HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1962-09-20, Page 6OPPORTUNITIES Fog
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S t.,EADING, scHoot.
Great Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing aneasant .sitaniciecu,preression go4d, wages Thousands of sticcessful
Am'elNit.AP,ArTaltt"igstent Illustrated Catalogue Free
write or'Call
Marvel Hairdressing School
358 Moor St, W., Toronto
Branches X
44 icing St, W.. Hamilton,
72 Rideau Street. 'Ottawa
'PERSONAL'
A modern wa,*, to help you redce,
East 3 meals a day Lose pounds nd
inches fast, Clinically tested Slirn.f. int
helps satisfy your craving for rood - 'Slim-Mint plan makes reducing easier
than you ever dreamed possible $2,00.
I weeks' supply
LYON'S DRUGS, 471 DANFORTH
... . ..TORONTO
PONY AND HORSE SALE
PONY
And
SADDLE HORSE SALE
forget McLelland's pony and saddle horse consignment sale at Beryl.
- near Kincardine on
Saturday, Oct. 13 at 12 o'clock. Elton
McLelland, Route 4, Kincardine, Ont.
Cash & Carry BARGAINS
New FIRESTONE
Tractor TIRES
Two 9-24 All
Traction Champ. $ 79.00 pair
Two 10-24 Champion
Ground Grip , 94.00 pair
Two 12.4-24 All
Traction Champ. 119,00 pair
Twe 12.24 Champ.
Ground Grip 119.00 pair
Two 10.28 Champion
Ground Grip 99.00 pair
Two 12,4.28 Champion
Ground Grip • 119.00 pair
Two 10-38 All
Traction Champ. 139.00 pair
Two 12.4-38 Champ
Ground Grip 149.00 pair
Two 12.4.38 All
Traction Champ. , 159 00 pair
Four 10.50x16
truck tires, new 150.00 sat
650x20 tubes-new .... 1.50 each
E P ABEY LIMITED
444 Wharncliffe Rd. S., London. Ont
GE 2-7597
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
GOOD lOcation. 9 room house, 2 acres choice loam. 2 miles from Hwy 401 2 tics drive from Toronto. Good well. Quiet, private, school bus, public and
high, by door, References exchanged, Write Roy Stafford, Selby, P.O Ontario.
:1 .*REAL ESTATE
- —
$1 ACRE, TaX, arrears properties
thrOughout Ontario. Farms, hotnes,
bushlands. Choose from hundreds. Lists, prices, details from: Printers 282 Davenport Rd., Toronto.
STAMPS
ROY S. WILSON
78 Richmond Street West, Toronto
NEW ISSUES CANADA - B.C. & FOREIGN
RAPKIN - GIBBONS SCOTT - MINKUS - HARRIS & GROSSMAN
ALBUMS IN STOCK
COLLECTIONS ALSO PURCHASED
TRACTOR TIRES FOR SALE
nue' snie, Ontario AntOrnotlye re•
Fair ;tort •weLatua shop Full .line of rft•
pair equipment welder, large- Staels wheels. axles.. tires. Other parts used. to
build wagons and trailers. (tow build. lug, 40' x c(r. in centre of town. For
further particulars contact Plats Pries
man. lioN 244, Dresden, Ontario . .
RESTAURANT
in heart et Grand .ttentl, Ontario'S
number one vacation spot, Doing
flourishing bnsiness,soating• capacity
55. also booth; quartet's for staff
and housekeeping. cottage' at rear,
Owner ill. Waldo. Inn Grand Rend. Oat, Box 157
CANADA'S largest distributor at hull:
type vending equipment gild supplies,
has for sale in the Toronto area along
with rural area, full or part-time bust.
news. 14 years of quality service have
helped us, now let us help you, Limited
capital: needed. For further particulars
write Or Phone* 10cr *WitY» ilaZlett.x1 .22.2
W„ Taranto. 'IQ, RU, 3-6501.
MEAT MARKET
LOCA'liED in the 1711010i-tourist *and
agricultural town In";Scitttb, Eiseie on
Lake
2 large gaolers, large walk In
deep freeze, open display coolers and freezerS, national cash register worth $2,400.00 new, automatic gas furnace,
full line of Hobart meat equipment and
many other items, good lease at $75,00 per month. Doing Over 100,000.00 am
lodly, A real going concern and three
people can operate it, Full price
$6,80(1.0(1 plus ItiventorY.
JOHN KUBIS, REALTOR Kingsville, Ontario - RE 34022
FARMS FOR SALE
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
FIRST quality men's, ladies', boys',
girls' and babies' wear. We list a few
of the hundreds of lines we carry:
socks, raincoats, caps, sweaters, hand-
kerchiefs, underwear, gloves, scarves,
33radshaw drill pants and shirts, over-
alls, dress shirts, nylon stockings, ankle '
socks, Bobby socks, Poodle Pups, Poodle Dogs, leotardS, panties, Teddy Bear Slippers, rubber pants, training, pants, diapers, diaper bags, blankets,
pillow cases, sheets, Cannon Bath Tow-els, tea towels, washcloths, watches, electrical appliances. Send for free
monthly Money Saver and illustrated catalogue, We save you money.
TWEDDLE MERCHANDISING
COMPANY
FERGUS 11, ONTARIO
HEARING AIDS
DON'T PAY HIGH PRICES FOR
HEARING AIDS!!
For Free Information Write
"CANHEAR" Reg.
24 Catherine St.
SMITHS FALLS, Ont.
All Models at Wholesale - Written Guarantees. The Golden Rule is our Business Guide.
LIVESTOCK AUCTION SALE
LIVESTOCK. Aberdeen-Angus Beef Cat.
tle, at London, Ontario, 110 lots regis-tered breeding cattle - 22 bulls and SS females. Selling at public auction sale,
October 4th and 5th, sponsored by On• tarlo Aberdeen-Angus Breeders Asscp elation, Write for free catalogue to
A. C, MtTaggart, Sale Manager,
1 Wellington St. E., Aurora, Ontario.
FOR Sale: 123 agres See* pasture,
nished cabln,'Waler; *tiro, garage;, gar, "
dens, Will sell 10 acres with buildings
separately. L. Morris, Hiiisburgli.
110 ACRE sandy loam farm for sale, 8 room house has full basement with oil furnace. Steel truss barn has basement, stables for cattle & hogs. Contract for hatching eggs. Other details may_
obtained from George Sider, 1111 No,
WaInfleet, Ont. •
RecOrd-treaking
Cash Losses
Without, gambling or indulg-
ing in any form of speculation,
some people are always losing
money. This happens particular-
ly in the :United States, where
Mr. Donald Maeanarnara, a cog-
suiting criminologist, says the
staggering sum of $750,000,000 a
year is lost through sheer negli-
gence-,
"No nation," says Maenamara,
"loses its cash so freely as ours."
His survey shows that only
one person in ten ever recavers
any cash he has lost, But if he
loses his car, or has it stolen, his
chances ef recovery are ninety-
five percent good.
University graduates, Mr. Mac-
narnera found, scored highest
marks as money-losers, followed
closely by professional and bus-
inessmen.
Of course, there are cash-losere‘
in other' countries. In Ringwood,
Melbourne, milk-bar proprietor
George Nicopoulos always placed
his day's takings in a garbage
can, until' he was ready to bank
it. Suddenly, while sitting in the
barber's chair, he remembered
the garbage men were duel With
his haircut unfinished, he raced
home, Too late--his can was
empty, and his $514 gone.
However, he hired a taxi and
dashed to 'the local, garbage
dump, Luckily,, he got there
just as the truck arrived. His
cash was saved.
Making Phonecalls
In England
*The full instructions for the
General Post Office's new Pay on
Answer coin telephone read as
follows:
HOW TO MAKE A CALL
Have your money ready (3d, 6d
or 1/-) but do not put it in yet,
Lift the telephone. When you
hear dialing tone
Dial
You may have to wait a few
seconds after dialing before you
hear a tone. Ringing tone will
change to rapid pips of a pay
'tone when the number answers.
When you hear rapid pips, put
in a coin and speak. You can
insert more money at any time
on a dialed call and it may be
best to use a 3d bit first in. case
the person you want is not avail-
able, Money, once inserted, can-
not be recovered.
When your time is up you will
hear the rapid pips again. If you
wish to continuo put in more '
money quickly.
....e-e.eeeeeeeeere-"e ' eP..•
FAKESNAKE — Simulated,
snakeskin boots mark the re-
turn of the long, leggy look to
foul weather fashion. This
pair, shown in. New York City,
is made of mock python.
The Kids Enjoyed
Every Minute Of It
Peter Monaghan is known
around Melbourne as,e men
with a talent for making money,
He makes considerable amounts'
of it, but he,• keep his wheeling-
dealings to himself. Last Novem-
ber the 37-year-old entrepreneur
found himself in difficulty when,
a court 'was investigating ,e,„
banleetiptcy "ease irnVolVing
wire-fence company 4iid 'the'
eompeny manager' named Mon-
aghan,as his silent ,partner,.Sum-
moiled to testify, Moriaglean,cle-.
aided he was "a marked man,"
and he also decided to leave
'town.
So he boarded his own lavish-
ly furnished $42,000 lugger, the
Bintang Siang, along with his
wife, Ivy, and their three chil-,
dreri, Bruce, 8, Glen, 5, and Ter-
rie, 3: Together, they headed out
into the lonely Coral Sea, off the
coast of Queensland, and began
cruising about just beyond the
3-mile limit that marks the end
of police jurisdiction and the be-
ginning Of international waters.
Foe seven months, the Monag--
bans cruised on. Occasionally
the skippein nipped in, over the
Great Barrier Reef to get sup-
plies. At other times he met aj:
sea With one Vincent Vlassoff,
who hires boats, out of the town
of Cairns. Throdegh,Viassoff, too, -
Monaghan arrartged :1,9 entertain
newsmen-from Arne to time. H
even fat up a TV inter-
view with HQ :shame's station
BTQ, After drinks 8.4d a leisure-
ly lunch, Monaghan went on the
air to display his supply of wea-
pons and to announce that any
attempt to board his ship would
be considered an "act of piracy."
He also threatened to shoot "any
trigger-happy policeman' who
tried to capture him.
This was too much for 'the
Australian police, They learned
that the Bintang Siang had an
cleared for repairs within the 3-
mile limit and an RAAF Plane
pinpointed it precisely- off the
tiny fishing village of Portland
Roads. Then they brought tip an
RAAF crash beat from Towns-
ville, 570 miles to the south, and
waited their chance. It carne at
6:25 arm. on a misty morning.
Three officers came over the side
and found Monaghan ;est getting
up, He submitted quietly and
was flown back to land to face
Dresred down for "masquerad-
ing as a buccaneer," Monaghan
spent five weeks in Brisbane's
Pentridge jail before a judge de-
cided last month that he had
been "sufficiently purged" of
contempt charges to be released.
He hod a cigarette dangling
from one corner of his mouth
and his captain's cap was still at
a jaunty angle, But he was sucl,
denly quiet as he headed back
toward Portland Honda and his
family,. waiting aboard the boat,
Newsmen who had visited the
Bintang Slang during its cruise
said that Mrs. Monaghan hadn't
been altogether pleased by the
sea-borne life, But the kids had
loved 'every minute ot it.
When you hear a person say.
"I say just What h think," you
know he doesn't. think.
SEVEN YEARS ENOUGH Shouting youths tt orcli ifit'atigh the 'Steebt'S. of Algieet
Shouting "Sbaa S'neert '13araket,” (seven years bre elliettg4inet they itieffitnitteote again*
the threof of thy more war.,
APENTS.
NtIENTS clubs, etc. Sell Canada's'
linest Christmas cards. Over 500 items
!Deluding ltcllirious, Fyeryday and per. :40ens,a 1 pre4i)iiii•Itil)st s\e%;rvzilisies iter.coalonrlel luwel•
Logue and samples. on approval, deab-
drnn Greeting Card Co. 1253 meg ht
4.. Hamilton. (Mc
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES.
,MEOICAL
IT'S IMPORTANT EVERY
$1,,IFFgRER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS
OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY
,
rco's oftvg
DIXON'S REMEDY
muN
0TT4w.A.
$.1„2 ,eeptess, Collect,
. ,
.POST'S. ECZEMA SALVE
RftNISB the torment or dry memo rashes, and • weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eezeina SalVe will net disappoint
ypp, Itching, scalding and Me+
out steno, rIngwortn. Pimples and root eczema, will respond readily to the stainless odorless otritment regardless
7f how stubborn or hopeless they seem.
Sent. cost Free on Receipt- of price
POST'S REMEDIES
740 Pert ,TAR
;865 St. Chit
male
East Avenue
SWOOPS !IN — Mrs, Kcii-en Hantze :St.isinan„ swoops in to
Make Q'retvfn against Justina .Bricka in a U.S. Tennis Singles
charnpianShip Match,
ele;e'
1r+l9slorn-butick •
Rajpnlano, fin; eiltitenee,
of trelainue e.itenitt;,&e:
Volt o age Sand fineeiiiIe Ely.:
any Inoue kelt, it seemed ke-, Nee
the cloud-eappeci ealeeve
'peel„ the p:.....eer eoitie ewaY, artd
the. 'wnele thine eienizt):e. litte tt,
Rolle-wood eivateal; 'yet the.
Paves of ille dell's house shops
were held up by etkpnants'
4ie:.itiS • that belonged to times
long before the Aleguis, end the
dine Wit I t u waetz.. Ftz'ti:allt:,d by the
eleonsoette, brake' ',everywhere
Into Itioelte or doors Of. laoewterk-
ed .erehes, whi,!re women steed
on steps, their he;;-like skirts
ewinging above .their anklets
and ftVo pitchers et et time upon
their leech. Al: e,':our was lov-
ely! and a nememelt graceful,
even to the pigenun balle.t.round
the water-palaee cupolas in the
, -
Every ronni Ili elte'pelecenmst
have, its story rocmas glass,
floored, or lined with. Chinese
tiles, or roof gatdens With may,"
„ble eminteine,. Qr ,sudden rich
pavilions; narrow staircases, and
'treasuries where clerke squat
counting bank-notes as one nese-
'eS, elephants painted all
, pyer nritievh .their hay - in the
eolerts below, In the town, old
Rajput noblemen rode through
the streets --- white, eyebrows
and a yellOW s'atin.'Itirben, and a
white beard' brushed from a
parting to either side; or a wed-
ding, where the bridesmaids
wrapped in red and orange
'walked einging• behind t h e.
groom. He, in 'a red Coat strip-
ed. with tinsel and green satin
turban, fourteen years old per-
haps, rode with a small brother
on his -crupper and his bride
buried among females behind
him in a cab, An old Muslim.
fakir came after, in a rich gown
seated in an open gharry, grey
hair in waves. over his Should-
ers.
Outside the town,, where the
lake is surrounded like the
background of Florentine pic-
tures with low and pleasant but
empty hills, the Government
feeds the wild pig from a high
terrace every- afternoon, Out of
the scrub they come, grunting
and pushing,. a Circe crowd, un-
til their heap of maize is eaten
and they -vanish, ,
Jaipur, a walled town, was
geranium-coloured with geran-
ium gateways, and Sir Mieza Is-
mail, its Persian PrimeeMinister,
was resuscitating the fancies of
bYgOne Maharajahs, repainting
and refurbishing thern as new.
3,rass ornaments again caught
'the sun on cupolas' drawn . like
'eyebrows; the water-maze for
swimmers was blue under pink
cloisters; the balconies green
against cream walls; and the.
high wail where one walked to-.
'Wards' the gates above the traf-
iic was streaked by shadow and
Sunlight under pagodas painted
yellow and pink. The town it-
eoe was geranium - colenred by
the genial caprice of some ruler
long dead; and where the fac-
ades had no ornament of white-
washed 'flags or flowers, the out-
lines of white windows • were
painted in for fun. The old pal-
ace; now' abandoned,. was above,'
in the neck • of a valley, and
there an elephant would take
the ruler's. guests.—From• "Dust
in the .Lion's Paw," Autobio-
graphy 1039-1946, by Freya
Stark,
hardly „keen. onOtt4.140410 4'4
Maigret in matches!
1,11.e ifal• t4seitiiaf a goo4
defeetive, is e a sense, of, cledica-
eintitiel.S. he-
briieging the evil-
el doer 40 justice doing honest
110 'itiNtls, a good' ttlrft, write.:; Etc-
I?utective- SuperinteAdent J oh It
luslin4 in "Tit-Bits."
No man knows better than it
wliee officer the ahguish. and
suffering endured by the vie..
1/114'. Of, crime.
N.Ithieg, cart eon penqtte the
,njury inflicted by a tearaway
bully; nothing cart, quite restore
the ' faith taf a. huuSewife Whose
week's .,hQpiying money has been.
,,*,natched bye suoak-thiet.
This deep-rooted sense of fair
play will bring little reward
other than gratitude — though
nothing is mare satisfying than
'confronting a villain or rester
lag stolen property to its right-
ful owner.
There is' •no yard-stick to
'Assess whether .a ,man will make
r a, good detective..,NeLther ecittca-
tion. family background ,,nor
good physique ate essential,
though each can help.
When bile Glmete Squad was
..COrilled I rentember -looking
with Immility at the other, mem
bers and wondering *hat I had
in common with` theM.
The* Chief, then, aThtective . In-
Spector Jolla' Capsticke, looked
like a farmer. He- was -,chubby
and tubby. He smoked ,a pipe,
had a relaxed manner and a
quiet voice. Yet before he re-
tired he became one 'of "the
world's greatest murder investi-
gators.
Detective Inspector N o b b y
Clark looked' less like a detec-
tive than any I have ever met,
He had the anonymity of a har-
assed clerk and few would guess
that he had an 'infallible instinct
f or "discerning a wrong doer,
matchless 'courage and a lively
sense of , humour,
Detective.Sergeant Matt Hein-
nand was 'long, lean and wiry,
and had immense reserves of
strength: He hated and despised'
croaks, especially humanity's
dregs like blackmailers and
pjinps who hated and feared
him in return.
I differed from the others on
the Squad in that I felt sorry
for lots of crooks — the small-
timers, anyhow — and actually
liked a few of them.
Sir Ronald Howe, the Assist-
ant Commissioner, 'who had call-
ed us together, answered my un-
spoken thought when he, told us-
that we had been chosen for our
integrity.
The character required to
make a successful detective in-
cludes a mixture of all these
qualities — a sense of dedica-
tion and of fair play; unobtru-
siveness linked with tenacity of
purpose; an understanding of
human nature leavened by a
sense of humour; courage, pati-
ence, integrity, a first-class
memory — and physical fitness
for good measure.
But these alone are not
enough. A man may learn all
about fingerprints, forensic me-
dicine and the contents of the
books, and yet fall short as a
detective,
Golf :
IE.Qm,TolovisiOtt:
. ,
1 /2), ell!' --a uy Lex Twee e,e,
utes tit hail an line; shell 'thee
calm ras arc-, hvposition, for tiv
next hote, 11,- kinatly ,ste,ps up
44" the We. ',J'tisi I itky' ii‘et, to tlii
erAs pita're note',4-
le and. give off a loud, stead:.
et, whir: there may oven be a.con-
'' fideet emneramen lying down on
'the era r, eneut e2 feeet,..14(41e'
ebeead of VinallSr I3 almet
laced into the ball, sets Itsiche
driver, and picks up, his micro.,
phone. En route to his 'hall, tic
tells several million home view-
. ers what's on his mind and what
strategy he plans.
This is television golf, ,a new
and strange contest whiCh was
dreamed up only a few ears ago
but which will be one of the hot-
test sports Oil the alti this season,
Ocinversely, television itself has
.become 'about the' hottest thing
to happen to golf---or at least
golfers—since the .emergence of
the popular Palmer himself, "TV
Olt has probably been the big-.
gest factor in increasing the
popularity of the; game"' golfer-
commentator Thew Etinaret of
• the "All Btu* Golf" show said
-' recently,
At first look, golf and TV
seem an unlikely match, and for
a long time it seemed that way to
insiders. "Golf isn't a spectator
sport," NBC sports director Tom
Gallery said 'ten years ago, when
TV golf was suggested to him,
Gallery leas changed his mind
about that, but not about the dif-
ficulties,. "It's the toughest damn
sport to televise,"" he said last
month, "You get set up on a hole
and everything looks. great, and,
then the sky changes when the
players get there and you can't
see the ball in the air any more,"
But televised golf also offers
viewers unique rewards, not the
least of which is the unrelenting
exposure of the athlete himself,.
at close range, in a series of
agonizing and decisive moments,
The golf' match played espe-
eially. for TV, however, is a far
cry from a regulation tourna-
ment, "I think the main differ- ,
cam" Jimmy Demaret says, "is '
getting adjusted to the delay
between:- each shot, definitely
,le 1' eeke- your' concentration.
There's ,aleoe the e camera noise.
But Gene, Sarazen, Babe Ruth,
Gene* Tuitriey„ and T once played
a reined with 'hundreds of kids
and Fred" Waring's band' behind
us,..end I shot 68 and Sarazen 69.
So, that debunks.. the theory that
you have to have quiet."
"Eighteen holes of television..
golf," said 'Gary Player, the other
day, "is equivalent to 45 holes of
tournament golf,' both in time
and in what it -takes out of you.
On a tournament, you get a
birdie and it gets you in a
charged-up mood and it carries.
you along. In TV golf, there's the
wait., •Playing tournament golf
is like going straight through,
flat-out. Playing TV golf is like
playing eighteen separate 'holes."
One unique' request that TV
makes of golfers is that competi-
tors should wear contrasting out-
fits for clearer identity.
God will look you over, not for
medals, diplomas, or degrees, but
for scars, Edward Sheldon.
How Can 1?
By Roberta Lee
Q. How can I remove airplane
cement stains from fabrics.
A, Use acetone on all fabrics,
except acetate rayon or vinyon,
which it dissolves. Amyl acetate
(banana oil) 'can be used on
rayon, Fingernail polish remov-
er contains acetone, and can„be
used on linens and cottons to
remove airplane cement,
Q. How can I avoid paint-lap
marks when painting on a, ceil-
ing?
A. These lap marks are caus-
ed by the edge of the paint
starting to dry on one section
before the next section is start-
ed. To avoid this, paint as ra-
pidly as possible, and keep the
sections to a size that will per-
mit -y o u r starting the second
Section before the first has be-
gun to dry.
"It is useless to try to hold a
man to anything he says while he
Is madly in love or drunk." Or
trying to get a seat in Parliament.
Fiery, Itching Skin
Gels Quick Relief
Here is a Clean stainless pone
trating antiseptic 'oil that will
bring yeti speedy 'relief from the
itching and distress of • Eczema,
Itching Toes and Feet, gashes-and
other itching skin troubles,
MOON'S EltfEll-ALD OIL not
only • helps promote rapid and
healthy healing in OPen scree and . wounds, but boils and SimPle til-
ecre are also quickly relieved. In
skin aff.ections—tho itching-Of
eetna is quickly eased, pimples, skin eruptions dry up and. scale, off'
in a very few days.
MOONIC'S 11111111E.ALO OIL Can
be obtained at any drog Stnre,
LAMP OF LEARNING -- The
U.S. Post Office will issue on
Nov, 14 in Washington, D.C.,
a special' Stamp pointing to
the role higher education hos
played in cultural and indus-
trial development in the U.S,
►
►
Just 'What Makes
A Detective Tick?
The yopng plain-clothes man,
trailing the rather bent old gen-
tleman, w a s exceptionally
"keen," He had read all the best
detective fiction since Sherlock
Holmes, and had just received
a pat on the back from his in-
spector, who'd said he had the
makings of a good detective.
All he wanted was an oppor-
tunity. And here it was. He was
on his first, assignment, follow-
ing a suspected "fence" who
could lead the pollee to a great
deal of stolen ,property.
lie' had' been trailing him for
nearly half an hour now, never
much farther than twenty yards
behind leis quarry.
, T h e n; unexpectedly, the old
gentleman stoppe d, turned
round and sauntered back to the
young police officer Who pre-
tended to be gaiing into a shop
window, On reaching him, the
old gentleman stopped and be-
gan to window-gaze as well.
"You've been tailing me for
the past balf-hourt young sha-
ver," he . rritymured confidenti-
ally, "I Can see you arc new
to the game, You -forgot your
false black 'beard and dark
glasses.
"Here's my card, 'Uncle Nat's
the name, Anything you want
to know, just ask," And so say-
ing, he moved oft
Never had any budding de-
tectiVe felt sillier, And I' should
know, because the "young hope-
ful" was me. What 'Uncle Nat
knew about detectives and how
to sidestep them would have
made a manual for any 'police
college,
Uncle Nat was the first person
to bring home to me the fact
that a real:life 'detective differs
considerably from those in films
and fiction, For One thing, the
wages of a real detective would
iSfitig, Ota
AL, SCOW LOOkirid SOtti ething like a modern-day work
f art itself, this fishing trawler is the site of an original
Orr exhibit, docked pt Santa Margherito Ligure, Italy.