The Brussels Post, 1950-5-10, Page 6,Lots Of Gold
If Your Look
There was a sudden boom in
quicksilver shares on the Paris
Stork Exchange recently when
news was received that a Chicago
scientist, Prof. Dempster, had suc-
ceeded in extracting five per cent.
of gold from mercury.
Optimistic speculators, with vis-
ions of making quick fortunes, bast-
ened to buy up quicksilver shares,
but scientists remained extremely
sceptical.
The truth is that the extraction
of gold from mercury has been
done before, and no one has made
a profit out of it.
The French scientists, M. and
Mme. Curie, did it, and British
scientists, using different methods,
all succeeded in extracting a certain
amount of gold.
The novel feature, however, of
Prof. Dempster's experiment was
that he employed a new ntethod—
bombardment by neutrons. He ob-
tained a larger quantity of gold than
other experimenters, but it cost him
many more tines as much as the
gold Was worth.
In view of the peculiar proper-
ties of mercury, it is not surprising
that gold can be obtained from it,
Mercury has a remarkable power
of dissolving, or combining with,
other metals without the aid of
heat to form amalgams, some of
which are important.
For instance, mixtures
o4
merc-
ury.
eraury
with powdered tin, silver, or
gold quickly form solid amalgams
and are used in dentistry.
Mercury is, ill fact, used in gold
mining. The gold -bearing rock is
first reduced to a fine powder and
then treated with mercury.
This is afterwards pressed
through chamois leather which re-
tains the amalgam. The amalgam,
a compound of gold and mercury, is
distilled in earthenware or iron re-
torts, and solid gold is left behind
while the mercury distils over,
But gold is found in a number of
. unexpected place. For instance,
nearly all European rivers carry
aiong a certain amount of gold dust
in their sands. Gold has been ex-
tracted from the Seine, the Rhine,
the Danube, beside the Clyde in
Lanarkshire, and many of the other
streams in Scotland, Wales and
Cornwall.
One ton of sand from the bed of
the Rhine yields nine and a half
grains of gold, or one -fiftieth part
of an ounce.
French metallurgists onee calcu-
lated that a certain 100 -utile stretch
of the Rhine contains no less than
36,000 tons of pure gold,
When the sand of the River
Seine, near Paris, is used for glass -
making, it is common to find here
and there in the glasshouse a cruc-
ible which is slightly gilt at the
bottom.
Monsieur Sage, a professor of
chemistry, went a step farther by
burning vines growing near the
Seine. From the ash of these plants
he extracted enough gold to make
three coins as big as half -pennies.
The gold from the sand had
found its way into the plants which
grow near the banks of the River
Seine.
Ace Scout '''America's top -
Yanking Scout" is Raymond
Cobb, 24, seen displaying his
merit sash containing 110 pf
a possible 111 awards. Ray-
mond is an Air Scout Ace,
Explorer Scout Ranger, Quar-
ternlaster in the Sea Scouts
and Scoutmaster for a local
troop. He lacks only the merit
badge for siding to attain per-
fection in. the Scout world.
Silt HUNDRED INMATES
of the workhouse in Warrensville,
went on a sitrlowu strike for bet-
ter recreational facilities. Their
chief demand was for television
acts.
New World Of Light—One of the youngest persons ever to
wear spectacles is 11 -month-old Johnny Peoples, seen being
fitted with special glasses at an eye hospital by nurse Madeline
Dorey. Born blind, Johnny underwent a series of four opera-
tions for the removal of cataracts, and saw for the first time
when the glasses were put on him.
TllEL&1M FRONT
H. H. McKinley operates a meat
market and restaurant down in In-
diana — but what he says alight
strike right home to some of us
living north of the border as well.
McKinley buys his animals locally
and kills all his own meat, He
claims that farmers are their own
worst customers when it comes to
buying the fat and finish they
strive to put on their stock.
'k 'k *
"About half my business is selling
beef in quarters and halves to farm-
ers who want it for freezers or
locker storage," he says. "They like
a lean grade of meat that would
only grade comnericial to good.
They don't want choice or prime.
Too fat, and they hate to see the
fat wasted. This is funny, when on
their farms they feed their stock
to put on fat"
k k 'k
Worth thinking over, isn't it?
And not only in regard to beef.
h * *
When you buy new fencing, keep
in mind that the price of the wire
is only a small part of the price—
is the good advice handed out by
J. F. Schaffhausen, writing in "The
Country Gentleman." The big cost
is posts, labor to set them and erect
the wire. staples and annual main-
tenance.
* r *
This means that to get the lowest
fencing cost per year you should
begin with wire that is strong'
enough for the jolt and properly
galvanized. Also, you' need treated
posts, placed properly, braced where
needed, and at them the wire must
be stretched and stapled correctly.
After the fence is in place, it
needs at least one annual inspec-
tion so that staples that have pulled
loose can be renailed, broken
strands repaired, and weak or bro-
ken braces corrected, Cleat fence
rows are an asset, but don't burn
the brush and grass away. bleat
may destroy the galvanizing on the
wire and permit rust to develop.
* O *
Corner posts are the critical ones
from: a maintenance standpoint. For
most farm uses, an 8 -inch diameter
corner post is needed. It should be
set in concrete to a depth of 3?'a or
4 feet to reach below the frost line.
The post -hole can be 18 inches
square on top and flared out to 20
inches at the bottom. The concrete
mix best suited to the job is made
from 1 part cement, 2 parts coarse
sand and 3 parts coarse gravel. Use
eeYen gallons of water to each sack
of cement,
k 4,
The best corner brace for a wood-
en fence is a thrust post between
the tops of the corner post and the
second and third post front the cor-
ner. These two brace posts should
not be over 10 feet apart. The first
one may be 6 inches in diameter
and the other 4 inches. The thrust
posts should be at least 4 inches
fn diameter, To complete the cor-
der assembly, apply a wire tension
member from the bottom of the
corner post to the top of the second
post, and another from the bottom
of the second post to the top of
third one.
# * *
This tension member can be made
up of No, 9 galvanized wire wrap-
ped so there are 3 strands on each
side of the posts. As each strand
of wire is wrapped around the post,
staple it to the postseparately.
When these wires are in place, use
a short piece of pipe to twist them
and create a tension great enough
Q
to pull the tops of the posts until
they are leaning slightly in the op-
posite direction from which the
fence is stretched. Then, when the
fence is tightly stretched, these
posts will be plumb. Leave the pipe
in the wire to permit adjusting this
brace on your annual rounds.
* » "
A line post which is not perform-
ing its fall function is a weak link
and should be replaced at once, Rot-
ted and weather -cracked posts that
no longer hold staples should be
cut out and replaced. Since the
ground may be frozen when you
make your fence inspection, digging
holes for new posts may be difficult.
It's easy, however, to drive a steel
post, and the fence can he attached
in a few minutes. So carry a supply
of steel posts on your fence round
and drive theist 2 feet down into
the ground along the fence line
*here you find you need them.
* ,k *
Broken strands in a woven -wire
fence may be fatal to the life of a
fence unless they are promptly re-
paired. If you do not already have
a good wire splicing tool, acquire
one. If you do the job with a pair
of pliers, the chances are that the
galvanized coating on the wire will
be removed,
,k k a,
If you are staking use of an oc-
casional steel post alongside wood
posts to provide spots for ground-
ing, fence wire against lightning,
check to see if both the `,:oven wire
and the barbed wire are well
grounded. Animals often drift into
the wind into a fence corner, where
they huddle. The weight of their
bodies occasionally disconnects in-
securely grounded Wires.
is is 'k
Persons climbing over a fence
can cause considerable damage.
Wires are stretched or staples are
torn loose; braces are cracked and
nails pulled out. Prevent this dam-
age by constructing stiles in the
places along the fence line where
the traffic is not heavy enough to
warrant the use of the gates,
'5 is
Large gates usually present a
probletu. The light ones are easy to
operate, but can he broken when
livestock crowd against then,
Heavy gates, of the other hand,
often sag and are hard to operate
unless they are well designed and
properly hong, Plunk the fence for
12 -feet on both sides of the gate if
large herds of cattle will be passing
through. This will reduce damage to
the fence,
$ e ,k
If the passage is used frequently
by trucks or tractors, you may want
a cattle guard instead of a gate, To
build one, dig a pit 18 -inches deep,
as wide as the lane and 5 or 6 feet
,long, Place alt 8 -inch -wide i'cinfor-
ed concrete wall around the pit.
Forst a ledge in the walls at the
sides of the road to support pipes,
rails or timbers flush with the lane,
Now divide the pit into three parts
and build two additional walls 40
support the guard rails at the inter-
mediate points, When the concrete
hardens, place the rails inches
apart, Use 2 -inch steel pipeto sup-
port cars, tractors and light trucks,
For supporting loaded trtteifs, you
will need discarded railroad rails
or small 1 -beams,
To control goats or sheep, V-
shaped wings sloping from the ends
of the pit to the fence or gate
Should be provided. These animals
will cross over if even 112 -inch -wide
smooth passage exists.
PV A SrAurC1C
The hue and still lamented Ring
Lardner wrote some of the greatest
sport yarns that ever saw print.
But one of the things which dif-
ferentiated hint from most of his
tribe was that he never choked up
or grew misty -eyed over the char-
acters he was describing—=a decided
contrast to some of our modern
sports chroniclers who would have
you believe that, even though some
of our baseball, prize -ring and race-
track heroes may be a trifle rough
on the outside, they're solid 24 -
carat gold at heart,
■ 't
Read such of Lardner's stories as
"Champion," about the great prize
fighter who was a louse at heart, or
baseball tales such as "Mibi Ike,"
and you'll see better. what we're
trying to get at. Ring called them
as he saw then, and he saw them
more clearly than most; and we'll
never forget his comment, when
baseball's biggest scandal broke
in 1919 and folks were going
around saying that the Chicago
Blacic Sox, in addition to being
crooked, had been a pretty poor
bunch of ball players to boot.
55 * ,k
"I don't like what the Sox did
any better than anybody else,"
quoth Lardner, or words to that
effect, "still, that isn't going to
make me say that Eddie Cicotte
didn't have a swell fast one, or that
Shoeless Joe Jackson couldn't take
a sweet cut at the ball"
55 * *
So it is only fitting that one of
Ring's sons—John, to be exact—
should do a grand job of debunking
one of sportdonl's greatest myths
in a recent magazine article, This
is the myth that the game of base-
ball is a strictly United States prod-
uct—that it was, in fact, invented
practically is its entirely, and in-
cluding its name, one summer's
afternoon at a place called Coopers-
town, N.Y., in the year 1839.
fi 4' 55
Upon this myth has been built
the Cooperstown "Shrine of Base-
ball," to which certain of the
Scotch Influence—There's no
lavish waste of matdrial in this
trim swim suit modelled by
Mary Brown. A touch o' the
Highlands is also evident in
the plaid "kilt" effect formed
by the ballerina ruffles at the
bottom. Designed by Margar-
et Newnan, the suit has a sim-
ple, strapless bodice.
game's "immortals" are elected at
regular intervals. As a producer
of baseball ballyhoo and material
for after -banquet speeches in the
off season, Cooperstown has prob-
ably been worth all it cost, and
more. The whole trouble is that
the records go to prove (1) that the
game wasn't invented at Coopers-
town; (2) that Abner Doubleday
had nothing to do with its inven-
tion, or the drawing up of its rules,
and (3) that the name baseball was
used for a somewhat similar game
in England years before it was ever
heard of on this side of the Atlantic,
* * 0'
For example, in the year 1700,
the Rev. Thomas Wilson, of Maid-
stone, England, was writing some
of his memoirs of the century just
ending, "I have seen Morris -danc-
ing, cudgel -playing," he wrote,
"baseball and cricket and many
other sports on the Lord's Day."
(We wonder if they took a vote
about it first, as happened recently
in the Queen City of Toronto).
a
* 4:
More than that, a far greater and
better known writer than the Rev.
CLASSIFIED A E1rVERTISIN6
AGENTS tt'AN't'siU
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BABY CHICKS
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money Out of eggs 0111 t,,aLt y moat this
Bummer and fall, 11 you order 1005 eltteks
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Consumer tvtlt tat mm's eggs and poultry
and this ha turn will moil higher prices.
100, 20 rearm Ire have been Inlpr0ving 111e
quality of Tw,"idle Chicks, and tills year the
Most of our pure breeds ere aired by 11.0.1%
(alerte,lc 2 males.
ln tot sveeksdeliverylder On dpullets,
turkey points. Free catalogue, Tweddio
Chick Hatcheries ltd.. Fergus, OMarlo,
SCHUMMER CHICKS
30VERNMENT approved. Top duality, Preo
Catalogue and price list explain details.
aehumne''s Quality Hatchery,' Linwood, Ont.
YES KIM It's always smart buslneea to buy
quality chicks and 'Pap Notch Chicks ere
Proven quality chlrks with a record of Per-
formance ones hard to motel,. More eggs
from the mune amount of feed and labour aro
always it good deal, but right now, Ton Nuteh
bonus eggs are the hest kind of profit In-
surance against fluctuating prices. If you
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Production you Can't bent TOP Noteh ehleka,
Can supply day old. started, elder Pullets,
also turkey pants in Broad B,'eaeted Bronze,
White holland, Beltsville Whites, Prompt de-
livery, Top Notch Chick Sales, Guelph, On -
"twig
Mr. Wilson also made reference to
baseball by that name. She was
Jane Austen who, in her novel,
"Northanger Abbey," wrote, "It is
not very wonderful that Catherine
should prefer cricket, baseball, rid- ,
ing on horseback and running
about the country at the age of 14,
to
books."
� >k rt
It wouldn't be fair to quote the
article at any great length. You'll
find it in the May issue of TRUE
MAGAZINE, and it's well worth
looking up, But, as John Lardner
figures it, the whole thing scents to
stent from a controversy between
A. G. Spalding—the man who did
more to put the game on a solidly
profitable commercial basis than
anybody else—and one, Henry
Chadwick, sometimes called the
"Father of Baseball,"
p 55 'k
Chad\vick, although a real lover
of and authority on baseball, was
English by birth. lie believed that
the game derived from the British
sport of "rounders," Al Spalding
would have none of such heresay,
'I
* 'k
"I claim that baseball owes its
prestige as our national game to
the fact that as no other sport, it
is the exponent of American cour
age, confidence, combativeness,
American dash, discipline, deter-
mination, American energy, eager-
ness, enthusiasm, American pluck,
persistency, performance, American
spirit, sagacity, success—it would
be as impossible for a Briton, who
has not breathed the air of this free
land as a naturalized citizen; for
one who had no part or heritage
ill
the hopes and achievements of
our country, to play baseball, as it
would be for an American, free
from the trammels of English tradi-
tions, customs and conventionalities,
to play the national game of Great
Britain,"
s '5 55
And so, Mr. Spalding appointed
an investigating committee 10 go
into the matter. And—sure enough
—they investigated and discovered
that baseball was the sole invention
of little Abner Doubleday and. his
playmates.
u ,k *
However, as we said before, we
haven't the heart—or the space—
to spoil your pleasure by quoting
mare 01 a grand sports article. Look
it up yourself. But try and do so
right soon. Because, any day now,
we expect that the real, genuine,
blown -in -the -bottle truth is going
to burst upon us. Then we'll learn
that baseball wasn't invented by the
English, Irish, Scots or the 'Amer-
icans, Who else but a Russian—
name of Ubumski—could have been
responsible for such a grand and
glorious institution Just today
Stalin's boys have revealed that the
art of printing was a Russian dis-
covery, and we're prepared for any-
thing now.
•1t Met. 1 ere la an enllitneo that
is recommended by Surgeons and
Doctors all over the world, stream
lined -118M clean (washable), no
leg ',traps bulbs, etc. wonderfully
designed, concave pat that halals
10ontng severely closed; comfort -
01,0 10 1'ea•: fully guaranteed.
Write few free charts and literature
and tree trial basis,
It's Entirely Different
British Distributors
236 Bloor W. — Toronto
ISSUE 18 — 1950
1101815 foss OP0(116r11 NIT11$S
AN 0110118 to over' Inventor—List of haven'
Dons and full Information seal free. The
Ramsay Ca,. Registered Pnlenl Atintaer., 278
Bonk Street. 01,0,0a.
01)1NNO AND CLEANING
HAVE YOU anything needs 111011111 or clean.
Ing? Write to u0 for Information, • We are
glad t0 0,00Wer 1061 500allnne, Depe,'tmant
H, Par0er'e Dye Works Limited, 701 Venae
Street. Toronto. Ontario
E511'1d111t11114R'AN'144U
E81DLtlENCED, reliable Holland immigrants
available; arriving 8000. Write to L. Van-
denbut'g, Box 93, Brookville. 001.1 atone
1(504 (atter 0 o'clock).
10585115 1''1111 5A1,E.
150 ACRE farm, well fenced, good buildings
on excellent slim spring creek for stock and
fishing, ciao hutting. $0000 cash, W. J. Jack-
son, Port Carling, Ont,
PARE, 40 urea, new manly hm,0e, barn,
machinery, Hydro. Prima, 04.600. 1 tulle
limn town. Apply J. 101i,ad,erg, Mx 203,
Penetang, Ont,
1'010 SALE
MOTORCYCLES Harley D0vld0on, New and
Deed bough' Bold. exchanged Large stoop
of guaranteed used motnrryclee ltopalre by
factory -trained mechanics 81,001es, and gem
Mete line of wheel goods Open evenings W101
nine except w•d0e0daY Strand Cycle R Sports.
Icing at Snorer'. Hamilton.
GINS—Large assortment new and used.
Bought, sold exchanged. Guaranteed repairs,
Scopes, eights Installed Fishing 'Tackle, 11011t.
ns ,Equlpment Sporting 000,10 See lel Team
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Strand Cycle, Hamilton
NEW JOHNSON Outboard Motors. Canadian
Canon Co. Pula'born Bouts, Cannes. Trail•
ere, bought sold. exchanged Large Mock used
motors. Repairs by factory -trained mechanics.
Open until nine exr0Pr Wednesday Strand
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CANVAS Tarpaulins, 0' x 6', new. 6 or,
Waterproof, eyelet each Corner. Boat, Trail-
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lots of six $4.00 meta, By -Products, 13 Ontario
St. Toronto.
GOOSE 15005 — Safe delivery. ASL'LEY
0005E 1A1(31, Comex, British Columbia.
SPRAY WITH L SI'n:1J10'rOR
SPIAYlIRS for orchard (engine and Olivier
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aimfeeling, whileweehing, Baine ebrayffig and
fire fighting; farm wagons, Shallow \\'ell
Pressure Syelems: "TWA" (Fog Applicator):
Portable Irrigation 0yeleme with aluminum
nine, Buckner Sprinklers, McDowell coupling..
Prue catalogues, Write today. Spramotnr LA0„
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SLIGHTLY 1'Slln John Deere forage har-
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tachment. No, 04. Also No. 2 Jahn 115
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Nicol, .11.A, No. 1, Allison. Ont. 1'h, 67-111-1.
ALUMINUM 110o1'INO—immedlole adamant
— 010" thick in 6, 7, 8, 5, and 10 -foot
lengths. Price 10 mini', ,010" at 09.40 per
square .010" at 18.211 per square delivered
Ontario points. For estimates, samples, iller-
atme, etc.. write: A. C. LESLIE l C'0,
LIMITED, 130 Commissioners St., Toronto 2,
Ontario.
ntED10A1.
GOOD RESULTS — Every Sufferer
from Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis
Should try Dixon's Remedy.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE,
335 Elgin, Ottawa
$1.25 Express Prepaid.
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
Hanish the torment or dry eczema ra5hee
and weeping skin troubles : Pow,'. )neseme
Salva .411 not dlaupp0101 you
Whine, scaling. burning eescma, ache. ring
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Protan 11 00 PER JAR
Sent Post Fres on 11000011 01 '1.1055
POST'S REMEDIES
885 Queen St In.. OMR., at Loganr,,rant0
0810 FINN'S 5,10.5. Tablets. Stop. calf
scours and pig ammo. 00st lifty rent.
calf. Ten cents nig. Easily given.. Guaranteed
or money refunded. One dollar trial sample,
R. A. Finn Co, Ltd., London, Ont.
CRESS WART 1ETdl0V111t—leaves no sears.
Your Druggist sells CRESS.
IN MORRIS, ILL., William
Mathre finally trapped a mouse
which for two months disturbed his
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canary.
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0001510 COLLEC'L'IONS-5 of the loveliest
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PIPPHEnsTON HA UGH a Company Patent
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Vernon) Rookie' of Information an redueat
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Tlt'ACIIE104 WANTED
TWO TEACHERS for two well equipped rural
sehanl0 111 the O'eml0lrnmhlg District. APplY
staling snlnry expected and full pa•tloulars as
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CHINCHILLAS
all ages up to 0 ,ears: give details In first
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n R, 3, Hannon. Ontario.
No4
Bo Sure beOrder by/timber ""
1 Fan INTERNAL NEE,
"2FOa EXTERNAL NEE° w.3
REM
AB
WAKE UR YOUR
LIVER BILE®
Without Calomel -And You'll Jump Out of
Bad in the Morning Rosin' to Go
The liver should pour out about 2 pinta of
bile juice Into your digestive tract every day:
If this bile is not lowing freely, your food may
not digest. It may lust decay 1n the digestive
tract. Then gas bloats up your stomal You
get constipated. You (cal sour, sunk and the
world looks punk.
It takes those mild, gentle Carter's Little
Liver Pills to get these 2 pints of bile now-
ing freely to make you feel "up and up 1
Get a package today, Effective is
bile low freely. Ask liar Cortex's Little Livor
Pills. 3bd nt any drugstore.
Rl.t,
t{J5618
BRAND NEW OR RECONDITIONED
ECONOMICAL power for sawing ... milling ... dozing pumping
plants ... trucking .. , generating sets ... crushing ... dozing
and shovelling ... etc.
OWEN SOUND 21158
TORONTO 551-5004
Dub dealers
Kirkland Lake 890
North Kay 57
Sant Ste. Merle 4075
Russel a Hipwell
ENGINES LIMITED
Owen Sound, Ontario
4e
1
Rich in /lavo: a"!
WOMEN WILL
NEVER LEARN
HOW TO USE
MACHINES,,,
/5 77/AT 5071
OKAY, LET15
5811 WHAT
YOU CAN
D0 WITN
17:
ALL IT NEEDS
IS A 4711.E 011.
AND A LIMO
ADJusTMENT.,.
(
TNERE, t -
THAT Dogs
Ir-- -,—
BETTER GIVE
IT A TEST RUN
10 MAKE
sum—
By 11;ZELLORS
WELL,DID YOU xCERTAINLY--
SET IT To
WORK 7
MAY S HAVE
THE Scissors,
PLEAAE 1.,