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AGENTS WAN'''ED FILMS AND PRINTS
OOD PROFITS ;'VERY DAY SEI,
• ding our guaranteed hosiery. Plen-
ty of repeat orders. Protected terri-
toryfor producers. Clarion Company,
Post Office 162, St. Catharines, Ont.
PROGRESSIVE AGENTS WANTED
for made -to -measure men's cloth-
ing. Supercraft Clothes, 5044 St. Law-
rence, Montreal, Quebec.
SEND FOR FREE KIT
S0131E'S, manufacturers for their
own 24 city stores across Can-
ada, want agents to become exclus-
ive factory representatives. Men and
women, earn big money! Sell Sobie's
.guaranteed Lingerie and -fine Hos-
iery. Get into this profitable busin-
ess now. Write today for free outfit,
Sobie's Silk Shops. Department S.T.
Farnham, Que.
$$5®.00 WEEKLY SELLING FELT
Rugs. For full particulars
write M. Shedel, Box 473, Mimico, Ont.
ARTIFICIAL LIMBS
ANGER STANDARD LIMB CO.,
• 126 Wellington Street West, To-
ronto, Improved light metal and win
low artificial limbs without shoulder
straps.
BARN ROOFING — FENCE POSTS
®UR DIRECT FACTORY PRICES
save you money on Supertite gal-
vanized roofing, Superior steel Fence
Posts and steel granary lining. Super-
ior Products Limited, Sarnia, Ont.
CARPETS RE -WOVEN INTO RUGS
oLD CARPETS WOVEN INTO RE-
versfble Rugs. Write for price list.
Baker Cleaning Co., Toronto 4.
CORONATION COVERS
FIRST DAY ISSUE CORONATION
Covers—Newfoundland 30c each,
L. Plodder, Bay -de -Verde, Newfound-
land.
DOGS
HIGH CLASS SCOTCH, ENGLISH
Collie Pups, natural born, low
heelers, good watch dog. Males, two
^•. months, $3.50. 3 months $3.75. Females
$2.00. Failures replaced free. Trained
cattle dogs, trained fox, coon and deer
hounds. Rapidview Kennels, Morris -
burg, Ontario.
ELECTRIC WELDER
The Trindl Electric Welder
WONDERFUL NEW INVENTION.
Operates from 6 -volt battery.
Welds—Solders--Brazes. $4.50 de-
livered. R. H. Anderson, Lindsay,
Ont.
EDUCATIONAL
STENOGRAPHY BY MAIL—WRITE
for free sample lesson. Miss Mac-
donald, 3472 West Broadway, Mont-
real, Quebec.
FURNITURE
LYONS' USED FURNITURE
BARGAINS
Great savings in our Furniture
Trade-in Department. Our ]ow prices
have made this department the,larg-
est and most popular in Toronto, Just
a few of the hundreds of specials are
listed here. If you don't see what you
want advertised come in or write,
Lyons are sure to have it and at the
lowest price in town. Every piece of
furniture is sanitarily treated and
completely refinished to look like new.
$59.00 Beautiful American walnut
bedroom suite, large chiff-
robe, full length triple mirror vanity
and full size 4 -poster bed with sagless
spring. Completely refinished. Cost
new over $200.00.
$21.50 Walnut finish dresser, in
perfect condition, with full
size steel bed to match, sagless spring
and brand new all -felt mattress.
$19.50 Solid oak dining -room
suites, large buffet, exten-
sion tables and 6 leather upholstered
chairs, iu perfect' condition. Your
choice of golden or fumed oak,
$89.00 Beautiful solid walnut din-
ing -room suite, Iarge buf-
fet, twin pedestal extension table,
china cabinet and 6 chairs upholstered
in genuine, leather. A really fine suite
and looks. brand new; completely re-
finished. Cost originally about $300.00.
$47.00 Eight -piece, 2 -tone walnut
finish dining -room suite
Queen Ann design; large buffet, ex-
tension table and 6 chairs upholstered
in genuine leather. Completely refin-
ished.
$49000 Luxurious 3 -piece chester-
field suite (unclaimed), —
This suite has been rebuilt and recov-
ered in a very attractive brand new
brown repp; has Marshall reversible
spring cushions and is a real bargain
at this price. Originally cost $175.00,
Is exactly like new.
$29.50 Full length chesterfield
and two roomy chairs to
match, upholstered in a novelty repp
with reversible Marshall cushions and
show -wood walnut frame; completely
re -conditioned and dry cleaned.
$3500 Large Chesterfield with
two big chairs, covered
en a French Jacquard Taupe shade;
^ �j1etPly re -built and thoroughly dry
?Cleaned,
Large assortment of Kitchen Cab-
inets, Sewing Machines, Gas Stoves,
Library Tables, Beds, Spring Mat-
tresses, Odd Dressers, Chiffoniers,
tudio Couches, etc., at amazingly low
prices,
;. TRADE-IN DEPT.
LYONS' BEDDING AND
UPHOLSTERING CO.
save 40%. Buy Direct from Factory
47$ YONGE ' ST. TORONTO
ENLARGEMENTS FREE WITH
every 25 cent order. Moll films
developed and eight prints 25 cents,
reprints 3 cents each. Brightiing, 29
Richmond Street East, Toronto,
SPARKLING, HIGLOSS, DECKLE
edged prints, three extra with
each roll finished 25c, Twelve reprints
25c Delhanty's, Webbwood, Ont.
25— ROLL DEVELOPED AND
C one deckle edge print of each.
Reprints 3e, 10 for 25c. One Free en-
largement with each order 250 or
more. Snap -Y Photo Service. Box 72,
Station K, Toronto.
ZERO PRICES, TXPERT WORK.
Roll with free enlargement 25c.
Trevanna Studios, 93 Niagara Street,
St. Catharines, Ont.
ROLLS DEVELOPED AND EIGHT
prints with free enlargement, 25c,
Reprints 3c each. Commercial Photo
Service, Dept. B„ Outremont, Que.
FUR FARMING
RAISE MINK FOR PROFIT — GET
started right with Moss "Quetico”
strain mink—guaranteed stock. Write
for full information, Moss Fur Farms,
Limited (mink breeding specialists),
Sapawe, Ontario.
MINK with a proven pelt record,
the same strain which averaged
$36.50 in 19.36 and $41.50 in 1937,
and that after the best have been sold
for breeders. 0. Lee, Faust, Alberta.
GREAT SALE USED PIANOS
®RIGINALLY COSTING WHEN
new up to $300., good makes, beau-
tiful walnut, mahogany and golden oak
cabinets, in real good condition, tuned,
including piano benches; bargain
prices, $39.50, $49.50, $59.50. Ideal for
homes, schools, churches. Write for
our bargain price list. Sovereign's
Sales, 241813 Dufferin St., Toronto. •
HELP WANTED
YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN—POSI-
tions more easily secured if you
train for Telegrapher or Stenographer.
Became stenographer in ten weeks—
notes written in English. Typewriter
supplied. Self -teaching machine loan-
ed with telegraphy. Inexpensive. What
course interests you? Write Caesan
Systems, Toronto.
LILY BULBS
IDLANT LILIES NOW — ADD TO
brightness of your garden with
Lilies from home-grown bulbs of re-
liable varieties. Also other perennial
flowers—and fruit trees for northern
gardens; all of the hardiest strains.
Send for Autumn Catalogue with in-
structions for Lilies, etc. ' Arrival of
all plants in good condition guaran-
teed. The Manitoba Hardy Plant
Nursery, F. L. Skinner, Prop., Drop
more, Manitoba.
MACHINERY
CET OUR NEW PRICES ON THE
Goold, Shapley & Muir gas, gaso-
line, and fuel oil engines and grinders.
Also repairs for Brantford engines.
pumps, windmills. J. A. Fellows & c'^
Brantford, Ont.
FANNING MILL (KLINE) SEEL
Grader, guaranteed increase crop.
Write, Kline Mfr., 121 Empress Cres„
Toronto.
REBUILT FARM MACHINERY AND
trucks composed of: Grain chop-
pers 8" to 15"; Gas engines 1% to 14
h.p.; Tractors 8 x 16 to 25 x 40 h.p.;
Power units 26 h.p. up; Ensilage cut-
ters; 21 Trucks from '/s -ton up. We
pay spot cash for old tractors. Write
or see us. Hanna's International Sales
& Service, MacDonnell St., ( : h,
Ontario.
MEDICAL
CONSTIPATED? — Immediate Re-
lief—(money back guarantee.)
Perfect (brand) Laxative Pills, 35c
box, 3 boxes $1.00, Mail orders in-
vited, Perfect Chemical, 460 Rich-
mond W., Toronto.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
EARN TO PLAY A SAXOPHONE
Trumpet, Trombone, Become a
Musician, Send for Form for six days'
Free Trial. Ten months' terms—no in
barest, Literature free. Greene Music
Company, 57 Queen St., East, Toronto.
MISCELLANEOUS
,Sensational New Discovery
,RECHARGES RADIO B's, FLASH -
lights, dry cells, guaranteed like
new. Stamped envelope brings full
particulars. A. E. Lueck, Box 152,
Lockwood, Sask.
LEAF BURLEY, FOUR POUNDS
$1.00, fourteen pounds $3.00. Five
pounds Virginia Leaf Cigarette Tobac-
co $2.00. Postpaid with flavorin', Nat-
ural Leaf Tobacco Co., '.ean ington,
Ont,
WE GUARANTEE YOUR FIT WITH
best quality, latest style suit or
winter overcoat (slightly used), regu-
lar to $60.00 for $6 to $12. Fall coats,
regular to $35.00 for $4 to $8. Suit
coats, $2, $2.50, $3. NOW trousers, in
tweeds, sergee and worsteds, g1„25,
$1.75, $2.25, $2.95. Postpaid. State
measurements, colours, style, age. Sat-
isfaction guaranteed or money refund-
ed. Send money order—Ruskin & Co.,
Peterbero, Ont.
Doctor—"What is a red corpuscle?"
Recruit—"A, red corpuscle is a Auto
tan non-commissioned otfieerl"
7
SHE WAS XAMIED
12 TIES
Tried Electric Treatestent Veer
Rbeurmatislm
To suffer for five years with pains
in the back , .. to be X-rayed 12 times
to undergo electric treatment for
three years < , and then to find that
Kruschen was what she really needed
to get relief—that was this womall'e
experience:--
"Five years ago, I was taken ill: with
pains in my back. After three weeks
in bed I was sent to hospital, M first
spine trouble was suspected, but after
12 X-rays I was found to have serious
lumbar rheumatism. For over three
years, I was given electrical treatment
three times a week. Last year, I tried.
ICruseben Salts and it bas done Won-
ders, I have discontinued hospital
treatment, and last winter, the first'
for five years, I was free from pain:,
My friends are'amazed to see me so
well." (Mrs.) E.P.
In a good many cases, rheumatism
cannot resist the action of Kruschen
Salts, which dissolve the painful ci'Y-
stats of uric acid—often the cause of
those aches and pains—and assist the
kidneys to eliminate the poison
through the natural channels,
PERSONAL
BOOKS EVERY MARRIED COUPLE.
and those contemplating marriage
should read. ''Entering Marriage," 24
pages, postpaid, 15c. "Sex, and Youth,"
104 pages, postpaid, 25c., Our 20 page
illustrated catalogue of books, 'drug
supplies, and household novelties, free
upon request, Supreme Specialty; .169,,
Yonge, Toronto.
ARD YOU RUPTURED? RELIEF,
Comfort, Positive Support with,,.
our advanced method. No elastic or
understraps or steel. Write, Smith
Manufacturing Co.. Rept, 219, Preston,
Ont.
POULTRY AND EGGS
Free Range Pullets
ALL HEALTHY STOCK FROM,
Government Approved blood -test-
ed breeders—Leghorns, Barred Rocks,
10 weeks old 40c, 12 weeks old . 50c,
14 weeks old 60c. Act quickly. At
these low prices, they will soon sell.
Write for prices on older pullets.
Tweddle Chick Hatchery, Limited,
Fergus, Ontario.
RADIO
FARM -CITY RADIOS $7.95 COM-
piete. Save half. Agents free offer.
Amazing prices windchargers, power
plants, accessories. Marco 1243X Mc-
Gee, Kansas City, Mo.
STAMPS
WANTED, CANADIAN STAMPS IN.,
quantity. Best prices for accumu-
lations and collections. Queen Stamp
Co., Toronto.
. SALESMEN WANTED
SALESMEN, EASY TO EARN4,25.00
weekly. Sell shirts, pyjamas,.
made -to -measure: Dignified work Ev-
ery' man interested. Write D. St$tbon,
Box 2110, Montreal.
TELEVISION AND RAD
ENGINEERING TAUGHT P1 4CTI•
cally. Motors, generators, arma-
ture winding, electrical drafting, etc.
Day and evening classes. Special cor-
respondence course. Employment ser-
vice guaranteed. Canadian Sebool of
Electricity. 232 Ontario West, Mont-
-nn1
TIRES
mLNL1.E'S USED TIRES $2.96 UP
for Ford, Chevrolet, Plymouth
Dodge, Buick, Oldsmobile, Packard,
Cadillac and all other cars and trucks.
Every tire guaranteed. 190 King West,
Toronto.
TRAPPING
I CAUGHT 16 FOXES IN 3 DAYS
You can do it. Particulars free.
Wells Hadley, Stanstead, Que.
WATCH REPAIRS
30 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
$1.00 replaces mainspring, jewel,
cleaning, hands, crystals,
dial repaired. Providing no parts
missing. 2 -years guarantee. Re-
turn, postage paid. Formerly with
Hamilton Watch Factory. American
Swiss Watch `Specialist Reg'd, Dept.
W., 4313 Breheuf. Montreal.
TORONTO.—Appreciation of the
governments of Canada in their pro-
tection of colored persons was voiced
in a resolution 'passed this week by
the regional conference of the Uni-
versal Negro Improvement Associa-
tion. The resolution volunteered the
promise the colored man, "so long as
he remains in Canada, shall always be
a ,loyal and obedient citizen." Four
hundred delegates, 350 of then from
the United States, attended.
MUSSES
ABOLISH
my eoaslcy's Wonderful New AIr Cushion
ENDORSED BY THE MEDICAL PROFESSION
Thousands of ruptured peoplehave found
instant relief frim Rupture given by this
light easily waahed,inllated air cushion. G'om-
fertable and cannot slip. Holds rupture gently
1
truly, affording tissues increased. chance di
re -uniting; Yon Inflate ordeflate ittopressurs
•you' desire) A wonderfully simple but 100
Sestive,de 'Se; Doctors recommend it, Gehtt
a��pqct", t e great medical paper ead,t(fe
l 5Utllte of ggiene endorse itl , e •
tl"^ ,Sset ie eleree TrXaf Parikela reg
BEASLEY'S (Canada) LTD.
Dept. 37E 60 Front St. W., Toronto
Issue No. 38—'37
D-1
•
WERE CHEW
TWAT 'S FRES,1-d AS
A DAISY AND
SWEGT AS '
A NUT /"
THE PERFECT
Chewing Tob
eco
1 Ki9kd a Man
(From Scribner's Magazine)
In the records of the courts and
insurance companies, it was ,pretty
much the same old story. While
driving hone early one evening, I
rounded a familiar curve and faced
a pair of glaring headlights. On the
right of the road, a millworker was
on his way to work on the night
shift. He became confused and
jumped the wrong way. The impact
threw me a little forward in my seat,
The millworker's body slid flat on the
pavement for perhaps 50 feet, rolled
over, jerked, and lay still. The din-
ner pail he had carried under his arm
rattled along the pavement for an-
other 20 feet, then all was quiet.
,When we got to him, we saw there
would be no hurry about taking him
to the hospital. He' was dead.
During the long court ordeal after-
ward, it was established beyond all
doubt that the accident was unavoid-
able. I am a free man; free to lie
inbed- on Sunday mornings, stretch-
ing and yawning; free to eat when I
am hungry and drink deep when I
am thirsty; free to feel the wind and
sun on my face, to know the four
seasons, to love.
Blit' I cannot forget that because
of me a man will never see the white
sparks from molten steel again, or
smell the hot meta} in the molds, or
feel the satisfying tug of his muscles
against a heavy crane, or peer out
of a factory window into a moonlit
alight, or open his dinner pail with
' the keen appetite of a laboring man.
Because of me a mother will never
.again. ear a familiar footfall when
work, done, and she will have
things o explain to her babies that
will break her heart.
I know all this is not my fault-
I car- a co. of law has told me so but
t stop thinking how different
things would have been if I had
started just half a minute sooner or
later, or if I had been going just a
little slower or faster, or if, in that
split second, my skill had been just
a little greater or my brakes a little
better, or if I had thought in ad-
vance of all the possible circum-
stances that might have been wait-
ing for me around that curve. It
has been two years since it happen-
ed, yet these thoughts go round and
round in my mind continually. Noth-
ing can make me forget that I am
still walking this earth, and that be-
cause of me another man is not, I
cannot forget that a combination of
factors—factors that could so easily
have been just a little different —
happened to work out with lethal
precision, and I killed a man,
Copper Can
Be Tempered
One of the Arts, accredited to the
ancient Egyptians and thought to have
been "lost to modern science, is that
of tempering copper, Scientists be.
lieve that the Egyptian legend Is true
only to the extent that the ancients
hardened this copper by hammering,
It is now claimed that by the addition
of 2% of a metal called Beryllium
to copper, the alloy can be tempered
to a hardness that will even cut steel.
The vast possibilities that this new
alloy offers to modern industry has
stimulated the search all over the
world for deposits of the mineral
Beryl, from which the metal Beryl
22
NEURITIS
•
SLICED "No
VERY •. ■
THIN . ■
Matter How Thin You Slice It—
It's Still Boloney"
By SIXBITS
The election campaign scorns to be warming up very nicely—that
is to say on the part of Mitch and Earl and others vitally interested,
although, it must be confessed that he general public still continues
to take a regretably- apathetic view ' of the noble efforts of all these
great patriots to save us from a fate worse than death, or something.
* *
However the boys are doing the best they ean, under the circ
circumstances, and already have aceused the other side of everything
from plain lying to attempted mayhem and threats of kidnapping.
e * *
In another couple of weeks we may expect them to be letting
down their back hair and really starting to call names.
Which is, of course, a good excuse for draggingin the old ones
about the two large and angry coster ladies who were pictured en-
gaged in a very heated altercation. Tugging at the apron strings of
one of them was a darling little thitng about six or seven years of age.
"Muvver,," she was saying to her maternal parent, "Muvver, don't
forget to call 'er a bleedin' old cow before she remembers to call
you one."
* * *
The constant back-biting, recriminations, threats of splits, and
' general atmosphere of an alley brawl which from the first have sur-
rounded the (Tommy Farr camp—as compared to the peace and quiet-
ness, of that of Joe Louis—would make us prouder than ever of be-
longing to the superior white race. They should indeed.
Mr. Farr made himself, overnight, one of the most popular fig-
ures in the flstic world—a popularity he should be able to cash in
for large bundles of coarse money. But if somebody doesn't take the
Welshman to one side, and tell him to pipe down and wash the dirty
linen in privacy; we fear that the next time he gets into an American
ring the large majority of pew -holders will be hollering for somebody
to knock his block off.
* * *
Mr. Broadribb may lack a lot in smoothness, culture and several
other desirable qualities; but as we see it, he stuck to Mr. Farr when
the going was rocky, and meals few and far between—and now it
wbuld appear as if Tommy was trying to ditch the man who helped a
lot to make him.
* ,e *
The, chisel artists—of whom there is never a dearth around boxing
circles—have undoubtedly got in some of their fine work on Farr,
some of them being real geniuses at making a fighter discontented with
his present management and painting rosy pictures of what would
happen if he only hooked up with somebody that knew how to get the
real dough.
* * *
We have said before, and will probably say again, that there is
nothing wrong with the boxing game—but only with people mixred up
in it. And that by no means refers to the boys who actually do the
pitching and the catching.
* *
However, it is probably no particular mud in our eye what Farr
and Broadribb do to one another — only we fear that Tommy will
live to regret the split.
For there was once a very popular fighter by the name of Jack
Dempsey who, for one reason or another, finally split out with his
long-time manager Jack Kearns.
And, strangely enough, Mr. Dempsey—if we remember correctly
—never won another championship bout after the break. And one of
the most certain things in sport—or most anything else—is that what
has happened before can happen again.
lium is extracted, Geologists agree
that Canada offers the best hunting
ground and it is expected that large
deposits of the mineral will be found
in this country.
Fiddle to Denrari'ay
Won't Play Second
HOLLYWOOD. — Judy Canova,
hillbilly singer, this week broke her
engagement to ventriloquist Edgar
Bergen, blaming dummy Charlie Mc-
Carthy for the cooling of a three-
year romance.
She said she didn't like "playing
second fiddle" to the wooden -headed
Iittle fellow that Bergen made into a
favorite.
"It's an obsession with Eddie," she
added. "He thinks and talks of no-
thing but Charlie,"
Their estrangement carne to light
when Miss Canova balked at plans for
posing with Bergen for a studio pho-
tograph.
"Eddie can stuff his old dummy in
his trunk and get in with him," she
announced.
Miss Petite—"Tell me, Doctor, is
skin grafting a very late discovery?"
Doctor—"Oh, no; it's only a branch
of a very " old art, All grafting is a
skin game."
One thing that helps is to
warm a 'dish, pour in Min-
ard'e. Then rub the liniment
gently in.
Pain ewes c'ff
"Superb*" (� ,, 66 ,,
GeneralA & Batteries
The best and most economical
battery equipment for your radio.
7,::717:' THEY LAST LONGER
Write for Pamphlet on "SUPERSILT" "A" battery
General Dry .Batteries of Canada Ltd.