HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1961-10-19, Page 3...
MUSIC
Legfn ,play the piano .In
i6,1 eymprovised :Miele Free detatla.'
p Box '873, 'Montreal.
NUTRIA
ATTENTION
PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA
When ptlrehaeing nutria Mulder the Mowing points which this organiza-
tion offerer
1,Tho best available stock, no cross
bred or standard types recornmend44.
2. The reputation, of a plan which Is
proving itself substantiated by files of
satisfied ranchers.
e, Fell insurance against replacementa
should, they not , live or in the event
of sterility tell fully explained to our
certificate of merit)
t aWree ignivde enytoeutid ofnolyr inulr agtairomme n't`e. h
5 You receive from this organization
guaranteed pelt market in writing.
6. Membership In our exclusive breed.
crc' association whereby only pur-
chasers Of this stock may participate
in the benefits so offered.
7 Prices for Breeding Stock start at
Sp$e2c019al u offer to those who qualify,
earn Your Nutria on our cooperative
basis Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd„
R.B. No, 2, Stouffyille, Ontario.
O
MEN
PP ORTU
AND
NITI
WOESMEN
FOR
•-
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn flaircireseing
Pleasant dignified profession- good
wages Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates
America's Greatest
Illustrated CatalogueSyste Free
m
Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOCH. '
358 Swot St W., Toronto
Branches:
44 King St. W Hamilton
72 Rideau Street Ottawa
PERSONAL
PURRHAVEN PERSIANS
Finest champion stock, whites, blues,
silver chinchillas. Pr oven young
breeding males, females and choice
quality kittens for sale, Write Mrs. en
Wilson. PR 5, Guelph, phone, TAylor
2.1149,
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
REPAIRS
RAZOR AND PEN REPAIRS
FACTORY authorized repair depots.
Overhauls and parts for all makes of
electric razors. Ronson, Philishave,
Sellick, Remington, Sunbeam, etc, Par-
ker, Sheeffer, Waterman Pens. Mail to
SHAVER SHOPS
88 King St. West, Hamilton or 418
Talbot St., London.
STAMPS
SPECIAL offerer 100 different select.
ed Br. Colonies used stamps $0.50,
200 different ease, T. ii Grebe/11 P.O.
Box 378, Beaverton. Ontario
UNWANTED HAIR
Vanished away with Saca-Pele. Seca-
Pelo is different. It does not dissolve
or remove'hair from the surface, but
penetrates and retards growth of un-
wanted hair, Ler-Beer Lab Ltd., Ste. 5,
679 Granville St., Vancouver 2, B.C.
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS
TESTED, guaranteed, mailed in Main
including catalogue and sex
book free with trial assortment, la for
$1 00 (Finest quality) Western Distribu-
tors, Box 241-PF Regina, Sask.
PHOTOGRAPHY
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
BOX 31, GALT ONT.
Films developed and
8 magna prints 400
12 magna prints 600
Reprints 50 each
KODACOLOR
Developing roll 900 (not including
prints), Color prints 300 each, extra.
Ansco and Ektachrome 35 m.m. 20 eX-
posures mounted in slides $1 20 Color
prints from slides 32¢ each Money re-
funded in full for unprinted negatives.
PET STOCK
HALIBURTON, solid house, chicken
coop, 300' x 300' lot on Hwy 28 near
Bancroft. ideal business site $3,800.
Ian Gllu es, R.R. No 3, Bancroft.
PROPERTY, 12 acres with buildings,
on highway 21, 1 mile north of Pinery
Park. H. Maas, RR 2, Grand Bend.
Apes Make it
Out Of Humans
Add t2 041 trottOIft kPOte
I3erlin, Damascus, np.tanfja, and
Vietnam the name of Kyushu,
the subtropical, .sPuthermnost
Main island •ef Japan. There, an-
other war — running both hot
and cold — was under way last
month, and as usual, the good
guys were losing.
r,t "good guys" were hun-
dreds of Japanese settlers trying
to carve out homesteads in Kyu-
shu's jungles. T he "bad guys"
were the island's apes who liter-
ally were making monkeys out
of the human "invaders,"
Widely reported in the Japan-
ese press and confirmed by
NEWSWEEK'S skeptical Tokyo
bureau in conversations with the
embattled farmers, t he "war"
centered around the village of
Kayagadan, where half the set-
tlers already have been driven
out, "The monkeys are smart,
as smart as we are," tamer Mi-
tsurn Takahama said, "Our only
consolation is that they haven't
attacked us physically."
What the monkeys have done
is to make life almost unbear-
able by raiding the farmers'
crops under the leadership of
a light-coloured monkey which
the villagers have named Taisho
Shirozaru (Gen. White Mon-
key), Each day, t h e villagers
say, "the General" holds "a cen-
tral committee meeting" with
other leading monkeys; then, in
disciplined waves, the "troops"
move out, usually during the
field hands' noontime rest period
or at midnight under a full
moon,
It is an amazing sight, Take-
haina reported. Sometimes the
monkeys spread out over a field
of yams and pass them along
hand to hand in a simian bucket
brigade. They also maintain an
alarm system, with a couple of
monkeys screeching from a tree-
top when a farmer comes near.
For the occasional dumb mon-
key who gets caught in a trap,
the monkeys even operate a
"rescue team" which tears the
trap apart.
Defense tactics are handicap-
ped by a law which prohibits
the killing of monkeys and by
the villagers' own superstition
that causing harm to the apes
is unlucky. The farmers did
bring in dogs as reinforcements
to frighten the monkeys away.
But after being harassed for a
few weeks, the dogs went over
to the enemy, Now, says Take-
hmaansatae,rsthey only snarl at their
Estimates vary on the amount
of food the monkeys have ga-
thered in during this year's har-
vest but obviously it has been
more than they could eat. Per-
haps, the villagers say, the mon-
keys have some inside informa-
tion on the nuclear arms race
and are stockpiling — just in
case.
WEIMARANERS Registered . males
.and females, nibs, to 111 milts. old.
Contact Clarence Holmes. "Ghost Inn
Kennels" Reg, R•lt, No. 1, Blenheim,
Ont Call OP 8-5757.
DISTRIBUTORS WANTED.
UNUSUAL
OPPORTUNITY for men and women
to build their own business, Products
have national promotion. Commissions,
Bonus, Lifetime ever-rides, Write R,
Dahmer. 30 William Si West, Water-
loo, Ontario.
FARM CATALOGUE
FRET fall farm catalogue, write Wil-
liam C Campbell, Realtor, Listowel,
Ontario.
FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS
BABY CHICKS
11A.Y has Ames pullets and other good
firietles, up to 12 weeks, available
quick shipment. Dayolds hatched to
order, Book Noyernber.December t-er onloks now. See local agent, or
write Bray Hatchery, 120 John Northe
Hanallten, Ont.
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
PI-TOTOGRAPHIO Studio and Cement
Shop; felly-equipped; established 10
years; P.O.Box lee, Forest, Ontarle.
BUSINESS: OPPORTUNITIES
GARDEN CENTRE
Anyone interested in operating or their.
leg sense in your town, we supply full
line of guaranteed stock. Contact IOW
Wylde Farms, Clifford, Ontario Phone
320 it 13.
DEER HUNTING
BURKS Falls, Algonquin Park area,
for deft, everything supplied, C. Sher-
rate eitastiale Phone Burks Fells.
102W5
HUNTING ACCOMMODATION
COME deer hunting to George Os.
borne's Camp, Golden Valley, Cint in
November. Reasonable rates cover
board, guides and dogs.
DOGS FOR SALE
ALADDIN KEROSENE HEATER
For barns, sheds, cellars, summer cot-
tages, camping or emergency heating.
Operates on non-explosive kerosene,
burning up to 25 hours on a single gal-
lon. Produces up to 9,320 BTU's per
hour. enough to heat 3,000 cu. ft.
It burns with a blue flame, hence no
smoke or odour. Perfectly safe, quick
to heat, easy to operate. Completely
portable. No flue pipe needed.
Ruggedly constructed of heavy gauge
steel with green enamel finish,
Satisfaction guaranteed, Only $20.95, we
pay freight if cash sent with order.
Aber & Sons, 36 Van Horne, Montreal.
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 or Price
PRICE $3.50 PER. JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St. Clair Avenue East
TORONTO
DON'T WAIT — EVERY SUFFERER
OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEUR-
ITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S
REMEDY.
EMLUGNRO'S DRUG STORE
335
IN,
OTTAWA
• $1.25 Express Collect,
HOBBIES
"Everything for the Hobbyist" Whole-
sale; Retail. Complete Cataltigue 400.
Model Hobbles, 1555 Lakeshore Road,
Toronto 14.
LIVESTOCK FOR SALE
PONY SALE — 300 head; consignments
open until sale time, Oct. 21, at Han-
chett Livestock Auction Sales, Route
27, between Jackson and Lansing,
Mich., near Leslie.
MEDICAL
Moustach,o.s.
3ive Them Away
A man's personality can be re-
/rated by his moustache, says A
nental health expert. Major
lleenfrey Peberdy„ former Bri-
Ash army psychiatrist and now
• en the staff of Newcastle (lea,
rrel Hospital, recently made a
nutty of 400 moustached applie
mine for officer (reining,
ife divided up the applicants
ay tile type of moustache they
sported: trimmed (short hair.
›iser entire upper lip), bushy,
Keen-thrush, hairline and divided.
The pass rate for trimmed,
atl.thy, hairline and divided
,ypts was an 'average twenty-
Airco per cent — about the same
tis for eleau-eliaven men. But
strangely enough, not a single
man with a toothbrush moue-
tulle passed.
Pubercly could hardly believe
this at first, So he persuaded
fellow psychiatrist to arrange
another test at an army base,
And again, to his astonishment,
not a single toothbrush mous-
tache owner passed.
Studying isle selection boards
reports on toothbrush candidates,
Pebercly discovered a significant
pattern,
The boards said that in general,
they were "too limited in imagin-
ation too little, appreciative of
the views of others and liable
to create rather than disperse
interpersonal tensions,"
The character of these candi-
dates, said the reports, tended
to resemble their m.oustaenes
"faintly rebellious, energetic but
prickly, precise to a fault, disci-
plining to near-ruthlessness and
disciplined to near self-mutila-
tion."
Major Peberdy added, judici-
ously that "the cut of a man's
moustache could, of course,
ney'rr be of influence in select-
ing candidates," But he made the
toothbrush owners wonder just
the same.
Scientists studying moustache
psychology have given many
other • explanations. Moustaches,
they say, are tell-tale signs of
political conservatism, or father
worship, emblems of confident
nonconformity, or "epigraphic
adornments designed to win
mates, like phosphorescence in
fireflies."
Many women find a mous-
tached man exceptionally roman-
bic. "A kiss without a moustache
is like an..egg without salt," runs
an old Spanish saying.
Women have long believed in
the idea — unsupported by me-
dical evidence — that a mous-
tache indicates virility.
This is probably because na-
tional. Leaders have frequently
warn moustaches. Would Kaiser
Wilhelm, Hitler and. Stalin have
risen to such ruthless heights
without a hirsute facial adorn-
ment?
MERRY MENAGERIE
'How do you think T tee!, liv-
ing with you birds all the
Smelly Auto Fumes
Under. Attack
New York state and city offi-
cials are moving to control auto-
mobile fumes after Detroit car
manufacturers have declined re-
quests for control devices in new
cars.
Orders have been given for
testing three types of crankcase
fume-control devices in 50, city
and 30 state government cars
within the next two or three
months.
If these tests are satisfactory,
administrative or legislative ac-
tion is expected to be taken to
make installation of such de-
vices mandatory in all new cars,
both government-owned and pri-
vate, a New York City Air Pollu-
tion Department spokesman said.
Experts regard fumes escap-
ing from various openings of
automobiles as the only major
source of air pollution that has
not been brought under at least
partial control.
The outlook for an all-out at-
tack on this problem has been
strengthened by a recent warn-
ing of Secretary Abraham A.
Ribicoff of the United States
Department of Health, Educa-
tion, and Welfare to American
car manufacturers.
Mr, Ribicoff said unless car
makers pledge by Jan. 1, 1962, to
install crankcase fume-control
equipment in all new cars, he
will seek to compel such a step
by legislation.
Crankcase control or "blow-by"
devices as they are called here,
attack the fumes escaping from
cylinders down into the crank-
case and from there into the air.
These fumes, consisting mostly
of unburned. gasoline, account
for 30 per cent of pollution from
automobiles.
The other 70 per cent comes
from the exhaust pipes and fuel
tanks. No similarly effective
controls have been developed for
them so far, city officials point
out,
But crankcase (tunes are an
important start, officials say.
'Blow-by" devices costing as
little as $5 are available for all
new cars, but few owners have
How Can. I?
By Roberta Lee
Q. How can. I renovate some
black kid gloves?
A. Touch the worn spots with
a camel's hair brush, dipped into
a mixture of olive oil and ink,
Q. How can I freshen the air
ill My living room after it has
been laden with eigaret and cigar
smoke by guests during an eve-
thee?
A. Try leaving a basin of water
in the room overnight, and the
air will be 'like new" in the
morning,
.„ .
ISSUE 42 — 1961
bothered to install these so far,
Within the past several weeks,
the General Services A.clminis-
tration ordered installation of
these controls in all its new non-
military cars, Sen. Maurine B.
Neuberger was quoted as saying
that the United States Army had
agreed to issue a similar order,
Official county ears in Los
Angeles, the United. States city
most seriously affected by air
pollution, will also carry this
equipment soon, writes Freder-
ick W. Roevecamp in the Chris-
tian Science Monitor.
Recent appeals to car manu-
facturers from Senator Neuber-
ger and from Arthur J. Benline,
commissioner of the Department
of Air Pollution Control of New
York City to make installation
of "blow-by" devices mandatory,
have been answered by the com-
panies on the grounds of "main-
tenance costs."
Installation of such devices
would mean "imposing burden-
some service and maintenance
requirements" on car buyers,
John. Dykstra, -president of the
Ford Motor Company replied
recently in a _letter to Mr. Ben-
line which was made public here.
Car makers generally have
emphasized that the devices are
available for all new cars as
an "optional" item, At the same
time, they have argued against
its usefulness on the basis that
climates in other cities might dif-
fer from Los Angeles so as to
make the- devices less effective.
Kenneth Kowald, secretary of
the city's Pollution Control De-
partment, suggested that the
manufacturers might prefer com-
pulsory legislation.
While the "blow-by" devices
are inexpensive, equipment to
be developed for controlling ex-
haust and tank fumes might run
to anywhere from $50 to $150 a
car, an item which manufactur-
ers might not want to add volun-
tarily to their production ex-
penses, he said,
Thief Studies
Obituary Columns
A thief now being sought by
Scotland Yard studies obituary
columns in newspapers and then
breaks into the bereaved rela-
tives' home while they are at-
tending the funeral,
Operating chiefly in Surrey
and West Sussex, he raids large
country homes, knowing that he
has plenty of time to ransack-
rooms and make a good getaway
With his booty.
And thieves of all kinds are
particularly active at the mo-
ment in Britain, They pose as
window-cleaners, meter-readers
and odd-job men in order to
'ease' the building, then they
break in at their convenience,
These thieves usually operate
in the afternoons, when house-
wives are out shopping. They
knock on the front door and if
there is no answer, slip the look
with a celluloid strip or walk in
through the kitchen if the back
door is unlocked — as is very
often the case,
"iVialte sure your homes are
locked before going out shop-
ping," police warn housewives.
"And report to the police at once
any suspicious characters seen
hanging about,"
0014V0ItTINO
rilmerging from a hairdresser's
with a superb new coiffure, the
Woman her
humped into
one of her bridge party friends.
'Why, tinily,' said the friend,
'what have you done to 'yeur
halt/ It looks just like 4 wigl'
'It hi a wig', replied tinily.
'Well, well,, iturintired 'her
friend", 'tiobody Would iveil
Home-Town Honors
For Jack Benny
By far the best-known product
of Waukegan, 111. (population:
55,719), is tightwad-typed come-
dian Jack Benny, Last month, to
show its gratitude to Benny for
putting his birthplace on the map
—and for donating handsomely
to the city's civic and charitable
causes — Waukegan summonded
the prodigal home for the dedi-
cation of a new school, Its name:
Jack Benny Junior High SchooL
The school's 450 students even
voted to memorialize. Benny's
perpetual show-business age by
dubbing their teams the Thirty-
Niners. Of his own school ties,
Benny had these memories: "I
was very bad in school. I hated
it. in my second year of high.
school they threw me out because
I skipped classes to play the
fiddle in a movie house,"
if brushing up on manners
doesn't help a child, try moving
the brush down farther.
LOFTY SENTIMENT — Japan's
newly built 170-foot monument
to her war dead rises above the
shore of Chiba prefecture, Vis•
hors can climb to the top-19
feet higher fhan fhe torch of the
U.S. Statue of Liberty.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
INTERNATIONAL-TYPE WATERS — A sailboat glides down New York's East River past the com-
plex of buildings that makes up the United Nations, At left is the steel' and, glass Secretariat
building. Low building houses the council chambers. Domed structure is the Generol Assembly
chamber.
Boats Have Notions
Of Their Own
LEARN WELDING
NO TIME LIMIT
Also
Certificate -Courses in
SUPER V 1:4 lON INSPECTION
QUALITY CONTROL
A.R.C. SCHOOL OF WELDING
92 John St. N., Hamilton
JA 9-7427 IA. 7-9681
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A boat has a way of her own.
Hidden beneath her plates or
planking there is a will every bit
as strong as that of her owner,
and however carefully her skip-
per will formulate his plans - for
a voyage his intentions may.haye
to be modified to suit the tem-
perament of the ship. .. This is
obviously the case with the Mani-
moths of the ocean, Now and.
again a great liner will leave
New York for Southampton, but
for some inexplicable mann will
clock at Cherbourg instead — in-
explicable, that is, to the lands-
man, who may imagine that a:
liner is not much more than ft
floating railway carriage on a
grand scale, The trtith is, of
course, that the vessel just wants
to visit France for a change of
scene, A dock strike may be the
pretext, but it can hardly be the
genuine underlying reason.... .
Many beats are very conserve-
tive and though they may be
ready enough to ride gaily along
some particular, favourite river
they will obstinately refuse even
to put their noses into another
waterway on which theiteowners
have set their hearts. Like a
skillful child a beat yen disobey
orders in the most piaruible
ways, The water-pumps for cool-
ing the engine may lock their
teeth in solid defiance, just as
though they were bound tight
with silt. Fuel pipes may refuse
even to drip, just us though
choked with water or sediment.
The engine itself rimy simply re-
fuse to start for no mechanical'
reason at all but merely from
tlisinclination—Lhough pretend-
ed symptoms of magneto failure
er faulty timing will be there to
deceive.
Nor is this behaviour 'confined
merely to motor-boats. Sailing
craft can be just as_ pig-headed
and at times they wilt even turn
upside down or shed their masts
like so much waste timber rather
than go, Where they have no de-
sire, Prom "Small 13oat
Through Iltilland," by Roger
ItZVe BALL Joe DiMciggiO, the Yankee Clipper, thrOWS
out the first ball at the opening game of the 1961 World
Series at Yankee StbdiUtil. Looking all it ilatebdit ebrei=.
fiord Frick:
THE MO BCE — One reason why this :hurriednet were,
traced with such precision is illustrated by the abOV,Ilt map.,
Shortly before the first, Carla, began to for et), the Weather-
Bureau had put into operation• the laSt link in its 1,006-rnifei
coastal radar net, Location of 1.011c-temp surveillance tackle
elailotit are shown an the Map,