HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1953-2-18, Page 3010iert SPORTS COLUMN
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,
• This is Ghe first of two articles con -
corning the life and hockey works of one
of hockey's greatest figures, .the famous
veteran Captain James T. Sutherland,
founder of the Hockey Hall of Fame at
ICineston, hockey's Grand Old Man,
Great oaks, says an old adage, from little
acorns grow, and this might -aptly be applied to the develop-
ment of hockey from the emfiryo stage to its present position
among the most attractive sports in the world. The, tiny seed
was planted In Kingston a long time ago and just as the tree
that grew, was 'bearing its first fruit, a - stalwart Kingston
athlete and rsportsman, James T, Sutherland, became Its first
ambassador of goodwill, and, being a natural salesman he
spread its gospel far and wide, If • hockey's Grand Old Man
didn't plant•the original seed, he certainly aided in the growth
to mighty proportions.
Away back in 1888 Captain Jim was 'one of the shining
stars In behalf of the Athletics, who operated in the Kingston
League On an out -door rink a stone's throw from the house in
which Mr, 'Sutherland has resided these many years.
It has been claimed that the Kingston League of 64 years
ago was the first in history, but, be that as it may, it is factual
that there was such a League, and that it was composed of
Queen's University, the Athletics, Royal Military College and
the Kingsto)ns. Queen's won the championship when in the
final game they defeated Athletics by 3 -to 0. And defenceman
Jim Sutherland did a bit of robust checking in a lost cause.
Mr. Sutherland, founder of the International Hookey Hall
of, Faroe, past president of the •Canadian. and Ontario Hockey
Associations and Life Member of both oeganizations, is now in
his 83rd year, but still as devoted to the heckey cause as when
he skated :with the stars In 1888. He has lived to see that seed
grow into the "Spreading hockey Tree" that Is now green in
most countries of the world.
Mr. Sutherland recently told this column; "In what was
the first organized league of which we have any authentic
record, we played on an open rink with side -boards risingnot
more than 30 inches above the ice surface. That old Dix ink
presented many hazards both to the players and spectators.
"Only after the storms came and the snow was piled high
around the low fences, were the spectators able to view pro-
ceedings from lofty heights and without being endangered,
Among the notables who saw us in spirited competition were
Principal Grant of Queen's University; Rev. Mr. Carson and
many of Kingston's most prominent residents.
"Following that outdoor venture Queen's University erect-
ed an adequate Indoor arena which was made to order for
skating and hockey and met with popular approval. Carnivals
and other attractions were staged at regular intervals, and
drew large and enthusiastic crowds. This was one of Canada's
first indoor rinks"
The second of this series on the founder of the Hockep
Hall of Fame appears next week.
Your comments and suggestions for this column will be welcomed
by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Calvert House, 437 Yonge St., Toronto.
Calvert DISTILLERS LIMITED
AMHERSTBURG, ONTARIO
SP/ORT
.�/ ,A SLX61TC�l LC
About the only outstanding
feature of the hockey season, so
ter, seems to be the way that not
only the fans, but the sports
writers as well, are frying the
moguls over too much hooking,
'tripping and totally unnecessary
roughness. A certain proportion
of the customers -the ones who
]mow something about the game
-have long been vocal in this re-
gard; but it is something new' for
the sports scribes and sports-
casters, who generally treated
the game, especially in its upper
reaches, with as great reverence
u Hindus observe toward a Holy
Cow. Just why they have .re -
tautly summoned the 'nerve to
actually criticize the sacred sport
we cannot say, although we have
our suspicions.
• e t
As to the cure for this hook-
ing, tripping, etc,, in our opinion
11 is a very simple matter. -So
simple, some think, as to be al-
most idiotic. What the would do
is pass a rule cutting from nine
inches to a from the length
allowable in a hockey stick. Do
that, and you would see some
real stick -handling, clever pass-
ing plays and - to sumItup
briefly, REAL HOCKEY.
a a
With that off our reputed mind,
let's turn to a real Champion of
Champions -one who doesn't get
too much publicity on this side
o1 the .water but, nevertheless, a
man who, in his own line, de-
serves to be rated along with
Willie Hoppe in billiards, Ty Cobb
and Babe Ruth in baseball, and
any other of the sporting greats
you, care to mention. We refer
to Mr. Joe Davis, master 01 all
he surveys in the realm of snook-
er pool. Leaning crutch -like on
an article by Sydney Slcilton,
English correspondent of The
Christian Science Monitor, we'll
give you a fill-in on the doughty
Joseph.
* s
This maestro of the cue from
Chesterfield reigned as world
champion from 1927 to 1946 tier-
ing which time he was never
beaten. Then he resigned the title
to give younger players a chance.
Today he is performing with
greater skill than at any time lee
was official world champion. And
almost any day now up on the
scoreboard is likelyto go his
'500th three -figure break.
Olympic Preview -Getting a glimpse of Melbourne's Stadium -
Se -be for the 1956 Olympic Games which willbe held in Australia,
etre, at left, Arthur W. Coles, chairman of the Games Control
COmmittoe, and W. S. Kent Hughes, Australian. Federal Minister
for the Interior, Designed by Frank Heath and a small group
of associates, the stadium Will seat 125,000 spectators, Two years
will be needed to complete its
S'ghtfat the Neat -Blind --His vision'limited to 10 per cent, near -
b ind Craig Hulsebos, et right, readt the small letters beinglioint-
ed out by Dr. William Feinbloom. Watching the first clinical
demonstration of newly developed, clear -image, high resolution
lenses is Dr. George O. Hettinger. The new glasses will give
adequate eyesight to an estimated 75,000 near -blind. A combine-
tion.of two or three lenses set one-eighth inch apart, the device
has helped persons with as little as 2 per cent vision.
The magnitude of that accom-
plishment will be appreciated all
the more when it is explained
that no other exponent of this
extremely popular game that has
ousted billiards from the tables
has anywhere near approached
that total. Nor is there anybody
on the horizon that looks like
doing so. The closest tally in any
part of the world to Joe's 498
are the 144 by his younger brother
Fred who succeeded to the world
titleand the 143 by Londoner
Sidney Smith.
a a a
Joe, who has been a profes-
sional cueist for more than 30
years, has the ijdvantage of more
than a decade over his younger
and closest rivals. But if they•are
to get on terms with the grand
ofd master they will have to
treble their rate of century scor-
ing. And even so Old Joe, 52 years
of age on April 15, is likely to
make their target a much more
inaccessible proposition before he
finally packs away the favorite
cue he purchased more than a
quarter of a century ago for a
mere seveneshillings and sixpence.
That purchase was made at a
second-hand store on the advice
of his father who although no
billiards player himself could see
that young Joe was really set on
the game. Joe was a member of
the local church institute which
boasted a billiards table. Every
spare minute he had was devoted
to the study on it of mathema-
tical exactitude in the applica-
tion 01 dynamics. He was never
satisfied with less than six hours
practice a day and his first suc-
cessful venture into the profes-
sional game was to win the na-
tional junior championship.
At the age of 20 years he went
to London for the senior title.
He came up against the reiging
champion, Tom Newman, and
went home after a very severe
chastening. After four more years
of practice, practice and more
practice, Joe was back Again in
the final of the senior champion-
ship. Again he received a lesson
from Newman. But it was a les-
son well learned because in 1927
the deficit against the big -chinned
Londoner was reduced to only
1,200 points. Thefollowing year
Davis had his just reward and
became champion. HE retained the
title until defeated by the Austra-
lian, Walter.Lindrum, in 1933.
e *
Meantime snooker, or Snooker's
pool to give, it its full and proper
name, was gaining rapidly in fa-
vor, rt was said originally to have
been ieVented by British Army
officers stationed in Inclia,
A Devonshire Regiment, sta-
tioned in Juppulpore is given the
credit for it. In 1875 members of
;the mess tried the addition of
extra colored balls on the table
as a variation from the normal
three -ball billiards game that
helped pass the rainy season.
Young cadets from Woolwich'
Academy at that time were call-
ed. "Snookers" and es one of the
subalterns missed an easy pot,
somebody called out "You're a
regular snooker." Thus was born
Snooker's pool."
o * *
It failed to gain any sort of
interest in Victorian and Edward
Ian England but following the.
end of World War I and the re-,,
moval of the cathedral -like at-
mosphere from the billiards halls
smelter was tried as k filler -in to
the end of the season. Its bright.'
nos and breeziness in contrast
to the marked precision and of.
ten irksome billiards gained fa-
'0± with the younger generation,
And billiards proceeded to go
out,
Pile 0' People - Nine skilled
acrobats climb up to form a
human pyramid supported by
one man at the Bertram Mills
Circus in London. Known as the
Wazzan Rif-Kobyleii group, they
performed for hundreds of
London kids.
"My Ninety Acres"
I had a friend, a little old man,
who lived over the, hill in Pos-
sum Run Valley in a small white
house on a farm which is known.
as "My Niniety Acres." It has
never been given that name as
farms are named "Long View"
or ''Shady Grove." The name is
not painted on the red barn nor
on a fancy 'sign hanging at the
end of the lane leading up to the
house; nevertheless through the
Valley everybody always refers to
Walter Oakes's farm es "My
Ninety Acres." At first, years ago
whets Walter was still a young
and vigorous man, they used to
speak of "My Ninety Acres"
with a half mocking, half affec-
tionate smile, especially the big
farmers who olvned a lot of land,
because as -if it were a ranch of
many thousand acres like the
vast King Ranch in Texas, or a
whole empire, as if he were Au-
•gustus Caesar or Napoleon re-
ferring to "My Empire." Some
of the old farmers, I think be-
lieved Walter a bumptious and
pretentious young man,
But at last as time passed, and
Walter turned into a solid mid-
dle-aged farmer and later into
an old man, the smiles and mild
sense of mockery went out and
"My Ninety Acres" became sin -
ply the name of the place the
way a farm was known as the
Ferguson pi ace or the Anson
place, People said, "I'm going
over to 'My Ninety Acres,"' or
"If you want to see a nice farm,
go and have a look at 'My Nine-
ty -Acres,'" Nobody in the Valley
any longer finds anything con-
fusing or absurd about the name.
I think this is so partly because
in places like the Valley, , peo-
ple come to accept the name
that is natural to a place and
,partly because as the years pass-
ed old Walter earned the right
to say "My Niniety Acres" as
Augustus Caesar might say "My
Empire."
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N'ra iyAla rl:ll Olt SAtim,_. ..,
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11,k ISE CROCKS
DEALERS wanted 40 *011 baby ,hicks and
turkey puults for one el Canada's oldeat
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commissions paid, Feed dealer., farmers,
implement dealers, mente for nurseries,
cream truck drlvm-o, and other denture
make eXcellent 'agent*. Sendtar full
details Bax No, 97, 123 lelebteonih 51.,
N,w Tonmlo, oat.
"OXFORD". Csnedlun A5prov00 Chick*,
Live, lay and psy. 1109 are .the results
et' twenty -live Pare 01 careful selection and
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we want the very beet hind of 0hlek, for
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The Oxford Farmers' tb.nperettve Pro-
em, Company,' Limited, 434 Main Street.
Woodotnek, Ontario.
011DER diose Purina embryo.leO ;hires
from al Imore'a ' Fully . g u e re n tee 5.
euailty ebleka from a real breeding Pro-
gramme. Artraettve early pullet Prices.
Write far epees and cataing0e "Which
Came First." OI1mre'e Pinery Breeding
Farm. Barrie, Ontario
CANADIAN Apprleed Chicks,. Marred
fluke. New Hampahlree, New Hanrpsbire
X Barred Rock, Columble Reek X New
tiampattb•o, Three ween old chicks always
mailable, [lean' day old cockerels, 46.00
per 100 Write for price 11st and folder.
I.Inenln Chick inetebery, 2 (titre Street. Si.
, •Jibe eine., Ontarin.
BR 2' chichi for any market -Molten,
eg'g's, heavier meat, bu tie best market',
await hgbruary-Srarek official. Tho" should
be ordered. now, Dray natcbery. 130 john
N. Hamilton.
We can ,ell you ordinary ;incite from
Canadian Approved flock, at 413.45 per
hundred, but if you -want chicks with
genuine brooding back c f Gnatbn, try
Tweddla chicks with Iota of 8.0.7', breed-
ing barer of them. ata temple 0t pennies;
more fretb1ek. Then you'll get Letter
egg prodnetionand make ane p1•nht Per
bird. We are
1a.3•ere,orit roasters. Also pecial 1 turkey te 1� unite
Send tar 1963 catalogue, boot oft the prem.
'rwanD1.E MI -1M. HATCDR1
19ES LTD.
Fergus Ontario
In the olden Hays, we bad no way of
telling what a ben would lay or what a
cow would produce. Now with R.O.P.
(Record of Performance) we know definite-
ly what breeding the offspring are from
Try Top Notch chicles with R.O.P. breed -
Inc back of them, Also turkey melts, Our
combination Of low prices and high quality
will please you.
TOP N0TCJr -, '111011 0.2.EN
Guelph "ntarin
DYEING AND CLEANING
HAVE you anything nerds dyeing or clean.
ing7• Write to uo for !ntnrmation. We
are glad to on0wer 50111. questions. De-
partmen; H. Parker's Dye tvnrk, L+mted.
791 Yonge St. Toronto
FARMS FOR SALE
501051, farm 200 acres, 200 acres eultivnt.
able 8 acres bunk, water front and rear,
8 to 11 Inches of exceptionally high Yield-
ing
storied sten room mo.'Id red comfortable k ,house
hydro. modern convenlrncea, hot air heat-
ing.barn Int' latedx Og' and la, smaller onod. 00' x18'0;
chklren house or hog Pen, 15' x 40'; driving
Med and garagb 40' x 25'. Located three
nrlles from Arthur. Ontarl0, Rand wren
Year round. known as 00* of the hest
farms in the dlatriet• Price 230.00,00
but owner will sell with s tack and fu1Q line
of equipment, Must Oe11 owing in Poor
health, Donald Welch, R.R, No. 4 ,Arlltllr,
Ontario.
Ile had a right to speak of it
with pride. It wasn't the conven-
tional Currier and Ives farm one
expects from the long tradition
of American Farming -a brief,
new place, with new wire fences,
and cattle standing like wooden
animals in a pasture that was
more like a Iawn than a pasture.
There was, indeed, •a certain
shagginess about it, a certain
wild and beautiful look with that
kind of ordered romantic beauty
which was achieved by the land-
scape artists of the eighteenth
century who fell under the in-
fluence of Jean -Jacques Rous-
seau's romantic ideas regarding
Nature, The white house was
small but always well painted
and prosperous in appearance,
and there was no finer barn than
Walter's with its fire -red paint,
its big straw' shed and its ornate
shutters and cupolas painted
white and there were no finer
cattle in the whole county than
those which stood behind the
white -painted wooden fences of
the barnyard staring at you, fat
and sleek and contented, as you
drove past "My Ninety Acres."
-F r o m "Pleasant Valley." by
Louis Bromfield.
ROMANCE!
A sentimental woman was
married to an unromantic man.
One evening she said to hint
with a sigh: "Would you mourn
for me if I were to die?"
"Oh, yes," he mumbled, "Of
course I would."
"And would you visit the teme-
tery often?"
"Certainly," he said, with a
little more animation. "I. pass it
on the way to . the tavern, any-
how."
Itits I Was
It..itch Crazy
Very first toe of soothing, coding 11 ,,id
D, D. D. Pce*crlptien positively relieves
rate red itch -caused by mum, Mews,
mein irritation, chafing --otheritch trophies.
Greaseless, gainless. 42o trig bottle Hurst
satisfy or money bark. I1on't pilfer. Ask
3 our drumistforD,D.D. PRE.SURIPTION
Good Advice if You
Suffer with Piles
When ,aur dire ori, mut Mien en sen
can't alt. watlt ar annul Ivllhn,4 constant
dl0eemfurt leu 8151,1,1 use hendlbi4, the
relief that then/mutts have 10,105 se 1000
told 10 quirk. Ree how 1154 Ent -Wet 4,1{09
eat the Ore, rellot es Melena nod goodies
0nin. Why Ilk, hist no tithe lit all You
forget 011e411. Year 01150, ono nmdiOatlen
MVP 1,01,09 lit ro'nrnrt. nnn't goiter
nertlleaaly.-Ito Rrt Lee -flint right new.
010Y 59r at all dt lie Morin.
OCCE56 00Ite SALVE -y,,5 sure relief.
Tour Druggist uoIls 0112986.
GROW quickly Indoors, sell, dwarfed
,tsingtrese—eltrus, overgrsous, aeytbing
Commit, 11,00, Cnoit, 70 Devaney. Toronto,
DION thregltor 54 7x.88 run 0,tly 20 days.
In Perfect Marie. Also 40 01P homely
engine an air Urea in good running order.
will sell together or w111 separate them.
Elwood Wilson, Campbellvlllo, n,n, 1.
NEED A Dlblo? Get 0 now. Dandy Fanny
Bibi .with army helm!, good binding.
44.80 postiold, litany others, Eardmans
,pools. A 8011,1* Rouse, 100aca, Ailwceota,
Y0Un. lOall Ardor 'Puniness Ready Now t
Advertleomont only expmme, guaranteed
pronto or money refunded. Rend 14.00 to:
Universal Rup4rlY Company, Derrymen
PSm, 'Eldon, Indiana.
70 LAWN ORNAMENT AND
Novelty patterns 41. Lawn Male patterns
8 for 41. Catalogue free, /Sombre Patterns,
44-tv Victor. Mlmico, 'Taranto 14, Ontario.
Heavy Homemade 'Work Socks
Pure wool and nylon work pock., W1l1 Ova
months' of hole free wear. 01.91 pair 50:0 -
paid, Homo Knit Socks, nog 36, Wood-
stock, Ontario.
"Aberdeen -Aero, are acknowledged, all
around the World, to be the best or000ing
beef 13011,, leaving uniform progeny of
m0der11 beef type, uniformly black, horn-
tesa feebmaturing, with top Steeping
malaise.
Forty-seven Angus bulls (the World's best
dolmrnern) will be offered at the Ontario
Bull Sale, Coliseum, Exhibition Grounds,
Toronto, March 11th., 1063.
Remember the Ontario Government 5030
a bonus of twenty percent of the prlee up
to one hundred and fifty dollars each,
Ontario Aberdeen -Angus Aseodatlan,"
LIVESTOCK SHIPPERS
Tea, we can help 500 to secure Ldp market
value for your livestock ,hlpments. Our
organization, with its skilled staff of
wefgbmon and assintunta will get your
took In beat weighing eondttlon.
Our salesmen because of their dally con-
tact with all buyers, Large and small, be-
cause they know each buyer's requite
meats and know who will pity the moat
Pr the class of stock you have to offer,
can matte Dare you receive all Your live -
stole Is worth.
C ensica your Iivestook dhlpmenta to Mc-
Curdy & McCurdy ;Limited. Ontario Stock
Yards, Toronto.
MEDICAL
Good Advice 1 Every sufferer of Rheumatic
Pains or Neuritis should try Dixon's
Remedy.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 Elgin Ottawa
$1.25 Express Prepaid
TA PEWO[0Mt, pinworms, cause aerloua
diseases; could be your trouble! tbou-
saods helped. Free literature describes,
condition and remedy. Write Mulvaney'.
Remedies Limned. Dom w g , Taman,
On tare
• FEMINEX *
Dile woman tells another. Take superior
21EM0NEx" to help alleviate pain, dis-
creet, and norvoua tension neenefated with
monthly periods.
00.00 Postpaid in plain weanner
POST'S CHEMICALS
989 QUEEN ST. EAST 'rofoNTo
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes
and weeping skin troubles Post's'.. Eczema
Salvo will not disappoint you.
Itching scaling. burning eczema• acne.
ringworm. pimples, and foot menu will
respond readily to the otalnleo, odorless
ointment, regardleea of now atubbnrn ar
hopolosa they seem.
PRICE 82.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
Sem Pn,t Free on Receipt of Price
800 Queen St. E. Corner of Logan.
Toronto
"PEP UP." Try C.C. R B. Tonic Tablets
for Inv vitality and general debility. -At
Druggist. one dollar 0r FEASEL AGENCY,
11134 - 82 Avenue, EDOIONTON, ALTA,
ASTHMA
Now Asthma Relief
1n minuten or pm annoy back
Ask your Druggist Inc an
Asthmanefrin Set
Uncondlt tonally gun ronteed
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Stanches:
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WOOD by mall. Plum. Flnlahing mater-
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Pine Shop Ltd., 2220 Benny Ara., Eon -
rival 28.
CASH for Poetry. 040.00 ter poem com-
mon. Boole listing 327 poetry markets,
90 ming markets, instruction. information.
tip,, etc., 25e, MidwesternDistrlbutorn,
Crnnhrook, 11,1'.
WHY YOU SHOULD
NOT TAKE SODA
• If you suffer from acid indigestion, gee,
heartburn, edoatiate my baking Bode can add
to your upset, destroy vitamins!, cauw
slkelosie, add rebound.
After meals I had ludigeotioe and gaa
pains, and I practically lived on baking
.oda," says Peter George; Lethbridge, Alta.
"Then 1 started taking Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery mod the pales went away
and I could oat and enjoy my meals, again. I
pined 30 pounds and Celt much better,"
'thousand, who guttered Ruch distress, duo
to no organic mamba, tried Dr, Pierce'•
Coition Medical Discovery with twanging '
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eon-alenholio medicine, with its wonderful
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Second, with stomach nativity improved, you
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Try it, Get Dr, Pierce's Golden Medioel
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ISSUE 8 - 1952
twr29Ni1:9
AN 05011950 to every Inventor -Vat *f ln•
venttons and lull Inlorruatlen sent tree.
The Ramsay 00., Itosbatored Patent Atter.
coy,. 273 flank Street, Ottawa,
8't0AT$E9TONILAuoII a Company Pe.
tent tIollrltoro. Established 1890. 440
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(fan 00 remora,
PERSONAL,
31,00. TRIAL offer. 'rwelny-avo deluxe
personal requlrontont4, Latest Cataleg00
!Minded. The Medico Agency. Um 104.
Terminal' A, Toronto, Ontario,
QUIT CIGARETTES
welly as tboueanda of others have One, Vas
TOBACCO ELIMINATOR
a moven day dolentlao treatment that
0010017 eliminates as craving for tobacco.
For tree booklet write A. W. Hing Phar.
tomcat Ltd,. pox 878,. London, Ontario.
04N your ewe nueinoao, 20500 02.00 kt«-
vestod, brings 430,00 Return, Complete
Deta11,11.00. Tyndall, 207 N, Mein Street,
Bristol, Conn,
nuSINass PERSONALS
SUP ON THE Ion?
Avoid dangerous tails, wear Ise Cromer
Straps under any footwear, 41.00 Post.
• Paid. Material, Sltawbrtdgo. Queboo,
RUGS
NEW rugs made from Your old rage and
Woollens. Write for catalogue and pries
Hat Dominion Rug Weaving Company,
2477 Dundas Street Weet, ,Toronto, Ont.
RUGS -Sharply reduced prlcea, 9' x 12'-
479.40 delivered; 9[,' x o3'-$47.50 de-
livered. Made of ane rayon car9et Yarns,.
in exquisite oriental Patterns, on wane
and red background. Will shin C.O.D.
Refund tf not used. Fromly Textile,
(Reg'd). 4067 Dundas W., Toronto.
STAMPS
POSTAGE STAMPS Fon SALE
29.000 different stampa one cent each.
Better grade British Colonlee bait
catalogue. RUIVIMERB, 42 Daly. Ottawa,
Ontario.
WANTED
MEN WANTED In warm. mild Texas.
Complete lob information; living costs
included. Men of all trade* wanted, 01.00,
Don 11'brray, 009 Pecos, Loel hart, Texas.
LOGY, LISTLESS,
OUT OF LOVE
WITH LIFE?
Then lake up your liver bile , . .
jump out of bed ecru' fo go
Life not worth liv0o ? rt may be the liver!
t', a fact! If your livor bile is not flowing
&aely your food may not digest . gee
bloats aalthu'argusti atednn all e fun and o con-
stipated
of life. That's when you need mild, gentle
Carters Little Liver Pius You lee Carters
help stimulate your liver bile till once again
itis pouring out ata rate of up to two pinta
day into your digestive tract. This should
tag you right up, make you feel that happy
day, aro hero nein. So don't stay otmk get
Carter. Little Liver Pills. Always have diem
on hand. Only are, from any drungi,d.
Eczema—Skin Troubles
Give your skin a real chance to get well. Go.
In any good drugtore and get an original bottle.
of MOONE'S EMERALD OIL—it lits many
dam because it is highly concentrated,
The itching of Eczema -Salt Rheum -Realise
-cracked tots and feet and many other skin
troubles - is quickly stopped, Pimples -dal.
erupt oto dry up and sde of in a very Pimple;
day*
Moon's memld Oil L a deco, powerful.
penetrating 'Antiseptic OR that dries ngbt in—
,minlea, You must he satisfied or 010000 back.
EAT ANYTHING
FALSE TEETH
n you have trouble with piotes
that elle. rook and cause eore same
-try Brim= Pinstl-Llner. One
application makes plots, At snugly
without vender or pasts, because
Hrimm, Plastt-Llner hardens per-
manently to your plate. Sterane and teats loose
plates 1111111%y no powder Or pasta call do. Elven
cm old rubber plates you get good resolve Mx
months to it year or longer. YOU CAN EAT
ANYTHING! Steeply lay Boit strip of Pleat -Liner
00 troublesome 3199er or lower. Eike and 1t
molds perfectly. Barr to me. t0steleee, 0,10, sea.
hamlees to you and your plates. Removable ea
Melded.Plato otemer included. Money bookie
not completely satleded, n not 00011ab10 at yon
drug Moro, 000, 81,80 for reliner for 1 plata.
WILDR0OT LTD., FORT ER1E ONT. Dept. TW
Ri1tA,lvtS-PLASTt LINER'
-n)tl ProMol e1n./,131'untinre.1nme
DEALERS WANTED
FAST SELLING LINE
Local dealer wanfed to handle nationally advertised alumi-
num Combination Door,
This product can show a dealer a nicerofit with little capital
P p ai
required.
Apply: BOX 95, New Toronto, 14, Ontario