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Star-Phoenix from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada • 3

Publication:
Star-Phoenixi
Location:
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

'HAVE YOUR NEXT BIBKS STERiING FIATWABE X)llSN 1 cuss 1 AT THE ELITE CAFE birrs luvitiMiTM FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1955 To Speak Here Friendly Call! Budget Up This Year Police $82,000 Hopes For Saskatoon Comedian Likes It Where Its Sate PRELIMINARY ESTIMATES REGINA (CP) John Blackbird. 32, Thursday received two months in jail for stealing a suitcase from a Bick friend he visited in hospital. Police said Blackbird walked out of the hospital with the piece of luggage when his friend dozed off for a minute. Don Carlos said he had a ter-nfic act You know, someone can walk into the place and Hope can build a whole show on this He's got something that other comedians havent got." That extra plus, said Harry, "lessiree, when he walks into a room, he seems to bring a lot of warmth. No ones too big or too small for him.

Hes genuine all right, Harry said. Tie ip Kingdom llall The Saskatoon police depart merits preliminary budget estimates lor 1955 rail for an Increase of about $82,000 over 1954 expenditures, Mayor Johm McAskUl, police commission chairman, disclosed today. It approved, this would mean the city's taxation levy would have to be hiked by that amount for police purposes alone. But the mayor emphasized that the figure was still preliminary, sub ject to revision by the commission at its meeting next Tuesday. Last year, the departments expenses came to some $343,000, about $28,000 more than estimated originally.

The 1955 preliminary estimates call for a tax requirement of about $425,000, on increase of $82,000. Almost all this increase $74,000 is for a bigger wage bill. The full effect of the sizable increase in the police complement, carried out in 1954, will be felt In 1955. The estimate does not take account of whatever wage increases may be requested on behalf of police employees in the next several weeks. Bobier to New Post REGINA (CP) Thomas G.

Bobier of Moose Jaw has been elected first vice-president of the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool, succeeding W. J. Ball who resigned the office recently to become man-ager of the pools country and terminal elevator division. Mr. Bobier.

formerly second vice-president, was first elected a pool delegate In 1928. Charles Gib bings of Rosetown, a member of the board of directors, was named second vice-president. LUMBER STOLEN REGINA (CP) Enough flooring and veneer panelling to finish the interior of a good-sized house was stolen Tuesday night from two locked sheds of Bird Building Supplies, police reported today. Loss was estimated at $1,600. 11 1l 4 ttU I IION.

RICHARD WOOD Member of the British Parliament and son of the Earl of Halifax, who will address a joint meeting of the mens and womens Canadian clubs at a luncheon at 12.15 oclock Monday at The Bessborough. Ills topic will be The Commonwealth and the World Today. Mr. Wobd is MP for Bridlington, Yorkshire, and parliamentary private secretary to the British minister of agriculture and fisheries. Members of both clubs may bring two guests to the meeting.

Mem. bers of the mens club are asked to phone reservations to 98737 or 93142. 4 Adventists To Dedicate New Church Pastor Walter A. Nelson, head of the Seventh-day Adventist Church In Canada, and Pastor Eldon L. Gree, treasurer of the Canadian church, are here from Oshawa, to conduct dedication services of the new Sev-enth-day Adventist Church at Salvation Primarily Ar Church, By HELEN TESKEY Take me to a safe Bob Hope.

I want to go to Saskatoon. Thats What hte said when he heard about Saskatoons accident record. Hope is a mighty popular guy with the troupe who will lend him a hand this evening when he plays a scheduled three-hour show at Exhibition Stadium. You could tell. Don Carlos, entrepreneur and Winnipeg night-club owner, thinks lies the tops.

So does Harry Douglas, leader of the Deep River Boys, an all-male singing combo who are billed to play this evening with Hope. Hes a tremendous guy, said Don Carlos, and most generous. His salary is $10,000 a night. Thats what he charges me, Tuesday night, after the show in Winnipeg, he said to me forget it. Thats the kind of guy he is.

Don Carlos and Harry Douglas were sitting in the cafeteria of The Bessborough this morning, having breakfast and trying to figure out where Jerry Colonna could be. Col-onna came in with the troupe this morning but he was nowhere to be found. Hes probably on the golf course," Harry said. Hope is coming Jn this evening by plane from Minneapolis. Thats cutting it pretty thin but his buddies say hes used to it.

What he doesn't know Is that Mayor John McAskill has planned a little reception for him. When he steps off the plane he will be presented with one of the biggest keys the mayor could find. Things will even be warmer at the Stadium. Don Carlos says tonights show is a sellout. The troupe has played Winnipeg, St.

Paul and Minneapolis. "The reason W'hy I picked Saskatoon was to help celebrate your Golden Jubilee, and Hope was all for it. I told him about Saskatoon being a city without an accident, (this was in early January). He said, take me to this safe He was so pleased he was going to send a wire to the mayor and chief of police, Last night, we were driving to Gimll to put on a show for the air force boys. Jerry was telling us about the time Hope was in a crash in Australia.

(It was almost the last act). Just as he finished the story, a tire blew. Colonna never opened his mouth again during the whole trip. Don Carlos finished his eggs and bacon, leaned back and talked about how the Deep River Boys have been playing his club for the last ten years and how they were celebrating their tenth anniversary this year. Harry Douglas said he had played several benefits with Hope but this was the first paying Job with him.

Colonnas been with Hope for years. Now they play the odd show together. Hope has his own company making TV and pictures. Last Novcmlier he played the Palladium in London in a command performance. What a performance, said Harry.

The English were mad about him. Last week in Winnipeg he helped sell Israel development bonds. Want Fairs To Add More Dairy Classes REGINA (CP) The Saskatchewan Dairy Cattle Breeders' Association called on provincial class A fairs Thursday to add more classes in dairy show cattle competitions. The classes requested were Junior getof-sire, senior herd and graded herd. President Harold La- trace of Saskatoon said these classes are on the prize lists for Brandon.

Calgary and Edmonton. Delegates asked to have more rigid check on quality and freedom from disease of cows and bulls entered in the annual dairy cattle sale at Saskatoon Oct. 13. A resolution opposing a livestock marketing board was introduced and passed. The same resolution was approved earlier by the Holstein and Jersey breeders and the Saskatchewan Dairy Association.

Ralph H. Hnight and Alvin Mil-lor, both of Saskatoon, were re-elected directors of the dairy cattle breeders association for another three years. Booth Declares City-Union Wage Talks Deadlocked City Councils negotiating team and representatives for the 166-member transit union appear to have reached a temporary deadlock in their talks on 1955 wages and working conditions. This was indicated today, following a contrary and presumably erroneous rumor Thursday which had the two parties not too far from agreement. Mayor John McAskill, member of the councils bargaining committee, said today the wage talks had been suspended until next week.

At that time, he said, the transit local planned to have an international representative from Vancouver in Saskatoon to take part in resumed negotiations. The transit local is one of four municipal unions, representing 760 civic employees, which have asked for wage increases and improved working conditions costing an estimated $321,000 annually, if granted. The transit union has asked for a 10 per cent wage hike for all its members, which would cost about $50,000 yearly. The mayor refused to comment on the significance of the transit unions request to bring in an international representative. In the past, such a move has always followed a deadlock in negotiations at the local level.

It Is understood the union bargainers and councils committee traded proposals at Thursday mornings joint meeting. Jail Rcporl Vindicated The John Howard Society report on conditions in Regina jail had been vindicated by recent releases from the minister of social welfare, L. O. Peterson, society president, told the members Thursday. Mr.

Peterson addressed the annual meeting of the John Howard Society held in the Technical Collegiate. He referred to a report prepared for the minister following a visit to the Jail last June, in which conditions were described as overcrowded and filthy. The report had been trup, he said, and he expressed the hope that remedies suggested to relieve the situation which had become increasingly more critical since last June would be taken by the department. The society supported the provincial governments policy of recognizing jails as places of training rather than as places of custody and correction, he said. ertising Rill Peanuts Br surf 'prtrr The amount spent by the Saskatchewan government on advertising the province was peanuts.

Provincial Secretary Joseph Burton said today. Speaking after the legislature's public accounts committee had finished consideration of the expenditure on the Bureau of Publications in the last fiscal year Mr. Burton said his eyes had been opened at a nnUonal conference of tourist officials last year. I found that Saskatchewan's expenditures on advertising in comparison with other provinces was peanuts, he said. He quoted from a letter from the Nova Scotia government, showing that its bureau of information had spent more than $50,000 on news-atone 8n Irtodieid advertising A reminder that the Salvation Army was not primarily a social agency, but a church, was given this morning by Commisioner William Wycliffe Booth, newly-appointed leader of the Salvation Army in Canada and Bermuda, who is paying his first official visit to Saskatoon.

Corporation To Manage Rental Units The charter for a limited dividend corporation to manage the proposed $500,000 low rental housing project for senior citizens is being drawn up. Mayor John McAskill said today. Articles of the charter are being drafted by City SoUcitor R. D. Phillips.

Once completed, the charter draft will be sent to the CentiYil Mortgage and Housing Corporation head office In Ottawa for approval. The city is proposing that the rent al project, comprised of 100 individual rental units and a hostel with accommodiation for another 100 persons, should be financed under section 9 of the National Housing Act. If Ottawa approves, the provincial government under existing legislation will finance 20 per cent of the estimated $500,000 capital cost; Ottawa will loan 90 per cent of the balance, and the city, along with the United Service Clubs, Past Masters of the Masonic Lodge and other organizations will be responsible for financing the The limited dividend corporation would be the local housing authority which would manage and administer the rental project, the mayor said. He said civic, service club, Masonic and other representa-tives would make up the board of directors of the authority. This is the new Kingdom Hall of Jehovahs Witnesses located at Clarence Avenue and Second Street.

It will be the meeting place of the Nu-tana congregation. The building is 40 feet by 70 feet and will seat about 300. The estimated value is approximately $50,000. A special dedication ceremony will be held this weekend, to which the public is invited. The program starts at 6:45 oclock Saturday evening with D.

E. Held, district manager for Jehovahs Witnesses, giving the main dedication talk at 7.30 o'clock. Sundays program features another public lecture. Hope in a New World. by Mr.

Held which will be followed with the showing of the film The World Society in Action. This is a colored film informing people of the organizational structure and function of Jehovahs Witnesses. Scenes from conventions irf Africa, Germany, France, England as well as the large international convention at Yankee Stadium; New York, in 1953, are shown. The public is invited at no charge, 4,500 Claim Benefits Here A total of 4,500 persons in the Saskatoon area are listed as claiming unemployment insurance benefits, an Unemployment Insurance Commission official said this morning. Total of unplaced Job applicants Is o.

The Saskatoon area takes In the district east to Wadena, north to Duck Lake, south to Outlook and west as far as the Alberta border. Woman Found Dead in P.A. PRINCE ALBERT. Nancy Johnson, 33, an Indian of the Mistawasis Reserve at Leask, was found dead on a street in north Trinee Albert early this morning. The low temperature of the night was 18 degrees below.

A police cruiser patrol found the woman outside a shack near Eighth Avenue and Ninth Street. Rushed to hospital, she was pronounced dead on arrival. An inquest, called at noon by coroner Dr. R. G.

Green, was adjourned sine die. The Salvation Army should be the spearhead of evangelical effort, he said In an interview, It was the idea of the founder and first general. William Booth, that every member should be a winner of souls and it still is. Commissioner Booth explained the essential difference between the Salvation Army and a church group, by saying that the latter left outward expression of doctrine to the minister, but In the Salvation Army everybody must be a preacher and an evangelist and a winner of souls. That Is why we wear uniform, as personal witness, and why we have open air services.

All our people speak and pray in public." Gen. Booth, the founder, died when the commissioner was 17, but this morning he recalled what a happy man his grandfather had been. Of the first generals eight children all became Salvation Army officers, and the commissioner's father, Gen. Bramwell Booth, had seven children, who also became staff of firers, My own six children are Salvationists, and the four eldest already are officers. So the fourth generation is continuing, he said.

Ive often been asked why we all have continued, and I think it is because ours is such a happy religion. To illustrate this Commissioner Booth recalled that his grandfather once had been asked by an officer if it was right to tell Six-Pound Key For Hope A six-pound, 15-inch cast Iron key, painted in gold and stamped with the words, Bob Hope and Saskatoon was delivered to Mayor John McAskills office this morning for presentation later in the day to the movie and TV comic who is playing a one-night stand here. The key was cast by the John East Ironworks at the mayors rAniuut Uia UVaakU s. request. His a funny story that had no moral.

rl never his reply, that laughter was one of the emotions. One way to reaeh the heart was through the door of the emotions, and once the door was open it was easier to reach the heart with something else. Besides, the commissioner added with a twinkle in his eye, SALVATION ARMY Continued on Page 5, Column 2 Mrs. Fred Mulvey Dies in Hospital A resident of Saskatoon for 47 'rC(l (Elizabeth Marie) Mulvey died Thursday in hospital here. She was 66 years of age and had resided at 622 Seventh Street.

Mrs. Mulvey, who came to Saskatoon from North Dakota 47 years ago, is survived by her widower, Fred; three sisters, "trs- D- F. Duke and Mrs. John Pfeifer of Saskatoon, and Mrs. Martin Auld, North Dakota, also four brothers, Philip, William, Otto and Edward Miller, all of rural Saskatoon.

The funeral service will be at one oclock Monday afternoon from St. Pauls Lutheran Church, the Rev. George Rode officiating and burial will be in the family plot, Haultain Cemetery. Saskatoon Funeral Home is in charge of the arrangements. Four Youths Face Charges A preliminary hearing for four Saskatoon youths charged with attempted rape opened in city court Thursday before Magistrate B.

M. Wakellng. The more serious charge against Robert Harrison, Henry Wasylyk, Bus Sommerfeld, and Gerald Anderson was substituted by the Crown for one of indecent assault laid Jan. 15 for an alleged offence against two girls on Jan. 13.

D. C. Disbery, QC, Is appearing as counsel for Wasvlvk and Sommerfeld; P. G. Makaroff, QC, for Harrison and Anderson.

The case is continuing. MEETINGS The Saskatoon Retriever Club will meet at 2.30 oclock Sunday afternoon at 1815 Avenue north. Those interested in training retrievers for water fowl work are invited. The Saskatoon and District Labor Council, CCL, will meet at 8 oclock this evening In the Farmer-Labor Hall. Inviting Bids On 750,000 Acres Bids are being Invited for the purchase of exploration permits in nine permit blocks covering more than 750,000 acres of Crown land in Saskatchewan.

Seven of the blocks being offered by the Saskatchewan Department of Mineral Resources cover a total of 614,262 acres west of the third PASTOR W. A. NELSON Ninth Street and Victoria Avenue. The services will start at 7.30 oclock tonight and conUnue all day Saturday. The first company of Seventh-day Adventists was organized here in 1907 but was not formally organized as a church unit until 1920.

Their church was located for many years at Avenue I and Nineteenth Street. Construction of the new $80,000 building started in 1952 under the pastorship of Pastor W. Streifling, who was recently transferred to Toronto. During the building program the congregation met in St, James Anglican hall. The congregation has grown to 200 members.

This does not include young children since Adventists do not practice Infant baptism. The latter stages of the drive for building funds was under the leadership of Pastor Clifford E. Reeves, Dave Heinrichs, Nick Koseruha, Bill Brocks and Chester Monson. Pastor D. Henriksen of Saskatoon, president of the Manitoba-Saskatchewan Conference of Adventists and Mr.

Reeves will lead the services. Would Ostracize Drunk Drivers REGINA (CP) Highways Min-istcr J. T. Douglas suggested Thursday that drunken drivers be socially ostracized. Mr.

Douglas said the tremendous Worship was to present the key to Bob Hope as a gag on the stars arrival by plane. The only thing worrying mayor this morning was the meridian, while the remaining two unlikely but still possible pro-parcels of 189,088 acres are tyest ofspect that the key might fall on tlie second meridian. Hopes toes. 3,000 Flock To Big Sale In what a veteran retailer desci ibed at the most concentrated sales operation in his experience, an estimated 3,000 buyers thronged premises of the Great Western Furniture Company on Thursday. Some 2,000 of them went through during the morning, many of them standing in line outside the main entrance before gaining admittance.

The outside line-up began before the doors opened Thursday morning and it was not until about noon that customers were able to get into the store without waiting. The sale is continuing today, but in at least one section a Sold Out sign was posted early this mom ing. An official of the T. Eaton Company, which is conducting the sale, said that the biggest immediate problem was one of delivery. We have mustered all available delivery equipment, but customers are still going tb have to be a little patient.

Well get their purchases out as quickly as possible. It might be necessary, he con tinned, to hold off the sale for a day next week to catch up on deliveries and give sales staff a breather. It would also provide an opportunity to assess the situation at the warehouse, from which the bulk of deliveries were being made, to see what remained to be moved. Considering customer response, Thursday's selling went along in a comparatively orderly manner. Clerks had little time for coffee breaks.

Two couples who took out squatter's rights on a chesterfield suite took a page from City Connell's book. The flip of coin decided the buyer. The sale was major supper time discussion in Saskatoon but still of greatest interest, and still unanswered, was: For whom did the Bank of Montreal buy the property? Whals on Tonight THEATRES Broadway Purple rialn, 7.45, 9 45. Capitol Desiree, 1.00, 3.50, 5 00, 7.10, 9.05. Daylight "The Black Knight, The Mad Magician, Roxy Francis Joins the Wacs, Silver Lode.

Bemiee Discusses Of International lies lion Lanmiajre Not Tulip Time Yet! Saskatonlans who switched to spring coats earlier this week neednt feel too embarrassed about having to go back to heavier gear. The weekend warmup even fooled as experienced an observer as Mother Nature herself. Mrs. W. H.

Barclay, 733 Third Street, east, today reported sprouts from tulip and daffodil bulbs she planted last fall showing above the frozen grounp this morning. She hadnt noticed them provi ously, Mr. Barclay said, but saw "something green when shaking a mop. The bulbs were planted on the south side of the Barclay home, getting full sun during the warm spell this week. Mrs.

Barclay covered the sprouts with sawdust today and thinks theyll survive till proper growing time. She bought the bulbs In Spokane last summer. Mrs. Maud ratson Dies Suddenly When it comes to the project of a second language for world understanding, I wonder whether we are more ready to admit the principle than anxious to implement it? Are we seriously concerned about a second language in Saskatchewan? Florence Ben-nee asked here Thursday. Miss Bennep, a teacher at Nutana Collegiate, spent two years in India where she was (lean of women at the Indore Christian College.

She was language to world understanding. The commissioner spoke of the As early as 1947, one year after jtjncrcase in cars has brought new had been founded, a committee of yTs of ront)s- new laws and new habits. But nothing was dune to keep drunken drivers off the road Addressing the 10th annual con vention of the Saskatchewan Temperance Federation, he said drunken drivers cant be kept off highways through laws alone. Aroused public opinion was needed. Mr.

Douglas promised the organization government assistance Column 2 gram.C0Uld UP SUtaWe pr- linguists was summoned to make recommendations. Work was done to increase the number of transla. tlons of the worlds greatest books into other languages and to improve the quality of translation generally. Referring to the seminar, she BENNEE Continued on Page 5. 1, To dale thU year there have been 238 traffic arrl-dfnts In this tlty; passenger and drivers Injured total 18; pedrstrian injured, 10; ry.

rlists Injured. 0. There has been one fatality. February accidents to date total 61; passengers Injured, three; pedestrians Injured, one Desiree A Review High Ground A Review Doug Schmelser of Bruno, president of the campus LibI crals at the University of Saskatchewan, left by air Thurs-played one of the leading roles- 4 the conference Sister Mary Bonaventure. This tiu University Liberal Federation in Ottawa today and Saturday.

Prime she did with quiet charm and assured competence. As the also director of the new school of social service at Indore. Miss Bennee addressed meeting sponsored by the Saskatoon branch of the United Nations Association at the Grey stone Theatre. As a Canadian delegate, she was one of the 38 partiripants. observers and advisers from 18 countries who attended UNESCO seminar in Ceylon in August 1953.

The subject was the contribution of the teaching of modern languages towards education for living in one world. The seminar, she pointed out, was in agreement on certain things: That the teaching should be primarily oral, the method active and with the greatest use possible made of the language itself in the classroom. The optimum age for beginning modern languages was attacked in an address by a Dr. Anderson of Yale University, in which he reported to the seminar on an experiment in the U.S.A. In which in selected areas foreign languages were begun at tiie grade two and three levels.

This experiment," said Miss Bennee, should be of interest to us in Saskatchewan where French Is not begun until grade nine. This is later than the time suggested by UNESCO experts. It might he wise to watch the experiments that are going on in the U.S.A. with regard to second language study elementary schools. Miss Bennee said that UNESCO had long been preoccupied with to Minister St.

Laurent is address the conference. Desiree Is a powerful drama which opened at the Capitol Theatre Thursday. Although it stars Marlon Brando as Napoleon, history's most legendary warrior, the Cinemascope picture portrays not one battle scene. The picture is based on Annemarie Selinko's best seller and co-stars Jean Simmons, Merle heron and Michael Rennie in pivotal characterizations. Cameron Mitchell adds to his screen stature in the strong supporting role of Napolean's brother, Joseph.

An English actress, Elizabeth Sel. lers, plays the part of his wife, Julie Bonaparte, with distinction. Producer Julian Blaustcin has taken Napoleon's amours and shown how they were part of his conmvings to erihanre his own position and make France great. That is, all except his first affair with Desiree Clary, young suter of a wealthy Marseilles silk merchant. The nen dowry that Desiree would have provided had Napoleon Dull play, 8re oft(n iaved actor actresses.

(Tallulah seems, to do it with regularity.) And, sometimes, poor actors are saved by brilliant Having imparted this electrifying news, we now stop to consider High Ground, billed as a suspense drama and presented to an opening night audience at Ilrunskill School, Thursday, by Saskatoon Community Players. A talky play such as this with very little physical action must be bolstered by sparkling lines andor sparkling performances. As for the lines, we greatly fear that the east was working against insupportable odds. As for the performances, with the exception of two, they were merely adequate. One of the best of the eve- married her as he promised, was some-attraction to the ambitious general, but at the end when being banished to the island of St.

Helena. he admitted that love had a part. It was the irony of fate that the egoist with the avowed destiny of making a united Europe by force of arms, with himself as emporer should end his life as an exile ori an island, whereas the girl he jilted, by being true to herself, ended as a Queen on the throne of Sweden. Jean Simmons gives an outstanding performance as the vivacious Desiree Clary who was Jilted at the age of 18 by Naixileon when other women In Pans favored his ambitions. Desiree Impulsively rushes rdf to Parts from Marseilles to seek the reason for Napoleon's cooled ardor DFMREE Con Lcued on Page 5, Column 1 A resident of Saskatoon since 1912, Mrs.

Maud Watson of 1108 Osier Street, died here suddenly Thursday. She was 71. The funeral service will be hfld Monday at 2 oclock from St Andrew's Presbvterlan Church with the Rev. E. S.

Mac-kay officiating. Bur.al will be In the family plot in Wocifllawn Cemetery Mrs. Watson was born in Peterborough. Ont and came to Saskatoon in 1912, where she lived until her death. Her hu-band, Albert, predeceased her in 1947.

Surviving are two F. Ross of Saskatoon and DoupIbs of Montreal; one daughter, Mrs Dunean Macfarlane, Ottawa MrKagues Funeral Home Is charge of arrangements. kindly sister who befriends i luckless girl, she may be criti cized for giving too much of a holier-than-thou interpretation but that is usually inevitable in such a role. The second standout per formanee of the evening fare was str-ngely supplied by an actor called upon to play what could bo termed a bit part. As the demented house-boy Willy, the performance of Peter Scott was the brightest thing in the whole show.

There is nothing more difficult than playing an idiot on stage. Some of us unwittingly do it evrry day, but to get up on stage and make an audience HIGH GROUND Continued on Page 5, Column 3 Tivoli Purple riain, 1.30, 3.30, 5 35, 7.40, 9 45. Victory Jungle Jim in the Forbidden Land, Fighting Caravans. DANCES The Art Bill Ilcuchert and the Rhythm Kings, 7.43. Avc.

Al's Melody Harvesters, 10-12 30. Mayfair Hall Midnight Revelers, 8 00. ON STAGE Brunskill High Ground, 8 15 Exhibition Stadium Bob Hope, 9 00. SATURDAY 19 A-M. Daylight' Fearless Fagan, Mr.

Justice A. Dorlon will preside at Queens Bench Court non-jury sittings which open at the court house Tuesday. A number of civil actions are listed, including four divorces and one application for nullification of a marriage. The following Is reported as a public service to readers who may have gone on the wagon abruptly this week. A usualy well informed, teetotal souree has confirmed sighting young ladies with lime green and pink hair.

Its a new style which is In some danger of spreading. It has been hot for iebruary! ninga performances was given the problem cl the relation of by Alice Turner, who luckily.

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