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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1956-12-19, Page 3POST'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. gardiess of how stubborn, or hopeless they 'seem, Sent pact Free en Receipt of Price PRICE $2.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 2065. St, Clair Avenue East. TORONTO •OPPOR iuNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN LEARN Real Estate! SimPliffed home study course. Pass any exam, Low price, terms. Anyone can qualify in 30 days. Seavy, 429 S. Western "Los 'Angeles, California. BECOME A DETECTIVE OR SECRET service agent.. Ambitious men over 18, wanted to qualify in these interesting fields. ' Learn at home. Information free., Write to Canadian InvestigatOrs Institute. 5665 Papineau Ave., Montreal., P.Q. OPPORTUNITIES MEN and WOMEN AGT-TELEGRAPHERS in demand. Men wanted now We train and secure positions. Day. Night and Home Study courses. Free folder. SPEEDHAND ABC Shorthand qualifies for Stenographer in 10 weeks home study, Free folder. Cassan Systems, 7 Superior Ave., Toronto 14. PATENTS FETHEESTONHAUGH & C o mpan y, Patent Attorneys. Established 1890. 600 VniversitY Ave„ Toronto, Patents all countries. PERSONAL $100 saw. offer. Twenty five deluxe personal requirements. Latest catalogue incltided. The Medico Agency, Box 22, Terminal '0Q" roronto Ont. SALESMAN WANTED WE are looking fin* a live wire Sales- than to, take or d ers for chicks and turkey Poults. We have all popular egg breeds, dual purpose breeds, broiler breeds and tour popular tur. key breeds. Liberal commission paid. Feed Dealers, Farmers, men calling on Farmers selling any product make suc cessful chick salesmen. Send for full details, Box No, 146, 123 Eighteenth St„ New Toronto, Ont. SWINE PRODUCE better pork with less Land- race. You will eventually have Land- race, why not noW, when you cart sell breeding stock at a good profit? Our herd is one 'of the best and largest in Canada, Outstanding weanling sows and boars, four month old sows and boars, guaranteed in pig sows. Service- able boars, all from imported stock at reasonable 'prices. Send for new cata- logue,, just off the press. FERGUS LANDRACE SWINE FARM FERGUS ONTARIO USED Correspondence School Courser bought, sold, rented and exchanged Austin E, Payne, 162•W MeRittrlek Kenivilie. N,S. IT PAYS TO USE OUR CLASSIFIED' COLUMNS ISSUE 51 — 1956 • pr Tit I • 1; ti :CLASSIFIED Beware Of Driver Fatigue On Holidays ADVERTISING „, FOR SALE AGENTS watt-rep OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN The 40,000 member Fraternal Order of Police agree With Canadian highway safety OM- cials that fatigue is a big killer in holiday driving, From its Philadelphia head+ quarters, this national United States police organization re- ports that ,December has more deaths than any single month. Last December, it claims, saw a -record toll, making Christmas and year-end holidays the most dangerous period of the year. To save lives during the coming holiday season, the, 13 0- lice group offers three C's& for conduct: I. Caution when driving. 2. 'Coffee to keep alert. 3, Common sense not to drive at all if overtired, sTrast stall000ry circular sawmill in good location with betiding, for K. 0, Schutt, Kith:doe, Out, GO INTO BUSINESS for: yoerselt, Sett excillelYe hoe,seware products and ap.. pile:Wes ',merited. by every. householder, 'mese items are not sold in stores. There Is-no competition Profits up to 5007#, Write immediately for free color eatelogile 4Vitil retail prices shown, Separate confidential 'wholesate price will be ineluded. Murray Sales, 3622 St. 'Lawrence, Noetreal. HELP WANTED ,BE A:HAIRDRESSER JOlN CssAPA'S Lakstt40 firOgt opportunity Leant Hairdressing rieseent dignified profession; good wages, Thousands of suseesstut Invest Graduates. America's Greatest System Illustrated catalog Free Write Or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING salniansS 358 Bloor St, W., Toronto Branches: 44 Xing St.. Hamilton 72 'Rideau St., OttaWa_ F.X.PERIENCED married man, mixed farm. Beef cattle, seed grain and hogs. Exeeilent Waken, good wages, and good Hiring quarters, Garnet .13, Weis ard. Bewreenville, Opt, LIVESTOCK ARTICLES FOR SALE IMPORT Duty Free: Oil PaIntiegs of highest 'quality. Only 46,25. Literature free. J. L,.. M. Enterprises,9 Greed. Canal Ireland. AVRSHIRES.'Fresh and bred cows, Brod and open heifers,.calves, Regis• terse. vaccinated, accredied. Farm sold, Gorge° Spring, Thornhill, Ontario. ARTICLES WANTED r; NEYI MONEY! 22 OPPORTUNITIES for making money working in your home, Booklet tells how: Other tips. Send 504 todayt Tames H. Patrick, Dept, 2., Ironside, Oregon, FOR Sale , five Aberdeen-Angus bulls eleven ,moriths to • sixteen months'. Kenneth guarrie, R.R. 5, Belwoad, Ont. °AMU-LINE STOCK TONIC FIRST choice of 'thousands of top Ontario dair*Yrrien. Irtie ultimate in. 'Digestibility, Palatability, Eirectiveeess! Send Post•Card today to• Deride-Line Stock Food. Company, St. Jacobs, Oetario, OPPORTUNITY FOR ASENTSI WANTED - Heavy duty gasoline motor electric, welder, good Condition. Write particulars to Urbaitis, P.O. Box 387 Geraltiton, Ontario. • BABY CHICKS. HEAVY Breed cockerel bargains. Light Sussex, Light Sussex x Red, Bed x Light Sussex, Red x Rock and other popular breeds. Day old $5.95 per hundred, week old 46,95 two week old $7,95; three to four wed( old $8.95, assorted breeds S1.00 per hundred less. TWEDDLE 'CHIC/C HATCHERIES LTD. FERGUS . ' ONTARIO fEKTRA EARNINGS" 'no earn motley easily in your spare time, .ask for Our 1957 catalogue en. tirely free- of. charge, Your sales will Operate like a charm. Judge for your. ,selves; 164 pages showing 3000 high quality articles priced to match any budget, including: diamonds, riegs, watches, cut crystal silverware, lug-gages, hoeseware and costume Jewelry. You buy at wholesale price and benefit up to 50% discount, "OPERA JEWELS" Wholesale Division, 8685 Casgrain St„ Montreal, Que. MEDICAL GOOD ativiest EVERY SUFFERER OF ' RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY- DIXON'S REMEDY MUNRO'S ,DRUG STORE' 335 Elvin.. Ottawa $1.25 Express Prepaid. SWINE WHATEVER you need,„,-, we have -- usually, the 'early birdV grow to' pro- duction the' best markets, Get your pullets growing this winter towards those, markets. •,.A.S.k for price list on laying strains, Or larollers; cockerels. Bray HatChery, 120, John N., Hamilton. LANDRACE Swine 550.00, cbineatnat from show stock $50.00. Allen Craig ' Waweig. N.B. WANTED SI4ARP IDEA-"=1.1;e lack of snow anti oative Christmas trees •in the warm winter resort of Phoenix, Ariz., doeen't bother Barbara Dennis, left, or Glenna Smith. They get into the sea- son's spirit by decorating a real Southwestern "Christmas tree" -a giant saguaro cactus. WE baVe said it before and we will say it again. If-'you keep records you will keep Tweddie layers, We buy ' foundation stock. each year (not once in ,a while) frpm the top breeders in the -United Stafes and Canada, to give our customers chicks that will lay more eggs on less feed. 'Our best for eggs, Ames In-Cross series 400, Shaver cross White Leghorn, Warren Rhode Island Red, White Leghorn x Rhode Island Red, California Gray x White' Leghorn, We challenge yott, to corn. pare any of these, with any, of the leading egg strains. If you do you will be back to. Tweddie each year. We have tops In Broiler chicks. First generation Indian Elver cross, First Generation Arbor Acre White Rock. Tiirkeys. Extroreely broad breasted bronze, Thompson.Large white, A, 0. Smith broad white, Special strain of St.el'ed chicks. Laying Pul-lets. Catalogue. TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHEIIIES LTD. FERGUS ONTARIO FOR SALE 0, BACKACHE May beWarninq T.V. Lamps $3.00, Table Lamps. Thorne, 2471 St, Antoine, Montreal. Backache is often caused by lazy kidney action. When kidneys eel our ot, order. excess acids and wastes remain in tbo system. Then backache. disturbed' rest or that tired-out and heavy-headed feeling may soon follow That'' the time to take Dedd's Kidney Pills, Dodd'', stimulate the kidneys to normal action. Then 10411 feel better -sleep better-work bettor. •Get Dodd's Kid:hale/ills now. Ot TWO acres land, large house, hydro, barb 22' - 36', good for gardening or chickens. Price $4,600. Allen Creek, R.R: 3, Port Dover, Ont. TRACTOR PARTS WE have spare parts for Caterpillar, Allis Chalmers, International Tractors and Bulldozers. Genuine new parts at a saving. Inquiries invited. Allatt Auto Supply Ltd., 107 Queen St4, E., Toronto.. • * "Driving to the information center at Pearl Harbor before, that morning, I flipped on` the local radio station playing' Ha- waiian music with no voice in- terruptions "and recalled that the station itself served as a homing beacon when flights of B-17's were coming in. So when I got the radar:report later, I assumed ,it was those B17's. I had no way of• knowint 'these were' enemy aircraft." And so it rerrlains, 15 years later. The bitterness of those who have'felt that they were unjustly accused, or that top officials in Washington, deliberately provok- ,ed. •the attack to get the U.S. into .World War II has now softened. 'For example, Judge Ferguson now" believes that 'President 'Roosevelt wanted the Yaps to • strike the first bloW but had no`, idea that it would be as devastat- ing as it turned out to be, Mtn. Kimmel feels the same way.' "We can only hopesand tray that our top military officials have, learned a lesson from Pearl Harbor that sticks with them to- day," Judge Ferguson says. "In ' an atomic age, the error of jtidg- ment which ''caused the Pearl Harbor disaster would spell the end of America." 4**- sIStessSes Built on the bedrock of faith, the spirit of Christmas—goodwiliqo all men —is the guiding force as mankind seeks the path toward lasting peace on earth. Is Pearl Harbor Truth Still Hidden? (Second of Two Dispatches) by Douglas Larsen NEA Staff correspondent Washington (NEA) — Fif- teen 'years after the disaster of Pearl Harbor some of, the key figures still insist that a suc- cessful, conspiracy has kept the full facts from the American public. Some, like Adml. Husband. E. Kimmel who was .head of the Pacific fleet and now is retired ' at Groton, Conn., believe 'that the full story eventually will be told. "The real facts exist in per- sonal diaries which have been kept by persons who know the facts and human vanity will eventually force them to light," he says hopefully. On the other hand former Sen. Horner, Ferguson, who served on the joint Pearl Har- bor, congressional investigating committee and is now a judge of the U.S. Court of Military Appeals, thinks that the full story never will be told. "The truth 'of how the'Roose- velt Administration egged the Japanese, into, launching the at- tack has died forever with Franklin D,, Cordell Hull and Henry L. Stimson," Judge Fer- guson insists, -"and those still • alive, like Gen. Marshall, will never tell all they , know." Those persons who figured prominently in the disastrous events of Pearl Harbor and are. Still alive were interviewed all over' the U.S., for this review On , the 16th anniversary of s the event. Some had new, informas tion to offer. Most of them agree with judge Ferguson. During' the past year, how- ever, a boolc' called "The Cause of Japan," Vritteri,by Shigeriori Togo, the wartime foreign min- . ister of Japan, does shed' im- portant new, light on the attack. Togo finished. the book while ' in prison as a war criminal and died a feW years later:" A key section of his•hook says: "It was disclosed at the (War crimes trial) that the naval task force under Admiral Nagumo had sailed•On 25 November der orders to strike Pearl Han- , bon We (the civilian" Japanese ' 'officials). had, of course, no knowledge of thee Plan; it Was the invariable. practice of the high command not to divulge to civilian officials -any scrap, of ins ' formation, bearing on these highly 'Secret operations," If this is true the actions of top OffielaiS in Washington can be better 'understood: The key Japanese Messages decoded Waahingtort, Which cominand- era at Peani, Herber, never got but claim would` haft, alerted them for etticiiis Were all Sent by„ Togo, 'The logical question thus raised is this: it the sender of the intercepted theasageS self didn't knit*. the ininend4 ing attack on Pearl Harbor how could Washington have deduced that irrirn his messages? Actin Harold R. Stark, then Chief - of Nitnal Operations and today retired on his Petiiisy1-4' Vailla farad, supports. the' efts' claim that the inter. Cepted niesSages did net give positive elite to the' attack Ott Pearl Harbor. "I have explored this cjiiettioit firi my mind hudxedy bf tintea,” he says, "arid tati only tOnAs eine% that. I sent Adm. Kinirriet all of the inforrnetion he needed to have to keep hint as ift4- formed Of events as we were in Washington," The item which raises the enestion of Togo's accuracy and Stark'S judgment is cited by Adm. Kimmel, It's this mes- sage from Togo to a Japanese agent in. Honolgin sent NeV. 18, 1.841, intercepted and de-. coded- in lArashipgtom, "Please yeport on the following areas as to vessels anchored therein:. Area N,, Pearl Harbor, Mamala Pay (Honolulu), and the areas adjacent thereto. Make yonr investigations with great secrecy," "This information was never supplied me," Adm. Himmel states, The message strongly nig- „gets that Togo was in on the Pearl Harbor plan, too. But this now becomes another one of the controversies which remain tine sallied 15 years later, Another moot question is why Gen. Marshall's warning to Pearl Harbor, sent early enough on Dec, 7, to at least have- provided time to prepare the guns for the attack, was given to Western. Union instead of the Signal Corps. The Message was 'handed by Gen Marshall to Cpl., Edward F. French but arrived after , the attack Plead started. ,.. del, French, retired in Wash- ington, explains: "Static was• so bad "our 'com- munications men had' lost Hone- lulu, so I gave it to Western, Union to. handle. This had. been done previously on other mes- hages and worked fine. Gen. Gerow is the man Who knows all about this,” Gen, Leonard T. Gerow was assistant chief of staff of the Army at the time and blamed for neglect in a minority con- gressional report ,on Pearl Har- bor. He is now a banker: in Petersburg, Va. "Col, French did• what was right," Gen. Gerow insists today. "But I have always said that if it is ever shown that my staff made any mistakes I was willing to assume all blame." In the same category of moot questions is the reason why the young Air Corps Lt. Kermit A. Tyler ignored the warnings of approaching Sap bombers spotted on radar by Pvt. Joe Lockard. Tyler is a lieutenant-colonel at Ent Air Force Base, Colorado Springs, today. He recalls: Invention Speeds Coconut Products In the ceeetitsteetoWned, Vile lase of San FrfillStSe0, in the Philippines, an invention was successfully tested recently for the first time. President Isilag- saysay and foreign diplomatic representatives were on hand to Witness the operation of . the Hiller eeeortut oil and flour ex- fractots, which is expected to revolutionize the .coconut Indus- , fry in several Asian countries and bring to the Plailippirtes an additional income of 64 million dollars a year. The inventor is Stanley Hils Len, His invention takes in fresh ecteorint meat, and, in less than la hour, discharges high-grade, edible coconut oil and flour for human consumption. Visitors WI this village were each handed a package contain- ing cookies and breadfruit coco- nut flour. The flour contains 20 to 24 per cent protein, higher than that of wheat flour, The establishment of plants, as en- visioned by the Philippine Gov- ernment, aside from producing high-grade coconut oil, will also provide a basic food material for the protein-deficient diet of millions on the Asian continent. With famine, a threat for millions of people in Asia, coconut prod- ucts may some day be their ul- timate salvation. The present method of manu- facturing oil and meal from coconuts uses , copra, which is dried coconut meat. After the nuts are harvested„ they, are de husked and split by hand with bolos. The meat is then made nit Into copra by s drying, smoke drying, or kiln drying. It is usually two to three months from the time the coconut is picked until the copra mann- factured into meal and oil. The invention, using fresh • coconuts and converting them Into nonrancid oil and flour in45 minutes, is a revolutionary pro- cess, Fresh coconuts are first shelled and fed into a slicing machine, which conveys the slices into a drying chamber, where the moisture content is reduced from 50 per cent to 5 per cent. The warm slices then drop from the drying drum, into a continuous expeller for sepa- ration of the oil from the solid material. The resulting meal is , ground into dour, and the oil passes through a filter for clari- fication. Finally, the oil is de- odorized and, then held in a bulk storage tank for shipping. The new method of making oil and flour directly from fresh coconftts produces at least a 4 per cent greater yield than the - present copra process. 'Financial gain, however, is only part of the story. With the present method. due to the time used in. drying, transportating; and warehousing, it is often two to *tree months from harvest time until the coconut producer re- eeives his money. He usually borrows money against the fu- ture sale of his produtts, and. Each loans carry high interest rates, The new method will shorten this time from -months, to days, thus greatly irriprev- Ing the position of the coconut farmer, ft .; f. The periods for Which patents' are valid,. vary front 12 to 20 years in the countries having patent laws, In the, U.S.A.' a patent holds good for 17 years; the term in Canada is• 18 years. After the term is completed the patent becomes public property. At this Christmas time let us once again affirm our faith in Mankind, and let us rededicate ourselves to the great task (if perpetuating" a better world---a world reflecting 5, the faith that is Christmas: with Its eternal message of Peace on Earth, o6ddiart to Men. . • ;4.6 FEARFUL EARFUL Gerard Hoff- riiirt§.: British tattOIniat and bilataisn player, "prepOrei to push a note threUgli this " subs contra-bass tuba; at th6 risk of blasting his wife, Anita, fa ihh " The six-foot,- mounted itiOnaterssia One :of the InstrUniolita tited iri Aoffiittn§is• Cartaoti daneeet LOnclOri. The catiert,lo[ew off with a 6tati4 O'verture's for ortfiestrif, ottani rifles, thre'd Venni:nit tleditera • and a 4iaei'' r. • • •K.