MARCH. 31. 1953 NHL'S CllAFTlES'l' Mill Schmidt. 35-year-old Boston Bruin centre, is rated the crafliest vet- eran in the National Hockey League. He received a one-vote margin over Elmer Lach of Mon- DEPENDABLE LIGHT ' ELECTRICS LIMITED Maritime Distributors 4 Atlantic Street, HALIFAX, N. S. treal Canadians in a. poll of coach- as, sports writers and sports-casters of the six Nil-LL cities. Schmidt and Lach are nlso the two oldest play- ers in the league. (OP PHOTO). Produce MONTREAL. (OP) - Federal Dopartmenrt of Agriculture quota- tions: Eggs: Free cases, extra large 57; large 56; medium 55; small 53; -B 43-50; c 45. Receipts: 152 cases. Butter: Storage 62H; wholesale 62'i: current. receipts Que 62; first grade creamer-y prints Jdb price 62-63. Receipts. nil. Cheese: Ontario white 30; color- ed 30V;-: f.o.b. factory; Quebec white 30, colored 30'i; f.o.b. Mon- tlreal; wholesale Ontario white 31- li: colored Iiila: wholesale Quebec vtihite 30M: Quebec 31. Receipts, nail. . No. 1 potatoes. smal-1 wholesale lots N. E., 7.55 1.65-1.75: N.B., 505 1.10-1.15; N.B., 105 .26-28; P.E.l'., 755 1.80-1.90: Maine. 505 1.10-1.20; Florida rod. 505 2.75. LONDON, (APv-Foregn secre- tziity Anthony Eden has caught a cold and will be forced to stay at home for the next day or two. is foreign office spokesman said Monday. The 55-year-old diplo- mat cancelled his official engage- ments. Happy Easter WITH THE FAMILY For Easter. a thoughtful gift of: repaid rail ticket rings near someone dear. Your Canadian Pacific agent will handle all details at no extra cost. And remember-train travel is safe and economical. You travel relaxed in modern, air-conditioned trains. arrive refreshed in 1 ga i holiday mooxl For overnight journeys, you have a choice of accommodation. from berths to drawing rooms. Delicious meals. Courteous service. - Full Information and raiervailons from any Canadian Pacific unonf. n n s l JOKE LE-ANDER 6cARes-A5 EASY A5 A HUNGRY PANTHER!-vw AND Tl-U5 I6 Wl-iAT'5 LEFT or YOUR RIP-ROARlN6 , F PUTTING THE ,. 6 UNK in His Wuxluowl-vw THAT GENT YOU BORROWED THE 6KurQlqK EROM Exit Tony Blount by Sydney to:-Iiman CIIAPIBI VI Continued Among the wider areas of wood- land, matter: were easier: but Wm here he had to take every possible precaution. and though he was able to walk upright and in the shade. he was conotanbly pausing to look round him and listen for any sound that might indicate the presence :1 a patrol. All was deadly still. however. The hot windleas air broiuht no sound of any kind, and he went forward again, each time with the sensa- tion of having been reprieved for the momenlt. It must have taken him a good two hours before he came 119011 the first indication of moisture un- derfoot that told him he was ap- proaching the coastal swamps. and he greeted the discovery with a heartfelt sigh of relief. However difficult. it was going to be among the mangroves, it could not be worse than the area he had already cov- ered. and alt least he would be able to relax something of his vigilance. He realised now that he would have been wiser to make for them in the first place. as his informant. had advised; but the hope of mak- ing quicker progress had decided him against it - to his cosit. As the ground became more sort and marshy. the nature of the ve- getation changed completely. Casu- airina. acacia and wild rubber trees gave place to the first gnarled colu- mm: of old mangroves. and the rank fern-growth dwindled down and finally ceased altogether. Reeds. tussooks of coarse grass. and thick pads of moss grew in the spongy soil. and presently gireen scummy pools began to appear everywhere. He made his best speed across this intermediate and coverless tract. where he could have been seen with fatal ease, and plung- ed in among the increasingly dense growth of mangroves. With each step the ground became more marshy. and presently ' he was wading inches deep in soft mud. covered. with a. carpet of grey-green moss. , The going became increasingly difficult as the mud deepened. but now he was well in among the many columned trees. he felt that he could move without circums- pection. and for the first time he ceased to look apprehensiveily a- bout hlm and made the best of his way towards the coast. He was now in perpetual shade. for the crowded tree tops formed dense. unbroken canopy for miles, but owing to the entire ab- sence of undergrowth, there was no difficulty in picking a way among the trunks. only the ground grew more and more dif- ficult under foot. and presently he was faced with the necessity of wading through narrow salt water creeks which wound in all directions. Burdened with the heavy keg, it was no easy matter to keep his footing when negotiating these channels. for the banks were fre- quentliy steep and always slippery with ooze. and on one occasion he was compelled to wade back along one of these waterways for some considerable distance before he could find a place where he could scramble out of it. It was well after mid-day when he caught his first glimpse of the sea and he lowered his bur- den into the mud at his feet and stared at it between the inter- vening tree trunks with longing eyes. It lay blue and sparkling in the sunshine, with the little foam- caps fviecking its surface. A fresh south-easterly breeze was blow- ing outside, and even where he stood among the slime and ooze of an amphibian world. it. brought a tang of healthy air. The stagnant water of the winding channel he was Just about to cross was faint- ly stirring in sluggish response to impulses transmitted from its sea- ward end, and as he leaned wear- ily against a. moss-gii-own trunk he' felt a certain lightening of spirit and hope that the worst of the 'ordeal was over. It was a premature hope and wholly without foundation, how- ever. for in many ways the worst was still to come. Now that he was within sight of the sea. he turned northward Maior Hoopla -X xwg FAPIE WHAT DID HE SAY? HE SAID THANK You -- 1; PAtD HIMTHE -1575 PRICE TA6 on I-its INFER- NAL GTUFFED CREATLlRE." -v Bur LET'5 Buizv THE DEAD PA6T-a-OUR ANGEL J. WELLINGTON 6lM6 :9 COMING TO 555 THE INVENTION , lN OPERATION. THE GUARDIAN. WN and began to follow the coastline; and there the real difficulty be- gan. for he found that the crash and channels fonaud an intricate mt-work among the mangrove: which kept him floundering in and out of the water the entire time. Frequently they were only separated by three or four yards of relatively dry land. and during the entire course of that hideous Journey he never once found him- self able to traverse fifty yards without encountering one of them. Time and seem he missed his footing through sheer wearlness and came down heavily. and though the soft mud prevented him from injuring himself. he be- come no plastered with it as to be almost unrecognizable. It was useless to think of edging further inland to avoid the worst of these obstacles. for only by keeping the coast in sight could he be sure that he was heading in the right direction. In the be- wildering maze of oreellna and mangroves, it would have been fatally easy to wander round in circles without knowing it. and in this eternal shadow it was imposs- ible to take bearings by the sun even if he knew the time within an hour or so. It was equally impossible to gauge distance, and though the dying man had stated that the boat lay five or six kilometres north of the spot where he had struck the coast, it was unlikely that he had any real conception of the distance he had covered. It could only be estimated in terms of time taken - and he had had no means of determining that. Markets Aflfti-lance (By The Canadian Press) Toronto - Indiiistzrials decline. Mrmltreal - Industnials slip. New York - Pence talk drops market. Canadian-If Iiiii-lar MONTREAL, (CP) - The U'.S. dollar Monday closed at a dis-l SCORES 300 GOALS - George (Sonny) Agar. 33. has reached the small. select group of players who have scored 300 goals in profes- sional hockey. The centre for Cal- gary Stampecicrs of the Western Hockey League broke into the money ranks in 1939 and has play- ed all his hockey in minor leagues. He won the scoring championship in the Coast Hockey League last season and the 1947-48 title while with Houston of the old United States League. Maurice Richard of the National Hockey League and Wingy Johnston of the Tacoma Rockets of the WEL are the others in the 300-goal circle among still active players. (CF Photo) count of ill; per cent in teams of Canadian funds. oft U32. It took 08h. cents Canadian to buy 31 American. Pound sterling s2.76bi. down is. JCA Victor V-607 ........'..32995'l J.A. clsrk link Won S'sliie curling club liliampionsliip -- The Tip Top Tailor trophy, emblematic of the club champion- ship. was decided on Friday night at the Summeraide Curling Rink when the rink skipped by J. Annui- Oiark defeated the rink skipped by Austin Brooks by 8 score of 8 to 7, The games were closely contested all the way as in the semi-if-inais. Austin Brooks defeated Elmer Of- fer ll-l0 after being tied on one seventh end. and Jack Clark de- feated Ralph Bishovp ll-7, an extra end being played to decide the winner. The foursome of the winning rink ware, J. Arthur Clark. skip, J.E. Morrison. James MacGregor. and E.M. Smith, lead, while the run- ners up were Al.lElt.ll1 Brooks. skip. Albert Siliiph.-int. Brent Clark, and Fred L. Arsenault. lead. the Siimmcrside Ladies Curling Club was won by Eileen Gordon. skip. Fran Hontliorii. mate. Ruhh Horne. second. with a spare lead, The second was won by Dot Ellis. skip, Dot Clark. mate. Helen Marks second. and Olive Ereiman. load. The winner of the spoon compel- ition was Betty Lllllilotif-l'. skip: ,Sally Easier. mate: Doi-is Morrison. second; and Emma Holman. lead. Thp runners up were. Marion Smallman, skip; mate; Elizabeth Ma::Do-riald. 0nd; and Dor Clark. lead. - S, Thorpels Medals Still In Hands Of 2nd Place Winners NEW YORK.. fAP)mThe med- als Jim Thorpe won in the 1912 SEC- Pe Tcoin piste comfort tho I -3 . all winter! I" Y0!" home you can enjoy the suns t makes a per. feet summer day so enjoyableur " t llonnox Alva-Flo l-leating..;w.,-m ,1, conditioning-provides it because it kupitliit ' Suinmerllly The first "niates" competition of- Rita Silliphantp duplicates the conditions that ; iomplete comfort: y ' T l I. Alt III the tight icniponhng. l 1 2. Continuous but gentle nlotlcnpol.-T IIII elr. . I. Proper humidity for good health and- Iumilurn plolulian. 4. AI: that is filtered clean and malansaa. LLlVlVQJ.4a'zem PALMER 96 - 100 Fitzroy St. ed. still are in the hands of tliei men who finished second in thel decathlon and pentathlon compe- tilions. The other trophies are in the Olympic Museum at Lausanne, Switzerland. The medals and trophies were taken away from Thorpe when he, was declared to have been a pro-i iessional when he won the two) Olympic all-around events. They were given to Ferdinand Bie of Norway and Hugo Wieslander of Olympic Games and which he hoped would some day he return-' a With .15, to is chun L... Sugguhd liu price Slightly oIl'5g::'l'.dill "45" records change from centre - the as many as 14 distortion-tree ''45” records For 33'”: rpm, slide off big spindle. For 78 rpm, flip over needle lever. Plays up or twelve l0-inch. It's the finest 3-speed Sweden, who had finished second and were later named as the "ol- "IJVE ii'a”iiroaiMiiiuici""”louA mom ALL voun nacogaoso Never before have you heard MI YW" Q0, ODJOYI thewinomant you winter-condition your home with . . .,y' provide Mao; hat of ELECTRIC Phone 1443 - 1444 ficlal" winners of the pentathloii Thorpe died of a heart attack in Los Angeles Saturday. NEW YORK. (AP)-Author actor-director Elliott Nugent was placed in the Bellevue Hospital psychiatric ward Monday, a hos- pital spokesman said. The 54- vear-old Nu-gent became ill Sun- day night at his club, The Lambs. Nugent was co-author and star of the plays "The Poor Nut" and "The Male Animal". and co-star of the play, "The Voice of the Turtle". I. I 1',Yi such faithful reproduction of yoicvesand instruments, such richness of tone . . . such captivating f'livc" performance quality. Your favourite recordings - 53V3, 45 or 78 R.P.M. - are all made doubly enjoyable on V the finest automatic record-changer ever devised . . . your radio listening is enhanced by new ultra-sensitive tuning, marvellously, distinctive console cabinet this ingenioux new slip-on centre xpindls, ' way. With one Iiond you can stock on n 1.2-inch records ger ever model owRCAVICToR I ,WorIdgf.oador In Radio . . . Firs! in Recorded Music . .. first In Television so typical of RCA Yictdr design and craftsmanship. rlear reception (Standard or Short Wave). All this is in a that reflects an elegance Ii. T. Summerslde HOLMAN LTD. flhnrlotfetown 129 Kent St. F. A. S. JONES Special Rt-preaenfai See and!-Ieiar me V-6017 af.Any, One of These RCA Victor Deniers SIMPSONS-SEARS LTD. A in! Phone 218! Duvar Radio Montague, P. E. I. Service L47 GI. George St. Miller Bros. Phone. 555 I Mactausl Siimniei-side and Fumiiure