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The Brussels Post, 1958-11-12, Page 9• :•!'"""Z MONTREAL 'TRAGEDY—Firemen are pouring water on ,one pf a row of CJ partment buildings which were swept by explosions and a fire in Montreal. One body had been recovered but 14 people were reported missing in the three damaged buildings. AGENTS WANTED GO INTO BUSINESS for youraelf., pell our _exciting , _beesle wares, Watches and other products Out lonnti: in, stores, NO competition, Prof- its up to 500%. Write now fo,r, ',see colour eittalegtio and Separate con, dential whelesale price. sheet, Murray Sales, 11322 St. Lawrence, Montreal,: BABY CHICKS' DUALm jtwo Leghorn. Ames and Leghor punets; aleo heavy cockerels, limited quantity, prompt shipment from Bray; or hatched tihorder, 14-10, Weelt. Ames, pullets, immediate ishiprnent. !Order Decernber-JannarY broilers now. 'See'` local agent, or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North, Hemiltoil. , FEMALE HELP Nty+NTED. CAPABLE girl for general housework, fond, of;„ehildren, friendly home, Sal- arY" to 'Start $80.00, Write with refer- ences and photograph, Mrs. B, Breg- man, 11 Model Ave., Downsview, On. tario. (Toronto). FOR SALE . LINDSAY AREA FARM TROUT 'stream 200 acres with good buildings, $5,000 cash, full price $14,- 500. Don Waterman, Realtor, Lindsay, Ontario. PRECIOUS; Rare White. Jade, Black Garnet, Agatized Cedar, Gem: Obsi-, dian, Barite Rosettes, seven more unique, beautiful specimens, $2.00. Old Prospector, Box 105, Canyon, Califor., nia, INSTRUCTION ARTICLES FOR SALE BRAID YOUR OWN CARPET. 10 lbs. 1 yd. long, new writ/lien strips, select. ed for rug making, assorted colours, W enough for 3 x 5 ft., $6.50. Remit 41.00 balance collect. Refund, Manson OW, 35 Britain St., Toronto, WHOLESALE PRICES TOYS, Gifts, salon Appliances and Household items from shoe laces to Transistor ,Radios, Write for free cats,- legue. John Lyons Imports, 101 On- tario Street Port „Hope Ontario. EARN more! Bookkeeping, Salesman. ship. Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les. sons 500. Ask for free circular No. 33. Canadian Correspondence Courses 1290 Bay Street, Toronto FREE INSTRUCTIVE BIBLE LITERA- TURE. POSTAGE APPRECIATED. John Olsen, Prelate, Sask. LIVESTOCK POLLED ShOrthorns. Runs lied males. Top quality, Highest rate Of gain; Walnut Farms, Shedden, Ont. PUREBRED Oxford Down rams and, ewes all ages, also North country Cheviot ram lambs, Ernest Talton, 11.11, 3, Walkerton, Ont: Carruthers ScourTablets ARE an inoxpensive and quick treat. meet for the pinsT SIGN OF SCOURS. IN QAL'VES. Give 0 tablets every 0 hourp' up to 5 doses. 50 tablets for 52.25, ISO's for 54,00, Purchase from. your druggist, or mail order to CA.RATJTHERS DRUGS LTD, ! Lindsay, Opt, 'MEDICAL GOOD ADVICE! EVERY OR N SUFFERER Of RHEUMATIC PAINS EURITIS SHOULD sae DIXON'S REMEDY, MUNRO'S DRUG STORE, 335 Elgin, Ottawa. $1.25 Express Collect. POST'S , ECZEMA SALVE „ BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles. Post's.Eozema,Salve will not disappoint Yell, Itching, scaling and burning ecze. ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless odorless ointment regardless 9f 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 BIBLE DISTRIBUTOR FAMILY Bibles, Books, Mottoes. BIBLE-TRACT DISTRIBUTORS Box 15, Stratford, Ontario. LEARN AUCTIONEERING. Term soon. Free catalogue. Reisch Auction Col, lege, Mason City, Iowa, America, BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant, dignified profession; soon wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates. America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free, Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 Bloor St. W., Toronto Branches: 44 King St., W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa PATENTS FETHERSTONHAUGH & Company Patent Attorneys, Established 1890, 600 University Ave., Toronto Patents all countries, PERSONAL WRITERS! AUTHOR of more than 1,000 published stories now offers personal assistance to beginners. Write for particulars. C. V. Tench. P.O. Box 580, Vancouver, B.C. $1.00 TRIAL offer. Twenty-five deluxe personal . requirements. Latest cata- logue included. The Medico Agency, Box 22 Terminal "Q" Toronto, Ont. POULTRY & LIVESTOCK KIMBERCHIKS recently won 1st. Minnesota Random Sample 'Egg Lay- ing Tests /earning $2.48 indome over feed and chick cost 'including pullet salvage value. This unbiased test indi- cates profitability of K-137 as a layer producing large white eggs in vol- ume. Save $1.00 per hundred by order- ing before January 15th for delivery anytime. Also' other egg breeds: White Leghorn X Rhode Island Red, Rhode Island Red, Rhode Island Red X Light Sussex, Light Sussex X Rhode Island Red. Broiler chicks: Vantress X Nichols 108, Vantress X Nichols 12, Vantress X Arbor Acres White Rock. Nichols 108 ,Cockerels. Turkey Broil- ers, Roasting Turkeys, Imported, Reg- istered Landrace ,Swine, Registered, Accredited Aberdeen Angus cows with, calves, Bred heifers, Bull calves. Cata- logue. - TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. FERGUS ONTARIO. TEACHERS WANTED SUBURBAN Montreal, 2 Roman Catho- lic teachers, grades 7 and 8, ladies, qualified and experienced. Excellent conditions. P. E. Griffin, Roman Catholic School Board of St. Laurent, St..-:Lhurent' Que. MERRY MENAGERIE ADULTS! Personal Rubber Goods! 2$ assortment for $1.00. Finest quality, tested, guaranteed. Mailed in plain sealed. package plus free Birth Con- trol booklet and catalogue of supplies. Western Distributors, Box • 24-TF, Regina, Sask. SKIIER DICKSON takes 1000 ft. back drop in 10 seconds. Outdoor Interests, Goodwood, Ont. THIS -S2-FOOT LONG filichlne ' In Ford's Lima, Ohio, plant automatically drills the oil system in a crankshaft in one con- tinuous operation. LARGISTfAtoifil. fury equal to "the fOrce of some' 20,000 tons. TNT cadldn'tbe contained '80 feetentrdergeotind` at the end of gs A,6994-fsont ittinnel , . It churned ,upwardclOud of radio- active dust-frOiiiI/WfrOOr' of' the ::',iklevcicici,NDesert- in wake. of -the sitgege,sternan-mode underground temTlosion,, ever 'to .h,e t•"Sabi has made him a partnr- in the business;" ISSUE 47• .1958 -1- * AUTOMATION KEY TO PROFITS CLASSIFIED .ADVERTISING ay /DOTICHAS I,ARSEN NE* ;Staff (Correspondent tc eDES an, effort Was Made to ntT prove quality control through automation. techniqees, Fauity tterigines and pnrts were euteinae &ally jerked oft the lines. 'This effort has had great suc- cess „The number of "bugs" has been drastically reduced and, the, real '"lemon" virtually eliminat- ed. (GM used automation for this purpose, too, espeeially on Olds- ,AutomatiOn of production lines 'turning .oat car transmissions is 'one of the big developments this year, Ford has a. new line turn- ing out front-end suspension systems That drastically reduces -manpower, The assembly operation has stubbornly resisted the encroach- ment of man-replacing machines. But the hint Of radicaPnew ap- spreeches to auto building might lees, the :answer to solving this prolelem, _experts are predicting, ne of ,lhe big problems autenriation is•- flies way it has tended to freeze product designs: production experts admit. Auto. rnation ,machinery , is expensive eomplex 'and difficult to install, This tends to dictate fewer changes in models each year. Car makers have -tried to over- come this difflealtY with flashy Importance Of Youth Leadership The youpger generatipn has been P0Iled (the beat $enera,' They take si beating, all right, Where you and I ran ponies or a Chugging Model-T, they let off steam in modern cars which mar., der , , all too often, What's more they're smarter than we were in most ways, They should be, They are better educated, And better papers, Listen to radios ,and see • televisipn which we haveln our day. . Today's youngsters should be Smarter , and they are, But none -of this means we— ' the adults" don't -have an added responsibility, top,.. It is that Ofs,farnishing lead- - TYEITROIT OWN) —,Auto- ma.tion 'progress 'in !this !ear town has become 'a bigger secret than the •StYling of. mesa Yeal"La Triedels. The eniblie eventually sees the new models, But 'if 'the ,auto makers 'have their way Ilse full details 4of ;how irnaChipes 'are xe- plating \werkers (automation— will never be told, :Antornation was ;,a eentral issue ilia the recent ilabne !nego- tiations. n has been xespongible for 706 Wildcat strikes thrown at (Chrysler during the past couple Of years. itt 'is also credit- ed with haVin'g saved (Chrysler from near tinandial 'disaster this past year, Automatic* is still turning Lis hidden sources of profits in :the s alintittetry. And the experts 'chilli that It holds the ;hope of same day ending ,the inflationgint epiral in the, industry. Jfew, FilltD:lalsoiscontracts call for about a seven-cents-per-hour *neer.increase. each Year to coMPens sate workers for the expecta increase in productivity result- ing from automation. But the in is confident of accom- plishing far more than this in rt,„ ILI A 0, -• Arian A Experts On. The Job *4, rI that he could cook up a 'perfect alibi. When his country house, with its valuable contents, was burned to the ground, the insur- ance company scented fraud— but- how could they prove it? The householder apologetically explained that, after sinoking in bed, he had stubbed out his' cigarettes on the dentures in mis=- take for an ash-tray., The 'teeth's had, practically exploded in flame, =- the sheets caught fire and then, the curtains ,went up. ership4 g omatter Miliat'your age, your "wa1k "Of life,- 'your 'background, your race, your religion , all of us need. leadership, And par- ticularly, our, young people. ,In gre'St universities, ter ex- ample, the 'president is 'very busy Man. • He handles._ millions of dollars, hundreds ,.upon hun- dreds, of employees , he has a big job, indeed, ' But the very best of Presi- dents of the *very , best univer- sities knew, there is only one reason for, universities: , To 'educate the y'burig people. And they keep that reason high in their "mind, - And in doing it, give leader- ship to 'their students. Dr. Elmer Ellis, President pf the .University Of Missenri," is such a man: When he" addressed new stu- • dents at-the university recently he ,,pointed out that a pinority. , of students who fail to, take ad- vantage', of ""educational are' resphnsible for ;much of the :criticism of education (and the youngerngeneration). ' se " ,,,He stpld his audience=, that ,be- coming a student at the Univer- sity of IViisgoUrf "niakes 'you its "representative ' esqf you ,,get into ,any; difficulty ,of any ;kind, .;the r publicity : will inalse sure to ,state that,you are a student, at the universitY,"' he said i ' ' ,"Yoe, ,ciwe it,te the • state and more „specifically to' the 'univer- sity to keep this in mindssat all ,times: Thee fayorablelimpression ' you 'make• publicli 4s%One that benefits all'higner eliileation; the Unfavorable impression •ypu•-make .depreciates us-allAn. :the eyes of the public and 'depreciates the 'State and nation in , the eyes of the world." Misgouriang • of all ages are ' fortunate ,to 'have an Elmer Ellis. —Mexico (Mo.) :Ledger. • reP the way of more efficient out- put. A recent business magazine survey reports that industry gen- arally increased productivity three per cent in one recent quarter. Auto industry produc- tivity usually leads the rest of industry. But if this figure would mean that productivity is in= creasing about four times as fast as provided for in the new con- tracts. Chrysler trailed Ford and General Motors in automation. Thus, in 1956 Chrysler ended with a profit of about $19 per vehicle. That year Ford and GM made between $82 and $250 profit on each vehicle. In 1957 Chrysler eliminated about 20,000 jobs out of 140,000 and wound up with a profit of about $82 per vehicle, .This in- spired the rash of - wildcat strikes. But industry experts say that automation saved Chrysler from the brink of• disaster in this bad yeer of 1958. A Ford engineer coined the word "automation" and the firm led in this development with engine preduction, lines that eliminated all but a handful of workers. This past,. year Ford found a way to Save many mil- lions of dollars' With a unique adaptation 'of automation tech- piques. This softened the reces- sion blow for Ford, too. In 1957: Ford discovered that the cost of assuming 100 per celit Of all vv.arranty •work was run- ning into -the' tens of of dollars, So when production lines were set tip *for the '58, How Can I? By Anne Ashley Q.: How can I intensify the, taste of coffee? Ae: Try placing a pinch of salt 'in it while it is boiling. - ,s , Q. How can I erase finger t marks from a' liglatielt hat? A. Use 'a piece of ,very; fine ,f Sandpaper, and rub slightly' with' the: nap of ;the felt• until the mark disappears. but superficial changes in body style. But it accounts for the fact that there have been rela- tively few basic engineering changes on cars during the past • several years. Just Like They Do On Television A 32-year-old housewife, Mrs. Shirley ,Orlofsky, was improving last week in a Denver hospital, but 10-year-old Kerry (Corky) Casey, was in trouble again. Kerry, already awaiting a pro- bation hearing as a juvenile delinquent, shot Mrs. Orlofsky in the shoulder when she,ignor- ed his command: "Drop, your purse of I'll shoot you." Later, 'Kerry said he was "doing it like they do on the TV." , What was little. Kerry's TV diet? He said he usually watch- ed TV from 3,30 p.m., when he. got hothe from fourth ' grade, right on through till bedtime, at ."A111• could' think of,". he said,, "was saving myself."' And ,e ven his' 'pyjamas 'were thalf-burned" to prove his story, Hardened' chain-smokers, however, seldom r. smoke `after removing 'their teeth._ This single "suspicious ,'circum- stance' caused further' investiga- tion, and 'a spectroscopic analysis'" of the: charred' fragments of • „sheets Showed a metallic sub-... stance lound , only in a -certain 'brand of paraffin, A -pyromaniaC, developed a' grudge against a •chain of pro- vincial shops and felt sure that• his insensate pattern of 'yen- .. geance could •never. be traced. ,Entering one of the company's shops by a back •way after dark; . he dug away the,wall plaster in the stock-room, and started his fire against. 'the exposed laths. The police traced every dis- missed emploYee who, might be a grudge and discovered, - ,' • 'commercial traveller 'whose • - movements from town to town coincided strangely with the fire.s Before he could start another shop blaze, the suspect was ar- rested and minute traces of plaster were found ire his trous-„„ er 'turn-ups. This matched plass ter the arson detective& had gath- ered from a shop bUrned in town, the traveller had visited •^• the previous week. Then there's the crook in Dart- , moor today who bitterly regrets' the impulse that led him to in-" , vest in 'a stock of stolen cellu- loid combs. After •insuringt the stock, he arranged a fire in, the'"' dingy East End of London ware- e- house in which they were stoyeds, He told the insurance assessors,„ that the combs lad never been 'emptied out of the, three-pli't" packing crates. But some of the combs had "flashed" into flames • on the floorboard's, leaVing thelb eharacteristic char of wood . . and' fragments from a 'further' line 'Of white ash examined by al"' tgneetregraphist were shown teser be lamp-wick soaked in gasoline, ,- Heat, intensities leave an unv mistakable record on the maters,,,, ial consumed, and the close-set alligator markings on 'the wood' boarding indicated riot only the r heat intensity .of celluloid but, ••alsp the higher heat intensity:vs 'of gasoline. Faced with this evidence, the' investigators , brought the fire trail closer..In a chink of brickles •steork in the burned warehouse was found a., gasoline • residue,, ,identical in molecular form and metal content with 'the gasoline in the firebug's car. It isby, such highly-scientific methods4s, these that convictions are secured in nearly all cases °I,, arson today No wonder gig crooks Arid it too hot -to handler.' "sonrtwas susnected when a $100,000 chemical warehouse burnt to the ground—but after fire-probing detectives had an- alysed the ash: it was found that the fire was due to a drop of peispirationl If a hardlwritking ' factory hand had stopped to mop his • :brow, the fire 'would, ,never have started. Instead, his 'perspiration splashed on 'to sodium dust, de- Veloned heat through a chain of 7 eeiheinidal-teactions':and finally set ,fire 'to a bottle of methylated" ether. • ° In another case, an electric, fire t. outside, a bathroom was' thought to have started a coun- try mansion fire. But the experts `discovered that the' fire had not °only not been switched on, but the' batlioom deor • had been burned, from the inside, Compression of ,charred fibres of the wood showed that rays of , the sun, focuged throUgh, the bathroom'st, plastic door-handle, had scorched and ,then set light to a bathrobe , which, in turn, burned down ;the door. Scientific, detection of this high order -- sifting and micro-photo- graphing every ash or• cinder to discover the causes of fire—has made arson very diffictilt to get away with. . It •is literally too hot to handle for would-be 'criminals — and statistics show a 9,8, pert cent drop in arson in twenty years. This is largely due to the efforts of one man, the greatest arson- tracker of them all, Dr,' James Firth, chief of the British Home Office forensic laboratory at Preston, He recently retired but has left behind him a crack firebug - fighting organization, built up during his twenty years of investigation into, nearly every big, blaze. He was in, charge of investi- gations into, the fire that de- stroyed the Empress of Canada at Liverpool -in January; 1953, and by painstaking, deductions tracked down the cause to a careles-sly discarded' cigarette • end, In another of his cases,, a pad- locked warehouse• was 'burned down over a week-end. Dr. Firth knew What to look ,for *hen he ' traced the origin of the fire' to near the telephone.. 41qping to; fool an insurance company, an 'arsonist had' dialled „ the Ware- •hoese number, • krieWing the ringing bell halnril6 Would, shat- ter a thin glass bulb, of sulphuric acid, which dripped on tee a ttire of chiorate of potash and ' sugar, causing it to burst • into flames. Another.fire-raiser' learned that' his dentures, Were 'made of an Inflammable plastic arid thought You Can Depend On When kidneys:6AL,-tq Mfilove ItOlitti SOB wastes, backache, feeling,- thatorhad. • test bike- knee-. Dodd's. Ridnay, Tina ,stilitaltite .biceititite7-66°1 rfuty'.' You're C ~ brit Wdtk"bater You bee tleat.rici. 58 •Dedcl:e:7GetiD6Vaitt-ally drtitetete, • • •A IS Y TO D PLAY HOPE DIAMOND The mailman delivered the' LE-EP IGHT • • AN I RELIEVE: ligIVOISiESS '0111-17Ar TO•MORROMI to' 'be. tioripivbild-,trtiliqell instead .of eereeej -er• fey a good night's sleep, take 4edleln I9hlet9 ttecordingip desenoes. SEDICIN°: •_ohrissei•idleyit al 'DON'T SOS ;.!,,'af,...tkiMsi,iiCkee14.11eakiiA gadget undei.;.'„,ii?: pia is the and rubbing it the wrong wily would be disastrous', les itie,lfrst-of'ihe 1311,4•Fiii Sites' with an'' atomic Treintliitiorit toUld carry an Weenie: -Warlietich legendary Hope diamond to the' Srilithgoniari Institute, Washing''s ton; D.C., A gem of midnight': ' bine; the stone emerged from en-- ordinary brown parcel stairiped, 'fragile arid 'tied With string, ' , It -Willjqe. displayed in the hail , Of gems and minerals. ' the dierriend,., as large eS la' s0-cent piece, and Weighing: 441/2- - carats, striii. 'be the main ekhilsit„ In..„),11 )!_peiitally built cOSe' iiigirlt., tit ,e4itie g ;Steel Safe behind SeVt t; 641 li nes of east at the irietie' tittle* ' eit* T Scar ,,,ah,e„,„..girl „Wes beautiful „and young LordsSaiiquhar Meant to win her. ,Eyeing her act'oss :the dilnice7 ',table'''. at .Lord Norris' '.shritise party; in Oxfordshire, the fiery-tempered,. Seet, W,Ondeecl W.9u/Ids.stsse, the„beatntnethed to Protroke ehtsEtiglishrnsin and denionstrate his prowess 'with a rapierteirliFY:i0s""1607 Atiels favorite method of „„','SettlirigSriffereiteee:' . 'Alter '"'dititteiti''' he t sire g Ore d O'er' to` `where” John 'tither, a nfaintitiS ,Lerideri fenting master, was „with, keis patrons and assistants: . • "Mercy'ene; you Eriglisn need somet feheing- legsbrial" he 'dee clneed, ' "Yet-I failbr YOU. learn better frees), My Old grand= *Other. than such ,a man as this!" 4.,t,fizst Turner,ehoSe to ignore the tatiritS; EventualY hotQseVer- he had to take action to protect -pi7ofeSsibrial nneptitatiOn. '"You ehall have your wish • ptePare for .combat!" he cried. , Sanquhar, thMigh conipara- tive novice, attacked with sante and a great deal - Of courage;- ut -Tinter parried's la big 'strokes with the ease of the master swordsman. ' When Sanquhar realized his opponent was just playing with him, he 'resorted once more to insults. Infuriated by. these, Turner lost his temper and, in the heat of the encounter, his foil accidentally pierced •Senqu- liar's eye. For several days , the young peer's life was in danger but eventually he recovered, though he had lost the sight of his eye. Turner was' exonerated •by: all who had witnessed the incident. But, SanqUhar was tot 'sure it was an accident. His desire for vengeance was aroused by a remark, -Made soon aftervsardg, at the court •of Henry IV of France. king-asked T Sanquhar about the patch of green 'taffeta over his eye. , "It was done, your Majesty, with a sword," said the young peer. "both the man live?" inquir- ed the 'king. No more was said, 'but• Sanquhar took• that idle re- ;nark to heart. At length, on hearing tha• t his sight would never be restored, he returned to England, with one thought in mind—revenge. Turner. was at Greenwich 'Palace, fencing in public matches before King James.. Sanquhsu: went straight •there and sat glar- ing down from the gallery as his enemy won fresh laurels in " the arena. -Immediately the prizes had been awarded, Lord Sanquhar hurried below, to seek out and stab the 'man •he' hated. Hand on dagger hilt, he roamed the, courts and corridors, but his ,tqhuraornrgy. herlescliseppeareds, in the Eventually, he hired two Scots- men sas -assassins,-,for :he srealize, ed he was too well knOwn to n take:„Tumer4y,,,,stirprisesehirness ieff.--Yeribe fencing" m OW Continued to prove elusive. Lord .:Sanquhar, his obsession now close to madness, theree- - fore hired' two more Scotamen, Hebert' Carlisle and Irving, his page. At ,abOute&even ,o'clock in the evening, • on May•.11th, 1612— five years after the fateful duel— they trailed 'Turner to a tavern in Whitefriars, just, off Fleet St. For a while they chatted With him, bought 'him 'some ale, Then, when he was off guard,- Carlisle whipped out a pistol and shot hmlh the 'chest. • 'Lord have mercy upon Ines- I am killed!" cried Turner, end fell dead. The assassins' ,fled Irving was soon caught, a few streets away.' Carlisle 'reached: Scotland before lie was captnre.i. After Carlisle and Irving had been convicted at the Old Sanquhar stood iiis Westminster -Hall, „charged with thaeti t;rign ,. . .:,siecpssony !Orel, 'th He,,pleaciedguilty but ,claimed- provocation, Saying that "ttitrner eliberatelY pet out 'his eye.,,, Fagging 'sentence-of death, Justicet Yelverton told Sanqu- har; "This base and barbarous Murder, Was •exceedieg strange. 'Under the Over of _kindness." On 'the Scaffold .Lcird Satiquinif said he" had been "blinded by. Hie detril". He then spent Sore- ;long in, prayer that the impatient ladder'. exeeioner hini" frOth the' -