The Brussels Post, 1951-6-13, Page 7Piano Stuff
Ninety pee rent ul ed planus are
bought by pawn!, for their chil-
dren, and Ili' ratio et female ama-
teur plovers to male is 10 to 1,
though the ratio of professional
l', 'Irl•n pi:mi:ds w male is just the.
revrr ,.
1 ht :u 11,st recorded onblc per .
fo1911 fou• oll 1110 pllallokifl.e look
Once at ihr Theatre Royal, 1.sown!
11;u'den. on May 14th, 176?, when,
according to an old playbill, "The
Beggar's ()ppm" was pr, tinted -for
the benefit of a Amiss l;rickler.
Played with Quills
Th, bill goes on to slate that
at the "End of Act 1 Amiss Brickler
will sing a favourite song from
`Judith,' accompanied by Mr. Dibdin
on 0 new instrument called the
'Piano Forte."'
The ancestor of the Maim was
the clavichord, which was played
with quills attached to keys, in the
sixteenth century, and the first
known pianoforte, a hannter-oper-
ated instrument, was made by Bar-
tolomeo Cristofori, a harpsichord -
maker, of Florence.
1:t hears the date 1720, and the
Metropolitan Museum, New York,
now houses this unique specimen—
a black -painted cedar -wood instru-
ment with light and dark wood
keys.
Prior to this date the spinet, or
espinette, flourished, giving place
about 1660 to the harpsichord, an
instrument which.gave fame to John
Ilaward, a London shopkeeper.
He fixed pedals to one of these
harpsichords, and was mentioned in
the diary of the famous Samuel
Pepys, who duly records in July,
1668, that "At noon is brought
home the espinette 1 bought the
other day of Ilaward; cost me 1615",
This price must make many mu-
sic -lovers wish they had lived in
the days of the Merry Monarch,
since in oar times as much as $30.-
Horning
30:
Horning In—The "Big Bertha" of
the horn world, this Swiss Alp -
horn was put thi''ough its paces
during the picturesque mile -long
parade in Konstanz, Southern
Germany. The occasion was the
annual Whitsuntide festival.
More than 4000 persons came
from Germany, Switzerland and
regional costumes and playing
France, wearing national and
characteristic instruments. But
the Alphorn-was the biggest hit
in the parade.
000 has been paid for a first-class
instrument.
• Inlaid with Gold
Most expensive piano ever made,
however, was ordered by an Indian
maharaja fr;,om a Leipzig factory.
Its frame was of pure silver, and
the wires of silver and gold. The
wood Was rosewood, matured for
a hundred years. The outside was
inlaid with goad, and studded with
emeralds anti rubies.
Durability of a modern piano de-
pends upon a .strong metal frame,
and only highly skilled workmen
Can accomplish the pinning, drilling,
and japanning which these frames
demand.
The polishing of the case, the
"drawing" of the strings, •'the regu-
lating of the notest the tuning and
the many tine adjustments require
the services of many specialists.
In fact, the average modern piano
passes through no less than eighty
pairs of hands before its is really
for the show -rooms, and 10,700
pieces of wood, metal, cloth, felt,
and other materials ester into its
construction,
"1'm very proud of my trailing
phlebitis, mut the laryngitises and
sleep 'purple quinsies that I put in
last year are a joy to behold, The
dear little dropsies are all in bloom
down by the lake, and Make such a
pretty showing with the blue of the
thorax border behind thein1"
—Susan Ertz.
Horse Won Famous Steeplechase
Then Fell. Dead Just Past The Post
1 Inuohrd :unl li11, 11 ;tars ago,
a Liverpool intikee ler had ,i bright
idea fur pepping up wade. Ile could
hardly have dreamed that he was
about to found the greatest spurt-
ing spectacle of modern times.
As well •1s owning the Waterloo
Hotel, William Lynn was lessee of
the nearby course at Aintree, where
meetings were held regularly on Chu
(1111. ile had milked how the St.
Albans Steeplechase peeked eus-
tomers into the 'Turf 1 lotel of that
town, and lie decided to do some-
thing about it, advertising a 'chase
10 be run at Aintree on February
291h, 1830.
Conditions 'were: .\ sweepstake
of 10 sovs. each with 80 anus, added,
for horses of all deuotninatious,
12s1. each, gentleman riders, second
horse receives Intel( his sta1te, Win-
ner to be sold for 200 sovs, if de-
manded. Rather different from 100-1
t,regalach's (Grand National in 1929.
Then the prize was £13,000 -- 11
record that still stands, its does that
of the huge field of sixty-six
starters,
Brought Telescopes!
That first race was a great suc-
cess, not only attracting a vast
crowd to Liverpool, but also, it
seems, adding a little roue to the
racing there. For, in the words of
one reporter, "the assemblage tvfas
composed principally of the middle
classes." There must also have
been quite a naval atmosphere since,
he adds, that a great many people
had provided themselves with tele-
scopes1
The National has never looked
back. The following year 'the con-
course of spectators was exceed-
ingly targe"—despite the fact that
there were only four starters. The
winner was a Mr. Potts on The
Duke who "carne in winning by
about thirty yards at a severe pace.
This result, so totally unexpected,
has mulcted 'the knowing ones' in
heavy sums. The race occupied fif-
teen minutes." The present record
is under ten.
Irish Take a Hand
Even in those early days, Irish
breeders took a hand in the Na-
tional and Have continued to do-
minate it ever since. In 1838, Sir
William was ridden to victory by
its owner, Mr. Alan McDonough, of
County Galway. Tales of his rac-
ing exploits reached England while
he was still in his teens. and he
wits soon riding there with great
success. So much so that jealousy
crept in amethg certain English
jockeys. One of then! named Ball
deliberately r'de on to a course
one day where McDonough was
competing and knocked ltinl. end-
ways. Justice was meted out, how-
ever, by a . certain Captain Lmnb,
who chased Ball and gave him "the
father and mother of a thrashing."
Next year, tate 'Liverpool Stan-
dard' publicized the race with a
piece of stirring prose, anticipating
"such a long list of nobs at this
chase as has not hitherto dazzled
the optics of our townsmen. 1 have
heard that one hundred beds have
already been booked at the Adelphi
and Waterloo and that hotels are
likely to be as thronged as four in
abcd."
The writer was correct in his
sttrmise. So great was the gallery
that the race, scheduled for one
o'clock, was not started until three!
It was Lottery's year. He romped
home at 12-1, and in the words of
one rider could trot faster than the
rest of us could gallop."
Carthorse Winner
Lottery later developed into
something of a legend anlong'cha-
sers. Bookies grew tired of con-
tinually paying out on him and
frequently managed to, freeze him
out, Conditions of a race would
read: "Open to all horses except
Lottery. He rounded off a glori-
ous career between the shafts of a
cart at Neasden. "And so ended,"
writes Argus at that time, "the best
horse that ever looked through a
bridle. We shall never look upon
his like again I"
Also ran in Lottery's National
wit,: .111 animal uaucad Conrad. Who
'line a rropprr 51 "x misty jump ---
a strung paling, urs[ a rough, high,
jagged hedge, Ma lastly a brook
about six feet wide." ('unrad's ttal-
taill
eider was 1 -.,'ri001 Captain
L'echu, whose. !dim' has been relip•,
sed by that ul' the brook at which
he fell, since named after him.
When Grimaldi Fell
!lecher is c, rtaiuly the best-re-
membererl rider who never won a
National. In itis 'lay he was very
much a leading light, immensely
popular with a public svlto never
hesitated to throw a fete things 51
any jockey who didn't sleet -wit![
its approval. Ile also appears to
have had a flair for histrionics. Af-
ter Grimaldi carried hint to victory
in the St. Albans Steeplechase of
1836, only to fall dead on passing
the post, a commentator wrote that
"the leading 00111 of t11e'Aciclphi and
Surrey (then the homes of lnelo-
dranaa) might have imbibed a use-
ful lesson front the attitude of agony
which the Captain displayed when
gazing. on ilie dead favourite."
Becher's title of Captain was
largely a courtesy one. He was,
however, able to put up one medal
—for being on duty tvitil the Duke
of Buckingham's Yeomanry at the
coronation of George IV. Physic-
ally he was spare and trim with
natty side -Whiskers. Apart from his
ability in the saddle he was some-
thing of an entertainer, for "there
was no sound of the farmyard that
he could not produce with startling
fidelity." Ile finished his career ra-
ther on a note of anti-climax—as
Inspector of Sacks on the G.N. Rly1
Ilecher's great rival Jim Mason,
who.9teered Lottery to victory on
so many occasions, combined bril-
liant riding with a flair for foppish-
ness. lie never rode without sear-
ing. white kid gloves, and was so
fussy about his boots that he ins.
sisted on having the tops and feet
made by different craftsmen. Dandy
or no. 11e spared neither self nor
horse when going at fences. On one
occasion, when Becher and another
well-known rider of the day, Tom
Oliver, had landed in a brook at
Aylesbury the Captain was heard
to shout: "Duck your heat!, Tont,
for Jim's a-comingl"
13y 1850 the National .was very
much as we know it today. Then
a grey named Peter Simple—later
to become a dual winner in 1853
—Was first past the post in a race
that was not outstanding for thrills.
Perhaps the chief feature was the
honesty of the winning jockey who
weighed -in with the story that a
certain gentleman rider, who had
been lying second, screamed sus-•
cessivc offers at him of one, two,
three—and finally four thousand
pounds—to "pull" the winter!
1852 saw the first mare to tri-
umph —Miss Mowbray, described
as "only a rat of a thing." Although
rejected by several experts as "no
good for 'chasing," she not only
won the National but was second
the following year. Her swan -song
sounded •ttvo years later when. she
broke her neck at notorious Be-
cher's.
Sending Messages
To Planet Mars
Can we send a message to Mars?
The possibility has fascinated
astronomers for half a century and
now Russian scientists are suggest-
ing that communication might be
made by means of the flashes given
-off by atomic explosions,
Some years ago the Russians
planted fir trees in Siberia in the
form of a huge triangle with sides
fifteen miles long, assuming that if
intelligent beings did exist on Mars
they might have telescopes with
which to spot this deliberate man-
made marking on the earth's sur-
face. But so far no corresponding
marking has appeared on Mars.
The German mathematician, Karl
Friedrich Gauss was .the first Plan
to suggest, a practical means of
communicating with other planets.
Rocky -Bye -Johnny — Rocky Graziano stares at the prone Johnny
Greco, champion Canadian welterweight, who had just taken
one of Rocky's special sedatives in the form of a straight, right
cross to the jaw in the third round of their fight in Montreal,
Johnny slept quietly through the count of ten,
Scull Session—Jack S. Guest, Jr., right, 18 -year-old holder of the
Canadian and American sculling championships, is shown above
with his father, Jack Sr., in England where he will compete on
the Diamond Sculls next month. His father won The Diamond
Sculls back in 1930 and hopes his son will follow in his footsteps
This year.
He decided that the nature of
the message had to be such that
t conveyed beyond doubt two points
-that the message itself was de-
liberate and not an accidental for-
mation, and that abstract thought
was behind it,
fie sttggested a geometrical fig-
ure in the form of a right-angled
triangle with a square over each
side.
Such a figure could not be an
accident of nature and its mean-'
ing should be clear to every living
being in the universe capable of
reasoning in the sante nl•mner as
Man,
The Austrian astronomer, Litt -
row, suggested that the Sahara
Desert would he the perfect place
•
front which to send a message. He
proposed a set of trenches, one
circular, 011e square, one hexagonal,
and one triangular, which were to
be filled with water.
Enough paraffin to burn six hours
was to be poured on the water, and
one trench was to be illuminated
one night, the other Ole following
night, and so on. Finally all the.
trenches were to be illuminated at
once.
Littrow's plan was never carried
out. Other scientists objected that
since Mars at its nearest point to
the earth was some 35,000,0(10 miles
away, even a trench of fire 100 utiles
long would not be noticed by any
intelligent beings who might exist
on the mystery .planet.
Without meaning to be snooty,
or anything of the sort, we would
say that the chances are your know-
ledge of Australian National Foot-
ball rates about zero. But don't let
it worry you. If zero is your rating,
it puts you on a level with ourself.
Or even slightly higher, if you
must have the truth.
y
Still, as one who has been for
years deploring the way some of our
own Most popular sports seem to
have slowed down—largely through
the efforts of coaches who put their
own reputations ahead of the cus-
tomers' interest—we couldn't • help
being rather intrigued, if that is the
word, by the account of an after-
noon of football as played down
under. Evidently, down there, they
believe in action and see to it that
they get same. The following para-
graphs, taken from the account of
something called the -"jubilee Cen-
tenary Lightning Premiership" will
give you a rough idea of what we
mean.
ry ,t o
Ali 12 teams in the Victorian
Football League took part and 11
games were played from 11.30 a.m.
till 5 p.m. The games were of
20 minutes •duration -10 minutes
each way—and spectators were af-
forded the opportunity of seeing all
State champions in action. This was
quite an event, for the season was
only three games advanced. De-
spite a boisterous, wet day, a big
crowd attended the Melbourne
Cricket Ground—where all the
stellar sports attractions are pre-
sented—and each vital point scored
was wildly cheered.
5 n o
A "foreigner" witnessing the
"lightning" games for the first time
would probably consider the series
was well named, Speed was the
predominant characteristic, as play-
ers were anxious to "play on" and
keep the ball in !notion. No fewer
than 220 players were seen in action
during the afternoon, and the two
teams to reach the final each play-
ed three matches.
5 s
The final was the best match of
the day, and from the first um-
pire's bounce in the 10 -foot ring
to the last kick of the day it was
"anybody's game." Melbourne's
goat was the only score of this
hard battle until 20 seconds before
the final siren from a scrimmage
(not a rugby scrimmage) a Col-
lingwood boot pushed the ball over
the, goal line to equalize amidst
wildest excitement. The ball came
back to the centreand in the last
seconds the Demons battled the ball
to their goal base—but the sired'
„screamed! It was a tie, and under
the rules, the ball had to be brought •
back to the centre and bounced
by the umpire—the [text score
would win the game.
' Melbourne had first chance as
they grabbed the ball from the
bounce and a hurried kick tray-
oiled goalwards. The Collingwood
backs, however, got possession and
worked powerfully to clear. The
ball slowly travelled around the
wings as each team handled it,
until finally Ron Richards, the
Magpies' plucky rover, dashed
through the pack and started an
attack which sent the ball into the
goal mouth, where rookie Jack
Hickey "flew" and marked the ball
on his chest only a few yards from
the goal. One point would do and
he had 21 yards width to score it!
He needed the,minimum as his punt
kick split the centre for a goal (six
points) and Collingwood won the
Jubilee Lightning Premiership.
h '1 '0
The recent series amply demon-
strated the terrific speed at which
National Football is played and
how remarkably free of injuries.
There is plenty of body -contact,
speedy dashes through packs of
players, daring hand pick-ups from
the very toes of opposing players,
high leaps from which players do
not always Iand on their feet—yet
only one player was forced to retire
through injury; and he becauce he
slithered over the wet turf into the
iron fence , . . and the fence is 10
feet away from the playing area.
a « >k
Well, of course, it all happened
several thousand miles away, and
possibly the old one about distance
lending enchantment may be appli-
cable. But "from where we sit, it
sounds like an afternoon of sport
in which there would be few dull
moments or opportunities for get-
ting bored. In fact, the way our
Canadian football is becoming Am-
ericanised—and decelerated—maybe
it mightn't be a bad notion to bring
a few of those Aussie teams over
to show us some real speed. What
do you say?
.{750 MI. 3 HRS :KUWAIT,,
•1 FLYING TIME yy
Ready For Trouble -- Newsmap
above shows air distances tc
troubled Iran f r o m Cyprus,
where Britain's only paratroop
brigade, now en route to the
Middle East by ship, will prob•
ably be stationed. The brigade
will be on hal'd to rescue any
British nationals threatened with
violence in dispute' over nation-
alization of Anglo-lranlan Oil
Co, holdings.
.. C htssified Advertising Y.
Iasi1 t 10t1,s
1.1Ir-. Y 1011 II55 '311,105
.. , 7 • L'. x.1.0 I'1' 1'Id•
:•11 t oloO:arbroods.
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11,11) l i .. I 1 11 Inn
„pre.11,7 rn11
her11 r nt 11 1. nod 1 w'r.. 1-000l
00,10 ow .1 hi. 000 , yol
pr.,. 11,.u,F: r 't.:;! 0.;11 ' nr 1e I,15
.1,,-y .,Itt •, „1 bulbr1 : al.
lu,'y '111 '111th
good 11 , ,,• •1 , . dale 1 / P. rd.
A.: hay.. ;•.I 1, p•1•a
h ,n. tt.-i.•... 11.0 •1`, 35)
ranhe ,al -r '•alb ,s, 3,il ,),n,
00
1: sass,. sats.; -,•r •r,,. ir
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11151V .n Ilpl'Ott'rl NIilws
101310 1 1
roomi 1 5 11 tlmn,p Nino 005
11,1,1001
,01 • n. Itnn••It053 1 0.110 00.
•100 121,101, tea 1111g0.'t. Rua) lir fate.
Ilta1hacl, ant.
aEA )15.1111
11" 11' la ABA I. i 4'r.Anl 520:151(515
,t arr.- 6,0,1 t- ll )nu aro lni,noted
eith r11,1 hos or or -Il.r 11t•wo or
ferns rite to Philin Younft. Realtor,
07 1• r 1 3 Street. 1.it!dl n n Ontario
T[1R'r 15ltl5 'TI3IE h#o 3,!1,x0 s,•11to0
I•l.. I totvr Lish+inb- Needs direct In Us-
ers. 11'-n or women, fn11 or par! -111.00.
complete training kit ,,5501 1. Repeat
Business. no investtnetn. Department
11W. P O. Lbw 254, Iramiltnn,
.�.— 11116120 AND CLt:AN1NG
HAVE you 05551i119 needs. dyeing or Clean-
ing) Wrap on ❑a ter information. we
are glad to answer your quotations. De..
Dorm -mot B. Parker's Dye Works Limited.
701 Voilge 1 ., Toronto.
._sass_ 11015 SALE
—ti-AnfW.IItI5 UUSSNE55 FOR SALE
Established 1090: also adlaoent plumbing
and tlnmulthing shop—with tools. With or
without building. ADUIy ens 193. Hnwllea-
bury On[
GF1f:RAL 51;1x, 540.000 Down payment
125,100, balance terms. 518,000 stock on
hand. Carrying complete Innes of ladles',
men's and ...hildren's Ready -to -Wear as
well as 03 touristy hardware.
district. Phone Minden 45 00
write win. Penrose, Minden.
1
os
B J andconteniea Hardwood lodge,
floors. city
510,000. $20.050 down. mortgage or terms
balance.on
William Penrose, health Cor sale.
Minden, Ont.
POMERANIAN Pups. pedigreed, stale and
femalKennels, 12 Sixth n St.Kingston anlan
t gston,, Ont
JOHN DI:ER12 BAILER writ MOTOR,
automatic, wire 110, nick -up. All in new
condition. Box number; 76, 133 -15th St.,
New Toronto. Ont.
GIANT WHITE P1:Ii(N 30y -old Duck-
iingo. Available weekly year around.
IIs -Sprits harms Limited, Uxbridge.' Ont.
ICE CREAM CARLU\ET5
Buy direst from manufacturer while sup-
ply lasts. Cash or terms. Every cabinet
guaranteed. Write for free catalogue.
Modern Dev1550 Mfg. Co., 1220 St. Ur-
bain St.. Montreal 15.
TWO PINTO MARES, one part Arabian,
one Western; also ether saddle horses
and ponies. 410 King St. W., Oshawa.
Ont.
0ARA0E, on Beaverton - Fenlon Falls
Road, Including stock. equipment and
dwelling, trade. Selling
0use1 11.reaI, Any William Mc-
Innis, Olenarm. Ont.
FARM 131PLEIMEJ'rr AND PARTS Busi-
ness; Esveltent Dealership m Machin-
ery, Plumbing and EIentrlcal Supplies,
Appliances and Dullders' Supplies; mom
street hl progressive terming community;
Store and Warehouse $27,005. Stock ate
proximntely.115,000 extra.LLiberal10rms
owing to illness. Boma r Broker,
25 William Street. Oritlla, Ont.
Sometimes It "Rains"
Strange Things
Tropical tree -frog which fell
from the skies during a rainstorm
on to the deck of a liner at Buenos
Aires has been sent to the London
Zoo. It is a white -lipped hyla, a
rare species. But how did it get into
the clouds in the first place?
Said an expert: "Frogs are some-
times drawn upwards by a rising
air current and have been known
10 be carried many miles before
coming to earth with rain." Still
stronger currents occasionally raise
multitudes of small fish, caterpillars
and worms into the air's upper
reaches, from which they descend
as soon as the force of gravity
overcomes the vertical wind.
Shepherds a nd cottagers in
North-west Ireland saw masses of
herring fry, which had been sucked
up from the sea. dropping on
Cruckmore mountainside in 1945.
A sudden shower of what at first
seemed to be pearls astonished the
people of a Spanish village some
years ago. But the "pearls" proved
to be the eggs of reptiles. Japan
actually experienced a real pearl
shower. The pearls had been car-
ried inland by a strong wind from
an oyster bed, where the shells con-
taining the pearls had been opened
an hour earlier.
Oue of the strangest living things
ever to drop front the sky in a hail-
storm was an ice -encased turtle,
eight inches long and six inches
wide. It plunged from the clouds
at Bovina, Mississippi. Weather
scientists decided that the turtle
must have been borne aloft by a
tornado,
Showers of golden. red and black
rain have heen recorded, The golden
rain was pollen from pines and fir
trees; the red rain was red sand
sucked up by a whirlwind passing
over a dessert. The black rain (ex-
perienced in London in 1913)• was
found to contain pieces of carbon
an eighth of an inch long; it stained
all it touched with soot.
. SMART GIRL
She was geing •to'her first dance.
and before leaving, her mother told
her that she should not just dance
silently; talking to her partner was
also a part of the social pirtare,
During the evening her mother
noticed that each time the music
started the sane boy tore across the
Boor, bowed to her daughter and
swept her away.
Later the mother aske.I wily the
sane hoy chose her I,'+r 511"1v (1.1,,5.5
"Oh," she explained, "I was teiling
trim a murder serial."
11)11 h55.15
,'ltf'iSJ It 1.151, x 9' n',.
•:,bit h,V. 0.n1.G,•J rn'ni,prd
nrh.
n ,d lu„t"r. ,3'00b0 ,1.0110, 1'.•-
hr,ry arrunr;e,1. itis mr•.r. i'uil Inf,nnna-
trrit„ reit,••: nr. Lsarrnthle
1, tit :'.1 LI: -- Pully , .n ivl,,.+ 'laity rtt:rc,
lot 25 ,'nn- 7 .. 0. 1 �• traria, 1,115, .
J�.,,Lara loon,.. ,eaa. ,r tap, macs s flora
iut. y, Apply 11::') 2i r1uh, 11.11. 3,
Ont.
FOR 3AL1: alt 1115?'r •- r-.ucl•at story.
• Ilnnnvllle 111.11,1, 50011 +nrnevet.
£o* brurmatinn wr+ : M. C, l'tnne°.
A . It. No. I Lanz, tie •,t .
1045 Ic 1 Sl -Il. 11 - 1 lits 1 1R 1111Idl(1'.
I,R, pear, Oro 1 ,.r talc '(5 Reeser -
able, W111 (10.hlinf. 3J.
l rill'. R.R. 2 tt 1,•t l,v, „ ,.
M111:U1C'A.L
DON'T WAIT — Every sufferer of Rheu-
matic Pains or Neuritis should try
Dixon's Remedy. Munro's Drug Store,
335 Elgin, Ogawa. $1.25 Express Pre-
paid.
CRESS INGROWN TOE -NAIL SALVE.
Your Druggist cells none better.
SUFFERERS from ttheumatio' or Arthritic
Pains: if 500 cannot get relief. write:
sox 125, Winnipeg, Monitnha.
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
e*N1S1i 15,0 mrmet5q lir dry e•:zeale rashes
and weeping akin SSlnubles. PosVo Eezems
Salve will not dleappolnt you.
Itchins, sealing, borolns eczema, 0050,
ringworm, pimples and athlete's toot, will
respond readily in the stainless, riderless
ointment, regardless nt haw stubborn or
hopeless they seem
PRICE 52.00 PER 74R
POST'S REMEDIES
Sent Post Free on 600015) et Price
005 Queen S,, E,. Corner sr Logan. Torsos
OPPOn•1'UNITIEES NOR
5130N AND 55'0HEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
IOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity Learn
Hairdressing
Pleasant Mangled profession. good wages
Thousands of successful Marvel graduates
America's Greatest Symem
tllustratod Catalogue Free
Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING 0051001.5
ass moor St, W.. Toronto•
Branches:
44 King St.. Hamilton
72 Menu St.. Ottawa
MAKE MONEY TII15 502101115 selling
sheer Nylons with amazing guarantee.
Aloo Lingerie, Men's hosiery and acces-
sories. Liberal commissions and bonus
Plan. Free Sales Kit, Duro-Teat W2,
Hamilton, Ont.
PATENTS
AN OFFER to every Inventor—List of m -
%nations and full information sent tree.
The Ramsay Co.. Registered Patent Attor-
neys. 273 Bank Street. Ottawa.
6ETHERSTONHAt7GH Aa Company. Pa-
tent Solicitors, Established 1590, 550
Bay Street, Tamalennnlnet et Informs•
flan nn request.
PERSONAL
QUIT CIGARETTES — The easy way.
Dec Tobacco Eliminator, a eclentifio
treatment. quickly eliminates the craving
for tobacco, rids the system of nicotine.
King Drug Pharmaceutical Chemists.
Vegreville, Alta. Write P. 0. Box Ola,
London. Ont.
STAMPS
T111$ ST1130r HUNTISOt
PAYS 51,000.00 and up for Canada 12
Penny stamp (not 130), good condition.
5E0.00 for 1510 $0.00 green war saving
stamp. Good collections also purchased.
The Stamp Hunter. Station Its Wlnnlseg.
Canada.
TEACHERS WANTED
TEACHERS WANTED — Male Princi-
pals In School Area No. 1, Yarmouth.
Etsin County, duties to commence Sept.
4, 1951. Salary schedule Minimum 02000.
Maximum 33500. Degrees Recognized.
Sherman Smith, Sec. -Trans., 11.0, No. 5.
St. Thomas. Ont.
WANTED--•\"U11SES
PUBLIC HEALTH NURSES
QUALIFIED STAFF NURSES required
for Peel County Stealth Unit. Salary
range 52500.32500, Allawanen for ex-
50510nce. Write 11.0.11., Court House,
Brampton.
[MATRON end 3 graduate nurses renuired
immediately for 10 -bed hospital; salaries
1200 and $150 respectively plus full main -
(mance; 1 month's holiday and 1 -way fare
from Toronto refunded after year's antis-,
factory service completed, with 05101"'
tunitles for Increases. Apply Mr. L. Fet-
ter. Secretary, Eastend Union Hospital.
Eastend, Saskntehewan.
REGISTERED SUleSES
General Duty Nuraeo nettled for Lady
Atlnto Hospital, Cbapleau. Ontario, Salary
5140.00 for 7-3 and 5100.00 for 2-11 and
11-7 per month will full maintenance.
Apply Superintendent of Nurses, Cha-
ideau, Ontario,
ISSUE 24 — 1951