HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1956-01-18, Page 7FAT OF THE MOON-The weird-looking object above' is fairy-
tale moon-being explored by space travelers-made from some
40 pounds of pork fat, Creator is confectioner Jean Chabot,
shown finishing his "masterpiece" in Nice, France, The pork-
fat moon required 20 days' work, to complete.
They-tilled/40 'Rio! Their Fellow .Dritiks
It .13
In all the heart of. London
only one royal palace stands
ealahowered in green parklaid.
Shopping streets actually flank
the southern walls of Sucking.
.hana Palace and King George V
once seriously considered selling
it for $10,900,000 to convert into
Offiees. But he longed to live in
tranquil Kensington Palace, now
to be the wonderful new home
Of the Duehess of Kent.
Not so long ago Kensington
Palace was slipping into ghast-
ly disrepair, The Walls were
bulging-according to a report
-the rafters rotting and the old
panelled walls and painted ceil-
ings slowly crumbling in decay, The Duke of Edinburgh spent
the last night of his bachelor-
hood in Kensington Palace but
the, servants found the scrubbed
board floors creaking so badly
that they tiptoed about for fear
they would wake him too soon.
The Duke stayed in the palace
flat occupied by his grandmo-
ther, the Dowager Marchioness
of Milford Haven. But her rooms
are now a ghost suite, empty
and echoing, It is not•idly that
Kensington has been called the
"sleeping beauty" palaee. When
on official took stock of the hun;
dreds of rooms, at leastletir out
of five were empty.
yet Kensington Palace has
been a royal home for 250 years
end for over a century it was
the chief official home ofe roy-
alty, just as Buckingham Palace
is today. King William III found
the London smog so trying to
breathe that he bought .the pal-
ace when it was called Notting-
ham House, rural home of the
Earl of Nottingham.
At $55,000 purchase price it
seems a bargain. But William
spent 'ten times this sum in five
years in making improvements.
He had scarcely begun a' new
'wing than the walls efell down,
killing-eight workmen, and..then
a disaetrons'fire meant that much
of the work had to be done Gall
over again,
Like William, Queen Aisn e
died ire `the; palace. Queeri''Vie
toila was barn there. When
Geerge .was living thereareS
sovereign, his wife laid out,, the ,,
gardens.,Conyinced that A9,ysmo
paying 'the bills out of het Privy
purse; the' King never inter-
fered., He: hada rude- sheet& aftei
her deafly; when he • examined
his bank accoonts and feend„tbe
Queen' had drawreeparlet oney1:;.
to-1he -turi (Of efoc,1000:
TddargItensington •• Palace is
The only royal residence in Lon- •
don with estato apartments x,egtie
larlye Open „ to . the . You •
ean,stand ein the Livery, rct9na,ti,
*Ike Vict6'Pit as an eighteen-
yeareold,rgirl, stood-in-dressing-
gown•and-shawl-to -.receive, the'
news, ;that shpelawnSieWeeroilofile
MV.I.PnCle'1,7014 can see her doll's„
bp*, ,4,,,Iiiilk,w146 -1ggailgtilt, Yini"cali shrVeie in a room so
draughty "that Xing Williarn
caught tineurhdriidttehentlee fell
asleep thefe.
There is a, staircase ,that,was
thought,,I te e 4iiiade,094,,,,ehente
unt4 restorers tried to clean if
anti' elisebVered the black was
merely dirt. So' much dirt and
tulabish.elwas taken Out of the,
palace, during the. cleaneap foe.,
the Duchess of Kent's suite that,
it took 'twenty truck loads to,
cart it all' aWaY.' ,
When KineCleciraeVI allOtted
the.DuchesS a twenty-two-room
suite, in the Palace as a grace-
Senel,,favotir residence„ heriveroeclf
her that• it would• take time to
put'it into .Shepeeand 'the
Duchess viewed her new home
MERRY MENAGERIE
'eliardortlite. Cotild you ,direct
me to the neereat belfry?"
BR-it-R-It's cold down below,
as Folke Brandt, left, and Hans
Gustcwsson• will tell -anyone.
They're working on the Stock-
holm, Sweden, subway during
one of the worst cold spells to
hit Europe in recent years.
Storms, snow and cold corn-
,bined. to create this fairylond
of icicles in the undergfound
work site. ••,
lying Story about her .hesband
having abandoned her, with 3
starving children on her hands:
The tender-hearted Countess
got one More' number eut of the
angry dount, and Sent the tear- '
ful worhati away with it - num-
ber eight for the December 7th
lottery - after pressing a gui-
nea into her hand.
The Scots put everything that
they could raise On this huni-
ber. And the Count must have
felt taint indeed when he heard
that it had won them over
$3',500:
This big win started' a life of
persecution for Count Cagliostro
which must have almost Made
him wish that he Were back in
torte Paletrijo jail, hi despera-,
filen he and his wife moved• to
Great Suffolk Street. But Mail
Fry took a room in the Same
honed arid by a trick got tile
Cottritess accept a necklace,
and then had the Count arrest-
ed for "stealing"' it: She even
,brought an action against him
for practising Witchcraft so that
her friends.'cotticl break into his
laboratory and Steal hiS precious
manuscript' while he was 'ens-
Wetitig the charge.
MACDONALD'S
DER
eahades ffratriand fnto&
When the rogues could riot
read what it contained - and
it would have been difficult for
anyone since it was pure gib-
berish - they broke into the
Count's room and held a loaded
pistol to his breast, demanding
the secret,
Only the knowledge that there
was no secret gave the Count
courage to refuse their request,
"My stay in England has cost
MO over $9,000e" he declared -
and decided to -leave London,
But this he could do only with
the consent of the Stets. Arrest
on trumped-up charges was only
too easy a way to keep him in
England for ever.
Finally, the Scots, realizing
that they could not get the
"secret" of the manuscript,
agreed, to let the Count leave
the.country in return for enough
lottery numbers: to provide them
with a, fortune. at
For geed measure r hoping to
teach them a good lesson and
praying that he would never
clap eyes on them again, he gave
the first half-dozen numbers
that came into his head.
Theo, before the first of them
could fail to come up-as he was
convinced they all would fail-
he and his wife hurried off to
France.
Sitting in his dungeon marry
years later-condemned to a life
impriponment from which he
was to emerge only 'in his cof-.
fin - the wretched "Count
Alessandro di Cagliostro" must
have wondered why he had got
into trouble by pretending to
have magical powers when, in
fact, he really did have them.
For how otherwise can one
explain how those laSt six reck-
lessly chosen numbers all turn-
ed up? Numbers which had en-
abled the 'confidently plunging
Scots,; to net a fortune of over
$150,000.
Easy On The ,, Eyes
The eyes, poetically described
4as . 'Alm windows of the soul,"
do in actual fact reveal more
aboutk their, -.owners than any
other' feature. Tiredness,
ill-health, overstrain and anxi-
ety,, 'show +' and
around the eyes, ' which deserve
- but seldom receive - as
inuch care and attention as the
hair or complexion.
actresses-=sire
noted for their beautiful eyes,
but etiert"they would -lose their '
lustre if shtt'dieln't take care of
their t I l 0
Yee, dry, Lsprit-ler days spent
mostlr'6141;:olltleors or win-
ter eveniatg Or '11.7"laiicl films
Oy- es. When you have been out
in the dust of a town, it's as im-
portant to bathe yuor eyes as it
is to freshen the rest' of Yntir-
self •-up with .a wash. Use one
of the branded .eye-lotions
which your on, the market;, or
make. own with, one tea-
'spoonful' of salt in a tumbler
fail df -Warm water And here's
another 'lip about eyeloathing
alWays have two eye-baths
(choose them in different col-
ours so that you can tell them
apart); one for the right and
one for the left. In this way
you won't pass an minor infec-
tions from one eye to the other.
Wheri you 'feel your eyes' are
tired after a lot -' of close work,
give thei0:41.eart and complete
rest. Clq*".14tri for a few min-
utes, cover them with the palms
of your hands to keep the light
right out - and you'll feel
wonderfully refreshed.
For reading and all dose
work, the light shoUld shine
over the left shoulder for mini-
nium strain on the eyes. And
don't on any account try 'to eco-
nomize by having lowpowered
bulbs; good light: is the secret of
good sight.
care for your eyes sensibly
and they will give you a life-
time's uncomplaining service.
No need to mollycoddle them
they were Meant to be Work-
ed and they flourish on use,
provided they are given reason-
able working conditions.
South., Africa' ha g its'
"Lourdes" according to a report
froth -last
Just before .she 'died es a.Wi-
dow at 18, an African girl de-,
clered that an angel ,bade told
her of a spring el ',holy water.
She retuned to. make Use of it to
cure her own ,F malady, s6, she
bequeathed it- to her people.
She instructed her mother to
go into one of her father's fields
and pull out a tuft of grass.
She had :dreamed that the soling
Woeld
had. ;dreamed
at that- stiee
The mother did as she .. was
told, and water gushed ,fprth
in a stream, which since -has
not Weakeried or varied in its
flowe
Meny, who have drunk the
Water haee professed Mittel:le
louS, cures. of various lirieSeek
Some; nO more than .etettiathe
ache, others more serious:
A white doctor Who. has anae
lyzed a sample of the water'
states that he fetuld no Medi,
chief j)repertiee. iii it. Yet the
"cures" still' go ort.
-get (41
3
a
000,01
.... GOVERNMENT
0
1940 r,1945 1950 .. 1955
, •1
SPENDING UP;WILL,R1&.E-4emancis Of the American leciiiilii ci
for gOodkend services tvalleat te, reeord annual rate' Of 19211111bart
dollars ire 1955; 9' per., cent 'above 1954. Consumer spending rose,
to the highest levet Is histOrY 'and investment by business ex-
Vended 'sharply. Government expenditures-federal, state and
local-AeVeled•oit. A look ahead to 1956 sees continued *rent
consumer Spending, business' investment rising filithee,, federal
goVernMent pureliateslibtait et 1955 level, State and Ideal gov-
kilinfents Will etiend increasing amounts for schools, roads in ....
SPENT .FOR.PRIVATE INVESTMENT'
ptherefaellities.
Kensington ,Palace Does A- 090107140c...:
it must have been one of the
most depressing experiences of
her life.
The suite had been eecUPied
for a, quarter of a century of
widowhood by Queeri 1 Victoria'e
daughter, Princess Louise, and
left untenanted for another ten
years, Dust and cobwebs lay
thick,
"No longer suitable for human
habitation" was the Verdict.
There were staircases wide as
etables, corridors along
which all coal and water had to
be carried, and rooms thAt led
into erie another in gloomy vis-
tas.
The walls were damp and mil-
dewed-and no wonder, for very
little light came through the
grimy latticed windows. Above
the ceilings could' be heard the
soft tap of the death-watch
beetle,
The Duchess of Kent had the
help of experts, of course. Angry
questions were asked in. Parlia-
ment when the Office of Works
bought a $2,500 Adam mantel-
piece to grace her drawing-room.
The $200,000 spent in repairs has
also been criticized.
If you look carefully you can
spot the Duchess's windows from
the Park, for, they are draped in
white-frilled nylon, an enchant-
ing modern touch. And every-
where in these redecorated, re-
planned rooms is grace
If you could walk down the
blue-carpeted corridor you
wouldebe charmed by the white
paintwqrk. The yellow ceilings
are intended to ,create a /sun-
shine effect even on a dull No-
vember day.
The drawing-room is 'a, wdri-
derland of gold and white. The
settees have been upholstered
in gold, and pieces of antique
furniture which ..were wedding
gifts' have been brought out of
store after thirteen years. Prin-
•cess,eAlekaridre 'ibis Separate
Sitting7reern „in„which...she. can
e.elJtert4.41 !ifIfl)WP .#1.endPs"ity.ith
a thedern radiogram.
Upstairs si*,bedronie, but
?'t*eifi'of'r'thehe geetNinall guest
bedrooms.. The •Duchess's- bed-
e, room, is rcarpeted sinehetrYetielth
curtains of white and red-„flow- , .• pied chit to set ethe,Aemeeiand
kbledsifitead pure 'White satin.
• Princess. Alekandra - has' ehesen
a ii.White.7.'-'1W' alltafier:"Patterned
with pink and red carnations. By
contrast,_ ,the , •young...Duke of
Kent end Prince. Michael. heve
aus eri y rooms.
The' DUchess of Kent's wing •
of Kensington Palace' has be-
,;come
a,.henne, as the. similarly re-
medelledieClareepef leteese,e4nd
nOW,'"fieedress' to say, there are
other kinsfolk of the Royal Fam-
ily who have been' eyeing the
r, remainiiignsil(Iacaiit'y ikfitePtiand
gently„ .t..hey too
rit ,',36t1MieY/V.95lin. ere* I Ig.YORgeRld-
faveur of these desirable royal
residenceS. ° e ''42:1.it
Young Men
Wanted By
Realizing ,the needefoc ming
then 4o'plan'a career, we inves-
tigated the possibilities of a
young' men trained as Agent-
Telegrapher. We discussed the
matter with J. E. cassan, presid-
ent of Cassan ,Systems School,
20 Spadina Road, Toronto, who
has' been specializing in this
training for over 50 years.
Records shoW that every gra-
duate, has been ,placed in ;posi-
r tions,, and during the put five
years the,school has been unable
to supply the demand , in On-
tario, let alone the other Prov-
inces.
Training may be taken at
home with. the use and loan of
the, Self-Teaching,. Code, Ma-
' chine, ,with the PriVilege of at-
tending school any time for
cheek-tip and`speed tests:` Train-
,. ing is also • given in Day and
Night School: If al Railway car=
eer interests you, secure book-
let without obligation. Tele-
eat:theta and Station Agents
work fitreqtate Weeli,' eight-hour
date ereceiVe 'Union payi. lien-
. Aelore.,'and expresel,cornrniSSions,
all of which means big wages,
ieou ple. Of ,seedy •' ;rdgilek -
"Lord, ; and,:eLadY asli they
called thereeelyese-- were, greatIe
ly interested irt the, newspaper,
accountsT'df the newly ~arrived
Count, Sentyled
alchemist.," They elverelipaRictf-,
larly 'keen teegetetheeirehandseeet
magical Egyptian manuscript
wh'10, nit 1wfls, i rignetiaeti;
perfowl, all ,insaTIfir 101 ,,repeyelse.,
and entild. 'gtten irecliCt Winning
lottery rs. - eighteen cen:
'fury • equiValent of Poet's.
The • Coen t Was orilyetoo; eager.
to., ,adyertise himself through,
newspaper: interviews. For, Ihe
had come to England to fleece
credulous - and wealthy -
mugs,
So,ielien the ScotS, read all
about the" Cagliostrbs having
taken furnished apartments rat'
a Mrs. Juliet's No. 4, Whitcomb.
Street, Pall' Mall, they made a
note to mark down, the Count
for plunder. '
The'Scot'vehanee to. Meet the
Count came when his landlady
snegested. that an impecunious
Porttignese 'lady, Madame, Ble.
vary,- went& like to earn a trifle
acting as interpreter for Coun-
tess Cagiostre; evhb 'kite,* no
Englishee
The, cagliostips were e exceed-
,IVIadarne;.131evary
and When she brought along a
starving ex-Jeettit - seminarist,
named Vitellini, introducing him
as a' felle'W-connfeYinaa,of • the
COunes• who could, teach. •Eng=
lish, the Cagliostros , Welcomed
the man, and took • pity,e en,, his
obvious poverty, -
Now the Scots' chance had
arrived. For •Vitellini was not. .'
ehlyepotaetand, grosSlY, diShOnest.'
hut he Wac.s very tMCjcr with t,
the Scots.• He introdeced them
to Madame Blevary as tWo
poverished Scottish aristocrats
who really deserved to know the
secret of predicting lottery num-
bers. For good measure, Vitel-
lini promised Madame Blevary
a cut on the profits if she could
arrange to introduce the Scots
to the Count.
After some trouble - for the
,Count 'showed a 'curious reluc-
tance to meet strangers whom
he himself had not marked down
for prey' --- Madame Blevary
managed to effect an' introduc-
tion •
And frein that Moment "Lady.
Scot" actually. Mary Fry, the
jailbird = began to ,worry the
life tint of poor AleSerincleo di
dagliostre for -a winning lot-
tery number:
The cream of the jest in this
priceless. example of, diamond'.
cut diaMond is .that the Scots
belieVed'implicitly in all the
fancy claims ,that: the Count had
made Ipt ,himself., The, Connt„ of
.course,: knew that his claims
weree no "More' than A device
to part 'the 'Wealthy rithes'.
Bet he 'sate, too, with alarm
that he would be' forded ..to give
some sort of answer to the. ex-
teethely ininerturiate Lady Scot
The tatint brought tip the
slums Palernio ,;could tell
a.dangerees :type evheriehe met
her: And he recognized just •that
irk this demure but demoniacally
ostitiate evotteaneye
s,In deeperatiore 'Itthotigh he
hadn't enough real confidence in
fil:8.03fqhfc;itOiVe;t0.Preeiriet, toe
nitirre*'S.,;*ather;,.,;E:4 „told her
What .t.hie4nagiC ,•letiole had turn-
ed up, fee, the ,nejet lottery:
Theecennteand Countess had
arritredvin Lohdon. from Porte,
gal in July of The' first
number Ahitti.:41e gave to Lady
SC& ,wae,fot !thee &a*on It'd-.o
tenth& "lath:
Confederate didn't
stake much .this, first nurither.
But theretyere. rid' at. all sur-
prised when the :number Came
up and ;latinehed 'thern. on an
anjaiingttn'''cif gOcid, fortune:
(it Wag 'the Celia who was AS-
Wished!) i•
Not their, pressute increased;
the heat Was well and truly oril
spite of ill refusal to *We
' ' ° '", • • :;;- another innther; the -Count was
forced by the ScotS now
backed up by Blevary and Vi-
tellini to give "just one more
number."
Two days': later:,; NOVember
16th, number 20,1 turned up -
'exactly as the count had ,.pre-
dieted. Oft Nieritber"
predicted number, ee,,- 25 net-
ted the Scdt,s; W,Wadzy,tith the
turning of two numbers, 55
• and 57, on the following day, the
Scots netted over $2;5001
The Count, certain that this
run of luck could not poSsibly
continue, refused.noint-blank to
predict any more numbers. But
he had reckoned without ,the
Scots. r.
For the first time in their un-
scrupulous lives they had, tetich-
ed "honest" money, And they
were not going to be sent beek
to dangerous driminalitt`r*if they
could help it.
But when the Count refused to
receive them, Lady Scot'lorced
her way into Countess Sera 7.,
phina'S room and sobbed - out a
""Don't judge a hoolc by itse
cover" goes an old eayiog. Likee
wise the appearance of a fabric
is rio, assurance that it will
wear well,
The right amount of sizing in
a fabric can enhance the look
and feel of the material., But
sometimes sizing may be used
to 'fill Put a fabric and skimp
on the actual amount of yarn
used. Sizing of this kind is very
often soluble in water, and one
or more washings will get rid
of it, leaving the fabric limp
and lifeless.
Water soluble sizing is often
affected even. by the slight
moisture present in dry clean-
ing. And the job of removing
spots and stains is made much
More difficult,
The Canadian Research Lute,
tote of Launders and Cleaners,
whiCh conducts regular tests
on a wide variety of fabrics,
says that taffetas have been a
chief offender. They warn too
of linens that have been 'heavily •
starched, Here again the excess.
starch. will wash out leaving the
linens looking very forlorn.
One simple but effective test
may. be used to show -up excess.
sizing that has' _been used to
conceal poor quality... Just rub a
portion .of the fabric between
your fingers. If. excess sizing has
been used, a trace of white
powder will, usually appear.
Remember too 'that when:bey.-
ing a. garment or .cloth where, a
crisp effect is desirable; it's
best to ask the question - will
this article . stay crisp after
cleaning? •
BABY CHICKS
SEND for full details about ournew
Tweddle series 400, 401 and 402.
These are regular egg machines. They
will lay more eggs on less feed than
any other breed we haVe to offer.
Buy some and compare them with
any other pure breed or cross breed,
if you do we know you will be hack
for more next year. Also first gener-
ation Broiler chicks, turkey poults,
laying and ready to lay pulletS.
Catalogue. TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD.
FERGUS . , • QNTARIO
ASK for Bray weekly lists - specials.
Broiler cockerels and mixed chicks
for February. Pullets (a few start-ed) including special strains such as.
Babcock Leghorns, Ames Hybrids.
PartiCulars, Bray, 'Hatchery 120 John
N., Hamilton.
"OXFORD" Approved Chicks live,
lay and pay. They are the results of
twenty-nine years of careful selec-
tion and breeding. They have to be
good because we want the very best
kind of chicks for our own flocks,
big, vigorous, and early maturing.
Columbia Rocks, White Leghorns, Sussex,-Barred.Rocks„ Hemp a- Rock
Crossbreds, New Hemp • x 'Sussex ,
Crossbreds, Leghorn x Columbia Rock.
Write for free folder. The Oxford
Farmers' Co-Operative Produce Corn-
Panv Limited, 434 Main Street Wood-
stock. Ontario,
FOR SALE
TRUCK - TANK
• 1 - 1365 gal., 4-Compartment truck-
tank with ' bucket box at rear, hose-
reel and two side,, delivery doors.
$800. This unit is very suitable for
farm trade agents.
NORDIC STEEL PRODUCTS COMPANY LIMITED
Servicing - Manufacturing
Petroleum Handling Equinment
144 Sixteenth St-ant. New. Toronto
CL. 0-5021,2
MEDICAL
PROVEN REMEDY — EVERY SUFFERER
OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY,
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE,
335 Elgin Ottawa
$7.25 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.
mg eczema, acne, ringworin. pimples
and foot eczema will respond readily
to the stainless,' odorless ointment
regardless or how stubborn or hope-
less they seem. • Sent, Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE $2.50 PER JAR
POET'S REMEDIES
889 Queen Sti-' OFFFONCTo
(Ter of Logan
Make Beg Money At Hemet
SO cents brings you a — Bid MAft -
Chock'full of mat order magazines,
money making opportunitles and FREE
offers.
HENDERSON Nettlioneee SYNDICATE
341 Waterloo.. iireet;Aandon;:- Ontario.
• '
... I Was
Very first asc at toothimi,!4o'olins
Eh D. D. PrellErintfen pOSItivelx,rclieves
taw red itch--caused by. eczema, rashes,
scalp irritation, chi, litigt--othet ltch troubles
Greaseless, stainless. 39c trial bottle must
satisfy or mone' back. Don't antler. Ask
Your ctruggiAt for D.D.D.PRESCRIBTION
ISSUE - 1956
A southern farmer recently
complained to a sheriff that his
Jersey cows came home the
other week so drunk that they
couldn't be milked. Seems the
animate had a little party down
by g stream into which had been
Spilled gallons of whisky from
an illicit still. Two men were
arrested,
4055 was quite a year for ani-
mal binges, In ,January a mon-
key started the ball rolling by
getting tipsy on a bottle of
Benedictine, Eighteen-inch tal.1
Jokko staggered around the
house in Southend where he=
lives, found a pair of nylon
panties, put them on and tot-
tered off out of the house and
down the road.
Passing children were delight-
ed, but a man yanked Jokko
off to the police station where
they put him in jail until, Our
Dumb Friends' League turned
up to bail him out.
In September last an animal
ambulance was called to Sara-
my, an eighteen - month - old
pony, who was skipping and
dancing about a field, blind
drunk. But it wasn't really
Sammy's fault, he had merely
been eating some fermented po-
tato peelings he found on the
small-holding in Roreford, Es-
sex.
When he had finished, he
walked unsteadily into the field
where his owners found him
later . . on his knees.
It took eight men to carry
Sammy away to sober up.
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PERFUMES - 13 formulag. • all, of '
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SAWDUST. Turn it into cash. 49
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