Loading...
The Brussels Post, 1961-03-30, Page 3NUTRIA ATTENTION PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA Weep purchasing' teutrta consider the following points widen this organize, tion offers: 1 The best available stock, no cross- bred or standard types recommended. 2.- The reputation of a plan which is proving Itself suestantieted by files ef satisfied ranchers. 3....-Full Insuranee against replace- ment, should they not live or the event Of sterility (all fully explained in our certificate of merit.) 4, We give you only mutations which Pre In demand for fur garments. 0, You receive from this organization guaranteed, pelt market in writing. 6. • Membership In a or exclusive breeders' asseelatien, whereby Only purchasers of this stack may partici, pate in the benefits so offered. 7. Prices for Breeding StOcit start at 5200. a pair. Special offer to those who qualify; earn your Nutrria on our cooperative basis Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd., R.R. No. 2, Stouffville, Ontario, PHOTOS •-• YOUR PHOTO on Stamps from any size photo, snap. 1001 uses, personalize stationery, greeting cards,etc. 100-$2,,. free particulars, samples. Milhench, Tyrone, Ontario, PHOTOGRAPHY FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB BOX 31, GALT, ONT, Films developed and a magna prints . 40. 12 magna prints 500 Reprints 50 each. KODACOLOR Developing roll 900 (not including prints Color prints 300 each extra. Ansco and Ektachrome 35 m,m. 20 ex-posures mounted in slides $1,20 Color prints from slides 320 each. Money re- funded in full for unprinted negatives. ROOFING CONTRACTORS ATTENTION Churches, sChools, homeowners. Have• your slate roof and metal work checked, and repaired by expert workmen. Alt material and workmanship guaranteed, Free estimates, Call AX. 4-6205. Norm Mothers; Parkhill, Ont. SALESMEN WANTED FULL time and part-time salesmen re- quired at once to sell exclusive formu-lations of the well known AgrIcIde Insecticides, Challenger Sprayers, Dis- infectants, dd. direct to Dairy Farms. Exclusive territory arranged. Liberal commission on first and repeat orders. Must be known in area and have a good record, Apply by letter to Mr. H. Feldkamp, B. Sc., Provincial Manager, Red Line Chemicals of Canada, Ltd., Mimics), Toronto 18, Ontario, STATIONERY CARTOON STATIONERY, an exclusive product to snake letter writing raor4 fun, $1. postpaid from: Otto A. 1Viels- ner, Box 320, Chicago 90, Illinois. STAMPS SIX beautiful Korea stamps, catalogue value 510 - only 100 to new approval applicants, Maurice Moore, Box 572, Fort Bragg, California. --- TEACHERS WANTED U.S.S. No, 3.0, 'Unless (Whitechuroh) Bruce County,requires ail experience Protestant teacher for a modern, wel equipped school. Apply stating qual flcationS, salary expected and name of last inspector. Duties will commence Sept. 5th. D. J. M. Moore, Sec.• Treas., RR No, '5, Lucknow, Ont. Teachers wanted by MURDOCHVIILLE INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL. Intermediett Licence, Salary $3,200 $4,050, Eletnentary Licence, Salary $2,850 - $4,600. Modern 7 room school. Sick Leave and Retirement Gratuity Plan in effect, Town of 3,000. Recrea-tion Centre with skating, curling, swim- ming and bowling. Good skiing, hunt- ing and fishing. Apply: The Trustees, Murdochville Protestant School, Box 879, Murdochville, PERSONAL HANDWRITING analyZedi ca m pieta analysis by experienced graphologist. .Enclose $1.00 and self-addressed en-velope to Mrs. Fr. Ingram. 454 Geneva St., St, Catharines, Ont. GET 8 hours sleep Nervous tension may cause 75",1 of sickness. Particu- tarty sleeplessness, jitteryness and ir- ritabillty. Sleep calm your nerves with "Napps", 10 for $1; 50 for $4. Lyon's Drugs, Dept. 20 471 Danforth, Toronto. HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS TESTED, guaranteed, .mailed In plain parcel, soclucling catalogue and sex book free with trial assortment. 10 for $1.00 (Finest quality) Western Distribu- tors, Box 74,TPF. Repine, Sask. n ONION SETS 1st C4A-58 MOM-nerd inspected. Size rs, produce very uniform. Onions without seed stalks. Price at request, State quantity. Newhouse specializing in Sets NEVVHOUSE RR2 Niagara an the Lake • ' BABY cHICKI • • MARKET trend is . good, :4014 Chht$ on wont. when mu Wall, them, by ordering Brat,' benching to onit'e, ale.° some dayolds and Started, promot •Iiipment Ames ist•CrtAs and other Ips., :1 ,carted pullets, tO JO Wok loold. r)rde.r Slay-June broilers otio* Agent --so, lora). agent, or write Bray 120 John North, .Hamilton, Ont. , . ,.„ BERRY /1, ROOT . PLANTS STRAWBERRIES ONTARIO "S largest growers. All torn• inertial varieties. 12 million plants, Redcoat voriely 00 $2.50 -- 100 so N.4.110 .•-- 000 5' $12.00 1,000 fa 521 09. $00.00. - for complete infOr- notion. and price list, . on other var. kites, anti 10,40 a 'n Ow growing system write: B R, F: Boston Berry Farms Meg-) It R 1 'Wilsonville, •Ontario, • „BULBS GLADIOLUS Bulbs, treated, ready for planting. Large to 2 Inches diem, titer $3.30, Jtunho 2 Inches OP .- $4.00 hundred. Post paid, William Bart. Waterdown, Ontario. Books BOOKS of Forttmei The Troth will make you Rich! Fewer unlimited! 'Un- told wealth, rush $2,00, William cal- mer, 7201 Gardenvailey, F3.00, Cleve. land, Ohio, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES MOTELS MOTELS MOTELS INQUIRIES invited from operators .in-terested in Chain Operation Motel, 25 Units with Gasoline. .Bar, and Coffee Bar. Locations avairable Ontario and Quebee on 25 years net lease basis. Capital to furnish required. Lease se. cority, excellent banking references: A good opportunity for security of oper- ation in All Canadian Motel Write; Botesamet Construction Gtuouln7-8Bolv9d. East, Montreal, P.Q. Tel. --- BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE COMPLETE cement block mantifecture trig plant for vibrated steam cured blocks, Close to new hydro atomic en- ergy project. full price $10.000. Apply William II. Roos, Pt, Elgin, Ont. Phone 136-W. R'ESTAURANT-service station, Highway 11, south of Gravenhurst, both Bally equipped, doing good business. Low down payment, balance open mortgage. Apply WL1by Motors,' Rilworthy, Mus- koka, CHRISTMAS TREES CHRISTMAS tree seedlings. Austrian and Scotch pines, Best possible stock, $15 per 1,000. D. A. Tiffin, Cookstown, Ont. EAVESTROUGHING ATTENTION TINSMITHS you ought to know that half round eavestrough in 28 gauge can be bought at less than current prices, Write Enos S. Martin, R. 3 Wallenstein, Ont. EMPLOYMENT INFORMATION, COMPLETE step-by-step information on how to get a better job, improve yourself, send $1.00, Phelps 118 Greg- ory Lane, Salem, Oregon. FARM HELP WANTED FARM, 200 acres, 12 miles front Sarnia, clay loam, 130 acres well tilled. gOod frame house, 3 piece bath, automatic hot water heat, Good steel truss barn, hen house, granary and implement shed. Apply Ralph Yokes, R R. 3, Petroila, Ont. FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE WRECKING: all steel White 28-50 grain thresher, Hyatt Bearings, adjustable shaffer and screen clover concaves. All Parts cheap, Also 13 inch mill grinder for $25.00; August 'Bauer, 11.31. 5, Mitchell, Ontario. NEW Holland Crop-Chopper, Model 03, used one season, John Deere' Cultivator, Model CC-147, used one season. 28" LEI- Thresher, completely equipped. Used four seasons. Contact 0. Ferguson, 1298 Tepper Road, Burlington, Ontario. NE, 4.0712. FOR sale: Sawyer Massey Threshing Machine with straw shredder and long feeder, SAS:). one LILO. grain binder, both in good condition, Apply J, M. Laird, Norwich, Ont. Phone Norwich 286-W-1. FARM EQUIPMENT FA11MALL M.D, new condition, high clearance adjustable, front axle, also narrow front end, belly pump, two- way rentote control valve, Model257- 1.11,C, cultivators, good. tires, 400 hrs. since complete rebuild. $1995.00. Con- sider trade and deliver in; X00 mile radius. EARL DEAMUDE R.R. No. 6 DUNNVILLE, PHONE 777M2 THOROUGHLY reliable couple. middle aged or even partly retired, for gentle-man's farm near Toronto, Man with dairy experience, preferably some gar- dening, Wife to help on week-ends. This position will be attractive to couple who no longer wish responsi- bility of farm under their own opera-Hon and would like for family reasons to be close to Toronto. Apply Frank Veitenheimer, Manager, Cyprus 6-1318, Kleinburg, Ontario. FARMS FOR SALE TWO 100 acre farms opposite, five miles front Clinton. Buildings on 'both. One with hydro and considerable hush. Carl Diehl, Bayfielci, Ont. their read er s that no car Corners safely at over 70 mph if there is ice on the corners; or for that matter if the driver cannot see round it; if a station- ary milk wagon is on the other, side, or if there is a child in the road, or if .another driver is com- ing the other way also at over 70 mph. And nobody t ells British motorists that when impatience causes a fast driver to overtake a slow one in a dangerous situa- tion it is the impatience of the fast driver not the sloth of the sluggard that is the danger, wries John Allen May in The Christian Science Monitor. • Road' casualties each year snow in Western Europe exceed 1„00, 000. Appalled, the United Na- tions Transport Commission for Europe.:had produced some vital- ly interesting reports on the re- duction of casualties (up to 50 per cent) through the enforce- ment of experimental speed limits. It has repeatedly urged an all-Europe test of speed limits, to no avail. The United Nations is balked by a few countries, notably Great Britain. It astounded this correspond- ent when he asked the British TratISPort Minister about these 'ITN researches that until that moment the Minister had never heard of them. -alA convinced that we could halve road casualties if, while "we wait patiently for the new. roads we so desperately need, we conduct a campaign de- liberately aimed at turning the car from the symbol of speed and selfishness into a symbol of convenience and care, Even if we did not impose speed limits (it might be asking too Much of the British yet) We eould at Least have safe "discretional” speeds posted clearly on each stretch of road end at each corner. It wouldn't be difficult, But if drivers go on saying, "Nonsense;: it's the slow drivers that datise all the acticlentS,"' that Means War., In that case, and in that context only, here is one driver Who is Cerivinced of this virtue of unilateral "Never admit you're a self- made Miati," advises a Philoso- pher. You might be criticized for not balling in competent help, iS-Stlig' 14 19". dittfOOPit WO -DOWN Batketbeill Citieltdrit ktint info big itibstatle as the'ldffititiyk teach the guys, N Branches at: Halifax • Saint Jab* • Qu Montreal • Toronto *Winnipeg • Edmisof** %MOW* • ......It- 10- sri CLASSIVIED ADVERTISING 4,0 A Simple Case Of $wg.11era Heads, .1: By PICK TCf a Lf.11fat, Al Li .114 who. wiie so ,lime tied that Newspaper ,EnterprIse is:,Ssre .didn't even have his Metal- NM YORK -'-Behinci -the..ene from one :of JIM" Mali''.0111 mein with him. (He borrowed Jack Pear vs. Bei .fetid eiciees.) • . is a complex story of Show!husi- When the Pear Show started, nes's economies aggravated try in- fluted egos.. it was a panel show, The price ion and definition, have honoet differences of: opin. boils down to two nun who litoorbogatywsotbiti;‘t;,at,t311,..esIttlidleld:rfii,rin:yd: dropped or, at least, 'relegated to the panel elements lieve been On the surface, they fought ...seeond Place, behind Pcrl • over the price paid to peilorm- AMC. tt is. this clement of sub, .ers on the two shows - a flat $320 fee for an appearance with Pour -kid one considerably. 'high- er. with Sullivan, ,What set Sullivan off was the case 81 a pretty, young "singer :darned Joan Fairfax. She took $1,000 for doing two numbers with Old Smiley, When, she worked the Paar show, she also did two numbers but her pay cheek was only $320. Sullivan blew his stack. .Paar. defended his position by 'saying that guests on his show' don't come on primarily to .perform but to be members of the panel. Sullivan's contention -_' 'and. this is shared by many! show business insiders - is that there, may be merit in what Parr says when applied to comedians -but not to singers. A comic, such as Buddy. Hack- ett or Myron Cohen, can sit , :on the Paar panel and ad He;is not using his standup material. He can then go on the Sullivan show, or similar variety TV pres- • entations, and do his regulartou; tine'without being afraid that-the- public has seen it all before. Sullivan's friends say he would never ,have objected to the• dif- ference in price for comedians. But singers are another Matter. When a girl such as Miss Fair, fax sits on the panel of Pear's, show, she .knows she's going. to sing. Sullivan and his..supporeers can see little difference between' a singer performing from the seat. of Pear's., easy chair and. standing up and singing on',the Sullivan show, song is a sprig is _a song. As one veteran Broadway man- ager says, "Even a blockbuster act goes on Pear's panel " and knows he has to sing. His eyes are open." What makes Paar's stand hard for Sullivan and others to swal- low is that his "panelists" often are required to rehearse their numbers. At other times, they are, in the worlds of one Broadwayite, "conned" into performing on the air, He mentioned Gracie Fields, Who was surprised on the air by a request to sing, and trumpeter R. 50 •Mp.s74e's P.1‘ric.p• o Young Pitchers: alaglie gave a boost to The confidence cf all young p1H1,Ts vith big league ambitions re- rently when 1w said: "You. can 'make it if you have a good arm and a fast ball," Although 'experienced baseball wen contend that abilty 'far hove iwerage is needed for a. boy to become a .3.00. hitter in the majors, Maglie will settle for the fast ball on the mound. "Naturally you like fair size in It boy," the Red Sox pitching coach said, 4 Phe big bays etch your eye. But it isn't too irn- portent, lf a 'boy' hat a Test ball, I don't ear+l-how big he can be taught the rest." However, Sal, who sported a 110-02 won and lost record the big leagues and pitched in three World Series with the Giants and Dodgers, won't set- tie for anything less. Not oven the success of a "junk"' pitcher like Ed Lopat an shake 'Sara opinion. 4' Through most of Lopat's ca- reer he was a soft-ball pitcher,' liaglie said. "But remember that Li the beginning he probably flap 7a good fast ball. -As .a ,matter of fr,ct, Lopat lS a prime example of my pitching theory, I mean, he got himself ready for the day he •no longer hod the fast ball. He was as ready for that day as any pitcher could be. He not only went right on winning; he probably w much, better,- eqtlippecl'• in later years without the fast ball. Ger• thinly his record suggests it "Give me a bay with a good fast ball and.. what we, like to refer to as a big-leagtte arm and MI make a pitcher out of Maglie continued. "He can be taught control, the curve, the change of pace, and all the rest. But in the beginning, when he's young and strong and can hum that ball, control is enough. if he can throw hard and keep the ball around the plate, he can. win. "I'm assuming, of course, that he has the desire to win, He Must .have the desire, because there's a lot of hard work, a lot. of concentrated practice, involv- ed. It doesn% come easy for very many. Most time ;have to give it a lot of time and sweat, and you can't do that .without desire," In the making of a pitcher, the sidelines are just as 'impor- tant as the middle of the. dia- mond. "No matter how successful' pliolher is, 'he should always be working toward improvement on. the sidelines," Maglie went on. title can always Improve his, control by throwing to spots, even while warming up. Be- tween starts or in the bull pen ,he can perfect a curve, a slider, ri •change-up and other things that will make him more effec-. Jive once he gets into a game. "By working on the sidelines a pitcher can get himself ready for the day he no longer has the fast ball, as Lopat did. It's up to each man. He can do it if he want to. But it takes work and practice - lots of it. 'Tar example," Sal s a i d, "when a boy's control is bad it usually means that, in the pro- cess , of his delivery, his body is cut in front Olt his arm, pushing the 'ball. Something like that can easily be fixed oh the si deli nes," FARM EQUIPMENT FAST' GAL - Mrs. Grace But- cher, mother of two, collects her breath after, breaking the world indoor record for the women's half-mile run, She did 2 minutes, 21.1 seconds, terfuge which rankles Sullivan, But Pear, obviously believes that guests on his show are not quite the pel formors they are on the Sullivan Show and other,,, On the so-called variety there ere production numbers and other devie:s to make the enter- tainers stand out, It is this honest difference of opinion that has got out of hand. ° Advisers of both men are angry becaUse the whole affair became a public disgrace, The feeling is that neither man helpecl ehlinsell in the public, eye; An ec9nomic oddity of the. Paar-Sullivan problem is thdt both Shows are booked by the lame man,'agent Marty Kummer Jinx they,e,ro: lie an early bird! lieasy duty wagons ulth 15.inMt tires. $123, Vmdcrisool, General Acpalr B,c9thellIes 20 C.I.N Wood': built cooler, ebore, ho machine. John ,CHOOri. KA 2 calecienia, itO. 154172, 'wn buve developed a farm wagon that tics proven to be reliable for •forage 1.1‘0$ And bale hauling, Its main feat- ures are a very good 'steering for short tumble and high speed no sway trail- ing, For Illustrated folder write Horst Welding, Mt No. 3, Elmira, Ontario,. FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS. PRESERVE Flowers! Instructions, in• grectients, 51.00, Morley Stephenson' 174 Euston, Burlington, Ontario. CANADIAN exclusive available, patent. eel wave and curl comb, wanted by every woman. A proven $1. mail order item in U.S. Write Royal Scot, Water-bury, Conn. • — — 37 COMIC Books 52 00. hard Cover Book disposals, 4 different $1.00. State wants. Gold coloured necklet crosses, thine. stone centre, $2,00 dozen, sample 350, Cash Postpaid, Off-price merchandise bulletins. 100. Freemans, Cornwall, Ont. QUILT PATCHES ASSORTED Broadcloth., plain arid print,- ed, 3 lbs. $1.89. Special, smaller pieces, 4 lbs, $1.98, Assorted Flannelette, 3 lbs. $1.49. Quilt Designs - set of 16 - 5e Drapery:- Better quality assorted mill ends, 1 3 yards lengths, 44 inches wide - 5 lbs, 57,98; pieces roc cushions, 2 lbs. $1.08. Postage paid, refund. Gordon Pullen, 48 Abell St., Toronto 3. GOURDS . GOURDS! Fantastic 36-in. handles. Grow yourself, sell $2.00 each, make good income, Generous Packet fresh seeds, instructions $1.00 postpaid. Derco, Box 8310, Asheville, N.0 -• HOUSE PLANTS British Motoi-ists Nuts On Speed The headlines on the story saieb;Ice '•Causes FiVe Crashes on Mi. "I was bowling along quite happily at 95 miles en boUr one of those involved was re- ported ,as saying. , • ,Reading this en My morning train to Waterloo I nearly shout- ed out loud, which, on this train at any rate,-, would have been considered exceedingly bad form. But this I find one of the most disarming things, about my countrymen; 'not their .praise- worthy capacity for silence but the loyalty with which they be- lieve still in the tales of their childhood, Speed is still beautiful Ice causes..s. tons, Highspeed motoring indeed is the one contest in which one can properly talk of "the. British race." crashes. Speed is safe. "Ninety-five" is quite rea- sonable. If, following a slow driver, a fast driver becomes impatient and overtakes unwise- ly so that there is an accident, the slow driver is to blame. No Minister of Transport in re- cent times has felt strong enough • as. a man and secure enough as a Minister to refute these' very English fallacies. But having driven'iundreds of thousands of miles in Britain, the United States, and; Western Europe, this correspondent, for one, is convinced that while they. go completely unchecked it will be irnpoSsible to reduce by much the annual toll of casualties suf- fered, in this War of the Roads, Now ice, as everyone knows, very rarely causes a crash. Driv- ing a car. Inexpertly or too fast over ice is more usually the cause. 3 Going to a neighboring village ."aiong a winding lane the other evening I. passed on the way a Jaguar that was deep in the woods, crushed against a tree, Coining home, after the Jag had been towed away, I saw a sports Shrtea in the identical position. There was ice on. the corner,. I suppose 100 ears had passed' that way in'the hour. If ice caus- ed crashes, they :would all have been, in the Wanda. . But in the, saute- conditions' RR drove safely by ,Thus two drivers caused their own .crashes. They would have crashed lesS severely had they been cornering less fast and not' at.:- all if they had been , cornering .carefully, Yet, "This car will corner safe- ly at over 70 mph," one reads in ahnost every ether test report in the, press. And readers .be, lieVe it, Motoring • editors, the Inershals. of speed, never remind AFRICAN violets. Write for ti..t offer- ing all the finest- varieties and colours. Aiken Nursery, Chute Panel, Que. HORSES SHETLAND registered 3 year old filly with white mane and tail. H. S. Halt, 21 Maple Street, Galt. INSTRUCTION EARN More! Bookkeeping, Salesman. ship. Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les- sons SOO. Ask for free circular No. 33, Canadian Correspondence Courses, 1290 Bay Street, Toronto, MEDICAL HAVE YOU HEARD ABOUT DIXON'S NEURITIS AND RHEUMATIC PAIN REMEDY? IT GIVES YOU GOOD RESULTS. MUNRO'S DRUGSTORE", 33S ELGIN, OTTAWA $1.25 Express Collect JO.Alsr-FAIO,AX":L Started two Tel" swelle d' fled s to" get swelter. of MCA, The'SulliVan shoW is an MCA package; MCA handles Pear personally. Therefore, the whole business of booking the shows falls on Kummer, who is 1961's candidate for' "The Man On The Hottest Spot." When the debate was sched- uled, and later called off, there appears to have been another honest difference of opinion - this time on the definition of the word "debate." Sullivan apparently thought a statement and rebuttal constitut- ed a formal debate, Paar believed. that a debate required an open discussion. The'feeling around the tele- vision centers is that neither "welched" or "backed out" but that both were sincerely unable to agree on ground rules, With people other than Paar and Sullivan, who are both on the egotistical side, probably all of the issues could have been ironed out without the public getting into the act. Show business, in general, and Paar and Sullivan, in particular, would have been better off if cooler heads had prevailed. POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin trQublee. Post's Eczema Salve not disappoint you. Itching scalding and burning ecze- ma, acne, ringworm, pimple's, 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 $3.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 186$ St. Clair Avenue East, TORONTO MISCELLANEOUS 3,000 INTERESTING Offers only 250, Get Listed, Receive free samples, maga-zines, etc. 'William Brown, 426 West 46th, New York 19, N.Y., U.S.A. 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 St , Tor- onto 19, Ont. RU. 9-2125, Loons-Mortgages 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 or recapitalize present. Complete flnanc. lag 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 hack on all types commercial buildings and motels. For financing let us assist you. For appointment call Corrumner-cial Loan Department Investment Dis. count Corporation, 10906 Gratiot Ave., Detroit 13, Mich, Phone DR. 1-8415 or DR. 1-4630. NURSING HOMES FOR SALE MERRY MENAGERIE NURSING home, licensed /or 9 patients, :fully equipped, in residential district, Apply to 68 Gladstone Ave., St. Thomas, Ont., or phone ME. 1.9301. No real estate dealers. OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN Q. How can I cope With a stubborn screw-type jar lid? A-.: First, tap the edges of the lid to, 'iSpring it" a little. fl the lid still -tefuses to budge,' wrap a big rubber band, adhesive or friction* tape around the lidg or hold a piece of sandpaper over the top, 'then twist. The -added friction you get should do the trick "He's not ,,much on WILL power, but 'mewl Does he-have WON'T power!" Newcastle Public. School Board REQUIRES TEACHERS FOR MIDDLE GRADES Salary schedule In effect Minimum $3000. ;200 per year ter two years experience, annual Incre- ment of ;200. Apply stating bull particulars io E, S. Barchard, Secretary Newcastle, Ontario 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 SCHOOL 358 Bloor St. W., Toronto Branches: 44 King St. W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa 101-2C-10t ii 'ALL .*:101115 A~ LURED YOU. ittigARD TICKET • • 275 lbs. free ba"ggage, alloWance • Superb cuisine • Duty-free shopping I Dancing, parties, movies • Stabilizers for smooth sailing • Flawless British service Save 10% on totind-trip Unlit April 14 PAY-LATER PLAN AVAILABLE SEE YOUR LOCAL AGENT* No One Can Serve You Better FAST, FREQUENT SWINGS TO ENGLISH, SCOTTISH, IRISH 'PRENtH PORTS ""NEW YORK k 14AUFA*5( QUEEN MARY Mer. 22, A tYLVANIA Met 22, AO, 14 O. MP*? QUEEN ELIZABETH Mar. 20, APO,,, 12,26 :tSAAXONNti4IA A iA.MCiorse,.1 MEDIA Mar. '31,-May 5, Juice 33 RI PARTHCA Apr. 21, Moy 19, Arne 16 grant HalitaO tallawind day, FROM MONTREAL d QUEBEC otZtiloNolAt. Apr. Apr. 3, May 5, 26, June July .2 8, kith to 22, May 12, June 21 23, July 14, Aug. 4, 25 CARINTHIA 'Apr, 28, May 19, June9, 30,, luIy 2l,,Aue, 11 Quebec folio/Ise day. ,f4tOtitAlcilinif4di Corner Bay & Wellington Sts., Toronto, Ont, Tel: EMpH.4 2-2911 r•