The Brussels Post, 1948-9-29, Page 6WHAT GOES ON
IN THE
WORLD
- z'Nortnan8late
Spain
Nine and a half years after the
end of the Civil War —that conflict
vy which was the prelude to World
War Two—Spain retrain; the eita-
del of fascism in Europe. Under
Generalissimo Fraueo tit +tate is
supreme, and Owl, is no fr'tdonl
of press or of speech. With the sole
exception of the Fascist Falange,
all political partite are suppressed,
even outlawed. There is said to he
an underground resistance move-
ment, but there are few evidences
that it amounts to vcry touch.
Only once, in all that period, have
the Spaniards been allowed to go
to the polls. 'that was in July, last
year, when they were asked to vote
"yes" or "no" to a question as to
whether they approved of a law
which formally made Franco the
"chief of state", and setting up ma-
chinery by which pia successor will
be chosen, at some distant day. The
"yes" votes numbered some twelve
and a half million as compared to
"no's" of just over six hundred
thousand.
But just a week or so ago the
Cabinet ordered another election to
take place early in November, and
there has been cosiderahle specula-
tion in other nations as to just what
Franco is up to. The general feel-
ing is that the Spanish Dictator
wants to put on at least a show of
democracy. First, because it ntiglat
give Spain a better chance to get a
helping of the European Recovery
Program "gravy"; and second, be-
cause Franco desires to make it
more difficult for the United Na-
tions General Assembly to put the
blast on him when it takes up the
Spanish question at its coming
Paris session.
But in spite of the fact that—
apparently—the Spanish voters will
be offered a free choice, it seems
pretty certain that when November
comes they will cast their ballots
pretty much as Franco wants—or
elseI
The United States
The Presidential campaign is be-
ginning to warm up in real earnest,
with both President Truman and
Governor Dewey starting off on
their first major speaking tours; and
it would take a calculating machine
of the latest model to even begin to
figure the amount of oratory that
will be spilled between now and
"the first Tuesday after the first
Monday in November"—the day of
the balloting.
Before starting out the President,
at the White House, received some
good news in the form of pledges
from important labor leaders that,
in spite of past differences, organ-
ized labor's heads were for the
Democratic party. By a vote of 35
to 12 the CIO executive committee
came out for the Truman -Barkley
combination; and the president of
the Brotherhood of Railroad and
Steamship Clerks told the President
that leaders of 7 million out of 8
million AFI, members would work
for him.
It seems certain that two issues
will play a large part in the Repub-
lican campaign — the presence of
Communists in high places at Wash-
ington, and the high cost of living.
• Two months ago it appeared as if
Dewey would win handily; but right
now it seems as though he has a real
battle on his hands, and the gam-
blers who were offering juicy odds
against the President going in again
have cut their prices sharply. Henry
Wallace—to continue the race -track
flavor --appears to be running mere-
ly for exercise, although there is no
doubt that Henry doesn't think so,
or if he docs, conceals his real feel-
ings very well.
Russia
Without ally pretensions of un-
derstanding the devious workings of
the official Russian mind, I imagine
Messrs, Stalin, Vishinsky and the
rest of them mast have feelings sim-
ilar to those of the disappointed
Irish gentldinan who—lusting for
battle—couldn't find anybody to
oblige. "Just what in blazes," said
he, "sloes a man have to do to start
a fight in this; town anyway?"
Not log ago German Commun-
ists—with the assistance of Russian
military— invaded the British sector
of Berlin, smashed the legally elect-
ed city Government, and by mob
violence forced its dispersal, They
also broke into the offices of the
Secretariat of United States Liaison
officers, after surrounding the City
Hall with cordons of armed soldiers
commanded by a Soviet General,
and forced the Americans to deliver
over to them Western police officers
who were supposed to be under
Uncle Sam's protection, marching
them off each handcuffed between
two Russian zone detectives.
The Americans didn't put up even
ii show of a fight. Tite arrested men •
Were carried away, tied to seats in
a truck under a spotlight played on
them by Soviet soldiers who were
following. In aswcr to official pro-
tests a Russian Major 'insolently re-
plied that the Americans had been
harboring criminals.
Whatever Goes Up Must Come Down—and Jockey J. Schweit-
zer is probably wondering whether the falling will be hard or
soft as he suddenly finds that he has no horse under him (luring
a recent steeplechase at Aqueduct race track. The unseated
rider made a good landing and walked away under his own
power.
Trying to keep' tab on the major
league baseball situation is about
the same thing as attempting to
follow, and write about, the French
political scene, "By the time your
stuff gets into print," a colleague
who writes comments on world
events puts it, "you're liable to find
yourself about three Parisian crises
and two new French cabinets be-
hind
ehind what's been happening."
* * * -
Anyway, at the present moment
the two Boston teams are still lead-
ing their respective loops — by
about the width of a gnat's eyebrow
—and please do not forget who pre,
dieted, before the season started, an
all-Beantown World Series. And if
the Braves should get in, everybody
and his brother will be recalling the
great days of George Stallings'
"Miracle Team", so wily not us?
* * *
It was late in the season of 1912
that the. owner of the Braves hired,
as manager, one George Stallings;
and if you imagine that guys such
as Leo Durocher are hard fighters
who will battle till the last out and
even after, we might tell you that
they are sissies as compared to the
same Mr. Stallings, as he was in the
days we are writing about.
* * *
The Braves, when Stallings took
over, were about the most hopeless -
looking aggregation that ever ap-
peared in Big League uniforms.
George immediately started using
the, pruning -knife, with, mighty
sweeps and no regard for hurt feel-
ings,; and when the 1913 season be-
gan there were only four of the
previous crop left—"Rabbit" Mar-
anville, George "Lefty" Tyler, Otto
Hess and Hank Gowdy. Stallings
used something like fifty different
players that year, shifting his men
like one of these chess experts play-
ing twenty or thirty games simul-
taneously. When the campaign was
over the Braves, much to every-
body's surprise, had struggled from
the cellar of the National League
up to a dizzy fifth position.
* * *
By the time the 1914 race began
Stallings had added to the line-up
the one and only Johnny Evers—
one-time key -man in the Tinker -to.
Evers -to -Chance combination — a
scrapper of high degree who was
installed as second base•-:^" --5
field captain. But in spite of this
the Braves started off distinctly "on
the limp" winning but four o. t..a r
first twenty-two games.
* * *
In baseball they have a belief
that the team on top when the
Fourth of July rolls around is very
liable to cop the pennant. On July
Fourth, 1914, the New York Giants
were in first place, with a fifteen -
game lead over the Braves, who
were last. Then, all of a sudden,
SA LY'35,SALLIES
It.,,...�.,M„
'The Mlssus hired me, 1 guess
Lo keep her 01' Boy in nights."
things began to happen, and on July
19tH the Braves climbed from eighth
place to seventh,
* * *
Then, when they had ascended to
the fourth rung of the ladder, the
Braves fell into such a hitting slump
that only the work of one of the
most remarkable pitching staffs in
history kept them from dropping
clear out of the league. There were
only three of then(—Dicky Rudolph,
long a favorite with Toronto fans,
Bill James and "Lefty" Tyler.
Stallings worked thein ,in order,
with only two days or less of rest
betw'e'en each mound appearance.
How well the trio did their duty is
seen by the fact that for fifteen con-
secutive games they held the oppos-
ition to an average of one run per
game.
* *
The measures the Braves had to
take in order to win games some-
times reached the point of despera-
tion. Arthur Daley recalls one after-
noon when, in a late inning of a
scoreless tie affair, they somehow
managed to fill the bases on Babe
Adams of Pittsburgh, Little Maran_
ville was the next man up and Stal-
lings ordered him to get on, no
matter how. So "The Rabbit" simp-
ly stuck out his head and allowed
himself to be conked by one of
Adams' fast ones.
* * *
Maranville dropped to the ground
like a steer hit with a sledge. Um-
pire Moran, 'working behind the
plate, viewed the prostrate figure
with deep suspicion. "If you can
walk to first base," he finally said,
"I'll let you get away with it" So
"The Rabbit" managed to totter un-
steadily to the initial sack, forcing
in what proved to be the only run,
of the game.
* * *
By Labor Day the Braves were
tied with the Giants for first place;
and with a morning - afternoon
double-header scheduled against the
New Yorkers, the demand for tick-
ets was so great that they borrowed
Fenway Park—home of their Am-
erican League rivals, the Red Sox,
and holding far more people—to
play it in.
* * *
Dicky Rudolph pitched the morn-
ing game, against the immortal
Christy Mathewson, and when the
Braves came frotn behind with two
runs in the ninth, to win 5 runs to
4, they were in first place. But
that afternoon Jeff Tesreau lout -
pitched Tyler, and the race was all
knotted up again. Then, the follow-
ing day Bill James tossed a dazzling
three -hitter, which was more than
"Rube" Marquard, fbr the Giants,
could, match. Once more The Mir-
acle Team was on top, and this time
to stay- The dazed Giants, still not
realizing that it was all too true,
practically chucked it, When the
season ended Mr. Stallings, unbe-
lievable Braves were pennant win.
ners by no less than ten and a half
games.
* * *
We have no space to tell how the
Braves went on and fooled the, ex-
perts, who almost unanimously said
that they should he charged admis-
sion to get into the same park with
the Philadelphia Athletics, and
swept the World's Series in four
straight games, But they were quite
an outfit, that team which George
Stallings patched together with
mending tape, rusty nails and bits
of hoopiron; and if their 1948 suc-
cessors
uscessors — supposing they stagger
into this year's classic—cat only
show anything like the same color
and action, it shoal( be ottite a
Series, and tin fooling.
TSS1lTs 39 -- 1948
Canada Climbing Out
Of "Fools' Paradise"
Despite its prosperity, its living
standard and its basic wealth, Can-
ada is in crisis. This is always a
healthy place for Canada to be in.
Canada was created by crisis, it won
its independence in crisis, its great-
est years of progress were the years
of crinis in two world wars, Long
betmisctl by the theory of the easy
life, which flows across its southern
frontier, it (('lust now seek its own
clear, cold lifesprings on the north-
ern slope of the planet There it has
always found its strength,
'rhis cutiotts national organism,
one of the few points of stability on
the map, is being hardened and tem-
pered already by the phases of
its trial. It is following its own in-
stincts, 1t is contriving its own
methods of cure. It is remodeling
its't'cononly. It is re -shaping its
society. Sooner than its neighbor it
is clinching out of the postwar fnds'
paradise.
Canada, 1 venture to predict, will
conte through the trial stronger than
ever and in a few years, as during
the war, the United States will ask
'tow' so fray people have accomplish-
ed so Hutch This I cannot prove by
facts but only by the record of the
past and the eharactlx' of my
country in the present— only by an
abstraction which no foreigner will
understand and no Canadian will
explain. In the alliance of free
nations we sltall remain the silent
partner.
—By Ilrucc Mitchinson in
The Anttric.ut Mercury,
Catching Up
The population of New York City
may soon overtake that of London,
The latest estimate of New York's
residents, thele by the city's health
Department, places the figure at
8,067,000, the first time it has gone
above the eight million mark. The
United States Bureau of the Cen-
sus counted 7,454; It15 New Yorkers
in 1990. The latest available popu-
lation figure for Greater London is
8,611,005. Greiner Loddon, how-
ever, covers 677 square miles, while
New f'ork's area is 3G5 square miles.
Fatherf
Juc
y
ME
1. 1J
t
D'ARCY HILL •
OF LA4(EF EL , ONTARIO,
mGrings; unconscious youngster to
surface after diving three times
At his home in Lakefield, near
Peterboro, Ontario, D'Arcy Hill
had just started to remove his
work clothes when a shrill cry,
coming from the direction of the
Otonabee River, pierced the air.
Dashing 300 yards down the
wooded path, he came to the
sheer, cement -walled bank of the
barge canal. At first he could see
nothing ... and then, suddenly,
he noticed a few bubbles rising
to the surface.
Immediately Hill dove into 17
feet of murky water. Swimming
to the bottom of the canal he
found a bicycle. A leaking air
valve had caused the bubbles...
and Hill was certain that the
rider must be somewhere near.
Coming to the surface for air,
the rescuer made two more dives
to the bottom. Despite the heavy
undertow from a nearby power
dam, he finally located the un-
conscious body of a 12 -year-old
boy and brought him to the sur.
face. Eight feet of bare cement
wall faced the rescuer ... so he
began the slow, difficult swim
to the canal entrance. Luckily,
help arrived within a few min-
utes ... and soon the boy was
in the hands of a doctor.
That young boy is alive and
well today due to the bravery
and cool efforts of D'Arcy Hill
of Lakefield, Ont. We are proud
to pay him tribute through the
presentation of The Dow Award.
THE DOW AWARD is ,a
citation for outstanding hero,
ism and includes, es a tangible
expression of appreciation, a
$eco Canada Savings Bond.
Winners are selected by the
Dow Award Committee, a
group of editors of leading
Canadian newspapers.
Seeing bubbles rising to the surface,
46 -year-old D'Arcy Hill dove into 17
feet of dark, murky canal water.
The sheer, cement wall was impos-
sible to climb ... so Hill swam with
the unconscious boy towards the
canal entrance. Fortunately, others
soon arrived and helped them out of
the water.
00-100A
LISTEN TO THE DOW AWARD RADIO SHOW
SATURDAY -8.30 P.M.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
.DENT* WANTED
00012 to dim; nal .0m n Sell made-tonleaen e
mens pants dila( from nuumfactmo
Largo muftis, Barry Allan, 1100 St, Law.
rem_i M nU•enl. ,
OILS, GREASES, TIRES,
tnseettoldee• I*laetrle Fence (tontrollore. Houou
and Darn Paint Ronf Comings oto, Dent
are wanted write Wenn. Orrnoo-.5 011 Limt
100 Toronto
AGENTS wanted 11 ,ill euauomUUos to 0.41
0,1)' popular 101.,01 children's robber tired
walnn 1(1,1,11,• 1(100, slelgim, el,•. 'I'r1uPl,•
Kalea Roma 110 112 1tl,I,,n,ot '1. \t', ',amain
(011(11S'� ,.
16,000 PULLETS
Ready to Lily also 10 wcolm to 3.4.0 etontht.
Floor and Range rained under bloat eondltl,as.
Alan Fall Ot,kl(s. Cotoingae and Prlre Mat
Free,
LAKEVIEW POULTRY FARMS
EXETER, ONTARIO
PULLETS. Pure brecdn and (tuna (05ed0,
weeks to hying Summer anti Fail ch101,0
Fre0 Catalogue Top - Nnlrh rhlelt Solea
Guelph. On! nrlo
POVL'riYK14511.lili*ran cash In on the 5000
egg inaoltet by ordering 0 In $ week pt111010,
nmv ready for r0uaonnbly 5000101 shipment,
Send for prleollet and ardor noon, Ordor
,-lett, naw for 0010ber delivery,
Dray Hatchery, 130 John N. Ilnurlltan, Ont.
PULLETS f�T
8 Weelta to Ready to Idly Several breeds and
crosses. Send for prion Ilei and breed*.
HU
ONDALE
CHICK RMATCHERY
LONDON, ONTARIO
PUId.i'rrs $-weep* to laying 11) intro broods
and crossbreeds Summer and Fall Chick,
hatched to older Free Catalogue 'fweddle
Chl01, Ilot•herie0 Limited, 1001.0110. 001110 lo
R'A\'1'Irp li In 00,1 Shoo lints: Darted fas:ks,
New Damp, hires, white I.eghnl'I,n, Light
Sussex. Any 004' 11.11111 eight weeIts to laying
Advise age, quantity and V lee asked. ApitY
Box No. 12, 123-1811, Sweet, -New Toronto. Ont.
DYEING AND CI.IIANINO
['AVE YOU anything needs dyeing or clean.
lag/ write to us for Information WO are
glad to answer your questions. Department
H, Parker's Dye Works Limited. 791 Y0nge
Sheet. Toronto. Ontario
FARMS FOR SALE
100 -ACRE FA10Jt in desirable locality. Two
good bank barns, goad crania house, len
acres good hard -wood, dinning trate]', one
mile (ram village, station, stores, churches,
school etc. Owner retiring, Immediate pow,
0008100, George Kerr, R.R. 1, Ethel, Ont,
160 ACRES elny loam, 100 clew', balance
pasture, 'Wood and Umber watered by
stream. House, out -building gond repair, steel
,00nchl0n, 28 head box stalls, I7ydro Prn8Oure
tank write 191:,0. Anderson, Lennard, Ontario
PRODUCTIVE DAIRY FARM
115 Arre0, Oroenbmtk area, Lens highway Nn.
12, arlen0ld grain and °lover farm, fully
emulates for dairy, hydro, largo trnetor Beide,
large barn, well equipped for hugs 1,11(1 pontic,'
Merl driving shed, largo cement alio. ova
gnrngea, elerh9c pumping aYalem, good nine
room frame house, fut•nnee, running water.
1teduee0 In prim. for quirk sale. Contact
LLOYD LEE
REPRESENTING
J. A. WILLOUGHBY and SONS
REALTORS
SEAGRAVE, ONT.
PHONE 0012T PERRY 110811
FOR SALE
BEAUTIFUL gummed frames for mounting
snapshots In album. 110, 120, 127 or 0e -
sorted Package 200. Decor -edges. 238 Hou,
awls. Montreal 22,
HI -POWERED RIFLES
• wean fmw lista and orl0ea
SCOPE SALES CO
320 Queen St Ottawa, Ont
LIVE breeding mini( for sale, stnndar,1, silver•
blue, restos and halt -Mood ellvo'btue, pelt
prices. Write to Erwin Grcenspnon, 40 G1en-
arden Rd., Toronto.
"PRECISION"
POWER 011A110 SAW
Suitable for cutting all types of wood.
Eight different types manufactured, all using
tho well-known and reliable 8110 h.p, ' 0,051•
*ton" alr-cooled. 2 -cycle molar. Immediate
delivery.
PRECISION PARTS LIMITED -
0910 Shemin Montreal 1$
PORTABLE chopping mill, oonsiating of Vete
cot 11" grinder, driven by John Deere 38
hep, power unit mounted on Idnplo (mat truck,
Walter W. Burkholder, Markham, Ont.
BEAUTIFUL farm raised English collie male
months, $7,fi0, femme $8.00, mole 0
months 08:00, female $4.00, Sen101'and Eng-
lish male 2 month,, 87,00, female 81.26, male
3 months $7.60, female $3.76, Pollee Collie
male 3 months, $7,60, (ornate 54,00, lnnl0 eollla
ready to train $12,00, rental. 00,00. Parents
of these nuns will go halt mil, for cattle like
man. Trained male collie cattle dog 2 years
old, will nueritice $20.00, female Just an gond
$20.00. Safe delivery gn0rante00. Box 208,
Mo•risbthg, Ont,
NEW MACHINES, Massey Harris 0 fl. one
way Disc, 0 ft. Grain Binder 2 row 70.111-
loe* corn planter, 0 re. Tr00tnr Plow, used
machines, 5 ft, 5Io0o'mlole Hilder, 13 run
McCormick Disc Drill, Mcrn'm°k 2 fr. Tree -
tor Dian Plow, Apply Chas, B. Craig & Snit,
North (flower, Ont,
COM. 1 ('01RN10LL, Reg. 1Dawson's Golden
Chaff wheat, 9 dollars initial; sono' 1 Daw-
son's 02,00 bus. PGw00 eioaood. Gordon Leslie,
Acton, Phone Rockwood 01-11-02.
QUALITY Standard Sllverbine and half blood
- mink for sate. Ronsonablc urines for October
delivery 0. EI, Lawrence, 11.11, 1, Pown0Oan,
Ont.
BAGS AND TOWELS
Bleached and washed cotton bags, Fleur, $2.88
Per (Innen. Sugar, $3.00 per dozen. TOWELS:
li't0\IMED—shout-1;" x 34", „Flour -02.00
doz. — Sugar, 82.25' dozen, Surplus mntlr'esa
covers, singly, tubus, tv0ahed, about 25" x 03"
—51,00 each, Far mailing add ,260 postage.
DEPT, W. '
BY-PRODUCTS
93 ONTARIO S'1'„ TORONTO
VEGETABLE Juice Extractors for home 800
Very ,0010, Write or phone LIve-Rite',re-
duct0, 740 Tango Street, Toronto, RA, 7120,
1:'080 SAI.20
010A0117 Inman puppies finest hunting 504
01,00 stoel6 Emerson ton ltobrl'toon, 1234 moor
SL w 7a00nte
t'UI 111 pups. 0,1.0 h 010,10-
1(110111 0,111-1.111 1.1,11'1'8
1'u11TA131.10 4.1)40 mill, 10011110g Cm:* 50,101.01,
puu•rr 111111, slab 811w, sao',l!nt drag, fonnaM
tint Umbers, Mr, ('l(van for cash. Also one
train of Horses. 00011 (1111,1 or bind) testi! --
0200,111 r,ouplrtn 1v1111 htu'nroH. Apply Rd1Ord
Lee, rhur-1,r, 1.:60.. D0(o 111n,d1. Ont.
'1'11'(1 iittla11111.1u(0 111a 1511 I,50, Silo") 300 000
rood wa, blm. hot welt', 815,00 emit.
Ono Burman hand inoyer ,lipping t11nr1,1110
urlu ly
111.0, a*ul only anre $12.00.
'1't,'n 11m*e 1.1111110•1, l.00,l condition lravy white
Molt, ..$11).140 Ili., pule,
(1t8 (banort rte Vow,. controller' uood nnlY A
few nmnl1 . ,11,:111110M inetnlyd leap flatteries
$10,00,
Una Ye
:u'ling 1,01,41,11 Pollee Female good
*01,')
,Iona tuna of obllobon 510,110, A. Lawrence,
t lrnftun, ol,t.
11611/4114 t Ir:,s:dm 24-1111 Invitee 84.50, 18.24,
811n t 1 this delivered. 1"corner Suraerlo0,
Whip. Fox. Rask,
ROOFING AND SIDING
FACTORY SECONDS
Hero Is real bargain rooting, we doubt you
ml tell them from first 000.10.
Asphalt Sldnrloo 210 11,. 04 98, 108 Ib. thane
000 $8.76, 125 110 $3,16 per sq. 1100 ft.) Red,
green, black and blends. Glue available in
210 1b. "MY.
tolled Roofing 90 10 rod. green or black,
$2.25 nor eq, 00 Ib red only 81,76 Mr 00.
I0(clt Insulated nr10k siding $8.00 sq.
Itoil (nett aiding In red or buff 53,10 pe" eq,
1, 003. Factory or Hamilton. Delivered prices
with detailed circular on r000est.
Robert Jones Lu0,100 CnmpnnY, Humliton, Ont.
3 PIECE BATHROOM SET $120
100,o plumbh,o slums:Itr, baths on loge, 00008*
hat tor, -lore(0. b1)oi,,n fnrn:,-:o, r:adiutnn•s.
:111 110100x015' pit"' and filling* 101' uluml,lng
and healing. Main Pl,m,hbne & Boating, 1000
SI, t.awreuoo Si., 81,,,,0 ,1 1.
SE01011A1, Osrms 20 to 200 acres, oevrral
with tla0 Wells on. Bring In $50.00 a year
each. Some with stool( and implements. All
level land. Ihoee not on highway on gond stone
roads. Come and ace them. R 8100,0, Grolier.
John Walker, 0ale8mnn. Rax 62. Jorvlu, Ont,
SPECTACLES LENSES
DVt'LICA'l'l.D
RETURNED by AIR NAIL same
received Plastic frames dyed any
TROTTIER
MANUFACTURING Optician 1054
Royal Nast, Montreal 34 "
TRACTOR OWNERS
writ, toe our cltnlngne, 31 pageO11r worth.
While equipment, fully (Ilo:tr0led t1'u have
for Immediate delivery 11111110 Minors. rued•
wood entre, otter., fel-1 lltae'r hroodoaol ere.
spike rood( harrows, Mr. (ll'l('r 00,0 5,•10,'0
prime Ine,•e:men bec"ir01 effective. Truett &
1 meow Equipment Co Ltd In00h,•rr ltd.
at Mitnieo, Toronto 14. Ont
WAR SURPLUS TIRES
New 400 x 10 hn0ol0 tires, 1.l1, tread $i 36.
standard trend 06.95. Like 1,010 111111 x 15
standard treed 8005. Jeep timid and ri:",v),
trend 00.98. 050 0 111 :onward 8111,
Jeep trend, $12.05 Prison of 1)l her , •11 1 and Gree and tarpaulins nn (411101 It 'nil
ler, on order* or noel fall almond and Hary
C ti D. chanes.
M EN'l.IES liltu'I'lll:lS
Established 102a 112 ,lobo 0140•.1, 'I'uroan.
11A11(11If19StI\I,
LEARN Hairdressing the Robertson method
Intarmatl00 on requr*I re411rding classes
Robertson's 11a11'dr000In, sendemv 131 *vs
nue Rend. Toronto
day as
rotor.
Mount -
11111,1' w'AS0RD
ALEXANDRA MARINE &
GENERAL HOSPTTAL
Onderloh, Ontario
arQtor-ma gene,'nl (101.0 NURSES ('nod
eatery. Ideal (1•'u0s rondltloon Aunty to the
Superintendent at tlndrrielt Oniarin
ME011'AI
1300010 1)40(410 lOvory n)T6vor or Itbononlle
lotus 1)r Nourf,1* should try Dixon's tb'uu'dy.
,1101100', I1rno Stu, 336 101:1,,, Otl:i w,l. I'. .'L•
Pahl 81,00,
SATISFY 000100ELP' — I'srery 011060,01' of
tthoumatle Pains or Nc01'lli, 0bou10 try
Dixon's Remedy. 8100,0',, Uruo Sturr. 326
Elgin, Ottawa. Postpaid $1.00,
PROVEN 115111141i1.—Every onl'b'rer of Moo
mate P,10, 00 Neuritis aholll, 117
Remedy, Munro's Drug KMq'o, 331 Elgin,
0(103'0, PoiUntid $1.00.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JON CANADA'S LEADING Sr1-100L
trent Opportunity Learn
Hairdressing
Pleasant dignified prnf0o010n. good wages,
thousands earceseful Marvel graduates.
America's greatest system illustrated eat.
lone free Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING
5014001.5
368 moor St W., rorento
Brandies: 44 King St„ Hamilton
& 74 Rideau Street, Otaw,,
PATENTS
SETHERS'1'ONAUGH & Company, Patent So.
llrltnre Established 1800, 14 King West,
Toronto 5001,1et 1)t Informnllnn nn request.
REG'LAR FELLERS—Crash Award
IP MR,JAMEA DUaAf4
Sgatoa., Is
f ISI( NING 4N,
15 IS 717
tNFORNI'
7HAT HE HAS
WON FIRST pglzs
40.4 Ault
eiGANTIc
4StL1NTssT+.--
By GENE BYRNES
lo,
A Pa33R.-DOER.
.:LInE2-DUpER
.3LELI'LLeY
e Ctdf9Td16"• ODIGC $.
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