HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1955-04-06, Page 3Nis
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING You And AID, 2,000
FOR SALA. Calvert S. P0 RTI. 0.101 N:
..efifvo 7094000
SEED GRAIN "FOR SALE
Ng, 1 Beg. Beaver. Clinton Alaska,Loraine 0.75 bus. No. Certified Oats,
81,65, All• varieties No. 1 Commercial Gets $1.50, No. 1 Reg. Galore Mout-calm Barley $2,50, No. 2 Reg., Barley
$2.30, No. I Com. Barley $2. No. 1
Ont. Red Clover $39. No. 1 Ont. Al-
falfa $38. No, 1 Timothy $14. Calm 'a
XIII Limited, Exeter, Ontario.
So we'll all be sitting down
to a nice meal of wood in 40
years' time! 13Y then, it 1$ said,
most foodstuffs will„be made
from it.
That, at any rate, °"is what
SOIlla scientific Koplieta believe.
They gave this and other
guesses about what will be hap-
pening in A.D, 2,900 es entries
in a competition sponsored by
a learned society in this coun-
try to .1Dark its bi-centenary.
In connection with eating
habits, it' is confidently asserted
that governments will make a
completely vegetarian diet com-
pulsory. All land animals
'hitherto raised for food are
likely to become extinct, since
every available acre will be
wanted for other projects caus-
ed by industrial expansion and
the need to house the greatly
increased population. Among
other forecasts: are;
Communications; The rocket
letter post will make possible
return mail to Australia in a
single day.
Pedestrians will move quick-
ly along main streets on auto-
matic speed walks. Pavements
in main streets will be raised
to first-storey level to allow for
wider roadways for traffic be-
low. Passengers will board
buses from the top deck.
Heat, light, power: A single
plastic dome will ,cover every
big city. House lighting will be
provided f r o m fluorescent
walls'. Domestic heating and
ventilation will be controlled
by covering each house and
garden with a plastic shell
entered by an airlock.
Industry: Adver tisements
will be projected on to the
night sky, and space will be
sold by reference to the posi-
tion of the stars.
Medicine: Hypnotism will be
the accepted means of banish-
ing physical and emotional
pain. The treatment of wounds
will have been made easier by
use of transparent medical
wrappings.
• All honour to the Penticton V's, In
the face of trying circumstances, they re-
covered the distinction rightly Canada's,
the hockey championship' of the world,
thus thsowing sand into the gear-,boxes
of a propaganda machine that must have
been, hopefully poised to grind out praise
for the athletic superiority of the sturdy sons, of the Soviet.
And now that we have won back what was really ours,
triumph in our own national •game; should we call it a day?
Should we refrain from further participation in this annual
orgy of insults, mis-statements and accusations which are
inevitable when one of the participants is seeking to use a
sport for national propaganda purposes?
There is the thought that Canada should continue to
participate, first, in the interest of friendly,relations with coun-
tries outside the iron curtain' second, for the international good
of hockey, to help spread the gospel of our crackling winter
sport.
But as to the event known as the world championships,
we believe it is mis-named. Everybody knows that no real
world championship, meaning world superiority in hockey,
Is seriously involved unless the champions of the National
Hockey League, or the Stanley Cup holders, are involved.
Of course, there can be produced that over-ripe red her-
ring to 'indicate that this is the "world amateur championship".
But that isn't going to deceive anybody, because everyone
knows that in hockey at that level, simon-pure amateurism
is as scarce as the dodo-bird. And everyone knows,. too, that
Russia's athletes are part of the propaganda machine, stall-
fed, government-spensored, government-controlled, their acti-
vities suitably recompensed. Russia has its own brand of
amateurism, something contrived to suit the circumstances.
And now that the fight has been won, and Canada's hockey
superiority re-established to the sembarraSsment of the Krem-
lin's propaganda machine, is there any virtue in carrying on
with a ,pointless chore? EverybodY in sport is fully aware
that Canada is stipreihe in hockey.
.BABY. CHICKS
IF you have never triedWeddle. turkeys it Will 1)4Y You well to Order some.this year. Our regular cgs** ers come back year after year begauSe 'they are satisfied, and make extra money. We Iwo the .following breeds. to onoose ,frogi: Broad Breasted Bronze. A, 0, Smith's Arend Whites, Thompson Breed Whites;, large and medium—Empire. Whites, White ..114, land, Walikeen Whites, Beltsville, hens, toms, non-sexed. Free 1555 catalogue, TWIDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LIMITED, FERMIS, ONTARIO.
If/d. acres, 12 -miles east of ReOr40t,t.
ough, rich dairy farm, 430 plopt
tusnoves; stone house; oil heat; buildings in good condition. ,Coritact. owner, J. Meineinger, Indian
River, Ontario, . ... •
VENEER LATHE AND CLIPPER.
For, sale, The. Capital. lathe..and;
Clipper are 88. inchcs.,long. For
further particulars. -apply-
,Kennedy,..584
'Cobourg, Ontario.
GET your Bray chicks now while we can give immediate delivery of the
cross or breed you wish. Immediate delivery. Some started. Mixed, pullets
broilers. Phone, write, drop in, PRAX HATCHERY, 120 JUIIN N., HAMM-
"GOVERNMENT AP pr o v e d Baby Chicks," For tops in production and feed economy try Lincoln White Leg-horns, Also hatchingmost popular grosses, Started Chicks and Capons always available. Try our dependable service, Lincoln Hatchery, Race Street, St. Catharines, Ontario. Phone MLItual
5.7353.
REGISTERED Hereford Bulls Western,
breeding, 20 mos. old. Ideal for thigh
years breeding, Domino strain. Box,
127, Brantford, Out, SEND for our 1955 catalogue. It will,
give you advice on the best breeds to buy for maximum egg production, the best for broilers, roasters or dual pur-pose. It also tells you all about the best turkeys for heavy roasters, med. lum roasters, turkey fryers or, broil-ers. In this day and age you have to specialize to make the maximum in profits. This catalogue will help you choose the right breeds. TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LIMITED, FERGUS, ON'rARIO
HARDWARE BUSINESS ' FARM Supplies, located In prosperous, farming district 20 miles from Ottawa. Equipped for Shoe and Harness Repair-ing. No gompetition within 20 mile: radius, Sale of stock with building pre-ferable, Selling due to GI health. Mr..
J. W. Dalgity, Carp., Ontario.
SETS RECORD, COLLAPSES—Runner Lou Jones lies sprawled on
the track where he collapsed after crossing the .finish line in
the 400' meter race, setting a new world's record at the Pan.
American games at Mexico City, Mexico. Running past Jones
is Jesse Mashburn, who finished third,
HORSEMEN!
AT stud, Palomino stallion, "Mac'or Golden Ace," •registered, P,H.B.A.P,B. 9011,C,P.H.A. 420, A.H.S.A. 12557, S.B. R.N. 426, Enrollment 236 grade A. 23' first prizes 1954. Second in prize points in Zone 2 1954. Also Palominos tor-rent with rider and colorful western, outfits to lead parades, etc, For sale,. Keystone black western, nickel silver mounted show saddle. Several other saddles for horses and ponies and pony harness. Horses and, equipment at A. Wallis. Farms, Whalen Corners, R.R. No. 1, Granton, Phone Granton 29-22. A, E. Bong, owner, 629 Queen's Ave. London, Ont. Phone 3-6926-W, Fair and horse show prize lists invited.
ORDER your poults now from: Vespra Turkey Farms. Twenty-six years of raising, breeding and .hatching tur-keys exclusively, guarantees you of the best poults procurable. Broad Breasted Bronze, early maturing, heavy meat rield, low feed costs, con-stitutes safe investment. Write for pr ce llar e, list. A. D. Patterson & Son; Box 101Ontario. twenty dollars for having kissed
his wife on landing after a six
months! voyage.
LAW'S "LIST"
The fine was paid. Then Cap-
tain. Montague, in order to prove
(as he• said) that no malice was
borne, asked the magistrates to
dine aboard his ship before he
left for his next voyage.
They accepted his invitation.
He plied', them with so much
liquor that most • of them were
soon rather tipsy. Then the cap-
tain told them: ",Gentlemen, I
have a strict law against drunk-
enness on my ship, just as you
have a law against kissing in
your streets. I paid my •penalty,
you must pay yours."
He then instructed his boat-
swain to administer to each er-
ring magistrate a dozen strokes
with a birch.
His Number
Was Two
gation of the spread between
producer prices and consumer
prices of meat and possible
abuses under the present sys-
tem of grading.
As the federal Minister of
Agriculture had refused to hold
an investigation as being more
properly in the provincial field
and as the ,large packing houses
,have their headquarters in On-
tario, such an investigation
should be held in Ontario, The
results would be most helpful
for the organization of producer
controlled orderly marketing,
The Brief was presented by
OFU Vice-President Walter Mil- ,
ler in a spirited manner. He
stood up manfully to a barrage
of questioni coming from all
sides. We missed, however, a
proposal for the establishment
of a separate Portfolio of Co-
operation to take charge of all
cooperative ventures as market-
ing, consumer stores, credit
unions, etc.
S *
This colurrin welcomes critic-
ism, suggestions and questions,
whether in the form of brick-
bats or bouquets. Address mail
to Bob Von Pills, Whitby, Ont.
BOOKS
BOOKS loaned free of charge on Theosophy, Comparative Religion, Science, Philosophy, etc. Write the Travelling Librarian, Toronto Theo-sophleal Society, 52 Isabella St., Tor-onto, Ont.
Our victories in this tournament, over teams that in ,some
cases could hardly ,make a respectable showing in Canada's
midget hockey leagues, prove nothing new. Or should we
continue so that hockey shall become a more universal winter
sport?
MEDICAL'
PROVEN REMEDY - EVERY SUF-
FERER ,OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR .
NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S
REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA.
$1.25 EXPRESS PREPAID
FOR SALE
FARM MACHINERY Belle City Threshing Machine 24-10 on rubber, with shredder and grain thrower, $1000; also No. 16 Clipper ' Fanning Mill with 16 screens, $100. Cruickston Park Farm, Blair, Ont. Phone 4589 Gait,
Your comments and suggestions for this column will be welcomed
by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Calved House, 431 Tongs St., Toronto.
Calvert DISTILLERS LIMITED
- NAMELESS
Cold Remedy, an Ointment that re. Heves Sinus, Flu, Headcolds, in 10. days, or money back. Convincing Trial $1.10. Address: Purity Co„ Exeter. Ont., ANHERSTBURG, ONTARIO
REGISTERED Yorkshire Boars and Gills, four months and up, some bred. Apply GLENHELEN FARM, R,11. 2,
Maple, Ontario.
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles. Post's Eczema Salve will not disap-point you. Itching, scaling and burn-ing eczema, acne, ringworm, pimples-and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless, odorless ointment, re-
gardless of how stubborn or hopeless they seem.
POST'S REMEDIES
PRICE $2.50 PER JAR
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price.
889 Queen St. E., Corner of Logan,
TORONTO
DELICIOUS, Economical Healthful! Booklet 35,1. Bean - Recipes. Box 65, New Lots Sta., Brooklyn 8, New York.
sa OUR Lacey Baby Panty Pocket Ker-chief, always good for a laugh, $1.00. No personal, checks. Harbour's Nov-elty Mailing Service, Box No. 112, Harbor City, California.
. PLAIN HORSE SENSE.. FARM FOR SALE: $20,000. TERMS.
200 ACRES; 125 WORKABLE, BAL-
ANCE BUSH AND PASTURE; GOOD
BUILDINGS; EXCELLENT LAND;. TEN=
MILES- FROM LINDSAY,
FOUND REALTY LTD.,
143 KENT ST., LINDSAY
VON PIL1S
"marketing boards, or • agencies
established under present „legis-
lation have been sadly lacking
the power to market, in other
words, the power to buy and
sell' and that existing boards
are only negotiating commit-
tees. It was therefore proposed
that the powers be extended to
include the powers (a) to mar-
ket, (b) to process the product,
(c) to fix prices.
To prevent a possible abuse of
such far reaching powers, the
Union recommended that a
number of members, not ex-
ceeding one fifth, of a market-
• ing board be appointed by the
Minister to represent consumer
interests.
Provincial Loans.
To facilitate the establish-
ment of more and larger pro-
cessing and storage plants, to
be owned and operated collec-
tively by farmers, in the inter-
est of orderly marketing, the
Union requested the assistance
of the Department of. Agricul-
ture in the form of advice• and•
'financial loans "on a consider-
ably larger scale than in the
past." On such a basis it could
be envisaged that a number of
'co-hp packing plants will be set
up, strategically located, all
over the provcince,
Investigation.
In closing, the Union Brief
Urged the Ontario government
to act on the motion of E, D.
Fulton (PC member for Kam-
loops) made in the House of
Commons on March 9th which
called for an immediate investi-
By F. (BOB) Numerologists m a y attach
whatever significance to this
story as they please. It's about
Ray Chapman, famous short-
stop of the Cleveland Indians,
whose greatest phobia was a
number—the number two.
Before batting, he would
always swing two bats. At bat,
he tapped twice on home plate.
He never entered a place first,
but always second. And he bat-
ted secpnd in the Cleveland
line-up.
On Aug. 16, 1929, Ray Chap-
man took part in the strangest
game of his career. Twice, with
the count at two and two, Ray
,hit two-baggers. Twice with •
the count at two and two, Ray
was hit by a pitched ball. At
the close of the day, his figures
in the box score were: Times at
bat, 2; runs scored, 2; hits, 2; •
stolen bases, 2. In the field it
was: putouts, 2; assists, 2; errors
2.
On his last time at bat, in
the seventh inning, Chapman
was hit by a pitched ball for the
second time, to make the' cycle
of twos complete. Ray Chap-
man dropped to the ground
under the impact Of the blow,
and never got up .again. Within
a matter of hours the great
shortstop was dead, never again
to be obsessed by the number
two.
s The Ontario, Farmers Union
deserve a hearty pat on the
back for the clear and precise
Brief presented by them to, the
Agricultural Committee of the
Ontario Legislature.
After stating that "producer
controlled orderly marketing is
one of the main objectives of
our oxganization," and that they
are fully in support of the idea
of co-operative marketing, the
Union said that any criticism
they had, was directed "only
against some of the methods
that have been used in the past
and are proposed to be used in
the future."
General Principle.
The Union wants to see con-
trol over the marketing of farm
products in the hands of pro-
ducers I n s teed of vested
in boards whose members
are appointed by the gov-
ernments. They proposed the
abolishment .of the government
appointed Provincial Board and
asked that "a n y marketing
scheme submitted by a repre-
sentative' group of producers
and adopted by a „majority of
the producers of the commodity
to 'which the scheme applies, be
established direetly by the Leg-
islature, to operate under the
supervision of the. Minister of
Agriculture."
Any such scheme shall be
operated by a marketing board
whose members are to be elect-
ed by the 'producers of the com-
modity to which the 'scheme ap-
plies.
Consumer 'Representation.
Tlse Union maintained that
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN FARMS—choice well improved farms in the tattoos Beaver Valley of the Georgian' Bay Area. Large and small acreages. Right now the price is at-tractive with immediate possession. Let us know your requirements. Gar-field Case, Agent, Clarksburg, Ontario. Gordon Stoutt Limited, Realtors.
WANTED• Real Estate Agents, men or women, to sell farms in this area on commission basis. I will train you. Write for details of how to get into this field to Chas. F. Corcoran Real Estate, 2434 Keele Street, Toronto 15. Ont., or CH 1-5880.
Fined For
Kissing Wife Secret Lost For Two
Thousand Years
BE A HAIRDRESSER
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Inspired by the sight of a
pretty girl, a romantic young
Austrian kissed her in the street,
against her will.
She summoned him for as-
sault, declaring that he .was a
stranger and that she greatly re
sented being kissed by someone
to whom she had not been in-
troduced.
After hearing the evidence,
the court decided the man was
guilty—of stealing a kiss. They
fined him heavily, but he ap-
pealed to the highest court in
Vienna. The supreme judge
listened carefully to him and to
the girl and then gave judg-
ment. -
"To kiss a girl against her
will is not a crime," he pro-
nounced. "You were wrongly
fined. Custom has made such
kisses a reCognized part of our
social system."
Kissers in public have fre-
quently got into trouble, so the
Austrian can consider himself
lucky. In. Belfast a few years
ago a young man and a girl
were locked up overnight mere-
ly because they kissed frequent-
ly in the' street.
In the days when Philadelphia
had an anti-kissing law, the
skipper of, a merchant ' ship,
Captain Montague, was fined
It took a Roman Caesar to
hold up progress more than two
thousand years. It happened at
the sumptuous palace of the
Roman princes where Tiberius
Caesar, Emperor of Rome, glow-
ered from his luxurious couch
at the craftsman who' sought
audience with him.
"What is it you would show
me?" he demanded.
From the folds of his garment
the man drew forth a beautiful-
ly moulded goblet of sparkling
glass. He held it up to the light
and gazed at it with pride.
"Watch, 0 Emperor!" he cried.
With a quick gesture he dash-
ed the crystal cup to the stone
floor of the palace: There Were
whispers of witchcraft as the
courtiers stared in wide-eyed
amazement. The glass had not
shattered; only a dent showed
where it had struck the floor,
The craftsman stooped, picked
up the goblet and hammered it
back into shaped.
"Does anyone else know the
secret of this glass?" thundered
Tiberius.
"No," said the man proudly.
But his pride soon turned to
fear, for a terrible anger clottd-
ed the Emperor's features as he
spoke again: "If this art be pro-
pagated; all goblets will be made
of this — and our gold and sil-
ver ones will be as worthless as
dirt!"
The craftsman paled at the
Emperor's next Words. Tiberius
Was ordering the soldiers to take
him away and execute him.
And so the invention of safety
glass, ,protector of every motor-
ist, was delayed for more than
twenty centuries.
PATENTS
FETHERSTOglIA UGH & Company, Patent Attorneys. Established 1890. 600 University Ave., Toronto Patents all countries.
AN OFFER to every inventor List of inventions and full information sent free. The Ramsay Co., Registered Pat-ent Attorneys, 273 Bank St. Ottawa,
---
PERSONAL
BOSTON PEACH BASKET — Lois
Heyl, 18, weaves her hopes of
becoming Boston Press Photo-
graphers' queen from this
woven-basket pose. 'If she wins
the title of "Miss Photogenic
Queen” late in April, Lois will
travel to Colorado to compete
in the national photo-queen
contest.
$1.00 TRIAL offer, Twenty-five deluxe personal requirements. Latest mita-
logue InclUded. The Medico Agency, Box 124, Terminal "A" Toronto Ont.
Racing Information Worth $1,400
Yours For Only---$25!
Prosperity Winfox $100. American. Sports Review $200. Wycliffe Hill's Course $100. Little's Personal Method $1000. ONE $15 or ALL FOUR ONLY $25 Certified cheek Or postal money order only. ANDERSON
Ansonia Station, P.O. Box 56.
New York, N.Y.
In good company you need not
ask who is the master of the
feast. The man who sits in the
lowest place, and who is always
industrious in helping every one,
is certainly the man. s
—David. Hume
Dog Saved Lives
You're TIRED ALL THE TIN E
Everybody gets a bit run-down now and
thea, sited-oitt, heavy-headed, and maybe
bothered by backaches. Perhaps nothing
seriously wrong, just a temporary toxic
condition' caused by excess acids and
wastei. That's the time to take NM's
Kidney Pills. Dodd's stimulate the kidneye,
and so help restore their normal action of
rarnoaing excess Was and wastes. Then
you feel better, sleep better, work bettei:
Git Dodd's Kidney Pills now. Loolt for
the blue box with the red band at
druggists. Yon can depend on Dodd's.
'Stop .Monkeying. Around -,.Play Bar,
Mascot Charlie Chimp, left, calls for one' right' Over the plate—law—cis the Brooklyn Dodgers
undergo' spring training at Vero Beach, Fla. It's about all the nikey shines you'll see perpe-
trated all season by the Dodgers, the "team to , beat" k the Nationale le'agUe this Season.
Below, cat-and-mouse play by Catcher Del Rice during a practice,sess'ion at the Cards' spring
training camp in St. Petersburg, Fla., isn't covered by anything in the rule book, Actually, it's
an attempt to block a wild pitch; a technique that may come in' handy when baseball teasdn •
° Opens.
ISSUEk.,14 1956
To exist is. tot thange, to
change is to rriaitire.
Bergson.
Every day a little dog called
Benito sits outside the class-
room of his small master at
Cesatia di Carripli, near! Naples,
waiting for school to end, Then
they ,scamper honie together
happily. " 7
One,' day 'recently, however,
Benito waited. and waited, but
his master did not appear. Ben..
ito jumped, up at the door and
pushed .it for see the
teacher and the Children slump-
ed over their desist. There was
a bad sirielt Of gha in 'the room,
Benito- Tatecl upstairs, bark-
irig, and -attracted the atteri-
tion of the caretaker, who cense
down to-See what had happen-
ed. Tie was. jolt . time to
open the windows and save the
Occupants.
The doctor who was called to
the ease, said the children arid
their teacher undetibteclly owe
their lives to the little do'g's
proMpt and intelligent action,
Naturally, ..Benito is. now
greater, pet than OVer.
And if loVed you Wednesday
Well, what is that to you?
I do not lOve you Tiirsday•s=s
So intich ie true.
Edna St. Vincent Millajj.