The Brussels Post, 1950-10-4, Page 2Effects Of Diet On
Lalydenirag of Arteries
It is the. prevailing medical op-
inion that ]gardening of the arteries
is caused by deposits of cholesterol,
an alcohol wltte11 is a constituent
of animal fats and oils. Hence to
Treating arteriosclerosis the special-
ists forbid eggs (the yolk are fatty),
'batter and fats int general, Experi-
ments conducted with such vege-
tarian animals as rabbits seem to
:prove the case, for when the rab
bits are fed large amounts of
cholesterol their arteries harden.
Does all this apply toenail? Drs,
'Ansel Reye, Olaf Michelson, E.
V. O. Miller and Carleton E. Chap-
man had their doubts, and they pro-
ceeded to test then.
The effect of diet on 482 clini-
cally "normal" volunteers was stud-
ied. These were all young men who
did not have to stint themselves so
far as their food was concerned.
All were studied for longer than
three years, and all told how many
eggs and how much butter, milk,
cheese, ice cream and lean fir fat
tneat they ate
Heavy and Light Consumers
Now dietary habits are more or
less fixed. Or. a$ Pr. Keys puts it,
"the man who regularly takes two
eggs for breakfast has several pats
of butter at every meal and does not
remove all separable fat from his
twice -a -day meat is in a very differ-
ent category from the man who dis-
likes milk, cheese and eggs as such
and is sparing of butter and refuses
all but lean meat." The butter and
egg eaters consume at least 600
milligrams of cholesterol a day, the
lean -neat eaters not more than 200
to 300. Accordingly, the heavy were
separated from the light cholesterol
consumers. .
Some arteriosclerotics were put on
the currently popular rice -fruit diet,
which is free frons cholesterol and
all but free of sodium. The diet
did bring
aboutmarket
I declines
in the serum cholesterol. Neverthe-
less, Dr. Keys and his colleagues
doubt whether most so-called low -
cholesterol diets serve their pur-
pose. The doubt is based on the
fact that a man with hardening of
the arteries who is allowed to eat
lean meat, some dairy products and
a little animal fat will show more
than 100 milligrams or even as
much as 200 milligrams of choles-
terol daily in his blood.
Vegetable Fats Tried
Cholesterol is not a constituent
of vegetable oils and fats. Neverthe-
less when one arteriosclerotic who
slid well on a diet completely free
from cholesterol and alt animal fats
was given vegetable fats, the cho-
lesterol in his blood increased to its
previous high level. But he did well
when his diet was modified to con-
tain minimal amounts of any kind
of fat and when he was allowed
one serving of meat or fish daily.
We take it from all Mist work
that cholesterol deposits are indeed
the cause of hardening of the art-
eries but that if hardening of the
arteries is to be treated successfully
cholesterol must be banned from
the diet entirely. Half -way -measures
are useless.
FashionNote for
J' ft3'ziors
The bigger the plaid, the,bet-
tet', for the school crow(, Pitll-
over plaided on suede flannel,
With stay -put snug knitted
ruff;,, and waistband. Two hold -
everything pockets,
FASHION NOTE FOR MEN
Favorite of businessmen—new
fall topcoat of Venetian Covert
with soft overplaid.
No Belt, no suspenders, no
visible means of support! Con-
cealed sponge pads bold up
these trousers, and keep skirt
neatly tucked -in.
F:i.1N
"Of the making of many opinion
polls," Solomon might have said if
he had lived a couple of thousand
years later, "there is no end." And
although the pollsters got a severe
black eye when they mix -guessed
the result of the last Presidential
election by as far as a strong boy
can throw a rock, they seem to
have done a comeback. At all events,
they're still carrying on
The results of the latest of these
polls that I've come across are
rather interesting to farm folks,
and especially to farm women.
We've all dreamed of what we
would do first if we came into even
a modest sum of money unexpected -
t'; and the question put to hundreds
of representative farm Women was
based on the following case. Some
ttvo years ago a farmer's wife had
the chance of either taking a trip to
Europe or doing a remodelling job
on her kitchen.
The European tour, she figured,
would be interesting and education-
al. On the other hand, a remodelled
kitchen would be enjoyed by the
whole family. So the money went
into the kitchen.
* *
So the question was: 1f you had
the money, which would you rather
have, a model kitchen, a trip to
Europe, a car of your own, or a
vacation with your fancily. and 40
per cent of all the women inter-
viewed said they would choose the
modern kitchen.
The younger women (those in
the age group from 20 to 34 years)
had the highest percentage for this
choice. Forty-seven per cent said
they would rather have a modern
kitchen, Only 22 per cent of the
older womenindicated this choice.
* 5 *
But of all the women interviewed
54 per cent of those who lived
00 rented farms put the modern
kitchen as their first choice.
* * *
While it was the younger wool-
en who lived on rented farms who
wanted modern kitchens, it was
the older women and those who
lived on their own farms who
would choose the trip to Europe.
* * 5
Nine per cent of all ttic women
said they would choose a Euro-
pean toter,
5 5 *
When the figures were broken
down into age groups, they found
that 17 per cent of the women over
50 chose the trip. Though one of the
younger farm women said rather
wistfully, `I would enjoy 'a trip
to Europe. it would be nice now
and give •me something to think
about Oben Poi old."
Only 5 per tent of the younger
women would choose a trip to
Europe,
"It would be wonderful to have a
car any time I want it," said an-
other woman. And she expressed
the cholcc of 9 per cent of the farm
women Interviewed,
Eleven per cent of the younger
women would like to have a car
of their .own. Seven per cent of
the middle-aged group and 5 per
cent of the older women indicated
the salve choice.
* * 5 •
"With a whole family bickering
over the car, I think I'd like to have
a car of my own, even if it were
only a jalopy," said one of those
interviewed. Then she added, rue-
fully, "At that, I'll het somebody
else would be driving it every time
I wanted it." * *
A vacation with the whole family
when the children are little and a
vacation with the family when they
are older arc two different things.
* :k *
Thirty-three per cent of all the
''omen interviewed wanted a vaca-
tion with their families. Twenty-
nine per cent of the younger women,
34 per cent of the middle-aged
group and 39 per cent of -the older
women made the sane choice,
r * *
But one of the younger women,
the mother of four small children,
said: "I'm not kidding myself that
a trip with the children is a vaca-
tion. It's a change of scenery."
* * *
Another woman in the same age
group said: "If I had the money for
a vacation, it would be a vacation
just to get away from the family
for a little while."
BULL—NOT STAG PARTY
Three hundred persons turned up
at a swank party in a tent in
England recently to toast the guest
of honour—a bull.
It was the 11th birthday of
Vern Robert, one of the finest
Ilerefords ever bred.
Eleven candles burned on his
birthday cake—made from, cattle
cake, flaked maize and bran—with
"Many Happy Returns" in red ber-
ries.
FORT
�v A Stx1311-C
One of the gags with which they
used to wow the customers back
he the palmy days of vaudeville was
when the comic of a two-man team
would seriously declare that Itis fav-
orite food was hash — because he
always knew what he was eating.
His straight', partner would indig-
nantly demand "flow in blazes do
you know what you're eating?"
whereupon the comic would reply,
"I know I'm eating hash!" Yak —
Yak — Yak,
* *. *
Which will serve as notice that if
this column turns out to resemble
hash, or a reasonable facsimile,
please don't complain that you
weren't warned.
'k * *
Anyway, about the most pithy
comment we have heard regarding
current conditions came from a fri-
end of ours the other day. He had
just been reading a newspaper story
which stated that, because of war
preparations, the price of ale, beer,
ice cream sodas, soft drinks, gin.
milk, whiskey and a few other as-
sorted potables were likely to show
an ipereaso in price.
* * *
"That guy Kipling surely knew
what he was talking about" said our
friend, "when he wrote 'When it
comes to slaughter, you will do
your work on WATER.' "
k * *
Just in passing, we fear that the
esteemed Toronto (=lobe and Mail
Sports Department must be
slip -
Pin;. The September r
morn follow-
ing
lloc-
ing the initial practice of the MA-
PLE LEAF HOCKEY TEAM
the Sports Page mentioned the
name of Conny Smythe a mere nine
tines — this being, as any close
follower of the sport can tell you,
much below par for the course.
* * *
In the same connection, sy Wright
say that if the Maple Leaf Hockey
Club's ballyhoo department doesn't
shortly dig up a new publicity stunt
to replace the one about Turk Bro-
da's excess poundage, we dread the
consequences among the reading
public. We are second to none
in our admiration for Mr. Broda's
twine - guarding abilities — but as
a permanent replacement for Miss
America, Gipsy Rose Lee, Sally
Rand or any of the other strippers,
Turk just doesn't dace it.
* * *
Arthur Daley tells a story, which
you may have heard before but
we hadn't, about Willie (Puddin-
head) Jones, third base guardian
for the Philadelphia Philties, This
was when Willie — as well as Man-
ager Eddie Sawyer — were. laboring
in the Toronto baseball vineyard.
* * *
Jones had slumped very badly in
Itis hitting and although he never
said anything about what was wor-
rying hint; Sawyer instinctively
knew and summoned Willie to his
office. ':Willie," he said, "I've been
doing sone thinking. I know your
wife is expecting a baby, so I was
wondering if you'd like to have her
here in Toronto — at the hall club's
expense?"
* * *
Mfrs, Jones arrived and her care-
free husband began knocking the
leather off the hall in old - time
"fashion, But just before the infant
was due he shipped itis wife back to
dear old Carolina. "It's thisaway,
Skipper," Puddinhead explained
things to Sawyer. "I want to have
my son born back home, so that
some day, he'll be eligible to be-
come President of the United Sta-
tes," •
* * *
Well, if we were making book,
we wouldn't want to be laying too
much money against the possibility
of Jones, Junior, someday doing
that very thing. We don't know ex-
actly what the actual odds are aga-
inst any United States youngster
e
Goose Still Honks -,-•When Thomas Bowes bought an estate
recently, he received an tntexepectecl dividend: a 1918 Wilts -St,
:CIA' "Grey (goose" roadster.. Shown with his wife and two
sons, Bowes pumped up the ear's tires, boosted the battery and,
without bothering to change the auto's original gasoline and
,oil, stepped on the starter; With a honk of delight, the "Grey
Goose" rolled out of tate garage for the first time itt.22 years,
eventually becoming President, Fif-
ty million to one, or even more,
.probably.
* *
Still, great as they are, those odds
can't be any biggcr5than they were
—when Willie ;tones made that re-
mark — against Puddinhead, play-
ing for the once - Phutile Phils, be-
ing eligible for a World Series cut
within the short space of tivo years
and a couple of months. For the
Phils, since the turn of the century,
have finished in the National Lea-
gue Cellar exactly seventeen times.
They finished in the seventh slot
on ten occasions. And, e_g to the
start of this season, their record was
a proud 4,325 losses es against 3,-
202 wins.
So it looks as if anything—posi-
tively anything — could happen in
baseball.. And in politics too—for
Anthony Eden is just reported as
recently saying that if he were in
the British Foreign Office, he thinks
he could "stake a satisfactory deal
with Stalin," Maybe Mr. Eden
w•ouid even turn his back while
Uncle Joe shuffled the cards!
Virgil Dreamed Of
Sugar From Trees
That a sweet syrup would em-
erge front forest trees was part of
Virgil's dreamt of the Golden Age.
At that time (around 40 B.C.)
honey of wild bees was the chief
m r
eatsf
O sweetening pro-
bably was p
r -
bably the first sugar food used by
Wren. The care and cultivation of
bees for their honey has been
known at least for three thousand
years. \Vith the ancients it was
almost their sole source of sugar... .
The first historic mention of sugar
is found in China in the eighth cen-
tury B.C., where it is spoken of as
a product of India. The sugar cane
was native in Bengal and cultivated
there. After the fifth century B.C.
it was introduced to the Euphrates
valley and to China. Fellow travel-
lers of Alexander the Great who
invaded India in the fourth century
B.C. in search of glory and loot,
brought back tales of a reed that
produced honey without the aid of
bees, "Honey cane" it was called
originally, end Herodotus spoke of
sugar as "manufactured honey" ...
The Greeks and Romans called it
"sweet salt," "Indian salt," "sweet
gravel." In the Bible (Jeremiah
6:20) is mentioned a "sweet cane
from a far country."
Crystallized sugar was in evid-
ence about 1,300 years after the
first historical mention of sugar.
The Arabs and Egyptians.were.tilo
pioneers in crystallizing. Tit India
at tete end of the thirteenth century
we first hear of evaporating the
cane juice, dissolving the residue
in water, and clarifying this solu-
tion with mills. They tlielt solidified
their sugar into cakes or crystal-
lized it into candy. W. W. Sweats,
in tracing the history of sugar, says:
"It long continued to be regarded
as a ram and costly spice and it
remained so up to the time of the
discovery of America at the end of
the fifteenth century.
In the oldest books oe arboreal
lore, maples were mentioned as
rarities he Europe, and there .was
no reference to their sugar -yielding
sap. The "ntapel-treow" ' was so
spelled by Chaucer in the fourteenth
century, and it is variously referred
to from then on in Middle English
literature as the mayple, the ntapell
arid the nlapole. In 1588 Jean Lie-
bault, the French naturalist, wrote
of "balnles and oyles" distilled front
trees, but never a word oft maple.
John Gerade, author of The Her -
ball or General historic of Plantes,
Writes: "The great Maple is a
stranger in England, only it groty-
eth in the walkes and places of
pleasure 'of noble inen, where it es-
pecially is planted for the shadowe
sake." In The Whole Art and Trade
of Husbandry, Barnette •Googe
speaks of the "juyce" and the
sappe" of many trees, but not of
• the maple, Closer to our own day,
Charles Sprague Sargent writes of
the maple in Europe: "The Sugar
Maple, like the Hickories, the White
Oaks• and other upland trees of
eastern America, sloes not flourish
in the Old World, and really fine
specimens, if they exist at all in
Europe, are extremely rare, al-
though 150 years have passed since
it was introduced, and at different
times considerable attention has
been givers to its cultivation."
Maple sugar and syrup are ap-
parently, then, a specialized North.
. American product,—From "The
Maple Sugar Book," hy Helen find
Scott Nearing,
Cure -Alit A bottle of medicine
was mistaken by a patient's mother
for carpet -cleaning fluid. Says the
'Medical "World'; "Tt proved very
efficient."
ISSUE 39 — 1450
..Classified Advertising..
AGENT'S W'AN'TED
OILS, GREASES, TIRES, Dntlorles,
Paints, Eleeu4a Motors, Stoves, Radios,
Rafrlgere torn, Past freeze's Dad 00111,
Coolers, heal' Coatings, Permanent Ante
110000, ere. Denims wanted, \Ninos War.
en Grease and 011 1,5,1., Toronto,
UtlIt (111('11S
WRITE about our sppoeba ,',•ono breeds for
broiler ehleko, Alno day old rinds! in
1111 Pelmle' breeds, prompt delivers'.
Started m illetn, 5 and 0 weeks old, Nilo*
Mal ba'gnlna 011 Turkeys 7 and 8 seeks
old, Older pullets 12 weeks to hiring,
Twiddle Chicle 1CntN,e,9es Limited. Fer-
gun, Ontario.
DYEING .AND CLEARING
HAVE you anything need11 dyeing 0, elcnn•
WV Write to us for Inl'armatlon, We
are glad to answer your quesllono. 0,.
pa•lment t1, Porker's Dye Works Limited,
701 Ventre Street. 'Toronto, Ontario.
HOnI(14151x`375G
_ACCO NT]P()
rt10O1{fe]JRP]Xfiimd Accounting Servh,.
lraIrvin•onto,g N. Shoom, 20 Nesmith street,
('5(1055 (Tilt SALE
EXCELLENT toile available, vnrtons
sizes, In first class dnleying pad nixed
farming 11.1, rt, enurement to Ottawa.
also ennnnen•,'lol nrul'eruea. w. C. Bev:
Dnnitld, 'Inehex('r, out.
VACANT Lunt for rale; aged cotirle have
roared 11,10 town: good bui5dluus, anter In
house, level fields 5,1 11 miles river
frontage, 001110 Umbel'. s'l'ate of wend;
also n 17 -urea 11,,1,1 reforested With pine.
Ansinns to sell, 'l'N9,,s, rush, Write for
Partl'ulers, ,Leel: Young, gli m'unt. (Int.
volt S.1LE
CORNEQUIPMENT
ONE 24 International ,:Mounted Corn Picker
In gots] condition, .1 C. Jarvis. R. 1,
Freeman, Ont. Phone 1urllaeton 601.1.
MOTORCYCLES. Harley Davidson, Now
and used, bought. sold, exchanged. Largo
steel, or guaranteed used motorcycles. Re.
pairs by factory -trained mechanics. III -
cycles, and complete line or wheel goods,
also Guts. Gusts and Johnson Outboard
Motors Open evenings until nine 050055
Wednouday. Strand Cycle A Sports. ging
at Sanford. Hoodltm,
AL.54530(75 CM 1((10 FI N 5
immediate shipment—.010" thick In 0, 7,
5, 9, 10 foot lengths. Prices delivered to
Ontario points an application, For estim-
ates, samples, literature, etc., terlte: —
e1. C. LESLIE N CO., LIMITED
130 COMMISSIONERS STREET
TORONTO 2, ONTARIO
GUNS—SU L'I'LIES—REI',1IRS
The greatest ousels of guns and ammunf-
lion gathered under ono roof—the latent
designs, g the oldest antiques.
13u •
sl
Sell! Excite
9,
t nng.
Order your Pall catalogue, : 2260 watts.
Modern Gun Shop. Dept, "L", 1000 Dan-
forth Ave., East, Toronto.
ASPHALT SHINGLES 53.80
These interlocking shingles are just one
of our many roofing and asphalt bargninn.
210 ib. Butt Shingles $0,26; 105 Titeleo
04.30 per 100 square feet.
t" TI(ick Insulated Siding; Brick or Ce-
dar Grain design, only $0.46 per square.
60 lb. red or green Granite Roofing, 12.25.
Above nricea 2',0,33., Hamilton.
Many other bargains In these faelory
seconds, we doubt you can tell from first
grade stools.
ALT t0INU81' CORRUGATED SHEETS,
only 98.00 per 100 sq. feet. Delivered
Ontario, Quebec and Maritimes,
All new stock, 20 gauge, various sizes
available for prompt shipment. Send mea-
surements for free estimates. Get yours
now. Stork limited,
ROBERT JONES Lt'\InER CO.
Hamilton, Ontario
GENERAL store 111 heart of tobacco dis-
trict, near Delhi. Good turnover, Or -
vice station in connection, and living
quarters. Must be seen to see value. Andy
Isonal, R.R. 1, Windham Centre. Phone
8 00.221, Waterford.
1.5510 SALE two registered Hereford
hulls. seven months old (dark red), sired
by Spring 'Valley Domino 8204, James
Minlin, Stoves, Ontario, R,R. No. 1.
1—NEW Model 302-0 Badger half-traok
Trencher complete. Lennox Equipment C
Sunni)! Company Limited, Selby, Ontario,
RAISE Hobbits for meat, pelts and wool,
Illustrated booklet, 26e. Carter's Rab-
bitry, Chilllwoelc British Columbia.
CLASSROOM desks for ante—aloes 2, 3,
4 and 5, Standard—sono box Lyne, some
open -irons' end Size 6-0 Adjustable, box
type. 511 In first -Ones condition, The
Timmins Public Sehool Board, Box 000,
Timmins, 01t,
HIeP O W ERED
SPORTING RIFLES
LARGE assortment and better values.
Write for latest catalog listing varloas
bargain petees,
SCOPE SALES CO„ LTD,
320 Queen Street, • Ottawa, (Warta.
305IN Deere power unit. 36 141'. with
belt pulley and radiator. Also Vessot
grain grinds', 11-1001, heavy duty. Wal-
ter W. Burkholder, Mm4,hnm, Ontarlo,
R,R, 07
Susatir\L
NEW, 2 -way wonder tablets builds blood,.
tones nerves fust. Greet for simple
anemia. Helps item pimples, bolls, clears
the blood stream. Makes tired folks alive
with pep, vin, vigor. Rush 51 for trial
500110ge. Large economy alae, $3, Money
back guarantee. Imperial Industries, F.O.
Box 901, Winnipeg. Dept.
UNWANTED HAIR
Eradicated from any Mtn of (he tinily
with Sae, -Fein, a remarkable discover
of the age. Seen -Pelt, contains no harm-
ful Ingredient. nod will destroy the hair
root,
LOR-I11010R LA 13t71tA'1'(Dt1E5
070 Granville Street.
Vnneneve,', I5.O.
Discovers Ho e
Skin Remedy
Tile 001111 sl"Inlrnn nnllueptie I111u,Y11 an
over Canada as kletmo'a Emerald Oil, Is
such a Ono healing agent tient Eozemn,
Barber's itch, Stilt Rheum, Itching Toes
- and reel, end ether inannnnntm'y skin
eruptions are often relieved In 0 few days.
M00ne's Emera14 011 is pleasant to use
and it Is so antiseptic and penetrating that
many old ah,ln,orn eases of long standing
have yielded to Its influence.
Homo's Emerald 011 la sold by drugglat9
everywhe'e to help rid You of stubborn
Dimples and unsightly skin trembles —
s0tisfn011mt fir 11105011 lmclr,
HARNESS & COLLARS
Farmers Attention — Consult
your nearest Harness Shop about
Staco Harness Supplies. We sell
our goods only through your
local Staco Leather Goods dealer
The goods are right, and so ars
our prices, We manufacture in
our factories — Harness. Horse
Collars, Sweat Pads, Horse Elan
kets, and Leather Travellint,
Goods. Insist on Staco Bran!
Trade Marked Goods, and yob
get satisfaction. Made only be
SAMUEJ. TREES Cc) ,• LTD
42 Wellington St, E., Toronto
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE
MEDICAL
('001:.454 Cora vglvr--for 011r0 row. (Oar
1,111y0(Nt sells Cress,
GAINING 1V10lutt'r? Slrndex Tau helps
Yon retain slender figura turns rood in-
to enetgY instead 0r fat 6u0rantacd barn).
100,), emnpnsed pleasant herbs, 110 e, .rets,,
or drastic diet 8lanih s $upply 11 PB11-
lne1'e Salem ltr6 d• 1,r Pt. w, flux 00, Sta-
nn, "N". fdn,nrenl, -
Try it! Every sufferer of Rheuma-
tic Pains or Neur tis should try
Dixon's Remedy.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 e.lg.n, Ottawa
$1.2.5 Express Prepaid
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes
nasi a••001ng Pan Irualleo. Poet.,, E'ze-
ma •Sale° trill trot dieuppolnt 0,00,
1" Meg, sealing, burning: eczelnfl, eine,
r,ug,a"an• :Glades :nal nthlete'n font, .0111
1,05,0,20 rcadil.,' to the 0101010mo. edor)esa
•,,nuneul, regardless of .how stubborn or
Loieltax they 11-.011.
PRICE 51.00 )')0nt JAM
Rent Post Free tin iloeolSI of Price
POST'S REMEDIES
8811 Queen 81 14., earner 1,1'' LogmL Toronto
(1110 PURE 11,:0 ;rAtes..e '15114ET5 •
(11110 W0N1)1410l+T1, 11101.110)'
B. 1 Foe catarrh of Slmsach. Sphm1 In.
1:. 5',;r INMtnnolio Pains,
15- :: F, r .-p'u:d Eyh:;us,I,OL
II. 5 Fel' Liver "fid 1(ldaey, Gnil-0Oa,ld,-r.
11- e Per till•,
I:• ", I•'or 1`u11,1,1,1u !Vert.
5:-' I'er stooge!: sod Intestinal Clean-
ing.
11- 1, P'„r 11.-artbufo, Hyper-neld10.
11-10 For Nurvous ,'ondlllan due In Ileum
lrregulnrlly. w'I11 race ['Id11.9 and
Trois'•- Sleep. Not narcotic,
11-11 For tiencral N,•rvons Condition,
m'• 1,511, of our 2011 selected pills
1,01 be sent to you, I'ooOwe tree, directly
from ,,ur btboratm•lex for $2.011.
15,15114 RESEARCH LIMITED
e080 Dlrknon Street,
StLLIORY,
N(:ILSL•'I(T ST'001(
145)005 NORTHERN Brown Latham,
59.00, Reties!) Raspberry Plants $6.0P
per 101)„.Red (eke and Pioneer Black
!'arrant Plants, 9 for 01.00. S. Frisley,
Huntsville, Ont.
RESERvaa NO9V for Pail planting. Fast
growing Chinese Elm Hedge, 13-20,
glebe, a •hen shipped. Planted one foot
apart: 20 for 53,25, Giant Exhibition
Paoonleo, red, white or pink, 3 for 51,50.
George0us assorted colours, large Darwin
Tulip Bulbs -26 for 11.70 or 100 for 50.30.
Apple Trees, McIntosh, Spy, or Delicious
3-00.h 1 h
g 3 fbr1.08
5 Pre,,
lo
ured
Garden Guidewith owerY older, Bronkdnl0
—IrmgeWBY Nurseries, Do{VmallYinO.
OPl'O1tTI1Ni'rtl7S FOR u'li)U074
BE A HAIRDRESSER
30IN CANADA'S LEADING $CHOOL
Great Opportunity Learn
Hairdressing
Pleasant dignified profession, good wage.
Thousands 0C successful Marvel graduate.
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MARVEL IIAIRDRE55INO SCHOOLS
368 llloor St, IV., Toronto
Brsochcs:
44 Ring St, Hamilton
72 Rideau St., Ottawa
DM Money In Moll Order llusinees, Spare
time, small Investment. Details free,
Village Cruftahap, 1e1,1. C., Box 125,
Meriden, Conn., 51.5.5,
PATENTS
11'ETHERSTONISACGH A Company. Pa-
tent Solicitors, Established 1300, 36P
nay Street, 'r,nnnto. Booklet of informa-
tion on request,
SALESMAN WANTED
MARItn00 Salesman 00 Nell nursery stack,
lestobltshed and reputable nursery rum -
pane. We train you. l'ny highest com-
missions, our men earn big money. Sev-
eral openings In Ontario. Pull or part
tine bests. Must have it ear and best
01 references, ''rile Toronto York
Nursery Company, 165 Bay St„ Toronto.
WA NTED
WANTED—Used Water Maio, unreal:
finitely 600 feet 8". Apply 30gden k
Orono Furniture Company Limned, Walk-
erton, Ontario. Phone I00.
Al
erote06 your 1300)48 'and CASH from
('11147 and THIEVES. We have n size
and hype of Safe, or Cabinet, for 0111'
100)00580. Visit us or aisle far prices,
etc., t0 Dept. W.
J.SCJ.TAVLEIR LIMITED
TORONTO SAFE WORKS'
1.18 )•'cont 5t. 10., l'nrouro
Bstnhlishri) 5861,
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