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The Brussels Post, 1959-03-19, Page 3DOWN Sit NOT OUT Prohatily recalltati thi smell eat 1952 and i066 When They 84E4 laciftery4itifele, Roy ,Came -iSaiiellii4ift In hit wheelchair and watches *lithe!' Carl &Ain.' *Off* at'fliii-DOelgiees• spring traininci rAerrip`e dampariella row 11116iitIat coach 'wi'th the team. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Some Parties Can Be Expensive "Tomorrow yoqr beautiful bride awaits you!" Cheers greet- ed this hilarious cry as hand- some Gunar, a 20 year r old Swede, reeled against none-too- steady party guest, The cheers grew inereasingly boisterous, for the stag party, having begun in the afternOon, was still going strong at mid- night and everyone present was well lit up. Finally, two family retainers, as previously briefed, took held of the tipsy guests, stripped off their outer clothes, and, plunged them one by one into the icy Water of a lake adjoining the restaurant. What a hangover tormented Gunar on his wedding morning! Watched with dismay by his radiant bride, 22-year-old honey blonde Ulla, he staggered up the aisle, white faced and desper- ately groggy, As the music pealed forth and sunshine flood- ed through richly stained glass windows, the church seemed to spin around him, Clutching his throbbing head, in a last vain effort to retain self-control, he blurted out, "I must get out of here!" Amid murmurs of consternation, he left his shocked young bride on the verge of tears. He ran out of the church, staggered into a taxi, and fled to his hotel. There he collapsed into bed. Ulla was heartbroken. No word of explanation came to her until twenty-four hours later, when Gunar 'phoned, saying that he'd blacked out because of his stag party hangover. "Well, if that's your behaviour on what should have been the happiest day of our lives, you can stay away from me for good?" she spat out, and slam- med down the receiver. How often does the unexpect- ed materialize at a party ! What begins in gaiety ends with Tear- ful shock or, maybe, with un- expected thrills and romance. In a Colorado nightclub re- cently, 25-year-old Canadian • Lester Johnston sat swilling champagne, feeling like a mil- lion dollars, when a firm hand fell on his shoulder. This ar- rest by American detectives act- log on a warrant from the Moun- ties, ended a sixteen-day revel. He was charged with having embezzled $300,000 from an Ot- tawa bank. They found $210,000 in bills in his hotel room; and besides financing his drinking spree, he'd bought himself an expensive car. "Well, that's it, boys, I guess," grinned Johnston, ruefully. "I always wondered what it would be like to have money. Now know !" Much sharper tension intrud- ed at a party held in Melbourne a few weeks ago, when an ex- asperated 27-year-old -butcher named Mike suddenly stopped everyone's fun by whipping out a revolver. "Get up against the wall there, all of you — and quick !"' he rasped. As he brandished his. gun, the party obeyed with some' speed. "New give me back my bottle of beer; one of yOu has stolen It !" he snapped. Mike was solely,' concerned with satisfying his suspicions that someone, had pinched• his bottle of beer; this was his way of finding out. But One guest greatly disliked such tough guy tactics. While Mike was marshalling him suspects, the, guest• slipped away and 'phoned the police. 'they soon arrived and, after a scuffle, disarmed, the gunman and Put him in a' cell.' Appearing In court, he was fined $75, and had his revolver confiscated. LEFT OUT — Left behind when the parade passed by were this little girl and the balloon ven- der during a children's celebra- tion in Paris, France. Saved Killer From Gallows. No mystery is really a mystery. There must always be someone who knows the truth. If a crime remains unsolved it is because there are those in the secret who will not speak. Such conspiracies of silence are to be expected in the criminal underworld, but they have oc- curred, even in cases of murder, among people who are apparent- ly good citizens. The mystery here is' why these people acted as they did. It is said that the secret of the Appin murder of 1'752, a classic of this kind, has been handed down in Argyllshire from genera- tion to generation to the present time. Clannishness is not peculiar to the Scottish Highlands; lemay be paralleled to-day in some quiet English countryside, The same secrecy whieh clamped doWn on the shooting of Campbell of Glenure 200 years ago enshrouds the murder of Edward Welham in 1931. We need not believe that Welham's Dorset neighbours would have gone so far as the Highlanders whose ideas of clan loyalty sent ,an innocent man to the gallows; but the determined silence of these rural folk was to baffle Scotland Yard. First manager and trainer of the Cloverdale Kennels, at Tar- rant Keynston, in. Dorset, was William Steer. When, within a few months Steer was found shot near - a badger hole, his gun by his side, the fatality was accept- ed as accidental. His successor was Edward George Welham, a young unmarried man. Welharn lodged in the village with the family of his kennel- maid, Mary Hathaway. She work- ed only in the afternoons; as full- time 'assistant Welham employed a young man, Frederick Deamen. The• kennels consisted of a long army- hut, divided in the middle by partitions which formed a small office. Here Welham kept 'his guns, a 16-bore and a 12-bore, In a cupboard by his desk. On the morning of October 1st, 1931, he was as usual at the kennels before, breakfast. He re- turned to the Hathaway's house for this meal at eight o'clock. When hewent back to the hut he missed a blind spaniel, to which be Was much attached, and. Deamen was sent to look for else dog, This WAS just before ten o'clock. Deamen, by his own accottrill, was only some IA yards front the but when he heard a shot, but thought nothing of it, It took him some time to, find, the spaniel When he returned to the but, Welham Was lying in a pool of blOod on the floor of the office, his own 10-bore gun be, neath him. Deamen 'ran to the village, Thomas Hathaway, the kennel- maid's father, went back with him to the hut, The girl herself, followed with her brother, arid after them came the police ron- stable stationed at Tarrant le ern- ston. Welham was still alive;"he was taken to the hospital at Blandford where he died the next morning, He had been shot in the back, apparently while standing at hie desk. The 16-bore had been fired. The policeman's first impres- sion was that it was a case of suicide. He looked about for means by which. Welham could have reached the trigger of the gun while holding the muzzle to the back of his neck, He expected, he said, to find a stick or a string, There was no string, but a, long stick of hazel was leaning against some sacks near the office door. • It was Mary Hathaway who pointed out that Welham's jacket was unbuttoned and that his wal- let was sticking half out of the =inside pocket, Tere was a pound, note in it. Welham, should have been carrying about S.10. The medical report, with that of the policeman, convinced the Chief Congtable of Dorset that he had a case of murder on his hands. Scotland Yard were called in and Superintendent Hambrook of the C.I.D. arrived at Tarrant Keynston. Experiments with ''the 16-bore proved that Welham had been shot from a distance of about twelve feet. The door of the office was thirteen feet from his desk. He was shot, in Hambrook's words, "by some person who stood in the doorway and thrust the muzzle of the gun through ' 'the opening," The gun, in the superinten- dent's opinion, was taken from its cupboard while Welham was away at breakfast. The murderer then waited near the hut — there was, plenty of cover handy — un- til Deamen left to find the span- iel. If the motive of the crime was gain, the murderer in his haste missed £9 in the desk. But was gain the motive? Hambrook began to have other ideas, which were strengthened, by the behaviour of Welham's neighbours. The young man ap- peared to have been well liked, but the folk of Tarrant Keynstdn had heard nothing, seen nothing, and knew nothing. They ignored the evidence of murder; it was obviously suicide, they said. ' At Supt. Hambrook's request the rector of Tarrant Keynston took the unusual step of asking his • parishioners from the pulpit to help the police — in other words, not to obstruct them. The appeal appeered- to have no ef- fect. • With the case in this unsatis- factory state, Hambrook returned to London to report. He had bare- , ly got there when Thomas Hatha- way made a confession: He had tampered with evidence. His first thought( on reaching the hut with Deamen, was that Welharn had shot hirnSelt by accident. Then he saw a cord trailing from the hazel 'stick towards the gun. To spare Welham's. mother the pain of knowing_ that her son had committed suicide, he slipped the '.cord from the stick., He had kept it, arid the stick was still in the office. The super- intendent hastened back .to Tar- rant Keynston; 'but further ex= , periments showed that no, ar- rangement of cord and stick could heve fired the gun as it must have been fired. Here, then, appeared to be proof of' premeditation. But why, having staged a suicide, did the Murderer defeat his aim by tam, peeing so carelessly with the Wal- let? Did he penie? Or was there no theft? Was Welham, perhaps, taking put the wallet when he was shot? • These arid other features of the case temain riddlee becatse the Main OtiestiOn is still utiansWereel. Wild fired the shot? "I think know,'' Hambrook said, but eVi- &nee to Justify a charge Was denied him by the, locals` silente. The case, therefore, is still open. It may be that ,Dorset Valk are lees Secretive than High, 'antlers and that, fifty years heriee, •When all concerned, in- eluding the murderer, are dead; stiarneethe will tell the story, hand- ed 'Of who killed EdWard Welham, and. why; and Scotland Yard can then Close the file: A girl applied for a job all stenographer and was given * spelling test. "HoW do yo !Spell' rslifitarii?" the wail . "The city or the rifle tarialred. About Those Baseball Dinners "Baseb41 dirinrs are great for the fans and maybe for all of 'IA" said a veteran member of the Bed SON. "But I'm not going . through 'another winter like this one, I could have gong out two or three times a week all winter if I'd accepted all of the invitations toSsed my way, And if you refuse, you hear about it.". The baseball .dinner has, course, become an important part of the off-season program. It helps to keep the game before the public even while proles. • sional basketball and hockey are at their peaks in the major cities, But it is getting harder and harder to get players to attend, SO great is the demand for the standouts. In the case of most stars, even the clubs usually have to work through an _Agent, who is always 'poking for hiS 10 per cent. A prominent eastern agent has ad- vised the players he represents not, to go without a fee, regard- less of the importance of the Wats. Prsetically every major city on the diamond map, and a lot of the minors, have a mid-winter dinner, with New York setting the pa.ve. The annual get- together st the Waldorf is the top sports attraction of the win- ter in Grtham. As these affairs are run by the writers, who have to foot most of the bills — and at to- day's ever increasing prices — it is not possible to hand out checks to. players. if you did it for one, you would have to do it for all. The player has a certain obli•• gation to his club, the public and press But 'the boys are beginning to talk about it and beginning to wonder how far, this obligation stretches. The fact might be, that sports writers, especially those c o nected with baseball, have been so accustomed to getting every- thing "on the cuff" that they sort of resent anybody talking of anything so crude as cash. TO LEAD CYPRUS — Greek Or- thodox Archbishop 'Makarios, above, leader of Cyprus' 400,- 000 Greek Cypriots, is slated to become the first president of Cyprus as the long - embattled island gains its independence. How Can 1? By 'Anne Ashley Q. How can I make a dish of noodles look appetizing? A. A noodle cheese, ring filled with cream shrimps makes a delicious dish. This combined with an attractive fruit or vege- table , salad, light dessert, and plenty of coffee, will afford an ample luncheon menu, not hard to prepare. Q. How can I make a cold cream? • A. Take• two ounces of oil of sweet almonds, once ,ounce of pure glycerine, 1/2 -ounee of sper- maceti, twenty grains of white wax, and six drops of oil of rose. Meltall this together, setting the cup over boiling water; then beat until prefectly cold and snowy white. Put up in glass or china. Q. HoW can I keep tulips for table use as a decoration? A. A tiny bit Of Wax. should be dropped into the calyx tot each flower. They will have a much longer life than if this is not &Me. Q„ What is Mee Willett for SOUPS A, An excellent garnish for &gain SOUPS is herd-boiled eggs grated across the'surface of the soup can I keen lettuce crisp? A, Lettuce. Witt, keep longer May. crisper it you wash it, roll in a .dampened. Cloth, and place iii the refrigerator in eine earthen bowl. tt HOW Can renew tarnished. braid? k *Their gold ilea Or: braid tarnished, sprinkle WO trillet earth and then rUb with a stiff' briatit, AGENTS vitAwrgp. BIBLES • SALESMEN or women to sell deluxe Catholic and Protestant Fairly Enbles. Fell or Part time, Salary. commission and bonus. Apply Box 18$, 125,18th Street, New TOrento. Oat, giving phone number And particulars fee personal. interview. • GO INTO BUSINESS for Yotirself, Sell our exciting house- wares, watches and other products not found in stores, No competition Prof. its up to 500% Write pow for free Colour catalogue and separate cenfl- dential wholeStile price sheet. Murray Hatee_toot ., 3622 St. Lawrence, Montreal. Foirrn Machinery Agency SHOWING DODO NET RETURN SKLI,ING every kind of farm trim-ilia. cry trucks and tractors, Well lished in territory, doing over $4110,0001 vraonr 1r)eonifnidc erenatstaeld itnof oSr8ltron per v °Ma rr*. Glieltsman 1W 7-1741. Curfagnini Real Est ate 342 Oakwood Ave.,Toronto. WANTED—A REPRESENTATIVE WITH a car to enroll Motor Club mem, berships In this area full or part-time, Ontario Automobile Write for free detaiAisssotcolattenp.t. awax, 817 London, Ontario. "COIN COLLECTING IS. CANADA'S FASTEST GROWING HOBBY WE ARE WHOLESALE DEALERS IN CoIN ALBUMS. SUPPLIES AND CATA- LOGUES WE REQUIRE LOCAL AND COUNTRY DEALERS. FREE SUPPLY LIST LIBERAL DISCOUNT INTERNATIONAL COIN COMPANY 227 Victoria Street Tor onto, Ontario," AUTO, TRUC K PARTS,TIRES o A WEAR EVER SPARK PLUG A Fire Injector spark plug for truck, tractor or ear, for better starting, more power on less gas—$1.75 each or X1,50 etch for 12 or more. L. M. King, 145 Mill St. South, Brampton, BABY CHICKS --„ TAKE stock 'of your requirements, or- der now, Bray has immediate shipment dayold, some started, dual purpose pul- lets rind cockerels. Also Ames Pullets; dayold heavy breed cockerels, Book Broiler chicks April-May. Pricelist rvall- able. See local agent, or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont, ONTARIO'S MOST PROFITABLE LAYER LOOSDON'S H' & N "Nick Chicks" Day old discount on large orders. Leukosis resistance. Started pullets available. Order now for spring delivery infor- mation upon request. Logsdon's H & N Hatcheries, Seaforth., Ont. BOOKICEEPING SERVICE BOOKKEEPING Service. By mail, $2.00 per month,, records kept. Writ e. Auclitax. 230 Herbert. Waterloo, On. tario BUSINESS PROPERTY FOR SALE TOBACCO, confectionery store, $1,000 weekly turnover; 3 apartments com- plete, 2 fonr-room ones are 'rented, 5- room apartment for owner. Building and business is modern, only 4 years old, with 3- car garage. One of the finest corners in Kitchener. A down payment of $20,000 is needed on the property and business. A real oppor- tunity for anyone looking for a good future and security. For inspection call or write William Harth, 228 Margarete Ave. Kitchener, Ont. FARMS WANTED FARM wanted: ideally located- 200 acres. excellent building or no bitIld. ings. State price, 'furnish picture. Box 181, 123-18th Street, New Toronto Ont. FOOD DISTRIBUTOR FISH WRITE for our 1959 price list. We have a good supply Quality and Variety, SILVERSTEINS 135W King St., London, Ontario. , FOR SALE SEVERAL different makes of good used milking-machines. Let us install one of these or a new Woods in your barn on trial without any obligation. Dist- ance is no barrier. Phone (collect) or write Irving Keyes, Glands. Phone Pais- ley 114-r-4. UNBREAKABLE DISHES SAVE $5.0 on 20 piece Tradition dinner sets. Assorted Pastel Colours, 4 each dinner plates ' side plates, bowls, cups, saucers. $7.50 full price. Send $1.00 with this ad, balance express collect. Glen S. Woolley & Co., Ajax, Ontario. $1 POCKET RUBBER STAMPS $1 YOUR name and address (three lines) in neat plastic container with ink pad. Lane Stationers, 937 Victroiri.Ave., Nia. gara Falls. Ont. Dept. W, FOR SALE AND EXCHANGE RENFREW Cream separator supplies. Exchange Bowls, Parts, all Makes, Elec. trio attachment, Hulse Separator Sere- Ice, Hillsdale. Ontario, FLOWERS-TREES-SHRUBS EVERGREENS, SHRUBS, ROSES SHADE trees, hedges. Christmas tree' seedlings. Free price list and advice. Landscaping done 75 miles radius:: THE GOLDEN TRIANGLE NURSERY R.R, 3, Spencerville. Ont., FUR FARM ANIMALS THE fur trade' is waiting for top qual- ity nutria fur. We have nutria for spring delivery that grade excellent in New York. Stewart's Nutria,• Box 164, Dryden, Ont. W .1. Stewart A. C. Thompson. HELP WANTED HARDWARE SALESMAN EXPERIENCED' man for contractors' and builders' hardware safes, bene- fits provided. Excellent Working condi- tions. Apply le own handwritieg Stat- ing previous experience. age, etc.. to Box 179. 123.18th Street New Toronto, 'Ont. INSTRUCTION EARN Morel Bookkeeping, Saldsinen- ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc, Les- sons 500. Ask for free circuler No. 33. Can adian Correspondence CouraeS, )200 Bay Street, Toronte. MAGAZINES AFRICAN VIOLET 'CHATTER ALL Canadian Magazine for African Violet care and culture in Caneda. One year's subscriPtion 51,00. Chatt2788 ThbrOld Road, Niagara Falls, Ontario: MACHINERY AND MOTORS SAW CHAIN 25% DISCOUNT id" I.E.L. Plotiger,$13.50. 18" ;.McCulloch D44 $15,50. 17" lloMelite EZ $15.25. Write for details on our complete ling • Of saw Chain. , JAY'S. MAIL ORDER, BOX* BURLINGTON, ONTARIO CANI AL PARTS AND REPAIRS' ••• GOOD used 'motors: rebuilt and used trensmissiOns, • reef ands, also rods. East End Rebuilts, 465 King E., Toronto: FOR TRUCK• PARTS IT'S . LEVY'S , ALL maker.' -- New, Used; rebuilt Leey's Auto Parts Company, Ltd.; 1400 Weston Tide Tideolitie.• Ontario, MECHANICAL 'PARTS, AND REPAIRS. :WItgOKING, 53 high, ReMbier, 52 Pen- itae, 51 ,Chevrolet hardtop, el Cadillac, $3 Consul, 03 Austin 51 Meteor, Van, Auto 'Wreckers, .55 ‘Will."4,• gest End Auto Wreckers, 40 King 4to ire r.,. onto, EM. 6.4884. MEDICAL "ARE you Aire ou don't have sugar (sign of Diabetes 1 Thousands de, and don't know it! P safe) Check your family nowt Simple home test that you snake yoerself, detects sugar imme. diately, 250 each, 6 for $1,00 Postpaid. Royal Company, Dept. 0, 1051 Mt, Royal East, Montreal, READ THIS EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR .NEURITIS SHOULD TRY 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 Eczema Salve will not disappoint you. Itching scaling and burning ecze- ma , acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless odorless ointment regardless 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 "M UCUS IN THROAT THUNA'S PINK TABLETS for the nose and throat dropping of mucus dis- charge, sensation of a lump in the throat and other disturbances, ASK YOUR DRUGGIST Both Department Stores And Tornblyn Stores A Product of Thuria Herbalist zsa Danforth, Toronto NURSES WANTED GENERAL STAFF NURSES AND CERTIFIED NURSING ASSISTANTS ARE needed for our new wings, which contain operating room and recovery room suites, obstetrical department, surgical and medical wards. Well planned orientation and inservice programmes. Good personnel policies, Attractive pension plan, 90 hour week, etrective June 1 1959. Apply: Director ef Nursing, Toronto East General H05.. pitl, Toronto 6. OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN LADIES to sew at home, on their own machine. Opportunity for high earn- ings. Apply Box 240, Glencoe, Ont. STUDENTS EARN extra money after school selling subscriptions for Saturday Evening Post, Ladies' Home Journal and other,- leading magazines; good commiseione, „ Write D. E. Wilson, c/o Davis Ageney, 1.431A Yonge St., Toronto.. OPERATE Home Mail Order Business! Men and Women (all ages). Ten Proven Money making Sources. Only 255; Satis- faction assured. Captain. Box 501-CA,•' Reading, Massachusetts. 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 Catalogue Free Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 !Moor St. W., Toronto 4, Branches: , 44 King St., W., Hamilton Y. 72 Rideau Street OttaWa• PATENTS' FETHERSTONHA UGH & C o m p Patent Attorneys. Established 1890. 600 University Ave., Toronto Patents all countries. PERSONAL YOUR HOROSCOPE by eminent English astrologist, with exceptional personal reading offer. Send month, date, birth with.25f, SIRDON BERNHARDI (R), Markham Ont. LADIES for the best In cosmetics, try Peggy Newton Products. Free cata- logue, beauty chart. Bern's Novelty P.O. Box 945 . Montreal. HEAR the people's gospel hour, Sun- days, with Canada's radio pastor Perry F. Rockwood, Chatham (Dial 630) 3;30 p.m.; Orillia (Dial 1570) 4 p.m., Niagara Falls (Dial 1600) 5 p.m. Write for free book of messages on "Bible Questions Answered" by, Pastor Rockwood, P.O. Box 1660, Halifax, Canada. GREY HAIR? PREMATURE grey hair is embarrassing. Look years younger with. Kabul Bril- liantine. Successfully used over 50 years, easily applied, Restores natural appearance. Does not stain, This Bill- liantine gets rid of grey hair. Results within two weeks. Complete treat- ment kit (two bottles) $3.50. Money orders prepaid; C.O.D. collect. Satisfac- tion guaranteed. Kabul Products Reg'd., 480 — Beth Avenue, Abord-a-Plouffe, Que. ADULTS! Personal Rubber Goods1 36 assortment for $2.00. Finest quality. tested, guaranteed. Mailed in plain sealed package plus free Birth Control booklet and catalogue of supplies. Wes t ern Distributors. Box 24-TF Regina. Sask, CULLODEN MOOR HEAtHER PERFUME Made by Fraser, Inverness Ideal Gift for Scots Perfume: $1.75; 53.25; and $5,50 (Sdnd $1.10 for Trial Offer.) Toilet Miter: $3,85: Takuni: $1.40 6-14 international Specialties, lteg'd. Box 246, Knowlton, Que. PHOTOGRAPHY „ S AVE! . . O. SAVE,! SAV Films developed and 12 Magna prints in album 600 9 magnn prints in ,albtitii 400 Reprints So etieli KODACOtOR Develepliig roll $1.00 (dot limiticlifig prihts). Color prints 351 oath Odra. AnSco and Eltteehrothe 35 flint 20 'eX- posures mounted in slides $1.25. COlor prints from' elides 354 each. 'Money refunded ,in full for unprinted fiega-tieeS. FARMERS' CAMERA CLUB BOX 31, ,dAtt, ONT. .,„ _ 1 ,i t .. I Was tch i_ .•c Nearly Craiy 'Versi', Arst use of iiriothIne. Cooling liquid A. D.-D. Preee.riptleri poSitiVely relieved raw red itch--eciiused by eczema, rushee, ideate initition, chafinge-otheritch troubles, Greaseless, stalnlees:igg trial bottle heist *tasty, or Money bi:ek, Dane sillier; Atik, feet ditigelsteiro,D,D,PREscRIPTION PERSONAL. . „ "ADAM to Armageddon " brief history., book free, to, bible redidere. Addreeet, Box 149, Dorchester, Ontario, POULTRY AND LIVESTOCK TUE repeat orders, we are receiving from customers whet purchased Ic-137 ,Kirriberebtke lest year and who tell Us, they have made more money out of Ktmber Pidleta than any other breed or strain they have ever had, has amazed us, One flock will convince you that K-137 Ximberchiks are best for early large eggs which bring bigger Premiume, better livability and less laying house mortality due to Leucosis, higher rate of Jay, strong shell texture, less cracked eggs, Order Kimber pullets war. /latching all popular Egg, Dual. Purpose Breeds, 1st Generation era, Turkey (Roasters anti Broilers), No matter bow you look at it, Blind Spotted Hybrid sows give you maxi, mum benefits of cross-bred mothers of your market pigs. Also selling pure bred, Imported, English Large Black and Landrace Swine. Also Accredited, Aberdeen Angus Cattle, Catalogue, TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. FER GUS ONTARIO PETS FOR SALE BRASS Name Plates, Machine stamped with your name and Address, Red let- ters, For Keys or Dog Collars. Three for dollar, -Pete Waite, 150 hallway Street. Woodstock. Ontario. POULTRY OUR April gosling prices are lower this year, Also hatches through May, June. Circular on request. Erie Goose Faun, Dunnville, Ontario. PROPERTIES WANTED WANTED, 100 to 1000 acres or more cheap hush lots for cash. Box 182 123. 18th Street, New Toronto, Ont. ---_____ STAMPS AND COINS CZARIST Russia — 25 different mints only 25 rents with approvals. Excello Stamps Company, P.O. Box 218, Station B, Montreal 2, Rue. WANTED old and recent coins. Cana- dian, Newfoundland, United States, Best premiums, Send 2.5e for three 1959 buy, ing lists. M, Marley, 212 Holhorne Ave., Toronto. OLD COINS, BANK NOTES May bring much profit. Send 255 coins or stamps for buying list, Paul Thibert. 1745 Prince, Windsor, Ont. 20 FOREIGN Coins $1.00 Gold Sover- eign $15.00 1958 Canadian Uncirculated Coin Set, $3.50, Scotch Highlander Badge $1.50. Coin Buying List 250. Crown Hobbies, 167 Codsell, Downs- view, Ont, SWINE WESSEX.Siddleback gilti,and boars, all age., registered or unregistered, ideal for •=ces-Lereeding. Weasex/Lancirace, Wescee/Terk, sow s • available. Dr. Murray Suifrb. Veterinarian. Charing Cross', Ontario. VACATION RESORTS Florida Bound --UNUSUALLY nice''housekeeping cot- ' Was: and, *apartments near Clearwater, private beach right on beautiful Gulf oe,Mexie"(1.— world's safest beach. Ex- tengivi,grounds; shade trees and, patios. Relaxing .outdoor living. Conservative rates and real hospitality bring our gueets heck year after year. • ' For Brochure- LOUISE JONES, OWNER GULF RPITLAE ZA 19420 •GULF 'BLVD. Indian Rocks Beech, Florida WANTED ,'WANTED: used wooden silo, Write stating ,price, size, condition and age .;to George Smale It, 21 Dublin • STAMPED FOR STOLEN KISS While krs. Rittel, of Phoenix, was peeling potatoes in her kit- chen her husband crept up from behind and kissed her On the back of the' neck. She turned in surprise, and the potato knife struck her husband on the ehhek, inflicting a nasty gash. The playful interlude ended with Mr. Rittel having six stitches in his cheek ^at a local hospital. MERRY MENAGERIE "As long as you're already up there, friend, mind knocking down a few nuts:" ISSUE 12 — 1960- CEDARANALL Aimazieig,„•Lab 'rested do-it yoUrselt. Crushed areniritie redwood c o cl a r I Mix With, wetee• brush on, Cederitee Cleeete, chests. wails eerinandeile Cl a fraction of the cost of n cedar (thing. 5 MAIM'S Ctitere 40 Se. ft. tette Only $5,95 Prepaid' Bold Clieride or Money OHM to• INDUSTRIES Dept. 51 Wellington, tinterlie YOU SLEEP CAN TO-NIGHT - - ANS RELIEVE NERVOUSNESS TO-M0111011 TO be happy and tranquil .lesiead. of nervous of fora good nleheadleip, take Si:diced fobleld; according to directions SEDICIN• $1,10..44,4S. TABLETS '