HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1951-3-14, Page 7Hunting "Monster"
An ,•'g1r$itiou, „insisting of Hev
to Danish ''1 leiti-tt.. Mei Sailed iron,
Plymouth with the .uulmmneeuleu'
that they are ;;Hint; tk111131 )1'
marine mniteil'51
Led by Dr. Anton 110:75171, ,circ, e
direrlur of the Lapeululgee Ifnit r'
city, they plait to :007717 two tow,
dredging the x!;)• down to ,froths: I5
34,000 feet.
Another expedition has left Moto
hese inn( is led by !sir. Adrian
Conan Doyle, ,son of the nntrlki.
Ina schooner manned by an -Arab
,aety, he hopes to find in the scat-
tered islands.off the African coast
traces of cities 10117 by Arab and
Persian adventurers 1,1)111) years ago
and Ilene buried beneath the jun-
gle.
Ile is also on the 70571 out. for
denizens of the deep, and believes
that there are huge sea monsters
living at the bottom of the Inditul
Ocean.
With all these people spending
valuable time :tad money in search
111 the same object it is difficult to
believe the sceptics who ridicule tihe
idea that sea serpents and monsters
are figments of the imagination.
These sceptics produce a varlety
of explanations for most of the
-"mnns';er reports, They suggest that
the deceptive appearance of the
.-n0rmons feelers of giant squids
ray account for reports of serpents
remaining partially submerged.
That "Kraken"
They say that large dolphins and
whales have been confused with sea
serpents. Basking sharks, Swimming
in pairs one behind the other, have
?leen mistaken for monsters.,
Porpoises, swimming in single
61e, half .emerging from and then
re-entering the water rhythmically
in order to breathe, have often made
witnesses rub their eyes and _swear
they have sten a sea serpent.
Even so, sufficient doubt exists
to send hard-headed scientists on
long and expensive investigations.
They say it is not wise to laugh at
the idea of a sea serpent. For in-
stance, a creature known to* all
marine experts is the oar -fish. This
is .30 feet long, yet only a few
inches thick, and could easily lay
claim to the title of sea serpent.
So could the giant squid, with its
ten tentacles. This creature lives 1)00
feet down in the depths and much
GE our knowledge of St is derived
from bodies of squids which have
been thrown to the surface by vol-
5a71i1: eruption. One was 54. feet
long.
Dr. Braun, leader of the Danish
mons,er-lltntting expedition, has
stated that it is "within the bounds
of possibility" that the setni-fahtt-
l0us 'kraken' really exists at depths
of a thousand feet and more. .
Describing its alleged enormous
size, Dr. Braun quotes the Danish
legend of the bishop who, finding
rs eraleen' on the shore, mistook
it for a huge rock, erected an altar
noon it and perfoi'nled mass.
'Be calm, dear: March must
come in like R lamb and go out
lilte one, too."
Shark's Appetites
A shark which had made a meal
of a horse's leg complete with hoof
and iron shoe, was killed in Aust-
ralia recently.
These matt -eating monsters could
aptly be described as the dustbins
of the sea. They seem to be Mile to
digest anything.
A sack of coke was devoured by
one shark. It was following a ship,
and the crew experimented with
various "tit -bits" for it. Into the
monster's maw went a biscuit till,
newspapers, a brick wrapped its a
5110th, and a wooden crate.
A shark certaittly has the deem!
equipment to deal with such tough
courses.
When its teeth become blunted it
grows fresh ones, for behind its
front-liue teeth is a reserve set,
and when the reserve set has been
used there is 'a second reserve be.
hind theta.
'Phis, explains why sllarl('s teeth
arc alwftys ill first -Class condition.
But a Attack not only grows teeth
inside {:s mouth. It is coverer] with
hem froul snout to tail.
A nark's outer covering does not
consist of scales a,; in other fish, but
teles
U
"dermal flClit .
thousands f 1
which are actually, minute teeth,
They are complete with pulp, den-
tine, 1111,1 outer layer of bard eniun-
el.
Carpenters used to use sharkskin
as a polisher before sandpaper was
invented. And sailors have often
used sharks' teeth as it good sub-
stitute for a razor.
'How -do, Daddy,'
ley. In a hospital
Ann, looked 111115•,5
trick. '!'ltc station
Sha.11lry tcatoheel
Says Tike On 'C V'— "9'0701 inion played postman for polio patient Jack Sha 1-
for sis months. Shadle1 kept tvuilrlerisig 11o11" his l ear -old baby, Rebecca
he sale her last..A letter hy Mrs. Shadley to a tele%ision station turned the
arranged for Rebecca Anti and her mother to appear as "guest situs." \Vat} e.
from hire hospital bed, Rebecca tossed her dark ettrls, emit et] and sa.'(1
'i'low-do," to the obvious delight of her dad.
Since "Sugar" Ray. Robinson took
the tniddleweight boxing chatnpiou-
ship from Jake LaMotta, people
are beginning -to compare flim with
some of the great Middles of former
days ---men like Jack "Nonpareil"
Dempsey, Bob Fitzsimmons, Kid
McCoy, Mickey Walter, harry
Grab and all the rest of them. In
fact, some of the experts arc even
going so far as to say that Robin-
son is the best of 1117111 a0.
Well, there's no doubt that Sugar
Ray is a mighty sheet piece of
fighting machinery, and it's hard
to pick a flaw in hint. But putting
him in the same class with Stanley
Ketchel, the Michigan Assassin—
that, friends, is going a bit too
far. For, as Arthur Daley says, there
are plenty of folks—men who really
1010115 what they are talking about
--who firmly believe that Ketchel
was in a class by himself, that
there never was a ringman to Com•
pare t'itll him, any weight.
Ketchel was a comet who blazed
briefly but fiercely across the fistic
horizon. He wasn't quite 17 when
he fought his first professional
fight. He was just 23 when he
fought :his last one, a few months
before he was slain by an assassin's
bullet. "I'll die before I'm 30,"
he had predicted. He overestimated
his life span.
But in those brief years he es-
tablished himself as the greatest of
a the great. He lost only two bouts,
both by knockouts and both under
unusual circumstances: Of the 59
he won, this fighting freak won
47 by knockouts. He had the ef-
frontery and the punch to knock
down Jack Johnson, the heavy-
weight champion. He had the con-
summate skill to outpoint the fabu-
lous boxing master, Philadelphia
Jack O'Brien.
There is a story that Francis Al-
bertanti loves to tell. It's been told
often before but it can stand •re-
peating because it Illustrates the
frenzied idolatry Ketchel com-
manded. When dickey Walker was
M his prince, a quite inebriated
gentleman sidled alongside and be-
gan to pile on the praise.
"Mesh, Id'•ick," he bellowed, "You-
're the greatest fighter of 'em all."
"Greater than Ketchel?" needled
Francis.
Ketcllcl?" screamed the drunk,
turning on AA alkcr n ith a snarl.
"Ya couldn't 11ck one 3,51e of Ket
rhe], ra bunt, ya."
The tirst kn,'ekom of the Michi-
gan Assassin mule at th- hands of
Billy Papke, un ontstanding chal-
lenger himself. They met, at ring
centre and ICetrhel casually reached
out his gloves for the formal hand-
shake. Papke tired in a "sacker
punch" that blinded Isetebel. Fight -
New Legs For Imogene —
Imogene Wittsche is pictured
on the school campus wearing
her new artificial legs which
replaced those she lost when
hit by a motor boat while
swimming in Lake Tahoe in
1949. Her accident, given wide
attention when it happened,
prompted California and Nev-
ada legislatures to take action
restricting boat speed] on Lake
Tahoe,
lost I• of
Dream—These two Inca stent a:1r jil tllt, and
9.11107 7711 r
i il.liput. They are Forel Motor Company offic2lals who as using
06 miniature models to study proposed colors for 1952 Fords.
'Ate one-eighth scale curs, which are painted 50'lt1 actual baked
ettatuel finishes, dere displayed in the styling showroom. The
models dei not represent future body ,styles, but color selections
from this :group will he applied to a limited umnbe0 of ftdl-
scale models 'for final approval.
iug aulyeo11 instinct, Stanley lasted
until the twelfth round when the
referee mercifnliy stopped the
slaughter.
Two 171011ths later there was a
reaoa.ell, K.etehel did not offer to
shake hands. In the cruellest ex-
hibition the ring has ever seen,
Ise heartlessly sliced Papke to rib-
bons. lie could have knocked him
out in the first round. But jus: as
Papke would start to topple. Stanley
would brace hie) up, Pet hint re
cover and then punish him some
more. By the eleventh round Pa:>1 e'.
blundy hail. was beyond being prop
pc.(l. N' o until the a did Fetch, 1 ,fis-
'Iainfull. finish 1+)•) with one
punch.
But .he most brazen exhibition
0i his career was against Johnson,
where be was outweighed by at
least thirty pounds. The heavy-
weight champion, however, still
had his troubles with this fighting
fury who held the middleweight
crown, To the twelfth round het-
chei's right crashed on Johnson's
jaw and the big fellow thundered
to the canvas. ile slating back from
the floor and knocked out the
Mighty Mite.
Those were the only defeats he
ever experienced. (1 Was no wond-
der then that he sent itis famous
telegram just before his bout with
Philadelphia Jack O'Brien. He sent
it to his father. It read:
"1 won the light, Stanley'."
X
Arconlpanying him to the tele-
graph office was Nat Fleischer,
the ring historian. "Do you always'
send such telegrams before a tight?"
he spluttered.
"Ile likes to know," explained
Stanley, "and it always comes out
like I say,"
In the first round of his match
with Frank IKlaus, another of the
great fighters of some forty -odd
years ago, the Assassin smashed
over a terrific right that caught
Klaus 011 the top of his head.
1: 1, 4,
"Von bashed your hand that time,
didn't you?" tainted IClaus. Ile was
correct. Ketchel had broken his
hand.
"Yes, 1 busted ly hand," snarled
Stanley, "But I still can lick you
with one hand." IIe did, too,
They built a huge granite tomb-
stone over his grave. "Stanley could
punch a hole in that tombstone,"
said a mourner softly. Maybe he
could.
These jurors Had
Really Secret Voting
For twelve long hours, Live Art-
ist Jurors judged over 507) entries
for the approaching 79th Annual
Show of the Ontario Society of
Artists to be held at the 'Art Gal-
lery of Toronto, front March 91It
to April 1 5th, 1951, From this un-
preeedented entry list a most sel-
ect and representative exhibition
consisting of 100 works was selec-
ted from paintings anti sculpture,
coming front nearly every province
in Canada. -
'I'he jurors, voting secretly, tad
their votes recorded on an electric
panel of lights, seen only by the
secretary. A. push button switch,
held by each juror, instantly reg-
istered each affirmative vote. By
this method, a completely unbiased
opinion sac reached and only an
extremely high standard Of work
was accepted for hanging. '.Gilt;
jury agreed that the conning exhi-
bition is perhaps the finest yet in
the O. S. A.'s 70 years o: Canadian
Art history.
The Jury of Selections was dee-
ted by the members of the Ontario
Society of Artists. It com¢rised a,
group of five nationally -known ar-
tists: J. W. G. Alacdouald, Yvonne
McKague llousser, J. Sydney Hal-
lam, Bobs Haworth, and R. York
Wilson,
: e Ilmnc PresuleIlt.
Cleave e
of the O. S ,A. was the Chairman,
with Ilerbert 5 %inter aro] 11'001
Finley ,usisting. •
Overheard; "You get it, dear.
Your legs are younger than mine."
"Yes, Mummie,, but they've got
to hast longer." -
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISI
1111:\'1'N 11.15'11;0
OILS, OREAS1S. TIRES
..nnnrrt Come i,1.
vire matinee,.I: 1. v 111}i'
antpII 1 57 i, etH. 0 .5117.•
and ars sats Stan..
AUCTION SCHOOL
Free •,. I,4, ,c. .-f lLt,m:n
14 f,W S• -)'U,1, 1,100,' .
''1e5 el
L.rn ban
60 " fnsiste00 front natant, r:.s ,Hell
for 1,:, X'
-t t /ruche, 1,0,ttln)0, 5711
11.00 , i1'es,llr•1, .
111511"d bnoht,•.
U111i i.1 's' •7111 l'AN Y. .'s !VI 1).
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r:7n,0 0,,111., —
•
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E,),-; 11.)51 ut'.l5. PNU' 11, We 0•n710,
11,.• hig)n•st egg arose", 0770 POI awl
Flnt.e• n'1J. IVO bare had in rears. toll
ta111 4n. 7, 1,0777 •0577055 50'> 00101' (401)1'
1.11'k. :44 ben 41144 57 5 (0 sure to snit)
fwe'U110 11.'1. P. Sir, 51 "hits fol• those
0:,171 n, Alma Today('oult,, '14,101
P'illl ,s. milt.d
, 50577+i i,• I'h1010 IIHt..her fes l.sw11.1.7.
1.191'71\E til'-1.Txh/ CHICKS .._...
eicAises 0r tweed lu1„a, Bred rose 10011
hybrid merle. Early taut ul'lug uniform pnt-
late. Triers to 14 months la'', less broudi-
neHX, 100's on the fano '1UInp; r1a0n Testa
0h0w 24 to 72 more 05411 per hen Doused
than standard bretls, I .uekerelo 3 lbs, in
11 rre1's. Catalogue on rennes!. fA•-111)0
t'hl••Fs, 682 Queen Street, Chatham. 0,157..
AI 1• ')1111 11 rl 1 1: r. S nee R.O.P. Shred
with : proven breeding bacharound of pp
to 203 eggs. These cc*dlied breeder's are
ottlolany proven the menial of Canadian
ooul1Py and their Oro11uetloA 10)1) truly
00000150 sou. We nave $ Ger, banded
breeds ream which to choose. Free cater
/0444,444401140n thrift, l'ar'n, &tiher”
roll. ,)tllm'la,
SPRINGITTLL Blood -tested 51hicki are pro.
fleabite. All popular breeds at 312.72,
outlets
ial:. on at551(06 _chicks, cockerels mixed and60. Pullts.
Springinli Farm. Preston, Ontario.
DOUGLAS CHICKS
n'y ton 1/00t. bas O n G (1 1, A S '" 107710
el Irks. Variety of 111,1', it:r-•Is Day -,Id or.
started Pelee Lige 1 ••,1p,5, 00tisr.:@non
nee ren. erd.
DOUGLAS 1IATC,IERY
Stittsville, Ontario
mutt term,I')5 Is aj lot better this rear
than last 400 to the tart that the wager -
thy of our ehleka are sired by 11.1).1.
)titles. Mom everything has gone let le
orieice
due
to ttt our entries a a
0(10 increased volume, mune
me,Before
ordering 1 sono for Oren Sired lee ,e14ng you
o
all abnnt our R.O.P. Shod 1`W'rlrs. Also
'turkey- ('netts. Older Pullets.
Top Notch Thiele Sales.
leueloh, Ontaris.
DUCES
LARGE Brown Rouen dwti[Iinga for '61.
Send 2011 deposit for delivery any time
March r0 July. 100. 3401 60. 321: 20,
311: 10. 34.60. 0, J. 7051051 ' Hatcheries.
Winnipeg, Manitoba.._-_.' -,_-• __
DYEING AND Oi.EAti1SO
(5A5yon anything needs dyeing or ciente"
ing7 write to us for information. We'
are glad 50 anawee your questions. Deo
00rtment 11, Pariter'S Dye Worts Limited.
L31 rdnga St.. Torontl).
Blown, Quarter Mile
Yet Landed. Unhurt
When a sudden cyclone slsept
over the island of Farquhar, in the
Seychelles, recently it was so de-
vastated that most of its eighty- in-
habitants became homeless and
more than half of their possessions
were lost. A 100 -ton schooner, which
was loading copra, was blown on to
the beach and wrecked, blit he3.
crew escaped.
Cyclones are among the 1)10551
dangerous freaks of nature. A fear-
ful cyclone in 1926 completely de-
stroyed a town in Paraguay and
killed more than 200 people. At
least ninety per cent. of the build-
ings were destroyed.
)Another cyclone carried sand
from the Sahara out to sea and
flung it on the deck of a ship 200
miles front the African mast, eove''-
ing it a quarter of an Melt ,thick.
When a cyclone struck the town of
I:Irksville, Missouri, note, letters
and papers blown from the city
were picked up next (lay ninety
miles away in the state of Iowa.
The same cyclone whisked up two
woolen and a child and dropped
them on a (0111111011 a quarter of a
mile away- so gently that none of
them was hurt,
Cyclones usually come swiftly in
the form of huge, rapidly -revolving
whirlwinds some thirty miles in
diameter. After one had ripped the
tops• off. scores of houses in the
Bernese. Juras, an old woman was
discoverer{ in a rootless house count-
ing and reronnting her small hoard
of money which had been scattered
among the debris. This cyetote also
wrecked twenty farms and fazed an
entire: forest. -
Material damage estimated an
$60,000,000 was done by a disas-
trous cyclone which swept 'over
• Cuba and the West Indies about
twenty -tire years ago. 'Ten towns
and villages were wiped Out, 1,51)
people were killed and 6,500 left
homeless. Otte result of this cyclone
vvas the building of refuges of solid
canrrete to which people could flee.
when a similar disaster threatener].
7"O BE SURE
Sanlbo--"What kind of chicken,,
do you like best, vastus?"
Rastas ---"Well, white ones is
easiest to find, but black ones is
easiest to hide after you gets 'eel."
�LDS
Check Thele' Past for 35c
SOLD EVERYWHERE
CANDIES N0(51 Ubbige felt
ht 5111.0:1) ,'70 5157 1)9111 .1 ?vont 064410
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A n. WOO.),sl'- ,. 11. 11 R 1,•m.hnbnra
..eon.
100/u OFF ASHPHALT
SHINGLES — ROLLED
ROOFING & SIDING
Rus sue 1.000 at Rebmt Junes ].umber lee.
'1 has Ulacwm! ;r,n1110s an n .i,.ra/0001700 to
Starch Fa,4ory Se-
monde with o)leht ennerte 710570 '-e Menu
anybody ,'ver notice. The:: o'l)l Klee ;'Nn
ears of valleabie e0,'01ce.
ROBERT JONES LUMBER CO.
Hamiltog, Ont.
t IIOR,,Yte ss Harley Davidson. 54650
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Wadneada5. Strand Cycie 8. 13500;0. King
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ORDER ,)%v ('OR SPRING DELIVERY
-'7)170000 Elm 12 inch else 100 for
50.9131 Dwarf Apple Trees (Macintosh or
Spy or Cortland); Dwarf Pear 'rrcee (Bart-
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25 for 53,58; Giant Exhibition Pommy
Privet Hedging planto 12 to 18 Inch slim.
00070 in red, vliite or vinic 3 fOr 51.85.
Plum trees. /sweet eating Burbank, Lom-
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or 9 for 31.00. Free .Colored Garden
Guide with livery Order. Brookdale --
Ifingewa5 hnrseries. Bowmnm'ille, Ont.
PRECISION PWR, mane SAWS --
The safest and fastest cutting power
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Yr•1 iv.un
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La,'hIne.:,tontreal 82.
SPRAY WITH A SPRAMOTOR
Sprayers for orchard (engine and tractor
dr"' tin) Role 'irons (traction), weed, dlain-
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motor 2.00.. 1000 York St., London, Ont.
TOB.315510 Farm—With all good machinery
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new greenhouse. 137 x0000. 33 acre0
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51701y .Albert tie. mans (owner). 11.0,6.
Sim00e, Ontario.
PUREBRED BERKSHIRE SOWS AND
boars four to five months old. Harold
W illlloloo, Waterdown, Ont.
RI9i1ISTF]1305) Eeglish Springer Spaniels.
born October; dark liver and white,
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Pion and champion blood lines. Reueonably
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Brantford. Ontario.
15)LLTE I'C'PS, 2 months, 50hlee and
Trl-Colol'. Mateo 32.00: Females 93.00.
70 Prioress Street, Port Hope, Ontario.
GERMAN SHTEPPARD PUPPIES by Ch.
'rexaa of Rarrlmare out of imported
female of best breeding. Reasonable.
WOOdU-n Kenneth, Mr, and Mrs. J. H.
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sc0T,5)0 collie Pimples, ebanlptvn breed-
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i>ntat90.
ALUMINUM ROOFING &
SIDING
20 imago in either 500085a,ed or ribbed
design. All guaranteed primary grade.
26" wide.
d' long — 31.73, 1' —• $2.06, 8' —• 42.84.
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ROBERT JONES LUMBER CO.
Hamilton, Ont,
MA110E1 HARRIS TRACTOR (02 SEN-
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SACRIFICE price for growing town
bakery, equipment 32.000.00. Buyer
non rent beillding. Wm. Pearce, Realtor,
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501E HAVE FOR SALE good 71100011,
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CASE ModelD Tractor equipped with new
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tractor is in excellent condition. Arthur
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HELP WANTED
550.00 — 300.00. Young woman fond at
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Alexandra Road. Galt. Phone 734-W.
HELP 'WANTED
RA1I.WAYS 110011 7701104 Ines t01.-•h,e•day
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7101.017410, _ _
NATURE'S HELP •-• DIXON'S
REMEDY FOR RHEUMATIC
PAINS, NEURITIS. THOUS-
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DRUG STORE, 335 ELGIN. OT-
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PAID,
CillfsF 1 ALLo( S S11,1 f, — 410 00:0 10-
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POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
51,75305 the 5Oreont dry 0i3O'155 cashes
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8nit'0 wlu "ea ,)11,,0l -,l',' yolt,
ftehing, eraltng. b„I'ming r 1:0'1.0. acne,
rinbls.rnl. pilnvWs „d ethle'0',, fan., wilt
'eapnnd 0050775 ea 0150 e5ahlielt0. odorleee
ointment. regardless of bow LInl,lllere al'
57 eeeeti8 711E7 Se 01/1.
PRTCE 81.60 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
:lent Post free on Receipt. or Price
888 Queen St. ti.. Corner al' Logan, Toronto
WellT LOVELY SKLI, S, 0LUIT1 1ING
0000 and 11.001 severs? Scud Si ')9 for
R.erfo tablets elan 33.00 and 06.00. Do-
peri,'1 tnd'a,e,9es, Box 001, W0 4pete,
"PEP UP"
1•ry
C. C..7 B. TOME TABLEYS
,„r tow vitality un' general deb:i;ty.
One Dollar, At Druggists
OPPORTUNITIES )'OR MEN 11 Ii06IAN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
col:4 „ANADS's LF.ADINIG SCHOOL
Great OpportimBy Learn
Hairdressing
Plereant dignified profession, good wages
'rlleaeande 01 successful Marvel graduate'.
America's Greatest System
11h:strata Catalogue Pree
Write or Call
HARVEY., 53A)RDRESSINO SCHOOLS
268 Bloor St. W., Toronto
Branches:
44 Ring St., Hamilton
'2 Rideau St,. Ottawa
NEW discovery, tested, eaves 45;0 gas-
oline, guaranteed. Send et0nlped envelope.
S. Brodie, Vilna, Alberta,
EMPLOYMENT — Canada, united States.
Alaska and foreign opportunities. How,
when. where to apply. Send 51.00 Mr latest
employment report listing firma hlring.
Service Bureau, Dept. A.C., P,O, Box 12776.
Saint John. N.B.
PA'5E5T8
Lai OPFER to every ln3entor—List of In-
ventions and Lull information emit tree.
The Ramsay Co., Registered Patent Atfor.
ney0, 273 Bank Street. Ottawa, PS
tent
FLTHERSTONH AUGH 81 Company. lra-
tent Solicitors. Estab1Ished 1550. 060
Bas Street, Toronto. Booklet of Informa-
tion on reaueat,
PHOTOGRAPHY
Free 6 x i Enlargements,
MAIL THIS COUPON with aider -8 exp.
roll o.35--12 exp. roll all enlarged 0.60
—10 exp, roll all enlarged 0.70. R0001nte
.04 Special 30 reprints 51.00. Ho175 wood
:got*. Station R. Montreal.
__
STAMPS
ESCELLENT VALUES. Yam, eh0ice: 100
for only 31.00 packet. Canada. British
Colonies. Newfoundland. Metropolis Stamp
Company. Bos 478, Adelaide. Toronto.
WANTED -- OLD t:ANADIAN POSTAGE
stamps. Send or write. .70.elt',, Stamp
Farm, Route 6, Woodstock. Ontario.
WANTED
PATIENT learning watchmaking wou)d
appreciate donations of old watches see
practise. Mark Craig, T. B. Hospital. EObt
St. Jahn, New Brunswick.
Itch 0 tt a Itch a 1t et Itch
1 Was Nearly Crazy
Until I elleco1ered Dr, D. D. Dennis' eimllr5nedy
0000 00901—A. D. D. Proscri tt0a, world
speeds0'rice (11)0 'comfort
000)1051'from
575010 el Itenou
aurid rmine. D melee ro000500 Hathlete e
foot.and other Itch troubles. Trial bottle, 4r3eee..
itch r money back Assk 5100551051 Doe 2)a A TD
Prescription )ordl0ary or extra strength).
ANECCAlINIMENT
AND MUSTARD POULTICE
Don't take chances on a Chest Cold—
it may become ye y serious. A poultice
made en of two tablespoons of Mecca
and a teaspoon of Mustard brings
excellent results. It relieves conges-
tion and reduces infiammatton—prevents
blistering. In severe eases change the
poultice twice daily. Mecca Ointment
at sold by all druggists -36c, 60o (Tubo),
700 and $1.40.
ISSUE 10 •— 1951
\Vhen rheumatic pain
gets you down, here's the
quick way to get relief, „/;//
Rub in soothing Minard's /// / rJ
Liniment. Is it good ? Jan /� ti
try it, you'll see!
RHEUMATIC
PAIN?
1.51
"KING OF PAIN"
LINIMENT