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The Brussels Post, 1941-8-6, Page 3Intal'national Golfers Compete For Seagram Gold Cup Eblem of Pr..eated tomthe R C.G,A. In 19368 by an The Hove of Seagram At Lambton Golf Club, outside of Toronto, on the 7th, 8th and 9th of August, the Canadian Open Golf Championship is ttea. three daysing its , will compete fo1 tournament. rvthe highest orld famous honor induring Cana- dian golfing history, for the winner of this tournament this year will have his name inscribed on the Scroll of Honour within the Seagram Gold Cup, which was presented six years ago to the Royal Canadian Golf Association by The House of Sea' - gram, for annual competition. Since the cup was presented in 1936, the names of the moat famous American golfers have been inscribed on the parchment scroll. First there was Lawson Little, then "Light- house" Harry Cooper; in 1938 Sam Snead — and in 1939 Harold "Jug" MgSpaden; then in 1940, Sam Snead again. Since the Seagram Trophy was presented, there has probably never been in the annals of Canadian golf history such a gathering of world famous golfers as there has been in these Canadian Open Golf tournaments. Players who have made golfing history in many countries of the world have taken part in this tournament. The cup itself stands twenty-two inches from the bottom of the base to the top of the cup. It was designed by the same firm which, in 1897, made the beautiful casket which Torontonians may still remember was presented by the City of Toronto to Queen Victoria', on the occasion of her Diamond Jubilee. One of the features of the cup is that its outstanding design, workmanship and materials are one hundred per cent Canadian. Standing on a massive base of onyx is the gold casket within which is the parchment scroll, where the names of the winners are inscribed from year to year. This design is similar to the one sent to Queen Victoria. The gold casket is mounted on heavily chased silver feet and at the four corners, heavy Corinthian columns. Beavers act as supporters of the casket and the Coat of Arms of Canada, beautifully exe- cuted, appears on the front. Surmounted on this base, is the Seagram Cup itself, also Grecian in design and made of gold. The cup is of exceptional design, with a beauty that is seldom seen in athletic trophies. There will be many thousands of people following, with great interest, the performances of Canada's most famous golfers as well as tho golfers from the United States and other countries, who are competing now in this tournament. Any- where on the course, during these three days, such names as Gene Sarazen, Horton Smith, Ray Mangrum, Lex Robson, Sam Kerr, Bobby Gray — and many other equally famous golfers will be seen making record-breaking rounds in competition with one 'another, for the honor of winning the Canadian Cperr' Championship for 1941 and the Seagram Gold Cup. VON Modern Etiquette BY ROBERTA LEE BY LEE 1. Why should the bride cut the wedding cake? 2, If a man .meets ,a girl ac- quatntancein a restaurant and he sits at the same table, le it obligatory that he offer to• pay her cheek?. 2 When registering at a hotel, is It all right for a woman to sign her name, "Dorothy Smith"? 4. In imolai cotrespondenoe, fe it right to use envelopes that are a different color than the letter paper? i IS you have a secretary or maid call a person is It permis- sible to keep that person waiting mstH you come to the telephone? 1 Please suggest some refresh- ments to serve at a garden party. ANSWERS '1. During the last course of the wedding breakfast. If she wishes she may cut only the first piece, letting one of her attendants out the rest. 2. No; this is not at all neces- sary, and"t'be girl should not ex- pect 1t. II No; she must always prefix the "Miss" or "Mew." 4. No; envelopes must exactly match and fit the letter paper with which they are used. I. No; while thie'may be saving your time, it is wasting the other pereon'e. IL Dainty sandwiches, salads, takes, Dandy, cold beverages or tea. Corks may be made air and water tight by being immersed in oil for, Ire minutes. A cork will fit any bottle If boiled for five minutes vioutlly, pre- , cratcOin�,tia gDe gapiarolloffrom Italdng ofecaemn pimples, adz. •ww•a resin, awbia,rneba And oti,erectomallfy Ir�.bia, nee fun-Aoling, cooling, anll. 1 D D. D.• Ikneorlpdnn, Gpr, a!ue, .WSotdfullelrrnraawl elderly zut))nbank Aek a leder for D. D,U, I'R)'SCltlp l ION, BY ANNE ASHLEY How Can I? Q. How can 1 make an indel- ible stencil ink? A, Mix two parts sulphate of manganese, one part lampblack, four parts sugar (all in powder form). Then make a paste by add- ing a little water. Q. 'How can, 1 keep moths out of my Svgs? ' A. Sponging the rugs with hot water, to which a little turpentine has been added, will drive out and keep oat moths. Q. How can _I treat an insect bite that has become inflamed? A. Cover the inflamed area of the bite with a paste made of equal parts of soda and salt, mois- tened with warm water, Hold the paste In place with a tight ban- dage. • Q. How can I protect the col- ored clothes from running when in the wash tub? A. Put a handful of salt into a good-sized bowl of cold water. Let the garment soak in this for about a halt -holt. Then wash with warm water (not too hot) and soap rude, 1f you should see a little color coming out, rlidse in cold water and salt, Q. How can r keep eggs Meth for a longer period? A. Eggs can be kept fresh for a longer time than ordinarily 12 butter or glycerine isrubbedthor- oughly over thein. One -Minute Test , 1. What is the difference be tween n dove and a pigeon? 2. In which of Charles Dick- ens' novels is found the phrase, "Pll never desert Mr. Micawber?" 3. Was the Roman Coliseum standing at the time of Christ? ANSWERS 1. There is no scientific dis- tinction, but the smaller form of this group of birds are usually called doves, such as the turtle, ring, ground and scaled doves, 2. "David Copperfield." 3. No, it was not built until 80 A.D. - HAVE B omb Mechanism Shown at C. N. E. YOU HEARD? A clergyman noticed a woman named Mrs. Parker, whom he much disliked, coining up ]lis front steps. Taking refuge in his study, he left his wife to entertain the caller, Ralf an bpur later he emerged from hie retreat, listened carefully on the landing, and, hearing noth- ing below, called down to his wife: "Has that horrible old bore gone?" The woman was still in the draw- ing room, but the minister's wife proved equal to the occasion, "Yes, dear," she called back, "She went long ago! Mrs. Parker is here now." "So you married that plump little girl who used to giggle so much 7" "Yes. 1 always did believe In a short wife and a merry one." A widower, confronted by the sad task of looking over the be- longings of his deceased wife, de- cided that the only thing be would. preserve was a bat which he bad always admired and in which she had always looked "so sweet." It was placed carefully on a shelf and not disturbed until discovered by wife number two, who inquired about tt and was told it was pre- served in memory of his flint 'wife. After a time his second choice was gathered to her fathers, and again the bereaved man selected ane of her hats in which she, like the first had always looked "so sweet" This was placed beside the tact bat. Time healed the second wound and a third wife ae introduced to hie household. She, too, was in- quisitive when she found the mil- linery and asked questions. The husband explained that the bats had beonged to her predeces- sore and were kept as mementoes. "That's all right," she replied. "But the next hat time goes up there is going to be a bowler." Vacation time Is when a wife can get a trunkful of stuff Into a suit case.—Kitchener Record. Sergeant (taking the particulars of the reoruit)—And when were you born? Recruit -December 1917. Sergeant (musing) Ah I well remember that winter. It was bitterly cold. Recruit—Cold. I'll say it was Bold. I was brought by a penguin —the stork couldn't make it. Canadian National Railways Revenues The gross revenues for the all- inclusive, Canadian National Rail- ways for the week ending July 21, 1941, were $5,846,216, as compared with $4,907,208 for the same period of 1940, an Increase of $938,008, or 19.1 per cent. Count the Babes Then Label Thern Adhesive tape and red nail polish having failed them, _Mr. and Mrs, Bley Fees of Weston, Mo., U.S.A., are depending on bracelets to help them tell their month-old triplet daughters apart, At first the babies were labelled 1, 2 and 3 with strips of adhesive on their feet. The tape peeled off. Then red nail polish was ap- plied to one finger on No. 1, two fingers on 2, etc. It chipped away. Now Joyce Fay has e bracelet with one bead; Judy May one with two, and Janice Kay one with three, S STAMPS Mpll "MIDDLE -ACE" WOMEN I HEED IHilS ADVICE!! Thousands of women gthe tiomes"la th Lydia E. Plnkuam'e Vegetable Compound, -famous for Over 60 years In re- lieving -female rem - tonal troublce, Try 191 in the Electrical and Engineer- ing Building will be Display- ed Interesting Mechania$n for Releasing Bombs, - Canadians have read for many months of the bombing of LOA - don and other British and Euro. peon cities`, but few have ever had the opportunity of seeing the in- tricate mechanism in the modern bomber which carries the bombs and vends them hurtling earth- ward at the touch of a button. In the 17,500 square feet of dis- play space allotted to the exhibit of the Department of Munitions and Supply in the, Electrical and Engineering Building at this year's Canadian National Exhibition, C. N.E. officials announce, such a mechanism will be mounted on a special frame so that visitors will be able to vee exactly how the release is operated. Revolving Gun Turret In the same display a revol- ving gun turret, similar to that used in -- the big Canadian -built Bolingbroke bomber, will be in operation. There will be, it is stated, an actual Bolingbroke bomber on exhibition outside the Electrical and Engineering Build- ing, the giant being much too large to admit to the inside dis- play. Visitors will be shown at first how the turret is turned hydraulically at a touch of the controls and how the machine gun within the turret is brought to bear on its target. • It is emphasized that secrecy will surround certain of the oper- ations within the Department of Munitions and Supply war pro- duction plant, where bombe, Bren gens and other war supplies will be made at the Exhibition. Most of the production of war supplies, however, carried on by a large staff of men and women workers, will be on full view. The workers will conte from munitions planta throughout the country and every article produced at the Exhibition will go to the assembly plants. Preliminary statistics place the value of Canada's output of ohem- tcals and allied products in 1940 at 2184,152,867, an increase of 16 per cent over 1939. When do elephants have eight lege? — When there are two of them. "Edible" chestnut trees, which may live for 500 years, do not neually bear fruit trail they are at levet twenty-five years old. THAT'S MY CHEW iia”....amorui.,.m.....wpososi.m.nimeamili,,, What Science Is Doing —0— LIQUID-FILLED TIRES Tires 100% liquid -filled, to weigh down the structurally light rear end of tractors, provide bet- ter traction. The 15% solution of calcium chloride in water w1$ not freeze above -20', reduces bouncing and sidewall buckling, requires little care - because water will not diffuse through an inner tube as air does. Theliquid dis- tributes pressure to all parts of the tire, unlike a solid filler. —0— BREATH-DISTILLED WATER Dean A. Buratall of the faculty of engineering at Melbourne Uni- versity, Australia, has perfected an apparatus that distills pure water from the human breath. It can be used to prolong the life of people who are facing death from thirst such as in desert crossing or mine disasters. —0— WARM FLYING SUITS EIectrically heated flying suits have been so perfected that the U.S. Army Air Corps has ordered 12,000 of them. In developing the suits, a Flying Fortress crew last winter flew 10,000 feet up over Alaska in -30° weather, dressed only in long woollen un- derwear through which electrical coils were woven. The new snits are lighter and cheaper than the sheepskin garments now used, and they leave a flier nimbler at his controls and guns. ' Heat can be adjusted for outside tempera- tures from 70' to —60°, oan be increased to protect injured fliers from shock and pneumonia. An electrically heated uniform of' it German flier shot down over England, was found to be so in- efficient as to be nigh worthless. Rail Man's Watch Must Be Accurate "Lf you want to know the time, ask a policeman," ran an old comic, but it accurate information is de- sired a railwayman would prove a better source. All employees of the operating department of the Can- adian National Railway? must have an inspector pass on their watches every two weeks. Men concerned in train operations are instructed not to reset "-eir own watohes, that task is the responsi- bility of the inspector. The rules limit the variation to thirty seconds in seven days, but in actual prac- tice owing to improved timepieces and the continuous checking the variation is far less. SOLDIERS RUB OUT TIRED ACHES ...CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS... AGENTS WANTED BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN NOW ready; cost determined by terri- tory desired, but not prohibitive; article sold by the gallon with inevitable repeats; a natural pro- duct, unequalled and easy to sell. Apply Aqua Vitae Sales Office, 646 Yonge St., Toronto, HIGH-CLASS REPRESENTATIVES wanted to sell every family a health appliance attachable to electric lighting circuit, Coope Remedies, Yonge Street, Toronto. ANKEIt-HOLTIc CREAM SEPAR- atore and parts stock moved from Sarnia to London. Order from John C. Dent, 387 Central Ave., London. Canadian Distributor Supervisors and Agents wanted, ANIMAL PET STOCK. WANTED WANTED — TAMED, UNINJURED young wild animals and birds.— John Wood, 2722 Yonge Street. Toronto. IBAIIY CHICKS IF YOU WANT BRAS LATE SUM - mer or early fall chicks, please order now. Hatching to order. Immediate delivery on pullets which are still good buys; started, day-old, most breeds. Bray Hatch- ery, 130 John, Hamilton, Ont. IIABY 0111054 REMEDY SAFEGUARD YOUR POULTRY with C'hicko Solution, Prevent for Ala diarrhea disease and chicks, Ing cecal worms from your poul- try. Postpaid, 50c. A. G. Cowtun and Co., Chemists and Druggists, Roblin, Man. FARM- EQUIPMENT FANNING MILL (Kline) BEST Seed Grader Wild Oat Separator, Kline. Manufacturing, 420 Willard ,Avenue, Toronto. BEE SUPPLIES WE PAY HIGHEST PRICES FOR Canadian pure beeswax. Please submit offerings immediately. Lloyd's Laboratories, Montreal, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY BELL OR. TRADE. ONLY HOTEL to good town near large military vamp. Good repair.- Twenty bed- rooms, Hugh McKenzie McCallum. Truro, Nova Scotia, volt SALe:. SALE! 20 YARDS GOODS 11.00 phos 30c deliVery, Values 210 to 90e yard! Clearance. Guaranteed 20 yards In beautiful '4 to 1 and lengths, i6 Widths. aontate ae0t1 Each colorfast Prints Broadcloths, Cottons, Linens, (iinghetns, Silks, Cranes, ote, dress etrintmings lStaprona etc, Soma day zsrvleo,—Mallory, LYIC 207 Lattrler, Montreal. 6 BEAUTIFUL APRONS $1.00 postpaid/ Lovely slipover styles, all organdie frilled. High quality, printed Silk Broadcloth. Stunning Summer patterns, washfast. Full- etze 14 to 54. 'Guaranteed!" Sample 25c.—Mailers, LBR, 207 Laurier, Montreal. 8 LADIES' DRESSES $1.98 Beautifully patterned Silk Broad- cloth, Flowered Prints, New Sum- mer fashions, exquisite designs, colourfast. Full sizes 14 to 42. Mention style desired. "Guaran- teed!" (44 to 64, two dresses $1,98). Delivery 22c. Rush $2,20 now to — Mailers, LD, 207 Laur- ier, Montreal. BELTING., FOR THRESHERMEN THRESHER - BELTS. BELTING, pulleys, hose. !aping, feeder can - van, motors, shafting and hangers at reduced prices. Send for new List York Belting Co., 88 York Street, Toronto. FOR SALE - R E .BUILT 10-20 McCORMICK- Deering Tractor, Same guarantee as new. international Harvester Dealer, J. I1. McCaw, Barrie. IRISES, LILIES, PEONIES, TULIPS PDerennial Plants, Numerous Var- icties and Calera Sensational New Introductions. Our descrip- tive Autumn circulars are again ready. Copies mailed on request James' Seeds, Lindsay, Ontario. IIDUSEWIVPvs i FOR. MODERN CANNING OF fruits and vegetables and pre- venting from spoiling. 2 packages Compound 25e. , Do ta2101 Canning Winni- peg, Manitoba, FUDR FARMI•NG NORTHERN BEAUTIES, CHOICE, Large, Dark, Silky, Heavily Furr- ed, Pedigreed Kitts. Ramona Mink Ranch, Merkstay, Ont. EG J. N. LIN USA YL LAW OPP] 'E, CAP. ttol Theatre Building, 81, Thome', Ontario, Special Department, for farmers collections. LEAP TOBACCO FOUR POUNDS'BURLEY AND VIR- ginie. Leaf for pipe $1.35. Five pounds Fragrant 'Virginia Leaf Cigarette Tobacco $2,40 postpaid. Natural Leaf Tobacco Co„ Loam. ington, Ontario. Eight 4 x 6 Enlargements 30c Your developed ond ,enagedto50e,Reprints,amine sine, 8 for 70c, DDIECT FILM 41i1141E10 183 King Most, Dept .. Toe"rotis .ISSUE MEDICAL ITS PROVEN—EVERT' SUFFERER of Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis should try Dixon's Remedy. Sold only Munro's Drug Store, 335 ,El- gin, Ottawa, Postpaid $1.00. MEN WANTED SELL FAM 1 7. E \ PRODUCTS. Needed in every home. Easily sold and repeated. Pleasant work, Start with good earnings and in- crease rapidly. Fine commission proposition. lVrite immediately for free catalogue, prices and details: Familex, 570 St. Clement, Montreal. PRESERVING LAI1RLs ATTENTION 1IOUSEIVIVES—Rnow your 100 Assor edeSLabels erves tt1Uc, 5mi 001 Labels Station postpaid. Toronto,.is Canada. QUILTING 8 LOVELY QUILTS, SEND $1 and receive Giant Patchwork out- fit esltummakes8 doblize quilts, 0- eludes 50c needle -book, threader, 2 pounds expensive silks, 15 Prize-winning 'Quilt 'Patterns," etc. Your choice; washfast cotton prints, broadcloths, silks, flan- nelettes. Large quilting size 06 30 inches, Delivery extra. Guaran- teed! Same-day service, Sample bundle 25e.—Mailers, LTU, 207 Laurier, Montreal, QUILTING PATCHES. GOOD QPArr ity printa and plain buoadeloths —50a Ib. Postage extra. Consult your Postmaster about 1•a. Les. Textile Jobbers, Maud Street, To- ronto, Rt1T; nuvrIsiut SATISFY YOURSELF. — EVERY sufferer of Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis should try Dixon's .Rem- edy, Sold only Munro's Drug Store, 385 Elgin, Ottawa. Peat - paid $1,00. WoTCN \IANPLD STEADY 7NCOME PULL OR PART timeselling11°amlle, Products areunt- tractively packaged, create instant eye -appeal, build and hold cus- tomers' confideneo. If you are willing to invest a few dollars without risk we will help you to progress surely and quickly in yor• chosen district, informnlion and 1 roe, IAM1 ,I7)(, ted Onto 0t St gClement,, Montreal. SNAPSHOTS TO -DAY TREASURES TO -MORROW Your films Bre ettpefully and &len=. tifica1ly processed by imperial, to; make sure they last, 0 or 8 gxt'OSIIIie rII01S 230 - With beautlfnl enla rgeInent free. Thousands of Ilth etter,, from sntlsfled eastolnels testify to our sopt)•lor 001110' end service. IDIleInt11. PHOTO SERV/CID 1,0p1.. D, Station J. Toronto. a a