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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1959-12-24, Page 3GROWING RUBIES — That's no lump of coal chemist Carroll Chatham is examining. Using a secret process at his one-man laboratory, Chastham "grows" marketable emeralds and rubies which are virtually indistin- guishable from the real gems. He calls them "cultured" rather than "synthetic." Space Grabber Is Baffled One of the wiliest space grab- bers ever to, bamboozle an edi- tor, New York Press-agent Jim Moran, 51, has found a needle in a haystack Jafter 82 hr. and 35 min:), hatched an ostrich egg (19 days on the nest), sold an Icebox to an Eskimo and. two snow-blind fleas to' Paramount (for use under klieg lights), to pitch hiinself or a 'client into the newspapers. Last month Mor- an was landing in print ,againk. en a .Coast=to-coast search for "the happiest girl in America ,,— a girl as happy as a Lark." His client: Studebaker's Lark But in Minneapolis Moran's bird failed to' -Sing. Minneapolis ,Tribune City Editor Robert T. Smith j puckishly printed a straight-faced - Story that Tan through a whole catalogue of cars without using the One Word that Moran was trying to- get„ into print — Lark, Smith'i story: '"Jim .MOran is a world-re- m-We._ rainbler, "In his many travels as a pressagent, he has been known to 'ford a river or brave Recall- ties where the mercury knows no bounds in order to plant a sponsor's name-, "Moran is well known in Cade iliac and Pontiac, Mich,' and' In the imperial palaces of the Ori- ent. On the other hand, he has never been in Buyck or Austin, Mihn'. "He has Milled many a dodge, but in general he is known in the trade as being solid as Ply- mouth Rock. "Maitre has a beard like Lin- Coln that gives many people the wilhee. is built iii. eorneveliat Goliath prOportiens and has the eye of an explorer, like be Soto. 'Metals was hi. Minneapolis promoting a Contest to find 'The Happiest Girl in Ansel-Ida' . . The Whiter, will receive a screen e tat grid a new autoMtibile, the Maker of whin is his sPatiter." In St. Ann, MO ,e a book titled, Ten bays to Successful Mee InOtY Wet returned ten Menthe overdue to a branch of the St. LOuit 'CottittY Llistaty with note q just forgot- AU about having IL" 'aeasealereate eeeeeee THIS IS 'BASEBALL? — looking for the worst!" like fourth clOWts 'and gear to ga, a not-so-friendly 'meeting is Conducted by Members of the Giants and Pittsburgh Pirates Sail Praficitca, Hassle developed Over an alleged spiking at third base, ' , LIVED TO SEE THE;PICTURE — Ace German racing ' driver* Hans Hermann, erbuch 1 es on the - pavement as his racing car hurtles through the air in, the"West Berlin ,Grand Pi7l.g. race, He was only slightly injured, but in a prelitnifial'i"raie the day before, french racing great Jean Behra was killed. .. ,a i t i fiz'aiaa „ a-a; Ca,' aa aat ' • ataia'aaaaana Baby Seal That Thinks He's Human When skin diver BM Cheeks dripped up out of Puget Seund one recent afternoon, he thought he heard anether pair of flip- pets slapping the sand behind him, Pushing fogged goggles over a tanned forehead and pounding the water from 'his ears, he looked hack; then down. He was right, Waddling in his tracks was a baby harbor seal — a sleek, rolyspoly infant with plaintive eyes, incongrnous mustache, and a patent conviction that it was a person closely related to Cheeks. Unable to coax it back to the water, Cheeks drove the foundling down the Washington shore to the Seattle- Aqua Di- vers Club, where it was promtly Christened Scuba. (short foe e 11 - contained underwater breathing apparatus") and adopted as club mascot, Not so promptly was Scuba accepted in a foster home. Lots et the men at the club wanted it, but somehow wives kept ob- jecting to a seal that thought It was a child, Most of them, in the skin-diving set,, already had their hands full with children who thought they were seals. But last month, after some whimpering days of institution- al care and force-feeding, by a veterinarain, Scuba was firmly established in the skim-diving family 'of Glen and Peggy Bris- tow of Bellevue, just across Lake Washington from Seattle; and more certain than ever that it was, human. It had, it was convinced, three foster 'brothers — Tim, 14; Ter- ry, TO, and Mike Bristow, 7 — and, for a pet, it had a beagle named Zekc with whom it liked to play on the Bristow lawn. Scuba despises water; he flipped right out of a wading pool that the Bristows gave him. (Turned loose offshore for en enforced daily swim, he can tow the other Bristow chil- dren or .Bristow, himself, by an improvised harness. But his destination is always the near- est beach.) He spurned an un- disguised fish diet, but thrives on a formula of pulverized, tin- ned salmon in goat's milk (he tips the scale at 21 pounds, a gain of 5 in a week). The Bristows haven't the re- motest idea of Scuba's sex — "I am not a seal," says Bristow —but a member of the family can't be called "it"; so they arbitrarily made Scuba a male. "Scuba thinks my husband is his mother," Mrs. Bristow says. "I just baby-sit during the day until Glen comes home." How does it feel to be a seal- sitter? "It's a new experieece," says Peggy Bristow. "He's a nui- sance. He's a baby, and you have to squirt him down every. No often. He only eats four times a day now, it's true; but we have to stay up till • 11 at night for that last feeding." What • future is there for a seal who thinks he's a person? "I read a book that said a fully grown harbor seal weighs between 150 and 220 pounds and eats about 30 pounds of fish a day," Bristow grimaced. "I can't afford that; so when the going gets 'tough, I'll have to give him to the Woodland Park Zoo." There, among others of his species, Scuba m a y finally learn that 'he is a seal, not a huniune He, might possibly even learn that he is a she. Cars Are Really , To Ride In! As automobile models for 1960 roll into the showrooms there. is going to be an en tirely new focus of interest. The breathless question will not be which company can adver- tise the highest-horsepower gas- burner, the flashiest fishtails or the most chrome. Curiosity in- stead will center on the new small cars which are being en- tered in competition by, motor- dom's Big Three, For once the mammoths of the industry will not be lead- ing; they will be following- where two independents and some twoscore foreign manu- facturers have slfown a waiting market to be. They will be ack- nowledging that after all a sig- nificant segment of American motorcar buyers are interested in economy and functionalism; • that many purchasers want transportation, not metal plum- age to outstrut their neighbors. Business Week magazine . counts this change of trend as one of five major turning points in the half-century of the auto- mobile industry. It 'quotes one researcher's estimate that po- tential compact car buyers con- stitute about one-fourth of the 1960 market in the United States. A study by U.S. News & "World Report brings out the points that typical buyers of economy cars already on the American market average some- what higher income than 'buyers of the big selling Chevrolet, Ford, and Plymouth, that they include a more than . average number of college-educated people, 'that 'most are families with children and many are two-car families.. An important change in at- titutde toward consumer tastes has taken place since 1955. This year Detroit will net' just be saying, "Here's your car; get mite:and sell it." Detroit will he listening. -- From the Christian Science Monitor. ,,s, it' Flow can I remove •s light scorch stains item evhite' Mater- ials? A, By sponging with hydrogen peroxide and, sodium Perbarate. Add' one teaspoon of sOdiuni per- bortte to one Pint of per6xide. Binge: afterward with Ideas. water'„ Jockey In A Hurry' He comes whooping and whip- ping out of the, starting gate, a pale-faced kid who fights for the lead right at the start so that no challenger will spoil his view of. the pot of gold waiting at the finish line. His body high and forward, weight over the horse's withers, boots in two of the shortest stirrups in racing, he is a jockey in a hurry, He is strong enough to ride all after- noon, and he applies the meas- ure of cold cash, not sentiment, to his work. Shxugs ,;Jockey Bob Ussery '(rhymes with fuss-ery) "If I ride in the Kentucky Der- by, I want a real 'shot 'at' win- ning. Otherwise, I'd rather ride six mocnts at Belmont," This frankly quantitative ep- roach to riding is paying off handsomely this season for Rob- ert Nelson ("Okie") YUssery, 23, who has risen from a dust-eater generally back in the pack of national rankings, as tabulated by the fact-finding' Morning Tel- egraph; .until he stands second only to the great Willie Shoe- maker in booting horhe winners (224 v. 221) and total purses ($1,863,049 v. $1,128,474). It mat- ters little to Ussery -that he has had to ride 143 more races than Shoemaker to get his total, or that he has -never won a major stakes event. He is often willing to resort to lackluster hayburn- ers to fill out an afternoon's work: "Those stiffs Will win now and then." Bob Ussery learned to ride back home in Vian, Okla,, a lit- tle farming town (green beans, cotton, corn) near the Arkansas border His father was a clerk in the general store, 'had fiVe children, a pump and; an put- house; his grandfather had a big black mare named Kate. When he was seven and weigh- ed just, 55 lbs., Ussery was clat- tering actosa•the Oklahoma' flat- 'land, perched like a raisin on the bare back of, Kate, and celebrat- ing 'a win. over other mounted kids by ,riding straight into * water hole, Kate' and all. ,.Bob. Ussery ,early" learned the value of a buck. Says he: "I al- ways wanted to hoe cotton— thaee,guys got „$3 a day. 'wasn't big enough."' So Ussery 'turned, instead to picking spin- ach (10¢ for every 20 lbs.). By seventh grade, he knew where easier money lay: "I couldn't ride and go to ,School too. I quit school," sprinting quarter horses over dirt tracks around the South-, west, Uspery learned to 'get a horse 'away fast at the start. By 16 he was ready for the thor- oughbreds, drove his first mount to victory in the 1951, Thanks- giving Handicap -in New Orleant. Within months Ussery was a big-tithe jockey, with reptita- tion as a slasher Who •bulled his way through the field like a full- back. Ussery used the Whip so much that some jockeys hated to mount the horte he had rid- den because the animal tended to sulk. Not until last yeet, when he was set down for., 30 days' for whacking Eddie Arc- erg's- horse aerate the nose at Jamaica,, did he finally realize that there is Mort to racing than intieeleo Ussery still Whips hard (craeke one jockey: "They rule for Shoemaker because they like to; they run for Ussery be- cause they have to"), but he now uses his head as Well, Says Ven- erable Trainer: Sine FitZsitititiblit: "The bey picks his hales right, and he doesn't get himself jani nied up in the peckete, Hell be a great one If he doesn't get OVertatisfied," Vase* hss sailed away $100,. • '000 in blue thitistocks, Fm earned more than $100;000' this year, At Saratoga last inikithi Ussery Minted lot a winner so Zealously that he rode in ten' 'Out„ Of 14 ace before finally etOss- ,ing the finish line in front. SUMS titi,Arearol "He'S i hungry kid." lairw can I clean Waked lido !lowers? A. By *Wilt them with bens tines Iteitteite, or niiptlik He Sells Athletes' Names For cash When Milwaukee's Poi Bur. dette walked into the locker room at 'Yankee Stadium after Winning, the seventh and final _game of the 1957 World Series, he had to face still another line-up — a „group of advertis- ing men WhO Wanted hire to productsign endorsements, Without missing a signet, I3ur- dette quickly turned to the club- house boy and said: "Go find Frank Scott," Burdette called for just the Klis4t man, In a, husiness that grosses $260,000 a year for the players, Scott might well be considered the clean-up hitter, accounting, for more than half the trstalsand taking his 10 per 9.44 off 'the top. Tist Month, for example, Seeott •lined up Mickey Mantle, football's Johnny Uni- tas,, and seven' other athletes 'for a Post Cereals .promotion; signed Casey Stengel to plug Skippy peanut butter; arranged a TV commercial in which the New York (football) Giants' Kyle Rote and Frank' Gifford will tout Colgate shaving creamy and booked ex-Dodger catcher Roy Campanella for the "Las- sie" TV show. Sports endorsements, of course, are not new on the U.S. scene. Under the management of the late Christy Walsh, for instance, Babe Ruth lent ,his name to more than 100 prodticts ranging from breakfast cereal to underwear. But, except for the super-stars, the practice didn't really blossom until Scott, an ex-road se'cr'etary tot' the New York Yankees, got, into the act in ,41950.: Since then, manufac- turers of everything from cigar- ettes to cement products have scrambled to "sign. athletes.. De- odorant makers, however, gen- erally avoid player endorse- ments. Scott's explanation: "It sort of makes you 'think of smelly locker, rooms." Scott had more' than 90. big- name athletes in his stable at latest count. "Now, ,when. a guy like (Washington's) Harmon Killibrew bepomes a star, I don't have to gb to him," Scott says. "He comes to me." They also come to'hinis:fer, elf-season jobs in industry (ScOtt recently set up a job-placement service for, baseball, players), to settle gripes` agaiat 'manageMent ,(he is the major leagues' player re-, presentative);, :and .for - arrang- ing, 'ghostwritten' Magazine articlesSetett!rsentry,into •jour- nalism,. ';however; makes s o In e sportswriters unhapPy. Even rookies, the writers claim, clear the "Aost etatentents with Scott to see how much they might be worth on .the open — arid ,;1:11e:1,M ani",041.8ing sa.,„ —market. And with.,good reason. Fox the ''payoff' can' be handsome for a really top star. Burdette's call for t;Fraoke ,Scott ,. netted, him $15,000 (for endorsing such pro- ducts,-as Camel cigarettes, Wa- Shingten" apples, and -Colgate - shaving ,creane.) Don Larsen of the 'New, Ye& '-ydrikees, Who pitched' the' ,only perfect game in World Series history, cashed in te,,the.teine of $25,000 for this one afternoon's Work (from, among other things, endorse- ments of Camel 'cigarettes and Gillette razor bfades as , Well as from television appearances). Scott, Jneanwhile, continues to, 4 hope for the - ne baseball player who could ,break the endorse- ment business 'wide open. "It's the man who hits 61 home runs arid:, breaks babe Ittith's 1927 recerd," Scott says. "That ought to' be worth more than $100,- Sleep While You Drive Your Car! Sleeping and driving may go together on an automatic high- way designed by General Mo- tors Corporation in conjunction with AR&T Electronics, Inc. The new electronic chauffeur service takes I: over steering; speed control; and obstaele de- tection. All the driVer hat to do is sit backarid relax, look at, the scenery, doze, Or do whatever does on an automatic elec- tronic highway. It is only ne- ceesary for hint 'to touch power steering, poWer brakes, toe-tip accelerator, and eiitislesietitton tearistniseion, to get on and Off the electreinegiletid system, ,"or for fuel and rest stops. Once on the automatic lane 'of the Auto Control System, a car steered dOWn eriegnetie path created by loWefrecItielleS> eled-Weai outrenit frein A. cable buried in the road. An the, CoMputet 'translates sig.. nals from the Cable -into right and left' " aireetIonal movements to steer the' bat table theattiret,,ebar speed, , A second Cable,'ContrOla speed and spading Of darS. Obstacle' detection is lidtOinpliehed by tiding the. hlthway 'into a saw ries of edintrOl. Whet cat is in a Partiettlar block, its speed diterittinet atitOinatietilly the speed of thig vehicles ilii the AGENT! WANTED EARN Cash in your Spare Time, Suss show your friends put Christmas and. AILOccesien, Greeting Cards (Melt:ding Religious) Stationery, Gifts, Write for samples, Colonial CVO Ltd. 469-la Queen Eapt, Toronto 2, EARN E X 1 la A MONEY) AGENTS, clubs, ate, Sell Canada's finest Ohrist. mas cards, novelties, etc. over 200 items including deluxe, religions, vet- vet, chrome, everyday and personal cards. Wraps, ribbons, toys, books, dolls and jewellery. Many gift items, Prompt service, For colored catalogue and saws. Gree tingpproval, writeJeandro Card Co., 1253 King Street East, Hamilton. Ont. ARTICLES FOR SALE "DESTROYER" for use in outdoor toil- ets, Eats down to the earth, saves cleaning. Directions. Thousands of users, coast to coast, Price $1.00 per can, postp,aid, Log Cabin Products. .0,22 York Road, Guelph, Ontario, POL,YETHYLENE plastic tarpaulins, grommets, reinforcement, only 60 sq. ft, Plastic silos, haystack covers, cist- ern ,,liners, Information Polyfilrn Prod- nets, 11,R, 1, Burlington,, Ontario, • STOP TOILET DRIP CONDENSATION stopped with a guar. anteed imperial styrofoam liner, Mail $4.00, we pay postage Mellardys, 996 Dundas St., Lora:ion, BABY CHICKS alflAY started iflweek old pullets ready soon, 74 each. Booking Oetober, November Broilers. See local agent, or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont. NINE and ten week old started chick bargains while they last. White Leg- horn X Rhode Island Red, California Gray X White Leghorn — $41.95 per hundred, Assorted Medium Breeds, nine weeks old — $39,95 per hundred. Also pullets. one week old, Barred Rock, Columbian Rock, Rhode Island Red,, Light Sussex — 528,95 per hen- dred.'RhOde Island Red X Barred Rock, Rhode Island Red X Light Sussex — $26 95 per hundred, Assorted breeds — $23.95 per per For each wek older, add r chick. Kimber pullets, one Week old, $47.00 per hundred. For each week older, add 40 •per chick. Catalogue, TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. FEE GUS ONTARIO BOOKS FAMILY Catholic Holy Bible for daily reading. Sacred Heart Edition, Art Leather Cover, Illustrated in color, $29.95 postpaid, Cash or money order. Edward Borak, 12 Ranson Street, Stam- ford, Connecticut. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIE" RESTAURANT in Newcastle; 455,000 year takings. Beautiful apartment, fully equipped, seats 40. Owner has other Interests. Apply Flying-Scotsman, New- castle 3136, WANTED: One reprepentatiye, each Canadian town. Collect names, You get 604 for each name. Information, start- ing supplies, $1.00. Dixie Sales, Box 1856, Ocala, Florida. ." FARM EQUIPMENT ,FOR SALE FOR Sale — Rosenthal Combine, very good condition $650.00. W. H. Knapp, Box 593, Monroe, Michigan. INSTRUCTION, EARN morel Bookiteeping,"Salesman. ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les- sons 504. 'Ask for free circular No. 33. Canadian Correspondence Courses 1290 Bay Street;; Toronto. a LEARN to Weld. No time1imit. Day or evening. ,Aalt,C. School 'of Welding; John St. at 'Gore, Hamilton. Ont. JA. B. 7427 — JA. ,7.9681, INDUSTRY NEEDS R A F "rt. M-6 N I THE Mechanical & isIfeMft Inst. offe,a you a new- and simplified' 'home-study course In iridustrial,,,drafting. Mane find excellent jobs after'completing this Government-approved „program, The course is very reasonable, in fact, you can pay es little as $10 per month. For further Information, without obli- gation, vvrite'to: • : beacon Institute of Orchids. Arts, 0 Derides Street, West, Dept: II, Toronto, Ontario. LAND WESTERN Canadian homesteads —160 acres. File age 18. Crown land 504 were up. For information se done dollar to: - Frontier Surveys, Bog, 246, V.anderhoof, British Columbia, 'MEDICAL IT'S IMPORTANT,— EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN OTTAWA $1.25 Express Callect POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of .dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles, Post's Eczema. Salve will hot disappoint you. Itching sealing and burning ecze. ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema will 'respond readily to the stainless odorless ointment regardless of hoie stubborn or hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 1865 St. Clair Avenue East TORONTO MISCELLANEOUS GENUINE German Cuckoo Clock with weight and ,pendulum movement. An- tique Walnut, finish,' Cuckoos every quarter hoer. 'Shipped ,from Europe, Satisfaction gtigaranteed. 53.95 each, 81, Jaeiceber Box 147, nay, Arizona; NEWEST Noyeltyl Your own Mono' gram to deeorate yo,ur car, boat, mail. bolt, •eta. $1.00 or 'S for $2.50 postpaid, Star' .Paoduets, 3701 Potomac AVedue Los Angeles', 16,,,Califotnia. OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Cninortunity Leath Hairdressing Pleasant, dignified profession; good Wages. Thettsands Of successful hiarvol,Graduates • Aliierica'e Greatest SysteM Illustrated Catalogue Free _ Write or. Call_ MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 Blear St,, W., Taranto BM-holes: 44 icing St, W,, Hamilton 72 Mclean Street, aOttetva „ two preceding block$. A ,telled Vehicle sutOdistioally.stops a eat in the 'Week to the rear, and thit. chain reaction back's, all slong ths highway as other vehiclet edelein range Of preceding elite. At least it there is , Aube Mane' traffic tie 'up from Chicago to 'New Yorfk, it won't be bump. er to bumper, but blotk to block, a NURSES WANTED GRADUATE NURSES PINEDIATELY tsgvw 58 bed hospitel to be opened. its. optember, Apply to: Supertatodeat prince Edward County Hospital. Platen, swede, PERSONAL. HANDWRITING Reveals True Self, Characteristica, Send 30 word semplar, $2.00 for Analysis, yours or another'] handwriting. Emmett Wells, 1648 27th Avenne, Phoenix, Arizona. TROUBLED? Love? Money Problems? 111 help, SelutIcin Available, If instruc-tions followed. Strictly personal, Jahn Wamsteker, Box 10-Cle Otters, Cape, South Africa. PPPP P Per., ADULTS! Personal. Rubber Goods. 96 assortment for '$2,00. Finest quality, tested, guaranteed. Mailed In plain sealed package pine free Birth -Control booklet and catalogue of suppliee, Western DIstrlkiptors, BOX 24TF Regina, Sask, P5(9TOGR4PHY SAVE I SAVE I SAVE I Films developed and 8 magna prints in album 400 la magna prints in album 604 Reprints 54 each KODACOLOR Developing roll 51.00 (not including Prints) Color prints 354 each extra. Ansco and Ektachrome 35 mm. 20 ex- posures mounted in slides 51,25. Color Prints from slides 350 each. Money refunded in full for unprinted nega- tiyes, FARMERS' CAMERA CLUB BOX 31, GALT, ONT. PROPERTIES FOR SALE CENTRAL ONTARIO VALUES! "WE have a wide range of listings to suit your taste and finances, Commer- cial opportunities, many farms of vari- ous sizes, small holdings in rural areas, cottages, vacant lots in town, country and vacation districts. Descrip- five literature and photos mailed promptly on request." LONG BROS. — Realtors Cobourg, Ont, Port Hope, Ont. Franklin 2-3161 Turner 5.4501 SALESMEN WANTED SALESMEN NEW CAREER OPPORTUNITIES HERE is ,your chance to start fresh in a new department of a 52-year-old com- pany to help it grow and grow with it: to become an important member of our well trained team of specialists. An opportunity to create a high pay- hig Career in the sales field. Frankly, we don't want just anybody. Each man will be selected with care and a con- siderable investment made by this fin- ancial firm in his future, The men we are looking for must be intelligent and personable, who can talk sincerely to the average person. If selected vou will be trained thoroughly and be given every assistance to help you suc- ceed. We are certain that this field represents a splendid opportunity for those seeking above average earnings. Salary, arid, commission, monthly bonus, group insurance annual increases in this responsible position If you feel you can qualify Write to Box 194, 123-18th Street. New Toronto, Ont. STAMPS AND COINS FOR the famous British Line of Rap- -kin Stamp Albums and accessories, see your Stamp Dealer or Bookseller. The Ryerson Press. 209 Queen St W., Toronto 2-B. GERMANY, Saar, locals, mint, used, List free. Ted Stals., 316 Oak St. North, Aurora, Illinois. Catalogues wanted, ay Highest price. ise. a, 9910 Jasper Ave- nue, Edmonton, Alderta. 100 DIFFERENT Worldwide stamps 104, pies surprise packet. Williams. Boat 187 — WL, Toronto.1, Ont.. TEACHERS WANTED School, No. 6, Rochester Townshi rades SATHOLIC teacheewanted for Pub September, 1 to 5. Duties to commence September. a APPLY, stating experience, qualifio Hans, and salary, expected, to Rf ' Strong. sec.-treas., R.R. 2, Belle Rive , Ont, 'TEACHER, male, Oingle, commeneinoi September, salary, . $2,560; 12 pupil S rades 1 to 8; located 68 miles west ChaPlean on main line C.P.R. APPLY ,-giving name of last inspector to Mrs. 'E. L. Roberts, Lochalsh P.O. Ont., via iC.P.R. TEACHER w a n d fair U.P.S.S. Silber Devitt and -Barker, ungraded. Apply to Mrs. E. Christianson, See.„ Mettle% Ont , Cochrane District, stata ing qualifications, last inspector and salary expected. Female Protestant pre- ferret!, TEACHERS wanted: One English and two bilingual for Separate School. Quote qualifications; APPLY to J. Nadeau, Secretary Treas. urer, P.O. Box 66, Spragge, Ont. • WANTED by Wolfe Island T.S.A., three qualified teachers, Protestant pre. ferted, for modernovell-equipped rural schools with attehdance about 20 pupils, Duties to commence September 1959. Please apply stating qualifica- tions. references and salary expected to Mrs. Mutiel joslin, Wolfe Island. ' Hold it -awhile, erase, rainihg!" YOU SLEEP CAN TO-NIGHT AND RELIEVE NERVOUSNESS 11.0.44Y TO-MORROW! SEDICIR teeith token according to directions is a safe Wciy to Induce slesii Nerirsia ikyliberaniteshe, resre‘ oilyt ca ati..aia.a tk„ali 0.00440,5 ISS[1li 3G' 069' rT