane Breton island community. described with the authority of a scion of the ancient. and proud Clan MncNeil. Scottish legend has it that the MacNeils descended from Niall of Scythia. a minister to the Eltvlltinn Pharaoh. who Rave his name to the river Nile. Author Nell MaoNeil. an editor of the New York ‘limes. spent his hflvhflod VPRFS iti Cape Breton‘: Washabuckt. to which his ancest. on led a hand of immigrants. The book abounds with earthy anecdotes. told with the minute attention to detail of the ace newspaper man. A host of pithy characters come to life at the stroke of his nen. such as "Little R01‘?! the Bnckhmise." so named because he was the first in Wash- sbtuokt to erect such a structure The author's longing for Cape Breton is enhanced when he tells of Weshabuckt-‘s nostalgia for the Hebrides. expressed in sono and story at "frolics" and at work. He extols with faint humor the days of ‘his own clsn’s greatness. when a herald would proclaim in rltaelic nightly from Klsimttil Cris. t e: "Hear. oh ye copies! Listen. oh ve nations! The great. MacNetl of Berra has finished his dinner. Tb- other princes of the earth "iev now dine." "a Rnllefllai-llleltt For Pswer-stervglleaoeaver ‘my The Canadian Preall VANCOUVER. Feb. 4~Power- starved Vancouver today sow no relief in slaht. Another cold wave. with a rush of polar- air. was sweeping down the Gulf of Alaska. end the mercury will plunge to I0 "trees above llero tonight. said a Wear-her Bureau forecast. It. was 26 esriv today. The Ice-blackened reservoirs of the British nolurnbla Electric Company were scrsoin: bottom. and more drastic power restrictions may be owls"- llell Meclleli Tells Story ‘ - l DELICIOUS ILEII 0E TIE WORLD'S FINEST WFEEES > >\\ l “'"'f"ill'°'!$'9f'* l’! Surrey Migrants Plan Rhodesian Farm Community 11y Norman wCrlbbenl GULDSTONI-I Surrey. England. pep 3 ._tcPt » Like most cinl- krants. lnn l-lalcs chief regret. at the prospcct of uolng abroad was lgavlng old iieielibors and friends. So llaic. Lilz-year-old Surrey farmer. got busy among his neighbors in the village of Goid~ stone. The i-cstilt is that '20 0f "W!" are sailing with l-lalP. his wifo End three sons. for South ‘Africa. Sixty miles tip country front Salisbury. lthoticsia. they will pionrcr a farming colony and. Sal/S llalc tisc modern azricultural equip- ment. to wrcst rrrcord FY0135 °l tobacco. mam‘. barley and potatoes from the vclrlt. "We shall btllld our own homes and tnaiiiiiavtiirc tho materials out of what. is at hand. even lo making a rottplP cnillioti bricks. The result will be a new Entzlish colony - a small lflWll. iii fart." Tu-o of the viilagcrs Me filflPk men who plan tn lake 1i small herd or high-bred cnlilP with them. Special sheds will hr‘ erected l0 protect thcrn from the tropical sun until they are acclimatized. Roads (‘ome First “.\s the nearcsi railway station is l5 miles from our estate. new roads will be a priority X4319 531d- "and ire shall plant trees to cool the ntmosphert- and attract rain. "Fltitnately there will be ‘a school. church. hotel. mo‘!!! theatre houses with modern con- vctilences and. perhaps. a brew- eryn The idea was born last. PM‘ when irate manpgod io leave his three farms for a holiday in South Africa. Thcre he met millionaire farmer and stockbrceder J. F. Kapnck who had for years admired the herd of l-‘riesian cattle bred by the Hale family in Britain. Kapiiek invited l-lale tn take 0W1’ an llndcvclfiped area of 12.000 acrcs of his holdirivzfi 11ml IRTm l! by the latest agricultural methods. Rack home. Hale was siirprisPd lfl find that people for miles around u-mited in join him. “For vrecks l‘vt- been flooded with telcizrawis. letters and phone calls from men and women who would give their ears to $1" l0 5mm‘ Amen, Qne fellow tramp“ 3° miles in ask it we wanted a baker to co with the party. Hale's herd of cattle was sold re- cenfly for 1270.000 15280. l find the last nf his three farms is til) l" sale oatami (‘ANAL Tito original \'\'ollnt1fi Sllll‘ Clnll was opens-d in 1R1!!! from Port Dill- hotisie on lmko (lnlnrio to Port Ru- binson. inland. ~'E\I'RDEN The average woman's 1D weighs about three‘ 90ml“ ‘nd contains around 30 items. ivsasuiamo aurmsauss DWARF IUSH STRAWBERRY - fun : uellr ‘ml. Etlcffihdlllebliifl illi- gln runners. Hardy perennial. ‘ll abundantly from early summer ull killiu frost. liar an intense luiritrus flavor a aroma like that of wild ttrawbttfli lml and iuiey. Neat compact bu 1 makes it highly ornamental as 111 es valuable ln vegetable. i W" ' ' 1i commercial m..ii.".".:i..:.iitt;'. .2 i". ....... ...... in] of any variety we know from muffin‘: ssing r e popular solesnather e l III q rypes. lit unique sh form and ea- gsire ilsvgglglace I wit‘; om all’, ti». em ) OUR llO I”. a AID MIIIIY ‘Ii-is big doctor quietly shouldered Alma out of line, int.o step with him, as the little group reached the street. "I want to talk ta you" he "said. "about. Clay Thurston." Then are people hers who don't like him. They want ‘to run him out. of the Territory as they ran hie father before him." "Why do they want to!" He shook his head. “To long a s ry for now. ‘There are water rigli that may be valuable. Mean- time. he's making out with his cat- tle. It's a hard life. livery week or some of his steers disappear without explanation.“ "You're fond of him. aren't. you " The big face broadened with a grin. “Ho's my Exhibit. A in this section. My first big case-Bullet clean through his abdomen." Her eyes widened. "I thought. that people shot through the body always died." "Because surgeons new up the wounds and shut in the poisons. The common sense of it is to keep the wounds open and let. the poison drain out. Of course. that's dead against everything the big bugs beech 1n the medical colleges. So they ran me out of New York fter they'd found out about a few f my operations. I came out here where there's plenty of bullet prac- lice." “They really shot. Clay Thu."- ton? Did they ever shoot you?" "I'm a privileged character. But I can't. protect Clay." “He must have other friends." “Plenty. There'll be the devil to pay if they do gel. him." Alma remembered the dormitory R O talk. "Mrs. Cassidy is one of them, isn't she " "Good old Sonora! She picked up a live trail and went to the front for Clay when he wouldn't have had a gophcris chance. itvith- out tier Warning. There's nothing lie wouldn't do for Sonora." "How romantic!" said lizhily. "Perhaps he's going marry her." ' "Anyone would be a fool to marry him." She laughed up at him. "ls that a tivarning, Dr. Gibson?" "No." he barked. He rubbed his sitibbly chin. “Perhaps it is, at that. Keep off the grass. little girl. It's full of raitlesiiakes. larantulas and critters out here." Alma to CHAPTER VIII Now that Sandrock has expand- ed magically across the years into the desert metropolis of Satidrovia. tradition still endures of the first Harvey Girls’ dance, with its se- quels of conflict. romance and so- cial upheaval. Harvey House Entertainment and inc! Home Talent-Music, Recitationl. Features. Square and Round Dances and Reels Hon. Ezra Purvis. l\i'r of Ceremonies Gentlemen Please Wear Coats and Collars Admission 25c Committee of Management Miss Selena Bliss. Miss Orna Mack- sie. Miss Alma Seelye The announcements. lettered in the pale purple of the bill-of-fare l-ielttograph, but bordered in pa- triotic red. white a.tid blue. were the handicraft. of Miss Sadie Por- ter. Lhe budding artist. It was un- derstood that. all persons of respect- able behavior would be welcome. Tickets went like Harvey hotcakes. Dr. Leonard Gibson learned of the coming show when the rescue trio stopped him to inquire after their patient. The physician rc- ported Mr. Maule as coming along nicely. “Will lie be well enough to come to the sltmv Saturday?" asked Alma, seeking a stile. "He won't, but. I will." answered the doctor. "Why don't. you drop in on Mattie Cheer him up." The twinkle of a banjo inside Tim the countermanb room set a rhythm for their“ feet as they climbed the pointless stairs. A slightly husky but not untiineful voice sang: "If they take you for a dude They will treat you very rude And fire you down them golden stairs." Hazel knocked. The music ceas- ed. "Come in." called the singer. Ha pushed himself to lils feet. as the girls entered. "What ho!" he hailed. "Lady Beauty and her two attendant nymphs. "Don't be silly." laid Hazel. She contemplated him not without ap- proval. ' Kindhearted little Deb said. "It's too bad you can't come to the en- tertalnment. Mr. Mauie. Hazel is going to recite." "No! Is she? ’I‘liat'll Ibo topplnfi" His face gloomed over. "That. doc- tor Johnny won't. let me out. He's taken away my clothes.“ ‘ "Oome on, girls." said Mice Bins. "Good-bye, Mr. Mauls." "Good-bye. Besutlful." returned the mglishman wlstiully. "And thank you. ladies. for vlsttin‘ the sick and poor." Saturday's dining room was promptly cleared after supper. A platform was built and a brand- new melodeon installed. Half an hour before the opening time, Alina and Iiaael went up to dress. At. the dormitory door Halal put a hand on her friend's arm. "book. Cricket." she whispered. Inst to the outer world. Deborah lapalje. before her tiny mirror. was adjusting the white ribbon of the Harvey service in her glossy hair. Independence and hearty food had already done wonders. Paint color hltl flushed into her luster of the eyes. ‘There was a ha»! quirk to her lips. uniform i" protested Hazel. ed the girl. seared. cheeks, subtly setting off the deep "You're not going to wear your r "It's the boat I've sot." answer- "Oii. Cricket! I'm so‘ Suppose iay voice breaks." ' "ll it ha: we'll all hh h and freeeMAlsske As Russia's Secret Weapon KODIAK. Alaska. Feb. 4—fAP)— Russia's secret weapon. Deputy Marshal Paul Herring believes, is Alaska. Herring liaa been busy for months telling all who will listen that the "fate of the world will ited States can defend Alaska." He bases hiuconcern “on what I have observed in the territory since I came out of the navy in Worll War I. and on simple logic." "Alaskans are among the best- read people on earth." says Her- ring. "because of long winters and lack of entertainment. Up hero you learn to think, and think straighc. or you don't last long." Alf Madsen. who has been guid- ing sportsmen on the trail of Ko~ diak bear since 1928. says: "I don't know much abolit these things." says Alf. "But 1 know what I feel. and it scares me. I don't see how we could keep the, Russians from coming in here l! they wanted to. They are commit- ted to a policy of tyorld domination. Only the United States now stands in the way. and Alaska is a na- tural springboard." “The best route of invasion." s-ys Herring, "lies across the Bering. Straits and south throulh Alaska and Canada. This is the Russian secret weapon. It is an ace up the Russian sleeve. And at the present‘ time that route is wide open. Am- erican defences in Alaska are neg- ligible." ' Beaver Meat iioes 0n Sale In London LONDON. Feb. 4--(AP)~ Ever eat :1 beaver‘! Beavers meat was on sale for general consumption in London today. It. is being offered as an off-ra- tion dclicacy to persons who still fcel hungry after eating the cur- rent. IO-ponce (16 cents) weekly ra- tion of fresh meat. Beaver was on the menus of some restaurants. too. and it was causing confusion and discussion because the beaver is not a famil- iar beast. in Britain. A restaurant. in Liidgaie Circus had an cncyclopaedia handy so doubting customers could read for themselves. in the book marked that the beiwer is a fastidious creature. subsisting on water cress and the bark of better-tasting trees. lri some places beaver was bcini: offered as a steak. Otherspressed it. into a gelatin to he eaten cold. Still other cooks fancied beaver as iricassee. The cookery hooks werc no help at all. so everyone made his own recipe. How docs it. taste.’ Some said you could still taste the swamp in it. To a few, tt was savory indeed. DISCOVERED IN I178 The Hawaiian Islands were dis- covered by Captain Jamel Cook in 1778. sing with you," said Ruby an in- spiration. "Oh. would you? If I knew that. I could get. through with it. You don't. look R bit scared." she added envlously. "Me! Poohl I'm a tough old trou- per." boasted Ruby. tTo be continued) THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW! ' 1n vtzacrtcausb A DEAD - EVE DICK “t HE CAN SINK 'EM STANDING ON Hi5 HEAD *~ shortly hinge on how well the Un- ' t B E E ll I ll E Knitting Wools We bring you todayHhe finest selection of the famous BEEHIVE KNITTING WOOLS that we have been able to offer for many years. We suggest that you take advantage of this opportunity and choose your favourite while the assortment remains complete. BEEHIVE FlNGERlNG—3 ply z most popular colon to ohooee from BEEHIVE FlNGERlNG-4 pg)‘ most popular colors to ehoooe from BY WOOL-3 1 BEEHIVE BA spniiist popular eolora in obooao from MISS CANADA KNITTING-B ply 12 most popular colors to choose from PATON 8t BALDWlN'S SUPER SOCK YARN-J ply 'l most popular colors to choose from KNITTING-J l MISS CANADA CROCHET: mutt popular collozs to choose from PATON'S BEEHlVE CREPE-Z ply 5 most popular colors to choose from PATON'S BEEHIVE BOUCLET 5 most popular colors to choose from noon: s. Mtieonm A GAME. WHEN QGING ONE MIGHT WIN THE BhLL GAME *“ 4mm 211* H/LL WHVTE; li/AU/(EGIMI, ILL. _ peanut-laden candy, richly coated with Moire tongue-temp XXX milk Two separate bars wrapped as onol Crisp, crunchy, chocolate. FEBRUARY 1. 1949i ém By, Fagaly and Shorts!