The Brussels Post, 1952-8-13, Page 9m
THE :gluon SPORTS ,COLUMN
• The late esteemed: a4iet Webster, who
- won very considerable,.fbpte.ae a gentleman
who knew what wordsreally:meant, defined
sport as a, noun meaning that',which
diverts and makes mirth;' pastime, amuse-
ment.
•
If Mr, Webster was around today, he,
might alter the'.definition, He, might'''remove the word mirth,"
Icor there is little more real fun in the major realtns of sport, It
has become a very serious business, with #ew laughs. If there is
any'nlirth, then'it is strictly colneidental ,and unintentional
In fact, the athletes of today aren't even characters as we
knew such in other days when there waa less: money, more laughs.
They're .cold, calculating and skillful, workmen.
Itwasn't like this in the not so old days when sport had its
sparts. the guys (and gals, too) had personality.
There are no more roistering characters such as, for instance,
the late i-Iarry Greb, Pittsburg's bouncing -boxer who buffeted his
way to the world middleweight title. Greb's deviations from what
were known as routine training methods won him: faille of a sort.
Certainly notoriety. Once in New York he rolled out of bed late in
the afternoon, went to the hotel barber -shop, requested a shave and
a face massage with hot towels. It had been a rough night
The barber asked courteously: "Who do you think will win
the fight tonight, Mr. Grob?"
Replied Harry, indifferently: "Who's fighting?"
"Why, you are, Mr. Greb," said the amazed barber. He was
right too.
Out west they recall lurid tales of big, rugged Araby Moran,
who played major hockey both east and ,west; Antby was careless
about training, trio. ' He played so' poorly for Regina one season,
that the late Wes Champ, advised him he would have fo report
in shape the next fall or do without a contract. -So Moran bought
a pair of pants three sizes top big for himself, donned .them, I.
reported to Champ. When the manager queried him about weight,'
Araby ran his hand around the top to show how .much larger
they were for him "as a result of his program of getting in shape." ,•
"It cost an $9 for those pants, but I got a contract," recalled:
Araby:
• Sprague Cleghorn,` one of hockey's great all-time defense
players, was a paradox, a practical.joker off the ice,- a hard man
on it. One night while he was managing Montreal Maroons, the
Governor General of Canada was present in the Montreal Forum
as patron and guest of honour at a big Christvias-basket charity
boxing event. He was invited to the Maroon dressing -room to meet
the players, who were hurriedly summoned. Just as the Governor
General and his staff were, making a dignified entrance, a horrified
Forum official noticed Cleghorn had a "buzzer" attached to his
hand. He was instructed, in hasty whispers, to get _rid of it.
"Surely" said the official,' "you were not going to shake hands
with the Governor General wearing that thing?",
"Certainly I was," said Clegho;n, "The boxing show is poor,
the Governor looks bored, and deserves some sort of a thrill."
There is no such humour' around the major sports wheel toddy.•
Big money has chased out the laughs, made it serious business.
Your comments and suggestions for this column will be welcomed
by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Calvert Hous,, 431 Yong. St., Toronto.
Calvert DISTILLERS LIMITED
AMHERS-MORO, ONTARIO
SPORT
A SLXi3iTC
1C
As we have explained many times
hefpre, thesecolumns have to be
written a little in advance of their
appearance. Aefew weeks ago we
did a piece about how many major
league managers had already been
let out this season, little thinking
that something of a,similar nature
was about to take place a lot nearer
home.
* *5
But before said piece got into
print, sure enough Joe Becker of
the Toronto Maple Leafs had been
handed his pink slip, and Burleigh
Grimes brought fn=with-consider-
able fanfare --to replace hitn.d
Becker's firing, of course, was
due to nothing else brut the ' fact
that the Toronto athletes -=or rather
the athletes wearing Toronto ani
forms—wero not only failing to'live
up to the Lcafian slogan, "First in
Fifty -Two," but were, showing signs
of slipping right out of the four„
teats playoffs. Whethcc " Or not
they'll de any better for Grimes,
only time Will tell,=Burlefgli is
a good baseball man and so is Joe
Becker. But even John McGraw,
or Casey Stengel, or any of the
other "Miracle- Men" -couldn't win
pennants if they didn't get pitching
and hitting from the hired help,
* *
Idowever, even if the Maple Leajs
aren't exactly balls of fire on the
diamond, they're not doing so badly
in one other very important res-
pect—that of making the cash regis-
ters jingle profitably. With the aid
of certain circus -like features,
Cf
"SP a al Days," -and the like, the
Queen. City representatives
presentatives do the
International Loop continue to draw
crowds that are really remarkable
When you consider the large 'meant
spaces that used to yawn in the
stands and bleachers just a year
or so back.
* M *
But before long Owner Cooke
and the rest of the Leafs' top brass
are going to find themselves fresh
out of outstanding occasions to cele-
brate, And, always anxious to be
helpful, we suggest that they pet
on a "Special Day"—or even a ser-
ies of them --in honor of what has
become, over the years, one of base-
ball's most important and bbst-
loved features. Not to keep you in
suspense, we refer to nothing but
the Frankfurter -• hot dog tp you.
* * *
For, way over in Deutschland
the burghers„and: citizenry of Frank -
fart -on -the -Main are in the midst
of a big ,celebrationmarking the
hundredth anniversary of the` in-
vention of that luscious delicacy.
* * *
German historians say—according
to Martin Gansberg in The Mew
York Times—that the glorified
sausage known as the Frankfurter
or hot dog, was developed in 1852.
And we hope that you won't get
the foolish idea that such an im-
portant development was the work
of a single man -,-or even a married;...
one. No, the Frankfurter was the
joint production of the members
of the entire Frankfort Butchers'
Guild—and there are some who sate
that its final shape was determined”'
by a butcher.. who was inspired by
his own dog—one of those dog-anl-
a-half-long-half-a-dog-high affairs .,
known as Dachshunds.
"Plying Disc"—This may look like a "life bool" from a flying
settee'', but in reality We only a new auto being tested by, Alfa
Romeo in Milan, Italy, Built; along entirely flew principles, the
"Plying, is powered by .a silt -cylinder engine with three
double -body carburettors and can develop about 200 horse
power with a maximum speed of 120 m.p.h.
They Have Taxed
'moot Everything
When the City of New York de -
tided recently to imposenuiaance
taxes on cigarettes, automobile use
and liquor licensee, thereby assuring
itself of about•$111 million a year
and the.endurfntt.'dIJ.strill of a largo
part of the gist eifpxr it' broke' no
new ground jif. e,,field: of fiscal
policy. Practically' on or
under the earth,, front„ beards' to
death, has been : immune from the
probing fingers ofthe tax collector.
Beards
There are' tor `things as per.
.,
sonal as a beard.' Yet, .aftei• a trip
to Western Europe, in 1698, Peter
Great found the, beards of his sub-
jects old-fashioned and decreed'
that all men must be slilootlt-shav-..
en. Later that year, he relented to
the extent that men could wear
beards if they wanted to do so,
but would have to pay a graduated
beard tax for the privilege; the
graduated rate referred to the ,sta-
bus of the man, not the beard.
-Peasants had to pay a nominal tax
of one kopecjt, while a chief boyar
was assessed one hundred rubles,
Bachelors
Being a bachelor also might ap-
pear to be a personal option; but
some tax may result. In certain
countries (as Switzerland) and in
some of our states (as Maryland)
in the past, taxes have been imposed
upon unmarried men as such. If a
man could prove that he had been
refused three times within a year
he could escape the tax; but a wid-
ower lost his exemption if he did
not take a new wife within a speci-
fied time, generally three years,
Chimneys
Advocates of an income tax allege`,
that only that type of levy is based -
on an fndfvidual's ;ability to pay:
Actually, certain types ; of. .property
tax are based, upon the same theory,.
There was the hearth tax, under
which, in seventeenth -century Eng-
land, two shillings were charged
"for every fire hearth and stove
within every such house, edifice,
chamber and lod`ging , t'
Switching Hours—Six-year-old Maxine Rudner plugs into a minia-
ture, switchboard without ever getting a "wrong number." The
board was one of the novelties displayed at the Toy Guidance
exhibit.
If a man could; afford more than
ose hearth, hecould afford to pay,,
at highs . tax_ (or so the theory
went), Ant tax collectors had to
enter every room to see wheth'ttr
there-wbii' a'liearth,- and ',This odi-
ous
dious visit•reu'dered--the tax Qdioua:".•
Ina a14 improvement ofthe same•
principle, a, chimney' tax was im-
posed. The 'result was that some
people camouflaged them, and con-
cealment of chimneys'was.made a
crime,
An ;ob,tious next step was the
',rt 5 t'7
"No Money Wasted On Monkey Business"—Bonzo, 'Hollywood's
famous chimp actor, looks every bit the politician as he declares
himself a "dark chimp" candidate for the presidential nomination.
But even the Germans admit the
food didn't come into international
prominence until it was imported
to America and used as an attrac-
tion at the Chicago World's Fair
in 1893, There, history states, the
original and its imitation, the hot
`diSg, were devoured by the thou-
sands.
* `* * •
While the elongated, pork -filled'
secretly smoked product has made
,-the cifyi,of'Frankfoit famous inter-
,, ,nationally, it has rtaken New World
enthusiasm, New World resort life
and New World spectator sports,
especially baseball, to put the hot
dog into the big time. For on
this side of the water the .frank-
furter actually is 60 popular as to
be a national institution. One in
eight pounds of•meat eaten by the
average family is of the sausage
category, and 32 per cent of the
meat thus consumed is in the form
of the hot dog.
* * s.
Statistics for last year, for ex-
ample, show that 3,739,267,000 hot
dogs (canned, boiled or on a roll)
were devoured by gourmets of all
ages. A, steady increase from year
to year has been noted by manu-
facturers since 1931.
A 5 *
German manufacturers condemn
the Canadian variety ' as inferior.
One of them explains that a good
frankfurter should snap when you
bite it. Explaining why his own
product is so successful, he adds,
"Our hest frankfurter skins used to
come from Russian and Chinese
lambs, We can't get them now,
but we arc getting some from Per-
sia. Half the secret of a good frank-
furter is. in the casing.'
5
This maker says that our model
is pale and wrinkled in contrast to
the original. "It can't even he cotn-
pared," he says. "No flavor, no tex-
ture, no sear)."
* * *
Manufacturers over here shrug
off comparison with the Frankfort
andel, and statistics show that they
have just cause. Four tithes as
many, casings for trot doge are lin-
ported
inported into the United. States alone
as into Germany,
Last year, for example, hot-dogs
casings from Canada (including
Newfoundland and Labrador) ran
more than S;348,000 pounds and
from Argentina more than 3,371,000
pounds. German makers imported
from these countries, in addition
to Persia, Russia and China, a Little
over 2,000,000 pounds.
* e *
Admirers .of the Frankfort pro-
duct explain that the secret of a
successful wiener is in the smoking.
One thing a manufacturer won't
tell is how long he smokes his
frankfurters.
5 5 *
One informant revealed that, be-
sidde.:the ..Persian- casings he uses
nothing but finely ground pork
from electrically killed pigs, and
spices prepared by a trusted cook.
"The real secret is in the smoking,"
be confided.'But he refused not only
to tell how long the process lasted
but also what wood he used.
* v *
Proud of the work that goes into
their product and its ultimate suc-
cess, manufacturers (Canadian,
American or German) are taken
aback when the content of the
frankfurter is questioned.
Asked if there was any chance
that iie or his competitors might
slip in some horse meat to increase
the profits, , a Frankfort manufac-
turer showed his irritation, "Horse-
fur'ters? Never! We butchers are
craftsmen—not chiselers!"
* d *
So conte on now, Mr, Cooke,
Don't look so glum as you glance
at the League standings and sec
your Toronto minions Clanging over
the brink of the second division
abyss. Maybe—perish the thought
—the Leafs won't be "First in
Fifty-tro, if memory serves there
have been other years when they
didn't quite make it 'either, But
that's nn reason to let A,D, 1952
slither past without taking advent -
age of the chance of putting on a
real, never-tp.be-forgotten-celebra•
tion in:honour of the delicacy which,
plat's no favourites but cheers and
mantilla whiners and losers Mike
—the 'HOT DOGi Put plenty of
Mustard os ours)
window tax, for windows could be
counted . from the outside of a
house. But many persons found this
asessnlent obnoxious, too, for it
was deemed to be a tax on the
light of Heaven, A modern adap-
tationof this "taxation by count"
was presented by. a 1951 Ridge-
wood, N.J., assessment cif' $11.60
per set for television.equipmest,
an inspection of roof -top antennae
being the basis of the lexy.
Pride
Such - taxes on degrees of com-
parative prosperity, as indicated by
physical evidence, took many forms.
There were taxes on carriages, sil-
ver plate, hair powder, and armorial
bearings; an accumulation of the
signs of wealth was a presumption
of the ability to pay taxes. The
U.S.A. also experimented with a
tax on vanity asd pride of pos-
session. In Colonial Virginia, it
was provided that for all public
"contributions," every unmarried
man
had
be assessed in church
"according to his own apparel,"
while a married man was assessed
"according to his own and his
'wife's apparel."
Some taxes were imposed on
articles used only by the wealthy,
such as the wig tax in early New
York; other levies were against
property used by the poorest of
Hien, such as the Roman tax on
urinals. A universal phenomenon
such as burial was not overlooked;
a cortege could not proceed to the
church or cemetery without pay-
ment of the funeral tax..
Travel ,
Travellers always have been
singled out for special treatment;
the bare fact that a man could
afford a voyage was presumption
of his ability to pay. Thus the
country of permanent residence
might tax the traveller to make up
for what he didn't pay there when
he was abroad. Other places as-
sessed the persons and goods of
travellers under such titles as pas-
sage, pontage'and stallage. In New
York City today, there is a special
hotel occupancy tax for transients
only.
But people didn't have to travel
to be taxed. Along came the poll
or capitation tax, based upon the
fact that a person existed. In Eng-
land, Richard II made this a 'per-
sonal tax, fashioned to the apparent
ability of the individual to pay as .
determined by his station in Hie.
Actitlities
As against the tax upon a person
or thing; • there is the ta.e upon an
art. Transaction taxes exist in
various forms. There are transfer
taxes, stamp taxes, document taxes,
sales taxes. There are taxes on pro-
duction and on consumption '(the
sumptuary tax). There are taxes on
property, on bank deposits, on capi-
tal.
Other taxes in America have been
upon auctions, lotteries, pari-
mutuels, issuance of currency by
a banle, giving away samples, catch-
ing shrimp, operating private rail-
road cars, cutting trees, distributing
oleomargarine, gathering gas, mill-
ing grain, malting gunpowder, mak-
ing book (si'tgular). TI a most re-
cent assessment is the rain tax,
a 1951 invcrtion, Utah authorized
a county levy to finance precipita-
tion in drought areas, while Wyo-
ming now has a license tax Upon
persons engaged in weather modi-
fication.
Sometimes things seem to be 30
arranged that whatever you do you
will be taxable, 'l`b1is, there is the
tax on spending (sales) or not
spending (capital), on keeping OS.
sets (property) or disposing of
then. (transfer), on living (capita -
doll) or 'dyieg (.stat ). Adam
Smith, the father of economics, ex-
• pinined that every tax is a badge
of liberty; if so, racist Caundians
today should look litre Russian
field marshals.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
AtIlliN'rp WAN'r44t
YOU will slake more .stoney, day after
day, Year after year. polling DUPONT
41Y14101, priced t0 0011 and relwat+ De,
taus Peens write today. ARCH HOsi•
15111, 104 N. PURI, Philadelphia 6,.1,14
WAFER SYsiom,-•-Aet'mptor Wtndtrinlr
mrd Eloolrla Pi•osauro SY0tem0.•eettte+'-
loy Tartans PUMPS, Quinn Rn% and 'Pout*
try Walerero, Quality gond., i'eaeonabli'''
srIw4, H. M. Flaming and bone. AlstrlJiu•
for Blenheim; Ont.
SALES AGENT WANTED
Well known Canadian Creating Card
Manufacturer requirerc representative to
hell Nationally Advortleed Lilies 01 011-lot-
lnas Cards and 130x00 Aasorttnents, Exclu-
elye territory can be arranged. BOX 3'So,
94, 123 Eighteenth Street, New Toronto,
Ontario,
estlusTMAS card agent., be aura to
write Monarch, for frog catalogue of
over 60 last moiling Stems.. Xooativoly the
Ilneet line available "anywhere, Su nplee
e0t'on approval. Immediate delivery and
liberal - commlaolon, Monarch Greeting
Curds, 47W, East Ave.,.' Bamilton, Ont.
HARM 4111/444.e
Day old and started ehlek, and turkey..
Older pullet., Special .broiler chichi!.
Catalogue.
TOP NOTCH CHICK SALES
Guelph Ontario
Tw43110 high aunllty chicks, batched
ovary week 1n the year. Special breeds
for layere, roasters 01 broiler,, non -sexed
Pullets, cockerels. Also turkey Doane,
started 8161,0 and turkey., older Du11of..
Catalogue.,
TWEDDLE CHICK BATCHERIES LTD.
Fergus Ontario
EUSINESB OPPORTUNITIES
WESTON
EXCELLENT Inveotment providing re-
tiring Income, 316,000 cosh, 6-plex,
centrally .located, completely equipped.
"Ons apartment now vacant. Balancenn-
n taeatly/coer arranged. lnsurante.P. A11SI' Reel
South
Station Street, Weaton. Ontarin.
ATTRACTIVE SERVICE STATION and
Curage. Restaurant and Tourist Cottages
-doing $41.000 yearly buoltteoa. Largo
river frontage. Wonderful location. New
standard electric, borne. Everything mod-
ern, tip -tap condition -423,000. Reasonable
terms.
BEATLEY REAL ESTATE
.8781 Water Street Peterborough
Dial 25871 or Beene 6581-4
REST ROMMF, FOR SALE
Excellent opportunity, to operation now.
Seeders for witch solo. Apply:
111X0. A. MAOIST/14N
330 Midland Avenue
Midland Ontario
03116109
'SICK"—write Chute Doctor -671 Dan-
forth, Toronto. Drugless—Oneratfooless
—Lieeneed, Why suffer? Nal,,, ynnreelf
Weill
DEALERS WANTED
OILS, GREASES, TIRES
Paint, and. varnishes, Eleclrie Motors.
Electrleal- Appliances. Refrigerators, Para
Freezer., 6tllk. Coolers and Feed Grtndore
Hobbyebop Macbinery. Dealers wanted.
Write: Warco Groan and Oil Limited,
Toronto.
DIEING AND CLEANING
'LAVE you anything need. dyeing or clean-
ing? Write in ,. for Inr0rmallen. We
are glad to .newer your gueetlene. De-
Partm0ol H, Park&r'e Dye Wnrk. Llmite6,
791 Vance 5t.. Tnrnntn.
FOR BALE
SAVE time—Money, Convert your women
driven Binder to a practleal Power
binder with a Carlson Power Drive. For
Information write Chea. Thatcher. dis-
tributor, Rockwood, Ont.
REGISTERED Dambrel and Cornell
Seed Wheat. Treated. 2 bushel., per
bag. B, 5'. McKim, Dresden, Ontario.
TIRES
Hamilton'. Lergoat Tire Store Since 1933.
Used Tires. $7.00 and up. Retreaded Tires,
600 x 16. 114.00, Other often, priced go-
cordingly. Vulcanizing and retreading gen
vice, All work guaranteed. A11 orders
C.O,D, 82 00 required with order. We pay
charges one way. Ponineula Tire Corpor-
anon. 96 King Street Weal Hamilton.
Phone 7-1821.
GOOD USED. THRESHERS
LOTS to choose from: Two 22" McCor.
mitt -Dearing; Two 22" Woods Bros.;
Two 2Remaly: Two 56"
WoodsBros.:OneAdvance 23" Advance Rumleyr
One 21'"Huber, like Pew; ' One 28" Huber
on rubber; One 28" Red River Special. H,
L. Turner Metall/ Ltd., Phone 414, Blen-
heim, Ontario.
WHEEL claire,. Invalid. walker., folding
and ((Mineable. Free Literature. Foam
rubber ring cushions 37.60 delivered,
Damford-Refile LlmIted, Ottawa, Ontario,
USED books for gale. Catalogue free.
Bethel, Box 85. Station K, Toronto.
SCRAP and salvage yard !nuances for
sale, downtown location, long lea.%
leap rent; opportunity for ambitious man.
• Apply ndvortiacr, 00 Samuel at,. rear,'
Sudbury.
PLUMBING AND HEATING CATALOGUE
FREE.•
She 1061 catalogue is od the press.. Write
for your Oo9Y or 1- blt rho now Warehouse
end see for rlurnelf the model bathrbom
Repays in white and •eoloured axturee, to
standard alae bathrooms with 111ed or
".Pointed walls, just the way' you Want. it
bathroom in your own bonze. We have
take and- Oink cabinet units, lavatory
Easing and tolleta, pressure eyetems and
Electric water heaters,. range bdltere, pine
and fittings In 0ablarr ga11puryllted 050
past iron, 0eptf0 ane 011 103E,,, 1-1'lrlgera-
tors and eloclrlo ranges, a com9150G 110.
Et furnac00, air condltloning .nnital and
hot water heating •0y0tanta 171th 0011VOOtor
rads. We deliver to .your nearest rail.,
NaratIOn. YOU 5. ' . JOHNSON PLUEIIl1NG1glIr. SUPPLIES
StroetavIlle Ontario
CRESS (101114 SALVE --For sure relict,
Your Druggist melte CRESS.
FOR SALE MAGREOOR GOURLhEY FOUR
aided planer. price E2,000. Alex Borman,
'con River, Alta,
RIIGISTERED ROdbune, mole, 4 month..
026. M, Alliler, 94 Simeon St„ 0.1111,,
Mammy Barrie Field Clipper, cute 6 foot,
enceinte. to trailer, Geed' condition,
Bambley Hatchorles, Winnipeg.
New Rolland Baler, Model 76, in good
condition, now to 1060, 11,200, Inn
Davidson, 3teadowvalo, Ontario.
Safety Iron Holder
Iron holder can be mounted on
iron • or door. Made of rust- re-
sistant metal with asbestos base,
it removes danger of fire otter iron-
ing.
111
n3(fA
Don't wail—,very sufferer ef. tlh►araatio'
Peons or Neural; should try Dixon's
Remedy.
MUNRO'S DRUG 57016E 15101'
335 Eight Ottawa
*1.25 Exps*ss Prspoid
•
ASTHMA
WHY endo, lr Moro 10 01alellna9 001 0110
hale your Huodreda nl lho00o0da of Atte
neve been sold on a money' 0,061 pear'
0nm4, Ho easy to 006 After YDu, sOm n
tons nave been d1n010.MA n0 Ao,bmo. you
owe It t0 yourself to my 901 hnn"w(rlo.
1401 5011r Draggle!
POST'S ECZEMA SAi:VB
BANISH 1nr lerrllahl t Ivy pommy,. reenter
and weenIna ek*n Irmdue. 410et'. Derd•,l,e
Salvo W111 not diaapl.,It yap
firkins, (mellnt. bill'ning"00001115 eche,
ringworm, pimples 'end athlete cram W01
reepIOA readily to the 01abube,o ndorita,.
ointment. rega14100. el naw .utdbnrp. 'n(
bopelese rhes- (Oen,
anion 51.00 Plat AAE
POST'S REMEDIES
este 01,0, alar n0 11,',1501 el prise
130 0114nn R, a Corner At Logan,
Porn to
F E M 1 94 E 0
One maroon tette manlier ' 'T16405 enporlor.
63015N104" to nelo anovinlo 0010 1110-
tr000 and nervp0L tenglin oaeorloled with
monthly periods.
80.00 Postpaid In 01010 wrapper.
POST'S CHEMICALS•
MO OOP,1EN ST. WAST 1'11161IN118
OPeORT*TN1Ttl5s Bots'
615514 ANn *YOntl.N
BE A HAIRDRESSER
Ants CANADA'S 1.11411HNu 16(6/1101
Greer Opl,lrlenli,v Learn
tinlr,i retain*
Pterin, menl5n0 prnfeaolun gum Agana
Ppnu0Onde or ,uMe.e rel marvel eredualre
America's Greaten' Sam.
(Iluale:Hod Catalogue Il'nu -
Write or Cell
MARVEL. HAiRDROSRINn S('HUOLe
968 Rlnor St 10., To,nnta
nrnnnbeo-
44 Etna Sr.H (Mn
75 Ramie St (Mown
O'i1T10NT9
AN Olrlrpllt-w every Inventor—List of la.
ventlona and full Information sent free.
rhe Ramsay Co. Reglalered Patent. atter-
00.10. 073 Rank Street. (-Mown ,
9'E;I11 Nlien'1'IINHA 2,WWW( d (,umpnn9. Ppp
tent Snllrllore. Eetebil hed 1000 500
Bay Street. 1050010 Rnnklot M ofnrnia,
Mon on regime(
rakes
THORO0G15BRED golden , Labrador Pup.
plea. Dr. Cicely Wilson, 111aple. 17182..
TEACHERS WANTED _
DARLING Township School Area. Lan.
ark County require. a Normal trained
teacher for SS No. 3. Darling. dune. t0
commence 'Sept 2. Apply, stating quail.
tloatl0no, experlenre and salary expected
to Mark 61, Barr, See-Treas.. Clayton.
Ontario.
GALT diotrlet, rural. eight grades. Mini-
mum salary 124011 for qualified tenebcr,
REPLY; Stating natn0 or 410905191 or
principal and telephone number.' to 0 D.
Ballet, Sec,-Treao„ R.R. 0, Galt-
TRUSTEES
alt
TRUSTEES Township ' School Area Dara..
oho, Jarvis, Hodgins, Gaudette. and
Shlolda, 'Senrchmont, 'Ontario Require.
Deo qualified teachers with experience,
one male preferred. Grades 1 to 10.
schools on highway g ay shoot 80 miles f ea [roc
a
Sault. Boarding pare. Gouda State Quail.
and
fishing.e and l salary. Goof hunting and
fishing. Apply Stamey Grgllon, Secretary.
Searahmant; Ont.
WATCHES REPAIRED
,FREE ]IXPAN$SON BRACELET
ONE of Ontario's largest mall order
• wotoh repair vompanlee, offers you our
32 YOare' experience In fine watch mak-
Mg. Over 20,000 natlefed customers in
3951. An estimate. seat immediately be-
fore repairing Your *etch. ,
ACCURATE WATCH REPAIR
1977 Tonga St.. Toronto. Dent. W.
WANTED
POULTRY xn00Esson
with Egg Grading experience proferred.
Group Insurance and other benefits, tele-
phone Or Write t0' G. Evens,
SILVERW00D DAIRIES, LIMITED
Floes, - Ontario
Itch..s
s.ItCh Near.lya CrazWay
Very first use of soothing, cooling liquid
D. D. D. Prescription poslllvely relieves
raw red Itch—caused by eczema, rasher,
eealpIrrttatlon, chnfog--othrritch troubles.
GreOaassiest, stainless. 436 trial bottle must
(atilt), or money back. Don't suffer. Ask
Your druggistforD.D.i).PRFSCRIPTION
SAFES
Preterit year DOORS and CASH from
JURE
baa oTHIEVES.
B 5,, oar Cabinet, P r ane
055504 ,51,15 o5 or write for micaseto.. to Deot, W.
J.&cJ.TAY LElR LiM'TEO
TORONTO SAFE WORKS'
040 Picea 6451 E., Toronto
Eotabllelied 1555
HARNESS & COLLARS
Farmers Attention -Consult your near.
est Heatless Shop about Staco Harness
Supplies, We sell our goods only
Through your local Staco leather.
goods dealer. The goods dr* right
and 'so are our prices. We manufae•
tura to out factories; Harness :Horst
Collars, Sweat Pods, Horse Blankets
and teacher Travelling Goods, lasin oil
State Brand Trade -marked Goods and
you gel satisfaction. Made only by
SAMUEL TREES CO. LTD.
42 Wellington St. E., Toronto
— Write for Catalogue —
ISSUE 32 — 1952
MACDONAL.D'S
BRIE
aaatr,3dth gel cd