The Brussels Post, 1950-5-24, Page 24
Phoney Titles,
Good Business
A self-styled Spatiisa. Grandee
once threw a brick at t'vc window
of an inn in Lyons. Fr:t'h ., and was
arrested. In aatrt it '•v'+- '.':{ted that
lie had arrived at the in in the early
hours anal had demanded to see the
pl'uprieb.r. rills weary gentleman
,lad taruyy:t up his Iudnu,tnl window
and asked, t h i is taere:"
Don Diego le Mendosa Silos
ktbe r,t r,1z ..an 1)sono Pane de
Leon /Itciga, b"e'ascii i;• alas," re-
plied the Grandee.
Jn that toter i he pro-
prietor, Shetty ut.; his window, "you'd
better i , your way, la.eanse i
haven't room for half ' you,"
He ail, eapressing the typical
Fret 'mete', cynicism over the as-
tounding number of "nobles" that
congregat•d in the r'itirs ;luring the
holiday season.
-Count; are two a penny, princes
and princesses stem to- 'De staying
at every hotel, dukes and barons
hobnob with swell other at the pave-
ment cafes.
ThousandsofP soud rl.o-a 's
tocr
lits
know it isgood business to sport
"phoney" titles, especially where
Americans are concerned, for they
have a reverence for a title which is
quite out of keeping with their usual
matter-of-fact shrewdness.
In the whole of France, it was
revealed recently, no titles are used
on identity cards ,or legal papers,
but there is no law forbidding a man
—or woman—to use any title he
may choose on his visiting cards,
whether rightfully his or not.
A title, even a bogus one, adds
distinction to a name, and due to
confusion surrounding so many
titles it is hard to prove that a claim
to one is not legitimate.
For years a character known at a
famous Paris hotel as "Monsieur le
comte" :tad been fleecing rich visi-
tors at the card table. His ,tanners
were exquisite, his conversation fas-
cinating.
Rich woolen vied with each other
for his company, and he had more
invitations than he could hope to
accept. Trades people gave him
credit, and the hotel management
kept fresh flowers in his room.
"Madame is too kind," he would
murmur, after reluctantly accepting
his winnings and bending over his
hostess' hand with a gallant smile,
Perhaps he was smiling inwardly,
for the title that made him so de-
sirable was a convenient and profit-
able figment of his imagination.
When the police finally caught up
with him for cheating at cards it was
revealed that he was the son of a
French peasant.
The police could do nothing about
his bogus title, "I am harming no
one by the little deception," he
shrugged. "So why shouldn't I be
le Comte'?"
Highboy -- Johann Peterson,
who stands eight feet, two
inches tall, is measured for a
fur suit to gear in a Holly-
wood movie. Peterson say's he
left his native Iceland because
the big boys were always
boating him up. The only
thing he finds wrong with
Hollywood is that "clouds get
between my eyes and the
ground."
Weaker Sex?
It seems that for nine months
the roadsweepers of Southwark,.
England, had agitated for a five-day
week, They got it. A few weeks
later they asked to be allowed to
go back to working on Saturday
mornings. 'There was no question
of losing pay or anything like that.
They just found that lnan'k place
definitely not the home, not on
oatwdty mornings When thelr
wives weren't conscripting them to
wa,h np or collect the ration;, they
rare being shoo'd out of the way,
%'hey weren't even allowed. they
complained, to stay in bed. So
they're back nn the job. Ali of
which was reported in t' TIBC
broadcast to the world.
"Gussie" Gets a Rubdown—In her dressing room at the "Forum
I alico" in Rome, Gertrude "Gorgeous Gussie" Moran, of lace -
panty fame, gets a massage before ,meeting French tennis a e
.Anne -Marie Seghers in the Italian Tennis (_hampiosItips,
Gussie won the :;latch.
S
PLORT
S1X8lTC't iC
Looking at the results of the first
week of the Toronto Maple Leafs'
home "stand" one cannot help be-
ing reminded, somehow, of the
deathless dispatch a Washington
newspaper correspondent sent horde
after having a couple of peeks at
the Senators going through their
paces in training camp,
* * *
"The Senators haven't got any
pitching, or hitting, or defensive
strength," the wire ran. 'Outside
that, they're loaded."
* 5 *
But maybe, by this time, the
Leafs have taken a turn for the
better; in fact, that's about the only
direction they have left. But it's too
bad. The advance build-up the Leafs
received—especially over the matter
of Sunday ball at last—was only
slightly less than terrific. On open-
ing day, and the first Sunday, the
crowds moved down to the air
(polar) conditioned spaces of the
Stadium in huge and highly profit-
able numbers in a mood of eager
expectation, completely forgetting
that neither wishful thinking or at-
tendance records ever won mann
ball games.
* * *
And right now a few thousand of
them are wondering if the expert
observers, who accompanied those
Leafs on their Southern travels,
mightn't have been the victims of
fraud or deception. In other words,
when they asked for sun -glasses,
some slicker must have slipped then{
the rose-colored variety.
* :4 *
As for the babyish tactics which
spoiled opening Sunday for so
many, so much has already been
written that we have but little to
add. Except this. Frank Shaugnessy
has been around for quite a while;
and while he has developed a slight
tendency to take off his hat and
bow whenever the sacred word
"baseball" is mentioned, that it
probably due to his official position.
Anyway, Shag knew enough to hit
those guilty of the stalling in the
only place where your modern ball
player can be hurt. We were just
about to write "in the bankroll"
when we recalled that today's hall
artists carry theirs in pocketbooks
—padlock -equipment. So make that
"in the wallet" and you'll get our
general meaning, 5we hope.
Baseball magnates vehemently
deny that there has been any
change, that they are aware of, in
the makeup of the baseball itself.
So far as they know, the poor inno-
cents, the apple that Ted Williams,
Ralph Kiner and the rest of today's
sluggers swing at is identical with
the one that used to serve as a mark
for Cobb, Wagner, Lajoie, and the
rest.
5 5 *
Those same magnates also laugh
to scorn any suggestions that seat-
ing arrangements are changed,
fences moved and so on, in an ef-
fort to make it easier for the boys
to smack on
tothe
park.
t of
"Ridiculous,"
theya •
s "We 1\'e 'use
do those things for the comfort and
convenience of our dear friends, .he
cash customers."
* * *
NVell, far be it irons us to odubt
the word of such an important per-
son as a baseball mogul, Still, here
are some statistics which would
appear to prove that either the
breed of baseball slugger 1s improv-
ing very fast or else that things
have been happening behind their
backs, * v .
On the first Saturday in May
there were exactly nine major lea-
gue games played. And in those
nine games there were exactly
thirty-one home runs belted. The
only occasion on which more hom-
ers than that were scored in a
single day's play was hack in June,
1937, when the count was one great -
ed, thirty-two in all. BUT, on that
June afternoon, there were fifteen
games played, which makes quite
a difference.
lir *
Just to keep the record clear, the
31 four -baggers of May 6th, were
divided up thusly. The .l,merican
League accounted for 16 of the
bumper crop with the Boston Red
Sox collecting the most, an even
half-dozen. Boston Braves led the
National with a quintet, and the
Chicago Cubs—of all people—tied
a major league mark by busting
three of them in *single inning.
* *
Yes. gentle reader, it looks very
nmch, from where we sit, as though
the breed of modern hall -player must
be undergoing vast inhprovement.
In fact, if the breed of Thorough-
bred had been improved with equal
celerity, this year's Kentucky
Derby would probably have been
run in around 1.55 instead of 2.01
and 3/5. Maybe Bill Corum, the
new impresario at Churchill Downs
should borrow a leaf from baseball's
book, and have somebody shorten
the track by a hundred yards or so.
While his back was turned, of
course, and without anybody telling
him about it.
* * c:
Still, on second thought, maybe
Corum had best let things stay as
they are. A home run in baseball
used to provide an authentic thrill,
NOW, they've cheapened then to
such an extent that the last quota-
tion we heard was a Clime a dozen
—with no bidders.
His System
An FBI investigator discovered
evidence of some amazing marks-
manship in a West Virginia town,
On trees, fences, and walls were
countless bull's-eyes, with the
bullet -hole in the absolute centre.
The FBI ,man demanded an intro-
duction to the Dead -eye Dick re-
sponsible for this spectacular shoot-
ing and was led to the village half-
wit, "Greateset shooting I ever
saw," marvelled the FBI man,
"How in the world do you do it?"
"Nothing to it," deprecated the
half-wit. "I shoot first and draw
the circles afterward."
Artists Without Arens—Despite the hanclicap of no arms, these
two painters in Dcisenhofen, Gerinany run a flourishing art
publishing business and have become well-known painters.
Bruno Schmitz -Hochberg, left, lost his arm in an accident
30 years ago. Arnttlf Erich Stegtnann, right, was paralyzed
when he was two years old and never regained use of his arias.
They employ several handicapped Persons in their business.
TIEFARM FRONT
Driving through the country, al-
most anywhere in southern Ontario,
there are few sadder sights than
some :,f the ancient barns, You
know tie kind 1 mean—roof sag-
ging, no doors, great gaps in the
sidings. In fact I r)ften think it
would he a fine thing if lightning
struck, and the poor deserted things
burners to the ground.
* *
There are lots who feel the sante
way; but we may be mistaken, at
that. Writing in a United States
farm magazine Harry R. McConnell
hands t•nt the advice --"take a good
look at your old barn; maybe it
too, has—years of service left in
it. Thea he goes on to tell about
a specific. instance.
* ,k e
Don't be too hasty with' the
wry ting bar on that cad tiarse
barn -•-i is arttc a '-arts--it In 1y
have ]ears of servi.'c' let in it, al-
though the horses are one.
a*.
Jr course, u se it may lou •
a kroty-
P
t
tough. But if it's the right size, if
ifs located on the right spot, and
if the framework is good—stop and
do some figuring.
That's what K,B.
Huff, agricul-
tural engineer did, when. he needed
a poultry house,
" * •
Ile had an old barn, It never had
been painted, the sills were rotten,
the roof sagged, and the walls were
out of line.
* *
But Huff found that it had good
oak framing, and his 'figures showed
that it would cost leas to remodel
than to build a new poultry house,
* * •
First he raised one side of the
foundation with house jacks, and
nailed new timbers in place 16
inches above the old sills. Then he
sawed off the old siding just below
the new sills.
• * *
Next he dug a trench, 3 feet wide
and 2 feet deep, under the sills. In
the bottom of the trench, directly
under the walls, he dug a footing
trench, 14 inches wide and 6 inches
deep. * * *
He filled this 14 -inch footing with
concrete, and then laid five rows of
concrete blocks to bring this new
foundation within an inch of the
new sill.
w * +
He cemented ai by 12 -inch bolts
every six feet in the foundation,
then lowered the sills and bolted
them down.
* * *
Then Huff raised the other side
of the barn and built a similar
foundation. The old barn already
looked better,
:k 'a•
The walls stili were out of line,
though, so he used jacks with heavy
timber extensions to force them into
line before nailing and bracing the
barn. He pulled the gable ends into
line with a set of woven wire stret-
cher.
* * *
He put in a good stairway to the
loft, which is the poultry house
part of the. building. On the ground
floor, he built a garage, stalls for
some cows and a horse, and stor-
age rooms for feed, hay, and small-
er farm tools,
* a
If you have an old barn, Buff
says, take a look at its possibilities.
Huffs total cost was $1800— but
he wound up with exactly the all-
round service building he needed
on his slnall farm. Your old barn
may have some life left in it, tool
What To Do Before•
The Moving Starts
Moving — whether done from
choice or of necessity—is a pretty
miserable business. However, it
sometimes has to be done, like it
or not; and the following hints as
to what should be done BEFORE
THE MOVING MEN- COME
may save you a lot of bother, work
and, possibly property damage or
loss.
* ' 5 *
Important papers should be
.placed in the bank or elsewhere for
safekeeping,. Papers are one of the
most frequently lost of household
items, and are apt to be needed in
a hurry.
* * *
Make a complete inventory of
household goods and note the value
of each grouping or important in-
dividual pieces.
* * 5
Ask your electrical dealer what
to do to protect your refrigerator,
freezer, range, sewing machine,
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
a
AGENTS WANTED
TO SEMI, Fent a Garden Tractors, VerY
srstltable line. Send for literature. Gar-
den Power Tools Limited, Went 810, Ontario.
SELL popular 53, fire extingu labor wholesale
or direct. L11 --rah profits ex li:h'e territory,
k-IRE•gCLLTtlt, 5042 Roslyn Ave„ Sfontreal,
"n1,0,1;1: •11,1:\ 1 Dt,our
oQ -,t'a'gs a51 :6'.7k mds Toron(som, 110-
liable
SBalales, 5 5 91015,5 Aer ('0, Toronto,
51.1141 ('H1C1i8
LF.tnrin[\9 X 11,11. and I.rruhrorri , 510.55,
Pallets 111 o,• • ker. Is S1,90 Barred
nock* N.H, \ 1714.. L.S. X N,55. 510.96; pals
lets 115.95; 'e'k•r 4 e .n'1 Nrw Sla,npsltiroo;
R.I. Iteds 114 t Mist* 5 1 cn..asreis
.53.90. Ttvo ice. k 11 111'..; 15 r 111 more
than thus° 1 e 1 , , pullets. Deposit
with ord '9t IlalnlintiLs, 1-t. A. batt,
lint,
11)11IL t. +, r ,' 5 5.o, o' r your Penn
lilted 50,5, 1:.;-:n;; I'::I.•ts ills 1,11. Eggs ere
hues to t 4 1..-5 r n. The
time to r t 5 's vi n
there are , TL:s fall
and wtntc-' v..11 n •1j t manes with
good IaSdng1 •' lit r, ally • ash to
if 5a1 buy , t • .7 an ,ray slid
or startal. AI-., •,.i., t. a.. I ,5'.{ Poulin,
r 'a,nitgue. p \
. r>rnrtu.
Bl lit ) 1 note mil
Y•i'; rpt r. , I nrd ergs.
nernenh r 5:) •t'e in years
(allot ml, r-- 1.t h cf the
kat; - pt all
5 1 err 1 w [ r fall
.st fa
0,:e.• than r. i . err d : .•n o
old. started 1; . ',.•1. 7•uller>.: .,.d .ani*, Older
Pullets, Tur.'.e> sir -5. 15,d liens
*extd e t m . .t. .d Turkey Quid.
Tw:addl Chh'k Ii Fergus.
us
e
Umnrfo
11]EISO AND CLEANING
HAVE YOt1 anything needs dyeing or clean-
ing? Write to us fm Information. Ws are
tad to answer rota questions Department
15. Parker's Dye Works Limited 791 Yooso
Street Toronto ,Intens
r'311.1.OYUEN7 WANTED
I tees E7,Ex,•ED, reltu bee H•,lland ,mmtgrants
available; arriving one, Write to L, Van•
denburg. Box 5J Bro'11vSlo. Ont.: p5000
1 2554 ,after 0 <,'cln.-kl
Fou
r.r NS—Large 50000,0001 new and
` nnusht, sold, exchanged Uuara0teed repairs.
copes atghl* ",stalled Cishlns Tseklet Hunt -
n6 Gqulpniem Spnrtlug Gnndo Spe Sai Tram
Pricers Open until alae •xrom WolneaaaY.
! Strand Cycle, Hamilton
•
radio phonograph, and so forth. It
is advisable to have these delicate
and expensive pieces of equipment
prepared for moving by a service-
man, but if y 'u are accustomed to
caring for thein yourself, he will
probably tell ,sou what to do.
1• * n
G:ve the telephone and. electric
companies ample notice of the
move.
* * ,1
If y-ou have a freezer, arrange
with the locker plant to store the
food during the mole and utilize
the time it is disconnected to de-
frost. 1n normal 'weather food can
be mored long distances in the
freezer without damage, if the box
is kept shut. You can speed settling
operations if you have frozen meals
and sandwiches available.
* * *
Start collecting pasteboard car-
tons and newspapers a month in
advance. You may be able to bor-
row mattress containers from a
local store. Have plenty ot heavy
string and rnpe on hand.
* * *
Prepare an emergency box con-
taingin screw driver, hammer, scis-
sors, thumbtacks, shelf paper,
needle, thread, tape measure, Band-
Aids, washcloth and towel, tea
towel, cold drinks and cookies.
Power From Sound
It's said that fib -year-old George
Constantinesco, the man who invent-
ed the device for firing through the
first world war, believes it may one
day be possible to run the world by
propellers of aeroplanes during the
sound.
At present he is busy in his work-
shop by Lake Coniston developing
sonic motors. Ha claims that by
transmitting power by sound -waves
he can run factories, heat water and
drive ships.
But," says Constantinesco, "per-
haps I am a little ahead of my
time. I'm sure this development will
come sooner or later."
COOK (General)
;s0 For Month for pleasant woman
under 45. Goad cooking en0*ntlel;
downstairs work. Charwoman, nurse-
maid employed, Reference. required.
Central location. Tiro. Beattie, 93
Ardwold Gate, Toronto, telephone
trldivay 2791.
Unequalled for OOi '
pTFILESEt ULCERS
SORES
S ° BURNS
1NFE gQILS
5751
�Saottiinq
'Herding
Plait -Reliever
41/15 MA 1.1
MOTOttr]YCLEs 11.007 Dtttl 1 Na• and
used. bough, sola. ••5,ltallge.1 Large x 'k
or guaranteed used n ,''r•'y''•4 *. !tapau•e 97
500105 -tra toed menlem 5* 117ay"lre, aro] cant
lets lino of wheel [nods '. t n e'etino ,Intel
n100 except N •dee. IaY !I" o l r'Y"h> Pr 57. 4s
Nang 555 Seam • Elam iton
NEW JOHNSON Untlentrd Slotoin. Canadian
Canoe Co., Peto•horn Bson, ilea...a.'Frail.
aro, boughs, Mid e''hnuged Lorna MIS 595,1
motara. Repair* 1,4? to^'ars•-tea lard !law :antra
Open until lithe esvW W'•h,rna:r Y •5'rrIo5
('5.15, Hamilton
ALL1t1NUA1 R001i\tl—nn,a,d in to t -hit fit
019" 11,1,9 m Ii. � x ,
) , - •,t
lengths Price to apply Al.,',tl 42,,11 ver
Arica..^e .010" at soilara11.1, ed
Ontario points.
WWw. A. C. LE,ME ❑ ,1 CO.
LI111r ED, 139
'Hearin.
Felt 9551.11: hue„ Trio tor.. ,d. 11.0.t 00
till lnnkex 0n1 1 I I I 5 11
1 l:•t t ,,•n Ines. om,,, t 1 I s• r
1r'"-. t•y.Mptlog trnrn,5 1.1 5'..i. I.:.1
!'m
1.11:US S:15t'S .PNU i'5((T. it 'Ie 69 ,00
1,10 I'rpe,-en 1U'11.112'r rii,s and 1Nrix,
54', lave a complete Work of 11,•1,1 1,1, 11..1.
1,1 D parte. new uud
n••w Lrn Prinrd 04110111 rialiii 11.nn a tui , all
rrlhn. D J. Ariel 'Iry I 1 1 rir0,.1, 447
\wc„I•., 155, •ttreet, LI Pil inn, i'u.
Tn 51(051 1'041:14-11e lotto a 5' I1, Ile rent
on day to five morel:a olri, ..t,tll,d, 11'"nrl
Tt+. t. t.0, Bronze 'rnrl., v Poillto Irma
r:a:u+rn[ approved xtn••1: and uwlcr lu, tell'-':
approve]. At rerbo.,.,l prirres for :t noi,•Ic ,
e
tr. Paul[' ulu I Mod,-
005
e 1, 1 I t 1 •error o00 II
y
er• sun. 71 Windsor., inn,or ,1 nn,• ', 1,519
y
atter 5 5.1n.
DAIRY for sale New De Laval minim° nl.
Apartments above. No opposition. M1,-lhonorn
Bros. Lions Ilead, clot.
TARPAULINS ANY SIZE
IN henry waterrnn*',red duck, complete with CA'rENTB
tie roues, your name xtrvtc(led on Knit side n•o-rrt4EusTuunwtFurt R [krlaeauY Putrnf
n 1701('.11.
..,'.IP, •1 ,, rn. ,a.• Earns. 1_.•. l;lar:ulrr,ed
,r ,. f.. ,
I '
.1. r 1111.11/1e..
11.
la)1111.11/1e..1111.11/1e..11. n;ra11'; led ,mL
ul'It1I1.11 .\15(129 1,011 111 \ 1111 110111055
BE A 1'1A1ltDRl SS1Ht
JUIN -97.) DA's LEA111:t1 SPtIOOL
,rent 1 ppnr"lnity Lea rn
tletrtlre: ulna
Pieria lel :,I:allied confession. 0100 wages
1,03*an m roil'.. snful Ma net graduates
Atnel n tt cot ,Iwsle1,1 (Orlin rated eats
•.a ,o 50* wills or Call
tl 11 VIII. 11A1801tlcs0lNa
,armless
la.) H„al til tw 1..,1•�Illa-
,i In ev 44 10105 Si nonillion
r• 15 Ilnleaa Strert,'wawa
�i Rvi In 9ru('R
It 1 bI Ill11It I F. - reLe, u• •r 0 0 0 1 1 0 ,
„h•11.ps I,ll,r k1,, t•rIe*. 1'11111
I - u
fruit L,,.rx u,.-. hedge Plants,
lira , ,.a ev'e'n n,l t rrnnloln, first
ir n01.. ,,,r •rt ,n r. etre xpnlL. It', ny,+,'de NVL'.
,.:r.t a u.r I P I t.
111:1„ I. ,' 1)11(.SI,.1NA. nerhes her 10e,
5'51 3'1 rrted erre unl..ln 11.21. Cramer
N, rs, r!,•;,. 415,5,, 1'u0, Sask.
--
GLADIOLUS BULBS
111, 10 114 IOS P.11 8108 •
I one n•yorrnlert 05 young beelthy bulbs,
rn 1” In 0,1, t e•ler, 10,,.11 Pok 6. Ooh talus 10
nnlbn fir 1„ different varieties. terse euparal
d., •,i env eirl, enrh order. All balite dusted
rue ,'nntrol or thrlp, sand 1101,10 and 000.0es
u, 1 ren:, order yto:
RIGHTLAND FARM,
lttco{Y. Ont.
nA[
1i1�1L)'H1 rlrawberrY plants: Kellogg Pre.
ruler, Royal sovereign. 50, 7002 510. 1,000.
Val. urine 514, 1.000. C. E. Sr1ltil, Scotland,
„aro tin
and delivered to your nem'ox1 x['11 0 8x10, gulleitors Note bllsheo 1895 550 Has career.
09.72; 10n1J. 513._0; 1x:11, 510,75. *50111.) I•nrnnto H00klat 0t IOturmo Lion no mammal.
ares made to your order 0t 110 ler t55unr0
foot. Please 0001000 ,nonny order or ehornro
With your order. :.11 Innuirina answered
Promptly, C'nnva., Sl0'eialty 1•ompuny, 1110
Tonne Street, Toronto.
UNWANTED HAIR
PERMANENTLY erndtrnted nrth .era fetor
The moat remarkable discovery of 0,e nae.
Sara Feta is guaranteed to kill the runts of
any hair, and contains no Irug:, 00 chemicals.
Loml3eor Lob„ 079 nr;u7einr, l'tmrouver,
A. Al LAIDLA W. B. Se., Parent Attorney,
Parent* of invention. 60 Sparks St., Ottowa.
1015551ONA1•.
LONELY people of opposite sexes will b.
personally Introduced to mrh other by new.
ly-formed elan with names of thousands he
Wren and{',Wren seeking companionship and
marriage. Phone. write er call personally at
PRI ENu81111' LNI.lX1'I'ED, 72 Queen Street
Went, 'Toronto, Phone P5aza 4377,
1'9(551 11111 0451.11
150 ACRES CHOICE omit? FAR11
IN EXCELLENT STATE of cultivation, Just
off main road in splendid established
F'armtug section (tear thrifty town, Two-fnmlly
brick house. large bank barn. g0ru5, and
Implement shed. Lots of water under i r00 -
sure In house, burn, school bate. Trite pull
hauls milk daily to Toronto, Reauroth:0 down
Payment and lots Interest on mortgage for
balance. Remediate pomiesat,n, 110.500. For
further particulars write 00 phone J. E,
('ober, Realtor, 222578 Tonga St,. 'Toronto,
510hnwk 3570.
58 ACRES, clay; close to school and church;
3 tulles from highway; good house, hydro:
situated between Barrie and Cnutngwood. Tont
Patton, New Lowell, Ont.
HELP WANTED
MOTIHER'S HELI', No cooking, UnlSex, live
in. 512.60 a weep. 92 Burnaby, Toronto.
MA 0104.
11711)10.11.
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
nani;h the torment of dry eczema rashes and
weeping shin troubles. Pont's Eczema Salve
will not disappoint you.
Iteling, sealing, burning 002enub acne,
ringworm. pimples and 0101010', foot, will
respond readily to the :stainless, ottnrlesd oint-
ment, regardless or how stubborn or hopeless
they seem.
PR/CE 81,00 PER JAR
Sent Post Free on Receipt 05 Price
POST'S REMEDIES
880 Queen St. E., Corner of Logan
Toronto
CRF55 1NOROw'N '5010-55,15. SALi'lO.
Tour Druggist sells none better..
DIXON'S REMEDY
DIXON'S REMEDY—.For Neuritis
and Rheumatic Pains. Thousands
satisfied.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 Elgin Ottawa
$1.25 Express Prepaid
BALANCED
TRACTION y iS SEND For Complete
Information TODAY
100010F CHIEFS BED DAILY
409. -Th
4tfd 504
1110111 P00
1%to3H.P.
FULL LINE OF
IMPLEMENTS
DIST'RIBU'TOR:
RUTHERFORD IfA1ti)'ARE co.
HAMILTON
Dealer Enquiries
Invited
STAMPS
S'I'A3lPS Free to Slneore Approval Applleants.
hest prier's paid for cnllectfune. Snowdon
Stanton, 0371 Clanreneld, 'Montreal,
{v n Mr10s,
WANTED — noon 17945:0 minneJl 5171.15
threshing machine. State make, size, equip.
stent and price. John 'MacDonald, 11.11. 5!,
Morn, Ontario, ..
WAKE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE—
Without Calomel _ Md You'll Jump Out of
Bed in the Morning Ruin' to Go
The Over should pour out about 2 pinta Of
bile Juice Into your rEgeetive tract every day.
[f this bile is not flowing freely your fool may
not digest. It rosy lust deoay in the digestive
bloomtract. Then gas bloom up your etomeela. You
get constipated. You feel sour, sunk and the
world looksunk.
It takes those mild, gentle Carter's Little
Liver Pill* to get these 2 pinta of bile Sow-
ing freely to make you feel "up and up.”
Get a package today. Effective In meks,0.
bile Bow freely. Ask for Cortes s Idols Liver
Palle. 815 at any drugstore.
Here it is 1
The Best Paint Value
In Canada Since 1939
Hoe Paint Co.
Owers Yon 1110 kin* *r value your got
BEFORE the wor—remember"—flliet-
ening unlet that flowed on 'moot10•v—
Cotered solidy—end stayed bright 051,1
colourful for years: 0,1011;; paint or
Onnilty enamel at the some law °rice.
s3 ■ C
PER GALLON ""
Name your own col-
our. There oro 35 fo
Mumma from. Or send
for colour chart.
snetFREE—Paintd,rB liush
these thick, smooth, long -bristle mint
hruoho* ore used by maker
ammeters throughout Co,,.
attn, rattle fit
With enol 5 gallon order
Send today fora 5 [,,lion triol order.
Cash with order will save 0,0.D.
charges, -
HOME PAINT CO.
313 RUSHTON ROAD
TORONTO — ONTARIO
ISSUE 20 — 1950
•
Sweet as its name/
m
BOUFORD
JUST 010 '0856.-
8 REMEMBER IT
WAS JUST OAS
THING X NAD
TO REIAF.tl4lFER--
JUST ONe
78186,,.
x
A4AYBELOO(C IF
AROUND IT'LL.
COME TO ME,,,
:•1511
IMITI VEE, *l'
PVC Sc -EN EVERY
ARTICLE IN TOE
STORE,,. y
WHAT ARE YOU
LOOKING FOR, 510)450907
WEVtI605 vow 41187V
NOW ORDER ALL I -
READY FOR
YOU'