Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1948-1-28, Page 3} l{i ,{l Sports And One "Ling or nother 13y FRANK MANN HARRIS e ("A Sixbit Critic") In times of rising prices and food Gho•tal;rs, a writer enjoys one great advantage over his fellow citizens, if he has nothing else to exercise his teeth 00, he can aiwoys eat his own words; although we wouldn't really recommend the custom as either very nourishing or even satisfying, p * 8, This is by way of saying that we find it necessary to take back some- thing we wrote; and at the sante time tender apologies to an athlete whom we have been cruelly wrong- ing in the past. Like practically every sports cobbler on the Contin- ent, we have been poking fun at the pretensions of Primo Carnera as a wrestler! and even hinting that his adversaries must he taking great care in their handling of the Ambling Alp, for fear that some nigh' he would snap in two, Now we learn, on good author- ity. Mot such jibes were entirely uncalled-for. Paying a visit recent- ly to these parts was our old friend trill Mikailof, the lean who slid slur., to make large sections of On- tario wrestling -conscious than any oohsr individual, and one who 1:nmvs what he is talking to. When lie hinhid that Mr. Carnera must rveu're a good deal of protection in his bouts, itikailoff scouted the id a. "You are all wet," he told us. "Tint Camera was a wrestler for fire len years before he ever went into dat crazy boxing racket. He ran wrestle like nobody's business, red don't need anybody to carry 11'15 or protect hint whatsoever." So our humble apologies to Car- etra for the foul wrongs we have brew doing him in the past. We are glad to item that his wrestling ,'tiri ;55 are paying him around two thousand dollars a week — and fiat he's actually getting the dough — which is a lot more than he slid, in site of the big gates he cb•cw, 1 ' en raised up with what Ittihad' 1;r Lrnls, "stat crazy boxing racket". :Iltli I)dr1 \'ITfb.\'.C, A Alili- 1 Ii t•Arrl is a nal 01(0 fon (700555 Jar p'•"Iic, with a perfectly straight fa r. that the atonic bomb has made rn-dc,. armies and air forces obsolete r'rl then, with just as straight a Are, solemnly recommend that etre Oh(1,ld sperd double 7:!151 we ore e,:iv adding to our military ,r'I; ligula 4, 4 a< 11. is same time since we saw a hockey game in the fair city of Montreal; but they tell las that there is an atmosphere of gloom down around The Forum that you could easily cut with a knife. For years 1.cs Canadicns have been top (rows in pro hockey; and even when 11:0 'Manic T,cafs knocked theta loose from the Stanley Cup last spring their loyal supporters put it down as more or less of a fluke. STUFF AND THINGS 1,s..+1:.,ht. ( T I I "He's an apprentice!" But it's funny %that a difference just a few months can make, es- pecially In sport, At this moment the Frenchmen are seriously threatening to drop out of the bot- tom of the league — and only the weakness of the Chicago Black I-Iawks' inner -guard keeps the Montrealcrs out of the cellar. Now, with Toe Blake — ode of their few retnainitig spar[( pulgs — out of it indefinitely, their plight is a sorry one — in fact a Ulan selling crying towels would probably find a ready and highly profitable mark- et down there, especially among the French-Canadian rooters, who really take their hockey seriously and their losses the hard way. And a gent by the name of Bou- cher must be having many a quiet ehuekle.to himself. You will recall the jeers and slicers which greated I'rankfe's prediction, at the start of the season, that the Montrealers wouldn't make the playoffs. Well —in their first eight games this season, Canadians have emerged with just exactly four points — one win and two ties — making it seem as though maybe Mr. Boucher wasn't as far off the beans as some of us who laughed at his "screwey" prediction. And maybe you're heard the one about the fruit and vegetable dealer -who was recently observed closing his establishment for the night. A friend 751(0 was looking on, noticed something unusual in the dealer's ac- tions and questioned hint "It's all right," was the reply. "Tete way things are these days 1 put the cab- bage im the register, and leave the rash in the windoet." Racketeers — sure -thing artists — have always been with u5; in fact we think it was Kipling who once surmised that the real secret of Cheops' pyramid was probably that "the contractor did Cheops out of several millions." Now, on the authority of a recent magazine article, we learn that even the sacred game of BiNGO isn't free from the gentry who always like to have an ace in the hole,' It seems that there are two fav- ourite methods of taking the el- ement of chance out of BINGO. In one of these, the players come to the game carrying a supply of little numbers exactly resembling those used on the official cards. As the numbers are called by the operator of the game, they simply paste the proper ones on their cards until they have a whole row of winners, The checking is gen- erally done so hastily that the sub- stitutions are seldom noted, In the other plan, the connivance of the checker is !necessary. The racketeer hollers "Bingo' then the checker simply costes over and calls off — not the numbers actually on the racketeer's card, but winning airs which he has memorized as the plane was progressing. There are other schemes loo -- in fact the. authorof the article says that when any many — 0r woman either — writs too consistently at BINGO, the Mantes am that there's dirty work at the crossroads. And so another ilhusion is shattered! You're not coven safe at a Church entertainment. Handling the Public The lady went up to a police man on duty outside the Houses of Parliament and, pointing to Big Bel, asked: "Is that clock right?" Gravely, the policeman looked at his watch. "No, madam," he replied. "It's two minutes fast." A Substitute for the Dog Team?—The Eskimo in the above picture looks rather modern, seated at the wheel of an up-to- date tractor. But in many ways these people still follow the same customs which have prevailed in Arctic regions for cen- turies. Life among the Eskimos—and the work the Canadian Government is doing to help them—is strikingly pictured in the National Film Board .movie "Eskimo Summer". "Eskimo Summer" It 'would probably surprise a great many people to learn that quite a few of our so-called "modern" inventions and gadgets are really old—and cen- turies old at that. Take our heating, for instance. Now this is supposed to be the acme of modernity. But, if you care to look at "Eskimo Suin- mer," a •National Film Board film dealing with the Eskimo of Canada's eastern Arctic region, you will see that oil heating has been used by these peoples for countless centuries. And, even further, the Eskimo use oil for lighting as welt. In case you're interested in using oil—a la Eskimo—you first take a stone and grind and polish it until you have converted it into a shallow, open dish. Next, you gather dried moss and fashion it into a wick. which you place in your dish. Then, you obtain some whale oil, which you pour into the dish around your wick, And there you are, all set, not only to heat your igloo (or skin tent in the summer tine), but to light it as well. Ancient and Modern "Eskimo Summer" also brings to light and contrasts the ancient and modern in present day Eskimo life. Alongside the stone whale -oil lamp you will often see a primus stove; again, the neighbour of the matt who uses a primitive fish trap will prob- ably be using a white man's net; and, in matters of transportation, diesel - powered fishing boats will be seen pulled up on shore alongside the old fashioned buoyant skin kayaks. Staff of Life Summer time in the eastern arctic is a short but busy season. The bitter cold of winter is never far front nand, and the men and women work feverishly to lay in a supply of food for the lean months of blizzard and isolation. The menfolk and the older boys are constantly busy, trapping and spearing fish, and hunting cari- bou, white whale, polar bear, seal and walrus. The women are kept just as busy, drying the fish as fast as the men catch them. Another of their jobs—and how litany of their white cousins would envy them?—is press- ing out oil from the whale blubber A Bartel of Sense in This Idea exactly half t he life of a cooper's barrel is a dead loss; having been delivered full, it Moist 1)0 returned empty over the same. distance. For the first time since barrels'werc made, this problem has been solved by the British fiat of Merron. 'len Merron barrels are shown ready to be filled and delivered. .Beside them are 10 "collapsed" ones ready to be returned, Girl holds one of 10 staves of plywood making up a barrel. with a 'ulu" knife, to provide the winter's foul. The nighty whale, indeed, is in many ways a staff of life to the east- ern Eskimo. To catch a whale is a communal effort, and it is logical that the community should share its bene- fits. The "corpse" is evenly divided between all the families participating in the hunt, and each section is then put to various uses. Food and oit come from the blubber, as we have mentioned, but if you are looking for an extra special delicacy, there is nothing more enjoyable than a juicy wedge of the whale's skin—at least, so the Eskimo say. An Annual Event Perhaps the isolation of the Eskimo from the rest of the world makes them such cheerful, jolly fellows when- they do manage to conte into contact with other human beings. Such occasions are rare, but are look- ed forward to eagerly for months ahead. One such occasion is the an- nual arrival of the Hudson's Bay Company ship the ("Nascopie"— the ship that made this trip for so many years — was unfortunately wrecked in the fall of 1947). TR the film we see the "Nascopie" stopping at every settle- ment along the coast. The sten aboard her, R.C.C.M., doctors, mis- sionaries and traders—are all as eager to see the Eskimo as the Eskimo are to see them. As the ship lands, the Eskimo come forward, and work manfully unloading the lumber, gasoline and traders' supplies. Tile R.C.M.P. and doctors check of health, take out the sick and injured, and learn of new problems and diffi- culties which have arisen in the lives of these copper -skinned natives. - Yearly Shopping Spree The visit to the trading post is an- other occasion for cheer and excite- ment. Furs are exchanged for wood- en sticks, worth fifty cents each, and these sticks are regarded as motley. With the sticks the Eskimo buy their supplies of rifles, ammunition, traps, tea, flour, sugar, clothing, matches, and even toys for the children. All in all the Eskimo are seen to be a reoourcefnl and self-reliant people, who have made their !tomes in what is possibly the most rugged and for- bidding region in the -world, Far from being dull, they have shown surprising ability in mastering the arts of the white mat. "Eskimo Sumpter" gives 011 interesting colour picture of these people, and includes an animated map showing the precise location of their territory in Can- ada's eastern arctic. The film is now being shown on the rural circ- uit film programmes in Ontario counties. tk Hard Times "These sausages you sent Ilse are cleat at one end and bread -crumbs at the other," said Mrs, Andrews, "Yes, Madam," replied the but- cher: "in these hard times it is difficult to make both ends meat," Learn to Parachute Starting in Reverse It has be, n poi'.tcd r -:t that start 111) at Ow bots ,et a- v;nr!:ing lip is a pretty good 51 , tin!,'::: the um dertal.ing is- that ,i ,digging a welt. Parachuliug int ,11 quit' mail -maid) be cla.,,e•t as another trade or pro- fession nhieh is impractical to "learn from the ground tip,- says a science 11 niter in the Christian Sci- ence Monitor, However, it is quite possible to start a parachute jump from ground level and without the aid of any type of aircraft or balloon. K 4 e: To overcome Old of the principal hazards attendant on notice (and other) parachute jumps from heights —the question of whetitrr or not tate chute will open properly after the leap into space—a deuce has been workers out whereby the para- chutist starts his jump front good old Mother Earth, The novice dons his parachute and harness and stands on a grilled plat- form. 1:ider the grill a powerful motor'driven fan springs into action, sending up a powerful vertical blast of air. The current fills the para- chute and as the cloth mushrooms out above the student's head, he feels hiutielf jerked 'off hi; feet and into the air. * 4' 4 Up and up he goes until Ills weight exactly counterbalances the force of the vertical colunm of air, where- upon the student begins his descent just as though he had stepped from a plane. IIe learns the tricks of handling a parachute, working the shroud lines to jockey for a perfect landing, getting his tra'.ning with virtually :dl of the hazards of the more familiar kind of parachute jumping eliminated. Foreign Trade Suppose we decided to forget ail about this headache of foreign trade, as some misguided people suggest, and try to live within ourselves, what would it mean? asks The Financial Post. H. V, Lusts, president of the Ca- nadian Exporters Association, an- swered that question very plainly recently. With no importing or exporting, he said, immediately 784,000 Canadians would lose their jobs and wage and salary earn- ings would shrink $30,000,000 weekly. That would be the direct loss, What would be the effect of such a blow on all other industries, oth- er jobs and other payrolls can only he imagined. PILES—Modern medical 051- cora has overcome all. menta formerly thought Imposoble. Piles were considered one of them- Thnt'e nonsense today. The new ['Atone treatment has moven R- emit In tlsou0Onde of the most stub- born cases. It gets results because It goes direct to the internal cause, Your first bottle (0 Ifauid talren by mouth) shows you the difference, or that price refunded at once. A11 modern Druggists, • NAJCK FLAME GUN 8.000 Deg. Fehr. controlled heat marbly and easily Kills Weds 055trs1,5 brush, tree stump s, unwanted .rase, antitB rocks, disinfects,, chars wood, heats Iron, melte lend and tar and has bun• dreds 01 other uses for all Bensons. Various models available Worn Winnipeg and Toronto DEPT. 001, 1'051' OFFICE 11110 NO. 747, Winnipeg Manitoba Canada UsuslI, brings quick, sure relief in coughs. bronchitis, and throat irrita• tions. ATAL,asusslsTs 2$5 (0-2 MADE BY TE ORIGINATO SIOF MHOS Classified Advertising ulS1 NESS orrou'1.O NOT1Ee AN OFFER to over, inventor—Loot of 10500• [lone orad full Information Fent free. lbe Rumaey to., Regletered Patent Attorney. SIA !Mph tercet. Ottawa. BABY 511151:09 ling �.u;•i [rants 80 million dozen ran from +'.151,1,1 u, 1948, The Prov starling laic Ln ,r+n,nry will be 5e per dozen higher than 1917 Hp''mg prices• k'all prieee beginning 71,t" tuber 151 w114 be 21!•0 a dozen. above Pnemmt Pali prices and will continue 'until .1111, us Eh 1949. Year in and year out there Iu,0 le- 111 money In Poultry and 1048 1451 be he exception, start with good chicks. 11',• have bell, aupPll'iair that kind for 24 1'••110. )Ter ('aLaloguo mid 1'rlreltsl, rwrddle (lick Hatcheries Llrntted, Fermin, Ontario.. P111 Pock Farm Chicks are stili the beet bet on the lam becauee they lay plenty nt big egee end make a good profit. They are 0troug liveable chick. olred by high egg record males, Discount on early orders. Write today Nr free calendar and price Ilot, Pis [tock Farm, Ellie Roehee, Ont. Bahr 11,01,0 — !tarred ltoel,s, nixed and lis tn9d 1355,5d hocks—New Iinmpahtrea. Mr:ed 519.10 per 100—sten 1, other breeds, :addend Chltit 1lahaterle0, 1tritar :a Heighto, til,. Pnal'r:'k,,..l.,.; 0 -_You knew the good markets nt you. Don't leave your chick businPo g till the last minute, we've daeolds ant started for prompt shipment. Mar 11,1,1sety. 131 Jahn N„ Ilzmllton• Ont. Mimitton Poultry Cblrlta -- 700 buy baby 0)11105 for one reason. To receive dlvf- denda on your taveetmenI, P. 0,001 be eer- tam where your money lu Invested We after NM baby (-hicks from a Poultry Pam with -every breeder pullorum teeled ant government banded. Take advantage of our early dna. count, Write for our 1943 rat lingua and Price net. M,.Ntton Poultry Derr.a, Monete0, On tarso. Ali popular breeds are offered by '!bp Notch Chick is ate',. Cel your order In early— right now—for a profitable 1043 season. All Top Notch I!h35110 are from riorerhmem A i•:o'ov'd l igh-pro.urtIve atorl:. Top Notch ('n0 to,ner, ,:,,me back year niter rear. Alt or,l'r 1'.010 protects You agslntt pn0N5,ie prier r�.`t,•, gives you full benefit Ct any price drop L,Ror•. d'Lv.'ry and assurer you of getting the br•,.d yeti want nn 100 407 yon want then, , o.1 1.,r catalogue and prlr'list. Top Notch (:hick Sales. (:uelpll. Ontarl 1. 1)1(E1NU AND CLEANING HAVE YOU anything needs dyeing or clean - Ing? Write to us for Information We are glad to answer 1151. aue0t,000, Department H, Parker'. Dye Works Limped 791 Yonne Street, Toronto, Ontario FOR SALE HARLEY DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES Parte and Service Bert C Ket',utd7 & Son. 410 College St. Toronto JOHNSON Iron Home engines, es 11 P. $51 45 1.34 EL P. 570.00 Immediate delivery. Cur- rey gaunter. Scheme & Bathurst. Toronto A0BKR HONEY Very choice. Light amber henry, gond keep• ing quality, 70 lb. can. 515.59 F.O.R. Fergus, Ont. Fred 11', Krause. Fergus, Ont. DORSET horn ewes, lambs, yearlings, 2 yrs, Canada's best breeding. J. Leigh, 5 Heath St, W , Toronto, Ont, 5 Lbs. I'INE QUILT PCS. $1.39 Colorful assortment, prettiest designs. Guar- anteed washable cotton prints, broadcloth, stunning s'll; onlitng notrhee. assorted slaee, making attractive quilts. Preferred selec- tion. $1.30 (20 the 15.297 "FREE": 15 unlit deeigns: Needles. Thread. Remittance with order, Dell very extra. 12 'YDS. REMNANT PCS, $1.69 Washable Cotton Prints. Ilroadetotit, Pltur,s, et5. 10" to 30" width. L'5neal measure- ments. Postage 205. MONTREAL REMNANTS Station 11, Dept. 4. M001renl, G.\RDEN TRACTORS and RO'i'ARV. TILLERS 1'1 to 5 horsepower. Garden Plows. Disco. (.00 5:uurs. Stcine Growers, etc. writes UNIVERSAL TRACTORS , LIMITED 1,10 n[oclrtrera — Suppliers. Bartnm'llle liiamilton', ,'00010. Doberman 1'uppie0—Sired by Champion floe, the ton Glnnnerheinr. Shaw prospects for approved honors Particulars on request. Tannenu•nld Kennels. 50 Yorkville Ave„ Toronto. 'Antiwar 2207. TAXI BUSINESS roc sale In Sudbury, Ontario. Ono of Sud- buty"n lending and most 5rt,ntlerOus 1001 business with eight nen- cars and all modern equipment. Best location m Pity with a large garage and service station. (10,000 carat or payments can be arranged. 110rim George Appleby, 140 Edward Ave., Sudbury, Ontario. 1109T efficient "Spiral-Pltetl" enowpiane Prorellel•a mid skive, 11 years enperlenee, J Bogen. Tadntore, Sash. TRANSF05E0fERtation for sale complete. consisting of 3.100 K.V.A. Ferranti 2,300/ 573 volts: 2 75 K.Y.A. Ferranti 2 300 1110- 250 vita: 2 3719 K.V.A. Ferrantl 2.300/ 110-220 toll; 5 not breaker. 11,000 vORs, 400 amps. panel mounted, Dux e. 73 Adel- aide W., Toronto. Selling Load Broke Homes. good size. Marcie delivery. would take to district where needed, write 11'. Hummel, Mantorio. Sask. For Site: P01005 Machinery Chnht slightly used, very gond condition. at5 B.P. Prise $250 delivered, Joseph Byrne, ivoodsire, Ontario. DACHsHU\DS, Black nod tan, Registered Champion bred stork. Fred. G. Altmann[, 44 Filbert Street. Kitchener. Ontario, T.115I51, 111.000 gals. Immediate delivery. Also other alkea on hand, P. St, Germain, 0778 St. Lawrence Blvd., Glmurenl, Rte, 70 TONS bo led lay. $20 per ton, Ie.O.B. Mauston. R. J, smut', /melees, Ont. Penny hand mill with 54" wheel,. 411." fare, bond sawn, hand setting grinding atm tanstnning machine, small Carriage. 18' (rooks, price 8080,00 ensu, as is, Walkerton, \upU• Bossism & Greer, Puncture Cu. Ltd.. Walkerton, naturae, Chow-Oh/1w ntmNea, 7 we, las, registered. Mrs. 0. r'nfnld, 11112, Whin flees. Ont. —"1"11(IYfi ('1116.111 -SEPARATORS — Wil,ether 500 aced atom parts, n poorer drive, er n now cream neIaralor, they are avail- nble at your Meal VIKING denier. Ivo supply a friction Mulch pulley. with all our eleotrte drives and n low stand with our electric machines. See your tiling dealer or write to UN, SWEDISH SEPARATOR CO. LIMITED 720.722 Notre -Dame %1'e: 1, MONTREAL., Q1'11. HAIRDRESSING LEARN Hnlydrrseing the Robertson method nnfortuntlan on request regarding Glories. Robertson's Hairdressing Acadriny, 137 Ave. rue 11o0,1, Toronto, MEDICAL (Moll Advice( Sivery rt:rferer of Rlear110t10 Pains or Neuritis should try mow* Beaman Monera Drug ewe, 5311 Melo, 7.4 Iowa. Pus l pa id Milo. IN1'8STINAL COMFORT, panel now, Ons Dollar trial package. Box 85, Toronto 1. A.__._. -. . _sass._- Talde.-,__ . POU uP. Take U.0 &B. Tmlfq TaU)eta for torr vunuty, nervous and general 40b111ty. 400 and $1,00 at draggietp, or C.C.&B.. 8 0011 141., Hamilton, Ont, 11's Important —0lvery sufferer of ItheusIAno Pons or Neurit hl dhnuld try DI50,t'a, Holm wu.bIUdi 5l5 Store, sea mon. 1id $1 OPPOOTUNITIIOA FOR WOMEN RE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great opportunity Learn fin trdressing Pleasant dignified profeaelon, good wages thnu5Anda ouooeesful Marvel grndue les Amerlca'o eeeateol eyetem. Illustrated cat. Inoue free. Write. or Call MARVEL LLAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS 858 moor St %Y., Toronto Sranehee 44 King St,. Hamilton & 74 Rideau Street. Ottawa Sarnia General IIospital School of Nursing O:Pa•x a gen'•ral ronrse In nuralne meeting Ole r.',e, irementa of the Ontario D.a,artnent 01 Health ('1..1111ES IIN'5l'0( a'HORUART AND sl2I'0E11BE12 Aga Limit — 13-21 Years Monthly A.1iowenoei 521,00 niter snnlet ion of prolintilary term Mit r tilt:01r0 and Textbooks Provided Not (Tose Will 11' Admitted 1'ebruary 14. 1948 Aptly 1'7.111INTF.NDEe-7• (,P 15117101.1,' _ 1AINIA GI4N111: AL. HOSPITAL, OI'P(ilt't't NIT88211 1011 111:1 ANO 050131:N EARN Ali '.aa- AT ,10th - SI -,1R17 of full -i oro. ,,,''',' mpklm;. Leas n to [melte randy o ben„, and earn lie you learn: rnrreanond.v,,• ..our ,.• Natlntml In- stitute of (tonfect,,o,•r'' 1t.o'd, Delorimier O ' G nntrea; ( . 1. Mix 1 5” 1 n' AWN & W051b1N—"N111.I.' the NEW UPn9a- tinm,l BOOK on 1:11/1.11 I.1t0PHF2CY. )roc tho:,e who are 1'SAItNI N'IT.Y seeking morn 1(NOIt'LED(1I3 and Tltt'7'13 from the BIIILE Orrllattrsa. Unusual troths bruu5Ut to debt. ANSWERS many 0111,E scriptures 700 have a l trays wanted to know. About 100 p5500. size 009 Inches. This 0.1 can't tell all the story. never 0 book hafore 11110 It. Good ronnmla0i,n to live wlr,, AGENT:. sOIleinr- thin 0unrnnteed. Pray 11.95. Order now. Write R. 1)011, 1505 tweet 9th Street, Loe Almelo; 15, California. VATEN7'S I'ETHII1STONA1GH & Company Patent SMbltnrs lestehlished 1800. 14 Icing wee, Coracle Booklet or Information 0 requeet. PF112 SINAI LONESOME' Romantic, 1'orreeiondece Mars- azlne cantein0, photon, descriptions 100, 11'tth addrooeee floc One Year 52 World Federation Club, Pnrltercle as, Sarin. "ELIJAH COMING Before Chrlat", wonder - f01 book free Megiddo 115 00tnn, Rochester 11, N Y. "Knew Thyself" Professor Edtvin, social oonneltor, business adviser. Solve your problems, 207 College. Toronto. Khngadnle 1005. Lem -some? Want romance and marriage? Our large magazine lists ladles and gentle. men of all (3505 and ages. with photogrnnha. descriptions, etc. 100 a 0007, C. C. Club, DoSnrtment 2, Re, 123, Calgary. Alberta. 07,5S7'ED _ REGISTERED NURSES WANTED for general duty in elxty-five bed hospital, with full maintenance And well equipped nurse's residence. Salary 5125.00 per month. Mindy Supt.. Lady Glint° Hospital. Cochrane, Ont. LOOK! Two For One Sale Only $ 1.49 Sturdy, beautifully turned Cigar- ette Lighter and All -Wool Army Muffler. Lighter alone well worth $1.95. BOTH sent Postpaid for only $1.49. DOMINION AGENCIES Box 47—Station B, Hamilton, Ont. ISSUE 4-1040 POP—A Boner . By J. MILLAR WATT YOURS PAYING FOR IT *44-1R4 61 I