Ske) q ey 1 et yl LAN oss IAW v ir ey } ir Sa a A v a = 1s hr A Tt ON A in" Ta Ri ne a a 1 wn i Le he Cal a a, rs, es oy Nord wT 2 es wy - NR) PET n A Cte AY at ARS A a we NR = iS . A hai S Wy ER " ay I . L } A wt ww Ark rate [oT 3 Phin LEA rede ss the block! I Ants Ate the Jail, Prisoner Escaped EE a 'I'he major disaster that threaten- ed cattlemen of Australia's $00,000 square mile Northern Territory re- gently, inthe shape' of their age- old enemy drought, has now keen varrowly averted. © . _ Unexpected rain last May, where hope of it had faded, before. the Octolter monsoon, saved 1,000,000 -wgattle from what "seemed. certain' | aath Drought is no stranger to cattle- - saen-of the Territory It has haunt- them ever since pioneer drover 'A¥cy Wentworth Dir rode {nto darwin with the first bullocks from the south in 1872. It killed off those who followed in his tracks, Hlagued others who blazed ngw {halle - across the grev, parched #alns . Fatal Blood-Sucker Another hoodoo of the early Saye yas su little blood-sucking cattle ¢k. 'First noticed In"1880 on gome ported Brahmin = cattle, Tle ever had spread within three hrough the entire Territory. Cattle died in thousands, millions of nade were lost, before the dread scase could be checked by In- ears & ulation. » In he old days, Hocker of the Terr Ww plagued by the Jeddy dodgers, hard riding; hard- ving outlaws who, working singly "or in pairs with a string of horses and a few blacks, would round up stray calves--"poddies" as they are ealled--by moonlight, head them nto the ranges and either alter wristing brands or mark them with Ir own. Sometimes they branded ) hundred in a single night. a Lh ~~ » : Town Wiped Ont Put 'most formidable "enemy to "Australians everywhere north of the reple of Capricorn is unseen, un- wd, unconquerable. It eats awa the fruits of thelr labours, their es, thelr hopes «.----~the-drepad- attotermes darwiniensis, or white nt. . Tts fearful, secret work was frst covered in Darwin back in the 870's, and within five years the town was rediiced to a shell of masticated pulp. So White 'ants ate the Resideney plano, the mails in the post office, the wooden stakes of miners claims, i wagon wheels while they were turn- Ing, blankets off sleepers in the night--and a set of billiard balls. They chewed jagged holes in the "eourthouse and police station, di- gested government records, ate out fhe strong-room of the bank and devoured the jail, allowing a "prize" prisoner to escapel A blacksmith even reported that they had carried away his "anvil, until it was discovered later buried + beticath the rubble that had been A mining director, absent for Yhiee months, returned to his home, put his key in the door . . . and the whole house fell flat. Darwin had become a honeycomb. of - dry "vot. a "Of all living creatures the Aus- tralian white ant is the most de- stinctive," writes Ernestine Hill In "The Territory"--a vivid history of the Northern Territory from its beginnings about a century ago. "Once, 'in poetic mood out there, 1 remarked to a bushman of a bell- like high note, scarcely heard yet allpervading, ringing beyond the silence." : i © "Yr quite right, missus," he re- plied "laconically. "It's the white. ants chewin,." ) White ants have the greatest social organization in the world .. . of sightless workers born to {oil fill death,- of cities built of their bodies. There. are ant soldiers, workers, nymphs, a diminutive "king and monstrous queen. mother of a multitude, "Kick an ant-hill," the author "writes, "and sec the soldiers rush. oud to link legs and block the open- mg. blind fighters with_an_armour- plated head that they flail from Yide to side, throwing an acid spray Not $kidd skid-eliminating fire elip which chains. fo snap on when a tire passes a --_--_ Er -------- ding Around--Joseph LaRocca demo PES - nstrates his special may soon outsell ordinary tire chai After eight years of no sale LaRocca has succeeded: in: - getting. a manhfacturer to produce the clips which are designed over 'it. He says they'll provide almost certain traction in ice, snow or mud. . shat encloses and corrodes a small fam. This 1s the mortir that ds the ant-hills. 'It is also the sesretion that ean penetrate sheet $on and corrode glass. The termite stmies seal themselves with it and become a living wall of malled © "When things are 'quiet, the sol- dlers stand astde and the workers ie the walls' with the secretion, py creatures half an inch long, fleshy and grey with a head like a wax match, they work till they drop . . . to be immediately de- voured "by thelr kind. There's no waste in an ant-hill." . Everywhere you travel north of the Tropic are endless ant-hill cities, towering at times to twenty-five feet. The queen, three inches long, horrible disgorgement of eggs at the rate of ork a second. 'Long files of workers stuff into her mouth food that has Leen pre-digested by their own bodies--anything from grass to historical records -- and carry away her eggs to the heated incubation chambers. Beneath her Hes the little king, a life prisoner of communal law. ~ ~ 77 Cooking Their Food ~~ When a nest is hacked open, the workers cement the queen in a solid block of clay that would resist an age. Should a hot spring burst beneath their skyscraper, they line it with a waterproof solution and turn the heat to account in cook- ing their food and hatching their young. White ants are no joke in the Northern Territory. But there's an amusing story told of one stock- "man who 'dwelt too Jong at the pub one night, and on" his Jay home staggered and fell by: the wayside. He awoke next morning powerless to move, witha-tickling irritation all' over him. He. thought he had been buried alive; and in a cold sweat of terror tried to remember the holy words he had learned at 'his mother's knce. , The cook at the droving camp nearby, busy with pots and paus, was startled to hear . . . "an ant-__ hill carrying on like anything and recitin' the Lord's Prayer! I reck- oned the place was bewitched by a parson or something, an' by golly 1 was goin' to hop it. quick, an' ole Bert woulda been there yet , . 2 If - I hadn't happened to sce a couple' of swan-neck spurs stickin' out!" y 2 Doggone Strong--Amazing Frankfurt, Germany night dub goers with his strength, a Hungarian iss shepherd dog balances his 12. year-old master. Hansi, on his head. The dress worn by the small- bui mighty pooch seems to accentuate his strength. spends her thirty years of life in| Using cabbage water and finger- nail varnish, wood-smoke and fry- I University has just embarked on a surprising quest. With the aid of a class of sniffing students, he |_is trying to. discover just why =a rose smells so sweet and a clogged drain so bad--and he's hoping to establish a standard measurement for smells' akin to the measure- ment of light or squid. With a simple instrument, the olfactometer, Dr. G. H. Cheesman dilutes such chemicals as ether and 'How's Your Smeller? ing bacon, a scientist at Reading qetone, sloohol with water and air, and sovers the precise strength at which students notice the smell tent and Dr. Cheesman is begin- aing to chart the upper and lower "limits of smell just as' some" ex- pette have done with sound deci- els, pie In fact, it's an international smel- ling race.. In Boston, Dr. Ernest Crocker has worked out. a "spec- trum" of smelling with thirty-two standard odours. All smells, he of four primary sensations: frag- rant, sour, burnt and "goaty." An- other expert has launched a smell 'society to encourage enthusiasts in the appreciation of smells, A sea- side borough council consulted it recently when they wished to iden- tify a stench on their promenade which drove away visitors, High in the recesses of the nose the olfactory bulb-is lapped in soft liquid like a submarine detecting radar signals and communicating them by nerve impulses to the ad- miralty headquarters in the brain, Yet scientists still know nothing of the speed or energy of the smell- waves, the radiations probably akin to light or sound by which we en- Joy the scent of the new-mown hay or the umph of eau-de-Cologne. In a museum in Munich visitors can sniff the twenty-four herbal scents of the world, recognizing and savouring them with delight. But an Australian aborigine can smell water a mile away and by contrast the civilized nose is un- trained and atrophied. An interest- ing discovery at Reading is that the nose tires easily, and is quickly saturated by too much of one smell. Some people remember smells well and can quickly summon "up in the imagination the smell of, say, the seaside or a country. grocer's shop. ' 1 : Research into -smell psychology may soon push British exports. In a recent test a London gfjore placed __on sale two _sets_of identical rayon _ stockings, One smelled slightly of the finishing oil used in manufac- ture, The other had been reodor- ized with a soft, silky smell special Jy blended by: perfumers. The lat- ter sold out immediately to cus- tomers who considered them of far superior 'grade. - Three or four times every year -- millions -- of ~dollars--Jeave the fair Province of Ontario, only a tiny fraction of which ever returns, Some of that money is ours, and, the chances are, some of it is yours, We _ are referring--in- case you haven't already gucssed--to the dough which travels in huge gobs either to-'Quebec or Ireland in ex- change for Sweepstake tickets. * * * : Now, it is a well known fact that the folks who carry on good works, such as that of the Red Cross, the St. John Ambulance. Corps, and many others, are year by year find- ing it more and more difficult to raise the necessary funds=Yet when somebody suggests that we should support such causes by holding Sweepstakes and Lotteries of our own, in other words, keeping moitey that is going to be 'spent anyway here at home whére it will do some good, the forest of uplifted hands "thing tremendous, Even folks who have: been buying Irish Sweep tickets all their. lives will piously say, "Oh, 'it would never do to have such things here * + * " Maybe what's okay to patronize ful if held in Toronto or Hamilton; but to us, personally, and toa whole lot like us, it just doesn't add up to common sensv., pA * * * . The opposition to lotteries and sweepstakes is largely based on the argument that they have' been Anti-lottery men-vwho probably go voit and sell tickets on a late model "fv car whenever their Lodge is put- ting on a charity drive---will refer "you to the notorigus Louisiana Lot- teries: which were filled with graft, pay-offs and crooked management. What they don't tell you is that vately owned and opérated -by in= dividuals tied in with politicians who were secret partners in the racket, It was NOT a public lot- tery operated by the Government, * . + A Government-ownled and oper- ated lottery can be run honestly, citizens. of a great deal of their tax burden--writes Marjorie Scilken in the Police Gazette--and for conclu- sive proof tells of Puerto Rico, a possession" of the United States, whose éxperiment in a state lottery debunks the reformers' arguments | agginst them, r H ; » fin * : In Pic te Rico, if you walk down aiy street, $m can't help seeing amd and cries of holy horror are some-' these Louisiana lotteries were pri- HORT py A Swat C Well, maybe such folks-are-right.- when it's in _Dublin_would be sin- tried in different places and failed. efficiently and can help to relieve " hearing the street vendors, The - pushers, One quarter, 25 cents, will get you part of a ticket and for part of a ticket you can win part of $60,000 (first prize), Of- course, for $12.50, a whole ticket,"you could win the whole first prize or a sec-. ond prize of $15,000 or even a third prize of $10,000. All you need is = a lucky number. + a le be a winner, get their small for- tunes tax free. About 67 per cent of the money taken 'in is paid out in prizes. The government gets about. 18 per cent of the take and the remaining 14 per cent or so goes" for administration and commission 'to agents and street vendors. Not a bad breakdown for the "gambler." * + * The net proceeds for the Puerto Rican.government in 1950-51 after deducting prizes, commissions and administrative expenses -was $4,- 791,213.85. This represents about four per cent of the Puerto Rican budgét--enough to pay for the is- land's "health - service and hospital bills, * * -* What is you lose "your quarter? service-and- improved. conditioris- on the island.. No local gambler lives off the fat-of-the-land from your accumulated quarters. No cops on the beat get paid off; there are no investigators, no scandals, no professional moralists, It's all on "the up and up. In a way, every- body wins! * * * Everybody has been winning in Puerto Rico for a long time, The islanders have been watching their "lucky numbers 'flash in lights since a Spanish Royal decree in 1814 es- tablished la Loteria Provincial in Puerto Rico. . * . 3 This provincial lottery ran suc- cessfully until 1899 when the United States occupation authorities who "The resuits~are remarkably consiz== _gidewalks are alive _with ticket . The winners, and. you might just ~ You get it back in better hospital pr ---- took over fhe Island, let 8 Puritani- * ¢al reform-bloc pack away the Aipminr and lucky numbers, ESBS SE RANEY SEE, _ "The only people thé least bit overjoyed at this: piece of "legisla- tion were the professional gamblers and thugs:- They went back into business. With the local lottery pad- -locked; foreign lottery tickets start- ed pouring into Puerto Rico. Some were counterfeit, some "good; all meant that money' was leaving the island. Puerto Rico hecaple a haven for all kinds of gambling, every game of chance; every shady op- erator tried to fill the -void left on the island by the closing down of the century-old. lottery. - * * * "In 1934, the depression flattened Puerto Rico. The local legislature, - casting about for restorative mea- sures, decided to legalize the lot- 'tery again. They had three ob- jectives: (1) _to raise. money to fight tuberculosis (2) as & means of support for the poorer municipali- - ties (3) to curb the traffic of foreign lotteries in Puerto Rico. The bill was passed. The United States, 'though she had the legal means. to veto the measure, closed her -eyes; the lottery became one of . the factors that put Puerto Rico back on its feet. . * J] * Reformers and blue stockings in the United States scream that there will be corruption and dishonesty, gangsterism and hoodlumism - if there is a Federal lottery in the Stafes. i * . . In Puerto Rico, under the Ameri- can flag, there has been an honest, business-like and successful lottery since 1934, Safeguards--dozens of checks--have been made by 'the government to insure that there will be no wayward tinkering with the machinery. : * . * yi In June, 1950, a brand new ma: chine was installed to draw the |__lucky humbers. "This Rube Gold- berg concoction of wire-mesh cages, spigots, turrets, baskets and sieves is completely automatic. No atfend- ant touches the balls 'until they .. are_spun and "dropped out into a "'mesh-sicve, one by one. They are then strung. up in the combination . in which they fall and each number ~ is read over the loudspeaker. These operations are always in view: of the public, SiN : * * 3 Each drawing--and there are st' drawings through the year--is or- "ganized, directed and inspected by a_ Board of Drawings which is composed of three citizens of good standing, qualified and "appointed by the Chief of the Bureau of the Lottery, Mr. Jesus Benitez Rezach, one of the outstanding men in Puerto Rico, has been the Chief of the Bureau since 1947. * * . If you win there is no tax .on the money at all (unless the roll leaves Puerto Rico and enters the U.S. in which case the prize money has to be written-in on income tax- forms). ; : : . . * h What do you think? What makes a lottery such a thing of horror ° here, and O.K. in Puerto Rico under the American flag? Why should the Puerto Ricans- get 51 chances a year to win money--with huge jack- pots of almost $300,000 for July and Christmas--and Americans "have to win piddling and illegal bets on numbers, football pools and the foreign lotteries? Why is a gov- * ernment run lottery so certain to be * crooked in the United States, when it's straight and honest in Puerto Rico? * * * Or, to draw a bit ncarer to home, if the Puerto Ricans and the Irish can do it, why couldn't the folks in Ontario? We gamble with our lives every time we cross a street or highway, what with. the kind of screwball drivers that are loose today, So what's wrong with gamb- ling with a little loose change, es--- pecially if doing so might make the going easier for many worthy causes? : z LOGY, LISTLESS, OUT OF LOVE WITH LIFE? = Thien wake up your liver bite : jump out of bed rarin' to go Life not warth living? It may ba the liver! [t's a fact! If your liver bile is not flowing realy your food may not digest . . . gas bloats up your stomach . . . you feel con- stipated and all the fun and sparkle go out of life. That's when you mild, gentle. lls. You see Carters at ta a 2 »5 PUMPS, CONCRETE. MIXERS, AIR TOOLS" : .| ©. ond ACCESSORIES: RENTALS --- SALES RAY GORDON LTD. 1385 BLOOR ST., W. TORONTO KEnwood 9417 SCHRAMM PORTABLE & STATIONARY COMPRESSORS gambling equipment, lock, stocks', Former i ce =m A. .opportunity for ambitious EER -- "ADVERTISING. AUENITS WANTED CLASSIFIED : MEDICAL - an CHRISTMAS card agents, be sure to write Monarch, for frees catalogue of _over 60 fast selling items. Positively the finest line available. anywhere. Samples . sent on approval. Immediate delivery, and - Ilberal commission. Monarch Greeting Cards, 47W, East Ave., Hamilton, Ont, ' MAKE EVE DAY A PAY DAY, Earn a FREE TIT by selling made-to- - measure clothes In your district. Splendld individual. A 'few- calls a day will put cash in: yoyr pockets: and a FREE SUIT on yaor back, A real. opportunity to wo inth hociness _ with. no investment. FREE sample set of hundreds of swatches, style books, «iv. _ No experience, no money needed. Write immediately for the most complete, made- to-measure clothing sample set and for instructions on taking measurements. INC, "FRANKLIN PARK' CLOTHES Dept. 18-R, Box 39, Station® *'N", Mont- real, P.Q. _GREETING CARD AGENTS GET an early start and make money fast by selling Canada's newest and different line of Christmas and" Everyday Greeting Card boxes. Samples on approval. Colonial Card Co., 60 Front St. West, Toronto 1. BABY CHICKS DAY OLD CHICKS, also started chicks, 2 two weeks . old, non-sexed, pullets, _ cockerels. All popular breeds at reduced prices. Prompt delivery. Turkey poults, two three and four weeks old, toms, hens or non-sexed. -Broller chicks, older pullets. Catalogue. : TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. Fergus : L _ Ontarlo _REDUCED PRICES on day old and started chicks, also started turkey poults, two three and four weeks old, non-sexed or Good. results--every sufferer from Rhews . matic Pains of Nevritis should ty Dixon's Remedy. : =H 1 MUNRO'S DRUG STORE Elgin ; : Ottawe $1.25 Express Prepaid ASTHMA 2 FH WHY suffer If there is something t will » help you? Hundreds of thousands of sets have. been sold on a money back gu antee. Bo easy to use, After your eyn - toms bave been diagnosed as Asthma, J awe It to yourself to try Asthmanefrin, Ty No . THE PERFECT SLIMMING DI Ask your Druggist. . No Pills Drife Es ET SHEET As used by leading London Homi snd Medical Bpecialists, sent on rece "of «Postal Order One Dollar to: . Diets Dept., MEDICAL & DRUGQGISTS . SUPPLIES, (2 Tavistock Place, | e388 Ey ry w.C.L NURSES NURSES, Graduate registered, for a shifts, in small hospital, good sal meals included. Write or phone colle Elm Street Hospital,. Battle Creek, Mich.; 2-8589. Fx OPPORTUNITIES FOR i MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SOHOOL Great Opportunity Learn | : Hairdressing * Pleasant dignified profession, good Wages. Thousands of successful Marvel gradual America's Greatest System Collingwood. Building, Approx, 20' X 150°, Frame and Steel Construction. Equipment, Complete and Modern. : ' Extra, * Cement Buflding, Approx. 20° X 116', Equipped for Poultry or Hog Rals- ing. 3 Doubls: Garage, To close Estate . . . Approx, 3 Acres Land. $6,600.00, Terms. Agents Wanted L. H. NIXON . 46 SPRING GARDEN, WILLOWDALE E " Plone BAldwin 1-23%7 Eastern Distributors for Hydraulie . Engineering Co. ONTARIO | Contact, Marsh and Erskine, Meaford, Ont, Realtots, . " ISSUE 34 -- 1952 ® MACDONALD'S © " "ry; wh paca: * L J sexed. Broiler Chicks; older = pullets. Nlustrated Catalogue Free Catalogue. Write or Call . TOP NOTCH CHICK BALES' MARVEL HAIRDRESSING BCHOOLS = Guelph, * Ontario 358 Bloor Bt. W., Toronto ~ BROILER RAISERS--Try our spectal | = "7% ¢4 King St Hamilton Im i broller New Hamps. Can supply _a . 1-<73 Rideau Bt., Ottawa "i Hmited supply of cockerel chicks suitable - oe or broilers at reduced prices. . ACCessor nd Pi we TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. BE rt Perel See oY arene lis Fergus : Ontarlo Bend motor number and make, Carfer _. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Bios, Waterloo, Ontatio, ' WESTON 3 WANTED 1000 Ladies, Gents, Get _ EXCELLENT investment providing re- Bikinis Ma, 3 Ta tn Bier tiring income, $16.000 cash. B-plex, "Lucky 'Days, Numbers. Name, Address, eentrally located, completely eauibped, Birthday, 28c coin, - prepald Canada, one apartment now vacant. Balance con- - DI tasal 329 N-E Street, 8 8 venlently arranged. J. P. Allan, Real rect iiales, TEast. Street, .Spenciv, Estate Broker & Insurance, 81 South indiana, : ; tation Street, Weston, . Optarle BUTTON COLLECTOR buying old, fancy 2: CLINICS glass, jet, metal buttons with designe f- of children, animals, people, etc. Large 'BICK"--Write Clinic Doctor--§11 Dan- or amall collections. Grandmother's charm, forth, Toronto. .Drugless--Operationless friendship button strings. - Also buying +Licensqd. Why suffer? Make yourself Indian Relics, old glassware, dishes. In * welll Ontario soon, Write now. Herman Zander, : > 7847 W. Harwood Ave., Wauwatosa, 13, "DEALERS WANTED" + RE LL ET ER SE ER TR OILS, GREASES, TIRES ~PATENTS Paints and, varnishes, Blectric¥ Motors, ed Electrical Appliances, Refrigerators, Fast AN OFFER to every inventor---List 'of ine Freezers, Milk Coolers and Feed Grinders ventions and' full information sent free. _Hobbyshop Machinery. Dealers wanted. The Ramsay Co., Registered Patent Attor- -- Write: Warco Grease and Oll Limited, neys, 273 Bahk Street, Ottawa. 4 Toronto. : 3 : . : ; Fann a x FETHERSTONHAUGH & Company Pa- DYEING AND CLEANING tent: Solicitors. Established 1890. 350 Bay Street, to. HAVE you anything needs dyeing or clean- wid Blreet an 9c .ooklet. of: Iaformas ih Write to us for Information. We = PR are glad to answer your questions. De- TEACHER 4 1] partment H. Parker's Dye Works Limited, EAC 8 YWaANTE! 191 Yonge St. Toronto. - DARLING ' Township. School Area. Lane ark County requires a Normal trained : FOR SALE teacher for SS No. 3, Darling, duties to BAVE time--Money. Convert your ground comments, Sept, -3,°. Apply, Mating . quali. driven Binder to a practical Power Beatlons, S3ierlence and op olasy expected binder with a Carlson Power Drive. For ont an NAIF Sec-Treas,, - Clayton, information write Chas. Thatcher, dis are. tributor, Rockwood, Ont. _ i -- % : : WANTED REGISTERED Dambrel and Cornell : r . Seed Wheat. Treated. 2 bushels 'per POULTRY PROCESSOR» bag. H. R. McKim; Dresden, Ontario. With Egg Grading experience', preferred. TIRES : Group Insurance and other benefits, tele Hamilton's Largest Tire Store Since 1933. y: rahe de ARIE LIMITED Used Tires, $7.00 and up. Retreaded 'Elmira. : A Sr Omtarl Tires, 600 x 16, $14.00, Other sizes, priced : miarie nccordingly., Vulcanizing and- retreading 3 service, All work guaranteed. All orders fou % Santen, 3 --C.0.D,--$2.00 -required -with-order.-We-pay-- ns men_to_traln an Ward-aides. 2 rt JhArTee Ya Peninsula Tire Corpora. 'Intendent of Nurses fora Hospital, on, , > 2 R oni LET Street West Handilton. tiravenhurst, - Ontario, SCRAP and salvage yard business . for : 3 AE sale, downtown location, long lease, . . cheap rent: opportunity for ambitious man. amw C C Anty advertiser, 60 Samuel St.. rear, inci, ; nay ; Chagiih ooo. | I'Was Nearly Crazy. FOR SALE MAGREGOR GOURLEY FOUR Until I discovered Dr. D. D. Dennis' amazing- sided planer, price $2,000. Alex Herman, ly fast relief -- D. D. D. Prescription, World fron. River. Alta : popular, this pure, cooling, liquid medication . : - eq Jorco,tnd comion Jiom fruel ohing. - REGISTERED Redbone, male. ¢ montha, foot and other Heh troubles, Trial bottle, 35. 25. M. Miller, 24 Simcoe St., Orillia. Greaseless, First use soothes, checks raw red Siddha Itch or money back. Ask druggist for D. D, D, Massey Harris Fleld Clipper, cuts § foot, Prescription (ordinary or extra strength). esculates to trailer. Good condiflon. E 3 ? § Hambley Hatcheries, Winnipeg. iE - 3 5 LARGE Imported Scarfs, Pure Silk from p : ' Far East. Exotic Hand Prints, $1.00 Ingrown Toenails Prepaid. Gerstner Accessorles, 384 East . . ' 149th Street, New York® 65, New York. ~ Nail 'Fix relieves vain Instantly and i - removes ingrown portions of nail in a HOW YOU May Heal Old Leg Sores, and ew . applications $1.50. ¥ relieve painful varicose veins at home, without. loss of time. Formulae and com- : WART FIX plete Instructions only $2.00, Dr: Goff, Guaranteed remedy. No acid, Safe for Utica, Michigan. | LEY ":hildren .75c. WATER Systems -- Aermotor Windmills CORN FIX . and Electric Pressure Systems. Berkley W : i Removes corns and eanlluges in 10 min. Turhin Pumps, Quinn Hog and Poultry ates Guaranteed Remedy 75c. At your erers, Quality goods, reasonably Irugeist or gent postpaid by -- + priced. H. M. Fleming and Sons, Distribu- Postpan Ys tor, Blenheim, Ont, 3 F THOMPSON CRESS CORN' BALVE--For sure rellef. . Your Druggist sells CRESS, 7 ORCHARD. CRESCENT - JORONTO 18, ONJARIO. / FIVE registered Angua bulls, eleven to N 7 sixteen months old, at farmers prices. fd Come and look these bulls pver. Kenneth . .* Quarrie," R.R. 8, Belwood, Ontario. BLACKSMITH forge and blower, *'Champ- fon"; anvil, vice, steel: tongs and other equipment; 20 feet smoke stack, steel; engine lathe, screw cutting, 10 foot bed 2 with equipment: post drill, %'" universal TTT re chuck with drills; 1 alr compressor, tank, hose and fittings; 1 air compressor, 3} 5 by 8}": 1 motor, 1 hp. Wagner; tube vulcanizer, electric) 18 fea track with sar. D, J! McRae, Leonard, Ont. LIVESTOCK MARKER, MARK ANIMALS - 3 wet or dry. White, black, red: 400 per . stick. Postpald, Hambley Hatcherles, Win- The "VERSATILE" i: niper. ] 3 BALE OF TURKEY TOULTS while th GRAIN MOVER " BALI 3Y POULTS while they 'Leads nll Loaders In performance 'and ° i) ant" two, 'threes and four-weeks ol. Tome. "| ;ifce, "LIENt to handle==gne man can wet v= LR Jens or non-sexed, Send 'Mor redaced price it up. Loads, unlonds, and elevates xraln Io iat. faster, Sturdy steel construction (Auger 3 TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES: LTD. Type). B sizes 13-17-21-24 and 28; foot : : _ Fergua : Ontario models, Can, be used with or without - 3 undercarriage. \, Bl . SEED "CLEANING MILL Write for prices and dederiptive folder © % Tocated, Edge of Corporation, Town of . ¢