The Brussels Post, 1953-8-26, Page 6{
Boxing fans et a generation Pr
ee ago Often ask what happened
to Sid Marks, a far•better-than-
average scrapper who fought in
Canada --and other parts of the
world—back in the early 1920's.
5 *
Marks, On his all-round skill
and punching ability, seemed
destined to go to the very top;
but all of a sudden, just when the
welterweight title appeared to
be Within his grasp, he dropped
clear out of sight
* 5 5
We personally have often in-
tended to make inquiries as to
whether he was still alive, and
if so what he was doing, but
never got around to it, But just
the other day, the puzzle was
solved—and, of all people, by the
very man who Marks was just
about due to battle for the cham-
pionship.
4 4 g
He is none other than Mickey
Walker, who turned from hurling
leather to pounding a typewriter,
and who writes a most interest-
ing department in The Police
Gazette. And here is what Mickey
has to say about Marks who,
even if he wasn't Canadian -born,
has roots in the Dominion. We
haven't as yet read Marks' book
which Walker refers to, but if
it's as good as his fighting used
to be, it's worth looking for,
• 4 4
Sid was a newsboy in the
Limehouse district of London
when World War I began. Al-
though only fourteen years old,
he enlisted in His Majesty's Navy,
where he learned to box as the
result of the oddest eircumstances
I've ever heard of.
Two years of Navy combat life
turned Sid into a seasoned "tar."
One day a German torpedo hit
his ship. Sid was blown into the
water, and when he was picked
ep by a British patrol boat. he
lr'uldr.'t move his right leg
s e e
Rushed to a British Navy hos-
pita/ lid was still recuperating
vrhen the war ended He even -
it a"v left the haspital, with 5129
o:Esieeorippled, to join tee
e,a '?are her battleship. A
A v- ed hem, •-7. E
rey
rrsneer
leet eel .....c • - R ...-.tie
L 4C
On hoard ship Sid remembered
the advice. Qne Might, a boxing
tournament was arranged for the
members of the crew. Sid had
never seen a boxing glove, but
he entered the tournament with
the idea of exercising his leg.
As his opponent, be "drew" the
ship's champion.
a
* *
At the sound Of the bell, Sid
tore across the ring. He threw
a wild right. Ten seconds later,
he was the new welterweight
champion of a British battleship.
* * *
In due time, Sid became a ci-
vilian again. He had a strong de-
sire to live in New York, and be-
fore he realized it he found him-
self on a cattle boat sailing for
Canada. A wealthy Capadian
farmer, who was a friend of
Sid's father, met him at the dock.
4 5 *
Abmutual admiration developed
at once. In the following weeks,
Sid plowed Canadian pastures
on his new friend's farm, His
dreams of New York quickly
faded away. Be learned to love
the daily routine of farm lice.
But one day, through no fault
of his own, farm life faded away
like Sid's thoughts of the Big
City.
The farmer occasionally went
to town and tried to paint it red,
The town happened to be Mont-
real, and he visited every tavern
he came to, bragging in each one
about his new farm hand's fistic
abilities. He'd end every mono-
logue with the words, "Sid
Masks, welterweight champion
of the British Navy!"
4 * 5
After one of these holiday
sprees, the farmer had arranged
for Sid to fight the welterweight
champion of Canada six weeks
later in the Montreal Arena. The
results of this fight were similar
to Sid's first title fight on board
ship. From then on, be belted out
nearly every man he fought.
♦ e
On a trip to London after box-
ing for two and a half years
around Canada and the border
cities of the United States, Sid
won the British welterweight
title. Later. he came to New York.
* 5 *
I held the world's welterweight
er: w*. at this time, mer
and Tex a Rie-Yours
F
for
Physiccai Fitness
Q
'r f :"a . � 'r '
Permanent e agnetDevice that exerts a mag-
- lCon the body ween brought intc
costar' wire es
Easy To Use Results Reported by Users:
e- bra elos,ng
a' Arc time taair
IP No schedule
7 No preparmnor
* Na mixing
ire Pio plugging en
• He recharging
• No upkeep
* Nothing to remember or forget
Refreshing, uninterrupted sleep
<' Got up without an oche or poen
+` Stiffness in joins now post
♦ Leg *welling all Sane
• 14* more tromps
<' Nosdes supple
f' Better appetite
.' Clear heed
O Alert mind
• Steady pulse
4 Feel rears younger
ReadFor anythrrg
♦ Can really enjoy rhe good things of
rife again
'tr Eads, arkriac p0106
Introductory Offer $35.00
30 Days Only!
leu she. can folly mica ehial.al 0t,,.,.
Fill in stSa<hfd t*ur.on nod fend Jeer ender
fn cos for darty deOsery.
MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
If not satisfied after 90 days, return ATOMAG-
Her and your money will be refunded in full,
Physical Fitness Foundation
of Canada
Suite 228, 73 Adelaide St W. .. Toronto 1, Ontario
r
a
yrttr:
I?1 &;gIGII, err5'Jn4g entesteteu N or (AYADA
x'rl7
129 7a ADT:LAIR* sT, W.. vetoers: 1. ONTARIO
T carless payment br: 0 Memos o &loner Order
ATUSlAoykyr fo'he matted to m,, address ss reenesled.
nriras* send me ns .eon 5* Domeier: flue *all of your "ATGSIAONRT"
with eomnlete lnetrurtlous, geld to me on s 90 dor money book
xnernntee.
V rrise
A UTeRsow
fallUNATTR
This One! — Roland La Starza will be a well-fed.ahailenger when
.he meets heavyweight Rocky Marciano-Sept.24,. ,Training' at
Greenwood Lake, La Starza selects a, steak for dj.nner. Pt nearby'
Long Pond inn, while proprietor Eddie McDonald „watches,'
ard, Amer'ica's greatest boxing
promoter, angled for a bout be-
tween Sid and tine, But Boo Boo
Hoff, Philadelphia's leading
matchmaker, wanted Sid to meet
the welterweight K,O. sensation,
Bobby Barrett.
4 4 *
Sid fought Barrett and sent
him the way of most of Sid's
opponents, This established Sid
as the number -one title contends
er, and gave Tex Rickard visions
of promoting a big -money title
match. But Sid, suddenly dropped
out of the boxing world. With
Lou Darrow, he began to pro-
mote wrestling on the West
Coast.
4 s a
It was not until. 1948, several
years after I retired from the
ring, that I met Sid Marks. ,Act-,
ing as my manager, he booked
me to referee wrestling matches
in California. ' e
4 rt
But that didn't end the am-
bitions of the one-time Limey
newsboy. He recently wrote a
book called sNewsboys Hall 'of
Fame. Like Sid Marks, it carries
a terrific punch.
Fascination For
Railroad Fans
Oftentimes you will see a man
stand at a railroad crossing wat-
ching a train roll by, for n( other
reason perhaps that that he likes
to think of the tremendous
power steam gives to the hand
at the throttle. Or, if it comes
your way, you may notice a boy
sitting at a window overlooking
railroad tracks and checking for
his own amusement the engines
that pass, Trains have fascina-
tion for man and boy. However
much the speed of a plane may
rise, the record of the steam or
Diesel engine never seems to
dim. For in the heart of states-
man and commoner alike there
is a sang of the tracks. a sym-
phersy of the rails. The rumble
of the wheels has rhythm. and
there's magic an a railroad tie.
You will find a good deal of
this sentiment in "The Railway
Book," an anthology that cap-
tures the imagination, with its
bright selection of stories of the
railroad, all the way from Fan-
ny Kemble's ride on George
Stephenson's Rocket to the me-
lodrama at Compiegne, when
Bitter was in the ascendancy. It
is a bouk that will thrill you,
a bock fur -die moments. re-
quiring little sustained effort to
read it through. It con -:pts of
prose and verse, and ever con-
deeeends to bad verse to giving
you McGonagai's descriptirn of 1
the tragedy of the Tay Bridge,
5,5 that the picture may rot be
left incomplete-,
Trains are traditionally known
to run on wheels and watches.
Back in 1329 yr u fired one Thomas
Crr;evey, setting out on er. ad-
venturous journey r,f five miles
in a train and carrying his watch
in his hand so that he will not
be deceived about time nr speed,
This he heem(•d noeessary for e
locomotive which rose to ,i haz-
ardous 23 miles an hour. He was
glad to see this miracle of speed
hut having done so, he was re-
solved his first adventure hnuld
be- his last.
a ,
Down -to -the -earth facts and
figures about railroads are to be
found in the readable volume
"Trains Bolling," by Col. H. A.
McBride. This book light to
disillusion people who have
gathered a distorted view of the
Comparative merits of transpor-
tation systems. Colonel Mc-
Bride employs statistics to show
the requirements to move 100,
000 tons of freight from the At-
lantis to the Pacific. `11 this
movement ware made oy rail,"
be quotes an authority as say-
ing, "90 tank ears of DIEisel fuel
would be required; if by truck,
250 tank ears of fuel would be
needed, and by air 2,700 tank
cars. In terms of mnnp,wer,
proving the 100,000 tons over
railroads would.. require 3,500
man -days of train -crew time; if
the movement were by truck,
90,000 man -days of truck -driver
tine would be needed; and;f the
movement were by" •air 550,000
man -days of plane - crew time.'
Colonel McBride has made a
lifetime hobby of railroads, and
in this book gives a vivid account
of the history and development
and the purposes of railroads at
home and abroad. The hook has
237 illustrations, all photographs
by the author.
o 4 a
If railroads mean something
more to you than the swish of
a fast passenger train or the
rumble of a mile -long xreight,
you will want to peruse or study
"British Trains Past and Pre-
sent" by O. S. Nock, Mr. Nock
brings to his subject the know-
ledge and technique of an ex-
pert, and in this book deals par-
ticularly with engines and the
various types of rolling stock.
His illustrations in color and -1n
black and white lend added in-
terest to the text.
To the average traveler the
railroad is a means of convey-
ance which affords a front seat
for observation of nature's chan-
ging panorama. To the enthu-
siast it is a grand institution
fascinating in every detail, and
currently meriting the best there
is in writing, Both will find
ample material for entertain-
ment and enlightenment in the
pages of these books.
Too Many Corpses
Near Oklahoma City in 1933,
a plane smashed into a hillside,
killing everyone aboard. Four-
teen bodies were found in the
wreckage. But to the conster-
nation of airline officials, their
records showed just ten passen-
gers and three crew men, thir-
teen. Who belonged to the ex-
tra body? Police investigating
unearthed some helpful facts:
farmer Johnson Saunders. had
taken advantage of the opportu-
nity that for most men, dissatis-
fied with their wives to the point
of neuroticism, comes but once
in a lifetime. Seeing the crash
from his nearby farm, he casual-
ly walked into the kitchen, hit
his wife Nana over the head
with a meat axe, put the body
into his whelIbarrow, and mar-
ched it up to the still burning
plane. He then tossed it into the
wreckage. Though farmer Saun-
ders showed great imagination.
he was the victim of a bad count,'
and was charged with murder.
Rang Hie Doorbell
Mew Up FIs Home
A householder .'in Geneva
went up le his front deer and
pressed the bell. .4n electric
sparandkthefset lightblew 10up, escaping gas
lat
,rust another,instasce of an in-
nocent action that started Off
a chain of events culminating in
disaster,
A custei-Qr' in a Lincoln cafe
struck a l'notch, The, place ex.
'plotted, How was he to know
that a mouse had previously
nibbled a large hole in a gas
pipe?, . .
When an Australian adjusted
.g, faulty,•carburaettor his car
back -fired and set his hair
alight. He rolled on to the verge
of the road ..and- started a fire
which bernt out 1,000 acres of
grassland.
The 'cal. Which Burled up close
• to a stove in'e Frcneh^home only
wanted ta get warm. It got
warmer than it -bargained for.
,When its fur caught•fire it dived
`into a pileof hay and started -a
'blaze causing' daisage„estimated
at'Itt1,000, The cat, incidentally,
still has eight of its lives left.'
A United States woman started
to searchfor;a coinshe'd drop-
ped. She moved the car' under
Which it had rolled, the car hit
a parking fneter and a building,
breaking a window in the pro-
cess. The coin cost the woman
dearly—shedamages. had to pay $125
When• a two-year-old Ameri-
can girl fell of a stool and broke
her thumb, mother got her ready
for hospital, Anxious to help,
her four-year-old boy ran to
open the door and put his face
on a glass panel, Worse follow-
ed, Slipping on the hospital
steps, the mother broke her
ankle.
A milk bottle caused chaos in
Kensington. Falling from a cart
it scared a pony, which bolted
in the path of a bus. The driver
slammed on his brakes, shaking
the passengers. The pony ram-
med a confectioner's window. On
the .pavement an elderly woman
collapsed.
Who would imagine that a
house Would burn down merely
because the kitchen shelf was
shaky? In a Connecticut home a
cake fell off the shelf on to a
tap, turning on the water. The
cake clogged the sink, the sink
overflowed, and the water caus-
ed a short circuit which set the
house alight.
Watch out for bees! One flew
into the cabin of a Twickenham
trolley bus and made the driver's
eye its target. He swerved. and
the bus crashed into the para-
pet of a railway bridge One
front wheel hung over a six. -
foot drop and the occupants of a
nearby house could see the bus
suspended above them.
Another bee blacked out hall
ria town. It stung a Pennsylvania
motorist on the nose, he rammed
a pole carrying the power lines,
and all the lights in the neigh-
bourhood went out.
There .would seem to be more
to a bee than just its sting.
DUSTBIN TREASURE
While watching rubbish pass-
ing along a conveyor belt, at a
Kent refuse disposal works, a
wothan sorter spotted a wad of
banknotes. She rescued them and
handed the mover to the works
superintendent.
It is believed that the notes
were accidentally thrown into
somebody's dustbin at Becken-
ham. But whose? Nobody has so
far claimed them.
If, at the end of six months, the
owner has not come forward,
one-fifth of the notes will be re-
turned to the finder and the rest
will go to the local council's "iri-
centive bonus account,” it is an-
nounced.
MOUNTIES GET THEIR WOMAN
When Marilyn Monroe, 20th'0Century-Fox Film star, stepped Oji the
Canadian National Railways' Continental Limited at Jasper, Alberta
recently, she was immediately confronted by two members of the Ro al.„:
Canadian Mounted Police—but not to he placed under arrest, MI mei, ”`
wanted to do was to escort her safely through the crowds of vticatiogisiees
who thronged the station to get a glimpse of the vivacious movie starer
Marilyn visited Jasper Paris Lodge after her arrival at the Canadian:,.,
Rockies resort town for the filming of loeatlon shots in Jasper NationalPar"
Robe t Mor itchum and "Elver
ory Calhoun. The luckwhich
Mount! s Is
starred
they
glamorous assignment are Constables J. E. Snider (left) end A. P. Dirk,
both of Jasper.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
Atoms weal ED
N ItSERY >SACESMIEN
Agents wanted 10 rePpregent Canada':
leading ntlr4ere. Wo'ago proatale* ton
Pr part tlm0 Galea .positions and Hood
moa wall.gl;lyo and In;tlativg, gem1011e
Mengowe.Whim outfit l 009territory,1
niter a aeMPlete lino .0t halt (5900 and
buahea, Ormen:entitle, Evergreens, Shrub's•
ROM etc, Oor *a1Oo- praposdioo oflera
Mu a dlotlnot advantage, For further
porticalara. write to:
' STOVE R • W17X,r,1NGTPx -
"The Polhill Nurseries,' 40 Wellington
Et, E„ Termite, 0qt,
AGENTS, clubs, church Irosiisl' Idaho
triode pad MOM eione 10101.54111 op a..
adieu *nest Cltrlalmos 0ard*, 75 Risme
Mantling Mathew, religion,O0onic, MI.
AMMO. •15xeneh, Por0o9l and..everyday
cords. NY novelly Items, ribbons,
Props, semis.. 12110325 'MOM and bo0k0;'-
Pt'omnt 04relee, Liberal omnmloelonsl W.
Y, JOandron Greeting Card Co., 44 lion.
aington North, I;ain1100,, Ont.
DAn8,. ou1PAs
CANADIAN ,Approved Day Old Standard
Quality pullets 114,00 Per hundred. Thera:
low prlcee mode possible by big demand
far cockerels. Money Molter Quality add
r Profit re00sloMat ng'add85,9Oper add14.00;ho-
50M
and cockerel chicks at compettuve
Prices, Turkey Y0u1te, Older Pallets,
Marked chicks, 0)0rt04' 5urkeys.
TWEDDLE CHICK IIATC121,nIES LTD,
FERGUS w ,ONTARIO
CANADIAN Approved ehicke standard
Quality day Old Dolleta as low n0 114.00
per hundred, Also non -sexed and 000110101
chicks at competitive heloos, Special broil.
ee chicks non-0oxed and a0cke•els. Get
our low prices ter August turkey volts
day old or started, o1d*r pullets.
TOP NOTCH CHI0K SALES
GUEL'PII ONTAiRIO
.09141N0 AND CLEANING
HAVE You anything needs dyeing or clean.
Ins? Write to 0P. tor. Inf0rmatleg We
aro glad to mimeo -yo0r 00ogt1oa0.. Dei
oartment H. Parkor'o Dye Works Limned,
791 Tonga *0.. Toronto.
nusixass OPPORTUNITIES
INDEPENDENT Petroleum Products
.Dealership In Terns, Wholesale and re-
tail. Priced to sell. KAaH1YNDER,
Wichita, ICanaae,
POR SALE
TURKEY Poults at bargain prices while
Ahoy last, Day old broad Breasted Bronze,
Beltsville Whites. 000.00xed 090„ hens 990„
toms 59 c,: 1 week old add 200.; 3 week
old add 700,
TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES Len,
resents ONTARIO
APARTMENT Building and Locker Plant.
City Montano,lH614 lockers, with terms. 10 090,
ICansaa,
CRESS nUNIOle SALVE—For amazing
relief. Your D180531 t Pelle cars8.
3005 0dlueablRILIEL e. Free liters ure.lid OFoamlrua
liar ouebions 17,00 delivered, Samford.
Reale Ltd,. 54 Et. Pleasant Ave.. Ottawa.
Ontario, '
11E600 Sotto Toilets, moat modern pall.
n -day toilet for summer cottages and
Camps, .available .today, Guaranteed for
10 years.- Lowest price on market. De-
livered to any station In Ontario for 394,
complete, At H, E, Simpson Motors 0,14,.
959 Lake Shore rd., New Toronto 14.
FOR act. Situated
farm
with Inlgomadnld
District
one half mile from TransCanada High.
way. Por more information write. Sod
Lino Farm. L. L. Manias and Son .
Welford Sta., Ontario, a
FOR SALE
ONE 2050 Geo, White all steal grain
separator on rubber tires. Price 8500. Two
11580 Geo. White all steel grain separators
on steal wheels. Price 5705 each, 371 egulp-
A 1 ottlirot c4 lasscondition.art r Wan arid
, 5fne ev.iforrla Dealer. Kingsville,
Ontario.
90010V10E STATION with tanks wagon
serving Nebo:aka town end large farm-
ing area. Doing 354.040 volume. KA911.
FINnlR, Wivhlta, SConsas.
1,08 Sale -- Reginterval Tod:al:1re saws,
heavy ,n Ms. from vaccinated amok, Also
Young breeding stook available, Fox
Haven Farm. Chippewa, Ont.
ONE--Sfedel L.A. Paso Traetar. One—
Model D. Case Tractor. One• -Model 13.10.
John Deere Tractor, One--5Taasvy-Harrl,
Pacemaker Tr:u'tar. One -Massey -Barrie
No, 44 Standard Tractor, Those Sumter*
are all In real good ronditl"n ready to
go to work and are all on real good tires.
Borthwlrlt pros., &;muel000 Perot. Galt
Ontario.
15015 sale, Benno Me:Menlcs Library,
Mneonrs', plumbing, painting and decorate
Mg. metalworking, carpentry and wood-
working, electrical work, bindings slight-
ly damaged, Regular 01.74 each, Sulo
price 75e, each postpaid- Complete net of
8 book0 for 84 postpaid. Diamond's nool,-
etnres, 005 bleary, Montreal.
Challenges Death
Man who frequently risks his
life for the sake of humanity
has received a high American
award—the medal of the Walter
Reed Society. He is 26 -year-old
Dr. Lloyd Thomas Kortiz, who
thinks nothing of conducting ex-
periments which may save the
Lives of thousands who come
near to drowning or electrocu-
tion,
He has voluntarily taker, rare
drugs to test their effects. He
swallowed some curare, the drug
Which South American Indians
put on their arrow -tips to para-
lyze their quarry, His breathing
stopped temporarily but he was
kept alive by artificial repiration.
Once Dr. Kortiz allowed him-
self to be hung on a telephone
pole with linesman's straps and
climbing irons. He was then
knocked out with drugs to give
practice in treating a victim
of shock without losing time tak-
ing him down.
rest Besse
4 ,
of es000n nowllne A11er (tour) all 04,5)5.
1po,lnfr. Apple 014,'Dome,21Mileholtla0 for
Phona 8,
MACK51EYs, brood mares, stallion pea
2104x5 Meek tor sale, [Maude IC, WWI.lloheoYeaan. Ont. ,
PAINT
pinECT MOM FACTORY
POarsptoo,. whit* primer 50,00, .Plat
White 80,00, Exterior 81,50 and 11,80 gal,
Interl01' shads 32.70' and 8300 gal, Write
for fro 3053 color card and pr10e Ilpt.
Service Paint Company 1181 ),:Meier 01aet,
moment 35.
8 .SCHOOL BUSES
5iPb11048 f1 -di, Da0aoOUorn 42.40. Modals
51.53, pas0ensern 72.18. Langdon', Cool:
uses Ltd„ wing. t)50, •
DODD aolQotton farm properties, Itompt•
Ville and vloinity, Contact J. R, Paper -
sen, Broker, ICemptville, Ont.
• MEUI0AI
SATISFY YOURSELF - EVERY SUFFERER
OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
SHOULD TRY 9JXOt;I;S REMEDY,
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 Elgin, Ottawa
$1.25 Express Prepaid.
S E M I N,E X•
" Ono woman Colla another.. 'Polio superior
'PENISES" to help alleviate pain. din
Creel, and OervoU tenaln0 an0nelnt00 with
mo0lhly periods, °'•'
85,90 Postpaid In pial* emptier
POST'S CHEMICALS
888 QUEEN ITT,: OAST TORONTO
E STS ECZEMA SALVE
BANISIPtb /oiinent or dry 0020500 rashes
tad edbebi3D?Pitln troubles Paat'e Eczema '
Salve will nor diem:point:you
Itching. scaling,, bernlpd eczema, -none,
ring orm, Dimples, and 5001 9e20mn, will
respond readily to the etalnloes, odorleoe
ointment regardless et haw stubborn or
0opelans they poem
PRICE $2.60 PEI) .TAR
• POST,'S REMEDIES
Boat Poet Free en Receipt of Pelee
808 Queen St. E., Corner at Logo
roronto
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
5115N AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JUIN CANADA'S LEADING 805)00),
Gru4,'ODportvhlty Lore
Halydr00,10n
Ploaeont, d:gntded profession, :mod nape*.
Thousands of sucee0etul Marvel graduates
America's Oreateot 0yat0m
rlluseratod Catalogue Free
IfARVEl Write . or Call
8118 R100m0100soor fit tvan. Toronto
9060OLa
8rancboe,
41 King 8t., 0amlitoa
72 Ride,- 8t„ Ottawa
F'IJLL or part time. Whether you are •
ltobeowife, once or factory worker, door •
to door agent, you can corn top money
selling nationally advorltsod Family Home
Message kite that everyone le talking
about. Wo pay your commt0016n a cob,
Writo for free information today. Family
Home Products. 5405 Deearte men meet -
real, Qua
PLASTIC PLANTS
ESTABLISH YOUR CREDIT
line of decors, 557,, to life Oro pand fade
resistant, washable. guaranteed to Io•t.
Every pinco using natural foliage, a
Prospect. Liberal cot0miuslon and advent.
,gee. ind01r0, American Decors. 1215
Groono Avenue, Montreal
LEARN prioelrsn secrets 0t Technical
ot0t10oJtlnd. Write: to Premier OCollege et
Technical 5letnph,sles. 2012 51r1.-enxle Bt.
Vnneouver, a.C„ Canada.
MAKE EASY MONEY
UP TO 5100 & MORE WEEKLY
FULL TIME OR PART TIME
MEN OR WOMEN
Sell our boo name Plate. Very, made of
glosscrzetal
T5 ey ar very mum {tool rind evens in o dark
ulac00. They reflect light. 14010 gulek
money. Ask for or free circular and
wholc0ale price not or better owl 41,2*
for your s:uople with your name on it,
Plerret 7122-331h, Avenue. Reacm4u0t,
Montreal 18. Quebec,
MEN WANTED
To sell II3 dv to•Meaou,'e clothing from
large o,xe eampleo at popular prices,
Earn 2005 commission during fell or
snare Lima. Get our free sample selling
100. Write 10 rnAMP1.AIN Temente
Dept, t"21. rex 84. Station ' N", Mont-
renl, P.03,
PAT45NT6
ON (MITER to overs Inventor—Lt,t et Is.
ventlnna• and full Information Dent frog.
rho Rameoy CO. Regletored Potent Alto:.
00530 111 Sank Sweet. Otte von
PETHERSTONHAUGIS & C o en D• n y,
Patent Attornos Eslab11ehct] 1890. 850
SAY Street, Toronto Pntenta all 0nuntrle:,
PERSONAL
it dolman of ridding Yourself of
CIGARETTE ADDICTION
do It the coag away. Tobacco Eliminator
orrice o "oatlataoUnn or money back"
guarantee. loo free booklet, write 0,
Hing Pharmacal Corporation Ltd. Soo
101. Welkervflle, Ont.
11.00 TRIAL otter Twenty -Ove deluxe
Personal ra0uirementn. Lutea, Catalogue
tadude4 The Medico Agents Sox' 124.
Terminal A. Toronto. Ontario
BE HEALTIlrI Send ter recipe to make
IXon1U, Candy. Also Doctor: Smoking cure
to Ito longer. Send *1,00, P.O. 11nx 121,
Hot Spring:, Arkansas,
TEACHERS WANTED
WANTED, 00511504 Pm:Mr:tone toaeber
for S.S. No. 0. Townohly School Area of
Konnebob in the County of Frentenee,
Pont 0111co 1,000 yards from school. Good
1oca1111. Single room achooh 10 polls,
Oradea 1 to 8. State qualilicationo, salary
expected and, nam0 of Inas inspee(00.
Ditties to commence Sept. 1. 1958, ADPI2
%. 10. HukheO, Son. -Trend.. MGOM, Ont
ISSUE 95 -- 19.53
CIGARETTE TOBACCO