The Brussels Post, 1961-03-23, Page 7AGENTS WANTED
It' you ore Ieterested in setting two
profitable Once, "Vi k ing" cream separ. etors and "Viking" inneers, .suspended
and fl ute types, uts Local .Agent,
have seine territories vacant to •Ordarlo. crud Quebec, Write today for full Ale,
lane to; Swedish Separator Co. Wilted,
720 Notre Dant•e St. West, Montreal (3i, P,cee
BABY CHICKS .
mieteet early to enstue sielivera when
required - hatching to order, also
some cia.volds and started, prompt ehIP-
ment. Ames In-Cross and other breeds
started pullets, to III Week-old. Book
iviay.june broilers itew. See local agent,
or write Pray Hatchery, 170 John North,
Hamilton, Ont,
BERRY 8 ROOT PLANTS
- -
ONTARIO'S LARGEST
STRAWBERRY GROWERS
ALL COMMERCIAL VARIETIES
12 MILLION PLANTS
Returns of up. to $2,500 per acre under
our new growing system
Fee complete Information and price list, write:
I3.B.F. BOSTON BelliltY FARMS (REG.)
RR. No. 1, wilisoNvieue, ONTARIO
PHONE: WATERFORD HICKORY 3.5607
RFOISTEREP
Immediate openings for General Duty
Nurses in a Vi-had private hospital located in a mettern peep mill town
In Northwestern Ontario. Storting. .salary $753.00 per month. ales room
and heard at no c00, Annual. More,
moots in reco9nitIon of satisfactory services. esecommedellon. ,oreekied in
single rooms in comfortable Nvrses'
Residence, Employee benefit$ Include Group Insurance, Pension Kan, And
I lbe r a I VaCalign allowance Year-
round recreational facilities, Apply, staling full partleulerS of gee, ex, perience, etc, to'
Pox No, 2300. 123,18th. Street,
New Toronto, Ont.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN.
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JON CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Greet Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant, dignified profession; good wages, Thousands ofeirecessfel
Marvel Graduates.
America's Greatest System
Illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL.
358 Bioor St. W., Toronto Branches: •
44 King St. W,, Hamilton
72 leideatt Street, Ottawa
PHOTOGRAPHY
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
BOX 31, GALT, ONT.
Films developed and
3 magna prints 400 12 magna prints 600
Reprints 50 each.
KODACOLOR
Developing roll 900 Inot including
prints Color prints 300 each extra.
Anseo and Ektachrome 35 m.m. 20 ex-posures mounted In slides $1.20 Color
prints from slides 324 each. Money re-funded in full for unprintee negatives.
ROOFING CONTRACTORS
ATTENTION
Churches, schools, homeowners. Have your slate roof and metal work checked
and repaired by expert workmen. All material and workmanship guaranteed.
Free estimates. Call AX, 4-6205. Norm 11/lathers, Parkhill, Ont,
STAMPS
SALARY SCHEDULE
Offered to Teachers by Board
(September) ,
First Class Minimum $3000.00
Maximum. $4850.00
Second Class Minimum $2700.00
Maximum $4550.00
Allowances: One-half confirmed experi-
ence outside of Ottawa Univeratty De-gree; Special. Certificates: $500 for
male married teachers with five rears
experience.
Address applications giving qualifies-
Liens, experience, name of last inspec-
tor, eta, to
A. Arvisais, B.A., F.C.I.S.,
Secretary.Treasurer,
140 Cumberlaed St. Ottawa CE6-7475
VEGETABLE SPONGES
GROW Vegetable Seem:eel Plant cure-
ashy. matured fruit 118. d for bathing,
Washinf or nainted into beautiful
r 'flowe decor:diens, Seeds 200, Zachary, Box OM. Peer:buret! 0, Penna.
ISSUE 12 - 1961
tam- MENAGERIE
(.,,u'vd- got Mt,. tialt Even
rioret hnoW What X
PERSONAL
GET 8 hours sleep, NerVOus tension may cause 76% of sickness, Particle. tarty sleeplessness, jitters/nese and it-'
ratability, Sleep calm your nerves with
"Napps", 10 for $1; 50 for $4. Lyon's
Drugs, Dept, 20, 471 Danforth, Toronto.
HANDWRITING analyzed; complete
analysis by experienced graphologist.
Enclose $1.00 and self-addressed en-velope to. Mrs. le, Ingram, 404 Geneva
St., St. Catharines, Ord,
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS
TESTED guaranteed, mailed to plain
parcel,including catalogue and sex
book free with trial assortment 18 for $1.00 (Finest quality). western Distribu.,
bars, Box 24-TPF. Repine, Sask.
A MAIMED supply of genuine "Novae'
World mixture samples still available.
Write for yours today, 250 for postage
and handling. Jebramek, Dept. E, Box
556A, Toronto.
AIRMAILS, animals, birds, flowers, plus 10 different large U.S. commem-
oratives and 7 lovely Nigerian stamps.
10e with approvals. Stellar Stamps,
Dept. 5, 23 Scott St Toronto.
BRITISH Colonial and USA used. Send
200 and 100 different from your du-
plicates and have me send vou an
entirely different assortment of 100 different. Approvals of above at l4 Scotts catalogue, T. EL Graham, 296a
Glenforest Road, Toronto 12. Ont,
TEACHERS WANTED
OTTAWA.
SEPARATE SCHOOL BOARD
Requires for September teachers of
regular gradese Home Economics, In-
duSteial Arts and Auxiliary classes,
BENEFITS Physicians' Services incorporated, Cum-ulative Sick Leave Plan, Teachers'
Credit Union, Modern, well-eeuippee
schools.
.A4oree-y.:1Afill Out
,seen After Ages
was insveler0We'd" and long;'
jawed, this early Stone Age
ereataire .uneovered by British
anthropologist L.S.B. LeakeY in
the debris of Tanpnyika's
Oldtivai Gorge. The geo-
logic layer where the skull and
frePellefetS Were', embedded
well over 000,000 years old,
,, made this the oldest evi-
deuce of man or manlike life
yet discovered. •
Prom other fossil evidenve at
the site, new facts of life in the
dawn of the Stone Age could
now be reconstructed: The .crea-
tures killed tortoises, docks, laid
other small animals. skinned.
them with a crude stone tool,
and ate them raw (fire-making
Was beyond lineal, • Since they
didn't know . how to make pot-
tery Cr other carrying vessels,
they pitched their camps close
to water-in this ease a lake
that covered present-day Tang-
anyika,
This .forerunner of the higher
primates was quite unlike mod-
ern .Man-except, in one sordid
respect. The fossil was that of
an 11-year-old child, sex unde-
termined, who had met death.
violently. The skull had a hale
in it with fracture lines radiat-
ing cut just as if the child had
received a sharp blow, It was
not the kind of fracture that
would he caused by a fall. The
N.ational Geographic Society,.
sponsor of the expedition, point-
ed out: "Thus the oldest 'known.
crime has come to light."
The Queen-Mother
Shoots Snooker
As a guest ••of London's all-
male Press Club, Queen Mother
Elizabeth set an eye-opening pre-
cedent by becoming the first
woman ever to be served a drink
in the club's smoky bare The
Queen. Mother sipped a dry Mar-
tini, engaged in gracious chit-
chat with club members, and
eventually found her way to the
billiard room-and couldn't re-
sist a spot of snooker,
"Let me try!" she exclaimed,
and she hefted e cue, drew a
southpaw bead on the cue ball
and stroked away, It Was a shot
pictured round the world, and-
evert though the red ball did fail
to land in a pocket-it showed.
what is jokingly known as the
sign of a misspent youth: Fam-
iliarity with a pool cue. After-
ward, a press officer ackoowl-
edged that the royal family en-
gages in billiards and snackor
now and again, and that the
Queen Mother is considered no
slouch,
ATTENTION-GETTER- Ira Schul-
man; unemployed salesman,
dramatizes his job hunt with
a donkey ride down Broad-
way in New York, Schulman,
23, said he just wanted to
draw attention to his plight.
ONION SETS
lei CLASS government inspected. Size
743, produce very uniform Onions without seed stales, Price at request. State quantity Newhouse specializing In Sets
NEWHOUSE
R52 Niaeara, on the eaka
BUILD-IT-YOURSELF
BUILD Electric Pin-Ball Game, 20" x
30" x 46" high, Wonderful project for
all. Easy simplified plans $2.00. Maz-zola, 345 Lincoln Place, Brooklyn 38, Nose York.
MAKE Penguin Boat, Water, Ice, SnOW,
Power, Trailer, Top. Complete less than $195,00, Instructions $3.00. Syl-
vester McKee Engineering, P.O Ilex 247, Burlington, Wisconsin.
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
COMPLETE cement block manufactur-ing plant for, vibrated steam cured
blocks, Close to new hydro atomic on, ergy project, full price $10,000. Apply
William H. Roos„ Pt. Login, Ont, Phone 136-W.
RES'PAURANT-service station, Highway 11, south of Gravenhurst, both fully
equipped, doing good business. Low
down payment, balance open mortgage.
Apply Wclby Motors, Kilworthy, Mus-koka.
SHOE STORE FOR SALE
FAMILY shoe store established in 1884.
Clean saleable stock at much below cost price, The building, 17' by 65', is
yours free if you buy the lot for
$1,500.00 and the stock.
OWNER WISHES TO RETIRE
CONTACT SHAW'S SHOE SHOP
CALEDONIA, ONT.
BULBS
GLADIOLUS Bulbs, treated, ready for, planting. Large 11/2 to 2 inches Wane-
eter - 53,50. jumbo 2 inches up -. $4.00 hundred. Post paid, William Bart-
ley, Waterdown, Ontario.
DAIRY EQUIPMENT
FARM HELP WANTED
THOROUGHLY reliable couple, mid-die-aged or even partly retired for
gentleman's farm near Toronto, Man with dairy experience, preferably some
gardening, Wife to help on week-ends.
For appointment write or call Frank Veltenheimer, manager, •CypruS 6-1318, Klelnburg.
Save On Milker Repairs
Inflations, milk and air tubes, and
gaskets, For all snakes of milkers, Most pulsators repaired. Loomis & Loomis,
Port MeNicoll, Ont.
'FARMS FOR SALE
• GAUL district, 100 acre dairy and
poultry farm, close to paved road and village, New sta.unchions and box stalls,'
accommodation and equipment (if de-sired) for 8300 broilers, Completely
modernized 8 roomed stonehouse. This
is an outstanding property for general farming, poultryman or country home. Asking price is $25,000 with substan-tial down payment. Contact Lloyd
Brown, Rile No, 2, Galt, Phone 621-9200.
Associate Clayton G. Hogg Limited,
Galt,.
FARM EQUIPMENT
20 CAN Woods bulk cooler, chore-boy milking machine, J.oho. Gibson, me 7.
Caledonia, RO. 5.2172.
111YERS power take-off Orchard Sprayer e with rocker boom, 200 gal- lank. e gel, per minute pump. Bought new,
used two seasons. _Farm sold. Sprayer ears be bought at big discount. P. C. R. 3, Thedford, Ontario.
WE have developed a& farm wagon that
has proven to be reliable for forage racks and bale hauling. Its main feet. urea are a very good steering foe short Welling and high speed no sway trail.-Mg. For illustrated folder write :floret Welding, an No. 3, Melte; Ontatio.
• • .-
FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE.
• •
FOR. sale: Sawyer. Massey Threshing
Machine with strew shredder end long feeder, also one 1.1I.C, grain binder,
both In good condition. Apply J, M. Laird, Norwich, ola. Phone Norwich
286-W-1. • • NEW. Holland Crop-Chopper, Model 33,
used one season, John Deere Cultivator,
Model. CC-147, used one season. 28" T.H. Thresher, completely equipped.
Used four seasons. Contact G. Ferguson, 1298 Topper Road, Burlington, Ontario.
NE, 4-07.12 . .
440 i,C, W/1.2" John Deere Traitor,
all Woos() grousers detaio'n revetser„ lights, bottom plate, key switch, rain tap anti shield; 83 Crawler leader
W/62" bucket & teeth, teenterweightg, purchased new July, 1000 -fee $0000 aN 1954 Dodge 11 toil dump trunk license:
Low bed machinery float, toed price
for all ceteemeat $7,000.00 may financed.. must be sold to wind up
estate Bee 188. Port Perry, Phone
Yukon 5.7931.
QUARTER horse consignment sale, De-
troit, Mich., April 8. State Fairgrounds.
Write: Leath and McKinley, Fenton, Mich.
INSTRUCTION -
EARN More! More! Bookkeeping, Salesman..ship. Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les-
sons 500. Ask for free circular No. 33. Canadian Correspondence Courses. 1290 Bay Street, Tor-onto. -
MEDICAL
A TRIAL - EVERY SUFFERER OF
RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
SHOULD 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 sweeping skin troubles. Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you Itching, scalding 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 53.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St. Clair Avenue East,
TORONTO
MISCELLANEOUS.
SEND wallet size photo, card, license,
sealed in plastic 50, 3-$1.00. Other bar-gains, catalog. Agents Wanted, profit-
able, Gallardo, R.F.D. No. 2, Box 42-A,
Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico,
MONEY TO LOAN
MORTGAGE Loans, Funds available on
suitable farms; homes, stores, apart-ments, hotels, motels. Pleasant, cour-
teous service. For information write, phone, or drop in. United County In-.
vestments Ltd., 3645 Bathurst 'SL, Tor-onto 19, Ont. '11U. 9-2125.
HORSES
Loans-Mortiages
FIRST and, second long and short term loans and mortgages from $6,000 up on
business stock, machinery, light or
heavy equipment, contracts, and ac-counts receivable factoring or pur-
chaser. Capital for new businesses of recapitalize present. Complete financ-
ing of motels, hotels; hospitals, medi-
cal clinics, factories, office buildings, commercial buildings an d develop-
ments. Bank loans on time deposits or compensating balance, Interim funds
on all projects and construction lease
back on all typo commercial buildings
and motels, For financing let us assist you, For appointment call Commmer-
cial Loan Department Investment Dis-
count Corporatioh. 10906 Gratiot Ape., Detroit 13. Mich. Phone DR. 1-8415 or
DR, 1-4650
NURSING HOMES FOR SALE
NURSING home. licensed for II patients, fully equipped, its residential district.
Apply to 68 Gladstone Ave., St Thomas,
Ont., or phone ME. 1-9301. No real estate dealers,
Palmerston Seniors Home
Equipeg with Niagara Therapy
See for yourself - the price is right.
Licensed for ten guests. Rates $100.00 to $150,00 per month. Large solid brick modernized home, double garage, huge
treed corner lot. Complete with furni-
ture etc, Owner has purchased another business. Write or phone note: Pal-
merston, Box 105 or phone 401. Hurry.
NUTRIA •
ATTENTION'
PURCHASERS :OF NUTRIA
When purchasing Nutria. consider the following .points which this organize Lion offers;
1 The best available stock no cross. bred or standard types recotemended. 2. The reputation of a plan which is
proving itself substantiated by flies df
satisfied ranchers. 3 _Full -insetence against replace moat, thould they not live or in Ilse
event of sterility din fully expInined In one certificate of inerit.i 4. We give ,you only mutation.' whims
are in demand for fur gann,mis 5 You receive from this oroanization a• guaranteed pelt market In wriiirt we
6. Membeteliip in n d r eeeltistive
breeders' aaseciatiere wherebe only purchasers of this steel, 1410, earliet.
nate in the benefits ui OfFel'Off
7 prices_ for Breeding Stock seem at 52011 a oair
Special offer to those who quality: teem veer Neter-le nn couuvrtaive
basis Write: Canadian Nutria R.R. Ho. 2, StouOvitio, Ontario.
MODERN OUTRIGGER - For thi obrunithi who 'likes lif!
"canoeing but not the chance of o sudden tWini,
pionlbalit httvi bee designed.,
Canadians Work In
Kipling Country
'The border tribesmen of Kip-
hng's breechbolt-snicking time
would be- amazed if they could
come back to witness a ceremony
today in their wild, rocky land.
At a spot a score of miles out
from Peshaelear, near the Mouth •
of the KhYber Pass, President
Mohammed Ayub Khan of Pekie
stan (himself a Pathan) is dedi-
eating the Warsak hydroelectric
project, the biggest construction
work to date in Pakistan's 11th'-
teen-year history.
Pakistan could not have done
this $773-million lob alone, 1t is
a joint enterprise, with Canada.
For five years, teams of Cada4
dian engineers have worked out
of Peshawar, and later on the
site itself, living in part on the
foods of the country (buffalo:
buttery okra and black-eyed peas
among thett) as participants in
the ,COiolthe Plan. Perhaps be-
cause i,t is little-puiblitiZed and
So 00:$ not get ninth involved
in. ,triterriatiOnal politiosy the CO-
loMbo Plan it firi affectiVe
gaithatient. Watsak is one of its.
hetenument,s_- Baltimore Sun.
An old-timer is a ;Men Wile
rerrieitibet When the only
OitLy fall-out he worried about
*Ue hie hair.,
only had time to recover a free-
lion of his strength in the Mille
ute between rounds. Still dazed,
he. stumbled, out to be a target
for enother savage battering in
the second round, He seemed on-
chic to hit back with anything
more than an occasional left. But
he reeled u.nder the Rock's.
hammer blaws, he stayed grimly
on his feet. Threugh the third,
fourth and fift h punishing
• founds, Zale faltered badly at
times but refused to go down.
G•razianoie inability to topple the,
wreck in front of him, hod the
crowd roaring;. By the end of
the fifth the. challenger was be-
coining arm weary. and. Zale's
incredible courage war ors its
way to becoming a legend.
There was nothing in the first
half of the bruising sixth to in-
dicate that disaster was stalking
Rocky Graziano, Zale, the tired
old ehampioo, •was still in his
half-crouch,. shouldering his way
forward into the path of further
barrages. ,He was le o k i n g
through his puffed eyes for e
sign, of an opening. As- they
reached . the. halfway m a .r k
through the siXtle, Tony,saw it!
Tensing, but keeping his bat-
tered face expressionless lest it
betray what his eyes had noted,
Zale shuffled just a little closer,
He Moved his left within range.
.Then he sent, a ripping hook to
• Ricky's midsection.
The punch buried itself into
the challenger's stomach. Graz-
iano halted, shuddered, and sank
cross-legged to the canvas. He
smiled emptily as he listened to
-: referee Ruby Goldstein toll off
the count. He was on his haun-
ehds," still -listening when Gold-
stein shouted "Ten!" The instant
Ruby said it, Graziano stood up.
He made an effort to resume, the
action, but the referee waved
him away. The fight was over,
and the middleweight crown still
rested on the battdred head of
Tony Zale,
The sudden ending touched off
one of the wildest scenes in the
history of Yankee Stadium. The
time of the knockout was 1:43
of the sixth. While a thoroughly
distraught but perfectly unmark-
ed loser made his way to the
dressing room, they raised the
hand of a smiling but lump-
faced Tony Zale' who resembled
a man who had been beaten to
a bloody pulp with a club
So tired that he could scarcely
stay erect without the full sup-
port of his handlers, Zale had
one significant footnote to add to
the night's story when interview-
ed in his dressing room, He said:
"1 might have stopped him
earlier, 'Copt I fractured my
right hand in the second round."
And with that kind of courage,
quiet-spoken Tony Zale added
another page to the memorable
history of the I60-pound
7.-e7;erst.
Pou kshop Small
But World Famous CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
Longing to meet "the great Mr,
Banntel John4on.' a literary
latintee jatHes Roswell
finally bagged his .prey in Tom
:Davies' London bookshop. fl,ver
since the days of that hietorie
Illevting in 17113, the nhenemee,,
on of the leiokstore-salon ---- the
where writing men can.
be .,.leounitered not only in print
has, had some
kind of spotty survival some.-
where. Probably the nearest
thing to this •whieli the U.S', af-
fords today is a narrow, step-
down grotto New York City's.
West 40's where Prances Steloff,
74 - a white-haired lady in a •
_duet smock --- runs the Gotham •i
Book Mart.
.Here, op a winter's evening
pint long ago, Brendan Behan
hustled in • from an insipidly
tame appearance on the Sack
Pear Show to address a meeting
of Miss Steloffie James Joyce
...Society in the Book Mart's back
room. On the air, Pear had made
A sneering reference to the
probable dullness of the book-,
worms' get-together, Pear should
have gone 'along. Taking in a
heady whiff of the Book Mart's
•' atmospheric dust, Behan plung-
ed into a "J'yce lecture" -4; full
of anecdote, song, and ribaldry
-• which packed enough enter-
tainment value to keep Paar
in business for the next year.
PRINCIPLE CF THE THING - Herman Abrahams, 69, is in hot
water in Los Angeles. He displays a few of the traffic ackets
he says he has received in the past few years. He claims he
does net like traffic lights and crashes them on principle.
When Sheer Courage
Retained A Title
Some of the most memorable
battles in the long history of the
prize-ring have been produced by
boxing's Middleweight division,
the 100-1b, ohm Thi4 division hes
bestowed its crown on sonic of
the most courageous warriors the
game has ever known.
Such a warrior was a seeming-
ly mild-mannered chap, born
Anthony Florian Zaleski in Gary.
Indiana, who became known to
the boxing world as Tony Za,c-
"The Man at Steel."
PHONOGRAPH
WE are Canad
EaC,4 0
mail
RpS
order head.
R
quarters for all. types of records, Mut Jar, classical, folk, foreign language,
countryand western we have them all! Safe delivery positively guaranteed,
Send 25 cents in coin or stamps to-day
Dicfetreo'V el ulislite.taC-deain tere, cBatoaxlo7g4117e; 114 013n13- real, P.Q. Please enclose this ad When Orderieg.
FOR sale, trade on good car. Terms.
ea section with buildihgs. Information
on request. Mike Hanes, oiericairn, Manitoba,
FOR SALE MJS.cgkLANEQVA
(.41NA-1/IAN exclusive evatieble, patent-rd wave and curl comb, wanted by
every woman A proven Si mail order !lel» in t)-8.• Write 1102.141 Seise Water. Om), Conn. _ .
ICI EN BA701t BLADES, four to seven
b11:10Util shaves guaranteed; free sent-
ples. order direct, 40 hlades $1. Agents
1,100 Jaeger co., 1211W 'Hex-
borough West, Toronto,
QUILT PATCHES
ASSORTED Broadcloth, plain and priple
ed, e lbs. $1.119, Special, smaller pieces,
4 lbs. $1,90. Assorted Flannelette, II lbs.
$1.49. Quilt Designs set of 16 -SOO. Drapery:- Better quality. assorted mill
ends, I.3 yards lengths, 44 inches wide
-, 6 ibe, e7,98; pieces for cushions,2
.lbs, $1.06 Postage paid, refund. Gorden40 Abell St., Teronte 8, •
OFITADE protector - recently over.
hauled $30..00, T. ff. Graham, 290e. Olen-
forest hoed, Toronto 12„ Ont. HP,
7-2245.
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE
The Gotham is a bottomless
fountainhead for name dropping.
Martha • Graham - empress of
the modern dance - has helped
wrap packages there during the
Christmas rush (out of abiding'
gratitude because the Book Mart
underwrote her first concert),
Theodore Dreiser and H: L. Men-.
oken, full of good German beer,
once dropped in of an afternoon.
• and created a bibliophile's trees- •
ure as a tipsy prank: Asked for
an autograph by a • customer,.
Men.ckert seized a finely bound
Bible and signed it as author,
with Dreiser countersigning as
"his disciple." (The book wound
tsp in the famous Adolph Lewi-
tolui collection,)
Most of the excitement which
the Gotham holds, however, is a
radiation of Miss Steloff's own
feeling for • her books, This is a
love affair ;which goes back to
1907, a year when .she thought
file had reached felicity's pin-
nacle because a Brooklyn -de-
partment store pulled her out •
of. the corset department and let
her sell books during the Christ-
mas season - at a princely wage
of $7 a week: •
Later jobs in bookstores kept
her close to the objects she lov-
ed, but far removed from pros-
perity. "For years," she said, "I
never allowed myself more than
le cents for lunch - wheatcake,s
and hot chocolate at Childs
would fill me up the beat." One
day in 1920, she spied a space-
for-rent sign in a brownstone
basement, "I looked at that lit-.
tle room with the marble .fire-
place," she said, "and my spine
lit up. I thought, what a lovely
little place for the bookshop
I've always wanted!" it was $75
a month, and she only heel $100
to her name, but she rented it,
end made a go of it,
Nowadays, the catalog of the
,1-otham Book Mart (still dim and
Dickensian, though in different
luarters) circulates worldwide,
and visitors from as far away - as
New Zealand sometimes enter
he shop with a pilgrim • air.
'You don't grow rich as a book-
seller," Miss Steloff said, "but
you make it up in the doctor's
bills you don't have to pay. ''he
only sad thought I have Js that, •
probably within a geeeration,
bookstores like this will have
mend to exist: All you'll have is
self-service supermarkets • for
paperbacks." From NEWSWEEK
_,. •
We be
en
tax instructors
have been asked to treat tax-
payers with courtesy
though the customer isn't neces-
eerily right.
Though already a champion
and a veteran performer, Zale
zoomed to true prominenee, and
a place -in history in his three-
bout series of heart-stoppers with
New • York's brawling Rocky
Graziano back in the late, Forties,
It was in the first of these
epics, at New York's Yankee Sta-
"dium on Sept. 27, 1946, that Zale
really demonstrated what the
world "Courage" means,
Tony was a 31-year-old, ring
rusty arid Utterly stale middle-
weight champion, who sat in his
corner under 'the • glare' of the
stadium lights that night, wait-
ing to make the first defense, of
the title he'd won from' stylish
Georgie __Abrams five year
earlier, The 1941 attack on Pearl
Harbor had come just nine days
after he'd been crowned king of
his division, and Zale had seen
his peak fighting years drift by
in four years of war with the
Navy. Now; with the added years
and the . slowed down reflexes
that went with them, he found
himself facing. Rocky Graziano,
a man younger, better condition-
ed, and possessor of such destruc-
tive punching power that he was
the • new terror' of the Middle-
weight class.
While Tony- had been gather-
ing duet on the ring shelf, Grazi-
ano hadn't, In fact so spectacu-
lar had been Rocky's rise, that-his
bombshell punching had all but
obscured the fact that Zate had
once been known for his thun-
der-punching too. Regarding the
titleholder as champion in name
only, the odds-makers had in-
stalled the Rock as a 3-1 favorite
in the pre-fight betting,
As many another veteran
fighter, has tried to• do before and
since, when faced with younger,
stronger opposition, Zale gam-
bled on ending it in a hurry.
Scarcely had the opening bell
sent them on their way than
Tony uncorked a left hook that
dumped the surprised Graziano
on the deck. Shocked but unhurt,
Rocky leaped to his feet and be-
gan pouring a non-stop volley
of punches into Zale, that had
him dazed, bloody and battered
before • the round was half over,
Zale took the barrage standing
up. In refusing to fall under the
onslaught he only succeeded in
infuriating the challenger fur-
their.
Graziano` lashed the champion,
Finally Zale crumpled - but the
bell saved him front being count-
ed out, writes Gil Smith in The
Police Gazette.
Dragged to his corner, Tony
How Coo- I?'
lOy Roberta Lee
ilintt? COO I the soft-
ite Se of dhairmis gloves after'
'washing them?
A, Alfter washing the glavcs.
rinse in clear wain suds, to
which a :few drops of olive oil
have been added,
(4, how can I dealt 0'16 vet-
tleat tube of a coffee percolator'!
A, 'Otte Way ifi to ran a pipe
cleaner 'through It, Or, fill roe
j)ercOlatOr with Water, add!ef,iiviee,
tablespoons of salt,. put the.l4ht;:.•
into this, and let it perk Ter-'11I
or 15 Mirages. 1 this should --
dull the hitter, of the percola-
tor, ).'estiere it by boiling virk-
gar in it, er water With r:dere:
''of raw loinori,
Ail
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tat_ The 450-pound eng.ine:predueret, 1:40 horsepower and Can be operated With unletitteti
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