novEMBP-Bg?» 194° Co Frequent Washings llarm Your Nair‘! Actual facts proud .99"? hair gets for dsrtier [ha]! your body Should you wash your hair only every 8 or 4 W??? u " as ar e:- "ilmlliifil; hail 1m u more dirt than any qt er hi! o! the body. It traps dust, soot ma grime from the air. You wggh your hands several times . day -you should wash ygur hair st least once a w g h you wash your will,‘ mzkdnsure all dirt and dandruff are completolg re- moved from your scal . and- yufl warns you that dried skin, etc. have combine_ with scalp oil and perspiration to form a waxy accumulation i (in; tightly over your scalp. This chokes ofl’ nourishment from your hair. It must be dissolved away if you want healthy, good-looking hair. Fitch Dandruff 3mm"? shgmpOO is guaranteed to remove dandruff. After it dis- solves all dirt and dindrufl. Fitch washes them away in a cream , stimulating lntber. Your scs p is left antiseptlcall clean because Fl Dundru Remover Shampoo gets right down into the tiny air open- ings in the scalp and clean! them out, so your hair can grow lustrous, healthy, and alive-looking. Prove I t Yourself Get Fitch Dumb-u] Hanover Shampoo for good-looking hair -try the B-oz. economy size, 69c. Be proud o! your hair: use Fitch tonight. To. fen. '- lHNURl/lv -—-.—’.' Qu lckies \, u \\ shrinkable Underwear . . . and filling orders by the numbers. ordering "6400" or "6401" or "3612", take it anted the clerk not only knows the Sun eld numbers but knows they would west for H0 other brand. Sunfseldb is the Underwear famous for more than 6O yous for being “fr, wen» and lrsniltldi owner _ grocess. in s comp ere range of combina- non an re ante shirts-and-drawers styles, ill . . Anode unshrinksble b elusive l_ Viflfly weights. . l- d, ‘lél“"\,._.\s\\ So many men always wear Stanfield’; Un- so many wear the same models year after year . . . that nles people in the stores tell us thcyisre constantly “We'll hove to use o Guardian Wont Ad, Alvin — in some woy or other Junior hos lost our piano!" 170/14 any customers dun le A special 236d. postage stamp is to .be issued in Australia to coin- cide with the Pan-Pacific Boy Scout Jamboree which is being held at Wonga Park, Melbourne, from Dee. 29 next to January 9. Across Canada Boy Scouts are being asked to assist the United Emergency Fund for Brllaln by helping at U.E.F.B. Depots, parti- cipating ln the clothing drive plan- ned for early in 1949, and contri- buting funds, as groups. to send food parcels to Scouts in Britain. Twenty-six Rover Scouts from Ontario have filed applications to attend the Fourth World Rover Moot in Norway from August 1 to 12, 1949. Ontario is the first prov- ince to file applications for the Moot with Canadian Scout Head- quarters. As part of theMarch of Books Campaign now being conducted by the Canadian Council for Recon- struction through Unesco, Cana- dian Boy Scouts are contributing to their own drive to send 1.000 copies of the Canadian Scout textbook “Tenderfoot to King's Scout" to D-P Scouts in Germany. Later they will assist in the general campaign to collect books for shipment to Europe. From A. R. Mosher, the Boy Scouts Association has received the following message: “As President o! the Canadian Congress o! Labour, I am very hupPY t0 extend greetings and congratulations to the Boy Scouts Association on the occasion of its Fortleth Anniversary celebration. "The Boy Scout Movement has been a highly useful supplement to other educational activities carried on by schools and churches. It has developed desirable qualities of character through training in co- operation and leadership. and has been particularly valuable in pro- viding recreation and the study of natural history. “I have no hesitation in urging that it be given adequate support by the workers and the people of Canada." I § R. S-rnsmasrvs Um awsna Removal Notice We Are Now Located At (Opposite Revere Hotel) ‘I20 Kent SI. EFFICIENT DRY CLEANING Our new quarters are much larger en- abling us to give a Better and Faster Service. UNCALLED FOR Dry Cleaning which has been in our plant for o long period will be disposed of un- less culled for at once. PLEASE CALL TODAY Phone 692 For Beller Dry Cleaning Cudmore Dry. Cleaners Unofficial Major League Fielding Figures Released By JOE RlElIOI-EER. NEW YORK, Nov. 26—-\AP)-A l5-year-old major league fielding record. set by Oscar Mcllilo of St. Louis Browns, was erased by two second baseman in the 1948 baseball season. Unofficial fielding percentages for the lust season showed today that both George Stirnwelss of New York Yankees and Bobby Doeir of Boston Red sox topped Mellllo's .f<9l figure for 130 games in 1933. Stirnwelss, one of the Yankees reported to be on the trading block because of his light hitting last season, fielded at. a sensat- ional .994 pace, three percentage points above the old record. Doerns mark was .992. The stubby Yankee second base- man. aided by a brilliant ‘ll-game streak wit-bout an error in the early part of the campaign, com- mitted only four hobbies all sca- son. He handled a total o! 694 chances flawlessly in 135 games. and had 338 putouts and 356 es- élsti. Btirnwelss’ stretch o! consecut- ive games without an error estab- lished a mark for second basemen. displacing the old figure of 59 which Doerr set in 1943. However. the record was shortlived as Doerr reclaimed the laurels later in the season by playing though '13 suc- cessive games without s. mlscue. In the first inning of the sec- ond game of a doubleheader on ept. 19. Doerr lmnbled a hard smash by Pat Mullin oi’ Detroit to snap his fielding streak at 73 games and number of chances a‘. 411. In all, he committed six er- rors out of 784 chances in 131 games for a .992 fielding average. Except for Pete Suder of Phila- delphia Athletics, who made l0 errors. no other regular second baseman even came close to the pair. Joe Gordon, Cleveland's great keystone playmaker. com- mitted 24 hobbies. Al Kozar of Washington and Jerry Priddy of St. Ipuis Browns had 2'1 errors apiece. Catcher Buddy Rosar of the Athletics and outfielder Frank Baumholtz of Cincinnati Reds came close to equalling fielding marks in their respective posit- ions. Rosa:- madc only one error all season. He sei the malb!‘ lea!- ue standard with a. perfect 1.000 in 117 garrtes in 1946. Baumholtz, after playing through 115 contests without a. mlscuc. committed three in his next eight games to lose any chance he might have had of matching Dan- ny Lliwhilefs perfect 1.090 field- ing mark in 1942. - Warwick Continues To Head N.ll.L. Scoring Race (By The Canadian Press) As the smoke cleared after a high-scoring week-end. Grant iKnobbyi Warwick, shifty Boston winger, still held down first place in the National Hockey league scoring race. Doug Bentley oi Chicago moved from fourth place into a second place tie with Tor- onto‘s Ted Kennedy after picking up a gonl and three assists over the week-end. Jim Conacher. Chicago winger. moved into third place with l6 points as he garn- cred two assists. The leaders: .0 A Pts. Warwick, Boston ll 9 2U Kennedy. ‘Poronlo a 9 1'7 D. Bentley, Chicago 6 ll l’? J. Oonaclier, Chicago R 9 16 Bsbsndo. Boston R '1 l! Snndford. Boston 7 B 1b R. Conacher, Chicago 5 10 1s BRAZILIAN LANGUAGE Portuguese is the language of most of 391d?! p®ulAW'~ T HE QQAEPTAISLQHAKQFYETQJYN..- =____.... {i} w DRY CLEANING 1C Major Penalties Record For N.ll.L. MONTREAL, Nov. 26 —- (GP) — Those sensational slugfests that punctuated Thursday night's Tor- onto Leafs - Montreal Canadiens game produced One National Hock- ey League all-time record and fell just short or another. A search of League files today showed that the 1 major penalties handed out by ref ee King Clancy was tops for a full game. Next in line came nine majors in 1932, also resulting from a Toronto-Montreal brawl and all in one period. ‘Thursday's single- pcriod high was eight. Million-sires Take Over Top Spot In League -__, NORTH SYDNEY, N. 3., Nov. 29 —(CPl—Sydney Millionaires crack- ed a. three-way tie and took over undisputed possession o! first place in the Cape Breton Senior Hockey League standings tonight by squeezing Nortslde Victoria: 3-2 here. Sllmmnryi~ First Period l-Sydney, Arundel 8.18 Penalties: J. Fritz. Whslen. Mac- Lean,_ Bungay, Gibson, Nelson, Gallagher. Second Period 2—Northslde, Mason, (Stark) ......... .. . . 10.55 3-Northslde, Komek, (MacLean) . ....._... 17.22 Penalties: MacDougall, Miller, Watts, Roach, H. Gibson, Dyte. Third Period ‘i-Sydney, MacDougall, (MacDonald. Medynskl) 5—Sydney, Whalen, (Nelson, D. Fritz) Penalties: Curtis (2), Nelson. 4.55 18.27 Whalen. MATA - HAIII Mafia-Hart famous spy o! the First World War, we; a pugch- Japanese dancer whose real name was Margaret Gertrude Zeller. Christmas Cheer More Plentiful (By The Canadian Press) Canadian Christmas tables, by and large. will be more lavish this year but the spreads will cost mOTE. A Canadian Press survey shows that most foods are more plenti- ful than last season. thanks mostly to relaxation of the austerity pro- gram on some fruits and vegetables. But - and this won't be news to housewives — prices are five to 95 per cent higher than a year ago. The last-minute flurry of turkey, plum pudding and candy-buying hasn't really started yet. Even at that it is pretty sure there will be lots to go round. You can buy turkey now in some places at 59 cents a pound but elsewhere the price goes as high as 75 and is likely to be even higher by Christmas. Walnuts come around $1 n pound, almonds 62-75 cents, pecans $1 to $1.20. Plum pudding costs about so cents a pound and $1.50 will get you a good-sized one. Brandy to pour over it is s good deal sumnsznsms: a. oro h race slzvlj more expensive. There are plenty of apples. raisins. grapes, peel, figs, cherries and mlncemeat but the prices are all up —— in some cases as much as 40 per cent — over last year's. Here is the cross-Canada picture: Vancouver: Japanese oranges are expected by Dec. 8 at about two- thlrds of last year's prices. Edmonton: Nearly everything is plentiful but prices are much high- er than a. year ago. Tomatoes. grapes, celery and lettuce are back, as in all Canadian communities. Regina: A few housewives are already buying Christmas cakes and puddings. ‘Ifiukeys are ex- pected to be scarce and the price will be well up over a year ago. Winnipeg: Nuts in the shell are the only scarce commodity, with hard candles and chocolates not too easy to come by. Turkey supply is below last year's and prices are h Toronto: Turkeys, geese and chicken; range from 55 to 59 cents a pound but the prices are ex- pected to advance as Christmas approaches. Windsor: This is about the one place in Canada where staple foods are a little cheaper. Reason is that supplies are more plenti- ful than a. year ago. There are not In this elr age, the R.C.A.F. hos o vital role in the defence end security of Canada. In the R.C.A.F. you not only ploy your purl but you can eel yourself o lergel of accomplishment lhol will satisfy your ambilions . . . and further- more . . . you will be given every opporiunily and encouragement lo achieve it. Young men of high calibre ore needed iodoy lo fill important openings in the ground crew trades, where you will be lroined to become on expert In Ihe electronic, mechanical, supply or clerical fields. In lino R.C.A.F. you will receive continuous employment e0 good roles of pey, wilh full opportunity tor advancement and o generous oenslofi at the end of your service, lnv men who s"... um. obilily ".4 u...» n» no. Honda/Us required, u... Is ...-.,..........., I... appoinlmoM lo commissioned rank. For full Information about ihe opening! ovoiloble in the R.C.A.F. llll in and mall the coupon Ieduy. ALWCANAIIIAN AIR FORCE Rccrrlllliw "Illa-er, swan», NAME (Please Pnnl). s-rmzcr xouncss cn-v ma...» R.F..»\.I". M"! Iiflrlll \0. 2 FIT.» send ml. vnnmn. ohllpilr-n. nm rurI Fv-‘(if-ko-Fns req-nrrmcnu and enemas- new ._.....___.__.___._.______..__ . rnovi NFI’. ______ L You an a Csasslsn (H1101! or ollzar Bmub m. . . s» lqunnlrnls n. both u l. Yo‘! are helwnn i: and .10 years. as many turkeys because feed. costs have doubled. The birds now are sclfzng a; '75 cams a pound, u 20-ccnn incl >0 from lust year. Dimitri-cl: Gob ‘en's ale exxpect- ed to be scarce by Christmas but the stores are bulging with every- thing else. Compared to 1947. flour is up a. cent, beef l5 up 22 cents a. pound, bacon 11p three cents, nutter llucc. coffec l0 and eggs six. Quebec: Retailers say this will be the first year since warls start when all items in demand at Christmas will bo plentiful. Ono rctuiiez" said he expected a "small reduction" in Christmal business because lower- income workers are hard put to buy even. every-day staples. Saint John: Prices are general- ly higher, with adequnto supplies except for turkeys. vlorkiz1g men'l families are eating .per cuts o! meat, less bacon, eggs and butter, Though there is ‘no scarcity ed staples. s11 of them cost more. Halifax: There is a wave o! buying candles and other sweet! ln the belief that supplies will drop off a little later. Supplies o! turkeys and chickens are expect- ed to go around. ‘The Christmas layouts will be better than iut Year but it will cost more. iiuilnn, lrflvc v;v. bis" '