The Brussels Post, 1960-12-15, Page 3ASS ELI AD
TisiNo
NUTRIA
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
STAMPS & COINS
HOUSE your Stamps and Coins prop-erly. Write for stamp album and ac-
cessories lists. Use Whitman Coin Fol ers, 50e each, postpaid. Cooke Puns
hag Company, Arkona, Ontario,
WANTED
WANTED old Military or Naval Medale prior to'1914 to complete my collection, also any decorations to the Air Force. Will pay fair price for same. Write Geo. W. Middleton, 3238 Yonge St., Tor-
onto 12, Ontario.
WATER. SOFTENER
SOFT WATER! Portable 1 Galion Soft-ener, simple operation, full informa-tion, $29.00. Complete line Softeners. Direct Factory prices, Velva-Soft Com-pany; P.O, Box 96, Brantford, Ontario.
WELDING MACHINES
ELECTRIC ARC WELDER
130 Amp: Unit $79.50
Welds and cuts metal to 1/2" thick, Write for literature-II & P InclestrIal Sales, Box 22, Whitby, Ontario
SALES HELP WANTED
TOP COMMISSIONS paid for selling the highly demanded Holiday uniforms to Waitresses, beauticians, nurses,, doctors, etc Nothing to Invest, Beautifully il-lustrated catalogue showing more than 100 top quality styles of miracle wash 'n wear fabrics. Write to!
HOLIDAY COMPANY 507 -5th Avenue New York 17, N.Y.
ATTENTIQN
PURCHASERS. OF NUTRIA
nerelaising Nutria, conetaer this fellowleg points. which this organize.
lion cm
i The WHO' ceval:41)to stock. no ;ace* bred or staipiard types recommended. 2, Tile riinitation at a plea widen I proving le.:eit !libstantiated by tiles Of satistied ranel;cea.
5, Fun insurance iteatnst r.cloccilient„.
should they Trot live Or In the event
sit sterility lolly' explained In one
eertifiente of merit.)
4 We give you only ultilations
are lit denuied for for..earinents,
$. You receive frOM tide organi.caCiola a guaranteed pelt market in writing.
B. llembersbip in our enelilSite breed,
ers. -wtlerebV only Perri-Met ars ,of Ms stock mos- participate in the, benefits so offered.
7, Prices far 13reeding Stneli elint at pair.
Special offer to those who qualifet earn your Nutria on our cooperative
basis Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd.,
tt Ji. No 2. StouIrville, Ontario
OPPORTUNITIES. FOR • .
MEN AND WOMEN
-•
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profesidon; good wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Calla oct es America's Greatest System Illustrated (catalogue Free.
Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 Bloor St W., Toronto Branches: 44 Itini.f St. W., tiamitton-
74 Rideau Street. Ottawa.
PERSONAL
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS
TEST.ED, guaranteed, mailed in plain, parcel, Including eLtulogUe and sex book tree with trial assortment. 18 fer
$1.00 (Fin est quality). Western Distills°. tors, Box 7.4-TPF Regina Saek,
PHEASANTS
SILVER 'Pheasants, 1900 hatched. $10 Per pair. White laced Cornish Bantarrie. Ed Walker, Maidstone, Ont. — -
PHOTOGRAPHY
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
BOX 31, GALT, ONT.
Films developed and 8 magna prints 40e 12 magna prints 600 Reprints 50 each
KODACOLOR
Developing r o t I 900 (not incinding prints), Color prints 300 each extra
Anson and Egtachrome 35 mm, 20 ex-posures mounted in slides $1.20. Coloir prints from slides 320 each. Money re-funded in full for unprinted negatives.
LARGE house, basement, hydro, phone,running water furnace. 91/2 acres land, Near village. Information, apply: Alvin Young, Utterson, Ont,
LAND is your best investment, BUY now and make SUBSTANTIAL profit in spring LOTS on registered plans on GEORGIAN Bay mainland development ROADS complete, Hydro arranged DISCOUNTS on all lots with SPECIAL discounts to en blo e pus. chasers. HU. 3.3587 or write J. A, Bailey Ltd. 727 Bayview Ave., Toronto.
.er
CONFESSES - Chester Weger,
handcuffed, walks from a
cave in. Starved Rock Stale
Park, Illinois, after showing po-
lice how he claims to have
killed three. Chicago women
last winter.
North America, "blocking the
coast and the mouths of the great
rivers all year round"! This
might make it better living at
the North Pole (where no one
lives), but it would make it
dangerous if not impossible for,
the many .who do live on the
edge of the Arctic basin, driving
them out of their homes
In Comrade Borisov's article
there were visions of the Soviet's
Siberian shores on. the Arctic
rivaling its Black Sea coasts tor
vacationlands and summer re-
sorts, writes Neal .Seandford in
the Christian Science Monitor,
Unadulterated fantasy, says
Comrade .Drogayts,eV. Before
talking about "any striking ame-
lioration of climate in the north-
ern lands," declares O. A. Dro-
gaytsev, let's toek at what would
actually happen with the northern
coast of Asia "blockaded by ice":
"The-region would become cold-
er in the summer, and the win-
ters even more seven. Ice con-
ditions in far eastern waters
would worsen. And there would
be catastrophic results for other
parts of the Soviet Union, with
Winters colder and summers hot-
ter and precipitation dropping
off. The arid zone of subtropical
deserts of North Africa, Central
Asia, and the Gobi would move
to the north." Is that what you
want, Comrade Borisov? suggests
Comrade Drogaytsev rhetorically
in his peroration.
There has not beee time. yet,
for Comrade Borisov to reply to
this denunciation of his pet oro-
ject for remaking the Arctic.
Perhaps in (mother six months
lie will return to the battle, But
until then Washington officiate
and scientists are not only !as-
cleated by the furious intra•mur-
al debate generated over this
proposal to dam the Bering
Strait, but they modestly won-
der if and. when Moscow will get
around to raising the issue diplo-
matically; for on United States.
map.% at least, Alaska sits on one
side of tering Strait.
GERMAN Short Hair Pointer Pups. Registered, ready for Christmas, Good disposition, excellent blood lines, dual purpose. Star Dust Kennels, 171 Brock Street, Brockville, Ontario,
HELP WANTED ,
REGISTERED German Shepherds, Pups, brood bitches, ypang stock. Very reas-onable, Must reduce stock. Write for information. Tim-Mar Kennels, Hawkee-ville, Ont.
FARM FOR SALE OR RENT
FOR Sale or Rent; 1/2-mile east of Mad-oc, 18-room double house with oil fur-nace hot and cold water on tap, fifty acres of land, 12 acres of orchard, Mackintosh, Tolman Sweets, Northern
Spy and Delicious. Good berry patch.
Handy barn with 50-ft. stable. Ideal cation. Terms arranged. Walter Pigden, Madoe, Ont., RR. No. 2.
FLORIDA VACATIONS
PLANNING on Florida this Winter? Cheerful 3 room furnished Apts. In town, only 5 blocks to Gulf, Write for details, Armada Apts., Venice, Florida.
FOR SALE - MISCELLANEOUS
PRESERVE flowers without spraying, dipping, brushing. Instructions $1.00. Morley Stephenson, 174 Euston Road, Burlington, Ontario.
So Nke To Him
He Can't Afford It!
They used to say that good
things come done up _in smelt
packages, but that was before
the packaging revolution, Now-
adays, just about everything
comes done up - not necessar-
ily in small packages, but ceet-
temly in neat ones, There are
some packages designed to keep
things crisp, others limp, still.
others moist or dry. But all are
designed, so it - seems, to make
one want to buy and to rust:
home and enjoy the contents.
I sometimes wish business
would stop being so nice to me,
I can barely afford it, When
go to the supermarket,•to buy,
say, a couple of pears (we have
a small family and don't care
toe much for, pears), I am con-
fronted by a wondrous array of
fruits and. vegetables all neatly
packaged in papier macho trays
and covered with crinkly plastid
that says "Don't touch - buy,"
The pears look nice. I can see
that the - packages are deSigned.
for people who like to eat a
lot of pears. I cannot buy two,
at least not without making an.
enemy of the fruit and vegetable.
manager.
It's the same with candy,
can save a nickel by buying a
"six-pack" of five-cent candy
bars for a quarter. But all I
want is one and I don't want to
save a niekel; I want to spend
it. So I am forced to save a quar-
ter by not buying the six-pack.
The packaging revolution, you
see, makes it easy for me to buy
more than I want or need. What's
more, it has made it easier for
me to use what I buy. Practically
every box or bar of soap has
a new, easy-to-open top or wrap
per. I pull gently on a little
string or I press lightly on a
tab or I use the new improved
easyepouring spout and living's
Today
a rk,
la there are crackers that
come in neat stacks like so many
circular dominoes, This is cer-
tainly the last word (I hope) in
the packaging of crackers. The.
company that thought this up
deserves a lot of credit. In fact,
by charging two coils more for
this convenience, they appear to
agree with roe.
In today's package deal every-
thing seems to be six of one and
half -a dozen of the other, This
is largely because of what is
called the cluster pack, This ere.'
ables you to cars y home six
cans of eVaporeted milk when.
all you wanted was three) or
four cans of dog food (when all.
you needed was two) or six-items
Of any number of things.
The packaging. revolution has
not ignored the great American
"cook 'Out." You can 'now buy
charcoal in whet are . termed
naultiwalt bags. These have a
little cellophane window so you
can peek in, just in case you,
don't know what charcoal loeke
like, This .is the disposable char-
-coal bag but it is virtually a
primitive .model. Anybody who e
is anybody, however, uses the
charcoal container which serves.
s its own torch lot the char-
coal within. For the timid ones
who don't wholly believe the
great etrides American lechnel-
•-ogy has made, there are vans
at inflammable liquid to poor
in the toleth container.
Vou, still need a match to tnalsie
it work. It is obvious that we
have a long way to go.
Another wrinkle Inc. the took-
.. ..........
MERRY i\AMAO-tkit,
ertecheeleel belie butierl"
,Ettng- Crosby fears
Poggy, Competition
Finding the right (lug fur Bing
Creel Rive. • Freneh star Ni-
cole Manley in their latest. film.
"High Time," proved. fl tougher
lob than vesting the actors,
First to land the role was CO-
cAiette, a three-year-old poodle
belonging to Nicole's hair stylist,
•Cladye Rasmuesen,
On. the day Coquette was •called
to the studio' for work, her proud
owner gave her pearly coat a
"come-alivo-groy" hair rinse, the
kind used to brighten grey hair
in beauty parlours.
Then followed a pedicure --
and Coquette sported brightened
toenails. Finally, she was treated
to three new collars, two of them
jewelled, so that director Blake
dwards could choose the one he
liked best.
"Coquette's film debut is cost-
ing me more than she's earning,"
said her owner'. "But I wanted
her to look as chic as Nicole."
Sire looked as smart as any
poodle you'd meet on the Champs
Elysees but, unaccustomed to the
bustle of a film set, she barked
nervously - and was fired be-
fore she'd made a single scene!
The obvious second choice was
Mia, a poodle belonging to the
film's actor - dialogue c Gee b,
James Lamphier, Mia had had.
the run of the set since produc-
tion started and knew she had to
keep quiet when a take was on,
"O.K." said director Edwards,
"give bee a fashionable trim."
And that ended Mies chance of
film fame - for her owner likes
his poodle to have a naturally
curly coat.
At this point, directOr Ed-
wards, tired of amateur talent,
decided to call in a professional
- Frank Weatherwax, the man
who trains most Hollywood film
dogs, writes Alison Barnes in
"Ti
Both Frank and his family
have a great affection for dogs
of all sizes. And he can easily
lay his hands on a dog that can
be taught a particular trick at a
moment's notice.
It wasn't long before he pro-
duced a silver grey, six-year-old
poodle named Johnny, the prop-
erty of film director Walter
Strange, Very much a film dog,
Johnny has a career of his own,
having been trained by Weather-
wax and played bits in numerous
films, as well as living in the
home of a director.
Johnny got the part but, even
then, canine troubles on the set
weren't over. He fell in love at
first sight with Mia, who, as a
result, had to be banned from
the set - not because of bad be-
haviour on her part, but •because
Edwards said, feelingly, "I don't
want Bing and Nicole's love
scenes stolen by . Johnny and
Mia's romancing."
Bows Beat Guns
For Deadliness
The ancient sport of crossbow
shooting is back in popularity
among archers. In Preston, re-
cently, twenty - five marksmen
arrived with crossbows to cele-
brate the 5th Northern. Flight
and Clout Archery Champion-
ship.
These bows conform to varied
designs, and despite their great
age retain astonishing lethal
power.
One weapon, probably used by
ancient terrorists, Is a German
windlass bow, Generating an.
800-lb. thrust, it fires a bolt-head
three-quarters of an indh long,
which will pierce any suit of me-
dieval armour,
Mr. G. P. Jenkinson, of Pres-
ton, an expert on these weapons,
' has a great collection of ancient
erossbows. These include a pis-
lel-shaped bow, which was much
favoured by hired assassins be-
eause •of, its light weight, small
site, and easy concealment.
i-law Can I?
By Roberta Lec
Q. How Gait 1 make a candle
lit -firmly into a too-large
holder?
A. Burn down an old candle.
stub or a hall-inch from the
bottom of the new one - in the
holder. Next, press the heat-
softened 1)0110111 of the new can-
dle 'firmly down -on the still-
burning stub, The candle will
!lien adhere to its new holder-
itting base.
BACKACHE
lieWornitig
Backache is often caused lacy
kidney action. When kidneys gotta( of
brae!, excess atidt and Wastes rotoin
in the Systein. Then backache, tills-
iniii6d rot it gait tired-out and hots,.
!leaded feeling May Seen follow. That's
the time to take Dodd's Kidney Pills.
bodd's stimulate the kidneys to iietniat
action. Then you feel flew-Atop
better-igetic hotter.. Get Dodd's'
Whey Pills tie*.
. MEDICAL „ ,
WANTED - EVERY SUFFERER OF
RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
TO TRY DIXON'S REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect.
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and Weeping akin troubles. Post's Eczema Salve trill not disappoint you. itching, scalding and burning ooze-tea, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema, will respond readily to the stainless odorless ointnient, regardless
of how stubborn or hopeless they seem, Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE $3.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1965 St, Clair Avenue East Toronto • • • NURSING HOMES
CLARION Nursing Heine. Arend new, Modern hospital -equipped, Day-bight best of care. Excellent food. $35 week, JA, 2-7911, 120 Tinnier W., Hamilteri, Ontario.
L ON-SITTER - "Just erilndingl
Her for d friend," was Anthohy
Ortolono's explanation far a
125-pound lioness found in hit
car by Brooklyn police. Antheiny
dud' lioness, Cleo, above,. Onek,
wer turnnions to police court,
II.SsUUSt— MI6
4aAfey aucts* •
BRAN' t; Ivve f( Alt tarto.1 clitctse,
proem stife:eria, .elso !_•:role older lecs Dual -,,erpose and specially egg,
taw-Inver ilayolds hatched to order. flock now Itlarch,April Oradea:. Contact lucid agent •• or end(' Bray Hatchery, 1.20 John North, Hamilton, Out,
BUSINESS oPPORTI,NITIES- •
'Ulf LEASE, Modern sertilee station and Xestaltr.ent, neat • 47 persons. 'Trenton cliNtrict, now limier construction, reedy
-March, 61 Write .C. Heave, lta Aun-ties 'W., Trenton, Out • • CIET Free Intl:0111E41ton about developMg and your own Mail Order littei- nese Send halite and .address to: Centre. P ft, Box 10, Levi-, Quebee. catindit.
i.ot foll
that ';,4 g • •A ^•;,H; ,,,I! •
&P ," llta JSi t r r la, you
;trap tin lo,1 V.
.s q. ..en con*
Ifi pi.i•kao.., anti ;•::t. &Alt,
to ti-viiitty a •‘ict of pe toilet.
()De dee( tetenent that teRtid
Jo ia,M v new era in Fiyk•
141,14 the bag. Th.s
tit found in what Is called
the non-fond section fix 'iettset
fitOreN a wetion that is gradu-
ally taking over the food depart-
merit Onc use for the dispwiAilit
bag is to pitelcupe the diqposahle
bag that tint replaced the (WI,
tatinioned dust bag in vacuum
eleaniTF,. The point of the dis-
posable hag in a vacuum cleaner
is to keep your hands from get-
ting dirty Any housewife eau
tell you this invention misses
the point. What is really neected
is a disposable vacuum 'cleaner.
I MARE $700 ON IMPORTS THAT was mY profit on I order I sold In I day I wilt show PM how to start this nig profitable business from your home in spare time, No merchandise investment needed Write today for free details and Information on inb Ports. Frank Clark Co.. 2707 St. Milt Aye it. Toronto 16,
STUDIO OF PHOTOGRAPHY
FOR SALE LocATEn in northern town and only studio In operation, In radius of 80 miles. Includes portrait, studio, photo. finishing, camera shop. Pako equipped, Agfa studio camera and leoclatron speed • lamps, sp'eed- graphic, camera stock of over $5,000. Selling because .of health. Sacrifie price. A bargain:
Studio averages gross sales of $25,000 yearly. For full particulars and price write to Best 227, 123-18th Street, New
l'""im'OUnicint ue Opportunity
MANUFACTURER of sensational to. vention Is opening exclusive territories
and offers franchise to serious person Who has $1,100. to invest, Complete training and publicity at our expense. Minimum revenue $10,000. Those with capital only need apply Write with references to: 0.5.0.1. Co., Post Office. Box 601, Station 9, St. Laurent, Mont-real
COINS
CASH paid promptly for old Canadian, Newfoundland and American coins. Tokens, medal collections and all gold coins, Booklet of prices paid, 25C. S. Bendier, 1.165 Levine St., Montreal. 9, Quebec,
roll through Chicago on railroad flatcars. Forty
Carlisle, Ind„ to Seattle, Wash„ via Chicago,
Seattle, they will go by barge to their destina-
occupancy, the houses are equipped with (*-
electrical wiring.
The packaging revolution has
la uadened that ancient merchan-
dising device known as the one-
cent sale. As developed by sonic
zealot in the cracker barrel age
of storekeeping, the one-cent
sale was simple in concept. You
bought one item at the regular
price, then received another for
a penny more. That was before
the cluster pack. With modern
packaging, you get an item for
one cent more when you buy
two, three, four, or sometimes
five of its mates. This is akin to
buying a piano because someone
has given you a bench.
A variant is the combination
offer. You can buy dental cream
with a roll of aluminum foil
riding piggyback. This intriguing
example of what the trade calls
"related selling" is One where the
relation eludes me. Apparently
an aluminum-foil man and a.
dental-cream man fell to talk-
ing one day with a packaging
engineer whose business was
siow at the time.
I remember an ad run by a
company that makes packaging
materials. It showed a picture
of an egg and called it "the per-
fect package." Some restless pio-
neer of packaging apparently
disagreed because now I learn
that this perfect package has
been improved. In some fields,
they shell eggs and pour them,
yokes and all, into little square
plastic pillows which, it may be
presumed, have an easy-to-open
tab.
The thought of square eggs
unnerves me. If my supermarket
attempts to foist this ultimate
triumph of technology on me,
I'll be tempted to start a coun-
ter-revolution. I might just set
up as an old-fashioned grocer
with a cracker barrel right
smack in the middle of my store
and perhaps a chicken coop out
back.
You can carry a good thing
too far, you know,
p
TOWN ON THE MOVE - Prefabricated homes
houses were being shipped 2,20Q miles from
Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad, From
tion - Anchorage, Alaska. Almost ready for'
pliances, hot water tanks, heating systems, and
DOGS FOR SALE
j
A Soviet Dream Of
Warming The iceCap
•
About a year ago 'a Soviet
scientist-engineer, P. M. Borisov
(nO ,other identification given),
writing in the "Literaturnaya
Gazeta," proposed a grandiose
project: A 55-mile dam across
the Bering Strait combined with
"pumps Of tremendous power"
that would pump cold water out
of the Arctic Ocean and bring
an influx • of warm Atlantic
waters from the Gulf Stream.
that would melt the Arctic ice-
cap and turn the, area into a
habitable region.
This dream obviously made ee
pikers of those who only want to
dam the Nile, harness the Yang-
tze, or water the Sahara Desert.
Comrade Borisov did not go into
'the cost of the project, the time
it would take to make the Arctic
comparable to the Mediterran-
ean for clirdate, flora, fauna, etc.
But he did get a respectful
hearing not only in the Soviet
press, but in American scientific
circles and government offices as
well. For the United States has
an interest in the Bering Strait
and in any climatic changes that
might occur from damming it
and eliminating the Arctic ice-
cap.
He also stirred up a number
of Soviet scientists and fellow
engineers, who have now con-
cluded that - brother Borisov's
dream is as dangerous as it is
grandiose. Their kindest com-
ments are that the affects of a
darn across the Bering Strait
would be . "catastrophic," would
"inflict irreparable harm to the
earth's environment." -
Another Soviet scientist-engi-
neer, 1), A. Drogaytsev (no other
identification given), has now
torn into Comrade Borisov in a
point-by-point rebuttal in eight
pages in, a recent issue of "Pri-
rode."
First, asks critic Drogaytsev,
would the warm waters from the
Atlantic Gulf Stream (assuming
they would replace the cold Arc-
tic waters as these were being
pumped out in the Pacific) melt
.the Arctic icecap?
Not at all, Rather, says Com-
rade Drogaytsev, "the creation of
a current moving southward to-
ward the Bering Sea and Strait
as a result of the powerful
pumping operation would net
only draw vast amounts of water
southwards, it would also bring
incalculable volumes of ice
southward which,. in an exceed-
ingly short time, would totally
' • block the narrow strait from the
surface of the 'sea to the very
bottom of the strait"!
What the scheme would actu-
ally do then, argues Comrade
Drogaytsev, is take the Arctic ice-
cap. off the Arctic Circle and disc
tribute it around the .entirtf.
northern coast of Eurasia and,
LIBRARIAN
RIVERSIDE Public Library (suburban community of Windsor), requires a fully qualified professional librarian to take full charge. New library In a fine resi-dential community across from Detroit. We have been operating with 6 part time help, but fast growth now demands a professional, $4,500 and upwards, de-pending on experience.
SECRETARY
1755 WYANDOTTE STREET
RIVERSIDE, ONTARIO
INSTRUCTION
EARN Morel Bookkeeping, Salesman. ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les. sons 500. Ask for free circular No 33. Canadian Correspondence Courses, 1290 Bay Street, Toronto.
Workers As Owners
Real -Way To Peace?
Phillips Petroleum. Co. employ-
es announced last week that
their Thrift Plan corporation
had become owner of . the largest
single block of company stock,
More than 15,000 of the firm's
16,500 workers are shareholders,
Incidental news in the sale of
the Oklahoma Tire & Supply Co,
a day or two later revealed that
20% of the stock of that firm is
owned by present and former
employes under a similar eh, ork-
e•r-compaey savings plan.
These two firms along with a
number of other leaders in their
categories with such stock ,own-
ership formulas have been no-
tablY free or management-work-
er disputes for years. Perhaps
they have found the real way to
peace 25 years after the Wagner
Act first became law, giving
union labor leaders special pet-
viteeres to invade the field of
management.. .
One gets the feeling from such
facts as these that the kind of
unionism which is more cores
cern.ecl with the progress of the
union as such therewith the real
progress of employes as part of
the business system is on the
way out.
We shall fail if we continue to
encourage the idea of the unions
that they are the natural ene-
mies of the employees and that
both sides must have second par-
ties, business agents and indus-
trial relations experts, to nego-
tiate for them, meanwhile keep-
ing those really concerned most
apart. There is too much von!-
DIM interest today between man-
agOnlont and other emotive:: to
let our still-free society founder
over their seeming inability to
resolve differences. •
American buelneee neteage-
molt and workers met proceed
its redevelop communication be-
tween each other without too
much counsel from the expert
third or fourth parties. Perhaps
Phillips, Otasco and the others
hate found the best way for' 'the.
big companies. It not only seems
to, succeed in instilling a proper
regard for the interests of each.
other; it presents a common,.
pleasant front to that all-import-
ant third parts,, the public, which
must, after all, provide the pro-
'coeds of industry which owners
and workers divide. --'Tulsa Tri-.„
built
gill/ PRISE MARRIAGE - Actress Debbfe' Reyrialds and shoe- theta-
Odd Harry Kart' smile at each 'Other after a surprise Marriage
Int .tleverly Hills( Calif.
HOW Melte some of
file leeks he otir lionse whet( less
sluggishly?
A. A shot of graphite powder
into your locks about once a
year will keep there hi smooth
operating condition. if you don't
have tiny graphite handy, blow
sonic pencil-point shavings into
the lock - this works Nile, too,