HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1947-10-22, Page 3TEEN -TOWN TOPICS
Vince
feature
By BARRY MURKAR
Litany, columnist and
writer' of the Montreal
Standard, in a re -
rent issue, blames
the radio for
crimes and atroci-
tirs committed by
the youth of our
country. Ile men-
, [lotted the two
young Wren con-
nected with a
bank robbery at
Pickering with ['hon we had the
pleasure (?) of riding to court,
ivho were sentenced to seven years
in Kingston Pen, Mr, Lunny fail-
ed to mention that every daily
- newspaper in the country splashes
its front page with the Most grue-
some stories and pictures it can
find and this too, may give the
younger set some of the hair-rais-
ing ideas they get. However, Mr.
Lunny is a member of the Fourth
Estate and naturally he has his
lintitations in his remarks.
Free T -B Tests Great Stuff
Owing to the fact that many
towns and villages throughout On-
tario will receive the free T -B
tests campaign that is currently on
the go, we are asking fol• the co-
operation of everyone—especially
the teen-agers—to stake these cam-
paigns a success., Most of the
adults realize how important this
free check-up is; but some of the
kids, thinking they are in perfect
health, just don't bother. This
test may be a guarantee that you
will have a future—be sure you heed
the call when it conies.
Lucky Little Ladies, You!
Two lucky little girls in the news
recently were Marjorie Norman of
Erindale and Judy Schopf of Owen
Sound. Marjorie, who is 10, won the
gate prize of a beautiful pony at
the Cooksville fall fair a few weeks
ago. She will call him Jo -Jo and
says that she has wanted a pony
of her own since she was a little
girl. Judy defeated all contestants in
a beauty contest to [vin the title
'Miss Owen Sound". This event
was held at the annual fall fair too.
Runners up were Owet-i Sound girls,
Jackie Ruck and Doreen Bye, All
these girls in their teens are well
known in their respective com-
munities and their popularity will
no doubt leap to greater heights
with the recent awards they have
tion.
Good Listening
Now that fall is well on the way,
all the good winter programmes are
back on the air. In case you have
forgotten, you will catch Phil I-Iar-
ris Sundays at 7.30, Charlie Mc -
("artily at 8, Lux, Monday's at 9;
Bob I'Iope and Red Skelton on
Tuesday nights; Bing Crosby on
Wednesday and Al Jolson. Wayne
and Shuster and Abbot and Costel-
lo on Thursdays. Other big -tine
radio shows will no doubt have
)lade their appearance by now, so
see your local paper.
TEEN -TOWN REPORTERS
Parry Sound—Audrey Harris --
have a Friday -Hite Club
dance weekly and the majority of
the Hi crowd attends. Skating,
skiing and sleighing parties are
planned for the winter. We had
a school track and field meet in
late September. The school was
divided into four houses, each house
with an executive, colours, cheers
and cheer leaders. The idea of the
house system is to increase comp -
talon and also to make for good
sportsmanship. Marg Howe and
'George Ryder were senior champ-
ions and Isobel Makins and Cal
Nichols won the intermediate cups,
while Betty Sheridan and lint Dar-
lington carried away junior hon-
ours.
Rydal Bank—Gail Martens and
Isabel McLeod—We have been ap-
pointed correspondents to Teen -
Town Topics and wilt,send in re-
torts. We are both students of
What Science is Doing
Royal Jelly
The queen bee owes her extra-
nedinary vitality to food rather
than to her life of ease, finds Dr,
Thomas 5, Gardner of the sciet-
ti'fic department of Hoffman -La
Roche, Nutley, N. J. A study of
royal jelly, a glandular secretion
of worker bees 'which is tlic rich-
est known source of pantothenic
acid, Itas partially explained why
a queen bee lives about five years
but the average worker only three
months. Dr. Gardner separated
1'oyal jelly into its chemical conn-
ponents, tested the various frac-
tions on fruit flies, and so Veri-
fied a suspicion that royal jelly
promoted longevity. He traced the
active ingredient to lna ntothellie
arid, which produced a 27 per cent
increase over the rotttrnls when
Used in quantities of half a grant
to each thousand grams of food -
consumed, Ilinlin alone had no
effect 00 the. length of life of
fruit flies but pyridoxin extended
11 ;Omit 10 per cent. When lh'.
'Gardner fel his flies ct mixture
of biotin, in'ridmin, sndititti
yeast nucleate. mol pnniniltt'nir
.titsd in the runeettt inhitn lnttntl in
royal jelly, their life Mutts was in-
rrasetl •l0 per cent.
Bruce ltdines Continuation School
and are intere'tcd in the activities
of teen-agers in the district.
Runnymede, "Village Club" —
Velma Davis—This is the third
year of operation for the Village
Club. Last week we held a dance
and acconlodatfd 330 people, while
dozens were turned away. We are
making plans for a larger building.
Rtuluymeete Dramatic Society also
has big plans. They recently held a
social, when the student body en-
joyed several plays that were stud-
ent acted and student directed.
Thanks a Lot, Gang
Many thanks to all you kids out
there who have been appointed as
correspondents for your town for
this column. The letters are starting
to roll in and we are trying to an-
swer them all as soon au possible.
If we do not answer your requests
for a few days after receiving same,
please be patient and, in the mean-
time, send along any news you can
think of that would be of interest
to teen-age readers.
Canada's Real
Source of Dollars
Where Canada would stand to-
day if our newsprint industry were
clot°producing upward of 300,000,000
of U,S. dollars is hard to say. We
Wright be a stagnant or even an in-
solvent nation.
One Wright also ask where the
newspapers of North America would
be today if there had not been this
vast development of newsprint man-
ufacture in Canada. They could
never have attained their present
circulations and scope, comments the
Financial Post.
Newsprint is a perfect example
of "continental" development of
industry in North America, mutu-
ally advantageous to the United
States and Canada. What made it
possible was the elimination before
World War I of the U.S. duty on
newsprint paper.
Canada continues to run behind
in its U.S. dollar account, gravely
threatening the economies of both
Canada and the United States. We
need more bold and imaginative
planning, applied in industries other
than newsprint.
A. perfect opportunity for such
mutual planning exists, It is in the
"book" and "fine" paper inclustry,
which is cleanly split by the 40th
parallel,
Three facts stand out:
1. The United States' demand for
paper, particularly for the magazine
and commercial printing industries,
is growing rapidly. It is not likely
that the U.S. paper industry can
supply that demand 10 years front
now.
2. The U.S. industry is only able
to produce its present total of pap-
er because it gets pulpwood and
wood pulp front Canada, one a raw
product, one semi -manufactured,
both returning fewer dollars per tort
of natural resources than they
should.
3. Canada is capable of great ex-
pansion in its production of finer
grades of paper, while the United
States is not. The facts all point
to the need for joint action between
Ottawa and Washington to wipe
out tariffs on grades of printing
paper other than newsprint and
thus enable the book paper indus-
try to develop in Canada as the
newsprint industry has. New mills
are needed. They should be built
here in Canada wilel'e the wood
grog's and the rivers run. -
She Protests—Among hun-
dreds of Londoners who dem-
onstrated against the British
government's new austerity
rulings was 13 -year-old Mar-
ion Gial'ltet'. Decorations
around her skirt bottom are
gasoline coupons — useless
now with the batt on pleasure
driving in force.
1.'Ihnlograull by yuul' F•ul-O-t'rp lobe Ogl':,pl.er
Marmora—A closely contested race at Marmora. Here the
"ponies" are sten going into the home stretch.
Sports — And One Thing
or Another
By FRANK MANN HARRIS
("A Sixbit Critic")
The other day a friend, who is
not too athletically -minded, asked
us why it is that sports stuff coat-
ing over the air sounds, as a rule,
rather more sickening than *tatter
appearing in print regarding the
same subject. As one who has
been guilty of a considerable a-
mount of material that has been
used in both these farms, the only
honest reply we could stake was
that the reason is exactly the same
as the one Inc the black cows eat-
ing more than the white ones—
there were far more of then!.
* * *
\Vhat our friend was mainly re-
ferring to was the broadcasts of
-the last World's Series, So we
tried to explain to Itinl that the
quantity of wordage those slaves
of the microphone had to turn out
would, if printed, probably dill a
whole newspaper. Such being the
case, it is surely only natural that
the chaff would outbulk the grain
by a considerable margin—a far
greater margin than if they could
boil their matter down to a column
or so.
It seems • that every sports
broadcaster—and we do not know
of a single exception—is grippe''
with a secret fear. He fears that
if he leaves even one split-second
of silence, all his listeners are
liable to take a runout powder on
him. And as we have said Before,
he also appears to be mortally a-
fraid of coming .right out and say-
ing that a contest is downright
lousy—even if everybody !Glows
it is—but seems to feel it his duty
to try and make you feel that you
are missing lite thrill of your life
by not being present.
• { *
Why these things should be you
will have to ask somebody a lot
older—or anyway wiser—than we
are. Personally sloe thought that
the World's Series artists did a
pretty fair job, only slipping to
any painful extent in their incense -
spreading at the feet 01 High-
Contntissioner Chandler for his
"master -mind" innovation of plac-
ing the couple of spare umpires
down on the foul lines, instead of
leaving them on the bench or in
the bull pens. Howe'er, as the
same Mr, Chandler has Hutch to
say regarding who is to do the
broadcasting, possibly they can be
forgiven, human nature being what
it is,
„ * *
Once tfp,ca a time there was n
Strike Conciliator who got the war-
ring parties together and addressed
them something like this. ")'on bods
say that you refuse io give in an
inrli" he said, "so let's imagine that
this .strike has been going on for six
months. You, the workers, hove lost
a lot of *'ages and your families are
really feeling the pinch!. You, the
employers, are short n whole heap of
,sales and profits That are going to be
highly embarrassing to account for
when your stockholders are expect-
ing thI•ir dividends, So nolo that you
have all ibis firmly in your minds,
where do we go from here," The
slirke was settled in half an Jahr
flat; but we had better explain that
this is a wholly imaginary rase, Judi '
pcnriie tactics bring for too direct
and ,simple t0 be used in (11e tipper
reaches of Capital and Labor rela-
tions.
* * *
Bacic there a piece we made re-
ference to some of the sports bal-
lyhoo which conies over the air,
and hinting that the perpetrators
of same --like the dame in the old
song—were really more to be piti-
ed than censured too harshly,
Now, with the hockey season bust-
ing into full bloom, cones the
time when the sports writer who
Is nine tenths press agent and one
tenth reporter is seen at his best
—0r worst, if you like. And, like
his erring brethren of the air.
waves, for this type of writer it is
also possible to find excuses.
* * *
Foy he, too, has his bucket which
must be filled whether or not
bossy is brimming over with milk
or rapidly running dry. Besides,
possibly there are plenty of folk
who revel in knowing just what
color of eyes their latest hockey
hero possesses, and what tinge of
talcum he favors; in this busi-
ness, as in many others, the cus
tomer is always right.
* * *
So the have hockey stars who
look and dress like moving picture
leading Hien, who know exactly
which knife to eat their pie with,
and who are much more- at home
at a tea dance than in the back
roost of Hennessey's Tavern. But
stake no mistake about it, they
still suffer for the cause. That
gaudy sports shirt still covers a
multitude of abrasions, and plenty
of bruises still lurk underneath
that flowing, hand -painted cravat.
* * 5
Still—it must be old age—store
and more as we look over the
rapers we wonder whether we are
stilt on the sports page, or have
strayed into the Hollywood jot-
tings by mistake; and more and
more we find ourself yearning for
the days when lads like Sprague
Cleghorn, Bad Joe Hall or Scotty
Davidson would spit out a mouth -
full of teeth and continue on their
way without breaking stride, little
caring how their next photograph
would loolc or what effect such
marring of their manly beauty
would have on the volume of their
fan mail. Ho, hunt! maybe it's the
weather; for even it appears to
have gone slightly haywire in this
definitely screwball era.
Spray Keeps Fruit
Hanging on Trees
Freight trains, jammed to the
roof with boxes of B.C. apples are
leaving the bustling Okanagan Val-
ley fruit -growing centre every 15
minutes bound for the fresh fruit
,markets of the Prairies and the
United States.
Plagued by a shortage of pickers
and fearful that the apples might
fall prematurely, many growers
for the past few weeks have been
experimenting .with a hormone
spray that may revolutionize the
fruit industry,
A, T. Ilowe, of Vernon, B.C., re-
putedly the owner of the largest
McIntosh orchard in the British
Empire, said the spray which is
scattered over the trees from a
helicopter "apparently is success-
ful" in making apples hang on
more tenaciously.
0011 11111 Epley Slnyin0 at
The St. Regis Hose!
TORONTO
• Every !loon, With Tub Rath,
Shover and T'elephnno
• Single, .$3.60 and up—
- Double, 5600 up
Y (food .Food, Dining and Dancing
Nightie
Shorboarne et Carlton
Tel. 110. 4186
Classified Advertising
AGENTS WA'N'( "11
OILS, GREASR';, TIRES,
la0eettddeo. Elrel rhe hen, Controllers Buono
and Bard Paint. hoof ' anima. ere. Dealer,
wanted Write Worry 000,,0 & 011 Limited.
'(,•unto
AGENTS: .5,-11 title of Ties lit nTini -aunt;
time, A fort , itnl r P' t al t,le. Wylie
Station 14, nos 20, wenlu, "-'',''w ^_
SELL WATCHES
And get your, hoer. Write ter far,,r'tnra rind
stuttplo Watch H6nle age and inoputiotl, Sell.
era [troth,, .Jewellers, 170 I(.110Ag0 Ave,
Toronto, Out.
Ao14N'r,-.rn;it,• 0111. to a,•ll t,7n3u,;
luya. t,-,v:•I(- x toe nlamtf,u'Inr,,,. P'u,l lista
ur 51,10 IJun. Attraethm nmr-leutd,x••. Nupu-
Inriy 7n•b-."l I'rot'aled territory. Star N00-
01ty 510*, Cu.. 172 Duluth 10,x[, M•,nlr•ol 15,
MAKE MONEY AT HOME
Des,ndable ('onlplluy Imo 05111,5 for hard-
working, dependable appurmu:' between 2040,
Part or full lisle basin..,, ltsrrOrnt rrnuuwra-
tlmin. !line Brunt I'rvn Ciel.., 7--t Ale antra,
Monter al.
BUSINESS OPI.ORTUNrliItS
ATTENTION
FAROIEIt8 AND I'Itt1I'ERl't' OWNERS
Wanted for cash Perchener, farms. *crease
or village properly ,residential or Irum*es%.
Send full particulars, ouch as Int, conee0Ulon,
taxes, kind of building. Also fun price naked.
H• Pragnell Really, 1551 Danforth Avenue.
Toronto
AN OFFER to every [nt'catur—List of invem
lions and full Information pent free. The
Itamosy Co„ Registered Patent Attorneys 271
Hanle Street, Ottawa.
AGENCY available for the Scots 000'1 Auto-
matic Fire Marc,,. Designed for home pro-
tection. Write for Details, P.oyal Scot, 6
Charles Street w'., Toronto.
BABY CIIICEs
A FEW started chicke; prom01 xntpment.
Chirps for November-Deronlber delivery
should be ordered now. Ask for list, Bray
hatchery, 170 Joint N„ Hamilton. Ont.
WANTED—Flocks to s111011 us with hatching
eggs for the 1048 hatching season. Flocks
culled and binodtested free, Guaranteed pre -
Intuit plus hatchability premium paid. Far
full details write Tweddle Clark Hatcheries
Limited, Fergus. Ontario.
FREE range ',uncle 15 weeks to layn.g.
Barred Hocks, New Hamp,:hires, White
Leghorn'', White Rodce, Light Sussex. Also
day old chuck,, booked to order, Free catalogue.
Tweddle Chick Hatcheries, Fergus. Ontario
FREE range collets 10 weeks to laying; White
Leghorn, Barred !tock. Neu timupnhlren and
many other popular breeds. Aim) day 01,1 chicks
booked to order. Free catalogue. Top Notch
Chiolterles, Guelph, Ontario.
BARGAINS while they Mat on six, seven and
eight week old pullets; white Leghorn,
White Leghorn x Barred hock, Barred Rock x
White Leghorn, Austra Whites, Out) a limited
quantity. Send for reduced price 1151. Tweddle
Chick Hatcheries Limited, Perna. Ontario.
PULLET bargains white they last, White Leg-
horn x Barred Hoek, Black Anilrnlnre x
White Leghorn, White Leghorn. Barred ROclt
x While Leghorn, 6 week 450; 7 week 05e,
eight week One. Assorted Light and Medium
Breeds 0 we01t0 400. 7 weeps 60e. 5 week 60e.
Top Notch Chicheries, Guelph, Ontario.
00E18(0 AND CLEANING
HAVE WOU anything neeoe. dyeing or clean
Ing7 write in ea for Information We are
glad to ,newer roar mulatto. Department
H, Parkers Dye Works Limited. t9t roncr
Street, Toronto. Ontario
FARMS FOR SA gall
0,00.51 for sale, 100 acres, 16 miles east 01
Parry Sound. For full particulars, write
S. J. Fisher, Parry Sound. Ont., 11.1:, t.
FARM 1.0011 001,E-160 acres, good bu;tn .nga,
2 miles from St. Thomas on No. 4 Highway.
Known as D. 0. Gilbert farm. F:xtu,Yoe prop
eery and send offer to executor. W. L.
011bert. 30 Tale Street, Leuhm,
FOR 8000. 60 acres, 75 cleared. of mostly
etas loam, exceptionally gond buildings
APPII' William Mnr:hnll, R,0. No. 1, Burke's
Fan's, 001,
160 ACRES, sic miles from tout, nae budd-
Iliga with ettruetive surroundings, !ledges
and dimde trees. 10 acres hnrdwnod bush, 10
of fall wheat, barn 74 x 00, straw shed 60 x
40, dentine savage, poultry houses; good brick
!louse with aUtlr0om; new tut'nar,•; this farm
Is ideal tractor land and a very deLlrnbte
propet'ly. Contact Fred and Chas. Sirhotson,
Mount Forest, Ont.
60 ACI2L•' [mom, part tobacco land, 2 Wine,
greenhouse, tobacco implements. 0 -room
home, 0, nine from town. Also a 4 -year
tense of 45 acres rented land. Apnty' to Frank
2olnl0, I1I5 No. 2, West Lorne, Ont.
112 ACRES, 2 houses targe barn. river, with
or without smelt and equipment. Tweed nitre
mites, Joe Robinson, Actinolite, Ont,
ATTENTION FARMERS
FOR SALE—Tractor Three, made of rubber,
minable for bolting on steel *-heels, 015,00
each. rear wheels: 57 60 dark. front wheeta.
When ordering male diameter and width of
wheels. Netionnl Rubber Co, !Ade 6 wilt.
shire Ave., Toronto,Ont.
INTERNATIONAAL T_ 9 tractor with Bucyrua-
Erle nngledoxer. Recently rebuilt, Have
Purchased larger machine. Duncan Prentice,
Minden, Ont,. phone S120,
FOR SALA
BREEDERS OPPORTUNITY!
Young pair Cocker Spaniels (breeder,l.—
Seventy-avo Dollars the pair, registered.
proven, heti breeding, blonde, Cocker Puppies:
females aftoen dollars, 1110010 extra. Black
female six months 000.00, Yorkshire. Timmins.
Ontario.
BOXER PUPPIES
190000 color, excellent bloodlines. Stn and 576.
M, Schmitt, Rex 537, South lbla•lmhte, Ont.
DRILL presses complete with motor pulley,
3 capacity precision nitric, mortising at-
tachment, mortising bits, sander nttadunent.
Sell In whole or part% Write Tool & En-
gineering Co.. Box 405. SL Catharines. Ont.
FON. and {leer haunde, bred front choice stock,
E. 16, Tripp. R.R. No, 2, Oshawa Ont.
FOR SALE—Power Ice culler, fee Mueller.
leader and ice toots. A. Lettere, Bos 700,
Chntlenu, Ont,
FASHION 111010 Angoras. Excellent woollen,
developed from highest prize winning Can-
adian 0trnin0, 9olerted Seniors nod ,llnuol's,
510.00 and 00.00 each. A. Gobc,dt, Statile
Drive Angora Ranch, Route 1, .Ayton. Ont.
GRAPE S1r101(6,, else 1" to 4" tops. AnitlY
Rogdon & Gross I•'urn. Co. Ltd., Walkerton.
Ont,
JOHNSON Iron Horse 0ngine0, ^d H.P. 161.40
1.34 1•I.P, 070.00. Immediate delivery, Cur-
rey Buhler, Eglinton & Bathurst, Toronto,
LATHAAM RASPBERRY canes, 54,00 Per 100,
Premier ,lrnwberries. 58,00 per 100. W,
Witney, Blom, Ont,
&Olt 3901.R
111 J AL >; J i'fl 'i'J.AN 13I.1NI)S
011V1, Poon 1,1)1113 .l x!,81'1, Inonninl a11I,1rUr-
lint„ u;,l. V •nctmn Blind., I,xst 100000,
miar, fnld,:m.11310 Buy1110',;+. rte., (00,11
t 1511 01 20, 265114, 07 1oi 20005.
S 0iroli, 57 00 31240 d, 40. 34064
5.10. 11:11. SI 50. 78261, 9t008. 4i/X64,
31061 12611, ell 4.1. 44x05 SI. 1,> 40054
617 ea 40011. 61 • 45; 611664 01.l _•1 Larger
bin In min Irwin in order. Vo '
;' t, Il: -,roll, ,' nrnv:. 1,,4111 Turonl•I
Altars Venetian Blinds
1;111 ,du..,.n 511
East To/2nd,, 1- Otp4rle.
Pl. Ile:-1nIt14D Irioil Netter popple,. toil pi'r-
.. tirulars. write J. Crotrher, lined 51., Orlllla,
f11:t,1s1'1•:1t1•:1, 11•.ldlr,,, y. pN 1,a ,1 Ka"w11 degas
ieesea eyed B. -l'1,4 ready 10 tram . .n this Fali.
A. Landb•'nt=-r. Ikminlunan, Of„
11E9.'O14DS, free catalogue of favorite hill-
billy 0%1 Mtn, artiste. National Rade*
L1.1„ Dint. 0, 427 Portage Ave, Wlnrdpeg,
Mian.
0011(1711 Latham Raxtb,.rry l.,rn'x fvr fall
Alantin.[. 51.00 per 100. Premier Straw -
bet ilea 52 03 A, C0005'. 1t. 11. No. 1. 00-
UnOt,1n, OM. „�-
TIRES
We aro ov.n:Iocked In good pxcd Trade -In
Ones with high trends—alt gluu•anteed to be
in eseellenr o11:1b.., Speclol price m1 ear Tiro.
ALL SIZES $4.50
BIG SAVINGS ON
NEW TIRES & TUBES
Guaranteed for one year
10x31,42 -05,1t Tube 51,26, 410,21-59,91,
Tube 51.00. 000x19-510,60, Tub., 11,21, 500
8.Q-510.7). Tube 91-21, 015x18-511.60. Tube
59.60. 060617-114.00, Tube 02.01, 600x10-
014,16. Tube 52.64 060x16 -0I2.60. Tube
98.26. 2160-700x20-145.75, Tube 64.70. 760
520-0407504.00, Tube 50,60. 810020-
162.60, Tube 57.75.
Also u full lino of retreads. all orders ship-
ped C.O.D. Denlero wanted,
BEACON TIRE
Cor, Qr'EEN & YORK STS, HIAMILTON 9.
ONTARIO.
WOLF, Fox, Mink Trappers one only the best,
complete tymem. 1'0101mrs tramline coyote
and gland nreing. Full particulars. A, E.
Fisher. Box 410, Calgary, Alberta.
HAIRDRESSING
LEARN Halydreeolne the Robertoos method.
Information on request regarding Ola0sea
Robertson's Huirdreoalne Aeodetny, 137 Avo
nue Road, Toronto
&IEDICAI,
H1(1HLY IO;CO\OAIENDED—Evers- eu0Yerer of
Rheumatic Pains ur Nouritix should try'
Dixon's Remedy, Munro's Drug Store. 315
Elgin. tnu,o'a. Pocload 51,00,
PILES—Nothing else you ran buy has the
same internal action as Pyltonr Pilo Remedy.
This liquid (taken by mouth) Is compounded
from s5eolal Balsams, flume, and ('lant-
Extraets. It gets results bemuse It goes
directly to the internal cause of Piles. Thai's
the reason for its ...evens on the moat stub-
born cases This modern tray of treating
that ll(0rnal trouble gets results that last.
One bottle of 1'yltoue IO enough to Provo Its
healing 0nu'er or price refudod at once.
That's our guarantee no matter how long
standing 0u0r case may be. tour Druggist
has it; or cin order it for you,
DON'T WAIT—Every sufferer of Rheumatic
Pains or 1eurillx should try Dixon',.
Remedy, Mun ri u Drug Store, 32.5 Elgin. 01 -
lawn, Postpaid 11,00.
OP19SRTCNi'1'IEs FOR 101011SN
BE A HAIDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Ouoortunity Learn
HalydMeaing
Pleasant 01*0(7ed 0ruf0selan, good wages,
thou0anda eucceeaful Marvel graduates
America'. grentr01 system illustrated cot,
tngu0 free Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING
SCHOOLS
366 131000 St W,, 1'oront0
Branches 44 Icing St,. Hamtltoo
& 74 Rideau Street, Ottawa
MIDDLE-AuED Housekeeper for farm home,
near town: 110,1,1 cooly. Steil -In Hummel,
Box 701. ('hestervrltr, Ont.
PATENTS
FETHERSTONA5'GB & Company Patent
Solicitors. Established 1950 14 ging West.
Toronto Booklet of Information on request.
PHOTOGRAPHS'
CRISTMAS CARDS
FROM YOUR OWN
NEGATIVES
20 FOR $1.00
The 10001 dl,lineth-e Christmas Cards YOU
eau get . . , cards friends will treasure.
Send upyour fnvorile negative, Well
o
return -0 attrartlr, greeting cards 600
x 418” with your "snap" (from one nega-
tive? printed on and matching envelopes.
On 2 -color folder cards 51,60 de, On fold-
er cards with photos colored 03.60 dx,
Any sire roll -6 or s developed and
printed 100. Reprints from your negatives
4 cento,
DEPT. M
STAR SNAPSHOT SERVICE
Box 129 Post office A, Toronto
WANTED
WAN'''ED—Ml elude of ar0xeod poultry. 'e
501(5a Jur lop lards, Jonepll Cooper Limited.
(Poultry Dept, 9064 Danforth Ave., Toronto
6. (We do 000tonl gradtlig).
Logs Required
WE 1'('tt/WARE Hardwood and Softwood logo
for ash Wrne Iios 607. Iionpolnr. Ontario
....._.._.--.WA'('(`H ttlllt'Atlt50
Dependable 10-tlny 0,101ce nil 011 171te0 0e
waleb 5104 Jewellery repairs. All worst guar.
ant 0,1, drltrrs Brothers Jeweller, tie Itaa-
tech re , Toronto. Ont
"Higher" Mathematics
"Do you know how these econotn-
lsts figure out the cost of living?"
"Sure. They take your income—
whatever it may be—arid add. 10 per
cent "
MOUTHS WATER when
the fragrance of Maxwell
House fills the air. This
wonderful blend of
coffees is Radiant Roasted
to develop to the fall all
its extra goodness,.
HEIVIORIMOIDS
2 Special Remedies
by the !Makers of Mecca Ointmn•hii
Mecca Pile Remedy No. 1 is for Protrudtn0
Bleeding. Pam, and fa sold in Tube, with pipo
for internal application. Price . Mecca Pile
Remedy No.21s for ?external Itching Piles. Bold
OnrdJaarr ,baynDd u(emVeer fexemrnyaousDrounglgys.Prioa 600
CHEST COLDS
is
PAT ,..IT ON!
_THERE S 0 N ETH/NG.FOR
r"
HEAPAcHE
• rFAS1r .'
fo :. ED
/!ems LO
�rRE
-nstantine
/2 TABLETS FOR 250
ISSUE 42-1947
t constant Smoking Pleasiire
via rift 414
ALSO AVAILABLI0
Il8 1/5 POUND TINS
'By Arthur Painter
JITTER DID VOd
TANG ANY 010 MY
CNOcoLATSSS F
1.04:4071,14-115'
SLHEVES, SILLY,
LOOK IN IRS SL,PSyeg,