The Seaforth News, 1946-08-01, Page 719
Classified Advertising
AGENTS WANTED
tGENTS A. N D STOREKEEPERSwrite for our 1106 of fast selling
Owe on epmbe, garters, nail cllp-
pre, plastic lamp shades, rayon
ca fs trimming's, etc. Lawrence
ado 10a -brace Co., 1961. Queen St, E,,
Toronto,
BART CHICKS
PULLETS EIGHT WEEKS fo lay-
ing,- Pree, catalogue and pricellot,
Top Notch Chiclteries, Guelph, On-
tario,
LAKEVIEW CHICKS
5000 Breeders
Summer and . Pall hatched .chicles,
hatches July 26, August 2nd, and
weekly after, also limited no start-
ed chicles and pullets.
FREE RANGE PULLETS
2 months to teeing' age, raised un-
der Ideal.- conditions.. Send for Price
list, and catalogue. Book your or-
der now, Also new pot typerange
oil burners, immediate delivery.
Pot type brooder oil bUrners. Boole
you I'S for rail delivery,
LAKEVIEW POULTRY
FARM, Wein Gros.,
ia:xeter, Ontario.
1'01. LETS `telGH'L'' W 18EKs
to laying- for Immediate delivery,
.Also two and three week old start-
ed chicks, Tyree catalogue. Tweddle
Chicle Butcheries, Limited, Pergus,..
Ontario
AUGUST. CHICKS AVAILABLE IF
you let us hayoo your order... now.
Dayolde, pullets, non -sexed, cock-
erels, Bray Hatchery, 130 John N.,
Hemil ton, Ont.-
MILLER'S CHICK
• HATCHERY, FERGUS, ONT.
DAltlt ED ROCKS BRED TO LAY
8 & 10 weeks. Hun11). x RR, Leghorn
x 1121, 4 & 6weeks. Plocic of Leg-
horn pullets of 100 at 12 weeks.
Immediate ehlpmpnt can be "made,
UYIQING ANI) I:LP:ANING
DAVE YOU " AN''TRING NEEDS
dyeing or cleaning? Write to us for
information. We are glad to answer
your questions. Department H,
Parker's Dye Works Limited\ 791
Yonge Street, Toronto. Ontario.
FOR SALE
BRASS VALVE 0 VAN171'1' VALVES,
Gauges, - oil steam, grease cups,
Carburetor. Reconditioned. 1 5
Brorle, Dundas, Ont.
EI't1'l'ItIU. MOTORS NEW. USED
bought, sold, rebuilt: belts, pulleys,
brushes. Allen Electric Company
Ltd.. 2326 Duaferin St., Toronto, Ont.
MAC MN1 S 001NG CONCRETE
block . cements combined, hand op
crated type, size 8 '.x 8-10, . two
holes, Selling price $325.00. H..
MARTINEAU. ST. - HERMAS, QUE.
Phone 910-12.
OIL 111RNE1RS..
FOR, KITCHEN STOVE ' 011 FUR-
Dace. Complete instructions for In-
stailatlen and operation, also oil
cabinet. Wholesale,:: retail, Agent
wanted. Atomle Weather 011 Heat-
ing.3706 Chateubrinnd,Montreal.
'r'U It ES AND RADIO PARTS
IIUU) TO. GET ELECTRICAL
Electronic supplies of all lands;
list for stamp. Economy Distribut-
ors, .Kingston, Ontario.
VISI 111( 'TACK LE BOXES —
Wholeoale ]'rice, Heavy Aluml-
ilurn, streamlined, green outside,
grey inside, completely rust -proof,
Two sizes $4.26 and $3.26 postpaid.
Walter .Dean Canoe and -.Boat Co.,
2050 1)utidns Street West, Toronto,
'Ontario.
FARMS FOlt SALE
3182.4011'1' PRO1'Ett'1'Y 10011 SALE
'ELBA: le RANCH AND NATU12AL
trout navel'. 6U acres, one or most
unique farms In Untarlo. Equipped
with modern turkey l'aising facili-
ties foe operating" in business 0100 -
tier. Concentrated group rearing
springs on elevatedslope,: with.
speckled and brown trout. Perfect
,foundutlon for automatic ram sys-
tem trout. hatchery. Great quanti-
ties Partridge, Deer,. Jack Rabbits,
etc. Easy accessibility. Georgian
Ray district. 100 miles from. Sarnia.
Complete including 3005 growing',
turkeysmanyof rare Beltsville va-
riety, marketable starting :August.
Sacrifice $20,000.00. Owner—Il. :J.
Whaling, 30 W. Jefferson,Detroit,
FARMS WANTED
3.IST 1'0018 ]+'ARMS WITH up
rot' prompt efficient and courteous
service,
We have clients ready to snake
substantial cash 'payments, •
7i'or action write L. V. H. Wadding-
ton, Rcal Estate Broker, 14 Queen
St. East, Toronto, Ontario.
HAIR DR ESSING '
LEARN HAIRDRESSING '1'Hm
Robertson method, Information on
request regarding classes. Robert-
son's Hairdressing Aeademy, 127
- .Avenue Road. Toronto.
11E1,1' WANTED
• COOK - GENE1tAL, COMPETENT,
small home; country woman pre-
ferred, -high wages if qualified.
Box 103.. 73 Adelaide W,, Toronto.
GENERAL STAFF NURSES
Operating Room Nurses
(100.00. PER MONTH, PLUS FULL
maintenance, 3 weeps' vacation
with payand. a $50 bonus at the
completion of each year of service,.
Pension plan. 1 day sick leave with
Poe per month, accumulative. Bus
sorviee to city street car lines, Ap-
ply: Superintendent or Nurses, Tor-
onto Hospital for Tuberculosis.
;'hone. JU. 1103.
GENERAL DU'PY NURSTI, APPLY
Superintendent, Douglas Memorial:,
Hospital, Port Erie, Ontario.
NURSES WANTED
IIE9TN11.ItEU AND ASSISTANT, 8 -
hour day, 6 -day week. Write Run-
nymede Hospital, Toronto 9..
M El/ ICAL
UPS PROVEN—EVERY SUFFER,
.er of Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis
should try Dixon's Remedy. ?ilun-
ro's Drug Store, 335 Engin,Ottawa,.
Postpaid $1.00,
ART ll0IPS ECZEMA - OINTMENT.
Try it. it works. Arthur's Eczema
Ointment, one of the most effective
ointments known' for '.therelief'. of
.eczema: 50c., OOc. and,$1.7'6. For in-
formation write Charles Arthur, 82
Spruce 1.1111. Rd., Toronto, Ont.
SA4 I SP 1 TOC nvlr,LII EVERY
sufferer of i hetunrttic Pains or
Neutitle should try Dixon's Rem-
edy. Munrn's Di ug Store, 335 1111.•
gin, Ott•lwa. Postpaid $1.00.
aIISCIDLLANII2OUS
MAKE :*YOUR OWN ;FLY, SPRAY.
Easy to make. Effective. Inexpen-
sive. Write Walkeith Enterprises,
Waterloo, Rue.
MUSICAL INST1tUMIIN'PS
FR16D A IIODDINGTON BUYS
sells, exchanges musical instru-
ments, 111 Church, Toronto 2:
OPPORTUNITIES. FOR - WOMEN'
B. A. HAIRDRESSER.
.LOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
great -.Opportunity Learn
-Hairdressing
Peasant dlgr,ifled. professlon, good
wages, thousands successful Marvel
graduates, America's greatest sys-
tem, Illustrated catalogue free.
Write or call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING
SCHOOLS
358 Bloor St, W., Toronto,
Branches; 44 King St. Hamilton
&' 74 Rideau Street, Ottawa.
PATENTS •
IPET111811s'PONTI A UGH & ()Om PANY
Patent Solicitors. Established 1890;
14 King West. Toronto. Booklet of
Information on request,
PERSONAL
WHV ALWAYS WORK 10011 OTII-
ers? - Manufacture._ plastic objects
In your own private home,. The
demand is big, Capital required
$6.00. Write us. R. Mercier, 3862 St.
Andre St, Montreal 24. Que.
I'ROTOGRAI'H1'
TIME TESTED QUALITY
SERVICE and SATISFACTION
Your flims properly developed and
printed
6 OR 8 EXPOSURE ROLLS 25c,
^ REPRINTS 8 for 21o,
FINEST ENLARGING SERVICE.
You may, not get all the films You
want this year, but you can get alt
the quality and service you desire
by sending yourfilmsto
inurrRIAL PHOTO SERVICE
Station„ 1, Toronto.
FINER "SNAPS" COST LESS
PROMPT MAIL SERVICE
Any Size Ron 6 or 8 Exposures.
•DBBVEL.OPED AND PRINTED 25c
3 MOUNTED ENLARGEMENTS 25c
Size 4x6" in Beautiful Easel Mounts
Enlargements 4x6" on Avery tinted
mounts; 71;9" in Gold, Silver, Cir-
cassian Walmit or Black Ebony
finish frames, 59c each. if enlarge-
ment't'oloured,- 79c each. '
Reprints Made Prom Your
Negatives. 3c, Each
DEPT. M
STAR SNAPSHOT SERVICE
Bog 129, Post Office A. Toronto,
Print Name and Address Plainly.
HAPPY too cumin 11 WITH EACH
25c order or more -you receive; (1)
coupon for two 5 x 7 heavy paper
enlargements; (2) one of the prints
"edge tinted''; (3) "double seal"
film wrapper, (4) quality unlimited.
Pilins developed and printed 25c;
reprints, eight for 20c. Fresh
films available, Victory Studio,
Saskaloon 7, W., Sask.
STAMPS
t"TIDE LAUREL", STAMP & -H01E-
by magazine. 3000 , circulation 76
countries, official organ Globe
Correspondence Club. 10 cents,coin
or stamps. "The Laurel'', Saugus,
Mass., U.S.A.
T19ACITERS WANTED
HASTINGS NORTH, a QUAL8FZED
Protestant teachers for Area No. 2.
Monteagle and Herschel Salary
$1300.00 if fully qualified. Apply to
G. H. Woodoos, Sec.-Treas„ MIL 1,
Hy1,10, Ont.
ISLAND FALLS, NORTHERN
ONTARIO
(North of -Cochrane)
A Consolidated, one room, grade
school, requires Protestant experi-
enced female teacher for grades 1
to 9, Numberof pupils 18. Music
and social service, Including ball-
dren'e Sunday School class, helpful.
Salary $1000.00, starting September
3rd, 1946. Apply in writing toHer-
bert L. Sanborn, Secretary, 408
University Avenue, Toronto 2. Ont.
TEACHER FOR SANDRINGHA111
`School S.S. No. 6, ltoxbarough
Stormont county. Protestant. -Du-
ties Sept. 1. Hydro, modern •plumb-
htg, piano, beautiful building and
grounds, Community Social Club,
State qualification andsalary ex
petted, Apply L. P. McDiarmld,
R.R. 1, .Moose Creek, Ont.
TEA0II1811 FOR S.S. '7 itndclllfe
Public School Combermerc, Ontario.
$1300 per year. Small school. Good
equipment. State qualifications and
apply to S. P. Snowdon, Treasurer,
Combermere, Ont.
SAVANT LAKE S.S. NO. 1 RE-
quires experienced teacher,- grades
1 to 8, salary $1300—$1400 it quail-
ficatlons warrant. Duties to com-
mence D'all term. Apply to -J., 13.
Melanson, Secretary Treasurer, Sa-
vant Lake, Ont,
PROTESTANT TEACHER, (MALI-
fled, for S.S. No. 2 Dummer. Term.
to commence Sept, 3. Salary $1300.
per year, Apply Walter Sloan, Sec.-:
Treas., Norwood,
WANTED
MILLER REAL ESTATE,188
Oshawa Boulevard, Oshawa. wants
resort property, unimproved,wood-
ed, good beach. near highway.
WANTED TO PURCHASE PULLETS
Barred Rocks, New Hampshtres,.
White Leghorn' any age from E
weelce tip to laying.. Good:. price
Paid. Apply to Box No. 95. 72
Adelaide M. Toronto.
To TOWN REEVES AND Titi-
vate owners. Advertiser wishes to
locatefactory space having good
Electric Water and Railway facili-
ties—business sorting, cleaning,
and wool scouring. Send 6011 de-
tails. Box* 105, 73 Adelaide St,W.,
Toronto.
ooyousuffer t®IT
sr
FEMALE NM?
Thisfine medicine is eery affective to
relieve pain, .nervous distress and weak,.
cranky, `dragged out" feelings, of such
days—when ,duoto female functional.
monthly disturbances. Also fine tonic!
MIA g15111:
ISSUE 31-1946
HEADS SHRINERS
Top man among the U. S.
Shriners is George H. Rowe, of
Buffalo, N. Y., New York State
Supreme Court justice: At the fra-
ternity's . Victory Convention in
San Francisco, he was unanimously
elected Imperial. Potentate of the
Ancient Arabic Order of Nobles
of the Mystic Shrine,,
Better In Than Out
When Storm Raging
The chance of 110t being struck by
.lightning is approximately 365,000
to 1, says Dr. G. D. McCann, West-
inghouse engineer, whose specialty
is lightning. About 400 persons will
probably be killed by lightning this
year, 83,000 in household accidents
and about 40,000 on the nation's
highways,
Most lightning casualties occur
in small towns and rural communi-
ties, according to Dr. McCann. The
city dweller is relatively safe,
chiefly because he seldom has far
to go to, reach shelter. Besides, the
shelter is bigger and safer. Be-
cause steel skeletons of skyscrapers
serve as electrical conductors, tall
buildings of a city afford almost
complete protection.
The ordinary city dwelling is a
pretty good haven. Thunderbolts
strike hundreds of such buildings
and homes every year, but the tops
and sides stied the lightning into
the ground. The structure is un-
damaged and the occupants are un-
aware that anything has happened.
Almost anywhere indoors is pre-
ferable to being out in the open
when a storm is raging.
SUPER SPY
Innocent -looping Ignacy Witezak
reportedly is Russia's "super spy"
now operating in United States. A
700 -page official Canadian report
says he bought a forged passport,
paid for by Russia, and came to
United States where he entered the
University of California as a student
in 1938. The name Witezak sup-
posedly is an alias.
hOP4TCNHeatRasb
Outckl Stop itching of insect bikes, heat rae14
eczema, hives, pimples, eeates scabies, athlete's
foot and other externally caused skin troubles.
Use quick -acting, soothint sdtiseptic 0. D D.
PRESCRIPTION, Greaseless, stainless, Itch
stops or your money back. Your druggist
stocks D. 0, 0, PRESCRIPTION.
HEMORRHOIDS
2 Special Remedies
by the Makers of Mecca Ointment
Moons. Pile ^Remedy No. 1 is for Protruding
Bleeding Plies, and is sold in Tube, with piyplication. Price 78e. Macao le
or Interpol applieation.
aim tie for External Itching Piles.
y�led,
:n Jar, and Is for external use onn1yy. Pylae e8s.
Drdor by number from your Druggist,
U. N. To' Settle
French Indo=China
Frontier Dispute
Slant has handed the United Na-
tions Security. Council an intricate
:!'problem in requesting mediation of
„cher historic frontier dispute with
;,'..French Indo-China.
• It involves the unexplored prob
tent of defining . sovereignty over
areas in three. Oriental kingdoms
which have been pawns of 19th
century imperialism attd 20th cen-
tury Japanese aggression.
The French 'laid; claims in 1887
to territories counter -claimed by
Siam. II) 1907 Siam' yielded the dis-
puted territories—under coercion
and a French show of force, the
Siamese insist—to the bodge-podge
of tribes and little kingdoms which
France unified to a degree in form-
ing the Indo-Cliina empire,
Ivlinor skirmishes continued in-
termittently along the lvlekong un-
• til it was engulfed by the organized.
warfare creeping in from Japan in
1040-41. Then, after France had sur-
rendered to Germany and with
Indo-China prostrate under J apa-
nese control, Siam struck eastward
.to expand her realm. It was a small-
scale and almost unrecorded war
but airplanes were used'in combat '
where disputes even now often are
settled with crossbows and arrows,
Liberated France now is the only
Allied power which has not made
or maintained peace with Siam.
The French have rebuffed Siamese
offers to end tlieii "technical state
of war," and the French" colonial
administration at Saigon has made
it clear, the Siamese say, that peace
will be made only ,•after the ter-
ritories' are handed back to Laos
and. Cambodia.
U.S. Crop Outlook:
A Bumper Harvest
The United States is well on the
way toward its sixth consecutive
bumper harvest.
In fact, the Agriculture Depart-
ment in its latest monthly crop, re -
„port said the current outlook for
total farm production has seldom
been surpassed.
The report said conditions pre-
vailing July 1 indicated a record
corn crop, near -record crops of
wheat, oats, potatoes and rice, and
large crops of vegetables and most
fruits.
If the grain crops turn out as
now indicated, the United States
will 1>e in a position to carry out its,
commitment to send 250,000,000
bushels of wheat to shortage areas
during the next 12 months and still
maintain production of livestock
products—meats, milk, eggs and
poultry—at levels near those of the
past year.
The crop outlook was not with-
out its dark spots. The production
of oilseeds—soybeans, peanuts and
flaxseed — will be below wartime
levels and below demands. Margar-
ine, shortening, salad oils and
paints are .principal products made
from the oilseeds. Likewise, the rye
and barley crops may be the small-
est since the droughts of the 30's.
On the brighter side was a fore-
cast that the domestic sugar crop
may be 25 per cent larger than last
year's abnormally small crop.
He Made: It—But!
A motorist was 100 yards from
an open level railway crossing and
was proceeding at 60 miles an hour.
A train was also approaching at 00
miles an hour, and its distance
from the crossing' was 376 feet.
Problem: Did the motorist get
across? Solution: Yes, the motorist
got a cross. His widow bought it
out of the insurance money.
Great Btitain
Faces Coal Crisis
.Britain's coal shortage, a constant
threat in war, is proving an equal
peril in peacetime.
For the fifth year in succession,
nobody can say definitely whether
the country will have enough coal
to keep going during the winter,
The coal problem assumed crisis
proportions in 1940 after the gov-
ernment allowed a number of coal
miners to leave the pits •for the
armed forces or war factories. As
the war developed, the demand of
munition factories andother estab-
lishments grew tremendously and
the shining industry's manpower re-
serves wore thin. Falling output per
Iran—accentuated by a deteriora-
tion in physical standards—was an-
other factor.
Today British coal mines still are
short of workers and output per
man has not improved to a point
that would offset the shortage.
Nationalization of the mines by
the Labor government may improve
the situation, but as yet the gov-
erttinetht has not had time to me-
chanize the industry to a level coin-
parable with that in the United
States coal nines.
Demands for coal, electricity and
coke for industrial purposes, are
steadily rising. Domestic consump-
tion is still on the increase, fed by
the large number of electrical ap-
p11500 a now available to the pub-
lic.
JET-PROPELLED TAKEOFF
"Phantom,” the XFD-1, successfully executes a jet-propelled take-
off from the flightadeck of the new carrier USS Franklin D. Roose-
velt off Hampton Roads, Va. Designed as an interceptor, the XFD-1
can land at speed comparable to that of conventional carrier -based
plane despite its top speed of more than 500 m.p.h.
SPOTS OF SP IaRTS
By FRANK MANN HARRIS
("A Six Bit Critic") • • • - - •
From Maple Leaf Hockey Head-
quarters 'has come the promise that
future Toronto hockey teams, un-
like some of their predecessors, are
going to be .scrappy, fighting ag-
gregations, chockfull and running
over with pep, pugnacity and
punch (non-alcoholic). This, com-
ing hard on the complaints of Mr.
Durocher, of the Brooklyn Bums,
that present-day ball players are
much 'too mild and gentlemanly, is
slightly interesting as illustrative of
a managerial trend, and gives rise
to certain speculations which might
do for weather such as this, when
it is too sticky to think of any-
thing of real importance.
* * *
We all know that, through the
agency of such great institutions
as radio and the cinema, modern
lookers and listeners have become
thoroughly accustomed to syn-
thetic substitutes for such vital hu-
man emotions as love, hate, fear,
apprehension, despair and what -
have -you. These are almost impos-
sible to tell from the real thing; in
fact there are many --such as the
soap -opera ,addicts- who greatly
prefer them, and who will sob
their little hearts out over the syn-
thetic trials . and tribulations of
some fictional character, and then
make an awful squawk because we
have too many Tag Days and ap-
peals for the relief of actual suf-
fering,
* * *
Naturally, it was only a matter
of time before sports promoters,
always impressed by the tar'h'ific
following enjoyed by the movies
and radio, and mucin obsessed by
the notion that "showmanship" is
the greatest of all 'virtues, should
tag along on the same line. And
they had several good and suffi-
cient reasons — or perhaps that
should be "sufficiently good" rea-
sons — for so doing, For one
thing, those who can detect the
synthetic from the genuine arc but
a negligible minority; for another,
you can always be assured of an
unfailing supply of the substitute
stuff; and, fora third, the latter is
considerably cheaper — although
that, of course, would scarcely be
a consideration with sports niag-
nates.
* * *
And so, to take hockey as an ex-
ample, we find that—by certain ma-
nipulations of the rules—we have
hustle, bustle,' speed -skating and
general hullaballoo substituting for
skill, stick -handling, combination
and team -work to such an extent
that one old-timer, seeing his first
game in several years, was keenly
reminded of a boyhood pastinme,
known as Duck on the Rock, (In
. case you don't recall that robust
sport, one kid would toss a boul-
der at the "duck" or goal, all the
others followed in pell-mell, and a
grand pile-up and free-for-all
would- ensue).
9. *' *.
Still what of it? The customers
appear to accept the modern ver-
sion of hockey; and where, after
all, will you find the merit of any
sport more faithfully reflected than
in the mirror of the financial bal-
ance -sheet?
* * *
But onward and upward must ever
be our motto. We must have no
standing still or slipping backward;
The clients want more and sturdier
action, so the order has gone forth.
And soon, at the word of command,
National Hockey League patrons
are to regale their eyes on pre-
fabricated bad men, on synthetic
chip -on -the -shoulder battlers, prac-
tically indistinguishable from the
original. No longer will defense
men take pride in going an entire
season without a visible wound or
bruise; no more will our photogenic
forwards deem it a disgrace to ap-
pear before their public sporting
anything so vulgar as a shiner.
The customers are calling for may-
hem—so mayhem they shall have,
even if we are forced to recruit
our teams from the ranks of the
wrestlers.
* * *
Borrowing the wings of historic
imagination and taking a quick
gander into the future, we can kJ -
ready visualize hockey games con-
ducted after the manner of a Sym-
phony or movie spectacle, with the
Maestro, or Producer, guiding the
entire performance as a whole, and
speedily correcting any faults or
failings as they appear. Already
we can hear the hockey impressario
of .1950 issuing—perhaps by means
of skatie-talkies— orders to his
minions such as, "There's a man
yawning over in Section F—better
put on a fist -fight in front of him";
or "there haven't been any ladies
fainting in the South bleachers for
ten minutes= better hustle down
there and start a battle -royal."
* * *
And yet—and yet—somehow we
cannot (help wondering. It has
been our happy lot to watch in ac-
tion, and to know personally, many
rough and ready performers from
the days of Bad Joe Hall, Scotty
Davidson, Hard Harry Mummery,
right down to modern times. And
we never got the idea that they
acted as they did by reason of any
orders from the bench, or from
higher-up. We had the notion that
those lads played that kind of
hockey simply .because that was
was file kind of hockey they lilccd
the kind of hockey they liked to
play; and the bench orders they
heard were of the "for Gripes sake
try and stayon the _ ire", . rather
than of the reverse variety,
* * *
And so perhaps We may be
pardoned for slight misgivings as
to whether that hardy type of
player, or a reasonable facsimile,
can be created overnight just be-
cause somebody—no matter who—
wills it so. For years they have
been ' putting the emphasis on
speed, speed, and stilt more speed.
Now they are expecting a lot of
Fancy Dans t0 change Over into
Hard-boiled Haggertys at the snap-
ping of a finger.
* * 4:
But we shall see what we shall
see, :as we say "down in that dear
Montreal. At all events the prom-
ise has been given, which should
be some satisfaction. Like the
time back at the Elora Fair when
a friend heard old - Joe Grimes
promising to give soon -expected
setter pups to what seemed lilce a
whole lot of people, and finally took
him to task., "Joe," 11e said, "I
don't know just what size of a
litter you're expecting, but I've
heard you promise lb give a pup
to at least twenty-five people."
"Well, what of it?" drawled Joe.
"I `figger it's a blamed, mean ,man
that won't at 1 tst PROMISE a
friend a pup"