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The Brussels Post, 1955-08-10, Page 5BRAY CHICKS WE 114.VE three special 1st genera, thin broiler chicks, all II00(1 ones — Indian River Cross, Arbor Acres White POeks, Nichols New Humps. Hook our orders for fail delivery now, roiler •folder. rvirBorn.,E. CHICKHATCHERIES LTD. Fpaons ONTARIO AUGUST, ducks non-sexed, pullets, cockerels, special egg breeds, dual purpose or broiler chicks, Also tur- key poults, Older pullets 12 weeks to laying. Catalogue, ',MEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD, FERGUS ONTARIO BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Greet Opportunity- Learn Hairdressing Pleasant, dignified profession, good, wages. Thousands of successful Marvel graduates. „ America's Greatest system Illustrated Catalogue free Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS. 358 Steer St. W , Toronto Branches: 44 King St., Hamilton 72 Rideau St. Ottawa PATENTS HATCHING EGGS niackuNG eggs wanted by one of Canada's largest and oldest established hatcheries. Eggs taken every week in the year. Big premium paid. For full details write Box 131, 123 Eighteenth St,, NeW Toronto, Ontario, EMPLOYMENT WANTED , TRAINED butter & cheese man, 30 years, German great and strong, wants Position. Write Fritz Wildfang 145 Broadview Avenue, Toronto, FOR SALE COMPLETE bathroom suite $125.951 Complete line of plumbing supplies, Pipe, fittings and fixtures. Inquire without obligation. Clifford, 7101 Tenth Avenue, Montreal 38, Quebec, HELP WANTED USED Grain Binders and Threshers for sale. A quantity of binders and threshers in several makes and sizes. Reconditioned and ready for use. Prices reasonable, satisfaction guaran- teed. We deliver. Ralph E. Shantz, Alma Ontario. Phone Drayton 607R23. CHOICE brick restaurant, snacks, drinks, excellent equipment. Apart- roent upstairs, Complete $26,000. Half cash. Village brick store 20x60 in- cluding tinsmith's equipment, two apartments upstairs, $5,500 cash, com- plete, Wm. Pearce, Realtor, Exeter, ()nt, LANDRACE Pigs, Registered' York- shlre-Landrace crosses, weanlings. LAURENCE LaLONDE BROCKVILLE ONTARIO • ,critvOnals Caught By Their Teeth One Of the little tricks Of dig^ guise is when a man Who knOws that the police description o f him will refer to his perfect set of teeth, has some removed, People do not like to lose their teeth, however, and even a hard- ened Criminal does not enjoy being relieved of his "pearlies." He would much rather disguise his front teeth by blacking out a couple. It is surprising what a difference this will make to his aPpearance—unless he makes the Mistake of walking about grip-. ping a pipe--stem between ap- parently non-existent teeth! Teeth have been the downfall of criminals in other ways, In one case a burglar bit a chunk out of a bar ,of marzipan and left a perfect cast to be recogn- ized by any competent dentist. Another revealed his dental characteristics in a piece Of cheese. Then there is the man who nearly left the 'teeth themselves behind when biting into an ap- ple which had been cleverly hol- lowed out to conceal a diamond. Other rogues have left chewed cigars or even cigarette holders complete with perfect tooth marks for the police to find. Teeth have also played a part in identifying bodies, as in the Dobkin case when the body of a woman was found beneath a war-damaged chapel. The teeth are among the hardest parts of the body to destroy. Even dentures resist destruc- tion as John. George Haigh, the acid bath murderer, found to his cost. The acid in which he placed Mrs. Durand's body had practi- cally completed its ,ghastly work, but it had not eaten away her dentures, and, by assisting in the idenification of her body, they helped to hang him. Smugglers' Wiles A Sinhalese returning from India suddenly developed a stomach discovered, by thirteen pieces of gold that she'd swal- lowed to evade the customs! Another traveller who smugi- gled diamonds from India into Ceylon in a inflated football. tactfully left it in the hands of a playing child. Someone else thought it would be a "piece of cake" to hide pieces of gold in. cakes of soap—there is no 'end,. in fact, to the ingenuity of smug- glers. Ban on the transport of arrack, liquor distilled from rice and sugar, during the war led to many schemes for smuggling it past the barriers in the East. One night a car pulled, up at a barrier. The occupants included two mourning women seated be- side a coffin. The guards, who had been tipped off earlier, ar- rested the occupants of the car and confiscated the coffin which was packed with bottles of arracks. Tc H INT OA JIFFYPPED or money back Very first use of soothing, cooling liquid D.D.D. Prescription positively relieves raw red itch—caused by eczema, rashes, scalp irritation, chafing—other itch troubles, Greaseless, stainless, 39,1 trial bottle must satisfy or money back. Don't suffer, Ask your druggist for IL D. D. PaEscturnott Milt 16113: No Diet For Jennie Jolly Jennie Brooks weighs nearly 500 pounds and does not mind if she puts on even more weight. This side-show fat Wont- an has been in show business for five years and loves it. She admits she is no Marilyn Monroe, but she has learned to accept her weight and does not mind people staring at her. Her measurements are: head 22 iriehes, bust 59 inches, hips 82 inches, and height 5 feet 8 inches. Her great bulk has its prob- lems. Beds, chairs and tables present difficulties: "It's ernbar rasSing sometimes;" she SOS, "especially when I bteak through the peWs at church." Jennie, 24, was always stout g--she weighed 151/2 pounds at birth, 8116 eats five meals a day, and a '5 pound ehicken is juit shack to her. Of her life with carnival people she says: "They are the most 'wonderful crew in the world. just like a big family. I've learned to love the saw- dust," Jennie long ago gave tip Wear-, itig a girdle Her last garment Was site 64, and then She de- tided to give tip dieting. She often gets stuck in telephone booths and showers, but clothing. is Perhapa her greatest 'trek- lent, Now she makes het Own end has a liking for Ulan -style Suits, which Ore OW to tit, who toVre the ihtlelight should rernember that It is both revealing' end Ulin ding STONE & WELLINGTON* -LT, "the, #antiint Forgeries "' titouthea. 54 Front 'Street Utah* Canada Nursery Salesman Wanted Sell .1-1di'dy. Canadian Grown Nursery Stock. We Offer full or part time Saida. •Potitiert and need Mad With driva' and' InittatiVa, _Exteritiva. leittloey—COninilttibets paidn!eekty, Our Saida. 1.ietiootifiott offers you distinctadvantages.'Far detailed ..Information Write to; . „ • EIGN.OF TIME Probable 'explanation fee this sign In Lee Angaaes, Calif, Is that Sotrietatie gat a Speeding: tiCket arid. didn't like it.. At any rate, paint On the iigh 'Warning' of a' OHO ambush War still wet' When officet Danchwerth ptilled down,, photo: at right, One bet& of the:. Sigtii *kirk was ironed by a "tiiitent Were the woetist qeSurnii t.peed:;1" 1 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Trees. That Fly These Ducks Really Had Golden Eggs ' WANTED EVERY SUFFERER ppP RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS TO TRY DIXON'S REMEDY. 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, orderless ointment, regardless of how 1-11111,-,ei, of hopeless, they seam, POST'S. PRICE $2.50 PER JAR Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price. 889 queen St. E., Corner of Logan, TORONTO QpENPOR AND W tE O ruNiTs MEN FOR M FETHERSTONHAUGH & Company,. Patent Attorneys, Established 1890 600. University Aye, 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, YOU WOULDN'T LIVE, TO TELL ABOUT IT—Eerie 'under-water scene shows, how radioactive cobalt 60 is loaded under 14 feet of water• into a five-ton steel-and-read container at Brookhaven National Laboratory. Bar to left of extension lamp is one of four one-pound units which together pack the wallop of ap- proximately 1500 grams of radium. Exposure of only 15-20 seconds to unshielded rays would be fatal to humans. Largest shipment of its kind so far intended for , industrial research, it's now in use at B. F. Goodrich Research Center. PERSONAL $1.00 TRIAL offer, Twenty-five deluxe personal requirements. Latest cata- logue included. The Medico Agency, Box 124, Terminal "A" Toronto Ont. Visualize it, if you can--.a giant helicopter PaSsing over your head, carrying beneath it a mighty tree, branches, limbs, foliage, trunk, roots and all, the roots writhing like snakes in the wind. Fantastic? Not according to an American; forestry expert who predicts that in fifty years from now logging will be carried out with specially designed helicop- ters. Hovering above the tree, intricate electronic mechanisms will guide hooks to grapple the trunk—and then, like a dentist drawing a tooth, the tree will be pulled bodily from the sell! And what trees! Straight, and tall, they will already have been seasoned and stained to desired by foresters using hypodermic- type needles. And the trees, thanks to new scientific know- ledge, will have reached matur- ity from seed in only twenty- five years, instead of the seventy or eighty now needed for most conifers. What you'll wonder, will hap- pen to the tree carried by the helicopter? It will be ferried across the skies to a mill and gently deposited in a storage rite. Every particle of the tree will be used—the pine needles for making pine oils, the branch- es and Toots for pulping and `hardboard manufacture, the bark for fertilizers. The 'sawyer of the future will use, rays of atomic radiation. With these he will cut the trunk into boards, each of which will , automatically be planed and edged at the same time. There'll be no waste, no sawdust. You can See how this will help the carpenter and builder of the future. The timber will arrive ready for instant use. No need to wait while it seasons. No plan- ing or edging to do, no staining. Moreover, special processes will make the timber so resistant to fire that insurance companies will be ready to offer better terms for buildings using, wood floors and framework than for any other building material. treasure and set off for the nearest town to exchange it for hard cash. Next, he ,used the money to engage the services of mineral experts. They drained the pond and probed, the muddy depths. A rich vein of gold was unearth- ed, and a contract was signed with a firm of mining engineers. In 1937. skilled workmen brought machinery to the spot, and Bad Bottom goldmine soon became a thriving concern. Sam Peters amassed a fortune. He and his wife built .a beautiful villa on the site of the burnt-out farm. And they designed their own coat-of-arms, incorporating the figure of a diving duck. rEACHER'S WANTED Flying Burglars WANTED: Qualified teachers for U.S.S. No. 1. Gowganda, Ontario, Temiskarn- ing District. Duties to commence Sept. 1st next. Full particulars upon request. Apply to N. R. Green. See, Treas., Gowganda, Ontario. MAN for general farm work. Room and board supplied. Apply J. l(erswell, R.R. 2, Aurora, Ontario, Greater numbers of jackdaws than ever before are likely to be seen in Britain this summer — for these birds are on the in- crease. The jackdaw is the children's pet bird, but he's a born thief. Two or three years 'ago a jack- daw flew every day for a week into the classrooms of a Hamp- shire school and stole not only the pupils' pens and pencils but the teachers' chalk. He hopped from desk to desk, walked about the floor, ptaked at the children's legs and tried to undo their shoelaces. He beat Reluctant Champion MOTOR VEHICLE PRICES HIGHER The average retail price of new motor vehicles rose again last year. Passenger ears aver- aged $2,586, some $73 more than in 1953 and $975 more than in 1946, while commercial vehicles averaged $2,663, up $121 over 1953 and $937 over 1946. Up Anll Down Life BEST OF FRIENDS — "Blackie," a three-month-old kitten who lives in Istanbul, Turkey, shows how easy it is to get along with strangers—even rabbits with ears five times as big' as his own. The friendly kitten even pals around with some local white mice! LET'S REST, FIRST — That rabbit- chasing habit and a built-in de- sire to hop for the nearest bramble bush when a pooch appears are put in the shade by sizzling midsummer weather, and a little rest in a hammock is indicated before taking up The chase, or so it would seem. Actually, the critters are pets of the DeLorenzo family. all attempts to catch him and smashed a vase during one scuf- fle. But jackdaws have good qual- ities. Some once saved the con.,. gregation, of ari Esseir church. Two oak beams at the church; each weighing about two tons, were in danger of falling, but nobody knew it. The fact Was only revealed when workmen stripped the roof of the tower because jackdaws had nested there. The rector said! "But for the intrusion of the jackdaws into the tower, the danger would not have been discoVered." While staying in het country home in Northamptonshire, a rich titled wOniati was the victim of a series Of cat-burglaries wieh baffled the police some years ago, Months afterwards seine men retrieved the thatch from the roof of a nearby inn and found hidden under it rings; brooches, bracelets; silver' din-ilia—in fact, all the woman's missing pro- petty.. t They had been stolen by a jackdaw which had followed the instinct of all jackdaws to Steal and conceal bright objects and had carried off its booty through the open . windows. JaCkle, a North tendon pet jackdaw, bleeped and took to A* short but hectic Carder of crime dtitifig which he got into trouble With the police. .He PeraisteritlY &relied ,ori „Ptilicenian's hefineta. Ire 'Mid 'Putted: clothes ppgS from WaShing and helped iiirriself to screws, hails and aver &Ant, Clinmbing- 1,000 stairs every day -for six years may not be everyone's idea of earning a liv- ing. But doing this was all part of the job of 58-year-old William Dowell, until recently the guide in the famous Whispering Gal- lery at St. Paul's Cathedral, "the parish church of the British Empire." William has now relinquished the job in the Whispering Gal- lery to another guide, and taken over the post of guide in the al- most equally famous Crypt of , the Cathedral. During his career as a guide at St. Paul's, Dowell has met people of nearly every nationality, col- our and creed, including the Chinese, who thought the spiral staircase to the. Whispering Gal- lery had been built that way so the Devil couldn't get up it! He says the greatest number of visitors to the Cathedral was during June in Coronation Year, when more people wanted to see the Whispering Gallery and Crypt than even during "Festival of Britain" Year. "I would not change my job for anything else," says Dowell, who was born in London's East End and started his working life as an upholsterer. Impossible though it may sound, there was a time when that great Czech runner Emil Zatopek, the "Iron Man" of athletics, was not only unknown but was actually a figure of fun. The story is told in a new book about the fabulous athlete. The occasion was the Athletics Championships of the Allied Forces in Berlin just after the end of the war. Zatopek was the sole representative of Czecho- slovakia, and when he appeared in the opening parade, a lone figure Joehind a soldier carrying the flag of his country, a roar of laughter greeted him. The crowd thought it a huge joke, the soldier bearing the flag was more than a little an- noyed, and Zatopek himself was embarrassed. It didn't help matters when he missed the announcement of the 5,000 metres and had to tear across the stadium, ripping off his track suit as he ran. But the race itself made up for all this. As he had done so many times since, he ran his opponents into the ground and finished an easy winner in near record time. When the final parade of the meeting was held, the attitude of the crowd towards the lone Czech was slightly different Another story that the author of this book recounts, quashes the idea that Zatopek was born wearing track shoes. Apparent- ly he was forced into his first race, and did his very best to get out of it! It was 1941 and Zatopek was employed in a shoe factory in Zlin. In order to advertise the "fitoducts, the employees were "encouraged" to take part in road races wearing a vest with the name of their factory on it. Zatopek avoided them as much as he could, but eventually his lack of enthusiasm was spotted and he was told to make his appearance at the next race. Still he tried to back out. He faked a knee injury, tried to lose himself in the reading room of his hostel on the day of the race, but all to no avail. He had to run, and he came second. This success meant that there was a demand for his services, but he remained unenthusiastic and did' his best net to enter. Only very gradually did he develop a liking for running. Certainly in those days no one, least. of all hinitelt Would have thought' of ZatOpek as the man who was to win three bylmpic Gold. Medals in one week at Helsinki end astound the world With his deVOtion to the cause of running. He Was a very reluc- tant champion. "Hurry UP, Sam. Supper's ready," called Mrs. Peters from the porch of Bad Bottom, farm- house •in South. Australia, "Okay, Mary. What's for sup- per?" shouted Sam a$ he trudged up the path. "Boast duck and green peas," she smiled. "I chose a beauty from the lot you killed for mar- ket." They were about to sit down when Mrs. Peters glanced through the window and gave a cry of alarm—"The big barn's on fire!" Dropping his knife and fork, her husband raced outside, Black columns of smoke were billow- ing from the barn's roof. Frantically, Sam and his wife dragged the pump and hosepipe from a shed to the edge of the pond. But the low level of water, due to the drought, hampered their efforts. The blaze spread with terrify- ing speed. Soon, the entire block of farm buildings, except the farm house, was a crackling in- ferno. A high wind fanned the flames. And Sam cursed because Bad Bottom Farm had no tele- phone, and was too far from hu- man.habitation for him to sum- mon help. By dawn, the fire had died down. Most of the livestock and all the well-filled outbuildings were lost. Seven years' struggle to produce profit from the farm had ended in disaster. The dejected couple retraced their steps homeward. "Come and sit down, Sam," coaxed Mrs. Peters. "You're ex- hausted and hungry. Let's finish this duck." Sam made a gesture of despair. "I guess we ought to sell the place," he exclaimed bitterly. "We'd better move to a more fertile ,area and make a fresh start." "Don't talk nonsense!" Mary replied. "You achieved a miracle in these barren fields, although we could never afford to take on any farm workers. We've had bad luck before. But we've al- ways managed to pay our „way." Suddenly, as Sam ate, he clutched his throat and began to cough violently. A hard morsel of meat was choking him. He raised, a hand to his mouth, and a tiny gleaming, nugget dropped into his palm. "Looks like gold!" he gasped. ."But how did it arrive in the duck's gizzard?" "Maybe we'll find more in those ducks you killed for mar- ket," his wife suggested excited- ly. In nervous haste, Sam seized a knife and slit open the birds to inspect their gizzards. Each one contained fragments of gold ore. Sam's eyes lit up. "There must be more somewhere on the land." For many days and weeks, they explored the soil, But they were unlucky. Eventually, Mrs. Peters had an inspiration. "Let's kill one of the remaining ducks and exam- ine it." "Why?" "I've a hunch," she replied. "We used up the water in the pond to quench the fire. So these young ducks haven't been able 'to swim or dive for several weeks. If they haven't much gold inside them, it proves that the secret lies at the bottom of the pond," Her theory was correct. Very little gold ore was found in the intestines of the younger birds. And when the rains came, the survivors swam and dived mer- rily as water in the pond rose to normal level. One by one, Sam killed the birds. Each yielded a small store Of tiny golden fragments. Then he carefully washed his heap of