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The Brussels Post, 1950-11-29, Page 6"River That Goes Down" The fairest hart of the great geological fault w which the Jor- dan Valley- belongs is the Walley of the .Lebneum-'; '. , Hemmed in by +.-11e tegi'te, ,coal ceder-eadorned 'Lebanon \tonntains nn the west side, and by the Anti - 1_ch: tion range on the east. the valley Was once called l "1-1ollow Syria" 4 (.,.tele ilia 1, eon,. 1'r by teedi..l at tints to all of southern Syria and 'Palestine, with the exception of 'Phoenicia. lac fertile fields and strong streams have llelpe:l to till it with cities and settlements from earliest antiquity on. 'Their glitter- ing crown teas Ltdbele. its founding fathers worshipped the god of fertility there, Baal was his name. The Greeks. however, had another word for it. They identifiedhim with their sun-god, 1' -b• wasrenamed Heli - s B 1 1 7I ht. Baalbek e Heli- opolis, only t 1 revert til former 01101., C " name after the Greek an had set. The Romans erected mighty tem- ples there to some of th:1r many' gods. Byzantines changed these buildings into churches and basi- licas, and Moslems into citadels and mosques. Mongols dettroy'ecl and massacred: earthquakes, too, had their disastrous innings; but the ruins still stand in imposing majesty. Six of the Mighty col- umns of the Temple of Jupiter, each sixty-two feet high, and measuring seven and a half feet in diameter, hold themselves proudly erect to this very day. Their glorious Corinthian capitols com- mand a distant view over the water- ed greenness of their valley. North of Baalbek. which stands on a watershed. at an elevation of some three thousand six hundred feet, the Orontes . sets its course, finally to flow by the city of Antioch at a point about twenty miles front its outlet into the Mediterranean Sea. The evangeli- cal efforts of early Christianity proved most fruitful at Antioch. There "Saul who is also called Paul" and Barnabas established the central church, to which they would return at journey's end . . . It was at Antioch by the Orontes that the converts to the new faith which was preached with such passion by Paul and Barnabas were first called "Christians" t Acts 11:26 To the south of Baalbek, the union of four streams creates- the river that is well named Jordan, that is, the "River that Goes Down." Called esu-Sheria, the "Drinking Place," by the Arabs, it journeys downward, ever down- ward, from the glittering snows of Mount Hermon, which perpetually cap its top, to the turbid depths of the Dead Sea. Washed white with snow at its beginnings, it soon acquires a m flingsvdd y 9010'10 g Finall- y it its silt into the sea'ssalty ed r swallowed watersbefore being swar of lie were the sites of Sodom at/, as and Gommorrah - Front "The River Jordan,' by Nelson Glueck. SALLY'S SALLIES ,'Are you sure that love s no dart of a. racket in this gene?' BATS IN YOUR BELFRY? When bats get into the hair of human beings -or any other hair -they are only looking for dark place to ]nide, according to Dr. Ralph S, Palaner, The ability of bats to "fly blind" by sending out supersonic squeaks and then hear- ing the echo from obstacles has been well established. How bats produce these supersonic squeaks is not known. "We do know that bats don't hear their own superson- ic squeak because of an eat muscle which contacts and opens only dur- ing the echo," says Dr. Palmer. "WOWED" THE KOREANS Jack London, who reported the Russo-Japanese war from Rarea in 1904, would be astounded at the "progress' made by the inhabitants since his day, One afternoon a high official came to his hotel and told him that the entire population of the small town was in the square be- low, and were shouting for him. Enormously bucked that his fame had spread so far, he went down and climbed a special plat- form that had been erected. Then the official asked him to take out his artificial teeth. This he did, and the crowd, who had never seen Otis, tgrth before; tv;-r, thrilled, So, to the tune of tumultuous applause, he stood there fore the best part of an hour, taking his teeth out, putting them back, and going through the motions of chewing! His demonstration was so suc- eessfut that a number of wealthy Koreans had their teeth extracted, so that they, too, could have den- tures, MUM FR if Wt/ µr iaLsJG1y -•N` .according to experts of the Uni- ted States Department of Agricul- ture a great 0111 ty farmers are toe- • sing away ten per cent or more of their stored grain eimPly letting insects chew away, uncon- trolled, after the harvest i.4 in the lin. • And those same experts claim that •11,11 wastage. 1s by no ltleaine necessary. The inroads ufadc by insects can be stopped by pleasures w11ieh almost any farther can use. It is estimatedthat if all .mall graiu and corn could be protected from loss the gain would he around a billion dollars a year; and that's south ofthe border r only.Add the Canada, tiherein Cdc we losses suffer s and the total would be dl palin g, even in these days when gig money figures are juggled around SO eUr- lessly. And while I realize that many of the following recommenda- tions come to you too late for use this year. they might be well worth clipping out, saving, and acting upon when the time comes. O * * In a recent study, entomologists carefully weighed grain going into average farm storage in many loca- tions, and then reweighed the same grain when it moved out of storage in the spring. They found that after allowing for ((moisture losses, insect damage had caused actual shrinkage in weight of from one to two per cent per month. Insect damage not only reduces market value of grain per bushel; it actual- ly reduces the amount of grain. a a 4 Most insects that destroy grain will work when the temperature in the bin is above 60 degrees F. That's why damage is greater in the South than in the North, But farmers in the North have to take into con- sideration the fact that grain in a bin cools off very slowly and may stay warm enough for insects t0 work in it two or three months after cold weather arrives. So the damage may be going on when the outside temperature is considerably below 60 degrees F. • * * Small grain or shelled corn should be fumigated as soon as it is put in the bin. Corn left over from last year in the crib can be protected by shelling it, putting it in tight bins, and fumigating it. * a ,a The official recommendation for fumigation is as follows: Use a mixture of one part by volume of carbon disulphide, and four parts of carbon tetrachloride. Do not attempt to mix it yourself -you'll find it for sale already mixed ed under some trade name, This e, liquid fumigant will not harm your grain as food, feed or seed. * v 10 Level off the surface of the grain in 'the bin to at least six inches below the top of the side walls. Use three gallons of the mixture for each 1000 bushels of small grains in tight wooden bins, twice that for shelled corn. Increase the dosage to eight gallons per 1000 bushels if the grain is in shallow bins with a large surface area. k 1k 5 Apply it evenly over the surface of the grain in the bin. You can use an inexpensive bucket sprayer if you chose, and you need not enter the bin. The liquid turns into a gas after it has been applied, and this gas sinks down through the grain and kills the insects as it goes. Avoid breathing the fu- mes, and wear a gas mask for your protection if you are exposed to it for more than a very short time. 1k 10 :10 Bins must be tight, or the fumi- gant won't do the job well. Tack laths or strips of heavy paper over cracks. A slatted crib won't hold the gas unless completely lined, or covered outside with roofing or building paper. Select a still day in mild, warns weather to do the job, or wind may blow the gas away 'before all the insects are killed. If the grain 'is warm, 65 to 75 degrees F., low . a��•, • �t.. d. l S.o • tom,:^ ll� 4 . 1 . r .T. ��.�� L -v r 1.w ...1 w - } 1' wi , Y. tie _3 .� a• t/1,. y "� tiSw .':2a � `r. .. 'sem. ,114 l �-\' . ! h3,.:�, .v-..raf�a�fi:,vr�i�?�'.v-ra;�,n:.•_a\....,_..\\..�r'�:a..l'I.-,,..�-,:.'.'t�:i�'�s. Building's Costly Over There, Same As Here -If you've got enough dough to get oter -he 1 new credit restrictions you'd still better recheck your cost estimate. Recent. hurdle of the t wage increases won by nearly 30 per cent of union construction workers in 85 major cities in the United States have pushed up the average hourly scale of all union construction workers to $2.32 all hour, - New schart above show's the average rates by crafts in the 0100th of October outside temperatures will not hin- der fumigation. k ;4 4 Properly done, one fumigation soon after harvest will hold stored grain free of insect damage until warns weather the following spring. But, insects are busy whenever and wherever there is mild weather. They will increase in number and do an ever-increasing amount of damage during mild weather until the grain is used or sold. This is particularly true when the moisture content of the grain is high, when the grain isn't very clean, or if the bin wasn't cleaned out thoroughly before putting the grain into it. a Even grain that has been fumi- gated should be inspected at least once each month. Look for warns spots, or areas where the grain may be webbed or caked. Take a sam- ple of the grain from such areas and look for small worths, weevils, beetles, moths, and kernels that are chewed or have small holes in them. x k 1x If you find that insects are work- ing in your grain, refunligate imme- diately. A new way to protect stored grain from insects for a much lon- ger period of time, developed by a commercial company, is under in- vestigation. It consists of applying a dust impregnated with pyrethrins and piperonyl butoxide to the grain as it goes into storage.e. This meth - od, unlike the fumigation treatment, provides a residue of insecticide and has the advantage of preventing grains from becoming infested. Fu- migation kills all insects present at the time. but protection ends when the fumigating gas disappears. * ,0 * The pyrethrin and piperonyl butoxide mixture is well known as one of the safest insecticides in fixe today. And, properly applied to newly harvested uninfested grain going into storage, it may give protection from insect damage for as long as a year or more. If this newly discovered method of treat- ing grain in storage for insect con- trol works, without complications, it will be a major scientific advance- ment. x ,s :x Entomologists have developed a year-round program to prevent in- sect damage to stored grains, The procedures outlined below will pro- tect stored grain. e 1. Construct tight bins to ((lake ' fumigation easier. 2. Clean up your old bin's thor- oughly before refilling diem with new grain. 3. Clean up trash or old grain from outside your bins. 4. Store bran, shorts, or other milled feed, and old feed bags, away front your stored grains, because FEED AND WATER CONTAINERS. OLD VARNISH CANS WiTH PORTIONS OF BACKS CUT OUT SERVE ON FENCE AS WATER CONTAINERS FOR POULTRY. OLD EAVE ('ROUGHS ON FENCE SERVE M FEED coNTAINERs, they often contain insect pests brought in from the Mill. 5, Spray the floors and inside walls with DDT, TDI, Methoxy- chlor, chlordane, or the pyrethrin- butoxide mixture before refilling your empty storage bins. Apply with an ordinary garden - type sprayer, 6. Store your grain as rlry as possible. 7. Have it as free from broken kernels and dirt as possible, 8. Fumigate all grain as soon af- ter harvest as possible. 9. Inspect all stored grain at least once each month -and fumi- gate it again if evidence of insect damage shows up.. We see by the papers .that in at least one Ontario town the ladies have taken avidly to the ancient sport of shooting pool -and not doing so in the seclusion of private residences, club rooms, Y.\\',C.A.'s or the like either, but right out in public pool rooms, or. "billiard aca- demies" as some of the higher -class joints used to try and call them- selves in the olden days. 4 1x a 'fE 'cite, we ever h only difference (The o l Y personally noticed between a pool room and a billiard academy was that the latter had a minimum fee of five cents per cue, whereas some of the former charged a rate of two -and -a -half; but that is entirely by the way.) d .Anyway, with the entry of the fair sex into the game, there dis- appears just about the last haven of safe refuge for the mere male; and whether or not this will prove to he a good thing for humanity, time alone will tell. 1\'Iany of you will recall the time when a man could go to a bowling alley, prize fight, burlesque show, wrestling match, pool roost or even a tavern without exposing himself to any of that refining and ennobling femin- ine influence you read so much about. But now it seems as if those days are gone forever; and maybe it is just as well, although we wouldn't wish to lay very heavy odds that it is. 5 4 4 All of which will serve to intro- duce a 'little news of the latest developments in the game on the other side of the briny, where they take their pool and billiards seri- ously, And it would appear that,. over in England, all the snooker fans are waiting breathlessly to sec if, during' the coming season, some expert will conte out with a maximum of 147. This, we night explain for those who did not have the benefits of a mis-spent youth, is equivalent to rolling 300 in ten- pins, or 450 in five -pins. In other words, if you score 147 in snooker, you've hit the jackpot, and cannot go any further. 4 4 a So far, nobody's done it - al- though there are said to be half a dozen experts, scattered through- out the world, ranahle of the feat, • some afternoon or evening w'lten- everything happens to be breaking right. Most -likely prospect is said to be Joe Davis, an Engl'sh pro. For 20 years Davis was undefeated champion of the world at snooker, or Snooker's pool to give it the full and proper name, 'lien, last February - as reported in this column, a young French-Canadian front Winnipeg, George Chenier by name, threw snooherdom into a tizzy by not only beating Davis, but by setting a new record, Although the old game of pocket billiards -or 15 -ball pool -is still highly popular in Canada, there are indications that snooker is gradu- ally replacing it in public favor. And with the advent of the. ladies -men- tioned earlier -it scenes probable that there will be more and more snooker played. Unlike billiards it is not a test of mathematical exacti- tude 117 the application of dynamics, as one writer puts it, but an ad- venturous game in which anything is likely to happen, And that fea- ture, alone, should make it suit the woolen to a "T." x 5 It requires less concentration, Fhike shots, which are a source of disgust to the earnest billiards plan, are part and parcel of snooker Ienchantmenti t nCall, a et O all, le gaiety theame, One can become fairly Y good quite soon and go on improv- ing all the time. That is, until you get into the professional class, where the 147 break is the only limit. 11 As for the 147 break -perfection -here's all that you have to do in order to achieve it. ,x To do it each of the 15 red balls (each scoring one ppint) must be put down alternately with the black• (scoring 7). When this las been accomplished and the black set up for the last time the other coloured balls mist be taken in correct order -yellow (2), green (3), brown (4), blue (5), pink (6), and then black. If this is done withouo a single Mistake, the 147 break is made. It means, of course, that the player must start off before the opponent has potted any of the balls. Ehere are 22 balls, including the cue ball, and this is another respect where snooker differs from the 16 in. pocket billiards, 1k 4 5 Sounds quite simple, doesn't it, O.K. Just grab yourself a cue -and a table -and go and do it. But bet- ter find yourself an all -]Hale pool' hall for the attempt, if such a thing can be found. Otherwise, just as you're nuking that final shot, a mouse is liable to run across the floor,-aud•in the flurry of feminine excitement bound to follow, your 'rccsrtl will be all shot to aitch and gone.• 14-year-cld Jockey : ---A 14 -year- old with 40 winner's to. his credit already, Lester Piggott is favored to become Britain's Champion Joc- key in the next few years. Ile has been competing with leading British adult rulers like Gordon Richards, on level terms. ..Classified vert sing .. 3.161 l 114( Itis s'Tilc'f4 •, f,lvcry t , t I i - -1s• brell 1a t1 ..lift,.,,. 11.0 h,n 1 ,1415. Net too 00411 to 1'la.',• y' :q..4.1,; 10',0.0. 1','e,. 4'ntalm:ue, t.e l."`0. 10 lay - Int:. 0..05, 7 I'onit0, '1'w'ed 11' 4'11al 11',0 00141 1.4010(1,Perm's. 1 I Il'l 1u.r'ilitt days 04,:0.1 lot the I , titi• i .in' High egg 1051 10 0111 pr1 on wltil bw,•,' rcnl cels means In -1,' profit. 00• +•hi4 hll ll fig. Also older 1,11„9 , '„Inh,r,,•.. Teo Not•.I1 rb tri: Snl,•:• duel oh, ,In to fie, (4'11I13A 11\N1♦l S1::V17a ur hales 1 t 1100' 1,01.0, caw alt h roe 1)1 r l r 1 11 I- ra5hit, sheen skins, 4,. r 1140. Ina 4a- t11e1•. J.'1'. flu la tli‘ Ittl. St lull tl Lf-rn- liagnote a' 0.. 0. , .w.....,. -1)1'181\11. A\U CL14,1 \1\(O IIAV10 100 an1th1110 nee,1 d4e(116 or clean. Ing? write to us for tnfurmntlln. w•o ale glad to answer year 51100110ns, 0e• partmenl 11. Parlor's Dye Nod's Lhn11r4. 701 1'ongo St•eet, Toronto, 116101'10 resit S.11.E - itu'l'otniy,n.19N. Earley Davidson. New and used, bought• sold. exchanged Largo stock of guaranteed used mntnrcyeles. nee pates by factory -trained mechanics. 131- 1 e node lino wheel g and complete n Y c -clan, n Outboard 1 ons Boats and Johnson r Rao G Motors Open evenings until nine except wed enOtt . Strand Cycle 1, Sports, Icing n y at Sanford. nonillion LESSEN Soul' bleat bills. Raise rabbits. nnoltlol, 1, 0„h plan, and price vat, 250. (famfr's Rabbitry, C7dllI week, Mc. Neeens. ''iitegat I10 5' ' heel or ...de ,. , 'holue of an colors. Postpaid. write Hone Sewers Supplies. 4150 St, Lawrence 1111,.. klout'ral, We alio make cloth 40verrd 1510000, hurtles, belts with your material. writ.) for free catalogue. - ABt'l1AL'15I11NGL164 80,35 Thea. interlocking ahmgl-' are Just ono of our many roofing and asphalt bargains. 210 11s. Butt Shingles 85,25; 165 TReloe 04.30 per 100 square feet dae"TItlek Insulated Siding: DrIelt or Ce- 6,'010 de.100, 0111' 011.45 per 00nare: [trey Rolt Steno design Skiing 18.75 ver cuare: 60 11, red or green Grnnite Roof- ing, 51.22. Above Prices. 1r,o.B., Ilanilton, Maly other humane 10 these 05,10 ' seconds. are doubt you can tell frmn first grade st016. AL1'SIIND1f CORRUOATliD SIIotierS, only 89.59 per 100 eq, feet, Delivered Ontario, Quebec and Maritimes. All new stock, 2r, 'rouge, various MOPE, available for prompt shipment, Send nom- sareni0nts Cnr bre eS111lmalee. net yours now. Stork limited. ROBERTS ,ONES Lraumlaa Co. Hamilton, Ontario New (hmra teed 11011 NET nue-Wool Chain SAWS with rope starter - 8249.00 with rewind starter - 8255.00, Equipped with 20" or 24" blade:, and the new Smith Planer Chain, Solea Tax extra if annli- cahle. we lake l,ndes. S3llT1LCAL1•ER LT41l'Ttell 0.17 Weelwdrh St.. - O1'ELPIL, Ont. 25 CUTOUT patterns, rcettle instructions for making rookie, tree mod table decora- tions, Sparkling out surprisingly nttrnrllve, Santa. relndoera, aleigh, rocking horse (stands and reeks), gingerbread house, many others. Order early -supply limited. 50e In coin. Cookie-ern{t Designs, 178 Bedford Pork .Avenue, Toronto, rulC19R 01,015d1 Toulouse or En11410n 1011109' 87.00, Toulouse 36 Embden (ten- ders 11.00, A, Treleaven, Baden, Ontario. 1015EED1N0, (lees, from pedigl•eed parent- age of high Producing records, selected from 2,500 10101.10, Geese 1110141011 ofthe brethren, Bright, Ont. TIrL-YY-Ut"rY 11130. -SAW enwnrill with Inserted tooth sow, Bud Fortier, Flinten, Ontario, 4'12911:1774 NI:whine suilebl, for making vias,'. Tex or 11nak01 Ye11010, 7. R. Keonedr, 554 willing. Street, Cohourg. Phone 1155\4', RIFLES Ell'NTING" . 303 'British Enaeld 0 -shot Service Rifle only 827.80. SneelallY adapted for deer hunting. 21•' barrel. Clean npnea•nnee. Smooth operation, A real ba• - gain. Yon r011't lose. Ceder GO,D„ if 500 do not like it return It nt 001• expense for immedlnla ensh refund, /lox 48 0110- trudges 52.50 whit purchase of rifle. Wit - nommen 1,01(Inlet. F irenrma Division, P.O.Do.. 1305, Ottawa, hot. Electric Fishing To rid a lake of pike which prey on trout, the British have been experimenting with electricity. Ul- tra -violet lamps are put in the lake at night. ']'here is a faint glow, be- cause more than invisible ultra- violet rays are emitted. Fish in- vestigate. Under the ultra -violet rays their scales glow. More fish are attracted by this secondary glow. When a current ,is switched on copper plates about twenty feet apart on either side of the lamp all the fish are stunned, so that •fishermen can lift the pike with nets. When the current is turned off, the other, fish, including the trout, re- cover and swim away. - - TARPAULINS - Give Quick Protection Waterproof, Best quality, Prices in - Chide delivery to nearest station. Name I lettered free. 9x10 911,50: 101.18 017.80; 1.e -x10 020.80; 10x20 144.50, 1 Othermoneorder, Ile per a0. ft. Enclose 1 CANVAS SPECIALTY CO. 1110 Yonne 01., Tomato f'Olt S -1L11 11 4'11\411 111110119101 Innued,ito ,Inp.pent -. i'1, thick In 8. 0,. 8, it, 10 tout lengths. 11.1000 ,,Bl''1ed 1n 00007!0 soinis on nbru..rtlon. 1'01. eahn- le•,:, ,:, 1•Iple`N, tbet':,1111','00,.. 00,40''. -- 9, 1'. 1.15%1.11 C ClC1., 5.1111'05;0) 1110 CO1111IK$1O\IsitN 04'1'1311141' 11(0091111 0. ((911116111 ,.:.1a 3,1 hots, 1 „woe .Intal I) , I, 1'1116 iolnf,ll for 104,. Sleiret• An,,lr- rne,,, 11. , 11110,1,, "d{trin. 01eard b11111 a 11, Have you hout Dixon's Neuritis and Rheumatic P:in Re- medy? It gives good results. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE, 335 Elgin, Ottawa 1151:55 ('1(14\ 5.11.0':-- tersur,• four l,rm:::int a••Ilr (441':55, UNWANTED HAIR Eradicated from 1111Y eget of the body with Sacs -Pel,, a remarkable disenvery 01' 1110 1(00, Snl'n•Pelo .001n111N no burnt - fel Ingredient. and will destroy the hair rout. LUtt-lil00EIt LAt1O1tATO 5tI:S MO GranvilleStreet. , vil ' Vancouver, POST'S ECZEMA A SALVE BA N10.11 the ttIlltiellt, „r , , 0 ry lout' 'Nese. soli 4. .41411g Iain t,.n,hle, l'ust's Nese. ma .Salve will not d1,,:, groin'. Yon. Ilehins, sealing. burring ....mina. aerie, rill, 0 lm, pimples and 1111k•te'a (sot, will 1.1 &pond n u,llly lu the stainless, odorless lnntaent, IWOl'alelva or 0,ow• stubborn or 1110. ;aunt. *101016 51,00 PEE eau POST'S REMEDIES n Post Free on 11•.'0440 of Price 000 Queen St. EO., Corner of Logan, Toronto IIPPOB7'tiNl'rIYPS IE(Ilt 0100, A 1%031EN BE A HAIRDRESSER IOIN •1ANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Growl OPPol'tunity Learn Ienlydreasing Pleasant dignified profession, sood wages Thousands of successful Marvel graduates America's Greatest System 111Ust•nted Catalogue Free Write or Call [MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS 338 Blom. St. 10,, Toronto Branches: 44 tang St., Hamilton 71 Rideau St.. Ottawa Lite :utATURY-TES'1ED inmates. stake 00,00 money Ot hem, with year own Pru,htet or plans. Literature free. SELECT PLANS. 3553 Lexington Avenue, St. Louts 76,(x((,•1, 00,0.A. f LEARN NANO 140 EAI[, wieldy. Fastest system ever Invented, young 04 obi can 10m•n, w04101 George t'onner, Dept. M., (91100105. Moms. 0,0.A. PATENTS AS OFFER to every inventor -List of In- ventions and full information sent free. The mmnsny Cn„ Registered Patent Attor- neys, 2.73 Bank Street, Ottawa, L'E'I'FBRSTONHAti OI'1 ,16 ttolnpanY. P00 tent Solicitors, Estnbl tailed 1890, 280• Day Street. Toronto. Booklet of informa- tion on. request. SALE'S HELP WANTED SELL Popular 63 fire extinguisher whole- sale or direct. Liberal profits exclusive territory. [IRE:-EILLLiIt . 6048 Eosins Ave., Montreal. WANTED WANTED -Flocks to supply a large hatch. ery with hatching eggs. Flocks culled' and bloodtested free of charge. High 500r- artCed 900,01010 paid, And some breeds can tape eggs the year round. Apply Box No. 63, 123 -13th St„ New Toronto, FAILMER, wire and 1 child wish to rent about 150 -sero farm. (100100500 to improve property. s Would consider •oin concern Ren1Y 10 D. O'Brien. 341 Pape Avenue, Toronto. U:F:f •t .n, ,,l. !� Nal 4491 Br^seI Sure d b ku b er 1FOR 1NT 0K A 4NNE0 rk 2 ", 7ee F�B9.E EP. E9J I Was Nearly Crazy With Fiery Itch - Datil I discovered Dr, D. D. Dennis' amazing- ly last relief -D. D, D. Prescription, World popular, this pure, cooling, liquid medication cpeeds peace and comfort from cruel Itching aused by eczema, pimples, rushes, athlete's foot and other Itch troubles, Trial bottle 350 Pint application cheeks even the most intense itch or matey beet,. Ask druggist for D, D D. Prescription (ordinary or extra strength). 4'yp �1C . Rub on freely, 004 nota ppyy��p� quick rung. Grcaseleoeg, ',0150 ECONOMICAL o'o} drying. No strong SIZE 65e 6 ISSUE 47 - 1950 JITTER y Arthur Pointer