Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1955-05-25, Page 3WILD PITCH — The New York Giants' Whitey Lockman falls to the ground to duck a. wild pitch hurled by Braves' pitcher Gene Corley,.-Catcher is. Del Crandall, and the- umpire is Babe Moen', it's a foul It takes up to two pints of fiVII4 bile si day to keep'your digestive greet ie top *baps! I; your liver bile is not flowing freely Your food 017, 0401 bleats op your steuumb. feel eopstipsted sad ail the bilT1111411Perwit go out dist& Thet's r - otten: you esedoislid rattle Certer'e lielirlille.11hilitteeteutvegatable pills help stimulate the low of lint, bile,Soon your (Emetics stars tunetagig properiY you'!" ". fie happy days tatt.here eselel Deal ' ear slit' Mak, 41060 .kirep'Carter's Islas " Liver P on hand. $7,0.41Avifir dniselat. • e BABY CHICKS s • vgwEit chicks started by "In .A.nd inners" wilt bring higher egg and meat prices to buslness4ninded poultry raisers who stick to their progran4 oat you must hest' chicks of high t'ffidency inheritance. We, have three • spacial egg breeds: Shiver R.O.P. Sired White Leghorns, Whitt. Leghorn ,)c abode Island Red, Partnenter Rhode- island Reds. Tiwee special broiler breeds: Indian River cress, Nichols New lit.mps, Arbor Acre8 White Melo, Turkey poults. Send for 1995 catalogue, it tells all about Oese special chicks 4pd palms, TwBooLE CWCR HATNIEILIE'S Veins us 'ONeeellie — . . FOREMAN .1-SDHORN$ ,sgg.farnous throughout every State of the .U.S. A 1965. necessity for the Canadian egg-producer. Day-olds avail able at 5e1.00 ear too. Started Piglets weekly: 5-weeks-old, 73c; 8-weeks-old, $1.10; 12.syeeksb.14, $1,40, May. rune. or July delivery. AR130i1 •WHITE ROCKS: ist generation ,for the • Attest • in Broilers, Some dung, July and August available. THE LAKEVIEW POTITRY FARM, & 'HATCHERY LTD. Exeter. Ont. S. A. Wein, Mgr `rltntREv is king again in 1955. Looks like 1953 all over again. We expect good turkey prices this .Fall and. Winter, .Order at once if ou do not wish to be disappointed.' We have Broad Breasted Bronze, A. 0. Smith Broad Whites, White Holland,. Nebras, ken, Thomson Broad white, Large and medium type; Wattkeen Whites, Empire Whites ' Beltsville, non.sexed, liens and toms. Send. for 1955 TitrkeY Guide. Tw.F..opix CHICK HATCHERIES LTD, FERGUS ONTARIO YOUR July broilers should he ordered now to avoid disappointraebt. We have chicks, daYold, started pellets, imme- diate shipment, Surnmdxf411. egg mar- kets will take eggs at. loy‘neing prices be prepared Bray*Aatchery, 120 John 11„ Hamilton. c'-ate • • FOR SALE:, MARINE FLAX COMMERCIAL No. 1, $4.50 per bushel, f.o.b. Parkhill, sacks included. Waters Elevators Ltd., Parkhill, Ont, IARGE stock used Outboard Peter. bore Boats. Johnson Outboard Parts ,shipped daily, Currey Bulmer. 2919 Bathurst Street, TORONTO. PLOW POINTS Buy Better Plow Points Cheaper McCrae's quality points—for all makes of plows—have been made in our own foundry for 45 years. Write for prices. Buy direct or through agents who should contact us, The John McCrae Machine & Foundry Company Ltd., Box 26, Lindsay, Ontario, HARDWARE and Implement Business in Texas irrigated section. Did $57,500 last year. Buildings, ground and stock $35,000. KASHFINDER, Wichita, Kansas. HOME PASTEURIZERS Raw milk can be dangerous. Safe. guard your family from milk borne diseases, Undulant, Typhoid and Sear. let Fever, Dysentry, Septic ;Sore Throat, etc. by pasteurizihg all the milk your family drinks, with a Wat- ers Conley Home Health Milk and. Cream Pasteurizer. Operates from any electrical outlet, 50.60 cycle. Two sizes, Prices $39.75 for 1 gallon, $49.50 for 2 gallon size. Enquiries solicited. MacKelvies Limited, Canadian Agents, National. Storage Bldg., Winnipeg, Manitoba. FOR SALE: Used Power Chain. Saws Priced from $50 and up; Pioneer, Mc. Culloch, Clinton & Precision Saws in' stock. A special discount on new saws. For further particulars apply: R. W. Jenkins, Bancroft, Ontario, ICE Cream Business in Missouri county seat at corner of the square, $15,000, price includes building. KASHFINDER, Wichita, Kansas. FOR SALE: WOOD PUZZLES. $ 1.00 POSTPAID. CARL JOHNSON, 510 Francis Street, Faribault, Minnesota. INDEPENDENT Wholesale Gasoline Business! Selling farmer, ,dealer, com- mercial accotints. Larte Montana city. 18 years truck stop. Splendid two man operation. Box 543, Great Falls, Mon- tana. LIVESTOCK SHOWY service age registered Rol- stein 'Bull, Grandson of Fond Hope from an Honour List two-year-old. Also Several registered Yorkshire -boars nearing service age. J. Gil- christ, Route 5, Guelph, Ontario. MEDICAL ISSUE 21 — 1955 MEN. Aap OPPOR7IT WOMEN IES FOR DRUG Store doing $9,000 monthly. Alissouri town of 6,500, Complete Preli• cription department, Modern ,fixtures, jPrata 31,1500. wichtta, Kansas, GO INTO BUSINESS for yourself. SO es.cluslvo bouseWare oponaneos wanted by every h er, These iternz ere not soid tri stared.here is no competl. lien, Profit up to 500%, Write ironic' diately for rree colour catalog, with retail prices spawn. Separate coniiden, Eal wholesale price list will be incind- Udo.5rIettarfay sates, 3812 St, Lawrence, Nnt BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING scitoot. (=rent Opportunity Learn Banglressing Plcasio4t, dig-puled profession, good wages, Thousands of succesafta Marvel graduates. America's Greatest Systein Illnstrated Catalogue Free Write or Call MARVEL TIAMPAESSING SCHOOLS"... 358 Eloor Et, W., Toronto Pranches 44 King St, Hamilton' 72 Rideau St., Ottawa TOURIST and ,Outfitters' camp on Can- adian Lake of the Woods. 21, cabins, 4 acres, Price $65,000, terms. KASH* 'FINDER., Wichita, Kansas, LIGHTNING .— -= LIGHTNING If yen are considering protecting your home or farm property from lightning, consult the manufacturers of notnnut. rods and save moneys All work guaran- teed and supervised by the Fire Mar. shat of Ontario. PHILLIPS LIGHTNING ROD 'CO LTD. 32 Osborne Ave Toronto OX, 4-0273 PATENTS "" PERSONAL $1,00 TRIAL oiler, Twenty-five deluxe personal requirements. Latest cats, Logue included. The Medico Agency, Box 124, Terminal "A" Toronto Ont, TEACHERS WANTED PUBLIC SCHOOL CARAMAT, ONTARIO Requires teacher for September. Ap- proximately 36-40 pupils, grades 1 to 8, New school fully equipped. Starting salary $2,600 with annual increase of $200. $100 per year allowance for each year of teaching experience!' up to a maximum of 5 years Free housing available. . Apply in writing, stating qualifications, experience and name of last inspector to A. A. Mantyla, Caramat, Ontario. P.S.S. 1, Missanabie, Ont. Grades 1-9, 30 pupils. Male preferred. Minimum $2100, and house free. APPLY W. J. comerrord,' See.-Treas.„ Missanabie, Ont. WANTED WANTED' STEAM TRACTION EN. - GINE, PREFERABLY WATERLOO. Box. 128, 123 Eighteenth Street, New Toronto, Ontario. BEAR CUBS Wanted-1955 bear cubs. Send full particulars to DON McDONALD, 99 King Street E., BowmanvIlle, Ontario. MERCHANDISE WANTED ALL types of surplus mercnandise, for Cash. SURPLUS JOBBERS, 157 McCaul Street, Toronto. e DRESS UP AND PROTECT YOUR FLOWER BEDS AND SHRUBS with Po t,ows; FENCE The only folding tenet. to provide extra heavy sauce galvanized' steel %VIM' hard baked enamel WW1. Ten ft. lengths fold —Into parks for easy stnrase . tosIst on °TACO . 1111. in Felines Fence. CAN BE ERECTED ill ANY 'SHAPE Ask tor 01A4.10 Fabliau' Fence at reek hardware be Variety+ store or order' direct wIltb this "Cotipon' ‘Cariada only), .IT MAY BE YOUR LIVER - it life's not worth living It Steely be your liveri t THE OTACO 1.+1121TIOD, 07'1111a, Oat, Geatleiben PlSdise Said ass prepaid s' 0' r 10 et. letutthi tit °TA tetaihe • pence et. 11,56 ass la ft, length .0 Money Order for E Is enclosed N•kidd ..... 1 141.04i ennanse - -• • NATURE'S HELP — DIXON'S REMEDY 'FOR RHEUMATIC PAINS, NEURITIS. THOUSANDS PRAISING IT MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN, OTTAWA $1.25 Express Prepaid 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= gardleas of hdtV stubborn or hopeless they seem. POST'S REMEDIES PRICE $2.50 PER. JAR Sent Post' Free en Receipt of Price. 889 queen .St.TOER..ONCTo ornor of Logan. FETHERSTONHA GB & Company, Patent Attorneys. Established 1890, 800 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, • ti I 14 t ealVert •apoRts.cmtol 560,44 7m9cedoit • This eollinin rejoices at the sudden and surprising decision of the Canadian Rugby Union to transfer the Grey Cup gam T e of 1955 from the traditional site in oronto out to ‘the British Empire Games stadium in Vancouver. It may be a move toward an objec- tive this column has been advocating for the past three years, namely: A two-game series for the Grey Cup annually, in the cities represented by the eastern and western winners re- spectively, total points to count. Hitherto,, the western champions were obliged to travel east, whether they liked it'or not, meet the eastern champions in Toronto's fine Varsity Stadium. We don't claim that this one-day clash of cast and west wasn't a great show, with colour, drama, background, ,everything. It was all of that -- wonderful. Wonderful, that is, for those who could see it. But what about those who, for one reason or another, couldn't bet to Toronto to watch their heroes in the crowning football game of the season? Those are the fans who were getting the short end of the stick in this one-city deal, Taking the Grey Cup out to Vancouver breaks this one- city tradition, and also is a smart bit of promotion. Vancou- ver is new in professional football, Awns Stnkus fought an uphill battle there last year and in the city's first venture into the game, his club got amazingly fine support. It was a throw-back to the long-ago days when pro- fessional hockey, as new to the west coast then as football was last year, invaded Vancouver, Victoria and New West:- minster and became a tremendous game overnight But Vancouver, in football, can do with the shot-in-the-arm the Grey Cup will provide. We trust this isn't8 just a one-year move. Other cities east and west, would like to be hosts to the Grey Cup finals. And they deserve it. But we still believe in our own idea, a two-city play-off between the two" champions. Baseball does it. Hockey does it. It's good for them. So why not for football? Your comments and suggestions far this column will be.welcomed by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Calvert House, 431 Yonge St Toronto. Calvert DISTILLERS LIMITED AYAHERSTBURG, ONTARIO • • • CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING . PLAIN HORSE SENSE .. VON PIUS Oceanliner's Roll Eased The sailor has a saying that no ship is too big to roll! Although this saw has come down from an earlier daST—what was considered a huge ship then would now be thought a small craft -- it holds true with the leviathans plying the sea today. Thisdact is emphasized by the Cunaid Steamship Company's recent installation of an anti- rolling device in its 83,673-ton liner Queen Elizabeth. The roll of a' ship is the re- sult of a complex mixture of impulses, •of ,which two are of particular.importance. These are the period of roll of the ship and the frequency of the wave motion. Every class of ship has an in- herent period of roll. For a com- plete oscillation the time of a roll ranges from 8 to 10 seconds for merchant vessels to approxi- mately 5 seconds for destroyers. Wave periods vary greatly de- pending On the height of waves and the rapidity of their onward movement. And the effect of any particular sequence of waves on a ship depends on the angle at which they strike the vessel's hull, The effect can also be varied by changes •of course or speed of the ship. The egect of wave's on a ship can be likened to impulses given to child'e swing. We all know how easy it is to make a swing go.higher and higher when little fillips are applied at just the right period of the swing's sway. When the period of role and the impinging waves synchro- nize, the angle of roll becomes When Jim Thorpe played in the minor leagues, one of his team-mates was Al Schacht,later famous as baseball's number one clown and corhedia,n. Al, who was easy-going and a wise- cracker, struck up a friendship with the moody and surly In- dian: But there was' one thing Al forgot to observe about the Indian. When Jim Thorpe grin- ned he was mad; and the wider the grin, the madder he was. One 'day at a party of the ball- players Of the club, comedian Al Schacht began ribbing the boys. Soon the crowd was howling with laughter. Before long, Al tried a gag on big Jim Thorpe. The Indian growled—then smiled. Al thought the big' fellow liked being kidding, He continued joshing and the Indian smiled and grinned wider and wider. Suddenly, Jim grabbed the com- edian-ballplayer by the scruff Of the neck, crossed swiftly to the open window dragging the star- tled ribber with him, lifted the body into the air and dangled , it outside a mere three stories above the ground. " "Let go!" screamed the fright- ened Schacht, ,.‘'What are you doihg, you crazy Indian! YOu'll drop me and I'll be killed! Pull me in out of here, I tell your "Take" it easy, Al," grinned the big Indian. "Let's heak hoev your jokes sound in the fresh air!" dangled the squirming clown outside the window fot several thintitte. When he brought him in, Al Schacht al- meet collapsed on' the floor. It took him a long time to learn to talk again. And the first thing he said when he could say anything at evaS: "flm 'Thotpe is the strongest men in the' *aid— thank, dee BIG SAVEisio A dress shop owner 'Met friend; tjrho greeted hini ith: Bear your shop *ad tabbed, lati night, bid yeti lose tr-lehl! ,,, answered the' owner, quit- 'it'Would have been battelt Wokse if the burglarg had got in the night -before. Yesterday" I knocked the price of e7p,rything, dOvti by thirty P•crccnt: STARTING YOUNG — Three-and. a-half-year-old Earl Welton pre- fers smoking a good cigar three' times a day to eating candy. At least, that's what the young, Steels mother says. She says she taught him to smoke as a stunt, but now complaints that the stunt hat become a habit and is embarrassing in public; LIONS We're attrethiS is the height of something or other, Just What; we dititho yet. Anyhow, sev.On men from the lion coup-, try Of. Nigeria Were visiting 'in London, recently:, They are very anStiotiS tie ea to the, 'zoo and Abe'. a 'real, live lion. Malam` Vtiktibe year-old ac- countant eitplained that lions 41iVe in. the bush in 191gerii, and, only Eriglislinieri Seek thein there We 'kite theft chine!" Nettinik IS 'ad fitinlY 'be:het/ea as 0.t!:Vid least IttiOWa, , • , increasingly great, and the ship hight eventually roll over were it not that friction from the ves- sel's side going .,through .the water dampens out the roll. Also as the ship's period of roll changes, resulting in' a cessation of the synchronism, The first antirolling device used, and which is still to be foimd on practically every sea- going ship, of any size, was the bilge keel. This is a'rib of metal secured to a ship for some dis- tance on each side at about the turn of the bilge. Its width de- pends on the size and type of the ship; and it reduces rolling by the resistance offered to its passage through the water. Although effective to some degree, bilge keels do not pro- vide the stability demanded in modern vessels, in merchant- men to ensure the comfort of passengers and abate damage to *Material, and in men-of-war to provide steady gun platforms. Consequently the search for bet- ter methods continued, writes Captain Fdererick L. Oliver in "The Christian Science Monitor." Some years ago, a Herr Frahm, a noted German naval , architect, proposed the use of antirolling tanks, and a number of ships were so equipped. There is considerable theory involved in.his project, but essentially it consists of a vertical tank on each side of a ship which is con- nected at theebottom by a hori- , contal duct and at the top by an air pine, With the tanks about half fill- ed with water, a proper adjust- . By "Fins" merit of valves and baffles will so, control the surge of water in the tank that its inertia can be used to counteract the -tendency to roll. The scheme is fairly suc- cessful in copine with heavy rolling, but it is not effective with moderate rolling, is. noisy and uses valuable space. t For these reasons it has not connehite' extensive use. According to accounts, a group of Stanford University techni- cians is now working on an anti- roll `‘ device in which water is transferred between tanks on either side of a ship by pumps controlled by an instrument call- ed "angular accelerometer." This scheme may - reduce the noisy rush of. water inherent in the Frahm tank method, but it in- volves the use of internal space in a ship which can be otherwise profitably utilized. Rotor Device Installed A more generally known anti- roll device is a gyroscopic con- trivance that has been installed in various ships. This scheme checks rolling by using the re- sistance that• a heavy, rapidly spinning motor exerts against being moved out of its plane of rotation. Such an installation was tried in U.S.S. HeridersOn about 40 years' go. It had two heavy rotors revolving in opposite directions to, eliminate torque, and , gave fair results. However, it weigh- ed around 200 tons, took tip cOn- iidereble space, and required constant attention. It had the fur- ther disadvantage of possibly set- - fing up malfunctions which could tend- to roll the ship over. - The installation was removed from the ship during World War I. In 1931, the huge liner Rex was provided with a gyroscopic stabilizer. For some years con- siderable publicity attended this installation, but it apparently did not come up to expectations, and the sister ship Conte di Sa- voie was not similarly equipped. Both ships passed from the pic- ture during World War II, And now comes an anti-rolling device - in the huge liner Queen Elizabeth ,a ship large enough not to roll if such a ship were possible. This scheme is a radi- cal departure from any previous- ly tried project. Known as the Denny-Brown stabilizer, it con- siste of two fins on each side in the forward three-quarters of the ship. Each fin is quite small as compared with the size of the ship,, being approximately seven feet wide and projecting 12 feet 6 inches from the side of the ship. The pairs of firns are located 15 feet up from the keel line and are 141 feet apart. They can be retracted into water-tight recess- es within the ship, when the yes- eele_goes alongside a pier, or on other "'occasions when exterior objects might cause Damage: Each fin is moved by a hy- draulically operated ram which tilts it so it exerts a Mill to counteract the roll, the ramie be- ing actuated at precisely the cor- rect instant by a small. gy'r'o- scopic gear. This system of antiroll control - has heretofore• been successfully used in smaller vessels, but the Queen Elizabeth installation is the first to use ttvo set's of fins. A recent trial of the. Queen Elizabeth at sea is reported, to have been suedeSsftil ironing out rolls to a. minimum. So it may be that the toll Out be taken out of ships and Out of the sailors' epigram. 413011) What Communism cloel,k to lands and people unde'r , domination is best illustrated by recent reports from Germany. The renewed and aggravated encirclement and isolation of the Western sectors of Berlin by the surrounding Soviet domina- ted parts of Germany is reach- ing a point where the aim ap- pears to be to seal off Free Berlin hermetically under the slogan "a defensive ring around Berlin". The plans now adopted foresee an expansion of the area around Berlin that serves as a "control belt" with particu- lar regard to supervision sepa- rately of general travel in and out of Berlin and of commuter services. The local puppet authorities had more extensive plans asso- ciated with the introduction of conscription in West Germany and timed to coincide with that operation. These plans aimed at something like a new Berlin blockade. It appears, however, that the supreme masters of these authorities, the. Soviets themselves, were not prepared at this moment to allow mea- sures that might not be capable of political "localization" and, hence, might get out of control. Hunger in Soviet Zone Ten years after the collapse of the Nazi regime and the mili- tary triumph of the Allies the population of the Soviet occu- When Big Jim Smiled, It Wasn't Funny • I pied zone of Germany and of the East sector of Berlin are associating the blessings" of spring with the menace of hung- er and starvation because of the failure of the agricultural and economic policies of the Soviet dominated local regime. Spring- time once again brings out long queues of ill-nourished and ill-clad subjects waiting pa- tiently before the .various food outlets of the regime for what fraction of established rations ex' 4 ing supplies may vouchsafe it ae butter ration is no longer available not even in the privi- leged ,HO shops and at a raised price corresponding to $2.30 per pound. One third of the estab- lished monthly ration of fats is supposed to be allowable in but- ter but is not forthcoming. The sugar situation is similar: Sugar is not on sale even at free market prices and the ra- tions are not provided. It is difficult for the normal con- sumer to find sources for the meat and sausage ration. There is a shortage of bread and the authorities are prep'aring to in- troduce a one-type loaf of bread in order to master, the situation. SoViets Live Off The, Land A contributory factor is the foreign trade policy of, or im- posed upon, the local authorities. Heavy industry having been re- turned to its privileged position in the zonal economy consumer needs are no longer considered primary. Forced exports benefit the Soviet Union and the other countries in the Soviet bloc. In the Soviet occupied part of German; itself the occupation forces continue to live off the land to the detriment of the in- habitants. A renewed wave of land collectivization does not help matters, but is embittering the farmers. 'eisirig en Vacation? Florida? irrenin 'Haiih, Motel. Apeitintiht. lee el A Witte; Mennen' 'ettoMMedetione ed.:- Wanner etc. Ethiett- or town orice. .11UltiAtt 941 No Federal H FlOPida (Z *Mee ROOK Pt.. Lauderdde W; 2d niitef 'north Miami) 111Alfr Nikki 'SMILE posing. it porpotrro rrtilfl•i Tritely for tills Underwater j5Ilelographere •