HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1950-10-25, Page 6He Built A House
From Newspapers
There's no accounting for :ultbi
don. Mitring the past iety weeks
it has•beetl reported that ae Egyp-
tian is attempting to walk the whole
length of the River Nile on his
hands; a Frenchman is trying to
'reach the North Pole on a bicycle
equipped with special tires; and
vet another Niagara barrel -juniper
has had to be reetraine,l by the po-
lice.
AVM do they do it?
"Because," say the psychologists,
"they have an overwhelming des-
ire to get out of the rut -- to do
- something sensationally different."
Well, some have certainly suc-
ceeded. Imagine drinking three
betties ,+t brandy in 30 minutes. just
to get out of the rut! An American
managed it recently. but within
another 30 minutes he was dead.
A few years ago a man rowed
across the Thames on a butcher's
tray. A tight -rope walker f.•alanced
himself for ten minutes on a piece
of rope slung between two sky-
scrapers, and a Canadian stood on
his head at the top of a bundrerl-
foot flagpole,
Then there is the acknowledged
prowess of the man who perched
' himself on a church .steeple and
stayed there for two days. Three
weeks later he broke his each when
lie fell downstairs at home,
The handiwork of some British
eccentrics may be seen in almost
every country in the shape of what
are known as "follies"—buildings
which are often ridiculous in ap-
pearance and serve no useful pur-
pose.
A Sussex schoolmaster, for in-
stance, had a house built without
doors or windows and with
passages that led nowhere.
Why? Even the schoolmaster
couldn't answer 'that one.
Much more understandable in
these days of acute housing short-
ege were the activities of George
James, a Sydney business man.
George always took a paper home
with him.- He had been doing se
ler forty years, and had.accumula-
ted many thousands.
His wife had left him because of
his strange hobby.
Then one day George took six
months' holiday, hired a lorry, and
transported his mountain of news-
papers to a remote spot in the
country. There he built himself a
house — Oi rolled -up newspapers,
and described himself as the happi-
est mall in the world!
Fashion Note for
Women
Handsome great coat in Bolivia
cloth—light weight, warm and
luxurious!
Lost at the Movies
Those who do not wear false
teeth do _not realize how agonizing
new or ill-fitting dentures can be.
Those who do will sympathize with
the man who took out his top set,
placed them on the arm of his seat
in the movies, and forgot all about
them when he left. 'Three months
have elapsed. and he k Gill trio
sent,itive to go back for them.
Hundreds of pairs of ,hoes are
left ender the 'eats by women who
slip them oft to ea, their corns,
though when they find themselves
itt the aisle in stockinged feet, or
bare -font, an usherette and her
flashlight renally emne to the 1'08 -
The variety of articles left in
cinemas is astonishing. The "red"
Dean of Canterbury recently emer-
ged leaving one. gaiter behind. One
woman left her baby asleep cm the
neat text to iter and did not miss
the child until she reached home!
C{ags, gloves, umbrellas, rings, wat-
ches, odd parcels of shopping, a
'wooden leg and the inner tube of
a motor tire have. been found tin-
der movie seats. People like con -
fort, and both Sten anti women
tette off their belts and forget them.
One - man did not realize he had
forgotten his until his trousers be-
gan to slide!
War is Lousy—Ar a 1.'N prison camp in South Rorea, a cap-
tured
a -tured Communist stands patiently while they spray him with
DDT powder, Other prisoners line up to await delousing.
Down itt Pennsylvania a pair of
brothers got the notion that the
standard arguments in favor of
keeping chickens in small groups
just wouldn't hold water. They
figured that if thousands of birds
can be kept together out of doors,
on the range a similar procedure
would work successfully in a laying
house.
* * *,
Confident that their idea would
work, they built the world's largest
chicken house. It is 360 feet long,
60 feet wide and four stories high.
It holds 22,500 chickens, 7,500 in
each of three pens. Each pen is a
single floor, without partitions. The
top floor is used for storage of feed,
litter and other supplies.
* k
*
To provide adequate light and
ventilation,rowsofwindows run the
entire length of the house. The
building is of wood construction,
native oak for framing and yellow
pine for siding, Because the broth-
ers, Earl Mack and Ray :Stack,
realized the necessity for full pro-
tection against the weather and
against fire, they chose fire-resist-
ant asphalt roofing for the roof.
The roofing color selected was red
—the standard color for all roofs on
the Thos. Hark & Sons farm. The
brothers believe that attractive uni-
formity of appearance can be creat-
ed by using the same color of roof-
ing for all buildings in .tic farm-
stead.
The \likes built the huge struc-
ture in order to achieve labor-sav-
ing efficiency to a degree impossible
in small pens. One ratan and a part-
time assistant now take care of all
22,500 birds.
• * • *
The Mack's methods are as
streamlined as their chickens' eggs.
\Vateiing is completely automatic,
and mechanization enables feeding
and egg -collecting to he done itt
minimum time.
The water trough is three inches
higher at one end than the outer,
330 fent away: A continuous flow
of water enters the high end and a
drain carries off the excess at the
low end,
• 0 1
toast\ is feel front two hoppers,
also•330 feet Jong. Theschoppersare
filled from an ingenious mash car-
rier—a wedge-silapecl, sheet metal
container about four feet high, with
the point of the wedge down. It is
suspended Plum a ceiling tracts that
Laugh at raindrops in this Cra-
vanette"treated pure silk scarf,
a creation that repels water,
When not dressing tip a suit' it
serves as etnergency rainv-clay
heart cov'etittg,
circles at both ends of the pen to
pass above both hoppers. The car-
rier holds 800 pounds of trash and
is filled from a chute coating down
from the fourth floor, To fill the
hoppers, a man simply- pushes the
carrier around the track, letting
mash flow out of the point of the
wedge- into the hoppers.
'5 *
The egg -collecting system saves
time, too. Midway between the two
rows of nests, which are six feet
apart, is another overhead track. .A
wooden platform ]tangs from the
track. To gather eggs, a man places
empty baskets on the platform.
Pushing it along the track, he walks
• along one row of nests, taking the
eggs as he goes. \\'lieu he reaches
the end of the pen, he pushes the
platforin back again, this time re--
moving
e-ntoving eggs front the .Mier row of
nests.
5 *
To simplify grain feeding, the
Macke built 18 grain chutes in a
long row. The chutes are in groups
of three—in each group, a chute for
corn, one for wheat and one for
oats.. The chutes conte down from
the storage floor. To feed grain
by this system a man has only to
walk along the row, stopping at
each chute, to scatter grain with a
bucket.
Other Papers PtslT
Boners Too
Frank Advertisement
We want you to -etc the cont-
plctcnttss of our hosiery tlep:trt-
meut.—Goldsboro News. ,
Automatic Alarm Clock
1loes:hold goods for sae. Elec-
tric rooster.—Vali \\'ort Times -
Bulletin,
Handy for Homes With Flooded
Cellars
For sale: Indoor mo:ur:,oat. Per-
fect condition.—Salem State -man.
Comedians Take Note
Egg -laying contest wt-):: by heal
mom—Hollywood Citizen.
Wanted: DDT
The condnctur of the Civic Sym-
phony Orchestra originated the
two -duty festival. I,etst year the
event was a bug sueoess,---Soullt
Bay Daily Breeze.
Novel Laborsaver
Garden rultiv:tio?-: •I'tvo good
used Ileagles. — Ifeneficld News-
Jourltal.
MURDERER GAVE HIS
EYES AWAY
Two minute,; after Michel Wat-
tle, a twenty -year-old murderer,
was guillotined :It Metz recently,
his eyes were carefully removed by
surgeons. Within forty-eight hours
they had been grafted to an ex -
serviceman who was referred to by
the authorities as "Lieutenant N."
After Watrin, an accountant. had
confessett to the murder of two
French taxi-drivers, he was so
stnitten by his conscience that he
asked the prison authorities if he
might atone by leaving his eyes to
a 'child or to a ratan who had been
blinded in the last war.
Touched by the man's sincerity the
governor agreed. He told the mur-
derer that he could not disclose to
whom the eyes would go, but he
promised it would be an ex -service-
man. So Watrin walked to the guill-
otine ,comforted by the thought that
this death would bring sight and new
(tope to a war -blinded man.
Lovely Spring Water
There is life and action in a bub-
bling spring. There is mystery, such
as only small boys know, in the
welling up of its transparent waters,
visible and yet invisible, louring
out always; but, like the widow's
cruse, never emptied. Springs are
life-giving; and above all, they are
free, earth's open-handed bounty.
The spring I best remember is
high up on the side of Buck Moun-
tain. Here a tiny rivulet flows front
under a blue -grassy bank ,into a
bowl dug into weathered granite,
Above it spread two- great chestnut
trees. Back of these, reaching up to
the mountain top, there is a long
slope covered with deep forest, car-
peted with moss and drifts of dead
leaves.
To this spring carte ttte small boy
to fetch water for the harvest Lands,
carefully instructed to clip it tip
from the northeast corner where it
was reputedly colder. To the brick
spring -house just below it were
brqught buckets and great crocks of
milk and cream. here, too, was
heard the gurgling drum of the
churn ... Beyond the spring -house
stood the. great wash pots, the foamy
tubs and boards with their good
smell of soap and cleanliness.
At the noon hour, under the
chestnut trees the farm hands, alter
a deep drink, stretched out luxus-
iously while tate boy watched the
white clouds float overhead tatoug)t
the lac' leaves, ear attuned for the
dinner horn. .
He who kneels at a spring to
slake his theist renews his strength
as did the ancient Achilles. Modern
man may drill deep wells or pipe
his water for utiles over or under
mountains and even across deserts,
but the explorer, the pioneer and
first settlers must take nature as
they find it. To these, wattrholcs
and springs become the most im-
portant points of their whole jour-
ney.... Springs, too, are stopping
places. They locate the cabin of the
first settler, and they have playcd-
a most important part in the plac-
ing of the cities and towns of all
nations,—From "Rocks and Rivmrs
of America," by Ellis W. Shuler.
G. Herbert Lash, who becomes
director of public relations for
the Canadian National Rail-
ways on October 23, 1950,
QUEER OCCUPATION
liaising moths for a living is
slightly unusual, but that's how
Mrs. Mary Holmes of Brunswick,
New Jersey, spends her time. Be-
sides regular servings of vitamins
and fish meal, the moths get a daily
fart al old suits and blankets, A
few years ago they digested 74
suits.
Mrs. Holmes raises the cloths so
chemists may experiment with
various gontrol methods,
,/ a SLY,EATC
Lt a room issue of The Fergus
News -Record Editor 1-Iugh Temp -
lin had some interesting things to
say about the game of lacrosse; and
we alight remark, in pasaing, that
before either we or it went into
a decline—you pays your money
and tapes your choice!—Ove got
more real thrills out of lacrosse
than front any other sports we ever
attended.
The article we refer to dealt,
specifically, with the ,uestion of
whether or not lacrosse players
should be forced to wear more pro-
tcctide armor, particularly helmets.
Many sports followers ascribe the
decline of the game from its once -
proud estate to its present fairly
lowly status to too notch roughness;
and while admitting that compel -
gory helmets might be a good
thing, Tentpiiu rather pools -poops
this view, pointing out that the
chances of injury in lacrosse are
far smaller than in other "bodily -
contact sports" such ac football or
hockey. '
* 0' *
Now we are in no position to
argue over such a matter with
anybody front Fergus, one of the
few centres where the lacrosse fires
have been kept blazing brightly
over tate years, We know that our
own personal enthusiasm for the
game began to become lukewarm
away back when R. J. Fleming,
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
ACGNTS W'ANT'ED
—MA—RE—MONEY
-
IN YOUR SPARE TIME
Sell Leading Lndy Cosmetics lin your home
loenitty. 1'lxpel'leneo not ncecasa'y. We
train you. Write The A, L IttsVelgh 00,,
152 Jnrvte Street, Toronto 9, Ontario.
DAISY CIi1CRh
PULLETS, 12 week's to laying, honey
breode, 10101 shipment. Edgar Cud -
more, Hensel!, Ont,
"WONDERFUL livability and growth"
tint's the kind of ret,ortc we get from
euatomero who purehneo 'rw'eddle Broiler
Chlrin. Also ektrks heed for layers.
T'o ktle ('hick Hatcheries Limited, Fer-
gus, Ontario,
BOOItKEEIMNG
ACCOUNTING
BOOISICEEPINC and Accounting Service,
Irving N. Stumm, 29 Nesmith Street,
Toronto.
BUSINESS OPI'ln(TUNP1IES
ESTABLISHED general store and living
quarters 1n town 50 mlloo from Sudbury
on Trans - Canaan Highway Two-storey
brick building, 85' x 80', Now mining,
railroad and tourlct trade. Sacrifice. owner
unable to manage. Please do not (tweed -
gate unions Interested. Write Alvortleor,
12 101gln St., S., Sudbury'. '
1/3'10Nlt AND CLEANING
HAVE you gestates sects dyeing or clean•
ing7 tVrito to us for Information, We
are glad to answer your queatlon0, De-
partment H. Pnrtcer'a Dye works Limited,
791 Yonge Street, Toronto, Ontario.
FARMS 10111 SALE
218 ACRES in Donnie'letvnattle, all good
land. most of It under cultivation. Hood
bank barn with water sytten, good drive
shed and Oleo 0 -room red brtek house,
near Stratford, J. R. Jackson. Royal Bank
Belldtng, Stratford. Tel. 3203-397W.
Grand Mogul of the Termites, re-
fused to field his team 0 Mick-
ey Ion, although declared eligible
by the league, played for the oppo-
sition, and the opposition -- the
Tecumsehs—rather than lose a fat
gate let him get away with it.
k * :1
But that is too far back in history
for any but the oldest inhabitants
to recal'1. Thinking it over, it
seems to us that we quit going to
lacrosse principally because they
cut it down to broiling size, took
it indoors and then tabbed it with
the—to its—most repulsive tag of
"BO\LA," -`
,k ,} e
Still, at that our -reason for quit-
ting could have been something
else. Maybe we were just like the
southern hill -billy who, when asked
why he was swearing such a ntoitrn-
fel expression, replied that he had
found it necessary to give up smok-
ing, and missed it' badly. "Doctor's
orders?" inquired his questioner.
"Naw," replied the hill -billy, taking
dead aim at a nearby stump, "I
just found out that P0 ruttier chow."
k * *
So possibly the reason for us
finding ourselves increasingly
A,W,O.L, from lacrosse games was
simply because of discovering
simething else we'd "ruttier do" and
had nothing whatever to do with
the sport iself. We wouldn't know
about that, But we do know, for
certain, that it wasn't the roughness
or brutality of lacrosse which kept
us away.
'8 ,5 8
However, to those who thinlc—
like Hugh Templin—that compul-
sory helmets would be a good thing
"for the game, the following hoary
anecdote alight be of interest. It's
the one about the Alabama charac-
ter wito had - been brought. up
before the Judge, for about the
twentieth time, on a charge of
wife beating.
n *
His Honour, looking very grins,
was just about t0 pass sentence
when suddenly the wife put in a
. plea for lenience. "Don't send Ras-
tas to jail, Judge," she begged,
"1 -Ie got his faults, but in some
ways he's tite most thoughtful hus-
band a lady could have." •
* r '1
"How can you talk like that,
as onion?" thundered His • honor.
"Isn't it the truth that almost every
Saturday night he • cones home
full of swamp -juice and beats you
to a frazzle.? How can you call
a man like 'that a thoughtful bus -
band?"
* * *
"What you says is the truth's own
truth, Judge," answered the wife.
"Still, in all the years he's been
doing that, Rastus has never once
put a mark on me where folks could
see itt"
'0 * *
And that's the way it is with the
sport of lacrosse. Football and
hockey are undoubtedly much
rougher games, Even a soccer, re-
feree—in Canada or South America
that is to say—is in much greater
danger of permanent injury than
any lacrosse player. But here's the
difference. In those sports they
comparatively rarely, if ever, put
a mark on one another where folks
can see it. So pass a rule that the
lacrosse boys must wear helmets
and see that the rule is obeyed.
:k * *
And perhaps—who knows—such
a rule might even be the means of
luring more of the rising generation
to take tip the game. Practically
every lad nowadays has a secret
dreamt of winding up either in the
movies or in television, and it is
even said that some of our athletes
on opening the morning paper,
take a hinge at whether the photo-
grapher caught their most photo-
genic profile before they look a5J
the scoring recordsi:
So maybe the tragi ;. would conte
out' for lacrosse ttfpre readily ff
they were assured that they world
finish utiscarrel and with features
intact, and so, escape being' always
• cast, when they get to Hollywood,
as menaces or villains.
FA1101 FOR SALTS
180 AC1tti5 NOrttl l0aetho 0e 2 mite: tram
city, Tido le good roiling clay loran, teen
fenced, \veli drained, boa 2 bunk barns,
3 drive sited, lovely 7 -room meld brlek
house, Thio would mnho nn ideal dairy
farm, present nwnar retiring. Also 100 -
acre farm, West :sorra, 8 miles from city,
acres bosh, balance good clay loam, new
drive shed, good bank barn with olio,
hydro and water pressure system, good
1 -storey )muse 10Ith 11ety roof, good reason
for selling, Jelin R. Rtelmon, Realtor and
Insurnnee, Royal Bank Building, Stratford,
Tel 3100.809718. '
NOR sales 10 Imre. excellent land; 0 -
roots brier home. ,,tt eonvellenees, (10,'•
age, barn, Poultry house, Benet:, bus,
highway 8 0,11*. 16,300 full price. Suit
soml-retired couple. J. Salter, Victoria
Xtnrbotu: Ontu'Io.
FOR SALE
efOTOROr0i,ES, Harley DavldCon, New
and used, bought, Gold, exchanged. Largo
stock of guaranteed 0000 mnlnrcyrloo. Re-
pairs by teeters -trained mechanics. BI -
cycles, and complete lino 01 wheel goods,
also Guns, Beata and Johnson Outboard
Motors Open evenings until nine except
treatment,. strand orate & sports, Bing
at Seaford, Hamilton.
ALU5IINUI1 'It000INO
Immediate shipment—.110" Oleic M. 0, 7.
8, 9, 10 tont lengths Prices delivered to
Ontario points on npollentton. For estim-
ates. onmpl,s, literature, etc., write: —
A, C. LESLIE S CO., 1,1I11210 )
180 (.•0313t[SSION10ltS STREET
TORO 7010 2, ONTARIO
tSa'ILtL'1' SHINGLES -83.85
Those Interlocking shingles aro Just one
of our many rooting and asphalt bm•galno,
10 tb. Butt Shingles 55,26; 165 Tlteloo
5.4.30 Ider '100 aua•o feet.
t" Thick Insulate] 11:1001 Brick or Co-
der Grain design, only 00.45 per square.
60 Ib, red or green Granite 1100005. 3245.
Above pt'Ices F.O.B.. Hamilton.
Many other ba'gnin0 In these fontory
seconds, we doubt 5,0 can toll tram first
grndo aorta
At,ttlt]NUta COIent1.feet. SHEETS,
only 08.00 ear 100 on, feet. Delivered
Ontario, Quebec and Maritimes,
All new stock. 20 gauge, various aim
available for prompt shipment. Send mea-
surements for free connotes, pet, yours
now, Stock limited.
ROBERT JONES LUMBER. CO.
Hamilton, Ontario
HI -POWERED
SPORTING RIFLES
LA11012 assortment end better values.
Write for latest cntaing listing various
bargain prlceo.
SCOPE SALES CO., LTU.
3211 Queen Street, • Ottawa, Ontario.
"D" CASE TRACTOR, ••S" Caso tractor,
"SC" Cana tractor, •'VAC" Case tractor,
Oliver "70" tractor, 1211 John Deere trac-
tor,
raytor, 'V" Case tractor, "C" Case tractor,
Iva'dson tractor, Annly Elliott's Farm
Equipment Limited, Phone 2100 Stirling,
Ontario ,
BALED SHAVINGS
FOR SALE—Baled softwood ahavins:,
01,rlead lot only. Write Plus Products,
P.O. Bos 75, Montreal 3,
REO. Suffolk rams, lambs and yearling.
of good breeding, Chmrh01de Farm,
Lunentntt-g, Ontario.
RIP LES
RIVLES—.303 eat. British Enfield Repent-
ers, 20" berrel. Nitro -proofed and thor-
oughly chedce0. Expertly reblued. 011 fin-
ished walnut stook. Condition perfect,
Appearance as new, A reliable hunting
,rifle for oily 537.50. Alen "Modified"
BTlli:h Enneld
.503 eat, 120" barrel). ]ter
peater0 In excellent condition 327.10. Sa-
tisfaction guaranteed or money ,•, funded.
other types write for Itat. With penin:;"
of rifle box 4S cartridges 52,00. Eastern
Sporting Equipment Co., 1320 Bank St,
Ottawa, Ont.
USED Tiasaey-Harris Hammer mill 510,101
21.0. like new. Also deep well pumps.
Reasonable. Allen Garage, 803 Bridge St.
Nln:atY, Falls, Ont.
200 ACRES, bank barn S6208, cement
stables, ling vet, sheep ecu, implement
ohed. All buildings have 00001 roofs. wa-
ter pumped to barn by windmill, 'ren
acres hardwood bueh, t-rnon 1000} brick
house, hydro throughout, A mild to school,
25 miles from Fergus. Price 111,000,
(Other fa•tn0 at yadou0 prlcea). A. II.
Halls, Real Estate. Srot•ana, Ont.
Lb1SSEN your meat bills. Raise rabbits.
Booklet, betel\ plan, and price lint, eye.
Carter's Rabbitry, Chillla'nels. B.C.
JOd'lt Innate duldtetted for xmna Nitta.
Artivuc mover and 3 pages, 505 for 200.
11,110 loam 100-55.00. 80n,a paper 30.00
Per 100. Sang poonta set to mimic.
MELODY MILL 5'l'rDIdS
1(111 Carlton 5t., Toronto. Ont.
WATER tower, sectional steel, 90 feet
and 1,200 gallon rapacity lank, sound
condition. Boat offer accepted. write
Rupert, R.I1. 1, Westboro (Ottawa).
New Ouarnnteel IIOttx1'.r one-man Chain
SAWS with rove otnrter--5290,00 with
• rewind :darter—$275,00. Equipped w•ilh
20" or 29" b1"deo and the new Smith
Planer Chain. SOLOS Tax extra it appli-
cable. We take truant,
S3117'1t-Q,\L5'IDt LtllPPEED
0(7 W*,teleh SL, - (t1:10161'11, lin.
NEW, Imported' European poppy seed
grinders, 53,06. Imported records, citc-
tionnrles and homes, In Czeehoalovak,
German. Polish and tlkrainian,- write 1.0
3', Dolncok, Dept, "10", 060 Main St.,
Winnipeg.
Y(11 NO .ltonning Agoutis, trained 250
Miles, Andy Denrdon, New ,Lowed Ont,
LAI1OIL OP FEIRL)
LABOURERS 0102 be scarce next spring.
Apply now and barn one for nest spring,
or sooner, LRA. P.O. Box 333, Ottawa.
Onta'lo,
MEDICAL•
Nature's help -- Dixon's Remedy
for Rheumatic Pains,, Neuritis,
Thousands praising it.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 Elgin, Ottawa
$1.25 Express Prepaid
WAiE JP YOUR
LIVE/ ILE-
Without Calomel—And You'll Jump Out of
Bed in the Morning Rarin' to Go
The liver Should pour out about 2 pints o1
bile !nine Into your digestive tract every dny.
If this bile is not flowing freely your food may
not digest, it may Just deeny in the digestive
treat, Then gas blonte up your stomnot, You
got constipated, You feel emir, suck and the
world looks Dunk.
It. tapes these mild, gentle Carter's Little
Livor Pills to got those 2 pinta of bile flow.
ing freely to make you fool "up and up."
got a package today. EReetivo lO Inakmg
bile cow freely, Ask for Carter's Little Livor
PBIa, 386 at. any Ilrug:tnre,
A10n1Crt 1,
('1(81814 WAJPL' 1t1'nn){701t
Lenvea no arm's. Ymtr Druggist :rile
CRESS,
NEW, 3 -way wonder tabletu builds blood,
toles n:rye: foot. Orval for simple
anemia. 510100 eloar pimple:. 80110, clears
the blood stream. Magee tired Mkt: naive
with Pop, vim, vigor. I;ush 11 for trial
parltuge. Lotto economy sine, $3. Money
book searnn too, itnprrinl Industrie:. P.O.
Box 001, Winnipeg hent,
UNWANTED HAIR
Eradleutal Iran, any cart of the body
With Seca -Pole, n remarkable dieenvery
of Olio age. Snot -Fele cont ins nn lueal-
ful ingredient, and will destroy Ibe hair
root,
I.OR-nit$0lt LABORATORIES
070 Grenville Street.
vuueoder, ILC,
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry. eczema rasllee
and wooing skin troubles, Post's Ecze-
ma Stive Will not disappoint you,
Itching. sealing, burning eczentn, acne,
ringworm. idmplea and athlete's foot, tete
r002ond renally to the stainless, ado:leas
obntne t, regardless of how stubbnl'n or
hopeless they scent,
PRICE 81.00 PER JAR
Sent Pest Free on Receipt 00 Pelee
POST'S REMEDIES
080 Queen S6 E„ Corner of Logan, 'Toronto
OUR Polity 110C13r,t111.13 TABLETS
GIVE W(INDEttb'U1. RIM -113F
B. 1 For Catarrh of Stmnaeh, Spinal In-
Ilnnunatinn,
R- 2 For Rheumatlo Pains.
13- 3 For Spinal Eehnustion, Backache.
13- 4 For Plies.
13- d'or Lite' and Kidney. Gait -Bladder.
If•
11 For Silo.
B. 7 For Palpitating Heart,
B- 0 i''or Stomach anti intestinal Clean-
ing.
n- 0 "00 Heartburn, Hyper -acidity.
B-10 For Nervous Condition due to Heart
Irregularity. Will ease Pains and
\'\'emote Sleep. Not narcotic.
13.11 For General Nervous Condition,
Ono bottle of our 200 nelceted pills
will be sent to you, postage free, directly
from ear labo•at ries for $2.00,
t1A'1'OI, RESEARCH 1)8611')01)
2000 Dickson Siren,
S1LLEttl', P.a.
NURSES
GENERAL DUTY NURSES
FOR lied Cross Outpost Hoopilnts In
Oatnrio. Opporlunitea for advancement.
Good worldng conditions in pleaotnt sur-
roundings. Apply 11iro,•tor of Outpost
Hospital Department, Inns ria Dlvlsfun,
Rel Croao, 021 3100010 St.. 10000to; or
Phone Medway 6652.
N UItSEItl' 5'POLIt
RASPBERIRIES. (Government certiliedt
Descriptive list free, W. J. Galbraith,
"Mnpleoeno," Stapler, Ont.
CHOICIO Red Raspberry Canoe 51.60 per
105-523.00 per 1.000, Edgar Precis.
Gmcdale, Ont.
U1'1'(Ilt'1'UNI'VILe 10(0 31:01 , 51 11081IEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S L15.0DINO SCHOOL
Great Opportunity Learn
Hairdressing
Pleasant dignified profession, good wage.
Thousands of auceassful Marvel graduates
America's Creatcat System
Illustrated Catalogue bice
Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCI300LS
358 Bl0or St. W„ Toronto
Branches:
49 )(ing St., Hamilton
73 Rideau St.. Ottawa
I'A'I1,6. i'S
AN DETER to every inventor—Llat of in-
ventiela and hal Information sent free,
Tho Itamany Co„ Registered Patent Atter-
net's, 273 Bank Street, Ottawa.
PETHERS'1'oNHAU011 fi Company, Pa-
tent Solicitors, Established 1890, 860
Bay Street, Tot'ontn ttouhlel et Informa-
tion on request.
PHOT(I01tAPHY
PEIIFEC't' ('ICl'(0155
Studio enlargements, 5 x 10, beautifully
mounted -01.25. coloured 52.00. Eight ex-
nonure rolls 15 tents. rem•ndnctinn negative
ala rge -0 colts. Daily Service, Dox 82,
Sint i"n D.. Toronto.
101'1,01 Ira
6o FitINeil t'uloidea all diftorent, 80e1
Inc requesting apprtiValo. Adana, -
Stamp, 2023 Main (tt'W, ',I,t 021'0', 11,i'
WA Per NIP
51.11011575HI—Excellent oppot•tnnity, 190-
perienced man In ,cork rnt 1',001, and
tractors. Steady employment. Advancement
for right elan. Covered by Sickness and
Accident insure are. Top wt,grs, Plume
4730. or write 11,\SNA'S IN'1'10it NATION -
Al. SALES 9 SI0lt sirs, GUELPH.
ASSISTANT DIETITIAN
Irl 4X\I:u•ge Lusp11:J. . 11 i : tive living
quarters. flood beteg. lute ,',•pa:, pen-
elon and liberal troll lien plan, State
expM•irne - 0,1d ,pntnflral tetra to Miss
Evan:. Mountain 00 nut:?ium, Ilnuliltou,
Outto•io-
A SAFE
OINTMENT
ISSUE 42 1950