The Brussels Post, 1957-08-28, Page 700E4 EVERYTHING BUT TALK—Ready to .respond NY his .master's
clirectlon"s is Rabefrone a six-foot 'diedtable "inettieleella Owes
his existence 10 the ingenuity and dingenee of 13-yetireOlti
Dena Id ,Rich, .RObetron,.. who is capablee Of •"seeing"- with ,his
0166- able eye art def. "sensing/F .:the' pretente. rated hutted te -bee,
Trig, can pick up, objects manually Or magnetically and .tetevee'
about wheels powered by eleettle 'Meters,. Donald. holds a
00jouter he .desidried, to fit the' robot. a enabling,
RObetroh
.
teitcutotttinsi
LATTER DAY ADVENTURERS—One of three teen-age youths
jumps into the Hudson River to join his companions (circled),
after the trio paid a surprise visit to the Mayflower II, anchored
in New York. The boys swam the two-mile .distance to the
ship from hte Jersey side of the river, and then, after taking
in the sights aboard the ship, they jumped back into the water
for the return trip.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR Aneii 'AND WOMEN
gAliN big money. Sales backgrinlig
PaSeritial. Exceptional earalmo'pear
sable to qualified men or women, NO investment. write Your qiudificanin4
fully fee free details. Acme pistol)*
tele Service, Washburn,
1 ^1,,,,Worrnr,Ir",
PATENTS
FerrilelleTONUAcen & c in p any
Patent Attorneys, Established 1800, COO teiweesity Ave., Toronto. patents,
all CeulltrieS.
PERSONAL
WHY Become Bald-Headed? Guaran-
teed preventive. Mall' 4 hairs for rale-
rescepy, 47 years experience. run
charge Only $1.00. Dr. Cotnam, 1000.
Beech, Cisco, Texas.
51,00 TRIAL offer. Twenty-five deluxe Personal requirements. Latest, cata-logue Included. The Medico Agency.
Box 22, Terminal "4" 'reroute, Ont.
SWINE
Gilt eandrece Swine Sale held in lid. Mentor!, June 29th was the most sue.
cessfoi wine sale ever held in Western
cameo. Average prices Pere the high-
est ever paid and why shouldn't this
swine sale be a good success? We
offered for gale some of the best ani-mals that money could buy, all Irons imparted stock. Available now for me mediate delivery, Weanling, 4 month old, 0 month old saws and boars, guar-
anteed in Pig sows, serviceable boars, all from imported stock. Catalogue.
FERGUS LANDRACE SWINE FARM
FERGUS ONTARIO
TEACHERS WANTED
HAWK JUNCTION, Algoma Central Railway, Ontario, requires 2 teachers.-male or female. Principal to teach Grades 6, 7 and 8. Mtn. salary $3,000. Teacher for Grades 3, 4 and 5. Min. salary $2,600. A pleasant railway corn-murtity 169 miles north of Sault Ste. Marie. Apply to Mrs. Ed. Metvedt, Secretary Hawk Junction, Ontario, Please state ago, experience, qualifi. cations and any special interests,
CATHOLIC teacher wanted for. Bam-
berg Separate School. New made= school, twelve miles from Kitchener, Apply stating experience and salary
exPOated, to Andrew Lanz, Secretary, Bamberg, Ontario.
Little Johnny, in church for
the first time, watched fascin-
ated as the ushers passed the
collection plate.
When they neared his pew, he
piped up so that everyone could
hear:
"Dont pay for me, Daddy, I'm
under five."
When Skin Itch
Drives You ViAD
Jeeps Is a clean stainless pene-
trating antiseptic—known all over
Canada as. MOONE'S EMERALD
OILI.--that dries right in and
brings swift sure relief from the
almost unbearable itching and
distress.
Its action is so powerfully pene-
trating that the itching is prompt-
ly eased, and with continued use
your troubles may soon be aver.
Use EMERALD OIL night and
morning as directions advise for
one full week. Itls safe to use and
failure is rare indeed.
MOONE'S EMERALD OIL can
be obtained In the original bottle
at any modern drug store.
SLEEP .
TONIGHT
AND RELIEVE NERVOUSNESS
WZDAY TO-MORROW!
SEDICIN tablets taken according to
directions is a safe way to induce sleep
or quiet the nerves when tense.
$1.00-$4.95 SEDICIN f Drug Store, Daryl
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
AGENTS WANTED
BE YOUR oWN BOSSf MEN or women, can work your own
helms, And make profits Up to 5009''
Selling exclusive houscware proauctS
and Appliances. No coliSpetitlelli Pot
available in stores, and theY are a
necessity in every tiOnte. Write at once for free =lour catalogue thaw,
trig retell prices plus equfidentlel
wholesale price list. Murray Sales,
3522 St^ 14wreneo Blvd., Montreal,
CATTLE - — AVAILABLE- Galloway Cattle-found'- stock. from registered and accredit-ed herd, Prices reasonable. .1, D. Tin-line, ILL 3, 'Painesville, Ont.
BABY CHICKS
DAYOLP rh t c !t s, variety breeds,
crosses. Including Ames In•Cross for
egg production at low cost, September broilers should be on order. Bray Hatchery, 1213 John N., Hamilton.
AM1IS In.Cress Series 400 pullets at re-duced prices for summer and early fall. This outstanding bird gives marvellous
egg production, We also recommend the following Or maximum egg production., Tweddlo Layrnore series Tao, T-110, T-120 and T-130, Also Shaver White
Legliorns, Warren Rhode Island lied, White Leghorn x Rhode Island Red, CaStfornia Gray x White Leghorn. AR popular dual purpose breeds, Broiler Breeds, Turkey Poults. Catalogue,
'MEDDLE CRICK ITATCIIEBIES LTD.
FERGUS ONTARIO
FARM. MACHINERY FOR SALE
NO. 00 Allis Chalmers Combine; Inter-
national 9 ft, Binder; Massey.I4arris 7
ft, Self Propelled Combine; Apply
Guelph Implement Co, Limited, Guelph, Ont.
FOR SALE
GENERAL Store for sale, 618,000. South-ern Ontario Village. Brick. Corner Lot. Business in operation. Owner retiring. Terms. Box 161, 123 Eighteenth Street, New Toronto, Ont.
MECHANICAL PARTS,' REPAIRS
MOTALOY
RING AND VALVE JOB
While you drive for only 58,00. For cars - trucks - tractors, etc. Un-conditionally guaranteed, Effective for life of car, Motaloy saves you money. Motaloy Sales Co., 34 West Street, Goderich, Ontario Dealer inquiries Invited.
MEDICAL
GOOD RESULTS - EVERY SUFFERER
FROM RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY,
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 Elgin Ottawa
$1.25 Express Prepaid
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles, Test's Eczema Salve will not distil), point you. Itching, sealing and: bum-tog eczema; acne, ringworm, ."pimples and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless odorless ointment re. gardless of 'how stubborn or hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE 53,00 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
2865 St. Clair Avenue East • • TORONTO • •
OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER.
JOIN CANADA'S i,EADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing. Pleasant dignified profession; good
wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates. Illustrated Catalog Free
Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS 358 Bloor St. W., Toronto
Branches: 44 King St, W„ Flamilton 72 Rideau St.. Ottawa
ISSUE 33 — 1957
ITCH or money hack
Very first use of soothing, cooling liquid D.D.D. Prescription positively relieves
raw red itch--causcd by eczema, rashes,
scalp irritation, chafing—other itch troubles.
Greaseless, stainless. 39 trial bottle must
satisfy or money back. Don't suffer. Ask
your druggist for D. D. D. PRESCRIPTION.
STOPPED
IN A JIFFY
•
'flow Can 1 2
Aeree Ashley
Q. Tow Pan X Wash a feather
pillow?
A. Dissolve 1 lb. sal-soda and
)/4 lb. soap in le gallon boiling
water, Pour this solution in a
tub of tepid water. Then dissolve
ee lb. chloride Of lime in 1 qt.
boiling water, let it settle, 'then
stir in tub. Let pillows soak for
an hour, stirring and pressing
constantly with a stick. `Rinse
in several changes of water.
wring, pre ss out all water pos-
sible and hang on line to dry,
turning and shaking often,
Choose a windy day for quick
drying.
Q. How can T darn torn tote
curtains?
A. By laying a newspaper un-
der the holes and stitching back
and forth on the sewing machine
until the hole is covered. Then
the paper can be torn oft.
Q.' How can prevent milk
from scorching the dish or pan
in which it is to be heated?
A. By rinsing the pan in cold
water before the milk is poured
into it,
Q. How can I make a good,
cold cream?
A, Melt together in double
boiler ee oz. spermaceti, 2 oz.
oil of sweet almonds, and 1 oz,
white wax. Remove from fire
and add gradually 4 oz. glyeerz'
ine, and perfume if desired,
Q. How can I clean a suede
coat?
A, Wash in warm water with
pure soap suds, in which one
teaspoon of household ammonia
is, added to each gallon of water.
Rinse lightly and stretch to the
desired size to dry,
'Q. flow cart I clean pans that
are scorched by food adhering
to them?
A. Sprinkle with dry baking
soda and altow to stand for
awhile. Then they can be read-
ily and quickly cleaned.
Q. How can I remove indelible
ink stains from a garment?
A. By using equal parts of
turpentine and ammonia. Satter-
ate the cloth thoroughly in this
solution, allow it to soak a few
minutes, then rinse well in
warm water.
Q. How can. I remove the rust
from a knife blade?
A, Stick the blade into an
onion and let it remain for sev-
eral hours; then polish it,
Q. How can. I Cut very thin
slices of bread?
A. The thinnest slices of bread
or cake can be cut if the knife
is heated 'Until quite hot, or
dipped in boiling water for a
few minutes. Wipe the blade
dry before eating.
MERRY MENAGERIE
..ner .,„„
"He's a bit eccentric — thinks
he's full of Trojan soldiers in
armor!"
eee-.00? eel-Puree •
GREAT A Y /WES IN
OCE4* TRAPEL!
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4":000.0F
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.. ELItikatni" Ewa "QUEEtt
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ofroillfr
These 'four 22,000-ton luxury liners were specially
designed for the Canadian service. They ore part of the
largest fleet of passenger ships art the Atlantic which
sets a standard of ocean ttavcl that is second to none.
Enjoy the ease and luxury of these great trans-atlantic
liners, all equipped with stabilizees for smooth sailing,
And there's 'round-the-clock' fun for you Movies,
datteing sports , plus Ciihard'e superb cuisine and
service. A perfect way to travel—arrive a t your destination
relaxed and tefrethed. _ Remember When You Go Cunard ,Getting
There Is Half The Puel
See Your Loco! Agent—leo One Cart Servo Yeti Deita0
ard
Cor. Boy 8. Wellinetort St`' /Monte, OM. FluShe: EMpire 2-i4e1
.7 • ..
•4 ,
••••• • '2+ •
Four clays later, a well-mean-
ing character named Jafsie Con-
don wrote to a Bronx news-
paper offering to act as inter-
mediary between Lindbergh and
the snatcher. Every crank and
well-wisher in America was
trying to get into the act,
The grounds of Lindbergh's
home swarmed with amateur
detectives. Scores of self-delud-
ed people claimed to be able to
contact .,the kidnapper. But it
was to naive and innocent Jafsie
that the message came — a
crudely written note which was
pushed through his letter-box,
There were already plenty of
fake ransom notes to muddle the
trail. But this message carried
three interlocking circles spaced
around three punctured holes in
the paper, the same identfying
marks of the ransom note left
in the nursery.
The Lindberghs were instruct-
ed to advertise in a personal
column, saying that the money
was ready. Through the,post the
kidnapper sent a second un-
deniable proof, the little boy's
sleeping suit.
In their terrible anguish, the
Lindberghs decided to keep a
rendezvous with the kidnapper
without police action. It was
only with reluctance that Lind-
bergh consented to serial num-
bers of the dollar bills being
taken.
And so, in the darkness of
night, beside a cemetery hedge,
Lindbergh and Jafsie kept their
appointment. They did not know
that the child was already dead,
his skull fractured; and that he
was buried in a shallow grave
five miles away.
Out of the blackness came a
man, calling in a guttural accent,
"Over here!" Swiftly in ex-
change for the 50,000 dollars
ransom money he gave a note,
saying that the boy would be
found on board a boat named
Nelly in near-by Buzzard's Bay.
It was two days, while the
whole coastline was searched,
before Lindbergh discovered
there was no boat named Nelly,
Grim, tense weeks passed before
the child's body was found.
The whole force of the Ameri-
can law went into action in a
fruitless manhunt. The police
pinned their hopes on the serial
numbers of the ransom money.
But the whole course of com-
merce could not 'be impeded
while shopkeepers and bank
clerks painstakingly checked
every dollar handed to them.
Time. passed and the ransom
dollars began to appear. Banks
couldn't recall who had deposit-
ed them; shopkeepers didn't
khow who had spent the money.
The dollar-bills never appeared
in the same place twice. Two
years after the crime, the Lind-
bergh kidnapper was still un-
known,
, By then 5,000 dollars—a tenth
of the total--had crept into eir-
Cr:dation. On the ransom mes-
sages, toxicologists had discover-
ed traces of glycerine end emery
dust. from this clue, and from
the hand-Writing; the police see,
petted they Were looking for
German carpenter, Nails in the
home-made ladder Were traced
to a bttildets' merchant in the
Bronx district of New York,
The police were, in fact look-
ing for Bruno ITatiptmanii.
Hauptmann Made hie Mistake
When he had to stop at a garage
for a gallon of gasoline and Offee-
ed a ten-dollar bill iit pee/I/Met,
As a Purely routine pre:tendon
egainst eotintetfeitere, the gar-
age hand took the number of Ills
ear.
AlVeir then it was three days
before detectives rushed to the
gasoline station. The trail led to
a cheap residential section of
the Bronx — and to Tiauptmann,
carpenter', twice arrested in Cer-
many for theft.
A cordon of seventy-five de-
teetivee /opt Ulf the black ear
as it backed out of the garage.
The garage itself was pulled
down, board by board, and stuff-
ed under the floor and walls
were 13,750 dollars of the ran-
som money.
There ware ransom dollars in
Heeptmann's pocket. Part of the
kidnap ladder, micro-photos
clearly proved, had been made
of wood from Hauptmann's attic.
Part had come from the timber
yard in which he wored.
Photographs from the Lind-
bergh home, enormously enlarg-
ed, identified his fingerprints.
His handwriting, experts agreed
matched that on the ransom
notes. Most careless clue of all,
Condon's telephone number was
found in his home.
Jafsie identified Hauptmann as
the man he had glimpsed at the
cemetery wall. In a pocket-book
in which Hauptmann had econo-
mically recorded the smallest
expenditure were bridge and
tunnel toll items on a certain
evening in February — proving
that Hauptmann had entered the
area of the Lindbergh home a
few days before the baby van-
ished.
Despite his thrift, it was after
the kidnapping that Hauptmann
began to be showy with his
money. To neighbours he boasted
of profits made in the fur trade,
The police were able to prove
that he had never made money
in furs. Equally Hauptmann's
story that he had been given
the ransom money by a Jew who
had since died in. Germany also
proved false.
With his hair cropped, his
trouser leg slit, Hauptmann went
to the electric chair. The throw
of the switch was the end of the
world's most hated man.
PUTTING ON THE DOG —
Definitely the "most" when it
comes to happy-go-lucky hab-
erdashery, Pixie the, pooch
looks proud after being voted
"best dressed" at a special dog
show for kids and mutts only.
Idle For 100 Years
Recent statements holding out
the possibility of men and
women living to ages of 125 or
150 deserve to be read with
statements from from a study
dealing with employment pro-
blems of workers 45 years of age
and older.
The study was made by the
Department of Labor's Bureau
fo Employment Security. The
results are deediebed in Social
Security Bulletin from which
we quote a paragraph:
"While workers aged 45 and
over made up 40 per cent of the
job seekers in the seven areas,
they obtained Only 22 per cent
of the jobs filled by employers
during the year under study.
Similar disparities were found
men and women. Male workers
aged 45 and over, reptesefiting
more than, two-fifths of all male
job seekers, obtained less than
one-foierth of- the jobs for men.
Women aged 45 and over who
made up one-third of the fe-
male unemployed workers, ob-
tained about one-sixth of all jobs
for which women were hired."
, So, if science extends human
life and if enterprise continues
to discriminate against older
workers, we shall face the pos-
sibility that some workers, so
unfortunate as to lose their jobs
at age 48, will not be able to
acquire new jobs but will have
to live on for MO years in idle-
ness supported by society.—
Ogden (IAA) Statichird.Waini-
GET ,RICI1Elf.
Froth KRIMET, Sweden, cares
Word that Greta Garbo,. 51;
Whose Movie portrayals of wist-
fhl lieftities made her nearly
$4 Million, was the Mince* heir
to the estate of her uncle, Rudolf
JohansSori, a local farm hand,
Her inheritance: 458 et owns
($88.8.1): t.
Business Rooming
Ribio. Saks
"We take the water Of We
to people's doors and prat:et:ally
force them to drink ill"
This is the resounding Voice
of preeiderti, J. B. Henderson of
the Southwestern CO. Nashville,
1."ene„ and he is referring to the
greatest phenelelenen in the
Amerlean ;book business, The
Holy Bible has always been the
largest-selling item in the trade,
but xio• one has ever witnessed
anything like its current Weer-
znaece, In a competitive business
which treats its statistics as
gnardedly as the Atomic Energy
Commission, an educated guess
"4inight be that in 1940 there
were 5 million Bibles sold hi the
U.S., whereas last year that
number had leapt to a torrential
15 million." But more signifi-
cant for the trade is the fact that
while conservative bookstore
Bible sellers last year grossed
something like $20 million, the
relatively new, rampageously
aggressive door-to-door branch
of the trade piled up a high take
in the neighborhood of $100 mil-
lion. For the most part they did
it by selling $25-$84 Bibles on
the installment plan to the poor
and the comfortably off alike,
Traditionally the South was
known as the Bible Belt of the
U.S., and the sales of Holy Scrip-
ture bore out that description. It.applies no longer. Bible sellers
generally agree that their bur-
geoning business is now a coast.-
to-coast affair. How account for
the boom? President William R.
McCulley of Thomas Nelson &
Sons of New York emphasizes
population growth and a new
Interest in religion, President
Ben D, Zevin of World Publish-
ing Co. in Cleveland stresses an
increase in leisure time, rising
economic standards, and an in-
crease in literacy.
F. Ronald Mansbridge of the
Cat-abridge University Press is
struck by both the new indus-
trial growth and the cultism of
California, which seems to have
contributed to Bible buying. He
also ruefully observes: "Bible
reading Is strongest among fun-
damentalistie evangelicals, and
Baptists, Weakest in the more
liberal denominations, particu-
larly in the Episcopal churches."
Walter T. Oakley, New York
sales vice president of the Ox-
ford University. Press, echoes
other Bible salesmen in the
opinion that New York City is
one of the worst territories. Miss
Louise H. Wynhausen, general
manager of, Sheed & Ward of
New York, one of the leading
Catholic houses, also has her
disappointments: "The Midwest
Is the gravy train. Boston is
rather disappointing. New York
Is so-so."
'But such melancholia is rare
among today's Bible sellers. The
staple product of preWar years
--the sober black Bible—is still
a. staple, but other Bibles have
put on a Joseph's coat of many
colors. Prices range freom less
than a dollar to around $300.
Formats and type fai:es are
legion, from good simple reading
bibles to such exquisite products
of the designers art as the $300
limited edition of the late typo-
grapher Bruce Rogers (sold by
the Oxford Press and now on
RI reserved list). Most of the
larger bookstore kiting houses
offer at least 75 types of Bible.
—,From NEWSWEEK. -
Kidnapping, is perhaps the
most terrifying of crimes, shock-
ing the world and gripping with
fear the hearts of parents every-
where. And the. Lindbergh kid-
napping — most sensational of
them all — not only made mil-
lions of mothers afraid but still
haunts some to this day.
It is twenty-five years since
the Scottish nurse cried half-
hysterically: "Colonel Lindbergh,
have you got the baby? Please
do not fool me—he is gone!"
A crumpled cot, an empty
nursery, smudges of yellowed
mud that led towards the win-
dow.
In 1932, Charles Lindbergh was
at the crest of the five years of
popularity that had swelled
around him as the first man to
fly the Atlantic solo in a single-
engined 'plane. His marriage to
Anne Morrow had been celebrat-
ed with the fervour of a royal
wedding. The birth of his son
had been like the advent of a
baby prince.
But the hideous penalties of
fame were never more explicit
than in his anguished cry that
March evening: "They have
stolen our baby!"
The world could only watch
in stunned sympathy. The police
were powerless to trace the kid-
napper of the twenty-month-old
toddler despite the clues he left.
First there was the ransom
note left on the nursery win-
dow-sill indicating that' the kid-
napper would soon demand 50,-
000 dollars. Next was a home-
made — but- expertly built —
ladder on the ground outside.
Smeared with no fewer than,
500 fingerprints, it seemed sure
to lead to an arrest. But none
of the prints could be matched
in police files.
World's Most aged Man Was Trapped
UNARD S
SYLVANIA '• CARINTHIA • IVERNIA • SAXONIA