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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1962-05-31, Page 7THAI PREMIER — Field Mar- shal Sarit Thanarat is Thai- land's strong man - premier. BUILDING MATERIALS LET'S FACE IT To sheath and Insulate the outside or face and insulate the inside of your Home, Barn, Milk house, Fruit & Vegetable storage, etc, costs are high. MIRO-CELL or TH ERMO-PLY will do both, one application, one price. Miro-cell, less than 7c and Ther- mo-ply less than 110 per sq. ft. for standard. 130 for Alkali resistant brand, Refer Inquiries to Thermo-Seal Insulation Ltd. 232 William St., London, Ont. Distributors across Canada EXPORTS WANTED EgPORT YOUR PRODUCTS TO US IN WESTERN' NIGERIA READY made wears and assorted cloths, hardspring, wheat flour, caustic soda, rice, potatoes, onions, electric fans, ceramics, and aluminum wares, tomato paste, sardines, olive and cod- liver oil BP., gold and silver wares, wrist watches and clocks, stationaries, musical instruments, portland cement, motor batteries, plywood. cameras, hot water bottles, vacuum flasks, shoes, leathergoods, toilet soaps BP., sewing and typewriting machines, and Repre- sentatives . , ALL enquiries are to be directed to West Africa (Independence) Coy.. P.O. Box 66, Ijelm-Igbo/Nigeria, ENGINES, A,&F, ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS 60 Stanley Ate, Toronto 14, Ont. MEDICAL PEOPLE ARE TALKING ABOUT THE GOOD RESULTS FROM TAKING DIXON'S REMEDY FOR RHEUMATIC PAINS AND NEURITIS. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN OTTAWA $1.25 Express Collect POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping akin 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 ubborn or hopeless they seem - Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3,50 PER JAR POST'S. REMEDIES 2865 St, Clair Avenue East Toronto 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, I 'mitts- trial, city, suburban and eoun''• and summer cottages. Forty years • 'oer- lance, SUMMERLAND SECURITIES LIMITED 112 Simeoe Street North, OSHAWA, Ontario. Phone 725-3566 NURSERY STOCK PAIGNTON HOUSE Motel and Cottage Unite LakeopRenossjeuantre, M23uradkeka. For complete information on summer vacation write for free coldred folder Or Phone Port Carling, 765-3135 GOVERNMENT certified Latham sec and year raspberry plants $00.00 per thousand, $7,00 per hundred, Tamer, Radbourne, R 4, Tara, Ontario, OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN 6E A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL. Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profession. good wages. thousands of successful Marvel Graduates America's Great lest System Illustrated Catalogue Free Write or Call Marvel Hairdressing School 358 Bloor Si. W., Toronto, Branches: 44 King St W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa PERSONAL TEECHERS WANTED SPRAYING EQUIPMENT HAHN ALL PURPOSE JET SPRAYER Covers up to 50 foot swath Includes hand gun and broad jet, pressure heed and hoses. Complete with Hahn 15 gal- lon per minute self-priming pump (150 lbs. pressure). For use in field spraY- ing, fence rows, livestock, washing buildings, etc. $120,00 complete. Spray- ers for every purpose. Write: Central Spraying Equipment, R,R. 4, London, Ontario VACATION RESORTS OVERWEIGHT? Try the effective "Way-Les" Tablets Reducing plan. 1 month's supply $7.00. Lyon's Drugs, Dept. 32. 471 Danforth Ave., Toronto, SAVE 15% ON ALL DRUG STORE NEEDS BY MAIL Including Vitamins, Cosmetics, Per- fumes, Patents, & injectables, etc, En- quiries invited. Lyons' Drug. Dept 34, 471 Danforth, Toronto, TEACHER required for September to teach intermediate grades in three- room school in North Cochrane Dis- trict. Minimum salary $3,000, annual increment $200 to maximum, State experience age and denomination. Arthur G. Stiles, Sec,-Tress., Clute. Ont. Schreiber Separate School Board re- quires on. lady teacher for Septem- ber term. Salary schedule Is as follows: Level 1 — $3,200 to $5,000 Level 2 — $3,400 to,$5,200 Level 3 — $3,600 to $5,500 Level 4 — $3,800 to $6,000 Increments $200x5, then $300 per year to maximum for all levels. t'revious experience, in Ontario S200,15 for ell levels, Applicants please write to Mrs. G. Mullins, Schreiber, ontario, Stating qualifications and name of previous Inspector. FARMS FOR SALE 2-yr.-old Palomino registered quarter- horse stallion. beautiful color and con- formation. 1 silver mounted Saddle, excellent con- dition. 1 Nearly new German silver saddle' and parade attachments. 1 3-yr.-old Palomino American saddle. bred gelding. This is an exceptional horse, registered 4 ways. This horse may be seen at Markhath. Telephone Unionville 69, ask for Miss Rae. FOR qUarterhorse and Saddlea contact Box 321, Belleville, Ont.. or call WO. 2.4034 Belleville, NEAR Owen Sound, 300 acres early land, running water, brick house, all conveniences, bank barn driving shed, 100 acres bush. Price $23,000. Write or phone between 7-8 a.m., Henry Ruhl, RR 5, Owen Sound, FR. 8-7524. 100 ACRES, Shelburne district, good clay loam, 3 acres bush, all, workable with tractor, barn 100'x70', good stables with water. Implement shed, 9-room brick house with modern conveniences. 30 rod from hwy. 1 hr. from ,Toronto. This farm has averaged over 100 bus. grain to the acre for past 12 years, and is outstanding farm in the district. Close to town and schools. First time offered for sale. For further particu- lars contact D. S. Thompson, 22 Royal. York Rd., Mimico, Tor. 14. CL, 9-2137. HOMES FOR SALE BEFORE YOU BUY GET THE FACTS! alanufactured Muttart Homes Save you money Consider some of the features: Mortgages Life-Insured at no additional charge. No money down for most models low monthly payments. Easy to assemble with pre-built walls and engineered roof trusses. Many models to choose from. MUTTART HOMES ARE. DELIVERED ANYWHERE IN ONTARIO, MANITO• BA, SASKATCHEWAN, ALBERTA AND B,C, Write for free Illustrated brochure tot Muttart Homes, Box 395, Brantford, Ontario HORSES AND EQUIPMENT FOR SALM How Can I? By Fete eta Lee Q. How can k clean some dis- colored enamelware? A. Usually rubbing with a paste of salt and vinegar will clean Up the 'enamelware. Q. How can I remove paint spots from my hair? A. With some warm vinegar. Then; of course, you'll need a shampoo to rehiove the odor of the vinegar. Q. How can I remove old ivititeWash from a wall? A, Here's one method that is much easier than washing it off • with water. First, Apply a thin. wash coat Consisting of starch, taint ' and glue. After this'has dried thoroughly, which causes the whitewash, to curl up, you cart brush it off quickly and easily, Q. How can 1 remove some heat rings front the top 'surface of one of MY tables? A. A Paste of- salt and Olive oil, applied to those rings With a brush, will heltx Let this stand On for about art hour before re- Moving, Or, let a thick coat of petroleum jelly stand on the mark's for about 48 hours before rubbing off with a soft cloth. ISSUE 2t -a 190' OVERTHROWN It cippeati that 1 0-yed r-old' /tickle Ihg.e, mascot Of the Unified A,W.C. datiiiterti Bolhani Institute iii London, En land Con hold his oWn at he "edeSles" With this beefy tackle' hopes ,to follow in the footsteps" of his father,. who is onitiStitute‘ itistittefot Wrestling,. C EN RAL ONTARIO HEREFORD ASSOCIATION THIRD ANNUAL SALE OF Carefully 'Selected and Goemenent- .11ritriected HORNED and POLLED. ittRESORDS 16 BULLS 0 30 FEMALES Tested Bulls Qualify for O,D,A, Premiums NEW COW' PALACE, StOtiOVILLEi ONt 56le StOrti 1 OA, Wed,4 6th 1961 Write 4.of catalogue W. a. Atkielsilfts, Auctioneer or C. A. MONVitiOMik*,„1Wriaav StrUffallie, Ont. PLR, '2, Staluffville, Onti law, is not the same thing as a chemical experiment!" So the rocket was dismantled, and the explosive washed down the drains. One man who knows a lot about the hazards of home-made bombs is Mr. V. I. Chancey, of the Armament Research and De- velopment Establishment at Woolwich Arsenal. He is usually called in by Scotland Yard when famous people are threatened by do-it- yourself parcel bombs, and mys- terious infernal machines. "We have devised a remote- control apparatus for opening this sort of device," he told me. "But we usually X-ray the par- cel first." An expert, with many years' experience investigating explo- sions caused by "the big stuff"— RDX, gelignite, and plastic ex- plosives such as Nobel 808 — ad- mitted to me: "The most dang- erous thing of all the home- made explosive. We never know where we are with it. Yet often they manage to pack it into par- cel bombs." Of all the dirty, dangerous and cowardly ways of bringing harm to your fellow man, the parcel 'bomb is the worst. In the past three years, Scot- land Yard and regional CID. forces have investigated seven major attempts at murder by this method. One of the luckiest escapes was that of a Nottingham man. He opened the parcel and saw to his amazement a jumble of can, isters of chemical. He phoned the police, who discovered this parcel bomb was intended to be deton- ated with an ordinary mouse- trap. On opening it, the coil-spring of the trap was, supposed to strike a little mercury-fulminate detonator, which would then fire the main charge. The parcel had, however, been damaged in the post, fortunately without causing an explosion. The mouse-trap had been 'pushed- out of aligns ment. When Michael. Sheldon, a Sus- sex detective-constable, received through the post a' coffee-box bearing the words "Requiescat in Pace" (Rest in Peace), he thought it was just a practical joke. The bomb went off with only a small, explosion,. which dazed the *detective. But investigation. showed that some 'screws had come loose. Had it functioned correctly, it could have been deadly. 'The Government should find tittle NOW to amend entirely the old Explosives Act of 1875, and the 1883 Explosive Substance Act. A• new law is needed to dear with twentieth-century amateur gangsters. Sale of all chemicals such at sodium' chlorate should be strict- ,ty controlled, And there should be stern sentences, up to life int- prisonment, for people who steal or misuse. Attny and Mining ex- plosives, or even chemicals such as the ammonium nitrate used to make them. Somehow, the idiot and criin- trial section of the public must be stopped front having easy ac- cess to saltpetre and Other Potas- shun nitrates which are so often used to fuse home-made bombs, YOUNGER GENERATION "Froth the day your baby is born," counseled a t o tt s scholar, "you must teach him to do Without things. Children to- day love luxury too much. They have execrable manners, flaunt authority; have no respect for their elders. They no longer isisd when their parents or teach erg enter the iodine What kind Of awful creatures. Will they be when they grow up?" The schelef who Wrote these words, incidentally, was Socta- tee, shortly before his death in 399 B,d; ,,,F.W.4=Z1.•=0* 'Sr" • CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING loAlrogrelarek.4;.:,4,0 PEST CONTROLS BABY CHICKS BRAY has Inttst Varieties alai purp(44,. prompt Shightent; day-olds and started 3.5 weeks old,. Also Ames, Request See local agent or write Bray Hatch, pry, 120 ,john North, Hatiallten, Ont., IOW THEM BY MILLIONS Black Files,, Mosquitoes, Moths, Fl ies,. BPOs No gases, polsona ar odorsCHernelese to birds, animals, humans! Positive electrie Insect-kill- it ing god! ornarren,, tal -•-• hangs any, Wherel Low priced — fylly automates. Works 24 hours a day for about 104 a month, Don't suffer from Insect$ a day longer) sand circular now to EAOKs — . Eclueatienal books, Drawer 108, Fort Erie, Ontario, English Grammar and PilnettlatiOn $2,00. Your pen and Your Vole!) deals With Banquets, Toasts, Public Speaking, Judging Speeches, etc.. $2,00 Speech corrections minimum fee $1 00. BOYS' AND GIRLS' CAMPS ROLLING ACRES RANCH VARNEY, ONT, BOYS and girls, 5.16 vs., complete camp Program, swimming pool, 3-4 bra. riding daily included in fee. 2 weeks, $105; 4 weeks, $200. SPECIAL TEEN CAMP JUNE 17TH 30TH GIRLS only, 13 yrs, and up, Really live with your horse. 1 week or 2 weeks. Write direct or phone Durham 307 W 2, BOYS' CAMP Allsaw New Natural Science Camp soya 7-15 Conservation, Farm Animals, Forestry, Also Swimming and. Sports, etc, 9 CALLAIS SAVE., DOWNSVTEW ONT. CH. 9-4517 THE U.S. MARINES DROP IN — Members of the 1,800-man Marine battalion that landed in Thailand are shown during "Operation Tulangun" on Mindoro Island in the Philippines last month. Five men are carried in each helicopter and descend a rope to land in isolated areas, BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE. SNACK bar with 3 bedroom apartment, main corner, year round business. $5000 or equivalent clown. Mom's Snack Bar. Port Dalhousie, WE. 4-0013. DEALERS WANTED FABULOUS income for those able to recognize opportunity. Protected fran- chise available for qualified dealer, handling our electric name plate. Send 5.00 for sample and Information to: Box 608, Medicine Hat, Alberta. GRAYMAR1NE Over 30 New and used engines avail- able from stock. Installation and rebuilding. LABCO EQUIPMENT LIMITED 44 Chauncey Ave., Toronto 18, Ont. le Talks A Good Game --And Plays One Tool Hobtrt (Bobo) Belinsky is a 36-yeer-old pool hustler who drives a red 1.661 Cadillac con- vertible, drink s champagne, wears easittnere spurt jackets, and has his initials Woven into his undershorts. He is one of the best pitchers in baseball, he says. He isn't — yet — but he is the most confident and col- ourful rookie since Lefty (Goofy) Gomez. "Nobody taught me nothing," the Los Angeles Angel left- bander admitted after defeating the Baltimore Orioles, 2-0, with the American League's first no- hitter in four years. "I taught myself everything I know, I had to teach. myself a screwball to make up for the spitter that I used in the minors," Against the Orioles and every other team he has faced this year, the 6,foot-2, 187-pound screwball has put his his new pitch and old fastball to excel- lent use. His record (5-0 — with a 1.70 earned-run average, best in the American League) is startlingly penfect; his tempera- ment is perfectly startling. When the no-hit game ended, the first thing Belinsky said to his man- ager, Bill Rigney, was: "How about that for a rookie?" Mana- ger Rigney, then tied for fourth place, grinned broadly, Signed by Pittsburgh in 1956, the New York-born, Trenton raised pitcher drifted through the minors for six seasons with- out making much of an impres- sion. Then the Angels bought him for $25,000 last y e a r. "I never got a bonus or nothing like that," said Bobo, named after middleweight boxer Bobo Olson ("We were both always taking the count"). "Hell, I was lucky somebody found me, I never played in high school. You had to be a kook to play on our team in Trenton. Everything was t o o regimented for Bo I didn't like that 'Win for the Red and Black, siss, boom, bah' stuff. It was a waste of time. I was picking up good money hustling at the pool hall." This spring, Belinsky reported to camp nine days late, immedi- ately called his own press con- ference, explained he had been delayed because of a pool tour- nament, and threatened to quit if Los Angeles didn't raise his salary from $6,000 to $7,000. The writers laughed; Angel general manager Fred Haney didn't. "Belinsky is a bug," he s a i d. "He can take our offer or go shoot pool," Belinsky whose salary will automatically jump $1,000 if he's still with the club June 15, took the offer. "In baseball, you got- ta protect yourself all the time," he said, "But you also gotta play. I tried my bit and lost, so I signed." Belinsky still isn't totally con- tent. "All the guys have heard about my pool and notrody'll shoot me a game," the hustler complained. "I guess I'll have to cool that bit for a while. I'm no n ut, I'm just socially sharp." SOB STORY Two old friends met for the first time in years. "How goes it with you,' Pete?" asked one. "Not good at all," mourned Pete. "My wife ran away with the letter carrier, my son is a juvenile de- linquent, my bank failed, and ,all my teeth• have come out," "Gosh, I'm sorry to hear that," eyenpaa thized the friend, "What business are you in now?" "Same old line," answered Pete. "S e 11 i n.g good - luck charms," Sonny Prepares For The Big Bout Charles (,Sonny) Liston took a sip of hot tea and jabbed a gi a, n t finger et a black-and- white poster showing all the heavyweight champions since 17A "When I win the abarrfr plOrtallip, I want my picture right here in the middle," he said. want it bigger than all the others and I want it with stars around it," After his first week of light training in the Catskills, Liston, the troubled top contender who fights Floyd Patterson for the heavyweight title in September, Was supremely confident, knock out Patterson in three or four rounds," he said. "I'm just as fast and I hit harder, No tighter hits harder than me, The only way Pattereon'd bounce up against me is with one of those those bouncing , ." "Trampolines?" suggested a writer, ""Trampolines," said Liston, smiling. At times smiling a n d serene, Liston can also be sulking and solemn. Unsweetened by the pink petunia wallpaper in his room at The Pines hotel golf clubhouse, he was irritable the day after his 30th birthday last month. He snapped at a sports- writer, shouted at an adviser on the telephone ("How can you advise me if you ain't here?"), and scowled at a gym assistant ("Who you working for, me or newspaper people?"). In or out of the ring, Liston, 6 feet 1, 225 pounds, two prison terms, is a menacing man. "He's, got to give hell to some- body," explained Teddy King, the assistant who was scolded for not timing Liston's workout properly. "But when Sonny gets angry, he cools off fast. He's a wonderful guy who'll make a great champion." Not everyone considers Liston wonderful. In refusing Liston a license in April, the New York State Athletic Commission stern- ly announced: "The history of Liston's past associations pro- vides a pattern of suspicion . . We cannot ignore the possibility that these longtime associations continue to .this day.". Convicted of armed robbery ha 1950 and of assaulting a policeman in 1956, Liston has also. Seen ac- cused of being associated with Philadelphia racketeer,. Blinky Palermo, heir transparent to Frankie Carbo, boxing'S under- world czar. Liston lately has confined his assault and battery to the ring. He now has won 33 of 34 bouts, including 23 by knockouts, and has been the No. 1 challenger for two years. "Liston will be the greatest fighter I've ever fought," says Floyd Patterson. "His record speaks for itself." One item' on which the -record is silent: Can the Philadelphia strong man take a punch? "I hope people never find out," says Liston, Preparing for .the biggest fight of his life, Liston fortifies himself with two meals a day (five strips of bacon, three soft- boiled eggs, two glasses of fruit juice, and two cups of tea for breakfast; 2 pounds of steak for , dinner), walks 7 miles in 7- pound shoes, shadow boxes four rounds, and skips rope nine min- utes to a jazz recording of "The Night Train." For diversion, he watches television, pitches nick- els with members of his entour- age, or stands on his head. Some- times he rides a red bicycle. "The bike beats walking," he said. "Someday I'm going to try to ride it to' Philadelphia (dis- tance: IN miles). If I make it, then. I'll know I'm in shape," Home-Made Bombs A Menace in Britain "Courts are having the im- mense problem again of dealing with violence in youngsters," gravely announced the chairman "of Middlesex Sessions, Mr. Ewen Montagu, Q.C., recently, He was jailing for four years an Enfield youth who had made his own home-made bomb to blow up a car. "It was bad enough when it was iron bars and knives," said Mr. Montagu. "Now it is bombs!" The bomb which caused the grave warning was made by a twenty-year-old labourer who wanted to blow up his father- in-law's car after his wife had walked out on him, With a short length of two- inch tubing filled with chemical, lie completely destroyed the car, blew one mudguard a distance of twenty-five yards and broke windows in nearby houses . . The bomb was made on the kitchen table from piping packed with weed-killer, sugar, and a solid fuel used to power model aircraft. Many schoolboys have been maimed and killed in the mod- ern craze to make bombs. This was spotlighted recently wheri a fourteen-year-old public school student died in Welwyn Garden City after the explosion of a weed-killer bomb, and his friend was seriously hurt. Supt. George Dear, of Hertford C.I.D., told 'ire: "All evidence shows this craze of making bombs is widespread. "Usually they are weed-killer bombs. But in some cases boys are ,making 'bottle bombs,' and detonating them by catapault! "We appeal to parents to keep chemicals which could be used as explosives out of children's way. Parents who find any tins which might have been used to make an explosive mixture should phone the police at once. "And, if they find any' of these home-made bombs, they' should place them in a bucket of sand or earth, handle them as little as possible, and on no account put them into water." In Supt.. Dear's area, a tele- phone kiosk was wrecked by a bomb which child, had ob- viously made. On the other side of Britain, in Wyllie, Monmouthshire, a boy of thirteen' is ill in hospital with IT PAYS TO USE OUR CLASSIFIED 1 COLUMNS a shattered hand. He was lucky to escape with his life. From a twelve-inch-long piece of piping and a mixture which, for once, was not weed-killer, he had con- structed a formidable bomb. When he tried to close the end of the tube with a hammer, a spark from the steel hammer- head exploded it. There are three reasons for this spate of dangerous idiocity. Schoolboys quickly learned the secret when a well-known juvenile publication gave the formula for a weed-killer bomb. Others gleaned the idea of a bottle-bomb from a TV pro- gram dealing with. Sir Winston Churchill. Millions of viewers were shown how an anti-tank bomb can be made from an old bottle filled with petrol,, and fused in a manner I have no in- tention of repeating, writes Chauncey Jerome in "Tit-Bits." Then, crooks have discovered the inner weakness of the old • Explosives Act — a law which has not been changed since 1875, when it was first put on , the' Statute Book, Even a few years after the Act became' law,: it was not ,enough to stop a maniac. blowing up a public convenience in. the forecourt of New Scotland. Yard itself! This was in 1883, at the height of an Irish bomb outbreak, and in panic our legislators rushed through the "Explosives Sub- stances Act," which helped to bring in other, dangerous'• sub- Stances, such as, picric, acid and liquid' oxygen — left out of, or perhaps not redognized as dang- erous by, 'the main Explosives Act. Police admit the old Act is full of difficulties. For instance, solicitors have managed to get an acquittal because a substance used in a home-made bomb could not. be proved an explosive Within the meaning of the Act. Other lawyers managed to get an .accused man off through. a loophole, which says that chemical experiments are ex- empt! A group of Croydon Schools boys recently discovered this loophole, and began. building themselves a monster "space rocket" Which,-, ,had it been launched, might have blow up a street of houses. Fortunately the pollee heard of the attempt' in tithe, and raid- ed the rocket site, 'We were only planning to tlo experiments!'"" the police were'told, Then one of the boy's admitted they Were ' planning "scientific"" experiments sending the rocket up with it Camera to study the stars, "Aight," said, the police's legal advisers, "Now the boys can be i.es, warned't they tun the risk of ars "A scientific' experiiiient, lit