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The Brussels Post, 1957-07-24, Page 3SLEEP TO-NIGHT AND RELIEVE NERVOUSNESS. AUDI TO-MORROW! YOU CAN SEDICIN tablets taken according to directions is a safe way to induce sleep or quiet the nerves when tense. . $1.00 - 4.95 SEDICIN Drug Stores Onfyl ISSUE 30 — 1957 When Skin itch Drives You MAD Here is a clean stainless pene- trating antiseptic—known all over Canada as MOONE'S EMERALD OIL—that dries right in and brings swift sure relief from the almost unbearable itching and distress. Its action is so powerfully pene- trating that the itching is prompt- ly eased, and with continued use your troubles may soon be over. Use EMERALD OIL night and morning as directions advise for one full week. It is safe to use and failure is rare indeed. MOONE'S EMERALD OIL can be obtained in the original bottle at any modern drug Store. AGENTS. WANTED ee, YOUR OWN etessi MEN or women, can work your own- hours, and make profile up '0 600.4. tiellintl exclusive houseware products and :appliances, No competition, net Mailable in stores, and they are a necessity in every home. Write at once for free colour catalogue, .snow- ing retail prices plus eonfidential, Wholesale price list Murray Sales, 3622 St, Lawrence Montreal, ARTICLES FOR SALE grad E exclusiveren $ Fencing gia. Soccer43 :d i fferent Football games $2,08, Helicopter, files up to 60 feet 52.98. Small compact portable Im. mersion heater with case 41.95 Post, Psaelidie,chCatsiTnmte cieldit.reati Romeo Sales $135 BABY CHICKS ORDER, ahead for your broilers. Or for Ames ill;Crese. Have wide choice started chicks, exempt shipment. Bray Hatchery, 120 John N., Hamilton. IT'S not too late to order your 1957 Glitches and Turkey Faults and it's not too early to order your Chicks and Turkey Poults for 1958. We hatch every week in the year and hatch only top quality chicks, for eggs or meat, Catalogue. TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. FERGUS ONTARIO BOOKS PLUME Annual, 1957, Illustrated. Big- ger and Better, 70 pages. Exhibition Poultry, Wild Birds, 51 Pestpaid. Plume, Iroquois, Ontario, FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE FOR SALE CAVE MAN — George Kendall stores some records in a file 205 feet beneath the ground in a former limestone mine at Butroom, Pa. 'The atomic-age record room has been made for storing records of the Westing- house Electric Corp. Kendall and three other workers care for some 105,000 file boxes. NEW Mildmay Threshers, used thrern- ers, grain throwers. Patent straw cut- ters and shredders, fits all makes of threshers, your grain and straw put in the barn at less cost, 85 years of pro- duction. Get our prices and terms den livered anywhere- in ,Ontario. Lobsinger Bros., Mildmay GRAIN AUGERS Save labour with a 4-inch SUPER SCOOPER. Basic length 11 ft. with $.ft. - 10-ft. extensions to make 16 ft. or 21 ft. or longer. For further information write or phone .Lorne A. Downharn, Box 168, Woodstock, Ont. Phone Lennox 7-6773„ GENERAL Store for sale, $15,000, South- ern Ontario Village. Brick. Corner Lot. Business in operation. Owner retiring. TerMs. Box 161, 123 eighteenth Street, New Toronto, Ont. SACRIFICING complete business, home, car trailer. Retail stock, furniture. No special training needed. One or more families could make good living on spare time. No competition. Prices ridi- culously slashed. Going to coast must sell by September. Write or phone. Alvin Keen, 58 Nelson Street, Barrie, Ontario. ...eletteitett"""' --eeetee MERRY MENAGERIE "Look, dear—I've had It per- Inanentl" store rule that girls of the staff should wear brown, dresses. De- termined to look smart, liorah splurged on a brown satin frock only to discover that store dresses had to be of brown cot- ton or wool, "You will have to go unless you follow 'the rules," Noreh was reminded. "I've gone!" she retorted. For a time she worked in a little gown shop in Birminghaerl, and maybe she was just one of many girls dreaming that one day they might marry million- aires. \, Norah didn't marry a million- aire. She was twenty-eight when, at a party,, she met Clem. Cellinghare, a director of a wine firm. The couple fell deeply in love, and soon were married. Their marriage lasted for sev- en years, affording perfect hap- piness, and they had a son, Lance. During the war Norah drove an ambulance, but apart from that her only interests in life were her husband and her son Norah was stunned with deep grief when Clem died, But he had told her: "If anything hap- pens to me, you should remar- ry." He had introduced her to Sir William Collins, who had lost his own wife only two years before. The widow and the wi- dower found companionship in their mutual grief,, and they were married; but the union of these two lonely people was to prove tragically brief, ,for,. Sir William died a year later. The gay Lady Docker remem- bers how, in those days, she used to cry herself to sleep. Her life entirely changed once more, however, when she met Sir Ber- nard at a charity dance. The Collins money had come from jam, pickles, tobacco.— a department store and other in- vestments. Bernard had inheri- ted an estimated £3,000,000 from his father, chief of a railway car company; and he had mar- ried a film actress, but divorced her in 1934. Thus Norah had not always been rich and Bernard had not always been happy. Norah knew that Bernard was the man for her when she saw him come home one day from a shooting expedition, with his` arm affectionately round her sons' shoulder. It was the boy himself who asked them whe- ther they wanted to marry. To-day young Lance is tht fo- cus of the family. Lady Decker is not ashamed to live the full life that is every woman's sec- ret dream. And Sir Bernard in- dulgently shares the fun with the air of a man who knows deep, inward tranquility. EASY ANSWER A man browsing in a pet shop was asked by an attractive young clerk if she could assist him. "Well," the customer replied, "I'm thinking of getting a pet for a client of mine. H. is a semi-invalid; can't go out. Man about 60; very wealthy; nice chap. He has no relatives — so the idea of a pet came to me," The girl considered — then brightening, said, "I think I have just the thing!" "Good!" said the man. "What kind of pet de you suggest?" Replied the young lady: "Me!" "A little over-weight, dear?" inquired Mr. Henpeck of his wife as she stepped off the ma- chine. "No," she replied, "it's just that according to this chart I should be six inches taller." Birthing Was A Serious Business. At a quiz for teenagers in the north of gngland recently, One of the panel was asked: "Who invented the bathing machine?" ele didn't knew the answer, He also _confessed that he had never teen one. That's not surprising, for they have practically disappeared from the world's bathing beaches — those old - tashienecl, wheeled contraptions. Who invented the bathing ma- chine? The credit usually goes to. a man named Benjamin Beale, Shocked by the 'Indecorum", of what he saw on a Kent beach some 220 years ago, he had the idea of a "horse-drawn caravan" which would make it possible for "modest ladies to take a dip without indelicacy." Fame was all he got for his idea, for he spent all his money in his at- tempts to popularize the bathing machine, and his successors reap- ed the harvest. In Beale's first machines women bathers were protected from pry- ing eyes by a screen which en- abled them to get into the sea and out again without being seen at all. A holidaymaker was charged 4s. a week for the use of a machine or one guinea for six weeks. Victorian bathing machines were more daring than Beale's. They dispensed with the screen and were also much smaller. In some later machines there was even a fireplace and a chimney so that the bather might warm up after a dip. The first king to use a bathing machine wan George III, at Wey- mouth. When he bathed for the first time another machine filled with fiddlers was sent into the sea to play the National Anthem as he took the plunge. So This Is Justice? Mrs. William Evans caused a stir in Brockton Superior Court when she stood up in the crowd- ed courtroom and shouted "So this is justice!" at the judge, Mrs. Evans was all worked up, apparently. She had just watch- ed the trial of the man who had run over and killed her 13- year-old daughter last February. The man was found guilty of drunken and dangerous driving. ft was brought out that he had a previous reputation for drunk- en driving, although no official action had ever been taken against him. The district attorney and the assistant district attorney both recommended a jail sent- ence. - The judge, however, fined him $150. Other than that, he will go free. Fortunately, under state law, his license will be revoked—for a time, anyway. But the case brings up the whole question of the way Massachusetts courts dispense justice in auto accident cases. Sometimes their verdicts are hard to explain or under- stand. —Worcester Telegram If you use baking soda only for cooking you're neglecting a valuable household aid. Among the many chores it tackles is cleaning the refrigerator, polish- ing tarnished silver, cut-glass and jewelry and removing grease and food stains from the top of the stove. In these days of low-cut gowns, it takes a lot of will power to look a woman in the eye. BLOOMER Gliti,,ekeitinitterit .ref the (`Bloomer Girl" 'Styles of the, .'kecsti this Haremn shirt, which' over a tight hemline, is blonde June Cunningham's eitaite foe festive Oceasion In lebridfin, She was the tenet-Dal style While working. OS it pro' :thine Seller at the pretiiiere Of • new movie. A Family Adventure Plan now to enjoy one of the greatest events of your lifetime . . the Canadian National Exhibition, the tarsi- est annual exhibition in the world, opening August 23rd. Fourteen glorious days of exciting entertainment for the whole family. BOB HOPE, World-famed comedy star, headlines the lavish Evening Grandstand Spectacular every night at 8;15 p.m. . . climaxed by a gigantic fireworks display. ORDER YOUR TICKETS NOW MAIL ORDERS CLOSE AUG. 19, 1957, ' RINGLING BROS, and BARNUM & BAILEY CIRCUS The exciting Afternoon Grandstand Show. FIRST WEEK ONLY Aug. 16, 27, 28, 29, 30 and 31, at 2:30 p.m. NEW MULTI-MILLION DOLLAR QUEEN ELIZABETH BUILDING OPENS THIS YEAR IRISH GUARDS BAND, World-celebrated band from Eng- land daily on the Bandshall. INTERNATIONAL AIR SHOW Sept. 6 and 7 only. SPORTS GALORE—Canada's Olympic troining plan. VISIT CANADA'S SPORTS HALL OF FAME ' WORLD'S LARGEST AGRICULTURAL BUILDING NATIONAL HORSESHOW Aug. 23, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29 INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITS —The famed products of touts= tries all over the world. MILE OF MIDWAY WORLD OF WOMEN FOOD PRODUCTS BUILDING — Contra of attrectlor, fat almost three millioh people every year CANADIAIN ATIONAL EXHIBITI N Ati6Usr /3 TO SEPTEIMER 7 dANAbA ON: :b1tOLAY Witttit, HIRAM E. Medal* eresteleet e General Manager eeit va FOR SALE MODERN GENERAL STORE and home. Thrifty business, paved eighway, ilydro, telephone, Bus ,Services, School. Down Payment '54,000, Sacrificing owing to health condition. Apply E. suceeey, Redbridge, Ontario, GOATS PUREBRED SAAEN GOATS IMPOrt-ed sire. JOHNSTON ORM. R,11,20 MITCHELL, ONT, MECHANICAL" PARTS, REPAIRS;. MOTALOY RING AND VALVE JOB wbno you drive for only $8.00. For ears — trucks tractors, etc. Une conditionally guaranteed, Effective for life of car. Motaloy saves you money, Manley Sales Co., 34 West Street, Coderich, Ontario, Dealer Inquiries invited, MEDICAL, PROVEN REMEDY — EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 33$ Elgin, Ottawa $1,25 Express Prepaid FETHERSTONHAUGH & C o m p any Patent Attorneys, Established 1890, 600 University Ave., Toronto. Patents, all countries. POST'S ECZEMA SALVE- BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes arid weeping skin troubles, roses Eczema Salve will not disap- point you. Itching, scaling and burn- ing eczema; acne, ringworm pimples and foot eczema will respond readile 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 2865 St. Clair Avenue East TORONTO OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profession; good wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates. Illustrated Catalog Free. Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS 358 Bloor St. Toronto Branches: 44 King St. W., Hamilton 72 Rideau St., Ottawa EARN more Bookkeeping, Salesman. ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les- sons 500 Ask for free circular No. 33. Canadian Correspondence Courses, 120 Bay Street, Toronto, EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY OILS, GREASES, PAINTS AND Colloidal Graphite Additives. Dealers wanted to sell to Farmers, 'Meet Owners and Service Stations. Write Warco Grease & Oil Limited, Toronto 3, Ont. PATENTS EARN big money. Sales background essential. Exceptiohal earnings pos- sible to qualified men or women, No investment. Write your qualifications fully for free details. Acme Distribu- ting Service, Washburn, Illinois, LEARN professional "Floristry" and "Greenhouse" by mail, Complete ,courses; leo brings literature. Write Walter Giessler, Eganyille, Ontario. $1.0Q TRIAL, offer. Twenty-five deluxe Personal requirements. Latest cam logue ineluded, The Medico Agency, Box gs, Terminal ".Q," Toronto, Ont,. WAY Bernina :Bald-Headed? Gearell, teed preventive, Mail 4 hairs for mine roscopy, 47 years experience, Full charge only $1.00. Dr. botnam, 1001 Reecho, Cisco, Texas, MEN save money Hygenie Supplies, Write Nourr price, Answer sent by First Class Mail privately, No oblige, Hon. Send name, addrese, age.-Must hs 21, Write Rainbow Sales, 171 ILizsberd Street, Toronto 4, Ontario, HAWK JUNCTION, Algoma Central Railway, Ontario, requires 2 teachers, male or female, Principal, to teach Grades 6, 7 and 8. Min. salary $3,000, Teacher for Grades 3, 4 and 5, MM, salary $2,600. A pleasant railway coin, munity 164 miles north of Sault Ste, Marie. Apply to. Mrs. Ed. Metvedt, Secretary Hawk Junction, Ontario Please state age, experience, qualifi cations and any special interests. eWiele TEACHERS WANTED ITCH O efimsece Pdo Heailkss—h Quick! Stop itching of Insect bites. heat rash, eczema, hives, pimples. scales, scabies, athlete's foot and other externally caused &do troubles. Use quick-acting. soothing, antiseptic D. D. D. PRESCRIPTION. Greaseless, stainless. Stops itch or money back. Don't suffer. Your drug- gist has D. D. D. PRESCRIPTION. 1-9 HOUSE OF CARLO INTRODUcES FOR WOMEN OVER 30, NEW LIFE and vi- tality I Feeds lifeless skin, feels, looks younger. Fades away tell-tale wrinkles, crows feet. NEW LIFE: Firms flabbY throat, chin muscles. Send for a 3-oz, jar, $3.00, plus 11.00 postage. New quick 3-minute, facial pack — MINT KOOL, 3-oz. tar $3.00, plus $1.00 postage. MIN/ KOOL Face Lotion, $1.50, plus 50e, SUMMER SPECIAL I Get all three fos $8.00 complete. MADAME JAYE'S, 141.35 - 72 Gres., Flushing 67, New York. KINDROCHET Imported Landraee for quality and type, for the new breeder we can supply unrelated stock and fen commercial try a Kindrochet 130a1 and see the difference. Apply; Joseph. Bernard, Waterford, Ont. MANY have asked us if it is true that Landrace have more ribs than .othei hogs. Yes, it is true, Most other breech have 14 ribs, Average for Landrace 16, and some with 18. Eye_n in crossing in. volving Landrace Wehigher rib count prevails consistently. It means monk pork chops per carcass, We have on a of the largest and the best imported herds of Landrace in Canada, Wean, ling, four month old, six month old sows and boars, guaranteed in pig sows. Serviceable boars for immediate delivery, All stock registered. Cate; logue. FERGUS LANDRACE SWINE FAIUd FERGUS ONTARIO PERSONA/- .CIGARETTESI Tar rind nicotine, eon' tent, Your brand revealed by scientific lainerat.ory report. Send brand nape And 41.00. Researchers, 40 .Oreee, Clifton, New Jersey. .7•1•1••••••••••-, CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING: ; Lady Docker ,believes that a woman's first duty is to be a woman, and look as glamorous as she can afford to. Most people find her gaiety quite infectious, and she makes it very evident that she thor- oughly enjoys being a Cinder- ella of real life. To understand Norah Docker you have to remember that her father died when she- was only sixteen, and that she and her mother faced a bitter, struggle to keep things going. They had to move from their big house at Edgbaston, and young Norah Turner helped her mother run a small hotel. Hard times continued and Norah thought they could do better in London. It was during the dance-mad 'twenties, and Norah fancied her chances as a professional dance teacher. She spent far more than she could afford on a course of lessons with Santos Casani. "Norah was my best dancer," he recalled. His ambitious pupil, however, soon discovered that there were far too many dance teachers and too few pupils. Living with her mother in a tiny flat in. Bayswater, Norah knew what it was to be uncom- fortably poor. She took a job in a big department store, selling hats, with a sales commission of a penny in the pound. She was told there was a „ .. . . . WEDDING DAY — Cleveland Indian's pitcher Herb Score and , his bride, the former Nancy McNamara, smile after their mar- riage. The southpaw's right eye showed no signs of the injury he received when he was hit by a line drive in a game with the Yankees. Secret of The Fabulous. Lady Decker "I haven't a million," claims Lady Docker, "I never have had a million!" Once, when asked how much money she had, she confessed, "About £150,000—and that's better than a slap *in the face with a wet fish." Of course, nobody is particu- larly interested in the precise sum lovely Norah Docker is worth. The world is content to have her just as she is—ecstati- cally demonstrating how to play marbles slapping faces at Monte Carlo and always fabulously blending caviare and contro- versy. It is common knowledge, how- ever that her first husband left £177,500 and that her second husband left £955,000. Death duties depleted these fortunes, but they may have been re- trieved since then by shrewd ihvestments. Twice widowed, Norah Docker has known heartbreak as well as happiness. She also has known what it is to toil in a shop, sel- ling hats, for fifty shillings a week. Maybe that is the secret of her vivid appeal. Even before she had money, she was afraid of nobody and nothing. Now that she has cash, her unconventional fun daunts the acid brigade. There was that wonderful oc- casion when Lady Docker visited a coal mine and afterwards told the miners, "Now you must come to see me!" Sure enough, thirty - three cloth - capped straight - talking colliery workers were duly ush- ered, aboard Sir Bernard Dock- er's luxury yacht Shemara, the largest British private yacht registered at Lloyd's. "It's a simple ship, really," Norah Docker explained, as she showed her guests around the opulent staterooms, the seven tiled bathrooms and the deep- carpeted lounge with its huge, open fireplace. She knew they would thoroughly enjoy this private peek. Liberally they feasted on sal- mon and lobster, cold roast pheasant, three saddles of lamb, a baron of beef, game pie, chick- en and duck. The English Chan- nel was afterwards littered with scores of empty champagne bot- tles. Perhaps the highlight of the Occasion was the delightful spec- tacle of Lady Docker herself, in bell-bottom slacks, dancing a. hornpipe while the guests roared applause and Sir Bernard beam- ed ,bland approval. She made a host of friends, also, when she answered the chal- lenge issued by the girls of a Yorkshire factory's marble team, Wearing a glamorous gown of peatock blue for the "reet do," Norah showed unexpected abil- ity; to win a decisive nineteen pointe to twelve, arid became Leh- official women's marble cham- pion of the world. One tan have nothing but, ad- miration fen. the way Lady Dec- ker rallied to her husband's cause during the 11.S.A. contro- versy. She autographed Mere than ten thousand photographs Of hereelf to accompany letters she sent to'stockholders; The fabulous Norah gained immense popularity but shock- ed the snobs by eigning auto- graph-books at the Royal Ascot race meeting: "if it gives a little hepteleess," she said defiantly, "T don't care What some people think," Arid she startled millions of viewers when she appeared 'on the tele- vision screen Wearing jewellery that looked like a queen's t en sent "Whet de yoti think?" she bubbled. "It cost only £3, 4s. ad." Men fkink r -tomorrow? yr-a-dice trit4rgeott ir :vet. -ete ee IctOYLARs's \11 cl 1—R Ar tN mE AG NR T 4. `4\toMottION ottse o f Sect' 9fatrt t he Pistillets thiee