Second Section Page $ - AS nana TOM-BOY Banquet Brand FRESH EGGS LARGE Quartet MARGARINE POUND CARTON 2 for 5c GRADE ~ Doz. 49c In Cartons SUNRYPE %* Apple Sauce :-.......... 2 roRDoaC *: Cohoe Salmon ison LO * Cut Green Beans *~....33¢c * BETTER BUY ROVER S Dog Food is..0 evn 59C MALKINS PURE * Strawberry Jam :.....«. 59¢ LIBBY'S Ve Spag*hettUr ae cones soe. 2 ror BSC Pork Sale PICNICS ee 3/ . GRAIN FED... : Pork Butts .. ASe Pork Loin ........... 55c Pork Sausages xcoxouy asx 49C “THE FRIENDLIEST STORE IN TOWN” Prices Effective Thurs., Fri., Sat, Feb. 6th, 7th, 8th f FREE * Delivery * Parking JAVEX Bleach ...... 3i1c SNOWFLAKE Shortening POUND, ‘CARTON: 2 scccgssssetice 2 fo r 49c MONARCH are Tea Bisk 402023: PACICAGRD cos cssirsseiscacvssessssseieesi Agee _ 53c RED ROSE Instant Coffee 15¢c OFF REGULAR PRICE BREEZE, King Size, 15c off.............. 1 83c SALAD DRESSING, Kraft, 16-07. Jar TOOTHPASTE, Colgate, Giant .......... MAZOLA OIL, 16-02. .....ccscse Whole Strawberries Clapison’s 11-0z. Poly Bag EACH — 25c Produce COOKING ONIONS, medium, 4-Ib. bag .......... 35c CABBAGE, California, 2 tb. .............. BANANAS, 2 tb. ‘Stamp—Henors Press A million new five-cent stamps, issued as a tribute to Canada’s press, have been sent for distribution in British Columbia. The special issue depicts two folded newspapers with the headline “A Free Press” in English and French! A back- ground of buildings and ships symbolizes Canadian life. The issue is limited to present supplies, Economic Fluctuations Being Controlled MONTREAL—The cycle of economie fluctuations in Canada is far from being a thing of the past, but progress has been made towards reducing the severity of its effects, according to G. Arnold Hart, general manager of the Bank of Mont- real, whose recent speech to the Empire Club of Canada, Toronto, is quoted in the B. of M’s Business Review for January. Attempting to ‘put current conditions into perspective,” Mr. Hart said that the need to “mitigate the extremes of the economic cycle” must be con- stantly on our minds on what- ever curve of the cycle we hap- pen to be.” Much has been accomplished by the Bank of Canada towards this end of “taming business gyrations,” he said, and in the light of changed conditions in recent months, a_ significant degree of monetary ease has been permitted. But Mr. Hart believed respon- sibility for keeping the Canadian economy on an even keel is “ not one that should he left pri- marily or even mainly to the financial system. It must rest as well upon the conscience of governments, business enter- prises and individuals,” he said. Large Revenue From Sales Tax VICTORIA—The B.C. Govern- ment last’ year collected $85,132,489 from the five per cent sales tax. It was the government’s largest single source of revenue, In 1954, B.C. Hospital In- surance was in trouble, because premium collections were not meeting hospital costs. A three per cent sales tax provided $33,466,768 in 1953-4. But with the five per cent tax the following year it rocketed to $55,178,473. Hospital costs last year, according to the public accounts, were $32,008,041, so that with an income of $85,132,489, there was a surplus of used for other purposes. Despite that fact many hospitals throughout the prov- ince are having a struggle getting by on their allowance HELPS HANDLESS ~— TO WRITE, DRAW This transparent ‘plastic at- tachment is the invention of Joel Barg, Montreal commercial artist-inventor, who e demonstrating how it works. He designed the apparatus to help a little girl crippled with polio who could not move her hands and who had become moody and morose. With this attach- ment on her head she is able to write and draw. Barg made the gadget out of a light, transparent Plastle, — a wernennnseeres, —__. ——,