HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1962-06-28, Page 3CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
NABY CHICKS
MK we egg p reetiction Bray hag 4,to week old Ames and other good
pullet varieties available, Prornn ship'
punt. Dayolds hatched to order, Broil-
er chicks quick shiPMent. See local,
agent, or write Bray Hatchery, 1,70
John NOrth, Hamilton, Ont, •
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
PHOTOGRAPHY
iir•come a Photographic.distributor fOr Photo finishing, cameras, supplies, No stock required write: Chevron Photo, Dept W 990 Coleman Ave, Toronto 1.3.
Ontario,
OPPORTUNITY:
For alert keen salesmen. To associate with successful
ORDINARY AGENCY.
REQU IREMENTS:
1, Desire to work
2 Presently employed 3 Age 28 45 Own car
4. Married preferred 5. Al references 6. Resident of area
OUR RESPONSIBILITY:
1, To train you for your career
2 To give you guidance, direction
and assistance in the field
3, To provide you with all welfare
benefits, Including contributory
pension
4 To maintain your standard of
living until you become estab-lished in our industry
If you are desirous of establishing yourself in the Sales and Service field,
we Invite you to write us, in confi-
dence, giving full details of your ex.
perience. marital status, education and
any relevant InformatiOn.
SOX 248, 123 18th STREET
TORONTO 14, Ont.
BUSINESS pROPERTY FOR SALE
fill...WARDS, lunch COnnter, two apart. ments. $6,000. Going concern raawrecg
Walsh Drayton Ont.
POOL room and equipment fer sale,
5'Al0' snooker talMefil" 14!88' Qae. tee _Au In.good, eer.icption ormesition —tease, Apply' to .Gerald
Keller Madge. Ont. Phone 613-473-2966.
.. •
• . LUNCH COUNTER
With ISstooto, 4 booths, ••full .dining
PPM. la rge• modern kitchen..2 Wash;
rooms, and_ living quarters .With 3 pee.
bath. All • steels, eqUipment, and 'real.
estate for .only - $8,000, Pine* •ferees
xale. and terms available on this ter.
rifle buy For particulars call, visit,
or write. DILL GOFF Real Estate. 14
Springbank Dr., London, -Ontario; GE
8-9255:-
BUSINESS 'PROPERTIES •.FOR. RENT
ATTENTION DENTISTS
NEWLY remodelled dental offices of the late doctor for rent on main street
In London, Ontario. Complete equip. merit in for 2 to 3 dentists sharing,
Also workshop completely equipped for
dental mechanic, Please apply to Kr.
Elleff, 533 Dundas St London,
MEDICAL
WANTED— EVERY SUFFERER or
RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
TO TRY !DIXON'S REMEDY,
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect.
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
SANISH 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 $3.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St. Clair Avenue East
Toronto
MORTGAGE LOANS
MORTGAGE LOANS
Money available for immediate loan
on First and Second Mortgages, and
Agreements for Sale, on vacant and
improved property, residential, indus-
trial, city, suburban, and country, and
summer cottages. Member of Ontario
Mortgage Brokers Association. 40 years
experience, J. E. Harris, F. G. Harris,
and R. C Bint.
SUMMERLAND SECURITIES LIMITED
112 Simcoe Street North, OSIIAWA,
Ontario. Phone: 725-3568.
NURSES WANTED
REGISTERED NURSES
Required for 38 bed hospital.
Good starting salary and working con-
ditions.
Apply Administrator,
Espanola General Hospital
Espanola, Ontario
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
HUNTING
IfUNTgrts Atteritton: .Now simple ins,
thod to tan hides, For complete instrute twos pent!. e1.00 to Easy Tan, Ernest
fouls, 3530 W. fleree, vIlvenix 9, Ark, zone,
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY
TOY eomerenlen Kennel Also lovely
home with same for sale. Owner r
tiring. Good income. Write; Box . Crystal limb, Ontario,
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
BEAUTIFY your stationery. 1,006 Surer
med name and addreas labels, 1-
P_OstPaid Averett Sale$ Co 14ss
center, Pocatello, Idaho.
COINS
MORGAN Silver Dollar, only U.S, coin struck (1878.19211 M 013V.--REV,—plus
23 K Gold.foll, $3,00. Numismatic Bank
Malta, 2.88 Columbia Road, Boston 21.
Massachusetts,
CHAIN SAWS
MANUFACTURER'S CLEARANCE
BOX 823, NORTH BAY, ONTARIO
Matched Chain & Spropket Combine.,
Hon, for all popular makes of chain,
saws, Specify make and model and,
bar length,
16" Chain & Sprocket — $12.00
18" or 20" Chain & Sprocket — ;14,00
24" Chain & Sprocket — $16.50
Sprockets to fit any Direct Drive Saw
— $3.50
Quantity of Reconditioned Chain Saws,
completely Rebuilt and Repainted, as
new, Various makes and models. Clear-
ing at $69,00 each.
Same day service on all orders re-
ceived.
FARMS FOR sm.'
FOR SALE, 37.0 acre dairy farm, 150
acres cultivated. Complete set of farm
buildings and machinery,' Holatein
dairy herd, new bulk cooler and .six
can milk quota, Located 14 miles from
New Liskeard. For further information
contact; Donald Define, Box 71, Earl-
ton, Ontario.
FARM MACHINERY FOR BALI
NEW TYPE HAYING MACHINE
CUTS LABOUR IN HALF
LUNDELL-MAYNARD three-in-one flail
type processor, 80-inch cut; cuts, con-
ditions and windross all in one opera-
tion. Write for prices and information,
C. E. Maynard Wholesale. saombers,
Ont.
EDUCATION
HIGH SCHOOL
Most jobs call for a high school edu.
cation. American School can train you
at home in your spare time, Progress
rapidly. All books furnished. Low
monthly , payments. For full internist-
ton, write or phone GE 84212. Ameri-
can School Dept., R.E.P., 439 Emery
St., London.
GUNS FOR SALE
CASH for old Guns, Colts, Remingtons,
Sharps. Winchester Lever action Rifles.
Avis, 79 Oak Park Ave., Toronto, Ont.
GUNS
MODERN OR ANTIQUE
BOUGHT -SOLD EXCHANGED
EXPERT REPAIRS—PARTS SERVICE
Poly-Choke Installations
TRADE DISCOUNTS
MONTHLY CATALOGUE 250
The Modern Gun Shop
"CANADA'S GUN HOUSE"
3004 DANFORTH AVE., E. TORONTO
HELP WANTED '
LABORATORY
TECHNICIAN
for
CANADIAN RED CROSS
BLOOD TRANSFUSION
SERVICE
Hamilton Depot
R.T. or University Graduate with ade-
quate science courses. Excellent work-
ing conditions, Vacations and Staff
Benefits. Apply stating experience and
qualifications to 401 Victoria Ave. N.,
Hamilton, Ontario.
HELP WANTED — FEMALE
tewardesses
TRANS-CANADA
AIR LINES
WE ARE SEEKING ATTRACTIVE CONFIDENT YOUNG L A D IES
WHO ARE INTERESTED IN A
REWARDING CAREER,
AGE 20 TO 26 INCLUSIVE
HEIGHT", 42 t. sr INCHES
WEIGHT, 105 TO 130 LBS..
- (IN PROPORTION)
EDUCATION—SECONDARY SCHOOL
GRADUATION DIPLOMA
NO GLASSSEISN,!OLRE,‘CONTACT ,
•LENSES
.YOU MEET THESE REQUIRE-
MENTS, .WRITE .OR PHONE ,FOR
AN APPLICATT.. ..FORM.
EMPLOYMENT OFFICE
U3 YoNTecoa R.Sotpit—o P1441 01
HELP WANTED. MALI
Police Recruits
Wanted
MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS:
AGE-21 TO, 35
HEIGHT--5'11"
WEIGHT-140 LSE.
EDUCATION—GRADI
Cadets
rxecient WpIrki,7 LEI pro. 11110t1011 possibIlitle6 and f r II a vonefite.
APPLY IN PERSON TOE"
'METROPOLITAN
TORONTO POLICE
PERSONNEL OFFICE
1(1/141 STROUT VAST
OPPICO NOURIli MONDAY TO
FRIDAY, I A.M. TO 4 P.M.
Did The British
Set Fire To The Sel?
Did Hitler launch invasion
barges from the French coast in
September, 1940? Did the R.A.F.
foil the operation by setting fire
to the sea?
"Yes, because my son was in
it," says Ursula Bloom in her
new book, War Isn't Wonderful.
At Exeter, where her son was
stationed,•11.A,F, pilots and crews
were at the ready, she says.
When the news came that the
invasion barges had been launch-
ed, every available plane was
sent up.
When the British aircraft were
over the German armada, fight-
ers sprayed the sea with gasoline
and bombers dropped incendiari-
es to ignite it. Other planes
machine-gunned survivors, mer-
cilessly.
Later, friends of Miss Bloom
living along the coast told her
that bodies of German soldiers
were being washed up, twenty
and thirty at a time.
The book, based on diaries.kept
`by Miss Bloom, is her vivid per-
sonal story of the blitz and the
home front. it would 'make the
ideal present for anyone who
thinks war pis wonderful, send can
remind us all' of the' price paid
for today's• uneasy peace..
RED STARLET — Mao A-po
of the woman's second team,
Peiping Physical Culture Insti-
tute, jumps in a basket try
during a game in Peiping.
Photo: Communist source.
TRADE SCHOOLS
ACETYLENE, electric welding- and
Argon courses. Canada Welding. Can-
non and Balsam N. Hamilton, Shop
LL 4-1284, Res, LI. 5.6283.
COURSES IN
ELECTRONICS
EVening clastesSte now being en-
rolled for, basic electronics, radio and television theory, transistor and ,oeint.
"ed circuit' techniqUei. TO secure rent'
future, inotilte now at the ..
ROOINSON -SCHOOL
OF ELECTRONICS: ''
160-james St, S., H amilton
TELLTALE iSOTOP11 Atomic science came to the aid Of
employes the Forth Worth plant Of 'General DynarencS
8vhtifi,:0 ;sewer. line .Aftet• installing a new sink
laboratory, 'Workmen sought td hook it' up to the existing
I•wir 'Old blueprints did hot ihOW the sewer's location
1.5 a radiaattive•itotOpe attached 'tO a ,long Wire,•
*as pushed 'through „io• HalkiS using
Geitierfajtiriter. to :fellovi the isotope ',While general foreman
G. S. Own ttatiWthi lieWetad, p6th With,e Chalk:
WEDDING RINGS
WEDDING RINGS!. New, beaut If ul
sterling or 10K gold filled, Men's, wo-
men's: 'Sculd or, trace 'size.. on paper.
;100 _each. Cahn's, 88 Adams, East
Islip. New fork,
ISSUE 5 1962
•
Johnny Bower
Kept in Stitches
—Also Vice Versa
.One Ton Depot. Perhaps :next
day they would reach it.
• • Putt during .a night a blizzard
sprang up, e'or ten days, perhaps
longer, they lay without fuel and; •
only scraps, of food, toping each
day the ,blizzard would lift at
•
least to give them. a .chance
covering those eleven miles. But
it did not. abate „
When, months later, the tent
Was foleride it seemed, Stott had
been the last to die, His arm w'as
Across the body of Dr. Wilson,
as it to comfort him.
Towards the end, Scott wrote:
- d o not •regret the journey,
Which has shown that gnash-
men can endure hardships, help_
one another and meet death with
as great fortitude as ever ,n the
- past."
HONEY FOR SALE
CLOVER Honey finest finest clolilitY white
unpasteuriZed 30 lb. pail 86.00. Light
Golden $5.50. JObli C Sproule Apiaries,
439Q Streetaville Road, Erindale, Ont.
TEAM'S NEW UNIFORM — Casey Stengel, manager of
New York's new National Lea gue baseball team, the Mets,
holds up a sketch of the team uniform at a press conference
in New York,
Heroes Who Died
In Southern •Snows
• t•,;
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant dignified profession, good
wages. Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates
America's Greatest System
Illustrated Catalogue Fret
Write, or Call
Marvel Hairdressing /School
251 Dicer St. W., Toronto
Branches:
44 King St. W., Hamilton
72 Rideau Street, Ottawa
A thin line of blood dripped
down his fee% cutting, across his
eye and down the side of his
nose, Johnny Bower, a Chunky
blond who plays gealie for the
Toronto Maple Leafs, reached
and clutched his foreheard ---
sliced by a puck fired from bare-
ly 15 feet away, Then, guided by
the referee and pressing a towel
to his head, Bower skated off the
ice at New Yol'k's Madison
Square Garden. "It's just a numb
feeling, like I always have when
3 get hit," he said,
Twelve minutes and six stitches
later, Bower returned to the ice.
As he stopped ten of eleven shots
in the remainder of the game one
night recently, Toronto defeated
the New York Rangers, 4,3,
After seventeen years and 230
stitches in professional hockey, ,
Bower, 37, the National Hockey
League's oldest player and sting-
iest goalie, is familiar with pain
and punishment.
"It's like being a target for Joe
Louis every night," said Bower, a
5-foot-9, 187-pound target, after
the game against the Rangers.
"You know you're the guy they're
all swinging at. That black spot
(6 ounces of hard rubber) comes
at you about 90 miles an hour.
You don't mind when it's flying
straight.at you, It's when it drops
or flips in mid-air that you've got
to get your chest in front of. it.
And don't forget, that you're
bound to lose sight of the puck
a few times a game."
The,puck is not a goalie's only
occupational hazard. A skate
slash once ripped a tooth out of
Bower's mouth and opened a cue ,
that ,required 32 stitches. Another
time, when an opponent slid into
the goal mouth, Bower broke
three ribs.
Brutal and blinding, the job of
goaltending takes a heavy toll
throughout the National Hockey
League—even among- the men
who do it best. Chicago's Glenn
Hall gets sick to his stomach be-
fore many games. Montreal's
Jacques. Plante, five-time winner
of the Vezina Trophy, refuses to
play without wearing a Fiber-
glas face Mask. Detroit's Terry
Sawchuk, while with Boston five
years ago, suffered a nervous
breakdown. "I'd rather see my
son do2something less dangerous
—like walk a tightrope across
Niagara:: Falls or take up" bull-
fighting," says New York's Gump
Worsley.
"The pressure's always on,"
said Bower in the locker room.
"You ' can. never relax. Even
when the action is 'at the other
end, I'm studying our own shoot-
ers. You never know who might
get traded and start shooting at
you. You've always got to be
ready for any type of shot,"
What's the most difficult shot
for Bower to stop? "The break-
away," he explained. "With that
one man coming against you, all
you can do is stand there and wait
for him to make the first move.
Guys like Gordie Howe, Bobby
Hull, and 'Boom Boom' Geoffrion
are great fakers, skaters and
shooters. Give them a little hole
and they'll beat you."
To keep the times an opponent
beats him to a minimum, Bower
sleeps at. least an hour before
every game and refuses to strain ,
his eyes by going to movies. "The
eyes are the most important
thing," he said, brushing the
blood off his cheek. "I don't
mind catching one in the face as
long as they keep it away from
the eyes." From NEWSWEEK
blow to the morale of Scott and
his .four compapions,
But they left a Union Jack
, flying on a cairn beside Amund-
sen's tent. Then they braced
themselves 'for the return jour-
ney — 900 miles of solid drag-
ging,
It was a desperate race then
against the Antarctic winter.
When it came, travel would be
impossible,
On the first few days of the
disappointed party 's 350-mile
march back to the glacier, they
had fine weather. Then blizzards
swirled around 'them again, and
soon injuries and frostbite added
pain to their exhaustion.
They began to suffer from lack
of sleep and slow progress meant
that they had to reduce their
food ration. Reaching the glacier
and mountains after six weeks on
the completely featurelesS pla-
teau cheered them.
But then their real 'troubles
began. Petty Officer Evans, the
biggest and strongest of the par-
ty, 'was hardest hit by frostbite,
and he could hardly pull on the
sledge ropes, 'writes J. M.
Michaelson in "Tit-Bits".
As the party were negotiating
a crevasse he stumbled, and fell
into the abyss. His team. mates
hauled him out, but he had sev-
ere concussion. Somehow he
kept up with his companions for
a while. •
Then he dropped behind, say-
ing he had trouble with his skis.
When Captain Scott, Dr. Wil-
son, Captain Oates and Lieuten-
ant Bowers realized he had not
caught them up again, they went
back.
They found him lying in the
snow, his hands uncovered,
wild.look in his eyes. The party
made camp and lifted Evans in-
to the tent. But that night he
died.
Two hours later his compan-
ions resumed their march. They
came off the- glacier, and now
had 424 miles to go. But one mis-
fortune after another hit them.
The temperature dropped away
to forty below zero.
The wind which should have
been at their backs had veered
into their faces, Every step be-
came a' struggle. Seven miles in
a day was an effort.
" They were nearly out of fuel,
but had placed a dump of a few
cans which they found again.
When they opened the cans,
though; they found•, them nearly
empty. The spirit had either
evaporated, or seeped away,
Oates was' severely frostbitten,
so exhausted that he dragged on
his compahione. Dr. Wilson, him-
self severely frostbitten, dressed
Oates's terrible injuries.
It was obvious that Oates
would not be able to. reach even
One, 'Ton Depot, 130 miles front
the base which` Was Bove the
party's utmost hope. There they
had placed a stock 'of food and ••
fuel and Medieal. eupplies,
Every pece a struggle, they
on for another six days.
0a.tee said he could move fio far-
ther' and begged them to leave
him in his eleepitig hag,
Scott refused, and that day
they Made a, few more miles.
When night fell, Oates went to
sleep hoping he would never
wake. nut he did—to fled a.
blizzard blowing,
Scott wrote what happciied
neXt in words that have become
immortal. "Oaths said: 'I am
going outside anal may be some
time.' He \\tilt Out into the bliz-
mrd and we Bove hot Seth Min
since.
"We' eriew that Peer Oates was
walking tO his death; bUt though
WE' tried to diiStiade; him, we
kneW it Was the act of el braVe
Man and ail. EngiiSh gentleman.
We all ,hopc to Meet the end with •
a similar Spirit •e-)• and assuredly
the end is tioefer."
They; resumed the march for
two 'or ehree days,: with Scott's
feat now frostbitten' and his two
companions Weakenieg. They
Pitched camp brie night Only
eltiVeit MileS libin the hatted Of
PERSONAL
As the British explorer strug-
gled up the long icy slope to-
wards his goal, he could not
know that he had failed already.
He and his party aimed to be
the 'first men at the South Pole.
But a Norwegian was planting
his country's flag there at that
moment.
Captain Robert Scott had lost
the grim race across the bleak-
ness of Antarctica when, on De-
cember 14th, 1911, Amundsen
reached the South Pole. He was
more than •a month in front of
his British rival.
That was fifty years ago last
month. And explorers' societies
everywhere are remembering the
valiant loser, as well as Amund-
sen' himself,
Amundsen should really have
been at the opposite end of the
world -- the North. Pole; It was
for an expedition there that he
had raised funds.
But when he heard that the
Pole had been reached by
Peare, he secretly changed. his ,
plans and sailed to the Antaretic.,is
There he waited through a win- .
ter for the race to be first to thee,,
South Pole.
Only by accident did Captain
Scott, also waiting to attack the
Pole, learn that he had a com-
petitor. His ship, Terra Nova,
met Amundsen's by chance in •
the Bay of Whales.
Captain Scott learned that Am-
undsen was starting sixty miles
nearer the Pole, and would be
able to start earlier because he
was using ponies. These were
two important advantages. But
Scott refused to reconsider his
plans.
"The proper course," he wrote,
"is to proceed exactly as if this
had not happened and do our
best for the honour of the country
without fear or panic."
At the moment Amundsen was
standing At the South Pole, Scott,
who had started ten days later,
was struggling up the great 125-
mile slope of the glacier whose
summit is 350 miles from the
Pole.
His party was man-hauling
sledges and had run into bad
weather. A blizard had kept
them tent-bound for four days.
Now the wet and sticky snow
'meant the sledges were continu-
ally getting bogged down.
He did not know he had lost
the race,, and on Christmas Day
he And his companions celebrat-
ed the festival in their small
tent pitched in the bleak desert.
-In mid-January they found the
track of Amundsen's sledges, a
few miles from the Pole. Then,
they knew that they had.lOst the
race for Britain. It was a bitter
BEAUTIFUL muscles for males, beau-
tiful figures for females. New, amazing
exercises. Easy, guaranteed!' Fast re-
sults now, $1.00. Jack James, Box 2.62-C,
Brooklyn 17, New York.
HYGENIC RUBBER GOODS
TESTED, guaranteed, mailed in plain
parcel, including catalogue and sea
book free with trial assortment, 18 for
$1.00 (Finest quality). Western Distribu-
tors, Box 24-TPF, Regina, Sask.
PROPERTIES WANTED
This Judge Ruled
With A Six-Shooter
America's Wild West produc-
ed many colourful characters,
but none more picturesque than.
"Judge" Roy Bean, the self-ap-
pointed administrator of law and
order who ruled a large area of
wild and woolly• Texas with a
hard heart and a nimble six-gun.
In the days when Wyatt Earle
Bat Masterson and, other rugged
Western marshals were dealing
out their own version& of justice,
Bean was leading an adventurous
life' that took him from state to
state.
.I n California he joined the gold
rush and got into a duel with an
army officer. They stood back
to back, then walked forward
twenty paces to await the com-
mand to fire. But Bean turned
,•immediately and shot his rival
through the heart.
For this treacherous- move: Roy
was arrested and charged with
murder. He was hanged, but his
friends cut him, down, found he
was still alive and carried him
off. •
During the Civil. War he be-
came a blockade runner for the -
Confederacy, and afterwards a
wagon-train boss in Texas. Then
they started to build the South-
ern Pacific Railway and Bean
changed to a saloon-keeper, He
fitted out a tent containing a
portable bar and followed the
gangs as the tracks were laid.
When they reached the deso-
late point where the Pecos River
empties itself into the Rio
Grande, a permanent camp was
set up.
Bean decided to stay there. He
built himself a 20 ft. by 14 ft.
'shack and set up his saloon. It
was the only drinking place for
miles around and he did a bois-
terous business with all those
Who tore a hazardous living from
that wild and remote part of
Texas.
White - bearded Bean found
that dispensing alcohol gave him
considerable power in settling
disputes 'among his bibulous cus-
tomers.
He got hold of a copy of the
Statutes of Texas and extended
his authority by setting himself
up as Justice of the Peace. That
was in 1882 and he remained
"Judge" Bean for twenty-one
years.
When he held ''court" the bar
of his saloon became the bench.
There was a rough dock and a
witness box, The jury, composed
entirely of Bean's regular cus-
tomers, sat in a group within
easy reach of their glasses.
The' only adornments on the
bench, once it, has been cleared
of •bottles were the "judge's" law
book arid his six-gun.
Roy administered the law on
profit-making basis. One day
a dead man was . found lying in
the street They took him into
the court-Mlee and on search-
ing the body, the "judge" found
forty dollars and a gun.. ,'I fine
the deceased forty donate for
AM-lawfully carryieg a gun," he
announced. 'Take him- out end
bury him," he ordered the bar
lay-abouts as he pocketed the..
Oneof Ails best enstomers
brainedrneY. a Chinese to whom' he
owed Money. When he ea lie be-
fore the "judge,' Been ihtinibed
through his law book and decid-
ed ::"""There ain't a tingle lino In
here that makes it,illegai to kill
a Chirik.
"3.1611'ke a" quitted but fined
twenty five bucks far
,my trete."
A 'straying, tiodait Was *het
by Si drunken lowhey, "if the
dead ;Min hag any money t
would fine hint for tateleSSIY get,'
tine : in the way of h bullet," edit-t-
itled up the "judge."
WANTED: Bush lots, abandoned farms.
wild acreages. Send location, descrip-
tion and price to D. F. Mullin Box
156, Station F, Toronto 5, Ontario.
SEED FOR SALE
ONTARIO'S newest and most outstand-
ing oat, outylelding Garry and Rod-
ney by 6 and 9 bus. per acre this year,
with shorter straw, thinner hull and
bigger grain. Ask your own dealer to
get. Russell or any Of our other, seeds for you, from us. Alex M. Stewart &
Son Ltd , Seed Grain Specialists, Alisa
Craig, Ont
STAMPS
FREE! 110 Worldwide Stamps With Ap-
provals. Thousands Beginners' Bargains
26 each! Advanced Collectors' Selee-
tions Accessories, Packets, Albums.
Argent Stamp 52 Bonnechcro, Scar-
borough. Ont.
WANT TO BUY FOR CASH
Old colleetions and aecumulations on
or off covers, Canada preferred but
will take ascome, good references
bank or otherwise. Cash by return
wail. Send, write, phone or call
HAROLD WALLIS
110 Sheppard Ave. W., Willowdale, Ont.
A bride-to-be had, just shown
si friend the list of wedding
guests. "Isn't it strange," asked
the friend, "that you've included
only married couples?"
"Oh, that was Jack's idea," the
bride-io-be replied. "He says
that if we invite only' married
people,' the presents will be all
clear profit."
How Can I?
By Roberts Lee.
Q. What is the easiest way Of
applying enamel over enamel
Without its running all over?
A. By adding a little cern,
starch to yetir enamel.
Q. How can I renovate sheet
that have become hard and stiff
fkOM a soaking in the 'rain? •
A. You can soften theen by
first Washing in warm water,
then rubbing either glycerin or
castor Oil thoroughly into the
leather,
re-
viva allhathihieare.anntic 'W"diteyattl.'t,"flatt
light battery?
Many of A. Many of these batteries
are given a new lease on life
simply by placing them in
warm oven overflight,
Q. How Can I renovate some
phonograph records that have
become warped out of sheik?
A, You can straighten these
records by, weighing them with
books, or other objects that ece-V,
en the entire- disk. Before et,
touptifig, to straighten, them
Make :-sure that they are t roots
tertepeetitiled, :eiltee a cold record
could creek. Usually, this pro-
rtes takes about 24 hours be tee,
theie any WAY I eau'
salt ii . mnatt :teak in' a pan 'Or
bintket
receptacle upside
down, cover` the leak with e little
ePteedered "sulphur`, 'heat an old
knife blade is very heti,
and spread On the sulphur .around
the leak With hot Wadi,
MERRY MENAGERIE
•
"tt Wsuit 3rOH to irmtst mfr`'
rtiother•in-law, my hither-in•
hiNvi.niSr bride and Itcr slaireftw,