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The Brussels Post, 1958-06-18, Page 3„ e eiet •Weetateeee 147 ACRES. Good buildings, brick house, all conveniences. Glengarry Cowley, Box 169, 123 Eighteenth St, New Toronto, Ont. INSTRUCTION EARN morel Bookkeeping Salesman- ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc, Les,, sons 500, Ask for free circular, No, 33, Canadian Correspondence Courses 1290 Bay Street, Torento, MEDICAL NATURE'S. HELP .-- DIXON'S REMEDY FOR RHEUMATIC PAINS, NEURITIS. THOUSANDS PRAISING IT, MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN, OTTAWA. $1,25 Express Collect POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH. the torment Of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles. POst's Eczema Salve will not disappoint you. Itching, scaling and burning ecze- Ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless odorless ointment regardless of how stubborn or hopeless they seem, Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price . PRICE $3.00 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES $865 St. Clair Avenue East TORONTO GO INTO BUSINESS for yourself, Sell our exciting house,. wares, watehes and other products not found in stores. No corppeao.on, prof. its up to 50051, Write now for free colour catelegue and separate cone- dentlai wholesale price sheet, Murray Sales, 3822 St. Lawrence Montreal, AGENTS EARN EXTRA INCOME — HERE is a profitable addition tq your lineS, Sell .Canada's leading bridal' and bridesmaids' gowns, yells, headpieces and accessories, Beautifully illustrated catalogue, and worthwhile information help you to sell on sight, classy Formal Wear 1227 Phillips Square, Montreal, Due, ARTICLES FOR SALE ELEVATORS -- portable '20" wide, for hay, grain or corn. Heavy duty under- carriage, cup-shaped flights, roller bearings, motor mount or P.P.O. drive. MANURE SPREADERS — Kelly Ryan I00 bus, P,T,O, combination spreader, rugged construction. Four bolts re- moves beater for use as self-unloading trailer for grain, roots, etc, Tandem axle and forage sides available. XENON COMPANY, Rockwood, Ontario, NYLONS! Irregulars, 3 pair $1.00, 12 pair $3.75 Postpaid. State size money back guarantee, Check or money or- der. P.O. Box 13, Merchantville, New Jersey, 1000 PERSONAL Printed Name and Ad. dress Labels in handsome re-usable plastic *box, $1.00 postpaid. Teoman Royal & Co., Box 1876, Milwaukee 1, Wisconsin, U.S.A. Mr. Farmer: Why should you face that hayloader or handle bales again this year, when you can take the back-break out of the job with a McKee One-Man Shredder Harvester. Remember a McKee Shredder Har. vester is not a "one-job" machine, aside from making better hay than with any other equipment, they are widely used for harvesting grass silage, corn silage, swathed grain and combined straw, We have sold McKee Shredder liar. vesters to over 3,000 progressive far- mers in Ontario. Write us for literature and the names of McKee ewnek's iii Your dis- trict. get the facts before yeti inveet. We have factory representatives In your area ready to call and tall: things over, you are under no obligation. Order yours to-day and keep it buey all siinnner long. McKee Bros, Limited, Elmira Ontario. How Can Hy Anne Ashley Q. How can I prevent Mg of patent leather? A. Olive 'oil, glycerine, all. sweet oil rubbed over the stir., face of patent leather Occasion— ally will prevent i, froth crack- crack- BALE CONVEYORS e. less under- carriage eonvenient„ low-cost band- ling bales. Adjustable guide rails for round or square bales, Single chain, complete with motor mount, See this conveyor before you buy. HARRIS FARM MACHINERY Rockwood, Ontario, BEAUTIFUL artistic nin-up photos of gorgeous girls, 8 different large gloss( photos $2: Sample anti price list 25 .. Ed .Provis„ 77 Victoria St., Teronte 1, GENERATORS — TOOLS — PUMPS Gasoline and Diesel Generators. Also Separate Generators. Beaver, Delta and Stanley Tools, Pumps for farms and summer cottages, All at attractive prices. Write or phone for quotation. Everything guaranteed, R. SPRATT COMPANY LIMITED 2402 Dufferin St., Toronto 10, or Box 482, Woodbridge, Ont. BABY CHICKS - PULLETS. Wide choice. Dayolds. Some started, Have Ames In-Cross dayolds; other high producers. Heavy cockerels, Dual purpose chicks. Sept:Oct. broil- ers. Order now. Get list. Bray Hatchery 120 John N., Hamilton,. or local agent. POULTRYMEN, we are setting extra eggs so that you can obtain egg, dual purpose chicks and turkey poults on short notice. For maximum egg pro- duction on the minimum amount of feed, we recommend,. K-137 Kimber- ehiks. Also rex' maximurn egg produc- tion. Warren "Rhode Island Red. Red X White Leghorn. „White Leghorn X Red, California Grey X White Leg- horn. Our best Iiiy-4ar for dual pun pose, Light -Sussex. X Red, Red X Light Sussex7" Rect,,,X Barred Rock. Turkey Poulta ::for heavy roasters, Broad Breasted Brohze., Turkey Broil- ers. A. 0. SinitliBroad":Whites. Broiler Chicks. Catalogue. TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. FERGUS, ONTARIO. BOOKS THE GOSPEL AN instructive booklet dealing with Bible teaching on this subject will be mailed free. Write Berean, 294 Glebehoirne Blvd., Torono 6, Ontario. REVEALING? Recent! By Jane Bright: "A Woman Attorney Released Me from Madhouse." Price $1.00. Capitol City Studios, Distributor's. 1804 Green St., Columbia, South Carolina. DO IT YOURSELF SWIMMING POOL! 32 foot. solid Ma- sonry for $250. Can be built , by hus- band and wife. Send $2 for hook. P.O. Box 97, Plymouth, Michigan. FARM EQUIPMENT MASSEY-ITARRIS No, 8 push bar hay loader, new condition. Reasonable. Could deliver. L.King, Tottenham, Ont. 1953 INTERNATIONAL Ha ry est er threshing machine. 1951 Goodison threshing machine, Both size 28-46 with recleaners. Lynch Bros., Phone 25 W, Fisherville, Ont. FEATHERS wanted, Duck and goose. Best prices. No wing or tail feathers. Coral Bedding Ltd., 475 Spadina. Ave., Toronto, FETHERSTONHAUGH & Comp a n y Patent Attorneys, Established 1890. 600 University Ave., Toronto Patents all countries. PERSONAL $1.00 TRIAL offer. Twenty-five deluxe personal requirements. Latest cata- logue included. The Medico A1teney, Box 22 Terminal "Q" Toronto, Ont. STAMPS GENERAL George Armstrong Custer stamps issued by U.S. Seventh Cavalry Memorial Association. Sheet $2.00; 200 each. Michael Callaghan, 435 Second Avenue N.W., Minot, North Dakota. SWINE REGISTERED Landrace Gilts — Boars, 41/2 months; excellent breeding stock. Three 1-year old Boars. A. VANDERSTEEN Huron Bay Farm Bright's Grove, Ontario, D14-3921. WANTED "500" WINNER — Jimmy Bryan, above, wears an oil-smeared smile in wake of his win in the. annual' 500-mile race at Indianapolis. His times 133.791 m.p.h., second fastest in history of the classic of motordom. ISSUE 25 — 1958 seggeargaSTAS GENERALS MEET—Preach Premier Charles de Gaulle (right), wearing two stars of a brigadier general—his 194Q rank—is greeted by Gen. Jacques Massu,,one of the chief military leaders In Algeria. De •Gaulle- Was given a -hero's welcome on his arrival in the city from Paris, Why The Giants Are Going Good Willie Mays took time out to think. To the Milwaukee crowd, he seemed simply to be rubbing dirt onto his palms. But, bent over just outside the batters' box at County Stadium, Willie was contemplating his next swing. The score was tied, and Mil- waukee's unbeaten Warren Spahn had pitched effectively against the San Francisco Giants. Now, in the ninth inning, Willie was up with a runner on first base. "I oughta go for it," Mays thought, "I ain't swung for a homer all year, but this time I got to." He stepped back into the box and, swinging from the heels, slammed one. of Spahn's sliders deep into the left-field bleachers for two runs and the ball game. "Every year," Willie explain- ed later, "there's maybe ten or, twenty times when I go for a homer. The other times they just come natural." Even New York baseball writ- ers are conceding that Willie, the natural, and a prize• batch of San Francisco rookies made the 1958 Giants a racy-looking im- provement over the club that pulled out of New York last year. "A cable car named desire," cracked Dick Young in The New York. Daily News. For their new home city, the Giants had pulled out half a dozen victories in the ninth, were running bases with great daring, and were slugging their homers (team total: 64) with dramatic timeliness. Sixth last year, the Giants were lead- ing the National League pennant race by one game late last week.. The difference was easily spot- ted: A rookie first baseman named Orlando Cepeda (thirteen homers), a rookie rightfielder named Willie Kirkland (four homers), a fine rpokie catcher named Bob Schmidt, - a slick rookie third baseman named Jim Davenport, strong, relief pitching from veteran Mary Gris- som, plus tremendously' improv- ' ed play by stortstop Daryl Spen- cer and a suddenly matured cere: ter fielder named Mays. "Did you' notice," asked mane, ger Bill Rigney, his eyes Spark- ling behind steel-rimmed glasses, "how Willie has grown up? Whenever he plays between two kids (Kirkland and Don Taus-, Quiz Master Turns To Comedy By WOK JCLETNELL MIA Staff Correspendeot Jack Berry is branching out, The co-creator and MC of the Current top quiz show, Twenty- One, isat satisfied to rest on his gold-inlaid laurels, He's turning himself into a comedian. "This isn't the end •of ray dreams," he said. "Sure, I love being a top MC on a top show, hut a man has to keep movin, doesnt he?" Barry tried to light his pipe — e new acquisition—and exhaust- ed a few matches in the futile cause, 'The idea is to branch out, de- velop,' he said, "Who knows how long this will last? I think it can go on at least another year— maybe longer, Twenty-One is more than a quiz show, it seems to have a psychological some, thing the others lack. So per- haps it'll go on for years. But perhaps not," In case it doesn't=and even if it does, just for variety's sake —Barry has been quietly ready- ing another side of himself, For the past six months, he's been taking dancing lessons with Nelle Fisher, who used to be on the Sid Caesar Show. "I'm finally getting it," he said. "It's hard for a man of 40, who -never danced a step in his life At the beginning, it was murder —my muscles were always sore., I'm studying soft shoe and tap, and Im just getting the feel of it. And he's studying singing. And brushing up on his piano—"I have played very bad jazz piano for years"—and working on com- edy routines. He's had some top comedy writers turning out ma- terial for him, material which he's been testing and smoothing during appearances at betrif its in the last few months, "I do every benefit I'm asked to do," he says. "Everything— even the Society for Wounded ,Pedestrians." He thinks he has a good sense of humor, a good delivery and he's, sure of his sense of timing. All that remains is experience and the ability to size up' an 'udience. "I've already found out, "he said, "that they won't accept in- sult comedy from me. I guess it's .because of the impreSsion I give,. on Twenty-One, but if I try some gags insulting somebody or something, they -Ireeze up. And 'nothing off „color, It has to be nice, bright, clean humor. That's all right with me." He's had some good nights, some bad ones, in his benefit appearances. But the general feeling has been encouraging, so encouraging that he's even now preparing a night club act, He hopes to break it in in Las Vegas this summer. He gets four weeks off Twenty- One and will use that time for his professional debut as a sing- Mg-dancing-piano-playing-com - edien, Barry worked on his pipe sonic more, sucking•hollow-cheeked as he tried to get the device to smoke. He looked a little de- jected as he put it down. "I've also told my agents," lie said, "that. I'm available for legititnate stage work in the fall. Twenty-One will move to a new day and time—Thursdays from 8 to 8:30—so I'll be able to do a Broadway. play, No heavy dramatics, of course, but I could , MC a. revue or do a light comedy part." ' For Barry, all this would he ,very new. He's not an old-timer in.show business. In fact, he was in the handkerchief business, "but I somehow 'knew I'd get into show business someday, al- though not as• a quiz show MC" Now he and his partner, Dan Enright, have Twenty-One and Tic Tae Dough going strong, They've had previous successes with such shows as Juvenile Jury, Winky Dink and Life Be- gins At. 80, and are constantly working on new shows. The two also own a Miami, Fla., radio station and a "sub- stantial percentage" of a ceri- cern that makes odors for news= paper advertisements, phis some investments in various foreign businesses. So Barry's 'ambition to make himself into a comedian has nothing to do with financial need. As he says, "a Man has to keep Moving, doesn't he?" Want to stop smoking? Try carrying wet matches. MERRY MENAGERIE *It Says; 'having a wonclerftt1 tulle, Wish Yen Were here'!" SLEEP - TO-NIGHT . AND RELIEVE'NERVONSNESI YOU CAN .M1.111)Ar"104AORROIVII to be happy and treacle!! 'initiate ,of nervous or for a good night's Sleep, take SCdktn tablets according'to directions. SEDICIN® TABLETS Drug siaisebstre 0 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING - AGENTS WANTED I FOR SALE recall it so clearly Way cotes it must have been a .peet- ty good safety drill at that, After All, these wise precau- tions are not unrelated to the boat drill on shipboard.. No good skipper omits this little exer- cise, Passengers obediently don baggy life jackets and report to their alloted lifeboat stations, The only time I ever. experi- enced. a .serious alarm, when our ship came within a few feet of crashing into Another in the fog. Ie steod rooted to the spot, My life jacket was under my berth several decks below. The ship could have gone down be- for I could have found it and got topside again. Crew members whipped past me on the dead run, shrugging on their life jackets as they sped to their stations, I recall the captain of the ship bragging later on .of the calm, obedient way in which every passenger reefed to the signal, reporting to his lifeboat station fully jacketed and without panic, writes Josephine Ripley in The Christian Science Monitor, I remember saying I thought it was fine and that I was cer, tainly grateful we had a captain skillful enough to avoid an al- most certain collision, In his flush of pleasure and relief, I ehoped he would fail to notice that my face was considerably redder than his. • Boat drills„ ditching briefings, air raid drills, fire drills in schools — all constitute an ex- pression of wise preparation, not for disaster but for safety. The tremendous increase in air traf- fic and air speeds is even now bringing about new air traffic regulations to meet the new con , ditions. Military transport planes have adopted as a safety measure the installation of seats which face the rear of the plane. The theory is that.the back of the seat acts as a shock absorber in the event of a crash landing. -Commercial planes so far have refrained from adopting this unusual arrangement fear- ing unfavorable passenger reac- tion.. It does seem odd to take off • and land backwards, Lai- though once in the air it is hard to tell whether you're coming or gbing anyway. • • Safe Passage Through The Skies Safety in the air has become an accepted thing, Passengers fasten seat belts as casually and. automatically as they button their coats, On overseas flights, there is additionally a brief demonetration of hew to don a Mae West jacket, It is done quietly, almost inconspicuously. But not so with the military. At least, I can recall a 'ditch- ing" briefing at a Florida air- base some yeers ago that was both explicit and graphic, We — a group of newspaper eorres- pendents — were about to take off over the blue Caribbean for Puerto Rico to cover the war maneuvers off Vieques Island. Coming down for refueling before the long over-water hop, we were conducted into a sort of classroom, equipped with rows of chair, a blackboard, chalk, and on prominent display for demonstration purposes—a Mae West life jacket, It was a violent, unbecoming shade of yellow, and was adorn- ed with more gadgets and im- plements than a carpenter's overalls — including a clearly marked supply of "shark repel- ' lent." A rather meager one, it seemed to us. "When that is gone and the' sharks aren't — what then?" Someone put the question in all our minds. The briefing officer brightened, as if to say, "I'm glad you asked that," and whip- ped a savage-looking dagger out of its sheath at the waistline of the vest. We all lapsed into sud- den silence. First of all, we were told, the jacket must be inflated. One gadget does this automatically — but just "in case': there is another tube, "Just blow," beamed our instructor. Then he held up a small container of bright yellow liquid to be squirt- ed over the water. Even a ship looks small from the air, and a bobbling life raft is a mere pin- point without something to mark the spot. As for the lift raft, the thing to remember is not to lose your head and inflate it before you leave the plane, or you'll never get it out of the door. Above all, don't enter a life raft with your shoes on — if you have spike heels, that is. At this point, most of us were contemplating a little war maneuver of our own, known ' as retreating. Once airborne again, we forgot the whole thing. Or did we? The fact that I can OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN THIS IS BASEBALL?—Giants' star Willie Mays tackles teammate Orlando Cepeda at Pittsburgh's Forbes. Field during a game with the Pirates. Willie tackled Cepeda when the latter attempt- ed to come to the aid of pitcher Ruben Gomez with a bat. Gomez 'and N. ate Manager Danny Murtaugh were squared off in a battle over a "duster" pitch. Giant Manager Bill Rigney (No, 18) rushes to the struggling pair. DO you want to make mono'. part or full time? Sell "CAPRI-50," The new all purpose hand cleaner that removes paint, tar, grease, carbon, etc„ with- out water, Write; Lemill Inc, PG, Box 147, Station "Youville," Montreal, BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant, dignified profession; good wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates. America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free, Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS 358 Bloor St. W., Toronto Branches: 44 King St. W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa PATENTS TURNABOUT In Birmingham, England, Nick Brookes, manager of a Royal S.P.C.A. home for the protection and care of animals, resigned to become handler of fox-hounds for the West Warwickshire Hunt. sag), he's like a coach, the way he moves them with the hitters. Then, when the kids come up against a new pitcher, there's Willie off talking to them, 'Watch this guy's screwball,' he says. He's even dressing better, Things like that. I mean, Willie isn't a kid any more." At 27, Willie Howard Mays Jr. might well be the finest all- around player in baseball—bet- ter than. Mickey Mantle defen- sively, comparable to Stan Mu- sial at bat, and more dangerous than either on the bases. When he came up seven years ago, a bubbling, implaUsible rookie, he poseessed immense raw talent and immense naïveté. "I like to sign papers," he once told a friend, '"because whenever I sign, somebody sends me money." After day games at the Polo Grounds he played stickballewith school children in the streets of -Harlem, Willie knows more about papers now, and he has given up stickball. But he still plays plausibly — thirteen homers, 36' runs batted in, seven'stolen bases, eleven amazing catches, and a .402 batting average after 44 games — and he still bubbles just as he always has done when he talks about his game. Recently, before the Giants defeated the Phils, 7-6 on a ninth- inning homer by Willie Kirk- land, Mays lounged on a bed in his hotel TOOTH and discussed San Francisco, the rookies, and him- self. "It's a nice town," Willie be- gan, but "you can't tell how much the'town's helped us, 'cause you don't know what the rookies woulda done in New York. Up in. Harlem I knew everybody. In San Francisco, I don't know the place yet. I'm •,a little afraid." "Scared and hitting .400?" .a reporter asked Willie. "I ain't afraid on the ball field," Mays said. "I }show what to do there. We got these kids, I got to help them, like Leo (Durocher) and (Ed) Stanky and (Alvin) Dark triedeto help me. Or (Ted) Williams. Last year I was going bad around the 'time of the All-Star game and Wil- liams saw me at the station, 'Hey, Willie?' he says, 'you ain't hitting like Willie should. What you doing with Your front Mot?' Mays sprang up and denion- streted a foot-in;the-bucket stride. "Great hitter like Wil- liams helps me," he said, "I got to help the kids. I only wish Wil- Emile was on this club eo he could help me all the time," Willie began pacing back and forth, "I don't like to watch games," he said. "I see a guy do `something,Wrong, it hurts me. don't even khOW how much I like to play." ''You're beginning to sound like e veteran," the reporter said. "I love to catch fly balls and Rive 'to seetil bases,and love to "throw guys out and; man, I lave to Mays Said. "I love it , When l'in doing sothething, It's just when I ain't doing soine- thihg, when the ball don't come to me, that I don't know how much Ilike it," '"-Ifelt414:i.4441.tent .`4T cion't.figttre I'll ever be a veteran. A vetetan, hese; a guy . like' Williams. He • knoWS it all. Me, I got to keep learning.. never, had nobody could teach. Me the biggest things. Leo tried, liett..heelede h.:250 bit-1 ter. I learned about hitting by X. get, to keep learning 'fOr thyself.. .Bache tithe I Make. a play that I datift think gontie maker I try and figure 'out Why,'!" that's One- big. reason a heti& ballplayer' this season and the San Frendisce Giants are big . Men in the National League. —From NEWSWEEK, cfi -:SWED YOUR WAY BIGGER PAY! USe. spare lute to build an Interesting *end profitable business'' datedt, Underline course that interests yee— Bookkeeping ,1111 CeSt,ACCOUnting • Shorthand • Typewriting` • stationary isegtheeting • Short Story Writing . • JUnior intermediate, 'Accounting Chartered Seeretary.iA.C./.S.1' ▪ Blitiness English end „ Correspondence Tree eatalegitle tedaee ti,9 oilier, eirUitet froie„votioh. to' ehobee Batt I, arias:street , o tO, Dept. ,NO. 111:13 4. How can I Make' k titer for plants? A. A little ammonia added 'to the water t affeetels a rich fertilizer for the plente„ and also aids preventing ,hugs. Q How can i` Satoh Water for 'Wahine? A, Add a half teacup of :nine mania 'to the bath Water and it Will soften the water Wender- arittAillso have a stithula , ting effect on the skin, How Can Welt d cloggett A, A strong atoutieu, 'ef top, perrae; .water poured clown the drain pipe Of the sink will open its GIANT TOADS INVADE FLORIDA—S.P.C.A, Officer Frank Blair distastefully holds aloft' 'one eif several giant South Aneeritdri 'toad§ recently discovered in Florida. Bigger than bullfrog, the IOads are .-poitonoUti A itOti tbbit 'bit one. died, GOVerriMent riatUkilists suspect that body, planted the toads (possibly California Chamber of 65Kit:ierce), , SHAW SCHOOLS