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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1957-02-27, Page 3SALESMAN WANTED SWINE WHAT The Landrace- will ,dl, 'for yOu.. • If yOtt • ' breeding, then e certainly o ypou should censider this wonderful po ^At t yatos. get ousel g ls u sy other breed by many ,dellars, It costs less to-' Landrace, and- .You get more ler Weanlings, four month old and six month old sows .and boars. Also serviceable boars and .ugaranteed. in pig sows for sale, 'All from - import- ed stock.• - • • • FERGUS LANDRACE, SWINE FARM. FERGUS • ONTARIO TEACHER wanted immediately for Shining Tree Pulilic School. ,SalarY $2,300. Fifteen pupils, grades 1.9. APPLY, stating qualifications and name of last inspector. Mrs. Audrey Moore, Sec.-Treas. Shining Tree, Ont, ABSOLUTELY no selling experleffee necessary. We will train and give you a Sales Training Course, if you quail. fy we WMMiYanee. you money en your future commissions to assure you of a living while training. This is a patented prOduct for Home TM. provement nationally advertised. Men from U.K. welcome. Age no barrier— Apply Mr. Mason, Richards Product., 419 Yonge Street, Toronto. Local dealership with exclusive terri-tory, new line of Canadian made domes- tic and industrial water softeners. Thiel is a direct selling proleet for someone haying this ability and available on part or full time basis, Write Water Soft. .ening Equipment Limited, ip Manville Rd., Scarboro Ont. STAMPS WANTED for Cash: Old Postage Stamps, Stamp Collections and Ac- cumulations, Also Old Buttons and Strings of Buttons. Write Box 537, Milton, Ontario. TEACHERS WANTED OPPORTUNITIES FOR. MEN AND WOMEN SALESMAN wanted. If you are call- ing on farmers or if you can sell farmers chicks or tunkey poults com- municate with us. We are looking for a live wire salesman to sell top qual- ity chicks for egg' production, for broilers and for dual purpose, also turkey poults. Liberal commission paid. Feed dealers, farmers, or any- one selling farmers make ideal chick salesmen. Send 'for full details. Box No. 153, 123 Eighteenth St.. New Tor- onto, Ont. ISSUE 9 — 1957 BARGAINS in magazine suhscriptions. Write for free list. Free prizes to our customers. Kaydon.Phillips Magazine Agency, nta 565 Portsmouth Avenue, Kings- Orio, BUY Wholesale! Ifundreds of Name Brand items at ,savings up to 80%, Write today for information. Del-Art, Box 02, Pocono Lake, Pa. REMAIL Service! Letters remailed from Flint, Michigan. 250 each, or 6 for $1.00. James Evans 525 garland Street, 014, Michigan, TROPICAL Booming Florida! Send dollar receive latest Sunday Miami paper, APprox. 220 pages, large classi- fied, return mail postpaid. Zook, Box 259, Coral Gables, Florida. MAKE more money taking magazine subscriptions, new renewals, gifts. Low rates, high commissions, For full par- ticulars write: Kayclon-Phillips Maga, zine Agency, 585 Pertsmouth Avenue, Kingston, Ontarid. SEND 250 wrapped, for many money saving, money making proposals. Big Mail, No junk. Nation-Wide Sales, Mail Order Specialties, P.O. Box 2452,, Greensboro, N.C. YOU too can read Handwriting for Pleasure. and Profit, protect yourself. Amazing Book $1.00, The Analyst, 211 E. Mulvane, Mulvane, Kansas. BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profession; good wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System Illustrated catalog Free Write or Call. MARVEL ,HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS 358 Bioor St. W., Toronto Branches: 94 'King St. W„ Hamilton 72 Rideau St., Ottawa PATENTS FETHERS'TONHAUGH & Co m pan y, Patent Attorneys. Established 1890, 600 University Ave.. Toronto. Patents all countries PERSONAL SPECTACLES from $3 — ten pairs sent to test your eyes. Give age. satisfaction or money refunded, Sal way & Rowe, Cardston, Alta. HYGENIC supplies for men. Qur con- fidential price list sent to you by mail In plain envelope First Class Mail. In- clude name, age and address, send to RAINBOW SALES 171 Harbord Street, Toronto, SALESMAN WANTED. HOW TO REDOCE A NEW Idea. A new way. Amazing results. Write for details. Box 130-F, Donalda, Alta. $1.00 TRIAL offer, Twenty-five deluxe personal requirements. Latest catalogue included. The Medico Agency Box 22. Terminal "Q" Toronto Ont. SLEEP TO-NITE SEDICIN tablets taken according to directions is a safe way to induce sleep or quiet the nerves when tense. $1.00 All Drag Stores or Adrem Ltd., Toronto 5. $12 sends 400 EXPORT CIGARETTES or any other Macdonald Brand Postage included Moil order and remittance to: OVERSEAS DEPARTMENT MACDONALD TOBACCO INC. P.O. Box 490, Place d'Armes, 'Montreal, Que. This offer Is ',ablest to any change In Government Regulations. SMOKES FOR CANADIAN MILITARY PERSONNEL serving with the United Nations Emergency Force in the Middle East CELEBRATING ITS TENTH Anniversary, the' 1957 Canadian National Sportsmen's Show, will be bigger and better than ever before. Even the fishing lures will be bigger, as Beryl Wil- liams proves with this giant-sized plug. Boat show, motor show, cottage show, wildlife exhibit, bowling competitions and three dog shows will be among highlights of this year's big springtime exhibition. Gpt your' seats NOW! 'for the COM fehfriaRivel .6-Colisetim, Toronto -1100:CH-.7,15,,TO .MAIRCH Z3;, 1957 ,Isrecestitin§ these T1 Terrific Acts ... Zippy the Chimp Gee Gee's Huskies Dotson's Divers Army Aerial Gymnasts The Cristian Addi Quinn Dieter *lasso Hamilton's Majorettes Sharkey the AP:', The Great Seal Veno THE FIRST TIME ANYWHERE— John Hamlet's "BIRDS OF PREY" LOG ROLLING, CHOPPING, CANOE TILTINO. OUR FINEST SHOW EVER'! TO CELEBRATE OUR' roft.isoo.r.iii Deily teessai lue4eiri 2.1S p.m.' ITS Illwinlogs1st Aftaniremi4M **Mil *044 Rea kat $1.23-111em ti.73,' Nape IbthIbiNen Wrimes soli) ChItsbei% 23* „ [Ivy cornb,not,on ,r1 otivancr. SOY, 25, per to,14,1 AGENTS WANTED GO INTO BUS! :NESS for yourself Sell .exclusive honsewere products and appliapces wanted by every house. bolder. TbeSe items are not sold in stores. There Is no COMpetltion prof. its up to 500% Write immediately for free color ca talegne with retail priee,s shewn. Separate confidential wholesale, Price will be Included, Murray Sales, 3822 St, Lawrence. Montreal ARTICLES FOR SALE SCOTCH and Austrian Pine Seedlings, seed from selected trees, Murray Ketchabaw, Corinth, Ont. SPECIAL Wier!' 10 new towels, Fine eat cotter:, and rayon, Large size, Colors; yellow And pink. $1.30 post- paid.• R. B. Greathouse, Warrior, .Alabama. BABY .CHICKS "OXFORD" Approved Chicks live, lay and pay. They are the results of thirty years of careful selection and breed. log. They have to be good, because we want the very best kind of chicks for our own flocks — big, vigorous and early maturing. We have four pure breeds and four crosses — Columbia Rock, Light Sussex, White Leghorn, L-400 Leghorn FUR. x C.R, x B.R. — W.L. x C.R. - R.I.R. x W.L. Write for free folder. The Oxford Farmers' Co-operative Produce Com- pany, Limited, 939 Main Street, Woodstock, Ontario. POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles, Post's Eczema Salve will nut disnp point you. Itching, scaling and, blirn. tog .eczema; acne, ringworm; pimples and foot. eczema will respond readily to the stainless odorless ointment re- gardless of how stubborn or hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3.00 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 286S St„..Ciair Avenue East TORONTO ANCIENT GAME Golf has been a popular sport for "centuries, but exactly where or when it originated is uncer- tain. Paganica, resembling golf, was played by the ancient „ Romans with a bent stick, and a feather-stuffed ball. GATEWAY TO INDIA The Khyber Pass is the gate- way to. India and has been the path of. invasion for many would-be toriquerors of that Cotthtry, Perhaps the first of these WAS Alegander the Great, Who Made savage advan0 through the 30-inile .canycin iri 320 B.C. 24Q EGGS a year from one hen! It's done. But It takes some 'doing' but, nowadays there are breeds for such specialized prodUction. It pays to con" centrate your chick buying on s,our markets. 'Wide choice, Bray Hatchery, 120. John .N., YOU get more income with Ames In- Cross chickens. The Ames In-Cross chicken has been in-bred• and crossed for a period of ten years, to combine and strengthen the most desirable traits a chicken, ,can have. High con- sistent production — Uniformity, of egg size, with high percentage grading large -- Efficient feed conversion and outstanding' livability, Send for Ames In-Cross colored folder. Also other popular egg breeds, dual purpose breeds, broiler breeds, Turkey poults. Started pullets, started turkey poults. Catalogue., TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. FERGUS ONTARIO BOOKS WE pay up to $5,000 for old books. Catalogue 250. American Book, Room 301, 181/2 Queen. Street East, Toronto. COINS WE BUY old coins. Send 250 for special list and coin folders. Collector's Centre, 1871/2 Queen Street East, Room 101, Toronto. FARM HELP WANTED SINGLE -farm hand' to start at once. Apply in person to. Findlay Dairy Farms, Edgeley Ontario. (Three miles east of Woodbridge, Ont.) FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE NEW Hydra-flex P T 0 hydraulic chain saw 32" blade, 20-fL double hose. Regu-lar price $375 — Special price $260. New Holland No. BO wire tie baler with engine, used very little, perfect condi- tion with hydraformatic bale tension control. This machine can be used for stationary baling if desired. New price $3,000 — our bargain price $1,395. HAW- KEN FARM EQUIPMENT, Arkona, Ont. MEDICAL HAVE you tried "KERFO" tablet for relief of boils, pimples, blackheads and nerves. $3.00 and $5.00. IMPO SALES. P.O Box 471 Winnipeg. Man DON'T DELAY! EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 Elvin Ottawa, $1.25 Express Prepaid ' FOR relief from piles use Certified Pile Ointment. Tube with applicator $1.48. Enclose cheque or money order, Arrow Falcon Company, 4625' Grand Blvd., Montreal. STOMACH SUFFERERS TRY "GYNO 4000" MONEY BACK' AGREEMENT GYNO "4000"' Scientifically compound- ed will help sooth stomach irritation, by neutralizing the acidity which is' often responsible for 'poor digestion, Acid Dyspepsia, Heartburn, gassiness, and kindred other discomforts. Sold at leading Drug Stores, one month treatment $2.50. Mail orders C.O.D. postage extra. Gyno Products Reg'd., 5 Whites Lane,,Stoney Creek, Ont. temperature about eight 4e- grecs, and Dr. l?'la,ss thinks that "SlIell all effect may have played, a. part irl bringing about past Joe ages, Geology shows that mountain-building preceded or aCeemPanied glacial ages. Fresh rock greedily absorbs carbon' dioxide in, weathering. Huge expanses pf fresh rock thrust into the air mountain building, would lessen the car- bon dioxide content of the at- mosphere, which in turn lower the temperature, bring more snow, and start the glacial cycle. On ,the otherv hanti he- finds two major effects that might balance out the amount of car- bon 'dioxide In the atmosphere. " First, the oceans' are' the vastest reservoir of it., They contain about 120,000,000,000,000 tons, whereas the atmosphere contains only about 2,300,000,000,000' tops. As the• amount in the atmos- phere increases, the seas absorb more. But they can absorb only thrtiugh 'their surfaces, and as it takes' several, thousand years for the oceans "to "turn over" and bring all their water to the surface, the yearly amount of such absorption: is limited, Dr. Plass . thinks man's output of carbon dioxide may be outracing this balancing device. , Second, carbon dioxide is necessary to plants, which take - it from the air, An increased supply should provide lusher plant grOwth and an increased Use of atmospheric carbon di- oxide. But, as Dr. Plass points out, eventually just as much is returned to the atmosphere through plant decay, as the plants use. So this effect, too, would tend to balance out, and without reducing the total amount of atmospheric carbon dioxide. Flowering plants evolved in the latest "long heat wave" of the earth, 'which lasted for many milliOns of years before the most recent ice ages. Dr. Plass notes that such plants grow more lushly in at atmosphere enriched with carbon dioxide, indicating that their ancestors may have evolved in such an atmosphere. This logically indi- cates that there may have been more carbon dioxide in the at- mosphere than now, during the earth's hundreds of millions of years of warm, placid "normal" weather. Suppose it is proved that man is actually acting as the sor- cerer's apprentice? What can he do about it? That's a tough question. Dr. Plass figures that there are enough fossil fuels to add 40,000 trillion tons of car- bon dioxide to 'the atmosphere and oceans, with consequent enormous changes in the cli- mate. One way out would be to turn to atomic energy, since the split- ting atom does not generate carbon dioxide. But on the other hand, how much radioactive material would this put into the air, and what would it do to mankind? Dr. Plass doein't even attempt to answer -this question, though he raises-it.—By Roscoe Fleming in The Christian Science Monitor. How Can I? By Anne Ashley Q. HOW' can I clean and press velvet? A.' To remove spots or stains from velvet moisten a rag with eucalyptus oil and rub article gently; the stains will gradu- ally slisappear. Do not press velvet. To clean and alsO raise the nap, and remove creases hold it pile sides.up over the steam of neatly boiling water to which a little ammonia has been added; then brush, Q. How can I comb tangled hair? A. When the hair becomes tangled, if the Scalp is rubbed thoroughly with alcohol the ,tangles can be combed out very readilY, Q. 110# can I make .the fat on boiled ham, firm and white?. When Serving cold ham as a luncheon dish, place it in iced water ,iinnlediately after rehnovs itig from the boiling water in which it was cooked. The fat will be white and firm and the meat will be a god color, Q. How can I clean gloves? A, A flannel cloth dipped in sweet milk Mid rubbed on a pure soap Will' clean gloves and avoid the unpleasant odor of benzi ne. Q. What kind of COOked Veges tables hold their flaVor toogeil A. Experience has taught that Steamedvegetables hold their flavor bite andare imore healthful than Cc:ilted in any other WAYS' Q. How'I .store linen sue testfullY? A. Linen that has been starch"- ed should never be stored, It is' liable tai crack, 'ever! ro,t •RinSe the articles ,Of all starch, dry thein theratighly and then wrap the!in Islue , paper. The blue pater ,PreVeiitar.thein from" turning Yellow, InittOkiiiitITA111—* 14-ton aluminum truck ixpand>s to Merl than five its 'On,thl-roarf dirnenilon.s'at .tho touch' of In its "closed" poiltloni• 100 thit'Vehict..1OOkit ;Ike any tither' truck-trailer of similar *IOC-Preis a..buttOn 'and presto !tile sides telescope outward :White aCcordlOtt4oldid floors. drop !into ploce,.Tho fiveniltiUto ojihrOttont inrioatise 'the trudet MOO' died of 150' iqUalit fiat to 7$O square feet ADVERTISING CLASSIFIED Is Man Warming Up The Climate? n STOPPED Dior Does It Once Again It, was just ten years ago that style-Conseletis women every- where suddenly found their wardrobes grievously outmoded. The reason was the "new look" fostered (or foisted, as many wailed) by a young French de- signer called Christian Dior. Mr. Dior celebrated the open- ing of his own house at 30 Ave- nue Montagne, Paris, with the fanfare of the "new look." It was a fanfare that responded like a bombshell, nowever, to a style world long hampered by war fabric restrictions and per- manently frozen, it seemed, to square shoulders; and short'tight skirts, Mr. Dior, crying that women wanted to look feminine again, tossed out the look that had persisted since 1939, and in one swoop brought back longer (Inches longer!) and fuller skirts, soft shoulder lines, and more defined waistlines. He was called a "fly-by-night" and a 'fraud" on one hand, land s "genius" and a "master" on the other. Women greeted his Innovation with indignation and something aproaching horror. Many rose up in vociferous protest, But, they were fighting a losing battle from the start. They capitulated gradually, first by letting out hems, and add- ing makeshift borders to their skirts, and then, by retiring old wardrobes for the "new look' in new ones. Mr. Dior made headlines in 1947 and he has been making d them ever since. Women every- where listen to and heed his fa- shion decrees. There is almost breathless anticipation of his fashion dictation. They have gone along with change after change — and line after line — Including the A-line, the H-line, the Pep& line, the empire line, and they have just greeted his liberte line in Paris. In ten years Dior has length- ened skirts, shortened them again, and last year dreated a stir with his demi-longueur or $' length for late-day wear. One season he abolished the bustline, and the next season he restored it. He has pushed the waistline up and down and all around. And each season his de- signs have been adopted, and adapted around the world. His Ideas have sifted down to the least costly garments made on' the production line. His is the talent which constitutes a. con- stant stimulus to fashion — and• the catalyst which keeps inter- " est bubbling. Today one can buy not only Dior „clothes, but Dior. perfumes, Bus, stockings, millinery, jew- elry, gloves, bathing suits, shoes, and ,accessories 'for mens • And since he is a designer with busi- ness acumen as well as creative talent, it might be said that the sun never sets on the Dior fash- ion empire whose interests stretch from Europe 'to North and South Anierida, and to Aus- tralia. FISHY HITCH-HIKERS For all their' aggressiveness, sharks can be imposed upon. Small holly fishes called' re- moras cling to the' shark by means of one of thes back fins which ,.has, become modified as a sort of"sucker. They "go along for the ride" until they, have hitchhiked into a school of still smaller fish. Then they eat their 1311 and look around for a shark (or a whale or a turtle might do) to give them a lift to the next attractive stop-over. IN A JIFFY IT: or:Meisey baeV Very first use ot'sOothing, cooling liquid D.D.D. Prescription positively relieves raw red itclic,,aused by iczernao rashes, scalp irritation, chafing—other itch troubles. Greaseless, stainless. 39e trial bottle must satisfy or money back. Don't suffer. Ask, your druggist for D. D. D. TREscillpTION. AT THE CANADIAN NATIONAL The sorcerer's apprentice learned how to turn the water on, but 'not off. Some weather- men and physicists wonder if the human race is a sorcerer's apprentice without knowing it. In their thinking, we may be ,well along toward restoring earth's "normal" climate, that prevailed throughout most of its history. • This was of "nine months of summer and three months of early fall" with no polar ice- caps, with tropical and temper- ate zone 'vegetation growing al- most to the poles, with seas 100 feet or morme higher than now; with a climate at the present site of Buffalo like' that of San Diego, and at Denver like that of Yuma. The agency that•may be pow- erful enough to bring • this about Is our ever-rising• use of coal, gas and oil as fuels, 'thus in- creasing the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Nature supplies, through vol- canoes, fires and the decay of vegetation. For ,the last century man's use of foSsil fuel,s has been growing year by Year, es- pecially since1900. There has 'been an increase of „perhaps 100. per cent in atrnos- Isheric carbon. dioxide , since then accompanied by a warm- ing climate. People who ad- vance what is' Called the' carbon dioxide thesiry; warn that this may constitute cause 'and effect. They • warn that as the world industrializes, the , concentration of 'carbon dioxide we add to the air is increasing fast. Estimates of the present yearly addition run from 6,000,000,000 tons a year up, and one eminent stu-, dent of the atmosphere calcu- ,lates that man may release up to 1,700,000,000,000 tons in the next 50 years. If so, the consequences could be tremendous. Dr. C. E. P. Brooks, the British climatic au- thority, calculates that a tem- perature rise of , only two de- grees would melt the polar ice caps. Why should more carbon di- oxide in the air bring about a , warming climate? Physicists compete our atmosphere to the roof of a greenhouse, under which we live. If there were no air, as on the, moon; or if the sun's heat were radiated away from the earth as easily as it is absorbed, the earth's surface temperatures would sink lar be- low zero every night, and mount toward that of boiling water every day. But when the sun's short- wave radiation strikes the sur- face, it is absorbed and reradi- ated as heat. Some eleMents of the atmosphere,` notably' ozone, water vapor, and carbon diox- ide, are transparent to the shOrt- wave, radiation coming in, but trap and hold back the rising long-Waye heat. Therefore we owe it to them: that we are not frozen every night, ands par- boiled every ; day. This is the "greenhouse ,ef- fect," Now, say the ,proponents 'of the carbon diosSide theory, in putting more of 'this gas into the air yearly, we are in effect thickening the roof of Our plene- ' fairy greenhouse, and so holding in, more' heat year by year. "The warming, trend itself is Undisputed. Our winters espe- ' dially seem to be warmer. Tropi- cal i and temperate zones seem , to he widening at least tempo- rarily toward the poles. Vegeta- tion,` fsh, and animals, -including man,sare" following' the, poleward .trend. The Canadian wheat belt is now. 50 to 00 miles wider toward the` "pole than, in 1900. Many other such shifts are noted. And the seas are creep- ing higher. This foremost exponent of the carbon dioxide theory is Dr. Gilbert Plass, physicist fetmerly of Johns Hopkins University. He believes that earhou dioxide has a fat More irripottant role in the "greenhouse' effect" than Was formmerly thought. If, 'as some estimates indicate, there is now about 10 per cent more of, it in the ntrnosphete than in 1900, this amount is in' ittelf sufficient to account for the ori.- etal warming trend 'Since then. He estimates that the amount :during the century will be in- Creasing by nearly one-thltd. Further, he calculates that doubling the, amount in the air would increase t h e world's, .watinth about eight degrees or much more than enough to Melt the several million cubic tkkater locked tip in 'the lee caps. This would Writ Otit earthly greenhouSe into a trePidal con., setVatetY, and Would certainly itibinerge all lands now less than 100 'feet above sea level'; ctOwdiot , the; 'present tints of Millions of 'square miles hit& towards the interior. tilt thin : Would eorisPensatessl for by opening other Millions. of sgtiare mileti pf Are,ie..and subs Arctic lands ,i6\ settlement; all :Of Greenland; and :perhat large part eVen of the ,Antarctic` ;e0ittinent Halving' the ,of!tt,t -*whale chili*. dioxide would eh the Other land, lower the If You're TIRED ILL THE MIME Efirybodylets i bit nth-down Miiie and then, tired-out, heavy-headed, Ind maybe .6ethered .bt backaches. Perhaps nothing iierliailf *Magi temporary • teak excess .aids Intl wastes. :That the time to take' DOdd's stimulate fife kidney! aril ie halitteitOti their normal actieri Ii removing etletfai adds ild you feel better, deep batter:W.4 Loiter: Get Dedd's 'Kidney Pills eels Leek les, 'thesblieslet Sith the red. beed„,tit ill Alrireilite.reit tan depend en Nat: