: : Gi : i 15 ! : £ A ------ : = ---- : 3 EI ve Taxed = |.ine Calvert sronts coum ore ie ree a dh cl find, = : cided recently to Impose nulsance ~i : taxes on cigarettes, automobile use ® The late esteemed Daniel . Webster, who who ey hd 'words really meant, defined 'sport as a noun meaning . . . that which diverts and makes mirth; pastime, amuse- ment. - Holy ht alter the nition. 'He ht remove the word "mirth. i there is Mini al fon hho major realms of sport. It has become a very serious business, with few laughs. If there-is any mirth, then it is strictly coincidental ,and unintentional. : In fact, the athletes of .today aren't even characters as we knew such in other days when there was less money, more laughs. They're cold, calculating and skillful, workmen, : * Jt wasn't like this in the not so old days when sport had its sports. The guys (and gals, too) had personality. * : 3 There are no more roistering characters such as, for instance,. the late Harry --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 lim fame of a sort. Certainly notoriety. Once in New York he rolled out of bed late in the afternoon, went to the hotel barber-shop, reqfiested a shave and a face massage with-hot towels. It had been a rough night vi The barber asked courteously: "Who do you think will win the fight tonight, Mr. Greb?" nL } Replied Harry, indifferently: "Who's fighting? "Why, you are, Mr. Greb," said the amazed barber, He was right too. : A Sia Out west they recall lurid tales of big, rugged Amby Moran, who played major hockey both east and west. Amby was careless about training, too. He played so poorly for Regina one season, "that the late Wes Champ, advised him he would have to report in shape the next fall or do without'a contract. So Moran bought a pair of pants thrée sizes too big for himself, donned them, reported-to. €hanip. When the manager queried him about weight, Amby ran his hand around' tlie top to show how much larger. they were for him "as a result of his program of getting in shape. "It cost me $9 for those pants, but I got a contract," recalled Amby., ~~ TTT : : 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 Christmas-basket charity. - boxing event. He was invited to the Maroon dressing-toom to meet 'the players, who were hurriedly summoned. Just as the Governor Genoral ond his staff were making a dignified entrance, a horrified Forum 'official noticed Cleghorn had a "buzzer" attached 'to hig hand.zHe was instructed, -in®hasty whispers, to get rid 'of it. "Surely" said the official, "you were not going -to shake hands-° erable fame as a gentleman . If. Mr. Webster was. around 'today, hé 3 "Certainly I was," with the Governor General wearing that thing?" d° Cleghorn. "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 today. Big money has chased out the laughs, made it serious business, : Your comments and suggestions far this column will be welcomed by. Eimer Ferguson, c/o Calvart-House, 431 Yonge St., Toronto. -. Calvert DISTILLERS LIMITED : AMHERSTBURG, ONTARIO + 1) | x br A SwaITCRITIC™ ~ ER Se HEE As we have explained many times before, these columns have to be written a little in advance of their 'appearance, A few 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, : * * * But before said piece. got into print, sure enough Si Becker of the Toronto Maple Leafs had been handed his pink slip, and Burleigh Grimes brought in--with consider- able fanfare--to replace him. ¥ * * * . Becker's firing, of. course, was due to nothing else but the fact that the Toronto athletes--or rather the athletés wearing Toronto uni- forms--were 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 team playoffs. Whether or not they'll do any better for Grimes, only time will tell. Burleigh 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. * * * However, even if the Maple Leafs 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« "International Loop-continue-to- draw spaces that used to yawn in the w the Frankfurter -- hot dog fo youl - of" <ceftain circus-like . features, "Special Days," and the like, the Queen City representatives in the crowds - that are really remarkable when you cohsider the large vacant stands and bleachers just a year or so back. : : HEL TENET « But before long' Owner Cooke and the rest of the Leafs' tep brass are going to find themselves fresh out of outstanding occasions to cele- 'brate. And, always anxious to be helpful, we suggest that they put on a "Special Day""--or even a:ser- jes of them--in honor of what has beconie, over the years, one of base- ball's most important and best- loved features. Not to keep you in. suspense, 'we refer to nothing but * * o * For, way over in Deutschland the burghers and citizenry of Frank- fort-on-=the-Main are in the: midsts. of a" big celebration marking the hundredth anniversary of the in- vention of that luscious delicacy. * * * German historians say--aceording to Martin Gansberg in The New "¥ork 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 {dea that such an im- portant development was the work of a single man--or evén a married one.. No, the Frankfurter was the joint production of the members of the entire Frankfort Butchers' Guild--and there are some who say that its final shape was determined by a butcher who was inspired by his own dog--one of those dog-and- a-half-long-half-a-dog-high affairs known as Dachshunds. "Flying Disc""--This may look like a "life saucer, but in reality It's only a new auto being tested by Alfa Romeo in Milan, Italy, Built along entirely new. principles, the "Flying Disc" Is powered by a six-cylinder engine with three: double-body carburetfors and can develop about 200 horse ie rie an boat" from a flying and Fagor licenses, thereby assuring --itsel of about $19.5 million a year and the enduring ill will of a large .part- of the titizenry, it broke no new ground in the field of . fiscal . policy. Practically nothing on. pr under the earth, from beards to' death, 'has been immune from the " prabing fingers of the tax collector, : - Beards = There are few things 'as "per- sonal as a beard. Yet, after 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 smooth-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 tus of the mai, not the: beard. Peasants had to pay a nominal tax of one kopeck, while a chief boyar was assessed one hundred rubles.. _.. Bachelors : Being a bachelor also fight ap- some tax may result. In certain countries (as Switzerland) and in 'somie 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 he could escape the tax; but a wid ower lost his exemption if he did not take a new wife within a speei- fied time, generally three years. .* Chimneys Advocates of an income tax allege that only that type of levy is based on an individual'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 charge "for every fire liearth 'and eed within "every such house, edifice, chamber and lodging .. ." ) graduated rate referred to the sta. - pear to be a personal option; but _ refused three times within a year" Switching Hours--Six-year-old Maxine Rudner plugs into a'mihid- _ ture switchboard without ever getting a "wrong number." The "board was one of the'novelties displayed at the Toy Guidance exhibit. Ii a man could afford more than ose hearth, he could afford to pay a higher tax "(or so 'the .theory went). But tax: collectors had to enter -evepy room to.see whether there was a hearth, and "This odi- ous visit rendered the tax odious." In an impfoveméent. of the 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. : a. : An obvious next step was the "No Money Wasted On, Monkey Business"--Bonio, Hollywood's famous chimp 'actor, looks every bit the politician as he declares « a IV CRS WE ~ himself a "dark chimp" candidate for the presidential nomination. But. even the Germans admit the "fobd 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 dog, were devoured "by the thou- sands, : : * * * While - the elongated, pork-filled secretly 'smoked product has made the city of Frankfort famous inter- nationally, it has taken 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 furter actually is so popular as to be a national institution, One in "| ~eight-poundsof -meat-eaten-by-the average family is of the sausage category, and 32 per cent of the meat thus consumed js in the form of the hot dog.' : . . s Statistics for last year, for ex- ample, show that 3,739,267,000 hot were devoured by gourmets of all ages. A steady increase from year to year has been noted by manu- fadturers_since 1931. . A A * * * 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 best frankfurter skins used to come from Russian and Chinese but we are getting some from Per- sia. Half the secret of a good frank- furter is in the casing". + . * This maker says that' our model is pale and wrinkled in contrast to the original. "It can't even be com- pared," he says. "No flavor, no tex- tate, no snap." . * + . Manufacturers over here shrug off comparison with the Frankfort model, and statistics show that they "have just cause. Four times ag many casings for fot. dogs are im: power with a maximum speed of 120 m.p.h. ported 'into' the United States alone as into Germany, : this side of the water the frank- dogs (canned, boiled or ona roft)="{-- lambs. We can't get them now, - Last year, for example, hot-dogs casings from Canada (including Newfoundland and Labrador) ran more than 5,348,000 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. * 5 Rd * 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. - ns] » * * One informant revealed that, be- sides. 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," he confided. But ic refused not only to tell how long the process lasted but 'also what wood he used. * a * Proud of tlie work that=goes into' cess, manufacturers (Canadian, American or JGerman) are taken aback when the content of the frankfurter is questioned. ~(sked if there was any chance that he or his competitors miglit slip. in some horse meat to increase the profits, a Frankfort manufac-\ "turer showed his irritation, "Horse- furters? Never! We butchers craftsmen---not chiselers!" * il NC . . \ So come on now; Mr, Cooke, Don't look-so glum as you glance at the League standings and sce your Toronto inions hanging over the brink of the second division abyss. Maybe--perish the thought =the Leafs won't be "First in Fifty- Two." Hf memory serves, there have been other years 'when they didn't quite make it' either. But that's no reason to let A.D. 1952 slither past without taking adyant- age of the chance of putting on a real, never-to-be-forgotten celebra- tiof in honour of the delicacy which plays nb favourites but cheers and sustains winners and losers alike ~<the HOT DOG! Put plenty of mustard on ours! are . "was presented by a 1951 window - tax, for windows could be "counted from the outside of a: hotise; But many. persons found this asessment obnoxious, too, for it was deemed to be a tax on' the light of Heaven. A modern adap- tation of this "taxation by Fo Ridge- wood, N.J,. assgsymgnt of $11.60 per---set-=for television equipniest, an inspection of roof-top antennae being the basis _of the levy. 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 to be assessed in church "according to his own woolly" "while a married man was asseSsed "according, to his own &nd, his wife's apparel." 1 Some taxes were imposed on' articles used only by the wealthy, such as the wig fax in early New York; ofher levies were against property tsed by the poorest of men, such as the Roman tax on urinals, A uriversal 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 "I'ravellers always lave 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 fiotel- occupancy tax for transients only. . --r . But people didn't have to travel to be.taxed. Along came the poll or_ capitation tax, based upon the fy a 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 life. Activities As against the tax upon a person or thing, there is the tac 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 Fahd on bank deposits, on 'capi- { hAE : 2 A \ Other taxes in America have been= upon auctions, lotteries, pari? mutuels, issuance of currenéy 'by . a bank, giving away samples, catch- ing shrimp, operating private rail road cars, cutting trees, distributing oleomargarine, gathering -gas, mill- ing grain, making gunpowder, mak- ing book (singular). Tc most re- cent assessment is the rain tax, a 1951 jnvertion. Utal: authorized : a county Jevy to 'finance precipita- tion in drought areas, while Wyo- ming now has a license tax updn persons engaged in weather modi- fication, Sometimes things seem to be $o arranged that whatever you do you will be taxable. Thus, there i the tax on spending (sales) or not spending (capital), an keeping as- sets (property) or disposing of them (transfer), on living (capita- tion) or dying (estat ). Adam Smith, the father of economics, ex- plained that every tax is a badge of liberty; if so, most Canadiang today - should look like Russian fiefd marshals, ~~ - 3 ee AUENTE WANTED You will make more Boner. day after day, yéar after year. "belllug DUPONT NYLONS, priced to sell and repeal. " talls FREE -Write today. ARCH HOS8I- Philadelphia 6, Pa. Windmills Berke: Fifth, pyre ta WATER ~ Aermotor and Electric Pressure Systems. ERY, 104 N. _ fey Turbine Pumps, Quinn. Hog and Poul- try: Waterers, Quality goods, 'reasonably. tor Blenheim, Ont, Ty . et SALES AGENT WANTED Well known Canadian Greeting. Card Manufacturer feduires representative to sell Natighally Advertised Lines of Christ. mas Cards and Boxed Assortinents. Kxclu- wlve tercitory canbe arranged. Box No 94..123 Eighteenth Street, New Toronto, Ontario, : CHRISTMAS card akelts, be sure to write Monarch, for free cdtalogue of over 60 fast sellipg Itgms, Positively the finest line available anywhere. Samples went en approval. lwmediate delivery and liberal commission, Monarch Greoting Cards, 41W, East Ave., Hamilton, Ont. BABY CHICKSN Day old and started chicks and turkeys. Older pullets Special bioller oljoks, Catalogue TOP NOTCH < HICK SALES Guelph . Ontario Tweddle high 'quality chicks, hatched avery week in the year. Speclal breeds for layers, roasters or broilers, non-sexed " pullets,' cockerels. Also turkey poults, atarted chicks and turkeys, older pallets Catalogue. TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. Fergus Ontarle BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES : WESTON EXCELLENT lovestment providing re tiring Income, §15.000 caab. b-plex, centrally located, ~ completely equipped. one apartment now ant. Balance cpn- veniently "arranged. I. Allan, Real Estate Broker & Insurance, 31 -Sputh Station Street, Weston, Ontario > APTRACTIVE SERVICE STATION and Garage, Restaurant and Tourist Cottages ----doing $45,000 yearly business. Large river frontage, Wonderful location, New standard electric home, - Everything, mod- ern, tip-top condition--§22000. Reasonable terms, : BRAYLEY REAL, ESTATK 3724 Water Street "7 Peterborough Dial 235331--or Keeno 03R1-4 REST HOME TT a------ ears ae ST HOME FOR SALE Excellent opportunity, in operation now. Sacrifice for quick sale. Apply MRS, A. BLACKBURN 330- Midland Avenue - Fl Ontarle ~ Midland : forth, Toronto. --Llcensed. welll Drugless--Operationleas Why suffer?---Make yourself DEALERS WANTED OILS, GREASES, TIRES Paints and varnishes. Electric Motors, Rlectrical Appliances, Refrigeratora, Fast Freezers, Milk Coolers and Feed Grinders Hobbyahop - Machinery. Dealers wanted, Write: Warco Grease and Oil Linilted, Toronto. f DYEING AND CLEANING HAVE you anything aeeds dyeing or clean. ing? Write to us for Information. We Are glad to answer your questions. De- partment. 1. Parker's Dyes Works Limited, 791 Yonge Bt.. Toronto. = __ YOR SALE SAVE time--Money: Convert your ground driven Binder to. a practical o binder with a Carlson 7 foformation write Chas. Thatch tributor, Rockwood, Ont. = apd Cormsll 2 bushels per Ol REGISTERED ~~ Dambrel Seod - Wheat. Treated. "bag. H. R. McKlin, Dread TIRES Hamilton's Largest Tire Store Since 1938. Used Tires, $7.00 and up, Retreaded Tires, cordingly. Vulcanizing and retreading ser- vice. All work guaranteed. = All orders 0.0.D. $200 required with order. We pay clinrges ove way. Peninsula Tire Corpor- ation, 95 Kiag Street Phone 7-1823. GOOD USED THRESHERS LOT8 to choose from: Two 23'. MoCor- mick-Deoring; Two 22" Woods Bro. | + Two 22" Advance Rumely; Two 16' Woods Bros.; One 28" "Ona 24" Huber, llke now; Oce -28'" Huber on rubber; One 28" Red River Bpeclal. H, West. Hamllton, helm, Ontarlo. WHEEL chairs, Invalid -walkers, and' adjustable, Free Literature. rubber ring cushions $7.60. Foam delivered. Bamford-Rexis Limited, Ottawa, Ontarlo. - USED books for wsals. Catalogues frees. Balliol, Box 85, Station K, Toronto. SCRAP 'and salvage yard business for sale, downtown location, long lease, cheap rent: opportunity for ambitious man. Apply advertiser, 60 8Bamuel 8t., rear, Sudbury. PLUMBING AND HEATING CATALOGUR "FREE The 1952 catalogue Is off the press, Write tor your copy or visit the new warshouss and see for yourself the niodel bathroom dlsplayns in white and coloured fixtures, In ---wtandard size _bathrooms with tiled or painted walls, just.the way you want a bathroom in your own home. Wa have sinks and sink cabinet units, lavatory sasins and toilets, pressure systems and slectric water hentars, range boilers, pipe and fittings fn copper, galvanized and tors and electric ranges, a complete. line ot furnaces, air conditioning units and hot water heating systems with conveotor rads, We .dellver to your neareat rall- . way station, you pay no freight: §. V..JOHMNSON PLUMBING BUI'PLIES Streetsville ' Ontario CRESS CORN SALVE--For sure rellef. Your Drugglst sells CRESS. . FOR SALE MAGREGOR GQOURLEY FOUR sided planer, price $2,000. Alex Herman, fron- River, Alta. REGISTERED Redbone, male, 4 months, $26. M. Miller, 24 Bimcoe St., Orillia. Massey Harris Field Clipper, sé foot, © esculates to traller. Good candition. Hambley Hatcherles, "Winnipeg. New. Holland Baler, Model 76, In good condition, new . in 1950, $1,300. Ian Davidson, Meadowvale; Ontarlo. Safety Iron Holder [ron holder can be mounted on iron or door. Made of rust. re- -sistant metal with asbestos base, it renioves danger of fire ofter iron- ing. 7 priced. H; M. Fleming and Sons, Distribu- 'SICK --Wrlte Clinic Doctor--=571 Dan- + 600 x 16, $14.00. Other sizes, priced mo- Advances Rumleyi _ L. Turner (Retall) Ltd., Phone 424, Blen-- cast fron, septic and oll tanks, refrigera- - ME Don't wait--avery svlfeier of Whaumotie Pains or Nevritis should try Dixon's Remedy.' Fi is ' © MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 15 Elgin : = 7 $1.25 Exprass Prepaid ae ayy ASTHMA WHY aulfer IT (here le somieining (oa wild help you? Hundrads of thousanda of sels have been sold on a '@oney back, guar antes. Ho easy (0 usa. Alter your symp tone have been diaguosed as Asihina you owe 1710 yourself to try Asthmanelrin Ask your Drugslist ~ pA AER ALAA SAA 1 3 Jr DREN IEE POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH he (wrmenl of diy esas canhon and weeping skia troubles Fosi's Woeema Salve will ant dlaappiiat rou [tching, scaling. burnipg ecrema acne cingworm, plinples and athlete 8 toot will ceapond readily (0 ths miainleaa odorlens ointment, regardless of how slabbarm wm hooeless they seen. CRICE 52.00 (EK JAR POST'S. REMEDIES - Sant Pani Fier 0p Recolor af $oice 489 Quean Kt . & Corner at Logan, Taronte ag p-- ® ftEMINER © Une woman tells anojher Take supbclor "YEMINEX'™ (0 telp alleviate vain, die teresa nervous tension associnted with monthly paride - $3.00 Postpaid tn plain wrapoer POST'S CHEMICALS 889 QUEEN NT. RANT TORONTO OPPORTUNITIES - YOR Ks . MEN AND WOMEN "© BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING BOHOL Great Opporiantiy Learn Halrdressing Cleasant dignified profession geod wan Thousands of successful Marvel gcadualire America's (reatest Hyvalom (Husteated Catalogs Free z Write ar (all MARVEL HAIRDRESSING : 368 Moor St WW, . Reanchea | ¢¢ Kine Sr, Hamtiton 12 Ridean Si Oitawa SCHouLL Toronto PATENTS . AN OFF ETT tu every Inventor-- List of Wu. ventions and >full tnformation sant Cros I'he Ramuay (Co Registered atent Atioe noys 273 Bank Bireet. (Minwa CS FETHERSTONHAUGH & Company. U's Estabitabed 1A90 © 160 Rooklet af informa tant Ballcttors' Bay. Street. Toronto tian Aan reatinat hu tes re PIES : pS hh ree -- irl THOROUGHBRED golden Labrador pap plea. Dio Cleely Wilson, Maple 1711RR TEACH ERS WANTED : - ie : v DARLING Township School Area. Lan ark County requires a Normal trained teacher fur 88 Nox 3, Darling, dutlea to commence Sept. 2. Apply, stating aualb fications, eéxperfenca and anlary expected to -Mark HH. Barr. Sec Treas. Clayton, Ontapo. GALT district. rural, "eight grades Mim mum salary $2,200 for qualified teacher, ; REPLY, stating name of inspector or principal and telephone pumber. to GD Balley, 8ec.-Treas., RI. 6, Galt TRUSTEES Township School Area Darn che, Jarvis, Hodgins, Gaudetto and Shields, Searchmont, Qotario Require two qualified tedchers with experiences one' male preferred. Grades 1° th 18, schools on highway about 50 miles from Sault. Boarding place found State quall fleattone and salary. Good hunting end fishing. Apply Stanley Gratton. Secretary, Hearchmont, "Ont. tid 4 FREE EXPANSION BRACELET ONB of - Ontario's Jargdal mall ord watch repair companies, offers you uu 2% years' experience In flie watch mak lug. Over 20,000 matisfled customers be 1981, An eatimate sent immediately be fore repairing your watch, _ ACCURATE WATCH --REPA{IR 1971 Yonge 8t.. Toronta., Dept. W. Tae "WANTED ' NURI op rr POULTRY I'ROCESSOR With Egg Ocading expéflenca preferced dyoup Insurance and other benefifs. tole. phone or write to G. Evans, ILVERWOOD DAIRIES, LIMITED Elmira, Ontade Itch. Itch.c.; x ay. first use of soothing, cooling liquid .D. D. Prescription positively relieves raw red {tch--caused by eczema, rashes, scalp Irritation, chafing--other itch troubles. Grenseless, stainless. 43¢ trial bottle inust satlsly or money back. Don't suffer. -A your druggist for D.D.D.PRESCRIP[{ Protect your BOOKS 'and OASH (rem FIRE and THIEVES, We bave a sine and trpe of Bafe, or Oablnet, for any purposes. Visit us or write for prices . elo to, Devt, w. J.6¢J. TAYLOR umMiTen T0RONT0 SAFE WORKS' 148 Front St. E., Toroute Fstabllshed 1853 HARNESS & COLLARS Farmers Aftention--Consult your news est Harness Shop about Staco Harness Supplies. Wa sell our goods only through your local Staco Leather. goods deoler. The goods are cight and so are our prices. We manufae ture jn our factories: Harness Horse Collars, Sweat Pads, Horse Blankets and Leather Travelling Goods. Inslst on Staco Brand Trade-marked Gaods aad you ge! satisfaction. Made only by SAMUEL TREES CO. LTD, 4 Wallington St. E, Toronte -- Werita for Catalogue = 13%. a CWATCHES-RELMEED -- "" i a ISSUE 32 -- 1952 SEAT lr - Ee a ia -- Te _ ne rs Fes 2 rd i he NY