The Brussels Post, 1957-03-13, Page 34
AGENTS WANTED
IF YOU are not Amen of a salesman. but can get along' with fanners, you can make 580 • $100 pep week rep,
resenting Lis In your county, Write the
Manager, Box 328, Milyerton, Ontario,
.00 INTO. BUSINESS for yourself. Sell exelusivo houseware products and
appliances wanted by eygry house-,holder, These items are not sold in stores. There IS no gompetition prof. AO. up to 595%., Write immediately isle
free color cat'altigne with retail prices shown. Separate gotLfidential whole, • sale price will he included, Murray Sales, 3822 St. Lawrence, Alentreal,
ARTICLES FOR SALE
,S1cCoOtcli'iCalbia IlAv.nacoAr junstthri,anoaPti.ne .Seedlings, seed from selected trees. Murray
BUY. Retail at Wholesale .Pricesi Savo money. 20 postcard brings Free Whole, sate Name Brand Catalog of Diantonds, Jewelry, , Watches, ApplianceS. No
R°bLigi 8baY York. °St t 1 olYri,,ntPsrp *tnAl e, Broos,
r0130°Itxlyn 675: New York.
RAW( CHICKS
"OXFORD" Approved Chicks live, lay and pay, They are the results of thirty years of careful selection and breed, ing. 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, R.I.R. x C.R. - `R.1.R, B.R. W.L. R.I.R. x W.L. Write for free folder, The Oxford Farmers' Co-dperative Produce Com. pany, Limited, 434 Maio Street, Woodstock, Ontario.
IT PAYS TO USE
OUR CLASSIFIED
COLUMNS
HORSE SPLASH — Leading her
horse to water is no problem
for,Marion Lisehora as she and
her mount, "Lorgah," thrill au-
diences at the Aquafair. Like a
western film hero, Marion rides
the horse off a 40-foot diving
board,
Ty Cobb Talks
About Baiting
%a you take a long lead off
lase?' the yOung fellow et the
baseball asked.
"Just as leng as they'd let
nee." came the grinnir4 reply
from the "No, 1 man in the,
ganie's Hall of Vartie) Ty Cobb.
Looking chipper, the former
batting and base running star
was the principal speaker Xe-
eentlY at the Stanford gathering
oe baseball men. His topics ran
the gamnt from a recomme4da-
tlen that hitters be given more
leeway, to an explanation of
his fermula for getting himself
out of a batting slump.
Most of his remarks came in
answer to questions as young
players and coaches kept him
busy demonstrating batting
stances and base running posi-
Cobb grasped the bat the way
he did during 23 years in the
majors—with both hands spread
well apart.
"When I started playing for
the town teame I was just 12
and had to hold the bat that way
to punch the ball for hits," he
explained. "If you keep your
hands apart, they won't cramp
together when you swing."
On, the matter of hitting, Cobb
maintained, "you can develop a
player's ability better if You give
him a little more leeway. I don't
think anybody sitting on a bench
should tell a batter which ball to
het.
"If you're going to develop
confidence in him, you've got to
let him decide . . If there are
men on base, a batter should
have the privilege of butting the
ball he wants to hit."
Cobb's argument was against
telling a batter, for instance, to
let the first pitch go by or to let
the ball go by with a three-ball
and one-strike situation.
"The element of surprise is
important," he said. "If a pitcher
knows you will 'take the first
pitch, he's liable to serve up a
cripple, Hit and you can hurt
the pitcher psychologically."
The erstwhile firery competi-
tor, who compiled a lifetime
overage of .367, recalled that on
ere occasion Chief Bender threw
It curve that he hit to the fence.
"Bender was a little too smart,"
he laughed. "He remembered
that I'd hit that curve and
never did throw me another.
He didn't know how lucky I
thought I'd been to hit that one.
Someone wanted to know,
"How did you go about getting
ant of a batting slump?"
Cobb replied that when he was
hitting well he would have a
couple of players watch him.
Then when he'd slump, he'd ask
them what he was doing differ-
ently and try to return to the
former style.
"Then I'd have a pitcher come .
be close and throw and I'd bunt,
hunt, bunt. Then I'd try to hit
et little haider. Next, with the
pitcher back on the mound, I'd
bunt some more and then start
taking swings,
"You have to work back into
the proper timing,"
What is most important in hit-
*ling?"
"Concentration is the main
thing. Get set and then think
only of the pitcher and the ball."
Did you aim at a certain spot?
"NO. I'd practice hitting
through a certain zone, such' as
between first and second, or be
tween second and short.",
Cobb claimed the players of
today are "Just as good as we
were, but they don't hit as well.
Too much etrophasis on the long
ball."
Forest. Of Bloom
• V.
Ieset out early in May. Climb-
ing for three days from the 3,000-
foot-high plain of Kathmandu
to the 12,000 feet of the Saone
Mani ridge, I first crossed huge
terraced mountain-slopes, aston-
ishing examples of the zeal and
patience of the peasant - .
Human ants, long caravans of
Tamangs inn Indian file — the
women wearing numerous neck-
laces of red beads—carried their
produce: bamboo baskets one
inside the other, massive planks
of reddish „wood, rectangular
loads of hand-made fibrous pa-
per, enormous bunches of green
boughs which entirely hid the
porter's body . . .
The woods and forests aston-
ished me in their turn. They'
bristled with black, branchless
trunks like stumps, almost leaf-
less, for in this region• there is
so little grass for the cattle that
the peasants cut the foliage to
feed cows and buffalo, just as
they do in Auvergne in the heart
of France. This habit, added to
the activity of the woodcutters,
is gradually killing the forest
which would maintain the soil
under the attack of the violent
monsoon rains. As for the larg-
est oak trees, they are burned
where they stand, their trunks,'
crowned with smoke, for their
ash is needed to whiten the paper
made on the spot from the bark
of the daphne. The industry is
so large that It has given its
name to the people of the cljs-
trice
No one who has not seen them
can imagine the overwhelming
Splendour and richness of a for-
est of tree rhbdodendrons. —
pale ivory-yellow, salmon-pink
and mauve — the latter growing
up to 10,000 feet. Wo,rds cannot
paint a tree dotted with blood-
red flowers standing out against
the receding blue- slopes tinged
with purple 'by distance, .under
the dark indigo of the sky, whilst
beyond shimmers thesatin'of the
Himalayan snows.— From "The
Land of the Sherpas," by Ella
Maniere.
DON'T WAIT EVERY SUFFERER OF
RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 Elgin Ottawa
$1.25 'Express Prepaid
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 Oyspepila 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.
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE.
BANISH the torment - of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Egzeme 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-
gardless. of how stubborn or ,Impeleas theY seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRIC . 0 0, PER' JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
2865 St. Clair .Averme East
TORONTO
OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN
MISSIONARY-Guide: Nonprofit, Rev, Morin!, 1481/2 Bloor West Teropto, WA. 4-4842. Collegiate, Public, Languages, Basic English, Public Speaking, Story Writing', Etiquette, Dramatics, First Aid, etc.
EDUCATIONAL
SOCIAL. DANCING MADE EASY
FOXTROT, Rhumba, Mambo, Waltz, taught by professionals, In easy les-sons, on long play unbreakable records. Suitable for Home, Schools and Rec-reation Centres, Particulars free. Edu-cational Services Reggi., Box 1725, Quebec, Que,
EMPLOYMENT WANTED
ENGLISH farm manager, married, 32, B.A. Agricniture (Cambridge), experi-enced arable, all livestock'," large Acreage, highest references. Einigrat-ing March, Desires post. Hughes c/o 52 Jasper Road, Beaconsfield, Quebec.
TEACHERS WANTED
TEACHER wanted immediately for Shining Tree Public 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.
FOR SALE
BODY SHOP
FOR SALE DOING MisIness for three Steady employees. Apply Box 221, Ansonville, Ontario.
GRAIN GROWERS
DO,, YOU NEED SEED?
STRONG, strawed, rust resistant Gar-ry oats, highest yielding In the On• tario tests each year for 3 consecu• tive years, also Rodney, Simcoe and the outstanding strong strawed Herta bar-ley. - also. Brant Barley, Montcalm,
Selkirk wheat and other standard varieties, Write for price lists and
descriptive literature. Place orders early for the grade and variety re.
quired and specify when to be shipped. while our good supply lasts. An analy. sis tag on every bag we sell of seed grains., We guarantee the purity, germination, quality, pedigree and satisfaction Alex M. Stewart & Son,
Ltd., Ansa Craig, Ont. "Your Pedigree 0 Seed House - sow the best out. yield the rest.'"
MEDICAL
FOR relief from piles us6 Certified Pile Ointment. Tube with applicator $L48. Enclose cheque or money order, Arrow Falcon Company, 4625 Grand. Blvd., Montreal.
"LEARN GRAPHOLOGY"! Handwriting, character analysis. Analyze yourielf, relatives and friends! Make big money anti/3,2(1dg strangers! Illustrated Ailey-sis Guide $1.00. Freed, 301 Vaughan, Winnipeg 2, Manitoba.
'MAKE more ne
w taking . magazine subscriptions,net.Y. renewals, gifta, LOW rates, high . commissions. For fUir.par• ticUlark KeydomPhillifia • Maga. zine Agency, 585 PortsMOutit AYeaue, KingSton, Ontario.
- • • - PLASTIC. FOAM (Fleitible) y3ensatioiiai -new graft- Material, You Cab create
beautiful gift iteina;or. .tigniohstrate• this Material tetYtinr Meal hobby. groups at a Profit, Demon'strator's . kit .$1, Postpaid.KIDDER MANUFACTURING CO. •138' Danforth' Ave,. Toronto.
.•. ......„.. -
REGISTERED Landrace boars for sale. At present there is a litter sired by Middlemuir Solid 18th and from War-wick Hybrid Sheila, only 5 boars left for sale out of the original litter. Boars are 3 months old and are $75. each. Apply Walnut Ridge Farms,, L. V. Martin & Son, Wallaceburg, Ont.
HOW TO REDUCE
A NEW Idea. A new way, Amazing
results, Write for details. Box 130.F. Donalda, Alta,
51,00 TRIAL offer. Twenty-five deluxe
personal requirements. eeatest catalogue Included, The Medico Agency, Box 22, Terminal "Q" Toronto Ont.
..7 •• SALESMAN WANTED
SALESMAN wanted. If you are call-ing, on farmers or if you can sell farmers chicks or turkey poults corm-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 Ter. onto, 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,
SWINE
MERRY MENAGERIE
,v3 A
'Would you mind making like
you're at bay? I hear it's it
noble sight!"
Vo4;17.41o7
SLEEP TO -NITS
SEDICIN tabtets taken according to,
directions is a safe way to induce sleep
or quiet the nerves when tens,. $1.00
All Drsig ,Stores sr Adrem Ltd., T S.
MOXON'S LINIMENT!
Sold in CANADA for over 50 years
Good for man or Beast Send $1.00 for-5-oz. Bottle, Postpaid
MOXON LINIMENT CO.
MT. CLEMENS, MICHIGAN,
U.S.A.
PEROXINE POWDER
BLACKHEADS
Don't squeeze Blackheads and leave ugly Scars - dissolve them ivith PEROXINE POWDER. Simple - Safe - Sure.
Cleanses the pores deep down, giving your skin vitality and charm. At your Druggist, Results guaranteed, Price
SMOKES
FOR CANADIAN
MILITARY PERSONNEL
serving With the
United Nationt Emergency
FOrce FOrce in the Middle East
.11i1901.er-the iiiVetteetiggedi ithodnei' 11SUsein dnalitine IMO the harbOr...at
Ilianipton, ',Va., 'after fest inn id prove her ited-Werihineiti 'Thei 'Ship, One of the. 'three ‘full-size d
irepliCat: Skips Which brought the firif set#lers to Jam estown, years age,
. made the: refire bi' proof :of'hee kiwi 0'64 In .the JattletteiWit 3tOth telee
brogan that higini April Isti
eOeeeee.eee'eeee
... ,., •
"STOPPED
•IN ADP&
.4r moniy bath "
Veik tkii of [nothing, cooling liquid PreScrIptiOn positively. relieves re* red itehaused by, eczema: rashes-,
ekt irrha ch tut ng.-.-7ot her itch troubles. GfeaSeletis, stairileii. 36/0 trial bottle
eider* or money bac. Dob't stiffen Mk • Year' druggist =for .141NSCRIPTIOS:
ISSUE 11. 107'
• - CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING . :
DPPORTOMITHIN. FOR MEN 'rAND -WOMEN . -
eitegAilee in magazine euesereptiene,
Write eor free use Free prieee to .our
customers..KilY4444141BPS 14PEBZITIC Agency. 585 Portemeeeti esuieel, etege oo, detarto,
Animal Acrobats
. „
Jack Burgess and richard,
Lilya were flying -low over an
ice-bound "Minnesota lake a
light plane not long no when a
1001.pound timber wolf leaped
,t1Pf clamped its jaws on one of
the, .plane's ekis, %mit brought. it
sma shing down;.
The only-casualti6S, fortunater,*
ly, were the plene and the arnbi-
Liao
Most' people thought it a ontsi),
in-a-lifetime a.cgiclent,, but am-
mats ere involved in such lethal
acrobatics year„ after year; and
't wide variety of them could
easily b'e'cliarged with attempted
:homicide, After shooting a deer,
Prend Utah bunter knelt Tar-
ran-like Over 'his "kill." The
not-sozdead creature kicked, hit
the trigger of..-the hunter's gun,
and shot him in the .thigh. While
in Texas, where everything is
different, a freshly-caught cate
fish flopping ar'iiehd in the bot-
toili of a "rbWboat sent a bullet
stertled-spertsman. • 1 •
' In Nortlf Dakota, several years
ago, 'a farmer ekas flying three
feet lebove„. the ground dusting
his crops when a jackrabbit with
delusions of grandeur gaVe a
mighty hop, hit, the roaring pro-
peller and grounded the plane, -
In Salisbury, Maryland, a
motorist submitted an odd, acci-
dent claim to the State Farm
Insurance Comi5any. He claimed
that his parked car had been
severely bitten by a horse, and
won a $5 settlement for the
damage.
Charles McDonough was fish
ing in the St. Lawrence River
When he hooked a beautiful pike.
After fighting 'and landing the
fish, McDonough exuberantly
'picked it up and gave it a kiss.
Not to be, outdone, the pike kiss-
ed, back, biting the fisherman in
the face.
Susan Reed,' an eight-year-old
girl from Southsea, England,
came home one day with a black
eye, "A polar bear hit me," she
told her mother gravely. When
little Susan refused to change
her story, Mrs. Reed investigated
. and disceyered that her daugh-
ter :was beieg quite truthful.
Seems she had tried to pet a
polar bear at a local circus and
been smacked with a heavy paw
for her familiarity. — From
CORONET Magazine.
BABY CHICKS
SPRING Bray bred-to-lay pullets for the early, good, heavy ,produgtion egg markets. Get our list. 'See the Wide choice breeds, crosses, 'spegials'' (Amer in-Cross • extra eggs low feed post; Pilch White Rocks-quick growing, Well rounded broilers) Bray Hatchery, 120 John N., Hamilton, Ont, FOOL ;your Driendsl Your letters re molest from Niagara Falls area 254
eagh, 7 for $1.09. Batherson, 19,1 Magairiley,, lieffalo 20, New York. "
,
SE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing
lleangnest, Tdih8onuifisaerldspor°f fessreneLfgard
McV. GreatestGrnduntAmeriSystem Illustrated catalog Free Write or Cali MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS
358 PloorB ranches:W" Toronto 44 King St. W,, Hamilton 72 Rideau St, Ottawa.
WE predict egg Prices Will, be eetter when it's top late to get early chicks, We predict, _a lot less chicks Will be sold this year, This. Is the year to buy and. he sure to purchase the, right breeds far the lab you want the chicks to do, Our beat Los eggs Ames in Cross series 400 a terrific layer, also Tweddle Lay More series T-1.00,
T-110,„ T-120, T.130, Write for fell details, Also dual purpose breeds, broiler breeds, turkey poults, Catalogue.
TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD, FERGUS ONTARIO
BOOKS
Tunney Down
:for 14, Soconds
e efered, Pave Barry stepped
• in-eideGene ;Turmey slumped to
theecanvels„ badly hurt from Jack
fiiiiPsgx",s .two-Banded attack,
-neutral corner, Jack,"
Harry, ald.
• ettI ,",4 ietay herenapped Derne-
tey, iyith
Tienney lied 'fallen directly
over my press row seat and I
heard- the exchange between
Dempsey and Barry clearly, The
referee had come up, arm teady
to start the count, then realized
Dempsey was not moving. He
took Jack by the arm, but it was
a couple of valuable seconds Ae-
fore Dempsey cleared out and
the count could be started 'Writes
Nat Fleischer, America's leading
fight authority.
This was, of course, the seventh
round of the second Dempsey-
Tunney fight at Chicago, Sept.
22, 1927. For most of six rounds,
Dempsey was in• trouble 'With'
Tunney. He simply could not
catch Gene and was taking a
good laCing While trying it.
But here in the seventh, the
lathed killing power in• Demp-
sey's fists. had exploded. He
hurt Tunney with a left hook,
then a short right fogged Gene's
brain. A;terrible battering stack-
ed' Tunney against the ropes,
where he took as murderous a
left hook as ever seen, then a
series of short rights before go-
ing down.
It was to be 14 seconds before
Tenney came off the floor. That
was my count and that is the
way it will• remain in my his-
tory. Others have argued that
Tunney was down for nearly
30 seconds.
Fourteen it was, and it prob-
ably was the most valuable space
of time in. Tunney's life. Demp-
sey wanted things his way—the
old way standing directly
over a fallen opponent and hit.
ting him the moment his knee
left the canvas. •
Referee Barry wanted it ac-
cording to the rules. So Tun-
ney, trying to clear his head,
came to one knee and waited
as Barry, five seconds late in
starting the count, reached nine.
Then Gene got up. And this
was not a dull-minded, desper-
ate fighter who reached his feet.
The Tunney who came off the
floor was, instead, a smart
fighter who ranks with boxing's
all-time best as a master of the
science.
Gene started circling the ring.
His legs moved, moved, moved.
And he lured Dempsey into a
mistake. The old Dempsey would
have piled into him, both hands
shooting. But the Dempsey who
lost this fight tried to stalk the
circling Ttihney. He followed
Gene's monotonous eireleseeand
after' ea while found he didn't
have -the „speed to catch his man.
Tunney would not,: gamble.
Weakened, he would have been
no match_ for Dempsey. So he
kept pecking with that left jab
and moving on those beautifully
conditioned legs of his.
Tunney lasted the round and
in the eighth, he broke out of
his' pecking with a shott right
chop which put Dempsey on the
floor, Gene Turiney, heavyweight
champion, was back in stride ,
again.
The rest of the fight had Tun- -
ney in command: Dempiey won
only three of the 10 round's:
There were 104,943 fans 'at •
Chicago's Soldier Field that
night.. They' paid, a tremendous
$2,658,660 . to witness the battle.
And"the thrill from those 14
seconds still carries over in my
memory.
WE pay up to $5,000 for old books, Catalogue 250. A.merican Book, Room 301, 1871/2 Queen. Street East, Toronto. PATENTS 1
FETHERSTONHAUGH & Corn p a n y, Patent Attorneys. Established 1890 000 University Ave.,, Toronto, Patents all countries.
• EDUCATIONAL INSTRUCTION SCHOOLS and. COLLEGES
PERSONAL
HYGENIC supplies for men, Our con-fidential price list sent , to you by mail in plain envelope First Class Mail, In-chide name, age and address, send to RAINBOW SALES 171 Harbord Street, Toronto.
How Can I?
By Anne Ashley
• —
Q. How can I remove iodine
stains?
A. If iodine has been spilled
on wearing apparel, cover the
stains With white laundry soap
and allow it to remain in cold
water for at least two hours.
It can then be laundered in the
usual fashion and the' stains will
'wash out.
Q. How can I prevent grease
from popping?
A. Sprinkle a little flour in
the frying pan and it will stop
the spattering at once. Also try
inverting a colander over the
pan, removing it only when
turning.
Q. What will loosen dirt when
washing?
A, One of the most useful
aids on wash day is turpentine.
It will loosen dirt without the
slightest injury to fabrics.
Q. How can I clean plaster
statues?. A
By using a thin paste of
fuller's earth and cold water,
and spreading on with a soft
brush. Remove the fuller's
earth with tepid soapsuds and
rinse in the same temperature
water. Dry with a soft cloth.
.Q. How can I prevent ingrow-
ing toenails?
A. Stodkings which are too
short in 'the foot are very often
the cause of ingrowing toenails.
See that both-the stockings and
the, shoes are not to short.
Q. 110w can I remove clogged
ink from steel pens?
A. Dip them in a strong solu-
tion of ammonia water. This
softens' the ink and it can be
easily wiped off.
Q. How can I save time in hang-
ing wash during cold weather?
A. Try pinning all small ar-
tides, • such as handkexchiefs
-and eollers, 'to the towels and
larger pieces before going out
to hang the wash.
Q. 'How can I clean white kid
gloves?
-A. Pure alcoliel is preferable
to gasoline for cleaning white
kid 'gloves. It dries quickly and
without' unpleasant odor of
gasoline; -
(14, How can I tell if an egg is
fresh?
. As egg is indicated by a
rough surface. and. how quickly
it dries_ when it is taken from
boiling wa ter..__ Q'. What Can be done to it •
*raw hat, that drifts at the
1"iAni? A. Sponge Well with the white.
Of art egg that has been thor-'
otighly .beaten., Then place one
a ,het. stand _to dry.
Q. How cart I prevent poach-
ed, eggs from sticking to the
pant?
A. When': poaching eggP,L
' sprinkle' telt in the water. he-
fbre 'the -eggs are' broken into
This- Treirents,the eggs from
Sticking 46 -the ,bottom 'of the
Skillet Old the,. Skillet" can be
eP•PY
HiGilLINE-:-Ift a high climb to
this telephone 'in a firehouse,
as Fireman ' Robert Mangan
demonstrates. The old floor
was ripped out•to be replaced;
and a 14,foot ladder offers ..
the Only access to the, pay
phone for personal,: calls.
Setitit.:400 •
I-X010kt.
:CIGARETTES
11,* dayi meat "people skiiirk: :ender . pressure, worry,more, sleep . less. This "
atriie en body afid hisin inaket.4i4thcal: 7
'fihiesi' easier to 161 e birder Ai tegAimi. .
Tedir's. tithe tieing; lenteted resistance,
overwork, -*Ohl any of these hay idled
noriiiit kidney iitien. Whed kidneys get
out of eider, it Ceti- and, SrAstes
remain in the lYileiM ;TANI backache,
disturbed Yost,. that heavy...
heeded feeling biten That's the
time to take Dotle's Kidney
stimulate the kidneys 'ketion.
When veiled better—skteii better work
Ifietteir,. Ask for Dodd's, kileee Pills it
lit drug counter:
onyt6thwe Macdonald Brand
Postage incleided
Mali &deeded remittance tat
OVERSEAS DEPARTMENT
PAAtDONAiD TOBACCO INC.
F.O. Bost 410, Piace.SPAretteAr,
Montreal, Out.
This otter ta
GoVerittierit
WORLD OF ELECTRONS
OkEN8DiVENTURI AGO
.December 18th was a tenten-
„erst of great note in the world
of Sdiande and indeed in- the
wider world too, for on that day
'in '1857, was born the Mari who
-first'discovered the existence
,s „arid Mare of electrons' . He was
Reel* J, .ThOthsdiiof 'Canto
bridge University, Ills re-
searches set, Off a series of *fele,
ilier 'ciieeteVetiee and itiVeetigee
e Vora' that are still going an.
brie of TheiriSen'e ' .atudenta
*IA tie* 'tealatideie
EitieSt Rutherford, who atteri.
Werdt,elideanie '
He, flee ,epeciel• interest for”
danddiapS in that, lie Served-tot"
a time a Frefeetor of
at -11tediiI . IfniVetaity..Ritther4
got anothergreit':seteritifie' •
'figure; 4'rederick Soddy, were-
ploneers Iii the field :of radio,
il'otti were knighted let
their services' tie Settee& and
medidirie.
:te