The Brussels Post, 1961-11-30, Page 3TRACTOR SPARES
CHAINS, ROLLERS, SPROCKETS,
IDLER, HARDWAR E, SHELLS,
BUSHINGS, PENS, SHAFTS, SEALS,
ALL MODEL TRACTORS. SPECIAL
LOW PRICES, TERMS.
LABCO EQUIPMENT LTD.
44 CHAUNCEY
TORONTO 18
RO 6-2401 BE 1-2624
MUSIC RECORDS'
ArPENTION: Quartets, Groups, etc..
Top (Milli 45 RPM ;lewd§ proceesee from your recording tapes, $1.0.00 per
hundred. Scenic Records,. nee einnnete
Avenue, Chattanooga, l'enrieSSee.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND .wpmehi.
BE A .tiAmpREssot
4004 "CANADA'S .LEADING
Great •0.pportenity • Learn iiaireires.sine
Pleasant dignified profession, .good
wages. Thousands of suecceefla
Marvel Graduates.
America's Greatest System mestrated .Catalogue. Free.
Write or eon
MARVEL 'I-IAIRPRESSING SCHOOL
355 Alper St, W., Toronto
firarichest
44 King St, W., ilanditen
72 'Rideau Street, Ottawa
PERSONAL
LOVERS OF GOB: Learn His declared
purposes - fear not but rejoice In
confident hope, Write Bible Truth Nils-,
sion, Box 011 Brantford, Ont.
AUTHORS Invited Submit NISS all types onciuding poems) for hook publi-
cation easonlhi ,. ',rms.S'noltwell
Ltd.. Ilfracombe, England, (estd. 18981.
IF you like to reedjoin our Novel Club!
Information for self-addressed stamped
envelope. Novel Club, P.O. Box 4207.CL,
Bakersfield, California
HYGENIC RUBBER GOODS
TESTED guaranteed, mailed in plain
parcel, including asso
rtmen
t, Sex
book' free with trial 18 for
tors,, Box
1.00 (Finest
24-T qPF,
ualitRe
gina, Sask .
y) Western Distribu.
pROFITABLE OCCUPATIONS
LEARN WELDING
NO TIME LIMIT
Also
Certificate Courses in
SUPERVISION — INSPECTION
QUALITY CONTROL
A.R.C..SCHOOL OF WELDING
92 'John St. H., Hamilton
JA. 9-7427 JA. 7-9681
MERRY MENAGERIE
,Ilkstr9rfueV tAr.41•4Dr Pi
"Remember the days wheals
they at least gave you &
sporting chance?"
BABY CRICKS AND POULTRY _
FOR. early egg production Dew has e•15, week Old Ames and ether good
varictieS ptilleta available Daynidg
hatched to order, Book your next lot ‘ovfritle)roatireorys Hilairc.heSrye:1 112o0ra j lohangeiNito,r johr,
1114171/ sjit9iA ni1 v7itt. '1` STARCROSS 2118 layer
is making a significant contribution to
Canada's export trade and Is now sold in 28 countries abroad. Achievements of Canadian agriculture: are well, known
abroad, and the profitable and reliable
TaoirsalwretTieorf ,sd.IdliAngv4tito stwivt,T.poust.!
Ben. Perhaps you've not tried this gut-
standing layer yet; this is a good year
to do so. There's an authorized Shaver distributor near YOU, or write for prices
and catalog in Shaver Poultry Breed-
ing Farms Ltd., Box 4000, Galt, °Marie.
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
G1 NiltM. store.
tmining area ull abskriin'igngprTcUeri5s5t0,0a0n0d.
Down payment $30,000 to rover stock.
Terms for' balance. Fully equipped.
Licvliundgedq,uairieenrtS413.-plwecreiLebatk, 2anhdoustes
Whyte„ Golvgatia, f)zt.,phone /114:
FURNACE, tinsmith, Plumbing, hard-ware store, stock, new ,modern apart.
merit, oil furnace. 530,000 complete,
E$1x50,00ter0, Odonwtarri,10,Wrn. Pearce, Realtor,
DOGS FOR SALE
White Terriers, registered, pedigreed,
PUPPIES for sale, West Highland
03 rimt.onater.61onld, 'E. Dabbs, Sebringville,
FARM THELP WANTED — MALE
MARRIED man, fully experienced, cap-
able of taking charge of herd, for year-
round employment on dairy farm, Sep-
arate living quarters for small family.
Heat, electricity, milk supplied. Apply
stating wages and size of family, Mel.
yin J. Baird, R,Tt, 3, Carp, Ontario.
FARMS FOR SALE
NATURE'S HELP — DIXON'S
REMEDY FOR RHEUMATIC PAINS,
NEURITIS,
THOUSANDS PRAISING IT.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN, OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect
ISSUE 48 -- 1961
EARN MONEY in your spare lime: New
homework Booklet, "Make Money Sell-
ing Big Mails," „yours for 250 coin.
Farmer, 210-C Fifth Avenue, New York
10, New York,
STAMPS
FREE mint Africa set and 5 U S. coin-
moms., with approvals- Litho, Box 51,
Canoga Park, Calif.
10 NUDES for 104 with 14 .and 24 ap-
provals in books of 1,000. A. J. Voss,
Box 618, Wrightstown, N.J.
FLOCKOWNERS WANTED to supply
Latching eggs weekly on a yearly ba-
sis. Large premium paid over market
Price. Apply, Box Number 243, 123 18th
St„ New Toronto, Ontario,
eeeY.rete.
ELMous.T RO EC
Farm for sale, 300 acres of which 150
is hardwood bush and the balance till-
able land and pasture. Good house and
other buildings, Well situated between
Shawville and Ladysmith. Ideal spot
for summer home with good hunting
and fishing nearby. For further details
contact Mr, Delmer Barber, Maryland
Quebec. This advertisement is publish.
ed free, as one of the many benefits
of THE ALLIED FARM SERVICES P.O.
Box 1029 London, Ontario.
100 acres; 85 workable, choice land,
fair buildings, water supply, hydro,
close to school and village, price
$10,000, $3,000 cash, balance at 6%.
200 acres; 150 workable, 6 acres hard-
wood, choice land, spring creek, good
building, price 517,500, $8,000 cash,
balance at 6%.
HOUSE in village; 7 rooms, double ga-
rage, $3,500, terms. Chester R, Mills,
Real Estate, Dundalk, Ont,, phone
130W4.
FLORIDA VACATION RESORTS
HELP WANTED FEMALE
TRADE SCHOOLS
ELECTRONICS
Evening classes in radio, television,
color automation. Transistors and semt
conductors. Visit or write Radio Elec.
tronic Television School, 725 Dundas,
London, GE• 3-2001.
DAYTONA BEACH, FLA.
ATLANTIC SEASIDE COURT
FOR ideal vacation, swimming, fishing
and plenty of warm sunshine and fun.
Come to Florida. For information, write
to Pauline and roe McKay, 3119 South
Atlantic Ave,, Daytona Beach, Florida.
DIETICIAN
REQUIRED immediately for 105-bed
hospital, 40-hour week. Salary coin-
mensurate with qualifications and ex-
perience. Apply Administrator St. An-
drew's Hospital, Midland, Ont.
HORSES
SHETLAND PONIES
FILLIES and stud colts for sale, $100.00
and up. Registered, best of blood lines.
Blyth Acres Pony Farms, myth, On-
taria. Phones 140 and 191.
WELDING EQUIPMENT
WELDING Machines, Electric, Used,
Good Condition, Very Reasonable. May
be seen or picked up at Saltfleet
Equipment, Belgraden Avenue, Stoney
Creek. Norman .4.4461.
WANTED — EGGS.
INVESTMENTS
8%
GUARANTEED
And secured. With no collection, inven-
tory or management problems. Interest
and principal quarterly. Call or write,
Income Investments. Ltd., 42 James N,,
Hamilton, JA, 7-4558.
MEDICAL
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salvo 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 $3.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St. Clair Avenue East
TORONTO
- CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
CHANGE
YOUR
LUCK !
COME TO TORONTO
SELL REAL ESTATE
Age-Education No Barrier
Many real estate men earn $8,500
a year and more selling houses, apart•
merit buildings, land and businesses.
PETERS AND WILES LTD.
REAL ESTATE BROKERS
8 Toronto Area Offices
over 30,000 Properties Sold
immediately Require
For 1961-62 Expansion
45 TRAINEE SALESMEN
27 EXPERIENCED SALESMEN
5 SALES MANAGERS
For details of qualifications, pay
training programme, Write --
"EMPLOYMENT MANAGER"
PETERS AND WILES LTD.
1190 WESTON ROAD •
TORONTO ONTARIO
AGENTS WANTED
SALESMEN, DEALERS, AGENTS. WAN. Tim to merchandise Hundreds of
ontstmidituf lines For details, apply
Boy ,No. 212, 193 16th ;street_ New Toronto, Ont.
VA/IMO:DS ,or part-linle agents want-
ed, one or more in every, ceinmunit,y,
to handle sensationel new patentedd winter sports item, SKEESTEB, the Now Aie.„ eau sus,
Initial Inventory as low as $110,00,
bring a small income eete lot of fun.
Piease, write for agency details giving
yotir age. occupation, and bank or ether business :references, to fil<EF,SPOTITS,
gMt 171, Postal Stn. 13, Hamilton, •Ont.
keep the peace, to strive coura-
geously to exhaust every other
means possible to settle inter-
national disputes?
For the Christian, however,
there is a third, and far more
important, consideration:
3. There are moral and spiri-
tual reasons against it.
Most important of all, what
has happened to our faith in
God? Have we forgotten that
"He has the whole world in his
hand?" Have we ceased singing,
"0 God our Help in ages past,
Our hope for years to come, Our
shelter from the stormy blast,
And our eternal home?" What
"stormy blast" ere we thinking
of if not the mushroom cloud of
sin over our world.
And even if God does allow
such a holocaust, are we not
persuaded "that neither death,
nor life . nor anything else
in all creation, will be able to
separate us from the love of
God in Christ Jesus our Lord."
(Rom. 8:38, 39).
Thus, the dissenter votes "No,"
not in fatalism but in faith, be-
lieving that God has a better
plan for His creation and better
ways for His servants to spend
their time and money in work-
ing for peace. — Dr. John F.
Anderson, Jr, in Orlando (Fla.)
Sentinel.
How Can I?
By Roberta Lee
Q. Any suggestions for some
"homemade" Christmas tree or-
naments?
A. You can •fashion some very
attractive tree ornaments from-
burned-out light bulbs. Cover
the bulbs with mucilage and then
dip them into colored confetti or
artificial snow.
Q. How can I flatten the edge
or corner of a linoleum rug that
persists in bulging or curling uP?
A, Place a hot - water bottle
filed with hot water over the
bulged or curled area, When the
linoleum is thoroughly warm, re-
move the bottle and place a large
book or flat weight over the spot
until it has cooled. A stubborn
spot will usually respond to this
treatment.
EAKTHROUGH IN --- WeSt customs guards examitiottn old-model auto,
mobile which was riddled with 100 Communist bullets when five East Germans used 4
to escape into West Berlin. The old flivver hod been reinforced with steer plates.
*
throughout the six continents,
the placards appeared.
This determination led them,
indeed, not only to: insist on
every possible fragment of the
original stone being recovered
from the river and utilized
afresh, but also on all additional
material needful being cut from
the original quarry in the Boboli
Gardens, and, even by means of
the traditional methods and
tools. And, when the reconstruct-
ed bridge was inaugurated three
years ago, it appeared as a faith-
ful replica of the original, save
only that Primavera,Nrestored to
her place, was without her head.
The idea of a substitute head
had, assuredly, been considered,
and, could a plaster cast have
been discovered, one might well
have been made by some skilled
Florentine sculptor. Indeed, from
Amiens came the suggestion,
from the Compte de Franque-
'ville, last descendant of the
sculptor of the Primavera, that
this should be done. Those in
favor maintained that such a
solution, proposed by Franca-
villa's own descendant, might
well be acceptable. But, despite
search in the. Florentine muse-
ums and art institutes, and fur-
ther search in collections of
plaster casts in many European
cities, none came to light; and
the authorities decided against
any new head for the statue.
"Either," they decreed, "the old,
or none,"
So, since the inauguration of
the rebuilt bridge, the Prima-
vera has held her place, headless,
a tacit reminder of tragic events,
writes Dorothy Nevile Lees in
the Christian Science Monitor.
Now, 17 years later, the head
has come to light, following
operations for cleaning the river
bed initiated by the Canoeists'
Club of Florence. •
Timoteo Lucaroni of Piacenza,
a workman operating a dredger,
finding his machine involved
with a hard mass, halted it,
and, on investigation, found this
to be a marble head, embedded
some 385 feet down the river
from the bridge. Save for his
alertness, the head might have
been crushed, and then carted
away, with the stones and rubble
destined for the foundations of
a superhighway now under con-
struction.
Borne to the Plazzo Vecchio
and examined by experts in the
presence of Professor Filippo
Rossi, Superintendent of 'Galler-
ies, and of Dr. Ugo Procacci,
Superintendents of Monuments,
the head was readily identified.
Various signs and details con-
firmed the verdict. Among these
were traces where a new tip was
applied to the nose in the 18th
cehtuty, a bluish mark on one
Cheek, the notable sweetness and
gentleness with which Franca-
villa had imbued the face, and
other characteristics.
To render identification yet
more sure, however, a plaster
cast of the neck-fracture was
taken, and, when applied to the
neck of the statue, found to fit
tightly,
Florence is one' of those uni-
versal cities with which all the
world feels a syrepethetie link;
and what happened to it on that
eernote August night of 1944
stirred wide echoes Of compas-
,eloh and regret.
MbiAfri 'however, that the head,
little damaged by shattering ex-
plosions and long irrinietsion, has
emerged from its water bed and
will once More stand forth,
crowning Praneavilla's statue,
against the pearly tints Of dawn,
the dente of midday, the golden
glow of.'sunset and the starry
preitteiditiee of night, it' seethe
that, for the Florentines, the war
is really over.
1:L
efinition of a mitibr oPeration
One viforined on somebody
eee
gr
Not-So-Gentle Art
Of Self,Defense
INSIDE OUTER SPACE •—•• What goes up will come down
when a space capsule like the one above is fired 1,165 miles
into space. Part of BIOS I, the first U,S. space project devoted
almost entirely to biological experiment; the G.E.-built
capsule will be packed with biological specimens to investi-
gate the effects of space'on living tissues. The capsule pro-
tects the experiments during shock of re-entry.
Tcatino The Lilly
From Charley Horse
From the bench at Yankee
Stadium Dr, Francis J. Sweeney,
physician for the New York
Giants for 31 years, watched
the players battering and butt-
ing each other in a practice
scrimmage one afternoon Igst
month. ",.whey used to laugh when
told them taking a pill would
bring down a swollen knee or
ankle," t h e crusty old doctor
said. "But they don't laugh any
more,"
The "pill" he referred to is
a recently developed tablet con-
taining alpha amylase, an en-
zyme whieh reduces the ill,
effects of black eyes, bruises,
strains, sprains, and, in fact,
any swelling but that which
sometime a fflicts' a football
hero's head.
One Giant, ancient Chunkin'
Charlie Conerly, two eyes black-
ened and one nose broken ir an
early season game, took a pill
and said later: "It seemed to do
reel good. My eyes didn't get as
black as usual,"
Buccal amylase (trade-named
Buclamase by its developer)
now being used increasingly on
athletes, was 'first tested, last
year, The New York State Ath-
letic Commission tried it on
boxers freeh out of the ring,
most of whom benefited. Dr.
Sidney Gaynor, team physician
of the New ,York Yankees, used
it on the champions last season
from spring training on,
Instead of adding 'fluid to an
injury as an injection does, the
drug works by inhibiting the ac-
cumulation of body fluids in in-
jured joints of the body, the
Giants' Dr. Sweeney explained.
In three decades, with the
Giants Dr. Sweeney has seen
that most common athletic ail-
ment, the Charley 'horse by the
herds. "There'S no question that
enzymatic treatment helps with
Charley horses," he added.
4
4
People come to learn rode for
their own reasons, In Bruce Teg-
n6r'e jude;Karate Sehool of
Self-Defense in toe Angeles,
there is a priest who wants the
exerelse, a bank Vice president
who was tired of feeling shy
and insecure and is now the
picture of self-eonfidence--,end
lab assistant whose co-
workers, just for fue, had been
pushing his head into the chemi-
cal vats each time they passed
by, Across the country in similar
schools charging three or four
dollars an hour, an estimated
250,000 Men and women, maneu-
vering around the mats in the
traditional loose robe s, are
learning the ancient techniques
of the Buddhist Monks for toss-
ing opponents into tailspins,
Some months ago in Los
Angeles, Mrs. Virgil Marks came
marching into Tepees school at
the head of a column of chil-
dren, "This," she announced, "is
the end," All five offspring had
been coming home from school,
bruised and battered — not only
the four boys, but the 10-year-
old girl, too, After the sibling
clan finished the seventeen-
lesson course, the mother com-
mented: "They're certainly not
what I would call experts, but
I'm sure they could defend
themselves in most situations."
In New York, recently, a 26-
year-old construction worker ap-
peared at Jerome Mackey's
Judo, Inc., with a large pur-
ple bruise on his upper arm.
"It was this fella I work with.
I mean, he's going to a psychia-
trist, but even so he just blows
up, every now and then. He
tried to gouge my eyes out last
week, And now this, 'I mean,
he bit me. So here I am,":,
"They come," said Jerome
Mackey, "thinking about self-
defense. But often they learn to
appreciate judo as an art. The
better the judo man, the more
docile he becomes — because he
knows what he can do, and he
doesn't have to prove it all the
time. 'Judo' means 'the gentle
art.' It's a modification of the
old jujitsu techniques. There are
jujitsu tricks, for example, that
break a man's arm., But in judo,
the trick is modified, sb You can
do it over and over again, with-
out hurting your opponent . . .
unless you need to." ,
Are there courses specifically
for self-defense in street fight-
ing?
"Let me put it this way. I
could teach you a hundred tricks
that you could use, but they'd
only be as good as, you are in
applying them. In a confronta-
tion with a," thug, you're likely
to freeze. In judo contests, one
simulatese:that pressure in the
studio, so you learn to think
under stress. Judo is all applied
physics. The. Japanese can be
devilishly clever, , a n d they've
worked to perfect these tech-
niques for .some :two thousand
years."
There are fads and specialties
in Oriental fighting methods;
yawara (stick fighting), aikido
(joint twisting), and karate
(open hand and foot fighting),
but it is judo which is the most
general and generally applicable
system.
Mackey indicated a sign in
Japanese which hung in a cor-
ner. "It means maximum effici-
ency, minimum, effort. And it's
a friendly *sport. Look at those
two men there. They're smiling!"
FLIGHTY?—David Smith, 27,
hovers in Hove, Sussex, Eng-
land, as he keeps fit an an
exercising rebound pad in his
garden. He's a diving champ.
Art Treasure Found
After 17 Years
One of the longest and most
intensive art searches in history
came to a happy ending early
last month, For on Oct. 6 there
was dredged from the, mud of
Florence's Arno River the some-
what' battered''bead, of a statue,
which experts immediately rec-
ognized as that of the famous
Primavera (Spring), which had
been lost since the German Army
leveled part of the city on Aug.
4, 1944.
Never; perhaps had there been
so intense a world-wide search
for a mere fragment of statu-
ary. But the head of Primavera
was something far from ordin-
ary, Of the statues of the four
seasons which adorned the beau-
tiful Holy Trinity Bridge across
the river, that of Spring was held
by Florentines to be the finest.
Thus there was city-wide mourn-
ing, when, it was learned that
Primavera's head was missing
when the river bed was carefully
gone over.
Many recall the succession of
thunderous explosions and the
crash of falling buildings, and,
next morning, the desolation of
the architectural glories of cen-
turies lying in piles of smoking
ruins, among them the 600-year-
old ,bridge.
The four statues were set at
the corners in 1608 for the mar-
riage of Maria Maddalena of
Austria with the Grand Duke
Cosimo II. That of Primavera,
by Pietro Francavilla, stood at
the northern end of the bridge,
The statue itself ultimately was
found among the debris, the
head and one arm missing; and
for long it was surmised that,
unless shattered at the time, or
lying deep in the river bed, the
head had been carried off as a-
souvenir by one of the Allied
soldiers to some remote part of
the world.
Tireless exploration was car-
ried out in .the river by divers,
and dredgers; inquiries pursued
by diplomats, demobilized sol-
diers, and police: a spectacular
publicity campaign organized,
with rewards offered throughout
the world,
Placards were put up practi-
cally everywhere: "Have you
seen this woman?" printed in.
English, German, Arabic, Japa-
nese, Spanish, French, Hindu,
. . a hundred languages, under
the photograph of the head. "She
is about 350 years old; color
white marble; weighs 20`pounds,
Threeetheusand dollars reward
to Whoever givee news of her."
From Tibet to Patagonia, from
the Fiji Ielancle to the Canaries;
in. Afghanistan and New Zealand,
Canada and South Africa; front
the Arctic snows to the equator-
ial heats; by land and water,
The first Indian pipes and to-
bacco in England were probably
brought in by Sir John Hawkins
when he returned feom Florida
in 1565.
Q. Is theee, ally way I can re-
pair a hdle that has been burned
into a leather-covered table top?
A, You can sometimes hide
this by melting some- caridleWax
of a matching color, pouring into
the hole, and smoothing this opt•
while it's still soft.
Down To Earth View
Of Fallout Shelters
Shall I build a fallout shelter?
At the risk of being labeled
unrealistic; unpatriotic, or worse,
here is one voice that joins his
majesty's loyal opposition by
voting an emphatic negative.
The futility of it all was crys-
tallized in this father's mind
when our 14-year-old, in a sur-
prising bit of mature thinking,
said one morning, "Dad, what's
the use of our building one any-
way? When o u r neighbours
come knocking at our steel door,
we as Christians could do noth-
ing but let them in too. Ho*
are you going to build, one large
enough for the whole neighbour-
hood?"
This set the wheels to turn-
ing in the mind of the preacher
and produced a simple, sermon-
st yIe outline stating why we
must vote against home fall-out
shelters:
There are practical reasons
againet it, How can we afford
it? 180 million people, spending
an average of $2,000 per family
of five, would have to find $72
billion,
How can we be certain we will
be hear enough to, the shelter;
When we need it? Is everyone
geirig to start staying home all
the time?
Again, if we follow this "Mole,
dig your oWxt hole" plat, hew
can we knoW how safe for sur-
vival they really are?
2. There ere psychological tea-,
salt against it.
Will not thee shelters give us
a false sense of security' tricking
Us to think that We can have' a
nuclear war and "got away With
it?" What will such a program
do to our owo deterrilitiation.id
ANAILIS PAdE-34cinat a. Bur e, 7; registers delight, with
this new children's shall. This spotted epi,
tome of the lake-it4aty sdhitial has a plastic shell in Mother
of pearl finish, a velvet body and leatherette underside; pits'
takith-ontenhtie e*OresilOtt•
•
4,
•