HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1962-04-05, Page 7Pop- SALE MIScLLANEDUS
,INTROPUOTORY OFFER: Send this Advertisement along with 98c for a pairs of men's wool rayon and nylon
work pecks, OR 1 pair of Ladles' finest quality nylon hose for 65c; I 'paira for $1.89 - colours: light or dark beige, OR one men's flannelette plaid work shirt for $1.98; two xor $3,49. Postage ?aid. Money-back gearantee, Free Ii-Illustrated'catalogue a rid monthly MeneySaver, listing hundreds of top quality merchandise.
'MEDDLE MERCHANDISING COMPANY r FRCVS 11, ONTARIO _ . • GOATS A LAMBS WANTED
PALETTA MEAT PACKERS LTD. - WANTED- Baby goats and spring lambs, Highest Prices according to (Val. ity. Write 600 MOUNTAIN BROW BLVD, HAMILTON OR CALL FU 3.7474.
GRASS SEED
GREEN PASTURE SCARCE? SORGHUM GRASS MAY ANSWER YOUR PROBLEM Nine foot growth in sand and gravel soil. Farmer at Enderby, 11.a, pastured stock calves in Sorghum until snow fall. Dairy farmer pastured his cows on Sorhum when his other pasture failed,trough drought, Prove to your- self what this grass may do in your area This annual grass is good for pasture er hay. Easy to bale and cure, Ten pounds delivered, for $15,50; Twenty-five pounds, for $37.50
ered. Requires about two to three pounds per acre for row crop. Place your order now. All No. 1 seed, C. E, KINGSTON DIST, Co. LTD.
Box 424, Kamloops, B.C.
HORSE SALE.
NURSES WANTED.
NUDS FA and Qualified Nursing Assist-.
aritS for New Modern 15 bed hogeltal treating Medical and Surgical cases, in
the Niagara District Close to 'Niagara Fails and St. Catharine's. Apply titaOPIA age, experiencce, qualifleationa, owe-tee salary, when available and tele-plume number to the Administrator Medical Centre Hospital, P.O. Box 10, Virgil, Ontario.
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 America's Greatest sestets) Illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Call
Marvel Hairdressing School
358 Bloor St. We Toronto
Branches: 44 King St. W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa
OLP COINS WANTED
PLEASE write to me What you have in old Coins wax will advise you of their worth. A, A. Nelson, Dennison, Ohio, U.S.A.
PARTY GAMES
PARTY Gaines! Adult's, Children'al Both 64-page books postpaid 50c. Ar-cane Book Mart, Riverdale Station, Box 529-C, Dayton 5, Ohio.
PERSONAL
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS 'rested, guaranteed, mailed in plain parcel In-cluding, catalog free with trial assort-ment. 36 for $2.00 (finest qtlaittY). Western Distributors« Box 24.TF Re-gina, Sask.
OVERWEIGHT?
A safe, effective reducing plan with "Way-Les" rablets Medically 'approved. 1 month's supply .$71:11 • Lyons Drugs,
Dept 32. 971 .Dantorl II the I ornnto,
LIVESTOCK SALES BARNS
LIVESTOCK Sales Barn located in Cen-tral Ontario on a Main Highway, Out-standing buildings, Thls, we believe, is one of the better located Sales Barns in Ontario with very good potential and priced to sell, Make all enquiries In confidence to: Don Wilson, Real. Es-tate, 184 Charlotte Street, Peterbor-ough, Ontario,
LISTENING DEVICES
DUTCH TREAT — Wim Crouwel, 18, left, of 'Amsterdam,
The Netherlands, helps Chicago White Sox infielder J. C,
Martin try on a pair of Dutch wooden shoes in Florida.
INVESTIGATORS! Write for free bro. chure on latest subminiature electron-ic listening devices, Clifton Electronic Devices, 11500 NW 7th Avenue. Miami 50, Florida.
MALE HELP WANTED
GYPROC Lathers & Roofer for new houses & experienced farm Rand for dairy farm, Goreski Roofing & Lathing,. Port Perry, Ont,
MECHANIC
An excellent opportunity exists for em. ployment of a mechanic or automotive machinist in Hamilton, Ontario, Our shop operates 52 weeks per year, we have a pension plan, 2 group insurance plans and excellent wage scale. Aptly with full details to: ,P.O. Box 139, Sta-tion "C", Hamilton, Ontario.
MEDICAL
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 scalding 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 $3.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St. Clair Avenue East
Toronto.
TRADE SCHOOLS
ACETYLENE, electric welding and Argon courses. Canada Welding Can-non and Balsam N., Hamilton, Shop LI ..4-1284. Res. LI 5-6283
,WELDING MACHINES FOR SALE
200 AMP
. PORTABLE WELDERS
We are clearing our full stock of Lin. coln & Hobart Portable Welding Mach-Ines. All overhauled, $400.00 each and up. Standard Englnels, Equipment & Supplies Limited, 516 Parkdale Avenue N,, Hamilton, Ontario,
WANTED TO BUY
YOUNG OTTERS WANTED
Society for Promotion of Wildlife and Forest Conservation Inc., R,R. 2, Stev-ensville, 'Ontario,
HIGHEST Prices Paid for old Canada, U.S„ Newfoundland stamp s-0 of n s. Write, Joe Morgan, Dunkirk: N.Y.
WILD ANIMALS
Max and Kati eloped to Nor:
way where they were married.
So began almost fifty years of
wedded bliss.
Kati performed before kings,
queens, erriperors and presidents.
All over the world crowds stared
in awe and amazement at the
tremendously strong and beauti
ful girl.
Once in Cologne, Kati was
watching Sigmund Breitbart,
then billed as "The World's
Strongest Man." On seeing her,
he sneeringly challenged the girl.
to equal his act.
When Kati jumped down on
the stage, Breitbart threw her a
length of heavy chain. She at
once snapped it in two and
tossed the pietes back!
From that moment, the rivalry,
between them was literally
"strong" — and• on Brietbart's
part bitter, They met in various
cities, Each time Breitbart chal-
lenged Kati to best one of his
acts. And each time she did.
One day hi 1919, Kati did her
usual two performances, then
went home. That night, the baby
was born.
Less than a week later, she
was again doing her heavy-lift-
ing act.
Kati's feats daily grew more
and more incredible.
She stood up under the weight
of a 1,200 lb. cannon balanced
on her shoulders. She balanced
a bridge over which walked forty
men and four horses:
She supported three women,
two standing on ladders, the
third holding the ladders up-
right, ,with all the weight testing
on a leather belt around Kati'm
waist.
When she died in 1052, per-
haps the finest 'and' truest 'trib-
ute paid . to her was: "She had
the muscular strengtheof ten or-
dinary men, and the-charming
femininity .of one,hundred Drain
ary women."
Troubles of a
Huge Ballplayer
Blond, brawny Frank' Howard
of the Los Angeles Dodgers rub=
bed dirt into the handle of his
36-ounce bat and stepped quickly'
into, the batting cage at,Al Lang
Field in St. Petersbtleg, Fla, Af-
ter setting himself in a epread.
siati8e,''the 250'epbund
right-handef 'swung easily, He
lined the first pitch through-the
left side• of the s infields, then
powered., a fast ball into' the
screen in left-center, 375 feet
away,
','Look at that, big slob and you
think he's got to be the• strong-
est man in, baseball," Dodger
coach Led Durocher told NEWS-
WEEK Sports Editor Barry Got=
tehrer: "I've seen him fooled,
catch' IV pitch With One hand' Ori
theeliate and stills drive it 450
feet, Then he starts, .pressing
and lunging, and he Ideas like
the worst bum you've ever seen.
With his power'' and potential,
yoU've got to be patient, Things
don't come easy fora big mate"
In a week of ipringstraihing
games, nothing was coining easy
for 25-year-old Frank Howard,
the man who Was sUppoeed to be
the besot Babb Ruth. He was
hitting 095, with one double and
One home in 21 at-bats. Yet
for the Dodgers, 9-5 favorites to
win the National. League lien,
nal% Howard remained the big
man, Blessed with excellent
pitching- (Don Drysdale, Sandy e
Koufax, end jahriey Rodree),
impressive hitting! and fielding
(Wally Melee; Totems, and Willie
Davis, and Maury .and in-
credible depth, the Dodgers lack
only power. "If ;they play How-
ard regularly and he ,cornes
around big,' said veteran, Stan
"they'd be the best learn
111 baseball,"
Getting Howard to come
around at all has'been a perplex.
Mg problem for the Dodger or-
How Lippy Leo
Cooled Out Mickey
This happened so long ago, Leo
Durocher was still a rookie. At
least, this is" the way Leo tells it.
Coming up to the Yankees as a
fresh recruit, the Lippy One
made his first appearance as a
big league "hitter" against the
Detroit Tigers. Who the pitcher
Was no longer matters. The De-
troit catcher is the key Man in
this vignette, and he was none
other, than the great Cochrane.
Because he was new, inexperi-
enced, and didn't know any bet-
ter, Durocher kept his attention
on the Detroit pitcher when he
stepped up to hit, Consequently,
Leo slid not notice Mickey Coch-
rane eurrpetitiously pick up •a
handful -of dirt with his bare
hand. As Duroclier gelded to
step into the first pitch, Cool-Irene
flung the handful of dirt en Leo's
shoes, Momentarily distracted,
Leo took the pitch for a strike.
On the :'secoild pitch the same
thing occurred. Calling. "time,"
Durocher stepped out of the bat-
ter's box ostensibly to dust his
hands. This time.Cochrane forgot
to watch the rookie, rot when
Leo's back was turned to the
Detroit otithher, he scooped up
two handfuls of dirt. When.
Mickey went trite his crouch to
signal for the next pitch, Leo
casually tossed the dirt into
Cochrane's face.
Frain then on, Leo recalls, no
catcher ever tried to distract hire
by tossing dirt on his shoes. And
he and Cochrane 110V01 had a bit
of trouble from then on.
ATOMIC PILER — Technician
Lester Race, checks ft.iel bun-.
dies in Yankee" Atomic Elec-
tric Co 's nuclear plant. A
second fuel charge of 25 tons
of uranium oxide wilt be in-
stalled in the reactor early
this spring. The first nuclear
core set a record by producing
one billion kilowatt hours of
electricity.
.sseetSITe, WANTED
EXCELENT .OPPORTUL IE NITS Applications for representatives, to cell' on Service Stations (enrolling members seeps with seri,* pertalhing to all phases of their business,' legal, insur-ance, etc.) -- are invitee from aR, cities
Of Western Ontarle, Salary end tlem. mission. GE 4-0961, or write 13,S-Pr-A.A 4.10 Wellington St., London, for person-al interview.. . .„.,
ISAIIT cHIGKS
ries ,they for Amcs, sykee end Comet
egg speeiallsts, to reach. best egg mark-ets. Dayeld to readyao-lay. Best deal
purpose varieties, and, Legitorns nixed Chicks,. pu ll ets and cockerels, Request price- list, See local agent 'or write Bray Hatchery, 124 rlohn North, 'Hamil-ten, Ont,
BUSINESS .OPPORTUNITIES
HIGH CLASS HAIRSTYLING SALON Hamilton Ownet, retiring. Geed .opportunity for skilled hairstylist. Equipment at de-Predated value, stock at cost. Batten, 5 Third Line S., Oakville, Ont,
ATTENTION MEN WITH INITIATIVE AND DESIRE 'TO GET AHEAD. SMALL Investment required to get ; started in a very profitable busi-ness right in your own home town, Limited number of dealerships available is towns and cities throughout southern Ontario, If you have the required desire to succeed we may have the oppor-
tunity you have been looking for. For full Information contact.
BRUCE SMITH, SUN-DLO PRODUCTS
LTD., 2 VANCOUVER AVE., TORONTO
BUSINEsE'PROPERTIES FOR SALE
GENERAL STORE LOCATED in Village South of 'City of Barrie, near Lake. Simcoe. Solid brick building 40 x 60 with modern living quarters above. Illness forces owner to sacrifice this thriving business for $22,000.00 plus stock at cost. Down pay-ment $5,000.00 plus stock, 'Yearly turn-over $51,000.00, Phone or write for fur-ther particulars. This is a wonderful
buy. , „
SERVICE 'STATION.; GARAGE' WITH GENERAL STORE RE STAURANT. & CABINS
ILLIA on No. 11 Highway, Owner.
THIS fully equipped business including living quarters located north or OR•
wishes to retire, Full *rico. 450,000.00 plus stock at cost, Down payment
$25,000.00 with 1st, mortgage for bal-ance at 6% with fair principal pay-ments. Yearly turnover $90,000.00 and all records to confirm. Phone or write for further particulars, See this busi-ness first before ever considering .a new venture. On evenings for the above call Wm.
Adams, Severn Bridge, MU. 9.2341
J. W. "Joe" MacDonald Real Estate and Mortgage. Broker 38 Peter St. South ORILLIA, ONTARIO Phone FAirview 5-5679 ANYTIME
CATALOGUES
FREE
CANADA'S
MOST WANTED
NURSERY CATALOGUE
Over 1,000 guaranteed selections. 80 page all-color catalog featuring the newest and the best in roses shrubs, trees,: flowers, evergreens, fruits, bulbs - from. Canada's largest grower-to-you nursery. Write today:
McCONNELL NURSERY CO. LTD.
65 Nova Scotia St. Port Burwell, Ontario
COINS WANTED
YOUR old coins may be valuable. High-
tiist prices for Canadian and American. ustrated Catalogue 50c, Coronet
oins, 1611 Church St., Toronto 2, Ont.
DOGS
SAMOYEDS, St. Bernards, Scotch Col-lies, German Shepherds, Fox Terriers, etc. All purebred and registered. Agents, for all breeds. Terms to 20 monthsavailable, • Jerdon Kennels, 47 St., Paul Street, Brockville, D1-2-3441.
FARM HELP WANTED — MALE
FULLY experienced married man for purebred Holstein Dairy Farm. Sepa- • rate house. Write, stating wages and experience, in first letter; also refer-ence from a previous employer. W. Wesley Werry, RR 1, Hampton, Ont,
FARM FOR SALE
GENTLEMAN farm 11 e a r Oshawa. Large brick home, modern kitchen, 2 bathrooms, 30' living room with broad-loom, 100 acres of rolling medium clay 'loam, trout stream running through cedar bush. Contact Howe and Peters, Realtors, 67 King St. Si., Oshawa, 725-4701.
How Can 1?
By Roberta Lee
Q. HoW can I make a good
toilet perfume?
A. Mix two ounces of alcohol
with ozie-half melee of orris root,
Keep this tightly corked in a
bottle, and shake thoroughly
each time before using, .
IloW can I remove seine
diseoloratien oti silutnietitis kiteh-
te. .vessels, caused by 'food or
Water containing iron?
A. 13y rubbing briskly with
steel wool and soap, Then rinse,
and dry,
. . TEEN AGERS! Your favorite star in 3D. Wail mask of grey styrene, ready to 'hring.'51'vre Istatle9„:13rigatiti7,pordoti Eliiabeth TAVIStiaTotilt 'Cbrtls; "'Rock Hudson, BUrt Lancaster, Merlon' Beiih-do; Pane John XIII. $1.25 PPd.
KISSING, DOLLS! Mag ietic 'attraction'
causes ttipse cute' dal s to Cling to. *ether vitten placed close together, $1,00 pale; „ MOUSY EARRINGS! Made of Velvet, comes in all at:tors. Mexicali import, $1.00 a pair, postpaid,
BETTY SMITH ENTERPRISES Deaf. 4, 29 BriglitsIda Av6fitict
East Northport, New'York
ISSUE 190,
FOR sale, $6,500 cash, 100 acres Hol-
land township, Grey county, 90 miles north of Toronto. For further particu-lars apply Wilmer Clark. Route 1, Berkeley
150 ACRES excellent state cultivation. 4 acres in maple bush, spring creek, good house, bank barn 50x60, hog pen, hen pen above, 30x50, water, hydro throughout. 517,000. Apply Irene Gil-lies, RR 2, or Milford Dowling, Fergus St., Ph. 49111, Mount Forest.
SALE due to illness, 100 acres good land, self drained. Modern 7 rooms and bath, half new 4 years, all new alumin-um siding, and Storemore storms and acreena. Bank barn 35x75, upper part .new 4 yrs., other buildings. School buses - mail - milk routes 'past door, In Warwick Twp., Lambton Co., 1/4 mile No, 7 Hwy. Immediate possession, Owner Wm. Wallace, 43 VVIgle, St., Leamington, Ont. Reasonable. down payment,
tiGt4 CONTRACT Heavyweight chonviosi Floyd Pottor'..
ton, left, shdkes hands with Sonny Listort after the'e
contract tor a title bout.
.7pr.; 4
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
ganization., When signed for a
staggering $103,000 bonus in 1953,
Howard,, an All-American 1244,,
ketball player at Ohio: State, Was
..a baseball player of unlimited
gain more e
strength afnicni eslsiten,i4tedwsaksilals.sigTnO.
ed to Pete Reisa,. then R minor.
league manager and ..now, a, Los
Angeles coach, Reiser watched
and talked, Il.rward listened and
• hit—until be A:ached the major
leagues: There the next Babe
Ruth, awkward and overeager,
swung like k Litttle Leaguer. "We
just gave him bad pitches and
• changes of speed and he was an
easy cut," recalled St. Louis
pitching coach l owie Pallet.
"But late last year, when playing
regularly, he was damned im-
pressive." . •
For many players, two Cason"
major-league totals of 33 home
runs, 122 runs battcd, in, and a
.278 average would be impres-
sive. For Howard, they are dis-
appointing, • This season, the
Dodgers, who played him part
time and finished four games be-
' hind pennant-winning Cincinnati
1961,in are determined to play
Howard regularly at first base or
in right field. "It's up to him
now," said Reiser. "He could
drive in 100 runs and hit 40
homers if he relaxed and learn-
ed not to swing as soon as the
pitcher lets the ball go. Some day
a pitcher with a good move will
throw the ball to first and Frank
will swing at it."
Howard is 'frustrated by his
failure. "I don't know what peo-
ple expect of me," he said softly,
sitting in front of his locker.
never said I was Babe Ruth and
I never thought . it, I just want
to play regularly. I' know. what
this season means to me and the
club. If a guy kicks 'himself in,
the backside eveny day, that's the
most he can do. And only I can
do it far myself."
CT:ipelled 'To Be
PPrents In One
Are we tailing him? Spelling
him? Depriving him? Such (1145'
tiolls, Swapped, among parents
about their children, are famil-
iar. ant few Where and Moth-
ers ask them with the particular
poignanee of the divorced and
widowed. Compelled to be tvie
parents in one, the lone guardian
plays a desolate and demanding
role that is increasingly common
in U S. life,
Today, there is 01/Q divorce to
every four 'U,S, marriages; all
told, some B million children live
in one-parent homes, Badly need-
ed for those involved; Advice
and understanding from sympa-
thetic outsiders. That need is
now being promisingly met by
Parents Without Partners, a five-
year-old organization with 65
national chapters and 15,000
members, From the Bronx to the
San Fernando Valleys-single par-
ents are klatsching in homes and
churches, listening to psychiat-
rists and social workers, tossing
back and forth over the coffee
cups their common perplexities
about everything from discipline
to adolescent sex.
"I didn't realize what a social
outcast I would be after I was
divorced," reports Mrs. Ann Kel-
man of Palo Alto, Calif., the
mother of three tow-headed
boys. At first, Mrs. Kelman
joyed a flurry of invitations, but
through the months they dwindl-
ed b zero, "1 got the impression,"
she says, ,"that nearly ever other
woman thought I was trying to
steal her husband,' Parents
Without Partnes,s;has offered, here
a new social -outlet = barbe&ies
for the kids, ein.Toccasional ,partse
mixed with the serious seminars
on parenthood.
Inevitably, many a chapter is ,
an incubator of'romance The
national ,president, for example,
" not long ago married his ( •ccu-
tise vice president, "Bs.. sils
is not a club for women looking
for husbands or for men on the
prowl," says a Miami father.
"PWP stresses the family as a
group." In Los Angeles, the
group regularly treks off to Ma-
rineland and Disneyland, chil-
dren in tow. In Buffalo, N.Y., a
puppet show was recently, staged.
The Palo Alto, Calif., chapter is
starting a pre-school nurserYefer
working mothers. Accordingsto
Mrs. Barbara Mordy of Ann .Arie
bor, Mich., "PWP has made MY'
four children realize others are
In the same situation,"
The first. Parents Without
partners were two In number,
Us.
1957, a pair of divorced New
Yprkers, James Agleson, a corn-
peercial artist, and writer Jacque-
line Bernard decided single par-
ents might learn from each other
ttnd placed,* classified ad in The
s e Xessr York Post. Its message to
other lone parents — let's get ,
together. Both have since be-
come inactive, but what they
planted has blossomed into . a .
loosely' knit national organiza-
tion that holds annual meetings,
provides group health insurance,
and issues a • monthly journal
whose topics. range from "Who
Pays a Widow's Bills?" to "Don't
Eat Up Your Alimony,"
If PWP has at times an ever-
sweet flavor ,of uplift4 it un-
surprising,.lince the Majority of
members are women seeking
spiritual bditris apolVell as .,aneWetss
to financial Security "anehossetiP
be a father to a boy. For male
members, however, the problems
are largely the same. "When we
get with single people," says
Chicago's John jerileine,t_Vehe'has
custody of two children, "we
find we don't belongl,there be-
cause we have kids and think
differently. We're like ducks out
of water." FOr Jenkins, PWP has
opened afresh reservoir ,of ideas
and companionship es- even of
confidence:
Q. How can; I write With ink
on celluloid?
A. If the surface is first rub-
bed over with' a .Chalk crayon,
then the dust wiped off With a'
clean cloth, the writing can be
done easily.
Quarter Horse Sale
APRIL 14, 1962
3rd Annual
MICHIGAN STATE FAIRGROUNDS Detroit, Michigan.
For Catalogues Contact
Bud Leetch or Tom MCKinley
Fenton, Mich., U.S.A.
A Girl Who Beat
The Strongest Men
Her vitql statistics at twenty-
five were 43, 29, 43, She was
the strongest woman, and per-
haps the strongest human being,
the world has ever known,
Each morning before break-
fast she kept in training by lift-
ing her husband, who weighed
154 The high abov'e her heactsAix
times with either. hand!
One of her most famous acts
was to lie on a bed of nails
while supporting a 210-1b. anvil
on her chest.
Men in the audience were
with to pound on the anvil with
sledge-hammers. By tensing her
iron-hard back muscles at the
moments of impact, Kati kept
the „nails from piercing her skin.
' Born in a gipsy caravan in Al-
sace-Lorraine, Kati Brurebach,
at fifty, was still abls, to lift her
210-1b. son over her head with
one hand.
Thirty years earlier she defeat-
ed strong man Sandow in a
weightlifting contest. From then
on, she was billed Sandwina.
But it wasn't strength alone
which made Kati a leading at-
traction with Ringling Brothers,
Barnum and Bailey and in
vaudeville houses throughput the
world. She was no muscled mon-
strosity, but very pretty, with a
lovely and exciting figure. In-
deed, the first part of her act
was devoted to posing, in brief
and tailored costumes, as Justice,
Columbia, Germania, Liberty
and other characters designed to
show off her statuesque .beauty,
She stood 6 ft. Ye in. and weigh-
ed 210 pounds.
From infancy, Kati had toured
France and Germany with her
circus-owner father and acre-
batic mother. When only two
years of age she could do hand-
stands. And when she was six-
teen, her father was offering 100
marks to any man who could
wrestle Kati and pin her' should-
ers to the mat,
There were naturally many
takers — but no winners!
In Saxony, a nineteen-year-Old
unemployed acrobat named Max
Heymann accepted the chal-
lenge. Within seconds, he had
been slammed to the mat with
such force that all the breath was
knocked out of him.
Afraid that she had hurt him
badly, Kati leaned over anxious-
ly. Max opened his eyes and
whispered: "I love you, Will you
marry me?"
Kati stared down, blushed,
then said softly: "Ptetend you
can't get up."
She then lifted Max in her
arms and carried him right out
of the arena!
Later, Kati told friends: "I beat
him. I then pick him up in my
arms, look at the. little man.
(Max was a mere 5 ft, 5 in.)
"Then I fall in, love with him."
STAMPS
100 DIFFERENT stamps re To Collectors Requesting ismIs
Winston Philpott Box 300 Botwood, Nfld., Canada —sass e
SHEEP FOR SALE
KARAKUL FOR SALE: Karakul (Black Persian) lambs ana ewes Edward E. Dickey,
11,6, Brampton, Ontario,
SPARE TIME PROFITS
SPARE Time Profits for Women! How to achieve high earnings with 'little cash. Based on successful Oxperiendes. Folio $1,00. E. M. Badgley, 111 N. Main.
Adanis; New York.
TRACTORS FOR SALE
INTERNATIONAL TRACTOR
Clearing a completely rebuilt 1940 /r):,
ternatlonal, Farmall. Tractor, complete with side cutting mower attachment -Sacrifice Price $395.00, Standard En-gines, Equipment & Supplies Limited,
516 Parkdale Ave. N., elaineten, On-
tario.
MONEY TO LOAN
MORTGAGE LOANS
Money available for immediate loan on First and Second Mortgages, and Agreements for sale, on vacant and improved property, residential, indus-trial, city, suburban and country, and summer cottages. Forty years experi-ence. SUMMERLAND SECURITIES LIMITED 113 Simcoe Street North OSHAWA, Ontario Phone: 725-3568
NURSES WANTED
REGISTERED Nurse required for the Arrow Lakes Hospital, Nakusp, B.C., fifteen bed, standard wage rates, holt-days, semi-annual increases, etc., 40 hour week, Room and board available at Hospital. Administrator, Arra* Lakes Hospital Nakusp, "B.C, ' •
,
SNOWED UNDER Workers try to uncover o roilrOdd
station completely buried by snow hear Oslo, Norway.
•4
--•vamiworawarialm•simaimmli•mmnammi&